+ Follow HELA Tag
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 795760
[Title] => Truly immortal
[Summary] => I kept imagining her cells as they were embedded on a 14” x 20” frame.
[DatePublished] => 2012-04-12 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 133961
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1489734
[AuthorName] => Maria Isabel Garcia
[SectionName] => Science and Environment
[SectionUrl] => science-and-environment
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 720852
[Title] => Don't cell yourself short
[Summary] => A poor black woman enters John Hopkins Hospital, Virginia, in 1951; the 40-year-old woman is diagnosed with cervical cancer, and before undergoing radium treatment, a biopsy of her cancerous cervical cells is taken and placed in a lab; the woman dies from the cancer, but her cells live on, multiplying in lab Petri dishes like wild mushrooms; despite the mutation caused by cancer, the cells seem to thrive, taking over any environment in which they’re placed.
[DatePublished] => 2011-08-28 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 136008
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1804693
[AuthorName] => Scott R. Garceau
[SectionName] => Sunday Lifestyle
[SectionUrl] => sunday-life
[URL] =>
)
)
)
HELA
Array
(
[results] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 795760
[Title] => Truly immortal
[Summary] => I kept imagining her cells as they were embedded on a 14” x 20” frame.
[DatePublished] => 2012-04-12 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 133961
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1489734
[AuthorName] => Maria Isabel Garcia
[SectionName] => Science and Environment
[SectionUrl] => science-and-environment
[URL] =>
)
[1] => Array
(
[ArticleID] => 720852
[Title] => Don't cell yourself short
[Summary] => A poor black woman enters John Hopkins Hospital, Virginia, in 1951; the 40-year-old woman is diagnosed with cervical cancer, and before undergoing radium treatment, a biopsy of her cancerous cervical cells is taken and placed in a lab; the woman dies from the cancer, but her cells live on, multiplying in lab Petri dishes like wild mushrooms; despite the mutation caused by cancer, the cells seem to thrive, taking over any environment in which they’re placed.
[DatePublished] => 2011-08-28 00:00:00
[ColumnID] => 136008
[Focus] => 0
[AuthorID] => 1804693
[AuthorName] => Scott R. Garceau
[SectionName] => Sunday Lifestyle
[SectionUrl] => sunday-life
[URL] =>
)
)
)
abtest