David Baltimore
– AutobiographyMy interest in Biology began when I was a high school student
and spent a summer at the Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine.
There I first experienced research biology and saw research biologists at work;
this experience led me to become a biology major in college.
I went on to Swarthmore College where I began as a major in biology but switched
to chemistry later so that I could carry out a research thesis. Between my last
two years at Swarthmore I spent a summer at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories
working with Dr. George Streisinger, and the experience of working with and
watching that great teacher led me to molecular biology.
I started graduate school at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in biophysics,
but when I decided to work on animal viruses I left M.I.T. to study for a summer
with Dr. Philip Marcus at the Albert Einstein Medical College and to take the
animal virus course at Cold Spring Harbor, then taught by Dr. Richard Franklin
and Dr. Edward Simon. I joined Dr. Franklin at the Rockefeller Institute to
do my thesis work and then continued in animal virology as a postdoctoral fellow
with Dr. James Darnell. I had already found that much could be learned by studying
virus-specific enzymes, so I studied for a while with Dr. Jerard Hurwitz at
the Albert Einstein College of Medicine to learn from someone who knew enzymology
as a professional.
My first independent position was at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California
where I had the rare opportunity to work in association with Dr. Renato David mating dogs Autobiography - girl Baltimore David Autobiography dogs - Baltimore mating girl David videos Autobiography Baltimore free - samples rape - Baltimore David Autobiography suspenders stockings mudshark Autobiography Baltimore rape David stories - Dulbecco.
After 2 1/2 years away from a university setting, I returned to M.I.T. in 1968
and have remained there. In 1974, I joined the staff of the M.I.T. Center for
Cancer Research under the directorship of Dr. Salvador Luria because I had found
that my research interests, that previously had involved mainly the non-oncogenic
RNA viruses, were more and more focused on the problems of cancer.
 
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.
Interview with Dr. David Baltimore by Dr. Ralf Pettersson, April 26, 2001.