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Ollier And Richards
Ollier is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Charles Ollier (1788–1859), publisher * Charly Ollier (born 1985), football player * Claude Ollier (1922–2014), writer * Cliff Ollier (born 1931), geologist * Edmund Ollier (1827–1886), journalist * Louis Léopold Ollier (1830–1900), surgeon * Patrick Ollier (born 1944), politician * Rémy Ollier (1816–1845), Mauritan activist See also * Ollier disease Ollier disease is a rare sporadic nonhereditary skeletal disorder in which typically benign cartilaginous tumors (enchondromas) develop near the growth plate cartilage. This is caused by cartilage rests that grow and reside within the metaphysis o ..., disease of cartilage {{surname French-language surnames ...
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Charles Ollier
Charles Ollier (1788–1859) was an English publisher and author, associated with the works of Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats. Early life From a Huguenot background, Ollier began life in the banking-house of Messrs. Coutts. About 1816 he was in business as a publisher in Vere Street, Bond Street, in partnership with his brother James, who was more the man of business. Publisher Ollier made the acquaintance of Leigh Hunt, and undertook the publication of some of his works: ''Foliage'', ''Hero and Leander'', and the second edition of ''The Story of Rimini''. Through Hunt, Ollier became known to John Keats, and volunteered to publish his first poems (1817). The book did not succeed, however, and Keats quarrelled with him, publishing his subsequent books with Taylor & Hessey. Shelley was more constant, although he objected to Ollier's insistence on the alterations which converted ''Laon and Cythna'' into '' The Revolt of Islam''. All the subsequent works of Shelley published in h ...
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Charly Ollier
Charly Ollier (born February 18, 1985) is a French professional football player. Currently, he plays in the Championnat de France amateur for ÉDS Montluçon. He played on the professional level in Ligue 2 for Clermont Foot, making a substitute appearance in May 2005. Ligue de Football Professionnel"Clermont Foot - Le Mans FC 0-0" May 27, 2005. Retrieved on May 18, 2013. His father Alain Ollier played in Ligue 2 for AJ Auxerre, CS Louhans-Cuiseaux and FC Montceau Bourgogne Football Club Montceau Bourgogne is a French association football team founded in 1948. They are based in Montceau-les-Mines, Bourgogne, France and are currently playing in the Championnat National 3. They play at the Stade des Alouettes in Mo .... References 1985 births Living people French men's footballers Ligue 2 players Clermont Foot players Montluçon Football players Men's association football midfielders {{france-footy-midfielder-1980s-stub ...
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Claude Ollier
Claude Ollier (; 17 December 1922 – 18 October 2014) was a French writer closely associated with the nouveau roman literary movement. Born in Paris, he was the first winner of the Prix Médicis which he received for his novel ''La Mise en scène.'' Ollier died on 18 October 2014, according to his publisher. He was 91.Claude Ollier (1922–2014), écrivain


Works

*''La Mise en scène'' (1958) *''
Le Maintien de l'ordre ''Le maintien de l'ordre'' ( Gallimard, 1961), translated as ''Law and Order'', is a novel by French writer Claude Ollier Claude Ollier (; 17 December 1922 – 18 ...
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Cliff Ollier
Cliff Ollier (born 26 October 1931) is a geologist, geomorphologist, soil scientist, emeritus professor and honorary research fellow, at the School of Earth and Geographical Sciences University of Western Australia. He was formerly at Australian National University, University of New England, Australia, Canberra University, University of Papua New Guinea, and University of Melbourne. In the late 1950s he worked on a soil survey in the Northern and Eastern provinces of Uganda }), is a landlocked country in East Africa East Africa, Eastern Africa, or East of Africa, is the eastern subregion of the African continent. In the United Nations Statistics Division scheme of geographic regions, 10-11-(16*) territor .... Throughout his career he was a prolific author (as C.D Ollier), and he has contributed to reference works such as ''The Oxford Companion to the Earth''. PublicationsWhy the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets are Not Collapsing
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Edmund Ollier
Edmund Ollier (1827–1886) was an English journalist and author. Life The son of Charles Ollier, he knew Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb, Leigh Hunt and Benjamin Haydon as a child. He was privately educated and began to write. After some years he was a journalist working for '' The Athenæum'', '' The Daily News'', ''Household Words ''Household Words'' was an English weekly magazine edited by Charles Dickens in the 1850s. It took its name from the line in Shakespeare's ''Henry V'': "Familiar in his mouth as household words." History During the planning stages, titles origi ...'', and '' All the Year Round''. Ollier died at his house in Oakley Street, Chelsea, London on 19 April 1886. Works In 1867 Ollier republished verses which had originally appeared in periodicals as ''Poems from the Greek Mythology, and Miscellaneous Poems''. In the same year he contributed an edition of the first series of the '' Essays of Elia'', with a memoir of the author Charles Lamb, to ''Hotten' ...
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Louis Léopold Ollier
Louis Xavier Édouard Léopold Ollier (; 2 December 1830 – 26 November 1900) was a French surgeon, known for his pioneering work in reconstructive surgery and orthopedics. Biography Ollier was born in Les Vans, department of Ardèche. His father and grandfather were also physicians. Initially he studied natural sciences at Montpellier, and in 1851 began work as medical interne at Lyon Hospital. In 1857 he earned his medical doctorate in Paris, and in 1860 became chief-surgeon at the Hôtel-Dieu in Lyon. In 1877 he became a professor of clinical surgery. Following Ollier's death in 1900, his position at Lyon was filled by surgeon Mathieu Jaboulay (1860–1913). Ollier is famous for his work in bone and joint surgery. He became internationally known for developing techniques involving bone- resection, and is remembered for his extensive research of regeneration of bone by the periosteum following resection. He was a pioneer in the field of bone grafting, and also devised a sur ...
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Patrick Ollier
Patrick Ollier (born 17 December 1944) is a French politician. He is the Mayor of Rueil-Malmaison. He was a national assembly deputy for Hauts-Alpes's 2nd constituency from 1988 to 2002, as a member of the UMP. Secondly for Hauts-de-Seine's 7th constituency from 2002 to 2017. He was briefly the President of the National Assembly in 2007. He is the partner of Michèle Alliot-Marie, Minister of Foreign and European Affairs in the government of François Fillon. He was elected on 16 June 2002, representing the Hauts-de-Seine, near Paris. He is president of the French National Assembly's committee on Economic Affairs, the Environment, and Territory. He is interested in renewable energies, and Africa, being head of the French-Libyan friendship group in the National Assembly. On 14 January 2007 he announced that he would be candidate to the presidency of the National Assembly, replacing Jean-Louis Debré, who would join the Constitutional Council. He ended up as the only cand ...
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Rémy Ollier
Rémy Ollier (October 6, 1816, 1845) was a journalist, author, and political activist of Mauritius. Childhood Rémy Ollier was the son of Benoît Ollier, a French artillery captain, who had settled in Beau-Vallon around 1799, and Julie Guillemeau, a freed slave. Like other settlers (and rich creoles), Rémy's father owned slaves. Life Young Rémy had an easy childhood and was a brilliant student with a talent for literature. In 1832, Ollier was deeply impressed by the conflict between the abolitionist John Jeremie Sir John Jeremie (19 August 1795 – 23 April 1841) was a British judge and diplomat, Chief Justice of Saint Lucia and Governor of Sierra Leone. He was given an award in 1836 for advancing "negro freedom" after accusing the judges in Maurit ..., sent by the British government to end slavery, and the French slave owners in Mauritius. When Ollier was 16 years old, his father died. His family moved to the street in Port Louis which bears his name today. H ...
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Ollier Disease
Ollier disease is a rare sporadic nonhereditary skeletal disorder in which typically benign cartilaginous tumors (enchondromas) develop near the growth plate cartilage. This is caused by cartilage rests that grow and reside within the metaphysis or diaphysis and eventually mineralize over time to form multiple enchondromas. Key signs of the disorder include asymmetry and shortening of the limb as well as an increased thickness of the bone margin. These symptoms are typically first visible during early childhood with the mean age of diagnosis being 13 years of age. Many patients with Ollier disease are prone to develop other malignancies including bone sarcomas that necessitate treatment and the removal of malignant bone neoplasm. Cases in patients with Ollier disease has shown a link to IDH1, IDH2, and PTH1R gene mutations. Currently, there are no forms of treatment for the underlying condition of Ollier disease but complications such as fractures, deformities, malignancies that a ...
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