Bleyman, Lea K.
Lea Kanner Bleyman was born into a Jewish family in Halle, Germany, of November 9, 1936. As an infant, she and her family fled Germany to France, where they remained for the duration of the war, even as her older sisters, Eva and Ruth, were evacuated to the United States by the Kindertransport Program of the humanitarian organization OSE ( Oeuvre de Sécours aux Enfants ).
Reunited in the United States in 1946, the Kanners settled in the Midwood section of Brooklyn. Entering the local public schools, Lea found her first brush with science leavened by her first experience with gender bias, but undeterred, she pursued biology as an undergraduate at Brandeis University. After graduation in 1958, and marrying Michael A. Bleyman, a philosophy major, then studying law at New York University, Bleyman relocated to New York for two years, earning a master's degree from Columbia University. During her first forays as a graduate student into the world of protozoans, she encountered the work of her future mentor, Tracy S. Sonneborn, and was drawn ever deeper into ciliate genetic research.
In 1961 the Bleymans moved to Indiana University, where Michael returned to his studies in philosophy, while Lea pursued a doctorate under Sonneborn in the Department of Zoology. At the time, Sonneborn's lab was one the nation's most vibrant centers for study of the biology and evolutionary genetics of ciliates, and Bleyman fell in with a remarkable community of graduate students, including Akio Miyake and Koichi Hiwatashi, with whom she would later collaborate. Her dissertation research centered on selfing in Paramecium aurelia with relation to macronuclear differentiation, and developing a new medium for culturing Paramecium .
Moving to the University of Illinois in 1964, Bleyman shifted course to study reproduction in Tetrahymena, even as she was completing her dissertation. Hired as a research associate in the lab of David L. Nanny (himself a former Sonneborn student), Bleyman formed a range of intellectually advantageous relationships with fellow protistologists, including John Corliss and Jerome Paulin (both past presidents of the Society of Protozoologists), Eduardo Orias, Peter Bruns, and Ellen Simon.
After a brief stint at the University of North Carolina, and her divorce, Bleyman returned to New York in 1973 to join the Biology faculty at Baruch College. Active in several professional organizations, she was a regular contributor to conferences and symposia on ciliate biology and served on the Executive Committee of the Society of Protozoologists (1981-1986 and 1999-2004), as Secretary (1991-1997), and ultimately President (2001-2002). At Baruch, she took up work on the mating patterns of a different genus of ciliates, Blepharisma, and beginning in 1975, she spent her next ten summers at Cornell, working with her old colleague Peter Bruns on Tetrahymena genetics. The author of dozens of papers on protists, Bleyman is currently Professor Emerita at Baruch.
From the guide to the Lea K. Bleyman Papers MS 548., 1958-2006, (Special Collections and University Archives, University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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referencedIn | William B. Provine collection of evolutionary biology reprints, 20th century. | Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library. | |
creatorOf | Lea K. Bleyman Papers MS 548., 1958-2006 | Special Collections and University Archives, UMass Amherst Libraries | |
referencedIn | David Ledbetter Nanney Papers MS 592., 1946-2008 | Special Collections and University Archives, UMass Amherst Libraries |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Baruch College | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Nanney, David Ledbetter, 1925- | person |
correspondedWith | Provine, William B. | person |
associatedWith | Society of Protozoologists. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Sonneborn, Tracy Morton, 1905-1981 | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country |
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Subject |
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Ciliates |
Developmental biology |
Paramecium |
Protozoans |
Protozoology |
Tetrahymena |
Occupation |
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Activity |
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