Newsletter  Volume 6 Issue 11
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Upcoming Events

Lunch Colloquium
John Banja
February 3, 2020


WEBCAST ONLY
John Banja
February 3, 2020


Lunch Colloquium
Kristin Mann
February 18, 2020

WEBCAST ONLY
Kristin Mann
February 18, 2020

January 27, 2020

This issue of our newsletter is sent to members and friends of the Emory University Emeritus College (EUEC). I hope the newsletter will help keep you informed about our activities and help you feel connected with our members throughout the U.S.  On the left are links to our website and links to contact either me or the EUEC office.   

 
With best wishes,
Gray 


Gray F. Crouse
Director, EUEC
In this Issue:
DirectorMessage from the Director
 
We had another fascinating Lunch Colloquium thanks to Ren Davis who led us through the history of the participation of Emory doctors and nurses in WWI. Along with that we also got to learn a lot about the history of medical treatment and its advances from the time of the Civil War. Thanks to Jan Pratt, you can read about Ren's talk below and thanks to Don O'Shea, you will soon be able to watch the recording on our website.
 
There is also an article in this issue about a different history of Emory Medicine: a history of the Emory Clinic, with Sally Wolff-King as general editor. Over 30 video recordings were made of contributors to this history, many of them our members, and the links to all of those videos are contained in the article below.
 
Our next Lunch Colloquium will be on a topic that is not of direct concern to most of us, but is a big concern as we try to imagine what the future of our society will be. What role is Artificial Intelligence (AI) going to play and what will be the impact on the workforce? Join us as we hear what John Banja has to say about this topic!
 
Also below is Part II of the report on last fall's Interdisciplinary Seminar on THE SOUTH. A glance at the disciplines of those who presented (History, Physics, Geology, Biochemistry, Medicine, Theology, Languages, Dermatology, and English) is a testament to what true interdisciplinarity is!
  
I am very grateful to Gretchen Schulz, Ann Hartle, and Marge Crouse for help with editing and proofing.  
LCFeb3TopLunch Colloquium--Monday, February 3





Artificial Intelligence and the Western Workforce: Will AI Take Our Jobs?
 
 
The Luce Center
Room 130
11:30-1:00
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

John Banja, Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Medical Ethicist, Center for Ethics, Emory University

 

Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium 



LCJan21TopLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, January 21






When Emory Doctors Went to War: Honoring the Centennial of the Emory Medical Unit's Service in the  
First World War
 







Ren Davis, Retired Administrator and Consultant, Emory Healthcare. Author of Caring for Atlanta: A History of Emory Crawford Long Hospital 


Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium


IDSTopInterdisciplinary Seminar--THE SOUTH--Fall, 2019--Part II


The Interdisciplinary Seminar held this past fall was a great success.  Many thanks to Marilynne McKay and Jim Roark for leading this seminar, and to Marilynne for compiling and writing the summary of the seminar that is presented here and in the previous issue.

Click here to read Part II of the report


NewMemTopNew Members




ClinHisTopA History of the Emory Clinic

A history of the Emory Clinic, with Sally Wolff-King as general editor, has just been published.  More information about this book, To the Ultimate Good: A History of the Emory Clinic, Early Years through 1994, as well as links to over 30 videos of contributors to the book (many of them our members), is given below.

Click here to read more below about this book

LCFeb3BotLunch Colloquium--Monday, February 3


Artificial Intelligence and the Western Workforce: Will AI Take Our Jobs?

John Banja, Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Medical Ethicist, Center for Ethics, Emory University

The history of technological development and its use has clearly shown that new technologies have created more jobs than they have replaced. Innovative technologies frequently result in greater demand and, thus, greater productivity, which has been good for job markets. However, artificial intelligence products, especially the ones characterized by "deep learning" computational functions, are generating great concern among futurists who worry that once these technologies become adopted, they will increasingly assume human job functions without improving job prospects for human workers. There is fear they will simply take over. And indeed, people in numerous job sectors including banking, delivery services, assembly line work, and the food industry are expected to be replaced by AI-run devices over the next five to twenty years. Come hear John Banja discuss the ways artificial intelligence is likely to alter the workforce in the not-so-distant future (and beyond) and the ways in which we might prepare for its doing so.  
 
About John Banja
 
John D. Banja is a Professor in the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine and a medical ethicist at the Center for Ethics at Emory University. He also directs the Section on Ethics in Research and Participant Advocacy of the Atlanta Clinical Translation Science Institute at Emory. Dr. Banja received a doctorate degree in philosophy from Fordham University in New York and has taught and lectured on topics in medical ethics throughout the United States and Europe. He has authored or coauthored over 200 publications and has delivered over 800 invited presentations at regional, national, and international conferences. Dr. Banja has conducted research or educational projects with numerous federal and private organizations including the NIH, the American College of Surgeons, the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality, the National Institute for Disability and Rehabilitation Research, the American Society for Healthcare Risk Management, the Georgia Hospital Association, and the Templeton Foundation. He is a former board member of the Commission for Case Manager Certification and the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery. His current research interests include the ethics of patient safety, forensic ethics, and neuroethics. He is the editor of AJOB Neuroscience and is the author of two books. His first, Medical Errors and Medical Narcissism, was published by Jones and Bartlett Publishers in 2005 and his most recent, Patient Safety Ethics: How Vigilance, Mindfulness, Compliance, and Humility Can Make Healthcare Safer, was published by Johns Hopkins University Press in 2019.
 
Dr. Banja was recently awarded a two-year grant from the Advanced Radiology Services Foundation. The grant will fund research, articles, and podcasts in the field of radiology as it relates to the ethics of artificial intelligence.
 
There has been rumbling in the radiology field around artificial intelligence, in particular, that AI will replace radiologists. Dr. Banja has said that doesn't appear likely; although AI can indeed help radiologists read images, that's only a sliver of a radiologist's job function. And even though AI can read the images and make recommendations we must incorporate ethics into AI - what happens when an image is read incorrectly and the recommendation is wrong? Dr. Banja will dive into this, and more, during this grant.  
 
Dr. Banja, principal investigator of the grant, will be teaming up with Emory radiologist Rich Duszak Jr, MD, and Norm Beauchamp Jr, MD, MHS, dean at Michigan State University College of Human Medicine.
 
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LCJan21BotLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, January 21


When Emory Doctors Went to War: Honoring the Centennial of the Emory Medical Unit's Service in the First World War


Ren Davis, Retired Administrator and Consultant, Emory Healthcare. Author of Caring for Atlanta: A History of Emory Crawford Long Hospital

 

THE WAR TO END ALL WARS

 

In 1914, following a series of diplomatic blunders and blusters and incidents of violence and (un)healthy doses of arrogance on every side, the Great Powers of Europe went to war.  After three years of fighting in which millions of men died or were wounded, under the leadership of generals who believed throwing more men into battle might turn the tide in their favor, the sides faced each other from their trenches across a sea of mud in a ghastly stalemate.

 

The United States had sat on the sidelines unscathed and, in fact, President Wilson had won his second term campaigning on a policy of isolationism. But that policy was reversed in 1917, and the United States entered the war and began to prepare to do as the President said, "make the world safe for democracy." But a lot of preparation was required. In 1917, the United States standing army was fewer than 300,000 men. There were no tanks, virtually no other modern equipment, and no Medical Corps. 

 

This was the background to the talk about the Emory medical unit's involvement in the war that Ren Davis gave to the Emeritus College Lunch Colloquium on Tuesday, January 21.  A retired administrator from Emory Healthcare and Crawford Long (Emory Midtown) hospitals, he is the grandson of Dr. Edward Campbell Davis, one of the founders of the Davis-Fischer Sanitorium, renamed Crawford-Long Hospital in 1931.

 

Dr. Davis, whose father had been a Confederate Army surgeon, was almost uniquely qualified for the task he was called upon to perform. He had served as an army surgeon during the Spanish-American War and had retained his military rank. When the Army Surgeon General, who together with the Red Cross was charged with coming up with the necessary medical personnel to form the Medical Corps in 1917, sent out a call to medical schools to assist in recruiting doctors and nurses to serve, it's no wonder that medical school Dean William Elkin turned to Dr. Davis for help.  Dr. Davis had lots of contacts at Emory and in the greater Atlanta medical community.  Working together with his partner, Dr. Charles Dowman, Dr. Davis pulled together a group of medical personnel that on August 30, 1917, was officially named Emory Unit Base Hospital 43, US Army, American Expeditionary Force.  Of course, this fledging unit was not yet ready for service.  It was not until April 1918, that the officers reported to Camp John B. Gordon (current site of Peachtree DeKalb Airport) for training and not until June 1918 that the unit was shipped to Europe on the RMS Olympia (sister ship of the doomed Titanic).  They took with them their own ambulance!

 

Once across the Atlantic, and then the English Channel, they were sent by train to Blois, south of Paris, to set up their hospital.  Several buildings were commandeered and by July 3, barely a month later, the hospital was operational with 939 regular beds and additional emergency beds. It was not long before they were needed.  General Pershing, Commander of the American Forces, had refused to comply with the British and French requests that his fresh troops be used to fill in for casualties in the trenches.  (Upon arrival he is alleged to have said, "Lafayette, nous voici," which cannot have sat well with the British commanders.)  When the American troops went into battle, they fought as units under American command. By August 15, fighting had already sent Base Hospital 43 a thousand patients.  The Meuse-Argonne battle in the fall of 1918, at long last the turning point of the war, sent them thousands more.

 

Medical treatment was organized in a four Tier system.  Tier one was a first aid station close to the front.  Soldiers who needed more care were sent to Tier two, a field hospital 2-4 miles behind the lines. (These were the early forerunners of the medical units portrayed in the TV show MASH, though they didn't have helicopters bringing in the wounded!) Tier three was an evacuation hospital 10-15 miles from the front lines, near the railway so that the most serious and complex cases could be shipped by train to Tier four - the base hospital.   Although in its relatively short existence between July 1918 and the end of the war in November and the wrap-up afterwards, Base Hospital 43 treated 9,000 patients, there were only 102 reported deaths.  This number seems remarkably small until one considers that many wounded soldiers died before they reached the hospital.  Even so, with open wards full of men suffering from the flu and other contagious diseases and with treatment options so limited, it is an impressive statistic. There was only one staff death in the Emory Unit- a nurse by the name of Camille O'Brien who died of spinal meningitis.  In December 1918, the hospital staff received a commendation from General Pershing, and they returned to Atlanta in March of 1919 to great fanfare.

 

Ren Davis listed several notable members of staff besides his grandfather including Dr. Frank Kels Boland, who amongst other achievements was instrumental in having the statue of Crawford Long placed in the US Capitol, and Joel C. Harris, son of Joel Chandler Harris, born at the Wren's Nest, who served as Quartermaster.

 

The war brought many medical advances including motorized ambulances, organized triage systems for treating patients, antiseptics and disinfectants to combat infection, improved anesthesia,  developments in prosthetic limbs, use of vaccines to reduce the spread of contagious diseases, advances in blood typing, a portable X-ray machine designed by Marie Curie, and early understanding of shell shock or so-called battle fatigue known today as PTSD.  Great medical advances to set beside the terrible cost of the war in lives lost or shattered.

 

It is now more than 100 years since the end of the Great War that, unfortunately, did not end all wars.  Yet the memory of its horror and the loss of a generation still resonates today (not least in literary and cinematic evocations, as, for example, two major films of the past year, They Shall Not Grow Old and 1917). During the Second World War, which also didn't end all wars, Emory equipped another team, mobilized as General Hospital 43. This unit, which served in North Africa and France, treated more than 20,000 patients. Let us all hope and pray that this proud heritage of service not require Emory to staff another hospital in a future Third World War.

 

Thank you to Ren Davis for his presentation and the exhaustive research behind it, bringing a not well-known story of Emory to us in the Lunch Colloquium.

 

--Jan Pratt

 

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IDSBotInterdisciplinary Seminar--THE SOUTH--Fall, 2019--Part II


THE SOUTH

This is a continuation of the report on the Interdisciplinary Seminar THE SOUTH.  For the first part, please see the previous issue of this Newsletter, Volume 6, Issue 10.  The picture above is of many of the participants:

Back row L to R: Linda Hubert, Tolly Williamson, Woody Hickox, Gretchen Schulz,

                            Don O'Shea

Front L to R: John Juricek, seminar leaders Marilynne McKay and Jim Roark

(Not in photo: Don McCormick, Delia Nisbet, and Spencer King)

 
 
 

Tolly Williamson (Theology) led a discussion on "Religion in the U.S. South" with a comprehensive essay written by Charles Reagin Wilson, a Professor of History at the University of Mississippi. Highlights included the Native American presence, which left a spiritual legacy in the South although Christianity increasingly replaced traditional Indian worldviews. In contrast with the North, religions of Western Africa and Western Europe came together in the South.

 

Secession of major religious denominations occurred in the 1840s.  Baptists withdrew over the issue of whether a slave-owner could be a missionary. Methodists withdrew on whether a slave-owner could be a bishop. Episcopalians did not formally divide. Most Catholic immigrants went to northern cities but Catholics and Jews in the South found ways to accommodate to a bi-racial society dominated by evangelical Protestants. Most worship by slaves occurred in biracial churches and spirituals became the creative group expression.

 

Evangelicalism began its rise in the mid-eighteenth century. It valued religious experience over liturgy, theology and other forms of religious life. Evangelicals' informal spirit-driven style of worship evoked remembrances of African Dance religions. Evangelicals were successful and expansive.

 

 

Delia Nisbet (Oxford, Languages) focused on the involvement of Southern Jewish Sephardic and Ashkenazy communities during 200 years of American Southern history. The first Sephardic communities in Georgia began in 1733 as General Oglethorpe assigned plots of land to these settlers. During the American Revolution, a Jewish native of Savannah, Mordecai Sheftall, took the lead in establishing the first "American Government." He also became the commissary general for Georgia militia and Continental troops. During the Civil War, Southern Jews, among them Judah P. Benjamin fought for the Confederate States. After the war, during Reconstruction, Jews from Central and Eastern Europe moved to the South where they were considered to be racially white but "racial outsiders." During the Civil Rights movement, the question confronting historians of Southern Jewish history was to assess if Southern Jews, who publicly showed support for segregation, did so in order to gain acceptance from white gentiles or if they also shared their prejudices.

 
 

John Juricek (History) presented "Indians of the Colonial Southeast" with more or less unfamiliar aspects of Indian society in colonial America. Most of our attention was on how leading anthropologists have described southern Indian societies prior to - or shortly after - the arrival of Europeans. Following Charles Hudson, chief authority on the Southeastern Indians, we considered the surprising importance of dual organization in these societies. We then turned to Morton Fried's "The Myth of Tribe." This provocative article contends that "Indian tribes" did not predate contact with Europeans but was one result of that contact. Finally we looked at the earliest years of English interaction with Southeastern Indians. Unlike other colonizing powers the English did not aim to govern Indians, but instead dealt with them as outsiders via diplomacy. The Anglo-Indian diplomacy that developed was a hybrid diplomacy, notably in its acceptance of native tradition that all agreements lapsed unless regularly renewed.

 

   
 
 

 

Marilynne McKay (Medicine, Dermatology) led a discussion on regional cooking, which typically borrows from local populations. In the South, Indian tribes ate squash, corn, and deep-pit barbecuing; the slave trade introduced African spices, black-eyed peas, okra, rice, eggplant, sorghum and melons. English/European settlers grew wheat, and raised cattle and chickens, maintaining a diet that included sugar, flour, milk, and eggs. Traditional Southern meals tended to be seasonal and vegetable-rich, typically including beans, rice, a little pork, and "greens" with cornbread, the latter a cornerstone of Southern cuisine, along with grits, fritters, and hoecakes.




Seminar participants companionably shared tastes of Hoppin' John (black-eyed peas, rice, onion, red and green pepper, and bacon), "a mess o' greens"  (cooked collards, mustard, and turnip leaves), "likker pudding" (made with sweet potato, egg, milk, and bourbon), chess pie,  and a comparison of two packaged cornbread mixes: Krusteaz Southern v Trader Joes (voted a delicious draw). Also on the menu was mac and cheese (often classed a "vegetable" in southern diners) and some Kentucky wines.


Linda Hubert (English, Agnes Scott) addressed "Fallen Angels: Several 'Ladies' and their 'Me-Too' Moments in Early/Mid-20th Century Southern Literature." John Crowe Ransom and Allen Tate, two of the Vanderbilt Fugitive poets, both dispel with irony the paralyzing futility of clinging to romanticized views of the southern past that include idealized notions of ladylike behavior and chivalric male honor.  

 

Robert Penn Warren's narrative poem Brother to Dragons reveals a brutal slave culture that also victimizes women with false expectations of feminine virtue and subjugated roles as his narrator (Thomas Jefferson's nephew Lilburn Lewis) scapegoats his self-loathing by making his wife surrender to an obscene sexual act that pulls her from the pedestal on which he has placed her. Victor Fleming's direction of the domestic "rape scene" from the film of "Gone with the Wind" inspired a comparison with Margaret Mitchell's text, which seemed subtler than the film in conveying Scarlett's abandonment of any "proper" pretensions to a lady's forbearance of sex - and less intent on emphasizing Rhett's apology for dishonorably taking advantage of his estranged wife.

 


Gretchen Schulz (Oxford, English) introduced "Country Music: 'Three Chords and The Truth'" with a video clip of Hank Williams, "the hillbilly Shakespeare," singing "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry," a song epitomizing the heart-rending authenticity and truth-telling of country music She contended that we are all so lonesome we could cry--because we are all "wayfaring strangers, a-traveling through this world of woe," men and woman "of constant sorrow" that may be mitigated by the love of other strangers met along the way, though love itself may be a source of sorrow, witness the many country songs detailing the innumerable versions of pain that this irresistible pleasure inevitably entails. We heard (and watched) a dozen performances including Patsy Cline, Emmylou Harris, Loretta Lynn, Reba McEntire, Tammy Wynette, Dolly Parton, Johnny Cash, Willy Nelson, and others, ending with Kris Kristofferson offering his take on the lonesomeness we (oxymoronically) share: "Sunday Morning Coming Down." In the end, we agreed that the unhappiness that infuses such music is perhaps the most "southern" thing about it, reflecting the fact we've referenced often in this seminar, that "this world of woe" has often proven even more woeful for southerners than for others, given the history of loss that haunts the region still.

 


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NewMemBotNew Members

New members are the lifeblood of any organization. Please make a special effort to welcome them to EUEC! 

Jamil S. Zainaldin, PhD, President Emeritus, Georgia Humanities Council
 
I moved to Atlanta in 1997 to assume the position of President of Georgia Humanities Council, an affiliate of Emory and the National Endowment for the Humanities.  I retired from that position after 21 years (having taught at Emory as an adjunct faculty member for ten of those years).  Prior to moving to Georgia, I served in leadership capacities at the Federation of State Humanities Councils and the American Historical Association (both in Washington, D.C.), and as a faculty member of Northwestern and Case Western Reserve Universities.  As an educator, historian, writer, non-profit advocate, and public speaker, I believe in the power of the humanities and arts to enrich and transform our lives.

 

 

ClinHisBotA History of the Emory Clinic


To the Ultimate Good: A History of the Emory Clinic, Early Years through 1994
(Bookhouse Group, Inc., October, 2019)

The book traces the distinguished history of the Emory Clinic, beginning with an initial gift in the 1930s from the legendary chairman of The Coca-Cola Company and philanthropist Robert W. Woodruff. The book chronicles and celebrates the accomplishments and achievements of the medical departments, divisions, and clinical specialties through 1994 and illustrates the essential roles of the Emory Clinic in contributing to the advancement of medical knowledge and skill and accruing "to the ultimate good of the sick everywhere."
 
Copies of the book are available for purchase at the Emory Barnes and Noble Bookstore and online via the Bookhouse Group, Inc. website.   
 
 
Clinic History Video YouTube Links
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne

Our words of inspiration from the last walk can be found in the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory.  The main part of the building is located at 1701 Upper Gate Drive, just off Clifton at the Cliff Shuttle Circle.  Constructed in 2003, the current Winship Cancer Institute building replaced an older facility that had been part of Emory University Hospital.  

According to Emory's website, Robert Winship was the maternal grandfather of Robert W. Woodruff and died of cancer, as did Woodruff's mother. Woodruff started the Winship Cancer Center with a gift in 1939, and the Woodruff Foundation helped support construction of the new building.

As I mentioned, each level of the building has a special word of inspiration -- all are shown below, as well as a photo of the building itself. 



 


For our next walk, let's visit a place on campus where, today, students go to socialize, eat, and unwind.  Way back when, this place was filled, not with students, but suitcases and traveling bags...
 
Where will you find this on the Emory Campus?




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Emory University Emeritus College

The Luce Center
825 Houston Mill Road NE #206

Atlanta, GA 30329

   

Emory University Emeritus College, The Luce Center, 825 Houston Mill Road NE #206, Atlanta, GA 30329
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