After days of confusion over whether the colleges may enroll the students, federal officials clear the air.
An accidental fall at the club in 2006 prompts a negligence lawsuit in 2007 and a secret settlement in 2008.
The chairman acknowledged that his decision was related to an uproar over the awarding of an unearned degree to a politically connected figure.
A high-school administrator and a Roman Catholic archdiocese are trying to find out who created phony page.
Faronics recently announced the release of Power Save 2.0, a product that allows IT administrators to monitor and control energy usage by campus computers.
Connecticut attorney general is hopeful about software vendor’s response to security lapse affecting college students.
Tennessee recently enacted a bill about campus file sharing and Illinois is considering a similar measure.
The U. of Colorado at Boulder’s department of physics education has created a cool, interactive online simulation feature that demonstrates physics principles.
Classes were canceled today after street fighting broke out on Thursday between Hezbollah and Sunni government forces.
Michael V. Bhatia, a graduate student at Oxford, had been advising the U.S. Army about local social structures.
The governor’s recommendation contradicted advice from the state attorney general’s office.
The department, one of several required to cut courses and faculty members, will eliminate classes for 1,500 students.
Draft legislation proposes measures to improve the success of women in academic science.
In a speech that was broadcast in the virtual world, an inventor of Second Life talks about the educational promises of his creation.
Having good relationships with the kids can backfire by making them less willing to leave home for college.
The university is expected to announce this afternoon that its dean of arts and sciences will be its new chancellor.
A psychiatrist presented research on the connection between playing computer games and school shootings at the American Psychiatric Association’s annual summit.
An amendment to the state’s Constitution barring gay marriage covers benefits for domestic partners as well, the court rules.
It will be located in India, but accept students from many countries.
Change management makes the list for the first time.
Prospects seem dim for efforts to use a war-spending bill to provide increased funds for physical-sciences research.
The International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences is still trying to save the meeting, scheduled for this summer.
The advice from the attorney general’s office runs counter to a directive issued last year by the community-college system’s lawyer.
House intellectual-property subcommittee approves orphan works bill.
A new study found that in Wikipedia, word count can be used to predict article quality.