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1

Tarcov, Nathan. « Introduction to Two Unpublished Lectures by Leo Strauss ». Review of Politics 69, no 4 (2007) : 513–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034670507000940.

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These two lectures by Leo Strauss, “What Can We Learn from Political Theory?” delivered in July 1942, and “The Re-education of Axis Countries Concerning the Jews,” delivered November 7, 1943, include not only Strauss's most elaborate statement about the relation of political philosophy and political practice (in the first), but what may well be his fullest written public statements about matters of contemporary foreign policy. Both lectures obviously were carefully considered, composed, and corrected, but Strauss did not attempt to publish either. He may have had second thoughts about some of the arguments he advanced in these lectures, or he may simply have chosen to concentrate his literary efforts elsewhere. Other lectures he prepared during this period but did not publish himself have since been published: “The Living Issues of German Postwar Philosophy,” delivered April 1940 at Syracuse University, and “Reason and Revelation,” delivered January 1948 at Hartford Theological Seminary, both in Heinrich Meier, Leo Strauss and the Theologico-Political Problem (Cambridge University Press, 2006); “German Nihilism,” delivered to the New School's General Seminar February 26, 1941, is in Interpretation 26:3 (Spring 1999).
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Myant, Martin. « New Research on February 1948 in Czechoslovakia ». Europe-Asia Studies 60, no 10 (25 novembre 2008) : 1697–715. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09668130802434315.

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Holmes, Kenneth C., et Alan Weeds. « Hugh Esmor Huxley MBE. 25 February 1924 — 25 July 2013 ». Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 63 (janvier 2017) : 309–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2016.0011.

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Hugh Esmor Huxley devoted his life to understanding how muscles contract. He was born in Birkenhead and entered Christ's College, Cambridge, in 1941 to study Physics. Joining the RAF in 1943 as an Acting Pilot Officer, he later moved to the Malvern Telecommunications Research Establishment where his pioneering work on developing H 2 S Mk IVA airborne radar over two years to 1947 led to his being elected a Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1948 while still an undergraduate. He started X-ray research on living muscle with Sir John Kendrew at the Medical Research Council Unit in the Cavendish Laboratory and showed that skeletal muscle is made of a hexagonal array of thick and thin filaments. In 1952 he moved to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to study muscle ultrastructure by electron microscopy, where he was joined by Jean Hanson, and in 1954 they published the sliding filament hypothesis (7) † . Back in London he produced ultra-thin sections of muscle barely 150 Å thick, which showed cross-bridges between the filaments, and in 1960 was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. His research at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology from 1962 led to his proposal of the swinging cross-bridge model. His ambition of studying cross-bridge movement in living muscle by X-ray diffraction in the millisecond time range required ever stronger X-ray sources and more sensitive detectors. The development in the 1970s of beam lines from synchrotron radiation opened a new perspective that fascinated him for the rest of his working life. From his last work at Argonne National Laboratory with Massimo Reconditi, Hugh finally convinced himself that he had incontrovertible evidence for the tilting lever-arm model.
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Svik, Peter. « The Czechoslovak Factor in Western Alliance Building, 1945–1948 ». Journal of Cold War Studies 18, no 1 (janvier 2016) : 133–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jcws_a_00622.

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This article assesses the role of the Czechoslovak coup d’état in February 1948 in the establishment of the Brussels Pact a month later and formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in April 1949. The article places these developments in the larger context of post-1945 national security policymaking in several countries, weighing the impact of the Czechoslovak coup on relations among seven countries on national security issues at the outset of the Cold War: Czechoslovakia, France, the United Kingdom, the three Benelux countries, and the United States. The article shows that the only proper way to evaluate the effect of the Communist takeover in Czechoslovakia on the formation of the Western alliance is by looking at the considerations present in each country and seeing how they interacted with one another. The Czechoslovak factor varied in its magnitude from country to country.
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Perret, Françoise. « ICRC operations in Hungary and the Middle East in 1956 ». International Review of the Red Cross 36, no 313 (août 1996) : 412–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020860400084837.

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In Eastern Europe, 1956 was above all the year that marked the beginning of destalinization, following the submission to the 20th Congress of the Soviet Communist Party (17–24 February) of Nikita Khrushchev's famous report on Stalin's crimes.Khrushchev's revelations were soon to have repercussions, notably in Poland where thousands of political prisoners were released as early as April of the same year. Among them was Wladyslaw Gomulka, former Secretary-General of the Polish Communist Party from 1943 to 1948, who had been dismissed in 1948 for “right-wing and nationalist deviation” and jailed in 1951.
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Ellis, Stephen, et Adrian Cunningham. « Dagmar Parer, 24 February 1948 – 4 November 2014 ». Archives and Manuscripts 43, no 2 (4 mai 2015) : 93–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01576895.2015.1047819.

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Lukes, Igor. « The Czechoslovak Special Services and Their American Adversary during the Cold War ». Journal of Cold War Studies 9, no 1 (1 janvier 2007) : 3–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jcws.2007.9.1.3.

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U.S. intelligence officials in early postwar Czechoslovakia had access to some of the Czechoslovak government's highest-ranking individuals and plenty of time to prepare for the looming confrontation with the Czechoslovak Communist Party. Yet the Communist takeover in February 1948 took them by surprise and undermined their networks. This article discusses the activities of four Czechoslovak security and intelligence agencies to demonstrate that the scale of the U.S. failure in Prague in 1945–1948 was far greater than often assumed, especially if one considers the substandard size and quality of Czechoslovakia's Communist-dominated special services after the war.
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Haska, Agnieszka, et Aleksandra Bańkowska. « Powojenni lokatorzy budynku przy ul. Tłomackie 5 ». Zagłada Żydów. Studia i Materiały, no 8 (2 décembre 2012) : 430–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.32927/zzsim.699.

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In 1945 the building of the Central Judaist Library was inhabited by ca. 30 illegal tenants. After the real estate had been taken over in February 1946 by the Central Commission of Polish Jews most of them moved, but one family refused to leave the apartment they had been living in. Certain files that have survived in the Legal Department of the Archive of the Jewish Historical Institute contain correspondence regarding the rooms on Tłomackie Street, which allow for a reconstruction of the dispute that began in 1948 and which this article describes. Aside from the profiles of the illegal tenants we also present the profiles of the legal tenants of the building at Tłomackie Street No. 5
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Giddins, Grey. « M. Felix Freshwater : 4 February 1948–1 October 2016 ». Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) 42, no 1 (12 décembre 2016) : 104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1753193416678518.

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Driedzic, W., J. M. Shick et G. N. Somero. « Bruce D. Sidell 20 March 1948 - 8 February 2011 ». Journal of Experimental Biology 214, no 15 (13 juillet 2011) : 2453–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.060970.

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Driedzic, William R., J. Malcolm Shick et George N. Somero. « Bruce D. Sidell (20 March 1948–8 February 2011) ». Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C : Toxicology & ; Pharmacology 154, no 4 (novembre 2011) : 437–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpc.2011.06.015.

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Driedzic, William R., J. Malcolm Shick et George N. Somero. « Bruce D. Sidell (20 March 1948–8 February 2011) ». Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B : Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 160, no 2-3 (octobre 2011) : 119–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpb.2011.06.005.

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Driedzic, William R., J. Malcolm Shick et George N. Somero. « Bruce D. Sidell (20 March 1948–8 February 2011) ». Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A : Molecular & ; Integrative Physiology 160, no 3 (novembre 2011) : 440–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpa.2011.06.025.

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Driedzic, William R., J. Malcolm Shick et George N. Somero. « Bruce D. Sidell (20 March 1948–8 February 2011) ». Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part D : Genomics and Proteomics 6, no 3 (septembre 2011) : 335–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbd.2011.06.005.

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Navarro Yerga, Rufino M. « Remembering Professor Jose Luis García Fierro (1948–2020) ». Catalysts 10, no 4 (25 mars 2020) : 357. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/catal10040357.

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Gupta, Sonika. « Frontiers in Flux : Indo-Tibetan Border : 1946–1948 ». India Quarterly : A Journal of International Affairs 77, no 1 (10 février 2021) : 42–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0974928420983095.

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On the eve of Indian Independence, as Britain prepared to devolve the Crown’s treaties with Tibet to the Indian government, the Tibetan government was debating its future treaty relationship with India under the 1914 Simla Convention and associated Indo-Tibetan Trade Regulations. Soon after Indian independence, Tibetan government made an expansive demand for return of Tibetan territory along the McMahon Line and beyond. This led to a long diplomatic exchange between Lhasa, New Delhi and London as India deliberated its response to the Tibetan demand. This article decodes the voluminous correspondence between February 1947 and January 1948 that flowed between the British/Indian Mission in Lhasa, the Political Officer in Sikkim, External Affairs Ministry in Delhi and the Foreign Office in London, on the Simla Convention and the ensuing Tibetan territorial demand. Housed at the National Archives in New Delhi, this declassified confidential communication provides crucial context for newly independent Indian state’s relationship with Tibet. It also reveals the intricacies of Tibetan elite politics that affected decision-making in Lhasa translating to a fragmented and often contradictory policy in forging its new relationship with India. Most importantly, this Tibetan territorial demand undermined the diplomatic efficacy of Tibet’s 1947 Trade Mission to India entangling its outcome with the resolution of this issue. This was a lost opportunity for both India and Tibet in building an agreement on the frontier which worked to their mutual disadvantage in the future.
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Paulson, Lawrence C. « Michael John Caldwell Gordon. 28 February 1948—22 August 2017 ». Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 65 (12 septembre 2018) : 89–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2018.0019.

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Michael Gordon was a pioneer in the field of interactive theorem proving and hardware verification. In the 1970s, he had the vision of formally verifying system designs, proving their correctness using mathematics and logic. He demonstrated his ideas on real-world computer designs. His students extended the work to such diverse areas as the verification of floating-point algorithms, the verification of probabilistic algorithms and the verified translation of source code to correct machine code. He was elected to the Royal Society in 1994, and he continued to produce outstanding research until retirement. His achievements include his work at Edinburgh University helping to create Edinburgh LCF, the first interactive theorem prover of its kind, and the ML family of functional programming languages. He adopted higher-order logic as a general formalism for verification, showing that it could specify hardware designs from the gate level right up to the processor level. It turned out to be an ideal formalism for many problems in computer science and mathematics. His tools and techniques have exerted a huge influence across the field of formal verification.
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Duggan, Joseph J. « In Memoriam Suzanne Fleischman : October 25, 1948-February 2, 2000 ». Tenso 15, no 1 (2000) : 74–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ten.2000.0010.

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Hall, Howard. « W. Curtis Banks (February 29, 1948 to January 14, 1998) ». Journal of Black Psychology 24, no 2 (mai 1998) : 123–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00957984980242003.

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Furniss, Graham. « William Finbarr (Barry) Burgess, 8 October 1948–7 February 2021 ». Africa 91, no 4 (août 2021) : 709–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0001972021000450.

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Švík, Peter. « February 1948 and commercial civil air transport between the East and the West ». Soudobé dějiny 27, no 1 (1 mars 2020) : 100–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.51134/sod.2020.003.

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Payn, W. H. « NOTES FROM TUNISIA AND EASTERN ALGERIA : FEBRUARY 1943 TO APRIL 1944 ». Ibis 90, no 1 (3 avril 2008) : 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1948.tb01397.x.

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BAIN, JENNIFER. « History of a book : Hildegard of Bingen's ‘Riesencodex’ and World War II ». Plainsong and Medieval Music 27, no 2 (octobre 2018) : 143–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0961137118000098.

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ABSTRACTOnly two large collections of Hildegard of Bingen's music are extant, today housed in the Katholieke Universiteit in Leuven (B-LVu, no shelf number) and in the Hochschul-und Landesbibliothek RheinMain in Wiesbaden (D-WI1 2, the so-called ‘Riesencodex’). The Riesencodex, though, was almost lost during World War II. It survived both bombing and plundering in Dresden in February 1945, only to be appropriated by the Soviet Administration in 1947. Using archival records from the Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv in Wiesbaden from the 1940s and 1950s, I detail the efforts of a number of people to retrieve the manuscript after the war and bring it back to Wiesbaden. Franz Götting, the director of the Wiesbaden library, spent several years trying to recover the manuscript through official channels. Its eventual return to Wiesbaden in 1948, however, came about surreptitiously, largely through the efforts of Margarete Kühn at the German Academy in East Berlin and an American woman, Caroline Walsh, in Berlin as a military spouse.
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Lindovská, Nadežda. « Year 1948 : Emancipation of Women and Slovak Theatre. » Slovenske divadlo /The Slovak Theatre 66, no 2 (1 juin 2018) : 141–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/sd-2018-0009.

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Abstract From the cultural and art point of view, the year 1948 in Czechoslovakia was not just the so-called “Victorious February” of the working people. The remarkable phenomenon of this era, which was related to the post-war political and social movement, was the phenomenon of female emancipation and feminization of the stage production. During the two consecutive theatre seasons 1947/1948 and 1948/1949, at The New Scene Theatre of the National Theatre in Bratislava, several women, led by the director Magda Husaková-Lokvencová created several productions. For the first time, a sovereign feminine alliance had emerged in our performance art, proving that conceptual and thoughtful theatrical production may not be just the domain of men. These women contributed to deconstructing the beliefs of typically male and typically female professions as well as transforming traditional views of the role and position of both sexes in society and the arts. The attention of theatre historiography in the recapitalization of the impacts of the breakthrough events of the Czechoslovak post-war politics of the forty years on cultural events so far focused mainly on the issues of dramaturgy and poetics, the process of ideological transformation and the sovietisation of art in the spirit of socialist realism. The subject of socialist emancipation and theatre was at the edge of the interest of our theatrology. Ten years ago, a collective monograph, dedicated to the first lady of the Slovak theatre directors, Magda Husaková-Lokvencová, managing to free her forgotten personality and work and return her to the context of Slovak theatre history in the second half of the 20th century. There is still room for further research, complementing the knowledge and reflection of the advent of women in the sphere of theatre directory, dramaturgy and scenography artwork, as part of the history of gender relations in Slovakia. Increased interest in the history of women provokes a new reflection on the issue of emancipation and theatre.
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Linzey, Kate. « Making a Place : Mangakino 1946-1962 ». Architectural History Aotearoa 5 (31 octobre 2008) : 65–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v5i0.6766.

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In between Whakamaru (1949-56) and Maraetai (1946-53) dams, on the Waikato River, sits Mangakino. Planned and built from c.1948 to 1951, by the Town Planning section of the Ministry of Works, the civic centre was to provide housing and services for the work force on the Maraetai scheme. The architectural design of these dams has previously been discussed as the work of émigré architect, Fredrick Neumann/Newman (Leach), and the town, as that of Ernst Plischke (Lloyd-Jenkins, Sarnitz). In 1949 the plan for Mangakino was published, alongside the plan for Upper Hutt, in the February-March edition of the Design Review. As two "rapidly growing towns," Upper Hutt and Mangakino are briefly reviewed in the context of two essays ("Who wants community centres?" and "Community Centres" by HCD Somerset), an outline of the curriculum of the new School of Architecture and Town Planning, run by the Wellington Architectural Centre, and notification of the 1948 Town Planning Amendment Act. As published in the Design Review, the plan of Mangakino includes a church in the south west, with the sporting facilities to the north and Rangatira Drive flanking a shopping strip on the east. The church sits in a field of grass, isolated and apparently serene. In the drawing published in the monograph Ernst Plischke, however, this building has been cropped off. Focusing on the case of Mangakino, this essay will review the discourse of town planning for secular and religious community in the late 1940s. This era, framed by the end of World War II and the deepening of the Cold War, is seen as the context for industrial action, a changing sense of nationalism, and small town New Zealand as the site of civil dispute.
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Shore, Marci. « Engineering in the Age of Innocence : a Genealogy of Discourse Inside the Czechoslovak Writers' Union, 1949-67 ». East European Politics and Societies : and Cultures 12, no 3 (septembre 1998) : 397–441. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325498012003002.

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And so it happened that in February 1948 the Communists took power not in bloodshed and violence, but to the cheers of about half the population. And please note: the half that cheered was the more dynamic, the more intelligent, the better half. Milan Kundera
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Balogh, Margit. « Arrest and Сonviction of Cardinal József Mindszenty 1948–1949. Part 2. “Most pitiful prisoner of the country” ». Slavic World in the Third Millennium 15, no 3-4 (2020) : 53–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2412-6446.2020.15.3-4.04.

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As a result of the political struggle that unfolded in Hungary after the Second World War, the only independent institution remaining in the country was the Catholic Church headed by the Archbishop of Esztergom, Cardinal József Mindszenty. Part One of the article reconstructs the investigation and political process against the primate, who was arrested on charges of high treason, preparing a coup aimed at overthrowing the republican system, espionage, and currency speculation. Part Two deals with the political process and show trial of Mindszenty. The hearings began on 3 February 1949 at the Budapest People’s Court, and, on 8 February 1949, the guilty verdict was announced. The facts were so cleverly manipulated that Mindszenty’s hopes for a change in the political system in the country were qualified as a political conspiracy. The cardinal was sentenced to life imprisonment, deprivation of civil rights, and complete confiscation of property. While preparing for the court of second instance, Mindszenty put forward new projects aimed at reconciling the state and the Church. Deeply disappointed, the cardinal signed his letters “condemned”, “prisoner”, and “condemned archbishop”. The show-trial and long prison confinement only strengthened the cardinal’s faith. This article is based on documents held by the Hungarian National Archives, the Historical Archives of the State Security Services, the Esztergom Primate Archives, the Archives of Foreign Policy of the Russian Federation, the National Archives and Records Administration (USA), and others.
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Lukes, Igor. « The Czechoslovak intelligence service and western reactions to the communistCoup d'Etatof February 1948 ». Intelligence and National Security 8, no 4 (octobre 1993) : 73–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02684529308432226.

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Stockton, Jim, et Benjamin J. B. Lipscomb. « The Anscombe-Lewis Debate : New Archival Sources Considered ». Journal of Inklings Studies 11, no 1 (avril 2021) : 35–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/ink.2021.0094.

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Meeting from 26 January 1942 through 26 May 1972, the Oxford University Socratic Club was a fixture of Oxford intellectual life for three decades. Founded by Miss Stella Aldwinckle, chaplain to undergraduate women students for the Oxford Pastorate, the club was an immediate success and quickly became a favoured venue for students and faculty alike, with C.S. Lewis serving as club president and senior member (advisor) from its inception to December 1954. One of the club's most famous papers was delivered 2 February 1948, when twenty-eight-year-old Somerville philosopher G.E.M. Anscombe presented a critique of a key argument in Lewis's recently published Miracles (1947). Most of the critical literature on the event has come from Lewis biographers. Less has been written about Anscombe's perspective, one reason being a lack of primary evidence. Following a framing discussion of the Socratic Club's early years, Lewis's persona and role in the club, and Anscombe's early biography, this article presents three unpublished pieces of primary evidence – a letter by Anscombe, a remark about Lewis by Ludwig Wittgenstein, and a full transcription of the meeting minutes – before briefly considering the light they shed on the exchange between Anscombe and Lewis.
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Zorin, A. V. « The problem of American Loans and Credits for Czechoslovakia in 1945–1948 ». MGIMO Review of International Relations 13, no 1 (3 mars 2020) : 56–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2020-1-70-56-81.

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The article is devoted to one of the aspects of the US European policy after World War II: the issue of loans and credits to affected countries. Using the example of Czechoslovakia, the author tries to answer a number of important questions: did Washington have a sound financial and economic policy towards this country, what goals did it pursue, what were its results? The study is based on the US Department of State archive documents and papers of the American ambassador to Czechoslovakia L.A. Steinhardt. The US financial policy towards Czechoslovakia in the early post-war years was the subject of intense debate in the United States. The author reveals evidence of serious disagreement between economic and political divisions of the State Department about providing of financial assistance to Prague, its size and terms of lending. Particular attention is paid to Steingardt’s position and his attempts to determine American loans and credits to Prague by upholding the property interests of American citizens. These disagreements hindered the development of a single thoughtful course regarding the Czechoslovak Republic and complicated diplomatic relations with Prague; negotiations on the allocation of large loans for the economic recovery of the Czechoslovak Republic dragged on. A fundamental role in the establishment of a new US political course had Secretary of State James Byrnes’ decision, made in the fall of 1946, on the inadmissibility of providing assistance to countries that have taken anti-American positions. This approach was finally entrenched after the Communists coup in Czechoslovakia in February 1948, when the country entered the Soviet sphere of influence. The article concludes that the post-war US policy was not distinguished by integrity and thoughtfulness.
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Dmytryshyn, Basil. « The Legal Framework for the Sovietization of Czechoslovakia 1941–1945 ». Nationalities Papers 25, no 02 (juin 1997) : 255–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905999708408502.

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Literature in many languages (documentary, monographic, memoir-like and periodical) is abundant on the sovietization of Czechoslovakia, as are the reasons advanced for it. Some observers have argued that the Soviet takeover of the country stemmed from an excessive preoccupation with Panslavism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries by a few Czech and Slovak intellectuals, politicians, writers and poets and their uncritical affection and fascination for everything Russian and Soviet. Others have attributed the drawing of Czechoslovakia into the Soviet orbit to Franco-British appeasement of Hitler's imperial ambitions during the September 1938, Munich crisis. At Munich, Czechoslovakia lost its sovereignty and territory, France its honor, England its respect and trust; and the Soviet Union, by its abstract offer to aid Czechoslovakia (without detailing how or in what form the assistance would come) gained admiration. Still others have pinned the blame for the sovietization of Czechoslovakia on machinations by top leaders of the Czechoslovak Communist Party, who, as obedient tools of Moscow, supported Soviet geopolitical designs on Czechoslovakia, who sought and received political asylum in the USSR during World War II, and who returned to Czechoslovakia with the victorious Soviet armed forces at the end of World War II as high-ranking members of the Soviet establishment. Finally, there are some who maintain that the sovietization of Czechoslovakia commenced with the 25 February 1948, Communist coup, followed by the tragic death of Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk on 10 March 1948, and the replacement, on 7 June 1948, of President Eduard Beneš by the Moscow-trained, loyal Kremlin servant Klement Gottwald.
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DRĂGULIN, Ioana. « Cotroceni Palace Symbol of the Propaganda of the Communist Regime From Romania in the Years 1948 - 1977 ». Anuarul Universitatii Petre Andrei din Iasi. Fascicula Drept, stiinte economice, stiinte politice 26 (2020) : 76–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.18662/upalaw/50.

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World War II produced a major shift in global power relations and led to the emergence of bipolarism. The agreements reached by the Allies in Yalta in February 1945 sanctioned the USSR's rule over Eastern Europe. In this context, the takeover of political power and the changes imposed in the economy by the communists in Romania, with the direct help of the USSR was a logical consequence. All the events that took place in Romania between August 23, 1944 and December 31, 1947 were part of the logic of communizing the Romanian society and state on the Soviet model. The communization of Romania followed a path that provided for the invalidation of the liberal, democratic, bourgeois, capitalist model of society and the imposition of another communist, undemocratic, egalitarian, totalitarian model. In order to achieve this goal, measures had been brutally applied to restrict citizens' rights, both politically and in terms of expression or property. In this context, the change of the historical role of the Royal Palace from Cotroceni to the Palace of the Pioneers was part of the propagandistic activity of a totalitarian regime which, in the absence of popular legitimacy, by vote, had to "fabricate" a history to legitimize it in front of the Romanian people.
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Horčička, Václav. « Czechoslovak–Liechtenstein relations in the shadow of the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia, February 1948 ». European Review of History : Revue europeenne d'histoire 19, no 4 (août 2012) : 601–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2012.697870.

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Ofori-Adjei, David. « Professor Rudolph Darko ». Ghana Medical Journal 54, no 2 (30 juin 2020) : 74. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/gmj.v54i2.2.

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Professor Rudolph Darko was born on April 5 1948 and passed away on February 23 2020. He was a general surgeon with a particular interest in gastroenterology and gastrointestinal endoscopy.At the time of his demise Professor Darko was an Associate Professor in the Department of Surgery, University of Ghana School of Medicine. He took up his teaching appointment in 1989 as a Lecturer and General Surgical specialist.
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Polnar, Stanislav. « Investigation and Political Processes with Soldiers in Czechoslovakia (1948–1989) ». Czech-polish historical and pedagogical journal 12, no 1 (2020) : 108–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cphpj-2020-010.

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The basic approach of the author was to place issues into the context of the political development of Czechoslovakia after the events of February, 1948. The applied research confirmed the theory that political delinquency of member of military personnel formed a unique class. The worst crimes of the founding period were the core of the author’s focus. This period can be characterized by political trials made as thought-out systems of illegalities organized by the bodies of military justice. Afterwards, the persecutions continued but only in an individual and more selective way. The author used original historical sources which are common for contemporary history.
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Scholz, Norbert. « Bibliography of Periodical Literature ». Journal of Palestine Studies 46, no 3 (2017) : 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2017.46.3.s2.

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This bibliography lists articles and reviews of books relevant to Palestine and the Arab-Israeli conflict from the quarter 16 November 2016–15 February 2017. Entries are classified under the following headings: Reference and General; History (through 1948) and Geography; Palestinian Politics and Society; Jerusalem; Israeli Politics, Society, and Zionism; Arab and Middle Eastern Politics; International Relations; Law; Military; Economy, Society, and Education; Literature, Arts, and Culture; and Book Reviews.
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Scholz, Norbert. « Bibliography of Periodical Literature ». Journal of Palestine Studies 46, no 4 (2017) : 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2017.46.4.s2.

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This bibliography lists articles and reviews of books relevant to Palestine and the Arab-Israeli conflict from the quarter 16 February-15 May 2017. Entries are classified under the following headings: Reference and General; History (through 1948) and Geography; Palestinian Politics and Society; Jerusalem; Israeli Politics, Society, and Zionism; Arab and Middle Eastern Politics; International Relations; Law; Military; Economy, Society, and Education; Literature, Arts, and Culture; and Book Reviews.
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Scholz, Norbert. « Bibliography of Periodical Literature ». Journal of Palestine Studies 47, no 3 (2018) : 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2018.47.3.s2.

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This bibliography lists articles and reviews of books relevant to Palestine and the Arab-Israeli conflict from the quarter 16 November-15 February 2018. Entries are classified under the following headings: Reference and General; History (through 1948) and Geography; Palestinian Politics and Society; Jerusalem; Israeli Politics, Society, and Zionism; Arab and Middle Eastern Politics; International Relations; Law; Military; Economy, Society, and Education; Literature, Arts, and Culture; and Book Reviews.
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Pinto, Roberto Magalhães, Delir Corrêa Gomes, Rodrigo Caldas Menezes, Cláudia Torres Gomes et Dely Noronha. « Helminths of rabbits (Lagomorpha, Leporidae) deposited in the Helminthological Collection of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute ». Revista Brasileira de Zoologia 21, no 3 (septembre 2004) : 599–604. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0101-81752004000300023.

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Helminth samples (n = 35) recovered from Oryctolagus cuniculus (Linnaeus, 1758) Lilljeborg, 1873 (3) and from another rabbit species, Sylvilagus brasiliensis (Linnaeus, 1758) Thomas, 1901 (32), from August 1909 to February 1948 and that are deposited in the Helminthological Collection of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute were analyzed. The studied samples were represented by the cysticercus of the cestode Taenia pisiformis (Bloch, 1780) and by the nematodes Passalurus ambiguus (Rudolphi, 1819), Vianella fariasi (Travassos, 1915), Longistriata perfida Travassos, 1943, Trichostrongylus retortaeformis (Zeder, 1800). The scope of the present investigation is to survey the parasites infecting these hosts, commonly used as laboratory animal models in scientific research and supply figurative data on the helminths in order to provide their easy identification, since the presence of autochthonous parasite burdens, if undetected or misinterpreted, can alter the final results of experimental assays, mainly those related to immunological approaches, when cross-reactions can occur.
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CORANIČ, JAROSLAV. « The Liquidation of the Greek Catholic Church in Communist Czechoslovakia, 1948–50 ». Journal of Ecclesiastical History 72, no 3 (9 février 2021) : 590–610. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046920001487.

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This article examines the liquidation of the Greek Catholic Church in Czechoslovakia following the Communist takeover in February 1948. The Greek Catholic Church was to be separated from the mother Catholic Church and incorporated into the Orthodox Church. The process culminated at the irregular Sobor (synod) of Prešov held on 28 April 1950. The synod was orchestrated and headed by the ruling Communist party, which enforced its conclusions. Greek Catholics were either outlawed or compelled to become Orthodox, although their situation slightly brightened during the Prague Spring of 1968 when their Church became legal again.
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Barlow, Jill. « London, Royal Academy of Music : Philippe Hersant ». Tempo 58, no 228 (avril 2004) : 76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204350151.

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Philippe Hersant (b. 1948 in Rome, graduated Paris Conservatoire, studied with André Jolivet), has been working with the French national radio station France-Musique since 1973 and has received many honours as composer in France. In February 2004 Radio France presented a ‘retrospective’ of his prolific output as well as the première of his Violin Concerto, a Radio France commission. His new opera, Le Maine Noir, based on Anton Chekov's story, will be premièred in May 2005.
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Pápai, Zsolt. « Distressed Glamour. Genres and Political-Social Context in Hungarian Cinema of the 1930s and 1940s ». Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Film and Media Studies 18, no 1 (1 octobre 2020) : 173–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/ausfm-2020-0008.

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AbstractThe article focuses on Hungarian films produced between 1939–1944 by examining how they tend to refrain from representing conflicts, and scrutinizing the political as well as social issues. However, directors started to revise this avoidance of conflicts by employing a so-called noir sensibility from the beginning of the Second World War in certain films, especially in “doomed love movies” such as Deadly Spring (Halálos tavasz, 1939), Mountain Girl (A hegyek lánya, 1942), and A Woman Looks Back (Egy assszony visszanéz, 1942), or melodramas, such as At the Crossroads (Keresztúton, 1942), Lent Life (Kölcsönadott élet, 1943), and Black Dawn (Fekete hajnal, 1943). The essay also offers a case study of the banned Hungarian movie Half a Boy (Egy fiúnak a fele, shot in 1943, but only shown in February 1946) by D. Ákos Hamza, which represented and protested against the stigmatization of Jewish people. Half a Boy is an often-cited emblematic film of its era. It is also an enigmatic one: it is a work full of social and political-historical reflections. Its humanistic point of view makes it outstanding in its era, nevertheless it is also rather ambivalent in terms of its orientation of values.
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Hiep, Tran Xuan, Nguyen Tuan Binh, Tran Hoang Long, Duong Quang Tra et Nguyen Quang Son. « India - Myanmar Relations (1948 - 1992) : From “Idealism” to “Realism” in India’s Foreign Policy towards Myanmar ». Academic Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 10, no 3 (10 mai 2021) : 168. http://dx.doi.org/10.36941/ajis-2021-0073.

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India and Myanmar are two neighboring countries that share the border of nearly 1.500km and have the relationship on history, politics, culture, ethnic... from over 2.000 years to present. India officially established diplomatic relations with Myanmar, just after this Southeast Asian country gained independence (1948). From 1948 to 1992, the bilateral relationship was influenced by India’s foreign policy towards Myanmar, especially the impact of “idealism” and “realism” in India’s policy. “Idealism” succeeded in India’s foreign policy towards Myanmar from 1948 to 1962; however, it was not effective in the period 1962 - 1988, which made India’s position severely decrease, contrary to the rise of China’s position in Myanmar. For this reason, India must innovate the foreign thought, moving from “idealism” to “realism”, which have more pragmatic quality to Myanmar in the years 1988 - 1992 when the international and regional contexts have many changes. On the basis of the reference sources, this research’s aim focuses on analyzing the foreign policy adjustment of India, especially this study will focus on the issue of India - Myanmar relationship (1948 - 1992) was dominated by the “idealism” and “realism” in the planning of foreign policy of India towards Myanmar. The scope of this research is the relationship between India and Myanmar from 1948 to 1992 under the influence of “idealism” and “realism” in India’s foreign policy. From the early 90s of the 20th century, India’s foreign policy towards Myanmar has been more realistic than in the previous period, especially since 1992, when India implemented its new foreign policy, the Look East Policy. Received: 4 February 2021 / Accepted: 9 April 2021 / Published: 10 May 2021
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Gabathuler, E. « Sir Alexander [Alec] Walter Merrison, D.L. 20 March 1924 – 19 February 1989 ». Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 48 (janvier 2002) : 309–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2002.0017.

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Alexander (‘Alec’) Walter Merrison was born in Wood Green, London, on 20 March 1924. He was the only child of Henry Walter Merrison, a fitter's mate, who rose to be a service manager in the local Gas Board and a respected Chairman of the Tottenham Group of Hospitals, and of Violet Henrietta Merrison ( née Mortimer) the daughter of an Ipswich family. Alec attended Tottenham Grammar School, then the Grammar School, Enfield, where he took the Higher School Certificate in physics, chemistry and mathematics. He became Captain of the school and is remembered as a fine scholar with a pleasant manner. His qualities of leadership were already evident at a very young age. He was also a choirboy at All Hallows Church, Wood Green, where his lifelong love of music was first developed. ;In 1944 he graduated in physics at King's College, London, when he was just 20 years old, researching radio wave propagation, after which he was ‘placed’ on wartime radar at the Signals Research Development Establishment at Christchurch, the only Englishman and civilian in a group of 26 engineers of the Polish Army in exile. Two years later he requested a transfer to the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell to participate in research of a more interesting and challenging nature. There he came under the tutelage of O.R. Frisch (F.R.S. 1948) and J.D. (later Sir John) Cockcroft, F.R.S., who were the leading research scientists in nuclear physics. At that time Harwell was the breeding ground for a generation of British physicists; Alec clearly relished this new environment, helping to equip an electron accelerator to produce short pulses of neutrons. His first published papers described how the new technique could be used to study the interaction of neutrons with matter. This was his first experience of the use of particle accelerators as powerful probes to investigate nuclear matter. The technique of neutron scattering from bulk matter is now an important discipline in its own right, and the genesis of the current world-leading facility (ISIS) at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory can be traced back to these pioneering experiments in which Alec played a major role.
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Skarupsky, Petra. « “The War Brought Us Close and the Peace Will Not Divide Us” : Exhibitions of Art from Czechoslovakia in Warsaw in the Late 1940s ». Ikonotheka 26 (26 juin 2017) : 95–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0010.1674.

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In his book Awangarda w cieniu Jałty (In the Shadow of Yalta: Art and the Avant-garde in Eastern Europe, 1945–1989), Piotr Piotrowski mentioned that Polish and Czechoslovakian artists were not working in mutual isolation and that they had opportunities to meet, for instance at the Arguments 1962 exhibition in Warsaw in 1962. The extent, nature and intensity of artistic contacts between Poland and Czechoslovakia during their coexistence within the Eastern bloc still remain valid research problems. The archives of the National Museum in Warsaw and the Zachęta – National Gallery of Art which I have investigated yield information on thirty-fi ve exhibitions of art produced in Czechoslovakia that took place in Warsaw in the period of the People’s Republic of Poland. The current essay focuses on exhibitions organised in the late 1940s. The issue of offi cial cultural cooperation between Poland and Czechoslovakia was regulated as early as in the fi rst years after the war. Institutions intended to promote the culture of one country in the other one and associations for international cooperation were established soon after. As early as in 1946, the National Museum in Warsaw hosted an exhibition entitled Czechoslovakia 1939–1945. In 1947 the same museum showed Contemporary Czechoslovakian Graphic Art. A few months after “Victorious February”, i.e. the coup d’état carried out by the Communists in Czechoslovakia in early 1948, the Young Czechoslovakian Art exhibition opened at the Young Artists and Scientists’ Club, a Warsaw gallery supervised by Marian Bogusz. It showed the works of leading artists of the post-war avant-garde, and their authors were invited to the vernissage. Nine artists participated in both exhibitions, i.e. at the National Museum and at the Young Artists and Scientists’ Club. A critical analysis of art produced in one country of the Eastern bloc as exhibited in another country of that bloc enables an art historian to outline a section of the complex history of artistic life. Archival research yields new valuable materials that make it impossible to reduce the narration to a simple opposition contrasting the avant-garde with offi cial institutions.
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Lévesque, Jean. « Exile and Discipline : The June 1948 Campaign Against Collective Farm Shirkers ». Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no 1708 (1 janvier 2006) : 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/cbp.2006.129.

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In February and June 1948, the Stalinist state issued two decrees aimed at a radical solution of the problem of labor discipline among Soviet collective farm peasants. Borne out of the initiative of the Ukrainian Communist Party Secretary N.S. Khrushchev, who found examples of community self-policing in tsarist legislation, the decrees granted collective farm general meetings the right to deport to distant parts of the Soviet Union peasants reluctant to fulfi ll the minimal labor requirements set by the state. Based on a wide array of formerly classifi ed Russian archival documents, this study draws the complete story of this little known page in the history of Stalinist repression. It demonstrates that despite the harshness of the measures employed, the decree did little to force peasants back to work on collective farms given the seriousness of the postwar agrarian crisis.
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Zorin, A. V. « The Czechoslovak Crisis of 1948 in the Perception of American Diplomats and Media ». MGIMO Review of International Relations 14, no 4 (9 septembre 2021) : 26–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2021-4-79-26-50.

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In February 1948, during the political crisis in Czechoslovakia was established a communist regime. This event completed the formation of the Soviet bloc in Europe. It directly impacted the US containment policy towards the USSR and the escalation of the Cold War. Based on archival documents and newspapers articles, the research studies these events through their perception by American media and diplomats, whose opinions and interpretations had great and decisive importance for the US public opinion and its government official reaction. The author concludes that the Czechoslovak crisis of 1948 aroused considerable interest and severe reaction in the United States. It was considered as a part of growing Soviet-American contradictions and international tension. Despite the fears of a communist coup in Czechoslovakia expressed back in 1947, American experts could not accurately predict the onset time of the crisis and its nature. The rapidity of the crisis, the Communist’s reaction, and decisiveness, lack of direct Soviet intervention, as well as the absence of democratic resistance, became a surprise for American journalists and diplomats. They believed that the communist takeover was a manifestation of Soviet expansion and the Kremlin’s desire to consolidate its control over all Eastern Europe. Despite the external legitimacy, the transfer of power to the left forces was interpreted as a coup d'état that final ized the establishment of the totalitarian regime in Czechoslovakia. Nevertheless, the US government refused to sever diplomatic relations with Prague and to initiate an international investigation. Washington found no direct evidence of Soviet intervention. It had to accept the changes in Czechoslovakia, focusing its forces on the inadmissibility of this scenario in Western Europe. The crisis directly influenced the adoption of the Marshall Plan and the intensification of the containment policy.
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Noguchi, Masayoshi, et John Richard Edwards. « CORPORATISM AND UNAVOIDABLE IMPERATIVES : RECOMMENDATIONS ON ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES AND THE ICAEW MEMORANDUM TO THE COHEN COMMITTEE ». Accounting Historians Journal 31, no 2 (1 décembre 2004) : 53–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/0148-4184.31.2.53.

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This paper re-examines the conclusion reached by Bircher [1991], and other researchers, that the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW), through the content of the series of Recommendations on Accounting Principles (RoAPs) that it developed and then incorporated into its memorandum submitted to the Cohen Committee on Company Law Amendment, molded the radical accounting provisions contained in the Companies Act, 1948 (CA48) “in the form of its own programme” [Bircher, 1991, p.293]. It is argued that (1) the Board of Trade (BoT), through the formation of the Cohen Committee, prompted the qualitative change in the content of the second five RoAPs, which were drafted to accord with the content of its submission to the Cohen Committee, and (2) before the ICAEW memorandum was submitted to the Cohen Committee in February 1944, a corporatist structure is discernable in the relationship between the BoT and the ICAEW causing the leaders of the ICAEW to align its interests with the BoT's priorities for the amendment of company law.
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Davis, Drew R., et Travis J. LaDuc. « Corrigenda : Davis DR, LaDuc TJ (2018) Amphibians and reptiles of C. E. Miller Ranch and the Sierra Vieja, Chihuahuan Desert, Texas, USA. ZooKeys 735:97–130. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.735.22200 ». ZooKeys 744 (20 mars 2018) : 149. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.744.25059.

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In our recently published checklist, we mislabeled one of the species of lizards in Figure 6. In error, we listed Figure 6D as a Chihuahuan Spotted Whiptail (Aspidoscelis exsanguis) instead of the correct identification as a Little Striped Whiptail (Aspidoscelis inornata). Additionally, on 6 February 2018 (the date this manuscript was published), we received a photographic voucher of an Eastern Patch-nosed Snake (Salvadora grahamiae) from the lechuguilla-beargrass association on the top of a mesa in the Sierra Vieja (TNHC 107584), reducing the number of species not detected from the historic 1948 survey from three to two.
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Gries, Zeev. « Adding Insult to Injury : Zionist Cultural Colonialism. In response to Gish Amit’s Eḳs libris : hisṭoryah shel gezel, shimur ṿe-nikus ba-Sifriyah ha-leʼumit bi-Yerushalayim (Ex Libris : Chronicles of Theft, Preservation, and Appropriating at the Jewish National Library). Yerushalayim : Mekhon Ṿan Lir bi-Yerushalayim, 2014. 220 p., 79 New Israeli Shekel. ISBN 9789650207069. [Hebrew] ». Judaica Librarianship 19, no 1 (26 avril 2016) : 73–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.14263/2330-2976.1170.

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The review essay claims that no books plunder was initiated by the National and University Library in Jerusalem, neither with regard to the books of European Jewry found after World War II, nor with regard to the Palestinian books abandoned during the 1948 war, or the Yemenite Jewish books not claimed after their arrival as cargo without owners to Israel. The essay is a translated and annotated version of Zeev Gries's talk, given in Hebrew at a literary evening in the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute (February 12, 2015), on the occasion of the publication of Gish Amit's book.
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