Difference between revisions of "Christine Haycock"
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
An award-winning surgeon and professor, active in cancer research, she was a nurse in [[World War II]], and after becoming an M.D., was the first woman intern at Walter Reed Medical Center. In later years she obtained a Master's in Political Science at Rutgers, was a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, and the U.S. Army War College. She retired from the military with the rank of Colonel in 1984. | An award-winning surgeon and professor, active in cancer research, she was a nurse in [[World War II]], and after becoming an M.D., was the first woman intern at Walter Reed Medical Center. In later years she obtained a Master's in Political Science at Rutgers, was a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, and the U.S. Army War College. She retired from the military with the rank of Colonel in 1984. | ||
− | She was the first winner of First Fandom's [[Sam Moskowitz Archive Award]] (1998). | + | She was the first winner of the [[First Fandom club]]'s [[Sam Moskowitz Archive Award]] (1998). |
She was buried in Arlington National Cemetery in [[Washington, DC]]. | She was buried in Arlington National Cemetery in [[Washington, DC]]. | ||
− | [[Ted White]] [http://pdf.textfiles.com/efanzines/Apparatchik/78-white.html recalled]: <blockquote>When Sam extolled, in his [[FAPA|FAPAzine]], his new wife's virtues (surgeon, fencer, softball player), I cattily remarked that she sounded, from Sam's description, like a better man than he was. My mistake. Christine wasn't bothered, but Sam was. He sent a Harlem storefront lawyer, one Stanley Seitel, to [[Towner Hall]] to throw a scare into me, and when that didn't work, he instituted a libel suit against me (in Christine's name), for calling her a lesbian and impugning her professional reputation. (This suit, filed in 1961, dragged on for more than five years before getting a court date assigned to it — at which point Christine dropped it.) It was Sam's hope to financially ruin me with this action, but [[Larry Shaw]] thwarted that hope by finding me a First Amendment lawyer who defended me pro bono, thank ghod.</blockquote> | + | [[Ted White]] [http://pdf.textfiles.com/efanzines/Apparatchik/78-white.html recalled]: <blockquote>When Sam extolled, in his [[FAPA|FAPAzine]], his new wife's virtues (surgeon, fencer, softball player), I cattily remarked that she sounded, from Sam's description, like a better man than he was. My mistake. Christine wasn't bothered, but Sam was. He sent a Harlem storefront lawyer, one Stanley Seitel, to [[Towner Hall]] to throw a scare into me, and when that didn't work, he instituted a libel suit against me (in Christine's name), for calling her a lesbian and impugning her professional reputation. (This suit, filed in 1961, dragged on for more than five years before getting a court date assigned to it — at which point Christine dropped it.) It was Sam's hope to financially ruin me with this action, but [[Larry Shaw]] thwarted that hope by finding me a First Amendment lawyer who defended me pro bono, thank [[ghod]].</blockquote> |
+ | [https://www.amwa-doc.org/faces/christine-e-haycock-md/ American Medical Women's Association bio.] | ||
{{recognition}} | {{recognition}} |
Revision as of 14:03, 17 January 2021
(January 7, 1924 – Jan 23, 2008)
Christine Haycock (aka Chris Moskowitz) was a fan, and a leading authority on women's sports medicine.
With her husband, Sam Moskowitz, whom she married in 1958, she attended hundreds of regional conventions and Worldcons, was a GoH at Disclave 9 in 1965, and was active in New Jersey fandom. She was a member of ESFA and the Lunarians (and was Treasurer of the Lunarians.) With SaM, she published Different for FAPA.
An award-winning surgeon and professor, active in cancer research, she was a nurse in World War II, and after becoming an M.D., was the first woman intern at Walter Reed Medical Center. In later years she obtained a Master's in Political Science at Rutgers, was a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, and the U.S. Army War College. She retired from the military with the rank of Colonel in 1984.
She was the first winner of the First Fandom club's Sam Moskowitz Archive Award (1998).
She was buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, DC.
When Sam extolled, in his FAPAzine, his new wife's virtues (surgeon, fencer, softball player), I cattily remarked that she sounded, from Sam's description, like a better man than he was. My mistake. Christine wasn't bothered, but Sam was. He sent a Harlem storefront lawyer, one Stanley Seitel, to Towner Hall to throw a scare into me, and when that didn't work, he instituted a libel suit against me (in Christine's name), for calling her a lesbian and impugning her professional reputation. (This suit, filed in 1961, dragged on for more than five years before getting a court date assigned to it — at which point Christine dropped it.) It was Sam's hope to financially ruin me with this action, but Larry Shaw thwarted that hope by finding me a First Amendment lawyer who defended me pro bono, thank ghod.
American Medical Women's Association bio.
Awards, Honors and GoHships:
- 1965 — GoH at Disclave 9
- 1988 — Sam Moskowitz Archive Award
Person | 1924—2008 |
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names. |