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Chad A. Mirkin, Northwestern University, George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. Photo by Bill Arsenault. 

DNA Blueprints Guide The Construction Of Specific Human Structures

Chad Mirkin discusses using DNA to build a three-dimensional structure out of gold, likening the process to building a house. Starting with basic materials such as bricks, wood, siding, stone and shingles, a construction team can build many different types of houses out of the same building blocks.
 
The article includes an audio recording of the full interview. Photo courtesy of the UCSD School of Medicine.
Worth Noting: Scout Takes A Hike From The Maryland Mansion Print E-mail
Government - Worth Noting
Daniel C. Vock   
Saturday, 21 June 2008 17:00
Worth Noting.
Daniel C. Vock
Daniel C. Vock
Stateline Staff Writer
Washington, DC, USA. The Colorado Lottery turns to scratch-and-sniff. Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley evicts Scout, one of his family’s dogs, from the governor’s mansion. Georgia puts mental health on the Xerox. A Florida prisoner bids for the state House. And the Quaker State slams its door on Muslims. In case you missed those stories this week, Worth Noting fills you in.
 
Scratch-and-sniff technology made the jump from stickers to lottery tickets, The Denver Post notes. The Colorado Lottery announced plans to sell crossword tickets that smell like coffee, chocolate and flower bouquets. The scented cards are aimed at women, who already buy 70 percent of the crossword tickets.
 
Scout, a four-year-old mutt.Doggone! Scout is out of the Maryland governor’s mansion. Scout, a four-year-old mutt, got the boot after biting the 5-year-old son of Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley, reports The (Annapolis) Capital.
 
Scout, who’s been in the doghouse for his bark as well as his bite, moved in with O’Malley family friends. He may get to come back to State Circle for a visit later this summer.
 
There’s plenty of reasons Jose N. Vazquez is a long shot for a seat in the Florida House. First, he’s a write-in candidate. Second, he’s in prison. And third, the prison he’s in is nearly 200 miles from the district Vazquez wants to represent, the St. Petersburg Times points out. Vazquez was allowed to register as a write-in candidate, even though Florida prohibits felons from running for office and requires legislators to live in the district they represent.
 
Change you can Xerox is alive in Georgia state government. A task force charged with overhauling the state’s mental health system lifted paragraphs-long passages straight from a 2004 report in Michigan, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. Gov. Sonny Perdue (R) appointed the commission after the newspaper exposed dangerous conditions in the state’s mental hospitals. The report, released earlier this month, also includes information copied from two other sources.
 
The Quaker State won’t be extending its brotherly love to a gathering of Muslims this weekend, the Harrisburg bureau of The Associated Press writes. Over the objection of many of his colleagues, state Rep. Daryl Metcalfe (R) derailed a resolution honoring the U.S. chapter of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community’s 60th annual conference. “The Muslims do not recognize Jesus Christ as God, and I will be voting negative,” Metcalfe said on the House floor.
 
Articles sourced from Stateline are prepared and printed with permission and do not necessarily convey an official position of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates. TS-Si thanks The Pew Charitable Trusts for support and cooperation.
 
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Last Updated on Friday, 20 June 2008 03:01