Members of Yale crew, left, and Harvard crew, proper, greet each other after the 4-mile course alongside the Thames River for the 146th Harvard-Yale Regatta, in New London, Conn., on Could 28, 2011.
Jessica Hill/AP
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Jessica Hill/AP
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — A few of Harvard’s sports activities groups can be just about worn out by a Trump administration determination introduced on Thursday that may make the Ivy League college with the nation’s largest athletic program ineligible for worldwide scholar visas.
Seven of the eight rowers on the lads’s heavyweight crew staff that simply gained the Japanese Sprints title — and is headed to the nationwide championships — record worldwide hometowns on the varsity’s web site. Mick Thompson, the main scorer final season, and Jack Bar, who was a captain, are amongst a handful of Canadians on the lads’s hockey roster; 10 of the 13 members of the lads’s squash staff and greater than half of the ladies’s soccer and golf rosters additionally record overseas hometowns.
Harvard’s 42 varsity sports activities groups are essentially the most within the nation, and Sportico reported final month that 21% of the gamers on the varsity’s rosters for the 2024-25 seasons — or 196 out of 919 athletes — had worldwide hometowns. The location famous that some may very well be U.S. residents or inexperienced card holders who would not want one of many worldwide visas at challenge in an escalating struggle premised by the administration’s assertions that the varsity failed to guard Jewish college students from antisemitism.
The Division of Homeland Safety on Thursday revoked Harvard’s potential to enroll worldwide college students, saying the varsity has created an unsafe campus atmosphere by permitting “anti-American, pro-terrorist agitators” to assault Jewish college students on campus. The transfer might power as many as 6,800 overseas college students on the college exterior of Boston — greater than 1 / 4 of its complete enrollment — to switch or go away the nation.
Harvard referred to as the motion illegal and stated it’s working to offer steerage to college students. President Alan Garber, noting that he’s himself Jewish, stated final month after submitting a lawsuit to halt a federal funding freeze that the varsity “will continue to fight hate with the urgency it demands as we fully comply with our obligations under the law. That is not only our legal responsibility. It is our moral imperative.”

Harvard’s Margaret Purce, left, kicks the ball previous Massachusetts’ Rebekka Sverrisdottir within the first half of an NCAA faculty soccer sport on Sept. 20, 2015, in Amherst, Mass.
J. Anthony Roberts/The Republican/AP
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J. Anthony Roberts/The Republican/AP
Harvard athletic director Erin McDermott beforehand declined an interview request from The Related Press on the potential affect of the visa ban. A Harvard athletics spokesman on Thursday referred a request for remark to the varsity’s important media data workplace, which didn’t instantly reply. The AP additionally requested remark from three Harvard coaches, who didn’t reply.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a former Harvard hockey participant, declined to remark when contacted by the AP. Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, a Democrat who performed basketball at Harvard, stated the athletes are amongst 85,000 overseas college students who come to the state to “study, conduct research, start businesses, and create jobs and innovations.”
“President Trump is punishing our students and hurting our economy, all as part of his agenda to silence anyone who disagrees with him,” she stated. “The only ones who benefit from Donald Trump’s actions are China and other countries who are already recruiting these students. It’s the exact opposite of America First.”