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UPPSALA

Dad leaves son in the cold for ‘playing like crap’

A 10-year-old boy was left outside in the cold wearing only a shorts and t-shirt in Uppsala in eastern Sweden on Saturday evening after his father felt the boy didn't deserve a ride home to Stockholm because he "played like crap" in a floorball tournament.

The lonely boy was standing outside the Fyrishov arena when the coach of senior floorball team Sirius came by to drop off some match equipment in the arena.

Coach Conny Eriksson told the boy to go inside since it was “seven – eight degrees below freezing outside” but discovered the boy was still there ten minutes later.

The boy then told Eriksson his father had left him there in just shorts and t-shirt.

“It’s so cruel, these things can’t happen. You don’t leave your child in another city and then go home,” coach Conny Eriksson told local daily Uppsala Nya Tidning, UNT.

However, the concerned coach was then able to phone the father and asked what was going on.

“But he didn’t think that was any of my business and said that ‘the boy played like crap and that he could walk home’.”

“This is child abuse,” Eriksson told UNT.

Since the father refused to make the roughly 70 kilometre return trip from his home in Stockholm to get his son, Eriksson was instead forced to get a hold of parents of one of the boy’s teammates who came to pick him up.

The head of the tournament, Peter Wennberg, was livid when he was informed on Saturday evening of what had happened.

“The father’s response alone is despicable,” he told the paper.

“How can one do something like this? I feel sorry for the kid to have to come home to that parent.”

Wennberg also questioned why the coaches of the boy’s team didn’t stay to make sure everyone had a ride home.

In the 19 years the tournament has been played, Wennberg said he had never seen anything like this.

“But unfortunately there are these kinds of parents,” he said.

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UNIVERSITY

Three Swedish universities earn spots in top 100

Three Swedish universities made it into the top 100 in an annual ranking of the world's best schools on Tuesday, but some of the country's higher education seats dropped from last year.

Three Swedish universities earn spots in top 100
Students at Lund University. Photo: Aline Lessner/imagebank.sweden.se

Lund in southern Sweden was again picked as Sweden's top university and came 73rd in the QS World University Rankings, but dropped three ranks on last year (and down from 60 in 2014).

Eight Swedish universities feature in the QS rankings, and all but three fell in the global list.

The ancient Uppsala University climbed back to the top 100, landing a spot in 98th place. Further down the list, Linköping and Umeå Universities both edged up to 282nd and 294th place, up from 286th and 319th, respectively.

The Royal Institute of Technology (Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan, KTH) dropped from 92nd to 97th place. Gothenburg-based Chalmers University of Technology fell from number 132 to 139 (which is still an improvement on its 175th place in the 2014 QS World University Rankings).

Lund was given a five-star ranking in addition to its place in the list. “Lund is Sweden's most attractive study destination. The compact university campus encourages networking and creates the conditions for scientific breakthroughs and innovations,” read the QS description.

“The university has a clear international profile, with partner universities in over 70 countries. Funding of more than 5 billion kronor a year goes to research at eight faculties, which gives Lund one of Sweden's strongest and broadest ranges of research activity.”

THE LOCAL SWITZERLAND: ETH Zurich best in continental Europe

Now in their 13th year, the annual rankings are compiled by global higher education analysts Quacquerelli Symonds (QS), and rank 916 institutions according to four key pillars: research, teaching employability and internationalization.

For the first time in more than a decade US universities took all three top spots, with MIT placing first for the fifth successive year ahead of Stanford and Harvard, knocking Britain's Cambridge to fourth.

Tuesday's list comes less than a month after the Shanghai Rankings, which picked the Karolinska Institute as the best university in Sweden.