
鈥奍f University College London had hoped that Sir Tim Hunt鈥檚 resignation over his 鈥渢rouble with girls鈥 comments had drawn a line under the controversy, it will have been sorely disappointed. Last week, senior academics, politicians and media commentators took turns to blast the treatment of the Nobel prizewinning biologist, who says he was forced to quit his honorary professorship at UCL. Stargazing scientist Brian Cox was quoted in The Daily Telegraph on 17聽June saying that Sir聽Tim had been 鈥渉ounded out鈥 after a 鈥渢rial by social media鈥, and Classics don Mary Beard wrote in same paper on 18聽June that it was wrong to 鈥渄rum him out of the academic town鈥 despite his 鈥渟tupid, wrong and, to some people, seriously offensive鈥 remarks. Evolutionary scientist Richard Dawkins hit out at the 鈥渂aying witch-hunt鈥 in a letter to The Times on 19聽June, while London mayor Boris Johnson and myriad letter writers championed Sir聽Tim鈥檚 鈥渞ight to offend鈥. And with eight Nobel laureates criticising UCL in a Times front-page story on 20聽June, the backlash may be far from over.
After a close-run contest that sparked controversy over which candidate Melvyn Bragg was backing, Simon Armitage 鈥 a Portsmouth Polytechnic graduate and former probation officer 鈥 has been elected professor of poetry at the University of Oxford. He pipped 80-year-old Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka 鈥 Lord Bragg鈥檚 original preference before he switched to Armitage 鈥 and American A.鈥塃. Stallings to the post, The Guardian reported on 20聽June. Armitage told the newspaper that he was 鈥渄elighted and very excited and suitably daunted as well鈥. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been such a long process,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n the time it鈥檚 taken, we鈥檝e had a general election, Sepp 颅Blatter has come and gone and come again, and we鈥檝e nearly got a new leader of the Labour Party.鈥
Research collaboration between Imperial College London and China鈥檚 aerospace sector 鈥渋s under scrutiny as US authorities investigate links between Beijing鈥檚 top military aircraft manufacturer and Iran鈥檚 ballistic missile programme鈥, the Financial Times reported on 23聽June. The Beijing Aeronautical Manufacturing Technology Research Institute (Bamtri) was added to a US watch list last year because of alleged dealings with companies owned by Li Fangwei, a Chinese national wanted by the US for selling missile technology to 颅Tehran, the newspaper said. Imperial was among 鈥渁 number of Western organisations and companies that have signed research agreements鈥 with Bamtri and its state-run parent, the FT added. Knowledge transfer is a聽good thing 鈥 but a transfer to Iran鈥檚 missile programme would probably be unwise. Imperial said that the collaboration 鈥渟upports fundamental, non-classified research鈥hich could help develop lighter, safer and more efficient commercial 颅aircraft鈥.
Lord Mandelson, the former business secretary, has failed in his bid to become chancellor of聽the University of Manchester, 鈥渓osing out to a poet from Wigan despite a concerted lobbying campaign for the former Labour minister鈥. Lemn Sissay, 鈥渁 poet, broadcaster and playwright who grew up in care鈥, topped the ballot of university alumni, reported The Guardian on 23聽June. Lord Mandelson鈥檚 position in the Manchester poll matched the title of his autobiography, The Third Man 鈥 he finished last, behind Mr聽Sissay and the conductor Sir Mark Elder. The peer is likely to be 鈥渙ffered another lofty position at the university as a consolation prize 鈥 most likely honorary chair鈥, The Guardian said. That would be a fitting show of gratitude to Lord Mandelson, who, after all, did bestow the Browne Review on higher education.
鈥奌aving dropped its 鈥淢etropolitan鈥 tag last year, Leeds Beckett University might have wondered if its new identity could help propel it up the league tables. Its number one ranking in the University Sex League is surely not what it had in mind, having unexpectedly ascended 22 places in this year鈥檚 standings. The sector鈥檚 trashiest league table 鈥 published by online magazine Hexjam on 18聽June 鈥 claims that students at Leeds Beckett have 8.45 sexual partners on average, just ahead of Southampton Solent University and the London School of Economics. One might question the honesty of the 6,000 students surveyed: the same poll found that theology students are among the most promiscuous on campus.
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