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How to Hire Your First Employee
Your solo practice is flourishing, but your clients are starting to get a bit cranky. The call back time to clients is growing. Your paperwork threatens to topple over and crush you. You've been juggling lots of oranges and spinning a dinner plate on your nose while riding a tiny bicycle in a figure eight. Now -- before the juggling act gets out of control -- it's time to hire your first employee.To hear Riddell Sports's lead counsel tell the tale, trial against Kirkland & Ellis was as ferocious as a goal-line stand in a playoff game.
Ricky Polston elected next Florida chief justice
Ricky Polston was unanimously elected to be the state's 55th chief justice and becomes the first from west of the Apalachicola River since 1925. Polston will succeed Chief Justice Charles T. Canady, with whom he shares many conservative ideological views.View more book results for the query "*"
All states get ethanol, but not everyone is sold
BELFIELD, N.D. AP - Ethanol has a toe-hold in every state, pushed by increased production, government subsidies and people looking to save a few pennies at the pump."For the farmer, it's another market for our product _ this is a good thing," said Mike Clemens, a Wimbledon farmer and a director of the North Dakota Corn Growers Association.Bingham McCutchen Adopts 'Merit Lockstep' Compensation System
Bingham McCutchen has joined the ranks of firms that are tweaking their compensation systems, saying Monday it is moving to a "merit lockstep" system that will keep base pay on lockstep but introduce a merit component into bonuses.Va AG appeals birth-injury payment order
RICHMOND, Va. AP - The Virginia attorney general's office is appealing an order requiring the state's birth-injury program to pay $59,000 to lawyers representing defendants in two malpractice lawsuits.The lawsuits stem from the death of a full-term newborn and injuries to the mother.The attorney general's office argues that the payments are against the birth-injury act's public policy.Fenced In: Border Eminent-Domain Cases Spike Judge's Slowpoke Report Numbers
If a federal judge has to land on Texas Lawyer 's annual Slowpoke Report, it might as well be for an interesting reason. That's what happened in 2011 to U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen of Brownsville, who had an unusually high 173 civil cases pending for more than three years on his docket — more than any other federal judge in the state.Trending Stories
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