59 research outputs found

    CPD Staff Helps Special Olympic Athletes

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    https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cpd_blog/1504/thumbnail.jp

    Stage Center Theatre Newsletter- Feb. 2012

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    https://neiudc.neiu.edu/stagecenter/1036/thumbnail.jp

    Comment: The Project of Freedom

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    A person’s status may change over time and people should have the right to maximize their autonomy and learn and grow from their experiences. Legal structures must encourage autonomy and growth, rather than producing a static environment that prevents people from challenging external controls imposed upon their lives. Law can create legal structures that sustain an individual’s right to live according to their values. As Ms. Rosen writes, “[i]f an individual is capable of valuing, the wishes stemming from those values should dictate how the individual ought to be treated.” By protecting those values, Ms. Rosen’s Note advises us how the law can be a stronger tool for the project of freedom. The choice of whether to use that tool is ours

    Preserving Religious Freedom

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    This address was given at Chapman University School of Law in Orange, California, on February 4, 2011

    Preserving Religious Freedom

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    This address was given at Chapman University School of Law in Orange, California, on February 4, 2011

    Sam Allardyce 'sting' is the latest chapter in a new era of investigative reporting

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    The manager of the England football team, Sam Allardyce, has resigned just two months into his job, apparently “by mutual consent” – whatever that means – after being splashed all over the pages of the Daily Telegraph which linked him with allegations of impropriety. The Allardyce “sting” was the first part of what the Telegraph says is a series of stories yielded by a ten-month investigation into corruption in British football. The paper has alleged that Allardyce, who was only appointed to coach England in July, had used his position “to negotiate a £400,000 deal and offered advice to businessmen on how to ‘get around’ FA rules on player transfers

    News, jokes and listicles: Here's how BuzzFeed changed the face of journalism

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    The 2015 Reuters institute digital news report has just been published. It contains, according to Matthew Ingram in Fortune magazine, mostly bad news for traditional, mainstream media – confirming what most people already knew anyway: that most consumers of news, particularly younger consumers of news, get it on mobile devices through social media
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