479 research outputs found

    Corporate Golden Parachutes: An Executive Bailout from Fiduciary Duty?

    Get PDF
    A golden parachute is a potentially lucrative wage contract that compensates officers or other key executives of a corporation in the event of a change in control.\u2

    Post-Settlement Malpractice: Undoing the Done Deal

    Get PDF

    With a Little Help From My Friends: The Attorney\u27s Role in Assisting Pro Se LItigants in Negotiations

    Get PDF
    In these difficult economic times, more litigants are attempting to handle their lawsuits without hiring attorneys. Even without seeking formal representation, these pro se litigants may want some assistance from attorneys. This advice seeking may be especially prevalent in the area ofnegotiation where no formalized procedures are in place but where the consequences of an inadequate settlement are disastrous for the self-represented Attorneys may want to assist pro se litigants in their negotiations but feel reluctant to do soforfear of triggering an attorney-client relationship and its accompanying malpractice exposure. Attorneys who are reluctant to give informal advice to pro se litigants may instead offer a limited scope arrangement in which pro se litigants hire attorneys for the limited task of conducting a negotiation session. Alternatively, attorneys may agree to provide clients with free representationf or the duration of their lawsuit, thus, these pro se litigants become pro bono clients. This article will define the relationship and potential ethical and malpractice concerns between an attorney and a pro se, limited scope, and pro bono client. This article will also offer practical guidelines to attorneys so they are aware of such issues and may feel confident in assisting these needy clients

    In Vitro Demonstration of Delayed Hypersensitivity in Patients with Berylliosis

    Get PDF
    To clarify immunopathological mechanisms in granulomatous hypersensitivity (GHR) to beryllium (Be), migration inhibitory factor (MIF) was assayed. Blood lymphocytes from three patients with GHR to Be and two normal persons were isolated and cultured with and without BeO or other antigens. Cell-free supernatants removed daily were dialyzed, lyophilized and assayed for MIF by measuring the area of migration of normal guinea pig peritoneal exudate cells out of capillary tubes within 24 hours after exposure to the supernatant. BeO added to sensitized lymphocytes produced supernatant that decreased migration, in contrast to supernatant from non-sensitized lymphocytes, indicating that BeO-sensitized lymphocytes cultured with Be elaborate a soluble factor, MIF, which correlates with delayed hypersensitivity and may play a role in granuloma formation. It may also prove useful in diagnosis of berylliosis

    DNA Vaccine Expressing Conserved Influenza Virus Proteins Protective Against H5N1 Challenge Infection in Mice

    Get PDF
    Influenza vaccination practice, which is based on neutralizing antibodies, requires being able to predict which viral strains will be circulating. If an unexpected strain, as in the 1997 H5N1 Hong Kong outbreak, or even a pandemic emerges, appropriate vaccines may take too long to prepare. Therefore, strategies based on conserved influenza antigens should be explored. We studied DNA vaccination in mice with plasmids expressing conserved nucleoprotein (NP) and matrix (M) from an H1N1 virus. After vaccination, mice were challenged with A/H5N1 viruses of low, intermediate, and high lethality. A/NP+A/M DNA vaccination reduced replication of A/Hong Kong/486/97 (HK/486), a nonlethal H5N1 strain, and protected against lethal challenge with more virulent A/Hong Kong/156/97 (HK/156). After HK/156 exposure, mice survived rechallenge with A/Hong Kong/483/97 (HK/483), although the DNA vaccination alone protected poorly against this highly virulent strain. In the absence of antigenically matched hemagglutinin-based vaccines, DNA vaccination with conserved influenza genes may provide a useful first line of defense against a rapidly spreading pandemic virus

    Sensory specific satiety: More than ‘just’ habituation?

    Get PDF
    AbstractSensory specific satiety (SSS) describes the decline in pleasantness associated with a food as it is eaten relative to a food that has not been eaten (the ‘eaten’ and ‘uneaten’ foods, respectively). The prevailing view is that SSS is governed by habituation. Nevertheless, the extent to which SSS results solely from this ‘low-level’ process remains unclear. Three experiments were conducted to explore the hypothesis that ‘top-down’ cognitive activity affects the expression of SSS; specifically, we manipulated participants' expectations about whether or not they would have access to alternative test foods (uneaten foods) after consuming a test meal (eaten food). This manipulation was motivated by ‘Commodity Theory,’ which describes the relative increase in value of a commodity when it becomes unavailable. We tested the hypothesis that a decline in the pleasantness and desire to eat the eaten food is exaggerated when uneaten foods are unavailable to participants. None of our findings supported this proposition – we found no evidence that SSS is dependent on top-down processes associated with the availability of other uneaten test foods

    Food for contagion : synthesis and future directions for studying host-parasite responses to resource shifts in anthropogenic environments

    Get PDF
    Human-provided resource subsidies for wildlife are diverse, common and have profound consequences for wildlife-pathogen interactions, as demonstrated by papers in this themed issue spanning empirical, theoretical and management perspectives from a range of study systems. Contributions cut across scales of organization, from the within-host dynamics of immune function, to population-level impacts on parasite transmission, to landscape-and regional-scale patterns of infection. In this concluding paper, we identify common threads and key findings from author contributions, including the consequences of resource subsidies for (i) host immunity; (ii) animal aggregation and contact rates; (iii) host movement and landscape-level infection patterns; and (iv) interspecific contacts and cross-species transmission. Exciting avenues for future work include studies that integrate mechanistic modelling and empirical approaches to better explore cross-scale processes, and experimental manipulations of food resources to quantify host and pathogen responses. Work is also needed to examine evolutionary responses to provisioning, and ask how diet-altered changes to the host microbiome influence infection processes. Given the massive public health and conservation implications of anthropogenic resource shifts, we end by underscoring the need for practical recommendations to manage supplemental feeding practices, limit human-wildlife conflicts over shared food resources and reduce cross-species transmission risks, including to humans. This article is part of the theme issue 'Anthropogenic resource subsidies and host-parasite dynamics in wildlife'.Peer reviewe

    Cloning of the Cytochrome b Gene From the Tomato Powdery Mildew Fungus Leveillula taurica Reveals High Levels of Allelic Variation and Heteroplasmy for the G143A Mutation

    Get PDF
    Leveillula taurica is a major pathogen of tomato and several other crops that can cause substantial yield losses in favorable conditions for the fungus. Quinone outside inhibitor fungicides (QoIs) are routinely used for the control of the pathogen in tomato fields across California, but their recurrent use could lead to the emergence of resistance against these compounds. Here, we partially cloned the cytochrome b gene from L. taurica (Lt cytb) and searched within populations of the fungus collected from tomato fields across California for mutations that confer resistance to QoIs. A total of 21 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified within a 704 bp fragment of the Lt cytb gene analyzed, of which five were non-synonymous substitutions. Among the most frequent SNPs encountered within field populations of the pathogen was the G143A substitution that confers high levels of resistance against QoIs in several fungi. The other four amino acid substitutions were novel mutations, whose effect on QoI resistance is currently unknown. Sequencing of the Lt cytb gene from individual single-cell conidia of the fungus further revealed that most SNPs, including the one leading to the G143A substitution, were present in a heteroplasmic state, indicating the co-existence of multiple mitotypes in single cells. Analysis of the field samples showed that the G143A substitution is predominantly heteroplasmic also within field populations of L. taurica in California, suggesting that QoI resistance in this fungus is likely to be quantitative rather than qualitative
    • …
    corecore