Word: sues
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...McCafferty’s novels three or four times each. Michael Pietsch ’78, the senior vice president and publisher of Little, Brown—which released “Opal Mehta”—told the Times yesterday that the publishing house would not sue Viswanathan for breach of contract. Most book deals include clauses that the writing must be original, according to Justin Hughes, the director of the intellectual property law program at Yeshiva University’s Cardozo School...
...African-American precincts was about 30% vs. nearly 50% for mostly white precincts, according to an analysis by GCR and Associates, done for the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority. Although Secretary of State Al Ater said the election went off without a hitch, Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition has threatened to sue for violation of voting rights...
...easy is then letting your patient know that you think he is lying. Not only is he paying you to be his advocate, but being caught in a lie is still embarrassing for most people. And remember, if they're looking for money in the first place, they can sue you too. It tests your integrity. it's often easier, often safer to "go along with...
...spent $50,000 on signs to direct people to other sites if their usual polling station was devastated by Katrina and had to be moved. "Let me tell you something: If this doesn?t work, if this is not a valid, good, legitimate election, nobody?s gonna have to sue the state of Louisiana," Ater told TIME. He said he?d go to the courts himself to do it. Not that he thinks that will be necessary. Ater said 100 employees with laptops will be assigned to precincts on election day to make sure people waiting to vote are listed...
...force Blinds to Go to buy back its shares at a price based on a previously agreed upon formula. But Blinds to Go used the formula and estimated the value of the shares to be much lower than what Charlesbank had expected to receive. That prompted the firm to sue the Canadian company, accusing it of intentionally undervaluing the holdings. Blinds to Go then accused Harvard of improperly transferring its stake to Charlesbank, saying the fund was not a Harvard affiliate. Reaffirming a lower court’s ruling, appeals judge Bruce M. Selya ’55, also...