The Good Doctor: Biography of Beulah Ream Allen 1897-1989 BYU Nursing +SIGNATURE
_________________________________________

Beulah The Good Doctor: A Biography of Beulah Ream Allen (1897-1989)
by Lucinda Bateman and Helen Ream Bateman
Published by HR Bateman (2001)
Listing includes book, 'Principles of Teaching' by Bennion previously owned/signed by Beulah Allen

Condition:
LIKE NEW 1st Edition Hardcover Book! The binding is tight and all 187 pages within are bright white with NO WRITING, UNDERLINING, HIGH-LIGHTING, RIPS, TEARS, BENDS OR FOLDS. The covers look near perfect, as can be seen in my photos. You will be happy with this one! Always handled and packaged with care!  Buy with confidence from a seller who takes the time to show you the details and not use just stock photos. Please check out all my pictures and email with any questions! Thanks for looking!

Also included: 
LIKE NEW 1952 Hardcover Book of 'Principles of Teaching' by Adam S. Bennion! The binding is tight and all 173 pages within are bright white with NO WRITING, UNDERLINING, HIGH-LIGHTING, RIPS, TEARS, BENDS OR FOLDS with the exception of the previous owner's signature (BEULAH ALLEN) on the inside front cover. 

About Beulah Ream Allen from the author:
In Utah Valley and on the Brigham Young University campus during the 1960s and 1970s, the name "Beulah Ream Allen" brought instant recognition. As third dean of the University's College of Nursing, a respected medical doctor at a time when few women sought medicine as a profession, and a wise teacher and healer, she was a woman whose very being demanded admiration. A survivor of Japanese internment camps in the Philippines during World War II, she had the moral glamour and faint exoticism that comes with suffering. She had given birth to her second son in the prison camp. Her husband had died a POW after surviving the Bataan death march, making her an effective inspiration to students who needed encouragement to persevere, to the bereaved who needed assurance that they too could endure. 

In our family, Auntie B was a central figure. She was my great-aunt, the sister of my mother's father, and part of the large Ream family with high expectations for each other and high demands upon each other. Beulah and my mother, Helen Ream Bateman, had a special relationship beyond aunt/niece. It was more a combination of mother/daughter, mentor/protegée, initiator/facilitator. Friends. As Helen's daughter, much of Beulah's influence trickled down to me, including her assumption, so calmly assured that I never questioned it, that I would become a physician too. 

Copyright © 2018-2024 TDM Inc. The photos and text in this listing are copyrighted. I spend lots of time writing up my descriptions and despise it when un-original losers cut and paste my descriptions in as their own. It is against ebay policy and if you are caught, you will be reported to ebay and could be sued for copyright infringement and damages.