Academia / General

Aufderheide, Patricia, ed. Beyond PC: Toward a Politics of Understanding. St.Paul MN: Graywolf Press, 1992. 239 pages.

This collection concerns the debate over multiculturalism, "political correctness," preferential admissions, and free speech on U.S. campuses. Essays and excerpts from authors on both sides of the debate are reprinted on the pages indicated:
 pp.7-10:   National Association of Scholars pp.129-32:  Raoul V. Mowatt
 pp.11-22:  Dinesh D'Souza                   pp.133-41:  Rosa Ehrenreich
 pp.23-26:  George F. Will                   pp.142-47:  Miles Harvey
 pp.27-49:  C. Vann Woodward                 pp.148-54:  Barbara Epstein
 pp.50-58:  Nat Hentoff                      pp.155-57:  Martin Duberman
 pp.59-64:  Mortimer J. Adler                pp.158-60:  Shawn Wong
 pp.67-70:  Teachers for Democratic Culture  pp.161-64:  Roger Wilkins
 pp.71-79:  Ruth Perry                       pp.165-74:  Paula Bennett
 pp.80-88:  Jacob Weisberg                   pp.177-79:  Harry C. Boyte
 pp.89-96:  Sara Diamond                     pp.180-81:  Sara M. Evans
 pp.97-106: Jon Wiener                       pp.182-84:  Troy Duster
 pp.107-12: David Beers                      pp.185-90:  Todd Gitlin
 pp.113-17: Linda Brodkey and Shelli Fowler  pp.191-200: Patricia J. Williams
 pp.118-21: Nina King                        pp.201-11:  Reed Way Dasenbrock
 pp.122-25: Katharine T. Bartlett            pp.212-24:  Joan Wallach Scott

D'Souza, Dinesh. Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus. New York: Vintage Books, 1992. 319 pages.

Dinesh D'Souza began his career as a critic of liberal multiculturalism and "political correctness" by co-founding and editing the Dartmouth Review while he was an undergraduate there from 1979-1983. The next two years he attended Princeton and edited an alumni magazine started by conservatives. After Princeton he was the managing editor of the Heritage Foundation's theoretically-inclined Policy Review. In 1987 he became a domestic policy analyst for the White House, and then a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. Throughout his career he has been supported by conservative money, particularly the John M. Olin Foundation.

It's embarrassing to the PC left that D'Souza is also a "person of color" (he's a native of India). This opened doors during his visits to six universities to collect data and interviews concerning issues of race and sex, how they have become institutionalized in course content, speech codes, and preferential admissions, and the effect this has had on attitudes and campus life. If liberals dared to sidestep the conventional PC wisdom and give this book a chance, many of them would be amazed to discover that it is tightly argued and compelling.


Goines, David Lance. The Free Speech Movement: Coming of Age in the 1960s. Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 1993. 767 pages.

The conventional wisdom of talking heads and columnists, for the last two decades, has frequently blamed our current cultural malaise on the excesses of the 1960s. Now we have the real story on a portion of that period straight from a major participant. Without a doubt, many of those who sat in at Sproul Hall in 1964 were smarter, more competent, more ethical, more democratic, more sensitive to important issues, less racist, and better educated than their parents, their university administrators, and their representatives in Washington. Yes, drugs and sex were part of the bargain, but that was merely frosting on the cake.

The story of the 1960s has not been told by our mainstream media; either you were there, or you ferret it out on your own, or you still don't know. This period has fallen victim to our ahistoricism. Today it is so far removed from of our culture's capacity for experience, that most observers look back without a clue. Instead the 1960s have become a repository for throw-away lines from know-nothings. It's refreshing, then, to find a thick book that knows intimately what it's describing. This is the definitive history: the names, the photographs, the blow-by-blow -- and best of all, the essential spirit.


Kors, Alan Charles and Silverglate, Harvey A. The Shadow University: The Betrayal of Liberty on America's Campuses. New York: The Free Press, 1998. 415 pages.

Alan Kors, a history professor at the University of Pennsylvania, and Harvey Silverglate, a civil liberties attorney in Boston, compiled this comprehensive account of what's been happening on American campuses over the last 15 years. It seems that the First Amendment is out of favor, and campus administrators have instituted kangaroo courts to enforce speech codes that protect the sensitivities of women, minorities, and gays. This has led to numerous prosecutions of straight white males -- both faculty and students -- for speech or expressive behavior that would have been considered legally protected on campuses just 25 years ago. Even today, as soon as one steps off campus, courts are consistently striking down these repressive speech codes. The problem is that students don't have the resources to pursue their rights off campus, which can take years of effort. This book is peppered with dozens of case histories and incidents on dozens of campuses, which are then juxtaposed with First Amendment case law in the real world (off-campus). What's going on here? The authors trace the problem back to Marcuse's theory of "repressive tolerance," which turned into "progressive intolerance." Not likely; it's rather a case of quotas and multiculturalism gone amuck. The "diversity administrators" on campus are buzzword thugs who know little of Marcuse or the 1960s -- sometimes they seem barely even literate.

North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA), 475 Riverside Drive, Suite 454, New York NY 10115, Tel: 212-870-3146.

The University - Military - Police Complex: A Directory and Related Documents. 1970. 88 pages.

NACLA began in 1966 and quickly became one of the most important research organizations to emerge out of the U.S. student movement. Through the mid-seventies their publications concentrated on the role of U.S. corporations and foreign policy in Latin America, with special emphasis on U.S. universities, development policy, police training, and CIA covert activities. Reports were well-researched, with more facts than analysis.

In the sixties students were concerned about defense and law enforcement contracting, and its influence on academia. Today our universities still sell to the highest bidder. This report contains hundreds of faculty names collected from lists of think tank directors and Defense Department contract summaries.


Schrecker, Ellen W. No Ivory Tower: McCarthyism and the Universities. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. 437 pages.

Ellen Schrecker is a Harvard Ph.D. who teaches history at Princeton, which makes her book on McCarthyism in academia very thorough, somewhat aloof and dry, and just a shade indignant that the long arm of politics was able to reach in from the real world and pluck tenured professors from their privileged perches. The fact that this book was published in the first place is a measure of the typical academic's sense of self-importance. During the 1950s, hundreds of professors were forced to testify under threat of contempt and some who refused lost their jobs. Not many years later, hundreds of thousands of their students were forcibly sent to Vietnam to kill or be killed, and that seemed okay. Similarly, Schrecker's account of the horrible blacklist that prevented some academics from finding jobs also deserves little sympathy. Today's political correctness and preferential hiring and admissions is a self-imposed campus orthodoxy which, by any reasonable standard, is more oppressive for more academics than the 1950s ever were.

So Schrecker's sob stories of ruined careers don't interest us much, but occasionally she mentions one of Joseph McCarthy's flunkies, or a professor who was turning in his colleagues just a bit too eagerly. The names plucked from this book tend to fall into those two categories, along with a few names of McCarthy resisters whom we recognized and respect.


Soley, Lawrence C. Leasing the Ivory Tower: The Corporate Takeover of Academia. Boston: South End Press, 1995. 204 pages.

During the 1960s, students almost forced the university to give up its military contracts. Then in the 1980s, the entire institution was sold to the corporations. Today a professor on the medical faculty might own stock in a pharmaceutical company, moonlight for this same company, and use tuition-paying students as unpaid researchers to write an article for a prestigious medical journal about this company's wonderful new drug. The stock goes up and he sells his shares for a quick profit. To one degree or another, this describes the modern American campus -- in biomedicine, in other patent-grubbing, high-tech departments, and even in the social sciences, which are littered with think tanks funded by conservatives. Campus buildings are now named after tycoons, and the board of trustees is packed with entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. If the new university president can't bring in the bucks, the trustees find someone who can.

A minor criticism: for the first few pages only, the author pays homage to political correctness by blaming the corporations for the attack on PC. It would be more accurate to say that PC diverted would-be activists from recognizing the real threat. Anyone who has worked for large corporations knows that they don't mind playing the multicultural card: it's a strategy that keeps the workers balkanized, and precludes any class consciousness.


Sykes, Charles J. The Hollow Men: Politics and Corruption in Higher Education. Washington DC: Regnery Gateway, 1990. 356 pages.

Charles Sykes, a conservative critic and reporter from Milwaukee, wrote this book as a follow-up to "ProfScam: Professors and the Demise of Higher Education" (1988). Half of "The Hollow Men" reviews trends and events in American higher education in the decades before 1970, while the other half is a case study of Dartmouth College, mostly from 1970 through the 1980s. The weak link in this thread is the author's limited knowledge of the 1960s. The issues and energy behind the Free Speech Movement in 1964, or the Columbia strike in 1968, completely escape Sykes, perhaps because he was only starting junior high about then.

Even after bracketing the 1960s, this book still has something to say. In the context of American higher education over many decades, the issues at Dartmouth during the 1980s demonstrate that something had gone very wrong on campuses. But rather than blaming the 1960s, Sykes should have used some of his reporter's shoe leather to investigate the many millions that the Ford and Rockefeller foundations pumped into women's and ethnic studies on campus, beginning in the early 1970s. (For women's studies alone, Ford Foundation, by their own estimate, put in $24 million between 1972 and 1992.) Unfortunately for the reader, such inconvenient facts don't find a place in Sykes' preconception of how political correctness evolved.


Trumpbour, John, ed. How Harvard Rules: Reason in the Service of Empire. Boston: South End Press, 1989. 450 pages.

Several times a century, apparently, some American students take a look at their university and are horrified to discover that they are in the belly of the beast. It happened to Randolph Bourne at Columbia in 1917, it happened again at Columbia in 1968 (see NACLA's reprint of "Who Rules Columbia?" in NameBase), and it happened to me at the University of Southern California in 1969. That's when I discovered that the campus was owned by former CIA director and future Chile-destabilizer John McCone and his multimillionaire/multinational corporate cronies, the campus fraternities were controlled by future Watergate dirty-tricksters, and half of Ronald Reagan's California kitchen cabinet was on the Board of Trustees.

By now I'm more amused than outraged after reading How Harvard Rules, a collection of 26 essays from assorted academics who have kept their eyes open. Some concern rather esoteric issues, but these are offset with seven essays by Trumpbour himself, who was a Ph.D. student in Harvard's history department. He demonstrates an appreciation of Harvard's historical role, including its connections to the intelligence community.

-- D.Brandt

Here are the names most frequently mentioned in the above books:

    ABRAMOVITCH MICHAEL     ACCURACY ACADEMIA     ADLER MORTIMER J     AIKEN MICHAEL     AIRALL ZOILA     AIST JAMES     AITKINS DUNBAR     ALLEN RAYMOND BERNARD     AMERICAN ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS     ANASTASI RON     APTHEKER BETTINA     ARGENT STEPHEN     ARTMAN CHARLES     ATWATER LEE     AUFDERHEIDE PATRICIA     BACH LEO     BAEZ JOAN C     BAKER HOUSTON     BALCH STEPHEN H     BALDWIN ROGER N     BANFIELD EDWARD C     BARDACKE FRANK     BARNES THOMAS (UCB)     BARTLETT KATHARINE T     BARZUN JACQUES     BEERS DAVID     BELL DANIEL     BELL DERRICK     BENNETT MIKE (BERKELEY)     BENNETT PAULA     BENNETT WILLIAM J     BERGMAN JAY (CCSU)     BERNAL MARTIN     BESIG ERNEST     BILLS DAVID     BLITS JAN H     BLOOM ALLAN     BLUMSTEIN CARL     BOHM DAVID     BOK DEREK     BOLTON EARL CLINTON     BOSTON UNIVERSITY     BREWSTER CARROLL     BROBECK JOHN     BRODIE H KEITH     BRODKEY LINDA     BROWN BENSON (FSM)     BROWN EDMUND G (PAT)     BUNDY MCGEORGE     BUNZEL JOHN H     BURNS HUGH M     BURNSTEIN MALCOLM     CADE VALARIE     CAHILL PAUL     CARNEGIE CORPORATION     CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY     CARSON CLAYBORNE     CARTER EDWARD WILLIAM     CENTER INTERNATIONAL STUDIES     CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY     CHATELLE ROBERT D     CHEEK JAMES (HOWARD UNIV)     CHEIT EARL F     CHENEY LYNNE V     CITY COLLEGE NEW YORK     CLEAVELAND BRAD     CLOKE KEN     COLE WILLIAM (DARTMOUTH COLLEGE)     COLEMAN KATE     COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY     COMMITTEE PRESENT DANGER     CONANT JAMES BRYANT     COONTZ STEPHANIE     CORNELL UNIVERSITY     COUNCIL FOREIGN RELATIONS     CRITTENDEN RUPERT J     CUNNINGHAM THOMAS     CURRIER RICHARD     CURRIER SUE     DARTMOUTH COLLEGE     DARTMOUTH REVIEW     DAVIS ROBERT GORHAM     DAVIS SHELBY CULLOM     DELGADO RICHARD     DER HENRY     DERRIDA JACQUES     DERSHOWITZ ADAM     DERSHOWITZ ALAN M     DICKEY JOHN SLOAN     DOLFMAN MURRAY     DRAPER HAL     DSOUZA DINESH     DUDERSTADT JAMES J     DUFFEY JOSEPH DANIEL     DUGA LARRY     DUKE UNIVERSITY     EHRENREICH ROSA     ELBERG SANFORD     EPSTEIN BARBARA (UCSC)     FANELLI A ALEXANDER     FANON FRANTZ     FARLEY REYNOLDS     FARMER JAMES     FEITIS ROSEMARY     FELSENSTEIN LEE     FEUER LEWIS SAMUEL     FISH STANLEY     FORD FOUNDATION     FOWLER SHELLI     FOX-GENOVESE ELIZABETH     FRANCK PETER     FRANKFURTER FELIX     FRECCERO CARLA     FREEDMAN JAMES O     FREEMAN JO (YOUNG DEMOCRATS)     FRIEDMAN DAVID (UCB)     FUCHS SANDOR     GARSON BARBARA     GARSON MARVIN     GATES HENRY LOUIS JR     GENOVESE EUGENE D     GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY     GILL BOB (FSM)     GILLIS MALCOLM     GITLIN TODD     GLASER LENNY     GLAZER NATHAN     GOINES DAVID LANCE     GOLDBERG ARTHUR LEE     GOLDBERG JACKIE     GOLDBERG SUZANNE     GOLDE STANLEY P     GOLDSTEIN JERRY     GORDON ROBERT A     GOTTFREDSON LINDA S     GRANTHAM WENDI     GREY THOMAS     HACKNEY SHELDON     HARLAN JOHN MARSHALL     HARLESTON BERNARD W     HART BENJAMIN     HART JEFFREY     HARTMAN GEOFFREY (YALE UNIV)     HARVARD UNIVERSITY     HARVEY MILES     HASSELMO NILS     HASTINGS DEWARD     HENTOFF NAT     HERNANDEZ-GRAVELLE HILDA     HERRNSTEIN RICHARD J     HERRNSTEIN-SMITH BARBARA     HEYMAN IRA MICHAEL     HIMSTEAD RALPH     HIRSCH MARIANNE     HIRSCH MO     HOLMES OLIVER WENDELL JR     HOOK SIDNEY     HOOVER INSTITUTION     HOPKINS ERNEST MARTIN     HOROWITZ DAVID     HUNTINGTON SAMUEL PHILLIPS     HUTCHIN MONA     HUTCHINS ROBERT MAYNARD     IANNONE CAROL     IIYAMA PATTI     INSTITUTE DEFENSE ANALYSES     INSTITUTE PACIFIC RELATIONS     IRWIN TOM     JABLON BARRY     JACKSON JESSE L (REV)     JACOBOWITZ EDEN     JAGGAR ALISON     JAMESON FREDERIC     JEFFRIES LEONARD JR     JEHLIN MYRA     JESSUP DAVE (UCB)     JEWETT L FRED     JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY     KAGAN DONALD     KAUFFMAN ROBERT     KEMENY JOHN     KENNEDY DONALD (STANFORD)     KERR CLARK     KIDNER FRANK     KING DEBORAH     KING JON (FSM)     KING NINA     KING WILLIAM (STANFORD)     KISSINGER HENRY A     KITTREDGE GRETCHEN     KLEIN MICHAEL (UCB)     KNOWLAND WILLIAM F     KOLODNY ANNETTE     KOLODNY DAVID     KORS ALAN CHARLES     KRISTOL IRVING     LA BERGE GERMAINE     LAHR DWIGHT     LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION     LAWRENCE CHARLES R III     LEGGETT JOHN     LENTRICCHIA FRANK     LEVIN MICHAEL (CUNY)     LEVINE LAURENCE (UCB)     LIPPMANN WALTER     LIPSET SEYMOUR MARTIN     LONDON HERBERT I     LOURY GLENN CARTMAN     LOVEJOY ARTHUR O     LUSTIG R JEFFREY     MAAS JAMES B     MACKINNON CATHARINE A     MACLAREN BOB     MALOTT DEANE W     MANSFIELD HARVEY     MARCUSE HERBERT     MARKS LARRY     MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE TECHNOLOGY     MATSUDA MARI     MAY HENRY F     MCCARTHY JOSEPH R     MCLAUGHLIN DAVID THOMAS     MEESE EDWIN     MELLIN PAM     MELODY RENEE     MEYERSON MARTIN     MILLER DUSTIN MARK     MILLER EDWARD M     MILLER J.HILLIS     MILLER MICHAEL V     MILLER STUART     MILLER THOMAS (UCB)     MIRSKY JONATHAN (DARTMOUTH COLLEGE)     MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION     MORRISSON KIM     MOSGOFIAN DENIS     MOWER PHILIP E     MULLONEY BRIAN     MUSCATINE CHARLES     NATIONAL ASSOCIATION SCHOLARS     NAVARRO MARYSA     NOBLE MARILYN     OLIN FOUNDATION     PARKER SHERWOOD     PASKIN PETER     PERKINS JAMES ALFRED     PERRY RUTH (MIT)     PETERSEN WILLIAM (UCB)     PIONEER FUND     PIPES RICHARD E     PLYMOUTH STATE COLLETE     POWELL CHARLES (UC BERKELEY)     PRINCETON UNIVERSITY     PUSEY NATHAN MARSH     RAND CORPORATION     READ ROBIN     RICHARDS PAUL (UCB)     RICHHEIMER ROBERT (SKIP)     RICKS GREGORY     ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION     RODIN JUDITH     ROMAN DICK     ROOS PHIL     ROSENFELD ED     ROSENTHAL DAN     ROSOVSKY HENRY     ROSS ARTHUR M     ROSSMAN MICHAEL     ROYSHER MARTIN     SAFRAN NADAV     SAID EDWARD W     SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY     SAVIO MARIO ROBERT     SCALAPINO ROBERT A     SCHMID CHRIS     SCHMIDT BENNO C JR     SCHULTZ MARSTON     SEARCY ALAN     SEARLE JOHN R     SELLERS CHARLES     SHALALA DONNA E     SHANAHAN EDWARD     SHANNON BRIAN     SHAW PETER     SHERRIFFS ALEX C     SHOCKLEY WILLIAM B     SHORT THOMAS     SILBER JOHN R     SILVA DONALD     SILVERGLATE HARVEY A     SIMEONE GIGI     SIMON WILLIAM EDWARD     SIMS TRACY     SLATKIN SAM     SMITH HENRY NASH     SMITH MIKE (UCB)     SNOWDEN FRANK M JR     SPROUL ROBERT GORDON     STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE     STANFORD UNIVERSITY     STAPLETON ELIZABETH GARDNER     STAPLETON SIDNEY R     STAROBIN ROBERT     STEEL JOHN (LA JOLLA CA)     STEIN DAVID FRED     STEIN SUSAN     STRONG EDWARD W     SYREK MARION     TEWHEY JAMES     THERNSTROM STEPHAN     THOMPSON JOHN (UCB)     TIGAR MICHAEL E     TOLMAN EDWARD C     TOMPKINS JANE     TOWLE KATHERINE A     TRILLING LIONEL     TUFTS UNIVERSITY     TURNER BRIAN     ULAM ADAM B     UNIVERSITY CALIFORNIA     UNIVERSITY CHICAGO     UNIVERSITY DELAWARE     UNIVERSITY FLORIDA     UNIVERSITY MASSACHUSETTS     UNIVERSITY MICHIGAN     UNIVERSITY MINNESOTA     UNIVERSITY NEW HAMPSHIRE     UNIVERSITY PENNSYLVANIA     UNIVERSITY TEXAS     UNIVERSITY WISCONSIN     WATSON JOSEPH     WEINBERG JACK (FSM)     WEISBERG JACOB M     WEISSMAN STEVE (FSM / RAMPARTS)     WELLER THOMAS WILLIAM     WELLS ANDY (UCB)     WHARTON DONALD (PLYMOUTH STATE COLLEGE)     WIENER JON (UC IRVINE)     WILDAVSKY AARON B     WILLIAMS ARLEIGH     WILLIAMS PATRICIA J     WILSON JAMES Q     WOODWARD C VANN     YALE UNIVERSITY     YOUNG LEROY

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