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A Big Payout for a Fired President

In 2015 College of DuPage trustees fired the president, refused to pay a $763,000 severance and dared him to file a lawsuit. He did. Now the college is settling for $4 million.

Students Bolstered Strong Youth Voter Turnout

Preliminary exit data suggest high youth voter turnout—including strong student showings at campus polling sites—may have been instrumental in last week’s midterm results.

Pressure Builds for Biden to Extend Student Loan Payment Pause

Calls for the extension intensified after a federal appeals court ruled against the administration, dealing another blow to the loan-forgiveness plan.

U.S. Appeals Court Blocks Debt-Relief Program

Eighth Circuit panel unanimously imposes preliminary injunction, ruling that states have standing and that the policy’s potential impact on state finances could be “irreversible.”

Debt Relief Blocked Again

Debt-relief advocates decry the ruling as “politically motivated” and “a miscarriage of justice” and ask the administration to extend the pause on student loan payments. (Update: U.S. appeals court imposes preliminary injunction.)

Moving Forward on FAFSA Simplification

Colleges and universities have to update their cost of attendance calculations now that the Education Department has said it is carrying out that change and others for the 2023–24 academic year.

Billions in Bonds Approved

But the fate of one high-profile statewide ballot measure—on undocumented students in Arizona—remains too close to call.

What the Voters Decided

In the wee hours of Wednesday, control of Congress remained unclear. The consequences for higher education could be significant.