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Title: Dr. David John Simpson

Date: 1917

Location: Lakeland, FL

Description: Dr. David John Simpson (1870-1955) became the first black physician in Lakeland when he arrived here in 1908. His persistent efforts helped to establish Lakeland Colored Hospital in 1926, during the time of racial segregation. During the Spanish flu epidemic of 1919-1920, he was noted to treat people of all colors, and provided medical care for white physicians in need. Simpson Park and Recreation Center is named in his honor.

Collection: Northwest Community

ID: Simp_DJ

All photos used from this gallery are to be credited: UNR Med/Brin Reynolds.

Questions: please contact brinr@unr.edu.

St Botolph Bishopsgate, London

 

It is hard to believe that much of the City is a conservation area when you step out of Liverpool Street station and set out southwards on Bishopsgate, for here the energetic Dubai-ification of the City continues apace, the shiny towers dwarfing the few older buildings allowed to remain. St Botolph Bishopsgate is the most northerly of the City churches dedicated to the patron Saint of Travelers and Wayfarers, three of which still survive at the former gates of the City. Directly across the road is the Heron Tower, and beyond are the towers of Bishopsgate and St Mary Axe - the Gherkin, the Cheesegrater, the Lloyds Building and the soon-to-be-replaced Aviva Building, among others. More are to come, and all will be dwarfed by the City's tallest tower, a fraction shorter than the hideous Shard. Well, I don't know. I can't help thinking that it might have been just as easy to build them somewhere else in London.

 

Be that as it may, St Botolph is still there, a grand frontage onto Bishopsgate as if it might actually be a banking house, and then the surprisingly large churchyard on the south side with the parish hall and the splendid former Turkish bathouse, now a restaurant. It is one of the quirkiest spaces in the City, and must be worth a fortune if the floor rents over the road are anything to go by. The parish hall was formerly a school, and the statues of children that flank its entrance are made out of Coade Stone. The churchyard is now a public garden. John Betjeman, whose grandfather George Betjemann was a churchwarden here, mentions the garden, and incidentally recalls the High Church nature of St Botolph in the mid-20th Century, in his poem City:

 

When the great bell

BOOMS over the Portland stone urn, and

From the carved cedar wood

Rises the odour of incense,

I SIT DOWN

In St. Botolph Bishopsgate Churchyard

And wait for the spirit of my grandfather

Toddling along from the Barbican.

 

Nothing survives of the medieval church, which was demolished in the 1720s, probably for street widening. The new church went up between 1725 and 1728, built by the Dance family to the design of James Gould, near enough in time for the influence to be all Wren's.

The church is open every day during the week. The first surprise when you step inside is that the porch leads you into the east end of the south aisle - that is to say, the altar and sanctuary are hard against the street wall. The barrel-vaulted interior, with its dark wood, plaster reliefs and galleries, is all of the 18th Century. Although it is a large church, the attempt at a baptistery in the north-west corner and a side altar in the north aisle don't really come off, for they attempt to shoehorn sacramental spaces into what is already a unified whole.

 

If you come here with an older Pevsner and are a fan of Hugh Easton's glass (such people do exist) you might wonder why you can't find his west window. This is because this church suffered considerable damage from both the big terrorist bombs of the 1990s, first the 1992 Baltic Exchange bomb in St Mary Axe and then the Bishopsgate bomb in 1993. The restoration of the furnishings is so perfect that you would not even know, if it was not for Nicola Kantorowicz's memorial window in the south aisle, the closest to the site of the two explosions. Better than anything by Hugh Easton, surely.

 

This church has a busy life, and if you are lucky you might meet the verger as you potter about. He will certainly engage you in conversation, and serve as a reminder to you that the City still has its characters. Forty-storey office blocks can't change that.

 

(c) Simon Knott, December 2015

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

Diplomas from SMU, UT-Houston med school, and residency (Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas) hang on the walls in my office.

Prophetic physicians and public storage. Spotted through the cab window on the way to the airport.

IPAP Graduates Newest Class of Physician Assistants

12.17.2021

Photo by Randy Mitchell

Naval Medical Forces Support Command

 

Navy Lt. Joe Hamm, Class 20-3 advisor, provides the Physician Assistant oath to students at the conclusion of their graduation from Phase 1 of the Interservice Physician Assistant Program. The new physician assistants will now head to various locations to complete Phase 2 of the program. (US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Shayla Hamilton)

 

Date Taken: 12.17.2021

Date Posted: 01.05.2022 10:34

Photo ID: 7001869

VIRIN: 211217-N-IR096-002

Resolution: 6000x4000

Size: 900.95 KB

Location: SAN ANTONIO, TX, US www.dvidshub.net/news/412473/ipap-graduates-newest-class-...

 

Navy Medicine Historical Files - Subject Series - Naval Medical Forces Support Command (NMFSC)

 

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

A sheet cake from Borracchini's Bakery

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

To view more of my images, Abbey Gardens, and St Edmundsbury Cathedral, please click "here" !

 

When, in the early 10th century, the relics of the martyred king, St Edmund, were translated from Hoxne to Beodricsworth, afterwards known as St. Edmundsbury, the site had already been in religious use for nearly three centuries. To the small household of Benedictine monks who guarded the shrine the surrounding lands were granted in 1020, during the reign of Canute. Monks were introduced from St Benet's Abbey under the auspices of the Bishop of Elmham and Dunwich. Two of them became Bury's first two abbots, Ufi, prior of Holme, (d. 1044), who was consecrated abbot by the Bishop of London, and Leofstan (1044–65). After Leofstan's death, the king appointed his physician Baldwin to the abbacy (1065–97). Baldwin rebuilt the church and reinterred St Edmund's body there with great ceremony in 1095. The cult made the richly endowed abbey a popular destination for pilgrimages. The abbey church of St Edmund was built in the 11th and 12th centuries on a cruciform plan, with its head (or apse) pointed east. The shrine of St Edmund stood behind the high altar. The abbey was much enlarged and rebuilt during the 12th century. At some 505 feet long, and spanning 246 ft across its westerly transept, Bury St Edmunds abbey church was one of the largest in the country. It is now ruined, with only some rubble cores remaining, but two other separate churches which were built within the abbey precinct survive, having always functioned as parish churches for the town. St James's Church, now St Edmundsbury Cathedral, was finished around 1135. St Mary's Church was first built around 1125, and then rebuilt in the Perpendicular style between 1425-35. Abbey Gate, rebuilt in the mid-14th century Abbey Gate, opening onto the Great Courtyard, was the secular entrance which was used by the Abbey's servants. In 1327, it was destroyed during the Great Riot by the local people, who were angry at the power of the monastery, and it had to be rebuilt. Norman Gate dates from 1120–48 and was designed to be the gateway for the Abbey Church and it is still the belfry for the Church of St James, the present cathedral of Bury St Edmunds. This four-storey gate-hall is virtually unchanged and is entered through a single archway. Abbey Gate is an impressive 14th century stone gatehouse, designed to be the gateway for the Great Courtyard. One of the best surviving examples of its type, this two storey gate-hall is entered through a single archway which retains its portcullis. The Crankles was the name of the fishpond near the river Lark. The vineyard was first laid out in the 13th century. There were three breweries in the Abbey as each monk was entitled to eight pints a day. The Abbey's charters granted extensive lands and rights in Suffolk. By 1327, the Abbey owned all of West Suffolk. The Abbey held the gates of Bury St Edmunds; they held wardships of all orphans, whose income went to the Abbot until the orphan reached maturity; they pressed their rights of corvée. In the late 12th century, the Abbot Adam Samson forced the Dean Herbert to destroy the new windmill he had built without permission. Adam said: "By the face of God! I will never eat bread until that building is destroyed!" The town of Bury St Edmunds was designed by the monks in a grid pattern. The monks charged tariffs on every economic activity, including the collecting of horse droppings in the streets. The Abbey even ran the Royal Mint. During the 13th century general prosperity blunted the resistance of burghers and peasants; in the 14th century, however, the monks encountered hostility from the local populace. Throughout 1327, the monastery suffered extensively, as several monks lost their lives in riots, and many buildings were destroyed. The townspeople attacked in January, forcing a charter of liberties on them. When the monks reneged on this they attacked again in February and May. The hated charters and debtors' accounts were seized and triumphantly torn to shreds. A reprieve came on September 29 when Queen Isabella arrived at the Abbey with an army from Hainault. She had returned from the continent with the intention of Deposing her husband, King Edward II. She stayed at the Abbey a number of days with her son the future Edward III. On October 18, 1327, a group of monks entered the local parish church. They threw off their habits, they were armoured underneath, and took several hostages. The people called for the hostages' release, the monks fired on them, killing some. In response, the citizens swore to fight the abbey to the death. They included a parson and 28 chaplains. They burnt the gates and captured the abbey. In 1345, a special commission found that the monks did not wear habits or live in the monastery. Already faced with considerable financial strain, the abbey went further into decline during the first half of the 15th century. In 1431 the west tower of the abbey church collapsed. Two years later Henry VI moved into residence at the abbey for Christmas, and was still enjoying monastic hospitality four months later. More trouble arose in 1446 when the Duke of Gloucester died in suspicious circumstances after his arrest, and in 1465 the entire church was burnt out by an accidental fire. Largely rebuilt by 1506, the abbey of Bury St Edmunds settled into a quieter existence until dissolution in 1539. Subsequently stripped of all valuable building materials and artefacts, the abbey ruins were left as a convenient quarry for local builders. In the late 19th century, a manuscript discovered in France revealed the burial location of eighteen of the Abbey's abbots. The location of the Abbey's chapter house was subsequently excavated, and on New Year's Day 1903 the coffins and remains of five of the Abbey's abbots were shown to the public. The abbots were (pictured from front to rear in photo): Edmund of Walpole (1248–1256); Henry of Rushbrooke (1235–1248); Richard of the Isle of Ely (1229–1234); Samson (1182–1211); and Ording (1148–1157). The antiquary and author Montague R. James, an authority on the Abbey's history, oversaw the excavation of the abbots' graves. The ruins are owned by English Heritage and managed by St Edmundsbury Borough Council. The Abbey Gardens surrounding the ruins had an "Internet bench" installed in 2001, which people could use to connect laptops to the Internet. It was the first bench of its kind.

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

Mike, Verna, Me, Pam, Gayle, Penny.

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QuinStreet, Inc. 950 Tower Lane, foster City, CA 94404

 

Yes, hair can be transplanted from one area of the scalp to another. The transplanting of the hair is not the issue. It is having enough hair to redistribute to the bald/thinning areas. There are currently two widely used methods of harvesting the grafts. The older method, follicular unit strip surgery, involves cutting a strip of hair from around the sides and back of the head about 1/4" by 9" long. Then dissecting it into 1,2 and 3 hair grafts to transplant under a microscope. Of course the scalp in th area of th surgery has to be stapled together. The problem comes with tighter scalps limiting strip surgeries and limiting the number of grafts. Since the scalp is rejoined where the strip is extracted, the hair on the back/sides is as thick as ever and the transplanted top can never be as thick. The newer method is FUE(follicular unit extraction), also know as the wood's technique. The 1,2 and 3 hair transplants are removed individually over a large area of the back/sides, thinning the back/sides. There is no problem with scalp tightness limiting grafts. Also, less invasive as there is no cutting with scalpels involved and no stapling of the scalp together. Only a topical anesthetic is used. FUE tends to be more expensive than a strip surgery to harvest the grafts. There is a lot of information on the internet on both methods. The transplanting of the grafts is largely the same. It is the way the grafts are harvested that differs. Hopefully, in the not too distant future, an unlimited supply of grafts to transplant will be able to be grown in a lab.

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

Physician Heal Thyself weekend

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

All photos used from this gallery are to be credited: UNR Med/Brin Reynolds.

Questions: please contact brinr@unr.edu.

Fortune Brainstorm Health

May 2-3, 2017: San Diego, CA

  

At our inaugural Brainstorm HEALTH conference, we focused on the best and brightest ideas in the digital health care revolution. In May, we’ll tackle how to speed up this disruption and seize the benefits now. We’ll dive deeper into what’s working, what’s not—and why? And we’ll drill down into some of the most urgent questions in this domain: How do we get investment into the right areas quickly—and overcome the barriers that stand in the way of progress. Our theme for our second Brainstorm HEALTH event says it all: “Accelerating the Health Revolution.” And yes, we mean to do just that.

 

Confirmed 2017 speakers include Joseph R. Biden, Jr., 47th Vice President, United States, CEOs Chip Bergh of Levi Strauss & Co. Mark Bertolini of Aetna, Tom Hayes of Tyson Foods, Arianna Huffington of Thrive Global, John Mackey of Whole Foods, Mike McNamara of Flex, Denise Morrison of Campbell Soup, and Timothy Wentworth of Express Scripts, as well as Duke University Surgical Oncologist (and Time 100 honoree) Dr. Shelley Hwang, Tempus Co-founder and Chair Eric Lefkofsky, Stanford University School of Medicine Dean Dr. Lloyd Minor, Venrock Partner Dr. Bryan Roberts, and Human Longevity Co-founder and Executive Chair Dr. J. Craig Venter. They will be joined by our co-chairs—Fortune Editor-in-Chief Clifton Leaf, Time Executive Editor Siobhan O’Connor and Dr. David Agus, one of the world’s most influential physicians.

 

Fortune Brainstorm HEALTH, in association with IBM Watson Health, will gather not only C-suite leaders of top companies, hospitals, insurers, and cutting-edge pharma and biotech companies, but also titans of venture capital, tech and telecom, and other industries, all of who are rapidly changing the face of health care. The forum will cover four pillars—personal wellness, intervention, research, and the value chain. Our aim is not only to push some boundaries in each of these areas, but also to show how businesses, both established and new, can lead the way. And, yes, as with all of our Brainstorm events, Fortune will disseminate these ideas on our website, in the magazine, on social media, and beyond.

 

Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm Health

  

- See more at: www.fortuneconferences.com/brainstorm-health-2017/#sthash...

Stoneybrook Physicians

15425-F-G-H-I Warwick Boulevard, Stoneybrook Shopping Center, Newport News, VA

 

Most of this business was previously Frank Hargrove Karate, which opened in the early 1990s. It became Peninsula Institute for Community Health on March 16th, 1998.

 

Space G was previously a Jackson Hewitt Tax Service, which relocated here.

Title: Dr. Herman Watson

Date: 1938

Location: Lakeland, FL

Description: Dr. Herman Watson, far right, presents a check to the officials of the Salvation Army in Lakeland, Florida. Watson was the founder of the Watson Clinic, a major medical facility in Lakeland.

Collection: Dan Sanborn Photograph Collection

ID: p0399

Link: cdm15809.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15809coll...

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

Title: Medical Office

Date: 1953

Location: Lakeland, FL

Description: Architect Donovan Dean designed this building on Lake Morton Drive as an office for a local pediatric doctor group Boulware and Johnson.

Collection: Donovan Dean Collection

ID: p1524

Link: cdm15809.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15809coll...

This is where the doctor would work on you, examine you, etc.

On Sunday, October 16th, PA students and faculty joined more than 55,000 people to walk at the American Cancer Society's Making Strides Against Breast Cancer in Jones Beach State Park.

Together, $2,900,000 was raised! Hofstra PA Program students came just shy of their $1000 goal at $915. Congratulations to PA Program students for understanding the importance of and putting forth the effort to raise money for this important cause.

 

What's a great way to finish the week ... ? ... well taking someone's Declaration as a Biology Major OF COURSE! Amala Hernandez '17 has interest in becoming a Physician's Assistant and knew the proper props for her archival photo were the stethoscope/kukui nut lei combo.

Student organization Physicians for Human Rights was spotted at the Student Center with plenty of big hugs, small hugs, group hugs, and high-fives.

The German humanist and physician Hartmann Schedel (1440-1514) was born and died in Nuremberg. He studied Medicine in Padua and other subjects in various European cities. While in Italy, he wrote a general description of the country’s antiquities. After returning to Germany, he became treasurer to the Episcopal See and cathedral of Saint-Sébald. Schedel possessed a very large library, of three hundred and seventy manuscripts and six hundred printed books, which included works on grammar, logic, mathematics, astronomy, medicine, history and theology.

 

With the help of a team of collaborators, Schedel compiled a landmark work in the history of books, both in its scope and in the quality of the final outcome. The "Chronicle" belongs in the category of illustrated histories of the world, a tradition that began in the Middle Ages. Without exception, these histories begin with the Creation and reach until the age when the book was written, in this case until 1490.

 

The first such attempt to record the history of the world was the "Chronikon" by Eusebius of Cesarea, in AD 300, which narrates the history of the Church, together with popular traditions, ancient and contemporary events, mixed with myths and legends. Schedel’s "Chronicle" commemorates eminent personalities and includes portraits of kings, priests (Jewish and Christian), philosophers and scholars. The history of the world is divided into six periods: 1) from the Creation of the World to the Flood, 2) from the Flood to the birth of Abraham 3) events that followed until the birth of David 4) from the reign of David to the conquest of Babylon 5) the events that followed until the birth of Christ 6) from the birth of Christ to 1490. The work closes with a text on the Second Coming and the description of the history, economy and culture of various cities. Schedel wrote the text and supervised the edition. The wood engravings are the work of Michael Wohlgemuth, painter and engraver, teacher of Albrecht Dürer, and his son-in-law, also an engraver, Wilhelm Pleydenwurff. It was published by the famous publisher Anton Koberger, who from 1489 onwards directed thirty-nine printshops with about one hundred employees. The work circulated in two editions (one in Latin and one in German), in a total of one thousand five hundred copies.

 

This first, extremely rare edition, consists of three hundred and twenty-five numbered folios, with Latin text in Gothic characters, and one thousand eight hundred and nine wood engravings (most of which, one thousand one hundred and sixty-four, are repeated). They mainly depict cities in Central and Southeast Europe, and rulers from these.

 

Known as the "Nürnberg Chronicle", this ambitious historical and geographical work, a product of the city in which flourished the theory and practice of scientific geography, as well as the art and craft of engraving, in the era of J. Van Eyck and A. Dürer, was a huge success, notwithstanding its high price. It was reprinted three times in the following ten years. In accordance with the spirit of the age, the images tend to be signifiers of place, in which snippets of verisimilitude are intermingled with purely imaginary elements. The same is true of the text, which includes passages from historical sources and a host of information presented without logical sequence and order. Twelve plates represent Athens, Corinth, Rhodes, Lacedaemon (Sparta), Troy, Alexandria, Achaea, Macedonia, Thrace, Athens, and two views of Constantinople.

 

Written by Ioli Vingopoulou

 

Alman asıllı hümanist ve doktor Hartmann Schedel (1440-1514) Nürenberg'de doğar ve aynı yerde ölür. Avrupa'nın birçok kentinde ve Padova'da tıp okur. İtalya'nın arkeolojik anıtları hakkında genel bir betimleme kaleme alır ve Almanya'ya döndükten sonra Saint-Sébald katedralinin piskoposluğunda veznedar görevinde bulunur. Çok zengin bir kütüphane sahibiydi. Kütüphanesi 370 tane elyazması ve 670 tane basılı eserden oluşmaktaydı. Bunlar dilbilgisi, mantık, matematik, gökbilim, felsefe, tıp, tarih ve tanrıbilimle ilgili kitaplardı.

 

Schedel, bilimadamlarından oluşan araştırma grubuyla birlikte kitap tarihinde bir kilometre taşı teşkil edecek olan bir yapıt hazırlar. Hem olağanüstü boyutu hem niteliği açısından çok önemli bir yapıt olan Vakayiname dünya tarihinin resimli anlatıları kategorisine girip Ortaçağ'dan beri süregelen bir geleneğin içinde yer alır. Yaratılış devrinden yazıldığı zamana dek, (sözkonusu kitap 1490 tarihine dek), dünya tarihini içermektedir. Böyle bir anlayışla yazılan ilk kitap MS 300 yılında Kayserili Eusebios (Eusebius Pamphili) tarafından kaleme alınan Vakayiname sayılır. Eusebios bu yapıtında Hristiyan Kilisesi tarihini, hikâyeler, eski devirlerden ve yaşadığı dönemden olaylar ve söylencelerden bir karışım yaparak anlatır. Schedel'in Vakayinamesinde önemli kişiler, krallar, Yahudî ve Hristiyan rahipler gibi çeşitli filozof ve yazarlar da resmedilir. Dünya Tarihi bu şekilde 6 devre ayrılır: 1) Dünyanın yaratılışından Nuh tufanına kadar, 2) Tufandan Hazreti İbrahim'in doğuşuna kadar, 3) Davut'un doğuşuna kadar yer alan olaylar, 4) Babil kuşatmasına kadar Davut'un krallık devri, 5) İsa'nın doğuşuna kadar yer alan olaylar, ve son olarak 6) 1490 yılına dek tarih olayları. Eser Mahşer Günü ile ilgili bir yazı ve çeşitli şehirlerin tarihî, ekonomik, kültürel betimlemeleri ile kapanır.

 

Kitabın yayına hazırlanışını H. Schedel yapar, gravürlerin çizimi ve basımını ressam ve gravürcü (ayrıca Albrecht Dürer'in öğretmeni) Michael Wohlgemuth ile Schedel'in damadı gravürcü Wilhelm Pleydenwurff yapar, yayını ise ünlü yayıncı Anton Koberger üstlenir. Koberger 1489 yılından beri 100 kişinin çalıştığı 39 ayrı matbaa yöneten bir matbaacıdır. Schedel'in yapıtı latince ve almanca olmak üzere her biri 1.500 adet kitap basan iki ayrı baskıda yayınlanır. Çok nadir bir kitap olan bu ilk baskı 325 adet numaralanmış yaprakta gotik harflerle latince metni ve Orta Avrupa ile Güneydoğu Avrupa ülkelerini ve hükümdarlarını gösteren 1.809 tahta gravür (1.164 tanesi tekrarlanmakta) içermektedir. Bu ilham dolu tarih ve coğrafya eseri, coğrafya biliminin kuram ve uygulamasının gelişmekte olduğu şehirden dolayı Nürenberg Vakayinamesi olarak bilinir. Nürenberg, coğrafyadan başka J. Van Eyck ve Al. Dürer sayesinde gravür sanatı ve tekniği alanında da çok gelişmiş bir seviyedeydi. Böylece Nürenberg Vakayinamesi yüksek satış fiyatına karşın çok büyük bir başarı kazanır ve ilk baskıyı izleyen on yıl içinde üç kez yeniden basılır.

 

Kitaptaki resimler düşgücüne dayanan unsurlar içermekle beraber mekânı belirleyen niteliklerini korumakta ve gerçek öğelerle düşgücü ürünü olanlar birbirine karışmaktadır. Aynı şey metin için de geçerli. Metinde yer alan tarihsel kaynak alıntıları aslında olduğu gibi verilirken bilgiler düzensiz ve gelişigüzel bir biçimde sergilenir. Eser Atina, Korint, Rodos, Sparta bölgesi, Truva, İskenderiye, Achaia (Patra yöresi), Makedonya, Trakya, Atina ve İstanbul (iki görünüm) konulu sadece 12 tane gravür içermektedir.

 

Yazan: İoli Vingopoulou

 

IPAP Graduates Newest Class of Physician Assistants

12.17.2021

Photo by Randy Mitchell

Naval Medical Forces Support Command

 

Master Chief Petty Officer Lee E. Boujie, PA-Student, Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune, N.C. (left) is joined by Maj. Gen. Francis L. Donovan, 2nd Marine Division’s commanding general, and former coworker Patrick R. Madden, Vice President and Head of TASER at Axon. Madden, a former marine captain, served with Boujie previously. (Courtesy photo)

 

Date Taken: 12.17.2021

Date Posted: 01.05.2022 10:34

Photo ID: 7001870

VIRIN: 211217-N-IR096-003

Resolution: 1536x2048

Size: 537.69 KB

Location: SAN ANTONIO, TX, UShttps://www.dvidshub.net/news/412473/ipap-graduates-newest-class-physician-assistants

 

Navy Medicine Historical Files - Subject Series - Naval Medical Forces Support Command (NMFSC)

 

project: Hampton Residence

location: 1751 Laclede Station Road, Richmond Heights, Missouri

architect: Harris Armstrong

client: Dr. Henry E. Hampton

date: 1941

condition: in danger of demolition

 

In the same year, Armstrong designed Dr. Hampton's medical office building at 2328 Market Street that is no longer extant. In 1961, Armstrong designed a second medical office building for Dr. Hampton at the corner of Jefferson and Pine in the City of Saint Louis.

 

This home is included in a large parcel of land the city has slated for demolition to be cleared for commercial development. Although arguments were made by Esley Hamilton and others regarding the significance of the house (architecturally as well as historically), the city decided to proceed with condemnation.

 

To see recent photographs of the house, check here.

 

For more on Saint Louis modern architect Harris Armstrong, check out my blog architectural ruminations.

  

Photograph courtesy of the Harris Armstrong Archives, Special Collections, Washington University in Saint Louis.

The Orange County Register and Coast Magazine, in partnership with Orange County Medical Association, honored Orange County’s top physicians by presenting the 2015 OCMA Physicians of Excellence Awards on Thursday April 22nd.

Marble relief of an Athenian physician called Jason, shown examining a patient. Jason is shown seated on a cushioned cirule chair (sella curulis, a foldable chair), bearded and wearing a tunic and draped in a himation; he is styled to look like an ancient Greek philosopher. He examines a patient, who appears to be either a young male child or a slave (who were depicted as tiny adults) with an unnaturally enlarged stomach and a thin chest. To the right is an egg-shaped object resembling a cupping vessel.

 

The relief was originally thought to be a funerary monument (and the British Museum still lists it that way), but it is now generally interpreted as a dedication to Asklepios on the grounds of the discovery at the Asklepieion of a dedication to Asklepios and Hygieia of the second century AD by the same Dekmos son of Theomnestos of Acharnai as is named here on the inscription.

 

In translation the inscription reads:

 

'Jason, also known as Decimus, of the Archarnian deme [an administrative division of Athens] a physician . . .'. It then goes on to mention other members of his family.

 

The full inscription translates as:

 

'Jason, known also as Dekmos (equivalent to the Roman name Decimus), of Acharnai (the Archarnian deme, an administrative division of Athens), physician. Dionysios son of Jason of Acharnai, by birth son of Theodoros of Athmonon. Theomnestos son of Dionysios of Acharnai and of Eirene daughter of Jason of Acharnai. Philostrate daughter of Aphrodisios son of Aphrodisios of Rhamnous and of Aristion daughter of Karpodoros 5 of Melite.'

 

It becomes clear from ll. 2-3 that Jason’s daughter, Eirene, married Dionysios of Athmonon, whom Jason then adopted as his son. This was common practice where a man’s only child was a daughter (an heiress, epikleros) and was designed to ensure that the man’s property remained in his household (oikos) after his death. Though not made explicit, Philostrate was perhaps the wife of Jason’s grandson, Theomnestos. Philostrate was the daughter of Aphrodisios son of Aphrodisios of Rhamnous and of Aristion daughter of Karpodoros of Melite. It may be nothing more than coincidence that the demes of Acharnai and Melite are associated some five hundred years earlier in a funerary monument for the midwife-doctor, Phanostrate of Melite, which was discovered at Acharnai.

 

This relief is an example of a "Familienweihung", that is a "family dedication" in which several generations of a family appear as co-dedicants. This practice commemorated a dedication made by, or on behalf of, several members of a family. The setting up of family portrait dedications emerged as a practice in the middle of the fourth century in Athens and Attica; such dedications tend to be set up by a relatively narrow range of kin: usually spouses, siblings, parents and offspring. **

 

The top of the relief is worked into a series of mock architectural antefixes.

 

This relief was discovered at Athens by Louis Fauvel (1753-1838) at an unknown location and purchased by the British Museum in 1865.

 

Roman Imperial

Athens, Greece

2nd c. CE

 

British Museum (1865,0103.3)

 

** Thanks to atticinscriptions.com for the assistance in placing this relief into the context of 2nd century Athens. www.atticinscriptions.com/inscription/AIUK45/10

August 8, 2007.

 

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