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Politically and culturally, America's college campuses are some of the least diverse places in the nation. In faculty suites and classrooms, liberal orthodoxy is the only approved view. (See concrete documentation of this phenomenon in TAE's September 2002 issue.)
Protecting dissent from left-wing worldviews on campus is no small task. The Academic Bill of Rights promoted by author David Horowitz is the latest attempt. It issues guidelines for academic freedoms that encompass hiring practices, grading policies, curriculum standards, and guest-speaker selection. One of the primary tenets of the Bill is to protect students and faculty from becoming indoctrinated by professors' personal opinions: "Intellectual independence means the protection of students--as well as faculty--from the imposition of any orthodoxy of a political, religious, or ideological nature." The Bill is intentionally devoid of all political references, merely aiming for an environment that is truly open to different ideas and viewpoints.
A group promoting the Bill of Rights, Students for Academic Freedom, claims 123 chapters at universities nationwide. It seeks to "end the political abuse of the university and to restore integrity to the academic mission as a disinterested pursuit of knowledge." ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Non-left students strike back.(Scan)