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In 2015 author and right-to-die advocate Derek Humphry reported that Worthington Industries, the world's largest manufacturer of disposable helium cylinders, had announced that their helium cylinders will guarantee only 80% helium, with up to 20% air, making them inappropriate for use with a suicide bag in Humphry's opinion. [23]
It also set a deadline of September, 30, 2021 for sale of the reserve. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) transferred the reserve to the General Services Administration (GSA) as surplus property, but a 2022 auction [10] failed to finalize a sale. [11] On June 22, 2023, the GSA announced a new auction of the facilities and remaining helium. [12]
Nitschke described his device as a modification of the exit bag with helium method described in The Peaceful Pill Handbook. Helium was replaced by a cylinder of compressed nitrogen and a regulator to supply the nitrogen into a plastic bag. One advantage of this method was the availability of larger amounts of nitrogen and flow rates last longer.
The lots included crude helium gas, the 24,700 square-foot Cliffside Gas Field Facility and all of its buildings, 38,314 acres of gas interests, 23 natural gas wells and 423 miles of pipeline that ...
Elizabeth Bullock Humphrey (May 13, 1841–April 1889), also credited as Lizbeth, Lizzie, or L. B. Humphrey, was an American illustrator active in the 19th century. Humphrey and other women from Cooper Union are considered some of the first women to receive recognition as illustrators in the United States.
A 36" cylinder bore Humphrey pump was installed at Chester, Pennsylvania in 1927 by the Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. The pump was used in dry dock operations and also for experimental purposes. It was designed as a 2-stroke engine to operate in a range of head from 20 to 150 ft (6 to 46 m).
English: Photographic portrait of American artist and illustrator Maud Humphrey (1868-1940). From American Women: Fifteen Hundred Biographies with Over 1,400 Portraits, Frances E. Willard and Mary A. Livermore, editors. Mast, Crowell & Kirkpatrick, 1897 (revised edition from 1893), vol. 1, p. 403.
The farm complex is set on the north side of the road, and includes a large Craftsman house, built about 1920, a derelict gambrel-roofed barn of similar vintage, and a dairy processing plant built about 1930. The farm was started by Harris Humphrey in 1911, and was for many years an important local supplier to the Hot Springs market. [2]