History of Biology: Biochemistry
History of Biology: Biochemistry
Biochemistry as a recognizably distinct discipline emerged at the beginning of the twentieth century. Initially it focused on the chemical changes of cellular metabolism .
Roots of Biochemistry
Biochemistry had its roots in nineteenth-century physiological chemistry, animal chemistry, and the chemistry of biological materials. The earliest
views on the chemistry of life posited that it was fundamentally different from nonliving chemistry. From around 1835, the view had developed that protoplasm , seen as a jellylike single homogeneous form of matter within organisms, carried out all the processes of intracellular breakdown of foods, respiration, and biosynthesis. Despite this general belief, neither Justus Liebig nor Ernst Hoppe-Seyler, two eminent chemists, accepted this view. Hydrolytic enzymes such as amylase, maltase, and pepsin were known in the nineteenth century, but were not thought to act within cells.
Probably the single most important experiment that initiated the study of biochemistry was the preparation by Eduard Buchner in 1897 of a cell-free extract of yeast, called zymase, which fermented glucose and produced carbon dioxide and ethanol. Buchner regarded zymase as a single enzyme, although others soon showed that it contained several. This work confirmed fermentation as a chemical process and discredited the protoplasm theory. Furthermore, the distinction between catalysis by hydrolytic extracellular enzymes and by intracellular enzymes disappeared.
Enzymes
The nature of catalysis began to be explored early in the twentieth century with the realization that enzymes bind their substrates during the reaction. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Emil Fischer proposed that a substrate fits its enzyme like a key fits a lock. Mathematical analysis of enzyme action enabled Leonor Michaelis and Maud Menten to formulate the classic equations for enzyme action in 1913. The chemical nature of enzymes as proteins remained uncertain until James Sumner crystallized urease from Jack bean meal in 1926. Several other enzymes were crystallized in the following years and were all shown to be proteins. In 1959, Sanford Moore and William Stein determined the first primary sequence (the amino acid sequence) of an enzyme, ribonuclease. The path was now open, using X-ray crystallography to reveal the catalytic process in three-dimensional models of enzymes.
Metabolism
Part of the significance of Buchner's work lay in initiating the study of fermentation as a metabolic pathway. Otto Meyerhof demonstrated that muscle juice had similar properties, although producing lactic acid rather than ethanol. Thus, the glycolytic pathway, associated with the names of Gustav Embden, Meyerhof, and Otto Warburg, was elucidated over the first four decades of the twentieth century.
In the first years of the twentieth century, Franz Knoop and also Henry Dakin outlined the basis of fatty acid oxidation , although this pathway was not fully formulated until the 1950s. The cyclical nature of some metabolic pathways became apparent to Hans Krebs in his study of the synthesis of urea, which led to the description of the urea cycle in 1931. In 1937, building on much work on cell oxidation reactions, Krebs formulated the citric acid cycle (often called the Krebs cycle in his honor). Identification of acetyl coenzyme A in the early 1950s facilitated the understanding of pyruvate oxidation, fatty acid oxidation, and the citric acid cycle.
During the 1930s, biochemists began to use radioactive isotopes such as deuterium (2H), 32P, and 35S in studies of metabolism. After World War
II, 14C became readily available, and together with the use of microbial mutants, enabled researchers to elucidate metabolic pathways, particularly from 1945 to 1975.
Bioenergetics and Membranes
The importance of adenosine triphosphate (ATP ) emerged slowly from a study of the cofactors necessary for glycolysis in yeast and muscle. In 1939, Vladimir Engelhardt and Militsa Lyubimova showed ATP to be a substrate for myosin that participates in muscular contraction. In 1941, Fritz Lipmann set out the essential role of ATP as the energy currency of the cell. Initially ATP synthesis was thought to be associated only with glycolysis, but during the 1930s a number of studies showed that much of ATP production was associated with oxygen uptake, linking oxygen consumption with phosphorylation .
During the 1920s and 1930s, David Keilin outlined the steps of the respiratory chain, through which oxygen is consumed in the mitochondrion. By the 1950s, it was clear that the respiratory chain was coupled to the synthesis of ATP. In 1961, Peter Mitchell formulated the chemiosmotic theory of ATP production, based on a gradient of H ions and membrane potential . This not only resolved the issue of oxidative phosphorylation but also gave a firm foundation for studies of transport across membranes. Jonathon Singer and Garth Nicholson resolved problems of membrane structure by proposing in 1972 the fluid mosaic model in which proteins are embedded in a fluid lipid bilayer .
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the basic process of photo-synthesis had already been defined. From 1954 to 1956, Melvin Calvin and Andrew Benson formulated the metabolic pathway for carbon dioxide fixation, which would be named the Calvin-Benson cycle in their honor. In 1937, Robin Hill and others had progressively elaborated the workings of the electron transport chain of the chloroplast. In the second half of the 1950s, Daniel Arnon showed that the electron transport chain drives ATP synthesis in the chloroplast. Many researchers in the twentieth century explored the basic photochemistry of photosynthesis, but the determination of the structure of a bacterial reaction center complex by Johann Deisenhofer in 1984 has helped to clarify the field.
Proteins
The theory that proteins were composed of linear chains of amino acids had been enunciated at the beginning of the twentieth century, while the amino acid constituents of proteins were still being identified. However, it was not until Fred Sanger obtained the first complete primary structure of a protein, insulin, in 1955 that the theory was confirmed. A model of the three-dimensional structure of a protein (whale myoglobin) was determined by John Kendrew and colleagues between 1958 and 1960 based on X-ray analysis. Concurrently Max Perutz described the structure of hemoglobin . Among other issues, these achievements confirmed the predictions made in 1950 by Linus Pauling and Robert Corey that the amino acid chain could coil into a spiral staircase-like structure called the alpha helix. Researchers have described the three-dimensional structures of many proteins since that time.
Improved techniques of crystallography, X-ray analysis, and other skills in protein chemistry are bringing new insights to many areas of classical biochemistry, including enzymology. For example, the elucidation of the structure and mechanism of the bacterial mitochondrial and chloroplast ATP synthase (ATPase) in the 1990s, based on the work of Paul Boyer and John Walker, has revealed an enzyme that involves a rotating core to carry out ATP synthesis. This molecule is used by both mitochondria and chloroplasts to make ATP.
DNA and Protein Synthesis
Work on bacteria led Oswald Avery to suggest in the 1940s that deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) was the genetic material of the cell. Francis Crick and James Watson elucidated the structure of DNA in 1953. The structure they proposed suggested immediately the way in which genes might be replicated. More importantly, Crick suggested that the sequence of bases determines the sequence of amino acids in proteins, and that the amino acid sequence in itself determined the three-dimensional structure of these proteins. By 1960, it was believed that a sequence of three DNA bases encodes an individual amino acid. Marshall Nirenberg, Severo Ochoa, and Gobind Khorana "cracked" the genetic code —the specific DNA base triplets that specify particular amino acids—in a series of experiments conducted in the 1960s.
In 1961, François Jacob and Jacques Monod introduced the concept of regulatory genes, which control the expression of structural genes that encode for proteins. Other methods of control were discovered later. By the 1970s, it was possible to synthesize proteins in vitro .
Manipulation of DNA and Elucidation of Protein Structure
The sequencing of significant lengths of DNA remained a problem until in 1977 Fred Sanger sequenced a bacteriophage genome of 5,375 nucleotides . This achievement led the way to Sanger's sequencing of the DNA of the human mitochondrial genome of more than 16,000 nucleotides in 1981. These early sequencing successes contributed to the idea that arose in the mid-1980s to sequence the human genome, which researchers expect to complete in 2003 (a draft sequence was published in 2001).
Parallel to DNA sequencing efforts was the use of restriction enzymes , which cut DNA at specific sequences. Restriction enzymes made possible DNA sequencing, recombinant DNA technology, transgenic technology, and other tools, giving rise to the rapid development in the 1990s of biotechnology based on gene splicing.
see also Crick, Francis; Enzymes; Glycosis and Fermentation; History of Biology: Cell Theory and Cell Structure; History of Biology: Inheritance; Krebs Cycle; Metabolism, Cellular; Muscle; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Protein Structure; Watson, James
John Prebble
Bibliography
Crick, Francis. What Mad Pursuit: A Personal View of Scientific Discovery. New York: Basic Books, 1988.
Florkin, Marcel, and Stotz, Elmer H. Comprehensive Biochemistry, Section VI (Volumes 30–39): A History of Biochemistry. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1970–95.
Fruton, Joseph S. Proteins, Enzymes, Genes: The Interplay of Chemistry and Biology. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1999.
Judson, Horace F. The Eighth Day of Creation. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979.
Kohler, Robert E. "The Enzyme Theory and the Origin of Biochemistry." Isis 64 (1973): 181–196.
Krebs, Hans A. Reminiscences and Reflections. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1981.
Watson, James D. The Double Helix. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1968.
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Farnsworth Friends acquire painting by Richard Estes
Newspaper article from: Portland Press Herald (Maine); 9/2/2007; ; 290 words
; ...Farnsworth Friends acquire painting by Richard Estes Byline: Compiled by Bob Keyes...Farnsworth Collection has purchased the Richard Estes painting "Forest Scene" for...Caption: "Forest Scene" by Richard Estes has been purchased by the Friends...
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SCRATCHING THE SURFACE Noted scholar changes focus from 19th century to contemporary art with landmark essays on his Maine neighbor Richard Estes
Newspaper article from: Bangor Daily News Bangor, ME; 8/8/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...muscular new art book "Richard Estes." Estes, a Northeast...Northeast Harbor home. "Richard had been pigeonholed...landmark essays on Estes. Something to be...a luminist. With Richard, photorealism is...your book, you call Estes a "New York painter...
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Richard Estes.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 5/1/2007; 385 words
; 0847828077 Richard Estes. Wilmerding, John. Rizzoli Intl. Pub...best known for his views of New York, Estes has painted scenes of the places he...5x12.75"), this volume surveys Estes' entire oeuvre, accompanied by a full...
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Richard Estes's "Waverly Place ...
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/18/2001; 356 words
; Richard Estes's "Waverly Place" (1980) is often called, misleadingly, a photorealist...Up close you see the fine and careful movements of his brush. -- Paul Richard "Waverly Place," a gift from Joseph H. Hirshhorn, is in the Hirshhorn...
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Richard Estes
Magazine article from: Artforum; 1/1/2007; ; 365 words
; ...It used to seem obvious that the Photorealist work of Richard Estes (boni 1932) was in tune with the major artistic currents...painting such as Telephone Booths, 1968. But our sense of Estes's affinity with these movements was doubtless mistaken...
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Entrevista / Richard J. Estes / Vinculan globalizacion con prostitucion infantil.(Nacional)
Newspaper article from: Reforma (México D.F., México); 11/3/2003; 700+ words
; ...globalizacion facilito de manera considerable el trafico infantil con fines de comercio sexual y prostitucion, aseguro Richard J. Estes, coordinador del area de Desarrollo Social y Economico de la Universidad de Pennsylvania. Esto es patente, acoto...
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Estes, Richard
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 6/20/2003; 224 words
; Estes, Richard Friday, June 20, 2003 Estes, Richard Age 89 years. June 17, 2003. Entrusted to: LEON L. WILLIAMSON FUNERAL HOME 2157 N. 12th St (414)374-1812
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OBITUARIES.(St. Charles County Post)(Obituary\Walter W. Adams, Clarence Oscar Reinwald, Robert E. Brown, Alancrawford, Wilbur Gerald Crocker, Joan M. Welz, Richard L. Emery, Williamh. Steimel Sr., Jeanna Marie Estes, Barbara A. Boswell, Henry W. Kuna,Marilyn Clare Poirier, Esther W. Prigge, Hubert F. Stewart, June L.Meyer)(Obituary)
Newspaper article from: St Louis Post-Dispatch (MO); 9/28/1999; 700+ words
; ...and Barbara A. Gray of Burke, Va.; two sons, Richard J. Welz Jr. of St. Charles and Dan J. Welz of...620 Jefferson Street, St. Charles, Mo. 63301. Richard L. Emery Richard L. Emery, 62, of O'Fallon, died Saturday...
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BUSH SWEEPS PAST DOLE IN N.H.; DUKAKIS COASTS TO DEMOCRATIC WIN SWEPT TO VICTORY YESTERDAY IN THE NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY, SETTING THE STAGE FOR A STERNER TEST OF HIS PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDACY IN THE SOUTH THREE WEEKS FROM NOW. IN THE ALL-IMPORTANT BATTLE FOR SECOND PLACE, REP. RICHARD A. GEPHARDT SOLD HIS MESSAGE OF ANTIESTABLISHMENT CHANGE TO ENOUGH VOTERS TO BEAT THE LIBERAL SEN. PAUL SIMON OF ILLINOIS, THEREBY THREATENING SIMON'S ABILITY TO RAISE ENOUGH MONEY TO REMAIN A CREDIBLE CANDIDATE. IN THE REST OF THE FIELD, REV. JESSE JACKSON WAS JUST AHEAD OF SEN. ALBERT GORE JR. OF TENNESSEE IN A CLOSE FIGHT FOR FOURTH PLACE.THESE TWO ARE EXPECTED TO BE IN THE THICK OF THE BATTLE WITH DUKAKIS AND GEPHARDT OVER THE NEXT 20 DAYS LEADING UP TO SUPER TUESDAY, MARCH 8, WHEN 20 STATES WILL HOLD PRIMARIES AND CAUCUSES. TRAILING AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PACK WERE FORMER GOV. BRUCE BABBITT OF ARIZONA, WHOSE CANDIDACY NOW APPEARS TO BE AT AN END, AND FORMER SEN. GARY HART OF COLORADO, WHO HAD WON THE PRIMARY IN A STUNNING UPSET FOUR YEARS AGO, BUT HAS NOW BEEN CRUSHED BOTH IN IOWA AND HERE. ONCE AGAIN, HOWEVER, HE VOWED TO KEEP CAMPAIGNING. WITH 94 PERCENT OF THE PRECINCTS HAVING REPORTED, DUKAKIS' VICTORY MARGIN WAS A SOLID 16 PERCENTAGE POINTS OVER GEPHARDT. THIS ECLIPSED THE RECORD FOR A SERIOUSLY CONTESTED RACE, AN 11-POINT MARGIN IN A HOTLY CONTESTED NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY THAT ESTES KEFAUVER WON OVER HARRY TRUMAN IN 1952. AS THE FINAL RETURNS BEGAN COMING IN, DUKAKIS WAS AHEAD BY 36 PERCENT TO 20 PERCENT OVER GEPHARDT, WITH SIMON GETTING ROUGHLY 17 PERCENT. THE TURNOUT, PERHAPS INFLUENCED BY SO MANY PREDICTIONS OF A DUKAKIS VICTORY, APPEARED LIKELY TO FALL BELOW THE 100,000 PEOPLE WHO VOTED FOUR YEARS AGO. IN THIS OLD CITY, TURNOUT WAS THE LOWEST FOR A DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY IN 20 YEARS. GEPHARDT HELD DUKAKIS TO A SMALL MARGIN OF 29 PERCENT TO 24 PERCENT IN THE MANCHESTER AREA, A HOTBED OF ANTI-DEMOCRATIC SENTIMENT WHERE THE RIGHT-WING UNION LEADER HAS LONG ASSAILED THE NEIGHBORING GOVERNOR. IN EVERY OTHER SECTION OF THE STATE, HOWEVER, DUKAKIS WAS WINNING WITH NEARLY A 40 PERCENT PLURALITY. ''I ALWAYS WANTED TO BE AN OLYMPIC CHAMPION. THANKS TO YOU I HAVE MADE IT,'' SAID THE VICTOR AS HIS WIFE, KITTY, DRAPED A REPLICA OF AN OLYMPIC GOLD MEDAL AROUND HIS NECK. ''LAST WEEK IN IOWA, OUR MESSAGE STARTED TO SHINE THROUGH AND WE WON THE BRONZE,'' HE SAID. ''TONIGHT HERE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE OUR MESSAGE CAME THROUGH LOUD AND CLEAR. WE WENT FOR THE GOLD AND WE WON IT.'' ''IT'S A MESSAGE THAT GOES FAR BEYOND NEW HAMPSHIRE AND NEW ENGLAND. IT'S A MESSAGE FOR ALL AMERICANS. IT'S A MESSAGE THAT SAYS THERE IS A WHOLE NEW WORLD OUT THERE AND WE DEMOCRATS ARE READY TO TAKE IT ON,'' HE SAID TO THE CHEERS OF JOYOUS SUPPORTERS CROWDED INTO AN OLD MILL BUILDING NEXT TO THE MERRIMACK RIVER. ''A MESSAGE THAT SAYS RESIGNATION AND RETREAT ARE OLD IDEAS AND DID NOT WORK IN THE PAST AND CANNOT WORK IN THE FUTURE, AND NOT BY LASHING OUT OR LOOKING BACK BUT BY STEPPING UP AND STANDING TALL, BY MAKING NEW IDEAS WORK, BY BRINGING PEOPLE TOGETHER AGAIN AND BRINGING EVERYONE ALONG,'' DUKAKIS SAID. GEPHARDT WAS JUST AS HAPPY WITH HIS SECOND PLACE FINISH. ''THIS IS ONE NATION AND ONE ECONOMY, HE TOLD CHEERING SUPPORTERS. ''WE PROVED THE PEOPLE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE CARE ABOUT THIS COUNTRY, CARE ABOUT THIS ECONOMY, AND CARE ABOUT THIS CAUSE.'' BEFORE THE CAMPAIGN BEGINS IN EARNEST DOWN SOUTH, THERE WILL BE SIGNIFICANT TESTS NEXT TUESDAY, WITH COUNTY CAUCUSES IN MINNESOTA AND A PRIMARY IN SOUTH DAKOTA. DUKAKIS AND SIMON HAVE BEEN THE MAIN ADVERSARIES IN MINNESOTA, WHILE SOUTH DAKOTA SHAPES UP MOSTLY AS A DUKAKIS-GEPHARDT FIGHT. DUKAKIS BEAT HIS OPPOSITION WITH SUPPORT FROM A BROAD CROSS-SECTION OF NEW HAMPSHIRE DEMOCRATS AND INDEPENDENTS, ACCORDING TO EXIT POLLING CONDUCTED BY NBC NEWS. HE LED AMONG VIRTUALLY ALL DEMOGRAPHIC GROUPS, AND AMONG VOTERS OF EVERY IDEOLOGICAL STRIPE. GEPHARDT DREW HIS SUPPORT PRIMARILY FROM BLUE-COLLAR, UNION, OLDER AND MORE CONSERVATIVE DEMOCRATS, ALL GROUPS HE CAN BE EXPECTED TO GO AFTER STRENUOUSLY IN THE SOUTH. SIMON'S SUPPORTERS WERE A MIRROR IMAGE OF WHAT POLLS HAD FOUND: YOUNGER, MORE LIBERAL, MORE AFFLUENT AND BETTER EDUCATED. EVEN BEFORE THE POLLS HAD CLOSED IN THE STATE, DUKAKIS WAS TREATED TO SOMETHING ON A SCALE GRANDER THAN HIS CAMPAIGN HAD YET EXPERIENCED -- INTENSE NETWORK TELEVISION COVERAGE. AT THE START OF NBC NIGHTLY NEWS, HE WAS INTERVIEWED LIVE FOR TWO MINUTES BY TOM BROKAW. A HALF-HOUR LATER, HE HAD TWO MORE MINUTES WITH CBS'S DAN RATHER. THE TWO INTERVIEWS, UNIFORMLY FRIENDLY AND AT TIMES EFFUSIVE, CONSTITUTED A GIGANTIC OPPORTUNITY FOR DUKAKIS TO MAKE AN INITIALLY FAVORABLE IMPRESSION ON THE MILLIONS OF AMERICANS WHO WILL BE JUDGING HIS CANDIDACY IN JUST THREE WEEKS. FOR EXAMPLE, BROKAW BEGAN BY TELLING THE GOVERNOR, ''YOU'LL BE A BIG WINNER HERE,'' AND THEN ASKED HIM HOW HE CAN ASSURE SOUTHERNERS THAT HE IS READY TO RUN THE NATION'S FOREIGN POLICY, AND WHETHER GORE WILL NOT CHALLENGE HIS CREDENTIALS. ''NO, I DON'T THINK SO, TOM,'' THE REPLY BEGAN. ''I'VE ALWAYS HAD A STRONG INTEREST IN FOREIGN POLICY AND DEFENSE POLICY. I DON'T THINK YOU HAVE TO NECESSARILY LIVE IN WASHINGTON FOR 15 OR 20 YEARS TO HAVE THAT. HE THEN SPOKE OF GEORGE BUSH AND THE IRAN ARMS DEALS, AND OF BUSH'S TRIP TO THE PHILIPPINES, THEN LED BY PRESIDENT FERDINAND E. MARCOS. ''THE MAN IN THIS RACE WITH THE LONGEST FOREIGN POLICY RESUME HAPPENS TO BE VICE PRESIDENT BUSH, WHO SAT NEXT TO THE PRESIDENT WHILE HE WAS TRADING ARMS TO THE AYATOLLAH, WENT TO THE PHILIPPINES IN 1981, WHERE HE COMMENDED MARCOS FOR HIS COMMITMENT TO DEMOCRACY. ''I THINK WHAT MAKES A STRONG INTERNATIONAL LEADER IS A SENSE OF VALUES, AN ABILITY TO PICK GOOD PEOPLE, WORK WITH THE CONGRESS,'' DUKAKIS WENT ON. ''I THINK I'LL BRING THAT TO THE PRESIDENCY.'' THINGS WENT JUST AS SMOOTHLY WITH DAN RATHER, WHO BEGAN HIS INTERVIEW BY SAYING, ''GOVERNOR, CONGRATULATIONS, AN OUTSTANDING WIN HERE.'' WHEN RATHER ASKED HIM IF HIS CAMPAIGN MESSAGE NEEDED TO GET SHARPER, DUKAKIS SAID, ''I THINK THIS IS A VERY STRONG MESSAGE ABOUT THE FUTURE. THIS CAMPAIGN'S ABOUT THE FUTURE, NOT ABOUT THE PAST. ''ALTHOUGH I'M A NEIGHBOR AND A GOOD NEIGHBOR, THIS WAS QUITE A TEST FOR ME, BECAUSE I WAS ASKING THE PEOPLE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE TO LOOK AT ME NOT JUST AS A NEIGHBORING GOVERNOR BUT AS A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE.'' RATHER THEN GOT A LITTLE TOUGHER AND ASKED DUKAKIS TO NAME ONE SOUTHERN STATE HE THOUGHT HE COULD TAKE ON MARCH 8. ''I THINK THERE ARE A NUMBER OF SOUTHERN STATES, DAN, WHERE WE HAVE A VERY GOOD CHANCE OF DOING WELL -- FLORIDA, TEXAS, GEORGIA, NORTH CAROLINA, MAYBE SOME OF THE SMALLER STATES. I THINK THE SOUTH IS WIDE OPEN,'' DUKAKIS SAID. AND WHEN RATHER ASKED IF HE DID NOT THINK HE WAS A BIT LIBERAL TO DO WELL IN THE SOUTH, DUKAKIS APPEARED TO BE READY FOR THAT AS WELL. ''I'M A GUY THAT'S BALANCED NINE BUDGETS IN A ROW, CUT TAXES FIVE TIMES IN THE LAST FOUR YEARS AND I'M SUPPOSED TO BE A LIBERAL?'' HE SAID. AND FINALLY, WHEN RATHER ASKED HIM ABOUT GOV. MARIO CUOMO OF NEW YORK, DUKAKIS FLASHED A GRIN AND SAID, ''I HOPE HE ENDORSES MIKE DUKAKIS.'' WHAT WAS IMPORTANT ABOUT ALL THIS WAS NOT THAT IT WAS NEWSWORTHY, BUT THAT MILLIONS OF PEOPLE, MANY FOR THE FIRST TIME, WERE SEEING DUKAKIS ON A NIGHT WHEN HE WAS BEING PRAISED FOR A SOLID, IF EXPECTED, VICTORY.
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 2/17/1988; ; 700+ words
; olipha;02/16 LDRISC;02/17,12:04 DEMOCR17
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LINDA ESTES WAS CRUSADER WITH VISION, GUTS
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 9/12/2009; 700+ words
; ...them. That works for Linda Estes. "I'm extremely honored...the end justified the means. Estes was fighting a good fight and...athletes who benefited from Estes' good work and thousands of...this event. Editor's Note: Richard Stevens is a former Associate...
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Richard Estes
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Richard Estes The American artist Richard Estes (born 1932) was one of the leading realist painters of urban genre scenes in the latter half of the 20th century. Richard Estes was born on May 14, 1932, in Kewanee, Ill., and received...
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Estes, Richard
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
Estes, Richard (1936– ). American painter...he was a leading figure in his field. Estes's work is devoted to the urban landscape...so that even the garbage looks glossy. Estes has also made very elaborate screenprints...
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Estes, Simon 1938–
Book article from: Contemporary Black Biography
...President Lyndon Johnson invited Estes to perform at the White House...of the next several decades Estes kept up a hectic pace. His...included roughly 100 roles. Estes became especially identified...operas of the German composer Richard Wagner, and in 1978 he became...
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Carey Estes Kefauver
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...campaigns for the presidency. Estes Kefauver was born in Madisonville...Cooke Kefauver and Phredonia (Estes) Kefauver. The Kefauvers were...politically distinguished family: Estes' paternal great-grandfather...Eisenhower and California Congressman Richard Nixon. Kefauver ran for the...
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Kefauver, Estes 1903-1963
Book article from: American Decades
KEFAUVER, ESTES 1903-1963 DEMOCRATIC VICE...presidential nominations, Estes Kefauver employed a grassroots...shouted, "Shame on you, Estes Kefauver." Rankin's famous...Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard M. Nixon was too strong and...
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