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Helen Craig McCullough (February 17, 1918 – April 6, 1998) was an American academic, translator and Japanologist. [1] She is best known for her 1988 translation of The Tale of the Heike . [ 2 ]
Helene Gayle was born in Buffalo, New York, to Jacob Astor Gayle, [1] a small-business owner, and Marietta Spiller Dabney Gayle, [1] a social worker. She attended Court Street Elementary School and Lancaster Middle School in Lancaster, New York, and in Buffalo, graduated with honors from Woodlawn Junior High School and Bennett High School (Class of 1972). [1]
Peter Andrew McCullough was born in Buffalo, New York, on December 29, 1962. [7] He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Baylor University in 1984 and his Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in 1988. [8]
Helen W. McCully was born in September 1902 in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada to Ethel Ellen (née Lowerison) and Herbert Read McCully [1] [2] Her family was quite prominent, including a great-grandfather, Samuel McCully an early minister who helped found the Baptist church in Amherst and his two sons: her grandfather, Robert, a prominent attorney and her great-uncle, Jonathan, a Supreme Court ...
Helen Elizabeth O'Connell AO (born 3 April 1962) [1] is an Australian professor of urology and a pioneer in the anatomical study of the clitoris. She is a leading researcher in the area of female pelvic anatomy and was the first woman to complete training as a urologist in Australia.
Helen Lee received her PhD from Cornell University.She started her career in diagnostics in Paris at the French National Blood Transfusion Centre. She has been associate professor as the head of the Diagnostics Development Unit at the University of Cambridge, where she developed simple robust HIV tests for developing countries.
McCullough received an MD-PhD in neuroscience from the University of Connecticut. She continued her training as an intern and later neurology resident at Johns Hopkins University from 1996-2000, followed by a fellowship in cerebrovascular disease. [1] [2]
Dr. Helen Thompson, portrayed by Corrinne Wicks, first appeared on 26 March 2000 and made her final appearance on 16 December 2005. [10] Before the series began, Helen married Phil (Mark Adams), with whom she had two children; son Dan (Joshua Prime) and daughter Claire (Tara Coleman-Starr).