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Released: 16-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
DOE's ORNL, Phone Home new partners for the future
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A minority-owned small business in New York and the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory are uniting to harness the power of knowledge through the innovative Community of the Future Initiative.

   
12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Artificial intelligence improves heart attack diagnosis
American Heart Association (AHA)

Drawing on artificial intelligence technology, researchers have for the first time found that machines show promise of improving on human's ability to diagnose heart attacks, according to a study in today's American Heart Association journal Circulation.

   
Released: 13-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
'Virtual lab' lets engineering students tackle tasks on the web
 Johns Hopkins University

A Johns Hopkins University professor has built a "virtual laboratory" on the World Wide Web to give engineering students a taste of the challenges they may someday face on the job.

Released: 13-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
ORNL system helping U.S. steel industry get tougher
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

An advanced temperature sensor originally developed by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory is allowing producers of galvannealed steel to tell in an instant if it is being processed correctly.

Released: 13-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Presidential Awards Honor Mentoring Efforts of 19 Individuals and Institutions
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The White House today announced that ten individuals and nine institutions are winners of the 1997 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring.

Released: 12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
A new state of matter turns a solid world into a melting one
University of Washington

A new form of matter, clusters of atoms, has been found to have a previously unsuspected property: it can melt at different temperatures from "solid" matter. An experiment described in Science this week paints an exotic portrait of certain substances seemingly confounding nature by existing as a liquid, instead of a solid, at room temperature.

Released: 12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
U of Minnesota research puts glacier theory of evolution on ice
University of Minnesota

Glaciers have been regarded as catalysts for the multiplication of species around the globe. Now, new research at the University of Minnesota casts doubt on this general theory and points to a more complicated evolutionary history for birds and other animals.

Released: 12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
ORNL-developed technology means business for Lambda
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

The Vari-Wave microwave heating system, an award-winning technology developed at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, provides controlled and selective features not possible with conventional heating or traditional microwave techniques.

Released: 12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Hopkins Researchers Study Space Flight's Effects on Blood Vessels
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Are astronauts at risk of developing coronary artery disease from spending time in space, or can their blood vessels adapt to the change in gravity? To find out, Johns Hopkins researchers are preparing a cargo of special cells to board the shuttle Atlantis for a 10-day trip including a stop at space station Mir. The shuttle is scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Sept. 25.

   
Released: 11-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Scientist Press Release
New Scientist

Press release of issue dated 13 September for New Scientist, the international science and technology weekly news magazine.

Released: 11-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Presidential Awards For Mentoring Announced
National Science Foundation (NSF)

Ten individuals and nine institutions will receive the second annual Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM) at a ceremony Sept. 11. The awards are administered and funded by the National Science Foundation, an independent federal agency responsible for supporting scientific research and education programs in science, mathematics, engineering and technology.

Released: 11-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Basin traps air pollution in Mexico City -- International Study has implications for U.S. cities
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

The first detailed measurements in Mexico City of pollutants such as peroxyacetal nitrate show concentrations similar to those that burned eyes and lungs in Los Angeles in the early 1970s, according to preliminary results of a field study conducted earlier this year. Peroxyacetal nitrate also is implicated in the production of ozone, another irritant that makes breathing difficult. The international study has implications for U.S. cities

Released: 11-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Electrically based technologies heat up the cleanup market
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Technologies that promise faster, cheaper and more effective cleanup of certain contaminated soils now are available commercially through a new company formed jointly by Battelle and Terra Vac Corporation of Irvine, Calif.

6-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Fossils Show British Columbia Was Once 2,000 Miles South
University of Washington

Extinct sea creatures have provided evidence that about 80 million years ago the west began to wander. University of Washington paleontologist Peter Ward and his collaborators report in Science that the discovery of pearly fossil shells of ammonites on two islands off the coast of Vancouver Island indicate that British Columbia and southern Alaska were once where Baja California is today.

Released: 10-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
National Science Foundation Tipsheet 9-5-97
National Science Foundation (NSF)

1) Scientists will meet next week in California to plan an international experiment they hope will answer a pivotal question in climate change, 2)The National Science Board (NSB) continues this year to examine how the agency manages its proposal review process, 3) The National Science Foundation-supported ocean drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution has been roaming the African coastline so that scientists may better understand the climate of southern Africa.

Released: 10-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Pioneering Team Spending Winter Atop Greenland Ice Sheet
National Science Foundation (NSF)

Winter has already begun for a crew of four who will spend the entire season atop the Greenland ice sheet studying the weather at a remote outpost called Summit. The camp at the apex of the ice sheet, where the sun will set in November and not reappear until late January, is the first attempt supported by the National Science Foundation to over-winter in Greenland.

5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Relaxing News About Damaged Hair
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Whether you perm, straighten, style or just brush your hair, you're eroding its protective cuticle layer and, eventually, breaking hair strands. Now scientists have, for the first time, figured out the step-by-step chemical effect of hair relaxers on curly hair, leading to new uses for polymers to protect your hair. The new research was presented here today at a national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Embargoed for 9-9-97, 7:00 PM EDT

5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Attic Dust Probed For Nuclear Fallout
American Chemical Society (ACS)

People are always amazed at what they find in their attics, but the latest discovery is that dust in the attics of some older homes in Nevada and Utah contain trace amounts of radioactivity left over from above-ground nuclear testing northwest of Las Vegas in the 1940s and 1950s. The researchers stressed that the radioactivity is low enough that the dust poses no direct danger to area residents. Embargoed for 9-10-97, 1:00 PM EDT

Released: 9-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
'He Says - She Says' sells books, but doesn't stand up to research
Purdue University

If there is life on Mars, it won't include those insensitive men popularized in best-selling books and on talk shows, a Purdue University communication expert says. "The popular notion that men and women are from different planets so to speak ó and thus they have trouble communicating with each other ó is a fallacy," says Brant Burleson, professor of communication.

5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Honey heads off Meat's 'Warmed Over' Flavor, Boosts Shelf Life
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Honey has been used to cure meat for hundreds, if not thousands, of years. In modern times, food chemist Paul Dawson and his group at Clemson University in South Carolina are discovering this natural preservative also confers excellent protection against oxidation and boosts shelf life in popular processed meats. Their research was presented here today at a national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Embargoed for 9-8-97, 11:00 PM EDT

Released: 8-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Paracel

Paracel Inc. today announced a new class of scientific computing for drug discovery that accelerates the analysis of genes that cause disease by as much as 1,000 times over traditional computing alternatives. The GeneMatcherô computer system will be introduced at the Ninth Genome Sequencing and Analysis Conference, Hilton Head, S.C., Sept. 13-16. Embargoed: Sept. 13

   
Released: 5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Forecast Outlook For Women In Chemistry
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Chemist and former U.S. Department of Commerce Undersecretary Mary L. Good, Ph.D., will address a historic gathering of women chemists at the national meeting of the world's largest scientific society, the American Chemical Society, in Las Vegas Sept. 9. To honor 70 years of actions by the Society's Women Chemists Committee, Dr. Good, a past president of the Society, will speak on the historic and future challenges faced by women chemists as they enter the 21st century.

5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
One Step Closer To Ultralow-Emission Automobiles
American Chemical Society (ACS)

A new application of a chemical process called sol-gel technology shows promise for making automobile catalytic converters dramatically more efficient in reducing harmful air pollution emissions, by targeting the first minute-and-a-half in which your car is running after a cold start, according to research presented here today at a national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Embargoed for 9-9-97, 1 PM EDT

Released: 5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Expert Scientists Advise Tomorrow's Chemists, Forecast Future Knowledge Needs
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Emerging chemistry challenges -- from new, incurable diseases to global climate change -- may have few solutions today. But they're just what tomorrow's chemists will face in the year 2020. What will the young chemists of today need to learn to be prepared for the chemistry challenges of tomorrow? That's the subject of a special Presidential symposium to be held Sept. 8 at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society, in Las Vegas.

Released: 5-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New training program to help countries stop smugglers
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Border and customs agents from Hungary, Slovakia and the former Soviet Union will be coming to Washington state this fall to participate in a new training program designed to prevent smuggling of items ranging from blue jeans to nuclear eactor components.

Released: 4-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Scientist Press Release
New Scientist

Press release of issue dated 6 September for New Scientist, the international science and technology weekly news magazine.

Released: 4-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Hubble Telescope finds Vesta crater
Cornell University

Proving that even minor planets can survive cosmic fender-benders, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have discovered a large crater - with an estimated diameter at 285 miles and about 8 miles deep - on the asteroid Vesta. The crater is roughly the diameter of Ohio, and may be the source of many meteorites that reach the earth.

Released: 4-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Female fruit flies pay a high cost for mating but not for egg-laying
University of Georgia

When it comes to reproductive fitness, it seems that mother knows best -- at least when mother is the common fruit fly. But two scientists have found that the act of mating is far more harmful to females than the act of egg laying. The study may give clues to how females help control their own reproductive fitness, according to a University of Georgia geneticist who is co-author of the research, to be published in the journal Evolution.

Released: 4-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Digital Communications Lab Aims for Faster, Cheaper Receivers
University of Maine

As computers get faster and communication networks expand, two electrical engineers at the University of Maine are helping to develop the next generation of radios, televisions and other communication devices. If they and their colleagues are successful, they may do for broadcasting, the military and other parts of American society what compact disc players have done for the audio entertainment industry.

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Pea plant stem growth gene cloned
Cornell University

Plant scientists from Cornell University and the University of Tasmania, Australia, have successfully cloned one of history's first-studied genes -- the gene found for stem growth in peas, according to a report in the journal The Plant Cell.

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Intel $6M grant to network desktop systems
Cornell University

Complex computing problems as different as modeling Earth's climate system or predicting effects of regulatory change in the dairy industry -- which once required massively parallel supercomputers -- will run on a scalable distributed network of powerful desktop computers, thanks in part to a $6 million grant from Intel Corporation to Cornell University. The grant from the Santa Clara, Calif., computing equipment manufacturer is one of 12 to American universities in Intel's three-year, $85 million "Technology for Education 2000" program .

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Computers Put Textbooks On The Fast Track
Michigan State University

East Lansing, Mich. - Until now, the classroom has been an ugly showdown between the blink-and-you-miss-it world of computers and the sedate pace of textbooks. Michigan State University's computer science department has become the first in the nation to use texts produced by a new printing method that not only keeps computer textbooks current to the month classes start, but also allows instructors to customize text selections down to the sentence.

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
UW sensors take chemical analysis out of the lab and into the field
University of Washington

Doctors needing chemical analyses such as blood tests to make life-saving diagnosis and treatment decisions soon won't have to lose precious time waiting for results to come back from the lab. New hand-held sensor technology developed at the University of Washington will allow physicians to bring a sophisticated "laboratory" directly to their patients for instant, on-site chemical analysis.

   
Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Electric Cars--Power source of the future
University of Delaware

Zero emission vehicles, as mandated in California, New York and Massachusetts, have the potential to replace large central utilities as the major source of power generation in the U.S.

Released: 3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Flood Warning System Crucial for Houston Medical Center
Rice University

The Texas Medical Center area faces continued severe flooding problems unless steps are taken to provide an adequate warning system, says Rice University professor Philip Bedient, a surface and groundwater hydrology expert.

3-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
E. Coli Genome Reported: Milestone of Modern Biology Emerges From Wisconsin Lab
University of Wisconsin–Madison

A team of scientists headed by Frederick R. Blattner of the E. coli Genome Project in the Laboratory of Genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has determined the complete genome sequence of the E. coli bacterium, it was reported today (Sept. 5) in the journal Science. (Note: Embargoed for release until 4 p.m. EST, 9/4/97.)

Released: 2-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
NASA Head Will Speak At Climate Change Impacts Workshop at UNH Sept. 3-5
University of New Hampshire

NASA's top administrator, Daniel S. Goldin, is scheduled to speak at the New England Regional Climate Change Impacts Workshop hosted by the University of New Hampshire's Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space (EOS) Sept. 3-5.

Released: 2-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
ARS News Tips
USDA Agricultural Research Service (USDA ARS)

News Tips for Sept. 2, 1997 from the USDA Agricultural Research Service: 1) Do Children's Growth Standards Need Refinement? 2) Eastern Gamagrass Surviving Drought, 3) Squeezing Fat Out of Foods, 4) Smoking Out Bee Mites, 5) Mouth-Watering New Fruits

Released: 2-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
UNH Researchers Pair Up With K-12 Students to Decode The White Pine Needle
University of New Hampshire

There's a world of life waiting to be decoded from the three-sided white pine needle. Just ask Gary Lauten, research scientist and coordinators of Earthday: Forest Watch Program at the University of New Hampshire's Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space (EOS). The program lets K-12 students study the health of New England forests for clues to atmopsheric and climate change impacts.

29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Evidence of new subnuclear particle discovered
University of Notre Dame

Evidence of a new subnuclear particle ó an exotic meson ó has been discovered by a team of physicists from the University of Notre Dame and six other institutions. Long theorized, the particle had been undetected until now, said Neal Cason, professor of physics at Notre Dame and a cospokesman on the project.

Released: 30-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Mouth-Watering New Fruits
USDA Agricultural Research Service (USDA ARS)

Flavorful new peaches and nectarines from California should please growers and shoppers alike. The treefruits are the latest from the Horticultural Crops Research Laboratory in Fresno, where scientists have produced 26 flavorful new fruits in the past 25 years. The lab is part of USDA's Agricultural Research Service.

Released: 29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Squeezing Fat Out of Foods
USDA Agricultural Research Service (USDA ARS)

It sounds like a dieter's dream: finding a way to squeeze the fat out of foods we love, like big juicy hamburgers. Scientists with USDA's Agricultural Research Service have developed a way to do just that--not for the sake of counting calories, but for food analysis.

Released: 29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Self-organizing' polymers will change our lives
Cornell University

Complex, self-organizing polymers will have a profound effect on our lives, perhaps keeping airplane wings free of ice, according to a Cornell materials engineer in the latest edition of the journal "Science." These complex polymers are now seen as useful for creating films, replete with multiple, self-ordering layers, and each layer with different functions.

Released: 29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
August Tip Sheet from Los Alamos
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Four tips from Los Alamos: 1) Plasma "roots" coatings for better adhesion. 2) A safe way to sample contents of mystery containers. 3) Computer tracks elk movement patterns. 4) New company to market laser-based tool for prospecting, mining and environmental remediation.

Released: 29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Mars is a peaceful planet, say U-M geologists
University of Michigan

Mars is a peaceful planet, say University of Michigan geologists. Limited plate motion, no giant impacts, and no large-scale mixing for 4.53 billion years according to an analysis of Mars rocks here on Earth.

Released: 29-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Species diversity: It's not who they are, it's what they do
University of Minnesota

University of Minnesota ecologist David Tilman and several colleagues have discovered why a diversity of species controls ecosystem sustainability. Working with plots of prairie plants, the researchers found that what counts most is not the number of species per se, but the number of different ways species perform a variety of functions such as growing, cycling nutrients or producing seed.

Released: 28-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
LSU scientist on team that discovers methane ice worms on Gulf floor
Louisiana State University

LSU researcher Bob Carney was a member of a team of university scientists led by chief scientist Chuck Fisher of Pennsylvania State University who discovered what appears to be a new species of centipede-like worms that live on and within mounds of methane ice on the floor of the Gulf of Mexico.

Released: 28-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Scientist Press Release
New Scientist

Press release of issue dated 30 August for New Scientist, the international science and technology weekly news magazine

Released: 28-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Oceanography News Tip Sheet
Council of Scientific Society Presidents

1) Research Shows Drops In Crab Population Probably Not Attributed To Fishery; 2) Computer Software Evaluates Costs And Benefits Of Sediment Remediation; 3) Burgeoning North Carolina Bluefin Tuna Fishery Attracts Scientists, Fishermen

Released: 28-Aug-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Experts: Public will accept irradiation in wake of meat recall
Purdue University

The Hudson Foods hamburger recall may be just what it takes to convince Americans that it's time to accept irradiation as another technique to safeguard their food supply, two Purdue experts say. Irradiation can destroy the microorganisms responsible for food-borne illnesses and extend the shelf life of perishable foods.

   


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