6-year-old girl comes to the rescue of Harvard researchers studying the axolotl
Earlier this year, a Harvard research team studying the axolotl, a salamander with the superpower to regrow body parts, lost almost all its government funding.
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Earlier this year, a Harvard research team studying the axolotl, a salamander with the superpower to regrow body parts, lost almost all its government funding.
Police say an explosion inside a building on the Harvard Medical School campus in Boston early Saturday morning appears to have been an intentional act.
Lawyers for Harvard University appeared in a Boston court on Monday as they challenge the Trump administration's attempt to freeze billions of dollars in federal grants for the school. CBS News legal reporter Katrina Kaufman has the details.
In federal court, the nation's oldest university went head-to-head with the Justice Department, fighting over the Trump administration's decision to freeze more than $2 billion in funding to Harvard. Jessica Levinson has more.
The battle between the Trump administration and Harvard University escalated on Wednesday. The Department of Education, as well as Health and Human Services, notified the school's accreditor that evidence suggests Harvard no longer meets accreditation standards. Douglas Belkin, a reporter covering higher education for the Wall Street Journal, joins "The Daily Report" to discuss.
The Trump administration says Harvard University violated the civil rights of Jewish and Israeli students. In a letter to Harvard, the Justice Department threatened to cut all federal funding if the school fails to take action. Associated Press race and politics reporter Matt Brown and NOTUS White House correspondent Jasmine Wright joined "The Takeout" to discuss.
The Trump administration said a failure by the university to enact certain changes would put at risk its access to federal financial resources.
The Boston Globe reports a different kind of college recruitment scandal at Harvard University involving one of its fencing coaches. Evan Allen from the Boston Globe joins CBSN's Elaine Quijano to dicuss her reporting.
A Kenyan man accepted to Harvard University says his grandmother sacrificed everything to get him to Cambridge.
Friday's monthly jobs report showed some softening in private sector hiring, but little that would suggest a coming recession, with the economy adding 139,000 jobs in May. Peggy Collins and Laura Davison, who cover politics for Bloomberg News, join "The Takeout" to discuss the jobs report, the latest on the feud between President Trump and Elon Musk, and more.
Believe it or not, the world of computers didn't begin with Bill Gates or Steve Jobs. Morley Safer sits down with 76-year-old U.S. Navy Captain Grace Hopper, who helped design the legendary Mark computer series at Harvard University in the 1940s and is credited with teaching computers to "talk."
The late Reverend Professor Peter Gomes was the official preacher of Harvard University and one of the country's most distinguished Baptist ministers. As Morley Safer reported in 1997, he also happened to be black, Republican and gay.
President Trump escalated a monthslong battle with Harvard University.
60 Minutes goes inside the 142-year- old Harvard institution that's produced some of the funniest people in show business. Jon Wertheim reports.
60 Minutes goes inside the 142-year-old Harvard institution that's produced some of the funniest people in show business. Jon Wertheim reports.
Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy pressed Education Secretary Linda McMahon at her Senate committee budget hearing on her decision to stop funding a mental health program for students nationwide. Murphy also asked McMahon about the Trump administration's demands in its fight against Harvard University.
In the wake of President Trump's efforts to limit the number of international students at universities in the U.S., some foreign students are looking outside the U.S. to study. CBS News national security contributor Sam Vinograd has more.
President Trump is pushing back on Wall Street's new "TACO" acronym that's being used to describe his economic policies. The acronym stands for "Trump Always Chickens Out." Political strategists Joel Payne and Matt Gorman, along with CBS News chief White House correspondent Nancy Cordes, join to discuss.
A federal judge has extended an order blocking the Trump administration from barring international students from Harvard University. Abdullah Shahid Sial, one of those international students and Harvard student body co-president, joins "The Daily Report" to discuss.
President Trump now says Harvard University should limit how many foreign students it accepts.
The Department of Homeland Security filed a court document Thursday morning giving Harvard University 30 days to respond to the Trump administration's push to block international students from enrolling at the Ivy League school. CBS News' Nikki Battiste has the latest from Cambridge.
The Trump administration is directing all government agencies to cancel any of its remaining contracts with Harvard University. The move could result in millions of additional dollars in government funding being stripped away. Fernando Reimers, professor of international education at Harvard University, joins to discuss.
President Trump escalated his fight with Harvard University on Tuesday, announcing the cancellation of the remaining federal contracts with the Ivy League school, worth an estimated $100 million. CBS News White House reporter Olivia Rinaldi has more.
A viral video shows French President Emmanuel Macron being pushed in the face by his wife as the couple landed in Vietnam. Plus, the Trump administration is moving to end all federal contracts with Harvard University. CBS News' Ed O'Keefe, Caitlin Huey-Burns, Jan Crawford and Camilo Montoya-Galvez join to discuss.
A letter from the Trump administration says government agencies should look at canceling their remaining federal contracts with Harvard University.
The government shutdown is now on Day 40 as senators are set to return to Capitol Hill for a rare Sunday session. Follow live updates here.
The FAA ordered airlines to cut thousands of flights ahead of this weekend as the agency deals with air traffic controller shortages during the government shutdown.
Under a deal between the Commanders and D.C., the team will return to the nation's capital in a new stadium expected to cost nearly $4 billion.
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad late last year, is due to meet President Trump at the White House on Monday.
A powerful earthquake, with an upgraded magnitude of 6.9 and a depth of about 12 miles, struck off the coast of northern Japan, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.
The Federal Aviation Administration on Saturday ordered MD-11 and MD-11F aircrafts to be grounded as authorities investigate the deadly UPS plane crash in Kentucky.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia's lawyers argued an interview conducted by a U.S. asylum officer last month did not amount to sufficient due process.
More than a dozen people were standing outside Bradley's, a popular LGBTQ bar, when the car crashed into them after a police chase.
A driver fired shots at Customs and Border Patrol agents in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood on Saturday, according to the Department of Homeland Security.