I am a professor at KFUPM in the mathematics department studying Randomness. We also have an active teaching program in Probability. I don't know where GrayKat gets his information. KFUPM is a great university with an active research base and bright motivated students. I have taught at large state universities in the USA and KFUPM is comparible in the teaching load given to faculty and support for research.
The King Versus The Radicals
Saudi Arabia's monarch is using Aramco—the crack state oil company—to build a Western-style university in a bid to outflank the repressive clergy.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
The main street of Dhahran Hills passes by perfectly manicured baseball diamonds and football fields. Prefab houses—complete with freshly mown lawns and tire swings hanging from elm trees—overlook golden desert vistas. Women in shorts and tank tops jog down Miller Street and Lilac Road while kids play basketball on bougainvillea-lined cul-de-sacs. Teenagers congregate at the movie theater and bowling alley; their parents grab dinner at the Olive Garden.
This could be Phoenix or Palm Springs. But Dhahran Hills is located in Dammam, in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province. It is the main compound of Aramco: the country's hugely successful national oil company, which turns 75 this month. Yet Dhahran Hills seems a world away from Riyadh or other Saudi cities, where men in white robes and traditional headdresses loiter aimlessly along clogged thoroughfares lined by dilapidated high-rises. Women—if they're seen outside at all in those towns—go about in black full-body coverings.
But Aramco has always been different. Since it was created by Standard Oil in 1933, and continuing through the company's takeover by the Saudi government in the '70s, Aramco has functioned as a state within a state, operating by its own set of laws and standards and maintaining a remarkable level of freedom from the fundamentalist Wahhabi clergy that dominates the rest of Saudi society. This freedom, and Aramco's impressive managerial efficiency, have helped it become the richest company in the world: a new study by McKinsey and the Financial Times put its net worth at $781 billion.
But the company's splendid isolation may be about to end. Saudi Arabia's reformist King Abdullah recently thrust Aramco into the spotlight by charging it with building a $10 billion Western-style university on the country's western coast.
It's a high-risk gamble. The project is part of Abdullah's attempt to wrest control of his country from the repressive clerics, using the one Saudi institution that's free of their influence. If the university succeeds, Aramco may become a key ally in the king's struggle and will likely be called on for other similar reform projects. But the company's involvement could also prove its undoing. For the school could turn Aramco—already suspect in many Saudis' eyes—into a prime target of the country's extremist factions, perhaps even ending its protected status. The implications will be profound for Saudi Arabia—and indeed, for the world, since the company supplies 26 percent of the world's oil.
The differences between Aramco and the rest of Saudi Arabia run deep. The corporation has its own print and broadcast media, as well as its own intelligence services and security force. It maintains its own lobbyists in foreign capitals, and its employees often act as intermediaries between the king and Western leaders. The company also sends thousands of Saudis to the United States every year for education—creating an elite that, on their return home, have formed a progressive (if tiny) core within Saudi society.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- Next Page »









Discuss