Today's Clips (11/21/19)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

Ten men were arrested and charged with crimes ranging from soliciting prostitution from a minor, sending nude photos to someone they believed to be a minor, and arranging to meet a child for sex. During the first week of York County's Operation Vigilant Shepard.

One of the men accused was a former Davidson College professor.

Mark Sandy '87, found himself in the uncomfortable position of testifying in the impeachment inquiry in Washington this past Saturday. Old pals and former teachers at North Cross described him as one of the finest graduates it ever produced.

Beijing’s "Sinicization” campaign extends well beyond Xinjiang.

IN OTHER NEWS

New government data shows which college degrees are instantly paying off and which ones leave graduates loaded with debt but skimpy income.

“His expressed views are stunningly ignorant,” an Indiana University provost said, “more consistent with someone who lived in the 18th century than the 21st.”

University's chancellor admits it's come up short responding to recent string of racist incidents; student protesters storm out of meeting on the incidents

“Should I worry about going to classes and continuing my education or stay at home and not worry about getting shot?”

For the first time, the U.S. Education Department has published data allowing students to compare salary and debt levels for specific college programs rather than for entire institutions only.

Nine people, including seven members of the recently expelled Sigma Pi fraternity at Ohio University, were indicted this week.

After a backlash, student government at Grand Valley State University is reinstating the Pledge of Allegiance at meetings.

The Foundation for the Carolinas of Charlotte, NC has sent millions in donor-advised gifts to at least nine organizations that campaign for limits on immigration, including NumbersUSA, CIS and FAIR.

More of the Roe v. Rape student group at UM met to form a “human chain for survivors” Wednesday, Nov. 20.

TRADES

Ohio magistrate recommends a federal judge allow a Title IX lawsuit against the University of Cincinnati to proceed. The university has asked that the case, brought by a former Title IX coordinator who alleged she was forced out for doing her job, be dismissed.

The brainchild of two women who have wrestled with substance-abuse problems of their own, the Haven picks up where colleges’ services leave off. And it is venturing into mental-health treatment too.

Archive available here: davidson-clips.ongoodbits.com
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