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www.carecareers.com.au's newest TV ad is about Talia, a young girl with cerebral palsy. With the support of a team of allied health professionals Talia has achieved a number of her goals, including going to high school. View the ad on www.youtube.com/carecareers
Pathologists (L-R) Kristen Chadwick (Central Oregon Service Center); Don Goheen (Southwest Oregon SC); Greg Filip (Regional Office); Ellen Goheen (Southwest Oregon SC).
Photo by: Unknown
Date: November 7, 2007
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
In-Depth: Autopsy is a videoconference program for Grades 10 and up offered by COSI, Columbus, Ohio's Center of Science and Industry. Students follow a videotape of an actual autopsy accompanied by live narration by retired forensic pathologist Dr. Larry Tate. Participants must work through the "case" and solve for cause of death.
The autopsy is shown from the Y-incision to the removal of the brain and is 90-minutes long. Teens, adults, and community groups are welcome. Individual tickets are available for non-school audiences and individuals to watch from COSI's Galaxy Theater.
Teachers will be sent a kit of materials prior to the program. In the kit, teachers will find materials to conduct both pre- and post-visit activities along with booklets for students to use during the program.
For more information, visit www.cosi.org.
Monday was miserable, weatherwise, but Tuesday cleared off beautifully and returned Boston to its rightful status as one of the most walkable cities in the US
Dr. William Hadlow (1921-2015) was recruited to work at the National Institutes of Health Rocky Mountain Laboratory in 1952. He started as its veterinary pathologist and remained at RML in Hamilton, Montana, in that capacity until retiring on May 30, 1987. He started a scrapie disease research program unlike any other, looking at the distribution of the disease, the organs it affected and sites where the disease replicated. His was the first group at NIH to study these so-called “slow virus” infections. Hadlow made significant contributions to the field that is now referred to as prion diseases. In addition to making seminal comparisons between scrapie and the human disease kuru, he played a crucial role in identifying chronic wasting disease and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease) as prion diseases. In the 1970s, Hadlow assisted future Nobel Prize-winner Dr. Stanley Prusiner with characterizing the enigmatic prion protein at RML.
‘PETER’ – A Study for a Portrait of a Serial Killer, is a feature length drama containing genuine archive that takes the audience on a unique journey into the mind of Peter Sutcliffe ‘The Yorkshire Ripper’. The 90min film starts from his formative years in Yorkshire, the largest police manhunt in history, to his on-going psychological treatment in Broadmoor Hospital. ‘PETER’ avoids the established genre clichés, of blood and gore and instead asks us to think about issues of retribution, punishment, compassion and guilt.
At the luncheon of October 31 Billy Hooper (Right) gave a talk " Honoring Veterans on Veterans Day". Billy is a veterinary pathologist who was a faculty member and administrator in the College of Veterinary Medicine. His interest in "Honoring Veterans" stems largely from his experience in the U.S. Marine Corps. During the Korean War he spent 14 months in 1950-51 as the senior non-commissioned officer in managing the storage and recovery of personal effects of marines in Korea. In that capacity he was responsible for communication with the mothers and fathers of deceased marines as they retrieved the personal effects of their deceased son.
At the luncheon of October 31 Billy Hooper (Right) gave a talk " Honoring Veterans on Veterans Day". Billy is a veterinary pathologist who was a faculty member and administrator in the College of Veterinary Medicine. His interest in "Honoring Veterans" stems largely from his experience in the U.S. Marine Corps. During the Korean War he spent 14 months in 1950-51 as the senior non-commissioned officer in managing the storage and recovery of personal effects of marines in Korea. In that capacity he was responsible for communication with the mothers and fathers of deceased marines as they retrieved the personal effects of their deceased son.
After Billy Hooper's presentation the Veterans were invited for a photo.
From left to right: Dick Bergdahl, Cecily Ward, Mary Quinn, Tom Schott, Jim Turley, Tom Ruzicka, Jim Moore, Billy Hooper.
Speech Therapy Pathologist helps adults and children. They provide the treatment related to swallowing, communication and related disorders.
Speech-language pathologists work with patients who have problems with speech and language, including related cognitive or social communication problems.
Hearing Loss is the problem that occurs due to high volume or aging. Sometimes the problem is treated by the medicine or surgery. In many of the situations of Hearing Loss, Hearing Aid is the best solution. Many of the Hearing Aids in India provide the cheap Hearing Aids.Get more information visit this site(Hearingsol.com).
Yeshi Wamishe (left), extension rice plant pathologist with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, was awarded the Rice Industry Award at the 2022 Rice Outlook Conference, held in Austin, Texas. Karen Moldenhauer, professor emeritus and rice breeder with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, was awarded the Rice Lifetime Achievement Award. (U of A System Division of Ag photo by John Carlin)
In-Depth: Autopsy is a videoconference program for Grades 10 and up offered by COSI, Columbus, Ohio's Center of Science and Industry. Students follow a videotape of an actual autopsy accompanied by live narration by retired forensic pathologist Dr. Larry Tate. Participants must work through the "case" and solve for cause of death.
The autopsy is shown from the Y-incision to the removal of the brain and is 90-minutes long. Teens, adults, and community groups are welcome. Individual tickets are available for non-school audiences and individuals to watch from COSI's Galaxy Theater.
Teachers will be sent a kit of materials prior to the program. In the kit, teachers will find materials to conduct both pre- and post-visit activities along with booklets for students to use during the program.
For more information, visit www.cosi.org.
Who is this lady? She was found in the river Seine in Paris in the 1880's and it was never found out who she was or how she lost her life, but the morgue pathologist thought her beauty had to be preserved so made this wax death mask, from 1960 her lips started to become the most kissed lips in the world.
Speech therapy for adults is not as widely known as the one for kids, especially because the latter can nip several speech disorders in the bud right in the childhood.
For more info visit qenrichment.com/adult-services/
L-R: Ken Snell (R6 FHP Director), Brian Tandy (Silviculturist, Sisters Ranger District), and forest pathologist Greg Filip (pink hardhat) with a Shigometer. Suttle Lake, Deschutes National Forest, Oregon.
Additional information from Kristen: "I think this photo was taken at Suttle Lake. On the trees that were pruned for Douglas-fir dwarf mistletoe we did Shigometer readings on the trees for the first 5 years post-pruning."
Photo by: Unknown
Date: c.2000
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
2013 Forest Health Protection tech meeting. Portland, Oregon.
Before ...
Photo by: Richard Sniezko. USFS, Dorena Genetic Resource Center. Cottage Grove, Oregon.
Date: November 14, 2013
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Joyce Loper was inducted into the Agricultural Research Service Hall of Fame in Washington, D.C., in September. She is a plant pathologist and associate dean at the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences. Photo by Carl Baker.
Walter Reed Army Medical Center plastic surgeon Lt. Col. Raymond Harshbarger and team deployed to the Dominican Republic for two-week humanitarian mission. (Walter Reed photo by Tara Dean, Speech Pathologist)
In-Depth: Autopsy is a videoconference program for Grades 10 and up offered by COSI, Columbus, Ohio's Center of Science and Industry. Students follow a videotape of an actual autopsy accompanied by live narration by retired forensic pathologist Dr. Larry Tate. Participants must work through the "case" and solve for cause of death.
The autopsy is shown from the Y-incision to the removal of the brain and is 90-minutes long. Teens, adults, and community groups are welcome. Individual tickets are available for non-school audiences and individuals to watch from COSI's Galaxy Theater.
Teachers will be sent a kit of materials prior to the program. In the kit, teachers will find materials to conduct both pre- and post-visit activities along with booklets for students to use during the program.
For more information, visit www.cosi.org.
Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center staff L-R: Kristen Chadwick (Forest Pathologist), Beth Willhite (Forest Entomologist) and Holly Kearns (Forest Pathologist). Fishermans Bend BLM Recreation site, near Mill City, Oregon.
Photo by: Unknown
Date: May 7, 2014
Photo credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Westside Forest Insect and Disease Service Center.
Source: Kristen Chadwick collection; Sandy, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth
Sridhar Bhavani, CIMMYT wheat pathologist breeder
and coordinator of the Durable
Rust Resistance in Wheat project in eastern Africa, is
a happy wheat breeder. On
his left is a wheat variety
highly resistant to Ug99, a
stem rust threatening wheat production throughout the
world. The variety completely
resisted infestation by the
variety on his right, which was
deliberately inoculated with
the fungal pathogen at the Kenya
Agricultural Research Institute,
Njoro, Nakuru County, Kenya.
W. Ojanji/CIMMYT
Greg Filip. Hemlock Fomes annosus study.
Photo by: Unknown
Date: c.1977
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.
Collection: Region 6, Forest Health Protection slide collection; Regional Office, Portland, Oregon.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth