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ABA Rejects Plan to Toughen Law School Standards

Opposition came from those who said rules would be unfair to institutions in California and those that serve minority students.

Telling Students Not to Speak Chinese

A professor at Duke University steps down from her administrative role after sending an email to students suggesting they not speak Chinese in student lounge and study areas.

Underrepresented Students, Unintended Consequences

Two prominent researchers say some selective colleges have responded to pressure to hit national benchmarks for enrolling low-income students -- in ways that hurt other needy students who are equally academically worthy.

‘Voluntary’ Departures: the New Expulsion?

Legal experts ponder whether public universities can ask students who are racist or who misbehave to leave. Has this become the new strategy to avoid kicking them out and facing First Amendment backlash?

Notre Dame Will Cover Columbus Murals

University says it is trying to balance the inspiration the murals gave to Roman Catholic immigrants more than a century ago and the pain the paintings create for Native Americans today.

Affirmative Action Fight Shifts to UNC

Some issues are similar to those in Harvard case, but Chapel Hill's status as public university -- and some differing strategies -- could affect outcome of the case.

Taking Race Out of Crime Alerts?

University of Nebraska at Lincoln is under fire by students who thought police should not have mentioned in a campuswide bulletin that two men accused of sexual assault were black, believing that it reinforced harmful stereotypes.

Men Blamed for Failure of French Effort on Hiring Female Academics

Requiring that at least 40 percent of search committee members be female was followed by a drop in hiring of women, study found.