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Columbia’s deal reaffirms rather than challenges a narrative of widespread antisemitism, while reinforcing the ongoing ...
If they're smart, other colleges and universities will follow Columbia's lead and strike a reform deal with President Trump.
Columbia University’s acting president Claire Shipman is defending the school’s controversial $200 million settlement with ...
The university agreed to a $221 million payout, tacitly conceding spurious right-wing conspiracy theories about higher ...
Columbia agrees to a $221M settlement and new restrictions to restore federal funding ...
Talks in Washington. An expert on negotiation. A balancing act. The university chose cooperation over litigation, a strategy ...
Faculty and others expressed a mixture of relief and frustration over the deal, under which the university will pay over $200 million to have most of its research funding restored.
For Columbia, the cost of mollifying Trump was steep. Claire Shipman, the university's president, agreed the school would pay ...
However, in a letter yesterday to faculty and students, Columbia's acting president, Claire Shipman, noted that Columbia has "recognized, repeatedly, that Jewish students and faculty have experienced ...
acting University President Claire Shipman said. The administration pulled the funding, because of what it described as the ...
Academics around the country are raising alarm about growing efforts to define antisemitism on terms pushed by the Trump ...
There's a reason why Claire Shipman, acting president of Columbia University, cut a deal with Secretary of Education Linda ...