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"Productive laboratories are not merely the reflection of good scientific discipline and expert direction but depend as much on the establishment of a congenial atmosphere in which science can flourish as a consequence of free thought, unguarded exchange of ideas, critical discussion and a respectful interaction among all of its personnel."

  • – Earl Stadtman
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The Stadtmans.
Earl and Thressa Stadtman in 2003

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Accomplished biochemists and beloved mentors, Thressa and Earl Stadtman have worked at NIH for more than half a century. They came to Bethesda in 1950 as a young married couple and developed a unique way of conducting research and training scientists—their colleagues call it the "Stadtman way."

The "Stadtman way" refers not only to the extraordinarily high standard of rigor they set in biochemical research, but also to their generous sharing of credit in publications with more junior scientists. The "Stadtman way" helped create a congenial atmosphere in their productive laboratory.

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This website has been adapted from an earlier version. Below is the original graphic used on the Home page.

The Stadtman Way Home page graphic used on earlier site.
Original website Home page.

All of the content and links are now available through the current website's navigation.

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Thressa Campbell