By Marcia Coyle | October 31, 2022
"How will we know when the time has come?" Justice Brett Kavanaugh asked at one point on when colleges and universities would stop using race as a factor in their admission policies.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Cheryl V. Shaw and Emily H. Breece | October 11, 2022
The changes are the result of Georgia Senate Bill 438, which went into effect on July 1. The new law eliminates some confusion as to when a local government must stop or may restart withholding retainage—two areas that had previously led to disputes.
By Avalon Zoppo | October 11, 2022
A dozen unnamed federal judges told a news outlet last week that they would join Ho in not hiring Yale Law students, but other jurists have been more critical of the boycott.
By Christine Charnosky | October 6, 2022
"Due to a technical error, 205 current applicants to the School of Law received an erroneous email notifying them of their acceptance into next year's class," according to a statement from Northeastern University. "Admissions decisions will not be finalized until later in the academic year."
By ALM Staff | October 6, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Avalon Zoppo | Brad Kutner | Christine Charnosky | September 29, 2022
"I very much doubt that any liberal-leaning students had any desire to clerk for him, so his decision ironically only adversely impacts conservative-leaning Federalist Society members who agree with him ideologically," one Yale law student said.
By Christine Charnosky | September 21, 2022
There are less than 200 ABA-accredited law schools in the U.S., but apparently not enough law school names to go around.
By Christine Charnosky | September 12, 2022
The Reddit subgroup r/LawSchool has been inundated in the past week with 1Ls questioning whether law school is right for them and whether they should drop out.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Michael Kenny | September 12, 2022
In the case in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, nine plaintiffs have filed a putative antitrust class action lawsuit against 17 elite private universities—Brown, Cal Tech, University of Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duke, Emory, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, MIT, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Penn, Rice, Vanderbilt and Yale.
By Law.com Contributing Editors | September 8, 2022
President Joe Biden's plan to forgive a portion of student loan debt has generated plenty of cheers, jeers, debate and internet hot takes. But what we really want to know is whether and how the plan impacts you as members of the legal profession.
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