Week ended 25 June 1999

Varmus defends E-biomed proposal, prepares to push ahead
(Science, 25 June 1999)
Library-society alliance puts bio journals online
(Science, 25 June 1999)
Gene therapy: RAC urges changes to retinoblastoma plan
(Science, 25 June 1999)
Legal fight over patents on life
(Science, 25 June 1999)
American Genetic Association meeting: Genomes reveal kin connections for whales and pumas
(Science, 25 June 1999)
Steady body clocks don't run down
(ScienceNOW, 25 June 1999)
British cloning research on hold
(ScienceNOW, 25 June 1999)
A puma is a cougar is a panther
(ScienceNOW, 21 June 1999)
Week ended 18 June 1999

Mutant fruit flies respond to Lorenzo's Oil
(Science, 18 June 1999)
Emerging diseases: Canada dedicates new human, animal labs
(Science, 18 June 1999)
Patent law: Supreme Court limits scope of appeals
(Science, 18 June 1999)
Japan: Corporate ties still off limits for academics
(Science, 18 June 1999)
A high-stakes gamble on genome sequencing
(Science, 18 June 1999)
Jumping genes
(ScienceNOW, 16 June 1999)
Pusztai fights back with royal approval
(ScienceNOW, 14 June 1999)
Week ended 11 June 1999

NIH urged to fund centers to merge computing and biology
(Science, 11 June 1999)
Scientists block NIH plan to grant Ph.D.s
(Science, 11 June 1999)
Germany waves a flag for science
(Science, 11 June 1999)
NIH Ethics Office tapped for a promotion
(Science, 11 June 1999)
Biomedical patents: No winners in patent shootout
(Science, 11 June 1999)
Biotechnology Industry Organization meeting: From the bioweapons trenches, new tools for battling microbes
(Science, 11 June 1999)
Novel treatment stops mice from shivering
(ScienceNOW, 9 June 1999)
Week ended 4 June 1999

German science policy: Panel calls for more flexibility in research
(Science, 4 June 1999)
Behavioral genetics: Fickle mice highlight test problems
(Science, 4 June 1999)
New leads to cancer, arthritis therapies
(Science, 4 June 1999)
European researchers grapple with animal rights
(Science, 4 June 1999)
Computer-aided vaccines
(ScienceNOW, 3 June 1999)
Week ended 28 May 1999

Human Genome Project: Sequencers endorse plan for a draft in 1 year
(Science, 28 May 1999)
Britain struggles to turn anti-GM tide
(Science, 28 May 1999)
Imaging living cells the friendly way
(Science, 28 May 1999)
Technology transfer: NIH proposes rules for materials exchange
(Science, 28 May 1999)
Community divides over push for bigger budget
(Science, 28 May 1999)
Why TB vaccines lose their teeth
(ScienceNOW, 28 May 1999)
Hot trail of stolen genes
(ScienceNOW, 26 May 1999)
DNA therapy works better under pressure
(ScienceNOW, 24 May 1999)
Week ended 21 May 1999

- Special Feature: Microbes, Immunity, and Disease
(Science, 21 May 1999)
- A symphony of bacterial voices
Is it time to uproot the tree of life?
Borrowing--genes--from microbial neighbors
Clinical research: Shutdown of research at duke sends a message
(Science, 21 May 1999)
Australia: Budget backs report on boosting biotech
(Science, 21 May 1999)
Nuclear transport protein does double duty in mitosis
(Science, 21 May 1999)
Enzyme suggests way to halt Huntington's
(ScienceNOW, 20 May 1999)
Super artificial cells
(ScienceNOW, 18 May 1999)
Panel pans potato safety study
(ScienceNOW, 18 May 1999)
Week ended 14 May 1999

Transgenic animals: Fertility therapy may aid gene transfer
(Science, 14 May 1999)
HIV: French-led therapy fund kicks off in Africa
(Science, 14 May 1999)
AIDS Now World's Fourth Biggest Killer
(Science, 14 May 1999)
Your DNA in a knot
(ScienceNOW, 14 May 1999)
Sperm cells find a new job
(ScienceNOW, 14 May 1999)
Novel treatment for lupus in mice
(ScienceNOW, 10 May 1999)
Week ended 7 May 1999

Gene may promise new route to potent vaccines
(Science, 7 May 1999)
Startling revelations in UC-Genentech battle
(Science, 7 May 1999)
Scientific misconduct: ORI report tracks gun-shy feds
(Science, 7 May 1999)
Harvard heads clinical research ranking
(ScienceNOW, 7 May 1999)
AIDS papers heard 'round the world
(ScienceNOW, 5 May 1999)
Breast cancer mimicked in mutant mice
(ScienceNOW, 4 May 1999)
Week ended 30 April 1999

Varmus circulates proposal for NIH-backed online venture
(Science, 30 April 1999)
New model for hereditary breast cancer
(Science, 30 April 1999)
Tobacco takes spark out of TNT
(ScienceNOW, 28 April 1999)
Plastic and pig cells make an artificial kidney
(ScienceNOW, 27 April 1999)
Radiation's collateral damage
(ScienceNOW, 26 April 1999)
Mixed grades for Japan's 5-year science plan
(ScienceNOW, 26 April 1999)
Week ended 23 April 1999

Discovery of "gay gene" questioned
(Science, 23 April 1999)
Blowing the dust off the French Academy
(Science, 23 April 1999)
Academy reform: Members have their say
(Science, 23 April 1999)
Ulcer bug's brighter side
(ScienceNOW, 21 April 1999)
Week ended 16 April 1999

Drug firms to create public database of genetic mutations
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Animal rights: Activists ransack Minnesota labs
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Graduate fellowships: Fewer minorities under new NSF rules
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Stem cell research: NIH plans ethics review of proposals
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Circadian rhythms: The clock plot thickens
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Lab-grown organs begin to take shape
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Tissue engineering: From the lab to the clinic
(Science, 16 April 1999)
Peptide orders tumor cell suicide
(ScienceNOW, 13 April 1999)
Week ended 9 April 1999

Alternatives to animals urged for producing antibodies
(Science, 9 April 1999)
Japan: New career path seen for young scientists
(Science, 9 April 1999)
Gene engineering: EPA, critics soften stance on pesticidal plants
(Science, 9 April 1999)
Waterman award goes to drug researcher
(ScienceNOW, 9 April 1999)
Researchers urged to go light on mouse antibodies
(ScienceNOW, 8 April 1999)
Block that Plasmodium!
(ScienceNOW, 6 April 1999)
Week ended 2 April 1999

Colorado Nobelist chosen to lead Howard Hughes
(Science, 2 April 1999)
Heart failure simulated
(Science, 2 April 1999)
Laundry, detergent, mushrooms . . .
(ScienceNOW, 2 April 1999)
New cancer role for telomerase
(ScienceNOW, 30 March 1999)
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