#c. k. agnew
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
STARS Song, Vocal Popular Sheet Music, Lyrics by James Lamont Haven Gillespie, Music by John Alden, Van Alstyne & Curtis Music Publishing Co., New York, Chicago, 1921.
Art Deco Cover Stars Art Illustration by C. K. Agnew.
#art deco#stars song#sheet music#1921#Haven Gillespie#c.k. agnew#c. k. agnew#night#stars#black#john alden#art#illustration#20s sheet music#1920s sheet music#20s music#20s new york#music history#stars illustration#art deco cover#art deco illustration#agnew#Vocal Popular Sheet Music#20s stars#1920s stars#night sky
115 notes
·
View notes
Note
2 and a half weeks until JC passes Cactus Jack!
It took me a little bit to figure out what you were referencing, but yes, Jimmy Carter will pass John Nance Garner as the longest-living President or Vice President in American history on September 18th. And if he is still with us on October 1st, Carter will be the first President or Vice President in American history to celebrate their 99th birthday.
And since I'm a huge dork who finds this stuff interesting, here's the big, complete list of longest-living to shortest-living Presidents and Vice Presidents in American history: (Presidents are in bold text, Vice Presidents are in italics, and those who served as both POTUS and VP are in bold italics.) John Nance Garner: 98 years, 351 days Jimmy Carter: 98 years, 337 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Levi P. Morton: 96 years, 0 days George H.W. Bush: 94 years, 171 days Gerald R. Ford: 93 years, 165 days Ronald Reagan: 93 years, 120 days Walter Mondale: 93 years, 81 days John Adams: 90 years, 247 days Herbert Hoover: 90 years, 71 days Harry S. Truman: 88 years, 232 days Charles G. Dawes: 85 years, 239 days James Madison: 85 years, 104 days Thomas Jefferson: 83 years, 82 days Dick Cheney: 82 years, 216 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Hannibal Hamlin: 81 years, 311 days Richard Nixon: 81 years, 104 days Joe Biden: 80 years, 287 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) John Quincy Adams: 80 years, 227 days Aaron Burr: 80 years, 220 days Martin Van Buren: 79 years, 231 days Adlai E. Stevenson: 78 years, 234 days Dwight D. Eisenhower: 78 years, 165 days Alben W. Barkley: 78 years, 157 days Andrew Jackson: 78 years, 85 days Spiro Agnew: 77 years, 261 days Donald Trump: 77 years, 81 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) George W. Bush: 77 years, 59 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Henry A. Wallace: 77 years, 42 days James Buchanan: 77 years, 39 days Bill Clinton: 77 years, 15 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Dan Quayle: 76 years, 211 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Charles Curtis: 76 years, 14 days Al Gore: 75 years, 156 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Millard Fillmore: 74 years, 60 days James Monroe: 73 years, 67 days George Clinton: 72 years, 268 days George M. Dallas: 72 years, 174 days William Howard Taft: 72 years, 174 days John Tyler: 71 years, 295 days Grover Cleveland: 71 years, 98 days Thomas R. Marshall: 71 years, 79 days Nelson Rockefeller: 70 years, 202 days Elbridge Gerry: 70 years, 129 days Rutherford B. Hayes: 70 years, 105 days Richard M. Johnson: 70 years, 33 days William Henry Harrison: 68 years, 54 days John C. Calhoun: 68 years, 13 days William A. Wheeler: 67 years, 339 days George Washington: 67 years, 295 days Benjamin Harrison: 67 years, 205 days Woodrow Wilson: 67 years, 36 days William R. King: 67 years, 11 days Hubert H. Humphrey: 66 years, 231 days Andrew Johnson: 66 years, 214 days Thomas A. Hendricks: 66 years, 79 days Charles W. Fairbanks: 66 years, 24 days Zachary Taylor: 65 years, 227 days Franklin Pierce: 64 years, 319 days Lyndon B. Johnson: 64 years, 148 days Mike Pence: 64 years, 88 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Henry Wilson: 63 years, 279 days Ulysses S. Grant: 63 years, 87 days Franklin D. Roosevelt: 63 years, 72 days Barack Obama: 62 years, 30 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) Schuyler Colfax: 61 years, 296 days Calvin Coolidge: 60 years, 185 days Theodore Roosevelt: 60 years, 71 days Kamala Harris: 58 years, 318 days (As of Sept. 3, 2023) William McKinley: 58 years, 228 days Warren G. Harding: 57 years, 273 days Chester A. Arthur: 57 years, 44 days James S. Sherman: 57 years, 6 days Abraham Lincoln: 56 years, 62 days Garret A. Hobart: 55 years, 171 days John C. Breckinridge: 54 years, 116 days James K. Polk: 53 years, 225 days Daniel D. Tompkins: 50 years, 355 days James Garfield: 49 years, 304 days John F. Kennedy: 46 years, 177 days
#History#Presidents#Vice Presidents#Longest-living Presidents and Vice Presidents#Presidential Data#Presidential Statistics#Presidential Facts#POTUS#VP#Jimmy Carter#President Carter#John Nance Garner#Vice President Garner
56 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Exhibitors Herald, June 1926
The first of the deluxe presentations was at the Forrest theatre, Philadelphia, Thursday evening. The audience was composed largely of members of the Advertising Clubs of the World, which was holding an international convention in the Quaker City, and the members of the Poor Richard Club. There were also present a large turnout of society, official and judicial life of Philadelphia. The other audience, which included Mrs. Coolidge, members of the diplomatic corps and Washington newspapermen, as guests of the National Press club, viewed the picture at a special screening Friday night at Poli’s theatre in Washington. General W. W. Atterbury; Senator-elect [and notorious political boss] Wm. S. Vare; Senator [and law professor] George W. Pepper; Lieut. Commander Geo. B. Wilson, U. S. Navy [not to be confused with the character from the Great Gatsby] ; Mrs. Barclay Warburton [civil rights supporter and journalist] ; Major Norman MacLeod; E. T. Stottsbury; Paul Thompson; Alexander Van Rensselaer; Mrs. Charlemagne Tower; Dr. H. J. Tily [department story owner, mason] ; Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Reath; Frank Smith; Mr. and Mrs. Jos. N. Snellenburg [merchant in clothing trade] ; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Block; Mr. and Mrs. Jules E. Mastbaum [movie theater and department store magnates] ; George Nitsche [possibly an affiliate of U. Penn]; Josiah H. Penniman [Provost of U. Penn] ; J. Willis Martin [a judge]; H. S. McDevitt; John J. Monaghan. Judge Buffington, of Pittsburgh; Thos Finletter [could be one of a a number of lawyers with this name]; Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Einstein; Maurice Paillard, French consul; Robt. Von Moschzisker [justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania]; Mayor W. Freeland Kendrick; Geo. H. Elliott, director of public safety; Chas. B. Hall, president of City Council; Dr. Charles Hart; Rev. Wm. H. Fineschriber; Chas Fox, district attorney [could be a coincidence but Charles Fox III and IV are both currently lawyers in Pennsylvania]; John Fisler, president Manufacturers Club [golf afficianado]; Albert M. Greenfield [real estate broker and developer]; Jos. P. Gaffney; Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Gimbel [department store owner]; Daniel Gimbel [brother and co-owner along with Ellis]; J. D. Lit; Richard Gimbel [son of Ellis Gimble]; Benedict Gimbel [brother of Ellis and Daniel]; Colonel Robert Glendinning [banker]; Benjamin Golder [member of the Pennsylvania State House of Representatives], Agnew T. Dice [President of Reading Railroad]. Dr. Leon Elmaleh [founder of the Levantine Jews Society of Philadelphia]; H. Gilbert Cassidy [a judge]; Utley E. Crane [author of Business Law for Business Men]; Cyrus H. K. Curtis [magazine publisher]; Chas. S. Caldwell; G. W. Cole; Hampton L. Carson [lawyer, professor, state Attorney general]; A. Lincoln Acker [Philidelphia port collector]; Max Aron [lawyer]; Eugene C. Bonniwell [a judge]; Chas. L. Brown; Edward Groome; Chas. L. Bartlett; Edward Bok [editor of the Ladies Home Journal]; Mr. and Mrs. Geo. H. Lorimer [editor of the Saturday Evening Post]; Edw. Bacon; Chas. Curtis Harrison [a judge]; Samuel S. Eels, Rev. J. J. O’Hara [future Archbishop of Philadelphia], and Bishop Thos. J. Garland, D. D. [Episcopalian bishop]
There were a bunch of Universal employees in attendance too but that's less interesting to me. Let's see who went to the Washington show
Both showings were under the auspices of Ambassador Henri Beragner of France and Marcel Knecht, French publisher and trade representative. Dr. Ferdnand Heurteur, leader of the orchestra of the Paris Opera House, came to the United States to conduct the orchestras at these two showings. Among the distinguished guests at the Washington showing were: Don Juan Riano, Spanish ambassador; Senor and Senora de Mathieu, Chilan ambassador; Raoul Tilmont, secretary, Belgium embassy; G. H. Thompson, second secretary, British embassy; A. J. Pack, British embassy; Eduardo Racedo and Madame Racedo, first secretary, Argentine embassy; Conrado Traverso, Argentine embassy; Dr. and Senora Velarde, Peruvian ambassador; Dr. and Madame Santiago F. Bedoya, secretary, Peruvian embassy; Senor and Senora Tellez, Mexican ambassador; Senor and Senora Castro, secretary, Mexican embassy; Ambassador de Martino, Italy; Colonel Augusto Villa, miltary attache, Italian embassy; Count and Countess Sommati di Mombello, Italian embassy; Signor Leonardo Vitetti, Italian embassy. Baron and Baroness Ago Maltzan, German embassy; Mr. and Madame Matsuidaira, Japanese embassy; Mr. and Madame Gurgel de Amaral, Brazilian embassy; Senor and Senora de Sanchez Aballi, Cuban embassy; Senor Don Jose T. Baron, secretary, Cuban embassy; Brigadier General Georges A. L. Dumont, military attache, French embassy; Mr. Jules Henry, first secretary, French embassy; Major and Madame Georges Thenault, French embassy; Captain and Madame Willm, French embassy; Mr. A. Konow Bojsen, secretary, Danish legation; Mr. and Madame Marc Peter, Swiss ambassador; Mr. Andor de Hertelendy, Hungarian embassay; Senor and Senora Ricardo Jaimes Freyre, Bolivian embassy. Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Smiddy, minister, Irish Free State; Mr. and Madame Simoposilis, Minister from Greece; Mr. and Madame Prochnik, Austrian ambassador; Mr. and Madame Charles L. Seya, Latvian embassy; Mahmoud Samy Pasha and Madame Samy Pasha, Egyptian embassy; Mr. Zdenek Fierlinger, Minister from Czechoslovakia; Mr. Simeon Radeff, Bulgarian embassy; Mr. and Madame Jan Ciechanowski, Polish minister; Senor don Manuel Zavala, Nicaragua embassy, and Mr. and Madame Bostrom, Swedish ambassador.
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
wip game
I was tagged by @jask-jaskier-jaskiest and @kaermorons and @agnew-writer to post the names of my wip documents as-is. Send me an ask with the name of the doc and I’ll tell you about it/give an excerpt!
Put the K in Kinktober
Witcher Bingo Card
Familial Relations
Railed Jaskier
Jaskier Lambert H C
geraskier arranged marriage au
first modern au
magic is time au
tagging @thenerdyindividual @stronglyobsessed @arialerendeair
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
✧・*゚scottish surnames
→ link to my scottish female name masterlist → link to my scottish male name masterlist
under the cut are 733 scottish surnames. this masterlist was created for all in one breath rp at the request of lovely el, but feel free to link on your own sites! names are listed in alphabetical order. ❝mac❞, ❝mc❞ and ❝m❞ are split into three sections because i mean... look at them. please like♡ or reblog if you found this useful.
abbot(son), abercrombie, abernethy, adam(son), agnew, aikenhead, aitken, akins, allan(nach/son), anderson, (mac)andie, (mac)andrew, angus, annand, archbold/archibald, ard, aris, (mac)arthur
B
(mac)bain/bayne, baird, baker, balfour, bannatyne, bannerman, barron, baxter, beaton, beith, bell, bethune, beveridge, birse, bisset, bishop, black(ie), blain/blane, blair, blue, blyth, borthwick, bowie, boyd, boyle, braden, bradley, braithnoch, (mac)bratney, breck, bretnoch, brewster, (mac)bridan/brydan/bryden, brodie, brolochan, broun/brown, bruce, buchanan, budge, buglass, buie, buist, burnie, butter/buttar
C
caie, (mac)caig, (mac)cail, caird, cairnie, (mac)callan(ach), calbraith, (mac)callum, calvin, cambridge, cameron, campbell, canch, (mac)candlish, carberry, carmichael, carrocher, carter, cassie, (mac)caskie, catach, catto, cattenach, causland, chambers, chandlish, charleson, charteris, chisholm, christie, (mac)chrystal, (mac)clanachan/clenachan, clark/clerk, (mac)clean, cleland, clerie, (mac)clinton, cloud, cochrane, cockburn, coles, colinson, colquhoun, comish, comiskey, comyn, conn(an), cook, corbett, corkhill, (mac)cormack, coull, coulthard, (mac)cowan, cowley, crabbie, craig, crane, cranna, crawford/crawfurd, crerar, cretney, crockett, crosby, cruikshank, (mac)crum, cubbin, cullen, cumming, cunningham, currie, cuthbertson
D
dallas, dalglish, dalziel, darach/darroch, davidson, davie, day, deason, de lundin, dewar, dickin, dickson, docherty, dockter, doig, dollar, (mac)donald(son), donelson, donn, douglas, dorward, (mac)dow(all), dowell, (macil)downie, drain, drummond, (mc)duff(ie)/duff(y), duguid, dunnet, dunbar, duncan, dunn, durward, duthie
E, F
eggo, elphinstone, erskine, faed, (mac)farquhar(son), fee, fergus(on), (mac)ferries, fettes, fiddes, findlay, finn, finlayson, fisher, fishwick, fitzgerald, flanagan, fleming, fletcher, forbes, forrest, foulis/fowlis, fraser, fullarton, fulton, furgeson
G
gall(ie), galbraith, gammie, gardyne, (mac)garvie, gatt, gault, geddes, gellion, gibb(son), gilbert, gilbride, (mac)gilchrist, gilfillan, (mac)gill(ivray/ony), gillanders, gillespie, gillies, gilliland, gilmartin, gilmichael, gilmore, gilroy, gilzean, (mac)glashan, glass, gloag, glover, godfrey, gollach, gordon, (mac)gorrie, gourlay, gow, graeme/graham, grant, grassick, grassie, gray, gregg, (mac)gregor(y), greer, greig, grierson, grieve, grimmond, (mac)gruer, gunn, guthrie
H
hall, hamill, (mac)hardie/hardy, harper, harvie, hassan, hatton, hay, henderson, hendry, henry, hepburn, herron, hood, hosier, howie, hugston, huie, hume, humphrey, hunter, (mac)hutcheon, hutcheson
I, J, K
(mac)innes, irving, iverach, ivory, jamieson, jarvie, jeffrey(s), johnson, johnston, jorie, (mac)kay, (mac)kean, keenan, keillor, keir, keith, kelly, kelso, keogh, kemp, kennedy, (mac)kerr(acher), kesson, king, kynoch
L
laing, laird, (mac)laine/lane, lamond, lamont, landsborough, landsburgh, lang/laing, larnach, laurie/lawrie, lees, lennie, lennox, leslie, lindsay, little(son), lithgow, livingston(e), lobban, logan, lorne, lothian, lovat, love, loynachan, luke, luther
MAC-
mac ruaidhrí, mac somhairle, mac suibhne, macadam, macadie, macaffer, macainsh, macalasdair, macallister, macalonie, macalpine, macanroy, macara, macarthy, macaskill, macaskin, macaughtrie, macaulay, macauslan, macbean, macbeath, macbeth(ock), macbey, macbriden, macbryde, maccabe, maccadie, maccaffer, maccaffey/maccaffie, maccalman, maccambridge, maccann, maccance, maccartney, maccavity, maccaw, macdowell, maccheyne, maccodrum, maccomb(ie), maccorkindale, maccormick, maccoll, macconie, macconnachie, macconnell, maccoshin, maccoskrie, maccorquodale, macclaren, maccleary, macclew, maccloy, macclumpha, macclung, macclure, macclurg, maccraig, maccrain, maccreadie, maccrimmon, maccrindle, maccririe, maccrone, maccrosson, maccuaig, maccuidh, maccuish, macculloch, maccurley, macdermid/macdiarmid, macdougall, macdui, macduthy, maceachainn, maceachen, macelfrish, macewan/macewen, macfadyen, macfadzean, macfall, macfarlane/macpharlane, macfater/macphater, macfeat, macfee, macfigan, macgarrie, macgarva, macgeachen/macgeechan, macgeorge, macghie, macgibbon, macgillonie, macgiven, macglip, macgriogair, macgruther, macguire, macgurk, machaffie, macheth, machugh, macichan, macinnally, macindeoir, macindoe, macinesker, macinlay, macinroy, macintosh, macintyre, macisaac, maciver/macivor, macilherran, macilroy, macjarrow, mackail, mackeegan, mackeggie, mackellar, mackelvie, mackendrick, mackenna, mackenzie, mackerlich, mackerral, mackerron, mackerrow, mackessock, mackettrick, mackichan, mackie, mackilligan, mackillop, mackim(mie), mackinven, mackirdy/mackirdie, mackrycul, maclafferty, maclagan, maclarty, maclatchie/letchie, maclaverty, maclearnan, macleay, maclehose, macleish, maclellan(d), macleman, macleod, macleòid, maclintock, macllwraith, maclucas, macluckie, maclugash, macmann(us), macmaster, macmeeken, macmichael, macmillan, macminn, macmorrow, macmurchie, macmurdo, macmurray, macnab, macnair, macnally, macnaught(on), macnee, macneish/macnish, macnicol, macninder, macnucator, macpartland, macphail, macphatrick, macphee, macphedran, macpherson, macquarrie, macqueen, macquien, macquilken, macrae/machray, macraild, macrob(bie/bert), macrory, macrostie, macshane, macsherry, macsorley, macsporran, macsween, mactavish, mactear, macturk, macusbaig, macvannan, macvarish, macvaxter, macvean, macveigh/macvey, macvicar, macvitie, macvurich, macwalter, macwattie, macwhannell, macwhillan, macwhinnie
MC-
mccabe, mccain, mcclelland, mcclintock, mcconell, mccracken, mccune, mccurdy, mcdiarmid, mcelshender, mceuen, mcewing, mcfadden, mcgeachie/mcgeachy, mcgowan, mcilroy, mcinnis, mcivor, mckechnie, mckeown, mclarty, mclennan, mcneill(age/ie), mcowen, mcphee, mcpherson, mcwhirter
M
maduthy, magruder, mahaffie, main(s), mair, major, malcolm(son), malloch, manson, marr, marno(ch), (mac)martin, marquis, massie, matheson, mathewson, maver/mavor, maxwell, may, mearns, meechan, meiklejohn, meldrum, mellis(h), menzies, mercer, micklewain, milfrederick, millar/miller, milligan, milliken, milne, milroy, milvain, milwain, moannach, moat, moffat, mollinson, moncrief, monk, montgomery, moore, moray, morgan, (mac)morran, morrison, morrow, morton, mossman, mucklehose, muir(head), mulloy, munn, munro, (mac)murchie/murchy, murchison, murdoch, murphy
N, O, P, Q
nairn, naughton, navin, neeve, neil, neish, nelson, ness, nevin, nicalasdair, niceachainn, (mac)nichol(son), nicleòid, (mac)niven, noble, ochiltree, ogg, ogilvy, o'kean, oliver, omay/omey, orchard(son), orr, osborne, park, paterson, patrick, patten, peacock, peat, peters, philp, polson, power, purcell, purser, qualtrough, quayle, quillan, quiller, quinn, quirk
R, S
(mac)ranald(son), randall, rankin, reid, reoch, revie, riach, (mac)ritchie, roberts(on), rose, ross, rothes, roy, ryrie, salmon(d), scott, selkirk, sellar, shannon, sharpe, shaw, sheen, shiach, sillars, sim(son/pson), sinclair, skene, skinner, sloan, smith, somerville, soutar/souter, stein, stenhouse, stewart/stuart, strachan, stronach, sutherland, (mac)swan(son/ston), swinton
T, U, V, W, Y
taggart, tallach, tawse, taylor, thom(son), todd, tolmie, tosh, tough, tulloch, turner, tyre, ulrick, urquhart, vass, wallace, walker, walsh, warnock, warren, ward, watt, watson, wayne, weir, welsh, whiston, whyte, wilkins(on), (mac)william(son), wilson, winning, wright, young
#names#masterlist#surnames#last names#name masterlist#rph#scottish surnames#scottish last names#roleplay help#roleplay#rp#mine#my stuff#surname masterlist#last name masterlist
76 notes
·
View notes
Photo
STARS Song, Vocal Popular Sheet Music, Lyrics by James Lamont Haven Gillespie, Music by John Alden, Van Alstyne & Curtis Music Publishing Co., New York, Chicago, 1921.
Art Deco Cover Stars Art Illustration by C. K. Agnew.
#art deco#stars song#sheet music#haven gillespie#1921#james lamont haven gillespie#stars#c.k. agnew#john alden#Van Alstyne & Curtis#1920s sheet music#20s sheet music#1920s new york#1920s music#20s music#music history#music#art deco illustration#art deco style#art deco design#art deco cover art#art deco cover#stars illustration#1920s stars#20s stars#agnew#C K Agnew#Vocal Popular Sheet Music#Vocal Popular#CK Agnew
761 notes
·
View notes
Text
Angels
Playlist I had on an Angel/Fallen Angel Blog I use to have.
Come Little Children- Katethegreat19
Angel of Darkness- Alex C. & Yasmin K.
Perfect - Simple Plan
Fallen - Sarah McLachlan
Angel - Sarah Mclachlan
Untitled - Simple Plan
Hallelujah - Rufus Wainwright
Paradise- Gavin Mikhail
I Will Follow You Into The Dark - Death Cab For Cutie
Your Guardian Angel - The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus
When Angels Cry - Douglas Kay
Songs of Angels - Psalm
Engel - Rammstein
Song of Angels - Celestial Odyssey Part 1 - Freddy Hayler
Song of Angels - Celestial Odyssey Part 2 - Freddy Hayler
Journey of the Angels - Enya
Angels Calling Me - Denean
Angeles - Enya
Tears of an Angel - RyanDan
Scorpions - Send Me An Angel
The Angel Gabriel- All Angels
Angels - All Angels
Angel's Song - Chloë Agnew
Guardian Angel Prayer - Rafael Brom and Colin Kennedy
Archangel Raphael (Angel of Healing) - Corciolli
The Prayer - Celine Dion & Andrea Bocelli
May It Be - Enya
Mordred's Lullaby - Heather Dale
Angel Eyes - Buzz Poets
Fallen Angels - Black Veil Brides
Even In Death - Evanescence
Anthem Of The Angels - Breaking Benjamin
Angel With A Shotgun - The Cab
1 note
·
View note
Text
Midseason Check-In: Playoffs and Awards
AFC
The Pats and Steelers make for uninspiring 1 and 2 seeds, but the inclusion of the Titans and Bills in the playoffs brings some excitement. Deshaun Watson’s rookie season comes with a playoff win, and the Chiefs finally win a home playoff game in a rematch of a regular season tilt against Buffalo. In the end, the Patriots are an inevitability to win the conference, but their roster is not deep enough to win the back-to-back.
NFC
The Eagles soar to the 1 seed with ease. The Cowboys back into the playoffs with Zeke on the shelf and have a hard time in a hostile Superdome before Brees is offed in a cold weather Philadelphia shootout. The Vikings do away with the upstart Rams before reliving some nightmares in Seattle. The Seahawks put up points in bunches as Russell Wilson’s mobility allows him to evade the pass rush of the Eagles and gash the slow-moving Patriots front. He’s named Super Bowl MVP as Seattle gets revenge, winning the Lombardi after a last-minute TD pass on a goading slant route gives them the lead.
AWARDS
MVP: Carson Wentz Coach of the Year: Sean McDermott OPOY: Russell Wilson DPOY: Calais Campbell OROY: Deshaun Watson DROY: Marshon Lattimore CPOY: Justin Houston
ALL-PRO TEAM
QB: C. Wentz, PHI HB: L. Bell, PIT WR: A. Brown, PIT WR: T. Hill, KC TE: T. Kelce, KC OT: T. Armstead, NO OT: A. Whitworth, LAR OG: Z. Martin, DAL OG: D. DeCastro, PIT C: T. Frederick, DAL DE: Calais Campbell, JAX DE: DeMarcus Lawrence, DAL DT: F. Cox, PHI DT: Aaron Donald, LAR OLB: R. Shazier, PIT OLB: T. Smith, JAX MLB: L. Kuechley, CAR CB: J. Ramsey, JAX CB: A. Talib, DEN FS: M. Hyde, BUF SS: H. Smith, MIN K: A. Vinatieri, IND P: M. King, OAK P/KR: J. Agnew, DET
1 note
·
View note
Text
Older Women Who Date Younger Men Are More Satisfied
Relationships in which a woman is significantly older than her male partner have always attracted a lot of attention and scrutiny. Case in point: remember what big news it was when Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher were together? Or the international media obsession that followed French president Emmanuel Macron and his spouse, Brigitte, who happens to be 24 years his senior?
This same scrutiny isn’t usually applied to relationships in which men are significantly older than their female partners. For example, U.S. President Donald Trump happens to be 24 years older than Melania. Certainly, the Trumps have attracted a lot of media attention—it just hasn’t been for their age difference! Research on age-gap relationships bears out this double standard.
Specifically, people are more disapproving of male-female age-gap couples when the older partner is a women than they are when the older partner is a man [1]. In these woman-older relationships, the disapproval seems to be reserved primarily for the female partner. Indeed, while older women are commonly referred to as “cougars”—a term that implies a predatory nature—derogatory labels for the younger men who enter these relationships don’t really exist.
This strong bias against woman-older age-gap relationships probably helps to explain why they’re relatively rare. In fact, according to census data in the United States, just 1.3% of marriages featuring a man and a woman include a woman who is ten or more years older than her husband [2].
Given this double standard and social disapproval, can older women develop and maintain long-term, satisfying relationships with younger men? According to my own research on this topic, they most certainly can.
I surveyed approximately 200 heterosexual women in relationships, who happened to be about evenly divided between those who were significantly older than their male partners (22 years older on average), those who were significantly younger than their male partners (17 years younger on average), and those who were close in age to their partners (3 years different on average).
What I found was that women who were more than ten years older than their male partners were actually the most satisfied with and committed to their relationships compared to both women who were younger than their partners, as well as women whose partners were close in age [3].
Why were the older women happier with their relationships? I can’t say with certainty based on my data, but it may be because when the woman is older, it might shift the power dynamic toward greater equality. We know from a lot of research that greater equality in a relationship tends to make couples happier [4], so perhaps it’s the case that this arrangement is just more equitable.
Alternatively, maybe it’s not as much about equality as it is about putting women in a more dominant position. We know that a lot of men are into the idea of submitting to a dominant, powerful woman—and they tend to see older women as having those characteristics. After all, this is a big part of the reason why MILF-themed porn is so popular. So maybe it’s a feeling of empowerment that ultimately underlies older women’s greater feelings of satisfaction—and perhaps that empowerment allows women to get more of what they want, sexually and otherwise.
Although more research is needed, these results suggest that while age-gap couples featuring an older women and a younger man might face a lot of social resistance, this does not necessarily prevent them from developing strong, highly satisfying relationships.
Want to learn more about Sex and Psychology ? Click here for previous articles or follow the blog on Facebook (facebook.com/psychologyofsex), Twitter (@JustinLehmiller), or Reddit (reddit.com/r/psychologyofsex) to receive updates. You can also follow Dr. Lehmiller on YouTube and Instagram.
[1] Banks, C. A., & Arnold, P. (2001). Opinions towards sexual partners with a large age difference. Marriage & Family Review, 33, 5–18.
[2] U.S. Census Bureau. (1999). America’s families and living arrangements. Retrieved April 8, 2009 from: https://ift.tt/2tlS2nW socdemo/hh-fam/p20-537_99.html
[3] Lehmiller, J. J., & Agnew, C. R. (2008). Commitment in age-gap heterosexual romantic relationships: A test of evolutionary and socio-cultural predictions. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 32, 74-82.
[4] Winn, K. I., Crawford, D. W., & Fischer, J. L. (1991). Equity and commitment in romance versus friendship. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 6, 301–314.
Image Credit: 123RF/Dmytro Zinkevych
You Might Also Like:
Should You Ever Keep a Relationship Secret?
Is There A Romeo & Juliet Effect? The Link Between Parental Interference And Relationship Quality
What A Decade Of Data From Pornhub Reveals About Our Sexual Interests
from Meet Positives SMFeed 8 https://ift.tt/2VmbuA0 via IFTTT
0 notes
Text
Older Women Who Date Younger Men Are More Satisfied
Relationships in which a woman is significantly older than her male partner have always attracted a lot of attention and scrutiny. Case in point: remember what big news it was when Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher were together? Or the international media obsession that followed French president Emmanuel Macron and his spouse, Brigitte, who happens to be 24 years his senior?
This same scrutiny isn’t usually applied to relationships in which men are significantly older than their female partners. For example, U.S. President Donald Trump happens to be 24 years older than Melania. Certainly, the Trumps have attracted a lot of media attention—it just hasn’t been for their age difference! Research on age-gap relationships bears out this double standard.
Specifically, people are more disapproving of male-female age-gap couples when the older partner is a women than they are when the older partner is a man [1]. In these woman-older relationships, the disapproval seems to be reserved primarily for the female partner. Indeed, while older women are commonly referred to as “cougars”—a term that implies a predatory nature—derogatory labels for the younger men who enter these relationships don’t really exist.
This strong bias against woman-older age-gap relationships probably helps to explain why they’re relatively rare. In fact, according to census data in the United States, just 1.3% of marriages featuring a man and a woman include a woman who is ten or more years older than her husband [2].
Given this double standard and social disapproval, can older women develop and maintain long-term, satisfying relationships with younger men? According to my own research on this topic, they most certainly can.
I surveyed approximately 200 heterosexual women in relationships, who happened to be about evenly divided between those who were significantly older than their male partners (22 years older on average), those who were significantly younger than their male partners (17 years younger on average), and those who were close in age to their partners (3 years different on average).
What I found was that women who were more than ten years older than their male partners were actually the most satisfied with and committed to their relationships compared to both women who were younger than their partners, as well as women whose partners were close in age [3].
Why were the older women happier with their relationships? I can’t say with certainty based on my data, but it may be because when the woman is older, it might shift the power dynamic toward greater equality. We know from a lot of research that greater equality in a relationship tends to make couples happier [4], so perhaps it’s the case that this arrangement is just more equitable.
Alternatively, maybe it’s not as much about equality as it is about putting women in a more dominant position. We know that a lot of men are into the idea of submitting to a dominant, powerful woman—and they tend to see older women as having those characteristics. After all, this is a big part of the reason why MILF-themed porn is so popular. So maybe it’s a feeling of empowerment that ultimately underlies older women’s greater feelings of satisfaction—and perhaps that empowerment allows women to get more of what they want, sexually and otherwise.
Although more research is needed, these results suggest that while age-gap couples featuring an older women and a younger man might face a lot of social resistance, this does not necessarily prevent them from developing strong, highly satisfying relationships.
Want to learn more about Sex and Psychology ? Click here for previous articles or follow the blog on Facebook (facebook.com/psychologyofsex), Twitter (@JustinLehmiller), or Reddit (reddit.com/r/psychologyofsex) to receive updates. You can also follow Dr. Lehmiller on YouTube and Instagram.
[1] Banks, C. A., & Arnold, P. (2001). Opinions towards sexual partners with a large age difference. Marriage & Family Review, 33, 5–18.
[2] U.S. Census Bureau. (1999). America’s families and living arrangements. Retrieved April 8, 2009 from: https://ift.tt/2tlS2nW socdemo/hh-fam/p20-537_99.html
[3] Lehmiller, J. J., & Agnew, C. R. (2008). Commitment in age-gap heterosexual romantic relationships: A test of evolutionary and socio-cultural predictions. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 32, 74-82.
[4] Winn, K. I., Crawford, D. W., & Fischer, J. L. (1991). Equity and commitment in romance versus friendship. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 6, 301–314.
Image Credit: 123RF/Dmytro Zinkevych
You Might Also Like:
Should You Ever Keep a Relationship Secret?
Is There A Romeo & Juliet Effect? The Link Between Parental Interference And Relationship Quality
What A Decade Of Data From Pornhub Reveals About Our Sexual Interests
from MeetPositives SM Feed 4 https://ift.tt/2VmbuA0 via IFTTT
0 notes
Text
Facebook, Fake News and the Yellow Vest Protesters: Has Online Activism Ruined Political Protests?
Since the ‘Arab Spring’ in 2011 which saw the fall of dictatorships across the Arab world through the organisation of protests on Facebook, online activism has become more and more common. For six months now, French citizens have been protesting every weekend against rising taxes, austerity measures, and further policies that they want to see Macron change. What started out as a movement with significant force, has seen numbers dwindle through the recurring violence and a seeming lack of drive from protesters (Agnew, 2019). From #BlackLivesMatter, to the #MeToo campaign, recent times have demonstrated how superficial online activism is becoming, with trends and campaigns gaining much support, before slowly dying out and rarely being mentioned (Malchik, 2019). Is social media helping to facilitate political demonstrations, or is ‘slacktivism’ and the circulation of fake news slowly killing the momentum of protests such as the yellow vests?
A picture taken in Paris on a day of the ‘gilets jaunes’ or yellow vest movement (AFP, 2019).
The protests in France were kicked off by self-proclaimed leader of the movement, Eric Drouet, a truck driver from Seine-et-Marne. He created a Facebook page in November 2018, calling for a national blockade against rising fuel prices (Agnew, 2019). The first protests attracted over 300,000 supporters, who took to the streets in huge numbers. It was all organised through the Facebook page, and slowly started to look like something out of the Arab Spring. By the end of December, the protests had taken a violent turn, with over 2,000 police and activists injured in clashes, and as of January 2019, there were 10 fatalities and 94 critically injured (BBC, 2018). Recently, numbers have plunged to an all time low, with only 28,600 gilet jaunes across France protesting at the end of March.
The lack of support has clearly been affected by fear of violence, but could Facebook also be responsible? Harriet Agnew argues that it was in part caused through a “surge in fake news”, with over 105 million pieces of fake news being shared and circulated about the yellow vest protests. Research conducted by Avaaz analysing false news stories circulating on the Facebook page concluded that Russian State media, RT France played an active role in disseminating fake news stories on the social media site (Agnew, 2019).
(Myth Detector, 2019)
Another reason for dwindling support in such fast paced movements is due to slacktivism. The term ‘slacktivism’ was first coined by Malcolm Gladwell, who defined it as the way of the “new style of activist who just signs online petitions and shares on Facebook, instead of the banner waving, old fashioned street style, brawling with copper activist days” (Gladwell, 2010). People simply have less time to protest and prefer to support online in France, with one woman who was interviewed by Richard Goodman, explaining “I have three kids to raise, and my job. I can’t go on strike” (Goodman, 2018). Others wish to protest but simply can’t, as one woman who works in the French Alps explained that once she had paid her bills, she barely had enough to eat. It is easier to show support online, however it is one of the reasons why movements such as the yellow vests slowly die out.
Antonia Malchik argues that online campaigns can “burn out faster” than campaigns that spend months or even years forging in-person connections (Malchik, 2019). Examples such as the civil rights movement which took ten years to get to Washington show how slower-growing campaigns allowed time for relationships to form, with Martin Luther King Jr. and his colleagues allowing themselves time to test the fibre of their movement. By contrast, movements such as Occupy Wall Street formed rapidly, but then “were lacking that underlying resilience created over time” to be able to go anywhere (Malchik, 2019).
Movements like the Yellow Vest campaign demonstrate the power of organising using digital tools, however, with the speed of the movement comes an unexpected weakness. The ease with which current social movements form often fail to signal an organising capacity powerful enough to threaten those in authority or bring about any political change (Tufecki, 2012).
660 words
References:
Agnew, H. (2019). French ‘gilets jaunes’ protests have stoked ‘fake news’ surge, says study | Financial Times. Retrieved from https://www.ft.com/content/a4eabbea-459e-11e9-a965-23d669740bfb
BBC. (2019). 'Shame' on Paris protesters, says Macron. Retrieved from https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-46331783
Four Lies of Sputnik and RT about Macron and the “Yellow Vests” | Myth Detector. (2019). Retrieved from http://www.mythdetector.ge/en/myth/four-lies-sputnik-and-rt-about-macron-and-yellow-vests
Gilets Jaunes. (2019). Retrieved from https://factuel.afp.com/tags/gilets-jaunes
Gladwell, M., Preston, D., & Collins, K. (2010). Small Change. Retrieved from https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/10/04/small-change-malcolm-gladwell
Greeman, R. (2019). Yellow Vest Protest Movement: Inequality and the Hollowness of the French Regime - The Bullet. Retrieved from https://socialistproject.ca/2018/12/yellow-vest-protest-movement/
Malchik, A. (2019). The Problem With Social-Media Protests. Retrieved from https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2019/05/in-person-protests-stronger-online-activism-a-walking-life/578905/
Tufekci, Z., & Wilson, C. (2012). Social Media and the Decision to Participate in Political Protest: Observations From Tahrir Square. Journal Of Communication, 62(2), 363-379. doi: 10.1111/j.1460-2466.2012.01629.x
0 notes
Text
Exosuits and exoskeletons
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24725838.2019.1626303
Soft (exosuits)
Soft exoskeletons (also known as exosuits) are devices consisting of garments worn on body segments adjacent to the joint that is assisted, for example the thigh and shank for a knee exosuit. Assistance is generated by using the garments to pull two body segments together, typically via a cable or strap (see Figure 3a). Joint flexion and extension must be achieved separately, each by a dedicated cable or strap. Examples of back-support exosuits are the PLAD (Abdoli-E et al., 2006), SSL (Imamura et al., 2011), and the biomechanically assistive garment detailed in the work by Lamers et al. (2017). All three devices apply forces on the upper body using dedicated shoulder straps. On the lower body, the PLAD pulls on the shank just under the knee joint, whereas the other two devices apply those forces on the thighs. All three devices generate forces via elastic bands that are situated rather close to the user’s body, thus potentially making it possible to wear the exoskeleton underneath clothes.
1.
Abdoli-E, M., Agnew, M. J., & Stevenson, J. M. (2006). An on-body personal lift augmentation device (PLAD) reduces EMG amplitude of erector spinae during lifting tasks. Clinical Biomechanics, 21(5), 456–465. doi: 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2005.12.021 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Abdoli-E, M., Stevenson, J. M., Reid, S. A., & Bryant, T. J. (2007). Mathematical and empirical proof of principle for an on-body personal lift augmentation device (PLAD). Journal of Biomechanics, 40(8), 1694–1700. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2006.09.006 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Aida, T., Nozaki, H., & Kobayashi, H. (2009). Development of muscle suit and application to factory laborers. Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics and Automation August 9–12, Changchun, China. [Google Scholar]
Alemi, M. M., Geissinger, J., Simon, A. A., Chang, S. E., & Asbeck, A. T. (2019). A passive exoskeleton reduces peak and mean EMG during symmetric and asymmetric lifting. Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology, 47, 25–34. [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Ansari, A., Atkeson, C. G., Choset, H., & Travers, M. (2015). Estimating Operator Intent (Draft 4.0). Technical report. Pittsburgh, PA. [Google Scholar]
ATOUN. (2018). Atoun Model Y. Retrieved from http://atoun.co.jp/products/atoun-model-y [Google Scholar]
Beckerle, P., Verstraten, T., Mathijssen, G., Furnemont, R., Vanderborght, B., & Lefeber, D. (2017). Series and parallel elastic actuation: Influence of operating positions on design and control. IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics, 22(1), 521–529. doi: 10.1109/TMECH.2016.2621062 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Chen, B., Grazi, L., Lanotte, F., Vitiello, N., & Crea, S. (2018). A real-time lift detection strategy for a hip exoskeleton. Frontiers in Neurorobotics, 12, 1–11. [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Colombo, G., Joerg, M., Schreier, R., & Dietz, V. (2000). Treadmill training of paraplegic patients using a robotic orthosis. Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development, 37(6), 693–700. [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
de Looze, M. P., Bosch, T., Krause, F., Stadler, K. S., & O’Sullivan, L. W. (2016). Exoskeletons for industrial application and their potential effects on physical work load. Ergonomics, 59(5), 671–681. doi: 10.1080/00140139.2015.1081988 [Taylor & Francis Online], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
EU-OSHA (European Agency for Safety and Health at Work). (2000). OSH in Figures: Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders in the EU—Facts and Figures. Bilbao, Spain: Publications Office of the European Union. [Google Scholar]
Garg, A. (1995). Revised NIOSH equation for manual lifting: A method for job evaluation. American Association of Occupational Health Nurses Journal, 43(4), 211–216. doi: 10.1177/216507999504300408 [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
German Bionic. (2018). German Bionic CRAY X. Retrieved from https://www.germanbionic.com/ [Google Scholar]
Hara, H., & Sankai, Y. (2010). Development of HAL for lumbar support. Paper presented at SCIS and ISIS 2010—Joint 5th International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems and 11th International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (pp. 416–421). SCIS & ISIS 2010, Dec. 8–12, 2010, Okayama Convention Center, Okayama, Japan Development. [Google Scholar]
Hara, H., & Sankai, Y. (2012). HAL equipped with passive mechanism. Paper presented at 2012 IEEE/SICE International Symposium on System Integration, SII 2012, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan December 16–18, 2012 (pp. 1–6). [Google Scholar]
Heydari, H., Hoviattalab, M., Azghani, M. R., Ramezanzadehkoldeh, M., & Parnianpour, M. (2013). Investigation on a developed wearable assistive device (WAD) in reduction lumbar muscles activity. Biomedical Engineering: Applications, Basis and Communications, 25(03), 1350035. doi: 10.4015/S101623721350035X [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
Imamura, Y., Tanaka, T., Suzuki, Y., Takizawa, K., & Yamanaka, M. (2011). Motion-based design of elastic belts for passive assistive device using musculoskeletal model. Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Biomimetics December 7–11, 2011, Phuket, Thailand (pp. 1343–1348). [Google Scholar]
Inose, H., Mohri, S., Arakawa, H., Okui, M., Koide, K., Yamada, Y., … Nakamura, T. (2017). Semi-endoskeleton-type waist assist AB-wear suit equipped with compressive force reduction mechanism. Paper presented at Proceedings—2017 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA) Singapore, May 29–June 3, 2017 (pp. 6014–6019). [Google Scholar]
Katz, J. N. (2006). Lumbar disc disorders and low-back pain: Socioeconomic factors and consequences. JBJS, 88, 21–24. doi: 10.2106/00004623-200604002-00005 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Kazerooni, H., Racine, J. L., Huang, L., & Steger, R. (2005, April). On the control of the berkeley lower extremity exoskeleton (BLEEX). In Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE international conference on robotics and automation (pp. 4353–4360). IEEE. [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
Ko, H. K., Lee, S. W., Koo, D. H., Lee, I., & Hyun, D. J. (2018). Waist-assistive exoskeleton powered by a singular actuation mechanism for prevention of back-injury. Robotics and Autonomous Systems, 107, 1–9. [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Konz, S. (1982). NIOSH lifting guidelines. American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal, 43(12), 931–933. doi: 10.1080/15298668291410846 [Taylor & Francis Online], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Koopman, A. S., Kingma, I., Faber, G. S., Bornmann, J., & van Dieën, J. H. (2018). Estimating the L5S1 flexion/extension moment in symmetrical lifting using a simplified ambulatory measurement system. Journal of Biomechanics, 70, 242–248. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2017.10.001 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Laevo. (2017). Laevo. Retrieved from http://en.laevo.nl/ [Google Scholar]
Lamers, E. P., Yang, A. J., & Zelik, K. E. (2017). Feasibility of a biomechanically-assistive garment to reduce low back loading during leaning and lifting. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 9294(c), 1–8. [Google Scholar]
Lobo-Prat, J., Kooren, P. N., Stienen, A. H., Herder, J. L., Koopman, B. F., & Veltink, P. H. (2014). Non-invasive control interfaces for intention detection in active movement-assistive devices. Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation, 11(1), 168. doi: 10.1186/1743-0003-11-168 [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
Lowe, B. D., Billotte, W. G., & Peterson, D. R. (2019). ASTM F48 Formation and Standards for Industrial Exoskeletons and Exosuits. IISE Transactions on Occupational Ergonomics and Human Factors, (just-accepted), 1–8. [Taylor & Francis Online], [Google Scholar]
Luo, Z., & Yu, Y. (2013). Wearable stooping-assist device in reducing risk of low back disorders during stooped work. Paper presented at 2013 IEEE International Conference on Mechatronics and Automation, IEEE ICMA, Takamatsu, Kagawa, Japan from August 4 to August 7, 2013 (pp. 230–236). [Google Scholar]
Manna, A., & Asbeck, A. (2017). Development of an Exosuit to support the back during lifting. Presentation at: U.S. Department of Energy Technical Interchange Meeting on Industrial Exoskeletons. Washington DC, June 28, 2017. Retrieved from https://www.nist.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2017/09/21/alan_asbeck_exoconference_june17-3.pdf [Google Scholar]
Marinov, B. (2018). Exoskeleton Report Catalog. Retrieved from https://exoskeletonreport.com/product-category/exoskeleton-catalog/ [Google Scholar]
Nabeshima, C., Ayusawa, K., Hochberg, C., & Yoshida, E. (2018). Standard performance test of wearable robots for lumbar support. IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters, 3(3), 2182–2189. doi: 10.1109/LRA.2018.2810860 [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
Näf, M. B., Junius, K., Rossini, M., Rodriguez-Guerrero, C., Vanderborght, B., & Lefeber, D. (2018). Misalignment compensation for full human-exoskeleton kinematic compatibility: state of the art and evaluation. Applied Mechanics Reviews, 70(5), 050802. doi: 10.1115/1.4042523 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Näf, M. B., Koopman, A. S., Baltrusch, S., Rodriguez-Guerrero, C., Vanderborght, B., & Lefeber, D. (2018). Passive back support exoskeleton improves range of motion using flexible beams. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 5(72). https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2018.00072 [Google Scholar]
Ortiz, J., Di Natali, C., & Caldwell, D. G. (2018, October). XoSoft-iterative design of a modular soft lower limb exoskeleton. Paper presented at International Symposium on Wearable Robotics, Pisa, Italy (pp. 351–355). Cham: Springer. [Google Scholar]
RoamRobotics. (2018). Roam Robotics. Retrieved from http://www.roamrobotics.com [Google Scholar]
Schiele, A., & Van Der Helm, F. C. T. (2006). Kinematic design to improve ergonomics in human machine interaction. IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, 14(4), 456–469. doi: 10.1109/TNSRE.2006.881565 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Sugar, T., Veneman, J., Hochberg, C., Shourijeh, M. S., Acosta, A., Vazquez-Torres, R., … Nabeshima, C. (2018). Hip exoskeleton market—Review of lift assist wearables. Wearable Robotics Association. Retrieved from http://www.wearablerobotics.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/J12434-Hip-Exoskelton-Report-FINAL4.pdf. [Google Scholar]
SuitX. (2017). SuitX BackX. Retrieved from http://www.suitx.com/backx [Google Scholar]
Toxiri, S., Ortiz, J., Masood, J., Fernández, J., Mateos, L. A., & Caldwell, D. G. (2015, December). A wearable device for reducing spinal loads during lifting tasks: Biomechanics and design concepts. Paper presented at 2015 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Biomimetics (ROBIO), Zhuhai, China (pp. 2295–2300). IEEE. [Google Scholar]
Toxiri, S., Calanca, A., Ortiz, J., Fiorini, P., & Caldwell, D. G. (2018). A parallel-elastic actuator for a torque-controlled back-support exoskeleton. IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters, 3(1), 492–499. doi: 10.1109/LRA.2017.2768120 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Toxiri, S., Koopman, A. S., Lazzaroni, M., Ortiz, J., Power, V., de Looze, M. P., … Caldwell, D. G. (2018). Rationale, implementation and evaluation of assistive strategies for an active back-support exoskeleton. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 5(53). [Google Scholar]
Toxiri, S., Ortiz, J., Masood, J., Fernandez, J., Mateos, L. A., & Caldwell, D. G. (2016). A powered low-back exoskeleton for industrial handling: considerations on controls. Paper presented at International Symposium on Wearable Robotics, Segovia, Spain. [Google Scholar]
Tucker, M. R., Moser, A., Lambercy, O., Sulzer, J., & Gassert, R. (2013). Design of a wearable perturbator for human knee impedance estimation during gait. Paper presented at 2013 IEEE International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR) June 24–26, 2013 Seattle, Washington USA (pp. 1–6). IEEE. [Google Scholar]
Tucker, M. R., Olivier, J., Pagel, A., Bleuler, H., Bouri, M., Lambercy, O., … Gassert, R. (2015). Control strategies for active lower extremity prosthetics and orthotics: A review. Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation, 12(1), 1. doi: 10.1186/1743-0003-12-1 [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
Ulrey, B. L., & Fathallah, F. A. (2013). Subject-specific, whole-body models of the stooped posture with a personal weight transfer device. Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology, 23(1), 206–215. doi: 10.1016/j.jelekin.2012.08.016 [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Wang, S., Van Dijk, W., & Van Der Kooij, H. (2011). Spring uses in exoskeleton actuation design. Paper presented at 2011 IEEE International Conference on Rehabilitation RoboticsRehab Week Zurich, ETH Zurich Science City, Switzerland, June 29–July 1, 2011 (pp. 1–6). [Google Scholar]
Waters, T. R., Putz-Anderson, V., Garg, A., & Fine, L. J. (1993). Revised NIOSH equation for the design and evaluation of manual lifting tasks. Ergonomics, 36(7), 749–776. doi: 10.1080/00140139308967940 [Taylor & Francis Online], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Wehner, M., Rempel, D., & Kazerooni, H. (2009). Lower extremity exoskeleton reduces back forces in lifting. Paper presented at ASME 2009 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference October 12–14, 2009, Hollywood, California, USA (pp. 49–56). [Google Scholar]
XoSoft. (2018). XoSoft. Retrieved from http://www.xosoft.eu [Google Scholar]
Yu, H., Choi, I. S., Han, K. L., Choi, J. Y., Chung, G., & Suh, J. (2015). Development of a stand-alone powered exoskeleton robot suit in steel manufacturing. ISIJ International, 55(12), 2609–2617. [Crossref], [Web of Science ®], [Google Scholar]
Zhang, T., & Huang, H. H. (2018). A lower-back robotic exoskeleton: Industrial handling augmentation used to provide spinal support. IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine, 25(2), 95–106. doi: 10.1109/MRA.2018.2815083 [Crossref], [Google Scholar]
References
0 notes
Text
Massachusetts HIV Outbreak Linked to IV Opioid Use
CDC Report: HIV Diagnoses Among Persons Who Inject Drugs, Northeastern Massachusetts, 2015–2018 IDSA Publications Corner
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Kevin Cranston, MDiv; Charles Alpren, MBChB; Betsey John, MPH; Erica Dawson, PhD; Kathleen Roosevelt, MPH; Amanda Burrage, MD; Janice Bryant; William M. Switzer, MPH; Courtney Breen; Philip J. Peters, MD; Tracy Stiles; Ashley Murray, MPH; H. Dawn Fukuda, ScM; William Adih, PhD; Linda Goldman, MBA, MSW; Nivedha Panneer, MPH; Barry Callis, MSW; Ellsworth M. Campbell, MSc; Liisa Randall, PhD; Anne Marie France, PhD; R. Monina Klevens, DDS; Sheryl Lyss, MD; Shauna Onofrey, MPH; Christine Agnew-Brune, PhD; Michael Goulart, MPH; Hongwei Jia, PhD; Matthew Tumpney, ScM; Paul McClung, MD; Sharoda Dasgupta, PhD; Danae Bixler, MD; Kischa Hampton, MSW; Amy Board, PhD; Jenifer Leaf Jaeger, MD; Kate Buchacz, PhD; and Alfred DeMaria Jr., MDMorbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
From 2000 to 2014, the number of annual diagnoses of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in Massachusetts declined 47%.1 In August 2016, however, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) received reports of five new HIV cases among persons who inject drugs from a single community health center in the City of Lawrence.2 On average, less than one case per month among persons who inject drugs had been reported in Lawrence during 2014–2015 from all providers. Surveillance identified additional cases of HIV infection among such persons linked to Lawrence and Lowell, in northeastern Massachusetts, during 2016–2017. In 2018, MDPH and CDC conducted an investigation to characterize the outbreak and recommend control measures.
Investigators reviewed surveillance data and HIV-1 polymerase (pol) gene nucleotide sequences derived from drug resistance testing and interviewed persons with HIV infection in northeastern Massachusetts. Cases were defined as diagnoses of HIV infection in northeastern Massachusetts during January 2015–May 2018 in:
A person who injects drugs who received medical care, experienced homelessness, resided, or injected drugs in Lawrence or Lowell
A person who was epidemiologically linked as an injecting or sex partner of a person with HIV infection connected to Lawrence or Lowell
A person with an HIV-1 pol nucleotide sequence molecularly linked at a genetic distance of ≤1.5% (as determined by pairwise sequence analysis) to that of another person in the investigation who was connected to Lawrence or Lowell
Qualitative interviews were conducted with a purposeful sample of 34 persons who inject drugs to assess risk factors for HIV infection and with 19 clinicians and other stakeholders in Lawrence and Lowell to identify available medical and social services.
As of June 30, 2018, a total of 129 persons meeting the case definition were identified; 74 (57%) were male, 94 (73%) were ages 20–39 at diagnosis, 87 (67%) were non-Hispanic white, and 38 (29%) were Hispanic. Most (114; 88%) reported a history of injection drug use, including four (3%) who also reported male-to-male sexual contact; 116 (90%) had laboratory evidence of past or current hepatitis C virus infection.
Median CD4+ cell count at diagnosis was 550 cells/μL (range, 1–1,470), suggestive of a number of recent infections.3 Molecular analysis aided case identification: 28 (22%) cases had epidemiologic links only; 69 (53%) had both epidemiologic and molecular links; and 32 (25%) had molecular links only. Four clusters of ≥5 cases were identified using molecular links; two of these clusters accounted for 78 (60%) cases.
In qualitative interviews, the 34 persons who inject drugs variously identified opioids alone, stimulants (i.e., cocaine and methamphetamine) alone, or both opioids and stimulants as their drugs of choice. Sharing syringes and other equipment, experiencing homelessness, being incarcerated, or exchanging sex for drugs during the previous year also were reported. Stakeholders reported that fentanyl had replaced heroin in local communities, was cheaper in Lawrence than in other cities in the region, and had increased injection frequency.
The reported increased frequency of fentanyl injection might have increased transmission in Lawrence and Lowell. Stakeholders also reported that frequent homelessness and incarceration among injection drug users undermined HIV treatment success because of interrupted treatment, missed appointments, and having multiple care providers. An additional challenge noted was syringe services program (SSP) accessibility. Lowell had a privately funded SSP with limited days and hours of operation; since 2017, Lawrence had a state-funded SSP with daily availability, but no weekend or evening hours.
Opioid overdose deaths have increased rapidly in Lawrence and Lowell since 2013,4 with postmortem fentanyl detection increasing statewide.5 The presence of multiple molecular clusters and unlinked infections suggests multiple introductions of HIV among persons who inject drugs as well as recent and rapid transmission in the context of some longstanding HIV infections.
Lawrence and Lowell approved state-funded SSPs in 2016 and 2018, respectively. MDPH has since deployed additional field staff members to link persons with HIV infection to care and to provide partner services. MDPH and local partners are expanding services that address social instability attributable to homelessness and incarceration and increase knowledge about safer injection practices among persons who inject drugs. MDPH will continue HIV testing, field investigation, and molecular cluster detection and response statewide.
References
1. Cranston K, et al. Sustained reduction in HIV diagnoses in Massachusetts, 2000–2014. Am J Public Health 2017; 107: 794-799.
2. Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health. 2017 Massachusetts HIV/AIDS epidemiologic profile: people who inject drugs (PWID). Jamaica Plain, MA: Massachusetts Department of Public Health; 2018.
3. Lodi S, et al. Time from human immunodeficiency virus seroconversion to reaching CD4+ cell count thresholds <200, <350, and <500 cells/mm3: assessment of need following changes in treatment guidelines. Clin Infect Dis 2011; 53: 817–825.
4. Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health. Number of opioid-related overdose deaths, all intents by city/town 2013–2017. Boston: Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health; 2018.
5. Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health. Data brief: opioid-related overdose deaths among Massachusetts residents. Boston: Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health; 2018.
One author (Nivedha Panneer) reported stock ownership in Gilead; another (Shauna Onofrey) reported that a family member works for and owns stock in Emergent BioSolutions.
Primary SourceMorbidity and Mortality Weekly ReportSource Reference: Cranston K, et al "HIV Diagnoses Among Persons Who Inject Drugs -- Northeastern Massachusetts, 2015–2018" MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2019; 68: 253-254.
The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by a qualified health care provider. © 2019 MedPage Today, LLC. All rights reserved. Medpage Today is among the federally registered trademarks of MedPage Today, LLC and may not be used by third parties without explicit permission.
0 notes
Text
Older Women Who Marry Younger Men: They're Stigmatized, but Highly Satisfied
Both before and after the recent election of French president Emmanuel Macron, his wife, Brigitte, found herself to be the target of constant attacks on social media. Why? Because she happens to be 24 years older than her husband.
Age-gap relationships in which a woman is significantly older than her male partner have always attracted a lot of attention and scrutiny. Case in point: remember what big news it was when Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher were together? As you may have noticed, this same scrutiny isn’t usually applied to relationships in which men are significantly older than their female partners. As some evidence of this, just consider what a non-issue it has been that U.S. President Donald Trump happens to be 24 years older than his wife, Melania (the same age gap the Macrons have between them).
Research on age-gap relationships bears out this double standard: people are more disapproving of opposite-sex age-gap couples when the older partner is female than they are when the older partner is male [1]. In the case of these woman-older relationships, the disapproval seems to be reserved primarily for the female partner: whereas older women are commonly referred to as “cougars”—a term that implies they are nothing but sexual predators—derogatory labels for the younger men who enter these relationships don’t exist.
This strong bias against woman-older age-gap relationships probably helps to explain, at least in part, why they’re so rare: according to U.S. census data, just 1.3% of different-sex marriages feature a woman who is ten or more years older than her husband [2].
But in the face of this double standard and all of the social resistance, is it possible for older women to develop and maintain long-term, satisfying relationships with younger men? According to a study I published on this topic a few years ago, the answer is yes.
I collected data online from approximately 200 heterosexual women in relationships. These women were roughly evenly divided between those who were much older than their male partners (22 years older on average), those who were much younger than their male partners (17 years younger on average), and those who were close in age to their partners (3 years different on average).
What I found was that women who were more than ten years older than their male partners were actually the most satisfied with and committed to their relationships compared to both women who were younger than their partners and women whose partners were close in age [3].
Why were the older women happier with their relationships? We don’t know for sure, but it may be because when the woman is older, it shifts the traditional heterosexual power dynamic toward greater equality. We know from a lot of research that greater equality tends to make couples happier [4], so perhaps it’s just the case that this arrangement is simply more equitable.
Though more research is needed, what these results tell us is that while age-gap relationships featuring an older women and a younger man might appear to face a very tough road due to social stigma, this does not necessarily prevent them from developing a strong and highly satisfying relationship.
Want to learn more about Sex and Psychology ? Click here for previous articles or follow the blog on Facebook (facebook.com/psychologyofsex), Twitter (@JustinLehmiller), or Reddit (reddit.com/r/psychologyofsex) to receive updates.
[1] Banks, C. A., & Arnold, P. (2001). Opinions towards sexual partners with a large age difference. Marriage & Family Review, 33, 5–18.
[2] U.S. Census Bureau. (1999). America’s families and living arrangements. Retrieved April 8, 2009 from: http://www.census.gov/population/www/ socdemo/hh-fam/p20-537_99.html
[3] Lehmiller, J. J., & Agnew, C. R. (2008). Commitment in age-gap heterosexual romantic relationships: A test of evolutionary and socio-cultural predictions. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 32, 74-82.
[4] Winn, K. I., Crawford, D. W., & Fischer, J. L. (1991). Equity and commitment in romance versus friendship. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 6, 301–314.
Image Credit: 123RF.com/adrianhancu
You Might Also Like:
Secret Romances: Not Nearly As Exciting As They Sound
Is There A Romeo & Juliet Effect? The Link Between Parental Interference And Relationship Quality
#age-gap relationships#women#age#double standard#social disapproval#marriage#satisfaction#commitment#power#equality
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
EVERY UNITED STATES PRESIDENT
1. George Washington April 30, 1789 - March 1797
Vice-President: John Adams
First Lady: Martha Dandridge
John Adams March 4, 1797 - March 4, 1801
Vice-President: Thomas Jefferson
First Lady: Abigail Smith
Thomas Jefferson March 4, 1801 - March 4, 1809
Vice-President: Aaron Burr March 4, 1801 - March 4, 1805
George Clinton March 4, 1805 - March 4, 1809
First Lady: Martha Jefferson
James Madison March 4, 1809 - March 4, 1817
Vice-President: George Clinton March 4, 1809 - April 20, 1812 (Died in office)
Office vacant April 20, 1812 - March 4, 1813 (Blance of Clinton’s term)
Elbridge Gerry March 4, 1813 - November 23, 1814 (Died in office)
Office vacant November 23, 1814 - March 4, 1817
First Lady: Dolley Payne
James Monroe March 4, 1817 - March 4, 1825
Vice-President: Daniel D. Tompkins
First Lady: Elizabeth Kortright
John Quincy Adams March 4, 1825 - March 4, 1829
Vice-President: John C. Calhoun
First Lady: Louisa Catherine Johnson
Andrew Jackson March 4, 1829 - March 4, 1837
Vice-President: John C. Calhoun March 4, 1929 December 28, 1832 (Resigned from office)
Office vacant (Balance of Calhoun’s term)
Martin Van Buren December 28, 1833 - March 4, 1837
First Lady: Emily Donelson
Martin Van Buren March 4, 1837 - March 4, 1841
Vice-President: Richard M. Johnson
First Lady: Sarah Yorke Jackson
William Henry Harrison March 4, 1841 - April 4, 1841
Vice-President: John Tyler
First Lady: Sarah Angelica Singleton
John Tyler April, 4 1841 - March 4, 1845
Office vacant
First Lady: Anna Tuthill Symmes
James K. Polk March 4, 1845 - March 4, 1849
Vice-President: George M. Dallas
First Lady: Jane Irwin Harrison
Zachary Taylor March 4, 1849 - July 9, 1850
Vice-President: Millard Fillmore
First Lady: Letitia Christian
Millard Fillmore July 9, 1850 - March 4, 1853
Office vacant
First Lady: Elizabeth Priscilla Cooper
First Lady:
Franklin Pierce March 4, 1853 - March 4, 1857
Vice-President: William R. King March March 4 - April 18, 1853 (Died in office)
James Buchanan March 4, 1857 - March 4, 1861
Vice-President: John C. Breckinridge
First Lady: Julia Garn
Abraham Lincoln March 4, 1861 - April 15, 1865
Vice-President: Hannibal Hamlin March 4, 1861 - March 4, 1865
Andrew Johnson March 4 - April, 1865
Andrew Johnson April 15, 1865 - March 4, 1869
Office vacant
Ulysses S. Grant March 4, 1869 - March 4, 1877
Vice-President: Schuyler Colfax March 4, 1869 - March 4, 1873
Henry Wilson March 4, 1873 - November 22, 1875 (Died in office)
Office vacant (Balance of Wilson’s term)
Rutherford B. Hayes March 4, 1877 - March, 1881
Vice-President: William A. Wheeler
James A. Garfield March 4, 1881 - September 19, 1881
Vice-President: Chester A. Arthur
Chester A. Arthur September 19, 1881 - March, 1885
Office vacant
Grover Cleveland March, 1885 - March 4, 1889
Vice-President: Thomas A. Hendricks March 4 - November 25, 1885 (Died in office)
Office vacant (Balance of Hendricks’ term)
Benjamin Harrison March 4, 1889 - March 4, 1893
Vice-President: Levi P. Morton
Grover Cleveland March, 1893 - March, 1897 (again)
Vice-President: Adlai Stevenson
William McKinley March, 1897 - September 14, 1901
Vice-President: Garret Hobart March 4, 1897 - November 21 1899 (Died in office)
Office vacant (Balance of Hobart’s term)
Theodore Roosevelt March 4 - September 14, 1901
Theodore Roosevelt September 1901 - March 4, 1909
Office vacant September 14, 1901 - March 4, 1905
Charles W. Fairbanks March 4, 1905 - March 4, 1909
William Howard Taft March 4, 1909 - March 4, 1913
Vice-President: James S. Sherman March 4, 1909 - October 30, 1912 (Died in office)
Office vacant (Balance of Sherman’s term)
Woodrow Wilson March 4, 1913 - March 4, 1921
Vice-President: Thomas R. Marshall
Warren G. Harding March 4, 1921 - August 2, 1923
Vice-President: Calvin Coolidge
Calvin Coolidge August 2, 1923 - March 4, 1929
Office vacant August 2, 1923 - March 4, 1925
Charles G. Dawes March 4, 1925 - March 4, 1929
Herbert Hoover March 4, 1929 - March 4, 1933
Vice-President: Charles Curtis
Franklin D. Roosevelt March 4, 1933 - April 12, 1945
Vice-President: John N. Garner March 3, 1933 - January 20, 1941
Henry A. Wallace January 20, 1941 - January 20, 1945
Harry S. Truman January 20 - April 12, 1945
Harry S. Truman April 12, 1945 - January 20, 1953
Office vacant April 12, 1945 - January 20, 1949
Alben W. Barkley January 20, 1949 - January 20, 1953
Dwight D. Einsenhower January 20, 1953 - January 20, 1961
Vice-President: Richard Nixon
John F. Kennedy January 20, 1961 - November 22, 1963
Vice-President: Lyndon B. Johnson
Lyndon B. Johnson November 22, 1963 - January 20, 1969
Office vacant November 22, 1963 - January 20, 1965
Hupert Humphrey January 20, 1965 - January 1969
Richard Nixon January 20, 1969 - August 9, 1974
Spiro Agnew January 20, 1969 - October 10, 1973 (Resigned from office)
Office vacant October 10 - December 6, 1973
Gerald Ford December 6, 1973 - August 9, 1974
Gerald Ford August 9, 1974 - January 20, 1977
Office vacant August 9 - December 19, 1974
Nelson Rockefeller December 19, 1974 - January 20, 1977
Jimmy Carter January 20, 1978 - January 20, 1977 - January 20, 1981
Vice-President: Walter Mondale
Ronald Reagan January 20, 1981 - January 20, 1989
Vice-President: George H. W. Bush
George H. W. Bush January 20, 1989 - January 20, 1993
Vice-President: Dan Quayle
Bill Clinton January 20, 1993 - January 20, 2001
Vice-President: Al Gore
George W. Bush January 20, 2001 - January 2009
Vice-President: Dick Cheney
Barack Obama January 20, 2009 - January 2017
Vice-President: Joe Biden
Donald Trump January 20, 2017 - Incumbent
Vice-President: Mike Pence
0 notes
Text
91. The 1991 season --- Team rosters
Team by team breakdown of more noted players in the 1991 season.
Atlanta - QB Walter Lewis, QB Rodney Peete, RB Cleveland Gary, RB Vagus Ferguson, FB Ken Talton, WR Marcus Anderson, WR/KR Cormac Carney,TE Ken Wisenhunt, DE Curtis Anderson, DE/DT Jackie Cline DE/DT Jimmy Walker DL Kevin Middleton OLB Cornelius Bennett, OLB Aundrey Bruce ILB John Brantley, ILB Kurt Crain FS Riccardo Ingram SS Bubba McDowell P Jim Grupp K Efren Herrera
Arizona- QB Alan Risher, QB Todd Santos RB Leonard Russell, RB Kevin Nelson, RB Randy Johnson RB John Barnett,FB Mack Boatner, WR Jim Sandusky, WR Jackie Flowers, TE Mark Keel, G Randall McDaniel G Carl Roberts G Frank Kalil, C Mike Katolin OL Jeff Kiewel RG Alvin Powell, DE Skip McLendon, DE Mike Mraz DT Stan Mataele NT Dan Saleamua NT Dave Futrell OLB Ben Apuna, OLB Scott Stephen MLB Byron Evans CB Anthony Parker DB Lance Shields DB Eddie Brown DB Gordon Bunch,FS Allen Durden FS Nathan LaDuke SS/OLB David Fulcher SS Chuck Cecil SS Don Schwartz P/K Frank Corral
Baltimore- QB Rick Neuheisel, QB Mike Shula, WR Jeff Graham WR Joey Walters, TE victor Hicks, RB Chris Warren, RB Harry Sydney, DE Mike Fox, DE Willie Broughton,DT Eric Swann DT Bob Nelson DT Wally Klein,
Birmingham- QB Gary Hogeboom,QB Kerwin Bell, RB Brent Fullwood, RB Jerry Mays, RB Scott Stamper FB Tommie Agee WR Wendell Davis, WR Joey Jones, WR Ron Fredrick, WR Greg Richardson TE Darryl Mason TE Allama Matthews T Antoine Davis T Pat Phenix, T Robert Woods G Crawford Ker G Pat Saindon, G Buddy Aydelette, C Tom Banks G Dave Drechsler DE Jon Hand DE Tracy Rocker,DE/DT Ronnie Paggett, DT David Rocker DT Doug Smith, NT Benji Roland OLB Herb Spencer,LB Dallas Hickman, LB Thomas Boyd MLB Keith McCants CB Ricky Ray CB Dennis Woodberry CB Frank Reed SS Billy Cesare FS Mike Thomas SS Chuck Clanton P Danny Miller K Phillip Doyle
Boston - QB Doug Flutie, QB Shawn Halloran, RB Jaime Morris,RB Troy Stradford, WR Kelvin Martin, WR Darren Flutie, WR Tom Waddle, TE Mike Bitterman, T Dave Widell T Scott Hough, T Pat Staub G Joe Wolf G Steve Trapillo G John Schmeding C Mike McLaughlin DE John Bosa,DE Kenny Neil DE Robert Banks DL Justin Strzelcyzk, NT Mike Ruth OLB Ben Needham OLB Bill Romanowski,ILB Marcus Marek ILB Michael Stonebreaker, ILB Ned Bolcar CB Gordie Lockbaum CB Woorow Wilson S Joe Restic S Pat Eilers S Stan Smagala DB D'Jaun Francisco P Bucky Scribner K John Carney
Carolina - QB Bret Farve,QB Ben Bennett WR Clarkston Hines, WR Sterling Sharpe, WR Naz Worthen, WR Robert Clark TE Shannon Sharp, RB Kevin Mack,RB Derrick Fenner, G Stacy Long G John Schmeding G Gerry Raymond DE Ray Agnew, DE Malcolm Taylor, DT Micheal Dean Perry, NT Roy Hart,DT Vance Hammond, OLB Vinson Smith, CB Donnell Woolford,CB Wayne Haddix,CB Joe Johnson,S Brad Edwards,K Steve Christie
Chicago-QB Jack Trudeau, QB Chuck Hartlieb, RB Bo Jackson, RB Thomas Rooks, FB Keith Byars, FB Howard Griffith WR David Williams,WR/KR Tim Brown, WR Doug Donely, TE Cap Boso, TE Jerry Reese LT Mark Dennis, LT Lee Spivey,LT Duane Wilson,G Jim Juriga,RG Arland Thompson, C Bill Winters DE Tyrone Keys, DE Scott Davis, DT Don Thorp, DT Moe Gardner, DT Mel Agee, NT Paul Hanna DT Tony Suber ILB Pepper Johnson MLB Darrick Brownlow, ILB Jeff Leiding LB Byron Lee LB Scott Leach LB Larry Kolic CB Rod Hill, CB Vince Buck, CB Kerry Glenn, FS Craig Swoope S Henry Jones S Sonny Gordon P Jim Miller K Max Zendejas
Denver- QB Marc Wilson,QB Scott Mitchell RB Eric Bienemy RB Steve Bartalo FB Bill Johnson, WR Frank Lockett,WR Mike Pritchard, WR Aaron Cox, RT Mark Vander Poel, LT Steve Rogers, G Ariel Solomon C Joe Garten C Tom Davis OL Sid Abramowitz DE Calvin Turner, DE Kenny Walker DL Chad Hennings,NT Tim Moore, OLB Alfred Williams, OLB Kanavais McGhee, ILB Galand Thaxton ILB John Nevens, LB Greg Gerken CB Dave McCloughan CB David Dumars CB Nate Miller, CB Victor Scott SS Mickey Pruitt, P Jack Weil K/P Jim Asmus
District of Columbia - QB Don Majkowski QB Shawn Moore RB Curtis Bledsoe, WR Herman Moore WR Perry Tuttle, RT Eric Williams, LT Dean Miraldi NT Chris Zorich K Chris Gardocki
Hawaii - QB Jack Thompson, QB Robbie Bosco,QB Garrett Gabriel, WR Walter Murray, WR Mark Bellini , WR Glen Kozlowski, RB Aaron Craver, RB/PR/KR Gary Allen, RB Anthony Edgar RB/PR/KR Vai Sikahema, FB Lakei Heimuli, FB Tom Tuipulotu, TE Trevor Molini, TE David Mills, RT Jim Mills LT Darryl Haley, T Neal Fort T Vince Stroth, T Nick Eyre, T Wayne Faalafua G Joe Onosai G Louis Wong G Bernard Carvalho, C Kani Kauahi, C Ed Riewerts C Robert Anae DE Al Noga DE Jason Buck DE Jim Herrmann DE Brandon Flint DE Brad Anae, DE Junior Filiaga, DT Kit Lathrop DT Tom Tuinei DT Colin Scotts, DT Brad Smith, OLB Kyle Whittigham, OLB Leon White, LB Cary Whittingham, MLB Kurt Gouveia,MLB Marv Allen LB Niko Noga CB Brian Mitchell CB Dana McLemore CB Jeff Griffin CB Manny Hendrix, CB Rodney Thomas, DB Rodney Rice, DB Kent Kafentzis, FS Blaine Gaison FS Jeff Wilcox FS Rich Miano SS Mark Kafentzis SS Kyle Morrell SS Jeff Sprowls, S Verlon Redd S Troy Long P/TE Clay Brown K Paul Woodside
Houston- QB Jim Kelly, QB Andre Ware WR Richard Johnson, WR Ricky Sanders, WR/PR Gerald McNeil, WR/KR Clarence Verdin, wr Manny Hazard RB Ickey Woods, RB Darren Lewis RB Todd Fowler, RB Chuck Weatherspoon RB Darryl Clark, LT Bryan Dausin RT Tommy Robinson T Ernie Rogers, T Denver Johnson RG Billy Kidd, LG Scott Boucher, C Mike Arthur C Frank Kalil, DE Pete Catan, DE Cleveland Crosby DE Charles Benson DT Craig Veasey, DT Tony Fitzpatrick DT Hosea Taylor OLB Andy Hawkins, OLB Mike Hawkins, MLB Kiki DeAyala, LB Lamar Lathon, CB Audrey McMillan, CB Will Lewis CB Mike Mitchell FS Luther Bradley FS Hollis Hall SS Steve Atwater SS Calvin Eason,S Tommy Myers P Dale Walters K Roman Anderson
Jacksonville- QB Ed Luther, QB Robbie Mahfouz QB Craig Erickson WR Wesley Carroll WR Alton Alexis, WR Perry Kemp, WR Wyatt Henderson RB Gaston Green KR/RB Tony Boddie, FB Larry Mason FB Melvin Bratton, T Bob Gruber G George Collins C Jay Pennison T Roy simmons C Mike Reuther,RT Ralph Williams, LG Rich garza,DE Anthony Smith, DE Alphonso Carreker, DE Keith Millard, DE Phil Dokes OLB Roman Pfifer WLB Maurice Crum LB Kirk Carruthers OLB tom dinkle OLB Joe Castillo, MLB Bernard Clark, CB Terry McDaniel, CB Van Jakes DB Will White S Don Bessillieu S Chester Gee CB Mark Harper DB Bobby Hosea, P/K Brian Franco
Los Angeles- QB Vinny Testaverde, QB Todd Marinovich QB Doug Gaynor, RB Christian Okoye, RB Reggie Brown RB/KR Jarvis Redwine, WR Mike Sherrad, WR Reggie Rembert, WR Willie “Flipper” Anderson, WR Duane Gunn WR John Jefferson TE Tim Wrightman OL Rod Walters, Vince Stroh, Bob Simmons, Doug Hoppock, Perry Harnett, & Jerry Doerger, G Max Montoya G Mark Tucker C Mike Katolin & G Alvin Powell, C Mike Schad, DE Gary Jeter,DE Lee Williams, DT George Achica, DE Fletcher Jenkins, DE Ben Rudolph DT Eddie Weaver,DE Dennis Edwards, DE Ray Cattage, DE Rich Dimler OLB Ken Norton Jr., OLB Eric Scoggins,LB Scott Ross MLB Marvcus Patton LB Danny Rich LB Sam Norris CB Darryl Henley CB Wymon Henderson, CB John Hendy CB Tyrone Justin FS/CB Mike Fox SS Tim McDonald P Jeff Partridge K Tony Zendejas,
Memphis- QB Warren Moon, QB Whit Taylor, QB Jeff Francis, WR Derek Holloway WR/KR Derrick Crawford, WR Greg Moser, WR Alexander Wright, WR Anthony Morgan WR Sam Graddy, WR Ted Wilson, WR Gizmo Williams RB John Stephens FB Cornelius Quarles, TE Keli McGregor T Richard Cooper, RG Myke Horton G Bill Mayo DE Anthony Pleasant, DE Calvin Clark DT Reggie White, OLB Kenny Tippins OLB Tony Hill LB Rod Shoate, LB Mike Brewington MLB Chris Gaines CB Mossy Cade CB Leonard Coleman CB mike thomas DB Terry Love FS Vic Minor SS Barney Bussey P Jimmy Colquitt K Alan Duncan
Miami – QB Browning Nagle, QB Peter Tom Willis RB Rodney Hampton, RB/PR/KR Eric Robinson FB Dwayne Crutchfield, WR Michael Irvin, WR Eddie Brown, WR/KR Mike Harris WR Greg Taylor, WR Ricky Simmons WR Elmer Bailey TE Willie Smith TE Bob Niziolek LT Mike Sullivan LT Joel Patten RT Jeff Seevy RT/RG Dave Pacella RG Ed Fulton C/G Brian Musselman C Tony Loia Vaughn Harman DE Ken Fagan DE Danny Stubbs ,DT Jerome Brown, DT Dan Sileo, LDT Bennie Smith OLB Winston Moss LB Jon McVeigh MLB George Mira MLB Mike Muller CB Jeff Brown CB Reggie Sutton FS Bennie Blades SS Mike Guess P Jeff Feagles K Jeff Brockhaus
Michigan – QB Jim Harbaugh, QB Jim Karasatos, RB Lorenzo White, FB Albert Bentley,WR Andre Rison, WR Chris Carter, WR Anthony Allen, TE Eric Kattus TE Duane Young,TE Mike Cobb,TE Donnie Echols T Chris Godfrey, T Ken Dallafior,G Eric Moten G Dean Dingman G Tyrone McGriff, C Wayne Radloff,C/G George Lilja, DE Al ‘Bubba’ Baker,DE John Corker, DE Mark Messner, DE Matt Vanderbeek DT/NT David Tipton DT Mike Hammerstein DT/DE Allen Hughes OLB Dixon Edwards OLB Bobby Abrams, OLB Carlos Jenkins MLB Percy Snow, LB Mike Mallory, CB Clarence Chapman,CB Brad Cochran CB Vito McKeever CB Oliver Davis CB Ron Osborne FS Garland Rivers SS Harlon Barnett S/PR Tripp Welbourne P Jeff Gossett K Novo Bojovich
Milwaukee-QB John Friesz, QB Bob Lane, RB Anthony Thompson, RB Nick Bell FB Bob Christian WR/KR Mike Bellamy, WR Jaime Holland RT Jerry Crafts G Kirk Scrafford SDE Don Davey WDE Mike Flores DT Greg Feilds DT Leon Lett, DT Paul Hanna LB Melvin Foster LB Mark Sander OLB Angelo Snipes OLB Kyle Borland ILB Ray Bentley, ILB Robert Pennywell CB Steve Jackson CB Mike McGruder,FS Merton Hanks S Tim Hauk S Pat Eilers,DB Sonny Gordon, SS David Greenwood
New England - QB Mike Buck, QB Tom Ramsey, RB Robert Drummond,RB Mike Mayweather RB Judd Garrett, WR Scott Schwedes,WR John Garrett, WR Clarence Collins WR Walter Broughton WR Tom McConnaughey WR Charlie Smith, TE Brian Forster, TE Gordon Hudson, T Harry Boatswain, G Tim Ryan G Mike Brennan G Dean Brown C Tim Grunhard,ILB Larry Kolic, CB Todd Lyght,P Chris Shale
New Mexico - QB Todd Dillon, QB Bob Gagliano RB Harvey Williams,RB Eric Pegram RB Del Rodgers, WR Keenan McCardell WR Terrence Mathis WR Kerry Cash, TE Keith Cash, TE Chris Smith DE Michael Sinclair, DE Mitch Donahue,DT Chad Hennings,OLB Marcus Cotton, OLB Galand Thaxton MLB Terry Maki, CB/PR David Martin, CB Tom Rotello CB Sammy Walker, FS Scott Thomas,
New Jersey - QB Don McPherson, QB Jason Garrett, RB Barry Sanders, RB Kirby Warren,WR Leonard Harris, WR Brett Perriman, WR Bernard Ford, WR Rob Carpenter, T Jumbo Elliot, T Paul Gruber, DE Rob Burnett, LB Terry Wooden, CB vince Clark, FS Marcus Paul
New Orleans- QB Tommy Hodson,QB Clemente Gordon, QB Matt Stevens, RB Marcus Dupree, RB Walter Dean, RB Anthony Steels,WR Jake Reed WR Bobby Slaughter WR Ron Johnson WR Mardye Mcdole TE Andrew Glover LT Charles McRae T Broderick Thompson DT Jerald Bayless, DT Henry Thomas DT Jeff Gaylord, DT Larry McClain, DE Darryl Wilkerson DE Larry White NT Jerry Ball NT Oudious Lee OLB Micheal Brooks OLB Erick Krumerow KB ray phillips CB Otis Smith CB Lyndell Jones FS Greg Jackson SS Leroy Butler S Charles Harbison S Tim Smith P Dario Casarino, K Tim Mazzetti
New York - QB Steve Young, QB Tom Ehrhardt, RB Freeman McNeil RB Dwight Sullivan RB Kelvin Farmer, FB Maurice Carthon,WR Rob Carpenter,WR/KR Rocket Ismail, WR/KR Marc Lewis, WR Vincent White, G Billy Ard, C Kent Hull, DE James Lockette, DE Ray Seals, DE Ricky Williamson, DE Freddie Gilbert DT Erik Howard DT Tom Woodland, NT Ted Gregory LB Jim LeClair, LB Mike Weddington CB Kerry Justin,CB Mike Williams CB Terry Daniels S Gregg Johnson DB Tony Thurman P Rick Partridge K Roger Ruzek
Oakland- QB Mike Perez, QB John Paye, QB Troy Taylor RB Eric Jordan,RB Tim Spencer, RB/KR Elmer James FB Brad Muster WR Ed McCaffery WR Gordon Banks, WR Ken Margerum, WR Lew Barnes WR Kevin Williams, TE Eric Green, TE Brian Williams, LT Gary Zimmerman, RT Mark Treynowicz T Ricky Siglar, G Gerry Raymond,G Mickey Marvin G Tracy Franz, G Jim Leonard C Roger Levasa DE Bruce Thornton, WDE Dave Browning, SDE Greg Feilds,DE Brad Anae, DT Ted Washington DT Rhett Hall DT Monte Bennett,DE/DT Bruce Thornton,DE/NT Mark Buben DT Brad Smith, OLB Dave Wyman, OLB David Shaw OLB Tim Lucas, ILB Gary Plummer LB Tony Caldwell OLB Mark Stewart RCB Deion Sanders LCB Mark Collins,CB Derrick Martin,FS Tommy Wilcox FS Frank Duncan, SS Marcus Quinn, P Stan Talley, K Sandro Vitiello
Oklahoma – QB Doug Williams, QB Mike Gundy, RB Thurman Thomas, RB Allen Pinkett,RB Gerald Hudson RB Spencer Tillman, FB Ken Lacy, FB Ted Sample, FB Jim Stone, WR Al Williams, WR Kris Haines, WR Lonnie Turner,WR Derrick Sheppard, TE Keith Jackson, TE Ron Wheeler, LT Joe Levellis T Mike Perino, RT Jim Bob Lamb,G David Huffman, G Tom Thayer, C Brian Williams C Mark Fischer, DE Leslie O'Neal DE Bob Clasby, NT Tony Casillas, OLB Kevin Murphy ILB Britt Hager ILB Dante Jones ILB Terry Beeson, LB Vic Koenning, LB Tony Furjanic CB Larry Brown CB Peter Raeford,CB Rock Richmond, CB Barry Copeland, CB Roney McMillan CB Lee Wilson DB Rod Brown SS Herb Williams, S/PR Tim Gordon P Case DeBrujin, K Luis Zendejas
Orlando - QB Steve Walsh, QB Roy Dewalt RB Emmitt Smith, RB Buford McGee, RB Scott Stamper, RB Earl Gant, RB Nuu Faaola, FB Cedric Smith, FB LaRue Harrington FB Leon Perry TE Mike Mularky,WR Ricky Simmons WR Elmer Bailey T Ed Muransky, G Vernice Smith, DE Shane Curry DE Bill Hawkins, DE Willis Peguese, DE Bob Cobb DE/NT Richard Tharpe DT Jimmie Jones, DT Kevin Kellin DT Gurnest Brown LOLB Darnell Dailey ROLB Joe Hines MLB Paul McGowan,LB Ken Kelley CB Richard Fain CB Trent Bryant CB Willie Holley FS Victor Jackson SS Jarvis Williams P Rick Tuten & The Frozen Fifteen.
Philadelphia- QB Todd Blackledge, QB Jim Crocicchia, HB Paul Palmer, RB Allen Harvin, RB Kelvin Bryant, FB David Riley WR Hart Lee Dykes WR Scott Fitzkee, WR Willie Collier WR Tom Donovan TE Ken Dunek TE Steve Folsom RT Irv Eatman, RG Chuck Commiskey, C Bart Oates, LG George Gilbert LT Mike McClearn D Bill Dugan NT Pete Kugler, DE William Fuller, DE John Walker, DE/DT Willie Rosborough ILB Shane Conlan, ILB Glenn Howard, OLB John Bunting OLB George Cooper LB John Brooks CB Ben Smith, CB Garcia Lane CB John Sutton FS Mike Lush,SS Mike Dumas CB/S Roger Jackson P Sean Landeta, K David Trout
Pittsburgh- QB Major Harris, QB Raphel Cherry HB Mike Rozier, HB Curvin Richards HB Walter Holman,HB Reggie Taylor, RB/KR/PR Mel Grey FB Amos Lawrence WR Greg Anderson, WR Alvin Harper WR Julius Dawkins, TE Joey Hackett LT Don Maggs RT Tom Ricketts LG Corbin C Correal RG Lukens RT Feilds OL Emil Boures LDE Sam Clancy DE Marc Spindler,RDE Tony Woods DE Doug Hollie DT Mark Gunn DT Tony Siragusa DT Ken Times, DT Mike Morgan, DT Dennis Puha, LDT David Graham RDT Dombrowski DE Ike Griffin NT Laval Short LOLB Rich D'Amico ROLB Ezekial Gadsen LB Mike McKibben MLB Brian Bosworth, MLB Jerry Olsavsky, MLB Jethro Franklin LB Craig Walls CB Jerry Holmes,CB Gary Richard, S Louis Riddick, DB Duffy Cobbs P Brian Greenfield P Larry Swider K Tony Lee
Portland-QB Steve Beurlein, QB Dan McGuire QB Bill Musgrave RB Derrick Loville, RB Blaise Bryant RB Otis Brown, TE Jay Novacek,WR Erick Affholteras,WR/KR Cornell Burbage,G Gene Williams C Bair Bush, DE Dennis Brown, DL Robert Banks,DE Brad Anae, DE Junior Filiaga, LB Junior Seau, LB Filipo Mokofisi, DB Ben Jessie P Bryan Barker K Mike Lansford
Sacramento-QB David Archer, QB Kevin Sweeney, RB Mike Pringle, FB Derek Hughes,WR Neil Balholm,WR Kelvin Edwards,TE Thornton Chandler LT Pat Harlow DE Dan Owens, DE Simon Fletcher, LB Ken Rose,OLB Ron Burton, OLB Gary Cobb,MLB Howard Carson, CB Lorenzo Lynch,CB Lemuel Stinson DB Billy Owens DB Gordon Bunch,
San Antonio - QB Steve Pelluer QB Billy Joe Tolliver,RB James Gray, RB/SB/KR/PR Eric Metcalf, RB Heath Sherman, RB/SB/KR/PR Johnny Bailey, FB Timmy Newsome, RB/SB Andrew Lazarus, FB Timmy Newsome FB/RB Bill Jones WR Anthony Carter, WR Ray Alexander, WR James Maness WR Tyrone Thurman, WR Rod Barksdale, TE Dan Sharp TE Doug Cosbie LT Daryle Smith RT Stan White G Dave Richards G/C Paul Jetton, G Newt Harrell, C Mike Baab SDE Kevin Brooks WDE Kevin Harris DE Ken Gillen, DT John Randle, DT Mark Whalen NT Artis Jackson, MLB Chris Speilman, DLB James Francis LB Tracy Simien, LB Jeff Rorher LB John Barefeild, CB Everson Walls CB John Booty CB Eric Everrett CB Ron Fellows CB A.J. Johnson, and FS Michael Downs, FS John Hagy, P Lee Williams K Jeff Ward
Seattle - QB David Woodley, QB Reggie Slack, RB Buford Jordan,RB Greg Lewis FB Jarrod Bunch WR Trumaine Johnson, WR Jerry Gordon,TE Sam Bowers T Randy Theiss G Louis Oubre G Terry Crouch G Jeff Pahukoa, G Dean Kirkland,S Charles Mincy K Brad Daluiso
Tampa Bay – QB Chuck Long QB Jimmy Jordan, QB Chip Ferguson RB Dexter Carter, RB Greg Allen FB Craig Heyward FB Greg Boone, WR Eric Truvillion WR Randall Hill WR Lawrence Dawsey WR Larry Brodsky, WR Willie Gillespie WR Chris Castor TE Marvin Harvey, LT Dan Fike, RT Reggie Smith LG Chuck Pitcock RG Nate Newton C Chris Foote DE Mike Butler DE Don Feilder DE Walter Carter, NT Fred Nordgren, DT Mike Clark DE Jim Ramey ROLB Alonzo Johnson LOLB James Harrell, MLB Kelley Kirchbaum MLB Fred McAllister CB Robert Bailey,CB Jeff George,CB Warren Hanna, FS Zac Henderson SS Louis Oliver SS Blaine Anderson DB Alvin Bailey DB Doug Beaudoin P/K Zenon Andrusyshyn
0 notes