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Ex-Football Player Romanowski Settles Suit With Teammate
As former Oakland Raider Bill Romanowski's movie career took off last month, a chapter in his legal travails was quietly laid to rest. Romanowski, who plays a prison guard in the remake of "The Longest Yard," last week settled a lawsuit with a former teammate whom he knocked unconscious during a practice-squad scuffle two years ago. The teammate, Marcus Williams, will receive $415,000 from Romanowski -- $75,000 more than a jury awarded him in April.Carroll Becomes New Chesco D.A.
More than a quarter century after he first joined the office, Joseph W. Carroll was appointed Chester County District Attorney by the county`s Common Pleas judges.No Baloney: Pick Counsel Like a Deli Service
Geoffrey Parnass, a Vandenberg & Feliu partner and a former GC for a consumer products company, advises in-house attorneys to select their outside counsel like they would a good deli person: Prompt and efficient service -- at a good value -- is key. While in-house counsel may seek lawyers in private practice who are experts in their field, Parnass suggests several other criteria that in-house counsel may apply to ensure that they get the best help, without waiting in line.Google reaches deal on Belgian newspaper links
Google Inc. reached a deal with Belgian newspaper publishers, resolving a six-year copyright battle that had blocked the owner of the world's most-used search engine from publishing links to local newspapers.View more book results for the query "*"
'Honest Mistake' Can Be Considered Willful Misconduct
An Unemployment Compensation Review Board's decision that a pre-school teacher who claimed she accidentally violated her employer's "100 percent supervision policy" was justified in ruling she was not eligible for unemployment compensation after being fired because an "honest mistake" was not enough to justify the violation, a Superior Court panel has ruled.Children of Ray Charles oppose action against Albany State over $3 million donation
Apostolou v. Governor Mifflin School Dist.
The school district did not abuse its discretion in waiving certain bid requirements in deciding a bid contest for electrical work in the construction of a new elementary school. Request for permanent injunction denied.Size of Appendix or Reproduced Record Doesn't Matter in Appeals
Appellate judges and the lawyers who handle appeals might occasionally wish that an appellate court could decide a particularly fascinating legal issue in the abstract, unconstrained by the facts and circumstances of the case in which the issue arises.Trending Stories
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