Salvador Luria Papers
1923-1992
(44 linear feet)

Ms. Coll. 39

© American Philosophical Society
105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386

American Philosophical Society

105 South Fifth Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
Table of contents Abstract
A bacteriologist from MIT, Salvador E. Luria's work with Max Delbruck on bacteriophage demonstrated that bacterial resistance to certain phages arose through genetic mutations. His later work showed that phages also mutate genetically. He received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1969 with Max Delbruck and Alfred D. Hershey.

The collection is organized into seven series: I. Correspondence, 1938-1992 ; IIa. Subject Files, 1938-1990 ; IIb. Personal Material. 1923-1991 ; III. Works by Luria, 1938-1987 ; IV. Works by Others, 1944-1990 ; V. Research Notes and Notebooks, 1941-1979 ; VI. Course Material, 1931-1991 ; VII. Photographs and Negatives, 1957-1982. Arrangement: Alphabetical by folder title and then chronological within each folder.
Background note
Salvador E. Luria was born on 13 August 1912 in Turin, Italy. He received his M.D. at the University of Turin in 1935, later becoming a specialist in radiology in Rome. With the rise of fascism and anti-semitism in Italy, he left in 1938 for Paris, where he was a Research Fellow at the Institute of Radium until 1940.

At that time, as the Nazis invaded France, Luria left for the United States (later, in 1947, he became a U.S. citizen), for a position as Research Assistant in Surgical Bacteriology at Columbia University, under the auspices of the Rockefeller Foundation, where he remained until 1942. He worked during the summers with Max Delbrück in Cold Spring Harbor on bacteriophage (a virus that infects bacteria). When Delbrück went to Vanderbilt, Luria went with him as a Guggenheim fellow for one year. They continued their collaboration after Luria became an Instructor in Bacteriology at Indiana University in 1943.

Luria and Delbrück's work on bacteriophage demonstrated that bacteria resistant to certain phages arose through gene mutations. Later work by Luria showed that phages also mutate genetically. The existence of genetic recombination in phage was revealed independently by Delbrück and by Alfred D. Hershey, the latter subsequently showing that phages were composed of DNA. This work earned Luria, Delbrück, and Hershey the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1969.

At Indiana University, Luria rose from Instructor to Assistant Professor (1945-1947) to Associate Professor of Bacteriology (1947-1950). One of his graduate students was James D. Watson; it was Luria who arranged for Watson to work at the Cavendish Laboratory, where he met Francis H.C. Crick.

In 1950, Luria became Professor of Bacteriology at the University of Illinois, where he remained until 1959. During this time, he also lectured in biophysics at the University of Colorado in 1950, was the Jesup Lecturer in Zoology at Columbia University in 1950, and was the Niewland Lecturer in Biology at the University of Notre Dame in 1959.

Luria became Professor of Microbiology and Chairman of the Microbiology Committee at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) in 1959. In 1964, he was made Sedgwick Professor of Biology, and then in 1970, Institute Professor. In 1972, he founded the Center for Cancer Research at M.I.T., which he directed from 1972 to 1985.

Luria was affiliated with many professional organizations during his career at M.I.T. He was a Non-Resident Fellow at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, was on the Scientific Advisory Committee of the Massachusetts General Hospital (1965-1968), was a member of the Committee on Personnel of the American Cancer Society (1966-1971), was on the boards of the Roche Institute for Molecular Biology (1972-1979) and the Basel Institute of Immunology (1977-1979), served as Chairman for the National Research Council's Board of Research on the Effects of Radiation, and was senior scientist for the Repligen Corporation.

Luria's strong political views prompted him to take a stand on many public issues, including civil defense, nuclear arms, the Middle East, and the United States' involvement in Vietnam and Central America. In 1969, he was blacklisted by the National Institutes of Health for his political activity, which included letter-writing campaigns and newspaper advertisements.

During Luria's career, he was involved with the editing of many scholarly journals. He was Editor of Virology, Associate Editor of Journal of Bacteriology, and Section Editor of Biological Abstracts, as well as being on the editorial boards of Experimental Cell Research, Journal of Molecular Biology, American Naturalist, Photochemistry and Photobiology, Annual Review of Genetics, and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Luria was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Academy of Microbiology, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Philosophical Society, the American Society for Microbiology (Vice President, 1966-1967; President, 1967-1968), the American Society of Biological Chemists, the American Society of Naturalists, the Genetics Society of America, the National Academy of Sciences, the Society for General Microbiology, and the Society for the Study of Development and Growth.

He received many honorary degrees, including those from Brown University, Indiana University, Providence College, Rockefeller University, Rutgers University, University of Chicago, and University of Palermo.

In addition to the Nobel Prize, Luria received the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize in 1969 with Max Delbrück for their work on the genetics of bacteria and bacteriophage. In 1974, Luria won a National Book Award in the Sciences for Life: The Unfinished Experiment, a work which has been translated into Italian, French, Spanish, German, and Japanese. Other books that Luria published include General Virology; 36 Lectures in Biology; A View of Life; and an autobiographical work, A Slot Machine, A Broken Test Tube. He published numerous articles.

When Luria died on 6 February 1991 in Lexington, Massachusetts, he was Institute Professor Emeritus at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is survived by his wife, Zella Hurwitz Luria, a professor of psychology at Tufts University, and his son, Daniel David Luria, an economist.


Scope and content
The Salvador E. Luria Papers (1923-1992) contain correspondence, subject files, manuscripts of published and unpublished works by Luria, papers by colleagues and students, research notes by Luria and by students, course material, and photographs, which document Luria's career as a molecular biologist. The collection is mainly in English, but there are a few items in other languages, such as Italian and French. These latter folders are marked, for example, "Some in Italian" or "In Italian," as appropriate.

The papers (94 boxes; 48.25 linear feet) are divided into eight series:

Series I. Correspondence, 1938-1992 (31 boxes; 15.5 linear feet)
Series IIa. Subject files, 1938-1990 (8 boxes; 3.75 linear feet)
Series IIb. Personal material, 1923-1991 (2 boxes; .75 linear feet)
Series III. Works by Luria, 1938-1987 (6 boxes; 2.75 linear feet)
Series IV. Works by others, 1944-1990 (23 boxes; 11 linear feet)
Series V. Research notes, 1941-1979 (10 boxes; 4.5 linear feet)
Series VI. Course material, 1931-1991 (9 boxes; 4.5 linear feet)
Series VII. Photographs, 1957-1982 (7 boxes; 5.25 linear feet)
Series I-VII. Oversize (1 box; .25 linear feet)

Arrangement
Oversized materials follow the same series arrangement as the general collection. Cross-referencing to oversized material appears on the folders in the standard sized boxes. All photographs and negatives have been removed from Series I-V and placed in Series VII. Cross-references appear in the original series. Reprints have been moved to the printed materials collection of the APS library. If a reprint was found as an enclosure, a photocopy of the title page was filed in its place. To retrieve reprints, consult the card catalog for printed materials.

The last addition to the Luria Papers included thirteen 5.25" disks containing word processing files. These files were printed onto acid-free paper and incorporated into the collection. Since many of these files contained a date code which automatically generated the date of the document as the date of its printing, the correct date for the document (as determined from the disk directory) was written in pencil on the printed document.

Administrative information
Restrictions
None.

Provenance
The Luria Papers were donated by Salvador E. Luria in 1985 (Accession 1985-575ms). After his death, additions were made to the collection by the estate of Salvador E. Luria in 1992 (Accession 1992-1176ms), in 1993 (Accession 1993-1542ms and Accession 1993-2043ms), and in 1994 (Accession 1994-636ms and Accession 1994-695ms). Most of the material from the 1950s came from Luria's office at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Preferred citation
Cite as: Salvador E. Luria Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Processing information
Catalogued by Miriam Spectre, November, 1994.

Other finding aids
The Luria Papers are further described in Bentley Glass' Guide to the Genetics Collections of the APS (http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/guides/glass/).

Additional information
Separated material
Two cassette tapes were removed from the collection ("Adventures in the Gene Trade" and "Science, Technology, and Responsibility"), along with one sound track film reel ("The Nobel Prize in Medicine: A Meeting with Dr. Alfred D. Hershey, Prof. Max Delbrück, and Prof. Salvador E. Luria), and two sound tape reels ("How Does a Virus Work?" and "Science, Technology, and Responsibility"). To retrieve these items, consult the card catalog for manuscript materials.

References
Luria, Salvador, General Virology (New York : Wiley and Sons, 1953). Call no.: 576.64 L97g.

Luria, Salvador, Life: the Unfinished Experiment (New York : Scribner, 1973). Call no.: 575 L975L.

Luria, Salvador, A Slot Machine, a Broken Test Tube: An Autobiography (New York : Harper and Row, 1984). Call no.: B L975s.

Luria, Salvador, Miscellaneous reprints (including a bibliography). Call no.: 574 Pam L.

Added entries
Subjects
  • Annual reports
  • Bacteriophages-Genetics
  • Central America-Foreign relations-1979-
  • Civil defense
  • Microbial genetics
  • Molecular biology
  • Nobel prizes
  • Nuclear energy
  • Nuclear weapons
  • Political participation
  • Vietnamese conflict, 1961-1975
  • Viral genetics
  • Contributors
  • Adelberg, Edward A
  • American Society for Microbiology
  • Anderson, Thomas Foxen, 1911-1991
  • Baltimore, David
  • Borek, Ernest, 1911-
  • Boston Area Faculty Group on Public Issues
  • Chomsky, Noam
  • Chovnick, Arthur
  • Clowes, Royston C., 1921-
  • Cohen, Seymour S. (Seymour Stanley), 1917-
  • Cohn, Melvin
  • Crick, Francis, 1916-
  • Davis, Bernard D., 1916-
  • Delbruck, Max
  • Dobzhansky, Theodosius Grigorievich, 1912-1975
  • Doermann, August H
  • Fondation Royaumont
  • Gould, Stephen Jay
  • Gunsalus, I. C. (Irwin Clyde), 1912-
  • Halvorson, Harlyn O
  • Hershey, Alfred D., 1908-
  • International Cell Research Organization
  • Jacob, Francois, 1920-
  • Lederberg, Joshua, 1925-
  • Luria, Salvador Edward, 1912-1991
  • Lwoff, Andre, 1902-
  • Magasanik, Boris
  • McClintock, Barbara, d1902-1992
  • Meselson, Matthew S
  • Monod, Jacques
  • National Institutes of Health
  • Novick, Aaron
  • Pauling, Linus, 1901-1994
  • Salk Institute for Biological Studies
  • Streisinger, George
  • Watson, James D., 1928-
  • Weigle, Jean
  • Wiesel, Elie, 1928-
  • Genre terms
  • Laboratory notebooks
  • Laboratory notes
  • Lantern slides
  • Lectures
  • Photoprints
  • Contact information
    American Philosophical Society
    105 South Fifth Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
    [http://www.amphilsoc.org/]

    ©11/1994

      Sponsor: Support for the processing of the Luria Papers was provided by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
    Collection overview

    Series I. Correspondence 1938-1992 31 boxes, 15.5 lin. feet

    Incoming and outgoing manuscript and typescript letters, carbons, telegrams, and postcards generated throughout Luria's career. Series I is arranged alphabetically by correspondent's name and then chronologically within each folder. When a correspondence file includes letters to a third party (i.e., not Luria), the name is indicated on the container list by using an indent under the folder title.

    Unidentified correspondence has been filed as "Unidentified" and is arranged chronologically. Enclosed manuscripts have been removed from this series and placed in Series III or IV as appropriate. As with the reprints, a photocopy of the title page was filed with the original letter. Cross references are also given for enclosed photographs, which have been removed to Series VII. Letters of reference are filed under the name of the person who is the subject of the letter.

    The bulk of this series covers the 1960s to the 1980s. Correspondents include molecular biologists, geneticists, biochemists, chemists, students, politicians, and some publishers. Among the topics covered in this series are: research on viral genetics; conferences; and political issues. There is a substantial amount of correspondence concerning Luria's affiliation with the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, as well as with the Fondation Royaumont, the International Cell Research Organization, and the American Society for Microbiology, among other organizations. Notes and telegrams congratulating Luria on receiving the Nobel Prize in 1969 are filed in this series under "Nobel Prize--Congratulations." Correspondence concerning Central America, nuclear arms, nuclear power, and Vietnam is filed in Series II (Subject Files) under those titles.

    Correspondents in Series I include:

    • Adelberg, Edward A.
    • Anderson, Thomas F.
    • Baltimore, David
    • Borek, Ernest
    • Chomsky, Noam
    • Chovnick, Arthur
    • Clowes, Royston C.
    • Cohen, Seymour S.
    • Cohn, Melvin
    • Davis, Bernard D.
    • Delbrück, Max
    • Dobzhansky, Theodosius
    • Doermann, August H.
    • Gould, Stephen J.
    • Gunsalus, Irwin C.
    • Halvorson, Harlyn O.
    • Hershey, Alfred D.
    • Jacob, François
    • Lederberg, Joshua
    • Lwoff, André
    • McClintock, Barbara
    • Magasanik, Boris
    • Meselson, Matthew S.
    • Monod, Jacques
    • Novick, Aaron
    • Pauling, Linus
    • Streisinger, George
    • Weigle, Jean
    • Wiesel, Elie




    Series IIa. Subject files 1938-1990 8 boxes; 3.75 linear feet

    Newspaper and magazine clippings; reports and meeting minutes (for the American Society for Microbiology and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, among others); and various versions of Luria's curriculum vitae. The folders are arranged alphabetically by title. Also included is a statement that Luria made about being blacklisted by the National Institutes of Health (filed under "Blacklisting"); articles written by distinguished scholars for a series organized by Luria for The Boston Sunday Globe (filed under the newspaper title); Columbia Queries, a poll taken by Columbia University on the topic of World War II (Luria's answers are included); reviews of Luria's book, A Slot Machine, A Broken Test Tube; and material about the Nobel Prize, the Boston Area Faculty Group on Public Issues (BAFGOPI), Central America, Vietnam, civil defense, nuclear power, and nuclear arms (filed under those titles).




    Series IIb. Subject files 1923-1991 2 boxes; 0.75 linear feet

    Items of a personal nature, including letters of condolence sent to his wife after Luria's death; letters in Italian from his brother and father in Italy; poems that Luria wrote; financial materials; Luria's naturalization certificate; and World War II letters in Italian from a girlfriend in Italy before he met his wife.




    Series III. Works by Luria 1938-1987 6 boxes; 2.75 linear feet

    Luria's typewritten and handwritten outlines, preparatory notes, research, and drafts for articles, books, and lectures. This series is arranged alphabetically by title, and cross-references are given for photographs which appear in this series. Some of the works are co-authored with colleagues and students. For each work, the notes and drafts are filed together. This series includes reviews of others' books; notes and drafts for the books, General Virology and Life: The Unfinished Experiment; and notes and drafts for lectures, including the Nobel lecture, "Phage, Colicins, and Macroregulatory Phenomena." The earliest item in this series is "Le Dosi Profonde e le Curve di Isodose Nella Terapia Roentgen ad Altissima Tensione," a paper that Luria wrote in Italian at the University of Rome. Also in this series is a bibliography of Luria's works until 1983. Also included are letters to the editors of the Boston Globe and the New York Times that were published. These letters are filed under the published title. Unpublished letters to the editor are filed in Series I (Correspondence) under the name of the newspaper.




    Series IV. Works by others 1944-1990 23 boxes; 11 linear feet

    articles, notes, reports, and papers written by colleagues and students of Luria. This series is arranged alphabetically by author and then by title. The series attests to Luria's practice of keeping up-to-date with the work of others in his field. Many authors are represented by four or more manuscripts, including Max Delbrück, Renato Dulbecco, François Jacob, Eduard Kellenberger, Ole Maalfe, Aaron Novick, Gunther S. Stent, and George Streisinger. Also included is a copy of James D. Watson's Ph.D. thesis (Luria was one of Watson's advisors) and a copy of a paper that Francis H.C. Crick wrote for the RNA Tie Club. Any works that Luria co-wrote with students and colleagues are filed in Series III alphabetically by title. Cross references are given for photographs which appear in this series.




    Series V. Research notes 1941-1979 10 boxes; 4.5 linear feet

    Loose notes and notebooks which are arranged by folder title and include the subjects of bacteria, colicins, microdermatology, phage, salmonella, Shigella coli, and viruses. Also in this series are notes taken by Luria at Cold Spring Harbor symposia and five folders of miscellaneous loose notes. Notebooks with no title have been filed as "Unidentified Notebook." Some notebooks have loose notes which are larger than the notebook pages. These notes were placed in folders and filed after each respective notebook. A photocopy of the first sheet of notes was placed at the appropriate notebook page with a cross reference.




    Series VI. Course materials 1931-1991 9 boxes; 4.5 linear feet

    Lecture notes, exam and quiz questions, problem sets, lists of students registered for the courses, grade books, handouts, instructions for experiments, and reading lists. Course subjects include bacterial viruses, biochemistry, biophysics, freshman seminar, general biology, general microbiology, and microbial physiology.




    Series VII. Photographs 1957-1982 7 boxes; 5.25 linear feet

    Prints and negatives, many of which are illustrations for articles. Folders containing prints of Luria include: American Society for Microbiology; Karl Taylor Compton Lectureship; and Osaka University. There are a number of folders containing unidentified figures, probably published in articles and books. Also included in this series are four boxes of lantern slides and one box of 2x2 inch slides. The slides seem to be visual aids for lectures and illustrations for articles.



    Detailed inventory

    Series I. Correspondence 1938-1992 15.5 linear feet

    Abercrombie, Robert D. 1970
    Box 1

    Abrahamson, Dean E. 1976
    Box 1

    Academy Press, Inc. 1956-1973
    Box 1

    Jacoby, Kurt


    Académie Royale de Médicine de Belgique 1977
    Box 1

    In French


    Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei 1965
    Box 1

    In Italian


    Adams, Mark H. 1949, 1956
    Box 1

    Adams, Mary Jane Neal 1959-1962
    Box 1

    Adams, William 1960
    Box 1

    Addison-Wesley Publishing Company 1976-1982
    Box 1

    Adelberg, Edward A. 1960-1969
    Box 1

    Adesnik, Milton B. 1969
    Box 1

    Adler, Howard I. 1960
    Box 1

    See also Ser.I, Microbial Genetics Bulletin


    Adler, Julius 1962, 1984-1985
    Box 1

    Adler, Susan 1968
    Box 1

    Ageno, Mario 1960
    Box 1

    In Italian


    Ahlquist, Nancy 1966, 1981, 1987
    Box 1

    Alexander, Martin M. 1958-1959
    Box 1

    Alianza Editorial S.A. 1974
    Box 1

    Alikhanian, S.I. 1962
    Box 1

    Allen, Leland C. 1984
    Box 1

    Allende, Jorge E. 1980
    Box 1

    Alpha Omega Alpha 1985-1987
    Box 1

    Alsop, Joseph 1973
    Box 1

    Altieri, Mario 1982-1986, n.d.
    Box 1

    Some in Italian


    Amati, Alexandra 1989
    Box 1

    Amati, Paolo 1964, 1977
    Box 1

    Ambler, Richard 1959
    Box 1

    American Academy of Arts and Sciences

    Box 1

    Edsall, John T.
    -See also Ser.III, Reflections on Democracy, Science, and Cancer


    Folder #1 1959-Jul. 1969
    Box 1

    Folder #2 Jul. 1969
    Box 1

    Folder #3 1970-Jul. 1972
    Box 1

    Folder #4 Sep. 1972-1989
    Box 2

    American Academy of Microbiology 1966-1975
    Box 2

    American Association for the Advancement of Science

    Box 2

    Folder #1 Feb.-Aug. 1955
    Box 2

    Folder #2 Sep. 1955-1956, 1975-1976
    Box 2

    The American Association of Immunologists 1958
    Box 2

    American Cancer Society, Inc.

    Box 2

    McGrady, Patrick M.


    Folder #1 1951-1959
    Box 2

    Folder #2 1960-1971
    Box 2

    Folder #3 1972-1980
    Box 2

    Folder #4 1984-1985
    Box 2

    American Chemical Society 1952, 1955
    Box 3

    American Institute of Biological Sciences 1959-1970
    Box 3

    American Philosophical Society 1964-1985
    Box 3

    American Society for Microbiology

    Box 3

    McClung, L.S.


    Folder #1 1965-Sep. 1966
    Box 3

    Folder #2 Oct.-Dec. 1966
    Box 3

    Folder #3 Jan.-Feb. 1967
    Box 3

    Folder #4 Mar.-14 Apr. 1967
    Box 3

    Folder #5 17 Apr.-May 1967
    Box 3

    Folder #6 Jun.-20 Jul. 1967
    Box 4

    Folder #7 Aug. 1967
    Box 4

    Folder #8 Sep.-Oct. 1967
    Box 4

    Folder #9 1-20 Nov. 1967
    Box 4

    Folder #10 22-30 Nov. 1967
    Box 4

    Folder #11 Dec.-15 Jan. 1968
    Box 4

    Folder #12 16 Jan.-19 Feb. 1968
    Box 5

    Folder #13 20 Feb.-Mar. 1968
    Box 5

    Folder #14 Apr.-15 May 1968
    Box 5

    Folder #15 16 May-Jun. 1968
    Box 5

    Folder #16 Jul.-Dec. 1968
    Box 5

    Folder #17 1969
    Box 5

    Folder #18 1970-1985
    Box 6

    American Type Culture Collection 1972
    Box 6

    Ames, Bruce N. 1960, 1970
    Box 6

    Amherst College 1958, 1961
    Box 6

    Amnesty International 1977
    Box 6

    Anderson, Alan 1971
    Box 6

    Anderson, Clay 1982
    Box 6

    Anderson, E.S. 1954-1955
    Box 6

    Anderson, John D. 1958
    Box 6

    Anderson, Thomas F. 1949-1970
    Box 6

    Andrewes, C.H. 1959
    Box 6

    Angela, Piero 1972
    Box 6

    In Italian


    Angell, Marcia 1978
    Box 6

    Annual Review of Genetics 1985
    Box 6

    Roman, Herschel L.


    Aposhian, H. Vasken 1985
    Box 6

    Benigno S. Aquino Memorial Foundation 1983-1984
    Box 6

    Arber, Werner 1959-1970, n.d.
    Box 6

    Argentina. Embassy 1984
    Box 6

    Ariotti, Piero E. 1980
    Box 6

    Aronson, Arthur I. 1960-1961
    Box 6

    Asociacion Venezolana para el Avance de la Ciencia 1969-1971
    Box 6

    -See also Ser.III, Science, Technology,


    Atwood, Catharine 1970
    Box 6

    Aufreiter, Eva 1970
    Box 6

    Augusto, Gavotti 1987
    Box 6

    In Italian


    Austin, Mary L. 1960-1961
    Box 6

    Austrian, Robert 1980-1981
    Box 6

    Ausubel, Frederick M. 1973
    Box 6

    Bachelor, Paul E. 1956
    Box 6

    Bachmann, Barbara J. 1972-1981
    Box 6

    Bachrach, Uriel 1963
    Box 6

    Backman, Jack 1974
    Box 6

    Baer, Robert 1955
    Box 6

    Baglioni, Corrado 1970-1980
    Box 6

    Some in Italian


    Bah, Han-Shie 1957-1958
    Box 6

    Bailey, Ethel 1959
    Box 6

    Bailey, L.R. 1957
    Box 6

    Baker, Jeffrey J.W. 1982
    Box 6

    Baker, Raymond M. 1980
    Box 6

    Baker, Thomas I. 1964
    Box 6

    Dushman, Miriam B.
    -See also Ser.I,


    Baldwin, Robert L. 1986
    Box 6

    Baltimore, David 1988-1989
    Box 6

    See also Ser.I, Friedman, Milton


    Baluda, Marcel 1957
    Box 6

    Bang, Frederik B. 1972
    Box 6

    Baquero, F. 1985
    Box 6

    Bard College 1982
    Box 6

    Barigozzi, C. 1962-1963
    Box 6

    Some in Italian


    Barksdale, Lane 1957-1964
    Box 6

    Baron, L.S. 1957, 1961
    Box 6

    Barroll, Martin 1984
    Box 6

    Basel Institute for Immunology 1974-1979
    Box 7

    Basic Books, Inc. 1987
    Box 7

    Basso, Lelio 1973
    Box 7

    Chomsky, Noam


    Bautz, Friedlinde 1971
    Box 7

    Bayer, Manfred E. 1965-1986
    Box 7

    Bayh, Burch 1974
    Box 7

    Baylor, Martha B. 1956, 1967
    Box 7

    Baylor College of Medicine 1979-1981
    Box 7

    Beacon Press 1961, 1963
    Box 7

    Beadle, George W. 1959
    Box 7

    See also Ser.I, University of Chicago


    Beale, G.H. 1960
    Box 7

    Becker, Yechiel 1961-1969
    Box 7

    See also Ser.I, Darnell, James E.


    Beckwith, Jonathan 1963-1982
    Box 7

    Begg, R.W. 1958
    Box 7

    Behrens, Otto K. 1949
    Box 7

    Bell Laboratories 1974
    Box 7

    Benedetti, E.L. 1978
    Box 7

    Bengelsdorf, Irving S. 1971-1974
    Box 7

    Ben-Gurion, Renana 1969, 1980
    Box 7

    The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company

    Box 7

    Gould, Stephen J.


    Folder #1 1962-Feb. 1980
    Box 7

    Folder #2 Mar. 1980-1981
    Box 7

    Bennett, H. Stanley 1981
    Box 7

    Benzer, Seymour 1949, 1980
    Box 7

    Benzinger, Rolf 1961
    Box 7

    Beppu, Teruhiko 1972
    Box 7

    Bernardini, G. 1959
    Box 7

    In Italian
    -See also Ser.I, Società Italiana di


    Bernstein, Aleck 1956
    Box 7

    Berrien, Roberta Hershkowitz 1971
    Box 7

    Berrigan, Daniel 1972
    Box 7

    Berrigan, Philip
    -See Ser.I, Berrigan, Daniel


    Berrigan, Philip

    Box 7

    Berry, Edward C. 1956
    Box 7

    Bertani, Giuseppe 1956-1984
    Box 7

    See also Ser.I, Calendar, Richard


    Bertani, L. Elizabeth 1958, n.d.
    Box 7

    Bertozzi, Carol 1972
    Box 7

    Bestor, Arthur 1973
    Box 7

    Beumer, Jacques 1957-1962
    Box 7

    Some in French


    Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1982
    Box 7

    Birnbaum, Norman 1980
    Box 7

    Bishop, Lauren J.

    Box 7

    See Ser.I, Suit, Joan L.


    Black, Lindsay M. 1957, 1961, 1966
    Box 7

    Siegel, Albert


    Blackwell, James 1963
    Box 7

    Blake, Roger D. 1976
    Box 7

    Bleck, E.E. 1974
    Box 7

    B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1960
    Box 7

    Bock, Robert M. 1958
    Box 7

    Boezi, John 1962
    Box 7

    Boice, Lu Belle 1959-1978
    Box 7

    Boicourt, Rose Mary 1955-1957
    Box 7

    Bok, Sisela 1973
    Box 7

    Borek, Ernest 1957, 1969-1974
    Box 7

    Borghi, Bruno 1980
    Box 7

    Borsellino, Antonio 1961
    Box 7

    In Italian


    Bose, Subir 1958, 1960
    Box 7

    Boston Fullbright Committee, Inc. 1976
    Box 7

    The Boston Globe 1961-1986, n.d.
    Box 7

    Luria, Zella
    -See also Ser.I, Maruyama, Masao


    Boston Latin School 1976
    Box 7

    Boston University 1965-1980
    Box 7

    Boston West Biology Round Table 1983-1984
    Box 7

    Botan, E.A. 1960
    Box 8

    Botstein, David 1972-1983
    Box 8

    Boulware, Kathleen Gaines 1973
    Box 8

    Bourgeois-Cohn, Suzanne 1969
    Box 8

    Bowles, Jean A. 1957
    Box 8

    Bowman, Bernard U., Jr. 1963
    Box 8

    Brachet, Jean Louis Auguste 1976-1977
    Box 8

    Bradford Books, Publishers 1978
    Box 8

    Bradshaw, Ralph A. 1989
    Box 8

    Brandeis University 1960-1979
    Box 8

    Brandly, C.A. 1956
    Box 8

    Branley, Franklyn M. 1957
    Box 8

    Braun, Armin 1962
    Box 8

    Bravo, Ernesto 1982-1983
    Box 8

    Bray, Dennis 1966-1967
    Box 8

    Brenner, Sydney 1960-1961
    Box 8

    Brewer, Gregory J. 1974-1985
    Box 8

    Brey, Robert Newton III 1978-1986
    Box 8

    Brink, R.A. 1962
    Box 8

    Brinton, Charles C., Jr. 1961, 1980
    Box 8

    Bristol-Myers Company 1985
    Box 8

    British Broadcasting Corporation 1981
    Box 8

    Brock, Thomas D. 1984
    Box 8

    Bronk, Detlev 1966
    Box 8

    Jacob Bronowski Centre for the Humanities 1975
    Box 8

    Brooke, Edward W. 1973
    Box 8

    Brookhaven National Laboratory 1959
    Box 8

    Brooks, Frank E. 1963
    Box 8

    Brooks, Toby 1970
    Box 8

    Brooks, Werner C. 1984-1985
    Box 8

    Brothers, Marietta 1957
    Box 8

    Brown, John 1971-1972
    Box 8

    Brown University 1973-1976
    Box 8

    Buggs, C.W. 1957
    Box 8

    Bukhari, Ahmad I. 1982
    Box 8

    Bulger, William M. 1965
    Box 8

    Bunka Hoso Development Centre Ltd. 1974-1975
    Box 8

    Bunting, Mary I. 1960, 1963
    Box 8

    See also Ser.I, Dushman, Miriam B.


    Burdette, Walter J. 1962
    Box 8

    Burman, Lars G. 1983
    Box 8

    Burrous, Jeanne W. 1959
    Box 8

    Burrous, Stanley E. 1958, 1960
    Box 8

    Burrows, T.W. 1957
    Box 8

    Burton, Kenneth 1961
    Box 8

    Burzatta, Giovanni 1962
    Box 8

    In Italian


    Bush, John 1974
    Box 8

    Bush, Sheila


    Bush, Sheila

    Box 8

    See Ser.I, Bush, John


    Buzzati-Traverso, Adriano A. 1961-1962
    Box 8

    Some in Italian
    -See also Ser.I, International Cell Research Organization
    -See also Ser.I, International Laboratory of Genetics and Biophysics


    Bylinsky, Gene 1973
    Box 8

    Cahn, Florence H. n.d.
    Box 8

    Cairns, John 1960-1990
    Box 8

    See also Ser.I, International Cell Research


    Calareso, Josephine 1980
    Box 8

    Calef, Enrico 1956-1974
    Box 8

    Some in Italian


    Calendar, Richard 1968
    Box 8

    Bertani, Giuseppe


    Califano, L. 1960
    Box 8

    Some in Italian


    Calkins, H.E. 1956
    Box 8

    Callaway, W. Ragan 1971
    Box 8

    Calvin, Melvin 1959-1961
    Box 8

    Cambridge Forum 1979, 1987
    Box 8

    Cameron, Kenneth Neill 1982, 1984, n.d.
    Box 8

    Cammeron, Dennis 1959
    Box 8

    Campaign for Peace with Justice in Central America 1982
    Box 8

    Campbell, Allen McCulloch 1957-1965
    Box 8

    Campbell, Bill

    Box 8

    See Ser.I, Campbell, Joan