Given the chaos that preceded it, one would expect that the most important hearing in the largest bankruptcy case in U.S. history would be a doozy.

It was, said Darryl S. Laddin of Arnall Golden Gregory in Atlanta. He was one of hundreds of lawyers who last Friday crammed into courtrooms, many of them limited to standing-room-only space, to deal with Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s effort to sell some of its big assets.

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