USA Today – Colleges Brace For More War Protests
USA TODAY says As college students return to campus this fall, whether administrators have learned how to better handle anti-war protests remains to be seen.
When police cleared a pro-Palestinian encampment at George Washington University earlier this year, officers doused Moataz Salim’s hands and arms so thoroughly in pepper spray, he says, they burned for days.
Elsewhere, the front page writes about a Florida Park which “clawed its way to success.” The paper the theme park, which describes itself as the “Gator Capital of the World,” is an endangered species of sorts. The first major tourist attraction in central Florida, Gatorland has managed to withstand an unrelenting cascade of upheavals to the state’s tourism industry that has sunk the vast majority of its peers.
Politics makes the front page as it says Latino voters are enthusiastic about Kamala Harris. The VP needs two-thirds of Latino voters in her corner to win, analysts say, echoing a benchmark that has been the standard for Democrats in elections in recent decades. Two recent polls of people self-identifying as Latino suggest she’s not there ‒ at least not yet.