Podcast appearances and mentions of anne moore

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Best podcasts about anne moore

Latest podcast episodes about anne moore

Monday Moms
Obituary - Anne Moore Stephenson

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 0:57


Anne Moore Stephenson, of Henrico, peacefully passed away at home on May 6, 2024, after a long illness. Anne was born in Pasadena, California to Thomas L. Moore, Jr. and Elisabeth R. Moore, both of whom predeceased her. She was also preceded in death by her husband, H. Wayland Stephenson; and her brother, Thomas L. Moore III. She is survived by her brother, Fielding B. Moore; and many cousins. Anne worked in retail as a young woman, opening the first Talbot's store in Richmond. She later pursued a career in real estate, becoming a Vice President at Long & Foster....Article LinkSupport the Show.

O.s.o.m.a (#OurSideOnlyMarketingAgencyLLC)
baddies South ( soundtrack) Anne Moore ( Atl)Houston

O.s.o.m.a (#OurSideOnlyMarketingAgencyLLC)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2023 2:02


Futureproof with Jonathan McCrea

On this episode of Futureproof: Dr Ruth Freeman, Science Foundation Ireland & Eoin Murphy, biochemist and science communicator, join Jonathan McCrea for Newsround. And Dr. Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer and Principal Investigator in Vaccines at University College Cork, explains her work in developing vaccine patches.

Scariff Bay Radio Podcasts
Saturday Chronicle 1st April 2023 Hosted by  Patricia Anne Moore with Tom Hanley.

Scariff Bay Radio Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 21:54


 Broadcast live from Nualas bar as part of Tuamgraney Harp Festival.   -00.00 Introduction -03.19 News  -16.19 East Clare Garda focus with Gda Declan Condon Tulaa Garda station. Saturday Chronicle is kindly sponsored by James M Nash and Co and Derg Kitchen Design   http://dergkitchendesign.ie Originally broadcast on Saturday 1st April 2023 

Wilson County News
RSVP for Livingway's 'Open Heavens 2023? conference

Wilson County News

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2023 1:08


Bill and Anne Moore of Livingway Family Church invite the community to its inaugural conference at the La Vernia campus, “Open Heavens 2023.” The conference will be an enriching two-day event, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 3-4, at 10688 U.S. 87 W. in La Vernia. Doors will open at 6 p.m. on Friday with special guest Pastor Matt Hagee of Cornerstone Church in San Antonio leading a 7 p.m. service. On Saturday, arrive at 8:30 a.m. for breakfast, followed by worship, and sessions with guest speakers Brandon Fender and Jarrell Flowers. Pastor Bill will also lead a session, and will conclude...Article Link

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Covid booster to be offered to those aged 18-49

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 5:28


Dr Anne Moore, Immunologist at UCC, discusses the latest Covid vaccine programme

RTÉ - Drivetime
Vaccines Specially Adapted to Recent Variants to be used in the Covid Boosters Programme

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 4:54


Dr. Anne Moore, Vaccine specialist and Senior Lecturer at the UCC School of Biochemistry

WorldWide Entertainment TV
Baddies South Ep. 3 Brooklyn Tea Talk Reaction

WorldWide Entertainment TV

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 11:04


Baddies South episode 3 continued tracking the trials and tribulations of the south cast of Natalie Nunn's Baddies series. Another fight broke out on the episode as the women try to get along on a road trip. Anne Moore gets into it with "Bad Girls Club" alumni Persuasion and Bri, then later comes after Rollie Pollie with disastrous results on her end. Persuasion reveals she has cancer, but Chrisean Rock is not buying her story.VISIT WWETVN.COMSupport the show

TALKING 2LOUD
EP 33 Cast of Zeus Network's BADDIES SOUTH

TALKING 2LOUD

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 14:06


Ashley2LOUD works the red carpet of the season premiere and interviews the cast of Zeus Network's Baddies South reality show. Guests include Shane Noman, Janelle (season 1), Rolli Pollie, Anne Moore, Persuasion, Bri, Blue Face & Chrisean Rock, & Natalie Nunn.

The Murder Diaries
MURDERED: Jennifer Anne Moore

The Murder Diaries

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 34:10


Today's case is one that hits pretty close to home for me. It's a case that happened in the church of a pastor that I know. This pastor happens to be the Uncle of my best friend of 29 years. I first told this case for The Murder Diaries when we were a baby podcast. My best friend joined and so did her cousin, David, the son the pastor. We'll be including the phone call we had with him exploring the impact of this case on the community and his family. We've grown so much since I first told it and this case is so important me that I want to do better by it. I want to tell it again. This is the case of Jennifer Anne Moore.  Resources:  My Favorite Murder -  episode 17th https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/04/21/Sunday-school-teacher-admits-killing-teen/4407609134400/ https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/04/26/Police-reveal-details-of-confession-in-teens-slaying/6385609566400/ https://www.newspapers.com/clip/20474776/petaluma-argus-courier/ https://www.newspapers.com/image/?clipping_id=20474517&fcfToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJmcmVlLXZpZXctaWQiOjI5ODQ2MzEzMCwiaWF0IjoxNjUxNDI2MTQwLCJleHAiOjE2NTE1MTI1NDB9._bZBY6vYSdNvMxnkzHTTvOH-8kkv5GL4vuRGE1bsmaE https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-04-20-mn-2291-story.html https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/31368823/jennifer-anne-moore https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-04-18-mn-2039-story.html https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/sfgate/name/sylvia-moore-obituary?id=9908573 https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1989-09-15-mn-208-story.html Music Used: Walking with the Dead by Maia Wynne Link: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Maiah_Wynne/Live_at_KBOO_for_A_Popcalypse_11012017 License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Fretless by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3777-fretless License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license

RTÉ - News at One Podcast
Approval sought to purchase anti-viral drugs

RTÉ - News at One Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 5:55


We hear from Dr Anne Moore, senior lecturer in the school of bio-chemistry at University College Cork.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Two years on from emergence of Covid, where are we now?

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 6:52


Dr Anne Moore, senior lecturer in the school of bio-chemistry at University College Cork, discusses the latest Covid-19 virus developments - including vaccines for children, booster shots and the growing impact of the Omicron variant.

RTÉ - Drivetime
NIAC Recommends Vaccines for 5–11-Year-Olds

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 9:36


Priscilla Lynch, Clinical Editor of the Medical Independent & Dr. Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in the School of Biochemistry UCC.

RTÉ - Drivetime
EMA Vaccine Decision

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 15:53


Dr. Anne Moore, Vaccine specialist and Senior Lecturer at the UCC School of Biochemistry

Brendan O'Connor
Covid 19 Update

Brendan O'Connor

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2021 18:04


Head of the ESRI's Behavioural Research Unit Dr. Pete Lunn spoke about personal responsibility and the latest ESRI Social Activity Measure. Also, Dr Anne Moore, Vaccine Specialist at UCC's school of Biochemistry talked about the new antiviral drug for Covid.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
WHO recommends use of first ever malaria vaccine

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2021 5:47


Dr Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry at UCC, discusses the WHO's decision to recommend a malaria vaccine for the first time.

Wilson County News
Livingway family legacy continues with Pastor Ryan Moore

Wilson County News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 1:08


Livingway Family Church in La Vernia welcomes Ryan Moore as its new campus pastor, continuing the 40-year legacy established by his grandparents, Billy and Ruby Moore, alongside his wife, Jacquelyn, and their three children. Ryan served as the worship, youth, and associate pastor of Livingway Family Church in Brownsville — founded by Ryan's parents, Bill and Anne Moore — for more than 15 years. He is passionate about leading worship and has been songwriting for more than 20 years. Pastor Ryan brings a fresh vision for the church and a desire to reach out to meet the needs of the...Article Link

RTÉ - Drivetime
Vaccinating 12 to 15-year-olds

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2021 18:06


Dr. Anne Moore, expert in vaccine development, at UCC and Dr. Simon Mills. barrister & author of Clinical Practice and the Law

RTÉ - News at One Podcast
AZ and J&J vaccines should be considered for younger people - Taoiseach

RTÉ - News at One Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 7:51


Dr Anne Moore, Vaccine immunology expert at Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology at UCC, discusses the Delta variant and how effective vaccines are against it.

RTÉ - Drivetime
Should vaccines be mixed?

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 11:09


Dr. Anne Moore, Vaccine specialist and Senior Lecturer at the UCC School of Biochemistry, on whether vaccines should be mixed.

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology
Conversations with the Pioneers of Oncology: Dr Anne Moore

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 30:05


Dr. Hayes interviews Dr. Anne Moore on pioneering the field of survivorship.   TRANSCRIPT SPEAKER: The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. [MUSIC PLAYING] DANIEL F. HAYES: Welcome to JCO's Cancer Stories-- The Art of Oncology, brought to you by the ASCO Podcast Network, a collection of nine programs covering a range of educational and scientific content and offering enriching insight into the world of cancer care. You can find all of the shows, including this one, at podcast.asco.org. [MUSIC PLAYING]   Today, my guest in this podcast is Dr. Anne Moore. Dr. Moore has been instrumental in the field of breast cancer, especially related to her clinical and educational contributions to our field. Dr. Moore was raised and spent much of her formative years in Peru. She received her undergraduate degree at Smith and her medical degree at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. She completed a residency in internal medicine, as well as her hematology and medical oncology fellowship at Cornell, where I believe she's basically spent the rest of her professional life now as a professor of clinical medicine, and a director of the Iris Cantor Weill Cornell Breast Cancer Survivorship Program at the Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University. Dr. Moore, welcome to our program. ANNE MOORE: Thank you, Dan. DANIEL F. HAYES: I hope I got all that right. I think I did. Very happy to have you. And I consider you a real pioneer in that regard, being a woman physician in the decade and decades when that wasn't very common, and a woman oncologist, when it was almost unheard of, frankly. So I know you've probably got some great stories about your med school class, where I think you were 1 of 10 women in your class or something like that, and in your training. Can you fill us in on what it took for you to become a physician? ANNE MOORE: Well, I must say, I went to all women's college. I went to Smith College. So coming into a class where 10% of the class the women was a big change for me, but a very exciting one. The women, we respected each other. We were respected by our male colleagues. We were well-treated. We were included at Columbia. The faculty were always gracious. We didn't have a sense of being excluded. So it was very-- it was a fabulous place to be and very exciting. DANIEL F. HAYES: Did you feel encouraged to pursue your ambitions? Or were there efforts to pigeonhole you into places that were better for women that you might not have wanted to? For example, I interviewed-- I did interview Clara Bloomfield before she passed away. And she made it clear that the things she wanted to do weren't considered ladylike where she trained, but she did it anyway. Did you run into that? ANNE MOORE: No, we didn't. I remember the head of orthopedics speaking to me about an orthopedic fellowship. Some of my classmates did become pediatricians, which of course, was a typical field for women. But I was interested in hematology/oncology even in medical school. And there was never a sense that that was not an appropriate place for me. DANIEL F. HAYES: Well, that's good to hear. I also know in a chat you and I have before this that you were telling me, by the way, I Googled you. And I found your original New York Times wedding announcement. I won't betray the date, but you had a very nice picture. You looked very young. You told me an interesting story about how much time you got off for your honeymoon. ANNE MOORE: That's right. We got married over a Labor Day weekend so we could get an extra day. And I had to go to my chief resident, whom I called Dr. Steinberg, and request not just a two day weekend, but a three day weekend. There was a lot of thought, but my fellow interns jumped in and covered for me for that great event. DANIEL F. HAYES: Those are different times, that's for sure. So I want to talk a little bit about your career. I know in the early 1990s, you began a multidisciplinary breast clinic at Cornell, which at the time, even in the country, was pretty unusual. I'm going to throw out my mentor, Craig Henderson, had started one in the early 1980s in Boston. But now it seems like everybody has a multidisciplinary clinic for every disease in oncology. What made you think that was a good idea then? ANNE MOORE: Well, it was a very practical idea, but we saw a patient for a new diagnosis of cancer. And at that time, I was already becoming very interested in breast cancer. And the patient would come with her slides, with her mammograms. And I would run to surgical pathology, look at the slides, run over to the radiologist, interrupt them to look at the mammograms, run back downstairs to see the patient. And each specialist that I saw was teaching me so much while I was there, just looking over the microscope or looking at the screens. There's too much running around, number one. We all need to learn from each other. And it would certainly benefit the patients. And the decisions were becoming, at that time, a little more complex. We were beginning to think about adjuvant chemotherapy, adjuvant radiation therapy for the new class of patients that had breast conservation. So it was clear that we had to get together. We realized that we had to speak to each other and it would be much easier if we were all in one room. So we started, in 1991, picking up illustrative cases. And we didn't discuss every case by any means. And we would talk to the radiation therapists, the pathologists, the radiologists ahead of time. They would prepare their sections, and we would all meet. The joy that we had of doing this and the excitement in those first few meetings, it's the first time we had ever had a meeting like that. And everybody was very excited to be there. And we met solidly up until today with those multidisciplinary meetings. They have become much more common. And now the group tries to present every case in some form of a multidisciplinary format. But those early tumor boards were enormously important and exciting for us. DANIEL F. HAYES: And who were we back in-- ANNE MOORE: It was basically the surgeons, of course, played a big role, the medical oncologists, the radiation oncologists, the pathologists, the radiologists. And they were sort of the center of the group. We brought the nurses. We brought-- we didn't have genetic counselors involved at that time. We certainly do now. If we had special issues, we would bring in a specialist to help us, a gynecologist, for instance, or a gynecologic oncologist if we had a case that involved removal of the ovaries or risk of uterine cancer, to talk to us. We had the obstetricians come with our first case of giving chemotherapy during pregnancy back in 1991, 27-year-old woman with an inflammatory breast cancer. We needed to give chemotherapy in the six month pregnancy. We had never done it before. And we had a conference including the obstetricians, again, all together in one room. And then, I had the practice of scheduling a telephone call with the patient who was presented. Because very often, they were my patients. I was the person doing the most with breast cancer. We would have a scheduled telephone call the night of the conference after the conference. And I would review who was at the conference and tell them what the recommendations were. And sometimes, we had two recommendations, one from one group, and one from the other. And I explained that to the patient. And of course, they were thrilled at the idea of all those people sitting there thinking about them. DANIEL F. HAYES: Was the surgeon Mike Osborn? ANNE MOORE: Michael Osborn was later the chief of breast surgery. The original surgeons were really, our private practitioners. Because at that time, most of the surgery was done by private practitioners. And most of the medical oncology, primitive though it was, was also done by private practitioners. I was one of the first to be a full time employee of the hospital doing medical oncology. DANIEL F. HAYES: Wow. In Boston, it was interesting. There was a, I won't call political split, but there was reluctance among some of the surgeons to engage in such an activity because they felt it would take away their autonomy and they didn't need it. And others who wouldn't miss a week, who loved it. Ultimately, everybody joined. But did you run into that as well, people who just didn't want to do this? ANNE MOORE: No. I must say, our surgeons were eager. Because this was the time when the question about breast conservation was coming up from the patients. And these are surgeons who all had trained in the radical mastectomy. And New York City women weren't keeping their work quiet. They were really in there, saying, what do you think about breast conservation? And I must say, the surgeons at our hospital-- wasn't true probably at every hospital-- were willing to listen, but they hadn't had the experience of breast conservation. And that's one reason why they were happy to have the multidisciplinary group discuss that. DANIEL F. HAYES: So you must have been at the same time or just before that, this was started at Memorial as well. And I know that then it became that. Was there a citywide breast cancer group that met routinely? ANNE MOORE: Memorial was later with the multidisciplinary tumor board at their hospital, as were the other hospitals in New York. However, we did meet together starting around 1971 with the New York Metropolitan Breast Cancer Group, which was a multidisciplinary group of the surgeons, oncologists, pathologists, the same group that we were meeting with on a smaller scale. And this was an enormous benefit to the doctors treating breast cancer in New York, that we were able to not only hear our own group, but we could hear the doctors from Memorial, from Mount Sinai, from Columbia, from Albert Einstein, from Montefiore come. And we would meet together. We'd always have a social hour. They like their scotch, these surgeons. They like scotch. So we would buy the scotch. DANIEL F. HAYES: That must have been a real cast of characters. Was that, like, Jerry Urban in those days? ANNE MOORE: It was just after Jerry Urban. It was just after Jerry Urban. DANIEL F. HAYES: After him? Wow. And how about Ezra Greenspan? Would he come to that? ANNE MOORE: Ezra had his own ideas. He was not so interested in this group, but he was just a little bit too early. DANIEL F. HAYES: And could you get Jim Holland to come to that? ANNE MOORE: The answer is Jim Holland was also not someone who felt he needed to hear a lot of opinions about management of cases. But on an individual basis, Jim Holland was very helpful with patients. DANIEL F. HAYES: I would have loved to have been at those meetings. That sounds like a lot of fun. ANNE MOORE: It was great. And we still have them to this day. We meet four times a year with an annual meeting on one Saturday every year. DANIEL F. HAYES: And I know now that the last decade or so, you've really focused on survivorship as well as your breast cancer work. I talked to Patty Ganz as part of this series. And in my opinion, she really began the field of survivorship. She started thinking about it 25 years ago. But you've really been a mover and shaker now, especially, I think, in the New York City area. Can you tell us about the clinic you've started and how that works? ANNE MOORE: Well, the survivorship has always been interesting to me, partly because I started so early giving chemotherapy, for instance. And the patients, many of them, had early stage II or stage I breast cancer. And 10 years has gone by, 20 years, 30 years, some cases, 35 years. And they still come to see us once a year. And I became more and more interested in what was going on with them, as well as obviously, with the new patients and the new treatments. So it's always been an interest on an informal basis. I have followed Patty Ganz wherever she goes. I'm always asking her advice. I go to any lecture that's anywhere near me. DANIEL F. HAYES: And I'm pretty sure she stays as late as she needs to and gives it to you well. I've never seen anybody as gracious as she is. ANNE MOORE: Absolutely. Absolutely. DANIEL F. HAYES: Let me ask you. This is an opinion question on my part. There are three models. One is that we just keep our patients as long as we're alive and they're alive. The second is that we start separate survivorship clinics, probably run by not by us. And the third is we say you've had enough of oncology. Go back to your primary care. And we trained our primary care doctors to be the survivorship. Which of those do you prefer? ANNE MOORE: Oh, I think about it a lot. Our primary care providers or gynecologists, to whom we could refer patients, especially our very early stage patients after, let's say, five years for their follow-up, I think they're very happy to have an oncologist on board. They have questions themselves. They don't have the confidence that they're giving the best follow-up, whereas of course, they are. But they're anxious that they don't know how to do it. So I think if we're going to hand them over-- that is, the patients-- we really have to prepare the gynecologists and primary care providers with what we think is the most helpful way to follow these patients. And I don't, at least in New York, we have not been good about that part. I know other programs are trying hard to educate their primary care providers to take these patients back in. I think it depends a lot on who's available. In New York, we have a lot of oncologists. Some of the oncologists will continue to follow their patients for the rest of their lives. Many of our oncologists are finding that they just don't have enough chairs in their waiting rooms to continue to follow the patients. And they want to hand them over. The patients themselves would like to stay with a breast cancer specialist or a special clinic for breast cancer survivors. And that's the model we've used. And some institutions have made it a nurse practitioner program, which I think, again, in the right situation, is certainly suitable. DANIEL F. HAYES: Yeah, that's what we've done, sort of a hybrid. It depends on the patient, depends on other factors. By the way, I found this is a wonderful problem to have. I was talking to a patient a few years ago. And I was saying, you can just go back with your primary care doctor. You don't need to see me anymore. And she said, no, I want to stay with you. And I said, well, the problem is there are too many of you for me to take care of. As soon as I said, that I thought, no, no, no. That's not a problem because there's too many of you for me to take care of. So we've all come up with it. All right, to move on a little bit, you've already kind of alluded to this. But why oncology, and why and when breast cancer? I will tell you that I read your CV and I saw your first paper was titled "The Development of Neural Control of Elementary Motor Function in Vertebrates." And this, in surgical journal, a far cry from breast cancer. And I know some of your earlier work as a fellow was in hematology and platelet function. So when did you change gears? ANNE MOORE: Well, I did my fellowship in 1973, 1974, finishing in '75. And really, the work in solid tumor for oncology wouldn't have filled up a half day in the clinic. We had 5FU for colon cancer. We didn't treat lung cancer with chemotherapy. Those were two of our top cancers. And breast cancer pretty much was treated by the surgeons. The surgeons had a surgical oncology clinic where they give their 5FU to the breast cancer patients. So they're really, or they did, of course, the oophorectomy followed by adrenalectomy followed by hypothesectomy for the estrogen receptor positive from their patients whom they didn't know whether they were estrogen positive or not. So there wasn't much to do. And so hematology, I really took a hematology fellowship later on called hematology medical oncology. But it was such an early time. What happened there was that all of a sudden, around 1976, I think it was, right after I finished my fellowship, came the reports of adjuvant chemotherapy improving disease-free survival for node positive patients. All of a sudden, these were now healthy women who'd had a mastectomy, most of them. And somebody had to give them the chemotherapy. And my first case was a doctor called me, a surgeon. And he said-- I hadn't really known him. He said, is this Dr. Moore? I said, yes. He said, I got a lady here. She just did her surgery. She wants a lady doctor for therapy. I said, great. I'll do it. So it was my first oncology patient. And she was exactly my age in her 30's. And I gave her the adjuvant chemotherapy, trembling. My hands were trembling when I started doing it. We gave, of course, our own chemotherapy. And she did well and went on to live about 30 years, and did die of metastatic breast cancer. DANIEL F. HAYES: So you mixed up your own chemotherapy and gave it yourself? ANNE MOORE: Oh, sure. Yeah, absolutely. There was nobody else to do it. There were no nurses who specialized in oncology. So we mixed it up. While we sat and talked to the patient, we shook the bottle of chemotherapy on the desk, took a syringe, drew it up, and put on a little butterfly needle and pushed the chemotherapy. DANIEL F. HAYES: I hope there are young people listening to this. ANNE MOORE: No worries, no nothing. DANIEL F. HAYES: I mean, the flip side is I think they're overwhelmed with the vast amount that there is to learn now. As you pointed out, when you started, it was 5FU. On the other hand, I don't think they realized how difficult it was to be an oncologist in those days. You must have been in one of the first rounds of the boards that BJ Kennedy pushed through. ANNE MOORE: The first round of the medical oncology boards, I was. I wasn't in the first class, but I was pretty close to it. DANIEL F. HAYES: Yes. And then you sat on the ABIM for a while, correct? ANNE MOORE: I did. It was 10 years for the ABIM on the hematology board. DANIEL F. HAYES: Oh, really? ANNE MOORE: And then I chaired the hematology board. And by the end of the time I was chairing the hematology board, I really was pretty much just doing breast cancer. Well, I was still doing sickle cell disease, thalassemia, breast cancer, lung cancer. And during those 10 years, slowly drifted just into breast cancer. I just scraped through as chair of the hematology board. DANIEL F. HAYES: That's fascinating. So I'm going to take you way back now. Tell me about why you were in Peru. Were you born in Peru? ANNE MOORE: When I was two years old, my father worked for WR Grace and Company, which was Grace Lines at that time. And they were very active in South America. And he was sent to Lima, Peru. And he went there with four children, came back with five, had a sixth later on. And we just went along, started school there, and then came back to the states. And then I went back right after high school and worked in a medical clinic outside of Lima, and what they call a barriada, which is a poor area where very, very poor people lived. I said, I would love to work in a clinic. I had been a candy striper, that was my experience. So they let me work there. And literally, they would give me syringes. I don't know what was in the syringe and they taught me to give injections to these patients. I had no idea what I was doing. DANIEL F. HAYES: I suspect you did not have malpractice insurance. ANNE MOORE: There was no malpractice insurance involved in these situations. But I sure learned a lot, loved it. DANIEL F. HAYES: And have you been back on medical trips or anything to Peru? ANNE MOORE: Not to Peru, no. I haven't been back to Peru since that time. DANIEL F. HAYES: Wow. That's fascinating. All right, another question that I've been dying to ask you, I'm going to call it an obscure role you've had, which has been the president of the American Clinical and Climatological Association. A very interesting group, to which I frankly belong. But it is the oldest honorific society in America, I believe. Is that true? ANNE MOORE: It was founded in 1884. DANIEL F. HAYES: Can you just give-- I suspect very few people on this call have ever heard of it. Can you give people what's the climatologic about? What's the story on this organization? ANNE MOORE: The American Clinical and Climatologic Society was actually founded in 1884 as a group to study climate. And the reason they were studying climate was they were trying to figure out how to treat tuberculosis. So they figured it had to do with climate. So they studied being near hot springs, being near cold springs, being in a warm climate, being in a dry climate, and gave papers on that subject. It was an all-male group for many, many years. The first women were elected around the 1980s. The wives were invited early on to come to the meetings and to sit in on the lectures, but they had to sit in the back rows of the auditoriums. There was one woman member, and then pretty soon, there were two women members. Then I came along as the next wave of women in the American Clinical and Climatologic. And the group has no longer concentrates on tuberculosis. It's a very diverse group with very different medical interests. The vast majority are internists. We meet and listen to papers. and the papers are from all different fields, which again, for an oncologist who loves going to ASCO and listening just to the breast cancer talks, it's really exciting to hear the latest in kidney disease, the latest heart disease. Perhaps one of the medical doctors who's interested in history of medicine will give us a talk. So it's a very varied group, different from our usual meetings. And everything is published in the transactions, which is on PubMed. And the papers are absolutely first rate. DANIEL F. HAYES: Yeah, I have to say, I've loved going and listening to things I know nothing about. One talk was on the importance of the oak tree in history. Because we built ships out of oak trees, they made all kinds of things, and how that then related to medicine. I'll never forget that. ANNE MOORE: That's right. DANIEL F. HAYES: OK, I want to end up with one other. It's timely, and I understand that when you were a resident, you worked with the now legendary Tony Fauci. How did that happen? ANNE MOORE: Tony was at the National Cancer Institute, the NIH. He had been at Cornell. They invited him back to be chief resident. He came on July 1 and I was his assistant chief resident. So we shared a very small office, as chief resident and my entire house staff just loved Tony. We would do anything for him. He was smart. He was fair. He was hard, hard working. Working next to him was absolutely a joy. It turns out, I didn't know at the time, and I wish I had, his father and mother graduated from the New Utrecht High School in Brooklyn in 1928. They had lived in Bensonhurst. Well, my father graduated in that same class and was class president. So I know he knew the Fauci's, mother and father. And I just wish I had known, because of course, that generation has gone now. But they all were alive at that time. DANIEL F. HAYES: He's been kind of busy lately. I don't know if you've heard, but maybe when this all boils over, you can have dinner with him and ask him that question. ANNE MOORE: A Brooklyn reunion, absolutely. But we loved him as a resident, as you can imagine. DANIEL F. HAYES: So I want to finish with the work you've actually done for ASCO. You are a fellow of ASCO. And I'm sure you're proud of that. You should be. And you've had a lot to do with the self-evaluation program. And I know you've been a mentor for the IDEA program. You were one of the lead of the leadership development program. And now you're on the board for the Conquer Cancer Foundation. And would you just give a few-- this is a little self-serving because I'm one of the foundation's greatest supporters. The stuff they do is amazing. But tell us a little bit about the Woman Who Conquer Cancer that Sandy Swain has started. ANNE MOORE: Women Who Conquer Cancer is a very focused initiative from the Conquer Cancer Foundation, started by Sandy Swain, to try to support with young investigator awards, with career awards, specifically, women. And I think it's so important. The ones I think are the most important are the young investigator awards for women who are coming out of their fellowship. Maybe they're married. Maybe they have a baby at home. They've got their hands full. And to have somebody recognize their work and say, we're going to support you, I think, is fabulous. I think that's a very hard time for women. They can begin to flounder right at that moment. And there's the Women Who Conquer Cancer awards to be able to focus on them. DANIEL F. HAYES: It is their most vulnerable time. And it's actually not a lot of money, but it keeps them alive. And all they got to do is get one paper with their name on it, and we got-- and they're hooked. And I've had two or three now who've had them. And they're wonderful awards. So for those of you who are listening, sit down and write a check to the foundation. ANNE MOORE: That's right. Absolutely. DANIEL F. HAYES: I'm shameless. Well, that's about all. We've run out of time now, unless there's any other great anecdotes or anything you'd like to share with us with your career. ANNE MOORE: No, just how important ASCO is, and very central to my career. And I hope anybody who's listening appreciates ASCO and the opportunities to serve on many, many, many of the committees and facets of ASCO. DANIEL F. HAYES: It's a lot of fun. Thank you for the shout-out. Well, thanks for taking your time to speak with me today. You've been very important to our field in general and to especially women in New York City with breast cancer. I don't know anybody who doesn't know of and respect Anne Moore if they live somewhere in the New York City area, let alone the rest of the world. So thanks for your time. I very much appreciate it and look forward to seeing you in person when this COVID thing goes away. ANNE MOORE: Thank you, Dan. And thank you for doing this series. [MUSIC PLAYING]   DANIEL F. HAYES: Until next time, thank you for listening to this JCO's Cancer Stories-- The Art of Oncology podcast. If you enjoy what you heard today, don't forget to give us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. While you're there, be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. JCO's Cancer Stories-- The Art of Oncology podcast is just one of ASCO's many podcasts. You can find all the shows and podcast.asco.org. [MUSIC PLAYING]

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
'Six weeks is a long time in Covid' - Immunology expert says NIAC decision may be reconsidered

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 6:24


Dr Anne Moore, Vaccine immunology expert and Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology at University College Cork, on the effectiveness of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine, as well as NIAC's advice on its use for those over 50.

Wilson County News
LV Christian Teaching Center is now Livingway Family Church

Wilson County News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 1:46


The La Vernia Christian Teaching Center has a new name! During a ceremony on April 11, executive pastors Bill and Anne Moore revealed it is now Livingway Family Church. The change comes after the recent retirement of Pastor Billy C. Moore, who had pastored the church since its inception in 1979. Drs. Bill and Anne Moore pastor two large campuses in Brownsville and Harlingen, and are excited about the opportunity to expand the ministry in the La Vernia area. Livingway Family Church believes in bringing people to the knowledge of Jesus and raising up fully devoted followers of Christ. When...Article Link

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Deferral of vaccine appointments for 30,000 people

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 5:36


Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in UCC School of Biochemistry & Cell Biology on the suspension of administering the AstraZeneca vaccine.

RTÉ - News at One Podcast
One-shot J&J vaccine approved by EU drugs regulator

RTÉ - News at One Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 4:29


Dr Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer with the School of Biochemistry and Cell Biology in UCC, gives her reaction.

The Conversation Weekly
Coronavirus vaccines: what's getting in the way of the global rollout

The Conversation Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2021 36:30


This week we're talking to researchers about how COVID-19 vaccines are manufactured – and a battle over the intellectual property rights surrounding them. And we hear from a researcher looking into why China is closing down coal-fired power stations faster in some places than others. Welcome to episode 3 of a new podcast from The Conversation, the world explained by experts. While some of the world's richest countries are racing ahead with large-scale programmes to vaccinate their populations, for much of the developing world, the first doses of the vaccines remain a long way off. For the past few months, a group of countries has been pushing for the intellectual property rules around coronavirus vaccines to be temporarily waived temporarily, arguing this would help expand supply and push down costs. Ronald Labonté, Distinguished Research Chair in Globalization and Health Equity at the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa, talks us through the detail. Meanwhile, Mosoka Fallah, Lecturer at the School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences at the University of Liberia tells us what the vaccine situation is like on the ground in West Africa, and Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology, at University College Cork in Ireland, explains some of the processes behind making coronavirus vaccines.In our second story, we talk to Hao Tan, Associate Professor at the University of Newcastle in Australia, on his new research on why – and where – China is decommissioning coal-fired power stations. He explains what this shift means for the wider region, and those countries which export coal to China.And Clea Chakraverty, politics and society editor at The Conversation in France, gives us some recommended reading on a historic child sex abuse scandal shaking France. The Conversation Weekly is hosted by Gemma Ware and Dan Merino. The show is co-produced by Mend Mariwany and Gemma Ware, with sound design by Eloise Stevens. Our theme music is by Neeta Sarl. Visit The Conversation for full credits.Further reading:Dummy's guide to how trade rules affect access to COVID-19 vaccines, by Ronald Labonté, Distinguished Research Chair in Globalization and Health Equity at the School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, and Brook K. Baker, Professor of Law, Northeastern UniversityNo country is an island: collective approach to COVID-19 vaccines is the only way to go, by Mosoka Fallah, Part-time lecturer at the Global Health & Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Lecturer at the School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of LiberiaHow are COVID-19 vaccines made? An expert explains, Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology, University College CorkForget about the trade spat – coal is passé in much of China, and that's a bigger problem for Australia, by Hao Tan, Associate Professor with the Newcastle Business School, University of Newcastle and colleaguesInceste : au-delà du bruit médiatique, entendre la tragique banalité du phénomène, by Anne-Claude Ambroise-Rendu, Professeur d'histoire contemporaine, Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ) – Université Paris-Saclay See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

RTÉ - Drivetime
Vaccine priority list

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2021 6:44


Dr Anne Moore of UCC School of Biochemistry on whether our vaccine priority list should be reviewed

Before They Were Famous
Anne Moore | Before They Were Famous | Famous Interview Instagram Girl

Before They Were Famous

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 26:14


Before It's Anne Moore would clock in nearly half a million Instagram followers. Before Anne Moore would get some shout outs from WSHH and collaborate with, Blessing Awodibu, Supreme Patty and more.

Kerry Today
Vaccine Expert on Vaccination Breakthroughs and Delivery – February 4th, 2021

Kerry Today

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2021


Dr Anne Moore is a leading international expert on vaccination, and is a senior lecturer in biochemistry and cell biology at UCC.

THE UPSIDE with Callie and Jeff Dauler
EPISODE 439: DEALING WITH STRESS WITH LIMITED TIME AND MONEY / DR. ANNE MOORE

THE UPSIDE with Callie and Jeff Dauler

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2020 31:25


episode 439 / December 15, 2020 BONUS EPISODE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Oxford develops vaccine that is 70% effective

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2020 3:21


Dr. Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry at UCC who has worked as an Immunologist at Oxford, discusses the positive news in relation to the development of the latest vaccine.

RTÉ - Drivetime
Vaccine and Lockdown Behaviour

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2020 12:32


Dr Anne Moore, School of Biochemistry in UCC, talk to Comrac about Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine, and Pete Lunn, Head of the Behavioural Research Unit, ESRI, discusses the change in people's behaviour under level 5 Covid-19 restrictions.

Kerry Today
Hopes Rise with New Vaccine - November 10th, 2020

Kerry Today

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2020


Dr Anne Moore is a senior lecturer in biochemistry and cell biology at UCC. She gives her assessment of the COVID-19 vaccine being developed by Pfizer and BioNTech.

RTÉ - News at One Podcast
Covid-19 vaccine proving '90% effective' in trials

RTÉ - News at One Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 6:12


Dr Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in UCC School of Biochemistry & Cell Biology discusses the results announced by Pfizer and BioNTech during ongoing Phase 3 trials

Music On The Run
EP23- The Running Episode

Music On The Run

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2020 53:38


In this episode, we focus 100% on running! We're joined by a coach, a doctor, gear experts, and some friends who love running. https://bit.ly/2uY7zRd With Bill Nolan, Steve Schmit, Davide Raso, Dr. Anne Moore, and coach Yanti Ardie  Produced by Davide Raso Running Time 54 minutes  PREVIOUS EPISODES: fDeluxe/TheFamily: https://apple.co/36fG5abAndre Cymone: https://apple.co/33zGDo6Sheila E: https://apple.co/3hPSbK2The Peterson Family: https://apple.co/3l0nMLcRamon Yslas: https://apple.co/2PqgnG9Kat Dyson: https://apple.co/3jnUOnrCory Wong - https://apple.co/2ZYmuqhStokley - https://apple.co/3fPrnImDave King - https://apple.co/3cKAok1Donny Osmond - https://apple.co/36ulzAKRicky Peterson - https://apple.co/3fL35zWNathan East - https://apple.co/3f5dciGLenny Castro - https://apple.co/2XvuCPoVince Wilburn- https://apple.co/2USdDDQVictor Wooten - https://apple.co/2QnoV1CBen and Leo Sidran - https://apple.co/2TyBWWRSinbad - https://apple.co/38B3SQ6 The Bacon Brothers - https://apple.co/2SgWOB9Eric Hutchinson - https://apple.co/37flwrPDebbie Gibson - https://apple.co/2FsVfKGSteve Miller - https://apple.co/2thWVnhSt. Paul Peterson - https://apple.co/37qqCkK MANY BEHIND THE SCENES VIDEO AVAILABLE TO OUR PARTNERS AT: www.Patreon.com/MusicOnTheRunPodcast.com

Krypton Radio's 'The Event Horizon'
Ep 33 - Leslie Anne Moore, 'A Tangle of Fates'

Krypton Radio's 'The Event Horizon'

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2020 66:17


RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Trials on drug for Covid-19 patients 'a breakthrough'

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 4:57


Dr Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry and Cell Biology at University College Cork, discusses reports of a low-cost steroid that has been found to reduce deaths of Covid-19 patients on ventilators by up to a third.

Scariff Bay Radio Podcasts
Saturday Chronicle 6th June 2020 Presented by Tom Hanley and Patricia Anne Moore 1

Scariff Bay Radio Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2020 52:11


Garda Focus, poet Michael Durack, East Clare Paddlers. Saturday Chronicle 6th June 2020 part 1 Presented by Tom Hanley and Patricia Anne Moore and broadcast live from Mountshannon -00.00 -Introduction -02.31 -News headlines -14.05-East Clare Garda focus with Gda Niall Naughton -26.40 Interview with established poet Michael Durack from Killaloe -39.40-Kevin Chesser of East Clare Paddlers talking about how the club has got on since its establishment last year and hopes to run courses for this year once restrictions begin to lift. https://www.facebook.com/Eastclarepaddlers Saturday Chronicle is Sponsored by JAMES M NASH AND DERG KITCHEN DESIGN  http://dergkitchendesign.ie Outside broadcast sponsored by Michael Long Construction Scariff http://www.mlcbuilders.ie  

Scariff Bay Radio Podcasts
Saturday Chronicle 6th June 2020 Presented by Tom Hanley and Patricia Anne Moore 2

Scariff Bay Radio Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2020 67:24


Jim O'Brien, Pamela Cahill, Killaloe Historical society and Bees.... Saturday Chronicle 6th June  2020 part 2 Hosted by Tom Hanley and Patricia Anne Moore live from Mountshannon.   -00.00 Jim O’Brien recently had an article in the  Farming independent a few weeks ago and spoke about same and working from home! -11.55 Pamela Cahill from Santander in Spain talks about life in the city in recent times and coming out of lockdown -19.25 Deborah Dudgeon from  Killaloe and Ballina local History society.talking about the working going on even during lockdown . https://killaloeballinalhs.wordpress.com -39.15-TJ O’Halloran and his his daughter Eilish talking bout their bee hives and hopes for they season in this his fifth season of keeping bees.  Saturday Chronicle is Sponsored by JAMES M NASH AND DERG KITCHEN DESIGN  http://dergkitchendesign.ie Outside broadcast sponsored by Michael Long Construction Scariff http://www.mlcbuilders.ie  

RTÉ - Today with Sean O'Rourke
Covid-19: Vaccines and President Trump

RTÉ - Today with Sean O'Rourke

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 8:55


Anne Moore, Senior Lecturer in Biochemistry, University College Cork

Heart of Dating
081: Dating As a Single Parent with Bethany Anne Moore

Heart of Dating

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 53:35


Today Heart of Dating is bringing you an episode on a very highly requested topic! We are talking about dating as a single parent with our new dear friend, Bethany Moore. Bethany Moore is a single mom through foster care and now adoption. She had the honor of adopting her three children Franklin, Katherine, and Theodore after being their foster parent. She was a public school teacher for 4 years and then worked as a social media manager for Maple Street Biscuit Company. She is looking forward to getting back into the classroom after getting settled into her new city of Nashville, TN and to be able to continue being an advocate for foster care and adoption. We are just truly in awe of Bethany’s story and how she is cultivating her singleness for such an amazing thing as being a SINGLE PARENT- wow! Some themes of today’s conversation: -Fostering and adopting as a single parent -What it is like to date as a single parent -Navigating time in dating as a single parent -When do you bring up that you’re a parent? When do you introduce your kids to the person you’re dating? P.S. Friends, this is really crazy for us to say but Heart of Dating has officially been around for 2 years now! Goodness it’s been quite the journey… it’s gone incredibly fast and has been filled with so many blessings. We want to take a second to THANK YOU guys in this community. Thank you for your love and support and advocacy. Thank you for sharing the podcast to your friends and for spreading the word. We have a quick favor to ask of you right now. If you haven’t done so already, would you write us a review for this podcast? Reviews are kind of like currency in the podcast world, they help us to stay on the charts and get discovered by other people and we’d love to do that so we can continue to grow and sustain this community and also so that more people can find resources for better dating! So if you’d be willing to hit subscribe, then rank and write us a review that would be so amazing! Thank you for being on this journey with us, fam!

Heart of Dating
081: Dating As a Single Parent with Bethany Anne Moore

Heart of Dating

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 53:35


Dating as a single parent?

Bangor Worldwide Missionary Convention Audio
Eric & Anne Moore Interview (Reach Beyond, HCJB)

Bangor Worldwide Missionary Convention Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2019


We hear from Pastor Foley (South Korea) and Eric & Ann Moore reflect on a lifetime of service.

Custom Made Kid
Episode 7 | Called to Care | Bethany Anne Moore

Custom Made Kid

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2019 32:11


Bethany Moore is an educator in Jacksonville, Florida who also happens to be a single, adoptive and foster mom to three young children. Bethany has a popular Instagram account (@bethanyanne42) that allows her followers to take a glimpse into her foster and adoption journey. Her life gracefully proves that life NOT working out "according to the plan" can be a huge blessing in disguise. To connect with Bethany, you can find her on Instagram @bethanyanne42. *** Get in touch: connect {at} custommadekid.com or engage using the hashtag #custommadekidpodcast Learn more: www.custommadekid.com Music : Bali Bash by PALA | Happy Together by Caleb Etheridge | Licensed through Soundstripe All rights reserved | Custom Made Kid™ Foundation | www.custommadekid.com

Two-Person Book Club
4 - THE MANSION OF HAPPINESS by Jill Lepore

Two-Person Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2019 116:10


Amanda B. and Rony J. follow Harvard professor and professional NEW YORKER-er Jill Lepore through birth, adolescence, work, and death, via a Puritan board game called THE MANSION OF HAPPINESS. Amanda antagonizes a (maybe) dead man, while Rony comes face to face with a giant conundrum."Impure thought!" the child ejaculated. "Go back three spaces!"We joke because otherwise we'd remember that women didn't get the vote until 1920.Who has the movie rights to the Anne Carroll Moore vs. Katharine White story?--RURTHER FEEDING:"Are Robots Competing for your Job?" by Lepore, Jill.Email us! tpbcpodcast@gmail.com

This Is Happening!
Episode 69: Anne Moore

This Is Happening!

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2019 61:05


This week Eric and Doug are thrilled to welcome good friend Anne Moore! Anne is an accomplished actress, writer, producer, and director and she teaches acting at New York Film Academy in Los Angeles! Anne has appeared on stages around the country, on television series including Grey's Anatomy and Vegas, films including Driver X and Czech Days, the award winning short she directed. Anne is charming, talented, and hilarious. Enjoy!

Healthy Charleston
Ep29 | Anne Moore - Endurance Coach

Healthy Charleston

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 56:20


Today's episode we had Anne Moore who is an endurance coach. She also competes in Looooong cycle races across the country. She has a very honest upfront attitude that has served her well in creating a community of people and clients who believe in her and her message. Anne has a master's degree and even taught anatomy and physiology at Trident before jumping in head first to coaching. Find out more here: http://www.annemoorecoaching.com/ https://www.facebook.com/annemooreendurancecoaching/

The Healthy Charleston Podcast
Ep29 | Anne Moore - Endurance Coach

The Healthy Charleston Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 56:20


Today's episode we had Anne Moore who is an endurance coach. She also competes in Looooong cycle races across the country. She has a very honest upfront attitude that has served her well in creating a community of people and clients who believe in her and her message. Anne has a master's degree and even taught anatomy and physiology at Trident before jumping in head first to coaching. Find out more here: http://www.annemoorecoaching.com/ https://www.facebook.com/annemooreendurancecoaching/

EarlyLearningReview
ELR Talking Eds Innovation AICC

EarlyLearningReview

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2016 31:17


The Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce today curated a fascinating roundtable discussion on the future of innovation in Australia, with specific reference to the role the education sectors, in particular universities, are playing in this brave new world. On the panel was technologist and entrepreneur Paul Shetler, who is currently the CEO of Digital Transformation Office. Also on stage was social scientist Anne Moore, founder and CEO of PlanDo; and former telco whizz and now the founder of startup accelerator muru-D Annie Parker. The fourth and final panellist was University of Sydney deputy vice chancellor (research) professor Duncan Ivison.

Campus Review Podcasts
CR Talking Eds Innovation AICC

Campus Review Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2016 31:17


The Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce today curated a fascinating roundtable discussion on the future of innovation in Australia, with specific reference to the role the education sectors, in particular universities, are playing in this brave new world. On the panel was technologist and entrepreneur Paul Shetler, who is currently the CEO of Digital Transformation Office. Also on stage was social scientist Anne Moore, founder and CEO of PlanDo; and former telco whizz and now the founder of startup accelerator muru-D Annie Parker. The fourth and final panellist was University of Sydney deputy vice chancellor (research) professor Duncan Ivison.

EducationReview
ER AICC July Intro

EducationReview

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2016 31:48


The Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce today curated a fascinating roundtable discussion on the future of innovation in Australia, with specific reference to the role the education sectors, in particular universities, are playing in this brave new world. On the panel was technologist and entrepreneur Paul Shetler, who is currently the CEO of Digital Transformation Office. Also on stage was social scientist Anne Moore, founder and CEO of PlanDo; and former telco whizz and now the founder of startup accelerator muru-D Annie Parker. The fourth and final panellist was University of Sydney deputy vice chancellor (research) professor Duncan Ivison.

Chapel 1979-1980
03-24-80 Anne Moore

Chapel 1979-1980

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2011 29:46


In the Stacks with Barry & LaToya

In the midst of a conversation in the office, Barry feels compelled, initially unbeknown to LaToya, to record the first of many anticipated impromptu mini-episodes. Anne Moore, Youth Services Coordinator happens upon the conversation when coming to the office on business matters. In this mini-episode Barry, LaToya, and Anne debate which LaToya finds cleaner, Kell Carpenter's kitchen or the kitchen at the local Golden Pantry.

Dermcast.tv Dermatology Podcasts
Dermatoses of Immunobullous Diseases with Julie Anne Moore, MD

Dermcast.tv Dermatology Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2010 31:25


Audio podcast from the 1st Annual SDPA Summer Dermatology Conference in Chicago, IL. This was “Dermatoses of Immunobullous Diseases” with Julie Anne Moore, MD. This session is also available as a download on iTunes through the dermcast podcast page*. Click here to visit the page on iTunes. *Please note that [...]

Dermcast.tv Dermatology Podcasts
Drug Eruptions with Julie Anne Moore, MD

Dermcast.tv Dermatology Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2010 57:53


Audio podcast from the 1st Annual SDPA Summer Dermatology Conference in Chicago, IL. This was “Drug Eruptions” with Julie Anne Moore, MDD. This session is also available as a download on iTunes through the dermcast podcast page*. Click here to visit the page on iTunes. *Please note that it sometimes [...]