(1) The distribution of dopamine (DA) immunoreactivity in the forebrain and midbrain of the ball python, Python regius, was studied by using recently developed antibodies against DA.
(2) An adenovirus-like agent was isolated from a moribund royal python (Python regius).
(3) Henricues Regius (1598--1679), professor at the University of Utrecht was the first physician who accepted the physiology of the philosopher Descartes (1596--1750) that he exposed in Fundamenta physices (1646) and in Fundamenta Medicinae (1647) but in Praxis Medica (1657) his therapy of the "odontalgia" is still mediaeval according to the principles of Galen.
(4) The DA system of the snake Python regius shares many features with that of lizards and turtles as determined with the same antibodies.
(5) Sir William Osler, the first physician-in-chief of the Johns Hopkins Hospital and later Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford, is judged by many to be the greatest clinician of the modern era.
(6) The distribution of vasotocin in the brains of the turtle Pseudemys scripta elegans and the snake Python regius was studied with immunohistochemical methods.
(7) As yet, no regius professors of history are banged up in the Scrubs, but Blair's lurch into Stalinism must still fester in a Home Office attic.
(8) Regius Chair of Clinical Surgery, University of Edinburgh.
(9) Formerly Regius Professor of Hebrew, University of Oxford.
(10) Ventilation in resting, unrestrained Boa constrictor, Python regius and Thanmophis s. sirtalis was monitored using various combinations of a closed Kopfkappe (head chamber), intratracheal pressure catheters, strain gauges around the trunk, and a flow meter connected to one of the nostrils.
(11) Ian Mearns, the Labour MP for Gateshead, confronted Gove with comments by Richard Evans, Regius professor of history at Cambridge University, suggesting the reforms were changing the history curriculum into "little better than a pub quiz".
(12) Forget about Blackadder, forget leftwing historians such as Richard Evans, regius professor of history at Cambridge University, who has said those who enlisted in 1914 were wrong to think they were fighting to defend freedom.
(13) Osler's immediate successor as Regius Professor at Oxford was Archibald Garrod (1857-1936), the founder of biochemical genetics.
(14) From Cambridge no less a personage than Richard Evans , the Regius Professor of History, condemned Gove's attempt to restore "rote learning of the patriotic stocking-fillers so beloved of traditionalists".
(15) I have attempted to show that Garrod's predecessor Regius also contributed to medical genetics--not to its theoretical roots, to be sure, but certainly in an important way to the nosology of genetic disease.