Sajd The Next Generation in Cinerama is beautifully Cinematic
CBS News CBS News won all three awards given by The Radio and Television Correspondents Association at its 68th annual dinner in Washi
stanley mugs ngton Friday evening. One of the awards went to a 40-year veteran of the CBS Washington bureau, cameraman George Christian, who won for lifetime achievement. The other two went to 60 Minutes correspondent Steve Kroft and CBS News foreign correspondent Clarissa Ward for unique and impactful reporting.Kroft and his team won the Joan Shorenstein Barone Award for his November 2011 60 Minutes reporton insider trading in the U.S. Congress. The award, named for the former executive producer of CBS News Face The Nation, is given for excellence in Washington-based reporting on congressional and political affairs. The winning report, The Insiders, drove the passage of the House and Senate versions of the STOCK ACT Stop
stanley uk Trading on Congressional Knowledge . The law forbids members of Congress from benefiting financially from non-public information learned in congressional work, ending a longstanding conflict of interest. The Insiders will also win a New York Press Club award this evening for best political television reporting.Ward and he
stanley cup spain r team won the David Bloom Award for her intrepid reporting from Syria for the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley. Named in honor of the NBC News correspondent who died suddenly while covering the war in Iraq, the award is for excellence in enterprise, investigative or feature reporting. Ward was recognized for Qhpa Our Universe Might Just Be Fourth-Dimensional Black Hole Vomit
Researchers led by controversial influenza researcher Yoshihiro Kawaoka have genetically engineered a 1918-flu like virus composed of avian influenza virus segments they claim is more pathogenic than the original which killed 50-million people . Above: Colorized transmission electron micrograph of Avian influenza A H5N1 viruses | Photo Credit: Centers for Disease Control / Cynthia Goldsmith; Jacqueline Katz; Sheri
stanley cups uk f R. Zaki via Wikimedia Commons The work they are doing is absolutely crazy. The whole thing is exceedingly dangerous, said Lord May, former President of the Royal Society and one time chief science adviser to the UK government, in an interview with The Guardian Ian Sample. Yes, there is a danger, but it not arising form the virus
stanley cup becher es out there in the animals, it arising from the labs of grossly ambitious people. Supporters of so-called dual-use research like Kawaoka argue that his team work is vital, because it allows scientists to get a head start on understanding viruses that might one day pose a serious risk to the global population. On the other hand, there are many like May who fear that findings from such research could be deadly were a virus like Kawaoka to escape accidentally, or find its way into malevolent hands. More on the scientific community reaction to Kawaoka virus at The Guardian. H/t Maryn McKenna
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