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David Miles Hogg (born April 12, 2000) is an American gun control activist. He rose to prominence during the 2018 United States gun violence protests as a student survivor of the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting , helping lead several high-profile protests, marches, and boycotts, including the boycott of The Ingraham Angle .
Pardis Christine Sabeti ( Persian: پردیس ثابتی; born December 25, 1975) is an American computational biologist, medical geneticist, and evolutionary geneticist. [2] She is a professor in the Center for Systems Biology and Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University and on the faculty of the Center for ...
David Addison Haig (born 28 June 1958) is an Australian evolutionary biologist, geneticist, and professor in Harvard University 's Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology. [1] He is interested in intragenomic conflict, genomic imprinting and parent–offspring conflict, and wrote the book Genomic Imprinting and Kinship.
The Parkland survivor and March for Our Lives co-founder is still fighting for gun restrictions, but his approach to activism has changed
At just 18 years, Hogg’s life completely changed after the deadly shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., which took the lives of 17 people.
Roger David Kornberg (born April 24, 1947) is an American biochemist and professor of structural biology at Stanford University School of Medicine. Kornberg was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2006 for his studies of the process by which genetic information from DNA is copied to RNA, "the molecular basis of eukaryotic transcription."
David Goldstein [3] David Emil Reich [4] (born July 14, 1974) is an American geneticist known for his research into the population genetics of ancient humans, including their migrations and the mixing of populations, discovered by analysis of genome -wide patterns of mutations. He is professor in the department of genetics at the Harvard ...
Microbiology. Institutions. Harvard Medical School. Thesis. (1952) Doctoral advisor. Howard J. Mueller. Harold Amos (September 7, 1918 [1] – February 26, 2003 [2]) was an American microbiologist. He taught at Harvard Medical School for nearly fifty years and was the first African American department chair of the school.