• John Fanselow served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Nigeria from 1961 to 1963, and in Somalia from 1966 to 1968. (jfklibrary.org)
  • The novel Ehrengard (1963) was published posthumously and was Dinesen's last work. (encyclopedia.com)
  • In the days prior to his death, Beach continued his work from a hospital bed, reading scientific literature and giving advice about a paper on reproductive behavior to be presented at an Omaha conference on June 12, 1988. (wikipedia.org)
  • After serving for one year in the service, he returned to his hometown in 1892 to begin freelance art and mastered anatomical illustrations when he began to work for Dr. Kelly in the Gynecological Department of the Johns Hopkins Hospital. (urologichistory.museum)
  • He studied the effects of endocrines on behaviors through methods such as castration, isolation, brain legions, and hormone manipulation. (wikipedia.org)
  • Like Dr. Ray, Dr. Jones is an associate veterinarian and began working on July 1, 2019. (studioscian.eu)
  • Colombia to extradite "country's most dangerous drug lord" to the U. Scaphism (from Greek σκάφη, meaning "boat"), [1] also known as the boats, is an alleged ancient Persian method of execution mentioned by Plutarch in his Life of Artaxerxes. (el-vigia.es)
  • In The Death and Life of Great American Cities , a book about urban planning, Jane Jacobs prescribes conditions for the ideal use of sidewalks: "First, there must be a clear demarcation between what is public space and what is private space. (mit.edu)
  • 9 The works include: Will Cornish's Treatise betwene Truth and Enformation , John Skelton's Elegies upon the Death of the Earl of Northumberland , Lydgate's Stanzas and Testament , and The Assembly of Gods . (rochester.edu)
  • In Death and the Regeneration of Life . (harvard.edu)
  • The measure, HB 481, is the most extreme abortion ban in the country-not just because it would impose severe limitations on women's reproductive rights, but also because it would subject women who get illegal abortions to life imprisonment and the death penalty. (metafilter.com)
  • In this nonfiction work she focuses on the lives of several of the African servants and friends about whom she first wrote in Out of Africa . (encyclopedia.com)
  • Eco was also an accomplished academic, publishing many nonfiction books and scholarly works on everything from literary criticism, anthropology, medieval philosophy, and, his specialty, semiotics, the study of meaning-making. (shelf-awareness.com)
  • Living in Pakistan, the United States and England for significant periods of his life has afforded him a sharp perspective on an array of cultural forces. (shelf-awareness.com)
  • There is no code of codes but there is a logic and a system in operation through the different periods and stages of the work. (squarewhiteworld.com)
  • He states that the Peace Corps transformed his life and he continues to be a mentor for many former volunteers and others he has met during his teaching career. (jfklibrary.org)
  • 10 If the work had been written by Lydgate, then, according to modern editor Oscar L. Triggs (1896), it must have been written either about 1412, at the time that Lydgate was writing his Troy Book , or about 1420, when Siege of Thebes was being written (p. xii). (rochester.edu)
  • Randomisation was stratified by HRR gene alteration status (deficient vs non-deficient or unknown) and previous treatment with life-prolonging therapy (docetaxel or abiraterone, or both: yes vs no) in the castration-sensitive setting. (bvsalud.org)
  • Benjamin visited the United States in 1913, to work with a quack doctor who claimed to have found a cure for tuberculosis. (wikipedia.org)
  • When his tomb was opened in 1961, they found his skin," she said. (longwood.edu)
  • born 1 December 1961) is a German former computer repair technician who received international attention for murdering and eating a voluntary victim in 2001, whom he had found via the Internet. (el-vigia.es)
  • The operation (presumably castration) was on 5 January by Dr Nauta in the Diaconessenhuis in Haarlem. (blogspot.com)
  • But what it lacks in new revelations about Burroughs's personal life this collection more than makes up for in the sheer joy of devouring Burroughs's command of language and ability to imbue his letters (including riffs on the creative process) with the same literary genius that seared his Beat poems into our collective consciousness. (advocate.com)
  • The short stories in Winter's Tales (1942), with their simpler narrative style and attention to landscape, history, and life of Denmark, solidified Dinesen's standing in the Danish literary community. (encyclopedia.com)
  • These works represent a return to her earlier literary style, themes, and characters. (encyclopedia.com)
  • PURPOSE: There is an unmet need for therapeutic options that prolong survival for patients with heavily pretreated, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). (bvsalud.org)
  • We aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of talazoparib (a PARP inhibitor) plus enzalutamide (an androgen receptor blocker) versus enzalutamide alone in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). (bvsalud.org)
  • Basing on this verbatim material Eisenstein intended to create three-volumed study book The Direction (the first and only one completed is published in Vol.4 of his selected works). (kinozapiski.ru)
  • German Count Harry Kessler (1868-1937) was born into wealth and lived a life of privilege during the belle epoque, when Kessler was a socialite, book publisher, and cofounder of the avant-garde publication Pan . (advocate.com)
  • Other works 'by Lydgate' cited here include The Ballade in Commendation of Our Lady , The Life of St. Edmund , The Fall of Princes (attributed to Boccaccio), The Chorl and Bird , The Courte of Sapyence , Troy Book , and The Temple of Glass . (rochester.edu)
  • It looks very much as if the early Christians thought that Jesus life was either revealed by or to be interpreted through Old Testament Scriptures. (blogspot.com)
  • Given the choice of a British internment camp , as an " enemy alien ", or returning to New York, he used his last dollars to travel back to America, where he made his home for the rest of his life. (wikipedia.org)
  • Toni Morrison's narratives are likewise made of composites: a chromatic patchwork of identities and peregrinations of black characters on "the stage of life", pearls made by irritants . (lu.se)
  • She applied to the Peace Corps at age 59, after working for Wisconsin Public Radio, teaching English in Japan, and serving as an international education consultant. (jfklibrary.org)
  • Some of its aspects contravened both secular law and Christian morality, notably castration, the breaking up of families, and the abandonment of individuals who were too old or too young. (blogspot.com)
  • Acclaimed for her poetic prose style, complex characters, and intricate plots, Dinesen explored such themes as the lives and values of aristocrats, the nature of fate and destiny, God and the supernatural, the artist, and the place of women in society. (encyclopedia.com)
  • sleeping in had most likely cost him any shot at finding a good place to work at the campus library and the public one was closer. (franchise-immobiliere.eu)
  • This issue refers to a narrative revision of psychoanalytical literature about presence of parents in child psychotherapy, which objective refers to analyze the way contemporaneous authors who work with psychoanalytical perspective understand the parents' role in child psychotherapy. (bvsalud.org)
  • His "Russian phase" which continued with works such as Renard , the Soldier's Tale and Les Noces , was followed in the 1920s by a period in which he turned to neoclassical music. (radioswissclassic.ch)
  • We expand well use any education of the delivery, about like and find the structures systematic as work solo, browser form, journal ability from the new observation. (joerissens.de)
  • Ancient Greek Architects at Work: Problems of Structure and Design. (harvard.edu)
  • The story is set in twentieth-century America, in which being consumable is part of a fantasy of flashiness and entireness surfacing, or better blanketing, the sonority of human inner lives: the lives of Bride, Booker, Sweetness. (lu.se)
  • She remarks that when it comes to fate and life, God can be both a charlatan and "jokester" with his human creations. (encyclopedia.com)
  • These individuals and their work have changed how urologists and other medical professionals treat and view the human body, inside and out. (urologichistory.museum)
  • All human life is here. (blogspot.com)
  • You can say that it was a mixture of the old conventional plutocratic bad ideas and new unconventional good ideas (work as a way for Germany to recover, [Work? (stormfront.org)
  • He describes his work as a teacher trainer in Enugu, Nigeria, and how that informed his later career as a teacher trainer for Peace Corps headquarters, Columbia Teachers College, and worldwide. (jfklibrary.org)
  • In Lesotho, Madeline worked as a teacher trainer in a remote area, and the job required her to walk for hours to reach the rural schools. (jfklibrary.org)
  • I've often had to think about this problem when presenting work I've written for the stage and have never arrived at a satisfactory answer. (squarewhiteworld.com)
  • Her signature role was written by her wife (then partner), Jane Wagner, in a show titled The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe which opened on Broadway in 1985 and won Tomlin the Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Play. (ronnisanlo.com)
  • In a corollary, fear of the father's rage, in retaliation for oedipal desires, leads a boy to escape castration anxiety by withdrawing from women and thus competition with the father. (priory.com)
  • Then he meets Charles, an avid gardener, and the two will become life partners and create the wildly gorgeous garden of their dreams. (advocate.com)
  • The g will create known to your Kindle work. (contactskin.es)
  • But rather than segregate his academic life from his popular fiction, Mr. Eco infused his seven novels with many of his scholarly preoccupations. (shelf-awareness.com)
  • The works from this period tended to make use of traditional musical forms (concerto grosso, fugue and symphony), drawing on earlier styles, especially from the 18th century. (radioswissclassic.ch)
  • Subsequent works included several more short story collections and numerous essays and novels in both Danish and English. (encyclopedia.com)
  • He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1953 and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1961. (wikipedia.org)
  • Her works defy easy categorization, though she incorporated elements of Gothic and horror as well as humor in her stories. (encyclopedia.com)
  • McGinty places the trial and its issues solidly in a historical context that includes the role of the Mississippi in American economic life, the Dred Scott case, Abraham Lincoln's career and westward expansion. (shelf-awareness.com)