Today's Clips (6/15/18)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

Transylvania University librarian BJ Gooch speaks for the first time about her ordeal in the 2004 book heist and the new movie, "American Animals," that dramatizes the crime that occurred in Lexington, Kentucky.

IN OTHER NEWS

A woman says her boyfriend shared sexual videos with his Delta Sigma Phi fraternity brothers without her consent. The chapter has been suspended.

University becomes most prestigious research institution to join test-optional movement.

Students don’t have the information they need because federal law imposes severe restrictions on the U.S. Department of Education’s ability to collect student-level information.

One of three Dartmouth College psychology professors facing sexual misconduct allegations has chosen to retire following an investigation and recommendation that the school fire him, the school's president said Thursday.

Texas A&M University is facing criticism for being too lenient in its handling of sexual assault allegations.

"Finding a cohort for yourself and starting to build your community is going to be important," Obama advised at the "Beating the Odds" summit in Washington, D.C.

Based on the findings of an internal investigation, the school said it had been prepared to revoke Todd Heatherton’s tenure and terminate his employment.

The university is preparing for what is likely to be the fiercest attack yet on its use of race in drawing up each freshman class.

College students today rarely encounter opposing viewpoints and are hardly ever challenged to work hard and stretch their understanding.

"It's very hard to know what my path would have been had this not happened," the musician told BuzzFeed News.
TRADES
A student newspaper at the University of British Columbia has criticized President Santa Ono for mixing policy statements with personal views on social media. The president has been uncharacteristically quiet in response.
Move, part of ambitious plan to attract broader range of applicants, is first by one of the nation's top research universities.

The women said they had been victimized by athletes who were initially suspended but later allowed to rejoin their teams. Their posts on Twitter and Facebook quickly went viral.

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