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de and doctors
In March 2000, doctors at the San Juan de Dios Hospital in San José, Costa Rica, published the manuscripts of the Costa Rican scientist and medical doctor Clodomiro ( Clorito ) Picado Twight ( 1887 – 1944 ).
The cupola contains allegorical paintings and on the pendentives, there are the four doctors of the Catholic Church, Francis de Geronimo, Pope Gregory I, Ambrose and Augustine of Hippo, as well as images of John Duns Scotus, Bonaventure, Bernard of Siena, and Anthony of Padua.
During 1965 and 1966, Cade, together with his team of research doctors Dana Shires, James Free, and Alejandro M. de Quesada, conducted a series of trial-and-error experiments with his glucose-and-electrolytes rehydration drink on members of the Gators football team of coach Ray Graves, first with members of the freshman squad, and after initially promising results, with starting members of the varsity team.
These include doctors such as Nicolás San Juan, lawyers such as Artemio de Valle Arizpe and Jose Linares and engineers such as Gabriel Mancera.
Sociedades de Negros ( Black Societies ) existed throughout Cuba, and Havana boasted a number of closely linked organizations including the Marianao Social Club, Union Fraternal, Club Atenas — whose members included doctors and engineers — and the Buena Vista Social Club itself.
It had been upheld by several councils, by the cities of Ghent and Florence, by the University of Oxford and University of Paris, and by the most renowned doctors of the time, for example: Henry of Langenstein (" Epistola pacis ", 1379, " Epistola concilii pacis ", 1381 ); Conrad of Gelnhausen (" Epistola Concordiæ ", 1380 ); Jean de Charlier de Gerson ( Sermo coram Anglicis ); and especially the latter's master, Pierre d ' Ailly, the eminent Bishop of Cambrai, who wrote of himself: " A principio schismatis materiam concilii generalis primus … instanter prosequi non timui " ( Apologia Concilii Pisani, in Paul Tschackert ).
Their daughter, Mary Corinna Putnam ( 1842 – 1906 ) was a pioneering female doctors, the first woman admitted to the Faculté de Médecine de Paris.
The only child to survive the epidemic was the future Louis XV who was locked inside his apartments with his governess Madame de Ventadour to avoid being bled to death by doctors like his elder brother had been.
In El Nuevo Luciano de Quito, he lamented the large number of quacks who pretended to be doctors.
He was supported, however, by the doctors of the University of Montpellier and by an Aragonese troubadour, Thomàs Périz de Fozes, who wrote a poem in his defence.
In 1784 an outbreak of typhoid prompted Lord Grey de Wilton to inform the magistrates of the Salford Hundred ; keen to prevent the spread of the disease to neighbouring towns and villages, they sent doctors to assess the situation.
And the list can go on and on, for, as a tree is known by the fruit it bears, Santa Maria can, indeed, be proud of the other sons and daughters who have distinguished themselves and, therefore, have brought honor to their town: oppresors like the Reyes, Agatep, Brillantes ; doctors like the Reyes ', the Florendos, the Julians, the Directos, the Domingos, and the Rillorazas ; lawyers like the Reyeses and Brillianteses, Florendos, and Camarillos, Domines, and Andrions ; Journalists like the de Guzmans and the ; military leaders like the Reyeses ; men of business like the Pacquings and the Guererros ; and men of politics like the late Mayors Joaquin Escobar, Dr. Ponciano S. Reyes, Brillantes.
Deciding that she would not allow the same treatment to be applied to the Duke of Anjou, Madame de Ventadour locked herself up with three nursery maids and refused to allow the doctors near the boy.

de and treated
Jakob Bernoulli's Ars Conjectandi ( posthumous, 1713 ) and Abraham de Moivre's Doctrine of Chances ( 1718 ) treated the subject as a branch of mathematics.
The Scotichronicon says that on being told that Comyn had survived the attack and was being treated, two of Bruce's supporters, Roger de Kirkpatrick uttering the words " I mak siccar (" I make sure ") and John Lindsay, went back into the church and finished Bruce's work.
This " reflection on the destructive aspect of progress " proceeded through chapter which treated rationality as both the liberation from and further domination of nature, interpretations of both Homer ’ s Odyssey and the Marquis de Sade, as well as analyses of the culture industry and anti-semitism.
In Jura, Chardonnay is sometimes treated to the same type of flor yeast found in Sherry ( though the wine is rarely, if ever, fortified ) and it is used to create vin de paille dessert wines.
The Art de vérifier les dates contains a history of Anjou which is very much out of date, but has not been treated elsewhere as a whole.
The position of official rabbi of a community, mara de ' atra (" master of the place "), has generally been treated in the responsa as such a position.
The Dauphin died the same day, 8 March 1712 while his younger brother, the Duke of Anjou, was personally treated by his governess, Madame de Ventadour, who forbade any bloodletting.
This means that the inter-particle distance is much larger than the thermal de Broglie wavelength and the molecules are treated as classical objects.
* Article 3 states that even where there is not a conflict of international character the parties must as a minimum adhere to minimal protections described as: noncombatants, members of armed forces who have laid down their arms, and combatants who are hors de combat ( out of the fight ) due to wounds, detention, or any other cause shall in all circumstances be treated humanely, with the following prohibitions:
When the Bishop of Valence and Charles de La Rochefoucault, sieur of Randan, sent by the king to negotiate, arrived in Scotland they were almost treated like prisoners.
In certain medieval European chivalric romances, such as Marie de France's Le Fresne, a woman cites a multiple birth ( often to a lower-class woman ) as proof of adultery on her part ; while this may reflect a widespread belief, it is invariably treated as malicious slander, to be justly punished by the accuser having a multiple birth of her own, and the events of the romance are triggered by her attempt to hide one or more of the children.
In this office he insisted that Eden's de facto deputy Rab Butler not be treated as senior to him, and threatened resignation until he was allowed to cut bread and milk subsidies.
His private life seems to have been typical of a young officer of the era: in 1605, aged twenty, he was treated by Théodore de Mayerne for gonorrhea.
* The painter Vincent van Gogh was treated here in the psychiatric center at Monastery Saint-Paul de Mausole ( 1889 – 1890 ).
In the 1950s Huxley played a role in bringing to the English-speaking public the work of the French Jesuit-palaeontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who he believed had been unfairly treated by the Catholic and Jesuit hierarchy.
The French writer Émile Deschamps claims in his memoirs that, in 1805, he was treated to some plum pudding by a stranger named Monsieur de Fontgibu.
The American retreat was well-organized largely due to the efforts of Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette, who, although wounded, created a rally point that allowed for a more orderly retreat before being treated for his wound.
If the market discount is less than the de minimis amount, the discount on the bond is generally treated as a capital gain upon disposition or redemption rather than as ordinary income.
But in 1813 Baden joined the coalition, and since then that nation created of odds and ends (" de bric et de broc ") and always handsomely treated by us, had not ceased to take a leading part in the struggles against our country.
< http :// utpjournals. metapress. com / content / g2536732n4568520 /></ ref > Coureurs de bois were basically unlicensed traders, treated at times as outlaws by New France authorities.
The French writer Émile Deschamps claims in his memoirs that in 1805, he was treated to some plum pudding by a stranger named Monsieur de Fontgibu.
In a form more concise than that employed by his predecessors, Francisco Lopez de Gómara and Oviedo, he treated the natural and philosophic history of the New World from a broader point of view.
It describes minimal protections which must be adhered to by all individuals within a signatory's territory during an armed conflict not of an international character ( regardless of citizenship or lack thereof ): Noncombatants, combatants who have laid down their arms, and combatants who are hors de combat ( out of the fight ) due to wounds, detention, or any other cause shall in all circumstances be treated humanely, including prohibition of outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment.

de and Thomas
In American history important spokesmen included Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, J. Hector St. John de Crèvecœur ( 1735 – 1813 ), and John Taylor of Caroline ( 1753 – 1824 ) in the early national period.
Due to mutual agreements with foreign clubs, the youth academy has also signed foreign players as teenagers before making first team debuts, such as Belgian defensive trio Jan Vertonghen, Toby Alderweireld and Thomas Vermaelen ( now with Arsenal ) and winger Tom de Mul ( now with Sevilla ), all of whom are full internationals as well as Dutch youth international Javier Martina and Vurnon Anita of the Netherlands Antilles.
She was the daughter of Tommaso di Benvenuto da Pizzano ( Thomas de Pizan ; named for the family's origins in the town of Pizzano, south east of Bologna ), a physician, court astrologer, and Councillor of the Republic of Venice.
Following her birth, Thomas de Pizan accepted an appointment to the court of Charles V of France, as the king ’ s astrologer, alchemist, and physician.
However many new approaches have appeared in recent years, especially by such scholars as Wilda Anderson, Kurt Ballstadt, Daniel Brewer, Jay Caplan, Andrew Clark, Elisabeth de Fontenay, Rosalina de la Carrera, Julie Candler Hays, Thomas M. Kavanagh, Walter Rex, and Pierre Saint-Amand.
The translation, as literary critics claim, was not based on Cervantes ' text but mostly upon a French work by Filleau de Saint-Martin and upon notes which Thomas Shelton had written previously.
de: Dylan Thomas
" Pommes de terre frites à cru, en petites tranches " (" Potatoes deep-fried while raw, in small cuttings ") in a manuscript in Thomas Jefferson's hand ( circa 1801 – 1809 ) and the recipe almost certainly comes from his French chef, Honoré Julien.
( Artist: Thomas de Leu, fl.
Thomas Aquinas, in the introduction to his commentary on the Psalms, defined the Christian hymn thus: " Hymnus est laus Dei cum cantico ; canticum autem exultatio mentis de aeternis habita, prorumpens in vocem.
* 1383 – Thomas de Ros, 5th Baron de Ros, English crusader ( b. 1338 )
It included a review of alternative theories, such as those of Thomas Burnet and Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon.
* de Pury, Albert, Römer, Thomas, Macchi, Jean-Daniel " Israël constructs its history: Deuteronomistic historiography in recent research " ( Sheffield Academic Press, 2000 )
While chivalric romances abound, particularly notable literary portrayals of knighthood include Geoffrey Chaucer's The Knight's Tale, Baldassare Castiglione's The Book of the Courtier, and Miguel de Cervantes ' Don Quixote, as well as Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d ' Arthur and other Arthurian tales ( Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, the Pearl Poet's Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, etc.
If Coleridge's dream did originate ideas within the poem, then the dreams are related to those experienced by contemporary opium eaters and writers, Thomas de Quincey and Charles Pierre Baudelaire.
In the 1170s Hugh de Moreville and his followers took refuge there after assassinating Thomas Becket.
* 1991: Le martyre de Saint Sebastien by Claude Debussy and Gabriele d ' Annunzio, narration, directed by Michael Tilson Thomas, London Symphony Orchestra
* Le Martyre de Saint Sébastien by Claude Debussy and Gabriele d ' Annunzio, with the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas
Museum expansion slowed after World War I, and the collection did not acquire many significant new works ; exceptions were Georges de La Tour's Saint Thomas and Baron Edmond de Rothschild's ( 1845 – 1934 ) 1935 donation of 4, 000 engravings, 3, 000 drawings, and 500 illustrated books.
These include Richard Kirwan, John Smeaton, Henry Moyes, John Michell, Pieter Camper, R. E. Raspe, John Baskerville, Thomas Beddoes, John Wyatt, William Thomson, Cyril V. Jackson, Jean-André Deluc, John Wilkinson, John Ash, Samuel More, Robert Bage, James Brindley, Ralph Griffiths, John Roebuck, Thomas Percival, Joseph Black, James Hutton, Benjamin Franklin, Joseph Banks, William Herschel, Daniel Solander, John Warltire, George Fordyce, Alexander Blair, Samuel Parr, Louis Joseph d ' Albert d ' Ailly, the seventh Duke of Chaulnes, Barthélemy Faujas de Saint-Fond, Grossart de Virly ,, Johann Gottling.

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