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How much can schools do?

In the fall of 2005, some 17 months before Cho Seung-Hui went on his killing spree (01) at Virginia Tech, his behavior was so disturbing that his creative-writing professor had him removed (02) from her class. Later that semester, two female students complained separately about what one called his “annoying” advances, and after an acquaintance warned that Cho might be suicidal, he was detained for several hours, evaluated at a local mental-health facility and released.

When it comes to the complex intersection of campus safety and mental health, the questions of what counts as sufficient warning signs and how universities should respond to them often end up in court. Move too quickly by, say, suspending a depressed student for posing a threat upon himself or others, and schools can - and do – (03) get sued for discriminating against the disabled.

(Julie Rawe. Time Magazine, April 30, 2007)

O segundo parágrafo do texto