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HARVARD LAW REVIEW

UVa law school well represented at Supreme Court The Daily Progress
The University of Virginia School of Law has more graduates clerking for the U.S. Supreme Court this term than any other school save Harvard and Yale.
Jane Doe, Inc. releases first domestic violence review The Daily Free Press
After examining cases and statistics over the past year, Jane Doe Inc., the Massachusetts Coalition Against ual Assault and Domestic Violence, released its first annual review of domestic violence-related homicides in 2003 through an in-depth report of the 24 people who died from it that year.
Law may aid cardiac program Palm Beach Daily news
Law allows hospitals without open-heart surgery to perform emergency angioplasty, if other criteria are met.
UI disputes study of black law grads The Daily Iowan
Despite a report asserting that black lawyers are less likely to excel professionally because firms hire minority graduates with lower GPAs, a UI College of Law official refutes that assertion. "Success is not correlated to GPA," said Steve Langerud, the assistant dean for career services in the UI College of Law.
Where Will the Troubles End for Sonsini and HP? Law.com
Larry Sonsini was about to have a bad day. It was the morning of Sept. 28, and Sonsini was preparing to testify before Congress about his role in the Hewlett-Packard Co. boardroom spying scandal.
Industry Ties Common on Hospital Boards The Herald-Sun
A survey of hospital review boards that watchdog experiments on patients shows that one in three members takes money from companies that make drugs and medical devices that come under study. What's more, many of those with conflicts rarely or never disclose their financial ties, researchers found.
Quest for youth drives craze for 'red wine' pills Bonita Daily News
Recent studies suggesting a substance in red wine could be a possible anti-aging elixir have sparked a surge in sales of dietary supplements containing the ingredient, known as resveratrol.
Obama doesn't hide middle name Chicago Sun-Times
Barack Hussein Obama. The blogosphere and talk radio, even C-Span, has chatter about the middle name of the Illinois Democrat. Obama never hid the name. Never highlighted it, either. People are just starting to pay closer attention as Obama mulls a 2008 White House run.
Quest for youth drives craze for 'red wine' pills Naples Daily News
Recent studies suggesting a substance in red wine could be a possible anti-aging elixir have sparked a surge in sales of dietary supplements containing the ingredient, known as resveratrol. But some scientists caution that there is no medical consensus on whether the products are effective or even safe for human use.
Wednesday December 6, 2006 By Andrew Gumbel The New Zealand Herald
LAKE FOREST- If Barack Obama ends up running for the White House, expect to see this footage run over and over on a television screen near you: the charismatic black Democratic senator from Illinois talking the language of God and receiving a standing ovation from a packed crowd at one of the country's most prominent conservative evangelical mega-churches.

UVa law school well represented at Supreme Court The Daily Progress
The University of Virginia School of Law has more graduates clerking for the U.S. Supreme Court this term than any other school save Harvard and Yale.
Jane Doe, Inc. releases first domestic violence review The Daily Free Press
After examining cases and statistics over the past year, Jane Doe Inc., the Massachusetts Coalition Against ual Assault and Domestic Violence, released its first annual review of domestic violence-related homicides in 2003 through an in-depth report of the 24 people who died from it that year.
Law may aid cardiac program Palm Beach Daily news
Law allows hospitals without open-heart surgery to perform emergency angioplasty, if other criteria are met.
UI disputes study of black law grads The Daily Iowan
Despite a report asserting that black lawyers are less likely to excel professionally because firms hire minority graduates with lower GPAs, a UI College of Law official refutes that assertion. "Success is not correlated to GPA," said Steve Langerud, the assistant dean for career services in the UI College of Law.
Where Will the Troubles End for Sonsini and HP? Law.com
Larry Sonsini was about to have a bad day. It was the morning of Sept. 28, and Sonsini was preparing to testify before Congress about his role in the Hewlett-Packard Co. boardroom spying scandal.
Industry Ties Common on Hospital Boards The Herald-Sun
A survey of hospital review boards that watchdog experiments on patients shows that one in three members takes money from companies that make drugs and medical devices that come under study. What's more, many of those with conflicts rarely or never disclose their financial ties, researchers found.
Quest for youth drives craze for 'red wine' pills Bonita Daily News
Recent studies suggesting a substance in red wine could be a possible anti-aging elixir have sparked a surge in sales of dietary supplements containing the ingredient, known as resveratrol.
Obama doesn't hide middle name Chicago Sun-Times
Barack Hussein Obama. The blogosphere and talk radio, even C-Span, has chatter about the middle name of the Illinois Democrat. Obama never hid the name. Never highlighted it, either. People are just starting to pay closer attention as Obama mulls a 2008 White House run.
Quest for youth drives craze for 'red wine' pills Naples Daily News
Recent studies suggesting a substance in red wine could be a possible anti-aging elixir have sparked a surge in sales of dietary supplements containing the ingredient, known as resveratrol. But some scientists caution that there is no medical consensus on whether the products are effective or even safe for human use.
Wednesday December 6, 2006 By Andrew Gumbel The New Zealand Herald
LAKE FOREST- If Barack Obama ends up running for the White House, expect to see this footage run over and over on a television screen near you: the charismatic black Democratic senator from Illinois talking the language of God and receiving a standing ovation from a packed crowd at one of the country's most prominent conservative evangelical mega-churches.harvard+law+review: harvard+law+review
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