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...Culture: Nobelist's Defiant Opera

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Losing Hearts and Minds | 12/15/2002 | See Source »

...center of gravity of English writing. So much of the new, best stuff was coming from what once had been the periphery of Empire: from Africa, India, the Caribbean, New Zealand, Australia. Naipaul's work was a major part of this process, as was that of an earlier Nobelist, the Australian Patrick White. Naipaul wrote with piercing insight and even tenderness about ignored areas of experience (lower-middle-class Trinidadian life, for instance, in A House for Mr. Biswas, 1961). What was more, when he decided to leave Trinidad, separation gave him a great theme: the condition of being...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Peace And Understanding | 10/22/2001 | See Source »

...machines that "could be run by monkeys"). So he and Claire Fraser, his wife and collaborator, left to found a private research firm, called the Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR), where in 1994 he upped the gene-sequencing ante to a new level. At the urging of medicine Nobelist Hamilton Smith, now a Celera scientist, Venter decided to use a technique called shotgunning to sequence the entire genome of a living organism, the H. influenzae bacterium (a bug that causes ear and respiratory infections...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gene Mapper | 12/25/2000 | See Source »

AUNG SAN SUU KYI First, police. Now, family. Myanmar Nobelist sued by half brother over home

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook: Nov. 27, 2000 | 11/27/2000 | See Source »

Until then, Venter had been randomly sampling and sequencing small bits of cDNA. But one of his new recruits, Hamilton Smith, a Nobelist from Johns Hopkins', proposed a bolder approach: "shotgunning" the entire genome of an organism. The idea was dramatically simple. Using an ordinary kitchen blender, they would shatter the organism's DNA into millions of small fragments, run them through the sequencers (which can read 500 letters at a time), then reassemble them into the full genome using a high-speed computer and novel software written by in-house computer whiz Granger Sutton. By contrast, the HGP divided...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Race Is Over | 7/3/2000 | See Source »

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