415-723-1772 E. M. Lederberg, Ph. D.
Dept. of Microbiology & Immunol.
Fairchild Bldg. #5402
Stanford Univ. Sch. of Medicine
Stanford, CA, 94305-2499
Dr. Bonnie Males
P. O.Box 452 (406 Lincoln)
Ellensburg, WA 98926 Oct. 1, 1991
Dear Bonnie.
I can't believe I haven't replied sooner to your April letter. I am glad you
are settled where you like, it sounds very good. The Centennial celebrations
are just about over. I did very little, except volunteer 2 afternoons of
help. The dedication of the new Biol. Bldg. was great; a wonderful all-day
symposium of outsider speakers, and a fine outside lunch. The first talk was a
celebration of Beadle & Tatum, one gene, one enzyme work with Neurospora,
where I got my MA in those labs., so I enjoyed it very much. And then an alum
who was my lab partner in Cell Biol. course, then known as the Mystery Hour,
also showed up.
As to the Plasmid Reference Center: it lost all sources of funding, and
without grant support ( my appointment was co-terminous with that) most of it
folded. I took Early Retirement, which allowed some support from the
department: xerox, computer, phone & postage costs. So the acquisition ,
maintenance, and testing of plasmid cultures and other laboratory operations
had to be cancelled , since there were no funds to support personnel. It was
personally difficult to give up lab and lab work. However, with the above
perks, I have been able to continue (part-time) the data base and nomenclature
activities, and I like this so much better.
The department has changed very drastically since you were here: it has grown
enormouly, and of course we are in the Fairchild Bldg. (Incidentally, the old
place, really spruced up for another dept., suffered severe quake damage in
Oct. 89). The only ones left are Bruce, Bob Roantree, Rosenberg, Schwartz
(rarely here) and perhaps you knew Abdul Matin. Despite his age, Bruce is very
active again, after a lapse when he had one person in the lab (from the Makela
lab in Finland). Now he is really flourishing, and funded. They sold their
house in Ladera, and bought a condo in downtown Palo Alto, very pleasant. Both
daughters have PhD's: one is married. All the former secys are also gone, but
anyhow, none of the new ones stay too long.
I can't remember who your old classmates in the lab were. Kris Mortelmans is
still around, working in SRI. Lynn Valdivia moved to Abbot labs in Chicago,
has a new husband and baby. Visits about 1x a year. Helen Hudson returned to
Sydney, Aus., Has 3 sons. visited them in 1988 on a short trip there. Learned
she had a baby girl a couple of years ago.
Other depts are doing well: David Botstain is new chair of Genetics. You may
remember him for finding Tn 10, from phage p22, when you participated in the
reading class I tried to conduct. A couple of weeks ago, a colicin researcher,
Jan Smarda, from Brna, Czech. turned up, and it was quite interesting to talk
to him. Unfortunately, Bruce was at a vaccine conference in Finland at the
time.
I'm glad you have good projects ahead, are are active and busy. Let me know