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Its 2004; three years after the attacks on New York and DC, Saddam Hussein is dead and the hunt for Osama bin Laden goes on. But there are more pressing matters for newly appointed General of the Project - Tylen Starwind. Called back to help train younger created Starwind, Tylen also learns something disturbing. Someone has leaked information about the United States best kept secret since WWII ended; the Project. In addition his personal relationship with Brieona Kim is on the ropes as well as a new advisor to the President to absorb, Tylen feels overwhelmed with his new responsibilities. After all, he wasnt created for politics he was created to keep the United States safe; he was created a...
424 pages including index, history of the county and the towns in it, businesses, churches, families and organizations, lots of b/w illustrations
Cincinnati Magazine taps into the DNA of the city, exploring shopping, dining, living, and culture and giving readers a ringside seat on the issues shaping the region.
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Land Use and Town and Country Planning is a 14-chapter text that provides statistical data on human land use and town and country planning, with particular emphasis on the Great Britain land statistics. The opening chapters deal with the concepts of land and land use, measurement, and the adoption of the metric system. The succeeding chapters are devoted to land statistics for agriculture, forestry, recreation, conservation and amenity, and other rural land uses. These topics are followed by discussions of urban land estimates and use, as well as land utilization surveys. The final chapters describe the potential of maps, air photography, and improvements in land-use records. This book will prove useful to workers and researchers in the general field of planning.
Originally published in 1964, this book describes the hospital service as it is seen by patients. It is based mainly on interviews with a random sample of patients and discusses the relationships between patients and between them and hospital doctors, nurses, and general practitioners. The best available medical care should not only be given, but the patient and his relatives should feel that this has been given. Explanations need to be seen not as a lavish appendage, but as an integral part of medical care. Recognition and acceptance of this responsibility could stimulate interest in patients' social lives, so that hospital staff become more aware of the difficulties patients may encounter when they leave hospital. This in turn could lead to greater integration between the hospital and welfare services and between the hospital and the general practitioners. Still relevant today this study can now be read in its historical context.
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