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11 J.C. & U.L. [i] (1984-1985)

handle is hein.journals/jcolunly11 and id is 1 raw text is: THE JOURNAL OF
COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY LAW
Volume 11       SUMMER 1984        Number 1

ARTICLES
Legalization in the Academy: Higher Eduction and the
Supreme Court ...................... Michael A. Olivas
and Kathleen McCartan Denison
In the 1981-82 term, the Supreme Court decided twenty-two cases involv-
ing education issues, six of which portend significant implications for
higher education law and administrative policy-Mississippi Women's
University v. Hogan, in which a male was ordered to be admitted to a
female-only nursing program; Plyler v. Doe, in which undocumented
children were ordered to be admitted without tuition to public schools in
Texas; Toll v. Moreno, in which a Maryland residency statute was found
to be unconstitutional; Washington v. Chrisman, in which a dormitory
search yielded evidence for a drug charge; Widmar v. Vincent, in which a
student religious group was allowed to hold worship ceremonies in a
public building; and North Haven v. Bell, in which the Court clarified
the extent to which Title IX bars sex discrimination in academe. While
the Court also decided cases that in all likelihood will prove to have
significance for higher education, these six posed critical, highly com-
plex, difficult issues that bear comment and suggest the scope of litiga-
tion encountered by colleges and universities. The article analyzes these
six cases for their holdings and reasoning, examines the policy implica-
tions, proposes preliminary suggestions for framing administrative re-
sponses to litigation, and recommends policy considerations for antici-
pating litigation.
Scientific Misconduct: Institutional Procedures and
Due Process Considerations .......... Steven G. Olswang
and Barbara A. Lee     51
Scientific misconduct includes the falsification of true discovery, theft of
others' discoveries, or violations of accepted scientific procedcures in
making discoveries. Few colleges and universities are presently prepared
to address internally these issues which require impartial investigation,
factfinding, and expert evaluation. This article examines the current
literature and federal agency pronouncements on the subject of scientific
misconduct, and suggests procedures institutions might consider adopt-
ing. Particular attention is given to the due process that must be afforded
faculty accused of such misconduct.
BOOK REVIEW
Marine Scientific Research and the Law of the Sea,
by Alfred H. A. Soons ................. Linda A. Caruso         65

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