Word: goodenough
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...mentioned cell biologist Ursula Goodenough's quip that if cloning were perfected, "there'd be no need for men." If your article had been written by Jorge Luis Borges, Annie Proulx, Thomas Pynchon or another author with a penchant for serendipitous character names, I'd know for certain that "Goodenough" was herself a clone. JONATHAN BRENNER BALKIND London...
...misused, and as news from Roslin spread, apocalyptic scenarios proliferated. Journalists wrote seriously about the possibility of virgin births, resurrecting the dead and women giving birth to themselves. On the front page of the New York Times, a cell biologist from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, named Ursula Goodenough quipped that if cloning were perfected, "there'd be no need...
There is never a surplus of bodies, according to Clerke and Goodenough. In fact, says Clerke, "we just made it in under the wire this year. People aren't dying as quickly as they used...
...Goodenough also gives each student a copy of a letter written by a woman who donated her body to medical school...
...Goodenough's essays explains that the living students have more in common with their cadavers than they might think: "We see ourselves in these donors...We see our histories, our roots, and our futures, what we must become. The donors were what we are; they are what we will...