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December 13, 2002 | Texas Lawyer

Bowling for Killers

5 minute read
April 25, 2000 | Law.com

Wait for Ruling Irks British Firm

British company AllVoice Computing has been waiting nearly a year for a ruling on its request for a preliminary injunction, after a judge predicted a "relatively" prompt decision. The company was seeking an injunction in federal court in Boston against Massachusetts firm Dragon Systems Inc., which AllVoice accused of infringing on a patent. Now AllVoice is appealing to the British Parliament.
3 minute read
Federal Circuit Affirms: Lucent's $1.5 Billion Verdict Against Microsoft is Out
Publication Date: 2008-09-26
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June 02, 2006 | New York Law Journal

Public Interest Projects

After nearly three years of legal proceedings and postponements involving a twice-rescheduled trial, political asylum was granted late last month to a couple from the embattled West African nation of Togo, thanks to pro bono representation by a litigation associate with DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary. Also, four students from three New York law schools received summer stipends from Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal for public interest project work.
4 minute read
January 16, 2007 | Law.com

The Patent Office: Getting Wiki With It

In August, when the Patent and Trademark Office said that it had removed Wikipedia from its list of acceptable research sources, the surprise was not that the Web site had been banished, but that examiners had been using it at all. To its fans, Wikipedia is remarkable: a gigantic, up-to-the-minute encyclopedia to which any user can contribute. To its detractors, it's a mish-mash of misinformation. Meanwhile, the PTO has not banned other Web sites where content is easily modified -- and not always accurate.
3 minute read
January 14, 2003 | Law.com

Brobeck Slims Staff as Merger Talk Continues

San Francisco's Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison has axed office administrators in Austin, Texas, and Irvine, Calif.; a third administrator in the Dallas office has voluntarily resigned. The departures come as the firm continues merger discussions with Philadelphia's Morgan, Lewis & Bockius. More staff cuts are possible, and another wave of partner defections may be in the offing in the coming weeks.
3 minute read
December 22, 2008 | Texas Lawyer

Key Developments in the Substantive Law in 2008

Significant developments in 16 practice areas, including bankrupty, business and banking, corporate governance and securities, criminal law, energy, environmental, family law, health law, immigration, insurance, intellectual property, labor and employment, legal malpractice, personal injury, real estate and tax law.
47 minute read
July 31, 2008 | Law.com

Associates Survey 2008

Smaller firms often outscore larger ones on our annual survey of midlevel job satisfaction. It may be because a more intimate atmosphere breeds happiness. Maybe it's because associates have more responsibility. Perhaps it's because they have a better chance of making partner. In these charts, firms are grouped roughly according to size. In the first category are firms whose annual gross revenues are too low to qualify for the Am Law 200. These are the smallest firms that took part in our survey. In the second category are Am Law Second Hundred firms?numbers 101-200 on the most recent Am Law 200 survey (July.) In the final category are firms that appear on our most recent Am Law 100 (May) or Global 100 (October 2007) survey. For a full methodology, click here.
14 minute read
February 06, 2006 | Texas Lawyer

Inside Job: Firm Brings Private Investigators into the Fold

Dallas-based Bickel & Brewer, a 35-lawyer firm, launched its own investigative unit in January. It�s staffed by three former agents and a former training instructor with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
7 minute read
March 31, 2006 | Law.com

History Is Not on GM's Side

The Connecticut Supreme Court's historic decision in Evans v. General Motors arises from historic precedents. Looking to 19th century English law for guidance, Justice Peter T. Zarella reversed a decision that inventor John W. Evans isn't entitled to have his spellbinding tale of treachery unfold before a jury. Evans is seeking more than $125 million in lost royalties for GM's alleged theft of his design for a sleek and powerful cooling system that first appeared in the 1992 Corvette Stingray.
5 minute read

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