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Elisha Atkins, M.D., professor emeritus of medicine, died on April
22 at the age of 84 in Belmont, Mass. With Yale colleague Phyllis Bodel,
M.D., Atkins demonstrated the close relationship between the induction
of fever and the ability to resist infection, and was author of numerous
research articles on fever and infection. At the School of Medicine, Atkins
served on the admissions committee and for a year was acting associate
dean. He also served as master of Saybrook College, one of Yale’s
undergraduate residential colleges.

John E. Bowers, M.D. ’47, died on February 10 at the age
of 80. Bowers was a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War
and was the chief of staff at Plantation General Hospital in Plantation,
Fla.

Sonja M. Buckley, M.D., a Yale virologist who in 1969 helped to
identify the deadly Lassa virus, which originated in Africa, died on February
2 in Baltimore at the age of 86. Buckley received her medical degree from
the University of Zurich in 1944. After coming to the United States, she
worked first as a research assistant at John Hopkins, then at the Sloan-Kettering
Institute, where she became head of the solid tumor program in 1949. She
began working on viruses at the Rockefeller Foundation in 1957 and came
to Yale in 1964. She retired in 1994.

Marshall Edelson, M.D., Ph.D., died at the age of 76 on January
16 in Woodbridge, Conn. Edelson was a professor emeritus of psychiatry
at the School of Medicine, where he taught for over 30 years. He wrote
nine books on topics ranging from group therapy to psychoanalytic theory
and received many awards for his teaching and scholarship.

Nicholas M. Greene, M.D., founder of the Department of Anesthesiology
at Yale, died in New Haven on December 28 at the age of 82. Greene, one
of the founding fathers of modern anesthesiology, served as director and
chair of the department for 18 years. He is credited with transforming
the service at Yale from a technical subspecialty of surgery into a medical
and academic discipline in its own right. He published several books and
more than 200 articles about education and the physiological changes associated
with anesthesia. In 2001 the School of Medicine honored Greene with the
establishment of the Nicholas M. Greene Professorship in Anesthesiology,
an endowed chair.

William E. Laupus, M.D. ’45, died on February 14. Laupus
taught at New York Hospital before going into private practice in Detroit.
He returned to teaching at the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, as
assistant professor of pediatrics, and then became chair of the department
of pediatrics at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond. As founding
dean, he transformed the School of Medicine at East Carolina University,
Greenville, N.C., into an accredited four-year program.

James M. Malloy, M.P.H. ’67, died on January 27. After his
graduation Malloy worked for Yale University and then Waterbury Hospital.
He also served as the CEO of three medical centers before moving to Jackson,
Miss., where he founded one of the state’s first HMOs. He subsequently
started a health care consulting practice. Malloy raised money for health
care initiatives serving underinsured communities in Mississippi, earning
him the Distinguished Alumni Service Award from the School of Public Health
in 2004.

Yvedt L. Matory, M.D. ’81, died on April 15 in Needham, Mass.,
of complications from melanoma. She was 48. Matory was an associate surgeon
in the Division of Surgical Oncology and co-chair of the Women’s
Cancer Program at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. In 2000
she started HospitalCareOnline, a company that uses computers and remote
monitoring to care for patients after their discharge from the hospital.

Eric W. Mood, M.P.H. ’43, died on December 31. Mood was a
veteran of World War II, who served in Italy and the South Pacific. He
retired from the Army Reserve as a colonel. He worked as director of the
Bureau of Environmental Sanitation for the New Haven Health Department
before joining the Yale public health faculty as a lecturer. In the mid-1960s
he developed the Division of Environmental Health and served as its director.
His research focused on food sanitation, waste water treatment, swimming
pool standards, drinking water quality, air pollution and the health aspects
of housing.

Alvin Novick, M.D., professor of ecology and evolutionary biology,
died in New Haven of prostate cancer on April 10 at the age of 79. After
serving in World War II, during which he was a prisoner of war in Germany,
Novick studied medicine at Harvard. He taught biology at Yale for 48 years
and was a world-renowned expert on bat echolocation. Starting in 1982,
however, he turned his attention to the aids crisis. He was chair of the
Mayor’s Task Force on AIDS in New Haven and a founder of AIDS Project
New Haven and Leeway, Connecticut’s only nursing home for the treatment
of people living with AIDS.

George A. Silver, M.D., died on January 7 at the age of 91 in Chevy
Chase, Md. A professor emeritus of public health at Yale, Silver served
as deputy assistant secretary for health and scientific affairs at the
U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare from 1965 until 1968.
He served in the Army Medical Corps in Europe during World War II, helping
to liberate Dachau and other concentration camps. After the war, he was
chief of the social medicine division at Montefiore Hospital in New York.
He served on the World Health Organization’s expert committee on
medical care and was secretary of the Federation of American Scientists’
national council.


Send obituary notices to Claire M. Bessinger, Yale Medicine
Publications, P.O. Box 7612, New Haven, CT 06519-0612, or via e-mail to
claire.bessinger@yale.edu
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