Genes
Subject
Subject Source: Unspecified ingested source
Found in 44 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from William J. Broughton to Sydney Brenner, 9/11/1988
Item — Box CP02, Folder: 44
Identifier: SB_1_1_87_1
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
The Correspondence series consists of incoming and outgoing handwritten and typed letters, carbons, postcards, faxes, and telegrams generated during Sydney Brenner's career. The bulk of this series covers the late 1940s to the 2000s. Correspondents include over 30 Nobel laureates, as well as biochemists, geneticists, students, publishers, and others. Highlights of the collection include the correspondence from Francis Crick, with whom Brenner shared an office for 20 years. Topics covered...
Dates:
9/11/1988
Publication: How to count_human genes, by Samuel Aparicio, 1990-1999
Item — Box CP01, Folder: 19
Identifier: SB_1_1_19_11
Abstract
Enclosure from Samuel Aparicio to Sydney Brenner
Dates:
1990-1999
Research notes from R. Michael Roberts[?] and Sydney Brenner, 20th Century
Item — Box CP13, Folder: 32
Identifier: SB_1_1_547_22
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
The Correspondence series consists of incoming and outgoing handwritten and typed letters, carbons, postcards, faxes, and telegrams generated during Sydney Brenner's career. The bulk of this series covers the late 1940s to the 2000s. Correspondents include over 30 Nobel laureates, as well as biochemists, geneticists, students, publishers, and others. Highlights of the collection include the correspondence from Francis Crick, with whom Brenner shared an office for 20 years. Topics covered...
Dates:
20th Century
Slips, Strings and Species, by Gabriel A. Dover, 6/6/1989
Item — Box CP04, Folder: 30
Identifier: SB_1_1_164_18
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
The Correspondence series consists of incoming and outgoing handwritten and typed letters, carbons, postcards, faxes, and telegrams generated during Sydney Brenner's career. The bulk of this series covers the late 1940s to the 2000s. Correspondents include over 30 Nobel laureates, as well as biochemists, geneticists, students, publishers, and others. Highlights of the collection include the correspondence from Francis Crick, with whom Brenner shared an office for 20 years. Topics covered...
Dates:
6/6/1989