The Ear
The Ear
The Columbia Daily Spectator
By investigating the past and present of Columbia University through audio projects, The Ear aims to uncover rich, controversial, and enduring stories that may be otherwise hidden from the community. The Ear is a podcast of the Columbia Daily Spectator, the undergraduate newspaper at Columbia.
From Hamilton Hall to Hind’s: Inside the Occupation
After 12 days of occupying South Lawn, pro-Palestinian protesters escalated their operations by occupying a building on April 30. Tune in to listen to reporters Lara-Nour Walton and Sophia Cordoba chronicle Hamilton Hall’s historic transformation to Hind’s Hall and the violent police crackdown that followed. ​​Credits • Edited by Sophia Cordoba • Produced by Sophia Cordoba • Music by Eva-Scholz-Carlson • Illustration by Kelsea Petersen Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
May 14, 2024
24 min
33 Hours in the ‘Liberated Zone’
On April 17, over 100 Columbia students erected an encampment labeled the “Liberated Zone” to demand complete University divestment from Israel. They remained for 33 hours until University President Minouche Shafik authorized the New York Police Department to sweep the encampment, resulting in their arrests. Join reporters Lara-Nour Walton and Sophia Cordoba in living the sounds of the first “Gaza Solidarity Encampment.” ​​Credits • Edited by Sophia Cordoba • Produced by Sophia Cordoba • Music by Eva Scholz-Carlson • Illustration by Kelsea Petersen Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Apr 26, 2024
22 min
Riverside Church and the Road to Racial Justice
Founded in 1930, Riverside Church in the City of New York strives to be interdenominational, interracial, and international.  While many in the Columbia community have seen Riverside Church, few are aware of its rich history—hosting the likes of Martin Luther King Jr. and Mandela. In this episode of The Ear, Sophia Cordoba unpacks the history behind Riverside’s prominence in the struggle for racial justice. ​​Credits: • Edited by Lara-Nour Walton • Produced by Sophia Cordoba • Music by Eva Scholz-Carlson and Matthew Schwizter • Illustration by Macy Sinreich • Voice Acting by Ted Schmiedeler Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Feb 13, 2024
19 min
Neurodivergent community and support at Columbia
The idea of neurodiversity intentionally moves away from a “correct” method of thinking, so how might this present itself at Columbia, where students are selected based on “intellectual” capabilities? Students who are neurodivergent are a diverse population that should not be generalized. A shift from preconceived standards of how academic and social settings “should” be approached might allow populations at Columbia to recognize more diverse perspectives contributed by neurodivergent students. In this episode, reporter Luisa Sukkar speaks with students who identify as neurodivergent, representatives from Columbia offices for accommodations, psychological care professionals, and researchers in the field of neurodiversity. ​​Credits: • Edited by Claire Schnatterbeck and Sophia Cordoba • Produced by Claire Schnatterbeck • Music by Sofia Schuster with additional music by Obi Okoli • Illustration by Jonas Ma Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Feb 7, 2024
27 min
Nim Chimpsky and Columbia’s Fraught History with Animal Experimentation
In this archival episode of The Ear, reporter Alicia Theologides Rodriguez commemorates the 50th anniversary of a controversial Columbia study that explored whether chimps possess the cognitive capacity to learn sign language. While the Nim project ultimately failed to prove its hypothesis, it revealed much more about the ethical precarity of anthropomorphizing animals in experimental settings. By contrasting Nim’s fate with that of other animals in Columbia’s care, this episode explores the unique privileges and perils that Nim encountered because of the way he was humanized. ​​Credits: • Edited by Claire Schnatterbeck and Sophia Cordoba • Produced by Julia Hay • Music by Christina Li • Illustration by Lizzie Melashvili • Voice Acting by Claire Schnatterbeck, Jorge Hernandez, Vasily Tselioudis, Donovan Barcelona, and August Phillips Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Jan 29, 2024
27 min
From Canton to Columbia: Low’s Legacy with Opium
In this episode of The Ear, reporter Shay Stulman explores the link between Columbia and the opium trade. She explores the profound impact this historical association has had on shaping esteemed American institutions. How do we reckon with the violent histories of philanthropic families? How did the opium trade shape prestigious American institutions? Tune into this episode to reflect on the implications of Columbia’s connection to this complicated history. ​​Credits • Edited by Claire Schnatterbeck, Sophia Cordoba • Produced by Claire Schnatterbeck, Sophia Cordoba • Music by Christina Li  • Illustration by Connor Sund • Voice Acting by Ciro Salcedo  Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Jan 26, 2024
15 min
Columbia’s ‘activist Ivy’ legacy amid pro-Palestinian campus resistance
Columbia boasts a student body that is known for being politically engaged. How did the institution earn the label? And does it still deserve the title today? In this episode of The Ear, reporters Nicole Sandrik-Arzadi and Lara-Nour Walton explore these questions and more. ​​Credits: • Edited by Sophia Cordoba, Claire Schnatterbeck • Produced by Claire Schnatterbeck • Music by Murat Gulcelik • Illustration by Macy Sinreich Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Jan 19, 2024
29 min
The Cradle of the Bomb: Columbia University and the Origins of the Manhattan Project
In this episode of The Ear, Ellie Carver-Horner and Charlotte Fay explore the complicated history of the atomic bomb, a controversial scientific creation that began at Columbia University in the basement of Pupin Hall. What role did Columbia play in the intricacies of nuclear discovery? How did those making these discoveries justify their role in mass destruction, and how does Columbia reckon with that violence in 2023? Learn alongside Ellie and Charlotte as they engage with Columbia’s complex history of innovation, a story of conflicting moralities, and the foundations for a piece of science that altered the course of human history. ​​Credits • Edited by Claire Schnatterbeck • Produced by Julia Hay • Music by Murat Gulcelik • Illustration by Saumya Chaudhry Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Dec 6, 2023
29 min
Life Behind Language: How Heritage Impacts Language Learning
With over 150 countries represented at Columbia, it is no surprise that the University must meet a vast array of language needs. For children of immigrants, learning their native language can mean a greater cultural connection. In this episode, reporter Sophia Cordoba speaks with professors and students alike to understand what it means to live and learn as a heritage speaker. ​​Credits: • Edited by Claire Schnatterbeck • Produced by Julia Hay • Music by Obi Okoli • Illustration by Cassie Wang Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Nov 15, 2023
19 min
Mapping Rurality: Defining Columbia’s ‘Rural Student’
Welcome back to The Ear, Spectator’s podcast dedicated to documenting, excavating, and investigating Columbia’s past and present. In this episode, Claire Burke and Claire Schnatterbeck investigate what makes a rural student. How do Columbia and Barnard define “rural”? Does the quintessential “rural student” actually exist? Schnatterbeck and Burke use their own rural backgrounds as a starting point and begin to explore what it means to be a rural student at an elite institution. Credits: • Script Edited by Sophia Cordoba and Caelan Bailey • Produced by Claire Schatterbeck • Music by Eva Scholz-Carlson • Illustration by Julian Michaud  Follow us on Instagram @SpectatorPodcasts and check out our other episodes!
Oct 31, 2023
22 min
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