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The earlier portion of my autobiography ( 1) dealt with the period from the time I started to work with Michael Heidelberger as a laboratory helper .on January 2, 1933 until my grants ftom the US Public Health Service were summarily cancelled in 1952. This chapter continues my story from that point. First though, I would like to add a few notes about my origins and earliest days. Beginnings My mother and father had married in 1913 and I was born on September 1, 1914. Both of my parents had come to the United States as small children. My father, Harris Kabatchnick, was born in 1872 and emigrated to the United States from Lithuania as a small boy. His first recollection after landing in the United States by boat from Hamburg was that the flags were at half mast because President Garfield had just died. His family settled on the lower East Side. My mother, Doreen Otesky, came to the United States from Kiev in 1893 at the age of seven. My father completed elementary school, went to work, and with his two brothers, Samuel and Joseph, started manufacturing women's dresses. In 1908 they changed their name to
Annual Review of Immunology – Annual Reviews
Published: Apr 1, 1988
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