... stability ofthe financial system. 2. Theoretical outline ofthe determinants of financial crisesProblems of a systemic nature, which can affect the whole ofthebanking sector, have been the subject ... the operation ofthe financialmarkets in general and the stability ofthebankingsystemin particular. The spectacular expansion inthe volume of financial transactions compared with that of ... analyse the economy from the angle of monetary developments. Thus, they tracethe startingpoint ofthe financial crisis ofthe 1930s back to the rise in interest rates triggered at the end of 1928...
... any-thing like the value of . . . Amytal in combination with amphetamine sulfate inthe treatment of depression.”104Beginning in 1942, Jacques Gottlieb at the University of Iowa had been working ... about them in 1844.17 The cure consisted of doses of 2–3 grains of opium, titrat-ing up to 8–10 and even to 16 grains, in intervals of 10 hours. (An apothecary “grain” is 64 mg.) The Engelken ... exist more inthe shadowland of artifact than inthe world of Nature—academic psychiatry has a lot to answer for. The historyof psychopharmacology, that is, ofthe study ofthe ef-fect of drugs...
... expressed in human cells that are undergoing rapid renewal: inthe lower-two thirds of gastrointestinal glands [15], inthe more primitive testicular germ cells [28], inthe transitional epithelial ... labelling of hMSH2 protein in basal and intermediate epithelial layers of normal oral mucosa (streptavidin-biotin amplified system, x 400). Int. J. Med. Sci. 2004 1(3): 146-151 146 International ... any staining ofthe nucleus, regardless of staining intensity. Cell counting was performed in six high-power microscopic fields (400x, Standard 20, ZEISS), which comprised almost all ofthe OLP...
... long letter insisting on the agency’s oppositionto the Delaney Clause, but also adding that, inthe interest of passing the bill, the department would withdrawits objection to the Clause if ... point of bothering to wear lip rouge was to garnerattention. Pallingston, supra note 8, at 13.11 medicine, with the medicine makeup quack [finding] a new home on the edge ofthe medical profession.”117Clandestine ... lob-bying in favor of food, drug, and cosmetics regulation continuously increased in terms of both numbers andintensity. The coalition of women’s interest groups expanded from the originally...
... commerce and bankingin the financial world. The bill prevented institutions that were “engaged principally” inbanking activities from underwriting or dealing in securities of any kind, and vice ... The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) oversaw the takeover ofthe failed bank IndyMac, the largest failure of an insured bank in history. The FDIC completed the sale of IndyMac in ... The experience ofthe Great Depression changed attitudes regarding the regulation of financial markets. Much ofthe current system is the result of changes put in place during the 1930s. In...
... beginning inthe crisis year, with the growth rate decliningby nine percentage points in both T and T+1. As inthe case of deposits, because ofthe highrates of growth before the crisis, in ... rate otherwise. The real rate isobtained by subtracting inflation. This interest rate is higher in the year of the crisis and in the following year, and lower thereafter, but these ... whether the behavior of the variables of interest changes following a banking crisis compared to the pre-crisis period, we examine whether in the crisis year and in each...
... while notceasing to belong to church history, becomes also a chapter inthehistoryof philosophy, a page inthe history ofthe human mind. The enumeration ofthe causes into which the intellectual ... much in its modern form of a subjective inquiry into the tests of truth, as inthe shape of History of Free Thought in Reference to The by Adam Storey Farrar 48 submission inthe soul ofthe inquirer.Nor ... treatment inthe investigation ofthe operation of these causes in the historyof doubt. (pp. 32-34.)Statement ofthe utility ofthe inquiry:(1) Intellectually, ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}) in a...
... converting it to the reduced form (GSH) usingan NADPH as the electron source. The function of GR in the male genital tract ofthe rat was examined by meas-uring its enzymatic activity and examining ... cells is involved inthe supplementation of GSH to spermatoge nic cells in which high levels of cysteineare required for protamine synthesis. In turn, the genitaltract, the epithelia of which ... distin-guish oxidized thiols from others [4]. Thiol oxidation occurs in the nuclei and the tail during the maturation process in the epididymis. The greater the extent of oxidation in nuclei,the...
... character ofthe painting is by referring him to the engravings of Albert Durer and the serious parts of Chaucer. There is the same want of proper costume the same intense feeling ofthe human being, ... and Paine. Think of the unshrinking gaze which Dante fixes upon the tortures ofthe souls in pain; ofthe wasted body of Christupon the cross; ofthe fasts, flagellations, mortifications of penitents; ... Time comingup unawares to destroy them the other rows of elders and doctors ofthe Church, forming part ofthe array of heaven the uplifted hand of Christ denouncing the wicked at the day of judgment...
... features including grade of steatosis,inflammatory infiltrate, and ballooning, the presence of Malloryhyaline, and stage of fibrosis were graded according to the scoring system proposed by Kleiner ... resistance; both insulin resistance andoxidative stress are key components inthe development of NAFLD.42 The main strengths of our study are the inclusion of childrenwith the whole spectrum of NAFLD ... appropriate as the comparison was done to overall mortality inthe generalpopulation of same age and sex regardless ofthe causes of death. The study also provides interesting data regarding the progressive...
... 6 THE NINETEENTH CENTURY: NATURAL HEALING the application of blood-sucking leeches and the raising of blisters on the skin)by referring to them as “heroic therapy.” Therapeutic heroism was the ... indiscriminate drugging” and otherwise ex-pressing their displeasure with the profession’s neglect ofthe body’s restorativepower. Nature, inthe eyes of these therapeutic reformers, was a “good, kindangel, ... physician that addressed the action ofthe drug cinchona. The driedbark of a South American tree ofthe madder family, cinchona contains quinineand had been used in Europe since the mid-1600s to treat...
... Witans ofthe Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in determining the succession to the throne remained much the same when they were all fused into a single kingdom; even among the descendants of Alfred, the great ... very unusual one in the rest ofthe European world, though not indeed in Spain of marrying the Infanta to Henry, brother of the deceased prince, who was now recognised as Prince of Wales. With ... designated the sovereign. Inthe disturbed state of things in which theynow found themselves, the lawful King having fled, and the other, who had put himself into actual possession of the supreme...
... 10%-15% of HCV-infected persons will advance to cirrhosis within the first 20 years. Persons with cirrhosis are at increased risk of developing HCC. An understanding ofthe natural history of hepatitis ... identified to explain the racial disparities inthe incidence of chronic HCV, response to treatment, or development of HCC. Clinical trials are currently ongoing inthe U.S. to identify these factors. ... between the rate of fibrosis and the age at time of infection.[38, 39] After controlling for the estimated duration of HCV infection, the stage of fibrosis was significantly higher in patients...