Le département des sciences fondamentales rassemble les disciplines nécessaires à la formation de base en sciences biologiques et fonctionnelles des futurs médecins vétérinaires.
Il comprend 6 services :

* Anatomie des Animaux Domestiques
* Physique et Chimie Biologiques et Médicales
* Histologie – Anatomie Pathologique

Handle locks with care, and be certain not to damage a customer’s automotive with auto shutters.
I'm nonetheless feeling a bit shaky."
The truth of the latter statement was so evident that I felt morally
compelled to curtail my explorations to the utmost that was attainable. But
it was a severe trial. For as I hurried alongside Clerkenwell Road I found
myself in a veritable Tom Tiddler's Ground. By sheer drive of will, I had
to drag myself past these wonderful shop home windows that displayed--higher
and more precious than gold and silver--all the wonders of the
clock-maker's artwork. I hardly dared to take a look at them. But even the hasty
look that I stole as I hurried past gave me an indelible picture of
these unbelievable treasures that I can recall to at the present time. I see them
now, although the years have made acquainted the topics of that first,
ecstatic, impression: the entrancing tools and gauges, bench-drills and
wheel-cutters, the lovely little watch maker's lathe, fairer to me than
the Rose of Sharon or the Lily of the Valley, the sprucing heads with
their buffs and brushes, the assembled movements, and the noble regulator
with its quicksilver pendulum, coping with seconds as common clocks do
with hours. I felt that I might have spent eternity in that blessed
street.
However, my precise business, though it was however with dealers in
"sundries", gave me the opportunity for more leisured observations.
Besides Clerkenwell Road, it carried me to St. John's Gate and
Clerkenwell Green; from which, ultimately, I tore myself away and set forth
at high speed in the direction of Holborn to catch the omnibus for Regent Circus (now,
by the way, called Oxford Circus). But all the best way, as my carriage
rumbled sleepily westward, the vision of these Aladdin caves floated
before my eyes and haunted me until I entered the little store and
dismissed my grasp to his straightforward-chair in the sitting-room. Then I
unpacked my parcels, distributed their contents in the proper
receptacles, put away the valuable value-lists that I had collected for
future examine, and set in regards to the ordinary business of the day.
I do not suggest to follow in detail the course of my life as Mr.
Abraham's apprentice. There would, in deed, be little sufficient to record;
for the days and months slipped by unreckoned, spent with placid
contentment within the work which was a pleasure to do and a satisfaction
when performed. But other than the fact that there would be so little to tell,
the mere circumstances of my life aren't the actual subject of this
history. Its function is, as I have defined, to trace the antecedents of
certain events which occurred a few years later when I was in a position to put my
finger on the one crucial incontrovertible fact that was essential to disclose the nature
and authorship of a really singular crime. With the invention of that
crime, the foregoing chapters have had at the very least some connection; and in
what follows I shall confine myself to incidents that have been parts of the
similar practice of causation.
Of those, the first was involved with my Uncle Sam. By start he was a
Kentish man, and he had served his time in a small workshop at Maidstone,
performed by a sure James Wright. When his apprenticeship had come to
an finish, he had migrated to London; however he had all the time saved in contact with
his outdated grasp and paid him occasional visits. Now, about the top of my
third year, Mr. Wright, who was getting too old to hold on alone, had
supplied to take him into partnership; and the provide being obviously
advantageous, Uncle Sam had accepted and forthwith made preparations for
the transfer.
It was a severe blow to me, and I believe additionally to Aunt Judy. For though I
had taken up my abode with Mr. Abraham, hardly an evening had handed
which did not see me seated in the acquainted kitchen (but not in my
original chair) going through the outdated Dutch clock and listening to old Mr.
Gollidge's interminable yarns. That kitchen had nonetheless been my residence as it
had been since my infancy. I had nonetheless been a member, not only of the
household, however of the family, absent, like Uncle Sam, solely throughout working
hours. But henceforth I should haven't any home--for Mr. Abraham's house was
a mere lodging; no family circle, and, worst of all, no Aunt Judy.
It was a dismal prospect. With a sinking heart I watched the preparations
for the departure and counted the times as they slid past, all too
quickly; and when the final of the sands had run out and that i stood on the
platform with my eyes fixed on the receding prepare, from a window of which
Aunt Judy's arm protruded, waving her damp handkerchief, I felt as may
have felt some marooned mariner following with despairing gaze the hull
of his ship sinking beneath the horizon. Because the practice disappeared round a
curve, I turned away and will have blubbered aloud; but I used to be now a
young man of sixteen, and a railway station shouldn't be a suitable place for
the display of the feelings.
But in the days that adopted, my condition was very desolate and lonely;
and but, as I can now see, viewing events with a retrospective eye, this
shattering misfortune was for my ultimate good. Indeed, it yielded
certain immediate benefits. For, casting about for some means of disposing
of the solitary evenings, I discovered an establishment identified as the
Working Men's College, then occupying a noble outdated home in Great Ormond
Street; whereby it happened that the homely kitchen was replaced by
austere but nice class rooms, and the voice of outdated Mr. Gollidge
recounting the mutiny on the Mar' Jane by these of pleasant young
graduates explaining the principles of algebra and geometry, of applied
mechanics and machine-drawing.
The subsequent incident, trivial as it can seem within the telling, had a good
more profound impact in the shaping of my future; certainly, however for that
trifling prevalence, this history might never have been written. So I
proceed without further apologies.
On a sure morning originally of the fourth 12 months of my
apprenticeship, my grasp and i have been within the store together reviewing the
stock when a rather irate-trying elderly gentleman entered, and, fixing
a truculent eye on Mr. Abraham, demanded:
"Do you know something about equatorial clocks?