Columbia University promises to address Trump administration's concerns after $400 million in funding pulled
- Columbia University faces $400 million in funding cuts due to actions taken by the Trump administration, including the shutdown of agencies like USAID and the Consumer Protection Agency.
- Members of Congress claim that the Trump administration's actions may have violated federal oversight laws regarding independent inspectors.
- The decisions made by the Trump administration, including budget cuts and tariffs, provoke significant criticism and concern among the public.
89 Articles
89 Articles
Budget cuts, hiring freezes: US campuses pay the price for hate
When an antisemitic tsunami engulfed America's elite educational institutions, most university presidents cowered in fear of the violent anti-Israel minority. In extreme cases, they managed to stammer a few condemnatory sentences attempting to cleanse themselves of moral failure. Even at the height of the protest wave, when campus lawns transformed into centers for anti-Israel activism, prestigious institutions deliberately ignored Jewish studen…
More Universities Are Choosing to Stay Silent
New York Times: “According to a new report released on Tuesday from the Heterodox Academy, a group that has been critical of progressive orthodoxy on college campuses, 148 colleges had adopted ‘institutional neutrality’ policies by the end of 2024, a trend that underscores the scorching political scrutiny they are under.”
Deportations and defunding: Who’s next in Trump's Ivy League crackdown?
President Trump targets academia with unprecedented actions, cancelling $400 million in grants to Columbia University and detaining a Palestinian student-activist. The crackdown on Ivy League institutions raises concerns about free speech and academic freedom.
Columbia scientists reel as Trump administration cancels grants, hitting broad suite of research
NEW YORK — Uma Reddy was sitting at her kitchen table Monday night, wrapping up patient notes, when the notice finally came: The $16.6 million grant she had used to build a maternal health center at Columbia University had been terminated. Reddy spent the next 18 hours calling and emailing dozens of collaborators and trainees across New York. For 19 months, they had painstakingly planned with community workers and a cohort of trainees new resear…
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