UCLA

UCLA cancels all classes after violent overnight melee on campus

The university said the decision to cancel Wednesday's classes was due to "the distress caused by the violence that took place on Royce Quad."

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UCLA Students are expected to access their classrooms hours after violence erupted on campus between pro-Palestinian and counter protesters. NBC Los Angeles’ Anastassia Olmos reports. 

The University of California, Los Angeles cancelled all classes for Wednesday, the school announced in an alert message to students and faculty.

Powell Library and Royce Hall would also remain closed Wednesday as well, according to the advisory.

"The hospital and health system, the Luskin Conference Center and PreK-12 schools remain open," said the university, which also urged people to avoid the Royce Quad area.

The update from the school came as multiple law enforcement agencies responded to the campus Wednesday morning, hours after violence fights broke out between pro-Palestinian protesters and counter demonstrators.

Officials in the uniforms of the Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, Santa Monica Police Department and the California Highway Patrol were seen at Royce Quad in the middle of the campus by Wednesday morning.

Felicia Ford, a concerned parent without any affiliation to both sides of the protest, said she witnessed protesters “settled down” as soon as police responded. 

“I’m happy that [police] are here. The manpower that came first was the Highway Patrol and the LAPD,” Ford said. “There were hundreds of them here in force. They did not arrest one person – not one.”

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