President Donald Trump’s wave of executive orders targeting funding for education sent shockwaves through Harvard this week, jeopardizing thousands of research jobs and more than 10 percent of the University’s operating revenue.
US universities are trying to interpret a directive from the Trump administration that seeks to pause federal grants and loans, threatening to disrupt higher education funding, especially for scientific research.
Harvard President Alan M. Garber ’76 wrote that some federally funded research initiatives at Harvard could be be forced to stop work to comply with Donald Trump’s federal funding freeze in an email to affiliates Tuesday afternoon,
Harvard University has hired a lobbying firm with close ties to President-elect Donald Trump and his inner circle as the Republican prepares to return to the White House last week, records show.
Harvard University has settled two lawsuits accusing the Ivy League school of failing to protect Jewish students from antisemitic bullying and harassment on campus.
Harvard University settled two major antisemitism lawsuits with Jewish student groups just one day after President Donald Trump’s inauguration. The settlement includes significant policy changes, such as adopting the IHRA definition of antisemitism,
With Trump on his side, the tech-billionaire appears to be gearing up to remake the world according to his own whims.
Moves intended to avert threats to vital federal funding.
Harvard Vice Provost for Research John H. Shaw sent an email Wednesday afternoon notifying faculty that the University would begin assessing National Science Foundation grants after the NSF instructed researchers to cease activities barred under President Donald Trump’s executive orders.
There's growing evidence that some American demographic groups need more help than others to live longer, healthier lives. American Indians in Western and Midwestern states have the shortest life expectancy as of 2021,
Females have been running amok over the last hundred-odd years, wearing trousers, voicing their opinions, asserting their bodily autonomy, even voting. Worst of all, they insist on going to college.
Jewish groups are split in their response; many applauding the president’s action, others bringing up First Amendment concerns.