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Harvard Scholars: Travel Ban Deprives U.S. of Best, Brightest

BOSTON — Harvard Medical School professor Thomas Michel was so excited about recruiting Iranian researcher Soheil Saravi, he put Saravi’s name on the door of his Boston lab when his new hire got his visa.

Then President Donald Trump’s travel ban took effect, blocking Saravi from entering the U.S.

“It’s interesting. This is a door. It’s open,” Michel said Tuesday. But he added this lament: “He can’t walk through the door into this country to walk into this laboratory.”

Trump’s ban on people from Iran and six other predominantly Muslim countries has frustrated academics like Michel, who feel like they’ve been robbed of a brain trust.

Boston and other U.S. cities have long prided themselves on attracting the world’s best and brightest. Many have been immigrants, and over the past half-century, their work has contributed to numerous Nobel Prizes.

But the ban and the legal tussles it has touched off have cloaked all that in uncertainty.

Another Harvard researcher, Soumya Raychaudhuri, is impatiently awaiting the fate of a new hire, Samira Asgari.

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