Today's Clips (9/22/20)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

Cal Cunningham got about 49 percent. Thom Tillis, 43 percent and eight percent undecided. We talked with two political experts today about these results, who looked at them two completely different ways.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg passed away last week.

College admissions are often a process kept behind closed doors, but the UW wants to be a transparent example of how a public university builds its class.

CORONAVIRUS

And what else you need to know today.

Doctors performed MRIs on 26 student athletes, women and men who had recovered from the disease. Myocarditis was detected in four of the athletes.

Lambda Chi Alpha is self-suspended indefinitely and the university's Equal Opportunity Office is also investigating the matter.

With a smaller on-campus population, university leaders say it is safe to return to the classroom.

Bringing students back has been a public-health disaster.

College administrators and government officials summoned students back to campus. Now, they are presiding over viral reservoirs poised to release a flood of infected undergraduates at Thanksgiving -- if they make it that far.

Elon University is moving to Level 3, high alert due to the increase of COVID-19 cases on campus, according to an email from Jeff Stein, chair of the Ready & Resilient committee.

IN OTHER NEWS

Ten years after state agents raided his home, an engineer fights to prove he was wrongfully attacked over a computer chip start-up.

Cross-country runner Andrew Cooper helped organize player rights movement in college football this summer and is focusing his work on systemic inequities in college sports.

Remember paying your broker $200 a trade? Higher education is at that stage today.

A California businessman who is said to have steered “Full House” star Lori Loughlin and her fashion designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli, to the ringleader of the college admissions bribery scheme has admitted to paying $40,000 to rig his daughter’s ACT score

TRADES

Samantha Huge, director of athletics at the College of William & Mary, admitted on Sept. 18 that the college’s letter announcing cuts to seven athletic programs imitated a letter put out by Stanford University about athletic cuts nearly two months prior. William & Mary published a letter on Sept. 3, which explained that men’s and women’s gymnastics, men’s and women’s swimming,

Adrian College planned to terminate history, philosophy, religion and more -- until graduates organized to stop it. Faculty members still don't understand why the programs were threatened.

The lack of uniformity in Covid-19 dashboards undermines their value.

Archive available here: davidson-clips.ongoodbits.com
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