Bulgarian Ex-EU Commissioner to Officially Launch New Party |
Former Bulgarian European Commissioner and presidential candidate Meglena Kuneva is to officially launch her new political project, the Bulgaria for Citizens party, on Sunday. The party, which declares itself as right-wing, is to elect its National Council that will consist of 21 members. Former education Minister Daniel Valchev and human rights expert Yonko Grozev are expected to be among those elected, dnevnik....
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Don Larsen to auction his uniform from perfect game |
Former Yankees pitcher plans to pay for his grandkids' college education with the proceeds.New York Yankees legend Don Larsen said Thursday he wants to pay for his grandkids' college education by auctioning off a prized possession — the uniform he wore when he pitched the only perfect game in World Series history.
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S.Africa claims delivery of books in schools fiasco |
South Africa's education department on Thursday claimed it had supplied nearly all missing textbooks to 5,000 public schools as ordered by a court but doubts remained that the fiasco was over.
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New site will allow people to track Ark. spending |
Arkansas officials on Wednesday showed off a new government website that will allow people to track by all state agencies, except higher education institutions.
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Gates: 'Higher education has not been substantially changed by the Internet' |
Bill Gates sounds off on a number of education issues in a recent interview with the Chronicle of Higher education. He states that higher ed hasn't really changed that much despite exposure to an incredibly transformative medium, the Internet.
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Why some for-profit colleges could lose eligibility for federal aid |
Dozens of for-profit colleges, also called career training programs, could lose their federal financial aid because they are saddling students with unsustainable levels of debt, according to new data from the US Department of education.
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Apollo faces federal review on financial aid issue |
The U.S. Department of education plans to review two years of paperwork filed by for-profit education company Apollo Group Inc. to ensure it complied with federal student financial aid rules at its University of Phoenix chain.
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Apollo faces investigation on federal reporting |
The U.S. Department of education plans to investigate for-profit education company Apollo Group Inc. to ensure it complied with federal student financial aid rules at its University of Phoenix chain.
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Borrowing for college skyrocketing in Ky. |
Kentucky college students borrowed a record $1.2 billion for higher education during the 2010-2011 school year, and the average student will spend a decade shelling out $200 a month to retire their loans, new data shows.
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NJ governor confident in university merger bill |
Gov. Chris Christie says he's confident the Legislature will approve a plan to change New Jersey's higher education system.
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