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2009 could be the 'year of condensed soup'
Judging by Dayna Neumann's pantry, Campbell Soup Co. may turn the U.S. recession into rising sales, just as it did in the last two contractions. Neumann's family in Louisville, Ky., is bracing "for a rough road ahead,'' the 32-year-old working mother said. After her 30-year-old husband, Nick, substituted $1.King siblings' fight continues with new suit
In the latest salvo in a battle of celebrated siblings, a lawsuit filed on behalf of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change accuses two of the late civil rights leader's children of misusing their positions as officers and board members of the center for personal gain.The chairman of the King Center is Dexter S.Enron's Skilling is reminder of risks of skirting the law
FORMER ENRON CEO Jeffrey Skilling's nearly quarter-century prison sentence this week should remind corporate bosses everywhere of how risky it can be to break the law.The timing couldn't be more perfect. In recent months, dozens of CEOs have found themselves in trouble for manipulating the grant dates of stock options.Downtown still a good bet, Equity vice president says
By Aisha I. Jefferson, Staff ReporterDespite the departure of two-thirds of his tenants from One Ninety One Peachtree Tower to Midtown, John R. Sullivan is bullish on downtown Atlanta."The quality of life is just great here," said Sullivan, 46, Atlanta region vice president for Equity Office Properties Trust, the building's owner.Family of car wreck victim gets $15M
By Wendy Moses, Editorial InternDollar General Corp. will pay $15 million to the father of Mark Allen Yee, who last year sustained permanent brain damage in a car wreck.Clark H. McGehee, who represented Thomas Jack Yee, said a Dollar General employee Tammylee Wright was picking up shopping bags on July 4, 2005, to bring back to the store where she worked when she caused a head-on collision with Mark Yee, who was riding a motorcycle.View more book results for the query "*"
Spousal privilege in domestic abuse cases could end
Georgia solicitors and victim advocates are pushing a bill in the General Assembly that would end the state's practice of allowing someone not to testify in a domestic violence case against her spouse.House Bill 711 also creates a conditional privilege by which workers at a battered women's shelter, for example, may not have to testify about what their clients have said.Warning: Cyber-criminals and terrorists are targeting your company
The public service video stars Shawn Henry, when he was still head of cyber investigations for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Bald, blue-eyed and straight-talking, he stands in what looks like a room full of computer servers, directing his message about the cyber-threats facing corporate America to an imagined audience of CEOs and board directors.Suit: 20-year miscalculation shortchanged state workers
NHL says it controls Coyotes, seeks dismissal
PHOENIX AP - The National Hockey League said it has been in control of the Phoenix Coyotes since November and is asking a federal judge to throw out the team's bankruptcy filing.NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said Coyotes owner Jerry Moyes signed documents giving control of the team to the league. Daly said the documents specifically prohibit Moyes from taking the franchise into bankruptcy.Suit alleges union's deal with Delta wronged disabled pilots
A Delta Air Lines pilot is alleging that the Air Line Pilots Association discriminated against its disabled members when it set up a plan to allocate $2.1 billion granted by the airline in exchange for pay and benefit concessions the pilots made while the airline was in bankruptcy reorganization.In a putative class action filed in federal district court in Alabama in September and transferred to the Northern District of Georgia on Dec.Trending Stories
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