The higher education establishment has a mixed record on delivering the diversity it claims to prize, at best.
Articles By: Malcolm A. Kline
An Appeasement Primer
Can today’s anti-war movement be compared justly to the British appeasers of the 30s?
UMBA in Diversity
American businesses would rather gamble on finding talent abroad than rely on homegrown collegiates who have been through the entire public school system in the United States. There may be some good reasons for that.
Around Campus
Mal Kline provides a wrap-up of U.S. campuses from the greening of Florida Gulf Coast University to English experimentation at Johns Hopkins.
Back to Bucknell
Some good and bad news from Bucknell.
Title IX & Unintended Consequences
The new athletic director appointed to the NCAA to oversee Title IX may be surprised by what some women in academia have to say about the program.
Gunther Grass Remembered
Jonathan Brent, editorial director of the Yale University Press, shows us in the September 8th installment of the Chronicle of Higher Education that Gunther Grass has long been ambivalent, at best about the nature of totalitarian governments.
A for Exceptable
College administrators are scratching their heads trying to figure our how the straight-A students they accepted tanked on the SATs.
Brave New World at JHU
Johns Hopkins is mostly known as a staid old Baltimore institution famous for the breakthroughs of its medical researchers but the university’s alumni magazine shows a campus that is more new age than old guard.
Building Up Student Bodies
Some teachers are attempting radical things with Massachusetts probationers and welfare families.