The Legal Profession Is Literally Going to the Dogs
How would you like to reduce your storage costs? What about ensuring that e-mail and files are retained for the long term so you can easily access them during e-discovery?Corporations of all sizes, both public and private, generate messages and data at ever-increasing rates, while expectations for retention and compliance grow as well. Legal staffs expect IT to quickly produce specific files or documents and place them on legal hold when legal or regulatory search requests arise. This presents problems for IT managers, who need to properly back up and preserve documents but also hold the line on costs.
Dell and Symantec offer a complete archiving solution that bridges the gap between business, legal and IT requirements. They do it by adding intelligence to the way organizations store, manage and discover unstructured information from sources such as e-mail systems, file server environments, instant messaging platforms, social media communications and Microsoft SharePoint®.
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Dell and Symanec are proud sponsors of the Legal Technology Leadership Summit 2011 , Sept. 6-8 in Amelia Island.
“The Legal Technology Leadership Summit brings together some of the best minds in e-discovery and some of the best names in technology,” says Sean Regan, Director of Product Marketing for Symantec Information Management. “I’m excited to have Dell, Symantec and Clearwell working together at this venue to advance e-Discovery. “
To learn more about Delll and Symantec, visit their website , or check out this helpful video .
Texas Law School - News
Dogs are appearing everywhere from law school libraries to courtroom witness boxes. Naturally, when we heard that the doggie-at-law phenomenon had made it all the way down to Texas, we were excited. Unfortunately, students at the Texas law school where
While I am a Chartered Financial Analyst and have a year of law school under my belt, most of what I know about financial journalism, I learned in Texas. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta today struck down the individual mandate central to
It will dispatch HP lawyers from now through September to 13 law schools to screen and select about six third-year law students for full-time in-house positions, in Palo Alto, Calif., and Plano, Texas. The technology company, which has an in-house
While I am a Chartered Financial Analyst and have a year of law school under my belt, most of what I know about financial journalism, I learned in Texas. Traditional lawyers may not like it, but venture capitalists are pouring money into one of the

“The law puts Texas in the group with Indiana and Georgia, which I would categorize as fairly strict,” said Doug Chapin, an elections expert at the University of Minnesota's Humphrey School of Public Affairs. Despite fears that voter ID would lead to
South Texas College of Law wins competition
South Texas College of Law wins competition November 10, 2010 By Pete Rosenbery
CARBONDALE, Ill. -- After a three-year absence, South Texas College of Law settled into familiar surroundings this past weekend by winning the 19th annual National Health Law Moot Court competition at Southern Illinois University School of Law.
The team of Charlie Gustin, Mary Nelson and Sabrina Stone defeated Loyola University Chicago School of Law in the Nov. 6 finals. The victory is the seventh by a team from the Houston-based law school in the event’s 19-year history. The win earned the team a $1,000 scholarship from the American College of Legal Medicine. A team from South Texas College of Law finished third a year ago.
Jonathan Brouk and Mallory Golas of Loyola University Chicago School of Law received a $750 scholarship, also from the American College of Legal Medicine. The law school won last year’s competition.
The team of Kenneth Elmore and Russell C. Ramzel from the University of Tulsa College of Law was third. The team receives a $500 scholarship from the legal medicine foundation. The team also submitted the best legal brief; the team received $500 from ACLM and the “Journal of Legal Medicine” will publish the brief.
Thirty-three teams representing 24 schools competed over two days in the nation’s only health law moot court event.
“It was a great competition,” said law professor W. Eugene Basanta, the Southern Illinois Healthcare Professor of Law. “The panel really put the students through the paces. And our moot court board did a great job of running the competition.” Next year’s event, which will mark the competition’s 20th anniversary, is tentatively set for Nov. 4-5.
Competitors argued a hypothetical case before the U.S. Supreme Court. At issue were questions surrounding organ transplant donation and constitutional rights.
The law school’s Center for Health Law and Policy, the School of Medicine’s Department of Medical Humanities, the American College of Legal Medicine, and the American College of Legal Medicine Foundation co-sponsor the event.
Stephen Simcox, of Indiana University-Indianapolis School of Law, won best overall oralist honors, and received a $500 scholarship from the legal medicine foundation. Simcox also was the best preliminary round oralist, and received a $250 scholarship from the law school’s Center for Health Law and Policy.
I may be relocating to Texas for an awesome job opportunity or I may be headed to law school. I am highly Blessed 2 be able 2 either!
Makes me proud... RT @: A Texas law school wants its students to roll over and beg for a job. Woof! - SZ
A Texas law school wants its students to roll over and beg for a job. Woof! - SZ
RT @: A Texas law school wants its students to roll over and beg for a job. Woof! - SZ
RT @: A Texas law school wants its students to roll over and beg for a job. Woof! - SZTexas Law School - Bookshelf
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