Alan Walker Tyson 1926–2000

Author(s):  
Oliver Neighbour

Alan Tyson was a musicologist who made an outstanding contribution to understanding issues of authenticity and chronology in the works of Mozart and Beethoven often based on detailed study of the paper used in sketchbooks and manuscripts. Yet he had qualified as a psychoanalyst and clinical psychiatrist, and until 1969, when he obtained a visiting professorship at Columbia University, musicology was only a scholarly hobby. In 1971, Tyson was awarded a Senior Research Fellowship at All Souls College Oxford and thereafter pursued it as a full-time career. He was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 1978. Obituary by Oliver Neighbour FBA.

US Neurology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Nora Vanegas ◽  

Nora Vanegas Dr Vanegas is a neurologist who specializes in deep brain stimulation (DBS) and the treatment of movement disorders including Parkinson’s disease, dystonia, and essential tremor. Dr Vanegas completed her combined clinical-research fellowship at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) under the mentorship of Dr Mark Hallett. Her training had a special focus on neuroimaging and neuromodulation. She transitioned to being an Assistant Professor of Neurology in Columbia University in 2016, and is now an established local expert in neuromodulation for movement disorders. Dr Vanegas is also a clinical investigator whose research involves clinical and translational areas of movement disorders, specifically the use of brain imaging for the understanding of DBS and the physiology of the basal ganglia. As part of multi-disciplinary research activities, Dr Vanegas has developed strong collaborations for various projects with the departments of Biomedical Engineering, Speech Pathology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry at Columbia University. Such collaborative research activities include the use of instrumented assessments to measure gait characteristics in patients with Parkinson’s disease, the benefits of various airway protection interventions in patients with Parkinson’s disease who aspirate with food and the activity of brain neurons during decision making tasks.


Criminology ◽  
2021 ◽  

Robert King Merton (b. 4 July 1910–d. 23 February 2003) was born to Yiddish-speaking Russian-Jewish parents in South Philadelphia, as Meyer Robert Schkolnick. Merton’s mother, Ida Rasovskaya, was a socialist and his father, Aaron Schkolnick, identified at his US port of entry as Harrie Skolnick, Hebrew and tailor. His parents immigrated to the United States from eastern Europe in 1904. Raised in an apartment above his father’s dairy products shop until the building burned down, Merton had an interesting wealth of cultural experiences. At fourteen years old, he performed magic tricks at parties under the stage name Robert K. Merlin. As a student at South Philadelphia High School, he frequently visited nearby cultural and educational venues, including the Andrew Carnegie Library, Central Library, the Academy of Music, and the Museum of Arts. Merton believed his childhood in South Philadelphia provided an abundance of social, cultural, human, and public capital; every type of capital he needed except financial. After acceptance to Temple University, he changed his name to Robert Merton, worked as a research assistant under George E. Simpson on a project about race and media, and graduated in 1931. Merton married his first wife, Suzanne Carhart, in 1934, with whom he had three children, a son named Robert C. Merton, and daughters Stephanie Merton Tombrello and Vanessa Merton. Merton earned both his Master’s degree, in 1932, and his doctorate, in 1936, at Harvard, where he taught until 1938. Merton then served as professor and chair of the Department of Sociology at Tulane University before joining Columbia University in 1941, where he remained until his retirement from full-time academic work in 1979. Spending most of his life in the Manhattan borough of New York City until his death in 2003, Merton taught as a Special Service Professor, or emeritus faculty, at Columbia University after he retired and served as an adjunct professor at Rockefeller University until 1984. Professional accomplishments include winning a Guggenheim, Parson Prize, and National Medal of Sciences; he was the first sociologist invited to the National Academy of Science, and he served as president of the American Sociological Society. Many of Merton’s childhood experiences would influence his theory of social structure, particularly the concept of the “reference group.” Other notable sociological concepts he developed include “opportunity structure,” “ritualism,” “role model,” “opinion leader,” “unintended consequences,” “self-fulfilling prophecy,” “focus group,” “peer group,” “role strain,” and “deviant behavior.” His record of achievements has led some to refer to Robert Merton as the father of sociology, Mr. Sociology, or the most influential American sociologist of the 20th century.


2021 ◽  

Raised in rural Massachusetts, the son of a Unitarian minister, Horatio Alger Jr. (b. 1832–d. 1899) graduated from Harvard College in 1852 and from the Harvard Divinity School in 1860. Expelled from the Unitarian pulpit in Brewster, Massachusetts, after confessing to a charge of pederasty, Alger moved to New York in April 1866 to begin a career as a full-time writer of fiction for juvenile readers. He published a serialized version of Ragged Dick in 1867 and a revised and expanded book version of the novel, his only bestseller, in 1868. During his career he twice traveled to Europe (1860 and 1873) and to California (1877 and 1890); he was also active in the Harvard Club of New York. To supplement his income from writing, he tutored the children of several prominent Jewish families in New York, including E. R. A. Seligman (b. 1861–d. 1939), later a professor of political economy at Columbia University and a founder of the American Economic Association; Benjamin Cardozo (b. 1870–d. 1938), later an associate justice of the US Supreme Court; and Lewis Einstein (b. 1877–d. 1967), later a career diplomat. Alger was the author of dozens of essays, poems, and short stories, and 103 books for young readers, and toward the end of his career he estimated his total book sales at eight hundred thousand copies. Despite the persistent notion that his heroes rise “from rags to riches,” only a few of his characters earn fabulous wealth. His young heroes normally rise not to riches, but to a secure middle-class respectability. Beginning in the late 1870s, Alger’s juvenile stories came under fire from ministers and professional librarians for their alleged sensationalism. Of 145 libraries surveyed by the American Library Association in 1894, over a third proscribed Alger’s books. Alger died of congestive heart failure at his sister’s home in Natick, Massachusetts, in July 1899. Early in the new century, his popularity began to skyrocket. By 1910, cheap editions of his moral tracts were selling at the rate of about one million annually because, in their idealization of a preindustrial order, they appealed to a nostalgic desire to reform business through a return to principles of equal opportunity and fair trade. The phrase “Horatio Alger hero,” denoting an honest and successful entrepreneurial type, obtained popular if inflated currency in the language in the 1920s, with Alger’s popularity at its peak. Though Alger’s books largely lapsed from print during the Great Depression, the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans, Inc., cofounded by Norman Vincent Peale (b. 1898–d. 1993), inaugurated the annual Horatio Alger Awards in 1947.


Parasitology ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Dobson

Female mice survived longer than male mice when infected with 400 eggs but not when infected with 100 eggs of Amplicaecum robertsi.The larvae grew to greater lengths in young than in older mice; smaller worm burdens were also found in the older animals.The growth of the larva was associated with the total worm burden of the host. As the worm burdens, of 40-day-old female mice, increased up to 281 individuals the length of the larvae attained after 14 days decreased; when the larval population increased above this number the lengths of the worms also increased.These crowding effects are discussed in relation to competition for nutrients, immunological suppression of larval growth and to the ability of large larval populations to swamp the resistance mechanisms of the host. It is suggested that the increased growth of the larvae in large populations is due to their ability to break down the liver of the infected host more efficiently than small populations. However, this eventually leads to the deaths of the host through total liver breakdown.This work was done during the tenure of a Senior Research Fellowship from the Wool Research Board of Australia. My best thanks are due to Mr J. James for his assistance with the statistics, to Professor J. F. A. Sprent for his help and advice and to Mr C. Wilkinson for his assistance.


Parasitology ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Dobson

Male rats were more susceptible than female rats to experimental infection with Amplicaecum robertsi. This sex difference first appeared at the time of puberty, i.e. about 50 days of age.Suckling rats were less susceptible to infection than weanlings. This was attributed to the cumulative effects of intestinal structure, the indirect effects of milk on the physio-chemical factors in the gut, and the direct effects of milk on the worms themselves.The rat showed an age resistance to A. robertsi: this was greatest in the female host.The larvae recovered from females were shorter than those recovered from male rats except in immature animals.The longest larvae were recovered from suckling rats: in old rats the length of the larvae recovered became progressively shorter as the animals aged.This investigation was carried out during the tenure of a Senior Research Fellowship from the Wool Research Council of Australia. I should like to thank Professor J. F. A. Sprent for his help and Mr C. Wilkinson for his technical assistance.


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