A Columbia University graduate continued to protest against the war in Gaza at their master’s degree commencement ceremony on Friday, ripping up her diploma the moment she was handed it.
A graduate of Columbia University wore zip-tie handcuffs and tore up her diploma on stage in an act of protest during one of the school's commencement ceremonies.
The fighting spirit was strong at Friday's commencement, which came on the heels of weeks of clashes between pro-Palestine protestors, administrators and law enforcement.
Defiant Columbia University graduates wore zip-tie handcuffs, brandished pro-Palestinian signs and even went as far as tearing up a diploma on stage during the Ivy League’s first commencement ceremonies. The protesting students were caught…
A hate-fueled revolutionary manifesto that links Columbia University's pro-terror protests to heralded “anti-colonial” movements is circulating at the school, bolstering claims of outside agitators there.
Minouche Shafik, the president of Columbia University, was in Washington on April 17 when she logged in to Zoom to convene her deans. Earlier in the day, pro-Palestinian demonstrators had erected a tent encampment on the Manhattan quad.…
Columbia University janitor Mario Torres provided one of the most heartwarming videos to come out of the takeover of a building at Columbia University by anti-Israel, pro-Hamas protesters.
Decision-making at Columbia University, long a magnet for protests, became centralized and shrouded even to high-level administrators as the crisis intensified.
Since the Hamas' Oct 7 massacre in Israel which left at least 1,200 dead, Columbia University has played host to a myriad of non-students with deep terrorist ties
A Park Slope dad got an eye-popping preview of James Carlson's anti-Israel ideology months before the wealthy advertising heir joined the violent protests at Columbia University.
Columbia University janitors were gripped with “sheer terror” as a mob of violent anti-Israel protesters stormed Hamilton Hall and took over the building.
Columbia University president Minouche Shafik urged other university higher-ups to “engage in serious soul searching” over the fallout from the campus protests.