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Successful audio-visual presentations are the result of careful
management by--as well as creative collaboration between--the
client and the professional communications firm. Because of their
high visibility within the corporation, presentations risk falling
prey to script by committee unless there is a clear plan at hand
for managing the project. Executives who find themselves
responsible for a presentation need to be fully aware of what
audio-visual can and cannot do--and how to go about getting it done
right. In this how-to guide for corporate executives, author
Richard Worth covers every step of the process in sequence, from
determining objectives to preparing for production and
post-production. While the emphasis is on working with an
audio-visual professional, Worth also includes do-it-yourself tips
for readers who want to keep the project in-house.
Selecting slides, video, film or multimedia is one of the first
choices to make. This decision, like others that follow, should be
based on a determination of purpose, audience and message. Worth
provides easy-to-follow worksheets to help get the planning process
going. Readers looking for budget guidelines will learn how much
money they will need to invest to get the presentations they want.
And, to help readers select the communications professional they
will be working with, Worth offers down-to-earth advice based on
his years of practical experience. In non-technical language, he
critiques and analyzes samples of script proposals and treatments,
providing valuable insight into the creative process. Any executive
or manager responsible for sales, training, public relations,
fund-raising, employee relations, or recruitment will find this a
valuable resource for planning and implementing effective
presentations.
Few subjects in naval history have elicited as much romance and
disdain as the battlecruiser. And few subjects have gone so grossly
misunderstood.
Fundamental errors regarding the battlecruiser's origins and the
technology of the times continue to distort hindsight, obscuring
the historical context of these powerful, majestic ships. Thunder
in Its Courses clears away the misconceptions, with essays
establishing the basic facts of the capital-ship cruiser as well as
thorny issues regarding individual designs.
Richard Worth writes for the Warship and Warship International
journals. His book titles include In the Shadow of the Battleship,
Raising the Red Banner (with Vladimir Yakubov), On Seas Contested
(edited with Vincent P. O'Hara and W. David Dickson), and Fleets of
World War II.
This book presents 100 scenarios requiring surgical treatment
commonly seen by medical students and junior doctors in the
emergency department. It covers summary of the patient's history,
examination, and initial investigations followed by questions on
the diagnosis and management of each case.
A 64-year-old woman has been referred to the on-call general
surgical team by her GP. She has been complaining of pain in the
upper part of her abdomen and generalized itching. Her daughter has
also noticed a yellowish discolouration of her skin. The symptoms
started a week ago and are gradually getting worse. You have been
assigned her initial assessment... 100 Cases in Surgery presents
100 scenarios requiring surgical treatment commonly seen by medical
students and junior doctors in the emergency department or
outpatient clinic. A succinct summary of the patient's history,
examination, and initial investigations-including photographs where
relevant-is followed by questions on the diagnosis and management
of each case. The answer includes a detailed discussion on each
topic, with further illustration where appropriate, providing an
essential revision aid as well as a practical guide for students
and junior doctors. Making speedy and appropriate clinical
decisions, and choosing the best course of action to take as a
result, is one of the most important and challenging parts of
training to become a doctor. These true-to-life cases will teach
students and junior doctors to recognize important surgical
conditions, and help to develop their diagnostic and management
skills.
First Published in 2009. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Lewis Wickes Hines documentary photography helped promote the cause
of the National Child Labor Committee, which published there
declaration in 1913. This text is a collection of photographs
showing children at work from 1910 to 1935 as Hines travelled
across America.
Participating in almost every major sea battle in World War II,
cruisers found themselves pressed into a myriad of roles. They
escorted battle lines, guarded convoys, patrolled oceans--even
acted as mini-battleships, going toe-to-toe with dreadnoughts three
times their size. Their duties ranged from the tedious but
necessary to the desperate and deadly, yet history has given them
little attention. In the Shadow of the Battleship gives these ships
their due, with essays to explain the lineage and quirks that made
cruisers what they were--the cornerstone of maritime supremacy.
On Seas Contested is an in-depth analysis of the Second World War's
seven major navies. A team of expert naval historians have
contributed chapters outlining the navies of the United States, the
United Kingdom and Commonwealth, Japan, Germany, Italy, France, and
the Soviet Union. Each chapter consistently details key features
such as weaponry, training, logistics, and doctrine. This
definitive work will be a standard reference for years to come.
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