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A Mind at the End of Its Tether

Whether or not madness seems like the right word for such a state of mind, Barbara K. Lipska's The Neuroscientist Who Lost Her Mind: My Tale of Madness and Recovery is likely to make a certain impression on the reader approaching middle age or well into it, writes Scott McLemee.

How to Avoid a Federal Investigation

Kate Kennedy highlights five assumptions that universities should question themselves about in the wake of sexual abuse charges at the University of Southern California.

How Online Can Learn From the Airline Industry

Global and regional alliances of colleges offering online programs can help higher education institutions navigate the future, Mark Lester writes.

Anti-Semitism After Charlottesville

Matthew J. Mayhew, Benjamin S. Selznick, Kevin Singer and Alyssa N. Rockenbach provide data and advice on improving attitudes toward Jewish students on college campuses.

Scholars or Spies?

Foreign agents are targeting research at American academic institutions, write Representatives Lamar Smith and Clay Higgins, and universities must take steps to guard against theft of sensitive information.

Questions Harvard Needs to Answer

Jun-Han Su and Hao Wu write that the university needs to assure Asian-American applicants that they aren't the subject of bias in the admissions process.

Ethical College Admissions: The Harvard Admissions Case

Jim Jump reviews the latest briefs. He's not convinced of discrimination, but he does have a lot of questions.

The Idea of the University Today

How have institutions like the University of Oxford endured for centuries through so many dramatic changes, asks Reverend John I. Jenkins, and what might their staying power teach us now?