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Great athletics--and steroids--are part of the story, but so are supply and demand.
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.
What is good for women's basketball may not be good for nuclear physics.
The dramatic rise in college tuition costs is due to the ways in which they organize and allocate resources--not lavish university facilities and extra student services. The real levers for increasing efficiency include rethinking student-faculty ratios, eliminating under-enrolled programs, and trimming unnecessary administrative positions.
Vance Fried explains what decision makers should know to rein in the cost of collage
Here is something of a marvel—a book by the Albert Guérard Professor in Literature at Stanford University that is written for the common reader, without footnotes, bibliography, or index.
By regulating gender representation in the sciences as it does for sports, Congress would compromise the intellectual integrity of research.
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?





