The Great Concentration: SMSA's From Boston to Washington

1964 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 3
Author(s):  
Irene B. Taeuber ◽  
Conrad Taeuber
Keyword(s):  
Daedalus ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 145 (3) ◽  
pp. 109-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Archie Brown

The Führerprinzip has not been confined to Nazi Germany. The cult of the strong leader thrives in many authoritarian regimes and has its echoes even in contemporary democracies. The belief that the more power a president or prime minister wields the more we should be impressed by that politician is a dangerous fallacy. In authoritarian regimes, a more collective leadership is a lesser evil than personal dictatorship. In countries moving from authoritarian rule to democracy, collegial, inclusive, and collective leadership is more conducive to successful transition than great concentration of power in the hands of one individual at the top of the hierarchy. Democracies also benefit from a government led by a team in which there is no obsequiousness or hesitation in contradicting the top leader. Wise decisions are less likely to be forthcoming when one person can predetermine the outcome of a meeting or foreclose the discussion by pulling rank.


1918 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 341-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Warfield T. Longcope ◽  
Francis M. Rackemann

1. The injection of horse serum either in small or in large amounts in human beings is always followed sooner or later by the development of hypersensitiveness of the skin to subsequent injections of horse serum. For the development of this reaction serum disease is not essential. 2. The blood serum of most patients who suffer from an attack of serum disease following injections of horse serum shows anaphylactin and precipitin for horse serum. 3. Anaphylactin and precipitin cannot be demonstrated in the blood serum of patients treated with horse serum who do not later present symptoms of serum sickness. 4. The appearance of anaphylactin and precipitin precedes shortly recovery from the disease. 5. With the appearance in the serum of antibodies to horse serum in great concentration, the antigen rapidly diminishes or disappears. 6. It is probable that the extrusion of these antibodies into the circulation is the result and not the cause of serum sickness. Their presence serves to neutralize or destroy the antigen and thus determines the recovery from serum sickness.


Author(s):  
G. Vettolani ◽  
G. Baiesi-Pillastrini ◽  
R. Scaramella ◽  
G. Zamorani ◽  
G. Chincarini

Philosophy ◽  
1933 ◽  
Vol 8 (32) ◽  
pp. 468-471
Author(s):  
Guido de Ruggiero

There has lately been published a posthumous work on “pure realism” by an Italian philosopher who died a little while ago at an early age. He had been working on the book for some time with great concentration of energy, but did not live to finish it. In the form in which it has been edited for publication some parts of it have been developed almost to completion, while others are mere sketches and notes—though not wanting in interest, for they reveal the author's method of working, and expose doubts and difficulties in the immediate form in which they presented themselves to his mind and found the way to a solution. The most complete section is one dealing with the critique of idealism, a critique which, while it is not devoid of ingenuity, is in the main stringent and vigorous, and deserves particularly the consideration of idealists. The principal thesis is that there are two possible solutions of the problem of consciousness. It admits the possibility either that consciousness itself creates its own world, endowing it, thanks to the action of the mind on its own images, with those physical attributes that make it appear external to the subject or independent of the activity by virtue of which it is formed (idealism); or that consciousness is the immediate revelation of the world itself to itself, a revelation that can only consist in a unique act whereby the world establishes itself as identical with itself and as different from itself, as internal and external knowing and known, spirit and nature (realism). At the basis of idealism, according to Ranzoli, is the implied presupposition (of the philosophy of Empedocles) that like is conscious only of like, and at the basis of realism is the Anaxagorean presupposition that opposite is conscious of opposite.


2005 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 822-842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitris Asimakoulas

Abstract Being rooted in a specific cultural and linguistic context, humour can pose significant problems to translation. This paper will discuss data collected from films in the light of a suggested framework based on script theory of humour initially proposed by Attardo and specifically adapted here for subtitling. The data include such categories as wordplay, where a more ‘semiotic’ approach is employed, comparisons, parody, disparagement and register humour. These data were culled from two films translated into Greek: Airplane! (1980), directed by David Zucker and Jim Abrahams and The Naked Gun: From the Files of the Police Squad (1988), directed by David Zucker, which exhibit a great concentration of verbal humorous sequences and inventive puns. It will be suggested that there was leeway to creatively solve linguistically/culturally based translation problems, although inconsistencies were to be observed.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1021-1026 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Green ◽  
K. G. McNeill ◽  
G. A. Robinson

Using a scintillation spectrometer, measurements have been made of the distribution of potassium and radioactive caesium in the bodies of the cow and the pig as a result of the ingestion of these materials. The results of these experiments, which are based on measurements of the radioactivity normally found in foodstuffs and in animals, agree with those of earlier experiments in that there is no great concentration of Cs137 apparent in any one organ. However, there is evidence for preferential concentration in the kidney and testes.


1923 ◽  
Vol s2-67 (267) ◽  
pp. 473-494
Author(s):  
J. S. HUXLEY ◽  
G. R. DE BEER

1. Confirmation is given of the results of Loeb, Thacher, Godlewski and Gast, and others, in showing that the hydranths of hydroids (in this case Obelia and Campanularia) when exposed to unfavourable conditions proceed to dedifferentiate and to be resorbed, wholly or mainly, into the stem. 2. Exposure to toxic agencies accelerates the process. Too great concentration of poison kills the zooids before dedifferentiation starts. Below the death-point, the acceleration is proportional to the concentration. 3. The effect is non-specific, both KCN and HgCl2 producing the same result as prolonged exposure to laboratory conditions. 4. When zooids are separated from the stem, resorption is impossible. Dedifferentiation, however, proceeds until an ovoid undifferentiated body packed with cells is produced. 5. The tentacles are first affected, then the hypostome. In early stages, separate tentacles may fuse locally. Stumps of tentacles are, however, still present after the hypostome has quite disappeared. The body becomes ovoid, then spherical, and is finally reduced to a minute pigmented dot. 6. The surface tension of the dedifferentiated zooid causes the emigrated zooid cells to flow into the stem. In later stages spontaneous pulsations of the stem and of the zooid (these possibly not spontaneous) occur. 7. Dedifferentiation of the tissues of the tentacles starts at the tip. Progressive histological dedifferentiation of the endoderm cells can thus be clearly followed in a single section. 8. Only after the mesoglaea at the base of the tentacle has ruptured can the contents be resorbed (confirming Thacher). 9. Cnidoblasts with nematocysts can be distinguished within the gastrovascular cavity as resorption proceeds. They may also be seen phagocytosed within large cells, presumably immigrated endoderm cells. 10. The dedifferentiation is regarded as due to interference with general metabolic processes, and especially with the production of the energy needed to maintain form against surfacetension. 11. Resorption is regarded as the natural result of dedifferentiation when there are adjacent cavities into which the cells can migrate. In higher forms it has been largely replaced by phagocytosis.


2011 ◽  
Vol 27 (suppl 2) ◽  
pp. s263-s271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnaldo Prata Barbosa ◽  
Antônio José Ledo Alves da Cunha

The objective of this study was to describe the characteristics of neonatal and pediatric intensive care units (ICU) and beds in Rio de Janeiro, correlating with population demands in 1997 and 2007. All neonatal and pediatric ICUs were visited, identifying the availability and type of beds. Comparisons were made between: supply and demand using projected need for beds for the population; public and private ICUs; and geographical regions. In 2007, 95 units were included totaling 1,094 beds (74 units and 1,080 beds in 1997): 51% public and 48% private (47% and 52% in 1997); 47% neonatal, 18% pediatric and 35% mixed units. Most units were located in the metropolitan area. The distribution of public and private beds was similar in the metropolitan area in both periods; in the interior, public beds tripled. Access has improved, mainly in the interior, but there is still no equity in the distribution of and accessibility to the available beds, with a shortage in the public sector, an excess in the private sector, and a great concentration in the metropolitan area.


1917 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Montrose T. Burrows ◽  
Clarence A. Neymann

Summing up these results, we found that all the ten α-amino-acids used inhibited the growth of the cells and finally killed the cultures. This inhibition is preceded by a short period of activity. The typical effect on the cells is shown in Figs. 1 and 2. The first (Fig. 1) is a control culture showing the usual growth of cells and their typical spindle shape form. The second (Fig. 2) is a culture in plasma plus asparagine showing the cells rounded off and beginning to undergo dissolution. We do not wish to draw too extensive conclusions from these experiments, but we believe that toxicity of α-amino-acids towards growing cells has been shown beyond a reasonable doubt; while we have found that compounds of higher molecular weight, namely, the peptones of egg yolk and proteins, are non-toxic. This toxicity depends upon the concentration and the time that the cells are exposed to their action. As these factors are reduced, the toxicity is decreased. In this respect, these substances are similar to all cell poisons. Applying these results to the work done on the intravenous injection of digestion mixtures, we believe that we have found a reason for the death of the experimental animals when the hydrolyzed proteins were injected too rapidly. Buglia found that large amounts of α-amino-acids could be injected into the circulation without causing deep-seated changes in the renal and intestinal functions, provided they were injected slowly enough; in fact, that enough of these mixtures could be injected in this way to cover the nitrogen consumption of the body. This injection, however, was always accompanied by an α-amino excretion through the urine and an increase of the peristalsis, of the intestine, with resultant liquid stools. As is well known, a sudden great concentration of these substances in the blood of an animal causes death. These results agree with our findings Folin and Denis demonstrated the fact that α-amino-acids probably pass into the circulation through the intestines. Van Slyke and Meyer, by means of Van Slyke's nitrogen method, have practically proven this, and Abel, Rowntree, and Turner, and Abderhalden have lately succeeded in obtaining α-amino-acids in crystalline form from the blood. Van Slyke and Meyer have shown that the tissues take up α-amino-acids to a certain point, but that after this the limit of saturation is reached. This is not so in the liver, which continually desaturates itself by metabolizing the α-amino-acids that it has absorbed, and consequently maintains indefinitely its power of removing them from the circulation, as long as they enter it no faster than the liver can metabolize them. Marshall and Rowntree have shown that there is an increase of the α-amino-acid concentration in the blood after injuries to the liver, which have caused deep-seated anatomical changes. Our experiments prove that tissue cells in general are unable to live in the presence of any great concentration of these acids. At the present time we do not feel able to give an explanation of the significance of this evident toxicity. However, the fact in itself seems to indicate that we should expect stimulation from a certain increase of the α-amino-acid concentration in the body, or the concentration of any one of the acids, while a greater increase would lead to marked disturbances of the metabolism.


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