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Synovus cutting 650 jobs; Capital One 220
COLUMBUS, Ga. AP - Synovus Financial Corp. plans to cut about 650 jobs over the next two years to save an estimated $50 million a year.The regional banking company also announced Wednesday that it is reducing its dividend this quarter from 17 cents per share to 6 cents, a savings of about $36 million, from $56 million.Anti-Harassment Policy Violates Free Speech
Constitutional Law Anti-Harassment Policy Violates Free Speech By April White Special to the Law Weekly In a decision that could affect many local school districts, a unanimous 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals panel has ruled that a State College ...Case Goes Up in Smoke for Lawyers Tossed Off Tobacco Suit
Open Source Case Expands Contract Rights in Area Usually Governed by Copyright Law
A liability carrier must defend its insured in an Illinois class action over junk faxes, at least until the case is tried, a New Jersey judge has ruled in a case of first impression. Myron Corp., a New Jersey-based company, is alleged to have violated the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act and the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. The plaintiffs in Stonecrafters Inc. v. Myron Corp. allege Myron unlawfully converted fax machine, paper and toner by sending the faxes.View more book results for the query "*"
IP Catch of the Day: Ropes & Gray to Land Fish & Neave?
Boston's Ropes & Gray has courted IP boutique Fish & Neave for years, a period over which numerous IP shops have closed. Since 2003, 12 partners have left the 160-lawyer Fish to join expanding practices at five other firms; 20 associates have left, too. Firm spokesperson James Haggerty has confirmed that "extremely preliminary merger talks" are again taking place. It seems that this time, Ropes might land the catch.Apple, Publishers, Open-Source Dictate Law School Textbook Evolution
Electronic tablets will make paper books in law schools obsolete, publishing experts say, in reaction to news of Apple entering the textbook market and Thomson Reuters exiting it.Divided Supreme Court OKs Strip Searches for Minor Offenses
Supreme Court to rule in Met Life case that could increase cost of employee benefit plans
WASHINGTON AP The Supreme Court on Friday said it would rule on an appeal by MetLife Inc. in a case that could make employee benefit plans more expensive.The dispute centers on whether insurance companies such as MetLife have a conflict of interest when they both administer employee disability plans and pay benefits under the plans.Trending Stories
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