Word: molecular
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Naturally, most molecular biologists now enjoying the new prosperity point out that collaboration between universities and industry is neither new nor dangerous. Physicists and chemists, they note, have long worked for private firms?not to mention the Pentagon?with little complaint from their colleagues except, in retrospect, over the atomic bomb. Says Boyer: "Industry is far more efficient than the university in making use of scientific developments for the public good...
...which the boredom and pointlessness of Emma Bovary's life was built up, and the minutely articulated jumble of reflections behind the blank-faced nana in Manet's Bar at the Folies-Bergère, 1882. Both works, in a sense, point forward to the "objective," molecular constellations of dabbed light from which Seurat assembled his figures on the speckled lawn of the Grande Jatte. If the origins of one aspect of the avant-garde lie with Courbet, those of the other are to be found in Manet: in detachment and irony, art contemplates its nature...
David Dressler, lecturer in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, said Cairns had done "elegant work" and that his appointment would "strengthen the intellectual foundation of the school of Harvard...
...John Cairns, a prominent molecular biologist and a pioneer in cancer research, has arrived in the United States to take up his appointment as professor of Microbiology at the School of Public Health...
Howard H. Hiatt, dean of the SPH, yesterday called Cairns' appointment particularly significant because "few people with his background in molecular biology have applied that background to human problems...