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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Sep 12.
Published in final edited form as: Neuroscience. 2013 Dec 6;0:174–186. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2013.11.041

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Irvine H. Page's group to discuss the formation of a National Academy of Medicine met for the first time on January 17, 1967, at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Although Page never realized his ambition to create such on academy, this group supplied the impetus that eventually led to the founding of the institute of Medicine. Top, left to right: Fay H. Lefevre, M.D.; J. Englebert Dunphy, M.D.; Carleton B. Chapman, M.D.; Francis D. Moore, M.D.; William B. Bean, M.D.; John B. Hickam, M.D.; E. Cowles Andrus, M.D.; Robert A. Aldrich, M.D.; Ivan L. Bennett, Jr., M.D.; and Stuart M. Sessoms, M.D.; Bottom, left to right: James A. Shannon, M.D.; Frederick C. Robbins, M.D. (who would later become the institute's fourth president, in 1980); Irving S. Wright, M.D.; Irvine H. Page, M.D.; Douglas D. Bond, M.D.; and Robert H. Williams. Photograph courtesy of The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Reprinted from To Improve Human Health: A History of the Institute of Medicine (1998).