Suspicious Friends: Halting Police Reliance on the Company We Keep

Introducing Northeastern Law magazine’s new online exclusive In My Opinion series, expanding our opinion coverage beyond the pages of our regular issues. In our debut piece, Professor Aliza Hochman Bloom argues that police reliance on a person's companions as grounds for intervention threatens the Fourth Amendment's core requirement of individualized suspicion.

She Channelled Her Competitive Juices Into the Fastest-Growing Sport in America

Cynthia Tow McPherson '05, director of the private sector in Northeastern Law's Center for Co-op and Career Development, has already lived one athletic lifetime. A former Division I tennis standout, college coach and brief pro, she knows exactly what it takes to compete at the highest levels. Northeastern Global News reports on how McPherson has found her second act in what many cite as the fastest-growing sport in America: pickleball.