(Page 6 of 10)
Nathan R. Norris /p>It is amazing. In this day and age, the black political establishment still lets itself be lead around the nose by the education establishment.
p>The sad fact of the matter is that, until the strangle hold the teachers unions have on the public schools is broken, no reform is possible. Until the unions are house broken, American schools will only continue to get more costly and less responsive to the academic needs of society. br> -- Peter Skurkiss br> Stow, Ohio /p> p> MY BACK PAGES br> Re: G. Tracy Mehan III's A Library of Unread Books : /p>I have that chronic problem, too. I've never bought a book I didn't intend to read, but time (and magazines like The American Spectator) sometimes keep me from getting to them before newer books crowd them out in the reading line. I can't stop. It's a couple-of-hundred-a-month habit. They've long since overflowed my shelves.
ADVERTISEMENT
SPONSORED LINKS
The speech our President should make.
A noted economist fires back.
How political can you get?
You might have missed it, but it was boomed in January.
Farcical feminism is a decades-old phenomenon, as George Will's essay from 1970 reminds us.