Quick Takes

November 3, 2009

Guilty Plea by Former Education Department Official

Matteo Fontana, the former general manager for financial-partner services in Education Department's student-aid office, pleaded guilty to conflict-of-interest and false-statement charges over his ownership of stock in a loan company, The Wall Street Journal reported. Fontana held as many as 10,500 shares of Education Lending Group Inc. when he joined the Education Department in 2002, prosecutors said. The holdings became public when Andrew Cuomo, New York State's attorney general, started investigating conflicts of interest between the lending industry and colleges.

Ultimatum Over Ole Miss Fight Song

The University of Mississippi has altered its fight song to discourage a chant of "the South will rise again," based on the old version. With many fans continuing that chant -- which many find offensive -- Chancellor Dan Jones said Monday that either the chant stops, or he'll bar the song from being played at football games, the Associated Press reported. "The University of Mississippi is a warm and welcoming place. So many have worked hard to make sure our image moves forward, and we don't want anything to hurt that," Jones said in a speech.

McMaster Teaching Assistants Strike

About 2,700 teaching and research assistants walked off the job Monday at McMaster University, in Ontario, The Canadian Press reported. Negotiations have resumed on a new contract.

Israel Boycott Fight Moves to Norway

The fight over academic boycotts of Israel -- which has been centered in Britain -- has shifted to Norway, The Jerusalem Post reported. The board of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology will consider a boycott proposal this month, at the request of professors. Israeli academic leaders are organizing a campaign against the plan.

Harvard Movie, Filmed at Hopkins, Angers Students

The cities (and colleges campuses) we see in the movies are not always what they claim to be -- and that doesn't go over well with students at Johns Hopkins University. The Social Network is currently being filmed at Hopkins, which is in effect playing the part of Harvard, which doesn't permit commercial films to be shot on its campus. The fee the university is receiving isn't enough to justify pretending to be Harvard, students told The Baltimore Sun. They fear Hopkins looks like a safety school. "The general consensus is, a lot of kids are not pleased," one student told the Sun. "It's obvious they [the filmmakers] could get Hopkins and not get Harvard."

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Comments on Quick Takes

  • Posted by Hoosier Prof on November 3, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • So where was Legally Blonde filmed??

  • Legally Blonde Locations
  • Posted by Kimberly , Athletics Certifying Officer at Temple University on November 3, 2009 at 11:15am EST
  • http://www.seeing-stars.com/locations/legallyblonde.shtml

  • easy enough to find on IMDB
  • Posted on November 3, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • Looks like Legally Blonde was filmed mainly in Pasadena at churches and high schools with some USC admin building thrown in:
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0250494/locations

    Obviously, Neptune's Beauty Nook was taking no chances that they'd be mistaken for a safety salon.

  • Posted by Googler on November 3, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • According to http://www.seeing-stars.com/locations/legallyblonde.shtml, Legally Blonde was filmed at USC and other Pasadena locations; however aerial shots Cambridge and Boston were used.

  • Harvard vs. Reality
  • Posted by DFS on November 3, 2009 at 5:00pm EST
  • I'd be offended, too, if my campus was prostituted into portraying Harvard -- the land of grade inflation.

    There's not enough money on this planet for that kind of bullshit.

  • The South
  • Posted by DFS on November 3, 2009 at 5:00pm EST
  • Never, never, is the South allowed to "rise again." Context be damned: we all know that every southerner secretly wants to be a plantation slavemaster. Damn! Our secret's out!

    Also never mind that Charlie Daniels's band had a great line in one of their signature pieces, namely, "the South will rise again." hus, Charlie Daniels should be ostracized from academia, and therefore from American enterprise. Let's just confiscate all of that band's revenue and award it to someone.

    Let's even forget that Abraham Lincoln's plea for eventual reconciliation involved the future 'rising' of the South. I suppose instead that we must all be the Nation of Carpetbaggers by fiat of political correctness. To hell with all reality, just keep flogging that Very Dead Horse.

    I'll tell you what: why doesn't the South rise again? Let's just arise, and actually conquer this time. After all, the South has far less racial discontent now compared to Detroit or to Chicago. In fact, I suspect that the eventual new President from the South may be a black person -- at least, it would happen a lot quicker from down here.

    Why don't the rest of you pansies get your thongs unbunched, so that the rest of us can just live our lives untouched by such crap that IHE thinks they must report on?

    Give me a break.