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Jewish students are planning to sue colleges like Cornell and Harvard for doing enough to stop antisemitism on campuses. "There has been an explosion of antisemitism on college campuses," attorney Mark Ressler told Insider. Harvard, New York University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The plaintiffs in the planned lawsuits will be "students who have been victimized by on-campus bigotry and hatred directed at them because they are Jewish," Ressler said. "And yet when it comes to Jewish students, university administrators have a double standard and they have put their head in the sand and allowed this problem to become out of control," he said.
Persons: Mark Ressler, Ressler, , Kasowitz Benson Torres, City's, Hitler, Israel Organizations: Cornell, Harvard, Civil, Service, New, Cornell , New York University , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Fox Business, . Harvard, . Harvard , New York University , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Jewish, City's Cooper Union, Defamation League, Hamas, ADL Locations: United States, New York City, Israel, Cornell ,, . Harvard ,, Jewish, Palestinian, Gaza
Donors often give for specific purposes — facilities, faculty research, technology on campus, athletics, scholarships and financial aid for low-income students. The Wexner Foundation said it’s breaking off ties with Harvard University, alleging the school has been “tiptoeing” over Hamas’ attacks. Lawrence Summers, the former president of Harvard and US Treasury Secretary, has criticized the “morally unconscionable” student statement and Harvard leaders’ response. But he said that financial threats from donors were not the right solution to influencing universities’ positions on these issues. Organizers of the Palestine Writes festival denied that it embraced antisemitism, according to UPenn student newspaper The Daily Pennsylvanian.
Persons: , Lee Gardner, Adam Glanzman, Sara Harberson, ” Gardner, , Indiana University’s, ” Harvard, Harvard “, Leslie Wexner, Abigail, Charles Mostoller, Claudine Gay, Boycott, Lawrence Summers, ” Summers, Jon Huntsman, Marc Rowan, Billionare Ronald Lauder, Susan Abulhawa, ” UPenn, Liz Magill, ” Magill Organizations: New, New York CNN, Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania, Ivy League, Harvard, Higher Education, Philanthropy, Bloomberg, Getty, “ Ivy League, Indiana, Indiana University’s Lilly Family School, , , “ Revenue, Wexner Foundation, Palestinian, College Hall, Israel, Israel Fellows, Wexner, US, CNN, Wall, Daily, University Locations: New York, Israel, UPenn, United States, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, U.S, , Palestine, Palestinian
Harvard University has become a flashpoint in the intergenerational divide on the Israel-Hamas war. AdvertisementAdvertisementIn the 11 days since Palestinian militant group Hamas launched its terrorist attack on Israel, Harvard University has become a flashpoint for intergenerational tensions about the war — and the broader culture war around campus free speech. Hamas launches terrorist attacks on IsraelPalestinian militant group Hamas launched a series of terrorist attacks on Israel on October 7, with Israel retaliating. AdvertisementAdvertisement"These hateful Harvard students are the future leaders of our society," Rep. Ritchie Torres of New York wrote on X. Some student groups backtrackSome student groups that co-signed the original statement have since withdrawn their signatures.
Persons: Israel, , Israel retaliating, Bill Ross, Ian Bremmer, Bremmer, Larry Summers, Tom Williams, Summers, Seth Moulton of, Moulton, Republican Sen, Ted Cruz, Rep, Ritchie Torres, Harvard Hillel, Bill Ackman, @harvard, Meredith Weenick, Weenick, Idan Ofer, Batia, Les Wexner, Ackman, Joe McCarthy, Claudine Gay, Craig F, Walker, Gay, Harvard Crimson, Israel's, Joseph Prezioso, Elise Stefanik, Win McNamee, Marc Rowan, Jon Huntsman Jr, Elizabeth Magill, Davis Polk, Wardwell, Winston, Strawn Organizations: Harvard University, Service, Hamas, Harvard, Republicans, Israel Palestinian, UN, Gaza's Hamas, Harvard Palestine Solidarity Groups, Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee, Inc, Getty, Republican, New York, Palestine, Alpha, CNBC, Harvard Crimson, Conservative, Media, Harvard University Police Department, Quantum, Group, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, CNN, Wexner Foundation, Bloomberg, Boston Globe, Nepali Student Association, Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity, Harvard Yard, New York Republican, New, Apollo Global Management, University of Pennsylvania, Huntsman, University, Columbia University, New York University, NYU Student Bar Association Locations: Israel, Gaza, Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, Ted Cruz of Texas, Harvard's, Harvard, Cambridge , Massachusetts, AFP, New York, Utah, Columbia
Billionaire Ronald Lauder wrote a letter threatening to stop donations to the University of Pennsylvania. AdvertisementAdvertisementRonald Lauder, the billionaire Estée Lauder heir, wrote a searing letter to the University of Pennsylvania's president threatening to stop donations to the school if it doesn't take a stronger stance against antisemitism. "Those invited to the event had a history of not just strong anti-Israel bias, but outright antisemitism," he wrote. "The University did not, and emphatically does not, endorse these speakers or their views," Magill wrote in an email to the Penn community on Sunday. Lauder, who is worth $4.5 billion, per Forbes, has donated millions of dollars to Penn, as has his brother, Leonard.
Persons: Ronald Lauder, Lauder, , Estée Lauder, Penn, Elizabeth Magill, Marc Rowan, Dick Wolf, Huntsman, David Magerman, Rowan, Magill, Steve Fluharty, Fluharty, Leonard, Batia Ofer, Israel's, Les Organizations: University of Pennsylvania, Service, University of, Apollo Global Management, Penn, Wolf Humanities Center, Ivy League, The Daily, Penn's Department of Arts and Science, University, Forbes, Institute, Wharton School, Penn Law, The Lauder Institute, Republican, Jewish, Harvard, Harvard's Kennedy School, University of Pennsylvania's Locations: Israel, Palestine, Penn, Cambridge
CNN is not naming the site because it reveals the identities of students and other individuals without their consent. A conservative nonprofit said it organized the truck featuring the virtual billboards with students’ names and images under a banner that reads: “Harvard’s Leading Antisemites.”Palestinian human rights activists say doxxing is nothing new. They told CNN they’ve feared losing jobs and endured psychological harm for advocating for fair treatment of Palestinians under occupation – or for simply being Palestinian themselves. Doxxing is the release of personal information without a person’s consent, often with malicious intent, according to the International Encyclopedia of Gender, Media, and Communication. Despite the reality of harassment for Palestinian Americans, the student said, the current sense of hysteria on the Harvard campus is unprecedented.
Persons: Fouad Abu, Israel, Hijleh, , CNN they’ve, ” Abu, , ” Dylan Saba, ” Saba, ” Lena Ghrama, ” Ghrama, Ghrama, ” Harvard Hillel, Meredith Weenick, Bill Ackman, UC Berkeley Law Dean, Erwin Chemerinsky Organizations: New, New York CNN, University of North, CNN, West Bank, Harvard, International, Gender, Media, Communication, Facebook, ” CNN, Palestinian, UN, Palestine, City University of New York School, Law, , Jewish, Holocaust, Alliance, Harvard University, University of California, Department of Education, Daily Cal, UC Berkeley Law, Justice, Peace, Locations: New York, Jordan, University of North Carolina, Chapel, Abu, Israel, Israeli, Gaza, Palestine, Brooklyn, undergrad, Berkeley
More than 30 Harvard student groups signed a letter condemning Israel for the Hamas attacks. On Wednesday, a truck drove through Harvard naming and shaming students it claimed was connected to the letter. AdvertisementAdvertisementOn Sunday, several Harvard student groups released a controversial letter letter blaming Israel for the brutal Hamas attacks over the weekend. The letter at the heart of the controversy was co-signed by more than 30 Harvard student groups. "We, the undersigned student organizations, hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence," the letter read.
Persons: Israel, , Jason Furman, Furman, Bill Ackman Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard Crimson, Media, Harvard Kennedy School, Publishing
More than 30 Harvard student groups signed a letter blaming Israel for the Hamas attacks. A driver rode around Harvard in a truck with names and images of students it linked to the letter. AdvertisementAdvertisementOn Sunday, dozens of Harvard student groups cosigned a letter blaming Israel for the brutal Hamas attacks over the weekend. Images on social media appear to show that the students' names and images appeared alongside the title "Harvard's leading antisemites." The letter at the heart of the controversy was cosigned by more than 30 Harvard student groups.
Persons: Israel, , Jason Furman, Furman, Bill Ackman Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard Crimson, Media, Harvard Kennedy School, Publishing
By clinging to legacy admissions, colleges are not only undermining claims of advancing equality but may be shooting themselves in the financial foot. 'A weak and sad excuse'The legacy preference has always been a dance of public intentions and private subtext. While the rationales for preserving legacy admissions have evolved, the propensity to obfuscate them hasn't. Harvard's massive $50 billion endowment makes it pretty clear: the school doesn't need to keep legacy admissions anymore. When Wesleyan announced it was dropping legacy admissions Roth was adamant that it was the right move.
Persons: James Murphy, , Richard Kahlenberg, Christopher Eisgruber, Ethan Poskanzer, Radcliffe, gosh, James Hankins, Murphy, Brooks Kraft, Amherst, Biddy Martin, Gabrielle Starr, Michael Roth, Wesleyan alums, Brown, MIT's Emilio Castilla, Kahlenberg, Harvard, Roth Organizations: US Supreme, Harvard, Department of Education, Georgetown University, Princeton University's, Washington Post, University of Colorado, Wall, Princeton, Getty, MIT, University of Texas, The Century Foundation, Pomona College, CNN, Research, Council, Advancement, Wesleyan College, Wesleyan, Ivy League, Stanford, Duke, University of Chicago, Poskanzer, University of North, Carnegie Mellon, Occidental College Locations: Boulder, University of North Carolina, America
Newsom's veto marked a rare but consequential setback in the movement against caste discrimination that had picked up momentum this year in North America. Had the bill been signed into law, California would have become the first U.S. state to explicitly ban caste discrimination. Here are some examples of recent policy steps across North America to fight caste discrimination:SEATTLEIn February, Seattle became the first U.S. city to outlaw caste discrimination after its local council voted to add caste to the city's anti-discrimination laws. FRESNOIn September, Fresno, California, became only the second U.S. city to ban caste discrimination after a unanimous city council vote. CALIFORNIAA bill to ban caste discrimination in California was introduced and authored by Democratic state Senator Aisha Wahab, an Afghan American, in March.
Persons: Gavin Newsom, Aisha Wahab, Newsom, Kanishka Singh, Jamie Freed Organizations: California State University, Brown University, Ivy League, Harvard University, Democratic, Thomson Locations: California, North America, U.S, SEATTLE, Seattle, TORONTO, Canada, FRESNO, Fresno , California, CALIFORNIA, Afghan American, Washington
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Persons: Dow Jones, 7ed771d3 Organizations: ramaswamy, harvard, yale
Ambivalent during early internal debate, Kavanaugh eventually gave Roberts enough confidence that he could write an opinion for a majority. The state’s approach would have wholly undercut the history and purpose of the landmark Voting Rights Act, passed at the height of the Civil Rights movement to try to end race discrimination. Senior conservative Thomas, who has been unyielding in his rejection of race-based practices, was ready to write a far-reaching opinion against the court’s Voting Rights Act precedent for redistricting. Meanwhile, Kavanaugh and Roberts came together, ensuring the chief a five-justice majority for the robust endorsement of Voting Rights Act remedies when states discriminate in redistricting. The Alabama redistricting case shook out differently as Kavanaugh signed a significant portion of Roberts’ opinion.
Persons: John Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh, Roberts, Kavanaugh, , Steve Marshall, Edmund LaCour, , Donald Trump, Ramos, Atticus Finch, , Bill Clinton, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, General LaCour, Holder, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Thomas ’, Barrett, George H.W, Roe, Wade, Dobbs, ” Roberts, General Marshall, LaCour, Organizations: CNN, Alabama, Republican, Supreme, Blacks, Democratic, Notre Dame, Black, Trump, Black Democrats, , Civil, Senior, Jackson, Health Organization, Harvard, University of North Locations: Alabama, Black, Minnesota, . Louisiana, . Mississippi, ” Alabama, Shelby County, Bush, Mississippi, University of North Carolina,
The Supreme Court struck down affirmative action in college admissions at the end of June. The Education and Justice Departments released new guidance for colleges in the ruling's aftermath. They said colleges can reconsider how they use legacy preference in admissions. On Monday, President Joe Biden's Education and Justice Departments released new guidance to schools in the aftermath of the Supreme Court decision at the end of July that struck down affirmative action in college admissions. Following the affirmative action decision, legacy preference in college admissions entered a harsh spotlight.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Merrick Garland, Kristen Clarke, Catherine Lhamon, Cardona Organizations: Justice, Service, Joe Biden's Education, Civil, Education Department, Harvard University, Community Economic, Greater Boston, Network, Harvard, Wesleyan, Occidental Locations: Wall, Silicon, New England
Goldman Sachs' summer internship program is harder to get into than Harvard. This summer Goldman hosted 2,970 interns, about 500 of whom were placed in the investment bank, according to stats provided by Goldman. Some rising juniors are also part of the internship classes, however, including Stephenson, who applied for her first Goldman internship during her freshman year of college. Last summer, Stephenson took the subway to work, which had its share of problems. According to Friedland, there's no "busy work" or "shadowing" and the senior bankers rely on the interns to do real work.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, India Stephenson, Stephenson, she'd, she's, It's, Dave Friedland, Friedland, they'll, , Conrad, I'm, it's, I've, you've, Nobody's, that's, we've Organizations: Harvard, Princeton, Investment Banking, Committee, Columbia University, University of Michigan, Brookfield, Investment, Goldman, Columbia Locations: India, Goldman's, Manhattan, San Francisco, New York City, Naya, there's, multitask, Goldman
Francesca Gino is suing Harvard and bloggers who accused her of data fraud for $25 million. Francesca Gino is suing Harvard and the bloggers who accused her of data fraud in a $25 million lawsuit. The Harvard professor claims they "worked together to destroy my career and reputation." In the June blog posts, Data Colada reported on a series of anomalies in Gino's data. Some worry the lawsuit will make exposing data fraud even more difficultGino is not the first high-profile professor that Data Colada has accused of unethical behavior.
Persons: Francesca Gino, Gino, Data Colada, , Uri Simonsohn, Joe Simmons, Leif Nelson —, Gino's, Simine Vazire, Goldman Sachs, Michael Sanders, Colada, Gary Pisano, Harvard, Data, Sanders, ESADE Business School —, Francesca Gino's, Simonsohn, Simmons, Nelson, Nick Brown, Vazire Organizations: Harvard, Data, LinkedIn, Data Colada, University of Melbourne, Disney, Alaska Airlines, Harvard Business School, King's College London, ESADE Business School, YouTube, Wharton Locations: Harvard
"We believe that many more Gino-authored papers contain fake data," the Data Colada professors wrote. Data Colada found that the raw data showed clear anomalies, such as a distribution infinitely more likely to be produced by a random-number generator than actual people. Soon after, Data Colada ran an article alleging that Gino tampered with data in at least one of her honesty-pledge experiments. A post on Data Colada or a tweet from Brown is like a bomb going off in the behavioral-science world. Others who attempted to build on Gino's studies are grappling with having wasted time, money, and energy.
Persons: It's, Francesca Gino, Gino, Michael Sanders, Greg Burd, , Hugo Boss, Gino coauthoring, Swarthmore College's Bhanot, Maurice Schweitzer, Simine Vazire, Sanders, Goldman Sachs, Schweitzer, they'd, Uri Simonsohn, Joe Simmons, Leif Nelson —, Data Colada, Dan Ariely, Ariely, Chris Goodney, Harvard, Colada, Nick Brown, Brown, Jeff Lees, Lees, There's Ariely, Brian Wansink's, HBS's Amy Cuddy's, Cuddy, Amy Cuddy's, Marie Claire's, Allison Williams, Astrid Stawiarz, Marie Claire Simonsohn, Simmons, Nelson, they're, Gordon Pennycook, Pennycook, it's, Bhanot Organizations: TED, Twitter, LinkedIn, Harvard, Wharton, Swarthmore College, Harvard Business School, Alaska Airlines, King's College London, Tione, University of Trento, Sant'anna, Studies, Carnegie Mellon University, University of North, Wired, Forbes, Google, Swarthmore, University of Melbourne, Disney, Lavin Agency, Data, Duke University, who's, NBC, BuzzFeed News, Bloomberg, Getty, Privately, Higher Education, Hill, Duke, US Department of, Cornell University, New York Times Locations: Trento, Pisa, University of North Carolina, HBS, Guatemala, Boston, New York, British, Guatemalan
The strange, improbable rise of Mark Zuckerberg 3.0
  + stars: | 2023-07-30 | by ( Kali Hays | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +27 min
In early July, Mark Zuckerberg unveiled the latest and perhaps most consequential product in Meta's history: a new model of Mark Zuckerberg. Silicon Valley Zuck was a husband and father with a legacy to build and protect at all costs. Silicon Valley Zuck was suddenly faced with something he'd never dealt with before, shrinking revenue. Still clinging to his persona as Silicon Valley Zuck, Zuckerberg engaged in an all-out media blitz to hawk his vision for the metaverse. They were the sort of people Harvard Zuck would have scoffed at and Silicon Valley Zuck would have gently ignored.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, Zuckerberg, Clark Kent, TikTok, Sheryl Sandberg, Mike Schroepfer, Wall, McKinsey Zuck, Rogan, Meta, Harvard Zuck, , Priscilla Chan, Ray's, pullover, Harvard Zuck —, Dianna, Mick, McDougall, Paul Sakuma, Zuckerberg's, Apple, Facebook, he'd, That's, Frances Haugen, Chris Cox, Zuck, Zach Gibson, Meta's, Sandberg, Marne Levine, who'd, Javier Olivan, he's, bode, Bain, Maher Saba, Lori Goler, He's, He'd, Katie Harbath, it's, Andrew Bosworth, Bosworth, Mark Zuckerberg McKinsey Zuck, Mark Shmulik, Bernstein, Augustus, Julius Caesar, Kali Hays Organizations: Meta, Menlo, Harvard, Apple, McKinsey, Business, Facebook, Cambridge, Capitol, Labs, Menlo Park, Q, Bain & Company, Reality Labs, Wall, Mark Zuckerberg McKinsey, Phillips Exeter Academy, Tech, Twitter Locations: California, Hawaii, United States, Davos, Silicon, contrition, Meta, verbiage, Harvard, Rome
The Education Department's inquiry into the school's legacy admissions process could shake up funding sources. Harvard fiscal year 2022 operating revenue sources. According to the school's 2022 financial report, philanthropy, which includes gifts from donors and alumni, accounted for 45% of total revenue. "In fiscal year 2022, Harvard received current use gifts from alumni, foundations, and others totaling $505 million, representing approximately 9% of operating revenues," the school said. When it comes to actually spending all that money, Harvard said it uses endowment funds to "support nearly every aspect of University operations."
Persons: Johns, Harvard Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard University, Ivy League, Education Department, Community Economic, Greater Boston, Network, Amherst, Research, University Locations: Wall, Silicon, New England, Johns Hopkins
Heat stroke is one of the most common and most deadly heat-related illnesses, and it becomes a significant problem during heat waves. Even healthy young people can get heat stroke, particularly if they are working or exercising outside when temperatures are high. Sorensen’s Global Consortium is trying to make it so every health care provider considers weather as a factor in health problems. “It doesn’t have to get as hot in Northern states as compared to Southern states, presumably because of differences in societal, physiological, cultural, health care adaptations,” Dresser said. Harvard is also piloting a program that will send targeted alerts to nurses, doctors and other health care professionals at clinics in areas with dangerously high temperatures.
Persons: It’s, , Caitlin Rublee, Dr, Cecilia Sorensen, ” Sorensen, “ We’re, Rublee, , Sorensen, ’ ” Sorensen, I’m, Caleb Dresser, ” Dresser, Sanjay Gupta, Dresser Organizations: CNN, University of Colorado School of Medicine, US Environmental Protection Agency, US Centers for Disease Control, CDC, Global, Health Education, Columbia University, Colorado ER, Sorensen’s, Harvard Center for Climate, Health, Global Environment, Get CNN, CNN Health, Harvard Locations: United States, Midwest, Colorado, Southern
Affirmative Action in Contracting Faces Legal Peril
  + stars: | 2023-07-26 | by ( Judge Glock | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Wonder Land: Democrats said decades ago they alone would run policies for black Americans. Now comes the reckoning. Images: AP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyIn Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, the Supreme Court held that “racial balancing” was “patently unconstitutional,” and that affirmative action has to have a “logical end point.” There’s been a lot of commentary about how that will apply to employment law but less about another program of racial discrimination: favoritism to racial minorities in government contracts.
Persons: Mark Kelly, ” There’s Organizations: Harvard
Colorblindness Is Worth a Try
  + stars: | 2023-07-25 | by ( Charlotte Allen | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Wonder Land: Democrats said decades ago they alone would run policies for black Americans. Now comes the reckoning. Images: AP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyJustice Ketanji Brown Jackson , dissenting in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, argued that the absence of racial preferences in college admissions “will forestall the end of race-based disparities.” “The only way out of this morass,” she wrote, “is to stare at racial disparity unblinkingly, and then do what evidence and experts tell us is required to level the playing field.” Never mind that colleges and the court have been doing that for half a century.
Persons: Mark Kelly Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, , Organizations: Harvard
A new study links anonymous posts on "4chan for economists" to IP addresses at Harvard, Yale, and other top schools. Other snippets of posts with IP addresses at Harvard, Stanford, Yale, University of Chicago, and the National Bureau of Economic Research headquarters include: "Rapefugees Welcome!!!!! Other snippets of posts with IP addresses at Harvard, Stanford, Yale, University of Chicago, and the National Bureau of Economic Research headquarters include: "Rapefugees Welcome!!!!! Notre Dame IP addresses made up 3.4% of posts from a research-institution IP address. According to Ederer, it took just 15 minutes to figure out how to connect usernames with IP addresses.
Persons: Anya Samek, Samek, EJMR, Boston University's Florian Ederer, Yale's Paul Goldsmith, Pinkham, Kyle Jensen, Ederer, Christina Romer, Scott Cunningham, Rob Seamans, Merkel, bubba, Trevon Logan, that's, She's Organizations: Harvard, Yale, North American Economic Science Association Conference, University of Chicago, undergrad, National Bureau of Economic Research, American Economics Association, Baylor, Marvel, Stanford, University of Notre Dame, Columbia, Notre Dame, Ohio State University, UMass Amherst, University of California Locations: Tucson , Arizona, Cambridge , Massachusetts, Ederer, Erdogan's Turkey, troon, Samek, San Diego
Getting a job at private equity giant Blackstone is getting more competitive. In 2020, Insider spoke with president Jon Gray to learn how to stand out and land a job Blackstone. The billionaire that built Blackstone doubts he'd land a job at the private equity titan today. "Getting an entry-level job at Blackstone is 12 times harder than getting into Harvard. So how exactly do applicants dead-set on working for the firm land one of its highly-prized entry-level gigs?
Persons: Jon Gray, Blackstone, Stephen Schwarzman, That's, I'd, Schwarzman, , Gray, Blackstone's cofounders, Pete Peterson, couldn't, Here's Organizations: Blackstone, Morning, Wall Street, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, Wall Locations: New York, Chicago
Why college is getting more expensive
  + stars: | 2023-07-16 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
After adjusting for currency inflation, college tuition has increased 747.8% since 1963, the Education Data Initiative found. But the net price of college — that’s the amount that students and their families are actually shelling out — has been decreasing. The average student at a private four-year college paid $32,800 for tuition and room and board last year. When adjusted for inflation, the actual price paid for private college has dropped by 11% over the past five years, according to College Board data. In a 6-3 decision the Supreme Court struck down the Biden administration's student debt forgiveness program in Biden v. Nebraska.
Persons: Brian Snyder, , Megan Brenan, Catharine Hill, , , couldn’t, ’ ”, they’ve, Kevin Dietsch, Joe Biden’s, Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, College, US News, Harvard University, Harvard, Reuters, Education Data Initiative, Georgetown University Center, Education, Gallup, Vassar College, , , National Education Association, Foreign Relations, Economic, Institute, luxe, ” Colleges, American, of Trustees, NEA, College Board, U.S, Supreme, Biden, . Nebraska Locations: New York, Cambridge , Massachusetts, United States, , Washington , DC, .
Affirmative Action Bred 50 Years of ‘Mismatch’
  + stars: | 2023-07-10 | by ( Heather Mac Donald | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Wonder Land: Democrats said decades ago they alone would run policies for black Americans. Now comes the reckoning. Images: AP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyJustice Sonia Sotomayor had harsh words for her colleagues who voted last month to bar the use of race in college admissions. She alleged in her dissenting opinion that the six-justice majority in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard had subverted the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection under the law, not upheld it, by “further entrenching racial inequality in education.” Chief Justice John Roberts ’s majority opinion slammed shut the door of opportunity to underrepresented minorities, especially black students, who still fight against a society that is “inherently unequal,” she wrote.
Persons: Mark Kelly Justice Sonia Sotomayor, , John Roberts ’, Organizations: Harvard
Harvard’s Stages of Grief Over Affirmative Action
  + stars: | 2023-07-08 | by ( Ruth R. Wisse | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Wonder Land: Democrats said decades ago they alone would run policies for black Americans. Now comes the reckoning. Images: AP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyAlmost immediately after the Supreme Court announced its ruling for the plaintiffs in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, I received several emails about the decision. From Harvard’s president-elect, Claudine Gay , a message of shared grief: “Today is a hard day, and if you are feeling the gravity of that, I want you to know you’re not alone.” A personal message from a former student: “Today is a great day in the life of the country.”
Persons: Mark Kelly, Claudine Gay, you’re, Organizations: Supreme, Harvard
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