In our experience, college administrators frequently engage in doublespeak, speaking out for academic freedom while actively suppressing it.
Features
Teen Attitudes
Despite the problems of today’s world, the state of American youth is “upbeat.”
Fahrenheit 7-11
As millions line up to see “Fahrenheit 9/11” in large metropolitan areas, a small but growing number of reviewers are questioning the so-called documentary’s accuracy.
An Education from A to Z
In an effort to revive their atrophied brain cells before the swiftly approaching fall semester, college students turn to two experts from the world of publishing and academia for a belated summer reading list.
Affirmatively Addled
To elevate racial sensitivity, some colleges have come up with a game for resident assistants called “the privilege walk.”
Academic Bill of Rights Wronged
When the Ivory Tower attacks something such as the Academic Bill of Rights that author David Horowitz is promoting, it shows, by its very opposition, the need for such a restraint.
Graduation Day “Diversity”
Last month, commencement-day speakers around the country used the podium to deliver the same sort of political broadsides that students can expect to hear if they tune in to this year’s Democratic convention.
Central Connecticut Counterculture
With its dearth of intellectual diversity and its intolerance of dissent, CCSU often seems disturbingly similar to the CCCP, according to one heterodox professor.
Conservative University 2004
Announcing Conservative University 2004, the cure for the common campus.
Action Jackson
In Professor Winsome Jackson’s comparative government class at Sierra College, students received 20 bonus points for attending a play not exactly known for its geopolitical insights.