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University Of Tulsa Announces Former Defense Official, Congressman As New President

Credit Courtesy The University of Tulsa Board of Trustees on Monday unanimously selected former U.S. Department of Defense official and Oklahoma congressman Brad Carson as the university s next president. Carson will begin his term as TU s 21st president on July 1, taking over from interim President Janet Levit. Levit has led the university since former university President Gerard Clancy resigned in January 2020 because of an unexpected medical episode. In a real way, The University of Tulsa is as much an idea as an institution: a pact between the past, with its glorious achievements, and the future, with its attendant possibilities. I am particularly excited about the new strategic plan and the great opportunities it contains, Carson said in a statement.

University of Tulsa selects ex-congressman as next president

University of Tulsa selects ex-congressman as next president The Associated Press FacebookTwitterEmail FILE - In this Nov. 2, 2004 file photo, Oklahoma Democratic congressman Brad Carson thanks supporters after giving his concession speech at his watch party at a hotel in Tulsa, Okla. Carson lost to Republican Tom Coburn. The University of Tulsa has named Carson as its next president. The university s Board of Trustees voted Monday, April 5, 2020, to select Carson to become the private university s 21st president.PAUL HELLSTERN/AP TULSA, Okla. (AP) Attorney and former Democratic U.S. Rep. Brad Carson has been selected as the University of Tulsa s 21st president, university officials announced Monday.

The Campus as Factory | City Journal

Education Universities were already in big trouble when 2020 rolled around. The combination of skyrocketing tuition (up more than double the rate of inflation since 1980) and an increasingly inferior education had made college a hard sell for many American families, and demographic trends looked likely to put further pressure on declining enrollments. But that was all B.C. Before Covid-19, which is shaping up to be a potentially lethal event for the American academy. When the virus emptied campuses in mid-March of 2020, schools had to refund payments for spring room and board and forgo income from sports, while still paying coaches. Small colleges lost millions in revenues, and big universities lost hundreds of millions. Professors scrambled to adapt to an online medium that was unsuited to teaching and learning across a range of disciplines, from performance arts to laboratory science. Students found themselves back in their parents’ homes, staring at classes on Zoom, from which

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