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"Many, many years ago one of my English TA officemates noticed that a student wrote 'writhing' instead of 'writing.' We spent the rest of the afternoon inserting 'writhing' into textbook titles ('Writhing with a Purpose') and other phrases like 'technical writhing.' My favorite: 'writhing across the curriculum.'” --peg Herding the 'Escape Goats': Contest Sends Up Epidemic of Student Howlers
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North Carolina A&T State Earns NSF Grant for Engineering Research The award marks the first time that a lead institution in this program is a historically black university or college. College of William and Mary Hires Interim Chief as President W. Taylor Reveley III was previously dean of William and Mary’s law school. Comment [10] Cuomo Reported to Be Planning New Student-Loan Lawsuit and Agreements After a long silence, New York’s attorney general is preparing a lawsuit against one student-loan company and is nearing agreements with about a dozen others. Comment [10] Southern Cal Deletes Muslim Scripture From Web Site Following Complaint The scripture, from Islamic texts knowns as hadiths, had appeared on the Web site of a Muslim-student group on the campus. Comment [32] Palin Attended 4 Colleges in 5 Years to Earn Diploma The Republican vice-presidential pick, Sarah Palin, attended four different colleges over five academic years before earning her bachelor’s degree. Comment [185]
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Palin Attended 4 Colleges in 5 Years to Earn Diploma | 185 Professor Suspects UCLA Is Illegally Using Race in Admissions Decisions | 40 Cutthroat Competition for Textbook Sales Pits UMass Faculty Members Against Bookstore | 37 Southern Cal Deletes Muslim Scripture From Web Site Following Complaint | 32 British Publisher Will Release Controversial Novel About Muhammad's Bride | 18
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Prior days' news: By date | Search This week's print issue Back issues: By date | Search April 18, 2007U.S. Colleges Still Appeal to Foreign Students, Says State Department SpokesmanThe United States remains a place where “foreign students will want to continue to come to study,” even after the Virginia Tech killings, the U.S. State Department’s spokesman said at a briefing for reporters on Tuesday. The spokesman, Sean McCormack, said the government issues more than 200,000 student visas every year because American institutions offer “a good environment for students to explore boundaries of knowledge” and “contribute to a body of knowledge in their given area of study.” Posted on Wednesday April 18, 2007 | Permalink |
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