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"Curtis, Dr"
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\Go Public\: Teen to undergo same operation twice after 1st procedure halted mid-surgery
2016
After waiting more than a year for surgery, an Alberta teen has to undergo the same operation twice. That's after the first procedure was stopped halfway through because the surgeon became ill. His family doesn't blame the doctor but the system for failing to respond. They brought their story to \"Go Public's\" Rosa Marchitelli. It wasn't. Nurses told him the surgeon got sick in the middle of the operation and had to stop. But instead of calling in another surgeon in the following hours or even days, the hospital sent [FATIMA SADIQ] home with no word on when he'd be back. After our inquiries, the surgeon called and sent a letter to Sadiq offering to move the second surgery date up. But the surgeon also said someone else will be doing the procedure this time because Sadiq decided to take his story public and the surgeon says now there's a trust issue. Rosa Marchitelli, CBC News, Calgary.
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Paid Notice: Deaths CURTIS, DR. PRUDENCE B. (PRUDY)
2000
CURTIS-Dr. Prudence B. (Prudy). On Sunday, August 20, 2000; of Elizabeth, NJ. Loving daughter of Anne B.
Newspaper Article
Alexandra Block, Curtis Weiss
2006
The couple met at Yale, from which the bride graduated summa cum laude and where she received her law degree. The bridegroom received his undergraduate degree, a master's in molecular biophysics and biochemistry, and a medical degree cum laude from Yale.
Newspaper Article
Research Supported by Pentagon Stirs Germ Warfare Accusations
1989
The area chapter of the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker-led humanitarian group that generally works to promote peace in places like Central America and the Middle East, wants the Amherst Town Meeting in May to declare Amherst ''a biological warfare research-free zone.'' ''The escalating global threat of the biological weapons race is the thing we are trying to focus on,'' said Dr. Ira Helfand, a doctor in Northampton and member of Physicians for Social Responsibility who opposes the research. ''Clearly, this could be adapted to offensive purposes, since if you're going to build a vaccine, you have to have a virulent agent to test it against.'' Debate Began in November Joseph Duffey, the Chancellor of the university, said in a statement that the opponents are ''imputing false motives to the university'' and to Dr. [Curtis B. Thorne], who has chosen not to comment publicly on the matter.
Newspaper Article
PSYCHOLOGISTS AIM TO PLEASE ANIMALS
1983
''The stronger, larger boars gain the right to be first in line to feed and water, by virtue of their superior fighting ability,'' said Stanley Curtis, an animal scientist from the University of Illinois. ''It is a bit different issue than agriculture has had in the past,'' said Dr. Curtis in a telephone interview. Other research has shown that chickens grow faster and have stronger defenses against diseases and infections when they have frequent contact with humans. Behavioral scientists have discovered that cattle become attached to specific ''home'' spots in large pastures, even when vegetation may be more plentiful in other areas. A calf learns its ''home'' from its mother and will live in that spot throughout its adult life, Dr. Curtis said.
Newspaper Article
Carol K. Demitz Is Married
[Carol Keyes Demitz], a financial executive and lawyer in New York, and Dr. [Curtis Fred Brewer], a professor at the [Albert Einstein] College of Medicine at Yeshiva University, were married yesterday at their home in New York by Justice [Myriam J. Altman] of State Supreme Court.
Newspaper Article