Professors must keep bias out of classroom
After taking numerous classes at this university, chances are at one point you have taken a class in which a professor gave a lecture or assigned a book that you did not agree with.
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After taking numerous classes at this university, chances are at one point you have taken a class in which a professor gave a lecture or assigned a book that you did not agree with.
The same weekend the United Nations' Security Council unanimously decided to impose sanctions on North Korea in response to its alleged Oct. 9 nuclear test, some leading experts on East Asian issues took a historical approach in debating the future of North Korea and the region at the UW-Madison Nuclear Security in Northeast Asia Workshop.A
The classic adage, ""It takes two to tango,"" is never more relevant than in the conflicts of the Middle East. The needless name calling and sensitivity of opposing religious groups is childlike, and often leads to unnecessary deaths.
Spurring five years of increased homeland security provisions and strengthened surveillance of U.S. citizens, the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks left the nation with much to reflect on, especially at UW-Madison.
Who was officially declared Mexico's president-elect following two months of alleged fraud?
When it comes to immigration policy, the United States is at a crossroads and any decision made will have drastic implications upon the future ethnicity of the country. Should the United States adhere to its heritage and allow immigration to continue to culturally shape and transform the nation, or should the United States close all borders and rigidly enforce against illegal immigration to preserve its ethnicity and legitimize U.S. residency.
Coincidence, or weird scientology?
Offended and enraged readers voiced their opinions surrounding The Badger Herald's controversial Feb. 13 republication of the recent Danish Muslim cartoons during a expert opinion panel discussion sponsored by the Dean of Students office Tuesday night.
As one of the foremost Henry Kissinger historians nation-wide, UW-Madison history professor Jeremi Suri is privileged with extensive access to archival materials and has even had six or seven meetings with the man himself'two resources few historians have at their disposal.
By military standards, $300 million a year is small change. This amount, the U.S. military budget for nanotechnology research, pales in comparison to its total budget for war or peacekeeping'both of which are possible applications for the minute technology.
Iraqis rushed to the ballot boxes in large numbers Saturday to vote on the constitutional referendum. Sixty-one percent of Iraqis voted, surpassing the 58 percent of citizens that voted in January.
Maintaining American troops in Iraq indefinitely could be a formula for disaster, Wisconsin Sen. Russ Feingold said Friday. Feingold, who may be considering a run for the presidency, reiterated his desire for a timetable for withdrawing American forces from Iraq at a rally in Manchester, N.H.
When North Korea declared itself a nuclear power Thursday, diplomatic alarms sounded across China, Russia, Japan, South Korea and the United States.
One need not read Anne Coulter's inky fireballs, visit the Campus Watch website or follow the teachings of Burke, Christ and Dubya to encounter the caricature of the P.C. humanities professor whose heart often doth bleed during class. Whether it's a lecture on Mao or Milton, we are not exactly shocked when contemporary politics seep in. But to many, the color of politics in humanities classrooms is annoying, even angering. Bill O'Reilly expressed that anger in his misleading rhetorical question, \Would you pay $30,000 a year to hear a professor applaud Mogadishu?"" Though we might be annoyed (the professorate is paid to annoy), we should never be as angry as O'Reilly.
When President Bush delivered his victory speech in Washington, D.C., the repercussions of his words resonated across the globe.
Muslims around campus will begin eating \fast"" food today, with the start of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Forbidden to eat between sunrise and sunset, it serves as an exercise in self-discipline and a reminder that others are less fortunate.
Saturday marked the third anniversary of the terrorist attacks that transformed security policies in America, and many universities nationwide have begun to reassess what role security should play on campuses today.
UW-Madison Chancellor John Wiley was met with boos from angered students when he did not issue a statement condemning the USA Patriot Act at an accountability session Thursday night in Science Hall sponsored by the Associated Students of Madison.