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The latest news from the 91±¬ÁÏ

Editorial calls for making defibrillators available for home use to save lives of heart attack victims

Sudden cardiac arrest remains the No. 1 killer of adults in the United States. Coronary artery disease will kill 250,000 or more people this year. One way to reduce the numbers of these deaths dramatically is to make automatic external defibrillators, or AEDs, widely available for home use, said Dr. Mickey Eisenberg.

September 12, 2000

Readers become part of the action through high-tech mixture of traditional storytelling and virtual reality in 91±¬ÁÏ’s ‘Magic Book’

A Magic Book looks like a traditional book – it has text and colorful pictures. But look at it through a lightweight viewer and moving, three-dimensional images jump off the page.

September 7, 2000

New evidence indicates huge vegetation loss accompanied mass extinction

The greatest mass extinction in Earth history eliminated 85 percent to 90 percent of all marine and land vertebrate species 250 million years ago, at the end of the Permian Period and the beginning of the Triassic. New evidence from researchers at the 91±¬ÁÏ and the South African Museum shows the extinction was accompanied by a massive loss of vegetation, causing major changes in river systems.

September 6, 2000

Institute for K-12 Leadership Receives $5.76 Million Grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to Create Small Model Secondary Schools

The Institute for K-12 Leadership at the 91±¬ÁÏ announced today that it has received $5,760,000 from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to create small model secondary schools in eight urban school districts across the nation.

August 29, 2000

Some antihypertensive drugs may cause unnecessary illness

Up to 85,000 unnecessary heart attacks and cases of heart failure may occur worldwide every year among the estimated 28 million users of longer-acting calcium channel blockers (CCBs), a class of drugs used to treat high blood pressure, according to the results of a study reported Monday at the European Society of Cardiology meeting in Amsterdam.

August 25, 2000

Sedro-Woolley, Kelso, Steilacoom, Bellingham teachers join 91±¬ÁÏ expedition

Teachers Beverly Mowrer of Sedro-Woolley High School, Cynthia Maldonado of Kelso’s Cornerstone Christian Community School, Robert Mize of Steilacoom Historical School and Misty Nikula-Ohlsen of Bellingham’s Whatcom Day Academy will sail Sept. 1 to 19 with scientists who are seeking information about the rugged, volcanically active areas on the seafloor 200 miles off the Washington coast.

August 3, 2000

Washington public school teachers join 91±¬ÁÏ expedition

Teachers Diane Nielsen of Mercer Island High School, Tom Lee of Battleground’s Columbia Adventist Academy, Evan Justin of Vashon Island Middle School and Melissa Cohen of Seattle’s Meany Middle School are among the teachers sailing Aug. 3 to 21 aboard the 91±¬ÁÏ’s vessel the Thomas G. Thompson seeking information about the rugged, volcanically active areas on the seafloor 200 miles off the Washington coast.