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This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To
mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania
Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's
distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print.
Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers
peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas.
Covering all the knowledge and skills needed for everyday duties as
well as success on certification and recertification exams, The
Ophthalmic Assistant, 11th Edition, is an essential resource for
allied health personnel working in ophthalmology, optometry,
opticianry, and other eye care settings. Drs. Harold A. Stein,
Raymond M. Stein, and Melvin I. Freeman are joined by new editor
Dr. Rebecca Stein and several new contributing authors who provide
practical, up-to-date guidance on ocular diseases, surgical
procedures, medications, and equipment, as well as paramedical
procedures and office management for today's practice. This
outstanding reference and review tool provides essential knowledge
and guidance for ophthalmic assistants, technicians, and
technologists as critical members of the eye care team. Keeps you
up to date with coverage of key topics such as topography-guided
PRK, cataract surgery with multifocal IOLs to treat presbyopia, and
OCT and OCTA, as well as the latest information on basic science,
new testing procedures and equipment, and two new chapters on
refractive surgery and eye banking. Provides full-color visual
guidance for identification of ophthalmic disorders, explanations
of difficult concepts, and depictions of the newest equipment used
in ophthalmology and optometry-more than 1,000 images in all.
Features more than 400 interactive multiple-choice review questions
that test your knowledge and understanding of key concepts.
Includes a bonus color-image atlas that tests your clinical
recognition of disease and disorders of the eye. Contains
convenient quick-reference appendices with hospital/practice forms
for more efficient patient record keeping, conversion tables, and
numerous language translations, plus information on ocular
emergencies, pharmaceuticals, and more. Enhanced eBook version
included with purchase. Your enhanced eBook allows you to access
all of the text, figures, and references from the book on a variety
of devices.
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Constables' Guide; Containing a Full Exposition of Their Rights, Privileges, Duties and Liabilities, Giving the Statutes, Both Civil and Criminal of the State of New York, With Annotations, Decisions, Explanatory Notes, Forms, and a Digest of Their Fees (Hardcover)
Melvin (Melvin Thomas) 1877-197 Bender, Harold Jay 1877- Hinman
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R824
Discovery Miles 8 240
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Cheerio! (Paperback)
Harold Melvin 1880- Hays
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R685
Discovery Miles 6 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
Since the first shots rang out at Lexington and Concord, signaling
the beginning of open war between the colonies and England, America
has been credited with a singular conviction, a concern for
military veterans' and others' economic and political rights. The
idea of America as a promised land of economic opportunity, social
mobility, and political freedom has not always flourished.
Historians have both given it reality and shaken its substance as
they exposed an undercurrent of greed, class conflict, and
corruption.
In this book Harold Hyman explores the question of American
singularity, using the Northwest Ordinance, the Homestead and
Morrill acts, and the G.I Bill to measure individual access to
land, education, and law.
The Northwest Ordinance, enacted in 1787 to encourage settlement
of the nation's untamed territories, mandated the establishment of
public schools and stable property rights in newly settled
lands--specific terms which enshrined the basic liberties secured
by the Revolutionary War. Hyman shows that through the Homestead
and Morrill acts of 1862, legislators sought to preserve the values
of the Union and to prepare for the entrance of the black man into
citizenship. Equal access to public lands in the West and to state
land-grant universities, countered the economic and social
injustices blacks and poor whites would face after the Civil War.
Finally, Hyman asserts that the G.I. Bill preserved beneficial
social programs forged during the depression, carrying into
post-World War II America a widespread concern for education and
housing opportunities.
Examining the legislation that emerged from three periods of
conflict in American history, Hyman reveals a consistent pattern
favoring equal access to land, education, and law--a progression of
singular, if sometimes flawed, attempts to embody in our statutes
the values and aspirations that sparked our major wars.
The demise of the Confederacy left a legacy of legal arrangements
that raised fundamental and vexing questions regarding the legal
rights and status of former slaves and the status of former
Confederate states. As Harold Hyman shows, few individuals had
greater impact on resolving these difficult questions than Salmon
P. Chase, chief justice of the United States Supreme Court from
1865 to 1873.
Hyman argues that in two cases--"In Re Turner" (1867) and "Texas
v. White" (1869)--Chase combined his abolitionist philosophy with
an activist jurisprudence to help dismantle once and for all the
deposed machineries of slavery and the Confederacy. In these cases,
Chase sought to consolidate the gains of the Civil War era, while
demonstrating that the war had both preserved the precious core
characteristics of the federal union of states and fundamentally
improved the nature of both private and public law.
"In Re Turner" was a private law case decided at the federal
circuit level. It involved a black woman's claim that she, a recent
slave, was being held in involuntary servitude. Elizabeth Turner's
mother had apprenticed Elizabeth to their former master, who had
not abided by his contractual obligations to provide Elizabeth with
training and compensation, substantively keeping her in slavery.
Chase's decision, which relied upon due process and equal
protection implications in the thirteenth amendment and 1866 Civil
Rights Act, confirmed the rights of emancipated slaves to bargain
and contract with employers on a parity with white workers.
"Texas v. White" was a public law case decided in the Supreme
Court. It revolved around the issue of whether the holders of U.S.
bonds seized and sold by the Confederate state of Texas could
demand payment after the war from that state's newly reconstructed
government. In effect, Chase and his associate justices were asked
to determine the legality of actions committed by all former
Confederate states and, thus, to define what constituted a state.
Chase's opinion reaffirmed the Union's permanence, and that of the
constituent states in the federal union, and the states' duty to
respect the legal rights and obligations of all citizens because
states were people as well as acreages and institutions.
Hyman's exemplary analysis of these cases reveals how their
political, legal, and constitutional aspects were so inextricably
interwoven. They secured for Chase a rostrum for both moral and
legal reform from which he asserted his strong views on the
fundamental rights of individuals and states in an era of
sporadically increasing federal power. Hyman's study provides a
much-needed reevaluation of those cases both in the context of
Chase's life and in terms of their mark on history.
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