107,712 research outputs found

    Pollock, G H, NX784

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/411167Surname: POLLOCK. Given Name(s) or Initials: G H. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX784. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 3213.226880 Item: [2016.0049.43433] "Pollock, G H, NX784

    Pollock, G J D, NX39761

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/411166Surname: POLLOCK. Given Name(s) or Initials: G J D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX39761. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 38291.226879 Item: [2016.0049.43432] "Pollock, G J D, NX39761

    Online Supplement for Han & Pollock (2021)

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    Online supplement for the manuscript: Han, Jung-Hoon & Timothy G. Pollock. 2021. The Two Towers (or Somewhere in Between): The Behavioral Consequences of Positional Inconsistency Across Status Hierarchies. Academy of Management Journal, 64(1): 86-113. Appendix A provides information about an alternative testing of our hypotheses using polynomial regression. Appendix B provides an example of high-artistic/commercial-status Hollywood professionals using out measurement. </p

    Ralph G. Pollock, stage actor

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    Ralph G. Pollock, stage actorTo order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction/reproduction Please cite the Order NumberScanned at 600ppi with an Epson 20000 flatbed scanner. Image then rotated, cropped, level-adjusted, and sharpened using Photoshop CS3. Converted to a JPEG2000 image upon ingest into CONTENTdm

    Roccapriore & Pollock, 2023 - AMJ - Online Supplement.docx.pdf

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    This online supplement provides additional reference material for the journal article published at AMJ with the following citation: Roccapriore, A.Y. & Pollock, T.G. 2023. I Don’t Need A Degree, I’ve Got Abs: Competence, Warmth, and the Influence of Multimode Communication On Social Media. Academy of Management Journal.  https://doi.org/10.5465/amj.2020.1546.</p

    MEASURING FISHING CAPACITY: AN APPLICATION TO IN NORTH PACIFIC GROUNDFISH FISHERIES

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    This research provides estimates of fishing capacity for the pollock fishery of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands using DEA and stochastic frontier techniques. Capacity estimates are computed and compared under various model specifications, as well as before and after passage of the American Fisheries Act, which allowed for cooperatives in the pollock fishery.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    Tribute to Justice Stewart G. Pollock, A A Tribute to Justice Stewart G. Pollock

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    Stewart Pollock knows how to make a play. On his favorite kind of court - the kind with a net in the middle - he can set up the winning volley with a perfectly placed approach shot. On the court on which he served for the past twenty years, the New Jersey Supreme Court, Justice Pollock proved himself an equally gifted playmaker, earning a reputation as one who could forge consensus through judicial craftsmanship and common sense. Appellate judging is a team sport, though one would hardly know it by looking at recent United States Supreme Court cases, with all their dissents, concurrences, and fractured opinions. The New Jersey Supreme Court, in contrast, has managed to offer many unanimous decisions, even when breaking new ground or dealing with political hot-button issues. The court has accomplished this unanimity despite New Jersey\u27s tradition of maintaining a Democrat- Republican split among the justices. Justice Pollock was at the center of the court on many of these decisions, not only by virtue of his political sensibilities, but also by virtue of his approach to judging. His opinions routinely are included in law school casebooks for their clarity and intelligence. A textbook admirer of Pollock opinions, however, might miss another of their signature qualities - their collegiality. As telling as Justice Pollock\u27s unanimous opinions, which are many, are his concurrences and dissents, which are few. He never, as far as I can tell, wrote a concurrence or a dissent merely to wax eloquent on an interesting legal issue. Justice Pollock wrote separately only where he saw some compelling reason to do so. Generally, an unfractured opinion offers both the litigants and the public clearer guidance, and enhances the court\u27s legitimacy and respect in the eyes of the citizenry and in coordinate branches of the government. Not only is Justice Pollock\u27s majority-to-dissent ratio notably high, his concurrences are exceptionally rare. Looking at his frequent unanimous opinions, his infrequent dissents, and his even less frequent concurrences, one gets an overall impression of the judge. The impression is that of a judge who can build a coalition to ensure unanimity or at least a majority, who is willing to state a dissent on those occasions when his position is irreconcilable with the majority position, but who rarely writes an opinion merely to offer another point of view

    Austrophaeogala Hsiao & Pollock 2022, GEN. NOV.

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    AUSTROPHAEOGALA GEN. NOV. (FIGS 3D–I, 6, 7) Z o o b a n k r e g i s t r a t i o n: u r n: l s i d: z o o b a n k. org:act: F95E43C8-9D2B-41BB-8FE9-5F1BF4302AC2. Type species: Austrophaeogala lawrencei sp. nov., here designated. Diagnosis: Body (Fig. 3D, E, F, G, H, I) large-sized (c. 5.5–8.0 mm), long oval to somewhat pear-shaped, surface sparsely covered with long, fine setae, setae not clustered. Head (Fig. 6A) subquadrate, frontoclypeal region distinctly depressed, frontal furrows (Fig. 6B) present but shallowly depressed; compound eyes small, ratio of eye diameter to interocular space c. 1:3.8–4.0, without impressed ocular grooves or carinae, interfacetal setae extremely short, not obvious; apical maxillary palpomere (Fig. 6C) elongate securiform; apical labial palpomere (Fig. 6D) oval, subtruncate apically; antennae (Fig. 6E) short, not extending to elytra, simple, filiform. Pronotum (Fig. 6F) transverse, distinctly wider than head, with sides arcuate, disc with shallow, paired depressions, lateral pronotal carinae (Fig. 6G) only visible basally; prosternum (Fig. 6H) with procoxal cavities closed externally, widely open internally. Elytra (Figs 3D, F, G, I, 6I) long oval, without apicoventral binding patches. Legs (Fig. 6J) with penultimate tarsomere expanded, not wider than length of distal tarsomere, claws simple, with basal swelling. Abdominal ventrite II of male (Fig. 6K) with sex patch. Etymology: The genus name is composed of the Latin prefix Austro-, southern, derived from Australia and the root - phaeogala (from Greek φαιογαλά, buckwheat), from its related genus Phaeogala. Gender: feminine. Distribution: Presumably endemic to Australia.Published as part of Hsiao, Yun & Pollock, Darren A., 2022, Morphology-based phylogeny of oval palm and flower beetles (Coleoptera: Mycteridae: Eurypinae), with descriptions of new genera and species from Australia, pp. 677-703 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 196 on page 691, DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab122, http://zenodo.org/record/718678

    Thisiomorphus caeruleus Pollock, 2016, new species

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    Thisiomorphus caeruleus, new species (Figs 4, 15, 37) Holotype, male, labeled: “Cerro Campana [8.66667, - 79.933333], 800m Panamá Prov., R.P. 29 Apr. ’ 70 H. P. Stockwell // Mycterus/ Lacconotus n. genus sp. 1 // HPSC // [large red label] HOLOTYPE &male; Thisiomorphus caeruleus Pollock ”, in USNM. Allotype, female, labeled: “ PANAMA: Panama Prov. Cerro Campana V- 17-1993 F. Andrews & A. Gilbert // CDAE // [large red label] ALLOTYPE &female; Thisiomorphus caeruleus Pollock ”, in CSCA. Paratypes: 1 female, labeled: “ Panamá: Panamá Pr. Cerro Campana, 850m 8 ° 40 ’N, 79 ° 56 ’W 21 Apr. ’ 73 Stockwell”, in USNM; 2 females, labeled: “PortoBello [9.550007, - 79.649962] PanMar 7 11 EA Schwarz”, in NMNH; 1 female, labeled: “ COSTA RICA: Heredia: Est. Biol. La Selva, 50-150m, 10 ° 26 ’N 84 °01’W [10.433333, - 84.016667]. 18.MAY. 1993, INBio-OET: M/05/ 100 // [blue label] CSCA Loan 2011 ”, in CSCA; 1 female, labeled: “ PANAMA: Panama Altos de Campana 26 May 1996 R. Turnbow”, in RHT; 1 male, labeled: “ COSTA RICA. Prov. Limón. R.B. Hitoy Cerere, Send. Espavel. 560m. 18 SEP- 4 OCT 2003, B. Gamboa, E. Rojas, W.Arana, Malaise # 3, L_S_ 401200 _ 569800 [9.661438, - 83.030709] # 75493 // [barcode label] INB 0003782859 INBIOCRI COSTA RICA ”, in INBC; 1 male, labeled: “ COSTA RICA. Prov. Alajuela, P.N. Volcán Tenorio, Guatuso, Falda Norte del Volcán Tenorio I, 1500 – 1600m, 30 MAY – 9 JUL 2005, J Azofeifa, Tp. malaise, L_N_ 294400 _ 426300 [10.670109, - 85.00698] # 83818 // [barcode label] INB 0003957449 INBIOCRI COSTA RICA ”, in INBC; 1 male, labeled: “ COSTA RICA. Prov. Limón. Pococí, Sector Cerro Cocorí, Finca de Elias Rojas. 160m. 23 NOV 1993 - 3 ENE 1994, E. Rojas, Malaise, L N 286000 _ 567500 [10.594274, - 83.716512] # 2593 // [barcode label] INB 0003819911 INBIOCRI COSTA RICA ”, in INBC; 1 male, labeled: “ COSTA RICA. Prov. Limón, Valle de la Estrella, R.B. Hitoy Cerere. Estación Hitoy Cerere. 100m. 0 4 MAR 1994. G. Carballo. Malaise. L_N_ 643400 _ 184600 [9.675378, - 83.026776] # 2889 // [barcode label] INB 0003497347 INBIOCRI COSTA RICA ”, in INBC. Derivation of specific epithet. From the Latin word “ caeruleus ”, meaning “blue”, in allusion to the bluemetallic dorsal color of individuals of this species. Diagnosis. Adults of this species share the following diagnostic features: color uniform, dark brown to piceous, with at least a trace of blue to purple metallic sheen; lateral margins of pronotum subparallel basally, then anteriorly arcuate. Description. Measurements (mm, N = 9): HL = 0.80–0.96; PL = 0.80–0.92; EL = 3.00– 3.72; GHW = 1.00– 1.12; GPW = 1.08–1.28; GEW = 1.60–2.24; TL = 4.64–5.40. Ratios: EL/GEW = 1.54–1.95; GPW/PL = 1.30–1.43; TL/GEW = 2.38–2.93; GPW/GHW = 1.08–1.15. With characters of Thisiomorphus, and the following: Body relatively elongate, narrowly ovate (TL / GEW 2.65), lateral elytral margins slightly arcuate. Color. Antennae uniformly light rufous; maxillary palpi with 2 basal segments rufo-testaceous, distal palpomere distinctly darker, piceous; head and pronotum concolorous, rufo-piceous to near black, with slight bluepurple metallic sheen; elytra slightly lighter in color than forebody, also with metallic sheen; femora piceous, tibieae and especially tarsi lighter, rufous; venter uniformly dark, piceous. Antennae moderately elongate, antennomeres 3–7 filiform; antennomeres 8–10 relatively elongate, slightly expanded distally. Pronotum moderately wider than long (GPW / PL 1.37), slightly wider than head (GPW / GHW 1.12); lateral margins subparallel basally, then arcuate anteriorly, maximum width about midlength; hind angles not protruding; dorsal surface evenly convex, without depressions. Male genitalia. Parameres shorter than basale, inner margins shallowly sinuate basally; basale with anterior margin distinctly curved, lateral margins sinuate. Distribution. Specimens are known from COSTA RICA (Alajuela, Heredia, Limón) and PANAMA (Coclé, Colón, Panamá).Published as part of Pollock, Darren A., 2016, Revision of Thisiomorphus Pic (Coleoptera: Mycteridae: Eurypinae) with descriptions of eleven new species from Central and South America and a key to genera of Neotropical Eurypinae, pp. 301-322 in Zootaxa 4093 (3) on page 313, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4093.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/26410

    Contract, Race, and Freedom of Labor in the Constitutional Law of “Involuntary Servitude”

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    The Supreme Court has yet to adopt and apply a standard for assessing labor rights claims under the Involuntary Servitude Clause of the Thirteenth Amendment. This Article suggests that one may be found in the leading decision of Pollock v. Williams (1944), which contains the Court’s most thorough discussion of the interpretive issues. Under Pollock, a claimed right should be protected if it is necessary to provide workers with the “power below” and employers the “incentive above” to prevent “a harsh overlordship or unwholesome conditions of work.” Although this is not the only conceivable standard, it does fit well with the text, history, and case law of the Amendment. The absence of any racial element, which might appear dishonest in light of the fact that most of the leading cases involved workers of color, nevertheless corresponds to the Amendment’s original meaning and appears to have important advantages from a doctrinal point of view. The Article discusses the legal and philosophical justifications of various labor rights in relation to the Pollock standard, including the right to quit, the right to change employers, the right to name the wages for which one is willing to work, and the right to strike.Peer reviewe
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