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Amid the growing national debate over gun laws and safety -- in the wake of the tragic mass murder at an elementary school in Connecticut -- here is a compilation of articles from the last two years about higher education and regulation of guns:
- Two Casper College faculty members killed.
- How campus safety and mental-health experts try to identify those who may be prone to be shooters.
- Colorado Supreme Court bars the University of Colorado from banning guns on campus.
- Momentum shifts away from gun bans and limits on college campuses.
- How higher education defeated a move to allow concealed weapons on Texas campuses.
- Why some students push for more guns on campuses.
- After ex-student at Pima Community College shoots a Congresswoman, experts consider the challenges faced by community colleges in dealing with potentially dangerous students.
- Essay on what it is like to be a professor fearful for your safety because of a student.
Among the details that emerged Sunday about Adam Lanza -- who killed 26 people and then himself on Friday -- was that he enrolled at Western Connecticut State University at the age of 16, and earned a B average in several courses, The Los Angeles Times reported.
Western Connecticut also has ties to two victims at the Sandy Hook Elementary School. Jimmy Greene, who is on the jazz faculty at the university, lost a daughter, Ana, in the killings. And a nursing student at the university, Thomas Murphy, lost his mother, Anne Marie Murphy, who was a teacher's aide at the school.
Also, on Friday night, Massachusetts authorities arrested a junior at College of the Holy Cross and charged him with posting threats online Thursday (before the Sandy Hook killings) that he would go to a theater and "shoot it up," The Boston Globe reported. The college suspended him Friday night, pending resolution of legal proceedings.