Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Football star among 2009 Rhodes winners

Scholarship trust selects 32 men and women from the U.S.

WASHINGTON - A University of Pennsylvania student who organized an exhibit about Lenape Indians living quietly in the state is among this year's winners of Rhodes Scholarships.

Abigail P. Seldin, of Tierra Verde, Fla., curated the exhibit "Fulfilling a Prophecy: The Past and Present of the Lenape in Pennsylvania," which opened at the University of Pennsylvania Museum in September.

She is one of 32 men and women from across the United States to win the prestigious scholarships for study at England's Oxford University. The winners' names were announced early Sunday.

Read full story MSNBC

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Community colleges suddenly in spotlight

Enrollment up 8 percent but colleges struggle with low completion rates

Analysis

updated 3:50 p.m. MT, Wed., Nov. 19, 2008
Long the neglected stepchildren of American higher education, community colleges have come front-and-center in the eyes of students, policymakers and philanthropists.

For students, that's because of the economy, which is boosting interest in two-year schools as a cheaper starting point for a bachelor's degree. They're also the place for job retraining, with unemployment at a 14-year high of 6.5 percent. A community colleges group estimates enrollment is up about 8 percent this fall.

Read full story MSNBC

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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Economy strikes America’s richest university

Harvard, like other Ivy Leagues, is considering its cost-cutting options

BOSTON - You know the financial meltdown is bad when even Harvard is feeling the pinch.

Harvard — America's oldest university and the world's wealthiest — helped pioneer a model of diversified endowment investing that many colleges have copied, branching into exotic investments like timber and private equity. When most schools were sticking with stocks and bonds, Harvard was buying forests in Maine and slices of startup companies financed with venture capital.

Now, the question is whether those practices have cushioned — or worsened — the blow from the latest downturn.

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Friday, November 7, 2008

Alum gives Univ. of Chicago $300 million

CHICAGO - The University of Chicago says an alumnus has given its business school a $300 million gift, a record sum that comes as many universities worry they'll see donations dry up amid the financial meltdown.

The unrestricted donation by David G. Booth, chairman and CEO of Dimensional Fund Advisors, and his family is the largest individual gift ever to a U.S. business school and the largest in the University of Chicago's history, said Dean Edward Snyder.

The school will be renamed the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, said Snyder, whose announcement Thursday was met by a standing ovation and cheers from students and faculty assembled at a news conference.

Read full story MSNBC

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