By Phillip Bantz | August 23, 2022
Georgia Tech and Wayne State University also have named new GCs.
By Nancy Cook | August 23, 2022
Loan forgiveness has become a tricky issue for the White House, as it tries to appeal to younger voters ahead of the midterms, while also trying to show Democrats as good stewards of the economy.
By Colleen Murphy | August 23, 2022
"Discovery in the two cases is likely to focus on different facts, and trial and summary judgment are likely to raise differing legal issues," stated U.S. District Judge Susan M. Brnovich of the District of Arizona. "Thus, the Court finds that the cases do not involve common issues of law and fact that would warrant consolidation."
By Marianna Wharry | August 19, 2022
The Salt Lake County court held that the new law would likely violate the equality guarantees of the Utah Constitution by singling out transgender girls and barring them from competing on girls' teams regardless of their individual circumstances.
By Michael A. Mora | August 19, 2022
"I have clients on both sides of the question," said David Miller, a past chair of the City, County, and Local Government Law Section of the Florida Bar. "The best advice I can give my employers is to sit back and let the dust settle."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Katie M. Shipp, Helene M. Weiss and Daniel Pollack | August 18, 2022
Title IX is a federal law that protects people from sex discrimination in educational programs and activities at colleges and universities that receive federal financial assistance. Among others, sexual assault is a form of discrimination prohibited by Title IX.
By Ross Todd | August 16, 2022
U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly in Chicago denied a bid by 17 elite private universities to knock out claims they colluded in ways that held down the amount of need-based aid going to undergraduates.
By Cedra Mayfield | August 11, 2022
"He had the opportunity to decontaminate Keturah Hall and chose not to do it," argued appellant attorney Thomas "Woody" Gatewood Sampson II. "He can be found liable for negligent performance of that ministerial duty."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Judie Saunders | August 11, 2022
Title IX has a long history of defining male and female participation in sports. Since Title IX's enactment, athletes have relied on this law to rid academic institutions of discriminatory practices in athletics. In recent years, transgender persons are also hopeful that Title IX will guarantee them increased access and opportunities in sports.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leigh E. Dalton | August 9, 2022
Because clothing is an expression of oneself, and because students do not shed their expressive rights at the schoolhouse gate, public schools must examine their student dress codes to be cognizant of those rights of expression and the liability of inconsistent and discriminatory enforcement.
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