New Black History Month Poster Exhibit honors pioneers of medicine

The Black History Month poster exhibit honors the many contributions of African Americans in science and in the field of medicine.  Nine of the eighteen posters are displayed on the Main Floor of the South Campus (main) Library; the remaining posters are on D1 across from the Food Court.

The exhibit is sponsored by the UT Southwestern Chapter of the Student National Medical Association along in conjunction with the Office of Minority Student Affairs and the Office of Faculty Diversity and Development.  It will remain throughout the month of February.

Biomedical Communications Alumni Art Exhibit showcases great talent

An exhibit of 40 medical illustrations and fine art by 23 alumni of the Biomedical Communications Graduate Program is on display in the South Campus (main) Library until May 18.

This year marks the 65th anniversary of the world’s first degree in medical illustration, which was awarded by Southwestern Medical College in 1947. Unfortunately, due to budget cuts, the program will close in July of 2013.

St. Paul Hospital and School of Nursing History exhibit now in Library

An exhibit of photos and artifacts illustrating the history of the University Hospital—St. Paul is now on display in the South Campus (main) Library. The photos range in date from the early 1900s through about 1975.

St. Paul began in 1896 in a frame cottage on Hall Street that was both a 10-bed hospital and home to a few Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul sisters. From this modest beginning, St. Paul grew rapidly. In 1898, a new 110-bed hospital building opened on Bryan Street, and substantial additions were made in 1916 and 1952. A School of Nursing was begun in 1900, and would operate until 1971. In 1964, St. Paul moved to a new state-of-the-art building on Harry Hines Blvd., where it remains today. These milestones are all reflected in the photographs on display.

A humorous, illustrated essay from 1923 titled “Evolution of a Uniform: 1903-1913-1923” is included in the exhibit and traces the radical changes in nurses uniforms over that twenty-year period.

The exhibit will be on display for at least two months.

“Women in Science and Medicine” book display, web guide, and speaker in collaboration with WISMAC

The Women in Science and Medicine Guide to information resources is available on the Library web site, and books featured in the Guide will be displayed at the Library entrance from February 6 through February 28, 2012. Both the Guide and the exhibit were developed in collaboration with the UT Southwestern Women in Science and Medicine Advisory Committee (WISMAC).

The exhibit coincides with the Southwestern Medical Foundation’s Ida M. Green Distinguished Visiting Professorship, Honoring Women in Science and Medicine. This year’s honoree is Judith Kimble, Ph.D., who is the Henry Vilas Professor of Biochemistry and Medical Genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Dr. Kimble will present “Stem Cells and RNA Regulation: Networks and Mechanism” on Wednesday, February 8, 2012, at 4 p.m. as part of the UT Southwestern University Lecture Series. The presentation will be given in the Excellence in Education Auditorium in the Simmons/Hamon Biomedical Research Building (Room NB2.101).

If you are unable to attend the presentation, a videotaped copy of the lecture should be available for checkout from the South Campus (main) Library within a few weeks. To locate the item, check the Library’s online catalog under “Judith Kimble.”

The “Women in Science and Medicine Guide” lists web sites, books, and databases arranged under headings such as:

  • Biography/History
  • Career Guidance/Management
  • Gender, Science, & Medicine
  • Professional Organizations

To locate the Guide on the Library web site, click on Resources by Subject and scroll down the list until you reach the Guide. Library-owned resources on the topics can also be found in the online catalog by searching for “Women in Science and Medicine.”