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Invitation to Residents & Fellows

Henry Newman, Edwin Boldrey and Kaiser Awards

 

To:      All Residents and Fellows, Neurologic Sciences

 

From: SF Neurological Society

 

Submission Deadline:  January 20, 2009

 

All residents and fellows in the neurosciences are invited to submit their papers for consideration for the San Francisco Neurological Society's annual Henry Newman Award, Edwin Boldrey Award and Kaiser Award. The Henry Newman award is presented each year to the author of the best paper dealing with clinical neurology.  The Edwin Boldrey award is intended to recognize a research project in neuroscience. The Kaiser Award is given to the next highest scoring paper, and can be either for clinical neurology or neuroscience. Each award recipient will present his/her paper on Sunday March 1, 2009 at the Society's Annual Meeting, which will be held at Casa Munras Hotel in Monterey, California.

 

The honorarium award is $500.00 each for the Boldrey and Newman Awards and $250 for the Kaiser Award. In addition, the Newman and Boldrey Award winners will receive one night's complimentary lodging at the Casa Munras on Saturday night. All winners will be invited to the Society's Annual Dinner and will receive a framed certificate award. Please e-mail your original research paper to Amanda Pacia at apacia@sfneurological.org by January 20, 2009 for consideration.

 

This year we will again invite all residents and fellows in the neurosciences to attend the Annual Meeting at for a greatly discounted registration fee.

 

Last Year's Winners:  From left to right:2008 Award Winners

HENRY NEWMAN AWARD - Ellen Mowry, MD, Multiple Sclerosis Center, University of California, San Francisco, "Multiple Sclerosis Onset Location Predicts the Location of Subsequent Relapses"

 EDWIN BOLDREY AWARD - Daniel Lim, MD, Department of Neurosurgery, University of California, San Francisco, "Chromatin Remodeling Factor MII Specifically Maintains Neurogenesis From Postnatal Brain Neural Stem Cells"

KAISER AWARD - Jennifer Armstrong-Wells, MD, MPH, Department of Neurology, University of California, San Francisco, Prevalence and Predictors of Perinatal Hemorrhagic Stroke.

EDWIN B. BOLDREY, M.D.

Edwin Barkley Boldrey was born in Indiana on July 17, 1906, the son of a minister and grandson of a doctor. His mother's parents were from Scotland and, spending summers with them as a child, he formed a strong and lasting affection for things Scottish. Influenced by his parents and his Latin teacher, he pursued a liberal arts education as a solid foundation on which to structure a life's work.

 

After graduation from DePauw University, he followed his growing interest in medicine, like many students during the Depression, working to continue his education. His interest in the nervous system was awakened by the work of Bailey and Cushing. Three days after receiving his M.D. degree from Indiana University in 1932, he married Helen Burns Eastland, who became his constant partner. After a surgical internship, he was offered a position at the Montreal Neurological Institute by Dr. Wilder Penfield in 1935. With Penfield, he studied and published original contributions that provided the fundamental anatomical correlates of much of the clinical physiology of motor and sensory cortical mechanisms in humans. He completed his residency in 1939.

 

In 1940, Dr. Howard C. Naffziger persuaded Dr. Boldrey to join the Department of Neurological Surgery at UCSF, where he served on the faculty for 48 years and as Chairman from 1951 to 1956. Dr. Boldrey was a pioneer in the therapeutic use of radiation for cerebral arteriovenous malformations and brain tumors. Among his many other contributions, to improve surgery for cervical intervertebral disc disease he developed an anterior cervical approach using discectomy without fusion, and was the first to remove a compressive lesion without requiring a bone graft.

 

As a physician, Dr. Boldrey demanded uncompromising attention to detail and concern in every act bearing on his patients' safety and welfare. His character was matched by his kind and gracious nature and a ready wit, and the fellowship of his colleagues and residents was a rich and valued aspect of his professional life. The Edwin B. Boldrey Lectureship at UCSF, established in 1983, reflects the maxim he adopted from Michaelangelo, and lived by- Ancora imparo, I am still learning. The Edwin Boldrey Award for Research In The Neurosciences was established by the San Francisco Neurological Society in honor of this great mentor and physician.

 

 

HENRY NEWMAN, M.D.

Henry Wise Newman, M.D., for whom one of our Society's two annual awards is named, was one of Stanford School of Medicine's first neurologists. He descended from a Fresno family of vintners, rose to full Commander in the U. S. Navy, and continued as a consultant once a week to the Oak Knoll Naval Hospital. A compact man with a wry sense of humor, he was a shrewd diagnostician and compassionate clinician.

 

He had many interests besides neurology, including sailing and restoring antique cars (his death occurred from a ruptured aortic aneurysm, while pushing one of these cars).

 

He left an indelible impression on those who worked with him, and he influenced many careers. His former Stanford colleague, Wm. Hofmann, M.D., remembers him as "a pleasant mixture of Robert Benchley and W. C. Fields, and the likes of him are today nowhere to be found".