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Section: Students
Students
Title IX: does help for women come at the expense of African Americans?
Gender equity has created an intriguing set of circumstances in the world of college athletics.
July 6, 2007
Students
Overcoming segregation in Alabama becomes responsibility of HBCUs – historically Black colleges and universities
HUNTSVILLE, Alabama Jamie Fleming is like other non-traditional college students in several ways. He has a strife and a nineteen-month-old son. He has a full-time job and he commutes more than 240 miles a week to attend classes. But until Fleming, who graduated from an all-white high school on rural Sand Mountain, Alabama, enrolled at Northeast Alabama State Community College on a scholarship, he had never sat in a classroom with an African American.
July 6, 2007
Students
Arthur Ashe and the next generation of student athletes – Sports Scholars
With all the attention that we have finally come to pay to Arthur Ashe as a pioneering professional athlete and humanitarian it is easy to forget that Ashe was first an incredible college student-athlete at the University of California Los Angeles in the 1960s.
July 6, 2007
Students
Stillman’s Wynn provided accessible visibility – Stillman College Pres Dr. Cordell Wynn
Dr. Cordell Wynn, president of Stillman College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, may be retiring, but he’s not going to stop working. He plans to remain active in the world of higher education, writing and consulting on the relationship between presidents and boards of trustees of historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs).
July 5, 2007
Students
By feeding community, Hytche nourished UMES – University of Maryland- Eastern Shore chancellor William P. Hytche
As a young mathematics instructor in 1963 at the college that is now the University of Maryland-Eastern Shore, Dr. William P. Hytche took a stand for better conditions for his students and the community surrounding the school.
July 5, 2007
Students
Wilson proud of Norfolk State’s “X” factor – Norfolk State University president Dr. Harrison B. Wilson
His grandfather on his father’s side was a tenacious Virginia slave Who fought in the Civil War, first for the Confederacy and the Union Army. His grandmother on his mother’s side was educated at Wilberforce University and taught in a one-room schoolhouse in Kentucky.
July 5, 2007
Students
Suit Would Have Board of Governors Set Tuition for Florida’s Public Universities
TALLAHASSEE Fla. Former Gov. Bob Graham and others are suing to have the courts declare that tuition at Florida’s 11 public universities should be set by the state Board of Governors rather than the Legislature.
July 5, 2007
Students
Tuition freeze celebrated, but cost of campus living increases
COLUMBUS Ohio Costs of attending a state college or university will continue to rise this fall for many students despite a two-year undergraduate tuition freeze celebrated by lawmakers and university officials.
July 4, 2007
Students
Lawyer who assisted with Sept. 11 claims to help administer Virginia Tech fund
BLACKSBURG Va. A lawyer who ran the Sept. 11 victim compensation program will help Virginia Tech distribute its $7.1 million fund for victims of the mass shootings, university officials said Thursday.
July 4, 2007
Students
President Clinton meets with NAFEO – finally – National Assn. for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education – includes excerpt of Pres. Bill Clinton’s speech and a list of attendees
Washington For the first time since he assumed office in 1992. President Bill Clinton met with several dozen members of the National Association For Equal Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO) to discuss issues of concern to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).
July 4, 2007
Students
Selective admissions: another milestone for Southern University – Column
Last year the Southern University, Board of Supervisors officially revealed its plan for the Southern University Baton Rouge campus to replace its long-standing policy of open admission selective admission. Thus, instead of admitting every student that applies regardless of academic merit — as was the tradition — admission will now be based on the ability of of prospective students to meet certain set academic criteria. By this pronouncement, the hoard has created another milestone in the history of the university’ which oversees the operation of the three campuses of the Southern University System, located in Baton Rouge, New Orleans and Shreveport Bossier City.
July 4, 2007
Students
Centers of attention: roles of collegiate conference centers come into focus – includes list of members of Assn. of Conference and Events Directors International for Collegiate Conference and Events Professionals – Cover Story
Twenty years ago, a college might have rented out dormitory space to church groups in the summer to keep the buildings in use and to make a little money on the side. Today, renting out space to host conferences and meetings has become a big business for colleges and universities.
July 4, 2007
Students
Following the leaders – the establishment of Leadership Development Centers in historically Black colleges and universities
Leadership Development Becomes Priority for Many Institutions
July 4, 2007
Students
Despite Sallie’s success story… – welfare recipient and Santa Clara University student Sallie Shows
Welfare Reform Expected to Restrict College Access
July 4, 2007
Students
Student loan default rates fall dramatically – includes related article on default violations of schools
Washington The nation’s student loan default rate has reached its lowest level ever, according to the U.S. Education Department (ED), which nonetheless identified more than 300 colleges and universities that could lose their right to participate in student-aid programs because of excessive defaults.
July 4, 2007
Students
An organization by any other name… – controversial name change of Hispanic Student Services at the University of New Mexico to “Centro de la Raza – includes related article
Controversy Flares Over University of New Mexico’s Centro de la Raza
July 4, 2007
Students
Open attacks on programs benefitting people of color – Impact 1996
California Passes Proposition 209
July 4, 2007
Students
Businessman’s $1 million Ferrari to fund UA scholarships
MOBILE Ala. Darrell Westfaul’s 1950 red Ferrari, purchased 41 years ago in his student days for $1,500, has been sold for $1 million that will generate scholarships for University of Alabama students.
July 4, 2007
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