Hal Dixon
Duration: 51 mins 10 secs
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Description: | An interview with Hal Dixon, Fellow of King's and distinguished bichemist at Cambridge University. talking about his life and work. Filmed by Alan Macfarlane, lasts about fifty minutes, filmed on 3rd August 2007 in his rooms in Cambridge. Generously supported by the Leverhulme Trust. |
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Created: | 2011-03-21 13:23 | ||||
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Collection: |
Film Interviews with Leading Thinkers
Interviews of people associated with King's College, Cambridge |
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Publisher: | University of Cambridge | ||||
Copyright: | C.H. Wheeler | ||||
Language: | eng (English) | ||||
Keywords: | biochemistry; Cambridge; | ||||
Credits: |
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Transcript
Transcript:
0:09:07 Born in Dublin in 1928; most notable ancestor was Charles Bush, a member of the Irish Parliament when the British Government forced through the Act of Union, which he opposed; later Lord Chief Justice of Ireland; father held the chair of Botany in Trinity, Dublin; main work on describing how water gets up tall trees; my parents had been married for twenty-one years when I was born so brothers much older; one brother was a neurologist, the other, Kendall, was a Fellow at King's; I probably chose biochemistry by seeing some of Kendall's books; mother born in 1881; her father became Secretary of the Irish Land Commission
5:35:16 First went to day school near house, later to a boarding prep school in North Dublin; went to St Columba's where I didn't settle and went instead to Shrewsbury; influenced by two chemists, Phillips and Larkin, and especially by Frank Macarthy who was a biologist; had become interested in sciences at prep school where best friend, Peter Schwarz, became an organic chemist at Edinburgh; enjoyed physics and chemistry and found relevant books at home
9:49:05 Applied to King's for a major scholarship; Donald Beves senior tutor at the time; suggestion that he was a spy rejected by Kendall; did play bridge with him; King's then a much smaller fellowship; A.C. Pigou, the economist, enjoyed his reputation for misogyny, and on engagement received letter with a cheque to buy a crash helmet; read chemistry, physics and physiology for the first year, then did both biochemistry and chemistry over four years for part two; biochemistry was a tiny subject with no supervisions but encouraged to talk with the staff; about twenty students at that time
17:07:22 Had been interested in Frank Young's lectures on hormones, particularly insulin, so became his research student; he got money for work on treatment of rheumatoid arthritis; Fred Sanger was my official supervisor; the research failed to produce a solution although present steroids in some way replicate hormones; Sanger thought very clearly, introduced working methods and knew when to drop them; PhD took about four years then got a demonstratorship in the Department of Biochemistry in 1954; got a Junior Research Fellowship at King's just before that; Shepard was Provost at that time; older scientists were frustrated by him as they didn't think he gave science enough weight among fellowship electors; he was a classicist and popularized the Greek play
23:51:15 Own work on protein chemistry; classification and naming; served on the editorial board of the 'Biochemical Journal' for seven years; Nomenclature Committee
30:09:23 Interest in Russia began through observation by Brian Hartley that no one in the department could speak Russian; bought a 'teach yourself' book the next day and enjoyed learning it; pressed by Frank Young to go to Russia and went to Moscow to the Institute for Physico-Chemical and Radiation Biology (later Institute for Molecular Biology) for eight months 1964-5; timing was good as Stalin had been dead long enough for a lot of liberalization to have occurred; when Khrushchev fell support for Lysenko faded and one could learn real biology; two years later things closed up again had had to wait for glasnost twenty-five years later; facilities were not good but the lab technicians were usually very skilled and could make things for you; getting beakers or reagents which were only available commercially abroad was very difficult
36:45:03 In exchange Evgeny Severin came to King's during 1968; did not feel that we were being spied on; did not drop relations even before glasnost; Russians usually got permission to go abroad for conferences; closest friend and colleague was told by KGB not to cultivate a friendship with an American couple which he refused to do so did not get permission to travel abroad
41:08:22 When a research student had a Durham Fund grant from King's to go to America, but otherwise have only taken short visits for conferences; work usually done in small groups but no really close collaborators; usually had two research students at any one time; enjoyed teaching; research work on copper; aided work of John Walsh on Wilson's disease
47:34:16 Value of Cambridge for academic research is to be thrown together with people whose subject isn't one's own but is close to it; think the supervision system is very important and should ...
5:35:16 First went to day school near house, later to a boarding prep school in North Dublin; went to St Columba's where I didn't settle and went instead to Shrewsbury; influenced by two chemists, Phillips and Larkin, and especially by Frank Macarthy who was a biologist; had become interested in sciences at prep school where best friend, Peter Schwarz, became an organic chemist at Edinburgh; enjoyed physics and chemistry and found relevant books at home
9:49:05 Applied to King's for a major scholarship; Donald Beves senior tutor at the time; suggestion that he was a spy rejected by Kendall; did play bridge with him; King's then a much smaller fellowship; A.C. Pigou, the economist, enjoyed his reputation for misogyny, and on engagement received letter with a cheque to buy a crash helmet; read chemistry, physics and physiology for the first year, then did both biochemistry and chemistry over four years for part two; biochemistry was a tiny subject with no supervisions but encouraged to talk with the staff; about twenty students at that time
17:07:22 Had been interested in Frank Young's lectures on hormones, particularly insulin, so became his research student; he got money for work on treatment of rheumatoid arthritis; Fred Sanger was my official supervisor; the research failed to produce a solution although present steroids in some way replicate hormones; Sanger thought very clearly, introduced working methods and knew when to drop them; PhD took about four years then got a demonstratorship in the Department of Biochemistry in 1954; got a Junior Research Fellowship at King's just before that; Shepard was Provost at that time; older scientists were frustrated by him as they didn't think he gave science enough weight among fellowship electors; he was a classicist and popularized the Greek play
23:51:15 Own work on protein chemistry; classification and naming; served on the editorial board of the 'Biochemical Journal' for seven years; Nomenclature Committee
30:09:23 Interest in Russia began through observation by Brian Hartley that no one in the department could speak Russian; bought a 'teach yourself' book the next day and enjoyed learning it; pressed by Frank Young to go to Russia and went to Moscow to the Institute for Physico-Chemical and Radiation Biology (later Institute for Molecular Biology) for eight months 1964-5; timing was good as Stalin had been dead long enough for a lot of liberalization to have occurred; when Khrushchev fell support for Lysenko faded and one could learn real biology; two years later things closed up again had had to wait for glasnost twenty-five years later; facilities were not good but the lab technicians were usually very skilled and could make things for you; getting beakers or reagents which were only available commercially abroad was very difficult
36:45:03 In exchange Evgeny Severin came to King's during 1968; did not feel that we were being spied on; did not drop relations even before glasnost; Russians usually got permission to go abroad for conferences; closest friend and colleague was told by KGB not to cultivate a friendship with an American couple which he refused to do so did not get permission to travel abroad
41:08:22 When a research student had a Durham Fund grant from King's to go to America, but otherwise have only taken short visits for conferences; work usually done in small groups but no really close collaborators; usually had two research students at any one time; enjoyed teaching; research work on copper; aided work of John Walsh on Wilson's disease
47:34:16 Value of Cambridge for academic research is to be thrown together with people whose subject isn't one's own but is close to it; think the supervision system is very important and should ...
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