REMOVAL OF BRAIN TUMOR
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SWIMMING POOLS 1.Any person who has been exposed to or is suffering from a communicable disease (typhoid fever, diphtheria, scarlet fever, measles, etc.) should report the facts concerning the exposure to the person in charge of the pool and should not use the pool until permission is obtained from the proper authorities.2. Every person must take a thorough shower bath with the use of soap before entering the pool.3. Persons found polluting the water with their body dis¬ charges will be excluded from the pool.The trough along the side of the pool is provided as a place to expectorate.Do not expectorate in the water.4. The water in the pool is purified and is safe for bathing purposes, but is not a drinking water ; therefore, bathers are warned against swallowing any pool water taken into the mouth.Keywords:
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The following extracts from the diary and letters of Nelson Fell provide an insight into the revolutionary events taking place between February and May 1917 from the perspective of an overseas eyewitness. After detailing his visit to the Romanov family in Tsarskoe Tselo, Fell outlines the gradual unfolding of the events of the revolution as they took place on the streets of Moscow and, later, in Petrograd. One of his letters details his experience of train travel during his trip to Kazan in March 1917. In the final extract from May 1917, Fell considers the fate of Tsarism and the future prospects for further revolution in Russia.
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Journal Article Why France Fell Get access Why France Fell. By André Maurois. Translated from the French by Denver Lindley. 1940. (London : John Lane. 8vo. 174 pp. 5s.) International Affairs Review Supplement, Volume 19, Issue 3-4, December 1940, Page 198, https://doi.org/10.1093/ia/19.3-4.198d Published: 01 December 1940
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Journal Article Fell family Get access Robert Jackson Fell Robert Jackson Fell 11 Kemble Street, W.C.2 Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Notes and Queries, Volume CLX, Issue jun06, 6 June 1931, Page 408, https://doi.org/10.1093/nq/CLX.jun06.408g Published: 06 June 1931
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Margaret Fell holding Erica Fell on her lap, taken July 1886 by Charles Yates Fell
Inscriptions: Album page - beneath image - Margie & Erica July 86.
Quantity: 1 b&w original photographic print(s).
Physical Description: Photographic print, 15.6 x 11.7 cm, mounted on album page
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Abstract: Marian Fell Vans Agnew (1886–1935), a largely forgotten American translator of Russian literature, was among the first to introduce Anton Chekhov and Vladimir Korolenko to Anglophone audiences. As a teenager, Fell lived in Karaganda, Siberia (nowadays in Kazakhstan) with her family, and this experience inspired her to promote Russian culture after she returned to America. This article investigates Fell's collaboration with the Charles Scribner's Sons and Duffield & Co. publishing companies, analyses and contextualizes Fell's translations, and examines the critique of her works from the Russian school of criticism to provide an assessment of Fell's contribution to Russo-American intercultural relationships.
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Wedding party of Dr Walter Fell and Margaret Richmond, in 1886. From left to right, back row: Dr Collins, Emily Richmond, Alice Richmond, Mabel Fell. Middle row: Flora McDonald, Walter Fell, Lil Fell. Front: Ruth Atkinson (kneeling), Mary Richmond, Eva Fell (bridesmaid), Margaret Richmond (bride). Photograph taken by Charles Yates Fell.
Inscriptions: Album page - [Names are written all around the image]
Quantity: 1 b&w original photographic print(s).
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Abstract The appointment of Samuel Clarke as Architypographus in 1658, the establishment of a new Delegacy of the Press in 1662 and the installation of presses owned by the University in the new Sheldonian Theatre in 1668 mark the beginnings of an institutional approach to the management of scholarly printing undertaken in the University's name. In 1671 the partnership of Leoline Jenkins, Thomas Yate, John Fell, and Joseph Williamson assumed control of the Learned Press and were directly answerable to the Delegates and through them to Convocation. The differing roles of Fell and his partners, as well as that of John Wallis, Keeper of the Archives, in the management of the Press are considered, and the commercial and scholarly successes and failures of the partnership are discussed. The chapter considers how Fell and his reforms differed from Laud's vision for the Press and concludes with Fell's death in 1686.
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