Title

Phosfluorescently target clicks-and-mortar growth strategies for timely infrastructures. Monotonectally embrace high-quality applications.
Features

Lost In Cyberspace

Surprise, surprise. Spending thousands of hours on the Internet apparently leaves children poorly prepared to face the challenges of adult life, according to The London Telegraph.

Features

Senioritis Cured

Senioritis is that time-honored “disease” that affects graduating seniors during the last half of their senior year, but this year it might just be in remission.

Perspectives

Defending an Exceptional History

Truly, now more than ever, students cannot let their education end with college graduation, particularly when institutions of higher learning are increasingly sacrificing bodies of knowledge for reams of interpretation.

News

Of Fairness & Freedom

“For a long time, the fairness doctrine has been sound asleep. In my opinion let it rest in peace,” said Jerald N. Fritz, General Counsel at Allbritton Communications Company, during a discussion panel on the fairness doctrine.

Features

German ‘Sex Education’

Alliance Defense
Fund attorneys are representing another two German parents in an appeal to the European
Court of Human Rights filed Thursday.

News

ACORN Under Fire

ACORN continues to come under fire even as U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) moved an amendment on the House floor that would allow non-profit organizations, such as the aforementioned group, easy access to federal funds.

Features

Pro-Obama Group Demands Socialist Media

While making demands for more federal money, another topic at the Free Press summit was how to divvy up the $7.2 billion that was authorized in the federal economic “stimulus” legislation to expand access to the Internet.

Features

Obama Pivots on Conscience Rights

In his address to the 2009 graduating class at the University of Notre Dame, President Barack Obama said yesterday that he supports conscience rights for healthcare workers.

News

Postmodern Prof Whistles Dixie

From the people who like to paint critics of higher education as anti-intellectual comes a new tome that shows how cerebral the pursuits of the academic publishing world are.