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The King’s College Media Updates | December 2018

A review of how the faculty, staff, and alumni of The King’s College are engaging culture.

Speed-Reading: Is it Fact or Myth?

Depending on your purpose for reading, speed-reading can interfere with how accurately you understand the information being read.

Liturgy: “We are always in danger of being false prophets”

We will never convince ourselves that we have been faithful (because we haven’t), nor will we ever figure out just how to become faithful. This doesn’t mean, of course, that we shouldn’t try.

Liturgy: What Does He Want?

The scripture readings this week provide broad guidelines for doing life together well, personally and professionally.

Overcriminalization and Mass Incarceration: Race and Justice Beyond the New Jim Crow

On Thursday, September 29, 2016, the Center for the Study of Human Flourishing at The King’s College hosted a special event, “Overcriminalization and Mass Incarceration: Race and Justice Beyond the New Jim Crow,” at the Princeton Club in midtown Manhattan.

October 2016 History Spotlight: Lexington, An American Story

Last month we learned about the very first site of The King’s College—the Marconi estate in Belmar, New Jersey. This month, we turn our attention to the College’s second home in Delaware: a mansion called Lexington, built by an extremely industrious citizen-farmer named Philip Reybold between 1840 and 1845.

Ain’t My Issue

There’s a pivotal question at the core of the King’s honor system: Who is responsible to confront? The King’s Honor Code gives a straightforward, yet immensely challenging, reply: Every student is honor bound to confront any other student who breaches the Honor Code.