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As It Happened Apr. 28, 11:41 p.m. ET
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Penn protest: More tents erected in defiance of disband order; demonstrators say they will not comply with a request for IDs

The encampment was set up on the University of Pennsylvania campus Thursday, and interim president J. Larry Jameson had ordered the group on Friday to disband "immediately."

People staying at the encampment, who agreed to be arrested if need be label their belongings and put them in the bins for safe keeping on College Green at the University of Pennsylvania campus on Sunday.
People staying at the encampment, who agreed to be arrested if need be label their belongings and put them in the bins for safe keeping on College Green at the University of Pennsylvania campus on Sunday.Read more
Elizabeth Robertson / Staff Photographer
What you should know
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  1. At the University of Pennsylvaniatents have remained in place despite an order to disband their pro-Palestinian protest by the school's interim president. Follow live updates Monday.

  2. The Penn protesters are calling for the university to disclose its financial holdings, divest from any investments in the war, and provide amnesty for pro-Palestinian students facing discipline over past protests.

  3. Encampments were also set up at Swarthmore, Haverford, and Bryn Mawr Colleges. At Princeton, two students were arrested and about a half-dozen tents were taken down by protesters voluntarily. 

  4. Protests over Israel's war against Hamas have spread across college campuses across the country.

  5. See photos from the encampment.

Apr. 28, 11:41 p.m. ET
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Penn encampment grows despite order to disband; protesters vowed not to comply with request for IDs

Pro-Palestinian protesters stood firm at the University of Pennsylvania Sunday, entering the fourth day of an on-campus encampment that grew — despite an explicit dispersal order — as organizers and college administrators met to discuss student demands.

As darkness fell, there were about 30 tents still pitched, and a few hundred people protesting the war in Gaza remained gathered in the center of campus, making plans in the event that police could imminently try to disband their encampment.

Apr. 28, 11:33 p.m. ET
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City Councilmember Jamie Gauthier says Penn president won't take her calls: 'The people on their campus are my constituents'

City Councilmember Jamie Gauthier said she has been trying to talk to University of Pennsylvania President J. Larry Jameson about the pro-Palestinian encampment, but he won’t take her call.

“I don’t feel like that’s acceptable when there are serious things happening,” said Gauthier, a West Philadelphia native who represents the 3rd District, which includes West and Southwest Philadelphia. “It’s important for all the stakeholders involved to communicate. I’m reaching out to the president of Penn an an important stakeholder, an important leader of this community.”

Apr. 28, 11:06 p.m. ET
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Petition by Penn faculty group urges school to not disband encampment or discipline students

Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine is circulating an internal petition urging the University of Pennsylvania not to disband the pro-Palestinian encampment or pursue discipline against students who are participating.

It has received more than 1,200 signatures in about five hours, according to Dagmawi Woubshet, an associate professor of English and a member of the group.

Apr. 28, 10:44 p.m. ET
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Protesters have been informed of 'their obligation to comply' with ID policies, Penn says

Just after 10 p.m. Sunday, Penn issued a three-sentence statement, acknowledging the president and provost had met with student protesters Saturday night and “reiterated… the importance of complying with Penn’s policies,” including providing identification when asked to insure the safety of everyone on campus.

“Tonight, representatives from Open Expression communicated Penn’s identification policies and informed the protestors of their obligation to comply with these policies,” the statement said.

Apr. 28, 10:33 p.m. ET
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Gallery: Pictures from the weekend’s encampment protest at Penn

Apr. 28, 9:19 p.m. ET
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Protesters prepare for potential arrest

Protesters at Penn prepared to face arrest Sunday evening as organizers said they did not intend to comply with the university’s plan to check for student identification and ask non-students to leave.

Protesters wore green, yellow, and red tape on their clothes and backpacks, labeling who was and was not willing to be arrested for the cause.

Apr. 28, 9:14 p.m. ET
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Campus fire department reportedly searched encampment for drugs, alcohol, and fire hazards

Early this evening, a University of Pennsylvania Fire Department official searched the encampment on the College Green for fire hazards, drugs and alcohol, according to a report in The Daily Pennsylvanian, the student newspaper.

Fire marshals checked every tent in the pro-Palestinian encampment, which was erected on Thursday evening, the newspaper reported.

Apr. 28, 9:00 p.m. ET
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Penn protesters will not comply with university’s imminent request for ID

As darkness fell Sunday, a few hundred people protesting the war in Gaza remained gathered in the center of the University of Pennsylvania’s campus, making plans in the event that police could imminently try to disband their encampment.

People crouched together in lantern light as an organizer told the group that within the next few hours, Penn police and administrators would be asking to check protesters’ identification. Encampment members would not be complying, the organizer said.

Apr. 28, 7:51 p.m. ET
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Campus police set to begin checking IDs at encampment

Organizers of the pro-Palestinian encampment at Penn announced Sunday evening that campus police would soon begin checking participants' identification.

Nick Vadala and Elizabeth Robertson

Apr. 28, 7:19 p.m. ET
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Haverford College students take down encampment to combine efforts with Bryn Mawr College

One pro-Palestinian encampment at an area college is no more.

Students at Haverford College this afternoon voluntarily took down their encampment, which had consisted of about 15 tents outside Founders Hall, according to a college spokesman.

Apr. 28, 6:37 p.m. ET
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Pro-Palestinian encampment sees support from Gaza

Students staging the pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Pennsylvania were heartened to see their support was appreciated in Gaza, said a professor with Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine.

“University of Pennsylvania, thank you all,” said a sign held by a woman in Rafah, a Palestinian city in the southern Gaza Strip, according to a post on Twitter by the faculty group. Two other photos were included, too, expressing appreciation for Penn’s Gaza Solidarity Encampment.

Apr. 28, 5:08 p.m. ET
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Man in 'I stand with Israel' shirt taken into custody at pro-Palestinian encampment

With about 300 people in attendance at a Passover seder at the pro-Palestinian encampment on Penn's campus, a man in a blue shirt that read “I stand with Israel” walked around with a large knife in his belt.

Within minutes, he was taken into custody by campus police. The man was identified by his wife as Yosef Cohen, 70, of Philadelphia.

Apr. 28, 4:39 p.m. ET
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Encampment movement 'creates this kind of ongoing spectacle of protest,' Rutgers historian says

The strength of the encampment protest model seen at the University of Pennsylvania and on college campuses throughout the nation is that it’s not “one-and-done,” said Mark Bray, a Rutgers historian, activist, and former organizer of Occupy Wall Street.

Rather than the pro-Palestinian demonstrators going home after a solitary march, Bray said the encampment movement “creates this kind of ongoing spectacle of protest.”

Apr. 28, 4:14 p.m. ET
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Jewish organizations join pro-Palestinian encampment for Passover Seder

Despite reportedly being told by the administration not to hold a Passover seder on College Green, four Jewish organizations joined the pro-Palestinian encampment for a celebration.

“This Passover, Jews say: stop funding genocide,” a sign — big enough to require two people to hold it — stands by a Seder table full of matzah and a bottle of grape juice put in place by the Jewish Voice For Peace Philadelphia, Rabbis for Ceasefire, Jews for Ceasefire, and Tikkun Olam Chavurah.

Apr. 28, 3:23 p.m. ET
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71-year-old Rabbi brings matzah to pro-Palestinian protesters for Passover

As some of the participants in the "No Hate on Campus" rally left, Penn junior Joseph Hochberg played Hebrew songs from a hand-size black speaker.

Some of his friends declined to be part of the rally out of “concern for their safety,” according to Hochberg. But, he said he does not feel scared on campus.

Apr. 28, 3:17 p.m. ET
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Demonstrations elsewhere at schools across the region

As the protest encampment in support of Palestinians perseveres on the University of Pennsylvania’s College Green, students across the region are taking part in similar demonstrations.

Four colleges in the greater Philadelphia area have erected encampments on their college greens: Penn, Bryn Mawr, Swarthmore, and Haverford.

Apr. 28, 1:59 p.m. ET
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Pro-Israel, pro-Palestinian protesters chant at one other near Penn encampment

Minutes after pro-Israel protesters finished a nearby rally on Penn's campus, more than 100 of them marched toward the pro-Palestinian encampment.

With 25 campus police officers present and the groups separated by a path and barricades, the demonstrators chanted at each other.

Apr. 28, 1:01 p.m. ET
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Pro-Israel rally at Penn calls for 'no hate on campus'

As the pro-Palestinian encampment marks its fourth day, a group of Penn faculty and students gathered for a “No Hate on Campus” rally.

About 250 people congregated outside the Annenberg Center for the performing Arts – away from the encampment area – draped in Israeli flags.

Apr. 28, 11:57 a.m. ET
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More police barricades placed around Penn encampment

Nada Abuasi's boots were still wet Sunday morning after overnight rain surprised members of the encampment. As a Drexel student organizer, she had spent the night at College Green since the protest began.

“Nothing we do here, including arrest, is at all comparable to what is going on in Gaza,” Abuasi said. “It’s up to the administration whether or not they want to put us at risk.”

Apr. 28, 11:03 a.m. ET
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More tents being erected at Penn in defiance of disband order

Wet blankets, jackets, and hoodies hanging from police-imposed barricades is how the fourth day of protest began at Penn's encampment.

The 40 people who spent the night at College Green woke up to the scent of wet grass after an overnight thunderstorm.

Apr. 28, 9:12 a.m. ET
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After meeting, Penn protesters say administrators view their demands as 'unreasonable'

As pro-Palestinian protesters at Penn enter a fourth day in their on-campus encampment Sunday, organizers said in a statement that after meeting with the university’s interim president and provost, they were “disappointed to hear that administrators viewed our demands as unreasonable.”

In the statement, organizers said they asked the university Saturday evening to “disclose, divest, defend,” calling on Penn to disclose its financial holdings, divest from any investments in the war, and provide amnesty for pro-Palestinian students facing discipline over past protests.

Apr. 28, 6:45 a.m. ET
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Encampment leaders met with Penn officials

Four student encampment leaders and two school faculty members met with school administration Saturday, including the interim president, to discuss their demands.

“We're disappointed that university administration has not given our demands the time of day,” said an encampment spokesperson. “These demands are not unreasonable.”Encampment leaders would not disclose what the university asked of them.

— Ximena Conde

Apr. 28, 6:40 a.m. ET
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Penn encampment continues as protesters defy university orders

Pro-Palestinian protesters maintained their on-campus encampment Saturday for a third day — with no signs of disbanding — defying the Friday night order by Penn’s interim president to end it “immediately.”

Late on an overcast, chilly Saturday afternoon, only a handful of security officers were near the site with no evidence of any move to evict the protesters, who are demanding that Penn divest itself of any Israel-related investments and provide amnesty for pro-Palestinian students who might be subject to discipline over past protests.

Apr. 28, 6:35 a.m. ET
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Penn faculty group objects to order to disband encampment

Penn Faculty for Justice in Palestine, the group that held a walkout on Thursday as tents were erected on Penn’s campus, added its objections to Penn president J. Larry Jameson’s order to disband the encampment.

They wrote that Jameson and other university leaders have done an “about face” and have not observed due process.

Apr. 28, 6:35 a.m. ET
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Anti-war protesters dig in at schools across the country

As students protesting the Israel-Hamas war at college campuses across U.S. dug in Saturday and dozens of demonstrators were arrested, some universities moved to shut down encampments after reports of antisemitic activity.

With the death toll mounting in the war in Gaza, protesters nationwide are demanding that schools cut financial ties to Israel and divest from companies they say are enabling the conflict. Some Jewish students say the protests have veered into antisemitism and made them afraid to set foot on campus.

Apr. 27, 6:30 a.m. ET
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Photos: Pro-Palestinian protest continues at Penn