Val-de-Travers, a district in the canton of Neuchâtel/Neuenburg
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Scientists agree that curing cancer involves unlocking the complexities of the cell, and Kevin Travers is on a team that might have its fingers on that elusive key.
In Stanford UniversityÂ’s biochemistry department, Travers is conducting postdoctoral research on the behavior of certain cellular molecules that are instrumental in transferring information within the cell as it carries out its basic functions, including growth, expansion, multiplication, and division.
Travers, who double-majored in biochemistry and mathematics, credits his undergraduate research opportunities with helping him choose a career path.
Travers was a woman who never married, wore trousers when she felt like it, had a transformative and emotionally charged relationship with an older married man, and entered into a long-term live-in relationship with another woman.
Travers wrote the first volume quickly, patching together the episodes of Mary Poppins and the children with those of Mary’s excursions—to her own “Fairyland,” on a private jaunt with Bert.
Travers was intimately involved in all aspects of the physical production of her books, including the color of the dust jackets and the typeface.