Today's Clips (3/2/20)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

An education in the liberal arts delivers what employers seek — as well as what graduates later say helped them build satisfying lives.

As voters prepare to go to the polls on Super Tuesday, there's an ad war playing out in Charlotte, N.C.

The billionaire former mayor should clean up in Charlotte, the banking capital of the South, on Super Tuesday. It’s not going to be easy.

A Davidson incubator is connecting startups, entrepreneurs, community partners and the local college in a collaborative space, The Hurt Hub.

A junior at UNC-Charlotte knew she would have a once in a lifetime experience when she chose to study abroad in Italy this semester. But she had no idea that the coronavirus outbreak would threaten her experience.

IN OTHER NEWS

Publishers say the program saves students money. But some student advocates say colleges are often not making clear how to opt out or even how much students are saving.

Colleges and universities are updating pandemic protocols in anticipation of potential widespread outbreaks of the fast-moving coronavirus among student populations living in close quarters.

Our study finds that some students do feel political pressure from their professors, but few change their points of view.

Vanderbilt University student Will Newell wishes it was easier for college students like him to cast ballots in Tennessee, one of 14 states holding a presidential primary on Super Tuesday.

Until Angelina Lincoln began researching the remarkable lives of William Moulden and his wife, Juliana, for her master’s degree, nearly everything that university administrators knew about them fit into a blurb on Villanova’s website.

It’s not what you might imagine.

TRADES

Spread of coronavirus in California, Oregon and Washington triggers student quarantines. American Physics Society cancels annual meeting, colleges cancel more overseas programs and players' group calls for possibly holding March Madness tournament without fans.

The university's ambitious $6 billion fundraising campaign is among the largest by a public higher ed institution.

A private high school imposes a limit on how many colleges its students can apply to -- nine -- and says it works.

Appalachian State University is one of several public institutions that have parlayed good reputations and nonflagship tuition prices into more students. But growth can bring other problems.

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