Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - Taschenbuch
2013, ISBN: 9780824746254
Gebundene Ausgabe
Paperback. Very Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items., Paperback. As New. High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Mage: The Awakening is a role-play… Mehr…
Paperback. Very Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items., Paperback. As New. High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Mage: The Awakening is a role-playing game developed by White Wolf, Inc. and based in their World of Darkness setting. The characters portrayed in this game are individuals able to bend or break the commonly-accepted rules of reality to perform subtle or o, Paperback. New. High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Mage: The Awakening is a role-playing game developed by White Wolf, Inc. and based in their World of Darkness setting. The characters portrayed in this game are individuals able to bend or break the commonly-accepted rules of reality to perform subtle or o, Hardcover. Very Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items., Leipzig: Hartmann & Wolf, 1945. text in Latin and German, 813 pages. reading copy only. pages loose, torn covers, dogeared pages, very minimal notes. text should be complete.. loose_leaf. As Is. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall., Hartmann & Wolf, 1945, Paperback. New., Hardcover. New., 2009-02-10. Good. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May not contain Access Codes or Supplements. May be re-issue. May be ex-library. Shipping & Handling by region. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2009-02-10, 2012-05-24. Good. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May not contain Access Codes or Supplements. May be re-issue. May be ex-library. Shipping & Handling by region. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2012-05-24, 2009-07-08. Good. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May not contain Access Codes or Supplements. May be re-issue. May be ex-library. Shipping & Handling by region. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2009-07-08, MGM (Video & DVD), 2005-09-20. DVD. New. brand new in original shrinkwrap; NTSC Region 1 formatting for playback in the US & Canada; because we care that your order arrives in the condition stated, we have additionally sealed the case in bubblewrap for added protection during shipment, MGM (Video & DVD), 2005-09-20, London: Fisher, Son, & Co., 1847. First Edition, First Impression. Full Calf. Very Good. 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall. George Cruikshank. 1847. Not dated. First Edition, 1847. Cohn 358; Wolf 2619, with no advertisements. Size 16mo, 222 pages. Bound in full tan calf with gilt frames and floral corner pieces to the covers and gilt titles on burgyndy labels and heavy gilt to the spine, all edges gilt, gilt on the inner dentelles, marbled end-papers. Condition very good, corners hinges and spine ends are rubbed, spots to front and rear end-papers, title and last page, remaining pages are toned otherwise clean., Fisher, Son, & Co., 1847, 2009-07-08. New. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May be re-issue. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2009-07-08, n/a. Please feel free to request a detailed description. Short description (computer translated from Russian into English): Cohn-League 1996 year. In russian language. SKUalb_11052000d6cbcdc2cc986f43d16c0a0e75de97 . Good. n/a. n/a. 1996., 1996, Berlin: A. Asher & Co, 1863. Livre. Bon. Couverture souple. Ed. originale. In-8. Berlin, A. Asher & Co (Albert Cohn & D. Collin), 1863. 23,5 x 14,5 cm, in-8, XVI - 242 - 334 pp., broché, couverture imprimée. Edition originale rare. La seconde partie, paginée séparément, est une anthologie importante en langue portugaise non traduite. Des rousseurs essentiellement marginales, sur papier bien blanc, bon exemplaire.., A. Asher & Co, 1863, 278+[1 ad] pages with diagrams and tables. Octavo (8 1/4" x 5 1/2") bound in blue cloth with gilt lettering to spine and marbled page ends. (Linde-Niemeijeriana:5278) First edition.The great Ostend tournament had scarcely ended when, ten days later, the Nuremberg Congress began. Although originally planned as a grandmaster event, the tournament failed to attract a number of the firs-rank stars - among them Lasker, Maroczy, Burn, Rubinstein, Marco and Teichmann. The reluctance of the Ostend participants to undertake the long journey to Germany's famous medieval city was understandable enough - given the great length and arduous nature of the the preceding tournament. There were, of course, other reasons keeping some players away: according to Bachmann, Maroczy and Marco were anxious to avoid meeting with Tarrasch because of "a recent press battle" with the German master. Other factors may have affected the entry list. The tournament organizers attempted a time limit experiment, but had to abandon it in the face of strong opposition. Basically, the rules imposed no limit for the first six hours of play; after that players had to make 15 moves an hour. Contestants who exceeded the time limit were assessed a penalty of one German mark per minute. Tarrasch was the most celebrated victim of this unusual arrangement. In a second-round paring against Salwe, Tarrasch not only suffered defeat, but had to pay the equivalent of "four pounds and 15 shillings" for the privilege. Others avoided such fines by agreeing "to make a number of meaningless moves," according to The Year book of Chess. The rules were abruptly changed in the face of such farcical proceedings. Afterwards there was no time limit observed except for adjourned games. Everything has its compensations, however, and the absence of some of the great names gave the new talent (Snosko-Borovski, Duras, Cohn, Wolf, Spielmann, Vidmar, etc) the chance to test their strength against their more experienced rivals. Marshall, one of the game's most colorful professionals, easily took top honors (+9 -0 +7, one and a half points of second) but found the tournament field worth of his steel: "Most of the big guns took part in tourney, so it was almost as great a triumph as at Cambridge Springs." The American champion avenged an earlier embarrassment in Nuremberg by playing imaginative attacking chess to win the 2,500 mark first prize without losing a game. Second-place finisher Duras (+8 -2 =6) distinguished himself by his astute positional play - a result already foreshadowed by his performance at Ostend. Schlechter, who along with Tarrasc, was the pre-tournament favorite, divided the thrid and fourth prizes with Fleischmann (+7 -2 =7). The Ostend winner, Schlechter, played evenly as always and would have finished hihger save for a painful loss to the tailender Janowski (+3 -11 =2!) and a costly lapse in his contest with Wolf. In a fourth-round game against his fellow Viennese, Schlechter attained a totally won rook-and-pawn ending and needed only to exercise normal care to win. Instead, he was rudely surprised when his stubbornly resisting compatriot orchestrated a clever stalemate by sacrificing his remaining Rook. Such misfortunes aside, Schlechter enjoyed the satisfaction of decisively besting Fleischmann and drawing with Marshall and Duras for a 2-1 scored against the top prize-winners. Fleischmann turned in the best performance of his career. He posted wins over Tchigorin, Vidmar, Salwe, Spielmann and Janowski and suffered by two losses gainst Schlechter and Wolf. Fifth place was Tchigorin who made a commendable showing following his disappointing failure at Ostend. Included in the Russian's point total (+8 -4 =4) against the front-runners were draws wit Marshall ad Schlechter and a victory over Duras. The out-of-form Tarrasch barely attained the last prize (+3 -4 =9), tying for the ninth through eleventh places. This unexpected weak showing was attributed to poor physical condition caused by overwork in his medical practice. Regarding Janowski's surprising last place finish (tied with Przepiorka), Bachmann poses the question: "What can one say regarding Janowski? The correct answer ... his nerves could not withstand the strain of two successive tournaments." In the "Hauptturnier" competition which featured 50 participants, Saviely Tartakower won the "Siegerguppe" playoff and was awarded the coveted master title. (Caissa Editions: Carl Schlechter!).Condition:Back cover soiled, corners bumped else a very good copy., Dr Tarrasch's Selbstverlag, 1906, Description:278+[1 ad] pages with diagrams and tables. Octavo (8 1/2" x 5") bound original wrappers. From the library of >font color=green>Lothar Schmid. (Linde-Niemeijeriana:5278) First edition.The great Ostend tournament had scarcely ended when, ten days later, the Nuremberg Congress began. Although originally planned as a grandmaster event, the tournament failed to attract a number of the firs-rank stars - among them Lasker, Maroczy, Burn, Rubinstein, Marco and Teichmann. The reluctance of the Ostend participants to undertake the long journey to Germany's famous medieval city was understandable enough - given the great length and arduous nature of the the preceding tournament. There were, of course, other reasons keeping some players away: according to Bachmann, Maroczy and Marco were anxious to avoid meeting with Tarrasch because of "a recent press battle" with the German master. Other factors may have affected the entry list. The tournament organizers attempted a time limit experiment, but had to abandon it in the face of strong opposition. Basically, the rules imposed no limit for the first six hours of play; after that players had to make 15 moves an hour. Contestants who exceeded the time limit were assessed a penalty of one German mark per minute. Tarrasch was the most celebrated victim of this unusual arrangement. In a second-round paring against Salwe, Tarrasch not only suffered defeat, but had to pay the equivalent of "four pounds and 15 shillings" for the privilege. Others avoided such fines by agreeing "to make a number of meaningless moves," according to The Year book of Chess. The rules were abruptly changed in the face of such farcical proceedings. Afterwards there was no time limit observed except for adjourned games. Everything has its compensations, however, and the absence of some of the great names gave the new talent (Snosko-Borovski, Duras, Cohn, Wolf, Spielmann, Vidmar, etc) the chance to test their strength against their more experienced rivals. Marshall, one of the game's most colorful professionals, easily took top honors (+9 -0 +7, one and a half points of second) but found the tournament field worth of his steel: "Most of the big guns took part in tourney, so it was almost as great a triumph as at Cambridge Springs." The American champion avenged an earlier embarrassment in Nuremberg by playing imaginative attacking chess to win the 2,500 mark first prize without losing a game. Second-place finisher Duras (+8 -2 =6) distinguished himself by his astute positional play - a result already foreshadowed by his performance at Ostend. Schlechter, who along with Tarrasc, was the pre-tournament favorite, divided the thrid and fourth prizes with Fleischmann (+7 -2 =7). The Ostend winner, Schlechter, played evenly as always and would have finished hihger save for a painful loss to the tailender Janowski (+3 -11 =2!) and a costly lapse in his contest with Wolf. In a fourth-round game against his fellow Viennese, Schlechter attained a totally won rook-and-pawn ending and needed only to exercise normal care to win. Instead, he was rudely surprised when his stubbornly resisting compatriot orchestrated a clever stalemate by sacrificing his remaining Rook. Such misfortunes aside, Schlechter enjoyed the satisfaction of decisively besting Fleischmann and drawing with Marshall and Duras for a 2-1 scored against the top prize-winners. Fleischmann turned in the best performance of his career. He posted wins over Tchigorin, Vidmar, Salwe, Spielmann and Janowski and suffered by two losses gainst Schlechter and Wolf. Fifth place was Tchigorin who made a commendable showing following his disappointing failure at Ostend. Included in the Russian's point total (+8 -4 =4) against the front-runners were draws wit Marshall ad Schlechter and a victory over Duras. The out-of-form Tarrasch barely attained the last prize (+3 -4 =9), tying for the ninth through eleventh places. This unexpected weak showing was attributed to poor physical condition caused by overwork in his medical practice. Regarding Janowski's surprising last place finish (tied with Przepiorka), Bachmann poses the question: "What can one say regarding Janowski? The correct answer ... his nerves could not withstand the strain of two successive tournaments." In the "Hauptturnier" competition which featured 50 participants, Saviely Tartakower won the "Siegerguppe" playoff and was awarded the coveted master title. (Caissa Editions: Carl Schlechter!).Lothar Maximilian Lorenz Schmid (10 May 1928 18 May 2013) was a German chess grandmaster. He was born in Radebeul near Dresden into a family who were the co-owners of the Karl May Press, which published the German Karl May adventure novels. He was best known as the chief arbiter at several World Chess Championship matches, in particular the 1972 encounter between Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky at Reykjavic. He was also an avid collector of chess books and paraphernalia. It was reputed that he owned the largest known private chess library in the world, as well as a renowned collection of chess art, chess boards and chess pieces from around the globe.Condition:Lothar Schmid's label to front wrapper verso. Light edge wear, some light soiling else a very good copy., Verlag von Viet & Comp, 1906, 28 with frontispiece, diagrams, plates and tables. Royal octavo (9 1/2 x 6 1/4") bound in original three quarter pebbled boards with spine label. (Bibliotheca Van der Linde-Niemeijeriana:5268) First edition.The richly endowed Barmen Chess Association commemorated its 40th year anniversary with a celebration centered around two major tournaments and three strong "Hauptturnieren." The innovative organizers added such melodious entertainment as a "Singspiel" involving a 60 person chorus and a three act musical comedy, "Der Seekadett." The latter feature a game with children as chessmen and an original music score the now famous Barmen Chess Waltz. Bachmann opines that it was a "grand chess feast, made even nicer by Rheinsche friendliness." The two principal contests were divided into "A" and "B" categories - the first being reserved for experienced grandmasters and masters, the second for promising young masters who had not achieved a tournament victory. First and second prizes in this category (1500 and 1000 Mmrks, respectively) were divided between Janowski (+9 -3 +3) and Maroczy (+7 -1 +7) with identical point totals of 10 1/2. The mercurial Janowski head the victory list with nine wins, but dropped full points to Bernstein, Berger and Gottschall - while an obviously fatigued Maroczy lost only once to John. The New World sensation, Marshall (+8 -3 +3), took third place laurels and 700 marks, a scant half point behind the two pacesetters. Schlechter and Bernstein divided the fourth and fifth prizes (400 marks) with identical scores of +7 -4 =4. The genial Wiener drew a blank with the first three place winners - surrendering games to Janowski, Maroczy and Marshall. He also uncharacteristically blundered away a Knight in loosing to his compatriot Berger. The plucky Graz veteran amassed four out of five points against the first five places(!) enroute to a surprise six-place finish. The young Bernstein, for his part enjoyed a magnificent start - leading through the ninth round before suffering successive setbacks to Marshall in the 10th and to Schlechter in the 11th. Russia's perennial champion, Tichigorin, was clearly in a period of decline although he managed a win and two draws against the first three place winners. Wolf, in dividing the seventh-tenth prizes with John, Leonhardt and Tchigorin, emerged as the tournament "Remis Koenig" with 10 draws in 15 games. In tournament "B" action first place fell to Fleischmann of Hungary with a score of 13 (+11 -2 +4) followed by Swiderski, 12 (+11 -4 =2) and W Cohn, 11 1/2 (+9 -3 =5). A major figure of the future, Nimzovich shared the 15th and 16th places - posting a disappointing score of 6 (+3 -8 +6). The secondary tournaments featured some coming stars. Rubenstein and Duras shared first and second prize in the Hauptturnier "A" (+11 -2 =2), with third and fourth places going to Vidmar (+11 -3 +1) and Lowy (+10 -2 =3). Shories defeated Tartakower in a playoff for Hauptturnier "B" laurels, (+2 -1 =1). Hauptturnier "C" honors fell to Szekely (+6 -1 =0), ahead of Biedendorf (+5 -2 =0).Condition:Previous owner's name to title, stamped to end papers and occasionally other pages. Corners bumped else a very good copy of one the scarcer tournament books., Kommissions -Verlag Adolf Graeper, 1905, New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
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Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - gebunden oder broschiert
2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT … Mehr…
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
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Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - gebunden oder broschiert
2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE 10% OFF DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - … Mehr…
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE 10% OFF DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
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Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - gebunden oder broschiert
2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE - DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Inte… Mehr…
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE - DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
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2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
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Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - Taschenbuch
2013, ISBN: 9780824746254
Gebundene Ausgabe
Paperback. Very Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items., Paperback. As New. High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Mage: The Awakening is a role-play… Mehr…
Paperback. Very Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items., Paperback. As New. High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Mage: The Awakening is a role-playing game developed by White Wolf, Inc. and based in their World of Darkness setting. The characters portrayed in this game are individuals able to bend or break the commonly-accepted rules of reality to perform subtle or o, Paperback. New. High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Mage: The Awakening is a role-playing game developed by White Wolf, Inc. and based in their World of Darkness setting. The characters portrayed in this game are individuals able to bend or break the commonly-accepted rules of reality to perform subtle or o, Hardcover. Very Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items., Leipzig: Hartmann & Wolf, 1945. text in Latin and German, 813 pages. reading copy only. pages loose, torn covers, dogeared pages, very minimal notes. text should be complete.. loose_leaf. As Is. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall., Hartmann & Wolf, 1945, Paperback. New., Hardcover. New., 2009-02-10. Good. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May not contain Access Codes or Supplements. May be re-issue. May be ex-library. Shipping & Handling by region. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2009-02-10, 2012-05-24. Good. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May not contain Access Codes or Supplements. May be re-issue. May be ex-library. Shipping & Handling by region. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2012-05-24, 2009-07-08. Good. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May not contain Access Codes or Supplements. May be re-issue. May be ex-library. Shipping & Handling by region. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2009-07-08, MGM (Video & DVD), 2005-09-20. DVD. New. brand new in original shrinkwrap; NTSC Region 1 formatting for playback in the US & Canada; because we care that your order arrives in the condition stated, we have additionally sealed the case in bubblewrap for added protection during shipment, MGM (Video & DVD), 2005-09-20, London: Fisher, Son, & Co., 1847. First Edition, First Impression. Full Calf. Very Good. 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall. George Cruikshank. 1847. Not dated. First Edition, 1847. Cohn 358; Wolf 2619, with no advertisements. Size 16mo, 222 pages. Bound in full tan calf with gilt frames and floral corner pieces to the covers and gilt titles on burgyndy labels and heavy gilt to the spine, all edges gilt, gilt on the inner dentelles, marbled end-papers. Condition very good, corners hinges and spine ends are rubbed, spots to front and rear end-papers, title and last page, remaining pages are toned otherwise clean., Fisher, Son, & Co., 1847, 2009-07-08. New. Ships with Tracking Number! INTERNATIONAL WORLDWIDE Shipping available. May be re-issue. Buy with confidence, excellent customer service!, 2009-07-08, n/a. Please feel free to request a detailed description. Short description (computer translated from Russian into English): Cohn-League 1996 year. In russian language. SKUalb_11052000d6cbcdc2cc986f43d16c0a0e75de97 . Good. n/a. n/a. 1996., 1996, Berlin: A. Asher & Co, 1863. Livre. Bon. Couverture souple. Ed. originale. In-8. Berlin, A. Asher & Co (Albert Cohn & D. Collin), 1863. 23,5 x 14,5 cm, in-8, XVI - 242 - 334 pp., broché, couverture imprimée. Edition originale rare. La seconde partie, paginée séparément, est une anthologie importante en langue portugaise non traduite. Des rousseurs essentiellement marginales, sur papier bien blanc, bon exemplaire.., A. Asher & Co, 1863, 278+[1 ad] pages with diagrams and tables. Octavo (8 1/4" x 5 1/2") bound in blue cloth with gilt lettering to spine and marbled page ends. (Linde-Niemeijeriana:5278) First edition.The great Ostend tournament had scarcely ended when, ten days later, the Nuremberg Congress began. Although originally planned as a grandmaster event, the tournament failed to attract a number of the firs-rank stars - among them Lasker, Maroczy, Burn, Rubinstein, Marco and Teichmann. The reluctance of the Ostend participants to undertake the long journey to Germany's famous medieval city was understandable enough - given the great length and arduous nature of the the preceding tournament. There were, of course, other reasons keeping some players away: according to Bachmann, Maroczy and Marco were anxious to avoid meeting with Tarrasch because of "a recent press battle" with the German master. Other factors may have affected the entry list. The tournament organizers attempted a time limit experiment, but had to abandon it in the face of strong opposition. Basically, the rules imposed no limit for the first six hours of play; after that players had to make 15 moves an hour. Contestants who exceeded the time limit were assessed a penalty of one German mark per minute. Tarrasch was the most celebrated victim of this unusual arrangement. In a second-round paring against Salwe, Tarrasch not only suffered defeat, but had to pay the equivalent of "four pounds and 15 shillings" for the privilege. Others avoided such fines by agreeing "to make a number of meaningless moves," according to The Year book of Chess. The rules were abruptly changed in the face of such farcical proceedings. Afterwards there was no time limit observed except for adjourned games. Everything has its compensations, however, and the absence of some of the great names gave the new talent (Snosko-Borovski, Duras, Cohn, Wolf, Spielmann, Vidmar, etc) the chance to test their strength against their more experienced rivals. Marshall, one of the game's most colorful professionals, easily took top honors (+9 -0 +7, one and a half points of second) but found the tournament field worth of his steel: "Most of the big guns took part in tourney, so it was almost as great a triumph as at Cambridge Springs." The American champion avenged an earlier embarrassment in Nuremberg by playing imaginative attacking chess to win the 2,500 mark first prize without losing a game. Second-place finisher Duras (+8 -2 =6) distinguished himself by his astute positional play - a result already foreshadowed by his performance at Ostend. Schlechter, who along with Tarrasc, was the pre-tournament favorite, divided the thrid and fourth prizes with Fleischmann (+7 -2 =7). The Ostend winner, Schlechter, played evenly as always and would have finished hihger save for a painful loss to the tailender Janowski (+3 -11 =2!) and a costly lapse in his contest with Wolf. In a fourth-round game against his fellow Viennese, Schlechter attained a totally won rook-and-pawn ending and needed only to exercise normal care to win. Instead, he was rudely surprised when his stubbornly resisting compatriot orchestrated a clever stalemate by sacrificing his remaining Rook. Such misfortunes aside, Schlechter enjoyed the satisfaction of decisively besting Fleischmann and drawing with Marshall and Duras for a 2-1 scored against the top prize-winners. Fleischmann turned in the best performance of his career. He posted wins over Tchigorin, Vidmar, Salwe, Spielmann and Janowski and suffered by two losses gainst Schlechter and Wolf. Fifth place was Tchigorin who made a commendable showing following his disappointing failure at Ostend. Included in the Russian's point total (+8 -4 =4) against the front-runners were draws wit Marshall ad Schlechter and a victory over Duras. The out-of-form Tarrasch barely attained the last prize (+3 -4 =9), tying for the ninth through eleventh places. This unexpected weak showing was attributed to poor physical condition caused by overwork in his medical practice. Regarding Janowski's surprising last place finish (tied with Przepiorka), Bachmann poses the question: "What can one say regarding Janowski? The correct answer ... his nerves could not withstand the strain of two successive tournaments." In the "Hauptturnier" competition which featured 50 participants, Saviely Tartakower won the "Siegerguppe" playoff and was awarded the coveted master title. (Caissa Editions: Carl Schlechter!).Condition:Back cover soiled, corners bumped else a very good copy., Dr Tarrasch's Selbstverlag, 1906, Description:278+[1 ad] pages with diagrams and tables. Octavo (8 1/2" x 5") bound original wrappers. From the library of >font color=green>Lothar Schmid. (Linde-Niemeijeriana:5278) First edition.The great Ostend tournament had scarcely ended when, ten days later, the Nuremberg Congress began. Although originally planned as a grandmaster event, the tournament failed to attract a number of the firs-rank stars - among them Lasker, Maroczy, Burn, Rubinstein, Marco and Teichmann. The reluctance of the Ostend participants to undertake the long journey to Germany's famous medieval city was understandable enough - given the great length and arduous nature of the the preceding tournament. There were, of course, other reasons keeping some players away: according to Bachmann, Maroczy and Marco were anxious to avoid meeting with Tarrasch because of "a recent press battle" with the German master. Other factors may have affected the entry list. The tournament organizers attempted a time limit experiment, but had to abandon it in the face of strong opposition. Basically, the rules imposed no limit for the first six hours of play; after that players had to make 15 moves an hour. Contestants who exceeded the time limit were assessed a penalty of one German mark per minute. Tarrasch was the most celebrated victim of this unusual arrangement. In a second-round paring against Salwe, Tarrasch not only suffered defeat, but had to pay the equivalent of "four pounds and 15 shillings" for the privilege. Others avoided such fines by agreeing "to make a number of meaningless moves," according to The Year book of Chess. The rules were abruptly changed in the face of such farcical proceedings. Afterwards there was no time limit observed except for adjourned games. Everything has its compensations, however, and the absence of some of the great names gave the new talent (Snosko-Borovski, Duras, Cohn, Wolf, Spielmann, Vidmar, etc) the chance to test their strength against their more experienced rivals. Marshall, one of the game's most colorful professionals, easily took top honors (+9 -0 +7, one and a half points of second) but found the tournament field worth of his steel: "Most of the big guns took part in tourney, so it was almost as great a triumph as at Cambridge Springs." The American champion avenged an earlier embarrassment in Nuremberg by playing imaginative attacking chess to win the 2,500 mark first prize without losing a game. Second-place finisher Duras (+8 -2 =6) distinguished himself by his astute positional play - a result already foreshadowed by his performance at Ostend. Schlechter, who along with Tarrasc, was the pre-tournament favorite, divided the thrid and fourth prizes with Fleischmann (+7 -2 =7). The Ostend winner, Schlechter, played evenly as always and would have finished hihger save for a painful loss to the tailender Janowski (+3 -11 =2!) and a costly lapse in his contest with Wolf. In a fourth-round game against his fellow Viennese, Schlechter attained a totally won rook-and-pawn ending and needed only to exercise normal care to win. Instead, he was rudely surprised when his stubbornly resisting compatriot orchestrated a clever stalemate by sacrificing his remaining Rook. Such misfortunes aside, Schlechter enjoyed the satisfaction of decisively besting Fleischmann and drawing with Marshall and Duras for a 2-1 scored against the top prize-winners. Fleischmann turned in the best performance of his career. He posted wins over Tchigorin, Vidmar, Salwe, Spielmann and Janowski and suffered by two losses gainst Schlechter and Wolf. Fifth place was Tchigorin who made a commendable showing following his disappointing failure at Ostend. Included in the Russian's point total (+8 -4 =4) against the front-runners were draws wit Marshall ad Schlechter and a victory over Duras. The out-of-form Tarrasch barely attained the last prize (+3 -4 =9), tying for the ninth through eleventh places. This unexpected weak showing was attributed to poor physical condition caused by overwork in his medical practice. Regarding Janowski's surprising last place finish (tied with Przepiorka), Bachmann poses the question: "What can one say regarding Janowski? The correct answer ... his nerves could not withstand the strain of two successive tournaments." In the "Hauptturnier" competition which featured 50 participants, Saviely Tartakower won the "Siegerguppe" playoff and was awarded the coveted master title. (Caissa Editions: Carl Schlechter!).Lothar Maximilian Lorenz Schmid (10 May 1928 18 May 2013) was a German chess grandmaster. He was born in Radebeul near Dresden into a family who were the co-owners of the Karl May Press, which published the German Karl May adventure novels. He was best known as the chief arbiter at several World Chess Championship matches, in particular the 1972 encounter between Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky at Reykjavic. He was also an avid collector of chess books and paraphernalia. It was reputed that he owned the largest known private chess library in the world, as well as a renowned collection of chess art, chess boards and chess pieces from around the globe.Condition:Lothar Schmid's label to front wrapper verso. Light edge wear, some light soiling else a very good copy., Verlag von Viet & Comp, 1906, 28 with frontispiece, diagrams, plates and tables. Royal octavo (9 1/2 x 6 1/4") bound in original three quarter pebbled boards with spine label. (Bibliotheca Van der Linde-Niemeijeriana:5268) First edition.The richly endowed Barmen Chess Association commemorated its 40th year anniversary with a celebration centered around two major tournaments and three strong "Hauptturnieren." The innovative organizers added such melodious entertainment as a "Singspiel" involving a 60 person chorus and a three act musical comedy, "Der Seekadett." The latter feature a game with children as chessmen and an original music score the now famous Barmen Chess Waltz. Bachmann opines that it was a "grand chess feast, made even nicer by Rheinsche friendliness." The two principal contests were divided into "A" and "B" categories - the first being reserved for experienced grandmasters and masters, the second for promising young masters who had not achieved a tournament victory. First and second prizes in this category (1500 and 1000 Mmrks, respectively) were divided between Janowski (+9 -3 +3) and Maroczy (+7 -1 +7) with identical point totals of 10 1/2. The mercurial Janowski head the victory list with nine wins, but dropped full points to Bernstein, Berger and Gottschall - while an obviously fatigued Maroczy lost only once to John. The New World sensation, Marshall (+8 -3 +3), took third place laurels and 700 marks, a scant half point behind the two pacesetters. Schlechter and Bernstein divided the fourth and fifth prizes (400 marks) with identical scores of +7 -4 =4. The genial Wiener drew a blank with the first three place winners - surrendering games to Janowski, Maroczy and Marshall. He also uncharacteristically blundered away a Knight in loosing to his compatriot Berger. The plucky Graz veteran amassed four out of five points against the first five places(!) enroute to a surprise six-place finish. The young Bernstein, for his part enjoyed a magnificent start - leading through the ninth round before suffering successive setbacks to Marshall in the 10th and to Schlechter in the 11th. Russia's perennial champion, Tichigorin, was clearly in a period of decline although he managed a win and two draws against the first three place winners. Wolf, in dividing the seventh-tenth prizes with John, Leonhardt and Tchigorin, emerged as the tournament "Remis Koenig" with 10 draws in 15 games. In tournament "B" action first place fell to Fleischmann of Hungary with a score of 13 (+11 -2 +4) followed by Swiderski, 12 (+11 -4 =2) and W Cohn, 11 1/2 (+9 -3 =5). A major figure of the future, Nimzovich shared the 15th and 16th places - posting a disappointing score of 6 (+3 -8 +6). The secondary tournaments featured some coming stars. Rubenstein and Duras shared first and second prize in the Hauptturnier "A" (+11 -2 =2), with third and fourth places going to Vidmar (+11 -3 +1) and Lowy (+10 -2 =3). Shories defeated Tartakower in a playoff for Hauptturnier "B" laurels, (+2 -1 =1). Hauptturnier "C" honors fell to Szekely (+6 -1 =0), ahead of Biedendorf (+5 -2 =0).Condition:Previous owner's name to title, stamped to end papers and occasionally other pages. Corners bumped else a very good copy of one the scarcer tournament books., Kommissions -Verlag Adolf Graeper, 1905, New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
Thaller, Seth R.; McDonald, W. Scott (editors):
Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - gebunden oder broschiert2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT … Mehr…
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 .*** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request *** - *** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - gebunden oder broschiert
2004
ISBN: 9780824746254
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE 10% OFF DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - … Mehr…
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE 10% OFF DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
Facial Trauma (MEDICINE, FACIAL TRAUMA, SURGERY) - gebunden oder broschiert
2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE - DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Inte… Mehr…
New York: Marcel Dekker Inc. New. 2004. Hardcover. 0824746252 . ***HOLIDAY SALE - DISCOUNT APPLIED AT CHECKOUT*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - 476 pages -- Interior text is clean, tight, and unmarked. Pages are intact and tight to the spine. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Facial Trauma: Overview of Trauma Care - Igor Jeroukhimov, Mark Cockburn, and Stephen Cohn; Microsurgical Options in Facial Trauma - Milton B. Armstrong; Synopsis of Dental Guidelines for Management of Facial Injuries - Kevin J. Kelly; The Biology of Trauma on Facial Growth - Bernard Sarnat; Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery: Our Family Trees - S. Anthony Wolfe; Fracture Healing and Bone Graft Repair - Samuel T. Rhee, Laurence Tong, and Steven R. Buchman; Optimizing Bony Repair - Stephen M. Warren, Tony D. Fang, Kenton D. Fong, HanJoon M. Song, and Michael T. Longaker; The Use of Biomaterials in Craniofacial Trauma - Mutaz B. Habal, Steven R. Cohen, and Ralph E. Holmes; Endoscopic Approaches in the Treatment of Facial Fractures - Mark Martin, William Y. Hoffman, and Chen Lee; Orbital Injuries - Peter J. Taub and Henry K. Kawamoto; The Management of Naso-orbital-ethmoid Fractures and Avoidance of Untoward Sequelae - Paul Manson; Management of Acute Injuries to the Frontal Sinus and Management of Untoward Sequelae - Denny J. Enepekides and Paul J. Donald; Maxillary Fractures - David A. O'Donovan and Oleh M. Antonyshyn; Zygoma Fractures - Jose I. Garri and William S. McDonald; Index -- with a bonus offer; ., Marcel Dekker Inc, 2004<
2004, ISBN: 9780824746254
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EAN (ISBN-13): 9780824746254
ISBN (ISBN-10): 0824746252
Gebundene Ausgabe
Taschenbuch
Erscheinungsjahr: 2004
Herausgeber: Informa Healthcare
512 Seiten
Sprache: eng/Englisch
Buch in der Datenbank seit 2007-05-21T12:10:09+02:00 (Vienna)
Detailseite zuletzt geändert am 2020-10-07T13:18:23+02:00 (Vienna)
ISBN/EAN: 0824746252
ISBN - alternative Schreibweisen:
0-8247-4625-2, 978-0-8247-4625-4
Alternative Schreibweisen und verwandte Suchbegriffe:
Autor des Buches: thaller
Titel des Buches: facial trauma surgery
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