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August 11, 2010 |

President's business charm offensive falls flat

Labeled antibusiness by Republicans and some corporate chiefs, President Barack Obama mounted a campaign to show he wasn't. But his charm offensive has hit a rocky patch.Business leaders gripe about burdensome new financial and health care regulations, what they see as unfriendly tax policies and vast government spending.
5 minute read
March 21, 2005 |

State v. Clarksburg Inn

The municipality's anti-noise ordinance, that prohibited "any loud, unnecessary or unusual noise . . . likely to annoy, disturb, [or] injure" the "health, peace or safety of others," is neither vague nor overbroad since it reasonably notifies the public of the conduct it proscribes; the Law Division judge properly balanced defendant's right to conduct its business against its neighbors' right to be free from excessive noise; defendant's conviction was based on substantial credible evidence and is affirmed.
12 minute read
February 22, 2013 |

After Hours

Extracurricular Activities.
3 minute read
April 21, 2003 |

Topical index to state case digests

135 minute read
August 18, 2010 |

Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 19, No. 158 - August 18 2010

Daily decision alert.
14 minute read
September 21, 2000 |

How Can I Help You?

Bob Boardman and his band of lawyers have helped Chicago's Navistar International Transportation survive Rust Belt decay and overhaul its corporate culture. Now they are working to make the company's future green. Navistar is a case study in how to turn a hierarchical, isolated, dispirited legal department into a strategy-oriented, involved, happy team that is helping the company get where it wants to go.
19 minute read
January 08, 2007 |

The Price of Holiday Parties: What Can Happen in the Aftermath

Now that the holiday season is over, employers may be facing fallout from their holiday parties. Employees may file sexual harassment claims or sue for workers' compensation for injuries sustained at office gatherings. Companies also risk being held liable for the conduct of intoxicated workers. It is not too soon to plan to minimize the risks at next year's celebrations, while the experience from this year is fresh, attorneys Jeffrey S. Klein and Nicholas J. Pappas advise.
11 minute read
August 25, 2000 |

The Great Migration

Many lawyers who until very recently clung to tradition -- one firm for life -- are surprising themselves by taking the plunge. There's usually no one reason partners move: to take on a leadership role, better serve clients, develop a niche for a new firm, or shed the animosities or bureaucracy of an old one. The American Lawyer profiles three partners who moved midcareer.
18 minute read
August 01, 2003 |

The Am Law Second Hundred: Succeeding Differently

The Am Law Second Hundred -- 101-200 on our list of the country's highest-grossing law firms -- had a good 2002 overall, with gains in gross revenue and profits per partner that rival their bigger competitors' numbers. But the Second Hundred's formulas for success are different: Some specialize in lucrative practice areas; some pursue a regional strategy; and some, located in Am Law 100 strongholds like New York and San Francisco, compete head-to-head with larger firms -- and prosper.
12 minute read
November 07, 2008 |

Kravitch blazed a path for other women lawyers

Judge Phyllis A. Kravitch says she's never thought of herself as a trailblazer or a pioneer. Her former clerks describe her as modest and even, around those she doesn't know well, shy. At the unveiling of Kravitch's portrait at the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2005, one former clerk, Atlanta lawyer Ronan P.
14 minute read

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