08/05/2021
An important message from MBM Chair, Dr. John Leong:
Dear colleagues
I am sorry to announce that Cathy Squires, former chair of the department, died on Aug. 3, at her home in California. She was 80 years old.
Many of you never met Cathy, but all of us have benefited immensely from her time as Micro chair. She was a highly successful microbial geneticist and biochemist at Columbia University when she was recruited to Tufts as MBM chair in 1994. (I was at Tufts Medical Center and a member of the Mol Micro graduate program, so I attended her job seminar, and even from that brief glimpse, I was struck by her energy, intelligence, and easy laugh.) From then until 2007, Cathy served as chair while also directing a successful research program on ribosomal function. During her tenure, she recruited several people who have had immeasurable impact and remain here today: Andy Camilli, Dave Lazinski, Joan Mecsas, and Katya Heldwein. In addition, she served as a role model here at Tufts (and beyond) as a successful woman scientist and administrator who showed her commitment to her department and colleagues with genuine openness and caring, but also was always firm (and when appropriate, tough) in acting on her priorities and principles. She was the epitome of someone who could disagree without being disagreeable.
Upon retiring as chair, Cathy moved to California, continuing her research with her former mentor at Stanford, Charlie Yanofsky. In 2010, she âretiredâ to her farm in rural Northern California, with her husband Craig, where she worked tirelessly raising goats and farming. She had made lifelong friends with many people at Tufts, including Verna Manni, Naomi Rosenberg and Peggy Newell (former dean of the graduate school), who visited her regularly.
I interacted with Cathy during my time at Tufts Medical Center and even after I moved to UMass Medical School; I was an admirer and friend but never had the honor of having her as my chair. Nevertheless, she served as a model for me and I benefit every day from her service to the department. For those of us who knew her, we will remember not only her contributions, but the way she made her way in the world.
John