Serial Book.Pdf
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Análisis De Los Casos Clínicos Presentados En La Serie Médica Televisiva Dr
TRABAJO ORIGINAL Análisis de los casos clínicos presentados en la serie médica televisiva Dr. House Analysis of the clinical cases presented in House M.D., the medical television drama. Germán Valenzuela-Rodríguez1 RESUMEN Objetivo. Analizar los casos clínicos presentados en las primeras siete temporadas de la serie médica televisiva Dr. House. Material y métodos. Estudio prospectivo, observacional, utilizando una ficha de recolección de datos. Resultados. Ciento cuarentaicinco casos clínicos fueron evaluados. La edad promedio de los pacientes fue de 28,48 años (DE: 13,56). Setentaisiete (53,10%) fueron de sexo masculino. Ciento treintainueve pacientes (95,86%) fueron casos de su hospital. Los casos clínicos estuvieron relacionados predominantemente con las subespecialidades médicas de infectología (31,72%), medicina interna (17,24%), toxicología (13,79%), oncología (9,65%) e inmunorreumatología (8,27%), entre las más frecuentes. Trece casos (8,96%) estuvieron referidos a enfermedades de muy baja frecuencia. Conclusiones. Los casos clínicos presentados estuvieron relacionados con medicina interna o sus subespecialidades, incluyendo algunas enfermedades de muy baja frecuencia. Para su diagnóstico y tratamiento, la serie presenta muchos dilemas éticos y errores de concepción de los sistemas de salud y sus componentes. Palabras clave. Televisión, series médicas, casos clínicos, drama, House M.D. ABSTRACT Conclusions. Clinical cases were related to internal medicine or their subspecialties, including some very low frequency Objective. To analyze the clinical cases presented in the first diseases. For diagnosis and treatment, this TV medical drama seven seasons of TV medical drama House M.D. showed ethical dilemmas and mistakes about the conception Design. Prospective and observational study, using a of health systems and their components. -
S" Qe Ay% ~ ~O&A Yo, 1O Q1 B5
41 6 ~ @ete Ge Qe +~~ sts' seta ~o oe~ G' Octo Qe ~/Sf coot ~Qe ~ Cpa Oe ~aa ~ +eea sob y 0 Oe St ~eai Ge CP goe ~ea s" Qe ay% ~ ~o&a yO, 1O Q1 b5 yO Reitmeir, Joe Golden Gate ~4$ TH 2 Roll, William Grange Coas t 3 Masinl& James Monterey Bay 4 PORSCHE 4 Johansen, Ray Sacramento Vz 5 Garretson, Bob Golden Gate PARADE 6 Raymond, Dick Great Plains , ~ epee Wo~ 1969 Buckthal, Bob Golden Gate 8 Brown, Bob San Diego 9 Daves, Robert Golden Gate Sandholdt~ Pete Monterey Bay w~ 1o~ on JUMf 24-28, 1969 ANANf IIN, CALIFORNA PORSCHE eve v OF AMERICA We. ~o ~e 555K MNR 0 9 Oa oo eS g', 0 op yQ ae3 6J Oe p~ eel~ ie~ dO 6d ldG ~e e„, Jest, 'J. @~o GOLDEN GATE RE/ION / PORSCHE ClUS OF:AMERICA / Ale 0- -i This Noath~s nesting features the Rouse Specialty dinner «t KONNA ~ The barbequod Now Torh strip steak is fsnous for at least a nile md a half in all directions~ snd the Nsklava, that waits in your nouch, hem authentic Creek dessert Creat Chat you wiH especially reaeaher. After the dinner «esting you will wsnt Co stay for the late show in the lounge with dancing snd music haportsd d~y froms Athena, Ie en reservations (wo have roon for at least RSC), but dsn~t be late getting ~yours in; this dinner you wcn't want Co miss. N~EU XORNA Specialty Ssla4 New York Steah RSSO sa ssmccw AVDNK ~ SAM JOSE Sarboqued Strip Pheea: 20$-HBk Bshed potato «ith Sour Croaa Vegetable proach Nroad Nahlava ~Ok: Saturday Fling, August 9 QIBRMR: 'y:00 p n. -
Saturday Flipcard.Indd
2010 NCAA DIVISION I CHAMPIONSHIP FIRST AND SECOND ROUNDS | MCCASLAND FIELD HOUSE (2,000) | NORMAN, OKLA. | FRIDAY-SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3-4, 2010 Date ...................................Saturday, December 4 | 2 p.m. CT Location ......................................................... Norman, Okla. Venue ................................................McCasland Field House Live Stats/Free Webcast............................ SoonerSports.com Series History .......................................Oklahoma leads 32-1 In Norman ............................................Oklahoma leads 15-0 In Tulsa .................................................Oklahoma leads 13-1 At Neutral Sites ......................................Oklahoma leads 4-0 No. 22 Tulsa (31-2, 20-0 Conference USA) | RPI: 26 Last Meeting ....................... Sept. 14, 2002 (TU, 3-1 in Tulsa) Oklahoma (22-10, 13-7 Big 12) | RPI: 28 GOLDEN HURRICANE OU’s Series Streak .........................................................Lost 1 SOONERS WINNER ADVANCES TO SWEET 16 AT UNIVERSITY PARK, PA. (PENN STATE) AVCA DIVISION I TOP 25 A LOOK AT OKLAHOMA POLL #14: NOVEMBER 29, 2010 Oklahoma defeated Wichita State for the fi rst time in six tries Friday evening (-27, -21, -14). School Points Record Previous The Sooners moved to 7-6 in NCAA Championship play and advanced to the second round for this fi rst time since 2007. 1. Florida (55) 1486 27-1 1 OU’s win over Wichita State moved the Sooners’ record to 21-8 against the Shockers. 2. Stanford (2) 1420 24-3 4 Oklahoma is 16-3 when leading 1-0 and 11-5 overall at home this season. 3. Nebraska (1) 1364 27-2 3 The Sooners are 4-7 against the RPI top 50 this year. 4. California (2) 1319 25-3 2 5. Southern California 1243 25-4 6 Caitlin Higgins posted her ninth double-double of the season Friday with 10 kills and 13 digs. -
Courts' Hostile Treatment of Site-Specific Works Under Vara
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law Volume 20 Issue 1 Fall 2009 Article 7 Hardly a Walk in the Park: Courts' Hostile Treatment of Site- Specific orksW under VARA Virginia M. Cascio Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/jatip Recommended Citation Virginia M. Cascio, Hardly a Walk in the Park: Courts' Hostile Treatment of Site-Specific orksW under VARA, 20 DePaul J. Art, Tech. & Intell. Prop. L. 167 (2009) Available at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/jatip/vol20/iss1/7 This Case Notes and Comments is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Law at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law by an authorized editor of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Cascio: Hardly a Walk in the Park: Courts' Hostile Treatment of Site-Spec HARDLY A WALK IN THE PARK: COURTS' HOSTILE TREATMENT OF SITE-SPECIFIC WORKS UNDER VARA "Men do change, and change comes like a little wind that ruffles the curtains at dawn, and it comes like the stealthy perfume of wildflowers hidden in the grass."--John Steinbeck1 I. INTRODUCTION As you walk through Grant Park on your way to downtown Chicago, you enjoy the ordered, natural splendor of two beautiful elliptical fields of wildflowers.2 The pleasure is further amplified by the seasonal transformation of nature's palette that brings forth a kaleidoscope of colors and patterns as new flowers emerge and older ones fade.3 Now, after twenty years of enjoying this park, one day you discover that sixty percent of the flowers have been destroyed, and those remaining have been abandoned to grow without care.' Imagine the feelings of the artist who created this living canvas when witnessing the culmination of his life's work destroyed by the Chicago Park District without notice after twenty 1. -
January 2 0 11
JANUARY 2 0 11 Vol. 39 Issue 1 [email protected] www.inmanpark.org Newsletter of Inman Park Neighborhood Association 245 North Highland Ave., N.E. STE. 230-401 ! Atlanta, GA 30307 PRESIDENT’S REPORT George Dusenbury, the new Com- 2011 HOUSE TOUR By Regina Brewer missioner of Parks, Recreation, and Cul- By Pat Westrick tural Affairs, and the City are willing to Our January meeting will be focus- reassess whether the Children’s area can It’s hard to believe that what started ing on our two parks. First will be a be allowed in Freedom Park. This would as a way to let the business community presentation on the plan developed be- mean that other festivals could be held in know that it was safe to lend money and tween our neighborhood and Park Pride Freedom Park and every neighborhood write insurance in our neighborhood has for Springvale Park. Amy Higgins, one that abuts Freedom Park would need to resulted in one of the best-known and of the Springvale Park Committee mem- consider and decide if they would sup- most-beloved festivals in the Southeast . bers, has written an article about this. port this policy. There are pros and cons The focal point of Festival in the This plan envisions major changes to to this decision, so we need to weigh this early years was the House Tour. How Springvale Park and a plan to address decision carefully. else to let the Atlanta community know ongoing issues such as drainage and I look forward to seeing you at the that we existed and what we were accom- erosion. -
August 1, 2019 MSRC-TAC Agenda
TECHNICAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE OF THE MOBILE SOURCE AIR POLLUTION REDUCTION REVIEW COMMITTEE AGENDA Thursday, August 1, 2019 at 1:30 p.m. LOCATION South Coast Air Quality Management District 21865 Copley Drive, Conf. Room CC8, Diamond Bar, CA 91765 Committee Members MSRC-TAC Chair Jamie Lai Dan York Alternate: Linda Johnson Representing Cities of Riverside County Representing Cities of Orange County MSRC-TAC Vice-Chair Vacant Representing Cities of Los Angeles County Anthony (AJ) Marquez Representing Orange County Board of Supervisors Steven Lee Representing Los Angeles County MTA MSRC-TAC Members Martha Masters Steve Hillman Alternate: Jenny Chan Representing City of Los Angeles Representing Riverside County Transportation Adriann Cardoso Commission Alternate: Cliff Thorne Andy Silva Representing Orange County Transportation Representing San Bernardino County Board of Authority Supervisors Rongsheng Luo Magdalena (Maggie) Martinez Representing Southern California Association of Alternate: Rick Teebay Governments Representing Los Angeles County Board of Jason Farin Supervisors Alternate: Alex Gann Vacant Representing Riverside County Board of Mechanical Expert Supervisors Sean O’Connor Nicholas Nairn-Birch Representing Cities of San Bernardino County Representing California Air Resources Board Tim Olson Kelly Lynn Alternate: Rhetta deMesa Alternate: Nicole Soto Air Pollution Control Expert Representing San Bernardino County Transportation Authority Martin Buford Representing Regional Rideshare Agency Vicki White Representing South Coast AQMD 8/1/19 MSRC-TAC Agenda Members of the public may address this body concerning any agenda item before or during consideration of that item (Gov’t. Code Section 548543.(a)). Please provide a Request to Address the Committee card to the Administrative Liaison if you wish to address the Committee on an agenda item. -
2020-21 Third Quarter Honor Roll
DISTRICT 202 THIRD QUARTER 2020-2021 MIDDLE SCHOOL HONOR ROLL Indian Trail Middle School High Honor Roll - Grade 6 EMA BEKERIS, JUNE COFFINDAFFER, ALEXANDER DUHAMEL, ALLISON DUHAMEL, EMILY FANNIN, GIANNA FLEMMING, ADDISON GARLING, SOPHIA GARLING, LUCAS GARRISON, MICHAEL GREEN, ARSEMA HABTAMU, ELI HOOVER, ETHAN LAMBERT, FINNEGAN LAMBERT, KAITLYN LAMBERT, MAGGIE LAMBERT, LEXI MCCLUSKEY, ISABELLE MCNAMARA, ANNA MOISEYTSEVA, SYDNEY MYERS, JOHN NGUYEN, ABIBAT OJELADE, STELLA RATLIFF, CHARLES REECE JR, JASON RUIZ, ISAAC SILVA, ANTHONY SILVER, RAEGAN TANG, LIAM THOMPSON, MARISSA TORRI, MIRABAI TUOMINEN, NYA VAZIFDAR, TY VITANOVEC, NATALIE ZULCA High Honor Roll - Grade 7 NARDINE ABDELMALEK, SAMUEL BATHAN, ELI BATTAGLIA, JASMINE BRISENO, DANIEL CARRANZA, COLIN COBERLEY, ARES COLLINS, KARA DAY, CAMILA DE LA TORRE, EMMA DEGRADO, SANTIAGO DELGADO SALINAS, TRISTAN DRAVO, JANET DURAN-MANZO, AUTUMN EMERIC, MCKENZIE FRANK, RILEY FREISCHLAG, KAITLYN GASZAK, ANDREW IMIG, KAROLINE LEGLER, ISABELLA MARTINEZ, JACOB MATULIS, JOHN MIKHAIL, ALEXI MLYNARCZYK, ARIANA MUNZON, MILO NELSON, DANIEL NEVAREZ, HAYLEN NGUYEN, ADRIAN ONTIVEROS, GRACIE PANTOJA, ALEXANDER PROCEK, CHRISTOPHER QUITUGUA, BRIANA RAMIREZ, SARA REHMAN, SHADRIC TICALA, ANTONELLA VALADEZ, DELILAH VALENZUELA, GIANELA VALLEJO, DELANEY WEBER, GRANT WITHAEGER High Honor Roll - Grade 8 NATALIE ADELMANN, LUIS ALVAREZ, ADALIE ARROYO, STEPHANIE CARRANZA, CAROLLANN COOMBS, GENEVIEVE DELLAMANO, JENNA DOLUDE, CHRISTINA DORVAL, SCOTT FREISCHLAG JR, EGEZIEHAREYA HABTAMU, LAYLAH JACKSON, RUTH LASKOWSKI, JAN GAVIN -
Flf~S~ THESIS COMMITTEE CHAIR SIGNATURE DATE
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY SAN MARCOS THESIS SIGNATURE PAGE THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULLFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE MASTER OF ARTS IN LITERATURE AND WRITING STUDIES THESIS TITLE: Queer Narrative Prosthesis: Disability and Sexuality in Richard III and House M.D. AUTHOR: Gina M Altavilla DATE OF SUCCESSFUL DEFENSE: November 30,2010 THE THESIS HAS BEEN ACCEPTED BY THE THESIS COMMITTEE IN PARTIAL FULLFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN LITERATURE AND WRITING STUDIES. II-fO-If) Martha Stoddard-Holmes, PhD flf~S~ THESIS COMMITTEE CHAIR SIGNATURE DATE Dawn Formo, PhD ~. 1- ~~-to-tU THESIS COMMITTEE MEMBER ~ DATE Aneil Rallin, PhD ~t.~ ~\\l't-l n. 30, ~O THESIS COMMITTEE MEMBER SIGNATURE DATE In order to critically rethink overlapping theoretical frameworks for considering identity, embodiment and "normalcy" offered by Disability Studies and Queer Studies, this paper explores the relationship and dissonance of both through the medium of popular culture. In an overarching sense, I am informed by scholars like Lennard Davis and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick. According to Davis in Bending Over Backwards, the focus of Disability Studies is to re-imagine the body from the "ideology of normalcy" to a "vision of the body as changeable, unperfectable, unruly, and untidy" (39).1 In a similar drive to question normalcy, according to Kosofsky Sedgwick in Tendencies, Queer Studies is an antihomophobic inquiry that examines sexuality and gender as unstable categories that "aren't made (or can't be made) to signify monolithically"(8). These fields share the practice of interrogating identities that are written on the body through cultural inscriptions of "normalcy." In a culture mediated by film, television and print media, I seek to understand how stereotypical notions of sexuality as "straight/normal" and "gay/abnormal" are perpetuated, and likewise, . -
02-22-2021 Through 02-28-2021
Chicopee Police Department Dispatch Log From: 02/22/2021 Thru: 02/28/2021 0000 - 2359 For Date: 02/22/2021 - Monday Call Number Time Call Reason Action 21-20188 0052 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] CHICOPEE ST + CHARPENTIER BLVD 21-20230 0215 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] GRANBY RD + COLUMBA ST 21-20261 0333 Disturbance Could not Locate Location/Address: [CHI 612] KENDALL HOUSE - SPRINGFIELD ST 21-20284 0607 Disturbance Unfounded Location/Address: [CHI 612] KENDALL HOUSE - SPRINGFIELD ST 21-20305 0750 Alarm False Alarm Location/Address: [CHI 931] TD BANK NA - MEADOW ST 21-20306 0750 Crash Property Damage Report Made Location/Address: [CHI] CHICOPEE ST + SHAW PARK AVE 21-20319 0818 Larceny Complaint Past Report Made Location/Address: [CHI] PENNSYLVANIA AVE 21-20325 0838 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI 958] PION PONTIAC (BOB) - MEMORIAL DR 21-20331 0900 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] GRANBY RD 21-20335 0909 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] GRANBY RD 21-20341 0924 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] GRANBY RD 21-20348 0937 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] GRANBY RD 21-20354 0953 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI 1122] CHICOPEE LIQUORS - MEMORIAL DR 21-20363 1023 Motor Vehicle Stop Citation/Warning Issued Location/Address: [CHI] MONTGOMERY ST 21-20369 1031 Larceny Complaint -
Eden Housing Project Plan to Go Before the City Council Monday
Thursday, MAY 20, 2021 VOLUME LVIII, NUMBER 20 Your Local News Source Since 1963 SERVING DUBLIN, LIVERMORE, PLEASANTON, SUNOL Schools Set Eden Housing Project Reopening Plans for Plan to Go Before the Next Year City Council Monday By Dawnmarie Fehr By Aly Brown construction jobs for union REGIONAL — Local LIVERMORE — A project members and develop af- school districts have begun proposed for the Down- fordable units to meet state the work of planning for town Core will go before mandates. The project is the 2021-22 school year the council next week in supported by several Liver- and are expecting a re- a meeting that could span more and Bay Area anti- turn to a regular schedule. more than one day. (See EDEN, page 6) However, most are also of- Livermore Mayor Bob fering virtual options. Woerner said at a recent As guidelines from the council session that the At press time, The state continue to fluctuate, May 24 hearing for Eden Independent received a local districts prepare for a Housing — the 130-unit, letter from land-use attorney full open, but administra- Residents at Stoneridge Creek senior living community brought legendary actors back four-story affordable hous- Winston Stromberg, with to life for a two-day photo shoot. The photos will be features in a 2022 calendar. To tors caution that nothing is ing project proposed for the Latham & Watkins, who read more, see page 9. To view a photo gallery, visit independentnews.com/multimedia. certain at this point. city’s downtown core — represents the community (Photo – Doug Jorgensen) could take more than one “For next year, the group, Save Livermore guidelines from the state day due to the anticipated seem to be leaning toward number of public speakers. -
Example Response to Announcement 2014
Response to Professional Services Procurement Bulletin No. 2012-07 Clinton County US 127 – Section 3 Item No. 8-108.00, 8-115.00 February 8, 2012 1957 House 2012 Pr oj ect I nfor mation | Page 1 Response TO Pr oposal FOR Per sonal ser vi ce contr act CLINTON COUNTY-US127-I TEM NO. 8-108.00 & 8-115.00 SECTI ON 3 Firm Name House Inc. Pr oj ect No./ 8-108.00 & 8-115.00 Firm Address: 1957 Doctors Lane Lexington, KY 40505 County: Clinton Pr ocur ement T el ephone: (859) 491-1363 Bulletin: 2012-07 Adver t i sement Contact Name: Chr i s Taub, PE, PLS Dat e: January 10, 2012 E-Mai l Addr ess: [email protected] Location of Offices(s) wher e wor k is to be Response Due Per f or med: Dat e: Lexington, Kentucky February 8, 2012 I cer t i f y that the infor mation included within this document i s, to the best of my k nowl edge, cor r ect as of the date indicated bel ow: I certify that H ouse I nc. is cur r ent l y r egi st er ed by the Commonwealth of K ent uck y in accor dance with KRS 322.060 to perform the engi neer i ng ser vi ces needed for this pr oj ect , and our Kentucky Regi st r at i on Number is 219. I cer t i f y to the best of my k nowl edge, House I nc. -
Directory of State and Local Government
DIRECTORY OF STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT Prepared by RESEARCH DIVISION LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL BUREAU 2020 Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS Please refer to the Alphabetical Index to the Directory of State and Local Government for a complete list of agencies. NEVADA STATE GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONAL CHART ............................................. D-9 CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION ............................................................................................. D-13 DIRECTORY OF STATE GOVERNMENT CONSTITUTIONAL OFFICERS: Attorney General ........................................................................................................................ D-15 State Controller ........................................................................................................................... D-19 Governor ..................................................................................................................................... D-20 Lieutenant Governor ................................................................................................................... D-27 Secretary of State ........................................................................................................................ D-28 State Treasurer ............................................................................................................................ D-30 EXECUTIVE BOARDS ................................................................................................................. D-31 NEVADA SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION