SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT PETROVSKAYA, V.G. - PETUKHOV, V.I.

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CIA-RDP86-00513R002202420006-3
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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USSR PETROVSKAYA, V. G. and BLINOVA, N. I., Zhurnal Mikrobiologii, Epidemiologii i Immunobiologii, No 10, 1971, pp 69-74 "pulmonary" model, quantitative keratoconjunctival test, and Formal riodel. Loss of the type-Spea4fic antigen by lactose-positive hybrids did not affect the virulence of the strains. Loss of the type-specific antigen by previously attenuated.hybrids resulted in behavioral differences in the Miodels studied compared with attenuated recombinations possessing the type-specific antigen, The authors concluded that type-specific antigens play a secondary role in the virulence of S. flexneri 2 a and that.some,still unknown factor is of decisive significance in this respect. 2/2 -17-2 013 UNCILASSIFItD~ PROCESSING DATE--160CT70 TITLE--THE VIRULENCE OF SH. FLEXNERI HYBRIDS OBTAINED IN CROSSING WITH VARIOUS STRAINS OF E. COLI K-12 ffk~-U- AUTHOR-'(02)-?ETROVSKAYAt V.G., LYCHEVA# T.A. -.COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR ,,,,OURCE--ZHURNAL MIKROBIOLOGIT, EPIDEMIOLOGII I IMMUNOBIOLOGII, 1970, NR 5, 7~7_~~-,'PP_ 42-47 -,DATE PUBLISHED - ----- 70 _SCl,ENCE,S .~JOPIC TAGS--ESCHERICHIA COLIT SHIGELLA, STREPTOMYCINt AN11BIOTIC RESISTANCE MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ~DQCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED :~4~PROXY REEL/FRAME--1994/0105 STEP NU--Uk/0016/'10/000/005/0042/0047 ~~,ORC ACCESSION NC--AP0114501 UNCLASSIFIEO -2/2 013 UNCLASSIFIED~ PROCESSING DATE--160CT70 ACCESSION NO-AP0114501 ',,-AOSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT.A SUPPOSITION WAS PUT FORWARD AND WERE PRESENTED POINTING TO THE PRESENCE OF ONE OF GENETIC LOCI ON ~THE CHROMOS04E OF SHIGELLAE NEAR THE STREPTOMYCIN ZONE; THIS WAS ONE OF LOCI RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CAPACITY OF SIGELLAE TO INDUCE ~KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS. A SUGGESTION BY So FORMAL ET AL. (1965) ON THE EXITENCE IN E. COLI OF ONE OF THE GENS NECESSARY FOR MANIFESTArION OF -SHIGELLA VIRULENCE WAS CONFIRMED. IT WAS SHOWN THAT THIS ALLELIC HOMOGOLOUS GEN WAS BLOCKED 1N E. COLI K-12 STRAINS RESISTANT TO :_:,-STREPTOMYCVq. FACILITY: INSTITUT EPIDEMIOLOGII I MIKROBIOLOGII GAMALEI AMN SSSR, MOSCOW. 4cc. PRIMARY SOURCE: Zhurnal llikrobiologiij I pider _0109'!... Immunobiologii, 1970, Nr 1, G F COLICINOGE F.ACTORS INTERSPECIES EXCHAN E 0 NIC IN ENTER,013ACTERIA IN VIVO Kudlav, G.; PetrpAt~k Kiselev R. N. _gy a.: n -in; enterabicteria ii, Possibility of interspecies exchan9c, of colic! agenic f:ict6rs (in the intestine of mice) was experimentally demonstrated between Sh"gellae ai-~d t sc I-,-- chia and Salmone'llae. Wher, S- typhimurium cultures (n3tural for nvce) ~vere used t*,,-:.c was seen a prolonged circulation of the originatiqg colicinogenic varLints., which were also Isolated, aloplo with the initifl recipieni strain, from the blood and orija ns of perishkA a nimals. ic !actors in enfil The, possibility of genetic exchange of cholicinogen .robicterla under natural conditions should be taken into consideration n an-elyzini'and &.messing the epide- midlogical materials of the outbreaks of intestinal dise'ases with utilization of colicinogeni- city and colicinosensitivity as genetic labels. :,p 022-,:~ ROCIES$ING, DATE-30CJCT70 ITL~~LUBAICANT -U- 7-AUTHOR-1051-PASEHOIKI M.S., KAMINSKIY* N*Aov -OSEYKOv N.I., CHAMIN. 1.A., PETROVSKIY, A.A. C&eR"f'l'~hFQ--USSR SOURCE-U.S.S.R. 2b6,987 RfiFbRkNCE-OTKRYTIYAt IZ08RET.j PROMs OBRAZTSY9 TOVARNYE ZNAKI 1970s DATE PUBLISHEC-OIAPR70 SUBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS TOPIC TAGS-CHEMICAL-PATENTs SURFACTANTv METALWORKING LUBRICANTt COLD WORKING, HorWORKING, VEGETABLE OIL't 'ESTER' CCNTRCL MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME-3003118.05 STEP NO-UR/0482/70/000/000/000010000 CIRC ACCESSIGN NO-AA0130638 UNCLASSIFIED PROCFSSING oATE--30OCr7O 022: LASSI '' I-ED CIRC ACCESSION NO-AA0130638 !~.,-A3STRACT/EX7fqACT-(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. A LUBRICANT FOR COLD ANO HOT METAL -WORKING WAS PREPO. FROM CORIANDER FATTY OIL BY HEAT TR":ATMENT AT L50-330DEGREES AND 5-500 MM AND.MIXING WITH MINERAL UR VEGETABLE OIL OR WITH A SURFACTANT9 SUCH AS A SYNTHETIC ESTER. :UNCLASSIFIED --03JUL7C UNdl-ASSIFiEC PQCCESSING CATE -GNEYIC RE-SMANCE 11% AN'[SCTROPIC FERRIT -TITLE-IFE NMINEAR FERRCMA ELLIF-f-C 10- ALTFGiz.. PETiCV---Kl-lr, A.B. C CL % T F Y CF-INF'C -LSSP ---SCLKCE-TFCFETl-CJ-ESKAYA I VATEMATIChESKAYA FIZIKAi, 1(;7Ct ~OL Zi, NR 2, PP -2E4 C T E :FLELIS~E-C--~----7C -t1fSUBJECT AREAS-FATEF IALSt Pl-YSIC-S' TAC-S--MATI-~FFATIC ANALYSIS, FERRIT'Et FEkRCPAGhE7IC RESCNANCE ~`.-~CUTRCL.' YAc:K I hCr--KC FESTRICTICNS ~.'DCCUMENT' CLASS----,!L N C LAS S I F I Ec PPCXY REEL/fRAVE-ISIE/lisg STEF'hC--UR/C646/701002/002/0254/0264 S-F( N- ct P-- c Cl 6 i i 141 i 1 ~ 9 i 1:! "i 1 All ~i;- ~ 1 1 ''h, il 11 ~ lki 1 il 11 111 " iLl I ; 1110 ! 1 141 J 1 A i - 7_11 A6c. Nr: UR .04 j44 4P0046122. Ref Code. PRIMARY SOURCE: Teoreticheskaya i Matemat~.cheskaya Fizika, 1970, i P Vol 2, NrA .p T NONLINEAR FERROMAGNETIC HESONANCE HE IN ANISOTROPIC-YERRIT: ELLIPSOID' P6brovskivs A.B. The nonlinear equation of the magnetization ve *ctor motion for a smaU ferrit ellipsoid, possessing crystalline anisotropy, is solved hy,Bogoliubov asyniptotical metbod. It is shown that in the case of the uniform -precession with frequency '(0 the existence of re- sonances at frequencies 63::-- v q (q t= 1, 2, 3,'J, 5) and w ze 2v (v being radio frequen. -ey) is possible. USSR UDC 621,371 PE-TROVSKIY, A. D., SMIMTOVA, L. V., and TOMILIN, V. K. "Results of the Physical 1.11odeling of Radio I-lave Propagation i-n a Conducting Medium Using Screens" Moscow, V sb. X Vses. _konf, no ras_pros-tr. rad~ovoln. Tezisy dokl. Sek-ts. 6 (Tenth All-Union Conference on the PropaGation of Radio Waves; Report Theses; 3ection 6--collection of works) "I'll[luka," 1972, pp 59-63 (from RZh--Hadioteklmika, No 10, 1972, Abstract No 10A.391) Translation: The investigation was conducted by the, method of phy- sical modeliiW,, baocd an the. principle of elect-rodynamic analory. ,A reservoir -filled with a solution of 1TaCl was used as the model. The antenna feeder devices were made in the Tor.m.. of symmetrical half-v,ave vibrators; the screens were imitated by aluninu.,:, plates. The screening coefficient was obtained in terms of the configuration of -t-he screen. One illustration, bibliography of four. 11. S. 57 paw--- USSR KLBMNTIYEV, A. A., MASLOV, Ye. P., PETROVSKIY, A. 1M., YASHIN, A. 1. "Control of Stochastic Processes with Adjustable Duration of the Test Interval" Tr. IV Vses. Soveshch. po Avtomat. upr., 1968. Toutiya Avtomat. upr. [Works of Fourth All-Union Conference on Automatic Control, 1968. The Theory of Automatic Control], Moscow, Nauka. Press, 1972, pp 226-236, Discussion 256-262 (Translated from Referatiirnyy Zhurnal,,Kibernetika, No 3, Moscow, 1973, Abstract No 3 V282 by the-authars). Translation: The problem is solved of synthesis of an optimal testing and control algorithm for a discrete random process with incomplete in- formation. Three types of losses are defined: to deviation of the con- trolled process in I from the assigned mode (0 1; to control of the pro- n n ~cess inn1; to testing of the process inn}. Suppose the number of cycles of existence of process (n I is finite and equal to N. As a result of n the operations of testing and control, and also the iiiismatch in coord'j- nate y and 0 n = 1, 2f N, summary random I oss(.~!; C ari so - The mathematical expectation of the value of C is ininimized by selecting the 112 20 USSR KLEMENTIYEV, A. A., MASLOV, Ye. P., et. al., Tr. IV Vses. Soveshch. po Avtomat- upr-, 1968. Teoriya Avtomat. upr., Moscow, Nauka Press, 1972, pp 226-236, Discussion 256-262. number and placement of moments of testing and control, and also by selecting control ukj k = 1, 2, ... The problem is sclved by methods of dynamic programming. Tlogic Gaim T~eox'7' USSR UDC: 62-501.7:518.9 ABRUAIUMN-TS, T. -G. , VOLKOVIOV .110M, M. I., MASLOV, Ye. P., and TETROVSY-fft-A. M.-, Moscow "Tracking Game on a Plane Uith a Limited Number of Tracking Trajectory Corrections" Moscow, Aytomatika i Telemelchanika, No 7, 1972, pp 31-39 Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to canalyze a differential trac'-in,j~, L 41 gaze on a plane for a limited number of tracking tra- I -ing two -artici- jectory corrections. The game.is~played by ha,l pants, a 'pursuer and an evader, moving as points on a plane. The pursuer uses piece-wise pro-IgIramme-d-'control, iFith shifts from one control law to another at a particular moment, the number of such shifts being fini e. The traiectory.corrections are defi-ned as the transitions from one proarran to the other. It is asouraed that the players have simple types of motion, with the velocity of -%"-he pursuer exceeding that of the evader. Solutions for the game are sought on the basis of a combination.of classical calculus of variations and dynamic programming.: ra H9111MM 1. 'pq r1milliq!)i IrA"JIMT TOlr illttffi~nz.r JJr USSR UX 539-3:534-1 NOVI6HKOV, YU. N. and PETROVSKU,-Aj-V. (Moscow) "The Stability of Multilayer Elastic Shells" Moscow, Yekhanika Tverdogo Tela, No 5, 1973, PP 54-61 Abstract: Equations of neutral equilibrium are derived for multilayer elastic shells. The local stability loss of multilayer round. cylindrical shells is investigated for axial compression and extermal. uniform pre-ssure. The spectra of bifurcational values of the loads are found for bGth kinds of loiding, and their relationship to the wave number in the longitudinal direction and to the number of waves in the circumferential direction is studied. An analysis is made of the changre of the nature of the loss of stability in relation to change of the elastic properties of the shell layers. 5 figureso 22 references. -..USSR UDC. 53.o82.4 KOLDASOV, G. D., PETROVSKIY, B. S., Leningrad Institute of Aviation In- strument Building,---- "A Method of Measuring Mechanical Stresses" Moscow, Otkrytiya, Izobreteniya, Promyshlennyye Obraztsy, Tovarnyye Znaki, No 5, Feb 72, Author's Certificate No 364841, Division G, filed 31 Dec 70, published 28 Dec 72, p 121 Translation. This Author's Certificate introduces a method of measuring rechanical stresses in ferromagnetic solids by setting up ultrasonic vi- brations and measuring the amplitude of the electric signal of a noncontact magnetoclastic induction pickup in the object to be iupected. As a dis- tinguishing feature of the patent, provision is made, for measuring dynr~mic mechanical stresses from the action of the ultrasonic waveu. The test object is subjected to the localized action of alternating heteropolar pulses of an external magnetic field with amplitudes which produce a zero electric signal. The object is then subjected to the simultaneous action of an ultrasonic wave which induces the mechanical stresses to be checked, and an external magnetizing pulse chosen to be shorter tham the duration 1/2 ~.USSR KOLDASOV, 0. D., PETROVSKIY, B. S., USSR Author's Certificate No 364841 of action of the ultrasonic wave. After this, ultrasonic vibrations are set up in the object to be inspected and the amplitude of the electric signal is measured to determine the mechanical stresses. The patent also covers a modification of this procedure distinguished by the fact that measurement accuracy is improved by choosing the length of the localized zone in which mechanical stresses are determined so that it is less than half the wavelength of the ultrasound which induces these stresses. 2/2 -_7 USSR UDC 681.327.66'13:53.088.7 YESIKOV, V. B., KOLDASOV, G. D., and 1?21HOQ~LSKI B..1.1 Leningrad Institute of Aviation Machine Building "A Device for Investigating the Reciprocal Effect of Signals Transcribed on Ferromagnetic Material" USSR Author's Certificate No 281540, Filed 17 Feb 69, Published 18 Jan 71 ('from Referativnyy Zhurnal -- Avtomatika, Telemekhanika, i Vychislitel'naya Tekhnika, No 8, 1971, Abstract No 8B123 F) Translation: There is a well-known device for investigating the reciprocal effect of signals transcribed on ferromagnetic material. It consists of -pulse generators, amplifiers [y-ley], power sources, magnetization coils, and read-out coils. The purpose of the present invention is to simplify the hardware of this device; to simplify the methods used to measure, for re- search purposes, the effect which all the surrounding elements have on a selected element; and to regulate the forces acting an this element. This is achieved in the following way: the part of the ferromagnetic material that is not used for storage is covered with coils connected to the mechani- cal-wave activator, while the part of the ferromagnetic material that is used for storage is covered with active magnetizing and read-out coils. -Jer,,s SSa~i2 DISCUSSION OT T1r, MrORT DELIVERED BY IN . PETMVSKj;, LSSK HINESTER OF FEALT-11i EArLiCle: Xaz.CoW, Vzarnik Akade=ii !'--diLSiankika Ntltlk 5 R. RUSS,-, No 1-1, 1971. pp 54i--~641 - f5 .. PA. (.1:oscov) statcd that tile -urther dcvc-L--;=c=it at tac preyen`n;;7 in u!edici- eutlined iii t1tie Uiieetl"6 4f L;te 240, Party Cc-.;rcrs -.crui-.cs invo%;r4gaticn of compen"tory =rc=zni~= for .1 no=al h"Ithy ;P1tv&iLal condition, in spite or Lbe LhouSunds of factori, L4at have I eifectu a.-. the buc:y'~; itincticnal 5ystf,m%, i.E. inVeStJgation of dif'ercnt MeChW11SMS. Pr0C.i;-ki, ti-L :U.1Ata1.V. alJ 1iy,;tC'%r Of the QTZ.Zaism en an optim6m level. Yet, zit tha prl-eaL tirz, the nLLCat4(M ul is USU.11y concentrated am investiSstion of the end process and ulti.-zte sta&c at a dibelmsm, for eiaz%Rl., =yucardlal irlEarction, serious vascular ?Athvlc~F'y' etc. It is much mara. ir.~,ort~at to innmuti;;atu tile gancas of a-- iliftess. to f Ind the mchanisaui with which this process, watch cado tragically for iman. begim We rmat find the czuses and machanisrs; that li-mit Lxogenoua perturbance and do not aiaw -;rzn io* be*coz,- slck.-' in carence, ve knur., tmudl' less about -.,hy we are norcial thzn why we Cet sick. For physialo6y to~-ay, the i;uc!)ti= as to how a norcial state Is malntnin,.d i~ a central Issue. It is only by studying tile rechonisms. wli~ch resist &Tvllitions thar. proper undurstand~nq can be za-lllcd of tile assets 01 the orr-'3~nlm at tile 'Ime 0 exposure 63 "a;Gzc:;siva factazs" and what =ascures are needed to provide coupeasation of lt-A functions. In conclusion. as an ex=plle of lnve5ti~ations that br-la; us clocr to detcr--'-rir;Z Cie ca~;,ius and prevviitiou of early ~ta&es of d1*,'.6czsv, r.K. citL.-' c:ata on L.-.e sLudy of fLae z:.z:cLiaiu= of rz:gt.-lalon e~ czirdliovascal~ r systoa fuact~0.1. ?.Y2. (Mascow) di&ctm;ed -)revotirioi of whic". ii; tna conccrn not only of public hcriltla .5~.n.-c:es but, al'~o of the unti- u'ld wl~ch in based on g.--moral state r-.zzsurcn. V,,.e latter ;uclud., of lwrt'har raisia~; the r~ateri"' and cultural tizamdard of livln,; stipulacd :Ln Directives of the 240i CcnrrccG a.' the UPSU: income par person, decreased use of heavy and unsk:LLlcd li%lior in all bmiches 70 pz~ USSR UDC 616.132+616.131-89.28-07:616.151.5-07 V.-, KNYAZEV, M. D., KOBLOV, L. F., STEPANOV, G. A., and SMIRNOVA L. A., Scientific Research:Institute of Clinical and Experimental Surgery, Ministry of Health USSR "Hemostasis After Repair Operations on the Aorta and Major Arteries Using Electroconductive Prostheses" Moscow, Kardiologiya, No 4, 1971, pp:9-14 Abstract! Vascular prostheses woven with silver threads were implanted in 30 patients with occlusion (due to atherosclerosis and endarterteritis) of the terminal portion of the aorta and iliac arteries or aneurysms of the aorta). A like number of patients with similar lesions received noncon- ducting terylene prostheses. Hypercoagulabilifty was characteristic of both groups of patients before surgery because of high fibrinogen concentration, lowered fibrinolytic activity, increased antifibrinolysin activity, and slow blood flow. Postoperatively, none of the patients who received an electroconductive prosthesis required anticoagulant and fibrinolytic therapy, whereas most of those who received a terylene prosthesis showed signs of hypercoagulability, and several developed thrombosis despite the administration of anticoagulants. -36 Pi~OCESSING DATE--11UECIO UNCLASSIFIEU .t,-i~.lTLL--',PL-LPLPS HEALTH IS PUs-ALIG lvEALTH ~-U- Kly, B UTHQR-PEl&a"'--- ;~.CCUNTRY Cj FINFG-USSR -T'SGURCE-MCSCC,v4j IZVESTIYA# 21 JUNE 70, P 3 -OVATE PUBLlSt--ED--21JUN70 ARLAS-BICLCGICAL ANO MEDICAL SCIENCES, ~-EALTH# MONEY, ORGAN:TRANSPLANTo.HEAPT DfiEASE, ,'j~.'_-TRAUMlATGLGGY, ALLERG [C ULSEASE,. MED[CAL- FACILArYl kESPlAAT, 'Y SYSTEM 701SEASE ~-CGATRGL MARKING-AG RESLkICTIGNS ~-DGCUHENT CLASS-WNCLASSIFIED ~'-?RJXY FILHL NQ----FD7Q/bC5C37/CO7 STEP NU---Ull/9003/71)/C(,G/C)Cf~/0003/0003 ACCLSSICN NLI'--AN01424~2 -216 038 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING JATE--IIDEC70 _C I RC ACCESSICN NO--AN014245Z '.A3,STF.ACT/EXTRAr.T--(U) rP-)- ABSTRACT. THIS IS THE IAOTTIJ OF THE MEDICAL WUK,,~.,_AS IHOLI DAY. f IMCE AND AG-11-N VLADIMIR ILICH LE-NIN ljTRL-rSE0 f HAT OUE, :SOCIETY'S POST VALUALBE PROPERTY IS PEOPLE WHG LIVE A ikiLL WORKING ANO -EALTH IS THE SINE. QUA NON 6-F SUCH A LIFE. SPIRITUAL LIFE. A N D f - ~FOLLOWING ThE bEHEST5 OF THE GREAT LFAVERr THE SGY1 E T COVERNMENT IS _.DOING ALL IT CAN TO PRESERVE AND STRENGTHEN THE PEOPLE'S HEALTH Af'40 TO INSURE ThE TREATMENT A~iO RAPID RECOVERY OF THE SICK. THIS YEAR MEDICAL WORKERS DAY IS BEING CELEBRATED ON THE EYE OF AN EVENT 15F PARTICULAR IMPORTANCE FOR MEDICAL WORKERS: ON I JULY THE PKliliCIPLES uF USSR AND ..'UNIGN REPUdLIC LEGISLATIX4 fili THE HEALTH, SERVICE., 'WHICH INCLUDE MORE THAN A HALf- CENTURY OF EXPERIENCE oF THE SOCIALIST SYSTEM UF TIE HEALT." SERVICE, ANO -.%HICH AHVE BEEN SUPPLEMENTED AND APPROVED AS A RESULT OF NATICNWIUE DISCUSSIGN, COVE INTO FURCEo ALL UNION REPUBLIC LEGISLATION MUST BE BRuUGhr INTO LINE. THE cpsu,cE-NrRAL C_0.4-M[TTEE AND USSk COUNCI-, OF MINISTLRS RESCLUT16IN "QN MEASURES TO FUkTHER IMPROVE THE HEALTH SERVILE ANE DEVELOPMENT OF MEOICAL SCIENCE IN THE USSI'Irll 'WHICH HAS BECCME A PROGRAM DOCUMENT F Ok MEDICAL WORKERSs! IS IMU~Et) VdTH CONCERN FOR ThE LLUNTRY'S PU6LIC WEALTH, THE PEOPLEIS HEALTH. MUCH OF WHAT I T ~ENVISAGLU HAS A' READY rlEEN DONEv ANO IS -NOW BEING DONE BY THE WORK OF 0OCTQRS ANb FEALTH SERVICE ORGANIZERS,_ SEVEN CENTEPS fCjR K19NEY ::'TRANSPLANTS AIND CHRONIC HEmLUIALYSIS Akr= NOW.8EING CkEATED IN THE USSR. THEY kILL HELP PEOPLE tITH ~SERITIU S KILNEY DISEASES. -3/6 036 UNCL ASS IF I E0 PkQCESSING DATE-11DEC70 ClRC ACC E SS I C :i INO-AINO 142452 A BST~, ALT/ EXT ~ ACT--R EAN IMAT 1 (2:1 CENTERS ARE COl'v'TINUI,',j'L-p TO U L F f? ~,A E D114 LAkGE N N .4 T CITIES# ANO ANESTI.ESIOLUGY UEPARYMEi,4TS KITH It TEi SIVE TREAT~!E; ANL REANINATIEN WARDS, WHICH ARE PAKTICULARLY IMPURTANT FGk SAVING THE LIVES GF PATIENTS WITH MYUCAKCIAL INFARCTIUNY SERIOUS INJURIES, ACUTE POISON11iG, AND GTHER LLSIU,-4S L;F VITALLY IMPORTANT ORGANS, CONTINU r TO bE -Ft_lPMLi, IN LAkC;-: FOSPITALS. A NET4ORK- OF CENIEKS AND L)EAPkTMENTS TO HELP PATIEI%TS kITh SEVERE 6UkNS HAS BEEN ORGANIZED IN THE ALST TWO YEARS. THE, LSSR HCALTH MINISTi~Y RECENTLY ADOPTED A DECISION bN FURTHER DEVELLPING AND 111PRUVIfiG TJRAUi4ATv-`L0GICAL AND URTHOPEbIC AIV. -INCEPENDENT ORTHOPEDIC DEPARTMENTS FOR TREATING [JISEASES AN-) GF.THE SKELETAL AUSCULATARE WILL SOON BE CPEA7'-::D UNDER T UbLAST, KRAY ANU KEPUEL~C HUSPITALS AND ALSO'114 TIE HOSPIT; S OF LARGE ~.._.-..INUUSTkIAL CENTERS. THE YEAR'SINCE THE LAST MEDICAL WURK' ~S DAY FAS BEEN PARKED BY THE BIPTH OF TaO MURE VERY IMPROTAr4f HEALTH ~'ERVICFS. FT HAS BEEN DECIDED To 0kGAiifZL ALLERGY CONSULTING F(JA 1AE SPECIALMA) TREATMILNT (JF PFOPL~ SUFFERING FROM DISEASIC~S OF AN ALLERGJIC ORIGIN (['Ri!NCI;IAL ASTli,,,,jA, POLLINUSISY;ANI) CJTHERS)~ IN UiL CONSIXTING POLYCL INCS jF OBLAST, KRAY, ANU :REPUBLIC MULT IUI SCI PL I NS h(SP I f "ALS. THE PLULICilL GEIIETIC SERVICE, WHICH IS AIMED AT HEALTHY Pi(.'Gg_iNY IS ALSO EXTREPELY 1APORTANT. CONSULTATIVE 14EDICA,L GENJETK:r~ CLINICS AUST GE ORGANIZED IN ALL UNION REPU8LICS:. GNLY BY IMPROVING SPECIALIZED ~;EDICAI, All) CAN WE CURE PEOPLE WITH LATEST ACHIEVEMENTS OF MEOICIf4E. THE -REFLRM GF THE FIRST AID SERVICL HAS THE SAME AIMS. A NEW TYPE Of ESTABLISHVENT 15 BEING CRIEATED IP-I THE COUNTRY; THE E'lERGE-'l'CY HUSPITt~_! L 1 N K E V. T C. T HIC r'IRST "I'll) CENTER. 4/6 03e UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE-ILDEC70 GrRC ACCESSICN NU--AN0142452 ABSTRACT/ EXTR AC T-- f--GSP I YA LS (if THIS SCRT ARE WORK ING' IN PEMZA, KISH14EV' ONEPRCPETR(IVSKi RIGAv JUSHANIBE, 0RDZHONlKIDZEo KUkGAN, YOSHKAR-OLAo NIKOLAYEV, ALMA-ATA, ANU crHER curIES. THIS MAKES IT POSSIBLE 1`0 6RiNG HIGHLY SKILLE(it SPEICALIZED MEDICAL AID CLOSER T13,THE ;POPULAriw'. AL~w ALSO GIVES FIRST All) D!JCT(,i',,S THE 0PP0kTUN[TY,0F INCREAS[NG THEIR. Y' QUALIFICATiCNS. WJkK It,.' URGANIZING FIRST AIO AND "EMEkGEN' , ASSISTANCE bE C(J.TINUED IN UT14ER CITIES. THE NETWJRK OF fflt-~APEUTIG PREVENTIVI: CSTABLISHMENTS IS ALSO GROW[NG. UVER THE PAST TWO YEARS 't5 LARGE HOSPITALS, 30 POLYCLINICS, AND A NUMbEk OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH INSTITUTES HAVE BEEN BUILT. THE. MINISTk Y GF HEALFH HAS FOPMULATED A LUNG TERM PRCGNOSIS UP THIS NETW0aK#S.PQ,TURE DEV;":LOPMt-.NT. BUT HERE IT MUST BE STRESSED THAT THE SITUATICN CONCERNING THE CGiNSTRUCTION OF MEDICAL UNITS REMAINS STRAINEU:, FkE.QUENTLY CONSTRUCTIGN PLANS FALL THRCUGHv ANX ONE COULD 14LSH FOR A14 IMPROVEMENT IN QU4LITY. UNLY THE ~MUST 4crivr- PAkTICIVATION IN RESOLVING THIS PROBLEIR OF THE LUCAL SOVIET, IISTKILSt OEVARTMENTS, ENTE1%1,1R1-sES K LJ Z S, AND LI:AUERS (Ji M It (j mi E ~OVKHCZES, ANU TRADE U'410N ORGANIZATIUNS, WITH THE P(13LICIS ACTiVII: PARTICIPATIGN, WIL11 ENSURE THE TIMELY A14U HlGH QUALITY cuNSFRUCT16N OF jHERAPLUFIC Pi~EVINTIVF- ESTA6LISHMENTS. WE ARE VERY MUCH LOUNTING ON SUCH SUPPORT. TFE MAIN CENTER OF SPECIALIZED MED]CAL AID IN THE CGUNTkYSIOL is rFE kAY-'7N HUSPITAL. IT MUST BE WEu- EQUIPPEO AND PROVIDED WITF SKfLLr-U PERSGPJNEL.~ r-tis CAN UNLY BE ACH[EVL-0 JY ENLARGING THE CENTKAL kAYCN HOSPITALS AND REUiWANIZAING StOtL OLSTRICT HJSPITALS INTU MEDICAL POLUCLI-Ixilf-S A,4D OUTPATIENT CLINFCS. t I-L 5/6 03e UNCLASSIFIEO PROCESSING DATE-11DEC70 i RL ACCESSI;-NNG-ANO 142452 AdSTi,ACT/EXT,, S'JRT ACT--'.-.CRK 6 THI 5 IS BEING SUCCES4jFULLY CAkRIED UUT IN b-tdkul,-4, Lit-FU4NIA, THE UKkAINE, AND A NU1413 E ROF RUSSIAN UbLASTss THE LITHUANIO'At, SSK UKMERGE CEt4rRAL RAY1JN FOSPITAL A140 THE 66GG0JKH0V CENTRAL ".AYUN HiLiSvITAL IN THE UKRAINE CA,~ BE TERMED SCHUOtS OF ADVANCED TRAiNING li,~ THE kURAL HEALTH HELATH SERVILE ORGMNIZEk5 MUST IMUTATE THLIR LXPL-RiENLE MU,cL ACTIVELY At-4D P05E THE QUESTION (IF THE REORGANIZATILN Of THL HEALTH SERVICE IN THE COUNTRYSIOE IACRE DICISIVELY. HERE MUCH UEPEINOS ON THE CDRRECT STANDPOINT OF THE LOCAL SOVIETS OF iiURKING PE-UPLE'S 6EPUTIES. 14EDICAL WC-RKERS EXPECT ACTIVE, EFFLCTVIE HELP FRUM, THEM. LARGE kESERVES FOR 11111PROVING I'M HEALTH -S&~VICE ARE ~CJNTAI,NEC IN ThE KATIGNAL ORGANIZATIGN OF. THE WJRK OF EVERY MEDICAL ESTAft-IShMENT AND EVE14Y MEDICAL WORKER. THERE ARE ALREADY A CONSIOLRAELE NUMBER CF HOSPITALS ANJ POLYCLI141CS m wFrcH THE PLACING AN& USE CF P.EDICAL PERS9NNEL IS 8EING IMPRUVED, AND WHEIZE DOCTOPS ARE BEING RELEASED FRCM WCRK WHICH IS NOT NATURAL FGR THEMr HA' '40ING CERTAIN :J(jt3$ CVER Tb MIDDLE GRACE MEDICAL PERSONNEL. AN~10 ThIS IS HAVING A PRONGUNCtO EUFECT ON THE QUALITY OF MEDICAL Ali). AN EXPLAIMENT ivHICH TOUK PLACE OVER T1,.Cj Aki) A HALF YEARS AGO IN 26 OF THE COUNTRYS MEDICAL ESTAOLISHiMENTS IS EXTkEMELY INTERESTING, . NEW PRINCIPLES OF PLANNINkG" FINANCING ANU ECC"6V-IL INCENTIVE WERE: INTRODUCED IN THESE 'LIWMENTS, AS THEY WEAE IN MANY BRANCHE$ GIF 'THL h JI(J1,4AL --J"' 1Y ESTAi TliE ChIEF ULCTOR ALQUIRED f3q(JAG RIGHTS IN THE USE~ DF t:~UDGEI RCES, ANO THr VLACING OF PERSONNEL. MATERIAL ~ESCUI 6/6 038 UINCLASSIFIE0 PROCESSING DATE-1110EC70 ACCESSIGN NO-AN0142452 ,,ABSTRACT/EXIKACT--THE ASSITS WHICH WERE 'WAVEL) WERE PUT INTO THE ESTAbLIShj%;ENT FUND, ANO UP TO 70 PERCENT oF THE FUNDS 6ERE USED FOR A4ARUING BONUSES TO THE ~10kKERS, ANG 30 PERCENT Fl~'R. IMPROVING THEIR SOCIAL AND LIVING CONDITIONS AND FOR ACQUIRING MEDICAL EQUIPMENT A., -MEDICINES. THE SUim TOTAL CF THE FUND FORMED THR(lUGHUU1 ALL ESTABLISHMENTS TAKING PART IN THE EXPERIMENT AMDUNTEU TO 2.9 '~ILL13N -RUBLES. AS A RESULT OF THE EXPERIMENTi THE NU#413EI:' OF DAYS HOSPITAL 6EDS AKE IN' USE HAS INCREASED, AND GROUPS OF WORKERS HAVE bEEN RELEASEU. -ION4L RESERVES, DE4PRTmr'NTS Fo-~ R ffiUst 6EC/,LJSE OF THE 4LGIT T EATING PATIENTS bITH LUNG DISEASES AND 0EAPFTMEriTS OF I14Tt'.-NStVE THERAPY AND REANIVATICN HAVE BEEN ORGANEZED, AND 113EDIS HAVE 3EEN ALLGCATED FOR PArIE,'vTS ~%ITH KIDNEY OISEASE AND GASTROliNTESTINAL OISORDERS IN THE LENINGRAD OBLAST FUSPITAL, IN THE POLYCLINIC OF THE KISHINEV CITY HOSPITAL NO 2, CLINICS HAVE BEEN CREATED FOR TkEATING SUf-FEREkS FROM ~GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASES, GALUCOMA* AND UTHER ILLNESSES- AN INTELtCOM SYSTEM HAS BEEN INSThLLE0 AP41J A DICTAPHONIE CENTER HIAS bEEN ASSEM'3LED IN THE VYSHNE`VGLQlSKIY CENTRAL RAY&4 H[SPITAL9 IN THE'POLYCLINIG. THE MENT ARE UNDOUBTEDLY POSITIVE, A14D T14E RESULTS C,~- THE EXPEkIl EXPEkI3ENT ITSELF NEEDS TO BE DEVELOPED. i i-_- TT TT,-i r liiall "16 6T. 6ab WI! Hematology. USSR PErROVS Academician, Minister of Health USSR KIY, B. V., "Transfusion Science in Surgeryll Moscow, Nauka i Zhizn', No 2,, Feb 70, pp 18-20 Abstract: Serious complications often result from surgery that requires =a sive blood transfusions. Among the steps taken by Soviet surgeons to prevent-these complications are transfusion of only whole bank blood which has been stored no more than I to 3 days and which is used during operations, together with low-molecular-weight blood substitutes such as the Soviet poly- glucinrheopolyglucin and the foreign rheomacrodex, periston, and others. The Swedish rheomacrodex, a low-molecular-veight plasma substitute, has a beneficial effect on capillary circulation and on the coagulation system. It also appears to have some value in preventing thrombosis. Concentrated albumen prepared from placental serum has been successfully tested on 120 patients suffering from liver, cardiovascular, and lung diseases as a means of controlling shock during an operation and afterwaras. Other new prepa- rations obtained from blood by Soviet scientists are im-mune ga wma- globulins, e.g., specific anti-influenza polyglobulin (obtained from the serum of donors 1/2 I uDc: 617-085.38 "Advances in the Use of Blood Transfusions in Surgery" Moscow, Problemy Gem-atologii i Perelivaniya Krovi, No 2j 1970, VP 3-8 Abstract: The complications following massive blood transfusions may be classified as follows: W cardiovascear,disorders (vascular collapse, asystole, bradycardia, cardiac arrest, ventricular fibrillation: (ii) changes in the blood (shift to ~~Lcid PH, hypocalcemia, iacreased viscosity, hypochromic anemia with leukopenia, a-ad thrombopenia, de(:rease in content of gamma globulin and albumin); (iii) impairmient of hemoStILSiS (spasm of the peripheral vessels, bleeding of the wound, fibrinogenopenia, hypQprothrom- binemia, each of accelerator globulin, each of convertin, thrombopenia, in- creased fibrinolytic activity; (iv) complications in the viscera (petechial hemorrhages, hemorrhages from the renal vessels and intestine, hepatic- la, anuria, jaundice, incrensed blood *bilirubin); renal insufficiency - oliguri. (v) lowered immobiological activity of the recipient (decrease in titer of agglutinating antibodies, separation of sutures in surg-tcal wound, poor heal- ing of the wound, sluggish and protracted postoperative period). VariauD prophylactic and therapeutic measures used before, during, and after surgery performed at the Research Institute of Clinical and F_xperimental Surgery, -TjS-qR Mir_-;*1s%27,r of Health, are described, L%*L'L ASS I F I E C P R CCF_SSIf'JG 0-%TE--17JUL'7f- FC1 T.1 TLE--t N Elp T CF FCRMUG AN ALTOE ICLCCICAL LINIt.,; FOR TWE , _NICU~ PR-VEkTICN OF THRCY F ENESIS ~N PFCSTF~SES OF TI-E CCA~?DI;VASCULAR SYSTEM, 'CG K I y V.t SHUMAKOVf V.I., STEPAINOV, G.A., PLOTKIN, L.L. .XLNTR*y CF INFC--LSSR SCUkCE.--KHRUPGIYA, 1970, NR I# PP 69--74 ).,,A,tE PUL ISFEC -------- 7C O.LEJECT AkEAS---BICLCGICAL ANO PECICAL 'SCIENCES roPIC lAG5--CtRGICVASCULAR SYSTE109 PRCSTI-ests? TFROPECSIS t(t\TFCL tlAkKI~C--&C RLSTRICTICNS UCCUMENT CLASS--.LNCLASSIFIEC PRCXY REEL/f-kANL-1977/1711 STEP NC--(,R/C531/70/ooo/Col/004~9/CO74 -A CC -1 LC k % c - -C c 114 -It e j 6 Acc- Nr:A Po044856 PRI~L4RY SOURCE: nirurgiya, 1970, Nr Ref. Code:UR 01,51.3 PP Lq-7* ~A NEW TECHNIQUE OF FORMING AN ALITOBIOLOGICAL LINING FOR THE PREVENTION OF THROMBOGENESIS ON PROSTHESES OF THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM 13. V. Petrovskiy.,V. 1. Shumakov, 0. A. Stepanov, L. L. Plotkin The authors propose a new technique of forming an autnblolo!zical lining on vrostlic. scs of the cardiovascular 5-,-stern, which consists in Thai on tl~e elect roconducti ng prosthesis in vitro and in the blood flow a po~;itive electric poten1lal is,"iven, conducive to a rapid pre- cipita-ijen of t~pce elements and proteins of the blood. On tl~-e proStliesis there is formed a fir- miv-bound aulobiolcaical lining prevcntinc, the formation oi fhrcrnb~, The authors conducted 52'experiments in Vi. o and 30 acute experiments with introd--iction oi an electric potential tr on the prosthes;:~ ;n the blood stream. The article contains a d-,Itailed de.-cription of the techni- que of formino the lining. as uell z5 the inethed of recording of the autobiclogical lining. The biochemical and morphological composition of the, linings formed by the galvanic techni- que. was studied. REEL/FBAHE 19771711 F, USSR UDC 10 PETRCFIS' M, G., 1. "Gnoseological Aspect of ),~thematical Probability" Filos. probl. suchasn. Dr.-Yrrodom. Mizhvid. nauk. zb. (Fhilosophi.cal Problems in Modern. Natural Science. intardepartmeatal Collection or Scio-utific Works). 1971, vyp 24, pp, 95-100 (Ulu-ainian; Russian sm-mry) (from No 2 Feb 72, Abstract No 2A9 from author's sumary) Translation: A criticism is given of -philosophical conceptions -Olich mduce probo1ility to a wasure of the neceisity of possibilities, Citin-g the con- cepts of mthematicians, the author notees that probability ex-presses only a nm-erical, quantitative characteristic of possibilil'Clies, if-hile t,-,e r01:! of cualitative measure is played by social expediency. Vne aitticle also reveals the gnoseological aspect of three groups of ra-thenatical pro;bability deftni- tion. Ai~ttL-:Assi,0ttD:,' PROCESSING OATE--13NOV70 -:-~TITLE_-OPTICAL GLASS -u- AUTHOR-(05)-NIKOLINA, G.P., KHALILEV, V.D., IVANOVo V.N.t P~~~lyf G. T . p TYLEVICHY F.G. ,?__~__CCUNTRY OF INFFj--USSR 267,030 ~-_~~,'.AEFER E11C E-0 TKRYT I YA, I ZL) 13:'k E T. iPkCM* OBRAZTSYI TOYAKNYE Z14AKI L970p `~'-DATE PUBLISHED--01APR70 'SUBJECT AREAS--MATERIALS _TOPIC TAGS --CHEMICAL-PATENTj GLASS COMPOSITIONt OPTIC GLASSt CALCIUM .,.FLUORLDEr ALUMINUM FLUORIUE, BERRYI UN +LUOR WE p. VTTRIOA, STRONTIUM COMPOUND, POTASSIUM COMPOUNDi. LANTHANUM, COMPOUND~'. I'.:- _C ON TR 0 L' MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME--3004/1803 STEP NO--UR/0482i7O/OOO/OOO/OOOO/OOOO CIRC ACCESSION NO--AAOI.32069 A;tCLAS' -2/2: 021 UNCLA S S I F i tU II)ROCESSING DATE-13NOV70 --AA0132069 CIRC ACCESSION NO At3STRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT, TO INCREASE MOISTURE RES[STANCE AND TR.ANSPARENCY IN THE 165 5000 MMU LONG WAVE i~ANGE, AS WELL AS TO DECREASE THE CRYSTN. TENDENCY AND THE M.P., YF SUB3 5-L2 MOLE PERCENT WAS ADDED TO OPTICAL GLASS CONSISTING,10F: 13EF SUE12 49-541 AlF SU83 10-15, CAF SUB2 LESS THAN 12t SRi SUB2 LESSJHAN~9, LAI: SUB3 L S THAN :3, AND KF 1.2-24 MOLE PERCENT. :FACILITY: LENS.O%/ET TECH,,,ioLOGICAL INSTITUTEf LENINGRAD. NCLASSSIF IEQ----~ USSR L= 621-316. 722. 1 HELESHKEVICH, M. F., and PETIROVISKIY, I. I. ','Voltage Regulation With the d of erm um D:Lo&e,% With Negative Resis- tancd" Vestn. Belorus. un-ta (Bulletin of Belorussian. University), 1970, Series I',,- No 3, pp 86-90 (from RZh--Elektroni.L-a i yeye primenenlye, No 5, May 31.971, Abstract No 5B494) Translation: The possibility is considered of voltage regulation with the aid of semiconductor diodes with negative resistance, and the conditions necessary for this. The results aredescribed of an experimental test of the operation of a regulator using germanium semiconductor diodes, for voltage with both constant and periodically changing polarity. Conclusions are made concerning tha possibility of, their practicaL use. 3 ill. 1 tab. ~3 ref. Author's Abstract. WiiAT A MSMUATION SIMU1.1% BE. Lli~~.' [Article hy.rrqj~" ;~. reLro-.skiv, C-tcza, 19 May 1971, Th, r4il~tivc przpoi:LI~n li-ertarlovs I,i Lite tc,-al viluvv of gclantllic remirch in otir country Ir rather large, and an Important role in tho 0-valopni-itt of science and Omy a4d ru,:F. to pr tiC,11 11wLterr. 4 5 " y. the qu..1ity 0~ '1011t doer noz always Sar.. 1. th, Inisic requirement.3 oi itcluntifit rercarch (IIIA11 level oz 01ccry, practic-, significance) . Thit, particularly rulates to condidata ~ic,~~.rtatir,-.,S. A -criouc rlicrtcozino. in the dcveIoj,:a,,t%t of young uz:!~ktistt j!: one-sided triinine. Frequently, tite entirc cruditio-z c! a candidate ef science, w1w has succcasfully tie[a"dad his dls~crtarf,=, It =h=tz-1 hit. givcn topic, tia a rcrultp In obtalninZ prclLrence for a ponition, fie turns out to be untrained for the pa:;Iricm. bctth tLeorcticz~'I:-, and practirally. This lock uf corrvnpomdancu 1e' most clearly =-,nilazt,,d clinical ~ costa It ions. Apr.iruntly, one shmild rit-citntzina the way in whirlt. gra.2,;.te tire accepttd, whpr~ Ow Frnduate sLody must ba proc4dQA 'Ly .::-Ii,! prazt-'cz. work (internzItip, ote.). An exception to thiu rii-~ht !:,z ra~4e, Wt-1- rc~zp~,~ct to 01, 0--oreLical dit;c1plinzi; wlwre the t~cst. taLvztti~d Who a1%, WC11 ~uowlx in a ;!ClarLILQU'~ -4nd have ctade a tpod shvwL,-.Z. -*".% thz ii-cie-.tili~ circle. ia~t;ht entpr gradvate study Immedi4-cly after gra4u.1zlen frc= tl,,,Ir Institute. A parLiCulaily lztr;:c role in the introduction of scl-Wnriiic mviiu; into praCLICL bolonpu to doctoral dissartaLions. We b(illeve that nothlap, IcUS should be L-Cpected P~ knwn d~ctorS o.' IiCiCnileti. A Valuable. (IOLtOtal 6iosertation can hardly t!e tDjilt on a barren place wlk~ru there hazi been tathini; olt value in zhc cc USSR uDc 613.21-057:612-766.2 PETROVSKIY, K. S., First Moscow Medical.Institute imeni. I. M. Sechenov "A Balanced Diet Under Hypokinetic Conditions" Moscow, Gigiyena i Sanitariya, No 4) 1973, pp ~0-23 Abstract: The calorie value of proteins, fats, and carbohydxates in a diet suitable for those exposed to hypokinesia should be in a 1:2:3 ratio. Using the standard balanced unit of 1000 kcal (megacalorle) proposed by the author, a megacalorie would contain 164 protein,,328 fat, and 508 carbohydrate large calories or, in terms of weight, W g of protein, 35 a of fat, and 124 g of carbohydrates. A daily diet of 2 1/2 me acalorier. is best under hypokinetic conditions. It should include 410 kcal ?100 g) of protein, 820 kcal (87 g) of fat, and 1270 kcal (310 9) of carbohydrates. Proteiz is particularly important because it is expended most intensively during hypokinesia owing to -its rapid breakdown and elimination from the body.. A table giving the protein content of various foods in g per 100 kcal can be used to determine the optimum protei-n level of a balanced diet with the minimum number of calories. % iH., USSR UDC 613.2(02) PETRQM_qKIY___K__R_, Editor Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Mosco%i, "11,1editsina," 197", 512 pp Translation: Table of Contents (Partial) Foreword 3 Introduction 5 Part one. Physiological Principles.offttritiott Chapter one: Molchandova, 0. P., "Some Data on Metabolism." 13 Chapter Two; Petrovskiy, K. S., "Proteins." 19 Chapter Three: Petrovskiy, K. S.,,"Fats." 47 Chapter Four: Petrovskiy,. K. S. , "Carbohydrates" 72 Chapter Five: Yefremov, V. V., "Vitamins." 88 Chapter Six: Petrovskiy, K. S., "~Unerals." 180 Part Two. Nutrition for Different Groups of the Population Chapter Seven: Nefed'yeva, N. P., "'Nutrition for Children Older Than One Year." 223 Chapter Eight: Petrovskiy, K. S., "Nutrition for the Middle-Aged and Elderly 2 4 3 1/12 HuiI USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S. , Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Allygiene), Moscow, "'Med itsina," 1971, 512 pp Chapter Nine: Petrovskiy, K. S. , "Nutrition With Mental Work. 260 9.1 Energy Expenditures 260 9.2 Hypokinesia and Excess Weight 261 9.3 Nutritional Norms 262 9.4 Feeding Schedule 267 Chapter Ten: Petrovskiy, K. S., "Nutrition With Physical Work." 268 10.1 Nutrition for Industrial Workers 268 IO.l.a Nutritional Norms 270 IO.l.b Preventive Nutrition 271 10.1.c Vitamin Supply for Workers Engaged in Hot Shopts and Tobacco and Nicotine Production Facilities 282 10.1.d Feeding Schedule 284 10.2 Special Features of Nutrition for Agricultural Workers 285 10.2.a Energy Expenditures and Nutritional Norms 286 10.2.b Feeding Schedule 289 10.2.c Organizing Food Supply ifiField Camps Chapter Eleven. Petrovskiy, K. S., "Hygiene of Feeding Troups." 292 2112 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscow, "Ifeditsina," 1971, 512 pp 11.1 General Data 292 .11.2 Adequacy and Differentiation in Diet 293 lli3 Putting Together Food Supply 11.4 Food Norms 296 11.5 brief Historical Information 296 11.6 Food Rations 298 11.7 Quantitative Description of Food Rations 300 11.8 Qualitative Description of Food Rations 301 11.9 Feeding Schedule 303 11. 10 Menu Allotment 304 11.11 Feeding Under Field Conditions 304 11. 12 Dry Food Rations 305 11.13 Organizing Food Supply Under Field Conditions 305 11.14 Food Supply Point 305 11.15 Technical Equipment for Preparing and Delivering Food Under Field Conditions 306 11.16 Protecting Food Against the Effect of Weapons of Mass Destruction 310 3/12 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition I'llygiene), Moscow, "Meditsina," 1971 512 pp 11.1; Medical Monitoring of Troop Feeding 310 11.18 Setting Up Dietetic and Therapeutic-Prophylactic Nutrition in Military Units 312 11.19 Diseases Related to Nutritional Deficiencies Among Troops 312 11.20 Avitaminosis and Hypovitaminosis and Their Prevention 313 11.21 Preventing Vitamin Deficiency Under Modern Conditions 315 11.22 Food Poisoning and Prevention 318 11.23 Brief Historical Information 318 Chapter Twelve: Petrovskiy, K. "Nutrition for Athletes." 321 12.1 General Data 321 12.2 Special Features of Metabolism in Athletes 321 U.3 Energy Expenditures 322 12.4 Calorie Requirement 323 12.5 Protein Requirement 324 -12.6 Fat Requirement 325 12.7 Carbohydrate Requirement 326 12.8 Vitamin Requirem-ant 327 12.9 Mineral Requirement 330 4 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscow, "I'leditsina," -1971, 512 pp .12.10 Feeding Ration for Athletes 331 12.11 Feeding Schedule for Athletes 333 12. 12 Additional Feeding for Persons Who Regularly Use Active Forms of Recreation 334 12.13 Bibliography 334 Part Three. Food Poisoning and Its Prevention. Classification of Types of Food Poisoning 339 Microbial Food Poisoning 342 Chapter Thirteen: Nefed'yeva, N. P., "Staphylococcus Intoxications." 342 13.1 Etiology and Pathogenesis 342 13.2 Epidemiology 347 13.3 Clinical Symptoms 350 13.4 Prevention 351 Chapter Fourteen: Budagyan, F. Ye., "Botulism." 355 14.1 Etiology 355 5/12 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscow, "Meditsina," 1971, 512 pp 14.2 Pathogenesis 358 14.3 Epidemiology and Prevention 14.4 Clinical Symptoms 361 The Role of Some Food Products in the Appearance of Botulism and Its Prevention 362 14.6 Treatment 368 Chapter Fifteen: Azbelev, V. N., Budagyan, F. Ye., and Kilesso, V. A., "Salmonella Infections." 370 15.1 General.Data 370 15.2 Etiology and Pathogenesis 372 15.3 Epidemiology 377 15.4 Sal.wnella Infections in Animals 378 15.5 The Pathogenic Nature of Salmonella for the Iluman Being 381 15.6 The Role of Some Types of Salmonella in Food Poisoaing 384 15.7 Sporadic Cases of Salmonella Infections 384 15.8 Sahwnella Carrier State in Human Beings 385 15.9 Clinical Symptoms 386 15.10 The Role of Some Food Products in the Appearance of Salmonella Infections 388 6/12 USSR w " PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (NuLrition Hygiene), Mosco Meditsina," 1971, 512 pp 15.11 Prevention 394 Chapter Sixteen: Ignatovich, Z-A., and Krupina, A. P., "Toxicological Infection Caused by Conditionally 0 Pathogenic Bacteria.." 398 16.1 Food Poisoning Caused by E. Coli Group Bacteria 399 16.1.a Pathogenic Features 399 16.1.b Serological Features of Coliform Bacteria 400 16.l.c. Clinical Symptoms 401 16.2 Food Poisoning Caused by Bacteria of the Proteus Group 402 16.2.a Serological Description of Proteus 404 16.2.b Clinical Symptonts 405 16.3 Enterococci as Possible Causati've Agents of Food Poisonings 406 16.4 Clinical Symptoms 410 16.4.a Food Poisoning Caused by Cl. perfringens 411 16.5 Other Conditionally Pathogenic Microbes 417 16.6 Epidemiology and Prevention 419 16.7 Bibliography 420 Chapter Seventeen: Bogordotskaya, V. P., "Food Mycotoxicoscs. " 4 2 14 7/12 M USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscow, 1971, 512 pp 17.1 General Data 17.2 Ergot 17.3 Fusariotoxicosis 17_4 Poisoning by "Intoxicated Grain"~ 17.5, Alimentary-Toxic Aleukia 17.6 Oskoarthrosis deformans (Kaschin-Beck's Disease) 17.7 Aflatoxicosis 17.8 Prevention of Mycotoxicoses 17.9 Bibliography 17.10 Nonmicrobial Food Poisoning Chapter Eighteen: ORLOV, N. L, "Poisoning by Poisonous Plants." 18.1 Mushroom Poisoning 18.1.a General Data 18.1.b Helvella Fungi 18.1.c Death Cup (Amanita Phalloides) 18.1.d Amanita Muscaria and Other Mushrocms Containing Muscarine "Ifeditsina," 424 425 426 426 427 428 430 434 435 436 436 436 436 436 438 439 8/12 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya. (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscaw, "Meditsiria," 1971, 512 pp 18.1.e Mushrooms Which Cause Nonspecific Poisoning 441 18 2 Poisoning by Berries From Pois onous Plants 442 j8A Poisoning by Nuts, Grain, and Seeds 445 18.4 Poisoning by Poisonous Leaves, Roots, and Tubers 452 18.5 Bibliography 454 Chapter Nineteen, "Poisoning by Products of Animal Origin." 456 19.1 Poisoning by Fish 456 19..2 Bibliography 460 Chapter Twenty, "Chemical Poisoning . 461 20.1 Copper 461 20.2 Zinc 461 20.3 Mercury 462 20.4 Cadmium 463 20.5 Lead 463 20.6 Other Poisoning by Chemical Substances 464 20.6.a. Tetraethylead 464 20.6.b Dulcin 465 9/12 T- USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigivena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscow, "Meditsina," 1971V 512 pp Poisoning by Certain Vitamins 465 20.7.a Vitamin A 465 20.7.b Vitamin PP 20.8 Poisoning of Undetermined Etiology 466 20.9 Gaff's Disease 466 Chapter T~-7enty-One: Budagyan F. Ye., "Techniques f or Investigating Food Poisoning." 463 21.1 General Data. 468 21.2 Disclosing Clinical Symptoms 470 21.3 Discovering the Suspected Food Product 473 21.4 Sending Samples to the Laboratory' 473 '21.5 Investigating Production,Conditions 476 21.6 Errors in Investigating Food.Poisoning 476 -21.7 Special Features of Investigating Nonbacterial Food Poisoning 478 Chapter Twenty-Tkqo: Geymberg, V. G., "Food Sanitation Microbiology. 480 22.1 General Information 480 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Gigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Moscow, "Meditsina," 1971, 512 pp .22.2 Microorganisms Encountered in Food Products 480 22.3 Formation of Microflora of Food Products 482 22 4 Formation of Spores 482 22.5 The Effect of Humidity 482 .22.6 The Effect of Salt and Sugar 483 22.7 The Effect of the Product's Chemical Compcsition 483 .22.8 The Effect of the Product's Acidity 484 .22.9 The Effect of the Product's Buffer Action 484 22.10 The Effect of Aeration and the ReOox Potential of the Environment 484 22.111 The Effect of Temperature 485 22.12 The Effect of Temperature and Length of Product Storage 487 .22.13 The Effect of the Product'Is.Dominant Ificroflors 488 22.14 Pathogenic Microbes and Toxins inTood Products 488 ~22.15 Ways of Raising the Quality of food Products 489 22.16 ILicrobiological Investigation of Food Products 489 22.17 Evidence for Microbiological Investigation e, 89 .11/12 USSR PETROVSKIY, K. S., Cigiyena Pitaniya (Nutrition Hygiene), Mosc(xr, 1971 512 pp 22.18 Methods of Investigation 22.19 Bacterioscapy 22.20 The Total Number of Viable Microbes in One Gram of Product, or the "Microbe Number" 22.21 Investigation of Pathogenic Micioflora 22.22 Investigation of Sanitary-Indicator-Microorganisms 22.23 Studying.the Qualitative Makeup~of Microflora 22.24 The Significance of Bacterioloalcal,Criteria and Principles for Developing Them 22.25 Evaluating the Results of a Microbiological Investigation 22.26 Sanitary-Bacteriological Monitoting of Production 22.27 Bacteriological Investigations for Food Poisoning 22.28 Bibliography 12/12 "Meditsina," 490 490 490 492 492 494 494 495 501 503 507 USSR UDC 621,357.3.035(088.8) NOVOSFIDV, V. A., NELIDOV, V. B., MITROFAINOV, V. S.,,AI!SHAJLjjL~4 ~IPt., EPELIFEL P -P. -D, F. I., SOLOVEY, L. F., PETRQVMI. . "Device for Distribution of Amalgams" USSR Author's Certificate No 295736, filed 30/09/69, published 8/04/71. (Translated from Referativnvy Zhurnal 10iimiya, No 4, Moscow, 1972, Abstract No 4L245 from the resume). Translation: A device is patented for distribution of amalgam in scrubber separators, cons-i-cting of a perforated grid with a circular tip, separating the upper plane of the grid into central,and peripheral zones with apertures for distribution of the amaluam and output of hydrogen, differing in that in order to improve the flow of amalgam, eliminate wear of the fitting and prevent hydraulic shock, the apertures in the peripheral zone are made in the form of slits covered with a screen, while the apertures for passage of amalgam are located at the points of intersection of slots nade on the lower plane of the grid and forming projections, preventing blockage of the aper- tures with granules of the packing. UDC 54-7.241 N. T., PMOVSKIYt F. V., and HESMEYANOV, A. N.t RYBIN, L. V., GUBDNXO, RMNSKAYA, M. L., Institute of Elemental Orgai~la-Co-m-po-MOz-AceAemy--of Sciences MR. "The Reaction of Triphenylphosohine with Iron Carbonyl Comploxe5 of -Substituted c~, ~e -Unsaturated Ketones$' Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Xhinii, Vol 42(104), Vyp 11, 1972, pp 2473-2477 Abetracti It was shown that the stability of the metsl lignad bond in rono- olefin complexes of iron may be determined Irf the reaction of the com- plex with triphenylphsophite such as in th6 following reactioni CO11&COC11=C11x (Colj~)ap C6115COC11=:Clix k(co)j LI(COW(CC11103 + CG11.5CC11=C1jx 0 FC(CO)ZP(CO1Yjj), 0) XCOClf,, (s) xCOOCII, 1/2 USSR NESHEYANOV, A. N., at al., Zhurnal Obshchey DWI, Vol 42(io4), yyp ii, 1972. Pp 2473-2477 The reaction of trans dibenzoylmethylene and trans methyl esters of -benzoyl- acrIlic acid with triphenylamine in methyl alcohol and heptane In room temperature and at heating to 60-700 C resulted in the.replacement of the CO ligard with the formation of complexes 11 wA III above. The order of increasing ease of substitutions of the ligands is -CO-CH-CH-CO CO -CH-CH-Co-. From thin it can be seen that the relative ease of substitution Increases with the increasing strength of the acids. Structurep, were confirmed by IR and KHE spectra. 2/2 1 t i;1 j ii USSR UDC 547.241 + 547-62 + 547.442 MATHOSOV, YE. I., and MASTRYUKOVA., T. A., ALADZHEVA, 1. M., PE-qui(SK X,_R!v. KABACMUX,, M. I., Institute of Organom6lWille &impounds "Acidity and Tautomerism of beta-Ketophosphonium Salts. Tautomerism of Tri- phenyl(diacylinethyl)phosphonium Salts" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii., Vol 43 (105), No 5, May 73, pp 991-997 Abstract: According to the IR- and NMR-Spectroscopic data the salts of tri- phenyl(acetylbenzoylmethjl)-, triphenyl(acetylcax-boathoxvmethy-1) and tri- phenyl(diacetylmthyl)phosphonium exist in the enale form; they are in the trans- enolic orientation with the protons:of the hydroxjl groups being involved in intermolecular hydrogen bonding with the anions or the oxygen of the carbonyl groups- Tr:Lphenyl(dicarboetlioxymethyl)phosphonium chloride exists in the dicar- bonyl form. LL USSR UDC 547.1-41 I MASTRYUKOVA, T. A., SUYERBAYEV, Kh. A.,.PETROVSKIY, P. V., MA-TROSOV, Ye. I., and KABACENIK, M. I., Institute of Metal-,~~M-MiRpouads, Acad. Sc., USSR "Acidity and Tautomerism of ~-Ketophosphonium Salts of 3,3,5,5-Tetraphenyl- 3i5-diphosphoniumcyclohexanone'.' Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Khimii, Vol 42 (104), No 12, Dec 72, pp, 2620- .2625 Abstract: Synthetic methods have been developed for 3,3,5,5-tetranhenyl- 3,5-disphosphoniumeyclohexanone (1) salts. Solutions of 1.52 g tetra- phenylmethylenediphosphine and 0.86 g symm-dibromoacetane in 30 ml tetrahydrofuran were slowly added to 90.mlof boili-ag THF with stirring. A finely crystalline material was obtained and reprecipitated from hexane- ethanol to yield the dibromide of (I), m.p. 230-255'C. To obtain the dichloride of (I), m.p. 264-266, 4.69 g of symm-dichloroacetone in 150 ml acetonitrile was added to 14.19 g tetraphetiylmethylenediphosphine in 950 ml acetonitrile, refluxed for 1.5 hr and cooled to precApitate the product. Sodium tetraphenylborate in absolute ethanol added to -t:h-- dibromide of (1) in absolute ethanol at room temperature with stirring yields the tetra- phenylborate of (I), m.p. 182-185*C. To obtain the diperchlorate of (1), USSR UDC 541.632+538.113:661.718.1 HASTRYUKOVA, T. A., SHIPOV, A. E., VAYSBERG, M. S., PETQO"VSK and KABACHNIK, M. I., Institute of Heteroorganic CompounTs, Academy of Sciences USSR "PHR Study of Diastereoisomerism of Substituted O-Ethyl 'Methyldithiophos- phonates" Moscow, Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seriya nimicheskaya, No 8, Aug 71, p 1841 2 THCH Abstract: In compounds of the general formula CH (C H50(P(S)SCH C(O)N (R)-COOH [R = H (1), 1)], M~ and (111) contain two C113 (II) and i-C3H7 'II asymmetric centers separated by five single bonds. Nevertheless, the P1,11R spectra of the resultant mixture of diastereomers clearly shows two doublet signals for the methyl protons corresponding to the wo diastereomers. The difference in chemical shifts varies according to compound and solvent from 0.06 to 0.1 p.p.m., with the maximum for compound (III) in benzene. This difference is great for substances in which the asymmetric centers are far removed from each other. Thus, it is shown that diastereomerism. can be found in the PbIR spectra for molecules with separated asymmetric centers. USSR UUC 547.241 MASTRYUKOVA, T. A., SUYEPJ3AYEV, KH. A., PETROVSKIY, P. V. MATROSOV, YE. I., Academician KABACHNIK, M. I. "Acidity and Tautomerism. of Some B-Ketophosphonium Salts" Moscow, Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSI, Vol 202, No 2, 1972, pp.354-357 Abstract: A study of diphenylphosphitiyl-substituted 6-i-etophosplionium Salts of.the following structure: (C6 H5)2P CH2 C Cli 1) (C 112 x 6 5 C11 0 2 where X Cl-, C10 BF BFh and CF COO- are anions was made to consider 4 4 4 3 the problem of whether introduction of radicals increasing the CH-acidity but capable of the formation of hydrogen bonds with OH-radicals of enol forms into a molecule of acylphosphonium salt must lead to enci.Lization. Paramagnetic resonance spectra and intrared spectra of the investigated salts are presented and analyzed. In contrast to simple a-ketophosphonium salts, their 1/2 .......... USSR MASTRYUKOVA, T. A., at al., Dokladv Akadtmii Nauk SSSR, Vol 202, No 2, 1972, pp 354-357 diphenylphosphinyl-substituted derivatives are capable of enolization in solu- tions. This property cannot be explained only by the increase in Cil-acidity as a result of introducing the diphenylphosphinyl radical. The cause of the enolizabiUty lies in stabilization of the enol form under the effect of the diphenylphosphinyl group. In t1te case of complex anions enolization does not occur.- Thus, for enolisation both the P(d)-radical and CF CDO~ or Cl- anions 3 must be present. 2/2 '112 012 UNCLASSIFIED 11ROCESSING DATE-30OCT70 TITLE-IRON CARBONYLS AS INHIBITORS DF*RADICAL CHAIN REACTIONS OF ORGANOSULFUR COMPOUNDS -U- I-.Iov PETROVA2 R.G.w PETROVSKIYt P.V.v TERENTYEVt A'05.".fl FREYOLINA, R.KH. 'COUNTRY OF INFO-USSR _"-SOURCE-,0OKL. AKAO. NAUK SSSR 19100 191(4), 835-8 (CHEMI PUBL ISHED-70 ;e~:SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY ~~--_';TbPIC TAGS--IRON CURPOUND9 CARBONYL COMPOUND, ORGANIC SULFUR COMPOUND, ~~-i.:..'~ALKENEY CHAIN REACTION "-tCNIRCL.MARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS ~,i'DOCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED ;~'_'PROXY REEL/FRAME-2000/0698 STEP NO--UR/00?-0/7O/l9lfjO4/0835/0838 I RC ACCESSION NO-AT0124370. UNC tX31 I Ff 66 _0 ffiff R."I'l POP 2/Z 012 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 ~~.-CIRC ACCESSION NO-AT0124370 ,--ABSTRACT/EXTRACT-(Ul GP-0- ABSTRACT, HEATING MIXTSa OF UNSATD, 5ULFIDES AND PHSH WITH FEICU SUB5 (1) (0.5 MOLE PERCENT) IN SEALED AMPULS AT OR 150DEGREES 10 HR WAS USED AS THE TECHNIQUE FOR STUDYING THE 'EFFECT OF THE CARBONYL ADDITIVE ON THE REACTION. I INHIBITED THE RADICAL ADON- OF PHSH TO THE OLEFINS. THE FOLLOWING PRODUCTS WERE OBTAINED FROM THE INDICATED OLEFINS IN THE PRESENCE (ABSENCE) OF 1; ..--..PHSCHZCH SUB2 100PERCENT MECH ISPHI SUB2 (100PERCENT (PHSCH SUB2) SUB2); PHSCPH=CH SU52~1000PERCENT-HFCCSPH) SUP2 PH (56PERCENT PHSCHPHCH SU82 SPH AND 27PERCENT MEC(SPH) SUB2 PH); AND MEC(SPHI $U62 PH 100PERCENT MECHLSPH)PH; NU REACTION TOOK PLACE WITH OR WITHOUT FE(CO) SUB5 WITH AND MECHISPH) SUB2, FORMATION OF PHSCHPH14E ABOVE Kr.SULTED FROM ADDN-OF PHSH IN ACCORD WITH THE MARKOVNIKOV RULE* AND CONVERSION OF THE HERCAPTAL-INTO THE FINAL PRODUCT OCCURRED BY LOSS OF PHS RADICAL, WITH .-FE.1COYSUBS INHIBITING THE RADICAL ADDN- dF-PHSH OT THE ORIGINAL ~OLEFINIC SULFIDE. FACILITY: INST. ELEMENTOORG. SOEDIN.r MOSCOW, USSR.: UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--230CT70 '~_-TITLE-ORIENTING ACTICN OF THE SULFrl GkOUP ON A CYCLOPFhTAOIENYLAANGANESE OF HYDROGEN -U- TRICARBONYL SYSTEM IN THE PROTOPHILIC ISOTOPIC EXCHANGE AUTHOR-(05)-SETKINA, V.N., KISLYAKOVAt N,V,r PETROV5KIYP P.V.t KOLOBOVA, N.YE.,_KU-RSAN0V, D.N. ...~COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR A.- SOURCE7-[IV. AKAO. NAUK SSSRt SEA. KHIM.. 19701 (3)r 698-9 `~'OATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 !-SUBJECT AREAS-CHEMISTRY, NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY TOPIC TAGS--MANGANESE C0AP-JUNU* CARBGNYL~ COMPOUND, CYCLIC GPROUP, ISOTOPE [_-,".:_%-_.EXCHAJ*4GEv SODIUM COMPOUNDr SULFONIC ACIDv ESTER RESTRICTIONS CLASS--UNCLASSIFIEO ~_:.PROXY REEL/FRAME--1999/1905 STEP NO--UR/0062/7010001003/0698/06q9 -C[ RC ACCESSfON-NO--AP0123689 UNC t. Ss I F I E 11 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING OATE--23OCT70 212 008 CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0123689' :ABSTRACT/EXTkACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTkACT. 0-H EXCHANGE WAS RUN WITH ETOD CONTG. A CATALYTIC AMT. OF ETONAt AND CYCLOPENTADIENYLMA"4GANESE TRICARBONYL AS THE N4 SULFONATE 1.14 THE ALPHA AND M:-JA POSITIONS. THE PROTOPHILIC ISOTOPE EXCHANGE REACTIONIHAD F VALUES (PARTIAL REACTION RATES) OF 4.B AND 1.8t RESP., FOR THE,2 ISOMERS. FACILITY: ELEMENTOORG. SOEDIN., MOSCOW, USSR. UNCLAssVFtcA---- 547-558.1 USSR UDC MASTRYUKOVA, T. A., =RBAYEV., M. A.; FEDINj, E. I.,--Pz-TRWSYJY, P. V., Y-AMOSOVIT YE. I.., and KABACBNM) M. I., Institute of -0i1&tii&TC6 Acad.; ~c, USSR "Diphosphacyclohexe.dienone" Leningrad, Zhurnal Obshchey Rhimii, Vol 43 (105), No 5, May 73, p 1195 Abstract: 3,3,5,5-Tatraphenyl-3,5-diphosphacyclohexaclienone, m-P- 168-5-1920 was synthesized by the reaction Of 3,3,5,5-tetraphenyl- 4,5-diphosphoniacyclohex- anone vith triethylamine, Oa the basis of IR and wc 3 P data it appeared that the new compound exists as diphosphacycloclienone substituted at the phosphorus atom; there were no indications of the existence of diphosphaphenolic structure. USSR UDC 536.421.4+536.421.1 SMENCHENKO, V. K., and PETROVSKIY, V,:4,-- "Kinetics of Crystallization Center Generation" V sb. Kristallizatsiva i faz. prevrashcheniya (Crystallization and Phase Transformations -- collection of works), Minsk, "Nauka i tekhn." 1971, pp 54-61 (from M-Fizika, No 9, 1971, Abstract No 9E373) Translation: The wathorS Dresent a microscopic theory of the kinetics of the homogeneous generation of crystallization centers, in which the form and anisotropy of the crystalline seed are taken into account. A kinetic equation for the nonstationary formation of crystalline seeds is derived. The equilibr-lum concentration is found for crystalline critical x seeds formed in a real solution, melt, or vapor. A formula is obtained for the rate of stationary generation of crystallization centers. It is shown that the anisotropy of the surface tension in the crystalline phase has no effect on the kinetics of this process. Author's abstract. 51. 11 J!, I I lilar ;--II111, 1,211 Pdl~ USSR UDC 6_21.582.2 GASkNOV, L.S., I-ESHEVCY, A.S., ~r__ I'L IY--Y. I "Stvdy Of VoltsEe-Capacitance 01"racteriBtics Of Amorphous Str,.iatures Based Gn Glassy Semiconduct-ors" Elektron.tekhnikai. Nauch-telihn.~b. '.:ikroelekt;rcnika (Elect ronics Technolc-.,. Scientific-Tec'nnical Uollection. .--ieroelectrcnics 7,1971, ro ;!(20),pp ~1_744' (from RZh:E'1ekt1roni1-a_i y Drimenenlye, 11o 2, Fab 72, Abstract No 23164) Translation: The low-eirnal canacitance is experimentblly investiF _uted of amarpho-up atructuren 've(jed an chalcoFenide gluav of th?,a-Wc-,v Ac--Te-Sri-Gu, of 81-To, Go-To, cnd norw g1wicy aL typdj A C2 It a ravaul- ed that during atreasep, the cupocitanco of' such str,.~ctivetj haco:nev negative. A strong dependence Is show-n of the neptive oapacitanco on tha tezperalture and the frequency of the signal measured. S~ummsry- SSR UDC B~` j "i'l 1; G I f;,:Cl"l S A PEIT V. It, a f (' 1~1.,! 4 -- as s-lon by th:--, ;"-Ajc-~ of Ccm- parison 11,11it., a .1 'adic 'Crequency" I Moscot- V- - %4 I_ b jTn 2, 1973 -0 0 -h 9tract: n 3',.,,nc'jcr of va-4 c,;s p a- r'-L'r C: t C).C-*.-. cpf:.-,,f ~`nr- undt~r cond4tions of ~:'d 7 Z ~at c 2. t a 11 prooc~r c .5 c 'G. are r c of :1-1--cl cxlr~" --:rjji!n ir t',- regio:i o -4. c~n I L _L bc nac' s t 12C r Co. ul S rc-!E-ti-ve lClL;: uf c-' Of 4 "V C A. l.- r le . I U I 0' --y tlie --liod of Com- 2-2 :j V l'b. lc-ct2T-Iicr~--cOllectior, of works 1'O 2, 2t c- No 7, Jul 71, 'a lnr~tjo of of 0 63 . un c f the i ter- U c, IL7 t'1~7 Ic :1 x t t a staMillized 1 v e h such. in h of hiC ~ F7 ' - w ~ li L i - ,c r, -d by t 1/2 -1 If ~RWI I! IPA USSR BASKIN, A. S. et al., Kyant. cl.e?~-tronikp (Quantum Flectronics-collection of works), No 2, Mosco-7, 1971, pp 40-48 (from RZh-Radiotgkhnj1;a, No 7, Jul 71, Abstract ~io 7D11'7) shift in the center of the line of the atomic transition as a consequence of various factors. Six illustrations, bibliography of four titles. 2/2 72 USSR UDC 621.438-251:536.24.001.24 PETROXVSXIY~~' TSAPLIN, M. I. ."Boundary Conditions in Heat Conductivity Problems for Gas Turbine Ro-cors" Tr. Mosk. aviats. tekhnol. in-ta (Works of Moscow Aviation Technological Institute), 1971, No. 72, pp 5-19 (from, RM-Turbostroyeniye, No 8, Aug 71, Abstract No 8.49.96) Trianslation: The forms of boundary conditions encountered in formulating heat conductivity problems for gas turbine rotors, do not always correspond to actual conditions. The data presented provides some foundation for assuming that in certain cases one should solve the heat conductivity problem for the disc. and blade simultaneously. This is feasible when data on -the preliminary gasdynamic. calculation of the flow portion of the turbine and the gasdynamic calculation o. I the cooling of the rotor are the only initial data for calcu- lating the temperature state of the rotor. 5 ill., 3 ref. 150 USSR IJDC 619:616.995.1~2+636.2+63'.52/.58 0 PETROVSKIY. V. V. "Ievel of Content and Duration of Excretion of Sevin in the Nilk of Cows Treated Against Ixodes" Kiev, V Sb. Gj'f? ena Pri-meneni7s., Toksikol. Postitsidov I -ygiene of Lhe Use Md ToxicMgy oT Klinika Otr 77T H ?esuic-ides and the Clinical Treatment of Intoxication -- Collection of Works), No 8, 1970, pp 193-196 (from RZh-58- Zhivotnovodstvo i Veterinariy No Apr 71, Abstract No 4.55.T69) fNo abstract USSR UDC 619:614-31+637.128.614.4419.542 maysKiv- Cindidate of Veterinary Sciences, AU,Union Institute of Ex- porimantal Veterinary ,,',edicine "Concentration of Sevin and Duration of Its Secretion in Cowls'Xilk" Xoscow, Vaterinariya, No 8, Aug 70, PP 39-40 Abstract: The miilk of co;,~s treatod with acaric."des rau,-;-Z not contain any posti- cido residues. Since this regulation also applies to sev~_n, th~i physiological effects of sevin on cows and calves wore invest' atGd. it was found that 0.85- 1. 0~ sevin suspensions induccd no hematojc,-,ica1 or biochordeal shifts in cattle blood. Sevin can thereforu ba rocomm=lod in concei.trationr. for the treat- ment of calves a-ainst 'icks, at :intervals of 7 days. 1%%on milch cows are treated with a. 0.85~ sevin suspension, their inilk mr-y contain sev_~Ui in a maximum concen- tration of 0.1-0.3 mg/liter on. the Ist day aft-or treatment, following which it - pidly diminishes. The greater the milk output, the smallor is the concontra- tion of sevin residues. To. prevent the appearanca of sev-.Ui in mUk. it is recom- " ded that cows be -rea-ed with a mixture of 0.4-0.5"' sevin and 0.4-0.5 percent M on L. )0 dicresyl. This mixture is as effective as ail,,i sevin suspension or a 1~ dicrosyl emulsion. -7 _~F ~_2_ - ~01 3 UN6 L k~'i h t e-1 lt~; ~00OCtSzPING DATE--30OCT70 JITLE-ACARICIDE NATURE UF DICKESY4 FOR~ILCAITLEJICKS _U_ ~~AUTHOR-(02)-PETROVSKIY, V.V.v RODIN# S.D. C&UNT RY OF INFO-USSR ~_,.5.0URCE-KHIM. SEL. KHOZ, 1970s 8(219 118-19 :-,.-DAT E, PU 13 L I S H E7 0 -~-SUBJECT AREAS-BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL SCIENCES 'TOPIC TAGS-ACARICIDE, TICK* CARBAMATE .CONTROL MARKING-NU RESTRICTIONS ;0OCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED REEL/FRAME--2000/1669 STEP NO--UR/0394/70/00d/002/0118/0119 A;IRC ACCESSICIV NG--AP0125310 UNCLASSIFIED . . i PROCESSING UATE--30UCT70 (A MIAT. OF M AND CATtLE AGAINST TICKS RHIPICEPHALUS BURSA, AND INST. EKSP. VET., USSR. 1 2 014 UNCLASSIFIED PPOCESSING DATE-160i:770 ~-,._-I.TITLE--CHARACTER OF CHEMICAL BONDS IN A VANADYL COMPLEX FOR SO,'.,.E OXIDE -,;---(;LASSES STUDIE0 FROM PARAMAGNETIC RESONANCE AND LECT 'IN A S RPTI E- R 3 o G L.U.v DOLGOLENKOv T.F,t LAZUKINt V.N., NOZDRINA~ YE.Nvv,..~~ N.V. -F-F --USSR COUNTRY 0 NFO -.._-..SOURCE--~-O0KL. AKAD. NAUK SSSR 1970, 191(1)t 54-7 DATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT AREAS-MATERIALS, CHEMISTRY TOPIC TAGS--VANADIUM COMPLEX# OXIDE GLASS,'EPR SPECTRUM, MOLECULAR -ORBITALi GLASS COMPUSITIONt CHEMICAL BONDING CONTROL MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS .~-DOCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED STEP NO--UR/0020/70/191/0,~l/()O~~4/0057 PROXY REEL/FRAME--1993/0505 :CIRC ACCESSION NO--AT0113396 UNCLASSIFIED 2/2 014 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--160CT70 ACCESSION NO--AT0113396 -ABSTRACTIEXTRACT-CU) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE ELECTRON ABSO"PTION AND P~-"'*, SPECTRA OF VO PRIME2POSITIVE IN B SUB2 0 SU83NEGATIYE BAO MINUS V SU32 0 SU.85, SID SUB2 MINUS BAD MINUS V SUB2 0 SUB5, AND P SUB2 0 SUB5 MINIUS aAO MINUS V suBz a SUB5 GLASSES (CONTG.. 1-SPERCENT V SUB2 0 SUB51 WERE MEASUREO AT LIQ.-N TEMPS. AS A FUNCTION OF -THE GLASS COMPIN. T h E Ni EXPTL. DATA AND THE EARLIER PUBLISHED DATA ON THE EPR SPECTRA OF V TH GLASSES (B., ET AL. 1967) WERE INTERPRETED WITHIN THE MG THEORY. RESULTS SUGGESTS THAT IN THE GLASSES STUDIED, VANADYL FOi~P-S C SUB.;,V YYP-c SYMMETRY COMPLEXES AND THE UNPAIRED ELECTRON IS LOCALIZED ON THE 6 SU32G OF 0 TYPE ORBITAL, CONSTRUCTED FROM 30 SU6XY ORBITAL V PRIME4POSITIV 2R.40 ORBITALS OF 0 LIGANDS. THE COEFFS. BETA SUSI AND t5ETA SUBI PRIME AT THE ED SUBXYNEGATIVE AND 2RHO ORBITALS, RESP., ARE DETD. BY TH= DEGREE OF LOCALIZATION OF THE UNPAIRED ELECTRON ON THE RESV. ORBITALS -REFORE, CHARACTERIZE THE Pt BONDING IN THE ~-QUATORIAL PL'Nf: OF AND, THC THE COMPLEX. ANALOGOUS, 8 SUBLEPSILON ORBITAL OF rHE COMPLEX IS CONSTRUCTED FROM 3D SUBX PRIME2 MINUS SUBY PRIME12 ORBITALS OF V PRIME4POSITIVE AND RHO ORBITALS Of THE VANADYL 0 AND THE CURRESPO.NDIING COEFFS. (SLPHA AND GAMMA) AT THE D FUNCTIONS CHARACTERIZE ~H~ SIGMA BONDING IN THE EQUATORIAL PLANE AND THE PI BONDING OF V WITH THE VA14_`0YL 0. EVALUATION OF THE PARAMETERS OF CHEM, BONDS BY THE MO ICAO METHOD A CONFIRMED THAT THE COVALENCY OF PI AND SIGM4 BONDS IN THE I/ COMPLEX INCREASES WITH THE AMT. OF THE GLASS FORMING AGENT JiN THEL(IRDER F SUB2 0 SUB5 YIELDS 510 SUS2 YIELDS 8 SU82 0 SUB3. FACILITv: MOSK. GOS. UNIV. IM. LOMONDSOVA, MOSCOWs USSR. UNCLASSIFIED USSR UDC 621.317.421 PETROVYKH, S. V., and KOLDASOV, G. D. "Ferrograph" Tr. Leningr. In-t Aviats. Priborostr. fWorks of Leningrad Institute of Aviation Instruments), 1972, No 74, pp 194-197 (from Referativayy Zhurnal, 'No 11, Nov 72, 32. Metrologiya i Izmeritel'raya Tekhnika. Single Issue. Abstract No 11.32.1020) Translation: An installation for oscillographing hysteresis loops of flat- film magnetic elements, its functional diagram, technological characteristics, and measuring error are investigated. A new method to measure magnitudes of residual induction (I) of elements is suggested which increases the measuring exactness. The point of the suggested method consists in the following: in't'o the amplification loop of signals proportional I in the maonetic element, is introduced a summator for sun-narizing the mentioned signals and signals pro- portional to the remagnetizing field. By regulating the amplitude of the signal proportional to the remagnetizing field, a transformation of tile signal proportional to I will be obta4ned by which the magnitude of its amplitude will be proportional to the magnitude of the residual 1. la the element. The -ed ca, error of the photographer, when measuring 1, is in the discuss so not 1/2 USSR uDc 621.396.967.-629.7-072.8 0NUFRIYEV, V. P., KUZ:112-TSOV, V. N.:P T. P. "An Imitator of Meteoric Radar Signals" Fadiotckhnika. ResD. mezhved. nauch-te!&,n. sb. (Radio Engineering. :Republic Interdepartmental Scientific and Technical Collection), 1971, 12,,Pp 38-40 (from Kh-Radiotekhnika 110 7 Jul 71, Abstract No W51) n: Translatio. nids paper discusses development of a simulator designed for checking whether the units and modules of radar installations are functioning properly, and for imitating various characteristics of re- flections from meteor trails. A description is given of an imitator which can be used to simulate Doppler frequency shift of a coherent pulse radar, end the time of existence of a reflection from a Trieteor trail. The Doppler frequency shift is simulated by means of tvo fre- quencies whose difference can be varied. The problem oil obtaf-ning the tvo frequencies lc solved by the method of uticcessive fr-~iquency dis- placereent with splitting into two frequency cliannels. A block diLgram of the simulator is presented and described. One illustration. Rf~-scw.L 1/1 USSR, UX1537.,)e,,64-53'T-31- -331;1535+5351 PEU?r,'CHUKp 1. 1., and SURIN, Yi. V. em o ry, E f -,'.'e ct in metal-Silicon Nitride-Gallium Arsenide Syitcm" Elektron. telftika. Mmich.-te'khn- sb. Vikroelektronzilm (Ele--tronic Eii_--ine-~rin-m,. "echnical Works on Mlic I- ct~,onics) 1 1, Collection of Scientific and 1 97 3(29), pp 88-91 (frotri RZ11-Fizika, No 11 Jan 720, Abstr',Wt- No IYE141 I by VYP authors) Translation. 'Die withors studied the effects of sizrface-potential instability ading to lasting IK;sterprds in the P%I-Si HII stractur,2. it, is le -&;haw-n that.the rmmory effect caused by hystore'sis '?I Ule si-li -Gniks stefri is sirdlar to the mewory mechanism in . the Si,,11j, -Si -,~y ~;tem andd 0 Y -rapping lweis in Mined by the upace charge accum~ulntiori and resorptilm at Ilicon nitride near the Si N -GaAs inter~act. 3 4 41 USSR UDC 911.3.616.9.576.895.771(571.56) TIMOFEYEVA, L. V., IETROWOV, A. M., VINOGRADSKAYA, 0. N., RASNITSYN, S. P., RYAZANTSEV, V. A., and.YEP F ftaw;waux, MISHEV, Yu. V. ?to rganizational Principles in the Struggle Against Blood-Sticking Midges and Aedes Mosquitoes on the Basis of Their Riological. Characteristics" V sb. Materialy Nauchn. konferentsii, posvyasbch. 50-letiyu In-ta med. parazitol. i tropich. med., 1970 (Proceedings on the Conference Commemorat- ing the 50th AnniversRry of the Institute of Medical Parasitology and Tropical Medicine 1970 -- collection of warks), Moscow, 1970, pp 50-51 (from RZh-36. Meditsinskaya, Geografiya, No 1, Jan 71, Abstract No 1.36.75) USSR UDO 621,791:620.192.7 KASATKIN, B. S., SOTCHEM-0, V. P., KORAB, G. N., PETRUKHA.,,. V. YEE., MASLENKOV, YU. A., and.BELOV, A. S. "Device for Studying Slow Deterioration of Welded Joints" Kiev, Avtomatichoskaya Svarka, No 3t Mar 71, pp 74-75 Abstract: This is a brief report on a devic4 developed and Manufactured at the Institute of-Electric welding imeni Ye. 0. Paton for studying slow deterioration of,welded joints. it automatically holds a given load on the upecimen and changes it in accordance with a preset program. ~The specimens can be welded in the longitudinal and transverse directions with respect to the loading axis manually or automatically under flux and in shielding gases. A schematic and the basic parameters of the device are presented. 82 USSR UDC 621.374 PETRUKRIN, B. e of Technical Sciences Candidat A'A Method of Improving the Characteristics of Some Types of Logic Elements" Moscow, Pribory i Sistemy Upravleniya, No 6, Jun 71, pp 32-33 Abstract: Because the "one" signal level of some types of logic elements (resistor-transistor elements in particular) dependsto a great extent on the number of similar elements connected at the output, the "one" signal may differ considerably in one and the same circuit, which creates difficulties where devices such as a counting flip-flop with potential-pulse input require a signal of a definite level with narrmv margin for normal operation. A method is proposed for stabilizing the "one" isignal which requires no ad- ditional power supply. The decoupling resistors are connected to the col- lector of the transistor rather than in the base circuit as in the conven- tional element. A constant "one" aignaLat the output is ensured by connecting unused resistors in the.collector circuit to a common point in the flip-flop element. In addition to its stabilizing function, the proposed circuit provides a higher coefficient of splitting than the conventional resistor-transistor element. A disadvantage of the proposed circuit is the increased power consumption (and dissipation), especially when not all inputs are used. Ion rxch!anee. USSR UDC 66.074.7:546.81 TIKHOMIROV, V. K., and,,!"RuKHIN.__X._ V. "Use of Strongly Basic _AV-17 Anion Exchange Resin for Separation and Puri fication of Thorium. Ills Leningrad, Radiokhimiya, Vol XIII, No 2, 1971, pp 318-320 Abstract: The experimental procedure and data from a study of the behavior of.micro amounts of thorium during its separation from solutions with sig- nificant salt content are discussed. Mcro amounts of thorium-234 vere separated from samples of the indicated type by sorption on AV-17 anion exchange resin from 11 normal nitric acid. It was found expedient to introduce the thorium-232 carrier into the sample. The method can also be used for analyzing uranium (235 and 238) isotope samples by the measured $-activity of thorium-231 and thorium-234.. The experimental data are plotted for separation of micro amounts of thorium- 234 by means of the AV-17 anlon-exchange resin, micro amounts of thorium- 234 in the presence of thorium-232 carrier and separation.of thorium-232 all in the presence of large amounts of soluble salts. The results of washing the fission products (with nitric acid solution irradiated by 1/2 -. ~ IT--, 112 012 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING OATE--27NOV70 TITLE--SYNERGISTIC EFFECTS IN THEl SOL,VENT EXTRACTION OF CHI-LATE COMPoUNDS. -REAGENT -U- INFLUENCE OF THE DONOR ATOMIS OF THE AUTHOR-(03)-ZOLOTOV, YU.A., P I N v0.*M.t GAVRILOVAilL.G. COUNTRY OF INFO--USSR SOURCE--J. INORG. NUCL. CHEM. 1970, 32( )t 1679-88 IDATE PUBLISHED ------- 70 SUBJECT.,ARE-AS--CHEMISTRY JOPIC TAGS--SOLVCNT EXTRACTIONt ZINC, CHELATE COMPOUNU, ORGANIC PHOSPHATE, Kr:TONE,.MERCAPTAN, OUINOLtNE, CARBAMATE ;,CONTROL IMARKING-NO RESTRICTIONS CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED --2000/2126 --UK/0000/70/03--'/005/167'?/16~18 PROXY REEL/FRAME STEP NO ~-CIRC ACCESS' ION Ni3--AP0125710 pkorESSING DATE--27NOV70 2/2 012 UNCLASSIFIED :-CIRC ACCESSION NO--AP0125710 GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE SOLVENT EXTN. OF ZN WAS INVESTIGATED IN THE FORM OF CHELATE COMPDS. WITH 2,THENOYLTRIFLUOROACETONE, 1,PHENYL,3iMETHYL,4,riEt4ZOYL,5,PYRAZC--LO4NEI 1,5,DIPHENYLCARBAZONE, 8j;lERCAPTOQUINJLINE 1,5,ViPfiENYLTHIaCARi3.A70j\lE (DITHIZONE), AND DIETHYLDITHIOCARBAMATE. BENZENE WAS USED AS DILUEENT. EXTN. OF THE ABOVE COMPDS. IN THE PRESENCE OF RU W33 PO SUB4 WAS ALSO STUDIED. A SYNERGISTIC EFFECT WAS OBSERVED FOR THF EXTN. OF CO,"IPLEXES Of- THE IST 3 REAGENTS# ITS MAGNITUDE DECREASING IN THE INDICATED SEQUENCE. WHEN USING S CONTG. REAGENTSv THE EFFECT WAS COMPLETELY ABSENT. THIS MAY BE ACCOUNTED FOR BYTHE DIFFERENCE IN THE ZN THESE CHELATES. IT IS ASSUMED THAT THE COORDINATION COORDINATION NO. IN NO. OF THE METAL ION IN CHELATES STUDIES IN THE LOWER, THE STRONGER THE METAL REAGENT BOND. FACILITY: VERNADSKI I .(NST. GEOCHEM..ANAL. CHEM.1 MOSCOW, USSR. UN C L A-5. f-- 5i H 010 UNCLASSIFIED FITLE-INVESTIGATION OF THE EXTRACTION OF SOME ISOTOPE COPPER 64 -U- AUTHOR-103)-RAKOVSKIY, E.E,t PETRUKHINt O.M.r ~.CGUNTRY OF INFO--USSR --,,SOURCE-J. RADIOANAL. CHEM. 19701 4(2)v Z07-14 DATE PUBLISHEO-70 PROCESSING DATE--30OCT70 COPPERs 119 C14ELATES USING SEVERIN,.V.1. `4HNOLOGY ,-''-i,SUBjE'CT-AREAS-CHEMISTRYr NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TE%. _v~.-JUIC TAGS-COPPER ISOTOPE, COPPER COMPLEX, COPPER EXTRACTING, -.DISSOCIATICN CONSTANT jNTR-UL MARK I NG--NO RESTRICTIONS cr L~.OCCUMENT CLASS--UNCLASSIFIED PROXY REEL/FRAME-2000/2038 STEP CIRC ACCESSLCN NO--AP0125626 UNCLASSIFIEO NO--NE/0000/701004/002/0207/0214 --,~212 010 UNCLASSIFiED PROCESSING DATE--30OCT7C ICIRC ACCESSICN NO-AP0125626 II : -ABSTRACT/EXTRACT--(U) GP-0- ABSTRACT. THE EXTN. OF CU(II) 8-orHYDROXYGUINOLINATEs 5,7,DICHLORO* 89HYDROXYQUINOLINATE, AND 2,THENCYLTRIFLUOROACETONATE WAS'INVEStIGATED AND THE STABILITY CONSTS. AND DISTRIBUTION CONSTS. OF THE COMPLEXES WERE DETO. THE DEPENDENCE OF THE PH VALUES FOR 50PERCENT EXTNOANO OF'THE DISTRIBUTION CONSTS. OF THE CU COMPLEXES ON THE DISSOCN. CONSTS, AND DISTRIBUTION CONSTS. OF T14E CORRESPGNDfNG AGENTS ARE DISCUSSED* FACILITY: CENT. MINING RES. LNST. NCNFERROUS METALSv MOSCOWu USSR!v UNCLASSIFIE.0 rn LIM 6U.1.014.477-019 IVE EMCr Cy G- MMES ON THE HICROCIRMATORY SYSTEM Ehrttcle b7 VV. guptiyarov -L, t-crWk-hin, Chair of Normal atomy (headed hn _ ~ V.V by Professor or of the USSW Acade of mb lay 11tedical Sciv~ncos) of the Zed 14cocow "Order of Lenin" tlt~Al Ir!AtiLUte lcogpv. iv Anatomil, Giscologil I im 10J&Ii, LonixLarad. Arkh -301 Ufa- Russi.tn, No 11, 101, submAtted 12 Fobrjory 1971, pp 17 In the flow of morphological literature of the last few years there in a paroi~tant jet of n=arluv publications dealing with the affect of gravic-a-tional stress on the vascular system of experimental animals. A Barlow of inVestilati;,na in our country begAn with the reports of V.S. Stapantsov, (1953, 19-1,S) free the laboratory of N.C. Prives. In these 15 years the disciples of N.C. Prives have published many articles. klmost all vascular region* are ccverad; arteries of muscles, skin. kidneys, spinal CcArd, brain. endocrine Slands, Joivt capsuies. nerve trunks, -joins of the liver. up'-oar.. ly=phatic vo*Fels of the extremities. Dozens of authors were Involved in the Invojitigations. The lltw of information Is growing continuously. A acruciny of .be published works convinces us that che facts obtained are rat'hor consistent and constitute a, so to dpeak, orderly sarioa of evidanc" oi the validity of the positions upheld, Lr.tll rrcr=tlv~ -17 utrh that had not com true was to u~m =thcj. atii~r th= -,he injection merhod that would define and 8"pple~.nc some findinEs with regard to evaluating the condition of Zho vascular bed. With all its endurlrip value for Inve-utita- tian c1 the topc.;~ra~=y ~nd architcctonLc~ of venscla, the injection mett-ad 1.6 inadequate for demnatrattan of fina chatte-a in the vau-cular system, for precise dLs~~ription of the cond!tiuv*. of mIcr,8czpic. Yet =other con3iderution is 6mgEasted after scrutirizln& the documentation illustrating the published vorli~s .On preparations And photographs, filled vessels are found to be fieparated from the substrate In which they exist during life. Efforts to detect the nowent of adverse effect of the circulatory dlvvr.~ar ao the surrcundlag tissue are complately ruled ouL, 4ince such tl~s~w ere nct -vlsilA~ ind their condition Is not recurded. Yer~ It Is precisely according to the state of functioning tissues of an ori;dn that ona can judge with a lagh dogciw of r.lt.1,411ity 17 Aerospace Medicine USSR UDC: 613.693 J V.G.J, Doctor of Medical Sciences, Lt Col Med Serv "Ebysiological and Morphological Effects of Accelerations" Moscow, Voyenno-Meditsinskiy Zhurnal, No 2, 1970, pp 65-6a Abstract: A general summary is given of the results of aboift a tLousand experiments performed on different animals (dogs, monkeys, rats, mice, and inea pigs) to determine when accelerations.re5ult in irreversible structural U 9 changes, and the extent to which accelerations can be tolexated through morphological changes in the tissues. A close relationship ,Vas observed betu reen the physiological effects of accelerations in any direction, and Subsequent structural disorders in orgrans. The greater the functdonal 1311I.Ets e3pecially in the cardiovascular and reapiratovy 5yatems, the deep~!r tbe ical change5, end the longer the period of repair. On the other hand, accelerations insufficient to alter physiological 'unctions cause- no more than transient morphological shifts. The leirel of tol*ranc~a tc accelera- tion is determined by the original condition of the organism, -,he compensatory capabilities of the cardiovascular system, the amount of ene -,j reserves, and the nature of the redox processes in the tissues. The limit; of tolerance is not constanz, but may vary considerably, depending on the candition of the organism at any particular time. Resistance to accelerations can be enhanced 1/2 USSR PETRUKRIN, V.G., Voyenno-Meditsinskiy Zhurnal, No 2, ir, o, pp 65-68 57 by increasing the compensatory capabilities of the cardiovascular and respiratory systems, augmenting the energy resources in vital organs and depots, reducing anaerobic glycolysis, and intensifying oxidative processes in the tissues. -1/2 029 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70 i.TITLE-PHYS'cIOLOGICO MORPHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF THE EFFECT OF ACCELERATIONS -U- ,,,AUTHUk-PETRUKHlN,, V.G. INFO USSR SOURCE--VOENNO MEDITSINSKII ZHURNAL, FEB. 19701 P. 65-68 PUBLISHE0---FE870 ~j CT AREAS--BIOLOGICAL ANU MEDICAL SCIENCES tUPIC:TAGS-BIOLOGIC ACCELERATION EFFECT,.DOGr MONKEYv RAT, MOUSE, GUINEA 17 .-:- ..PJG, HUMAN CENTRIFUGE EQUIPMENT, CAR IOVASLULAR SYSTEM, RESPIRATORY D SYSTEM MARKING--NO RESTRICTIONS ~`.:.'OGCUMENT CLASS-UNCLASSIFIED -P JWXY REEL/FRAME--1990/0928 STEP NO--UR/017-.r/'TO/1)00/000/0065/0068 _CIRC ACCESSICN NO--AP0109085 UNCLASSIFIE0 212 029 UNCLASSIFIED PROCESSING DATE--090CT70 C.IRC ACCESSION NO-AP0109085 ~.AbSTRACWEXTRACT-IU) GP-0- AdSTRACT. DISCUSSION JIF Tli[- kFSULTS OF A TOTAL OF ROUGHLY looo rEsrs IN WHICH THE ACCELERATIUN TOLERANCE OF OUGS, MONKEYS, RArS# MICE AND GUINEA PIGS WAS DETERMINED UNDER ACCELERATIONS -IN VARIOUS DIRECTIONS IN A CEN 'TR[FUCE. A CLOSE RhLATION IS ESTABLISHED BETWEEN PHYSIOLOGICAL REACTIONS UNDER ACCELERATION AND SUBSEQUENT STRUCTURAL DISORDERS IN VARIOUS ORGANS~OF THE EXPERIMENTAL ANIMALS. IT IUCE UNLY TEMPORARY IS FOUNO THAT ACCELERATIONS IN ANY DIRECTION PROL STRUCTURAL SHIFTS IF THEY DID NOT AFFECT PHYSIOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS. ACCELERATION TOLERANCE IS FOUND TO BE GENERALLY H16HER WHEN THE 'COMPENSATORY CAPACITY OF THE CAR010VASCULAR AND RESPIRATORY SYSTEMS IS Fll4'jHER WHILE,THE ANAEROBIC GLYCOLYSIS 15~LESS INTENSIVE AND THE -OXIDATION PROCESSES IN THE TISSUES ARE'STRONG. UNCLASSIFIED USSR UDC 539.l92/.l94i-535.33/.34.O1 KRUMSHTEYN3 Z. V., PFTRUKHIN, V. 1. , SMMOVA, L. M. SUVOROV, V. M. , YUFLANDOV, I. A. "Investigation of-the Character of the H-0 Bond in Certain Oxygen-Containipg Acids With the Aid of w -Meson Capture by Hydrogen" Issledovaniye khraktera svvazi H-0 v neYotorvkh kislorodsoder,-hashchik'n Rislcte!,~h s pomoshchlyu zakhvata -,T--mezonoy -vo-dorodam (cf. English above), joint institu-ce or Nuclear Research, Laboratory of lNuclear Prolble~ras, No. P12-52211, Preprint, Duhna, 1970, 10 pp, ill. (from RZh-Fizika, Nlo 5, May 71, Abstrae-ft No 5D98) Translation: The degree of ionicity of the H-0 bond in --ulfuric acid, nitric acid, phosphoric acid, boric acid, and oxalic acid was evaluated wifli the aid of R -meson capture by hydrogen. Oxalic acid should belong to a group of stronger acids on the basis of the degree of the ionicity of the H-0 bond. BAIMUN, 0. K., BIAGORODOVt A. H.# BOIDIMM, B. V., GORIIII,YU. P., GRICOWYEEV, V. K., GRISHIN,,A. P., YEROFEY-EY, 1'. A., XOROLIKOV, 1. YA.# LUZZIM, V. H., MUM, V. V., 14IKOLAYEVSCY, YE. S.p EE-T-M-M-NA VO 11.j PMCIN, YU. S.9 PONMMAREV, L. A., SIROTY,1110 S. If., SOKOLOYSKITp V. V., TARASOV, YR. X.1 TIKHOMROV, G. D., TROSTINA, K. A.t TURCHANOVICH, L. K., and SHKURENKO, YU. P.9 Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Physics GKI AE (State Committee for the Use of Atomic Energy) *The Z-P---o-en charge Exchange Reaction at a.Fulse of 39 GeV/Sed, Hoscows Yadernaya Mika; Vol 18t No 3t Sep,730 pp 542-54-4 Abstracti The authors present the meaBurement results from studying the charge exchange reaction of k--mesons on protons (K -p --~% K1Pn) at a pulse of 39 Gev/sec. The study was carried out using the ITEF 6-m magnetic track spectrometer. The working volume of the magnetic field of the spectrometer was 1.0 x 1.5 x 6 a . Twelve optical spark chambers were located Inalde the magnet, with each chamber having eijght-spax1c.&aps (10 mm each). The chamber electrodes cor-sisted of two layers ol U-tuninum foil 14 Microns thick. The photographs were taken through a special slit in the Pagnet,yoke. A mirror syi~tem made it possible to obtain three stereoprojectior,8 o:r all of the chambers BALOSHIM6 0. ft., at a'-'.# Yadernaya Mika, Vol M No 3, Sep ?3, PP 542-544 with one camera. The reaction waz studied on the negative particle beam of the ME accelerator. The X -meeons.were distinguished by a differential Cerenkov counter. The beam was focused on~ a liquid. hyAxaren target 40 cm long which was set approximately three meters from the first c1famber of the spectrQme- ter. ApproximatelY 5'107K -mesons were paosed through the equipment and 1020 photogmphs taken. Pairs of uniformly charged tracks were measured on the Photographs. The measurement resulta were tben processed on the Razdan-3 com- puter, Only 270 intersecting tracks were found* A graph Is given for the differential cross section of the reaction,% The results show that the cross section value of 7,1t1.2 microbarns obtained by the authors in comparison to data obtained for lower energies elsewhere shows the logarithmic dependence of the charge exchange cross section on the pulse# equal to -1-51~�0-05, The authors thank K. Go Bareskov, A* M. Lapidus, S. To Sukhorukovp and K. A. Ter-14artiros)-an for their presentation of the computational results as the dependence of the differential cross section: onpulse transfer (do/dt). This dependonce in compared with predictions of the Rogge pole tiodel.: 82 USSR BALosH111, 0. N., VIADDLIRSIaY, V. V., DUKHOVSKOY, L A., KISHKUILNO V V- HRMENKOVA, A. P. t OLIKOV , V. V.-, NIKOL&YEVSKIY, YE. pRolaim- V. H. RADKEEVICHI 1. A.t and FEDORETSp V. B., Institute of Theoreticaj- and Experimental Physics of the State Committeel for the Use 017 Atomic Energy "Study, of the Reaction )7 -p pX at a Momentum of 3.23 GeV/c With a High Momentum Transfer" Moscow, Yadernaya Fizikap Vol 14, No 1, Jul 71, pp 131-133 Abstracts The authors investigate the spectrum of nissirg rasses of a proton in the reaction 7T p pX- ior high transfer momentums usi~t- a track spectrometer ifith optical spqk chambers in a aagnetic field. found the momentum of the Diinary )7 mesons to be 3.25 GeV/C, and th--Y measured the differential cross sectian of the formation of the mesor. in the range of angles -1 < cos -0.0005o which was:found to 1-3 equal to 28.2 + 9.8 pbarn/sterad. Figure I shows the spectrum of the missing nasses in this reactior he 7T meson f 3 9 - for a momentum of t CeV1c. Figure 2 shows the cross section of the creation of the backwards in the rea,~tion )7- -p p C as a function of the momentul:. of the )T - mesons. The article contains 2 figures and 5 Ubliographic on-tries. 1/1 A4,m,4w_xMk EM 11. 1. [MFR Constructio-h USSR UDC 624.131-43:531.5 N I.P CHERIK,%SOV, 1. 1., MIK-HEEV, V. V., PETRUKHIN, V. P., Pfi.XULIN, V. A., SNr ISM, A.S., and SHV.AREV, V. V. "Effect of Gravity on Mechan-ical Properties.of Soils" 1-10scow, Osnovaniya, fundamerty imckhanika gruntov. No 1, 1970, pp 14-18 Abstract- Results are given of an experimental investiVition oi: the effect of gravity on mechanical properties of soils, conducted. in an aircraft and in a centrifuge. The first series of experiments were (,onducted in a specially equipped TU-104 aircraft flying rJong a specific trajectory. Alonga a sectioa of this traJec-Iory the soils were subjected to an acceleration a = 1.6~9m/sec2 for 8 seconds, i.e. 1/6 at ground level. The second series were conducted on a centrifuge, on which soils were subjected to 55.1, 98.1 and 196.2m/sec2 acceleration, i.e. 5.6,10, and 20 g. Both series of tests contained controlled tests in motionless aircraft and centrifu-e. The over- load coefficient a/& varied from 0,165 to 20. E%perimenLal setups and techniques for both the- aircraft and centrifu8oa testa deticTibed in detail. A photograph of the airbornc- equtyAnent and a 6chematic till of the centrifuge are presented. Four typas of soila were tet;zed, whot~e physico- mechanical properuieu are g1win in a Lable. They are. O*M.ca tiaud; 1/2 USSR CIMRKASOV, I.I., at al-, Osnova-.uya, fundamenty i mekhanilka gruntov. No 1, 1970, pp 14-18 a-lopor-ite gravel with negligible bond and of low spocific weiolit; 3) keramsit gravel, loose material with rounded granulesi 4) soft plastic clay of great specific weight, with strong bond and small internal friction angle. The -ie angle results are presented in graphs and tables. Ibey show that tit 6g LI of rest in agloporite and keramsit gravels decreases while it remains Vlearly constant in the silica sand. An analysis of motion picture records shows that a certain reduction in angle of rest is related to,the ai-scraft vibration. Thus, it is considered that the variation of gravity hau no effect on the an3le of rest of loose granular soils. A specially adapted H-700 oscillograph was used for recording experiments in the dentrifuge. The deformation aptitude of both type of soils was determined, taking the sag of the pressing stamp under lkg/CM2 pressure on the base, as a comparability criterion. 7- A comparison with theoretical data for carrying power ahows that: 1) the griavity variation in accordar,-~~ ,.-Lth the theory of limLt equilibrium, substantially affects the carrying power of sand and wea:~ly affects that of plastic clw .1; 2' in contrast to the theory of lim it eqi il'brium the carrying power of sand varies a little less than in direct proporr-Lon to gravity. The carrying power of clay does not remain constant, but incl7eases alightly with ravity. The causes of these discrepancies are diccussed and tentatively explziincd. Orig. art. nall;: 6 fig r, . ttroa, 7 tabIr Forming USSR uDc 669-715:621-77 A~Ovj of Vag FETUf&2L,j,.J* and MANEGIN, YU. V. "Application of Ultrasonic Vibrations to Press Forming of 14etals" Moscow, Tsvetnyye metally, No 2, Feb 72, pp 63-65 Abstract: Discussed in this study are various systems of applying ultrasonic vibrations to the area of deformation and the effect of vibration amDlitude on both the power parameters and the degree of notraniformity of metal deformation in either direct or.indirect extrusion. The results of the study indicate that ultrasonic treatment was most effective in direct extrusion when applied to the plastic deformation zone through the die and in indirect extrusion -- when applied through the ram. An increase in the amplitude of elastic vibration displacement decreases both the press forming force and the degree of nonuniformity in metal deformation, The effect of ultrasound an the power parameters of press forming may be related to the decrease in the coefficient of friction in the defornation area and to the increase of plasticity in the for=able metel. The ultrasonic vibration equipment involved in thestudy is detailed. (3 illustrations, 1 table, 4 bibliographic references). 1/1