942 research outputs found
FEDERAL PROCEDURE-VENUE-APPLICABILITY OF SECTION 1404(a) OF NEW TITLE 28 TO ANTI-TRUST SUITS
Working directly from a branch office in Washington, D.C., defendant corporation solicited orders and distributed films in the state of Virginia, although it had not registered as a foreign corporation in that state. Alleging that the defendant had violated the anti-trust laws by its activities in Virginia, plaintiff brought a civil action for damages and injunctive relief in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Pursuant to section 14O4(a) of Title 28 U.S.C. defendant moved to transfer the action to the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. Held, since the defendant was not transacting business in Virginia sufficient to satisfy the venue provisions of the anti-trust acts and had not shown a preponderance of circumstances favoring the transfer as required by section 1404(a), motion denied. Hampton Theatres Inc. v. Paramount Film Distributing Corporation, (D.C.D.C. 1950) 90 F. Supp. 645
LABOR LAW-ARBITRATION-APPLICABILITY OF THE UNITED STATES ARBITRATION ACT TO COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENTS
Plaintiff brought an action in the federal district court for Pennsylvania against the defendant labor union for damages caused by a strike, allegedly in violation of a written collective bargaining agreement between them. This contract also provided, inter alia, for submission to arbitration of all differences arising between the parties under the contract. However, no arbitration had been had prior to this suit. Defendant moved to stay all proceedings pending arbitration, allegedly as authorized by section 3 of the United States .Arbitration .Act providing for such stays in . . . any suit or proceeding . . . brought in any of the courts of the United States upon any issue referable to arbitration . . .. Plaintiff urged that these words were limited by section 1, the definition section of the act, which contained a clause that . . . nothing herein contained shall apply to contracts of employment. . .. The district court sustained defendant\u27s arguments and further pointed out that even if section I were applicable to section, it was doubtful that a collective bargaining agreement was a contract of employment for purposes of exclusion from the act4 On appeal, held, reversed. Contracts of employment, which include collective bargaining agreements, are excluded from the operation of the entire Arbitration Act. Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway, & Motor Coach Employees of America, Division 1063, (3d Cir. 1952) 193 F. (2d) 327
Bounds on second generation scalar leptoquarks from the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon
We calculate the contribution of second generation scalar leptoquarks to the
anomalous magnetic moment of the muon (AMMM). In the near future, E-821 at
Brookhaven will reduce the experimental error on this parameter to , an improvement of 20 over its current value.
With this new experimental limit we obtain a lower mass limit of
\ GeV for the second generation scalar leptoquark, when its
Yukawa-like coupling \ to quarks and leptons is taken to be
of the order of the electroweak coupling .Comment: 5 pages, plain tex, 1 figure (not included available under request
On chemiluminescent emission from an infiltrated chiral sculptured thin film
The theory describing the far-field emission from a dipole source embedded
inside a chiral sculptured thin film (CSTF), based on a spectral Green function
formalism, was further developed to allow for infiltration of the void regions
of the CSTF by a fluid. In doing so, the extended Bruggeman homogenization
formalism--which accommodates constituent particles that are small compared to
wavelength but not vanishingly small--was used to estimate the relative
permittivity parameters of the infiltrated CSTF. For a numerical example, we
found that left circularly polarized (LCP) light was preferentially emitted
through one face of the CSTF while right circularly polarized (RCP) light was
preferentially emitted through the opposite face, at wavelengths within the
Bragg regime. The centre wavelength for the preferential emission of LCP/RCP
light was red shifted as the refractive index of the infiltrating fluid
increased from unity, and this red shift was accentuated when the size of the
constituent particles in our homogenization model was increased. Also, the
bandwidth of the preferential LCP/RCP emission regime decreased as the
refractive index of the infiltrating fluid increased from unity
The equivalence of four extensions of context-free grammars
There is currently considerable interest among computational linguists in grammatical formalisms with highly restricted generative power. This paper concerns the relationship between the class of string languages generated by several such formalisms, namely, combinatory categorial grammars, head grammars, linear indexed grammars, and tree adjoining grammars. Each of these formalisms is known to generate a larger class of languages than context-free grammars. The four formalisms under consideration were developed independently and appear superficially to be quite different from one another. The result presented in this paper is that all four of the formalisms under consideration generate exactly the same class of string languages
Is it still worth searching for lepton flavor violation in rare kaon decays?
Prospective searches for lepton flavor violation (LFV) in rare kaon decays at
the existing and future intermediate-energy accelerators are considered. The
proposed studies are complementary to LFV searches in muon-decay experiments
and offer a unique opportunity to probe models with approximately conserved
fermion-generation quantum number with sensitivity superior to that in other
processes. Consequently, new searches for LFV in kaon decays are an important
and independent part of the general program of searches for lepton flavor
violation in the final states with charged leptons.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures. An extended version of the talk given at the
Chicago Flavor Seminar, February 27, 2004. In the new version some misprints
were corrected and some new data for LFV-processes were added. The main
content of the paper was not changed. The paper is published in Yad. Fiz. 68,
1272 (2005
Caring for the collective: biopower and agential subjectification in wildlife conservation
types: ArticleCopyright © 2014 PionPost Print. Srinivasan, K. 2014. The definitive, peer-reviewed and edited version of this article is published in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, Vol. 32, Issue 3, pp. 501 â 517 DOI:10.1068/d13101pThis paper explores turtle conservation in Odisha, India, to map the complicated ways in which animal well-being is pursued in the contemporary world. Using insights from Foucaultâs work on biopolitics, it offers an account of conservation as population politics, questioning the entanglement of harm and care that infuses this space of more-than-human social change. In doing this, the paper elaborates the concept of agential subjectification in order to track the mechanisms that underlie the asymmetric circulation of biopower in humanâanimal interactions and to develop Foucauldian scholarship for the examination of present-day manifestations of the âwill to improveâ.RGSâIBGCulture and Animals Foundatio
Constraints on a Massive Dirac Neutrino Model
We examine constraints on a simple neutrino model in which there are three
massless and three massive Dirac neutrinos and in which the left handed
neutrinos are linear combinations of doublet and singlet neutrinos. We examine
constraints from direct decays into heavy neutrinos, indirect effects on
electroweak parameters, and flavor changing processes. We combine these
constraints to examine the allowed mass range for the heavy neutrinos of each
of the three generations.Comment: latex, 29 pages, 7 figures (not included), MIT-CTP-221
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