Month: March 2013

What Happened At Oberlin? Maybe Nothing

Hateful graffiti at Oberlin College have drawn national attention (NY Times, CNN) and caused turmoil on campus. The graffiti, which included nasty words for blacks and gays, swastikas and “whites only” scrawled on a water fountain, prompted a big anti-hate rally, outpourings of emotion and a one-day cancellation of all classes. Though written slurs can […]

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Even More Sexual Diversity at Yale

As part of sex weekend,  Yale held a seminar last Saturday on an ever-vexing question– “Sex: Am I normal?”   Obvious answer: “Of course you are.” The visiting guarantor of normalcy this year was one Jill McDevitt, billed as “the only person in the world with all three of their degrees–b.a., m.a, ph.d.—- in sex!” (Exclamation […]

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Duke Drops the Case Against Me

As some readers of Minding the Campus know, since last summer I’ve been embroiled in a legal controversy with Duke. The battle ended last week, when, facing a potential defeat before the US. District Court in Maine, Duke withdrew its subpoenas. The affair spoke volumes about the indifference to First Amendment values at one of […]

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English Translation for This Not Yet Available

Here’s David Frum hilariously quoting an all-gibberish explanation by Columbia Professor Joseph Massad on why gay rights are a Western imposition on the Muslim world: “…capitalism is the universalizing means of production and it has produced its own intimate forms and modes of framing capitalist relations, these forms and modes have not been institutionalized across […]

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An Upbeat Conference and Two Snarky Attacks

This past weekend the National Association of Scholars celebrated its 25th anniversary with a conference in New York attended by more than 250 guests. The concluding dinner on Saturday night featured Tom Wolfe as the keynote speaker.                                    The […]

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Student Loans are the Problem

Peter Sacks’s recent piece attacks a straw man. He argues against advocates for eliminating all federal aid to colleges, a powerless faction if there ever was one. In so doing he sidesteps the very real failings of our higher-ed policy.  Sacks claims that capitalistic systems requires educated citizens. Far from controversial. However, he contends that since […]

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Race-Class-Gender in History Dissertations

Inside Higher Ed features a somewhat odd analysis about a study by the AHA comparing words in the titles of dissertations that appeared between 1920 and 1960 with those that appeared in the last 20 years. According to IHE‘s Scott Jaschik, “For the recent titles, some of the analysis may challenge conventional wisdom about the […]

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The End of Unwatched Professors

One of the enduring operative principles of higher education has been reliance upon professors to do their work diligently and conscientiously without the eye of a monitor upon them.  Yes, there are tenure reviews and other periodic reviews of faculty performance, but the day-to-day functioning of faculty members in their teaching and research has largely gone […]

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Stop Dumping on Student Loans

Some critics have called for a near-total rollback of the government’s involvement with higher education, including the end of subsidies to low-income students.  Last month, for instance, Jarrett Skorup of Michigan Capitol Confidential.com suggested that state and federal governments should  quit subsidizing higher education altogether because the aid fails to improve individual economic prospects or […]

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