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Tea and Sympathy

A law professor argues that the Tea Party movement is the Constitution's bodyguard. Scott McLemee gets schooled on originalism.

Dear Reviewers, a Word?

Brian C. Rathbun offers some tips to those who decide the fate of journal submissions.

Grant Panels as Prom Committees

Serving on committees that consider proposals to the National Institutes of Health leaves Felicia B. LeClere feeling confident in a crucial part of the scientific process.

Real Impact

A chancellor's death reminds Roger Epp of the in-person, community-based connections that are vital to academe.

An Evangelical Renaissance in Academe?

As a major new center for Christian thought opens, evangelical scholars should seek to exorcise the ghosts of fundamentalism, write Thomas Albert Howard and Karl Giberson.

Values and Scholarship

Eleven research university provosts explain why they back open access -- in Congressional legislation and on their campuses.

Taking Exception

American politicians love American exceptionalism -- or at least to talk about it. Scott McLemee wonders if they know the concept's odd history.

A Better Approach to 'Gainful Employment'

Bipartisan federal legislation would give taxpayers and students data about college programs' labor market returns -- without imposing onerous regulations, writes Mark Schneider.