UK: Call for more holistic approach to HE

The Guardian: Call for more holistic approach to HE

Universities will be urged to nourish students’ souls as well as their minds and wallets at the Guardian Higher Education summit in London next week.

Today’s students are as interested in their own personal development as they are in learning about their subject or getting a well-paid job, university and student leaders will say. chairwoman They will argue that students are disillusioned with the consumerist society they have grown up in and want learning environments that emphasise sustainability and value human interaction.

New York: Students evicted for low grades

Newsday: Low grades cost 87 SUNY students their dorms

SUNY Old Westbury has removed 87 residential students from their dormitories for having grade point averages below 2.0, enforcing a policy that appears to be the only one of its kind on Long Island.

U.S. Universities Rush to Set Up Outposts Abroad

The New York Times: U.S. Universities Rush to Set Up Outposts Abroad

When John Sexton, the president of New York University, first met Omar Saif Ghobash, an investor trying to entice him to open a branch campus in the United Arab Emirates, Mr. Sexton was not sure what to make of the proposal — so he asked for a $50 million gift.

Ban on Head Scarves Voted Out in Turkey

The Washington Post: Ban on Head Scarves Voted Out in Turkey

Turkey’s parliament voted Saturday to end a more than 80-year-old ban on women wearing head scarves at universities, acknowledging the rising influence of conservative Islam in the most determinedly secular republic of the Muslim world.

Professors strike at Uganda’s Makerere I

The Monitor (Kampala): Uganda: Makerere Lecturers On Strike

MAKERERE University lecturers have laid down their tools.

They said yesterday that they would only return to lecture rooms if the university management meets a set of conditions, including payment of arrears of all their teaching and non-teaching allowances of up to December 14, 2007, when the first semester ended.

Woman shoots 2, then self on La. campus

UPI: Woman shoots 2, then self on La. campus

Three students died at Louisiana Technical College in Baton Rouge Friday, where police said a woman shot two other females then turned the gun on herself.

UT regents discuss border fence

Austin American-Statesman: UT regents discuss border fence

Regents unanimously offer support for fence while criticizing plan to leave 166 acres of the campus on the other side.

University of Texas System regents, hoping to avoid a lawsuit by the federal government, called Wednesday for negotiations to resolve a dispute concerning a proposed border fence that would cut through parts of the campus of UT-Brownsville and Texas Southmost College.

ORU money funneled, suit claims

Tulsa World: ORU money funneled, suit claims

More than $1 billion annually was funneled through ORU, a former accountant claims.

A former Oral Roberts University accountant revised his lawsuit Thursday to allege that more than $1 billion annually was funneled through the university, possibly to regents.

“It appears that many of the former board members were actual participants in the funneling of money through the university for their own eventual personal use, and thus, the foxes were watching the hen house,” says former accountant Trent Huddleston’s lawsuit.

The money “was not used for any legitimate purpose” that Huddleston
knew, his lawsuit says.

Gossip and Slander at a Campus Near You

Inside Higher Ed: Gossip and Slander at a Campus Near You

In the annals of online discourse, “did you hear about [student]’s nose job?” isn’t among the best of what the Internet has to offer. It also isn’t the worst. An anonymous Web site that’s caught the attention — and provoked the ire — of students across the country has already unleashed comments like that one, and much worse, in carefree, unregulated and sometimes vicious discussion threads that have raised privacy concerns and condemnations on several campuses.

On JuicyCampus.com, anyone can post to campus-specific boards with the guarantee that their identities will be protected and their messages left uncensored. At some colleges, the site has caught on — particularly among campus Greeks. The result is often a barrage of shout-outs, accusations, open threads (“Hottest Frat Boy!?!!”) and often, personal attacks, assertions about women’s sexual history and even death threats. In the site’s FAQ, the creators note: “Facts can be untrue. Opinions can be stupid, or ignorant, or mean-spirited, but they can’t be untrue. And we believe everyone is entitled to their opinion.”

Marxist critic Eagleton faces axe at debt-hit university

The Guardian: Marxist critic Eagleton faces axe at debt-hit university

Terry Eagleton, Britain’s leading Marxist literary critic, faces the axe at Manchester University, where he has been involved in one of the most ferocious literary spats of recent years with the novelist Martin Amis.

Tumult Hits Texas Tech, Again

The Chronicle: Tumult Hits Texas Tech, Again

Texas Tech University had reached some long-sought goals in recent years. It finally got a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, was being led by a popular and personable president, and had stabilized after years of leadership turnover.

Beginning in December, a series of bombshells hit. The university’s accreditor put the institution on probation (The Chronicle, December 17, 2007), a move its chancellor called a “public-relations nightmare.” By the beginning of this month, the president, Jon S. Whitmore, had announced his resignation (The Chronicle, February 4), followed three days later by the resignation of the best-known person on the campus, Bob Knight, the basketball coach (The Chronicle, February 6).

Is Your College Student Safe at School?

Readers Digest: Is Your College Student Safe at School?

Almost a year after the Virginia Tech shooting, colleges are getting smarter about campus risks. RD gives out grades and tells parents what to study up on.

Iowa: ISU prof loses intelligent design fight

The Des Moines Register: ISU prof loses intelligent design fight

The Iowa Board of Regents today denied an appeal by Iowa State Professor Guillermo Gonzalez, an intelligent design supporter who has lost a bid for academic tenure.

Tenure is essentially a lifetime appointment at a university.

Gonzalez, an assistant professor in physics and astronomy, has supported intelligent design, which disputes parts of the theory of evolution.

He maintains that he lost a bid for tenure because of his support for the idea.
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Professor at Israeli College Threatened With Dismissal Over Uniformed Student

The Chronicle News Blog: Professor at Israeli College Threatened With Dismissal Over Uniformed Student

An Israeli college professor’s refusal to teach a student wearing a military uniform has led to a campus debate about free speech and the possible dismissal of the professor, The Jerusalem Post reported today.

Educause Lobbies Against Piracy Measure in House Bill

The Chronicle News Blog: Educause Lobbies Against Piracy Measure in House Bill

Washington — Mark A. Luker, a vice president of Educause, said last night that his group was pushing lawmakers to block a measure designed to stem online swapping of music files on college campuses. The measure is part of legislation to reauthorize the Higher Education Act (HR 4137), which is scheduled for a vote today by the U.S. House of Representatives.

Alabama: Former college head agrees to plea deal in system probe

AP: Former Southern Union head agrees to plea deal in system probe

Former Southern Union State Community College President Joanne Jordan has agreed to plead guilty to obstruction of justice for lying to a grand jury probing Alabama’s two-year college system, a federal prosecutor said Thursday.

U.S. Attorney Alice Martin in Birmingham said Jordan, 66, of Ashland admits giving false testimony and also has agreed to plead guilty to a state ethics charge related to the federal charge.

The federal obstruction charge could bring a penalty of no more than 10 years in prison and fines of $250,000, or both. She will enter a formal plea later.

Canadian University Says Atheists Are Welcome to Join the Club After All

The Record: Blogs blast snub of atheist club

The rejection of a group for atheists and other “freethinkers” as a campus club at Wilfrid Laurier University has touched off a firestorm on the Internet.

Angry e-mails and at least 19 blogs, some with international readership, are sizzling the e-waves.

Writers professing “atheism, agnosticism, humanism, or just general non-belief” are blasting WLU’s students’ union for intolerance toward people with no religious affiliation, said Anatolijs Venovcevs, co-founder of Laurier Freethought Alliance.

The writers are particularly incensed that religion-based groups, such as Laurier Christian Fellowship, have campus club status at Laurier.

Move to Lift Head-Scarf Ban Wins First Approval in Turkey’s Parliament

The Chronicle: Move to Lift Head-Scarf Ban Wins First Approval in Turkey’s Parliament

Turkish lawmakers voted early Thursday morning to amend their country’s Constitution to allow observant Muslim women to wear head scarves at universities. The controversial measure, which requires a two-thirds majority for final passage, won preliminary approval on a secret ballot by a vote of more than 400 in favor and about 90 against after a marathon parliament session that had begun 12 hours earlier, according to news reports.

UCLA Professor’s House Is Firebombed

The Chronicle: UCLA Professor’s House Is Firebombed

The house of a professor at the University of California at Los Angeles was damaged by a firebomb left at the front door early Tuesday in an attack apparently orchestrated by animal-rights extremists, the university said in a news release. No one was at home when the device ignited, charring the door.

The incident was the second attack in four months against Edythe D. London, a professor of psychiatry and of molecular and medical pharmacology who uses primates in her research on nicotine addiction.

A statement issued today by the North American Animal Liberation Press Office said “animal liberationists” were responsible for placing the incendiary device. The press office relays messages from the underground Animal Liberation Front, but is not officially related to the group.

Pipeline to College Presidencies Carries Few Members of Minority Groups

The Chronicle: Pipeline to College Presidencies Carries Few Members of Minority Groups

Women represent a significant share of the senior campus administrators whose jobs are most likely to lead to a college presidency, according to a new survey by a leading higher-education group. But when it comes to members of racial minority groups, the supply of such potential leaders is much smaller.