A grown woman was reduced to tears at Columbia University in late August after seeing Donald Trump's name scribbled in chalk across a sidewalk on campus.
The undercover footage of the gal's meltdown was released Tuesday by Project Veritas founder and pioneering investigative reporter James O'Keefe.
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“I’m scared that you guys even think this,” the female student told O'Keefe.
"What do you mean? Let's make America great again," he replied.
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“I don’t want my future to be this!” she answers.
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Another student approaches and defends O'Keefe's right to express his "values" and opinion about Trump in public.
O'Keefe and other Project Veritas members also stacked up cardboard bricks during their impromptu Trump "rally" to symbolize the GOP nominee's "wall."
“You don’t have to make a wall. You don’t need a man like this!” the distraught gal exclaims.
A security guard gave O'Keefe permission to declare his support for Trump, saying the university "does not retaliate." However, the guard later asks to see O'Keefe's ID, prompting the filmmaker and his crew to pick up their props and leave.
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A man later shows up with a hose to wash away Trump's name and his campaign slogan, "Make America Great Again."

Trump's face in chalk frightened students at Emory University.
The Columbia student's reaction is shared by other college students across the country, and could very well be chalked up to something now dubbed "The Chalkening" – incidences of Trump sidewalk art across the nation and the negative response that follows, as WND reported.
Students at Emory University are so “afraid” of Trump that even his name written in chalk prompts pleas for administrators to take action.
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WND reported when dozens of students converged on the university's administration building to discuss the “pain” they felt over seeing Trump’s name.