((Excerpt))
“The two-month period was used to simulate the late-onset effect of sarin/nerve agents in Gulf War veterans. There are suggestions that Gulf War illness, in which symptoms are long-lasting, may be related to exposure to low-dose chemical warfare agents,” Mariana Morris, of the Boonshoft School of Medicine at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio, said in a news release from the American Heart Association.

Wright State President Sue Edwards Named to Dayton Business Journal’s Power 100
Civil Air Patrol encampment brings 500 cadets to Wright State for leadership training
Wright State Board of Trustees approves balanced budget reflecting financial strength and stability
Words of appreciation
Wright State names rising star Division I leader Brad Chandler as director of athletics