Ferid Murad - AutobiographyHOME SITE HELP ABOUT SEARCH
NOBEL PHYSICS CHEMISTRY MEDICINE LITERATURE PEACE ECONOMICS
My father, Jabir Murat Ejupi, was born in Albania in 1892 and was the
oldest of four children. His mother died when he was 13 years old. He and
his family were shepherds and he subsequently ran away from home to sell
candy in the Balkan countries as a teenager for several years. Although he
had less than a year of education, he learned to speak seven languages
before he died at the age of 84 in 1976. He met a group of other teenagers
in Austria and they immigrated to the United States. The immigration
officer at Ellis Island, August, 1913, asked his name, after which the
officer declared him to be John Murad and stamped his papers. It was not
uncommon to have names changed and abbreviated upon immigration. After
working briefly in the steel mills and factories in Cleveland and Detroit,
he settled in Chicago where he had several friends. His career was quite
diverse and although he never admitted it, I learned subsequently from
some of his colleagues that he was quite a playboy with fancy automobiles,
perhaps the reason for my love of nice cars.
My mother, Henrietta Josephine Bowman, was born in 1918 in Alton, Illinois
and was the third of six surviving children of Elizabeth Lillian and
Andrew Orvie Bowman. My grandmother was a kind and wonderful woman. Only
six of her eleven children survived due to stillbirths and some died of
diseases and other conditions of poverty. My mother went to grade school
for several years before she too quit to help her mother and younger
siblings while her mother and two older sisters went to work. My
grandfather was a carpenter who generally worked part-time and frequently
spent his modest paycheck at the local bars before going home. The
childhood poverty of both my parents and their minimal education did much
to influence me and my two younger brothers in our education and career
choices. One brother became a dentist and the other a professor of
My mother also ran away from home at 17 in 1935 to marry my father who was
39. I was born September 14, 1936 at home in their hot and small apartment
over a bakery in Whiting, Indiana. My brothers John Abderhaman and Turhon
Allen were born in 1938 and 1944. We were raised in a four room aparttment
behind my parents' restaurant in Whiting, Indiana. This small apartment
undoubtedly influenced my desire for large expensive homes.
The restaurant business had a profound effect on my future and that of my
two brothers. When we were able to stand on a stool to reach the sink we
washed dishes and later when we could see over the counter, we waited
tables and managed the cash register. I did this throughout grade school
and high school each evening and on weekends. I created a game from those
chores and learned to memorize all of the customer's orders in our
restaurant with a capacity of 28 customers and before they left I would
tally their bills mentally and meet them at the cash register. I met a
diverse and wonderful group of customers that ranged from laborers in the
local refineries and steel mills to local bankers, businessmen, families
and school teachers. My parents worked long hours as is typical of a
family business, particularly a restaurant. My father worked 16 to 18
hours daily while my mother put in similar hours between the restaurant
and raising three children. They owned the building that also included two
other small apartments, another small business and 21 sleeping rooms
upstairs. Many of the tenants were old and retired and my mother would
often care for them and prepare their meals when they were sick. I learned
from my mother and grandmother Bowman about compassion and generosity for
people and this in turn influenced my career choice in medicine. My father
taught me some business skills and how to repair numerous items that were
continually breaking down in this old building. He was quite good at
remembering how he took anything apart in order to repair it and
reassemble the pieces as I stood at his side as a youngster passing him
With this background I knew that I wanted considerable education so I
wouldn't have to work as hard as my parents. Also, I knew at the age of 12
that I was going to become a doctor. My parents always encouraged us to
get an education and establish a profession. However, my brothers and I
grew up with considerable freedom whether it was saving or spending our
tips from the restaurant or our career choices. This was also applied to
our religious choices as my father was Muslim, my mother Baptist and we
were raised in a Catholic community. Subsequently, my brothers became
Catholic when they married Catholic wives and I was baptized Episcopalian
in college. My wife of more than forty years is Presbyterian, two of our
daughters married Jewish men and one married a Catholic man.
In eighth grade the class was asked to write an essay of our top three
career choices. My choices were 1) physician, 2) teacher and 3) pharmacist
(in 1948 clinical pharmacology was not yet a discipline in medicine).
Today I do just that, as I am a board certified physician and internist
doing both basic and clinical research with considerable teaching in
medicine, pharmacology and clinical pharmacology and with a PhD in
pharmacology. While I am probably working much harder and longer hours
than my parents, I certainly love my profession and have considerably more
enjoyment and disposable income than they did. Until my graduation from
high school only three of my cousins had finished high school and no
relatives had ever gone to college. Grade school, middle school and high
school were relatively easy for me and with little studying I was an honor
student every semester graduating 5th in my high school class. Fortunately
several high school teachers, some of whom frequented our restaurant, Jack
Taylor in Spanish and history, LaDonna Thue Elson in art, Bernard Quebeck
in music, Jesse Allen in math, and coach Peter Kovachic convinced me I had
some potential and were wonderful counselors and advisers. I lettered in
track and cross country as a distance runner in the one and two mile
events and music. I also played football and basketball but spent most of
my time keeping the bench warm. I played offense and defense left guard at
5'11 " and 140 pounds. After three monsters ran over the top of me I spent
more of my energy with distance running in cross country. While I started
to play golf in grade school, I stopped playing for many years during
college and medical training and I continue to struggle with my game after
I began playing again about 20 years ago.
There was one notable friend since kindergarten, Ronald Delismon, who
influenced me considerably. We competed constantly with everything:
grades, chess, fencing, sports, etc. Today he is an aeronautical engineer
recently retired from Boeing. His projects were always top secret such as
the stealth bomber and some of the star war defense projects. He would
never discuss his work with me for security reasons and often joked with
me by saying, "if I told you, I would then have to kill you". After 57
years we remain the best of friends and still compete, generally at golf,
skiing and more pleasant encounters. His recent comment was, "one Nobel to
The University of Chicago had a new program in the 1950s that accepted
students after three years of high school and friends in the restaurant
who were alumni from the University of Chicago encouraged me to apply.
However, after considerable thought I decided not to enter college
prematurely but rather completed my senior year in high school. In
retrospect, this was the correct decision for me as my senior year in high
school was wonderful. I coasted through the year with excellent grades and
lots of fun participating in the school's chorus and took the lead in
several operettas. This was probably the only year in school where I
wasn't compulsive about grades and didn't study constantly.
Since my parents couldn't afford to help me with my college costs, I
looked for a school that offered the best scholarship. I considered the
military programs at the Naval Academy and Westpoint, but I knew I
wouldn't have received the biology training for medical school since these
were primarily engineering programs with a requisite four years of
military duty afterwards. I competed successfully for a Rector Scholarship
at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana, a small and excellent
liberal arts university and went there from 1954 to 1958 on a tuition
scholarship. The first year my grades were okay but not great with several
A's, one C and the rest B's due to the hazing and distractions of being a
pledge in the fraternity. In subsequent years my grades progressively
improved as I was developing more self confidence and better study habits.
I lived in "annexes", or small apartments with other fraternity brothers
since the fraternity couldn't accommodate all of us and I generally chose
other premeds as roommates. We often studied together and competed for
grades. I was the scholarship chairman of the fraternity and remained a
premed major with a second major in chemistry as I enjoyed both biology
and chemistry. Throughout college I waited tables, taught the anatomy and
embryology labs and worked one and sometimes two jobs during the summers
to cover my expenses. If I had only one summer job I would take additional
classes at one of the local extensions of Indiana University for
additional math or literature classes in order to take more courses in
biology, chemistry, physics or Greek and Latin at DePauw. The Greek and
Latin courses in high school and college were of great value subsequently
in learning the root derivatives of many scientific words.
In the spring of my junior year in 1957 on spring break in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, I met Carol Ann Leopold, my wife to be. She and her
family were from St. Louis. We were at DePauw together where she was an
English and Spanish major planning to become a teacher. Although she dated
many of my fraternity brothers, I had not met her previously. After spring
break we began to date and I gave her my fraternity pin a month later. Our
dates were primarily "study dates" at the library (the only thing I could
afford) and after mostly A's in my senior year I was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa. At Christmas we were engaged and married within several weeks of
graduation from DePauw on June 21, 1958.
During my senior year of college I began to apply to medical schools and
planned to go to Washington University Medical School in St. Louis.
However, my faculty advisor Forst Fuller, a professor in the biology
department and also my mentor during an elective research project to
understand how fish managed calcium metabolism without parathyroid glands,
suggested that I consider a new MD-PhD program at Western Reserve
University. A fraternity brother, Bill Sutherland, also advised that I
consider this new combined degree program that his father Earl Sutherland,
Jr initiated in Cleveland in 1957. The program paid full tuition for both
degrees and provided a modest stipend of $2000 per year. I quickly applied
and was interviewed on a Saturday morning in February of 1958 by the
entire Pharmacology Department. Needless to say, I was awed by the
attention they gave me and decided immediately to accept their offer.
Carol, my fiancée, was somewhat concerned that I was now planning seven
more years of education but she has always been understanding and
supportive of my training, career path and numerous moves around the
country. The game plan was to have Carol teach high school English as I
went through the combined degree program. These plans abruptly changed
within three months when Carol became pregnant. After teaching for only
one semester, she was asked to resign when the pregnancy "began to show".
Subsequently, she was a substitute teacher, part time secretary and
hospital clinic coordinator as we progressed with our family; four girls,
including a set of identical twins before I finished medical school and
graduate school in 1965. Number five, the first boy, was born as I
finished my residency in 1967. Fortunately, we didn't stop as planned
As I entered the new combined degree program my mentors were Earl
Sutherland, Jr. the chairman of the Pharmacology Department and Theodore
Rall a new young assistant professor and collaborator of Sutherland's. The
year before I arrived they had discovered cyclic AMP as a "second
messenger" of epinephrine - and glucagon-mediated effects on
glycogenolysis in liver preparations. My assignment was to show that the
catecholamine effects on cyclic AMP formation were due to effects through
the beta adrenergic receptor. Alquist had previously reported that
adrenergic effects could be classified as alpha or beta depending on the
relative potency of several catecholamines. The new and only beta
adrenergic receptor antagonist, dichloroisoproterenol, had also been just
described and was to become a useful antagonist in our work. We found that
catecholamine effects on adenylyl cyclase activation in both heart and
liver preparations were, indeed, due to beta adrenergic effects as shown
by the relative potencies of l-isoproterenol, l-epinephrine and
l-norepinephrine with inhibition by dichloroisoproterenol and failure of
alpha blockers and agonists to have effects. I also found that
acetylcholine and other cholinergic agents inhibited adenylyl cyclase
preparations, the first description of hormones, inhibiting cyclic AMP
formation. I then became interested in agents that could block the effects
of cyclic AMP on phosphorylase kinase and phosphorylase activation. This
required some novel assays and an acquaintance with numerous cyclic AMP
analogues and other nucleotides including cyclic GMP, cyclic IMP, cyclic
CMP, etc. Many of these nucleotides and their analogues were synthesized
by Theo Pasternak, a professor from Geneva who was on sabbatical
collaborating with Sutherland and Rall. This work subsequently influenced
my desire to work with cyclic GMP as described in my Nobel lecture. Later
I again played organic chemist to make some nucleotides.
I was first in my class every year in medical school and graduate school.
This was a wonderful and exciting time in my life working with these
mentors, watching a new area of biology develop and actively participating
in the work. I loved research as Earl Sutherland was quite a visionary who
was able to bring together multiple disciplines and areas to apply to his
work. Ted Rall taught how to do those fool proof "Sunday experiments" as
we came to call them. It was on Sundays that I could design and conduct
those large and complex experiments with all of Ted's required controls
such that the data were "publishable". We and others in the department
were able to determine that multiple hormones including catecholamines,
cholinergics, ACTH, vasopressin, etc. could increase or decrease adenylyl
cyclase activity and cyclic AMP formation. Prior to this the view of
Sutherland was that receptors and adenylyl cyclase were a single
macromolecule or a tightly associated complex in cell membranes. My work
as a student and the work of others questioned this hypothesis and
suggested that different receptors for this growing list of hormones must
be coupled to adenylyl cyclase in yet to be determined complex ways (see
Gilman's and Rodbell's Nobel lecture of 1994 for a greater description of
I also enjoyed medical school and found myself learning everything
presented before me. I knew that I couldn't determine what was to be true
and important and many of our faculty acknowledged this as well. Since
anything could be important, I began to learn everything taught. The new
experimental integrated organ-system approach to medical education at
Western Reserve permitted me to assimilate and integrate information more
readily. I also thoroughly enjoyed my clinical rotations in medicine,
surgery, OB-GYN, pediatrics, orthopedics, neurology, etc. There were few
clinical rotations that I didn't think about as a possible discipline for
my future academic career. I subsequently learned that I was at the top of
the medical school and graduate school class each year and received prizes
at graduation for both clinical medicine and research. I was in my element
and loved it. There was no doubt in my mind about an academic career in
In order to supplement my stipend with so many children, I moonlighted at
the Cleveland Clinic working one or two nights per week on the OB-GYN
service to follow mothers with pelvic exams as they progressed through
labor, assisted in deliveries and Caesarian sections and then scrubbed
tables and floors after each delivery. All of this for $20.00 per night
for 12 hours of work from 7:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. one or two nights per
week for four years. On slow evenings I was able to study, analyze lab
data and write research protocols. Some nights required that I work all
night and then attend a full day of classes the next day. I continued this
during my clinical clerkships requiring my absence from my family as often
as 4 to 5 nights per week. However, I tried to have dinner with my family
as often as my schedule permitted. My wife and children were very
understanding. They grew up as wonderful children and adults in spite of
my absence, obviously due to a devoted wife and mother. My current fetish
is my 5 grandchildren who I try to spend as much time with as possible,
undoubtedly due to my guilt as an absent father. I did manage to spend
several weeks each summer with my family as we took them camping all over
the U.S. to various scientific meetings. There are only a few states where
we have not camped together as a family and they all became proficient
I decided to go to Massachusetts General Hospital for my internship and
residency in medicine (1965-67). What a wonderful experience this was with
some of the worlds' leading scientists, teachers and clinicians. Our group
of 14 housestaff included exciting bright minds such as Tom Smith, Tony
Gotto, Jim Willerson, Ed Scolnik and others that had considerable
influence on me. My attendings and chief residents included Alex Leaf, Dan
Federman, Roman DeSanctis, Frank Austen, Sam Thier, Ken Shine and others.
As a resident Joe Goldstein and Mike Brown were two of our interns. I
couldn't have asked for a greater introduction to medicine in spite of
being on call every other night and weekend. I did, however, miss the
laboratory and each spring I found myself in the library reading many of
the abstracts of the Federation meeting (currently FASEB meeting) to see
what I was missing in "second messengers and hormone signaling". I
generated a notebook that contained numerous "obvious experiments" to be
done. When I subsequently went to NIH as a clinical associate in the Heart
Institute I was able to do many of the planned experiments in Martha
Vaughan's laboratory. She too was an excellent mentor with a style
different from either Sutherland or Rall. She gave me considerable freedom
to pursue a number of areas related to cyclic AMP and hormonal regulation.
Her husband, the late Jack Orloff, while superficially a gruff and tough
man, was a sensitive person and talented scientist. I was indeed fortunate
that they and many others at NIH influenced my thinking and career
planning. I soon learned that I had numerous role models and attempted to
extract the best features of each as I planned my career path and future.
I remained at NIH for more than three years (1967-70) when the University
of Virginia called to recruit me to develop a new Clinical Pharmacology
Division in the Department of Medicine with an appointment as an Associate
Professor in medicine and pharmacology. I couldn't resist the offer from
Ed Hook, the new chairman of medicine and Joe Larner, the new chairman of
pharmacology. Other faculty such as Tom Hunter, the Vice President of
Medical Affairs, Ken Crispell the Dean, Bob Berne, Bob Haynes and others
influenced my decision to leave NIH. I had known Larner, Berne and Haynes
since they were faculty at Western Reserve when I was a student.
Charlottesville was also an appealing place to raise my five children.
Some colleagues around the country, particularly David Kipnis, another one
of my role models, questioned me about going to Charlottesville. Just the
previous year I called him to apply for a fellowship in endocrinology at
Washington University. I was then 33 years old with 5 children and his
advice was appropriate. He said, "Fred, time for you to get a job and
support your family", and I took his advice to heart.
I joined the faculty at the University of Virginia, September 1, 1970 and
nervously thought about how I could launch my own independent research
career. I decided to work with cyclic GMP as it was beginning to emerge as
a possible new "second messenger" to mediate hormone effects. This is
detailed in my Nobel lecture. I remained at the University of Virginia
from 1970 to 1981 where I was promoted as one of the youngest professors
in 1975; I was also asked to become the Director of their Clinical
Research Center in 1971 and the Director of Clinical Pharmacology in 1973.
I built a research program with both clinical and basic studies and
started to recruit many exciting students and fellows to work with me. Of
the 82 fellows and students I have trained and collaborated with to date
twenty are professors, chairmen, research directors and division chiefs
around the world. I view them as offspring and keep in contact with most
of them in my travels. There is no question that one of my greatest
accomplishments is to have participated in the training of such successful
scientists in my own laboratory and also influenced the careers of many
talented medical students, graduate students and housestaff.
After looking at many university positions around the country as a chair
of medicine or pharmacology and industrial positions, I decided to go to
Stanford in July 1981 as Chief of Medicine of the Palo Alto Veterans
Hospital, a Stanford affiliated hospital. I was a professor of medicine
and pharmacology and the associate chairman of medicine. While it was
difficult to leave many friends and colleagues at the University of
Virginia where we conducted the first experiments with the biological
effects of nitric oxide, I couldn't turn down this exciting opportunity at
Stanford. Ken Melmon was chairman of medicine and during our first three
years together we recruited about 30 new young faculty. Inspite of the
large administrative and clinical teaching demands, I continued to
supervise a large and productive laboratory with about 15 students,
fellows and staff. Trainees continued to come to our laboratory from all
over the world. Some of my students and fellows subsequently went to
medical school and after completing residencies have become very
productive physician scientists at a number of institutions.
After a stint as Acting Chairman of Medicine at Stanford (1986-88), I left
to become a Vice President at Abbott Laboratories as I was becoming
concerned about managed health care on the horizon and its possible
effects on patient care, research and education. After considering several
industrial positions, I chose Abbott primarily because of its president
Jack Schuler, a sales and marketing person with an MBA from Stanford who
also had considerable vision. We worked well together as he taught me many
business principles and I taught him about drug discovery and development.
I enjoyed the access to all of Abbott's resources, scientific staff,
instrumentation and what initially seemed like an unlimited research
budget. I eventually learned that one can never have enough resources when
one looks for novel therapies of major diseases; it's an expensive
undertaking. Nevertheless, in four years of directing their pharmaceutical
discovery and development programs we were able to discover many novel
drug targets and we brought forward about 24 new compounds for clinical
trials for various diseases. I continued to have a very productive lab
with two NIH grants, some outside funding for fellows and about 20
scientists working with me on nitric oxide and cyclic GMP. The
administrative demands and travel were considerable since I was a
corporate officer, vice president and also overseeing many industrial
collaborations around the world. When I left Abbott I was supervising
about 1500 scientists and staff and probably earned the equivalent of an
MBA from the experience on the job plus periodic management courses
required by the company. Before my arrival at Abbott the company had no
postdoctoral fellows or extramural funding. When I left we had about $3.5
mill. per year of extramural grant support and about 35 fellows in
pharmaceutical research. Unfortunately, Abbott reorganized its senior
management and my business roll models were asked to leave. As Abbott's
senior scientist I found myself wedged between upper management, the
marketing staff and the scientists and constantly was defending my
decisions about the research programs. There were always considerable
marketing pressures on me that in my opinion were often the wrong
decisions to develop novel therapeutics for diseases without adequate
I left Abbott in 1993 to be a founder, President and CEO of a new biotech
company, Molecular Geriatrics Corporation. The plan was to create another
intensive research-based biotech company. Unfortunately, my investment
banker never raised the amounts of money promised and he eventually lost a
major personal fortune with his leveraging tactics. I found myself
skipping around the world to find investors and partners to keep the
company afloat and pay the bills. After a partnership with a major
pharmaceutical company and some more financing as a private company, I
left to rejoin academics, hopefully much wiser.
After considering a number of Vice President, Dean positions and
Chairmanships, I realized that such positions would probably totally
remove me from the laboratory, fellows and students, things I could not
give up. In April 1997, I became the University of Texas-Houston's first
chairman of a newly combined basic science department, Integrative
Biology, Pharmacology and Physiology. I am also creating a new Division of
Clinical Pharmacology jointly between our department and medicine. I plan
to continue an active basic and clinical research program and will
participate in clinical medicine and teaching again. Thus, I have come
full circle. I am back in my academic element again and I love it. I also
expect to continue some business adventures and exercise my
entrepreneurial skills, areas that I also enjoy and view as lucrative
hobbies. The freedom and intellectual environment of academic medicine and
bright young students and fellows are exciting and a daily joy for me.
After all, I hope to tell Ron Delismon some day "Two Nobels to zero".
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1998, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and
later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The
information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the
Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
It has been seven years since receiving the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
Medicine for my work with nitric oxide and cyclic GMP. Life has been
extremely busy. I have continued as chairman of the Department of
Integrative Biology and Pharmacology at the University of Texas – Houston.
I have expanded the department with the recruitment of six new, young,
faculty, but some retirements and one death in the department kept us
about the same size until some of the Dental School faculty joined us to
My laboratory has been very active with about 15 to 18 scientists which is
our usual size for the past 25 years. We have found ourselves redirecting
some of our research interest with nitric oxide and cyclic GMP into some
new directions to maintain our lead in the field and address new
challenging questions with soluble guanylyl cyclase regulation, and the
role of nitric oxide and cyclic GMP in mouse and human embryonic stem cell
While research grant applications and support are always a nervous and
time consuming process, several foundations and donors have generously
supported our work and provided me with a handsomely endowed chair. These
flexible and discretionary research funds have been most appreciated to
pursue some of our research ideas, or accept another outstanding young
The academic world like the business world is busily involved with layers
of review and compliance. With about one-half of the number of scientists
in our department that I had as Chairman of Medicine at Stanford
University the paper work has probably tripled. The developers of e-mail
should be admonished for destroying so much paper and trees and wasting
hours and hours of my time. It seems that everyone in the University feels
obliged to send me all of their email copies, often after four pages of
addresses, followed by a brief useless message. Perhaps all employees
should be allocated some annual allotment of emails which, if exceeded,
Shortly after the Nobel Prize, I was asked to become the Director of our
Institute of Molecular Medicine which I also accepted. For the past eight
years I have held two senior positions in the University, as Chairman of
the Department and Director of the Institute, each normally a full-time
position. While at the University of Virginia, Stanford University, and
Abbott Laboratories I also held two positions simultaneously. This is
perhaps due to my workaholic tendencies.
Being the Director of the Institute has also provided me with a
significant building and recruiting opportunity. I was able to convince
the University President to engage in a major fund raising campaign of
$200 million. About half was used to build a new research building, of
about 230,000 sq ft for the Institute, and the other half to recruit new
faculty and scientists. The state of Texas, the Houston community, and
local foundations have been most generous and we will be moving into our
new research building in mid-2006. We expect to recruit 30 to 40 new
faculty over the next three to five years, plus their research staff and
trainees. We expect to triple our current number of scientists.
A very time consuming activity in the past seven years has been my travel
and lecturing. I have visited about 35 to 40 countries during the past
seven years and traveled about 100,000 to 150,000 miles per year. I am
invited to all sorts of meetings and functions around the world to
dedicate buildings, hospitals, participate in conferences, scientific
meetings, university seminars, consult for companies and governments, etc
. Presumably, it is assumed that by having received the Nobel Prize you
are automatically an expert on all topics, fields and disciplines. I have
even been invited on panels of Nobel Laureates to discuss methods to
promote peace and education around the world. While participating in these
many travels and meetings, I have also declined many invitations because
time does not permit the travel or because of conflicts in scheduling.
After all, I do have a day job and must be home occasionally to pick up my
paycheck. I have had many memorable experiences and meetings and
fortunately my wife, Carol, accompanies me on much of my travel. I have
had meetings with Palestine’s Chairman Yasser Arafat, Israel’s Prime
Minister Netanyahu, Presidents Lee and Chen of Taiwan, Chief Executive
Tung of Hong Kong, President Medani of Albania, President Trajkovski of
Macedonia, Premier Wen Jiabao of China, President Clinton, President Bush,
many congressman and senators, governors and mayors.
I have also met dozens of Nobel Laureates and attended conferences and
meetings with them. Carol and I have become friends of many Laureates and
their spouses and many travel and lecture as much as I do. For those who
are retired, it hasn’t been quite so demanding or difficult.
My office and home are filled with artifacts, photographs, plaques,
medals, statues, gifts and memorabilia. You receive numerous honorary
degrees and certificates to wall paper your office at both work and home.
We have run out of wall and surface space in my office and home and have
begun to create piles to organize in the future. Since I have no plans for
retirement, my children and grandchildren will probably have to organize
the materials some day. One of the more humorous and memorable events was
being grand marshall of the fourth of July Parade, with my wife and some
of our grandchildren on the float, in my home town Whiting, Indiana. I
have also given lectures to children in schools, churches and mosques.
After a number of such requests, I prepared a children’s educational video
that can be viewed on the Nobel website that discusses the Nobel Prize and
On one of my several trips to Macedonia, my father’s homeland, Carol and I
arranged for one of our daughters to adopt a three-month-old Albanian baby
girl. The trip, at our expense, required that I give several lectures and
meet with many dignitaries. I consider this one of my best honorariums.
The Nobel Prize has also influenced my grandchildren who have been asked
to discuss nitric oxide and the Nobel Prize in their classes after a
classmate’s new premature sibling required inhaled nitric oxide for
pulmonary hypertension. Press conferences with the media and radio, and
television interviews are frequent. The media often wants to talk about
Viagra, while I attempt to lead them into more medically significant
areas: such as, pulmonary hypertension in premature babies, wound healing,
endothelial dysfunction with atherosclerosis, hypertension, or diabetes,
where nitric oxide can be much more important medically.
While the Nobel Prize ceremonies in 1998 in Stockholm were quite a treat,
the 100th anniversary Nobel Reunion in 2001 allowed me the opportunity to
participate in the ceremonies and festivities, again, with less anxiety
and an opportunity to absorb and savor the activities and functions. Life
after the Nobel Prize is quite exciting, interesting and also demanding. I
thought the attention and notoriety would subside within several months
after receiving the Prize. However, there is no indication that this is
the case seven years later. Wherever you go you can’t escape the media and
the attention. The numerous invitations to travel, lecture, attend
conferences, consult for governments, universities, and companies have not
subsided. It is exciting, rewarding, educational, lucrative and
exhausting. You can rarely let your guard down and hide or relax. You
don’t dare pick your nose or scratch in some places for fear that someone
will catch you on camera or video. When you travel, you often feel like
Although I receive multiple faxes, phone calls and FedEx’s when I travel,
when I return there are stacks of correspondences and long lab meetings
with my staff to review our research progress before preparing for the
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1998
Copyright Nobel Web AB 2006SITE FEEDBACK CONTACT TELL A FRIEND
The Official Web Site of the Nobel FoundationLast modified January 16, 2006
60 years old, retired doctor, chief physiciansJan stares intensely at his daughter Louise. They are in a big empty room. Here it will unfold. Hanne stands between them. They don’t look at her. Not yet. She speaks to both of them but they don’t listen. Not yet, but soon, when truths will come to light they will look at her and listen. Louise looks scared. She better be. She knows it’s not
I st INDO-FRENCH LEGAL FORUM MEET Intellectual property rights-such as copyrights, patents, trademarks, and so on-offer the legal protection upon which authors, inventors, firms, researchers, and others rely to protect their creations. Intellectual property rights dictate what use can legally be made of the creative work, and are thus essential to ensuring that authors are rewarded for