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Brian Randall Shaffer (born February 25, 1979) [1] [2] was an American medical student at the Ohio State University College of Medicine who has been missing since the early hours of April 1, 2006, after security cameras recorded him just outside a bar in Columbus.
Thomas Bryan (Irish republican) (1897–1921), member of the Irish Republican Army Luke Bryan (Thomas Luther Bryan, born 1976), American country singer Thomas Bryan Martin (1731–1798), early American jurist, legislator, and prominent landowner
Sir Thomas Bryan KS KB (died 14 August 1500) was a British justice of obscure origin. It is suggested by J.H. Baker (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography) that he descended from a John Bryan, fishmonger of London, whose son, also John (d. 1418), owned land in Buckinghamshire & London, as did Sir Thomas.
Noel will take charge at UnitedHealthcare, the largest U.S. health insurer that provides benefits to more than 50 million Americans, at a critical moment. The health insurance industry, on the ...
Charles Willing Byrd (DR) 1801 1802 1803 Edward Tiffin (DR) [c] William Creighton Jr. (DR) William McFarland (DR) Thomas Gibson (DR) DR maj. DR maj. 3DR John Smith (DR) Thomas Worthington (DR) 1DR: 1804 Thomas Jefferson/ George Clinton (DR) 1805 1806 1807 Thomas Kirker (DR) [d] Edward Tiffin (DR) 1808 Samuel Huntington (DR) [e] Jeremiah McLene ...
Dr. Jeremy Engel, a family practitioner with St. Elizabeth who has become an outspoken advocate for a medical response to the heroin epidemic, said there is a good reason for the slow pace. His months-long effort to recruit doctors for the proposed clinic has been met with reluctance from his fellow physicians.
Thomas Sherwood (chemical engineer) (Columbus) Thomas J. Silhavy (molecular biologist) (Wauseon) Richard Smalley (chemist, Nobel Prize winner) (Akron) Oberlin Smith (engineer, magnetic recording pioneer) (Cincinnati) Lee Smolin (theoretical physicist) (Cincinnati) George Smoot (astrophysicist, Nobel Prize winner) (Upper Arlington)
A look at the lives of Dr. Susan Smith McKinney Steward, the first Black female doctor in New York, and her sister Sarah J. S. Tompkins Garnet, the first Black female principal in NYC.