Government By Goldie Blumenstyk, Shannon Najmabadi, and Sarah Brown A panel of appellate judges affirmed that states have legal standing to challenge the executive order, specifically because of its impact on students and researchers at their public universities. |
Administration By Lawrence Biemiller The Indiana college’s leaders said suspending operations would preserve what resources remain, allowing them to work on "a future, re-engineered Saint Joseph’s College." |
Campus Speech By Peter Schmidt New bills try to put new pressure on the colleges to uphold the First Amendment. In two states, legislators want to require such institutions to punish students who attempt to shout down speakers. |
Leadership By Steve Kolowich Ana Mari Cauce, president of the University of Washington, faced criticism after declining to block Milo Yiannopoulos from her campus. She talks to The Chronicle about free speech, tolerance, and student safety. |
Commentary By Brian Halley University presses must adapt to the rise of digital publishing and the greater reliance on nontenured faculty. |
The Chronicle Review By Seth Perry In the 19th century, they generally lived in cowed silence. But a new book recalls a few who spoke out. |
Vitae By Andrew Thaler Not in the initial cull, anyway. So why does academia keep pointlessly requiring them for job applications? |
Lingua Franca The Supreme Court nominee's much-lauded sentence diagram was sloppy, says Lucy Ferriss. So let's not judge him on that. |