50,154 research outputs found

    Y. Murphy & R. F. Murphy, Women of the Forest

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    Lévi-Strauss Monique. Y. Murphy & R. F. Murphy, Women of the Forest. In: L'Homme, 1976, tome 16 n°1. pp. 166-167

    A Transformative Moment

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    Enns, F. [Promotor]Parushev, P.R. [Promotor]Murphy, N. [Copromotor

    Getting Started as a Medical Teacher in Times of Change

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    Medical school teaching is a skill that is very often learned on the job. The faculty comprised of researchers and clinicians are expert in many biomedical disciplines, but familiarity with learning theories and pedagogy are usually not included in their knowledge and skill sets. The pressure to see patients and acquire extramural funding leaves little time for faculty to learn how to teach. When coupled with the natural attrition of senior faculty it is necessary to start junior faculty on the correct path to being effective medical educators who are capable of lecturing and facilitating. Institutions cannot afford to have medical educators learn through trial and error. The standards set by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) are also creating an urgency to produce competent teachers as quickly as possible. Novice teachers need to be able to use these standards to align their teaching with goals, objectives and the appropriate pedagogy. This article is designed to be a self-directed guide describing some essentials that a newly hired faculty member can quickly use to get started. An institutional faculty development program can then serve to build upon and enrich the experience for the new faculty member.This is the authors' accepted manuscript of the article. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1007/s40670-014-0098-y.Peer reviewe

    Murphy, Florence N. (Birth, 1897-06-01)

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    Address: Leland Avenue3372/Pg.243/1897/F W/Cinti, Ohio/Cinti, Ohio/Dr. F. S.Original record filed in drawer labeled 'MULLER-MURPHY, F'

    Mode-II fracture behaviour of aerospace-grade carbon fibre/epoxy composites interleaved with thermoplastic veils

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    Thermoplastic veils based on Polyethylene-terephthalate (PET), Polyphenylene-sulfide (PPS) and Polyamide-12 (PA) fibres (∼10μm in diameter) were used to interlay unidirectional (UD), non-crimp fabric (NCF) and 5-Harness satin weave (5H) carbon fibre laminates. The PET and PPS veils remained in a fibrous form and the PA veils melted during the laminate curing process. The results of an end-loaded split test demonstrated significant improvements in the mode-II fracture performance in all cases. In general, interlaying thermoplastic veils was most efficient for toughening the UD laminates, with reduced improvements observed for the 5H and NCF laminates, respectively. The main toughening mechanism of the intact PET and PPS veils was thermoplastic fibre bridging. The melted PA veils mainly improved the fracture toughness of the epoxy at the mid-plane. The different toughening mechanisms of the veils, combined with different fracture mechanisms between the UD, NCF and 5H laminates, resulted in significantly different toughening levels

    Murphy (Birth, 1890-02-03)

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    Address: 140 Hopkins1126/Pg. 27/1890/W M/U S/U S/Dr. C. N. & N. W. AbbottOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MULLER-MURPHY, F'

    Sous-facteurs de L(F∞) d'indice 4cos2π/n,n≥3

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    Let Q be a factor of type II1, λ a number in the Jones discrete series {4cosπ/m:m≥3}, and {ei} the Jones projections associated with λ. Denote by A2n and A1n the finite-dimensional von Neumann algebras generated, respectively, by {1,e2,⋯,en} and {1,e1,⋯,en}, with the corresponding traces. The author shows that, for n sufficiently large, the index of the inclusion An=(Q⊗A2n)∗A2nA1n⊂(Q⊗A2n+1)∗A2n+1A1n+1=An+1 is equal to λ (here ∗ denotes the reduced, amalgamated free product of the algebras in question). Using the random matrix model of Voiculescu, he proves that if Q is the von Neumann algebra L(F∞) of the free group with infinitely many generators, then An is isomorphic to L(F∞). The two facts together imply the existence, for any λ in the Jones discrete series, of an irreducible subfactor of L(F∞) of index λ. This constitutes the first example of a nonhyperfinite, non-Γ II1 factor such that its Jones invariant is fully computable (the existence of nonirreducible subfactors of L(F∞) for any index ≥4 is a simple consequence of known results)

    Murphy, Cath. (Death, 1876-10-07)

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    Address: 118 E. 5th St.Age at death: 72 yrsPg 195/1876/108/F W M/Ireland/Dr. N. Foster/Sullivan/St. Joseph'sOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MULLER-MURPHY, F'

    Murphy, Agnes (Death, 1899-05-15)

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    Address: 1041 Freeman Ave.Age at death: 2 yrs.Pg 59/1899/308/F W S/City/Dr. N. W. Abbott/E.Busse/St.Joseph's Cem.Original record filed in drawer labeled 'MULLER-MURPHY, F'

    Synthesis and spectroscopic characterization of a series of substituted cyclopentadienyl Group 4 fluorides; crystal structure of the acetylacetonato complex [(acac) 2 (??-C 5 Me 5 )Zr(??-F)SnMe 3 Cl]

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    A series of mono- and di-substituted cyclopentadienyl Group 4 fluorides [Ti{eta-C(5)H(3)R(R')-1,3}F-n(m)], (n = m = 2 and n = 1, m = 3; R = H or SiMe(3); R' = H, Me or SiMe(3)), [Ti(eta-C(5)Me(5))(2)F-2] and [Zr(eta-C5H5)(2)F-2] have been-prepared via the reaction of the corresponding chlorides with SnMe(3)F. The compounds have been characterized by means of H-1 and F-19 NMR, IR and mass spectroscopy and chemical analyses. The solvent dependence of the reactions using SnMe,F is discussed. To demonstrate the wide applicability of this fluorinating system the acetylacetonatofluoro complex [(acac)(2)(eta-C(5)Me(5))Zr(eta-F)SnMe(3)Cl] has been prepared and its crystal structure determined
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