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EDITORS' NOTE |
We are pleased to welcome two new members to the editorial board of STEM CELLS, Diana Linnekin (Basic Research Laboratory Center for Cancer Research, NCI) and Nadir Askenasy (Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel, Petach Tikva, Israel).
They join the following new editorial board members: Malcolm Brenner (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX), Eliane Gluckman (Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris, France), Susumu Ikehara (Kansai Medical University, Moriguchi City, Osaka, Japan), Richard Jones (Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine), Joanne Kurtzberg (Duke University Medical Center), Thomas MacVittie (University of Maryland Cancer Center), Ronald McKay (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, NIH), Donald Orlic (The National Human Genome Research Institute, NIH), Wanda Piacibello (IRCC Cancer Center, Candiolo, Italy), Jeffrey Rothstein (Neurosciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine), and William Vainchenker (Institut Gustave-Roussy, Villejuif Cedex, France). We look forward to publishing their peer-reviewed submissions within these pages as well as to their encouragement of high impact articles of interest to the broad stem cell scientific community [1].
We also acknowledge our collective gratitude to Philippe Hénon, Roland Mertelsmann, Angelo Carella, Steven Clark, and Brian Lord for their years of dedicated service to the Journal.
It gives us great pleasure to launch the new journal feature, "Stem Cells in the News" edited by one of our board members, Robert G. Hawley and his colleague, Donna A. Sobieski. We salute them for their commitment to keeping us abreast of significant developments in the stem cell field that holds such promise in clinical applications. Please send your announcements and noteworthy news releases to Bob at hawleyr{at}usa.redcross.org.
We also pause and lend a memorial tribute to Eugene P. Cronkite who was one of those who helped to found STEM CELLS twenty years ago. Gene's passing brings to mind the adage that our vision has been made clearer and we can see farther because of the giants' shoulders upon whom we have been honored to stand. Gene was such a giant whose legacy casts a great shadow across the broadening expanse of stem cell research.
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