HUNTINGTON -- Huddleston Bolen has partnered with The State Journal, SCORE, and the Small Business Association to present the first series of Business4Breakfast events to be held in Huntington.
Neely CHARLESTON -- Two prominent Charleston lawyers have again filed a lawsuit against the publisher of the Verizon Yellow Pages and a company that collects its debts.
MORGANTOWN -- The ascension of new American leadership always leads to a sense of change and the expectation that a new administration will initiate solid solutions to the most pressing problems that confront the nation.
WSAZ-TV anchor Tim Irr throws a quoit during the annual President's Media Challenge tournament on the Marshall University campus as a part of Constitution
Week. (Photos by Rick Haye, Marshall University) HUNTINGTON -– Marshall University recently concluded its annual Constitution Week festivities with that included a quoits tournament and a celebration of John Marshall's 253rd birthday.
FAIRMONT -- An Atlanta debt-collecting firm has filed a notice of removal for a case originally filed in Monongalia Circuit Court by a Marion County woman.
CHARLESTON -- First of all, Bray Cary deserves credit for a major coup in landing an hour long interview with Rich Rodriguez as the lawsuit with West Virginia University drags on.
Callaghan CHARLESTON – A prominent Charleston law firm has filed suit against the company that produces Verizon's phone books, saying its ad was screwed up in the latest Charleston edition.
CHARLESTON -– For the 19th consecutive year, members of the Capitol press corps are teaming up with the Marshall University W. Page Pitt School of Journalism and Mass Communications (SOJMC) to bring "The Third House" to the stage.
CHARLESTON – Citing matters that arose out of pre-trial conference, a Morgantown law firm has withdrawn as legal counsel for all the Kanawha Circuit judges named in pending civil suit in federal court.
CHARLESTON - A local musician who fell down an empty elevator shaft at the state's Cultural Center has filed a suit against the West Virginia Division of Culture and History, seeking compensatory damages for his injuries.
CHARLESTON -- During the week of Oct. 9, 116 lawyers were admitted to practice law in the State of West Virginia during ceremonies before the Supreme Court of Appeals.