01466pab a2200205 454500008004000000100002200040245006000062260000900122300001500131362000800146520086400154650001201018650001701030700002401047700002401071773003401095909001001129999001701139952010401156180718b1999 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aGreenwood, M.R.C. aWhose millennium: the university as a medium of culture c1999 ap.1041-051 aMar aSince the medieval university was established in Padua and Bologna, and throughout the development of the American research university, institutions of higher education have provided vital representations of culture, and perhaps more important, they have been instrumental in shaping culture and society. In recent years, however, the university has been criticized for a range of reasons, including rising tuition, declining standards, pursuing basic research that is too ethereal, or selling out to the demands and financial incentives of industry and government. Yet, the university is not "in ruins". Indeed, society continues to look to the university for answers to the problems that intrigue us. As the new millennium approaches, universities have to rise to the challenges posed by the complex environment in which they thrive and strive. - Reproduced aCulture aUniversities aDollenmayer, Judith aNorth, Karen Kovacs aAmerican Behavioral Scientist a41125 c41125d41125 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 42, Issue no: 6pAR41501r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR