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George H. Nash will deliver the September 2010 Bradley Lecture at AEI.
In one of his last acts as prime minister, Barham Salih symbolically launched the Aras Publishing House’s book fair in Erbil. The event featured important Kurdish classics, translations of Western works, as well as children’s books. Book fairs are important.
Twenty-five top college students will travel to the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington, D.C. this June to participate in the 2012 American Enterprise Summer Institute.
Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin (1799-1837) was Russia's greatest poet--its Shakespeare, its Dante. The author of Evgeny Onegin, Boris Godunov, The Bronze Horseman, and innumerable other classics, Pushkin is credited with creating modern literary Russian, and his influence is impossible to overstate. To be able to read and appreciate Pushkin is indispensable...
Gender bias is the usual explanation for why few women reach the top levels of academic science, but what if the explanation is more complex than that?
As a threat to the nation's health, television stands far higher than alcohol, drugs, or tobacco, and the worry is that it may be too late to do anything about it, since the addiction is all but universal.
The university is evolving, leaving many to wonder whether a university education is quite the bargain that its defenders claim it to be and leading to significant changes in what students take from their university experiences.
The crabbed and inward-looking professional literature of the 1990s has given way to what looks to be a renaissance of serious thinking about the art of war.





