From today's UK papers

二月 26, 2001

FINANCIAL TIMES

Sheffield Business School, part of  Sheffield Hallam University, is to stop operating in its current form.

Cranfield School of Management is launching a modular MBA.

A $1m (£600,000) gift from an alumnus, Richard Sorenson, will help endow a studio arts facility at Babson College in Massachusetts.

THE GUARDIAN

Leading article argues that poor students should be protected and top-up fees permitted to fund higher education.

John Sutherland asks can you blame students for funding their years at college the smart way - by selling soft drugs.

THE INDEPENDENT

Archaeologists from Bristol University have the first firm evidence that ancient Britons were cannibals.

Research at the Institute of Neurology in London has located a spot where jokes stimulate activity in the brain.

Nearly 800 students have been DNA-tested in the hunt for a suspected serial sex attacker, believed to be a student living in Edinburgh.

In an interview, historian David Starkey says that his mother made Margaret Thatcher look like a weakling.

DAILY MAIL

Scientists at Stanford University have produced mice in which a quarter of the brain cells are human.

THE TIMES

Robert Schumann, the 19th-century composer, should not have spent his last two and a half years imprisoned in a mental asylum, according to the American scholar Eric Jensen.

Rates of autism have risen faster in the past decade than previously thought, but the cause remains a mystery, researchers at Sunderland University have said.

A band of influential scientists from around the world is warning that genius is being stifled by populism.

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