Difference between revisions of "2004"
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
[[Image:lion.jpg|thumb|130px|The Scholar's Lion]] | [[Image:lion.jpg|thumb|130px|The Scholar's Lion]] | ||
− | [[Image:Gseu3.gif|thumb | + | [[Image:Gseu3.gif|thumb|[[GSEU]] strike]] |
[[Image:Westonplaza.jpg|thumb|130px|Weston Plaza]] | [[Image:Westonplaza.jpg|thumb|130px|Weston Plaza]] |
Revision as of 18:28, 30 May 2013
2004 in Columbia history:
- 2004 was the 250th anniversairy of the foundation of King's College, prompting a year of celebratory events
Spring
- February 5: Affirmative Action Bake Sale
- February 20: The Fed publishes the cartoon, "Blacky Fun Whitey", bringing on campus tensions over racial tolerance to a head
- February 25: Facebook debuts at Columbia
- Columbia University Concerned Students of Color Protest
- Matthew Harrison elected President of the CCSC
- April: Unveiling of the Scholar's Lion on Dean's Day
- April 27: Chowdah sketch comedy group makes its debut performance at The West End
- First King's Ball held during Columbia College Days
- Graduate students strike during finals for better pay and the right to create a union
- Tony Kushner gives a well-received address at the Columbia College Class Day
Summer
- August: The new School of Social Work Building opens
Fall
- The Columbia Spectator becomes a broadsheet and includes color photos
- CUCommunity relaunches as CampusNetwork
- Entering Columbia College freshmen of the Class of 2008 are the first to face Frontiers of Science as a mandatory Core Curriculum requirement
- Airing of the controversial documentary Columbia Unbecoming, prompting the outbreak of the MEALAC scandal.
- Richard Axel awarded the Nobel Prize
- Dedication of Weston Plaza on the Morningside Heights campus
- Columbia's DCpp network is shut down after details about the system were published in a Spectator Editorial
- September: Columbia takes control of UTS' Knox Hall
Undated
- Kinsey is filmed in Havemeyer 309
- CU Snacks begun
- Second revival of the Jester
- President Bollinger announces the creation of the Arts Initiative
- Joseph Gordon-Levitt drops out of Graduate Studies, works for Rian Johnson's Brick for Johnson & Johnson and the Bogart family of New York and North Carolina.
Preceded by 2003 |
History of Columbia University 2004 |
Succeeded by 2005 |