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DLA Helps Thai Prince Get Plane Back From Germany
A German court released a Thai prince's personal plane Wednesday after the government of Thailand agreed to post a bond for the roughly $54 million it owes a defunct German construction company from an international arbitration ruling. DLA Piper represented the Kingdom of Thailand in the German court proceedings.Expanding the Internet's Domain
New Internet addresses will soon be popping up with roots such as .biz or .store. Companies with famous trademarks fear it is a cybersquatter's dream come true -- many advocate excluding famous marks from new Internet addresses. But small businesses and noncommercial entities oppose the idea. One consumer group has asked the FTC to investigate whether such a restriction is an antitrust violation.Attorney Scandal Threatens Gonzales' Job
The damage is done. The Justice Department's top two officials gave misleading information to Congress under oath. The attorney general's chief of staff has resigned, and the job security of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is in serious doubt. Regardless of whether Gonzales becomes a casualty of the U.S. Attorney scandal, former DOJ officials and lawmakers agree that the White House and Justice Department must restore credibility to an office whose impartiality has been seriously undermined.As Other IP Boutiques Falter, Finnegan Moves Forward
Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner stands as perhaps the healthiest IP boutique in the country -- at a time when other IP specialists have collapsed because of competitive pressure from general service firms, management woes and a turbulent economy. Finnegan's recipe for success includes high-end litigation, a deep bench of institutional clients, a clear succession plan and IP stars like partner Donald Dunner.Airlines struggle to both fly and make money
Airlines may defy the law of gravity, but they can't ignore math.When American Airlines sought bankruptcy protection last week, it marked the 189th time a U.S. airline has done so since the government deregulated the industry in 1978. Most lived to fly again, as American probably will. Some were grounded forever.Expensive labor contracts, erratic fuel prices and passengers used to cheap cross-country fares were to blame this time.Communists help GE lobby China
Every summer since 2000, General Electric Co. has worked with the world's largest communist party to pick about 25 Chinese executives for the company's leadership program in Crotonville on New York's Hudson River. The training creates potential Chinese allies for GE to help ensure its continued expansion in the world's fastest-growing major economy, company officials say.Trending Stories
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