Today's Clips (10/2/19)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

The party can do better.

In 9/30 newsletter: "Davidson College is changing the consequences for underage drinking on campus by replacing fines with community service."

IN OTHER NEWS

The lawsuit presented one of the biggest challenges to affirmative action in years, and is almost certain to reach the Supreme Court.

With a new law, California says yes. The N.C.A.A. says it’s unconstitutional.

Ohio State University says about 1,500 instances of decades-old sexual misconduct by a now-deceased Ohio State team doctor were reported were reported last year and this year

A high-tech building named after Andre "Dr. Dre" Young and Jimmy Iovine will be opened on the University of Southern California campus.

The head of a West Hollywood prep school flips and is likely to back up accusations of a criminal conspiracy in the college admissions scandal.

Professor’s email, headed ‘A Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day for many of you,’ goes viral as students react to launch of disciplinary investigation.

"This health threat is serious enough that I want to see the ban include every building, outside space, parking lot, garage and laboratory within the Texas A&M System," Chancellor John Sharp wrote in a Tuesday memorandum.

The loss of leaders in Greenville is part of the politicization of the UNC Board of Governors

A federal judge ruled in favor of Harvard, saying the elite private college should continue to consider race in its admissions process. UNC-Chapel Hill is facing a similar lawsuit.

Authorities are investigating after offensive stickers showed up on the College of Charleston campus over the weekend.

The University of Wisconsin-Madison has apologized for a homecoming video that featured almost all white students.

With intercollegiate athletics under intense scrutiny, basketball phenom Josh Christopher considers taking his talents to a historically black school.

TRADES

The challenge, from Students for Fair Admissions, may still end up before the U.S. Supreme Court.

The accreditation system worked -- slowly -- for a unusual start-up college aimed at adult students, according to a case study by the American Council on Education.

Archive available here: davidson-clips.ongoodbits.com
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