Tuesday, September 1, 2020

9-1: "Paint is not bullets," Trump says, as he also defends an apparent killer; PLUS unnamed people in “dark shadows” control Biden, he notes


President Trump calls his supporters ‘peaceful’ and defends a 17-year-old who shot three people in Wisconsin -- President Trump on Monday defended a teenage supporter accused of killing two people during unrest in Wisconsin, and declined to condemn his supporters’ use of paintballs and pepper spray against protesters in Portland, Ore., over the weekend, calling his supporters “peaceful” and saying, “Paint is not bullets.” Maggie Haberman in the New York Times$ -- 9/1/20

Mr. Trump defended Kyle Rittenhouse, a 17-year-old supporter of the president who was charged last week with two counts of first-degree homicide and one count of attempted homicide after he shot three protesters in Kenosha, Wis., in the unrest that has followed the police shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake. One of the people whom Mr. Rittenhouse is accused of shooting is said to have had his hands in the air.

Reopening of Orange County schools now delayed to Sept. 22, at the earliest -- Orange County’s schools may be able to open in-person on Sept. 22 – not Sept. 8 – the Orange County Health Care Agency announced late Monday night via Twitter. Under a new four-color, tiered monitoring system, Orange County is in the most restrictive of the tiers, but it’s on track to bump up to the next tier on Sept. 8. Roxana Kopetman in the Orange County Register -- 9/1/20

 

For-Profits Fear a Biden Presidency

—Inside Higher Ed

They worry Democratic control over the White House and Senate will bring a return of Obama administration policies. Many are donating to Republicans to keep it from happening.

     If Steve Gunderson didn’t know what awaits for-profit colleges should Democrats capture the White House, he thought it became clear when he heard vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris at the Democratic National Convention lump the colleges he represents with rapists and the mob.

     “I’ve fought for children and survivors of sexual assault. I've fought against transnational criminal organizations. I took on the biggest banks,” Harris said, “and helped take down one of the biggest for-profit colleges…

 

‘Precursor for the Fall’

—Inside Higher Ed

     College enrollments declined sharply this summer among Black undergraduates and men, and at community colleges and rural institutions, raising worries about the fall and worsening equity gaps.

     As some experts feared, the biggest college enrollment declines this summer were among vulnerable student populations, potentially widening equity gaps in college access for Black students, students who attend community colleges and for-profits, and men….

 

Liberty Retains Forensic Firm to Investigate Falwell's Tenure
—Inside Higher Ed
     The executive committee of the Board of Trustees at Liberty announced the investigation yesterday. Liberty, a conservative Christian university based in Lynchburg, Va., with a massive online presence, has retained a forensic firm to investigate aspects of Falwell’s tenure including the university’s financial, real estate and legal operations….

 

Summer Enrollment Numbers Are In, and the Patterns Are Confounding

—CHE

     Many close observers of the fiscal health of higher education in the Covid-19 era have been focused on colleges’ fall enrollments. And while initial signals about the fall have been emerging, newly released figures on summer enrollments offer insights on changes that are already happening. Some of what the numbers say is surprising.

. . .

     The organization’s data counts 7 million students enrolled in summer sessions at 2,300 colleges. Enrollments among Black students and male students saw the largest declines. And of the four institution types highlighted in the report — community colleges, and four-year public, private, and for-profit institutions — community colleges and for-profit colleges suffered the most.

     As a tattered economy and a pandemic play out simultaneously, some of the enrollment patterns were unexpected, said Doug Shapiro, the center’s executive director. For instance, community-college enrollment, according to the data, fell nearly 6 percent from the summer of 2019….

 

Making false, racist 911 calls could soon be a crime in California under bill sent to Newsom -- The legislation comes amid a nationwide reckoning on systemic racism and following confrontations across the country in which primarily white people have made discriminatory emergency calls to the police when encountering people of color bird watching and barbecuing in a park, among other everyday activities. Phil Willon in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 9/1/20

 Profanity, followed by Republicans on mute: Welcome to California's last night of session -- The final night of the California legislative session reached a boiling point Monday evening when frustrated Republican senators, barred from the capitol after Sen. Brian Jones (R-Santee) tested positive for the coronavirus last week, accused Democrats of taking advantage of their quarantine. Mackenzie Mays Politico -- 9/1/20

 

California renters poised to receive COVID-19 eviction protections under plan sent to governor -- The California Legislature acted Monday to avert a crisis by approving emergency legislation to extend protections against evictions by five months for Californians facing financial hardship because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Patrick McGreevy in the Los Angeles TimesAdam Beam Associated Press -- 9/1/20

 

California lawmakers approve bills to address racism in criminal charges and jury selection -- In a year marked by protests across the nation against police killings of Black men and women, the legislation was among only a handful of bills addressing racial discrimination in the criminal justice system that progressed to the governor’s desk. Taryn Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 9/1/20

 

Ethnic studies requirement for California high school students passes Legislature -- Every high school student in California would be required to take a course on the contributions of racial and ethnic groups that have been oppressed and exploited through U.S. history, under a bill now on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk. Dustin Gardiner in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 9/1/20

 

Trump alleges Biden controlled by people in ‘dark shadows’ -- President Donald Trump alleged unnamed people in “dark shadows” are controlling Democratic nominee Joe Biden in an interview with Laura Ingraham that aired Monday night on Fox News. David Cohen Politico -- 9/1/20

 

UC must immediately drop use of the SAT and ACT for admissions and scholarships, judge rules

LA Times


University of South Carolina Cracks Down on Greek Houses for Virus Violations

—NYT


Today's County Covid numbers. 287 new cases. 8 deaths.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...