Australia
Spread more thinly to go further
An Australian politician has defended the latest cuts to vocational course subsidies, arguing that funding will go further as a result. Peter Hall, skills minister in the Victoria state government, said the cuts would ensure that students shouldered a 鈥渞easonable鈥 proportion of the burden of course costs. Overall, they should be paying about 20 per cent of the total, he argued. 鈥淭his is about spreading the training dollar as far and as fairly as we can,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he changes are significant, but they won鈥檛 cause upheaval in the system.鈥 Victoria has cut subsidies across 10 per cent of the 2,000 courses available in the state, targeting those that charge students no or low fees, 罢丑别听础耻蝉迟谤补濒颈补苍 reported. Critics say the changes are unfair to students and will undermine some courses鈥 viability.
Germany
Let鈥檚 blow whistleblower trumpet
A German university may award Edward Snowden an honorary doctorate for his role in exposing the scope of National Security Agency surveillance. The University of Rostock is considering honouring the former security contractor after one of its deans praised his 鈥渃ourage and civil disobedience鈥. 鈥淲e owe it to Snowden to not forget him鈥hen he has dedicated himself to exposing truth,鈥 said Hans-J眉rgen Wensierski, dean of Rostock鈥檚 philosophy department, who has put the whistleblower forward for the honour. 鈥淢oral courage is a central theme in鈥he social sciences and humanities.鈥 Professor Wensierski added that civil disobedience was an important part of modern democracy, The Local website reported.
United States
We don鈥檛 want friends like this
A US university has suspended its 15-year partnership with a Palestinian institution after a Nazi-style demonstration was held on the latter鈥檚 campus. Frederick Lawrence, Brandeis University鈥檚 president, announced last week that the institution had put its association with Al-Quds University on hold. During the demonstration on 5 November, protesters marched in black military gear with fake automatic weapons while offering the Nazi salute, The Jewish Daily Forward reported. Banners with images of Palestinian suicide bombers decorated the campus鈥 main square, according to a statement from Brandeis, and several students portrayed dead Israeli soldiers. However, in a message to students, Al-Quds president Sari Nusseibeh claimed that 鈥淛ewish extremists鈥 were using the demonstration to 鈥渃apitalise on events in ways that misrepresent the university as promoting inhumane, anti-Semitic鈥nd Nazi ideologies鈥.
Pakistan
Sectarian slaughter?
A professor at a Pakistani university has been killed by gunmen on suspected religious grounds. Syed Shabbir Hussain Shah, director of student services at Gujrat University, died instantly, along with his driver, Khadim Hussain, when gunmen on motorcycles intercepted his car and opened fire on the vehicle last week. Sheikh Abdul Rashid, a university spokesman, told Agence France-Presse that Professor Shah 鈥渨as a Shia by sect, and a very progressive official of the campus鈥, while an anonymous source said he had been threatened before, The Express Tribune reported. Manzoor Malik, the local deputy superintendent of police, told Reuters: 鈥淲e found a note at the scene of Shah鈥檚 death which read: 鈥楾his is retaliation for Rawalpindi.鈥欌 On 15 November, eight residents were killed in Sunni-Shia clashes in the city.
United States
Close to the audit
The president of the Iowa State University board of regents has called for a comprehensive review of its universities. Bruce Rastetter said an efficiency study of the three state institutions was long overdue. 鈥淲e think a generation and a half is too long,鈥 he said, noting that the most recent thorough examination of the universities of Iowa, Northern Iowa and Iowa State University was an efficiency audit undertaken in 1989, The Gazette (Cedar Rapids) reported. The regents have formed two committees to conduct reviews at the campuses of everything from academic standards and administration to athletics, Mr聽Rastetter added. 鈥淚t will be a very large study to look at a variety of factors,鈥 he told members of the Des Moines Conservative Breakfast Club on 19聽November.
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