| 41. | As the prosector meticulously outlined each charge, Reardon's brow furrowed, his lips trembled, but he never cried.
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| 42. | He received his education at the Universities of Erlangen, and in 1794 was appointed prosector at the anatomical institute at Leipzig.
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| 43. | In 1803 he gained his internship, followed by promotions as an anatomy assistant ( 1805 ) and prosector ( 1806 ).
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| 44. | In 1889 he began work as a prosector at St . Georg Hospital in Hamburg and in 1909 attained the title of professor.
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| 45. | Beginning in 1877, he worked as a prosector at the University of Halle, where in 1882 he gained an associate professorship.
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| 46. | He received his doctorate from the University of Munich in 1843, where from 1848 to 1854 he served as prosector of pathological anatomy.
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| 47. | He received his medical doctorate at Heidelberg University in 1901, and several years later became a prosector at the municipal hospital in Karlsruhe.
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| 48. | In 1889 he became prosector at the University of Basel, later performing similar duties at the University of W�rzburg ( 1892 95 ).
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| 49. | He studied medicine at the Universities of Prague, afterwards working as a prosector in Vienna under Joseph Hyrtl ( 1810-1894 ).
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| 50. | He was a prosector at the University of Oslo from 1965, docent from 1969 and professor from 1978 to his retirement in 1996.
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