88,799 research outputs found
Interview with former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Giles Kavanagh
Part 1: Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh relates his family history and discusses his father's work with newspapers and the Democratic Party, his own early schooling, and his first jobs in law firms. He also discusses his judicial career, starting with the newly created Court of Appeals in 1964 and then running for the Michigan Supreme Court in 1968. He provides an insiders view of the Court during his tenure and discusses the various political and personal differences that arose among the justices. Part 2: Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh talks about the Justice John Swainson bribery case, his own involvement in the investigation and his view that Swainson was "framed". Kavanagh also discusses the turmoil on the Court in the mid-1970s and talks candidly about his colleagues, including Justices Mary Coleman, Charles Levin, John Fitzgerald, Thomas Brennan, Thomas M. Kavanagh, James Ryan, and Dorothy Comstock Riley. After 1976, Kavanagh says, the Court stabilzed and a new spirit of good will and collegiality was embraced by all of the justices. Kavanagh covers a wide range of general topics, including legislative apportionment, mandatory arbitration, the difficulty of campaigning for election, judicial conferences, the Michigan Supreme Court's involvement with the State Bar of Michigan and its disciplinary procedures, term limits for Chief Justices, and the selection process for Supreme Court Justices. He finishes by describing his speech to the Kalamazoo County Bar Association, which was titled, "Pot, Pornography, and Prostitution," by the program organizers.See the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society website for more information on the life of Thomas Giles Kavanagh.Image courtesy of the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society.Interviewed by Roger F. Lane at Justice Kavanagh's residence in Troy, MI, Nov. 19-20, 1990.Digital remastering of analog cassettes originally recorded for "Interviews with Michigan Supreme Court Justices," sponsored by the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society
Interview with former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Giles Kavanagh. Part 2
Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh talks about the Justice John Swainson bribery case, his own involvement in the investigation and his view that Swainson was "framed". Kavanagh also discusses the turmoil on the Court in the mid-1970s and talks candidly about his colleagues, including Justices Mary Coleman, Charles Levin, John Fitzgerald, Thomas Brennan, Thomas M. Kavanagh, James Ryan, and Dorothy Comstock Riley. After 1976, Kavanagh says, the Court stabilzed and a new spirit of good will and collegiality was embraced by all of the justices. Kavanagh covers a wide range of general topics, including legislative apportionment, mandatory arbitration, the difficulty of campaigning for election, judicial conferences, the Michigan Supreme Court's involvement with the State Bar of Michigan and its disciplinary procedures, term limits for Chief Justices, and the selection process for Supreme Court Justices. He finishes by describing his speech to the Kalamazoo County Bar Association, which was titled, "Pot, Pornography, and Prostitution," by the program organizers. Ends abruptly. Second of two interviews of Justice Kavanagh.See the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society website for more information on the life of Thomas Giles Kavanagh.Image courtesy of the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society.Interviewed by Roger F. Lane at Justice Kavanagh's residence in Troy, MI, Nov. 20, 1990.Digital remastering of analog cassettes originally recorded for "Interviews with Michigan Supreme Court Justices," sponsored by the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society
Interview with former Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Giles Kavanagh. Part 1
Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh relates his family history and discusses his father's work with newspapers and the Democratic Party, his own early schooling, and his first jobs in law firms. He also discusses his judicial career, starting with the newly created Court of Appeals in 1964 and then running for the Michigan Supreme Court in 1968. He provides an insiders view of the Court during his tenure and discusses the various political and personal differences that arose among the justices. First of two interviews.See the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society website for more information on the life of Thomas Giles Kavanagh.Image courtesy of the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society.Interviewed by Roger F. Lane at Justice Kavanagh's residence in Troy, MI, Nov. 19, 1990.Digital remastering of analog cassettes originally recorded for "Interviews with Michigan Supreme Court Justices," sponsored by the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society
Language by Ear and by Eye de James F. Kavanagh et Ignatus G. Mattingly
Richaudeau François. Language by Ear and by Eye de James F. Kavanagh et Ignatus G. Mattingly. In: Communication et langages, n°18, 1973. p. 124
Implications of research on comorbidity for the nature and management of substance abuse
This chapter provides a critical evaluation of different models concerning the etiology of the high rate of substance use disorders (SUD) in patients with severe mental illnesses (SMI). Common factor models posit that high rates of comorbidity are the result of shared vulnerabilities to both disorders. Research shows that clients with comorbid disorders are more likely to have relatives with SUD than are similar patients with only SMI. It is suggested that genetic risk for dual disorders may be enacted through gene-environment interactions, whereby substance misuse acts as an environmental stressor on the developing brain. A variety of different models posit that SMI increases clients' vulnerability to developing SUD. These models can be broadly divided into three types, which include psychosocial risk factor models, the supersensitivity model, and the brain reward circuitry dysfunction model. Alleviation of dysphoria represents a more general model than self-medication that proposes people with SMI are prone to misuse substances in response to distress. Models proposing that psychotomimetic drug misuse can lead to long-term psychotic disorders typically build on the catecholamine hypothesis of schizophrenia or affective disorders, and are supported by basic animal research on drug effects. It is suggested that further significant advances in the basic science of addiction in people with SMI may be required before substantial leaps in effectiveness of interventions can be achieved
Language by ear and by eye; the relationships between speech and reading.
"Proceedings of a conference on 'the relationships between speech and learning to read' in a series entitled Communicating by language, sponsored by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health [held May 16-19, 1971, at Belmont, Elkridge, Md.]"Includes bibliographies.Edited by James F. Kavanagh and Ignatius G. Mattingly
You can hide but you have to run: direct detection with vector mediators
We study direct detection in simplified models of Dark Matter (DM) in which interactions with Standard Model (SM) fermions are mediated by a heavy vector boson. We consider fully general, gauge-invariant couplings between the SM, the mediator and both scalar and fermion DM. We account for the evolution of the couplings between the energy scale of the mediator mass and the nuclear energy scale. This running arises from virtual effects of SM particles and its inclusion is not optional. We compare bounds on the mediator mass from direct detection experiments with and without accounting for the running. In some cases the inclusion of these effects changes the bounds by several orders of magnitude, as a consequence of operator mixing which generates new interactions at low energy. We also highlight the importance of these effects when translating LHC limits on the mediator mass into bounds on the direct detection cross section. For an axial-vector mediator, the running can alter the derived bounds on the spin-dependent DM-nucleon cross section by a factor of two or more. Finally, we provide tools to facilitate the inclusion of these effects in future studies: general approximate expressions for the low energy couplings and a public code runDM to evolve the couplings between arbitrary energy scales
Variations on the Author
“Variations on the Author” discusses two of Eduardo Coutinho’s recent films (Um Dia na Vida, from 2010, and Últimas Conversas, posthumously released in 2015) and their contribution to the general question of documentary authorship. The director’s filmography is characterized by a consistent yet self-effacing form of authorial self-inscription: Coutinho often features as an interviewer that rather than express opinions propels discourses; an interviewer that is good at listening. This mode of self-inscription characterizes him as an author who is not expressive but who is nonetheless markedly present on the screen. In Um Dia na Vida, however, Coutinho is completely absent form the image, while Últimas Conversas, on the contrary, includes a confessional prologue that moves the director from the margins to the center of his films. This article examines the ways in which these works stand out in the filmography of a director who offers new insights into the notion of cinematic authorship
The development of an evidence based resource for burns care
Abstract not availableZachary Munn, Sheila Kavanagh, Craig Lockwood, Alan Pearson, Fiona Woo
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