Gerry Fink on Writing the Whitehead’s History
  Gerry Fink     Biography    
Recorded: 13 Nov 2023

I’m currently writing a book about the history of the Whitehead Institute, which includes the history of the Human Genome Project. I've been collecting information about the founding of The Whitehead Institute and recently discovered a letter from Jim Watson to Jack Whitehead. In his letter, Jim Watson told Jack Whitehead that he would not accept money from Jack Whitehead to build a Whitehead Institute at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. (I got it out of The Cold Spring Harbor archive.)

Gerald Fink, geneticist, changed the field of molecular yeast biology. He is a professor of genetics at MIT, a founding member of both the Whitehead Institute and the American Cancer Society and a member of the National Academy of Sciences (1981). After receiving his Ph.D. from Yale University, he was a part of the Cornell faculty for fifteen years and also served as president of the Genetics Society of America.

In 1976, Fink’s lab succeeded in performing yeast transformation. Gerald Fink currently researches baker's yeast and explores critical pathways in cell growth and metabolism; applications include cancer research and the development of new anti-fungal drugs. He also directs a plant research group heralded for new insights into root growth and salt metabolism.

Although Fink grew up on Long Island, it was not until he attended the 1966 Symposium that he visited Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. In 1970, he began teaching the CSHL course on yeast molecular biology and continued doing so for 17 years. In 1999, he received the first honorary doctorate awarded by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.

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