Which of the following is not within the normal scope of duty for municipal bond counsel?

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Which of the following is not within the normal scope of duty for municipal bond counsel?

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journal article

Securities Law Duties of Bond Counsel

Duke Law Journal

Vol. 1976, No. 6, Symposium on Municipal Finance (Jan., 1977)

, pp. 1205-1238 (34 pages)

Published By: Duke University School of Law

https://doi.org/10.2307/1372077

https://www.jstor.org/stable/1372077

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Journal Information

The Duke Law Journal is published six times per year, in October, November, December, February, March, and April, at the Duke University School of Law. The journal is among the most prestigious and influential legal publications in the country. Edited by a student board, approximately one-third of each issue's contents consists of student notes dealing with current legal developments, with the remaining content being devoted to articles and comments by professors and practitioners. Generally one issue each year is devoted to administrative law and often another issue is in the form of a symposium.

Publisher Information

Duke Law School was established as a graduate and professional school in 1930. Its mission is to prepare students for responsible and productive lives in the legal profession. As a community of scholars, the Law School also provides leadership at the national and international levels in efforts to improve the law and legal institutions through teaching, research, and other forms of public service. Although Duke University is young by comparison to other major American universities, its academic programs and professional schools together have attained an international stature and a reputation for quality and innovation that few universities can match. Among the Law School's unique strengths are an extensive network of interdisciplinary collaboration across the Duke campus and an emphasis in teaching and research initiatives addressing global and international issues.

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What are municipal bonds? Municipal bonds (or “munis” for short) are debt securities issued by states, cities, counties and other governmental entities to fund day-to-day obligations and to finance capital projects such as building schools, highways or sewer systems.

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