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Louisiana State University |
Dr.
James C. Andrews
Dr. James C.
Andrews
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James R. Andrews, orthopaedic
surgeon, is internationally known and recognized throughout the
world for his scientific and clinical studies of knee, shoulder
and elbow injuries. A native of Homer, Louisiana, Andrews graduated
from Louisiana State University in 1963, where he was Southeastern
Conference indoor and outdoor pole vault champion. He graduated
from the LSU School of Medicine in 1967, and completed his residency
at Tulane Medical School in 1972. He completed surgical fellowships
in sports medicine at the University of Virginia Medical School
in 1972 with Dr. Frank McCue, III, and at the University of Lyon
in 1972 with the late professor Albert Trillat, who was known as
the Father of European Knee Surgery. Andrews moved to Birmingham
in 1986 to help form the Alabama Sports Medicine and Orthopaedic
Center. During his career, he has formally mentored more than 150
orthopaedic/sports medicine fellows and more than 30 primary care
sports medicine fellows. He holds memberships in several organizations
including the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery, the American
Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, the American Orthopaedic Society
of Sports Medicine, the Arthroscopy Association of North America
and International Knee Society. He is Clinical Professor of Orthopaedic
Surgery at the University of Alabama Birmingham Medical School,
and hold titles at the University of Virginia School of Medicine,
the University of Kentucky Medical Center, and the University of
South Carolina Medical School. Involved in education and research
in sports medicine and orthopaedic surgery, he has made major presentations
around the globe, and has authored numerous scientific articles
and books. He is orthopaedic consultant to five university athletic
departments, USA Baseball, and several professional sports teams
and associations.
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Dr.
Joseph Callaway III
Dr. Joseph
Callaway III |
Joseph Callaway
(1931-1994), Boyd Professor of physics & astronomy, had a distinguished
career in academia and earned national prominence for his research
in solid-state physics. Born in 1931 in Hackensack, NJ and raised
in Alexandria, VA, he graduated from William and Mary College before
his 20th birthday in 1951. He completed his PhD in 1956 at Princeton
and by the time he graduated, had already published eleven papers
in Physical Review. His first academic appointment was at the University
of Miami in 1954. He moved to the University of California-Riverside
in 1960 where he was one of the prime architects of the graduate
program there, and in 1967, he joined the faculty at LSU. He became
the first chair of today’s modern Department of Physics & Astronomy
and is recognized for having molded the complexion of the department
through his leadership and research. He was the first person to
encourage some of his graduate students to become faculty members
at Southern University. Colleagues have described him as a man
of strong personality. His stature among his peers allowed the
department to recruit only the top scientists. A prolific writer,
his book The Quantum Theory of the Solid
State remains a standard
reference and text for students. As an internationally known physicist,
he served the science community in many ways. He was a Fellow of
the American Physical Society, was elected to serve on the Executive
Committee of the Division of Condensed Matter Physics, a Fellow
of the Institute of Physics (UK) and the European Physical Society,
a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
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Dr.
William A. Pryor

Dr. William A.
Pryor |
William A. Pryor, Boyd Professor
Emeritus of chemistry, has had a distinguished career spanning
more than five decades. In 1954, he received his PhD in chemistry
from the University of California-Berkeley in chemistry and began
his first job as a research chemist with the California Research
Corporation. In 1960, he became an assistant professor at Purdue
University and in 1963 he moved to LSU, earning the rank of Professor
in 1968 and Boyd Professor (LSU’s highest academic rank)
in 1972. In 1985, Pryor was named the first director of the Biodynamics
Institute, a biomedical research unit that was the only one of
its kind in the state. In 1988, Pryor became Acting Director of
the Pennington Biomedical Research Center, endeavoring to fill
the empty facility and hire world-class faculty, researchers, and
technical staff for the new center. Having been awarded more than
25 national and international medals and honors, Pryor was one
of the first four scientists granted a MERIT Award, created by
the National Institutes of Health in 1986 to ensure continuous
funding for outstanding scientists. He has received five medals
from the American Chemical Society, is a Fellow of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, and has been both a
Guggenheim Fellow and an NIH Special Post-Doctoral Fellow. Pryor
has authored more than 25 books during his career and been author
on more than 800 articles. Pryor holds memberships in more than
30 societies in the fields of chemistry, biochemistry, toxicology,
nutrition, and gerontology. A recognized expert on antioxidant
vitamins in human health, he has presented at conferences and lectures
world wide and appeared in many national media outlets during his
career.
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Dr.
Eugene C. St. Martin
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Dr. Euegene C.
St. Martin |
Eugene St.
Martin, urologist, graduated with a bachelor of science from LSU
in 1940 and from Tulane University Medical School in 1944. At New
Orleans Charity Hospital he completed an internship, a urology
residency program (1944-46) and in 1950 a preceptorship in urology.
His distinguished career in medicine and service to the medical
community is equally matched by his devotion to medical education.
St. Martin is one of the founding physicians of the LSU Shreveport
Medical School and is a founding member of the LSU Health Sciences
Foundation of Shreveport. He is a Diplomat of the American Board
of Urology, a Fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and
is a licensed medic in Louisiana and Texas. He founded the Ark-La-Tex
Urological Society and the Louisiana State Urological Society.
In 2007, he received the American Urological Association Gold Crane
Award. Throughout his career, St. Martin has been invited as a
guest speaker across the nation. He has served as president of
a number of medical and professional associations, including Shumpert
Medical Center, Louisiana State Urological Society, Louisiana State
Medical Society, Shreveport Medical Society, Society for Pediatric
Urology, and Southeastern Section of American Urological Association.
He was a member of the College of Basic Sciences Development Council
from 1993-1999. He is a consistent supporter of the LSU Alumni
Association, the College of Basic Sciences Annual Fund, and in
2006, created the Eugene St. Martin Endowed Professorship in Pediatric
Urology at the LSU Health Sciences Center in Shreveport. Although
retired, he still does rounds and continues to give lectures and
mentor students.
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