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third Clyborn report October[1]

CNN reports on third report October[2]

Bloomberg reports on third report October[3]

second report August[4]

WaPo report August[5]

General Accounting Office report April[6]

GAO report from CNN April[7]


  1. ^ "New Select Subcommittee Report Details Trump Administration's Assault On CDC And Politicization Of Public Health During The Coronavirus Crisis". Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis. October 17, 2022. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  2. ^ Diaz, Daniella (October 18, 2022). "Scientific Integrity: HHS Agencies Need to Develop Procedures and Train Staff on Reporting and Addressing Political Interference". CNN. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  3. ^ Baumann, Jeannie (October 17, 2022). "Trump's CDC Changed Weekly Reports, House Covid Panel Finds (1)". Bloomberg Law. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  4. ^ "New Select Subcommittee Report Uncovers Trump White House's Extreme Pressure Campaigns Targeting FDA's Coronavirus Response". Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis. August 24, 2022. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  5. ^ Diamond, Dan (August 24, 2022). "House panel: Trump sought to pressure FDA on covid vaccines, treatment". The Washington Post. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  6. ^ "Scientific Integrity: HHS Agencies Need to Develop Procedures and Train Staff on Reporting and Addressing Political Interference". General Accounting Office. April 20, 2022. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  7. ^ Howard, Jacqueline (April 21, 2022). "CDC, FDA, NIH workers did not report incidents of political interference, 'fearing retaliation,' government watchdog agency says". CNN. Retrieved 13 November 2022.



Tina Nova "A Daydreamer from Delano who rocketed to biotech superstardom" - UT special section "phenomenal women in Business" featuring her as the lead story

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/phenomenal-women-series/story/2021-09-25/tina-nova-a-daydreamer-from-delano-who-rocketed-to-biotech-superstardom

  • She played a key role in developing the prostate specific antigen test, credited by some for helping slash prostate cancer death rates by 30 percent during the 1990s. Since then, she’s gone on to lead one successful biotech company after another, selling firms for hundreds of millions of dollars. Since then, she’s gone on to lead one successful biotech company after another, selling firms for hundreds of millions of dollars.
  • In 2002, she was tapped to serve as the first female chair of Biocom, a California life science trade group that now represents 1,400 companies. In 2007, she won the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award in San Diego life sciences.
  • Age = 68 as of Sept. 26, 2021, lives with her husband near Del Mar
  • U.C. Irvine
  • Doctorate in biochemistry at U.C. Riverside
  • https://www.biospace.com/article/releases/veracyte-to-acquire-decipher-biosciences/
  • Las Vegas quickie marriage annulled: https://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2007/mar/01/vegas-quickies/

from a dead website: Dr. Nova was a co-founder of Nanogen, a provider of molecular diagnostic tests, and served as its chief operating officer and president from 1994 to 2000.

Video: Biotechnology executive and entrepreneur Tina Nova, a 1982 doctoral graduate from UCR, addresses the 13th Annual Southern California Conference on Undergraduate Research. Nova is the chief executive officer of Genoptix, Inc., the fourth biotechnology firm she has co-founded in the San Diego area. (#11365) [1]

References

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Rear Admiral Stephen Barnett

"Rear Adm. Stephen Barnett will assume command of Navy Region Southwest at a ceremony Friday at Naval Air Station North Island, the Navy said in a statement. He most recently served as the commander of Navy Region Northwest in Kitsap, Wash. and was the commanding officer of Naval Base Coronado from 2015 to 2016." "Barnett served as a naval flight officer on P-3 Orions, the Navy’s land-based anti-submarine and surveillance aircraft. He’s served as commanding officer of one P-3 squadron and has since worked as an analyst for the Navy at the Pentagon and as the executive assistant to the Vice Chief of Naval Operations, according to his Navy biography." [1]

The position is often described as the "Navy Mayor of San Diego". He replaces Read Adm. Bette Bolivar, who is retiring.

military biography https://www.navy.mil/Leadership/Biographies/BioDisplay/Article/2236508/rear-admiral-stephen-barnett/


Rear Admiral Bette Bolivar

"During her Navy career, Bolivar, a 1985 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, served as a Navy diver and salvage ship commander. Since taking command in San Diego in 2019, Bolivar found herself at the crossroads of military service and politics when she was named the convening authority overseeing the war crimes court-martial of Navy SEAL Chief Eddie Gallagher." "Bolivar also led the region’s 10 Navy bases through restrictions brought on by the coronavirus pandemic.

The admiral’s career was not without controversy. Bolivar, like hundreds of Navy officers of her generation, was embroiled in the Fat Leonard scandal, the Union-Tribune first reported in 2019. In 1998, as the commanding officer of the salvage ship Salvor, Bolivar — who held the rank of lieutenant commander at the time — accepted a hotel room, dinner, drinks, entertainment and a golf outing in Malaysia by Leonard Glenn “Fat Leonard” Francis, according to Navy records. The Navy addressed Bolivar’s alleged misconduct through “administrative action” and otherwise deemed her a “significant contributor and valued Navy leader,” according to a 2017 memo from Adm. Philip Davidson, who was leading the Navy’s “Fat Leonard” investigation at the time. Bolivar is one of hundreds of naval officers investigated by the Navy for connections to Francis, who was arrested in San Diego in 2013 for defrauding the Navy out of at least $34 million in ship husbanding fees in the Western Pacific and Indian Oceans. Although he pleaded guilty, Francis has not been sentenced in the case."[2]

military biography https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrsw/about/biographies/NRSW_Regional_Commander.html

Rotary introduction https://seattlerotary.org/stories/font-size-3-meet-radm-bette-bolivar-font

Navy Times https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2019/08/06/before-she-handled-seal-war-crimes-cases-one-star-was-tied-to-fat-leonard/

she is listed here https://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/List_of_Filipino_Americans#Military

and here Timeline of women in warfare and the military in the United States from 2011–present

  1. ^ Dyer, Andrew (July 15, 2021). "San Diego to get new 'Navy Mayor' in change of command Friday". San Diego Union Tribune. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  2. ^ Dyer, Andrew (July 15, 2021). "San Diego to get new 'Navy Mayor' in change of command Friday". San Diego Union Tribune. Retrieved 16 July 2021.



Oliver Ryder the Zoo’s Kleberg Endowed Director of Conservation Genetics[1]

  1. ^ Fikes, Bradley J. (September 13, 2018). "Kurt Benirschke, San Diego Zoo visionary and human fertility expert, dead at 94". San Diego Union Tribune. Retrieved 2 December 2018.


Sara Cody

NYT article from April: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/03/us/coronavirus-shelter-in-place-california.html?campaign_id=49&emc=edit_ca_20201130&instance_id=24574&nl=california-today&regi_id=16153474&segment_id=45677&te=1&user_id=e9848bda5d7546386411f6e2fbdaf95e

Stanford Magazine

References

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Note: consider an article on Gerald S. "Jerry" Spear also.[1]

and possibly Ivan Bennett.




Dave Wondrich, drinks historian, book ‘Imbibe’ about American cocktail history written 2007, second edition 2015 https://www.grubstreet.com/2015/04/david-wondrich-knows-the-origins-of-cocktail.html?te=1&nl=morning-briefing&emc=edit_NN_p_20200121&section=backStory?campaign_id=9&instance_id=15336&segment_id=20500&user_id=e9848bda5d7546386411f6e2fbdaf95e&regi_id=16153474on=backStory

see article Jerry Thomas (bartender), father of American mixology Dave Wondrich, drinks historian, book ‘Imbibe’ about American cocktail history written 2007, second edition 2015 https://www.grubstreet.com/2015/04/david-wondrich-knows-the-origins-of-cocktail.html?te=1&nl=morning-briefing&emc=edit_NN_p_20200121&section=backStory?campaign_id=9&instance_id=15336&segment_id=20500&user_id=e9848bda5d7546386411f6e2fbdaf95e&regi_id=16153474on=backStory

see article Jerry Thomas (bartender), father of American mixology




David Page, M.D. - breast pathology, Vanderbilt. Died October 17, 2019.



RADM Bette Bolivar or Babette Bolivar - Navy mayor of SD as of March 2019, former commander of Navy Region Southeast RADM Yancey B. Lindsey previous Navy mayor of SD



Mike Schaefer

[edit]

Mike Schaefer (one LA Times article suggests his name is John Michael Schaefer and says he is an attorney. May not be the same person but says former SD councilman.) LA Times usually says Michael Schaefer.

http://articles.latimes.com/keyword/michael-schaefer LA Times articles

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/politics/sdut-mike-schaefer-nevada-election-ballot-removed-court-2014may19-story.html May 19, 2014

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/politics/sdut-michael-schaefer-electionl-mayor-palm-springs-2015oct19-story.html Oct 19, 2015

https://www.desertsun.com/story/news/politics/elections/2015/10/01/michael-schaefer-still-laughing-years/73177840/ October 1, 2015

https://www.desertsun.com/story/news/politics/elections/2016/02/11/mike-schaefer-congress-nevada/80263022/ Feb 11, 2016

https://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2018/may/03/ticker-mike-schaefer-80-running-office-again/ May 3, 2018




The entire Notable research/achievements section was removed from Stanford Medical School.

  • 1956 - First use in Western hemisphere of linear accelerator to treat cancer
  • 1960 - First kidney transplant in California
  • 1964 - Demonstration of electrical stimulation of auditory nerve in deaf patients, paving the way for cochlear implants
  • 1968 - First adult human heart transplant in the United States
  • 1970 - Leonard Herzenberg develops the fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) which revolutionizes the study of cancer cells and will be essential for purification of adult stem cells
  • 1974 - Isolation of genome of a virus that causes hepatitis B and a common form of liver cancer
  • 1975 - Discovery of link between exercise and increased “good” (HDL) cholesterol levels
  • 1979 - Discovery of dynorphin, a brain chemical 200 times more powerful than morphine
  • 1981 - First successful human combined heart/lung transplant in the world (fourth attempted worldwide)
  • 1984 - Isolation of a gene coding for part of the T-cell receptor, a key to the immune system’s function
  • 1988 - Isolation of pure hematopoietic stem cells from mice
  • 1992 - Development of a genetically engineered vaccine to enhance patients’ immunological response against B-cell lymphoma
  • 1993 - First clinical trial testing methods for preventing eating disorders in adolescents
  • 1996 - Discovery that the p53 protein, known to be involved in controlling cancerous tumors, works as an “emergency brake” on cancer development
  • 2000 - Solution of the structure of the RNA polymerase protein, a pivotal molecule that copies genes from DNA to RNA
  • 2005 - Discovery of obestatin, a hormone that suppresses appetite
  • 2007 - Application and expansion of optogenetics, a technique to control brain cell activity with light
  • 2009 - Discovery of a "don't-eat-me" signal that allows blood cancer stem cells to migrate safely through the body
  • 2009 - Discovery of the first human bladder cancer stem cell
  • 2010 - For the first time, researchers use a healthy person's complete genome sequence to predict his risk for dozens of diseases
  • 2013 - Karl Deisseroth's development of the CLARITY technique for rendering intact tissues transparent
  • 2013 - A new technique induces egg growth in infertile women, and one gives birth
  • 2014 - Study finds infusion of young blood recharges brains of old mice
  • 2014 - First study to show no survival benefit for bilateral mastectomy for breast cancer patients
  • 2014 - Discovery of abnormalities in the brains of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome
  • 2015 - Scientists find genetic signature enabling early, accurate sepsis diagnosis
  • 2015 - Discovery of iron-containing inflammatory cells seen in Alzheimer’s brains that could be used to diagnose and monitor Alzheimer’s patients earlier than what is currently possible
  • 2015 - Researchers genetically engineer yeast to produce opioids, a faster and less expensive technique that could improve access to medicines in impoverished nations
  • 2015 - Discovery of a bacterial community in pregnant women that is linked to preterm birth




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