Columbia alumni tell president to order in cops and suspend faculty who support pro-terror mob

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Hundreds of Columbia University alumni led by high-profile graduates demanded that cops end the pro-terror protests Tuesday — and faculty who support them be suspended.

More than 2,000 people signed an open letter to the college’s under-fire president, Minouche Shafik, calling for “immediate and resolute action” to end the antisemitic protests.

Students barricaded themselves inside Hamilton Hall, an academic building that has been the focal point of previous student protests. Getty Images
Students barricaded themselves inside Hamilton Hall, an academic building that has been the focal point of previous student protests. Getty Images

The alumni spoke out after students smashed their way into Hamilton Hall on the Morningside Heights campus in the early hours of Tuesday after a deadline to quit their tent encampment on the lawn had passed.

The “Stand Columbia” group, which says it supports the school’s Jewish Alumni Association, called on the administration to immediately expel students involved in the violence and place professors providing “material or emotional support” on administrative suspension.

David Friedman, who was US ambassador to Israel from 2017 to 2021, said he was proud to sign the letter.

Friedman, who graduated from the school with a degree in anthropology in 1978, told The Post Tuesday that the Columbia administration and Shafik have lost control.

“They’re sending the wrong signals by bringing in the police and then telling them to leave,” Friedman said, referring to the university’s decision to call police to break up the protest on April 18, resulting in 108 arrests, then not using them to clear out the tent city which mushroomed in subsquent days.

Former US ambassador to Israel David Friedman is one of the signatories of the Stand Columbia statement urging administrators at the Ivy League school to crack down on the riots. NurPhoto via Getty Images
Former US ambassador to Israel David Friedman is one of the signatories of the Stand Columbia statement urging administrators at the Ivy League school to crack down on the riots. NurPhoto via Getty Images

“It’s a misguided and appeasing policy when dealing with criminal behavior. The faculty is siding with criminals.”

The Stand Columbia letter also decries the “wanton disregard for university policies” and “the presence of masked outside agitators …and self-proclaimed leaders…spewing vile anti-semitic vitriol while directing this chaos.”

Video footage showed masked protestors smashing a glass door and carrying furniture and metal barricades to Hamilton Hall where 60 protestors occupied the building and vowed not to leave Tuesday.

“The university must act forcefully and decisively to end the anarchy that has been allowed to overtake and endanger the Columbia campus,” the letter said.

More than 2,000 alumni and others signed a letter demanding that Columbia University act “forcefully” to end the anarchy on campus. Stand Columbia
More than 2,000 alumni and others signed a letter demanding that Columbia University act “forcefully” to end the anarchy on campus. Stand Columbia

“This untenable situation requires an emphatic response befitting the gravity of these destructive and discriminatory acts.

“Anything less than the full enforcement of laws and policies signals a surrender of Columbia’s fundamental identity.”

Other signatories of the letter include Lisa Landau Carnoy, a former chair of the university’s governing body who has been a major donor.

Another signatory, Sherri Wolf is the current president of the Columbia College Alumni Association, representing thousands of graduates of the liberal arts school.

A pro-Palestinian protestor hangs out on a ledge at Hamilton Hall, the academic building taken over by student rioters. via REUTERS
A pro-Palestinian protestor hangs out on a ledge at Hamilton Hall, the academic building taken over by student rioters. via REUTERS

And it was also signed by a series of members of the Columbia Board of Trustees, which acts as an advisory board to Shafik, and by at least one member of the Senate of Columbia, Jonathan Susman. The Senate selects the trustees and has already demanded a probe into Shafik’s handling of the crisis.

The Columbia Jewish Alumni Association was founded just after the October 7 massacre of hundreds of defenseless Israelis by Hamas terrorists, and amid an upswell of anti-Israel protests on the campus.

Hedge fund billionaire Leon Cooperman, who has vehemently criticized the Columbia riots in the past told The Post that administrators have themselves to blame for the “anarchy.”

“I’ve said it before, but I think these kids have sh–t for brains,” said Cooperman, a graduate of Columbia Business School in 1967.

Hedge fund billionaire and Columbia Business School grad Leon Cooperman, has called out “blatant antisemitism” at his alma mater. The Washington Post via Getty Images
Hedge fund billionaire and Columbia Business School grad Leon Cooperman, has called out “blatant antisemitism” at his alma mater. The Washington Post via Getty Images

“What we are seeing on campus is blatant antisemitism.” he continued. “These kids should be ashamed of themselves. They’re stupid.”

However, Cooperman, who is of Polish-Jewish origin, said he is is not pulling his donations from Columbia Business School, drawing a distinction between it and the rest of the university.

He has donated more than $50 million to the school, including a $25 million grant in 2012 for construction of a new facility in Manhattanville, north of the university’s main campus.

“The university has to deal with this now,” he told The Post. “There are too many left-wing professors at the school.”

The school’s press department did not return a request for comment Tuesday.