John C. ECCLES' Private Library: CATALOGUE (Labels Underlined)
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Guide Storico-Artistiche Della Svizzera Canton Ticino
Guide storico-artistiche della Svizzera Canton Ticino L’oratorio del Corpus Domini di Bellinzona (ital., ted.) Maria Fazioli Foletti. 2017. n. 991. 24 p. CHF 13.- Il Cimitero monumentale di Lugano (ital.) Cristina Brazzola, Paola Capozza, Giovanna Ginex. 2016. n. 986.987. 72 p. CHF 18.- Il complesso di Santa Maria degli Angeli e il centro culturale LAC Lugano Arte e Cultura (ital., ted., ingl.) Riccardo Bergossi, Lara Calderari. 2015. n. 978-979. 52 p. CHF 15.- Il Sacro Monte della Madonna del Sasso a Orselina (ital., ted., franc., ingl.) Lara Calderari, Simona Martinoli, Patrizio Pedrioli. 2015. n. 966-967. 48 p. CHF 15.- Der Monte Verità von Ascona (ted.) Mara Folini. 2013. n. 939-940. 44 p. CHF 13.- Remo Rossi (ital., ted.) Diana Rizzi. 2012. n. 909. 40 p. CHF 12.- La chiesa di S. Maria della Misericordia e il Collegio Papio di Ascona (ital., ted.) Daniela Pace, Michela Zucconi-Poncini. 2012. n. 907. 48 p. CHF 15.- Villa dei Cedri a Bellinzona (ital.) Simona Martinoli. 2011 n. 897. 36 p. CHF 10.- I castelli di Bellinzona (ital., ted., ingl.) Werner Meyer, Patricia Cavadini-Bielander. 2010. n. 866-867. 58 p. CHF 13.– Agnuzzo (ital., ted.) Jürg Ganz. 2010. n. 876. 32 p. CHF 8.– Collina d’Oro (ital., ted.) Katja Bigger. 2010. n. 892. 46 p. CHF 12.– www.gsk.ch, [email protected] Pavillonweg 2, CH-3012 Bern, T +41 (0)31 308 38 38, F +41 (0)31 301 69 91 Il cimitero di Bellinzona Simona Martinoli, Cristina Palma, Lucia Pedrini-Stanga, Diana Rizzi. 2009. -
書 名 等 発行年 出版社 受賞年 備考 N1 Ueber Das Zustandekommen Der
書 名 等 発行年 出版社 受賞年 備考 Ueber das Zustandekommen der Diphtherie-immunitat und der Tetanus-Immunitat bei thieren / Emil Adolf N1 1890 Georg thieme 1901 von Behring N2 Diphtherie und tetanus immunitaet / Emil Adolf von Behring und Kitasato 19-- [Akitomo Matsuki] 1901 Malarial fever its cause, prevention and treatment containing full details for the use of travellers, University press of N3 1902 1902 sportsmen, soldiers, and residents in malarious places / by Ronald Ross liverpool Ueber die Anwendung von concentrirten chemischen Lichtstrahlen in der Medicin / von Prof. Dr. Niels N4 1899 F.C.W.Vogel 1903 Ryberg Finsen Mit 4 Abbildungen und 2 Tafeln Twenty-five years of objective study of the higher nervous activity (behaviour) of animals / Ivan N5 Petrovitch Pavlov ; translated and edited by W. Horsley Gantt ; with the collaboration of G. Volborth ; and c1928 International Publishing 1904 an introduction by Walter B. Cannon Conditioned reflexes : an investigation of the physiological activity of the cerebral cortex / by Ivan Oxford University N6 1927 1904 Petrovitch Pavlov ; translated and edited by G.V. Anrep Press N7 Die Ätiologie und die Bekämpfung der Tuberkulose / Robert Koch ; eingeleitet von M. Kirchner 1912 J.A.Barth 1905 N8 Neue Darstellung vom histologischen Bau des Centralnervensystems / von Santiago Ramón y Cajal 1893 Veit 1906 Traité des fiévres palustres : avec la description des microbes du paludisme / par Charles Louis Alphonse N9 1884 Octave Doin 1907 Laveran N10 Embryologie des Scorpions / von Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov 1870 Wilhelm Engelmann 1908 Immunität bei Infektionskrankheiten / Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov ; einzig autorisierte übersetzung von Julius N11 1902 Gustav Fischer 1908 Meyer Die experimentelle Chemotherapie der Spirillosen : Syphilis, Rückfallfieber, Hühnerspirillose, Frambösie / N12 1910 J.Springer 1908 von Paul Ehrlich und S. -
Fleming Vs. Florey: It All Comes Down to the Mold Kristin Hess La Salle University
The Histories Volume 2 | Issue 1 Article 3 Fleming vs. Florey: It All Comes Down to the Mold Kristin Hess La Salle University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lasalle.edu/the_histories Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Hess, Kristin () "Fleming vs. Florey: It All Comes Down to the Mold," The Histories: Vol. 2 : Iss. 1 , Article 3. Available at: https://digitalcommons.lasalle.edu/the_histories/vol2/iss1/3 This Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Scholarship at La Salle University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The iH stories by an authorized editor of La Salle University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Histories, Vol 2, No. 1 Page 3 Fleming vs. Florey: It All Comes Down to the Mold Kristen Hess Without penicillin, the world as it is known today would not exist. Simple infections, earaches, menial operations, and diseases, like syphilis and pneumonia, would possibly all end fatally, shortening the life expectancy of the population, affecting everything from family-size and marriage to retirement plans and insurance policies. So how did this “wonder drug” come into existence and who is behind the development of penicillin? The majority of the population has heard the “Eureka!” story of Alexander Fleming and his famous petri dish with the unusual mold growth, Penicillium notatum. Very few realize that there are not only different variations of the Fleming discovery but that there are also other people who were vitally important to the development of penicillin as an effective drug. -
Cholinergic Cells and Pathways
2 Cholinergic Cells and Pathways A. History of Methodological Feldberg was struck with the uneven distribu- Development Needed to tion of ACh, sites of ACh release and synthesis, Defi ne the Cholinergic and activities of ChEs in the CNS; these fi ndings Neuron, Explain led him to postulate that “the central nervous system is built of cholinergic and noncholinergic Acetylcholine Release, neurones,” distributed in an alternative fashion and Establish Central (Feldberg, 1945). This was the fi rst step toward Cholinergic Pathways the notion of a transmitter, including ACh CNS pathways; in fact, Feldberg (1945) was perhaps 1. What Led to Establishing the fi rst investigator to employ the term “central Cholinergic Pathways? pathway” to denote “transmission . through the mediation of acetylcholine across a number a. Sir Henry Dale and Sir William of . central . synapses.” The evidence in Feldberg and the Existence of question was obtained via the use of several Cholinergic Pathways extraction methods and bioassays for extracted ACh, although occasionally chemical identifi ca- The central presence of cholinergic trans- tion was attempted (Stedman and Stedman, 1937). mission was fi rst hypothesized by Sir Henry Also, collecting released ACh whether from the Dale (1937). The Stedmans, Paul Mann, John cerebrospinal fl uid or via perfusion of appropriate Quastel, and Maurice Tennenbaum, Dale’s spinal or brain sites was helpful with formulating associate William (now Sir William) Feldberg, Feldberg’s notion (Feldberg, 1945; Bulbring and and his coworkers, including Martha Vogt and Burn, 1941). Catherine Hebb, and Josiah Burn and Edith A digression is warranted. Although Zenon Bulbring provided additional evidence for Dale’s Bacq had already employed chemical identifi ca- hypothesis; this evidence included the demon- tion of endogenous ACh in 1935, his method was stration of the central nervous system (CNS) pre- complex and impracticable. -
Howard-Florey-Maker
_ ....II""lle,st'Ol)' of "Ie lin ~t tlt:Mc 'c y~ successfullY to rmat. pea WIth ~ IJ&. iBfoctiOus'diseases - begins-with &bit Qf IuC AI~ PI tIlil1g, a .S 9itisb ~lientlst.notlcEid In t$!B ftJal mould.,ad l:!"eveAted growth of ~ qerms {bacterial 1., lils ~ the ~In plot 0 me story 1'I0J0IYl1l$ Sr ~pvay Qf penidll 10 ~ years la1er by arl·Aus\ 1;1 Sdetl bam t'!undred s R Y~'89D this year, H'owar~ I: fIotey and h d ~ team's ~ systttma!JQ, detalla wotk "'~ Jl 11_ fJTIed petlicilin from an 53 i[l~1Jlg o~ , nto-a life saver. ' Emma ,au fY 50 IJSOO to tm e teliladll', at t'l'wiMlstral r:Ja • U verslty's JOOf\ CtJrti[l Scbool of Moolaal Rasecll'eh (HQw FJor~ ptayed 8 c roI'a II'l the-est)bllshmflnt at itI& School god ~!lr'S1ty t In h 11M), TIll> !/O"'"_....... ot l!1te.dJ1l1II d1Haie'&."4ICh .. po.~a~1I ~ Erl'1lil"1a's.lile w~!i8Vedby penicillin irllll IIlIaod .. 1111 IIihi' 1111\1:_ tva ~ntil>iol~; 8uI1hft;e phDl Cl(a pauilftl n Get'rJ1art refiJg g mp. tt WQf1d War II. ,1<42 -"ow ho"; b.d thlnP COIH~. Pft_ 1 lind Imagine hO\ she fett any years later. 2 ~ '1M .III~ !It II YOUl1'llll1J1 willi _I J."..,tllltw...... OlIl1dltlicln ,..,_by the tt.iituI t cooid~ blITlping iHlo mtJY wh fa lIay ..fI...boiIJg IIlven penldll" {JItIiJID 3" _ hIld ~ woriled- the man who made tile shown .~"in.IH",p"'-.ntIIIf tbll JIIII!Ilt dllly g~pIy mpooicillin ~bte. -
Sir Howard Florey - Biography
Sir Howard Florey - Biography Sir Howard Florey – Biography The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Sir Howard Walter Florey was 1945 born on September 24, 1898, at Presentation Speech Adelaide, South Australia, the son Educational of Joseph and Bertha Mary Florey. His early education was at St. Sir Alexander Fleming Peter's Collegiate School, Adelaide, Biography Nobel Lecture following which he went on to Banquet Speech Adelaide University where he Documentary graduated M.B., B.S. in 1921. He Other Resources was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford, Ernst B. Chain leading to the degrees of B.Sc. and Biography M.A. (1924). He then went to Nobel Lecture Cambridge as a John Lucas Walker Banquet Speech Student. In 1925 he visited the United States on a Rockefeller Other Resources Travelling Fellowship for a year, returning in 1926 to a Fellowship at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, receiving Sir Howard Florey here his Ph.D. in 1927. He also held at this time the Freedom Biography Research Fellowship at the London Hospital. In 1927 he was Nobel Lecture appointed Huddersfield Lecturer in Special Pathology at Banquet Speech Cambridge. In 1931 he succeeded to the Joseph Hunter Chair of Pathology at the University of Sheffield. 1944 1946 Leaving Sheffield in 1935 he became Professor of Pathology and a Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. He was made an The 1945 Prize in: Physics Honorary Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge in Chemistry 1946 and an Honorary Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford in Physiology or Medicine 1952. In 1962 he was made Provost of The Queen's College, Literature Oxford. -
The Roundhouse of International Spirits’
‘the roundhouse of international spirits’ Hans Arp, Raffael Benazzi Julius Bissier Ben Nicholson Hans Richter Mark Tobey Italo Valenti in the Ticino 17 January - 15 March 2009 Teachers’ Pack Contents • Introduction to the exhibition and maps • History of the arts in the Ticino region • Friendships between the artists • Image, key questions and biography for each artist • Themes and shared techniques to consider 'the roundhouse of international spirits' Arp, Benazzi, Bissier, Nicholson, Richter, Tobey, Valenti in the Ticino 17 January - 15 March 2009 'The landscape ... is entirely magical and with the kind of visual poetry which I would like to find in my painting.' Ben Nicholson The natural beauty of the Ticino, around the famous tourist spots of lakes Maggiore and Lugano had long attracted artists and intellectuals. Writing to a friend in 1962, German painter Julius Bissier described the area of Ascona and Locarno, where he was then living, as 'the roundhouse of international spirits'. By the early 1960s a remarkable group of artists had settled in the area. Hans Arp and Hans Richter returned, having first visited in the 1910s. Julius Bissier, Italo Valenti, Ben Nicholson and Felicitas Vogler arrived in search of better living conditions and new inspiration. The American painter Mark Tobey, based in Basel and a friend of many of these artists, regularly visited. The Locarnese, as it is known locally, became a thriving intellectual hotspot, with a strong sense of community - so much so that Arp liked to refer to it as 'el kibbutz'. These artists shared ideas and swapped works and the period produced rich results. -
The Art of Hans Arp After 1945
Stiftung Arp e. V. Papers The Art of Hans Arp after 1945 Volume 2 Edited by Jana Teuscher and Loretta Würtenberger Stiftung Arp e. V. Papers Volume 2 The Art of Arp after 1945 Edited by Jana Teuscher and Loretta Würtenberger Table of Contents 10 Director’s Foreword Engelbert Büning 12 Foreword Jana Teuscher and Loretta Würtenberger 16 The Art of Hans Arp after 1945 An Introduction Maike Steinkamp 25 At the Threshold of a New Sculpture On the Development of Arp’s Sculptural Principles in the Threshold Sculptures Jan Giebel 41 On Forest Wheels and Forest Giants A Series of Sculptures by Hans Arp 1961 – 1964 Simona Martinoli 60 People are like Flies Hans Arp, Camille Bryen, and Abhumanism Isabelle Ewig 80 “Cher Maître” Lygia Clark and Hans Arp’s Concept of Concrete Art Heloisa Espada 88 Organic Form, Hapticity and Space as a Primary Being The Polish Neo-Avant-Garde and Hans Arp Marta Smolińska 108 Arp’s Mysticism Rudolf Suter 125 Arp’s “Moods” from Dada to Experimental Poetry The Late Poetry in Dialogue with the New Avant-Gardes Agathe Mareuge 139 Families of Mind — Families of Forms Hans Arp, Alvar Aalto, and a Case of Artistic Influence Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen 157 Movement — Space Arp & Architecture Dick van Gameren 174 Contributors 178 Photo Credits 9 Director’s Foreword Engelbert Büning Hans Arp’s late work after 1945 can only be understood in the context of the horrific three decades that preceded it. The First World War, the catastro- phe of the century, and the Second World War that followed shortly thereaf- ter, were finally over. -
International Review of the Red Cross
MAR 211985 NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 1984 TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR - No. 243 international review• of the red cross PROPERTY OF U. S. ARMY THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S SCHOOL' LIBRARY INTER ARMA CARITAS GENEVA INTERNATIONAL COMMITIEE OF THE RED CROSS FOUNDED IN 1863 INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE RED CROSS Mr. ALEXANDRE HAY, Lawyer, former Director-General of the Swiss National Bank, President (member since 1975) Mr. MAURICE AUBERT, Doctor of Laws, Vice-President (1979) Mr. VICTOR H. UMBRICHT, Doctor of Laws, Managing Director, Vice-President (1970) Mr. JEAN PICTET, Doctor of Laws, former Vice-President of the ICRC (1967) Mrs. DENISE BINDSCHEDLER-ROBERT, Doctor of Laws, Professor at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva, Judge at the European Court of Human Rights (1967) Mr. JACQUES F. DE ROUGEMONT, Doctor of Medicine (1967) Mr. GILBERT ETIENNE, Professor at the Graduate Institute of International Studies and at the Institut universitaire d'etudes du developpement, Geneva (1973) Mr. ULRICH MIDDENDORP, Doctor of Medicine, head of surgical department of the Cantonal Hospital, Winterthur (1973) Mrs. MARION BOVEE-ROTHENBACH, Doctor of Sociology (1973) Mr. HENRY HUGUENIN, Banker (1974) Mr. RICHARD PESTALOZZI, Doctor of Laws, former Vice-President of the ICRC (1977) Mr. ATHOS GALLINO, Doctor of Medicine, Mayor of Bellinzona (1977) Mr. ROBERT KOHLER, Master of Economics (1977) Mr. RUDOLF JACKLI, Doctor of Sciences (1979) Mr. OLIVIER LONG, Doctor of Laws and Doctor of Political Science, Ambassador, former Director General of GATT (1980) Mr. DIETRICH SCHINDLER, Doctor of Laws, Professor at the University of Ziirich (1961 1973; 1980) Mr. HANS HAUG, Doctor ofLaws, Professor at the St-Gall School ofAdvanced Economic and Social Studies, former President of the Swiss Red Cross (1983) Mr. -
Penicillin: World War II Infections and Howard Florey
In Focus Penicillin: World War II infections and Howard Florey The results were dramatic – the control mice rapidly succumbed, while all of the treated mice survived. These results attracted great interest from the scientific and military communities because, if Ian Gust replicated in humans, the drug had the potential to influence the Department of Microbiology and outcome of WWII. Immunology University of Melbourne It took Florey and 16 colleagues several months to produce suffi- Parkville, Vic. 3010, Australia Tel: +61 3 8344 3963 cient material to treat a handful of patients. The team worked under Fax: +61 3 8344 6552 fi fi Email: [email protected] dif cult circumstances with a lack of funding and equipment; at rst penicillin was made using old dairy equipment. Hospital bedpans were later used to grow the mould and the liquid containing fi Howard Florey is celebrated for his major contributions to penicillin drained from beneath the growing mould and ltered the large-scale production of the fungal product, penicillin, through parachute silk. during World War II (WWII), leading to life-saving outcomes The first patient they treated was a policeman, in whom an infected for many more than those with war wounds. scratch had developed into a life threatening infection. He was given Howard Florey was born in South Australia in 1898. After studying penicillin, and within a day began to recover. Unfortunately Florey’s medicine at the University of Adelaide he was awarded a Rhodes team only had sufficient drug for 5 days of treatment and when Scholarship to work in Oxford under Sir Charles Sherrington. -
Criticism and Study of the Astrology of the Eckankar Based on the Teachings of Islam1 Dr
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL & SCIENCE EDUCATION 2017, VOL. 12, NO. 4, 817-840 OPEN ACCESS Criticism and study of the astrology of the Eckankar based on the teachings of Islam1 Dr. Abdolreza Mahmoudi 1*, Dr. Maryam Shamsaie 2, Hashem Kakaei 3 1-Assistant professor of Islamic Education Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. 2-Assistant professor of Islamic Education Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. 3-Instructor of Islamic Education Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. ABSTRACT The subject of astrology in the School of Eckankar has two main bases of Karma and reincarnation. Karma or the very law of action and reaction can be called the moral basis of the Eckankar. The totality of this law is accepted by the reason and tradition. But yet what casts doubt and therefore a serious damage to this law would be a tight connection between Karma and Incarnation in the School of Eckankar. This is because the ECK believes that Karma is incarnated through the transmigration, and moves from a birth to another one and this long way is continued up to the constellations. Therefore, in this writing and while explaining the Karma and accepting it in its totality, various typed of incarnation are explained ,and then it will be studied and criticized based on the teachings of Islam. KEYWORDS ARTICLE HISTORY astrology, Karma, transmigration. Received 3 April 2017 Revised 29 April 2017 Accepted 4 May 2017 Introduction The Sanskrit word “Karma” means “work”. This word first appeared in the “Rig Veda” hymns, (Tulle, 2007), and was used as the religious work and especially offering, and means so to say a law which determines the outcome of man’s deeds, and (ibid, p.310) brings about the cycle of reappearing. -
The Religion We Need
SWAMI ANANYANANDA RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY The Religion We Need SWAMI ANANYANANDA wo great forces have been exerting physical existence of man. But science, with their powerful influences on the all its gifts to humanity, has not touched Tminds of men during the past few even the fringe of the life of the spirit. The decades. They are science and humanism. soul of man is hungering for spiritual solace. Science and humanism have become the dominant features of the modern age. The other side Science has achieved astounding results for Look at the other side of the picture of the happiness of man and, let us hasten to science, its dreadful and destructive side. add, also for the unhappiness of man. Humanity today is at the mercy of science. Humanism has led mankind in two different Man has created a Frankenstein’s monster directions: proletarian socialistic which is threatening to destroy its very authoritarianism, on the one hand, and creator. Science has placed in the hands of secularized democratic governments and man such deadly instruments of death and institutions, on the other, both of which, destruction which, if let loose in a moment working purely on secular humanistic of miscalculation or misunderstanding, will principles, have betrayed man and robbed make short work of all our boasted human him of his spiritual essence. civilization. This is a possibility which The progress that science has made science has created for man today. Is this to today is the symbol of man’s untiring efforts be the end of all human culture, its to conquer nature and to make it serve his civilization, and its proud achievements? own ends.