Perception on Ito Hirobumi of the France in the Residency-General Period

2018 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 157-186
Author(s):  
Kwang Ho Hyun ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (03) ◽  
pp. 292-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Line Lied ◽  
Grethe E. Borchgrevink ◽  
Vilhjalmur Finsen

Background: “Wide awake hand surgery”, where surgery is performed in local anaesthesia with adrenaline, without sedation or a tourniquet, has become widespread in some countries. It has a number of potential advantages and we wished to evaluate it among our patients. Methods: All 122 patients treated by this method during one year were evaluated by the surgeons and the patients on a numerical scale from 0 (best/least) to 10 (worst/most). Theatre time was compared to that recorded for a year when regional or general anaesthesia had been used. Results: The patients’ mean score for the general care they had received was 0.1 (SD 0.6), for pain during lidocaine injection 2.4 (SD 2.2), for pain during surgery 0.9 (SD 1.5), and for other discomfort during surgery 0.5 (SD 1.4). Eight reported that they would want general anaesthesia if they were to be operated again. The surgeons’ mean evaluation of bleeding during surgery was 1.6 (SD 1.8), oedema during surgery 0.4 (SD 1.1), general disadvantages with the method 1.0 (SD 1.6) and general advantages 6.5 (SD 4.3). The estimation of advantages was 9.9 (DS 0.5) for tendon suture. 28 patients needed intra-operative additional anaesthesia. The proportion was lower among trained hand surgeons and fell significantly during the study period. Non-surgical theatre time was 46 (SD 15) minutes during the study period and 55 (SD 22) minutes during the regional/general period (p < 0.001). This gain was cancelled out by a longer surgery time during the wide awake period. Conclusions: Wide awake surgery is fully acceptable to most patients. It has a number of advantages over general or regional anaesthesia, but we feel it is unlikely to improve the efficiency of the operating theatre.


Author(s):  
Dr. Nabil Ibrahim Mahmoud

The failure of companies is one of the most important topics that prompted many writers and researchers to study them, due to the negative effects it may have on the national economy and on society as a whole. There are many methods of financial analysis in predicting failure, including the Altman model. As Altman's equation was applied to the data obtained from the list of financial position and profit disclosure for the study sample companies and listed on the Iraq Stock Exchange, and the results of the analysis for the years of study appeared varying for the general period from 2012 to 2017, as well as the recurrence of failure of some companies during the years of study where the value was (Z) is low ((for the year 2013 the value of Z (1.43) for the Iraqi Carpet and Furniture Company)), ((and for the year 2014 the value of Z (0.25), (-175.61), (1.70), (1.47), (1.62), for the company Al-Kindi for the production of vaccines and patient medicines, the National Company for Chemical and Plastic Industries, the Iraqi Company for the manufacture and marketing of dates, Baghdad for the manufacture of packaging materials, and the Iraqi carpets and furnishings, respectively)).


Author(s):  
Wintgen Robert

This commentary analyses Article 10.3 of the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts (PICC) concerning modification of limitation periods by the parties. Under Art 10.3, the parties are allowed to modify the limitation periods. However, the parties may not shorten the general limitation period to less than one year, shorten the maximum limitation period to less than four years, or extend the maximum limitation period to more than fifteen years. This commentary discusses the possibility of modification under Art 10.3(1), with particular emphasis on modification by the parties as distinguished from other techniques, different kinds of modification, and means of modification. It also considers limits to modifications under Art 10.3(2), including limits in respect of the general period and limits in respect of the maximum period, along with the effect of agreements on limitation periods in violation of Art 10.3(2).


2006 ◽  
Vol 06 (01) ◽  
pp. 43-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. G. YING ◽  
Y. Q. NI ◽  
J. M. KO

A direct numerical approach for solving the instability problem of multi-degree-of-freedom dynamic systems with general period-parameter excitation is developed based on the Floquet theory, Fourier series and generalized eigenvalue analysis. The developed direct numerical approach to the instability is applied to an inclined stay cable with sag under periodic two-support-motion excitation. The partially differential equation for the parametrically excited vibration of the cable is derived by using the transformation of displacements and converted into ordinary differential equations according to the Galerkin method. The unstable regions for parametrically excited vibration of the damped cable system with multi-degree-of-freedom are obtained to illustrate its overall instability. The effects of each mode vibration and parameters of the cable on the unstable regions are analyzed. The developed direct numerical approach to the parametrically excited instability is applicable to more general periodic parameter-excited systems.


1978 ◽  
Vol 90 ◽  
pp. 141-146
Author(s):  
J.G Mitchell

Nine basaltic dykes were sampled by coring during geological reconnaissance of the south-east coast of Greenland (Bridgwater et al., 1977) between Angmagssalik (65°40') and Nordfjord (fig. 49). The samples were initially collected for palaeomagnetic investigations (Beckmann,1977). In the field it was assumed that all the fresh basic dykes in the region were Tertiary in age and represented a southern continuation of the coastal dyke swarm described by Wager & Deer (1938). The timing of dyke injection is very important as a possibie indication of the initial break-up of the original North Atlantic mass. Furthermore, it was assumed that the major coast-parallel dyke swarm (for example site 26 & 28, see fig. 49) was the continuation of the more intense Tertiary dyke swarm reported by Wager & Deer (1938) further north, while the more sporadic dykes with other trends were presumed also to belong to the same general period of injection. The preliminary palaeomagnetic studies by Beckmann (1977) showed no consistent differences between dykes grouped according to their trends.


1945 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-61
Author(s):  
Oliver P. Field

The paragraphs that follow answer the same questions with respect to unconstitutional legislation by Congress that were answered with respect to unconstitutional legislation in the ten states (Colorado, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota, South Dakota, Illinois, Indiana, and New York) included in my study published in 1943 under the title, Unconstitutional Legislation in Ten Selected States. The congressional statutes and the decisions of the Supreme Court analyzed herein are based upon the list found in Professor Charles Grove Haines, The Doctrine of American Judicial Supremacy. The reason why this list was chosen as the basis for analysis was that it covers approximately the same period, namely, from the beginnings to the early thirties, not including the period of the New Deal which formally began in 1933. This does not mean that there is no point in analyzing the later statutes and decisions, but that for purposes of comparison it was thought safer to restrict this analysis to the same general period for both state and national materials. The three cases under No. 1 in the Haines list have been omitted because no decrees based on invalidity followed their decision.


2008 ◽  
Vol 04 (05) ◽  
pp. 775-796 ◽  
Author(s):  
KAZUHIRO ONODERA

Our aim is to investigate the behavior of generalized multiple sine functions with general period parameters in the fundamental domain. For that, we need to calculate the number of their extremal values. By estimating their special values, we determine it in some cases including the quintuple sine function. As a consequence, we sketch their graphs.


1957 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Hart

The asphyxiation level of oxygen at various levels of CO2 (CO2 sensitivity), measured on the brown bullhead, southern channel catfish, and largemouth bass decreased as the water warmed up with the approach of summer conditions in Florida. In the same general period blood pressure of the bass and channel catfish fell with seasonal change from winter to summer temperatures. Correlated changes were found in the weight of the ventricle with occluded blood. In the channel catfish, ventricle weights were lowest when water temperatures were warmest. They were greatest in winter in Florida and Tennessee fish when temperatures were lowest. Small seasonal trends in stroke output were also observed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 212-250
Author(s):  
Leonard V. Rutgers

Using data collected in the early Christian catacombs of St. Callixtus on the Appian Way and comparing these with data from the Jewish catacombs of Villa Torlonia on the Via Nomentana, this article discusses what sort of labor the building of the early Christian catacombs of Rome entailed, what kind of investment this required, and how these expenses related to the costs incurred in other big architectural projects dating to the same general period. It then explores the significance of these expenses by historically contextualizing the evidence in reference to current debates on the issue of early Christian catacomb organization, early Christian social history, and managerial developments within the early church. The article concludes by highlighting how economic feasibility was a major factor that allowed the early Christian catacombs to develop into huge communal cemeteries and how this development, in turn, affected early Christian identity formation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document