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The time is coming for Romney to get angry, very angry, with what is increasingly, quaintly called "the mainstream media."
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.
Before World War II, academically excellent students from families unable to afford college for them could apply for scholarships available to outstanding students, but scholarships were scarce. The federal government itself did not then make direct grants to individual high school students to enable them to attend college, as it does now.
The B.A. has become the union card for social respectability.
Doing a better job of providing accessible, high-quality training, and helping students identify those programs, may not garner the headlines of a new research lab or football stadium, but it's a whole lot more likely to make a difference for workers and communities across the land.
The college athletes who entertain us receive a very small percentage of what they would have earned if they sold their services in a competitive market.
J. M. Barrie's famous 1904 play, Peter Pan or the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, reflected the difficulty of the young entering the adult world in Victorian times. The story, still enormously popular, made the refusal to grow up sound charming. Far less charming is the thwarted transition to adulthood...
Media inquiries: Veronique Rodmanvrodman@aei.org; 202.862.4870
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 28, 2008
The first issue of The American magazine under the leadership of new editor-in-chief Nick Schulz was released today.
A former senior editor of The American, Schulz helped launch the magazine and its online...






