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New Beginning (new + beginning)
Selected AbstractsA New Year,A New BeginningCONGENITAL HEART DISEASE, Issue 1 2010Douglas Moodie MD No abstract is available for this article. [source] Hydrogeology: Time for a New Beginning?GROUND WATER, Issue 3 2002Fred M. Phillips No abstract is available for this article. [source] Each Venture Is a New BeginningJOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 1 2000Marc K. Drezner M.D. Editor-in-Chief No abstract is available for this article. [source] JCE: A New BeginningJOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2 2004Eric N. Prystowsky M.D. No abstract is available for this article. [source] Towards a "new beginning": dietary fat restrictions in infancy?ACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 1 2000R Kleinman No abstract is available for this article. [source] Cultural Models and Metaphors for Marriage: An Analysis of Discourse at Japanese Wedding ReceptionsETHOS, Issue 3 2004CYNTHIA DICKEL DUNN This article uses metaphor analysis to delineate the cultural model of marriage expressed in speeches at Japanese wedding receptions. Wedding speakers used three main metaphors for talking about marriage: marriage as a joint creation, marriage as a physical union, and marriage as a journey. These metaphors were used to express a number of themes including the concepts that marriage is a new beginning, requires joint effort and cooperation, is ideally a lasting union, and involves love, trust, and emotional unity. A comparison with earlier studies of U.S. discourse reveals that people in Japan and the United States share many of the same metaphors and ideas about marriage, but differ in their understanding of the "work" required in marriage. Whereas people in the United States talk of the need to "work on" the relationship, particularly through open communication of needs and emotions, speakers at Japanese weddings emphasized the couple "working together" and emotional unity was presented as a part of that cooperation rather than an end in itself. [source] A NEW NEW ORLEANS?JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, Issue 3 2008LOCAL RELATIONSHIP IN THE RECOVERY PROCESS, UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF HISTORY AND THE STATE ABSTRACT:,Two years after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, the city still struggles to rebuild and recover. In this article, we examine how deeply rooted historical patterns of state,local conflict reasserted themselves even after the terrible destruction of Katrina and the redemptive promise of a new beginning. We also explain how state government, some city leaders, and most New Orleanians took advantage of the opportunities presented by Hurricane Katrina to change certain aspects of governance in New Orleans. This research highlights the importance of the state,local relationship in understanding urban affairs and the critical nature of historical patterns and their persistence. State,local conflicts over finances, control of local politics, and cultural differences have plagued New Orleans for decades, and they continue to do so in the post-Katrina era. [source] Reflection; end of an era and a new beginning!ANAESTHESIA, Issue 4 2002G. Y. G. Lahoud No abstract is available for this article. [source] Peeling Away the Western VeneerNEW PERSPECTIVES QUARTERLY, Issue 2 2008KISHORE MAHBUBANI Globalization has indeed flattened the earth, paving the way for new beginnings and the resurgence of old cultures alike by levelling the playing field for all comers. While this new era of post-globalization certainly heralds de-Westernization by century's end, is it more likely to mean a revival of the old ways of the East or the new hybrid ways of the first global civilization? Some of Asia's most provocative voices, as well as the world's most renowned cellist and cross-pollinating musician, offer their views. [source] Bound Together: The Future of GlobalizationNEW PERSPECTIVES QUARTERLY, Issue 2 2008NAYAN CHANDA Globalization has indeed flattened the earth, paving the way for new beginnings and the resurgence of old cultures alike by levelling the playing field for all comers. While this new era of post-globalization certainly heralds de-Westernization by century's end, is it more likely to mean a revival of the old ways of the East or the new hybrid ways of the first global civilization? Some of Asia's most provocative voices, as well as the world's most renowned cellist and cross-pollinating musician, offer their views. [source] Endings and new beginningsPERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT, Issue 5 2005Doug Leigh PhD No abstract is available for this article. [source] |