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"The path of carbon in photosynthesis"for Progress in Botany: 50
years of Calvin-Benson cycle - 30 years of Kelly-Latzko reviews
While writing this Foreword and trying to focus my thoughts on the
bioch- istry of photosynthesis, a handsome slim hardcover booklet
of 104 pages bound in dark blue linen is in front of me on my desk:
"The Path of Carbon in Photosynthesis" J. A. Bassham and M.
Calvin,1957 I acquired it in the month of my oral Ph. D. -exams,
April 1960, to get prepared with the Nobel-laureate's text. In 2004
in his last swan-song review for Progress in Botany Grahame J.
Kelly celebrated "The Calvin cycle's golden jubilee"in an overview
of 50 years of carbon flowing for the progress in botany. He had
met Erwin Latzko in 1970 in another then foremost and now historic
place of the biochemistry of photosynthesis, the laboratory of
Martin Gibbs at Brandeis University, Massachusetts. Four years
later Latzko and Kelly (1974) published their first joint review on
photosynthetic carbon metabolism, starting off a long flow of
articles on the flow of carbon in the series Progress in Botany.
Most faithfully they produced regular accounts of the progress in
Progress in Botany every second year, and when Erwin Latzko decided
to retire after the 1996 review Grahame Kelly carried on alone.
"The path of carbon in photosynthesis"for Progress in Botany: 50
years of Calvin-Benson cycle - 30 years of Kelly-Latzko reviews
While writing this Foreword and trying to focus my thoughts on the
bioch- istry of photosynthesis, a handsome slim hardcover booklet
of 104 pages bound in dark blue linen is in front of me on my desk:
"The Path of Carbon in Photosynthesis" J. A. Bassham and M.
Calvin,1957 I acquired it in the month of my oral Ph. D.
-exams,April 1960,to get prepared with the Nobel-laureate's text.
In 2004 in his last swan-song review for Progress in Botany Grahame
J. Kelly celebrated "The Calvin cycle's golden jubilee"in an
overview of 50 years of carbon flowing for the progress in botany.
He had met Erwin Latzko in 1970 in another then foremost and now
historic place of the biochemistry of photosynthesis, the
laboratory of Martin Gibbs at Brandeis University, Massachusetts.
Four years later Latzko and Kelly (1974) published their first
joint review on photosynthetic carbon metabolism,starting off a
long flow of articles on the flow of carbon in the series Progress
in Botany. Most faithfully they produced regular accounts of the
progress in Progress in Botany every second year, and when Erwin
Latzko decided to retire after the 1996 review Grahame Kelly
carried on alone.
Albert Meisner is one incensed trucker; not only is he being blamed
for the cataclysm that transported his whole property, his family,
their friends and two unexpected guests to this peculiar world; the
whiskey he's been drinking is having no effect on him The truly
culpable person is Frank; his future son-in-law who is now in a
coma from the power surge precipitated by his experimentation with
the 'harmless' alien objects Albert had salvaged a dozen years
earlier from the wreckage of a spaceship. Albert learns that just
moments before the disastrous event catapulted them to this place,
the secret service and army had been situated right outside his
front gate about to raid his home. As all vestiges of 21st century
life have disappeared, the question becomes not where are they, but
when? Though Albert boasts he's just a 'dumb trucker', he sets out
to chronicle all the events that may have contributed to their
predicament in the hope of discovering how it could've happened and
who or what really caused it. As if things couldn't get worse, a
shovel and pick-axe being used to fortify the compound against a
possible attack from their new neighbours go missing.
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