Bishop and Varmus Win the Nobel Prize (October 12, 1989)
Bishop, Varmus Become UCSF's First Nobel Prize Winners [14-27 October 1989]
Bon Voyage to Varmus, Bishop [16 December 1989 - 12 January 1990]
Harold Varmus, MD and J. Michael Bishop, MD [Spring 1990]
Harold Varmus Nominated to Head the NIH [21 August - 10 September 1993]
"The Hunting of the src" and "Jumping Genes" [November 1982]
Integration of Deoxyribonucleic Acid Specific for Rous Sarcoma Virus after Infection of Permissive and Nonpermissive Hosts (November 1973)
Is Cancer Part of Our Genetic Dowry? Proto-Oncogenes May Be Cancer Switches [September 1987]
Isotopes Lost -- UCSF Restricts Radiation Rights (January 28, 1988)
The Molecular Genetics of Cellular Oncogenes (1984)
The New Era in Cancer Research (May 26, 2006)
Nucleotide Sequences Related to the Transforming Gene of Avian Sarcoma Virus are Present in DNA of Uninfected Vertebrates (September 1978)
A Proposal for Naming Host Cell Derived Inserts in Retrovirus Genomes [1981]
Recent Evidence for Oncogenesis by Insertion Mutagenesis and Gene Activation (1982)
Shattuck Lecture - Biomedical Research Enters the Steady State (September 21, 1995)
Squirrels Have It [October 1981]
The src Protein Contains Multiple Domains for Specific Attachment to Membranes (March 1990)
Telomerase Activation in Mouse Mammary Tumors: Lack of Detectable Telomere Shortening and Evidence for Regulation of Telomerase RNA with Cell Proliferation (July 1996)
UCSF's Nobels: Surprise, Satisfaction and the World Reaction . . . [January 1990]
Using Recombinant DNA Technology to Study the Behavior of Retroviruses [1983]
Varmus Portrait Dedicated in Bldg. 1 (February 18, 2003)