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NURSING: Making a Difference
Locally and Globally
Stem Cells: Potential Clinical Applications
Art in the Hallway: Eight
Online Exhibits
Founders and Early Benefactors of the Historical Library![]() |
Welcome to our display about the presence of nursing, both here at Yale University and throughout the world. At our most basic level, we are rooted in service to mankind. Our aim is not solely care of the sick, but better health for all. This display is an opportunity to share with you what we do to make the world a better place. As a profession, we are acutely aware of the trust the public places in us and we are thankful for and enriched by your support. We care for the sick and the well; for the young and the old; for those without voices and those with competing voices. We are in hospitals, clinics, communities, and homes. Some of us come skilled with remarkable technology, yet we all believe that the best treatment we offer is housed in our senses and in our presence. We mediate, both life and death, and are privileged with this intimacy. We educate and learn from each other. We are clinicians, researchers and scholars, and we make a difference. Linda Horan Pellico, PhD, MSN |
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This exhibit sheds light on the insights of prominent scientists and describes potential applications of stem cell discoveries. The exhibit runs from May 4 until July 1, 2005 in the Cushing Rotunda of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library. Included are videotaped interviews of Yale and other scientists as part of an online exhibit and the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library Associates 57th Annual Lecture and Exhibit at the Yale School of Medicine. Director/Producer: Martin E. Gordon, M.D., F.A.A.A.S. Clinical Professor of Medicine and Chairman, Board of Trustees. |
![]() The High Priest oil portrait by Bernie Siegel |
John Anlyan, M.D. Oil Paintings: Landscapes Paul Barcewicz, M.D. Color Photographs: Landscapes James M. Dowaliby, M.D. B&W Photographs: Portraits Bernie Siegel, M.D. Oil Paintings: Portraits Wayne O. Southwick, M.D. Bronze Sculptures Eiji Yanagisawa, M.D. Color Photographs: Florals/Web Ken Yanagisawa, M.D. Color Photographs: Nature Studies/Web Michael O'Brien, M.D. Clay Sculptures |
Art in the Hallway is located inside the Library along the hallway leading from the Circulation Desk area to the Library rotunda. For more information on Art in the Hallway, contact George Moore, Circulation Department, Cushing/Whitney Medical Library.
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An exhibition exploring the sights
and sounds of the evacuation of Manhattan Island during the September 11, 2001
tragedy. Displayed at the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library's Morse Current Periodical
Reading Room through June 27, 2004. Streaming video of symposium
talks available. Created by South Street Seaport Museum, New York City: David Tarnow, Oral Historian and Andrew Garn, Photographer; Martin E. Gordon, MD, Organizer & Coordinator. Exhibit supported by an unrestricted educational grant, Pfizer Medical Humanities Initiative. |
![]() Metallic Tractors, by James Gillray |
This exhibit of British satirical prints from the Clements C. Fry Prints and Drawings Collection was prepared by Susan Wheeler in conjunction with the Yale Symposium, The Art in Medicine: Image-Making and Communication. Each case explores a different facet of medical prints as media of communication. The exhibit dates were April 14 - April 28 and May 12 through June 9, 2004. |
| Marie
Curie, Radioactivity, and the Emerging New Physics: The Extraordinary Career
of a Woman Scientist Curated by Toby Appel |
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This exhibit commemorated the Centennial of the announcement of the Nobel Prize in Physics to Marie Curie, Pierre Curie, and Henri Becquerel in October 1903. The exhibit is in conjunction with the Yale University symposium Marie Curie Nobel Centennial: Celebrating Women in Science November 6 - 8, 2003. |
| Marie Curie Nobel Portrait, ca. 1903. | |
Microscopy: Tools of the Biomedical Sciences
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| Microscopy: Tools of the Biomedical Sciences is an exhibit of the history of microscopy, current applications and future trends that was on display in the t he Cushing/Whitney Medical Library from April 25 through May 28, 2001. It featured rare historical microscopes as well as modern instruments on the cutting edge of technology. Microscopy:Tools of the Biomedical Sciences was created in ho nor of Yale's Tercentennial Celebration by Dr. Martin E. Gordon, clinical professor of medicine and chair of the board of trustees of the Associates of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library. It was supported by an educational grant from the Carl Zeiss Fo undation. The online version includes rotating images of microscopes. |
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| The Historical Library in 1941. Photo by Samuel Kravitt. |
The Medical Library at Yale, 1701-2001, was on display in the rotunda of the Medical Library from mid-December 2001 through January 2002. It was prepared by Toby Appel, Historical Librarian, as the last in a series of Yale Tercentennial exhibit s. Ned Pocengal prepared the Web adaptation.
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| The Yale School of Nursing at 100 Church Street South |
The Yale School of Nursing: A Yale Tercente nni al Exhibit presents the history of nursing education at Yale from the founding of the School in 1923 to 2001. The exhibit was on display in the rotunda of the Medical Library from September throug h November 2001, and was prepared by Mona Florea with the assistance of Helen Varney Burst, Linda Pellico, and Kathleen Bauer. Lilli Sentz prepared additions to the Web version.
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| Laboratory of Epidemiology and Public Health (LEPH) |
Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale presents the history of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health from the first teaching of public health at Yale in the 1880s to 2001. The exh ibi t was on display in the rotunda of the Medical Li brary from September through November 2001, and was prepared by Toby Appel, Historical Librarian, with the assistance of Matthew Wilcox, EPH Librarian.
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| Sterling Hall of Medicine |
Yale and Medicine, 1951-2001, highlights the past fifty years of medicine at Yale, a period of tremendous growth and change. The exhibit was on display in the rotunda of the Medical Library from J une through August 2001. Lilli Sentz and Toby Appel were the curators with the assistance of Arthur Ebbert, M.D. and Gerard Burrow, M.D.
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| Sterling Hall of Medicine, the new home of the School of Medicine, was dedicated in 1925. This picture shows the entrance on Cedar and Davenport Streets before the Institute of Human Relations wing was added in 1931 and the facade altered to its current appearance. |
Yale and Medicine, 1901-1951, part of the Medical Library's Tercentennial series of exhibits, was on display in the rotunda of the LIbrary from late January until the middle of April. It covers the period of tremendous growth in which the Medi cal School gradually moved from inadequate quarters at 150 York Street to Cedar Street. This building boom culminated in the building of Sterling Hall of Medicine and the Institute of Human Relations. Under the deanships of George Blumer and Milton Winternitz, agreements were made with the New Haven Hospital, departments were founded, the Yale System of Medical Education was established, the medical school formed closer relations to the graduate school, and an endowment was built up. Also feature d in this segment of the school's history is the school's role in the two World Wars.
This exhibit was prepared by Toby Appel and Lilli Sentz and is based in part on the manuscript history of the Medical School by Gerard N. Burrow, M.D.
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| Postcard of the first home of the Yale School of Medicine, then known as the Medical Institution of Yale College. The school was located at the corner of Grove and Prospect Streets from 1813 t o 1860. |
Yale and Medicine, 1701-1901, which was on display in the rotunda of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library from late October 2000 to late January 2001, features ephemera, memorabilia, and photographs of Conne cti cut physicians who graduated from Yale College in the 18th century and it traces the development of the Yale School of Medicine from its charter in 1810 to the school's celebration of the Yale Bicentennial in 1901.
This exhibit was prepared by Toby Appel from materials in the Historical Library and is based in part on the manuscript histories of the Medical School by Elizabeth Thomson and Gerard Burrow, M.D.
New Haven's Hospitals: An Online Exhibit
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| The first home of the State Hospital, now Yale-New Haven Hospital, built in 1833. This building was located between Howard and Cedar Streets and faced Cedar Street. |
New Havens Hospitals, was originally on display in the rotunda of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library from May to September 2000. It features photographs and ephemera related to the origins, early years, and complex in teractions of the citys many hospitals and their relations to Yale University. It is the first in a planned series of Yale Tercentennial Exhibits in the rotunda of the Library.
New
Haven's Hospitals was curated jointly by Toby Appel, Historical Librarian
of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Shari Laist, former Archivist for the
St. Raphael's Healthcare System, and Allison Carboni,
former Archivist of Yale-New Haven Hospital, and highlights
the wealth of material available for historical research in these three collections.
Gillian Goldsmith Mayman, Toby Appel, Mona Florea, and Allison Carboni prepared
the Web adaptation.
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