Oral History Interview: Bill Sugden (1590)
Abstract
In his three-part interview in 2016, Professor Bill Sugden of the McArdle Lab for Cancer Research discusses his life, focusing on his time studying cancer and virology. Born in NY in 1945 to an electrical engineer father and a mother who would later become a professor, Bill pursued his undergraduate education at Harvard and graduate study at Columbia. Sugden secured an alternative service position during the Vietnam War, working in a lab at Cold Spring Harbor. Later, he came to UW to work at the McArdle lab, which was then home to the Nobel Prize winner, Howard Temin. In his interviews, Professor Sugden discusses his research in Epstein-Barr and other viruses as well as his work with DNA/RNA research at UW.
Subject
Burkitt's lymphoma
Human papillomavirus (HPV)
Coffin, John
HIV/AIDS
Spleen Necrosis Virus (SNV)
Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV)
RNA synthesis
Nobel Prize
Temin, Howard
Virology
Cold Spring Harbor
UW Hospital and Clinics
McArdle Lab for Cancer Research
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/78064Description
Interviewer: Silke Schmidt