925 resultados para Joueurs de tennis
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Delaware sets the governance standards for most public companies. The ability to attract corporations could not be explained solely by the existence of a favorable statutory regime. Delaware was not invariably the first or the only state to implement management friendly provisions. Given the interpretive gaps in the statute and the critical importance of the common law in the governance process, courts played an outsized role in setting legal standards. The management friendly nature of the Delaware courts contributed significantly to the state’s attraction to public corporations. A current example of a management friendly trend in the case law had seen the recent decisions setting out the board’s authority to adopt bylaws under Section 109 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (DGCL), particularly those involving the shifting of fees in litigation against the corporation or its directors. The DGCL allows bylaws that address “the business of the corporation, the conduct of its affairs, and its rights or powers or the rights or powers of its stockholders, directors, officers or employees.” The broad parameters are, however, subject to limits. Bylaws cannot be inconsistent with the certificate of incorporation or “the law.” Law includes the common law. The Delaware courts have used the limitations imposed by “the law” to severely restrict the reach of shareholder inspired bylaws. The courts have not used the same principles to impose similar restraints on bylaws adopted by the board of directors. This can be seen with respect to bylaws that restrict or even eliminate the right of shareholders to bring actions against management and the corporation. In ATP Tour, Inc. v. Deutscher Tennis Bund the court approved a fee shifting bylaw that had littl relationship to the internal affairs of the corporation. The decision upheld the bylaw as facially valid.The decision ignored a number of obvious legal infirmities. Among other things, the decision did not adequately address the requirement in Section 109(b) that bylaws be consistent with “the law.” The decision obliquely acknowledged that the provisions would “by their nature, deter litigation” but otherwise made no effort to assess the impact of this deterrence on shareholders causes of action. The provision in fact had the practical effect of restricting, if not eliminating, litigation rights granted by the DGCL and the common law. Perhaps most significantly, however, the bylaws significantly limited common law rights of shareholders to bring actions against the corporation and the board. Given the high dismissal rates for these actions, fee shifting bylaws imposed a meaningful risk of liability on plaintiffs. Moreover, because judgments in derivative suits were paid to the corporation, shareholders serving as plaintiffs confronted the risk of liability without any offsetting direct benefit. By preventing suits in this area, the bylaw effectively insulated the behavior of boards from legal challenge. The ATP decision was poorly reasoned and overstepped acceptable boundaries. The management friendly decision threatened the preeminent role of Delaware in the development of corporate law. The decision raised the specter of federal intervention and the potential for meaningful competition from the states. Because the opinion examined the bylaw in the context of non-stock companies, the reasoning may remain applicable only to those entities and never make the leap to for-profit stock corporations. Nonetheless, the analysis reflects a management friendly approach that does not adequately take into account the impact of the provision on the rights of shareholders.
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This article analyzes the relationship between two types of performances, one on the ground (of a tennis court) and the other on the floor (of the stock market). The empirical application looks into the tennis player, Rafael Nadal, and his endorsing firms. The findings show a positive reaction in the market value when the tennis player wins matches in the Grand Slams, the intriguing effect being the diminishing sensitivity pattern that such reaction shows and the absence of loss aversion.
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The purpose of the present study was to describe patterns in the dynamics of families of talented athletes throughout their development in sport. Four families, including three families of elite rowers and one family of an elite tennis player were examined. The framework provided by Ericsson, Krampe, and Tesch- Römer (1993) to explain expert performance served as the theoretical basis for the study. Ericsson et al. suggested that the acquisition of expert performance involves operating within three types of constraints: motivational, effort, and resource. In-depth interviews were conducted with each athlete, parent, and sibling to explore how they have dealt with these three constraints. A total of 15 individual interviews were conducted. Results permitted the identification of three phases of participation from early childhood to late adolescence: the sampling years, the specializing years, and the investment years. The dynamics of the family in each of these phases of development is discussed
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Dans cette thèse, l’impact du polymorphisme rs3846662 sur l’épissage alternatif de la 3-hydroxy-3-méthylglutaryl coenzyme A réductase (HMGCR) a été investigué in vivo, chez des patients atteints d’hypercholestérolémie familiale (HF) ou de maladie d’Alzheimer (MA). Le premier manuscrit adresse la problématique de la normalisation de la quantification relative des ARNm par PCR quantitative. Les découvertes présentées dans ce manuscrit nous ont permis de déterminer avec un haut niveau de confiance les gènes de référence à utiliser pour la quantification relative des niveaux d’ARNm de l’HMGCR dans des échantillons de sang (troisième manuscrit) et de tissus cérébraux post-mortem (quatrième manuscrit). Dans le deuxième manuscrit, nous démontrons grâce à l’emploi de trois cohortes de patients distinctes, soit la population canadienne française du Québec et les deux populations nord américaines « Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study (ADCS) » et « Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) », que le génotype AA au locus rs3846662 confère à ces porteurs une protection considérable contre la MA. Les femmes porteuses de ce génotype voient leur risque de MA diminuer de près de 50% et l’âge d’apparition de leurs premiers symptômes retarder de 3.6 ans. Les porteurs de l’allèle à risque APOE4 voient pour leur part leurs niveaux de plaques séniles et dégénérescences neurofibrillaires diminuer significativement en présence du génotype AA. Enfin, les individus atteints de déficit cognitif léger et porteurs à la fois de l’allèle APOE4 et du génotype protecteur AA voient leur risque de convertir vers la MA chuter de 76 à 27%. Dans le troisième manuscrit, nous constatons que les individus atteints d’HF et porteurs du génotype AA ont, contrairement au modèle établi chez les gens normaux, des niveaux plus élevés de cholestérol total et de LDL-C avant traitement comparativement aux porteurs de l’allèle G. Le fait que cette association n’est observée que chez les non porteurs de l’APOE4 et que les femmes porteuses du génotype AA présentent à la fois une augmentation des niveaux d’ARNm totaux et une résistance aux traitements par statines, nous indique que ce génotype influencerait non seulement l’épissage alternatif, mais également la transcription de l’HMGCR. Comme une revue exhaustive de la littérature ne révèle aucune étude abondant dans ce sens, nos résultats suggèrent l’existence de joueurs encore inconnus qui viennent influencer la relation entre le génotype AA, l’épissage alternatif et les niveaux d’ARNm de l’HMGCR. Dans le quatrième manuscrit, l’absence d’associations entre le génotype AA et les niveaux d’ARNm Δ13 ou de protéines HMGCR nous suggère fortement que ce polymorphisme est non fonctionnel dans le SNC affecté par la MA. Une étude approfondie de la littérature nous a permis d’étayer cette hypothèse puisque les niveaux de HNRNPA1, la ribonucléoprotéine influencée par l’allèle au locus rs3846662, sont considérablement réduits dans la MA et le vieillissement. Il est donc proposé que les effets protecteurs contre la MA associés au génotype AA soient le résultat d’une action indirecte sur le processus physiopathologique.
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Projet de recherche réalisé en 2014-2015 avec l'appui du Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et culture.
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Projet de recherche réalisé en 2014-2015 avec l'appui du Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et culture.
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Built 1914; removed 1956. Tennis courts removed 1955. Located where east wing of Medical Science I is now. On verso: Hospital, University. Contagious Disease Hospital, August, 1950
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William L. Jenney, architect. Originally University Museum, built 1880-1881. Roof replaced 1894. Museum moved in 1928. Housed Department of Romance Languages after 1928. Building razed in 1958. Old University Hall on left.
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Front Row: athletic trainer Keli Coughlin, Julie Scherer, Linnea Mendoza, Jane Stevens, Erin McGovern, Meg Akehi, Chereena Tennis, Emily Carr, Berit Volstad, asst. coach Jennifer Dhaenen
Back Row: head coach Greg Giovanazzi, Shareen Luze, Shannon Brownlee, Suzy O'Donnell, Darlene Recker, Aimee Smith, Colleen Miniuk, Sarah Jackson, Ramona Cox, asst. coach Mora Kanim.
Not pictured: Kristen Ruschiensky.
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Front Row: Colleen Miniuk, Sarah Jackson, Darlene Recker, Shannon Brownlee, Suzy O'Donnell, Ramona Cox, Kristen Ruschiensky, administrative assistant Susan McAvoy
Back row: Meg Akehi, assistant coach Amy Verhoeven, Chereena Tennis, head coach Greg Giovanazzi, Shareen Luze, Karen Chase, Linsey Ebert, Jeanine Szczesniak, Jane Stevens, Erin McGovern, Linnea Mendoza, assistant coach Mora Kanim, athletic medicine Keli Coughlin.
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Front Row: athletic trainer Keli Coughlin, assistant coach Irene Renteria, head coach Greg Giovanazzi, assistant coach Mora Kanim, student trainer Suzanne Dolembo.
Middle Row: Erin McGovern, Ramona Cox, Sarah Jackson, Colleen Miniuk, Shareen Luze, Darlene Recker, Kristen Ruschiensky, Jane Stevens, Chereena Tennis, Linnea Mendoza, Meg Akehi.
Back Row: Carrie Ricker, Kiley Hansen, Shari Turner, Linsey Ebert, Anne Poglits, Jennifer Allen, Karen Chase, Maggie Cooper, Jeanine Szczesniak.
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Front Row: Sarah Jackson, Darlene Recker, Linnea Mendoza.
Second Row: athletic trainer Keli Coughlin, assistant coach Irene Renteria, Missy Akey, Chereena Tennis, Shawna Olson, Jane Stevens.
Third Row: assistant coach Aimee Smith, Jenny Schroeder, Sarah Behnke, Linsey Ebert, Karen Chase, Maggie Cooper, Alija Pittenger.
Back Row: Jeanine Szczesniak, C.C. Pryor, Joanna Fielder, Anne Poglits, Annie Maxwell, Shari Turner.
Not pictured: Carrie Ricker.
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Front Row: Nicole Kacor, Amy DeCinces, Jenny Lachapelle, Shannon Melka.
Middle Row: student athletic trainer Anna Napolitano, Jeanine Szczesniak, Chereena Tennis, Jane Stevens, Linsey Ebert, Karen Chase, Maggie Cooper, athletic trainer Joel Pickerman
Back Row: assistant coach Aimee Smith, Irene Renteria - assistant coach, Alija Pittenger, C.C. Pryor, Sarah Behnke, Katrina Lehman, Anne Poglits, Joanna Fielder, Annie Maxwell, Carrie Ricker, Shawna Olson, undergraduate assistant coach Ramona Cox, head coach Greg Giovanazzi
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Imperfect: frontpiece wanting. cf. v.1, p. 4211.
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The reporter who made himself king.--Midsummer pirates.--Richard Carr's baby.--The great Tri-club tennis tournament.--The jump at Corey's slip.--The Van Bibber baseball club.--The story of a jockey.