On Science as a Vocation "In the face of so much uncertainty, would I recommend a career in science to my grandchildren? Emphatically yes! Science is unique among all human activities -- unlike law, business, art, or religion -- it is identification with progress...There were no grants then, laboratory resources were meager, and academic jobs were almost nonexistent. Those were not the good old days, but rich or poor, science is great! To frame a question and arrive at an answer that opens a window to yet another question, and to do this in the company of like-minded people with whom one can share the thrill of unanticipated and extended vistas, is what science is all about. That is what will sustain us in the days and years ahead." - Arthur Kornberg in "Science in the stationary phase", Science 1995, 269, 1799. |
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On Meeting Remarkable People Company
of distinguished fellows at U.C. San Diego (1994)Standing: (left to right) Jannette Rusch, Joe Corbo (now at Washington University), Scott Barolo (U. Michigan), Bob Zeller (San Diego State U.), Haini Cai(U. Georgia), David Arnosti. Seated: Michael Levine (U. Calif., Berkeley), Christianne Nusslein-Volhard (U. Tübingen, Nobel Prize 1995), Keith Maggert (Texas A & M), Sue Gray |
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On Life "Nothing worth doing is completed in our lifetime; therefore we must be saved by hope. Nothing true or beautiful or good makes complete sense in any immediate context of history; Therefore, we must be saved by faith. Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore, we are saved by love." -Reinhold Niebuhr, in The Irony of American History |
On Middle Western State Universities Vignette:Press Relations from Science -from the experience of James A. Van Allen, cited in Discovery of the Magnetosphere (C. Stewart Gillmore and John R. Spreiter, Eds.; American Geophysical Union)
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