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Yale Professor Who Diagnosed Dershowitz and Trump in Tweet Loses Appeal
A professor lost her—“voluntary,” as Yale puts it—position after tweeting about the two. The courts have dismissed her lawsuit.

Plain Speaking or Rude? Fight Over ‘Disparaging’ Psychiatry Paper
British scholars differ on study on the effectiveness of antidepressants.

‘In God We Trust’ in Every Louisiana Classroom
A new Louisiana law that requires “In God We Trust” signs displayed in classrooms raises larger questions about religion and higher ed.

Student Mental Health and Pressure to Do Well
Respondents to the Student Voice survey on health and wellness feel pressure to do well at different rates based on mental health, with students who describe their mental health as poor feeling the most pressure. What’s going on and how can higher ed help?

The ChatGPT Commencement Address
Wells College president Jonathan Gibralter is among the higher ed leaders who used ChatGPT to craft a graduation speech this year. But the administrative potential of such tools remains largely untapped.

Program Launch: Retention and Career Preparation for Hispanic Students
A new project targets persistence and cultural engagement among low-income and first-generation Hispanic and Latino students at the University of Arizona.

Supreme Court to Hear GI Bill Case
The plaintiff in the case, a retired Army captain and Bronze Star recipient, wants the Supreme Court to overturn a lower court ruling that he said broke Congress’s promise to veterans.

Duke’s Affordable Action Plan
The university’s decision to waive tuition for lower-income North and South Carolinians is officially about equity. But its potential as a recruitment tool for underserved students connects it to affirmative action’s fate.
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