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A Touchstone for Marine Chemists and Students Retires

John Farrington was celebrated by scientists and future scientists

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John Farrington presides over his last commencement as vice president for Academic Programs at WHOI in September.
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In September 2005, John Farrington presided over his last commencement as Dean and Vice President for Academic Programs at WHOI. He stepped down from the position in November after 15 years leading the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography. Photo by Tom Kleindinst, WHOI.
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Passionate about science, education, and the welfare of his colleagues. A quiet champion for diversity—of gender, race, nationality, and intellectual approach—in oceanography. Colleagues and friends invoked such phrases to describe John Farrington, chemical oceanographer and longtime dean and vice president for Academic Programs at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. In November 2005, he stepped aside from his academic post after 15 years, and he will retire as a senior scientist in February 2006 after 34 years at the Institution.

During his tenure as dean, 366 students in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering were awarded graduate degrees, and the Institution recruited and hosted 198 postdoctoral fellows and 476 summer student fellows.

Farrington also became the first WHOI researcher to receive the B.H. Ketchum Award, given by  a panel of colleagues to a scientist who demonstrates innovative approaches to coastal research, leadership in the scientific community, and attention to the effects of marine pollution on the coastal environment and society.

A native of New Bedford, Mass., Farrington joined WHOI in 1971 with a postdoctoral award in the laboratory of organic geochemist Max Blumer. A one-year appointment turned into a full-time job, and he rose through the ranks of the Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry Department. Within 10 years, colleagues elevated him to the rank of senior scientist.

He established himself as a leader in the study of organic geochemistry in the ocean, conducting pioneering research on petroleum in the marine environment, on the mobility of contaminants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in seafloor sediments, and on the role of natural organic chemicals in the ocean. Along the way, he participated in 18 research cruises (eight as chief scientist), authored 117 refereed scientific papers, and contributed to more than 30 policy, education, or public information documents.

From 1981 to 1986, he served as the director of WHOI’s Rinehart Coastal Research Center, but his leadership has extended well beyond Woods Hole. He has been a trustee of Bermuda Biological Station for Research since 1991, and he served on numerous national and international committees. For his service to the National Research Council, he was awarded the honorary title of national associate of the National Academy of Sciences.

Farrington became associate director for education and dean of graduate studies in 1990 and vice president for Academic Programs in 2002. During his tenure, Farrington led the effort to have WHOI’s Academic Programs accredited, and he was a tireless advocate for students inside and outside the Institution, particularly for young women entering science. He is also credited with expanding and strengthening the postdoctoral program.

“I have stayed at WHOI all these years because of my colleagues on the scientific and technical staff; the spirit of access to the sea; the employees who provide the support that enables scientists and engineers to carry out research ideas; the interactions with world-class students and postdocs; and the private support and advice of the trustees and corporators that enable freedom to pursue innovative ideas,” Farrington said.

In celebration of his research, colleagues and protégés, led by Associate Scientist Chris Reddy and Assistant Scientist Liz Kujawinski, organized a Nov. 8 symposium on “Advances in Coastal Organic Biogeochemistry.” The program included James Quinn, emeritus professor from the University of Rhode Island and Farrington’s mentor, and 10 speakers from as far away as Alaska and Japan.

“John’s most important teaching occurred simply in the way that he lived his life,” wrote Jeff Parkin, a one-time student in Farrington’s lab and now a middle school counselor. “He would always seem to make time for you, no matter how busy his schedule. He could find humor and patience in trying situations. He treated your most modest contribution as something significant, and he so deeply cared for his students.”

Financial support for the symposium on biogeochemistry was provided by the WHOI Director of Research, the Coastal Ocean Institute, and the Department of Marine Chemistry & Geochemistry.



Jim Yoder


New Dean Brings Experience from Academe and Federal Agencies

The torch of leadership in WHOI’s education programs was officially passed on Nov. 28 to James Yoder, the sixth dean in the history of the Institution and its new vice president for Academic Programs. He was elected at the WHOI Board of Trustees meeting in October 2005.

Yoder comes from the University of Rhode Island (URI), where he was a professor of oceanography and used satellite sensors to study the relationship between physical and biological processes in the ocean. From 1993 to 1998, he served as associate dean of the URI Graduate School of Oceanography, where he had earned his own master’s and doctoral degrees in the 1970s.

Between career stops at Skidaway Institute of Oceanography and URI, he served as a visiting senior scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California and also worked as a program manager in the oceans branch of NASA. From 2001 to 2004, he served as director of the Division of Ocean Sciences at the National Science Foundation.

“Jim brings a wealth of teaching and administrative experience in graduate education, as well as a unique perspective on the ocean research community,” said WHOI President and Director Robert Gagosian. “He understands the federal funding system and the challenges facing ocean science from a number of viewpoints, and that insight will be helpful for students and researchers alike.”



MIT/WHOI graduate student Mike Braun gets his Ph.D. diploma?and a kiss from mom


Bon Voyage, Class of '05

MIT/WHOI graduate Mike Braun gets his Ph.D. diploma—and a kiss from mom. In September, 22 students of the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering gathered for commencement ceremonies in Woods Hole as part of the Institution’s 75th anniversary celebration. Activities began with a daylong symposium on the oceans and education; later, Patricio Bernal, executive secretary of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission and assistant director-general of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, delivered the commencement address. In all, 25 doctoral and nine master’s degrees were awarded for the 2004-2005 academic year. Since the program began in 1968, the program has awarded 722 degrees. WHOI last hosted a Joint Program graduation in June 2000; the next is planned for 2010.



Posted: December 21, 2005

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