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Show The Daily Utah Chronicle Page Two EVENTS Monday. January 4, 1993 professor given engineering patent award U. I Today Exhibit, Fae Swinyard The invention of a membrane that promises to help scientists Main Library. 209 E. 500 has earned its inventor the University of Utah College of decipher the human genetic code Paintings and Ceramics. South, through Jan. 5. Tunes at Noon Concert, Engineering's 1992 Patent Award. Award recipient Karin Caldwell Union Deli, noon, Larry is director of the U.'s Center of Jackstein Trio. Chemistry Seminar, 2006 HEB, 4 p.m., "Electronic laboratory in 1986. The center is part of the state of Utah's Center of Excellence Program. She is within Energy Transfer Metal-Rar- Biopolymers at Interfacs. She established the research Gas Complexes," e JohnKaup. Lady Ute Basketball, John Huntsman Center, 7:35 associate of professor bioengineering and research associate professor of materials p.m., Utah vs. Montana and science engineering. Tun-Je- n Chu, a U. graduate State. Basketball, JHC, 7:35 p.m., Utah vs. UTEP. The Lesbian and Gay Student Union will be meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in OSH 215. The Topic: Babs Delay of KRCL radio will discuss gay and lesbian music. LGSU welcomes all gay, lesbian and students to attend. "Joker's Wild" an art exhibition by Richard Pennin the Union Gallery. The opening reception will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. in al the gallery. Refreshments will be served. If you have any further questions please call the Union Art Gallery at 581-746- student, and William Pitt, Brigham Young University assistant professor of chemical of engineering, are companies have already licensed the membrane, which provides a relatively inexpensive method of DNA identification for studies in forensic medicine and the human genome. DNA informational molecules contained in the are nucleus of every living cell Along with the ribonucleic acid (RNA), DNA transmit all genetic information. Caldwell said the membrane is useful in sequencing proteins as well as DNA. A graduate of the University of Uppsala in Sweden, where she earned a Ph.D. in 1968, Caldwell joined the U. faculty in 1979. This summer she received the Governor's Medal for Science and Technology. depression severe enough to study require hospitalization. The rate of from page one The probability that there is a genetically transm'tted liability for developing these disorders was supported by evidence from the records of biological relatives of adoptees. About 2 of the biologically related percent family members of non-depress- ed non-depress- ed adoptees the polymer membrane. These had suffered from hospital treatment for substance abuse for these family members was also about 2 percent. The frequency of depression or substance abuse requiring a hospital stay in the adoptive relatives of both sets of parents was between 1 and 2 percent. This is close to the rate of hospitalization for these disorders in the general population. surfaces of a wide range of medical devices. She holds Caldwell's grandfather. Svante Arrhenius was awarded the 1903 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his pioneering work in physical chemistry. He won the prize for research faculty appointments in chemistry, chemical engineering and materials science and establishing the electrolytic dissociation theory, which he described in his Ph.D. thesis at engineering. Potential practical applications for the center's biopolymers include the control of blood clotting, coatings to make artificial devices more compatible with human tissues and the of scientific manufacture instruments, drugs, cosmetics, soaps and detergents. CBI's industrial affiliates include companies that represent the medical device and contact lens industries, biotechnology computer hardware software and other biomedical equipment and the University of Uppsala. . "What grandfather my proposed in 1884 is now taken for granted," Caldwell said. "People now consider his theory Many of them don't even know that it was an invention, or that his claims stirred controversy when he proposed them." Caldwell has been recognized as a visionary in her field as well. Under her direction, CBI conducts self-evide- nt research on how high-tec- h devices. proteins absorb or bind onto the about 7 percent of the male biological relatives of adoptees with a depressive disorder had a The NIMH study also confirmed past studies showing that men tend to suffer more from substance abuse disorders than women and that women tend to be more likely to have depressive disorders than history of substance abuse requiring hospitalization, compared with about 4 percent of the female relatives. About 7 percent of the female biological relatives of adoptees with a men. "There is a strong suggestion that the same genetic tendency in brothers and sisters is expressed differently, depending on the sex of the person," Wender said. depressive disorder also had a depressive disorder, compared with about 3 percent of the male Hospital records showed that relatives. or the Union 9, Programming Office at 581-310- i 9. The University of Utah will welcome students in an non-tradition- al open house from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m in the Collegiate Room, Union Building. rv n UFF JraOT ooo ml DUCAT I0NAL- - Cliff Notes give you a greater understanding of the classics. Learn more and earn better grades. January 5 More lhan 200 tides hdp you get acquainted wifotfiesearihors... ADEC Smoking Cessation Program, noon, Registration: 581-777- 6. Chemistry Seminar, 2006 HEB, 4 p.m., "Transition Metal Radicals," James Iowa State Espenson, baac Asimov, Tennessee Williams, Plato, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, George Eliot Jane Austin, Willa Carter, Walt CAMPUS SELF-STUD- Y University.. A "Flute Fest" will be presented featuring April and Elaine Clayton Jorgensen, flutists; Jed Moss piano and harpsichord; and Karin Hendricks, cello. They will perform music by Telemann, Mozart, Corelli and Cassella. The concert will be held in the Assembly new . it on your own following a detailed study guidesyllabus that covers y exercises and the study self-stud- Lecture, Classroom C SOM, 7:30 "Practice a.m., Nineties," Ethicon. Chemistry Seminar, 2006 HEB, 11 a.m., "Scope and instructor's lecture notes. Campus Chemistry "Ethnobotany in the Discovery of Prostratin as a new Anti-HICompound," Paul Cox, BYU. Biology Seminar, 212 S BIOL, 4:10 p.m., "Gene in. Maize Imprinting Kermicle, Jerry Endosperm," University of Wisconsin. V Self-Stud- y count towards. classes full-tim- e status. Financial Aid does Limitations of Rhodium Medicinal works: . DosTtmm CREWE Emily Bronte, Kate Cfopin, Daniel Defoe, Dante, Henry James, William Faulkner, James Fenimore Cooper, Mark Twain, Charlotte Bronte, Edward Albee, Ernest Our Everyday Low Start jUSt Hemingway, John Steinbeck, Stephen Crane, George Bernard Shaw, Thomas Hardy, Nathaniel rtowjhome, James Joyce, DosJbevsly and more. Quarto Opening ExUndtd Hows 7:30am-7:30p- m Mm. Units. Job. -- , 4-- 7 r-- ,- I UNIVERSITYBOQKSTORE UN I VERS I TY OF UTAH SOLA mug CAMPUS applyl for Campus y courses through Independent Study, 2180 Register Self-Stud- Annex Building. Telephone 581-880- 1 AN PUKlSHiViEN Whitman, Arthur Miller, Salinger, Machiavdli, Franz Kafka, Edgar Allen Foe, Edith Wharton, Thomas Sinclair, Percy Shelley, Jonathon Swift, high-dema- The rest of the quarter you Surgery Grand Rounds Seminar, 316 SK H, 4 p.m., get into lectures, review sessions and exams. . and prices. January 7 Cyclization program designed Classes meet five to six times each quarter for 581-696- Reactions," Paul Murch. a courses. Here's how Pioneer Theatre Company, "Fences," Box 1 Office: for times Carbenoid U is y to help students Hall on Temple Square, 7:30 p.m. January 6 Lady Ute Basketball, Huntsman Center, 7:30 p.m., Utah vs. Metro State. Self-Stud- Campus CUTSKOIBca for complete details. Everybody's Wearing Them A |