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Answer Upon - Do You Ever Wonder How Hwang Woo-Suk Tricked The World About Embryonic Stem Cells?
Building Credit Ideas he authors of the concentrate and underlying article, which authors had a "stake" in the way the concentrate and underlying article had been written. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs.There are several ways that we can build credit. If you are tired of collectors hounding you, or if you are frustrated that no one will loan you money because you never had credit, it is time to learn how to build your credit. First, and foremost never purchase items you do not need. If you 'want', do not let your wants wear you down and get you deeper in debt. If you are searching to build credit and have no history at all, make sure you have your priorities in order.Bad Credit Building CreditIf you have, bad credit get a DO-IT-YOURSELF-Kit and gets the balls rolling. You can go to your public library and get books that will guide you through the steps of repairing your credit. Most libraries allow you to copy and print forms that you must fill out and then send to your credits.There are systematic guides at your local library that has the tools for instructor debtors how to write letters to creditors. Letters are probably better than phoning creditors, since some creditors could care less about your situation and may threaten you. Another good reason for writing letters is that (copy in writing) is more valuable in a courtroom than a conversation on the phone. If something is said or an agreement is reached and the creditor late On December 18, a second reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. This reply was made after having obtained a copy of the 1992 article by Arai, et al. Contrary to Jacobs' representations, the paper, titled "Resistivity of Single Crystal C60 and Effect of Oxygen", did not teach "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2". This second reply established not only the contents of the 1994 paper but also the contents of the 1992 paper had been isrepresented. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. The December 18 letter included the following numbered items: 1. There is belief that there is an "inflexible etiquette" within the scientific community that authors should refer to all previous relevant findings on which their own later work is based. 2. On page 23 of the Nov. 30, 1998 issue of C&E News, you reported: "The possible presence of degradation products in bulk material has not been pointed out" and that this "discovery suggests that fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in Offshore Banking: What You Need to Know Before Opening an Account Wonder how Korea's Hwang Woo Suk pulled off one of the greatest scientific frauds of all time? The scientific journals that published the work must shoulder some responsibility. First, they compete for the trendiest, cutting-edge research stories. Second, they tend to ignore conflicts-of-interest, as Science ignored the pending, independently filed, patent applications of Hwang and Schatten which existed at the time of article submission and which gave each author a vested interest in seeing publicity of work which would financially benefit each author. Other patent applications of both Hwang and Schatten became known after the scandal broke. Third, once the article is on-board, the journals become stakeholders, very reluctant to accept criticism of an article published in their journal. Some of this can be seen in the journal Science describing, at one point in December 2005, the problem with the 2005 paper of Hwang as a mere photographic mix-up, when Korean television (MBC, PD-Notebook) had broadcast evidence of scientific fraud on the part of Hwang by November 2005. The broadcast included an interview with a then unidentified Hwang co-author (Kim Sun Jong) who would later be indicted. Kim had even tricked Hwang about the origin of some cell lines in the paper in 2005.Offshore banking, we have all heard about it before. Unfortunately, many are misinformed when it comes to offshore banking. We have all heard news reports of offshore accounts being used to front illegal activities or to avoid taxes. In fact, we have also seen it in the movies, being used a similar way. This has led many individuals to believe that offshore banking is illegal. Despite what you may believe, offshore banking is legal. However, how you use it may be considered illegal.Offshore banking is done through a bank that is known as an offshore bank. Offshore banks are banks that are located in another country, other than the country that you reside in. For instance, if you live in the Untied States an offshore bank would not be located in the United States. Many popular offshore banks are located in Switzerland. There are a number of advantages to offshore banking, but there are disadvantages as well.The biggest advantage of offshore banking is that you are offered privacy and stability. There are many individuals who place their money in offshore accounts for security purposes. When your money is in an offshore account, you can access it, but many choose not to. It is easier to access and spend your money if it is at a loc The journal Science created an external panel, chaired by Stanford University professor John I. Brauman to conduct a review of the Hwang matter in March 2005 and to issue a report in April 2005. Returning to the theme of journal as stakeholder, I include text from an article from 1999 illustrating the reluctance of a journal even to acknowledge the existence of pertinent prior art. Here's an excerpt from an article in Intellectual Property Today, titled "Zurko and the Optimization of Fact-finding: Who Can You Believe?," authored by me and originally published in February 1999. As pointed out in Intellectual Property Today ("IPT") in January, 1999, n3 Chemical & Engineering News, in its November 30, 1998 issue carried a news article captioned "Fullerene degrades at ambient temperature," which stated that "The possible presence of [oxidation] degradation products in bulk [fullerene] material has not been pointed out before," and concluded that "The discovery suggests fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in any application. n3 Lawrence B. Ebert, "Issues in Etiquette: Zurko, Pfaff, and Scientific Doormen," Intellectual Property Today, pp. 30-31 (Jan. 1999). On December 8, 1998, a letter was sent to the editor of Chemical & Engineering News, which stated: Of the Science/Technology Concentrate captioned "Fullerene degrades at ambient temperature," (C&EN, Nov. 30, page 23), note that the paper "Oxidative Stability of Fullerenes", J. Phys. Chem., 1994, 98, 3921, reported that as-received (bulk) fullerene had a C/O atomic ratio of 31.9 which dropped to 20.6 on heating in air at 115C for 24 hours. Oxidations in air of 99.5% buckminsterfullerene and soot were carried out at temperatures below 400C, with resultant carbon-oxygen functionality in bulk samples characterized by IR and solid-state NMR. The stability of C 60 depends on what species are present during exposure. The adverse impact of air instability on potential applications was pointed out in Intellectual Property Today, April 1998 (pp. 34-35) and October 1998 (pp. 44-45), available on the Internet and in LEXIS. On December 14, the editor (Madeleine Jacobs) responded that the letter would not be published. Jacobs' letter stated: "Having discussed this with the author of the concentrate and with the researcher cited, I am not sure that the content of your letter is relevant, and the paper to which you refer was not original in reporting that fullerenes would oxidize if heated to high temperature in air, giving ultimately carbon dioxide. In this respect, of course, fullerenes are no different from any other form of carbon." Jacobs' letter concluded with an excerpt from a book by the researcher cited (Roger Taylor) which Jacobs stated to summarize earlier work. Only one paper was pertinent to the 1994 paper in J. Phys. Chem. and was described teaching : "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2" [T. Arai, et al., Solid State Commun., 1992, 84, 827]. On December 14, a reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. In part, it noted that the 1994 paper pointed to the ambient oxidation of fullerene [p. 3921: "unstable with respect to oxygen at ambient, and higher, temperatures"], and in part, it noted that fullerenes, in being oxidized at the temperatures cited in the 1994 paper, were not like graphite and many aromatic hydrocarbons [accord: J. Phys. Chem., 1992, 96, 1016: C60 "less oxidatively stable than graphite."; Chem. Phys. Lett., 1992, 194, 62] This December 14 reply thus challenged the accuracy of the factual understanding of Jacobs, which apparently had been based, at least in part, on Jacobs communications with the authors of the concentrate and underlying article, which authors had a "stake" in the way the concentrate and underlying article had been written. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. On December 18, a second reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. This reply was made after having obtained a copy of the 1992 article by Arai, et al. Contrary to Jacobs' representations, the paper, titled "Resistivity of Single Crystal C60 and Effect of Oxygen", did not teach "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2". This second reply established not only the contents of the 1994 paper but also the contents of the 1992 paper had been isrepresented. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. The December 18 letter included the following numbered items: 1. There is belief that there is an "inflexible etiquette" within the scientific community that authors should refer to all previous relevant findings on which their own later work is based. 2. On page 23 of the Nov. 30, 1998 issue of C&E News, you reported: "The possible presence of degradation products in bulk material has not been pointed out" and that this "discovery suggests that fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in Adverse Health Effects Of Oil Mist In Machine Tool Industries n of some cell lines in the paper in 2005.Manufacturing environments that use oil-based cutting fluids often put workers health at risk. Applications such as CNC machines, screw machines and surface and centerless grinders produce an oil mist from the coolant used to keep cutting tools from overheating. Oil mist, also known as cutting oil or metalworking fluid, is an oily liquid aerosol dispersed in the air. Fine oil mist hangs in the air for long periods, similar to tobacco smoke.It has been estimated that up to one million workers in the United States are exposed to oil mist. The health effects of exposure to oil mist have been studied for several decades. Many Epidemiological studies have indicated that long-term exposure to oil mist can lead to increased susceptibility to several types of cancer.The following diseases have been associated with exposure to oil mist: skin – oil acne, contact dermatitis, and photosensitive allergic dermatitis; respiratory system – rhinitis, bronchitis, bronchial asthma, lipoid pneumonia, lung fibrosis and lung cancer; scrotum – benign and malignant tumors. According to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), potential symptoms of exposure to high concentrations of oil mist include eye and skin irritation, shortness of The journal Science created an external panel, chaired by Stanford University professor John I. Brauman to conduct a review of the Hwang matter in March 2005 and to issue a report in April 2005. Returning to the theme of journal as stakeholder, I include text from an article from 1999 illustrating the reluctance of a journal even to acknowledge the existence of pertinent prior art. Here's an excerpt from an article in Intellectual Property Today, titled "Zurko and the Optimization of Fact-finding: Who Can You Believe?," authored by me and originally published in February 1999. As pointed out in Intellectual Property Today ("IPT") in January, 1999, n3 Chemical & Engineering News, in its November 30, 1998 issue carried a news article captioned "Fullerene degrades at ambient temperature," which stated that "The possible presence of [oxidation] degradation products in bulk [fullerene] material has not been pointed out before," and concluded that "The discovery suggests fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in any application. n3 Lawrence B. Ebert, "Issues in Etiquette: Zurko, Pfaff, and Scientific Doormen," Intellectual Property Today, pp. 30-31 (Jan. 1999). On December 8, 1998, a letter was sent to the editor of Chemical & Engineering News, which stated: Of the Science/Technology Concentrate captioned "Fullerene degrades at ambient temperature," (C&EN, Nov. 30, page 23), note that the paper "Oxidative Stability of Fullerenes", J. Phys. Chem., 1994, 98, 3921, reported that as-received (bulk) fullerene had a C/O atomic ratio of 31.9 which dropped to 20.6 on heating in air at 115C for 24 hours. Oxidations in air of 99.5% buckminsterfullerene and soot were carried out at temperatures below 400C, with resultant carbon-oxygen functionality in bulk samples characterized by IR and solid-state NMR. The stability of C 60 depends on what species are present during exposure. The adverse impact of air instability on potential applications was pointed out in Intellectual Property Today, April 1998 (pp. 34-35) and October 1998 (pp. 44-45), available on the Internet and in LEXIS. On December 14, the editor (Madeleine Jacobs) responded that the letter would not be published. Jacobs' letter stated: "Having discussed this with the author of the concentrate and with the researcher cited, I am not sure that the content of your letter is relevant, and the paper to which you refer was not original in reporting that fullerenes would oxidize if heated to high temperature in air, giving ultimately carbon dioxide. In this respect, of course, fullerenes are no different from any other form of carbon." Jacobs' letter concluded with an excerpt from a book by the researcher cited (Roger Taylor) which Jacobs stated to summarize earlier work. Only one paper was pertinent to the 1994 paper in J. Phys. Chem. and was described teaching : "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2" [T. Arai, et al., Solid State Commun., 1992, 84, 827]. On December 14, a reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. In part, it noted that the 1994 paper pointed to the ambient oxidation of fullerene [p. 3921: "unstable with respect to oxygen at ambient, and higher, temperatures"], and in part, it noted that fullerenes, in being oxidized at the temperatures cited in the 1994 paper, were not like graphite and many aromatic hydrocarbons [accord: J. Phys. Chem., 1992, 96, 1016: C60 "less oxidatively stable than graphite."; Chem. Phys. Lett., 1992, 194, 62] This December 14 reply thus challenged the accuracy of the factual understanding of Jacobs, which apparently had been based, at least in part, on Jacobs communications with the authors of the concentrate and underlying article, which authors had a "stake" in the way the concentrate and underlying article had been written. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. On December 18, a second reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. This reply was made after having obtained a copy of the 1992 article by Arai, et al. Contrary to Jacobs' representations, the paper, titled "Resistivity of Single Crystal C60 and Effect of Oxygen", did not teach "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2". This second reply established not only the contents of the 1994 paper but also the contents of the 1992 paper had been isrepresented. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. The December 18 letter included the following numbered items: 1. There is belief that there is an "inflexible etiquette" within the scientific community that authors should refer to all previous relevant findings on which their own later work is based. 2. On page 23 of the Nov. 30, 1998 issue of C&E News, you reported: "The possible presence of degradation products in bulk material has not been pointed out" and that this "discovery suggests that fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in Should Broadband Providers UK Operations Be Worried? Many existing broadband providers UK operations are feeling the pinch with the proliferation of new and enticing deals coming at them from all angles. With the explosion of high-speed Internet access in the UK we are seeing more and more companies jumping on the bandwagon. Furthermore these companies are not necessarily traditional telecommunications companies.Supermarkets and even utility suppliers are beginning to offer broadband Internet access to their customers. You only have to search google to get an idea of how competitive the market is. It's a cutthroat business and to succeed in this area communications companies have to be prepared to move with the times and adapt their business models possibly many times a year.Since the middle of 2006 broadband providers UK wide have had to compete with a new service from the popular high street store, Carphone Warehouse. Using their existing clout in the marketplace and an innovative deal they have managed to acquire well over half a million new customers in under a year. Pretty impressive by anyone's standards.Since the Carphone Warehouse unveiled this broadband offer many UK ISPs have attempted to compete by offering similar products. However, the reviews suggest that the original On December 8, 1998, a letter was sent to the editor of Chemical & Engineering News, which stated: Of the Science/Technology Concentrate captioned "Fullerene degrades at ambient temperature," (C&EN, Nov. 30, page 23), note that the paper "Oxidative Stability of Fullerenes", J. Phys. Chem., 1994, 98, 3921, reported that as-received (bulk) fullerene had a C/O atomic ratio of 31.9 which dropped to 20.6 on heating in air at 115C for 24 hours. Oxidations in air of 99.5% buckminsterfullerene and soot were carried out at temperatures below 400C, with resultant carbon-oxygen functionality in bulk samples characterized by IR and solid-state NMR. The stability of C 60 depends on what species are present during exposure. The adverse impact of air instability on potential applications was pointed out in Intellectual Property Today, April 1998 (pp. 34-35) and October 1998 (pp. 44-45), available on the Internet and in LEXIS. On December 14, the editor (Madeleine Jacobs) responded that the letter would not be published. Jacobs' letter stated: "Having discussed this with the author of the concentrate and with the researcher cited, I am not sure that the content of your letter is relevant, and the paper to which you refer was not original in reporting that fullerenes would oxidize if heated to high temperature in air, giving ultimately carbon dioxide. In this respect, of course, fullerenes are no different from any other form of carbon." Jacobs' letter concluded with an excerpt from a book by the researcher cited (Roger Taylor) which Jacobs stated to summarize earlier work. Only one paper was pertinent to the 1994 paper in J. Phys. Chem. and was described teaching : "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2" [T. Arai, et al., Solid State Commun., 1992, 84, 827]. On December 14, a reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. In part, it noted that the 1994 paper pointed to the ambient oxidation of fullerene [p. 3921: "unstable with respect to oxygen at ambient, and higher, temperatures"], and in part, it noted that fullerenes, in being oxidized at the temperatures cited in the 1994 paper, were not like graphite and many aromatic hydrocarbons [accord: J. Phys. Chem., 1992, 96, 1016: C60 "less oxidatively stable than graphite."; Chem. Phys. Lett., 1992, 194, 62] This December 14 reply thus challenged the accuracy of the factual understanding of Jacobs, which apparently had been based, at least in part, on Jacobs communications with the authors of the concentrate and underlying article, which authors had a "stake" in the way the concentrate and underlying article had been written. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. On December 18, a second reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. This reply was made after having obtained a copy of the 1992 article by Arai, et al. Contrary to Jacobs' representations, the paper, titled "Resistivity of Single Crystal C60 and Effect of Oxygen", did not teach "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2". This second reply established not only the contents of the 1994 paper but also the contents of the 1992 paper had been isrepresented. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. The December 18 letter included the following numbered items: 1. There is belief that there is an "inflexible etiquette" within the scientific community that authors should refer to all previous relevant findings on which their own later work is based. 2. On page 23 of the Nov. 30, 1998 issue of C&E News, you reported: "The possible presence of degradation products in bulk material has not been pointed out" and that this "discovery suggests that fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in Cerebral Palsy Cases l in reporting that fullerenes would oxidize if heated to high temperature in air, giving ultimately carbon dioxide. In this respect, of course, fullerenes are no different from any other form of carbon." Jacobs' letter concluded with an excerpt from a book by the researcher cited (Roger Taylor) which Jacobs stated to summarize earlier work. Only one paper was pertinent to the 1994 paper in J. Phys. Chem. and was described teaching : "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2" [T. Arai, et al., Solid State Commun., 1992, 84, 827].Though cerebral palsy has been known to have its cause in the fetal developmental stage itself, yet, medical negligence cannot be entirely ruled out. This is the reason why cerebral palsy litigation has become a specialized branch of its own. Legal firms dealing in cerebral palsy litigation employ medical professionals to do medical sleuthing for them. This is because the medical field is very specialized and it is not possible for a legal person to know all the ins and outs of treatment and birth procedures. With time, their expertise does improve; still the help afforded by a trained medical eye is very essential.An unbelievable $120 million verdict was awarded for a delayed breech delivery. The ruling said that an earlier delivery would have prevented the permanent brain damage that the child suffered. Damages of $103 million were awarded in favor of another child victimized due to a delayed delivery. The delay caused a lack of oxygen supply to the child's brain that resulted in cerebral palsy.If the attending doctors fail to recognize a symptom in the mother that could be a potential cause for cutting off oxygen supply to the fetus, he or she can be held responsible for the child's condition. In one such case, the attending doctor On December 14, a reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. In part, it noted that the 1994 paper pointed to the ambient oxidation of fullerene [p. 3921: "unstable with respect to oxygen at ambient, and higher, temperatures"], and in part, it noted that fullerenes, in being oxidized at the temperatures cited in the 1994 paper, were not like graphite and many aromatic hydrocarbons [accord: J. Phys. Chem., 1992, 96, 1016: C60 "less oxidatively stable than graphite."; Chem. Phys. Lett., 1992, 194, 62] This December 14 reply thus challenged the accuracy of the factual understanding of Jacobs, which apparently had been based, at least in part, on Jacobs communications with the authors of the concentrate and underlying article, which authors had a "stake" in the way the concentrate and underlying article had been written. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. On December 18, a second reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. This reply was made after having obtained a copy of the 1992 article by Arai, et al. Contrary to Jacobs' representations, the paper, titled "Resistivity of Single Crystal C60 and Effect of Oxygen", did not teach "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2". This second reply established not only the contents of the 1994 paper but also the contents of the 1992 paper had been isrepresented. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. The December 18 letter included the following numbered items: 1. There is belief that there is an "inflexible etiquette" within the scientific community that authors should refer to all previous relevant findings on which their own later work is based. 2. On page 23 of the Nov. 30, 1998 issue of C&E News, you reported: "The possible presence of degradation products in bulk material has not been pointed out" and that this "discovery suggests that fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in Earn Cash Online he authors of the concentrate and underlying article, which authors had a "stake" in the way the concentrate and underlying article had been written. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs.The all pervading influence of the Internet has resulted in several avenues of business. One can safely say that the Internet has changed the way business is transacted all over the world. One major advantage with the Internet is that physical barriers are no longer restrictions to conducting business. Earning cash online has become a multi-billion dollar industry. Online business is also known as electronic business or e-business. With the advancement in Web-based technologies, online businesses are becoming more complicated. The earning potential is also increasing by the day.There are literally thousands of online earning opportunities. A casual search on the Internet would reveal that there are myriad business opportunities. Earning cash online is in fact a full time job for many people. For most of the earning opportunities online, all you need to have is access to the Internet, and some basic knowledge of computers. You really don't need to be a technical geek to earn money online.There are data entry jobs, data conversion jobs, simple typing jobs, you name it and there is an opportunity for you to earn online. Many big companies outsource labor intensive jobs to others, who in turn complete these jobs online and send them across t On December 18, a second reply to Madeleine Jacobs was made. This reply was made after having obtained a copy of the 1992 article by Arai, et al. Contrary to Jacobs' representations, the paper, titled "Resistivity of Single Crystal C60 and Effect of Oxygen", did not teach "Oxidation occurs at 250C giving anhydrides, then acids and eventually CO and CO2". This second reply established not only the contents of the 1994 paper but also the contents of the 1992 paper had been isrepresented. To this date, no reply has been made by Jacobs. The December 18 letter included the following numbered items: 1. There is belief that there is an "inflexible etiquette" within the scientific community that authors should refer to all previous relevant findings on which their own later work is based. 2. On page 23 of the Nov. 30, 1998 issue of C&E News, you reported: "The possible presence of degradation products in bulk material has not been pointed out" and that this "discovery suggests that fullerenes will need protection from oxidation in any application." This report is based on a paper which is published in Chem. Commun., pp. 2497-2498 (1998). 3. On Dec. 8, the existence of the paper "Oxidative Stability of Fullerenes, " J. Phys. Chem., 1994, 98, 3921-3923 was pointed out to you. This paper discloses elemental analysis of a bulk fullerene soot which shows a C/O atomic of 31.9, which drops to 20.6 on heating at 115 C for 24 hours. The paper states that this fullerene soot is unstable to oxygen at ambient temperature. The paper further discloses the oxidative attack on bulk fullerene soot and bulk C60 at temperatures of 400 C and lower, and characterizes carbon-oxygen functionality by photoacoustic infrared and solid state C-13 NMR spectroscopies. Also, on Dec. 8, the existence of papers in Intellectual Property Today, pp. 34-35 (April 1998) and p. 44 (Oct. 1998) which disclosed the issue of oxidative instability of fullerenes as to applications of fullerenes was pointed out. 4. After consulting with the author of the capsule and of the article in Chemical Communications, you concluded that the content of the Dec. 8 letter (1994 paper on air instability of fullerene) was not relevant to the subject matter of the capsule (1998 paper on air instability of fullerene). You further stated that the 1994 paper was not original in reporting that fullerenes would oxidize if heated to high temperature in air, although you made no comment on the fact that the 1994 paper reported that the fullerene soot oxidized at ambient temperature, and that the fullerene soot and C60 were reported to oxidize at low temperatures (below 400 C) which bulk products were characterized by IR and NMR of the bulk solids. You recharacterized the significance of the work in the capsule as including "identification of the oxidation product", although this is irrelevant to the conclusion of the need for protection from oxygen. 5. You included a list of publications which summarize earlier work, which did not include the 1994 paper. The only publication on the list which arguably anticipated the 1994 paper was a paper in Solid State Communications, 1992, 84, 827, which your Dec. 14 letter indicated to show oxidation of fullerenes at 250 C to form anhydrides, then acids, and eventually CO and CO2. 6. In fact, the 1992 paper describes the effect on the resistivity of single crystal C60 which absorbs oxygen near 250 C and reversibly desorbs oxygen at higher temperature. It is about donor compensation by O2 acceptors, not about anhydrides and acids. If I have found the correct 1992 paper, your Dec. 14 letter would seem to misrepresent the content of the 1992 paper. 7. Your response of Dec. 14 is in tension with your editorial of July 13, 1998, and separately in tension with Stu Borman's comments at page 37 of the Jan. 26, 1998 issue n4 Separately, one notes the irony that the C&E News position on fullerene oxidative stability has gone full circle between 1988 (fullerenes a fundamental component of ordinary combustion soot made under extreme oxidative conditions) and 1998 (fullerenes not stable in ambient air). Of course, the properties of the fullerenes as to oxygen exist independently of human attempts to describe them, and are the same for all time. Nevertheless, our attempts should accurately reflect history, which your letter of Dec. 14 sadly does not do. Effectively, you not only deny your readers useful facts but also establish a clear case for the presence of institutional bias against the inflexible etiquette that pertinent prior work be cited. n4 Borman's comments concern a report of work by scientist A which was criticized by scientist B as not original. Although Borman did not include the comments of B, he later determined that scientist A had a financial stake in the outcome. I note that to this day in May 2006, Madeleine Jacobs has never responded.
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