Almost Famous

As a follow-up to yesterday’s post, I took a look at Wikipedia’s ‘List of Chemists’: all the Nobel laureates have entries (for example, EJ Corey, Barry Sharpless, Ahmed Zewail, etc.) and though the top of the page boldly claims ‘This is a list of famous chemists: (alphabetcal [sic] order),’ this is by no means a fleshed out list of ‘important’ chemists: Margaret Thatcher is on the list, but George Whitesides didn’t make the cut for some reason. (I don’t mean any disrespect to the former Prime Minister, but I don’t think many scientists think ‘oh yeah, she’s a chemist’ when they hear her name…)

Whether you like it or not, Wikipedia has become the first place many people look to find information (online). But the information on chemists isn’t up to snuff: as I mentioned, George Whitesides has an entry, but a number of other respected chemists in the same chemistry department don’t appear in Wikipedia (for example, Eric Jacobsen, Andrew Myers, Eugene Shakhnovich, and David Liu, just to name a few…)

So I had a thought – let’s flesh these Wikipedia entries out…

If you have time in the next week, add an entry for your Ph.D./post-doc supervisor, one of your co-workers (if you’re a professor), or someone whose work you’ve enjoyed reading for years. If they already have an entry, add some (truthful) information to it… And if you add their names to the ‘List of Chemists,’ don’t forget to put them in ‘alphabetcal’ order…

Joshua

Joshua Finkelstein (Associate Editor, Nature)

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Isotopes help pin down artificial testosterone

As two sporting stars undergo doping tests, news@nature.com finds out whether cheaters can really be caught.

In the past week, cyclist Floyd Landis and sprinter Justin Gatlin have both been singled out by doping tests – not for any new-fangled drug, but for the old-fashioned sex hormone testosterone. Landis made a spectacular comeback in the 17th leg of the Tour de France to take first place in the famous cycle race. But urine samples taken following that stunning performance showed unusually high levels of testosterone. And Gatlin, who shares the world record for the 100-metre sprint, tested positive for synthetic testosterone after a race in April this year. Both men maintain their innocence.

Read the story here.

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