1,358,518 research outputs found

    [Voluntary Statement by Mary Ann Moorman #1]

    No full text
    Voluntary statement by Mary Ann Moorman, a witness in Dealey Plaza. She states that she was with Jean Hill watching the parade go by and taking photographs with a Polaroid camera. Gunshots went off as she was taking a picture, which developed and showed the President slumped over

    [Voluntary Statement by Mary Ann Moorman #2]

    No full text
    Voluntary statement by Mary Ann Moorman, a witness in Dealey Plaza. She states that she was with Jean Hill watching the parade go by and taking photographs with a Polaroid camera. Gunshots went off as she was taking a picture, which developed and showed the President slumped over

    Moorman, A

    No full text

    [David Garner Moorman 1]

    No full text
    Undated photograph of David Garner Moorman which is taped to his May 15, 1967, personal and professional data bank form.David Garner Moorman was born on July 3, 1939 in Tyler, Texas. He received a B.S. in Agricultural Economics from Texas Technological College in 1959 and his M.S. from Texas Tech in 1963. He also attended Texas A&M from 1963-1966. Moorman was hired as a assistant professor in Agricultural Economics in 1970 and resigned his position in 1971

    Moorman, Clifford (SC 76)

    No full text
    Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 76. Letter written by Clifford Moorman, Hillsboro, Texas, to a relative, Miss Annie Kennerly, Lewisburg, Kentucky, which contains chiefly Moorman family genealogical information

    Preparation of 3-aroylthiophene-2-amines as allosteric enhancers of the A1 adenosine receptor

    No full text
    Title compds. represented by the formula I [wherein W = (un)substituted (hetero)aryl; R1 = H, (un)substituted (cyclo)alkyl, alkenyl, etc.; R5, R6 = independently H, (un)substituted alkyl, aryl, etc.; and pharmaceutically acceptable salts thereof] were prepd. as allosteric enhancers of the A1 adenosine receptor. For example, II (R = iso-Pr) was provided in a multi-step synthesis starting from 3-(4-chlorophenyl)-3-oxopropionitrile. Certain invention compds., e.g. II (R = Me3CCH2), showed increasing the A1 specific binding of the agonist [3H]CCPA to human CHO-A1 membranes up to 5.5-fold at 10 μM concn., and exhibited about 6.3-fold increase in the Bmax value of the agonist [3H]CCPA at 10 μM. Thus, I and their pharmaceutical compns. are useful for the treatment of pain, in particular, chronic pain such as neuropathic pain, and inflammatory pain, cardiac disease or disorder such as cardiac disarrhythmias, e.g., paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, angina, myocardial infarction and stroke, neurol. disease or injury, sleep disorders, epilepsy and depression

    [David Garner Moorman 2]

    No full text
    Undated photograph of David Garner Moorman which is taped to his February 6, 1963, personal and professional data bank form.David Garner Moorman was born on July 3, 1939 in Tyler, Texas. He received a B.S. in Agricultural Economics from Texas Technological College in 1959 and his M.S. from Texas Tech in 1963. He also attended Texas A&M from 1963-1966. Moorman was hired as a assistant professor in Agricultural Economics in 1970 and resigned his position in 1971

    Mary Moorman Dailey nee Kirkpatrick

    No full text
    The photograph is of Mary Moorman Dailey nee Kirkpatrick taken in 1947. According to her daughter, Claudia Moorman Eley, this photograph appeared in the 1947 "Silver Spruce," yearbook for Colorado A & M, Fort Collins, Colorado, from Mary's senior year. Her name in the album is listed as Mary Moorman, but she married James "Jim" Dailey in March of 1947
    corecore