No cocktails, but tea and sympathy
Being an admissions officer is bad for your teeth, says Anne Maddox in the second in our series from the grass roots. Ah, summer, oh what does it mean to you? Long sunny days in Tuscany perhaps, or...
Being an admissions officer is bad for your teeth, says Anne Maddox in the second in our series from the grass roots. Ah, summer, oh what does it mean to you? Long sunny days in Tuscany perhaps, or...
Severino Antinori (main picture) and Panos Michael Zavos are pioneers of reproductive cloning and, as befits their controversial status, public opinion about the men could not be more diverse. Hailed...
With more academic support, NGOs will continue to be potent agents for social change, says Brenda Gourley. The Salzburg Seminar bills itself as "one of the world's foremost international centres...
Ten years after the cold war's end, Russia's rising young historians are working with US and western European researchers to re-evaluate 40 years of frosty East-West relations with the help of...
ߣߣÊÓÆµn sport's newest and unlikeliest star is an Irishman who is studying at the University of New South Wales. Tadhg Kennelly, 20, from Listowel, County Kerry, had never seen a game of...
Swedish medical students attending Danish universities are giving Denmark's education and health ministers a headache. Although Denmark lacks doctors, Copenhagen, Aarhus and South Denmark...

Research into neurobiology laced with visits to Bordeaux vineyards; seminars on European enterprise combined with jazz and Paris museums; studies on the communications society complemented by guided...
Students at the University of Lagos College of Medicine have been asked to conform to an official dress code. A circular signed by Christopher Isiekwenagbu, student affairs officer, says: "Ladies...
An essay competition for young Latvians has caused a political storm with critics branding it chauvinistic and anti-Russian. Critics claim the entries, collated into a book by the Vieda publishing...
In most industrial countries universities compete for the best scholars and researchers knowing that their presence will bring prestige and cash. Not so in Japan. All 99 national universities receive...
The British government has given the Association of Commonwealth Universities £100,000 to help combat the effects of Aids and HIV on higher education in the Commonwealth. Although the Commonwealth...

Two teenagers have convinced an American bank to sponsor their way through the first year of university, to the tune of $40,000 each (£28,000), in return for becoming corporate "student ambassadors...
A summer school on high technology has attracted so many applications from researchers worldwide that less than half can be accommodated. Of the 200 applicants, only 85 will be able to attend the...
A centre of excellence for architecture and the built environment commemorating black race-hate victim Stephen Lawrence is to be built in southeast London, writes Tim Greenhalgh. The construction of...
The ߣߣÊÓÆµn government has committed A$200 million (£73 million) to a World Bank plan to offer education and skills training to developing countries via the internet. The scheme was launched by...