3,333 research outputs found
Fair Hearing in Administrative Rule-Making: A Recent Experience Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic and Fair Packaging and Labeling Acts
In promulgating regulations to govern the labeling of foods under the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act, the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, despite the objections of adversely affected parties, denied all requests for a public hearing. In this article the author reviews the hearing provisions of the Act, analyzes the position taken by the Food and Drug Administration, and concludes that the failure to grant a trial-type hearing on the labeling regulations was legally indefensible
Mapping the galaxy NGC 4486 (M87) through its Globular Cluster System
As shown in previous works, globular clusters can be used to trace the
overall structure of the diffuse stellar populations in early type galaxies if
the number of clusters per unit stellar mass depends on metallicity. In this
paper we further test this assumption in the galaxy NGC 4486 (M 87), by
combining several data sources. The results show that globular clusters allow
the mapping of the galaxy in terms of the surface brightness profile,
integrated colour gradient, chemical abundance, and mass to luminosity ratios
up to 1000 arcsec (or 80.4 kpc) from its centre (i.e. some 10 effective radii).
The analysis indicates the presence of a dominant high metallicity bulge
associated with the red globulars, whose ellipticity increases outwards, and of
a more flattened low metallicity halo connected with the blue globulars. The
chemical abundance gradient of the composite stellar population is remarkably
similar to that inferred from X ray observations of hot gas. The
mass-metallicity spectrum of the stellar population can, in principle, be
understood in terms of inhomogeneous enrichment models. In turn, the
distribution of the bluest GCs, and lowest metallicity halo stars, has an
intriguing similarity with that of dark matter, a feature shared with NGC 1399.
Also, in these two galaxies, the number of blue GCs per dark mass unit is
identical within the errors, \approx 1.0(\pm0.3) \times 10^{-9} . The total
stellar mass derived for NGC 4486 is 6.8(\pm1.1) \times 10^{11} M\odot with a
baryonic mass fraction fb = 0.08(\pm 0.01).Comment: 18 pages, 23 figure
Applications of DFT to the theory of twentieth-century harmony
Music theorists have only recently, following groundbreaking work by Quinn, recognized the potential for the DFT on pcsets, initially proposed by Lewin, to serve as the foundation of a theory of harmony for the twentieth century. This paper investigates pcset “arithmetic” – subset structure, transpositional combination, and interval content – through the lens of the DFT. It discusses relationships between interval classes and DFT magnitudes, considers special properties of dyads, pcset products, and generated collections, and suggest methods of using the DFT in analysis, including interpreting DFT magnitudes, using phase spaces to understand subset structure, and interpreting the DFT of Lewin’s interval function. Webern’s op. 5/4 and Bartok’s String Quartet 4, iv, are discussed.Accepted manuscrip
The Fair Packaging and Labeling Act: Its Legislative History, Content, and Future
The Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (FPLA), which became effective on July 1, 1967, was designed to protect consumers by requiring informative labeling and nondeceptive packaging for consumer commodities. The statute has been described as an information bill. The first part is information largely about the label .... The second part of the bill is really, in a way, to try to eliminate the confusion in words so we have a common terminology, so we all speak the same language.... It is like establishing an alphabet ... in size designations. The author seeks to provide an insight into the new alphabet of the FPLA and the controversial regulations issued by the FTC and the FDA pursuant to the FPLA through a discussion of the legislative history and some of the present difficulties under the statute
Seeking social capital and expertise in a newly-formed research community: a co-author analysis
This exploratory study applies social network analysis techniques to existing, publicly available data to understand collaboration patterns within the co-author network of a federally-funded, interdisciplinary research program. The central questions asked: What underlying social capital structures can be determined about a group of researchers from bibliometric data and other publicly available existing data? What are ways social network tools characterize the interdisciplinarity or cross-disciplinarity of co-author teams? The names of 411 grantees were searched in the Web of Science indexing database; author information from the WoS search results resulted in a 191-member co-author network. Research domains were included as attribute data for the co-author network. UCINet social network analysis software calculated a large 60 node component and two larger components with 12 and 8 nodes respectively, the remainder of the network consisted of smaller 2-5 node components. Within the 191-node co-author network the following analyses were performed to learn more about the structural social capital of this group: Degree and Eigenvector centrality measures, brokerage measures, and constraint measures. Additionally, ten randomly selected dyads and the five 4-node cliques within the 191-node network were examined to find patterns of cross-disciplinary collaboration among researcher and within award teams. Award numbers were added as attribute data to five 4-node cliques and 10 random dyads; these showed instances of collaboration among interdisciplinary award teams. Collaboration patterns across disciplines are discussed. Data from this research could serve as a baseline measure for growth in future analyses of the case studied. This method is recommended as a tool to gain insights to a research community and to track publication collaboration growth over time. This research method shows potential as a way to identify aspects of a research community’s social structural capital, particularly within an interdisciplinary network to highlight where researchers are working well together or to learn where there is little collaboration
The Department of Consumers
In 1872, Congress began protecting the American consumer by enacting legislation to prevent mail fraud. From this modest beginning, the consumer protection activities of the federal government have proliferated until today there are at least 33 government agencies engaged in 296 consumer protection activities. In 1961, the estimated annual expenditures by the federal government for direct consumer protection activities totaled 272 million dollars and the number of full-time federal employees engaged in such activities was almost 22,000. Expenditures for consumer advancement, a broader concept, were estimated at 681 million dollars in 1961 and the number of full time federal employees assigned to such work was nearly 43,000.
Current figures for such expenditures and employees would surely be substantially greater. This vast expenditure of money and time was not coordinated or administered by any single department or agency of the federal government. The activities were conducted independently except when independent federal agencies, in their own discretion, found it advisable to consult among themselves
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