* Greeeeeaaaaat. Now it's easier for states to defund Planned Parenthood. [Slate]
* Scott Pruitt is the new EPA chief, but his open records issues continue. [Huffington Post]
* Finding new job opportunities as you age. [Law and More]
* Justice Breyer is an optimist. [Harvard Magazine]
* Law school scholarships and market forces. [TaxProf Blog]
* Kate Spade is exploring her options. [The Fashion Law]
* Randy Maniloff interviews Karen Korematsu, daughter of the late, great Fred Korematsu. [Coverage Opinions]
* RBG's legacy. [YouTube via How Appealing]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chLdAKe9ADw
* Judge Richard Posner of the Seventh Circuit completely obliterated a Wisconsin law that required doctors performing abortions to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. Posner said any health benefits conferred by the law were "nonexistent." [Reuters]
* Judge Richard Sullivan (S.D.N.Y.) wasn't a fan of the Bank of China essentially telling Gucci to "suck it up" when it came to "ridiculous" delays in providing counterfeiters' records, so he held the bank in contempt and is considering assessing millions of dollars in fines. [WSJ Law Blog]
* A Pennsylvania attorney activist who launched the "Kane is not Able" campaign has asked the state's highest court to provide clarification on how AG Kathleen Kane should delegate her duties considering the fact she has a suspended law license. [PennLive.com]
* A proposed class-action suit has been filed against fashion company Kate Spade over its alleged "imaginary discount prices." If this goes the way of the $4.88M Michael Kors settlement over the same issue, then Kate Spade could be in trouble. [Consumerist]
* "Talk about being uprooted!" Vendors who sell wares outside of Brooklyn Law are pissed about the school's plans to install planters on the sidewalks around the building, thereby kicking the vendors not to the curb, but out onto the street. [Brooklyn Paper]