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Our website uses cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing to use our site, or clicking "Continue," you are agreeing to our Cookie Policy | Continue JAMA HomeNew OnlineCurrent IssueFor Authors Podcasts Clinical Reviews Editors' Summary Medical News Author Interviews More Publications JAMA JAMA Network Open JAMA Cardiology JAMA Dermatology JAMA Health Forum JAMA Internal Medicine JAMA Neurology JAMA Oncology JAMA Ophthalmology JAMA Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery JAMA Pediatrics...
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This study is the first of a series in which a main concern will be to establish the Neogene absolute motion of the African Plate. A combined palaeomagnetic and K–Ar whole rock age dating study has been made of the Haruj Assuad basaltic volcanic area of central Libya. Seventy volcanic units, largely pahoehoe basaltic flows, were sampled in the north-central Haruj Assuad in an area centred on 27°45′ N, 017°30′E. Precisely defined paleomagnetic directions were obtained for 68 of the volcanic...
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Journal of Non-White Concerns in Personnel and GuidanceVolume 2, Issue 3 p. 133-144 A Helping Experience in African Education: Implications for Cross-Cultural Work Asa Grant Hilliard III, Asa Grant Hilliard III Dean Asa Grant Hilliard III is Dean of the School of Education, San Francisco State College, San Francisco, California.Search for more papers by this author Asa Grant Hilliard III, Asa Grant Hilliard III Dean Asa Grant Hilliard III is Dean of the School of Education, San Francisco...
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Inhabitants of villages in the Highlands of New Guinea wear scant clothing. To keep warm during cold nights they burn smoky fires in small closed huts, where they inhale extremely high levels of particulate matter and aldehydes. Pulmonary disease, mainly obstructive but also restrictive, appears at an early age and was present in 78% of subjects over age 40 years. Severely affected subjects have diminished breath sounds, coarse rales, and decreased chest cage movement. Pathologic specimens...
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Having read most of the literature both on participative management and industrial democracy, I have to conclude that much of it needs to move from value-laden prescriptions to the crucial issues of proper implementation. We should be asking and answering such questions as: Under what conditions is participation most appropriate (personalities, organizations, types of decisions, and so forth)? How does one hold groups accountable for poor decisions? Until managers and researchers come to...
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The Cost of Learning: the politics of primary education in Kenya by L. Gray Cowan New York, Columbia University Teachers College Press, 1970. Pp. xiii + 106. $4.50. - Education, Development and Nation-Building in Independent Africa by H. F. Makulu London, S.C.M. Press, 1971. Pp. xiii + III. £2.25. - Volume 12 Issue 2
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Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsJ. A. AkinpeluJ. A. Akinpelu is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Education at the University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria
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SUMMARY A retrospective analysis is presented of the aetiology of mental handicap in 212 Rhodesian African children. In 23 per cent the cause of the mental retardation was primary (present at birth), in 27 per cent there was a well‐documented acquired cause and in the remaining 50 per cent the aetiology was unknown. The findings are discussed in relation to social and medical conditions in Rhodesia, and an outline is given of the authors' approach to the retarded child in Rhodesia. RÉSUMÉ...
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Data were needed for the planning of disaster relief in West Africa, which has been subject to a prolonged drought. A nationwide survey was undertaken to determine the nutritional status of the Mauritanians and the rates of important communicable diseases. The main findings were that: (a) acute malnutrition was most severe among nomads; (b) malnutrition was of the marasmic variety; (c) severe vitamin deficiency was present in isolated pockets; (d) measles was present in epidemic proportions;...
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(1974). The health of Nigerian children of school age (6–15 years) Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology: Vol. 68, No. 2, pp. 157-166.