N.Y.U. Says It Will Discipline Students Who Remain in Encampment
The university had set a noon deadline for an end to overnight stays at the site, but students remained there on Monday afternoon.
By Maia Coleman and
The university had set a noon deadline for an end to overnight stays at the site, but students remained there on Monday afternoon.
By Maia Coleman and
Michael D. Cohen’s lawyers took on OAN over the false story. The settlement came as right-wing news outlets face a barrage of defamation suits.
By Maggie Haberman and
Sandra Doorley, the district attorney of Monroe County, N.Y., refused to pull over and responded angrily to the officer who confronted her, body camera footage showed. Now she faces calls to resign.
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Pro-Palestinian student activists say their movement is anti-Zionist but not antisemitic. It is not a distinction that everyone accepts.
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Student Protester Is Suspended After Anti-Zionist Video
Khymani James, a Columbia University student, was barred from campus after his January video resurfaced online last week.
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Homelessness Is Especially Hard on Children. Making Music Helps.
Therapists from the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music have found that teaching homeless children to make beats and write songs is a way to heal trauma.
By Andy Newman and
Columbia Protests: The Musical
Students at the university staged “Mayday,” a show that satirizes the administration, especially the beleaguered president, Nemat Shafik.
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The Aggressive and Expensive Legal Team Defending Mayor Adams
With Mayor Eric Adams and his top aides facing several investigations, he is amassing a team of high-powered lawyers paid by his donors and city taxpayers.
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What’s So Funny About a Dead Comedian?
Kenny DeForest was beloved among his fellow stand-ups. After his sudden death, they came together to grieve — and to confront comedy’s eternal question: Too soon?
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It’s a challenging time for the theater industry, but each new opening is another reason to pause for a moment and celebrate.
By Michael Paulson and Landon Nordeman
The Columbia University building, which opened in 1907, has been occupied several times by student activists.
By John Yoon
The reptiles, an endangered species, hadn’t been seen in the state since the 1970s.
By James Barron
The group, which led the fight against Gov. Kathy Hochul’s nominee to lead the state’s top court, argues that judges are routinely reappointed to the bench without sufficient evaluation.
By Hurubie Meko
On Monday, Columbia administrators issued an ultimatum to student protestors: leave their encampments or face suspension. In response, several faculty members created a human barrier.
By Alexandra Eaton, Neil Collier, Chevaz Clarke and Kassie Bracken
Students in the encampment were told they would be suspended if they did not leave before the deadline.
A New York State forest ranger who worked in the Adirondacks, she died after falling about 1,000 feet from a peak at Denali National Park and Preserve in Alaska.
By Gaya Gupta
Blade, after a decade of flying passengers to eastern Long Island on helicopters, is getting into the luxury coach business.
By Andrew Zucker
Missing a morning ritual, an accidental act of recycling and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
A new jury would hear from only one or both of the women whom he was convicted of assaulting, in what analysts say will be a much narrower and weaker case.
By Jan Ransom and Hurubie Meko
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