256,643 research outputs found

    Using Distillers Grains in the U.S. and International Livestock and Poultry Industries

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    This book brings together in one publication the latest information and research findings of internationally renowned experts to help market participants understand how best to utilize distillers grains both in the U.S. domestic market and in international export markets. The book discusses how to optimize distillers dried grains with solubles (DDGS) to best suit the needs of beef cattle, dairy cattle, swine, and poultry, and how each species can best take advantage of current and improved DDGS products. The book also lays out export opportunities for DDGS and describes challenges and technological hurdles that need to be resolved for better nutritional value and best storage and transport practices. Editors: Bruce A. Babcock, Dermot J. Hayes, and John D. Lawrence Contributors: Dermot J. Hayes, Terry Klopfenstein, Galen E. Erickson, Virgil R. Bremer, David J. Schingoethe, Hans H. Stein, Kristjan Bregendahl, John A. Fox, Nicholas D. Paulson, John D. Lawrence, Garland Dahlke, Frank J. Dooley, Bobby J. Martens, Jerry Shurson, and Abdorrahman S. Alghamdi.https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/card_books/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Litigation in 2050: A Backward-Forward, Topsy-Turvy Look at Dispute Resolutions

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    Litigation in 2050: A Backward, Forward, Topsy-Tury Look at Dispute Resolutions was originally comissioned by the American Bar Association Center for Professional Responsibility. Along with two companion pieces reflecting varying perspectives on the same subject, it was presented as part of the Seventeenth Annual Conference on Professional Responsibility, presented at Scottsdale, Arizona, June 6-9, 1991. It appears here with the permission of the American Bar Association

    Amicus Brief in Terrance Williams v Pennsylvania

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    The Miracle Worker Playbill

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    Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance & Film Harkins Hall Auditorium The Miracle Worker by William Gibson February 21-25, 1979 Director, Ms. Sandy Fox Scenery, Richard J. Knowles Costumes, Patricia White Lighting, Richard J. Knowles Music Composed, John J. Swaboda Theatre Arts Program Director, John Garrity Cast: A Doctor - John Shea, Kate - Pamela Pitou, Keller - David Ubaldi, Helen - Lee Merkle, Martha - Louann Dimuccio, Percy - Kevin Friend, Aunt EV - Katherine Spackman, James - Dan Foster, Anagnos - Richard Lawrence, Annie Sullivan - Mary Lou Mayce, Viney - Valerie Huyghue, Blind Girls - Holly Dimuccio, Jera Dimuccio, Tricey DelPonte, Norma Jean Meglio & Tyais Terry, The Voices of: John F. Cunningham, O.P., Frank Hanley, Maggie McDonald, Dwayne Preble, Kathy O\u27Neill & Peter Thomson, and Hamiltonhttps://digitalcommons.providence.edu/miracle_pubs/1001/thumbnail.jp

    The Role of the Market Model in Corporate Law Analysis: A Comment on Weiss and White

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    In a recent article, Elliott Weiss and Lawrence J. White sought to establish that seven decisions of the Delaware courts concerning corporation law had little value in predicting the future conduct of courts and corporations under the Delaware Corporations Law. Weiss and White relied, in part, on a statistical analysis of changes in the prices of publicly traded shares in Delaware corporations to show that the seven studied decisions had no statistically significant market impact. In this Comment, Professor Fox takes issue with the explanation Weiss and White give for their data. Although the absence of an observed market impact might demonstrate the insignificance of the judicial decisions, Fox argues, it more likely demonstrates the limited capacity of market studies to reveal changes in the actual value of shares of stock resulting from such decisions. In Part I, Fox states and defends his assumption that judicial decisions do have predictive value regarding the future conduct of courts and corporate actors. In Part II, he examines the justifications offered for the conclusion that market study techniques provide reliable evidence that the seven decisions Weiss and White studied had no impact on share value. In Part III, he argues that the market model is not well equipped to discern the significance of events like judicial decisions. Finally, in Part IV, Professor Fox examines the significance of the results of the Weiss and White study for the current debate among corporate scholars concerning the contractual model of corporate law

    It Takes More than Cheek to Lose Our Way

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    It Takes More than Cheek to Lose Our Way

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    Short Story: Free Enterprise Heaven; Ethics Hell

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