Science, Volume 66John Michels American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1927 Since Jan. 1901 the official proceedings and most of the papers of the American Association for the Advancement of Science have been included in Science. |
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Page v
... Activity of Nerve , 495 GETMAN , F. H. , A Daylight Metcor , 355 Gibbs , Josiah Willard , and Thermodynamics , F. W. STEVENS , 159 ; Scientific Papers of , V. CoFMAN , 510 GILMORE , C. W. , The Mosasaurian Reptile Globidens , 452 Gins ...
... Activity of Nerve , 495 GETMAN , F. H. , A Daylight Metcor , 355 Gibbs , Josiah Willard , and Thermodynamics , F. W. STEVENS , 159 ; Scientific Papers of , V. CoFMAN , 510 GILMORE , C. W. , The Mosasaurian Reptile Globidens , 452 Gins ...
Page vi
... Radiation from , C. LADD- FRANKLIN , 239 ; The Activity of , E. W. Gerard , 495 Newcombe , Dr. , Hawaii's Tribute to , E. D. W. BROWN , 499 VOL . LXVI New York Hospital - Cornell Medical College vi INDEX SCIENCE AND [ CONTENTS.
... Radiation from , C. LADD- FRANKLIN , 239 ; The Activity of , E. W. Gerard , 495 Newcombe , Dr. , Hawaii's Tribute to , E. D. W. BROWN , 499 VOL . LXVI New York Hospital - Cornell Medical College vi INDEX SCIENCE AND [ CONTENTS.
Page 1
... activity - a hobby . Many an American physician has drawn boundless pleasure from this particular hobby and a few even 1 From the laboratories of the Philadelphia General Hospital . An address to the Piersol Anatomical Society of the ...
... activity - a hobby . Many an American physician has drawn boundless pleasure from this particular hobby and a few even 1 From the laboratories of the Philadelphia General Hospital . An address to the Piersol Anatomical Society of the ...
Page 2
... activity , one gets out about as much as one put into it ? While each individual will work this out best according to his own temperament , most will find their interest most actively stimulated by selecting some topic , perhaps already ...
... activity , one gets out about as much as one put into it ? While each individual will work this out best according to his own temperament , most will find their interest most actively stimulated by selecting some topic , perhaps already ...
Page 29
... activity he published more than 350 papers on geological and biological subjects , making known to science more than a thousand new species of marine invertebrates , and revised the classification of almost every group . That he was ...
... activity he published more than 350 papers on geological and biological subjects , making known to science more than a thousand new species of marine invertebrates , and revised the classification of almost every group . That he was ...
Contents
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acid Advancement of Science Agriculture American American Chemical Society animals appointed Association beet leafhopper beriberi biological blood botanical brain Bureau Bureau of Chemistry California carbon monoxide cells cent chairman chemical chemistry Chicago College committee defective determined Detrital Plains director disease effect elected engineering epidemic encephalitis experimental experiments fact fessor field forest genes genetic Geological Gibbs Grand Central Terminal ical important industrial infection Institute interest International intersexuality investigation iridium John July laboratory lecture material Medical School medicine meeting ment Mesocestoides method Museum mutations National nature normal observed organisms paper pathology period pernicious anemia physical physiology plants platinum present president problems Professor public health published recently scientific secretary Smithsonian Institution Building Society solution species stars Survey temperature theory tion trophozoites tropical United Univer University Washington York zoology
Popular passages
Page 9 - June 30, 1951, there is hereby authorized to be appropriated a sum not to exceed...
Page 287 - New occasions teach new duties ; Time makes ancient good uncouth ; They must upward still, and onward, who would keep abreast of Truth ; Lo, before us gleam her camp-fires ! we ourselves must Pilgrims be, Launch our Mayflower, and steer boldly through the desperate winter sea, Nor attempt the Future's portal with the Past's blood-rusted key.
Page 122 - True, I talk of dreams; Which are the children of an idle brain, Begot of nothing but vain fantasy, Which is as thin of substance as the air, And more inconstant than the wind...
Page 31 - RESOLUTIONS RESOLUTION ON TRANSLATIONS OF REPORTS ON SEISMOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS PUBLISHED IN THE JAPANESE LANGUAGE (Submitted by Section of Seismology and adopted at general assembly of the Union, April 29, 1927) Whereas, it has become known that the reports of much of the seismological investigations carried on in Japan will hereafter be published in the Japanese language only, and Whereas, This procedure is calculated to deprive most of the American students in this field of research of the advantages...
Page 256 - Competitors will not be required to report for examination at any place, but will be rated on their education, training, and experience; and writings to be filed with the application.
Page 205 - No structure found in the brain of an ape is lacking in the human brain, and, on the other hand, the human brain reveals no formation of any sort that is not present in the brain of the gorilla or chimpanzee. . . . The only distinctive feature of the human brain is a quantitative one.
Page 389 - Howard is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He...
Page 204 - To unravel Man's pedigree, we have to thread our way, not along the links of a chain, but through the meshes of a complicated network.
Page 48 - a defective gene — such a thing as produces diabetes, cretinism, feeblemindedness — is a frightful thing; it is the embodiment, the material realization of a demon of evil; a living self-perpetuating creature, invisible, impalpable, that blasts the human being in bud or leaf. Such a thing must be stopped wherever it is recognized."32 Fisher's primary criticism was levelled at the use of Hardy's table to demonstrate the inefficacy of selection.
Page 207 - What is Man's origin ? Was Darwin right when he said that Man, under the action of biological forces which can be observed and measured, has been raised from a place amongst anthropoid apes to that which he now occupies ? The answer is Yes ! and in returning this verdict I speak but as foreman of the jury — a jury which has been empanelled from men who have devoted a lifetime to weighing the evidence.