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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
This is the last thing we needed around Washington, D.C. Wal-Mart is negotiating a deal to open its first store in Washington D.C. The location is a parcel owned by a family in the taxicab business. The Washington Post contacted sources who remained anonymous, but stated that Wal-Mart has not yet signed a lease, but [...]
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
If your company has or is obtaining a patent, don’t miss this important seminar! In what many consider a surprise decision, the Supreme Court in Bilski decided that business methods can be patented, and rejected the machine-or-transformation test as the “sole test” for patent eligibility. However, uncertainty remains on what will pass muster with the [...]
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
Venture-capital finance has contracted sharply. Looking at the numbers shows an ugly picture for VCs and start-ups looking to raise money in the near future. Last year venture-capital funds raised just $15 billion, half the average of the preceding four years. But it is not all bad news. Amount of money raised in 2009 by [...]
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
It's a "cooler" day today than Wednesday, with temperatures in the muggy mid-90s, but D.C.—and Georgetown—is still sweating bullets.
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
Thursday night’s D.C. Council Chair candidates' forum at The Latham Hotel will be crucial to Georgetown's future. Not because people will ask about education and Michelle Rhee or if our finances are leading to another Control Board. Both candidates -- D.C. Council member Kwame Brown and former Council member Vincent Orange -- have their answers ready on these city-wide topics.
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
The surplusing of the Hurt Home is finally up for a vote before the Committee on Government Operations and the Environment tomorrow, Thursday, July 8 at 4:00 p.m.
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Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:17 |
Betsy Emes has spent her life donating her time to others. For 30 years of her career, she worked for the World Bank, first in the Economic Institute, then on issues in the Middle East and North Africa, and then in Eastern Europe. When she retired, she got her master gardening certificate and volunteered to work with the National Botanical Gardens's rare orchids.
Now, she's volunteering her time for a new, albeit less glamorous cause: saving Georgetown's trees.
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