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Admitted students at Columbia University are opting out of attending the prestigious Ivy League institution due to the disruption caused by anti-Israel demonstrations on its campus, as reported by the New York Post.
A college admissions advisor mentioned to The Post that 10 high school seniors under their guidance, who were accepted by Columbia, have chosen to pursue their education at different schools.
“This would not have been the case three years ago,” Christopher Rim, CEO of Command Education, told the Post. “The actual brand has been tarnished.”
Rim further noted that individuals who plan to join for the academic year 2025–2026 are mostly those “who were not accepted elsewhere,” indicating that the prevailing “erratic situation” has led to perceptions of Columbia being a volatile place for academia.
Fox News Digital reached out to Columbia for comment.
Ivy League woes extend beyond Columbia, though.
After watching Trump’s intervention on Columbia’s campus, Interim Harvard Dean of Social Science David M. Cutler reportedly dismissed faculty leaders from the school’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies (CMES), saying that the school’s “programming on Palestine was insufficiently balanced,” according to the Harvard Crimson.
CMES’ director, Turkish studies professor Cemal Kafadar, and associate director, history assistant professor Rosie Bsheer, were reportedly purged from their posts inside the center.

A view of the encampment in Harvard yard. The “Liberated Zone” had several signs decrying genocide and calling for divestment from Israel. (Nikolas Lanum/Fox News Digital)
Harvard’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors responded with condemnation of their own.
“Not only has such a standard never been required before of any other centers, but the standard itself, if real, would be a new ideological attempt by critics of the university to undermine its faculty’s subject-area expertise and to dictate what its faculty teaches,” the chapter said in a statement.
The Department of Education also recently announced a “comprehensive review” of federal contracts and government-funded grants at Harvard, as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on antisemitism on campuses.
The agency said in a press release on Monday that it will review more than $255.6 million in contracts between Harvard, its affiliates and the federal government, plus nearly $9 billion worth of grants.
Fox News Digital reached out to Harvard.
Fox News Digital’s Andrea Margolis contributed to this report.