UCLA loses federal research funding in administration's ongoing fight with top universitiesNew Foto - UCLA loses federal research funding in administration's ongoing fight with top universities

UCLA is the latest major institution of higher learning to see promised research funding snatched away by the Trump administration, the university's leader said in an open letter to students and faculty Thursday. "This is not only a loss to the researchers who rely on critical grants,"wroteChancellor Julio Frenk. "It is a loss for Americans across the nation whose work, health, and future depend on the groundbreaking work we do." Grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health are included in the suspensions, Frenk said, but did not provide an amount of how much funding is in peril.The Los Angeles Times reportedthat roughly $200 million in grants awarded to UCLA are being suspended, citing a partial list of suspended grants provided to them by a source. A spokesperson for the National Science Foundation declined to provide specific figures, saying grant awards are being suspended "because they are not in alignment with current NSF priorities and/or programmatic goals." "We will not fund institutions that promote antisemitism," said a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, which includes the National Institutes of Health. "We will use every tool we have to ensure institutions follow the law." The Trump administration has repeatedly cited antisemitism – especially in the context of contentious pro-Gaza protests on campuses – as a reason to deny promised funds to universities, includingHarvardandColumbia. Harvard is fighting the funding decisionsin court, while Columbia agreed to asettlementwith the government that restored its grants. The funding cut comes days after the Justice Department's Civil Rights Divisionannouncedit found UCLA in violation of federal law by "acting with deliberate indifference in creating a hostile educational environment for Jewish and Israeli students." While the formal notice to UCLAsaidthe federal government "now seeks to enter into a voluntary resolution agreement," Attorney General Pam Bondi sounded less conciliatory. "DOJ will force UCLA to pay a heavy price for putting Jewish Americans at risk and continue our ongoing investigations into other campuses in the UC system," Bondi said in a statement. It is not just the Trump administration that has tangled with UCLA over charges of antisemitism. A group of Jewish studentsfiled suitagainst the university last June, saying the school allowed discrimination against Jews to flourish following Israel's military operation in Gaza in response to the October 7 attacks. The lawsuit said UCLA leaders waited days before responding to a group of pro-Palestinian protesters that refused to allow students to enter campus unless they agreed to "a statement pledging their allegiance to the activists' views." UCLAsettledthe lawsuit earlier this week for $6.45 million, with more than $2 million of the total going to designated "organizations that combat antisemitism and support the UCLA Jewish community." UCLA alsoagreedit is prohibited from "knowingly allowing or facilitating the exclusion of Jewish students, faculty, and/or staff" from university programs and activities. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

UCLA loses federal research funding in administration’s ongoing fight with top universities

UCLA loses federal research funding in administration's ongoing fight with top universities UCLA is the latest major institution of high...
US warns of corruption and reported bribery aimed at destabilizing Haiti as crisis deepensNew Foto - US warns of corruption and reported bribery aimed at destabilizing Haiti as crisis deepens

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — U.S. officials announced Friday they are aware of "reported bribery attempts" aimed at destabilizingHaiti, raising concerns that the troubled country could sink further into crisis. The announcements were made on X by the U.S. Embassy in Haiti and the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs. Officials did not provide details except to say that they commended members ofHaiti's transitional presidential council"for their rejection of corruption" and for collaborating with the current prime minister to "work together" to stabilize the country. "We will hold accountable anyone who attempts to undermine this collaboration," the embassy wrote on X. The announcement comes as infighting threatens the stability of the council while gangsthat control up to 90% of Haiti's capitalcontinue to seize more territory in Port-au-Prince andin Haiti's central region. The council's voting members did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Neither did the U.S. Department of State nor the office of Haiti's prime minister. Some people on social media mocked the announcement as they accused some council members of being corrupt. In October last year, Haiti's anti-corruption unitaccused three council membersof bribery and corruption involving the government-owned National Bank of Credit. No one has been charged, and the council members remain in their positions. Haiti's political stability has been fragile ever since a powerful gang federation known as "Viv Ansanm"launched attacks early last yearon critical government infrastructure including police stations and the country's main international airport, forcing itto close for nearly three months. The attacks prevented then-Prime Minister Ariel Henry from returning to Haiti. Heeventually resigned, unable to enter his homeland following an official visit to Kenya to talk abouta U.N.-backed missionthat police from the eastern African country are currently leading to try and quash gang violence. The council is under pressure to hold general elections by February 2026, with the previous ones held nearly a decade ago. No date has been set yet. The councilwas created in April 2024as the international community scrambled to meet with Haitian officials to rebuild the country's government after Henry resigned. Political stability remains fragile, with three prime ministers having been appointed in the past year. Meanwhile, gang violence continues to surge in the aftermath of theJuly 2021 killingof President Jovenel Moïse. In a report released Friday, the United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti noted that at least 1,520 people were killed and more than 600 injured from April to the end of June. Nearly 80% of those incidents happened in Port-au-Prince, with nearly 20% reported in Haiti's central region. More than 60% of the killings and injuries occurred during operations by security forces against gangs, with another 12% blamed on self-defense groups. The report noted that Johnson André, best known as "Izo" and considered Haiti's most powerful gang leader, was injured in drone strikes earlier this year, as was gang leader Renel Destina, who goes by "Ti Lapli" and leads the Grand Ravine gang. From April to June, more than 400 homes and other buildings including schools and health centers "were ransacked, burned or destroyed by gangs," the report stated. Gang violence alsohas displaced more than 1.3 million peoplein recent years. ___ Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Evens Sanon in Port-au-Prince, Haiti contributed.

US warns of corruption and reported bribery aimed at destabilizing Haiti as crisis deepens

US warns of corruption and reported bribery aimed at destabilizing Haiti as crisis deepens SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — U.S. officials annou...
Judge pauses termination of LGBTQ+ health research grantsNew Foto - Judge pauses termination of LGBTQ+ health research grants

A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration's cancelation of US National Institutes of Health grants that research on LGBTQ+ related health issues. Ruling from the bench, US District Judge Lydia Griggsby, an appointee of former President Joe Biden, said she would issue a preliminary injunction against NIH directives to terminate grants for LGBTQ+ health research, describing such directives as designed to "focus and target LGBTQ+ members." "It's clear that why the funding is being terminated and why the grants will not move forward is because they relate to that community," Griggsby said. The lawsuit, filed in May by the American Association of Physicians for Human Rights, against the NIH and Department of Health and Human Services alleges that in targeting only certain, predominantly LGBTQ+-related research projects for funding cuts, the NIH engaged in unlawful discrimination. In determining what grants to cut, Physicians for Human Rights attorney Omar Gonzalez-Pagan argued on Friday, NIH employees "literally do a search term of projects, and they literally look for words" associated with LGBTQ+ related issues – including transgender, nonbinary, and sexuality. The reason the government is targeting transgender research projects "is because they believe transgender people do not exist," Omar Gonzalez-Pagan said. "We need to take the government at its word," he continued. "That this a president of the United States who has spoken so denigratingly of the people that he governs" Assistant US Attorney Michael Wilson argued that the court lacked jurisdiction and would become "involved in what should be a political process." This is not the first time a district court has thwarted the NIH's attempts to cancel grants funding identity-related research. In aseparate legal challenge to the case, a district court judge in Massachusetts ruled in June that the gutting of NIH grants in diversity-related fields is illegal, though that ruling addressed only a fraction of the hundreds of grants actually terminated. District Judge William Young, an appointee of former President Ronald Reagan, said it is "palpably clear" that "racial discrimination and discrimination against America's LGBTQ community" was behind the NIH's grant termination plans. Griggsby said she would issue a written ruling on the matter in the coming weeks. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Judge pauses termination of LGBTQ+ health research grants

Judge pauses termination of LGBTQ+ health research grants A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration's cancelation of US...
American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeansNew Foto - American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans

NEW YORK (AP) — Teen retailer American Eagle Outfitters has a message to its critics, who took issue over its denim adcampaignwith 27-year-old actor Sydney Sweeney that sparked a debate over race and Western beauty standards. The campaign, the retailer said, was always about the jeans. In a statement posted on American Eagle's Instagram account on Friday, the retailer said the ad campaign "is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story. We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone." The message marked the first time the teen retailer responded to days of backlash since the ad with the tagline "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans" launched last week. In the run-up to the ad blitz, the company's chief marketing officer told trade media outlets that it included "clever, even provocative language" and was "definitely going to push buttons." It's unclear if the company knew how much controversy the ad could raise. Most of the negative reception focused on videos that used the word "genes" instead of "jeans" when discussing the blonde-haired, blue-eyed actorknown for the HBO series"Euphoria" and "White Lotus." Critics found the most troubling was a teaser video in which Sweeney says, "Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color. My jeans are blue." The video appeared on American Eagle's Facebook page and other social media channels but is not part of the ad campaign. Some critics saw the wordplay as a nod, either unintentional or deliberate, to eugenics, a discredited theory that held humanity could be improved through selective breeding for certain traits. Other commenters accused detractors of reading too much into the campaign's message. Some marketing experts said the buzz is always good even if it's not uniformly positive. "If you try to follow all the rules, you'll make lots of people happy, but you'll fail," Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consultancy Metaforce said. "The rocket won't take off."

American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans

American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans NEW YORK (AP) — Teen retailer American ...
Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in HollywoodNew Foto - Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood

Harrison Fordwas never going to be a household name, according to a Hollywood executive in the '60s. Ford explained that when he got his debut role in "Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round," he was making $150 per week and was treated accordingly. "I was under contract to Columbia Pictures at the time for $150 a week and all the respect that that implies. I was called into the office of the head of the new talent program, and he told me that I had no future in the business, which was OK," Ford toldVariety. He explained that the head of talent at Columbia Pictures told him to change his look and his name. Tom Cruise, Harrison Ford, Charlize Theron Suffer Brutal Injuries Risking Their Bodies On Set "And then he asked me to get my hair cut like Elvis Presley. That I didn't go along with." Read On The Fox News App "He thought that 'Harrison Ford' was too pretentious a name for a young man," the actor said. Ford told the outlet that, later on in his career, he saw the Hollywood executive while he was at dinner one night. "I met him later, across a crowded dining room. He sent me a card on which he'd written, 'I missed my guess.' I looked around, couldn't remember which one he was, but then he nodded at me and smiled, and I thought, 'Oh yeah, I know you,'" he told the outlet. Although he's undeniably one of themost famous leading menin Hollywood history, he said he never expected or necessarily desired the level of fame he's achieved. WATCH: Harrison Ford walks the red carpet at the 2024 Critics Choice Awards "No one ever believes this, but I never wanted to be rich and famous. I just wanted to be an actor," he toldPeoplein 2023. "I never thought that I would be a leading man. I really was just hoping I could make a living as an actor and not have to supplement my income with some other side hustle. "I thought I would be lucky to have a character part on a regular TV show." During his interview with Variety, Ford took a trip down memory lane and recalled the moment he discovered a love for acting. He was in college and was searching for an easy course to get his GPA up and stumbled upon drama. "The first line of the paragraph that described the course said, 'You read and discuss plays,' and I thought, 'I can do that.' I didn't read all the description — typical of me in those days — because the last few lines described that the course also required you to be part of the school plays for that academic year. I hadn't ever done anything like that before, so I was shocked by that part of it. "But I quickly recognized that I loved telling stories. I liked dressing up and pretending to be somebody else. And the people that I met had a similar bent, people that I might have overlooked. They're people that probably hadn't been really seen before, for who they are, for what they were — and they were storytellers," Ford told Variety. Ford has made a name for himself in numerous iconic roles, including "Star Wars," "Indiana Jones" and the "Blade Runner" franchises. In 2017, Ford reprized his role as Rick Deckard in "Blade Runner 2049," which starredRyan Gosling. While on set, Ford accidentally punched Gosling in the face. "[We were rehearsing a fight] and we got too close, and I hit him. I apologized right away. What more could I do? Can't take back a punch. Just take it. He's a very handsome man. He's still very handsome," he told Variety. Like What You're Reading? Click Here For More Entertainment News Ford is never going to retire from acting. "No. That's one of the things I thought was attractive about the job of an actor, was that they need old people, too, to play old people's parts," he told the outlet. In 2023, Ford admitted that although things have been getting tougher for him as he gets older, he's also glad to be his age. "I don't want to be young again. I was young, and now I enjoy being old," he told People at the time. "You are certainly physically diminished by age," he explained, "but there arewonderful things about age— richness of experience, the full weight of all the time you've been spending getting to being old — and there's a certain ease in it for me." Another thing that comes easily to Ford is being a movie star. "I am very gratified that I still have the opportunities that I have to work, and I owe that to the audience," he said. Click Here To Sign Up For The Entertainment Newsletter With a decades-long acting career to support him, Ford doesn't care about how anyone sees him. In 2023, Ford sat down with The Hollywood Reporter to discuss therapy. He plays a therapist on theApple TV+show "Shrinking," and he revealed his thoughts on the subject. "My opinion is not of the profession, it's of the practitioner. There are all kinds of therapy. I'm sure many of them are useful to many people. I'm not anti-therapy for anybody — except for myself. I know who the f--- I am at this point," he said at the time. Original article source:Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood

Harrison Ford was told to ditch ‘pretentious’ name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood

Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood Harrison Fordwas never going to be a ...

 

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