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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Y! Alert: National Law Journal


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Dodgers accuse Fox Sports of trying to bust up plans for a sale Top
Lawyers for the Dodgers have filed a complaint in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware seeking damages and an injunction that would prevent Fox Sports Net West 2 LLC, which operates the Prime Ticket television network, from ruining its plans to sell the team's future broadcast rights through a planned auction.
 
USC shelves plans for a tax LL.M. Top
Launching master of law programs in tax seemed like a great idea when employers were confident that there would be a demand for the credential. But the legal market has changed dramatically since then, and the University of Southern California Gould School of Law is backing off a plan to add a tax LL.M. program.
 
9th Circuit agrees to hear early appeal in Toyota MDL Top
A federal appeals court has granted Toyota Motor Corp.'s request to immediately review a lower court ruling that allowed millions of consumers to sue the company for damages even though their cars didn't experience a defect or sell for reduced prices following the company's recall of more than 8 million vehicles to repair the defect.
 
Defense counsel may not pull out of patent case despite client's nonpayment Top
A federal magistrate judge has denied a bid by Minneapolis firm Leffert Jay & Polglaze to withdraw from a patent case, despite the fact that its client hasn't paid nearly $278,000 in legal bills.
 
Ginsburg, others praise the impact of Reed v. Reed, 40 years later Top
At a packed panel discussion at the National Press Club Nov. 17, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg remarked at how the Constitution has allowed the country to evolve to embrace "a marvelous diversity."
 
In fiscal 2011, EEOC won record-breaking $365M for discrimination victims Top
It's been a record-breaking year at the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which received more discrimination charges than ever before and won an all-time high $365 million for victims of workplace discrimination, while simultaneously managing to reduce its huge backlog of cases.
 
Dueling motions in Kung Fu Panda copyright case Top
Call it judicial jujitsu in a case over a martial arts bear. A plaintiff who claims DreamWorks and Paramount infringed his copyrights in their Kung Fu Panda movies has asked the court to sanction the defendants for improper investigation tactics, but his opponents want the case dropped because he skipped a deposition.
 
Professor's plea: Say no to 'law school porn' Top
It's that time of year when law school faculties are inundated with so-called "law school porn" — slick mailings extolling the virtues of individual law schools meant to influence law school rankings. Some legal educators believe the barrage of mail has gotten out of control, and proves that rankings are driving administrative decisions.
 
Fields insists: Client Pom's product is not 'snake oil' Top
Pom Wonderful's 100% pomegranate juice is not "snake oil," but rather provides numerous health benefits widely supported by medical research, prominent litigator Bertram Fields argued in defending the company's health claims before a jury for the first time.
 
LAW SCHOOLS REVIEW Top
Rising tuition. Misleading employment statistics. Inadequate skills training. One law school professor has launched a full-scale assault on the legal education system in response to these mounting issues. Are law schools in crisis?
 
IN-HOUSE COUNSEL: In-house use of matter-management software Top
A large number of U.S. law departments have licensed the software, but smaller departments mostly have not.
 
OPINION: Let the cameras roll Top
The Supreme Court's defiant stance against cameras is born of fear of change, nostalgia, a self-interested desire for anonymity, but most of all exceptionalism: the Court's view of itself as a unique institution that can and should resist the demands of the information age.
 
THE PRACTICE: Cases on malfunction theory, res ipsa's kissing cousin Top
Shifting the burden of proof to the defendant can make sense for manufacturing defects, but not for design defects.
 
COURTSIDE: A Court with a human face Top
Clare Cushman has compiled a treasure trove of colorful information about the Supreme Court and its justices, past and present, in her new book Courtwatchers: Eyewitness Accounts in Supreme Court History.
 
The Minority 40 Under 40 Top
The lawyers profiled here were all born in the 1970s, a decade when law schools and law firms were just beginning to welcome minorities in significant numbers. The thriving careers of these lawyers — at law firms and in government, academia and public interest — attest to the greater opportunities available to them, as well as to their talents.
 
IP LAW: A SPECIAL REPORT Top
The sweeping patent reform law enacted last month is expected to create new classes of intellectual property winners and losers as game-changing provisions kick in during the next 18 months.
 

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