Thank you Hans for that kind and gracious introduction. We are deeply honored to have been asked by Bibi Day to speak at the opening session of the first Robert A. Good Immunology Symposium. It is with deep humility that we come before such an illustrious faculty and assembled delegates. There are no words to describe how moved we are that this session is dedicated to our son, Jeffrey. What a great honor. We first met Dr. Good in 1975 when our son Jeffrey was 5 years old. He had already been diagnosed with Hypogammaglobulinenemia. He was treated superbly by his doctors, many of whom are here with us today. We asked Jeffrey’s doctors to reach out to the greatest experts, anywhere in the world, on this disease; especially experts on the specific B cell complexities that affected our son. In our quest for answers, we eventually reached Dr. Joshua Lederberg who, at the time, was President of Rockefeller University. To our surprise, he told us that the greatest expert, anywhere in the world on Primary Immunodeficiencies, was not half way around the globe but, in fact, was only two city blocks from our home. Of course he was talking about Dr. Robert A. Good, President of the Sloan Kettering Cancer Institute. Dr. Good took our call, met with Jeffrey, and monitored Jeffrey’s progress over many years. Doctor and patient got along famously. Both of them were constantly filled with energy and enthusiasm. Dr. Good gave Fred and I the confidence to share a normal life with our son. Jeffrey did well in school, played sports, traveled, enjoyed summer camp, and even had a girlfriend. But repeated episodes of high fever, multiple hospitalizations, and eventually serious bouts of pneumonia were too much for Jeffrey to overcome and he lost his courageous battle at the age of 15. Throughout those years, we never met another family and Jeffrey never met another child facing this condition. We were sure that he was the only one. A few months after we lost Jeffrey, with the urging of family and friends to do something to remember his life, we
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