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First Foreigner Is Named Partner at a Japanese Firm
In the late 1960s, Bonnie Dixon lived in Fukui on Japan's north coast while her father, a Westinghouse Electric Co. engineer, helped build a nuclear power plant. Running water was a luxury in her village, her classrooms were unheated and she sharpened pencils with a razor. With all the exotica, Dixon became fluent in both the language and culture.ACLU Pushes in Two Courts for Names of Muslim Detainees
The American Civil Liberties Union stepped up its fight last Tuesday on two fronts � in New Jersey state court and in federal court in the District of Columbia � to learn the details about hundreds of Muslims detained on immigration charges since Sept. 11.Justices Turn to Ex-Clerks for Unusual Role
Two cases before the Supreme Court this week involve the unusual appointment of counsel to argue on behalf of positions the U.S. has abandoned.Court Administrator Wins Language Access Award
Patricia W. Griffin, the state court administrator for the Delaware Administrative Office of the Courts, received the inaugural Mission award from the Consortium for Language Access for her work to provide equal access to justice for linguistic minorities.Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 21, No. 79 - April 23, 2012
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Investors shouldn't fear the 'three Gs'
The stock market has made no progress for three weeks. Traders blame the "three Gs," Greece, Goldman Sachs and the Gulf of Mexico. Greece, teetering on the brink of default on its sovereign debt, was bolstered by a financial-aid package cobbled together by European governments. Many investors still worry that Greece will be unable to service its debt, and they have plenty of doubts about shaky finances in Portugal, Spain and Italy.Ramos Trial a Challenge For DA
S.F. District Attorney Kamala Harris has long opposed the death penalty, but the Edwin Ramos case may be nudging her in that direction even as the emergence of a second suspect could undermine the prosecution.Grand Jury Re-Indicts Former Judge in Pa. 'Kids for Cash' Scandal
A federal grand jury has handed down a superseding indictment against former Luzerne County, Pa., Common Pleas Judge Mark A. Ciavarella Jr. in response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of the federal honest services fraud statute, according to federal prosecutors. The number of criminal charges against Ciavarella has been reduced from 48 to 39, with three counts of honest services fraud among those dropped. It's the latest twist in a case that has seen several since mid-2009.Trending Stories
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Strong & Hanni Solves Storage Woes--Learn How You Can, Too
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