State Tipoffs Involving Missouri Newsletter for Saturday May 25, 2024 ( 4 items ) |
BRYAN CAVE LEIGHTON PAISNER TRIAL TEAM SAVES CLIENT FROM MONETARY REPUTATIONAL DAMAGES IN YEARS-LONG DISPUTE
ST. LOUIS, Missouri, May 25 -- Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, a law firm, issued the following news:
BCLP was mentioned in Law360 on its representation of Nutrien Ag Solutions, Inc., a global provider of crop inputs and services, in a dispute brought by DRB Realty & Properties LLC (DRB), a hunting property, over alleged damage from an herbicide application-- successfully avoiding over $44 million in compensatory fees.
In 2019, the hunting property, owned by the Blounts family, was in process of
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MDC Proposes Minor Price Adjustments for Some Permits in 2025
JEFFERSON CITY, Missouri, May 25 -- The Missouri Department of Conservation issued the following news:
Missouri is home to more than 1 million anglers, 500,000 hunters, and several thousand trappers. MDC issues nearly 2.6 million hunting, fishing, and trapping permits each year. While MDC permit prices have increased only slightly over the past 20 years, MDC's cost of doing conservation work have increased significantly.
To keep pace with continual rising costs of goods and services, MDC has i
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St. Louis School of Medicine: Weil Installed as Medoff Professor
ST. LOUIS, Missouri, May 25 -- The Washington University St. Louis School of Medicine issued the following news release:
Gary J. Weil, MD, an infectious diseases physician-scientist whose work has helped reduce the global burden of parasitic worm diseases, has been named the inaugural Gerald and Judith Medoff Professor of Infectious Diseases at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
The professorship was established by the Department of Medicine -- with the support of more than
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UT Institute of Agriculture: Fescue Farmers Needed for Large-Scale Grasslands Agriculture Project
KNOXVILLE, Tennessee, May 25 -- The University of Tennessee's Institute of Agriculture issued the following news release:
Beef cattle farmers in the tall fescue belt are eligible to take part in one of the largest initiatives ever undertaken to improve productivity, profitability and conservation benefits of grasslands in the eastern U.S. This program is also open to pasture-based sheep and goat operations.
A total of 230 farms are being sought to collaborate on this sweeping initiative, known
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