I was born in 1925, in New York City, - S. hardcore Blumberg brutal Baruch thehappytimes.com/pant/archives/206/05/stocking-thumbnails/"> thumbnails Baruch stocking - Blumberg S. the second of three
children of Meyer and Ida Blumberg. My grandparents came to the United States
from Europe at the end of the 19th century. They were members of an immigrant
group who had enormous confidence in the possibilities of their adopted country.
I received my elementary education at the Yeshiva of Flatbush, a Hebrew parochial
school, and, at an early age, in addition to a rigorous secular education, learned
the Hebrew Testament in the original language. We spent many hours on the rabbinic
commentaries on the Bible and were immersed in the existential reasoning of
the Talmud at an age when we could hardly have realized its impact.After attending
Far Rockaway High School I joined the U.S. Navy in 1943 and finished college
under military auspices. I was commissioned as a Deck Officer, served on landing
ships, and was the commanding officer of one of these when I left active duty
in 1946. My interest in the sea remained. In later years I made several trips
as a merchant seaman, held a ticket as a Ships Surgeon, and, while in medical
school, occasionally served as a semiprofessional hand on sailing ships. Sea
experience placed a great emphasis on detailed problem solving, on extensive
planning before action, and on the arrangement of alternate methods to effect
an end. These techniques have application in certain kinds of research, particularly
in the execution of field studies.
My undergraduate
degree in Physics was taken at Union College in upstate New York, and in 1946
I began graduate work in mathematics at Columbia University. My father, who
was a lawyer, suggested that I should go to medical school, and I entered The
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in 1947. I enjoyed
my four years at the College immensely. Robert Loeb was the chairman of the
Department of Medicine and exerted a marked influence on the entire college.
There was a strong emphasis on basic science and research in the first two years
(we hardly saw a patient till our third year), and we learned practical applications
only in our last years.
Between my third and fourth years, Harold Brown, our professor of parasitology,
arranged for me to spend several months at Moengo, an isolated mining town,
accessible only by river, in the swamp and high bush country of northern Surinam.
While there we delivered babies, performed clinical services, and undertook
several public health surveys, including the first malaria survey done in that
region. Different people had been imported into the country to serve as laborers
in the sugar plantations, and they, along with the indigenous American Indians,
provided a richly heterogeneous population. Hindus from India, Javanese, Africans
(including the Djukas, descendants of rebelled slaves who resided in autonomous
kingdoms in the interior), Chinese, and a smattering of Jews descended from
17th century migrants to the country from Brazil, lived side by side. Their
responses to the many infectious agents in the environment were very different.
We were particularly impressed with the enormous variation in the response to
infection with Wuchereria bancroftia (the filariad which causes elephantiasis),
and my first published research paper was on this topic. This experience was
recalled in later years when I became interested in the study of inherited variation
in susceptibility to disease. Nature operates in a bold and dramatic manner
in the tropics. Biological effects are profound and tragic. The manifestations
of important variables may often be readily seen and measured, and the rewards
to health in terms of prevention or treatment of disease can be great. As a
consequence, much of our field work has been done in tropical countries.
I was an intern and assistant resident on the First (Columbia) Division at Bellevue
Hospital in lower New York from 1951 to 1953. It is difficult to explain the
fascination of Bellevue. In the days before widespread health insurance, many
of the city's poor were hospitalized at Bellevue, including many formerly middle
class people impoverished by the expenses of chronic illness. The wards were
crowded, often with beds in the halls. Scenes on the wards were sometimes reminiscent
of Hogarth's woodcuts of the public institutions of 18th century London. Despite
this, morale was high. We took great pride that the hospital was never closed;
any sick person whose illness warranted hospitalization was admitted, even though
all the regular bed spaces were filled. A high scientific and academic standard
was maintained. Our director, Dickinson W. Richards, and his colleague, André
F. Cournand, received the Nobel Prize for their work on cardio-pulmonary physiology.
Anyone who has been immersed in the world of a busy city hospital, a world of
wretched lives, of hope destroyed by devastating illness, cannot easily forget
that an objective of big-medical research is, in the end, the prevention and
cure of disease.
I spent the following two years as a Clinical Fellow in Medicine at Columbia
Presbyterian Medical Center working in the Arthritis Division under Dr. Charles
A. Ragan. I also did experimental work on the physical biochemistry of hyaluronic
acid with Dr. Karl Meyer. From 1955 to 1957, I was a graduate student at the
Department of Biochemistry at Oxford University, England, and a member of Balliol
College. I did my Ph.D. thesis with Alexander G. Ogston on Baruch S. k9 stories erotic Blumberg - the S. - Blumberg teens forced Baruch pics physical and
erotic Blumberg k9 stories Baruch S. - biochemical characteristics of hyaluronic acid. Professor Ogston's remarkable
combination of theory and experiment guided the scientific activity in his laboratory.
He has served as a model to me on how to train students; I hope I have measured
up to his standard. Sir Hans Krebs was the chairman of the Department of Biochemistry.
I have profited by conversations with him, particularly when (in 1972) I was
a visiting fellow at Trinity College and we had opportunities to discuss our
mutual interests in the history of science.
Oxford science at that time was influenced by the 19th and 20th century British
and European naturalists, scientists and explorers who went to the world of
nature - often to distant parts of it - to make the observations which generated
their hypotheses. Anthony C. Allison was then working in the Department of Biochemistry
and introduced me to the concept of polymorphism, a term introduced by the lepidopterist
E. B. Ford of the Department of Zoology. In 1957 I took my first West African
trip (to Nigeria) and was introduced to the special excitement of that part
of the world. I found the Nigerians warmhearted and friendly with a spontaneous
approach to life. We collected blood specimens from several populations (including
the nomadic pastoral Fulani and their domestic animals) and studied inherited
polymorphisms of the serum proteins of milk and of hemoglobin. This approach
was continued in many subsequent field trips, and it eventually led to the discovery
of several new polymorphisms and, in due course, the hepatitis B virus.
I worked at the National Institutes of Health from 1957 until 1964. This was
during a period of rapid growth for the NIH, and I continued to develop my research
on polymorphisms and their relation to disease. This led to the formation of
the Section on Geographic Medicine and Genetics, which was eventually assigned
to an epidemiology branch directed by Thomas Dublin, from whom I learned the
methods of epidemiology. The NIH was a very exciting place, with stimulating
colleagues including J. Edward Rall, Jacob Robbins, J. Carl Robinson, Kenneth
Warren, Seymour Geisser, and many others. The most important connection I made,
however, was with W. Thomas London (who later came to The Institute for Cancer
Research), who has become a colleague, collaborator, and good friend with whom
I have worked closely for fifteen years. Tom was an essential contributor to
the work on Australia antigen and hepatitis B, and without him it could not
have been done.
I came to The Institute for Cancer Research in 1964 to start a program in clinical
research. The Institute was, and is, a remarkable research organization. Our
director, Timothy R. Talbot, Jr., has a deep respect for basic research and
a commitment to the independence of the investigators. Above all, people are
considered an end in themselves, and the misuse of staff to serve some abstract
goal is not tolerated. Jack Schultz was a leading intellectual force in the
Institute, and his foresighted, humane view of science, his honesty and his
good sense influenced the activities of all of us. Another important characteristic
is the dedication and intelligence of our administrative and maintenance staffs,
which contributes to the strong sense of community which pervades our Institute.
Over the course of the next few years we built up a group of investigators from
various disciplines and from many countries (Finland, France, Italy, Poland,
Venezuela, England, India, Korea, China, Thailand, Singapore) who, taken together,
did the work on Australia antigen. Alton I. Sutnick (now Dean of the Medical
College of Pennsylvania) was responsible for much of the clinical work at Jeanes
Hospital. Some of the early workers included Irving Millman, Betty Jane Gerstley,
Liisa Prehn, Alberto Vierucci, Scott Mazzur, Barbara Werner, Cyril Levene, Veronica
Coyne, Anna O'Connell, Edward Lustbader, and others. There were many field trips
during this period to the Philippines, India, Japan, Canada, Scandinavia, Australia,
and Africa. It has been an exciting and pleasant experience surrounded by stimulating
and friendly colleagues.
At present, we are conducting field work in Senegal and Mali, West Africa, in
collaboration with Professor Payet of Paris, formerly the Dean of the Medical
School of Dakar, with Professor Sankalé, his successor in Dakar, and
a group of other French and Sengalese colleagues, including Drs. Larouzé
and Saimot.
I am Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and attend ward
rounds with house staff and medical students. I am also a Professor of Anthropology
and have taught Medical Anthropology for eight years. I have learned a great
deal from my students.
My non-scientific interests are primarily in the out-of-doors. I have been a
middle distance runner (very non-competitive) for many years and also play squash.
We canoe on the many nearby lakes and rivers of Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
I enjoy mountain walking and have hiked in many parts of the world on field
trips. With several friends we own a farm in western Maryland which supplies
beef for the local market. Shoveling manure for a day is an excellent counterbalance
to intellectual work.
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.