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Education
By Maria Dinzeo | November 16, 2023
Merlyn Mind, New York-based maker of AI-powered digital assistants for teachers, has found its first general counsel in Google in-house lawyer Scott Pojunas.
2 minute read
By Lisa Willis | November 16, 2023
"This court has already excluded 'unsuccessful work' from the lodestar calculation," Chief U.S. District Judge Mark E. Walker wrote.
4 minute read
By Emily Saul | November 15, 2023
In a 3-2 vote, the panel found the Stony Brook University Appeals Committee erred in affirming a determination by a university review panel that a student violated codes of student responsibility by engaging in sexual contact with another student without her affirmative consent.
3 minute read
By Michael P. Maslanka | November 14, 2023
Let's list the training needs of law students and new lawyers that are currently ignored, marginalized or eschewed.
6 minute read
By Hugo Guzman | November 14, 2023
Dan Malasky has joined Bradenton, Florida-based IMG Academy, which offers grades six through 12 and has become a magnet for U.S. athletes seeking to maximize their chances of hitting it big.
3 minute read
By Alex Anteau | November 13, 2023
The charter schools argued that the district refused to honor multiple provisions in their contracts.
4 minute read
By Ryan Dailey | November 9, 2023
The newly passed measure focuses on the Family Empowerment Scholarship for Students with Unique Abilities program, which has been limited to nearly 41,000 children this school year.
3 minute read
By Ryan Dailey | November 7, 2023
The Senate Fiscal Policy Committee and the House Appropriations Committee unanimously approved identical measures aimed at allowing more students to receive the state-backed vouchers amid high demand.
4 minute read
By Law Journal Editorial Board | November 5, 2023
We are undergoing one of our periodic waves of what is commonly referred to as book banning. The term is not strictly accurate.
3 minute read
By The Associated Press | November 2, 2023
James G. Maloney, former chief scientist for the Georgia Tech Research Institute, and James J. Acree and James D. Fraley III had access to a university credit card that was supposed to be for official business, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a statement. Instead they used it to finance about $200,000 in personal expenses from 2007 through 2013.
2 minute read
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Truly exceptional Bergen County New Jersey Law Firm is growing and seeks strong plaintiff's personal injury Attorney with 5-7 years plaintif...
Epstein Becker & Green is seeking an associate to joins its Commercial Litigation practice in our Columbus or Cincinnati offices. Ca...
McCarter & English, LLP, a well established and growing law firm, is actively seeking a talented and driven associate having 2-5 years o...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS