Crile


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Crile

(kraɪl)

n.
George Washington, 1864–1943, U.S. surgeon.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Describing it as 'the dirty little secret of the Afghan war' in his book, George Crile writes that Gen Zia had extracted a concession early on from President Reagan that in return for working with the CIA against the Soviets in Afghanistan, the US would look the other way on the matter of the bomb.
Both Crile and Treverton make it clear that Pakistan's fear of a Soviet invasion drove the need for subterfuge.
The 18 curers' names are Beard, Becker, Budwig, Burzynski, Coley, Crile, Gerson, Glover, Hamer, Lakhovsky, Lincoln, Livingston, Michelakis, Naessens, Olney, Ott, Revici, and Rife.
Susan Crile, the taxpayer, served as a tenured professor of studio art at Hunter College in New York City and produced artwork for more than 40 years.
In Crile, (30) the taxpayer, a tenured art professor, also had a long and successful, but rarely profitable, career as an artist.
History reveals that endocrine surgery has predominantly been dealt with by legendary general surgeons like Kocher, Halsted, Lahey, Mayo, Crile and Cope.
Dr George Crile took up the challenge to train nurses in the safe administration of anaesthetic to patients as did Dr Arthur Guedel who also actively taught hundreds of individuals on the safe administration of ether to surgical patients during WW1.
We are grateful to all participants in the program, Jacqueline Frey, Ann Crile Esselstyn, and Jim Perko.
Describing perceptions in 1991, journalist George Crile stated "each year it seemed that Najibullah only grew stronger and the mujahideen only more divided, less attractive, maybe even dangerous." (72) The regime appeared to be a fixture on the landscape even as the AIG struggled to maintain credibility.
However, reintroducing electrical potential resulted in cell reconstructing and the cell became active and healthy (Crile, 1926).