Today's Clips (5/4/18)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

Steph IQ is like HQ for the NBA playoffs, with the chance to win the newest Curry shoes and $10,000 in prizes.

IN OTHER NEWS

Saifullah Khan was found not guilty of sexual assault in a criminal trial in March, but now faces a university panel to determine if he will be reinstated.

Two studies out in the last week show that key revenue sources at public and private universities continue to shrink without any immediate signs of slowing.

Polly Rogers was a 20-year-old sophomore studying special education at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

The unlikely journey of a Canadian professor who’s been embraced by the right, denounced by the left and watched on YouTube by Kanye.

Students at a Pennsylvania college protested this week over the handling of sexual assault cases.

The "abhorrent" criminal conduct by now-convicted sexual abuser Larry Nassar while he was a sports doctor at Michigan State did not violate NCAA rules, an attorney for the university has told the governing body of college sports.

A course on the history of big-time sports drew the attention of administrators in 2016 and 2017. History professor Jay Smith filed a grievance, which he won. Now the faculty panel's report and recommendation has been rejected by UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt and the UNC Board of Trustees.

In the coming decade, many campuses will be desperate for students.

How little Carthage College surpassed the Crimson giant’s returns on its $37 billion trove, and most others.
TRADES

While the university has been known as a place where students shouted down a speaker, administrators are trying to shake that image, and a new student group has launched to diversify the types of speakers who visit.

University of Mobile gives faculty and staff members the equivalent of Fridays off, with a 35-hour week that shifts classes to a Monday-Thursday schedule.

Seth Bodnar, a business executive, took over the ailing University of Montana in January. He says the institution needs to evolve, but some professors say he’s putting the humanities on the chopping block.

A campus panel wants the university to require student groups to explain why potentially disruptive events should be held, and to provide volunteer monitors for the crowd.

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