NASA DUMPS YALE'S CRIMINALLY INSANE DURLAND FISH

0 views
Skip to first unread message

kathleen

unread,
Sep 13, 2007, 1:24:12 PM9/13/07
to scilyme2
Article below- $750,000 contract goes to University of New Hampshire
--------------------------------

Michael Crichton, Henry Waxman, Mortimer Zuckerman, and Yale's Psycho
Durland Fish's NASA Eyeball in the Sky:
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/980a70cbe2065a21/cb915b82a6bb3048?lnk=gst&q=durland+fish+eyeball+in+the+sky+NASA&rnum=1&hl=en#cb915b82a6bb3048

http://www.actionlyme.org/PIGS_DURLAND_AND_SWEEG.htm

The foul and profane world of the true criminals Yale's Durland Fish
and NIH's Edward McSweegan:

In case you missed the most recent update to the scandal, this is the
link- Hartford Courant interview with Durland Fish. See how Durland
talks, stalks, and keeps lists of- and about- people.. (creepy and
weird)
http://www.topix.net/forum/source/hartford-courant/T1PQJ3U5AAMHAR152


Tick Bite Conspiracy- Stalker Durland and Crazy Eddie don't want it
known that you should be treated immediately upon tick attachment to
prevent brain invasion.
http://www.actionlyme.org/TICK_BITE_CONSPIRACY.htm

Yale's Durland Fish says to Sweeg:

"I need more than rumors to attack!!!"

"Want to send her a bogus article?"

"We did lose the railroad case."

This exhibit was entered into evidence in Richard Blumenthals' 1999
Lyme Hearing by the Lyme Disease Foundation,
http://www.lyme.org (Nothing was done about it for 7 years...)

The "railroad case" was where Lenny Sigal perjured himself about what
Lyme disease is. We wonder why Durland Fish thought "the railroad
case" was his personal case.
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Oasis/6455/conrail.txt (Railroad
case)

"He [Durland Fish] proceeds down the list, name by name: "Totally
bogus." "He killed one of his patients." "They tried to shut him
down." Words like "crackpot," "wacko," "buffoon" and "fraud" pepper
his discourse.

"A little later, he stops to ponder a question.

"'I don't know," he says after a moment's thought. "I don't know why
they hate me so much."

Awww. Maybe Durland needs some...

"Get him to go out and lay a few broads, Father. That'll do the
trick," says the psychiatrist.

"God bless such salutary broads, Doctor," says the Exorcist.

Something from the "Penises Trump Brains" Psychiatric Formulary for
Poor Thing Durly ??
http://www.actionlyme.org/070418hometemp.htm


Let's get Kristine Ragaglia, DCF's Chief Whore !!
http://www.actionlyme.org/RAGAGLIA_GRANDJURY_DETAILS.htm


Hey, now we know what DCF is good for!!!

They can pork all the crooks at Yale who are so sad to have been
discovered to be criminally insane.

"That investigation is still going on, Blumenthal said last week. His
office has subpoenaed documents from IDSA and from members of the
panel, he said; so far, the society has complied, but the members have
not.

"Blumenthal would not discuss details of the investigation. "I can
tell you," he said, "that the information we've received so far has
created very significant concerns about the process and about
potential conflicts of interest." (Gary Wormser and all the Lyme
crooks are now "advising" Baxter. This is an exact do-over of the
LYMErix crime.)
http://www.actionlyme.org/WORMSER_INSISTS_LYME_A_KNEE_DISEASE.htm


These Lyme crooks are so stupid, they want to sell a vaccine for a
disease that they simultaneously deny exists!! But Sweeg explains how
they could sell it in Europe first, since, Europeans are stupid-
according to Sweeg.
http://www.actionlyme.org/MCSWEEGAN_AND_DUMB_EUROPEANS.html


All about McSweegan's penis and everyone else's penis, and penises in
general- By his lover Durland ??? 'Posts from a CT IP, and uses the
same language, as seen in the Hartford Courant...
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.med.diseases.lyme/browse_frm/thread/0a21de082a71ef35/286a43878245ca24?hl=en#286a43878245ca24

NASA removes Yale's criminally insane Durland Fish from Lyme project-
awards it to UNH

Date: Sep 13, 2007 7:48 AM

http://www.actionlyme.org/index.htm

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-09/uonh-ush091207.php

Public release date: 12-Sep-2007
[ Print Article | E-mail Article | Close Window ]

Contact: David Sims
david...@unh.edu
603-862-5369
University of New Hampshire
UNH, state health agency, private industry and NASA to tackle Lyme
disease

DURHAM, N.H. -- Armed with satellite imagery, field samples, human
Lyme disease
case data, and mathematical models, an interdisciplinary research team
from the
University of New Hampshire, the New Hampshire Department of Health
and Human Services,
and the private sector will conduct work on the ecology and risk
factors of Lyme
disease in New Hampshire and neighboring states in an effort to
eventually identify
"hot spots" and issue early warning to help prevent human exposure and
disease. The project will expand an emerging field of research at UNH
that applies
space technology to study disease ecology and address public health
issues.

The research team, comprised of five UNH professors, a private sector
scientist,
and two state public health officials, was recently awarded nearly
$750,000 by the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration to conduct the work for
a three-year
period beginning January 1, 2008.

That such work is needed in the state is made clear by the numbers:
while human
Lyme disease cases have doubled across the U.S. over 15 years, New
Hampshire has
experienced a nearly 16-fold increase in cases of the tick-borne
disease from 1997
to 2006 - from 39 to 617, or about 47 cases per 100,000 people in
2006. Surrounding
New England states have also seen increases greater than the national
average.

Despite this rapid increase, the state currently lacks much of the
capacity for
doing the tick surveillance, data integration, and epidemiological
modeling necessary
to respond to the public health needs of this disease. Moreover,
changes in climate,
land use, and socio-economic conditions in the near future are likely
to further
alter the patterns and dynamics of coupled human-environmental systems
thereby substantially
affecting the pathogen-vector-host relationships of infectious
diseases.

Over time, the team will build the capacity to identify potential hot
spots for
transmission of Lyme to humans thus making an early warning system
possible. This
infrastructure could also be applied to the study and tracking of
other vector-borne
diseases such as Eastern equine encephalitis, West Nile virus, both of
which have
shown up in the state, and the deadly form of avian flu, which has the
potential
to appear in the U.S., including New Hampshire.

"That predictive ability is something we'll achieve down the road,"
says project co-investigator Xiangming Xiao of the UNH Complex Systems
Research
Center within the Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space
(EOS). Xiao
specializes in the applications of satellite remote sensing and
geographical information
systems (GIS) technologies to ecosystems science and natural
resources. He adds,
"Before we can make predictions we have to build the research and
education
capacity."

Ultimately, that capacity will involve combining the remotely sensed
data with data
from a new systematic tick surveillance and testing program. In turn,
these data
will be integrated into a mathematical model to generate a diagnostic
and a predictive
capability. The remotely sensed data includes highly detailed
biophysical and biochemical
information derived from satellite-based optical and radar imagery of
the landscape
favored by white-tailed deer and small rodents - important hosts for
the tick species
responsible for transmitting Lyme disease.

"Lyme is an emerging disease in the state," says project co-
investigator
Jason Stull, who holds a dual appointment as the State Public Health
Veterinarian
with the New Hampshire Health Department and as assistant clinical
professor in
the UNH Department of Health Management and Policy. "Information
provided by
this project will be critical in order to better understand the
ecology and human
risk of Lyme disease in the state, which in turn will directly assist
in its prevention
and control," Stull adds.

The successful proposal, entitled "Enhancing Research and Education
Capacity
for Integration of Earth Observations, Infectious Diseases Ecology and
Public Health
in New Hampshire," is part of NASA's Experimental Program to
Stimulate
Competitive Research.

The federal EPSCoR program is designed to assist states in
establishing an academic
research enterprise directed towards a long-term, self-sustaining and
competitive
capability that will contribute to the states' economic viability and
development.

NASA's EPSCoR program in the state is managed by the New Hampshire
Space Grant
Consortium - one of 52 university-based consortia around the country
funded by the
space agency. Space Grant is a national network of colleges and
universities that
contributes to the nation's science and technology enterprise by
funding research,
education, and public service projects.

UNH research professor David Bartlett directs the state's Space Grant
program
and also is the principle investigator on the Lyme project. Bartlett
notes that
the recent award will galvanize an emerging area of research strength
at UNH and
across the state.

"Applying space technology to disease ecology is a promising new
field, and
this project will further develop existing technologies as well as
help initiate
a training program for students in a variety of fields," Bartlett
says. He
adds, "This innovative collaboration of specialists in remote sensing,
geographic
information systems, ecology, and public health places New Hampshire
to lead future
efforts in the state, in the region, and around the globe."

The long-term goal of the research team is to establish a center of
excellence in
the application of geospatial technology - satellite remote sensing,
global positioning
systems, and GIS - for disease ecology and public health at UNH. The
program aims
to substantially raise the competitiveness of research programs in the
state and
to promote economic development and job opportunity in the fields of
geospatial
technology, science, mathematics, and health in New Hampshire.

Other project investigators include scientist Rob Braswell of EOS,
Ernst Linder
of the UNH Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Rosemary Caron of
the UNH Department
of Health Management and Policy, state epidemiologist Jose Thier
Montero of the
Department of Health and Human Services, and William Salas, president
and chief
scientist of Applied Geosolutions in Durham.

###

For further information on the New Hampshire Space Grant Consortium
and the state's
EPSCoR program, visit http://www.nhsgc.sr.unh.edu, and http://www.epscor.unh.edu,
respectively.

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ Print Article | E-mail Article | Close
Window ]

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages