Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said Friday she is receiving chemotherapy after her cancer has returned, but has no plans to retire from the U.S. Supreme Court.
29.06.2020 - 19:09 / glamour.com
Roe vs. Wade decision that enshrined the right to abortion as constitutional in the U.S.Louisiana's abortion law was significant for two reasons.The first is that it would have required doctors to have a credential called an “admitting privilege” at a nearby hospital.
To a person outside of healthcare, that sounds like a reasonable credential to require of a doctor.In fact, an is a financial relationship a doctor has with a hospital, not a qualification or a special license. And in an ironic
.Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said Friday she is receiving chemotherapy after her cancer has returned, but has no plans to retire from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg revealed she’s battling cancer once again, after previously fighting the disease four times.“I began a course of chemotherapy (gemcitabine) to treat a recurrence of cancer,” Ginsburg, 87, said in a statement released by the court on Friday, July 17, noting her treatment began in May after a biopsy in February revealed she had lesions on her liver.The My Own Words author, who has been on the Supreme Court since 1993, explained that her May hospitalization due to a gallstone
Ruth Bader Ginsburg announced Friday that she is being treated for a recurrence of cancer. She said, however, that she will «remain a member of the [Supreme] Court.» The announcement comes days after she was hospitalized to treat gallstones and an unrelated infection. According to Ginsburg's statement, she began a course of chemotherapy on May 19.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg says that her liver cancer has returned, but she will remain on the Supreme Court while undergoing chemotherapy.
Janet Lee editorSupreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has been transported to the hospital and treated for a possible infection.“Justice Ginsburg was admitted to The Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, early this morning for treatment of a possible infection,” spokeswoman Kathleen Arberg told CNN on Tuesday.“She was initially evaluated at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C., last night after experiencing fever and chills.
On Tuesday, the New York Post reported, Ghislaine Maxwell was denied bail due to being labeled as a “substantial” “flight risk” by the authorities. Reportedly, the alleged sex offender hid in a New Hampshire mansion for months following Jeffrey Epstein’s arrest and subsequent suicide.
Jill Goldsmith Co-Business EditorA federal judge Monday permanently struck down an anti-abortion bill in Georgia — legislation that prompted protests from Hollwyood last year and had some threatening to move production out of the state if it was ever enforced.U.S. District Judge Steve Jones ruled against Georgia in a lawsuit filed by abortion providers and an advocacy group, according to news reports.
Hot New Hip Hop says that Donald Trump took to his Twitter today to put the Supreme Court on blast after they reportedly demanded he hand over his financial documents and tax returns to a district attorney in Manhattan, New York.
ruling effectively carves out a huge exemption for religious schools by embracing an overly broad interpretation of what constitutes a “minister” and applying it to all teachers, even those who are lay, do not teach religion, or are not directly involved in the propagation of faith.In two cases brought before the court, two teachers at religious schools alleged that they had been discriminated against and fired without cause.
The Supreme Court issued a mixed verdict Thursday on demands for President Donald Trump's financial records that will keep his tax returns, banking and other documents out of the public eye for the time being. The court rejected broad arguments by Trump's lawyers and the Justice Department that the president is immune from investigation while he holds office or that a prosecutor must show a greater need than normal to obtain the tax records.
Ted Johnson The Supreme Court ruled that Manhattan prosecutors can obtain Donald Trump’s financial records, including his tax returns, concluding that the president was not immune from a grand jury subpoena of the records.The case is not over, though, as the high court sent the case back to lower courts to resolve the issue.The court was expected to issue two opinions having to do with whether the president’s financial records had to be turned over in response to subpoenas.The first was a case
religious grounds to providing this insurance so long as they gave notice of their objection so employees could apply for supplemental insurance to cover contraception and any other medication or procedures to which the employer might object.
More employers who cite religious or moral grounds can decline to offer cost-free birth control coverage to their workers, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday, upholding Trump administration rules that could leave more than 70,000 women without free contraception.
In a decision that undermines LGBTQ teachers at religious schools, the U.S. Supreme Court has affirmed for Catholic schools an expansive ministerial exemption in hiring practices under civil rights law.
Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania ruling means that 70,000-126,000 women could now lose their contraception coverage.“Today’s ruling is egregious—people rely on birth control for their health, for their livelihoods, and for their ability to determine their own futures," Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO, Planned Parenthood Action Fund said in a statement.
Flouting youngsters have been slammed for getting bevvied and breaking social distancing rules during lockdown.Police have been forced to go on patrol after a number of reports of anti-social behaviour by young people.The groups have been gathering near Ayr’s River Doon, Fullarton Woods in Troon and the Marchburn area of Prestwick.Prestwick councillor Hugh Hunter is disappointed by the problems and he’s called on the flouters to remind themselves of the current pandemic.Hugh told the Post:
The gay man whose case was pivotal in the U.S. Supreme Court ruling banning discrimination against LGBTQ people in the workplace says he is “elated” by the result.
The Supreme Court struck down Louisiana's abortion law on Monday (June 29) that would've nearly shut down every clinic in the state in a 5-4 ruling, with Chief Justice John Roberts siding with liberal justices in the final vote.
Ted Johnson The Supreme Court on Monday struck down a Louisiana law that placed restrictions on abortion clinics.Chief Justice John Roberts concurred with the court’s four liberal justices in forming a majority in the closely watched case.The Louisiana law placed requirements on doctors who performed abortions, requiring them to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital.Read the opinion here.More to come.Subscribe to Deadline Breaking News Alerts and keep your inbox happy.Signup for
Nicole Maines, 22, is known by many fans as ‘Dreamer’, on The CW’s Supergirl. But the 22-year-old 2020 GLAAD Award nominee is also an avid transgender rights activist who has achieved much more than the coveted title of TV’s first transgender superhero.