Faculty in the News - Archive
Thursday, June 16, 2005
Professor Richard BoothThe Baltimore Sun – Lawyers began arguments today in a complex civil lawsuit brought against the mutual fund industry by average investors, who allege the companies knowingly cheated them. Richard Booth, JD, a professor at the School of Law, comments on the meager amounts most investors will receive if they win the case. [
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Thursday, June 16, 2005
Adjunct Professor Dan FriedmanThe Baltimore Sun – The Ehrlich administration is shutting down the offices that enforce minimum wage and prevailing wage laws, ignoring legislation passed by the General Assembly this year directing the governor to keep them open. Dan Friedman, JD, a Baltimore attorney who has taught state constitutional law at the School of Law and is writing a book about Maryland's Constitution, said such disputes have been common over the years. [
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Thursday, June 16, 2005
Dean Karen RothenbergThe Daily Record – A committee of the Maryland State Bar association has revisited a report done 18 years ago on the status of minorities in the legal profession. The result is the "2005 Minority Report," being presented at the MSBA annual meeting in Ocean City. Karen Rothenberg, JD, MPA, dean of the School of Law, is a panel member. [
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Wednesday, June 15, 2005
Professor Michael GreenbergerWUSA TV – Chemical plants are an extremely vulnerable target for terrorists, second only to nuclear plants, according to government sources. The Bush administration's policy has been to allow chemical plants to develop their own protection plans. This week, that policy changed and the Bush administration is now backing mandatory regulations. Michael Greenberger, JD, professor at the School of Law, comments on the shift in policy, as well as problems discovered with the government's master list of suspected terrorists compiled after 9/11.
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
Dean Hoffmann, Professor Anita TarzianThe Chicago Tribune – Chronic daily headache is a condition affecting 4 percent of the population. It occurs twice as often in women as in men. According to research by Diane Hoffmann, JD, associate dean at the School of Law, and Anita Tarzian, PhD, RN, research associate in the Law and Health Care Program at the School, women's complaints aren't taken as seriously as men's, and the treatment given to women tends to be less aggressive than with male patients. [
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