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Word: biochemists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...where it went," says Duelfer of the Iraqi bio cache, "we could never nail it all down." Even if inspectors had found all the materials before they left the country, Iraq has almost certainly made more in the past three years. Thanks to Rihab Taha, a British-educated Iraqi biochemist, nicknamed Dr. Germ by the U.N. inspectors, Saddam still has the best biological expertise in the region...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Saddam's Got | 5/13/2002 | See Source »

Mainly by putting old doubts in new bottles. Michael Behe, a biochemist at Lehigh University, invented the label "irreducibly complex" for structures that could not have arisen incrementally. And rather than dwell on the eyeball, he applies the term to such microscopic entities as the human blood-clotting mechanism. In his book Darwin's Black Box, Behe says this mechanism, involving more than a dozen proteins, could hardly have emerged full-blown in a single mutation. Yet it couldn't have been built one protein at a time, he says, because without any one protein it would be useless...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Darwinian Struggle | 3/11/2002 | See Source »

...toxin. UNSCOM destroyed most of those supplies, but officials believe that Iraq hid four times as much anthrax and twice as much botulinum as was discovered. Iraq still has the best biological expertise in the region--thanks in part to the efforts of Rihab Taha, 48, a British-educated biochemist known as Dr. Germ--and experts agree that since UNSCOM left, Saddam has been aggressively stockpiling materials and converting production facilities for bioterror...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Does Saddam Have? | 10/22/2001 | See Source »

...Nunn-Lugar may have to make due with its pre-attack allotment, the grim events of the past three weeks have cast the 10-year-old program in a new light. This time around, there is a renewed sense of purpose: No one wants to see a disillusioned Ukrainian biochemist drift into the wrong laboratory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nunn-Lugar Act: Old Fears, New Era | 10/1/2001 | See Source »

That approach didn't make sense to Stanford biochemist Patrick Brown. Convinced that tissues and cells could be studied as collective systems rather than as individual components, he devised a method to mechanically print more than 20,000 gene molecules onto 45,000 tiny spots on a conventional microscope slide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Genomics: Gene Detective | 8/20/2001 | See Source »

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