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From YouTube: Pagliuca Harvard Life Lab Ribbon Cutting
Description
Mayor Walsh joins members of the Harvard community to celebrate the opening of the Pagliuca Life Lab on Harvard's Allston campus. This lab was the result of a major donation by Steve and Judy Pagliuca with the aim of providing Harvard students, faculty and alumni with a wet lab containing all the resources needed to develop future scientific advances.
A
A
Good
afternoon
I'm
Nitin
Nohria,
I'm
the
dean
of
harvard
business
school
and
it's
my
great
privilege
to
welcome
you
to
the
opening
of
the
pahlavi
oka
Harvard
life
lab
for
a
space
that
was
initially
dubbed
the
wet
lab.
That's
in
some
ways,
perhaps
auspicious
that
the
weather
is
what
it
is
today
and
the
forecast
drove
us
inside.
But
given
that
this
is
New
England
and
it's
November,
maybe
we
can
take
some
comfort
in
the
fact
that
it's
not
snowing
but
I'm
delighted
to
see
you
all
here
this
afternoon.
A
It's
also
wonderful
to
gather
in
a
space
where
Julia
Child
first
conducted
one
of
her
cooking
classes
and
since
cooking
is
the
art
of
chemistry.
In
some
ways,
it's
very
appropriate
that
we're
going
to
do
we're
going
to
launch
a
life
lab
as
a
part
of
this
I
lab
system.
Today
we
are
honored
to
have
with
us.
Many
friends
are
fearless
and
wonderful.
President
of
Harvard
University
drew
Faust
mayor,
Marty
Walsh,
the
Harvard
Innovation
Lab
faculty,
chair
Srikant,
daughter,
Judy
and
Steve
palooka,
who
support
have
made
this
remarkable
space
possible.
A
I
want
to
welcome
as
well
judy
and
steve's
family
and
special
guests,
including
joe
and
felicia
palooka
stephanie
palooka,
a
former
governor
deval
patrick
congressman
joe
kennedy
and
representatives
from
what
seems
to
be
every
Boston
landmark
organization,
from
media
to
our
beloved
sports
teams,
to
global
strategy
to
venture
capital
to
private
equity.
To
consulting.
A
We
have
a
very
brief
speaking
program
planned
inside
here
and
then
we're
going
to
ask
you,
assuming
that
the
weather
stays
as
clear
as
it
is,
or,
if
not
to
brave
the
elements
for
just
a
few
minutes,
as
we
will
go
out
and
do
a
ceremonial
ribbon
cutting
to
mark
the
official
opening
of
the
paducah
Harvard
wife
lab
at
the
actual
facility,
which
is
next
door
to
us.
And
then
after
that,
we
invite
you
to
enjoy
a
reception
back
here
as
well
as
sulfide
tours
of
the
life
lab.
A
If
you
wish
to
see
the
facility,
please
go
in
and
take
a
look
at
what
this
remarkable
facility
will
enable
almost
exactly
five
years
ago
on
November
eighteenth.
In
fact,
2011.
We
gathered
here
to
celebrate
the
opening
of
the
Harvard
innovation
lab,
and
we
marvel
that
we
had
reached
such
a
moment
just
a
short
13
months
after
announcing
the
plans
for
this
building.
A
Now
we
can
look
across
the
street
to
the
launch
lab,
which
is
a
space
where
alumni
who
graduate
from
the
life
lab
from
the
ilab
can
work
which
opened
in
2014,
and
we
are
here
today
to
celebrate
the
opening
of
this
Claudia
Harvard
white
cloud
five
months
only
after
unveiling
the
plans
for
this
building
with
17
teams
already
selected
and
some
as
of
this
Tuesday
already
in
residence.
Now
many
many
people
say
that
the
pace
of
innovation
in
academic
institutions
is
somewhere
between
slow
and
glacial
I
hope.
A
Today,
you
believe
that
there
is
tangible
proof
of
what
can
happen
when
circumstances
conspire
to
enable
things
to
happen
in
a
very
positive
way.
It's
not
just
circumstances
that
are
conspiring
to
go
from
an
idea
to
the
space
you
see
today
required
the
effort
of
many
many
people,
so
I'd
like
to
acknowledge
and
thank
those
who
have
gotten
us
to
where
we
are
today.
A
First,
my
partner
and
everything
that
we
do
at
Harvard,
Business
School
Angela
crispy,
who
runs
all
of
our
operations,
everything
on
the
staff
side
of
our
business
school,
who
never
batted
an
eye
when
the
idea
of
the
life
lab
landed
on
her
plate.
This
is
often
the
role
that
she
has,
that
Dean's
dream
up
ideas,
and
then
they
say
Angela
jay
is
right
here.
A
We
are
very
blessed
to
have
great
partners
in
Masshole
Katie
Lapp,
our
Provost
Alan
Garber,
a
president
drew
Faust
who
were
championing
this
vision
of
allston
as
an
enterprise
zone.
They
have
been
open
to
all
of
the
things
that
we
say
to
them.
They
often
wonder
why
does
this
business
school
dean
keep
come
with
ideas
that
require
us
to
do
crazy
things,
but
we're
truly
truly
grateful
to
them
for
all
that
they
allow
us
to
do.
A
Mayor
Walsh
and
the
City
of
Boston
getting
something
like
this
permitted
and
opened
it's
a
it's
a
facility
that
requires
a
wide
range
of
self
and
health
concerns,
and
so
safety
issues
are
paramount.
And
yet
we
found
a
way
to
do
this
and
meet
the
city.
The
city
work
with
us
in
a
remarkable
way
to
help
make
this
happen,
and
this
is
I
think
his
vision
of
seeing
what
life
sciences
represent
for
this
city
and
the
enormous
possibility
that
Alston
has
as
another
node
in
this
amazingly
vibrant
ecosystem.
A
That
is
now
a
part
of
heart
word
from
Kendall
Square
to
the
waterfront
district
to
what's
happening
here
so
I
think
we
have
the
opportunity
to
build
an
amazing
amazing
innovation,
ecosystem
and
Mayor.
Walsh
has
been
deeply
supportive
of
that.
The
dean's
advisory
board
for
the
ilab,
which
consists
of
the
deans
of
all
of
the
schools
of
Harvard,
but
I,
want
to
especially
signal
a
single
out
Doug
Melton,
who
was
perhaps
the
person
who
first
gave
us
the
idea
that
there
should
be
something
like
the
life
lab
here
at
Harvard
and
Felicia.
A
A
Shrikant
daughter
and
our
life
lab
selection
committee,
Alan,
crane,
Adam,
Cohen
George,
daily
mark
Fishman,
Johannes,
fruehauf,
Jennifer,
Lewis
and
Rick
McAuliffe
for
choosing,
and
these
17
amazing
inaugural
teens,
with
an
eye
to
creating
opportunities
for
innovation
and
I
want
underline
and
education,
because
the
role
of
each
of
these
teams
is
not
just
to
spur
innovation,
but
to
be
educational
partners
of
the
ilab.
The
ilab
team,
led
by
our
fearless
Jody
goldstein,
were
continuing
to
surpass
everyone's
wildest
hopes
in
engaging
students,
faculty
alumni
and
staff
across
Harvard.
A
Our
operations
team
led
by
Dave
zenga
for
working
tirelessly
to
ensure
that
the
execution
of
these
plans
has
exceeded
our
highest
expectations.
I
had
the
opportunity,
in
the
last
three
months
to
visit
labs
at
novartis
at
vertex
at
Mass,
General
advisor
and
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
what
we
were
building
was
of
the
same
quality
and
I
think
anybody
would
be
proud
to
work
in
the
life
lab
right
next
door,
so
Dave.
Thank
you
so
much
to
your
team
for
having
pulled
this
off
and
finally
and
most
importantly,
Judy
and
Steve,
hey
Luca.
A
It
was
their
support
that
ultimately
made
this
project
possible
for
many
years.
They
have
articulated
the
opportunity
for
Alston
to
become
a
life
sciences
cluster
and
they
have
understood
the
need
for
a
lab
space
to
support
Boston
as
a
hub
for
biotechnology
ventures.
This
truly
is
an
arena
in
which
Boston
leads
today,
and
we
must
have
the
aspiration
to
continue
to
lead
into
the
future.
So
thank
you,
judy,
judy
and
steve
for
your
inspiration
and
your
support
to
make
that
happen.
B
It's
wonderful
to
be
here
with
so
many
people
to
celebrate
the
Palio,
a
Harvard
life
lab
and
to
see
individuals
not
just
from
the
University
but
from
the
allston-brighton
community,
from
City
Hall
and
far
beyond
Thank
You,
mayor
Walsh,
Thank,
You,
Governor,
Patrick
and
Congressman
Kennedy
for
joining
us
today,
and
for
recognizing
always
the
role
that
universities
play
in
driving
progress
here
in
Massachusetts
and
across
the
country.
If
you
want
to
understand
the
potential
impact
of
work
that
will
be
undertaken
in
this
beautiful
new
space,
you
need
only
consult
the
roster
for
our
first
season.
B
As
Nathan
said,
17
groups
representing
eight
of
Harvard
schools
will
use
the
life
lab
to
put
their
knowledge
into
practice
for
the
common
good.
Their
aims
are
inspiring
from
faster
DNA
sequencing
and
targeted
genome
editing
to
better
biomaterials,
proteins
and
vaccines.
The
list
goes
on.
What
will
life
be
like
if
they
succeed,
it
will
be
greener
thanks
to
new
wastewater
technology,
it
will
be
longer
thanks
to
new
tests
for
HIV,
drug
adherence
and
resistance
and
earlier
detection
of
drug-resistant
pathogens.
We
will
prevent
dehydration
hearing,
loss
and
cancer-causing
viruses.
We
will
identify
pancreatic
cancer
sooner.
B
We
will
stop
tumors
from
progressing
and
we
will
treat
diseases
more
effectively
with
new
therapeutics
life.
In
short,
will
be
better
because
of
this
space,
and
because
of
the
creativity
it
will
spark
and
the
students
faculty
and
alumni
it
will
bring
together.
This
future
is
imaginable
thanks
to
Judy
and
Steve
pally
Yuka,
whose
philanthropy
reflects
unfailing
optimism
and
a
deep
commitment
to
improving
the
world.
Thank
you,
Judy
and
Steve.
B
Harvard
is
shaping
our
campus
for
the
next
century
with
spaces
that
encourage
collaboration,
spur
experimentation
and
foster
connections
among
boundlessly
imaginative
and
inventive
people.
This
growing
innovation,
neighborhood
already
enriched
by
the
AI
lab
in
the
launch
lab,
has
the
incomparable
Harvard
Business
School
as
its
foundation
and
will
be
strengthened
further
with
the
addition
of
the
Harvard
Paulsen
School
of
Engineering
and
Applied
Sciences.
B
This
area
will
become
the
heart
of
an
enterprise
research
campus,
where
higher
education
and
Industry
intersect
in
dynamic
ways
enabling
the
elation
of
discovery,
the
application
of
research,
the
translation
of
good
ideas
into
great
progress
for
Humanity
universities
are
essential.
They
push
the
edges
of
what
is
known
and
they
pull
remarkable
and
sometimes
world-changing
efforts
from
individuals
as
they
create
opportunities
for
extraordinary
collaborations.
B
C
Thank
You,
president
of
Houston,
thank
you
for
hosting
us
today
at
the
campus
of
Harvard.
University
I
also
want
to
thank
congressman
joe
kennedy
for
being
here
with
us
today
and
all
the
invited
guests
they're
going
to
speak
in
a
few
minutes.
I
want
to
give
a
special
shout-out
to
Steven,
Judy
and
I'll
talk
about
them
in
a
few
minutes,
and
thank
you
very
much
for
this
important
place
of
space.
So
many
so
many
people,
so
many
things
going
to
be
discovered
here.
So
thank
you.
C
I
also
want
to
recognize
City
Council
Maxie
Elmo,
who
represents
this
neighborhood
known
as
a
partner
at
City
Hall.
Thank
you,
Mark
for
being
here
with
us
and
Kevin
hone
instead
represent
of
Kevin
honing,
my
former
colleague
in
the
house.
Thank
you
Kevin
and
governor.
It's
good
to
see
you.
You
look
a
lot
more
relaxed
right
now.
You
know
the
past
I
want
to
thank
you
for
being
here
and
also
for
me,
a
senator
Motown's
with
us
as
well.
Thank
you
Sandifer
for
being
here
as
well.
C
On
this
exciting
day,
the
pail
yoga
life
lab
is
going
to
open
new
doors
for
the
students,
faculty
scientists
and
scholars,
and
I
think
that
we
all
know
that
it's
going
to
give
them
a
platform
to
launch
new
biotech
startups.
It's
also
going
to
be
an
engineer
for
healthcare
and
the
environment,
and
it's
all
right
here
in
Austin
and
I,
think
that's
what
really
makes
it
so
special.
C
We
are
in
the
midst
of
a
tech
startup
boom
in
Boston,
and
the
Commonwealth
in
this
beautiful
state-of-the-art
facility
is
going
to
help
us
even
attract
much
more
talent
to
our
great
city
off
the
bat.
The
pedicle
life
lab
will
host
17
venture
teams,
that's
going
to
have
the
opportunity
to
be
here,
they're,
going
to
be
developing
ways
in
diagnosing
cancer
sooner
and
getting
clean
water
to
refugee
camps,
and
so
much
more.
C
And
hopefully,
that's
a
sign
of
things
to
come
in
the
coming
weeks,
and
it's
got
that
brain,
not
that
I'm
getting
blood
or
anything,
but
it's
going
to
bring
bright
minds
from
all
over
the
world
right
here
to
solve
some
great
problems.
The
work
on
mine,
the
Bostonians,
especially
our
youth,
that
we
can
accomplish
great
things
together.
C
It
represents
the
kind
of
progress
that
we're
hoping
to
see
throughout
the
wii
boss
program,
our
small
business
plan,
both
of
these
initiatives
are
were
created
to
close
the
wage
gap
and
to
support
women
and
people
of
color
on
the
entrepreneurial
companies.
We
think
the
innovation
in
Boston,
that's
right
in
our
thriving
seaport
district,
probably
comes
to
mind.
C
The
life
lab
is
certainly
a
reminder
that
people
are
making
incredible
progress
in
Sciences
all
over
the
city,
not
just
in
certain
parts
of
our
city,
I'm,
happy
to
see
that
the
pelvic
life
lab
will
join
the
Austin
community
and
is
committed
to
being
a
good
neighbor
for
several
years
was
the
Dean
mentioned.
The
Harvard
ed
portal
has
connected
community
members
with
academic
resources
this
spring,
that
that
portals
hosted
over
100
allston-brighton
students
in
enrichment
and
in
biotech
programs.
C
This
new
lab
is
certainly
going
to
continue
that
tradition
and
will
add
an
emphasis
on
life
sciences.
Right
here
will
be
sponsored
science,
technology,
engineering
and
math
workshops
for
our
local
residents.
It
also
provides
a
sixty
thousand
dollar
grant
for
Chromebook
laptops
for
the
allston-brighton
public
school
students.
This
is
the
exact
the
kind
of
community
investment
a
city
wants
to
see
from
the
private
and
academic
sectors,
and
that's
something
that's
really
important
for
us
that
this
lab
is
not
just
focused
on
people
coming
in
here.
C
It's
focused
on
getting
people
from
this
Community
and
young
people,
whose
community
to
be
in
here
eventually
so
Boston's
well,
is
honored
to
welcome
this
lab
and
I
am
grateful
to
Steve
and
Judy
for
the
generous
donation
they
made
and
made
this
possible
and
I.
Remember
when
Steve
kind
of
conversation
me
about
this
idea,
he
was
giddy.
He
was
excited
because
he
knew
that
it
was
going
to
make
a
difference
in
so
many
different
peoples
lives
with.
C
So
many
different
reasons
and
he
was
drinking
I've
done
not
to
mention
the
celtics-
have
a
ton
of
first-round
picks
but
other
than
that,
but
it
truly
is
remarkable.
When
you
see
somebody
from
the
community
make
an
investment
back
in
the
community,
an
investment
that's
going
to
go
on
for
generations.
Is
the
Dean
said
someday.
We
can
somebody's
going
to
look
back
in
history
on
this
in
this
particular
lab
and
realize
all
of
the
great
progress
has
been
made
here
in
the
different
areas
of
life
sciences.
C
D
Would
like
to
add
my
thanks
to
Judy
and
Stephen
for
this
very
generous
gift.
I've
had
the
privilege
and
pleasure
of
spending
time
with
them
on
what
they
hope.
This
gift
will
mean
to
the
University,
the
city
of
Boston
and
the
wider
community
and
I
can
say
today
that
I
am
very
confident
that
we
will
meet
and
exceed
your
already
high
expectations.
D
Over
the
last
four
months,
I
have
had
the
honor
of
working
with
some
truly
outstanding
faculty
members
in
businessman
and
the
ilab
staff
to
select
the
first
group
of
scientists
and
entrepreneurs
for
the
life
lab
I
want
to
thank
Alan,
Garber
and
Nitin
Nohria
for
their
unstinting
support
and
Adam
Cohen
Alan
crane,
George
daily
mark
Fishman,
Johannes,
fro,
half
Jennifer,
Lewis
and
Rick
McCullough
for
the
passion,
dedication
and
commitment
that
you
all
brought
to
this
work.
I
was
trying
to
reduce
the
workload
for
these
individuals.
D
I
said
I'll
review
some
of
the
applications
myself
and
only
send
you
the
ones
that
we
need
to
really
spend
time
on,
but
no,
they
insisted
on
reviewing
every
single
one
of
the
applications
we
received
and
spent
many
hours
interviewing
the
candidates
using
their
deep
scientific
and
business
insights.
They
made
many
constructive
suggestions
to
the
teams.
All
with
the
goal
of
improving
the
ideas
being
presented.
Many
of
the
teams
have
commented
to
me
about
how
valuable
those
interviews
were:
Jody,
Goldstein,
Alice,
Lee,
Neil,
Doyle
and
Paige
Burke
provided
fantastic
support.
D
What
a
joy
it
was
to
work
with.
All
of
you.
We
have
selected
17
outstanding
teams
representing
eight
Harvard
schools
and
diverse
industries,
consumer
products
and
device
diagnostics,
therapeutics
vaccines
and
biomaterials.
Nearly
half
the
women
are
women
founders
and
nearly
two-thirds
are
led
by
our
faculty
and
students.
D
D
Collectively,
we
look
forward
to
building
a
culture
of
cooperation
or
working
together
and
of
thinking,
imaginatively
and
creatively
about
difficult
and
important
problems.
Some
of
the
teams
have
already
begun
talking
to
each
other,
about
sharing
equipment
and
ideas,
they're,
showing
already
the
generosity
of
spirit
that
precisely
describes
why
such
collaboration
will
benefit
us
all.
We
want
each
of
our
teams
to
succeed
because
they
are
engaged
in
some
truly
truly
important
work,
but
we
also
look
forward
to
their
contributions
in
helping
us
further.
The
research
and
educational
mission
of
the
University.
D
This
was
made
very
clear
to
them,
as
we
interviewed
them
to
become
the
founding
entrepreneurs
of
the
life
lab.
They
could
share
ideas
in
seminars,
engage
with
students,
many
different
ways.
It
is
our
ambition
and
dream
that
the
life
lab
as
the
ilab
and
the
launch
lab
that
came
before
it
will
make
significant
contributions
to
the
University
and
the
city
while
improving
the
lives
of
millions
of
people.
All
of
us
in
volved
in
the
life
lab,
are
motivated
and
dedicated
to
achieving
this
goal
and
to
fulfilling
our
promise
to
judy
and
steve.
E
Wow,
what
a
great
group
I'm
just
thrilled
to
be
here
today
for
the
dedication
of
the
Harvard
life
lab
and
I-
am
just
so
impressed
to
see
a
de
Nuria
and
president
faust
mayor,
Walsh
shrikant,
to
come
here,
and
you
know
speak
on
our
behalf
and
say
such
nice
things
about
us
as
well
as
this
really
impressive
group
of
scientists
and
business
people,
as
well
as
our
friends
and
other
supporters
that
we
have
in
this
audience.
It's
very
emotional
for
me
to
stand
up
here
in
front
of
all
of
you
people.
E
Many
people
have
found
out
that
we've
been
doing
this
and
you
know
prior
to
this
day
and
they'd,
ask.
Why
would
we
support
this
endeavor
and
where
did
this
passion
for
science
come,
and
why
is
this
lab
adjacent
to
the
Harvard
Business
School?
And
the
answer
lies
in
of
two
things:
tomatoes
and
planaria,
which
is
a
flatworm?
So
you
know
I'm,
you've
heard
all
these
I'm
not
going
to
use
any
big
words
here
right
so
because
it
because
I
really
want
to
bring
this
down
to
an
emotional
level.
E
There's
when
you
make
it
a
donation
like
this
and
have
this
kind
of
involvement,
there's
really
primitive
feelings
that
come
that
spur
you
to
do
it.
You
know
that
Steve's,
Italian
and
tomatoes
are
a
very
important
part
of
the
Italian
cuisine,
but
what
you
probably
don't
know
is
that
my
dad
was
a
tool-and-die
maker
and
a
first
gen
in
the
US
and
really
only
achieved
a
high
school
education,
but
really
was
an
incredible
supporter
of
Education.
E
He
descended
from
Lithuanian
farmers
and,
as
a
result
we
lived
in
a
like,
even
though
we
lived
in
a
little
too
family
in
Chicago,
he
had
a
little
plot
in
the
backyard
where
he
would
plant
tomatoes
and
one
when
it
came
time
to
really
put
that
garden
to
use.
He
was
not
short
short
changed
at
education.
He
researched
seed
types,
weather
patterns,
composting,
the
best
way
benefits
of
worms,
soil,
aeration,
soil
chemistry.
E
So
really,
in
my
experience,
the
very
first
teacher
in
my
life
was
my
dad,
who
taught
me
all
about
these
scientific
ways
to
grow
a
potato
tomato,
and
you
know
a
tomato
grown.
That
way
is
the
very
best
tomato
that
you
will
ever
taste
now,
something
as
simple
as
a
tomato
requires
research
and
resources
and
collaboration
to
produce
it
and
make
it
the
best
it
could
be.
E
So
what
I
learned
from
him
is
imagine
the
resources
that
are
going
to
be
needed
to
do
all
the
great
things
that
President
fouls
talked
about
and
that
nori
and
shrikant
talked
about
just
just
imagine
those
resources
and
I'm,
just
hoping
this
life
lab
will
be
one
of
those
resources
that
can
help
push
this
forward.
My
dad,
as
I
said,
loved
science
and
science
actually
returned
the
favor
in
middle
age.
E
He
contracted
rheumatoid
arthritis,
which
is
a
terrible
autoimmune,
disease
and
degenerative,
but
if
it
wasn't
for
the
entire
pipeline
of
value
creation
in
from
bench,
research
all
the
way
to
practical
application
and
go-to-market
strategies,
he
really
never
would
have
benefited
from
some
of
the
great
advances
they
made
in
treating
that
disease.
We
also
have
a
niece
who
had
osteosarcoma
and
recently
was
able
to
take
advantage
of
the
new
immunotherapies.
That's
really
saved
her
life.
E
E
Now
these
creatures
are
pretty
cool,
because
if
you
chop
off
their
head,
they
grow
a
head.
If
you
chop
off
their
head
and
tail,
they
grow
a
head
and
a
tail
and
from
one
you'll
can
get
three.
And
if
you
split
its
head
it
grows
two
heads,
so
you
could
imagine
as
a
seventh
grader
in
middle
school,
all
of
the
incredible
experiments
that
you
could
do
with
these
tiny
creatures.
And
it's
fair.
You
know
it's
really
cool,
but
here
we
are
like
generations
later,
and
would
you
research
this
for
this
day?
E
Thinking
about
these
planaria,
so
what's
going
on
with
these
planaria
well,
it
turns
out
they
maintain
their
telomeres
over
their
lifetime,
making
them
effectively
immortal
and
stem
cell
scientist
to
this.
If
this
very
day
are
trying
to
unlock
their
secrets
to
help
with
regenerative
medicine.
So
the
lesson
I
draw
here
is
that
probably
we've
only
scratched
the
surface
of
what
is
possible
and
we
have
a
multi-generational
responsibility
to
make
sure
we
push
the
frontiers
of
science.
E
But
my
life
went
in
a
little
different
direction
and
studied
business
and
now
I'm
more
interested
in
the
business
model
of
science
and
how
its
funded
and
how
value
is
created
in
the
pipeline.
Right
now
you
know,
federal
funding
has
been
declining
and
you
hear
about
venture
capital,
and
you
also
hear
about
philanthropy
rising,
but
it
has
not
really
closed
the
gap.
E
And
yet
do
you
know
that
there
are
more
talented
people
studying
science
than
there
ever
has
been
and
there's
just
not
enough
funding
for
them
to
pursue
their
great
ideas
and
all
these
amazing
tools
that
Drew
was
talking
about
the
technologies
crisper.
The
date
of
the
genome
I
mean
we
live
in
x
and
incredible
potential.
So
I,
don't
know
what
the
juxtaposition
of
science
and
business
will
bring.
We
really
don't
know
and
that's
part
of
the
fun
of
like
of
doing
a
project
like
this.
E
Is
you
really
act
on
your
principles
and
you
act
on
a
dream?
You
try
to
just
be
a
little
part
of
that
dream
and
push
it
a
little
bit
forward.
We
really
don't
know
what's
going
to
happen,
but
you
know,
maybe
a
hundred
ideas
will
happen
and
maybe
only
two
will
work.
I,
don't
know,
but
I
really
hopeful
that
something
good
will
come
out
of
this.
So
I
thank
my
first
teachers
and
instilling
a
love
of
science
and
I.
Thank
all
those
people
who
devote
their
lives
to
unlocking
the
secrets
and
I.
E
Also
thank
those
people
who
devote
their
lives
to
thinking
about
value
creation.
It's
a
tremendous
opportunity
to
be
linked
with
this
endeavor
and
to
aspire
to
foster
collaboration
and
to
leave
the
world
a
better
place.
I
whole
heartedly
also
thank
my
husband
Steve
for
making
my
inclusion
in
this
day
possible
and
I
know
my
dad
and
mr.
Erickson
would
be
very
proud
that
we've
all
come
together
to
do
this.
So
thank
you
very
much
for
your
pack
light.
E
F
This
is
quite
quite
overwhelming
to
be
here.
I
almost
feel
like
it's
probably
better
than
my
own
funeral
My
partner,
wicker,
probably
said,
probably
be
lecturing
at
my
own
funeral,
going
on
going
on
too
long.
I
really
want
to
thank
all
of
you
for
coming.
It's
been
incredible
support
and
that's
what
we
need
here
in
Boston
for
efforts
like
this.
We're
really
fortunate
to
have
these
leaders
in
the
room:
I'm,
not
a
great
politician,
so
I'm
sure
I'll
miss
one
of
them.
F
I
start
naming
names,
but
on
they
name
a
few
names
of
all
these
people
right
here,
everybody
in
the
whole
room,
doing
what
you're
doing
and
when
you
step
back
leaders
like
mayor
Walsh,
who
have
had
many
conversations
with
us
about
Joe
Kennedy,
deval
Patrick,
who
started
with
the
big
biotech
initiative
here
at
Motown
who's
back
there.
That
also
promoted
this
as
a
senator
and
an
exemplary
personally
community,
Dean
nuria
president
faust
shrikant
this
the
second
hardest
name
to
say
behind
hell
yuka,
but
I've
got
nailed.
My
we
have
a
wide
diversity
of
people
here.
F
My
roommate
from
colleges
is
here:
Sanjay
saini,
the
the
Celtics
family,
you
know,
wick
and
and
and
Danny
and
Mike
Zarin.
All
this
could
have
been
possible.
You
know
with
without
the
help
for
all
these
folks
and
its
really
heartening.
To
me,
it's
a
shining
example
how
the
city
of
Boston
and
the
state
of
Massachusetts
business
people
and
our
leaders
can
come
together
for
the
common
good,
and
that
really
is
missing.
Today
many
of
you
are
concerned.
F
Hopefully
you
are
concerned
about
the
state
of
our
elections
and
what's
going
on
politically
with
all
the
partisan,
the
bickering,
and
here
we
are
developing
such
a
facility,
not
because
of
us
really
because
of
these
people.
This
community
really
diving
in
and
making
this
happen
in
record
speed,
I,
don't
think,
there's
any
other
community
that
could
get
this
building
up
and
running
in
17
businesses
up
and
running
in
less
than
two
years.
F
I
even
have
a
high
school
classmate
here
who
I
wouldn't
be
here
without
him,
because
he
gave
my
first
job
as
a
furniture
mover,
which
was
probably
the
hardest
job
of
my
life,
and
it
started
out
slowly
because
the
first
day
in
the
yard,
the
the
people
came
down
and
they
said
the
driver.
Wasn't
there
there's
20
people
in
the
yard,
he'll
tell
you,
he
was
there
and
I
just
learned
to
drive
a
stick
shift
from
him
the
day
before
and
the
driver.
Wasn't
there
there's
20
people
in
yard?
F
F
Unfortunately,
I
got
it
out
a
lot
of
live
and
I
was
able
to
pay
for
college.
You
know
from
having
that
job
and
and
ended
up
going
to
do,
can
harvard
business
school,
so
I've
been
very
fortunate
to
to
be
part.
A
little
part
of
these
big
institutions,
which
I
think
are
much
more
important
than
me
or
any
one
individual.
F
F
All
of
our
friends,
Bain
&
Company,
Bain
Capital,
with
my
parts,
Bank
heavily
Java,
the
vines
here,
Ryan
Cotton's
here
I
know:
I
Mississippi,
John
Connon
was
here,
Michael,
Ward,
Kim,
McCaslin
and,
and
probably
someone
who
tell
me
I
missed
them
back
at
the
office,
but
those
are
the
ones
I
saw
out
in
the
nosc
in
the
in
the
meeting
here.
Duke
University,
Harvard,
Business
School.
This
really
wouldn't
be
possible.
F
Without
all
this
collaboration
going
on
leadership
with
the
mayor
joke
any
of
many
discussions
with
unbeaten
and
that
we'd
love
you
to
get
over
and
see
the
live
lab,
that's
the
most
important
part
we're
just
thrilled
to
be
part
of
this
community.
Do
this
I
think
Adam
Coples
here
as
well?
The
another
part
of
mine
just
came
back
to
me.
That's
why
I'm
a
bad
politician?
You
know
that
the
mayor
Walsh
can
rattle
off
34
people
that
are
here
and
never
miss
a
person.
He's
been
incredible
and
incredible
in
terms
of
making
this
happen.
F
Working
with
Harvard
I
think
this
is
a
shining
example.
What
we
should
do
in
the
rest
of
America
I'm,
very
proud
to
be
part
of
this
team.
Junya
are
proud
to
be
part
of
this
team.
To
make
this
happen,
appreciate
you
all
coming
and
I
think
the
next
step
is
to
go
over
and
see
the
facility.
So
thank
you
very
much.
G
Thank
you
for
coming.
This
concludes
the
speaking
portion
of
the
program.
The
reception
will
continue
here,
but
it's
dry
outside.
We
encourage
everybody
to
join
us
next
door
for
the
ribbon.
Cutting
ceremony
and
self-guided
tours
will
be
available
after
the
photos
are
taken
next
door.
So
join
us
next
door.