View allAll Photos Tagged pathologist
In this photo taken by AP Images for College of American Pathologists-See, Test and Treat, Yan Ling Zhong of Boston waits for a digital mammogram at the CAP See, Test and Treat event, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2010, at Tufts Medical Center in Boston. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/AP Images for College of American Pathologists/See, Test and Treat)
Aaron Ziegler is a speech-language pathologist and singing voice specialist whose clinical interests are in voice and swallowing disorders.
At home PATHOLOGIST would be code for all these things but the Indians are quite explicit on this point. Once I noticed this one I noticed them pretty much everywhere.
Give me your blood, your urine, your stool, your sputum, your poor huddled masses...
Michael Dudek, College of American Pathologists
Oracle OpenWorld 2014
San Francisco, CA
Watch the video:
*The quote was edited for fit.
Mandy is employed. As a Speech Language Pathologist she really is in no danger of losing her job. However she did just break-up with her boyfriend of about 3 years. Devastated she will used this photo when her heart is on the mend to place singles ads on E-harmony.com or whatever single people do. Photo made in Louisville Monday, June 22, 2009. Photo by Jonathan Palmer
Strobist info:
SB-26 in Wescott Apollo (camera left)
SB-26 with Honl grid spot (camera right)
SB-26 bare bulb (behind subject pointed a wall)
Canon 5D strobes fired with Pocket Wizards.
SBC2ASSIGN1
Studious side.
I'm in school to become a speech-language pathologist. I'm majoring in Communication Science and Disorders with a double minor in Audiology and Linguistics. School in incredibly important and I'm extremely passionate about my field of study.
The human language and the study of communication is fascinating to me. I am obsessed with linguistics and speech disorders. Everything about it gets me super excited to learn.
I hope to get a career helping elementary age kids with speech disabilities. I can't wait!
Oh, and yes, those are my glasses and they are real.
In this photo taken by AP Images for College of American Pathologists-See, Test and Treat, Nora Laver, MD, FCAP, right, explains a Pap test slide to Ying Pu at the CAP See, Test and Treat event, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2010, at Tufts Medical Center in Boston. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/AP Images for College of American Pathologists/See, Test and Treat)
In 1954, Donald Teare was the chief Home Office pathologist. A bit of a celebrity. Check out his smug face. But really, he didn't have much to be smug about. The year before being called to Jean Townsend's body he'd investigated the serial killer John Christie - for the second time. Teare's first investigation of Christie's victims back in 1949 had been problematic. He’d neglected to take a vaginal swab, which is basic, from one of the bodies. The result was that Christie's lodger, Timothy Evans, was wrongly accused of murder. Evans was hung. After that, Christie killed four more women, including his wife.