SUNY Downstate Medical Center - Iatros Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)

 - Class of 1968

Page 30 of 190

 

SUNY Downstate Medical Center - Iatros Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 30 of 190
Page 30 of 190



SUNY Downstate Medical Center - Iatros Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 29
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SUNY Downstate Medical Center - Iatros Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 31
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Page 30 text:

It is difficult to express in words the verve, en- thusiasm and dynamic personality of RITA CAR- RIERE, Assistant Professor of Anatomy. Part of her sparkling energy arises from her love for teach- ing and her ability to highlight each lecture with humor. Although at times she seems to be racing the clock in an attempt to include as much material as possible, she never over-burdens the class. Want- ing to teach for as long as she can remember, she chose to study histology at McGill University where she earned her Ph.D. in anatomy. After teaching at McGill and the University of Toronto, she joined the Downstate staff in 1960. She has done much re- search and is currently writing the section on hormonal influence on liver cell growth for the International Review of Cytology. Despite this hectic schedule, she has managed to find time to study philosophy at New York University. She hopes someday to earn a Ph.D. in philosophy and eventually to write on the philosophy of science. Dr. Carriere enjoys a wide variety of interests and is an accomplished pianist, skier, and tennis player, and has studied the harpsichord. She also has a fine collection of Eskimo art and antique books. She commutes daily to Downstate from her apartment in Manhattan. 26 HUGH J. CARROLL, Assistant Professor of Medicine, is well known for his informative, com- prehensive, erudite, and Witty lectures. Dr. Carroll attended Regis High School, Fordham University, and New York University School of Medicine. While a house oificer at Bellevue he decided to pursue a career in academic medicine. Since then his research interests have centered on electrolyte composition in normal and disease states and transport properties of cellular membranes. In 1964 he joined the Down- state Medical Center faculty. Dr. Carroll states that he enjoys nothing better than teaching although he does miss the personal patient contact available in private practice. He characterizes Downstate students as capable, and asserts he has learned a great deal from them. He is enthusiastic about proposed changes in medical edu- cation which he thinks should be shorter, more selec- tive in content, and less repetitive. His outside activities include a subscription to the Metropolitan Opera, attendance at football games, and cultural interests such as the study of language and the history of the Near East. He admits, how- ever, that most of his spare time is spent at home with his wife and three daughters and three sons.

Page 29 text:

One of our favorite pathologists is Greek-born THOMAS J. ATHANASSIADES. He feels that any member of the faculty that doesnft feel teach- ing medical students is his or her business has no business whatever in a medical school. He attended Haaren High School in Manhattan and received his B.S. degree from The City College of New York. Following graduation from Tulane Medical College, he interned at St. Vincent's Hospital and received his residency training at Kings County Hospital. In addition to working on immunopathology, he is the coordinator of the pathology program for medical students. He feels that Downstate students are ex- ceptionally good and that they teach their instruc- tors a great deal. Dr. Athanassiades lives in Brooklyn with his Wife and young daughter. In his leisure time he enjoys listening to opera. A man of eminent stature, CHANDLER MCC. BROOKS won us over with his personal warmth and interesting stories. Dr. Brooks came to the Long lsland College of Medicine in 1948 as Professor and Chairman of the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology. Since 1956, he has been Professor and Chairman of the Department of Physiology at Downstate, from 1956-1966 he was Director of the Graduate Educational Program, and, since 1966, he has been Dean of the School of Graduate Studies. The State University at Downstate is in the stage of rapid expansion, and Dr. Brooks, in the forefront of that expansion, envisions the school at a cross- roads, where the choice of path can utilize a great potential of integrated teaching or can squander the potential on the road to mediocrity. He feels that the function of Downstate is to teach, and all else must be subordinated to that goal. Dr. Brooks received his A.B. from Oberlin Col- lege, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton. In his distinguished career he has been a National Re- search Fellow, Instructor, and Associate at the Harvard Medical School, and an Associate Professor at Johns Hopkins University. His interests have been in the nervous, cardiovascular, and endocrine sys- tems, and their relationships to one another and the total integrated organism. Dr. Brooks' special fin- terest is in the history of physiology. Unfortunately, Dr. Brooks is approaching the retirement age, and students at Downstate will miss a great teacher and friend in the years to come. 25



Page 31 text:

S l like to deal with students. I find them stimulat- ing and interesting. Students feel the same way about JOHN CRAIG, who, as an Associate Pro- fessor of Microbiology and Immunology, has re- peatedly demonstrated that energetic and intelligent approach to course material which characterizes an excellent teacher. A graduate of Oberlin College, Dr. Craig received his M.D. degree from Western Reserve in 1947, and interned at Yale-New Haven Medical Center in Medicine. He spent another year there studying in- fectious diseases before taking a fellowship at West- ern Reserve in preventitive medicine. He then served in this capacity as an Army officer during the Korean War, and remained in Tokyo as an epidemiologist for the Army,s Far-Eastern Laboratory. In 1952 he studied at the Harvard School of Public Health, and then did research on Arbo viruses at the Rocke- feller Foundation before coming to the Downstate faculty in 1954. He has since investigated the pathophysiology of cholera, and has helped to es- tablish therapeutic measures among the medical community in Pakistan. Dr. Craig feels that Downstatels nucleus is the medical school, and that the success of the expansion programs will be judged only by the better quality of medical education which, hopefully, will ensue. He has precious little time for his hobbies -of photography, natural history, and Held biology which he has pursued throughout the United States and, whenever possible, on his scientific trips to Mexico, Pakistan, Europe and the Far-East. If anything stood out amongst Krebs, cycles and urine bottles it was PHILLIP C. CHAN, who brought the human qualities of sincere interest and devotion to the teaching of biochemistry. Born in Amoy, China, Dr. Chan received his early education in Singapore, his college education in Monmouth, Illinois, and his Ph.D. at Columbia University. He was a fellow at Johns Hopkins and at the Max Planck Institute in Munich, he came to Downstate in 1960. Dr. Chan is studying the enzyme systems in the red cell membrane, and sees a bright future for Downstate and the health related sciences. He spends his leisure time enjoying music, plays, the opera, and amateur photography, and he is the proud father of a new baby girl. 27

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