Today's Clips (8/1/22)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

The Indianapolis Star and the Columbus Dispatch broke the story of a 10-year-old girl who had to leave Ohio to get an abortion after Roe v. Wade fell.

Taiwanese people are used to threats of force by China, and urge the House Speaker to visit. But it's a crisis not of their making. 

At a Charlotte hearing, environmentalists told the Utilities Commission that Duke Energy’s proposed plan wasn’t aggressive enough to combat climate change.

“I don’t want you to know how I work unless I tell you, because I want it to seem spontaneous,” Herb Jackson says.

IN OTHER NEWS

Their bond faded while they were raising children and starting careers. A jolt of bad news reunited them.

Hardly anyone is telling college applicants what power the activities they pursue during college can have over the rest of their lives.

New proposals show how the Biden administration wants to overhaul the federal lending system. Higher education experts and lawmakers are torn on whether it will deliver meaning changes.

Under Armour Inc. is paying $67.5 million to resolve a lawsuit by the University of California at Los Angeles that accused the company of using the Covid-19 pandemic as a pretext to end the largest college-sports apparel sponsorship deal ever.

Today’s presidents have good reasons to exercise restraint.

A Michigan professor who was suspended in January for making a profanity-filled video to welcome students settled his legal dispute with a university by accepting $95,000 and agreeing to a three-year gag order.

TRADES

A teacher revoked a letter of recommendation. Others at the high school disagreed (and quit in protest). The University of Pennsylvania rejected the applicant.

Lorgia García Peña, an acclaimed Latinx-studies professor, tries to find hope after a traumatic experience.

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