http://www.online-literature.com/bible/Genesis/
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Literature Network > The Holy Bible > Genesis
Genesis
4:9 And the LORD said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not: Am I my brother's keeper?
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Release dates for
Genesis: 4-9 (1913)
Country Date
USA 25 September 1913
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Release dates for
Stargate (1994) [ RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 ]
USA 28 October 1994
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Memorable quotes for
Stargate (1994) [ RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 ]
[correcting the translation from the cover stone]
Dr. Daniel Jackson: It's not "Door to Heaven"... is...
[writing]
Dr. Daniel Jackson: Stargate.
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Release dates for
"60 Minutes"
Judy/The Ultra Secret (1975)
Country Date
USA 3 August 1975
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045905
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60 Minutes (TV series documentary 1968– )
Judy/The Ultra Secret
Retrospective on the life & career of Judy Garland, including interviews with her daughters; a look at how the British cracked the WWII German code, considered at the time to be unbreakable.
Release Date: 3 August 1975 (USA)
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20040730&slug=crickobit30
The Seattle Times
Friday, July 30, 2004
DNA pioneer Francis Crick dies at 88
By Seattle Times news services and staff
Francis Crick, a British scientist who shared in biology's most important breakthrough — discovery of the spiral "double helix" structure of DNA — then abruptly turned his back on genetics to study the brain and consciousness, died of colon cancer Wednesday night in a San Diego hospital.
His 1953 discovery would penetrate the mystery of all life on Earth, inheritance and evolution, showing how components of DNA work together to create a new human being and maintain every cell.
Mr. Crick, 88, shared the 1962 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for the work with James Watson and Maurice Wilkins of Britain.
After making the discovery, Mr. Crick walked into a Cambridge pub and announced he and Watson had "found the secret of life." But only a few people "even thought it was interesting," Mr. Crick once said, and it took years before the discovery was firmly accepted.
Decades later, the discovery's impact can be seen everywhere. It laid the foundation for the biotechnology industry, enabling scientists to engineer bigger tomatoes, doctors to pursue gene therapy to treat disease, and police to solve crimes through DNA evidence.
Biotechnology is a $30 billion-a-year industry that has produced some 160 drugs and vaccines, treating everything from breast cancer to diabetes. Seven million farmers in 18 countries grew genetically engineered crops last year, allowing them to grow food with fewer pesticides.
"It's almost too difficult to pay him high enough tribute for what he contributed," said Stanford University scientist Paul Berg, who won the Nobel in chemistry in 1980 for his pioneering work with genetic engineering.
"He is a giant," said Francis Collins, director of the National Human Genome Research Institute, at the National Institutes of Health. "It's fair to say Francis Crick defined the discipline of theoretical biology, and so far no other practitioners of that art have come up to that standard."
After Watson and Mr. Crick cracked the structure of DNA, Mr. Crick's intellectual insights deciphered how only four chemical building blocks, called nucleic acids or bases, could combine to direct the construction of 20 amino acids that make up proteins — the structure and fabric of the human body.
Watson, who told of the fierce competition and infighting that led up to their discovery in his 1968 best seller "The Double Helix," in a statement yesterday honored Mr. Crick "for his extraordinarily focused intelligence and for the many ways he showed me kindness and developed my self-confidence."
"Being with him for two years in a small room in Cambridge was truly a privilege," said Watson, president of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York. "I always looked forward to being with him and speaking to him, up until the moment of his death."
Dr. Robert Waterston was a postdoctoral researcher studying the genetics of tiny worms called nematodes when he crossed paths with Mr. Crick at Cambridge.
"Even in 1972, when I went over there, he was an icon," said Waterston, now chairman of genome sciences at the University of Washington.
"This was the man who discovered the structure of DNA. That alone would have made him intimidating to me as a postdoc."
http://www.northwest-books.com/html/history/chasing_the_devil.html
northwest-books.com
Chasing the Devil : My Twenty-Year Quest to Capture the Green River Killer
by Sheriff David Reichert
Chasing the Devil is the gripping firsthand account of Reicherts relentless pursuit--a 21-year odyssey full of near-misses and startling revelations.
List Price: $24.95 Price: $16.97
Product Details
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown; (July 28, 2004)
ISBN: 0316156329
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_propaganda
Wikipedia
Nazi propaganda
Propaganda, the coordinated attempt to influence public opinion through the use of media, was skillfully used by the Nazi Party in the years leading up to and during Adolf Hitler's leadership of Germany (1933–1945). Nazi propaganda provided a crucial instrument for acquiring and maintaining power, and for the implementation of their policies, including the pursuit of total war and the extermination of millions of people in the Holocaust.
As to the methods to be employed, he explains:
"Propaganda must not investigate the truth objectively and, in so far as it is favourable to the other side, present it according to the theoretical rules of justice; yet it must present only that aspect of the truth which is favourable to its own side.
http://www.biblio.com/david-reichert/chasing-the-devil/ISBN-9780316156325
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Home > ISBN Search > 9780316156325
Chasing the Devil My Twenty-Year Quest to Capture the Green River Killer
by David Reichert
ISBN 13: 9780316156325
ISBN 10: 0316156329
Hardcover
Boston, Massachusetts, U.s.a.: Little, Brown and Company, July 28, 2004
http://www.amazon.com/Chasing-Devil-Twenty-Year-Capture-Killer/dp/0316156329/ref=pd_bbs_2/002-5409716-7824064?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1211106488&sr=8-2
Chasing the Devil: My Twenty-Year Quest to Capture the Green River Killer (Hardcover)
by David Reichert (Author)
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company (July 28, 2004)
http://dictionary.law.com/default2.Asp?selected=741&bold
felony murder doctrine
a rule of criminal statutes that any death which occurs during the commission of a felony is first degree murder, and all participants in that felony or attempted felony can be charged with and found guilty of murder. A typical example is a robbery involving more than one criminal, in which one of them shoots, beats to death or runs over a store clerk, killing the clerk. Even if the death were accidental, all of the participants can be found guilty of felony murder, including those who did no harm, had no gun, and/or did not intend to hurt anyone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felony_Murder_Doctrine
Felony Murder Doctrine
The felony murder rule is a legal doctrine current in some common law countries that broadens the crime of murder in two ways. First, when a victim dies accidentally or without specific intent in the course of an applicable felony, it increases what might have been manslaughter (or even a simple tort) to murder. Second, it makes any participant in such a felony criminally responsible for any deaths that occur during or in furtherance of that felony.
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20030822&slug=waterston22
The Seattle Times [ SEVERE CRIMINAL PROPAGANDA ASSET OF THE CORBIS MICROSOFT BILL GATES AL QAIDA GLOBAL TERRORIST NETWORK ]
Friday, August 22, 2003
Q&A: Critical mass forming for UW genetic research
By Luke Timmerman
Seattle Times business reporter
Robert Waterston made his name as a leader of the Human Genome Project, the historic job that put the genetic instruction book on the desktop of all biologists.
These days, Waterston is settling in as a Seattleite. He bicycles to work down the Burke-Gilman Trail thinking of a new challenge: making sense of the flood of genetic data to improve human health.
Waterston, who turns 60 next month, came to the University of Washington in January to lead the department of genome sciences, which has three of the eight recognized leaders of the genome project. Last week, he broke ground on a $150 million state-of-the-art building to house his department and that of bioengineering. Nearly half the money for the building, a key recruiting tool, came from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Q: What should the public, most of which dimly recalls ninth-grade biology, be doing to learn about this new biology that is changing health care and the economy?
A: They have to read. Seriously. A lot of biology is very complex, and depends on detailed understanding, but the great thing about DNA is (that) it's conceptually straightforward. People understand it's a language, with A, G, C and T, and different combinations have different meanings, just like words.
Q: What is the biggest obstacle to genome-science progress?
A: People's participation.