Meet the successful people

ELON MUSK


Elon Musk is the most daring entrepreneur of our time.
There are few industrialists in history who could match Elon Musk's relentless drive and ingenious vision. A modern alloy of Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Howard Hughes, and Steve Jobs, Musk is the man behind PayPal, Tesla Motors, SpaceX, and SolarCity, each of which has sent shock waves throughout American business and industry. More than any other executive today, Musk has dedicated his energies and his own vast fortune to inventing a future that is as rich and far-reaching as a science fiction fantasy.
Elon Musk was born on the 28th of June 1971 in Pretoria, South Africa, from the Canadian Maye Haldeman and the South African Errol Musk. Today he is considered one of the brightest minds of the 21st century; his business projects, Tesla and SpaceX show he is a skilled businessman as well as his vision of the future, the vision of the man who is considered one of the most influential young billionaires on the planet by Forbes magazine. His companies and many of his ideas, considered almost impossible to carry out, brought him to the big screen: it’s quite easy to find analogies with the character of Iron Man, inspired by the life of the South African inventor, naturalized American citizen.
Elon Musk shows a great interest in programming from a very young age, he creates his first program at the age of 10, using Basic, one of the first softwares used by anyone who grew up in the 80’s; at the age of 12 he sells his first video game: Blastar. A sort of Space Invaders, where a spaceship destroys enemy spacecraft using hydrogen bombs.
After the divorce of his parents, Musk spends his youth in South Africa with his father; in 1989 he moves to Canada and attends Queen University, and ends his studies in the United States at Pennsylvania University where he earns degrees in physics and economics. He wins a scholarship at Stanford University, but choses San Francisco, the future birthplace of Silicon Valley. It is the very beginning of the world wide web, the internet. Search engines like Yahoo! and Netscape were born during those years, and the first bits started moving on the web. Here comes his first intuition: creating a list of businesses located in a digital map that would then be sold to editors. He founded the Global link information network with his brother Kimbal, a start up company that would then be renamed Zip2 after the New York Times and the Chicago Tribune decided to buy the service. Compaq saw the potential in this idea and decides to buy Zip2 for 307 million dollars and 34 million in stock options in 1999. This is Elon Musk’s first great success in the business world.
But Elon Musk’s great step forward comes from online financial services, especially because of the effect his creation will have on our everyday lives. He co-founds X.com in 1999, a sort of online bank that would soon become Paypal, one of the most used and famous online payment methods in the world. The platform works perfectly, so much so that Ebay decides to buy it in 2002. Paypal closed the fourth trimester of 2016 with a 367 million dollar profit, a 26 per cent increase from the previous year.
One of Elon Musk’s biggest dreams is space exploration. Musk never hid his desire to bring man to Mars before the end of the century. During the Guadalajara Astronautical Congress, in Mexico, Musk said “What I really want to try to achieve here is to make Mars seem possible, like it’s something we can achieve in our lifetimes.” SpaceX was created in 2002, probably because of this dream. Musk becomes the world’s first owner of a space transportation company. In a way he also invented the first reusable rocket: The Falcon 9 – the rocket used to refuel the International Space Station and bring satellites into orbit- it can use the same engine for multiple launches and return to base without a pilot. The first step towards interplanetary travel: the Dragon capsule could soon become a cockpit and a mean to transport humans.
SpaceX truly revolutionised orbit transport with rockets. Rockets used to fall apart during the various launch phases, and only the landing module remained after its return through the atmosphere. Orbital transport has become much cheaper thanks to the Falcon 9. Musk declared that “At this point, I’m highly confident that it’s possible to achieve at least 100- fold reduction in the cost of space access. A completely reusable rocket has never been made before. Rapid and complete reusability of rockets is really the key to opening up space and becoming a space-faring civilization.” According to the entrepreneur the first human mission on Mars could realistically take place in 2022. We’re really close.
The internet and space exploration are only two of Musk’s intuitions. Another theme that fascinates him is energy. Especially what concerns renewable energy. This is why he created Tesla Motors in 2003, a car manufacturer that will revolutionise the idea of electric cars: the first Tesla Roadster was produced in 2008. A supercar that was able to reach 200 km/h. It immediately had great success even though it was very expensive both to build and to buy. It is no longer in production, but 2000 of these cars were made.
It was obviously a toy that could be afforded by few people, but it allowed Musk to invest and create the first electric luxury sedan: the Model S. This car has beaten numerous records: more than 400 km range for the first model. The following model reached 900 km. It is also the first car with an autopilot and an integrated connection to the web. Tesla offers much more, since Musk’s idea is for electric cars to be accessible to everyone. After the futuristic Model X – a SUV with gull wing doors – Tesla recently created a compact car called Model 3. It costs around 30,000 euros, even though it will probably reach 50,000 after adding options. Musk promised that “We won’t stop until every car on the road is electric.”
Due to its connection with electric vehicles, the energy sector has always interested the American billionaire. This is why, after a few economic and legal issues, Musk was able to open the first Gigafactory in Nevada: a large production site for the lithium batteries Tesla uses in its cars and energy storage devices like the Powerwall. Musk is also thinking about Europe, and in 2016 he announced the construction of another production site for cars and energy storage systems: Gigafactory 2. He also said that he wants to create the most powerful lithium ion battery in the world.

Meanwhile tests continue on the supersonic train that should connect San Francisco to Los Angeles in just around 30 minutes. In August 2017 the train levitated for around half a kilometre, going just above 300 km/h. It is still very far from the 1,200 km/h it should reach when fully functional, but the main focus is currently on breaking and safety systems. Elon Musk posted a video of the Hyperloop’s astonishing acceleration.

On the 6th of February 2018 at the Cape Canaveral base in Florida the world’s most powerful rocket, Falcon Heavy, is launched into space. The sheer size of this rocket is impressive: 70 meters long, over 54 tonnes load capacity in low orbit and more that 22,000 in geostationary orbit. It was developed for the transportation of goods, but as Elon Musk himself said it could also be used to transport people.


 The rocket was also designed to be used more than once, in fact the three boosters that were used to push the Falcon Heavy beyond the atmosphere returned to Earth in one piece. What was most amusing about this event, in addition to the implications for future space travel, was the rocket’s crew: a red Tesla Roadster driven by Starman, a dummy dressed like an astronaut that entered orbit with David Bowie’s Space Oddity as the soundtrack. It’s out there now, on the Van Allen belt, journeying towards Mars (where it will never actually land).
Elon Musk’s dream is the same as many other people’s: a world fuelled by renewable energy, where citizens become prosumers (they produce and consume at the same time) and travel without emitting any C02, and that maybe one day, they will be able to set foot on the Red Planet.
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JAMES P. ALLISON

James Patrick Allison was born in Alice, Texas, U.S.A., in 1948. He obtained his BS in Microbiology in 1969, and later in 1973, his Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from the University of Texas (UT), Austin, TX, USA. He did his postgraduate fellowship in Molecular Immunology at Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation. Afterwards, he served in several reputable universities and Hospitals all over the US as professor, director, chair and head of Molecular and Immunology Departments or Cancer. Since 2012, he has been a Professor at the Department of Immunology at MD Anderson, Vivian L. Smith Distinguished Chair in Immunology, Director of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, Chair of the Department of Immunology, Executive Director of the Immunotherapy Platform and Deputy Director of the David H. Koch Center for Applied Research of Genitourinary Cancers at MD Anderson Cancer Center at the University of Texas in Houston.
Professor Allison is a well renowned scientist who has pioneered the concept of immunotherapy blockade by showing that antibody-mediated suppression of the T-Cell inhibitory molecule CTLA-4 can promote tumor rejection which lead to a groundbreaking method of treatment that is the standard of care in the clinic and is saving lives around the world. His seminal work in developing an antagonistic anti-CTLA-4 antibody has led to effectively opening up the field of “immune checkpoint therapy” and the effective treatment of different types of cancer with this methodology.
He published over 250 highly cited articles, with a total ISI (Google Scholar) citations of 40,796 (56,683) and an H-index of 102 (117). He is a member of the editorial board of several scientific journals and has participated in various conferences and exhibitions in his field.
Professor Allison recivied over 60 awards and honors he has received including the Dana Foundation Award in Human Immunology Research, Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award and Canada Gairdner International Award.
Professor James P. Allison, has been awarded the 2018 King Faisal Prize in Medicine for his outstanding contribution to the development of the field of immunotherapy for cancer. He identification of CTLA-4 as an inhibitory receptor of T-cells and pioneering the development of immune checkpoint inhibitors for the treatment of a range of cancers.
He, along with Tasuku Honjo, was jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2018 for their discovery of Cancer therapy by inhibition of negative immune regulation.
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LARRY PAGE

Lawrence Edward Page, more popularly known as Larry Page, is a computer scientist, entrepreneur, and the co-founder of Google, the largest internet company in the world. Page was born in March 1973 in Michigan to computer scientists Carl and Gloria Page. Carl Page earned his Ph.D. in computer science in 1965 when computer technology was still in its infancy, whereas Gloria Page taught at Michigan State University. Page was raised without any specific religious beliefs. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in computer engineering with honors from the University of Michigan, and his Master of Science in computer science from Stanford University.
Because Page’s parents were one of the earliest computer scientists, he was exposed to computer gadgetry and information from a very early age. This also piqued his interest in the subject very early on. He would often take machines and gadgets apart to see how they operated. After earning both his Bachelors and Masters in computer science, Page decided to enroll in the Ph.D. program at Stanford University. Here, he thrived under the mentorship of his supervisor Terry Winograd. He also met his future business partner, Sergey Brin. They originally met during orientation, where Brin (who had already been in the program for two years) had offered to show new students around, one of whom was Page.
For his dissertation, Page wanted to explore the World Wide Web, still a new phenomenon at that time. More specifically, he wanted to understand its mathematical properties and find out which and how many web pages link to a specific page. A combined research project by Page and Brin titled “Backrub” led to the development of an algorithm called “PageRank”. The duo realized that using this algorithm they could develop a search engine much more powerful than any that were present at the time. The original version of their search engine is still available on the Stanford University website.
Page and Brin registered the domain name Google.com in 1997. After applying to family and friends for loans, the duo managed to raise $1 million and officially incorporated their business as “Google, Inc” in 1998. The name Google is based on the term “googol” which is a very large number written as 1 followed by a hundred zeros. The company grew from a small start up in a friend’s apartment in Menlo Park, to a multi storey complex in Mountain View, California known as “Googleplex”. Google has time and again been named one of the best companies to work for. When it went public in 2004, Page and Brin became billionaires overnight. They initially ran Google as co-presidents, until 2001 when Eric Schmidt took over as CEO. In 2011, however, Page went back to being the CEO, while Schmidt assumed an executive management position. The founders still own a chunk of shares but their compensation is officially $1 per year, which ties their compensation directly to the company’s performance.
Page is passionate about environmental causes, as evidenced by the launch of “google.org” – the charitable arm of Google. The company invests in renewable energy and development of hybrid cars. Page has won numerous awards and honors including an honorary doctorate from the University of Michigan, being elected as a fellow of the Marconi Foundation at Columbia University and being listed as one of the top 100 innovators in the world by the MIT Technology Review TR100. Page is married to a research scientist Lucinda Southworth, and the couple have two children. His current net worth is estimated to be US $48.8 billion.
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SERGEY BRIN

American  computer scientist and entrepreneur Sergey Mikhaylovich Brin is the co-founder of Google, the largest internet company in the world. Brin was born in Russia in 1973 and his family suffered from financial trouble before arriving in America. They moved to the US when he was six years old to avoid the unfair persecution of Jews in Russia. Brin’s father wanted to be an astronomer but ended up as professor of mathematics at the University of Maryland (Sergey Brin’s alma mater) and his mother is a researcher at a NASA Space Center.
After graduating from University of Maryland with honors in 1993, Brin began his graduate studies at Stanford in the field of computer science on a graduate fellowship he received from the National Science Foundation. Brin met Larry Page, the co-founder of their future company, during the orientation at Stanford. After a while they became close friends, especially since they were able to intellectually challenge each other.
Brin’s area of interest was data mining and together with page, he co-authored a paper entitled “The Anatomy of a Large Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine“. After putting their heads together, they began working on their theoretical project in earnest and bought a number of low priced computers which they would keep in their dormitory rooms. Using these computers, they began to build a search engine which quickly surpassed even Stanford’s computer search system. After working together for a while, in 1998 the pair decided to put their PhDs on hold in order to take their extraordinary idea to market.
At that time they had no money for product development or establishing a company, so they borrowed from friends, family and professors. With the money they had collected, they rented out a garage in Menlo Park to set up their headquarters and bought some servers to begin working. They were in the process of filing the paperwork to incorporate their company but as yet their company had not been formally established. With another $100,000 from Andy Bechtolsheim (the co-founder of Sun Microsystems) the duo officially incorporated their company as “Google, Inc” which was named after the mathematical term “googol”.
Ever since the incorporation of his company in 1998, Brin and Page have had unprecedented global success. Google Inc’s motto is Brin and Page’s combined vision and that is to make information universally accessible to everyone. Their contribution to enhancing the spread of global knowledge has been so great, that “The Economist” magazine even compared it to the modern equivalent of the invention of the mechanical printing press by Johannes Gutenberg. Google, Inc is now the largest Internet company in the world and Brin and Page own 16% of it.
In 2007, Sergey Brin married a biotech analyst named Anne Wojcicki. Brin’s wife is actively interested in spreading health information and the couple co-founded a company named “23andMe” that is devoted to research about the human genome project. They have a son (born 2008) and a daughter (born 2011) but the couple separated in 2013. Brin’s mother is suffering from Parkinson’s disease and is being treated at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, to which Brin himself has made a donation. Brin and Page have won numerous awards and honors, including being named the fifth most powerful people in the world by Forbes magazine in 2009. As of March 2018, Brin is the 13th richest person in the world with a personal wealth of US $47.5 billion.
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JACK MA

Jack Ma is the founder of the E-commerce giant Ali baba and is a stakeholder at Alipay, its sister company which is an e-payment portal. He is now officially the richest man in China with an estimatedJack Ma is the founder of the E-commerce giant Alibaba and is a stakeholder at Alipay, its sister company which is an e-payment portal. He is now officially the richest man in China with an estimated net worth of $25 Billion, on the back of the recent world record $150 Billion IPO filing of his company. Given all of this, Jack Ma only holds a 7.8% stake in Alibaba and a 50% stake in Alipay. Alibaba and Jack Ma, although are not household names out of China, you must know that Alibaba is worth more than Facebook, and processes goods more than eBay and Amazon combined!
This might be beginning to seem like the story of an arrogant and rich billionaire who hasn’t seen the dark. But don’t be mistaken by the numbers that you see above, they can fool anyone. Although as simple as it may sound, Jack Ma has had it hard in his life to get to where he is today. A true rags-to-riches story and definitely a one which will inspire you even in your darkest days.
Jack Ma Childhood
Jack Ma is one of those self-made billionaires with humble beginnings. Jack Ma was born in Hangzhou, located in the south-eastern part of China. He was born and raised along with an elder brother and a younger sister during the rise of communist China and its isolation from the Western regions. His parents were traditional Musicians-Storytellers and they didn’t make enough to be even considered as middle class during those days.
Former US president Richard Nixon’s visit to Hangzhou in 1972 improved the situation of tourism in his home-town and Jack wanted to make the most of this opportunity. Jack always wanted to learn English as a kid and he spent his early mornings riding on his bike to a nearby park, giving English tours to foreigners for free. It was then he met a foreign girl who gave him the nickname ‘Jack’ for his name was hard to spell for her.
Jack, after graduating with a Bachelor’s degree in English, worked as an English teacher at Hangzhou Dianzi University with a pay of $12 a month! Now here comes the part where it gets more interesting, even before he has received that degree and became an English teacher.
Rejected, But Not a Failure.
Jack Ma as an extremely lucky bloke who just became a billionaire in a snap. But it is safe to know that Rejections are synonymous with Jack Ma. You wouldn’t believe the number of times this man has been rejected and failed.
In his early childhood, Jack Ma Failed in his Primary School examinations, not once, but Twice!  He Failed Thrice during his Middle School exams. When applying to universities after his High school, Jack failed the entrance exams thrice, before finally joining Hangzhou Normal University. He even applied and wrote to Harvard University ten times about being admitted – and got rejected each time. This was only during his education!
During and after his Bachelor’s degree Jack tried and failed to get a job at a multitude of places. After spending three years to get into a University, Jack failed to land a job after applying to them 30 times! He recollects in his interview, “When KFC came to China, 24 people went for the job.  Twenty-three people were accepted.  I was the only guy who wasn’t.” He also one of the 5 applicants to a job in Police force and was the only one getting rejected after being told, “No, you’re no good.”
Also, on his Entrepreneurial undertakings, Jack Ma went on to fail on two of his initial ventures. But that didn’t stop him in any way of dreaming bigger.
Down, but not Out!
In one of his interviews, when asked about his rejections, this is what he had to say, “Well, I think we have to get used to it.  We’re not that good.” Overcoming the pain of rejections and treating rejections as opportunities to learn and grow was what Jack Ma made of it.
After finally coming to terms with all of his rejections and failures, Jack Ma visited US in 1995, for a Government undertaking project related to the building of highways. It was then that Jack Ma was first introduced to the Internet and Computers. Computers were pretty rare in China then, given the high costs associated with them and Internet or E-mails were non-existent. The first word he searched on the Mosaic browser was ‘Beer’, and it popped out results from different countries, but signs of China anywhere. He then searched ‘China’ and not a single result popped out! He decided it was time for China and its people to get on the Internet.
Finally, after persuading 17 of his other friends to invest and join him in his new e-commerce startup – Alibaba, the company began from his apartment. Initially, Alibaba didn’t had a single penny in investment from outside investors, but they later raised $20 Millio from SoftBank and another $5 Million from Goldman Sachs in 1999. Building trust among the people of China that an online system of payment and package transfers is safe was the biggest challenge Jack Ma and Alibaba faced, a challenge that Jack will cherish for his lifetime.
Having started his first successful company at the age of 31 and even after never having written a single line of code or selling something to anyone, Jack Ma runs one of the biggest E-commerce networks in the world. The company went on to grow rapidly, expanding all across the world, quickly growing out of its China shell. Only second to Walmart now in terms of sales per year, Alibaba has become the E-commerce giant that Jack Ma has envisioned for it. on the back of the recent world record $150 Billion IPO filing of his company. Given all of this, Jack Ma only holds a 7.8% stake in Alibaba and a 50% stake in Alipay. Alibaba and Jack Ma, although are not household names out of China, you must know that Alibaba is worth more than Facebook, and processes goods more than eBay and Amazon combined!
This might be beginning to seem like the story of an arrogant and rich billionaire who hasn’t seen the dark. But don’t be mistaken by the numbers that you see above, they can fool anyone. Although as simple as it may sound, Jack Ma has had it hard in his life to get to where he is today. A true rags-to-riches story and definitely a one which will inspire you even in your darkest days.
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CHANDRA KUMAR NARANBHAI PATEL

C. Kumar N. Patel was born in Baramati, India on 2 July 1938. He received the B.E. from the College of Engineering in Poona, India and the M.S. and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 1959 and 1961, respectively.
Patel joined the Bell Laboratories in 1961. He is currently Executive Director, Research, Materials Science, Engineering and Academic Affairs Division at AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ.
Patel's discovery, in 1963, of the laser action on the vibrational-rotational transitions of carbon dioxide and his invention, in 1964, of efficient vibrational energy transfer between molecules, led to his series of experiments which demonstrated that the carbon dioxide laser was capable of very high cw and pulsed power output at very high conversion efficiencies. No other laser has made a greater impact on society.
In 1966, Patel began pioneering studies which created a new field of infrared nonlinear optics which led to his 1969 invention of the spin-flip Raman laser, a class of tunable infrared lasers and the first tunable Raman laser in any wavelength region. Using this laser, he carried out very high resolution spectroscopy of both ground and vibrationally-excited states of molecular gases, resulting in his contribution to the problem of atmospheric pollution detection. In 1970, he developed a tunable laser opto-acoustic measurement technique for extremely small concentrations of pollutant gases. In 1973, he carried out the first measurements of the temporal variation of concentration of nitric oxide in the stratosphere, which provided crucial data bearing on the problem of ozone depletion by man-made nitrogen oxide emission from sources such as the SST. His opto-acoustic spectroscopy studies of cryogenic liquids and solids, begun in 1980, are providing crucial data in understanding these materials and have culminated in the first observations of high vibrational over-tone absorption of molecular hydrogen in solid hydrogen. Patel's current research interests include spectroscopy of highly transparent liquids and solids, and surgical and medical applications of carbon dioxide lasers.
Patel has received numerous awards, including The Optical Society of America's Adolph Lomb Medal (1966); Coblentz Prize (American Chemical Society, 1974); Association of Indians in America's Honor Award (1975); IEEE Lamme Medal (1976); National Academy of Engineering's Zworykin Award (1976); OSA Townes Medal (1982); New Jersey Governor's Thomas Alva Edison Science Award (1987); Hon. D.Sc, New Jersey Institute of Technology (1988); George E. Pake Prize of the American Physical Society (1988); OSA Frederic Ives Medal (1989). He received the IEEE Medal of Honor in 1989, "For fundamental contributions to quantum electronics, including the carbon dioxide laser and the spin-flip Raman laser."
Patel is a Fellow of the IEEE, the American Physical Society, the Optical Society of America, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Association for Advancement of Arts and Sciences, the Laser Institute of America, and the American Society of Laser Medicine. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Science.
Patel and his wife Shela, a Graduate Advisor at Kean College, NJ, have two daughters: Neela, a second year Ph.D. student in Molecular Biology at UCLA; and Meena, a Freshman at Claremont-McKenna College. His interests include tennis, windsurfing, and gourmet cooking.
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NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON

Neil deGrasse Tyson is an American astrophysicist, cosmologist, author, and science communicator. Since 1996, he has been the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Rose Center for Earth and Space in New York City. The center is part of the American Museum of Natural History, where Tyson founded the Department of Astrophysics in 1997 and has been a research associate in the department since 2003. Born and raised in New York City, Tyson became interested in astronomy at the age of nine after a visit to the Hayden Planetarium. After graduating from the Bronx High School of Science, where he was editor-in-chief of the Physical Science Journal, he completed a bachelor's degree in physics at Harvard University in 1980. After receiving a master's degree in astronomy at the University of Texas at Austin in 1983, he earned his master's (1989) and doctorate (1991) in astrophysics at Columbia University. For the next three years, he was a postdoctoral research associate at Princeton University. In 1994, he joined the Hayden Planetarium as a staff scientist and the Princeton faculty as a visiting research scientist and lecturer. In 1996, he became director of the planetarium and oversaw its $210-million reconstruction project, which was completed in 2000. From 1995 to 2005, Tyson wrote monthly essays in the "Universe" column for Natural History magazine, some of which were published in his book Death by Black Hole (2007). During the same period, he wrote a monthly column in Star Date magazine, answering questions about the universe under the pen name "Merlin". Material from the column appeared in his books Merlin's Tour of the Universe (1998) and Just Visiting This Planet (1998). Tyson served on a 2001 government commission on the future of the U.S. aerospace industry, and on the 2004 Moon, Mars and Beyond commission. He was awarded the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal in the same year. From 2006 to 2011, he hosted the television show NOVA ScienceNow on PBS. Since 2009, Tyson hosted the weekly podcast StarTalk. A spin-off, also called StarTalk, began airing on National Geographic in 2015. In 2014, he hosted the television series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, a successor to Carl Sagan's 1980 series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences awarded Tyson the Public Welfare Medal in 2015 for his "extraordinary role in exciting the public about the wonders of science".
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