Word: enriched
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...currently seeking outside capital for a major research project: developing a bacterial organism that would convert biomass like wood or grass into ethanol, which is used in the production of industrial chemicals. The company is also accelerating research into the mass production of vitamins and amino acids used to enrich foods. Success could cut the cost of additives in feed corn from $50 to as low as $2 a pound...
Such serious flourishes enrich this Figaro--without detracting from the abundant comedy, they help recreate for us a sense of why this play was taken up as a banner of revolution across Europe, why it was suppressed by governments as an act of subversion. It's a sense obtainable today neither from the opera--performed extravagantly before wealth audiences--not from the leaden translations footnoted in drama texts. If there are individual lapses in the production, the whole moves unquestionably in the right direction--towards, Beaumarchais, capturing his language, temperament and ideas...
Sacks says the College should have a more comprehensive legal program, explaining. "There is a perception of law that would enrich all college graduates...
...with the all-important win or lose, parental support that has made the Rapps such standouts--both inside and out of the pool. Swimming is treated as just one facet of the family's life, and goal setting and goal achieving are viewed as two incidental lessons that will enrich later years...
...word "diversity" peppers Willie's conversation. To him it is nothing, like the concept of racial balance, which he calls "head-counting." Diversity stems from a recognition that students--and teachers--from different racial and ethnic backgrounds enrich the educational process. "The existential history of minorities is different from the existential history of majorities," he says...