changed conditions

  • 101John Mullanphy —     John Mullanphy     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► John Mullanphy     Merchant, philanthropist, b. near Enniskillen, Co. Fremanagh, Ireland, 1758; d. at St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A., 29 August, 1833. At twenty he went to France where he served in… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 102Joseph Sadoc Alemany —     Joseph Sadoc Alemany     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Joseph Sadoc Alemany     First Archbishop of San Francisco, California, U.S.A., b. at Vich in Spain, 3 July, 1814; d. at Valencia in Spain, 14 April, 1888. He entered at an early age the… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 103Roger Brooke Taney —     Roger Brooke Taney     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Roger Brooke Taney     (Pronounced Tawney)     Fifth chief justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, born in Calvert County, Maryland, 17 March, 1777; died at Washington, 12 October,… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 104regulation — 1. Control of the rate or manner in which a process progresses or a product is formed. 2. In experimental embryology, the power of a pregastrula embryo to continue approximately normal development after a part or parts have been manipulated or… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 105Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg — Portrait by Jean Étienne Liotard, wearing the chain of the Order of the Golden Fleece State Chancellor of the Habsburg Monarchy …

    Wikipedia

  • 106Morningside Park (New York City) — Morningside Park is a New York City public park in the northern portion of the New York City borough of Manhattan. The 30 acre (12 ha) area occupies 110th to 123rd Streets from Morningside Avenue to Morningside Drive a …

    Wikipedia

  • 107histologic accommodation — a group of changes in the morphology and function of cells following changed conditions …

    Medical dictionary

  • 108adaptive hypertrophy — increase in size in response to changed conditions, as, for example, increased thickness of the walls of a hollow organ when the outflow is obstructed …

    Medical dictionary

  • 109Deaconess —    In the Apostles time there were holy women set apart for the work of the Church, for example Phoebe, the servant or deaconess, who was commended by St. Paul. This order of Deaconesses continued until about the seventh century, when the changed …

    American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia

  • 110religion —    With the exception of the small numbers adhering to minority religions, the predominant affiliation of Spaniards has for centuries been to Roman Catholicism, so much so that it has come to be seen almost as a mark of national identity. It was… …

    Encyclopedia of contemporary Spanish culture