Super excited to announce that I am going to my #1 choice for my Interventional Radiology training, DUKE UNIVERSITY!!!!😝
Can't wait to be trained by the best in the coolest speciality in medicine!!! 🔥#Match2024#MatchDay2024#IRad#futureradres
“The Desert” episode is the wildest episode in Avatar. Sokka was high on shrooms, Toph couldn’t sense anything, Aang wanted to murder everyone, and Appa was kidnapped💀 Katara really saved everyone
Hand belonging to an X-ray technician at the Royal London Hospital, which shows the damage from radiation exposure, 1900.
Every morning, they would calibrate the machines by taking an X-ray of their hands. So you might be wondering, why not just use something else to test the X-ray? Like a piece of meat or a chicken leg? Well back in 1900, people didn't know the dangers of radiation exposure so they thought it would be harmless to use their hands. During this time, people could even purchase and build their own X-ray at home for entertainment purposes. Those who did, however, often went on to develop cancer or suffer from amputations.
The X-ray had been discovered just a few years before in 1895 by a man name Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, a German mechanical engineer and physicist. He named it X-ray because he actually didn't have a name for his invention and decided to use the mathematical designation "x" for something unknown. In some European countries, X-rays are actually called Röntgen rays.
Röntgen did not seek patents for his discoveries because he wanted society to benefit from the practical applications of X-rays. In 1901, Röntgen was awarded the first Nobel Prize in Physics.
That’s why I don’t speak to people in the streets lmao someone sneezed and I said bless you and my mans said “I’m an atheist”
A po Que te lleve el diablo entonce mmg!
If the child on the left was old enough to pick cotton and the child on the right was old enough to attend Klan rallies, then today's children are old enough to learn about both of these and how they've led us to where we are today.
Affirmative action was never a complete answer in the drive towards a more just society. But for generations of students who had been systematically excluded from most of America’s key institutions—it gave us the chance to show we more than deserved a seat at the table.
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent decision, it’s time to redouble our efforts.