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Sypx Web tool to aid disaster relief Students walk through the Warren College and Moore College area at Vanderbilt University on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2015, in Nashville. CONCORD, N.H. -- On college campuses nationwide, the intertwined problems of sexual assault and alcohol are under intense scrutiny as students increasingly speak up and the federal government cracks down. Pushed to a collective moment of reckoning, colleges and universities are trying a slew of solutions focused on education, environment an <a href=https://www.airforceone.fr>airforce</a> d enforcement.At the University of Virginia, a social network will connect female freshmen with older mentors. Brown University hopes to make it easier for women to report sexual assault. In New Hampshi <a href=https://www.adidascampus.us>adidas campus</a> re, Dartmouth College has banned hard liquor and plans to take the unusual step of completely overhauling its housing system.At Dartmouth, where a committee spent nine months researching high-risk drinking, sexual assault and a general lack of community on campus, no one solutio <a href=https://www.adidas-yeezys.es>yeezy slide</a> n stood out. I was hopeful that they would find some campus that had really unlocked the secret, but what they found is that every campus is suffering from these issues and struggling with these issues, Dartmouth President Philip Hanlon said.Even as administrators implement changes, new incidents have cropped up. A Penn State fraternity is accused of posting photos of nude women, some apparently unconscious, on a private Facebook page. The University of Wisconsin-Madison terminated a fraternity Renx Taking the Plunge: Chattanooga Polar Plunge raises $20,000 for Special Olympics Marvin Chase, a former volunteer LaFayette firefighter charged with arson A former firefighter who was once called a serial arsonist and accused of lighting dozens of <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.at>stanley trinkflaschen</a> fires two years ago won t have to serve time in a Georgia prison.Marvin Chase pleaded guilty to seven counts of first-degree arson and <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>gourde stanley</a> one count of second-degree arson earlier this week and was sentenced to 15 to 18 months at a minimum-security detention center.Chase s attorney, David S. West, said the sentencing was a victory because Chase didn t go to prison. The sentence also shows that the former LaFayette, Ga., firefighter wasn t responsible for 20 to 30 arsons that were originally pinned on him, West said. The case was never what <authorities> were making it out to be, West said.But police say they still believe Chase set dozens of fires at abandoned houses during the five years he was a firefighter, but they couldn t prove all the cases.Georgia law requires police to find the property own <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cup</a> er of a burned structure and have the owner prove the property is theirs, said LaFayette police Sgt. Stacey Meeks. But many of the property owners for the burned homes had died, and taxes hadn t been paid in more than 20 years on several of the buildings. Yes, it was as big as we claimed, but we couldn t locate the property owners, Meeks said.Chase was 33 years old when he was arrested in December 2010 on one count of arson but, during a news conference, authorities said they would be able to prove he was responsible
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