Duquesne University
Higher Education |
Colleges & Universities
600 Forbes Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15282
Recent News About Duquesne University
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Marshall Dennehey Announces 2022 New Shareholder Class -- With 10 women and 7 men, the class has one of the highest percentages of women in the firm’s 60-year history.
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Butler Buchanan, III Receives 2021 Diversity Leaders in Business Award from the Philadelphia Business Journal.
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Blank Rome Welcomes Litigation Associate in Pittsburgh.
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Steven M. Regan has joined the Business Department as a Member of Steptoe & Johnson PLLC.
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The Legal Intelligencer, a leading legal-trade publication in Pennsylvania, will honor Reed Smith in three categories at the upcoming 2021 Pennsylvania Professional Excellence Awards. Glenn Mahone, who broke barriers in 1973 when he joined Reed Smith to become the first African-American lawyer hired by a major law firm in Pittsburgh, was awarded the “Lifetime Achievement Award
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Edward G. Rice has joined Steptoe & Johnson PLLC. His legal practice covers a wide cross-section of services offered by the firm’s business department including banking and regulatory, financial services, technology, data privacy, and cybersecurity.
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The following cases categorized as "labor" cases were on the docket in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on Nov. 6. All case details are allegations only and should not be taken as fact:
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The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania reported the following activity on Nov. 6 in the suits below:
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The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania reported the following activities in the suit brought by Ralph "Trey" Johnson against Temple University on Nov. 6.
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An award-winning veteran reporter is suing energy drink manufacturer Red Bull, its Pittsburgh partners and a public relations firm after suffering serious injuries allegedly caused during a media event ahead of the city's 2017 Flugtag.
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NORRISTOWN - Kathleen Kane, the former attorney general of Pennsylvania who recently resigned after being found guilty of perjury, won't spend much time in prison, but she likely won't be practicing law for a long time - if ever again - a Duquesne University law professor says.
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HARRISBURG - Embattled state Attorney General Kathleen Kane's announcement that she won't seek another term did much to calm the controversy surrounding her office, a Duquesne University law professor says.
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The state Senate's decision this week to withhold action on whether to remove embattled Attorney General Kathleen Kane from office makes sense, a law professor at Duquesne University says
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A professor at Duquesne University says state Attorney General Kathleen Kane is likely collecting a paycheck while not being able to perform the duties of her office while her law license is suspended, and that the state Senate has the authority to remove her from office.
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Republican Vic Stabile, a Harrisburg attorney and former Cumberland