Abstract

My PhD research at the University of Florida, Gainesville, looked at the influence of paternal and maternal genes on sea urchin development. I did a postdoc at the same institution (while my husband finished his PhD) on cell differentiation in slime moulds. I moved with my husband to a small college town in Michigan, where I became the business manager of The Society for Developmental Biology and worked part time at the local college where my husband was employed. I then took a job in science administration at the National Institutes of Health. My first job at the NIH involved direct management of a grants programme in cell biology, in the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. I was promoted to positions of increasing responsibility, first in the NIGMS and later in other parts of the NIH. I returned to the NIGMS in 1989 as Associate Director for Extramural Activities.

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