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  • House and Senate negotiators agreed Monday on a revised appropriations plan for spending on education and biomedical research, Bloomberg reported, but the plan may soon be overtaken by other plans for across-the-board spending cuts. The new plan is largely similar to one that the House of Representatives rejected last month and it is a plan that most college leaders argue is woefully inadequate.
  • Eight universities plan to announce today that they are creating a new Division III athletic conference, the Associated Press reported. The yet-to-be named conference will begin in the fall of 2007 in all sports except football. The institutions that are joining are: Catholic, Drew, and Susquehanna Universities; Goucher, Juniata, and Moravian Colleges; Stevens Institute of Technology; and the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy.
  • The College Board on Monday released a guide covering the legal and educational issues involved with efforts to admit and retain a diverse student body. The guide is available free online.
  • The American Council of Trustees and Alumni on Monday released a report saying that colleges were doing little to follow up on a statement issued by a coalition of higher education groups in which the organizations endorsed the concept of intellectual diversity on campus.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday directed the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit to reconsider a case it had decided involving the government's ability to withhold Social Security payments to a borrower who had defaulted on student loans in light of the high court's ruling last week in a similar case.
  • Hundreds of custodians, food service workers and hospital employees at Stanford University held a one-day strike Monday, to demand better terms for a contract currently being negotiated, The San Jose Mercury News reported.
  • A sophomore who is the president of his class at Lehigh University has been arrested and charged with a bank robbery on Friday, the Associated Press reported.
  • The former men's basketball coach at Barton County Community College pleaded guilty Monday to four federal charges of embezzlement and fraud stemming from a scandal in which athletes at the college illegally received financial aid, according to The Wichita Eagle. Ryan Wolf faces combined penalties of 45 years in jail and $1 million in fines, though the government recommended leniency as a part of his plea agreement.

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