ROOKE: J.D. Vance Brings Democrats Face-To-Face With An Existential Threat To Their Future

'Vance will help deliver Rust Belt voters in November, which should terrify Democrats'

ROOKE: Yale Law Professor Jed Rubenfeld Lays Out Battle Plan To Overturn Trump Conviction

'Watch as the left cries over their failed attempt to take Trump down'

Yale Administrators Stand By as Students Unveil 'Free Palestine' Banner During Official Class Photograph

Yale University officials stood by silently as students unveiled a large "Free Palestine" banner during an official class photograph for the School of the Environment. The move came after university officials said they had warned students not to display "political messages," according to internal emails obtained by the Washington Free Beacon.

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Incentives on Campus Start To Change

We couldn't help but smile when we saw Yale Law School dean Heather Gerken announce the school's new tenure-track professor, Garrett West. A former law clerk for Supreme Court justice Samuel Alito, Judge Thomas Griffith of the D.C. Circuit, and Judge Diarmuid O'Scannlain of the Ninth Circuit, West is… a conservative?

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VA expands IVF coverage to single veterans and same-sex couples: 'Equity of access'



The Department of Veterans Affairs announced Monday that it will expand in-vitro fertilization coverage to single, unmarried veterans and same-sex couples, according to a department press release.

Previously, only married veterans who could "produce their own sperm [and] eggs" were eligible under the VA's IVF coverage. This week, the department announced that it would expand its fertility treatment coverage to include veterans "using donated sperm or eggs."

"The Department of Veterans Affairs announced that it will soon be able to provide in vitro fertilization (IVF) to eligible unmarried Veterans and eligible Veterans in same-sex marriages. VA will also be able to provide IVF to Veterans using donated sperm or eggs – a critical step toward helping Veterans who are not able to produce their own sperm or eggs due to service-connected injuries and health conditions," the VA's press release read.

"Under existing law, all Veterans who receive IVF from VA must be unable to procreate without the use of fertility treatment due to a health condition caused by their military service. Before today's expansion of care, VA was only allowed to provide IVF services to Veterans who were legally married and – within that relationship – able to produce their own gametes (both eggs and sperm)," the press release continued. "Under this expansion of care, VA will offer IVF benefits to qualifying Veterans regardless of marital status and – for the first time – allow the use of donor eggs, sperm, and embryos."

The VA anticipates that it will be able to expand IVF coverage "nationwide within the coming weeks."

The Department of Defense announced plans for the expanded coverage in a December court filing following a lawsuit by Yale Law School and the National Organization for Women's New York City chapter, the Military Times reported.

According to Sonia Ossorio, the executive director of NOW-NYC, the lawsuit challenged the DOD and the VA "to remove all discriminatory barriers so that each and every service member and veteran who needs this reproductive care can access it."

Kimberly Lahm, a product director in the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs for Health Services Policy and Oversight, stated, "We continue [to] identify ways to lean forward as much as we can in support of equity of access to reproductive health care for our service members."

"We're doing what we can to support our service members in making the reproductive health decisions that align with their family planning goals," she said.

Lahm stated that the IVF coverage expansion was "just one example of how we're supporting" Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III's "Taking Care of Our Service Members and Families" campaign, which aims to "make military moves easier, support careers of military spouses, strengthen support for military families and ensure economic stabilization."

VA Secretary Denis McDonough noted that the coverage expansion has been a top priority for the department.

"Raising a family is a wonderful thing, and I'm proud that VA will soon help more Veterans have that opportunity," McDonough said.

"We are working urgently to make sure that eligible unmarried Veterans, Veterans in same-sex marriages, and Veterans who need donors will have access to IVF in every part of the country as soon as possible."

Troops and veterans seeking IVF treatments will still only be covered if their infertility challenges are due to their military service, the press release explained.

Donovan Bendana, a Yale Law School student representing NOW-NYC, called the coverage expansion "substantial progress," despite its failure to fully address the lawsuit, which aimed to open coverage to all regardless of the cause of their infertility issues.

"The onerous requirement of linking infertility to a specific service injury will deny many service members the opportunity to build a family. This is especially arbitrary in light of the military's decades-long disinterest in studying women's health, including the impact of service on fertility," Bendana stated.

NOW-NYC intends to continue forward with its lawsuit.

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Yale Law School Students Protest Presence of IDF Soldier on Campus

Yale Law School's chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine, the group that celebrated the murder of 1,200 Israelis on Oct. 7 and praised the architects of the attack as "martyrs," is calling on the school to cancel an event with a soldier in the Israel Defense Forces, arguing that his presence on campus will make students unsafe.

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The Yale Law School Dean Who Presided Over the 'Trap House' Scandal Is Now Under Consideration To Be the University’s Next President

The dean of Yale Law School, Heather Gerken, who has presided over numerous free speech and anti-Semitism scandals since assuming the post in 2018, is under consideration to be the next president of Yale University, according to five people familiar with the matter.

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Law Students for Hamas

In its own telling, Yale Law School’s Schell Center for International Human Rights seeks to "equip lawyers and other professionals with the knowledge and skills needed to advance the cause of international human rights."

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Today, Joe Biden Rails Against Legacy Admissions. His Past Casts An Awkward Shadow.

How Beau Biden got a DOJ job provides an awkward backdrop to his father's rage at the Supreme Court's decision outlawing affirmative action.

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American Confidence in Higher Education Falls Sharply

American confidence in higher education has dropped dramatically over the past decade. A Gallup poll released Tuesday revealed that 36 percent of U.S. adults reported having "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in higher education, compared with 48 percent in 2018 and 57 percent in 2015.

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