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Happy Black History Month! Lift Every Voice and Sing, till earth and heaven ring! Happy American Heart Month, as well. In this episode of Scientifically Sound, I'm hanging out with Dre'Von Dobson as we talk about our time as black scientists in our love of Ernest Everett Just and discuss The Bee Gees' hit, Al Green classic, "How Can You Mend A Broken Heart". We are tying this song to Dre'Von's research on fibrinogen, a key protein complex circulating in our cardiovascular system. And oh, Dre'Von has a surprise for you and me. For more information about Dre'Von Dobson, read below. Dre'Von Dobson is a multi-instrumentalist (specializing in the saxophone, bass, and piano) who studied at North Carolina A&T State University, graduating with a B.S. in Biology and minoring in Music Performance. He is currently a PhD student in the Pathobiology and Translational Sciences Program at UNC Chapel Hill studying hemostasis and thrombosis. His current project is identifying genes that regulate the expression of the coagulation protein, fibrinogen. Dre' is also the co-founder of The Society for Black Biomedical Sciences (SBBS) at UNC, an organization that works to promote and support the recruitment, retention, and success of black biomedical scientist. While pursuing his PhD, Dre' continues to provide live music for weddings, festivals, churches, and private functions across North Carolina. Dre' hopes to use his scientific findings and career to improve the cardiovascular health and scientific literacy in black communities. Dre'Von Dobson Social MediaInstagram: @superfly_bamTwitter: @BloodBiologySong of the Sound : High Blues Pressure by Freddie HubbardFollow Scientifically Sound----Twitter: 4theSci_SoundInstagram: scientificallysoundTikTok: scientificallysoundemail: 4thescientificallysound@gmail.com
Today is the 138th birthday of the scientist Ernest Everett Just. His contribution to the field of fertilization biology is still recognized today. The world is a better place because he was in it and still feels the loss that he has left. This episode is also available as a blog post: http://waldina.com/2021/08/14/happy-138th-birthday-ernest-everett-just/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/waldina/message
How many degrees can one man get? This week's subject Ernest Everett Just will leave you wondering just that. Hear about his many degrees, his amazing work in embryology, and the science feud that nearly ended his career.
Black history mini docs:. Ernest Everett Just, PhD Marine Biologist. Fannie Lou Hamer, Co-Founder of the Freedom Democratic Party. Check out The Do Better podcast with Tiger 180 on Anchor.fm.
Host Mika chats with friend, commercial oysterman and activist, Cyrus Buffum, to discuss the current state of environmental advocacy in Charleston, SC. Also!...The two discuss the work and life of Maryville native, Biologist Ernest Everett Just. Ernest Everett Just: https://www.biography.com/scientist/ernest-everett-just Cyrus' Suggestions: The City Podcast - https://www.thecitypodcast.com/podcast_episode/six-stories/ The Color of Law -bit.ly/CyrusSaysColorOfLaw New to the show? Check out this previous episode: bit.ly/MicdUpSouthernScholarship Sign-up for the Charleston Activist Newsletter: bit.ly/CANLIST I run on love and support: bit.ly/SupportCAN , $mikagadsden on CashApp Support this podcast via Patreon: patreon.com/ChsActNet Follow the Charleston Activist Network on Social Media: IG: @charlestonactivistnetwork Twitter: @ChsActNet FB: @charlestonactivistnetwork Email Mika: Tamika@charlestonactivistnetwork.com Clip used in the show: https://youtu.be/5qUM0vb-ZaI
Nesse episódio vamos discutir um pouco sobre uma bebida fermentada que vem ganhando cada vez mais adeptos: a kombuchá. Os artigos de hoje foram publicados esse ano, um na revista Food Bioscience e se intitula “Fermentação Kombuchá de folhas de mostarda africana: composição química e bioatividade” e o outro "A fermentação de Kombuchá melhora as propriedades promotoras da saúde das bebidas de leite de soja”, publicado esse ano na Journal of Functional Foods. No Microlitros de notícias o Athirson e o Thiago contam pra gente um pouco do papel dos microrganismos na biorremediação de ambientes marinhos contaminados por óleo. Também teremos o caso da Síndrome da Fermentação Intestinal, contado pela Isabela e Mayanne. E no Filogenia da Ciência de hoje, o Matheus e a Gabriela vão falar sobre a vida e pesquisa do embriologista Ernest Everett Just, primeiro PhD negro na Universidade de Chicago. Acesse a transcrição desse episódio! Você pode ouvir os episódios do Microbiando através do iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcast, TuneIn e outros aplicativos de podcast Apoiadores do A Ciência Explica Leandro LoboGabriel SiqueiraMasashi C. InoueCelia Campos Tobaldini-MansbachEduarda Moura Obrigado por nos apoiarem através do financiamento coletivo! Apoie você também e ganhe recompensas, como canecas, bottons, adesivos e livros exclusivos. Não pode ajudar financeiramente? Siga nossas redes sociais e compartilhe nossas matérias com seus amigos!
Ernest Everett Just was a renown scientist who made important discoveries about the biology of a cell's surface.
This episode, in honor of Black History Month, we interviewed Malcolm Byrnes about E.E. Just, a pioneering African American Biologist, and Joseph Graves about his own experience as an African American Evolutionary Biologist. Some resources for these interviews: Kenneth R. Manning (1983) Black Apollo of Science: The Life of Ernest Everett Just. Oxford University Press. Lilly’s obituary of Just in Science (1942): http://science.sciencemag.org/content/95/2453/10 Gould SJ. Flamingo’s smile: Reflections in natural history. New York: WW Norton and Company; 1985. Just in the middle: A solution to the mechanistvitalist controversy; pp. 377–391. Malcolm Byrnes on Just and Hotfreter: http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3371230 Graves Jr, Joseph L. The emperor's new clothes: Biological theories of race at the millennium. Rutgers University Press, 2003. Graves Jr, Joseph L. The Race Myth: Why We Pretend Race Exists in America. Plume, 2004.
Physicist Stephon Alexander feels overwhelmed until the father of quantum gravity himself helps him find inspiration in his subconscious. Stephon Alexander is the Ernest Everett Just 1907 Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Dartmouth College. Stephon was born in Trinidad and grew up in the Bronx, NY. He is a theoretical physicist specializing in the interface between cosmology, particle physics and quantum gravity (String Theory and Loop Quantum Gravity). He received his BSc (1993) from Haverford College and PhD (2000) from Brown University. He held postdoctoral fellowships at Imperial College, London and The Stanford University Linear Accelerator Center. Stephon is also a Jazz Saxophonist and Author, and will release his new album (in Colaboration with RIOUX) Here Comes Now in Aug, 2014. His upcoming Book will explore the secret link between music and cosmology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Theoretical physicist Stephon Alexander, the Ernest Everett Just 1907 Professor, discusses the Higgs boson particle discovered with the Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland, and the implications of this pivotal finding, which was announced in July 2012.
Theoretical physicist Stephon Alexander, the Ernest Everett Just 1907 Professor, links the most recent revelations of particle physics with dark matter, the mysterious substance that constitutes most of the universe, and with dark energy, the force responsible for accelerating cosmic expansion.