Martynas ycas biography of donald
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Reengineering the Survey of Income and Program Participation ()
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References Abowd, John (). Assessing Disclosure fara and Analytical Validity for the SIPP-SSA-IRS Public Use File beta Version PowerPoint presentation to the Panel on the Census Bureauâs Reengineered SIPP, Committee on National Statistics. Cornell University. Avail- able: [accessed May 15, ]. ______ (). Assessing the Utility of Statistical Methods for Limiting Disclosure Risk: Value of Synthetic uppgifter Sets. PowerPoint presentation to the Workshop on Collecting, Storing, Protecting, and Accessing Biological Data Collected in Social Surveys, National Research Council. Cornell Univers
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Social Security and the "D" in OASDI: The History of a Federal Program Insuring Earners Against Disability
This article explores the efforts of Social Security planners to establish a disability program in the United States and the history of the program over the past 50 years. It describes how the program has evolved and the internal and external influences that have affected its development.
The author is a senior analyst with the Office of Research, Evaluation, and Statistics, Office of Policy, Social Security Administration.
Acknowledgments: The author is grateful to the following persons for invaluable comments on earlier drafts of this paper: Fred Arner, Howard Bradley, Anthony Chavez, Larry DeWitt, Eli Donkar, Joe Humphries, L. Scott Muller, Bill Newton, Rene Parent, Jack Schmulowitz, Regina Smith, and Martynas Ycas.
Contents of this publication are not copyrighted; any items may be reprinted, but citation of the Social Security Bulletin as the
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RNA Tie Club
Association of scientists deciphering the genetic code
The RNA Tie Club was an informal scientific club, meant partly to be humorous,[1] of select scientists who were interested in how proteins were synthesised from genes, specifically the genetic code.[2] It was created by George Gamow upon a suggestion by James Watson in [2] when the relationship between nucleic acids and amino acids in genetic information was unknown. The club consisted of 20 full members, each representing an amino acid, and four honorary members, representing the four nucleotides. The function of the club members was to think up possible solutions and share with the other members.
The first important document of the RNA Tie Club was Francis Crick's adaptor hypothesis in Experimental work on the hypothesis led to the discovery of transfer RNA, a molecule that carries the key to genetic code. Most of the theoretical groundwork and preliminary experiments on the g