10,380 research outputs found
R. Williams letter to Mrs. Susan M.Weirman, March 23, 1896
Letter from R. Williams to Mrs. Susan M. Wierman (here, spelled Weirman by R. Williams), daughter of Benjamin Lundy, concerning Williams' plan to visit Mrs. Wierman to take photographs for a forthcoming article on the life and times of Lundy, to be published in a Chicago newspaper. Williams describes previous visits to Wierman, and makes notes of the resources, publications and repositories he has used in compiling his study of Lundy thus far. He also makes requests of Mrs. Wierman for a sketch of recollections about life with her father and her own involvement in the abolition movement. Benjamin Lundy (1789-1839) was a prominent Quaker abolitionist best known for his development of abolitionist periodicals. His Genius of Universal Emancipation was first published in 1821 from his home in Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, and enjoyed a wide circulation across the antebellum United States. In the 1820s, the young William Lloyd Garrison came to work for The Genius. Benjamin Lundy traveled widely seeking subscriptions to The Genius, giving talks about the anti-slavery movement, and observing and documenting the conditions of enslaved people across the Americas. He was also involved in the establishment of freed slave colonies in Mexico
R. Williams letter to Mrs. Susan M.Weirman, September 9, 1895
Short note from Lundy biographer R. Williams to Mrs. Susan M. Wierman (here, "Wiederman") concerning Williams' proposed return visits to Wierman's home in Clear Creek, Illinois. Williams explains that he had intended to visit with a "Col. Plumb"; but Plumb is elderly and had fallen ill. Williams proposes hoping to visit solo in months to come, and asks after the dates of the local Friends Quarterly Meeting. Benjamin Lundy (1789-1839) was a prominent Quaker abolitionist best known for his development of abolitionist periodicals. His Genius of Universal Emancipation was first published in 1821 from his home in Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, and enjoyed a wide circulation across the antebellum United States. In the 1820s, the young William Lloyd Garrison came to work for The Genius. Benjamin Lundy traveled widely seeking subscriptions to The Genius, giving talks about the anti-slavery movement, and observing and documenting the conditions of enslaved people across the Americas. He was also involved in the establishment of freed slave colonies in Mexico
R. Williams letter to Mrs. Susan M.Weirman, July 21, 1896
Response letter from R. Williams to Susan M. Wierman [sometimes spelled Weirman] following up on a visit from photographer M. Wooley, presumably to snap photographs of Susan and the Lundy home to accompany Williams' biographical essay on Lundy. Williams sends along Wooley's letters and requests additional information from Ms. Wierman about the life and times of some meeting houses significant in the life and times of her father, anti-slavery activist and abolitionist periodical publisher Benjamin Lundy. Benjamin Lundy (1789-1839) was a prominent Quaker abolitionist best known for his development of abolitionist periodicals. His Genius of Universal Emancipation was first published in 1821 from his home in Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, and enjoyed a wide circulation across the antebellum United States. In the 1820s, the young William Lloyd Garrison came to work for The Genius. Benjamin Lundy traveled widely seeking subscriptions to The Genius, giving talks about the anti-slavery movement, and observing and documenting the conditions of enslaved people across the Americas. He was also involved in the establishment of freed slave colonies in Mexico
Craig Miller, Carol Edison, Ute beader Fabian Jenks
Craig Miller, Carol Edison, Ute beader Fabian Jenk
Supplemental Figures - Supplemental material for Head and Bottle Angles Achieved by Patients During High-Volume Sinonasal Irrigations
Supplemental material, Supplemental Figures for Head and Bottle Angles Achieved by Patients During High-Volume Sinonasal Irrigations by Zachary H. Griggs, Amy M. Williams and John R. Craig in American Journal of Rhinology & Allergy</p
Validity and reliability concerns associated with cardiopulmonary exercise testing young people with cystic fibrosis
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Letter to the Edito
The effect of ivacaftor in adolescents with cystic fibrosis (G551D mutation): an exercise physiology perspective
This is the author version of an article published in Pediatric Physical Therapy 26(4):454-461, Winter 2014. The final published version is available via: http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PEP.0000000000000086PediatricPURPOSE: The purpose of this report was to evaluate the influence of 12 weeks of ivacaftor treatment on the aerobic function of 2 teenage patients with cystic fibrosis (CF; ΔF508/G551D) using a maximal cardiopulmonary exercise test. SUMMARY OF KEY POINTS: One patient, with relatively mild disease, demonstrated no clinically meaningful changes in maximal oxygen uptake ((Equation is included in full-text article.)O2max). However, in the second case, with more established lung disease on imaging, (Equation is included in full-text article.)O2max improved by approximately 30%, an improvement out of proportion with early lung function changes. This improvement resulted from increased muscle oxygen delivery and extraction. STATEMENT OF CONCLUSIONS: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing can monitor the extent and cause(s) of change following interventions such as ivacaftor, with the potential to identify functional changes independent from spirometry indices. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CLINICAL PRACTICE: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing represents an important and comprehensive clinical assessment tool, and its use as an outcome measure in the functional assessment of patients with CF is encouraged
Relationship between (non)linear phase II pulmonary oxygen uptake kinetics with skeletal muscle oxygenation and age in 11-15 year olds
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this recordThis study investigated in nineteen male youth (mean age: 13.6 ± 1.1 y, range: 11.7 –
15.7 y) the relationship between pulmonary oxygen uptake ( o2) and muscle
deoxygenation kinetics during moderate‐ and very heavy‐intensity ‘step’ cycling
initiated from unloaded pedaling (i.e. U→M and U→VH) and moderate‐to‐very heavy‐
intensity step cycling (i.e. M→VH). Pulmonary o2 was measured breath‐by‐breath and
tissue oxygenation index (TOI) of the vastus lateralis using near‐infrared spectroscopy.
There were no significant differences in the phase II time constant (τ o2p) between
U→M and U→VH (23 ± 6 s vs. 25 ± 7 s; P = 0.36); however, the τ o2p was slower during
M→VH (42 ± 16 s) compared to other conditions (P < 0.001). Quadriceps TOI decreased
with a faster (P < 0.01) mean response time (MRT; i.e. time delay + τ) during U→VH (14
± 2 s) compared to U→M (22 ± 4 s) and M→VH (20 ± 6 s). The difference (Δ) between
the τ o2p and MRT‐TOI was greater during U→VH compared to U→M (12 ± 7 vs. 2 ± 7 s,
P < 0.001) and during M→VH (23 ± 15 s) compared to other conditions (P < 0.02),
suggesting an increased proportional speeding of fractional O2 extraction. The slowing
of the τ o2p during M→VH relative to U→M and U→VH correlated positively with
chronological age (r = 0.68 and 0.57, respectively, P < 0.01). In youth, “work‐to‐work”
transitions slowed microvascular O2 delivery‐to‐O2 utilization with alterations in phase
II o2 dynamics accentuated between the ages of 11 to 15 y
Evolution of aposematic behavior and coloration in the Australian frog genus Uperoleia
Edmund D. Brodie Jr., Craig R. Williams, and Michael J. Tyle
Page 81
Images and descriptions of Arkansas College football players Emil Wyatt, Asa Rogers, Alfred R. Kelly, and Craig Williams
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