55 research outputs found

    Interviews with Harold Riisoe and Zelma Sibley

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    Interviews with Harold Riisoe and Zelma Sibley 00:00:01 - Introduction, Harold Riisoe of Kinsley, KS 00:00:25 - Childhood in Norway 00:01:14 - Norwegian song, vocal and guitar, with English translation 00:04:10 - Song, A New Pig in the Parlor vocal and guitar 00:05:11 - Song, Square Dance, vocal and guitar 00:05:40 - Song, Sailing East , vocal and guitar 00:06:17 - Song, Coffee Grows on White Oak Stumps 00:08:13 - May 17th Norwegian Independence Day celebrations 00:10:10 - Food and recipes 00:16:22 - Predicting the sex of a baby 00:16:44 - Song, square dance, fiddle and guitar 00:18:07 - Song, Chase that Possum , fiddle and guitar 00:18:50 - Song, Polka square dance, fiddle and guitar 00:19:38 - Song, Little Brown Jug , fiddle, vocal, and guitar 00:21:04 - Song, Heel and Toe Polka , fiddle and guitar 00:22:30 - Song, Waltz Quadrille , fiddle, vocal, and guitar 00:23:51 - Song, The Rye Waltz , fiddle and guitar 00:24:50 - Song, The Cake Waltz , fiddle and guitar 00:26:09 - Song, Rag-time Annie , fiddle and guitar 00:27:29 - Song, Schottische , fiddle and guitar 00:28:42 - Unidentified song, fiddle and guitar 00:29:53 - Song, Put Your Little Foot , fiddle and guitar 00:31:12 - Song, Flying Dutchman , fiddle and guitar 00:33:08 - 44th birthday 00:34:31 - Blizzard of 1886 00:37:47 - Introduction, Zela Sibley of Lewis, KS 00:38:24 - Song, Little Blossom , vocal and piano 00:42:50 - Song, The Sailor\u27s Daughter , vocal and piano 00:45:06 - Song, Babes in the Woods , vocal and piano 00:46:32 - Song, The Black Sheep , vocal and piano 00:51:17 - A Salvation Army song, vocal and piano 00:52:44 - Unknown man, poem, Two babes were born in the self-same townhttps://scholars.fhsu.edu/sackett/1130/thumbnail.jp

    Regional Anesthesia Introduced Into an Emergency/Trauma

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    Emergency rooms across the United States have an incredibly large number of shoulder dislocations that need to be manipulated and reset on a daily basis. A cost-benefit analysis in this Doctor of Nursing Practice Project will demonstrate a new form of care for shoulder dislocations in the emergency room with certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNA) providing regional anesthesia with local lidocaine injections into the shoulder joint. A level II trauma center in Mississippi with many shoulder dislocations was the location that was used to evaluate conscious sedation, length of procedure, and pain scores. A retrospective chart review was performed at this hospital. The primary regional anesthetic evidence was provided using a focus review. The cost- benefit analysis suggested a decrease in cost with the direct variables of regional anesthesia and conscious sedation. The indirect variables were satisfaction through pain scores and length of procedure/stay. Descriptive statistics were used to evaluate the evidence. The findings suggested decreased cost with decreased pain scores and decreased length of procedures using regional anesthesia. The 54 patients in the retrospective review were calculated on the appropriate acuity level per procedure to determine cost. The calculated cost of conscious sedation patients per year was 25,704;thecalculatedcostofregionalanestheticpatientsperyearwas25,704; the calculated cost of regional anesthetic patients per year was 15,660. The determined saving was $10, 044, and the difference in turnover was an additional 2.18 patients that can be seen per day in the emergency room if regional anesthetics were used to manipulate shoulder dislocations. Decreased cost for the patient, increased revenue and reimbursement for the hospital, and improved quality of care should lead healthcare provider and systems to consider this positive change. Regional anesthesia for shoulder manipulation has been used by other providers outside the nation and in military bases providing evidence of safe and effective practice

    Should the Surety Stand on Its Equitable Subrogation Rights or File Its Indemnity Agreement under the Uniform Commercial Code?

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    I. Introduction II. The Hypothetical Case III. The U.C.C. and Equitable Subrogation ... A. The Bank Has Superior Claims to the Contractor\u27s Assets under the U.C.C. ... B. The Doctrine of Equitable Subrogation ... C. The Tension between the U.C.C. and Equitable Subrogation ... 1. Equitable Subrogation Was Not Replaced by the U .C.C ... 2. Weaknesses of Equitable Subrogation ... 3. Potential Uses of the U.C.C. by Sureties IV. Analysis of the Hypothetical ... A. Who Gets the Contract Balance? ... 1. Rights under the U.C.C. ... 2. Completion of Performance ... 3. Governing Law ... 4. Conclusions as to Contract Balances ... B. Who Gets the Materials? ... 1. The Bank Has a Perfected Security Interest in the Materials ... 2. The Owner May Have Rights Superior to the Bank\u27s Interest ... 3. The Surety Has No Enforceable Claims to Materials under Equitable Subrogation ... 4. The Surety Has Problems Even If It Filed Its Indemnity Agreement under the U.C.C. ... 5. Conclusion—Materials ... C. Who Gets the Equipment? ... 1. The Bank Has Superior Rights to the Equipment … 2. Equitable Subrogation Does Not Give the Surety Any Rights to Contractor\u27s Equipment ... 3. Filing under the U.C.C. Would Have Given the Surety Rights in the Equipment ... 4. Conclusion—Equipment V. What Are the Advantages and Disadvantages of Recording the Indemnity Agreement under the U.C.C.? … A. Advantages of Filing under the U.C.C. ... B. Disadvantages of Filing under the U.C.C. ... C. Filing after Default ... D. Filing When Necessary under the Circumstances May Be the Best Solution VI. Conclusio

    Altered Backbone and Side-Chain Interactions Result in Route Heterogeneity during the Folding of Interleukin-1b (IL-1b)

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    Deletion of the b-bulge trigger-loop results in both a switch in the preferred folding route, from the functional loop packing folding route to barrel closure, as well as conversion of the agonist activity of IL-1b into antagonist activity. Conversely, circular permutations of IL-1b conserve the functional folding route as well as the agonist activity. These two extremes in the folding-functional interplay beg the question of whether mutations in IL-1b would result in changes in the populations of heterogeneous folding routes and the signaling activity. A series of topologically equivalent water-mediated b-strand bridging interactions within the pseudosymmetric b-trefoil fold of IL-1b highlight the backbone water interactions that stabilize the secondary and tertiary structure of the protein. Additionally, conserved aromatic residues lining the central cavity appear to be essential for both stability and folding. Here, we probe these protein backbone-water molecule and side chain-side chain interactions and the role they play in the folding mechanism of this geometrically stressed molecule. We used folding simulations with structure-based models, as well as a series of folding kinetic experiments to examine the effects of the F42W core mutation on the folding landscape of IL-1b. This mutation alters water-mediated backbone interactions essential for maintaining the trefoil fold. Our results clearly indicate that this perturbation in the primary structure alters a structural water interaction and consequently modulates the population of folding routes accessed during folding and signaling activity

    The expression and characterization of mutant chloroproxidase with mutations in amino acid residues, C29 and H105

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    Thesis (B.S.)--Univeristy of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.Includes bibliographical reference (leaves 23-25)U of I OnlyTheses restricted to UIUC community onl

    MEDICAL REHABILITATION

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    Rusk, Howard A

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