
Thomas Miller
Articles
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Aug 17, 2024 |
dailyegyptian.com | Alli Goering |Thomas Miller
Categories: August 17, 2024 With just little time until the first MVFC football games kick off, the Missouri Valley Football Conference has released its preseason poll and teams. SIU piled up 293 poll points and was picked to finish a distant fourth, behind only South Dakota State (482), North Dakota State (437) and South Dakota (371). SIU was closely followed by North Dakota and Illinois State, who were both within 30 points of fourth place.
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Aug 14, 2024 |
dailyegyptian.com | Alli Goering |Thomas Miller |Carly Gist
August 14, 2024 A Carbondale man has been charged in the death of 18-year-old SIU student Keeshanna Jackson after a shooting that took place in August of 2021 on West Cherry Street in Carbondale, Illinois. It was announced that 22-year-old Keavonte Nesby has been charged with first degree murder as well as other offenses; two counts of first degree murder, two counts of aggravated discharge of a firearm and one count of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon.
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Jul 22, 2024 |
dailyegyptian.com | Thomas Miller |Carly Gist |Ryan Grieser
Connected to the waist of Pulliam Hall is a building that houses a history of education. As with most things rich in history, there is more than meets the eye. Still a muse of inspiration, the Wham Education Building is the location of a new Welcome Center, has inspired puns through campus culture, and is named in the spirit of George D. Wham who was dean of faculty after a 32-year tenure at SIUC.
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Jul 5, 2024 |
aei.org | Thomas Miller |Julia Cataneo
Last week, the Supreme Court finally put a four-decades-long experiment with Chevron-style judicial review of agency action out of its misery. A six–three majority in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo relied on a reinvigorated section 706 of the 1946 Administrative Procedure Act to overturn its 1984 precedent (and the latter’s mutated offspring) in Chevron v. United States.
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Feb 5, 2024 |
aei.org | Kevin Stack |J. Joel Alicea |Nat Malkus |Thomas Miller
Changes in the Supreme Court’s membership have shifted its approach to interpretation in a more textualist and originalist direction. That approach appears to be a basis for the Court’s increasing skepticism of foundational concepts of modern administrative law, such as delegation and deference. The Court is currently considering overruling Chevron deference, and it has revived something akin to the nondelegation doctrine through the major questions doctrine.
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