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KATHLEEN MARGARET COLE
By Dr. Robert Scagel
Kay Cole spent
her early years as a child in the small community of Wells
(near Barkerville), later moving with her family to a home
in the upper levels of West Vancouver. I first new Kay as
a graduate student in the Department of Biology and Botany
at U.B.C. We were both students on honour programmes in
the Department - Kay in Biology and I in Botany. Our supervisor
was Andrew Hutchinson, Head of the Department. As Honours
students we were provided with office/study space in the
then Applied Science Building on the West Mall. We had adjoining
desks. At that time, to get to U.B.C. from West Vancouver,
she would take a bus from the upper levels to the waterfront
at Ambleside where she would take a ferry under the Lions
Gate Bridge to the foot of Columbia St. in Vancouver. She
would then take a streetcar from Hastings St. to Blanca
St. where she would transfer to a bus to the U.B.C. Campus.
We both completed B.A. degrees, graduating in 1947 and M.A.
degrees in 1948. This was when the Faculty was Arts & Science,
before the establishment of the Faculty of Science and the
awarding of the B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees. Kay then left for
Smith College, where she completed her Ph.D. in genetics
under the supervision of Albert F. Blakeslee. Blakeslee
was a world authority on the genetics of Datura
and it was on this plant that Kay did her Ph.D. research.
I left for the University of California (Berkley) where
I completed the Ph.D. in marine phycology under the supervion
of G.F. Papenfuss.
During her years at U.B.C., Kay was active
in the Music Society. She had a fine contralto singing voice
and frequently performed in concerts and in Vancouver on
radio during her years as a student at U.B.C.
Kay was appointed Lecturer and I was appointed
Assistanat Professor in the Department of Biology and Botany
at U.B.C. in 1952. Both us continued on the staff in the
Department until retirement.
In the early years of our appointments
at U.B.C. she continued her research in genetics, however
on Medicago (alfalfa) . For several years in the
summers in the 1950's I taught a course in marine phycology
at the Friday Harbor Marine Laboratory of the University
of Washington. Kay was looking for a area of genetics that
was new and challenging instead of the vascular plants she
had been working with. I suggested to her that the genetics/cytology
on marine algae was a new and challenging area she might
like to explore. She spent one summer at Friday Harbor in
the late 1950's experimenting with her cytological techniques
on marine algae. From then on, she and her graduate students
pursued their research on the cytology (eventually the ultrastructure)
of marine algae. She soon became a world-renewed researcher
in the field of the cytology of marine algae. (I can see
her yet at Friday Harbor, where her thumbs were usually
stained purple from doing the fuchsin squash technique!).
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