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Transcripts For CSPAN3 Ethics Of 20th Century Organ Transplants 20170528

Medical history professor at the university of wisconsin. You focus on bioethics. Organ transplants. How did attitudes about death change in the United States after world war ii . One of the ways in which death changed after world war ii is that there was a growing interest in the increasing costs associated with the funeral industry. Great concern about Funeral Directors who unscrupulously took advantage of people during their time of need. And so, in response to this exploitation, there was a trend toward simple burial and the formation of socalled memorial societies that offered workingclass families a much cheaper alternative for the burial costs associated with the death of their loved ones. Another Major Development was the popularity, the enormous attention to the possibility that blindness could be cured by ....

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Transcripts For CSPAN3 Ethics Of 20th Century Organ Transplants 20170529

Took advantage of people during their time of need. So in response to this exploitation, there was a trend toward simple burial in the formation of socalled memorial societies which offered workingclass families much cheaper alternative for the burial costs associated with their loved ones. Another Major Development was the popularity, the enormous attention to the possibility wordblindness could be to by cornea transplants in the 1940s. Thousands of americans volunteered their corneas after their dad and effort to restore the side of a blind person. Among many of these individuals, myy thought, if im giving corneas once im dead, why not the rest of me . ,o there is increasing interest and you see it in the archives of medical schools, of individual saying my eyes are going to the eye back at stanford, what about the rest of my body . Does the Anatomy Department want m ....

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Transcripts For CSPAN3 Paisley Caves And The First Americans In Oregon 20170603

His archaeological work which are located about 200 miles southeast of eugene. Jenkins when i was a werent in the 1970s, we taught people had only been here about 11,000 years. Well, as time has gone on and certainly with the radiocarbon dating of human dna and copper and the paisley caves, that story begins to come apart. The paisley caves are found in the high desert of central oregon. It is technically called the northern great basin. That is because all of the water nows to the interior and access out to the Pacific Ocean so it evaporates. It comes from the mountains surrounded it very surrounded it. It was excavated in 1938 and a little bit in 1940. When he was finished, he published and said he had found extinct animals from the ice age, horses and camels that were here, you know, north america before they were actually found in other portions of the world. People hunting these animals and he had found a small in the cave wit ....

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Transcripts For CSPAN3 Sculpting James Monroe 20170603

Commemoration and reflection. Our speaker today is gordon kray. Gordon and i go way back to our days when they were on campus. He was from massachusetts and i was from lexington. Both of us had spent our lives in virginia. He studied history at william and mary. We were sticking cigarettes and the mouths of sculptures. Gordon has gone on to be a prominent sculptor. For many of you, if you have been to st. Matthews cathedral, you will see his culture there. You will also see one of his sculptures in washington, d. C. Most prominently in colonial williamsburg. You will find it in front of the red building at the college of william and mary. It looked worse for wear by 1958. It was put on display in front of the library. This was dedicated in the fall of 1993. Introduced by people who have been walking on the street. Now he has taken his talents to sculpting james monroe. In watching gordon work and being aware of the intensity with which he understands the person he is sculpting, it occu ....

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