Yeah, maybe if he got down to 1.0 Angstrom he could get it in the front door.
Scott On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 8:39 AM, Jacob Keller <j-kell...@fsm.northwestern.edu > wrote: > Maybe you could refine it using our new-fangled methods to improve the > model? (Couldn't resist such irony!) > > Jacob > > On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:34 AM, Katherine Sippel > <katherine.sip...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I'm going to interject into the middle of this rousing though protracted > > debate to pick your brains. I am in possession of a rather large and > intact > > brass scale Kendrew model (sans mirrors). Due to facility restructuring > we > > no longer have room for it. I have approached the local health science > and > > natural science museums but have gotten nothing but the run around. This > > amazing model is in need of a forever home and I'm stumped as far as > > alternative ideas. I am seriously considering suspending a Mars bars in > the > > sugar binding cleft, calling it MBP, and trying to spin it to the art > museum > > as a modernist piece commenting on the diets in Western civilization. > Either > > that or putting it in my dining room if I can get it in the door. Any > > suggestions would be appreciated. > > > > Cheers, > > > > Katherine > > > > > > -- > ******************************************* > Jacob Pearson Keller > Northwestern University > Medical Scientist Training Program > email: j-kell...@northwestern.edu > ******************************************* > -- Scott D. Pegan, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Chemistry & Biochemistry University of Denver Office: 303 871 2533 Fax: 303 871 2254