2,964 research outputs found
Group algebras and enveloping algebras with nonmatrix and semigroup identities
Let K be a field of positive characteristic p, let R be either a group
algebra K[G] or a restricted enveloping algebra u(L), and let I be the
augmentation ideal of R. We first characterize those R for which I satisfies a
polynomial identity not satisfied by the algebra of all 2-by-2 matrices over K.
Then we examine those R for which I satisfies a semigroup identity (that is, a
polynomial identity which can be written as the difference of two monomials).Comment: 11 pages. Written in LaTeX2
The Russian GULAG: Understanding the Dangers of Marxism Combined with Totalitarianism
This study examines the Soviet Gulag, the main prison camp administration implemented in the Soviet Union. The GULAG represents an institution that is not well known, and this paper will explain why it existed and why it remains in the shadows of history. Terror, propaganda, and belief in progress represent the three ideas that directed the Soviet totalitarian system. This thesis will accordingly explore the ideology behind totalitarian government and Marxist practice in order to understand why the Gulag was allowed to exist. Finally, it investigates the reasons why the Gulag has not taken a priority position in human knowledge and how the rise of the intellectual Left in the West and its sympathies towards Marxism contributed to this. Alexandr Solzhenitsyn is heavily used throughout this paper for his insights on the Gulag
Introducing Journal of Biological Engineering
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens
Union Walks in the Sixth: The Integrity of Mandatory Non-Binding Grievance Procedures in Collective Bargaining Agreements - AT & (and) T v. Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO, The
There are many mechanisms short of industrial action which labor unions and employers use to resolve disputes. Anticipating conflict, but aiming to avoid industrial action, the two parties might place an arbitration agreement or other mandatory grievance adjustment procedure into their collective bargaining agreement. This agreement will reflect the parties\u27 understanding as to how disputes are to be resolved. This Note examines the limited circumstances in which the federal courts will enjoin union protest activity carried out in violation of a collective bargaining agreement\u27s provisions regarding dispute resolution. It focuses on the analytic inconsistency of the judicial refusal to enjoin union activities carried out in violation of a collective bargaining agreement during the pendency of a mandatory dispute resolution procedure other than arbitration
Union Walks in the Sixth: The Integrity of Mandatory Non-Binding Grievance Procedures in Collective Bargaining Agreements - AT & (and) T v. Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO, The
There are many mechanisms short of industrial action which labor unions and employers use to resolve disputes. Anticipating conflict, but aiming to avoid industrial action, the two parties might place an arbitration agreement or other mandatory grievance adjustment procedure into their collective bargaining agreement. This agreement will reflect the parties\u27 understanding as to how disputes are to be resolved. This Note examines the limited circumstances in which the federal courts will enjoin union protest activity carried out in violation of a collective bargaining agreement\u27s provisions regarding dispute resolution. It focuses on the analytic inconsistency of the judicial refusal to enjoin union activities carried out in violation of a collective bargaining agreement during the pendency of a mandatory dispute resolution procedure other than arbitration
Usury Legislation - Its Effects on the Economy and a Proposal for Reform
This Note examines both the original and current purposes of general usury ceilings and evaluates the success of the ceilings in achieving these purposes. In addition, the Note considers the impact of the present form of usury legislation on the economy of those states that have such ceilings and proposes a model usury statute that attempts to accomplish the social policy objectives of the current legislation while also minimizing detrimental and unintentional effects on the economy...
This Note suggests that the proposal outlined above would solve the majority of the problems created by the present statutory form. The proposal recognizes that in order to prevent contraction of credit supply, the market must be allowed to set the market cost of credit to provide lenders with an incentive to lend. Within this framework, the best protection for the high risk borrower is for the system to insure legitimate lenders who are competing for his business. This competition would provide lawful sources of credit to these borrowers while minimizing the costs to them
Finding the Parameters: The Scope of Arbitration Agreements in Medical Service Contracts in California - Pietrelli v. Peacock
There is perhaps no better indicator of the general perception of crisis in the American medical system than the lavish attention given President Clinton\u27s health care reform initiatives in the media.2 In the 1970s, the frequency of medical malpractice claims and the cost of malpractice insurance, two sources of this perceived crisis, came into sharp focus.3 Experiencing a decline in profits as a result of increased malpractice litigation, many insurers began refusing to provide coverage or demanding high premium increases.4 This created a problem in malpractice insurance availability to health care providers.5 Health care providers, insurers, and state legislatures responded with a variety of reforms,6 some of which aimed to curb the frequency and cost of malpractice controversies through the use of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms such as arbitration.
Rubus beamanii, a new name for Rubus vagus L.H. Bailey, a glandular dewberry described from Kalamazoo County, Michigan, and recently discovered in Ohio
The recent discovery of Rubus vagus L.H. Bailey at Camp Ravenna Joint Military Training Center in Portage and Trumbull County, Ohio, has highlighted a seldom-seen species of North American Rubus that, for 70 years, has been illegitimately named. We propose a valid name for it: Rubus beamanii Widrlechner & Riley, nom. nov., honoring Professor John Beaman (1929-2015). A key to the glandular dewberries of Ohio and surrounding states is included as an aid to distinguishing R. beamanii from the other glandular dewberries encountered in the region
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