707 research outputs found

    Hotel: 2000 Wage and Benefit Survey

    Get PDF
    During the summer months of 1994 through 2000, the Dick Pope Sr. Institute for Tourism Studies at the University of Central Florida has conducted a survey of Central Florida hospitality industry properties regarding wage rates and employee benefits. This ongoing project has been sponsored by the Hotel Human Resource Association of Central Florida and has been supported by the Central Florida Hotel Motel Association. This comprehensive study solicits and reports data on wages and benefits from 353 hospitality organization covering 120 occupational/hourly job titles and 46 management/supervisory position. The first final report in 1994 summarized data from 32 companies. The 2000 report includes data from 65 reporting organizations. An attempt was made to collect data on vaction ownership positions, including the methods and bases for computing commissions, however due to insufficient response this information is not being reported

    Jury Instructions: A Persistent Failure to Communicate

    Get PDF

    Jury Instructions: A Persistent Failure to Communicate

    Get PDF
    This article reports on an empirical study of juror comprehension of pattern jury instructions. It demonstrated that comprehension of the original instructions was poor, but that rewriting significantly improved their ability to understand and explain the meaning of the instructions. A separate study showed that jurors report that they discuss and consider the language of the instructions provided to them

    Jury Instructions: A Persistent Failure to Communicate

    Get PDF
    This article reports on an empirical study of juror comprehension of pattern jury instructions. It demonstrated that comprehension of the original instructions was poor, but that rewriting significantly improved their ability to understand and explain the meaning of the instructions. A separate study showed that jurors report that they discuss and consider the language of the instructions provided to them

    Entropic force in black hole binaries and its Newtonian limits

    Full text link
    We give an exact solution for the static force between two black holes at the turning points in their binary motion. The results are derived by Gibbs' principle and the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy applied to the apparent horizon surfaces in time-symmetric initial data. New power laws are derived for the entropy jump in mergers, while Newton's law is shown to derive from a new adiabatic variational principle for the Hilbert action in the presence of apparent horizon surfaces. In this approach, entropy is strictly monotonic such that gravity is attractive for all separations including mergers, and the Bekenstein entropy bound is satisfied also at arbitrarily large separations, where gravity reduces to Newton's law. The latter is generalized to point particles in the Newtonian limit by application of Gibbs' principle to world-lines crossing light cones.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Nonenzymatic Glucosylation of Rat Albumin: Studies in Vitro and in Vivo

    Get PDF
    Incubation of rat serum with D-glucose in vitro resulted in nonenzymatic glucosylation of serum proteins. Analysis of freshly isolated rat albumin by ion exchange chromatography indicated that the glucosylated albumin accounts for 6.7.+-. 0.9% of total albumin in normal rat serum. Glucosylation of rat albumin in vitro was 1st order with respect to glucose and albumin concentrations and occurs primarily (\u3e 90%) at intrachain lysine residues. Kinetic analysis and inhibition of glucosylation by aspirin suggest that 1 reactive lysine residue is the primary site of glucosylation. Less than 5% of the radioactivity from glucosyl-albumin was released as glucose or mannose by hydrolysis conditions normally used for the analysis of neutral sugars in glycoproteins. Studies in vivo demonstrated that the half-life of albumin in normal rats was unaffected by the addition of 1 mol of glucose/mol of albumin. In addition, glucosylation was a stable modification since 125i-albumin isolated up to 3 days after injection of glucosylated 125i-albumin was recovered only in the glucosylated fraction. In contrast, following injection of unglucosylated 125i-albumin there was a gradual shift of 125i radioactivity to the glucosylated albumin fraction, as would be predicted for nonenzymatic glucosylation occurring in the circulation. Finally, levels of glucosylated albumin isolated from diabetic rats (alloxan induced) were significantly (4-fold) elevated 4 days after withdrawal from insulin therapy. The rat should be a suitable animal model for in vivo studies on nonenzymatic glucosylation of albumin and other serum proteins in normal and diabetic metabolic states

    Gravitational waves from extreme mass-ratio inspirals in Dynamical Chern-Simons gravity

    Full text link
    Dynamical Chern-Simons gravity is an interesting extension of General Relativity, which finds its way in many different contexts, including string theory, cosmological settings and loop quantum gravity. In this theory, the gravitational field is coupled to a scalar field by a parity-violating term, which gives rise to characteristic signatures. Here we investigate how Chern-Simons gravity would affect the quasi-circular inspiralling of a small, stellar-mass object into a large non-rotating supermassive black hole, and the accompanying emission of gravitational and scalar waves. We find the relevant equations describing the perturbation induced by the small object, and we solve them through the use of Green's function techniques. Our results show that for a wide range of coupling parameters, the Chern-Simons coupling gives rise to an increase in total energy flux, which translates into a fewer number of gravitational-wave cycles over a certain bandwidth. For space-based gravitational-wave detectors such as LISA, this effect can be used to constrain the coupling parameter effectively.Comment: RevTex4, 18 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
    • …
    corecore