November 21, 2009, 04:59 PM ET
U. Washington Provost Named to Nike Board
Phyllis Wise, provost of the University of Washington, has accepted a position on the board of directors of Nike, which last year signed a 10-year contract to provide the university's athletic department with all its footwear, apparel, and some equipment.
The Associated Press reports that some students are not happy with Ms.Wise's decision. They have been urging the university to pressure Nike to stop its purported abuses of workers.
November 21, 2009, 11:53 AM ET
UC-Berkeley Sit-In Ends With Arrests
University of California at Berkeley students protesting a planned 32-percent hike in tuition ended their occupation of an administration building Friday night, escorted out by county sheriffs, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. The protesters will face misdemeanor trespassing charges. Protests at UC-Santa Cruz continued Saturday, according to the Associated Press.
November 21, 2009, 09:00 AM ET
Fairmont State U.'s Board Chair Quits After Berating Coach
Andrew Knicely, chairman of Fairmont State University's Board of Governors, resigned Friday for having verbally harangued the university's head football coach after a game last month, The Charleston Gazette reports. Mr. Knicely had apologized for the incident, in which he yelled at the coach over his son's lack of playing time in the game.
November 20, 2009, 01:22 PM ET
Protesters Take Over Academic Building at Berkeley
About 50 to 100 protesters took over a prominent building at the University of California at Berkeley this morning and barricaded themselves inside, The Daily Californian reported. The action, one day after the system's Board of Regents approved a 32-percent increase in tuition, culminated several days of protests over the impact of the state's dire finances on university campuses. Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau sent an e-mail message urging employees working in the building, Wheeler Hall, which houses several academic departments, to avoid it until further notice. Protesters have also started a
Read MoreNovember 20, 2009, 01:05 PM ET
U. of Nebraska Regents Reject New Limits on Stem-Cell Research
The University of Nebraska's Board of Regents, despite heavy lobbying by religious groups, narrowly voted today to uphold the expansion of research on human embryonic stem cells as permitted by the Obama administration. The regents voted, 4 to 4, on a proposal to observe limits on stem-cell research imposed by the Bush administration, and a tie vote meant the resolution failed.
November 20, 2009, 09:18 AM ET
Judge Grants Preliminary Approval to Revised Google Book Settlement
The federal judge overseeing the Google Book Search case has given preliminary approval to the revised settlement submitted late last Friday by the parties to the lawsuit. The new version is "within the range of possible approval," according to a court order issued yesterday. The order also set February 18, 2010, as the date for a final fairness hearing on the deal.
November 19, 2009, 10:56 PM ET
Nothing Improper in Payments Flagged by Audit, Kansas State U. President Says
In the aftermath of an audit that raised questions about spending practices at Kansas State University, the institution's president, Kirk H. Schulz, reported to the Kansas Board of Regents today on what his administration has done to ensure that sound business and management practices are in place. The regents had commissioned the audit as an exit review upon the retirement of Mr. Schulz's predecessor, Jon Wefald. Among other findings, the review flagged $845,000 in questionable payments. According to the Associated Press, Mr. Schulz said that compensation for the university's football coach accounted for most of that,...
Read MoreNovember 19, 2009, 06:18 PM ET
Education Department Needs Better Ways to Monitor Grant Recipients, GAO Says
The Education Department has made efforts to create risk-based ways to monitor grants for fraud and abuse, but more work needs to be done, says a report from the Government Accountability Office. The GAO found that the department's staff members need more financial expertise and training in order to accomplish their work, and that information on grant recipients should be shared systematically throughout the department for monitoring to improve.
November 19, 2009, 03:51 PM ET
GAO Raises New Doubts About Job-Creation Claims From Stimulus Spending
About 22 percent of economic-stimulus funds have been paid out by the federal government, the Government Accountability Office reported today, but the job-creation data posted on the Web site Recovery.gov to highlight the effect of the $787-billion legislation, officially the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, has "significant reporting and quality issues that need to be addressed." As suggested in a Chronicle article two weeks ago, state education departments have had difficulty reporting their data correctly, in part, the GAO said, because there was not a clear definition of "full-time equivalent" jobs, the measure states were supposed to use to measure job creation.
November 19, 2009, 12:21 PM ET
In Close Vote, Faculty Members at UConn Health Center Form a Union
Faculty members at the University of Connecticut Health Center voted this week by a two-vote margin, 223 to 221, to unionize, the Hartford Courant reports. This is the first vote on the issue since the faculty twice defeated union bids, in 1999 and 2000, and some observers feel the affirmative vote demonstrates a growing uncertainty about the future of faculty job security.

