1,799 research outputs found
Oral History Interview, Phil Farrell (1064)
In his three 2009 interview sessions with Anne Peckham, Philip Farrell, a pediatrician and emeritus dean of the School of Medicine and Public Health at the University of Wisconsin, recounts his career journey. To learn more about this oral history, download & review the index first (or transcript if available). It will help determine which audio file(s) to download & listen to.In his three October 2009 interviews with Anne Peckham, Phil Farrell reflects on his development as a pediatrician, his research, and his roles as an administrator at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health. He recounts his early interest in medical research which led to career-long NIH funding and foundational work in the creation of neo-natal intensive care units around the country, and discusses early influences that encouraged his development as a researcher and clinician. He then summarizes major moments of leadership and administration in his career at UW, including moving the NICU from St. Mary’s, his cystic fibrosis research, chairmanship of the pediatrics department, deanship of the Medical School, curricular development, creation of the UW Medical Foundation, administrative changes in the medical school, campus planning and development, and the Blue Cross/Blue Shield settlement. Throughout, he offers his perspectives on major campus and state political figures and how they have related to the Medical School throughout its history. This interview was conducted for inclusion into the UW-Madison Archives & Records Management Oral History Collection
Oral History Interview: Philip M. Farrell (1064)
In his three October 2009 interviews with Anne Peckham, Phil Farrell reflects on his development as a pediatrician, his research, and his roles as an administrator at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health. He recounts his early interest in medical research which led to career-long NIH funding and foundational work in the creation of neo-natal intensive care units around the country, and discusses early influences that encouraged his development as a researcher and clinician. He then summarized major moments of leadership and administration in his career at UW, including moving the NICU from St. Mary?s, his cystic fibrosis research, chairmanship of the pediatrics department, deanship of the Medical School, curricular development, creation of the UW Medical Foundation, administrative changes in the medical school, campus planning and development, and the Blue Cross/Blue Shield settlement. Throughout, he offers his perspectives on major campus and state political figures and how the Medical School has related to them through its history. This interview was conducted for inclusion into the UW-Madison Oral History Program
Author Q and A with editor Phil Crockett Thomas and contributors on abolition science fiction
In this author Q&A, Rémy-Paulin Twahirwa speaks to editor Phil Crockett Thomas and contributors about their recent collection, Abolition Science Fiction, a collection of short science fiction stories written by activists and scholars involved in prison abolition and transformative justice in the UK
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Phil Magness: COVID-19 Interview
Phil Magness is a Senior Research Fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research. He is the author of numerous works on economic history, taxation, economic inequality, the history of slavery, and education policy in the United States. Listen to the Policy@McCombs podcast to learn more about the data shaping public policy and the data that should be. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel to watch video versions of the podcasts.Salem Cente
The Phil Rogers Russell, D.O. Collection
Finding aid for The Phil Rogers Russell, D.O. CollectionPhil Rogers Russell, D.O., practiced osteopathic medicine in the state of Texas from his 1917 graduation from the American School of Osteopathy, Kirksville, Missouri, until his death at the age of 80 in 1975. He was a strong supporter of the profession and was instrumental in the establishment and growth of the Fort Worth Osteopathic Hospital and the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine. He won numerous awards and honors from the American Osteopathic Association, the Texas Osteopathic Association, other osteopathic institutions and associations, and civil awards. He was the author of "Quack Doctor", a memoir of his years as an osteopathic physician.The Phil R. Russell, D.O. Collection consists of speeches, articles, book manuscripts, books, memorabilia, photographs, certificates and awards that Dr. Russell authored or was presented during his lifetime
Phil Raisor, 36th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Phil Raisor is the author of Swimming in the Shallow End and Outside Shooter: A Memoir, and the editor of Tuned and Under Tension: The Recent Poetry of W. D. Snodgrass. His poetry and reviews have appeared in The Southern Review, The Sewanee Review, Prairie Schooner, Southern Poetry Review, 5AM, Poetry East, Tar River Poetry, Ascent , Poetry Northwest , Midwest Quarterly, Aethlon and Poet Lore. He was on the Board of Directors of the Associated Writers and Writing Programs and managing editor of New Virginia Review. Raisor is an emeritus professor of English at Old Dominion University
Re-engaging with the intimacy of materials through touch
In today’s retail led world consumers are suffocating through an excess of soulless products. It is time we paused to breathe.
"Touch has a memory" - John Keats. [A1]
It is often assumed that product designers, especially in the fashion industry, will have a deep understanding of the tactile properties of materials that they use. This tacit knowledge is also assumed to be an essential ingredient for intimate engagement with the materials, for touch is about direct contact, close and personal; it is not sensation at a distance in the way of sound and vision. Through this intimacy, the designer can fully understand the potential sensory impact on their customers and can share their knowledge of this intimacy with the customers.
However the rise of fast, offshore manufacture has led to a virtual design approach where cad-cam rules and the first direct contact that the designer has with their material is often when they receive the finished goods. The approach has become embedded in teaching, where virtual-oriented design is cheap and simple as well as effective.
This runs in parallel to what Black [A2] describes as "The Fashion Paradox", i.e. the tension between an industry which has become dependent on the overconsumption of the consumer society made possible by low cost design and manufacture processes with emerging imperatives of environmental and ethical issues. It has become easy to make and sell a lot of goods, but perhaps a new approach is needed before we drown in an ocean of stuff.
We hypothesise that a business strategy to introduce a new intimacy with materials to consumers through goods and experiences that celebrate "the joy of touch" will a) spawn better, higher value goods with cutting-edge appeal and b) provide a positive piece in the jigsaw necessary to address the Fashion Paradox, taking the line described by Fletcher and Early in "5-Ways" [A3, A4] that touch is relevant to the production of "supersatisfiers...which begin to break the chain of consumption and dissatisfaction".
There are always many old voices that decry the lack of materials knowledge in the "designers of today", and we do not wish simply to join them. To avoid this yet to achieve new thinking in the territory we take a tangential approach that does not get stuck into stuff to early.
Accordingly, the method will apply a method of research and teaching based on storytelling in multidisciplinary teams developed by Smith and Sams [A5, A6]. This reflects on the role of designer-storytellers described by Seah [A7] and Erikson [A8]. Thus, perhaps counter-intuitively, we seek to stimulate word-based approaches to a physical effect.
The resultant project vehicle "Touch Stories" is inspired by the observations of experimental psychologist Charles Spence, e.g. [A9], that people have difficulty in detecting and remembering touch, but can be taught touch skills. This builds on earlier design projects "Touch Gourmet" by Torres and Sams [A10]. We provide below a short summary of the science context as well as the more usual design context for the project.
The work described here is our first experiment using this method in the touch context with a fashion student community of young business and design professionals. In recognition, we report in the style of a science experiment - which also reflects the background of the second author.
We are at the very start of a journey which we intend to take well beyond fashion (for the challenge of new materials and "too much stuff" spreads well beyond Fashion and its Paradox), thus to stretch and develop the territory, through the processes described in [A5, A6]. It’s a journey the design world needs to ‘touch on’
Maine Voices piece by Phil Hoose of Portland, whose cousin Don Larsen on Octob
Maine Voices piece by Phil Hoose of Portland, whose cousin Don Larsen on October 8, 1956, pitched a perfect game in the World Series. Hoose, an author, wrote It\u27s Our World, Too!, which was named a Lupine Honor Book by the Maine Library Association
Data & Code: Ghost of hosts past
Scripts and data to reproduce figures in "The ghost of hosts past: impacts of host extinction on parasite specificity" by Farrell et al. as part of the Phil Trans B Special Issue “Infectious disease macroecology: parasite diversity and dynamics across the globe
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