The tides are are changing. While the fall semester may be over, our solidarity with Palestine is not. We are only getting started. We will continue fighting until we see a #FreePalestine — from the river to the sea. (2/2)
— Harvard for Palestine (@HarvardPSC) December 17, 2023
I’m thinking of applying for a job teaching “Jew Studies” at Harvard.
They need my expertise.
I don’t care if they’re “woke.”
If “woke” means “running Jews off of college campuses,” then sign me up to go woke. I’m already broke anyway, so the consequences I’ve heard about will not affect me.
Harvard’s early admission applications have slid to a four-year low as the elite university continues to face backlash for its administration’s unwillingness to condemn antisemitism on campus — while its rivals see gains.
The Ivy League school saw a 17% drop in applications from students applying through early admission, with just 7,921 high school seniors seeking to secure their spot, compared to the 9,553 that did so last year, according to figures released by the university.
That is the smallest figure since the pandemic began, but still exceeds the number of early applications submitted each year from 2017 through 2019.
Its competitors, meanwhile, saw increases in the number of students seeking early admissions.
This year’s early admissions deadline also marked the university’s first since the Supreme Court struck down its affirmative action practices.
It is unclear what effect the high court’s decision may have had on the number of applicants, but in an announcement Thursday, university officials declined for the first time to include information about the racial and ethnic identities of the 692 students they decided to accept.
They said only that of the students granted early admission, 15.5% came from “first generation college backgrounds” and nearly 21% received a waiver of the $85 application fee due to financial hardship.
Additionally, they noted that more than 22% of the students live in New England, almost 2% reside in the mid-Atlantic and more than 17% are from western states.
Nearly 17% are foreign students.
“We continue to attract applications from a diverse range of secondary schools and communities around the world,” Harvard Director of Admissions Joy St. John said in a statement.
You dug the grave, Jews.
I guess go to Israel and get ready to fight all Moslems on earth, lol.
No stronger evidence of antisemitism at Harvard than…many Jews joining pro-Palestine demonstrations? Stay tuned for more in-depth reporting from The New York Times’ Ivy League anti-Zionism = antisemitism bureau. pic.twitter.com/BIkMJEAqtR
— Daniel Denvir (@DanielDenvir) December 16, 2023