0 results for 'excellent'
Lawyers for Cannabis Applicants Welcome Additional Licenses, But Hold Concerns
The New York Cannabis Control Board is expanding the number of Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary licenses, from 150 to 300.Applicant Filing Deadline for New York Chief Judge Extended to March 10
The Commission on Judicial Nomination is giving hopefuls three more days to submit their credentials. The process to replace retired Chief Judge Janet DiFiore was restarted in the wake of a state Senate vote to deny confirmation to Justice Hector LaSalle.In 'Steady March Forward,' Haynes and Boone Posts Another Record Year
Revenue grew at Haynes and Boone by 5.5% in 2022, boosted by strong demand in practices including litigation, restructuring, finance, investment management and real estate, as well as low attrition.24. Are You In the Business of Law for Your Clients Or Yourselves?
Once you start thinking of attorneys as problem solvers rather than cash generators, a very interesting thing happens. You realize that the prize isn't money, it's happy clients. Then you see that it's actually a "set up to succeed" strategy. To the problem solver, money is just a by-product, albeit a vital one, but it's still a by-product.Newsmakers: New Partners at McGuireWoods, Jackson Walker
Chelsea Hilliard has joined McGuireWoods' commercial litigation practice as a partner in Dallas, plus other moves.View more book results for the query "excellent"
Alena Allen to Become First Black Dean of LSU Law
"My mother applied to college in 1965," Alena Allen said in an email to Law.com on Thursday. "She only applied to Southern in Baton Rouge" because "LSU admitted its first Black undergraduate in 1964 so my mom did not view attending LSU as a viable option."Keker Names First Female Managing Partner
Keker named Laurie Carr Mims its new managing partner, following another record year of growth in which the firm took 12 cases to trial or arbitration, with 65% of partners and 43% of associates involved in trial or arbitration work.10th Circ. Declines to Pronounce Bright-Line Benchmark for Attorney Fees in Class Actions
"To date, we have not adopted a benchmark percentage for attorneys' fees from common fund settlements," stated Judge Joel M. Carson, III, in his written opinion for the court. "And we decline to pronounce a bright-line benchmark today. Instead, we reiterate our prior recognition that awards across a range of percentages may be reasonable."When Our Stress Becomes Dangerous
Patrick Krill, the author of a recent study on factors that lead to suicidality in lawyers, shares his thoughts on work-related stress.Congress Could Use Technology To Keep Incapacitated Lawmakers Present
As we now know, remote court appearances, depositions and the like have helped the courts and litigants attend to matters more easily, efficiently, and at times when people simply can't attend personally. Congress could learn from this, one attorney writes.Trending Stories
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