Vital Signs in Charleston: Voices Through the Centuries from the Medical University of South Carolina • Edited by Carolyn B. Matalene, Katherine E. Chaddock; Foreword by Raymond S. Greenberg • Association Copy


Inscribed to the front free endpaper by Raymond S. Greenberg, then President, Medical University South Carolina, to Dr. E. Conyers O'Brian, who served on the board of trustees for MUSC from 1976 until the present and as chairman from 1994-1996, 1996-1998 and 2000-2002 while also serving on the board of directors for the Hollings Cancer Institute. "...Thanks for working with me to help set the course of your alma mater."  Dated April, 2010.


Also flat signed by the authors to the title page. Near Fine hardcover.

The History Press, 2009. 160 pages. B/w illustrations.



The Medical University of South Carolina, which began with seven faculty members and thirty students, is today a large and complex institution, with six colleges, hundreds of faculty and staff, thousands of students and numerous teaching hospitals and research laboratories and libraries. In this unique collection, the remarkable narrative of MUSC's survival and growth is told through the voices of the participants: the students and professors, the deans and doctors, the administrators and employees who have been there all along. They tell their stories through lecture notes and journals, letters and diaries, minutes and memos, headlines and catalogues and, finally, through e-mails and blogs. The men and women of MUSC reveal the challenges the university has met, from wars, epidemics and earthquakes to financial and accreditation crises. And they chronicle the changes in medicine from house calls and purgatives to genetics, vaccines and organ transplants. Not least of all, they record their aspirations, fears and firsthand experiences in their own honest, often humorous, words.