1,355,605 research outputs found
Clara Cotten, Aileen Cotten, and Claud Cotten on a dirt road
Description on back: Clara, Aileen, and Claud Cotten [illegible]
Wright, Cotten, and Douglass Family Papers, MSS.1583
Abstract: This collection contains diaries, correspondence, and other materials related to four generations of this Tennessee/Alabama family.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains diaries, correspondence, and other materials related to four generations of this Tennessee/Alabama family. The papers are divided into four series, each representing a family generation.The Thomas and Mary Hostler Green Wright Family Series contains materials created by Thomas, Mary, and their siblings and children. It includes incoming and outgoing correspondence of family members, journals, religious and fictional writings, and some legal documents.The Leonidas and Sarah Elizabeth Wright Cotten Family Series contains materials created by and for Leonidas, Sarah Elizabeth, and their children. The majority of the material in this series belonged to Sarah Elizabeth, who kept many commonplace journals in which she wrote and collected fiction, poetry, recipes, and ideas. There is also a substantial number of letters from Sarah Elizabeth to her children.The Robert Napoleon Cotten Family Series contains materials created by Robert N. Cotten, his wife, and children. Within the series are legal documents and correspondence, the bulk of which was written by Robert N. Cotten to family members. The early letters are articulate, detailed letters written to his mother from Civil War camps.The Edward Trent Douglass Jr. Series contains materials created and collected by and for Edward Trent Douglass. Included are his incoming and outgoing correspondence, historical writings, genealogical materials, photographs, and other materials related to genealogical activities.Biographical/Historical Note: Reverend Thomas Wright (1784-1835) was an Episcopalian minister in early Tennessee. In 1810, he married Mary Hostler Green (1794-1865). They had thirteen children: Sarah Elizabeth Wright (1812-1817); Sophia Ann Wright (b. 1813); John Mercer Wright (b. 1814); Catherine Wright (1817-1817); Mary Wright (1817-1817); William Green Wright (1818-1882); Sarah Elizabeth Wright (1820-1904); Robert Scott Wright (b. 1822); Thomas Marshall Wright (1822-1856); Ravenscroft Wright (1827-1845); Mary Wright (1829-1834); James Wright (1834-1860); and Thomas Wright (1835).Sarah Elizabeth Wright (1820-1904) married Leonidas Cotten (1817-1847) of LaGrange, Tennessee. They had four children: Alice London Cotten, (1838-1887); Robert Napoleon Cotten (1840-1901); John Mercer Cotten (b. 1842); and Leonidas Cotten (1844-1900).After serving in the Civil War, Robert Napoleon Cotten married Eliza (Lida) Sophia Davenport (b. 1842) and attended medical school at Louisiana State University. They had several children: Alice Houston Cotten (1870-1952); Ernest Wright Cotten (b.1872); Leonidas Cotten (b. 1873); Sarah Eliza Cotten (b. 1873); Claud Davenport Cotten (b. 1875); Clara (Cab) Holmes Cotten (b. 1876); Aileen Cotten (1879-1963); and Robert Ewing Cotten (b. 1879).Clara (Cab) Cotten married Edward Trent Douglass. Among their children was Edward Trent Douglass, Jr. (1906-1994), whose hobby was family genealogy. The material in this collection is a result of his genealogical work.Sources: www.findagrave.com; www.ancestry.co
Portrait of R. D. Cotten in a University of Alabama ROTC Uniform
Description on back: Cotten, [R.D.]
Sarah Cotten Douglass Beaumont and Sterling Joe Beaumont on a sofa
Description on back: Sarah Cotten Douglass Beaumont, Sterling Joe Beaumont in living room of Susan Douglass Smith home, 1953
Letter from Lois to Clara Cotten Douglass, January 24, 1955
Included with this letter is a negative of three men standing outdoors
Lipopolysaccharide is a frequent contaminant of plasmid DNA preparations and can be toxic to primary cells in the presence of adenovirus
Endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) is commonly found as a contaminant in plasmid DNA preparations. We demonstrate here that the quantities of LPS typically contaminating DNA preparations can generate a toxicity to primary cells (primary human skin fibroblasts, primary human melanoma cells) in the presence of entry-competent adenovirus particles. Toxicity can be observed with as little as 100 ng/ml free LPS or 100 pg/ml LPS when the LPS is assembled into polylysine/adenovirus complexes. Simple and effective methods of removing the contaminating LPS using either a polymyxin B resin or Triton X-114 extraction are described. Treatment of DNA samples to remove LPS eliminates the toxicity to primary cells
D\u27ann and Sheila Jo Cotten
D\u27ann and Sheila Jo Cotten, left to right, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cotten, shown with a box containing a donation for the Fort Worth Heart Association.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/28218/thumbnail.jp
Imaging of rock climbing injuries.
Competition climbing has grown increasingly in popularity, and many people are being drawn to this sport with a parallel increase in the occurrence of sport-related injuries. One of the most common and unique lesions occurring in the rock climbing population is the closed rupture of the flexor pulley system of the fingers. This lesion is strictly related to some climbing techniques in which the entire body weight is placed on fingerholds, which causes bowstringing of the flexor tendons with subsequent loss of strength across the full range of motion of the finger. This article summarizes the current literature regarding the application of imaging modalities in the diagnosis of rock climbing injuries with a specific focus on ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging. Biomechanics of the sporting activity and resultant pathophysiologic and clinical considerations concerning flexor pulley system injuries are also discussed
Photograph of Edith Johns Cotten
Portrait of Cotten at approximately 30 years old, a subject in the "Famous Beauties of Baltimore" mural located in Shriver Hall
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