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A keyword listing of serial titles currently received by the National Library of Medicine.
First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.
The need for dark matter and dark energy are removed by the introduction of observations of galaxies and stars at cosmic distances to be added to the observations of planets in our solar system. When cosmic observations that were not available to Newton are included, the result is a new universal model of gravity also valid for the cosmos and also the solar system, without change. When applied to the existing cosmic observations and solar system observations, the resulting Universal Law of Cosmic Gravity by Aisenberg explains cosmic observations and reduces to Newtons law in the solar system. Hubble observed that redshifts increased with distance but without proof suggested that the redshift and the Doppler effect showed that the galaxies were receding and that the universe was expanding. This led to the wrong belief in the big bang but without observational proof of receding velocity. We will show that the age of the cosmos is wrong, explain tired light, solve Olbers paradox about the dark sky, and remove the need for inflation. We will explain the cosmic microwave background (CMB), explain quasars and black holes, and why the cosmos is apparently closed. The latest Nobel Prizes (1978 and 2011) for Physics should be reexamined. The author, Dr. Sol Aisenberg earned a PhD in Physics from MIT, with a minor in math, was a part time staff member in the MIT physics department and in the Research Lab of Electronics, RLE, and was a part-time lecturer at the Harvard Medical School and a part-time visiting research professor of bioengineering in Boston University. Aisenberg was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi (science), and Pi Mu Epsilon (math) honor societies.
Ready access to computer-stored med of subject matter and requiring varying Ever since the early 1960s, the medical ical records. Expert assistance in di levels of technical expertise. A typical world has awaited the promise of com agnosis and treatment selection will be issue might contain a review of an office puterization. Many of us were fasci as close as the nearest telephone, which practice management system-of in nated by the efforts of the pioneers: will provide an immediate link to the terest to the physician, nurse, and office Homer Warner's computerized diag office computer. practice manager. Next to it might be nosis system, Octo Barnett's medical found a detailed article about a language information system, Howard Bleich's Since 1983, M.D. Computing has automated acid/base consultant, and explored and explained all of these as such as LISP and how it could be ap plied to medical problems, or a tutorial Warner Slack's history-taking program pects. Our magazine's major focus is on computer systems that serve the health about real-time monitoring of a patient's were foretastes of what was to come. provider in the home or office environ physiological state, along with book re At first, however, physicians and hos ment. M.D. Computing has also ex views and departments reporting on pital personnel resisted the computer amined more general computer appli pertinent computer news. because it was too slow, too fragile, too cations in medical care.