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Levittown (Hardcover)
Richard G. Wagner, Amy Duckett Wagner
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R612
Discovery Miles 6 120
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Many of the brightest Chinese minds have used the form of the
commentary to open the terse and poetic chapters of the Laozi to
their readers and also to develop a philosophy of their own. None
has been more sophisticated, philosophically probing, and
influential in the endeavor than a young genius of the third
century C.E., Wang Bi (126-249). In this book, Rudolf G. Wagner
provides a full translation of the Laozi that extracts from Wang
Bi's Commentary the manner in which he read the text, as well as a
full translation of Wang Bi's Commentary and his essay on the
"subtle pointers" of the Laozi. The result is a Chinese reading of
the Laozi that will surprise and delight Western readers familiar
with some of the many translations of the work.
Many of the brightest Chinese minds have used the form of the
commentary to open the terse and poetic chapters of the Laozi to
their readers and also to develop a philosophy of their own. None
has been more sophisticated, philosophically probing, and
influential in the endeavor than a young genius of the third
century C.E., Wang Bi (126-249). In this book, Rudolf G. Wagner
provides a full translation of the Laozi that extracts from Wang
Bi's Commentary the manner in which he read the text, as well as a
full translation of Wang Bi's Commentary and his essay on the
"subtle pointers" of the Laozi. The result is a Chinese reading of
the Laozi that will surprise and delight Western readers familiar
with some of the many translations of the work.
The concepts of acute coronary care are changing so rapidly that it
is appropriate that the volume ACUTE CORONARY CARE: PRINCIPLES AND
PRACTICE, published early in 1985, would have yearly updates. The
process of rapid production of camera-ready manuscripts has added
new capability to the exchange of information. ACUTE CORONARY CARE
1986 is the first of a series of yearly updates in this important
area of cardiology. Materials published during the fall of 1984,
including abstracts for the November American Heart Association
meetings were reviewed by the editors to identify the areas of new
information and the authors making important contri butions.
Manuscripts were completed and edited during the spring of 1985 and
the final camera-ready versions were delivered to Martinus Nijhoff
by mid-July. The broad area of coronary care is divided into its
five time sectors: Pre-hospital, Post-admission, Coronary Care
Unit, Pre-discharge, and Conva lescent. As patients are more
frequently encountered in the pre-hospital phase, it has become
evident that alterations in the autonomic nervous system have a
great impact on the clinical situation. The chapter by Ron Victor
emphasizes the important interactions between the nervous system
and the cardiovascular system in this critical situation."
During the 25 years since acute coronary care was focused into
Coronary Care Units there have been three major Phases: I.
prevention of death caused by arrhythmias; II. prevention of death
due to myocardial failure; and III. limitation of infarct size. In
the latter two Phases, there has been infringement upon the time
honored concept of a prolonged period of rest for the patient in
general and the heart in particular to minimize myocardial
metabolic demands. During the second Phase of coronary care,
patients with myocardial failure received aggressive measures to
increase cardiac work via increase in preload, decrease in
afterload, and direct increase in inotropy. It was believed that
true cardiogenic shock was so irreversible that it should be
prevented by vigorous efforts to improve the cardiac output despite
the risk of extending the area of ischemic myocardium. However,
Phase II produced minimal overall reduction in mortality. In the
initial part of Phase III, myocardial infarct (MI) size limitation
was attempted by reducing myocardial metabolic demands via either
beta adrenergic or calcium channel blocking agents. We are
currently several years into the second part of Phase III of
coronary care where the principle means of limiting MI size is
restoration of coronary blood flow.
This is the first truly interdisciplinary collection devoted to the
legacy of Richard Wagner to merge insights from Musicology and
Music Theory with explorations of the composer's vast
socio-cultural impact from such fields as History, German, and
Disability Studies. The wide ranging topics include Glenn Gould's
piano transcriptions, the value of naming musical themes in the
music dramas, the status of Wagner in Israel, and the assignment of
"Jewish" characteristics in both Wagner's music and polemics and,
in recent years, to his descendant, musicologist Gottfried Wagner.
Contributors include Robert Gauldin, Warren Darcy, Marc Weiner, and
Paul Rose.
Medical Data Management is a systematic introduction to the basic methodology of professional clinical data management. It emphasizes generic methods of medical documentation applicable to such diverse tasks as the electronic patient record, maintaining a clinical trials database, and building a tumor registry. This book is for all students in medical informatics and health information management, and it is ideal for both the undergraduate and the graduate levels. The book also guides professionals in the design and use of clinical information systems in various health care settings. It is an invaluable resource for all health care professionals involved in designing, assessing, adapting, or using clinical data management systems in hospitals, outpatient clinics, study centers, health plans, etc. The book combines a consistent theoretical foundation of medical documentation methods outlining their practical applicability in real clinical data management systems. Two new chapters detail hospital information systems and clinical trials. There is a focus on the international classification of diseases (ICD-9 and -10) systems, as well as a discussion on the difference between the two codes. All chapters feature exercises, bullet points, and a summary to provide the reader with essential points to remember. New to the Third Edition is a comprehensive section comprised of a combined Thesaurus and Glossary which aims to clarify the unclear and sometimes inconsistent terminology surrounding the topic.
Major presentation of pharmacokinetics by a leading international
expert. Methods for: estimating drug disposition parameters from
data obtained after intravascular or extravascular drug
administration, estimating rate and extent of drug bioavailability,
and comparing rate and extent of drug availability following
administration of several different dosage forms of a drug.
The Operator's Manual for the New Administration explains how
government works and how to make it work to advance policy goals
and objectives. Bringing decades of experience in government
administration, the authors have identified eight key
tools-leadership, performance, people, money, contracting,
technology, innovation, and collaboration-that executives must
utilize in order to be successful.
Getting It Done was written for those who have answered the call to
public service. Now, in this revised edition, the editors of IBM's
Center for The Business of Government series have assembled a
comprehensive guide to navigating the current environment of
government, and what government leaders ought to know to survive
and thrive with respect to the ways it's evolved over the years.
Concise analyses of the roles and responsibilities of those
involved in any political decision accompany informative and
instructional chapters, each highlighting a key step any public
servant must take to ensure they do all they can for the people and
causes they represent. From the patient and careful study of an
issue, to the assembly of a trusted advisory team and the
development and execution of a focused vision and agenda, leaders
of all kinds will find some part of this book to incorporate into
their own leadership strategies, for which this book's expert and
pragmatic insights prove a refreshing boon.
The Operator's Manual for the New Administration explains how
government works and how to make it work to advance policy goals
and objectives. Bringing decades of experience in government
administration, the authors have identified eight key
tools-leadership, performance, people, money, contracting,
technology, innovation, and collaboration-that executives must
utilize in order to be successful.
Major presentation of pharmacokinetics by a leading international
expert. Methods for: estimating drug disposition parameters from
data obtained after intravascular or extravascular drug
administration, estimating rate and extent of drug bioavailability,
and comparing rate and extent of drug availability following
administration of several different dosage forms of a drug.
Industrial Development and the Social Fabric
Originally published in German in 1973, and first published in
English as this Cambridge edition in 1982, this is a detailed and
systematic account of the extent to which mentally abnormal
offenders are likely to commit crimes of major violence, based upon
a study of all the 533 men and women in the Federal German Republic
from 1955 to 1964 who were detained in hospitals after committing
homicide or near-homicide. The authors calculated that such
patients are no more, but also no less, dangerous than the rest of
the population, and that the policy of treating psychotic or
seriously subnormal patients in the community does not expose the
public to risk. The book makes important suggestions for the
prevention of such disasters by describing the diagnoses, special
symptoms and social situations which involve a special risk,
especially to close relatives and those with whom the patient is
emotionally involved.
In this timely collection of essays, leading American and German
scholars analyse immigrant incorporation into the welfare state
from a comparative economic, social, and political viewpoint by
applying data from the 1980s and 1990s. New insights are revealed
into how ethnic stratification and socioeconomic integration is
promoted by specific programs and other institutionalized policies
in education, labour markets, and welfare. This volume will be an
important resource not only to scholars and students in economics
and the social and political sciences, but also for professionals
in education, social work, journalism, politics, and community
groups.
This is a set of pioneering studies on Chinese encyclopaedias of
modern knowledge (1870-1930). At a transitional time when modern
knowledge was sought after yet few modern schools were available,
these works were crucial sources of information for an entire
generation. This volume investigates many of these encyclopaedias,
which were never reprinted and are hardly known even to
specialists, for the first time. The contributors to this
collection all specialize in the period in question and have worked
together for a number of years. The resulting studies show that
these encyclopaedias open a unique window onto the migration and
ordering systems of knowledge across cultural and linguistic
borders.
The concepts of acute coronary care are changing so rapidly that it
is appropriate that the volume ACUTE CORONARY CARE: PRINCIPLES AND
PRACTICE, published early in 1985, would have yearly updates. The
process of rapid production of camera-ready manuscripts has added
new capability to the exchange of information. ACUTE CORONARY CARE
1986 is the first of a series of yearly updates in this important
area of cardiology. Materials published during the fall of 1984,
including abstracts for the November American Heart Association
meetings were reviewed by the editors to identify the areas of new
information and the authors making important contri butions.
Manuscripts were completed and edited during the spring of 1985 and
the final camera-ready versions were delivered to Martinus Nijhoff
by mid-July. The broad area of coronary care is divided into its
five time sectors: Pre-hospital, Post-admission, Coronary Care
Unit, Pre-discharge, and Conva lescent. As patients are more
frequently encountered in the pre-hospital phase, it has become
evident that alterations in the autonomic nervous system have a
great impact on the clinical situation. The chapter by Ron Victor
emphasizes the important interactions between the nervous system
and the cardiovascular system in this critical situation."
This book presents critical studies of modern reconfigurations of
conceptions of the past, of the 'classical', and of national
heritage. Its scope is global (China, India, Egypt, Iran, Judaism,
the Greco-Roman world) and inter-disciplinary (textual philology,
history of art and architecture, philosophy, gardening). Its
emphasis is on the complexity of the modernization process and of
reactions to it: ideas and technologies travelled from India to
Iran and from Japan to China, while reactions show tensions between
museumization and the recreation of 'presence'. It challenges
readers to rethink the assumptions of the disciplines in which they
were trained
Fission track dating is based on the microscopic observation and
counting of etchable tracks left by the spontaneous fission of
uranium in minerals. Since its development in 1963 the method
attracted a steadily growing interest from geologists and
geochronologists throughout the world. Apart from its relative
experimental ease the success must be mainly ascribed to the
specific ability of the method of unravelling the thermal and
tectonic history of rocks, a potential which only became fully
exploited during the last decade with the systematic introduction
of track size analysis. The present work is the first one to deal
entirely with fission track dating covering all of its aspects from
the origin of the fission tracks, the basis of track etching and
fading, the various dating techniques as well as practical
procedures and the geologic interpretation to the most recent
applications in geology and archaeology.
During the 25 years since acute coronary care was focused into
Coronary Care Units there have been three major Phases: I.
prevention of death caused by arrhythmias; II. prevention of death
due to myocardial failure; and III. limitation of infarct size. In
the latter two Phases, there has been infringement upon the time
honored concept of a prolonged period of rest for the patient in
general and the heart in particular to minimize myocardial
metabolic demands. During the second Phase of coronary care,
patients with myocardial failure received aggressive measures to
increase cardiac work via increase in preload, decrease in
afterload, and direct increase in inotropy. It was believed that
true cardiogenic shock was so irreversible that it should be
prevented by vigorous efforts to improve the cardiac output despite
the risk of extending the area of ischemic myocardium. However,
Phase II produced minimal overall reduction in mortality. In the
initial part of Phase III, myocardial infarct (MI) size limitation
was attempted by reducing myocardial metabolic demands via either
beta adrenergic or calcium channel blocking agents. We are
currently several years into the second part of Phase III of
coronary care where the principle means of limiting MI size is
restoration of coronary blood flow.
Pain is unfortunately not an early symptom in neoplastic diseases.
When it occurs, however, as it so often does in the advanced stages
of the disease, then it can be particularly severe. Many physicians
are not able to treat such pain efficiently with the standard
methods familiar to them. Even in the oncological clinic, it is
common for cancer patients not to receive adequate treatment of
their pain; the therapeutic efforts are directed principally at the
cancer, the pain often being neglected. This book fills a gap in
the literature and should enhance the awareness of pain of all
those who deal with cancer patients. For the patient, the symptoms
of the disease are usually the direct cause of suffering, and pain
is often the most severe symptom. The pain may be potentiated by
knowledge of the threat posed by the cancer, or may itself
considerably increase the patients existing anxiety. Thus there is
a vicious circle of pain and psychological factors which will
reduce the patient to a state of despair and distress. It is,
therefore, obvious that efficient pain therapy is of utmost signi
ficance to the patient, who will judge the doctor's ability to
provide medical assistance according to the degree of pain relief
achieved. The patient's quality of life will also depend critically
on the relief obtained."
When a patient develops symptoms suggestive of and infarction, this
section is emphasized. There acute coronary insufficiency, the
health care sys- are brief sections on prediction and prevention of
tem is presented with a challenging diagnostic ischemic events,
methods of diagnosing and siz- and management problem. During the
past 20 ing infarcts, and methods of monitoring the pa- years,
hospitals have been developing coronary tient with myocardial
ischemia. A major focus of care units as the specialized inhospital
facilities for the text is on "coronary care. " As indicated above,
such patients. For the past 15 years, many com- during the past 20
years five distinct phases of munities have employed paramedical
personnel coronary care have evolved: (a) prehospital, (b) to
extend the principles of "coronary care" to the postadmission, (c)
coronary care unit, (d) predis- site of the patient who develops
the problem. charge, and (e) convalescent. Cardiac rehabilitation
programs have also been The section on pathophysiology begins with
a established to facilitate the return to function of chapter by
Greenfield and Rembert discussing patients who have had acute
coronary insuffi- the factors that determine the transmural distri-
ciency. More recently, aggressive medical and bution of blood flow.
Reimer then shows the surgical techniques have been developed to
either relationship between coronary blood flow and prevent or
limit the extent of myocardial necrosis both reversible and
irreversible damage to the that develops due to acute coronary
insufficiency. myocardium.
The contributions of this collected volume are the result of a call
for papers. The authors met and discussed their drafts at the
workshop "Inequality in Europe," organized by the editors. The
workshop was sponsored by the "Population Economics" section of the
German Association for Demography ("Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer
Bevoelkerungs wissenschafl" - DGBw) and by the
"Josef-Popper-Naehrpflicht" Foundation. The aim of this foundation,
located at the Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-University of Frankfurt am
Main, is to support research dealing with problems of achieving a
"reasonable" standard of living. Originally the aim of the
foundation was to further the notion of a guaranteed minimum income
("allgemeine Naehrpjlicht"). The publication of this book is also
sponsored by this foundation. The workshop was held at the
"Evangelische Akademie Arnoldshain," near Frankfurt am Main. The
helpful discussions during the workshop benefitted greatly from the
friendly atmosphere of the academy. Some of the articles were
financially supported by the "Panel Comparability" Project (PACO),
located at CEPS (Centre d'Etudes de Populations, de Pauvrete et de
Politiques Socio-Economiques) in Luxembourg. PACO is a joint
activity of the German Institute for Economic Research (DrW) in
Berlin, CEPS and some other institutions in European countries. It
is sponsored by grant No. ERBCHRX-CT92- 0037 ("European Network on
Longitudinal Household Panel Studies Meeting Technology Requirement
for Comparative Research") of the "Human Capital and Mobility"
program of the Commission of the European Community."
A longtime bestseller, "Politics and Change in the Middle East"
employs a multidisciplinary approach to comprehensively and
evenhandedly examining the region's past, present, and future.
Through politics, economics, culture, and history, this book offers
a rugged analytical framework that familiarizes readers with the
Middle East and helps them to critically evaluate contemporary
developments. Thematically organized, "Politics and Change in the
Middle East" introduces students to the primary actors and issues
that define the region and its role in world politics.
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