Reviews in Computational Chemistry, Volume 22 Edited by Kenny B. Lipkowitz (Howard University, Washington, DC), Thomas R. Cundari (University of North Texas, Denton), Valerie J. Gillet (University of Sheffield, UK), and Editor Emeritus, Donald B. Boyd (Indiana University−Purdue University at Indianapolis). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.:  Hoboken, NJ. 2006. xxviii + 362 pp. $160.00. ISBN 0-471-77938-5.

2006 ◽  
Vol 128 (20) ◽  
pp. 6761-6762
Author(s):  
Gordon M. Crippen
1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 297-304
Author(s):  
Bill Maurer

[First paragraph]We Paid Our Dues: Women Trade Union Leaders of the Caribbean. A. LYNN BOLLES. Washington DC: Howard University Press, 1996. xxxviii + 250 pp. (Paper US$21.95)Gender: A Caribbean Multi-Disciplinary Perspective. ELSA LEO-RHYNIE, BARBARA BAILEY & CHRISTINE BARROW (eds.). Kingston: Ian Randle, 1997. xix + 358 pp. (Paper n.p.)Daughters of Caliban: Caribbean Women in the Twentieth Century. CONSUELO LOPEZ SPRINGFIELD (ed.). Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997. xxi + 316 pp. (Cloth US$ 35.00, Paper US$ 17.95)Two weeks before I began writing this review essay, I had the misfortune to contract food poisoning while visiting New York. I was admitted to St. Vincent's Hospital in Greenwich Village where I found myself under the capable care of a team of West Indian nurses. At the time, I didn't give this much thought; I was simply happy to be getting good care far from home. The day before I was released, my right arm swelled up from the intravenous drip that had been delivering fluids and antibiotics into my body. It was first noticed by one of the Jamaican nurses, who told me that the IV had "infiltrated" my arm and that, as a result, my "fluids were out of balance," and this was keeping me from getting well. She promptly pointed this out to another nurse, who took out the IV and stuck another one into my left arm.


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