221 research outputs found

    Letter from Atsuko to Mr. Bengston

    No full text
    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Letter from Atsuko to Mr. Bengston

    No full text
    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Letter from Atsuko to Mr. Bengston

    No full text
    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Postcard from Atsuko Nagano to Mr. Walter E. Pollock. June 6. 1979

    No full text
    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Letter from Ann Atsuko Nagano to Mr. Pollock, July 7, 1981

    No full text
    Post-WWII, Pollock maintains various correspondence with folks from the Fresno Assembly Center, as well as other correspondence with the Pentagon.Walter E. Pollock was the head of the service division at the Fresno Assembly Center. He was deeply affected by his time working at the center and was working on a memoir of his experiences there, but unfortunately passed away before it could be completed. The collection contains his research and draft chapters

    Assessment of testing methods for drug-induced repolarization delay and arrhythmias in an iPS cell-derived cardiomyocyte sheet: multi-site validation study.

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    主査 : 赤坂喜清 / タイトル : Assessment of testing methods for drug-induced repolarization delay and arrhythmias in an iPS cell-derived cardiomyocyte sheet: multi-site validation study /著者 : Yuji Nakamura, Junko Matsuo, Norimasa Miyamoto, Atsuko Ojima, Kentaro Ando, Yasunari Kanda, Kohei Sawada, Atsushi Sugiyama, Yuko Sekino /掲載誌 : Journal of Pharmacological Sciences /巻号・発行年等 : 124(4):494-501, 2014

    Language, Nation, Race

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    Language, Nation, Race explores the various language reforms at the onset of Japanese modernity, a time when a “national language” (kokugo) was produced to standardize Japanese. Faced with the threat of Western colonialism, Meiji intellectuals proposed various reforms to standardize the Japanese language in order to quickly educate the illiterate masses. This book liberates these language reforms from the predetermined category of the “nation,” for such a notion had yet to exist as a clear telos to which the reforms aspired. Atsuko Ueda draws on, while critically intervening in, the vast scholarship of language reform that engaged with numerous works of postcolonial and cultural studies. She examines the first two decades of the Meiji period, with specific focus on the issue of race, contending that no analysis of imperialism or nationalism is possible without it. “Language, Nation, Race is an exceptional book. It not only provides a cogent interpretation of Meiji-era linguistic and literary reform movements but also productively challenges the current scholarly consensus regarding the meaning of these movements. Atsuko Ueda makes an entirely original and convincing argument about the relevance of ‘whiteness’ to the understanding of linguistic, aesthetic, and cultural values within these movements.”—JAMES REICHERT, Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Stanford University “A remarkable accomplishment, bound to have a lasting impact in the field of Japan studies and beyond. Ueda’s compelling reading of Meiji period literary and linguistic debates opens new avenues for a philosophical questioning of phoneticism and its significance to the formation of the geopolitical categories of ‘West’ and ‘non- West.’”—PEDRO ERBER, author of Breaching the Frame: The Rise of Contemporary Art in Brazil and Japa

    Assessment of testing methods for drug-induced repolarization delay and arrhythmias in an iPS cell-derived cardiomyocyte sheet: multi-site validation study

    No full text
    主査 : 赤坂喜清 / タイトル : Assessment of testing methods for drug-induced repolarization delay and arrhythmias in an iPS cell-derived cardiomyocyte sheet: multi-site validation study /著者 : Yuji Nakamura, Junko Matsuo, Norimasa Miyamoto, Atsuko Ojima, Kentaro Ando, Yasunari Kanda, Kohei Sawada, Atsushi Sugiyama, Yuko Sekino /掲載誌 : Journal of Pharmacological Sciences /巻号・発行年等 : 124(4):494-501, 2014 /本文ファイル: 査読後原稿

    The maturation of reticulocytes. I. Following introduction of reticulocytes into polycythemic and normocythemic animals

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    Investigations were conducted on the life-span of &#34;stress&#34; reticulocytes and the fate of the early denucleated large-sized reticulocytes in circulating blood. Reticulocyte disappearance was examined after reticulocyte introduction into the vein and into the peritoneal cavity of polycythemic and normocythemic animals. The results indicated that these introduced reticulocytes matured to red cells by about 36 hours after injection under both the polycythemic and normocytehmic conditions. The large-sized reticulocytes disappeared by about 4 to 12 hours after introduction. The maturation of reticulocytes was largely arrested when the cells were introduced into the peritoneal cavity.</p
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