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Opinion
China’s Reopening Brings New Recruiting Challenges
Returning to China after three years without recruitment travel, admissions officers will face changed expectations from Chinese families, Xiaofeng Wan writes.

Oxford Earns Windfall on COVID-19 Vaccine
University received $176 million in the last academic year. Stanford and MIT earned far less in licensing revenues.

Spain Debates Whether Universities Can Take Political Stances
Issue comes up as the country considers a higher education reform law.

Reviving the College Dreams of Afghan Women
A month after the Taliban abruptly banned women from colleges and universities in Afghanistan, U.S. institutions are trying to help them back into academe any way they can.

Probation, Not Prison, for Researcher in China Initiative Case
A jury convicted the former chemical engineering professor on charges linked to allegedly failing to disclose ties to China, but a judge threw out several of the convictions and imposed the lightest possible sentence.

Opinion
Investing in Ukraine Through Scholarships
Alfred University president Mark Zupan encourages other university administrators to continue to invest in Ukraine, its people and its future through scholarships.

Intensive English Could Disappear Further
Pitt plans to shut down its decades-old English Language Institute this summer. A department chair is trying to save it.

India Sets Rules for Foreign Universities
Draft says institutions must be among the top 500 in the world. It also has some provisions that raise questions about academic freedom.
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