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It’s almost impossible to overstate the benefits of creating a
well-planned pond in your garden or field. This detailed and
practical guide will give the novice and experienced gardener alike
a straightforward explanation of how to plan, construct and plant a
thriving pond, avoiding common problems and establishing a haven
for wildlife.
You will enjoy the stories you are about to read.....David Kerr has
a wholesome, mischievous humor with a creative insight reminiscent
of those early homemade philosophers........I'm sure that Will
Rogers, Mark Twain, and other names are familiar to you still.
DuWayne Furman, Ph.D. Human Growth and Development University of
Nebraska "(More Tales of the Strange and Wonderful) cannot really
be placed in any particular genre. it is a fascinating combination
of local folklore, true stories (many from David's youth in
Huntsville), interspersed with Bible stories and parables told and
spun from a slightly different perspective. Rushville Rotary Club
Outside the box. Out of the mainstream. Tales of the Strange and
Wonderful uncovers some of the strangest and most wonderful stories
of the Bible and brings them to you as only an old turkey hunter
can spin them. You will enjoy the stories you are about to read in
this book. David Kerr has a wholesome, mischievous sense of humor
with a creative insight reminiscent of those early homemade
philosophers who have endeared themselves to American readers for
over one-hundred-fifty years; although the earliest are seldom read
much anymore. In these stories, you will find some long-familiar
Biblical themes viewed from a different perspective, which
sometimes embellishes, sometimes disturbs, but will bring a smile,
if not a laugh. You will find that they come back to you in your
thoughts. They are stories that can be read again and again. You
will relate to the events, people, and activities included in this
wonderfully witty collection of stories. From "The Witch of Endor"
to "The Maniac of Gardara," they will enrich your life in
surprising ways.
If we could know in 2020 what we will know in 2025 (only five
foreseeable years into the future), how would we change our
attitudes, actions, and the way in which we practice law, the
services we offer, the clients we target, and the ways in which we
choose to deliver our services? Indeed - if we could have known a
year ago the events of the first three months in 2020, what might
we have done to prepare? The American writer and humorist, Mark
Twain, advised: "When everybody is out digging for gold, the
business to be in is selling shovels!" So, what foreseeable trend
may represent the figurative "shovel" that every client will need
tomorrow?
This book provides an overview of Data Monitoring Committees(DMC) -
what was done in the past, what is currently being done, and
thoughts on improvements for the future. Previous works focused
primarily on large cardiovascular studies (where DMCs originated
more than 30 years ago) but updated references are needed that
discuss smaller, more flexible studies in areas such as oncology.
The authors have attended ~800 DMC meetings from ~200 distinct
studies across all areas of clinical studies (oncology,
rheumatology, rare diseases, cardiology, immunology, etc.) This
wide range of expertise will be used, as well as the expertise that
comes from working with virtually every large biotechnology
and pharmaceutical company and CRO for DMC work. The reader
of the book will know when DMCs are needed or helpful, how to form
the DMC, how to work with external CROs and with sponsor teams and
the DMC to create needed DMC outputs, how the DMC meetings are
conducted, and - especially for DMC members - what are
considerations within the Closed Session to review safety/efficacy
outputs to assess risk/benefit to make appropriate recommendations
that protect the patient safety and trial integrity. This is a
practical hands-on book on how to decide if a DMC is necessary, how
to form the DMC, how to expertly create the necessary materials for
the DMC and have smooth running DMC meetings. There is no
specialized training in school about how DMCs work - frequently
people may have been in industry for many years without ever
needing to work with a DMC. This book is the helpful reference for
those new to these DMCs. The DMC work is critical to be
correctly implemented as the impact of DMC activity on safeguarding
the trial is so important.This book provides the following:
Provides thorough instructions on the steps needed to form and
implement a Data Monitoring Committee for clinical trial
evaluation; Includes practical and hands-on information on DMC
implementation; Discusses a wide range of clinical trial – by
phase and therapeutic area.
The advent of the World Wide Web has changed the perspectives of
groupware systems. The interest and deployment of Internet and
intranet groupware solutions is growing rapidly, not just in
academic circles but also in the commercial arena. The first
generation of Web-based groupware tools has already started to
emerge, and leading groupware vendors are urgently adapting their
products for compatibility and integration with Web technologies.
The focus of Groupware and the World Wide Web is to explore the
potential for Web-based groupware. This book includes an analysis
of the key characteristics of the Web, presenting reasons for its
success, and describes developments of a diverse range of Web-based
groupware systems. An emphasis on the technical obstacles and
challenges is implemented by more analytical discussions and
perspectives, including that of Information Technology managers
looking to deploy groupware solutions within their organizations.
Written by experts from different backgrounds - academic and
commercial, technical and organizational - this book provides a
unique overview of and insight into current issues and future
possibilities concerning extension of the World Wide Web for group
working.
Published in 1994. Integrating cross-curricular themes into the
curriculum has emerged as a major challenge for all schools. What
is their relevance to the specialist subject teacher? How can the
hard-pressed teacher ensure their coverage through the statutory
programmes of study and statements of attainment? How does a school
ensure that each pupil's experience makes sense - across the
curriculum, at any one time, and in the course of time? How can a
school link with partners in the local community to enhance
cross-curricular work? This challenge remains as National
Curriculum content and procedures are streamlined. Primary and
secondary school teachers will find here a book filled with
practical suggestions from a wide range of subject-specialist
viewpoints. These highlight opportunities for developing economic
and industrial understanding (EIU) and economic awareness through
work in the other cross-curricular areas, through the National
Curriculum core and foundation subjects and through other areas of
study. Whatever the shape of the National Curriculum in years to
come, this book and its companion volumes provide - for heads and
deputies, teachers engaged in curriculum coordination and delivery,
school inspectors, advisers, initial teacher trainers, INSET
providers and those in the community - a wealth of ideas to embed
cross-curricular issues into the whole school and its curriculum.
Diabetes Digital Health and Telehealth explains, from technologic,
economic and sociologic standpoints how digital health and
telehealth have come to dominate the management of diabetes. The
book also includes information on improved telemedicine tools and
platforms for communicating with patients, reviewing medical
records, and interpreting data from wearable devices. In addition,
evolving wearable sensors such as continuous glucose monitors,
closed loop automated insulin delivery systems, cuffless blood
pressure monitors, exercise monitors and smart insulin pens are
covered.
Diabetes Digital Health brings together the multifaceted
information surrounding the science of digital health from an
academic, regulatory, industrial, investment and cybersecurity
perspective. Clinicians and researchers who are developing and
evaluating mobile apps for diabetes patients will find this
essential reading, as will industry people whose companies are
developing mobile apps and sensors.
Citizenship through Secondary History reveals the potential of
history to engage with citizenship education and includes: a review
of the links between citizenship education and the teaching and
learning of history an analysis of how citizenship education is
characterised, raising key issues about what could and should be
achieved a critique of the discipline and the pitfalls to avoid in
teaching citizenship through history case studies offering
practical teaching suggestions. History teaching is at the vanguard
of citizenship education - the past is the springboard from which
citizens learn to think and act. This book offers positive and
direct ways to get involved in the thinking that must underpin any
worthwhile citizenship education, for all professional teachers,
student teachers in history, policy-makers, heads of department and
principals.
Addressing education for citizenship and the teaching of democracy
in schools, the final report of the advisory group set up by the
Secretary of State for Education notes a need for citizenship
education as a distinct part of the curriculum, but also recognizes
that "it can be taught in combination with other subjects". It
highlights history as one of the key subjects. This book defines
the contribution that history can make to citizenship and democracy
education, and which it must make if citizenship education is to be
effective in a crowded curriculum. It addresses both the ways in
which the content and the pedagogy of the secondary history
curriculum can contribute to the teaching of citizenship and ways
in which the proposed content of the curriculum for citizenship can
be addressed through history. Theoretical discussion is used to
provide a platform for the presentation of practical teaching
suggestions. The use of case studies in the final section clarifies
classroom issues.
Published in 1994. Integrating cross-curricular themes into the
curriculum has emerged as a major challenge for all schools. What
is their relevance to the specialist subject teacher? How can the
hard-pressed teacher ensure their coverage through the statutory
programmes of study and statements of attainment? How does a school
ensure that each pupil's experience makes sense - across the
curriculum, at any one time, and in the course of time? How can a
school link with partners in the local community to enhance
cross-curricular work? This challenge remains as National
Curriculum content and procedures are streamlined. Primary and
secondary school teachers will find here a book filled with
practical suggestions from a wide range of subject-specialist
viewpoints. These highlight opportunities for developing economic
and industrial understanding (EIU) and economic awareness through
work in the other cross-curricular areas, through the National
Curriculum core and foundation subjects and through other areas of
study. Whatever the shape of the National Curriculum in years to
come, this book and its companion volumes provide - for heads and
deputies, teachers engaged in curriculum coordination and delivery,
school inspectors, advisers, initial teacher trainers, INSET
providers and those in the community - a wealth of ideas to embed
cross-curricular issues into the whole school and its curriculum.
Democracy should enable citizens to play an informed role in
determining how power is exercised for their common wellbeing, but
this only works if people have the understanding, skills and
confidence to engage effectively in public affairs. Otherwise, any
voting system can be subverted to serve the interests of
propagandists and demagogues. This book brings together leading
experts on learning for democracy to explore why and how the gap in
civic competence should be bridged. Drawing on research findings
and case examples from the UK, the US and elsewhere, it will set
out why change is necessary, what could be taught differently to
ensure effective political engagement, and how a lasting impact in
improving citizens' learning for democratic participation can be
made.
Explores the range of vibrant cultural production and political
activism of youth in Africa today, as expressed through art, music,
theater, and online media. This edited collection focuses on the
links between youth and African popular culture. Contributions by a
distinguished group of scholars explore popular culture produced
and consumed by young people in contemporary Africa. Essays cover a
variety of cultural representations--visual, oral, written,
performative, fictional, social, and virtual--created by African
youth, mostly about their lives and their immediate societies, and
for themselves, but also consumed by the larger public and shared
locally and globally. The volume examines the range of music, art,
and media African youth produce, under what conditions or contexts
they produce such work, and the aesthetic dimensions of these texts
as cultural artifacts. Essays further explore why these textual
practices matter as social facts, as interpretive acts, and as
symbols of the cultural activism of young people in a rapidly
changing world-a world where the global cultural economy is the
prime terrain for the relentless struggles over the meanings that
come to shape political-economic and social systems.
This book provides an introduction to the ergodic theory and
topological dynamics of actions of countable groups. It is
organized around the theme of probabilistic and combinatorial
independence, and highlights the complementary roles of the
asymptotic and the perturbative in its comprehensive treatment of
the core concepts of weak mixing, compactness, entropy, and
amenability. The more advanced material includes Popa's cocycle
superrigidity, the Furstenberg-Zimmer structure theorem, and sofic
entropy. The structure of the book is designed to be flexible
enough to serve a variety of readers. The discussion of dynamics is
developed from scratch assuming some rudimentary functional
analysis, measure theory, and topology, and parts of the text can
be used as an introductory course. Researchers in ergodic theory
and related areas will also find the book valuable as a reference.
Examines the impact of new media (such as video and YouTube) and
the use of multi-media on live and recorded performance in Africa.
Focuses on the ways African theatre and performance relate to
various kinds of media. Includes contributions on dance; popular
video, with an emphasis on video drama and soaps from Eastern and
Southern Africa, and the Nigerian 'Nollywood' phenomenon; the
interface between live performance and video (or still
photography), and links between on-line social networks and new
performance identities. As a group the articles raise, from
original angles, the issues of racism, gender, identity, advocacy
and sponsorship. Volume Editor: DAVID KERR is Professor of English
in the University of Botswana, and is the author of African Popular
Theatre Series Editors: Martin Banham, Emeritus Professor of Drama
& Theatre Studies, University of Leeds; James Gibbs, Senior
Visiting Research Fellow, University of the West of England; Femi
Osofisan, Professor of Drama at the University of Ibadan; Jane
Plastow, Professor of African Theatre, University of Leeds; Yvette
Hutchison, Associate Professor, Department of Theatre &
Performance Studies, University of Warwick
The advent of the World Wide Web has changed the perspectives of
groupware systems. The interest and deployment of Internet and
intranet groupware solutions is growing rapidly, not just in
academic circles but also in the commercial arena. The first
generation of Web-based groupware tools has already started to
emerge, and leading groupware vendors are urgently adapting their
products for compatibility and integration with Web technologies.
The focus of Groupware and the World Wide Web is to explore the
potential for Web-based groupware. This book includes an analysis
of the key characteristics of the Web, presenting reasons for its
success, and describes developments of a diverse range of Web-based
groupware systems. An emphasis on the technical obstacles and
challenges is implemented by more analytical discussions and
perspectives, including that of Information Technology managers
looking to deploy groupware solutions within their organizations.
Written by experts from different backgrounds - academic and
commercial, technical and organizational - this book provides a
unique overview of and insight into current issues and future
possibilities concerning extension of the World Wide Web for group
working.
This book collects the notes of the lectures given at an Advanced
Course on Dynamical Systems at the Centre de Recerca Matematica
(CRM) in Barcelona. The notes consist of four series of lectures.
The first one, given by Andrew Toms, presents the basic properties
of the Cuntz semigroup and its role in the classification program
of simple, nuclear, separable C*-algebras. The second series of
lectures, delivered by N. Christopher Phillips, serves as an
introduction to group actions on C*-algebras and their crossed
products, with emphasis on the simple case and when the crossed
products are classifiable. The third one, given by David Kerr,
treats various developments related to measure-theoretic and
topological aspects of crossed products, focusing on internal and
external approximation concepts, both for groups and C*-algebras.
Finally, the last series of lectures, delivered by Thierry
Giordano, is devoted to the theory of topological orbit
equivalence, with particular attention to the classification of
minimal actions by finitely generated abelian groups on the Cantor
set.
This book provides an introduction to the ergodic theory and
topological dynamics of actions of countable groups. It is
organized around the theme of probabilistic and combinatorial
independence, and highlights the complementary roles of the
asymptotic and the perturbative in its comprehensive treatment of
the core concepts of weak mixing, compactness, entropy, and
amenability. The more advanced material includes Popa's cocycle
superrigidity, the Furstenberg-Zimmer structure theorem, and sofic
entropy. The structure of the book is designed to be flexible
enough to serve a variety of readers. The discussion of dynamics is
developed from scratch assuming some rudimentary functional
analysis, measure theory, and topology, and parts of the text can
be used as an introductory course. Researchers in ergodic theory
and related areas will also find the book valuable as a reference.
An overview of African popular theatre, its history and
contemporary forms In this survey of theatre forms in sub-Saharan
Africa from pre-colonial times to the present day, popular theatre
is interpreted widely to include not only conventional drama, but
such non-literary forms of performance as dance, mime, dramatised
story-telling, masquerades, improvised urban vaudeville theatre,
and the theatre of resistance and social action. The book also
considers theatre embedded in the modern media of film, radio and
television. Kenya: EAEP
Of all the wars fought in or by America, only one takes its name
from a single person.
In 1675, when the English hold on New England was still fragile,
one Indian, King Philip, organized the seperate Algonquin tribes
into one powerful, military force with a single objective - to
drive the English settlers back into the sea. King Philip's War
almost did just that.
For a year Algonquin forces terrorized English settlements. Out of
ninety New England towns, fifty-two felt the ferocity of the
Algonquin attack. Twelve were completely destroyed before the
English regained the upper hand. To the settlers, King Philip
represented all that was despicable about the Indians. They
considered him a wicked savage, a devilish scoundrel.
But to himself, he wasn't even King Philip.
He was -
Metacomet - sachem of the Algonquin. But he did agree with the
English on one thing. This was his war.
Recent advances in biology and immunology have opened up new
horizons in both our understanding of cancer as a disease, and the
potential for cancer therapy. These major developments mean that
chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery are no longer the only
options. Biotherapy, or biological therapy, is now regarded as the
fourth treatment modality for patients with cancer. It utilises the
great increase in our knowledge of molecular biology, cell biology
and immunology to achieve tumour control. New biological agents are
currently being used to treat cancer, such as monoclonal antibodies
and vaccine therapies to stimulate the body's immune system to
attack cancer cells. Biotherapy may be targeted to act specifically
on cancer cells. Drugs such as monoclonal antibodies can be
designed to recognize and find a particular type of cancer cell,
attach itself to them, and destroy them. Naturally occuring
biological molecules such as cytokines are also used, and the
manipulation of normal biological mechanisms to control or inhibit
tumour growth is another key feature of biotherapy. Edited by a
team with perspectives in pharmacology, oncology and nursing, and
with contributions from experts in the various areas of biotherapy,
this book serves as an introduction to the subject. It includes the
principles behind biological therapy, with discussion of the impact
on the future of the fight against cancer. It has a strong clinical
focus, describing the relevant biology and immunology while
highlighting clinical relevance and treatment issues.
Directors and collaborators assess and comment on the production of
plays by West Africa's Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka and East
Africa's most influential author Ngugi wa Thiong'o. Wole Soyinka
and Ngugi wa Thiong'o are the pre-eminent playwrights of West and
East Africa respectively and their work has been hugely influential
across the continent. This volume features directors' experiences
of recent productions of their plays, the voices of actors and
collaborators who have worked with the playwrights, and also
provides a digest of their theatrical output. Contributors provide
new readings of Ngugi and Soyinka's classic texts, and astimulating
new approach for students of English, Theatre and African studies.
The playscript for this volume is a previously unpublished radio
play by Wole Soyinka entitled A Rain of Stones, first broadcast
onBBC Radio 4 in 2002. Volume Editors: MARTIN BANHAM & FEMI
OSOFISAN Guest Editor: KIMANI NJOGU Series Editors: Martin Banham,
Emeritus Professor of Drama & Theatre Studies, University of
Leeds; James Gibbs,Senior Visiting Research Fellow, University of
the West of England; Femi Osofisan, Professor of Drama at the
University of Ibadan; Jane Plastow, Professor of African Theatre,
University of Leeds; Yvette Hutchison, Associate Professor,
Department of Theatre & Performance Studies, University of
Warwick
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