May

28

 Here is part of a recent article on a professor involved in HGH cloning research:

Teachers can have a profound effect on the careers of their students. Just ask Professor John Shine, who detested biochemistry during a miserable three years studying veterinary science at Sydney University. A few years later, however, when he’d switched to a general science degree at ANU, an inspiring biochemistry lecturer instilled in him a fascination for molecular biology and how genes work.

“In a sense, that was what started me on my scientific career,” says Shine, 61, the executive director of Sydney’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research. He’s internationally recognised for his ground-breaking research cloning human hormone (HGH) genes - built on a biochemistry foundation.

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