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Brick Lane Mosque or Brick Lane Jamme Masjid ( Arabic: جامع مسجد بريك لين "Brick Lane Congregational Mosque"), formerly known as the London Jamme Masjid (جامع مسجد لندن "London Congregational Mosque"), is a Muslim place of worship in Central London and is in the East End of London which serves the British Bangladeshi community.
In 1972, he was appointed as a consultant in Cardiovascular Diseases at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. Where he became the Director of the Echocardiography Laboratory from 1980 - 1992 and Chairman of the Cardiovascular Division from 1993 - 2002. He joined Aurora Health Care in Wisconsin in 2010. [2]
The Islamic Society of Baltimore was founded in 1969 by three Muslim physicians, [1] one of whom was Mohamed Z. Awad, an Egyptian-born physician at Towson, Maryland. [2] [3] Awad co-founded the society due to Muslims' concerns to "maintain their religion for themselves and to pass on their Islamic heritage to their children in the face of strong pressures toward assimilation."
Other notable books on the area are Salaam Brick Lane by Tarquin Hall, [26] On Brick Lane (2007) by Rachel Lichtenstein and An Acre of Barren Ground by Jeremy Gavron. [27] A large collection of photographs of the characters and salespeople who worked on the markets in Brick Lane were taken by Fran May between 1976 and 1978, whilst she was a ...
Due to decreasing revenue, the 0.38 hectare city centre site was offered for sale in 2014 at €5 million. [5] It was purchased by U+I Group for €7.1 million and later sold to the Dalata Hotel Group for €11.9 million.
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From 1954 to 1955 he worked as house surgeon at the Auckland Hospital, and after a period at the Thames Hospital, he worked from 1956 to 1962 at the Auckland Hospital and Green Lane Hospital. It was during this period, while working as registrar that in 1961 he published his paper on the syndrome that was to bear his name. [ 1 ]
John Webster Kirklin (April 5, 1917 – April 21, 2004) was an American cardiothoracic surgeon, general surgeon, prolific author and medical educator who is best remembered for refining John Gibbon's heart–lung bypass machine via a pump-oxygenator to make feasible under direct vision, routine open-heart surgery and repairs of some congenital heart defects.