scholarly journals „Ballungsreaktіоn“

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1237-1237
Author(s):  
A. Weinstein
Keyword(s):  

Lechner, having tested Muller's Ballungsreaktіon in 2000 cases. (Wien. Klin. Woch., 1929, No. 29), came to the conclusion that it is the most sensitive and simple in technique among other reactions of precipitation to syphilis and should therefore take its rightful place in serodiagnostics of the latter.

2004 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
AD BACKUS

This issue of Bilingualism: Language and Cognition is about convergence, a type of language change that is contact-induced and results in greater similarity between two languages that are in contact with each other. In Backus (forthcoming), I have attempted an overview of contact-induced language change, focusing on causal factors, on mechanisms of change, and on the actual changes. In this conclusion, I will try to give convergence its rightful place in this general typology, referencing the contributions to this volume where appropriate.


Author(s):  
Terry L. Birdwhistell ◽  
Deirdre A. Scaggs

Since women first entered the University of Kentucky (UK) in 1880 they have sought, demanded, and struggled for equality within the university. The period between 1880 and 1945 at UK witnessed women’s suffrage, two world wars, and an economic depression. It was during this time that women at UK worked to take their rightful place in the university’s life prior to the modern women’s movement of the 1960s and beyond. The history of women at UK is not about women triumphant, and it remains an untidy story. After pushing for admission into a male-centric campus environment, women created women’s spaces, women’s organizations, and a women’s culture often patterned on those of men. At times, it seemed that a goal was to create a woman’s college within the larger university. However, coeducation meant that women, by necessity, competed with men academically while still navigating the evolving social norms of relationships between the sexes. Both of those paths created opportunities, challenges, and problems for women students and faculty. By taking a more women-centric view of the campus, this study shows more clearly the impact that women had over time on the culture and environment. It also allows a comparison, and perhaps a contrast, of the experiences of UK women with other public universities across the United States.


2021 ◽  
pp. 234-247
Author(s):  
Elena Kaloeva ◽  

This paper is a review of the book written by the famous Croatian-German researcher L. Markovic, containing answers primarily to such challenges facing Europe as the migration crisis, the confrontation of Christianity and Islam, abd the upsurge of right-wing radicalism. The author makes an attempt to help «a little» man overcome his fears associated with finding a rightful place in the modern world.


2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 656-683
Author(s):  
Patricia A. Reid

In the years before the Missouri Compromise, petitioners who won their freedom suits based upon their ancestral links to white women, with land, could participate in the body politic. However, as Maryland legislators began to identify with the plantation south, they invented a legal understanding that would deny ambiguously freed blacks freedom, and justices would re-invent proslavery jurispudence, using the attachment clause, which would remand the previously freed into a status worse than before they had petitioned the court. Those who were freed and could claim citizenship in the years immediately after the American Revolution, by 1810, case law had changed and they lost many of their rights they once held. By using a slave state like Maryland as a microcosm, this research hopes to show the gradual way African Americans were not only denied claims to legal protections but, were deprived of their rightful place as agents in this new democratic experiment.


1978 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 94-114
Author(s):  
Ronald W. Hanks

In terms of lessons to be learned from history, World War I remains a nearly unparalleled example of how not to do things. The origins and conduct of the war, as well as the major peace treaties ending the conflict, have become monuments to ineptitude. The circumstances surrounding the end of the war on the Austro-Italian front can take their rightful place in this panoply of bungling. Neither the Austrians in defeat nor the Italians in victory displayed attributes worthy of emulation, and, if anything is to be learned from these events, it is that haste to extricate oneself from a war can be as dangerous as haste to enter a war and that, contrary to popular belief, it takes two sides to make a peace.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajiv Kumar Jain

Abstract Focus of Presentation The process and results of popularizing Occupational Health Epidemiology amongst Occupational Health practitioners in India during the covid-19 Pandemic in India through Webinars Findings The 25 webinars of average duration of 90 minutes, with contents relating to Covid-19 Epidemiology in India, generated immense interest amongst Occupational Health Practitioners with reference to innovative methods of data collection, analysis of data, results dissemination and integration of results in occupational Health practice during pandemic of Covid-19 in India. Conclusions/Implications Occupational Health Epidemiology is a neglected discipline in India. Innovative method of use of webinars amongst Occupational Health practitioners can be used for popularizing the methods, data analysis and results dissemination etc. It is expected that this interest shall be sustained in Post Pandemic period and the discipline of Occupational Health Epidemiology will get its rightful place amongst Occupational Health practitioners in India leading to research initiatives and application of results in the practice of Occupational Health in India.


2022 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenn Taylor

The creative and cultural sectors in the United Kingdom largely exclude the working classes. Even the small number of working-class people who do ‘make it’ into these sectors often find themselves and their work badly treated by those who hold the real power. This article explores some of the experiences of working-class artists navigating the cultural sector and how exclusion, prejudice and precarity impacted and continue to impact them. It takes as its focus the filmmaker Alan Clarke and the playwright Andrea Dunbar, who were at the height of their success in the 1980s. It also considers the writers Darren McGarvey and Nathalie Olah, whose work has achieved prominence in recent years. It is through this focus I hope to demonstrate the long continuum of challenges for working-class creatives. This article also considers how, on the occasions when they are allowed the space they deserve, working-class artists have created powerful shifts in cultural production. Finally, it details some of the changes needed for working-class people to be able to take their rightful place in contributing to cultural life and the societal risks involved if they are denied that place.


2018 ◽  
pp. 17-34
Author(s):  
Khairudin Aljunied

This chapter discusses Hamka’s harmonization of reason and revelation in the road to reform Southeast Asian Muslim thought. To achieve this, he marshalled a few intellectual assertions. He highlighted the problem of intellectual stagnation that was ubiquitous in Malay-Muslim societies. Hamka also strategically appropriated the rational tradition in Islam to argue for the restoration of reason to its rightful place within Islamic thought in the Malay world. The last section of this chapter elaborates on Hamka’s concept of “guided reason,” a type of reasoning that was guided by the sacred sources of Islam, by good character, by changing contexts, as well as by the forms of new knowledge developed in the modern world.


Author(s):  
Faith Chidinma Nworah ◽  
Oragade Christy Dolapo

The pursuit of mathematics for the achievement of prosperity and advancement is very conspicuous in many national developmental plans both in developed and underdeveloped countries. In this chapter, an attempt was made to examine some of the major challenges facing mathematics education in the modern globalized curriculum and its prospect. It was argued that the success of the teaching and learning of mathematics could only be achieved when the subject is given its rightful place. The chapter highlighted the characteristics and usefulness of mathematics, aims and values of mathematics education in the society. Finally, meaningful suggestions were proffered that if adopted will induce a positive change into the teaching and learning of mathematics.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document