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  • 81 Salazar, Antônio de Oliveira

    (1889-1970)
       The Coimbra University professor of finance and economics and one of the founders of the Estado Novo, who came to dominate Western Europe's longest surviving authoritarian system. Salazar was born on 28 April 1889, in Vimieiro, Beira Alta province, the son of a peasant estate manager and a shopkeeper. Most of his first 39 years were spent as a student, and later as a teacher in a secondary school and a professor at Coimbra University's law school. Nine formative years were spent at Viseu's Catholic Seminary (1900-09), preparing for the Catholic priesthood, but the serious, studious Salazar decided to enter Coimbra University instead in 1910, the year the Braganza monarchy was overthrown and replaced by the First Republic. Salazar received some of the highest marks of his generation of students and, in 1918, was awarded a doctoral degree in finance and economics. Pleading inexperience, Salazar rejected an invitation in August 1918 to become finance minister in the "New Republic" government of President Sidónio Pais.
       As a celebrated academic who was deeply involved in Coimbra University politics, publishing works on the troubled finances of the besieged First Republic, and a leader of Catholic organizations, Sala-zar was not as modest, reclusive, or unknown as later official propaganda led the public to believe. In 1921, as a Catholic deputy, he briefly served in the First Republic's turbulent congress (parliament) but resigned shortly after witnessing but one stormy session. Salazar taught at Coimbra University as of 1916, and continued teaching until April 1928. When the military overthrew the First Republic in May 1926, Salazar was offered the Ministry of Finance and held office for several days. The ascetic academic, however, resigned his post when he discovered the degree of disorder in Lisbon's government and when his demands for budget authority were rejected.
       As the military dictatorship failed to reform finances in the following years, Salazar was reinvited to become minister of finances in April 1928. Since his conditions for acceptance—authority over all budget expenditures, among other powers—were accepted, Salazar entered the government. Using the Ministry of Finance as a power base, following several years of successful financial reforms, Salazar was named interim minister of colonies (1930) and soon garnered sufficient prestige and authority to become head of the entire government. In July 1932, Salazar was named prime minister, the first civilian to hold that post since the 1926 military coup.
       Salazar gathered around him a team of largely academic experts in the cabinet during the period 1930-33. His government featured several key policies: Portuguese nationalism, colonialism (rebuilding an empire in shambles), Catholicism, and conservative fiscal management. Salazar's government came to be called the Estado Novo. It went through three basic phases during Salazar's long tenure in office, and Salazar's role underwent changes as well. In the early years (1928-44), Salazar and the Estado Novo enjoyed greater vigor and popularity than later. During the middle years (1944—58), the regime's popularity waned, methods of repression increased and hardened, and Salazar grew more dogmatic in his policies and ways. During the late years (1958-68), the regime experienced its most serious colonial problems, ruling circles—including Salazar—aged and increasingly failed, and opposition burgeoned and grew bolder.
       Salazar's plans for stabilizing the economy and strengthening social and financial programs were shaken with the impact of the civil war (1936-39) in neighboring Spain. Salazar strongly supported General Francisco Franco's Nationalist rebels, the eventual victors in the war. But, as the civil war ended and World War II began in September 1939, Salazar's domestic plans had to be adjusted. As Salazar came to monopolize Lisbon's power and authority—indeed to embody the Estado Novo itself—during crises that threatened the future of the regime, he assumed ever more key cabinet posts. At various times between 1936 and 1944, he took over the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and of War (Defense), until the crises passed. At the end of the exhausting period of World War II, there were rumors that the former professor would resign from government and return to Coimbra University, but Salazar continued as the increasingly isolated, dominating "recluse of São Bento," that part of the parliament's buildings housing the prime minister's offices and residence.
       Salazar dominated the Estado Novo's government in several ways: in day-to-day governance, although this diminished as he delegated wider powers to others after 1944, and in long-range policy decisions, as well as in the spirit and image of the system. He also launched and dominated the single party, the União Nacional. A lifelong bachelor who had once stated that he could not leave for Lisbon because he had to care for his aged mother, Salazar never married, but lived with a beloved housekeeper from his Coimbra years and two adopted daughters. During his 36-year tenure as prime minister, Salazar engineered the important cabinet reshuffles that reflect the history of the Estado Novo and of Portugal.
       A number of times, in connection with significant events, Salazar decided on important cabinet officer changes: 11 April 1933 (the adoption of the Estado Novo's new 1933 Constitution); 18 January 1936 (the approach of civil war in Spain and the growing threat of international intervention in Iberian affairs during the unstable Second Spanish Republic of 1931-36); 4 September 1944 (the Allied invasion of Europe at Normandy and the increasing likelihood of a defeat of the Fascists by the Allies, which included the Soviet Union); 14 August 1958 (increased domestic dissent and opposition following the May-June 1958 presidential elections in which oppositionist and former regime stalwart-loyalist General Humberto Delgado garnered at least 25 percent of the national vote, but lost to regime candidate, Admiral Américo Tomás); 13 April 1961 (following the shock of anticolonial African insurgency in Portugal's colony of Angola in January-February 1961, the oppositionist hijacking of a Portuguese ocean liner off South America by Henrique Galvão, and an abortive military coup that failed to oust Salazar from office); and 19 August 1968 (the aging of key leaders in the government, including the now gravely ill Salazar, and the defection of key younger followers).
       In response to the 1961 crisis in Africa and to threats to Portuguese India from the Indian government, Salazar assumed the post of minister of defense (April 1961-December 1962). The failing leader, whose true state of health was kept from the public for as long as possible, appointed a group of younger cabinet officers in the 1960s, but no likely successors were groomed to take his place. Two of the older generation, Teotónio Pereira, who was in bad health, and Marcello Caetano, who preferred to remain at the University of Lisbon or in private law practice, remained in the political wilderness.
       As the colonial wars in three African territories grew more costly, Salazar became more isolated from reality. On 3 August 1968, while resting at his summer residence, the Fortress of São João do Estoril outside Lisbon, a deck chair collapsed beneath Salazar and his head struck the hard floor. Some weeks later, as a result, Salazar was incapacitated by a stroke and cerebral hemorrhage, was hospitalized, and became an invalid. While hesitating to fill the power vacuum that had unexpectedly appeared, President Tomás finally replaced Salazar as prime minister on 27 September 1968, with his former protégé and colleague, Marcello Caetano. Salazar was not informed that he no longer headed the government, but he never recovered his health. On 27 July 1970, Salazar died in Lisbon and was buried at Santa Comba Dão, Vimieiro, his village and place of birth.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Salazar, Antônio de Oliveira

  • 82 πρόσφυσις

    πρόσφῠσις, εως, [dialect] Ion. ιος, , ([etym.] προσφύομαι)
    A growing to: clinging to, of a rider, ἰσχυροτέρα π. a firmer seat, X.Eq.1.11; of vine to tree, D.H.19.2.
    II ongrowth, attachment or point of attachment, e.g. of the legs to the body, Diog.Apoll.6, Hp.Art.45; of the diaphragm to the spine, τῶν φρενῶν ibid.; of the navel in embryos, Arist.GA 745b24; of the caudal vertebrae in birds, Id.IA 710a4; of flowers to spray, leaves to stem, Thphr.HP3.16.4,al., 1.10.8, al.: freq. in Arist. of all after or adventitious growths which do not form part of the organism,

    ἓν γενέσθαι.. προσφύσει Ph. 227a17

    ; ἡ τοῦ ᾠοῦ π. GA 754b12; of zoöphytes, HA 548b8; assimilation,

    τῆς τροφῆς Pr. 866b21

    (prop., adhesion of food to tissues, Gal.Nat.Fac.1.11, 3.1); in trees, growth of new wood, Thphr.HP9.2.6; of a fungus, Id.Fr. 168.

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > πρόσφυσις

  • 83 Eastman, George

    [br]
    b. 12 July 1854 Waterville, New York, USA
    d. 14 March 1932 Rochester, New York, USA
    [br]
    American industrialist and pioneer of popular photography.
    [br]
    The young Eastman was a clerk-bookkeeper in the Rochester Savings Bank when in 1877 he took up photography. Taking lessons in the wet-plate process, he became an enthusiastic amateur photographer. However, the cumbersome equipment and noxious chemicals used in the process proved an obstacle, as he said, "It seemed to be that one ought to be able to carry less than a pack-horse load." Then he came across an account of the new gelatine dry-plate process in the British Journal of Photography of March 1878. He experimented in coating glass plates with the new emulsions, and was soon so successful that he decided to go into commercial manufacture. He devised a machine to simplify the coating of the plates, and travelled to England in July 1879 to patent it. In April 1880 he prepared to begin manufacture in a rented building in Rochester, and contacted the leading American photographic supply house, E. \& H.T.Anthony, offering them an option as agents. A local whip manufacturer, Henry A.Strong, invested $1,000 in the enterprise and the Eastman Dry Plate Company was formed on 1 January 1881. Still working at the Savings Bank, he ran the business in his spare time, and demand grew for the quality product he was producing. The fledgling company survived a near disaster in 1882 when the quality of the emulsions dropped alarmingly. Eastman later discovered this was due to impurities in the gelatine used, and this led him to test all raw materials rigorously for quality. In 1884 the company became a corporation, the Eastman Dry Plate \& Film Company, and a new product was announced. Mindful of his desire to simplify photography, Eastman, with a camera maker, William H.Walker, designed a roll-holder in which the heavy glass plates were replaced by a roll of emulsion-coated paper. The holders were made in sizes suitable for most plate cameras. Eastman designed and patented a coating machine for the large-scale production of the paper film, bringing costs down dramatically, the roll-holders were acclaimed by photographers worldwide, and prizes and medals were awarded, but Eastman was still not satisfied. The next step was to incorporate the roll-holder in a smaller, hand-held camera. His first successful design was launched in June 1888: the Kodak camera. A small box camera, it held enough paper film for 100 circular exposures, and was bought ready-loaded. After the film had been exposed, the camera was returned to Eastman's factory, where the film was removed, processed and printed, and the camera reloaded. This developing and printing service was the most revolutionary part of his invention, since at that time photographers were expected to process their own photographs, which required access to a darkroom and appropriate chemicals. The Kodak camera put photography into the hands of the countless thousands who wanted photographs without complications. Eastman's marketing slogan neatly summed up the advantage: "You Press the Button, We Do the Rest." The Kodak camera was the last product in the design of which Eastman was personally involved. His company was growing rapidly, and he recruited the most talented scientists and technicians available. New products emerged regularly—notably the first commercially produced celluloid roll film for the Kodak cameras in July 1889; this material made possible the introduction of cinematography a few years later. Eastman's philosophy of simplifying photography and reducing its costs continued to influence products: for example, the introduction of the one dollar, or five shilling, Brownie camera in 1900, which put photography in the hands of almost everyone. Over the years the Eastman Kodak Company, as it now was, grew into a giant multinational corporation with manufacturing and marketing organizations throughout the world. Eastman continued to guide the company; he pursued an enlightened policy of employee welfare and profit sharing decades before this was common in industry. He made massive donations to many concerns, notably the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and supported schemes for the education of black people, dental welfare, calendar reform, music and many other causes, he withdrew from the day-to-day control of the company in 1925, and at last had time for recreation. On 14 March 1932, suffering from a painful terminal cancer and after tidying up his affairs, he shot himself through the heart, leaving a note: "To my friends: My work is done. Why wait?" Although Eastman's technical innovations were made mostly at the beginning of his career, the organization which he founded and guided in its formative years was responsible for many of the major advances in photography over the years.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.Ackerman, 1929, George Eastman, Cambridge, Mass.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Eastman, George

  • 84 Spence, Peter

    SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology
    [br]
    b. 19 February 1806 Brechin, Forfarshire, Scotland
    d. 5 July 1883 Manchester, England
    [br]
    Scottish industrial chemist.
    [br]
    Spence was first apprenticed to a grocer and then joined his uncle's business. When that failed, he found work in a Dundee gasworks. During his spare time he had been studying chemistry, and in 1834 he established a small chemical works in London, which was none too successful. It was after a move to Burgh, near Carlisle, that his prospects brightened, with an improved method for making alum, a substance much used in the dyeing and textile industries. Spence obtained a patent in 1845 for extracting the substance from alum-containing shale by treating the burned shale and iron pyrites with sulphuric acid. He set up a plant at Pendleton, near Manchester, and enlarged the scale of his operation to become the largest manufacturer of alum in the world. The most profitable product was a crude form of alum known as aluminoferric. This came to be much in demand by the paper industry and in the treatment of sewage, an activity of growing importance in mid-Victorian Britain.
    Not all of Spence's ventures met with success; his attempts to exploit the phosphate deposits on the island of Redmonds in the West Indies lost heavily. He was an active citizen of Manchester, with a strongly Nonconformist tendency. He supported the cause against atmospheric pollution, although he himself was successfully prosecuted for pollution from his alum works at Pendleton; that prompted a move to Miles Platting, also near Manchester. In 1900, his firm became part of Laporte Industries Ltd.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Fenwick Allen, 1907, Some Founders of the Chemical Industry, London.
    Proc. Manchester Lit. Phil. Soc. (1883–4) 23:121.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Spence, Peter

  • 85 עול

    עוּל(interch. with עֲלַל) 1) to come, come in. Perf. עָל, עָאל; part. עָל, עָאֵיל, עָאֵל, עָיֵיל. Targ. O. Ex. 7:23 על; Targ. Y. עאל (ed. Amst. אָעַל). Targ. Y. ib. 33:9 עאיל (ed. Amst. אָעֵיל). Targ. O. Gen. 23:10 עָאלֵי (ed. Berl. a. oth. עָלֵי; Y. עֲלֵי). Targ. Prov. 17:10 עָאלָא ed. Lag. (oth. ed. עָלָא); a. fr.Y.Kidd.II, 63a top דחק סומכוס ועאל S. pressed on and went in. Yoma 51b נֵיעוּלוכ׳ (Ms. M. נעביד) let him make his entrance in the way prescribed by R. J. Ib. 52a ניעול בין מנורהוכ׳ let him make his entrance between the candlestick and the wall. Pes.112a; B. Bath.21a שבשתא כיון דעל על a mistake once entered (into the mind) remains therein. Sabb.98b האי עָיֵיל והאי נפיק one will go in (recede), the other go out (protrude, i. e. form an uneven surface.); a. v. fr. 2) to bring in. Targ. Y. Gen. 6:19 תֵעוֹל ed. Vien. (v. עֲלַל).Gen. R. s. 67 (ref. to ועל חרבך Gen. 27:40) עול חרבךוכ׳ bring thy sword home (into its sheath), and thou shalt live; (Yalk. ib. 115 תטול, read: תֵּעוּל). Pa. עַיֵּיל 1) to come in habitually. Inf. מְעַיֵּיל, v. מֵעֲלָא. 2) to bring in, insert. Ḥull.42b אפיק … ועַיֵּיל, v. נֽפַק. Erub.44b בעי עַיְּילִינְהוּ wanted to bring them in. Sabb.96b מה לי אפוקי ומה לי עַיּיוּלֵי what is the difference between carrying out and bringing in? Erub.38b ע׳ רב חסדאוכ׳ R. Ḥ. brought (the subject) in, in order to show a contradiction Keth.61a, עַיְּילִיתוכ׳, v. חֲרִיקָא. Ib. 101a עַיְּילָא ליה גלימא if she brought him a cloak (as dowry). Yoma 47a נְעַיֵּיל והדר נעייל shall he bring in (one portion) and again bring in (another portion)?; a. fr. 3) to produce, develop, ripen. R. Hash. 13a ודילמא לא ע׳ כלל perhaps it means when it (the growing vegetation) had not yet begun to ripen at all? Ib. דע׳ ביד נכרי the barley of which the ‘Omer was brought had ripened while in the possession of a gentile (a Canaanite). Ib. דע׳ ריבעא if it has developped one fourth of the full size; a. e. Ithpa. אִתְעַיֵּיל to insert ones self; to get in. Yoma 51b ולא מִתְעַיֵּיל ליה he could not get himself in (between the table and the wall). Af. אָעֵיל; Ittaf. אִיתָּעַל, Ithpe. אִתְעַל, v. עֲלַל.

    Jewish literature > עול

  • 86 עוּל

    עוּל(interch. with עֲלַל) 1) to come, come in. Perf. עָל, עָאל; part. עָל, עָאֵיל, עָאֵל, עָיֵיל. Targ. O. Ex. 7:23 על; Targ. Y. עאל (ed. Amst. אָעַל). Targ. Y. ib. 33:9 עאיל (ed. Amst. אָעֵיל). Targ. O. Gen. 23:10 עָאלֵי (ed. Berl. a. oth. עָלֵי; Y. עֲלֵי). Targ. Prov. 17:10 עָאלָא ed. Lag. (oth. ed. עָלָא); a. fr.Y.Kidd.II, 63a top דחק סומכוס ועאל S. pressed on and went in. Yoma 51b נֵיעוּלוכ׳ (Ms. M. נעביד) let him make his entrance in the way prescribed by R. J. Ib. 52a ניעול בין מנורהוכ׳ let him make his entrance between the candlestick and the wall. Pes.112a; B. Bath.21a שבשתא כיון דעל על a mistake once entered (into the mind) remains therein. Sabb.98b האי עָיֵיל והאי נפיק one will go in (recede), the other go out (protrude, i. e. form an uneven surface.); a. v. fr. 2) to bring in. Targ. Y. Gen. 6:19 תֵעוֹל ed. Vien. (v. עֲלַל).Gen. R. s. 67 (ref. to ועל חרבך Gen. 27:40) עול חרבךוכ׳ bring thy sword home (into its sheath), and thou shalt live; (Yalk. ib. 115 תטול, read: תֵּעוּל). Pa. עַיֵּיל 1) to come in habitually. Inf. מְעַיֵּיל, v. מֵעֲלָא. 2) to bring in, insert. Ḥull.42b אפיק … ועַיֵּיל, v. נֽפַק. Erub.44b בעי עַיְּילִינְהוּ wanted to bring them in. Sabb.96b מה לי אפוקי ומה לי עַיּיוּלֵי what is the difference between carrying out and bringing in? Erub.38b ע׳ רב חסדאוכ׳ R. Ḥ. brought (the subject) in, in order to show a contradiction Keth.61a, עַיְּילִיתוכ׳, v. חֲרִיקָא. Ib. 101a עַיְּילָא ליה גלימא if she brought him a cloak (as dowry). Yoma 47a נְעַיֵּיל והדר נעייל shall he bring in (one portion) and again bring in (another portion)?; a. fr. 3) to produce, develop, ripen. R. Hash. 13a ודילמא לא ע׳ כלל perhaps it means when it (the growing vegetation) had not yet begun to ripen at all? Ib. דע׳ ביד נכרי the barley of which the ‘Omer was brought had ripened while in the possession of a gentile (a Canaanite). Ib. דע׳ ריבעא if it has developped one fourth of the full size; a. e. Ithpa. אִתְעַיֵּיל to insert ones self; to get in. Yoma 51b ולא מִתְעַיֵּיל ליה he could not get himself in (between the table and the wall). Af. אָעֵיל; Ittaf. אִיתָּעַל, Ithpe. אִתְעַל, v. עֲלַל.

    Jewish literature > עוּל

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