On the Offensive and In the Lead
College athletes are leading boycotts and prompting conversations about racial injustice. They're also embracing their power to initiate change at their institutions and beyond.
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College athletes are leading boycotts and prompting conversations about racial injustice. They're also embracing their power to initiate change at their institutions and beyond.
A new law in Virginia makes college tuition cheaper for illegal immigrants than for some American citizens.
At a San Francisco gala in March 2014, Stanford University President John Hennessy accepted an award for the school’s “Advancement in U.S.-China Relations.”
New study shows strong link between headlines and citations, but scholars say more research needed on causality
Facebook says it mistakenly let 5,000 developers gather information from people's profiles after a time limit on their rights had expired.
Bravous Esports and Game Truck provide a recreational vehicle for young adults, teens and kids to achieve.
A University of Massachusetts-Lowell dean was fired after sources say she wrote “everyone’s life matters” in an email.
The college scramble for survival during the pandemic has been palpable, but so far, no school has done the obvious: Streamline the degree, cut all the fluff, reduce their delivery costs, and thereby lower substantially the tuition bill and the opportunity costs for a college diploma.
Researchers at Cornell University have concluded an online semester at the university will result in more COVID-19 infections than an in-person one.
Stanford University’s student-run newspaper, The Stanford Daily, refused to publish an opinion piece written by Stephen Sills, president of the Stanford College Republicans.