The Journal of the Quekett Microscopical Club

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Quekett Microscopical Club, 1894
 

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Seite 90 - Vice-President, in the Chair. The minutes of the preceding meeting were read and confirmed. The following gentlemen were balloted for and duly elected Members of the Club :— Mr.
Seite 253 - President, in the Chair. THE minutes of the preceding meeting were read and confirmed. The following gentlemen were duly elected Fellows of the Society :— ER Budden, CT Macadam, WR Criper.
Seite 214 - The properties of living matter distinguish it absolutely from all other kinds of things ; and," he continues, " the present state of our knowledge furnishes us with no link between the living and the not living.
Seite 235 - President, in the chair. The minutes of the preceding meeting were read and confirmed, a list of donations was read, and the thanks of the meeting were voted to the donors.
Seite 6 - Provide two precisely similar equi-convex lenses, whose identical refractive index /JL, and ralii r, are known, and cement them together with the mounting medium whose refractive index has to be determined. Now measure F, the principal focus of the combination, then the refractive index of the mounting medium.
Seite 237 - The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed. The following gentlemen were balloted for and duly elected members of the Society.
Seite 124 - Dr. Hooker relates an account of a gardener, who " incautiously bit a piece of the Dumb Cane, when his tongue swelled to such a degree that he could not move it ; he became utterly incapable of speaking, and was confined to the house for some days in the most excruciating torments.
Seite 122 - THE ESSENTIALS OF HISTOLOGY. Descriptive and Practical. For the Use of Students.
Seite 386 - Millar, that the reports now read be received and adopted, and that they be printed and circulated in the usual way.
Seite 150 - Here, however, all exact notions as to the functions of the tube-length have practically stopped, so much so that there has not been any agreement even as to how the length of the tube is to be measured, whether from the front or back lens of the objective to the field-lens, the diaphragm, or the eye-lens of the eye-piece.' Since these lines were written, now some eight years ago, it has come to be very generally admitted that the optical tube-length must be measured from the posterior principal...

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