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Harvard is making changes Trump officials want, even without a deal

At the beginning of spring, a new presidential administration, aggressive and polarized, prepared a request menu designed to reshape the culture of the country’s richest university, many of whom were very special.

In his research funds in Jeopardy, the leaders of the university are now negotiating with the White House with billions of dollars. However, a final agreement may not fully capture the small and large changes that came into force in Harvard before any articles are signed.

The university has returned to some of the comprehensive changes requested by the Trump administration. Harvard’s president. Alan M. Garber was elected as an interventionist and contrary to the Constitution, including the demands that the university hired and accepted.
However, he took a step in compliance with the desires of the White House and checked the items that eliminate the diversity offices in the detailed menu of the administration.

President Donald Trump and his appointments made Harvard’s attacks on the Harvard in an unprecedented way, using the hold of the government’s blunt force into a totem for the changes they wanted to see at the Choice of America.


The demands of the Trump administration include the elimination of diversity, equality and inclusion programs. In April, Harvard now renamed the Equality, Diversity, Inclusion and Meltying Office, which is now called the community and campus life office. More recently, Harvard took over websites for the basis of intercultural and race relations, and their websites for homosexual and female students for their accompanying offices, and they have combined them to a new, single center. The government also called for leadership shocks in some departments, including Jewish graduates and others accusing sponsorship programs for anti -Semitic programming. Harvard lifted two of the center, including a leading Turkish scholar Cemal Kafadar in March. And Trump officials asked Harvard’s partnership with the West Bank’s partnership with Birzeit University, a senior Palestinian College. Harvard said he had suspended the relationship and hit new institutions in Israel. The university announced some changes, arguing that they should make them more hospitable and more open to different perspectives. However, Kirsten Weld, a Harvard professor, says that the university independently adopts measures reflecting the demands of the White House.

This article was initially published in the New York Times.

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