Tag Archives: johns-hopkins

So Sad: Baltimore Woman Fatally Stabbed After Giving $10 To Panhandler

Source: Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post/Getty Images / Getty SMH… Jacquelyn Smith Stabbed After Giving $10 To Panhandler Now THIS is an extremely sad story. A kind-hearted Baltimore woman is dead after her husband says she gave money to a woman who was panhandling to “feed her baby.” Keith Smith tells ABC News that he was driving his wife Jacquelyn and daughter Shavon home after Shavon’s birthday party when his wife spotted a woman begging for money while holding what appeared to be baby. Jacquelyn asked her husband to pull over so she could help out the woman who was standing near a man on the corner. As Jacquelyn handed over the money, Keith says the man reached into the car and began stabbing his wife in the chest before grabbing her necklace and running. “As she was handing her the money, the guy came to say ‘Thank you,’ and the woman was saying ‘God bless you. God bless you,’” Smith recalled. “While we’re looking at her saying ‘God bless you’ and my wife was handing her the money, he came over to the car and said ‘Thank you’ and then he started stabbing my wife and snatched her necklace off and ran.” He said the female panhandler reached into the car, grabbed his wife’s purse and scurried off into the darkness. DISGUSTING. Keith then drove his wife to Johns Hopkins Hospital where she was pronounced dead. Baltimore’s Interim Police Commissioner is seeking the public’s help in identifying the two suspects. The female suspect is described as being in her 20s with medium brown skin, a medium build, about 5 feet tall, and wearing a long brown coat. The suspected male accomplice is black, about 5 feet 10 inches tall, with a medium build, a goatee and was wearing a black hoodie. We hope that these two heartless people are captured immediately. Our condolences to the Smith family!

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So Sad: Baltimore Woman Fatally Stabbed After Giving $10 To Panhandler

Forehead Nose Grown By Doctors to Replace Chinese Man’s Original One

A Chinese man whose nose was damaged by infection is receiving groundbreaking treatment by his doctors, who are “growing” a second one on his forehead. The 22-year-old patient, identified only as Xiaolian, had his nose damaged permanently from an infection he suffered following a car accident. His doctors decided the only way to reconstruct his nose was to surgically form a new one on his forehead, where it will match the tissue of his face. Tissue expanders were placed under the skin and then cut to resemble a nose. According to news reports, doctors expect to implant the new nose soon. Forehead skin is used to help reform noses because it is the closest match to skin on the nose. However, usually the nose is reformed during surgery. Dr. Patrick Byrne, the director of Facial, Plastic and Reconstruction Surgery at Johns Hopkins Medical Center, said this was likely an extreme case. Nose Regrown on Forehead “My guess would be they felt that the tissue in the nose was so damaged they had to use the forehead skin on the interior part of the nose,” said Byrne. “It’ll be a real nose and [have a] breathing passage way.” When the nose is transplanted, cartilage from Xiaolian’s rib will be used to give the nose added structure , which will be vulnerable for 18 months afterward. “There’s a lot that can happen,” said Byrne. “If he gets a little infection the cartilage can disintegrate… [what looked like a nose] now looks like a blob.” However Byrne said as long as Xiaolian is able to avoid any additional complications, his new nose should work nearly as well as his original nose. “He should be able to smell, the smell receptors are pretty high in the nose,” said Byrne.

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Forehead Nose Grown By Doctors to Replace Chinese Man’s Original One

John Hopkins Students Petition To Ban Dr. Ben Carson From Commencement For Comparing Gay Marriage To Human-Animal Sex

Students are stepping in and speaking out about Dr. Ben Carson’s controversial comments Students Campaign To Ban Dr. Ben Carson From Graduation Ceremony College students at John Hopkins University are joining forces to campaign against anti-gay political pundit Dr. Ben Carson speaking at the University commencement ceremony following comments made earlier this week in which Carson compared gay marriage to human-animal sex . via Fox News Johns Hopkins students are campaigning to have Dr. Ben Carson pulled from this year’s commencement speaker line-up in response to comments made about gay marriage. Carson has since said he apologizes for having offended anyone and indicated he might withdraw from the commencement role, though he says his words are being misconstrued. Carson, who rocketed to political fame after criticizing President Obama’s policies during the National Prayer Breakfast,made the gay marriage comments on Fox News Tuesday night. Host Sean Hannity asked Carson his opinion on same-sex marriage, given the Supreme Court’s consideration of two gay marriage cases this week. “Marriage is between a man and a woman,” Carson said. “It’s a well-established, fundamental pillar of society and no group, be they gays, be they NAMBLA, be they people who believe in [human-animal sex]– it doesn’t matter what they are, they don’t get to change the definition.” Students accused Carson of effectively comparing “gay relationships with [pedo-files] and [human-animal sex].”

The Cape Farewell Expedition’s Brush with Disaster

Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by Joy Guillemot, an ecological anthropologist and environmental health scientist currently completing a PhD at Johns Hopkins, as part of the Cape Farewell project . “Bring only your passport and dress extremely warmly. The helicopter will arrive in 40 minutes.” Before it was announced, I had already prepared my things to abandon ship. Danger was not retreating against the running clock, and the highly skilled crew was anxious. I felt a bit silly being hyper-prepared, but flashbacks of working i… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Cape Farewell Expedition’s Brush with Disaster

Baltimore Johns Hopkins shooting incident 2010

A police vehicle arrives at Johns Hopkins Hospital, where a shooting was reported Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. Baltimore police set up a tactical operation to deal with a gunman who is holed up on the eighth floor of Johns Hopkins hospital after shooting a doctor. Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi says some parts of the hospital are being evacuated, but not the entire massive complex in east Baltimore. We have news straight from Baltimore, where a shooting has taken place inside the Johns Hopkin

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Baltimore Johns Hopkins shooting incident 2010

CBS, NBC Mourn Loss of Funding for Embryonic Stem Cell Research

A  recent court ruling  found that federal funding for embryonic stem cell research violates laws prohibiting the government from using taxpayer money for research that destroys an embryo. The ruling has sent the evening network news broadcasts reeling. While ABC’s “World News” briefly reported on the ruling Aug. 23, the NBC “Nightly News” and CBS “Evening News” have both aired reports suggesting that the ruling would end life-saving research – in spite of the fact the embryonic research can continue if privately funded, and federal funding of adult stem cell research is unaffected. NBC’s Robert Bazell reported Aug. 24 that the ruling “left a lot of researchers fairly stunned.” CBS’s Wyatt Andrews called the ruling “a shock.” But was it really? Neither report mentioned that federal funding for embryonic stem cell research was  severely restricted  under the Bush administration, and was only widened by the Obama administration  in July 2009 . Both reports also suggested that the ruling would end life-saving research. Bazell featured Dr. Chuck Murray, who is “in the delicate business of rebuilding severely damaged hearts and has tried adult and embryonic stem cells in his efforts.” The segment featured heart muscle built from embryonic stem cells, and Bazell warned that “because of yesterday’s court ruling, this research might have to stop by the end of the year.” But he didn’t mention that the rest of Dr. Murray’s research – on adult stem cells – is unaffected by the ruling. On CBS, Andrews warned the ruling “could halt a half-million dollar research project both the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins have been using to study childhood leukemia” and another studying Down syndrome. But later in the report he noted that the National Institutes of Health has said that “more than 200 existing stem cell experiments could continue for now but may not be renewed.” Andrews did note adult stem cell research is unaffected by the ruling. While both reports suggested the ruling would mean the end of promising research, they both alluded to the fact that the research will, in fact, continue – just not with taxpayer money. Private funding of embryonic stem cell research is not affected by the ruling. Both reports also included brief input from pro-life advocates and medical ethicists who praised the decision. Like this article? Sign up for “Culture Links,” CMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter, by   clicking  here.

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CBS, NBC Mourn Loss of Funding for Embryonic Stem Cell Research

Possible Signs of Methane-Based Life on Titan

Something is consuming hydrogen and organic molecules on Saturn's moon Titan, and the recipe matches astrobiologists' theories about possible methane-based life. Granted, there may be other chemical explanations — it's just that no one knows what they are yet. New data from the Cassini spacecraft show hydrogen is disappearing near Titan's surface. What's more, scientists have not been able to find acetylene, an organic molecule that should be pretty abundant in the moon's thick atmosphere. All this fits very nicely with a theory from NASA astrobiologist Chris McKay, who proposed five years ago that microbial life on Titan could breathe hydrogen and eat acetylene, producing methane as a result. Scientists emphasize that the findings are not proof of life, and there's plenty of work to do before non-biological causes can be ruled out. Scientific conservatism suggests that a biological explanation should be the last choice after all non-biological explanations are addressed,” says Mark Allen of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., in a NASA release. The good news is that even if life is ruled out, the non-biological explanations are still interesting. According to previous studies, hydrogen should be distributed pretty evenly throughout Titan's atmosphere. But it's disappearing at the surface. “It's as if you have a hose and you're squirting hydrogen onto the ground, but it's disappearing,” says Darrell Strobel, a Cassini interdisciplinary scientist based at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., who authored a paper published in the journal Icarus. It's possible that the hydrogen is combining with carbon on Titan's surface to produce methane. But Titan is too cold for that to happen quickly enough to account for all the missing hydrogen. An unknown mineral could be the culprit, meaning scientists may have found a new substance previously unknown to exist on Titan. The explanations for the dearth of acetylene are equally puzzling. The hydrocarbon should form abundantly in icy aerosols in Titan's atmosphere, but it's not there. It's possible that sunlight or cosmic rays are transforming the acetylene into more complex molecules that would fall to the ground with no acetylene signature, according to NASA. It's also possible that chemical reactions are transforming acetylene into benzene (which Cassini did observe on Titan's surface), but that would require a catalyst, which hasn't been identified. There's one more thing: Cassini observed an organic compound with the benzene that scientists have not been able to identify. Cassini has several more Titan flybys in which to gather data — in fact, the craft is set to fly within 2,000 miles of Titan's surface this afternoon, to make infrared scans of the moon's north polar region. The region includes Kraken Mare, the largest lake on Titan, which covers a greater area than the Caspian Sea on Earth. If methane-based microbes do live on Titan, there's a good chance they would live in just those sort of lakes. http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-06/new-cassini-findings-hint-methane-… added by: pjacobs51