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Genome recoding could offer new modes of virus resistance

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Plus: How Reading Got Farm Women Through the Depression [The Linguistics of Cooties ] | daily@jstor.

Plus: How Reading Got Farm Women Through the Depression [] To ensure delivery of your JSTOR Daily please add daily@jstor.org to your address book. [] Weekly Digest [Web Version](700e/ct0_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] 700e/ct1_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1 [] [Can We Protect Against Coronavirus by Rewriting Our Genomes?](700e/ct1_1/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] By Sophie Fessl [] Face masks, social distancing, lockdowns: Around the world, countries are racing to stop the transmission of the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, and to mitigate the devastating effects of COVID-19, the disease it causes. Scientists, of course, have a major role to play in the global effort, modeling the epidemic and aiding in the development of new drugs. But one group of scientists has been working on another, entirely different way of confronting viruses and preventing infection—editing the human genome. [] [Read More](700e/ct1_2/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] [] [] 700e/ct2_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1 [] [Has the U.S. Government Abandoned Birds?](700e/ct2_1/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] By Lina Zeldovich [] Recent changes to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 leave birds vulnerable to industry, experts say. [Read more...](700e/ct2_2/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] [] 700e/ct3_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1 [] [The First Movie Kiss](700e/ct3_1/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] By Kristin Hunt [] The public fascination was so intense that fans soon started demanding live reenactments. [Read more...](700e/ct3_2/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] [] 700e/ct4_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1 [] [The Linguistics of Cooties (and Other Weird Things Kids Say)](700e/ct4_1/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] By Chi Luu [] The game of cooties lets children learn about the idea of contagion, but kid culture and wordplay aren't meant for adults. [Read more...](700e/ct4_2/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] ADVERTISEMENT [] [JSTOR Daily Patreon](700e/ct5_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] [] 700e/ct6_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1 [] [How Reading Got Farm Women Through the Depression](700e/ct6_1/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] By Livia Gershon [] They worked over sixty hours a week but were also insatiable readers. [Read more...](700e/ct6_2/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] [] 700e/ct7_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1 [] [Yes, Mass Observation Still Wants to Know about Your Life](700e/ct7_1/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] By Livia Gershon [] The organization has collected interviews and diaries recording ordinary life in Britain over the course of decades. A pandemic won't stop it now. [Read more...](700e/ct7_2/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) [] [] [] Contact Us 101 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10006, USA [daily.jstor.org](700e/ct8_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) | daily@jstor.org | [@JSTOR_Daily](700e/ct9_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) | [Facebook](700e/ct10_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1) ©2004-2020 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA. Interested in advertising with JSTOR Daily? [Contact us](700e/ct11_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1). If you prefer not to receive email messages from JSTOR Daily in the future, you may [unsubscribe here](700e/ct12_0/1?sid=TV2%3ACtEOxEVe1).

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