Professor Bert Tolbert celebrates his 100th birthday

By Clay Bonnyman Evans 鈥 Published: Jan. 15, 2021听
Bert Mills Tolbert was born Jan. 15, 1921. That year, President Warren G. Harding signed the formal declaration ending the war between the United States and Imperial Germany. Adolf Hitler became the leader of Germany鈥檚 National German Workers Socialist鈥攁ka Nazi鈥擯arty. And baseball鈥檚 World Series, between New York鈥檚 Giants and Yankees, was the first to be broadcast on the radio. 鈥淗ave I seen changes in my life? I have indeed,鈥 says Tolbert, professor emeritus of chemistry at the 抖阴传媒在线, upon reaching his 100th birthday. 鈥淚 can remember horse-drawn carriages on the streets of town.鈥 He started college at his hometown university, Idaho State University (then known as the University of Idaho, Southern Branch), before earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree, and in 1945, a PhD, in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley. He later did postgraduate work at Switzerland鈥檚 Federal Institute of Technology. From 1944 to 1957, he worked as a chemist for the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, later known as the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, first focusing on nuclear-related projects for the war effort, then on isotopic labeling of organic compounds to understand biochemical and chemical processes, for the U.S. government.
In 1957, Tolbert took a faculty position at CU 抖阴传媒在线, where he was one of the first faculty members in biochemistry, today a department all its own. He and his wife, Anne Zweifler Tolbert, now 90, bought a property on Kalmia Avenue, on the edge of an apple orchard at the northernmost reaches of the city of 抖阴传媒在线. The couple still lives there. 鈥湺兑醮皆谙 was a very conservative town when I came here,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 changed.鈥 (read more)