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Art History And Economics: Graduate studies at the pres-tisiims Research Institute of Agricultural Economics in Moscow led to his obtaining a doctorate in 1936. He embarked on a successful career in aericultural economics, serving as senior research associate at the Institute of Economics of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and as a member of the editorial board of the journal Problems of Economics.
The author Philip Jodidio studied art history and economics at Harvard University, and was Editor-in-Chief of the leading French art journal Connaissance des Arts for over two decades.
Furnace development in other industries fo lowed a similar but independent pattern. Tlj Romans, for example, developed an efficient fu nace system for their bathhouses. The history i combustion furnaces is thus, in a sense, ide tified with the unconnected histories of individu processes, and it is only within the last 100 ye that dissemination of technical literature and formation has given some degree of homogeneitj to furnace concepts.
The history of electric furnaces, in contr; to that of combustion furnaces, is well do mented. The furnace industry quickly adopted, i the extent that economics would permit, new" developments made possible by the growing electrical generating industry. The history of the electric furnace is less than 100 years old, and most of the development has come in the 20th century. |
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