Today's Clips (3/2/21)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

If you’ve followed along on Instagram over the last two years, you’ve witnessed the enthusiasm and pure joy owners Jamie Brown and Jeff Tonidandel and their team have poured into the project, a renovation of a 1950s church in the heart of Plaza Midwood.

CORONAVIRUS

Many schools that use fever scanners and symptom checkers have not rigorously studied if the technology has slowed the spread of Covid-19 on campuses.

St. Bonaventure University President Dennis DePerro died Monday from complications of COVID-19, according to the university. He was 62.

Rosie Miller, 74, who has followed Dayton basketball since the early 1950s, has her wardrobe, Christmas tree and vaccinations ready for the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament.

IN OTHER NEWS

Absolution is off the table. And liberal ideals themselves are up for renegotiation.

Netflix's upcoming documentary 'Operation Varsity Blues' digs into the college admissions scandal that snared actresses Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman.

A new type of college attempts to redefine what constitutes an “elite” education. Students live in the lap of luxury while learning how to accumulate it. But after a year of shutdowns and social reckoning, is it still okay to major in amenities?

Research finds students who showed signs of addiction were also highly likely to suffer from poor sleep

If you missed Sunday's News & Record, you should go back and check out this column from Guilford College's new interim president, long-time English professor Jim Hood, in the Ideas

TRADES

Through Feb. 15, only 44 percent of people using the Common Application submitted SAT or ACT scores. Last year's total was 77 percent.

Dennis DePerro, 62, had been hospitalized since late December.

Prognosticators predicted mass shutterings. That hasn’t happened, but other enormous changes are underway.

Bob Jones University, a Christian institution in South Carolina, has backed away from requiring face masks in classrooms, the Associated Press reported. Masks will still be required to enter buildings but can be taken off once students are seated and instruction has begun. Mask mandates are ubiquitous across higher education both in South Carolina and around the country. The

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