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PRODID:-//MD Diversity Programs//NONSGML Events//EN
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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20220909T1613Z-1662740038.1956-EO-13393-1@172.23.128.19
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTAMP:20260421T134209Z
CREATED:20220903T154412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221103T213145Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221014T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221014T203000
SUMMARY: 2022 Homer G. Phillips 26th Public Health Lecture with special ded
 ication of Nash Way
DESCRIPTION: This public health lecture series is named in honor of the his
 toric Homer G. Phillips Hospital in St. Louis\, the premier training ground
  for African American medical professionals. Although it closed its doors o
 n August 17\, 1979\, we can learn much from the hospital’s history\, presen
 ted by the very people who worked diligently to provide […]
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <p>This public health lecture series is named
  in honor of the historic Homer G. Phillips Hospital in St. Louis\, the pre
 mier training ground for African American medical professionals. Although i
 t closed its doors on August 17\, 1979\, we can learn much from the hospita
 l’s history\, presented by the very people who worked diligently to provide
  culturally sensitive care to the patients who so deeply trusted and loved 
 them. This year's lecture will be hybrid.</p><p>Watch a recording of the ev
 ent below:</p><p>https://youtu.be/BsepZk0x1k0</p><p> </p><h2>Guest Speaker:
 </h2><p>[caption id="attachment_13396" align="alignleft" width="162"]<img c
 lass="wp-image-13396" src="https://mddiversity.wustl.edu/app/uploads/2022/0
 9/Dr-_Donald_Suggs.webp" alt="" width="162" height="194" /> Donald Suggs\, 
 D.D.S.\, Civic Leader Publisher and Executive Editor\, St. Louis American[/
 caption]</p><p dir="ltr" align="left">Donald M. Suggs\, D.D.S. graduated wi
 th bachelor’s and doctor of dental surgery degrees from Indiana University\
 , completing his post-graduate work at Washington University Dental School 
 and Homer G. Phillips Hospital. He served as chief of oral surgery at Dover
  Air Force Base in Delaware and was the first African-American to serve as 
 an associate clinical professor at St. Louis University Dental School.</p><
 p>Active in the civil rights movement in the 60s and 70s\, he served as cha
 irman of the Poor People’s March-On-Washington in 1968. Later\, he became f
 ounder and chairman of the African Continuum\, organized to bring serious n
 on-commercial African-American artistic endeavors to St. Louis.</p><p>He wa
 s a long-time president of the Alexander-Suggs Gallery of African Art based
  in St. Louis and New York City (1970-89). He is a founding member of the C
 enter for African Art\, (now the Museum of African Art in New York City) an
 d a former member of the board of directors of the Studio Museum in New Yor
 k.</p><p>Suggs currently serves on the St. Louis Art Museum Board of Commis
 sioners and its Collections Committee. He was the first African-American to
  serve as president of the Convention and Visitors Bureau of St. Louis.</p>
 <p>Suggs has been awarded honorary doctorate degrees from Washington Univer
 sity\, the University of Missouri-St. Louis\, Harris-Stowe State University
  and Saint Louis University.</p><p>He is publisher and executive editor of 
 the St. Louis American Newspaper\, Missouri’s largest weekly newspaper.</p>
 <h2>Special dedication of Nash Way:</h2><p>At the heart of the Central West
  End there is a street called Children’s Place\, but part of that street at
  the center of the Washington University in St. Louis Medical campus will s
 oon be named Nash Way. The change will honor a family whose legacy continue
 s to define pediatric care in St. Louis. As two St. Louis pediatricians\, w
 e celebrate this well-deserved tribute as we mourn the loss of Dr. Homer Na
 sh Jr.\, a consummate educator and renowned clinician whose name is synonym
 ous with compassionate care.</p><div class="callout"><p><img class="alignle
 ft wp-image-13471 size-medium" src="https://mddiversity.wustl.edu/app/uploa
 ds/2022/10/Helen_Homer_headshots-700x467-1-300x200.jpg" alt="Shown are pedi
 atricians Helen E. Nash\, MD\, and her brother Homer E. Nash Jr.\, MD\, St.
  Louis pediatricians who spent decades providing health care to and advocat
 ing for generations of children. On Oct. 14 on the Washington University Me
 dical Campus\, Nash Way will replace Children’s Place between Euclid Avenue
  on the west to Taylor Avenue on the east. The renaming is planned to honor
  the late siblings." width="300" height="200" data-wp-editing="1" /></p><h3
 ><a href="https://medicine.wustl.edu/news/a-family-of-pediatricians-paves-w
 ay-for-health-equity-in-st-louis/">A family of pediatricians paves way for 
 health equity in St. Louis</a></h3><p>The Nash family prioritized health eq
 uity by caring for the health and well-being of hundreds\, if not thousands
 \, of children in the St. Louis area.<br /><a href="https://medicine.wustl.
 edu/news/a-family-of-pediatricians-paves-way-for-health-equity-in-st-louis/
 ">Read the story »</a></p></div><p>The medical careers of two of his childr
 en\, Helen and Homer\, brought them to St. Louis and forever changed this c
 ity for the better. Dr. Helen Nash did her residency at Homer G. Phillips H
 ospital and was made supervisor of pediatrics the minute she finished her t
 raining. She transformed care at that hospital and in 1949 became the first
  African American woman to join the attending staff at St. Louis Children’s
  Hospital\, where she helped develop one of the first specialized wards for
  premature infants.</p><p>She fought to get the best care for her patients 
 — and for basic recognition of their humanity. Helen was also one of the fi
 rst four African American physicians on the clinical faculty of Washington 
 University School of Medicine and later served as acting dean of minority a
 ffairs for three years  after her retirement from practice. She paved the w
 ay for others to follow her\, creating a scholarship for St. Louis kids loo
 king to pursue careers in medicine.</p><p>Dr. Homer E. Nash Jr. served in t
 he U.S. Army in Italy during World War II and received a Purple Heart and a
  Bronze Star. When he returned\, he went to medical school in Nashville and
  then moved to St. Louis to train under his sister at Homer G. Phillips.</p
 ><p>The Nash family has shown us what it means to take seriously the health
  and specific needs of all members of our community. Nash Way will honor th
 is extraordinary family and serve as a permanent testimonial of their servi
 ce.</p><p>In February\, the city approved a measure renaming Children's Pla
 ce – between Euclid Avenue on the west to Taylor Avenue on the east -- as N
 ash Way\, to celebrate the accomplishments and cultural impact of Dr. Helen
  Nash on the St. Louis region.</p><p>Free validated parking is available in
  the Euclid Garage\, across the street from the Center for Advanced Medicin
 e (CAM) building or the Metro garage.</p><p><a href="https://wustl.az1.qual
 trics.com/jfe/form/SV_cvi1yRygKycDm8C">Please RSVP to attend this event!</a
 ></p><p>Reach out to Liz Riggs at <a href="mailto:eriggs@wustl.edu">eriggs@
 wustl.edu</a> if you have any questions.</p>
LOCATION:Eric P. Newman Center
GEO:38.636891;-90.262391
ORGANIZER;CN="Brian":MAILTO:bmarston@wustl.edu
URL;VALUE=URI:https://mddiversity.wustl.edu/events/calendar/2022-homer-g-ph
 illips/
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TZID:America/Chicago
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TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
DTSTART:20220313T080000
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