 Robert Hubner
Clarence A. (Bud) Ryan, one of WSU’s
preeminent scientists, died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in
October. Ryan pioneered the study of the innate immune
response of plants. Prior to his work, plants were assumed to
contain protease inhibitors all the time, as a deterrent to being
eaten. Ryan discovered instead that plants make the inhibitors in
response to an attack. He further showed that an attack on one part
of a plant sets off chemical signals that spur production of
inhibitors throughout the entire plant. Besides his scientific
renown, Ryan was well known around campus for his graciousness—-and
his ability on the basketball court. The following is excerpted
from comments by College of Sciences dean Michael Griswold at
Ryan’s memorial service.
Bud started his research program by buying a bag of potatoes at
the local grocery store. In succeeding years his laboratory
discovered and in plants. The research was innovative. The concepts
were breakthroughs. Because of these scientific achievements, Bud
was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1986, the first
WSU scientist to be so selected. Out of the hundreds of thousands
of scientists in the United States, only a select few are members
of this exclusive academy. His total list of honors and awards is
remarkable, and he is one of the world’s most cited scientific
authors.
What has this meant to WSU? The scientific achievements of this
one scientist have provided to WSU a measure of recognition and
credibility that is difficult to quantify. WSU is currently
regarded as one of the best places in the world to study plant
molecular sciences, and we attract the best students and faculty in
this area. Perhaps if Bud had not come to WSU, we would still have
a good plant science program, but his presence and his reputation
have catalyzed the excellence we currently have. All of us in
research labs at WSU, even those of us not in plant sciences, know
it is possible to emulate his success. That is what made him our
hero—-he showed what is possible.
Through all of these honors Bud remained humble and even
somewhat embarrassed by the fuss. He told me that the most
enjoyable recognition he received when he became a member of the
National Academy was when his basketball buddies from Colfax came
and took him to lunch.
He also would bashfully tell the story of one of the times he
was cited in a national publication. After some of his research
papers were published about the capability of plants to protect
themselves from attack by insects, Bud got a call from a reporter
at the National Enquirer. Bud had no idea that the
National Enquirer was a supermarket tabloid of questionable
repute. Sometime later the National Enquirer published a
picture of Bud Ryan, famed research scientist, holding his killer
tomatoes.
Bud and I interacted in a number of nonacademic ways. In recent
years Bud caught steelhead on my boat in the Snake River, and we
spent a week in Canada fly-fishing for northern pike. For many
years we met for lunch along with a ragtag group of faculty that
solves the problems of the world and secretly runs the
University.
What I remember most fondly is that Bud and I played basketball
together three times a week. All of his noonball friends will
remember the many times that Bud would “educate” a young hotshot
student on the court. As time went by and Bud and I became the
elder statesmen of noonball, we nearly always paired up and guarded
each other. Sometime in the future someone will ask a trivia
question about who was the highest scoring basketball player in WSU
history. There will be only one right answer: Bud Ryan. We once
estimated that over the course of his 40-plus years of noonball Bud
probably scored well over 40,000 points—most of them over me.
We shared a lot of other time together, including many years of
meeting at the golf course at 6 a.m. I don’t think Bud ever knew
that the only reason I played golf was so I could spend that time
with him.
To many who knew him well, Bud’s academic and athletic
credentials pale in comparison to his credentials as a warm,
caring, humble colleague and friend. He lived the concepts of
“world class, face-to-face” and “trust and respect in all we
do,” before these words became a part of our WSU culture. His life
touched the lives of many others in important ways. His great
achievements, his noble character, his courage, and his important
impact on WSU made him our champion, our hero. Our role now is to
honor his life and his memory by following his
example.
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