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Bt pesticide resistance
Xref: 127.0.0.1 sci.med.nutrition:171349 nz.general:593935 sci.agricultu63629
At the time she claimed to be associated with Oregon state she had no job there and only had the use of the faculties of one forestry professor. According to the department of Forestry, Biology and Plant Pathology she had no connection with them. I called and asked. It was obvious I wasn;t the first. I did not ask 2 full professors and a former dean and acting department head for a written opinion of the paper. When the someone lies about their affiliation with a university, the publication of a paper and claims higher statistical certainty than they have trials and discard data without documentation I don't look any further. I did check my evaluation of the statistics of the paper because it had been some time since I had worked through a statistical presentation and didn't want to make an error. Any one of the improprieties she fostered on the Royal Commission is inexcusable in total they constitute fraud. And the scientific community and most of the press agreed. Gordon "Brian Sandle" wrote in message ... Gordon Couger wrote: Elaine has no connation with Oregon State University other than a courtesy card giving her library privileges and one professor allows her to use his equipment, Then do you think this is wrong? Linkname: DR ELAINE INGHAM URL: http://www.westnet.com.au/satlink/KA...ham%202003.htm size: 495 lines [...] In 1986, Elaine moved to Oregon State University, and joined the faculty in both Forest Science and Botany and Plant Pathology. For several years, Elaine's "home" department was Botany and Plant Pathology. In 1991,because the number of samples from outside Elaine's immediate program being sent to her for analysis were becoming a large component of what she was doing, Elaine opened a service through the University called the Soil Microbial Biomass Service. The Service offered researchers and commercial clients the ability to have soil samples analyzed for soil foodweb organisms. During this time, Elaine became known as an energetic and easy-to-understand speaker who explained what life in the soil was all about, and she started speaking to groups throughout the United States about the Soil Foodweb. By 1995, the number of samples coming into the Soil Microbial Biomass Service was close to 8,000 samples a year, and the amount of lab space required to process this number of samples was greater than originally planned. The head of Elaine's department asked that the commercial portion of the Biomass Service be taken off-campus. Thus, in the fall of 1996, Soil Foodweb Inc. became a commercial enterprise. With the move into a private lab, Elaine's focus turned more to grower-related issues, focusing on the expense of intensive chemical use as well as the damage these chemicals inflict on beneficial organisms in the soil and on foliage. The research and practical understanding and application of soil organisms continue at Soil Foodweb Inc., while much of the academic side of her work remains at the University. In December 2000 a new Soil Foodweb lab was opened in Australia, at Southern Cross University in Lismore, Australia so that growers down-under could have overnight access to the assays they need to improve plant production without the use of high levels of inorganic chemicals. The Lab Director at the Australia lab is Merline Olson, Certified Soil Foodweb Advisor. [...] her paper was not published until after the fact, what the EPA calls peer review does not meet the standards of any other peer reviewed journal It was peer reviewed first by teh journal it was published and later by EPA for their purposes. and the results claimed by statistics used in the paper were not supported by the data in the paper according to 3 professors that teach statistics. Do you have a ref for that please? |
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