Results 151 to 160 of about 3,157,498 (205)
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Coccidioidomycosis in New England

New England Journal of Medicine, 1947
COCCIDIOIDOMYCOSIS, probably the most infectious of the systemic mycoses, is rarely found along the Atlantic Seaboard. Owing to the tremendous displacement of people from their native areas that occurred during the war, however, clinicians must be aware that these infections may occur among the population, particularly in persons who have seen service ...
Edward R. H. Kurz, Norman W. Loud
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Leptospirosis in New England

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1977
Although rarely reported in humans in New England, leptospirosis is enzootic in western and central Massachusetts. Recently there were three cases of Leptospira interrogans, serotype var pomona, in Easthampton, Mass. Our study and others indicate a potential for waterborne epidemics in humans.
E D Andrew, G R Marrocco
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The New England quarterly

Serials Review, 1982
This new biography of Brooks Adams, appearing four years after a leaner account by Thornton Anderson, offers little in the way of interpretation that clashes with earlier analyses of Henry Adams' cantankerous brother, but Mr. Beringause is the first biographer who has had access to the previously restricted Adams family papers.
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This New England

1986
In October 1959 Labour suffered its third successive general election defeat. In the inevitable inquest which followed, a central issue was the party’s working-class image. Douglas Jay saw Labour’s two fatal handicaps as ‘the class image and the myth of nationalization’.1 Patrick Gordon Walker said simply: ‘The Tories identified with the new working ...
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New England, Nonesuch

Early American Literature, 2010
In 1652, Roger Williams published a book titled The Hireling Ministry None of Christs in London in which he made a theological argument with political implications for the settlement of the New World. “Nations being meerly and essentially civill,” Williams wrote, “cannot (Christianly) be called Christian States, after the patterne of that holy and ...
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New-England Primer, The

2012
The New-England Primer was one of the first textbooks used in U.S. public schools. It cost two to four pence and was commonly found in colonial households. The first U.S. edition was most likely printed by Benjamin Harris of Boston before 1687, and it was reprinted consistently for the next 150 years. Although its authorship is unknown and its contents
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New England Coelogynoporidae

Hydrobiologia, 1981
Eleven species of the proseriate turbellarian family Coelogynoporidae have been encountered between Cape Cod, Mass. and the southern shore-line of New Brunswick, Canada. The distributions of Coelogynopora schultzii, C. biarmata and Cirrifera cirrifera are reported.
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New England Textiles and the New England Economy

Southern Economic Journal, 1957
B. U. Ratchford   +2 more
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