Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Accidental injury (1)
- Claim filing (1)
- Continuing negligence (1)
- Cut-off date (1)
- Equity jurisdiction (1)
-
- Equity power (1)
- Incompetent person (1)
- Liability (1)
- Mental handicap (1)
- Mental health (1)
- Occupational disease (1)
- Overexposure (1)
- Personal injury (1)
- Radiation (1)
- Radioactivity (1)
- Recovery (1)
- Salpingectomy (1)
- Statute of limitations (1)
- Statutory time limitation (1)
- Sterilization law (1)
- Time limitation (1)
- Workmen's compensation (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Radiation Injuries And Time Limitations In Workmen's Compensation Cases, Samuel D. Estep, Walter R. Allan
Radiation Injuries And Time Limitations In Workmen's Compensation Cases, Samuel D. Estep, Walter R. Allan
Michigan Law Review
The increasing use of radioactive materials and radiation-producing devices in industry and elsewhere makes it clear that injuries from exposure to radiation must be anticipated. It becomes relevant, therefore, to inquire into the extent to which the present workmen's compensation statutes will be able to cope with the injuries which may arise from the use of this new source of energy.
Fraenkel: Lawyer's Medical Cyclopedia Of Personal Injuries And Allied Specialties, C. W. Muehlberger Ph.D.
Fraenkel: Lawyer's Medical Cyclopedia Of Personal Injuries And Allied Specialties, C. W. Muehlberger Ph.D.
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Lawyer's Medical Cyclopedia of Personal Injuries and Allied Specialties . Edited by Charles ]. Fraenkel, M.D., and others.
Courts-Scope Of Authority-Sterilization Of Mental Defectives, William R. Warnock
Courts-Scope Of Authority-Sterilization Of Mental Defectives, William R. Warnock
Michigan Law Review
Respondent, age nineteen, appeared before the probate court of Muskingum County, Ohio, upon an affidavit filed by her mother alleging the child to be feeble-minded and in need of medical treatment. Results of psychological tests were presented at the hearing, revealing that respondent had an intelligence quotient of thirty-six and was therefore a feeble-minded person within the statutory definition. Respondent had had one illegitimate child, for whom she was unable to provide even rudimentary care or financial support, and was physically capable of bearing more children. Taking judicial notice that the state mental hospitals were then overcrowded and unable to …