The Principle and Practice of Operative Surgery. By Stephen Smith, A. M., M. D., Professor of Clinical Surgery in the University of the City of New York; Surgeon to the Bellevue and St. Vincent’s Hospitals, New York; Consulting Surgeon to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, to the Foundling Asylum, to the Infant’s Asylum; New York State Commissioner in Lunacy, &c. New and thoroughly revised edition. Illustrated with one thousand and five woodcuts. Philadelphia: Lea Brothers & Co., 1887

1887 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-294
Author(s):  
Robert W. Johnson
1905 ◽  
Vol 153 (4) ◽  
pp. 121-121

2021 ◽  
pp. 43-58
Author(s):  
Edward Shorter

The take-off of psychopharmacology in the mental-hospital world began in the vast asylum system of New York State in the early 1950s. Henry Brill ordered the state system to introduce chlorpromazine in 1955, which led to the first decrease in the census of the state asylum system in peacetime. Sidney Merlis and Herman Denber implemented chlorpromazine in their hospitals and, with Brill, began a series of publications on the drugs and their efficacy. Pharmacologist and psychiatrist Joel Elkes established the first department of experimental psychiatry in the world in 1951 at the University of Birmingham in England. Finally, the chapter examiunes the historical heft of the National Institute of Mental Health, which in 1953 opened the “intramural” (in-house) research program where much of the research in psychopharmacology done in the United States has occurred.


Author(s):  
Erkin Özay

This chapter begins with a background on the demolition of Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin building in 1950 which proved ominous for Buffalo. It sketches Buffalo's impending socioeconomic decline by citing several landmark events from the decade, such as the relocation of the prominent Technical High School from the black East Side to the white West Side in 1954. It also follows five decades of decline that halved Buffalo's population and hastened its transformation into a rust belt cornerstone. The chapter focuses on Buffalo in the present time, which looks to refugee resettlement as a means to rejuvenate its distressed neighborhoods, starting with 11,000 refugees who have resettled in Buffalo since 2008. It stresses how Buffalo continues to receive the highest number of refugees in New York State, which afforded the city with a much-needed urban stimulus and jolted its lethargic public systems reeling from decades of regression.


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