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Revision as of 15:36, 13 September 2007 by Bart Versieck (talk | contribs) (Minor fixes)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)This user is a skeptic. |
5,000+ | This user has made more than 5,000 contributions to Misplaced Pages. |
Born May 2, 1974, I have already made a small impact on this world in many small ways.
I am currently the Senior Gerontology Consultant for Guinness World Records (since 2005, and a junior consultant prior to 2005) and the senior claims investigator for the Gerontology Research Group (www.grg.org)(since 1999). I also run the web group "World's Oldest People" at Yahoo groups (founded 2002). I work part-time for several organizations, including the New England Centenarian Study, the Social Security Administration, the New England Centenarian Study at Boston University, and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research. I am a founding member of the Supercentenarian Research Foundation, and I have been featured in hundreds of newspapers, including "The Wall Street Journal" and "The New York Times". I have worked on several books, the first of which, the "Wisdom of the World's Oldest People," was out in bookstores in Oct 2005. Two more books are soon to follow. I have been cited in scientific journals, including "The Gerontologist" and "Rejuvenation Research". I hold a certificate of gerontology from Georgia State University (2006) and am currently a Master of Gerontology student at Georgia State University.
I am also an editor at www.emporis.com, which is the #1 web resource for high-rise buildings. I have contributed to the Guinness Book of Records (including the 1987, 1997, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007 editions). I also contributed to the "World Almanac 2004".
I am also an historian. I hold two degrees in history, an Associate of Arts in History (honors) from Georgia Perimeter College (2004) and an Bachelor of Arts in History (summa cum laude) from Georgia State University (2006). I believe that Misplaced Pages, while not the place for 'original' research, can move the 'chains of progress' forward (a reference to first downs in football). For some articles, such as William Potts and Myrtle McAteer, I have employed my genealogical skills to locate birthdates for long-forgotten persons who are suddenly notable again, as their once-unrecognized contributions have now come to light. Thus, I am melding gerontology, history, genealogy, and the frontier of Misplaced Pages to further the collective knowledge of humanity.
My ultimate goal is to further the education of the planet, through both small, incremental improvements as well as bold new ideas. Stay tuned for more!
Wikicontributions
http://tools.wikimedia.de/~river/cgi-bin/count_edits
- Contributions summary for: Ryoung122
- Username Ryoung122
- Total edits 5773
- Image uploads 10 (10 cur, 0 old)
- Distinct pages edited 936
- Edits/page (avg) 6.17
- Deleted edits 103 (browse)
- First edit 2005-02-17 21:39:17
- Edits by namespace Namespace Edits
- Articles 3806
- Talk 1113
- User 118
- User talk 379
- Project 229
- Project talk 16
- Image 23
- Image talk 5
- Template 47
- Template talk 6
- Category 22
- Category talk 9
Last updated Sept 11 2007, 6:28PM EDT.
Although I only adopted the current identity "Ryoung122" in Feb 2005, I have edited articles in Misplaced Pages for several years prior. I have contributed heavily to the supercentenarian and associated articles, and started several. While this remains my first area of focus, my interests are not limited to this, and I have on occasion contributed to a plethora of articles over a great many topics. My first goal is to further the "education" of the world, and correcting errors is something I do quite a bit.
Edit history:
- 1,000th edit June 18 2006
- 2,000th edit Nov 27 2006
- 3,000th edit Mar 30 2007
- 4,000th edit July 8 2007
- 5,000th edit July 31 2007
Articles I've started (since Nov 20 2005):
- 1.Longevity claims started Nov 20 2005
- 2.Willow oak started Nov 23 2005
- 3.Paweł Parniak started Nov 24 2005
- 4.Anne Primout started Nov 24 2005
- 5.Hanna Barysevich started Nov 26 2005
- 6.Lucy D'Abreu started Nov 28 2005
- 7.Maria Capovilla started Dec 9 2005
- 8.Gladys Swetland started Dec 17 2005
- 9.Denzo Ishisaki started Feb 2 2006
- 10.Doyenne started Feb 2 2006 (deleted Mar 12 2007 after transfer to Wiktionary)
- 11.Flossie Page started Feb 23 2006
- 12.Marion Higgins started Mar 3 2006
- 13.Mary MacIsaac started Mar 11 2006
- 14.Lucie Péré-Pucheu started Apr 12 2006
- 15.Grace Nelsen Jones started Apr 25 2006
- 16.Du Pinhua started Apr 26 2006
- 17.Cruz Hernandez started May 4 2006
- 18.Rafael Verga started May 22 2006
- 19.Mary Margaret Smith started May 24 2006
- 20.Emma Tillman started June 14 2006
- 21.Emmeline Brice started June 17 2006
- 22.Robert Meier started June 18 2006
- 23.Beausejour, France started June 18 2006
- 24.Antonio Pierro started June 18 2006
- 25.Hannah Smith started July 13 2006
- 26.Annie Knight started Aug 5 2006
- 27.Florence Homan started Aug 18 2006
- 28.Mountain View, Georgia started Sept 3 2006
- 29.Giulia Sani-Casagli started Sept 16 2006
- 30.Oberia Coffin started Oct 20 2006
- 31.Dalby Springs, Texas started Oct 20 2006
- 32.Charles Brunier started Nov 10 2006
- 33.Paul Baltes started Nov 13 2006
- 34.Konrad Fuchs started Nov 16 2006
- 35.James Birren started Nov 26 2006
- 36.Alberta Davis started Dec 27 2006
- 37.Gerontology Research Group started Feb 11 2007
- 38.Florrie Baldwin started Feb 13 2007
- 39.Charlotte Winters started Mar 28 2007
- 40.Elizabeth Kensley started Apr 27 2007
- 41.Mary Ewen started May 7 2007
- 42.Moniac, Georgia started May 10 2007
- 43.Saint George, Georgia started May 10 2007
- 44.Enrico Garbuglia started May 28 2007
- 45.Raymond Cambefort started May 29 2007
- 46.Stephen Coles started June 26 2007
- 47.Justin Tuveri started July 2 2007
- 48.Louis Epstein (supercentenarian tracker) started July 3 2007
- 49.Erich Kästner (WWI veteran) started July 5 2007
- 50.William Seegers started July 6 2007
- 51.William Potts started July 7 2007
- 52.Emma Carroll started July 10 2007
- 53.Most ancient common ancestor started July 20 2007/deleted July 26 2007 (controversy)
- 54.Species integration started July 26 2007/deleted Aug 9 2007 (evolutionary theory controversies)
- 55.Candé, France started July 27 2007
- 56.Yakup Satar started July 28 2007
- 57.Robert Young (gerontologist) started July 29 2007
- 58.New England Centenarian Study started Aug 7 2007
- 59.Tom Perls started Aug 13 2007
- 60.Noah Raby started Aug 14 2007
- 61.Corinne Dixon Taylor started Aug 15 2007
- 62.U.S. state longevity recordholders started Aug 21 2007
- 63.Jean-Marie Robine started on Aug 25 2007
- 64.Wilhelmina Kott started Aug 31 2007
References
http://www.demogr.mpg.de/calendar/files/23312.3112487793-Workshop%20Program.pdf
http://www.grg.org/Adams/E.HTM
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/Worlds_Oldest_People/
http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/ci/ed/?id=101302
http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/368496.html
http://www.supercentenarian-research-foundation.org/organizers.htm
In search of the elders Man travels around the world looking for people 110 and older
Korky Vann, The Hartford Courant Call Jerry Friedman a "senior" sleuth. For the past five years, the Kent, Conn., resident has circled the globe in search of the world's oldest citizens, talking to individuals 110 and older. Traveling throughout Italy, Portugal, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Japan, Mongolia and Spain, as well as cities and towns across the United States, Friedman has met, interviewed and photographed 50 "extreme" elders, ranging from a former cotton-picker in rural Georgia to a Tibetan lama in Mongolia. The results of his unique journey are reported in Friedman's new book, "Earth's Elders: The Wisdom of the World's Oldest People." The book provides a window into the lives of "human time capsules," who have reached the outer edges of longevity. Their experiences -- the torching of the all-black town of Rosewood, Fla.; the atom-bomb attack on Hiroshima; the fall of the last Chinese Dynasty; the assassination of President McKinley and new inventions such as the washing machine or the automobile -- give new meaning to the term "living history."
Friedman, an award-winning television and advertising photographer, says his project was inspired by his mother, a 92-year-old nursing home resident.
"I went to my mother's long-term-care facility and 'embedded' myself for four days to see firsthand what my mother was experiencing," Friedman says. "It was like drawing back a curtain on a hidden society, and the reality was shocking. What I found was a group of well-cared-for people who were isolated in an elder ghetto. Here were people with extraordinary history and knowledge, but they didn't go out, and for the most part, the world didn't come in. I wanted to learn more about this invisible population."
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Enlarge Font Decrease Font More Lifestyles Market savvy, message saved A perfect 'Potter' for ESPN fans Gifts that say 'Please change' Live from the mall ... Love a parade? This is your season Phoenix, as Cash, walks a fine line
Spurred by curiosity, Friedman began to research supercentenarians, the oldest of the old, and discovered John McMorran, born in 1889, living in a nursing facility in Lakeland, Fla., and Ann Smith, born in 1891, living in a retirement home in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. After interviewing the elders and their families, Friedman was hooked. He tapped his savings to finance his travels and set out to document the untold stories of individuals whose lives span more than a century. Friedman was assisted in his discoveries by gerontology expert Robert Young of the Gerontology Research Group, who verified the records of the people documented in the book. Young, who validates records for the Guinness Book of World Records, says his group recognizes 65 living individuals ages 110 and older, 58 women and seven men. Friedman thinks there are hundreds more and continues to seek them. So far, he's met and photographed 60 individuals.