Category: Uncategorized

  • Reunion Weekend a Big Success

    Reunion Weekend a Big Success Alumni Weekend attracted more than 435 alumni and their guests to the medical school April 19–20. Keen interest in Northwestern’s progress made a state-of-the-school address, presented by Senior Executive Associate Dean and Chief Operating Officer Jeffrey C. Miller, a major attraction. Strongly attended, the update generated “lively discussion,” reported Assistant[…]

  • Bonow is President-Elect of American Heart Association

    March 8, 2002 Broadcast Media: Tamara Kerrill Field at (847) 491-4888 or attlk@northwestern.edu Bonow is President-Elect of American Heart Association CHICAGO— Robert O. Bonow, M.D., Max and Lilly Goldberg Professor of Cardiology at The Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, has been named president-elect of the American Heart Association. Bonow will become the AHA[…]

  • In Memoriam (David Earle, Olga Haring, Roy Patterson, Herbert Sommers)

    In Memoriam (David Earle, Olga Haring, Roy Patterson, Herbert Sommers) David P. Earle, MD, professor emeritus and former chair of medicine at the medical school, died January 31 in his Wilmette, Illinois, home. He was 91. Dr. Earle earned his MD degree at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1937 and completed residency[…]

  • Exchange Program Takes Students to Mexico City

    Exchange Program Takes Students to Mexico City Four medical students returned to school this fall with a renewed appreciation for the medical profession thanks to a program called Medicine and Public Health in Mexico that took them to Mexico City this summer for a six-week experience in international health. Joined by several Northwestern University undergraduates,[…]

  • Free Conference Focuses on Human Stem Cell Research

    March 21, 2002 Contact: Megan Fellman at (847) 491-3115 or atfellman@northwestern.edu Free Conference Focuses on Human Stem Cell Research EVANSTON, ILL.— Human embryonic stem cells can potentially develop into every tissue of the body, but adult stem cells are thought to be less flexible and more focused. Should stem cells of either kind be used[…]

  • Alumni to be Treated to Old and New During Annual Reunion

    Alumni to be Treated to Old and New During Annual Reunion Alumni Weekend will be April 19–20 for MD and GME alumni of the medical school. Of special interest are a CME session on “Stem Cells and Genes in the Practice of Medicine” moderated by Rex L. Chisholm, PhD, director of the Center for Genetic[…]

  • School Renamed to Recognize Generosity of Feinberg Foundation

    School Renamed to Recognize Generosity of Feinberg Foundation Northwestern University President Henry S. Bienen announced February 13 that the medical school would be renamed The Feinberg School of Medicine in recognition of gifts totaling more than $103 million from the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation. The total includes a new $75 million gift for medical[…]

  • VA Lakeside’s Inpatient Unit to be Closed

    VA Lakeside’s Inpatient Unit to be Closed The Department of Veterans Affairs announced on February 8 that inpatient care at VA Chicago Health Care System—Lakeside Division would be phased out, pending congressional approval. Chicago-area veterans requiring inpatient care would go to VA Chicago’s West Side Division at 820 South Damen Avenue. The VA plans to[…]

  • Gene-Based Cancer Test Studied

    February 8, 2002 Gene-Based Cancer Test Studied CHICAGO— Northwestern University Medical School is testing an investigational, noninvasive, gene-based screening method for colorectal cancer, the second-leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Around 57,000 Americans die of colon cancer each year. The test, called the PreGen-Plus, uses a technique similar to that described in[…]

  • Scientists Develop Nanoarrays for Biological Detection

    February 11, 2002 Contact: Megan Fellman at (847) 491-3115 or atfellman@northwestern.edu Scientists Develop Nanoarrays for Biological Detection EVANSTON— Scientists at Northwestern University have developed a new detection technology on the nanometer scale that could lead to the next generation of proteomic arrays and new methods for diagnosing infectious diseases. Once optimized, the new nanotechnology holds[…]