Jun
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2010
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Becoming A Doctor In The Army
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Believing in E’Stephan
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On Becoming a Doctor $10.35 On Becoming a Doctor |
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Becoming a Doctor $10.55 Becoming a Doctor |
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Essential Guide to Becoming a Doctor $35.1 Essential Guide to Becoming a Doctor |
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Essential Guide To Becoming A Doctor $28.49 All you need to know about becoming a doctor in the UK This book contains all the help you need to become a doctor. From applying to medical school through to choosing your specialty you can find out: How to choose a medical school How to get into medical school How to survive as a medical student All about electives What life is like as a doctor As well as easy to follow information on choosing getting into – and surviving – medical school junior doctors in different specialties provide unique insight with firsthand accounts of what the job is like in real life to help you plan and decide your future career path. Included in this fully updated third edition is the latest information on admission tests an admission table with practical details about each medical school (as well as greater coverage of graduate medical schools) making this now even more comprehensive for everyone planning a career in medicine. |
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Becoming $15.27 Grammy and Dove award-winning gospel superstar Yolanda Adams’ eleventh studio album puts the emphasis on the contemporary in CCM with an 11-track collection of inspirational, self-penned, dancefloor jams (and one lovely ballad in the first single “Be Still”). Simple, upbeat, and radio-ready, Becoming is a relentlessly positive and catchy set from one of the genre’s most reliable talents. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi Performers: Rico Henry – Sequencing; Rodney East – Sequencing; L. Robertson – Vocals (Background); T. Butler – Vocals (Background); The Nashville String Machine – Strings; Al Willis – Guitar (Acoustic) |
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The Essential Guide to Becoming a Doctor $35.95 Written by doctors who have been through changes in both medical education and the NHS, this book explains what life as a medical student and a doctor is really like. Supplemented with many real life personal experiences, it helps readers to gain an unbiased view of their possible future careers. |
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Doctor Who: The Forgotten Army $4.16 ?Let me tell you a story. Long ago, in the frozen Arctic wastes, an alien army landed. Only now, 10,000 years later, it isn?t a story. And the army is ready to attack.? New York ? one of the greatest cities on 21st century Earth… But what?s going on in the Museum? And is that really a Woolly Mammoth rampaging down Broadway? An ordinary day becomes a time of terror, as the Doctor and Amy meet a new and deadly enemy. The vicious Army of the Vykoid are armed to the teeth and determined to enslave the human race. Even though they?re only seven centimetres high. With the Vykoid army swarming across Manhattan and sealing it from the world with a powerful alien force field, Amy has just 24 hours to find the Doctor and save the city. If she doesn?t, the people of Manhattan will be taken to work in the doomed asteroid mines of the Vykoid home planet. But as time starts to run out, who can she trust? And how far will she have to go to free New York from the Forgotten Army? A thrilling, all new adventure featuring the Doctor and Amy, as played by Matt Smith and Karen Gillan in the spectacular hit series from BBC Television |
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Singular Intimacies: Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue $14.98 "Singular Intimacies" is the story of becoming a doctor by immersion at New York’s Bellevue Hospital, the oldest public hospital in the country. When Danielle Ofri first enters the doors as a medical student, she is immediately plunged into the teeming world of urban medicine. It is here that Dr. Ofri develops a profound instinct for healing and, above all, learns to navigate the tangled vulnerabilities of doctor and patient. |
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The Doctor $23.79 If any one record sums up all the ludicrous indulgence of ‘80s record-making it’s The Doctor, Cheap Trick’s ninth album. Cluttered with cacophonic electronic drums and clanking with cheap overdriven synths, the record is cavernous and hollow, every instrument echoing endlessly in a fathomless digital stage. As sonic archaeology, this holds some interest, as it contains every bad record production idea of the mid-‘80s — it’s as garish as its record cover. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi Performers: Bun E. Carlos – Drums; Coral Gordon – Vocals (Background), Vocals; Dee Lewis – Vocals (Background), Vocals; Jon Brant – Bass; Paul Klingberg – Sequencing, Keyboards; Rick Nielsen – Guitar; Robin Zander – Vocals |
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Becoming a Doctor By Konner, Melvin $22.67 The author, already in his mid thirties and distinguished as a scholar, tenured professor, and published writer before beginning medical school, chronicles his third year of medical training Author: Konner, Melvin Subtitle: A Journey of Initiation in Medical School Publication Date: 1988/07/01 Binding Type: Paperback Language: English Depth: 0.75 Width: 5.25 Height: 7.75 |
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The Doctor Is In $9.58 Good ’91 session featuring the steady cool and bop-tinged alto sax solos of Bud Shank in a combo setting. He’s backed by pianist Mike Wofford, bassist Bob Magnusson, and drummer Sherman Ferguson. They tackle familiar standards and a few originals, and make satisfying, if unchallenging, music. ~ Ron Wynn, Rovi Performers: Bob Magnusson – Bass; Bud Shank – Sax (Alto); Mike Wofford – Piano; Sherman Ferguson – Drums |
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The Doctor Is In! $84.98 This four-CD set, containing 122 songs (23 of them previously unreleased) cut between 1950 and 1966 for RCA, Groove, Okeh, and Columbia is, literally, the best of Piano Red, and may be the best box in the entire Bear Family catalog. This is about as good as piano blues and R&B got, and also some of the best piano-based rock & roll you’ll ever hear — rivaling anything that Jerry Lee Lewis or Little Richard ever cut — with barely a second-rate track. Even the multiple versions of his signature tune, “Right String but the Wrong Yo-Yo,” are welcomed, from its lean, mean piano-bass-drums original 1950 version, to the live 1955 rendition and the broader 1961 remake (at the “Mr. Moonlight” session), because they’re each different enough to justify their presence. And, yet, the most amazing thing about the 16 years covered on these four discs is the consistency of the music and performances — Red hardly changed at all until the early ’60s, always giving his audience a good show whether he was making records or playing live. The second and third discs are arguably the best parts of the set, with Red at the peak of his prowess as a pianist and singer. He made the jump into rock & roll more easily than most bluesmen of his age, with the result that his music from this period is as solid as anything else he ever did. Still later, on the fourth disc, once he moves into a more produced, pop-oriented R&B sound, he holds up almost as well. The sound is excellent, the notes are thorough, and the $100 list price of this 122-song set makes it proportionately more attractive than any $15/15-song best-of on Red that might ever show up (and there isn’t one). ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi Performers: The Four Students – Choir, Chorus, Vocals; Al Sears – Saxophone; Albert Johnson – Saxophone; Albert White – Saxophone; Alonzo Buddy Lucas – Saxophone; Andrew L. Goodrich – Saxophone; Ben Smith – Sax (Baritone); Bertha Colbert – Vocals; Beverly “Guitar” Watkins – Guitar; |
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Not Becoming My Mother: $11.97 For information on the author Ruth Reichl click here. Bestselling author Ruth Reichl examines her mother’s life in this little gem, and gives voice to the universal unarticulated truth that we are grateful not to be our mothers. In Not Becoming My Mother, bestselling author Ruth Reichl embarks on a clear-eyed, openhearted investigation of her mother’s life, piecing together the journey of a woman she comes to realize she never really knew. Looking to her mother’s letters and diaries, Reichl confronts the painful transition her mother made from a hopeful young woman to an increasingly unhappy older one and realizes the tremendous sacrifices she made to make sure her daughter’s life would not be as disappointing as her own. Growing up in Cleveland, Miriam Brudno dreamed of becoming a doctor, like her father. But when she announced this, her parents said, “You’re no beauty, and it’s too bad you’re such an intellectual. But if you become a doctor, no man will ever marry you.” Instead, at twenty, Miriam opened a bookstore, a profession everyone agreed was suitably ladylike. She corresponded with authors all over the world, including philosophers such as Bertrand Russell, political figures such as Max Eastman, and novelists such as Christopher Marlowe. It was the happiest time of her life. Nearly thirty when she finally married, she fulfilled expectations, settled down, left her bookstore behind, and started a family. But conformity came at a tremendous cost. With labor-saving devices to aid in household chores, there was simply not enough to do to fill the days. Miriam–and most of her friends–were smart, educated women who were often bored, miserable, and silently rebellious. On what would have been Miriam’s one hundredth birthday Reichl opens up her mother’s diaries for the first time and encounters a whole new woman. This is a person she had never known. In this intimate study Reichl comes to understand the lessons of rebellion, independence, and self-acceptance that her mother–though unable to guide herself–succeeded in teaching her daughter. |
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Becoming a Doctor: From Student to Specialist, Doctor-Writers Share Their Experiences $21.48 In this poignant collection, doctors who are writers (and vice versa) relate their real-life journeys from intern to specialist, student to teacher, reflecting on the rewards, disillusionments, and triumphs encountered along the way. Featuring a wide array of distinguished voices, including Peter Kramer, Kay Redfield Jamison, Robert Coles, Lauren Slater, Sandeep Jauhar, and Perri Klass, these original stories create a vivid mural of the medical world and provide invaluable insight for both doctors in training and longtime physicians. Becoming a Doctor portrays the broad arc of a doctor’s life, from a medical student’s uneasy first encounter with a cadaver and her realization that the experience’s redemption will lie ahead in the lives saved, to a resident’s reliance on dance during her grueling year in an inner-city hospital, and a veteran doctor’s profound ruminations on what it means to really listen to a patient’s story. |
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A Soldier-Doctor of Our Army $22.48 This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR’d book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. |
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Becoming a Doctor Laminated Reference Guide $7.14 No Synopsis Available |
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Watson’s Afghan Adventure – How Sherlock Holmes’ Dr.Watson Became an Army Doctor $15.48 In Watson’s Afghan Adventure the good doctor explains to Sherlock Holmes how he chose to become an army doctor, served with the 5th Northumberland Fusiliers and how a treasure map brought him to the battle of Maiwand and on to 221B Baker Street. |
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Becoming A Doctor: From Student To Specialist Doctor-Writers Share Their Experiences $16.09 In this poignant collection doctors who are writers (and vice versa) relate their real-life journeys from intern to specialist student to teacher reflecting on the rewards disillusionments and triumphs encountered along the way. Featuring a wide array of distinguished voices including Peter Kramer Kay Redfield Jamison Robert Coles Lauren Slater Sandeep Jauhar and Perri Klass these original stories create a vivid mural of the medical world and provide invaluable insight for both doctors in training and longtime physicians. Becoming a Doctor portrays the broad arc of a doctor"s life from a medical student"s uneasy first encounter with a cadaver and her realization that the experience"s redemption will lie ahead in the lives saved to a resident"s reliance on dance during her grueling year in an inner-city hospital and a veteran doctor"s profound ruminations on what it means to really listen to a patient"s story. Physicians recount true personal stories from their professional lives in this inspired anthology by new and known writers. |
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The Becoming $7.19 The Becoming |
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Doctor at Large $18.75 The third of the droll British “Doctor” series, Doctor at Large once more stars Dirk Bogarde as young Dr. Simon Sparrow. Back in his old stamping grounds at St. Swithin’s Teaching Hospital, Sparrow misses his chance at becoming chief surgeon when he cross |
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A Woman’s Life: A Novel of Friendship $9.64 Connie is the youngest member of a large Irish family, and Ireland’s too small to contain her. She is beautiful and impulsive, and she roars through life, never looking before she leaps. Nina is English and middleclass, the shy, thoughtful, daughter of an army officer. She marries her boyhood love and has two children before realizing how unfulfilled she is, and that painting is her true passion. Fay is American and Jewish, the granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor. She’s the ambitious one, who fulfils her dream of becoming a doctor before admitting a darker, more complex side to her nature. Three women, born at the outbreak of World War II, who’ve grown up in widely differing circumstances, form an improbable friendship that sustains them through 40 years of love, marriage, children, work, divorce, and tragedy, against the backdrop of a society undergoing dramatic change at every level. |
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Doc $7.58 No Indiana governor in the 20th century has been more popular or successful than Otis R. Bowen. In his long-awaited autobiography, Doc writes in rich detail about the hard work and persistence that got him into and through medical school. His commitment to serving people made him a beloved family physician in Bremen, a respected state legislator and legislative leader, and one of the most esteemed governors in Indiana history.Otis Bowen grew up poor in Fulton County, but was rich in the things that matter. With the support of his parents, siblings, teachers and friends, he pursued a dream of becoming a family physician, making many sacrifices to finance his way through medical school.As a newly minted doctor, Bowen first practiced medicine in the Army. He describes his experience on the field of combat in the Pacific during the last major battle of World War II, and tells of his life after coming home from the war to serve the medical needs of a small northern Indiana community. We learn, too, of his personal life, about his own family and his first two wives, Beth Bowen and Rose Bowen, the loneliness and emptiness he endured after they died painfully of cancer, and how his third wife, Carol, has filled that void.An almost accidental entry into politics and public life led Bowen to the capitals of Indiana and the nation. Drafted as a candidate for Marshall County coroner in 1952, Bowen moved up from that office to become a member of the Indiana House of Representatives, to House leadership as Minority Leader and Speaker, to the governor’s office in 1973, and to President Ronald Reagan’s cabinet in 1985. The first person to serve eight consecutive years as Indiana’s governor,Bowen candidly explores the challenges, crises and triumphs of that period. In an equally candid way, he recounts his efforts and frustrations as Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.As warm, down-to-earth, and genuine as its subject, Doc will be welcomed by |