346:, and in fact cited the opportunity to teach undergraduate courses as one reason for his move from Harvard Medical School to MIT. During his career at MIT he was engaged in redevelopment of the undergraduate biology curriculum and continued to teach undergraduate courses for several years after his retirement.
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In 1967, Magasanik became the head of the
Department of Biology, a position in which he served until 1977. His leadership during this period, especially in decision-making about new faculty hires, has been widely cited as contributing to the success of the department in the molecular biology field.
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Magasanik met his first wife, Adele Karp, when both were graduate students at
Columbia; they were married in 1949. Karp was also a researcher at Harvard and later worked with Magasanik at MIT, though she retired from science in the early 1960s to care for her elderly mother. The couple became avid
261:. As Magasanik later recalled, other recent chemistry graduates of the period were able to find jobs in the defense industry, but as he was not yet eligible for American citizenship, he was instead drafted into the army and ultimately spent four years serving as a medical technician.
272:. Magasanik received his Ph.D. in 1948. Asked years later to write a brief autobiography about his life in science, Magasanik described his early life as "almost entirely determined by the political events of the period between the two world wars and by World War II."
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in 1960, Magasanik spent the rest of his research career at MIT, including an influential decade as the head of the
Department of Biology from 1967–77. Magasanik's research interests focused on
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and began his faculty career there in 1949, advancing to a tenured position in the
Department of Bacteriology and Immunology in 1958. During this period he spent a
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as department head, Magasanik concentrated on research and teaching rather than administrative work until his retirement in 1990, when he became
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Boris
Magasanik, Transcript of an interview Conducted by Sondra Schlesinger In three sessions between 1993 and 1995
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on
December 19, 1919, to a family he later described as "belonging to the capitalist class" and who left for
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Magasanik became the
Jacques Monod Professor of Biology in 1977. After being succeeded by
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in 1938, in which Jews were expelled from
Austrian universities. He then emigrated to
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300:. In 1960, Magasanik was recruited from Harvard to MIT by noted microbiologist
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After leaving the army
Magasanik returned to Ph.D. studies, this time at
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232:. Raised in Vienna, Magasanik began his university education studying
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Magasanik was recruited to a position at
Harvard Medical School by
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Science faculty
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161:(December 19, 1919 – December 25, 2013) was a
359:, with particular interest in African art, and also enjoyed
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Magasanik was known as a skilled and committed educator of
568:"Boris Magasanik, 94; pioneer in molecular biology at MIT"
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Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences
257:, but was interrupted by the United States' entry into
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of Microbiology in the Department of Biology at the
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236:in 1937, but was unable to continue due to the
208:. Magasanik retired in 1990 and died in 2013.
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653:Members of the National Academy of Medicine
328:United States National Academy of Sciences
326:In 1969, Magasanik became a member of the
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228:forces during the then-ongoing Ukrainian
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648:Austrian emigrants to the United States
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332:Selman A. Waksman Award in Microbiology
93:Selman A. Waksman Award in Microbiology
400:"Biologist Boris Magasanik dies at 94"
253:Magasanik began graduate education at
179:Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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458:10.1146/annurev.mi.48.100194.000245
363:and extensive travel. Karp died of
250:, from which he graduated in 1941.
566:Lawrence, J.M. (2 February 2014).
487:Reisz, Matthew (16 January 2014).
204:, and intracellular signaling via
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439:Magasanik, Boris (October 1994).
398:Clark, Andrew (3 January 2014).
633:City College of New York alumni
224:after Kharkiv was captured by
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445:Annual Review of Microbiology
330:, from which he received the
255:Pennsylvania State University
548:Chemical Heritage Foundation
537:Schlesinger, Sondra (1995).
489:"Boris Magasanik, 1919–2013"
643:Soviet emigrants to Austria
367:in 1991. Magasanik married
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638:Harvard University faculty
623:Columbia University alumni
523:Science History Institute
516:Center for Oral History.
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618:American microbiologists
373:Cambridge, Massachusetts
248:City College of New York
212:Early life and education
72:Cambridge, Massachusetts
608:Scientists from Kharkiv
268:under the direction of
493:Times Higher Education
216:Magasanik was born in
183:Harvard Medical School
131:Harvard Medical School
298:Guggenheim Fellowship
206:two-component systems
202:catabolite repression
189:, including study of
546:. Philadelphia, PA:
181:. After moving from
266:Columbia University
83:Columbia University
369:Helen Donis-Keller
321:professor emeritus
518:"Boris Magasanik"
306:molecular biology
290:Pasteur Institute
282:J. Howard Mueller
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121:molecular biology
103:Scientific career
64:December 25, 2013
36:December 19, 1919
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441:"A Charmed Life"
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218:Kharkiv, Ukraine
142:Doctoral advisor
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187:gene regulation
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79:Alma mater
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302:Salvador Luria
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270:Erwin Chargaff
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163:microbiologist
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575:. Retrieved
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496:. Retrieved
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407:. Retrieved
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296:thanks to a
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259:World War II
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169:who was the
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127:Institutions
117:biochemistry
113:Microbiology
102:
66:(2013-12-25)
48:Russian SFSR
603:2013 deaths
598:1919 births
451:(1): 1–25.
375:at age 94.
365:lung cancer
592:Categories
577:25 October
498:25 October
409:25 October
379:References
317:Gene Brown
286:sabbatical
173:Professor
167:biochemist
32:1919-12-19
334:in 1993.
239:Anschluss
234:chemistry
230:civil war
226:Communist
194:metabolic
404:MIT News
338:Teaching
198:bacteria
191:nitrogen
175:Emeritus
51:(now in
467:7826001
288:at the
53:Ukraine
40:Kharkiv
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222:Vienna
109:Fields
96:(1993)
89:Awards
544:(PDF)
361:opera
292:with
579:2015
500:2015
463:PMID
411:2015
165:and
61:Died
26:Born
453:doi
308:.
135:MIT
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