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Marco Rubio says immigration deal needs tough terms
While a deal includes a long and difficult process for the 11 million the United States illegally, Senator Marco Rubio insisted the proposal does not include an "amnesty" provision that fellow conservatives have called a deal-breaker.DLA Piper Makes Measured Progress
It's now the second-largest law firm in the world, but the conglomeration has sceptics who deride its "Starbucks" approach.Looking Back, While Moving Forward
After almost 130 years of membership in the Connecticut bar, woman attorneys are playing an increasingly visible and important role in the profession. The percentage of women general counsel in Fortune 500 companies has grown rapidly over the last 35 years and now is at 19 percent. Twenty-six percent of state court judges are now women. Progress towards equality has been frustratingly slow but, thanks to these encouraging trends and affinity programs for woman like Day Pitney's Women Working Together, there is a far greater reason for optimism.Antitrust Lawyers Predict New DOJ Division Chief to Continue 'Aggressive Enforcement'
The Senate confirmed William Baer of Arnold & Porter as the new chief of the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, to the delight of many in the antitrust bar who have widely lauded his qualifications for the job.View more book results for the query "White Case"
No King Please, We're Americans
King George ought to abandon his pretensions to royal prerogatives like his Cuban dungeon, contend Frederick A.O. Schwarz Jr. and Aziz Huq.Best Option for E-Mail Recall and Other Tips
Sometimes the "Send" button is our worst enemy. How many times have you composed an e-mail in haste or anger and fired it off, only to realize you sincerely regret what you wrote? Wish you could take it back? Brett Burney offers pros and cons of the e-mail-recall options out there, plus tips for composing, addressing and sending better e-mails.Major cities file lawsuits against online travel agents
DALLAS AP - Several cities around the country have sued Web-based travel clearinghouses such as Expedia, Travelocity and Orbitz, claiming they have failed to pay millions of dollars in hotel taxes.San Antonio filed a class-action lawsuit this week seeking to recover lost taxes, and Los Angeles, San Diego, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Chicago have filed similar suits.Trending Stories
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