Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Kornberg Essays - Guggenheim Fellows, Arthur Kornberg, Severo Ochoa
  Kornberg    A. Personal Information  Arthur Kornberg (1918-), American biochemist and physician, claims  he has never met ?a dull enzyme.? He has devoted his life to pursuing  and purifying these critical protein molecules. His love of science did  not spring from a family history rooted in science. He was born on  March 3rd, 1918, the son of a sewing machine operator in the  sweatshops of the Lower East Side of New York City. His parents,  Joseph Aaron Kornberg and Lena Rachel Katz, were immigrant Jews  who made great sacrifices to ensure the safety of their family. They  had fled Poland, for if they had stayed, they would have been  murdered in a German concentration camp. His grandfather had  abandoned the paternal family name Queller, of Spanish origin. This  was done to escape the fate of the army draft; he had taken the  name of Kornberg, a man who had already done his service. His father  used their meager earnings to bring and settle his family in New York  City and was thrust into the sweatshops as a sewing machine  operator. He, along with his brother Martin, 13 years older and sister  Ella, nine years older, was encouraged by loving parents to obtain a  good education. The public school reinforced this ideal. Education was  the road of opportunity for social and economic mobility out of the  sweatshops.   His early education in grade school and Abraham Lincoln High School  in Brooklyn was distinguished only by his ?skipping ? several grades.  There was nothing inspirational about his courses except the teachers'  encouragement to get good grades. When he received a grade of 100  in the New York State Regents Examination, his chemistry teacher  glowed with pride. It was the first time in over twenty years of  teaching that a student of his had gotten a perfect grade. Arthur was  a brilliant student who graduated from high school at the age of  fifteen. He enrolled in City College in uptown Manhattan. Competition  among a large body of bright and highly motivated students was  fierce in all subjects. His high school interest in chemistry carried over  into college. After receiving his B.S. degree in biology and chemistry  in 1937, and since City College offered no graduate studies or  research laboratories at that time, he became one of two hundred  pre-med students at the University of Rochester. All through college  he worked as a salesman in his parents' furnishing store, and earned  about $14 a week. This along with a New York State Regents  Scholarship of $100 a year and with no college tuition to pay he was  able to save enough money to pay for the first half of medical school.  While a student, he became aware of a mild jaundice (yellowing) in  his eyes. He observed a similar condition among other students and  patients at the hospital and published these findings, his first  professional paper, in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.   He enjoyed studying to become a doctor, and his goal was to practice  internal medicine, preferably in an academic setting. The medical  school curriculum was uncrowded and close contact with a  distinguished faculty was encouraged, but to his shock anti-Semitism  was rampant in the academic circles. He was denied academic awards  and research opportunities because he was Jewish. He had hoped to  receive one of the fellowships from the medical school which allowed  a few outstanding students to spend a year doing research, even  though the idea of spending a significant amount of his days in the  laboratory had no appeal at that time. To his disappointment he was  passed over in every department, due to the ethnic and religious  barriers which existed during that time, even though his grades were  the highest. Although one professor at Rochester stood out, William  S. McCann, Chairman of the Department of Medicine, the only one who  made any effort to help Kornberg. William McCann persuaded a  wealthy patient to endow a scholarship of which Kornberg was the  recipient. This enabled Kornberg to pursue his first research project  (on jaundice), and allowed him to be appointed to an internship in  medicine, and then to an assistant residency, which would groom him  for a career in academic medicine. Following his graduation in 1941,  Kornberg enlisted in the U.S. Coast Guard, being assigned duty as a  medical officer in the Caribbean. Officials at the National Institute of  Health in Maryland, aware of his brief clinical study on the subject of  jaundice, arranged for Kornberg's transfer to the institute. He spent  the remainder of World War II carrying out research in the nutrition  laboratory. In 1943, Kornberg married Sylvy Levy;    
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