TAKE WING!
Interesting Things That Happened On
My Way To School
By: E. Grey Dimond (Signed by
Author)
Copyright: 1991; Stated First
Edition
Published By: University of Missouri-Kansas
City School of Medicine and The Lowell Press
This Soft Cover autobiography
is signed by the author, who passed away in 2013 (see obituary below). Book in great condition inside and out.
Extremely
collectible in great condition! First
editions in this great of condition are hard to find. Signed versions are exceedingly rare. Do your own research!!!
About Book:
Dr E. Grey Dimond's
autobiography, from childhood through retirement from academic medicine, is a
fascinating and exciting read. Its tenor is one of vaulting ambition combined
with exuberant enthusiasm for the good fortune of being a physician and total
confidence in the worthiness of his profession. We learn a little about
Dimond's childhood in a small Mississippi town, of the tragedy of his alcoholic
father, of his early first and unsuccessful marriage, and of his attending
Purdue University and the Indiana University Medical School.
The author's
medical education occurred during World War II via the accelerated Army
Specialized Training Program. As early as his first year, he took umbrage at
the rigidity of both pre-medical and medical school curricula. He describes a
"dreary lecture intensive year... and the required initiation rites of the
tedious, macabre, strangely irrelevant dissection of the formaldehyde-soaked
cadaver."
Author?s Obituary:
Hundreds gathered
at the University of Missouri-Kansas City Sunday to celebrate the life of the
late E. Grey Dimond, a founder of the university?s School of Medicine.
Dimond, a
cardiologist, teacher, author, world traveler, artist and medical pioneer, died
in November at the age of 94.
The public was
invited to the life celebration at UMKC?s Pierson Auditorium on what would have
been Dr. Dimond?s 95th birthday. Guests were served cake and champagne to toast
his birthday and his life.
Speakers at the
event included family members, colleagues, friends and former students.
Daughters Lark Grey Dimond Cates and Lea Grey Dimond offered rememberances, as
did UMKC Chancellor Leo E. Morton, Jerald A. Burton, M.D., Karen E. Canon,
Nancy K. Hill, Harry S. Jonas, M.D., Richardson K. Noback, M.D., and C.J. Wei.
The family has
indicated that memorial contributions may be made to Diastole Scholars? Center,
2501 Holmes, Kansas City, Mo. 64108.
Dimond, a national
medical education consultant and the former chair of the University of Kansas
Department of Medicine, was recruited to start the UMKC School of Medicine,
founded in 1971. At his insistence, UMKC refused to follow the traditional
medical school format ? four years of premedical education plus four years of
medical training ? and replaced it with an intensive six-year curriculum
modeled on his own accelerated education during World War II. Students would
work nearly year-round, and they would have contact with patients almost from
the start.
More than 3,000
physicians have graduated from the UMKC School of Medicine.
?E. Grey Dimond was
an innovator and a leader, as well as a healer,? said UMKC Chancellor Leo E.
Morton. ?A man with immense gifts of intellect, imagination and insight, he put
those gifts to work to benefit his community, his university, his profession
and the world at large. Many of us at UMKC feel his loss deeply and personally;
all of us are the beneficiaries of his vision, and the years of intense effort
he put into the realization of that vision.?
In 1971, the same
year the medical school was founded, Dimond was one of a handful of physicians
invited inside Communist China. It was the first of more than two dozen trips
to China, a nation, people and culture that grew to become a lifetime passion.
The late
international journalist, Edgar Snow, opened Dimond?s mind to China in the
early 1960s. Snow, a Kansas City native, had lived in China for 14 years.
Dimond?s wife, Mary Clark Dimond, who died in 1983, created a fund in honor of
Snow. Now called the Edgar Snow Memorial Foundation, the organization hosts a
number of opportunities to bridge relations in U.S. and China, including the
Snow Symposium, held biennially in Kansas City and China. The foundation is an
affiliate constituent organization of UMKC, which holds the Edgar Snow
Archives.
In 1994, Dimond
dedicated his modernist house on Hospital Hill to UMKC to be used for
university and community events, meetings and receptions. The house at 25th and
Holmes is named Diastole (dy-AS-tuh-lee),
a medical term for the interim between heartbeats, when the heart muscle
relaxes. It was the sort of rest-plus-invigoration role Dimond intended the
home to perform.
Dimond also
published 18 books including ?Essays From An Unfinished Physician: Lessons From
People, Patients and Life? (2000) and ?Inside China Today: A Western View?
(1984).
As UMKC Provost
Emeritus of Health Sciences, Dimond won the Chancellor?s Medal in 2011, UMKC?s
highest non-academic honor. The medal, given at the discretion of the
chancellor, honors those who have shown unwavering support and volunteer
service.
Dimond held the
medical profession and its education dear until his death. His impact is
visible throughout UMKC?s School of Medicine. The E. Grey Dimond, M.D., Program
in International Medicine gives students the opportunity to develop an
understanding of patient cultures and traditions in foreign countries and to
gain international experience. The E. Grey Dimond, M.D., Take Wing Award honors
a graduate who has excelled in medicine, academic medicine, research or
community service. Take Wing is a bronze sculpture cast from a carving Dimond
created in 1952 from a piece of driftwood. The sculpture stands in front of the
School of Medicine.
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