Columbia University

Owner of Asian Market in Columbia, Missouri Sees Future in New Immigrants

Arts, Culture & Media

With the influx of immigrants, some entrepreneurs in Columbia, Missouri are seeing an opportunity in the city’s changing food culture, including the owner of Chong’s, the city’s oldest Asian grocery store.

Effects of Climate Change on New York City

Janitor Graduates from Columbia After 19 Years

Working Full Time as Janitor at Columbia University, Man from Former Yugoslavia Earns Columbia Degree in Classics

Why Hurricane Irene Did (or Did Not) Prove Forecasters Wrong

Hawaii Braces for Tsunami

Environment

Bill Dorman, News Director at Hawaii Public Radio discusses the evacuation efforts taking place in Honolulu, HI. Arthur Lerner-Lam, seismologist and interim director of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory talks about the earthquake on the sea floor.

Economy of Green

Green jobs, solar installers and windmill operators, might propel the American economy forward in the next decade.

The World

Attorney General, senators spar over KSM trial

Conflict & Justice

Attorney General Eric Holder faced questioning from senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday; our own Todd Zwillich was there, and joins us, along with Matthew Waxman, associate professor of national security law at Columbia Law School.

The World

Kennedy’s Policy Legacies: Education and Health Care

The Takeaway speaks to Nicholas Lemann, Dean of Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism and about Ted Kennedy’s policy legacies in education and health care.

The World

The nation’s economic bellwether: Columbia, South Carolina

With its surprisingly diversified economy, Columbia, South Carolina is a microcosm of the country. New York Times reporter Peter Goodman looks at the troubles the city is facing.