Wynne v. Tufts

USCA1 Opinion









October 6, 1992





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No. 92-1437

STEVEN WYNNE,
Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

TUFTS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE,
Defendant, Appellee.

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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Breyer, Chief Judge,
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Torruella and Selya, Circuit Judges.
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Robert LeRoux Hernandez, with whom Ellis & Ellis was on
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brief, for appellant.
Alan D. Rose, with whom Nutter, McClennen & Fish was on
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brief, for appellee.

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SELYA, Circuit Judge. This appeal requires us to
SELYA, Circuit Judge.
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revisit a longstanding dispute between Tufts University School of

Medicine and Steven Wynne, a former student. On a previous

occasion, we vacated the district court's entry of summary

judgment in Tufts' favor. See Wynne v. Tufts Univ. School of
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Medicine, 932 F.2d 19 (1st Cir. 1991) (en banc). After further
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proceedings, the district court again entered summary judgment

for the defendant. This time around, on an augmented record, we

affirm.

Background
Background
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The facts pertinent to Wynne's banishment from the

groves of academe are chronicled in our earlier opinion and need

not be fully rehearsed. A succinct summary suffices.

Wynne matriculated at Tufts in 1983. He failed eight

of fifteen first-year courses. Although academic guidelines

provided for dismissal after five course failures, the dean

granted Wynne a special dispensation and allowed him to repeat

the first year of medical school. Over the summer of 1984, Wynne

underwent neuropsychological testing at Tufts' instance and

expense. The results, described in detail in our earlier

opinion, id. at 21, showed cognitive deficits and weaknesses in
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processing discrete units of information. However, no

differential diagnosis of dyslexia or any other particularized

learning disability was made at this time.

During Wynne's second tour of the first-year


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curriculum, Tufts arranged to supply him with tutors,

counsellors, note-takers, and other aids. This time, he passed

all but two courses: pharmacology and biochemistry. Tufts still

did not expel Wynne. Instead, it permitted him to take make-up

examinations in these two subjects. He passed pharmacology but

failed biochemistry. That ended the matter. Wynne was dismissed

in September, 1985.

Prior Proceedings
Prior Proceedings
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In his court case, Wynne alleged that he was learning-

disabled and that Tufts had discriminated against him on the

basis of his handicap. In short order, Wynne refined his claim

to allege that his disability placed him at an unfair

disadvantage in taking written multiple-choice examinations and

that Tufts, for no good reason, had stubbornly refused to test

his proficiency in biochemistry by some other means. Eventually,

the district court granted summary judgment in Tufts' favor on

the ground that Wynne, because of his inability to pass

biochemistry, was not an "otherwise qualified" handicapped person

within the meaning of section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of

1973, 29 U.S.C. 794 (1988), as explicated by the relevant

caselaw.

On appeal, a panel of this court reversed. That

opinion was withdrawn, however, and the full court reheard

Wynne's appeal. We concluded that, in determining whether an

aspiring medical student meets section 504's "otherwise

qualified" prong, it is necessary to take into account the extent


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to which reasonable accommodations that will satisfy the

legitimate interests of both the school and the student are (or

are not) available and, if such accommodations exist, the extent

to which the institution explored those alternatives. See Wynne,
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932 F.2d at 24-26 (citing, inter alia, School Bd. of Nassau
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County v. Arline, 480 U.S. 273 (1987)). Recognizing the unique
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considerations that come into play when the parties to a

Rehabilitation Act case are a student and an academic

institution, particularly a medical school training apprentice

physicians, we formulated a test for determining whether the

academic institution adequately explored the availability of

reasonable accommodations:

If the institution submits undisputed facts
demonstrating that the relevant officials
within the institution considered alternative
means, their feasibility, cost and effect on
the academic program, and came to a
rationally justifiable conclusion that the
available alternatives would result either in
lowering academic standards or requiring
substantial program alteration, the court
could rule as a matter of law that the
institution had met its duty of seeking
reasonable accommodation. In most cases, we
believe that, as in the qualified immunity
context, the issue of whether the facts
alleged by a university support its claim
that it has met its duty of reasonable
accommodation will be a purely legal one.
Only if essential facts were genuinely
disputed or if there were significantly
probative evidence of bad faith or pretext
would further fact finding be necessary.

Id. at 26 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
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Because the summary judgment record did not satisfactorily




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address this issue,1 we vacated the judgment and remanded for

further proceedings, leaving the district court "free to consider

other submissions [and] to enter summary judgment thereon if [an

expanded record] meet[s] the standard we have set forth." Id. at
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28.

Following remand, Tufts filed a renewed motion for

summary judgment accompanied by six new affidavits. The

plaintiff filed a comprehensive opposition supported, inter alia,
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by his own supplemental affidavit. The court below read the

briefs, heard oral argument, reviewed the parties' updated

submissions, and determined that Tufts had met its burden under

Wynne. In the lower court's view, the expanded record clearly
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showed that Tufts had evaluated the available alternatives to its

current testing format and had reasonably concluded that it was

not practicable in this instance to depart from the standard

multiple-choice format. Accordingly, the court again entered

summary judgment in Tufts' favor. This appeal ensued.

Issues
Issues
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The principal issue on appeal is whether, given those


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1Tufts had filed only a single affidavit touching upon this
issue. Scrutiny of that affidavit, signed by the dean, revealed
the following shortcomings: "There is no mention [in the dean's
affidavit] of any consideration of possible alternatives, nor
reference to any discussion of the unique qualities of multiple
choice examinations. There is no indication of who took part in
the decision [not to deviate from multiple choice examinations]
or when it was made." Wynne, 932 F.2d at 28. Because we thought
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that a party seeking summary judgment should proffer more than
"the simple conclusory averment of the head of an institution,"
we declined to accept the dean's affidavit as a sufficient basis
for shortstopping the litigation. Id.
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facts not genuinely in dispute, Tufts can be said, as a matter of

law, either to have provided reasonable accommodations for

plaintiff's handicapping condition2 or to have demonstrated that

it reached a rationally justifiable conclusion that accommodating

plaintiff would lower academic standards or otherwise unduly

affect its program. There is also a secondary issue: whether

plaintiff has advanced significantly probative evidence

sufficient to ground a finding that Tufts' reasons for not making

further accommodations were pretextual or asserted in bad faith.

Standard of Review
Standard of Review
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Summary judgment has a special place in civil

litigation. The device "has proven its usefulness as a means of

avoiding full-dress trials in unwinnable cases, thereby freeing

courts to utilize scarce judicial resources in more beneficial

ways." Mesnick v. General Elec. Co., 950 F.2d 816, 822 (1st Cir.
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1991), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 2965 (1992). In operation,
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summary judgment's role is to pierce the boilerplate of the

pleadings and assay the parties' proof in order to determine

whether trial is actually required. See id.; see also Garside v.
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Osco Drug, Inc., 895 F.2d 46, 50 (1st Cir. 1990). Since
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appellate review of an order granting summary judgment is


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2There is a lingering question as to whether Wynne's
disability is such that he should be deemed "an individual with
handicaps" within the purview of 29 U.S.C. 794. Since the
court below resolved the case against Wynne on summary judgment,
we must take the facts and the reasonable inferences from them in
the light most congenial to his cause. Thus, we assume, as the
district court apparently assumed sub silentio, that Wynne
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suffers from a recognizable handicap.

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plenary, the court of appeals, like the trial court, "must view

the entire record in the light most hospitable to the party

opposing summary judgment, indulging all reasonable inferences in

that party's favor." Griggs-Ryan v. Smith, 904 F.2d 112, 115
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(1st Cir. 1990).

We uphold a grant of summary judgment if "the

pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and

admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show

that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that

the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."

Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). When, as here, the movant-defendant has

suggested that competent evidence to prove the case is lacking,

the burden devolves upon the nonmovant-plaintiff to "document

some factual disagreement sufficient to deflect brevis
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disposition." Mesnick, 950 F.2d at 822.
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This burden is discharged only if the cited

disagreement relates to a genuine issue of material fact. See
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Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-48 (1986).
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"In this context, 'genuine' means that the evidence about the

fact is such that a reasonable jury could resolve the point in

favor of the nonmoving party [and] 'material' means that the fact

is one that might affect the outcome of the suit under the

governing law." United States v. One Parcel of Real Property,
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Etc. (Great Harbor Neck, New Shoreham, R.I.), 960 F.2d 200, 204
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(1st Cir. 1992) (citing Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248; internal
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quotation marks omitted). This requirement has sharp teeth: the


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plaintiff "must present definite, competent evidence to rebut the

motion." Mesnick, 950 F.2d at 822. Such evidence "cannot be
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conjectural or problematic; it must have substance in the sense

that it limns differing versions of the truth which a factfinder

must resolve at an ensuing trial." Mack v. Great Atl. & Pac. Tea
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Co., 871 F.2d 179, 181 (1st Cir. 1989). As the Court has
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cautioned, evidence that "is merely colorable or is not

significantly probative" cannot deter summary judgment.

Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249-50 (citations omitted).
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Discussion
Discussion
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We have carefully reviewed the amplitudinous record and

are fully satisfied that the district court did not err in

granting summary judgment. Fairly read, the record presents no

genuine issue as to any material fact. Because this case has

consumed so many hours of judicial time, we resist the temptation

to wax longiloquent. Instead, we add only a few decurtate

observations embellishing what the en banc court previously wrote

and remarking the significance of the new materials adduced

below.

First: Following remand, Tufts satisfactorily filled
First:

the gaps that wrecked its initial effort at summary judgment.

The expanded record contains undisputed facts demonstrating, in

considerable detail, that Tufts' hierarchy "considered

alternative means" and "came to a rationally justifiable

conclusion" regarding the adverse effects of such putative

accommodations. Wynne, 932 F.2d at 26. Tufts not only
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documented the importance of biochemistry in a medical school

curriculum, but explained why, in the departmental chair's words,

"the multiple choice format provides the fairest way to test the

students' mastery of the subject matter of biochemistry." Tufts

likewise explained what thought it had given to different methods

of testing proficiency in biochemistry and why it eschewed

alternatives to multiple-choice testing, particularly with

respect to make-up examinations. In so doing, Tufts elaborated

upon the unique qualities of multiple-choice examinations as they

apply to biochemistry and offered an exposition of the historical

record to show the background against which such tests were

administered to Wynne. In short, Tufts demythologized the

institutional thought processes leading to its determination that

it could not deviate from its wonted format to accommodate

Wynne's professed disability. It concluded that to do so would

require substantial program alterations, result in lowering

academic standards, and devalue Tufts' end product highly

trained physicians carrying the prized credential of a Tufts

degree.

To be sure, Tufts' explanations, though plausible, are

not necessarily ironclad. For instance, Wynne has offered

evidence that at least one other medical school and a national

testing service occasionally allow oral renderings of multiple-

choice examinations in respect to dyslexic students. But, the

point is not whether a medical school is "right" or "wrong" in

making program-related decisions. Such absolutes rarely apply in


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the context of subjective decisionmaking, particularly in a

scholastic setting. The point is that Tufts, after undertaking a

diligent assessment of the available options, felt itself obliged

to make "a professional, academic judgment that [a] reasonable

accommodation [was] simply not available." Wynne, 932 F.2d at
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27-28. Phrased another way, Tufts decided, rationally if not

inevitably, that no further accommodation could be made without

imposing an undue (and injurious) hardship on the academic

program. With the diligence of its assessment and the

justification for its judgment clearly shown in the augmented

record, and with the fact of the judgment uncontroverted, the

deficiency that spoiled Tufts' original effort at brevis
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disposition has been cured.

Second: The undisputed facts show that Tufts neither
Second:

ignored Wynne nor turned a deaf ear to his plight. To the

contrary, the defendant (a) warned Wynne in 1983 that he was

failing biochemistry and suggested he defer his examination (a

suggestion that Wynne scotched); (b) arranged for a complete

battery of neuropsychological tests after Wynne failed eight

courses in his freshman year; (c) waived the rules and permitted

Wynne to repeat the first-year curriculum; (d) furnished Wynne

access to tutoring, taped lectures, and the like; (e) allowed him

to take untimed examinations; and (f) gave him make-up

examinations in pharmacology and biochemistry after he again

failed both courses. Given the other circumstances extant in

this case, we do not think that a reasonable factfinder could


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conclude that Tufts, having volunteered such an array of remedial

measures, was guilty of failing to make a reasonable

accommodation merely because it did not also offer Wynne,
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unsolicited, an oral rendering of the biochemistry examination.

Third: Reasonableness is not a constant. To the
Third:

contrary, what is reasonable in a particular situation may not be

reasonable in a different situation even if the situational

differences are relatively slight. Cf., e.g., United States v.
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Rodriguez-Morales, 929 F.2d 780, 785 (1st Cir. 1991) (concluding
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that "reasonableness has a protean quality"), cert. denied, 112
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S. Ct. 868 (1992); Sierra Club v. Secretary of the Army, 820 F.2d
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513, 517 (1st Cir. 1987) (paraphrasing Emerson and observing that

"reasonableness 'is a mutable cloud, which is always and never

the same.'"). Ultimately, what is reasonable depends on a

variable mix of factors.

In the section 504 milieu, an academic institution can

be expected to respond only to what it knows (or is chargeable

with knowing). This means, as the Third Circuit has recently

observed, that for a medical school "to be liable under the

Rehabilitation Act, [it] must know or be reasonably expected to

know of [a student's] handicap." Nathanson v. Medical College of
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Pa., 926 F.2d 1368, 1381 (3d Cir. 1991). A relevant aspect of
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this inquiry is whether the student ever put the medical school

on notice of his handicap by making "a sufficiently direct and

specific request for special accommodations." Id. at 1386.
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Thus, we must view the reasonableness of Tufts' accommodations


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against the backdrop of what Tufts knew about Wynne's needs while

he was enrolled there.

Several factors are entitled to weight in this

equation, including the following: (a) Wynne was never diagnosed

as dyslexic while enrolled at Tufts; (b) the school gave him a

number of special dispensations and "second chances" including

virtually every accommodation that he seasonably suggested; (c)

Wynne had taken, and passed, multiple-choice examinations in

several courses; and (d) he never requested, at any time prior to

taking and failing the third biochemistry exam, that an oral

rendering be substituted for the standard version of the

multiple-choice test.3 Under these circumstances, we do not

believe a rational factfinder could conclude that Tufts' efforts

at accommodation fell short of the reasonableness standard.

Fourth: Wynne's allegations of pretext do not raise
Fourth:

prohibitory doubts about the reasonableness of Tufts' attempted

accommodations or about the honesty of its assessment of

alternatives to multiple-choice examinations vis-a-vis the

school's educational plan. When pretext is at issue in a

discrimination case, it is a plaintiff's duty to produce specific

facts which, reasonably viewed, tend logically to undercut the


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3In his appellate brief, Wynne excoriates Tufts for its
failure to provide him "with the one simple accommodation he has
asked for and believes would make a difference: that the
multiple choice examination in biochemistry be administered to
him orally on an untimed basis with the assistance of a trained
reader." Wynne neglects to mention, however, that he never
sought this type of accommodation until after Tufts sent him
packing and adversary proceedings were underway.

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defendant's position. See, e.g., Villanueva v. Wellesley
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College, 930 F.2d 124, 127 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 112 St. Ct.
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181 (1991); Mack, 871 F.2d at 181. The plaintiff may neither
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"rest[] merely upon conclusory allegations, improbable

inferences, and unsupported speculation," Medina-Munoz v. R.J.
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Reynolds Tobacco Co., 896 F.2d 5, 8 (1st Cir. 1990), nor
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measurably bolster his cause by hurling rancorous epithets and

espousing tenuous insinuations. See Mesnick, 950 F.2d at 826;
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Yerardi's Moody St. Restaurant & Lounge, Inc. v. Board of
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Selectmen, 932 F.2d 89, 92 (1st Cir. 1991).
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Here, Wynne's charges comprise more cry than wool.

They consist of unsubstantiated conclusions, backed only by a few

uncoordinated evidentiary fragments. More is required to

forestall summary judgment. See Wynne, 932 F.2d at 26.
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Conclusion
Conclusion
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We need go no further. In our earlier opinion, we

recognized the existence of a statutory obligation on the part of

an academic institution such as Tufts to consider available ways

of accommodating a handicapped student and, when seeking summary

judgment, to produce a factual record documenting its scrupulous

attention to this obligation. Id. at 25-26. Of course, the
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effort requires more than lip service; it must be sincerely

conceived and conscientiously implemented. We think that Tufts,

the second time around, has cleared the hurdle that we

envisioned: the undisputed facts contained in the expanded


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record, when considered in the deferential light that academic

decisionmaking deserves, id. at 25, meet the required standard.
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We add a final note of caution. Although both parties

to this litigation invite us to paint with a broad brush, we

decline their joint invitation. The issue before us is not

whether a medical student, authoritatively diagnosed as a

dyslexic and known to the school to be so afflicted, is ever

entitled, upon timely request, to an opportunity to take an

examination orally. Rather, we are limited to the idiosyncratic

facts of Wynne's case. The resulting record presents a narrower,

easier issue and we believe that the district court resolved

that issue correctly.



Affirmed.
Affirmed.
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