"The administration's excuse that these policies somehow address antisemitism are so absurd," said Jacob Miller, a student and former head of Harvard Hillel, the Jewish social hub on campus.
As water trickles through the cabinet's porous clay walls, it naturally cools the interior.Mr Prajapati says it can keep fruit and vegetables fresh for at least five days - no electricity needed.
He named it MittiCool or the clay that stays cool.At $95 its affordable and now sold through 300 stores in India and exported to countries including the UK, Kenya, and UAE."Fridges are a dream for many poor families," Mr Prajapati says. "And such dreams should be within reach."
Mr Prajapati's innovation is part of a growing wave of grassroots entrepreneurship in India, driven by necessity.Prof Anil Gupta who runs the Honeybee Network, a platform for supporting such ventures, call these "frugal innovations".
"It is a mindset," says Prof Gupta.
"Frugal innovation is about making solutions affordable, accessible, and available. Many of these innovators don't have formal education but are solving real world problems.""There is no way that Saudi Arabia is going to agree to that. This has been tried before. This has led to conflict between Saudi Arabia and the US," he says.
Ms Rosner says there are both moral and practical issues with the West buying Russian hydrocarbons while supporting Ukraine."We now have a situation in which we are funding the aggressor in a war that we're condemning and also funding the resistance to the war," she says. "This dependence on fossil fuels means that we are really at the whims of energy markets, global energy producers and hostile dictators."
Founded in 1600 as a trading enterprise, the English East India Company gradually transformed into a colonial power.By the late 18th Century, as it tightened its grip on India, Company officials began commissioning Indian artists - many formerly employed by the Mughals - to create striking visual records of the land they were now ruling.