2,302 research outputs found
Manual of interventional oncology/ Douglas M. Coldwell.
Includes bibliographical references and index.Essentials of medical oncology / Vivek R. Sharma -- Essentials of surgical oncology / Robert C.G. Martin II -- Essentials of radiation oncology / Andrew S. Kennedy -- Interventional radiology in the treatment of the cancer patient / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Chemotherapeutic agents / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Colorectal cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Cancer of the pancreas / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Carcinoid tumor (neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract) / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Hepatocellular carcinoma / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Cholangiocarcinoma / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Lung cancer (non-small cell) / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Head and neck cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Renal cell carcinoma / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Urothelial cancer and transitional cell cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Prostate cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Breast cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Gynecologic tumors / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Clinical trials of interventional oncology / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Building an interventional oncology practice / Douglas M. Coldwell.1 online resource (xi, 217 pages)
Manual of interventional oncology
Essentials of medical oncology / Vivek R. Sharma -- Essentials of surgical oncology / Robert C.G. Martin II -- Essentials of radiation oncology / Andrew S. Kennedy -- Interventional radiology in the treatment of the cancer patient / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Chemotherapeutic agents / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Colorectal cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Cancer of the pancreas / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Carcinoid tumor (neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract) / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Hepatocellular carcinoma / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Cholangiocarcinoma / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Lung cancer (non-small cell) / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Head and neck cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Renal cell carcinoma / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Urothelial cancer and transitional cell cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Prostate cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Breast cancer / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Gynecologic tumors / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Clinical trials of interventional oncology / Douglas M. Coldwell -- Building an interventional oncology practice / Douglas M. Coldwel
Translation as creative retelling : constituents, patterning and shift in Gavin Douglas' Eneados
The Thesis analyses and evaluates how Gavin Douglas (Eneados, 1513) has refocused Virgil's Aeneid, principally by giving more emphasis to the serial particularity inherent in the story, loosening the narrative structure and involving the reader in its retelling.
Chapter I pieces together (from the evidence not merely of what Douglas explicitly says, but of what his words imply) what for him a "text" in general is, and what accordingly it means for a translator or a reader to be engaged with it. This sets the scene for what follows.
The next four Chapters look in turn at how he re-expresses important (metaphysical) characteristics of the story. In Chapter II his handling of time is discussed, and compared with Virgil's: the Chapter sets out in detail how Douglas consistently refocuses temporal predicates, foregrounding their disjunctiveness and making them differently felt. In Chapter III spatial position and distance are analysed, and Douglas' way of dealing with space is found to display parallels with his treatment of time: networks are loosened and nodal points are accentuated. In Chapter IV the way in which he presents individuals is compared with Virgil's, and a similar repatterning and shift reveals itself: Douglas provides his persons with firmer boundaries. Chapter V deals with fate, where Douglas encounters special difficulties but maintains his characteristic way of handling the story. The aim of these four Chapters is to characterise formally how Douglas concretises and vivifies the tale of Aeneas, engaging his readers throughout in the retelling.
Finally, Chapter VI looks at certain general principles of translation theory (notably connected with the ideas of faithfulness and accuracy) and argues for a way in which Douglas' translation can be fairly experienced by the reader and fairly evaluated as a lively retelling which (albeit distinctive) is fundamentally faithful to Virgil
Interview with Douglas Jackson
Douglas Jackson is the author of Timberwolf Goes to War, an autobiography of his wartime experience. He entered United States Army service in October of 1942, and served in the 104th Infantry Division, 413th Regiment, during World War II. Here, he discusses his experience as an American soldier in Germany during WWII
The geology and scenery of Sutherland
by Henry M. CadellHandschriftliches Exlibris: "Dr. Alb. Heim" Exemplar der ETH-BIB, Rar 46804Exlibrisstempel: "Geolog. Institut der Eidg. techn. Hochschule Bibliothek Schenkung Heim" 002323356_0004 Exemplar der ETH-BIBHandschriftliches Geschenkexlibris: "From the Author 9.IX.1912" Exemplar der ETH-BIB, Rar 4680
Mrs. Helen Douglas Morton Obituary
Newspaper Article - Mrs. Helen Douglas Morton ObituaryAlberta Women's Institutes; AWI CollectionDeaths
MORTON— On Sat.. Oct. 17. Mrs.
Helen Douglas Morton of Vegreville.
passed away at the age of 68 years.
She is survived by 2 sons.' Edmund
Forrest of Vegreville and Alexander
Charles of Calgary, also 2 grandchildren.
Her husband predeceased her
by 8 months.
Funeral service will be held on
Wed. Oct. 21 at 2: 00 p. m. at the
Vegreville United Church. Rev. G.
B. Mather will officiate and interment
will be made in the family
plot. Riverside Cemetery. No flowers
by request. Donations to the Canadian
Cancer Society or the Canadian
National Institute for the Blind will
be gratefully accepted. Park Memorial
Ltd.. ( Vegreville) Funeral Administrators
and Directors. The Chapel on
the Boulevard
Author, Actor and Audience- Figures: The Theatrical Metaphor in Jonsonian Comedy
In this thesis, I am concerned with Jonson's attitude toward theatricality in the world. His representation of a "centered self," especially in his poems, can be seen both as a part of the Renaissance concern with fashioning identity and as a protest against the theatrical role-playing it often caused. I am further interested in Jonson's conception of the nature of the theatre as a significant social activity. He employs the theatrical metaphor in Volpone, Epicoene, and The Alchemist in which clever author and actor-figures deceive less clever audience-figures who lack proper judgement. These characters reflect Jonson's awareness of his own engagement with his audience. The series of plays-within-the-play illustrate a theatre of deception and manipulation by which Jonson comes to measure both himself as a playwright and his art. This study also attempts to come to terms with the interesting discrepancy between Jonson the moralist and Jonson the artist. There is a certain tension created in Jonsonian comedy when we consider that he infuses his theatrical tricksters with immense comic vigour. The audience's ability to pass judgement on the author and actor-figures' subversive actions is complicated since they perform so amusingly and with such brilliance. As well, I trace the development of Jonson's thinking about the nature and function of comedy. With each successive play, I find that he subtly disguises his moral idealism in order to write successful comedy. A problem with this formula was that it tended to mask Jonson's identity as a morally purposeful writer. Increasingly, his comedies seemed to owe their success to a triumph of theatrical over moral values. Jonson remains a morally responsible dramatist who incorporates into his art the critical acceptance of the stage as a medium.Master of Arts (MA
Argyres-Douglas theories and S-duality
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits any use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are creditedM.B. and T.N. are partly supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under grants DOE-SC0010008, DOE-ARRA-SC0003883, and DOE-DE-SC0007897.
This research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.
NSF PHY11-25915. S.G. is partially supported by the ERC Advanced Grant “SyDuGraM”,
by FNRS-Belgium (convention FRFC PDR T.1025.14 and convention IISN 4.4514.08) and by the “Communaut´e Francaise de Belgique” through the ARC progra
Book Review: Manual of Interventional Oncology
Manual of Interventional Oncology. Douglas M. Coldwell, Thieme, 2017, ISBN-13: 978-1626231382. The Manual of Interventional Oncology is a well-organized pocket book ideally suited for quick checking, designed to help the reader understand the main principles of cancer treatments and the role of interventional oncology
Letter from Douglas M. Todd, Assistant Project Manager, Heart Mountain Relocation Project, to Mr. Shoji Nagumo, September 20, 1943
Letter to Shoji Nagumo regarding his appointment as Manager for Block 12 at Heart Mountain incarceration camp.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
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