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Senate leaders roll out stripped-down budget plan
ATLANTA AP - Leaders in the state Senate on Wednesday rolled out a stripped-down version of a spending plan for the next few months, paying for what they called critical needs while carving away projects favored by their colleagues in the House. The Senate Appropriations Committee approved the budget unanimously, setting up what could be a battle of wills with the House, which had added many of the projects the Senate slashed.Bimbo GC: It's Not What You Think
Since Claudia Coscia became the first GC for Fort Worth-based Bimbo Bakeries USA in 1998, she has reduced the company's legal costs by more than 50 percent. She says the savings came from a combination of tactics, including doing more work in-house, closer management of outside counsel and negotiation of fixed-fee schedules. And for the record, the name of the company -- the U.S. operation of a Mexico City-based entity -- comes from a combination of "bambino" and "Bambi."MoFo Examines Its Strategy in New York
Morrison & Foerster's New York office lost its second corporate partner in as many weeks as John Cleary departed Friday for a New Jersey firm. His departure followed the exit of partner William "Billy" Stern, who left the firm last week. The moves underscore the change under way at MoFo's 122-lawyer New York office, which played a winning hand during the dot-com boom but is now reshuffling its emphasis during the bust.Associate's IP Blog Is Patently Good Publicity
Dennis Crouch's IP blog, Patently-O, has won him thousands of fans, a book deal and speaking engagements galore -- but few may realize he's a third-year associate. Crouch spends about an hour a day blogging about patent law, on top of his day job at Chicago's McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff. But the firm cuts him some slack for last year billing about 1,900 hours -- slightly under the firm's average -- because the blog has also landed McDonnell Boehnen new clients.Intel Loses a Second Patent Fight With Intergraph
Intel lost its second patent battle against Intergraph Corp. when a Texas federal court ruled that Intel's Itanium microprocessors infringe two Intergraph patents. In the first case, heard before an Alabama federal court, Intergraph claimed Intel's Pentium microprocessors infringed its so-called Clipper chip patents. That case settled when Intel agreed to pay $300 million in damages.Cite as: Adusumelli v. Steiner, 08 Civ. 6932, NYLJ 1202472830800, at *1 (SDNY, Decided September 29, 2010)Judge Richard J. HolwellDecided
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