In 2014, The Korea Herald asked, “Will Korea ever have ‘Linsanity’?” Eight years later, Lee Hyung-jung of NCAA’s Davidson College may have given us the answer.
U.S. Senate action on President Joe Biden's five nominees to the Federal Reserve stalled Tuesday after Republicans boycotted a key vote over objections to Sarah Bloom Raskin, the White House's pick to be the central bank's Wall Street regulator.
The very act of making a sexual harassment claim can set off a convoluted legal procedure unfamiliar to accusers. Experts say the university has both legal and ethical considerations.
Stanford University raised $1.39 billion in the last fiscal year, the most among U.S. colleges, narrowly edging out Harvard University for the top spot.
It is past time to bring the equivalent of “breach of warranty” accountability to one of our most vital services, the education delivered by U.S. schools.
A community group opposes UC Berkeley’s plans for expansion, citing the impact on local neighborhoods. Now, amid an ongoing legal battle, Berkeley may have to cut enrollment by 3,500 incoming students.
Former two-term governor Sonny Perdue is all but certain to become the next leader of Georgia’s 26-institution public system. Students fear that if Perdue’s tenure looks anything like his time as governor, funding cuts will follow.