36 posts
Ralph Fiennes Sunshine
ESBAT • oil on panel • 2019 for the RITUAL exhibition at Haven Gallery in New York
“ I know you’ll come carry me out to the Palace of Winds. That’s what I’ve wanted: to walk in such a place with you. With friends, on an earth without maps. ”
“ I know you’ll come carry me out to the Palace of Winds. That’s what I’ve wanted: to walk in such a place with you. With friends, on an earth without maps. ”
“Every night I cut out my heart. But in the morning it was full again.”
[x] Pics edited.
The English Patient — Almàsy + landscapes
How can you ever smile as if your life hadn’t capsized?
Ralph Fiennes, the director and star of The Invisible Woman, on Hollywood, tabloid gossip, and Charles Dickens’s complicated romantic life
The White Countess
Ralph Fiennes
Ralph Fiennes in Maid in Manhattan
Ralph Fiennes
Ralph Fiennes
Ralph Fiennes
Ralph Fiennes in “The Dig”
Azellia White (1913-2019) was one of the first African-American women to obtain a pilot’s license in the US. She is seen as a trailblazer for women and African Americans alike in the field of aviation.
She obtained her license in 1946, and co-founded the Sky Ranch Flying Service, an airport and flight school open to African Americans in the Houston area.
Left: JoAnn Trejo, PhD, is professor in the Department of Pharmacology at UC San Diego School of Medicine and assistant vice chancellor for UC San Diego Health Sciences Faculty Affairs. Right: Elizabeth Winzeler, PhD, is professor in the Division of Host Microbe Systems and Therapeutics in the Department of Pediatrics at UC San Diego School of Medicine and adjunct professor in the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at UC San Diego.
Leaders in cell biology and anti-malarial drug development respectively, JoAnn Trejo and Elizabeth Winzeler were recognized by their peers with one of the highest honors in health and medicine.
Trejo is known for discovering how cellular responses are regulated by molecules known as G protein-coupled receptors, particularly in the context of vascular inflammation and cancer. Her findings have advanced the fundamental knowledge of cell biology and helped identify new targets for drug development. Trejo’s research has been continuously funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including a recent NIH R35 Outstanding Investigator Award.
Winzeler is known for her early contribution to the field of functional genomics, where she worked primarily in the model yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Concerned about global health disparities and the alarming rise in the number of worldwide malaria cases in the early 2000s, she shifted her research focus to malaria, beginning with functional genomics and then moving to drug discovery.
Hazen and Brown discovered nystatin, an early antifungal medication.
The discovery of nystatin by Elizabeth Lee Hazen (1885–1975) and Rachel Fuller Brown (1898–1980) at the Division of Laboratories and Research of the New York State Department of Health ("the Division") was inspired by the discovery and development of penicillin (see Alexander Fleming and Howard Florey and Ernst Chain) and by the success of biochemist and microbiologist Selman Waksman in screening soil samples for antibacterial agents. Nystatin, which is now known by a number of brand names, including Mycostatin, has been used for years as an effective treatment for fungal infections of the skin, mouth, vagina, and intestinal tract.
Check out the Historical Biographies on our website.
We have a few nursing materials in our collections such as Chemistry for Nurses (1914), pictured above, and Applied Chemistry for Nurses (1926).
"“My colleagues and I decided to do this study since we were personally impacted by the pandemic and had been hearing anecdotal accounts of archaeologists who had been negatively impacted. We were curious just how widespread career impacts were and if they were concentrated among certain groups of the archaeological community,” Hoggarth said."
In the 100 years Margaret Murray was on this Earth she became a driving force for women in anthropology and in academia, earning the titles of archaeologst, Egyptologist, author, lecturer, Folkorist, and feminist.
Murray was born to wealthy English parents in Calcutta, India in 1863. She spent her early years living in Britain and Germany before settling back in India as a nurse until 1887 when she moved to England and became a social worker.
She began attending the University College London (UCL) at the age of 31 in 1894 (proving that there is no set age to being your academic career) and by 1898 she was working as a junior lecturer of linguistics in the Egyptology department.
In 1902 she joined British Egyptologist Sir William Flinders Petrie for 2 field seasons in Egypt. During the first field season she helped to excavate a temple to Osiris, the Osireion, built during the New kingdom (roughly 16th to 11th century BCE) under the Pharaoh Seti I (pictured below).
After returning to London, she became a big supporter of the first wave feminist movement and joined the Women’s Social and Political Union. Murray initiated many campaigns to change the culture for women in academia and make it more accessible. At her insistence for inclusivity, the UCL common room was opened to women and later a redesigned room was constructed and named the Margaret Murray Room.
During World War I, she began studying and publishing articles and books on the history of witchcraft in Europe and Folklorism. Eventually, in 1927 she was awarded an honorary doctorate for her work in Egyptology. Throughout her career she wrote several books and many articles on Egyptology, Folklorism and also authored her own autobiography titled “My First Hundred Years” published in the year of her death 1963.
It is challenging for modern day academics to truly comprehend the different era and culture for a woman in anthropology during the late 19th to mid-20th centuries. Although, I am sure many of us agree that the academic climate of today oftentimes has much more progress to make. In any case, Margaret Murray was one of the first women to ‘make it’ within this scientific field dominated by a white men, and her contributions to academia were significant, well known, and respected.
However, this does not mean she was perfect. Much of her academic work and theory, especially in the field of Folklorism, is often criticized. Anthropology has changed quite a bit since Murray first entered the field over 158 years ago, and our views and methods of understanding are extremely different today.
What will not change is Murray’s solidified importance as an academic mind and as a woman in archaeology. She paved the way for other female scholars, and she fought for their advancement and their voices along the way.
Refs:
Drower, Margaret S. (2004). “Margaret Alice Murray”. In Getzel M. Cohen; Martha Joukowsky (eds.). Breaking Ground: Pioneering Women Archaeologists. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. pp. 109–141
Margaret Murray. (n.d.). Retrieved March 16, 2021, from https://www.fembio.org/english/biography.php/woman/biography/margaret-murray/
Margaret Murray. 25 Feb. 2021, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Murray.
“Margaret Murray”. Stories From The Museum Floor, 2021, https://storiesfromthemuseumfloor.wordpress.com/2018/03/02/margaret-murray/.
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About the podcast: The I Dig It Podcast was created by Alyssa and Michaela in March of 2020. Our goal for this podcast was to provide archaeology enthusiasts with insight into the student perspective of navigating the world of academia and the job market for archaeology and anthropology. Guests on the podcast include people from all different parts of their career, including highschool, undergrad, grad school, post doc, and early career!
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Here's a really beautiful publisher's binding on a 1902 edition of Fairyland of Science. The end paper with a Pegasus and the title page were definitely worth sharing too. This book was written by Arabella Buckley for a young audience to learn about science through imagination and story telling.
The fairyland of science, 1902. by Arabella B. Buckley.
Women from three different countries training to become doctors at Women's Medical College of Philadelphia in 1885. From left to right: Dr. Anandibai Joshi (from India), Dr. Kei Okami (from Japan) and Dr. Sabat Islambouli (from Syria). All were among the first women to practice Western medicine in their respective countries.
Ralph Fiennes in Hail, Caesar! (2016)
HAPPY 52nd BIRTHDAY RALPH FIENNES! (12/22/1962 - 12/22/2014)
Today, Ralph Fiennes is 52 years-old. For 23 years now, he has been entertaining us with some of the best movies that we know. Since its very beginning, his career has been a reflection of his exceptional talents and endless abilities, through characters that were complicated, touching, tormented, desperate, romantic, funny, brave or even mad. Today, Ralph still shows that he can take on any part, as long as he believes in it. For all those years he has remained true to himself, making movies not for the pleasure of fame but for the love of acting. Ralph is different from the other stars in the wide world of show business; different in the sense that he is a very special one who’s chosen his own path and who is, above anything, a wonderful human being. His professional choices, always atypical, have made him this incredible actor who eventually turned his movie career into a beautiful mix of shades and lights, of colors and nuances. And that is, after all, the reason why he is such a unique and truly gifted person.
All this month, the Science Library is highlighting the lives, research and medical breakthroughs of Oberlin College affiliated women, with displays at the library’s entrance, social media posts, and photographs of notable women added to the portrait collection on the north wall. That small collection was male-dominated for decades - it was high time to represent the achievements of scientists and medical professionals who identify as female.
The recent additions to the portrait wall are June E. Osborn ‘57 (photo above), Joanne Chory ‘77 and Matilda Arabella Evans, who attended Oberlin in the late 1880s, leaving in 1891.
Thanks to Science Library Associate Jennifer Schreiner for creating the elements for the display on the bulletin board. We invite you to take a look! The display is summarized on the ObieSciLib Instragram post on March 8.
See also ObieSciLib on Tumblr for a look at the current Oberlin College women of science. Women in all of the natural science departments regularly publish research articles, numbering over 40 articles in the past four years alone. Books also have been published recently; see these authors in OBIS: Marta Laskowski, Jillian Scudder, and Lynne Bianchi. The tradition of scientific achievement and contributing to scientific knowledge continues.