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Suing
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The latest trend in
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malpractice law is educational lawsuits. The Chronicle of Higher
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Education reports that nearly 30 students are suing their universities
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for "breach of contract, fraud, misrepresentation, or negligence." Most of the
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claimants are angry at the poor quality or low value of the degrees they
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received. James M. Houston, who earned a Ph.D. in educational leadership from
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Northern Arizona University
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in 1995, is seeking $1 million in punitive damages for an education he says
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makes him a "fraud."
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Other
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litigants are suing over degrees that were never awarded. A student who had
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enrolled at Lorain County Community College in Ohio in 1993 but never graduated
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from the school's nursing program is suing for breach of contract and violation
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of consumer protection laws, Community College
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Week reports. According to that publication, the student contended that
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"the catalogue of course offerings and academic policies created a contract
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that obligated the college to provide him with a nursing degree." He complained
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that courses required for his degree hadn't been offered during the time of his
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matriculation, forcing him to leave before earning the degree. But an appeals
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court threw out the suit, stating, "Ohio does not recognize educational
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malpractice claims for public policy reasons."
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Cutting
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Off the Nose ...
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According to the Southern
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Illinois University Daily Egyptian, SIU's medical school has "changed its
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long-standing policy of cutting the limbs off of cadavers to fit them into
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wardrobe boxes" before shipping them off to be cremated. An e-mail message sent
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to local media and the Illinois Board of Higher Education had claimed that
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student workers were employed to remove the limbs and that the policy was
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designed to save money. Both charges turned out to be false. But the school of
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medicine has stated that "in the future no student workers will work with
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cadavers or disintegrated anatomical remains. Further, we will no longer
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physically alter anatomical remains." SIU says the new policy is more
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respectful of people who have donated their remains to the cause of
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science.
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In other
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cadaver news, a technique developed by a German anatomy professor named Gunther
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von Hagens, which allows him to preserve and study the body in detail, has
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occasioned protest. Plastination, as the preservation method is called, involves the
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replacement of blood by a colored polymer, which maintains its shape as the
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flesh is gradually removed. The entire circulatory system, down to the tiniest
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capillaries, can be examined at full scale. An exhibition of von Hagens' work
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has toured Japan and Germany, and protesters have called it an affront to human
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dignity--which the German Constitution requires citizens to preserve.
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Go
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Fish
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Stanley Fish, the flamboyant
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Milton scholar, legal theorist, and academic celebrity (David Lodge based his
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jet-setting Professor Morris Zapp on him), has left Duke University and the
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English department to which he attracted a parade of stars and controversies.
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According to the Chronicle of Higher Education , Fish will become dean of
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liberal arts and sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago, a respected
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commuter campus making a bid for greater prestige and attention. Fish's wife,
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Jane Tompkins, who has made her disenchantment with conventional teaching and
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scholarship the subject of both her courses and her writing, will teach one
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course a year in the school of education.
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Fish is
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not the only academic celebrity making a somewhat mysterious job switch.
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Philosopher Richard Rorty (whose work was the topic of "Out of
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Left Field" in Slate ) has given up his chair at the University of Virginia (and a
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salary that made him the highest-paid public employee in the state) in favor of
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a nontenured post at Stanford, where he'll teach until he retires--or until a
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better offer comes along. His reason: He wants to be nearer to some members of
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his family.
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Face
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It
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A
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professor of English at the University
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of Mainz, Germany, believes she has figured out what William Shakespeare
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really looked like. Hildegard Hammerschmidt-Hummel believes the closest
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likeness may be a death mask most other scholars think is a fake.
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Hammerschmidt-Hummel, working with a team of scientists using advanced
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photographic techniques, found close similarities between the mask and a famous
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bust of Shakespeare, which she believes was copied from it. In particular, the
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bust bears traces of "three small swellings on the nasal corner of the left
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eye"--swellings that are evident on the death mask as well. The mask also shows
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a swelling in the upper left eyelid, which, according to Professor Walter
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Lerche, head of the Horst-Schmidt eye clinic in Wiesbaden, Germany, could be
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evidence of a rare form of cancer that may have killed the bard. British
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Shakespeare scholars remain skeptical, both of the death mask's authenticity
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and of the possibility of discovering Shakespeare's true face.
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All
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Politics Is Local
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Another NYU video
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controversy: NYU's Project on Media Ownership, under the direction of
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journalism Professor Mark Crispin Miller, recently completed a study of the
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effects of local television news on the civic life of Baltimore. PROMO's report
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claimed that local TV news foments fear and hostility among city residents and
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suburbanites alike by devoting a disproportionate share of its broadcast time
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to crime. Such "inadvertent anti-urban propaganda" also hurts Baltimore's
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reputation and economy.
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But the
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nonprofit research firm Public
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Agenda, whose polls PROMO used for the report, has publicly disavowed it.
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In its own press release, given to the Baltimore Sun and posted on the organization's Web site,
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Public Agenda charged that PROMO's report "while using data that are
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technically correct, distorts Public Agenda's findings by presenting them in a
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biased context and tone." In particular, the pollsters charge that PROMO
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downplayed the extent to which respondents' fear of crime was based on the
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experience of crime--53 percent of those polled had said that they or someone
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they loved had been the victim of a crime. Miller stands by his conclusions and
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insists that "anyone who reads my overview and their report will see that there
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is absolutely no disagreement."
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Girls!
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Girls! Girls!
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New York
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University has filed a lawsuit against the operators of a soft porn Web site.
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The site purported to display footage, picked up from an "NY University Dorm
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Cam," of young women dressed in skimpy clothing bearing the NYU insignia
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cavorting in a room decorated with NYU paraphernalia. The site promises that
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the women will "romp for your enjoyment in their own dorm room." Visitors to
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the site have included journalistic bon vivant Anthony Haden-Guest, who noted
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in a recent "Talk of the Town" piece for The New Yorker that among the
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"humdrum vulgarities that have become the bread and butter of the Internet,"
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one can cop "a peek at some female NYU students who have wired up their dorm
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room." But the university's suit refers to the rompers as "alleged NYU co-eds"
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and assures all concerned that "there is no 'NYU Dorm Cam' installed in any NYU
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dorm room."
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The
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Class System
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Students
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at less prestigious British universities will soon be able to take courses with
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such Oxford and Cambridge luminaries as physicist Steven Hawking, literary
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critic Terry Eagleton, and paleontologist Richard Dawkins, through a national
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system of video linkups. The plan has drawn criticism on a number of fronts.
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Some say it slights the teaching abilities and intellectual talents of
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professors who don't happen to be world famous but who do a perfectly good job
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instructing their pupils at places such as Bristol or Newcastle. Others point
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out that world-class scholars don't always make the best teachers and worry
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that the videos will pacify the minds of students rather than stimulate them.
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"It would be like watching television," a professor at Brunel University told
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the Sunday Times of London, which published a story about the proposal.
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"You would lose that excitement of a live performance on a stage."
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Doctor's
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Fees
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University of New Orleans
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historian and best-selling author Stephen Ambrose is credited as a consultant
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on Stephen Spielberg's World War II epic Saving Private Ryan . But
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Ambrose did his consulting after the film was completed. According to a story
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in the New York Observer , Spielberg's people approached Ambrose this
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past spring and arranged a screening for him. Once he'd seen the film--which he
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loved--Ambrose signed on for less than $100,000, a pittance by Hollywood
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standards. The Observer speculates that Spielberg, who seems to have
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borrowed heavily from Ambrose's books in Ryan , was anxious to avoid
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another lawsuit like the one that plagued his last movie, the slave trade epic
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Amistad . (For more on the Amistad flap, see this
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Slate
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"Cheat Sheet" on plagiarism.)
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