Chris Mondics covers legal affairs for The Inquirer as a member of the business news staff. Before joining the business department in April of 2007, he was a Washington correspondent for The Inquirer, covering the impeachment of President Clinton, the collapse of Enron and Arthur Andersen, the 9/11 attacks and the 9/11 Commission investigation, among other assignments. For a time, he also covered the global pharmaceuticals industry, and was The Inquirer’s investigative reporter on the 2000 presidential race.
Before joining the Washington bureau, Mondics was The Inquirer’s bureau chief in Trenton, where he covered Gov. Christie Whitman and other political leaders.
- Volunteers spend a day greening the city
- Bio-fuel growth raises concerns about forests
- GreenSpace: The really effective conservation steps, not just feel-good ones
With all the corporate hype surrounding sustainable growth and the energy-conservation movement, skeptics sometimes dismiss the latest wave of environmental piety as more fad than fact.
For much of his career, until he passed away in 1996, former New Jersey Supreme Court Chief Justice Robert N. Wilentz was a lightning rod for the right.
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Little more than a year ago, after the collapse of Bear Stearns but just before the implosion of Lehman Bros. and the ensuing shock to the credit markets, Michael Pollack sat in a conference room high atop Reed Smith L.L.P.'s Center City offices and ventured a few educated guesses about near-term prospects for Big Law.
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In grim economic times, when deals dry up and jobs at the big law firms dwindle, law schools like to tell their nervous and often heavily indebted students that a legal education can be put to work in myriad ways, and that the career path for lawyers doesn't necessarily mean staying put at a firm until retirement.
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