Word: bindings
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...antibodies then go through testing to make sure they will bind to cancer cells with the designated receptor, that they can be absorbed by the body and that they won't have toxic side effects. Some of these studies can be done in the lab, but they quickly move into animal and finally human subjects. Already, Millennium has 40 potential targets for monoclonal-antibody drugs against various cancers, and Tepper's goal is to generate 10 to 12 new ones each year...
...several new therapies that work by cutting a cancer cells lines of communication, either preventing it from reproducing or forcing it to self-destruct. Other signal-jamming treatments use monoclonal antibodies, tiny proteins that resemble the human immune systems own antibodies but which bind to the surface of cancer cells. New York-based ImClone Systems has an antibody called IMC-C225, now in the final phases of testing in colorectal and head and neck cancer, that acts like bubble gum stuffed in a keyhole. It prevents a specialized protein known as a growth factor from fitting...
...Bush will turn from the details of litigation to planning the intricacies of a new administration. The most important thing for him to do is to bind the nation's wounds from this election drama and to reunite the country. Bush, who has campaigned as a "uniter, not a divider," has the chance to make good on his promise...
...five states have penalties for deviating from the popular vote. But in most of those states, the sanctions are relatively minor--in Oklahoma, for instance, it's a $1,000 fine. Of the states that are currently in some dispute, Florida, Iowa and New Hampshire don't try to bind their electors; Wisconsin, New Mexico and Oregon do. But it's worth noting that no elector has ever been prosecuted for being unfaithful. Throughout U.S. history, only nine electors out of some 18,000 have violated their pledges. It's going to be hard to find one who's going...
...five states have penalties for deviating from the popular vote. But in most of those states, the sanctions are relatively minor - in Oklahoma, for instance, it's a $1,000 fine. Of the states that are currently in some dispute, Florida, Iowa and New Hampshire don't try to bind their electors; Wisconsin, New Mexico and Oregon do. But it's worth noting that no elector has ever been prosecuted for being unfaithful. Throughout U.S. history, only nine electors out of some 18,000 have violated their pledges. It's going to be hard to find one who's going...