NATIONAL NEWS

'Fraternity' inspired racial equality at Holy Cross

Affirmative action has once again been thrust into the national spotlight. In 2008, Abigail Fisher, a young, white Texas resident, took the University of Texas to court, claiming she was denied admission on the basis of her race. Her case reached the Supreme Court this year. More »

HBCU law grads face tough job market

The career scenario painted for Ahman Airitam and his law school classmates could not have been rosier entering Southern Methodist University (SMU) in 2007. "When we came in, SMU Law pretty much pitched nothing but big law, big firm for life, and that's what you did afterwards," recalled Airitam, who graduated in December. More »

For single mom, 30-year journey toward dream of education

Born in Ennis, Texas -- a mid-sized town about 40 miles south of Dallas -- Diedrea Lewis, 47, was the tenth child of a large African American family. Headed by her father, a U.S. veteran and a custodian, and her mother, a homemaker, Diedrea describes her family as "chronically poor." But she says, "It was always instilled in me to go to college. That was the equalizer." More »

Universities reluctant to use iTune U

In keeping with Steve Jobs' vision of transforming education, Apple has expanded its iTunes U so that professors can now offer entire courses, not just lectures. So far, though, not many colleges and universities are rushing to drop the platforms they already use for online learning and adopt the new application from the technology heavyweight. More »

Community Voices: In Defense of Politics

A common insult aimed at someone trying to accomplish something in the public realm these days is to say: "He?s playing politics with the issue." And if you want to disparage a policy decision? "It was political." Or dismiss an action as barely worth discussing? "Oh, that's just politics." More »