翻訳と辞書
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・ Park Jin-pyo
・ Park Jin-seop
・ Park Jin-soo
・ Park Jin-woo
・ Park Jin-yi
・ Park Jin-yong
・ Park Jin-young
・ Park Jong-chan
・ Park Jong-ho
・ Park Jong-hoon
・ Park Jong-hwan
・ Park Jong-il
・ Park Jong-jin (born 1980)
・ Park Jong-jin (born 1987)
・ Park Jong-kil
Park Jong-sei
・ Park Jong-sin
・ Park Jong-sun
・ Park Jong-won
・ Park Jong-woo
・ Park Jong-woo (footballer, born 1979)
・ Park Jong-yang
・ Park Joo-bong
・ Park Joo-ho
・ Park Joo-hyun
・ Park Joo-mi
・ Park Joon-gang
・ Park Joon-kyung
・ Park Joong-hoon
・ Park Ju-sung


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Park Jong-sei : ウィキペディア英語版
Park Jong-sei

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Park Jong-sei (born 1943), also spelled Park Jong-se, is a South Korean chemistry researcher and former government official. He rose to worldwide notice during the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul for his role in detecting Ben Johnson's steroid use. He was later the head of South Korea's Food and Drug Administration (now the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety) under President Kim Dae-jung from March 1998 until January 1999, and founded protein microarray development start-up Lab Frontier in 2002.
==Early career==
A graduate of Seoul University's Department of Chemistry, Park moved to the United States for higher studies in 1966, where he attended graduate school at the University of Rochester and did postdoctoral research at Georgetown University before joining the faculty of Johns Hopkins University. He later naturalised as a U.S. citizen and worked for the government of Maryland's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Park moved back to South Korea in 1986, where he served as head of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology's Applied Sciences Division. He resumed his original South Korean citizenship and renounced U.S. citizenship in 1996 before joining the Food and Drug Administration, as South Korea did not permit dual citizenship at the time.
In his capacity at KIST, Park was involved with drug testing at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul as head of the Olympic Doping Control Center. There, he was responsible for the detection of stanozolol in urine samples from Ben Johnson which resulted in the latter being stripped of his gold medal. Park took great care in performing the urinalysis, and even repeated the test procedure from scratch to be entirely sure of his results before reporting the sample to International Olympic Committee officials; he did not find out to whom the sample belonged until days later, as the samples were not labelled by name per standard procedure.〔 ''ABC World News'' named him "Person of the Week" on 30 September 1998 for his role in bringing the scandal to light. He also detected marijuana usage by three athletes, though no action was taken against them as marijuana was not a banned performance-enhancing substance. Park clashed with Olympics officials over other aspects of how he did his job, and made angry comments to the ''Washington Post'' about false samples with trace amounts of banned substances which had been planted among genuine samples in his lab.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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