The quickly approaching fall semester has America’s colleges under pressure to decide how far they should go to guard their campuses against the coronavirus while navigating legal and political questions and rising infection rates
College students are willing to pay a lot of money to get their hands on vaccination cards. The cards, of course, are free as proof that a person has had the COVID-19 vaccine. But students are using the fakes to provide that proof and circumvent campus requirements that they either get the shot or submit to regular testing.
The governing body of college sports ordered an investigation in response to outrage over disparities between its men’s and women’s basketball tournaments.
With high-paying jobs out of reach for most, graduates of the University of Miami and other well-regarded programs routinely carry six-figure student loans for years. “I thought I would come out making much more than I did,” said a recent graduate who owes nearly $300,000.
Penn State stays the course in recommending but not requiring COVID-19 vaccines, amid growing faculty and student calls for a mandate -- and days after a student death.
After California Lutheran University’s softball players dressed up in Napoleon Dynamite wigs to perform a skit, the college’s then-president condemned the incident. They say he went too far.
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