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Are Employers Discriminating Against Unemployed Job Applicants?
Are employers unlawfully discriminating against job applicants who are unemployed? The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, or EEOC, is making an inquiry into this issue, in particular into whether those in protected classes are being subject to disparate treatment by employers not considering job applicants who are not currently working.Appeals Court Nominee Has History With 9th Circuit
Sandra Segal Ikuta, nominated to the 9th Circuit on Wednesday, clerked for both 9th Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and has been general counsel to the California Resources Agency since 2004. The former O'Melveny & Myers partner, described as a moderate conservative, is known for her lightning-fast mind and unusual background. Before going to law school, Ikuta was an editor of martial arts magazines such as Inside Kung Fu.Bank of America hit with equal pay suits over retention bonuses
Wall Street brokerage firms are battling a new breed of discrimination lawsuits: retention bonus discrimination. Two class actions — one in New York, the other in Illinois — have been filed on behalf of female and African American brokers who claim that they were offered lower retention bonuses when Bank of America bought Merrill Lynch last year.View more book results for the query "White Case"
Reinstatement of Attorneys From the 2008 Pro Hac Vice Ineligible List
Notice to the bar.Between Blue and Gray: Questions for Roberts
Many lawyers and law professors are imagining the questions they would like to ask Judge John Roberts Jr. in his confirmation hearings. Author Sanford Levinson says John Roberts should be asked about his views on the Civil War and what it meant regarding our "constitutional fabric." Among other points: Does Roberts believe that President Lincoln was right in viewing himself as constitutionally empowered to resist Southern secession?Coal ash disaster lingers in Tennessee
Holly Schean didn't know what was on the other side of the hill near her parents' home in Kingston, Tenn. At 1 a.m. on Dec. 22, 2008, she found out. The earth split and toxic coal ash surged across a finger of the Emory River. The 5.4-million-cubic-yard torrent from a slurry-filled pond owned by the Tennessee Valley Authority deposited the splintered house 10 yards from its foundation.Trending Stories
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