Word: rhee
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...freshman Samantha Rosekrans was ousted, 6-3, 7-6(5), in the first round by Dina Senkina of Temple. After her loss, Rosekrans teamed up with junior Catriona Stewart on Saturday in the doubles main draw. The two lost their first match, 8-2, to Sarah Lederhandler and Jessie Rhee of Yale. Captain Stephanie Schnitter and freshman Agnes Sibilski also paired up in the doubles main draw. The duo lost, 8-3, to Cornelia Carapcea and Pascaline Cette of Maryland-Baltimore County in the first round. “The doubles got outplayed this weekend,” Green said...
...Crimson, but a poor showing in singles gave the Bulldogs a 5-2 victory.With Harvard winning at No. 1 doubles and falling at No. 3, the battle for the doubles point came down to the second spot, with Mukundan and Brook facing Yale’s Jessica Rhee and Sara Lederhandler. Mukundan and Brook overcame a 5-3 deficit in a 9-7 victory.Despite winning the doubles point, the Crimson’s inexperienced lineup yet again failed to capitalize on the advantage in singles play.“We won the doubles point again,” Graham said...
...Julie Y. Rhee, Shannon E. Flynn, and Nicola C. Perlman contributed to the reporting of this story...
...shambles, the status of the world's most famous dog hangs in the balance. The embattled scientist maintains that Snuppy is the world's first canine clone, and he even hired an independent Korean DNA lab, HumanPass Inc., to verify that assertion. The verdict: HumanPass CEO Seung Jae Rhee told TIME last week, "There is no dispute about these results, and so I am 100% certain on Snuppy's authenticity." But since HumanPass is in essence working for Hwang, that's hardly good enough for the investigative panel at Seoul National University, which is carrying out independent tests...
...resulting embryo splits in two. With a clone, the situation is different. Because the cloning process that Hwang says he used to create Snuppy involves two dogs--one for the nucleus and another for the egg--Snuppy's mitochondrial DNA should not match Tai's. That's what Rhee's scientists say they've found and what Hwang undoubtedly hopes the university and Nature will find as well. Final, ironclad proof of Snuppy's provenance would involve showing that the dog's mitochondrial DNA matches that of his egg donor. It's not clear, however, whether that test is being...