WyoHusker56
Starter
Tom Mars and this Ohio attorney have been going back and forth on stuff. They smell blood in the water it seems and they just got access to the bylaws...
Tom Mars and this Ohio attorney have been going back and forth on stuff. They smell blood in the water it seems and they just got access to the bylaws...
That says handbook, not bylaws. You can see a copy of the 2017 handbook here.
Refresh my recollection I don’t remember what I forgot.With all this craziness going on in the world: covid, protest, riots and no big ten football. I just want to remind everyone to never forget
Refresh my recollection I don’t remember what I forgot.
If only I hadnt left it at home with my reminder notes. Just slipped my mind I guess when I misplaced my keys and locked myself in my car. Not a good start to my day.Check your calendar
We have to hope so because if the original actions are as bumbling and inept as the attempted cover up has been (and the smell test is really awful), it will raise a bunch of doubt about the Big Ten management capability. What will the next mess be? For better or worse, NU is married to the Big Ten and a divorce will be a real ugly case.We have seen this over and over with different institutions where the coverup is worse than the actual incident. Yeesh.
Asking if the corp is following laws regarding corporate formalities (meetings, quorums, notices, votes, basic governance items, good faith dealings with shareholders ( the universities) and their board members - various states in this case actually as the Unis are state govt agencies. Of course, the consuming public who buy their products has a clear interest in honest dealing. Whether for profit or not, any corporation doing business in several states has basic formalities (not to be confused with something trivial or insignificant). Regulate internal affairs would likely mean decisions and policies not process or procedures imo.Looks like the players' lawsuit might not be the only legal action coming (Article)
"“Nebraskans expect transparency from nonprofits operating in this state, and the Big Ten Conference is no exception.... The act also says the state cannot regulate internal affairs of a corporation from outside the state that is authorized to conduct business in Nebraska."