522 research outputs found
Andrew Jackson Riddle papers, W.0162
Abstract: Papers and photographs by Civil War photographer Andrew Jackson Riddle.Scope and Content Note: The letters and papers of Andrew Jackson Riddle (probably best known for his photographs of the Andersonville Prison Camp) in this collection includes several lists of chemicals and papers needed to produce the photographic copies of maps for the Confederate Army. There is also a letter from Assistant Engineer A. H. Buchanan to Lieutenant J. W. Glenn requesting more copies of a particular set of maps of the Atlanta, Georgia, area. On the back of this letter is a note from Lieutenant Glenn to Captain Wrenshall to have the correct negative sent to the photographers "for execution of the within order." In a photocopied document, Riddle makes a case for leniency while a prisoner of war. As he was captured three times while transporting photographic supplies, it appears this statement was made during his second internment.The photographs are primarily cartes-de-visite made in his Macon, Georgia, studio. There are two larger cabinet cards made while he was in Columbus, Georgia. Of the cartes-de-visite, four of which are of Confederate officers, one is a composite picture of General Robert E. Lee surrounded by other Confederate officers. The other three include the following: John C. Wrenshall, Captain Engineers, C.S.A.; E. J. McGehu (McGehee?), Co. D. Twenty-first Mississippi Volunteers, Longstreet's Corps, Army of Northern Virginia; and Henry Farrow (rank and unit unknown). The remainder of the cartes-de-visite and the two cabinet cards are mainly of young women and children. Various fabrics in four of the pictures are tinted with a vibrant pink and one child's dress is a pale blue with dark blue trim.The collection also includes a single issue of
Confederate Veteran (v. XX, no. 2, August 1912) and the reprinted article "Scientist of the Confederate Nitre and Mining Bureau" by Ralph W. Donnelly from
Civil War History, vol. II, no. 4, December, 1956. The reprint is inscribed by the author and dated December 8, 1963.Biographical/Historical Note: Andrew Jackson Riddle was born on February 28, 1828, in Baltimore, Maryland. In the early 1850s, Riddle moved to Columbus, Georgia, and established a Daguerreian studio. On November 12, 1856, he married Annie P. Hunley; the couple had three children who lived to adulthood: John, George A., and Susie.Riddle enlisted in the Confederate army at the outbreak of the Civil War and served three years. He was captured three times; he even spent eight months in the Old Capitol Prison in Washington, DC. During the war, he worked with the engineers making photographic reproductions of the maps needed by the Army. In fact, two of the times he was captured, he was carrying photographic supplies from New York to Virginia through enemy lines.After the war he reestablished his photography studio in Macon, Georgia. He also spent a few years in Eufaula, Alabama, and moved from there to Columbus, where he resided until his death. Riddle died on March 21, 1897. He is buried in the Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon
Sustained glycaemic control and less nocturnal hypoglycaemia with insulin glargine 300 U/mL compared with glargine 100 U/mL in Japanese adults with type 1 diabetes (EDITION JP 1 randomised 12-month trial including 6-month extension)
New insulin glargine 300 units/mL versus glargine 100 units/mL in people with type 2 diabetes using basal and mealtime insulin: Glucose control and hypoglycemia in a 6-month randomized controlled trial (EDITION 1)
The Campaign: a case study in identity construction through performance
This article undertakes a detailed case study of The Campaign, a teaching and learning innovation in media and communications that uses an online educational role-play. The case study draws on the qualitative analysis of classroom observations, online communications and semi-structured interviews, employing an interpretive approach informed by models drawn from social theory and sociotechnical theory. Educational authors argue that online educational role-plays engage students in authentic learning, and represent an improvement over didactic teaching strategies. According to this literature, online role-play systems afford students the opportunity of acting and doing instead of only reading and listening. Literature in social theory and social studies of technology takes a different view of certain concepts such as performance, identity and reality. Models such as performative self constitution and actor network theory ask us to consider the constructed nature of identity and the roles of all of the actors, including the system itself. This article examines these concepts by addressing a series of research questions relating to identity formation and mediation, and suggests certain limitations of the situationist perspective in explaining the educationalvalue of role-play systems
New Insulin Glargine 300 Units/mL Versus Glargine 100 Units/mL in People With Type 1 Diabetes: A Randomized, Phase 3a, Open-Label Clinical Trial (EDITION 4)
Diabetes Research and Care Through the Ages
As has been well established, the Diabetes Care journal’s most visible signature event is the Diabetes Care Symposium held each year during the American Diabetes Association’s Scientific Sessions. Held this past year on 10 June 2017 in San Diego, California, at the 77th Scientific Sessions, this event has become one of the most attended sessions during the Scientific Sessions. Each year, in order to continue to have the symposium generate interest, we revise the format and content of this event. For this past year, our 6th annual symposium, I felt it was time to provide a comprehensive overview of our efforts in diabetes care to determine, first and foremost, how we arrived at our current state of management. I also felt the narrative needed to include the current status of management, especially with a focus toward cardiovascular disease, and finally, we wanted to ask what the future holds. Toward this goal, I asked four of the most noted experts in the world to provide their opinion on this topic. The symposium started with a very thoughtful presentation by Dr. Jay Skyler entitled “A Look Back as to How We Got Here.” That was followed by two lectures on current concepts by Dr. Bernard Zinman entitled “Current Treatment Paradigms Today—How Well Are We Doing?” and by Dr. Matthew Riddle entitled “Evolving Concepts and Future Directions for Cardiovascular Outcomes Trials.” The final lecture for the symposium was delivered by Dr. Ele Ferrannini and was entitled “What Does the Future Hold?” As always, a well-attended and well-received symposium is now the norm for our signature event and our efforts were rewarded by the enthusiasm of the attendees. This narrative summarizes the lectures held at the symposium.
—William T. Cefalu
Chief Scientific, Medical & Mission Officer, American Diabetes Association</jats:p
Babka, Matthew (Death, 1904-08-22)
Address: Riddle Road (Little Sisters of the Poor)Age at death: 76-11-24373/Pg103/1904/M W M/Germany/Dr. Wm. C. Schmidter/Joseph Schreiber & Son/St. Johns Cem.Original record filed in drawer labeled 'AUG-BACHMANN'
Maher, Matthew (Death, 1904-05-20)
Address: Little Sisters (riddle Rd.)Age at death: 60 yrs.Pg 71/381/1904/M W/Ireland/Dr. Wm. C. Schmidter/J. J. Sullivan/St. Joseph's NewOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MACK, R-MAIN'
Tim Brady
Dr. Tim Brady is the Interim Chancellor, Daytona Beach campus at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. He previously was Professor and Dean, College of Aviation, at Daytona Beach. Prior to Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Brady was the Chairman of the Power and Transportation Department (Aviation Department) at Central Missouri State University (1991-1998) and was at Parks College of St. Louis University for 11 years as Dean of Institutional Advancement and External Programs (1980-91). He led the effort to create the first Ph.D. in Aviation and the first Ph.D. program for Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
Brady has served as the President of the Council on Aviation Accreditation (now AABI, Aviation Accreditation Board International). He also served as President of the University Aviation Association (1993-94). His other experience includes active duty with the U.S. Air Force (1958-1980); dual rated as a pilot and navigator. He flew the C-130 aircraft for 20 years and was twice decorated in combat (Vietnam) with the Distinguished Flying Cross. He currently holds the Air Transport Pilot (ATP) rating (multi and single engine with commercial privileges). He holds a Ph.D. in Higher Education Administration from Saint Louis University; Master of Science Degree in Management from Abilene Christian University, Abilene, Texas; and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Social Science from Troy State University, Montgomery, Alabama.
Brady serves as the Chair of the FAA’s Aviation Rulemaking Advisory Committee (ARAC). He is a published author of more than 30 articles related to aviation and is the lead author of the textbook The American Aviation Experience: A History. He has written more than 40 externally funded grants or contracts totaling nearly $4 million. He created and hosted the first National Training Aircraft Symposium (NTAS) in 1987 while at Parks College.https://commons.erau.edu/ntas-bios/1028/thumbnail.jp
Low levels of unmodified insulin glargine in plasma of people with type 2 diabetes requiring high doses of basal insulin
Glargine metabolism has been studied
in insulin-treated people with type 2 diabetes
(T2D) at usual glargine doses of
0.4–0.8 units/kg/day (1,2). In some
obese subjects with insulin-resistant
T2D, higher basal insulin doses are
needed, and the question of safety of
glargine (3) is therefore still relevant.
Epidemiological studies indicate that
the risk of cancer is especially elevated
in obese individuals with insulin-resistant
diabetes requiring high insulin doses (4).
Unmodified insulin glargine has been
suggested to confer a higher risk of cancer
(3), but prior studies have shown
that, at usual doses, an active metabolite
(M1) with actions similar to human
insulin is the main circulating molecule
after glargine injection (1,2).
The aim of the current study was to
establish the plasma levels of insulin
glargine (M0) and its metabolites M1
and M2 (1,2) in subjects with T2D
treated long-term with glargine dose
$1.2 units/kg/da
- …
