Banner Graphic, Volume 12, Number 79, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 December 1981 — Page 5

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MR. AND MRS. BRIAN LEE FOWLER

Wedding Cash-Fowler

Dana Marlen Cash, daughter of Peggy Cash, Coatesville, and Russell Cash, Greencastle, married Brian Lee Fowler, son of Claude and Carolyn Fowler, Bainbridge, in a double-ring ceremony Oct. 24 at the First Baptist Church in Greencastle. The Rev. Ival Lane officiated the ceremony. THE BRIDE, attired in a ■ white gown with a V-shaped neckline and trimmed in Chantilly lace, was given in . marriage by her father. She is a graduate of North Putnam High School and is employed at IBM. ! The bridal party included Deanna Cash of Coatesville, maid of honor; Anita Fowler of ; Bainbridge, Lori O’Hair of Mor- ! ton, and Rhonda Brown of '.Coatesville, bridesmaids; and Tonya Broadstreet of Bainbridge, flower girl. The attendants wore old fashion floorlength maroon dresses trimmed with bodice lace. They wore matching hats.

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Israeli scientists are reporting considerable progress in using brackish salt water for irrigation. Already in use on about 6,500 acres of cotton farms, the technique is now being adopted by other farmers as well in a country where arable land is far more plentiful than fresh water. In the past, a problem in using salt water for irrigation had been that large amounts of salt

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Members of the groom’s party included Bruce Fowler of Bainbridge, best man; George Pearson of Bainbridge, Mike McCammack of Belle Union, David Mcßride of Greencastle, groomsmen; Brad Cash, Brent Cash, both of Greencastle, Bart Cash of Coatesville, ushers; and Brent Fowler, ring bearer. THE GROOM, WHO is a graduate of North Putnam High School and is employed at DuWall Construction, wore a white tuxedo with tails. His attendants, ushers and ringbearer wore silver tuxedoes with white shirts. Soloist Suzanne Stern sang “Color My World,” “The Wedding Song,” and “You Light Up My Life” during the ceremony. Following the wedding, a reception was held at the Elk’s Club in Greencastle. The couple settled at Route 3, Greencastle, after a wedding trip to Nashville, Chattanooga and Gatlinburg, Tenn.

SALT WATER

accumulated, interfered with plant growth and harmed the soil structure. By spreading gypsum on fields at the end of the agricultural season, brackish water can be used.

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Breast cancer Sound waves aid in accurate detection and result in fewer biopsies

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - Purdue University researchers say high-frequency sound waves used to take pictures of body organs might help doctors detect breast cancer more accurately and without biopsies. Professor Avi Kak and graduate students in Purdue’s School of Electrical Engineering are trying to improve ultrasound images so breast tumors can be diagnosed as malignant or benign. Ultrasound imaging has an advantage over X-rays because the patient is not exposed to potentially harmful radiation, Kak said. Ultrasound imaging doesn’t work on objects that have bone or air but the method is well suited to detecting breast cancer without surgery, according to Kak. In ultrasound imaging, pictures are taken from sound waves which either bounce off an object or pass through the object. Kak is studying images based on sound waves passing through the object, a process called transmission. The process of sound waves bouncing off objects is called echo imaging. Kak said the transmission process is better than echo imaging to distinguish a malignant tumor from a benign one. So far, ultrasonic images based on echos have mostly shown the shape of different tissues in the breast. Although a

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Mrs. Daniel T. Smith announce the approaching marriage of her daughter Janet Marie, to William Post Marentette, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Post Marentette Jr., Scituate, Mass, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, January 9 at St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church, Greencastle. A reception will follow the ceremony at the Windy Hill Country Club. Miss Smith is employed at American Fletcher National Bank in Indianapolis. Her father was the late Daniel T. Smith, former chairman and president of the First Citizens Bank. Marentette is employed by American Tigre Inc. in Indianapolis. Both are graduates of Ball State University. All friends and relatives are invited to attend.

foreign mass can be seen, the information alone makes it hard to tell whether a tumor is malignant or benign. Through work supported by the National Institutes of Health, Kak is developing techniques which will give hard data about different tissues in the breast. He uses a model of a female breast made up of gels with properties such as sound conduction that are similar to real breast tissue. Malignant and benign artificial tumors are inserted into the artificial breast. The breast model is suspended in a vat of water. A transmitter placed in the water gives off high-frequency sound waves as it moves across the tank. The sound waves, picked up by a receiver at the other end of the tank, are changed into electronic signals. In a clinical setting, a woman would lie face down on a bag of water on a breast-scan table. The transmitter and receiver would rotate under her while her body remained stationary. The electronic signals tell a computer the speed of the sound waves through the artificial breast and the rate at which the sound loses its intensity during transmission. The computer sees the breast model as a matrix, or a map full of thousands of tiny squares. Using the information from the signals, the computer comes up with a number for each square. From this matrix of numbers, the computer con-

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December 9,1981, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic

structs a black-and-white, cross-sectional photograph of the breast by shading the squares in proportion to the numbers. A separate cross-sectional photo is made for both the speed and intensity of the sound waves through the artificial breast, Kak explained. Both numbers are needed to clearly define whether a certain area on the photo is a malignant or benign tumor. A benign tumor has a set of numbers different than numbers for a malignant tumor. Other tissues in the breast have their own numbers, too. Kak said doctors in the future might be able to make automated diagnoses for cancer detection because the numbers associated with a tumor could tell them if it was malignant or benign. Kak said other researchers already have worked out the numbers for tumors and other tissues in the breast. Ultrasound transmission signals haven’t been processed correctly to get a good, clear, cross-sectional image of the breast because sound waves bend as they go through an object, causing fuzzy or distorted signals. “Our focus is on taking the signals and treating them correctly and mathematically in the computer so more accurate numbers and better photos can be made.”

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