Education
The university president said that Harvard must “prepare for the possibility that the lost revenues will not be restored anytime soon.”
The chief investigative counsel vowed “to ensure that the American people know the true scope of foreign funding and influence on our campuses.”
“We’ve been sounding the alarm for a long time now, and it is completely intolerable,” Josh Landau, director of government relations for Ontario at the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, told JNS.
Linda McMahon, the U.S. education secretary, stated that the decision is “a significant win for students and families.”
In his new autobiography, Irwin Gabriel Katsof describes how he nearly lost his soul chasing after money, power and status.
That GMU leadership “needs a refresher on the primacy of treating individuals equally under law is deeply disheartening,” stated Craig Trainor, assistant secretary for civil rights.
According to an official at the Ivy League school in New York City, he chose not to return to the university in a mutual agreement.
“Instead of offering real solutions, they propose vague, universalist ‘restorative practices’ to ‘create safe spaces,’” the organizations stated.
Carly Gammill of StandWithUs said the end result reflects “Barnard’s commitment to ensuring equal treatment for its Jewish students.”
“This groundbreaking federal tax credit will help every parent for a large range of uses,” Rabbi A.D. Motzen, of Agudath Israel of America, told JNS.
Marci Miller, of the Brandeis Center, told JNS that the curriculum was “unvetted” and “rushed.”
“Boycotts against Israel are divisive to the campus community,” Roz Rothstein, CEO of StandWithUs, told JNS.