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A Wyoming law banning Delta-8 — a psychoactive compound derived from hemp — will stay in effect, following the dismissal of a lawsuit aiming to halt the law.
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The U.S. District Court of Wyoming ruled that private organizations such as Kappa are allowed to decide their own membership.
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College sororities are free to induct whoever they want, and that includes transgender students, according to a recent ruling from a federal court judge.
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The U.S. District Court of Wyoming granted a preliminary injunction Friday, Aug. 18, allowing Laramie Faith Community Church Elder Todd Schmidt to return to campus while his lawsuit against the university proceeds. The injunction comes less than two weeks before the start of the fall semester.
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The national organization has accused the plaintiffs of being "plainly and profoundly unserious" about raising or answering real legal questions who are instead aiming to "cloak their view of the world in the authority of this Court."
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"Plaintiffs can also resign their membership in the organization if a position of inclusion is too offensive to their personal values," states the motion to dismiss.
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Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority members at the University of Wyoming (UW) have refiled a lawsuit using their real names after a judge denied their request for anonymity.
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For 424 days, William Perry-Pendley held the power of director within the Bureau of Land Management. But on Sept. 25, the U.S. District Court for the…
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Ten years ago, a young Arapaho man was charged with killing an eagle without a permit for a Sun Dance ceremony. The Northern Arapaho tribe decided it was…