Word: molecular
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...total number of students enrolled in the life sciences concentrations has been increasing over recent years. In 2001-02, for example, 658 students were enrolled in Biochemical Sciences, Biology, Chemistry, and Biological Anthropology; currently 850 students are enrolled in Biochemical Sciences, Biology, Chemistry, Biological Anthropology, Chemical & Physical Biology, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and Human Evolutionary Biology. In addition, another 56 students have integrated Life Science coursework into their Psychology concentrations through the new Social and Cognitive Neurosciences track, for a total of 906 current Life Sciences concentrators. Note too that the trend is not entirely...
...reprogramming process a little more than six months ago. “Nobody knew which genes were involved in the reprogramming process or whether it occurs randomly,” said Nimet A. Maherali, who works in Hochedlinger’s laboratory and is a teaching fellow for Molecular and Cellular Biology 125: “Stem Cells and Cloning.” “It was a big task to accomplish.” Hochedlinger’s discovery could potentially have therapeutic applications. “We now know the conditions for replacing genes of viruses with...
According to a University of Pennsylvania press release, Faust will be joined on the commencement stage by Paquito D’Rivera, a Cuban musician; Lila R. Gleitman, a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania; Bert W. O’Malley, a professor of molecular and cellular biology at Baylor College of Medicine; Cyril Ramaphosa, the former secretary general of the African National Congress; and Neil deGrasse Tyson ’80, a director at the American Museum of Natural History...
...divided government, check the excesses of any one party and send a veiled warning to everyone in Washington that it's time for a little bipartisanship. Or perhaps people simply choose the candidates they like. Campaign managers overthink things too. Consider the time wasted in war rooms parsing the molecular difference between, say, "Ready for Change" and "Change We Can Believe In," a distinction without a difference if ever there was one. Voters make their decisions at a far more visceral level than that. When they're surly - as they are now - they look for a credible candidate...
Like other sophomores who study in a foreign country, Leiby says he is trying to find direction in his academic career. He has declared a concentration in molecular and cellular biology, but Leiby says he isn’t sure it?...