{"id":6269,"date":"2015-03-18T11:00:29","date_gmt":"2015-03-18T15:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=6269"},"modified":"2024-10-21T11:15:49","modified_gmt":"2024-10-21T15:15:49","slug":"a-tribute-to-marshall-nirenberg-myrna-weissman","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2015\/03\/18\/a-tribute-to-marshall-nirenberg-myrna-weissman\/","title":{"rendered":"A Tribute to Marshall Nirenberg\u2014Myrna Weissman"},"content":{"rendered":"

On March 17, 2015, the National Library of Medicine held a special event,\u00a0<\/em>A Tribute to Marshall Nirenberg<\/a>,” the first of a\u00a0“triplet” of events at NIH being held to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of his deciphering of the genetic code. View the event here<\/a>. The program included presentations from his wife, Dr. Myrna Weissman, scholars, and Library staff. <\/em>Circulating Now interviewed the presenters and today we hear from Dr. Myrna Weissman. <\/em><\/p>\n

Circulating Now:<\/strong> Tell us a little about yourself. Where are you from? What do you do?<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>Myrna Weissman:<\/strong> I\u2019m originally from Boston, and a Professor of epidemiology, currently at Columbia University\u00a0at the Medical School and at the New York State Psychiatric Institute and at the School of Public Health. I met Marshall Nirenberg, around December 11, 2001. I was a widow and he had been recently been widowed following the passing of his wife Perola, to whom he was happily married for many, many years. Marshall and I met through a friend who thought I should know him and vice versa. We started dating and got married in 2005, so we knew each other for about 9 years in all when he died in 2010.<\/p>\n

CN:<\/strong> The life of a scientist is often described in terms of their academic achievements and contributions to science, would you share something of your experience of Marshall Nirenberg the person rather than the scientist?<\/p>\n

MW: <\/strong>Marshall came from an incredible family of talented, loving, and extraordinarily ethical people. Marshall himself was a very modest and very curious man. He rarely said anything bad about anybody. He was very humble and he was very curious about the world. He had no children of his own and when he got to know me and my children \u2014and my children\u2019s spouses and my grandchildren\u2014we all became part of his life, and he became very much a part of ours. When we all gathered together in the house he bought in Potomac\u2014which had a swimming pool, and which my children called \u201cThe Resort\u201d\u2014he loved it, and we all did too. Marshall was a very warm man, and very much of a family man, and he very much loved my children, and they loved him.<\/p>\n

CN:<\/strong> The National Library of Medicine is incredibly grateful to you for your generous donation of Nirenberg\u2019s papers and his Nobel Prize. We understand that selecting an appropriate repository for these materials was a matter of great concern to you; would you share your thoughts on your decision?<\/p>\n

MW:<\/strong> Well, I\u2019m an epidemiologist, so I approached my donation as an epidemiologist would, and with the help of my children and the Nirenberg family. I proceeded to a number of different places that might considered to be appropriate, and I met with the curators there. I found that many, many places were interested and I would have loved to have had any one of them accept the donation. But then, I wasn\u2019t sure.<\/p>\n

\"Nirenberg<\/a>
Marshall Nirenberg reading data in a lab, 1975
Profiles in Science, Courtesy John Neubauer<\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

I was familiar with the National Library of Medicine, of course, but I didn\u2019t know that much about it. As I went through Marshall\u2019s papers, I came across the name of Allan Stypeck, from Second Story Books. I saw the correspondence between Allan and Marshall, and that Allan had been involved in donations of other papers that Marshall had made during his lifetime. So I called Allan, and he came over to the house in Potomac. It was clear from our conversation that he respected Marshall tremendously, and that they had quite a friendship. Allan knew and cherished the papers, and he knew they were important. So he became our archivist, and he advised me along the way to making the donation to the National Library of Medicine. And that was the right thing to do, because I felt the papers belonged to the NIH, where Marshall did all his work. And NLM would ensure that the papers\u2014and now Marshall\u2019s Nobel Prize and other medals\u2014would be preserved for as long as we could imagine, and be made available to anyone who wanted to use them for research, education, and learning.<\/p>\n

CN: <\/strong>The archive of Dr. Nirenberg’s papers<\/a> at NLM is very rich, spanning materials from 66 years of Nirenberg\u2019s work, is there a piece of the collection that is particularly special to you?<\/p>\n

MW:<\/strong> Well, it\u2019s all special, really, and the material holds special memories for me. After Marshall passed away, my kids would come by plane from all over the country\u2014California, Chicago, New York, and South Carolina\u2014and they would get into their dungarees, and they would start going through the bubble wrap and going through the boxes. And the Nirenberg family also came, from Texas, Mississippi, Connecticut and Florida to join us and advise. This was tough work, this took a long time. We were astonished at what we found. We found movie tickets from 1959. And we found letters from Francis Crick. All of it, and especially that correspondence, was amazing to us. But probably the most amazing are two items that I\u2019ve not yet donated to the NLM, but will eventually. One of these items is the medal given to Marshall by President Johnson, when he visited the Oval Office<\/a> with his wife, Robert Q. Marston, and Wilber Cohen. The other item is a diary kept by Marshall\u2019s wife, Perola, covering about 10 days after they received the call about the Nobel Prize. It reveals the excitement of those days, when so many friends and colleagues came out to congratulate them, everyone getting together and drinking champagne, and reporters calling. Unfortunately, she didn\u2019t keep the diary much past the first week or so. But it\u2019s a lovely piece of history to have, and I look forward to donating it to the NLM.<\/p>\n