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China tells Obama what he can do with his yuan views
China took Barack Obama's views on the yuan seriously. So seriously that it is doing the exact opposite of what the U.S. president would like.China let the yuan fall the most in a month on Jan. 23, right after Timothy Geithner, Obama's pick for Treasury secretary, relayed Obama's campaign position that China was "manipulating" its currency.Samuel Saiber, 95, Nestor of the New Jersey Bar
Tis the season for massive financial fraud, and we at The Am Law Litigation Daily have a few more stocking stuffers for you. Today's news concerns (who else?) Bernard Madoff
A Snapshot of Fair Defense Act Success
A question-and-answer with Judge Sid L. Harle of the 226th District Court in Bexar County, the local administrative judge who is responsible for orchestrating his district's response to the Fair Defense Act.Environmentalists, EPA Clash Over Atlanta Air Standards Extension
Environmentalists asked federal judges to order the Environmental Protection Agency to enforce its own missed deadline for cleaning Atlanta's air. A win for environmental groups could result in restrictions on new industry, less polluting but more expensive gasoline, and further jeopardizing of the state's access to federal highway money.View more book results for the query "*"
MIT Settles Student Hazing Death for $6 Million
Massachusetts Institute of Technology student Scott Krueger was found in an alcohol-induced coma in the basement of his fraternity house, Phi Gamma Delta, after a night of hazing in 1997. He died three days later. Krueger's parents have now reached a $6 million settlement of their claims against the university in connection with their son's death.Chasing the Myth of the First U.S. Patent
Our IP reporter happened to stumble across the Vermont town where the very first U.S. patent was issued to Samuel Hopkins. But is Hopkins's story history or mythology?PetSmart Sets Its Eagle Eye on New Top Lawyer Emily Dickinson
Pet supply chain PetSmart, Inc., calls all of its animal-owning employees 'pet parents.' Its new senior vice president, general counsel, and secretary will fit right in: Emily Dickinson is a 'pet parent' to a yellow labrador named Maggie, a cat named Pumpkin, and a red-eared slider turtle, Greenback, all of whom she hopes will enjoy moving with her to sunny Phoenix, where the company is headquartered. No word yet on whether she has any feathered friends, but as another Emily Dickinson taught us, 'hope is the thing with feathers.'Customers pay a nonrefundable $6 service fee to apply for tickets worth far more than their face value. That's arguably a lottery, according to the Seventh Circuit.
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