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 An extraordinary story about living on your own asÂ
an undocumented immigrant. Ten-year-old Feng Li Lin is so excited
for her family's first trip to the United States! But after an
action-packed two weeks, she and her siblings learn that they will
remain indefinitely in California while first their father and then
their mother returns to Taiwan. Suddenly Feng Li and her siblings
are thrust into an alien world where the fear of being discovered
by immigration become a daily reality. Parachute Kids digs deep
into the hardships and psychological challenges of being left to
fend for yourself in an unfamiliar place, while celebrating the
comical moments and the incredible courage it takes to make a life
on your own. Betty C. Tang is the New York Times bestselling
illustrator of the Jacky Ha-Ha series of graphic novels by James
Patterson and Chris Grabenstein.
Since the end of the First World War, the legend of "Lawrence of Arabia" has enjoyed a place in the popular imagination of the West. Behind the legend, however, is a man, Thomas Edward Lawrence, whose life and art reflect the modern consciousness and the war that indelibly marked it. This volume addresses what has been overlooked by the legend and illuminates the legacy of T. E. Lawrence's presence in the 20th century. Contributors explore Lawrence's relation to other major writers, the colonial and postcolonial implications of his link with Arabia, his sexuality, and his status as cultural icon.
Perspective of Neurochemistry in Neurological Disorders.-
Selegiline Induces "Trophic-Like" Rescue of Dying Neurons without
Mao Inhibition.- Aliphatic Propargylamines, a New Series of Potent
Selective, Irreversible Non-Amphetamine-Like MAO-B Inhibitors.-
Medical Treatment of Parkinson's Disease.- Neuropharmacological
Effects of (-)-Stepholidine and Its Analogues on Brain Dopaminergic
System.- Neurotoxicity of MPTP and Uptake of MPPT into Dopamine and
Norepinephrine Neurons in Mice.- Linopirdine.- Differential Changes
in Regional Brain Ganglioside and Neutral Glycosphingolipid
Contents in Alzheimer's Disease.- Action of Organophosphate
Anticholinesterases on the Three Conformational States of Nicotinic
Receptor.- Purification and Characterization of a Novel
Neurotoxin-Kappa Bungarotoxin.- Development of Antidepressant
Drugs.- The Identification of Heterogeneity of 5-HT Receptors with
[H]Rs-42358-197.- Advances in Clinical Research on Common Mental
Disorders with Computer Controlled Electro-Acupuncture Treatment.-
The Importance of Glutamate Receptors in Brain Ischemia.-
Biochemical Study of the Postischemic Neuronal Damage.- Effects of
Ilexonin A on Circulatory Neuroregulation.- Study on
Cerebrovascular Disease of the Elderly in China.- Cellular
Physiology of Epileptogenic Phenomena.- The Clinical Pharmacology
of Antiepileptic Drugs.- Hemodynamic Actions of Huatuo
Reconstruction Pill on Anesthetized Animals.- Treatment of
Affective Disorders.- Studies of Diagnosis and Pathogenesis of
Wilson's Disease.- Evidence for Presynaptic Damage in Myasthenia
Gravis.
Repetition and Race explores the literary forms and critical
frameworks occasioned by the widespread institutionalization of
liberal multiculturalism by turning to the exemplary case of Asian
American literature. Whether beheld as "model minorities" or
objects of "racist love," Asian Americans have long inhabited the
uneasy terrain of institutional embrace that characterizes the
official antiracism of our contemporary moment. Repetition and Race
argues that Asian American literature registers and responds to
this historical context through formal structures of repetition.
Forwarding a new, dialectical conception of repetition that draws
together progress and return, motion and stasis, agency and
subjection, creativity and compulsion, this book reinterprets the
political grammar of four forms of repetition central to minority
discourse: trauma, pastiche, intertextuality, and self-reflexivity.
Working against narratives of multicultural triumph, the book shows
how texts by Theresa Cha, Susan Choi, Karen Tei Yamashita,
Chang-rae Lee, and Maxine Hong Kingston use structures of
repetition to foreground moments of social and aesthetic impasse,
suspension, or hesitation rather than instances of reversal or
resolution. Reading Asian American texts for the way they
allegorize and negotiate, rather than resolve, key tensions
animating Asian American culture, Repetition and Race maps both the
penetrating reach of liberal multiculturalism's disciplinary
formations and an expanded field of cultural politics for minority
literature.
An Introduction to Compressible Flow, Second Edition covers the
material typical of a single-semester course in compressible flow.
The book begins with a brief review of thermodynamics and control
volume fluid dynamics, then proceeds to cover isentropic flow,
normal shock waves, shock tubes, oblique shock waves, Prandtl-Meyer
expansion fans, Fanno-line flow, Rayleigh-line flow, and conical
shock waves. The book includes a chapter on linearized flow
following chapters on oblique shocks and Prandtl-Meyer flows to
appropriately ground students in this approximate method. It
includes detailed appendices to support problem solutions and
covers new oblique shock tables, which allow for quick and accurate
solutions of flows with concave corners. The book is intended for
senior undergraduate engineering students studying thermal-fluids
and practicing engineers in the areas of aerospace or energy
conversion. This book is also useful in providing supplemental
coverage of compressible flow material in gas turbine and
aerodynamics courses.
An Introduction to Compressible Flow, Second Edition covers the
material typical of a single-semester course in compressible flow.
The book begins with a brief review of thermodynamics and control
volume fluid dynamics, then proceeds to cover isentropic flow,
normal shock waves, shock tubes, oblique shock waves, Prandtl-Meyer
expansion fans, Fanno-line flow, Rayleigh-line flow, and conical
shock waves. The book includes a chapter on linearized flow
following chapters on oblique shocks and Prandtl-Meyer flows to
appropriately ground students in this approximate method. It
includes detailed appendices to support problem solutions and
covers new oblique shock tables, which allow for quick and accurate
solutions of flows with concave corners. The book is intended for
senior undergraduate engineering students studying thermal-fluids
and practicing engineers in the areas of aerospace or energy
conversion. This book is also useful in providing supplemental
coverage of compressible flow material in gas turbine and
aerodynamics courses.
This transformative textbook, first of its kind to incorporate
engineering principles into medical education and practice, will be
a useful tool for physicians, medical students, biomedical
engineers, biomedical engineering students, and healthcare
executives. The central approach of the proposed textbook is to
provide principles of engineering as applied to medicine and guide
the medical students and physicians in achieving the goal of
solving medical problems by engineering principles and
methodologies. For the medical students and physicians, this
proposed textbook will train them to "think like an engineer and
act as a physician". The textbook contains a variety of teaching
techniques including class lectures, small group discussions, group
projects, and individual projects, with the goals of not just
helping students and professionals to understand the principles and
methods of engineering, but also guiding students and professionals
to develop real-life solutions. For the biomedical engineers and
biomedical engineering students, this proposed textbook will give
them a large framework and global perspective of how engineering
principles could positively impact real-life medicine. To the
healthcare executives, the goal of this book is to provide them
general guidance and specific examples of applying engineering
principles in implementing solution-oriented methodology to their
healthcare enterprises. Overall goals of this book are to help
improve the overall quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery
and outcomes.
This transformative textbook, first of its kind to incorporate
engineering principles into medical education and practice, will be
a useful tool for physicians, medical students, biomedical
engineers, biomedical engineering students, and healthcare
executives. The central approach of the proposed textbook is to
provide principles of engineering as applied to medicine and guide
the medical students and physicians in achieving the goal of
solving medical problems by engineering principles and
methodologies. For the medical students and physicians, this
proposed textbook will train them to "think like an engineer and
act as a physician". The textbook contains a variety of teaching
techniques including class lectures, small group discussions, group
projects, and individual projects, with the goals of not just
helping students and professionals to understand the principles and
methods of engineering, but also guiding students and professionals
to develop real-life solutions. For the biomedical engineers and
biomedical engineering students, this proposed textbook will give
them a large framework and global perspective of how engineering
principles could positively impact real-life medicine. To the
healthcare executives, the goal of this book is to provide them
general guidance and specific examples of applying engineering
principles in implementing solution-oriented methodology to their
healthcare enterprises. Overall goals of this book are to help
improve the overall quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery
and outcomes.
Neurological disorders cause untold suffering and financial burden
to hundreds of thousands of people, not only to the patients, but
also the relatives and society. As of today, though numerous
scientists and clinicians have devoted their efforts to understand
and combat these diseases, there is still no cure or satisfactory
solution to the problems. Furthermore, the brain is the most
essential organ of a human being. Realizing the importance of the
brain, the president of the United States, George Bush, declared
the 90s as the Decade of the Brain in January, 1992. Being in
neuroscience research for almost three decades, I initiated,
planned and organized the first international neuropharmacology
symposium. After long negotiation and fund raising, with the
assistance and moral support of Dr. Abel Lajtha, director ofthe
Center ofNeurochem istry in New York, USA, we finally successfully
put the program together. The Sun Yat-sen Foundation in China
supported all the local expenses of the symposium and Sun Yat-sen
University of Medicine in Guangzhou, China served as host
organization. The symposium was held in Guangzhou, China, November
9-11,1992, the eve of Dr. Sun Yat-sen's birthday. Dr. Sun Yat-sen
was born in Cui Heng Cun, on the outskirts of Guangzhou, China on
November 12, 1866. He finished his high school education in the
British and American Christian school in Honolulu, where he was
exposed to Western influence. He had been long frustrated and
discontented with the backwardness and corruption of the Ching
Dynasty.
Provides an introduction of the data industry to the field of
economics This book bridges the gap between economics and data
science to help data scientists understand the economics of big
data, and enable economists to analyze the data industry. It begins
by explaining data resources and introduces the data asset. This
book defines a data industry chain, enumerates data enterprises
business models versus operating models, and proposes a mode of
industrial development for the data industry. The author describes
five types of enterprise agglomerations, and multiple industrial
cluster effects. A discussion on the establishment and development
of data industry related laws and regulations is provided. In
addition, this book discusses several scenarios on how to convert
data driving forces into productivity that can then serve society.
This book is designed to serve as a reference and training guide
for ata scientists, data-oriented managers and executives,
entrepreneurs, scholars, and government employees. * Defines and
develops the concept of a Data Industry, and explains the economics
of data to data scientists and statisticians * Includes numerous
case studies and examples from a variety of industries and
disciplines * Serves as a useful guide for practitioners and
entrepreneurs in the business of data technology The Data Industry:
The Business and Economics of Information and Big Data is a
resource for practitioners in the data science industry,
government, and students in economics, business, and statistics.
CHUNLEI TANG, Ph.D., is a research fellow at Harvard University.
She is the co-founder of Fudan s Institute for Data Industry and
proposed the concept of the data industry . She received a Ph.D. in
Computer and Software Theory in 2012 and a Master of Software
Engineering in 2006 from Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
Since the end of the First World War, the legend of 'Lawrence of
Arabia' has enjoyed much currency in the popular imagination of the
West. Behind this legend, however, is a man, Thomas Edward
Lawrence, tortured and brilliant, a man whose life and literature
reflect the modern consciousness and the war that indelibly marked
it. Here in this volume are essays which seek to address what has
been overlooked by the legend and to better understand the legacy
of his presence in the twentieth century. Contributors explore
Lawrence's relation to other major writers of his time, the
colonial and postcolonial implications of his link with Arabia, his
sexuality, and his status as cultural icon.
In recent years "C"-glycoside chemistry has been one of the main
topics in carbohydrate chemistry, not only because of the synthetic
challenges posed, but also because "C"-glycosides have the
potential to serve as carbohydrate analogues resistant to metabolic
processes. Consequently, this class of compounds is currently
receiving much interest as a potential source of therapeutic agents
for clinical use. This book provides a broad coverage of the
various synthetic methods available for the preparation of
"C"-glycosides, and illustrates the interesting breadth of
connections between carbohydrate chemistry and modern general
synthetic organic chemistry by including topics such as
transition-metal catalysis, radical chemistry, cycloaddition and
rearrangement processes. In addition, in the final chapter of the
book, the syntheses of C-di and trisaccharides reported through
1994 are reviewed. This well organised account of the synthetic
chemistry in this field will prove to be very valuable to a wide
range of researchers and advanced students, both as an introduction
to the topic and for reference.
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