Campus Antisemitism
As protests fell to “violence, antisemitism, the colleges had to do something,” the Senate minority leader said. “And a lot of them didn’t do enough.”
The school “utterly failed to take the steps reasonably necessary to protect Jewish students on their campus,” Yael Lerman, of StandWithUs, told JNS.
The goal is to cultivate “an awareness that allows them to feel secure in any situation,” Kerri Reifel, SCN’s director of campus safety and security, told JNS.
The U.S. Department of Justice has opened an investigation to determine whether Columbia University concealed illegal aliens on its campus.
“What’s going on is disgraceful—it’s not getting better, it’s getting worse.”
The Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD) coalition declared that it was “fighting for the total eradication of Western civilization.”
“This ruling is an important first step in righting the wrongs of the past year and a half,” stated Brian Cohen, executive director of Columbia Barnard Hillel.
The “Washington Free Beacon” obtained emails from three professors who told students that class wouldn’t take place in person.
It wasn’t clear if the university has actually used the tools, the Harvard student paper reported.
“American taxpayers shouldn’t underwrite the tuition of criminal, pro-Hamas protesters who deface their college campuses, disrupt classes and endanger their fellow students,” the senator said.
“Mahmoud Khalil was an individual who was given the privilege of coming to this country,” the White House press secretary said. “He took advantage of that opportunity, of that privilege, by siding with terrorists.”
“A call from the DOJ concentrates the mind like the prospect of a hanging,” said Kenneth L. Marcus, Brandeis Center chairman and a former U.S. assistant secretary of education. “A call from the Office of Civil Rights is more like a heavy-duty laxative.”