The National Institutes of Health directive to cap "indirect costs" for medical research grants drew swift criticism.
Susan M. Collins, Boston Fed President, is speaking at an event hosted by NAIOP Massachusetts, the Commercial Real Estate Development Association, this morning. Read a transcript of her remarks ...
The move by 22 state attorneys general comes after the National Institutes of Health announced on Friday that it would slash billions in university funding.
Maine, Senate Appropriations Committee Chair, opposed what she called a "poorly conceived directive" for the National ...
I wonder what, in the end, persuaded Senator Susan Collins that Robert F ... (Linda Hoffman, Georgetown, S.C.) And in The Boston Globe, Christopher Muther recalled someone’s awkward attempt ...
Susan Collins blasted the Trump administration ... The NIH’s cap on indirect costs was challenged in a lawsuit filed by 22 states in Boston federal court on Monday, arguing that “the effects ...
Susan Collins, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg) A resilient economy and too-high inflation argue for a patient approach to adjusting monetary policy ...
Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate Republican from Maine, has become a fixture on Capitol Hill, in her nearly 30 years in office. Collins is a lifelong Republican, but has at times bucked her party ...
Collins endorsed HHS nominee RFK Jr., who said he would "reexamine" the cuts Sen. Susan Collins ... The lawsuit filed in federal court in Boston challenges the Trump administration, the Department ...