Today's Clips (3/29/23)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

Exclusive: 1-on-1 with new Davidson President Dough Hicks

The award-winning author of 'How the Word is Passed' and 'Above Ground' on W.E.B. Du Bois, 'The Warmth of Other Suns,' and the Book That Broke His Heart.

I read with interest and trepidation the Martin Center’s March 16 article “Davidson College Affirms Free Speech,” which noted that Davidson had adopted a version of the Chicago Principles as … Continue reading "What Does It Take to Really Protect Campus Free Speech?"

Hardywood Park Craft Brewery, Virginia’s leading craft brewer, is excited to announce its partnership with Tryon Distributing out of Charlotte, North Carolina.

From uniting us during crises to a leisure activity, no sport is more connected to the White House and U.S. history than America's Pastime: Baseball.
IN OTHER NEWS

Jason Wingard, the first Black president of the university, faced criticism over his handling of a strike and fears about rising crime in Philadelphia.

Party officials across the country have sought to erect more barriers for young voters, who tilt heavily Democratic, after several cycles in which their turnout surged.

Students discuss higher education and their choice of major.

The global stars of March Madness may not have to entirely miss out on name, image and likeness money after all.

After the Stanford episode, Ilya Shapiro sounds a warning: The threat to ‘dismantle existing structures’ is an idle one in English class. But in legal education it targets individual rights and equal treatment under the Constitution.

A common theory of teen unhappiness says that kids these days are under an inordinate amount of pressure to compete. The evidence is all over social media.

The cost of tuition, room and board keeps climbing at elite US colleges, with some economists warning about sticker shock.  

Interviews and records obtained by ESPN show that Lauren repeatedly reached out to University of Utah officials, putting herself in the hands of a system that was supposed to protect and guide her through her own uncertainty.

TRADES

Preliminary data from the National Student Clearinghouse show flat enrollment across all sectors of higher education. Enrollment rises at community colleges and in certificate programs, while bachelor's-degree-seeking students dip.

Colleges across denominations are being challenged on campus and in courts by a student population that is increasingly demanding equal resources and acceptance.

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