LNER Passenger Trains and Formations 1923-67

LNER Passenger Trains and Formations 1923-67
Author: Steve Banks
Publisher: Opc
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2013
Genre: Express trains
ISBN: 9780860936497

This book provides a record of the composition of the major passenger trains operated by the LNER and its BR successors from Grouping in 1923 through to the end of main line steam in the late 1960s.

Flying Scotsman

Flying Scotsman
Author: Alan Pegler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 88
Release: 1970
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 9780711001787

Railway Workshops of Britain, 1823-1986

Railway Workshops of Britain, 1823-1986
Author: Edgar J. Larkin
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 316
Release: 1988-06-18
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1349080748

An illustrated history of Britain's railway workshops, covering the period from 1823 to 1986, this book deals with the history of the main railway workshops of Britain, a subject of wide-ranging mechanical and electrical engineering interest.

The Apallic Syndrome

The Apallic Syndrome
Author: G. Dalle Ore
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 448
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 3642811515

The subject of the apallic syndrome is one which has long been familiar to me, although I have not personally studied it as deeply as I would have wished. I became acquainted with this syndrome long before the last war, when my neurosurgical colleague Hugh Cairns (1952), made his pioneer contribution under the term "akinetic mutism" . This was an ar resting title, but it was one which did not altogether satisfy some of his colleagues, includ ing myself. We found it difficult to suggest an alternative. That is one reason why I wel come the expression "apallic syndrome" . Forensic practice has forced me from time to time to consider rather more deeply this distressing syndrome, and to try and marshal my ideas in a form which would satisfy my colleagues in the legal profession. More than once I have been instructed to make a medico legal assessment of these unfortunate patients. The points which have concerned my lawyer friends have not been matters of diagnosis, or of morbid anatomy, or of etiology. The fac tual problem which has been put before me was to make some approximate assessment as to the expectation of life. Vague guess-work is unacceptable in such circumstances. What the lawyers require is a precise and dogmatic answer.