Today's Clips (10/22/18)
IN OTHER NEWS

Dartmouth College has long been a feeder school for Wall Street. But one angry undergraduate is taking aim at the bank recruiting process, which he says results in a “tragedy of wasted minds.”

A lawsuit accusing one of the country’s most selective universities of discriminating against Asian-Americans is providing a glimpse into how admissions officers decide “yea” or “nay.”

A federal trial is telling an important story about the buying and selling of young basketball prospects.

A lawsuit challenges Harvard’s betrayal of “Veritas.”

On college campuses this fall, voting is a competitive sport. Organizers play on academic and athletic rivalries between schools to lift chronically-low student voting rates for the 2018 midterm elections.

The University of Southern California has agreed to pay $215 million to settle a federal lawsuit brought against it by women who have accused a former campus gynecologist, George Tyndall, of sexual abuse and misconduct.

College students and university doctors are fighting to keep an outbreak of hand, foot and mouth disease at bay as it spreads across campuses along the East Coast.

Students and parents need to know the rules of college early-admissions processes to maximize the aid they receive.

A federal trial has lifted the curtains on Harvard’s admissions process. Here is what we've learned.

Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf is expected to sign legislation on Friday raising the maximum penalty for fraternity hazing to a felony, carrying up to seven years in prison.

Duke University is pulling back the curtain and revealing to the public what happens during the college admissions process.

The university formally installs Connie Book as its ninth president — and the first woman to lead Elon.

TRADES

Plan reportedly under consideration would bar any definition of sex other than that designated at birth. Transgender students could lose wide range of rights.

If teachers and counselors favor some groups over others, should colleges be relying on their letters?

Smith College is investigating.

The statewide group rips birth-control funding, tolerance of transgender people, and support for Muslim groups in a combative document that one scholar says veers right of even many conservative students.

On countless TV screens, Independence Community College stands for second chances. But to many people who live in the Kansas town, watching the show that made their town famous is like staring into a broken mirror.

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