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Show Cogs love, not more money
NO MORE MONEYThat's right-I said it. I don't want another "market raise." Don't "show me the money" Don't add another $10,000 or $20,000 to my paycheck. You think I am lying. Even now, you're saying to yourself: "Of course you want more money, you greedy Cog. Your greed is the reason this is happening You won't be satisfied until your salary neutralizes partner profits.Deemed Approval Is the Right Remedy For Planning Board Delay, Court Says
The New Jersey Supreme Court has warned county planning boards that if they fail to meet legislatively mandated deadlines for acting on applications, projects will be deemed approved.City Mourns for King's Widow, Who Continued Legacy
Steven H. [email protected]'s legal and political community Tuesday reacted with sadness and veneration to news of the death of Coretta Scott King.Mrs. King, who was 78, won praise for continuing the work of her husband, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., after his assassination in 1968. She sometimes drew criticism for her ardent defense of his copyrights.View more book results for the query "*"
Commentary: Diversity -- Get in the Game
When Kathleen J. Wu is not being a lawyer, she watches tennis. As vice chairwoman of the United States Tennis Association's national committee on diversity and inclusion, her job is to get more Asian-Americans to play tennis. While she tries to find ways to attract more minorities to the game, she sees a parallel question about how firms can attract more minorities of every kind.Florida's Gay-Adoption Ban Goes to 11th Circuit
The American Civil Liberties Union will argue today before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Miami that Florida's 1977 statute banning adoption by gays and lesbians violates their rights to due process and equal protection under the 14th Amendment. The ACLU says the law categorically excludes gays from adopting while evaluating other applicants on a case-by-case basis.After Landmark Supreme Court Case, Citizens United Group Finds Its Niche
In a pair of town houses less than 10 blocks from where the Supreme Court gave his group a place in legal history, David Bossie is making movies and cutting a path for a new art form: the nonpolitical political ad. Bossie is the president of Citizens United, a conservative group whose anti-Hillary Clinton movie in 2008 led to a landmark ruling this year, when the Court threw out parts of a 63-year-old law prohibiting corporations and unions from paying to air ads for or against political candidates.Trending Stories
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