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Volumn 29, Issue 3, 1996, Pages 331-360

Wendell Stanley's dream of a free-standing biochemistry department at the University of California, Berkeley

Author keywords

[No Author keywords available]

Indexed keywords

ARTICLE; BIOCHEMISTRY; CURRICULUM; HISTORY; UNITED STATES; UNIVERSITY; VIROLOGY;

EID: 0030236752     PISSN: 00225010     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1007/BF00127379     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (29)

References (120)
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    • This story has been recounted to the author by nearly everyone Stanley recruited to his new department; it was clearly one of his favorite anecdotes. Heinz Fraenkel-Conrat has recorded it this way: "It is supposedly due to a snowstorm grounding of two planes in the wild American West, that Stanley was forced to have a long talk with the President of the University of California, Robert Gordon Sproul, a conversation which laid the groundwork to Stanley's coming to Berkeley as chairman of the new department of biochemistry and to the creation of the Virus Laboratory there" (Proc. Robt. A. Welch Found. Conf. Chem. Res., 20 (1977), 253-261 on 254). Greer Williams offers more specific timing: "In the late spring of 1946 he was flying out to the University of California to collect one of his eight honorary degrees, . . . when he was set down for three hours in the Cheyenne, Wyoming, airport because of engine trouble. Among the grounded passengers was a tall man with a deep voice, who introduced himself as Robert Gordon Sproul, president of the University of California"
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    • Daniel J. Kevles, "A Physicists' War," chap. 20 of The Physicists: The History of a Scientific Community in Modern America (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971). Kevles also discusses the prominence of the Berkeley physicists, particularly Lawrence and Oppenheimer, during the interwar period in the context of the larger U.S. physical science community.
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    • An important theme in the historiography of molecular biology has been the relationship of molecular biology to physics. (For one summary of this view, see Evelyn Fox Keller, "Physics and the Emergence of Molecular Biology: A History of Cognitive and Political Synergy," J. Hist. Biol., 23 (1990), 389-409.)
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    • Notwithstanding the authority that molecular biologists derived by appealing to physics, they sought and achieved institutional independence from the physical sciences in the postwar period. Nicolas Rasmussen has outlined the similar efforts to create disciplinary autonomy for biophysics immediately after World War II, in "The Midcentury Biophysics Bubble: Hiroshima and the Biological Revolution in America" Hist. Sci., 37 (forthcoming, 1997).
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    • The boundaries around molecular biology, even when articulated, changed significantly over time; see Doris T. Zallen, "Redrawing the Boundaries of Molecular Biology: The Case of Photosynthesis," J. Hist. Biol., 26 (1993), 65-87.
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    • The Politics of Macromolecules: Molecular Biologists, Biochemists, and Rhetoric
    • For an exploration of the contentious discussion that erupted in the 1960s over the status of molecular biology with respect to biochemistry, see Pnina Abir-Am, "The Politics of Macromolecules: Molecular Biologists, Biochemists, and Rhetoric," Osiris, 7 (1992), 164-191.
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    • ed. Alexandra Oleson and John Voss Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press
    • See Charles E. Rosenberg, "Toward an Ecology of Knowledge: On Discipline, Context, and History," in The Organization of Knowledge in Modern America, 1860-1920, ed. Alexandra Oleson and John Voss (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1979), pp. 440-455.
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    • New York: McGraw-Hill
    • On the importance of the land-grant legacy in shaping both the departmental structure and the funding of research at the University of California at Berkeley, see Verne A. Stadtman, The University of California 1868-1968 (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1970).
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    • privately printed by the University of California courtesy of R. David Cole
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    • A Cupful of Luck, a Pinch of Sagacity
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    • ed. André Lwoff and Agnes Ullman New York: Academic Press
    • Doudoroff and Stanier subsequently developed close connections with Jacques Monod at the Pasteur Institute, as reflected in their contributions to The Origins of Molecular Biology: A Tribute to Jacques Monod, ed. André Lwoff and Agnes Ullman (New York: Academic Press, 1979).
    • (1979) The Origins of Molecular Biology: A Tribute to Jacques Monod
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    • Explorations of Bacterial Metabolism
    • H. A. Barker, "Explorations of Bacterial Metabolism," Ann. Rev. Biochem., 47 (1978), 1-33, on 15.
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    • Abraded from Several Corners: Medical Physics and Biophysics at Berkeley
    • forthcoming
    • On the development of medical physics, and later biophysics, around the cyclotrons, see Peter Westwick's fine analysis, "Abraded from Several Corners: Medical Physics and Biophysics at Berkeley," Hist. Stud. Phys. Sci., 27:1 (1996, forthcoming).
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    • Berkeley: Office for the History of Science and Technology, University of California at Berkeley
    • For a more extensive analysis, see Frederic Lawrence Holmes, Between Biology and Medicine: The Formation of Intermediary Metabolism (Berkeley: Office for the History of Science and Technology, University of California at Berkeley, 1992).
    • (1992) Between Biology and Medicine: The Formation of Intermediary Metabolism
    • Holmes, F.L.1
  • 44
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    • note
    • Ibid. This program was separate from the relatively large graduate program in the medical school's Division of Biochemistry: "Greenberg says that there is a definite trend in the University of California toward building an upper division school. This is reflected in the department, in that an expansion at the graduate level has occurred, that there are forty candidates, exclusive of medicine, for M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in biochemistry. The department serves the non-medical sciences more than the medical" (diary, February 1947, box 11, file 155, RG 1.1, 205D, Rockefeller Archive Center (hereafter RAC), North Tarrytown, NY).
  • 45
    • 25444464824 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Robert G. Sproul to C. B. Hutchison, January 10, 1946, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem, 1946-54."
    • Robert G. Sproul to C. B. Hutchison, January 10, 1946, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem, 1946-54."
  • 46
    • 25444443859 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Excerpt from Warren Weaver diary, November 14, 1947, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Excerpt from Warren Weaver diary, November 14, 1947, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 47
    • 25444441703 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Letter from committee to recommend a new chairman for the Biochemistry Division to Robert G. Sproul, July 30, 1946, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem, 1946-54."
    • Letter from committee to recommend a new chairman for the Biochemistry Division to Robert G. Sproul, July 30, 1946, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem, 1946-54."
  • 48
    • 25444488934 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Epilogue: Toward a Molecular Biology?
    • above, n. 2
    • On the relative prominence of these subfields in the biochemistry of the 1940s, see Robert E. Kohler, "Epilogue: Toward a Molecular Biology?" in From Medical Chemistry (above, n. 2), pp. 324-335.
    • From Medical Chemistry , pp. 324-335
    • Kohler, R.E.1
  • 49
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    • W. M. Stanley's Crystallization of the Tobacco Mosaic Virus, 1930-1940
    • Lily E. Kay, "W. M. Stanley's Crystallization of the Tobacco Mosaic Virus, 1930-1940," Isis, 77 (1986), 450-472.
    • (1986) Isis , vol.77 , pp. 450-472
    • Kay, L.E.1
  • 51
    • 25444445201 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Stanley's intention to unify biochemistry from its dispersed campus functions into an institutionally autonomous discipline is explicit in his letter to Robert G. Sproul, May 11, 1949, Presidents' Files, "Special Problem: Virus Laboratory, Part I: 1946-50," UCB, CU-5: 1946, 420-Biochem.
  • 53
    • 25444491914 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • above, n. 2
    • Kohler, From Medical Chemistry (above, n. 2), p. 283. After World War II at Harvard there was a sustained search for a chair to head a new department of biochemistry that would bring together researchers from the medical school and some members of the departments of chemistry and biology across the river in Cambridge. Despite strong administrative backing, this new department failed to materialize, due to the failure of some high-profile recruits and the subsequent ambition of one of the disliked medical school biochemists to chair the department. See Conn papers, especially the folder "Harvard University 1949 Confidential Division of Biochemistry - Candidates," Rare Books Room, Francis Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass. Rockefeller Foundation officer William Loomis's amusing account of the demise of the plan can be found in his diary excerpt, box 141, folder 1746, RG 1.1, 200D, RAC.
    • From Medical Chemistry , pp. 283
    • Kohler1
  • 54
    • 25444472021 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • W. M. Stanley to President Robert G. Sproul, March 11, 1948, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem
    • W. M. Stanley to President Robert G. Sproul, March 11, 1948, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
  • 55
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    • Berkeley: University of California Press, September
    • I am referring to Fred Carpenter, Charles A. Dekker, Arthur B. Pardee, and Donald L. MacDonald; see University of California General Catalogue, 1951-52 (Berkeley: University of California Press, September 1951).
    • (1951) University of California General Catalogue, 1951-52
  • 56
    • 25444529144 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Horace A. Barker to Vice President Wellman, August 12, 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467
    • Horace A. Barker to Vice President Wellman, August 12, 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467.
  • 57
    • 25444484056 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, October 29, 1953, box 612, file 5240, RG 1.2, 200V, RAC
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, October 29, 1953, box 612, file 5240, RG 1.2, 200V, RAC.
  • 58
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    • Walter Fletcher, F. G. Hopkins, and the Dunn Institute of Biochemistry: A Case Study in the Patronage of Science
    • Robert E. Kohler, "Walter Fletcher, F. G. Hopkins, and the Dunn Institute of Biochemistry: A Case Study in the Patronage of Science," Isis, 69 (1978), 331-355.
    • (1978) Isis , vol.69 , pp. 331-355
    • Kohler, R.E.1
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    • above, n. 34
    • See Corner, History (above, n. 34).
    • History
    • Corner1
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    • note
    • I do not mean to suggest that the Rockefeller Institute and the Rockefeller Foundation were programmatically united - but the Princeton laboratories, and particularly Stanley's group, did represent the kind of research that Warren Weaver's program fostered elsewhere. For different views regarding the motives and effects of the Foundation program's science policy, see the references in n. 3 above.
  • 61
    • 25444518879 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, February 1, 1952, box 7, folder 50, RG 1.2, series 205D, RAC. (Weaver declined the invitation, and Detlev Bronk, president of the Rockefeller Institute, gave the talk on "molecular biology" instead.)
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, February 1, 1952, box 7, folder 50, RG 1.2, series 205D, RAC. (Weaver declined the invitation, and Detlev Bronk, president of the Rockefeller Institute, gave the talk on "molecular biology" instead.)
  • 62
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    • Warren Weaver and His Program
    • above, n. 3
    • On Weaver's programmatic vision and his hesitancy to employ his own invented term "molecular biology," see Robert Kohler, "Warren Weaver and His Program," in Partners in Science (above, n. 3), esp. pp. 275 ff.
    • Partners in Science
    • Kohler, R.1
  • 63
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    • Newspaper clipping
    • July 21, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem
    • Newspaper clipping, San Francisco News, July 21, 1948, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
    • (1948) San Francisco News
  • 64
    • 25444492788 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Stanley's commitment to virology distinguished his vision of autonomous biochemistry from that of Hopkins: whereas the Dunn Institute was focused on a variety of materials and problems, each of which related to dynamic metabolism, Stanley's group was focused most prominently on viruses.
  • 65
    • 25444449742 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, September 17, 1948, copy in Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem: Virus Lab, Part I, 1946-1950."
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, September 17, 1948, copy in Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem: Virus Lab, Part I, 1946-1950."
  • 66
    • 25444481767 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Loomis diary, February 6, 1951, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Loomis diary, February 6, 1951, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 67
    • 25444460075 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, September 17, 1948 (above, n. 47)
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, September 17, 1948 (above, n. 47).
  • 68
    • 25444512582 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • As Robert Kohler elaborates in the last chapter of From Medical Chemistry to Biochemistry, "the late 1930s saw the beginning of a remarkable expansion in biochemists' interests in biological oxidation, intermediary metabolism, biosynthesis, and macromolecules" ("Epilogue" [above, n. 30], p. 325).
  • 69
    • 25444487672 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Moreover, the plant biochemists were distressed by Stanley's relative disinterest in metabolism, as indicated by his appointments to the new department. In 1952, one wrote: "Anyway - since the trend was to gripe, I spoke strongly in terms of appointing somebody who knows something about metabolism. I stated that all over the campus much concern was expressed concerning the one-sided policy of Stanley. He said he would be pleased to appoint somebody next year to fill that gap" (Paul Stumpf to Barker, "Night before election," 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467).
  • 70
    • 0030236991 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Sequences, Conformation, Information: Biochemists and Molecular Biologists in the 1950s
    • See Soraya de Chaderevian, "Sequences, Conformation, Information: Biochemists and Molecular Biologists in the 1950s," J. Hist. Biol., this issue.
    • J. Hist. Biol. , Issue.THIS ISSUE
    • De Chaderevian, S.1
  • 71
    • 25444506541 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Interview with R. David Cole, Berkeley, Calif., February 24, 1993. (It was also Cole who referred to Stanley as the "Biochemistry Czar.")
    • Interview with R. David Cole, Berkeley, Calif., February 24, 1993. (It was also Cole who referred to Stanley as the "Biochemistry Czar.")
  • 72
    • 25444438398 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Research Activities in the Virus Laboratory," attached to letter from Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, October 29, 1953, box 612, file 5240, RG 1.2, 200V, RAC
    • "Research Activities in the Virus Laboratory," attached to letter from Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, October 29, 1953, box 612, file 5240, RG 1.2, 200V, RAC.
  • 73
    • 25444437414 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • "The approach to, the attack of, the entrance into and the metabolic behavior of a virus within a cell are being studied by biological, chemical, physical and tracer methods using a variety of virus-cell combinations. Energy and enzymatic relationships within normal, malignant and virus diseased cells are being investigated" (ibid.).
  • 74
    • 25444505847 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Rockefeller Foundation officers were also put off by Stanley's presumption of support, even as they approved the soundness of his plan for a Virus Laboratory: "G. [Gasser] is certainly not favorable to any building gift to California for W. M. Stanley, and WW [Warren Weaver] infers that he would not favor any large gift there for that purpose. G. emphatically dislikes the fact that California takes on Stanley with the assumption that S. has all sorts of important connections which will assure large support for him, and he equally dislikes the fact that Stanley probably himself approves of this procedure" (Warren Weaver, diary note on conversation with Dr. H. S. Gasser, January 9, 1948, box 7, file 88, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC). After refusing Stanley a capital grant, the Rockefeller Foundation did in fact support his research quite substantially. Despite the fact that Weaver was always annoyed by Stanley's salesmanship, he acknowledged that Stanley was "planning a scientific development at Berkeley which will be absolutely first-rate in its concept, in its personnel, and in its setting" (interview notes, Warren Weaver diary, June 15, 1948, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC). Another Foundation officer echoed these sentiments: "On objective grounds it is difficult to deny that $1,000,000 devoted to a virus laboratory may produce results of as great intrinsic importance as those to be derived from the cyclotron and telescope - and of far greater importance to human welfare" (Memo on W. M. Stanley proposal by Robert S. Morrison, January 30, 1948, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC).
  • 75
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    • Science, Government, and the Mass Production of Penicillin
    • In the copy of the publicity release for Stanley's acceptance of the university position, the following sentence is added by hand to the description of the relevance of virus research to disease control: "The fact that penicillin and the sulfa drugs are not effective in the treatment of most viruses diseases emphasizes the importance of the new approach" (University of California Office of Public Information, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5, "Special Problem, 1946-54"). On the development of penicillin, see Peter Neushul, "Science, Government, and the Mass Production of Penicillin," J. Hist. Med. Allied Sci., 48 (1993), 371-395.
    • (1993) J. Hist. Med. Allied Sci. , vol.48 , pp. 371-395
    • Neushul, P.1
  • 76
    • 25444434328 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, January 8, 1948, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Wendell Stanley to Warren Weaver, January 8, 1948, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 77
    • 25444519404 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Loomis diary, April 17, 1950, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Loomis diary, April 17, 1950, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 78
    • 25444451268 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Location of the Virus Research Laboratory," a memo to Mr. Corley, September 28, 1948, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem
    • "Location of the Virus Research Laboratory," a memo to Mr. Corley, September 28, 1948, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
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    • "Information Concerning the Biochemistry and Virus Laboratory," enclosure with letter from Stanley to Weaver, February 1, 1952 (above, n. 43)
    • "Information Concerning the Biochemistry and Virus Laboratory," enclosure with letter from Stanley to Weaver, February 1, 1952 (above, n. 43).
  • 80
    • 25444441027 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Warren Weaver diary, November 10, 1952, box 7, file 50, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Warren Weaver diary, November 10, 1952, box 7, file 50, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 81
    • 25444530178 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Kohler, "Instruments" (above, n. 3)
    • Kohler, "Instruments" (above, n. 3).
  • 82
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    • Newspaper clipping
    • July 20, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
    • Newspaper clipping, Oakland Post Enquirer, July 20, 1948, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
    • (1948) Oakland Post Enquirer
  • 83
    • 25444438936 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Warren Weaver, diary, November 14, 1947, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Warren Weaver, diary, November 14, 1947, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 84
    • 25444463505 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Unlabeled newspaper article, from Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
    • Unlabeled newspaper article, from Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
  • 85
    • 25444472544 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Stanley, "Research Activities" (above, n. 54). On molecular biologists' recourse to physics, Abir-Am, "Discourse" (above, n. 3); Keller, "Physics" (above, n. 8); Rasmussen, "Biophysics Bubble" (above, n. 8)
    • Stanley, "Research Activities" (above, n. 54). On molecular biologists' recourse to physics, Abir-Am, "Discourse" (above, n. 3); Keller, "Physics" (above, n. 8); Rasmussen, "Biophysics Bubble" (above, n. 8).
  • 88
    • 0004026478 scopus 로고
    • trans. Alan Sheridan and John Law Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press
    • See, by way of comparison, Bruno Latour, The Pasteurization of France, trans. Alan Sheridan and John Law (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988).
    • (1988) The Pasteurization of France
    • Latour, B.1
  • 89
    • 25444436395 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Unlabeled newspaper article (above, n. 66)
    • Unlabeled newspaper article (above, n. 66).
  • 90
    • 25444460074 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • "We plan an extensive program of research on viruses affecting people, animals, plants, and bacteria. We are primarily interested in the elucidation of the mode of reproduction and mutation of viruses, but do expect to work with viruses of social and economic importance. The State of California loses about 100 million dollars annually from virus diseases of animals and plants and I am confident we will be able to do something about this. We plan work on several plant and animal viruses. Work is now under way on viruses causing tumors or cancers in animals. I expect to push this aspect because I am convinced that the viruses provide the best possible experimental approach to the cancer problem" (Wendell Stanley to Dr. Benjamin W. Carey of Lederle Laboratories, from the Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1950, 420-Biochem.). Not insignificantly, Stanley became on of the key organizers of cancer research funding, serving on the board of the American Cancer Society.
  • 91
    • 25444446781 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Funding details are drawn from the information enclosed with the letter from Stanley to Weaver, February 1, 1952 (above, n. 43). On the funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, see above, n. 56.
  • 94
    • 25444497431 scopus 로고
    • Epilogue
    • Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
    • The restructuring of federal funding for basic life science research opened up new funding sources at both the National Institutes of Health (through their program of extramural grants) and the National Science Foundation. The National Institutes of Health was to focus entirely on disease-related research, leaving public health issues (epidemiological tracking, etc.) to the newly created Communicable Disease Center. The National Science Foundation also included funding for basic life science research, including molecular biology. Before the NSF was founded, some of Stanley's biochemists were supported by the Office of Naval Research, which funded basic research immediately after World War II. My survey of Berkeley grants records from the 1950s and 1960s reveals that all of these sources were important in supporting research in the Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, although Public Health Service (NIH) grants were most frequent. On the restructuring of the research mission at the National Institutes of Health, see Victoria A. Harden, "Epilogue," in Inventing the NIH: Federal Biomedical Policy, 1887-1937 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987), pp. 179-191.
    • (1987) Inventing the NIH: Federal Biomedical Policy, 1887-1937 , pp. 179-191
    • Harden, V.A.1
  • 95
    • 0000470393 scopus 로고
    • The Federal Impact on Biomedical Research
    • ed. John Z. Bowers and Elizabeth F. Purceli New York: Josiah Macy, Jr., Foundation in conjunction with the National Library of Medicine
    • On the establishment of biological research funding at the NSF, Toby Appel is completing a monograph on the National Science Foundation and federal patronage of biology, 1945-1975 (forthcoming). G. Burrough Mider offers an overview of federal funding of biomedical research: "The Federal Impact on Biomedical Research," in Advances in American Medicine: Essays at the Bicentennial, vol. II, ed. John Z. Bowers and Elizabeth F. Purceli (New York: Josiah Macy, Jr., Foundation in conjunction with the National Library of Medicine, 1976), pp. 806-871.
    • (1976) Advances in American Medicine: Essays at the Bicentennial , vol.2 , pp. 806-871
    • Burrough Mider, G.1
  • 96
    • 25444512581 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Henry Palm, article from July 21, 1948, unidentified newspaper, in Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem
    • Henry Palm, article from July 21, 1948, unidentified newspaper, in Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1948, 420-Biochem.
  • 97
    • 25444470950 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Stanley to Sproul, August 23, 1950, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-5: 1950, 420-Biochem. Stanley was ambiguous (probably intentionally) about whether a "national emergency" requiring expert virologists involved the threat of combating bacterial warfare or the more conventional needs by the armed forces for vaccines.
  • 98
    • 25444489246 scopus 로고
    • California after World War II
    • Arlington Heights, IL: Harlan Davidson
    • See Andrew Rolle, "California after World War II," in California: A History, 4th ed. (Arlington Heights, IL: Harlan Davidson, 1987), pp. 452-467. For another view of the historical impact of the Cold War on molecular biology, see Lily E. Kay.
    • (1987) California: A History, 4th Ed. , pp. 452-467
    • Rolle, A.1
  • 100
    • 25444455548 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See letter from Zev Hassid to H. A. Barker, November 17, 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467
    • See letter from Zev Hassid to H. A. Barker, November 17, 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467.
  • 101
    • 25444463775 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See letter from H. A. Barker to President Sproul, copy enclosed with a letter to Dr. Harry Wellman, Vice President, dated October 27, 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467
    • See letter from H. A. Barker to President Sproul, copy enclosed with a letter to Dr. Harry Wellman, Vice President, dated October 27, 1952, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467.
  • 102
    • 25444532219 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Roger Stanier to H. A. Barker, November 6, 1952, ibid.
    • Roger Stanier to H. A. Barker, November 6, 1952, ibid.
  • 103
    • 25444477466 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The last two stanzas were: "I became so great it occurred to ME / That I really might have ability. / I thought for awhile that I should have spent / At least one day on an experiment. / I never did but its [sic] just as well / For now I am director of the BVL. / Now students all whoever you may be / If you want to gain success like ME / Be sure and never go near a lab / For all you really need is the gift of gab. / I have this gift as you can tell / For I soon became director of the BVL" (copy of "lyrics" in box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467).
  • 104
    • 25444527400 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Warren Weaver diary, November 10, 1952, box 7, file 50, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Warren Weaver diary, November 10, 1952, box 7, file 50, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.
  • 105
    • 25444433773 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • One plant biochemist wrote into a committee report: "It should be noted that not until six weeks later did we learn from Dr. Stanley that he attributed his resignation largely to the fact that we had been 'uncooperative.' We believed his resignation was the result of the failure of the Biochemistry staff to support his 'unification' policy" (Report to the Pitzer Committee, September 26, 1953, p. 11, box 6, folder 34, Barker Papers, UCB, CU-467).
  • 106
    • 25444468505 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Memo of Conference with Professor Snell, Department of Biochemistry," drafted by Lincoln Constance, Dean, May 1, 1957, President's Files, UCB, CU-149: 1959, 400-Vir
    • "Memo of Conference with Professor Snell, Department of Biochemistry," drafted by Lincoln Constance, Dean, May 1, 1957, President's Files, UCB, CU-149: 1959, 400-Vir.
  • 107
    • 25444432211 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Interview with Horace A. Barker, February 23, 1993, Berkeley, Calif.
    • Interview with Horace A. Barker, February 23, 1993, Berkeley, Calif.
  • 108
    • 25444441145 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The timing of the founding of the Department of Virology also reflected the fact that Stanley was being courted by University of Pittsburgh to fill a Vice Presidency: "One of our keep-Stanley programs was to push fast on the establishment of the proposed Dept. of Virology, approved by the AAC, Ed Policy, the Budget Committee and you" (Memo "Re: Stanley-Dept. of Virology," February 17, 1958, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-149: 1959, 400-Vir.).
  • 109
    • 25444449199 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Memo from Dean Lincoln Constance to Chancellor Strong, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-149: 1961, 400-Vir.
    • Memo from Dean Lincoln Constance to Chancellor Strong, Presidents' Files, UCB, CU-149: 1961, 400-Vir.
  • 110
    • 25444467396 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Letter from Chancellor Strong and Robley C. Williams, quoted by C. A. Knight in "Department of Molecular Biology," July 14, 1965, drawn up for the University Centennial publication, box 23, file "History of M. B. Dept.," Stanley Papers, UCB, 78/18c
    • Letter from Chancellor Strong and Robley C. Williams, quoted by C. A. Knight in "Department of Molecular Biology," July 14, 1965, drawn up for the University Centennial publication, box 23, file "History of M. B. Dept.," Stanley Papers, UCB, 78/18c.
  • 111
    • 25444443858 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Report of the Committee to Plan the Scope and Activities of a New Department Concerned with Relating Biology and the Physical Sciences," pp. 1-2, October 22, 1962, ibid. The members of the committee were Robley C. Williams (chair), Daniel Mazia, Roger Y. Stanier, Howard K. Schachman, and Gunther S. Stent. The report's positioning of molecular biology with respect to the physical sciences posits it as the cognate of physics, which is presented as more fundamental than chemistry (whose cognate would be zoology). On the rhetorical power of the comparison with physics, see Keller, "Physics" (above, n. 8).
  • 112
    • 25444457454 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Report" (above, n. 92), p. 3
    • "Report" (above, n. 92), p. 3.
  • 113
    • 25444480713 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., p. 5
    • Ibid., p. 5.
  • 114
    • 25444447626 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., p. 14
    • Ibid., p. 14.
  • 116
    • 25444494367 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Report" (above, n. 92)
    • "Report" (above, n. 92).
  • 117
    • 0030243479 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • See Elzen, "Two Ultracentrifuges" (above, n. 5); Kay, "Laboratory Technology" (above, n. 4); and Nicolas Rasmussen, "Making a Machine Instrumental: RCA and the Wartime Origins of Biological Electron Microscopy in America, 1940-45," Stud. Hist. Phil. Sci., 27 (1996), 311-349. A very telling account of changes in biochemical instrumentation has been given by the Berkeley medical biochemist David Greenberg, who elaborates on how new methods and tools transformed the biochemistry research laboratory beginnings at the end of the 1930s: see "Recollections" (above, n. 17), pp. 35-36.
  • 118
    • 0026822415 scopus 로고
    • The Rockefeller Foundation and Spectroscopy Research: The Programs at Chicago and Utrecht
    • Kohler, "Instruments" (above, n. 3)
    • On the development of spectroscopy in particular, see Doris T. Zallen, "The Rockefeller Foundation and Spectroscopy Research: The Programs at Chicago and Utrecht," J. Hist. Biol., 25 (1992), 67-89; and Kohler, "Instruments" (above, n. 3).
    • (1992) J. Hist. Biol. , vol.25 , pp. 67-89
    • Zallen, D.T.1
  • 119
    • 0020180657 scopus 로고
    • Intellectual Traditions in the Life Sciences: Molecular Biology and Biochemistry
    • For example, see Scott F. Gilbert, "Intellectual Traditions in the Life Sciences: Molecular Biology and Biochemistry," Perspect. Biol. Med., 26 (1982), 151-162.
    • (1982) Perspect. Biol. Med. , vol.26 , pp. 151-162
    • Gilbert, S.F.1
  • 120
    • 25444475424 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Loomis diary, April 17, 1950, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC
    • Loomis diary, April 17, 1950, box 7, file 49, RG 1.2, 205D, RAC.


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