NewsBlog:
    Posted by Alison McCook
    [Entry posted at 18th May 2007 11:09 PM GMT]
    The band The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets is inviting marine biologists to be in their new music video for a song about -- yes, of course, marine biology.

    You can catch the song here, a ditty they call "A Marine Biologist" -- "a fun little number about bathyscaphes, benthic trawlers, giant squid, etc, " according to the band.

    The band's plan is to film marine biologists at work, adding text at the bottom of the screen... Click to continue

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    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Stephen Pincock
    [Entry posted at 14th May 2007 10:06 AM GMT]
    All those British whistleblowers wondering who they should tell about the medical research misconduct going on under their noses now have a hotline direct to the very people who can do something about it.

    That's right, by calling 0844 77 00 644, anyone involved in issues related to misconduct in research can confess all to the nice people at the UK Panel for Research Integrity in Health and Biomedical Sciences.

    The hotline, launched, launched Friday, is reportedly completely confidential, and... Click to continue




    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Kerry Grens
    [Entry posted at 9th May 2007 10:09 PM GMT]
    Last week the Journal of Neuroscience published findings suggesting antidepressant treatment stimulates neurogenesis in primates, something researchers had spotted in rodents and tree shrews previously. These results, which report neurogenesis in monkeys undergoing electroconvulsive shock (ECS), come close to confirming a hunch by ... Click to continue

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    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Alison McCook
    [Entry posted at 8th May 2007 03:10 PM GMT]
    Yesterday afternoon, the front stoop on every house on my block was tagged by a bright neon piece of paper tucked into the railings. Pulling out mine, I was greeted with the message "What have your STEM CELLS done for you lately?"

    That was just the beginning. "Why not have your own ADULT STEM CELLS work to enhance your health?" The product is "a concentrated natural aquabotanical extract that 'wakes up' our body's stem cells and puts them to work!"

    For just... Click to continue




    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Simon Frantz
    [Entry posted at 8th May 2007 01:00 PM GMT]
    There's a rumor going round the exhibition hall that Bono made an unannounced visit yesterday morning. Our very own director of business development, Jeremy Abbate, told me that Bono was walking around the hall and even visited our exhibition stand. Apparently Bono was attracted to our newly launched biotechnology magazine Biotech360 , as it features the headline Can biotechnology save the developing world on the front cover, though I think that he would... Click to continue




    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Simon Frantz
    [Entry posted at 7th May 2007 03:26 PM GMT]
    The annual BIO International Convention is under way in Boston, and already TV programs, newspaper articles and blogs are fizzing with stories of the great and the good in biotechnology. But there will be one notable exception to the blanket coverage of the event. Reporters entering the press room were greeted with a sign stating that the media will not be able to attend the ... Click to continue

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    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Alison McCook
    [Entry posted at 4th May 2007 07:27 PM GMT]
    Anyone planning to watch "Pirate Master"? It's a new reality TV show on CBS where cameras follow 16 people as they live on a pirate ship and search the Caribbean for clues to find $1 million. I didn't even know the show existed until my online search for news brought me to the homepage of one contestant, John Lakness -- whose occupation is listed as "scientist/Chippendale dancer."

    Relax, ladies --... Click to continue

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    NewsBlog:
    Posted by Brendan Maher
    [Entry posted at 2nd May 2007 06:25 PM GMT]
    I sent a note to our editorial board member, Steve Block, to congratulate him on his election into the National Academies of Science this week. He got back to me mentioning that the honor was juxtaposed with grief over the recent death of "our beloved lab espresso machine." Just as I was thinking, "What an odd name for a Labrador!" I remembered the ... Click to continue

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