Word: proteins
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...factory. Suddenly the virus slips into the complex living cell which, factory-like, has a definite schedule for receiving raw materials and processing them for the benefit of the whole organism. Either before or just after it slips in, the virus sheds its coat, a swatch of protein...
Nobel prizewinning Physicist Willard Libby plans to take a large supply of sleeping pills into his own $30 did-it-him-self shelter, so that he and his family could doze out most of the ordeal. Several companies are selling prepackaged, high-protein emergency food supplies, and the Mormon church is distributing a two-week supply of emergency rations, packed in a neat metal cylinder, to all its members, along with the urgent suggestion that all good Mormons stockpile a full two-year supply in their larders. Others purvey all-purpose packages, such as the Bolton Farm Packing...
...into which the survivors emerged would lack certain valuable things. Most large mammals are known to be just as radiation-sensitive as humans, so domestic animals that survived the bombs would soon die from eating contaminated forage. Human survivors would have to go without meat, milk and other accustomed protein foods. Forest lovers to the end, the Emory biologists made one positive recommendation. Pine seeds, they said, should be stockpiled in shelters so that the earth's pine forests can eventually be restored...
...shed new light on the transmission of hereditary traits in mammals and on the origin of genetic abnormalities. After experiments with the sperm of fish and fowl, rabbits and bulls, the Manhattan researchers carefully washed the human sperm to rid it of enzymes, then treated the DNA tough protein topcoat with a chemical that freed the 400,000 chainlike DNA molecules for examination...
...water; when the nutrients have been exhausted, they argue, Salvinia will not grow so fast. Even more optimistic is a group that is trying to make Salvinia a valuable local crop; if ways can be found to harvest it cheaply, it might prove to be acceptable cattle feed, and protein extracted from its leaves might be good food for humans. One Rhodesian industrialist claims that dried, compressed Salvinia might make fine fiberboard. But none of these schemes are working yet, and the little green fern remains the victor...