Word: ebert
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...balance of the immediate expense will have to come from private philanthropy. However, Dr. Robert H. Ebert, dean of the Faculty of Medicine, said yesterday that "eventually we will have to have an office for recruitment." Formal fund-raising might be a function of this office, Potter said...
...scholarships will raise the size of the Medical School class from approximately 160 to 185. Ebert said yesterday that this "will probably put some strain on the facilities...
Early in the fall of 1967, Dr. Robert H. Ebert, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, hinted that all but specialist and post-doctoral programs might be discontinued. A committee of experts appointed by President Pusey, however, recommended in December only those curriculum changes that the School has implemented...
...Beecher asked Robert H. Ebert, dean of the Harvard Medical School, to sponsor the Ad Hoc Committee to Examine the Definition of Brain Death. Testifying before a Senate investigation into scientific research on humans increased Beecher's feeling that such a committee was necessary...
...insure divergent viewpoints, the committee drew on various branches of medical faculties. For good measure Ebert and Beecher got some non-medical types to join the crew; they felt that death was not simply a matter of medicine, but also one for other disciplines, especially religion and law. Everett I. Mendelsohn, associate professor of the History of Science at Harvard, joined up after Beecher saw him at a conference on the social implications of biology and chemistry, because he felt his historical background would broaden the group. Ralph Potter was pulled in from Divinity School because Ebert wanted a theologian...