Goulston & Storrs Announces 2021 Partner Elevations
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BOSTON, April 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Goulston & Storrs, an Am Law 200 firm, has promoted five attorneys to partner, Timothy John Carter, Brian W. Dugdale, George W. Evans, III, Philip E. Tedesco, and Megan Watts. We are thrilled to elevate these five talented attorneys to director, said Bill Dillon, Co-Managing Director at Goulston & Storrs. Each one has proven themselves invaluable to our firm and our clients, and we look forward to their continued success as members of our firm s partnership.
Timothy John Carter will continue to focus on corporate finance, restructuring and bankruptcy – representing lenders and borrowers in financing transactions and debtors, lenders, acquirers and creditors in workouts, restructurings and insolvency proceedings. His expertise includes cash flow and asset-based financings, first lien-second lien, split-collateral and unitranche i
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Everi Appoints Kate Lowenhar-Fisher Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer – General .
Everi Holdings Inc.March 15, 2021 GMT
LAS VEGAS, March 15, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Everi Holdings Inc. (NYSE: EVRI) (“Everi” or the “Company”), a premier provider of land-based and digital casino gaming products, financial technology and player loyalty solutions, today announced the appointment of Kate C. Lowenhar-Fisher as Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer – General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary, effective March 22, 2021, subject to customary regulatory approvals. Ms. Lowenhar-Fisher will have responsibility for the Company’s legal and regulatory compliance affairs and will report to Everi’s Chief Executive Officer, Michael Rumbolz.
It was once possible to embark on the 38-mile bus ride from Steubenville, Ohio, to Moundsville, West Virginia, and the time would change seven times.
That likely didn’t impact too many time-traveling Jews in the 1950s, when cities and towns chose individually when, or whether, to institute daylight saving time. But now, in a move that delights Orthodox Jews in Atlanta, Georgia may become the third state to eliminate the spring-forward, fall-back tradition of changing clocks.
The Georgia Senate passed a bill last month that would eliminate daylight saving time in the state. The state House of Representatives has until midnight on March 31 to pass it. (If no action is taken, the legislature can take another look at it during the next session, which begins in January, 2022.)
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