
The University of Massachusetts Amherst confirmed Saturday that federal authorities have revoked the visas of five international students. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Chancellor Javier Reyes called the incidents “troubling news” in a letter was published online Friday evening. “In each of the five cases, the students’ legal status to remain in the United States has been revoked,” Reyes wrote.
Main Idea: UMass Amherst says federal authorities revoked the visas of five international students, and Chancellor Javier Reyes said the school is trying to support them.
Key Points:
Visa revocations can scare international students away from US colleges, which may cut tuition revenue and weaken campus communities and local spending.
UMass Amherst’s support and emergency aid could help affected students stay enrolled and reduce sudden disruption for families and nearby businesses.
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Central institution confirming the visa revocations and responding to the impact on its international students.
Named university leader whose letter and comments drive the article’s main response.
Federal agency referenced as involved in the visa-revocation crackdown and asked for comment.
Agency whose SEVIS database was used to discover the visa status revocations.
Another university reporting a student visa revocation in the broader crackdown.
Mentioned as another university system affected by similar visa revocations.
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Sign in to commentCited as a school where foreign-born students and scholars appear to have been targeted.
Appears only through the University of California system’s multi-campus impact, as part of the broader state-based higher-education context.
Cited as a school where foreign-born students and scholars appear to have been targeted.
Cited as a school where foreign-born students and scholars appear to have been targeted.