2,611 research outputs found
Maxwell Whiteman collection of Hendricks family papers undated, 1799-1872, 1971
Collection consists of Hendricks family papers that were in the possession of Maxwell Whiteman, author of Cooper For America. The collection includes accounts and business correspondence written to Harmon Hendricks primarily from trade metal agents Solomon Moses (1774-1857) and Joseph Lyon Moss (1804-1874). An invitation to the third annual meeting of the Coppers Manufacturers Association is also available. The collection also contains a copy of Whiteman's book, photographs of illustrations Whiteman used for Cooper in America, and a photograph of Edmund HendricksSid LapidusMr. Sid Lapidu
Error analysis of finite element methods with triangles for elliptic boundary value problems
Letter re: cakes
Letter from Ferne Whiteman Smith, sister of band leader Paul Whiteman, to James M. North, Jr., vice president of Carter Publications Inc. and editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, regarding some cakes being sent.Mr Carter Letter from Paul's sister about the cake 3/3/37 JMN My dear Mr North When Brother was in St. Louis last month he asked me to send a certain cake to you and one to Mr. Carter. You should have received them last Saturday. You may like to know that this is a Rhume cake made without flour. Just ground hazelnuts, sugar and eggs with a filling of cream and rhume. Hope you enjoy it. And will you please pass this information on to Mr. Carter? Sincerely Ferne Whiteman Smith 4612 Sundell Blvd, St Loui
Phosphinodithioate and Phosphoramidodithioate Hydrogen Sulfide Donors.
Hydrogen sulfide is rapidly emerging as a key physiological mediator and potential therapeutic tool in numerous areas such as acute and chronic inflammation, neurodegenerative and cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity and cancer. However, the vast majority of the published studies have employed crude sulfide salts such as sodium hydrosulfide (NaSH) and sodium sulfide (Na2S) as H2S "donors" to generate H2S. Although these salts are cheap, readily available and easy to use, H2S generated from them occurs as an instantaneous and pH-dependent dissociation, whereas endogenous H2S synthesis from the enzymes cystathionine γ-lyase, cystathionine-β-synthase and 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase is a slow and sustained process. Furthermore, sulfide salts are frequently used at concentrations (e.g. 100 μM to 10 mM) far in excess of the levels of H2S reported in vivo (nM to low μM). For the therapeutic potential of H2S is to be properly harnessed, pharmacological agents which generate H2S in a physiological manner and deliver physiologically relevant concentrations are needed. The phosphorodithioate GYY4137 has been proposed as "slow-release" H2S donors and has shown promising efficacy in cellular and animal model diseases such as hypertension, sepsis, atherosclerosis, neonatal lung injury and cancer. However, H2S generation from GYY4137 is inefficient necessitating its use at high concentrations/doses. However, structural modification of the phosphorodithioate core has led to compounds (e.g. AP67 and AP105) with accelerated rates of H2S generation and enhanced biological activity. In this review, the therapeutic potential and limitations of GYY4137 and related phosphorodithioate derivatives are discussed
Pharmacological tools for hydrogen sulphide research: a brief, introductory guide for beginners.
The purpose of this brief review is to help researchers in their initial approach to the H2S field and to provide answers for the
most frequently posed questions by newcomers to the topic related to H2S donors and inhibitors of H2S synthesis, as well as
methods to measure H2S production. Here the reader will find a practical guide that provides fast and to the point
information on how to (i) deliver H2S to cells; (ii) modulate its endogenous production; and (iii) measure its levels in fluids,
cells and tissues in order to gain an understanding of its role in health and disease
Starting with RefWorks
Pen to Paper image by mbgrigby shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 license.This document is an introduction to RefWorks - an online research management, writing and collaboration tool designed to help researchers easily gather, manage, store and share all types of information, as well as generate citations and bibliographies - for staff and students. The workbook contains copies of a PowerPoint presentation that is also available on this site. A workbook for an introductory workshop explaining and demonstrating how to set up a small database of references and use it in preparing a document using MS-Word
Aisopos: Fables Told in Type and Ornament
Here is a lovely book done under the direction of Gloria Kondrup and Heidrun Mumper-Drumm. The preface by Bruce Whiteman of the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. Hand-bound by Alice Vaughan. Unpaginated. There are thirty-three pairs of pages, the first a nearly transparent page with the name of the student who did the design of the fable itself, which is on the second, underlying page. Many of the fable texts are straightforward. Several are not. Among those apart from the tradition is the third selection by Sarah Cathcart: I am Aesop, Gabriel, a Liar. I'll build my wings with paper, glue, and wire. I'll catch an updraft in the city tonight. I gotta be ready. You don't fuck around with flight. So there! D. Reagan Marshall gets the swirls of the 2 in the title 2 Crabs to represent the sideways walking of the two crabs. Soyoung Leah Kim's title The Fox with the Cropped Tail is itself cropped on the edge of the page. Clever! Dyna Kau does lovely work with designs and colors in a version of GA called Summertime. Emily Liu works with several highly expressive designs for her version of WC. A standard feature of the pages is a rectangular section in the upper left that usually contains the text of the story. Other things like the title and moral often fall outside this rectangle. Another favorite of mine is The Scorpion and the Frog by Christine Marie Montgomery. Ellen Wong's fable is new to me and very strong. I quote it without attending to its poetic form. Cartier a richman bought his wife a Cartier necklace every month. (Just for being beautiful) he said. One day, she observed a wrinkle above her right eye and decided to go under the knife. (For sure he will reward me wth an extra diamond) she thought. But with 1 cut of inexperience her face now sits lop-sided. And her husband now sits with another. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder (of the knife). I am so delighted to have found a copy of this book!This is a hardbound book (hard cover)Limited edition of 75 copiesArt Center College of Desig
Statesmen , Scholars and Merchants. Essays in Eighteenth-Century History presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland. Edited by Anne Whiteman, J. S. Bromley and P. G. M. Dickson, 1973
Michaud Claude. Statesmen , Scholars and Merchants. Essays in Eighteenth-Century History presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland. Edited by Anne Whiteman, J. S. Bromley and P. G. M. Dickson, 1973. In: Dix-huitième Siècle, n°7, 1975. pp. 386-387
Statesmen , Scholars and Merchants. Essays in Eighteenth-Century History presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland. Edited by Anne Whiteman, J. S. Bromley and P. G. M. Dickson, 1973
Michaud Claude. Statesmen , Scholars and Merchants. Essays in Eighteenth-Century History presented to Dame Lucy Sutherland. Edited by Anne Whiteman, J. S. Bromley and P. G. M. Dickson, 1973. In: Dix-huitième Siècle, n°7, 1975. pp. 386-387
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