Word: schultze
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...only concrete statistics pertain web-streaming, the newfangled way to listen to the radio online. According to WHRB’s General Manager, Kenneth D. Schultz ’07, over 15,000 streams were launched through their website last month for a total of 12,000 hours. During “Orgy Season” last January—when the various programs showcase the works of specific composers, groups, or artists—the tally reaches 17,000 hours...
...WHRB will be broadcasting the greatest number of hours a week of classical music,” says Schultz...
...Schultz continues, “We think [WCRB’s folding] has the possibility to bring in more money. We will have the most dynamic classical programming in Boston. That’s a big opportunity...
...Schultz and his partners at the University of Florida slipped into the wound-healing business in a roundabout way. Schultz was studying uncontrolled cancer growth and teaching biochemistry at the University of Louisville in 1985 when a student who had worked in a burn unit suggested that the way cells respond to cancer could point to a new method to help burn victims heal without their wounds becoming infected. The notion intrigued Schultz and led to the invention of his antibacterial bandages 20 years later...
...hottest potential applications for Schultz's invention is fighting burns from sulfur mustard, which was Saddam Hussein's poison gas of choice. (He deployed it against Iraq's Kurds and stockpiled it for use on coalition troops.) The U.S. Army has asked Schultz and his company, Quick-Med Technologies of Gainesville, Fla., to develop a dressing that could be used to treat sulfur-mustard blisters. Meanwhile, the Department of Defense has ordered up $1 million worth of research into a mustard-gas ointment. "It's all the same technology," says Schultz. "It's just adapted for different uses...