Word: molecular
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...specializing in X-ray photo lithography, which is used in semiconductor manufacturing. Then a third company heard rumors of the impending deal, made a hurried study and offered the firm $7.5 million for only a 50% interest. It was eagerly accepted. Amgen, a genetic-engineering company founded by a molecular biology professor from U.C.L.A. and a vice president from Abbott Laboratories near Chicago, raised an astonishing $19 million earlier this year. That was the third largest amount ever given to a venture firm. Although the initial risk and rewards of venture capital belong mostly to the small select club...
...formaldehyde and then dyed. Breyers and other producers of the natural article make do with the real thing-dark red to black, imperfect and not dyed. At the other end of the frozen rainbow from Breyers are Marty Rex and Marcel Arsenault. They were writing their doctoral dissertations in molecular biology ten years ago at the University of Colorado at Boulder, when Arsenault's homemade ice cream turned out to be so popular at parties they tried selling a few gallons to stores during the summer break. They now own Mountain High, a wildly popular superpremium freezery in Colorado...
...concern, Harvard has become closely associated with the scramble to squeeze profits from exotic biomedical innovations. The two most recent agreements with Du Pont and the German company, Hoechst-Roussel, differ vastly from the failed attempt to set up a business with Mark S. Ptashne, professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. But all three cases have contributed to a nation-wide reevaluation of academic-commercial links and a hurried attempt by members of Congress and the administration to catch up with a trend some say could lead to academic disaster before it produces any scientific breakthroughs...
...stepped the gene splicers from Genentech, who managed to isolate the gene in the virus that orders up the production of VP3. A molecular fragment containing these instructions was then spliced into a plasmid, or small circular collection of DNA, taken from an E. coli bacterium. Then the plasmid and its "recombined" DNA were inserted back into E. coli. Not only did the recipient bacteria begin cranking out VP3, but all their offspring reproduced the protein as well...
...whole tradition of French landscape runs through Pissarro's work. He is a link between the weighty, materialist vision of Courbet and the molecular analyses of impressionism, and the best of his landscapes possess an unremitting gravity of construction. Everything in a painting like The "Côte du Jallais," Pontoise, 1867, is, so to speak, freighted with scruple, rendered dense by inspection-the blue air and clouds no less than the swatches of plowed and seeded field and the massed trees. Its low tones and construction by horizontal bands make one think of Corot, but its directness...