5,235 research outputs found

    An evaluation of thematic mapper simulator data for the geobotanical discrimination of rock types in Southwest Oregon

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    Rock type identification may be assisted by the use of remote sensing of associated vegetation, particularly in areas of dense vegetative cover where surface materials are not imaged directly by the sensor. The geobotanical discrimination of ultramafic parent materials was investigated and analytical techniques for lithologic mapping and mineral exploration were developed. The utility of remotely sensed data to discriminate vegetation types associated with ultramafic parent materials in a study area in southwest Oregon were evaluated. A number of specific objectives were identified, which include: (1) establishment of the association between vegetation and rock types; (2) examination of the spectral separability of vegetation types associated with rock types; (3) determination of the contribution of each TMS band for discriminating vegetation associated with rock types and (4) comparison of analytical techniques for spectrally classifying vegetation

    M & A Fiduciary Duties: Delaware\u27s Murky Jurisprudence

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    After the Ball Is Over: Investor Remedies in the Wake of the Dot-Com Crash and Recent Corporate Scandals

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    I. The Bursting Bubble . . . . . 732 II. A String of Corporate Scandals . . . . . 734 III. Regulating the Conflicted Securities Industry . . . . . 737 IV. The Supreme Court Turns Away from Investor Protection . . . . . 739 V. Some Promise of Investor Relief in the Enron Litigation . . . . . 741 VI. Mixed Results in Market Fraud Litigation . . . . . 745 VII. Customer Claims against Brokers . . . . . 748 VIII. Arbitration as a More Promising Forum . . . . . 751 IX. Claims That May Not Prevail in Arbitration . . . . . 760 X. Conclusion . . . . . 76

    Guardians of the Galaxy: How Shareholder Lawyers Won Big for Their Clients and Vindicated the Integrity of Our Economy

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    Securities class actions are the most economically significant form of litigation. Highly skilled lawyers expend huge sums and relentless efforts in these matters but because of the costs involved and the potential for enormous liability very few of them ever make it to trial. This Article is the story of one that did, a mammoth fraud where a jury returned a 1.5billionverdictthat,withinterest,increasedtoalmost1.5 billion verdict that, with interest, increased to almost 2.5 billion by the time the case reached the appellate court. There the Court upheld the shareholders’ theory that their damages could be measured by the excessive amounts they had to pay for their shares whose value was artificially inflated by the defendants’ false financial statements. In doing that the appellate panel significantly strengthened the potential claims of shareholders in these actions by accepting a new approach to reckoning their losses called the “leakage model.” It allows damages to be determined by fixing the decline in the price the stockholders paid for their shares from the time news of the fraud first becomes available, rather than when the defendants ultimately acknowledge their wrongdoing. Thanks to the unyielding work of their lawyers, the case was a grand success for the shareholders, returning them a significant percentage of the money they lost. Yet it took 14 years to litigate and initially cost the plaintiffs’ attorneys, who bore all their clients’ expenses, over $30 million. If we are truly committed to achieving justice in these shareholder frauds the law must find a more expeditious way to deter such wrongful conduct and compensate investors like these who are cheated

    Some Factors Influencing the Abundance of Waterfowl Along the Mississippi River in Iowa

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    In order to determine some of the factors influencing waterfowl abundance in eastern Iowa, field studies were made of migrating ducks during the years 1940-1945. A study area was selected on the Mississippi River 20 miles north of Davenport, Iowa, and near the town of Princeton, Iowa. The study area, a low-land meadow and marsh, is 5 miles in length and 1½ miles in width. It is known locally as the Princeton Marsh. Additional observations were made at scattered points along the Mississippi from Dubuque south to Keokuk, Iowa; on the Wapsipinicon River for a few miles above its mouth; and on Rock River near Moline, Illinois

    The Promise of Stakeholder Advisory Councils

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    Income Equality in Utopia

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