- Thu Nov 30 1995 Student Drops Email Bomb on University
- Wed Aug 11 2004 Students saying no to computer science
With the tech job market weak, undergrad enrollments in computer science departments keep dropping.
- Tue Dec 22 2009 AT&T strategist learns lessons of battlefield
Jim Cicconi, a senior AT&T exec who runs legislative affairs, digs deep into strategy when it comes to getting what he wants in Washington, D.C.
- Wed Jun 2 2004 Corel discounts software for students, teachers
The $300 regular price for WordPerfect Office, a Microsoft Office alternative, has dropped to $99 for teachers, students and educational groups.
- Mon Sep 11 2006 Photos: Tech tugs at college students
See which gadgets today's college students use the most.
- Mon Oct 28 1996 New notebook for students
Apple introduces a new mobile computer for students, hoping to maintain its strong position as in educational hardware.
- Tue Dec 23 2008 MIT students to help Boston secure subway fare system
Transit authority and students it sued will work together to fix weaknesses in Boston's subway fare collection system now that lawsuit over RFID card hacking research has been dropped.
- Tue Nov 25 2008 Felony charges dropped against teacher in porn/spyware case
Connecticut officials may seek another trial after felony charges are dropped against a teacher accused of showing Internet porn to students in class, despite evidence the culprit was spyware.
- Tue Apr 14 1998 Short Take: Student gets settlement in Net free speech case
A student who insulted his band teacher on his Web site will get $30,000 from the school district, according to the Associated Press. The student of Westlake High School in Cleveland, Ohio, was suspended for the remarks. In return for the settlement, the student, Sean O'Brien, dropped a lawsuit claiming the school board violated his First Amendment right to free speech.
- Wed Apr 19 2000 Yale drops Napster after legal pressure
The weight of lawsuits pending against the MP3-swapping company is taking its toll on universities that had turned a blind eye to students' use of its software.




