New York
Read the Notice From Columbia Administrators
April 29, 2024
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK
NOTICE TO ENCAMPMENT
Columbia is committed to the well-being and safety of all students, and follows two principles in
managing public speech on campus: the right of members of the community to engage in protest and
free expression, and the right of members of the community to pursue their academic activities
without interruptions and free of harassment and discrimination. These principles are embodied in
the Rules of University Conduct and other policies governing conduct on campus.
As you are probably aware, the dialogue between the University and student leaders of the
encampment is, regrettably, at an impasse. The current unauthorized encampment and disruption on
Columbia University’s campus is creating an unwelcoming environment for members of our
community. External actors have also contributed to this environment, especially around our gates,
causing safety concerns – including for our neighbors.
Exams are beginning and thousands of your peers are due to graduate. These are among the most
significant aspects of students’ academic programs. Many of this year’s graduates were deprived of
a graduation celebration from high school because of the pandemic. For many of their families, this
will be the first time anyone in their family has completed college and received a degree.
We urge you to remove the encampment so that we do not deprive your fellow students, their
families and friends of this momentous occasion. The University will offer an alternative venue for
demonstrations after the exam period and commencement have concluded. If the encampment is not
removed, we will need to initiate disciplinary procedures because of a number of violations of
university policies. These are policies you agreed to adhere to when you joined our community.
We have explained that this encampment violates multiple University policies, including:
•
The Rules of University of Conduct
•
•
•
•
•
Disruptive Behavior (Standards and Discipline, pp. 4-9)
University Policy, Violation (Standards and Discipline, pp. 4-9) including but not limited to
operations policies regarding “tenting”
Failure to Comply (Standards and Discipline, pp. 4-9)
Vandalism/Damage to Property (Standards and Discipline, pp. 4-9)
Access/Egress, Unauthorized (Standards and Discipline, pp. 4-9)
Harassment and/or violation of the Columbia University Non-Discrimination Statement
(Standards and Discipline, pp. 4-9)
Please promptly gather your belongings and leave the encampment. If you voluntarily leave
by 2 p.m., identify yourself to a University official, and sign the provided form where you
commit to abide by all University policies through June 30, 2025, or the date of the conferral of
your degree, whichever is earlier, you will be eligible to complete the semester in good standing
515 West 116th Street
212-854-4900
New York, NY 10027
columbia.edu
New York
Video: We Analyzed the Deadly Crash at LaGuardia
new video loaded: We Analyzed the Deadly Crash at LaGuardia

By Lazaro Gamio, Coleman Lowndes and James Surdam
March 27, 2026
New York
Video: LaGuardia Crash Survivors Recount Ordeal
“I just thought, please don’t let this be how my life ends. I’m not ready to die. When we landed, it was a very rough landing. Like we landed and the plane jolted back up, and that caught a lot of passengers off guard. Everyone kind of like, ‘What’s going on?’ And then you hear the pilot braking, and it was like just this grinding sound.” “Everybody was shocked everywhere. There was — there’s people screaming. The plane just veered off course. I mean, it was just — it all happened so quickly, but it all felt just like a very dire situation.” “Oh, God. Oh my goodness. That’s crazy.” “People were bleeding from their nose, cuts and scrapes. I saw black eyes, all different types of facial contusions, bruising and bleeding. I was sitting by the exit door, and I opened the exit door. There was a sense of camaraderie amongst the survivors. Nobody was pushing, shoving, ‘I got to get out first.’” “The plane actually tipped back as we were leaving, as people were getting off the plane. That was when the nose kind of fell off the front of the plane, and the whole plane kind of went up to what we’d seen in all the pictures of the plane’s nose in the air.” And there was no slide when we got out. A lot of us were jumping off of the airplane wing to get down. And when I got out and I saw that the front of the plane, how destroyed it was, I just was — I was in shock.” “It was only really when I was outside of the plane, looking back at the plane, and I had seen what had happened to the cockpit, and then just like this sense of dread overcame me, where I was just like, wow, a lot of people might have just been pretty badly hurt.” “I’m grateful to the pilots who were so courageous and brave, and acted swiftly, and they saved our lives. And if it wasn’t for them, I wouldn’t be able to come home to my family. I’m forever indebted to them. They’re my heroes.”
New York
Video: Passenger Jet and Fire Truck Crash at LaGuardia Airport, Leaving 2 Dead
new video loaded: Passenger Jet and Fire Truck Crash at LaGuardia Airport, Leaving 2 Dead
By Axel Boada and Monika Cvorak
March 23, 2026
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