Peter Klopfer
Peter H. Klopfer | |
---|---|
Born | Peter Hubert Klopfer August 9, 1930 |
Nationality | American |
Education | University of California at Los Angeles Yale University |
Known for | Ethology Research on lemurs |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Zoology |
Institutions | Duke University |
Thesis | An Analysis of Learning in Young Anatidae (1957) |
Peter Hubert Klopfer (born August 9, 1930)[1] is a German-born American zoologist, civil rights advocate and educator. He is Professor Emeritus of Biology at Duke University, where in 1966 he co-founded, with John Buettner-Janusch, the Duke Lemur Center (formerly Duke Primate Center).[2] This facility houses the largest living collection of endangered primates in the world. [3]
Peter Klopfer is an Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1963) and the Animal Behavior Society (1968).[4] In 1979–80 he received the Humboldt Research Award for his achievements in the field of Sensory and Behavioral Biology.[5]
As a scientist Klopfer has authored, co-authored or edited twenty-five volumes and more than 125 peer-reviewed articles, most in the field of animal behavior. Among other contributions, Klopfer's research helped to establish the link between oxytocin and maternal attachment behavior[6] and to initiate study of neural processes involved in hibernation among primates[7]
As a civil rights advocate Klopfer was jailed in 1964 for protesting segregated restaurant facilities in Orange County, North Carolina.[8] He subsequently became the plaintiff in the 1967 United States Supreme Court case, Klopfer v. North Carolina, which upheld that the Speedy Trial Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution applies to individual states in the same way as it does to the federal government.[9]
As an educator Klopfer and his wife, Martha Smith Klopfer, were among the Quakers who founded Carolina Friends School in 1962.[10] CFS was one of the first schools in the modern South that welcomed children of all races.[11]
Biography
Early life and education
Peter Hubert Klopfer was the elder of two sons born to German immigrant parents, Hubert Robert Klopfer (1900–1937) and Edith Brauer (1896–1977). Shortly after the end of World War I, Hubert Klopfer studied economics at Columbia University. There, in the 1940s (and later at UCLA), his brother, Bruno Klopfer, taught psychology and popularized use in the U. S. of the Rorschach test.[12]
Peter Klopfer was raised in the suburbs of Philadelphia and attended Abington Friends School. When his father became ill with Hodgkin lymphoma, young Peter lived for several years with Alice and Thomas Knight, Hicksite Quaker elders in Wyncote, Pennsylvania, who were close friends of his father.[13] Late in 1937, after Hubert Klopfer's death, the brothers and their mother settled in southern California. Edith Brauer supported her family by taking in boarders, chiefly older German women with connections to the film industry.
As a teenager Klopfer attended Windsor Mountain School, an international boarding school in Lenox, Massachusetts, before matriculating at the University of California, Los Angeles, from which he earned a B.A. (with honors) in Biology in 1952. Here Klopfer was especially inspired by the "personal but unassuming" pedagogical style and "wide-ranging studies" of George A. Bartholomew.[14] While an undergraduate at UCLA Klopfer's Quaker convictions led him to refuse conscription for military service during the Korean War. Returning his draft card resulted in a prison sentence; however, Judge Leon Yankwich, then Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, released Klopfer on probation, on condition that he "obey all laws, State and Federal, so far as…conscience allows."[15] Klopfer proceeded to join a technical assistance training program (forerunner of the Peace Corps) that was based at Haverford College.
At Haverford Klopfer came to know the herpetologist, Emmett Reid Dunn, who advanced the rigor of the young scientist's interest in animal behavior. While at Haverford Klopfer also discovered the work of Niko Tinbergen, in particular Tinbergen's 1952 paper, "Derived Activities: Their Causation, Biological Significance, Origin, and Emancipation during Evolution".[16] Around the same time Klopfer became acquainted with the work of Eckhard Hess and his associate, A.O. Ramsay. Ramsay, who was both a researcher and a high school science teacher, offered a vocational model that Klopfer briefly followed (1952–53) when he returned to his former high school, Windsor Mountain School, as a science teacher.[17]
Through volunteering at an American Friends Service Committee weekend work camp in Claremont, California, Peter Klopfer became acquainted with Martha Smith.[18] Friendship grew into engagement, and they married in 1955.[19] Through more than six decades the couple has collaborated in many ways: as researchers, as founders of Carolina Friends School, as active members of Durham Monthly Meeting of Friends (NC) and board members of other Quaker organizations, as Masters runners, as equestrians, and as participants in Ride and Tie competitions. Peter and Martha Klopfer have three daughters and four grandchildren. Since 1958 the Klopfers have made their home in North Carolina, residing nearly all that time in Orange County, on land that now accommodates Carolina Friends School, located 5 miles from the Duke Lemur Center and 6 miles from Duke University's Biological Sciences Building.
Peter Klopfer did his Ph.D. work at the Osborn Memorial Labs of Yale University, drawn there by the recommendation of George Bartholomew and the charisma of G. Evelyn Hutchinson and Frank A. Beach.[20] Here Klopfer came to know a variety of faculty members and guest lecturers, including J.P. Trinkaus, Dillon Ripley, Don Griffin, José Delgado, Konrad Lorenz and Margaret Mead. His cohort of graduate students at Yale included Malcolm S. Gordon, Alan J. Kohn, Daniel A. Livingstone, Robert H. MacArthur, and Jane Van Zandt Brower. Klopfer's Ph.D. thesis studied imprinting in waterfowl; however, his interest in maternal attachment in goats also dates to these years.[21]
After a brief stint as head of the science department at Windsor Mountain School (1956), Klopfer's next stop in his formation as a scientist was a year (1957–58) as a postdoctoral fellow at W.H. Thorpe's Madingley Field Station for Animal Behaviour in Cambridge, England. In addition to Thorpe, Klopfer associated at Cambridge with Robert Hinde, Thelma Rowell, Malcolm Gordon, and Stephen Wainwright. Klopfer and Wainwright later became longtime colleagues at Duke University.[22]
Academic career
Peter Klopfer's career in higher education began in 1958, when he accepted a position as Assistant Professor in Duke University's Department of Zoology. Apart from four Visiting Professor positions in German and Israeli universities, Klopfer has spent his entire career at Duke University. He attained the rank of Associate Professor in 1963 and Professor in 1967. Currently he is Professor Emeritus of Biology.[23]
Klopfer has held a variety of professional offices at Duke, including service on the Undergraduate Faculty Council (1959–64; 1988–89), the Neurosciences Curriculum Committee (1965–66), the Animal Care Committee (1966–68), the Academic Council (1967–71), and the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (1997–2018). He was Duke's representative to the Board of Directors for the Organization for Tropical Studies (1967–82), Secretary of Duke's American Association of University Professors chapter (1967–69), and Director of its Field Station for Animal Behavior Studies (1968–73).
An additional arena of Klopfer's service to Duke University was as its women's track coach, before Title IX (1972), when the team was a club (but did compete in ACC cross country meets).[24] Klopfer was trained for this work by Duke's legendary and long-serving track coach, Al Buehler. Buehler also inspired Klopfer himself to become a Master's runner, a pursuit that he and his wife, Martha Klopfer, have participated in for decades.[25] In the 1970s Peter and Martha Klopfer were among the founding members of the Carolina Godiva Track Club.
In addition to his election to the AAAS, the Animal Behavior Society, and his Humboldt Award, other fellowships, awards, and honors Klopfer has received include a U.S. Public Health Service Special Postdoctoral Fellowship (1964), a Career Development Award from the National Institute of Mental Health (1965–70), the Duke University Student Association's "Outstanding Professor" Award (1968), and the "Distinguished Service Award" of the Cook Society, Duke University Office on Institutional Equity (2009).[26] Klopfer was also named a "Distinguished Professor" by the UNCF (formerly the United Negro College Fund) in 1985–86.
During his academic career Klopfer has held a variety of editorial positions with academic journals, including as Associate Editor, Journal of Experimental Zoology (1970–76), Editorial Advisor, Springer Verlag (1970–1990), and Co-Editor of the Plenum Press series, Perspectives in Ethology (1970–1990). Klopfer served as an Editorial Board member for The American Naturalist (1972–76) and the International Journal of Comparative Psychology (1995–2000).
Peter Klopfer has traveled widely as an academic research scientist. He has been a Visiting Professor in Israel at Tel Aviv University (1970) and Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1987), and in Germany at the universities of Tübingen (1979–80) and Potsdam (1992). In Budapest, Hungary, he gave the Inaugural Lectures at Bolyai College of Eötvös Loránd University (1995).
Lemurs, both in Madagascar and at the Duke Lemur Center, are the focus of Klopfer's current research.[27] A personal interview with Klopfer in August 2020 yielded the following list of previous animals and habitat locations he has studied: ducks in Manitoba; ducks and passerine birds in England; elephant seals in California; antelope in Israel, Jordan and Egypt; fish in Germany and Belize; horses on the Outer Banks of North Carolina; goats and giant tortoises on Aldabra; birds in Costa Rica, Panama, Guatemala, Jamaica, Cayman Brac and Puerto Rico; birds, ducks, goats and lemurs in North Carolina.
Activism and advocacy
Peter Klopfer has compiled a life-long record of activism and advocacy with respect to civil liberties and civil rights.[28] That record is rooted in his membership in the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), which dates to his youth and is briefly discussed above. It continued with the American Friends Service Committee, on whose Southwestern Region Executive Committee Klopfer served (1967–74; 2003–10).[29] Perhaps the fullest manifestation of Peter (and Martha) Klopfer's Quaker commitments is the founding of Carolina Friends School (CFS) as a racially integrated school. The couple were not only founding and sustaining board members of CFS; they taught at it, raised funds for it, donated the land for it, sent their three daughters to it, and have provided continuous servant leadership to it for six decades.[30]
While a young professor at Duke, Klopfer chose to take an active role in the civil rights movement that swept across the American South from 1954–1968. Indeed, just days after arriving in Durham, North Carolina (from Cambridge, England, in 1958), Peter and Martha Klopfer behaved, at a segregated laundromat, in a manner that confounded both its black and its white patrons. They put their dark-colored laundry in machines designated "colored" and their light-colored laundry in ones designated "white."[31]
As an extension of his Quaker pacifism Klopfer, when a young adult, had joined the American Civil Liberties Union, the Fellowship of Reconciliation and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE).[32] He supported non-violent sit-ins to segregate public accommodations that began in Durham and Orange Counties in 1960. As documented in detail by Daniel H. Pollitt in a 1965 article published in the North Carolina Law Review 43 (689–767), the national profile of this movement for justice became especially pronounced in early 1964. On January 3, 1964, Peter Klopfer was one of six professors (four from Duke and two from UNC-Chapel Hill) who were arrested as part of a multi-racial group that met to request service at Watts Motel and Restaurant in southern Chapel Hill. Before they could enter "Watts Grill," the would-be protestors were "jumped on in the parking lot and beaten"[33] Local police intervened in the bloodshed only after one of the UNC professors, Albert Halstead Amon, received serious head injuries.[34]
On February 24, 1964, Klopfer was indicted for the misdemeanor crime of criminal trespass by an Orange County grand jury. North Carolina Superior Court Judge Raymond B. Mallard presided over Klopfer's initial trials.[35] A string of hung juries and legal appeals--some of them focused on Klopfer's refusal, as a Quaker, to swear on the Bible--ultimately led Klopfer, his attorney Wade H. Penny, and the American Civili Liberties Union to assert, first to the North Carolina Supreme Court and then to the United States Supreme Court, that Klopfer's Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial had been abridged.[36] Ultimately, the U.S, Supreme Court voted by a margin of 6-3 to accept the case, which was argued on December 8, 1966, and decided unanimously in Klopfer's favor on March 13, 1967. Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote the opinion.[37]
Ten years later, when Peter Klopfer was a member of the Carolina Friends School board of directors, the school filed an amicus curiae brief in another legal case, arguing for repeal of legislation passed by the state of North Carolina in 1977 that required non-public schools to administer standardized tests.[38] Don Wells, Carolina Friends School principal at that time, asserted in sworn testimony that a "standardized equivalent measure" of student success, which Carolina Friends School employed, was the Quaker process of "consensus," which those in the judicial system should know well since it is what juries use "to decide, at times, matters of life and death." Surely this same process should be "suitable for use in measuring student progress," the school's argument concluded.[39] Ultimately the North Carolina legislature concurred with this view. In 1979 "the General Assembly amended Chapter 115 of the General Statutes to include two new articles, Articles 32A and 32B, both of which have the effect of limiting the authority of the State Board of Education to regulate the educational programs of nonpublic schools providing instruction to children of compulsory attendance age."[40]
Major publications
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References
- ^ "Guide to the Peter H. Klopfer Papers, 1957-1980s". David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Retrieved 2020-05-18.
- ^ Markis, John (2019-04-24). "From lemurs to poisoned chocolate: The tale of a Lemur Center founder". Duke Chronicle. Retrieved 2020-05-18.
- ^ "History and Mission". Duke Lemur Center. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
- ^ "Duke Department of Biology". fds.duke.edu. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter (1979-08-01). "Humboldt Foundation". Humboldt Foundation. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Epstein, Randi Hutter (2018). Aroused: the history of hormones and how they control just about everything. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 218–222. ISBN 978-0-393-35708-0. OCLC 1107492740.
- ^ Casarett, David (2014). Shocked : adventures in bringing back the recently dead. New York, New York: Current (Penguin). pp. 119–23. ISBN 978-1-59184-671-0. OCLC 870085094.
- ^ Ehle, John (2007). The Free Men. Lewisville, NC: Press 53. pp. 145–46. ISBN 978-0-9793049-1-0.
- ^ Mosnier, Joseph (1966). "The Demise of an "Extraordinary Criminal Procedure": Klopfer v. North Carolina and the Incorporation of the Sixth Amendment's Speedy Trial Provision". Journal of Supreme Court History. 21 (2): 136–60. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5818.1996.tb00054.x.
- ^ Klopfer, Martha and Peter. "Love, Experience, and Reflection". Health and Healing. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
- ^ Huff, Carrie (2015). 27 Views of Carolina Friends School. Durham, NC: Pine Bough Press. p. 175. ISBN 9780692295595.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-0838754054.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. p. 21. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University. p. 22. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. p. 23. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. pp. 24–25. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Martha. "I Was a Volunteer". AFSC. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell university Press. p. 25. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. pp. 27–29. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. p. 36. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H. (1999). Politics and People in Ethology. Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press. pp. 53–54. ISBN 0838754058.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter H (20 August 2020). "Duke University Biology". Duke Biology. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Bradham, Bre (27 February 2018). "Dear Old Duke" The Biologists". Duke Chronicle. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Blount, Alma (March 1978). "Running Face to Face with Yourself". The Sun. 36 – via Sun Magazine.
- ^ Klopfer, Peter (18 February 2009). "Cook Society Announces Award Winners at Annual Dinner". Duke Office of Institutional Equity. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
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(help) - ^ Groskin, Luke (24 April 2019). "Sleeping Cutie: The Hibernation Habits of Dwarf Lemur". Science Friday. Archived from the original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Davidson, Kathleen (Spring 2009). "in the Name of Plainfolks Who Could Not Ignore Injustice" (PDF). We&Thee. 2009: 1, 10 – via Carolina Friends School.
- ^ Klopfer, Martha and Peter. "I Was a Volunteer". American Friends Service Committee. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Stites, Clay V. (1 July 2017). "Carolina Friends School" (PDF). Consultants for Leadership and Governance. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Wise, Jim (15 November 2003). "Tape Transcript, Durham Civil Rights Heritage Project" (PDF). Durham County Library. Archived from the original on 2003. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|archive-date=
(help) - ^ Wise, Jim (15 November 2003). "Tape Transcript, Durham Civil Rights Heritage Project". Durham County Library. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Wise, Jim (15 November 2003). "Tape Transcript, Durham Civil Rights Heritage Project" (PDF). Durham County Library. Archived from the original on 2003. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|archive-date=
(help) - ^ Ehle, John (2007). The Free Men. Lewisville, NC: Press 53. pp. 145–48. ISBN 9780979304910.
- ^ Ehle, John (2007). The Free Men. Lewisville, NC: Press 53. pp. 145–150, 216–244. ISBN 9780979304910.
- ^ Jim, Wise (15 November 2003). "Tape Transcript, Durham Civil Rights Heritage Project" (PDF). Durham County Library. Archived from the original on 2003. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|archive-date=
(help) - ^ Feeley, Malcolm M. (2020). "Klopfer v. North Carolina". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
- ^ Wells, Donald A. (1 June 1978). "Religious Freedom at Stake". Friends Journal. 24:11: 7.
- ^ Wells, Don (1988). "Friends School and the State of North Carolina". Carolina Friends School: 1963-1988. 1: 38–39.
- ^ Edmiston, Rufus A. (29 August 1979). "Home Instruction of a Child in Liew of Attending a Public School". North Carolina Department of Justice. Retrieved 20 August 2020.