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NCAA Recruit Says Justices Saved His Adidas RICO Claim
Law360 (July 7, 2021, 7:35 PM EDT) A former University of Louisville basketball recruit said Tuesday that a South Carolina federal judge must reconsider tossing RICO claims against Adidas in light of the U.S. Supreme Court s ruling on NCAA amateurism that he says demonstrates college athletes have a business interest in competing.
Plaintiff Brian Bowen II, who also filed notice Tuesday that he is appealing to the Fourth Circuit, says U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Anderson Jr. must reconsider his May ruling in light of the justices June decision in NCAA v. Alston, adding that Adidas misrepresented key facts in the case.
UK Alumni Association Announces Service Awards
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CDC grant aims to improve care and outcomes for stroke patients throughout Kentucky
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McConnell comments on vaccines, federal spending, critical race theory Talking before local elected officials and economic development leaders in Murray, McConnell said there would be a “hell of a fight” over new spending proposed by President Joe Biden, broadly opposed by Republicans on Capitol Hill.
by Liam Niemeyer |
July 6, 2021
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell promoted COVID-19 vaccines, criticized budget proposals from the Biden administration and attacked the critical race theory academic framework in a speech Tuesday in western Kentucky.
Talking before local elected officials and economic development leaders in Murray, McConnell said there would be a “hell of a fight” over new spending proposed by President Joe Biden, broadly opposed by Republicans on Capitol Hill. The Biden administration proposed a $6 trillion budget in May, encompassing infrastructure, climate change resiliency, child care and other priorities.
By Christopher Harris
14 hrs ago
Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron was the featured speaker at Tuesday s July Somerset-Pulaski Chamber of Commerce membership luncheon, held Tuesday at The Center for Rural Development. Christopher Harris I CJ
One secret to public speaking is knowing your audience. In Somerset, it never hurts to invoke the name of John Sherman Cooper.
That s what Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron did in his visit to the Somerset-Pulaski County Chamber of Commerce s monthly membership luncheon on Tuesday. Like Cameron, Cooper was an attorney, with time at Harvard Law School and a longstanding practice in Somerset before beginning his political career. As a U.S. Senator and later Ambassador to East Germany, Cooper became one of the nation s most distinguished statesmen in the second half of the 20th century, leading to his statue on Somerset s Fountain Square.