When trying to convince dubious students of the benefits of social security when they are all too familiar with the costs, professors might well ask the question: “Who are you going to believe, me or your paycheck?”
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Enabling the Disabled
Hope springs eternal in the academic breast, at least for the secular.
Semester At Sea, Literally
Not content with the crowd of left-wing speakers at colleges and universities on land, the semester at sea program is extending this trend to the high seas.
Zero Tolerance for Cadets
Those diversity mavens in academia want to keep at least one group out of their big tent—the U. S. military.
Green Go The Jobs
Of all of the promises that America’s elites—from academia to the higher echelons of government—make to American youth, none may be quite so suspect as the promise of a greener future, in every sense of the word, if the young will only train for jobs of a similar hue.
Lessons From Recovering Politicians
Academics might be able to learn something from retired public officials.
Feds to the Rescue?
Professors still believe that the woes that afflict higher education can be solved through federal intervention.
Neoconservative Blind Spots
Because the conservatives most likely to be employed in academia are of the neo variety, students may not get an accurate picture of conservatism or, for that matter, America.
DREAMing Of Bigger Budgets
What is known locally in Washington, D. C. as a dog-and-pony show is being played out across the country as proponents of the DREAM Act rally their troops to put this education spending proposal over the top.
Thanksgiving Then & Now
Although the exact date is in dispute, it is generally assumed that in the Fall of 1621 in the vicinity of Plymouth Plantation, a group of very grateful colonists set down to a bountiful feast.