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DR. CHARLES LYMAN, 87 HARVARD BIOLOGY PROFESSOR
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Dr. Charles Peirson Lyman of Canton, a retired Harvard professor
and conservationist, died Wednesday in Newton Wellesley Hospital. He
was 87.
Dr. Lyman was born in Brookline and attended Rivers School in its
first year. In 1932, he was in the first graduating class of the
Brooks School. He graduated from Harvard College in 1936. He received
a master's degree in 1939 and a doctorate in 1942.
A major in the US Army Air Corps, Dr. Lyman was stationed in the
Pacific during World War ...
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Dr. Lamar Soutter, 87; war hero, UMass Medical School founder
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ON THE DEAN'S LIST ... ... is balancing CWRU medical school's budget, solving West Quad riddle.
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Dr. James McGuire, first student at UMass Medical School; at 48
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First Black Woman To Head U.S. Medical School
Oakland Post
; For most African-Americans of her generation, a professional career was not a given. Born and raised in a Detroit housing project, then as a divorced mother supporting two children while putting herself through medical school, Dr. Barbara Ross-Lee has paid her dues. She went on to be the first
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CHICAGO DOCTOR SEEN AS CHOICE TO HEAD UMASS MEDICAL SCHOOL
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; Dr. Jordan C. Cohen, chairman of the department of medicine of Michael Reese Hospital, an affiliate of the University of Chicago, is the top choice of University of Massachusetts president David C. Knapp to become the chancellor of the UMass Medical School, according to Beacon Hill sources. Through
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Oglesby Paul, 91, cardiologist, dean at Harvard Medical School
The Boston Globe
; Oglesby Paul's heart beat for medicine and for teaching. Dr. Paul, a cardiologist and former dean of admissions at Harvard Medical School, devoted his time to both his patients and students, according to colleagues and relatives. "He practiced medicine seven days a week," said his son, Rodman, of
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DR. PIER PACI, AT 58; PATHOLOGIST, HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL INSTRUCTOR
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; Dr. Pier Franco Paci, a pathologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and instructor at Harvard Medical School, died of pancreatic cancer Wednesday in his home in Brookline. He was 58. Dr. Paci's accuracy in diagnosing tumors and the gusto, warmth and wit with which he shared his knowledge made him a
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First African American Woman to Head U.S. Medical School
Precinct Reporter
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