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http://www.rense.com/general61/deadmic.htm

List Of Dead Microbiologists

From Charlene Fassa

1-12-5

 

 

Here is at least a partial list of dead microbiologists:

 

 

July 18, 2003: Dr. David Kelly, a British biological weapons expert

 

June 24, 2003: Dr. Leland Rickman, a UC San Diego expert on

infectious

diseases

 

November 12 2002: Dr. Benito Que, 52, was " an expert in infectious

diseases and cellular biology at the Miami Medical School

 

March 25, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Steven Mostow, 63

 

March 24, 2002: Dead microbiologist: David Wynn-Williams, 55

 

February 28, 2002: Two dead microbiologists in San Francisco,Tanya

Holzmayer, 46, is shot and killed by a colleague, Guyang Huang, 38, who then

apparently shot himself.

 

February 11, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Dr. Ian Langford, 40

 

February 9, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Victor Korshunov, 56

 

January 2002: Two dead microbiologists: Ivan Glebov and Alexi

Brushlinski

 

December 14, 2001: Dead microbiologist: Nguyen Van Set, 44

 

December 10, 2001: Dead microbiologist: " Dr. Robert Schwartz, 57

 

November 24, 2001: Three more dead microbiologists: Dr. Yaakov

Matzner,

54, dean of the Hebrew University school of medicine; Amiramp Eldor,

59, head of the haematology department at Ichilov Hospital in Tel

Aviv

and a world-recognized expert in blood clotting; and Avishai

Berkman,

50, director of the Tel Aviv public health department and

businessman

 

November 21, 2001: World-class microbiologist and high-profile

Russian

defector Dr. Vladimir Pasechnik, 64

 

November 16, 2001: Dr. Don Wiley, 57

 

November 6, 2001: Jeffry Paris

 

 

Now, read the circumstances of the deaths of some of these

scientists. It seems microbiology is the most dangerous occupation...

 

http://www.usenet.com/newsgroups/talk.religion.bahai/msg09281.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.rense.com/general61/sem.htm

Another Dead Microbiologist

Prof Was Working With Mycoplasma Membranes

(See paper after news story)

1-11-5

 

Police Seek Tips In Death Of Researcher

 

By Mike Wells

Columbia Daily Tribune Staff

1-9-5

 

A retired research assistant professor at the University of

Missouri-Columbia died of multiple stab wounds before firefighters found in

his body in the trunk of a burning car Friday.

 

Boone County Medical Examiner Valerie Rao said after an autopsy that

Jeong H. Im, 72, of Columbia was stabbed several times, but she declined to

elaborate.

 

MU police yesterday named Im as the victim. His body was found in

the trunk of his burning white, 1995 Honda inside the Maryland Avenue

parking garage, MU police Capt. Brian Weimer said.

 

The case was under investigation by the Mid-Missouri Major Case

Squad. No arrests had been made by last night.

 

Weimer spoke to reporters at a news conference yesterday in Jesse

Hall but declined to discuss details such as whether a murder weapon was

recovered or the cause of the fire.

 

Rao also was cautious about discussing the investigation. Regarding

questions on the estimated time of death, the number of wounds, the type of

weapon or the fire, she said, " We don't want to release any of that

information because it's so crucial to what the police are doing. "

 

Police yesterday hadn't ruled out robbery as a motive.

 

" All possibilities are being looked at right now, " Weimer said.

 

Im was primarily a protein chemist. Mark McIntosh, chairman of the

MU department of molecular microbiology and immunology, said he doubted the

crime could have been the act of an angry student.

 

" He's a 72-year-old and pretty much keeps to himself, and so I can't

imagine that it was anything more than some random act, " he said.

 

Police were trying to find an unknown person who used a campus

emergency phone to report the fire, Weimer said. Police want that person to

contact them again.

 

Weimer also asked the public for help in identifying a man - 6 feet

to 6 feet, 2 inches tall - who was seen in the garage area wearing some type

of mask, possibly a drywall or painter's mask.

 

That individual is a " person of interest, " Weimer said, and not a

suspect.

 

" There could be a valid reason for someone like this to be in the

garage, " he said.

 

At about 6 p.m. Friday, MU Police Chief Jack Watring activated the

major case squad. It's the first homicide investigation on the campus in

nearly 16 years. The request drew in 28 squad members from various law

enforcement agencies, including the Columbia Police Department and the

Missouri State Highway Patrol.

 

Im's wife, Tesuk Im, declined comment yesterday when contacted at

her Columbia home.

 

The parking garage serves employees of MU and University of Missouri

Health Care as well as employees of and visitors to the Mid-Missouri Mental

Health Center.

 

Weimer said investigators were still trying to determine the

timeframe for the crime. Anyone who was in or near the garage from early

morning to afternoon Friday has been asked to call MU police at 882-7203 or

CrimeStoppers at 875-8477.

 

" By all means, let us sort it out, " he said. " Please, give us a call

and let us know what you saw. "

 

Tribune reporter Megan Means contributed to this report.

http://archive.columbiatribune.com/

 

 

Identification of mycoplasma membrane proteins by

systematic TnphoA mutagenesis of a recombinant library

 

Catherine M. Cleavinger, Mary F. Kim, Jeong H. Im and Kim S. Wise*

 

Wall-less prokaryotes in the genus Mycoplasma include over 90

species of infectious agents whose pathogenicity for humans and other

animals is currently being assessed. Molecular characterization of surface

proteins is critical in this regard but is hampered by the lack of genetic

systems in these organisms. We used TnphoA transposition to systematically

mutagenize, in Escherichia coli, a genomic plasmid library constructed from

Mycoplasma fermentans, a potential human pathogen. The strategy circumvented

problems of expressing mycoplasma genes containing UGA (Trp) codons and

relied on the construction of the vector pG7ZCW, designed to reduce TnphoA

transposition into vector sequences. Functional phoA gene fusions directly

identified genes encoding 19 putative membrane-associated proteins of M.

fermentans. Sequences of fusion constructs defined three types of export

sequence: (1) non-cleavable, membrane-spanning sequences, (2) signal

peptides with signal peptidase (SPase) I-like cleavage sites, and (3) signal

peptides with SPase II-like lipoprotein-cleavage sites which, like most

other mycoplasmal lipoprotein signals analysed to date, differed from those

in several Gram-negative and Gram-positive eubacteria in their lack of a Leu

residue at the 3 position. Antibodies to synthetic peptides that were

deduced from two fusions to predicted lipoproteins, identified corresponding

amphiphilic membrane proteins of 57 kDa and 78 kDa expressed in the

mycoplasma. The P57 sequence contained a proline-rich N-terminal region

analogous to an adhesin of Mycoplasma gallisepticum. The P78 protein was

identical to a serologically defined phase-variant surface lipoprotein.

TnphoA mutagenesis provides an efficient means of systematically

characterizing functionally diverse lipoproteins and other exported proteins

in mycoplasmas.

 

Full PDF paper:

http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/

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