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Levy, 10 Po: General Summary of the Meeting 507 Subject Index 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 515 1 Also special Lecture for
the Wilsede Joint Meeting on Pediatric Oncolo- gy II 2 Were also
presented in the Wilsede Joint Meeting on Pediatric Oncology II 3
Presented in the Wilsede Joint Meeting on Pediatric Oncology II xv
Participants of the Meeting Anders, Fritz, Genetisches Institut der
Universitaet, Heinrich-ButT-Ring 58-62,6300 Giessen, Federal
Republic of Germany Bauer, Georg, Institut fuer Virologie im
Zentrum fUr Hygiene, Hermann- Herder-Strasse 11,7800 Freiburg,
Federal Republic of Germany Bell, Richard, Medical Oncology
University Hospital, 75 East Newton Street, Boston, MA 02062, USA
Bernhard, Silke, Dahlem-Konferenzen, Wallotstrasse 19, 1000 Berlin
33, Federal Republic of Germany Bister, Klaus, Max-Planck-Institut
fUr Molekulare Genetik, Ihnestrasse 63-73, 1000 Berlin 33, Federal
Republic of Germany Blattner, William A. , Family Studies Section,
Environmental Epidemiology Branch, National Cancer Institute,
Landow Building, Rm. 4C18, 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Bethesda, MD
20205, USA Boiron, Michel, Institut de Recherches sur les Leucemies
et les Maladies du Sang, Universite Paris VII, Hopital Saint-Louis,
2 Place du Docteur-Four- nier, 75475 Paris Cedex 10, France
Boniver, Jacques, Institut de Pathologie B 23, Laboratoire
d'Anatomie, Pathologique, 4000 Liege, Belgium Bornkamm, Georg W. ,
Institut fuer Virologie im Zentrum fuer Hygiene,
Hermann-Herder-Strasse 11,7800 Freiburg, Federal Republic of
Germany Burgess, Antony W.
Gut ist eine Lehrart, wo man vom Bekannten zum Unbekannten
fortschreitet; schon ist sie, wenn sie sokratisch ist, d.i. wenn
sie dieselben Wahrheiten aus dem Kopf und Herzen des Zuhorers
herausfragt. Bei der ersten werden dem Verstand seine Uberzeugungen
in Form abgefordert, bei der zweiten sie ihm abgelockt. Professor
Friederich Schiller Jena, in a letter written on 23 February 1793
to his friend and supporter Korner, father of the poet Theodor
Korner. Established clinicians and scientists as weil as students
aga in tried the Wilsede experiment for three days and nights and
learned from each other. In our fourth Wilsede meeting on "Modern
Trends in Human Leukemia" we concentrated once again on questions
re gar ding the practical application of research and its benefits
to the patient. The main emphasis of leukemia research has changed
since the first Wilsede meeting in 1973. Virology is no longer the
sole interest. Advances in immunology and cell genetics and a
better understanding of Dr. h. c. Alfred Toepfer speeking with
participants of the meeting in Wilsede XXI Arrival and discussion
of participants in front of the meeting pI ace "De Emmenhoff" XXII
Personal and scientific discussion in Wilsede June 1980 Fotos: R.
Vols XXIII the mechanisms regulating normal and pathological blood
cell differen tiation have had a considerable impact on the
direction of leukemia research."
This is a new release of the original 1955 edition.
2014 Reprint of 1957 Revised Edition. Full facsimile of the
original edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software.
Woolworth founded an international financial empire with a short
lease on a tiny store, a couple of gross of tin cans and a simple
but revolutionary idea. Woolworth grew up a poor farm boy who
tended his father's cows barefoot, but he followed the great
American dream by parlaying native ingenuity, business sense, and
understanding of people into a huge fortune and establishing an
institution that became a familiar part of America's way of life,
The Five and Ten.
This is a new release of the original 1935 edition.
This is a new release of the original 1955 edition.
This is a new release of the original 1929 edition.
This is a new release of the original 1935 edition.
Miles J. Dean, a Newark, NJ schoolteacher, rode his horse from New
York to California to celebrate the contributions African Americans
made in the settling of the United States. During his six-month,
5,000-mile journey, Dean, a 57-year-old African American, addressed
people along the way at schools and colleges, community
organizations, and penal institutions. He met hundreds of Americans
through informal encounters at campgrounds, Wal-Mart parking lots,
restaurants, and country stores. With each, he shared his reasons
for the journey and inspired others to fulfil their dreams. Growing
up in Brooklyn, New York, Dean first learned about cowboys from
watching television. Like any boy at that time, he wanted to be
like those heroes and pretended to be a cowboy. He galloped through
the streets on his bicycle, ambushing outlaws on street corners.
Although Hollywood helped keep his dream alive, the cowboys on TV
didn't look like Dean. At age 23, he saw Sidney Poitier play a
cowboy in the 1972 film, "Buck and the Preacher," and realized he
too could be a cowboy. He deferred his teenage dream another 10
years before he could afford riding lessons and eventually bought
his first horse. But the film inspired him to explore the African
American history he never learned in school, specifically the
contributions made during the 1500-1800s when horses were the
primary means of transportation. He knew he wanted to make a
cross-country journey and retrace the steps of these early
pioneers; it was just a question of when. On September 22, 2007,
Dean brought his horse, Sankofa, a 12-year-old Arabian stallion
into New York City and rode to the African Burial Grounds, in lower
Manhattan to begin his journey. Granted an unpaid leave of absence
from his 5th grade social studies position, he embarked on this
odyssey he had dreamed about for nearly 35 years. Six months later,
Dean completed the trip with a celebration at the California
African American Museum in Los Angeles. In between he visited
several historical monuments, paying homage to history's forgotten
heroes, including the black jockeys at Kentucky's Churchill Downs
and soldiers at Tennessee's African American Civil War Cemetery.
His travels through Memphis and Little Rock evoked his own memories
of growing up during the Civil Rights Movement. His ride through
the harsh deserts of the Southwest and across California's
formidable Chocolate Mountains allowed him to re-enact the
conditions and perils faced by early cowboys and marshals. "On the
Trail of the Ancestors: A Black Cowboy's Ride Across America"
recounts how one man followed his childhood dream. Dean's
commitment to his journey helped him battle a brain tumor; his
gratitude to his ancestors fortified his resilience; and his
integrity to honoring heroes in history via his horse kept him on
road. This book chronicles Dean's cross-country journey and
introduces readers to people from all cultural and social
backgrounds. Dean's many encounters with strangers who assisted
him, his meetings with students, his participation in local
community parades and other events as he travelled bring to life
the complex tapestry of the country. As Dean travels from state to
state, the reader learns about African Americans who contributed to
US history. Dean's relationship with his horse Sankofa provides
insights about what it is like to ride a horse for six months.
Whether navigating dangerous terrain and city traffic, riding long
distances, handling medical problems for him and the horse, or
facing the challenges of acquiring the four relief horses, his
anecdotes regale readers with the visceral pleasures and
difficulties of such a journey. Dean's story demonstrates that an
ordinary person can accomplish the extraordinary.
1929. Winkler writes that John D. Rockefeller and his Standard Oil
Trust have provoked a literature and litigation of their own. In
this overwhelming mass of material, Rockefeller the Man is but a
shadowy myth. This study seeks chiefly to illumine a rare and
astonishing personality. It includes, therefore, only such portions
of our subject's long and serried business career as seem essential
to our purpose. Contents: A Strange Pilgrim and His Son; A Pious
Youth Gets a Flying Start; A Godly Young Man Strikes Oil; A Refiner
Marches Toward Monopoly; A Business Genius Makes the World Pay
Tribute; The Malevolent Trust-Raking In a Billion; The Benevolent
Trust-Ladling Out the Billion; John D. Jr., a Character Sketch;
John D., III, the Clan's Future Chieftain, an Intimate Portrait;
and John D. at Ninety. See other titles by this author available
from Kessinger Publishing.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
What was the world's first billionaire really like? This highly
entertaining work, by an acclaimed business biographer, seeks to
explode the "shadowy myth" of John D. Rockefeller and reveal the
"rare and astonishing personality" behind it. From his humble roots
in Ohio, where he learned thrift and industry as the bookkeeper of
a dockside warehouse, to the death threats this "modern
Machiavelli" received during the early years of Standard Oil, to
his ascendancy to the rank of "the most detested man in the
country"-when churches refused his donations as tainted money-and
his subsequent formation of the philanthropic Rockefeller
Foundation, this is a knowingly ironic and subtly witty work of
biography. JOHN K. WINKLER is also the author of W.R. Hearst: An
American Phenomenon (1928) and Morgan the Magnificent, or The Life
of J. Pierpont Morgan (1930).
"No Help Wanted" signs decorated the doors of Cleveland
storekeepers and merchants in early September, 1855, when
sixteen-year-old John Rockefeller set out to seek employment for
his budding talents. It was a hard year in the West. For days and
weeks the youth tramped the streets, grave, self-centered,
tenacious in his quest. -from "A Pious Youth Gets a Flying Start"
What was the world's first billionaire really like? This highly
entertaining work, by an acclaimed business biographer, seeks to
explode the "shadowy myth" of John D. Rockefeller and reveal the
"rare and astonishing personality" behind it. From his humble roots
in Ohio, where he learned thrift and industry as the bookkeeper of
a dockside warehouse, to the death threats this "modern
Machiavelli" received during the early years of Standard Oil, to
his ascendancy to the rank of "the most detested man in the
country"-when churches refused his donations as tainted money-and
his subsequent formation of the philanthropic Rockefeller
Foundation, this is a knowingly ironic and subtly witty work of
biography. JOHN K. WINKLER is also the author of W.R. Hearst: An
American Phenomenon (1928) and Morgan the Magnificent, or The Life
of J. Pierpont Morgan (1930).
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