
What Antonin Scalia’s Empty Spot Means For Texas-Based Supreme Court Cases
The stakes have changed in an abortion case and affirmative action debacle coming out of Texas.
The stakes have changed in an abortion case and affirmative action debacle coming out of Texas.
Supreme Court case will likely hinge on the effects of Texas's college admissions law.
The U.S. Supreme Court could take on affirmative action and abortion restrictions, two cases originating from Texas.
A familiar plaintiff. A familar case. Will the outcome be any different?
The U.S. Supreme Court made the right ruling yesterday in Fisher v. University of Texas by remanding the case to a lower federal court.
This time to a black correspondent from the BBC, in an interview about the use of race in college admissions. He'd said similar things at a student forum in 1997.
The outcome of the case could bar affirmative action from use in college admissions.
The University of Texas responded to a lawsuit questioning its admissions policy by submitting a 55-page document to the Supreme Court clarifying how race factors in to its process.
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Fisher v. Texas, a case that could limit or eliminate using race as a college admissions factor.