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Features

Performing a Litigation Audit on Your Lease Agreements

Michael Eidel

This article discusses the applicable general principles and drafting considerations for some of the most frequently litigated boilerplate provisions: choice-of-law, forum selection, venue, jury trial waiver and attorney's fees.

Features

Invest in Next Gen X Leaders Now!

Phyllis Weiss Haserot

Many smart companies and professional firms are betting that training and coaching the next generation in leadership skills will help them through the recovery period and give them an edge when competitors start building again. Now is the time to focus on generational leadership development.

Features

Practice Building Skills: Where to Focus Your Efforts with Online Social Networking

Larry Bodine

Online networking is no substitute for face-to-face business development meetings. An online presence will make it easy to contact you, showcase your knowledge, help meet potential clients and generate leads. But the goal of online networking is to meet with a contact in person.

Features

Client Speak: Quality Work v. Quality Service

Donald E. Aronson

Many marketing professionals with whom the author has spoken have no doubt that quality work, while clearly essential, will not cause a firm to stand out from the competition ' but that quality service will. Is this still true?

Media & Communications Corner: Making Outlook More Useful for Relationship-Centered Professionals

Nicholas Gaffney

If your outlook on everyday business communications is heavily influenced by, well, Microsoft Outlook, then there's a good chance you've wished at one point or another that you could tweak the software to make it serve your needs more efficiently. The good news is that you can.

Career Journal: The 'Web' Factor

Michael DeCosta

All about blogs, from A to Z.

A New Beginning

Ari L. Kaplan

Thinking of law school as an assured meal ticket or as simply a safe harbor in which to weather the economic storm is probably not appropriate in today's world, particularly given the substantial debt that law students typically incur in order to pay for their education," notes a prominent law school dean.

Features

Real Property Law

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

A look at recent cases.

Landlord & Tenant

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent rulings you need to know.

Development

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

An extensive roundup of recent cases important to you and your practice.

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MOST POPULAR STORIES

  • Surveys in Patent Infringement Litigation: The Next Frontier
    Most experienced intellectual property attorneys understand the significant role surveys play in trademark infringement and other Lanham Act cases, but relatively few are likely to have considered the use of such research in patent infringement matters. That could soon change in light of the recent admission of a survey into evidence in <i>Applera Corporation, et al. v. MJ Research, Inc., et al.</i>, No. 3:98cv1201 (D. Conn. Aug. 26, 2005). The survey evidence, which showed that 96% of the defendant's customers used its products to perform a patented process, was admitted as evidence in support of a claim of inducement to infringe. The court admitted the survey into evidence over various objections by the defendant, who had argued that the inducement claim could not be proven without the survey.
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  • In the Spotlight
    On May 9, 2003, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts announced that Bayer Corporation, the pharmaceutical manufacturer, had been sentenced and ordered to pay a criminal fine of $5,590,800 stemming from its earlier plea of guilty to violating the Federal Prescription Drug Marketing Act by failing to list with the FDA its drug product, Cipro, that was privately labeled for an HMO. Such listing is required under the federal Food, Drug &amp; Cosmetic Act. The Federal Prescription Drug Marketing Act, Pub. L. 100-293, enacted on April 22, 1988, as modified on August 26, 1992 by the Prescription Drug Amendments (PDA) Pub. L. 102-353, 106 Stat. 941, amended sections 301, 303, 503, and 801 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, codified at 21 U.S.C. '' 331, 333, 353, 381, to establish requirements for distributing prescription drug samples.
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