Biochemical Bulletin, Bindi 4-5

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Columbia University Biochemical Association., 1915
 

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Síða 304 - Such a realization could not fail to have an elevating influence upon the medical profession itself, and would probably exert a favorable influence upon the development of international morality in general.
Síða 453 - Academie des sciences in Paris. It is made by the well-known process of adding sodium carbonate to a solution of chlorinated lime. The mixture is thoroughly shaken, and after half an hour the liquid is siphoned off from the precipitate of calcium carbonate and filtered through cotton. To this clear liquid, sufficient boric acid is added to make the preparation neutral or acid, the amount required being determined by titration with phenolphthalein.
Síða 441 - Corinna Borden Keen Research Fellowship in the Jefferson Medical College, the income from which now amounts to $1000. The gift provides that the recipient of the fellowship shall spend at least one year in Europe, America or elsewhere (wherever he can obtain the best facilities for research in the line of work he shall select, after consultation with the faculty), and that he shall publish at least one paper embodying the results of his work as the "Corinna Borden Keen Research Fellow of the Jefferson...
Síða 280 - A comparison of the physico-chemical constants of the juices expressed from the wall with those from the included carpellary whorl in proliferous fruits of Passiflora gracilis.
Síða 225 - ... feet per second. That is, under the influence of alcohol, seven times as long may be required to hear, feel, taste, or to receive an impression of any sort, as by a normal person. Such a man called upon in an emergency would require at least seven times as long to make up his mind what he ought to do as a healthy person requires, and when large doses of alcohol are administered, the effects are still more pronounced. Certainly this can not be regarded as the effect of a tonic.
Síða 439 - Among the men who admitted that they had taken alcohol occasionally to excess in the past, but whose habits were considered satisfactory when they were insured, there were 289 deaths, while there would have been only 190 deaths had this group been made up of insured lives in general.
Síða 109 - Feb., 1916. Mr. George Embrey, President, in the Chair. Messrs. Thomas Featherstone Harvey, Cyril Hubert Manley, Caryl Cameron Roberts, and Frank Thomas Shutt were elected members of the society. A certificate was read for the first time in favour of Mr. Frank Theodore Alpe, " Bracondale,
Síða 303 - The war has demonstrated, however, one encouraging fact; namely, that among all the sciences and professions, the medical sciences and medical practice occupy an almost unique relationship to warfare, and that among all the citizens of a country at war, medical men and women occupy a peculiar and distinctive position. No discovery in medical science has been utilized for the purpose of destroying or harming the enemy. Medical men in each of the warring countries are as courageous, as patriotic, as...
Síða 292 - In the dawn of history the medical man was also the treasurer of philosophy and morals. In the Middle Ages, when knowledge became specialized, medical men more and more devoted their activity exclusively to medical practise. On account of the inefficiency of medicine at that time, medicine lost its prestige. However, in the recent decades medicine became a science, and one marvelous discovery follows another, and the efficiency of medical practise increases rapidly. Medicine makes accessible to man...
Síða 364 - Osborne and Mendel: The relation of growth to the chemical constituents of the diet.

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