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Have you ever dreamed? And wished you hadn't? Then awakened, sweat
drenched? To find you were not sure what was a dream and what was
not? Then thought about the dreaming symbols? Perhaps, messages for
your daytime life? Or wondered if your nodding thoughts were
messages from the great beyond? Were messages that after death will
yet carry on? If you can still but wonder, then come along and
wander in my Knightly Tale. Did I dream each passing scene? Or, was
it told, through me, by a muse not mine? Know that in dreaming,
That if time could bend, And stretch, Grow fat and thin, Then one
would no longer wonder - Where I've been, Or, what I am. Enjoy the
dream. Daniel C. Sullivan
Historians and sociologists have been consistently - albeit
gloomily - enthralled by Max Weber's model of the inevitable rise
of the neurocrat. However, literary critics positively boast that
writers, like academics, cannot 'do admin'. While Weber's thesis
about the rise of the entrepreneur - all fire, individuality,
thrust - is in tune with what we think literature is about, his
thesis about the rise of the bureaucrat is not, yet 'creative
bureaucracy' is not only a euphemism for bending the rules.
Literature in the Public Service shows how the public service makes
its workers original, taking them beyond an individuated point of
view to imagine the perfect public system. Creativity theorists too
have swapped the model of solitary inspiration for a managed
creative environment. John Milton, Anthony Trollope, and David Hare
are examples of how authors work in and write about the public
service, during its crisis moments.
Examines the complexity and the humanity of the opioid epidemic
America's opioid epidemic continues to ravage families and
communities, despite intense media coverage, federal legislation,
criminal prosecutions, and harm reduction efforts to prevent
overdose deaths. More than 450,000 Americans have died from opioid
overdoses since the late 1990s. In Opioid Reckoning, Amy C.
Sullivan explores the complexity of the crisis through firsthand
accounts of people grappling with the reverberating effects of
stigma, treatment, and recovery. Nearly everyone in the United
States has been touched in some way by the opioid epidemic,
including the author and her family. Sullivan uses her own story as
a launching point to learn how the opioid epidemic challenged
longstanding recovery protocols in Minnesota, a state
internationally recognized for pioneering addiction treatment. By
centering the voices of many people who have experienced opioid
use, treatment, recovery, and loss, Sullivan exposes the
devastating effects of a one-size-fits-all approach toward
treatment of opioid dependency. Taking a clear-eyed, nonjudgmental
perspective of every aspect of these issues-drug use, parenting,
harm reduction, medication, abstinence, and stigma-Opioid Reckoning
questions current treatment models, healthcare inequities, and the
criminal justice system. Sullivan also imagines a future where
anyone suffering an opioid-use disorder has access to the
individualized care, without judgment, available to those with
other health problems. Opioid Reckoning presents a captivating look
at how the state that invented "rehab" addresses the challenges of
the opioid epidemic and its overdose deaths while also taking
readers into the intimate lives of families, medical and social
work professionals, grassroots activists, and many others impacted
by the crisis who contribute their insights and potential
solutions. In sharing these stories and chronicling their lessons,
Sullivan offers a path forward that cultivates empathy, love, and
hope for anyone affected by chaotic drug use and its harms.
How can one make state administrative systems interesting, embody
an abstract public ethos and give heroism to homogeneity? The
discipline of literature and bureaucracy dismisses Weber's
'neurocrat'. Milton, Trollope and Hare are case studies on
implementing the 'what if' visions literature explored during a
period of great change in public service
Examines the complexity and the humanity of the opioid epidemic
America’s opioid epidemic continues to ravage families and
communities, despite intense media coverage, federal legislation,
criminal prosecutions, and harm reduction efforts to prevent
overdose deaths. More than 450,000 Americans have died from opioid
overdoses since the late 1990s. In Opioid Reckoning, Amy C.
Sullivan explores the complexity of the crisis through firsthand
accounts of people grappling with the reverberating effects of
stigma, treatment, and recovery. Nearly everyone in the
United States has been touched in some way by the opioid epidemic,
including the author and her family. Sullivan uses her own story as
a launching point to learn how the opioid epidemic challenged
longstanding recovery protocols in Minnesota, a state
internationally recognized for pioneering addiction treatment. By
centering the voices of many people who have experienced opioid
use, treatment, recovery, and loss, Sullivan exposes the
devastating effects of a one-size-fits-all approach toward
treatment of opioid dependency. Taking a clear-eyed, nonjudgmental
perspective of every aspect of these issues—drug use, parenting,
harm reduction, medication, abstinence, and stigma—Opioid
Reckoning questions current treatment models, healthcare
inequities, and the criminal justice system. Sullivan also imagines
a future where anyone suffering an opioid-use disorder has access
to the individualized care, without judgment, available to those
with other health problems. Opioid Reckoning presents a
captivating look at how the state that invented “rehabâ€
addresses the challenges of the opioid epidemic and its overdose
deaths while also taking readers into the intimate lives of
families, medical and social work professionals, grassroots
activists, and many others impacted by the crisis who contribute
their insights and potential solutions. In sharing these stories
and chronicling their lessons, Sullivan offers a path forward that
cultivates empathy, love, and hope for anyone affected by chaotic
drug use and its harms.
Florence Nightingale is best known as a woman of action--a founder
of modern nursing, a reformer in the field of public health, and a
pioneer in the use of statistics. What is not generally appreciated
is that Nightingale was deeply engaged in the religious and
philosophical thought of her time and that the primary aim of her
life was not to reform social institutions but to serve God.
Although Nightingale gave primacy to her spiritual life, few of the
books written about her have done so, and, until recently, few of
her own writings about religion have been published. This failure
to attend to Nightingale's spiritual life began to change during
the 1980s, most significantly with the 1994 publication of
Suggestions for Thought, her own presentation of her religious
views.
At the heart of "The Friendship of Florence Nightingale and Mary
Clare Moore" are forty-seven letters written by Nightingale to
Moore--her "Dearest Reverend Mother"--the founding superior of the
Roman Catholic Sisters of Mercy in Bermondsey, London; ten letters
written by Moore to Nightingale; and five letters written by
Nightingale about Clare to other Sisters of Mercy. These letters
illustrate the personal lives and spiritual struggles and
aspirations of two highly influential women in Victorian England:
one working to achieve military and governmental reforms, the other
designing and implementing new church-related services to the
poor-both bound together by their devotion to those who were
neglected, by nursing and other skills, by mature Christian faith,
and by their engaging affection for one another.
The closed orbits of three-dimensional flows form knots and links.
This book develops the tools - template theory and symbolic
dynamics - needed for studying knotted orbits. This theory is
applied to the problems of understanding local and global
bifurcations, as well as the embedding data of orbits in
Morse-smale, Smale, and integrable Hamiltonian flows. The
necesssary background theory is sketched; however, some familiarity
with low-dimensional topology and differential equations is
assumed.
This elegant Fourth Edition of Chip Sullivan's classic Drawing the
Landscape shows how to use drawing as a path towards understanding
the natural and built environment. It offers guidance for tapping
into and exploring personal creative potential and helps readers
master the essential principles, tools, and techniques required to
prepare professional graphic representations in landscape
architecture and architecture. It illustrates how to create a wide
range of graphic representations using step-by-step tutorials,
exercises and hundreds of samples.
A visual journey through the history of landscape design
For thousands of years, people have altered the meaning of space
by reshaping nature. As an art form, these architectural landscape
creations are stamped with societal imprints unique to their
environment and place in time.
"Illustrated History of Landscape Design" takes an optical sweep
of the iconic landscapes constructed throughout the ages. Organized
by century and geographic region, this highly visual reference uses
hundreds of masterful pen-and-ink drawings to show how historical
context and cultural connections can illuminate today's design
possibilities.
This guide includes:
Storyboards, case studies, and visual narratives to portray
spaces
Plan, section, and elevation drawings of key spaces
Summaries of design concepts, principles, and vocabularies
Historic and contemporary works of art that illuminate a
specific era
Descriptions of how the landscape has been shaped over time in
response to human need
Directing both students and practitioners along a visually
stimulating timeline, "Illustrated History of Landscape Design" is
a valuable educational tool as well as an endless source
ofinspiration.
Jane Austen's six novels are true classics, still immensely popular
some 200 years after their first publication. But although the
celebrated stories never change, the covers are always different.
"Jane Austen Cover to Cover" compiles two centuries of design, from
elegant Victorian hardcovers and the famed 1894 "Peacock" edition
to 1950s pulp, movie tie-in editions, graphic novels,
foreign-language translations, and many, many others. Filled with
beautiful artwork and insightful commentary, this fascinating and
visually intriguing collection is a must for Janeites, design
geeks, and book lovers of every stripe.
In March 2010, President Obama signed into law a comprehensive
health reform bill, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA), and a package of amendments to PPACA, as well as the
Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act (HCERA). PPACA
includes numerous provisions intended to increase the primary care
and public health workforce, promote preventive services and
strengthen quality measurement. This book on PPACA and HCERA
focuses on the new law's workforce, public health, health care
quality and related provisions. It includes summaries of these
provisions, explores some of their implications for health policy
and contains an associated timeline.
Please visit www.cancerstaging.org for information about content
updates and staging forms. The AJCC Cancer Staging Manual is used
by physicians and health care professionals throughout the world to
facilitate the uniform description and reporting of neoplastic
diseases. Proper classification and staging of cancer is essential
for the physician to assign proper treatment, evaluate results of
management and clinical trials, and to serve as the standard for
local, regional and international reporting on cancer incidence and
outcome. Significantly expanded and developed by international
disease site expert panels, the Eighth Edition AJCC Cancer Staging
Manual brings together all the currently available knowledge on
staging of cancer at various anatomic sites. In this edition,
evidence-based TNM staging is supplemented, as appropriate, by
selected molecular markers and newly acquired insights into the
molecular underpinnings of cancer. This edition features 12
entirely new staging systems, a wide range of changed or new
staging definitions, and a refined emphasis on a
personalized-medicine approach. To enhance the print and electronic
usability of the cancer staging forms, they are now available
exclusively for access and downloading at www.cancerstaging.org.
The Eighth Edition AJCC Cancer Staging Manual remains the gold
standard reference for oncologists, surgeons, pathologists,
radiologists, cancer registrars and medical professionals
world-wide to ensure that all those caring for cancer patients are
fully versed in the language of cancer staging.
From 2012-2014, local historian Patrick Sullivan collected the
stories of World War II veterans currently living in Macon County,
Illinois. Those stories, told in the veterans' own words, are
presented here. All proceeds from the sale of this book will go to
preserving the Macon County World War II Memorial.
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