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26 THE STUFF OF LIFE
o cellular activity, but as allace, King, and Sanders point out in Biology: t rarest text), oday al processes suc and memory. e kno  kno  time you could pluck one from your body and take it audy o many of Morgan’s peers as t scientists today migure a strayt and examine it under a microscope.

    ainly true  someted ingcell replication. Finally, in 1944, after fifteen years of effort, a team at titute in Mantan, led by a brilliant but diffident Canadian named Osricky experiment in eria ly infectious by crossing it  DNA  certainly ive agent in y. trian-born bioc Ered quite seriously t Avery’s discovery wo Nobel Prizes.

    Unfortunately, Avery itute, a strong-ein ent named Alfred Mirsky,  Avery’s  ies at titute in Stock to give Avery a Nobel Prize. Avery by time y-six years old and tired. Unable to deal ress and controversy, ion and never  near a lab again. But ots elseructure of DNA.

    ting person in t certainly ec, to crack tructure of DNA.

    Pauling ermining tecture of molecules and allograpec o peering into t of DNA. In an exceedingly distinguis  tructureriple  a double one, and never quite got on t track. Instead, victory fellto an unlikely quartet of scientists in England eam, often  onspeaking terms, and  part novices in the field.

    Of t to a conventional boffin omic bomb. tis—Crick of type t bloype t produce coal.

    t unconventional of tson, an American prodigy  least part of tion for some of tered ty of C fifteen. y-ttaco tory in Cambridge. I
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