At U.C.L.A., Police Arrest More Than 20 Pro-Palestinian Protesters
Protesters marched through campus, pitched tents and occupied various quads in demonstrations that became confrontational at times.
By Jonathan Wolfe and
![Pro-Palestine protesters demonstrated at the University of California, Los Angeles, on Monday, at times getting into physical clashes with security guards and law enforcement.](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/06/10/multimedia/10nat-ucla-protest-thzl/10nat-ucla-protest-thzl-thumbLarge.jpg?auto=webp)
![Pro-Palestine protesters demonstrated at the University of California, Los Angeles, on Monday, at times getting into physical clashes with security guards and law enforcement.](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/06/10/multimedia/10nat-ucla-protest-thzl/10nat-ucla-protest-thzl-threeByTwoMediumAt2X.jpg?auto=webp)
Protesters marched through campus, pitched tents and occupied various quads in demonstrations that became confrontational at times.
By Jonathan Wolfe and
An Orange County judge halted the labor action by academic workers after the university system said the walkout was causing students “irreparable harm.”
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The new rules, which would also significantly rein in demonstrations at the university in other ways, come on the heels of a nationwide wave of student activism against Israel’s actions in Gaza.
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“Just because you have the right to say something doesn’t mean it’s right to say,” said Carol Christ, who is retiring as chancellor at the end of this month.
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Police Arrest 13 After Protesters Occupied Stanford President’s Office
Demonstrators had taken over the office at dawn and demanded that Stanford University trustees vote on divestment from companies said to support Israel’s military.
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Students Want Charges Dropped. What Is the Right Price for Protests?
At pro-Palestinian demonstrations, students have broken codes of conduct and, sometimes, the law. But the question of whether and how to discipline them is vexing universities.
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The Battle Over College Speech Will Outlive the Encampments
For the first time since the Vietnam War, university demonstrations have led to a rethinking of who sets the terms for language in academia.
By Emily Bazelon and
University Leaders Face a Long, Complex Summer
Many officials may be confronting federal investigations, disputes over student discipline — and the prospect that the protests start all over again in the fall.
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The lawsuit was part of a wave of litigation against universities over accusations of antisemitism related to campus protests over the war in Gaza.
By Sharon Otterman
With the survivor generation shrinking and antisemitism on the rise around the world, Israel’s Holocaust memorial is stepping up efforts to safeguard its vast collection of artifacts and testimony.
By Isabel Kershner
Readers discuss a column by Pamela Paul. Also: Criticism of The Times’s Biden-Trump coverage; why voting matters; helping migrants in New York.
Sullivan & Cromwell is requiring job applicants to explain their participation in protests. Critics see the policy as a way to silence speech about the war.
By Emily Flitter
Nemat Shafik, the university president, called the sentiments in the text messages “unacceptable and deeply upsetting.”
By Katherine Rosman
Readers discuss an article about how the Gaza war has been divisive at a hospital and medical school.
In her four years at the state university, Maurie McInnis drew criticism from faculty members who said some of her decisions violated academic freedom.
By Stephanie Saul
The one-minute commercial, which was created by a group formed by former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, seeks to bring attention to atrocities linked to Hamas.
By Grace Ashford
An incident at Columbia suggests that schools beset with antisemitism are beyond salvation.
By Bret Stephens
Doctors at the University of California, San Francisco, say that the workplace they once loved has been fractured by the Israel-Hamas war.
By Heather Knight
The Manhattan district attorney’s office cited a lack of evidence in deciding not to prosecute 31 of the 46 people charged in the takeover of Hamilton Hall.
By Chelsia Rose Marcius
Leaked images showed the trio sharing disparaging text messages during an alumni group discussion last month about Jewish life on campus.
By Hurubie Meko
One report documented antisemitic threats. The other, anti-Muslim threats. Both signaled that there may be little room for agreement.
By Anemona Hartocollis
I don’t like operating in unison, and I’ve never been much of a tribalist or a joiner.
By Pamela Paul
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Readers discuss preparations by progressive activists and others. Also: A nuclear threat; geoengineering; Gaza protests in Belgium; a tribe’s whale hunt.
Invoking Nazis and pogroms in discussing the Hamas attacks is wrong and offensive and helps the Israeli government avoid responsibility for its failures.
By Jonathan Dekel-Chen
The department concluded that both schools failed to appropriately respond to complaints that campus protests had veered into antisemitism and anti-Arab discrimination.
By Zach Montague
Pro-Palestinian student activists at one Belgian university have borrowed from the U.S. playbook of encampments and slogans. The results, however, have been starkly different.
By Matina Stevis-Gridneff
A tentative new contract at an Ohio battery maker on Monday was big for President Biden’s E.V. transition, but for some, the victory was upstaged by the U.A.W.’s activism on college campuses.
By Jonathan Weisman
Readers discuss a column by Pamela Paul about college protesters’ job prospects and future careers.
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