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Keyword: researcher

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  • Researcher Can Make All-White-Meat Chicken

    08/27/2005 9:44:27 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 23 replies · 675+ views
    AP - Yahoo ^ | 8/27/05 | Soraya Nadia McDonald - AP
    ATLANTA - Daniel Fletcher has found a way to transform dark meat chicken into white, a scientific advance some purists say has gone too far. "Leave chicken alone," said Mary Raczka, who's in charge of hospitality at Mary Mac's Tea Room, a prominent Southern-style restaurant in midtown Atlanta that serves more than 500 pounds of fried chicken a week — dark and white meat. But Fletcher, a University of Georgia poultry science professor, said his other white meat isn't designed to compete with the real thing on restaurant menus or grocery shelves. Instead, it's a filler that can be used...
  • Allegations of fake research reach new high ('brilliant' researcher did it for the past 3 years)

    08/24/2005 9:08:23 PM PDT · by Libloather · 1 replies · 331+ views
    Picayune Item ^ | 8/24/05 | MARTHA MENDOZA
    Allegations of fake research reach new high By MARTHA MENDOZA/AP National Writer Wednesday, August 24, 2005 1:03 PM CDT On the night of his 12th wedding anniversary, Dr. Andrew Friedman was terrified. This brilliant surgeon and researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School feared that he was about to lose everything - his career, his family, the life he'd built - because his boss was coming closer and closer to the truth: For the past three years, Friedman had been faking - actually making up - data in some of the respected, peer-reviewed studies he had published...
  • Russians Investigating Possible Bio-Attack

    06/09/2005 4:55:37 PM PDT · by genefromjersey · 10 replies · 796+ views
    06/09/05 | vanity
    Posting note: Gleaned from shaky translation of a Russian press report.Reliability ? Thursday, June 09, 2005 Russians Investigating Possible Bio-Attack Investigators are checking whether the mass outbreak of hepatitis A in the Tver region near Moscow could be linked to the bio-weapons sector. At the moment 363 people are in hospital, and some newspapers have linked the outbreak to the recent murder of Russia’s leading specialist in bio weapons. The outbreak began at the end of May in the Tver region and has now reached the neighboring region of Smolensk, agencies report. It was initially blamed on a local soft...
  • Researcher Develops Methods To Test Artifacts' Links To The Bible

    05/29/2005 5:17:11 PM PDT · by blam · 14 replies · 818+ views
    Newswise/Purdue ^ | 5-28-2005
    Researcher Develops Methods to Test Artifacts' Links to the Bible Newswise — A Purdue University professor has invented a system to judge whether ancient inscriptions refer to people in the Bible. Lawrence Mykytiuk (MICK-ee-took) uses the system to test whether archaeological inscriptions refer to ancient Hebrew kings such as David, Omri, Jeroboam II, Uzziah and other Old Testament personages such as Mesha and the high priest Hilkiah. The system and results are detailed in his new book, "Identifying Biblical Persons in Northwest Semitic Inscriptions of 1200-539 B.C.E." (Society of Biblical Literature, $42.95). Mykytiuk's work steps outside the conflict between two...
  • Researcher admits fraud in grant data(we ain't as fat as we're told we are)

    03/18/2005 2:26:23 PM PST · by Rakkasan1 · 32 replies · 1,339+ views
    boston globe ^ | 3-18-05 | Carey Goldberg and Scott Allen
    In the worst case of scientific fakery to come to light in two decades, a top obesity researcher who long worked at the University of Vermont admitted yesterday that he fabricated data in 17 applications for federal grants to make his work seem more promising, helping him win nearly $3 million in government funding. Eric T. Poehlman, a leading specialist on metabolic changes during aging, acknowledged that he altered and made up research results from 1992 to 2002, including findings published in medical journals that overstated the effect of menopause on women's health. Under a plea agreement with federal prosecutors
  • Ugliness a potential health hazard, researcher says (micheal moores not long for this world )

    03/15/2005 7:27:20 AM PST · by freepatriot32 · 108 replies · 2,652+ views
    canada.com ^ | 3 14 05 | ARCHIE MCLEAN
    If you were neglected as a child or if your parents paid more attention to your siblings, take heart. It might not be your fault. It might be because you're ugly. That's what Andrew Herrell's research at the University of Alberta suggests. Herrell, the director of the population research lab in the university's sociology department, studied parents' behaviour in grocery stores, where children often suffer minor injuries. He was trying to understand what factors contributed to those injuries. What he found would stun most fair-minded parents - ugly kids were neglected more often than attractive ones. "They'll deny it," said...
  • LSU Researcher Solves Ancient Astronomy Mystery (Farnese Atlas)

    01/14/2005 2:36:12 PM PST · by blam · 27 replies · 1,857+ views
    Innovations Report/LSU ^ | 1-14-2005 | Bradley E. Schaefer/LSU
    Physik Astronomie Louisiana State University 14.01.2005 LSU researcher solves ancient astronomy mystery An ancient mystery may have been solved by LSU Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy Bradley E. Schaefer. Schaefer has discovered that the long-lost star catalog of Hipparchus, which dates back to 129 B.C., appears on a Roman statue called the Farnese Atlas. Hipparchus was one of the greatest astronomers of antiquity and his star catalog was the first in the world, as well as the most influential. The catalog was lost early in the Christian era, perhaps in the fire at the great library in Alexandria. The...
  • New four-winged feathered dinosaur?

    01/28/2003 1:54:40 PM PST · by ZGuy · 18 replies · 1,528+ views
    AIG ^ | 1/28/03 | Jonathan Sarfati
    Papers have been flapping with new headlines about the latest in a long line of alleged dinosaur ancestors of birds. This one is claimed to be a sensational dinosaur with feathers on its hind legs, thus four ‘wings’.1 This was named Microraptor gui—the name is derived from words meaning ‘little plunderer of Gu’ after the paleontologist Gu Zhiwei. Like so many of the alleged feathered dinosaurs, it comes from Liaoning province of northeastern China. It was about 3 feet (1 meter) long from its head to the tip of its long tail, but its body was only about the size...
  • Jellyfish (Irukandji) could hold cure for male impotency: Australian researcher

    07/21/2004 7:13:15 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 14 replies · 723+ views
    Yahoo ^ | 7/21/04 | AFP - Cairns, Australia
    CAIRNS, Australia, (AFP) - A strong cocktail of toxins from the potentially deadly irukandji jellyfish may hold a remedy for impotent men, according to an Australian researcher. James Cook University academic Lisa-Ann Gershwin said she believes a sting from an irukandji tentacle, which causes excruiating pain, anxiety, paralysis and a potentially fatal rise in blood pressure, also causes prolonged erections in male victims. "This is a bizarre extra symptom of irukandji syndrome in addition to the really dreadful life-threatening symptoms the syndrome gives," Gershwin said. At least two people are known to have died from irukandji stings and hundreds of...
  • Good shrink could have tamed Stalin, saved millions: researcher

    07/07/2004 6:59:08 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 45 replies · 856+ views
    Yahoo ^ | 7/7/04 | AFP - London
    LONDON (AFP) - Soviet dictator Stalin was a madman who could have benefited from a psychiatrist's attention and millions of lives could have been saved, a British researcher claimed. Stalin, who ruled Russia from 1924 until his death in 1953, suffered from dementia caused by heart attacks, according to Dr George El-Nimr. "This (Stalin's dementia) might be an explanation for the florid paranoia, dimming of his superior intellect and the unleashing of his most sadistic personality traits," Nimr told the annual conference of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in Harrogate in northern England. Nimr and two colleagues, Dr Baseem Habeeb...
  • U.S. researcher found guilty on 47 of 69 charges over missing plague bacteria

    12/01/2003 3:48:29 PM PST · by yonif · 10 replies · 174+ views
    CNews ^ | December 1, 2003 | AP
    LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) - A jury on Tuesday found a researcher guilty of 47 of the 69 charges he faced after reporting that samples of plague bacteria were stolen from his Texas Tech University lab. Thomas Butler, 62, closed his eyes, shook his head and appeared to fight back tears as the verdicts were read after two days of deliberations. The charges stemmed from an investigation following his report to police Jan. 14 that 30 vials of the potentially deadly plague bacteria - once known as the Black Death - were missing. The report sparked a bioterrorism scare in this...
  • Why Ecstasy Researcher Is Smiling

    09/12/2003 11:06:22 AM PDT · by freepatriot32 · 57 replies · 538+ views
    wired news ^ | 9 12 03 | Kristen Philipkoski
    <p>When the results of a widely publicized study last year showed that ecstasy could cause Parkinson's-like brain damage, it seemed unlikely that the drug would ever be considered a viable form of therapy.</p> <p>The drug, a staple among teen ravers, was considered by experts to be too dangerous to warrant further study.</p>
  • Pitt researcher called 'father of CPR' dies

    08/05/2003 10:23:49 AM PDT · by bedolido · 3 replies · 187+ views
    Pittsburgh Tribune-Review ^ | 08/05/03 | Luis Fabregas
    <p>Dr. Peter Safar, a medical pioneer at the University of Pittsburgh who spent a half-century perfecting landmark treatments in emergency care and became known as the father of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, died Sunday night from complications of cancer. He was 79. Safar, who was convinced that too many people die needlessly before reaching emergency rooms, is best known for crafting modern first-aid techniques now used inside and outside hospitals, including mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing, a hallmark of CPR. His internationally recognized work was nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in medicine, most recently in 1994.</p>