logo
All the US presidents who attended Ivy League universities

All the US presidents who attended Ivy League universities

Sixteen US presidents were educated at the eight elite colleges and universities in the Ivy League.
Joe Biden was the first US president since Ronald Reagan to not attend an Ivy League school.
Donald Trump has recently taken on Harvard University, the alma mater of eight US presidents.
Long before President Donald Trump engaged in a war against Harvard University, the Ivy League has been a breeding ground for world leaders, including many US presidents.
Among the Ivies, Harvard has educated the most US presidents — eight — followed by Yale, at five.
Most presidents in recent US history, including Trump, graduated from an Ivy League school. In fact, from the end of Ronald Reagan 's term in 1989 until the beginning of Joe Biden 's in 2021, the presidency was occupied by Ivy League alums.
Trump has had a fraught relationship with some universities since he signed an executive order during his first term prompting higher education institutions to take tougher action in combating antisemitism.
Since October 7, 2023, US colleges and universities have been at the center of controversies regarding student protests against the war in Gaza, with Columbia University gaining national attention in April 2024 when students formed on-campus encampments demanding the school divest from Israel.
Since January, the Trump administration has made attempts to block Harvard University from receiving federal funds and enrolling international students, citing the university's failure to meet "both the intellectual and civil rights conditions that justify federal investment," as members of the administration wrote in an April 11 letter addressed to the university's leadership. It came after the university refused the administration's demands to change hiring and admissions policies, among others.
Harvard's president, Alan Garber, wrote in a letter to students and staff in April, "No government — regardless of which party is in power — should dictate what private universities can teach, whom they can admit and hire, and which areas of study and inquiry they can pursue."
Here's which presidents were Ivy-League educated, and where they attended university.
Princeton University
The Ivy League's ties with the US presidency go back to the nation's founding. In 1771, founding father and fourth US president James Madison, who was president between 1809 and 1817, graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from Princeton University, then called the College of New Jersey.
Woodrow Wilson, who was president between 1913 and 1921, also graduated from the College of New Jersey in 1879.
University of Pennsylvania
The ninth US president, William Henry Harrison, who served the shortest presidency in US history in 1841, attended the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied medicine, but he withdrew before his expected graduation date of 1793.
In 1968, Donald J. Trump graduated with a Bachelor of Science in economics from Penn's Wharton School, which he had transferred to from Fordham University two years prior.
Columbia University
After graduating from Harvard College — Harvard University's undergraduate school — in 1876, 26th US president Theodore Roosevelt attended Columbia University's Law School, from which he eventually withdrew.
His fifth cousin and the 32nd US president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, attended Columbia's Law School in 1904 after graduating from Harvard College a year prior, but also withdrew from the program.
In 1981, Barack Obama, then a junior at Occidental College, transferred to Columbia University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in political science in 1983.
Yale University
The 27th US president, William Howard Taft, graduated from Yale University in 1978. His father, Alphonso Taft, who graduated from Yale in 1833, had founded the Skull and Bones secret society during his time at the school — his son, as well as two other US presidents, would become members of that society.
In 1941, 38th US president Gerald Ford graduated from Yale Law School. In 1973, Bill Clinton, who was the president between 1993 and 2001, graduated from the same program.
George H. W. Bush, who was president between 1989 and 1993, graduated from Yale with a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics in 1948. His son and 43rd US president, George W. Bush, graduated from the school with a Bachelor of Arts in History in 1968.
Both of the Bush presidents were members of the Skull and Bones secret society founded by William Howard Taft's father.
Harvard University
Harvard University also has ties to the US presidency dating back to the nation's founding. The first US vice president and second US president, John Adams, attended Harvard University, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1755 and a Master of Arts in 1758. His son and sixth US president, John Quincy Adams, graduated from Harvard College in 1787.
In 1845, Rutherford B. Hayes, who was president from 1877 to 1881, graduated from Harvard Law School.
The 26th US president, Theodore Roosevelt, graduated from Harvard College with a Bachelor of Arts in 1880, as did the 32nd US president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1903.
In 1940, the 35th US president, John F. Kennedy, graduated from Harvard with a Bachelor of Arts in International Affairs. In his college essay, he famously expressed his desire to attend the school from which his father, Joseph P. Kennedy, graduated in 1912: "To be a 'Harvard man' is an enviable distinction, and one that I sincerely hope I shall attain."
In 1975, George W. Bush graduated from the school with an MBA, the only US president to have earned this degree.
In 1991, Barack Obama graduated from Harvard Law School, the most recent US president to attend the school.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Wiretap: Facial Recognition, Amazon Ring, And Surveillance Of The LA Protests
The Wiretap: Facial Recognition, Amazon Ring, And Surveillance Of The LA Protests

Forbes

time31 minutes ago

  • Forbes

The Wiretap: Facial Recognition, Amazon Ring, And Surveillance Of The LA Protests

The Wiretap is your weekly digest of cybersecurity, internet privacy and surveillance news. To get it in your inbox, subscribe here. The protests in LA are being captured by all manner of surveillance devices. But federal and local police have different restrictions on what they can do with the footage (Photo by) 'I have all of you on camera. I'm going to come to your house.' Those were the words coming from an LAPD officer in a helicopter over LA protestors, according to the LA Times. The implicit threat, according to some privacy advocates, was that the cops would use facial recognition software to identify and locate those protesting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids. It's not quite so easy to do that, though. A source close to the agency, who was not authorized to talk on record, told Forbes that LAPD will be going through camera footage - whether shot from a helicopter, surveillance cams or bodycams - and try to identify people. However, the LAPD can only search for matches from police-owned arrest records, namely, mugshots. Its own rules don't allow it to search for matches across other sources, such as social media. Federal agents, however, don't have the same restrictions. Any federal agent using Clearview or an alternative can take the same footage and run facial images to find matches across photos scraped from social sites. One of Clearview's best-known federal customers is ICE, which typically uses it in child exploitation cases. It's unclear how often the agency uses it for immigration enforcement. Neither ICE nor the LAPD had responded to requests for comment at the time of publication. Law enforcement has another potential source for protest footage: video from Amazon Ring cameras or its competitors. Though Amazon has stopped cops requesting information directly over the Ring Neighbours social platform, federal and local cops can demand data recorded by those devices with a court order. The video could then be used to identify protestors. While the source close to LAPD said they weren't aware of any specific uses of Ring around this week's events, they said it's certainly a capability that exists. Meanwhile, concerned citizens have also been using Neighbors to share footage of ICE raids and agents in the L.A. area, either to warn about them or to celebrate the actions. In footage from Monday, identified by a Forbes' reporter, a Ring user shared footage they claimed showed ICE targeting laborers at a local Home Depot. Another warned about ICE agents at a mall and a Costco. Amazon Ring didn't comment on record, though a spokesperson pointed Forbes to guidelines that prohibit users posting on 'topics that cause inevitable frictions like politics and election information,' as well as 'highly debated social issues.' Its moderators might be busier than normal this week. Got a tip on surveillance or cybercrime? Get me on Signal at +1 929-512-7964. DOGE pre-Elon Musk's departure and break up with President Trump. (Photo by) The Supreme Court has given a green light to the Department of Government Efficiency to access Social Security Administration data. The decision came after the Trump administration had filed an emergency application to lift an injunction from a federal judge in Maryland. In its decision, the Supreme Court said DOGE staff needed the access to do their job. While the White House cheered the decision as a victory for fighting fraud and waste in federal agencies, opponents said the ruling 'will enable President Trump and DOGE's affiliates to steal Americans' private and personal data.' A cyber researcher found a way to identify phone numbers linked to any Google account. Google has since fixed the issue, which may have exposed users to SIM swapping scams. The DOJ has launched an offensive on the dark web marketplace BidenCash, where users buy and sell stolen credit card and personal information. The agency has taken down 145 domains across both the standard web and the darknet associated with the bazaar. The service has so far generated over $17 million in revenue, according to Justice officials. A man who controls much of the infrastructure that underpins Telegram also controls other companies with links to Russian intelligence agency FSB, according to an investigation by the Organized Crimes and Corruption Reporting Project's Russian partner, Important Stories. Telegram has not responded to the allegations. The Guardian has launched a new way to tip its reporters securely with an app simply called 'Secure Messaging.' It sounds pretty neat: 'The technology behind Secure Messaging conceals the fact that messaging is taking place at all by making the communication indistinguishable from other data sent to and from the app by our millions of regular users. By using the Guardian app, other users are effectively providing 'cover' and helping us to protect sources.' President Trump has been unsurprisingly careless with his personal iPhone, taking calls from numbers he doesn't recognize. That's despite repeatedly being warned about the heightened risks of foreign surveillance and interception that come with using a device with a 'broadly circulated number,' according to a report in The Atlantic.

How Chinese imports are skirting Trump's tariffs
How Chinese imports are skirting Trump's tariffs

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

How Chinese imports are skirting Trump's tariffs

There's a huge drop underway in Chinese imports entering the US — from China. But Chinese goods are arriving anyway, via other Asian nations such as Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia. That may be good news for shoppers, because it means cheap Chinese goods are still making it to US stores despite the higher costs imposed by President Trump's new import taxes. But shifting trade patterns will surely get Trump's attention, and the tariff-happy president could easily put a stop to it by raising import taxes on what are turning out to be loophole countries. Trump's aggressive tariff regime is meant to make most imported products more expensive to encourage more domestic production. But Trump's uneven approach has created opportunities for a kind of trade arbitrage that was all but inevitable. As things stand now, Trump has imposed new import taxes of 30% on most goods from China but only 10% on imports from most other nations. That 20% differential is a big advantage for the less-tariffed countries. Sure enough, trade data shows that Chinese exporters are almost certainly "transshipping" goods to the US by passing them through neighboring countries. Chinese data shows that exports to the US dropped 35% in May compared with a year earlier. But during the same period, Chinese exports to six other Asian nations jumped 15%, including a 22% increase in exports to Vietnam and Thailand, a 12% jump in exports to Singapore, and an 11% rise in shipments to Indonesia. "[China's] direct exports to the US are down sharply, but its exports to all kinds of places across Asia are up massively," economist Robin Brooks of the Brookings Institution posted on social media on June 9. "These are obviously transshipments to the US via third countries."The US Department of Commerce hasn't yet published trade data for May, but data for April shows the mirror image of the Chinese data. Imports from China fell 20% from 2024 levels, while there was a 48% jump in Vietnamese imports, a 32% jump in shipments from Thailand, and a 16% increase in goods from Malaysia. Trade experts have been predicting this shift since Trump began imposing new import taxes in February, because it's the same thing that happened during the trade wars Trump waged during his first presidential term. Vietnam, in particular, was a big beneficiary of Trump's tariffs on Chinese imports in 2018 and 2019. While imports from China fell by 11% from 2017 to 2019, imports from Vietnam boomed by 43%. Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet Since Trump's first trade war, many Asian producers and their US customers have carefully diversified so they're not overdependent on China. The US now imports less clothing from China, as one example, and more from Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan, and India. Transshipment can mean that some products are fully assembled in China and simply make a brief stopover in another country before heading to the US so that their country of origin isn't China. Governments tend to discourage that, however, because those countries gain little from merely serving as a way station for Chinese products headed to the US. Plus, it may attract unwanted attention from Trump. Chinese companies are also increasingly building their own production facilities outside of China. "There are two ways to transship," Jason Judd, executive director of the Global Labor Institute at Cornell University, told Yahoo Finance. "In one, you're just cheating. In the other, you disassemble your product in China and send the inputs and the know-how to a new place." In Cambodia, for example, most of the companies making goods that go to the US have Chinese ownership. Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs — on ice for the moment — are meant, in part, to target countries that are way stations for Chinese products. When Trump announced those nation-by-nation tariffs on April 2, Asian trade partners other than China got hit with some of the highest rates. The new tariff on Chinese imports was 34%. For Cambodia, the new tariff rate was 49%. Vietnam: 46%. Thailand: 36%. Indonesia: 32%. Malaysia: 24%. Those rates weren't based specifically on transshipment of Chinese products but on the size of the trade deficit in goods each country has with the US. The larger the deficit, the higher the tariff. Read more: 5 ways to tariff-proof your finances Trump suspended those tariffs on April 9, following a week of mayhem in financial markets. That eventually left the tariff rates at 30% on most imports from China and 10% on most imports from every other country. But Trump said the reciprocal tariffs could go back into effect if nations don't make trade deals with him one by one by a July 9 deadline. By then, a boom in imports from Asian nations other than China will give Trump plenty of justification for more reciprocal tariffs. But he may choose to overlook it. Trump seems to have a much bigger trade beef with China than he does with other nations. His advisers are also telling him that high tariffs across the board could mean shocking price increases on clothing, electronics, appliances, and many other things just as Americans start their back-to-school shopping this summer. After that will come a Christmas season possibly starring Trump as the Grinch. So Trump might end up talking tough on China and looking the other way as the country's products enter the side door. That would make stealthy Chinese imports an unintended innovation triggered by Trump's trade war. Rick Newman is a senior columnist for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Bluesky and X: @rickjnewman. Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices.

Trump warns would-be protestors on Army's 250th Birthday celebration of 'heavy force'
Trump warns would-be protestors on Army's 250th Birthday celebration of 'heavy force'

USA Today

time33 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Trump warns would-be protestors on Army's 250th Birthday celebration of 'heavy force'

Trump warns would-be protestors on Army's 250th Birthday celebration of 'heavy force' Nationwide "No Kings" protests against Trump are scheduled for June 14 but not in D.C., the site of a 250th birthday celebration for the U.S. Army Show Caption Hide Caption Trump warns military parade protesters will be met with 'big force' President Donald Trump warned people against protesting in Washington, D.C., to celebrate the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary. President Donald Trump is warning any would-be protestors who are planning to interrupt the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary celebration in Washington D.C., this weekend that they'll be "met with very big force". The June 14 event, which coincides with Trump's 79th birthday and Flag Day, is set to feature thousands of police officers and security measures including metal detectors, anti-scale fencing, concrete barriers and drones overhead surveilling the crowd. It also comes as Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom are locked in a standoff over the use of the National Guard and U.S. military to help quell protests that have sprung up against the sweeps that ICE is carrying out at the president's direction in various Los Angeles neighborhoods. 'This is people that hate our country, but they will be met with very heavy force,' Trump said in the Oval Office on June 10. Billed as the U.S. Army's 250th birthday parade, the event in the nation's capital will feature Army equipment, musical performances and thousands of soldiers in uniforms from past and present. Fireworks are scheduled to close out the festivities. Trump's remarks come as his critics prepare their own 'No Kings National Day of Defiance" — or "No Kings" protests — that are set to take place at more than 1,800 sites nationwide. Indivisible, a progressive group, alongside a coalition of partner organizations, said it's holding the events to counter Trump's plans to 'hijack' the Army's legacy to 'celebrate himself.' There will be no planned "No Kings" protests scheduled for Washington D.C. Organizers said they intentionally avoided having a protest in the capital to avoid being cast as 'anti-veteran.' The largest protest is instead scheduled to take place at noon ET in Philadelphia, where the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. 'We made that choice to not feed into any narrative that Trump might want," said Indivisible Co-founder Ezra Levin. " That we're counter protesting him directly or give him the opportunity to crack down on protesters." Last month, Trump said God had willed his participation in the "big big celebration." Trump, who lost the 2020 election, would have missed the event had he been elected to a consecutive second term. During his current term, Trump is also expected to preside over the FIFA World Cup in 2026, which the United States will cohost with Canada and Mexico, as well as the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in 2028. 'I'm glad I missed that second term. Now look what I have,' Trump said. 'I have everything. Amazing the way things work out. God did that.' Contributing: Sarah D. Wire

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store