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Katherine Brehme Warren

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Katherine Warren


Katherine Brehme Warren Intracellular Transport Katherine Brehme Warren 9780124316928

Katherine "Kitty" Brehme Warren (1909–1991) was a geneticist and scientific editor known for her work at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.

Contents

Education

Warren earned a doctorate in zoology from Columbia University.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Warren was a student of Calvin Bridges and after his death the Assistant Director of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Milislav Demerec pushed for Warren's appointment to complete some of Bridges's unfinished work. The project was supported by a fellowship from the Carnegie Institution of Washington and the completed work, The Mutants of Drosophila melanogaster (1944), became a classic in the field. For decades "Bridges and Brehme" served as an essential reference for geneticists and later formed the backbone of subsequent scholarship and, ultimately, the online resource FlyBase.

Warren served as the executive director of the Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology. As Symposia editor from 1941-1958, she was responsible for manuscript preparation, proofreading, and indexing. In addition to her serious editorial duties, she introduced a nonexistent scholar, J. C. Foothills of Tennessee Intermountain College, whose name was derived from her favorite expression of frustration: "Jesus Christ in the foothills!"

Teaching and administration

Warren taught biology at Adelphi University, Hofstra University, Cornell University Medical College and Wellesley College. She later spent a decade as a grants administrator at the National Institutes of Health, retiring in 1971.

Personal life

Warren married a fellow scientist, Charles O. Warren. She suspended her teaching career for several years after the birth of her children, but did not interrupt her work with the Cold Spring Harbor Symposia. The couple divorced in 1961, with Warren retaining custody of her three teenage daughters.

References

Katherine Brehme Warren Wikipedia