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Federal Agents Search Two Dorm Rooms at Columbia University

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Federal Agents Search Two Dorm Rooms at Columbia University

Department of Homeland Security officials searched two dorm rooms at Columbia University, days after the immigration authorities arrested and moved to deport a pro-Palestinian activist and recent graduate of the university.

Columbia’s interim president, Katrina Armstrong, said in a note to students and staff late Thursday that the officials had presented federal search warrants for private areas of the university. She added that no one was detained and nothing was taken, and did not specify the target of the warrants.

“I am writing heartbroken to inform you that we had federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security (D.H.S.) in two university residences tonight,” Dr. Armstrong wrote. She added that Columbia made every effort to ensure the safety of its students, faculty and staff.

The search occurred after the Trump administration said that Columbia would have to make major changes in its student discipline and admissions processes before it would begin talks on reinstating $400 million in government grants and contracts that it canceled last week.

The government said it pulled the funding over the university’s failure to protect Jewish students from harassment as pro-Palestinian protests spread on campus last year over the war in Gaza. Some of the demonstrations included chants, signs and literature that expressed support for the Hamas-led terrorist attack against Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

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Mahmoud Khalil, who recently completed a graduate program at Columbia and is a permanent resident of the United States, played a prominent role in the pro-Palestinian student movement at the university. The Trump administration has said that Mr. Khalil, who is of Palestinian heritage, is a national security threat. It has also accused him of participating in antisemitic activities, though officials have not accused him of having any contact with Hamas. He is being held in a detention center in Louisiana.

The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment. Columbia declined to comment beyond Dr. Armstrong’s letter.

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Video: Secret New York City Passage Linked to Underground Railroad

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Video: Secret New York City Passage Linked to Underground Railroad

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Secret New York City Passage Linked to Underground Railroad

Hidden under a built-in dresser in a former home in the East Village is a narrow crawlspace, which historians have recently linked to the Underground Railroad.

A person could access the passage here by removing the bottom drawer. There’s a built-in ladder inside the wall. And so you could catch your foot on that top rung and then lower yourself down into the ladder. The passage here at the merchant’s house was built when this house was built in 1832. It’s a secret space and meant to be hidden, but also very purposefully designed. Institutional archives tell us that the passageway itself was discovered in the 1930s, when the house was being converted into a museum, but we didn’t know its significance. Slavery was abolished in New York State in 1827, but New York’s economy was deeply entrenched with the slave economy. A passage like this could have been used to hide a person, really, for a very short period of time, perhaps while they were waiting for transport to their next destination. This passage is completely unlike any other house in this neighborhood. Any other house that we have seen that the architectural historians that we have worked with have seen. It’s really quite a remarkable find.

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Hidden under a built-in dresser in a former home in the East Village is a narrow crawlspace, which historians have recently linked to the Underground Railroad.

By Jamie Leventhal, Remy Tumin, Christina Kelso and Dave Sanders

February 15, 2026

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Video: Is Ikea Cookware As Good As All-Clad?

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Video: Is Ikea Cookware As Good As All-Clad?

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Throughout years of testing, our kitchen journalists have consistently found that All-Clad cookware is top-of-the-line. But that quality comes at a price, the company’s 10-piece set costs a whopping $800. According to reviews, IKEA’s set of pots and pans is seemingly indestructible and capable of lasting nearly two decades — for just $100. If you add the stainless steel frying pan (sold separately) you have a seemingly comparable 10-piece set for about $130. Can this potential dupe stack up against our buy-it-for-life recommendation?

By Wirecutter

February 2, 2026

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Video: We Tested Shark’s Viral Facial Device

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Video: We Tested Shark’s Viral Facial Device

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Shark claims its $400 facial device delivers a “spa-level glow and sculpting in just one use.” “As someone with perpetually clogged New York City pores, I was ready for salvation,” writes Neha Tandon. “Instead of the promised land, I found too many steps for too few benefits.”

February 2, 2026

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