Trump, Harvard
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Despite only being in effect for a single day, President Donald Trump’s proclamation barring Harvard's international students from entering the U.S. has had a serious, lasting negative impact, the university says.
As President Donald Trump and his team dialed up the pressure on Harvard University last month, threatening to bar its international students, the school issued what was at once a warning and a plea.
Universities are willing to sell at a discount, but not necessarily because of Trump’s attack on their finances.
In the last decade, top officials at Harvard and Yale exploited accusations of systemic racism in the country and at their institutions to remake scholarship and teaching at their universities.
I grew up in Middle Tennessee and became a scientist studying at Harvard. President Trump's funding cuts impact my work and the future of America.
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Perhaps the university should be dismantled, much as the leviathan Bell System was decades ago
Trump’s reckless attack on higher education shows why colleges have to regain public trust.
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Axios on MSNWhat's actually up with crime at Harvard UniversityOne of several reasons President Trump cited for denying Harvard-bound international students entry into the country was "rising crime, including violent crime." Why it matters: Harvard doesn't have a crime problem,
Thousands of Harvard University alumni have signed on to a legal message of support for their alma mater, CNN has learned, an unprecedented effort to back the school as it challenges the Trump administration’s decision to halt more than $2.
In the months since it became a top target in the administration’s efforts to overhaul higher education, Harvard has activated an all-out media blitz to burnish its image.
The U.S. State Department directed all U.S. missions abroad and consular sections to resume processing Harvard University student and exchange visitor visas after a federal judge in Boston last week temporarily blocked President Donald Trump's ban on foreign students at the Ivy League institution.
Melissa Hortman, a Minnesota lawmaker who was gunned down in what is described as a politically motivated attack, earned degrees at Boston University and Harvard.