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Joseph (Hardcover)
Merrell M Peters
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Our story takes you on a journey from our lives before the war to
the mountainous terrains of Afghanistan and the barren deserts of
Iraq. It is our desire to bring to life what it is like for the
American Soldier fighting in the war on terror overseas. Not just
from a Soldier's perspective, but from the Combat Medic's
perspective. We want you to learn about the heartaches, the fear,
the excitement and the terror of combat today. These stories are
not intended to bring glory upon ourselves. They are written to
show the courage and bravery of every American Soldier with whom we
served. While this book is written from our first person view, the
"I" and "we" are inclusive of all the Medics that have served
Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. Every medic
deployed in support of these operations have similar stories to
tell. The title, Not On My Watch, The 21st Century Combat Medic
expresses the fervor with which we serve. First, our motto: Not On
My Watch. This speaks not only of the personal pride and sacrifice
that we, as Combat Medics have in our assignment, but also of our
willingness to sacrifice in order to save a fellow Soldier's life.
We are saying, "As long as I am there, I am going to sacrifice
everything I have to give the wounded Soldier a second chance at
life." The latter part of the title stresses how combat and combat
medicine has evolved to our generation from the generation of the
heroes who served from the very first shot of the Revolutionary War
until now. We have met the men and women of past wars at welcome
home ceremonies, the local VFW's, and through everyday
interactions. Every story is different, yet every story is exactly
the same: The same courage, bravery, honor, and dedication to
fellow Soldiers on the battlefield. We remember the look of pride
in the eyes of every Vietnam, Korean, and WWII veteran as they
shook our hands at the airport upon our arrival back to the United
States. It is that look that lets us know that although we never
stormed a beach on that Day in June of 1944, or never took that
hill in the jungle with certain death on the ascent to the top, we
did serve a cause that blankets our great country with Freedom. We
are Americans fighting and defending the rights of every American.
We are Americans dedicated to bringing peace and democracy to every
citizen of the globe. Our cause is just and this is our story.
Germination of the thought of "Enzymatic- and Transporter-Based
Drug-Drug Interactions: Progress and Future Challenges" Proceedings
came about as part of the annual meeting of The American
Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS) that was held in
San Diego in November of 2007. The attendance of workshop by more
than 250 pharmaceutical scientists reflected the increased interest
in the area of drug-drug interactions (DDIs), the greater focus of
PhRMA, academia, and regulatory agencies, and the rapid pace of
growth in knowledge. One of the aims of the workshop was to address
the progress made in quantitatively predicting enzyme- and
transporter-based DDIs as well as highlighted areas where such
predictions are poor or areas that remain challenging for the
future. Because of the serious clinical implications, initiatives
have arisen from the FDA
(http://www.fda.gov/cber/gdlns/interactstud.htm) to highlight the
importance of enzyme- and transporter-based DDIs. During the past
ten to fifteen years, we have come to realize that transporters, in
addition to enzymes, play a vital role in drug elimination. Such
insight has been possible because of the continued growth in
PK-ADME
(pharmacokinetics-absorption-distribution-metabolism-excretion)
knowledge, fueled by further advances in molecular biology, greater
availability of human tissues, and the development of additional
and sophisticated model systems and sensitive assay methods for
studying drug metabolism and transport in vitro and in vivo. This
has sparked an in-depth probing into mechanisms surrounding DDIs,
resulting from ligand-induced changes in nuclear receptors, as well
as alterations in transporter and enzyme expression and function.
Despite such advances, the in vitro and in vivo study of drug
interactions and the integration of various data sets remain
challenging. Therefore, it has become apparent that a proceeding
that serves to encapsulate current strategies, approaches, methods
and applications is necessary. As Editors, we have assembled a
number of opinion leaders and asked them to contribute chapters
surrounding these issues. Many of these are the original Workshop
speakers whereas others had been selected specially to contribute
on topics related to basic and applied information that had not
been covered in other reference texts on DDI. The resulting tome,
entitled Enzyme- and Transporter-Based Drug Interactions: Progress
and Future Challenges, comprises of four sections. Twenty-eight
chapters covering various topics and perspectives related to the
subject of metabolic and transporter-based drug-drug interactions
are presented.
The use of molecular biology and biochemistry to study the
regulation of gene expression has become a major feature of
research in the biological sciences. Many excellent books and
reviews exist that examine the experimental methodology employed in
specific areas of molecular biology and regulation of gene
expression. However, we have noticed a lack of books, especially
textbooks, that provide an overview of the rationale and general
experimental approaches used to examine chemically or
disease-mediated alterations in gene expression in mammalian
systems. For example, it has been difficult to find appropriate
texts that examine specific experimental goals, such as proving
that an increased level of mRNA for a given gene is attributable to
an increase in transcription rates. Regulation of Gene Expression:
Molecular Mechanisms is intended to serve as either a textbook for
graduate students or as a basic reference for laboratory personnel.
Indeed, we are using this book to teach a graduate-level class at
The Pennsylvania State University. For more details about this
class, please visit http: //moltox. cas. psu. edu and select
"Courses. " The goal for our work is to provide an overview of the
various methods and approaches to characterize possible mechanisms
of gene regulation. Further, we have attempted to provide a
framework for students to develop an understanding of how to
determine the various mechanisms that lead to altered activity of a
specific protein within a cell.
In 1994, in my role as Technical Program Chair for the 17th Annual
International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and
Biology Society, I solicited proposals for mini-symposia to provide
delegates with accessible summaries of important issues in research
areas outside their particular specializations. Terry Peters and
his colleagues submitted a proposal for a symposium on Fourier
Trans forms and Biomedical Engineering whose goal was "to demystify
the Fourier transform and describe its practical application in
biomedi cal situations." This was to be achieved by presenting the
concepts in straightforward, physical terms with examples drawn for
the parti cipants work in physiological signal analysis and medical
imaging. The mini-symposia proved to be a great success and drew a
large and appreciative audience. The only complaint being that the
time allocated, 90 minutes, was not adequate to allow the
participants to elaborate their ideas adequately. I understand that
this feedback helped the authors to develop this book."
Schopenhauer and Adorno on Bodily Suffering explores how the works
of both philosophers revolve around an entwinement of pessimism and
optimism, which links statements regarding the wrongness of the
world to analyses of the human capability to experience compassion
with bodily suffering and to the redeeming qualities of the arts.
Race in Sweden is an introduction to, and a critical investigation
of, the Swedish relationship to race in the post-war and
contemporary eras. This relationship is fundamentally shaped by an
ideology of colourblindness, with any kind of race talk being taboo
in public discourse and everyday language use, and in practice
forbidden in official and institutional language. A study of a
country which was until recently strikingly white but has become
extremely diverse, yet where the legacy of Swedish whiteness
co-exists with a radical, colourblind, antiracist ideology, Race in
Sweden will appeal to scholars across the social sciences and
humanities with interests in race and ethnicity, whiteness and
Nordic studies.
While science and technology have been moving at speed in the last
decade and major investments have been placed in Artificial
Intelligence, blockchain technology, 3D printing, and gene editing,
medical practice, including cutaneous medicine (otherwise known as
Dermatology), is only just starting to follow these technological
advances. This book is a timely intellectual investment for
cutaneous medicine, addressing these particularly needed areas. It
is written for medical educators, dermatology residents, practicing
dermatologists, and medical researchers in the area of skin
diseases, to alert them all to medical advances and up-and-coming
technology and in the hope, it will inspire further novel
methodology for the future of cutaneous medicine, in diagnosis and
therapy.
The Blessed Virgin Mary is uniquely associated with Catholicism,
and the century preceding the Second Vatican Council was arguably
the most fertile era for Catholic Marian studies. In 1964, Pope
John Paul VI published the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, or
Lumen Gentium (LG), the eighth chapter of which presents the most
comprehensive magisterial teaching on the Blessed Virgin Mary. As
part of its Marian Initiative, the Institute for Church Life at the
University of Notre Dame invited scholars to a conference held at
Notre Dame in October 2013 to reflect the rich Marian legacy on the
eve of the Second Vatican Council. The essays unanimously stress
that the Blessed Virgin Mary is not merely a peripheral figure in
Christian faith and in the panorama of theology. More than fifty
years after Lumen Gentium, students of theology as well as Marian
devotees take their bearings from this document in order to promote
the person of Mary and the study of Mariology, as well as grow in
authentic Marian piety. This book will have great appeal to
students and scholars of Catholic theology and history,
particularly those interested in Mariology. Contributors: Ann W.
Astell, Peter Casarella, John C. Cavadini, Lawrence S. Cunningham,
Brian Daley, S.J., Peter J. Fritz, Kevin Grove, CSC, Msgr. Michael
Heintz, Matthew Levering, Danielle M. Peters, James H. Phalan, CSC,
Johann G. Roten, S.M., Christopher Ruddy, Troy Stefano, and Thomas
A. Thompson, S.M.
Sontag and the Camp Aesthetic: Advancing New Perspectives marks 50
years of writing and cultural production on the phenomenon of camp
since Susan Sontag's 1964 cornerstone essay "Notes on 'Camp'." It
provides cutting-edge theory and understanding on ways to read and
interpret camp through a collection of essays from historical,
theoretical, and cultural perspectives. It includes varied subject
areas including camp icons, stylistics periods, and important and
representative texts from television, film, and literature. These
essays create a scholarly conversation that understands camp as not
only signifier or aesthetic but also a language, mode, and style
that goes beyond its initial linguistic and semiotic guise. The
contributors, representing a diverse group of established and
rising scholars, explore camp as a largely queer genre that
includes varying modes of understanding of desire and of the self
outside a hegemonic model of heteronormativity.
Hospital and Haven tells the story of an Episcopal missionary
couple who lived their entire married life, from 1910 to 1938,
among the Gwich’in peoples of northern Alaska, devoting
themselves to the peoples’ physical, social, and spiritual
well-being. The era was marked by great social disruption within
Alaska Native communities and high disease and death rates, owing
to the influx of non-Natives in the region, inadequate sanitation
and hygiene, minimal law enforcement, and insufficient government
funding for Alaska Native health care. Hospital and Haven reveals
the sometimes contentious yet promising relationship between
missionaries, Alaska Natives, other migrants, and Progressive Era
medicine. St. Stephen’s Mission stood at the center of community
life and formed a bulwark against the forces that threatened the
Native peoples’ lifeways and lives. Dr. Grafton (Happy or Hap)
Burke directed the Hudson Stuck Memorial Hospital, the only
hospital to serve Alaska Natives within a several-hundred-mile
radius. Clara Burke focused on orphaned, needy, and convalescing
children, raising hundreds in St. Stephen’s Mission Home. The
Gwich’in in turn embraced and engaged in the church and hospital
work, making them community institutions. Bishop Peter Trimble Rowe
came to recognize the hospital and orphanage work at Fort Yukon as
the church’s most important work in Alaska.
Ecce Educatrix Tua discusses the Apostolic Letter Novo millennio
ineunte (NMI), wherein John Paul II outlined the path the Church
should adopt in the third millennium. The necessity "to rediscover
the full practical significance of Chapter 5 of the Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, dedicated to the
universal call to holiness" (NMI 30) is at stake. John Paul II
stressed that a concrete "pedagogy of holiness" is required,
including a "spiritual path," without which "external
structures...will serve very little purpose (NMI 43)." The Polish
Pontiff invited ecclesial movements to present their original
pedagogy of holiness (cf. NMI 31). Peters highlights the Blessed
Virgin Mary as educator in a pedagogy of holiness from the
teachings of John Paul II and Father Joseph Kentenich, founder of
the Schoenstatt Movement.
The elections of 1998 bear out the thesis of this book: so far, the
Republicans in Congress are operating more like an old minority
party than the new majority party they've become. Still, Congress
has changed under Republican leadership and the Republicans have
changed, too. This volume of original essays by leading
congressional scholars explores the impact of the Republican
majority on Congress with attention to the history of the
institution and party characteristics present and future. For
students and scholars alike, the new majority of an old minority
provides a laboratory for political analysis that demonstrates
lasting effects. As Republicans learn to govern, the country will
no doubt learn something, too.
The elections of 1998 bear out the thesis of this book: so far, the
Republicans in Congress are operating more like an old minority
party than the new majority party they've become. Still, Congress
has changed under Republican leadership and the Republicans have
changed, too. This volume of original essays by leading
congressional scholars explores the impact of the Republican
majority on Congress with attention to the history of the
institution and party characteristics present and future. For
students and scholars alike, the new majority of an old minority
provides a laboratory for political analysis that demonstrates
lasting effects. As Republicans learn to govern, the country will
no doubt learn something, too.
First Published in 1993. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an Informa company.
A selection of papers from an April 1990 Carl Albert Center
conference commemorating the bicentennial of the US Congress and
the centennial of the U. of Oklahoma. The conference was entitled
Back to the Future: the US Congress in the 21st Century, and its
focus was on change and candidate-centered
The use of molecular biology and biochemistry to study the
regulation of gene expression has become a major feature of
research in the biological sciences. Many excellent books and
reviews exist that examine the experimental methodology employed in
specific areas of molecular biology and regulation of gene
expression. However, we have noticed a lack of books, especially
textbooks, that provide an overview of the rationale and general
experimental approaches used to examine chemically or
disease-mediated alterations in gene expression in mammalian
systems. For example, it has been difficult to find appropriate
texts that examine specific experimental goals, such as proving
that an increased level of mRNA for a given gene is attributable to
an increase in transcription rates. Regulation of Gene Expression:
Molecular Mechanisms is intended to serve as either a textbook for
graduate students or as a basic reference for laboratory personnel.
Indeed, we are using this book to teach a graduate-level class at
The Pennsylvania State University. For more details about this
class, please visit http://moltox. cas. psu. edu and select
"Courses. " The goal for our work is to provide an overview of the
various methods and approaches to characterize possible mechanisms
of gene regulation. Further, we have attempted to provide a
framework for students to develop an understanding of how to
determine the various mechanisms that lead to altered activity of a
specific protein within a cell.
Schopenhauer and Adorno on Bodily Suffering explores how the works
of both philosophers revolve around an entwinement of pessimism and
optimism, which links statements regarding the wrongness of the
world to analyses of the human capability to experience compassion
with bodily suffering and to the redeeming qualities of the arts.
This book begins by introducing the basic concepts of impedance to
non-specialist readers who have only an elementary knowledge of
physics and mathematics. Mathematical concepts are explained
clearly at appropriate points in a series of Theory Notes.
Subsequent chapters cover RCL (resistor, capacitor, inductor)
circuits, with many simulated examples, before moving on to develop
key ideas relating to the application of impedance spectroscopy to
electrochemical systems. Circuit elements used to model electron
transfer, double layer capacitance and diffusion are described in
detail, along with Kramers-Kronig testing of experimental data.
After explaining how potentiostats and frequency response analysers
work, the book analyses a wealth of real-life experimental data
that have been obtained either during the annual EIS courses in
Bath or in research carried out in the laboratories of the author
and his colleagues in Bath. Topics covered include not only
conventional electrochemical systems such as the rotating disc
electrode and ultramicroelectrode but also solar cells, using data
obtained for dye-sensitized solar cells and perovskite solar cells
for illustration. The application of frequency-resolved methods in
optical spectroscopy is illustrated with results from polyaniline
electrochromic windows and hematite photoelectrodes, and finally
the last two chapters introduce techniques based on modulation of
light intensity rather than voltage or current — examples are
intensity modulated photocurrent /photovoltage spectroscopy
(IMPS/IMVS). The book concludes with worked answers for the
problems set out in earlier chapters.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of two workshops
MAIR/AE-CAI 2013, held in conjunction with MICCAI 2013, held in
Nagoya, Japan, in September 2013. The 29 revised full papers
presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 44 submissions.
The papers cover a wide range of topics addressing the main
research efforts in the fields of medical image formation, analysis
and interpretation, augmented reality and visualization, computer
assisted intervention, interventional imaging, image-guided
robotics, image-guided intervention, surgical planning and
simulation, systematic extra- and intra-corporeal imaging
modalities, and general biological and neuroscience image
computing.
Adenomatous Polyps of the Colon: Pathobiological and Clinical
Features consolidates the vast body of basic science and clinical
data associated with adenomatous polyps of the colon, much of it
inspired by the realization that most colorectal carcinomas seem to
arise in such polyps. This book strives to evaluate these data,
with particular emphasis on their implications for management of
polyp-bearing subjects. Topics comprehensively explored include
anatomy and histology of the normal colon; pathologic
characteristics of adenomatous polyps, differential diagnosis, and
grading schemes for degree of dysplasia and villosity; adenomatous
polyposes; histologic and epidemiologic evidence for the malignant
potential of adenomatous polyps; and detection and management, with
special attention to endoscopy, endoscopic polypectomy, the
malignant polyp, and post-polypectomy surveillance schedules.
Responding to Jacques Derrida's vision for what a 'new' humanities
should strive toward, Peter Trifonas and Michael Peters gather
together in a single volume original essays by major scholars in
the humanities today. Using Derrida's seven programmatic theses as
a springboard, the contributors aim to reimagine, as Derrida did,
the tasks for the new humanities in such areas as history of
literature, history of democracy, history of profession, idea of
sovereignty, and history of man. Deconstructing Derrida engages
Jacques Derrida's polemic on the future of the humanities to come
and expands on the notion of what us proper to the humanities in
the current age of globalism and change.
The 6th International Conference on Medical Imaging and
Computer-Assisted Intervention,MICCAI2003,washeldinMontr eal,Qu
ebec,CanadaattheF- rmont Queen Elizabeth Hotel during November
15-18, 2003. This was the ?rst time the conference had been held in
Canada. The proposal to host MICCAI 2003 originated from
discussions within the Ontario Consortium for Ima- guided Therapy
and Surgery, a multi-institutional research consortium that was
supported by the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Ministry
of E- erprise, Opportunity and Innovation. The objective of the
conference was to o?er clinicians and scientists a - rum within
which to exchange ideas in this exciting and rapidly growing ?eld.
MICCAI 2003 encompassed the state of the art in computer-assisted
interv- tions, medical robotics, and medical-image processing,
attracting experts from numerous multidisciplinary professions that
included clinicians and surgeons, computer scientists, medical
physicists, and mechanical, electrical and biome- cal engineers.
The quality and quantity of submitted papers were most impressive.
For MICCAI 2003 we received a record 499 full submissions and 100
short c- munications. All full submissions, of 8 pages each, were
reviewed by up to 5 reviewers, and the 2-page contributions were
assessed by a small subcomm- tee of the Scienti?c Review Committee.
All reviews were then considered by the MICCAI 2003 Program
Committee, resulting in the acceptance of 206 full papers and 25
short communications. The normal mode of presentation at MICCAI
2003 was as a poster; in addition, 49 papers were chosen for oral
presentation.
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