Academe Today Thursday, March 30, 2017 Sign up for this newsletter | Todayâs News Leadership By Jack Stripling After Graham Spanier’s conviction last week, a Penn State trustee said he was "running out of sympathy" for Jerry Sandusky’s abuse victims. Those remarks and a furious statement by Louis Freeh suggest anything but calm. | Government By Katherine Mangan The president has spoken out about putting Americans back to work, but college leaders fear that his budget plan would sharply undermine that goal. |
Faculty By Nell Gluckman Lisa DeBoer, a professor at Westmont College, explains the significance of a statement whose signatories promise to recognize "vulnerable populations among us" and "ways we benefit from and participate in structural injustices." |
Publishing By Lindsay McKenzie The publications of the 90-year-old press, which got an annual subsidy of $200,000, include a highly regarded journal of Milton studies. |
In Brief A New Feature for Chronicle Subscribers We’ve started a new email, for subscribers only, that briefs readers on everything they need to know in higher ed to start the day. Here’s a sample. |
Views The Chronicle Review By Joel Baden and Candida Moss Academe rightly objects to President Trump’s immigration bans. But by doing so for corporatist, not humanitarian, reasons, it tacitly endorses his priorities. | Lingua Franca Ben Yagoda praises a new book, Hemingway Didn't Say That: The Truth Behind Familiar Quotations, by Garson O'Toole. |
Advice Ms. Mentor By Ms. Mentor How to explain to a colleague that you are a woman, not a cow. |
Vitae By Mark Carrigan Social media has made academia more visible to the wider society, and, thus, made academics more vulnerable. |
Job Opportunities Tools & Resources Free Dossier Service Get organized with The Chronicle’s Vitae dossier service. Manage all of your professional documents in one convenient place — safely, securely, and at no cost. Applying for jobs online is simpler, saving you time and money. Start your free dossier. |
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