265,143 research outputs found
Oral History Interview with Vincent Moreno, October 6, 2005
Transcript of an oral interview with Vincent Moreno. Moreno was drafted and, after training as a longshoreman, was stationed in Calcutta, India with the 289th Port Battalion. He sailed there aboard the USS Hermitage (AP-54) arriving in December, 1944. He volunteered for a combat assignment and was sent to Burma and trained as a scout. He was assigned to the 124th Cavalry Regiment in the 5332nd Brigade. Moreno describes fighting the Japanese in the jungles attempting to open the Burma Road. Also, Moreno mentions serving as an MP guarding warehouses in Kunming, China before shipping home
Recommended from our members
Invitation to a Paul C. Moreno Appreciation Party
Paul C. Moreno, State Representative, writes to Dr. Hector P. Garcia sending an invitation to an appreciation party held in his honor. A brief history of his experience in state Legislature and his support of the Mexican American people
Oral History Interview with Jonathan Moreno
This interview was conducted in person with Jonathan Moreno, PhD, as part of “Moral Histories: Voices and Stories from the Founding Figures of Bioethics,” an oral history project of the Johns Hopkins University Berman Institute of Bioethics. Professor Moreno is the David and Lyn Silfen University Professor Emeritus of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, Philosophy, and History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of over twenty-four books and hundreds of articles. His areas of expertise include neuroethics, biotechnology, and national security, with a particular interest in the history and sociology of bioethics.
In this interview Moreno discusses his childhood and the intellectual influence of his parents, particularly his father J.L. Moreno, who was renowned for developing the therapeutic model of psychodrama and the idea of social networks. He discusses his philosophy graduate studies and shares how he became involved in bioethics as one of the first “staff philosophers” in hospitals early in his career. He discusses his gradual move towards government and policy ethics, including being on the staff of Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments (ACHRE) during the Clinton Administration; the Advisory Committee on Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research for the National Academy of Sciences; Department of Defense consulting; creating “Science Progress” content as a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress; and being on the Obama presidency transition team. Post-9/11 issues of biosafety and bioterrorism are discussed, as well as his experience consulting on the ethics related to force-feeding, interrogation, and the different approaches of the CIA and Army regarding Guantanamo prisoners post 9/11.
Moreno reflects on being a senior advisor for the Obama administration’s Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues, particularly the historical importance of the Guatemala syphilis experiments that added a new chapter to the history of medicine and bioethics. He also touches on the ethical implications of neuroscience advancements, such as brain organoids and synthetic brains. Moreno concludes with reflections on the importance of bioethics in a rules-based international order and his contributions to the field through accessible writing and diverse kinds of academic work and public facing endeavors
Oral History Interview with Jonathan Moreno
This interview was conducted in person with Jonathan Moreno, PhD, as part of “Moral Histories: Voices and Stories from the Founding Figures of Bioethics,” an oral history project of the Johns Hopkins University Berman Institute of Bioethics. Professor Moreno is the David and Lyn Silfen University Professor Emeritus of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, Philosophy, and History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of over twenty-four books and hundreds of articles. His areas of expertise include neuroethics, biotechnology, and national security, with a particular interest in the history and sociology of bioethics.
In this interview Moreno discusses his childhood and the intellectual influence of his parents, particularly his father J.L. Moreno, who was renowned for developing the therapeutic model of psychodrama and the idea of social networks. He discusses his philosophy graduate studies and shares how he became involved in bioethics as one of the first “staff philosophers” in hospitals early in his career. He discusses his gradual move towards government and policy ethics, including being on the staff of Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments (ACHRE) during the Clinton Administration; the Advisory Committee on Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research for the National Academy of Sciences; Department of Defense consulting; creating “Science Progress” content as a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress; and being on the Obama presidency transition team. Post-9/11 issues of biosafety and bioterrorism are discussed, as well as his experience consulting on the ethics related to force-feeding, interrogation, and the different approaches of the CIA and Army regarding Guantanamo prisoners post 9/11.
Moreno reflects on being a senior advisor for the Obama administration’s Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues, particularly the historical importance of the Guatemala syphilis experiments that added a new chapter to the history of medicine and bioethics. He also touches on the ethical implications of neuroscience advancements, such as brain organoids and synthetic brains. Moreno concludes with reflections on the importance of bioethics in a rules-based international order and his contributions to the field through accessible writing and diverse kinds of academic work and public facing endeavors
Oral History Interview with Vincent Moreno, October 6, 2005
Transcript of an oral interview with Vincent Moreno. Moreno was drafted and, after training as a longshoreman, was stationed in Calcutta, India with the 289th Port Battalion. He sailed there aboard the USS Hermitage (AP-54) arriving in December, 1944. He volunteered for a combat assignment and was sent to Burma and trained as a scout. He was assigned to the 124th Cavalry Regiment in the 5332nd Brigade. Moreno describes fighting the Japanese in the jungles attempting to open the Burma Road. Also, Moreno mentions serving as an MP guarding warehouses in Kunming, China before shipping home
Volontà violate. Intervista a un maestro di strada
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak scriveva alla fine degli anni ‘80 un saggio, divenuto celebre, in cui proponeva il seguente quesito: can the subaltern speak? (possono parlare i subalterni?). Ad esso sono seguite numerose risposte, non solo di accademici delle più svariate parti del mondo, ma anche da operatori del sociale che hanno inteso questa domanda come un concentrato di interrogativi da cui si sentivano quotidianamente toccati.
Per comprendere le implicazioni e la portata di tale problema va innanzitutto
spiegato chi sono i subalterni. ‘Subalterno’ è chi è inchiodato al suo status sociale. E questa immobilità è dovuta al fatto che il subalterno abita un sistema di dominio che non gli consegna alcun mezzo o abilità per partecipare al controllo del potere. Egli non può comprendere, né
esprimersi, né tanto meno essere compreso, perché escluso dai codici egemonici. È importante notare che il subalterno non è semplicemente oppresso, ma è più che oppresso:
l’oppresso può, infatti, reagire, protestare, difendersi. Ad esempio, un lavoratore che
ha ricevuto un ingiusto trattamento e si rivolge ai sindacati o ai tribunali competenti,
riconosce di essere oppresso e conosce le vie di reazione alla sua condizione. Il subalterno
è invece concausa del suo status, come nel caso di quegli schiavi neri che sposavano
il razzismo dei loro padroni, dei colonizzati grati ai loro coloni o delle donne che
partecipano della mentalità patriarcale. Su questo nucleo di questioni ho intervistato Cesare Moreno, coordinatore di Chance, un progetto contro la dispersione scolastica che ha sede nei quartieri più degradati di Napoli. Chance è una scuola che accoglie i ragazzi che l’istituzione scolastica ufficiale ha perso lungo il percorso. L’elemento che forse più distingue e rende
particolarmente valido questo progetto è la costante rielaborazione collettiva dell’esperienza
maturata sul campo. Ed è proprio per questa caratteristica che le riflessioni di
Moreno a proposito del nostro quesito sono autorevoli e meritano attenzione
Leonia cymosa Mart. from Colombia collected by F. Moreno y C. Carvajal #1538
File Name: TOLI-23400-PER-01-R1
CÓDIGO FOTO: TOLI-23400-PER-01-R1
Fotografía: SI
Nº TOLI: TOLI-23400
PARCELA: PER-01
CÓDIGO: R1
Nº COLECTA: 1538
NUEVOS COLECTORES: Esteban Álvarez Dávila
COLECTORES: F. Moreno y C. Carvajal
Nº MUESTRAS MONTADAS: 1
Homologación: No homologado
Nueva fecha del evento : 20/12/2018.
Fecha del evento: 01/09/2012.
Proyecto : Recursos Botánicos Disponibles en Línea (BRAVO) para la flora Colombiana
Hábitat: Bosque húmedo tropical (bh-T)
Comentario del evento: Bosque de tierra firme, dosel abierto, de 25-30 m, emergentes de 35 m, estrato medio de 15 m, sotobosque denso con alta regeneración natural, presencia de palmas como Lepidocaryum tenue, Oenocarpus bataua, Geonoma sp., capa de hojarazca de 15 cm, abundante materia orgánica. Pendientes pronunciadas. Poca intervención antrópica.
Continente: SA
Pais: Colombia
Estado/Provincia: Amazonas
Municipio: Puerto Santander
Localidad: Resguardo indígena Nonuya de Villazul.
Elevación minima en metros: 250
Elevación maxima en metros: 400
Latitud: -0.654
Longitud original: -72.072
datum geodésico: WGS 84
Latitud decimal: -0.654
Longitud decimal: -72.072
Identificado por: Felipe Moreno & C. Carvajal
Fecha de identificación: 01/09/2019.
Nombre cientifico: Leonia cymosa Mart.
Reino: Plantae
Filo: Magnoliophyta
Clase: Equisetopsida
Orden: Malpighiales
Familia nueva: Violaceae
Género nuevo: Leonia
especie nueva: cymosa
Autoría del nombre científico: Mart.
: Violaceae
genero herbario: Leonia
especie herbario: cymosa
Especie de herbario para TNRS: Leonia cymosa
Especie corregida herbario y desde TNRS: Leonia cymosa
Familia corregida desde TNRS: Violaceae
: 2507</p
Leonia cymosa Mart. from Colombia collected by F. Moreno y C. Carvajal #604
File Name: TOLI-23402-PER-01-H5
CÓDIGO FOTO: TOLI-23402-PER-01-H5
Fotografía: SI
Nº TOLI: TOLI-23402
PARCELA: PER-01
CÓDIGO: H5
Nº COLECTA: 604
NUEVOS COLECTORES: Esteban Álvarez Dávila
COLECTORES: F. Moreno y C. Carvajal
Nº MUESTRAS MONTADAS: 1
Homologación: No homologado
Nueva fecha del evento : 20/12/2018.
Fecha del evento: 01/09/2012.
Proyecto : Recursos Botánicos Disponibles en Línea (BRAVO) para la flora Colombiana
Hábitat: Bosque húmedo tropical (bh-T)
Comentario del evento: Bosque de tierra firme, dosel abierto, de 25-30 m, emergentes de 35 m, estrato medio de 15 m, sotobosque denso con alta regeneración natural, presencia de palmas como Lepidocaryum tenue, Oenocarpus bataua, Geonoma sp., capa de hojarazca de 15 cm, abundante materia orgánica. Pendientes pronunciadas. Poca intervención antrópica.
Continente: SA
Pais: Colombia
Estado/Provincia: Amazonas
Municipio: Puerto Santander
Localidad: Resguardo indígena Nonuya de Villazul.
Elevación minima en metros: 250
Elevación maxima en metros: 400
Latitud: -0.654
Longitud original: -72.072
datum geodésico: WGS 84
Latitud decimal: -0.654
Longitud decimal: -72.072
Identificado por: Felipe Moreno & C. Carvajal
Fecha de identificación: 01/09/2019.
Nombre cientifico: Leonia cymosa Mart.
Reino: Plantae
Filo: Magnoliophyta
Clase: Equisetopsida
Orden: Malpighiales
Familia nueva: Violaceae
Género nuevo: Leonia
especie nueva: cymosa
Autoría del nombre científico: Mart.
: Violaceae
genero herbario: Leonia
especie herbario: cymosa
Especie de herbario para TNRS: Leonia cymosa
Especie corregida herbario y desde TNRS: Leonia cymosa
Familia corregida desde TNRS: Violaceae
: 2509</p
Rinorea racemosa (Mart.) Kuntze from Colombia collected by F. Moreno y C. Carvajal #1002
File Name: TOLI-22343-PER-01-L1
CÓDIGO FOTO: TOLI-22343-PER-01-L1
Fotografía: SI
Nº TOLI: TOLI-22343
PARCELA: PER-01
CÓDIGO: L1
Nº COLECTA: 1002
NUEVOS COLECTORES: Esteban Álvarez Dávila
COLECTORES: F. Moreno y C. Carvajal
Nº MUESTRAS MONTADAS: 1
Homologación: No homologado
Nueva fecha del evento : 20/12/2018.
Fecha del evento: 01/09/2012.
Proyecto : Recursos Botánicos Disponibles en Línea (BRAVO) para la flora Colombiana
Hábitat: Bosque húmedo tropical (bh-T)
Comentario del evento: Bosque de tierra firme, dosel abierto, de 25-30 m, emergentes de 35 m, estrato medio de 15 m, sotobosque denso con alta regeneración natural, presencia de palmas como Lepidocaryum tenue, Oenocarpus bataua, Geonoma sp., capa de hojarazca de 15 cm, abundante materia orgánica. Pendientes pronunciadas. Poca intervención antrópica.
Continente: SA
Pais: Colombia
Estado/Provincia: Amazonas
Municipio: Puerto Santander
Localidad: Resguardo indígena Nonuya de Villazul.
Elevación minima en metros: 250
Elevación maxima en metros: 400
Latitud: -0.654
Longitud original: -72.072
datum geodésico: WGS 84
Latitud decimal: -0.654
Longitud decimal: -72.072
Identificado por: Felipe Moreno & C. Carvajal
Fecha de identificación: 01/09/2019.
Familia antigua: Violaceae
Especie antigua: Rinorea racemosa (Mart.) Kuntze
Nombre cientifico: Rinorea racemosa (Mart.) Kuntze
Reino: Plantae
Filo: Magnoliophyta
Clase: Equisetopsida
Orden: Malpighiales
Familia nueva: Violaceae
Género nuevo: Rinorea
especie nueva: racemosa
Autoría del nombre científico: (Mart.) Kuntze
: Violaceae
genero herbario: Rinorea
especie herbario: racemosa
Especie de herbario para TNRS: Rinorea racemosa
Especie corregida herbario y desde TNRS: Rinorea racemosa
Familia corregida desde TNRS: Violaceae
: 1482</p
Testimonio del escritor César Fernández Moreno leyendo sus poemas
El escritor César Fernández Moreno lee fragmentos de su libro Argentino hasta la muerte de 1963.
César Fernández Moreno (1919- 1985) escritor argentino, hijo del poeta Baldomero Fernández Moreno.Colección: CulturaRadio Universidad Nacional de La Plat
- …
