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"dissection" Definitions
  1. the act of cutting up a dead person, animal or plant in order to study it
  2. the act of studying something closely and/or discussing it in great detail

449 Sentences With "dissection"

How to use dissection in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dissection" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dissection". Mastering all the usages of "dissection" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In surgery we use sharp dissection and blunt dissection, but we don't rip.
In 18th-century Great Britain, posthumous dissection was a punishment for criminals, and grave robbing in the 19th century for anatomical dissection often preyed on non-white and indigent burial grounds.
This is known by doctors as cervical artery dissection (CD).
Every single exposed identity is up for dissection, censure, attack.
Is it a problem for dissection that Harambe got shot?
Yet dissection has long been a complex and controversial task.
The two gunmen quickly became the focus of that dissection.
His published writings include works on dissection and mobile autopsies.
Both men were central in acquiring cadavers used for dissection.
TARA GARCÍA MATHEWSON Dissection day always made Karina Frey queasy.
He is known for his remorseless dissection of public figures.
An alien dissection toy that contains slime on the inside
In 1685, Bidloo's anatomical atlas shows the dissected body with props: ropes, pins, dissection tools, tables, etcetera, even a fly on a cadaver, rendering the realities of the dissection room in 105 copperplate engravings.
I wish I could read their dissection of Hillary vs Bernie.
Of course, The Sopranos's dissection of masculinity was innovative, even radical.
My favorite piece is the dissection of Lemmy [Kilmister of Motörhead].
Millions of frogs are killed each year for dissection, PETA said.
Now playing in the presidential primary: The dissection of Amy Klobuchar.
Ultimately, I did end up at a school with a dissection program.
It's a beautiful shell, a veneer that crumbles under scrutiny and dissection.
It is an exceptional bloodbath that deserves exceptional mourning, dissection, and reflection.
American Museum of Natural History, where he learned dissection, and a few
The dissection probably contributed to the original cardiac arrest, according to Parnia.
Her dissection of Trump's impact on a potential reverse of Roe v.
"Although the risk of aortic aneurysm or dissection is low, we've observed that patients are twice as likely to experience an aortic aneurysm or dissection when prescribed a fluoroquinolone drug," FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb said in a statement.
You want a scathing dissection of the tech industry and corporate gender politics?
Obviously, we'll discuss this in an "extended universe" dissection at a later date.
The Dissection of Sigmund Freudprecedes your solo show IKON at Jonathan Levine Gallery.
Dissection is common in Asia (China/Japan) due to endemic high blood pressure.
So, half dissection of Drake deep cuts, half praise of The Cable Guy.
"We see a rather neat surgical dissection," Wecht said after examining crime scene photos.
Let's stick with game, set, match when it comes to Wimbledon — not outfit dissection.
THEN: "A hard rain's a-gonna fall" is Dylan's dissection of the Vietnam War.
Based on subsequent dissection the dead Sand Martin was identified as an adult male.
Pick up Jack Slack's hit dissection of the Conor McGregor phenomenon, Notorious from Amazon.
Now his divergence from those stereotypes is deemed remarkable and in need of dissection?
Pick up Jack Slack's hit dissection of the Conor McGregor phenomenon, Notorious from Amazon.
They had cued up a YouTube video of a previous lion dissection at Odense.
Cervical artery dissection is an important cause of stroke in young and middle-aged adults.
What would Game of Thrones be without a little post-show dissection of obscure details?
Blaine suffered a spontaneous coronary artery dissection last Monday, her family said in a statement.
He is gracious, but he recoils from joining in any dissection of his life's work.
Accreditation required precision – adherence to strict donation, dissection and shipping procedures in a largely unregulated market.
A conversation can consist of a one-off question or a complete dissection of the art.
Before cancer she was a taskmaster, pushing her students into a deeper dissection of the text.
But for survivors, the belated discovery that a relative was used for dissection can be devastating.
Here's out dissection of key parts of the memo, which you can read in full here:
At no point was there a threat to City's quiet, surgical dissection of the Premier League.
Around the 2 minute mark, Dissection plays one of the heaviest trill-laden riffs on The Somberlain.
As our class proceeded with the dissection, we began to piece together the stories of our donors.
After hearing Richard's apt dissection of the incident, the flashbacks to the "end zone" are much darker.
This most recent dissection of the growing data from respondents should leave us with a few takeaways.
Where the cinephiles will get their money's worth, though, is in the technical dissection of the scene.
Her dissection of an issue that many women have had first-hand experience with is praise-worthy.
Right now, the only other video from the Food Surgeon is of a very soothing clementine dissection.
Now, I'm no fan of the endless media dissection of each tit for tat tweet or soundbite.
Fandom and television are tightly entwined; showrunners play to viewers and to the internet's appetite for dissection.
Instead, Gadsby launches into a shrewd and impassioned dissection of misogyny, homophobia, art history and especially comedy.
Letter of Recommendation When I walked into the dissection room, my girlfriend was holding a human heart.
The bank said Dimon experienced an aortic dissection, an abnormal separation of tissues in the aortic wall.
The brain dissection is a beautiful metaphor for literally "opening our minds" to new experiences and ideas.
PETA says that nearly 3 million frogs are killed a year for dissection purposes, ABC News reports.
In the science-lab dissection scene, almost everyone else is wearing goggles — except for Lara Jean and Peter.
Misty's frog dissection hell first hit FX during the American Horror Story: Coven finale—on January 29, 2014.
Robin was diagnosed with a rare type of heart attack known as spontaneous coronary artery dissection, or SCAD.
So with that, we'll let Milstein drop the mic on the public dissection of Abedin and Weiner's split.
And when legislation cuts procedural corners, it's still usually released with plenty of time for dissection and debate.
However, in the 15th century, the first printed depiction of a modern dissection portrayed the process with dignity.
But now, thanks to a data scientist's extensive dissection, feuding Mario Kart combatants have a better way forward.
It was "preferable because it provides survival equivalent to total mastectomy and axillary dissection while preserving the breast".
The cant of victimology no less than the obtuseness of sexual victimizers is subjected to a live dissection.
The terms "dissection" and "aneurysm" are frequently confused—dissections can weaken the aorta, predisposing to late aneurysm formation.
"We want to let you know that Jamie experienced an acute aortic dissection this morning," the memo said.
Once the dissection is complete, kids can store the contents in the included container to put on display.
But the really thoughtful idea here is Emezi's dissection of what justice means, even in a supposed utopia.
Most dissection of the plan has focused, for obvious reasons, on the way it changes our tax bills.
In the 18th century, in New York and elsewhere, they were also sites of bodysnatching, often for dissection.
Inside it holds a diorama, a square dissection of an idyllic piece of natural land suspended in empty space.
On Monday night, Michael Cordero, played by Brett Dier, succumbed to an aortic dissection from an earlier gunshot wound.
Indeed, commentators and strategists have already begun their dissection, on the merits, of whether Sanders should continue his campaign.
At the very least, keep the beer hidden from him, especially when it's frog dissection day at school. 3.
There were a lot of iconic moments in Season 7 that warrant revisiting, dissection, and just plain old appreciation.
Mr. Jones also lets Hitchcock speak for himself about his technique and artistry through the dissection of memorable scenes.
It also represents a much less intrusive method than some other means of determining a turtle's sex, like dissection.
It's has already drawn its fair share of critical dissection by those of us in the sci-tech media.
This Oscar-winning actress allows the complete dissection of both her personal and professional lives in this new documentary.
Some observers supported the move, arguing that making political ads available to public dissection was more democratic than censorship.
They've invited the very funny Sasheer Zamata, Jacqueline Novak, Shane Torres and others for this public dissection of affection.
This year's premieres include an adaptation of Lars von Trier's "Breaking the Waves" and a piece about public dissection.
He smiled and jumped into a minute dissection of the reviews, which had been published a few days earlier.
In addition, Egan is concerned about the dissection of natural migration routes, and future range expansions driven by climate change.
Sunday • Learn about the inner workings of owls during an owl pellet dissection at Wave Hill House in the Bronx.
Trump said in an interview last year that she was not fazed by the scrutiny and dissection of her relationship.
Each layer of the scan took up to 10 minutes, and each dissection took a day in total to complete.
That's why researchers typically rely on traditional dissection to get a good look at the insides of their invertebrate specimens.
In life, his identity was jealously guarded; in death, the dissection of his brain was streamed live on the internet.
The dissection of American reality, in all its complexity, is essential to political progress, and yet it rarely goes unpunished.
As a dissection of the American dream, Imbolo Mbue's first novel is savage and compassionate in all the right places.
When the Black residents of Wilhelmshöhe died, their bodies were then sent for dissection to the Collegium Carolinum in Kassel.
Markovits's dissection of elite culture and behavior (obsession with Ivy League credentials, competitive workaholism, exceptional wealth) is precise and unsparing.
The medical colleges boasted about their ample supplies of subjects for dissection, a necessary component for training in human anatomy.
Its central dome was originally built for veterinary study of animal anatomy, usually through the dissection of cows and horses.
"Twilight" is a dissection of the 1992 Los Angeles riots after a Rodney King trial that Taibi Magar will direct.
JPMorgan said Thursday that CEO Jamie Dimon is recuperating after having emergency heart surgery to repair an acute aortic dissection.
There's seldom one reason someone else wins out, making the dissection of any outcome all the more painful and perplexing.
Elite media and water cooler dissection of this phenomenon seem to begin and end with a surface level demographic analysis.
On dissection, the growth turned out to have a partially formed face with an eye, a tooth and black hair.
Among them is the earliest depiction of a modern dissection, a urine color chart, and a pregnant anatomical female figure.
In this scenario, like-minded fifth-graders who are queasy about cutting open animals are excited to participate in this dissection.
On the morning of Rent's first off-Broadway preview performances, he suddenly passed away due to complications from an aortic dissection.
While these events are taking place, a severed hand escapes from a dissection laboratory and attempts to find its body again.
A single white rose sits on a dissection table in the pathology department at the Buchenwald concentration camp near Weimar, Germany.
As is wont of internet-based subgenres, the nebulously linked scene immediately went through the ringer of dissection and antagonistic thinkpieces.
I always look at this record— both the cover and the songs— as a kind of dissection of the human body.
PhotoCredit Mike Groll/Associated Press An illuminating dissection of how Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York found himself politically bereft.
One of the most colorful is "Work, Spend, Forget," the history of consumer desire told as the dissection of a frog.
Anger's public, frank dissection of what happened and why is a shock to the bland "women in film discussion panel" paradigm.
For third- and fourth-grade lovers of biology (and all things gross), the museum's weeklong Dissection Lab Camp also has openings.
Initially, the flow was weak, and another neurosurgeon, eyeing the monitor, suggested a bit more dissection to loosen the recipient artery.
He later underwent a procedure for "an acute aortic dissection" — when blood forces its way into a tear in the aorta.
It's the kind of thoroughgoing dissection you might expect from a socialist or black nationalist, someone willing to scrap liberalism altogether.
The next day, a girl of four and her parents came upon a similar scene, following the dissection of a sitatunga.
Dr. Distel carefully cracked open its shell like a soft boiled egg, then slid the shipworm out and improvised a dissection.
Two years later, he found a document saying his uncle's body was given to a medical university for dissection by students.
As usual, Case's extreme aesthetic distance produces a few marvelously weird songs and a few songs that sit motionless, demanding dissection.
" According to the actor's official death certificate, the Canadian native died of a "ruptured aorta" and a "standard type A aortic dissection.
The difficult election process required a thorough dissection of her work and application, and a 12-hour long deliberation of her portfolio.
Before this turns into a 1,000 word dissection of my favorite Drake album — The Weeknd wrote at least five songs on it!
Researchers hope that a virtual cadaver can teach students the basics of dissection, says Guillaume Captier, a surgeon and professor at Montepellier.
Published in the late 15th century, the Fasciculus Medicinae contains the earliest depiction of a modern dissection, a groundbreaking representation for anatomy.
The story of BlackBerry's mobile demise stretches so far back that we wrote a forensic dissection of it back in early 2012.
People talk about what this song sounds like, or the dissection of why this resonates, but they miss what matters: the feeling.
Those 63 cadavers may turn out to be the last unclaimed bodies ever used for dissection in New York City without consent.
He often uses one fabric for a collection, his approach almost scientific in the dissection and cataloging of the material's various forms.
Dimon, 63, experienced an "acute aortic dissection" — a tear in the inner lining of the aorta blood vessel — requiring surgery Thursday morning.
Body snatchers like Grandison Harris of Georgia and Chris Baker of Virginia collected specimens for dissection for the benefit of medical colleges.
Dennett has suffered a heart attack and an aortic dissection; he is robust, but walks slowly and is sometimes short of breath.
The result is closer to being a dissection of domesticity than a distillation of it, with any sense of stability thrown off.
Joe Biden, then the chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, perform what the New Yorker called "a meticulous dissection" of Bork's career.
The great documentary filmmaker Steve James brings his latest project, a 10-hour dissection of a Chicago-area high school, to television.
In addition to Ellis' own thoughtful dissection of creator culture, the video also includes a guest appearance from VidCon co-creator Hank Green.
In Banff National Park in Alberta, Canada, the dissection of habitat by the Trans-Canada Highway had restricted the movement of grizzly bears.
For each, he performed a dissection on a real cadaver from the skin to the muscles to the arteries — eight levels in all.
By nightfall, Trump — to no surprise — replied "give me a break" once his comments became fecund for dissection on the major news networks.
He read a study that claimed that the humorous dissection of complex issues helped viewers feel more empowered to participate in political change.
Both operations restrict the amount of calories the body absorbs – but one requires more sewing skill while the other requires more dissection skill.
After Mr. Molaison died, Dr. Corkin arranged to have his brain removed, preserved, exhaustively imaged and finally sent for dissection and electronic mapping.
Hass Otsmane-Elhaou's weekly comic dissection series Strip Panel Naked focuses this week on the classic "9-Panel Grid" found in most comics.
Titled The Dissection of Sigmund Freud, the 10-foot tall sculpture consists of Freud's famous couch over a larger-than-life dissected image.
Nothing can compete with spontaneous coronary artery dissection, an uncommon and incurable condition that has taken over my left, right and diagonal arteries.
Over nearly 30 years at the magazine, his sharp writing and sophisticated dissection of the complexities of football gave him a national voice.
This species lives high in the inaccessible treetops of rainforest mountains, but Cohn-Haft was able to obtain a bellbird specimen for dissection.
Equally good is Isaac's dissection of how a clever hashtag led 500,000 people to delete their accounts in the space of a week.
Prosecutors said they must tie the medical evidence about the drugs ingested to a fatal overdose, which requires careful dissection of toxicology reports.
But the dissection isn't just about our own learning; it's not about taking the body apart and studying it as you would an engine.
The iconic actor died of a "ruptured aorta" and a "standard type A aortic dissection," according to Thicke's official death certificate obtained by PEOPLE.
While you might be used for dissection, you could be used for other purposes within the school, and you might not have much control.
The majority of Americans who have an aortic dissection are male, and the symptoms often include sudden pain in the chest or upper back.
One reason foreign doctors and researchers rely on U.S. companies for body parts: Their nations restrict the dissection, sale and distribution of donated cadavers.
It's an ambitious task: a comic novel that also meditates on recent national events, with a measured dissection of ignorance and inspiration thrown in.
The series is about as effective a television dissection of the way rape is ignored and excused by society as you're likely to find.
If you relish a dissection of how it creates both wild interconnectedness and yet can foster isolation or even exile, this is your bag.
As a result, the play — which was celebrated for its nuanced dissection of race, dignity and identity — may actually seem ahead of the times.
Portrayed with a confiding bashfulness by Rafael Sardina, Álvaro is an artist and his dissection of the "X-Files" episode is a performance piece.
Thank you, Ms. Boosler, for your alarmingly passionate dissection of Ms. Weintraub's puzzle, and thanks for being brave enough to try a Friday crossword.
Mr. van Eldijk was tasked with fishing out more, and for that job he was given a dissection probe with a single nostril hair.
After I had that removed, I saw an oncologist—a specialist in lymph nodes—and they elected to do a double lymph node dissection.
It's impossible to turn on the news or access the internet without encountering headlines about him, along with the endless raging dissection of those headlines.
Dissection in particular sent them into a tizzy, which created a shortage of educational bodies and helped spawn the dreaded resurrection men of later centuries.
After dissection, bodies are wheeled in under crisp sheets for disposal in Fisher's alkaline hydrolysis machine, which turns them into liquid and pure white bone.
"We did a small dissection of the brain tissue and what we saw was a very well encapsulated, firm lesion that was ovoid," said Rasouli.
"I told my bosses at Thrones about my condition, but I didn't want it to be a subject of public discussion and dissection," she wrote.
A dissection by Andrew Sampson, as well as people on the /r/Piracy subreddit, has thrown up a few worries about how the plugin works.
Disney's vague answers, my MagicBand dissection, and Kamkar's comments managed to demystify some of the band's functions for me, but I'm still left feeling torn.
That description might make the movie sound like a home work assignment, or perhaps a too-neat dissection of race relations in the American South.
Demand for body parts from America — torsos, knees and heads — is high in countries where religious traditions or laws prohibit the dissection of the dead.
We watched the wholesale dissection of a young, unknown woman — me — who, due to legal quarantine, was unable to speak out on her own behalf.
Rather, the entire 7,000-square-foot exhibition hall has been dedicated to the granular dissection of the visual semiotics and rhetorical stylings of political advertising.
Instead, the opinion is mostly a tedious dissection of whether customers might end up paying an extra 45 cents per month for pay-TV service.
Earl J. Hess's minute dissection of THE BATTLE OF PEACH TREE CREEK (University of North Carolina, $37.50) shows the value of this sort of work.
Demand drove the passage of legislation allowing the dissection of unclaimed bodies from hospitals and morgues, which, for generations, meant the bodies of the poor.
When the university where Janna and I worked — I taught writing, she was a bioengineering postdoc — announced it was offering a dissection class, she enrolled.
The book is a fierce dissection of the American justice system and of the policies of mass incarceration that have immiserated generations of African-Americans.
The crime laboratory at the police headquarters at Camp Crame in Manila has only two dissection tables and no cold storage for bodies, SOCO said.
At times, artists would rearrange a scene or add more details; the 1509 image of the dissection, for instance, is more dynamic than earlier versions.
To the student who fled for the restroom on dissection day and took a zero in biology lab: It's a great gift to love animals.
Dishonored saw them scurrying through the walls, torn open on dissection tables, skewered over open fires, and of course eating bodies whole in large swarms.
Ebenstein: An Anatomical Venus is a life sized, wax woman demonstrating the anatomized female body; some are dissectible, others in a fixed state of auto dissection.
But the best dissection of the various types of scares and how they work probably comes from the horror genre's most successful modern practitioner, Stephen King.
We consider everyone we swap spit with fair game for public dissection, so long as they do something strange and compelling enough for a viral tweet.
It's a premise easily worth hours of dissection via true crime podcast or documentary TV series, the kind of story that takes the world by storm.
Breedlove said consent forms signed by United Tissue donors permitted the dissection and transfer of body parts to for-profit entities, including the one he owned.
"One Breath", Adam Skolnick's dissection of an extreme sport and post-mortem of a dive gone wrong, becomes a morality play of hubris, imprudence and obsession.
On the one hand, you might want to learn from such a person's work; to have a full and open dissection of everything that went wrong.
As with so many things we discussed in many hours of interviews, this one required a painstaking dissection of Trump's record in order to sort out.
As with so many things we explored in many hours of interviews, this one required a painstaking dissection of Trump's record in order to sort out.
Surely one way to read "Two Martyrs" is as a dissection of masculinity, but that is not the only way, nor perhaps even the most interesting.
Their presence, as well as the play's title, may lead you to expect a scathing indictment of privilege, or at least an anthropological dissection of it.
Of the works in New York this week, "Come Jump With Me" is the most direct in its dissection of, and ambivalence about, modern Israeli nationalism.
Message from Daniel Pinto and Gordon SmithDear Colleagues, Shareholders and Clients – We want to let you know that Jamie experienced an acute aortic dissection this morning.
Dimon, 63, was in touch with the bank's senior leaders Friday, a day after the emergency procedure to repair an acute aortic dissection, the person said.
And then a dissection into what went wrong, during which allies of the National Rifle Association will quickly point their fingers at something other than … guns.
Sarah Gilchrist is brave, but not so stoic that she doesn't blanche to see a familiar figure show up as a corpse on her dissection table.
It has a mostly clever script, and it borrows its structure from "True West," Sam Shepard's classic dissection of vicious rivalry and violent loathing between brothers.
Philadelphia was home to some of the first teaching hospitals in the United States, but his skeleton has no other cut marks that indicate anatomical dissection.
Fluoroquinolone antibiotics might raise the risk of an aortic dissection, and people who are already at risk should be cautious about taking those antibiotics, the FDA said.
This section begins, 'Here begins the anatomy, or dissection of the human body, composed and compiled by the most famous and esteemed doctor of the art, etc.
It quite possibly has the first dissection scene in a ballet, in which a corpse is dismembered and merry students dance joyously with severed arms and legs.
Reading Morales's dissection of Latinx identity formation, however, one begins to believe that the x in "Latinx" is more than just a means of providing gender-neutrality.
"A lymph node dissection might disable you and leave you in pain, so you're less able to dress or bathe or even feed yourself," Dr. Tang said.
Mr. Dimon, 63, underwent successful heart surgery for an "acute aortic dissection," and he is recovering, said the memo, which was reviewed by The New York Times.
But on social media and in the streets, the dissection was often harsher still -- and Flack had spoken about the difficulties of living in the public eye.
Chiang spends a sizable part of the story building up the dissection, going through with it and discussing its implications, and it isn't hard to see why.
He introduces an eminent anatomist, Baron Peel (the stentorian bass-baritone Robert Osborne), and his assistant Ambrose Strang (the tenor known as Timur), who perform the dissection.
Manipulating the neck can put patients at a higher risk of arterial problems, including stroke or vertebral artery dissection, or the tearing of the vertebral artery (though Rubinstein noted that people in the initial stages of stroke or dissection may also seek out care for their symptoms, such as neck pain, which makes it difficult to untangle how many of health emergencies are brought on by the adjustments).
The now depressingly familiar media dissection of a right-wing extremist's social media after an act of violence, looking for markers on an inevitable road, plays into it.
As the presidential primaries head into states where the black vote could have significant influence, this dissection of how Bill Clinton's policies have affected blacks is required reading.
Of course, in the Christian worldview, human dissection is necessarily complicated, as it is believed that, on Judgement Day, one's soul will be reunited with one's physical body.
While a more thoughtful dissection of the facts might have supported Trump's case, the tweets again crossed the river Styx and took the country into social media hell.
This causes aromatic molecules to evaporate off the surface, or distill, at much lower temperatures than traditional hot distillation, allowing for a cleaner dissection of flavors and aromas.
But revisiting the film now, that powerful feeling is diluted not just by Sparks' recent scandal but by the kind of overanalysis and dissection that comes with adulthood.
And you see that quite a bit with the sort of values around diversity, around identity, and these sort of softer skills that avoid intellectual dissection as easily.
Game of Thrones released a 10-minute, behind-the-scenes dissection of the show's colossal battle between Jon Snow, Ramsay Bolton and their respective armies of weapon wielders.
Indeed, Hillary Clinton is the embodiment of this double-bind, with the decades-long dissection of her personality, not to mention her hair and wardrobe, to prove it.
He describes his approach to Too Many Voices—his fourth full-length, out now on Modern Love—as if he were Herbert West looking over a dissection table.
Dissection is also made more difficult when a cadaver carries more fat—the dissector has to cut through the layers of fatty tissue to reach the body's organs.
Dissection in summa and Dawn's Slaughtersun are the touchpoints here (especially the latter), with shades of Weakling (and by extension, Ash Borer) providing the only detectable American influences.
This kind of thing is made for Sunday morning talk show dissection, and it called up immediate comparisons to some significant primary campaign gaffes from the recent past.
That's surprising because the ancient city was, to say the least, a very chatty place — everything seems to have been up for discussion, dissection, polemic and comic ridicule.
An aortic dissection occurs when blood forces its way into a tear in the aorta, the biggest artery in the body, separating its layers or peeling them apart.
Students at J.W. Mitchell High School in New Port Richey, Florida have become the first in the world to use synthetic frogs for dissection, according to the school.
I used the remaining intact cookies to conduct an informal dissection, pulling the biscuits apart and nibbling the components individually, covering my keyboard in crumbs in the process.
The process is more like that of a film editor than a conventional painter (Reed's engagement with movies is well known) in its painstaking dissection of every detail.
The new iPad can support them, and Joz is showing off a few demos, including the World Wildlife Federation app and something called Froggipedia, including a virtual dissection model.
The consumer is financially strong and some companies are still managing to expand margins, according to Goldman Sachs after the firm's dissection of second-quarter earnings conference call transcripts.
It's no secret that celebs face an incredible amount of scrutiny when it comes to every aspect of their lives, and their romantic relationships in particular face widespread dissection.
His cause of death was later revealed to be from a "ruptured aorta" and a "standard type A aortic dissection," according to his official death certificate obtained by PEOPLE.
HBO's new comedy Insecure is worth watching for so many reasons — including creator and star Issa Rae's wholehearted performance and hilarious dissection of the unfortunate realities of everyday racism.
"I'm interested in iconic form and also the dissection of that form with intricate subparts that provide further details relating to the entire context," Garber tells The Creators Project.
See for yourself (and for a more thorough dissection, check out the Arms Control Association's comprehensive timeline): What: Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear WeaponsWhen: December 12, 1985What happened?
Women no longer write politically controversial blogs; instead, they hold sponsored objects in their Instagram posts about body positivity (Bitch published an exceptional dissection of this phenomenon in 2017).
It was still lying in Einstein's cooler, after its dissection in a summer anatomy class, when Ms. Arutt was making her inquiries in November and December of last year.
This change involved a switch from male to female dress and gender pronouns, although readers coming to "The Endless Summer" expecting a dissection of transgender themes will be disappointed.
They were long harvested for pet stores and companies that supply dissection subjects for schools, leading to fears in the late 1980s that the snakes' numbers might fall dramatically.
But her embrace of pop, and the surge it's given her career, also made Ms. Cottrill uneasy, especially as her every move has become fodder for dissection on Reddit.
Leif Pagrotsky (9%) When the Swedish social democrat and Minister of Culture, Leif Pagrotsky, went to see Dissection live in 2005, he became "Leffe" to his metal-loving compatriots.
Kim, whose chromatic dissection of Miyazaki's work has been shared all over the internet last year, has been imagining new ways to process the Studio Ghibli founder's technique ever since.
In the December issue of The Baffler, journalist Liz Pelly wrote a fascinating, widely discussed dissection of how the algorithms employed by major streaming services — particularly Spotify — are changing music.
Lukasz Zal's cinematography — filmed entirely in black and white — is sumptuous, heightening the interplay of shadow and light in a way that makes every frame worthy of analysis and dissection.
Here's a dissection of all players involved with Swish/Waves/Gospel, including people whose names don't appear to be on the paper, but who are definitely involved with the record.
In Xiconomics, the thrust of supply-side policy is less clear, despite the term's prominence at recent economic-planning meetings and its dissection in numerous articles published by state media.
Facing elimination at home in Oakland on Thursday night, the Warriors could also soon be looking at a critical dissection of their collective achievements, from last season through this one.
What seems at first like a simple job to remove one section of an accumulated structure often turns into an unexpected puzzle, requiring greater dissection and reassembly than originally anticipated.
You probably couldn't, but the fact that they almost defy dissection means that they're as helpful for forgetting the horrifying reality of 2017 as they are for recruiting neo-Nazis.
Essentially a feature-length film, the season four finale of Nathan for You (and quite possibly the show's final episode ever) is an intimate, intricate dissection of one man's obsession.
His excitement about doing the play — a verbally explosive dissection of male power dynamics, set in a Chicago junk shop — had been palpable in the months leading up to production.
It's almost a fascinating dissection of pop feminism, of the idea that something is feminist solely because it centers on a "strong woman," no matter what other values it peddles.
Brilliantly installed, the works here remarkably balance the sensuous and the social, exposing music to minute dissection, charged settings or uncharacteristic instruments, inspiring us to listen as deeply as we look.
Long before the video camera, scandalous Renaissance texts like Three Books on the Dissection of the Parts of the Human Body and Aristotle's Masterpiece displayed salacious engravings alongside legitimate medical advice.
As politics (and the endless dissection of it, with or without any particular expertise) became the biggest and loudest cultural conversation in America, Cher was already at the center of it.
Then they put the hagfish on a dissection tray, blotted them dry, and zapped them with electricity to make the muscles contract and expel the milky pre-slime from the pores.
On Monday, Kaley Cuoco posted a heartbreaking Instagram to honor actor John Ritter, who tragically passed away 14 years ago at the age of 54 after suffering from an aortic dissection.
It's the type of TV that lengthy, Reddit-based dissection was made for, in other words — and the sort of show that's very hard to summarise in just a few sentences.
This brutal crab-bird dissection probably isn't a one-off, either: According to Laidre, the birds tend to stay away from certain crab-infested islands, ostensibly to keep from being massacred.
Ever since grave robbers haunted American cemeteries and medical students paid for fresh corpses, New York State law has appropriated unclaimed bodies on behalf of medical schools that teach anatomical dissection.
It ends a 162-year-old system that has required city officials to appropriate unclaimed bodies on behalf of medical schools that teach anatomical dissection and mortuary schools that train embalmers.
Young Francisca (Olivia Bond) learns from her mother (Diana Agostini), who was once a surgeon in Portugal, about anatomy, dissection, and the similarity between the eyes of cows and of humans.
Petkanas delivers a meticulous dissection of our endless fascination with the modish, bewitching women who refuse to let us in, and upon whom we project our fantasies, desires, even our hatred.
Dee Rees's "Mudbound" is a period drama (it takes place in the Mississippi Delta during and after World War II) that is unflinching and unsentimental in its dissection of white supremacy.
The same year, Ron Unz, a conservative activist and Harvard graduate, published a lengthy dissection of Harvard admissions, suggesting that the university was keeping down the number of Asian-American students.
Ms. Glickman Lauder's haunting photographs of death camps — many rendered through the otherworldly glow of infrared film — make visible the mechanics of genocide: the Nazis' gas chambers, dissection tables and crematories.
One criticism I had of your dissection of his brand was that you talk about him as if he's a triumph of capitalism, even though he's not — he inherited his wealth.
A Florida high school is the first in the world to provide synthetic frogs for dissection  Ahh, but now kids won't be able to get nostalgic for that queasy formaldehyde smell.
A top Saudi doctor of forensics had been brought along for the dissection and disposal of the body — an addition to the team that Turkish officials have called evidence of premeditation.
The trailer — and tonight's premiere — will only be a fraction of the many times viewers will be forced to listen to the dissection of a man's sex life during this season.
Photo: Costantino Ferlauto, IBC Emilia-RomagnaEbenstein: What I learned while working on The Anatomical Venus is that the church's attitude towards dissection it was actually a bit more complicated than straightforward damnation.
In a will he drafted that year, Bentham requested that his body be left to medical science, a radical proposal at a time when dissection was used as a posthumous criminal punishment.
While the period piece, premiering Sunday, April 8, is very much exactly what you expect it to be — a gorgeous British dissection of humanity — it is also a bit of a surprise.
While Hahn sympathized with the "very vulnerable position" of a novelist offering up his work for dissection and revision by committee, the role of Eve required her to be plenty vulnerable, too.
Next, they plan to create dissection scans for the thigh area and the hands, and they want to have five scans ready for students to start using by the end of 2018.
Just as Hulu's Emmy-winning The Handmaid's Tale offered a depressingly timely dissection of gender roles and power dynamics in an all-too-plausible near-future dystopia, so Amazon's The Marvelous Mrs.
A forensic dissection of the selfish mind-set wrought by first-world entitlement and desensitising technology, it is somewhere between a blackly comic soap opera and a spine-tingling gothic horror movie.
It was said that they carried the cadaverous smell around with them referred to as "good old hospital stink," because they went right from the dissection lab straight to the operating theaters.
"We've become much more technical, so that we treat the preparation of food as if it was some sort of scientific dissection in which everything should also be measured," Mr. Estévez said.
About two-thirds of people who have an aortic dissection are male, according to the American Heart Association, and those with high blood pressure or high cholesterol may be at greater risk.
Instead of being a surgical dissection of snobbery, as the first book was, they were too often a manifestation of it, an expression of resentment and contempt rather than anger and compassion.
The first anatomical wax museum was founded in the mid 18th century Bologna by a pope who encouraged the scientific verification of miracles and encouraged his laity to donate their bodies for dissection.
Afterward, we went through the steps of the dissection more slowly, double-checking and triple-checking with one another and faculty before doing anything, distinctly aware of the permanence of our every action.
A homeschool biology class/dissection lab that Homeschool Road Trips — a division of Hip Homeschool Moms had during one of their HEART trips (Homeschool Educational Adventure Road Trips) to Fort Caswell, North Carolina.
Director Paul Feig and screenwriter Jessica Sharzer took major liberties with Darcey Bell's novel of the same name—replacing much of the original story's tense psychological dissection with campy, high-powered dark comedy.
Robert Osborne, superbly cast as the pompous Baron Peel, narrates the dissection, as his assistant (Timur) extracts the internal organs from her body and vigorously saws them open, his hands running with blood.
There are ideas that have been pulled to the forefront because of what's going on, but so much of what is in the play was there already — like the dissection of Griswold v.
Co-presidents Daniel Pinto and Gordon Smith sent a memo to employees and shareholders, which said Dimon underwent a successful procedure to repair an acute aortic dissection and was alert and doing well.
In their submission, the couple wrote of their meeting: "By chance, we were assigned as dissection partners in gross anatomy, and thus spent countless hours together over the first several months of school."
In Bob McGrath's production, the audience members become witnesses to the trial and dissection, starting with a pre-performance gathering in which friendly women in period dress serve steins of beer and sausages.
After dedicating a majority of The Confession Killer's airtime to tapes of interviews with Lucas and the meticulous dissection his mental state, the series serves some justice in spotlighting the families of victims.
Patients should call 911 or get to an emergency room if they feel symptoms of an aortic dissection, which include sudden, severe, and constant pain in the stomach, chest or back, the FDA said.
"If the implants are not in the target of the surgical dissection or the radiation, the basic party line is: If they don't bother you, then you don't bother them," Dr. Weintraub tells PEOPLE.
One is a sound dissection of the Pet Shop Boys' "It's a Sin," with Tillmans playing the record layer by layer (there are 48 tracks in total) over the course of a few hours.
The Great Gatsby is my favorite book ever written, for instance, but good luck finding any thoughtful dissection of America's fraught relationship with race and racism, an enormously important part of the country's history.
Her third novel, " Americanah ," which would win the National Book Critics Circle Award, would be larger still, describing the disorientation, release, and cruelties experienced by young Nigerians abroad, and their outsiders' dissection of America.
The more apt benchmark, however, would be "Goodfellas," inasmuch as this fact-based movie, starring Jessica Chastain, provides a heavily narrated dissection of a criminal enterprise, from its build-up to its gradual unraveling.
For the most part, though, Annie Hall is a sharp dissection of heterosexual romance because Allen understands what Alvy Singer doesn't: that women don't exist purely to fulfill male needs and assuage male insecurities.
This would not be a meeting of two equal Big Ten powers, as many had predicted before the season, but a clash that would most likely end in an anticlimactic dissection of the Spartans.
But in other ways, "Heather" feels like a stylistic and thematic sibling of "Mad Men," particularly in Mr. Weiner's almost surgical dissection of the ways that social status, wealth, gender and class define us.
This time Karloff played the grave robber, giving a sensationally creepy performance — at once vicious and obsequious — as a cabby who moonlights with the illicit sale of fresh corpses for dissection by medical students.
Dimon, who has helmed JPMorgan for over a decade, underwent surgery for acute aortic dissection, a condition where the inner lining of the aorta tears away from the outer edge of the blood vessel.
A team of 10 scientists welcomed the unusual challenge and carried out a dissection that involved melting down some parts of the fatberg, extracting and identifying the waste materials and even performing DNA sequencing.
For the Minnesota senator, Mr. Buttigieg is an opportunistic, armchair critic of Washington, who rose above her into the top tier of candidates because of male privilege and a misguided dissection of national politics.
Treasure X, Aliens Dissection Kit With Slime, available at Target, $12.99Curious kids will enjoy using the included tools in this toy to dissect an alien to find slime, surprises, and a treasure hunter inside.
Shorts like "The Making of 'Star Wars'" in 1977 and "The Making of 'Thriller'" in 1983 set the standard for the genre's dissection of special effects, visits to the makeup chair and sit-down interviews.
But if the Department of Justice's antitrust probe into Google parent Alphabet results in the tech giant's dissection, the value of the total company could rise by 50% to shareholders, according to one equity analyst.
That technology "is not only more precise than physical dissection, but it also doesn't require us to discard the specimen," Michael Tessler, the lead author on the paper describing the research, said in a statement.
"When people are having a spontaneous dissection of a vertebral artery, there are certain symptoms that if the patient has we are taught not to adjust them and send them to the ER," says Murphy.
These Italian multitaskers are known for their poppy, surrealist, and hyperreal ads for Kenzo, which started by featuring model Sean O'Pry and actress Rinko Kikuchi pinned to a dissection table alongside bright beetles and butterflies.
Examples abound: Moira Weigel's debut, "Labor of Love"; Kate Bolick's dissection of singleness in her 2015 book, "Spinster"; Jessica Valenti's recent memoir, "Sex Object"; Kristin Dombek's starkly original take on threesomes in The Paris Review.
The ramshackle tree's branches are filled with photographs and mementos that remind us that this musical is about the history and intimate lives of its characters rather than a heated, political dissection of transgender identity.
Many analysts have depicted the embrace of refugees as part of Germany's dissection of its Nazi past, when millions were murdered and millions of others driven out, usually rejected by countries where they sought shelter.
The carotid artery on the right side of her neck, the blood vessel that brings blood from the heart to the brain, had been injured, in what is called a spontaneous carotid-artery dissection (SCAD).
The song "Crimson Towers" combined Baroque-era counterpoint, frequent trills, and sorrowful melodies to form a unique hybrid sound that distinguished Dissection from their atonally-focused peers in other formative black metal bands of that time.
Jawline explores what's unique about social media stardom without overemphasizing its novelty, so the film works as a dissection of modern digital celebrity, but also a classic story about beautiful young people struggling to get famous.
Perhaps admirably, as this thriller builds toward its blood-soaked climax, it also tries to be much more: a coming-of-age story, a dissection of race and class, a lyrical rendering of love and violence.
But that didn't stop her from ignoring that pain for 36 hours last February – a move that could have cost her her life after she discovered she'd actually suffered from SCAD, or spontaneous coronary artery dissection.
It would take another 1,400 years for Constanzo Varolio, an Italian anatomist who pioneered the dissection of the brain's soft tissue, to reveal the regularly repeating tight-packed whorls of tissue of which it is made.
When researchers looked only at patients who did not receive surgery, death rates were higher in England for four conditions: aortic dissection, peptic ulcer perforation, small bowel or large bowel perforation and incarcerated or strangulated hernias.
Tragically, the creator and composer died on January 229, 21996 — the night before Rent's Off-Broadway premiere at the New York Theatre Workshop — of an aortic dissection believed to have been caused by undiagnosed Marfan syndrome.
The only way the two inputs can communicate effectively and safely is if they are constructed in a very specific manner, and unfortunately this can only be determined via vigorous testing or dissection of the cable.
The announcements, made in a statement by the Associated Medical Schools of New York, reflect the changing politics and practicalities of acquiring bodies for dissection in a time of public sensitivity to inequality and informed consent.
As "agents cut off Mr. Khashoggi's head and dismembered his body," a Saudi doctor of forensics who had been "brought along for the dissection and disposal" had some advice for the others, The Times reported Wednesday.
In an interview with Broadly, Dr. Neuilly explains that it is important to consider whether or not Zhang was held responsible for the death of the baby before going further into the dissection of this case.
And I can remember being around when it was a big deal that Margaret Chase Smith got her name put into nomination at the Republican convention after a campaign dominated by dissection of her muffin recipe.
On the weekends, she makes time to visit the racetrack in Arcadia (her father owns a horse racing company) and play with friends in a punk-rock bowling league (her favorite black-metal band is Dissection).
As the title of "Ghostbox Cowboy" indicates, the unpopulated metropolises built by China's government have a metaphoric affinity with this unusual movie — a scary, dryly funny dissection of entrepreneurial absurdism bleeding into existential and metaphysical despair.
Dimon, who is at the helm of JPMorgan for over a decade, underwent surgery for acute aortic dissection, a condition where the inner lining of the aorta tears away from the outer edge of the tube.
In the alley beneath Holst's office, Bertelsen led the dissection, assisted by Cathrine Sauer Jørgensen, a Ph.D. student in animal nutrition, who was able to add to her collection of digestive tracts from three dozen giraffes.
Gruesome, challenging theater from the composer David Lang and his co-librettist, Mark Dion, in an opera that follows a convicted murderer from confession to dissection, asking questions all the while about the nature of evil.
He offered terrific analysis of just why some presidents spark on TV and others don't, as well as a quick dissection of the several similarities between Nixon and Trump, and the biggest single dissimilarity between them.
A few days after he passed on June 6, his friend Southwood Smith carried out a dissection and preserved Bentham's head with techniques adopted from the Maori in New Zealand, plus a bit of sulphuric acid.
When he died in 1832 at the age of 84, the English philosopher's will was very specific about the fate of his body: following a dissection, he wanted to be reassembled and placed in a display cabinet.
After my orchiectomy and CT scans were completed, my cancer was found to have spread, so I went through three months of complete misery getting chemotherapy, and then had to get a retroperitoneal lymph node dissection surgery.
Not only was it the culmination of three nights of Noah delving into this case, but it was an exhausted, wrenching dissection of why the grief over Castile and black victims like him won't subside anytime soon.
For single people, they're a platform for seeking potential spouses; for fans, they're the subject of gossip and dissection; for the cultural elites, they're a topic for derision; and for the government, they're a target for surveillance.
Copenhagen Zoo, which hit the headlines for the killing and public dissection of a healthy giraffe five years ago, has become the 27th of the world's around 10,000 zoos to have pandas, and the ninth in Europe.
David Lang and Mark Dion's opera Anatomy Theater at BRIC (Prototype Festival) revels in Grand Guignol gruesomeness: it enacts an 18th-century anatomy lesson through the public dissection of the body of a young woman (Peabody Southwell).
About one hour into the episode, an ultrasound scan of the heart also showed an aortic dissection, a potentially lethal condition in which blood is forced between the inner and outer layers of the aorta, Lundsgaard said.
Particularly heinous murders were punished with not only execution but also dissection — punishment for not just the body but also the soul, as it was widely believed that an intact body was necessary to ascend to heaven.
The book is described as Machado's "engrossing and wildly innovative account of a relationship gone bad, and a bold dissection of the mechanisms and cultural representations of psychological abuse," and it's all of that and then some.
And Mr. Biden, straining to keep his grip on the race, survived an early dissection of the impeachment inquiry that centers on Mr. Trump's urging of the Ukrainian president to investigate Mr. Biden and his son Hunter.
By the time the mob arrived, it had swelled to at least 2,000 angry residents, many of whom broke into the dissection rooms, displayed the dismembered corpses to shocked bystanders and burned the remains in the street.
Her mother (Diana Agostini) is a former surgeon who demonstrates dissection for her little girl as casual entertainment; her father (Paul Nazak) is a quiet, unexpressive man who treats his wife and daughter as none of his business.
Despite their affiliations and geographical kinship, though, the Reykjavík quintet stands apart; their take on black metal leaves ample room for whiffs of aggressively technical, dissonant death, and their general mien is far more Deathspell Omega than Dissection.
It also serves as an important, pointed dissection of the challenge black women face in society and the media when it comes to honestly expressing emotion — a stigma not even celebrity, stardom, or legendary ability can inoculate against.
Even amid a booming international market in donated bodies, in countries where dissection clashes with prevailing funeral rites, as in the Middle East and parts of India, a trade in unclaimed bodies has often arisen to fill demand.
The Dissection of Freud is just a taste of what will be on view at his subsequent solo show called IKON at the Jonathan Levine Gallery where other pop culture heavyweights are split, made see-through, or melted.
The group had included a forensic pathologist expert in dissection who had brought along a bone saw, and a portly body double who left the consulate wearing Khashoggi's clothes to give the impression he'd made a safe exit.
Ms. Carlen opened her car's hatchback, revealing a miniature laboratory: plastic sampling tubes, needles for drawing blood, a dissection kit and a supply of brown paper grocery bags from Whole Foods to hold the birds separately for testing.
What's particularly fascinating about Amanda Knox is how the documentary's main focal points—the damnation of tabloid journalism, the dissection of Knox's "suspicious" behavior, and the irrelevant narrative surrounding her sexual past—are only heightened by Knox's presence.
The gun has long been a museum favorite, and one of the odder, more dangerous forms of tomb protection in the 19th century, when "resurrection men" stalked cemeteries in search of fresh corpses to offer doctors for dissection.
As a member of an outmoded genre, and in an era of pop feminism and fierce and instantaneous political dissection, Bridget Jones's Baby has a lot working against it, and its creators appear to have been well aware.
In 2014, not long after Marius, the giraffe, was shot in Copenhagen, a British zoo professional had a conversation with Bengt Holst, the Copenhagen Zoo's scientific director and the public face of the zoo's euthanization and dissection polices.
Shin: Properties [like Facebook] do not show you the whole funnel —  video player loads -> ad impressions -> video views -> viewing time -> video completions — for lots of reasons including not wanting to enable dissection of their economics or traffic patterns.
The most infamous case is the pocket-sized book bound in the skin of William Burke, half of the Scottish duo Burke and Hare, who murdered sixteen people in order to sell their bodies to doctors for dissection.
Their surrealistic juxtaposition of parts, which evoke Comte de Lautréamont's "chance encounter of an umbrella and a sewing-machine on a dissection-table," declares a corresponding dislocation in what they're modeled on: the body reduced to a simulacrum.
She combined civic education in her explanation of the alt-right movement, bipartisan outreach (appealing to Republicans by citing noble behavior of their past presidential nominees), and lawyerly dissection of the misguided reasons some conservatives continue to support Trump.
A dissection of toxic masculinity existing within a superhero series is a compelling way to smuggle some thoughts about the world we live in today into a genre context that makes them easier to approach than something more straightforward.
According to their report, the 60-year-old had suffered an ascending aortic dissection, a potentially fatal rupture in the inner wall of the major artery that pumps blood away from the heart to the rest of the body.
Markar's team reviewed data from 2006 to 93 on patients admitted with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, aortic dissection, appendicitis, perforated esophagus, peptic ulcer perforation, small intestine or large intestine perforation, or an incarcerated or strangulated abdominal or groin hernias.
Ms. Harris, 20153, a retired New York City correction officer who was elected in a special election in 2015, was arraigned on Tuesday afternoon before a United States magistrate after prosecutors released a lengthy dissection of her alleged crimes.
Ms. Rubasingham, the director, skilfully maps out the modes of attack and retreat that are deployed across an evening that could use more authorial modulation if this dissection of a riven urban landscape is to acquire its full potential.
During an era when the dissection of human bodies was still seen as taboo in many circles, Vesalius doggedly argued that cutting open dead people and documenting their anatomical specs should be the foundation of medical education and literacy.
Dissection really became fraught and controversial in the 19th century when a rise in the number of medical schools and new methods of instruction involving the body led to the need for many more cadavers than could be legally sourced.
Although Clarke was back at work, she was taking morphine to handle the debilitating pain, and told her bosses about her condition with the understanding that she didn't want "to be a subject of public discussion and dissection," she wrote.
In an effort to find out more, Janda's team used what they describe as a "dissection through vaccination" scientific technique which allowed them to parse out various components of the drug and test each one for its effects on the brain.
Alongside these heads are drafts of Bentham's wills, as well as his 1826 "Body Supply Bill" legislation draft, which he intended to address the issue of the lack of corpses legally available for dissection, a shortage which fueled grave-robbing.
In the 90s, bands like Electric Wizard, Cathedral, Emperor, and Gorgoroth used it throughout their songs, and special attention should be given to the work of Dissection, particularly the Baroque-esque classical interludes scattered throughout their debut album, The Somberlain.
We get to see how the hundred of parts come together in this dissection animation and even cooler, get to see the manufacturing process of the all-important guide bar of a chainsaw (the metal plate of the chainsaw blades).
As with the figures in the dissection tray collages, which gaze out at us from their shallow pools of silicone, the difficult act of looking at the sculpture ("Suspension," 2016) underlines the privileged position of the (historically white and male) viewer.
" By today's best evidence, derived from meticulous cadaveric dissection, it is an organ that extends deep into the body on multiple planes, and constitutes far more than the small glans and hood that most of us think of as "the clit.
Jack Off Jill and especially Scarling were a little more pop-leaning than Queenadreena, but both Jessicka and Katie Jane shared common ground in their artfully crude dissection of themselves, and the overtly destructive ways they presented themselves on stage.
While scenes of mechanical masturbation and one dissection are not for the faint of heart, seeing Primate on the big screen is essential for any ape fan, as the large canvas at Anthology puts these animals' humanity on vivid display.
Some bodies might wait in cold storage for as long as a year before being used for dissection, depending on when they arrived and how many privately donated bodies were available to fill the annual demand for 40 to 60 cadavers.
In a letter to employees, shareholders and clients, Dimon's two deputies — Gordon Smith and Daniel Pinto — said the chief executive experienced an "acute aortic dissection," or a tear in the inner lining of the aorta, that required surgery on Thursday morning.
Dissections can have lethal consequences without causing rupture if the dissection obstructs blood flow to the brain or other critical organs, but dissections can cause acute rupture of a weakened aorta as well, even in the absence of an aneurysm.
How can an aerodynamics engineer speak with authority on the matter when he or she has not even bothered to research the events at Roswell and is not even aware that there are alien dissection videos freely available on the internet?
Instead, right from the start of this debut episode, Pope Pius XIII (Jude Law), the first American pope, begins using the papacy to build up the self, and the series begins its thrilling dissection of faith in the 21st century.
But though I have my own quibbles with the series, I found You frequently brilliant, a thrilling dissection of the stories we tell and the reasons we tell them, with a season finale unlike anything else on TV this year.
For North America's all-sport television and radio stations starved for content that post was nothing short of pure gold providing days of endless analysis, discussion and dissection while the future Hall of Famer decides where he will play next.
Where to Stream: Netflix, Hulu, CBS All Access A scientist's order, backed by Starfleet, that Picard's android science officer Data turn himself in for dissection and eventual replication provides the opportunity for one of TNG's favorite tropes: a courtroom episode.
When Yasmina Reza's play opened in London just over 20 years ago, the three-character dissection of a male friendship torn apart by the purchase of a painting struck many as a sustained comic caprice that didn't dig especially deep.
This is suggested by an outstanding show of 80 artists who use The Times as subject or material, or both, to make just about anything; commit various acts of dissection; or touch on specific events, social mores, the passage of time.
But some Netflix movies now have theatrical releases, including the forthcoming films "The Two Popes," about the relationship between Pope Benedict and Pope Francis, and "I Lost My Body," an animated film about a hand that escapes from a dissection lab.
The U.S. followed up their drubbing of Senegal in their opener with a less ruthless but no less clinical 103-63 dissection of third-ranked Spain on Monday, blowing out a team viewed by many as a legitimate medal contender.
What initially seems like a straightforward dissection of polarization — going all the way back to the George W. Bush years — instead turns out to be a kind of free-floating collage of many of the biggest news stories of the Obama era.
At the August talks, left without clear policy direction, Davis and his team's detailed dissection of the EU's arguments on the Brexit bill left the bloc's main negotiator Michel Barnier wondering whether "we can build trust and start discussing a future relationship".
There might be some truth to that: Although Trump's name is never mentioned in the play, Angels in America's dissection of the Republican Party — its isolationist, individualist policies and strong personalities — provides a sort of road map toward our current political moment.
The most disturbing images for me are the ones near the end, where a whale's body is cut, methodically and relentlessly, gutted and parceled and the documentation of its dissection makes me think of the recurring theme of our human history: blood.
The paper, which was published in the Journal of Anatomy this week, traces the history of using infants and fetuses for dissection purposes, along with a catalog of differences between how doctors dissected the smaller corpses versus the larger, more adult ones.
I don't know why we're told about Catherine the Great's dissection of her deceased husband's heart, the two-dozen lovers taken up by an English diplomat's wife in 1783, or the Bolshevik orgies in which pools of blood mixed with puddles of wine.
De Scudéry described its "good grace" and "beauty," Flemish animal painter Pieter Boel sketched its elegant form, and it was depicted in royal tapestries, all before achieving the posthumous fate of most menagerie animals: dissection at the new Royal Academy of Sciences.
She recalls considering deferring treatment so she could go away to school immediately — but ultimately opted for a procedure known as a "radical neck dissection," which involved the removal of essentially all of the lymph nodes on the right side of her neck.
House Democrats now have to make a very tough call about how much energy and credibility to pour into the dissection of the Mueller-Barr decisions, while also weighing the political benefits and liabilities of appearing obsessed with proving the president's culpability.
And while Mr. Proechel gets some deep flavors out of his braised oxtail, he's had the meat trimmed into long sections that are interwoven with equally long sections of connective tissue; after awhile, it starts to feel more like dissection than eating.
Listening became difficult when I was sitting at a table in the main room and the other two, not far away in the sitting area, engaged in a critical dissection of a former neighbor's marriage to another woman (and their new son).
One afternoon last January, two years after staff members at the Copenhagen Zoo surprised many people by shooting a healthy young giraffe, dissecting it in public, and then feeding its remains to lions, another Danish zoo was preparing for a public dissection.
But they depend at least on that belief, at least on the ideas that certain books and arts and forms are superior, transcendent, at least on the belief that students should learn to value these texts and forms before attempting their critical dissection.
The original documentation from 1977 doesn't exist anymore, but ROM dumps do, and they found their smoking gun: What followed was a slow, experimental dissection of the code by three different people, as they worked backwards to try and to coax meaning from the code.
"The boys ended up sharing a 5 x 7 cm area of brain tissue with no definite plane for dissection ... so Dr. Goodrich had to make the call and the final cut based on his instinct," their mother Nicole McDonald wrote in a Facebook post.
But the faux-memoir of Shapiro's voyage to Supreme LA, Harajuku, Daikanyama, Shibuya, Nagoya, Osaka, Fukuoka, London, and New York is probably the best thing he's published, and is arguably the most intimate dissection of the brand and its hierarchy of fandom to date.
After months of dissection and debate, the Browns selected Mayfield, Oklahoma's cocky and charismatic quarterback with the No. 21991 overall pick in the NFL draft on Thursday, a somewhat surprising selection by a team that figured to play it safe with such an important decision.
The team first closely observed the muscles and tension patterns involved in various types of movement using motion capture and good old dissection, then wired up those muscles and stimulated them with pulse-width modulated signals generated on a nearby (but not on-beetle) microcontroller.
Although Sarah causes a scandal by assisting that same anatomy professor in the dissection of a cadaver without a chaperone present, she uses both her medical knowledge and her detection skills to try to save her fiancé from being hanged for a double murder.
He offered me a snap dissection of American politics: blue-collar families were suckers: their sons and daughters went off to die in unwon wars; their equity evaporated with the 2008 meltdown, destroyed by "financial weapons of mass destruction"; their jobs migrated to China.
"Now that I look back, that was kind of like an early sign of me having a SCAD event," she said, referring to how she had spontaneous tearing in the artery walls of her heart, related to her heart attack, called spontaneous coronary artery dissection.
Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna's musical comedy dissection of a woman and her mental illness started out in its first season winking at its title, but very quickly left that behind as Rebecca Bunch (Bloom) dove headfirst into blinding narcissism, self-loathing, and despair.
Casting the fictional part of JonBenét takes up a tiny fraction of the runtime, as the young girls who weren't alive in 1996 (and are currently six years old) don't really have that much to contribute to the dissection of how Ramsey's death shaped their community.
Between all the usual antics (the first episode's A-plot is about a raccoon named Randall), it's a dissection of how a TV show gets green-lit in the streaming age — through consideration of how it fits into a catalog, a recommendation algorithm, a brand, etc.
Going after four Democratic congresswomen one by one, a combative President Donald Trump turned his campaign rally Wednesday into an extended dissection of the liberal views of the women of color, deriding them for what he painted as extreme positions and suggesting they just get out.
True to the exhibition's title, cutting and collaging are the dominant modes of making on view here, from the two portraits of sorts assembled from sliced-up beauty magazines and anatomy books set in dissection trays, to the gory silicone sculptures of slashed and punctured faces.
While the piece itself is most notable for its sensitive dissection of Franzen's complicated relationship with the public, public life, and technology (and also birds), a paragraph on Franzen's declining sales numbers stood out: Sales of his novels have decreased since The Corrections was published in 2001.
The corollary to the "Ferguson Effect" is the "Viral Video Effect," posited as an explanation for rising crime and less proactive policing – essentially, the fear of having your every movement or encounter videotaped and uploaded for slow-motion, stop-action dissection of your real-time judgments.
It turns out that this is a hopelessly naïve and confused and counterproductive and corruptible approach, flawed in many or at least several different ways, each of which deserves considered dissection and repudiation — but it's nothing like the straw Valley that Chiang attacks in his piece.
The nominees for Justine's ickiest scene include her waxing, her hair-chewing, and her rash-scratching, and there's a sigh of relief when she and her gay roommate, Adrien (Rabah Nait Oufella), in the course of their studies, settle down to an ordinary dissection of a dog.
I'll spare you the specifics (and photos) of the dissection process (check out the full article if you want all the gory details), but what they basically did was perform a painstaking search for a structure in the genital region that corresponds to the G-spot.
The first show they planned was a black metal super-bill with Dissection headlining and support coming from Cradle of Filth and Enslaved; for reasons he doesn't remember (or care to explain), the show ended up being cancelled and the money the pair put up vanished into thin air.
Matthew Stoller elaborates on this in a fantastic dissection of WeWork and, well, the economy at large: We do not have companies like Uber and WeWork because they're efficient or innovative or even because we want to, we have them because they are being subsidized by venture capital.
But the bill passed both houses overwhelmingly in June, a month after a New York Times investigation highlighted provisions in the current law that give families as little as 48 hours to claim a relative's body before the city must make it available for dissection or embalming practice.
However, his statement at the Bagram Airfield that the United States has "put the Taliban on the offensive" needs further dissection: A guerrilla doesn't strategize as per the "offense-defense" warfare pattern; guerrillas, such as the Taliban, either strike hard or go into hiding and bide their time.
This was also a boon to anatomists, who often struggled to acquire human corpses for dissection, and another timeline on the Anatomy Act of 1832 chronicles how the later act finally gave the medical world legal access to corpses beyond the criminal dead and snatching bodies from tombs.
But early in our discussion, when I asked him to find a common denominator among successful sitcoms, he gave me a long dissection of what went right with The Office, which helped transform it from a one-season curio into a nine-season series that ran for over 200 episodes.
" On Wednesday, though, a clinical dissection of the Rams' departure often gave way to emotion, to criticism of Mr. Kroenke's perceived lack of community involvement and what many considered his harsh assessment of St. Louis, which in recent years has battled a reputation for high crime and racial inequality. "St.
In "Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton's Doomed Campaign," which was released Tuesday and is the first dissection of Clinton's unsuccessful campaign, authors Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes write about Clinton's long awaited first national television interview, which I conducted in July 2015, almost three months after Clinton got into the race.
Playwrights Annie Baker and Heidi Schreck, working with I Love Dick co-creator and director Jill Soloway, punctuated the first season of the show's tricky, winking love triangle slash dissection of power imbalances between men and women with an entire episode of monologues delivered by the show's many supporting characters.
The 22-year veteran completed 224 of 20 passes for 2287 yards and 23 touchdowns, overcoming a fairly pedestrian game by his team's running backs, and the absence of Rob Gronkowski, in a total dissection of a defense that had been one of the toughest to score against in the playoffs.
Roanoke is an ungainly season of television, but in its dissection of the ways that we keep filming everything, even when our lives are in danger, and the ways that tendency often leads to a world where we become desensitized to horrible behavior, it gets at something profound, if unintentionally.
And while Pixar's Finding Dory — the sequel to Finding Nemo, out June 17 — might not seem like an obvious candidate for dissection, eagle-eyed fans locked in on a quick shot in the latest trailer that seemed to signal a potential new frontier for the animation studio: featuring a lesbian couple onscreen.
P. T. Barnum's first exhibit was a blind, crooked, and shrivelled old woman, a hundred and sixty-one years old, and his second was her dissection, conducted in an amphitheatre on Broadway in front of more than a thousand New Yorkers, who paid fifty cents each to see her get cut up.
Long after the last dissection in a medical class, nearly three years after his death, his corpse was one of 22 such "borrowed" cadavers still stranded in cold storage at the school, all of them waiting for the city to provide what the unclaimed dead are owed by law: a decent burial.
Here as in her previous six novels, it's in part Hadley's unflinching dissection of moments and states of consciousness that makes the Woolf comparisons irresistible, but it's also her commitment to following digressions both mental and philosophical (a debate, for instance, on the ethics of tourism) rather than pushing away at plot.
I know you might be thinking that 13 doesn't sound like that many, but this is actually one of the largest post-mortem studies to date in this area and it's a huge improvement over previous studies of the G-spot that made bold claims based on dissection of a single cadaver.
PARK CITY, Utah — The directors of "Weiner," which follows Anthony D. Weiner and his wife, Huma Abedin, as they navigate the public fallout from an explicit texting scandal, sought in remarks at the Sundance Film Festival on Sunday to position their documentary as less political personality study and more dissection of the news media.
At its best, it could have been a focused dissection of the implications of Minimalist as it pertains to wider social contexts, particularly that of Southeast Asia, where the latent spiritualism shared by Minimalism manifests in forms such as film (the cinema of Apichatpong Weerasethakul, for example) but is never directly under its auspice.
The vote — 2542 to 22005 in the State Senate, 21 to 2200 in the Assembly — came a month after a New York Times investigation highlighted provisions in the current law that give families as little as 5003 hours to claim a relative's body before the city must make it available for dissection or embalming practice.
"House Democrats now have to make a very tough call about how much energy and credibility to pour into the dissection of the Mueller-Barr decisions, while also weighing the political benefits and liabilities of appearing obsessed with proving the president's culpability," John Lawrence, Pelosi's former chief of staff, wrote Monday in The Hill.
From how she'd choose Supreme Court justices to her dissection of potential gun safety regulations and their impact, array of ideas to change the tax code and grow the U.S. economy, and detailed knowledge of complex foreign policy issues — she, at many times, looked like a presidential candidate on stage next to a college debater.
Word of the Day noun: an examination and dissection of a dead body to determine cause of death or the changes produced by disease verb: perform an autopsy on a dead body; do a post-mortem _________ The word autopsy has appeared in 262 New York Times articles in the past year, including on Oct.
That is a huge part, but it doesn't include the task of actually placing those translated words into the game, a labour that's not simply copy-and-paste, but a careful dissection of game code produced in a foreign language, juggling of memory constraints on old hardware, programming tools to overcome those constraints, and more.
I hadn't seen Abhimaan from 1973 since I was a teenager and was wary to revisit it; based on the marital troubles of Pandit Ravi Shankar and his first wife, Annapurna Devi, it's an dissection of the jealousy that consumes a famous singer after his new bride turns out to be more talented than him.
DUBLIN — For decades, some of Ireland's church-run "mother and baby homes" gave the bodies of many of the children who died in their care to medical schools for dissection, a government inquiry reported on Wednesday, indicating that the scale of the abuses at the homes for single mothers was greater than previously known.
Sarah Gilchrist is one of the few, brave women studying for medical degrees, but she blanches like a timid girl when she recognizes the corpse on her dissection table as Lucy Collins, a pregnant streetwalker she'd met at St. Giles's Infirmary for Women and Children, the charity clinic where she serves as a volunteer.

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