Results 291 to 300 of about 639,780 (330)
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Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2011
AbstractOver the last decade the use of urea derivatives as useful reagents, catalysts, and structural features in organic chemistry has increased rapidly. They now find utility as hydrogen‐bond donors in organocatalysts and anion transporters, as important scaffolds in supramolecular chemistry, as lithiation directors, amination substrates, and ...
Volz, Nicole, Clayden, Jonathan
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AbstractOver the last decade the use of urea derivatives as useful reagents, catalysts, and structural features in organic chemistry has increased rapidly. They now find utility as hydrogen‐bond donors in organocatalysts and anion transporters, as important scaffolds in supramolecular chemistry, as lithiation directors, amination substrates, and ...
Volz, Nicole, Clayden, Jonathan
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The spironolactone renaissance
Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs, 2001Until recently, spironolactone was considered only as an antagonist at the aldosterone receptors of the epithelial cells of the kidney and was used clinically in the treatment of hyperaldosteronism and, occasionally, as a K(+)-sparing diuretic. The spironolactone renaissance started with the experimental finding that spironolactone reversed aldosterone-
Doggrell, Sheila A., Brown, Lindsay
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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1996
The Eastern Orthopaedic Association is very fortunate to have its twenty-sixth Annual Meeting in Rome. Rome! The very word brings vivid images to the mind. There is the grandeur of Imperial Rome with the Colosseum and the Forum. Christian Rome and its importance are exemplified by Saint Peter's and the Vatican.
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The Eastern Orthopaedic Association is very fortunate to have its twenty-sixth Annual Meeting in Rome. Rome! The very word brings vivid images to the mind. There is the grandeur of Imperial Rome with the Colosseum and the Forum. Christian Rome and its importance are exemplified by Saint Peter's and the Vatican.
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THE RENAISSANCE OF THERAPEUTICS.
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1906A new start in life, a new lease of life, a new movement—that is what we are witnessing to-day, I think, in the theory and practice of therapeutics. There have been other such new shoots before on the old tree, and doubtless there will be many more. Our time is not the turning point of all the ages.
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Did the Renaissance have a Renaissance?
Art History, 1998John T. Paoletti and Gary M. Radke, Art in Renaissance ItalyA. Richard Turner, The Renaissance in Florence: The Birth of a New ArtHermann Voss (trans. Susanne Pelzel), Painting of the Late Renaissance in Rome and Florence I: From the High Renaissance to Mannerism 1520–1570Evelyn Welch, Art and Society in Italy 1350 ...
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The renaissance of a renaissance man
The European Legacy, 1999Machiavelli's Virtue. By Harvey C. Mansfield (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1998) xvi + 372 pp. $15.00, £11.95 paper. From Poliziano to Machiavelli: Florentine Humanism in the High Renaissance. By Peter Godman (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998) xviii + 366. $49.50, £33.50 cloth.
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