i Toll due to COVID-19 rises to 1,075, cases at 33,610 By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 18:48:17 +0530 Of the 1,075 deaths, Maharashtra tops the tally with 432 fatalities, followed by Gujarat at 197, Madhya Pradesh at 130, Delhi at 56, Rajasthan at 51, Uttar Pradesh at 39 and Andhra Pradesh at 31. Full Article PTI Photo Uttar Pradesh Himachal Pradesh IMAGE Delhi Maharashtra Odisha Assam Punjab Madhya Pradesh Tamil Nadu Rajasthan ICMR IIT Andhra Pradesh West Bengal
i How couples are saying 'I do' amid the pandemic By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 08:50:09 +0530 Love is in the air this spring, even with the coronavirus pandemic. Countless weddings have been postponed, but people are still getting married; although with adjustments to accommodate social distancing and other restrictions. Here are some ways couples are exchanging their wedding vows. Full Article Reuters ANI Photo Getty Images Rodger Andrei Onate Noelle Danielle Francisco Hong Kong Italy Jose Luis Doug Ducey Eduardo Dominguez Diego Fernandes Novi Herdjanto Yonatan Meushar Noha Hamid Roni Ben-Ari Mustafa Amin
i 'Special train' with 1,200 migrants leaves Telangana By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 17:11:01 +0530 Thousands of migrants were stranded in places across the country since the lockdown was enforced on March 25, many even attempting to walk home. Full Article Arun Kumar Telangana Railway Protection Force South Central Railway Hatia Jharkhand Labour Day Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh Lingampally Bihar Maharashtra Lingampalli Kerala Punjab Odisha
i India's COVID-19 tally rises by 1,755 to 35,365 cases By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 19:26:40 +0530 A total of 77 deaths were reported since Thursday evening of which 27 fatalities were reported from Maharashtra, 17 from Gujarat, 11 from West Bengal, seven each from Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, three from Delhi, two from Andhra Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh and one from Karnataka. Full Article PTI Photo CIDCO Exhibition Center IMAGE Navi Mumbai Maharashtra Tripura India Arunachal Pradesh Vashi Bemina Delhi Srinagar
i SEE: Armed forces salute India's COVID-19 warriors By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 21:59:29 +0530 Several activities like fly-pasts, flashing warship lights and other displays by the Indian army bands were included in Sunday's spectacular show across the country. Full Article Indian Air Force PTI Photo KGMC Hospital C-130 New Delhi Indian Navy PHOTOS INHS ANI Manvender Raisina Hill Subhav India Lucknow
i REWIND: Best of the month -- April By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 08:19:44 +0530 Here's a presentation of some of the best photos from around the world in the month gone by. Full Article Reuters NHS Cecilia Bartalena New Delhi Lorenzo Marianelli Adnan Britain Marston Moretaine Tom Moore State Capitol Flavio Lo Severo Ochoa Hospital REWIND Ronen China Hashim
i Migrant workers clash with cops in Surat; 11 hurt By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 19:12:23 +0530 Appearing impatient to return to their native places, migrant workers pelted stones at police in Surat district of Gujarat on Monday, leaving nearly a dozen personnel injured, one of them an IPS officer, and also held protests elsewhere during the coronavirus-enforced lockdown, officials said. Full Article PTI Photo Surat Range Uttar Pradesh IPS IMAGE Ravi Mohan Saini Rajkot Ramya Mohan Gujarat Shapar-Veraval Vareli Kosamba Ahmedabad
i Chaos as liquor shops open after 40 days By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 20:30:09 +0530 Liquor shops reopened across the country in the non-containment zones after 40 days from Monday with people queuing up in large numbers, giving social distancing norms a toss at some places. Full Article ANI Photo PTI Photo Manvender East Delhi New Delhi Lucknow
i India begins lockdown 3.0; more cars, people on roads By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 21:47:54 +0530 Massive crowds thronged liquor stores, more vehicles plied on roads and cab-hailing platforms resumed services as India entered the third phase of the lockdown on Monday with further easing of curbs except in containment zones in the shadow of the highest rate of recovery yet from coronavirus. Full Article PTI Photo IMAGE All India Motor Transport Congress New Delhi NAREDCO Lav Agarwal CREDAI Ola Bhiwani's Circular Road Greater Noida MHA Green Zones Harsh Vardhan Sajjanraj Mehta Pandian Rajkumar Metro Rail
i Hefty corona fee doesn't dampen tipplers' spirits By www.rediff.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 20:36:19 +0530 Undeterred by the threat of coronavirus infection or the 'special corona fee' of 70 per cent levied on alcohol, hundreds of tipplers queued up outside liquor vends in the national capital for the second consecutive day on Tuesday, keeping the police on their toes. Full Article PTI Photo East Delhi IMAGE Rajbir Singh Ramesh Bharat Kumar Raj Kumar Regal Cinema Krishna Nagar New Delhi Atul Manvender Gurgaon Kalyanpuri Ghaziabad Noida
i Railways spent Rs 50 cr to move 70K migrants in 5 days By www.rediff.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 21:35:26 +0530 A day after opposition parties, including the Congress launched a scathing attack against the Union government and the railways for charging money from migrants for the travel, sources in the railways said the national transporter is spending around Rs 80 lakh per service for the special trains, and it has run 67 such trains carrying around 67,000 stranded migrants since May 1--- incurring an expenditure of over Rs 50 crore. Full Article PTI Photo Bahujan Samaj Party IMAGE Congress Bihar Goa Ahmed Patel Dankuni Station SCR Ashok Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Ahmedabad Ajmer Ashwani Kumar Health Department
i US woman living in her car helps the homeless By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:20:54 +0530 Dominick SeJohn Walton hands out food, along with positive messages, to those less fortunate than her. She says, "I started serving meals to the homeless because I understand what it's like not to know where your next meal is going to come from and that'sthe least that I feel like we can do for our community is to give back." Full Article Dominick SeJohn Walton IMAGE Chevrolet Malibu Houston Jesus Texas United States
i What do countries look like after easing lockdowns By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 08:17:02 +0530 Italy, Spain, Portugal and India are among the countries easing coronavirus restrictions.Social distancing, mask wearing are the new norms as these countries continue to battle the virus pandemic, but are venturing out of their homes after extended periods of staying at home. Full Article Reuters Italy Spain Antonio Henri de Chassey Thailand Margaux Rebois La Graciosa Flavio Lo Nacho Doce Soe Zeya Erawan Shrine Catania Brussels Jorge Belgium
i Vizag: Grim scenes bring back memories of Bhopal By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 15:17:06 +0530 Unconscious children being carried by parents in their arms, people laying on roads, health workers scrambling to attend to those affected by the styrene vapour leak and residents fleeing were some of the scenes that played out near Visakhapatnam on Thursday, bringing back grim memories of the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy. Full Article PTI Photo LG Polymers King George Hospital RR Venkatapuram Vizag Gopalapatnam Visakhapatnam
i Mumbai to build Wuhan-like 1000-bed Covid-19 hospital By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 15:52:22 +0530 The hospital, in the commercial hub of Bandra-Kurla Complex, will serve as an isolation facility for non-critical COVID-19 patients.Expected to be ready in a fortnight, the new makeshift facility can be scaled up to 5,000 beds, if needed.The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation will run the hospital that will have, among other things, oxygen facilities and pathological laboratories.Sohini Das reports. Full Article
i Chhattisgarh: 7 fall ill after inhaling poisonous gas By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 19:03:31 +0530 The incident occurred at Shakti Paper Mill in Tetla village, where the victims were cleaning an open tank on Wednesday evening, said Raigarh superintendent of police Santosh Singh. Full Article
i First flights to bring back Indians land in Kerala By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 23:45:41 +0530 Launching its biggest ever repatriation exercise, India on Thursday airlifted 363 of its citizens, including nine infants, stranded in the United Arab Emirates due to the international travel lockdown over the COVID-19 pandemic. Full Article Air India Express Abu Dhabi Kochi United Arab Emirates UAE Ajith Pullanikotti Abu Dhabi Vande Bharat Mission PTI Photo Dubai International Airport IX452 Benson Andrews Neeraj Agrawal Gulf News IMAGE Jackson Consul General of India
i John Brown: The Abolitionist and his Legacy By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 16:19:16 +0000 Planned by the Gilder Lehrman Institute in collaboration with the New-York Historical Society. October 16, 2009 marks the 150th anniversary of John Brown's doomed raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia in 1859. Brown, an ardent abolitionist who believed in racial equality, embraced violence as a means to end slavery. Executed in 1859, he has been both vilified as a murderer and celebrated as a martyr. This exhibition of rare materials from the Gilder Lehrman Collection and New-York Historical explores Brown's beliefs and activities at a critical juncture in American history and invites us to ponder the struggle for civil rights down to the present. End Date: March 25th, 2010Sep 15 2009 to Mar 25 2010Teaser Image: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 to Thursday, March 25, 2010Start Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009Teaser Image Caption: Thomas Satterwhite Noble (1835 – 1907) John Brown's Blessing 1867 Oil on canvas 1939.250, New-York Historical Society, Gift of the children of Thomas S. Noble and Mary C. Noble, in their memory Planned by the Gilder Lehrman Institute in collaboration with the New-York Historical Society. October 16, 2009 marks the 150th anniversary of John Brown's doomed raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia in 1859. Brown, an ardent abolitionist who believed in racial equality, embraced violence as a means to end slavery. Executed in 1859, he has been both vilified as a murderer and celebrated as a martyr. This exhibition of rare materials from the Gilder Lehrman Collection and New-York Historical explores Brown's beliefs and activities at a critical juncture in American history and invites us to ponder the struggle for civil rights down to the present. Planned by the Gilder Lehrman Institute in collaboration with N-YHS.http://www.gilderlehrman.org/ October 16, 2009 marks the 150th anniversary of John Brown's doomed raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia in 1859. Brown, an ardent abolitionist who believed in racial equality, embraced violence as a means to end slavery. Executed in 1859, he has been both vilified as a murderer and celebrated as a martyr. This exhibition of rare materials from the Gilder Lehrman Collection and N-YHS explores Brown's beliefs and activities at a critical juncture in American history and invites us to ponder the struggle for civil rights down to the present.Relating Tags: Civil RightsSlavery Full Article
i FDR’s Brain Trust and the Beginning of the New Deal By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 16:16:26 +0000 In his search for a new national message during the 1932 presidential primary, FDR gathered around him a number of political, economic and legal scholars. The core of this group were Columbia University professors, who knew and trusted each other, and were willing to take risks and work long unpaid hours to promote a candidate that they believed could turn around a nation in crisis. End Date: March 26th, 2010Nov 6 2009 to Mar 26 2010Teaser Image: Friday, November 6, 2009 to Friday, March 26, 2010Start Date: Friday, November 6, 2009Teaser Image Caption: Irving Browning Buy My Apples, 1929 Gelatin Silver Print New-York Historical Society, Gift of Irving Browning.Although at first a casual circle, the group became tightly organized after FDR's nomination. After the election, they were publicly christened the "Brain Trust," and became the central component of the New Deal. This exhibition will focus on the three key members of the Brain Trust—Raymond Moley, Rexford Tugwell, and Adolph Berle—and two of the New Deal cabinet members with whom they worked to bring about FDR's radical changes—Frances Perkins and Harry Hopkins. Using contemporary photographs, cartoons, broadsides, articles and newsreels, this exhibition will be supplemented by audio reminisces from the collection of the Columbia University Oral History Research Office. Relating Tags: Eleanor RooseveltFranklin D. RooseveltNew DealBrain Trust Full Article
i Ariadne: The Great American Nude By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 16:13:09 +0000 John Vanderlyn was among the first American painters to spend significant time studying in Paris, and while abroad around 1812 he created his masterpiece, "Ariadne Asleep on the Island of Naxos" (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts). The painting was admitted to the Paris Salon that year—a triumph for a young American artist. But triumph turned to despair when Vanderlyn exhibited Ariadne back in the United States in 1815, where audiences considered the nude a shocking subject, and it failed to garner the public acclaim it deserved. End Date: April 28th, 2010Jun 4 2009 to Apr 28 2010Teaser Image: Thursday, June 4, 2009 to Wednesday, April 28, 2010Start Date: Thursday, June 4, 2009Teaser Image Caption: John Vanderlyn, Ariadne Asleep on the Island of Naxos, 1809–14, oil on canvas John Vanderlyn was among the first American painters to spend significant time studying in Paris, and while abroad around 1812 he created his masterpiece, "Ariadne Asleep on the Island of Naxos" (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts). The painting was admitted to the Paris Salon that year—a triumph for a young American artist. But triumph turned to despair when Vanderlyn exhibited Ariadne back in the United States in 1815, where audiences considered the nude a shocking subject, and it failed to garner the public acclaim it deserved. Many artists and critics, however, realized Vanderlyn's great achievement, among them the engraver and aspiring painter Asher B. Durand. In 1831 Durand purchased Vanderlyn's great work, along with an unfinished copy that is now in the Historical Society collection. Durand created an engraving of Vanderlyn's unappreciated masterpiece that was hailed by some as a great achievement, but the American public was still unprepared to accept a nude figure as a subject for art, so the print met a fate similar to the painting that inspired it. But there the two artists' fates diverged: while Vanderlyn became embittered and eventually died in poverty, Durand went on to become an accomplished portraitist and a highly acclaimed landscape painter.Relating Tags: Asher B. Durand Full Article
i A Portrait of the City By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 15:59:08 +0000 A group of 22 paintings and two small sculptures will offer visitors a chronological journey through highlights of the New-York Historical Society's rich collection of New York views, including historical images of the metropolis and richly allusive images of its inhabitants and their lives. The installation will include a selection of city views, beginning and ending with two monumental cityscapes, Guy’s "Tontine Coffee House" of ca. 1797 and Jacquette’s "From World Trade Center," 1998. It will feature portraits of political and cultural figures such as DeWitt Clinton, who oversaw the development of the Erie Canal, and Peter Williams, the former slave who became a successful merchant and a founding trustee of the Zion Church for Negroes. It will also illuminate the everyday lives of New Yorkers through such works as Burr’s "The Intelligence Office," 1849 and Thain’s "Italian Block Party," 1922. End Date: September 1st, 2010Sep 1 2008 to Sep 1 2010Teaser Image: Monday, September 1, 2008 to Wednesday, September 1, 2010Start Date: Monday, September 1, 2008A group of 22 paintings and two small sculptures will offer visitors a chronological journey through highlights of the New-York Historical Society's rich collection of New York views, including historical images of the metropolis and richly allusive images of its inhabitants and their lives. The installation will include a selection of city views, beginning and ending with two monumental cityscapes, Guy’s "Tontine Coffee House" of ca. 1797 and Jacquette’s "From World Trade Center," 1998. It will feature portraits of political and cultural figures such as DeWitt Clinton, who oversaw the development of the Erie Canal, and Peter Williams, the former slave who became a successful merchant and a founding trustee of the Zion Church for Negroes. It will also illuminate the everyday lives of New Yorkers through such works as Burr’s "The Intelligence Office," 1849 and Thain’s "Italian Block Party," 1922. Full Article
i Grateful Dead: Now Playing at the New-York Historical Society By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 15:56:32 +0000 In March 2010, the New-York Historical Society will present the first large-scale exhibition of materials from the Grateful Dead Archive. Drawn almost exclusively from the Archive housed at the University of California Santa Cruz, Grateful Dead: Now Playing at the New-York Historical Society, will chronicle the history of the Grateful Dead, its music, and phenomenal longevity through an array of original art and documents related to the band, its members, performances, and productions. Exhibition highlights from the archive will include concert and recording posters, album art, large-scale marionettes and other stage props, banners, and vast stores of decorated fan mail. End Date: September 5th, 2010Mar 5 2010 to Sep 5 2010Teaser Image: Friday, March 5, 2010 to Sunday, September 5, 2010Start Date: Friday, March 5, 2010Teaser Image Caption: American Beauty album cover, 1970, copyright 2010 Alton Kelley.Tracing the career and achievements of a band that became one of the most significant cultural forces in 20th century America, the New-York Historical Society presents The Grateful Dead: Now Playing at the New-York Historical Society. The exhibition, on view from March 5 to September 5, 2010, represents the first large-scale exhibition of materials from the Grateful Dead Archive, housed at the University of California Santa Cruz. Through a wealth of original materials, the exhibition will explore the musical creativity and influence of the Grateful Dead from 1965 to 1995, the sociological phenomenon of the Deadheads (the band's network of devoted fans) and the enduring impact of the Dead's pioneering approach to the music business. Among the objects in the exhibition will be documents, instruments, audio and video recordings, album art, photographs, platinum records, posters, programs, newsletters, tickets, and t-shirts and other merchandise. Highlights will include the band's first record contract, tour itineraries, backstage guest lists, decorated fan mail, rare LP test pressings, drawings for the fabled Wall of Sound amplifier array, scripts for the Grateful Dead ticket hotline, notebooks of Dead archivist Dick Latvala, life-size skeleton props used in the band's "Touch of Grey" video and large-scale marionettes and other stage props. "Despite the Grateful Dead's close association with California, the band and New York have been an important part of each other's history from the first time the Dead played here in 1967 to the band's year-on-year performances in New York from the late 1970s through 1995," commented Dr. Louise Mirrer, President and CEO of the New-York Historical Society. "This exhibition not only celebrates the band's relationship with New York but its tremendous impact on American culture." "The Grateful Dead Archive is one of the most significant popular cultural collections of the 20th century," said Christine Bunting, the head of Special Collections and Archives at the University Library at UC Santa Cruz. "We are delighted that the Historical Society is presenting this unprecedented exhibition, providing the public and the thousands of fans with such an exciting overview of the band's musical journey." The Grateful Dead: Now Playing at the New-York Historical Society provides unique glimpses into the political and social upheavals and artistic awakenings of the 1960s and 1970s, a tumultuous and transformative period that shaped our current cultural and political landscape, and examines how the Grateful Dead's origin in northern California in the mid-1960s was informed by the ideology and spirit of both the Beat Generation and the burgeoning Hippie scene, including the now-legendary Acid Tests. The exhibition also explores how the band's refusal to follow the established rules of the record industry revealed an unexpected business savvy that led to innovations in a rapidly changing music industry, and also to a host of consumer-driven marketing enrichments that kept fans in frequent contact with the band. Click here to read a curator's blogRelating Tags: music Full Article
i It Happened Here: The Invention of Santa Claus By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 15:50:31 +0000 Though legend has it that Santa Claus hails from the North Pole, he was actually a New Yorker who came into the world on West 23rd Street in what is now the trendy Chelsea neighborhood. End Date: January 8th, 2012Nov 25 2011 to Jan 8 2012Teaser Image: Friday, November 25, 2011 to Sunday, January 8, 2012Start Date: Friday, November 25, 2011Teaser Image Caption: Thomas Nast and George Webster. Santa Claus and his works. New York: McLoughlin Bros., ca 1870. New-York Historical Society, YC1870.Web. Though legend has it that Santa Claus hails from the North Pole, he was actually a New Yorker who came into the world on West 23rd Street in what is now the trendy Chelsea neighborhood. The modern Santa was born in the imagination of Clement Clarke Moore, a scholar who penned a whimsical poem about St. Nicholas, the patron of old Dutch New York, for the amusement of his six children at Christmastime. Soon after the publication of "A Visit from St. Nicholas"—popularly known today by its opening line, "Twas the night before Christmas…""—St. Nicholas became a popular feature of American Christmas celebrations. Moore's poem permanently connected St. Nicholas to Christmas, and led to our idea of Santa Claus. Santa's popularity, appearance and many of the holiday traditions that surround him owe much to the imaginative work of two other New Yorkers: Washington Irving, the creator of Knickerbocker's History of New York, and Thomas Nast, an artist whose drawings of Santa were reproduced all over the country in the years following the Civil War. To celebrate the winter season, the New-York Historical Society is presenting It Happened Here: The Invention of Santa Claus, an installation tracing the modern image of Santa Claus, the red-suited, pot-bellied descendant of the medieval bishop St. Nicholas of Myra, which emerged only decades after the first Congress met in 1788 in Federal Hall in New York. The exhibition features Robert Weir's 1837 painting of a rather sly St. Nicholas and Thomas Nast's Harper's Weekly cartoons of Santa. Clement Clarke Moore's desk is on display in the Henry Luce III Center for the Study of American Culture.Relating Tags: Santa ClausChristmasPoetryWashington IrvingResources: Video excerpt: The Santa Files with John Sergant (c) 2010 Fine Stripe Productions. Full Article
i Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of Insulin By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Thu, 12 May 2011 15:34:02 +0000 Recalling the desperate fight for life that used to be waged by juvenile diabetes patients, and commemorating the events of 1921 that inaugurated a new era of hope for them and their families, the New-York Historical Society will present the exhibition Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of Insulin from October 5, 2010 through January 31, 2011. Exploring the roles of science, government, higher education and industry in developing and distributing a life-saving drug, the exhibition will bring to life the personalities who discovered insulin and raced to bring it to the world and will tell the story of one extraordinary New York girl—Elizabeth Evans Hughes, daughter of the leading statesman and jurist Charles Evans Hughes—who was among the very first patients to be saved. End Date: January 31st, 2011Oct 5 2010 to Jan 31 2011Teaser Image: Tuesday, October 5, 2010 to Monday, January 31, 2011Start Date: Tuesday, October 5, 2010Teaser Image Caption: Girl injecting herself with insulin (Lilly Girl), 1930. Photograph. Courtesy of Eli Lilly and Company Archives Gallery: 'Daughter of U. S. Secretary of State tries new Toronto discovery' Photograph of Elizabeth Hughes with her mother, summer, 1918Insulin Vacuum Drier, 1923J. L, 3 years, December 15, 1922; J.L., Weight 29 lbs, February 15, 1923Photograph of laboratory 221, 1929Early Insulin I Am a Diabetic cardRecalling the desperate fight for life that used to be waged by juvenile diabetes patients, and commemorating the events of 1921 that inaugurated a new era of hope for them and their families, the New-York Historical Society will present the exhibition Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of Insulin from October 5, 2010 through January 31, 2011. Exploring the roles of science, government, higher education and industry in developing and distributing a life-saving drug, the exhibition will bring to life the personalities who discovered insulin and raced to bring it to the world and will tell the story of one extraordinary New York girl—Elizabeth Evans Hughes, daughter of the leading statesman and jurist Charles Evans Hughes—who was among the very first patients to be saved. To lead visitors through this history, from the discovery of insulin in Toronto by Dr. Frederick Banting in 1921 and its first human trials in 1922 to its widespread use today, Breakthrough will feature digital interactives, film, artifacts and ephemera drawn from the Historical Society's own collections and from archives including those of the University of Toronto, Eli Lilly and Company, the Rockefeller Institute, the Joslin Clinic and the New York Academy of Medicine. The first chapter will recount the excitement, and the clash of personalities, among the scientists whose research led to the discovery of insulin, beginning in May 1921. Also included in this chapter will be an account of the valiant but heartbreaking efforts of Dr. Frederick Allen in the years before the discovery to prolong the lives of diabetic children through the use of a starvation diet. The story of Elizabeth Evans Hughes, told in part through actual treatment charts and period letters, will bring to life the impact of insulin when it first became available. Because Elizabeth was the daughter of Charles Evans Hughes—Governor of New York (1907–1910), Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1910–1916), United States Secretary of State (1921–1925) and Chief Justice of the United States (1930–1941)—her survival provided powerful testimony to the value of insulin, and helped bring the work of Dr. Allen and Dr. Banting to the world's stage. The exhibition's second chapter will examine how insulin became available for widespread medical use through a partnership between the University of Toronto and Eli Lilly and Company—the first such collaboration between an academic institution and a drug company. Photographs from the Lilly archives will reveal the painstaking early method of manufacturing insulin in mass quantities—an innovative industrial process that ran from the slaughterhouse to the laboratory. Display cases of syringes, vials, testing kits for blood sugar and other equipment will take the story of insulin treatment from the 1920s up through today. The exhibition's final chapter will tell about recent developments—notably the synthesis of insulin in the 1980s as the world's first biotechnology drug—and the current state of research, development, treatment and demography of diabetes. Included in this chapter will be information about the alarming increase in prevalence of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes in the past decade, and the ways in which individuals, families and institutions can address this health crisis. The exhibition will conclude with a presentation of Life for a Child, a documentary film produced by the International Diabetes Federation and Eli Lilly and Company to raise awareness of the devastating impact of the disease.Breakthrough will be installed in the Historical Society's 1,300-square-foot temporary gallery, located just off the 77th Street entrance, while the remainder of the landmark Central Park West building undergoes a $60 million architectural renovation.Exhibitions: Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of InsulinResources: Full Article
i Dutch New York Between East and West: The World of Margrieta van Varick (Bard Graduate Center) By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Fri, 29 Apr 2011 09:26:01 +0000 Timed to coincide with the 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's sail into the New York bay, The World of Margrieta van Varick explores the life and times of a fascinating woman, her family and possessions. Born in the Netherlands, Margrieta spent the better part of her life at the extremes of the Dutch colonial world: in Malacca (now Malaysia) and Flatbush (now Brooklyn). Arriving in Flatbush with her minister husband Rudolphus in 1686, she set up a textile shop, bringing with her an astonishing array of Asian and European goods. We know about the wealth of objects thanks to an inventory, taken after her death in 1696—and recently rediscovered in the archives of the New-York Historical Society library—documenting her personal belongings and shop goods. End Date: January 24th, 2010Sep 18 2009 to Jan 24 2010Teaser Image: Friday, September 18, 2009 to Sunday, January 24, 2010Start Date: Friday, September 18, 2009Teaser Image Caption: Bedcover or wall hanging (palampore), ca. 1720-1740. Cotton, linen, paint. New- York Historical Society, Gift of Mrs. J. Insley Blair, 1938.1 Gallery: The Negro in the warSlavery and somethingNYHS EntranceTimed to coincide with the 400th anniversary of Henry Hudson's sail into the New York bay, The World of Margrieta van Varick explores the life and times of a fascinating woman, her family and possessions. Born in the Netherlands, Margrieta spent the better part of her life at the extremes of the Dutch colonial world: in Malacca (now Malaysia) and Flatbush (now Brooklyn). Arriving in Flatbush with her minister husband Rudolphus in 1686, she set up a textile shop, bringing with her an astonishing array of Asian and European goods. We know about the wealth of objects thanks to an inventory, taken after her death in 1696—and recently rediscovered in the archives of the New-York Historical Society library—documenting her personal belongings and shop goods.Relating Tags: Traveling ExhibitionDutch New YorkNetherlandsMargrieta van Varick Full Article
i New York Divided: Slavery and the Civil War By www.nyhistory.org Published On :: Tue, 22 Mar 2011 22:05:11 +0000 New York Divided: Slavery and the Civil War is the final exhibition in the New-York Historical Society's groundbreaking series on slavery and its impact on the people, landscape, institutions and economy of New York. New York Divided offers a bold look at one of the most challenging periods in New York City's history, when it was torn by the violence of the 1863 draft riots, produced some of the most significant figures in the abolitionist movement, and became the economic engine of the country. Featuring precious historical artifacts, many never displayed before, as well as an online exhibit, the exhibition examines New York's little-known history. End Date: September 3rd, 2007Nov 17 2006 to Sep 3 2007Teaser Image: Friday, November 17, 2006 to Monday, September 3, 2007Start Date: Friday, November 17, 2006Online exhibition link: www.nydivided.orgTeaser Image Caption: "Band of the 107th U.S. Colored Infantry," 1865. Gallery: The Negro in the warSlavery and somethingNYHS EntranceEntrance 2Governors islandThe HouseThe HouseGovernors islandNYHS EntranceNew York Divided: Slavery and the Civil War is the final exhibition in the New-York Historical Society's groundbreaking series on slavery and its impact on the people, landscape, institutions and economy of New York. New York Divided offers a bold look at one of the most challenging periods in New York City's history, when it was torn by the violence of the 1863 draft riots, produced some of the most significant figures in the abolitionist movement, and became the economic engine of the country. Featuring precious historical artifacts, many never displayed before, as well as an online exhibit, the exhibition examines New York's little-known history. Few non-historians recall that during the "secession winter" of 1860-61, pro-Southern voices (including New York City's Mayor Fernando Wood) called for the City's declaration of independence from both the North and the South, aiming to preserve its role as a great port for both sections. New York was a virtual "Capital of the South," with major commercial and political ties to Southern slavery and, at the same time, a major center of the nation's abolitionist movement. The exhibition traces the evolution of New York's rise to national and global economic power and its relationship to the nation's confrontation with issues of slavery and racial inequality against the backdrop of the Civil War. New York Divided shows how the momentum of emancipation was interrupted by the emergence of the cotton revolution, and enhances the public understanding of the efforts of New Yorkers—black and white—in the struggle for freedom that presaged the civil rights movement of the 20th century. The exhibition is a follow-up to last fall's groundbreaking, highly acclaimed exhibition, Slavery in New York. This is not the American history most of us grew up learning. Exciting new discoveries have upended our understanding of the national past, including that of New York City and State. New York Divided brings the exciting research recently unearthed by scholars to a broad audience. We hope that visitors to this exhibition will have learned something new from their visit, made important connections to the past and the present-day lives and be inspired to action. Full Article
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i Hizbul chief Syed Salahuddin claims responsibility for Handwara attack, adm... By Published On :: Hizbul chief Syed Salahuddin claims responsibility for Handwara attack, adm... Full Article
i AAP MLA Prakash Jarwal arrested in connection with doctor's suicide By Published On :: AAP MLA Prakash Jarwal arrested in connection with doctor's suicide Full Article
i ICMR partners with BBIL for developing indigenous coronavirus vaccine By Published On :: ICMR partners with BBIL for developing indigenous coronavirus vaccine Full Article
i Govt allows opening 3000 CBSE affiliated schools for evaluating class 10, 1... By Published On :: Govt allows opening 3000 CBSE affiliated schools for evaluating class 10, 1... Full Article
i Taliban wants positive relationship with India, welcomes New Delhi's c... By Published On :: Taliban wants positive relationship with India, welcomes New Delhi's c... Full Article
i Vizag gas leak: LG Polymers issues official statement, says doing our... By Published On :: Vizag gas leak: LG Polymers issues official statement, says doing our... Full Article
i Coronavirus in India LIVE: With 116 new cases, COVID-19 tally in Madhya Pra... By Published On :: Coronavirus in India LIVE: With 116 new cases, COVID-19 tally in Madhya Pra... Full Article
i 'Sadness is, seeing your favorite player getting old': Twitter re... By Published On :: 'Sadness is, seeing your favorite player getting old': Twitter re... Full Article
i Latest Bollywood News: Shehnaaz, Jassie's 'Keh Gayi Sorry' t... By Published On :: Latest Bollywood News: Shehnaaz, Jassie's 'Keh Gayi Sorry' t... Full Article
i India in lockdown over coronavirus: Day 46 in pictures By Published On :: India in lockdown over coronavirus: Day 46 in pictures Full Article
i 'Distribute grants to cow shelters at earliest', orders CM Gehlot By Published On :: 'Distribute grants to cow shelters at earliest', orders CM Gehlot Full Article
i Work resumes in Greater Noidaâs Oppo mobile factory By Published On :: Work resumes in Greater Noidaâs Oppo mobile factory Full Article
i Vande Bharat Mission: Indian citizens arrive at London airport to board eva... By Published On :: Vande Bharat Mission: Indian citizens arrive at London airport to board eva... Full Article
i Mortality increases if COVID-19 positive person delays in visiting hospital... By Published On :: Mortality increases if COVID-19 positive person delays in visiting hospital... Full Article
i Prince Harry-Meghan Markle's biography 'Finding Freedom' to... By Published On :: Prince Harry-Meghan Markle's biography 'Finding Freedom' to... Full Article
i Top sports news: A grey-bearded MS Dhoni enjoys playtime with Ziva, T2... By Published On :: Top sports news: A grey-bearded MS Dhoni enjoys playtime with Ziva, T2... Full Article