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Released: 25-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Help for Parents Adopting Children from Overseas
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

To meet the special needs of both adoptive parents and their children, Rainbow Babies and Childrens Hospital has developed a new program called the Rainbow Center for International ChildHealth. Children who are adopted from overseas sometimes carry rare diseases, or have psychological or behavioral problems associated with neglect or deprivation common to institutionalization.

Released: 25-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Hidden data, Major magnet, Casting models
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Three tips from Los Alamos: 1) Embedded computer data protects secrets, 2) 60 Tesla magnet packs a wallop, 3) Computer model for molten alloys

Released: 25-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Media Advisory on ADA Telephone News Conference
American Dental Association (ADA)

The American Dental Association invites you to participate in a telephone news conference highlighting some of the most dynamic areas of dentistry: trends in cosmetic dental services such as tooth whitening; new technology that improves patient's understanding of their treatment options; and recent advancements in oral care for seniors and women.

Released: 25-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
ISU Plays a Key Role in FAA Center
Iowa State University

Iowa State University and Ohio State University will manage the newly established Airworthiness Assurance Center of Excellence announced Sept. 23 by the Federal Aviation Administration. AACE will identify and solve critical technology challenges related to national aircraft safety, including research in the areas of aircraft inspection, maintenance and repair; crashworthiness; propulsion; advanced materials; and landing gears.

Released: 24-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Health Tips from Stanford University Medical Center -- September 1997
Stanford Medicine

Topics: 1) Take a systematic approach to solving bedwetting; 2) LSD can produce symptoms years later, says drug rehab expert; 3) Get out and walk says a cardiologists who has answers for common excuses not to.

Released: 24-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Lowly Glia Strengthen Brain Connections
Stanford Medicine

Once dismissed as mere padding, cells known as glia may be essential for the correct wiring of the brain. This is the conclusion of a study reported in the Sept. 12 issue of Science by researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine.

Released: 24-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Multicenter Study Finds That Antidepressant Alleviates Symptoms of Severe PMS
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Women suffering from a severe form of premenstrual syndrome that adversely affects relationships and work may have fewer emotional problems when treated with the antidepressant sertraline, a researcher at UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas reported Sept. 23 in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

Released: 24-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Third and Final Flight in KidSat Pilot Program
University of California San Diego

The Space Shuttle Atlantis, scheduled for launch on the STS-86 mission on Sept. 25, will support the third and final flight of KidSat (short for Kid's Satellite program), NASA's pilot education program that uses an electronic still camera aboard the Shuttle to bring the frontiers of space exploration to a growing number of U.S. middle school classrooms via the Internet.

Released: 24-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Electric Cars: A power source of the future
University of Delaware

A University of Delaware research scientist says the zero emission car plugged into your garage could make large, expensive, centrally located utilities obsolete.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Study questions validity of student evaluations
Cornell University

A Cornell study finds student evaluations of teachers invalid; ratings on many measures soared when the professor simply used a more enthusiastic tone of voice in teaching the same material.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Heavy rains hit Atlantic City, set new records
Cornell University

Heavy rains hit Atlantic City, N.J., with new records in August, while many parts of the Northeast region remained dry, according to the climatologists at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University. The Atlantic City rain event of August 20-21 deluged the area with 13.52 inches. Atlantic City's daily precipitation total of 11.2 inches on Aug. 20 more than surpassed their all-time daily rainfall record of 6.46 inches set on July 10, 1949.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
A Delicate Balance: Scientists Seek Ways to Increase Soil Nitrogen Without Harming the Environment
Washington State University

If ever there was a clinching argument for meandering evolution, it is the process of symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Beautiful though it is, such a process could not possibly be the result of straightforward design. We need nitrogen desperately, as do all living things, for nitrogen atoms are a key component of many important biological molecules, including DNA, RNA and proteins. And proteins, as they say, are us.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Hopkins AIDS Network Studies Early AIDS Treatment
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins AIDS researchers have launched a multi-center study to find out if early, aggressive treatment of HIV infection can reduce virus levels or even eliminate the virus. The study also will examine the effect of this treatment approach on the immune system during the first few months of infection. Funded by the National Institutes of Health, the research could lead to improved treatments and more effective vaccines.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
UD professor to study Caravaggio mysteries
University of Delaware

The only signature Michelangelo da Caravaggio ever put on one of his paintings appears as a flow of blood oozing from the neck of a partially decapitated St. John in Caravaggio's greatest work, "The Beheading of St. John the Baptist." Why the newly knighted Baroque artist chose this bloody dedication is a key question that David Stone, assistant professor of art history at the University of Delaware, says he hopes to solve as a winner of the 1997-98 Rome Prize Competition.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Wonder thread: UD scientists report first protein with collagen and elastin-like domains
University of Delaware

Five times tougher and 16 times more extensible than a human tendon, the leathery, yet amazingly stretchy collagen threads produced by marine mussels might someday suggest strategies for developing better artificial skin and other biomimetic materials, say University of Delaware researchers. In the Sept. 19, 1997 issue of Science, they describe byssal threads as containing "the first known protein [with] both collagenous and elastin-like domains."

   
Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Purdue study: One vitamin A shot does nothing for hogs
Purdue University

Hog farmers who hope to boost pig production by giving each of their healthy sows a single, massive shot of vitamin A are probably wasting their money, according to Purdue University research.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
LSU Sea Grant Program receives national award
Louisiana State University

The Gore Hammer Award, given to partnerships that make a contribution to the nation, was presented to the Louisiana Sea Grant Program at LSU and other members of the national Sea Grant Alliance, for promoting the safety of U.S. seafood.

Released: 23-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
International Symposium on Oxidative Stress and Brain Damage
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago will host the Second International Symposium on Oxidative Stress and Brain Damage Sept. 26-28 at the Hotel Inter-Continental, 505 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois. The focus is neuropsychiatric disorders.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Oral Vaccine That Prevents Corneal-Transplant Rejection tested at UT Southwestern
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Ophthalmologists at UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas have developed an oral vaccine that may prevent rejection of corneal transplants, the most common type of tissue transplant.

17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Headaches During Exercise May Be Sign of Heart Disease
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

Headaches that begin during exercise and go away with rest may be a sign of heart disease, according to a report in the September issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Embargoed For Release Until Monday, September 22, 1997.

12-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Estrogen quickly reduces lipoprotein (a) - one of the "bad cholesterols" - but "how" remains a mystery
American Heart Association (AHA)

Estrogen replacement therapy used to help relieve menopausal symptoms quickly reduces the amount of lipoprotein (a), one of the "bad cholesterols" in the blood, say researchers reporting in this month's American Heart Association's journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology.

Released: 20-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Former Wall Street Executive and Darden Dean Inaugurated as President of Babson College
Babson College

The business school environment has never been more competitive and students have higher expections of their schools that must be met, said former Wall Street executive and academic leader Leo I. Highdon, Jr., during his inauguration as tenth president of Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, USA. Babson is recognized internationally for its strength in entrepreneurial management education.

Released: 20-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Mars Researcher Available To Discuss Magnetic Field
Rice University

Paul Cloutier, Rice University professor of space physics and astronomy, is a co-investigator on the Mars Global Surveyor team that announced Wednesday that the red planet has a magnetic field.

Released: 20-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
ORNL technology helping N.Y. company battle piracy
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A new counterfeit-deterrencsystem has been developed at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The technology is based on a non-chemical tagging agent that is difficult to duplicate but easy to scan using a simple optical scanner.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Study Shows Increase in Effectiveness of Lipoplasty
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

Through the utilization of ultrasound-assisted lipoplasty (UAL), plastic surgery procedures for body contouring are being refined and augmented, according to two studies to be presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPRS), September 20-24 in San Francisco, Calf. The evolving role of UAL in body contouring and its relation to traditional suction-assisted lipoplasty (SAL) was examined in one study; another study showed the benefit of using UAL for removing contour irregularities or tightening skin in patients who previously had conventional lipoplasty.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Research In Mice Indicates Potential Benefits of Vitamin A for Malignant Melanoma
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

Supplemental vitamin A may provide therapeutic benefits in the treatment of malignant melanoma, according to a study to be presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPRS), September 20-24 in San Francisco, Calf. Vitamin A, which possesses both wound healing and anti-tumor actions, causes the body to encapsulate tumors which can then be removed surgically. This study of three groups of mice was designed to determine the effect of vitamin A on the presence and size of tumors.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Studies of Breast Reduction Surgery Increase Knowledge of the Benefits
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

New research confirms that breast reduction surgery may provide benefits other than a smaller size, according to two studies to be presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPRS), September 20-24 in San Francisco, Calf. One study examined whether women who have breast reduction surgery are at greater or lesser risk for developing breast cancer than other women; another prospective study demonstrated that breast reduction surgery may offer significant social and psychological benefits for adolescent girls.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Technology Allows Plastic Surgeons To Use Virtual Reality In Planning And Teaching
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

New custom software and computer technology allows plastic surgeons to transform CT and MRI data of actual patients into three-dimensional and stereoscopic images of bones and soft tissues, according to a study to be presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPRS). With the patient's individual CT or MRI data in virtual reality, plastic surgeons now can practice surgical techniques and plan procedures before they perform surgery on the actual patient.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Plastic Surgeons Apply Advanced Laser Techniques for Full Face Resurfacing
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

The evolution of laser resurfacing techniques is producing dramatic improvement in full face resurfacing, according to two studies to be presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPRS). One study was made to establish a consistent method of laser skin resurfacing that would result in predictable improvement of facial skin quality; the other study examined the combination of full face laser resurfacing with a facelift for rejuvenation of the aging face.

19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Tram Flap Breast Reconstruction May Provide Greater Psychosocial Outcomes For Patients
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

Women who choose breast reconstruction with autogenous tissue (tissue from the patient's own body) rather than implant may experience greater psychosocial outcomes, according to a study to be presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (ASPRS), September 20-24 in San Francisco, Calf. The study, designed to measure the psychosocial outcomes of postmastectomy breast reconstruction, includes evaluations of patients before and after reconstruction. Past research has been only retrospective, and did not include pre-operative evaluation.

Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
False memories in children can fool experts
Cornell University

When young children are interviewed suggestively over a long period of time, they begin to believe the fictitious events questioned about. Experts can't distinguish between children telling false or true accounts.

   
Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Parenting Course Helps Young Fathers say 'It's My Child, Too'
Purdue University

Young fathers, barely more than children themselves, are learning how to be good dads thanks to a Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service class on fathering called "It's My Child, Too."

Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Sniffing Danger: Sandia tests explosives detection portal at Albuquerque International Airport
Sandia National Laboratories

Some airline passengers visiting the main security checkpoint at the Albuquerque International Airport this week are being asked to try out tomorrowís technology for combating terrorism ó an ìexplosives-detection portalî under development at Sandia National Laboratories for the Federal Aviation Adminstration (FAA). The ìportalî is intended to help prevent airliner hijackings and bombings by identifying passengers and airport visitors and employees who have recently been working with any of a wide variety of explosive chemicals.

Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Pharmaceutical Scientists to Meet in Boston
Zynyx

More than 5,000 pharmaceutical scientists will gather in Boston, Massachusetts, November 2 - 6, 1997, for the Annual Meeting and Exposition of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS).

Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Business Majors Opt For Sign Language Classes
Purdue University

Purdue University has doubled the number of instructors teaching American Sign Language on its West Lafayette campus this year, but for every student enrolled in a class, two to three more are turned away. The classes have always been a popular option for future educators and health care professionals, but now business majors are starting to jump on the bandwagon.

Released: 19-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New product being developed may prove valuable in fight against tuberculosis and Legionnaires' disease
West Virginia University - Eberly College of Arts and Sciences

A new product invented by an Auburn University professor and being developed at West Virginia University may change the way disinfectants are applied in fighting diseases such as tuberculosis and Legionnaires' disease.

18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Waltzing With a Black Hole: Model Shows How Star May Trigger Bursts of Radiation
University of Wisconsin–Madison

University of Wisconsin-Madison physicists have created a model that seeks to explain a conundrum of modern astrophysics -- the origin of mysterious bursts of gamma rays that appear uniformly across the sky on an average of once a day. (Embargoed until Sept. 19, 1997.)

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Scientist Press Release
New Scientist

Press release of issue dated 20 September for New Scientist, the international science and technology weekly news magazine

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
AHA clarifies message on mouth-to-mouth component of CPR
American Heart Association (AHA)

Bystanders who witness a cardiac arrest should dial 9-1-1 and then perform mouth-to-mouth ventilations and chest compressions -- the two major components of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) -- according to the American Heart Association in a statement on CPR published in its journal Circulation (Sept. 16).

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Sandia patents extreme ultraviolet light source
Sandia National Laboratories

The realization that atomic gas clusters could serve as part of a sort of ìlight bulbî that emits extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light when laser-heated has inspired a recently patented invention at Sandia National Laboratories. This light source enables research development of EUV lithography to pattern faster, more memory-dense microchips.

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Statement of John R. Garrison, CEO, American Lung Association September 17, 1997
American Lung Association (ALA)

The American Lung Association thanks President Clinton for taking a big step forward to protect children by not endorsing the "global" tobacco settlement that proved woefully inadequate in addressing this nation's tobacco-related health problems. The President is right in signaling that Minnesota Attorney General Hubert H. Humphrey III should be allowed to put the tobacco industry on trial in January and that Congress should not allow the tobacco industry to dictate the timing of any legislative action.

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Fisheries scientists to meet at Johns Hopkins
 Johns Hopkins University

Fish are an important global resource, yet scientists do not know how to predict how many fish will be produced in a given year. Scientists from around the world will meet at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore beginning Sept. 22 to discuss factors affecting the production rates of vital ocean fisheries.

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Ships Depart to Launch Ice Station SHEBA in the Arctic Ocean
National Science Foundation (NSF)

Two icebreaking ships will depart Tuktoyaktuk, Canada around September 18 to establish Ice Station SHEBA in the Arctic Ocean, launching the largest and most complex science experiment ever supported in the Arctic by the National Science Foundation (NSF).

Released: 18-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
NSF Grant Will Spur Collaboration for Internet Tools, Information and Protocols
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The beauty of the Internet is also a beast. The Internet is a global network of networks -- mostly private, and often competing among themselves. While the diffuse structure of the Internet is one of its strengths, the competitive environment has made collaboration on operational and engineering requirements difficult, and has made research on the metrics of the Internet virtually impossible.

   
17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Archaeologists identify oldest existing mound complex in New World
University of Washington

The earliest existing mound complex built by humans in the new world has been identified in Louisiana by a team of archaeologists and researchers from around the United States. Details of the discovery appear in tomorrowís (Sept. 19) issue of the journal Science. The complex of 11 mounds was built between 5,000 and 5,400 years ago and predates other known existent mound complexes by 1,900 years.

Released: 17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Project Feederwatch Top 10 Birds in backyards
Cornell University

The most frequently seen birds at feeders across North America last winter were the Dark-eyed Junco, House Finch and American goldfinch, according to the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, which released its Project FeederWatch Top 10 Birds List. Project FeederWatchers also reported large numbers of downy woodpeckers, blue jays, mourning doves, black-capped chickadees, house sparrows, northern cardinals and european starlings.

Released: 17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
Researchers To Present Results of Mediation Study at AAMFT Conference
University of Georgia

Results from the first two years of a four-year study on skillful mediation will be presented at the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy conference Sept. 18-21 in Atlanta. "The crux of this research is to define what is skillful mediation," according to Margaret Herrman, a senior associate at the University of Georgia Vinson Institute of Government. "You can have mediation that's close to therapy and you can have mediation that's close to lawyering. Both styles can be highly successful, but is it mediation? We want to identify skillful practices that are common throughout mediation styles."

Released: 17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
San Diego Unified Port District Approves UC San Diego Demonstration
University of California San Diego

Thanks to clean-up and pollution prevention efforts, San Diego Bay is cleaner and attracting more marine life. Among the increasing population are borer worms that dine on the wooden pilings and fenders that support many of the piers along the Bay. One solution may be a new design created at UC San Diego and approved by the San Diego Unified Port District : pilings are made from molded hollow tubes of advanced composite materials including glass fiber and vinyl ester resin.

Released: 17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
UT-Houston Awarded $2.5 Million for Scleroderma Research
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

The University of Texas-Houston has been awarded $2.5 million by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases to establish a Specialized Center of Research (SCOR) in scleroderma, a chronic, often fatal connective tissue disease. Headquartered in the UT-Houston Medical School division of rheumatology and clinical immuno-genetics, the center will conduct a wide range of investigations into the disease for which there is no known effective treatment or means of prevention.

Released: 17-Sep-1997 12:00 AM EDT
New Test May Improve Treatment of Kidney Disease
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Why some patients with kidney diseases respond well to certain medications and others do not has continued to stump physicians. With no means to test the medications besides trial and error, finding the right treatment is often a frustrating experience for physicians and their patients.



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