Current weather: 
45° F   light rain
sponsored by:

printer-friendly  |  e-mail this story

WSU chemistry professor marks 50 years


Don Matteson holds a 1937 photo of himself and his wife, Marrianna, in his lab at Fulmer Hall on the Washington State University campus Wednesday. Both taught at WSU for a long time, and Don continues to conduct research on the Pullman campus. (CHRISTOPHER ANDERSON The Spokesman-Review)

PULLMAN – It wasn’t Washington State University that hired Don Matteson to teach.

No, in the fall of 1958, the school on the Palouse was still known as Washington State College.

Fit, bearded and bespectacled, and with hearing aids that help him decipher words spoken over the rattle of ventilation fans, Matteson this year is marking 50 years of teaching organic chemistry at the school that became WSU as he was starting his second year.

“I have former students who are retired,” said Matteson, 76, whose work with organoboron compounds was later used by a pharmaceutical company to develop a cancer treatment.

Hiring Matteson at a starting wage of $5,700 was a good investment for the college. He collected research-funding grants that exceeded his salary every year from 1959 through 2006. Since cutting back to half time about five years ago, he’s donated his salary to the chemistry department to fund a speakers series.

And he and his wife Marrianna Matteson, who retired as chairwoman of WSU’s foreign-language department in 1997, have donated enough to start endowed professorships in each of their specialties.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Turns out that professors, while they aren’t paid a whole lot for their expertise … have a good retirement system,” Matteson said. “And we suddenly discovered that we’re in pretty good shape.”

A native of Kalispell, Mont., Matteson was the son of a high school teacher whose subjects included science.

Among other things, Stephen Matteson taught his son to clip a note to a kite string and let the wind carry it up the string.

That’s why a young Matteson is staring skyward in the yellowed newspaper clipping that hangs in his WSU laboratory. You can’t see the kite or the note, just the string running out of the upper left-hand corner of the picture.

Standing next to him in that 1937 photograph is another 5-year-old, Marrianne Merritt, whom he would marry 34 years later. Her dad, too, taught in the Kalispell school system.

“We liked each other at that age because the academic attitude was sort of bred into us,” Matteson said. “The other kids seemed kind of dull compared to her.”

But they did not become childhood sweethearts; Matteson was interested in other things.

When he started asking about chemical elements in the fourth grade, his father knew just enough to get him started. After that, Matteson read about chemistry in the World Book encyclopedias that his dad sold to augment his teacher’s salary.

Soon, he had a chemistry set containing compounds that are highly regulated today.

“I could probably get them as a university professor,” he said. “But (anyone else) would have a hard time.”

About the time Matteson was starting high school, his dad got fired for agitating to start a teacher’s union. Matteson’s chemistry set was among the possessions that stayed in Montana when the family moved to California, so he channeled his energy into mastering the violin and composing music.

Though he would later play “second-fiddle” in the Washington-Idaho Symphony, Matteson said he eventually determined he could have greater impact as a chemist than as a musician. He earned a bachelor’s degree at the University of California at Berkeley, followed by graduate degrees from the University of Illinois, and then a year of working for DuPont in Delaware.

“I couldn’t stand living in the East,” Matteson said, so he applied at colleges in the West. “Washington State was the only one that made me an offer, and since it was closest to Glacier (National) Park, I was very happy.”

Matteson’s father had worked in the park as a summer ranger when the family lived in Kalispell, and Matteson worked summers there himself, during his college years. Other than the kite-flying picture, most of the photographs on his lab walls are scenes from Glacier – including one of Matteson’s that was impressive enough to appear in the May 1956 issue of National Geographic.

It was in 1970 that Matteson learned through his mother that Marrianne Merritt was teaching Spanish at WSU. They married the following year, and raised Matteson’s autistic son from a previous marriage. His daughter, now an attorney in California, lived with her mother.

Though he always taught an undergraduate class or two, Matteson preferred working in the lab with graduate students.

“He’s always been a very good mentor,” said Levente Fabry-Asztalos, who studied under Matteson and now teaches chemistry at Central Washington University. “He’s one of the eminent chemists in the study of boron compounds.”

It was in that role in 1980 that Matteson and students discovered a class of organoboron compounds that imitates proteins. Millennium Pharmaceuticals used it to develop Velcade, a drug introduced in 2003 for treating multiple myeloma, an incurable cancer of the plasma cell. Velcade is “highly effective” in treating patients who have already undergone at least one other treatment, according to the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation Web page.

Matteson stresses that he had nothing to do with developing the drug. “I get only passing mention,” he said. “But the chemist has to be there at some point.”

These days, Matteson works with just one graduate student. He hasn’t bothered fixing the broken A string on his violin, now calling himself a “passive listener” of music. And while he and Marrianne still hike in Glacier, they gave up overnight backcountry treks in 1986, when a burglar stole their backpacks.

But still sometimes he rides his bicycle between the Pullman campus and his home east of Moscow, Idaho. And he doesn’t plan on giving up research in the cluttered, cubbyhole lab with the rattling chemical vents.

“I still have a fascination with chemistry,” he said.

Contact Dan Hansen at (509) 459-3938 or danh@spokesman.com.


back to top


Search:
Advertisement

GU basketball

See our Gonzaga hoops page for photos, game results, stories and more. Also see:

SportsLinkFan forumZags mobile

Sponsored by:

WSU basketball

See our Cougar hoops page for photos, game results, stories and more. Also see:

SportsLinkCougs mobile

Holiday Gift Guide

Cold Case stories »

For three decades, Kathy Forech had nightmares that her daughter would disappear on her birthday and be found in the Spokane River. It's just a mother's fear, she thought. It was more of a premonition. »

Sponsored by:

High school sports

High school sports Get schedules and scores for football, volleyball, slowpitch softball, girls and boys soccer and cross country.

High school news

Check out the Vox Box, online companion to the high school newspaper, The Vox.

Download The Vox in PDF

Gas prices

Readers report local prices here.

Ongoing coverage

Kendall Yards
Otto Zehm death
Spokane Diocese bankruptcy
Met Mortgage bankruptcy
Duncan investigation
River Park Square development
River Park Square crash
Archived sections:
Jim West investigation
Morning Star investigation

Assisted living database

Search for information about local assisted living and skilled nursing facilities.

Local bloggers

See our list of Inland Northwest bloggers. If you live in the Inland Northwest and are a regular blogger, we might link to your blog.

 

Bookstore
Click here for details

Chemical Dependency Professional
Kalispel Tribe of Indians

CNC MACHINIST
Honeywell

Hair Stylists
Northern Quest Resort & Casino

ICW Tribal Social Worker
Kalispel Tribe Indians

In Town Route
Click here for details

Laboratory Manager
Overlake Internal Medicine Associat

Mental Health Professional
Kalispel Tribe of Indians

Nail Technician
Northern Quest Resort & Casino

Parts Distributor Hiring
Click here for details

PROMOTIONS
   HOT DEALS | About
No Data Supplied
   No Data Supplied
Spokane Duplexes for Rent
   Windermere Property Mgmt
Franchise Opportunity
   UPS Store
Appliances at Super Low Prices
   Appliance Recycling
Now Leasing - Downtown
   Spokane Housing Authority