LEVEL 1 - 444 STORIES
1.   The Baltimore Sun, July 29, 1995, Saturday, FINAL EDITION, Pg. 9A, 3217
words, Guidance Isn't All about Choosing a College
 
2.   Science News, July 22, 1995, Vol. 148 ; No. 4 ; Pg. 55; ISSN: 0036-8423,
387 words, Using network noise to boost detection; computer-modeling research on
stochastic resonance suggests that faint signals can be detected more easily;
Brief Article, Peterson, Ivars, IAC 17352502
 
3.   The Daily Yomiuri, June 26, 1995, Monday, Pg. 9, 335 words, Speaking of
Language; SQUIDS AND SQUIDDING, John Abbott ; Daily Yomiuri, TOKYO
 
4.   R & D, June, 1995, Vol. 37 ; No. 7 ; Pg. 67; ISSN: 0746-9179, 1594 words,
Magnetic measurement instruments attract materials researchers., Studt, Tim, IAC
17100181
 
5.   R & D, May, 1995, Vol. 37 ; No. 6 ; Pg. 65; ISSN: 0746-9179, 1402 words,
Superconducting materials research zeros in on real products., Studt, Tim, IAC
17040702
 
6.   Science News, April 29, 1995, Vol. 147 ; No. 17 ; Pg. 264; ISSN: 0036-8423,
1457 words, Cavities of chaos: sorting out quantum chaos in the microwave lab;
chaos in quantum mechanics; Cover Story, Peterson, Ivars, IAC 16932880

7.   Aviation Week and Space Technology, April 17, 1995, INDUSTRY OUTLOOK; Vol.
142, No. 16; Pg. 13, 120 words,  NOT JUST CALAMARI, COMPILED BY PAUL PROCTOR
 
8.   Science, April 7, 1995, Vol. 268 ; No. 5207 ; Pg. 77; ISSN: 0036-8075, 4064
words, Classical and quantum magnetic phenomena in natural and artificial
ferritin proteins., Gider, S. ; Awschalom, D.D. ; Douglas, T. ; Mann, S. ;
Chaparala, M., IAC 16845090
 
9.   Microwave Journal, April, 1995, Vol. 38 ; No. 4 ; Pg. 244; ISSN: 0192-6225,
2963 words, A novel microwave planar phase shifter., Varadan, Vijay K. ; Jose,
K.A. ; Varadan, Vasundara V. ; Hughes, R. ; Kelly, James F., IAC 16938751
 
10.   Federal News Service, MARCH 16, 1995, THURSDAY, IN THE NEWS, 2583 words,
PREPARED TESTIMONY OF C. W. FRANCIS EVERITT PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR, GP-B
STANFORD UNIVERSITY BEFORE COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE SUBCOMMITTEE ON SPACE AND
AERONAUTICS
 
11.   Federal Document Clearing House Congressional Testimony, March 16, 1995,
Thursday, CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY, 4219 words,  TESTIMONY March 16, 1995
C.W. FRANCIS EVERITT PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR STANFORD UNIVERSITY HOUSE SCIENCE SPACE AND AERONAUTICS NASA
=======
                       Copyright 1995 The Daily Yomiuri
                               The Daily Yomiuri
 
                             June 26, 1995, Monday
 
SECTION: Pg. 9
 
LENGTH: 335 words
 
HEADLINE: Speaking of Language;
SQUIDS AND SQUIDDING
 
BYLINE: John Abbott ; Daily Yomiuri
 
DATELINE: TOKYO
 
 BODY:
   Squid is good. According to a study conducted last year at Hirosaki
University, squid ink may be effective in fighting cancer in mice. It didn't
take long for the ink to be a popular additive to foods--an additive is
something added to a substance, usually in small amounts, in order to improve
it.

 
   Some food sellers were reluctant to add squid ink--they were afraid the color
would turn off buyers. They needn't have worried. Customers are gobbling up the
stuff.
 
   Gobble up is an informal term that means "to eat especially quickly or in
large amounts." Japan has doubled its squid ink imports--Japanese squid are
feeble ink producers--to four tons a month.
 
   One company offers squid ink curry. A bakery selling squid ink bread has
customers so eager to buy they are lining up before the doors open in the
morning. Another bakery has added squid ink to its steamed Chinese buns.
 
   Tired of the same old pizza? A home delivery pizza company in Chiba offers
hungry couch potatoes squid ink in pizza--a couch potato is someone who spends a
lot of time watching television. English has a number of words that mean "long,
comfortable seat, usually with arms." Couches, sofas, love seats and davenports
are all found in front of TV sets, though "davenport potato" doesn't quite have
the same ring as "couch potato."
 
   For those who want something a bit more special than even the special
combination, there are noodles coated with a light sprinkling of gold dust. For
one particularly hard-to-please customer who felt the gold was too difficult
to see--it didn't sparkle enough--the noodle maker added squid ink.
 
   Not all squid can be found in the sea. There is squidding in the air and
there are squids on dry land. When a parachute "squids," it means it has
partially collapsed or closed.
 
   And "squid" is an acronym for a super-conducting  quantum interference
device, something which measures magnetic changes using a superconducting ring,
or a ring that has little or no electrical resistance.
 
LOAD-DATE: June 27, 1995
=================

======================
                             LEVEL 1 - 550 PATENTS
1. 5,444,373, Aug. 22, 1995, Biomagnetometer with selectable pickup coil array,
Johnson, Richard T., San Diego, California Warden, Laurence, San Diego,
California
 
2. 5,444,372, Aug. 22, 1995, Magnetometer and method of measuring a magnetic
field, Wikswo, Jr., John P., Brentwood, Tennessee Black, Jr., William C., Del
Mar, California Hirschkoff, Eugene C., Leucadia, California Marsden, James R.,
San Diego, California Paulson, Douglas N., Del Mar, California
 
3. 5,444,039, Aug. 22, 1995, (Hg,Pb)-Ba-Ca-Cu-O superconductor and method of
manufacturing the same, Isawa, Kazuyuki, Tokyo, Japan Yamamoto, Ayako,
Minamiashigara, Japan Itoh, Makoto, Tokyo, Japan Adachi, Seiji, Urayasu, Japan
Yamauchi, Hisao, Nagareyama, Japan
 
4. 5,442,289, Aug. 15, 1995, Biomagnetometer having flexible sensor, DiIorio,
Mark S., Del Mar, California Hirschkoff, Eugene C., Leucadia, California
Johnson, Richard T., San Diego, California Buchanan, D. Scott, Escondido,
California James, Stephen O., San Diego, California Paulson, Douglas, Del Mar,
California Black, Jr., William C., Del Mar, California
 
5. 5,442,288, Aug. 15, 1995, Magnetoelastic magnetometer, Fenn, Ralph C.,
Cambridge, Massachusetts Gerver, Michael J., Brookline, Massachusetts Hockney,
Richard L., Lynnfield, Massachusetts Johnson, Bruce G., Monument, Colorado
 
6. 5,441,682, Aug. 15, 1995, Method of forming a ceramic composite, Baker, Anna
L., Seattle, Washington Garrigus, Darryl F., Seattle, Washington
 
7. 5,439,878, Aug. 8, 1995, Method for preparing copper oxide superconductor
containing carbonate radicals, Kinoshita, Kyoichi, Hoya, Japan Yamada, Tomoaki,
Higashimurayama, Japan
 
8. 5,439,875, Aug. 8, 1995, Process for preparing Josephson junction device
having weak link of artificial grain boundary, Tanaka, So, Osaka, Japan Inada,
Hiroshi, Osaka, Japan Iiyama, Michitomo, Osaka, Japan
 
9. 5,438,036, Aug. 1, 1995, Planar squid of oxide superconductor, Matsuura,
Takashi, Hyogo, Japan Itozaki, Hideo, Hyogo, Japan
 
10. 5,437,276, Aug. 1, 1995, Apparatus for measuring magnetic sources, Takada,
Youichi, Chiba, Japan
 
11. 5,436,471, Jul. 25, 1995, Josephson junction apparatus formed on flexible
polymeric film, Hoko, Hiromasa, Sagamihara, Japan

====
('josephson junction')
                             LEVEL 1 - 764 PATENTS
1. RE 31,485, Jan. 3, 1984, Waveform transition sensitive Josephson junction
circuit having sense bus and logic applications, Faris, Sadeg M., Yorktown
Heights, New York
 
2. RE 28,853, Jun. 8, 1976, Superconductive shift register utilizing Josephson
tunnelling devices, Hamel, Harvey C., Poughkeepsie, New York Kunzinger, Charles
A., Poughkeepsie, New York Stelzenmuller, William K., Poughkeepsie, New York
 
3. 5,446,016, Aug. 29, 1995, Method for forming a patterned oxide superconductor
thin film, Tanaka, So, Osaka, Japan Nakamura, Takao, Osaka, Japan Iiyama,
Michitomo, Osaka, Japan
 
4. 5,445,766, Aug. 29, 1995, Superconductive conjugate photoconductive
substances of the Bi-SrCa(LaY)-Cu-O system, a method for producing the same and
superconductive optoelectronic devices using the same, Masumi, Taizo, Yokohama,
Japan
 
5. 5,442,289, Aug. 15, 1995, Biomagnetometer having flexible sensor, DiIorio,
Mark S., Del Mar, California Hirschkoff, Eugene C., Leucadia, California
Johnson, Richard T., San Diego, California Buchanan, D. Scott, Escondido,
California James, Stephen O., San Diego, California Paulson, Douglas, Del Mar,
California Black, Jr., William C., Del Mar, California
 
.....
760. 3,628,184, Dec. 14, 1971, SUPERCONDUCTING OSCILLATORS AND METHOD FOR MAKING
THE SAME, Thompson, William A., Yorktown Heights, New York
 
761. 3,626,391, Dec. 7, 1971, JOSEPHSON TUNNELING MEMORY ARRAY INCLUDING DRIVE
DECODERS THEREFOR, Anacker, Wilhelm, Yorktown Heights, New York
 
762. 3,622,881, Nov. 23, 1971, VOLTAGE MEASURING APPARATUS EMPLOYING A JOSEPHSON
JUNCTION, Silver, Arnold H., Farmington, Michigan Zimmerman, James E., Santa
Ana, California
 
763. 3,621,472, Nov. 16, 1971, SUPERCONDUCTING FREQUENCY CONVERTER SYSTEM,
Rothwarf, Frederick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
 
764. H 873, Jan. 1, 1991, Fabrication of NBN based electronic devices with
silicon barriers, Cukauskas, Edward, Vienna, Virginia Carter, William,
Chelmsford, Massachusetts

================
                          LEVEL 1 - 2 OF 42 REFERENCES
                 National Library of Medicine MEDLINE Database
 
TITL: Broadband SQUID NMR with room-temperature samples.
 
AUTH: Kumar S; Thorson BD; Avrin WF
 
ORGA: Quantum Magnetics, Inc., San Diego, California 92121, USA.
 
CITE: J Magn Reson B 1995 Jun; 107 (3): 252-9
 
LANG: ENG; English
 
ABST: Superconducting  quantum interference  devices (SQUIDs) are the most
sensitive detectors of magnetic fields. We have used an untuned broadband SQUID
detector to detect transverse nuclear magnetic-resonance signals from samples of
mineral oil, salt water, and animal tissue at room temperature. Proton NMR
signals have been detected from about 20 to 450 kHz. We have also detected
fluorine, sodium, and possibly phosphorus NMR signals. SQUID NMR shows promise
in NMR imaging, since the SQUID's sensitivity and broad bandwidth make it ideal
for low-field imaging. SQUID NMR may also be useful for low-field spectroscopy
in biology, chemistry, and materials science. (AUTHOR)
 
MJTR: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance IS.
 
MNTR: Animal.    Fluorine AN.    Meat AN.    Mineral Oil AN.    Phosphorus AN.
   Sodium AN.    Sodium Chloride AN.    Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S..
   Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S..    Swine.    Temperature.  JOURNAL ARTICLE
 
RNUM: 7440-23-5 (Sodium); 7647-14-5 (Sodium Chloride); 7723-14-0 (Phosphorus);
7782-41-4 (Fluorine); 8020-83-5 (Mineral Oil)
 
GEOT: UNITED STATES
 
IDEN: ISSN:  1064-1866. JOURNAL-CODE:  B1A. ENTRY-DATE:  950724.
NIH-GRANT-NUMBER:  1 R43 RR08832-01RRNCRR. JOURNAL-SUBSET:  M. IM-DATE:  9509.
 
ACCE: 95307837