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Spring 1967


Winter 1970
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From
Fifteen years of Growth: Yale Medicine
1952-1967 in the Spring 1967 issue:
Speaking at the Yale Alumni Meeting in St. Louis in January this
year, Dean [Vernon] Lippard noted: When Whitney Griswold invited
me to take on the deanship (in 1952), he pointed out a number of problems
that had to be faced, and I soon discovered others. The physical plant
had many deficiencies; the relationship with the Grace-New Haven Hospital,
as it was then called, was cordial but needed definition; the clinical
departments did not, in general, measure up to the preclinical; the Department
of Public Health was seriously undernourished; and there was, as there
still is, need for more financial support for operation. On the other
hand, there were assets that money could not buyassociation with
a great university; a glorious tradition; a faculty that, although thin
in spots, was loyal and devoted; and a brilliant group of students.
From Research in Molecular
Biology, Winter 1970:
A new department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry was established
at Yale last year to promote the interaction between advanced research
in the biological sciences and the development of clinical techniques
in medicine. It brought together two disciplines that were previously
in separate departments.

The former Department of Biochemistry at the medical school was
one of the oldest in the country, having been founded in 1875 as the Department
of Physiological Chemistry. The former Department of Molecular Biophysics
was part of the Yale Faculty of Arts and Sciences and grew out of the
Department of Physics shortly after World War II.

In the past decade, with the enormous proliferation of knowledge
in the biological sciences, department lines have become more and more
arbitrary. It has been especially difficult to draw any intellectually
meaningful boundaries for molecular biology, which now pervades the entire
field. Thus, the joining of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry in one
department brings together investigators whose studies range from questions
of theoretical physics and chemistry to problems of clinical medicine.
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