Handbuch der drahtlosen Telegraphie und Telephonie: ein Lehr- und Nachschlagebuch der drahtlosen Nachrichtenübermittlung / von Eugen Nesper
Télégraphie et téléphonie sans fil expliquées a tout le monde / par Henry de Graffigny, ancien chroniqueur scientifique du Petit Troyen ; avec 24 figures explicatives
Pioniere der Radiotechnik: (mit einigen handschriftlichen Korrekturen des Autors): Reprint.
Torpedo manual for His Majesty's Fleet (in three volumes). by authority of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty
Kleine Telegraphen-Schule für Postanwärter und Postgehülfen: ein Hülfsbuch zum Selbstunterricht behufs Erlangung des Befähigungs-Zeugnisses für den technischen Telegraphendienst bei vereinigten Verkehrsämtern: mit 100 er
Der elektromagnetische Telegraph in den Hauptstadien seiner Entwickelung und in seiner gegenwärtigen Ausbildung und Anwendung: nebst einem Anhange über den Betrieb der elektrischen Uhren: ein Handbuch der theoretischen und praktischen Telegraphi
Centenary of the Netherlands Telegraph Service: exhibition at The Hague, July 19th through September 28th, 1952: bulletin of the Organizing Committee.
75 Jahre Lorenz, 1880-1955: Festschrift.
Communication of Hon. William H. Seward, Secretary of State, upon the subject of an intercontinental telegraph / connecting the eastern and western hemispheres, by way of Behring's strait, in reply to Hon. Z. Chandler, Chairman of the Committee on Co
Hasler, 1852-1952: hundert Jahre Fernmeldetechnik und Präzisionsmechanik.
The early history of data networks / Gerard J. Holzmann, Björn Pehrson
Gwyneth Paltrow jokes Elon Musk, Grimes 'beat' her and Chris Martin for 'most controversial baby name'
Migrant labourers protest in Andhra's Guntur, demand govt send them back to native places
Marx and three idiots
Chance found me, three years ago, at the end of a brilliant summer day in Leeds, seated at dinner next to a distinguished gentleman, vice-chair of a venerable UK bank.
Man opens fire in Shaheen Bagh, shouts 'Jai Shree Ram'
No one was injured in the incident that came even as Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath during a poll rally in Delhi's northwest Rohini area alleged that those who support terrorists in Kashmir are staging protest at Shaheen Bagh.
Mumbai photographer thrashed by cops at CAA protest
Ashish Raje, a photojournalist with a Mumbai tabloid, was allegedly pushed and assaulted by two police officials when he was walking to Mumbai Bagh in Nagpada area.
What Trump wrote in book at Sabarmati Ashram
After landing in Ahmedabad and being accorded a grand welcome, United States President Donald Trump and US First Lady Melania Trump made their way to Sabarmati Ashram for a brief stopover on their way to Motera Stadium.
How our MPs are dealing with coronavirus threat
Several MPs came to the Upper House wearing masks and demanded curtailment of the ongoing Budget session, which is due to end on April 3, in view of the novel coronavirus scare, but the government seemed unwilling.
Record spike in COVID-19 cases, 37 deaths in 24 hrs
While the number of active COVID-19 cases stood at 6,039, as many as 515 people have been cured and discharged, and one had migrated, it said. The total number of cases include 71 foreign nationals.
918 COVID-19 cases, 31 deaths reported in 24 hrs
While the number of active COVID-19 cases stood at 7,409, as many as 764 people have been cured and discharged, and one had migrated, it said. Of the total 273 deaths, Maharashtra tops the tally with 127 fatalities, followed by Madhya Pradesh at 36, Gujarat at 22 and Delhi at 19.
1,463 COVID-19 cases in 24 hrs, total count 10,815
The number of active COVID-19 cases stands at 9,272 and as many as 1,189 people have been cured and discharged, and one has migrated, it said.
Many throng wedding venue of HDK's son despite appeal
Nikhil, son of former Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy, tied the nuptial knot with Revathi, the grand-niece of former Karnataka housing minister M Krishnappa.The marriage was solemnised at Kumaraswamy's Kethaganahalli farmhouse at Bidadi in the neighbouring Ramanagara district, a JD-S stronghold.
36 deaths, 957 cases in 24 hrs; COVID-19 toll 488
36 deaths have been reported since Friday evening -- 12 from Madhya Pradesh, 10 from Gujarat, seven from Maharashtra, four from Delhi and one each from Andhra Pradesh, Bihar and Jammu and Kashmir.Of the 488 deaths, Maharashtra tops the list with 201 fatalities, followed by Madhya Pradesh at 69, Gujarat at 48 and Delhi at 42 and Telangana at 18.
47 COVID-19 deaths, 1,975 cases in 24 hrs; toll 826
The number of active COVID-19 cases stood at 20,177 while 5,913 people (21.96 percent) were cured and discharged, and one patient has migrated, the ministry said.The total number of cases include 111 foreign nationals.Of the 47 deaths reported since Saturday evening, 22 are from Maharashtra, eight in Rajasthan, seven from Madhya Pradesh, six Gujarat and one each from Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir and Tamil Nadu.
51 COVID-19 deaths, 1,594 cases in 24 hrs; toll 937
Of the 937 deaths, Maharashtra tops the tally with 369 fatalities, followed by Gujarat at 162, Madhya Pradesh at 113, Delhi at 54, Rajasthan at 46 and Andhra Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh at 31 each.
71 Covid deaths in 24 hrs take India's toll to 1,008
There has been a spike of 1,813 cases since Tuesday evening.The number of active COVID-19 cases stand at 22,982, while 7,796 people have recovered, and one patient has migrated, the health ministry said.
Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of Insulin
Recalling the desperate fight for life that used to be waged by juvenile diabetes patients, and commemorating the events of 1921 that inaugurated a new era of hope for them and their families, the New-York Historical Society will present the exhibition Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of Insulin from October 5, 2010 through January 31, 2011. Exploring the roles of science, government, higher education and industry in developing and distributing a life-saving drug, the exhibition will bring to life the personalities who discovered insulin and raced to bring it to the world and will tell the story of one extraordinary New York girl—Elizabeth Evans Hughes, daughter of the leading statesman and jurist Charles Evans Hughes—who was among the very first patients to be saved.
To lead visitors through this history, from the discovery of insulin in Toronto by Dr. Frederick Banting in 1921 and its first human trials in 1922 to its widespread use today, Breakthrough will feature digital interactives, film, artifacts and ephemera drawn from the Historical Society's own collections and from archives including those of the University of Toronto, Eli Lilly and Company, the Rockefeller Institute, the Joslin Clinic and the New York Academy of Medicine.
The first chapter will recount the excitement, and the clash of personalities, among the scientists whose research led to the discovery of insulin, beginning in May 1921. Also included in this chapter will be an account of the valiant but heartbreaking efforts of Dr. Frederick Allen in the years before the discovery to prolong the lives of diabetic children through the use of a starvation diet. The story of Elizabeth Evans Hughes, told in part through actual treatment charts and period letters, will bring to life the impact of insulin when it first became available. Because Elizabeth was the daughter of Charles Evans Hughes—Governor of New York (1907–1910), Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1910–1916), United States Secretary of State (1921–1925) and Chief Justice of the United States (1930–1941)—her survival provided powerful testimony to the value of insulin, and helped bring the work of Dr. Allen and Dr. Banting to the world's stage.
The exhibition's second chapter will examine how insulin became available for widespread medical use through a partnership between the University of Toronto and Eli Lilly and Company—the first such collaboration between an academic institution and a drug company. Photographs from the Lilly archives will reveal the painstaking early method of manufacturing insulin in mass quantities—an innovative industrial process that ran from the slaughterhouse to the laboratory. Display cases of syringes, vials, testing kits for blood sugar and other equipment will take the story of insulin treatment from the 1920s up through today.
The exhibition's final chapter will tell about recent developments—notably the synthesis of insulin in the 1980s as the world's first biotechnology drug—and the current state of research, development, treatment and demography of diabetes. Included in this chapter will be information about the alarming increase in prevalence of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes in the past decade, and the ways in which individuals, families and institutions can address this health crisis. The exhibition will conclude with a presentation of Life for a Child, a documentary film produced by the International Diabetes Federation and Eli Lilly and Company to raise awareness of the devastating impact of the disease.
Breakthrough will be installed in the Historical Society's 1,300-square-foot temporary gallery, located just off the 77th Street entrance, while the remainder of the landmark Central Park West building undergoes a $60 million architectural renovation.
Death Cap mushrooms behind Meghalaya deaths
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