4,071 research outputs found
Guide to on-site wastewater management for industrial and commercial establishments and other institutions: guide for vehicle service station owners and managers
Wastewater treatmentEnvironmental managementOrganizations
Recent Cases: Eminent Domain — Retention Value as an Element of Valuation
In 1940 the plaintiff, a Swiss firm, purchased 420 metallic railway tires from an American firm, but was unable to ship them to SwitzerÂland through the existing British blockade. Plaintiff then made exÂtensive efforts to dispose of the tires, but because of their unusual dimensions was able to sell only 212 of them. In 1943, defendant, the United States Government, requisitioned the remaining 208 tires and awarded the plaintiff 8,100.84 on the domestic market or 4,000.
The power to requisition private property for public use is limited by the constitutional guarantee of just compensation. The conventional criterion for just compensation is the price the property would bring on the open market by a willing seller to a willing buyer. But market value cannot be a rigid standard in all cases, for occasionalÂly the existing market price may be a wholly inadequate measure of just compensation. This may be true where the market price includes enhancement of value arising from the government\u27s demand for the requisitioned property. Conversely, market value may be just as inadequate where it fails to include all relevant considerations of value
Trial — Nature of Rebuttal Evidence Admissible in Nebraska
Arthur Vanderbilt once stated that the right to a fair trial in both civil and criminal cases is the most fundamental right of all. No matter how just the rules of substantive law may be, the interests of justice might often be thwarted if there were no procedural rules controlling presentation of evidence at trial; and it is with this in mind that certain procedural limitations have been placed upon the introduction of rebuttal evidence. If the plaintiff could withhold certain shreds of evidence or testimony until the last possible moment, the resulting surprise and dramatic effect upon the jury might very easily amount to an advantage for the plaintiff far greater than that merited by the probative value of the evidence so withheld. Since a trial should be an orderly search for truth in aid of administration of justice rather than a battle of wits between counsel, surprise tactics and unfair manipulation of evidence should be guarded against
Eminent Domain — Interest of the Condemnee in Mineral Rights
In 1920 the Oklahoma Legislature passed an act authorizing condemnation of forty acres of land for State Capitol building purposes. Defendant condemnee was paid $80,000 for land condemned pursuant to the Act. Sixteen years later, defendant condemnee executed an oil and gas lease to the defendant Jones. The question of whether the mineral rights passed from the condemnee to the state immediately came of issue. In an action brought by the State to quiet title it was held that the State acquired a full fee title when the land was condemned, so the defendant condemnee retained no· rights in the mineral deposits.
Analogous situations present the important problem of whether the interest taken by the condemner is such as to exclude any claim the condemnee might have to mineral rights. An examination of the nature of title acquired in eminent domain proceedings and its effect upon disposition of mineral rights, with particular attention to protection of the condemnee\u27s interests, is the purpose of this note
Trial — Nature of Rebuttal Evidence Admissible in Nebraska
Arthur Vanderbilt once stated that the right to a fair trial in both civil and criminal cases is the most fundamental right of all. No matter how just the rules of substantive law may be, the interests of justice might often be thwarted if there were no procedural rules controlling presentation of evidence at trial; and it is with this in mind that certain procedural limitations have been placed upon the introduction of rebuttal evidence. If the plaintiff could withhold certain shreds of evidence or testimony until the last possible moment, the resulting surprise and dramatic effect upon the jury might very easily amount to an advantage for the plaintiff far greater than that merited by the probative value of the evidence so withheld. Since a trial should be an orderly search for truth in aid of administration of justice rather than a battle of wits between counsel, surprise tactics and unfair manipulation of evidence should be guarded against
Electron scattering states at solid surfaces calculated with realistic potentials
Scattering states with LEED asymptotics are calculated for a general
non-muffin tin potential, as e.g. for a pseudopotential with a suitable barrier
and image potential part. The latter applies especially to the case of low
lying conduction bands. The wave function is described with a reciprocal
lattice representation parallel to the surface and a discretization of the real
space perpendicular to the surface. The Schroedinger equation leads to a system
of linear one-dimensional equations. The asymptotic boundary value problem is
confined via the quantum transmitting boundary method to a finite interval. The
solutions are obtained basing on a multigrid technique which yields a fast and
reliable algorithm. The influence of the boundary conditions, the accuracy and
the rate of convergence with several solvers are discussed. The resulting
charge densities are investigated.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, copyright and acknowledgment added, typos etc.
correcte
Mobile Healthcare Design Research: A Special Issue for Information Systems Researchers
Special Section Editorial - Mobile Decision Support and Analytics for Healthcare: Citizen, Organization, Governmental and Technological Perspective
Plagiocephaly Perception and Prevention: A Need to Intervene Early to Educate Parents
Background: Plagiocephaly is a condition where the cranium has been malformed because of external forces or premature cranial suture fusion. This study’s objective was to gather and examine data regarding parent and caregiver awareness of plagiocephaly and its potential impact on development as well as to determine their rate of concern for positional flattening.
Method: A cross-sectional survey study was conducted. Categorical variables were described by frequency and proportions. The study was conducted across eight outpatient pediatric sites. Approximately 1,100 parents and caregivers were targeted. Inclusion criteria required participants to be willing to answer the questionnaire, to be 18 years of age or older, and to have an infant 12 months of age or younger.
Results: There were 404 participants, most of whom were female (89.8%) and 30–39 years of age (61.1%). Nineteen children (4.7%) were reported to have plagiocephaly, torticollis, and/or muscle weakness (PTM). A greater percentage of the participants with a child with PTM knew of positional flattening or plagiocephaly (73.3%) compared to those without (53.8%). The respondents with a child with PTM had a greater concern about plagiocephaly than those without (p = .03). Many of the respondents (65.3%) would use a device designed to prevent plagiocephaly.
Conclusion: Many parents and caregivers were unaware of plagiocephaly and its potential impact on facial symmetry. A greater percentage of the participants with a child with PTM knew of positional flattening and also had a greater concern about plagiocephaly than those without
Dealing with the eurozone debt crisis: A proposal for reform
The Eurozone faces a fourfold challenge: (1) fiscal support: to provide a credible mechanism for supporting countries with high and rapidly rising national debt and high borrowing costs; (2) fiscal responsibility: to ensure that all member states of the Eurozone credibly commit to sustainable levels of national debt; (3) fiscal autonomy: to permit each member state to determine its own fiscal policy; and (4) counter-cyclical fiscal policy: to allow each member state to pursue fiscal stabilization policy, stimulating the economy in a recession and dampening it in a boom. We outline a proposal for meeting these challenges. The paper is organized as follows. First, we summarize the underlying problems. Second, we present the proposal for over-coming these problems. Third, we consider two potentially important extentions of the pro-posal. Fourth, in the context of a simple model, we assess empirically how this proposal could work for the Greek economy. Fifth, we examine the merits of this proposal in relation to other prominent proposals for dealing with the Eurozone crisis. Finally, we conclude by high-lighting the most important implications of the proposal for the Eurozone
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