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United States National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health

Finding Aid to the Donald S. Fredrickson Papers, 1910-2002 (bulk 1960-1999)

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Biographical Note

Collection Summary

Index Terms

Administrative Information

Restrictions

Series Descriptions

Series I: Personal and Biographical, 1914-2002 (bulk 1960-1990)

Series II: Correspondence, 1948-1998

Series III: Writings, 1910-2001

Series IV: Recombinant DNA Materials, 1947-2001 (bulk 1974-1989)

Series V: Director, National Institutes of Health, 1962-2001 (bulk 1974-1981)

Series VI: Reports and Committees, 1970-1991

Series VII: Travel, 1961-1997

Series VIII: Professional Activities, 1958-2000

Series IX: NIH Clinical Center, 1937-1996

Series X: Photographic Materials, 1914-1997

Series XI: Audio-Visual Materials, 1978-1997


Archives and Modern Manuscripts Program, History of Medicine Division

Processed by Kent Woynowski; Processing Completed January 2003; Encoded by Kent Woynowski



Descriptive Summary

Collection Number: MS C 526
Creator: Fredrickson, Donald S.
Title: Donald S. Fredrickson Papers
Dates: 1910-2002 (bulk 1960-1999)
Quantity: 55.4 linear feet (53 boxes)
Abstract: Donald Sharp Fredrickson (1924-2002) was an American physiologist and science administrator who made contributions to American medicine over the course of four decades, first as a laboratory scientist, then as a leader of several prominent medical research institutions. As director of the National Institutes of Health from 1976 to 1981, Fredrickson mediated between scientists and the federal government during contentious, far-ranging debates over the direction of medical research policy, research funding, and the dangers of genetic engineering. The collection consists of a wide range of materials related to Fredrickson's scientific and administrative careers

Biographical Note

Donald S. Fredrickson (1924-2002), a physiologist and science administrator, made signal contributions to American medicine over the course of four decades, first as a laboratory scientist, then as a leader of several prominent medical research institutions. Fredrickson's studies of the connection between lipid metabolism (the processing of lipids, chief among them fats and cholesterol, in the body) and heart disease made him one of the most widely cited physiologists of the 1960s and 1970s. His system of classifying disorders in lipid metabolism was adopted by the World Health Organization as an international standard for identifying increased risks of coronary artery disease, heart attack, and stroke linked to the consumption of fats and cholesterol. He also discovered two diseases, cholesterol ester storage disease and Tangier Disease, caused by genetic disorders in the storage of cholesterol in the body. As director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the world's foremost biomedical research facility, Fredrickson mediated between scientists and the federal government during contentious, far-ranging debates over the direction of medical research policy, research funding, and the potential dangers of genetic engineering that took place in the second half of the 1970s.

Donald Sharp Fredrickson was born in Cañon City, Colorado, on August 8, 1924. During World War II he enlisted in the army reserves at the University of Colorado before transferring to the Army Specialized Training Program in engineering at the University of Michigan, a subject for which military tests had indicated a special aptitude. After another aptitude test and with the end of the war in sight, Fredrickson settled on medicine as his true calling. He received his bachelor's degree in 1946 and his medical degree in 1949, both from the University of Michigan. He was certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1957.

While touring Europe by bicycle, Fredrickson met Henriette Priscilla Dorothea Eekhof, a law student at the University of Leyden. They married in her hometown of The Hague in 1950. After one year of separation, Henriette joined her husband in the United States. During the 1950s, she supported the junior scientist and their two sons through an import company for Dutch cigars she founded in their home.

Fredrickson conducted postgraduate research at Harvard University Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital before arriving at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, in 1953. He was one of ten young physicians chosen by NIH Director James Shannon as clinical associates in the National Heart Institute and assigned to the Institute's research laboratories in the newly opened NIH Clinical Center. From an early stage in his professional career, Fredrickson sought to integrate laboratory research with clinical practice, and to place science in the service of treating disease.

After a research career in laboratories devoted to cellular metabolism, physiology, and molecular diseases, he became director of the National Heart Institute (NHI), now known as the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), in 1966, a position he held until 1968. During his term as director the first heart transplant in man was performed by South African heart surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard, with whom Fredrickson arranged a meeting on December 18, 1967, at Chicago's O'Hare airport. The historic meeting was attended by prominent heart surgeons in the United States who soon after replicated Barnard's feat. Fredrickson remained at the National Heart Institute as Director of Intramural Research until 1974.

In late spring of 1974, Dr. Fredrickson left the NIH to become the second President of the Institute of Medicine, a Washington, D.C. health care and medical research policy think tank under the auspices of the National Academy of Sciences. He recalled that he was attracted to his new position because "there was a rich mixture of the dialects and ethics operative in the world outside the laboratory walls" that offered "an unparalleled view of the complex field of human health." During his brief tenure at IOM he proved an effective fundraiser, a new role for an official used to administering, not soliciting, research funds.

Almost from the moment Dr. Fredrickson joined the Institute of Medicine, he was drawn once again into the administrative politics of NIH. The directorship of NIH had become vacant for the second time in as many years. Fredrickson received phone calls from federal officials indicating dissension in the upper ranks of NIH, and asking Fredrickson to step into the void of leadership by becoming NIH director. On April 19, 1975, Fredrickson returned to Bethesda as director of NIH. In a conversation with Philip Handler, the President of the National Academy of Sciences, Fredrickson justified his decision by stating that leading NIH was "not a job; it's a cause."

Over the next six years, Fredrickson's administrative and political skills were frequently tested during the most turbulent period in the history of the NIH. Immediately he was thrown into the growing controversy over the environmental hazards and the ethics of recombinant DNA research, cutting-edge genetic experimentation that, critics warned, could produce new and untreatable pathogens and presented an unwarranted human manipulation of the natural order. During the economic and budget crises of the late 1970s, the U.S. Congress considered reducing government funding on which NIH and, through its extramural grant program, most biomedical research in the United States depended. Fredrickson had to counter arguments from members of Congress who sought to curtail NIH funding by arguing that basic research sponsored by NIH did not yield clinical applications and therapies rapidly enough to benefit patients. Not least, Fredrickson had to adjust to the changing priorities of the three U.S. Presidents and five Secretaries of Health, Education, and Welfare (since 1980, Health and Human Services) under whom he served.

Fredrickson's main successes as NIH director lay in devising guidelines for recombinant DNA research that preserved the freedom of scientific inquiry while allaying public fears of genetic manipulation; stabilizing NIH funding at a time of retrenchment; and fostering consensus among clinical and scientific researchers at NIH, groups that often found themselves at odds in their research objectives and struggle for funding. With these controversies alleviated, Fredrickson stepped down as director of NIH in June of 1981.

After two years as Scholar-in-Residence at the National Academy of Sciences, Fredrickson first became vice president, then president, CEO and trustee of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), founded in 1953 by the aviator and industrialist. Fredrickson oversaw the sale of the Institute's sole asset, the Hughes Aircraft Company, for six billion dollars, as well as the Institute's subsequent expansion into the largest source of philanthropic support for biomedical research in the United States, dispensing research grants and supporting laboratories in hospitals, academic institutions, and research organizations. Moreover, Fredrickson organized the relocation of the Institute from Coconut Grove, Florida, to Chevy Chase, Maryland, in close proximity to NIH. He resigned all of his positions at HHMI in 1987 under allegations of financial irregularities, allegations he strongly denied and which were never proved.

From 1987 until his death, Fredrickson was Scholar-in-Residence at the National Library of Medicine, as well as a consultant on medical research and health care issues in the United States and abroad as President of D. S. Fredrickson Associates. Drawing on his early medical training, he became medical adviser to King Hassan II of Morocco in 1975, a service for which he was elected a member of the Academy of the Kingdom of Morocco in 1991.

Dr. Fredrickson died at his home in Bethesda on June 7, 2002.

Brief Chronology

Date Event
1924 Born in Cañon City, Colorado (August 8)
1943-1946 Engineering student in the Army Specialized Training Program
1946; 1949 Receives B.S. and M.D. degrees from the University of Michigan
1949-52 Postdoctoral training in internal medicine at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston
1950 Marries Dutch law student Henrietta Priscilla Dorothea Eekhof in The Hague, Netherlands
1950-1951 James Jackson Cabot Research Fellow in Medicine, Harvard Medical School
1952-1953 Research fellow in medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston
1953-1955 Clinical Associate, National Heart Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland; investigates lipid transport in the blood
1955-1961 Member of the senior research staff in the Laboratory of Cellular Metabolism, National Heart Institute
1957 Certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine
1960 First to describe and name Tangier disease, an abnormality in the storage of cholesterol in the body
1960 Publishes standard textbook, The Metabolic Basis of Inherited Disease, with John B. Stanbury and James B. Wyngaarden
1961-66 Clinical Director, National Heart Institute
1962-66 Head of the Section on Molecular Diseases in the Laboratory of Metabolism, National Heart Institute
1966-68 Director, National Heart Institute
1967 New England Journal of Medicine publishes a five-part review of Fredrickson's work on abnormalities in lipid metabolism
1968-74 Scientific director, National Heart Institute
1973 Participants at the Gordon Conference on Nucleic Acids in New Hampshire call on their fellow scientists to voluntarily suspend certain experiments with recombinant DNA
1974-75 President of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences
1975-81 Director, National Institutes of Health
1975 Over 140 prominent molecular biologists and geneticists attending the Asilomar conference on the dangers of genetically reengineered microorganisms propose a voluntary moratorium on recombinant DNA research until its scientific and ethical implications could be explored
1975-78 Chairman, Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee (RAC)
1975-81 Chairman, Interagency Committee on Recombinant DNA Research
1976 Releases NIH Guidelines for Research Involving Recombinant DNA Molecules (June 23)
1976 Issues a draft Environmental Impact Statement for recombinant DNA experiments (September); a final statement is issued October 1977
1977 Initiates NIH Consensus Development Conferences to bridge scientific and professional differences among NIH personnel
1978 RAC expanded to include non-scientists, among them the new RAC chairman
1978 Chairs National Conference on Health Research Principles, held at NIH
1978 Establishes the Office of Medical Applications of Research at NIH
1979 Revised recombinant DNA guidelines take effect (January 2), easing containment requirements particularly for experiments involving Escherichia coli strain K-12 as a host-vector system
1979 In a time of federal budget shortfalls, Fredrickson secures funding for a minimum of 5,000 new NIH research grants
1981-83 Scholar-in-Residence, National Academy of Sciences
1983-87 Vice President, then President and CEO of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Chevy Chase, Maryland
1987-2002 Scholar at the National Library of Medicine, Bethesda
1987-2002 President, D.S. Fredrickson Associates, a health and science policy consulting firm
2002 Dies at his home in Bethesda (June 7)

Awards and Prizes

American College of Physicians Award
American College of Cardiology Distinguished Service Award
American College of Cardiology Gold Medal Award
American Heart Association Award of Merit
American Society for Clinical Nutrition McCollum Award
Arthur M. Sackler Foundation Award for Service to Science
Commandeur de Ouissam Alaouite
Department of Health and Human Services Distinguished Public Service Award
Fondazione Lorenzini Medal (Milan)
Gairdner Foundation Award
Intrascience Award
James F. Mitchell International Award for Heart and Vascular Research
Jimenez Diaz Award (Madrid)
La Madonnina Prize for Science (Milan)
Lifetime Achievement Award, Sandoz Research Institute
Modern Medicine Distinguished Achievement Award
National Cholesterol Award for Public Health Scientific Achievement
New York Academy of Science Sarah L. Poiley Award
Phi Rho Sigma Irving Cutter Medal
Purkinje Medal (Prague)
Society of Research Administrators Distinguish Contribution to Research Administration Award

Editorial Appointments

American Journal of Medicine, Editorial Board
American Physiology Society, Chairman, Publications Committee
Circulation Research, Editorial Board
Health Affairs, Member of the Advisory Board
Issues in Science and Technology, Member of the Advisory Board
Journal of Atherosclerosis, Editorial Board
Journal of Clinical Investigation, Editorial/Advisory Boards
Journal of Lipid Research, Advisory Board
Physiology in Medicine, Advisory Board

Honorary Degrees

George Washington University
Georgetown University
Karolinska Institutet
Medical University of South Carolina
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
University of Michigan
University of North Carolina
University of Rochester
Yeshiva University

Lectureships

American Academy of Dermatology, Marcus R. Caro Memorial Lecture
American College of Cardiology, Seventeenth Annual Convocation Lecture
American Dermatological Association, The Carl Herzog Guest Lecture
American Swiss Foundation for Scientific Exchange University Lectures (Basel, Bern, Lausanne, Geneva, Zurich)
Association of American Medical Colleges, Symposium Speaker
Association of American Physicians, The Distinguished Lecture
Columbia University Conference Science, the Endless Frontier, Speaker
Cornell-N.Y. Hospital Policy Conference, Speaker
Deutsch Gesellschaft für Klinische Chemie (Bonn), Plenary Lecture
Institute of Medicine, Twentieth Annual Meeting, Chairman
International Atherosclerosis Society, First Donald S. Fredrickson Lecture on Lipoprotein Research
National Institutes of Health Centennial, Plenary Lecture
National Library of Medicine, Lister Hill Center, Lecture
National Research Council Facilities, Keynote Address, Dedication
Royal Academy of Morocco, Casablanca, Speaker
Royal Academy of Morocco, Paris, Speaker
Royal Academy of Morocco, Rabat, Speaker
Stanford University, John Kent Lewis Memorial Lecture
Tokyo University, Lecture
University of Alabama Birmingham, The Reynolds Lecture
University of Pennsylvania, Third Bernard H. Pastor Memorial Lecture

Memberships

Alpha Omega Alpha
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
American Association for the Advancement of Science, Fellow
American College of Cardiology, Fellow
American College of Physicians, Fellow
American Federation for Clinical Research
American Heart Association, Council for the Study of Arteriosclerosis
American Philosophical Society
American Physiological Society
American Society for Clinical Investigation
American Society of Human Genetics
Association of American Physicians
British Cardiac Society, Corresponding Member
College of Medicine of Valencia (Honorary)
Cosmos Club
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Innere Medizine, Corresponding Member
Harvey Society (Honorary)
Institute of Medicine, Academy of Sciences
International Society of Cardiology
Medical Society of Sweden (Honorary)
National Academy of Sciences
Peripatetic Club
Phi Beta Kappa
Phi Kappa Phi
Royal Academy of the Kingdom of Morocco
Royal College of Physicians, London, Fellow
Society of Pediatric Research


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Collection Summary

Correspondence, photographs, diaries, research materials, reports, writings, drafts, and audiovisual materials (1910-2002; 55.4 linear feet) document the semi-official portion of Donald S. Fredrickson's professional career as a leading biomedical administrator and policy maker. Beginning with his clinical laboratory career at the National Heart Institute, Fredrickson spent over 28 years at NIH, culminating in 1975-1981 when he was Institute Director. During the course of his career, Fredrickson became world-renowned for his dynamic leadership qualities and creative vision about the future directions of biomedical research in the U.S. and NIH's role in that future.

The collection consists largely of records of Fredrickson's activities (travel, talks, etc.) outside the institutions with which he was associated and of subject files he used primarily for his historical researches later in his career. The collection includes a significant amount of correspondence, as well as a large selection of biographical materials, including diaries, scrapbooks, and reminiscences.

Fredrickson began his career as a clinical associate at the National Heart Institute (NHI) in 1953, where he discovered two genetic disorders of the storage of cholesterol in the body: cholesterol ester storage disease and Tangier disease. Aside from articles and speeches, there is very little primary source material (e.g., lab notebooks) documenting his clinical research career at NHI. As Director of NHI, he organized a Conference on Cardiac Transplantation in response to the first human heart transplant, performed by South African heart surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard. The collection contains a fair amount of materials on this conference, including memos, schedules, and photographs in Series VIII: Professional Activities, National Heart Institute sub-series.

In 1975, Fredrickson was appointed Director of the National Institutes of Health. As Director, Fredrickson led NIH in developing guidelines for recombinant DNA research, and stabilized NIH funding for extramural grants in the face of Congressional budget cuts. Important documentary materials from this period of Fredrickson's career include research materials he prepared for his book The Recombinant DNA Controversy: A Memoir, and the materials of Series V: Director, NIH, Authorization sub-series, which include reprints, correspondence, memos, notes, etc. relating to grant funding at NIH.

Following his career at NIH, Fredrickson became President and CEO of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Series VIII: Professional Activities, Howard Hughes Medical Institute sub-series contains diaries, correspondence, and newspaper clippings relating to Fredrickson's HHMI presidency.

After a long career of administration, Fredrickson turned to historical research, as a Scholar-in-Residence with the U.S. National Library of Medicine. The materials of Series IX: Clinical Center are the product of that research and provide valuable insight into the history of the NIH Clinical Center. They include photographs, notes, correspondence, and interviews.

The files of Series IX: Clinical Center, Series IV: Recombinant DNA Materials and the Authorization sub-series of Series V: Director, National Institutes of Health are peculiar in their nature and arrangement. These materials tend not to be original documents, but rather photocopies of the originals, along with additional comments by Fredrickson, which he created on his computer and printed out. The digital files are no longer available, but Fredrickson preserved their arrangement in his paper filing system, noting the titles of the original hard drive folder and sub-folder on each item. In order to preserve the original organization, sub-series titles replicate the computer hard drive's top-level file naming convention. Fredrickson discusses his filing system arrangement for these series in an interview titled "Fredrickson on the Recombinant DNA Controversy," located in Series XI: Audio-Visual Materials, Audio Materials sub-series.

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Restrictions

Restrictions

Portions of the collection are restricted. Contact the Reference Staff for information regarding access. For online customer service, please visit http://www.nlm.nih.gov/contacts/custserv-email.html.

Copyright

Copyright was transferred to the public domain. Contact the Reference Staff for details regarding rights. For online customer service, please visit http://www.nlm.nih.gov/contacts/custserv-email.html.

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Index Terms

These terms are indexed in the National Library of Medicine's online catalog LocatorPlus. Researchers wishing to find related materials should search the catalog using these terms.
MeSH Subjects
Biomedical Research -- ethics
DNA, Recombinant
Health Policy
Public Health Administration
Corporate Names
National Institutes of Health (U.S.)

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Administrative Information

Alternate Forms Available

Portions of the Collection have been digitized and are available at: http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov

Preferred Citation

Fredrickson, Donald S. Donald S. Fredrickson Papers. 1910-2002 (bulk 1960-1999). Located in: Modern Manuscripts Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD; MS C 526.

Provenance

Gift of Donald S. Fredrickson, 2001. Accession #2001-75.

Processing Information

Fredrickson was the subject of the first prototype website of Profiles in Science, the U.S. National Library of Medicine's Digital Manuscripts Program's digital archive and exhibition of the papers of key figures in the fields of science and health. Fredrickson was very active in the creation of this digital archive, rearranging many of his papers, adding comments and annotations to specific documents, and collecting files into new series and sub-series, particularly in Series I: Personal and Biographical and Series X: Photographic Materials. As a result, it is difficult to ascertain the "original" order of the documents in the collection.

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Series Descriptions

 

Series I: Personal and Biographical, 1914-2002 (bulk 1960-1990)

The Personal and Biographical Series contains materials related to the personal life of Donald S. Fredrickson. This series consists of seven sub-series covering: resumes, Curriculum Vitae and biographies; diaries; scrapbooks; awards; personal reminiscences; memorabilia; and newspaper clippings about Fredrickson.
The series contains a great deal of information about Fredrickson's childhood and early years in the form of a scrapbook maintained by his mother. However, his college years and residency in Boston are under-represented. Throughout much of his later professional career, Fredrickson kept detailed diaries, which reveal his personal thoughts and motivations.
Additional biographical information can be found in the Audio-Visual Materials Series, Audio Materials sub-series in the form of an interview with Fredrickson conducted by archivists from NLM.
The Resumes, CVs, and Biographies sub-series contains information on Fredrickson's personal life and professional career. Created from loose materials found in the collection, this series is semi-artificial in nature. The majority of materials in this sub-series are files collected by NLM's Digital Manuscripts Program and Fredrickson for the purpose of creating the prototype website for Profiles in Science.
Box Folder
Resumes, Curriculum Vitae, and Biographies, 1965-2002
1 1 Modern Medicine Biography, 1965 Dec 20
1 2 Biographical Information, 1965-1981
1 3 DSF Publicity, 1967
1 4 [Area Knowledge Report], [ca. 1970]
1 5 [Various Chronologies, Publication Lists, and CVs], 1975-1997
1 6 "America's Research Baron", 1977
1 7 Some Data for Future Biography, 1980-1989
1 8 Executive Personnel Financial Disclosure Report, 1981
1 9 Who's Who in the East, 1981
1 10 FBI and IRS Background Check, 1982
1 11 DSF's Parents' Obituaries, 1982, 1984
1 12 "How Washington Has Changed" [Washingtonian Biography of DSF], 1985 Oct
1 13 [IOM Biographical Essay], 1990
1 14 [Autobiography], 1992
1 15 Curriculum Vitae, 1996 Mar
1 16 Biographical Sketch for 50th Anniversary Celebration, 1996 May
1 17 A Short Biography of Dr. Fredrickson, 1997 Oct 29
1 18 "Fredrickson Reflects on Politics of Recombinant DNA Research", 2002 Jan 22
Diaries
The Diaries sub-series contains the diaries and journals that Fredrickson kept throughout most of his career. In addition to the journal entries, correspondence, newspaper clippings, magazine articles, and notes are present in the diaries. The diaries include personal information, as well as information on Fredrickson's professional activities and interests.
The "Green Diaries" date from 1972 to 1981 and deal primarily with Fredrickson's career at the National Institutes of Health, which included his tenures at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), and as NIH Director. Volume II and Volumes V through X are missing from the collection. It is presumed that Fredrickson did not donate the volumes and that they remain with his family. Much of the information contained in these volumes is available in the collection, but the information is scattered throughout the different series. Before donating his papers, Fredrickson reorganized them, inserting comments throughout the collection. Many of these comments come in the form of annotated diary entries copied from the "Green Diaries."
The "Black Diaries" date from 1983 to 1996. Included at the end of the last volume is a list of Fredrickson's diary entries found only on diskette. The diskettes are not included in the collection and their whereabouts are unknown.
1 19 Diary II - 50s through 70s, 1967-1976
Green Diary
1 20 Volume I, 1972 Jan - 1979 Feb
1 20a Volume I [Extraneous Materials], 1972 Jan - 1979 Feb
1 21 Volumes III/IV, 1980 Jun - 1980 May
1 22 Volume XI, Excerpts, 1981
Black Diary
1 23-42 Volume 1-9, 1983-1987
2 1-22 Volume 9 (cont'd.)-19, 1987-1996
2 23 Record of Diary Entries on Diskettes "Diary 1, 2, 3, 4", 1987-1997
2 24 Diskette Entries, 1987-1996
2 25 Scan, 1984-2000
2 26 DSF Diary (see also Black Diaries), 1989-1997
Scrapbooks, 1914-1990
OS1 1 Notes, 1990 May 19
OS1 2-29 Childhood Scrapbook, [1914-1940s]
OS2 Childhood Scrapbook (cont'd.)
2 27-36 Brown Scrapbook, [1958-1975]
3 1-5 Brown Scrapbook (cont'd.), [1958-1975]
3 6-45 Clippings Scrapbook [5 volumes], 1963-1981
OS4 1 Resignation Scrapbook, [1974]
3 46 NIH Alumni Reunion Scrapbook, 1975
3 47-48 Letters Scrapbook, 1979-1981
3 49 Vincent T. DeVita Scrapbook, 1980
2 27 [Various unidentified scrapbook pages], [ca. 1940-1950]
2 28 [Unidentified scrapbook pages], 1949-1972
Awards, 1951-1992
3 50 [Admission to the] Medical and Metaphysical Society, 1951
3 51 Stouffer Prize, 1967-1969
3 52 27o Congresso Brasileiro de Cardiologia [27th Brazilian Congress on Cardiology], 1971
3 53 Modern Medicine Award for Distinguished Acheivement, 1971 Jan 11
3 54 American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1975
3 55 Karolinska Institutet, 1977
3 56 Gairdener Award, 1978
3 57 Irving S. Cutter Medal, Phi Sigma Rho, 1978 Feb
3 58 University of Athens, Honorary Degree, 1980-1981
OS3 1 Medical University of South Carolina Honorary Degree, 1985 May 17
OS3 2 Sackler Award, 1986
3 59 Fuiggi International Award, 1987
3 60 Who's Who in America, 1991
3 61 Sandoz Publicity, 1991-1992
Reminiscences, 1963-1997
3 62-63 DSF Calendar, 1981-1982
3 64 DSF - Personal, 1976-1989
4 1 Congrel [Congresional Relations], 1978
4 2 Aagenl [General], 1990-1992
4 3 DSF Papers Info, 1981-1990
4 4 Personal - NIH 1975, 1968-1989
4 5 Personal - NIH 1976, 1975-1976
4 6 Citation, 1977-1991
4 7 Obituaries, 1977-1998
4 8 Personalities, 1969-1999
4 9 Docs in NLM, 1989
4 10 Farewell Lunch [Anderson, French], 1992
4 11 NLM and Elsevier [?], 1982
4 12 DSF Papers 1976, 1976, 1990
4 13 Personal - NIH 1977, 1977
4 14-17 DSF Papers 1977, 1977-1980
4 18 Testimony on National Arthritis Institute, Senate Committee on Labor, 1982 Jul 20
4 19 Sundry Memberships [EPCOT Center], 1981
4 20 DSF to be processed, 1965-1971
4 21 C, 1963-1990
4 22 "Grist for the Mill", 1968-1974
4 23 Trustees, 1986
4 24 Brigham and Women's Hospital Medical Staff and Alumni Directory, 1992
4 25 [Cañon City History], 1992
4 26 [64th Birthday], 1988
4 27 First Heart Transplant in Man, 1997 Apr 26
Memorabilia, 1944-1981
4 28 University of Michigan Honors Convocation and Commencement, 1944, 1946, 1949
Map Drawer 7 [Tangier Disease Collage], [1960s]
OS3 3 [Tangier Disease Collage Viewing Copy], [1960s]
OS3 4 [Signed Photograph of President Lyndon Johnson's Visit to NIH], 1965 Aug 9
OS3 5 [Signed Photograph of President Lyndon Johnson's Visit to NIH], 1967
4 29 Memorabilia, 1967-1981
OS3 6 [Franco Conti, Cesare Sirtori, and Oreste Mantero], 1975
4 30 NIH Director Badge, 1975
4 31 Passports, 1976-1981
4 32 NIH Challenge Relay, 1976
4 33 University of Michigan 1977 Winter Commencement, 1977
OS3 7 [Autographed portrait of Ted Kennedy and Paul Rogers], 1977
OS3 8 [Autographed photograph of Jimmy Carter], 1980 May
4 34 Steve Hall Drawings, [n.d.]
Newspaper Clippings, 1957-1981
4 35 New York Times - "The Visible Hand", [n.d.]
4 36 Pueblo (Colo.) Star-Journal - "Drug to Curb Cholesterol", 1957 Mar 3
4 37 Scope Weekly - "Experts Weigh Effects of Dietary Fats", 1957 Mar 27
4 38 Virginia Pilot - "Tonsils May Cure Hearts", [ca.1960s]
4 39 Washington Post - "Ted's Tonsils Offer Heart Disease Cure", [ca.1960s]
4 40 InternistObserver - "Blood Lipids", 1963 Mar-Apr
4 41 Oklahoman - "Additional Public Support Urged at Medical Institute", 1963 May 5
4 42 Evening Bulletin, Philadelphia - "Specialists Doubt Cholesterol's Importance in Heart Disease", 1967 Feb 23
4 43 Modern Medicine - "Defining High Cholesterol", 1968 Oct 7
4 44 Clinical Laboratory Forum - "Classical Laboratory Technique Now Applicable to Study of Lipidemia", 1969 Apr
4 45 Otago Daily Times, New Zealand - "Women Less Susceptible to Heart Attack 'Plague'", 1971 Sep 23
4 46 Southland Times, New Zealand - "Premature Heart Attacks on Increase", 1971 Sep 24
4 47 Christ Church Star, New Zealand - [Television listing], 1971 Sep 25
4 48 The Press, New Zealand - "N.Z. Diets Questioned", 1971 Sep 26
4 49 Christchurch Star - "Killer 'We Must Arrest at Once'", 1971 Sep 27
4 50 The Press, New Zealand - "Heart Week", 1971 Sep 27
4 51 The Press, New Zealand - "Smoking a Factor in Heart Attacks", 1971 Sep 28
4 52 Honolulu Star Bulletin - "The Boss? He's at his Summer Home", 1971 Sep 29
4 53 New Zealand Herald - "Lessons Which Must Be Taken to Heart", 1971 Oct 1
4 54 New Zealand Herald - "Diet Link with Heart Trouble", 1971 Oct 2
4 55 Canberra Times, Australia - "One-in-Four Potential Heart Attack Victim", 1971 Oct 5
4 56 West Australian - "Early Checks for Heart Risks Urged", 1971 Oct 9
4 57 The Rising Nepal, 1971 Oct 11
4 58 The Rising Nepal, 1971 Oct 12
4 59 Latest Advancement in Health Research, 1972
4 60 Washington Post - "Shift to Coal Seen Shortening Lives", 1974 Feb 16
4 61 Drug Research Reports - "NIH's Fears Become Real", 1974 Dec 11
4 62 Washington Post - "NIH and the Real World", 1974 Dec 27
4 63 Washington Report on Medicine and Health - "Cooper and Fredrickson Nominations Sent to Senate by Ford", 1975 Apr 28
4 64 Washington Post - "Worldviews", 1975 May 11
4 65 Washington Post for Tangier File, 1975 Jun 2
4 66 Philadelphia Inquirer - "Cancer Research Unit Opens", 1975 Jun 12
4 67 Washington Post - "A Scientific Breakthrough", 1976 Jul 2
4 68 York, PA Newspaper - "Legion Disease: Man-made Virus?", 1976 Aug
4 69 The Nation's Health [APHA] - [June Christmas Awarded Domestic Award], 1976 Nov
4 70 Washington Star - "A Black Quota in Research?", 1976 Nov 1
4 71 New York Times - "American Scientists Report Important Benefits from Joint Medical Research with the Russians", 1976 Nov 23
4 72 Observer, Great Britain - "The Babies That Need Not Die", 1976 Dec 12
4 73 Washington Report on Medicine and Health - "Harris-NIH Dispute Continues", 1980 May 12
4 74 Washington Star - "NIH Director Fredrickson Announces He Will Resign", 1981 Jun 19
4 75 New York Times - "Director of the National Institutes of Health Quits Post Citing Personal Reasons", 1981 Jun 20
4 76 Washington Post - "NIH Director Fredrickson Resigns, Citing 'Personal Reasons'", 1981 Jun 20
4 77 Washington Star - "Fredrickson Resigns as Director NIH", 1981 Jun 20
4 78 Nature - "Fredrickson Quits Without Warning", 1981 Jun 25
4 79 The NIH Record, 1965 Feb 9 - 1991 Apr 2

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Series II: Correspondence, 1948-1998

The Correspondence Series consists of Fredrickson's professional and personal correspondence with individuals and organizations, discussing a wide variety of subjects, and covering all aspects of Fredrickson's career. The series is divided into five sub-series, mostly based on Fredrickson's own organizational scheme: professional correspondence, personal correspondence, resignation letters, daily letter files, and writing engagements.
A good deal of personal information is available in the Personal Correspondence sub-series, especially in the Fredrickson family correspondence. Researchers interested in family correspondence should also consult the Scrapbooks sub-series of Series I: Personal and Biographical, which contains a great deal of early correspondence between Fredrickson and his parents.
The "Inquiries" folders, as labeled by Fredrickson, range from 1966-1974 and cover Fredrickson's time at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI). These files relate to requests for information or research guidance from Fredrickson, mostly concerning his experience with Tangier Disease and lipoproteins.
Box Folder
Professional Correspondence, 1954-1997
5 1 A - Ahr, 1956-1990
5 2 Alaupovic, Pierre, 1964-1993
5 3 Alm - And, 1962-1992
5 4 Anfinsen, Christian B., 1954
5 5 Anl - Ari, 1975-1995
5 6 Armstrong, Neil A., 1989
5 7 Aro - Asp, 1960-1996
5 8 Assmann, Gerd, 1975-1997
5 9 Att - Bay, 1958-1992
5 10 Bea - Berge, 1971-1992
5 11 Bergström, Sune, 1956-1975
5 12 Berk - Berl, 1994-1997
5 13 Bernard, Jean, 1986-1994
5 14 Bers - Blai, 1967-1997
5 15 Blankenhorn, David, 1965-1970
5 16 Blas - Bra, 1960-1992
5 17 Bre - Bu, 1958-1993
5 18 C - Cau, 1961-1995
5 19 Ce - Cri, 1961-1994
5 20 Crocker, Allen C., 1959-1966
5 21 Cu - Di, 1955-1993
5 22 Dole, Vincent P., 1959-1987
5 23 Dr - E, 1961-1995
5 24 F - Fl, 1958-1997
5 25 Ford, Gerald R., 1974-1981
5 26 Fordh - Fra, 1965-1995
5 27 Fredrickson, Donald T., 1972
5 28 Free - Gil, 1956-1994
5 29 Gin - Gord, 1956-1992
5 30 Gore, Albert, Jr., 1981
5 31 Gorl - Gott, 1957-1997
5 32 Graham, Katharine, 1966
5 33 Graham, W - Hal, 1956-1993
5 34 Hamburg, David A., 1982
5 35 Hame - Han, 1963-1989
5 36 Harden, Victoria, 1983-1997
5 37 Harlan, W. - Haw, 1959-1994
5 38 Havel, Richard, 1957-1983
5 39 Hay - Hey, 1966-1994
5 40 Hi - Hut, 1956-1994
5 41 I - J, 1961-1992
5 42 K - Ke, 1961-1993
5 43 Khachadurian, Avedis K., 1964-1971
5 44 Khar - Kis, 1961-1991
5 45 Klenk, E., 1964-1965
5 46 Kler - Kod, 1962-1992
5 47 Koop, C. Everett, 1987-1989
5 48 Kop - Kun, 1962-1992
5 49 Kuo, Peter, 1959-1982
6 1 Kuz - Lan, 1960-1995
6 2 Lasker, Mary, 1967-1988
6 3 Laudat, Philippe, 1960-1986
6 4 Le - Lindb, 1959-1993
6 5 Lindgren, Frank T., 1965-1972
6 6 Linds - Ly, 1965-1984
6 7 M - Ma, 1961-1992
6 8 Mc - Me, 1961-1989
6 9 Mi - My, 1965-1992
6 10 N, 1963-1990
6 11 O - Pac, 1962-1994
6 12-14 Page, Irving H., 1956-1991
6 15 Pal - Pel, 1962-1990
6 16 Perpich, Joseph G., 1978-1982
6 17 Perr - Pop, 1958-1991
6 18 Porter, Phil, 1990
6 19 Pot -- Pz, 1969-1989
6 20 R - Re, 1958-1994
6 21 Rh - Roc, 1962-1996
6 22 Rodbell, Martin, 1960-1994
6 23 Rog - Ru, 1974-1994
6 24 S - Schm, 1961-1995
6 25 Schnaper, Harold W., 1962-1970
6 26 Schne - Sh, 1959-1994
6 27 Si -- Sir, 1957-1997
6 28 Sjoerdsma, Albert, 1988-1989
6 29 Sk - Sp, 1956-1997
6 30 Staats, Elmer B., 1983-1987
6 31 Stamler, Jeremiah, 1964-1975
6 32 Stan - Sz, 1954-1997
6 33 T - Thom, 1959-1991
6 34 Thorn, George W., 1954-1987
6 35 Thornt - Tz, 1959-1994
6 36 W - Wh, 1960-1996
6 37 Wi - Wo, 1958-1994
7 1 Wyngaarden, James B., 1961-1996
7 2 Y - Zi, 1959-1987
7 3 Zöllner, Helmut, 1961-1972
7 4 Zu, 1973-1990
7 5-14 Inquiries, 1966-1978
Invitations Declined, 1982
7 15 A - C
7 16 D - K
7 17 L - O
7 18 P - W
7 19 Writing Obligations, 1966-1974
Personal Correspondence, 1948-1997
7 20 Abelson, Philip H., 1982
7 21 Allen, C. R., 1981
7 22 Altrocchi, Paul H., 1961-1962
7 23 Anderson, W. French, 1987-1997
7 24 Anlyan, William G., 1981
7 25 Arantes, E Oliveira Amalia and Eduardo, 1995
7 26 Asper, Samuel P., 1981
7 27 Beattie, Richard I., 1980
7 28 Benaissa, Mohamed, 1997
7 29 Berglund, Ragnhild, 1960
7 30 Bergstrom, Sune, 1974-1976
7 31 Berliner, Robert W., 1961-1973
7 32 Bersot, Tom, 1971-1972
7 33 Bevan, William, 1985-1993
7 34 Bilheimer, David J., 1988
8 65 Biking, 1979-1981
7 35 Blobel, Günter, 1997
7 36 Blokhin, N. H., 1980
7 37 Blomquist, Nancy L., 1981
7 38 Bloom, Max R., 1981
7 39 Bond, Enriqueta C., 1994
7 40 Bosch, Jan K., 1992
7 41 Brandt, Edward, 1981
7 42 Briner, William H., 1978
7 43 Brinkley, Joe, 1986
7 44 Brooks, David J., 1981
7 45 Brown, Sarah, 1975
7 46 Bulger, Roger J., 1975
7 47 Bunim, Miriam, 1964
7 48 Butler, Robert N., 1987-1994
7 49 Cahill, George F., [1981]-1993
7 50 Califano Jr., Joseph A., 1979
7 51 Capron, Alexander, 1981
7 52 Carter, James, 1985
7 53 Carter, Tim Lee, 1980
7 54 Charles, David, 1981
7 55 Chase, Robert O., 1994
7 56 Chase, William, 1975
7 57 Christie, George C., 1993
7 58 Cohen, Robert, 1977-1978
7 59 Cohen, Sheldon, 1978
7 60 Coleman, John S., 1974
7 61 Comroe, Julius, 1976-1981
7 62 Cooper, Theodore, 1974-1978
7 63 Corn, Milton, 1987
7 64 Corning, Mary, 1982
7 65 Cornwell, Jean, 1992
7 66 Crane, Stanley, 1987
7 67 Crawford, Bryce, Jr., 1987
7 68 Cummings, Carol, 1996
7 69 Cummings, Martin, 1975-1976
7 70 Darnell, James, 1987
7 71 Davies, Norman, 1981
7 72 Davies, William D., 1985-1988
7 73 Davis, R. B., 1990
7 74 DeRábago, Pedro, 1990
7 75 DeSanctis, Roman, 1993-1998
7 76 Determan, Helmut, 1987-1997
7 77 Dow, Michael M., 1981
7 78 Ebert, Richard V., 1967
7 79 Egeli, Bjorn, 1982
7 80 Eisenberg, Leon, 1981
7 81 Engelhorn, Victoria, [n.d.]
7 82 Engelhorn-Vechiatto, Traudl, 1992
7 83 Evens, Ronald G, 1978
7 84 Fairweather, Jane, 1997
7 85 Fennessy, Róna, 1990
7 86 Fennesy, John, 1991
7 87 Finley, Wayne H., 1991-1994
7 88 Ford, Gerald R., 1975
7 89 Fouraker, Lawrence, 1978
7 90 Fredrickson, Bryan, 1973
7 91 Fredrickson, C. Arthur and Blanche Sharp Fredrickson (parents), 1948-1975
7 92 Fredrickson, Donald S., 1959
7 93 Fredrickson, Eric, 1972-1997
7 94 Fredrickson, Henrietta P. D., 1971
7 95 Fredrickson, Robert G., 1989-1997
7 96 Fretter, William B., 1981
7 97 Gajdusek, D. Carleton, 1977-1997
7 98 Giocometti, Luigi, 1984
7 99 Glaser, Robert J., 1981
7 100 Glenner, George G., 1981
7 101 Godber, George, 1974
7 102 Goodman, Ann, 1992
7 103 Goodman, Dewitt S., 1971
7 104 Gordon, Betsy, 1985
7 105 Greene, Warner C., 1987
7 106 Gromyko, 1995
7 107 Gronvall, John A., 1981
7 108 Halbach, Detlef M., 1992-1993
7 109 Handler, Philip, 1974-1975
7 110 Hatch, Orrin G., 1982
7 111 Hassan II, King of Morocco, 1977-1995
7 112 Hegyeli, Ruth J., 1987
7 113 Hitachi, Masahito, 1978
7 114 Hobbins, Peter C., 1995
7 115 Hofmann, Alan F., 1995-1996
7 116 Hollis, Calvin V., [n.d.]
7 117 Hugenholz, Paul G., 1978
7 118 Ideh, A. E., [n.d.]
7 119 Jacobs, Robert P., 1978
7 120 Jardine, Bryan W., 1990-1996
7 121 Johnston, Mrs. Franklin N., 1971
7 122 Jolly, William P., 1994
7 123 Jones, James R., 1981
7 124 Jover, David, 1995
7 125 Kadigamar, Vee, 1996
7 126 Kalkhuis, Teunis, 1996
7 127 Kannel, William B., 1978
7 128 Karateas, Dorian, 1991
7 129 Keimowitz, Robert I., 1979
7 130 Kellner, Aaron, 1981
7 131 Killip, Thomas, 1981
7 132 King, James, 1971
7 133 Klimov, Anatoly N., 1965
7 134 Klocke, Francis J., 1968
7 135 Kowalczyk, Mercy, 1987-1990
7 136 Lambo, Tom A., 1980
7 137 Li, David K. P., 1987
7 138 Lindgren, Frank T., 1978
7 139 Lindsey, Charles, 1997
7 140 MacLean, Paul D., 1975-1977
7 141 Margolis, George, 1981
7 142 Mark Twain Society, 1973
7 143 Marland, S. D., 1978
7 144 Masprangelo, Santino, 1989
7 145 McDermott, Walsh, 1981
7 146 McDowell, James E., 1969
7 147 McLachlan, Ken J., 1992
7 148 Mernissi, Mohammed, 1978
7 149 Morehead, D. E., 1978
7 150 Moure, Richard, 1981
7 151 Muhlstock, B. J., 1991
7 152 Nature, 1982
7 153 Nemetz, Martin, 1981
7 154 Neufeld, Elizabeth, 1981
7 155 Newman, Lanny, 1981
7 156 Nienhus, Arthur, 1981
7 157 Oldham, Robert K., 1981
7 158 Olseth, Nancy and Dale, [n.d.]
7 159 Omenn, Gilbert S., 1978
7 160 Ouazzani, Wafa, 1982
7 161 Owen, William R., 1968
7 162 Page, Irving H., 1981
7 163 Paskin, Norman, 1982
7 164 Pearce, Robert A., 1981
7 165 Peeters Van Hoorenbeek, Herbert and Thèrése, [n.d.]
7 166 Pena, Ada R., 1978
7 167 Perpich, Joseph G., 1979-1981
7 168 Perry, Dan, 1981
7 169 Perry, Seymour, 1982
7 170 Petito, Frank, Jr., 1986
7 171 Pines, Maya, 1987-1988
7 172 Porter, Phillip B., 1973
7 173 Prager, Dennis J., 1981
7 174 Press, Frank, 1980-1991
7 175 Price, Don K., 1981
7 176 Project Hope, 1981-1982
7 177 Radi, A., 1982
7 178 Rall, David P., 1982
7 179 Raub, William F., 1982
7 180 Reagan, Ronald, 1989
7 181 Reich, Aurora K., 1995
7 182 Rhode, Barbara, 1988
7 183 Rice, Dorothy P., 1982
7 184 Rich, Patrick [?], 1994
8a 1 Rifkind, Richard A., 1981
8a 2 Robinson, Joseph A. and Madeleine, 1992-1997
8a 3 Roman, Aurelia, 1989-1996
8a 4 Roman, George, 1982
8a 5 Rose, Richard, 1981
8a 6 Rosenblith, Walter A., 1979-1982
8a 7 Rotem, Zeev, 1982
8a 8 Roth, Jesse, 1981-1982
8a 9 Sabatos, Chuck, 1990
8a 10 Sanders, Charles, 1981
8a 11 Sarrett, Lewis H., 1982
8a 12 Saunders, Joseph F., 1981
8a 13 Schaeffer, Juergen, 1991-1997
8a 14 Schecter, Alan, 1981
8a 15 Schettler, Gotthard, 1981
8a 16 Schmid, Rudi, 1981-1982
8a 17 Schmidt, Benno C., 1982-1986
8a 18 Schultz, Julius, 1981
8a 19 Scientists' Institute for Public Information, 1981
8a 20 Scoular, Charring Connett, 1987-1995
8a 21 Setlow, Jane K., 1981-1982
8a 22 Seward, Ralph T., 1987
8a 23 Shelley, Julian H., 1981
8a 24 Sheps, Cecil G., 1981
8a 25 Sherwood, Bruce, 1996
8a 26 Simopoulos, Artemis, 1982
8a 27 Smith, Louis C., 1982
8a 28 Smith, Robert L., 1973
8a 29 Sokol, Herman, 1981
8a 30 Stadtman, Earl, 1981
8a 31 Stamatoyannopoulos, George, 1981
8a 32 Stark, Nathan, 1982
8a 33 Steinberg, Daniel, 1981-1982
8a 34 Stewart, William, 1982
8a 35 Stokes, Joseph, 1982
8a 36 Storey, Patrick B., 1981
8a 37 Temin, Howard, 1981
8a 38 Terrab, Aicha Aloui, 1982
8a 39 Thorton, Ray, 1982
8a 40 Timour, John A., 1981
8a 41 Tomizaura, Tom, [n.d.]
8a 42 Trivelpiece, Alvia, 1982
8a 43 Unger, Walter, 1982-1993
8a 44 Vagelos, P. Roy, 1982
8a 45 Wagner, Galen S., 1981
8a 46 Wall, James J., [n.d.]
8a 47 Ward, Lady Mary, 1976-1982
8a 48 Watt, James, 1961
8a 49 Weinberger, Caspar W., 1975
8a 50 Weissman, Sherman, 1982
8a 51 Whaley, Storm, 1981
8a 52 Whelan, William, 1980
8a 53 White, Paul Dudley, 1982
8a 54 Whitehead, Jack, [n.d.]
8a 55 Winkelstein, Warren, 1981
8a 56 Womeldorf, G. Raymond, 1978
8a 57 Woolf, Patricia, 1982
8a 58 Wormser, Ellen, 1981
8a 59 Wright, Lonnie M., 1981
8a 60 Xuma, Mtutuzeli, 1978-1981
8a 61 Yarmonlinsky, Adam, 1974
8a 62 Young, Leo, 1979-1982
8a 63 Zinder, Norton, 1981
8a 64 Unidentified, 1977-1991
Job Offers, 1965-1982
8a 66 1965
8a 67 1966
8a 68 1967
8a 69 1969
8a 70 1970-1973
8a 71 1975-1979
8a 72 1980
8a 73 1981
8a 74 1982
8a 75 [n.d.]
Congratulatory Letters, 1973-1977
NAS
8a 76 A - I, 1973
8b 1 J - P, 1973
8b 2 R - Z, 1973
IOM
8b 3 A - F, 1974
8b 4 G - L, 1974
8b 5 M - R, 1974
8b 6 S - Z, 1974
NIH
8b 7 A - D, 1975
8b 8 E - J, 1975
8b 9 K - N, 1975
8b 10 O - R, 1975
8b 11 S - Z, 1975
8b 12 Reappointment Congratulatory Letters, 1977
Recommendation Letters, A-Z, 1961-1995
[RESTRICTED]
Resignation Letters, 1981, 1987-1998
9 1 DSF's Announcement, 1981
9 2 Advisory Committee to the Director, NIH, 1981
9 3 Interagency Radiation Research Committee, 1981
9 4 House of Representatives and Senate, 1981
9 5 A - B, 1981
9 6 C - D, 1981
9 7 E - G, 1981
9 8 H - K, 1981
9 9 L - M, 1981
9 10 N - P, 1981
9 11 R - S, 1981
9 12 T - Z, 1981
9 13 HHMI Resignation Letters, 1987-1998
Daily Letter Files, 1981-1982
9 14 Jun 1981
9 15 Jul 1981
9 16 Aug 1981
9 17 Sep 1981
9 18 Oct 1981
9 19 Nov 1981
9 20 Dec 1981
9 21 Jan 1982
9 22 Feb 1982
9 23 Mar 1982
9 24 Apr 1982
9 25 May 1982
9 26 Jun 1982
9 27 Jul 1982
9 28 Aug 1982
9 29 Sep 1982
9 30 Oct 1982
9 31 Nov 1982
9 32 Dec 1982
Writing Engagements, 1966-1980
9 33 American Journal of Medicine, 1974-1975
9 34 American Physiological Society (Strydom-Hoffenberg), 1969-1970
9 35 American Physiological Society (ii), 1966-1969
9 36 Atherosclerosis, 1974-1975
9 37 Circulation Research, 1970-1976
9 38 Genetics, 1975
9 39 Invitations to Write, 1970-1973
9 40 JAMA, 1974-1976
9 41 Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine, 1974-1975
9 42 Reviews - Misc., 1959-1980

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Series III: Writings, 1910-2001

The Writings series contains both published (articles, essays, contributions to books, etc.) and unpublished (speeches, lectures, talks, eulogies, etc.) materials. The series is divided into four sub-series: Speeches and Unpublished Materials; Publications; Interviews; and Publications by Others. For the most part these materials are reprints, photocopies of typescripts, or printouts; occasionally these items are accompanied by associated correspondence or printed matter (e.g., programs or brochures).
The Speeches and Unpublished Materials sub-series includes, but is not limited to, speeches, lectures, addresses, talks, and other presentations by Fredrickson. These files are divided into several categories, following Fredrickson's original organization. The first is composed of a six-volume set of speeches given by Fredrickson from 1975 to 1982. The speeches are individually numbered, and each volume has an index to its contents. The second consists of a collection of lectures and an essay ("The Unpublished Lectures - An Annotated Anthology of Lost Words") about these materials. Each lecture mentioned in the essay was given a number, and these numbers have been included in the titles of the folders. The third section includes the remaining unpublished works found scattered throughout the collection, including lectures, eulogies, speeches, drafts, etc.
This series consists primarily of typewritten texts or photocopies; some correspondence, notes, and copies of programs are also included. Some of these pieces were later published, but are included here in their earlier unpublished form. Other items included here (eulogies, for example) were "published," but not widely distributed.
Also included is a set of 8-inch floppy disks, which contain documents created with Wang word processing software. There is a list of the titles of these documents, but the contents of the disks are inaccessible until the digital information can be converted to a readable format.
The Publications sub-series includes copies of articles, essays, and other published work by Fredrickson. For the most part these materials are reprints, photocopies of typescripts, or printouts; sometimes these items also have associated drafts, correspondence or printed matter (e.g., programs, brochures). Materials up to the late 1970s generally report on laboratory work; after that time they largely deal with broader biomedical issues - a change in focus reflecting Fredrickson's career shift from research to administration.
The majority of reprints in this sub-series come from a volume entitled Selected Reprints and Lectures, which includes a bibliography created by Fredrickson in June of 1987; a smaller percentage have been removed from other parts of the collection and gathered here. Also of interest are the three microfilm reels of Fredrickson's publications created prior to March 1, 1979. These reels contain 207 published articles and several pamphlets, mostly concerning Fredrickson's scientific research. A list of these titles is included in the folder entitled "Publications of Dr. Donald Fredrickson Available for Microfilming as of March 1, 1979," box 11, folder 86.
Box Folder