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2. Oxford Slavonic Papers, Vol. 1, 1950 [Book Review]
- Published
- 1951
3. [The weekly paper "Medical News". A sketch on the history of Russian medical journalism].
- Author
-
MAGAZANIK GL
- Subjects
- History of Medicine, Humans, Russia, Ethnicity, Periodicals as Topic
- Published
- 1959
4. [Organization of antituberculosis work at the plants of the timber, paper and woodwork industries].
- Author
-
Sherman SG and Leshukovich IuV
- Subjects
- Disability Evaluation, Humans, Occupational Diseases prevention & control, Occupational Medicine, Organization and Administration, Russia, Wood, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary prevention & control
- Published
- 1973
5. [Experimental study of the sterilization of prescriptions and paper by ultraviolet radiation].
- Author
-
Lopatin PV, Kats AM, Iarantseva EP, Fedorova TM, and Gorskaia LV
- Subjects
- Russia, Pharmacy instrumentation, Radiation Effects, Sterilization instrumentation, Ultraviolet Rays
- Published
- 1965
6. [Planning of large city hospitals (apropos of the paper by V.A. Miniaev)].
- Author
-
Petrov ME
- Subjects
- Humans, Russia, Hospital Planning
- Published
- 1968
7. UNITED NATIONS ATOMIC ENERGY NEWS.
- Author
-
Kihss, Peter
- Subjects
NUCLEAR energy ,NUCLEAR nonproliferation ,NUCLEAR engineering ,NUCLEAR arms control - Abstract
The article offers various United Nations atomic energy news. The United Nations Atomic Energy Commission met on September 10 and 11, 1947 and adopted the second report to the Security Council. The nations who voted in favor of the report are Australia, France, United States, Brazil, Canada, and China. Russia rejected the report, and Poland abstained. The proposals submitted by Russia involves the investigation of mining and production facilities and accounting of atomic materials, and the conduct of investigations in case of violation of the weapons ban.
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. [Morbidity with temporary loss of working capacity among "year-round" and skilled worker contingents].
- Author
-
Laĭko FL
- Subjects
- Cellulose, Female, Humans, Male, Paper, Russia, Disability Evaluation, Morbidity, Occupational Diseases epidemiology
- Published
- 1973
9. [Amino acids and carbohydrates in the earliest deposits (exemplified by kyanite schists in the Kola Peninsula)].
- Author
-
Sergienko IZ, Bobyleva MI, Sidorenko SA, and Egorov IA
- Subjects
- Aluminum Silicates analysis, Amino Acids analysis, Autoanalysis, Carbohydrates analysis, Chromatography, Paper, Russia
- Published
- 1974
10. [Black-brown intracellular pigment in Actinomyces brunneorectus].
- Author
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Krasil'nikov NA, Zenova GM, and Bushueva OA
- Subjects
- Actinomyces cytology, Chromatography, Paper, Culture Media, Pigments, Biological analysis, Pigments, Biological biosynthesis, Russia, Soil Microbiology, Spectrophotometry, Actinomyces metabolism, Pigments, Biological isolation & purification
- Published
- 1974
11. [New species of brown Actinomycetes--Actinomyces luminobadius n. sp].
- Author
-
Vinogradova KA, Petrova LI, and Poltorak VA
- Subjects
- Actinomyces growth & development, Actinomycetales classification, Chromatography, Paper, Culture Media, Luminescent Measurements, Russia, Soil Microbiology analysis, Actinomyces classification
- Published
- 1973
12. [Comparative characteristic of the flavonoid composition of Sideritis taurica, Maschalliana and ajpetriana].
- Author
-
Fefer IM
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Paper, Glycosides analysis, Russia, Flavonoids analysis, Plants, Medicinal analysis
- Published
- 1971
13. [Phenolic acids in cultivated and wild plants growing in the northern Caucasus].
- Author
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Sergeeva NV, Zemtsova GN, Bandiukova VA, and Shinkarenko AL
- Subjects
- Caffeine analysis, Chromatography, Paper, Cinnamates analysis, Russia, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet, Phenols analysis, Plants analysis, Plants, Edible analysis
- Published
- 1973
14. PRESIDENT WILSON AND CHARLES CRANE: RUSSIA AND THE US DECLARATION OF WAR, 1917.
- Author
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Perman, Dagmar Horna
- Subjects
DECLARATION of war ,AMERICAN diplomats ,STATESMEN ,DIPLOMATIC negotiations in international disputes ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The article offers information regarding the declaration of war between United States and Russia in 1917, and the way diplomats and influential people of the U.S. faced the situation. It states that the U.S. President Woodrow Wilson had a talk with his friend and industrialist Charles Crane on the diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Russia. It mentions that Wilson wanted Crane to represent the country on international front, but Crane declined and the post gradually went to George T. Marye of San Francisco.
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Roosevelt, Russian Persecution of Jews, and American Public Opinion.
- Author
-
Stults, Taylor
- Subjects
POGROMS ,RUSSIAN Empire, 1613-1917 ,PUBLIC opinion ,FOREIGN relations of the United States - Abstract
The article discusses the 1903 pogrom in Kishinev, Russia. The pogrom is an example of how American public opinion, led by the Jewish community, forced U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt to take a more anti-Russian position. Several events involving Jews in Russia happened before the pogrom in April 1903. The pogrom brought Roosevelt and U.S. Secretary of State John Hay under fire from the Jewish community. It shaped and unified American public opinion as had few earlier issues. From mid-June 1903, Roosevelt and Hay became involved in the issue of the pogrom in particular and Russian anti-Semitism in general.
- Published
- 1971
16. A Conference on Forest Protection in Moscow.
- Author
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Hanso, M.
- Subjects
FOREST protection ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
This article highlights and presents papers on reviewed subjects from the conference on forest protection, held on November 30-December 02, 1971 in Moscow. It was one of the broadest conferences in this field in the Soviet Union till that time. Its general theme was application of new chemical and biological control methods in combating forest pests and diseases. The abstracts of the reports presented at the conference were published in three volumes. In one section of the conference topical problems of forest pathology were treated.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. RUSSIAN LABOR PRODUCTIVITY STATISTICS.
- Author
-
Galenson, Walter
- Subjects
LABOR productivity ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,INDUSTRIAL efficiency ,INDUSTRIES ,EMPLOYEES ,STATISTICS ,PRICES ,MINERAL industries - Abstract
This paper has a threefold purpose: (a) to examine the concepts employed by Russian statisticians in computing labor productivity; (b) to indicate the trend of labor productivity in Russian industry (including manufacturing and mining) since the inception of the five-year plans; and (c) through study of productivity changes in an illustrative industry, coal mining, to point up the problems involved in dealing with Russian productivity statistics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1951
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. CONTROLLED CAMPING OR USSR IN HETEROSPECT.
- Author
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Smith, Otto J. M.
- Subjects
SPEECHES, addresses, etc. ,INDUSTRIAL tours ,TOURS ,FAMILIARIZATION tours ,FOREIGN independent travel ,PUBLIC speaking ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The article narrates the author's visit in Russia and some series of events including the paper that the author is scheduled to present in the First Congress of the International Federation on Automatic Control to be held in Moscow on June 27 to July 6, 1960, the author's application for a 60-day tour permission in Intourist, the visit in several Russian cities, the 40-day trip by boat to Odessa, the series of kilometer-drive to the city of Kiev, Kharkov, Yalta, Simferopol, Melipotol, Zaporoshe, Kursk, Orjel, Moscow, Kalinin, Novgorod and Leningrad.
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Some Comments Concerning Murvar's "Messianism in Russia: Religious and Revolutionary"
- Author
-
Eichler, Margrit
- Subjects
MESSIANISM ,HUMANITY ,MATERIALISM ,REVOLUTIONARIES - Abstract
The article presents comments on social thinker, Vatro Murvar's paper "Messianism in Russia: Religious and Revolutionary." Murvar does nor give us a formal definition of messianism, but in the course of his analysis he nonetheless provides a clear delimitation of the term. Briefly, what he means by messianism is a social movement which exhibits certain doctrinal traits namely (a) millennialism, (b) twain cosmogony with a corresponding division of humanity into the children of light and darkness, and (c) collectivism and/or monism. Murvar proposes, and proceeds to demonstrate that the two sets of Russian messianism-religious and revolutionary-have many similar, if not identical, characteristics. The religious-revolutionary dichotomy should therefore be replaced by the old religious-secular one and revolutionism or politics should be recognized as a separate dimension. A division of millenarian movements into religious and revolutionary (political) categories generates an analysis which obfuscates on the conceptual level the potential presence of political elements in religious movements. Conversely, the distinction also obfuscates the presence of religious elements in revolutionary messianisms.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. DETERMINATION OF THE TIME OF OIL AND GAS ACCUMULATION BY EPIGENESIS STUDIES.
- Author
-
Prozorovich, G. E.
- Subjects
MINERALS ,EPIGENESIS ,ROCKS ,HYDROCARBONS ,TITANIUM - Abstract
The paper describes a method for determining the time of formation of oil and gas accumulations on the basis of the number of epigenetic minerals contained in granular reservoir rocks. The beginning of the accumulation is established by comparing the epigenesis state in the oil- or gas-bearing crest areas of the trap with the water-bearing part of the reservoir at different depths of the geological section. This takes into account that the epigenetic processes tend to intensify with depth and to slow down after the rocks become filled with hydrocarbons. The time of accumulation completion is found by comparing the degree of epigenetic alteration of the oil- and gas-bearing reservoirs with the water-bearing reservoirs occurring at the oil (gas)-water interface in the trap. The greater the differences, the older is the age of the pool completion. Lack of a difference indicates a youthful pool completion. In this paper, the ratio of detrital to authigenic titanium minerals, the quantity of regenerated quartz grains, and the pelitization of feldspars have been used. The application of this method is exemplified by oil deposits occurring in the productive Valangien and Hauterive beds (Lower Cretaceous) of the Ust-Balyk and Megion fields of western Siberia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Patterning of Recent Cultural Change in a Siberian Eskimo Village.
- Author
-
Hughes, Charles Campbell
- Subjects
SIBERIAN Yupiks ,SOCIAL change ,VILLAGES - Abstract
This paper deals with a change in self-definition among a group of Siberian Eskimo. Such a change, which has begun over the last generation,may be traced to a concomitant series of conditions which has affected the group. In the years between 1940 and 1955 the Eskimo people living in the small Bering Sea coastal village of Gambell have come into intensive contact of both a personal and impersonal nature with the white world; they have been given opportunities for jobs and new forms of satisfaction of basic wants; they have been subjected to many "stressor agents" of different types; and they have continued to observe and draw reasoned conclusions about conditions which affect their lives. These factors have combined to bring about a change in the function of the mainland with reference to themselves. The mainland no longer supplies only material goods; it now also supplies basic criteria of choice and models for the identification of self. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. What is Lef Fighting For? (Manifesto), Vol I Lef, Vol I.
- Subjects
FUTUROLOGISTS ,FORECASTING ,ARTISTS ,POLITICS in art ,SOCIAL movements - Abstract
This article discusses the futurist movement in Russia. The futurist movement was led by people in art who scarcely understood politics and was sometimes also painted with the colours of anarchy. Alongside people of the future went those trying to look young, screening their aesthetic putrefaction with the left flag. Joining the futurist group were the first production-futurists and the constructivists. In order to propagate the ideas of the futurists by agitation, the paper "Art of the Commune" and a tour of factories and workshops were organised.
- Published
- 1971
23. Max Weber's Urban Typology and Russia.
- Author
-
Murvar, Vatro
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL typologies ,SOCIAL classes ,MIDDLE class ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore the usefulness of Weber's city typology in relation to the Russian urban experience and to attempt to locate the Russian city within Weber's celebrated Oriental-Occidental dichotomy. The failure of various intellectual and revolutionary groups before and in 1917 to liberalize a traditionalistic societal system is correlated to the absence of a middle class in the Russian cultural context. Kiev, Novgorod, and Pskov existed long before the Mongol conquest of Russia in the thirteenth century and were exposed to certain Western influences due to the political connections with the neighboring Western countries. Unknown before the Mongols arrived, Moskva "still in the nineteenth century before the liberation of the peasants from slavery retained all the characteristics of a great Oriental city of about the time of Diocletian of the second century A.D." In addition to being the seat of the patrimonial ruler, Moskva was a "locality where rents from possessions in land and slaves as well as income from office holding were spent." Elsewhere Weber said that the cities in Russia "never arrived at freedom in the Western sense. Everywhere the military, judicial, and industrial authority was taken from the cities." This act of taking away autonomous-autocephalous authority is probably Weber's reference to the total destruction of Novgorod and Pskov by the Russian rulers as soon as they emerged from the shadow of Mongol dependence as well as to the Russian colonial conquest of the non-Russian cities and countries in the more recent centuries including the twentieth. Seven major characteristics basic to Weber's Oriental vs. Occidental typology of urban behavior, as tentatively modified in view of the needs and the contribution of recent research, will be utilized in examining the Russian experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. RATIONAL SYSTEMS AND LOGICS OF ACTION: THE FACTORY SITUATION.
- Author
-
Abruzzi, Adam
- Subjects
FACTORIES ,JOB evaluation ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,MERIT ratings ,MATHEMATICAL models ,INDUSTRIAL costs ,MANAGEMENT science ,FACTORY management ,HALO effect (Psychology) ,PRODUCTION management (Manufacturing) ,INDUSTRIAL management - Abstract
The field of management science has reached a stage of development where it can profit from the enriched collection of empirical information currently available about factory problems. This information can be useful in the process of constructing a unified theory of management science. It can also be useful by showing to what extent rational models need to be elaborated for an optimum result in applications. The paper shows that rational models intersect in a fundamental way with the value logics of the people affected. The result is that restraints and restrictions arise; these must be taken into account in developing rational techniques for factory activity. Rational techniques, in essence, should supply a framework within which the value logics of the various groups involved can come to equilibrium. A particular technique with this property is the technique of job evaluation. Within the rational base of a job evaluation system, there exist abundant possibilities for the expression of value logics. A particularly revealing example is the existence of the so-called halo effect; this effect can profitably be exploited for making needed local adjustments, always, of course, with the rational base as framework. In summary, the Russian factory system is shown to exhibit similar characteristics. Rational techniques there too are constantly interacting with the value logics of the groups affected. This contradicts the original view that the factory system could be run exclusively by rational means. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. ON THE TRANSLOCATION OF MASSES.
- Author
-
Kantorovitch, L.
- Subjects
APPROXIMATION theory ,THEORY of distributions (Functional analysis) ,HYPERFUNCTIONS ,CALCULUS of variations ,LINEAR substitutions ,LINEAR programming ,MANAGEMENT science ,BUSINESS planning ,STRATEGIC planning ,FUNCTIONAL analysis ,NUMERICAL analysis - Abstract
The article discusses work in the field of linear programming. The author attempts to give American readers an idea of the kind of work being done in the field of rational planning in Russia. Specific examples are given, through which the author hopes to convey the types of interpretation that Russians have made of abstract mathematics. The author has made a number of contributions in the field of pure mathematics and also to the theory of functional analysis. Also noted are the author's contributions to applied mathematics in numerical analysis and in the theory and practice of computation.
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Russia and the International Wheat Trade, 1861-1914.
- Author
-
Falkus, M. E.
- Subjects
WHEAT ,EXPORTS ,RUSSIAN economy ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
This article examines the course of Russia's wheat exports and suggests that the slower growth during the 1880s and 1890s marked a turning point when, under the impact of foreign competition and changes in demand for particular qualities of wheat, a new pattern of trade emerged. In this period Russian exporters developed new markets, and it was the further growth of these markets after 1900 which accounted for most of the rapid increase of exports thereafter. It is also suggested that the poverty of the Russian market and the agrarian system within which the farmer was producing prevented any widespread diversification despite the acute distress caused by the low world prices, and that
1 I am grateful to several of my colleagues, and particularly to Professor F. J. Fisher, for helpful comments and suggestions on an earlier draft of this paper.
2 The data for this chart are from the sources used in Table 3, below.
3 The period 1910-13 when exports again declined is too short to determine whether a new trend had emerged. Harvest fluctuations considerably affected the exportable surplus and the Balkan Wars interfered with trade, especially in the Sea of Azov where Greek shipping usually carried the bulk of grain exports. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. THE DEVELOPMENT OF GEOGRAPHY IN PRE-SOVIET RUSSIA.
- Author
-
Hooson, David J. M.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,THOUGHT & thinking ,REVOLUTIONS ,SCIENTISTS ,INTELLECTUALS - Abstract
This is an attempt to portray some of the more important currents of thought and personalities associated with the progress of geography in pre-Soviet Russia, with the chief aims of 1) indicating some of the roots of present Soviet geographical thinking, and 2) placing the Russian contribution as an integral yet distinctive part of the developments in world geography before 1920. The main part of the paper is organized chronologically and appraises the life arid work of the more significant geographers of each period, their impact on the character of the subject, and their relation to their historical and intellectual milieu Finally, the nature and extent of the carry-over to the Soviet period is suggested. The recent intense methodological debate is seen as, in good measure, inspired by the work of the pre-Revolutionary scholars, and by the awareness of a broken heritage. In conclusion, some continuities of thought in Russian geography, then and now, are postulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Sources of Russian Economic Information.
- Subjects
RUSSIAN economy ,TRANSLATING & interpreting ,ECONOMIC systems - Abstract
The article presents information about the paper "Sources of Russian Economic Information," by G. Russell Barker, that appeared in the August 1954 issue of the journal "Aslib Proceedings." The author discusses briefly the publications that carry translated information, Soviet sources and the availability of Soviet material, reliability of the data, and reference works. The availability of data on the workings of the Soviet economic system at the present time is such that very careful and scrupulous analytical work is essential on the part of every individual student of current material, within the framework of a sound methodological approach.
- Published
- 1955
29. MEETING REPORTS.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PALYNOLOGY ,BOTANY -- Congresses ,PLANT spores - Abstract
Information on several papers discussed at the 3rd international conference on palynology is presented. Topics include palynology as a Science, coal palynology, and spore-pollen analysis of oil and gases. The conference featured several Soviet palynologists including V. V. Menner, K. R. Cheikov, and Z. I. Verbitskaya.
- Published
- 1971
30. NEWS AND NOTES.
- Author
-
Vernon, P. E., De Budberg, M., and Stern-Lipmann
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY ,PSYCHODIAGNOSTICS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,HEREDITY ,BOTANY ,ANIMALS ,SEX preselection - Abstract
Presents news briefs related to psychology as of December 1, 1933. Growth in the number of papers of psychodiagnostic interest which are read at the meetings of the British Association for the Advancement of Science; Information on lectures delivered at a meeting of the German Society for the Study of Heredity on problems of heredity in the animal and vegetable kingdom; Information on experiments in Russia which aimed at finding methods to regulate the sex of offspring.
- Published
- 1933
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. THE BOGS AND SWAMPS OF WHITE RUSSIA.
- Author
-
Regel, C.
- Subjects
BOGS ,WETLANDS ,SWAMPS ,MARSHES ,VEGETATION & climate ,CROPS & soils ,NITROGEN fertilizers ,POTASSIUM fertilizers - Abstract
The article provides information regarding the predominance of swamps, marshes and bogs in Polesje and White Russia. According to the author, their predominance is accidental because this country is a low one with many rivers and is flooded in spring by the waters of rivers. He adds that it is therefore clear that in time the original marshes, swamps, bogs and extended alderwoods will disappear, it will give place to cornfields, meadows and pastures. In addition, as it was seen from the experiments of the Research Station in Sarny (Pruchnik, 1933) the Polesje soils can give big crops being drained and manure by nitrogenous, potassium and phosphorus manures.
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. CORRESPONDENCE.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS literature ,CRIMEAN War, 1853-1856 ,CENSORSHIP ,LITERATURE translations ,SOCIALISM ,EMANCIPATION of serfs ,COOPERATIVE banking industry ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) - Abstract
The article focuses on the condition of the economics literature in Russia. During the period between 1800-1850s, economic literature in Russia was limited, perhaps due to censorship during the rule of Czar Nicholas. After the Crimean war around 1856, reform arrived in the form of emancipation of the serfs and foundation of small cooperative credit associations, mainly due to lack of faith in the previous government system. This reform also brought with it a demand for the study of political economy. Initially, Russian economic literature consisted of translations of texts from other countries but soon original texts were being written that addressed the problems of the country. One primary topic was the socialist measure involving peasant land and its distribution.
- Published
- 1888
33. THE DEVELOPMENT OF PRICE FORMATION IN THE USSR.
- Author
-
Kondrashev, D.
- Subjects
PRICING ,RUSSIAN economic policy, 1991- - Abstract
Focuses on the development of price formation in the USSR. Definition of price; Factors contributing to the development of pricing; Changes in economic and pricing policy in 1921.
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. "Police Socialism" in Tsarist Russia.
- Author
-
Bailey, Sydney D.
- Subjects
POLICE & society ,SOCIALISM ,RUSSIAN monarchy ,LABOR movement - Abstract
The article provides information on police socialism in Tsarist Russia. Police socialism was designed to continue Tsarism through manipulating the working-class movement. Police socialism is difficult to distinguish since Tsarist records are not fully opened. Furthermore, Russians invented the word zubatovism, which was derived from S. V. Zubatov's name who was the inventor of police socialism, to describe the system of placing police agents in the labor movement.
- Published
- 1957
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Slaves of the 20th Century.
- Author
-
Ezrahi, Yaron
- Subjects
HUMAN rights ,SOCIAL & economic rights ,HIGHER education ,INTELLECTUALS ,IMMIGRATION policy ,HUMAN rights violations ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The article reports on the decree issued by the USSR imposing that the brains of educated people as property of the state, with total disregard for humanity and the rights of the person who happens to have these brains. The new Soviet regulation mandates a graduated scale of exit fees for educated citizens who wish to emigrate to non-Communist countries. Soviet intellectuals were shocked and expressed their disapproval of this government regulation which makes the Soviet system of higher education into a means for enslaving its citizens for life.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Reply.
- Author
-
Naleszkiewicz, Wladimir
- Subjects
SOCIAL security ,ECONOMIC security ,GOVERNMENT insurance ,FINANCE ,ECONOMICS ,LABOR policy ,LABOR ,PERSONAL finance - Abstract
The article replies to a comment made by Robert J. Myers about the paper, Financing and Coverage Under Social Insurance in Soviet Russia, published in the January 1964 issue of the Industrial and Labor Relations Review. The author states that after having read thoroughly Myers' communication regarding the article on social insurance, he realize that there is actually no quarrel between Myers and him as to statements of opinion or as to comparisons of Soviet Social Insurance with other systems. Myers is charging the author though with inaccuracy in some factual information. In Myers' comments, he states that the description of certain benefits and coverage is just not true. The author replies that this particular part of the article has been totally documented and each paragraph, if not each sentence, is footnoted. On the other hand, Myers in his communication does not give a single reference to support his claims. The author admits that he has no way to check on the truthfulness of his sources and references other than using cross-references and other substantial published Soviet materials. So the whole problem boils down to the fact that Myers questions the truthfulness and/or accuracy of the authors of references.
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Financing and Coverage under Social Insurance in Soviet Russia.
- Author
-
Myers, Robert J.
- Subjects
SOCIAL security ,INSURANCE ,LABOR policy ,ECONOMIC policy ,SECURITY management ,SOCIAL legislation ,GOVERNMENT securities ,ECONOMIC security - Abstract
The article comments on the paper, Financing and Coverage Under Social Insurance in Soviet Russia, by Wladimir Naleszkiewicz, published in the January 1964 issue of the "Industrial and Labor Relations Review." According to the author, the article gives some valuable economic analyses of this important sector of Soviet economic life. Apparently, the author was not aware of the extensive document on the subject, A Report on Social Security Programs in the Soviet Union, which was prepared by a five-man group from the Social Security Administration that visited the Soviet Union under the East-West exchange program in late 1958. That report made a detailed appraisal of the various Soviet programs, which have changed very little in the intervening five years, and its factual accuracy and completeness have, with only certain minor exceptions, been unquestioned by experts in the subject.
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Protozoology.
- Author
-
Levine, Norman D.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PROTOZOOLOGY ,MICROBIOLOGY - Abstract
Information about the topics discussed at the Third International Congress of Protozoology that was held in Leningrad, Russia on July 6 to 10, 1969 is presented. There were 641 registered participants from 36 countries. The Congress was sponsored by the International Commission on Protozoology. The International Society of Protozoologists cooperated.
- Published
- 1971
39. Theory Second to Fact.
- Author
-
Murvar, Vatro
- Subjects
MESSIANISM ,EVIDENCE ,THEORY ,HUMANITY ,MATERIALISM - Abstract
The author replies to the criticism that has been made on his work on messianism. His simple descriptive distinction between two sets of messianic phenomena is declared by the critique to be a basic dichotomy. But this is not what he intended. Of course the two sets are empirically distinct, but his task was not to show how Russian messianic structures can be fitted into two mutually exclusive categories, but rather to show that many of these structures are both religious and revolutionary. The amazing, almost unbelievable evidence that the basic doctrines and structural characteristics of both revolutionary and religious messianism are almost identical-indistinguishable for all practical purposes-struck him forcefully as a bloody fact of life in the Russian cultural context. This is what he wanted to share with students of messianic elsewhere. It is worth noting that the critique pays no attention at all to the facts of the Russian case. She seems more interested in conceptual elegance than in comprehending the complexities of the real world. This shows she is a competent sociologist trained in the dominant tradition. The author respectfully submit that this dominant tradition has done a disservice to this field by encouraging unwarranted claims to theoretical universality.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Bacteriological Warfare.
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL warfare ,ARMS control ,WEAPONS of mass destruction ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,NUCLEAR energy ,RED Cross & Red Crescent - Abstract
The article reports on the issue about the use of the United States of bacteriological methods of warfare in Korea which is discussed at the quadrennial meeting of the International Red Cross Conference in Toronto, Canada. The issue was first raised by a Russian representative before the Disarmament Commission of the United Nations. The US representative at the UN commission urged the establishment of a foolproof system of arms reduction that would include the elimination of all weapons of mass destruction. It cites that the safeguards would differ with those of atomic energy and other types of nonatomic weapons.
- Published
- 1952
41. Another View of Akademgorodok.
- Author
-
Leighton, Lauren G.
- Subjects
LEARNED institutions & societies ,RESEARCH & development ,SCIENCE museums ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SCIENCE education ,TECHNOLOGICAL progress ,RESEARCH institutes ,SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
The article presents views of a visitor of the Siberian science center Akademgorodok in Novosibirsk, Russia. The first impression of the center, including the physical plant and its natural environment, is that here is an ideal realized. Akademgorodok was almost a technological nightmare instead of a humanistic showplace. The original plans called for the erection of those huge skyscrapers. Nature was to have been locked out, men would have been locked in, and minds would surely have been sterilized by artificiality.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Science in Siberia.
- Author
-
Shelton, William R.
- Subjects
SCIENTISTS ,SCHOLARS ,WORK environment ,EMPLOYMENT ,SCIENTIFIC development ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
The article discusses the development of science centers in Siberia, Russia becoming one of the landmarks of the world scientific revolution. Soviet science at Akademgorodok in Siberia was a symbol of the new status and evidence of the new working environment of the Russian scientist. In a country where just a half century ago more than half of the population was illiterate, the degree to which the modern Soviet scientist has created a new world for himself is most remarkable. His new rank not only affords younger scientists, engineers and technicians immediate and relatively gainful employment, as in the U.S., but it has also finally given a few senior scientists an active role in the decisionmaking processes of government.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Can We Control the Arctic Climate?
- Author
-
Borisov, P. M.
- Subjects
PUBLISHED reprints ,CLIMATE change ,POPULATION density - Abstract
The article presents a reprint of the article "Can We Control the Arctic Climate," by P. M. Borisov, which appeared in the "Soviet" journal. It discusses the problems of the climatic changes in Russia and other places in the Arctic regions which are caused by the expanding populations. The author examines the efficacy of transporting Atlantic Ocean water across the Arctic Basin to improve the climate in the areas.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. To Stop of Not to Stop.
- Author
-
Szilard, Leo
- Subjects
DISARMAMENT ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,MILITARY weapons ,NUCLEAR weapons testing ,NUCLEAR weapons ,WEAPONS of mass destruction ,NUCLEAR arms control ,NUCLEAR disarmament ,NUCLEAR energy ,NUCLEAR warfare - Abstract
The article reflects the author's view regarding the cessation of bomb tests between Russia and U.S. He believes that continuation of testing for the purpose of developing bombs which are suitable for being carried by anti-missile missiles that may be developed for the purpose of destroying incoming long-range rockets in flight is a futile arms race. He stresses that if it were really true that the development of the anti-missile missiles requires the further development of bombs rather than of missiles, then the stopping of bomb tests might perhaps serve the purpose of preventing the futile arms race to which the development of anti-missile missiles might lead. Other arguments, contentions, and analyses of the author are presented.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Nuclear Bomb Tests.
- Author
-
Rabinwitch, Eugene
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations, 1955-1965 ,NUCLEAR weapons (International law) ,PRESIDENTS of the United States ,NUCLEAR arms control ,NUCLEAR weapons ,INTERNATIONAL security ,MILITARY readiness ,TESTING - Abstract
The article focuses on the deliberation of scientific experts from the U.S., Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and Great Britain concerning the methods of monitoring nuclear weapon bomb tests. U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, regarding the issue, expresses that the Americans are willing to stop nuclear tests for a year. Great Britain readily signifies to take the same action, while the Soviet Union announces that it will resume the action if other nations continue testing. Eisenhower suggested a moratorium unless the establishment of an effective monitoring system is provided. Furthermore, annual extensions are envisioned if general disarmament negotiations develop favorably.
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. It's Up to You, Mr. President.
- Author
-
Sawyer, Roland
- Subjects
NUCLEAR weapons ,ATOMIC bomb ,CIVIL defense ,BOMBS ,CIVILIAN evacuation ,MASS casualties ,AMERICANS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The article focuses on informing the American people about the possibility of atomic attacks. It should be the President's and not the fifth-rank official's responsibility to tell the people of the possible eventualities of a Russian atomic attack. The only solid endeavor under President Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration addressing atomic attacks is, Project East River. Fear among the American citizens should be eliminated in order for each and everyone to perform their task in civil defense. Instead of protecting their cities, the people should be advised to evacuate and live out in the open to prevent casualties. By doing this, Russian atomic bombs can destroy the cities but not the people.
- Published
- 1953
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. "SOVIET ATOMIC ESPIONAGE".
- Author
-
T. H. D.
- Subjects
ESPIONAGE ,INTELLIGENCE service ,SECRECY ,VIOLATION of sovereignty - Abstract
The article offers information on Soviet atomic espionage. Relative to this issue, several notable scientists who leaked information to Russia were mentioned. Klaus Fuchs was imprisoned in 1950 for leaking sensitive information, including extensive data in written form, concerning the Oak Ridge gaseous diffusion process, the weapons research at Los Alamos, British activities at Hatwell, and other projects in the United States, Canada, and Great Britain. Bruno Pontecorvo, Allan Nunn May, and David Greenglass were also reprimanded for unauthorized distribution of highly sensitive information.
- Published
- 1951
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. ATOMIC POWER AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT.
- Author
-
Isard, Walter and Whitney, Vincent
- Subjects
NUCLEAR energy ,ECONOMIC status ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMUNITY development ,NUCLEAR weapons - Abstract
The article criticizes the book "Fear, War and the Bomb," written by P.M. S. Blackett which centers on how the economic status of various nation, specifically Russia and United States, will be affected by the advent of atomic power. According to the authors, Blackett's book points social scientists' inadequate attention on the economic implications of atomic power. They further state that the existing analyses on atomic power's economic consequences made them realize that they lack a clear understanding of regional economic development process which would have allowed them to examine the effect of technological change on specific economies.
- Published
- 1949
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. ATOMIC POWER VERSUS WORLD SECURITY.
- Author
-
Covers, David F.
- Subjects
NUCLEAR energy ,INTERNATIONAL security ,NUCLEAR nonproliferation ,ATOMIC bomb ,SCIENCE ,ARMS control ,NUCLEAR arms control - Abstract
The article offers information on the relationship of atomic power and world security. The creation of the atomic bomb and other weapons of mass destruction has heightened the issue of world security. In this instance, science is more geared towards annihilation rather than progress. The actions that the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission has done relative to the concern of arms control are underlined. The opposing views of the United States and Russia regarding the nonproliferation of arms are also mentioned.
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Man's Leisure and His Health.
- Author
-
Martin, Alexander Reid
- Subjects
LEISURE ,WORK ,HEALTH ,CREATIVE ability ,AUTOMATION ,WORKING hours - Abstract
The article emphasizes that a capacity for leisure and work is indispensable for health growth and creative development. The advancement of technological science and automation is causing a shrinkage of workaday world. Plans for a six-week vacation and a three-day weekend is now underway. Boris Pregel, former president of the New York Academy of Sciences, states that the work week will be reduced by 20 hours within the next decade. In his book "The Great Contest," Isaac Deutscher states that Russia has now a nation-wide plan of preparing its people for a three-hour workday by 1984.
- Published
- 1965
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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