Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 11/2/07
November 2, 2007
By now everyone should be sufficiently recovered from their Halloween nights…and will have likely consumed enough candy to last the rest of the year.
Meanwhile, the LexBlogosphere keeps chugging along, as is evident by these posts from November 2, 2007:
- Grant Thornton surveys CFOs – Ohio attorney Jack J. Gravelle of Porter Wright Morris & Arthur in the firm’s Federal Securities Law Blog
- Is there proof in the EHR pudding? – Princeton lawyer Helen Oscislawski of Fox Rothschild in the firm’s HIPAA Health Law Blog
- More on ExxonMobil v. state – Alabama attorney Ivan B. Cooper of Lightfoot Franklin & White in the firm’s Alabama Appellate Watch Blog
- Dog performs Heimlich maneuver – Cambridge attorney Michael H. Cohen in his Complementary & Alternative Medicine Law Blog
- Legal thriller thrills lawyer – Las Vegas lawyer Tami Cowden of Kummer Kaempfer in her blog, Appealing in Nevada
- Consulting fees deemed excessive and severely limited by Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals decision – Pennsylvania attorney Joseph Hackenbracht of Payne Hackenbracht & Sullivan in the firm’s Federal Construction Contracting Blog
- Retroactivity and the federal sentencing guidelines – Texas lawyer Jamie Spencer in his Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer Blog
- Article from North Carolina – Tennessee attorney John Day of Day & Blair Attorneys in his blog, Day on Torts
- U.S. hospitals not working to prevent infections: new study – The blogging lawyers and attorneys from Regan Zambri & Long in the firm’s D.C. Metro Area Medical Malpractice Law Blog
- VAT on investment management services – update – Mercer & Hole’s Jane Stacey in the English accounting firm’s Tax Plus Blog
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