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  1. Elbow-joint (10539 bytes)
    2: ...ons are usually described as distinct ligaments under the following names:
    9: '''Figure 1 :''' Left elbow-joint, showing anterior and ulnar collateral ligaments....
    11: '''Figure 2 :''' Left elbow-joint, showing posterior and radial collateral ligament...
    14: ...the anterior surface of the coronoid process. The deep or transverse set intersects these at right ang...
    17: ...ew scattered fibrous bundles, which pass from the deep surface of the transverse band to the upper par...

Page text matches

  1. Theodora (6th century) (3433 bytes)
    1: [[image:Theodora.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Theodora, depicted on a Byzantine mosaic]]
    8: ... the [[Nika riots]] of [[532]], her advice and leadership for a strong (and militant) response caused ...
    10: ...ething of a voice for prostitutes and the downtrodden. She also helped to mitigate the breach in Chris...
    12: ...n to own and inherit property, and enacting the [[death penalty]] for [[rape]], all of which raised wo...
    14: ... [[Italy]], which was completed a year before her death.
  2. Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
    1: ...al, possibly Melisende herself, from the [[Melisende Psalter]]]]
    3: '''Melisende''' ([[1105]] - [[September 11]], [[1161]]) was [[...
    5: ... was named after her paternal grandmother, Melisende of Montlhery, wife of Hugh I, [[Count of Rethel]]...
    9: ...reginam, cui jure hereditario competebat." Melisende was no mere regent-queen (for her son Baldwin III...
    11: ...hter as a capable successor to himself and Melisende enjoyed the support of the ''[[Haute Cour of Jeru...
  3. Mary I of England (24813 bytes)
    8: ... or [[19 July]] 1553 (''[[de facto]]'') until her death. Mary, the fourth and penultimate monarch of t...
    13: ...was created Princess of Wales, even though he was deeply disappointed that his wife had again failed t...
    15: ...[[English language|English]]. Other studies included [[Greek language|Greek]], [[science]], and [[mus...
    17: ...h England. A marriage treaty was signed; it provided that the Princess Mary should marry either Franc...
    19: ... [[Roman Catholic Church]]. All appeals from the decisions of English ecclesiastical courts to the Po...
  4. Catherine I of Russia (2658 bytes)
    3: ...er, she was also co-ruler from [[1724]] until his death in the next year.
    5: ...sant. She was married at the age of 17 to a [[Sweden|Swedish]] [[dragoon]], having been working at th...
    17: In [[1724]], Peter named her [[Tsaritsa]] and joint ruler. Peter died in early [[1725]] without namin...
    20: ...4]]-[[1725]]''<br>''De-facto ruler Prince [[Alexander Menshikov]] [[1725]]-[[1727]]''}}
  5. Anne of Great Britain (22303 bytes)
    8: ...monarch of the [[House of Stuart]]; she was succeeded by a distant cousin, [[George I of Great Britain...
    10: ... crippling the Scottish economy by restricting trade) were used to ensure that Scotland would co-opera...
    12: Anne's reign was marked by the development of the two-party system. Anne personally...
    15: ...rom France in [[1670]]. In about [[1673]], Anne made the acquaintance of Sarah Jennings, who would bec...
    17: ...nued to send her Catholic books and essays, but made no serious attempt to effect a conversion.
  6. Mary II of England (12093 bytes)
    8: ...pon her death. Popular histories usually know the joint reign as that of "[[William and Mary]]". Mary, al...
    11: ...harles II]]; her maternal grandfather, [[Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon]], served for a lengthy pe...
    13: ...aking as his second wife the Catholic [[Mary of Modena]], also known as Mary Beatrice d'Este.
    15: ...Mary became betrothed to the Protestant [[Stadtholder]] and [[Prince of Orange]], William III. William...
    17: ...t enjoy a happy marriage; her three pregnancies ended in miscarriage or stillbirth. She became popular...
  7. Maria Cantwell (9094 bytes)
    3: ... a member of the [[United States Democratic Party|Democratic Party]].
    7: ... predominantly Irish neighbourhood on the south side of Indianapolis. Her father, Paul, served as coun...
    9: ...e, Washington|Mountlake Terrace]] because it reminded her of Indianapolis. She led a successful campai...
    13: ...anagement Act of 1990]], which required cities to develop comprehensive growth plans, and she negotiat...
    15: ...e to narrowly defeat her in the Republican landslide year of [[1994]].
  8. Golda Meir (10143 bytes)
    2: ...ive-born [[Israeli]] whose family moved to [[Philadelphia]] when he was a teenager; he moved back to I...
    12: ...ed and ran away. She went to Denver, where her older sister, Sheyna, was living. Here she met Morris...
    20: ...o represent them at [[Histadrut]], the General Federation of Labor. By 1924, her husband tired of th...
    24: ...vement in Palestine. They arrested many of its leaders. Golda, however, was never arrested. She gradua...
    28: ...itting down and signing a [[declaration of independence]]."
  9. Condoleezza Rice (23116 bytes)
    6: |'''Order'''
    12: |'''Predecessor'''
    27: ...[Colin Powell]]), and the second woman (after [[Madeleine Albright]]) to serve in that post.
    34: ...icle for the ''[[New Yorker]]'', Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at [[Colum...
    35: ...d an administrative position at the University of Denver. Her name is a variation on the [[Italian]] m...
  10. Mary Robinson (21825 bytes)
    3: ...servative political office. She resigned the presidency four months ahead of the end of her term of of...
    5: <table border="0" align="right" style="margin-left:1em"><tr><t...
    6: <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
    7: ...ption><font size="+1">'''MARY ROBINSON<br><i>President of Ireland</i>'''</font></caption>
    10: <tr><td>'''Term of Office:'''</td><td>[[3 December]] [[1990]] - [[12 September]] [[1997]]</td>...
  11. Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
    1: {| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right...
    9: |'''PM Predecessor:'''
    25: |[[Order of the Garter|Order of the Garter]]<br>Life Barony
    27: ... Kesteven" -->''', [[Order of the Garter|LG]] [[Order of Merit|OM]] [[Privy Council|PC]] [[Royal Socie...
    29: ...he Conservative leadership in [[1975]]. She was undefeated at the polls, winning the [[United Kingdom ...
  12. Mae Jemison (5527 bytes)
    1: ...' blasted into orbit aboard the [[Space Shuttle Endeavour]], [[September 12]], [[1992]], she was the f...
    3: ...acelab J flight, a [[United States|US]]/[[Japan]] joint mission. She conducted experiments in [[life scie...
    5: ...ysician]], teacher and [[astronaut]], she has a wide range of experience in technology, engineering, a...
    9: ...ldren, was born on [[October 17]], [[1956]], in [[Decatur, Alabama]] and raised in [[Chicago, Illinois...
    11: ...B. in African and Afro-American Studies. She attended [[Weill Cornell Medical College|Cornell Medical ...
  13. Marie Curie (5862 bytes)
    2: ...logy]] and a two-time [[Nobel laureate]]. She founded the [[Curie Institute|Curie Institutes]] in [[Pa...
    5: ...Eventually, with the monetary assistance of her elder sister, she moved to [[Paris]] and studied [[che...
    7: ... was far more radioactive than uranium; thus on [[December 26]]th Marie Curie announced the existence ...
    9: ...itially the chloride salts (refining radium chloride on [[April 20]], [[1902]]) and then two new [[che...
    11: ... Becquerel]]". She was the first woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize.
  14. Grace Hopper (7469 bytes)
    1: ...rogrammer]] for the [[Mark I Calculator]] and the developer of the first [[compiler]] for a computer p...
    3: ... at [[Yale University]], where she received an MA degree in the same two subjects in [[1930]] and in [...
    5: ...d from the Navy, but she continued to work on the development of the Mark II and the Mark III Calculat...
    7: ...auchly]] Computer Corporation and joined the team developing the [[UNIVAC I]]. In the early [[1950s]] ...
    9: ...machine code]] or in languages close to machine code, such as the [[assembler]]s of the time. It is fa...
  15. Mary Edwards Walker (4835 bytes)
    6: ... she believed the fashions of the day, which included such binding clothing as [[corsets]], were not h...
    8: ... school student, Albert Miller, and they set up a joint practice in [[Rome, New York]]. The practice did...
    10: ... [[Battle of Chickamauga]]. Finally, she was awarded a commission as a "Contract Acting Assistant Sur...
    12: ...nry Thomas]]. On [[November 11]], [[1865]], President [[Andrew Johnson]] signed a bill to present her...
    16: ...soldiers, both in the field and hospitals, to the detriment of her own health, and has also endured ha...
  16. Mary, the mother of Jesus (30135 bytes)
    8: ... figure of Mary, and the centuries of Marian cult derived from the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Chris...
    11: ...t|250px|thumbnail|[[Gabriel (archangel)|Gabriel]] delivering the [[Annunciation]] to Mary. Painting by...
    13: ... strangers (Luke 2:6, 7). But as the inn was crowded, Mary had to retire to a place among the cattle.
    15: ...rs only one event in the history of Jesus is recorded: his going up to [[Jerusalem]] when twelve years...
    17: ... and other women (John 19:26). Mary cradling the dead body of her son is a common motif in art, calle...
  17. Krystyna Skarbek (11133 bytes)
    3: ...fore the [[Special Operations Executive]] was founded in [[July]] [[1940]].) Her resourcefulness and ...
    7: ... at eighteen, to businessman Karol Getlich soon ended without rancor. On [[November 2]], [[1938]], at...
    9: ... [[Germany|German]] occupiers would eventually murder her at one of their [[concentration camps]]. An...
    11: ...Horthy|Mikló³ ˆorthy]].) Krystyna and Kowerski made good their escape from Hungary via the [[Balkans]...
    13: ...pt]], it came as a shock to them that they were under suspicion due to Krystyna's contacts with a Poli...
  18. Human brain (15406 bytes)
    9: ...synaptic]] connections, making it one of the most densely connected network systems among natural and ...
    15: ...arated by a prominent [[central fissure]]. A well-developed [[cerebellum]] is visible at the back of t...
    21: ...weighs 1,500 g in air weighs only 50 g when suspended in CSF. (Livingston, 1965). Fluid movement withi...
    23: ...pressure can result in permanent brain injury and death.
    25: ...vic openings to accommodate the birth of large-headed children, but the larger this opening, the more ...
  19. Bone (11388 bytes)
    1: '''Bone''' refers either to a hardened [[connective tissue]] or to one of the individ...
    6: ...(chiefly [[collagen]]). Bone is a [[mesh]], the [[density]] of which may vary at different [[points]].
    9: ...rge portion of skeletal mass; but, because of its density, it has a low surface area. Cancellous bone ...
    13: ...ed with yellow marrow as the child ages (see Bone Development below).
    23: ...in to ''cells'' and ''matrices''. Bone cells include ''[[osteoblast]]s'', so called ''Bone Lining Cell...
  20. Femur (1778 bytes)
    1: ...:Femur1.jpg|right|frame|250px| Femur Clipart provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip A...
    2: ...lume) and strongest (mechanical ability to resist deformity) [[bone]] of the human body. The femur con...
    4: ...the hip. The condyles at the knee form a condylar joint.
    6: ... runs down the back of the femur, which also provides an attachment for the biceps femoris muscle.
    10: ...st in other complex animals, such as the bone inside a [[Ham (meat)|ham]] or a [[leg of lamb]].

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