2,745 research outputs found

    Shapero - Direct Mail Clarified

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    In June, 1988 the Supreme Court handed down a decision which the bar had eagerly awaited. Now, the evolving, slippery subject of lawyer advertising and solicitation has been clarified further. This article examines several cases involving attorney advertising and provides a general overview of acceptable and nonacceptable methods of advertising by direct mail

    The Client Retention Agreement - The Engagement Letter

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    What I propose to do in this paper is to review various aspects of engagement or client retention agreements. As background, I have examined some of the forms\u27 which are suggested for these agreements and a number of agreements currently in use by lawyers and law firms, principally in the Summit County, Ohio area. The purpose of this effort is to examine some key provisions of these agreements and, perhaps, suggest possible improvements

    Constitutional Law - Criminal Law - Power of Federal Government to Commit Mentally Incompetent Persons Charged with Federal Crimes

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    Petitioner was indicted for robbery from a United States Post Office. After a series of hearings and examinations, the district court found petitioner so mentally incompetent that he could not stand trial, and that, if released, he would probably endanger the safety of the officers, property, or other interests of the United States. The district court ordered petitioner committed to the custody of the Attorney General for confinement in a mental institution. This order was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, one judge dissenting. On certiorari to the Supreme Court of the United States, held, affirmed. The petitioner was legally in the custody of the United States under its power to prosecute for federal crimes and this custody could continue even though there was little likelihood of petitioner\u27s eventual mental recovery and prosecution. Greenwood v. United States, 350 U.S. 821, 76 S.Ct. 410 (1956)

    Missouri Humanitarian Doctrine in the Years 1958-1960, The

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    A Synopsis of the 1979 Amendments to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure

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    On April 30, 1979, the Supreme Court of the United States ordered the amendment of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The modifications ordered by the Court promise to bring about significant changes in the Rules, clarify ambiguous sections, eliminate confusion in application, and bring the Rules into conformity with recent case law. The process of amending the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure began with the Advisory Committee on Criminal Rules of the Judicial Conference of the United States. The Advisory Committee was responsible for drafting the text of the proposed amendments and submitting explanatory comments. The proposed changes and additions were then sent to the Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure of the Judicial Conference, which solicited comments from the bench and bar before submitting the amendments to the Judicial Conference. Subsequently, the Judicial Conference approved the proposed amendments and transmitted them to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court then ordered these amendments to take effect on August 1, 1979. Upon receipt by Congress, the amendments to the Rules were referred to the House Subcommittee on Criminal Justice. Currently engaged in a major effort to overhaul the Federal Criminal Code, the Subcommittee was unable to study the proposed changes in detail. Consequently, the Subcommittee acted to delay the passage of those amendments that it regarded as particularly controversial or far-reaching. Accordingly, Congress delayed the effective dates of the modifications to rules 11(e)(6), 17(h), 32(f), and 44(c) and the enactment of rules 26.2 and 32.1 until a study of the changes could be made, or until December 1, 1980, whichever comes first. This comment will analyze the changes made in the Federal Rules, particularly noting the rationale for the various amendments and the intended effects of those changes

    A microrod-resonator Brillouin laser with 240 Hz absolute linewidth

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    We demonstrate an ultralow-noise microrod-resonator based laser that oscillates on the gain supplied by the stimulated Brillouin scattering optical nonlinearity. Microresonator Brillouin lasers are known to offer an outstanding frequency noise floor, which is limited by fundamental thermal fluctuations. Here, we show experimental evidence that thermal effects also dominate the close-to-carrier frequency fluctuations. The 6-mm diameter microrod resonator used in our experiments has a large optical mode area of ~100 {\mu}m2^2, and hence its 10 ms thermal time constant filters the close-to-carrier optical frequency noise. The result is an absolute laser linewidth of 240 Hz with a corresponding white-frequency noise floor of 0.1 Hz2^2/Hz. We explain the steady-state performance of this laser by measurements of its operation state and of its mode detuning and lineshape. Our results highlight a mechanism for noise that is common to many microresonator devices due to the inherent coupling between intracavity power and mode frequency. We demonstrate the ability to reduce this noise through a feedback loop that stabilizes the intracavity power.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure

    Pain Management for Primary Care Providers: A Narrative Review of High-Impact Studies, 2014-2016

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    Objective: This manuscript reviews high-impact, peer-reviewed studies published from January 2014 to March 2016 that are relevant to pain management in primary care. Given the recent release of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's "Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain" emphasizing the primacy of nonopioid treatment, we focused our review on nonopioid pain management. Design: Narrative review of peer-reviewed literature. Methods: We searched three article summary services and queried expert contacts for high-impact, English-language studies related to the management of pain in adults in primary care. All authors reviewed 142 study titles to arrive at group consensus on article content domains. Within article domains, individual authors selected studies approved by the larger group according to their impact on primary care clinical practice, policy, and research, as well as quality of the study methods. Through iterative discussion, 12 articles were selected for detailed review, discussion, and presentation in this narrative review. Results: We present key articles addressing each of six domains of pain management: pharmacotherapy for acute pain; interventional treatments; medical cannabis; complementary and integrative medicine; care management in chronic pain; and prevention. Within each section, we conclude with implications for pain management in primary care. Conclusions: There is growing evidence for multiple nonopioid treatment modalities available to clinicians for the management of pain in primary care. The dissemination and implementation of these studies, including innovative care management interventions, warrant additional study and support from clinicians, educators, and policy-makers

    Initial Development of a Patient-Reported Instrument Assessing Harm, Efficacy, and Misuse of Long-Term Opioid Therapy

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    Guidelines on long-term opioid therapy recommend frequent reassessment of harm, efficacy, and misuse of these potentially harmful and sometimes ineffective medications. In primary care, there is a need for a brief, patient-reported instrument. This report details the initial steps in the development of such an instrument. An interdisciplinary team of clinician-scientists performed four discrete steps in this study: (1) conceptualization of the purpose and function of the instrument, (2) assembly of an item pool, (3) expert rating on which items were most important to include in the instrument, and (4) modification of expert-selected items based on a reading level check and cognitive interviews with patients. A diverse panel of 47 subject matter experts was presented with 69 items to rate on a 1–9 scale in terms of importance for inclusion in the instrument. The panel highly rated 37 items: 8 related to harm, 4 related to efficacy, and 25 related to misuse. These 37 items were then tested for patient comprehension and modified as needed. Next steps in development will include further item reduction, testing against a gold standard, and assessment of the instrument’s effect on clinical outcomes

    Handling qualities of a wide-body transport airplane utilizing Pitch Active Control Systems (PACS) for relaxed static stability application

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    Piloted simulation studies have been conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of two pitch active control systems (PACS) on the flying qualities of a wide-body transport airplane when operating at negative static margins. These two pitch active control systems consisted of a simple 'near-term' PACS and a more complex 'advanced' PACS. Eight different flight conditions, representing the entire flight envelope, were evaluated with emphasis on the cruise flight conditions. These studies were made utilizing the Langley Visual/Motion Simulator (VMS) which has six degrees of freedom. The simulation tests indicated that (1) the flying qualities of the baseline aircraft (PACS off) for the cruise and other high-speed flight conditions were unacceptable at center-of-gravity positions aft of the neutral static stability point; (2) within the linear static stability flight envelope, the near-term PACS provided acceptable flying qualities for static stabilty margins to -3 percent; and (3) with the advanced PACS operative, the flying qualities were demonstrated to be good (satisfactory to very acceptable) for static stabilty margins to -20 percent

    Geology for Environmental Planning in Marion County, Indiana

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    Marion County is the center of a large and rapidly growing urban-industrial complex in the heartland of Indiana. The boundaries of the county and of Indianapolis, the state capital, are the same as a result of the UNIGOV concept. The rapid growth of Indianapolis and its suburbs makes effective land-use planning important for Marion County. This report is designed to provide information, based on the geologic setting of the area, that can be used for effective and environmentally sound development of the county
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