Frederick Baar John ('Jack') Alfred Campbell Burridge Finlay Graham Campbell Adele Patricia Chatterjee (nee Powell) George Archibald Craig Ronald Dent James Montgomery Leishman Howat Maurice Kenig John Douglas Wilkinson Alastair Milner Macdonald Wilson Robert Baird Wilson Thomas Henry Wilson
Autor: | James T. Leeming, W R Morris, Gill Moore, Ian Brown, Gerald Collee, M D J Kenig, A R Lorimer, M F Lewis, R F Gillie, John Surtees, Barry Ross, Margaret Baar, Beverley Y Craig |
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Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | BMJ. 318:1423-1423 |
ISSN: | 1468-5833 0959-8138 |
DOI: | 10.1136/bmj.318.7195.1423 |
Popis: | Frederick Baar {#article-title-2} General surgeon Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, 1957-85 ( b Opava, former Czechoslovakia; q Prague; FRCS), d 14 March 1999. In 1939 he escaped from the Nazi occupation and fled to England where he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps and served in India and the Middle East. After surgical training he emigrated to Canada. He was interested in endoscopy and vascular surgery and was chief of surgery at the Plummer Hospital. In Sault he was a member of the B'nai Brith and loved the arts, especially classical music and opera. He was an accomplished pianist. He also enjoyed riding, skiing, swimming, and tennis. He leaves a wife, Betty, and a daughter and a son. # John (“Jack”) Alfred Campbell Burridge {#article-title-3} Former general practitioner Warlingham, Surrey, 1934-74 ( b Slough 1908; q King's 1933; MBE), d 4 March 1999. Jack joined the Royal Army Medical Corps soon after Dunkirk and trained with 222 Field Ambulance. He was appointed second in charge of 212 Field Ambulance and was with the 53 (Welsh) Division after their Normandy landing on D Day + 21. The division saw heavy action in the next few months and was engaged in the Ardennes offensive. Jack was mentioned in dispatches and was awarded the MBE (Mil). At the end of the war he became senior medical officer to 308 Brigade. When he returned to general practice referral letters to visiting consultants were never necessary as Jack invariably presented the patients himself as he was keen to discuss their management with his colleagues. He was appointed a serving brother of the Order of St John in 1958. Outside medicine he was a keen golfer and an expert gardener. He retired to Sussex and then to Suffolk and Norfolk. He leaves a wife, Margery, and five children. # Finlay Graham Campbell {#article-title-4} Former neurologist Croydon and east Surrey, 1965-88 ( b Glasgow 1923; q … |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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