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  1. Charles Moss Woolf (10 July 1879 – 31 December 1942) was a British film distributor. Biography. Woolf made a fortune by financing, distributing and exhibiting films after World War I, including some of Alfred Hitchcock 's first films. In 1935 he resigned from the Gaumont British Picture Corporation and formed General Film Distributors.

  2. C.M. Woolf. Biography. Charles Moss Woolf (1879–1942) was a British film distributor. He set up W. & F. Film Service in February 1919 with £10,000 of investment, along with S. Freedman, D. Tebbitt and Julius Hagen. [1] . By the late 1920s, he had become a chairman of Gainsborough Pictures and a joint managing director of Gaumont-British. [2]

  3. Oct 28, 2002 · Pain can be an adaptive sensation, an early warning to protect the body from tissue injury. By the introduction of hypersensitivity to normally innocuous stimuli, pain may also aid in repair...

  4. Clifford J. Woolf and Michael W. Salter Authors Info & Affiliations. Science. 9 Jun 2000. Vol 288, Issue 5472. pp. 1765 - 1768. DOI: 10.1126/science.288.5472.1765. Abstract. We describe those sensations that are unpleasant, intense, or distressing as painful.

  5. Jun 9, 2000 · Pain is not homogeneous, however, and comprises three categories: physiological, inflammatory, and neuropathic pain. Multiple mechanisms contribute, each of which is subject to or an expression of neural plasticity-the capacity of neurons to change their function, chemical profile, or structure.

  6. Mar 16, 2004 · Authors. Clifford J Woolf 1 ; American College of Physicians ; American Physiological Society. Affiliation. 1 Neural Plasticity Research Group, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129, USA. cwoolf@partners.org. PMID: 15023710. DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-140-8-200404200-00010. Publication types.

  7. Woolf C.J. Wall P.D. Prolonged C-fibre mediated facilitation of the flexion reflex in the rat is not due to changes in afferent terminal or motoneurone excitability.