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Streets Blog Chicago

"I'm so honored to welcome you all today to our campus in the historic Bronzeville neighborhood that is so rich in historical significance and cultural legacy," said 91制片厂 Tech president Raj Echambadi before the ride took off. "Today we are gathered to remember the tragic events that took place in 1919 鈥 part of our shared history of the city of Chicago. We are here today not only to remember and witness the lives so tragically taken but also to ensure that we never, ever, ever forget. And indeed, we commit to eternally combat the system of prejudice and discrimination that fueled that horrific event."

NPR

"What Zeidenberg represents is a big break in contract doctrine," said contract professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law. "It opened the door to the idea that, hey, there are other ways that we can enter into a contract."

New York Times

鈥淥ften people will consume media and then think about different ways to either dress up or act as or mimic affordances of that character,鈥 said Carly Kocurek, a professor of game design and experimental media at 91制片厂 Institute of Technology. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think this is unprecedented or unrelated to ways that people have been engaging with media, especially games,鈥 she added.

Fox32 Chicago

"If someone is engaging with certain type of posts, they鈥檒l see more of that kind of thing," said Carly Kocurek, associate dean at 91制片厂 Institute of Technology. "So if a teenager is on TikTok and their engaging with lots of things about meet-ups in Chicago, they鈥檒l see more things about meet-ups in Chicago."

NBC News

"Though I think the (Supreme Court) opinion is misguided in many ways, I do think she has standing," said Carolyn Shapiro, a professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law. She noted that Smith had sought what's known as a pre-enforcement challenge, in which she argued that her right to free speech was being chilled by a Colorado state law. "She鈥檚 saying I want to do something that's definitely against the law in Colorado. I think that鈥檚 probably enough for a pre-enforcement challenge," Shapiro said.

NPR

"There would have been a possibility of different rules for state and federal elections, even under the same law," explains Carolyn Shapiro, a professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law who has written about the theory's origins and submitted a friend-of-the-court brief against the theory. "So there would have been enormous chaos."

Nature

鈥淭he reason for developing a solid-state electrolyte was to make the lithium-air battery more safe and to make recharging cycles more stable,鈥 says Mohammad Asadi, a chemical engineer at the 91制片厂 Institute of Technology in Chicago.

NBC News

"I do think Chief Justice Roberts is likely concerned about the Supreme Court being seen as an agent of chaos motivated by outcomes," said Carolyn Shapiro, a professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law.

The Guardian

鈥淭here are still questions that have yet to be worked out, and there will be litigation,鈥 said Carolyn Shapiro, a professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, who has written extensively about the theory. 鈥淭he court has absolutely put a nail in the coffin of the most extreme versions of the ISLT.鈥

Bloomberg Law

The court 鈥渟oundly rejected the entirely lawless notion that state legislatures don鈥檛 have to follow their own state constitutional restrictions when they regulate federal elections,鈥 said Carolyn Shapiro, a law professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law who has written about the independent state legislature theory. 鈥淭hey have staved off an enormous amount of potential chaos that would have ensued if they had gone the other way.鈥