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Penn in the News

A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
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  • Into the Mosh Pit: Republican Campaign Talk Gets Nastier
    Associated Press

    Into the Mosh Pit: Republican Campaign Talk Gets Nastier

    Kathleen Hall Jamieson of the Annenberg Public Policy Center is quoted about how Donald Trump has ‘“hijacked” political correctness to justify his use of personal attacks.

    Feb 15, 2016

    Faculty Asked the Mount St. Mary’s President to Resign. He Didn’t.
    The Washington Post

    Faculty Asked the Mount St. Mary’s President to Resign. He Didn’t.

    On Friday, faculty at Mount St. Mary’s asked, by an 87-to-3 vote, for university President Simon Newman to resign by 9 a.m. Monday. The time came and went. And the university was closed Monday because of a snowstorm, so professors did not meet to discuss their reaction to Newman’s decision. They will later in the week, said David McCarthy, secretary to the faculty. Newman was on campus for a student rally Monday morning and thanked the students for their support.

    Feb 15, 2016

    In Praise of Jargon
    Chronicle of Higher Education

    In Praise of Jargon

    When I served in the Obama administration, some of my colleagues, who had recently been academics, wondered, with something like despair, how they could ever return to academic life. "After this," they wondered, "what could possibly be the point of going back to write academic articles?" When I asked them to elaborate, one of them sent me this quotation from Theodore Roosevelt: It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.

    Feb 14, 2016

    Where Are the Minority Professors?
    Chronicle of Higher Education

    Where Are the Minority Professors?

    On average, 75 out of every 100 full-time faculty members at four-year colleges are white. Five are black, and even fewer are Hispanic. But that’s not the whole story. Among the higher ranks and at certain types of institutions — say, small, private master’s universities — the faculty is even less diverse. Using the drop-down menus below, you can find the racial and ethnic breakdowns of all types of professors and institutions. Click the bars to see which colleges employ the most faculty members in each group.

    Feb 14, 2016

    Antonin Scalia’s Death Probably Won’t Affect ‘Fisher,’ but It Could Change the Future of Affirmative Action
    Chronicle of Higher Education

    Antonin Scalia’s Death Probably Won’t Affect ‘Fisher,’ but It Could Change the Future of Affirmative Action

    The death on Saturday of Antonin Scalia, the sharp-tongued justice who shaped constitutional debates for nearly 30 years, could end up shifting the Supreme Court’s ideological balance. But his absence is unlikely to affect the highly anticipated ruling in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, the pending legal challenge to race-conscious college-admissions policies. In short, the math still seems to favor the court’s conservative wing.

    Feb 14, 2016

    The Uncertain Path to Full Professor
    Chronicle of Higher Education

    The Uncertain Path to Full Professor

    They have national, even international reputations for groundbreaking research and scholarship. They write lauded books, win coveted prizes, draw graduate-student disciples. Their institutions and their disciplines tap them as leaders. They’re full professors, the elite class of the professoriate. But the path that scholars must follow to join their ranks is hardly clear-cut, which can make it more difficult for some people — particularly women and minorities — to get there.

    Feb 14, 2016

    Building a Bridge Between Engineering and the Humanities
    Chronicle of Higher Education

    Building a Bridge Between Engineering and the Humanities

    The engineering field is booming these days. Society regards it as an essential part of innovation, and colleges promote a degree in it as an entry into a fruitful, sustaining career. The humanities, by contrast, are in peril, with fewer students each year. We want to bridge this divide and help create a system where the two areas are not separate but are essential to each other. One of us began his studies in art and is now dean of an engineering school, and the other is an expert in Russian literature who originally planned to study physics.

    Feb 14, 2016

    How Mount St. Mary’s Chose Simon Newman as Its President
    Chronicle of Higher Education

    How Mount St. Mary’s Chose Simon Newman as Its President

    When Simon P. Newman was interviewing for the presidency of Mount St. Mary’s University, he promised to bring the small Catholic institution in rural Maryland national exposure. Now he and the board are probably just wishing that would all go away.

    Feb 13, 2016