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Building 7 was crowded and was not spacious by any means. The electron microscope was in the subbasement, and it was like going down the narrow steps into a submarine to use the electron microscope; that is where we did our studies on both norovirus and rotavirus. The Chanock lab was functional, albeit crowded, and it was filled with many people talking to one another—an early example of team science. I was in an interior office with two other people without windows for over 12 years. One of the things I said when I left there was, “I never want an office again without a window.”

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Rotavirus Discovery in the Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, NIAID, NIH—Sept. 1974 NIH Record


Harden:   Who were the senior people besides Dr. Chanock and Dr. Kapikian in the Laboratory of Infectious Diseases?

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