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Biochemistry: The Molecular Basis of Life is an intermediate,
one-semester text written for students on degree pathways in
Chemistry, Biology, and other Health and Life Sciences. Designed
for students who need a solid introduction to biochemistry, but are
not specializing in the subject, the text focuses on essential
biochemical principles that underpin the modern life sciences, and
offers the most balanced coverage of chemistry and biology of any
text on the market. The text equips students with a complete view
of the living state, emphasizes problem solving, and applies
biochemical principles to the fields of Health, Agriculture,
Engineering, and Forensics, to show students the relevance of their
learning. McKee and McKee is respected for its balance of biology
and chemistry, consistently placing biochemical principles into the
context of the physiology of the cell and biomedical applications.
This volume contains the proceedings of a Symposium held in honor
of Emmy Noether's lOOth birthday which was sponsored by the
Association for Women in Mathematics, and held at Bryn Mawr College
on March 17, 18 and 19, 1982. It was fitting that the Symposium be
held at Bryn Mawr, where Noether held her last position. Indeed,
the lectures were held in Goodhart Hall, where the famous Memorial
Address was delivered by Hermann Weyl on April 29, 1935. The
Association for Women in Mathematics is honored to have sponsored
this event, which was judged by many of those attending to have
been not only scien- tifically successful but a specially moving
occasion. There were nine scientific lectures by Nathan Jacobson,
Richard Swan, Judith Sally, David Mumford, Michele Vergne, Olga
Taussky-Todd, Karen Uhlenbeck, Walter Feit, and Armand Borel. There
was also a panel discussion on "Emmy Noether in Erlangen,
Gottingen, and Bryn Mawr" in which Gottfried Noether, Olga
Taussky-Todd, Grace Quinn, Ruth McKee, and Marguerite Lehr par-
ticipated. The last four were at Bryn Mawr during Emmy Noether's
time and presented their personal reminiscences of her. Gottfried
Noether is a nephew of Emmy Noether and gave an account of her life
and career in Germany.
Few crimes generate greater public reaction than those where a
mother murders her child. We are repelled, yet mesmerized, by the
emerging details of cases such as Andrea Yates and Susan Smith.
Annually, hundreds of infants and young children perish at the
hands of their mothers. How could a mother destroy the first and
most fundamental relationship we experience?
In Why Mothers Kill: A Forensic Psychologist's Casebook, Geoffrey
R. McKee, Ph.D. uses more than a dozen case studies from his
29-year forensic psychological evaluation practice to help us, and
most importantly, prevent these horrific events from occurring. He
applies current research findings to analyze, explain, and suggest
practical interventions to alter the personal, familial, and
situational circumstances that may influence some mothers to kill.
With an emphasis on prevention, Dr. McKee sets out specific
strategies that might have been employed at various "risk
intervention points" occurring before the child's death.
Through the use of extended narratives the author brings to life
the thoughts and emotions experienced by women in each of the five
categories of mothers he has identified from his years of practice.
Additionally, the author presents the Maternal Filicide Risk Matrix
which he developed to help mental health and medical professionals
determine the risk and protective factors that lead mothers to kill
their children.
Students, as well as mental health and medical professionals will
find this an important and unique resource.
Something Sweet is the 9th volume of the Sweet Poetry series.
Sweet Gestures is the 8th book in the Sweet Poetry Series. It
features a collection of poems about a love lost and found spanning
over 12 years of writing!
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
How humans adapt to life in an area prone to natural disasters
is an intriguing study for the social sciences. In this volume,
experts from several disciplines explore the adaptation process of
prehistoric societies in the volcanic Arenal region of Costa Rica
from about 2000 BC to the Spanish Conquest at about AD 1500.
The data in this volume come from a survey of the region
conducted with the latest remote sensing technology. Sheets and his
coauthors have compiled a detailed record of human settlements in
the area, including dozens of archaeological sites and a network of
prehistoric footpaths that reveals patterns of travel and
communication across the region. The Arenal peoples prospered in
their precarious environment apparently by taking advantage of food
and lithic resources, keeping population levels low, and avoiding
environmental degradation. These findings will interest a wide
interdisciplinary audience in anthropology and archaeology, earth
sciences, technology, geography, and human ecology.
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