The name stuck, and the pathologist found himself famous overnight.
You're my superior and senior pathologist and it's your duty to protect me against the press.
It was engrossing, important work, and it could be accomplished in a normal work-day, leaving the pathologist considerable leisure to study, read and relax.
To thepathologist it was quite clear first that Jerome Jerrold believed he had been shot; secondly that no second person could have entered the room, and thirdly that the theory of assassination might be at once dismissed.
The great pathologist knit his brows and cast down his head thoughtfully.
Doctor Obelt, whose reputation as a pathologist was the highest in the Netherlands, and against whose opinion even the Chief of Police of Amsterdam could raise no word.
That was my instant suspicion, one that was afterwards verified by the great Dutch pathologist Doctor Obelt, who lived in the Amstel Straat, and to whom I carried the mysterious but incriminating scrap of steel.
The gross appearance of the ulcers in the intestine and the common character of the discharges he {779} describes with the accuracy of the modern pathologist and the ardor of the true clinician.
A pathologist without a microscope is an unarmed man, indeed.
Resist hunger as long as you can, and, rather than die of starvation, your instinct will make you a cannibal; resist love when youth and nature impel to it, and what pathologist does not track one broad path into madness or crime?
This forces the pathologist to use microscopic examination and various artificial keys to arrive at the proper identification of a given rot-producing fungus.
The pathologist goes farther and asks the reason for certain apparent immunities.
There is nothing that is more emphasized to the pathologist than that one man's meat is another man's poison.
Next a pathologist was introduced, and in answer to a long hypothetical question, based upon the testimony of Dr.
He described in detail each step of his work, and exhibited a thoroughness and caution which more than anything demonstrated that he was the expert pathologist which the prosecution claimed him to be.
Allen, pathologistat the Melbourne Hospital, for the particulars of a case of hydatids of the cerebrum, which are given as follows: “J.
Every pathologist is familiar with gritty particles in the various viscera of man and animals, but few are probably aware how constantly these are dead and degenerated Cysticerci.
These facts he gave orally to Dr John Reid, pathologist to the Edinburgh Infirmary, whose experience of the morbid anatomy of fever was altogether different.
Moreover, and it is an unusual combination, he was not only an investigator of the lesser known attributes of electricity who could be ranked with Tessler, Edison, or Marconi, but he was a psychologist and pathologist of European reputation.
But an hour before count-down began, a jitney buzzed across the field, and a Two-star Pathologist climbed aboard with his three black-cloaked orderlies.
The pathology sector lay to the north of the city, and Black Doctor Arnquist was the chief pathologist of Hospital Seattle.
The pathologist was sitting in the control room of the Lancet, his glasses slightly askew on his florid face.
The necropsy pathologist of the next fifty years may well, like Warthin, upset our most plausible generalizations of today.
The assistant pathologist of St. Francis’ Hospital carried on the experimental work, adding salicylic acid to the camphor.
Welch, pathologist of the Lying-in Hospital, found that rabbits infected with lethal doses of pneumococcus cultures intravenously were saved by large doses of camphorated oil; fragmentary protocols are given.
Virchow of Berlin, the greatest living pathologist at the time, was asked to deliver the principal address.
He called particular attention to the fact that what he found corresponded very closely with the pathological process which had been observed by Laennec in the liver, and to which the French medical pathologist had given the name of cirrhosis.
The evidence of the Government pathologist is also of interest.
The Government pathologist will clear up these points when he makes the post-mortem examination," said Merrington.
The Government pathologist says that the burnt hole was nearly two inches across, but he also states that the punctured wound made by the bullet was about the size of a threepenny piece.
The Government pathologist had formed the opinion that the revolver must have been held very close to the body to account for the larger scorched hole.
Huxley asserted a few {144} years ago that a distinguished English pathologist had mistaken for movements of minute living organisms the "Brownian movements" seen in the particles of many not living substances under a high magnifying power.
The pathologist has no such demonstrative data to show that, in the course of time, the forms and species of morbid action have undergone great mutations, like the forms and species of normal life.
In pursuing such an inquiry, the pathologist labours under comparative disadvantages.
Be that as it may, however, our present concern lies not with these matters, but with Virchow the pathologist and teacher.
Then he said suavely-- "A pathologist is a kind o' pathfinder.
Presently Pete remarked: "Surgeon an' pathologist is the Perfessor.
Surgeon to the Western Infirmary Out-Door Department; Pathologist and Lecturer on Pathology at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary; Examiner in Pathology in the University of Glasgow; Vice-President Glasgow Pathological and Clinical Society.