PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Joseph Hollander and Craft Expanding its Wichita, KS Divorce and Family Law Department

Joseph Hollander & Craft welcomes new divorce and family law attorney in Wichita, KS.

2013-04-11
WICHITA, KS, April 11, 2013 (Press-News.org) Joseph Hollander & Craft LLC rang in the new year by expanding the firm's family law department. Associate Rebecca Sisk joined Joseph Hollander & Craft's Wichita office in January 2013. She practices family law alongside Julia Craft and Boyd McPherson.

Prior to joining the firm, Ms. Sisk worked in Chanute, Kansas, as an assistant city attorney. She also handled family law cases for a private firm. Ms. Sisk is a graduate of Washburn University School of Law. She completed her undergraduate studies at Kansas State University.

Joseph Hollander & Craft looks forward to offering even more support to its clients as a result of its burgeoning family law department. The department, which handles cases of divorce, child custody, paternity, and child support, is delighted to have Ms. Sisk aboard. Her experience and ingenuity have already proven to be great assets.

If you need help with your divorce or domestic case, contact Julia Craft, Kristine Savage, or Rebecca Sisk at our Wichita (316-262-9393), Topeka (785-234-3272), or Lawrence (785-856-0143) offices.

For additional information, visit the firm's website at www.josephhollander.com.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Npower Research Reveals How Technology Rules the Modern Office

2013-04-11
The average UK worker sends and receives 10,000 emails a year and one in ten spend the whole working day on a computer or mobile phone. That's according to new research released by npower, which documents how electronic devices have transformed our working lives over the past 60 years. The study, produced by Warwick Business School to support the 'Remember How We Used To Work' online archive from npower, which has been created on Historypin.com and maps out the increasing use of office gadgets through the years; from typewriters to telex, computers to smartphones, it ...

Environmental change can lead to rapid species evolution

2013-04-10
Environmental change can drive hard-wired evolutionary changes in animal species in a matter of generations. A study by Umeå University ecologist Tom Cameron and a research team at University of Leeds overturns the common assumption that evolution only occurs gradually over hundreds or thousands of years. The results are published in the journal Ecology Letters. Instead, researchers found significant genetically transmitted changes in laboratory populations of soil mites in just 15 generations leading to a doubling of the age at which the mites reached adulthood and large ...

GUMBOS technology promises new drugs, electronic devices

2013-04-10
Michael Woods m_woods@acs.org 504-670-4707 (New Orleans Press Center, April 5-10) 202-872-6293 American Chemical Society GUMBOS technology promises new drugs, electronic devices NEW ORLEANS, April 10, 2013 — Mention a breakthrough involving "gumbo" technology in this city, and people think of a new twist on The Local Dish, the stew that's the quintessence of southern Louisiana cooking. But scientific presentations at a meeting of the world's largest scientific society this week are focusing on what may be an advance in developing GUMBOS-based materials with far-reaching ...

Overcoming a major barrier to medical and other uses of 'microrockets' and 'micromotors'

2013-04-10
Michael Woods m_woods@acs.org 504-670-4707 (New Orleans Press Center, April 5-10) 202-872-6293 American Chemical Society Overcoming a major barrier to medical and other uses of 'microrockets' and 'micromotors' NEW ORLEANS, April 10, 2013 — An advance in micromotor technology akin to the invention of cars that fuel themselves from the pavement or air, rather than gasoline or batteries, is opening the door to broad new medical and industrial uses for these tiny devices, scientists said here today. Their update on development of the motors — so small that thousands ...

Major symposium on arsenic contamination in food and water supplies

2013-04-10
Michael Woods m_woods@acs.org 504-670-4707 (New Orleans Press Center, April 5-10) 202-872-6293 American Chemical Society Major symposium on arsenic contamination in food and water supplies NEW ORLEANS, April 10, 2013 — After virtually eliminating arsenic as a useful tool for homicide, science now faces challenges in doing the same for natural sources of this fabled old "inheritance powder" that contaminates water supplies and food, threatening more than 35 million people worldwide. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of a popular book documenting arsenic's ...

Understanding the life of lithium ion batteries in electric vehicles

2013-04-10
Michael Woods m_woods@acs.org 504-670-4707 (New Orleans Press Center, April 5-10) 202-872-6293 American Chemical Society Understanding the life of lithium ion batteries in electric vehicles NEW ORLEANS, April 10, 2013 — Scientists today answered a question that worries millions of owners and potential owners of electric and hybrid vehicles using lithium-ion batteries: How long before the battery pack dies, leaving a sticker-shock bill for a fresh pack or a car ready for the junk heap? Their answer, presented here at the 245th National Meeting & Exposition of ...

Fox Chase researchers find some lung cancers linked to common virus

2013-04-10
WASHINGTON, DC (April 10, 2013)—A common virus known to cause cervical and head and neck cancers may also trigger some cases of lung cancer, according to new research presented by Fox Chase Cancer Center at the AACR Annual Meeting 2013 on Wednesday, April 10. Examining tissue samples from lung cancer patients, the researchers found that nearly 6% showed signs they may have been driven by a strain of human papillomavirus (HPV) known to cause cancer. If HPV indeed plays a role in lung cancer in some patients, the next step is to better understand those tumors so they ...

Florida Tech professors present 'dark side of dark lightning' at conference

2013-04-10
MELBOURNE, FLA.—"What are the radiation doses to airplane passengers from the intense bursts of gamma-rays that originate from thunderclouds?" Florida Institute of Technology Department of Physics and Space Science faculty members addressed the issue and presented their terrestrial gamma ray flashes research modeling work at a press conference meeting of the European Geosciences Union in Vienna, Austria, April 10. Joseph Dwyer, Ningyu Liu and Hamid Rassoul discussed a new physics-based model of radiation dose calculations and compared the calculations to previous work. Scientists ...

Doctors not informed of harmful effects of medicines during sales visits

2013-04-10
The majority of family doctors receive little or no information about harmful effects of medicines when visited by drug company representatives, according to an international study involving Canadian, U.S. and French physicians. Yet the same doctors indicated that they were likely to start prescribing these drugs, consistent with previous research that shows prescribing behaviour is influenced by pharmaceutical promotion. The study, which had doctors fill out questionnaires about each promoted medicine following sales visits, was published online today in the Journal ...

Scripps Research Institute scientists help unravel central mystery of Alzheimer's disease

2013-04-10
LA JOLLA, CA – April 10, 2013 – Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have shed light on one of the major toxic mechanisms of Alzheimer's disease. The discoveries could lead to a much better understanding of the Alzheimer's process and how to prevent it. The findings, reported in the April 10, 2013 issue of the journal Neuron, show that brain damage in Alzheimer's disease is linked to the overactivation of an enzyme called AMPK. When the scientists blocked this enzyme in mouse models of the disease, neurons were protected from loss of synapses—neuron-to-neuron ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Start school later, sleep longer, learn better

Many nations underestimate greenhouse emissions from wastewater systems, but the lapse is fixable

The Lancet: New weight loss pill leads to greater blood sugar control and weight loss for people with diabetes than current oral GLP-1, phase 3 trial finds

Pediatric investigation study highlights two-way association between teen fitness and confidence

Researchers develop cognitive tool kit enabling early Alzheimer's detection in Mandarin Chinese

New book captures hidden toll of immigration enforcement on families

New record: Laser cuts bone deeper than before

Heart attack deaths rose between 2011 and 2022 among adults younger than age 55

Will melting glaciers slow climate change? A prevailing theory is on shaky ground

New treatment may dramatically improve survival for those with deadly brain cancer

Here we grow: chondrocytes’ behavior reveals novel targets for bone growth disorders

Leaping puddles create new rules for water physics

Scientists identify key protein that stops malaria parasite growth

Wildfire smoke linked to rise in violent assaults, new 11-year study finds

New technology could use sunlight to break down ‘forever chemicals’

Green hydrogen without forever chemicals and iridium

Billion-DKK grant for research in green transformation of the built environment

For solar power to truly provide affordable energy access, we need to deploy it better

Middle-aged men are most vulnerable to faster aging due to ‘forever chemicals’

Starving cancer: Nutrient deprivation effects on synovial sarcoma

Speaking from the heart: Study identifies key concerns of parenting with an early-onset cardiovascular condition

From the Late Bronze Age to today - Old Irish Goat carries 3,000 years of Irish history

Emerging class of antibiotics to tackle global tuberculosis crisis

Researchers create distortion-resistant energy materials to improve lithium-ion batteries

Scientists create the most detailed molecular map to date of the developing Down syndrome brain

Nutrient uptake gets to the root of roots

Aspirin not a quick fix for preventing bowel cancer

HPV vaccination provides “sustained protection” against cervical cancer

Many post-authorization studies fail to comply with public disclosure rules

GLP-1 drugs combined with healthy lifestyle habits linked with reduced cardiovascular risk among diabetes patients

[Press-News.org] Joseph Hollander and Craft Expanding its Wichita, KS Divorce and Family Law Department
Joseph Hollander & Craft welcomes new divorce and family law attorney in Wichita, KS.