A method for programming an alternate instruction into the bank's computer , which is accessible only to an account owner, owning and operating a personalized account access security unit which can transmit a signal instruction to the bank's computer so that no access can be granted to the owner's account while the signal is in process, to prevent the unauthorized use of an owner's account information in all avenues of the electronic transaction process wherever they can be made regardless of whether an owner's personal account information has fallen into the wrong hands.
Aspirus Medical GroupWausau Heart & Lung Surgeons 425 Pne Rdg Blvd STE 209, Wausau, WI 54401 (715)8470400 (phone), (715)8470401 (fax)
Education:
Medical School University of Colorado School of Medicine at Denver Graduated: 1988
Procedures:
Coronary Artery Bypass Heart Valve Procedures Pacemaker and Defibrillator Procedures Septal Defect Repair Thoracoscopy Endarterectomy Lung Biopsy Removal Procedures on the Lungs and Pleura Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm Repair
Conditions:
Congenital Anomalies of the Heart Lung Cancer Thoracid Aortic Aneurysm
Languages:
English Spanish
Description:
Dr. Miles graduated from the University of Colorado School of Medicine at Denver in 1988. He works in Wausau, WI and specializes in Congenital Cardiac Surgery (Thoracic Surgery). Dr. Miles is affiliated with Aspirus Wausau Hospital.
Ronald Miles, Wausau WI
Work:
Wausau Heart & Lung Surgeons
425 Pine Ridge Blvd, Wausau, WI 54401 Loyola University Medical Center
2160 S 1St Ave, Maywood, IL 60153
Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
313 W 59Th Pl, Chicago, IL 60621
Ronald Miles Vice President
Big Boy Movers Movers
313 W 59 Pl, Chicago, IL 60621 (773)5360911
Ronald R. Miles Director
American Association of Professional Landmen, Inc Professional Membership Organization
The pioneering work in discovering the fly's unusual hearing mechanism was done by Ronald Miles at Binghamton University and colleagues Ronald Hoy and Daniel Robert, who first described the phase amplification mechanism the fly uses to achieve its directional hearing some 20 years ago.
The teeter-totter mechanism in the fly ear was first explained by mechanical engineer Ronald Miles and neurobiologist Ronald Hoy in 1995 NPR's Morning Edition even featured a segment on the discovery way back in 1999.strived to create tiny, man-made microphones that mimic the teeter-totter mechanism in the fly ear. Within the past year, teams lead by Ronald Miles at Binghampton University and Miao Yu at the University of Maryland have also published directional microphone prototypes inspired by the Ormia ochracea.