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         Baltimore David:     more books (103)
  1. Truth fantasy: David Lebe photographs by David Lebe, 1986
  2. Baltimore's travels continued.(Ethics): An article from: Issues in Science and Technology by David Baltimore, 2003-06-22
  3. Father Connell's The New Baltimore Catechism And Mass No. 3 by C.SS.R., S.T.D. Rev. Francis J. Connell, C.SS.R. Rev. Thomas A. Chapman, et all 1954
  4. The Robinson collection, Baltimore, Md: Fascicule 2 (Corpus vasorum antiquorum : United States of America) by David Moore Robinson, 1937
  5. Molecular Cell Biology, 3rd Ed. by Harvey; Baltimore, David; Berk, Arnold Lodish, 1995
  6. Molekulare Zellbiologie (German Edition) by Harvey Lodish, Arnold Berk, et all 2001-09-13
  7. Limiting science: a biologist's perspective.: An article from: Daedalus by David Baltimore, 2005-09-22
  8. A strained partnership.(Brief Article): An article from: Issues in Science and Technology by David Baltimore, 1999-09-22
  9. Molecular Cell Biology 3.0 Cd-Rom by Harvey Lodish, David Baltimore, et all 1996-02
  10. Molecular Cell Biology by James E.; Baltimore, David; Lodish, Harvey F. Darnell, 1986
  11. Was Rep. John Dingell's investigation of scientific fraud unjustified in the "Baltimore case"?: An entry from Gale's <i>Science in Dispute, Volume 3</i> by LOIS N. MAGNER, ADI R. FERRARA, et all 2003
  12. Voting: What Is, What Could Be by David Baltimore, 2001-08
  13. Education as My Agenda: Gertrude Williams, Race, and the Baltimore Public Schools.(Book review): An article from: The Oral History Review by David Gerwin, 2007-01-01

41. International: Italiano: Salute: Medicina: Medici_e_Ricercatori: Baltimore,_Davi
Translate this page Top International Italiano Salute Medicina Medici e Ricercatori baltimore,david (1) E’ stato insignito del premio nobel per la medicina, (per le
http://open-site.org/International/Italiano/Salute/Medicina/Medici_e_Ricercatori
Open Site The Open Encyclopedia Project Pagina Principale Aggiungi Contenuti Diventa Editore In tutta la Directory Solo in Medici_e_Ricercatori/Baltimore,_David Top International Italiano Salute ... Medici e Ricercatori : Baltimore, David
Vedi anche: David Baltimore ¨ stato insignito del premio Nobel per la Medicina (per le scoperte concernenti l'interazione fra i virus del tumore ed il materiale genetico della cellula) nell'anno 1975. David Baltimore Data di nascita : 7 marzo 1938
Genere Attivit  principale presso: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Cambridge, MA, USA
Luogo di nascita : New York City
Nazionalit  : Statunitense
Questa Categoria ha bisogno di un Editore - Richiedila Open Site Code 0.4.1 modifica

42. History For Sale - Nobel Prize Autographs
$99.00. david baltimore PAMPHLET SIGNED CIRCA 1976 - DOCUMENT 100681,$179.00. GEORGE 16, We have many nobel Prize Winner autographs! Here
http://www.historyforsale.com/html/display.asp?page=62

43. David Baltimore Bio
Caltech’s seventh president, david baltimore is perhaps the most influential biologistof his generation. Awarded the nobel Prize at the age of 37 for his
http://www.its.caltech.edu/~kpickar/e103/bios/baltimore.htm
David Baltimore Caltech’s seventh president, David Baltimore is perhaps the most influential biologist of his generation. Awarded the Nobel Prize at the age of 37 for his work in virology, Baltimore has also had a profound influence on national science policy regarding such issues as recombinant DNA research and the AIDS epidemic. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1964, Baltimore held postdoctoral positions at MIT and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, followed by a three-year appointment at the Salk Institute. He returned to MIT as an associate professor in 1968 and was named full professor in 1972. At MIT, Baltimore’s early investigations focused on questions about the relationship between DNA and RNA in a cell’s internal functions—specifically, on how cancer-causing RNA viruses manage to infect a healthy cell. One result of this research was the identification of the enzyme reverse transcriptase. Baltimore shared the 1975 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for this discovery, which has greatly expanded scientists’ understanding of retroviruses like HIV. In the mid-1970s, Baltimore played an important role in creating a consensus on national science policy regarding recombinant DNA research. He served as founding director of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at MIT from 1982 until 1990. An early advocate of federal AIDS research, Baltimore was appointed in 1996 to head the National Institutes of Health AIDS Vaccine Research Committee. He was also a professor at Rockefeller University from 1990 to 1994, and Rockefeller’s president in 1990-91.

44. Faculty And Research Areas
david baltimore. ericsant@caltech.edu. Ph.D.,1963, Rockefeller University. 1975Recipient of nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Marianne BronnerFraser.
http://www.its.caltech.edu/~biology/faculty.html
Biology Faculty 1955
SEATED, left to right: Anthonie van Harreveld, Renato Dulbecco, Arthur Galston, A.H. Sturtevant, Albert Longley.
STANDING, left to right: Henry Klostergaard, Cornelus Wiersma, Jacob Dubnoff, Roger Sperry, Albert Tyler,
Herschel Mitchell, Sterling Emerson, Edward Lewis, Giuseppe Bertani, Victor Rothschild, George Beadle. John Abelson Ray Deshaies Paul Patterson Jose Alberola-Ila ... Elliot Meyerowitz Charles Brokaw
brokawc@its.caltech.edu Ph.D., 1958,Cambridge university more on Charles Brokaw David Chan dchan@caltech.edu Ray Deshaies deshaies@caltech.edu Ph.D., 1988, University of California-Berkeley more on Ray Deshaies William G. Dunphy dunphy@caltech.edu Ph.D., 1985, Stanford University more on William Dunphy Jean-Paul Revel revelj@caltech.edu Ph.D., 1957, Harvard University
Jose Alberola-Ila alberola@caltech.edu M.D., Ph.D.,1991, University of Barcelona David Baltimore ericsant@caltech.edu Ph.D.,1963, Rockefeller University 1975 Recipient of Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Marianne Bronner-Fraser mbronner@gg.caltech.edu

45. EMF Announcements
Gene Expression in Development and Aging, the third in a Fall series of sponsoredsymposia on aging, was hosted by david baltimore (nobel Laureate 1975) at the
http://www.ellison-med-fn.org/announcement_detail.jsp?announcement_id=9

46. AEGiS-Reuters Nobel Laureate To Steer AIDS Vaccine Research
WASHINGTON (Reuter) A nobel Prize-winning scientist was named Thursday to MassachusettsInstitute of Technology biologist david baltimore will try to jump
http://www.aegis.com/news/re/1996/RE961262.html
Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1996. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Nobel Laureate to Steer AIDS Vaccine Research Reuters NewMedia, Inc. - Thursday, 12 December 1996, 13:52 P.M. WASHINGTON (Reuter) - A Nobel Prize-winning scientist was named Thursday to step in and try to reinvigorate the search for an AIDS vaccine at the National Institutes of Health. Massachusetts Institute of Technology biologist David Baltimore will try to jump-start the frustrating search for a vaccine, which most scientists believe is the only way the global epidemic can ever be brought under control. "David Baltimore has agreed to lead the AIDS vaccine research committee and to provide key advisory expertise in restructured and reinvigorated NIH vaccine efforts," Dr. William Paul, director of the NIH's Office of Aids Research, told Reuters in a telephone interview. Early in the AIDS epidemic, many hoped that a vaccine would be available within a few years. But AIDS is unlike any other virus, and the blazing hopes for a vaccine became instead a trail of false starts. But in the past two years or so, scientists have made huge leaps in understanding the basic mechanics of how the virus works, and have gained insight into understanding how it causes disease, a process known as pathogenesis.

47. Jewish Nobel Prize Laureates - Biomedical Sciences
Year, nobel Laureate, Country of birth. 1975, baltimore, david for their discoveriesconcerning the interaction between tumor viruses and the genetic material of
http://www.science.co.il/Nobel-Biomedical.asp
Israel Science and Technology Homepage
HOME Search About Contact
Nobel Prize Subject Biomedical Chemistry Economics Physics ... Literature Sort options Country Name Year Order A - Z Z - A Show citation Yes No
Jewish Laureates of Nobel Prize in Biomedical Sciences
Year Nobel Laureate Country of birth Brenner, Sydney
"for their discoveries concerning genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death" South Africa Horvitz, H. Robert
"for their discoveries concerning genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death" USA Greengard, Paul
"signal transduction in the nervous system" USA Kandel, Eric R.
"signal transduction in the nervous system" Austria Furchgott, Robert F.
"for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signaling molecule in the cardiovascular system" USA Prusiner, Stanley B.
"for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection" USA Gilman, Alfred G.
"for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells" USA Rodbell, Martin
"for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells" USA Varmus, Harold E.

48. Nobel Italiani
nobel Italiani. Fisica 1909. The prize was awarded jointly to baltimore, david,USA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, b. 1938;.
http://www.embitalia.org.br/tec32Nobelitaliani.htm
Nobel Italiani
Fisica 1909
MARCONI, GUGLIELMO, Italia (1874 - 1937) e a BRAUN, CARL FERDINAND, Germania (1850 - 1918): "in riconoscimento del loro contributo allo sviluppo della telegrtafia senza fili" More...
Physics 1938
FERMI, ENRICO, Italy, Rome University, b. 1901, d. 1954: "for his demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons" More...
Physics 1959
The prize was awarded jointly to: CHAMBERLAIN, OWEN, U.S.A., University of California, Berkeley, CA, b. 1920: "for their discovery of the antiproton" More...
Physics 1984
The prize was awarded jointly to: RUBBIA, CARLO, Italy, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, b. 1934; and VAN DER MEER, SIMON, the Netherlands, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, b. 1925: "for their decisive contributions to the large project, which led to the discovery of the field particles W and Z, communicators of weak interaction" More...
Chemistry 1963
The prize was divided equally between: NATTA, GIULIO, Italy, Institute of Technology, Milan, b. 1903, d. 1979:

49. Nobel Laureates - 7. Lectures And Nobel Laureates - NIH 1998 Almanac Content
nobel Laureates. Laureate, DRG. david baltimore, USA (shared with R.Dulbecco and HM Temin, USA), Physiology or medicine, 1975, NIAID, NCI.
http://www.nih.gov/about/almanac/1998/lectures/nobel.html
NIH 1998 Almanac Lectures and Nobel Laureates Nobel Laureates Laureate Field Year Supporting Institute(s) Paul D. Boyer, U.S.A. (shared with J.C. Skou) Chemistry NIGMS, NIDDK Jens C. Skou, Denmark (shared with P.D. Boyer) ......do NINDS Stanley B. Prusiner, U.S.A. Phyisology or medicine NINDS, NIA, NCRR, NIGMS Edward B. Lewis, U.S.A. (shared with C. Nusslein-Volhard, Germany, and E.F. Wieschaus, U.S.A.) Physiology or medicine NICHD, NIGMS Eric F. Wieschaus, U.S.A. (shared with E.B. Lewis, U.S.A., and C. Nusslein-Volhard, Germany) ......do NICHD Alfred G. Gilman, U.S.A. (shared with M. Rodbell, U.S.A.) .....do NIGMS, NINDS Martin Rodbell, U.S.A. (shared with A.G. Gilman, U.S.A.) ......do NIEHS, NIDDK George A. Olah, U.S.A. Chemistry NCI, NIGMS Phillip A. Sharp, U.S.A. (shared with R. Roberts, U.K.) Physiology or medicine NIGMS, NCI, NIAID, DRS, NCRR Richard Roberts, U.K. (shared with P.A. Sharp, U.S.A.) ......do NCRR, NLM, NCHGR, NCI, NIGMS Kary B. Mullis, U.S.A. (shared with M. Smith, Canada) Chemistry NHLBI, NIAID, NIGMS

50. NIH Record - 12-02-97 -- Baltimore Gives Khoury Lecture
Dr. david baltimore, nobel Prize winner and president of California Instituteof Technology, will present this year's George Khoury Lecture on Dec.
http://www.nih.gov/news/NIH-Record/12_02_97/story03.htm
Front Page Previous Story Next Story Baltimore Gives Khoury Lecture Dr. David Baltimore, Nobel Prize winner and president of California Institute of Technology, will present this year's George Khoury Lecture on Dec. 10, at 3 p.m. in Masur Auditorium, Bldg. 10. His talk is entitled "Cell Life and Cell Death." In 1975, Baltimore became one of the youngest recipients of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. He shared the prize with Drs. Howard Temin of the University of Wisconsin and Renato Dulbecco of the Salk Institute for "discoveries concerning the interaction between tumor viruses and the genetic material of the cell." Dr. David Baltimore In 1970, simultaneously with Temin, he discovered the enzyme reverse transcriptase, which enables cancer-inducing RNA viruses to replicate within the host organism. The enzyme also made possible many of the developments in biotechnology that were to follow, and its presence in human immunodeficiency virus allowed the cause of AIDS to be uncovered. Baltimore was recently named chairman of the AIDS vaccine research committee to help coordinate AIDS vaccine research and development across NIH. In 1986, he cochaired a major study of AIDS, sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine.

51. Nobel Laureate Revisiting Lectures
September 1980 Host D. Ottoson 1981 George E. Palade, nobel Laureate 1974 May 1981Host J. Wersäll 1982 david baltimore, nobel Laureate 1975 December 1982
http://www.mednobel.ki.se/mednobel/revisiting-lectures.html
Nobel Laureate Revisiting Lectures
Since 1980 previous Nobel Laureates in Physiology or Medicine are invited to give a Nobel Laureate Revisiting Lecture at Karolinska Institutet. The Laureates also meet with the Nobel Committee for informal discussions of recent developments within the scientific area defined by the prize.
May 1980
Host: N. Ringertz
Arthur Kornberg, Nobel Laureate1959
June 1980
Host: P. Reichard
Sir Bernard Katz, Nobel Laureate 1970
September 1980
Host: D. Ottoson
George E. Palade, Nobel Laureate 1974
May 1981 David Baltimore, Nobel Laureate 1975 December 1982 Host: E. Norrby Gerald M. Edelman, Nobel Laureate 1972 April 1983 Host: D. Ottoson Renato Dulbecco, Nobel Laureate 1975 May 1984 Host: E. Norrby Christian de Duve, Nobel Laureate 1974 May 1985 Host: N. Ringertz D. Carleton Gajdusek, Nobel Laureate 1976 May 1986 Host: H. Wigzell Julius Axelrod, Nobel Laureate 1970 October 1987 Howard M. Temin, Nobel Laureate 1975 May 1989 Host: E. Norrby

52. David Baltimore's Final Days At Rockeffeler
For by the end of the Thanksgiving weekend the 53year-old nobel laureate, who wasborn only a few yards off campus at New York Hospital david baltimore photo
http://home.t-online.de/home/Bernhard.Hiller/wstewart/CelebratedCases/BaltimoreC
Science 1576-9, 13 December 1991
David Baltimore's Final Days
Trapped between an irate faculty and a stubborn board of trustees, the renowned molecular biologist became a figure out of Greek tragedycomplete with the flaw of hubris David Baltimore accepted the presidency of Rockefeller University with his eyes open. "I was certainly aware that I was walking into a situation where there was significant opposition," Baltimore said during an interview with Science on 25 November. But on that day, barely a week before he was to turn in his resignation, Baltimore adopted a confident and upbeat tone: He expressed optimism about the changes he had initiated at one of the country's premieralbeit troubledbiomedical research institutions. And he even offered an olive branch to critics on the university faculty who were about to make his position untenable. Remarkably, he sounded like someone settling in for the long haul, not a man who was under intense pressure and about to throw in the towel. "[When I was appointed] I felt there was enough support to carry forward the plans, to do what seemed necessary to do," he said in his airy office. "And that has turned out to be true. And I think that's more important than all those statements about how many people are on one side or the other. New people are coming to the campus. A tremendous amount of money has been raised; more will be raised. People are working together in a very effective effort. And we can talk about our differences, and perhaps that's as important as anything."

53. Résultats De La Recherche Par Auteur
Translate this page Envoyez cette citation à un(e) ami(e) Biologiste américain (nobel de médecine1975) david baltimore Extrait du numéro spécial Libération - A quoi
http://www.citationsdumonde.com/req_auteur.asp?Auteur=David Baltimore

54. Baltimore To Become President Of Caltech
Professor david baltimore '61 will head to the California Institute of Technologythis fall to become the school's next president. baltimore a nobel laureate
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V117/N27/baltimore.27n.html
Baltimore to Become President of Caltech
Gabor CsanyiThe Tech
David Baltimore '61 By Stacey E. Blau
Opinion Editor

Institute Professor David Baltimore '61 will head to the California Institute of Technology this fall to become the school's next president. Baltimore - a Nobel laureate and pioneering biomedical researcher as well as a prominent public figure on national scientific issues - accepted the appointment to Caltech's presidency on May 13. "Caltech is such a remarkable institution," Baltimore said. But he said that the decision to accept the appointment and leave MIT was a difficult one. "MIT has been extremely good to me," he said. Baltimore leaves a long and distinguished career at MIT. With few interruptions, he has spent over three decades here, first as a graduate student from 1960 to 1961 and later as a postdoctoral research associate. He returned to MIT in 1968 as junior member of the faculty and, save a few years, has been here ever since. Baltimore was the founding director of MIT's Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research - one of the foremost facilities of its kind in the world - heading it from 1982 to 1990. In 1995, he was named an Institute professor, a select title given to only a handful of professors in recognition of their achievements. "Simply put, David Baltimore is one of the most outstanding living scientists," said President Charles M. Vest. "We will miss having his intellectual leadership, research activities, and teaching centered on the MIT campus."

55. Baltimore Discusses Science, Community
flocked to Kresge Auditorium on Tuesday evening to hear nobel Laureate and Presidentof the California Institute of Technology david baltimore ¹61 give a talk
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V122/N6/6baltimore.6n.html
Baltimore Discusses Science, Community
By Eun J. Lee NEWS EDITOR National news shows need for trust He cited recent national events which spurred his interest in the topic, citing the Enron scandal and the aftermath of Sept. 11. These events have had a dramatic impact on the trust that Americans now have for many national institutions. Baltimore discussed the need for trust on a national level in light of recent events. Whitehead had to earn MIT trust In the case of Whitehead, Baltimore insisted that the motives of the founders were pure, which is reflected today in what the institution has become. Scientific context of trust can vary Baltimore himself was the center of a decade-long media controversy in a case of scientific fraud starting in 1986 with the publication in Cell of an article he co-authored with former Assistant Professor of Biology Thereza Imanishi-Kari. The claims, brought forth by a post-doctoral researcher and pursued by the National Institutes of Health and the federal House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigation, were eventually dismissed. Trust not enough in large projects He went on to say that all intellectual endeavors highly depend on personal integrity, which is even more reason why group science depends on trust.

56. JAMA -- Page Not Found
This work led to the 1975 nobel Prize (shared with Temin and Renato In 1986, Baltimoreand ImanishiKari published a joint paper with david Weaver and Moema
http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v287n17/ffull/jbk0501-4.html
Select Journal or Resource JAMA Archives of Dermatology Facial Plastic Surgery Family Medicine (1992-2000) General Psychiatry Internal Medicine Neurology Ophthalmology Surgery MSJAMA Science News Updates Meetings Peer Review Congress
The page you requested was not found. The JAMA Archives Journals Web site has been redesigned to provide you with improved layout, features, and functionality. The location of the page you requested may have changed. To find the page you requested, click here HOME CURRENT ISSUE PAST ISSUES ... HELP Error 404 - "Not Found"

57. Il Caso Baltimore
Translate this page Robert Dallek, autore di Flawed giant Lyndon B. Johnson, 1960-1973 Torna su Dalla prefazione di DJ Kevles david baltimore ha vinto il premio nobel per la
http://www.fioriti.it/kevles.htm
Il caso Baltimore - Un conflitto fra politica, scienza e personalità
di  Daniel J. Kevles Collana: scienze, medicina
pagine
: XX + 492
formato : 24x16, brossura, b/n, paperback
prezzo : euro 29,95 Contenuto Target : il libro interessa ampie fasce di pubblico colto, medici, biologi, studenti universitari,  storici e filosofi della scienza. “Kevles descrive la crescente frenesia che ha travolto gli uomini del Congresso, i mass media, i timorosi funzionari dell’N.I.H., e gli altri scienziati. Il caso Baltimore ci porta a chiederci se i processi alle streghe di Salem sono veramente così lontani da noi.” -Jonathan Beckwith, Associazione Americana sul Cancro “Kevles è uno dei maggiori storici della politica della scienza americana a livello nazionale. Il suo studio sul caso Baltimore è la sua migliore e più coraggiosa opera di ricerca e di scrittura.” - David A. Hollinger, autore di Postethnic America: beyond multiculturalism Il caso Baltimore è uno dei più affascinanti libri sulla scienza che sia stato pubblicato negli ultimi anni. Daniel Kevles, uno dei maggiori storici mondiali della scienza, ci racconta una storia affascinante, spiegandoci la complessità del dibattito scientifico e legale con grandissima abilità e lucidità. Per me è stato molto difficile posare questo libro - e ancora più difficile smettere di pensare alle numerose questioni fondamentali che Kevles solleva.” - Philip Kitcher, autore di

58. Nobel Prize Winner: 'New Challenges Ahead'
david baltimore became fascinated with biology in high school, when he spent a summerat eventually led him to a career in molecular biology, a nobel Prize in
http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/0203/Feb17_03/13.shtml
      Updated 2:00 PM February 24, 2003 MORE STORIES
Nobel Prize winner: 'New challenges ahead'
By Michelle Bolek
Life Sciences, Values and Society Program
David Baltimore became fascinated with biology in high school, when he spent a summer at the Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. That summer of research biology sparked an interest that eventually led him to a career in molecular biology, a Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1975, and a place in history as one of the most distinguished and influential biologists of his time. (Courtesy Calttech) Baltimore, a proponent of embryonic stem cell research, will present this year's Life Sciences, Values and Society Program (LSVSP) Annual Distinguished Lecture, titled "Biotechnology: New Capabilities, New Challenges." The free public lecture will be at 4 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 20, at Rackham Auditorium. A public reception will follow. LSVSP's mission is to engage the community in discussion of the ethical, social and legal implications of advances in the life sciences. Currently the president of the California Institute of Technology, Baltimore has established a high-profile career both in research and national science policy. His research in the molecular study of animal viruses that led to the Nobel Prize vastly increased scientists' understanding of cancer and, later, the AIDS virus. Baltimore's discovery of the enzyme

59. Ahead Of The Curve -- David Baltimore's Life In Science -- Shane Crotty
Crotty's biography of david baltimore details the life and only in his early sixties,baltimore has made of Rockefeller University, won the nobel Prize, and
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0520225570
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60. In Conversation - 11/3/1999: Professor David Baltimore
david baltimore is one of the worlds leading scientists In 1975 at the young ageof 37 he won the nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology for work that would
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/incon/stories/s93640.htm

Earthbeat

Health Report

Ockhams Razor
In Conversation ...
Science News

Professor David Baltimore
Broadcast Thursday 11/3/1999
Summary:
David Baltimore is one of the world's leading scientists. In 1975, at the young age of 37 he won the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology for work that would illuminate how viruses spread. It was Professor Baltimore's research that gave us the understanding of what the AIDS epidemic, still years away, really meant.
Guests on this program:
Professor David Baltimore President;Professor of Biology Caltech Primary Office M/C 204-31 Pasadena CA 91125 Tel: +1 626 395 6301 baltimore@caltech.edu Return to index Navigate the Radio National Website... Search Radio National... Choose a program... Airplay All In The Mind AM The Ark Asia Pacific Australia Talks Back Australia Talks Books AWAYE! Background Briefing Big Ideas Book Reading Book Talk Books and Writing Boyer Lectures Breakfast Bush Telegraph The Business Report The Buzz Classic Comedy The Comfort Zone Correspondents Report Country Breakfast The Deep End DIG - Internet Radio Earthbeat Encounter The Europeans First Person The Goons The Health Report Hindsight In Conversation Late Night Live The Law Report Letter From America Lifelong Learning Life Matters Lingua Franca Live on Stage The Media Report Music Deli The Music Show The National Interest

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