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| James Watson joins a field ornithology class at
the Biological Station. He spoke fondly to the students about his
days as an ornithology student at UMBS in 1946. He remains an avid
birder today. (Photo by Gary Williams) |
After 57 years, James Watson returned to the U-M Biological Station (UMBS)
in northern Michigan in August. The Nobel Prize-winner picked up where
he left offwith a pair of binoculars in his hand.
Watson last was at UMBS in the summer of 1946 as an ornithology student
from the University of Chicago. The Biological Station draws faculty and
students from U-M and around the world. On his recent visit, Watson happily
joined a field ornithology class at a marsh with black terns and great
blue herons flying overhead.
Watson's early interest in ornithology led him to focus on genetics as
a graduate student at Indiana University. Seven years after leaving UMBS,
working as a post-doctoral fellow at Cambridge University, Watson and
colleague Francis Crick elucidated the helical structure of the DNA molecule.
They received a Nobel Prize in 1961, and forever changed modern biology.
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Nobel Prize-winning geneticist James Watson talks
with LSA Dean Terrence McDonald prior to Watson’s speech, “From
the Double Helix to the Human Genome Project,” Aug. 5 at the
U-M Biological Station in northern Michigan. (Photo by Gary Williams)
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"One reason we won the race was that I was the only person who thought
of it as a race," Watson told an audience of 300 gathered at the station
on the evening of Aug. 5 to hear his lecture, "From the Double Helix to
the Human Genome Project."
Watson's lecture style was familiar to readers of his books, including
his 1968 classic, "The Double Helix." He delivered frank, and at times
funny, commentary on the human drama of genetics research and likened
it to the plot of a compelling novel. Of his famous book, he said it was
"too good of a story not to be written up."
Watson has remained a leader in the field of genetics to this day, lending
his reputation and expertise to recent efforts such as mapping the human
genome and applying this newfound knowledge to treating human diseases.
Watson acknowledged that new advances, such as the ability to clone organisms
and to transfer genetic material between species, raise moral issues within
society. He said college courses in moral philosophy should be taught
alongside molecular biology.
"We are trying to understand what our genes are programming us to do.
We should accept this and not deny it. Don't ask us to behave in ways
that go against our human nature," Watson said. "But I say this believing
that human nature is more good than bad."
At the lecture, LSA Dean Terrence McDonald and UMBS Director Knute Nadelhoffer
also spoke. Nadelhoffer introduced Watson as having written "the most
influential paper in biology in the 20th century."
Watson returned to UMBS as part of a summer-long lecture series featuring
distinguished scientists. The Biological Station, founded in 1909, is
dedicated to education and research in environmental biology, including
global climate change. Watson was this year's Pettingill Lecturer, an
endowed lectureship named in honor of the late Olin Sewall Pettingill,
who taught at UMBS for 35 yearsand was a world-renowned ornithologist.