Results 211 to 220 of about 130,252 (267)
Effects of Spatial and Signal-Imposed Noises on Motor Unit Decomposition
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1966
THE accepted normal values for white blood cells in the peripheral blood as stated in the various medical textbooks are based on several studies of large groups of apparently normal persons.1 2 3 4...
G O, Broun, F K, Herbig, J R, Hamilton
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THE accepted normal values for white blood cells in the peripheral blood as stated in the various medical textbooks are based on several studies of large groups of apparently normal persons.1 2 3 4...
G O, Broun, F K, Herbig, J R, Hamilton
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The Negro Family and Negro Youth
The Journal of Negro Education, 1940The purpose of this paper is to analyze and evaluate the influence of the Negro family in the adjustments which Negro youth are required to make to the world in which they live. Because of the wide scope of the task which has been assigned the writer, the discussion will include a consideration of only some of the more important characteristics of ...
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2016
Examines the reception of black US writing in Spain in order to contextualize and defamiliarize it as literatura negra norte-americana. By studying the translations, anthologies, and bilingual Spanish-English texts in which works by Hughes and Claude McKay appeared alongside works by leading figures of the Afro-Caribbean negrismo movement (Nicolás ...
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Examines the reception of black US writing in Spain in order to contextualize and defamiliarize it as literatura negra norte-americana. By studying the translations, anthologies, and bilingual Spanish-English texts in which works by Hughes and Claude McKay appeared alongside works by leading figures of the Afro-Caribbean negrismo movement (Nicolás ...
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The Negro Intellectual and Negro Nationalism
Social Forces, 1954would mean a greater immediate shock, the latter would take a little more time, but both involve consequences which will materialize in a gradual manner. The net consequences of the abandonment of compulsory segregation may be short of what many people feared they would be, but they may also be short of what many people hoped they would be.
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Archives of Internal Medicine, 1967
ALTHOUGH thalassemia is usually considered to be a disease of the Mediterranean people, it has been described in many racial and ethnic groups.1In particular, McFarland and Pearson recently reported six individuals with this disease, none of whom stemmed from the Mediterranean area.2 Among races and ethnic groups where thalassemia has been found is ...
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ALTHOUGH thalassemia is usually considered to be a disease of the Mediterranean people, it has been described in many racial and ethnic groups.1In particular, McFarland and Pearson recently reported six individuals with this disease, none of whom stemmed from the Mediterranean area.2 Among races and ethnic groups where thalassemia has been found is ...
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2019
This essay examines the ideas and activism of a woman calling herself Madame Parque, who traveled across the United States giving lectures to black and white audiences during the 1870s. Claiming to be a well-educated, multilingual, and mixed-race Haitian educator, Parque spoke at courthouses, black churches, and black schools throughout the United ...
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This essay examines the ideas and activism of a woman calling herself Madame Parque, who traveled across the United States giving lectures to black and white audiences during the 1870s. Claiming to be a well-educated, multilingual, and mixed-race Haitian educator, Parque spoke at courthouses, black churches, and black schools throughout the United ...
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2018
Laws regulating the movement, residence, employment, and labor of the poor, and especially of poor African Americans in states with burgeoning free populations, demonstrate how mobility, when enacted by the poor and by non-whites, was classified as a criminal action in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century United States. In the Upper South especially,
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Laws regulating the movement, residence, employment, and labor of the poor, and especially of poor African Americans in states with burgeoning free populations, demonstrate how mobility, when enacted by the poor and by non-whites, was classified as a criminal action in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century United States. In the Upper South especially,
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