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OBITUARIES
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Jack
Myers
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Jack
Edgar Myers
Jack Edgar Myers,
whose career featured the unusual combination of serving science education
and research and serving children as science editor of Highlights
magazine, died of cancer on December 28 in his Austin, Texas, apartment
at Westminster Manor. He was 93.
Myers, named to the
prestigious National Academy of Sciences in 1975, earned numerous other
honors for contributing to the understanding of photosynthesis, phototrophic
growth, and the physiology of algae, including the Charles F. Kettering
Award from the American Society of Plant Physiologists. In the presentation
of the Kettering Award, Myerss wide influence on the field was emphasized,
along with recognition that his career shows in an exemplary manner
how wide- ranging scientific achievement can be combined with humanism,
modesty, and wisdom. In 1998, the American Society of Gravitational
and Space Biology awarded Myers its highest honor, the Founders Award,
for his seminal work providing the foundation for practical applications
of algae as a source of food in the closed environments needed for space
exploration.
Following his appointment
to the University of Texas faculty in 1941, he spent 58 years there, taking
emeritus status in 1980 but continuing to occupy his lab and actively
conduct research until 1999. He authored more than 100 papers for scientific
journals and publications.
Myers called himself
lucky for being able to work as a scientist . . . there was always
another challenge, because there was always another question.
That approach and
a devotion to the scientific process guided Myerss work at Highlights
for Children, Inc., an educational publishing company founded 60 years
ago by his parents, Garry Cleveland Myers and Caroline Clark Myers. Writing
for children, Jack Myers later recalled, was a challenge I hadnt
counted on, but my Pop was of a mind that, You can do this. Youre
a scientist, arent you?
His duties as science
editor began in 1958. In search of authors, he sought out scientists who
have a great insight into their subjects. The limitation is that it is
hard to find people who will write in the language that kids will find
sufficiently easy to be interesting. In a typical reaction to a
submitted piece, he once wrote, I think the author was trying to
teach about a tidal marshnot tell a story and make it an exciting
place. . . . If were going to have a muddy adventure,
something has to happen. And we really cant have an adventure if
we must catalog all the kinds of things that can happen in a marsh.
Highlights
magazine editor Christine French Clark noted that Uncle Jack,
as everyone at the magazine office called him, had everyones great
respect as a scientist and an editor and a writer who speaks to kids in
a very honest, forthright way.
As part of his Highlights
job, Myers responded to as many as 400 letters a year from young readers
who asked him virtually everything from the difference between frogs and
toads to why human skin wrinkles in water. His answers often were disarming.
When a child asked why every dog I know goes around and around in
circles before lying down, Myers answered, I have heard the
idea that the circling . . . is a behavior inherited from wild ancestors.
That sounds reasonable enough, though I cannot be sure it is the best
explanation. If you find a better explanation, please let me know.
For Myers, science
was the search for understanding of our world. All the fun and excitement
is in the search. Thats where the action is. He decried the
teaching of science as a collection of facts. . . .When it becomes
a bunch of facts, it is a sterile and rather unexciting subject. But the
real fact is that science is an open-ended endeavor and never deals in
certainty. Kids do not get much exposure to how we know. I think it makes
science a lot more fun, and it does a lot more useful service for Highlights
to treat the question: How do you find something out?
Jack Myers was born
on July 10, 1913, in Boyds Mills, Pennsylvania, one of three children.
He recalled having been a mediocre student until ninth grade,
when he was fired up by his teachers of English, mathematics,
and general science, the last having had, in Myerss words, a
remarkable ability to stimulate real interest in science among his students.
Myers attended Juniata
College in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, for his undergraduate work, which
included a major in chemistry. He earned a masters degree in 1935
from Montana State University and then chose the University of Minnesota
for his doctoral work, concentrating on plant photosynthesis and achieving
his degree status in 1939.
He had chosen Minnesota
in part because Evelyn De Turck, a friend from undergraduate days, had
taken a job in Minneapolis, with plans to do graduate studies at the university.
By 1937, said Myers, we decided to get married. We pooled
our incomes. Mine was $66 a month, and hers was $33. Depression days!
You could do it then on that amount of money. They had four daughters,
and Jack was devoted to his wife and children. Mrs. Myers died in 1997.
In 1960, when his
younger brother, Garry Cleveland Myers, Jr., and his wife Mary died in
a plane crash, Jack, Evelyn, and their daughters expanded their family
to include five additional children. Garry Myers, Jr., had been the senior
business executive of Highlights for Children, Inc., from 1949 until his
death. As a result of this tragedy, Jack Myers stepped into a leadership
role on the Highlights corporate board of directors. He served as a mentor
to his nephews, including Garry Cleveland Myers III, a long-time executive
who was CEO of Highlights for Children from 1981 until his death in 2005,
and Kent L. Brown, Jr., who started in the editorial offices in 1971 and
is now editor-in-chief, as well as to his grandnephew, Kent S. Johnson,
who is the current CEO of the company. Myerss influence extended
to four generations of the entire Myers family: He combined a great sense
of humor, personal ethics, wisdom, humility, and soft-spoken thoughtfulness
to lead through inter-generational transitions, always nurturing a strong
commitment to family unity and to stewardship of the Highlights corporation.
In 1939 Myers was
awarded a National Research Council postdoctoral fellowship and joined
the staff of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, to concentrate
on his studies in photosynthesis.
The University of
Texas recruited him in 1941 as an assistant professor of zoology. Promotions
followed, to associate professor in 1946 and professor in 1948. In 1956,
his title expanded to professor of botany and zoology. During his years
at the University of Texas, he earned honors for teaching and, in 1959,
won a Guggenheim Fellowship.
In 1993, the College
of Natural Sciences at the University of Texas named Myers to its Hall
of Honor. A colleague wrote, Jack Myers has been, and continues
to be, a true hands-on research scientista molecular biologist 50
years before this discipline became a recognizable field of research.
He is the consummate faculty member in the best sense of the word, and
one who has a pure interest in the learning enjoyed by others as well
as by himself. In 2006, Norman Hackerman, chemistry professor emeritus
and former president of the University of Texas at Austin, described Myers
as a pure scientist, very interested in understanding nature betterand
he was a good guy besides.
Along with his academic
papers and the countless articles he wrote for Highlights, Myers published
a number of books that focused on young readers and the scientific process,
including Can Birds Get Lost? What Makes Popcorn Pop? and What
Happened to the Mammoths?
In the 1990s, Myers
devoted considerable time to training, inspiring, and mentoring young
science and nature writers with an interest in writing for children. Much
of that work was done at the annual conferences of the Highlights Foundation
Writers Workshop held in Chautauqua, New York.
Myers is survived
by his four daughters and their husbands: Shirley and Fred Wendlandt of
Mullin, Texas; Jacquelyn and Jim Leonard of Lakeway, Texas; Linda and
Allan Anderson of Ashland, Oregon; and Kathleen and Steve Holland of Spicewood,
Texas, as well as by 10 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He
also is survived by four of his brothers five children and their
spouses: Tom Myers of Austin; Fred and Jennifer Myers of Austin; Patricia
and John Mikelson of Columbus, Ohio; and Marie Jolene Rich of Portland,
Maine, as well as by their six children and six grandchildren.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions in the memory of Jack Myers may be sent to the Jack Myers
Scholarship Fund, Highlights Foundation, 814 Court Street, Honesdale,
PA 18431 or to Hospice Austin, 4107 Spicewood Springs Road, Suite 100,
Austin, TX 78759.
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