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11 Jun 2019, 12:35 pm by Lindsay Griffiths
  One: It makes you a good content citizen We all already know not to plagiarize words, but ideas are a little bit more difficult, especially because there are essentially no new ones these days. [read post]
14 Jan 2014, 6:00 am by marketing
There are lots of little pieces to analyze in a case like that, but if you are behind the wheel in Virginia on a public roadway, you are considered to be operating the vehicle. [read post]
15 Mar 2011, 10:04 am by Thom Lambert
Members of the AALS, of course, contend that their little arrangement is fine. [read post]
5 Oct 2018, 2:00 am by Ed Muzio, CEO, Group Harmonics
Too often business leaders reduce HR to little more than order-takers: fill requisitions, solve employee problems, calculate compensation tables, run surveys. [read post]
5 Oct 2018, 2:00 am by Ed Muzio, CEO, Group Harmonics
Too often business leaders reduce HR to little more than order-takers: fill requisitions, solve employee problems, calculate compensation tables, run surveys. [read post]
27 Dec 2017, 8:31 am
Next is "continuum," but then you're probably stuck if you're just coming up with words out of your head. [read post]
27 Oct 2010, 9:59 am
But, if people in this 80% category file without a lawyer -- which is a feasible option in most cases -- then they will see little change overall. [read post]
Two decades later, the poor of Central America continue to experience the effects of these wars and to struggle for basic subsistence with little hope that their children will have schools, health care, or even adequate nutrition. [read post]
3 Mar 2012, 6:48 am by Max Kennerly, Esq.
There’s so many Accutane (Roche) and Fosamax (Merck) cases they’re deemed a mass tort, and there’s a good chance that Propecia (Merck) might end up as one, too. [read post]
3 Jun 2016, 7:12 am by Kenneth J. Vanko
The basic problem in In re M-I is that the trial judge never considered any countervailing interests that the plaintiff had in protecting the secrets during the court proceeding.It is a little curious that the Court in its Fourteenth Amendment analysis never cited E.I. duPont de Nemours Powder Co. v. [read post]