Heartless animal or rational beast?
How can an animal rights leader who finds 'pet' a demeaning term argue that severely disabled babies should be killed? Kate Worsley meets Peter Singer, a philosopher who believes that not all lives...
How can an animal rights leader who finds 'pet' a demeaning term argue that severely disabled babies should be killed? Kate Worsley meets Peter Singer, a philosopher who believes that not all lives...
Half of the country's adults remain poor readers, but Diane McGuinness argues that the governments latest literary strategy is in danger of ignoring some vital lessons. After six years of research on...
Was the recent Spanish holiday hoax by Leeds University art students performance art or just a stunt? Alison Utley reports Leeds University's fine art department could not believe its luck last week...
An ancient ritual due for sacrifice Mina's (not her real name) story is not untypical of the suffering that British girls go through every year. She is a 30-year-old arts graduate born and raised in...
Millions of women worldwide have suffered the searing pain and harm of clitoral circumcision. African film-maker Ladi Ladebo tells Tim Greenhalgh how he aims to show why the practice must end Ladi...
In the first of a series in which top academics discuss their ground-breaking research, archaeologist Colin Renfrew explains how our genes hold the key to a linguistic riddle 8,000 years old The Indo...
Brilliant objects of desire The star phenomenon got its biggest boost from Duke University, where from the mid 1980s the hiring of two huge names, Stanley Fish and Fredric Jameson, shoved Duke's...
Brilliant objects of desire Stars are often made by books. In 1995, Alan Taylor, a professor of history at the University of California at Davis, won a Pulitzer Prize for William Cooper's Town. The...
Ruthless competition between American universities to recruit top talent has seen salaries for the courted few spiral, prompting fears of division and corruption, Tim Cornwell reports Tom Bender,...
Britain at risk of botching its ABC The above is an extract from a story read by Susie, a child taught by the "real books" method. Real-books teachers are taught that children can "discover" how our...
The data for the nine league tables published last week were used by The Times to produce its consolidated "league table" according to its own criteria. The THES did not select those included.
Iris Kemp, a former casual worker featured in last week's THES, is employed by the University of Hull and not by the University of Lincolnshire and Humberside.
University teachers criticised the proposed Institute of Learning and Teaching at a regional consultation last week. The criticism follows a paper from the '94 group of universities which described...
The Higher Education Statistics Agency's findings for 1996/97 reveal that: 2.4 million students were at further education colleges in England, 3 per cent fewer than in 1996 73 per cent of students on...
The University of Central Lancashire, not Lancaster University, should have been listed in the "Top Institutions in 70 Subjects" table under Communication, Cultural and Media Studies.