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President Trump has again vented anger at Harvard University.
Writing online,
he said he's considering moving $3 billion of grant money to trade schools across the U.S.
The Trump administration is already pulling other federal funding from Harvard,
accusing it of anti-Semitism, a charge Harvard officials deny.
The administration has told international students at Harvard they have to leave the university or they will lose the ability to stay in the U.S. A federal judge has halted that demand.
There's a status hearing on the case this morning in Boston.
The Senate now has the multi-trillion dollar government spending plan passed last week by the House.
NPR's Corey Turner reports the legislation includes a first-of-its-kind national private school voucher plan.
The government can't directly fund private religious schools,
so Republicans in Congress are looking to do it indirectly, using the tax code.
A private citizen could make a donation to a nonprofit called a scholarship-granting organization,
which would then bundle that money into vouchers for students to attend private schools.