OTHERS
Ron BrownRalph Bunch
Nobel Peace Prize Winner,
U.N. Diplomat
James Conkling
Founder of The National
Academy of recording Arts & Sciences, Also was responsible for helping
create the Grammys. Died:April 12,1998 in Sacramento,.CA of complications of
Pneumonia & diabetes
John Grant
State Social
Worker,Convervationist. Longest-lived diabetic, Diagnosed as a Diabetic at the
age of 3, in 1921. The same year Insulin was Discovered. Was started on
Insulin in 1923 the year Insulin was first widely available. Died on Feb 18,1997
In Boston,MA--SURVIVED for 75 years as a Diabetic.
Deana Herrera
the New 1998 Miss NY State
She has had juvenile Diabetes since the age of 8.
She's now 20. She 's using
her title to increase diabetes awareness.
Phebe Robinson Jacobsen
NEWS:4-22-2000
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Phebe Robinson Jacobsen, an archivist who
helped ``Roots'' author Alex Haley
determine that his ancestor Kunta Kinte landed here, died Wednesday of
complications from diabetes. She was 78.
Jacobsen and Haley began corresponding in 1967, after he asked her for help with
his genealogical research. It was Jacobsen who dug up a Maryland Gazette
advertisement from 1767 at the Maryland State Archives. The ad announced
the arrival of the Lord Ligonier in Annapolis on Sept. 29, 1767. The ship
carried ``a Cargo of Choice, Healthy Slaves,'' the ad said. Among them was
Kunta Kinte, the inspiration for Haley's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1976
historical novel, which traced 10 generations of his family from Gambia to
the United States. Through the course of research for the book, Jacobsen
and Haley became close friends, said Chris Haley, associate director of
research services at the archives and the late author's nephew.
``She would help give a sense of what life for African-Americans, free or
enslaved,
was like during Colonial times in
Maryland,'' he said. ``It just happened that my uncle
was someone who hit big with the
story that he was researching, but she would help
anyone who asked a question.''
Nicole Johnson
Miss America 1999 she is
also Miss Virginia, A National Celebrity Spokesperson, Juvenile Diabetes
Foundation-- Virginia Spokesperson, American Diabetes Association--
Lobbied U.S. Congress for increased funding for national diabetes research--
Assisted in passing diabetes-related legislation in the Virginia General
Assembly through the Virginia Diabetes Legislative Coalition --Producer/Writer,
Promotions Department, Christian Broadcasting Network. insulin dependent Type 1
and uses a insulin pump.
Cardinal John Krol
previous Roman Catholic
Archbishop Of Philadelphia Confidant, Pope John Paul II Born
10-26-1910
William R. Melton
a World War II pilot
and member of the famed Tuskegee Airmen, died Sept. 2 of complication from
heart disease and diabetes.
He was 78. During World War II, he enlisted as a pilot in what was then
the Army Air Corps and was assigned to the all-black unit. As a
fighter pilot, Melton flew more than 108 missions over North Africa and Europe.
When he completed his duty, Melton remained active with the Tuskegee Airmen
throughout his life. He returned to Tuskegee to serve as a flying
instructor, served as public relations officer, historian and assistant to
several of its national presidents.
Charlie Park
NEWS:April 29,2000
WARREN, Ark. (AP) - Charlie Park, a veteran Arkansas broadcaster, died Thursday
of complications from diabetes and heart disease.
He was 66. Park was news director of Crossett radio station KAGH for 20 years
until retiring in
March because of his illnesses.
Born Nov. 3, 1933, in Flint, Mich., Park began his broadcasting career working
with his father in Detroit. His wife, Carol Park, said her husband spent
48 years in the field, moving to Arkansas in 1979 to work for KAGH.
Sir Harry Seacomb
President of the British
Diabetes Association
Gloria Loring's--son
Brennan Thicke
Actress, Singer Played Liz
Chandler on "Days Of Our Lives" Divorced from Alan Thicke of
"Growing Pains Author of THE KIDS, FOOD AND DIABETES FAMILY COOKBOOK,
PARENTING A DIABETIC CHILD,PARENTING A DIABETIC CHILD - THE VIDEO Gloria's son
Brennan is a Diabetic Brennan is studying film in college Gloria She serves on
the board of directors for the Juvenile Diabetes Association Brennan is
Insulin dependent TYPE 1 Juvenille
Leonard Thompson
at age 12 he was the
first person to successfully receive an insulin injection in 1922 at the
Toronto General
Hospital. SOURCE:Christopher Frost
Milton Rubincam
called ``the dean of
American genealogists'' by the Smithsonian Institution
died of diabetes
complications ;at the age of 88.
Edmund
Schulman
dendrochronologist
at the University of Arizona, the one who discovered that the
bristlecone pines
are the oldest trees in the world. I recently vacationed in Nevada and
California. Near the end of the trip I went to the Ancient Bristlecone
Pine Forest, in the Inyo National Forest, just east of Bishop CA. This
place is astounding. So is the background. Schulman spent much of his career
studying old trees. He found 1500-year-old limber pines in Idaho, and
dated many of the 3000+ year old giant sequoias. A ranger on the Inyo knew
of very old trees in the White Mountains, heard about Schulman's work, and
invited him to visit. Schulman first sampled the more vigorous bristlecone
pines but could find none older than about 1500 years. One day he ventured
up the opposite slope and took a core from a terribly decrepit looking
pine. That night in camp, with a microscope and a Coleman lantern, he
counted the rings: over 4000. That was in 1953. In subsequent years he found an
entire grove with many trees over 4000 years old. The forest service now
has a beautifully maintained 4-mile trail starting at the visitor center
and winding through a variety of bristlecone habitats, including this most
ancient grove. They won't
identify the
oldest tree, but the grove is awesome. (There was once a 4900 year old
bristlecone in eastern Nevada, but it was accidentally cut down for study. Its
form was such that no one guessed it was anywhere close to that old.) Schulman
continued this work for five years. He wrote an article about it for
National Geographic, but died before it was published in March 1958. All the
talks and literature at the visitor center only say that he died early, so I
asked why. He died of a heart attack -- and he had diabetes.
The photographs of him show an obvious ectomorph, so it's a pretty safe
assumption that he had what we now call type
1 diabetes. Doing a bit of arithmetic tells that he
was 15 years old in 1924. This makes it likely that he was one of the
first people saved by insulin, though I haven't been able to discover when
he developed diabetes. He may have died early, of a known diabetic
complication, but insulin gave him enough life to have an important
career. Hearing at age 50 that he died at 49 gave me yet another bit of
appreciation for the improved care of the past 40 years. The greatest
impact of his work came after his death. The visitor center talks about
"The Trees that Rewrote History", and it's only a bit hyperbolic.The
carbon-14 dating method, developed in the 1940s, ran into problems around 1960.
It agreed entirely with independent dating back about 2000 years. But then
researchers found a room in one of the Egyptian pyramids with hieroglyphics
which mentioned a solar eclipse, giving an independent date. The C14 dates were
off by 700 years! Such inconsistencies built up until someone thought, you know,
we've got organic material sitting right here which we can date precisely
because we can count the rings. The bristlecone pine samples demonstrated
that one
of the assumptions
behind C14 dating was false: the atmospheric concentration of C14 is not
constant. (We now know that it is affected by variations in the earth's
magnetic field -- and I assume the related Van Allen belts -- and by variations
in the sunspot cycle. C14 is formed when gamma rays from space collide with
nitrogen-13 nuclei.) Finally the old pines were used to calibrate the C14
method. In fact the bristlecones can calibrate the method back 8600 years. Dead
wood, especially the dense, resinous bristlecone wood, decays incredibly
slowly in the White Mountains. There are standing snags which have been
dead for 2000 years. And because the bristlecones are highly sensitive to
annual weather variations, they form distinctive patterns in the growth
rings. By matching the patterns in dead wood which overlap live wood,
dendrochronologists can date wood which is older than the oldest living
trees. Thus the 8600 year record. But that isn't all. Using the original C14
method, artifacts from all over Europe had been dated. Based on these
dates and independent dating of other artifacts, archeologists had
constructed a theory of how civilization developed. This is the framework
that I learned in school: that civ developed in the Tigris-Euphrates river
valleys and then spread through Europe. A closely related theory was that the
Egyptians developed the techniques for building with large stones and somehow
disseminated this to England, leading to the construction of Stonehenge. But the
redating destroyed these theories. Stonehenge predates the pyramids. Artifacts
from all over Europe have intermixed dates, with no area being clearly the
leader. Tablets from the Balkans are older than those from Mesopotamia.
And so on. Thus "the trees that rewrote history".
SOURCE:Edward
Reid
Hubert Smith and
son, George,
who is president of the
Bermuda Diabetes Association
Jimmy "The
Greek" Synder
Las Vegas, NV
Oddsmaker
Helen Waterford
Nazi Holocaust Survivor
born 1909 -- -Autobiography
Zen Master Ji Bong
(Robert Moore)Insulin
dependent TYPE 1