133,023 research outputs found
Anna Hanselman, MD Anderson\u27s First Nurse, 1960
M.D. Anderson\u27s first nurse dies at age 88. Anna Hanselman, R.N., M. D Anderson\u27s first nurse, is shown at her reitirement party in 1960. Hanselman joined the staff of the istitution in 1943, with Dr. E W. Bertner, acting director. She helped estabish early on, M. D. Anderson\u27s reputation for compassionate and competent car of the cancer patient. from Messenger February 1980https://openworks.mdanderson.org/nursing_img/1001/thumbnail.jp
Chapter 02: R. Lee Clark’s Vision for MD Anderson: A Hospital, Research Institution, and a Setting Where Everyone Belonged
In this chapter, Dr. Bowen talks about coming to work at MD Anderson, his reflections on the institution’s early days, and how MD Anderson developed both a medical and an academic character. He also discusses the institution’s organizational structure and explains why people, “Once they got to M. D. Anderson, they never wanted to work anyplace else.”https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/1674/thumbnail.jp
Interview with David Anderson
David D. Anderson was a Michigan State University faculty member from 1956 until his retirement in 1994. Anderson was born in Lorain, Ohio. He received a B.S. (1951) and a M.A. (1952) from Bowling Green State University. His Ph. D. in American Literature (1960) was earned at Michigan State University. After teaching in the United States Army, he taught at the General Motors Institute (Kettering Institute), and then joined the MSU English Department faculty in 1956. A year later he transferred to MSU's newly formed Department of American Thought and Language (ATL). Anderson also served as the Assistant Dean for Lifelong and Continuing Education in the University College. He retired from the ATL Department in 1994 with the rank of distinguished professor emeritus. In 1963-1964, he was a Fulbright Lecturer in American Literature at the University of Karachi, Pakistan. Throughout his career he traveled and lectured in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Anderson's primary scholarship was about Ohio and Midwestern literature. He was a recognized authority on the author Sherwood Anderson (no relation). Anderson was a founder of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature and was an active member of the Modern American Literature of the Modern Language Association. He published 37 books and countless articles and other creative works. David D. Anderson died December 3, 2011. Topics/People Covered in Interview include: Emerson Shuck, Russ Nye, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, Modern American Literature Mid_amaerica Award, Mark Twain Award, Gwendolyn Brooks, Paul Bagwell, Bert Engel, campus size, hiring, University College, Clarence WInder, Justin Morrill College, James Madison College, Lyman Briggs College, John Hannah, Edgar Harden, Clifton Wharton, Humanities Coordinating Committee, John DibBiaggio, Dolores Wharton, M. Peter McPherson, M. Cecil Mackey, Distinguished Faculty Award, military service, campus protests, GI Bill, Declaration of Independence, Fulbright Schola
Interview with David Anderson
David D. Anderson was a Michigan State University faculty member from 1956 until his retirement in 1994. Anderson was born in Lorain, Ohio. He received a B.S. (1951) and a M.A. (1952) from Bowling Green State University. His Ph. D. in American Literature (1960) was earned at Michigan State University. After teaching in the United States Army, he taught at the General Motors Institute (Kettering Institute), and then joined the MSU English Department faculty in 1956. A year later he transferred to MSU's newly formed Department of American Thought and Language (ATL). Anderson also served as the Assistant Dean for Lifelong and Continuing Education in the University College. He retired from the ATL Department in 1994 with the rank of distinguished professor emeritus. In 1963-1964, he was a Fulbright Lecturer in American Literature at the University of Karachi, Pakistan. Throughout his career he traveled and lectured in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Anderson's primary scholarship was about Ohio and Midwestern literature. He was a recognized authority on the author Sherwood Anderson (no relation). Anderson was a founder of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature and was an active member of the Modern American Literature of the Modern Language Association. He published 37 books and countless articles and other creative works. David D. Anderson died December 3, 2011. Topics/People Covered in Interview include: Emerson Shuck, Russ Nye, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, Modern American Literature Mid_amaerica Award, Mark Twain Award, Gwendolyn Brooks, Paul Bagwell, Bert Engel, campus size, hiring, University College, Clarence WInder, Justin Morrill College, James Madison College, Lyman Briggs College, John Hannah, Edgar Harden, Clifton Wharton, Humanities Coordinating Committee, John DibBiaggio, Dolores Wharton, M. Peter McPherson, M. Cecil Mackey, Distinguished Faculty Award, military service, campus protests, GI Bill, Declaration of Independence, Fulbright Schola
Interview with David Anderson
David D. Anderson was a Michigan State University faculty member from 1956 until his retirement in 1994. Anderson was born in Lorain, Ohio. He received a B.S. (1951) and a M.A. (1952) from Bowling Green State University. His Ph. D. in American Literature (1960) was earned at Michigan State University. After teaching in the United States Army, he taught at the General Motors Institute (Kettering Institute), and then joined the MSU English Department faculty in 1956. A year later he transferred to MSU's newly formed Department of American Thought and Language (ATL). Anderson also served as the Assistant Dean for Lifelong and Continuing Education in the University College. He retired from the ATL Department in 1994 with the rank of distinguished professor emeritus. In 1963-1964, he was a Fulbright Lecturer in American Literature at the University of Karachi, Pakistan. Throughout his career he traveled and lectured in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Anderson's primary scholarship was about Ohio and Midwestern literature. He was a recognized authority on the author Sherwood Anderson (no relation). Anderson was a founder of the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature and was an active member of the Modern American Literature of the Modern Language Association. He published 37 books and countless articles and other creative works. David D. Anderson died December 3, 2011. Topics/People Covered in Interview include: Emerson Shuck, Russ Nye, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, Modern American Literature Mid_amaerica Award, Mark Twain Award, Gwendolyn Brooks, Paul Bagwell, Bert Engel, campus size, hiring, University College, Clarence WInder, Justin Morrill College, James Madison College, Lyman Briggs College, John Hannah, Edgar Harden, Clifton Wharton, Humanities Coordinating Committee, John DibBiaggio, Dolores Wharton, M. Peter McPherson, M. Cecil Mackey, Distinguished Faculty Award, military service, campus protests, GI Bill, Declaration of Independence, Fulbright Schola
Chapter 04: A Year Away; Reorganization of the Basic Sciences; a Return to a Faculty Position
In this chapter, Dr. Bowen talks about research and the working environment at MD Anderson. “The feeling of walking into M. D. Anderson in those days is hard to describe,” he said, “but it was a sense of the becoming a part of something that made you much bigger than you could ever be as an individual. And it is not just me. Everybody I knew had that sense.” He also discusses why he “never really wanted to spend my career anywhere but at M. D. Anderson.”https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/1676/thumbnail.jp
Chapter 13: A Shared Culture of Commitment to Mission
In this chapter, Dr. Bowen talks about the culture, history, and mission of MD Anderson. He also discusses “the individual and collective sense of ownership of M. D. Anderson\u27s mission.”https://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewchapters/1685/thumbnail.jp
IC104: M. D. Anderson Hospital
M. D. Anderson Hospital for Cancer Research exterior view with cars parked in front. See more at Texas Medical Center (TMC) Photograph Collection and finding aid.https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/tmc_photographs/1034/thumbnail.jp
Dwight D. Eisenhower to Dillon Anderson, June 18, 1956
Eisenhower thanks Anderson for flowers and sympathy following his operationTHE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
June 18, 1956
Dear Dillon:
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X know you understand only too well, without elaboration from me, how nauch the thought of friends naeans during the first uncomfort¬
able days following an operation, flowers brightened "our" siiite greatly.
Your
We will have to get together soon to discuss all the unpleasant things that Leonard Heaton can devise.
Meantinae nay thanks and warm regard.
As ever.
The Honorable Dillon Anderson The White House
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OncoLog, Volume 44, Number 06, June 1999
After Diagnosis, Another Hurdle: Cancer Screening for the Cancer Patient House Call: Reduce Cancer Risk With Regular Cancer Screening M. D. Anderson Participates in Multinational Breast Cancer Prevention Trial of Tamoxifen and Raloxifene Nerve Grafting Attempts to Restore Erectile Function After Prostatectomy M. D. Anderson Researchers Study Children\u27s School Lunch Habits and Choiceshttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/oncolog/1075/thumbnail.jp
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