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Page 12 text:
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Gettysburg College and the University of Maryland. Dr. Bowers trained for three years in In- terna! Medicine and then served with the United States Navy Medical Corps and re- ceived the Legion of Merit as well as the Purple Heart. After two years of private practice in Baltimore, he served as an Assist- ant Professor of Preventive Medicine at Johns Hopkins. In 1950, Dr. Bowers was made Dean of the University of Utah, Col- lege of Medicine. He also served as Profes- sor of Radiobiology at Utah. In 1955, Dr. Bowers became Professor of Medicine and Dean of the School of Medicine at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Dr. Bowers has also served as Deputy Director, Division of Biology and Medicine, U. S. Atomic Energy Commission; Editor of the Journal of Mediciil EchiCcitiou. and as National Consultant, Medical Education and Internal Medicine in addition to his position as Surgeon-General, United States Air Force. John Z. Bowers, B.S., M.D., Sc.D. Dean, University of Wiicoiisiii SCHOOI. OF MnOIClNE He is a member of AOA, a Fellow of the American College of Physicians and a Diplomat, American Board of Internal Medicine. Dr. Bowers, we of the Class of 1960 honor your code of ethics and your devotion to humanity. Your diligence and brilliance place you among the top educators in Medi- cine today. Dr. Thomas Bourne Turner, a native West- ern Marylander, was educated at St. John ' s College, Annapolis and at the Univerity of Maryland Medical School. After graduation in 1925, he was an intern at the Hospital for the Women of Maryland, a resident at Mercy Hospital, and a Fellow in Medicine at Johns Hopkins Medical School. From 1928 to 1932, Dr. Turner was an Associate in Medicine at the Hopkins to which he returned in 19. 6 after four years of research at the Rockefeller Institute. In 1939, Dr. Turner became Professor of Microbiology and is now Dean of the Medi- cal Faculty at the Johns Hopkins Medical School. Dean Turner has also served as a colonel in the United States Army and is a member of the Board of Visitors and Governors, St. John ' s College. A member of the National Advisory Council on Health Research Facili- ties, National Institute of Health, Dr. Turner is also Consultant to the Surgeon General, United States Army, and Vice Chairman, Committee on Virus Research and Epidemi- ology of the National Foundation for Infan- tile Paralysis. He is also Chairman of the Fellowship Committee of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.
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Page 11 text:
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Dr. Stanley E. Bradley, Bard Professor of Medicine, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, was born in Colum- bia, South Carolina but was educated entirely in Baltimore, Maryland. Following his A. B. in 1934 at Johns Hopkins University, he attended the University of Maryland, School of Medicine, graduating with high honors and the Prize in Medicine in 1938. This year was an important one in the history of the University as two classmates of Dr. Bradley ' s have also gained prominence in the field of Academic Medicine, namely Dr. John Z. Bowers, Dean of the University of Wiscon- sin, and Dr. Theodore E. Woodward, Pro- fessor of Medicine at the University of Maryland. Dr. Bradley served as an i ntern under Dr. Maurice Pincoffs at the University Hospital and then went to New York University as a Fellow in Medicine. After two years at Bellevue, he spent time at Boston University and Evans Memorial Hospital. Since 1947, he has been a member of the staff at the Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. This year Dr. Bradley was appointed one of the most coveted positions in Medicine, namely Bard Professor of Medicine, Columbia University. Aside from his numerous societies. Dr. Bradley has served as a member of the edi- torial board of Circulation, and the journal of Medical Education as well as Editor-in- Chief of the Journal of Clinical Investi- gation. He is a Fellow, American College of Physicians and a member of the American College of Internal Medicine. Among Dr. Bradley ' s ninety-three publi- cations in the past eighteen years are numer- ous articles on the kidney and the liver. This year Dr. Bradley discussed the Excretory Function of the Liver at the AOA Lecture here at the University of Maryland. He also published on this topic in the Harvey Stanley E. Bradley, A.B., M.D. Professor of Medicine COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Lectures. Volume 54, I960. Dr. Stanley Bradley, we of the class of i960 admire you for you have not only con- tributed greatly to the advances of modern medicine, but have brought honor and fame to the institution where you were trained. Another of the Class of 1938 is John Z. Bowers, M.D., Dean of the University of Wi.sconsin Medical School. An outstanding worker in the field of Preventive Medicine and Radiobiology, Dr. Bowers has done ex- tensive research on the use of Atomic Energy in Medicine. He is also active in the field of developments in medical education. Because of his prominence, he was awarded Doctor of Science degrees from his two Alma Maters,
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Page 13 text:
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Thomas Bourne Turner, B.S., M.D. Dean. Johns Hopkins University SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Dr. Turner, you have been a sterling ex- ample to those who follow, of a man who has not only done outstanding microbiologi- cal research, but one who is a true scholar and educator. Early in his career. Dr. Bennett became associated with the late William S. Baer at the Johns Hopkins Medical School and Hospital. These two men were quite active in the then-new fields of Reconstructive Surgery and Rehabilitation. This expansion of Orthopedics was one of the lasting benefits of World War One and transformed it from a narrow specialty dealing chiefly with the crippled child to include the reconstruction of all manner of crippling injuries and dis- ease in adults. Dr. Bennett was at the fore- front of this movement and contributed much to the organization of services to crippled children in the State of Maryland. Under his leadership, regular orthopedic clinics were established throughout the state, staffed by leading surgeons. He developed the plan of coordination between the county clinics and the two children ' s hospitals in Baltimore (Kernan ' s and Children ' s Hos- pital School ) , whereby any child found to need treatment was immediately hospitalized, regardless of race, creed, or financial limita- tion. During this period of time, he was active as Associate Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at the Johns Hopkins Hospital until 1942, when he was appointed Adjunct Professor. This post was held by Dr. Bennett until his resignation in 1947. He has published num- erous monographs on Orthopedics. During George Eli Bennett, M.D., D.Sc. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery JOHNS HOPKINS MEDICAL SCHOOL
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