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Wallet Hub

Best States for Working from Home

Stuart Eimer, associate professor and co-chair of the Sociology Department, answers this Q&A related to remote work including ways in which employers can invest in it as well as the advantages and disadvantages of working from home.

KU Today

KU Law to Honor 3 Alumni with Top Award

James May, professor of law and founder of the Global Environmental Rights Institute and co-founder of the Dignity Law Institute at Delaware Law School, is one of three University of Kansas School of Law alumni to receive the law school's Distinguished Alumni Award, its highest alumni honor.

The Street

New All-Electric DeLorean EV Leans Into Its Curves

As DeLorean Motor moves closer to a full debut of its first concept car later this summer, Brian Larson, professor of marketing, comments on the company's international brand awareness and how that may impact its performance in the market.

Wired

The Future of NFTs Lies With the Courts

Juliet Moringiello, associate dean for Academic Affairs and professor at Widener Law Commonwealth, is quoted in this article that examines how the courts will approach incoming NFT-related litigation.

6ABC

Road to Victory

Widener alumnus James Gillespie and his family, including younger brother and Villanova basketball player Collin Gillespie, were interviewed ahead of the Final Four NCAA Basketball Tournament this weekend.  

See also: NBC10

The Chattanoogan

Mystery Plant: Pawpaw

This article highlights research led by Kate Goodrich, associate professor of biology, to understand the pollination of the pawpaw plant, a tree native to United States and Canada that smells of fermenting fruit to attract fruit-loving flies for pollination.

The Chester Spirit

Chester students inspired my interest in SLP

This opinion article is authored by Kathryn Mosser, a first-year graduate student in the Speech-Language Pathology program who writes about her clinical internship at Drexel Neumann Academy and the impact the experience had on her learning career.

6ABC

College Signing

This news segment features Katelyn Tong, a senior at Penn Wood High School, who signed a letter of intent to play softball at Widener next year.

Politico

12 Questions That Would Actually Tell Us Something About Ketanji Brown Jackson

John Culhane, professor and the H. Albert Young Fellow in Constitutional Law at Delaware Law School, is a featured commentator in this article that examines the questions that members of the Senate Judiciary Committee should ask Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to understand how she will shape the court.

See also: MSN

WGAL News 8

Confirmation Hearing

Following coverage of the confirmation hearing for Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, Michael Dimino, professor of law at Widener Law Commonwealth, shares his expert opinions and expectations on how the Senate will vote.

E&E News

Biden Supreme Court nominee faces big climate questions

John Dernbach, professor and director of the Environmental Law and Sustainability Center at Widener Commonwealth Law, comments on how Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson stands to impact cases related to climate change that are expected to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.

 

Wallet Hub

2022’s States With the Highest Job Resignation Rates

Following a newly published ranking of job resignations by state, Anthony Wheeler, dean of the School of Business Administration, answers this Q&A to offer insight into the pandemic's impact of the job market and labor force.