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was and impressive
But after the doctor's return that night Alex could see, from the high window in his own room, the now familiar figure crouched on a truly impressive heap of towels, apparently giving its egg-hatching powers one final chance before it was replaced in its office by a sure-enough hen.
What made these new location figures particularly impressive was the fact that although 1960 was a year of mild business recession throughout the nation, Rhode Island scored marked progress in new industry, new plants, and new jobs.
If we thus spent our very first day in the midst of a large number of your people honoring a new hero and a great national achievement, our last day, to us at least, was equally impressive and very moving, even though the crowds were absent and there was almost complete silence.
An ancient Rolls-Royce, as shiningly impressive as the day it came off the ship, was parked at the curb.
His statistical record that year, when Texas won only one game and lost nine, was far from impressive: he carried the ball three times for a net gain of 10 yards, punted once for 39 yards and caught one pass for 13 yards.
What we did get, however, was impressive.
Alfonso, who was provided with the most impressive artillery of the time, again besieged Naples.
In the end, the Cham replica was more impressive than the real brick tower of the Khmer, and the Cham won the contest.
As historian Eric Shaw noted of the years following nationalisation, the electricity and gas supply companies became impressive models of public enterprise ” in terms of efficiency, and the National Coal Board was not only profitable, but working conditions for miners had significantly improved as well.
The power of the Buddhist clergy was so great and the wealth of the monasteries so impressive, that it instigated criticism from Confucian scholars, who considered Buddhism as a foreign religion.
Despite a cast led by Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner and some impressive battle scenes, the film was considered a disappointment by many.
The resemblance to the chupacabra was really impressive ," Tolentino reported.
The Council of Trent, delayed and interrupted several times because of political or religious disagreements, was a major reform council and the most impressive embodiment of the ideals of the Counter-Reformation.
Brown, who had built an impressive record as coach of a Massillon, Ohio high school team and brought the Buckeyes their first national championship, at the time was serving in the U. S. Navy and coached the football team at Great Lakes Naval Station near Chicago.
This was especially impressive since two of the teams swept by the Bengals ( the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Baltimore Ravens ) had both made it to the AFC Championship Game the previous season.
2, with the character of Bill noting that Superman was not born into his alter ego ( Spider-Man was " Peter Parker " first, Batman was born " Bruce Wayne "), using the blanket he was wrapped in as his costume, and Clark Kent is a collage of mankind's less impressive traits meant to blend in with other humans ( as well as a device to pursue Lois Lane's affections ).
Geoffrey's description of Caerleon is probably based on his personal familiarity with the town and its impressive Roman ruins ; it is less clear that Caerleon was associated with Arthur before Geoffrey.
The massive use of charcoal on an industrial scale in Early Modern Europe was a new type of consumption of western forests ; even in Stuart England, the relatively primitive production of charcoal has already reached an impressive level.
Marshall Field was at first unimpressed by the impecunious Beatty as a future son-in-law, but was persuaded by his heroic reputation, impressive record of promotion and future prospects.

was and lecturer
Aagesen was Carl Christian Hall's successor as lecturer on Roman law at the university, and in this department his researches were epoch-making.
In 1701 he was appointed lecturer on the institutes of medicine at Leiden ; in his inaugural discourse, De commendando Hippocratis studio, he recommended to his pupils that great physician as their model.
Demobilized as a Major in 1945, he was appointed lecturer in history at the University of Liverpool from 1946 to 1949.
He was promoted to full-time lecturer and Director of Surgical Research at the University of Cape Town.
Nearly a decade before he was born, his uncle David Guest, a lecturer and Communist Party member, was killed in the Spanish Civil War fighting in the International Brigades.
He was also a special lecturer for New York University Law School, 1893-1900.
In 1907 he became a part-time lecturer at University College London, and was afterwards appointed to a full-time position.
In the same year, she co-founded London School of Medicine for Women with Sophie Jex-Blake and became a lecturer in what was the only teaching hospital in Britain to offer courses for women.
He was Hulsean lecturer in 1876.
Wright authored 20 books and many articles and was a popular lecturer in the United States and in Europe.
After he told his story, he was encouraged to become an anti-slavery lecturer.
From 1904 to 1914, Soddy was a lecturer at the University of Glasgow and while there he showed that uranium decays to radium.
Helen Adams Keller ( June 27, 1880 – June 1, 1968 ) was an American author, political activist, and lecturer.
In 1898, Janet was appointed psychology lecturer at the Sorbonne, and in 1902 became chair of experimental and comparative psychology at the Collège de France.
He held many college offices, becoming successively lecturer in Greek ( 1651 ), mathematics ( 1653 ), and humanity ( 1655 ), praelector ( 1657 ), junior dean ( 1657 ), and college steward ( 1659 and 1660 ); and according to the habit of the time, he was accustomed to preach in his college chapel and also at Great St Mary's, long before he took holy orders on 23 December 1660.
As a lecturer he was exceedingly attractive, and his success in teaching was largely attributable to the persuasiveness with which he enunciated his views.
He was in high demand as a lecturer, and was frequently invited to lecture at conferences and as a guest lecturer at other universities, including Harvard, Columbia, Cornell, Johns Hopkins, Rutgers, Dalhousie, Wellesley, Florida State, the Universities of New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Prince Edward Island, and Massachusetts at Amherst and Boston Harbor.
After obtaining his Ph D, he was a research fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge and then from 1954 a lecturer in the mathematics faculty at Cambridge.
He regretted that he had begun the work of teaching so late in life, but as a lecturer he was not successful: he had no aptitude for digesting facts and suiting them to the level of comprehension of his students.
She was distinguished lecturer at Harvard University in 2002 and the Litchfield lecturer at the University of Oxford in 2003.

was and radiologist
The daughter of Philip M. Hatfield ( a radiologist ) and The Boston Globe fashion critic Julie Hatfield, Juliana was born in Maine and grew up in the Boston suburb of Duxbury.
Angioplasty was initially described by the US interventional radiologist Charles Dotter in 1964.
His first Japanese movie was Frankenstein Conquers the World, in which he played Dr. James Bowen, a radiologist working in Hiroshima who encounters a new incarnation of the Frankenstein monster.
Interventional radiologist Charles Dotter, MD, known as the " Father of Interventional Radiology " for pioneering this technique, was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1978.
University of Virginia radiologist Avery Evans said his study, which was funded by the Australian government and Cook Medical Inc., found vertebroplasty and sham procedures offered patients nearly identical pain relief.
Robert Abbe ( April 13, 1851 – March 7, 1928 ) was an American surgeon and pioneer radiologist in New York City.
The original traditional treatment of breathing into a paper bag to control psychologically based hyperventilation syndrome ( which is now almost universally known and often shown in movies and TV dramas ) was invented by New York City physician ( later radiologist ), Alexander Winter, M. D.
Chilaiditi's sign is named after the Greek radiologist Dimítrios Chilaiditi, born in 1883, who first described it when he was working in Vienna in 1910.
In this novel, Chaz's backstory explains that his original ambition was to go to medical school and become a radiologist, which struck him as an appealing way to become wealthy without " interacting with actual sick people ," and leave him plenty of leisure time to maintain his sex life.
Dratch was born in Lexington, Massachusetts, the daughter of Elaine, a transportation director, and Paul Dratch, a radiologist.
Henry Khunrath Pancoast ( February 26, 1875 – May 20, 1939 ) was an American radiologist after whom a type of lung tumor is named ( Pancoast tumor ).
Her father was the pioneer radiologist Arthur E. Rayner ; her mother was a violinist in the Hallé Orchestra.
František Běhounek (; October 28, 1898 Prague – January 1, 1973 Karlovy Vary ) was a Czech scientist ( radiologist ), explorer and writer.
Vojtech Alexander ( Slovak ), Alexander Béla ( Hungarian ) ( 1857, Késmárk – 1916, Budapest ) was Slovak radiologist, one of the most influential radiologists in the world.
The station signed on the air on December 31, 1994, under the call letters WFBI and was owned by Memphis businessman, radiologist ( and later Shelby County commissioner ) George Flinn.
The transjugular approach was pioneered by radiologist Charles Dotter in the 1970s.
Rudolph Fisher ( May 9, 1897 Washington, DC-December 26, 1934 ) was an African-American physician, radiologist, novelist, short story writer, dramatist, musician, and orator.

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