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High Court Rules on Duty of Care Owed to School Bus Riders
Emina Poricanin, an appellate court attorney for the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, discusses a recent decision which held that if a bus that transports students is not a "school bus," as defined by §375(20), then the bus driver does not have to comply with 1174(b), and argues that students riding city buses to school are exposed to the same dangers that students riding yellow school buses encounter and should not receive less protection.Discover Novus Network v. Reko Tours Inc.
Use of Name Under Which Business Conducted Prior to Corporate Name Change Not PrejudicialDelaware Likely to Remain Hotbed for Bankruptcy Filings
Bankruptcy lawyers in Philadelphia predict that the current economic crisis will inevitably lead to an increase in Chapter 11 filings by struggling businesses but that the lion's share of those cases are likely to be litigated in the bankruptcy courts in Delaware and the Southern District of New York, with only a handful of sizeable cases ending up in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.US officials, Macon police meet about shooting
Federal authorities have been in Macon this week to meet with the city's police chief about the fatal shooting of a man outside a grocery store.View more book results for the query "*"
Letters to the Editor: No Corporate Funds for Classes; Accept a Gift Ban?
Reform Eyed For Landmark Drug Law
The Hatch-Waxman Act, a 1984 law that transformed the pharmaceutical industry, is out of date. Just as lawmakers are thinking of making changes to it, the makers of both brand-name and generic drugs are trying to solve a complicated political equation involving election-year politics and the political backlash against health care costs to decide if revisiting the Hatch-Waxman Act is in their best interests.Judge orders insurer to pay $5.7 million in Miami Beach case
U.S. District Judge Alan Gold ended a 10-year legal battle over the drownings of two people whose deaths inspired a landmark court ruling on beach safety.Some Professors Say Laptops Inhibit Debate And Ban Them From Class
As the professor lectured on the law, the student wore a poker face. But that was probably because, under the guise of taking notes on his laptop, the student actually was playing poker online, using the school's wireless Internet connection.Delaware Ruling Reinforces Validity of the Poison Pill
David A. Katz, a partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and Laura A. McIntosh, a consulting attorney for the firm, write that the events leading up to a recent Delaware Chancery Court decision, as well as the opinion itself, provide useful insights into the workings of the modern poison pill, in both the NOL context and the market for corporate control generally.Trending Stories
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Driving Value with Better Decision-Making: A Governance Maturity Checklist
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