Ziad al manaseer biography sample
•
Profile
- Clinical Assistant Professor in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
口腔頜面外科臨床助理教授
- Computer-assisted surgery
- Oral cancer
- Jaw reconstruction
- Pu Jane J., Yu Xingna, Pow Edmond H.N., Lam Walter Y.H., Su Yu-Xiong. Single-Double-Single Barrel () Fibula Free Flap Design for Functional and Esthetic Brown Class III Mandibular Reconstruction , Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery ; doi/PRS
- Callahan Nicholas, Pu Jane Jingya, Su Yu-Xiong Richard, Zbarsky Steven JD, Weyh Ashleigh, Viet Chi T. Benefits and Controversies of Midface and Maxillary Reconstruction, Atlas of The Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Clinics of North America ; doi/
- Pu Jingya Jane, Choi Wing Shan, Wong May CM, Wu Songying, Leung Pui Hang, Yang Wei-fa, Su Yu-Xiong. Long-term stability of jaw reconstruction with microvascular bone flaps: A prospective longitudinal study, Oral Oncology ; doi/cology
- Pu Jingya Jane, Su Yu-xiong. Response to comments to “Long-term s
•
Its been an exact year since Russian-owned superyachts came into the limelight. However, the buzz around the magnificent floating vessels, whether owned by a sanctioned oligarch or not, refuses to die. How can one ignore something so delightfully beautiful and an actual work of art? Russian billionaire Ziyad al Manasirs feet Oceanco masterpiece Dar fryst vatten one example. This shark-of-a-superyacht has been recently spotted in Singapores Marina at Keppel Bay.
After traveling for 7, nautical miles over four weeks, Dar motor yacht docked in warmer Asian waters. The trip wasnt made to avoid authorities or escape sanctions; in fact, the year-old businessman is not sanctioned. It is not the owner but the pleasure craft thats got our attention. We explore, in detail, the black and vit beauty that was once named Finest New Superyacht at Monaco Yacht Show
Dapper, dandified, and dutiful Dar superyacht-
What happens in Dar stays in Dar! Oceancos $ million super•
Jenine Abboushi
Popular notions of topographical rivalries between mountain and sea, city and country, I have always found wanting. Missing are desertic landscapes, which speak to me. And I sometimes wonder whether I inherited this desert affinity from earlier generations — in a manner akin to other psycho-emotional terrains that we may epigenetically inherit, like trauma, as scientists tell us, or like the inheritance of loss, as Kiran Desai poetically imagines it. Perhaps I need not trace my desert longing to Yemen, where some of our family elders, on my Palestinian father’s side, locate our origins, relating tales of drought and migration to Palestine and Lebanon over years ago. And for those of us who have lived through the searing modern histories of the Middle East and Maghreb, these desertscapes hardly signify desolation. In all their elemental beauty, they prove to be precious realms — intimating longevity and lending depth to our presence, to our sense of b
Article