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THE MEANING OF OZ - All you need to know!

 
 
Dutchy
 
  1  
Reply Wed 13 Jun, 2007 05:19 am
McTag, maybe we're both right. See biography below. Perhaps as an Adelaidian lad we're a bit one eyed. Smile

Sir Howard Walter Florey was born on September 24, 1898, at Adelaide, South Australia, the son of Joseph and Bertha Mary Florey. His early education was at St. Peter's Collegiate School, Adelaide, following which he went on to Adelaide University where he graduated M.B., B.S. in 1921. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford, leading to the degrees of B.Sc. and M.A. (1924). He then went to Cambridge as a John Lucas Walker Student. In 1925 he visited the United States on a Rockefeller Travelling Fellowship for a year, returning in 1926 to a Fellowship at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, receiving here his Ph.D. in 1927. He also held at this time the Freedom Research Fellowship at the London Hospital. In 1927 he was appointed Huddersfield Lecturer in Special Pathology at Cambridge. In 1931 he succeeded to the Joseph Hunter Chair of Pathology at the University of Sheffield.

Leaving Sheffield in 1935 he became Professor of Pathology and a Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. He was made an Honorary Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge in 1946 and an Honorary Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford in 1952. In 1962 he was made Provost of The Queen's College, Oxford.

During World War II he was appointed Honorary Consultant in Pathology to the Army and in 1944 he became Nuffield Visiting Professor to Australia and New Zealand.

His best-known work dates from his collaboration with Chain, which began in 1938 when they conducted a systematic investigation of the properties of naturally occurring antibacterial substances. Lysozyme, an antibacterial substance found in saliva and human tears, was their original interest, but their interest moved to substances now known as antibiotics. The work on penicillin was a result of this interest.

Penicillin had been discovered by Fleming in 1928 as a result of observations on a mould which developed on some germ culture plates but the active substance was not isolated. In 1939, Florey and Chain headed a team of British scientists, financed by a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, whose efforts led to the successful small-scale manufacture of the drug from the liquid broth in which it grows. In 1940 a report was issued describing how penicillin had been found to be a chemotherapeutic agent capable of killing sensitive germs in the living body. Thereafter great efforts were made, with government assistance, to enable sufficient quantities of the drug to be made for use in World War II to treat war wounds.

Florey was a contributor to, and Editor of, Antibiotics (1949). He was also part-author of a book of lectures on general pathology and has had many papers published on physiology and pathology.

Dr. Florey has had many honours bestowed upon him. Among these may be mentioned the Lister Medal of the Royal College of Surgeons, the Berzelius Medal of the Swedish Medical Society, the Royal and Copley Medals of the Royal Society, the Medal of Merit of the U. S. Army, and many others.

He is President of the Royal Society since 1960 and a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, and among other honorary fellowships he holds is that of the Royal Australian College of Physicians.

He has been awarded honorary degrees by seventeen universities and is a member or honorary member of many learned societies and academies in the field of medicine and biology.

In 1944 he was created a Knight Bachelor.

He married Mary Ethel Hayter Reed in 1926. They have two children, Paquita Mary Joanna and Charles du VĂ©.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 14 Jun, 2007 07:40 am
Hey, did any of you watch the final instalment of the Choir of Hard Knocks on Tuesday night?
So what did you think?
Me, I went through my usual quota of tissues .... <honk!>

But, dadpad, I couldn't see your mate (below) in that final town hall performance. Was he there?:


dadpad wrote:
Gotta love Clarko dont you.
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/hardknocks/img/clarko_large.jpg
0 Replies
 
dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Thu 14 Jun, 2007 05:20 pm
Nope I didnt see clarko anywhere.

I was interested to hear the program rated it's socks off.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 14 Jun, 2007 08:25 pm
Gosh, I hope he's OK. Strange that there was no mention of why he didn't participate, when so much time was spent on getting the woman who'd been drinking sober enough to perform.

But I guess the whole thing has been a rocky, up & down experience. Quite a few gasp-inducing, cliff-hanging moments! Perhaps they'd made a decision to not concentrate on the negatives too much.

So the ratings were good? That's great. ABC viewers are an interesting bunch, hey?
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jun, 2007 01:04 am
Census gives a snapshot of a nation
Jane Holroyd
June 27, 2007 - 12:24PM/the AGE


Australians are getting older, our median weekly incomes have risen by almost $100 but a smaller proportion of us own our own homes outright, according to first batch of results from last year's census.

The 2006 snapshot of Australia showed our population has almost hit the 21 million mark, with an estimated resident population of 20.7 million. This is up from an estimated population of 19.4 million in the last census in 2001.

The census counted 19,855,289 Australian residents on census night, but the ABS estimate of 20.7 million takes into account Australians temporarily overseas and those who for other reasons were not counted.

Lower fertility rates and longer life expectancy mean Australians are getting older.

The median age of Australians is 37, up from 35 years in 2001. The proportion of Australians aged 55-64 is now 11 per cent (2.2 million people), up from 9 per cent (1.8 million people) five years ago.

Meanwhile the proportion of children - those aged under 14 years - decreased. However, the Howard Government may claim credit through its baby bonus scheme for an increase in the number of children under four, up 16,500 to 1.26 million. .... <cont>

http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/snapshot-of-a-nation/2007/06/27/1182623949953.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap1

Bureau of Statistics & the 2006 census findings:
http://www.abs.gov.au/websitedbs/d3310114.nsf/Home/census
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jun, 2007 02:03 am
Surprised
Wet enough for you, SE Oz?:


Heavy rain falling in parched catchments

http://www.theage.com.au/ffximage/2007/06/27/rain_sat_wedam_wideweb__470x281,2.jpg
A satellite image from 8.30am today showing the thick band of cloud moving across Victoria and Tasmania from the east.
Photo: Bureau Of Meteorology

June 27, 2007 - 9:11AM/the AGE

The first wave of potentially drought-busting rains is sweeping across Victoria from the east this morning, with severe weather alerts for much of the state today.

Flood warnings have been issued for the important Genoa, West Gippsland and all East Gippsland water catchment areas - and even heavier falls are predicted when a second rain band moves in from the east later today.

Heavy rain started in the parched Gippsland area last night and continues this morning, with lashing rain and gale force winds expected across the state today.

Up to 90 millimetres fell around Genoa in the state's far east, 87 millimetres at Mallacoota, 59 millimetres at Orbost and 20 millimetres in Sale "and still raining", according to weather bureau senior forecaster Terry Ryan.

He said that the falls were typical of the Gippsland area - "nothing for months and months, then you get a heavy fall." - and much more would be needed to break the drought across Victoria.

"Various parts of the coast of NSW have had a lot of rain fall but we're finally getting some in Victoria. We need a lot more though, we're way down on average," he said.

Wind warnings have also been issued across Victoria, with gale force winds gusting up to 80 km/h in Melbourne today. Melbourne is also likely to receive a soaking.

"Melbourne could get up to 20 millimetres, if we're lucky," Mr Ryan said.

The bureau is forecasting a second prolonged period of heavy rain developing tonight, with further falls up to 100 millimetres. ... <cont>

http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/06/27/1182623948078.html?from=top5
0 Replies
 
margo
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jun, 2007 09:40 pm
I love a sunburnt country,
A land of sweeping plains,
Of ragged mountain ranges,
Of droughts and flooding rains
.

I guess it's just that we don't expect both at the same time!

How're things your way, dadpad!
Soaked in Sydney - but still level 3 water restrictions!
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jun, 2007 06:02 am
What I'm trying to figure out, margo, is how come all these flooding rains seem to by-pass the bloody catchments? Confused
0 Replies
 
dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jun, 2007 07:22 am
margo wrote:
I love a sunburnt country,
A land of sweeping plains,
Of ragged mountain ranges,
Of droughts and flooding rains
.

I guess it's just that we don't expect both at the same time!

How're things your way, dadpad!
Soaked in Sydney - but still level 3 water restrictions!


We got hardly a drop but Gippsland (other side of the mountains) has really copped it. One man killed by a falling tree as he slept. Many homes damaged roads cut by flood water, concern that glenmaggie dam will burst...

Ahhh Victoria... bushfires one day, flooded the next!

This lot should fill the Thompson dam for a Melbourne friends.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jun, 2007 07:27 am
I the level only went up something like 1% dadpad. Or that's what the ABC was saying today. It may increase a bit, but ....
0 Replies
 
margo
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jun, 2007 07:31 pm
msolga wrote:
What I'm trying to figure out, margo, is how come all these flooding rains seem to by-pass the bloody catchments? Confused


Apparently, they put the catchment areas near the dams - not where the rain falls! Dunno!

Looks like we might be getting a few days break soon.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Sun 1 Jul, 2007 12:04 am
Happy 75th birthday, dearest Auntie! Very Happy

Hang in there & don't let the bastards wear you down!:



The ABC is celebrating 75 years

On this day in 1932, then-prime minister Joseph Lyons launched what was then called the Australian Broadcasting Commission. ....


http://www.abc.com.au/news/stories/2007/07/01/1966721.htm
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Sun 1 Jul, 2007 11:46 pm
Good morning, Oz.

We have had a very wet weekend here and the floods of last week have still not subsided in many places (not here, thank goodness)

And some nutters are trying to blow us up.

Otherwise, no worries. Very Happy
0 Replies
 
dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Mon 2 Jul, 2007 12:19 am
We'll match your floods but you can keep the mad bombers.

June 30, 2007 - 1:36PM
Emergency workers are sandbagging businesses and homes in flood-hit Lakes Entrance in Victoria's Gippsland region as fears grow that the water level is rising again, pushed by high tides.

The State Emergency Service (SES) said 54,000 sandbags had been moved to Gippsland to protect businesses and homes from the area's worst floods in 17 years.

Image gallery
http://www.abc.net.au/gippsland/stories/s1966502.htm?backyard
0 Replies
 
margo
 
  1  
Reply Mon 2 Jul, 2007 01:08 am
Jeez
The saying "It never rains, but it pours" is ever so suitable here.

A dry weekend, but more rain to come, I think.

Like dadpad said, McTag - keep the bombers. We have enough loonies of our own
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Jul, 2007 04:27 am
margo wrote:
Jeez

Like dadpad said, McTag - keep the bombers. We have enough loonies of our own


I think we may have spoken too soon. Some Australian accents on our TV news this morning.

What have these daft doctors been up to?
0 Replies
 
dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Jul, 2007 05:57 am
You may be correct Mctag. I heard a very brief radio report of a doctor being arrested as he was trying to leave the country from Brisbane airport. Some links are being made. One way ticket to india and allegedly shared a house with one of the people arrested in Britain. His registration does not run out until September.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/police-quiz-second-doctor/2007/07/03/1183351175236.html
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Jul, 2007 07:27 am
What is this thing about Queensland & crazy doctors? Confused
0 Replies
 
margo
 
  1  
Reply Tue 3 Jul, 2007 08:55 pm
msolga wrote:
What is this thing about Queensland & crazy doctors? Confused


You don't have to be crazy to live there, but it helps (not so bad as in Joh's day!)

I guess the same applies to doctors. Although why the hell someone employed at the Gold Coast Hospital would want to bomb the daylights out of someone I can't understand....although living on the Gold Coast would drive me mad!
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Wed 4 Jul, 2007 05:34 pm
This, following the scandal of the Bundaberg (sp?) surgeon. They're not exactly having a great run with these medical things in Qld! Poor old Premier Beastie seems to be apologizing, explaining endlessly on my TV news. He's beginning to look quite crumpled!
0 Replies
 
 

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