Public Policy Tipoffs Involving Pennsylvania Newsletter for Monday February 03, 2025 ( 4 items ) |
First Liberty Institute: Case of Mail Carrier Who Sued Postal Service and Won at U.S. Supreme Court Set for Trial
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, Feb. 1 -- The First Liberty Institute issued the following news release:
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Gerald Groff lost his job after seeking religious accommodation to observe Sunday Sabbath, resulting in unanimous decision at Supreme Court.
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The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania rejected the U.S. Postal Service's ("USPS") motion for summary judgement, ordering a trial for Gerald Groff, the former mail carrier who filed a lawsuit against USPS a
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Practice of Art Collection as a Collaboration
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, Jan. 27 -- The University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences issued the following news:
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The practice of art collection as a collaboration
As part of an undergraduate course, Penn faculty and students curated an Arthur Ross Gallery exhibition of works from the Neumann family's extensive collection of modern and contemporary art.
In a clear case in Penn's Arthur Ross Gallery is a plaster piece of cheesecake topped with enameled red cherries, a few sca
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Standardizing Provider Assessments Reveals Important Information About Gun and Opioid Access for Veterans at Risk of Suicide
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, Jan. 29 -- The University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine issued the following news release:
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Standardizing provider assessments reveals important information about gun and opioid access for veterans at risk of suicide
Study of nearly 39,000 health records is the first to examine access to firearms and opioids, and completion of related interventions, among veterans at risk for suicide receiving care at the VA
PHILADELPHIA--Standardizing an asse
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Who, What, Why: Alexander Schrier on Uzbekistan's Role in a New World Order
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, Jan. 28 -- The University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences issued the following news:
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Who, What, Why: Alexander Schrier on Uzbekistan's role in a new world order
The fourth-year international relations student is researching Uzbekistan and Central Asian diplomacy, with a summer spent talking with taxi drivers and U.S. ambassadors on the ground in Tashkent.
Who
Alexander Schrier arrived at Penn from Gaithersburg, Maryland, unsure of his path. On t
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