Today's Clips (5/1/20)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS
Forecast declines in enrollment and revenue have triggered spending cuts and salary freezes. “The world order has changed,” said a Northeastern University official.

May 1 was the deadline for students to commit to a college. Thanks to coronavirus, colleges may not know who's coming until the fall semester starts.

At 10 minutes to showtime, performers gather backstage to receive final instructions. Poets, take a breath between readings. Artists, don’t rush from ...

"We need to do everything we can to make sure our campuses are as safe and secure as possible."

Members of Reopen Meck will gather in the streets of uptown Friday to protest the county’s stay-at-home order in place due to the coronavirus pandemic.

CORONAVIRUS

A guide to some of the tour sites that aim to help students feel as if they are walking around campuses without leaving home.

For now, the SAT and ACT are more democratic than many of the other metrics used to evaluate college applicants.

The Education Department has asked the University of Texas System to provide documentation of its dealings with the Chinese laboratory U.S. officials are investigating as a potential source of the coronavirus pandemic.

U.S. colleges, their finances upended by the coronavirus pandemic, are now struggling with how to get help from the government.

One university hopes to use money intended for needy students to cover a rebate to attract sign-ups for its online summer classes.

The lawsuit claims the decision to move classes online deprived students of the benefits of on-campus education.

IN OTHER NEWS

Campus police officers placed two wreaths in front of the Kennedy Building, where the shootings occurred.

The NCAA is facing a federal lawsuit accusing the organization of failing to address gender-based violence by male athletes against female students at colleges and universities.

TRADES

With hundreds of colleges extending their deposit deadlines due to the pandemic, May 1 means less than ever this year.

Their enrollment decisions and ability to pay have been upended. Their preference for being on campus, however, remains intact.

As the pandemic disrupts the 2020-21 enrollment process, an admissions group says institutions should consider whether the benefits of testing policies outweigh the “potential cost” to disadvantaged applicants.

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