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         Baltimore David:     more books (103)
  1. Ahead of the Curve: David Baltimore's Life in Science by Shane Crotty, 2003-06-02
  2. The Baltimore Case: A Trial of Politics, Science, and Character by Daniel J. Kevles, 2000-01-17
  3. Baltimore Unbound: A Strategy for Regional Renewal by David Rusk, 1995-10-01
  4. Limits of Scientific Inquiry by David Baltimore, Harvey Brooks, et all 1980-10-30
  5. Baltimore and Ohio : Sunburst Trail to Chicago : Cumberland to Chicago by David P Ori, Stephen J. Salamon, et all 1993
  6. The Baltimore Orioles Baseball Team (Great Sports Teams) by David Pietrusza, 2000-05
  7. The Baltimore Orioles: Memories and Memorabilia of the Lords of Baltimore (Major League Memories) by Bruce Chadwick, David M. Spindel, 1995-07
  8. Daniel Willard and Progressive Management on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (Historical Perspectives on Business Enterprise Series) by David M. Vrooman, 1991-12
  9. Nobel Lectures: Molecular Biology, 1933-75
  10. Frontiers of Life, Four-Volume Set, Volume 1-4
  11. The living world (Frontiers of life) by David Baltimore, 2002
  12. Animal Virology (ICN-UCLA symposia on molecular and cellular biology)
  13. Molekulare Zellbiologie (German Edition) by Arnold Berk, David Baltimore, et all 1996-09
  14. A Guide to the Baltimore Stage in the Eighteenth Century: A History and Day Book Calendar

1. David Baltimore Winner Of The 1975 Nobel Prize In Medicine
david baltimore, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology and Medicine, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. david baltimore. 1975 nobel Laureate in Medicine
http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/1975a.html
D AVID B ALTIMORE
1975 Nobel Laureate in Medicine
    for their discoveries concerning the interaction between tumour viruses and the genetic material of the cell.
Background Book Store Featured Internet Links Nobel News Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

2. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Medicine
OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE. Name, Year Awarded. Adrian,Lord Edgar Douglas, 1932. Arber, Werner, 1978. Axelrod, Julius, 1970. baltimore,david,
http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

3. David Baltimore - Autobiography
david baltimore – Autobiography. My Mass. 1973present, American CancerSociety Professor of Microbiology. From Les Prix nobel 1975.
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1975/baltimore-autobio.html
My interest in Biology began when I was a high school student and spent a summer at the Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. There I first experienced research biology and saw research biologists at work; this experience led me to become a biology major in college.
I went on to Swarthmore College where I began as a major in biology but switched to chemistry later so that I could carry out a research thesis. Between my last two years at Swarthmore I spent a summer at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories working with Dr. George Streisinger, and the experience of working with and watching that great teacher led me to molecular biology.
I started graduate school at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in biophysics, but when I decided to work on animal viruses I left M.I.T. to study for a summer with Dr. Philip Marcus at the Albert Einstein Medical College and to take the animal virus course at Cold Spring Harbor, then taught by Dr. Richard Franklin and Dr. Edward Simon. I joined Dr. Franklin at the

4. Medicine 1975
The nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1975. david baltimore, Renato Dulbecco,Howard Martin Temin. 1/3 of the prize, 1/3 of the prize, 1/3 of the prize.
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1975/
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1975
"for their discoveries concerning the interaction between tumour viruses and the genetic material of the cell" David Baltimore Renato Dulbecco Howard Martin Temin 1/3 of the prize 1/3 of the prize 1/3 of the prize USA USA USA Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Cambridge, MA, USA Imperial Cancer Research Fund Laboratory
London, United Kingdom University of Wisconsin
Madison, WI, USA b. 1938 b. 1914
(in Catanzaro, Italy) b. 1934
d. 1994 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1975
Press Release

Presentation Speech
David Baltimore ...
Banquet Speech
The 1975 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry
Physiology or Medicine Literature ... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

5. Dieci Nobel Per Il Futuro
Translate this page 1979 Wiesel, Elie Pace, 1986 Zewail, Ahmed H. Chimica, 1999 Zinkernagel, Rolf M.Medicina, 1996, Premio nobel per la Medicina 1975 david baltimore è nato a New
http://www.hypothesis.it/nobel/ita/bio/baltimore.htm

Allais, Maurice
Economia, 1988
Altman, Sidney
Chimica, 1989
Arber, Werner
Medicina, 1978
Arrow, Kenneth J.
Economia, 1972
Baltimore, David Medicina, 1975
Becker, Gary S.
Economia, 1992
Black, James W.
Medicina, 1988
Brown, Lester R.

Buchanan, James M.
Economia, 1986
Charpak, Georges
Fisica, 1992 Dahrendorf, Ralf Dausset, Jean Medicina, 1980 Debreu, Gérard Economia, 1983 de Duve, Christian Medicina, 1974 Dulbecco, Renato Medicina, 1975 Ernst, Richard R. Chimica, 1991 Esaki, Leo Fisica, 1973 Fo, Dario Letteratura, 1997 Gell-Mann, Murray Fisica, 1969 Glashow, Sheldon Lee Fisica, 1979 Guillemin, Roger C.L. Medicina, 1977 Hoffmann, Roald Chimica, 1981 Jacob, François Medicina, 1965 Kindermans, Jean-Marie Pace, 1999 Klein, Lawrence R. Economia, 1980 Kroto, Harold W. Chimica, 1996 Lederman, Leon M.

6. Ten Nobels For The Future
1979 Wiesel, Elie Peace, 1986 Zewail, Ahmed H. Chemistry, 1999 Zinkernagel, RolfM. Medicine, 1996, nobel Laureate in Medicine, 1975 david baltimore was born in
http://www.hypothesis.it/nobel/eng/bio/baltimore.htm

Allais, Maurice
Economics, 1988
Altman, Sidney
Chemistry, 1989
Arber, Werner
Medicine, 1978
Arrow, Kenneth J.
Economics, 1972
Baltimore, David Medicine, 1975
Becker, Gary S.
Economics, 1992
Black, James W.
Medicine, 1988
Brown, Lester R.

Buchanan, James M.
Economics, 1986
Charpak, Georges
Physics, 1992 Dahrendorf, Ralf Dausset, Jean Medicine, 1980 Economics, 1983 de Duve, Christian Medicine, 1974 Dulbecco, Renato Medicine, 1975 Ernst, Richard R. Chemistry, 1991 Esaki, Leo Physics, 1973 Fo, Dario Literature, 1997 Gell-Mann, Murray Physics, 1969 Glashow, Sheldon Lee Physics, 1979 Guillemin, Roger C.L. Medicine, 1977 Hoffmann, Roald Chemistry, 1981 Jacob, François Medicine, 1965 Kindermans, Jean-Marie Peace, 1999 Klein, Lawrence R. Economics, 1980 Kroto, Harold W. Chemistry, 1996 Lederman, Leon M.

7. Dr. David Baltimore
Caltech’s seventh president, david baltimore is perhaps one of the most influentialbiologists of his generation. Awarded the nobel Prize at the age of 37
http://www.caltech.edu/president/
is perhaps one of the most influential biologists 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.

8. Dr. David Baltimore -- Biography
david baltimore is perhaps the most influential biologist of his generation. Awardedthe nobel Prize at the age of 37 for his work in virology, he has also had
http://www.caltech.edu/president/bio.html
David Baltimore
Baltimore received his bachelor's degree from Swarthmore College in 1960 and his PhD from Rockefeller University in 1964. He subsequently held yearlong postdoctoral positions at MIT and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, followed by a three-year appointment at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California. In 1968, he returned to MIT as an associate professor. He was named full professor in 1972.
In addition to his research accomplishments, Baltimore has several outstanding administrative and public policy achievements to his credit. In the mid-1970s, he 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 to 1991.
Baltimore's numerous honors include the 1970 Gustave Stern Award in Virology, the 1971 Eli Lilly and Co. Award in Microbiology and Immunology, the 1999 National Medal of Science, and the 2000 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1974, and is also a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Academy of Microbiology. He has published more than 500 peer-reviewed articles.

9. Baltimore, David
david baltimore. AP/Wide World Photos. (b. March 7, 1938, New York, NY, US), Americanvirologist who shared the nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1975
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/49_16.html
Baltimore, David
David Baltimore AP/Wide World Photos (b. March 7, 1938, New York, N.Y., U.S.), American virologist who shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1975 with Howard M. Temin and Renato Dulbecco . Working independently, Baltimore and Temin discovered reverse transcriptase, an enzyme that synthesizes DNA from RNA. Baltimore also conducted research that led to an understanding of the interaction between viruses and the genetic material of the cell. The research of all three men contributed to an understanding of the role of viruses in the development of cancer. Baltimore and Temin both studied the process by which certain tumour-causing RNA viruses (those whose genetic material is composed of RNA) replicate after they infect a cell. They simultaneously demonstrated that these RNA viruses, now called retroviruses, contain the blueprint for an unusual enzymea polymerase called reverse transcriptasethat copies DNA from an RNA template. The newly formed viral DNA then integrates into the infected host cell, an event that can transform the infected cell into a cancer cell. Baltimore received his undergraduate degree in chemistry from Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania (B.A., 1960), and went on to study animal virology at the Rockefeller Institute (now Rockefeller University) in New York City, where he obtained his doctorate in 1964, and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston. He worked with Dulbecco at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, Calif. (1965-68), studying the mechanism of replication of the poliovirus.

10. Nobel Prize Winners A-C
Balch, Emily Greene, 1946, peace, US, baltimore, david, 1975, physiology/medicine,US, interaction between tumour viruses and the genetic material of the cell,
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_a-c.html
Article Year Category Country* Achievement Literary Area Addams, Jane peace U.S. Adrian (of Cambridge), Edgar Douglas Adrian, 1st Baron physiology/medicine U.K. discoveries regarding function of neurons Agnon, S.Y. literature Israel novelist Alder, Kurt chemistry West Germany discovery and development of diene synthesis Aleixandre, Vicente literature Spain poet physics Sweden work in magnetohydrodynamics and in antiferromagnetism and ferrimagnetism Allais, Maurice economics France contributions to the theory of markets and efficient use of resources Altman, Sidney chemistry U.S. discovery of certain basic properties of RNA Alvarez, Luis W. physics U.S. work with elementary particles, discovery of resonance states American Friends Service Committee peace U.S. Amnesty International peace (founded 1961) Anderson, Carl David physics U.S. discovery of the positron Anderson, Philip W. physics U.S. contributions to understanding the behaviour of electrons in magnetic, noncrystalline solids Andric, Ivo literature Yugoslavia novelist Anfinsen, Christian B.

11. Caltech Academic Village - Nobel Laureate David Baltimore
nobel LAUREATES david baltimore. david baltimore. My interest inBiology began when I was a high school student and spent a summer
http://bookstore.caltech.edu/nobelbaltimore.html
NOBEL LAUREATES - David Baltimore
David Baltimore My interest in Biology began when I was a high school student and spent a summer at the Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. There I first experienced research biology and saw research biologists at work; this experience led me to become a biology major in college.
I went on to Swarthmore College where I began as a major in biology but switched to chemistry later so that I could carry out a research thesis. Between my last two years at Swarthmore I spent a summer at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories working with Dr. George Streisinger, and the experience of working with and watching that great teacher led me to molecular biology.
I started graduate school at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in biophysics, but when I decided to work on animal viruses I left M.I.T. to study for a summer with Dr. Philip Marcus at the Albert Einstein Medical College and to take the animal virus course at Cold Spring Harbor, then taught by Dr. Richard Franklin and Dr. Edward Simon. I joined Dr. Franklin at the

12. Caltech Academic Village - Nobel Laureates
nobel LAUREATES. nobel Laureates Currently on Faculty david baltimore,Physiology or Medicine 1975 President; Faculty. Edward B. Lewis
http://bookstore.caltech.edu/nobellist.html
NOBEL LAUREATES
Nobel Laureates Currently on Faculty David Baltimore , Physiology or Medicine 1975 President; Faculty Edward B. Lewis , (PhD '42) Physiology or Medicine 1995 Faculty Rudolph A. Marcus , Chemistry 1992 Faculty Ahmed H. Zewail , Chemistry 1999 Faculty Nobel Laureates, Retired Faculty and Alumni Anderson, Carl D. (BS '27, PhD '30) Physics 1936 Faculty
Beadle, George W. Physiology or Medicine 1958 Faculty Delbrück, Max Physiology or Medicine 1969 Faculty Dulbecco, Renato Physiology or Medicine 1975 Former Faculty Feynman, Richard P. Physics 1965 Faculty Fowler, William A. (PhD '36) Physics 1983 Faculty Gell-Mann, Murray Physics 1969 Faculty Glaser, Donald A. (PhD '50) Physics 1960 Lipscomb, William N. (PhD '46) Chemistry 1976 Merton, Robert C. MS '67 Economics 1997 McMillan, Edwin M. (BS '28, MS '29) Chemistry 1951 Millikan, Robert A. Physics 1923 Faculty Morgan, Thomas H. Physiology or Medicine 1933 Faculty Mossbauer, Rudolf Physics 1961 Faculty Osheroff, Douglas D. (BS '67) Physics 1996

13. David Baltimore Named As New Caltech President
nobel Prizewinning biologist david baltimore Named President of theCalifornia Institute of Technology. baltimore, Thorne, CIT Beaver
http://pr.caltech.edu/media/Baltimore_release.html
Nobel Prize-winning biologist David Baltimore Named President of the California Institute of Technology
Dr. Baltimore's Announcement in Beckman Auditorium
Dr. Gordon Moore, Dr. Thomas Everhart, Dr. Baltimore, Dr. Kip Thorne
Dr. Moore, Dr. Alice Huang, Dr. Baltimore, Dr. Thorne
Biographical Sketch of Dr. Baltimore

Statement from Dr. Baltimore

Statement from Dr. Gordon Moore

Statement from Dr. Kip Thorne
...
Announcement in The Boston Globe
PASADENA, 13 May 1997 Dr. David Baltimore, one of the world's leading scientists and winner of the 1975 Nobel Prize for his work in virology, has been appointed president of the California Institute of Technology. The announcement was made Tuesday, May 13, by Dr. Gordon E. Moore, chair of Caltech's Board of Trustees. Baltimore will assume the presidency this autumn, succeeding Dr. Thomas E. Everhart, who has served for the past 10 years. "David Baltimore is perhaps the most influential living biologist, and surely one of the most accomplished," Moore said on announcing the appointment. "He is our nation's leader in the effort to create an AIDS vaccine, and he was a major player in the creation of a national science policy consensus on recombinant DNA research. "In the coming decade there may be rapid and remarkable changes in the relationships between research universities and government, industry, and society," Moore continued. "Dr. Baltimore's wisdom and his proven abilities as an educator, researcher, administrator, and public advocate for science and engineering make him an outstanding choice to lead Caltech through this period of change and into the 21st century. I look forward to working with him to make our Institute even greater in the future than it has been in the past." Baltimore is currently Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was founding director of MIT's Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, and served from the institute's creation in 1982 to 1990, when he became president of Rockefeller University.

14. Caltech Academic Village - Nobel Laureate David Baltimore
Caltech's Academic Village nobel Laureates. david baltimore. 1973-present,American Cancer Society Professor of Microbiology. From Les Prix nobel 1975.
http://131.215.176.1/html/nobelbaltimore.html
Caltech's Academic Village - Nobel Laureates
David Baltimore
My interest in Biology began when I was a high school student and spent a summer at the Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. There I first experienced research biology and saw research biologists at work; this experience led me to become a biology major in college.
I went on to Swarthmore College where I began as a major in biology but switched to chemistry later so that I could carry out a research thesis. Between my last two years at Swarthmore I spent a summer at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories working with Dr. George Streisinger, and the experience of working with and watching that great teacher led me to molecular biology.
I started graduate school at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in biophysics, but when I decided to work on animal viruses I left M.I.T. to study for a summer with Dr. Philip Marcus at the Albert Einstein Medical College and to take the animal virus course at Cold Spring Harbor, then taught by Dr. Richard Franklin and Dr. Edward Simon. I joined Dr. Franklin at the

15. Caltech Academic Village - Nobel Laureates
Caltech's Academic Village nobel Laureates. nobel Laureates Currently onFaculty david baltimore, Physiology or Medicine 1975 President; Faculty.
http://131.215.176.1/html/nobellist.html
Caltech's Academic Village - Nobel Laureates Nobel Laureates Currently on Faculty David Baltimore , Physiology or Medicine 1975 President; Faculty Edward B. Lewis , (PhD '42) Physiology or Medicine 1995 Faculty Rudolph A. Marcus , Chemistry 1992 Faculty Ahmed H. Zewail , Chemistry 1999 Faculty Nobel Laureates, Retired Faculty and Alumni Anderson, Carl D. (BS '27, PhD '30) Physics 1936 Faculty
Beadle, George W. Physiology or Medicine 1958 Faculty Delbrück, Max Physiology or Medicine 1969 Faculty Dulbecco, Renato Physiology or Medicine 1975 Former Faculty Feynman, Richard P. Physics 1965 Faculty Fowler, William A. (PhD '36) Physics 1983 Faculty Gell-Mann, Murray Physics 1969 Faculty Glaser, Donald A. (PhD '50) Physics 1960 Lipscomb, William N. (PhD '46) Chemistry 1976 Merton, Robert C. MS '67 Economics 1997 McMillan, Edwin M. (BS '28, MS '29) Chemistry 1951 Millikan, Robert A. Physics 1923 Faculty

16. MITWORLD |» Dr. David Baltimore
Ford/MIT nobel Laureate Lecture. Dr. david baltimore nobel Laureate President,California Institute of Technology. Building a Community on Trust .
http://web.mit.edu/mitworld/content/ford_mit/baltimore.html
Ford/MIT Nobel Laureate Lecture
Dr. David Baltimore
Nobel Laureate
President, California Institute of Technology "Building a Community on Trust" February 19, 2002
Kresge Auditorium Prior to becoming Caltech's seventh President in 1997, Dr. Baltimore was an Institute Professor at MIT and founding director of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. He received the Nobel Prize in 1975 for his work in virology. Sponsored by the Ford Motor Company, this lecture is part of the Ford/MIT Nobel Laureate Lecture Series. More information can be found at:
http://web.mit.edu/nobel-lectures/
Hosted by
Community Services Office at MIT
http://web.mit.edu/oscs/
Dr. David Baltimore
"Building a Community on Trust"
Abstract:
In this lecture, Dr. Baltimore discuses the central importance of trust, in science, education, commerce and personal life. According to Dr. Baltimore, "trust is a moral stance without which a community cannot exist because, as the Enron debacle shows, no network of safeguards can replace moral behavior." In his remarks Dr. Baltimore emphasizes the role of trust in the collaborative activities that are needed for interdisciplinary science and in the educational community that is Caltech. Credits CAES AMPS MIT ... ILP

17. Ahead Of The Curve
david baltimore has done nobelprize-winning work on viruses and cancer, he hasled three of the world's great centers of biological research, and he has
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9029.html
Entire Site Books Journals E-Editions The Press
Shane Crotty
Ahead of the Curve
David Baltimore's Life in Science
Publication Date: April 2001 Subjects: Science Biology Autobiographies and Biographies Rights: World 270 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 28 b/w photographs, 6 line illustrations Clothbound
Available Now Paperback
NYPDue 6/03 Read Chapter One Description Table of Contents About the Author ... Related Books
"Crotty does an impressive job of outlining Baltimore's scientific role in many of his major discoveries and makes many of the basics of modern molecular biology accessible to the general public." Publishers Weekly "[T]he personal as well as scientific reasons for Baltimore's eminence shine through." New Scientist "Crotty has a knack for explaining complicated science in lay language." Washington Post Book World "In his hugely entertaining biography of David Baltimore, Shane Crotty delivers a vivid description of the career of one of the most influential scientists of our time, while providing a lively account of discoveries that shaped biology over the last forty years and of events that contributed to define its place in today's society. Crotty's writing style is a hit, he brings the science to everyone's level, and he has a great story to tell." Nature Medicine "Crotty's book brilliantly illuminates this pillar of molecular biology, and should be read by anyone, whether scientist or not, who cares about the modern research enterprise and the politics that drive it."

18. Whitehead Institute - David Baltimore
nobel Laureate david baltimore Tackles Issues of Trust. From the September11th attack on the World Trade Center to the Enron scandal
http://www.wi.mit.edu/nap/features/nap_feature_baltimore.html
whitehead home publications biology week newsroom ... Media Contact Information News Feature Press Releases Fact Sheets and Backgrounders Discovery Director's Report ... Research Summaries

Nobel Laureate David Baltimore Tackles Issues of Trust
Academia is Based on Trust In his talk, Baltimore touched on past personal experiences with issues of trust, including the establishment of the Whitehead Institute. These large collaborative efforts are generating a tidal wave of data that has required the development of powerful new tools to manage, compile, and manipulate the massive amount of information. As a result, trust is more important than ever, said Baltimore. The talk was the fourth in the Ford/MIT Nobel Laureate Lecture series, a five-year program sponsored by the Ford Motor Company.
© 2002 Whitehead Institute
Nine Cambridge Center
Cambridge, MA 02142-1479

19. Nature Publishing Group
writes that I campaigned to have baltimore's nobel prize rescinded led a campaignto destroy baltimore is false the longdiscredited rumour that david knew of
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v411/n6834/full/

20. PBS - The Nobel: Visions Of Our Century
Additional Links. Biography nobel e-Museum. Additional Reading. Crotty,Shane. Ahead of the Curve david baltimore's Life in Science.
http://www.pbs.org/kqed/nobel/laureates/baltimore.html
shared the 1975 Nobel Prize with Howard M. Temin and Renato Dulbecco for his work in discovering the role genetic material and viruses play in the development of cancer. A 1986 article on gene-splicing provoked accusations of fraudulent research against Baltimore's collaborator, Thereza Imanishi-Kari. The investigation lasted 10 years, during which time Baltimore resigned as president of Rockefeller University. Ultimately, both were cleared of all charges. An early advocate of federal AIDS research, Baltimore was appointed in 1996 to head the National Institutes of Health AIDS Vaccine Research Committee. He is currently president of the California Institute of Technology, a position he has held since 1997. Additional Links Biography - Nobel e-Museum Biography - California Institute of Technology Article on Baltimore Investigation and Exonoration of Imanishi-Kari - Massachusetts Institute of Technology Editorial on Baltimore's Appointment to Caltech - Los Angeles Times Additional Reading Crotty, Shane.

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