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1. Gerard Wolfe at the Tenement Museum

Thirty years after the first edition was published, Synagogues of New York’s Lower East Side: A Retrospective and Contemporary View, Second Edition (Fordham University Press) was released earlier this year. The author Gerard Wolfe shows how the Jewish community took root on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in the late 19th and early 20th century by focusing on these beautiful buildings and houses of worship. It was Dr. Wolfe’s walking tours on the Lower East Side early 1970’s that led to the renovation of many synagogues in the neighborhood, including the Eldridge Street Synagogue. The Tenement Museum on Orchard Street hosted Dr. Wolfe for a signing and launch event for the book on 19 November 2012. These photos were taken from that event, and a visit to the Museum of Jewish Heritage earlier that day.



Gerard R. Wolfe, Ph.D., is an architectural historian and former professor and administrator at New York University and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He was the first to offer historical/architectural walking tours of the Lower East Side, beginning in the early 1970s. He is the author of The Synagogues of New York’s Lower East Side: A Retrospective and Contemporary View, Second Edition.

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2. Lower’s Dogs

Rom Harre is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Linacre College, Oxford, and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University, Washington, DC. In his book, Pavlov’s Dogs and Schrodinger’s Cat: Scenes from the Living Laboratory, we get an enlightening look at the use of plants and animals–including humans–in scientific experiments. In the excerpt below we see how dogs were essential to figuring out heart transplants.

By coincidence, two men, one living in the seventeenth century and one in the twentieth, who both used dogs as models and whose work led to major breakthroughs in medicine bore the same name.  The first Richard Lower used dogs to perfect blood transfusion techniques, while the second Richard Lower used the same species of animals to perfect heart transplantation methods.

History, as presented in the media and so in popular belief, credits the beginning of heart transplantation techniques to Christiaan Barnard.  Digging a little deeper we come across the most successful practitioner of this art, Norman Shumway.  However, using dogs as experimental apparatus – as pilot plants- to perfect the surgical techniques required to carry out transplant operations on human beings.  Christiaan Barnard did forty-eight trial transplants with dogs before he undertook such an operation with a human being.  He acknowledges that what he uses ‘was a technique built on that developed by Shumway and Lower, who had experimented on more than 300 dogs… With their findings joined to mind there was little point in continuing to further sacrifice of animals.’

Richard Lower studied at the Medical School at Cornell but moved for his residency period to the University of Washington in the northwest of the United States.  One autobiographic snippet suggests that the American northwest suited his love of the outdoors.  Finding things not to his liking there he moved south to Stanford were he could qualify more quickly.  Working in very primitive conditions in the training section of the hospital he eventually met up with Norman Shumway and forged a remarkable partnership with him.

Norman Shumway (1923-2006) studied medicine at Vanderbilt University, moving on to a doctorate at the University of Minnesota in 1956.  He was appointed as a surgery instructor at Stanford University in 1958, where he remained for the rest of his career.  He seems to have been a somewhat paradoxical character.  Reticent and wary of publicity, yet he was famous for his witty and jocular conversation, particularly during the course of long and demanding surgical procedures.  The persistence with which he pursued his goal of successful himan heart transplantation suggests a dogged streak.

Lower began his experimental programme as an assistant to Shumway working on the techniques for open heart surgery, including the possibility of cooling a living heart so as to stop its beating.  Under this condition surgical repair would be greatly facilitated.  The heart could then be warmed up and restarted with a fibrillator.  Perhaps the heart could be removed completely from the patient’s body for delicate surgical work and replaced when the repair was done.  This is the procedure known as ‘auto-transplantation’.

Dogs were already in regular use at Stanford University Medical School for training surgeons.  …Lower and Shumway continued their use of dogs as experimental apparatus, pilot plants for the ultimate transfer of the techniques to the human case.  Despite his skill in surgery Lower was unable to achieve successful autotransplantation.  The reason was simple

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