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John Julian Cuttance Wild (August 11, 1914 – September 18, 2009) was an English-born American physician who was part of the first group to use ultrasound for body imaging, most notably for diagnosing cancer. Modern ultrasonic diagnostic medical scans are descendants of the equipment Wild and his colleagues developed in the 1950s.
It was still a wild place in 1905, though by that time it was nearly a ghost town with only a small population. According to the Tombstone Epitaph, Canyon Diablo was described as being the "toughest Hellhole in the West," which may have been at least part of the reason why Evans and Shaw chose to flee there instead of Flagstaff. The two lawmen ...
John J. Wild (1914–2009), developer of ultrasound in cancer diagnosis; Paul Wild (Australian scientist) (John Paul Wild, born 1923), Australian radio astronomer; Frank Wild (John Wild, 1873–1939), Antarctic explorer; Jonathan Wild (1682–1725), London criminal; John Wild (priest) (1904–1992), English dean and college head
Mason Shaw is back with the Wild. The forward signed a two-way contract on Thursday for the remainder of the season after returning from a fourth knee injury with the Wild's minor-league team.
The timing wasn't lost on Mason Shaw. Almost exactly 12 months — or 366 days, as Shaw pointed out — after he suffered yet another ACL tear that sidelined him from hockey, Shaw commemorated ...
Fred Stolle and Lesley Turner were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Tony Roche and Judy Tegart.. Ken Fletcher and Margaret Smith defeated Roche and Tegart in the final, 12–10, 6–3 to win the mixed doubles tennis title at the 1965 Wimbledon Championships.
John Daniel Wild (April 10, 1902 – October 23, 1972) was a twentieth-century American philosopher. Wild began his philosophical career as an empiricist and realist but became an important proponent of existentialism and phenomenology in the United States.
John J. Holland (1843–1893) – shipbuilder; Stuart Howe (born 1967) – operatic tenor; William Lloyd Hoyt (born 1930) – lawyer, judge; Chief Justice of New Brunswick, member of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry [51] Jack Humphrey (1901–1967) – watercolour painter [52] John Horbury Hunt (1838–1904) – Australian architect [53]