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Supreme Court Seems to Side With Starbucks’ Challenge to Labor Ruling
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Panama Supreme Court rejects challenge to candidacy of presidential frontrunner days before vote
Panama’s Supreme Court has rejected a constitutional challenge to the candidacy of leading presidential contender José Raúl MulinoABC News - World -
UK government’s climate action plan is unlawful, High Court rules
Judgment upholds four of five grounds for legal challenge brought by campaign groups against net zero strategyFinancial Times - World - United Kingdom -
Cambodia's Supreme Court upholds the 2-year prison sentence of a casino strike leader
Cambodia’s Supreme Court has upheld the two-year prison sentence of a labor union leader who led a long-running strike against the country’s biggest casinoABC News - World -
Former Supreme Court justice Stephen Breyer: ‘Are you kidding? You’ll get more cases than ever!’
The American lawyer on the problem of overturning of Roe vs Wade, the ‘psychological difficulty’ of retirement — and what ‘Macbeth’ tells us about WashingtonFinancial Times - Business -
The UK government acted unlawfully in approving a climate plan, a High Court judge has ruled
A U.K. High Court judge has ruled that the government acted unlawfully when it approved a plan to meet climate targets without evidence it could be deliveredABC News - Tech - United Kingdom -
The U.S. labor market is shifting toward skilled labor as white-collar hiring slows
America's jobs market increasingly appears to have a steady demand for skilled workers and a flagging interest in hiring more "knowledge-based" professionals.NBC News - Top stories -
Starbucks Is Running Out of Americans to Drink Its Expensive Coffee
The chain is banking on foreigners, especially in China, to buy a lot more of its drinks.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Key charity prepares Rwanda legal challenge
Ministers are now facing attacks on two fronts - with more cases expected from as early as next week.BBC News - Top stories -
Pat Gelsinger was brought in to fix Intel. 3 years later, it still seems like a mess.
Turning around Intel Corp., the second-largest chip maker in the world, is taking a lot longer than many investors were counting on — but they need to be patient because the ongoing strategic changes may yet save the company.MarketWatch - Business -
The No. 1 credit card myth that 'just will not seem to die'—why you shouldn’t fall for it
Believing this myth about credit cards could actually harm your credit score in the long run. Here's why people tend to fall for it anyway.CNBC - Business
More from The New York Times
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Calls to Divest From Israel Put Students and Donors on Collision Course
To get protesters off campus lawns, Brown University and others have agreed to consider ending investments linked to Israel. But how?The New York Times - Business - Israel -
Live Updates: U.S. Job Growth Slows
The economy added 175,000 jobs in April, a slowdown in hiring. The unemployment rate ticked up to 3.9 percent.The New York Times - Business -
F.T.C. Clears Exxon Mobil’s Acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources
The Federal Trade Commission will bar Pioneer’s chief executive, Scott Sheffield, from joining Exxon’s board, saying he colluded with OPEC to reduce oil production.The New York Times - Business -
North Carolina Triad Tries to Reinvent Its Economy
North Carolina’s Triad was built on tobacco, textiles and furniture. Now it’s trying to forge a new economy from more highly skilled manufacturing.The New York Times - Business -
Campus Protests Give Russia, China and Iran Fuel to Exploit U.S. Divide
America’s adversaries have mounted online campaigns to amplify the social and political conflicts over Gaza flaring at universities, researchers say.The New York Times - Business - China