Chinese Paper Gods   Chinese Paper Gods —  An online visual catalog of over 200 woodcuts used in folk religious practices of central China in the 1930s. They were collected by Anne S. Goodrich (1895–2005) in 1931, when as a Christian missionary in Peking she became interested in local folk religious practices. From the C. V. Starr East Asian Library.
    Notable New Yorkers — Original audio recordings and edited transcripts of oral history interviews with ten influential New Yorkers drawn from the collection of Columbia Libraries' Oral History Research Office, including: Bennett Cerf, Kenneth Clark, Mamie Clark, Moe Foner, Andrew Heiskell, Edward I. Koch, Mary Lasker, John B. Oakes, Frances Perkins and Frank Stanton.
  Link to Urban project   Joseph Urban Stage Design Models and Documents Funded by a grant from NEH, this web site presents brilliant images of designer Joseph Urban's set models and drawings done for the Metropolitan Opera, the Ziegfeld Follies and various New York theater productions during the period 1915 to 1933.
  Link to Jewels in Her Crown exhibition   Jewels in Her Crown: Treasures of Columbia University Libraries Special Collections — An online version of the exhibition organized in honor of Columbia's 250th anniversary celebration bringing together selected objects from the eleven Special Collections within the Columbia University Libraries and their affiliates.
 
  APIS (Advanced Papyrological Information System) — A collaborative online database and library of digitized images of papyri and ostraca (potsherds with incriptions) dating from the period 400 BCE to 800 CE.
    Digital South Asia Library — Access to a broad array of digital resources for scholarship on South Asia, including electronic dictionaries, images, maps, bibliographies and books.
    Digital Scriptorium — An image database and catalog of medieval and renaissance manuscripts, bringing together resources from more than 20 institutions.
  Papers of John Jay — An online index to all known documents (correspondence, memos, diaries, etc.) written by or to the American statesman and Columbia alumnus John Jay (1745-1829).
    Ling long Women's Magazine — A digital version of Ling long Women's Magazine, originally published in Shanghai from 1931 to 1937 and of significant scholarly research value in several disciplines.