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Myron...

Many thanks for sharing your experience with us.
I found it fascinating.

Now let's see how fast the medical research
community can make those beneficial living aids
obsolete by finding the CURE!!

Sooner is better than later. huh? <rueful smile>

Barb Mallut
[log in to unmask]

-----Original Message-----
From: myron greene <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Saturday, March 11, 2000 8:15 AM
Subject: Miami University Engineering Students' Sr. Design
Projects


Hello,
I first announced the start of my working  with 4 senior
engineering
students from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio in  Janiuary 1999.
The
following press release summarizes the activities and results.  I
would
like to thank those  members of this list who made suggestions or
contributed in other ways to  our efforts.  Please email or post
your
comments.
SIncerely,
Myron Greene (59,36,27)


7 March
2000 Contact:
Claire Wagner
OX office:
(513) 529-7592
home:
(513) 521-0124
ENGINEERING STUDENTS PUT CONTROL WITHIN REACH
OXFORD, Ohio - The ingenuity and skills of manufacturing
engineering students at Miami University and a grant from the
Dayton
Power & Light Company have helped bring the power and lights
literally
within reach for an Oxford man with Parkinson's Disease.
Myron Greene can now operate 11 lights and appliances
with one remote control. Movement and access within his apartment
have
also been improved since it was re-engineered by four students as
part
of a senior design course.
The students first studied Parkinson's disease and talked
with specialists to learn the toll the muscle-stiffening disease
takes
on patients. Osama Ettouney, department chair and coordinator of
senior
design projects, was adviser to the four students.
A team of Nick Carvaines, Alex Hall and Matt Wirks
designed and built a swing cabinet, similar to a bed table found
in a
hospital, with divided spaces for medicines, pens and other items.
The
three students also arranged for the refurbishing of a
hospital-style
bed that fits in Greene's bedroom and eases the task of getting
into and
out of bed.
The grant paid for materials and the professional
refurbisher.
Senior Andrea (Andee) Beymer set up 11 lights and
appliances (stereo, TV, room air conditioner, thermostat) to
respond to
two remote control boxes, so that Greene can turn things on and
off, or
dim lights without having to get up or grasp difficult controls.
Funds
from the DP&L grant paid for the Radio Shack X-10 system remote
that
Beymer configured. Greene keeps one control in the living room and
one
in the bedroom.
"I made out like a bandit," boasts Greene, a former
systems analysis instructor at Miami, who says he admired the
students'
problem-solving abilities.
Other teams of senior design students worked to improve
manufacturing processes for local businesses, created a virtual
manufacturing environment with students from a university in the
Czech
Republic, and performed outreach programs for area scouts and
elementary
school students.
The rigorous syllabus provides students with the
continuous interaction of faculty and professionals as they
perform
real-world design, testing, analysis and implementation of
engineering
projects. Each year, five faculty members from the department
advise
one-to-three senior project teams.
Dayton Power & Light has committed another $12,000 grant
to the manufacturing engineering program this year.
----------------------