Catawba College Names Two New Members and Change in Leadership to its Board of Trustees
May 27, 2021
The two new members joining Catawba’s Board of Trustees are Marvin Moore of Concord, Principal of Salisbury High School and Bill Wagoner of Salisbury, owner and developer of Wagoner Properties. The new trustees will began their four-year terms at the conclusion of the Board’s April 2021 meeting.
Moore is a 1999 graduate of Catawba, earning a degree in physical education. He was a member of the basketball team. He also earned a Master’s degree from Gardner Webb University and is pursing a doctorate degree from Wingate University. He has devoted most of his professional career to education. Moore served as an assistant men’s basketball coach at Catawba for 10 years and received a Distinguished Alumni Award for Service in 2018.
CLINTON TOWNSHIP Officials in Clinton Township continue to look into different ways to incentivize business opportunities across a mostly-developed community, including businesses that have called the township home for years.
Clinton Township board to decide whether unsolicited newspapers could invoke fees, infractions
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CLINTON TOWNSHIP At press time, Clinton Township officials were deliberating the enacting of an ordinance that would regulate the delivery of unsolicited newspapers while financially penalizing those who would not comply.
The ordinance was put forward by Clerk Kim Meltzer and introduced at the Board of Trustees’ April 12 meeting. The motion was approved by six of the seven members, with Supervisor Bob Cannon being the lone no vote.
An agenda item for board approval or rejection was listed as part of the board’s April 26 agenda.
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The Ohio University Board of Trustees on Monday voted unanimously to approve a resolution objecting to the Faculty Senate committee report that recommended upholding the tenure of journalism professor Yusuf Kalyango, who was found by the university Title IX office to have sexually harassed at least two students.
The Board of Trustees, as the final arbiter in determining the fate of the professorâs tenure, made the decision following a more than four-hour long executive session where members reviewed the report and transcripts from the Faculty Senate committee.
Kalyango, who has been at the center of several university investigations and lawsuits in recent years related to sexual misconduct allegations, and his attorney also appeared during the executive session in accordance with the faculty handbook, according to Board of Trustees Chair Janelle Coleman.