Campus Report Online, which documents the frequently-shocking political bias on college campuses and in public schools, goes live on the radio via www.Rightalk.com on Friday, October 29th from 2-3 p.m.
Features
Can Academia Confront Iraq?
The film challenges extreme but growing ideas such as that of Gordon Feldman, professor at Brandeis University who described terrorism as merely “ways of inflicting revenge on an enemy that seems unable or unwilling to respond to rational pleas for discussion and justice.”
(X) Free Speech (X)
In this day and age, it is interesting to see what type of free speech that college and universities allow. A survey of some recent cases suggests that they find political statements risky, particularly conservative ones, but pornography fair game.
Black Rock & The Ivory Tower
Some of the media heavyweights who weighed in on the CBS scandal also moonlight as college professors. Some of these journalists, in turn, remain perplexed about the the story itself.
Brainwashing 101: The Movie
Filmmaker Evan Coyne Maloney’s first effort is essential viewing for those who believe that the politically correct campus is a myth.
Campus Book Store Bias
You may not be able to judge a book by its cover but you can tell a lot about a college by the titles it stocks in its bookstore.
Anti-American Idol at UT Austin
When conservative students at the University of Texas (UT) at Austin created a satiric scholarship to reward anti-Americanism, those young Tories named it after a journalism professor at the school who richly deserves the recognition.
Extremely P. C. Makeover at W&L
While Americans continue to move south of the Mason Dixon line, officials at southern institutions of higher learning try to distance their schools from the region that they are in.
College Rankings (Over)Rated
If you are trying to decide which university to attend, you might want to think twice about heavily basing your decision on the U.S. News and World Report’s infamous college rankings.
In Search Of the Nutty Professor
We’ve discovered that most college students can find a local variety of the educated dunce at their own institutions of higher learning.