Lying Teachers, Olympic Outsourcing, Football Innovations, Microbrew Names. Must Be…
… Monday’s JD Supra Buzz. Here’s what we learned in law today:
Wait… copying can be GOOD for the economy? (Bloomberg Law)
Ever wonder how microbreweries come up with those cool brew names? A lot of leg work, my friend (Lane Powell)
Outsourcers can learn a lot from this year’s Olympic and Paralympic games in London (Pillsbury)
Georgia’s second-largest school district just added obligatory polygraph tests to its employee discipline policy (XpertHR)
Lawsuits targeting greenhouse gas emitters for their role in global warming haven’t fared particularly well. Like this one (McCarter & English)
What could be wrong with California’s new Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act? Plenty (Allen Matkins)
It’s not too early to start preparing for the 2013 proxy season (Leonard, Street and Deinard)
Comments on the CFPB’s proposed new mortgage servicing rules are due in less than three weeks (BuckleySandler)
Trademark victims tend to get a lot of sympathy, but sometimes they only have themselves to blame for their predicament (Winthrop & Weinstine)
A federal judge just threw out what one employment lawyer calls “the dumbest sexual harassment case evah” (Constangy, Brooks & Smith)
More and more grandparents are going to court to secure visitation rights to see their grandchildren (Lawyers.com)
Thinking about selling off some investments? Think about doing it before the end of the year… (Carr, McClellan, Ingersoll, Thompson & Horn)
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