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Greenpeace should beware of glass houses when throwing stones.
The real question hanging over all this is whether there was a quid pro quo for Mr. Chen’s release.
In a recent post, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) education expert Andrew Kelly highlights a notable trend: prestigious academic institutions are beginning to offer open, online courses. Kelly explains that if employers and less prestigious colleges begin to accept the credit earned in these...
A century from now, observers may well identify the last months of 2011 as the start of higher education’s Great Disruption.
It has been reported that the Obama campaign this year, as in 2008, has disabled or chosen not to use AVS in screening contributions made by credit card. That doesn't sound very important. But it's evidence of a modus operandi that strikes me as thuggish.
The reality of Ben Bernanke's press conference did not live up to the hype. The discussion was dry and undramatic and could only have been torpor-inducing to anyone outside the economics profession. In the pursuit of a notion of openness, the Fed will have lost its mystique.
Mead urges Washington to “enter into deep strategic conversations” with each of these powers, so as to start building effective partnerships. The problem is, we’ve already tried that, with most of them.
The removal of a top Communist party official doesn’t tell us much.






