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"Measuring graduation rates is indeed a charade. Yes, some programs have a “respectable” rate of graduating athletes, but these grads often take gut courses, major in fields that have little academic rigor (coaching, general studies), and are placed in courses taught by profs who wouldn’t recognize an academic standard if it slept in their bed. The whole enterprise ought to be called academic gerrymandering." NCAA Imposes Stiffer Penalties for Academic Performance of Midlevel Division I Teams
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U. of Evansville President Arrested on Drunken-Driving Charges In a statement released today by the university, Stephen G. Jennings acknowledged making “a very serious mistake” and apologized. Comment [4] Petitions Are Filed for Arizona and Nebraska Referenda on Affirmative Action The backers of a similar measure in Colorado filed petitions months ago, but legal challenges may complicate such campaigns. Comment [19] Oklahoma's Matching-Gift Backlog Booms Despite Moratorium Instead of helping to clear a $225-million backlog of matching-gift obligations, a July 1 moratorium on the program has set back the state even more. Italian-American Groups Rally to Save Advanced Placement Test in Italian The Italian ambassador to the United States is leading efforts to raise money to continue the examination. Comment [3] U. of Chicago Students Scramble After Lender Pulls Out The Illinois Student Assistance Commission is ending its “school as lender” arrangement with the university. Comment [2]
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Darwin Defeated in the Bayou: Louisiana Encourages 'Critical Thinking' About Evolution | 88 ACLU Complains About Noon-Meal Prayers at Naval Academy | 77 Columbia U. Fires Teachers College Professor Accused of Rampant Plagiarism | 61 U. of Phoenix's Report on Students' Progress Is 'Disingenuous,' Critic Says | 49 Student Who Died at Professor's Home Suffered a Drug Overdose | 47
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Prior days' news: By date | Search This week's print issue Back issues: By date | Search July 15, 2007Auction of Accused Professor's Holdings Nets $2.35-millionA court-ordered sale of the rich holdings of a former economics professor at Charleston Southern University brought in $2.35-million for the estimated 600 people he allegedly bilked through investment companies he ran, the Associated Press reports. Albert E. Parish Jr.s college is among those that say they lost money in the scheme, estimated at $50-million by investigators. Among the items on the auction block were a custom Mercedes-Benz, Mount Blanc pens, 117 expensive watches, and guitars owned by George Harrison, Jimi Hendrix, and Keith Richards. —Jeffrey Selingo Posted on Sunday July 15, 2007 | Permalink |
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