From owner-csm@net.bio.net Sun Oct 09 23:00:00 1994
Path: biosci!biosci!not-for-mail
From: kristoff@net.bio.net (David Kristofferson)
Newsgroups: bionet.prof-society.csm
Subject: Test of bionet.prof-society.csm
Date: 10 Oct 1994 16:17:01 -0700
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Biology
Lines: 10
Approved: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <37ci1d$1pp@net.bio.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

Test of bionet.prof-society.csm.  This moderated newsgroup is not yet
ready for use.  Please await a welcoming announcement before
attempting to post into it.

				Sincerely,

				Dave Kristofferson
				BIOSCI/bionet Manager

				biosci-help@net.bio.net

From owner-csm@net.bio.net Tue Oct 11 23:00:00 1994
Path: biosci!biosci!not-for-mail
From: biohelp@net.bio.net (BIOSCI Administrator)
Newsgroups: bionet.prof-society.csm
Subject: BIOSCI info sheet
Date: 12 Oct 1994 11:11:24 -0700
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Biology
Lines: 781
Approved: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <37h8sc$je7@net.bio.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

Our instruction sheet follows.  If you can not use news software and
therefore need to subscribe by e-mail, please follow the instructions
below for using the e-mail server at biosci-server@net.bio.net.  If
you have problems using the server, personal help can be reached at
biosci-help@net.bio.net.  Thank you for your interest in the BIOSCI
newsgroups.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

      THE BIOSCI ELECTRONIC NEWSGROUP NETWORK INFORMATION SHEET
                       (last revised 12-OCT-94)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the BIOSCI information sheet for the Americas and Pacific Rim
countries.  If you are located in Europe, Africa, or Central Asia,
please retrieve that version of the information sheet by sending the
command

info ukinfo

in the body of an e-mail message addressed to the Internet address

                       biosci-server@net.bio.net

Any text placed on the Subject: line of your message is ignored, so
please be sure to put the "info ukinfo" command in the main body of
your e-mail message.

New users of BIOSCI/bionet may want to read the "Frequently Asked
Questions" or "FAQ" sheet for BIOSCI.  The FAQ provides details on how
to participate in these forums and is available by gopher to
net.bio.net or anonymous FTP to net.bio.net [134.172.2.69] in
pub/BIOSCI/doc/biosci.FAQ.  It may also be requested by sending e-mail
to biosci-server@net.bio.net as described above except that the
command 

info faq

should be used in the body of the mail message.  The FAQ is also
posted on the first of each month to the newsgroup
BIONEWS/bionet.announce immediately following the posting of both
versions of the BIOSCI information sheet.
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Contents of this Document
-------------------------
Introduction
List of BIOSCI Mailing Lists and Newsgroups
List of BIOSCI Newsgroup Topics
BIOSCI Newsgroup Discussion Leaders
Participating in BIOSCI Using USENET News Software
Participating in BIOSCI by E-mail
  E-mail Subscription Requests and other Information
  E-mail Address Changes
  Interruption of E-mail Service
  Posting Messages to Newsgroups by E-mail
Retrieval of old postings from the BIOSCI archives
BIOSCI "prototype" newsgroups
Retrieving Other BIOSCI Documentation


Introduction
------------

The BIOSCI newsgroup network was developed to allow easy worldwide
communications between biological scientists who work on a variety of
computer networks.  BIOSCI is supported by the National Science
Foundation, Department of Energy, and National Institutes of Health in
the U.S.A. and by the Science and Engineering Research Council
Daresbury Laboratory in the United Kingdom.  BIOSCI services are
available to users free of charge.

BIOSCI messages are distributed by two means: USENET news software and
electronic mail.

WE STRONGLY ENCOURAGE ALL INTERESTED USERS TO EXPLORE GETTING "USENET
NEWS" SOFTWARE AT YOUR SITE.  The software is in the public domain,
and you will find it much more convenient than subscribing to
newsgroups by e-mail.  Please consult your systems manager (the
software may already be available on a machine at your institution) or
contact biosci-help@net.bio.net for a list of software available free
of charge on the Internet.  NOTE, however, that the installation and
maintenance of news software requires the assistance of a trained
systems operator in most cases and is not a task to be undertaken by a
computer novice.

Why is news software preferable to e-mail?  News software recovers
messages automatically after network interruptions, whereas your e-mail
address may have to be removed from the subscription list at times if
your computer/network malfunctions and undelivered mail starts
bouncing back to the BIOSCI administrative sites.  You will have to
manually retrieve lost messages from the archives if your e-mail
subscription is suspended.

News software organizes messages by topic and subtopic for easy
browsing.  In contrast if you subscribe by e-mail to more than one
discussion list, messages from multiple lists arrive into your
personal mail file in chronological order of posting only and are
mixed in with your personal messages.  You have to connect the
discussion threads yourself if you use e-mail.

In summary, e-mail participation should be seen as a LAST RESORT to be
used only if news software can not be installed locally.

Fortunately, BIOSCI offers advantages for e-mail users too.  By having
distribution sites or "nodes" on each major network, BIOSCI allows its
e-mail users to contact people around the world without having to
learn a variety of computer addressing tricks.  Any user can simply
post a message to his/her regional BIOSCI node and copies of that
message will be distributed automatically to all other subscribers on
all of the participating networks, including the Internet, USENET,
BITNET, EARN, NETNORTH, HEANET, and JANET.


List of BIOSCI Mailing Lists and Newsgroups
-------------------------------------------
BIOSCI messages are distributed on the newsgroups in the "bionet"
hierarchy of USENET and on the corresponding mailing lists indicated
below.  Contents of the USENET newsgroups and the e-mail distributions
are *identical*, i.e., messages sent in by e-mail are also forwarded
to USENET and messages posted to USENET newsgroups are also
distributed to e-mail subscribers.

An expanded description of the purpose of each newsgroup follows this
list.


MAILING LIST NAME          USENET Newsgroup Name
-----------------          ---------------------
ACEDB-SOFT                 bionet.software.acedb
AGEING                     bionet.molbio.ageing
AGROFORESTRY               bionet.agroforestry
ARABIDOPSIS                bionet.genome.arabidopsis
ASCB **                    bionet.prof-society.ascb
BIOFORUM                   bionet.general
BIO-INFORMATION-THEORY +   bionet.info-theory
BIONAUTS                   bionet.users.addresses
BIONEWS **                 bionet.announce
BIO-JOURNALS **            bionet.journals.contents
BIO-MATRIX                 bionet.molbio.bio-matrix
BIOPHYSICAL-SOCIETY **     bionet.prof-society.biophysics
BIOPHYSICS                 bionet.biophysics
BIO-SOFTWARE               bionet.software
BIOTHERMOKINETICS          bionet.metabolic-reg
BIO-WWW **                 bionet.software.www
CELEGANS                   bionet.celegans
CELL-BIOLOGY               bionet.cellbiol
CHLAMYDOMONAS              bionet.chlamydomonas
CHROMOSOMES                bionet.genome.chromosomes
COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY **   bionet.biology.computational
CSM **                     bionet.prof-society.csm
CYTONET                    bionet.cellbiol.cytonet
DROSOPHILA                 bionet.drosophila
EMBL-DATABANK              bionet.molbio.embldatabank
EMF-BIO                    bionet.emf-bio
EMPLOYMENT                 bionet.jobs
EMPLOYMENT-WANTED          bionet.jobs.wanted
FASEB **                   bionet.prof-society.faseb
GDB                        bionet.molbio.gdb
GENBANK-BB                 bionet.molbio.genbank
GENETIC-LINKAGE            bionet.molbio.gene-linkage
GRASSES-SCIENCE            bionet.biology.grasses
HIV-MOLECULAR-BIOLOGY      bionet.molbio.hiv
HUMAN-GENOME-PROGRAM       bionet.molbio.genome-program
IMMUNOLOGY                 bionet.immunology
INFO-GCG                   bionet.software.gcg
JOURNAL-NOTES              bionet.journals.note
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS       bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts
MICROBIOLOGY               bionet.microbiology
MOLECULAR-EVOLUTION        bionet.molbio.evolution
MOLECULAR-MODELLING        bionet.molec-model
MOLLUSC-MOLECULAR-NEWS     bionet.molbio.molluscs
MYCOLOGY                   bionet.mycology
NEUROSCIENCE               bionet.neuroscience
N2-FIXATION                bionet.biology.n2-fixation
PARASITOLOGY               bionet.parasitology
PHOTOSYNTHESIS             bionet.photosynthesis
PLANT-BIOLOGY              bionet.plants
POPULATION-BIOLOGY         bionet.population-bio
PROTEIN-ANALYSIS           bionet.molbio.proteins
PROTEIN-CRYSTALLOGRAPHY    bionet.xtallography
PROTISTA                   bionet.protista
RAPD                       bionet.molbio.rapd
SCIENCE-RESOURCES **       bionet.sci-resources
STADEN                     bionet.software.staden
STRUCTURAL-NMR             bionet.structural-nmr
TROPICAL-BIOLOGY           bionet.biology.tropical
URODELES                   bionet.organisms.urodeles
VIROLOGY                   bionet.virology
WOMEN-IN-BIOLOGY           bionet.women-in-bio
YEAST                      bionet.molbio.yeast
ZBRAFISH                   bionet.organisms.zebrafish

+ full name is BIOLOGICAL-INFORMATION-THEORY-AND-CHOWDER-SOCIETY

** Note that newsgroups flagged with ** are moderated, i.e., postings
are directed to a moderator (editor) who later forwards messages
(possibly edited or condensed) to the newsgroup.


List of BIOSCI Newsgroup Topics
-------------------------------

MAILING LIST NAME            TOPIC
-----------------            -----
ACEDB-SOFT                   Discussions by users and developers of genome
                                databases using the ACEDB software.
AGEING                       Discussions about ageing research
AGROFORESTRY                 Discussions about agroforestry research
ARABIDOPSIS                  Newsgroup for the Arabidopsis Genome Project
ASCB **                      Announcements from The American Society
                                for Cell Biology
BIOFORUM                     Discussions about biological topics for
                                which there is not yet a dedicated newsgroup
BIOLOGICAL-INFORMATION-
  THEORY-AND-CHOWDER-SOCIETY Applications of information theory to
                                biology; this group is not for general
                                information or for discussion of
                                theories in general.
BIONAUTS                     Question/answer forum for help using
                                electronic networks, locating e-mail
                                addresses, etc.
BIONEWS **                   General announcements of widespread
                                interest to biologists
BIO-JOURNALS **              Tables of Contents of biological journals
BIO-MATRIX                   Applications of computers to biological databases
BIOPHYSICAL-SOCIETY **       Official announcements/information from the
                                Biophysical Society.
BIOPHYSICS                   Discussion of issues related to the
                                science and profession of biophysics
BIO-SOFTWARE                 Information on software for the biological
                                sciences
BIOTHERMOKINETICS            Discussions about the kinetics, thermodynamics
                                and control of biological processes at
                                the cellular level
BIO-WWW **                   Announcements about new information
                                resources in biology which can be
                                accessed via electronic networked 
                                information retrieval software
CELEGANS                     Research discussions on the model organism 
                                Caenorhabditis elegans and related nematodes 
CELL-BIOLOGY                 Discussions about cell biology including
                                cancer research at the cellular level
CHLAMYDOMONAS                Discussions about the biology of the green alga
                                Chlamydomonas and related genera
CHROMOSOMES                  Discussions about mapping and sequencing
                                of eucaryote chromosomes
COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY **     Mathematical and computer applications in biology
CSM **                       Announcements from the Canadian Society
                                of Microbiologists.
CYTONET                      Discussions about research on the
                                cytoskeleton, plasma membrane, and
                                cell wall
DROSOPHILA                   Discussions about biological research on
                                Drosophila
EMBL-DATABANK                Messages to and from the EMBL database staff
EMF-BIO                      Discussions about research on
                                electromagnetic field interactions
                                with biological systems
EMPLOYMENT                   Job opportunities in biology (see BIOSCI
                               FAQ *before* posting commercial job openings)
EMPLOYMENT-WANTED            Forum for posting resumes/CVs by
                             individuals seeking employment in the
                             biological sciences or in support of the
                             biological sciences
FASEB **                     Announcements from the Federation of American
                               Societies for Experimental Biology
GDB                          Messages to and from the Genome Data Bank staff
GENBANK-BB                   Messages to and from the GenBank database staff
GENETIC-LINKAGE              Newsgroup for genetic linkage analysis
GRASSES-SCIENCE              Discussions regarding grasses, especially
                               cereal, forage, and turf species
HIV-MOLECULAR-BIOLOGY        Discussions about the molecular biology of HIV
HUMAN-GENOME-PROGRAM         NIH-sponsored newsgroup on human genome issues
IMMUNOLOGY                   Discussions about research in immunology
INFO-GCG                     Discussions about the GCG sequence
                               analysis software
JOURNAL-NOTES                Practical advice on dealing with professional
                               journals
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS         Requests for information and lab reagents
MICROBIOLOGY                 Discussions about research in microbiology
MOLECULAR-EVOLUTION          Discussions about research in molecular evolution
MOLECULAR-MODELLING          Discussions about molecular modelling
MOLLUSC-MOLECULAR-NEWS       Discussions about research on mollusc DNA
MYCOLOGY                     Discussions about research on filamentous fungi
NEUROSCIENCE                 Discussions about research in the neurosciences
N2-FIXATION                  Discussion about biological nitrogen fixation
PARASITOLOGY                 Discussions about research in parasitology
PHOTOSYNTHESIS               Discussions about photosynthesis research
PLANT-BIOLOGY                Discussions about research in plant biology
POPULATION-BIOLOGY           Discussions about research in population biology
PROTEIN-ANALYSIS             Discussions about research on proteins and
                                messages for the PIR and SWISS-PROT databank
                                staffs
PROTEIN-CRYSTALLOGRAPHY      Discussion about crystallography of macromolecules
                                and messages for the PDB staff
PROTISTA                     Discussions about research on ciliates
                                and other protists
RAPD                         Discussions about Randomly Amplified Polymorphic
                                DNA
SCIENCE-RESOURCES **         Information from/about scientific funding
                                agencies
STADEN                       Discussions between scientists using the
                                Staden molecular sequence analysis software 
STRUCTURAL-NMR               Discussions about the use of NMR for
                                macromolecular structure determination
TROPICAL-BIOLOGY             Discussions about research in tropical biology
URODELES                     Discussions about research in urodele
                                amphibian biology
VIROLOGY                     Discussions about research in virology
WOMEN-IN-BIOLOGY             Discussions about issues concerning women
                                biologists
YEAST                        Discussions about the molecular biology
                                and genetics of yeast
ZBRAFISH                     Discussions about research using the model
                                organism Zebrafish (Danio rerio)

** Note that newsgroups flagged with ** are moderated, i.e., postings
are directed to a moderator (editor) who later forwards messages
(possibly edited or condensed) to the newsgroup.


BIOSCI Newsgroup Discussion Leaders
-----------------------------------

Most scientific specialty newsgroups (except for a few created several
years ago) have individuals who are responsible for stimulating
discussion on the newsgroup.  General purpose forums such as
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS do not have discussion leaders.  If a group that
you are interested in does not seem to have much activity recently,
please contact the discussion leader and ask why.

NEWSGROUP NAME               Discussion Leader and their e-mail address
--------------               ------------------------------------------
ACEDB-SOFT                   Mike Cherry (cherry@genome.stanford.edu)
AGEING                       Sydney Shall (bafa1@central.sussex.ac.uk)
AGROFORESTRY                 Gerry Lawson (F_GJL@vaxa.nerc-bush.ac.uk)
ARABIDOPSIS                  Chris Somerville (21847CRS@msu.edu)
ASCB **                      Vincent Shan (moderator@faseb.org)
BIOFORUM                     None
BIOLOGICAL-INFORMATION-
  THEORY-AND-CHOWDER-SOCIETY Tom Schneider (toms@ncifcrf.gov)
BIONAUTS                     Rob Harper (harper@convex.csc.fi)
BIONEWS **                   David Kristofferson (kristoff@net.bio.net)
BIO-JOURNALS **              David Kristofferson (kristoff@net.bio.net)
BIO-MATRIX                   Dan Davison (davison@uh.edu)
BIOPHYSICAL-SOCIETY **       David Kristofferson (kristoff@net.bio.net)
BIOPHYSICS                   Carol Gross (cgross@molbio.cbs.umn.edu)
BIO-SOFTWARE                 None
BIOTHERMOKINETICS            John Woods (eanv20@castle.edinburgh.ac.uk)
BIO-WWW **                   Reinhard Doelz (bio-www@comp.bioz.unibas.ch)
CELEGANS                     William Morgan (wmorgan@acs.wooster.edu)
CELL-BIOLOGY                 Ola Myklebost (ola.myklebost@dnr.uio.no)
CHLAMYDOMONAS                Elizabeth H. Harris (chlamy@acpub.duke.edu) and
                             Antonio R. Franco (bf1rodri@cc.uco.es)
CHROMOSOMES                  Bruce Roe (broe@aardvark.ucs.uoknor.edu) and
                             Greg Lennon (greg@mendel.llnl.gov)
COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY **     Phil J. Curtiss (curtiss@umiacs.umd.edu)
CSM **                       Max Firtel and John Nash (csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca)
CYTONET                      Nicholas C. Carpita (carpita@btny.purdue.edu)
DROSOPHILA                   Michael Ashburner (m.ashburner@gen.cam.ac.uk)
EMBL-DATABANK                None (datalib@embl-heidelberg.de)
EMF-BIO                      Allan H. Frey (afrey@uunet.uu.net)
EMPLOYMENT                   None
EMPLOYMENT-WANTED            None
FASEB **                     Vincent Shan (moderator@faseb.org)
GDB                          Kerryn Brandt (kab@welchgate.welch.jhu.edu)
GENBANK-BB                   Dennis Benson (benson@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
GENETIC-LINKAGE              Steve Bryant (s_bryant@icrf.ac.uk)
GRASSES-SCIENCE              Allen Wright (adwright@iastate.edu)
HIV-MOLECULAR-BIOLOGY        Mika Salminen (msalminen@nphi.fi)
HUMAN-GENOME-PROGRAM         Jane Peterson (jp2@cu.nih.gov)
IMMUNOLOGY                   Donald Forsdyke (forsdyke@qucdn.queensu.ca)
INFO-GCG                     John Cargill (ontogen@nic.cerf.net)
JOURNAL-NOTES                Donald Forsdyke (forsdyke@qucdn.queensu.ca)
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS         None
MICROBIOLOGY                 Martin Latterich (mdhouse@mendel.berkeley.edu)
MOLECULAR-EVOLUTION          Dan Davison (davison@uh.edu)
MOLECULAR-MODELLING          Philippe Stas (philstas@vub.ac.be)
MOLLUSC-MOLECULAR-NEWS       Elizabeth Grace Boulding (boulding@uoguelph.ca)
MYCOLOGY                     Tom Adams (tom@bio.tamu.edu)
                             Leland Ellis (leland@straylight.tamu.edu)
                             Greg May (gsmay@bcm.tmc.edu)
NEUROSCIENCE                 Vincent A Mazzarella (vamg6792@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu)
                             James L. Olds (olds@bernard.ninds.nih.gov)
N2-FIXATION                  Eng-Leong Foo
                             (eng-leong_foo_mircen-ki%micforum@mica.mic.ki.se) 
PARASITOLOGY                 Daniel R. Brooks, Sherwin S. Desser and
                             Henry Hong (parasite@zoo.toronto.edu)
PHOTOSYNTHESIS               Johnathan Marder (marder@agri.huji.ac.il)
PLANT-BIOLOGY                Tony Travis (ajt@rri.sari.ac.uk)
POPULATION-BIOLOGY           None
PROTEIN-ANALYSIS             Amos Bairoch (bairoch@cmu.unige.ch) and
                             John Garavelli (garavelli@nbrf.georgetown.edu)
PROTEIN-CRYSTALLOGRAPHY      Morten Kjeldgaard (morten@oase.kemi.aau.dk)
PROTISTA                     Marsha Altschule
                             (marsha.i.altschuler@williams.edu) and
                             Mark Farmer (farmer@emlab.zoo.uga.edu)
RAPD                         James Farmer (farmerj@yvax.byu.edu)
SCIENCE-RESOURCES **         David Kristofferson (kristoff@net.bio.net)
STADEN                       Tim Littlejohn (tim@bch.umontreal.ca)
STRUCTURAL-NMR               C. S. Raman (raman@bioc01.uthscsa.edu)
TROPICAL-BIOLOGY             Matti Nummelin (saarikko@cc.helsinki.fi)
URODELES                     Susan Duhon (duhon@ucs.indiana.edu) and
                             Anthony Mescher (mescher@ucs.indiana.edu)
VIROLOGY                     Robert Coelen (robert@arbo.microbiol.uwa.oz.au)
WOMEN-IN-BIOLOGY             Cassandra Smith (cls@buenga.bu.edu)
YEAST                        Francis Ouellette (francis@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
ZBRAFISH                     Richard Vogt (vogt@biol.scarolina.edu) and 
                             Una Smith (smith-una@yale.edu)

** Note that newsgroups flagged with ** are moderated.


Participating in BIOSCI Using USENET News Software
-------------------------------------------------- 
Users who have access to USENET news software and the bionet USENET
groups can participate immediately, i.e., they do not need to
"subscribe" to anything.  They can read and reply to messages using
their local news software (e.g., "nn" or "rn") and post new messages
of their own.

Users will have to consult their local systems managers for help in
using news software.  There are many different programs available and
the BIOSCI staff can not provide training in news software use.
Fortunately, most news software is fairly simple to use and can be
learned quickly.

When posting new messages, USENET users should be sure to set the
message "distribution" to "world" or "bionet" or else your message may
not be distributed beyond your local computer.  In most cases,
messages are posted directly to the newsgroups without editorial
intervention.  Some groups (indicated in the lists above) are
"moderated," however.  This means that postings to these newsgroups
will be sent to the newsgroup moderator who will decide whether or not
the message is suitable for posting to the newsgroup in question.


Participating in BIOSCI by E-mail
---------------------------------
PLEASE NOTE THAT IF YOU HAVE ACCESS TO USENET NEWS YOU DO NOT NEED AN
E-MAIL SUBSCRIPTION!!  Simply read and post to the newsgroups in the
"bionet" newsgroup hierarchy using your USENET news software.


E-mail Subscription Requests and other Information
--------------------------------------------------
For users in the Americas and Pacific Rim countries, e-mail
subscription and cancellation requests are handled automatically by an
e-mail server, although personal assistance is also available via the
biosci-help@net.bio.net address.  Once your e-mail address is added to a
subscription list, mail will be sent to your address automatically
each time someone posts a message.  This will continue until you
remove your address from the subscription list.

You should first send the

lists

command to the address

biosci-server@net.bio.net

to obtain a listing of all current BIOSCI mailing lists.  You may
leave your message Subject: line blank in any message that is sent to
the server (text on the Subject: line is *not* processed).  Please
include all commands only in the body of your mail message.

Please BE SURE to substitute the appropriate mailing list name
obtained FROM THE "lists" COMMAND OUTPUT for "listname" in the
subscribe or unsubscribe commands shown below.  Some list names used
by the server are abbreviated compared to their full spelling in the
BIOSCI information sheet.

After obtaining the names of the mailing lists using the "lists"
command, use the

subscribe listname

or 

unsubscribe listname

commands to add or delete your address from the mailing lists.  Please
substitute "listname" above with the appropriate name of the list that
you want to join/cancel.

!!! PLEASE BE SURE to send all subscribe or unsubscribe commands only to
!!! the biosci-server@net.bio.net address and not to the newsgroup posting
!!! addresses where they will bother all of the readers!

Your e-mail address is obtained AUTOMATICALLY from the header of your
mail message and should NOT be included on the subscribe/unsubscribe
command line unless you need to sign up at a different address than
the one you are currently using.  Such requests must be handled
manually by us and create extra work.  (Also you would be surprised at
how many people list their e-mail addresses incorrectly, so please let
our server obtain this information automatically from your mail
header.)

Multiple commands may be placed on separate lines in the same mail
message, i.e., you can include all of your subscribe and/or
unsubscribe requests in one mail message as long as each is on a
separate line.  If you put multiple commands in your mail message,
please put an

end

command as the last in your list of commands.  This helps avoid
sending to the server any signatures that might be automatically
included in your mail messages.

Here is a sample subscription message.  The address public@state-u.edu
would be automatically added to the bionews and grasses mailing lists
as the result of this message.
 
    To: biosci-server@net.bio.net
    From: J.Q. Public <public@state-u.edu>
    Subject: 

    subscribe bionews
    subscribe grasses
    end

If you are already a BIOSCI e-mail subscriber and need to determine
which mailing lists you are on currently, send the command

which

to biosci-server@net.bio.net if you are signed up under the address
which will appear on the From: line of your mail message.  If your
address has changed, you can put a search string after the which
command, e.g., if you are certain than your user name has always been
jqpublic but do not remember the computer hostname, send the command

which jqpublic

Other command details are included in the mail server help file from
biosci-server@net.bio.net.  To get the server help file
(in computerese 8-), send in the

help

command to the server address.


E-mail Address Changes
----------------------
If you have subscribed to a newsgroup and are now leaving an
institution or changing your e-mail address, it is IMPERATIVE that you
cancel your subscription!  Non-existent addresses or overflowing
mailboxes cause computer mail programs to send back "daemon" messages
which might bother everybody on the newsgroup.  We will immediately
remove any address causing such a problem, but would prefer it if you
would notify us in advance as a courtesy to the rest of the user
community.


Interruption of E-mail Service
------------------------------
It is our policy to remove any address from our mailing lists which
becomes inaccessible and causes mail to bounce back to the sender.
This might happen to you if your local computer or network fails for a
significant period of time.  If you notice that you are no longer
receiving BIOSCI postings, it may be because your address was removed
for the above reason.  It will be necessary for you to contact
biosci-help@net.bio.net and resubscribe.  Please see the BIOSCI FAQ,
mentioned at the beginning of this document, for more details on how
BIOSCI handles addresses which reject mail.


Posting Messages to Newsgroups by E-mail
----------------------------------------
Those who use e-mail to post messages should send their mail to the
following Internet addresses in the USA:

**********************************************************************
DO NOT, REPEAT, DO NOT POST SUBSCRIPTION OR CANCELLATION REQUESTS
DIRECTLY TO ANY OF THE NEWSGROUP E-MAIL POSTING ADDRESSES.  PLEASE USE
ONLY THE ADDRESS

                      biosci-server@net.bio.net

for subscription or cancellation requests as explained above.  Your
posting could go to several thousand people.  Supposing that each
person spends a couple of seconds to figure out that you did this,
before they go on to the next message.  You will have wasted the
equivalent of several hours of one person's time, not to mention
wasted computer time and disk storage.
**********************************************************************

MAILING LIST NAME           Mailing Address 
-----------------           ----------------      
ACEDB-SOFT                  acedb@net.bio.net
AGEING                      ageing@net.bio.net
AGROFORESTRY                ag-forst@net.bio.net
ARABIDOPSIS                 arab-gen@net.bio.net
ASCB **                     ascb@net.bio.net
BIOFORUM                    bioforum@net.bio.net
BIO-INFORMATION-THEORY +    bio-info@net.bio.net
BIONAUTS                    bio-naut@net.bio.net
BIONEWS **                  bionews@net.bio.net 
BIO-JOURNALS **             bio-jrnl@net.bio.net
BIO-MATRIX                  biomatrx@net.bio.net
BIOPHYSICAL-SOCIETY **      bphyssoc@net.bio.net
BIOPHYSICS                  biophys@net.bio.net
BIO-SOFTWARE                bio-soft@net.bio.net
BIOTHERMOKINETICS           btk-mca@net.bio.net
BIO-WWW **                  bio-www@net.bio.net
CELEGANS                    celegans@net.bio.net
CELL-BIOLOGY                cellbiol@net.bio.net
CHLAMYDOMONAS               chlamy@net.bio.net
CHROMOSOMES                 biochrom@net.bio.net
COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY **    comp-bio@net.bio.net
CSM **                      csm@net.bio.net
CYTONET                     cytonet@net.bio.net
DROSOPHILA                  dros@net.bio.net
EMBL-DATABANK               embl-db@net.bio.net 
EMF-BIO                     emf-bio@net.bio.net
EMPLOYMENT                  biojobs@net.bio.net 
EMPLOYMENT-WANTED           wantjob@net.bio.net
FASEB                       faseb@net.bio.net
GDB                         gdb@net.bio.net
GENBANK-BB                  genbankb@net.bio.net
GENETIC-LINKAGE             gen-link@net.bio.net
GRASSES-SCIENCE             grasses@net.bio.net
HIV-MOLECULAR-BIOLOGY       hiv-biol@net.bio.net
HUMAN-GENOME-PROGRAM        gnome-pr@net.bio.net
IMMUNOLOGY                  immuno@net.bio.net
INFO-GCG                    info-gcg@net.bio.net
JOURNAL-NOTES               jrnlnote@net.bio.net
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS        methods@net.bio.net 
MICROBIOLOGY                microbio@net.bio.net
MOLECULAR-EVOLUTION         mol-evol@net.bio.net
MOLECULAR-MODELLING         molmodel@net.bio.net
MOLLUSC-MOLECULAR-NEWS      molluscs@net.bio.net
MYCOLOGY                    mycology@net.bio.net
NEUROSCIENCE                neur-sci@net.bio.net
N2-FIXATION                 n2fix@net.bio.net
PARASITOLOGY                parasite@net.bio.net
PHOTOSYNTHESIS              photosyn@net.bio.net
PLANT-BIOLOGY               plantbio@net.bio.net
POPULATION-BIOLOGY          pop-bio@net.bio.net 
PROTEIN-ANALYSIS            proteins@net.bio.net
PROTEIN-CRYSTALLOGRAPHY     xtal-log@net.bio.net
PROTISTA                    protista@net.bio.net
RAPD                        rapd@net.bio.net
SCIENCE-RESOURCES **        sci-res@net.bio.net
STADEN                      staden@net.bio.net
STRUCTURAL-NMR              str-nmr@net.bio.net
TROPICAL-BIOLOGY            trop-bio@net.bio.net
URODELES                    urodeles@net.bio.net
VIROLOGY                    virology@net.bio.net
WOMEN-IN-BIOLOGY            womenbio@net.bio.net
YEAST                       yeast@net.bio.net
ZBRAFISH                    zbrafish@net.bio.net

+ full name is BIOLOGICAL-INFORMATION-THEORY-AND-CHOWDER-SOCIETY

** Note that newsgroups flagged with ** are moderated, i.e., postings
are directed to a moderator (editor) who later forwards messages
(possibly edited or condensed) to the newsgroup.



Retrieval of old postings from the BIOSCI archives
--------------------------------------------------
Users with Internet access can use either the WAIS or gopher software
to search the BIOSCI archives located at net.bio.net as described in
the BIOSCI FAQ.  E-mail users can retrieve messages from our waismail
e-mail server.  For waismail instructions, send the word

help

in a message to waismail@net.bio.net.  Please leave the Subject: line
of your message blank.


BIOSCI "prototype" newsgroups
-----------------------------
To assist areas of research in developing their own electronic
communication forums, BIOSCI at net.bio.net will set up, on request, a
mailing list *without* an associated USENET newsgroup.  The mailing
list is created only at net.bio.net, the U.S. BIOSCI node, and all
subscription requests must be sent to the e-mail server at
biosci-server@net.bio.net regardless of one's geographical location.
There is no charge for this or any other BIOSCI service, as usual.

This procedure waives the rule that requires each new newsgroup
proposal to be put to a vote of the readership first (see the BIOSCI
FAQ, mentioned at the beginning of this document, for details on
creating new full-fledged newsgroups and prototype newsgroups).  Each
mailing list ("prototype newsgroup") must have a scientist volunteer
to serve as its discussion leader and an initial list of e-mail
subscribers.  The prototype newsgroup has six months to build up its
readership after which time it is put out for a vote for full
newsgroup status (i.e., to have both a mailing list *and* parallel
USENET newsgroup created at both BIOSCI nodes in the U.S. and U.K.).
If you are interested in establishing such a forum for your research
specialty, please contact biosci-help@net.bio.net.

The current prototype newsgroups are listed below.  Please send
subscription requests to biosci-server@net.bio.net and NOT to the
newsgroup posting addresses.  Prototype newsgroups may *not* be fully
archived, so please be sure to save any messages that you may want to
refer to again.

Posting Address         Purpose
---------------         -------
amyloid@net.bio.net     Discussions about research on amyloid protein
                          and Alzheimer's disease.
bigblue@net.bio.net     Discussions between researchers who use
                          transgenic animal systems for mutation assays.
biocan@net.bio.net      An unmoderated forum established by the
                          Canadian Federation of Biological Societies
                          (CFBS) to serve as a multidisciplinary forum
                          for the exchange of information within the
                          Canadian biological and biomedical science
                          community.
diagnost@net.bio.net    Discussion of problems involved in diagnosis
                          of pathogens, in all fields
                          (plant/animal/human) and involving the full
                          range of diagnostic techniques (biochemical/
                          serological/ nucleic acid). 
plant-ed@net.bio.net    Discussions among instructors, lab
                          preparators, and graduate assistants who
                          teach courses in any aspect of plant biology
                          at both the undergraduate and graduate level. 
rna@net.bio.net         Discussions about RNA editing, RNA splicing,
                          and ribozyme activities of RNA.
schisto@net.bio.net     Discussions about research on Schistosoma.
yac@net.bio.net         Discussions about yeast artificial chromosomes.
7tms_r@net.bio.net      Discussions about the cloning, characterization
                          and analysis of members of the super-family 
                          of heptahelical signal transducing receptors
                          which interact with heterotrimeric G-proteins.


Retrieving Other BIOSCI Documentation
-------------------------------------
BIOSCI documents are kept in the anonymous FTP area on net.bio.net
[134.172.2.69] in the directory pub/BIOSCI/doc and can be retrieved
eith via FTP or by gopher to net.bio.net.  Documents can also be
retrieved by addressing e-mail to the Internet address
biosci-server@net.bio.net and including any of the commands below in
the body of your mail message.  Text placed on the Subject: line of
your message is ignored, so please be sure that the commands are in
the body of the mail message.  Although multiple commands may be
placed in one message, we recommend instead that one message be sent
per command to avoid having to extract multiple documents from a
single message.  The server sends back all information requested from
a multiple command query in a single response message.

Document to Retrieve            Command to send to biosci-server@net.bio.net
--------------------            --------------------------------------------
BIOSCI FAQ                      info faq
(Frequently Asked ?'s
 about using BIOSCI)

BIOSCI info sheet for the
Americas & Pacific Rim          info usinfo

BIOSCI info sheet for
Europe, Africa, & 
Central Asia                    info ukinfo

Information on Network
Connections                     info internet

How to set up USENET News
at your site                    info usenet1

USENET Netiquette and other
edifying reading                info usenet2


FURTHER QUESTIONS???  Please address them to biosci-help@net.bio.net.

PLEASE DO NOT DIRECT BIOSCI QUESTIONS TO THE PERSONAL E-MAIL ADDRESSES
OF PEOPLE ON THE BIOSCI STAFF!!  DUE TO OUR VOLUME OF MAIL, ANSWERS MAY
BE DELAYED OR NOT SENT AT ALL!!


From owner-csm@net.bio.net Tue Oct 11 23:00:00 1994
Path: biosci!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!torn!nott!nrcnet0.nrc.ca!csm
From: jnash@nyx10.cs.du.edu (John Nash)
Newsgroups: bionet.prof-society.csm
Subject: Test post, please ignore
Date: 11 Oct 1994 20:09:25 -0600
Organization: University of Denver, Dept. of Math & Comp. Sci.
Lines: 10
Approved: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Message-ID: <37fggl$en3@nyx10.cs.du.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Originator: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca

Testing moderation.  Please ignore this message.  The newsgroup is not
yet open for business. 



-- 
Dr. John Nash // Dr. Max Firtel  (moderators)
Disclaimer: The Canadian Society of Microbiologists and/or the
National Research Council of Canada disclaim all responsibility for
the content of messages posted to this newsgroup.

From owner-csm@net.bio.net Tue Oct 11 23:00:00 1994
Path: biosci!biosci!not-for-mail
From: biohelp@net.bio.net (BIOSCI Administrator)
Newsgroups: bionet.prof-society.csm
Subject: CSM/bionet.prof-society.csm is ready!
Date: 12 Oct 1994 11:10:17 -0700
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Biology
Lines: 209
Approved: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <37h8q9$jbt@net.bio.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

The CSM/bionet.prof-society.csm newsgroup for the Canadian Society of
Microbiologists is ready for operation.  If you received this message
by e-mail, it is because your address is on a list provided by the
Society.  Please read further below for instructions on how to remove
yourself from this mailing list if you would prefer to participate via
USENET news software.  The Society list is currently on the computer
called net.bio.net which is the BIOSCI node for the Americas and
Pacific Rim.  Please refer to the instructions below for that site if
you just received this message by e-mail. 

Please note that this is a *moderated* newsgroup and mailing list.
Only messages preapproved by the moderators, Max Firtel and John Nash,
will be distributed on this list in the future.  Following this
instructional message, a general BIOSCI information sheet and a BIOSCI
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) sheet will be posted to assist you in
using the network.  Please save these three messages for future
reference.  John Nash will be posting a welcoming message sometime
after these three postings.

PLEASE NOTE that many USENET sites do not allow automatic creation of
new USENET groups!!!  If you do not see bionet.prof-society.csm in your
newsreader within another day or two, ask your news system
administrator to act on our "newgroup" message to enable the group at
your site.  We have already done several tests and are certain that
the group is currently propagating around the network.  If he/she can
not find the newsgroup message, have them retrieve the bionet
checkgroups message from the anonymous FTP area on net.bio.net in
pub/BIOSCI/doc/bionet-checkgroups-msg.  This file contains the latest
list of bionet USENET newsgroups and can be used to update your bionet
distribution.  If the newgroup did not arrive at your site, it may
also be necessary for your news administrator to contact the upstream
computer site providing you with your newsfeed and determine if they
acted on the newgroup message.

Subscribing to this group:
--------------------------

IF YOU USE USENET NEWS: you need do nothing other than participate in
bionet.prof-society.csm when it appears in your newsreader.  Depending
upon your news software, this may entail you having to answer a prompt
indicating that you want to subscribe.  You might also try the command
"g bionet.prof-society.csm" in rn-like newsreaders.

IF YOU ARE LOCATED IN EUROPE, AFRICA, OR CENTRAL ASIA: please send the
word

help

in the body of your message to MXT@dl.ac.uk to retrieve general server
usage instructions.  To subscribe to the CSM list, first
be sure that you are sending mail from the address at which you wish
to receive news postings, and then send
the command

SUB bionet-news.bionet.prof-society.csm

to MXT@dl.ac.uk.  This message will be automatically read by the
computer and your e-mail address will be extracted from the mail
header and added to the list.


IF YOU ARE LOCATED IN THE AMERICAS OR THE PACIFIC RIM: log in to the
computer account in which you would like to receive mail (not an
account that you use infrequently) and send a mail message to the
Internet address

biosci-server@net.bio.net

Leave the Subject: line of the message blank and enter the following
line into the body of the mail message:

subscribe csm


This message will be automatically read by our computer and your
e-mail address will be extracted from the mail header and added to the
list.


Canceling your subscription:
----------------------------

IF YOU ARE LOCATED IN THE AMERICAS OR THE PACIFIC RIM: send a message
to biosci-server@net.bio.net exactly as described above for
subscribing except include the text

unsubscribe csm

in the body of the message.  Please be sure to send the message from
the account whose address matches the one on the list.  If your
address differs, we will be notified automatically and will remove you
manually from the list if we can determine what was your old address.
Please contact biosci-help@net.bio.net if you have problems.

IF YOU ARE LOCATED IN EUROPE, AFRICA, OR CENTRAL ASIA: first be sure
that you are sending mail from the address at which you signed up to
receive news postings, and then send the command (in the body of your
mail message)

UNSUB bionet-news.bionet.prof-society.csm

to MXT@dl.ac.uk.  This message will be automatically read by the
computer and your e-mail address will be extracted from the mail
header and removed from the list.


IF YOU HAVE A PROBLEM:
----------------------

Please send a message to one of the following addresses depending upon
your location

Address                              Location
-------                              --------
biosci-help@net.bio.net              Americas and the Pacific Rim
biosci@daresbury.ac.uk               Europe, Africa, and Central Asia

and someone on the staff will help you.  PLEASE DO NOT send mail to
our personal e-mail addresses as this will delay a response to your
request for help.


How to post a message to the group:
-----------------------------------

If you use news, simply post a message into bionet.prof-society.csm.
Be sure to set your "distribution" to either bionet or world or else
the message might not leave your site!!  Your posting will be
forwarded by mail to the newsgroup moderators who will decide whether
or not to approve it for distribution.

To post by e-mail, mail your message to one of the following addresses
depending upon your location:

Posting Address                      Location
---------------                      --------
csm@daresbury.ac.uk              Europe, Africa, and Central Asia
csm@net.bio.net                  Americas and the Pacific Rim

These addresses will forward your message to the newsgroup moderators
for their review prior to posting.

PLEASE DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTION REQUESTS TO THE POSTING ADDRESSES!!!


How to reply to a message on the group:
---------------------------------------

If you are using a newsreader, simply use the reply or follow-up
command on your newsreader (these vary from program to program) to
send either private or public replies.

If you are using e-mail, replies to messages that you receive will
*NOT* be automatically returned to the group.  This is the standard
for Internet mailing lists as opposed to BITNET LISTSERVs which often
send all replies back to everyone.  You must be certain that your
reply contains either of the two newsgroup posting addresses above in
your message header if you want to share it with everyone on the
group.  Otherwise in most cases your reply may go back to only the
original poster of the message to which you are replying.  Messages
directed back to the group will have to be approved by the moderators
before they are distributed.

ALWAYS be certain that you examine the address on your messages before
you send them!!!  Once a message is sent there is no way to cancel it
or bring it back once the moderators pass it on to the newsgroup and
mailing list!!!  Some non-Internet compliant mail systems may attempt
to send replies to our error-trapping address called BIOSCI-REQUEST.
If yours does this, please be sure to readdress your message to
csm@net.bio.net or csm@daresbury.ac.uk if you want to send it to the
newsgroup.


How to look at archives of the list:
------------------------------------

Archives for CSM/bionet.prof-society.csm are kept in the
anonymous FTP account at net.bio.net [134.172.2.69].  Look in the
directory pub/BIOSCI/CSM for posting archives.  Each file
is assigned a date such as 9312 for December 1993.  Please note that
ours is a UNIX system and all file and directory names are
case-sensitive, i.e., upper case file names are different from lower
case names. 

You can also access these same files via Gopher if you start a gopher
session using net.bio.net as your gopher server.  Gopher also allows
you to view the individual messages within each monthly archive file.
The files are in the CSM directory.  Postings to
bionet.prof-society.csm are also WAIS indexed and can be searched via
either gopher or WAIS at our site.  In gopher the option at
net.bio.net is "Search Bionet USENET Articles" and in WAIS one should
use the WAIS source biosci.src.  This is a WAIS index of all
BIOSCI/bionet messages including this newsgroup.  Please see the
BIOSCI FAQ for details.  The FAQ can be requested from
biosci-help@net.bio.net.  Finally, you can also access the archives
via WWW/Mosaic.  The URL is gopher://net.bio.net/.

Once again, if you have any administrative questions that require
personal assistance, please address them to biosci-help@net.bio.net in
the U.S. or biosci@daresbury.ac.uk in the UK.

Best wishes for a successful newsgroup!

				Sincerely,

				Dave Kristofferson
				BIOSCI/bionet Manager

				biosci-help@net.bio.net

From owner-csm@net.bio.net Tue Oct 11 23:00:00 1994
Path: biosci!biosci!not-for-mail
From: biohelp@net.bio.net (BIOSCI Administrator)
Newsgroups: bionet.prof-society.csm
Subject: BIOSCI FAQ
Date: 12 Oct 1994 11:12:19 -0700
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Biology
Lines: 1867
Approved: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <37h8u3$jga@net.bio.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

Newsgroups: bionet.announce
From: BIOSCI Administrator <biosci-help@net.bio.net>
Reply-To: biosci-help@net.bio.net
Subject: BIOSCI/bionet Frequently Asked Questions
Approved: bionews-moderator@net.bio.net

	    BIOSCI/bionet Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
	    ----------------------------------------------
		      (last revised - 28-JUN-94)

This document supplements the BIOSCI Newsgroups Information Sheet and
provides details on how to participate in BIOSCI forums.  Both
documents are available for anonymous FTP and gopher retrieval (port
70) from net.bio.net [134.172.2.69].  The FAQ is found in
pub/BIOSCI/doc/biosci.FAQ.  This document may also be requested by e-mail
by sending the command

info faq

in the body of an e-mail message addressed to the Internet address

                       biosci-server@net.bio.net

Any text placed on the Subject: line of your message is ignored, so
please be sure to put the "info faq" command in the main body of your
e-mail message.  The FAQ is posted the first of each month to the
BIONEWS/bionet.announce newsgroup along with the BIOSCI information
sheet and the list of changes to the newsgroups during the preceding
month.

			       Contents
			       --------

Common Questions about BIOSCI/bionet usage
------------------------------------------
*  What is BIOSCI and bionet?
*  What newsgroups are available on BIOSCI/bionet?
*  Where should I post my messages?
*  What are the restrictions on commercial activities in the
   BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups?
*  How does one post a message?
*  Should I post my message to more than one newsgroup?
*  Sorting out mail - which newsgroup did an e-mail message come from?
*  Why do all of my postings come from "BIOSCI-REQUEST?"
*  How do I reply to a BIOSCI posting?
*  What is USENET?
*  How can I get news software at my site?
*  How can I test my news or mail software?
*  I hear that a new bionet newsgroup was created but why isn't it at
   my site yet?
*  A new bionet USENET group has been created at my site but there are
   no messages in it.  However, I see that messages are being sent out to
   the mailing list.  Why do the contents differ?
*  How do I request or cancel e-mail subscriptions to BIOSCI newsgroups?
*  How can I get a list of newsgroups or my subscriptions?
*  How do I find back issues of BIOSCI postings?
*  Is there a summary of METHODS-AND-REAGENTS postings?
*  What journals are available on BIO-JOURNALS?  How can one locate articles?
*  Why are there two BIOSCI sites?
*  Why have I stopped getting messages?
*  What should I do about mail error messages that come back when I post?
*  How does one start a new BIOSCI newsgroup/mailing list?
*  How can I list my address information in the BIOSCI user directory?
*  Why didn't my USENET posting show up elsewhere?
*  Why are my messages are going to bionet.followup?

Common questions posted to BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups
---------------------------------------------------
*  What are all of these references to FTP, WAIS, Gopher, and WWW?
*  Please help me find the e-mail address for Dr. ...
*  How do I report a problem in a biological data base?
*  What about submitting sequence data to GenBank, EMBL, DDBJ or PIR?

Other questions to add to this list???  Please send them to
biosci-help@net.bio.net.  We would also appreciate your sending the
*answer* to the question if possible.  All contributions will be
gratefully acknowledged by including the author's name along with the
answer provided.


	      Common Questions about BIOSCI/bionet usage
	      ******************************************


What is BIOSCI and bionet?
--------------------------

We'll spare you the fascinating historical details and say simply that
BIOSCI is a series of freely accessible electronic communication
forums (i.e., electronic bulletin boards or "newsgroups") for use by
biological scientists worldwide.  No fees are charged for the service.
The system is intended to promote communication between professionals
in the biological sciences.  All postings to the newsgroups should be
made in that spirit.  While the general public may "listen in" to the
discussions, these newsgroups are intended primarily for
communications between researchers.  There are other forums on USENET
such as sci.bio for the asking and answering of biological questions
from lay persons.

BIOSCI messages are distributed without editorial intervention in most
cases.  Dissemination is by both electronic mail and over USENET in
the form of the "bionet" newsgroups (see below for USENET details).
The contents of the electronic mail distribution is identical to the
USENET news distribution, but we encourage BIOSCI users to access the
system through USENET news software whenever possible.  E-mail
distributions may eventually be phased out.  As of October 1992, 59%
of our readers used USENET news software instead of e-mail.

We provide a summary about USENET further below.  More detailed
information has been collected from the USENET newsgroup
news.announce.newusers and placed in two files in the pub/BIOSCI/doc
directory in the anonymous FTP area on net.bio.net [134.172.2.69].
These files may also be retrieved using gopher to net.bio.net port 70.

The file "usenet.info" contains the following articles:

         How to become a USENET site
         USENET Software: History and Sources
         What is Usenet?
         How to Get Information about Networks

The file "usenet.info2" contains

         Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet
         Emily Postnews Answers Your Questions on Netiquette
         Hints on writing style for Usenet

Another file in the same directory entitled "internet.info" provides
starting information on how to get your site connected to the
Internet.  Any or all of these files may also be requested by e-mail
to biosci-help@net.bio.net.


What newsgroups are available on BIOSCI/bionet?
-----------------------------------------------

"THE BIOSCI ELECTRONIC NEWSGROUP NETWORK INFORMATION SHEET" containing
the latest list of newsgroups, e-mail posting addresses, and other
information about subscribing/unsubscribing, etc., to BIOSCI is posted
the first of each month on the BIONEWS/bionet.announce newsgroup along
with this FAQ posting.

Two versions of the BIOSCI info sheet are available, one for the
Americas and the Pacific Rim countries, and the second for Europe,
Africa, and Central Asia.  The former may be requested by e-mail to
biosci-help@net.bio.net, while the latter may be requested from
biosci@daresbury.ac.uk.


Where should I post my messages?
--------------------------------

The list of newsgroups in the BIOSCI info sheet gives a brief
description of the purpose of each newsgroup.  Please select the
appropriate forum for your posting with the newsgroup's purpose in
mind.  The groups designated as "Scientific Interest Group" are for
discussions of professional interest in the area designated by the
newsgroup name, i.e., population biology issues should obviously be
directed to the POPULATION-BIOLOGY newsgroup.

A few guidelines on specific newsgroups:

BIONAUTS/bionet.users.addresses: This newsgroup was designed to help
biologists "voyaging" into the new world of electronic networking.
This is also the appropriate forum for requesting electronic mail
addresses of other biologists if you can not find them in the BIOSCI
user address directory (the address directory is described elsewhere
in this FAQ).  Regarding address requests to BIONAUTS, there are no
guarantees that the people in question will respond personally, of
course, but someone else might.  In addition, this forum can be used
for asking questions if you need any help with mail and news software
or other aspects of electronic networking, e.g. "What is WAIS, gopher,
and all of these other newfangled things that I have been hearing
about?" (see another FAQ section for answers to this last question!).

BIONEWS/bionet.announce: This is a moderated newsgroup designed to be
low-volume, high content and intended primarily for announcements of
interest to most users on the network, e.g., for general announcements
such as for scientific meetings, courses, etc.  We recommend that
*ALL* participants subscribe to this newsgroup to keep up with the
items above and also to receive the latest information about changes
to BIOSCI/bionet.

BIOFORUM/bionet.general: BIOFORUM is intended for discussions on
topics that do not fit in to any of the specialty newsgroups.  If you
want to start a new newsgroup, you might begin by trying to raise
interest through a discussion in this forum.  Be aware that this
newsgroup is by design one of the most "chatty" forums in the BIOSCI
network.

BIO-JOURNALS/bionet.journals.contents: This newsgroup is not for
postings by readers.  It is used to distribute the Table of Contents
for over 30 biological research journals approximately a week or two
in advance of publication (see the latest listing of journals in the
FAQ section about the BIO-JOURNALS newsgroup).

BIO-SOFTWARE: Intended for discussions about software in the
biological sciences.  There are other USENET newsgroups and mailing
lists for questions about word processors, etc., i.e., for general
purpose software.  BIO-SOFTWARE is intended for discussions about
software for biologists.  For USENET users only, please note that
there is an accompanying newsgroup bionet.software.sources used for
distributing biological software source code and binaries.  This
service is *not* available by e-mail.

COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY: This newsgroup is moderated, i.e., postings
made to the group are reviewed by a moderator before being
distributed.

EMPLOYMENT: These are the posting regulations for
EMPLOYMENT/bionet.jobs as formulated by the U.S. National Science
Foundation.  Readers outside of the U.S. should check with their local
network authorities to determine what rules apply to their usage.
EMPLOYMENT/bionet.jobs is to be used for the posting of job openings
in the biological sciences or professional level jobs that support the
work of biological scientists (such as for computer/systems
programming/support).  There are no restrictions on the content of the
postings if these jobs are in the non-profit sector.  Individuals
regardless of their place of employment may post their CVs/resumes to
this newsgroup or simply place a request for work if they are looking
for jobs in this area of endeavor.  Commercial companies can post jobs
intended for professional people in the areas just mentioned provided
that the postings are limited to the format described below.  Extended
commercial job/benefit descriptions and promotional material are not
allowed, nor may commercial firms post openings for non-professional
positions (if in doubt about the appropriateness of a posting, please
check with biosci-help@net.bio.net *before* proceeding).


Commercial job posting format:
-----------------------------

The posting should include 

		o job title
		o one or two line factual description of the position
		o an e-mail contact address for further information;
                  a regular surface mail address and contact telephone
                  number is also permissible.

To repeat, commercial job postings that do not comply with the above
format or that are for jobs in areas outside of the range described
above are not permissible in this newsgroup.  Your cooperation is
greatly appreciated.


SCIENCE-RESOURCES: This newgroup is used solely to distribute funding
agency announcements such as the "NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts"
and is not to be used for postings by readers.

Most other BIOSCI newsgroups are dedicated to professional discussions
in the area defined by the name of the newsgroup.  You are free to
post anything of interest within the specialty served by the
newsgroup.  Please note that the lack of face-to-face contact often
emboldens some of our readers.  While we can wish that everyone
learned manners in grade school or at home, please be aware that
discussions can sometimes become a bit more heated than a new user
might be accustomed to (our readership is usually composed of "sober"
Ph.D.s, or so we used to think, but it appears that perhaps economic
hard times have taken their toll on sobriety 8-).

NOTE: To understand what 8-) means tilt your head to the left; other
variants: :-) and :-(.  These symbols try to add emotional connotations
to the electrons such as "that's a joke, son!"


What are the restrictions on commercial activities in the
BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups?
---------------------------------------------------------

BIOSCI is funded in part by the National Science Foundation (NSF)
which supports the Internet in the U.S. with U.S. taxpayer dollars.
NSF is responsible for setting Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) for the the
NSFNet backbone section of the Internet of which BIOSCI makes
extensive use.  Because of these reasons, BIOSCI users should adhere
to the following guidelines.

Commercial activities on BIOSCI are in general prohibited except as
noted below.  People at for-profit organizations are free to read all
postings made to the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups, but must ensure that
their postings to the newsgroups do not violate our guidelines.

Commercial organizations may post job openings on
EMPLOYMENT/bionet.jobs subject to the format restrictions for that
group.  Commercial job posting format restrictions for the
EMPLOYMENT/bionet.jobs newsgroup are described above under the
question "Where should I post my messages?"  Users who violate these
format restrictions consciously risk losing their network access.

BIOSCI readers without any financial connections to a company or a
product may discuss and/or post endorsements of a commercial product.
However, it is standard Internet practice to include in the posting a
disclaimer of any financial interest in the product/company.  Note
that postings to newsgroups are subject to libel laws.  BIOSCI advises
readers to think twice before taking potshots at products that they do
not like.

BIOSCI users often post general questions about problems that might be
solved through the use of a commercial product.  It is EXTREMELY
IMPORTANT, however, that such general questions *not* be answered by
people affiliated with the product or company that might stand to gain
a sale as a result.  For example, user X may ask, "Is there a product
that will allow me to separate protein A from protein B given the
following properties ...?", but, if user Y works at company Z which
sells a product that can accomplish this task, user Y does *NOT* have
permission to respond to the question.  Responses can only be posted
by other scientists who might have experience in solving the problem
in question and who do not stand to gain financially by promoting the
product in question, i.e., they are not employees, consultants, or
connected to the company via other financial ties.  As noted above,
postings endorsing commercial products should contain a customary
disclaimer stating the absence of financial ties of the poster to the
product/company.

Commercial companies MAY RESPOND to a public BIOSCI newsgroup if a
BIOSCI user asks a question directly about one of their products,
e.g., mentions it by name.  The response should be limited to a
factual answer of the question posed and should avoid any hint of
advertising hype.  Comparisons with competitors' products should be
avoided completely.

Finally, as a general rule, if you are unsure about the
appropriateness of your posting, before you post anything please send
a copy of what you propose to post to the BIOSCI adminstrator at
biosci-help@net.bio.net for review.

BIOSCI will takes steps to terminate network access to any reader who
willfully violates our commercial use policies.


How does one post a message?
----------------------------

If you use USENET, run your posting program (e.g., postnews or e.g.,
use the ":post" command in nn) and follow the prompts.  Please check
with your local systems administrator for details on using your local
news software; general information on USENET and how to get news
software is provided further below but each news program is different.
When prompted, enter the appropriate newsgroup name from the list of
USENET names in the BIOSCI info sheet.  Be sure to set your news
distribution to "world" (or "bionet" if the option is available) if
you want your message to be seen by others.  Some USENET systems may
default to "local" which means that only people on your local computer
will see the message.  You can limit the extent of distribution of
your message by choosing other distribution options, e.g., "usa"
distributes only to the U.S.A. (sometimes! - on occasion these
distribution limiting features don't work for a variety of reasons).
Usually pressing "?" or "h" at the Distribution: prompt will show you
your options.  After entering your options, you are usually placed in
an editor to compose your message.  After saving it and exiting the
editor, one typically enters a "send" command to complete the posting
process.

If you are using e-mail, first select the newsgroup that you wish to
post to and find the mailing address in the BIOSCI info sheet for your
region.  For example, to post to the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS newsgroup
you would use one of the following two addresses depending upon your
location:

Address                               Serving
-------                               -------
methods@net.bio.net                   The Americas and Pacific Rim
methods@daresbury.ac.uk               Europe, Africa, and Central Asia

Once you have entered the newsgroup mailing address on the To: line of
your mail message, the rest of the process is the same as composing
and sending any e-mail message.  Your message will be automatically
distributed to all mail recipients on the list and also distributed by
USENET news.

The BIOSCI information sheet containing the latest list of e-mail
addresses for each of the above regions can be requested from
biosci@net.bio.net or biosci@daresbury.ac.uk respectively.


Should I post my message to more than one newsgroup?
----------------------------------------------------

Generally only *ONE* copy of a message should be posted to the most
appropriate forum.  Crossposting the same message to multiple
newsgroups can aggravate readers who participate by e-mail.  These
people will receive multiple copies of a message if they are on the
mailing lists for the groups that receive the crosspostings.

Please note that software safeguards in our system which prevent
mailing loops also make it difficult to use news software to both
crosspost to different newsgroups AND simultaneously mail to all
associated mailing lists.  If you *absolutely must* distribute a
message to different newsgroups AND their associated mailing lists,
the way to do this is to e-mail a *separate* copy of your message to
each newsgroup e-mail posting address.  Including multiple mailing
addresses on a single e-mail message will not crosspost to all mailing
lists.  Please be aware that many people read multiple groups by mail
and be assured that, if two groups are related, many people who are
interested in one will obviously sign up for the other group, too.
Before crossposting, be certain that your message is so important that
it really warrants sending multiple copies to a large number of
people.


Sorting out mail - which newsgroup did an e-mail message come from?
-------------------------------------------------------------------

If you use USENET news software, all messages are sorted by newsgroup
so there is no problem identifying the source.  If you receive BIOSCI
postings in your mail file, all postings are funneled into your one
mail file merely by chronological order of posting and you must be a
little discerning to follow discussions.

The best way to determine the news forum is to look at the line in the
mail header that starts with "To:".  For example, if you see "To:
arab-gen@net.bio.net" or "To: arab-gen@daresbury.ac.uk" then you know
that the address for sending a reply to everyone on the newsgroup is
"arab-gen@net.bio.net" or "arab-gen@daresbury.ac.uk."  The "From:"
line in the mail header indicates who sent the message.  In most
cases, if you want to reply only to the author of the message, use the
address on the "From:" line, and, if you want to reply to everyone on
the newsgroup, use the address on the "To:" line (but please read the
following sections on the BIOSCI-REQUEST address and replying to
BIOSCI postings for additional information).

Please note that replies to BIOSCI messages are *not* automatically
sent back to the newsgroup address.  The default reply on most mail
systems (your local mail configuration may differ) will be to reply to
the address that you see on the "From:" line, i.e., only to the person
who posted the original message.  You must consciously decide to send
a copy of your reply to the newsgroup by including the newsgroup
posting address in your e-mail response.  This default reply (to the
original sender only) is an Internet newsgroup standard and is the
opposite of that used by the BITNET LISTSERV software (for those who
may be familiar with the latter; the Internet standard is designed to
minimize wasted network bandwidth, i.e., to avoid the *automatic,
unthinking* posting by many people of the same answer to a particular
question).


Why do all of my postings come from "BIOSCI-REQUEST?"
-----------------------------------------------------

Unfortunately some mail systems make all BIOSCI postings appear to
come from someone named "BIOSCI-REQUEST."  The
BIOSCI-REQUEST@net.bio.net address was established to trap mailing
error messages ("bouncers").  The address is not normally seen by
BIOSCI readers in the messages that they receive.  Unfortunately some
proprietary (read "VMS") and other oddball mail systems misread the
information used to transmit Internet e-mail messages and may end up
putting the BIOSCI-REQUEST address on the From: line in the mail that
you may receive.  If this happens at your site and you want to reply
to a message, please use either the newsgroup address on the To: line
of the message or try to find the author's e-mail address elsewhere in
the message (people often append this at the end of their text in
their "signature").  If you send a message back to
BIOSCI-REQUEST@net.bio.net, the BIOSCI managers at net.bio.net will be
the only ones who will see it (we will try to forward it to the
appropriate newsgroup, but would appreciate it if you would determine
the correct address yourself first).


How do I reply to a BIOSCI posting?
-----------------------------------

If you are using news software, there are usually two types of reply
commands.  One command sends a private reply to the author of the
original posting; the second sends a "followup" posting to everyone on
the newsgroup.  Press ? or h in your news software to find these
commands.  They are often noted by "r" and "R" or "r" and "f"
respectively.

If you are replying to an e-mail message from BIOSCI, be sure to look
carefully at the To: and Cc: lines of your reply message *before*
sending it off.  If you want the reply to be PRIVATE, only the address
of the person who posted the original message (and perhaps your
address and/or that of other individuals) should be on the To: and Cc:
address lines.  If you want the reply to be PUBLIC, be sure that the
newsgroup posting address appears on either the To: or Cc: line of
your response.  If your mail system is a bit unorthodox and puts the
"BIOSCI-REQUEST" address in your response (see the section about
BIOSCI-REQUEST above), please be sure to correct this *before* sending
your message (ask your systems administrator how to edit the To: and
Cc: lines of your mail messages before sending if you do not know how
to do this).

Now that you have read about all of these problems with using e-mail
to participate in BIOSCI, why don't you get news software installed at
your site and make life easy for yourself instead of using e-mail
8-)!!  Let's look at USENET news next!


What is USENET?
---------------

USENET (short for Users Network) is an electronic bulletin board
network which utilizes various public domain versions of the "netnews"
software for message transmission.  The software can operate over
physical networks ranging from as simple as a telephone UUCP link (via
modem) to networks as sophisticated as the Internet.  Netnews has been
optimized to transmit messages without loss and also to avoid possible
mail loops and other errors which plague simple electronic mail
"broadcasting."  We strongly encourage our users to adopt netnews
software at their sites as soon as possible.  News software also keeps
messages segregated into their respective newsgroups, making it easier
to follow the thread of a discussion.  If you only use e-mail,
messages from all of the newsgroups to which you subscribe will be
sent to your one personal e-mail address and will be mixed in with
each other and with your other personal messages.  This is obviously a
suboptimal means of organizing messages.  With news software, you can
browse the discussion topics easily, read what you want and discard
the rest.  Why subject yourself to having to page through a
disorganized mail file message-by-message unless you really have no
other choice??  News software makes the use of BIOSCI pleasant and
efficient.  It's time to get your organization "into the 20th Century"
before it turns into the 21st Century!


How can I get news software at my site?
---------------------------------------

Contact biosci-help@net.bio.net for information on getting started with
USENET.  News software can be obtained free of charge from anonymous
FTP sources.  Note, however (yes, here's the unfortunate catch), that
news software should be installed and maintained by a trained systems
administrator in most cases; it is not a task for a computer novice.
The file "usenet.info" available by anonymous FTP and gopher from
net.bio.net in pub/BIOSCI/doc contains the following articles:

         How to become a USENET site
         USENET Software: History and Sources
         What is Usenet?
         How to Get Information about Networks


How can I test my news or mail software?
----------------------------------------

Please DO NOT post test messages to any of the BIOSCI/bionet USENET
newsgroups.  If you are unsure about whether or not your mail is
working, please send test mail messages to either of our two
administrative addresses, but NOT to newsgroup mailing addresses:

Address for tests                    Location
-----------------                    --------
biosci@daresbury.ac.uk               Europe, Africa, and Central Asia
biosci@net.bio.net                   Americas and the Pacific Rim

If you need to test your USENET news software, please post test
messages to the USENET newsgroup misc.test which was created solely
for this purpose. 


I hear that a new bionet newsgroup was created but why isn't it at
my site yet?
------------------------------------------------------------------

This could happen for a variety of reasons.  When we create a new
USENET newsgroup, a "newgroup" message is sent out from net.bio.net to
news administrators at USENET sites around the world.  Many sites are
configured so that such newgroup messages are acted upon automatically
and the group is established without human intervention.  However, due
to the growing volume of USENET newsgroups, many sites have turned off
automatic newgroup creation and require human intervention to create a
new USENET group in response to a newgroup message.  If you know from
reading BIONEWS/bionet.announce or from contacting the BIOSCI staff at
biosci-help@net.bio.net that a new bionet newsgroup should be in
existance, please contact your local news administrator and ask them
if they acted on the newgroup message.  Newgroup messages can
sometimes be simply overlooked by the news administrator and sometimes
they may not be received if a USENET site upstream on the net from you
had a problem and did not pass on the message.  Please let your news
adminstrator know that a bionet "checkgroup" message is posted on the
first of each month to bionet.announce.  Your news administrator can
use the contents of that message to update your local list of bionet
USENET newsgroups.

Please note that all new BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups are announced on
BIONEWS/bionet.announce as soon as they are ready for use.  If you see
this announcement, this means that the BIOSCI staff has tested the
group and is (1) sure that it works, and (2) knows that it has
propagated to at least some other sites in both North America and
Europe.  We obviously can not check for propagation to the thousands
of sites on USENET.  Depending upon your source of USENET news, there
may be a delay of several days before the newgroup message reaches
your site.  The announcement of the newsgroup availability, however,
is always sent to bionet.announce *after* the newgroup message has
been sent and after system tests have been run.


A new bionet USENET group has been created at my site but there are
no messages in it.  However, I see that messages are being sent out to
the mailing list.  Why do the contents differ?
----------------------------------------------------------------------

If you experience the problem above, please contact your local news
administrator and have them check with the site that sends you your
bionet USENET news feed.  We explained in a question above that new
USENET newsgroups are created in response to a "newgroup" message
which is sent out to all USENET news administrators.  It is possible
that your news administrator acted on the message to create the group,
but that the site which sends you bionet USENET news did not.  Having
your USENET news administrator contact the administrator at the
upstream site can usually resolve the problem.  If you have a problem
getting a reliable bionet USENET news feed, please contact
biosci-help@net.bio.net.


How do I request or cancel e-mail subscriptions to BIOSCI newsgroups?
---------------------------------------------------------------------

Instructions for subscribing and unsubscribing to the BIOSCI
newsgroups by e-mail are included in the BIOSCI info sheet which can
be obtained from either of the following two addresses:

Administrative Address               Location
----------------------               --------
biosci@daresbury.ac.uk               Europe, Africa, and Central Asia
biosci@net.bio.net                   Americas and the Pacific Rim


How can I get a list of newsgroups or my subscriptions?
-------------------------------------------------------

Simply send a request to your appropriate BIOSCI distribution site:

Administrative Address               Location
----------------------               --------
biosci@net.bio.net                   The Americas and Pacific Rim
biosci-help@daresbury.ac.uk          Europe, Africa, and Central Asia

The most recent list of BIOSCI newsgroups/mailing addresses and the
latest revision of the BIOSCI/bionet FAQ are posted the first of each
month on the BIONEWS/bionet.announce newsgroup.  You should save these
postings for future reference.


How do I find back issues of BIOSCI postings?
---------------------------------------------

The BIOSCI node at net.bio.net maintains the entire collection of
BIOSCI/bionet messages.  They are available via WAIS (biosci.src and
biology-journal-contents.src), Gopher (net.bio.net port 70), anonymous
ftp from net.bio.net [134.172.2.69], and Mosaic/WWW (URL is
gopher://net.bio.net/).  Contact biosci-help@net.bio.net for further
help.  If you are on the Internet but do not have WAIS software
running locally, try

telnet quake.think.com

and login in as "wais" to experiment with the software.  All of our
WAIS sources (biosci.src, biology-journal-contents.src, and
biologists-addresses.src) may be selected from the menu for searching.
Please also refer to the FAQ section below entitled "Please help me
find the e-mail address for Dr. ..." for additional uses of
our WAIS sources.

If you are not on the Internet you may search the BIOSCI WAIS archives
by e-mail using our WAISMAIL e-mail server.  For instructions on using
WAISMAIL, please send the message

help

in the body of a mail message addressed to the Internet address

waismail@net.bio.net

and be sure to leave the Subject: line of your message blank.
Detailed instructions will be returned to you automatically.

The SERC Daresbury BIOSCI node runs a BIOSCI newsgroups WAIS source
called BIOWAIS.  This source can also be searched through their gopher
client at host s-crim1.dl.ac.uk, port 70.

All the Bionet newsgroup postings since December 1991 are stored for
Gopher searching and retrieval and anonymous ftp at
ftp.bio.indiana.edu, the IUBIO archive maintained by Don Gilbert.  The
directory in the anonymous FTP account is usenet/bionet.  This gopher
site also contains an outstanding collection of biological software
and databases.

Another excellent gopher server is maintained by Dan Jacobson at
merlot.gdb.org, port 70.  In addition to newsgroup archives, many
other information sources of use to biologists are available.

In Europe, Rob Harper runs a full-featured Gopher for biologists at
gopher.csc.fi and Reinhard Doelz maintains a biology gopher at
gopher.embnet.unibas.edu.  The number of "gopher holes" on the network
is expanding too rapidly to list them all here.


Is there a summary of METHODS-AND-REAGENTS postings?
----------------------------------------------------

Yes.  A FAQ for the METHODS newsgroup was created by Paul Hengen of
Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center.  It can be obtained
via anonymous FTP from net.bio.net in
pub/BIOSCI/METHDS-REAGNTS/METHODS.FAQ or from ncifcrf.gov in
pub/methods/FAQlist.

Note, however, that maintaining such a FAQ is a gargantuan task.  We
also recommend searching the METHODS archives for keywords through the
use of the WAIS and Gopher software as described in the "archives"
question above.

In each issue of "Trends in Biochemical Sciences" since November 1993,
Dr. Hengen writes a monthly digest column of the METHODS newsgroup.
This column highlights topics of special interest which were discussed
recently on the newsgroup.


What journals are available on BIO-JOURNALS?  How can one locate articles?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

The following journals appear regularly as of 6/28/94.  This list is
constantly expanding and the latest copy can be requested from
biosci-help@net.bio.net.

Anatomy & Embryology
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Binary
CABIOS
Cell and Tissue Research
Chromosoma
Clinical Chemistry
Current Genetics
EMBO Journal
European Journal of Biochemistry
European Journal of Physiology
Experimental Brain Research
Histochemistry
Human Genetics
IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology
Immunogenetics
Journal of Bacteriology
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Journal of Comparative Physiology B: Biochemical, Systemic, and
    Environmental Physiology
Journal of Membrane Biology
Journal of Molecular Evolution
Journal of Virology
MGG - Molecular and General Genetics
Mammalian Genome
Microbial Releases
Molecular Microbiology
Molecular and Cellular Biology
Nucleic Acids Research
Plant Cell Reports
Planta
Protein Science
Roux's Archives of Developmental Biology
Seminars in Cancer Biology
Seminars in Cell Biology
Seminars in Developmental Biology
Seminars in Immunology
Seminars in the Neurosciences
Seminars in Virology
TAG - Theoretical and Applied Genetics

Table of Contents for the journals above are available for FTP from
net.bio.net in pub/BIOSCI/BIO-JOURNALS and also for searching and
retrieval by Gopher from net.bio.net, port 70.  One can use either
gopher or WAIS to search the WAIS source biology-journal-contents.src
at net.bio.net and retrieve individual article references from the
journals above.  This can be accessed through WAIS, WAISMAIL, gopher,
and Mosaic as described in the FAQ section entitled "How do I find
back issues of BIOSCI postings?"


Why are there two BIOSCI sites?
-------------------------------

Originally there were *four* BIOSCI distribution sites (nodes), but
due to administrative complexities, the number of nodes was scaled
back to two.  Although 99% of you never have to pay for any BIOSCI
messages, rest assured that network resources are not free and should
not be squandered.  We established BIOSCI distribution sites on each
side of the Atlantic to minimize network e-mail traffic.  For example,
if a message is posted to the U.S. site, only one copy is sent on to
the U.K. site **via netnews software, not by mail** before being
"exploded" for mail distribution to all of the final e-mail
destinations on the "other side of the pond."  This is more efficient
than sending hundreds of copies of the same message across the
Atlantic.  A trade-off for this efficiency is slightly increased
complexity in the distribution network, i.e., the mailing lists for
each newsgroup are split between two sites.  In the past BIOSCI
experienced sporadic problems with "bounced" mail, but the reduction
in the number of BIOSCI distribution sites and the implementation of
U.S. to U.K. message transfer via news rather than by e-mail has
eliminated this problem.  Everyone would be better served if USENET
news was used exclusively, and we have the eventual elimination of
e-mail subscriptions as a **long term** goal.  Currently, however, too
many biologists still have no other means of access to BIOSCI other
than through e-mail.


Why have I stopped getting messages?
------------------------------------

If your computer or network connection is down, mail sent to your
address will "bounce" back to the sender of the message and often to
the BIOSCI-REQUEST address at net.bio.net.  Given the number of people
using BIOSCI around the world, this can become quite a problem, so we
have to take prompt action to eliminate troublesome addresses from our
mailing lists.  Offending addresses are "commented out" of the mailing
lists.  If your system is down, there may be no way to reach you, so
it is your responsibility to contact your BIOSCI distribution site and
request reinstatement if you notice a lapse in distribution.  There is
an automatic reminder system at net.bio.net in the U.S. that sends a
message to all "commented out" addresses on the mailing lists at
net.bio.net each Monday for three weeks. After that if no response is
received to biosci-help@net.bio.net, the bad addresses are completely
removed from the mailing lists.


What should I do about mail error messages that come back when I post?
----------------------------------------------------------------------

It is not uncommon when posting a mail message to a newsgroup to
receive an error message from a "mailer daemon."  Don't panic!!  The
devil is not in the employ of BIOSCI!  It is a rare day when every
single computer and e-mail address in the world is functional.  Mail
systems are programmed to alert you if mail does not go through to a
particular address which could be on any of our BIOSCI lists.  Rest
assured that your message was received by the *vast majority* of
readers.  You may either just delete these "bouncers" or send them on
to your local BIOSCI distribution node (in most cases we will probably
be aware of them already).  It is not uncommon to receive one or two
bouncers for any e-mail posting that you make.  Note once again that
if everyone used news software and if we didn't have to bridge so many
incompatible e-mail networks to bring the biology community together,
we wouldn't have to deal with this problem.

Note that the BIOSCI-REQUEST address at net.bio.net was established to
trap daemon bouncers instead of passing them back to the person who
posts a message.  Unfortunately due to network incompatibilities, the
BIOSCI-REQUEST trapping mechanism is often disabled when the bad
address is not on the Internet.


How does one start a new BIOSCI newsgroup/mailing list?
-------------------------------------------------------

BIOSCI's goal is to promote the use of electronic communications among
biologists and we are here to assist you in establishing new forums at
no charge.  There are currently two options - create a full newsgroup
or a prototype (mailing lists only):

For full-fledged BIOSCI newsgroup status (also see "prototype" rules below):

Proposals for new groups must contain a statement of purpose for the
group and the name of a person designated as discussion leader unless
the group is in the service category such as METHODS, EMPLOYMENT, etc.
Discussion leaders are responsible for ensuring that a reasonable
level of activity is sustained on the newsgroup (see Newsgroup
Termination Policy below).  The discussion leader can also propose the
creation of moderated newsgroups if he/she agrees to serve as
moderator (this requires access to USENET news software at the
moderator's site).  Proposals should be sent to
biosci-help@net.bio.net.

When a proposal is received it will be posted on
BIONEWS/bionet.announce.  A ten day period for discussion on
BIOFORUM/bionet.general will follow and precede the call for votes.
After the discussion, the person proposing the newsgroup may modify or
withdraw the proposal prior to the call for votes.  The modified
proposal will then be included in a call for votes on
BIONEWS/bionet.announce.  The proposal must collect 80 YES votes in 30
days and the number of YES votes must exceed the number of NO votes by
at least 40 to pass.

BIOSCI management must be informed in advance of any intended efforts
to advertise the newsgroup proposal in other forums.  While BIOSCI
wishes to inform potential users of the creation of newsgroups that
might be of interest to them, promotional efforts should be focussed
in forums likely to be utilized by professionals in the subject area
covered by the newsgroup proposal, and should seek participation in
the discussion of the proposal within bionet.general/BIOFORUM rather
than promoting separate discussions in other forums to which portions
of the BIOSCI readership may not have ready access.

If a proposal is not passed by the readers, there will be a three
month period before it can be brought up for another vote.


Newsgroup Termination Policy

Any group with less than 52 msgs in the previous calendar year will be
put on notice by posting an announcement to the newsgroup (not to
bionet.announce) that it faces cancellation.  It can be reprieved if
80 readers respond within two weeks (this policy will be stated in the
termination announcement).  It then has two months to reach a usage
level of one message per 3 days or else it will be abolished.  Appeals
to the BIOSCI management about high content albeit low volume on the
group will be considered.


Newsgroups for Professional Societies in Biology

BIOSCI will create a moderated newsgroup in the bionet.prof-society
domain without voter approval for any professional society in the
biological sciences which has a membership of at least 500.  Smaller
groups must go through the regular BIOSCI/bionet newsgroup creation
process.  Because these groups are not discussion forums, they will be
exempted from the 52 message per year minimum posting limit and would
only be discontinued if the society in question no longer wishes to
use them.  If usage seems extremely low on any group in the
bionet.prof-society domain, the BIOSCI/bionet staff will contact the
society in question and ensure that the newsgroup is still wanted.


BIOSCI "prototype" newsgroup creation policy

We will be happy to establish and administer a straight *mailing* list
*without* an associated USENET newsgroup for a six month trial period
for anyone that wants to try to form a new electronic community in the
biological sciences (We stress that the topics are limited to
professional communications though.).

The mailing lists will be maintained *initially* only at net.bio.net
instead of at both BIOSCI sites.  It will be the responsibility of the
person who proposes the list to get it up and running within the six
month period.  They will have to handle promotion; our involvement at
BIOSCI at net.bio.net will be limited to creating the list, putting
out one announcement about it, and handling subscription requests.

After six months, the list will be put out for discussion and a vote
according to our procedures for full-fledged newsgroups above (unless
the organizer decides to bow out).  If it passes it will become a
full-fledged BIOSCI newsgroup at both net.bio.net and daresbury.ac.uk
and will also have a parallel USENET newsgroup.  If it fails, the
prototype mailing list at net.bio.net will be shut down.

Note that this service does not preclude people who have an idea that
has widespread appeal from following our current newsgroup creation
policy and going to a vote after a 10 day discussion.

If you have an idea for a prototype newsgroup, please send it to
biosci-help@net.bio.net.


How can I list my address information in the BIOSCI user directory?
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Below is the address form that we would like each reader of the
BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups to complete and return if you would like to
be listed in our database.  The database serves as a directory that
enables biologists, who are currently using (or even just reading) the
BIOSCI newsgroups, to look up e-mail addresses and other information
about our users.

The address database is reindexed nightly for WAIS, waismail, and
gopher access.  If you have access to gopher, connect to net.bio.net
to search the database.  If you have access to WAIS, please use our
WAIS source biologists-addresses.src.  If you are not on the Internet,
please use our waismail server (send the word "help" to
waismail@net.bio.net to get instructions; any text on the Subject:
line of your message will be ignored, so put the help command in the
body of the mail message.).

Please carefully follow the instructions for completing the form
below and return it to either of the following two addresses
(whichever is more convenient for you).  Thanks in advance for taking
the time to complete and return the form.

Addresses for returning forms         Location        Network
-----------------------------         --------        -------
biovote@net.bio.net                   U.S.A.          Internet/BITNET
biovote@daresbury.ac.uk               U.K.            JANET


	     MAKING SURE THAT YOUR INFORMATION IS CURRENT

This notice will be mailed bimonthly to each newsgroup.  You should
check your database entry from time-to-time to see if your address
information is still up-to-date.


		  Using Gopher to complete the form
                  ---------------------------------

If you don't want to use a text editor, you can also use Dan
Jacobson's gopher site to fill out the address database form as
follows.  Otherwise skip this section on gopher and proceed to the
instructions for filling out the form below.

> To add yourself to the database just point your
> gopher client at merlot.gdb.org and select the following:
> 
> -->  15. Searching For Biologists/
> 
>  -->  9.  E-mail Addresses of Biosci-Bionet Users/
> 
>   -->  1.  Add (or Correct) Your Address to the BIOSCI User Address
> Data..
> 
> 
> And fill out the form.

or Rob Harper's gopher site in Europe as follows:

> Europeans can point their gopher client at gopher.csc.fi and add their
> information to the database. All entries will be mailed directly to
> Dave for incorporation in a wais source.
> 
> The path to the questionare is as follows.
> 
>    ---> 10. Finnish EMBnet BioBox/
> 
>         ---> 8.  FAQ Files/
> 
>                               FAQ Files
> 
>       1.  EMBnet: Information.
>       2.  EMBnet: Internet resources guide.
>       3.  A Biologist's Guide to Internet Resources/
>       4.  All FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) Searches and Archives/
>   --->5.  Bionauts Address Database (questionaire) <TEL>


	    IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS - PLEASE READ CAREFULLY

Please enter all responses after the : on each line, leaving one (1)
blank space after the : (i.e., before the start of your text).

Please do NOT extend your responses past the end of each line (80
characters).

PLEASE DO NOT alter any of the field identifiers such as "first name: ". 
If you have nothing to enter after a field identifier, PLEASE LEAVE IT
- do not delete it even if there is no data on the line in question.

Several lines are provided at the end of the form for comments, but,
please adhere to the line length restriction.

On the date: line, please enter the date in the DD-MM-YY format, e.g.,
15-05-93 for 15 May 1993.  This line will tell others when the
information was last updated.  Please be sure to include the 0's for
single digit days or months, e.g., 15-05-93, not 15-5-93.

Note that the "e-mail network: " line below is for specifying, e.g.,
"Internet," "BITNET," "EARN," "JANET," or whatever other network that
your computer may be on.

If you are uncertain about any field, please feel free to leave it
blank, but please DO NOT DELETE the field identifier from the form!

In the first field below, "New information or Update ...", please
enter "N" if this is the first time that you have registered in the
directory or "U" if you are correcting a listing that you sent to us
previously.

The comment: lines may be used for anything that you like but PLEASE
DO NOT DELETE THEM FROM THE FORM OR ALTER THEM.  One suggested use is
to list the names of the newsgroups in which you participate.  Please
use the MAILING LIST name (see below - the latest version of the list
can be requested from biosci@net.bio.net) instead of the USENET name
even if you don't participate by e-mail.  WAIS might get confused by
the periods in the USENET names.  This allows one to retrieve via WAIS
or waismail the list of participants in a particular group.

For example:

comment: ARABIDOPSIS PLANT-BIOLOGY BIONEWS

On the comment: lines
use these names below ---- NOT the USENET names below

MAILING LIST NAME          USENET Newsgroup Name
-----------------          ---------------------
ACEDB-SOFT                 bionet.software.acedb
AGEING                     bionet.molbio.ageing
AGROFORESTRY               bionet.agroforestry
ARABIDOPSIS                bionet.genome.arabidopsis
BIOFORUM                   bionet.general
BIO-INFORMATION-THEORY     bionet.info-theory
BIONAUTS                   bionet.users.addresses
BIONEWS                    bionet.announce
BIO-JOURNALS               bionet.journals.contents
BIO-MATRIX                 bionet.molbio.bio-matrix
BIOPHYSICAL-SOCIETY        bionet.prof-society.biophysics
BIOPHYSICS                 bionet.biophysics
BIO-SOFTWARE               bionet.software
BIOTHERMOKINETICS          bionet.metabolic-reg
CELL-BIOLOGY               bionet.cellbiol
CHLAMYDOMONAS              bionet.chlamydomonas
CHROMOSOMES                bionet.genome.chromosomes
COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY      bionet.biology.computational
CYTONET                    bionet.cellbiol.cytonet
DROSOPHILA                 bionet.drosophila
EMBL-DATABANK              bionet.molbio.embldatabank
EMPLOYMENT                 bionet.jobs
GDB                        bionet.molbio.gdb
GENBANK-BB                 bionet.molbio.genbank
GENETIC-LINKAGE            bionet.molbio.gene-linkage
GRASSES-SCIENCE            bionet.biology.grasses
HIV-MOLECULAR-BIOLOGY      bionet.molbio.hiv
HUMAN-GENOME-PROGRAM       bionet.molbio.genome-program
IMMUNOLOGY                 bionet.immunology
INFO-GCG                   bionet.software.gcg
JOURNAL-NOTES              bionet.journals.note
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS       bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts
MOLECULAR-EVOLUTION        bionet.molbio.evolution
MYCOLOGY                   bionet.mycology
NEUROSCIENCE               bionet.neuroscience
N2-FIXATION                bionet.biology.n2-fixation
PARASITOLOGY               bionet.parasitology
PHOTOSYNTHESIS             bionet.photosynthesis
PLANT-BIOLOGY              bionet.plants
POPULATION-BIOLOGY         bionet.population-bio
PROTEIN-ANALYSIS           bionet.molbio.proteins
PROTEIN-CRYSTALLOGRAPHY    bionet.xtallography
PROTISTA                   bionet.protista
RAPD                       bionet.molbio.rapd
SCIENCE-RESOURCES          bionet.sci-resources
STRUCTURAL-NMR             bionet.structural-nmr
TROPICAL-BIOLOGY           bionet.biology.tropical
VIROLOGY                   bionet.virology
WOMEN-IN-BIOLOGY           bionet.women-in-bio
YEAST                      bionet.molbio.yeast

Listing newsgroups on the comment: line is optional, of course.

Thanks again for your cooperation!



--------------- please cut here and return portion below ---------------

New information or Update to old record (enter N or U): 
date (DD-MM-YY): 
first name: 
middle initial: 
family name: 
job title: 
e-mail address: 
e-mail network: 
phone number: 
FAX number: 
institution: 
address1: 
address2: 
address3: 
city: 
state/province: 
country: 
postal code: 
research interest: 
research interest: 
comment: 
comment: 
comment: 
comment: 
comment: 


Why didn't my USENET posting show up elsewhere?
-----------------------------------------------

Your local USENET software may have defaulted to "local" distribution.
If this option is selected, only other readers of the bionet
newsgroups on your local computer will see your posting.  If you want
your message to be delivered to all BIOSCI/bionet readers, please be
sure to specify "world" or "bionet" when prompted for the
Distribution:.  Generally, if you press "?" or "h" when prompted, you
will see your options for controlling the distribution of your
messages on USENET.  If your message does not reach one of the two
BIOSCI nodes in the U.S. or the U.K. it will not be distributed to
people who participate in BIOSCI by e-mail.


Why are my messages are going to bionet.followup?
-------------------------------------------------

This is a problem that might plague users of older versions of the
"rn" newsreading program when they try to reply to messages on
BIOFORUM/bionet.general.  bionet.followup is a non-existent newsgroup.
In the "good old days" there was a newsgroup called "net.general" and
replies to net.general were posted to "net.followup."  Unfortunately
the USENET name of the BIOFORUM newsgroup, bionet.general, contains
the text "net.general" as a subset.  Older versions of news software
can latch on to this text string and redirect replies to
bionet.general messages to bionet.followup.  If you are plagued by
this problem, please call the following fixes, provided by Roy Smith
and Wayne Rindone, to the attention of your local systems manager:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
The problem is indeed in the rn sources, specifically in intrp.c.  In
the version I have (intrp.c,v 4.3.2.11 90/12/31 11:47:44 sob Exp),
It's the following code at lines 664-670:

			if (h = instr(s,"net.general")) {
			    off = h-s;
			    strncpy(scrbuf,s,off+4);
			    strcpy(scrbuf+off+4,"followup");
			    safecpy(scrbuf+off+12,h+11,sizeof(scrbuf));
			    s = scrbuf;
			}

	What's going on is that there used to be the convention that
followups to articles in the newsgroup net.general (which doesn't
exist anymore and hasn't for something like 5 years) should be placed
in net.followup.  For better or for worse, the rn code attempted to
enforce this convention.  What's going on in the above code is that
the string "net.general" in the Newsgroups line of an article being
follow-ed-up to gets changed to "net.followup".  Unfortunately, that
means "bionet.general" gets changed to "bionet.followup".  I would
suggest simply deleting the above code entirely.  I'm not even sure
why it's still there, other than nobody bothered to take it out, and
until bionet.general came around, it never bit anybody.

	Old code never dies.  It simply gets integrated into the host
genome of the program it's part of waiting for the right environmental
conditions to appear.

-- 
roy@alanine.phri.nyu.edu (Roy Smith)
Public Health Research Institute
455 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016, USA
"Arcane?  Did you say arcane?  It wouldn't be Unix if it wasn't arcane!"

----------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Wayne Rindone <wrindone@BBN.COM>
Subject:  Another source of bionet.followup problem

     Thought you might like to know that there are other potential
reasons for the appearance of the bogus bionet.followup group name. A
couple of months ago, I installed rn 4.4 on my workstation, expecting
that to fix the bionet.followup problem, among other things. I was
very surprised to discover that I still had bionet.followup appearing,
even though it was quite clear there was nothing in the new rn sources
to account for that.

     It turned out that the following lines were included in
/usr/local/news/rn/Pnews.header:

case $ng in
*net.general*)
    follow=`echo "$ng" | sed 's/net\.general/net.followup/g'`
    ;;
*)
    follow=""
    ;;
esac

     Once these were removed the problem disappeared. I have no idea
if this logic was created locally at BBN or not, or if it came from
elsewhere or had wider dissemination beyond BBN. Although the problem
is solved for me, I have a bad feeling that it will turn up many
places around the world for many years to come.

     Feel free to mention Pnews.header as another potential source of
the problem the next time someone asks if you think that helpful.

				Wayne Rindone, BBN
----------------------------------------------------------------------



	 Common questions posted to BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups
	 ***************************************************


What are all of these references to FTP, WAIS, Gopher, and WWW/Mosaic?
----------------------------------------------------------------------

				 FTP
				 ---
FTP stands for File Transfer Protocol and is a method for transmitting
files at high speed over the Internet.  There are also e-mail servers
at various BITNET sites which provide e-mail access to FTP archives.
Send the word "HELP" to BITFTP@PUCC.BITNET for details.  A sample
session of using FTP to access the BIOSCI archives follows.  Keyboard
input is underlined.  ### highlights comments about the procedure.

net<1>ftp net.bio.net     ### connect to the BIOSCI computer
      ---------------
Connected to net.bio.net.
220 net.bio.net FTP server (SunOS 4.1) ready.
Name (net.bio.net:kristoff): anonymous     ### login as anonymous
                             ---------
331 Guest login ok, send ident as password.
Password:               ### enter any password; typically your e-mail address
         ----------
230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply.
ftp> ls     ### display the directories.  sometimes "dir" is used here
     --
200 PORT command successful.
150 ASCII data connection for /bin/ls (134.172.2.69,3225) (0 bytes).
bin
dev
etc
lost+found
misc
pub
usr
226 ASCII Transfer complete.
72 bytes received in 0.1 seconds (0.7 Kbytes/s)
ftp> cd pub     ### change to the "pub" public directory.  Most FTP
     ------     ### sites place public material in this directory
250 CWD command successful.
ftp> ls     ### list the files again.  BIOSCI archives are in BIOSCI 8-)
     --     ### Be sure to strictly follow upper/lower case in filenames
            ### when accessing FTP sites running UNIX such as net.bio.net
200 PORT command successful.
150 ASCII data connection for /bin/ls (134.172.2.69,3227) (0 bytes).
BIOSCI
README
doc
dos
mac
unix
vms
226 ASCII Transfer complete.
42 bytes received in 0.05 seconds (0.82 Kbytes/s)
ftp> cd BIOSCI
     ---------
250 CWD command successful.
ftp> ls
     --
200 PORT command successful.
150 ASCII data connection for /bin/ls (134.172.2.69,3228) (0 bytes).
ADDRESSES
AGEING
AGROFORESTRY
ARABIDOPSIS
BIO-INFO
BIO-JOURNALS
BIO-MATRIX
BIO-SOFTWARE
BIOFORUM
BIONEWS
CHROMOSOME-22
COMPUTATIONAL-BIOLOGY
EMBL-DATABANK
EMPLOYMENT
GDB
GENBANK-BB
GENETIC-LINKAGE
HIV-BIOL
HUMAN-GENOME
IMMUNOLOGY
JRNLNOTE
METHDS-REAGNTS
MOLECULAR-EVOLUTION
NEUROSCIENCE
PLANT-BIOLOGY
POPULATION-BIOLOGY
PROTEIN-ANALYSIS
PROTEIN-CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
SCIENCE-RESOURCES
TROPICAL-BIOLOGY
VIROLOGY
WOMENINBIOLOGY
biosci-uk.infosheet
biosci-us.infosheet
biosci.FAQ
internet.info
usenet.info
usenet.info2
226 ASCII Transfer complete.
562 bytes received in 0.1 seconds (5.5 Kbytes/s)
ftp> cd PROTEIN-ANALYSIS   ### We want to look at PROTEIN-ANALYSIS archives
     -------------------
250 CWD command successful.
ftp> ls
     --
200 PORT command successful.
150 ASCII data connection for /bin/ls (134.172.2.69,3233) (0 bytes).
8912
9001
9002
9003
9004
9005
9006
9007
9008
9009
9010
9011
9012
9101
9102
9103
9104
9105
9106
9107
9108
9109
9110
9111
9112
9201
9202
9203
9204
9205
9206
9207
9208
9209
9210
9211
current
226 ASCII Transfer complete.
225 bytes received in 0.12 seconds (1.8 Kbytes/s)
ftp> get 9211     ### Retrieve the file for November 1992.
     --------
200 PORT command successful.
150 ASCII data connection for 9211 (134.172.2.69,3234) (208763 bytes).
226 ASCII Transfer complete.
local: 9211 remote: 9211
213849 bytes received in 1.4 seconds (1.5e+02 Kbytes/s)
ftp> bye     ### End the FTP session.  Some systems use quit or exit.
     ---
221 Goodbye.

Liberal use of the ? key and help at the ftp> prompt will provide
information on other options.


				 WAIS
				 ---- 
WAIS stands for Wide Area Information Server.  WAIS software allows
information to be stored at many sites around the Internet in to a
particular format.  Computers running WAIS software can query these
sources remotely using a standard protocol.  Free software is
available for many popular hardware platforms, but requires some
systems expertise to install.  Now that you know how to use FTP
(above), you can use anonymous ftp to think.com and cd to the "wais"
directory for software and more information.  A public WAIS account is
accessible to Internet users by using the command

telnet quake.think.com

and logging in as "wais" (lowercase).


				Gopher
				------ 
Gopher is both a user-friendly interface to the FTP program described
above and a network searching tool similar to WAIS (which can also
utilize WAIS information sources).  Gopher software is available as
described below for many platforms; TurboGopher on the Macintosh is
especially slick!  Don Gilbert (gilbertd@silver.ucs.indiana.edu) at
ftp.bio.indiana.edu runs the excellent IUBIO Gopher Hole with many
services of use to biologists, including search and retrieval of
GenBank entries and BIOSCI/bionet newsgroup postings among many other
information resources.  Dan Jacobson (danj@gdb.org) runs an excellent
gopher server at merlot.gdb.org with software, database, news, and
government information archives.  In Europe Rob Harper
(harper@finsun.csc.fi) has set up a similar gold mine of information
at gopher.csc.fi.  Please see the section on searching the BIOSCI
archives for other useful gopher sites.

The following information is excerpted from the Gopher FAQ.  Many
questions have been cut out for brevity.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Common Questions and Answers about the Internet Gopher, a
client/server protocol for making a world wide information service,
with many implementations.  Posted to comp.infosystems.gopher and
news.answers every two weeks.

The most recent version of this FAQ can be gotten through gopher, or
via anonymous ftp:

rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet/news.answers/gopher-faq

Those without FTP access should send e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu
with "send usenet/news.answers/finding-sources" in the body to find out
how to do FTP by e-mail.
------------------------------------------------------------------- 
List of questions in the Gopher FAQ:

Q0:  What is Gopher?
Q1:  Where can I get Gopher software?
Q2:  What do I need to access Gopher?
Q3:  Where are there publicly available logins for Gopher?

Q5:  Who Develops Gopher Software?

Q12: What is the relationship between Gopher and (WAIS, WWW, ftp)?
Q13: Are papers or articles describing Gopher available?
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Q0:  What is Gopher?

A0:  The Internet Gopher client/server provides a distributed
     information delivery system around which a world/campus-wide
     information system (CWIS) can readily be constructed.   While
     providing a delivery vehicle for local information,  Gopher
     facilitates access to other Gopher and information servers
     throughout the world. 

-------------------------------------------------------------------
Q1:  Where can I get Gopher software?

A1:  via anonymous ftp to boombox.micro.umn.edu.  Look in the directory
     /pub/gopher

--------------------------------------------------------------------
Q2:  What do I need to access Gopher?

A2:  You will need a gopher "client" program that runs on your local PC
     or workstation

     There are clients for the following systems.  The directory
     following the name is the location of the client on the anonymous
     ftp site boombox.micro.umn.edu (134.84.132.2) in the directory
     /pub/gopher.

      Unix Curses & Emacs   :  /pub/gopher/Unix/gopher1.03.tar.Z
      Xwindows              :  /pub/gopher/Unix/xgopher1.1a.tar.Z
      Macintosh Hypercard   :  /pub/gopher/Mac_client/
      Macintosh Application :  /pub/gopher/Macintosh-TurboGopher
      DOS w/Clarkson Driver :  /pub/gopher/PC_client/
      NeXTstep              :  /pub/gopher/NeXT/
      VM/CMS                :  /pub/gopher/Rice_CMS/ or /pub/gopher/Vienna_CMS/
      VMS                   :  /pub/gopher/VMS/
      OS/2 2.0	            :  /pub/gopher/os2/
      MVS/XA                :  /pub/gopher/mvs/

     Many other clients and servers have been developed by others, the
     following is an attempt at a comprehensive list.  

      A Macintosh Application, "MacGopher".
        ftp.cc.utah.edu:/pub/gopher/Macintosh

      Another Macintosh application, "GopherApp".
        ftp.bio.indiana.edu:/util/gopher/gopherapp

      A port of the UNIX curses client for DOS with PC/TCP
        oac.hsc.uth.tmc.edu:/public/dos/misc/dosgopher.exe

      A port of the UNIX curses client for PC-NFS
     	 bcm.tmc.edu:/nfs/gopher.exe

      A beta version of the PC Gopher client for Novell's LAN Workplace
      for DOS
         lennon.itn.med.umich.edu:/gopher

      A Xwindows/DECwindows client
         job.acs.ohio-stat.edu:


     Most of the above clients can also be fetched via a gopher client
     itself.  Put the following on a gopher server:

       Type=1
       Host=boombox.micro.umn.edu
       Port=70
       Path=
       Name=Gopher Software Distribution.

 
     Or point your gopher client at boombox.micro.umn.edu, port 70 and
     look in the gopher directory.

     There are also a number of public telnet login sites available.
     The University of Minnesota operates one on the machine
     "consultant.micro.umn.edu" (134.84.132.4) See Q3 for more
     information about this.  It is recommended that you run the client
     software instead of logging into the public telnet login sites.  A
     client uses the custom features of the local machine (mouse,
     scroll bars, etc.)  A local client is also faster.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Q3:  Where are there publicly available logins for Gopher?

A3:  Here is a short list, use the site closest to you to minimize
     network lag.

     Non-tn3270 Public Logins:

     Hostname                  IP#              Login   Area
     ------------------------- ---------------  ------  -------------
     consultant.micro.umn.edu  134.84.132.4	gopher  North America
     gopher.uiuc.edu           128.174.33.160   gopher  North America
     panda.uiowa.edu           128.255.40.201	panda   North America
     gopher.sunet.se           192.36.125.2     gopher  Europe
     info.anu.edu.au           150.203.84.20    info    Australia
     gopher.chalmers.se        129.16.221.40    gopher  Sweden
     tolten.puc.cl             146.155.1.16     gopher  South America
     ecnet.ec		       157.100.45.2     gopher  Ecuador
   
     tn3270 Public Logins:

     Hostname                  IP#              Login   Area
     ------------------------- ---------------  ------  -------------
     pubinfo.ais.umn.edu       128.101.109.1    -none-  North America


     It is recommended that you run the client software instead of
     logging into the public login sites.  A client uses the
     custom features of the local machine (mouse, scroll bars, etc.)
     and is local client is also faster. 

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Q5:  Who Develops Gopher Software?

A5:  Gopher was originally developed in April 1991 by the University
     of Minnesota Microcomputer, Workstation, Networks Center to help
     our campus find answers to their computer questions.  

     It has since grown into a full-fledged World Wide Information
     System used by a large number of sites in the world.

     Many people have contributed to the project, too numerous to
     count. 

     The people behind the much of the gopher software can be reached
     via e-mail at gopher@boombox.micro.umn.edu, or via paper mail:
   
      Internet Gopher Developers
      100 Union St. SE #190
      Minneapolis, MN 55455  USA

     Or via FAX at:
 
      +1 (612) 625-6817

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Q12: What is the relationship between Gopher and (WAIS, WWW, ftp)?

A12: Gopher is intimately intertwined with these two other systems.
     As shipped the Unix gopher server has the capability to: 
     
       - Search local WAIS indices.
       - Query remote WAIS servers and funnel the results to gopher
         clients.
       - Query remote ftp sites and funnel the results to gopher
         clients.
       - Be queried by WWW (World Wide Web) clients (either using
         built in gopher querying or using native http querying.

-------------------------------------------------------------------
Q13: Are papers or articles describing Gopher available?

A13: Gopher has a whole chapter devoted to it in :

     _The_Whole_Internet_, Ed Kroll, O'Reilly, 1992 (Editors note:
                             ..Great book, go out and buy a bunch!)

     Other references include:

     _The_Internet_Gopher_, "ConneXions", July 1992, Interop.

     _Exploring_Internet_GopherSpace_ "The Internet Society News", v1n2 1992, 

     (You can subscribe to the Internet Society News by sending e-mail to
      isoc@nri.reston.va.us)

     _The_Internet_Gopher_Protocol_, Proceedings of the Twenty-Third
          IETF, CNRI, Section 5.3

     _Internet_Gopher_, Proceedings of Canadian Networking '92

     _The_Internet_Gopher_, INTERNET: Getting Started, SRI
          International, Section 10.5.5

     _Tools_help_Internet_users_discover_on-line_treasures, Computerworld,
          July 20, 1992

     _TCP/IP_Network_Administration_, O'Reilly.

      Balakrishan, B. (Oct 1992)
        "SPIGopher: Making SPIRES databases accessible through the
      Gopher protocol".  SPIRES Fall '92 Workshop, Chapel Hill, North
      Carolina.

      Tomer, C.  Information Technology Standards for Libraries,
      _Journal of the American Society for Information Science_,
      43(8):566-570, Sept 1992.


-------------------------------------------------------------------


				 WWW/Mosaic
				 ----------
The World-Wide Web (WWW) has become the latest hot network item,
especially since the advent of the Mosaic software from the National
Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois.

In a nutshell, Mosaic is a "hypertext browser," i.e., an application
program that lets you read through the thousands of cross-linked
hypertext documents, pictures and sound bites now available on the
Internet.  A more detailed explanation will be included in a future
version of this FAQ.  For now, we recommend using FTP to
ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu to pick up a version of Mosaic for your hardware
platform.  Note that to get the most out of Mosaic, your machine needs
a direct and fast Internet connection.  9600 baud links or lower will
not be a happy compromise except possibly for browsing plain text
documents in some cases.


Please help me find the e-mail address for Dr. ...
--------------------------------------------------

If you can not get this information by calling the person in question,
there are several other resources that can be of help.  As of May
1993, BIOSCI at net.bio.net began running a BIOSCI user address
directory which can be accessed through gopher to net.bio.net or via
WAIS or waismail.  The WAIS source is called biologists-addresses.src
and is updated daily.  See the FAQ section entitled "How do I find
back issues of BIOSCI postings?" for information on WAIS and waismail
access.  Instructions for using the address source are included in the
waismail help file which can be retrieved by sending the word "help"
to waismail@net.bio.net (leave the Subject: line of your message
blank.)

The second easy route is to post your request to the
BIONAUTS/bionet.users.addresses newsgroup managed by Rob Harper.  Odds
are that you will get a response fairly promptly, but, if not, there
are other routes described below.

If the person in question has posted to BIOSCI/bionet or another
USENET newsgroup, they will be listed in the "usenet-addresses" WAIS
source.  If you are on the Internet, telnet to quake.think.com and
login as "wais" (lowercase).  After entering your terminal type,
select the usenet-addresses source from the list presented to you (use
the up-arrow key to get there more quickly since it is near the end of
a long list).  When the source is highlighted, press the return key
and then enter the person's surname at the Keywords: prompt to begin
the search.  Available commands are listed at the bottom of the
screen.  When finished, press "s" to return to the source menu and
then "q" to quit.

For those who do not have access to the Internet, the usenet-addresses
source can also be accessed by e-mail.  Please send mail to
mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "help" in the body of the message
in order to receive more information.

Another source of information for finding Internet, but not BITNET,
addresses is netfind.  Use the command

telnet bruno.cs.colorado.edu

and login as "netfind" without a password.  The program is menu-driven
and pretty self-explanatory.  Unfortunately it is not available to
people on BITNET.

Gopher is also useful in the address search.  For example, Dan
Jacobson provides access to several directories of biologists at his
gopher hole on merlot.gdb.org.

None of the above methods is guaranteed to return you an answer, so
you may still have to resort to the telephone or (groan) regular mail
to make contact 8-(.


How do I report a problem in a biological data base?
----------------------------------------------------
(answer contributed by Dr. John Garavelli of PIR)

Brookhaven Protein Data Bank    bionet.xtallography
PIR or SWISS-PROT               bionet.molbio.proteins
NCBI GenBank DataBank           bionet.molbio.genbank
EMBL Databank                   bionet.molbio.embldatabank
Human Genome Database (GDB)     bionet.molbio.gdb
Museums and Herbaria            bionet.plants, or private inquiry
                                  to beach@huh.harvard.edu

Since staff members of these databases usually monitor the
corresponding newsgroups fairly closely, a posting about a problem on
the appropriate board will usually get a response from someone on a
database staff fairly quickly.  Problems that might not be of general
interest or corrections to particular entries should be directed as
follows.

Database      address
--------      -------
Brookhaven    pdb@chm.chm.bnl.gov, pdb@bnlchm.bitnet
PIR           postmaster@nbrf.georgetown.edu, postmast@gunbrf.bitnet
SWISS-PROT    bairoch@cmu.unige.ch
GenBank       update@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
EMBL          update@embl-heidelberg.de
GDB           help@welch.jhu.edu
Herbaria      beach@huh.harvard.edu


What about submitting sequence data to GenBank, EMBL, DDBJ or PIR?
------------------------------------------------------------------
(answer contributed by Dr. John Garavelli of PIR)

Researchers should submit nucleotide sequence data directly to GenBank
or EMBL for assignment of an accession number prior to publication.
Derived amino acid sequence data may also be included at the same
time.  Amino acid sequence data submitted in this way to GenBank, EMBL
or DDBJ is eventually passed on to PIR, and need not be submitted
separately to PIR.  This is done so correct cross-references can be
made between nucleotide and protein sequence accession numbers.  All
other determined amino acid sequences may be submitted directly to PIR
when the authors permit their public release prior to publication.

Authors are strongly urged to use the sequence submission software
package AUTHORIN to submit their sequence data to the databanks; a
free copy (for either the IBM PC or Macintosh) can be obtained by
sending your request and regular postal mailing address to:
  authorin@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Please be sure to specify the IBM or Mac version when sending your
request.

Japanese authors who use the NEC 9801 PC should communicate directly
with DDBJ, as these machines use a version of DOS that is
significantly different enough to render the discs unreadable on
MS-DOS computers here. The staff at DDBJ will forward the data to the
appropriate databank via electronic mail.  DDBJ may be contacted at:
  ddbjsubs@flat.nig.ac.jp

The address for GenBank submissions is:
   U.S. mail (for submissions on diskette, indicate whether Mac or PC):
                GenBank Submissions
                National Center for Biotechnology Information
                Bldg. 38A, Room 8N-803
                8600 Rockville Pike
                Bethesda, MD 20894


   E-mail submission of new sequences:  gb-sub@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

   E-mail submission of updates:        update@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

The address for EMBL submissions is:
  EMBL Data Submissions
  Postfach 10.2209
  D-6900, Heidelburg
  Federal Republic of Germany
  Telephone (+49) 6221-387-258
  Electronic mail: DATASUBS@EMBL-Heidelberg.DE

The address for DDBJ submissions is:
  DNA Database of Japan
  Center for Genetic Information Research
  National Institute of Genetics
  111 Yata
  Mishima, Shizuoka 411
  JAPAN
  Telephone (+81) 559-75-3651
  Electronic mail:  ddbjsubs@flat.nig.ac.jp

The address for PIR submissions is:
  PIR Submissions
  National Biomedical Research Foundation
  3900 Reservoir Road, NW
  Washington, DC  20007
  U.S.A.
  Telephone: (202) 687-2121
  Electronic mail:  FILESERV@GUNBRF.BITNET, FILESERV@NBRF.Georgetown.EDU

While we would again urge that AUTHORIN be used as the first choice in
data submission tools, the GenBank/EMBL/PIR Data Submission Form can
be obtained by sending a message consisting of the words

  SEND SUBFORM

to the PIR FILESERV address.  This form can be filled in using any
text editor, saved in ASCII (text) format, and mailed electronically
or on disk to the databanks.

Please, do not submit data either by electronic mail or on disk in
files that are formatted for word processing programs.  Such files are
almost always unreadable except by systems with the same configuration
of computer, operating system and word-processing program.  For files
sent by disk, either DOS or Mac formatted disks can be used but
regular "double density" disks are preferred to "high density" disks.


From owner-csm@net.bio.net Thu Oct 13 23:00:00 1994
Path: biosci!rutgers!utcsri!utnut!nott!nrcnet0.nrc.ca!csm
From: Eric.B.Carstens@uni-konstanz.de (Eric B. Carstens)
Newsgroups: bionet.prof-society.csm
Subject: International Congress of Virology
Date: 14 Oct 1994 13:53:41 +0100
Organization: National Research Council, Canada
Lines: 29
Approved: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <37lv0l$ddv@mserv1.dl.ac.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca
Originator: csm@nrcbsa.bio.nrc.ca

I have received a letter from Yechiel Becker requesting names and addresses
of Canadian virologists who would be interested in receiving the First
Announcement for the Xth ICV in Jerusalem in Aug, 1996. If you are
interested, contact him directly at:
Dept. of Molecular Virology
Institute of Microbiology
Faculty of Medicine
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
P.O. Box 12272
Jerusalem 91120
FAX: 9722784010

-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-#-
Eric Carstens
