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School District Resolves Student's Anorexia Complaint
A mother who claimed her daughter became anorexic because of more than a year of bullying by classmates has reached a settlement with the Pittsburgh public school system for damages related to claims that the girl's school did nothing to stop the students' behavior.Law Firms Ride a Boom Built on Energy in Houston
Doug Atnipp -- who helped open Greenberg Traurig's Houston office -- is one of a growing number of home-grown lawyers to jump firms in recent years, leaving an established Houston firm for a national firm opening an outpost in Space City. In the booming Houston legal market, it's a buyer's market for lawyers -- particularly those with an energy practice. Competition is so fierce that some firms offer lucrative and rare three-year compensation guarantees and get into bidding wars over energy partners.Shedding Light On a Dark Issue
Two young Israeli attorneys concerned with shameful crimes that some of their countrymen refuse to acknowledge called on two New York law firms last week asking for help in their delicate cause: navigating the line between respect for the insular culture of ultra-Orthodox Jews and legal modernity in the practice of domestic abuse law.OCA Headquarters Tackles Building Damage While Courts Slowly Resume Routine Services
"People have been making extraordinary efforts to come to work," Chief Administrative Judge A. Gail Prudenti said. "They have put the justice system and the people we serve first and their own personal situation secondary. I have never felt so much pride in our personnel."Evaluation and Compensation of Partners
The decision as to who gets what is probably the most crucial decision made in a firm today. Dissatisfaction with the decision-making process and result may be the single greatest factor in the decision of a lawyer to leave his or her firm. Failure to appreciate the process is responsible for a major part of this dissatisfaction. Further, goals, objectives and perhaps culture, as described in this article, change so that a firm may ultimately become something different than that which a lawyer originally joFrench Court Rules Against Google in Books Case
A court in Paris, France, ruled Friday that Google Inc. is breaking French law with its policy of digitizing books, handing the U.S. Internet giant a $14,300-a-day fine until it rids its search engine of the literary extracts. A judge also ordered Google to pay $430,000 (300,000 euro) in damages and interest to French publisher La Martiniere, which brought the case on behalf of a group of French publishers. The attorney for Google, Alexandra Neri, said Google plans to appeal the decision.Trending Stories
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