Remarks at memorial service for William Munro Preston, April 22, 1989.
Bill Preston, whose life we remember here today, served Harvard as a scientific administrator for nearly 25 years. I first met him the day after I came to Harvard. As a young Assistant Professor I turned up at the cyclotron ready to start work. He already had cleared office and lab space and had suggested that two incoming graduate students work with me. Over the next years at the cyclotron, he found the funds, wrote the reports, arranged the shops and ensured that the machine worked. Us youngsters were free to do our scientific work untroubled by these administrative chores. Bill knew one of the important secrets of administration; understand the strengths and weaknesses of everyone in the lab, and keep them to yourself. He knew what everyone was doing and all the hazards in the laboratory. One day there was a loud explosion. Bill knew at once what it was. He popped his head out of the office door. "Harold, are you alright?". It was not me exploding liquid hydrogen; it was Harold Furth destroying a pulsed magnet by running it too high. Then came Bill's most important
contribution to science and to Harvard. Already in 1963 Bill
Sweet and Ray Kjellberg, neurosurgeons from the Massachusetts General
Hospital had come to use
the proton beam for medical treatments. Bill received them
enthusiastically. By 1967 they had treated
50 patients. But the cyclotron was being shut down.
Unfortunately, Bill Sweet and Ray
Kjellberg were out of the mainstream of medical thought.
In vain did Bill Preston and I try to get the hospital or the medical
school to find funding. I remember
a fruitless 2 hour convention with the dean of the medical school. But
Bill and Andy Koehler knew
better than the physicians the importance of the work. They persuaded
the department of Physics to
underwrite the operation financially, on a small scale. The cyclotron
was kept going by Patient fees,
helped by some fee for service irradiations for NASA. It eventually
cost the department nothing.
When Bill became ill
himself in 1978 it was providential that the cyclotron and MGH had the
world's best treatment for prostate cancer. Although formally he was
cured, it turned out only to be a
10 year remission. But for these 10 years we must be grateful. In retirement Bill maintained his
interests. He continued to be proud of the cyclotron and its
achievements. Be served on the visiting committee for the Radiation
Medicine Department at MGH
and never missed a meeting.
Richard Wilson
Mallinckrot Professor of Physics