SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Non-Tech : Any info about Iomega (IOM)? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gary Wisdom who wrote (37702)11/28/1997 4:28:00 PM
From: Teddy  Respond to of 58324
 
Gary, that is what Mark posted this morning, but could you explain the 4,100 volume? I have never seen this before a split, but i never looked for it either.
TIA for any information



To: Gary Wisdom who wrote (37702)11/28/1997 4:36:00 PM
From: Teddy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 58324
 
Gary, i forgot to include this in my last post,
since you have to take a nap on low volume, i think it might mean that you have no balls <G> You might want to ask Dr. Sheila about this.
My biological clock is where?

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Your biological clock -- the internal
mechanism that helps you sleep at night and wake in the morning --
might not be just in your head, scientists have found.

If you're a male, it's probably also in your testicles.

"It does give a whole new meaning to the rhythm method," said Steve
Kay, a cell biologist at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego.

Scientists used to believe that the human body's clock was all inside
the brain, in a place called the superchiasmatic nucleus, but a new
study in Thursday's edition of the journal Science found that clocks
may be ticking all over the body.

These clocks, determined in different animals by different genes,
respond to daily changes in light over the course of a day and to the
more gradual changes in light over the course of a year.

In flies, mice and men, the gene is called the period gene.

"Recently the period gene has been found to be in humans," Kay said
in a telephone interview. "The place where the period gene is most
highly expressed in mouse and I think in humans is the testes."

Kay and other researchers at Brandeis University in Boston and at the
National Science Foundation's Center for Biological Timing studied
fruit flies to determine where the period gene was working to set the
body's circadian rhythms.

The scientists identified this so-called period gene, spliced it with a
jellyfish gene that stained the period gene fluorescent green, and
looked at the flies under microscopes.

The period gene was all over the insects: in the digestive tract, in the
mouth, on the feet and legs and at the base of tiny hairs, according to
Steve Kay of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California.

With a bit more genetic splicing, using firefly genes this time, the
scientists managed to find which of these biological clocks were
actually ticking in the fruit flies, Kay said.

Many of them were ticking with 24-hour regularity, and this was
visible because parts of the fruit flies glowed dull yellow and dimmed
over a one-day cycle, independently of the flies' brains.

The study of these individual genes may shed light on such larger
biological clock-related ailments as seasonal-affective disorders,
which are characterized by depression in some people during the
darker, winter months.

It could also lead to new strategies for the treatment of jet lag and
shift work, the scientists said. REUTERS



To: Gary Wisdom who wrote (37702)11/28/1997 4:58:00 PM
From: RedCrystal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 58324
 
Gray, why were IOMEGA CP WI (NYSE:IOM_w) shares created? Do they represent new shares that will be issued after the split (i.e., a dilution of IOM stock)?