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Resilient Floor Covering Pension Fund v. M&M Installation, Inc.
Smaller Firms Manage Their Opportunities With Bigger Clients
Last year, as the economy faltered, many smaller firms began to hear opportunity knocking and came to find more and more large corporate clients gathered on their doorsteps. The recession forced in-house counsel at even the biggest companies to find creative ways to stretch shrinking legal budgets and many of them turned their attention to midsize and small firms. But now, the firms themselves must prove their worth while contending with increasingly aggressive large firms, some say.Huffington Bloggers Lose Bid to Sue AOL for Compensation
Unpaid bloggers to the TheHuffingtonPost.com who claimed the company concealed data on the money the website earned from their posts have lost their bid to recover more than $100 million in damages.Class Decertified in Case Over Title Insurer's Alleged Overcharges
Although class treatment might be preferable in a case alleging that the Chicago Title Insurance Co. overcharged customers, a federal judge decertified the class in light of the Third Circuit's reading of state court precedent on the contours of the Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law.Tampa office market may bottom out
The Tampa Bay office market may be beginning to turn a corner, with the amount of negative absorption in the first quarter of 2010 significantly smaller than in first quarter 2009, according to brokers at Grubb & Ellis and CB Richard Ellis. Plus, activity in the market is up from late 2009, they report.View more book results for the query "*"
Affirmative Action Rulings Leave N.J. Law Schools on Safe Ground
With affirmative action programs at New Jersey law schools conforming to the model approved by the U.S. Supreme Court last week, deans at the state's institutions say they have no plans to alter policies that have helped a generation of black and Hispanic aspirants become lawyers.Ga. Supreme Court throws out Clark Atlanta engineering challenge
ATLANTA AP - Clark Atlanta University's engineering department cannot sue the historically black school to save its program and faculty members from being cut, the Supreme Court of Georgia ruled Monday.The school is set to graduate its last group of engineering majors by May 2008, and future aspiring engineers at Clark Atlanta would be funneled through an existing dual-degree partnership with nearby Georgia Tech.Cast of Lawyers Arguing Supreme Court Health Care Cases Now Set
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