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Science 5 April 1996:
Vol. 272. no. 5258, pp. 15 - 19
DOI: 10.1126/science.272.5258.15

Letters

This Week's Letters

Web ways

The advent of electronic publishing raises a host of issues that are discussed by this week's writers. Peer review--How might it change? Could it be bypassed altogether? Should it be? Equity--What is the cost of publication and of archiving? Who should pay? Indexing--How should information be organized? (At right, the home page of a new, on-line journal in development.) Webs of a different sort (spider) are described by one author as not so tough after all when compared with mighty man-made fibers. Two authors discuss developments in particle physics. And according to a young investigator, female and male crayfish alike exhibit dominance behavior.



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Volume 272, Number 5258, Issue of 5 April 1996 pp. 15-19.
©1996 by The American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Letters in This Issue

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[Letters] Electronic Publishing
Pete Goldie and Andrea Keyhani
Norman Redington and Karen Rae Keck
C. S. Holling
Kurt Paulus
Joseph F. Traub
[Letter] Strength of Spider Silk
John J. Gilman
[Letter] ``New Physics''?
A. Patrascioiu and E. Seiler
[Letter] Antihydrogen
Dimitri Dimitroyannis
[Letter] Dominance in Crayfish
Justine H. Lange
[Letter] Amide Cleavage by a Ribozyme: Correction
Gerald F. Joyce, et al.
[Corrections] Corrections and Clarifications

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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)