Today's Clips (1/5/26)
STEPHEN CURRY INTERCHANGE

Curry, the former Davidson star, was honored at his old college Tuesday night and then helped the Golden State Warriors beat the Charlotte Hornets on Wednesday.

The Golden State Warriors’ star was recognized at halftime of Tuesday’s men’s basketball conference opener between Davidson and Duquesne.

Before Curry became a two-time NBA MVP with four championships and a finals MVP to his name, he dazzled the college landscape.

Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry was back on Davidson's campus Tuesday night, where he caught a game and was honored with an off-ramp being named for him.

Naming stuff for famous people isn't new, but there's a bit of a difference between folks celebrating a connection to Stephen Curry and what's happened at the Kennedy Center.

The Golden State Warriors guard was recognized by his alma mater with an exit in his name.

Steph Curry attended his alma mater’s basketball game this week to be honored during halftime.

DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

What was behind the seizure of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro? The Trump administration’s hemispheric strategy recalls the 1904 Roosevelt Corollary to the Mon…

Makayla Binter found a way to channel her feelings about ICE into a ‘hornet’s nest of rebellion’ — and raise money for a local nonprofit.

A Powerball ticket purchased at a gas station outside Little Rock, Arkansas, won a $1.817 billion jackpot just before Christmas.

ABC News’ Linsey Davis spoke with Davidson College professor Tim Chartier who says you're 20,000 times more likely to get hit by lightning than win Wednesday’s $1.7B Powerball jackpot.

IN OTHER NEWS

A student-organized “tech fast” at St. John’s College thrust young people headfirst into a world of chalkboard-based communication. (On that note: Has anyone seen Eliza?)

After the Oct. 7 attacks, campus groups pressured trustees to adopt policies enforcing ‘institutional neutrality’. But it is an elusive and illusory goal.

As white-collar hiring slows down and corporate DEI goals vanish, where you went to college matters again.

A look ahead at the federal policies taking effect in 2026 that will shape how students and families pay for college.

TRADES
Some education experts are prepared for the sector’s growing disenchantment with generative artificial intelligence. Others believe it will improve college systems and processes. 

Higher ed advocates say the new mandate, at Northwestern University, could be helpful but seems patronizing.

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