425 results
Search Results
2. METHOD FOR DETERMINING RESIDUAL THIOSULFATE AND TETRATHIONATE IN PROCESSED PHOTOGRAPHIC PAPERS.
- Subjects
COLOR photographic papers ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,WRITING materials & instruments ,THIOSULFATES ,PHOTOGRAPHIC paper - Abstract
The article informs that the American Standards Association (ASA) approved on February 27, 1950 the American Standard Method for Determining Residual Thiosulfate and tetrathionate in Processed Photographic Papers sponsored by the Optical Society of America. The ASA classification is Z38.8.25-1950, and the UDC 77.023. The Standard contained in an eight page leaflet may be secured from the American Standards Association Inc., 70 East 45th Street, New York 17, New York, at a cost of $0.35 (thirty-five cents). From the same source a free list of all standards approved to date, including 142 dealing with photography, is available.
- Published
- 1950
3. PAPERS READ AT THE ROUND TABLE ON THE TEACHING OF ELEMENTARY ECONOMICS, NEW YORK, DECEMBER 30, 1949.
- Author
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Malick, Clay P. and Garnsey, Morris
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,MEETINGS ,ECONOMICS education ,ELEMENTARY education ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
This article focuses on papers discussed at the round table meeting on "the teaching of elementary economics" on December 30, 1949, at New York. Since the movement toward a general course in the social sciences seems to one essential it would be useful at this stage to collate the experiences of the hundred institutions now engaged in offering such a course. Fortunately both the American Economic Association and the American Political Science Association are engaged in a survey of this field by questionnaire and interviews. It is already clear, however, that the general course can be expected to follow no set formula. Its content and emphasis will vary from college to college with the abilities, interests, and philosophies of the staff members, and with the financial resources of the institution. One do not consider such diversity unfortunate. It is fragmentation and compartmentalization which are making the teaching of the social sciences increasingly ineffective in the light of social integration today. The closest integration will continue to recognize the infinite diversity contained in the fundamental unity of society.
- Published
- 1950
4. Repeal of the Greenback Conversion Clause.
- Author
-
O'Leary, Paul M.
- Subjects
BOND prices ,PAPER money ,WAR ,ACCOUNTS payable - Abstract
The article reports on conversion clause in the United States. American monetary history is full of strange happenings and queer events beginning with the resolution of Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1690 explaining the issue of the first paper money. It referred to "the sundry considerable debts" which had been contracted "for maintaining their Majesties" interests against hostile invasions of their French and Indian enemies," the actual fact being that the colony had sent an expedition against Quebec in the expectation that plunder would pay the costs thereof. It is true that the highest prices at which the five-twenty bonds sold on the New York market never exceeded 14 points above par in 1864 and 12 points above in 1865, whereas at the same time the premiums on gold were in the ranges 77-85 and 98-105, respectively. In the years following the war the gap between the premium on the bonds and on gold steadily narrowed. By late 1869 the gap had disappeared and from 1870 on the advantage clearly lay with the bonds, their market premium over par persistently exceeding the gold premium. Senator John Sherman pointed out on the floor of the Senate, March 6, 1876, that even the government's 5 per cent bonds had been "at par with gold for the past five years" while the greenbacks had been "from 6 to 22 per cent below gold."
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. NOTES.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ECONOMICS education ,MEETINGS - Abstract
Presents a preliminary announcement of program schedules for the Eighty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association on December 27-30, 1973 in New York.
- Published
- 1973
6. PROGRAM TWENTY-SECOND ANNUAL CONVENTION The American Catholic Sociological Society.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY conferences ,CATHOLICS ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
This article presents the program for the annual convention of the American Catholic Sociological Society in New York City from August 31 to September 2, 1960.
- Published
- 1960
7. QUERIES.
- Subjects
ART ,LITERATURE ,TERMS & phrases ,STATUE of Liberty (New York, N.Y.) ,PAPER arts - Abstract
Presents several queries on topics and issues related to art and literature. Search for the original source of a quotation on exchanging babies for a pound of tea; Symbolic meaning of the points in the crown of the Statue of Liberty; Information on the process of making cut and embossed paper scenes.
- Published
- 1963
8. Stolen Test Paper Wrecks School Team.
- Subjects
STUDENT suspension ,STUDENT cheating ,SCHOOL discipline ,COLLEGE athletes ,HIGH school students - Abstract
The article reports on the suspension of four members of the basketball team of Thomas Jefferson High School in Brooklyn, New York following their admission that they had stolen a set of midterm examination papers. Apparently, one of them got to the school vault where the papers were kept. He then distributed the copies to the team, all but four of whom accepted them.
- Published
- 1929
9. Old School Books Sold as Paper.
- Subjects
TEXTBOOKS ,SELLING ,PUBLIC schools ,INTERNATIONAL alliances - Abstract
The article reports that old textbooks that date from about 1925 used in public schools in New York City, New York, were sold at a price as an ordinary paper. According to a representative from the North American Newspaper Alliance, old textbooks were sold about thirty cents for every 100 pounds of paper. The cover page of these books were torn off and sold at fifty cents per 100 pounds.
- Published
- 1932
10. A CLASSIFICATION OF TEETH THE DISEASED PULPS AND APICES OF WHICH ARE RELATED TO INFECTIVE FOCAL AND SYSTEMIC SEQUELAE.
- Author
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GRIEVES, CLARENCE J.
- Subjects
DENTAL pathology ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,DENTAL pulp diseases ,PATHOLOGY ,DENTAL research ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
A conference paper that discusses the results of a research study conducted to classify and differentiate between the processes that result in teeth lacking dental pulp is presented. The paper was read at a meeting of the First District Dental Society of the State of New York held in New York City on February 2, 1920.
- Published
- 1920
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. PROGRAM of the Eight Annual (Seventeenth National) Meeting of the Operations Research Society of America.
- Subjects
MEETINGS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,LINEAR programming ,STRATEGIC planning ,PRODUCTION planning - Abstract
The article presents information on the program of the Eight Annual Meeting of the Operations Research Society of America held in New York City from May 18 to 21, 1960. As part of the meeting, the symposium titled Optimization on Chemical Reactors was held at New York University. John Happel served as chairman of the symposium. There were many papers presented during the meeting. A. V. Butterworth and P.C. Hayes presented their paper which discusses the use of mathematical predictors in a distribution system. Other topics discussed at the meeting include linear programming, strategic planning, and production planning.
- Published
- 1960
12. College Paper in Basic English Gives Head Man Headache.
- Subjects
BASIC English ,EDITORS ,COLLEGE publications ,ENGLISH language - Abstract
The article reports on the bewilderment of Henry A. Grunwald, head of the Washington Square College Bulletin of New York University in New York City, regarding the use of Basic English. In a column entitled "We Go Basic," Grunwald expresses that although Basic English is a language that knows many good words, they are not the ones he need. He has taken much punishment, is tired and desires to say things that he will not be able to say so in Basic English.
- Published
- 1943
13. PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST DISTRICT DENTAL SOCIETY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PREVENTIVE dentistry ,DENTAL public health ,DENTAL research - Abstract
This article offers information on a meeting of the First District Dental Society of the State of New York held in New York City on February 7, 1921. Transcripts of two research papers read at the conference are presented, "Preventive dentistry in the public school system," by M. M. Bluhm, and "The public health problem," by E. Briggs Riblet. Also included is a discussion of the papers by several members of the organization present for their reading.
- Published
- 1921
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. AUDITING INSTRUCTION BY THE LABORATORY METHOD.
- Author
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Byrnes, Thomas W.
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,STUDY & teaching of auditing ,ACCOUNTANTS ,ACCOUNTING ,ACCOUNT books - Abstract
For many years, the accounting professionals in the U.S. have recognized the need for the preparation required by accountancy students in the field of auditing, and conceived the idea of the link between theory and practice as a business clinic where students might work among the records of actual transactions. In 1914, Robert H. Montgomery, a professor at the Columbia University, New York City obtained a number of sets of used account books which formed the basis for the course of study which has been given since 1915, termed as the Auditing Laboratory. From time to time since, additional records have been obtained until at the present time there are approximately 100 workable sets of books of greatly diversified activities. Questions and problems, to be solved only by an actual examination of the books and other records, provide the basis of the student's work. This gives him a practical working test under conditions which very closely correspond to those met in actual practice. All through the work done by the student, the preparation and care of his work papers are carefully watched and criticized; the preparation of audit programs and the proper filing of work papers in the permanent and current files for the different engagements are also stressed. The Auditing Laboratory contains labor saving devices, such as adding and other computing machines, slide rule, etc., etc., in the legitimate use of which the student is urged to become adept.
- Published
- 1939
15. SYNOPSIS OF THE NEW YORK CITY MEETING.
- Subjects
MEETINGS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CHEMICAL reactors ,INVENTORY control ,OPERATIONS research - Abstract
The article presents information on the Eight Annual Meeting of the Operations Research Society of America held in New York City from May 18 to 21, 1960. As part of the meeting, the symposium titled Optimization on Chemical Reactors was held at New York University. There were many other sessions held discussing various topics including inventory control theory, reliability theory, financial management applications and operations research. Max A. Woodbury of New York University served as chairman of the meeting.
- Published
- 1960
16. GROUP DISORDERS IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
- Author
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Ritterband, Paul and Silberstein, Richard
- Subjects
HIGH schools ,DISEASES ,PUBLIC schools ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATION ,POLICE - Abstract
A large body of evidence points to high rates of group disorder in America's high schools. This paper examines several alternative models to account for the distribution of these events in the nation's largest school system. It is the thesis of the paper that while disorders occur in the schools, their roots lie in the larger society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. NOTES.
- Subjects
SEMINARS ,ECONOMICS ,ANNUAL meetings ,MEETING minutes ,ECONOMIC systems ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,POVERTY ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
The article focuses on the seventy fourth annual meeting of the American Economic Association to be held in New York from 27 to 29, 1961. Executive Committee dinner meeting will be held on December 26, 1961 at 6:00 p.m. On December 27, 1961 there would be a seminar on systems of economic accounts and analysis for urban region. Edgar D. Hoover of Pittsburgh Regional Planning Association would be the chairperson of the seminar. Discussants would include — Meredith B. Givens of Institute of Public Administration and Frederick T. Moore of The Rand Corp. Seminar on rural poverty and national policy would be held at 2:30 P.M. on December 29, 1961. Professor William H. Nichols of Vanderblit University would be the chairperson for the seminar. Papers to be discussed in the seminar include — "Economic Security for Agricultural Labor," by Louis Levine, "Relation of the Low Income Farm Problem to Major National Economic Problems," by Leonard P. Hendrix. Discussants include — professor Leonard P. Adams of Cornell University and John G. McNeely of Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas.
- Published
- 1961
18. Organizational Structuring of Sex Roles in a Nonstereotyped Industry.
- Author
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Mennerick, Lewis A.
- Subjects
TRAVEL agents ,GENDER role ,STEREOTYPES ,MANAGEMENT ,SALES ,EXECUTIVES ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,GENDER role in the work environment ,WOMEN executives ,EMPLOYMENT practices - Abstract
This paper examines the occupation of travel agent, an occupation that is not sex-role stereotyped. Six measures were developed, revealing the existence of sex structuring of men and women in management and sales positions both among and within New York City travel agencies. Men were found to predominate in management, women in sales. Male managers were also most frequent in the more prestigious kinds of agencies, female managers in the less prestigious agencies. Furthermore, whereas female top managers tended to employ female managerial and sales subordinates, male top managers employed males in management but females in sales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A.M.A. Notes.
- Author
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Brown, George H.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Information is presented about several papers discussed at the American Marketing Association Conference held in December 1949 in New York City. Topics include consumer research, marketing research, and sales management. The event featured presentations by Darrell B. Lewis from New York University and Philip Salisbury, editor of "Sales Management" magazine.
- Published
- 1950
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. COMMENTS ON 'EVALUATING THE ADEQUACY OF AIRPORT PARKING LOTS'
- Author
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Waldron, Stephen and Steinhardt, Jacinto
- Subjects
AIRPORT parking facilities ,AUTOMOBILE parking ,AUTOMOTIVE transportation ,PARKING facilities ,DECISION making ,PARKING lots - Abstract
The article presents comments of authors on the article "Evaluating the Adequacy of Airport Parking Lots," by F.V. Hurst which appear in the November 1955 issue of the periodical. This paper deals with a useful and interesting problem what number of parking spaces is required to cope adequately with the maximum inventory of parked cars? Here adequate and inventory are used as defined in the paper. The primary defect of this paper is the author's use of the methods of decision theory. The author associates a risk function with parking adequacy. He then indicates that, for the Port of New York Authority, yield per dollar invested can be maximized by having inadequate parking facilities.
- Published
- 1956
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. ASSOCIATION NEWS.
- Author
-
Immel, R.K.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,SPEECH education - Abstract
Highlights a national convention on speech education to be held at the Hotel McAlpin in New York City in December 1925. Various sessions to be featured at the conference; Papers to be presented.
- Published
- 1925
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. THE FOUNDING OF NEW AMSTERDAM IN 1626.
- Author
-
PALTSITS, VICTOR HUGO
- Subjects
NEW York City history ,HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
A conference paper is presented concerning the founding of New Amsterdam (later known as New York City) in 1626. It discusses explorers who came to the harbor of New Amsterdam but did not stay, including Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524 and Estavam Gomez in 1525. It details the arrival of Henry Hudson to Manhattan Island in 1609. Subjects of the paper also include the historiography of New York, the Dutch West India Company in New York, and the fort known as "New Netherland."
- Published
- 1924
23. Value Orientations in Educational and Occupational Choices.
- Author
-
Schwarzweller, Harry K.
- Subjects
RURAL youth ,VALUES (Ethics) ,SOCIAL norms ,HIGH schools ,SOCIAL structure ,VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
The research reported in this paper studied 240 rural youths in four central New York high schools. It investigated (1) the relationship between value orientations and the education and occupation choice-making process, and (2) the structural antecedents of those value orientations. Choice making was classified in two levels: aspirations and plans. An instrument was constructed which aimed at ranking individuals on a latent continuum for each of twelve values. The findings support the general hypothesis that in the education and occupation decision process there is a relationship between an individual's value orientations and the choice that an individual makes from among the alternatives available. The findings further suggest that the influence of values on choices decreases as freedom of opportunity is restricted by the bonds of social structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1959
24. The Jews and New York City's Mayoralty Election of 1917.
- Author
-
Szajkowski, Zosa
- Subjects
MAYORAL elections ,PACIFISTS ,SOCIALISTS - Abstract
The article investigates the role of the Jews in New York City's mayoralty election of 1917 in order to validate the concept of a pacifist Jewish vote. There were four mayoral candidate in the 1971 election, incumbent Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, Judge John F. Hylan, William M. Bennett, and Morris Hillquit. Hillquit represented the radical and pacifist Jews and many non-radical and non-pacifist Jews opposed him. His defeat in the election reflects the fact that there is no such thing as a pacifist Jewish vote.
- Published
- 1970
25. RESULTS OF FIVE YEARS OF DENTAL PROPHYLAXIS FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.
- Author
-
HYATT, THADDEUS P.
- Subjects
DENTAL prophylaxis ,ORAL microbiology ,PREVENTIVE dentistry ,PERIODONTICS ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
A conference paper that discusses the results of a research study conducted to examine the effects of five years of regular prophylactic treatments administered to employees of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company on the oral bacteria in the mouth is presented. The paper was read at a meeting of the American Academy of Periodontology held in New York City on May 9, 1921.
- Published
- 1921
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Family Health Worker Revisited: A Five-Year Follow-up.
- Author
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Torrey, E. Fuller, Smith, Debris, and Wise, Harold
- Subjects
COMMUNITY health workers ,TRAINING ,MEDICAL centers ,SELF-esteem ,SELF-confidence ,PATERNALISM - Abstract
This paper describes the present position of family health workers who were trained and worked at a neighborhood health center during the past five years. Problems initially anticipated for such workers did not materialize but others have emerged: lack of self-esteem, lack of upward and lateral mobility, inadequate evaluation of the validity of their training and role, and to some extent paternalism. These are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. ON WHAT BASES SHOULD SCIENCE LEARNING MATERIALS BE SELECTED ON THE ELEMENTARY LEVEL?
- Author
-
Milgrom, Harry
- Subjects
TEACHING aids ,SCIENCE education (Elementary) ,LEARNING ,ELEMENTARY education ,EDUCATION ,CHILDREN - Abstract
The article discusses the basis of selecting science learning materials in the elementary level in New York City. It explains on the eagerness of adults and children to learn about and make use of new scientific developments. It focuses on the need for science learning materials on the elementary level to make the pursuit of science by young people. It provides information on the potentialities of using science learning materials by youngsters in the elementary level.
- Published
- 1956
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. PROGRAM OF THE THIRTY-EIGHTH ANNUAL MEETING.
- Subjects
ANNUAL meetings ,SOCIAL adjustment ,SOCIAL psychology ,SOCIOMETRY - Abstract
The article presents information on the thirty-eighth annual meeting of the American Sociological Association to be held on December 4 and 5, 1943 at Hotel McAlpin, New York City. Papers on social research to be presented at the meeting are: "A Controlled Analysis of the Relationship of Guided Participation in Extra-curricular Activities to the Scholastic Achievement and Social Adjustment of College Students," by Reuben Hill, University of South Dakota, "Techniques of Social Reform: An Analysis of the Dry Movement," by Alfred McClung Lee, Wayne University, and "Reliability of the Idea-Centered Question in Interview Schedules," by Morton B. King, Camp Shelby, Mississippi. Papers will be followed by open discussion. Papers on Sociometry to be presented at the meeting are: "What Level of Living Indexes Measure," by Margaret Jarman Hagood and Louis J. Ducoff, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and "Some Regional Variations in Levels and Standards of Living," by Edgar A. Schuler, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
- Published
- 1943
29. NOTES.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC summit conferences ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations conferences ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
This article takes a note of a few relevant events from the economic fields. It first corrects an error occurred in the June 1955 issue of "The American Economic Review," whereby the name of the nominee for president of the American Economic Association was mistaken as Edwin E. White for Professor Edwin E. Witte. The next note is a preliminary announcement of the program for the Sixty-Eight Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association to be held in New York City, on December 28-30, 1955. Nearly half of the sessions of the program for this year will be centered upon the economic growth of the United States, that is, on the problem of keeping the United States economy moving onward and upward. It further notices on the The first congress of the International Economic Association, to be held in Rome, Italy, from September 6-11, 1956. The next note is on International Committee for Social Sciences Documentation, which was created at the end of 1950 as a result of meetings of experts convened by UNESCO to coordinate and improve existing bibliographic instruments for the social sciences, and the creation of new instruments in this area.
- Published
- 1955
30. PROCEEDINGS OF THE TWENTY-SECOND ANNUAL CONFERENCE.
- Author
-
Erskine, Hazel
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,PUBLIC opinion ,PUBLIC opinion polls ,BOLTON Landing (New York, N.Y.) ,AWARDS - Abstract
The article presents the proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Conference of American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) that was held on May 18-21, 1967 at Bolton Landing, New York. The conference was divided into fifteen formal sessions and three round tables. The new format also consists a presentation program of the best papers from a recent AAPOR competition for graduate students. In addition to the informative meetings, numerous social events were also organized. Also, the AAPOR Award of 1967 for distinguished achievement in the field of public opinion was presented to Hans Zeisel, a social researcher. Some of the topics on which papers were presented at the conference are: variations in the application of theory to attitude and opinion research; interviewing: special situations and problems; polling and the political process; socio-medical research in sensitive areas; predicting purchasing behavior: alchemy or science? and; computer-assisted analysis of survey data.
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Symposia at the New York Meeting.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,TRADE associations ,GEOGRAPHERS - Abstract
Provides information on the papers presented at symposia held during the Association of American Geographers' 1942 meeting in New York City. Papers focusing on selected counties of the Southern United States; Papers on problems of post-war reconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1942
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Police of the Twenty-third Precinct and the East Harlem Community.
- Author
-
Gross, Solomon
- Subjects
POLICE ,INNER cities ,ETHNIC neighborhoods ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
This paper recounts an intergroup situation in New York City between October of 1966 and November of 1967 and describes the efforts made in a ghetto community to develop some appreciation between the minority inhabitants and the police. The underlying pathologies of group intemalization and isolation were attacked on a day-to-day basis in an effort to dissolve some of the tensions and bitternesses. The premise was the belief that a police force cannot operate effectively without the wholehearted support and cooperation of the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. IMPLICATIONS OF SABBATH PROGRAMMING FOR THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER.
- Author
-
Berger, Graenum
- Subjects
SABBATH (Jewish law) ,PROHIBITED work (Jewish law) ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,YESHIVA University. Wurzweiler School of Social Work - Abstract
The article presents a paper delivered by Graenum Berger, a consultant for the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies during the Social Work Alumni Association Symposium held on April 12, 1962 at the Yeshiva University Wurzweiler School of Social Work in New York City. This paper focused on the author's reasons for opening Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew Association facilities during the Sabbath day, which has caused the author to come into conflict with Rabbis and Jewish Communal Workers alike. Reasons for this action include the obligation of Jewish institutions to make the Sabbath a significant day and the fact that these institutions have failed to frequently attract the majority of Jews into the synagogues.
- Published
- 1963
34. MINUTES OF THE SIXTH COUNCIL MEETING HELD IN THE EAST ROOM OF THE STATLER HILTON, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1962.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,EDUCATION associations ,FINANCIAL statements - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the sixth council meeting of the American Association on Mental Deficiency held in New York City on May 3, 1962 is presented. The discussion focused on several recommendations based on financial reports from the different committees of the organization. The meeting featured several speakers including Katherine Lynch, Arthur E. Westwell, and Harvey A. Stevens.
- Published
- 1962
35. MINUTES OF THE FIRST COUNCIL MEETING HELD IN THE TOWN ROOM, STATLER HILTON, NEW YORK CITY, MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1962.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,EDUCATION associations ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the first council meeting of the American Association on Mental Deficiency held in New York City on April 30, 1962 is presented. The discussion focused on the interpretation of the constitution and the documentation on the minutes of the meeting. The meeting featured several speakers including Herschel W. Nisonger, William Sloan, and George W. Wadsworth.
- Published
- 1962
36. "Mr. Spirit" and THE BIG BEAR OF ARKANSAS: A Note on the Genesis of Southwestern Sporting and Humor Literature.
- Author
-
Current-Garcia, Eugene
- Subjects
JOURNALISTS ,EDITORS - Abstract
Examines the editorial skills and acumen of the New York-based journalist, William T. Porter, who successfully pioneered in a unique editorial field with his weekly sporting paper, the 'Spirit of the Times,' and published anthologies of American frontier humor and life. Porter's acknowledgement of the many contributors to the Sporting paper; Porter's connection with writer, artist and newspaper editor Thomas Bangs Thorpe; Porter's skill in selection and arrangement of material; Porter's editorial work in the anthologies.
- Published
- 1955
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. SPEECHMAKING OF THE NEW YORK DRAFT RIOTS OF 1863.
- Author
-
Fletcher, Winona L.
- Subjects
DRAFT Riot, New York, N.Y., 1863 - Abstract
Discusses the Draft Riots of 1863 in New York City. Impact of President Abraham Lincoln's conscription bill on the people in New York; Appearance of names of the first draftees in the sunday paper; Arguments that disturbed the complacency related to the draftees.
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. SEASONAL VARIATIONS IN THE NEW YORK MONEY MARKET.
- Author
-
Kemmerer, E. W.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC seasonal variations ,MONEY market ,MARKET prices ,FINANCIAL markets ,FINANCIAL institutions - Abstract
The article focuses on seasonal variations in the New York money market. It was nearly a half-century ago that W. Stanley Jevons read before the Statistical Society of London his classic paper on the Frequent Autumnal Pressure in the Money Market, and the Action of the Bank of England. Since that time several others han made careful studies of the seasonal movements of the London money market. The subject of seasonal variations in American money markets, however, has been largely neglected by economists, although the fact that the U.S. is to such a large extent an agricultural country makes the subject one of great importance on this side of the Atlantic. The seasonal swings of the money market are quite varied in different parts of the country, and as limits of space prevent a consideration here of more than one city, one shall confine himself/herself largely to New York City, the country's principal money market. The best two criteria for seasonal fluctuations in the New York money market are probably call interest rates on the New York Stock Exchange, and percentages of reserves to deposits in New York associated banks.
- Published
- 1911
39. SOME FURTHER EXPERIMENTS IN THE PERCEPTION OF RESONANT CONSONANTS.
- Author
-
Obrecht, Dean H. and Babcock, William R.
- Subjects
LANGUAGE & languages ,SPEECH ,SOUND ,HEARING - Abstract
A series of forty-eight stimulus patterns were painted and converted to sound by the pattern playback. At the Haskins Laboratories, New York, experiments concerned with resonant consonants have been carried out in which the approach was somewhat different from that employed in the experiments to be described in this paper. The basic pattern used in the Haskins experiments was probably designed to compensate for the absence of third format, since an addition of it to the Haskins pattern made alteration necessary to gain a satisfactory approximation to the speech sound desired.
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. FOOD PRICES IN RELATION TO INCOME LEVELS IN NEW YORK CITY.
- Author
-
Alcaly, Roger E. and Klevorick, Alvin K.
- Subjects
FOOD prices ,CONSUMERS ,INCOME ,RETAIL stores ,COST of living - Abstract
In recent years many public outcries and expressions of indignation have focused on the claim that the poor pay more for the goods and services they buy than do their wealthier neighbors. A number of empirical studies have been undertaken to examine the specific question of the relative cost of food to low- and high-income consumers. Federal agencies, local governments, civic groups ad hoc consumer groups, the news media, and academic researchers have pursued these studies. This paper analyzes a comprehensive survey of food prices conducted in New York City during the summer of 1967 by the New York City Council on Consumer Affairs. The regression results of this study suggest that commodity-by-commodity with few exceptions, the prices of food items on retail merchants' shelves do not rise with decreases in neighborhood income. The cost of food may, in fact, be greatest to the poor, but a complete investigation of this issue will require data and discussion that go beyond the level of relative shelf prices in stores serving areas with different incomes.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Analysis and Urban Government: Experience of the New York City-Rand Institute.
- Author
-
Szanton, Peter L.
- Subjects
BUSINESS enterprises ,CITIES & towns ,HUMAN settlements - Abstract
For almost four years New York City and the Rand Corporation have been engaged in an enterprise distinctive if not unique: the subjection of a wide variety of the City's problems to the scrutiny of independent analysts. This paper* is the attempt of a participant in that enterprise to describe the background of that effort and the novel arrangements made to institutionalize it, to outline the nature and effect of the analyses produced, and then to reflect on some of the lessons this effort has taught some of its participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. From Hard to Soft Drugs: Temporal and Substantive Changes in Drug Usage Among Gangs in a Working-Class Community.
- Author
-
Klein, Julius and Phillips, Derek L.
- Subjects
GANGS ,WORKING class ,COMMUNITIES ,DRUG abuse ,URBAN sociology - Abstract
This paper examines changes over time in the utilization of hard and soft drugs among working-class gang members in "Eastville," an urban community outside New York City. Three different gangs are compared with respect to several factors which influenced the eventual decline in the proportion of regular users of hard drugs in the more recent gangs. Among the most important of the factors explaining this decline in hard drug usage are: (1) an increasing visibility and knowledge of the "negative" effects of hard drug use; and (2) an increasingly repressive stance toward hard drug use by community agencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. CONVENTION REPORT.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,MEETINGS ,ACCOUNTING ,FINANCIAL statements ,ANNUAL meetings - Abstract
The article focuses on the twenty-sixth annual convention of the American Accounting Association that was held in New York from December 29 to 30, 1941. The first session started on December 29, 1941. The topic for the first session was related to accounting principles underlying corporate financial statements. Some of the papers discussed were — "The Cost Principles," by Walter A. Staub, "The Revenue and Income Principles," by James L. Dobr and "The Capital Principle," by Samuel J. Broad. The second session was held on the same day. Six years ago in this city at the twentieth annual meeting of the American Association of University Instructors in accounting the association was reconstituted as the American Accounting Association. At that time many felt that what was accomplished at that meeting was only a streamlining of name and only a few recognized the change as particularly significant. For some years prior to 1936 a small group of members were attempting to awaken the association to its opportunity to render a real service.
- Published
- 1942
44. The response of settlements to the Great Depression.
- Author
-
Trolander, Judith Ann
- Subjects
SOCIAL settlements ,DEPRESSIONS (Economics) ,NEW Deal, 1933-1939 ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
The article focuses on the response of social settlements to the Great Depression of 1930s. During the depression of the 1930s, only settlements in New York City and Chicago continued the reform activities of the Progressive Era. A social settlement, Chicago Commons, held the first hearing, and many people connected with settlement houses were also deeply involved in the Chicago Workers Committee on Unemployment. Outside New York City and Chicago, virtually no settlement took part in social action to improve economic conditions. The major professional social work organization in the 1930s was the American Association of Social Work. Some of the differences in cities that did and did not have a Community Chest were reflected in attitudes toward various New Deal measures. Until the Social Security Act was passed in August 1935, the New Deal had provided only temporary relief programs, formed in response to the drastic conditions of the depression. The Social Security Act marked a turning point.
- Published
- 1973
45. Revealing Diagnosis and Prognosis to Cancer Patients.
- Author
-
Jablon, Rosalind and Volk, Herbert
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,CANCER in women ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
The social and psychological concomitants of cancer are profound and extensive, and a treating physician inevitably needs to grapple with these allied issues. Present medical thinking also holds that it is inadequate to treat a 'disease.' Typically the physician's explanation for restricting his activity to the treatment of disease is that he does not have the time for more than this. It is tacitly assumed thereby that a doctor would have the skillfulness generally to help patients in the broader sense. The authors question this premise and propose that it is rather the other way around. The thinking expressed in this paper is mainly based upon experiences with breast cancer patients attending the tumor clinics of the Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, a New York City general hospital. The authors believe these patients to be representative of the general breast cancer patient population, but this is an inference based upon observation rather than statistical demonstration. Breast cancer patients include women with operable disease as well as patients with advanced inoperable or recurrent postoperative malignancy.
- Published
- 1960
46. AN APPRAISAL AND LOOK TO THE FUTURE OF TEACHER EDUCATION IN SCIENCE: INTRODUCTION OF THE THEME OF THE CONFERENCE.
- Author
-
Powers, S. Ralph
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,TEACHER training ,SCIENCE education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the Twenty-fifth Conference on the Education of Teachers in Science, at the Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, on November 18 and 19, 1949, is presented. "An Appraisal and Look to the Future of Teacher Education in Science," was the general theme of the conference. Proposals regarding the nature and function of schools were discussed. The conference featured experts like S. Ralph Powers, Head of the Department of Natural Sciences at the Teachers College.
- Published
- 1950
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. SPECTRAL ANALYSIS OF NEW YORK STOCK MARKET PRICES.
- Author
-
GRANGER, CLIVE W. J. and MORGENSTERN, OSKAR
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,MARKET prices ,BUSINESS cycles ,STOCK prices ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,SEASONS - Abstract
SUMMARY New York stock price series are analyzed by a new statistical technique. It is found that short-run movements of the series obey the simple random walk hypothesis proposed by earlier writers, but that the long-run components are of greater importance than suggested by this hypothesis. The seasonal variation and the 'businesscycle' components are shown to be of little or no importance and a surprisingly small connection was found between the amount of stocks sold and the stock price series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. EXPERIENCES IN INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH.
- Author
-
Swaine, Dorothy
- Subjects
INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,ETHNOLOGY ,BUSINESS cycles ,SOCIAL disorganization - Abstract
Sociology at Barnard college, in the early 1920's, was a very insignificant appendage to the Economics Department, and William F. Ogburn served as chairman of the joint curriculum. The author took both economics and sociology with Ogburn, and was greatly influenced by his emphasis on the relationships between economic and social phenomena, his tendency to view the economic as independent and social phenomena as dependent variables, and his insistence on objectivity, verification, and measurement. The author's research orientation came from several disciplines, and his first two research papers, prepared under Ogburn's direction and published in collaboration with him in 1922, were interdisciplinary in the sense that the one, dealing with the incidence of simultaneous inventions, involved explorations into the history of science and into cultural anthropology. And the other combined the data and procedures of economics, sociology, and statistics to measure the relationships between business cycles and cycles in demographic phenomena and in indices of social disorganization.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. DIVORCE AND BUSINESS CYCLES.
- Author
-
Gulden, Tees
- Subjects
BUSINESS cycles ,DIVORCE - Abstract
The present article is concerned only with the connection between business cycles and frequency of divorces. The Bureau of Statistics of the city of Amsterdam has calculated the correlation between various economic indices and the marriage rate, for the years 1830-19 14. These data indicate an undeniable positive correlation between economic conditions and the frequency of marriages. This result cannot be interpreted as indicating that the tendency to matrimony in periods of prosperity is greater than in years of economic depression but rather that the possibilities of contracting a marriage are more favorable during a boom than during a depression. The effort in the present research paper is to trace a connection between business cycles and divorce similarly does not mean that the author considers economic conditions as the principal cause of divorce. In many cases, economic factors may have nothing to do with the inner cause of failure in marriage; in some, it merely predisposes towards failure; in others, it truly may be "the cause."
- Published
- 1939
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. EDITORIAL.
- Author
-
Gough, Harry Brainbridge
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
Editorial. Comments on the 1922 convention of the National Association of Teachers of Speech in New York City. Aims of the association.
- Published
- 1923
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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