New York
White House Cancels $400 Million in Grants and Contracts to Columbia
The Trump administration announced on Friday that it had canceled $400 million in federal grants and contracts to Columbia University, an extraordinary step that it said was necessary because of what it described as the school’s failure to protect Jewish students from harassment.
Columbia’s interim president, Katrina Armstrong, said in a universitywide email on Friday night that the school is taking the administration’s actions seriously. Columbia is “committed to working with the federal government to address their legitimate concerns,” she wrote.
The announcement escalated the administration’s targeting of Columbia, where protests last year over the war in Gaza set off a nationwide debate over free speech, campus policing and antisemitism, and led to similar demonstrations at schools nationwide.
The move also represents the latest in a series of attacks by Trump-aligned Republicans aimed at elite higher educational institutions, following last year’s congressional hearings that resulted in the departure of the presidents of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania. It comes after recent executive orders barring diversity, equity and inclusion programs at all educational institutions that receive federal funds.
A warning issued Monday by Linda McMahon, the newly confirmed secretary of education, made clear that the administration had its sights set on Columbia. Ms. McMahon warned that Columbia would face the loss of federal funding, the lifeblood of major research universities, if it did not take additional action to combat antisemitism on campus.
Dr. Armstrong, the interim president, said Columbia was going through a “time of great risk to our university” and that the cutoff of government funds would be felt in “nearly every corner” of the school.
“There is no question that the cancellation of these funds will immediately impact research and other critical functions of the University, impacting students, faculty, staff, research, and patient care,” Dr. Armstrong wrote.
A statement issued by four federal agencies on Friday announcing the funding cuts referred to ongoing protests and antisemitic harassment at Columbia, though to what extent pro-Palestinian demonstrations on campus can be considered antisemitic remains in dispute.
Issued by the departments of Justice, Education and Health and Human Services, along with the General Services Administration, the statement did not indicate what grants would be terminated. But it said that the Health and Human Services and Education Departments would soon issue stop-work orders to immediately freeze the university’s access to some funds.
The statement said that the cancellations represented the “first round of action” and that additional cancellations were expected to follow.
More than a quarter of Columbia’s $6.6 billion in annual operating revenue comes from federal sources, according to its 2024 financial statements.
The National Institutes of Health gives the most federal research money to Columbia, providing $747 million in 2023. An additional $206 million came from other Health and Human Services programs.
Because grants span multiple years, Columbia holds more than $5 billion in federal grant commitments, according to the federal government. While the university’s large endowment can help to plug funding gaps, it is not clear if the school will use it for that purpose. The endowment was almost $15 billion at the end of the last academic year, according to figures published by the school.
The school also faces three federal investigations into allegations of antisemitism on campus that have been announced over the past several weeks. In her email on Friday, Dr. Armstrong said Columbia would “continue to take serious action toward combating antisemitism on our campus.”
Ms. McMahon said in her statement on Friday that “universities must comply with all federal anti-discrimination laws if they are going to receive federal funding.”
“For too long, Columbia has abandoned that obligation to Jewish students studying on its campus,” she said.
Ms. McMahon met with Columbia’s interim president on Friday and posted on social media about an hour after the funding cuts went public that the meeting had been “productive.”
“Look forward to working together to protect all students on their campus,” Ms. McMahon wrote.
A Columbia spokeswoman said the university was reviewing the Trump administration’s announcement and that it pledged to work with the federal government to restore the funding.
Columbia’s campus in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan became a hotbed of protest last year, when students established a camp on the college lawn to oppose the war in Gaza and express support for Palestinian rights.
But the protests at Columbia also drew allegations of antisemitism, after some Jewish students said they had experienced harassment on campus. Others complained of offensive signs or chants at protests, including some that appeared to downplay the severity of the Hamas-led terrorist attack against Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, or to directly support it.
During the attack, Hamas and its allies killed about 1,200 people and took about 250 hostages, some of whom remain in Gaza, according to the Israeli authorities. Israel’s subsequent war in Gaza has killed tens of thousands of people, according to health officials in Gaza, and has displaced almost two million more and destroyed most of the territory’s infrastructure and economy.
To end the encampment, Columbia’s administration requested assistance from the New York Police Department, whose officers swept through the protest area in riot gear and arrested 109 people, mostly students. The police were called again to intervene after protests escalated and demonstrators took over Hamilton Hall, a campus building.
The decision to call in the police drew criticism from within higher education, with many faculty members and administrators recoiling from footage in the news media of riot police arresting students. The move also heightened pressure on Columbia’s president, Minouche Shafik, who resigned in August after a brief and tumultuous tenure largely defined by the protest crisis.
But the steps Columbia took last year, including the decision to call in the police, did not mollify the concerns of congressional Republicans. They continued to accuse Columbia and other universities of failing to adequately address allegations of antisemitism, even though a subset of the pro-Palestinian protesters are Jewish themselves.
While the outpouring of student support for the pro-Palestinian demonstrators lessened this fall, sporadic protests continued. The main protest group on campus became more vocally supportive of armed resistance against Israel, leading some Jews on campus to demand that further action be taken.
But efforts to discipline students for pro-Palestinian activism also set off a backlash. Students at Barnard, Columbia’s affiliated women’s college, held two sit-ins during the past week to call for the reinstatement of two students who had been expelled for disrupting a “History of Modern Israel” class and handing out fliers with slogans such as “Crush Zionism.”
Students and faculty members on campus on Friday expressed anger at the federal funding cut, even as some acknowledged that antisemitism was a concern.
Ilana Cohen, a Jewish woman and recent Barnard graduate, said she wanted to see progress made to combat antisemitism, but was skeptical that the funding cut would promote that goal.
“I find it hard to believe that they’re acting out of care for Jewish students,” she said. “In the past year, I have felt that Jewish voices on this campus have been treated like a pawn in a political game.”
Joseph Howley, a classics professor at Columbia who has been supportive of the students’ First Amendment right to protest, blasted the cuts and said that he believed they were unlawful.
“My only question right now is whether the university will be taking Trump to court over this or just rolling over and accepting it,” he said.
Radhika Sainath, a senior staff attorney at Palestine Legal, which is representing Palestinian students in a civil rights case against Columbia, called the government move “a bullying attempt on a massive scale” that was meant to punish Columbia and its students for their exercise of free speech.
She said it was it was “really important in this moment that we’re in that Columbia University — and the many other universities that will soon be in Columbia’s boat — not bow to this McCarythite attempt to stop any and all criticism of Israel.”
But others said the move was justified, even if they hoped funding cuts would be short lived.
“Columbia has an antisemitism crisis, and for months, I have worked with faculty, staff, students, parents and alumni to urge the administration to act quickly to address this crisis and avoid lasting damage to the university,” Brian Cohen, the executive director of Hillel on campus, said in a statement.
“I hope this federal action is a wake-up call to Columbia’s administration and trustees to take antisemitism and the harassment of Jewish students and faculty seriously,” Mr. Cohen continued, “so that these grants can be restored, the vital work of the university can continue and that Columbia can become, once again, a place where the Jewish community thrives.”
Anvee Bhutani contributed reporting.
New York
Video: Historic Brooklyn Church Destroyed in Fire
new video loaded: Historic Brooklyn Church Destroyed in Fire
By Meg Felling
June 22, 2026
New York
How a Security Guard Lives on $46,000 a Year in the East Bronx
How can people possibly afford to live in one of the most expensive cities on the planet? It’s a question New Yorkers hear a lot, often delivered with a mix of awe, pity and confusion.
We surveyed hundreds of New Yorkers about how they spend, splurge and save. We found that many people — rich, poor or somewhere in between — live life as a series of small calculations that add up to one big question: What makes living in New York worth it?
Maruf Abubakari Sadick left Ghana for New York in April 2023, confident he was prepared for chilly weather.
When he arrived that morning, the temperatures were in the 50s. He might as well have arrived during a snowstorm.
“‘It’s really cold,’” he told his brother, who laughed and reminded him it wasn’t even winter. His brother brought him a warm jacket, sparking a love affair with outerwear, as well as clothes and colognes.
Three years later, these are the little luxuries on which Mr. Sadick splurges when he is not working two jobs as a security officer in the city.
“I really like to look good, and I like to smell good,” Mr. Sadick, 37, said. “I just tell myself ‘I work too hard. It’s self care.’”
Together, his security jobs bring in close to $46,000 a year, which pays for rent, remittances to his family in Ghana, Wi-Fi, his phone bill and groceries. At the end of the month, he squirrels away what he can so he can one day pay for nursing school.
His rent is $700 a month, which affords him a room in a four-bedroom, one-bathroom apartment in the East Bronx that he shares with two other men and one woman.
“Funny enough, we don’t have a schedule for the bathroom,” Mr. Sadick said. “It’s not easy.”
He buys a 30-pound bag of rice for $30 from the nearby bodega that lasts him about three months and a 40-pack of Poland Spring water for $20 so he can bring a bottle to work.
The housemates often share food, usually fish stews and okra soups that Mr. Sadick pours into a thermos, along with the rice, which he then takes to work. It helps him avoid paying for takeout which can cost more than $20.
Mr. Sadick said he learned quickly that to survive in New York, you need to share.
Two Jobs, Little Sleep
Mr. Sadick makes $17 an hour at both jobs, earning the current minimum wage in the city. By next year, he could be making at least $22.20 an hour, with two weeks of paid vacation and paid holidays.
The bump in pay is part of the Aland Etienne Safety and Security Act, a city law that Mayor Zohran Mamdani signed shortly after he took office that set a minimum wage for security guards. The law, which also requires employers to contribute to paid time off and health benefits, was named after the security officer who was fatally shot in July 2025 at 345 Park Avenue by a gunman who killed three others before killing himself.
Mr. Sadick did not know Mr. Etienne, but he said his death terrified him and other security officers, who realized how vulnerable they were at work.
The job “seems easy,” he said. “It seems quiet. Then, one moment, it’s all chaos.”
From Tuesday to Friday he works a four to eight-hour shift when he guards a sprawling office complex in Long Island City, Queens.
On weekends, he guards a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center in East Harlem from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. When his shift ends, he takes the subway for a 40-minute commute back to the office complex in Queens, where he works 12-hour overnight shifts on Saturday and Sunday.
Three days a week he takes GED classes in the morning, which are free to state residents. Mondays are his one day off, which he uses “to make up for the two days that I don’t sleep,” Mr. Sadick said.
During the summers, when school is not in session, he tries to make some money selling bus tours to tourists around Times Square. On a good day, he will make $250 to $500 in commissions. On bad days, he will spend five hours in the heat with nothing to show for it.
He said he was exhausted, but driven to pursue a career in medicine.
“I like to take care of people,” he said.
Sending Help Home
A big part of Mr. Sadick’s salary goes to his family in Ghana. On average, he will send $500 a month to help pay for his parents’ food, his grandmother’s health aide and his sister’s schooling.
Last month, he sent a $1,200 so that his parents could buy two sheep. He sent the money through Taptap Send, an app that lets people send money to countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America.
The sheep should provide enough meat to last them a couple of months, he said. His brother sent over $2,000 around the same time so that their extended family could buy a bull.
Sending money home is “expected,” Mr. Sadick said, adding that he feels “very good” about being able to help.
“We are brought up in a system where it’s all about family,” he said. “You are brought up to provide.”
Self-Care Is Worth the Splurge
When Mr. Sadick has extra money in his pocket, he will pop into Zara or Macy’s, where he shops for shoes, jackets and button-down shirts.
He has six bottles of cologne. His favorites are Al Rehab Lord Eau De Parfum and Mountain Woody Forest from Zara. The Al Rehab cologne, which sells for $10.95 an ounce on Amazon, is for daytime. He saves the Mountain Woody Forest — $74.99 on Amazon — for special occasions.
He owns 18 pairs of shoes, including red and white Air Jordans that he bought for $200 and a pair of brown, suede boots from Zara that cost $100.
“These are my favorites,” he said, stroking the soft Zara boots. “I look a bit professional in them.”
He is still trying to figure out what he will do when his salary goes up.
Most likely, he said he would keep working both jobs so that he could save more money. But he daydreams about quitting one of them.
It would be nice, Mr. Sadick said, to get more sleep, have time to play soccer and visit art museums.
What he would really like is more time to take long walks.
One of his favorite places to walk is Dumbo, where he worked briefly guarding a construction site and fell in love with the sweeping views of Manhattan and the cool breeze that comes off the water.
A place in Dumbo, he said, would be the ultimate indulgence.
“That would be a dream come true,” Mr. Sadick said. “It’s so nice there.”
We are talking to New Yorkers about how they spend, splurge and save.
New York
Video: Fans Show Up to the Parade in Their Best Knicks-Themed Attire
new video loaded: Fans Show Up to the Parade in Their Best Knicks-Themed Attire
transcript
transcript
Fans Show Up to the Parade in Their Best Knicks-Themed Attire
New York Knicks fans showed up in droves to a ticker-tape parade in Manhattan in their best orange and blue outfits to honor the N.B.A champions.
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“Patrick Ewing. He didn’t get a ring. But I wear your sneakers, bro. When I was in high school, back in the ’90s, Patrick Ewing, John Starks, they were the team that I rooted for in the ’90s. They didn’t make it. So as a tribute to him because this is where I started at being a fan, Patrick Ewing. Knicks hat in denim — I’m a denim fanatic. So I love denim — Knicks hat. And yeah, that’s it.” “This is my style. I usually dress like this every day. But I did a special Knicks edition. It’s all really fun. I start with my makeup. I did really cute flames on my eyes because the Knicks are fire. I don’t really know what I’m going to do before I put it on. I just figure it out along the way. Like, this is a piece of fabric and I just layer in stuff.” “This is from my online boutique and the hat I just bought on the way to the parade because I wanted to match the jumpsuit, and that’s how I came up with the outfit.” “She was ready to go, man.” “Can you show your fingernail?” “She’s been sleeping in her Jalen Brunson jersey for the last 10 weeks. We’ve been watching all the games. You want to tell them who’s your favorite player?” “Jalen Brunson.” “I’m pretty sure this jersey was actually made for a human baby. But they’re selling them around the block. And we threw it on Chester and everyone started clapping. So — he wears it well.” “Blue and orange.” “So I did blue and orange.” “It had to be orange and blue. “Orange and blue. Orange and blue.”
By Meg Felling, Jeremy Raff, Ang Li and David Cheung
June 18, 2026
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