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Richard M. Eakin

Richard Marshall Eakin (/ˈkɪn/ AY-kin; May 5, 1910 – November 25, 1999), was an American zoologist and professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He was widely known for portraying prominent historical scientists during some of his lectures; dressing in costume and speaking in character to entertain and inform his students. A 1953 Guggenheim fellow, he wrote several books and more than 200 scientific papers. His research focused on eyes and vision in animals, especially the parietal eye or "third eye" of vertebrates, as well as animal embryology. He served as chairman of the UC Berkeley Department of Zoology for over 10 years, was elected president of the Western Society of Naturalists and American Society of Zoologists, and was a fellow of the California Academy of Sciences.

Richard M. Eakin
Eakin as Gregor Mendel, demonstrating genetic inheritance in pea plants circa 1974
Born
Richard Marshall Eakin

(1910-05-05)May 5, 1910
DiedNovember 25, 1999(1999-11-25) (aged 89)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUC Berkeley
Known forImpersonating famous scientists,
Parietal eye research
Spouse(s)Mary Mulford (1935–1980; 3 children)
Barbara Nichols (?–1999)
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship (1953)
Scientific career
FieldsZoology, Embryology
InstitutionsUC Berkeley
Doctoral advisorJ. Franklin Daniel

Eakin was born in Florence, Colorado, and grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He initially studied at the University of Tulsa, planning a career in the clergy, before switching to zoology, earning a bachelor's degree and doctorate at UC Berkeley. After postdoctoral studies in Germany under Hans Spemann he returned to UC Berkeley as a faculty member, where he would teach for over 40 years, earning awards and recognition for his teaching before retiring with highest faculty honors.

Early life and education (1910–1936)

Richard Eakin was born on May 5, 1910, in Florence, Colorado, to parents Marshall and Mary Elizabeth Eakin.[1] He attended high school in Tulsa, Oklahoma, graduating in 1927. He initially planned to go into the clergy, enrolling in the University of Tulsa and studying subjects such as theology and Greek for two years, before deciding to pursue zoology.[2]

In 1929, Eakin moved to Berkeley, California to attend UC Berkeley. He earned his A.B. in 1931, then enrolled in graduate school under J. Franklin Daniel, an ichthyologist and embryologist. For his dissertation, Eakin studied the development of salamander and frog embryos, earning a PhD in zoology in 1935. From 1935 to 1936 he worked in Germany as a postdoctoral scholar in the laboratories of embryologists Otto Mangold [de] and Nobel laureate Hans Spemann.[2]

On August 8, 1935,[1] Eakin married Mary Mulford, daughter of Walter Mulford, a Berkeley professor of forestry.[3][4]

Career (1936–1977)

Upon his return to UC Berkeley in 1936, Eakin was appointed instructor of zoology, becoming assistant professor in 1940 and full professor in 1949. He was assistant dean of the College of Letters and Science from 1940 to 1943, and chairman of the Department of Zoology from 1942 to 1948, and again from 1952 to 1957.[2][5] As an administrator he helped found the university's Bodega Marine Laboratory, Sagehen Creek Field Station, and Cancer Research Genetics Laboratory.[2] In 1956 he published a history of zoological research at Berkeley spanning the period from the university's 1868 founding through 1956,[6] followed by a 1988 companion article covering the intervening 32 years.[7]

Research

 
The third eye (frontal organ) of a frog, seen between the regular eyes.

Eakin was known for his research of animal eyes and photoreceptor cells, especially the parietal eye (the so-called "third eye") and associated pineal gland of vertebrates.[2][5] He was persuaded to study the parietal eyes of reptiles by his colleague Robert C. Stebbins,[8] and the two published several articles on the parietal eye of western fence lizards. Eakin, alone or with colleagues, published many other papers on the anatomy and function of reptilian parietal eyes and similar structures in amphibians.[9][10] Eakin's 1973 monograph, The Third Eye, was received as comprehensive and detailed enough for biologists, yet in a style approachable to non-scientists or undergraduates.[11][12] He also studied amphibian development and was recognized as a skilled and early practitioner of electron microscopy.[2][11] Eakin received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1953, and the Boston Museum of Science's Walker Prize in 1976. He authored or co-authored over 200 scientific papers, was elected president of the Western Society of Naturalists in 1949 and American Society of Zoologists in 1975, and was a fellow of the California Academy of Sciences for 52 years.[2][5]

"Great scientists speak again"

In 1970, in order to combat boredom and absenteeism in his introductory zoology course, Eakin gave his first lecture in character, appearing unannounced in full costume and makeup as William Harvey, the 17th-century physician who made the first complete descriptions of blood circulation. His portrayals of historic scientists, including Charles Darwin, Louis Pasteur, and Gregor Mendel, often involved elaborate wigs, makeup, costumes, and props, aided by professional makeup artists and drama teachers-[5] his portrayal of Darwin required up to three hours of makeup, wig, and beard preparation.[13] His lectures were popular with students from the start and attracted international attention, with profiles in publications such as LIFE,[14] Der Spiegel,[15] and the International Herald Tribune. He gave guest lectures at universities nationwide, and in 1975 compiled the text of his lectures, along with photographs, diagrams, and stage directions, into a book, Great Scientists Speak Again. Eakin typically gave six lectures in character during a course, with each "guest lecturer" introducing particular concepts. The figures portrayed, in order of appearance during a typical course,[16] were:

Eakin considered his impersonation of Spemann to be his most authoritative, due to knowing him personally from working in his lab in Germany, helping translate a book of his into English, and becoming good friends.[16]

Eakin was recognized for his teaching long before he first donned a wig: in 1963 he was the first recipient of Berkeley's Senior Citation for Distinguished Teaching and in 1968 received the Outstanding Teaching Award from the Associated Students of the University of California.[2][5]

Later years (1977–1999)

Eakin retired in 1977 and was honored with the Berkeley Citation, the highest honor given to Berkeley faculty. He continued to periodically perform his lectures in character until 1988, and also taught embryology at several historically black colleges and universities in the southern U.S., including Tougaloo College, Mississippi; Talladega College and Tuskegee University, Alabama; and Fisk University in Tennessee.[2][17]

Eakin was a member of the First Congregational Church of Berkeley for over 60 years, where his first wife, Mary Mulford Eakin – ordained by the United Church of Christ – was associate minister.[2][18] He co-authored a history of the church in 1999. In a 1981 interview, Eakin stressed that matters of faith and science should be kept separate – as he did in his own life as both a Christian and a scientist – and that proponents of teaching creationism alongside evolution in public schools should similarly recognize the differences. "The great concepts of justice, mercy and love- science cannot test them or write a formula", he said, "They are human beliefs and are outside the realm of science."[19]

His first wife Mary, with whom he had three children (one of whom died prior to 1956[1]), died in 1980. He later remarried Barbara Nichols, a former professor at the University of California, San Francisco.[2]

Eakin died on November 25, 1999, at his home in Danville, California, at the age of 89. He was survived by his wife Barbara, a son and daughter from his first marriage, and two stepdaughters.[5]

Books

  • Vertebrate Embrology: A Laboratory Manual. University of California Press. 1973.
  • The Third Eye. University of California Press. 1973.
  • Great Scientists Speak Again. University of California Press. 1975.
  • The Future is Watching: A History of the First 125 Years of First Congregational Church of Berkeley. First Congregational Church of Berkeley. 1999. ISBN 9780967530505. (with James M. Spitze)

References

  1. ^ a b c "Eakin, Richard Marshall". Who's Who in the West. Marquis Who's Who, Incorporated. 1954. p. 178.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bern, Howard; Pearson, Oliver; Wilt, Fred (1999). "Richard Eakin, Zoology: Berkeley". University of California: In Memoriam, 1999. Academic Senate, University of California. pp. 43–46.
  3. ^ "Honored at Party". Berkeley Daily Gazette. July 11, 1935. p. 6.
  4. ^ Kreuger, M; Colwell, R. N.; Gardner, M. W. (1958). "Walter Mulford, Forestry: Berkeley". University of California: In Memoriam, April 1958. Academic Senate, University of California. pp. 79–81.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Oliver, Myrna (December 7, 1999). "R.M. Eakin; Professor Depicted Famed Scientists". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  6. ^ Eakin, Richard M. (1956). "History of Zoology at the University of California, Berkeley". BIOS. 27 (2): 67–90. JSTOR 4605755.
  7. ^ Eakin, Richard M. (1988). History of Zoology at Berkeley. Department of Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
  8. ^ Eakin, Richard M. (1973). The Third Eye. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02413-7.
  9. ^ Eakin, R. M. (1960). "Further observations on the fine structure of the parietal eye of lizards". The Journal of Cell Biology. 8 (2): 483–499. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.283.683. doi:10.1083/jcb.8.2.483. PMC 2224933. PMID 13725484.
  10. ^ Eakin, R. M. (1961). "Photoreceptors in the amphibian frontal organ". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 47 (7): 1084–1088. Bibcode:1961PNAS...47.1084E. doi:10.1073/pnas.47.7.1084. JSTOR 71134. PMC 221329. PMID 16590856.
  11. ^ a b Gans, Carl (1974). "Review: The Third Eye by Richard M. Eakin". Science. 184 (4137): 681–682. doi:10.1126/science.184.4137.681-c. JSTOR 1738806.
  12. ^ Bagnara, Joseph T. (1975). "Review: The Third Eye by Richard M. Eakin". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 50 (2): 221–222. doi:10.1086/408528. JSTOR 2821982.
  13. ^ Honan, William H. (December 5, 1999). "Richard Eakin Dies at 89; Did His Lectures in Costume". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  14. ^ "A Professor Dresses Up Zoology". LIFE. 23 July 1971. pp. 62–63. ISSN 0024-3019.
  15. ^ "Personalien: Richard Eakin". Der Spiegel (in German). June 14, 1971.
  16. ^ a b Eakin, Richard M. (1982). Great Scientists Speak Again (2nd ed.). Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-0520047686.
  17. ^ Wake, Marvalee H. "Richard M. Eakin—Great Scientists Speak Again". SICB Digital Library. Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  18. ^ Sanders, Robert (December 1, 1999). "Richard M. Eakin, a zoology professor who enthralled UC Berkeley students with costumed lectures, is dead at 89". U.C. Berkeley. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  19. ^ Wheat, Jack (October 29, 1981). "Science, faith division is stressed". The Tuscaloosa News. p. 5.

External links

  • Great Scientists Speak Again at Google Books
  • Works by or about Richard M. Eakin in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

richard, eakin, richard, marshall, eakin, 1910, november, 1999, american, zoologist, professor, university, california, berkeley, widely, known, portraying, prominent, historical, scientists, during, some, lectures, dressing, costume, speaking, character, ente. Richard Marshall Eakin ˈ eɪ k ɪ n AY kin May 5 1910 November 25 1999 was an American zoologist and professor at the University of California Berkeley He was widely known for portraying prominent historical scientists during some of his lectures dressing in costume and speaking in character to entertain and inform his students A 1953 Guggenheim fellow he wrote several books and more than 200 scientific papers His research focused on eyes and vision in animals especially the parietal eye or third eye of vertebrates as well as animal embryology He served as chairman of the UC Berkeley Department of Zoology for over 10 years was elected president of the Western Society of Naturalists and American Society of Zoologists and was a fellow of the California Academy of Sciences Richard M EakinEakin as Gregor Mendel demonstrating genetic inheritance in pea plants circa 1974BornRichard Marshall Eakin 1910 05 05 May 5 1910Florence ColoradoDiedNovember 25 1999 1999 11 25 aged 89 Danville CaliforniaNationalityAmericanAlma materUC BerkeleyKnown forImpersonating famous scientists Parietal eye researchSpouse s Mary Mulford 1935 1980 3 children Barbara Nichols 1999 AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship 1953 Scientific careerFieldsZoology EmbryologyInstitutionsUC BerkeleyDoctoral advisorJ Franklin DanielEakin was born in Florence Colorado and grew up in Tulsa Oklahoma He initially studied at the University of Tulsa planning a career in the clergy before switching to zoology earning a bachelor s degree and doctorate at UC Berkeley After postdoctoral studies in Germany under Hans Spemann he returned to UC Berkeley as a faculty member where he would teach for over 40 years earning awards and recognition for his teaching before retiring with highest faculty honors Contents 1 Early life and education 1910 1936 2 Career 1936 1977 2 1 Research 2 2 Great scientists speak again 3 Later years 1977 1999 4 Books 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and education 1910 1936 EditRichard Eakin was born on May 5 1910 in Florence Colorado to parents Marshall and Mary Elizabeth Eakin 1 He attended high school in Tulsa Oklahoma graduating in 1927 He initially planned to go into the clergy enrolling in the University of Tulsa and studying subjects such as theology and Greek for two years before deciding to pursue zoology 2 In 1929 Eakin moved to Berkeley California to attend UC Berkeley He earned his A B in 1931 then enrolled in graduate school under J Franklin Daniel an ichthyologist and embryologist For his dissertation Eakin studied the development of salamander and frog embryos earning a PhD in zoology in 1935 From 1935 to 1936 he worked in Germany as a postdoctoral scholar in the laboratories of embryologists Otto Mangold de and Nobel laureate Hans Spemann 2 On August 8 1935 1 Eakin married Mary Mulford daughter of Walter Mulford a Berkeley professor of forestry 3 4 Career 1936 1977 EditUpon his return to UC Berkeley in 1936 Eakin was appointed instructor of zoology becoming assistant professor in 1940 and full professor in 1949 He was assistant dean of the College of Letters and Science from 1940 to 1943 and chairman of the Department of Zoology from 1942 to 1948 and again from 1952 to 1957 2 5 As an administrator he helped found the university s Bodega Marine Laboratory Sagehen Creek Field Station and Cancer Research Genetics Laboratory 2 In 1956 he published a history of zoological research at Berkeley spanning the period from the university s 1868 founding through 1956 6 followed by a 1988 companion article covering the intervening 32 years 7 Research Edit The third eye frontal organ of a frog seen between the regular eyes Eakin was known for his research of animal eyes and photoreceptor cells especially the parietal eye the so called third eye and associated pineal gland of vertebrates 2 5 He was persuaded to study the parietal eyes of reptiles by his colleague Robert C Stebbins 8 and the two published several articles on the parietal eye of western fence lizards Eakin alone or with colleagues published many other papers on the anatomy and function of reptilian parietal eyes and similar structures in amphibians 9 10 Eakin s 1973 monograph The Third Eye was received as comprehensive and detailed enough for biologists yet in a style approachable to non scientists or undergraduates 11 12 He also studied amphibian development and was recognized as a skilled and early practitioner of electron microscopy 2 11 Eakin received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1953 and the Boston Museum of Science s Walker Prize in 1976 He authored or co authored over 200 scientific papers was elected president of the Western Society of Naturalists in 1949 and American Society of Zoologists in 1975 and was a fellow of the California Academy of Sciences for 52 years 2 5 Great scientists speak again Edit In 1970 in order to combat boredom and absenteeism in his introductory zoology course Eakin gave his first lecture in character appearing unannounced in full costume and makeup as William Harvey the 17th century physician who made the first complete descriptions of blood circulation His portrayals of historic scientists including Charles Darwin Louis Pasteur and Gregor Mendel often involved elaborate wigs makeup costumes and props aided by professional makeup artists and drama teachers 5 his portrayal of Darwin required up to three hours of makeup wig and beard preparation 13 His lectures were popular with students from the start and attracted international attention with profiles in publications such as LIFE 14 Der Spiegel 15 and the International Herald Tribune He gave guest lectures at universities nationwide and in 1975 compiled the text of his lectures along with photographs diagrams and stage directions into a book Great Scientists Speak Again Eakin typically gave six lectures in character during a course with each guest lecturer introducing particular concepts The figures portrayed in order of appearance during a typical course 16 were William Harvey 1578 1657 William Beaumont 1785 1853 Hans Spemann 1869 1941 Gregor Mendel 1822 1884 Louis Pasteur 1822 1895 Charles Darwin 1809 1882 Eakin considered his impersonation of Spemann to be his most authoritative due to knowing him personally from working in his lab in Germany helping translate a book of his into English and becoming good friends 16 Eakin was recognized for his teaching long before he first donned a wig in 1963 he was the first recipient of Berkeley s Senior Citation for Distinguished Teaching and in 1968 received the Outstanding Teaching Award from the Associated Students of the University of California 2 5 Later years 1977 1999 EditEakin retired in 1977 and was honored with the Berkeley Citation the highest honor given to Berkeley faculty He continued to periodically perform his lectures in character until 1988 and also taught embryology at several historically black colleges and universities in the southern U S including Tougaloo College Mississippi Talladega College and Tuskegee University Alabama and Fisk University in Tennessee 2 17 Eakin was a member of the First Congregational Church of Berkeley for over 60 years where his first wife Mary Mulford Eakin ordained by the United Church of Christ was associate minister 2 18 He co authored a history of the church in 1999 In a 1981 interview Eakin stressed that matters of faith and science should be kept separate as he did in his own life as both a Christian and a scientist and that proponents of teaching creationism alongside evolution in public schools should similarly recognize the differences The great concepts of justice mercy and love science cannot test them or write a formula he said They are human beliefs and are outside the realm of science 19 His first wife Mary with whom he had three children one of whom died prior to 1956 1 died in 1980 He later remarried Barbara Nichols a former professor at the University of California San Francisco 2 Eakin died on November 25 1999 at his home in Danville California at the age of 89 He was survived by his wife Barbara a son and daughter from his first marriage and two stepdaughters 5 Books EditVertebrate Embrology A Laboratory Manual University of California Press 1973 The Third Eye University of California Press 1973 Great Scientists Speak Again University of California Press 1975 The Future is Watching A History of the First 125 Years of First Congregational Church of Berkeley First Congregational Church of Berkeley 1999 ISBN 9780967530505 with James M Spitze References Edit a b c Eakin Richard Marshall Who s Who in the West Marquis Who s Who Incorporated 1954 p 178 a b c d e f g h i j k Bern Howard Pearson Oliver Wilt Fred 1999 Richard Eakin Zoology Berkeley University of California In Memoriam 1999 Academic Senate University of California pp 43 46 Honored at Party Berkeley Daily Gazette July 11 1935 p 6 Kreuger M Colwell R N Gardner M W 1958 Walter Mulford Forestry Berkeley University of California In Memoriam April 1958 Academic Senate University of California pp 79 81 a b c d e f Oliver Myrna December 7 1999 R M Eakin Professor Depicted Famed Scientists Los Angeles Times Retrieved 25 June 2015 Eakin Richard M 1956 History of Zoology at the University of California Berkeley BIOS 27 2 67 90 JSTOR 4605755 Eakin Richard M 1988 History of Zoology at Berkeley Department of Zoology University of California Berkeley Eakin Richard M 1973 The Third Eye University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02413 7 Eakin R M 1960 Further observations on the fine structure of the parietal eye of lizards The Journal of Cell Biology 8 2 483 499 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 283 683 doi 10 1083 jcb 8 2 483 PMC 2224933 PMID 13725484 Eakin R M 1961 Photoreceptors in the amphibian frontal organ Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 47 7 1084 1088 Bibcode 1961PNAS 47 1084E doi 10 1073 pnas 47 7 1084 JSTOR 71134 PMC 221329 PMID 16590856 a b Gans Carl 1974 Review The Third Eye by Richard M Eakin Science 184 4137 681 682 doi 10 1126 science 184 4137 681 c JSTOR 1738806 Bagnara Joseph T 1975 Review The Third Eye by Richard M Eakin The Quarterly Review of Biology 50 2 221 222 doi 10 1086 408528 JSTOR 2821982 Honan William H December 5 1999 Richard Eakin Dies at 89 Did His Lectures in Costume The New York Times Retrieved 25 June 2015 A Professor Dresses Up Zoology LIFE 23 July 1971 pp 62 63 ISSN 0024 3019 Personalien Richard Eakin Der Spiegel in German June 14 1971 a b Eakin Richard M 1982 Great Scientists Speak Again 2nd ed Berkeley Calif University of California Press pp 1 3 ISBN 978 0520047686 Wake Marvalee H Richard M Eakin Great Scientists Speak Again SICB Digital Library Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology Retrieved 6 November 2015 Sanders Robert December 1 1999 Richard M Eakin a zoology professor who enthralled UC Berkeley students with costumed lectures is dead at 89 U C Berkeley Retrieved 25 June 2015 Wheat Jack October 29 1981 Science faith division is stressed The Tuscaloosa News p 5 External links Edit Biography portal Biology portal San Francisco Bay Area portalGreat Scientists Speak Again at Google Books Works by or about Richard M Eakin in libraries WorldCat catalog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard M Eakin amp oldid 1063483112, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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