College football meltdown, December 1, 2007 | |
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Oklahoma crushes Missouri | Pitt burns WVU's backyard |
As I write this, college football's championship system is melting down. The smart money expected Oklahoma to crush Missouri in the Big 12 championship, and OU's Sooners exceeded those expectations. For its part, West Virginia had simply to defend its home turf against a 28-point underdog in Pitt, and at worst the Mountaineers would have had a share of a national championship game against Ohio State — surely the dream matchup that everyone in Wheeling, W. Va., has always wanted. But no. Pitt smothered West Virginia's vaunted scoring machine; Pitt's punt unit made as many trips through its own end zone as did the Mountaineer offense.
As a result, all sports shows on Saturday night and Sunday morning are filled with the spectacle of analysts and, worse yet, coaches pleading the cause for one team or another. There is a consensus, albeit an unexamined one, that Ohio State deserves one of two berths in the BCS Championship Game by default. The case can — and has — been made for a flotilla of other teams, including Georgia, Louisiana State, Southern California, Kansas, Oklahoma, and even Hawaii.
Which brings us back to the South Carolina bar exam scandal. This morning's front page at The State announced that the South Carolina Supreme Court is not yet off the hook:
Calls are increasing for an outside investigation into the state Supreme Court’s decision last month to reverse the grades of 20 people who flunked the latest bar exam — including the children of two prominent officials.
But S.C. law doesn’t allow independent investigations of complaints against the state’s highest court — prompting House Speaker Bobby Harrell to say the time might be right to consider changing that.
In interviews last week with The State, three people — a 2007 Charleston School of Law graduate who flunked the July exam, a federal attorney with S.C. ties and a legal ethics professor at one of the nation’s top law schools [Deborah Rhode of Stanford] — called for an independent investigation into whether the Supreme Court engaged in any misconduct in connection with the exam.
I promise I will salute.
Editorial note: Hat tip, once again, to Not Very Bright. At Feminist Law Professors, Ann Bartow also discusses The State's latest story.