Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
51. On T-10 culture, see Waterman, “Skiing the Sun.”
52. Theoretical Biology and Biophysics Group, “Proposal to Establish a
National Center” [WBG papers].
53. Los Alamos National Laboratory, “$2 Million Earmarked” [WBG
papers].
54. George I. Bell, letter to George Cahill [WBG papers].
55. For more, see Strasser, “Collecting, Comparing, and Computing
Sequences.”
56. Strasser, “GenBank”; Strasser, “The Experimenter's Museum.”
57. Those clearly identifi able by name and institution (others used a non-
obvious username): Bob Sege (Yale University), Hugo Martinez (UCSF), How-
ard Goodman (UCSF), Perry Nisen (Albert Einstein), Jake Maizel (NIH), Bill
Pearson (Johns Hopkins), Brian Fristensky (Cornell), Hans Lehrach (EMBL
Heidelberg, Germany), Allen Place (Johns Hopkins), Schroeder (University of
Wisconsin), Frederick Blattner (University of Wisconsin), Rod Brown (Utah
State University), David W. Mount (University of Arizona), Fotis Kafatos (Har-
vard), Jean-Pierre Dumas (CNRS, Paris), Dusko Ehrlich (Université de Paris),
Dan Davison (SUNY at Stony Brook), Jeffrey S. Haemer (University of Colo-
rado), Tom Gingeras (Cold Spring Harbor), Paul Rothenberg (SUNY at Stony
Brook), Tom Kelly (Johns Hopkins), Clyde Hutchison (University of North
Carolina), Allan Maxam (Harvard Medical School), Robin Gutell (UCSC),
Mike Kuehn (SUNY at Stony Brook), John Abelson (UCSD), Margaret Day-
hoff (National Biomedical Research Foundation), Mark Ptashne (Harvard),
Irwan Tessman (Purdue), Brad Kosiba (Brandeis), Rick Firtel (UCSD), Walter
Goad (Los Alamos Scientifi c Laboratories), R. M. Schwartz (National Bio-
medical Research Foundation), H. R. Chen (Atlas of Proteins), Stephen Barnes
(Washington University), Andrew Taylor (University of Oregon), Gerschenfeld
(Stanford), Annette Roth (Johns Hopkins), Mel Simon (UCSD), Mark Boguski
(University of Washington Medical School), Kathleen Triman (University of
Oregon), and Stoner (Brandeis). National Institutes of Health, “MOLGEN
Report,” 17-18 [EAF papers].
58. A word is in order about Ostell's name. James Michael Ostell was born
James Michael Pustell, and it is this name that appears on some of his earlier
published papers. He changed it sometime around 1986, and Ostell is the
name that appears on his PhD thesis.
59. Ostell, “A Hobby Becomes a Life.”
60. CP/M (Control Program for Microcomputers) is an operating system
developed by Gary Kildall in 1973-1974.
61. Ostell “A Hobby Becomes a Life.”
62. Ostell, “Evolution,” 3.
63. Ostell, “Evolution,” 3-4.
64. Pustell and Kafatos, “A Convenient and Adaptable Package of DNA
Sequence Analysis Programs for Microcomputers.”
65. Pustell and Kafatos, “A Convenient and Adaptable Package of DNA
Sequence Analysis Programs for Microcomputers,” 51-52.
66. Pustell and Kafatos, “A Convenient and Adaptable Package of Com-
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