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Notes1940s ![]() |
2003-2004 |
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Robert H. Furman, M.D. ’43,
FW ’45, writes to say: “We’re enjoying retirement at
La Posada, a continuing care retirement community in Green Valley, Ariz.”
Furman attends a medical journal club and weekly grand rounds at the University
of Arizona School of Medicine. He also participates in a weekly lecture
series called “The Forum at La Posada.” |
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1950s |
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Eva Henriksen, M.D. ’54,
writes to say that “in Los Angeles, I quilt, visit with daughter
Liz and granddaughters Ryann, 8, and Addison, 5, and e-mail daughter Mary,
who with husband Reggis has been in South Africa, Thailand and Australia
as part of an around-the-world tour. I do anesthesia consultations on
operating room-related deaths for the LA coroner’s office.” |
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1960s |
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Robert L. Johnson, M.D.,
HS ’64, clinical professor of otolaryngology at the University of
California, San Francisco, for more than 30 years, writes to say that
“almost 40 years have passed since I was an otolaryngology resident
at Yale. Married for 42 years to Barbara, a staff pediatric nurse, with
three adult children all living in the Bay area. My younger daughter recently
received her doctorate in psychology. My wife and I returned from Thailand,
Bhutan and Laos, where I gave lectures on sinusitis.” |
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| 1970s |
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Ian B. Berger, M.D.,
M.P.H. ’74, is president of Houston-based InFOCUS, a nonprofit organization
promoting eye care for all, and director of the InFOCUS Center for Primary
Eye Care Development, whose domestic programs in poor and rural areas
provide eye care for migrant farm workers, Native Americans and other
populations in need. InFOCUS has promoted a new paradigm, the Vision Station,
to deliver primary eye care. Berger, with colleague Larry Spitzberg, Ph.D.,
O.D., has also created the Focometer, a hand-held refracting instrument
that measures visual errors and determines prescriptions. It was designed
for use in remote or poor areas and is used in 40 countries. |
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| 1980s |
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Robert S.D. Higgins, M.D.
’85, the Mary and John Bent Chair of Cardiovascular-Thoracic Surgery
at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center, was honored as a
leader in public health and medicine by the Gift of Hope Organ & Tissue
Donor Network and its African American Task Force at a ceremony in Chicago
in November. Higgins was honored for establishing a standard of excellence,
improving the health of communities and supporting efforts to save and
improve lives through organ and tissue donation. |
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| Marie (Ciacco) Tsivitis, M.P.H. ’86,
staff associate at the Long Island State Veterans Home in Stony Brook,
N.Y., is teaching a new course titled “Issues in Public Health”
at Stony Brook University as an adjunct staff associate in infection control.
Tsivitis also writes that she and her husband have two children, Alexandra,
8, and Christopher, 4. |
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Antonio F. Vinals, M.D. ’93, writes to say that he and his wife, Liselotte Pieroth-Vinals, M.D., are enjoying living in Manhattan. Vinals is an ophthalmologist at the Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital. He and Pieroth met at Yale in 1992. She was a visiting international medical student and intern at Yale and completed her ophthalmology training at Columbia University and a fellowship in oculoplastic surgery at the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, where she is now on the staff. They are the proud parents of Matilde Beatrix, who was born at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital on December 12 and weighed seven pounds. |
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