The U.S. Department of Education’s (Department’s) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) released a Dear Colleague Letter Tuesday to schools specifying with concrete examples the application of Title VI of the ...
On May 7, 2024, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) again issued guidance in the form of a Dear Colleague Letter (DCL) to educational institutions discussing how Title VI ...
Letters to the editor reflect the views of individual readers. Today’s issues: Trump's attacks on universities; Tennessee ...
Other writers address columns from Chris Churchill and Fred LeBrun, a questionable court ruling, lots of climate change-related issues and more Writer argues age discrimination in policing must change ...
“Naval Academy: Military benefits from keeping race an admissions factor” (page A10, Sept. 26) notes that attorneys for the U.S. Naval Academy have said the school should continue considering race and ...
In response to The Oregonian's March 28th editorial "Bias in Section 8 proposal" addressing House Bill 2639, which seeks to end housing discrimination against Section 8 voucher-holders in Oregon: The ...
New records reveal details about Israel-related complaints at Columbia, Harvard, MIT and others, while a new investigation opens in Hawaii. (JTA) – Since Oct. 7, the federal office that handles ...
Re: the March 2 article "UA's cashless policy a bad idea." In David Devine's column about the UA's cashless policy, he described himself as one of many people over 65 who don't have a smartphone. I am ...
Actors have been doing drag for centuries, and children were in the audiences. In Shakespeare’s time, no women were allowed on stage, so most of the female roles in his plays were men dressed as women ...
One writer, in his 50s, has applied to more than 100 jobs. And a second has had it up to her silver bob with younger colleagues’ condescension. Credit...Photo Illustration by Margeaux Walter for The ...