0 results for 'Travelers'
Madness over a Muncie, Ind., museum jars the senses
William W. Bedsworth Henry David Thoreau once said, "It is not worthwhile to go around the world to count the cats in Zanzibar." It's a good thing Thoreau didn't know my mother. If he had, he never would have spent all that time hanging out at Walden Pond. He would have gone to Zanzibar, seen the cats, and dropped the writing thing like a hot rock.Brooklyn Prep School Settles Claims Over Alleged Sex Abuse Cover-Up
Poly Prep Country Day School and the attorney for the 12 plaintiffs confirmed in a joint announcement that the parties had reached a settlement in the high-profile federal lawsuit stemming from the conduct of coach Philip Foglietta, who died in 1998 after working at the school for 25 years.CEO of Offshore Gambling Web Site Charged
David Carruthers, whom authorities say runs an offshore gambling company that illegally takes bets from U.S. residents, was ordered held in custody Monday after appearing in federal district court. BetonSports took bets on an Internet site and over a toll-free telephone line, federal prosecutor Mark Nichols said. Internet gambling has become a political issue with last week's passage of a House bill to prevent American banks and creditors from making payments to online gambling sites.9th Circuit Hears Hotel Guest Privacy Case
If the court strikes down an L.A. ordinance requiring local hotels to keep guest information available for inspection for 90 days, it would be the second en banc decision this year blocking a warrantless search program.Apple, Dow drive fourth-quarter profits to 19-year high
U.S. corporations are set to report their most profitable fourth quarter on record as companies from Apple to Dow Chemical feed the demand for iPads, caustic soda and capital goods that's bolstering the economy.Court Allows Testifying Doctors to Rely on Third-Party Records
Jeffrey S. Siegel, a partner at Bruno, Gerbino & Soriano, and Mitchell S. Lustig, an associate at the firm, write that in a recent decision that is an obvious boon to the New York no-fault insurer, the Appellate Term, Second Department, expressly allowed a peer review doctor to testify based upon review of medical records prepared by third-party providers that were not in evidence, despite the hearsay objections of the plaintiff's counsel.Trending Stories
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