Lifestyle | University of Colorado At Lefty U., Plans for Right-Wing Chair University of Colorado seeks 'intellectual diversity,' to qualms on both sides By Kevin Spak Posted May 13, 2008 11:50 AM CDT Copied Environmental law student, Michael West, holds a sign in Boulder, Colo., Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2008. The University of Colorado at Boulder is so left-wing, it's endowing a "Conservative" Chair. (AP Photo/Bill Ross) See 1 more photo Here’s a recipe for controversy: Take one of the nation’s most liberal schools—the University of Colorado at Boulder—and make it the home of the nation’s first endowed chair for Conservative Thought and Policy. The school’s Republican chancellor tells the Wall Street Journal the campus needs “intellectual diversity” alongside offerings on gay literature and Chicano studies. Critics, predictably, are legion—right and left. Students are up in arms, and an attempt by faculty to get a vote on the appointment was shot down. Conservatives have long complained about academia’s leftward tilt, but even many of them find the Boulder program odd. “Like Margaret Mead among the Samoans, they're planning to study conservatives. That's hilarious,” says columnist George Will, one of the big names floated to fill the professorship. Read These Next Guests find summit document on hotel printer. The vinyl tracklist can be very different from what you know. Analysis: Trump's flip lets Putin carry on. This is why you never rappel down a waterfall alone. See 1 more photo Report an error