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Preparing a Medical Response to Bioterrorism. Meryl Nass, M.D.

Preparing a Medical Response to Bioterrorism. Meryl Nass, M.D.

from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) on November 20, 2009
Duration: 3812
Dr. Nass is a physician in private practice who has testified in Congress on bioterrorism issues. Doctors for Disaster Preparedness 21st Annual Meeting July 2003 Phoenix, AZ.
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MTS38 - Jonathan Eisen - An Embarrassment of Genomes

MTS38 - Jonathan Eisen - An Embarrassment of Genomes

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on November 04, 2009
Duration: 0
Jonathan Eisen is a professor at the University of California, Davis Genome Center. Over the course of his career, he has pioneered new ways of sequencing microbial genomes and analyzing them. I talked to Eisen about some of the weirdest creatures he's studied, such as bacteria that only live on the bellies of worms at the bottom of the ocean, and how we may be able to exploit their genomes for our own benefit. We also discussed the new movement for open access to scientific literature, a subject that's a particular passion of Eisen, who is academic editor in chief at the open-access journal PLOS Biology.
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Why Wasn't H1N1 Vaccine Available Before School Started?

Why Wasn't H1N1 Vaccine Available Before School Started?

from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) on October 26, 2009
Duration: 152
The H1N1 emergency demonstrates that we need to produce vaccines and medicines faster and less expensively. Chicken eggs aren't the answer.
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MTS37 - Hazel Barton - Cave Dwellers

MTS37 - Hazel Barton - Cave Dwellers

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on October 23, 2009
Duration: 0
Hazel Barton is the Ashland Professor of Integrative Science at Northern Kentucky. She explores some of the world's most remote caves to study the remarkable diversity of microbes that thrive in their dark recesses. I spoke to Barton about how she first became captivated by these bizarre organisms, what it's like to do delicate microbiology when you're hip-deep in mud, and why she wants to explore caves on Mars in search of Martians.
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MTS35 - Michael Cunliffe - The Ocean's Living Skin

MTS35 - Michael Cunliffe - The Ocean's Living Skin

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on September 11, 2009
Duration: 0
Michael Cunliffe is a microbiologist in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Warwick in England. He studies the microbes that live in the thin layer of water at the very surface of the ocean. His research is shedding light on an ecosystem that's both mysterious and huge, spanning three-quarters of the surface of the planet.In this interview, I talked with Cunliffe about the discovery of this sea-surface ecosystem, and the influence it has over the climate.
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MTS34 - Pratik Shah - Combatting Pathogens with Polyamines

MTS34 - Pratik Shah - Combatting Pathogens with Polyamines

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on August 28, 2009
Duration: 0
Pratik Shah is a graduate student in the Department of Microbiology at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, and he’s a 2009 recipient of ASM’s Raymond W. Sarber award, granted to recognize students for research excellence and potential. His research focuses on polyamines and polyamine biosynthesis and transport systems in Streptococcus pneumoniae. He’s studying polyamines with the goal of finding potential targets for pneumococcal vaccines and prophylactic interventions against pneumococcal disease. In this interview, I talked with Pratik about why polyamines may hold the key for new ways to combat pathogens, his plans for the future, and about advice he would give to young people considering grad school.
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MTS33 - Abigail Salyers - The Art of Teaching Science

MTS33 - Abigail Salyers - The Art of Teaching Science

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on August 13, 2009
Duration: 0
Abigail Salyers is a Professor of Microbiology and the G. William Arends Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and her research focuses on the ecology of microorganisms in the human body and the comings and goings of antibiotic resistance genes, particularly genes in Bacteroides species. Dr. Salyers is ASM’s 2009 Graduate Microbiology Teaching Awardee. If you’ve ever tried teaching or mentoring, you know it’s not always easy, but for an eminent scientist, teaching at the undergraduate or graduate level must be incredibly difficult. After all, once you reach a certain level of knowledge in any field, it can be hard to relate your knowledge to people who know relatively little about it. Dr. Salyers has tackled 100-level biology courses with as many as 300 students, taught one-on-one at the lab bench, and been an instructor at an intensive summer course in microbial diversity, all while rising to the top of her field in research. In this interview, I talked with Dr. Salyers about the most influential teacher in her own life (you might be surprised to learn who that is), about whether antibiotic resistance is getting the kind of play it deserves, and about why the baboon vagina is an interesting study system.
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The Fall of the Republic 1/5

The Fall of the Republic 1/5

from Top Rated on August 07, 2009
Duration: 648
Max Igan American Voice Radio August 6th, 2009
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The Fall of the Republic 2/5

The Fall of the Republic 2/5

from Top Rated on August 07, 2009
Duration: 634
Max Igan American Voice Radio August 6th, 2009
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The Fall of the Republic 5/5

The Fall of the Republic 5/5

from Top Rated on August 07, 2009
Duration: 632
Max Igan American Voice Radio August 6th, 2009
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David Icke - DONT TAKE SWINE FLU VACCINE !!!!

David Icke - DONT TAKE SWINE FLU VACCINE !!!!

from Metacafe - Videos by TripLeGz3 on July 13, 2009
Duration: 375
David talking about the upcoming swine flu vaccine. This was filmed on the 12th of July 2009 for B3TA by Kirk Rutter. Plan to vaccinate whole UK for flu Canadian Doctor: H1N1 Vaccination a Eugenics Weapon for Mass Extermination Youtube user who is in contact with Jane Burgermeister Dr. Rebecca Carley Jane Burgermeisters blog : Official documents of evidence and charges can be viewed and downloaded here: Evidence of the Use of Pandemic Flu to Depopulate USA- Criminal Charges - Swine Flu Edits v2[1]- NUREMBERG CODE: Cytokine Storm: Blue Sky Sunshines Blog You have no right to think for yourself Ranked / 5 | 137 views | 1 comment Click here to watch the video (06:15) Submitted By: TripLeGz3 Tags: David Icke Swine Flu H1N1 Avian NWO Mass Death Genocide Jane Burgermeister 1976 July 2009 Vaccine Pandemic Jab Needle New World Order 2012 End Of The WHO UN America United Kingdom Mandatory Lies Truth Obama Virus Bioterrorism WMD Pigs Bird Gb Categories: News & Events
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MTS5 Brett Finlay - E.coli and the Human Gut

MTS5 Brett Finlay - E.coli and the Human Gut

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on October 02, 2008
Duration: 0
Brett Finlay is a professor in the Michael Smith Laboratories, and the Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and Microbiology and Immunology at the University of British Columbia. His research program focuses on E. coli, how it interacts with the cells of the human gut, and mouse models of E. coli-like infections. Dr. Finlay will speak at the conference on Beneficial Microbes in San Diego this October, where he’ll describe the results of some of his latest research, which examines how E. coli infections effect the microbes that live in our guts. Sadly, outbreaks of Escherichia coli infections in this country are common – just this summer a huge E. coli outbreak in Oklahoma sickened nearly 300 people and sent 67 of them to the hospital. Clearly, in an outbreak, not everyone is effected equally. When lots of people are exposed to E. coli, why do some of those people walk away unharmed while others wind up in the I.C.U.? Dr. Finlay would say part of the answer, at least, probably lies in which microbes live in our intestine. In this podcast, I talked with Dr. Finlay about why we have so many different kinds of microbes in our guts, what happens to them when E. coli strikes, and why we have a long way to go before probiotics offer help – and not just hope.
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MTS2 Seth Darst

MTS2 Seth Darst

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on September 09, 2008
Duration: 0
Seth Darst is a professor of Molecular Biophysics at the Rockefeller University in New York city, where his research centers on RNA polymerase, the enzyme at the heart of a cell’s ability to make protein from a set of DNA instructions. In this interview, Merry talks with Dr. Darst about how he got his start in research, whether computers will eventually be able to predict complex protein structures, and why eager young scientists shouldn’t miss their chance at postdoctoral training.
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MTS1 Ralph Tanner - The Future of Biofuels

MTS1 Ralph Tanner - The Future of Biofuels

from MicrobeWorld's Meet the Scientist Podcast on August 18, 2008
Duration: 0
Ralph Tanner, a professor of microbiology at the University of Oklahoma, focuses his research on anaerobes in the environment and putting those bacteria to use in industry. He develops useful microbial catalysts for biofuel production from sustainable crops and has extended our knowledge of microbial diversity by isolating a number of new genera and species with novel physiologies. He helped define the phylogeny of bacteria. In this podcast, I talk with Dr. Tanner about his work producing biofuels from burnt plant material, the future of biofuels in the U.S., whether bacterial systematics might be forced to change in light of new research on recombination, and about his approach to teaching microbiology.
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Anthrax Case Closed! gnooze 8-7-08

Anthrax Case Closed! gnooze 8-7-08

from The Willy Will Show on August 07, 2008
Duration: 211
The Justice Department reveals details of their investigation into the 2001 anthrax attacks, Osama bin Laden's former driver is convicted and your wait time is getting longer in the emergency room. Marta Costello hosts the gnooze (the g is silent)- today's top stories in about 3 minutes. Bloopers, t shirts and more at http://gnooze.com ! Music by Pistol Youth: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=19522968720 and Special Thanks to Lettuce for the t-shirt/logo design - http://www.lettuceoffice.com
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Strange Culture

Strange Culture

from Strange Culture on October 04, 2007
Duration: 4491
A documentary in which actors interpret the legally touchy subject of artist Steve Kurtz, who is being held as a suspected terrorist because of his work.
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