Harvard University laid off the staff members of its Slavery Remembrance Program on Thursday and outsourced the program.
Staff told Harvard's student newspaper that they were not given any advance notice of the decision to lay off staff and outsource research to a nonprofit.
The scrapping of the lecture is the latest controversy for Harvard in what has been a week of turmoil for the Ivy League institution.
Harvard, which has seen its campus erupt in pro-Hamas demonstrations after the terror group launched its Oct. 7 attacks, has settled two separate lawsuits alleging antisemitic discrimination brought by The Louis Brandeis Center and the other filed by Students Against Antisemitism and Shabbos Kestenabaum.
Harvard University had to be dragged to court to make some small changes to prevent antisemitic outbursts on campus.
Harvard University has settled two lawsuits accusing the Ivy League school of failing to protect Jewish students from antisemitic bullying and harassment on campus.
After long lines at the Adams House dining hall on Sunday and Monday, Harvard College declined to disclose how it prepared to accommodate returning undergraduates.
A program at Harvard University meant to identify the descendants of people previously enslaved by university affiliates has been outsources, while its staff was terminated, a report said.
The No. 1 Boston College Eagles (16-4-1, 9-3-1 HE) men’s hockey team starts a home-and-home series against the No. 8 Boston University Terriers (13-7-1, 9-3-1 HE) on Friday night at Agganis Arena in Boston.
Student resilience can be defined as the capability to bounce back from a challenge or great adversity. Being able to build this capability is complex and nuanced, but there are many science-backed ideas and strategies that help students increase their current level of resiliency.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — The Ivy League will not join the antitrust settlement that will allow schools to pay their players directly, a decision that leaves the conference of eight elite academic institutions clinging to college sports’ amateur model even as it is increasingly abandoned by the NCAA’s biggest powers.