Taiwan
Wrong formula for libel
A court has dismissed a libel case against an academic whose research suggested that emissions from an industrial conglomerate鈥檚 chemical plants had raised cancer rates in Taiwan. In 2010, Ben-Jei Tsuang, an environmental scientist at National Chung Hsing University in Taichung, presented findings at scientific meetings and to government agencies showing elevated cancer rates in the town of Mailiao and linking them to emissions from plants owned by several companies belonging to the Formosa Plastics Group. In April 2012, two FPG companies sued Professor Tsuang for defamation. However, the court has dismissed the suit, stating that the scholar鈥檚 declarations were 鈥渇air comments on a fact subject to public criticism鈥, Nature reported. Despite the favourable outcome, the case has 鈥渉ad a chilling effect on Taiwan鈥檚 academic community鈥, said Severia Lu, a lawyer representing Professor Tsuang, Science reported.
United States
About that cash we promised鈥
A liberal arts college in Kentucky has missed out on one of the largest gifts in US higher education history after a $250 million (拢160 million) donation was withdrawn, officials have confirmed. Centre College in Danville said the all-stock gift from the A. Eugene Brockman Charitable Trust was linked to a 鈥渟ignificant capital market event鈥 that did not pan out. Consequently, the gift was withdrawn and a proposed scholarship programme at the college has been put on hold. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not happy, in any shape or form, with this outcome,鈥 John Roush, Centre College鈥檚 president, told Associated Press. The scholarship programme would have helped up to 160 students every year majoring in the natural and computational sciences.
Australia
Pressure on the fees cap
Australia鈥檚 new government could face pressure to deregulate student fees, according to analysts. Andrew Norton, higher education programme director at the Grattan Institute and an adviser in the office of Liberal education minister David Kemp in the 1990s, said any move on the cap was 鈥渇ar from certain鈥, 罢丑别听础耻蝉迟谤补濒颈补苍 reported. However, policy consultant Brendan Sheehan believed that fee deregulation was a 鈥済iven鈥. 鈥淭hey (could) pull the subsidy altogether from things that they don鈥檛 see as economically essential,鈥 said Mr Sheehan, who has run education ministers鈥 offices at the state and federal level.
Spain
Mixed reviews for 鈥榞odfather鈥
A scheme that would involve 鈥済odfathers鈥 helping out Spanish university students in financial difficulty has received a mixed response from the sector. The idea originated in July when the dean of the University of M谩laga, Adelaida de la Calle, received a call from a pensioner offering to pay the fees of one student, The Local newspaper reported. 鈥淛ust as it鈥檚 possible to sponsor a child, it would also be possible to 鈥榮ponsor a student鈥 and pay their tuition fees,鈥 said Professor De la Calle, who is also head of the Association of Spanish University Deans. The Federation of Spanish Students Associations welcomed the idea, but also said it 鈥渃ould only be a temporary measure鈥 and that the state should 鈥減rovide help and grants to students in need鈥. Ana Garc铆a, secretary general of Spain鈥檚 Union of Students, said the proposal would lead to education becoming 鈥渁 form of charity rather than a right鈥.
Canada
Anti-booze, but more so
A Canadian university is redoubling its efforts to reduce binge drinking and alcohol abuse despite being regarded as having one of the toughest policies in the country. Carleton University in Ottawa, whose strict policy has been adopted by other Canadian institutions, will introduce its new strategy this autumn. The decision comes in light of the fact that since the majority of first-year students are not of legal drinking age (19 in Ontario), Carleton students tend to drink in dorm rooms and off campus. Despite alcohol use decreasing, Ryan Flannagan, director of student affairs at Carleton, said that binge drinking remained a persistent problem, the Ottawa Citizen reported. Under the strategy, the university will aim to more effectively coordinate alcohol awareness campaigns, even involving parents in the months before their children enter college in an effort to promote responsible drinking.
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