Dear Dr. Kunkel:

JBC On-line is available as a member subscription or an institutional 
site license.  The member subscription provides an individual license 
and is $200 for 1997.  This subscription requires that the subscriber 
be a member of ASBMB and access is controlled through user ID's and 
passwords.  An institutional subscription is $1,100 for 1997 and 
allows for activation of an entire "site".  Institutional access is 
controlled through IP addresses that have been setup in the system as 
valid for that particular subscription.  The system provides for up to 
10 address with wildcarding "*".  If your site requires more that 10 
addresses for activation we can handle that on an exception basis, but 
almost all sites have been able to meet their needs with the 10 
provided and making use of the wildcarding capabilities.

As a guest browser you may view abstracts of the articles appearing in 
the current issue at the following address:
     
http://highwire.stanford.edu/jbc/

The On-line issue of the Journal also has a lot of additional 
information on subscribing that you may find helpful.

Thank you for your interest in JBC On-line.

     
Sincerely,
     
     
Ned Maher, JBC
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Suggestion sent via JBC Feedback Page
Name:             Joseph G. Kunkel  
Hostname:         128.119.55.149
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I have just been refused access to downloading a full length 
article from your archive. I am a professor at U. Massachusetts at
Amherst using my office computer on an Ethernet system and accessing 
your WWW site using Netscape 3.0.
I had thought that every University Library with hard copy 
subscription would gain for its University community access to 
downloading capabilities. Since I am a committee chairman of a 
subcommitte on electronic access for graduate and undergraduate 
students I am interested in your policy.
Can you direct me to the specific WWW pages that explain your policy 
with respect to 'hardbound' library subscriptions what if any 
electronic access privileges that subscription provides any or 
specific individuals at the University and what are the minimal 
requirements to have on-line access to complete articles for a 
University community.
Joe Kunkel
Professor
http://www.bio.umass.edu/biology/kunkel/