111 research outputs found

    Comparative Risk Predictions of Second Cancers After Carbon-Ion Therapy Versus Proton Therapy

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    Purpose This work proposes a theoretical framework that enables comparative risk predictions for second cancer incidence after particle beam therapy for different ion species for individual patients, accounting for differences in relative biological effectiveness (RBE) for the competing processes of tumor initiation and cell inactivation. Our working hypothesis was that use of carbon-ion therapy instead of proton therapy would show a difference in the predicted risk of second cancer incidence in the breast for a sample of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients. Methods and Materials We generated biologic treatment plans and calculated relative predicted risks of second cancer in the breast by using two proposed methods: a full model derived from the linear quadratic model and a simpler linear-no-threshold model. Results For our reference calculation, we found the predicted risk of breast cancer incidence for carbon-ion plans-to-proton plan ratio, , to be 0.75 ± 0.07 but not significantly smaller than 1 (P=.180). Conclusions Our findings suggest that second cancer risks are, on average, comparable between proton therapy and carbon-ion therapy

    Birmingham News sleeve BN0048544

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    Drug bust / "Rope-A-Dope" / Rope a dope arrests. / Photographer will accompany driver and officers on arrests. / Meet driver at grand jury room on 6th floor of Jefferson County courthouse / 1) Bobby Edward Cooke / 2) Kenneth Lee Warden / 3) Joey Paul Felton / Sergeant Ken William / Officer B. H. Herren (glasses and [moustache]) / Officer Wayne Owens (with hat, blonde hair) / Officer Pat Howell (woman) / 4 Birmingham cops / Bobby Edward Cooke / Dennis Blanton [Co.] / David Boggans / Mustache / [Work order and notes included

    Band, 1954-1955 ROTC

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    Shown members of the Jacksonville State College ROTC band stand outside in uniform with instruments on the field inside the stadium. Band leader was Master Sgt. Guy Bigham. Band members were George Broom, Hugh Epley, James Harrell, Marlin Hawkins, James McDonald, Jimmy Rayburn, Deleath Ribes, Dewitt Self, Jimmy Busby, John Denman, Howard Entrekin, Kenneth Howle, Charles Howell, Allen Mason, Wilbur Phillips, Lynn Shelton, Jerry Smith, Weldon Smitherman, Gus Unger, Wayne Washam, Harrell Whitehead.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/3068/thumbnail.jp

    Miller, Dorie

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    Adams, George

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    James Webb Throckmorton: the life and career of a southern frontier politician, 1825-1894

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    Many scholars of the Reconstruction era have examined James Webb Throckmorton??s political career between 1860 and 1867 and have revealed that his racist views helped hasten the end of Radical Reconstruction in Texas. However, these scholars have not explained the motivations behind Throckmorton??s political ideology, nor have they explained adequately the origins of the North Texan??s racism. This dissertation focuses on these critical issues by examining the development of Throckmorton??s personal and political beliefs between 1850 and 1874. It shows that Throckmorton??s political ideology was influenced by four primary factors: his early experiences on the North Texas frontier, his desire to create a community on the frontier that was primarily designed to be a haven for white settlers, his commitment to political conservatism which evolved from his early affiliation with Whig political ideology, and his quest to bring economic improvement to the North Texas region. In contrast to other scholarly works on Throckmorton which claim that the North Texan??s political views were contradictory and inconsistent, this study demonstrates that Throckmorton??s ideological beliefs remained constant and changed little over time. His commitment to preserving the whiteness of the frontier, to protecting the settlers of his home region, to conservative political ideology, and to internal improvements, especially railroads, never wavered during one of the most turbulent periods in Texas politics. This study also reinforces several important conclusions about the South in the nineteenth century: The region was never a homogeneous society; southern racism was multifaceted; and southern settlers migrating westward, especially those from the Upper South, viewed the frontier as a potential escape from the political and social dominance of large slaveholders

    1951 Varsity Football Team

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    These football players were students at Jacksonville State Teachers College (now Jacksonville State University). Shown dressed in football uniforms the varsity squad is shown in the College Bowl. Shown from left are, first row, Bob Shelley, Harold Bentley, Graham Boyd, Ben Miller, Charlie Siebold, Ray Horne, Harry West, Johnny Howell, Jodie Connell, Jack Kines, Guy Simms, Whit Wyatt, second row, John Meadows, Dick Greer, Bob Wallace, Ray Campbell, Travis Walker, Aubrey Tinsley, Buddy White, Bobby Harris, Bernard Hammett, Bob Henderson, Don Mauldin, Charlie Stough, Bob Baker, Charles Gilmer, Paul Quinn, Phil Woodward, third row, Kenneth Conway, Slashburg Winchester, Carlton Hosmer, Judson Whorton, John Hammel, Rosy Williams, Bobby Dobbs, Ernest Goggans, Bill Nolan, Morris Britt, Bobby Jones, Bill Gobert, Frank Johnson, fourth row, Robert Machen, Frank Bice, Charles McCarty, Bob Coley, Thomas Poe, Ernest Robinson, Earl Bates, Jack Stewart, Duel Johnson, Byrd Tucker, John Sherley, Wayne Hardeman, Paul Thompson, Junior Holder, Bull Bailey. (circa September 26, 1951)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/8813/thumbnail.jp

    University of Nebraska College of Medicine Class of 1952

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    Carl Richard Aschoff, Paul Jule Beithon, Robert Leslie Bierbower, Marvin Dean Bordy, Zane Rex Boyd, David Dean Bronder, Robert Enos Butler, John Douglas Carson, Bruce Frederick Claussen, Grace Elizabeth Clements, David LeRoy Edelman, Milton Dwight Faul, John Richard Finkner, James Robert Frans, Harold Ellis Gentry, Jr., Harris Breiner Graves, Earl George Greene, Jr., Russell Gilbert Gustavson, Keay Hachiya, George James Haslam, Orin Robert Hayes, Marquis Warren Hineman, Kenneth Clyde Hoffman, George Frederick Hoffmeister, Leo A. Hrnicek, Patricia Alynne Hunt, Morris Blaine Johnson, Robert Hugo Johnson, Robert Warren Johnson, Stanley Logsdon Johnson, Benjamin Keith Karas, Henry Joseph Kellogg, William Clinton Kenner, III, Philip Sheridan King, III, Philip Kolnick, Theodore John Lemke, Jr., William Bradford Long, Thomas Harry Luby, Donald W. McIllece, Joseph Ernest Marvin, Roger Dale Mason, Georgia Elizabeth May, Clyde Avery Medlar, Ramona Jean Middleton, Warren Robert Miller, John Gregory Minder, Donald Harlan Morgan, James William Morrow, Robert Benton Muffly, Lester John Nathan, Patricia Jean Neely, Parry Swan Nelson, Salvatore Luciano Nigro, Merle Lewis Otto, Wayne Wilson Owens, John Edward Peckler, Robert Kimball Philips, Robert Vernon Plehn, Ernest Howell Price, Robert Orville Ralston, Hans Rath, Dale Crosser Reynolds, William Edward Reynolds, Jerrold Sidney Rice, George Raymond Rieth, Jr., Kenneth Dale Rodabaugh, Gordon Boyd Roget, Alvin Richard Scheffel, Gerhard Traugott Schmunk, Clayton Marion Shors, Earl Shrago, Robert Nelson Smith, Kenneth Claire Stout, Donald Trojan Story, William L. Sumption, Damaris Elisabeth Suttle, John Rutherford Thompson, John Richard VaVerka, Joseph Raymond Volk, Jr., James LeRoy Vose, Roger Edward Wehrs, Leland Blaine Wilson, Herbert Jerome Winterhttps://digitalcommons.unmc.edu/comclass/1032/thumbnail.jp
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