2008年全国优秀院长

2024-08-01

2008年全国优秀院长(精选6篇)

2008年全国优秀院长 第1篇

南京大学医学院附属鼓楼医院院长丁义涛、中国人民解放军第181医院院长向月应、烟台毓璜顶医院院长刘运祥、首都医科大学宣武医院院长张建、中山大学附属第三医院院长陈规划5人获本届医院管理突出贡献奖,山东省胶南市人民医院丁宝国等97位院长获优秀院长殊荣。

附属一院王深明院长被评为2008年度中国医院“先声杯”优秀院长 2008度年优秀院长名单(按姓氏笔画排序)

------------------来源:中国医院协会 日期:2008-11-19

1丁宝国山东省胶南市人民医院马友范山东省东营市人民医院

3马旭东福建省漳州市医院

4马集云新疆生产建设兵团医院王子锡广西壮族自治区凤山县人民医院

6王玉国哈尔滨二四二医院

7王 林 江苏省口腔医院

8王国顺湖北省广水市第一人民医院

9王明晓煤炭总医院

10王 炜宁夏回族自治区人民医院王学生黑龙江省农恳总局宝泉岭分局中心医院

12王深明中山大学附属第一医院

13孔抗美 汕头大学医学院第二附属医院

14石庆泉 河南省濮阳市油田总医院叶广春 广州医学院第一附属医院

16白爱萍北京中医药大学附属护国寺中医医院成建国西藏自治区第二人民医院

18吕长俊 滨州医学院附属医院

19朱启星安徽医科大学第一附属医院

20朱建民 上海市徐汇区中心医院

21任国胜重庆医科大学附属第一医院

22刘义成山东省泰安市中心医院刘沈林江苏省中医院刘海朝 河北省邯郸市中心医院

25许洪元 新疆伊犁州友谊医院

26孙立忠吉林省神经精神病医院苏振武哈励逊国际和平医院李长河 山西省运城市第二医院李文增 山西省原平市第一人民医院杨正文 湖南省株洲市妇幼保健院

李松林 民航总医院

何小舟 江苏省常州市第一人民医院

何伟生广西壮族自治区民族医院

34沈洪 黑龙江省密山市人民医院

35宋兴福湖北省宜昌市中心人民医院

36宋晓平新疆阿克苏地区第一人民医院

37宋 康浙江省中医院

张大平湖北省荆州市中心医院

张三定 陕西省汉中市中心医院

张永寿 青海省海晏县人民医院

张延祥浙江省杭州市第三人民医院

42张兆光 首都医科大学附属北京安贞医院

张苏展 浙江大学医学院附属第二医院

张秀治 河北省南皮县人民医院

45张晓友 大庆油田总医院

46张展郑州大学第三附属医院

陈少仕 海南省中医院

48陈凤娴重庆市妇幼保健院

49陈仲强北京大学第三医院

50陈园江西省南昌市第一医院

51陈明清昆明医学院第一附属医院

林方才 华北电网有限公司北京电力医院

53欧景才 广东省第二人民医院

54岳庆祝山东省济南市第四人民医院

55周广鑑江苏省海安县人民医院

周云峰 武汉大学中南医院

57周延安福建省泉州市儿童医院&S226;妇幼保健院

58周科选陕西省宝鸡市中心医院

59庞国明河南省开封市第一中医院

60赵玉亭河南省南阳市中心医院

61赵守健 甘肃省静宁县人民医院

62赵劲民广西医科大学第一附属医院

赵铱民 中国人民解放军第四军医大学口腔医院

64赵聪四川省成都市第二人民医院

65郝培来 山东省临沂市沂水中心医院

66胡玉川四川省凉山彝族自治州第一人民医院

67柏和辽宁省肿瘤医院

68姜合作中国人民解放军第二炮兵总医院

69祝益民湖南省儿童医院

70姚美芬浙江省武义县第一人民医院

贾亚丁

山西省眼科医院

顾小萍

上海市第十人民医院

徐 克

中国医科大学附属第一医院

徐建光

复旦大学附属华山医院

郭天康

甘肃省人民医院

高方方

内蒙古自治区第四医院

唐植忠

湖南省长沙市第三医院

焉寿金

吉林省白山市中心医院

黄旭东

中国人民解放军第三军医大学第三附属医院

曹荣辉

山西省长治市人民医院

龚圣济

上海交通大学医学院附属第三人民医院

崔 泽

河北省第六人民医院

麻生文

山西省大同市第五人民医院

董爱民

辽宁省抚顺市中心医院

蒋均远

中国人民武装警察部队北京市总队第二医院

韩景献

天津中医药大学第一附属医院

程齐波

中国人民解放军北京军区总医院

舒占坤

云南省曲靖市罗平县人民医院

曾定邦

江西省南丰县人民医院

富景春

内蒙古自治区妇幼保健院

谢荣秋

湖南省耒阳市人民医院

靳建宁

宁夏石嘴山市中医医院

虞 婕

河南省郑州市中医院

蔺广东

陕西省志丹县人民医院

戴 夫

安徽省合肥市第一人民医院

魏云志

天津市蓟县人民医院

魏 健

大港油田总医院

2008年全国优秀院长 第2篇

各位领导、同志们:

因为工作较忙,准备仓促,说的不好希望大家原谅。

思想品德、工作能力、工作态度方面平常大家也都清楚,可以说是有目共睹,这里我就不再多说了,我主要说说工作业绩和廉洁自律方面,以及自己对队长助理的浅显认识。

一、工作业绩方面

三年来,本人一直担任地矿院院长(原叫规划院),见证了我院地质产业的发展历程,本人也为此付出了艰辛的努力。

近几年来,我院地质产业从无到有,并且发展壮大,如同平地起高楼,经历了多少风风雨雨,走过了一条布满荆棘之路,但我们地质人没有为困难所阻,始终保持积极、乐观向上的态度,不计个人得失,不辱使命,按照总院的战略部置,知难而进,奋勇向前,四年的辛勤汗水浇灌出了鲜艳而丰硕的果实。

(一)主要经济指标完成情况

三年来,地矿院经济规模一年一个台阶,由2004年的100万元上升到今年的800万元,共实现实现到帐收入1200余万元,实现利润近500万元,人均收入由2004年的1万余元,上升到人均5万元,签订有效合同额2000余万元,共申请财政项目7个,金额1800余

1万元。每年均超额完成队下达的目标。在此期间,我们在省总工会举办的全省地质技能竞赛中荣获团体二等奖,参赛个人也取得了较好成绩;获得省职工群众技术创新成果二等奖(吕工)。

(二)迎难而上,积极开拓市场。

我们不等、不靠、不要,振奋精神,勇创市场,工作领域函盖了工程地质勘察、地质勘查、矿产压覆、地灾评估、矿山测量、资源调查评价、储量核查、矿山鉴定等几乎所有地质领域。

先后与省厅、部分地市(如郑州、平顶山、南阳、洛阳)等国土部门建立了良好合作关系,地盘不断得以巩固和扩大。

(三)不畏困难、不断拓展工作服务新领域,寻求新的经济增长点。

地质勘查等上述地质领域均是我院以前从未涉足的新领域,尤其是地质勘查工作的突破,填补了我院在该领域的空白,还有新近我们所联系的土地整理项目,为我院经济发展拓展了发展空间,对兄弟院也起到了抛砖引玉的作用。

(四)强化服务意识,科学组织生产,产品质量优良。

抓好生产管理,保质保量完成任务,是我们实现“双赢”的重要基础。

一是生产组织管理水平不断提高,三年来我们先后承担了几十个项目任务,组织管理由开始的无所适从,到现在的成熟驾御,为

我院地质工作生产管理积累了宝贵经验。尤其是2005年,我们克服任务重、人员少、经验不足等困难,全院职工团结一心,拼搏进取,圆满完成了各项工作任务。

二是产品质量优良。我们严格执行地质勘查工作的相关标准,严格执行“四级验收”质量管理程序(分院、地地方主管理部门(甲方)、总工审核、省级),因些我们所完成的项目没有发生任何质量事故,当然也均受到了客户的好评,维护了我院的声誉,为我们的市场开拓与巩固打下良好基础。如新安项目连续不断、矿山鉴定基本处于省内垄断地位即是很好的证明。

(五)注重学习,不断提高职工队伍素质。

我们除了积极参加总院安排的各种学习活动,我们自己还有针对性地开展专题学习,如我们年初举办的地质培训班,使得职工素质得以提高,一批懂技术会管理的骨干脱颖而出,同时也培养了职工学习的良好氛围。

(六)强化管理,管理逐步规范化。

没有规矩不成方圆,我们除了认真执行总院的各项管理规定,建院之初我们还制定详细的管理规定,从生产、经营、安全等各方面加以规范,使得我院各项活动基本做到规范化、制度化、科学化。

(七)积极协助总院做好矿权申报工作。

(八)强化思想教育,职工队伍团结稳定,职工精神焕发。注

重安全生产教育,未发生任何安全责任事故,实现安全生产责任目标。

上边所说的有些只是了了数语,但实际工作中,地矿院职工付出了无比艰辛的努力。比如说市场开拓上,比如说生产组织上等等。

以上工作业绩的取得,是总院正确而坚强有力的领导的结果,是全体职工发扬“三光荣”、“四特别”精神,艰苦奋战的结晶,只有发扬团队的力量才能使我们的地质事业从胜利走向胜利。

虽然本人在工作中取得了一些成绩,但决不会沾沾自喜,夜郎自大,本人还有很多不足之处,如工作中胆子不够大,有些缩手缩脚,自身学习提高上还不足,应酬中饮酒不够节制,有时误事等,在今后的工作中应加以克服,不断完善自己。

二、廉洁自律方面

作为一名分院领导,我时时刻刻告诫自己,自己能走上这个岗位,是组织上给予的信任,是职工赋予的权利。因此,几年来,本人认真遵守领导干部廉洁自律准则;以集体利益为重,把单位和职工的利益放在个人利益之上,严以律已,勤俭节约,谦虚谨慎;严格遵守队通讯工具配备使用规定和院业务招待费管理规定,除公务接待外没有公款大吃大喝现象;认真遵守各项财务制度,坚持《全过程管理程序》,地矿院财务管理规范,没有小金库;无收受礼金、有价证券和以权谋私等违规行为;带头贯彻队党风廉政建设责任制,落实“一岗双责”廉政目标责任。

三、对当好队长助理的一些浅显认识

在总院坚强有力的领导下,经过全体地质从业人员3年的艰苦拼搏,我院地质产业从无到有,由弱即强,不断壮大,成为我院继测绘之后又一重要产业。

我院要实现跨越式的发展,离不开地质业的有力支持。地质业门坎较高,技术含量高,市场秩序好,竞争相对较小,因此利润空间较大。目前地质业又遇到了历史性的发展机遇。我们抓住抓好这个机遇就可能实现我院跨越式的发展。但我院地质业毕竟还很年轻,在发展的道路上并不是一帆风顺,也有许多坷坎与困难,需要我们付出艰辛的努力,去培育她,吓护她。本人几年来一直担任地矿院院长,对地质业有着较深的了解,同时与省厅、一些大矿业地市发建立了良好的关系。因此,本人对地质业发展前景非常乐观,对当好队长助理有充分的自信心。我想有总院的正确领导,有上级部门和兄弟单位的大力支持,有地质人持之以恒不懈努力,我院地质业必将迎来一个快速发展的明天。(本人几年来一直从事地质工作,对地质说的多一些,对其它产业不太熟悉,所以不敢妄加评论)

队长助理是队长的参谋与助手。本人如果有幸被选上,今后将至力于以下几个方面协调。

1、积极开拓地质勘查市场,努力在勘查基地方面实现突破。

2、以项目为依托,加快人才队伍的培养。

3、完善内部沟通机制,实现资源共享。

4、强化矿业权动作,实现矿业权的流转,最终力争实现矿山建设。

谢谢大家!

2008年全国建材工业运行情况 第3篇

2008年, 全国水泥产量13.9亿t, 比上年增长5.2%, 增幅同比回落8.3个百分点;平板玻璃产量5.52亿重量箱, 比上年增长6.5%, 回落6.9个百分点, 其中12月份同比下降15.4%。受需求变化影响, 水泥、平板玻璃价格波动较大。重点建材企业水泥平均出厂价8月份达到310元/t, 为历史最高水平, 比年内最低的2月份上涨27元/吨, 12月份回落到302元/吨, 同比上涨12元/t。平板玻璃出厂价7月份达到72元/重量箱, 为2005年4月以来月度最高水平, 12月份回落到66元/重量箱, 同比回落1元/重量箱。12月末, 重点建材企业水泥库存933万t, 同比上升11.1%;平板玻璃库存2365万重量箱, 上升20.2%。1~11月, 建材行业累计实现利润1013亿元, 同比增长26.6%。其中, 水泥制造业利润261亿元, 增长30.8%;平板玻璃制造业利润1.5亿元, 下降94.3%。

2008年全国优秀院长 第4篇

已经访华11次的耶鲁大学院长列文,此行还是第一次亲临中央音乐学院。高挑个头温文尔雅的列文,对于这个坐落清醇王府的中央音乐学院充满好奇和期待。他表示:耶鲁大学能够借中国举办奥运会的机遇,与其他9所音乐学院一道,在奥运前期举办这样一个盛大的文化活动,对耶鲁大学有着非凡的意义。他说:“由胡咏言和王健两位耶鲁大学的校友来担纲此次活动的重头戏,的确非常合适和到位。如今的中国,不但在经济上飞速发展,在文化艺术领域也是非常有潜力。许多中国音乐家都活跃在欧美的音乐舞台上。中国也为我们耶鲁输送了不可多得的音乐人才。我希望我们将来的互相往来更为密切和深入”。

中央音乐学院与耶鲁大学音乐学院的交往可谓历史悠久。指挥系创立者黄飞立教授,早在1948年曾就读耶鲁大学,是耶鲁最早的校友。中央院院现职教授、指挥家胡咏言和中提琴家何荣等先后毕业于耶鲁大学。自2005年胡锦涛主席成功访美之后,中美两国在各个领域特别是文化、教育界的交往日益频繁。同年,中央音乐学院院长王次炤应耶鲁大学音乐学院邀请前往访问交流。王次炤认为,耶鲁大学独具特色的人文环境和艺术氛围,其他欧美音乐院校无法比拟。

据悉,7月8日至24日的交流活动,将分别在北京音乐厅、中山音乐堂和国家大剧院演出12场包括独奏、室内乐、爵士乐和交响乐各种形式的专场演出。届时,人们不但可以参加各种类型的音乐讲座、工作坊,音乐大师班活动,还将领略来自英国皇家音乐学院的铜管室内乐、芬兰西贝柳斯的爵士乐、中国民乐、以及大提琴家王键与耶鲁爱乐乐团的交响乐和协奏曲等专场音乐会。重头戏当属7月24日由中央音乐学院乐团、合唱团与耶鲁爱乐团约400人的庞大阵容,在国家大剧院演出马勒的《第二交响乐》——“复活”。胡咏言认为,演出该作品的重要意义在于:马勒赋予《第二交响乐》“复活”的意义。中国第一次举办奥运会表明中华民族的复兴。我们还希望通过演出该作品,表达对于地震灾害的人民的问候,希望他们在奥运精神的鼓舞下,尽快重建家园。

■本报记者 李瑾

今夏7月,美国耶鲁大学音乐学院和中央音乐学院联手推出“相约北京2008:世界顶极音乐学院音乐文化交流活动”,将在奥运会开幕前正式拉开帷幕。届时,美国朱利亚音乐学院、英国皇家音乐学院、匈牙利李斯特音乐学院、奥地利莫斯科音乐学院、芬兰西贝柳斯音乐学院、韩国国立艺术学院和澳大利亚悉尼音乐学院和上海音乐学院将齐聚北京。5月14日上午,美国耶鲁大学院长理查德·列文和副院长罗琳达女士一行,亲临北京中央音乐学院,为两院共同发起的该项目预热。中美两方院长接受了本报记者独家专访。

已经访华11次的耶鲁大学院长列文,此行还是第一次亲临中央音乐学院。高挑个头温文尔雅的列文,对于这个坐落清醇王府的中央音乐学院充满好奇和期待。他表示:耶鲁大学能够借中国举办奥运会的机遇,与其他9所音乐学院一道,在奥运前期举办这样一个盛大的文化活动,对耶鲁大学有着非凡的意义。他说:“由胡咏言和王健两位耶鲁大学的校友来担纲此次活动的重头戏,的确非常合适和到位。如今的中国,不但在经济上飞速发展,在文化艺术领域也是非常有潜力。许多中国音乐家都活跃在欧美的音乐舞台上。中国也为我们耶鲁输送了不可多得的音乐人才。我希望我们将来的互相往来更为密切和深入”。

中央音乐学院与耶鲁大学音乐学院的交往可谓历史悠久。指挥系创立者黄飞立教授,早在1948年曾就读耶鲁大学,是耶鲁最早的校友。中央院院现职教授、指挥家胡咏言和中提琴家何荣等先后毕业于耶鲁大学。自2005年胡锦涛主席成功访美之后,中美两国在各个领域特别是文化、教育界的交往日益频繁。同年,中央音乐学院院长王次炤应耶鲁大学音乐学院邀请前往访问交流。王次炤认为,耶鲁大学独具特色的人文环境和艺术氛围,其他欧美音乐院校无法比拟。

据悉,7月8日至24日的交流活动,将分别在北京音乐厅、中山音乐堂和国家大剧院演出12场包括独奏、室内乐、爵士乐和交响乐各种形式的专场演出。届时,人们不但可以参加各种类型的音乐讲座、工作坊,音乐大师班活动,还将领略来自英国皇家音乐学院的铜管室内乐、芬兰西贝柳斯的爵士乐、中国民乐、以及大提琴家王键与耶鲁爱乐乐团的交响乐和协奏曲等专场音乐会。重头戏当属7月24日由中央音乐学院乐团、合唱团与耶鲁爱乐团约400人的庞大阵容,在国家大剧院演出马勒的《第二交响乐》——“复活”。胡咏言认为,演出该作品的重要意义在于:马勒赋予《第二交响乐》“复活”的意义。中国第一次举办奥运会表明中华民族的复兴。我们还希望通过演出该作品,表达对于地震灾害的人民的问候,希望他们在奥运精神的鼓舞下,尽快重建家园。

2008年全国优秀院长 第5篇

中文翻译:

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·耶鲁大学法学院院长2008年迎新发言(MP3)附英文文本 发表时间:2008-11-4 22:25:00

阅读次数:335

在法博上看到耶鲁大学法学院院长2008年迎新发言,英语听力不大好,于是找到英文原文对着听 Dean‟s Welcoming Speech Harold Hongju Koh Yale Law School August 27, 2008 http://cs.law.yale.edu/blogs/files/7/214/StudentWelcomeKoh082708.mp3

耶鲁大学法学院院长在开学典礼上的致辞(转)发表时间:2008-11-15 7:34:00 阅读数次: 131

Welcome to Yale Law School!

I am Harold Koh, and I am the Dean here.Please call me Harold.I really mean that.I have taught Procedure and International Law here for more than two decades, and I have called New Haven home for nearly five.If that is who I am, who are you? You, collectively, are the 197th group of law students to receive your legal education here at Yale.Formal legal education began here in New Haven around 1814, at least three years before Chief Justice Isaac Parker of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts founded a law school up at Harvard, and 32 years before a law school was founded down at Princeton, which closed its doors only six years later.As you will hear this afternoon, when Professor John Langbein tells you about the early history of Yale Law School, legal education first came here more than 200 years ago, when a Yale college graduate named Seth Staples and two of his students—Samuel Hitchcock and David Daggett, all of whose portraits now hang in Room 127—started to teach budding lawyers in the New Haven building that became Yale Law School.(Parenthetically, that explains the seal of the Yale Law School that is now your shield: which honors these founders with a field of Staples on the left, in honor of Seth Staples;a greyhound on the right in honor of David Daggett(whose original family name was Doget);and an alligator on top— which Samuel Hitchcock and his family took as their symbol after the family moved to the Bahamas.)You, nearly the 200th class ever to study here, include 189 entering JD students from 77 undergraduate institutions, 28 LLMs, 7 new JSD students, 14 transfer students, and several visiting students.You are, quite simply, the finest group of entering law students assembled anywhere on this planet this year.Each year, one school in this world gets to say that, and this year, happily, it is us.You are the best, not just because you are so able, but because you are so interesting.Collectively, you have lived or worked in 77 countries;you read and speak at least 30 languages.(Take a look at this map).Your classmates include: A Chinese yo-yo artist, a hip-hop dancer;a certified judge for the Kansas City Barbeque Society;a scholar of Korean soap opera;a firefighter;a member of the College Football Hall of Fame;winner of 2007 The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest;a former Brazilian professional soccer player;a sailor who twice crossed the Atlantic;the youngest university graduate in the history of Germany;and the leader of the cymbal section of a marching band that once played at the Vatican.By the numbers, your group includes: 1 Flamenco dancer 2 Military officers 2 Debate champions 2 Competitive skydivers 3 Radio talk show hosts 4 Black belts in martial arts 4 Eagle Scouts 5 Mountain climbers, including 2 who climbed Mt.Kilimanjaro A television producer who won 5 Emmy awards 7 Marathon runners And a partridge in a pear tree.:-)

Now hearing this litany, I know what you are saying: “So what on earth am I doing here?”

If it makes you feel better, let me assure you that you are not alone.I know just how you feel.The only difference between you and me is that we started law school 30 years apart.Like you, until now, I have been lucky in my career.Like you, I have been to places I‟ve never dreamed I could go.And like you, I have sometimes wondered whether I got to where I am at Yale Law School because somebody well meaning made the wrong decision.But what I have learned over time is that there is no such thing as a wrong decision.There is the decision that you make, then what you do to make it the right decision.On the day I was invited to clerk for the Supreme Court, I asked my late father: “Do I deserve this?” He paused, and answered, “Of course not.No one deserves to clerk for the Supreme Court.But if you give it your best, by the time you are done, you will have deserved it.”

So that is what I say to you about Yale Law School: To be at Yale Law School is a very great privilege.None of us really deserves to be here.But if we all do what we have to do, if we make this place our own, if we do our best and force our school to live up to its own highest aspirations, then all of us will belong here.So that is my first message: today marks the start of our journey together.To prove that I really do intend to journey with you, please mark your calendars for a week from this Saturday—Sept.6—when you can tell the Dean to take a hike, then actually go with him.We will gather at a state park in Hamden and hike to the top of Sleeping Giant mountain(it is actually a foothill, but for us in Connecticut, it‟s as close as we get to a mountain).At the top, we will take pictures, survey the landscape, then hike back down for lunch to celebrate our new beginning.As you look around this room, consider this fact: for each of you sitting here, 20 others applied for your place.We have far more qualified applicants than we can accept, but you were selected for a reason.You were chosen to be a part of this dynamic community because of the unique talents, ideas, and energy that you possess.So look to your left;look to your right.You see what Yale Law School is, and must always be: a community of remarkable individuals, committed to excellence and humanity in everything you do.From century to century, from class to class, this School has remained a community of commitment to the values we share.In your time here, you will hear that phrase from me often:

A community of commitment.A community of commitment.There are many committed individuals who belong to no communities.There are many communities that share no commitments.But what makes the Yale Law School a special law school is that it is a community of commitment: commitment to the highest excellence in our work as lawyers and scholars, commitment to the greatest humanity in our dealings with others, and commitment to lives genuinely devoted not to selfishness, but service.As you look to your left and right, please remember one more thing: this is a place where we are committed to each other.At this school, you will learn best through dialogue with one another.The people who will get you through here;the people who will teach you most about how to be a good lawyer and how to be a good person are the classmates you meet for the first time today.Your classmates will stay with you throughout your lives.They will attend your wedding, join your vacations, serve as godparents of your children, watch over you in illness, send you emails and clients, vouch for you at your Senate confirmations, and speak at your funeral.So if you are wondering: how am I going to make my way here? The answer is simple: Trust your classmates.Right now they are your classmates;but in time, they will be your soulmates.Think of them as your brothers-and sisters-in-law.You are all in this together, and the time to start supporting one another is right now.Now all of this sounds fine, except for one thing: when it comes to Law School, your classmates are novices, too.None of them can answer the questions that cloud your mind: like, how do I get off to a good start in law school?

Well, those are relatively easy questions.Getting oriented is what orientations are for, and this week is designed to help you figure out where things are, and who can help you solve your transition problems.Each of you is assigned to a Dean‟s Advisor;let me ask them all to stand up: Yaw Anim BJ Ard Sipoura Barzideh Jennifer Bennett Lauren Chamblee Caroline Edsall Elliot Morrison Christina Parajon Sergio Perez Sujeet Rao In our Office of Student Affairs, we have a wonderful Dean of Students in Sharon Brooks;a marvelous Student Life Coordinator, Maura Sichol-Sprague;Sachi Rodgers, Special Project Coordinator in charge of Student Organizations;Marie Battista, Senior Administrative Assistant;and Joe Lynch, Student Journals Assistant.As you will learn, in addition to having the best students and faculty in the world, we have the most humane and dedicated administrative staff in the world.The real Deans of Yale Law School, the Administrative Deans who make this place run, are pictured at the front of your facebook, but let me introduce some of them now.First, our two deputy deans:

Reva Siegel, Deputy Dean for Intellectual Life and the Nicholas Katzenbach Professor of Law;

Jon Macey, Deputy Dean for Curriculum and Sam Harris Professor of Corporate Law, Corporate Finance and Securities Law;

Our Librarian, Professor Blair Kaufmann, and:

Megan A.Barnett

Dean for Academic Affairs

Toni Hahn Davis

Dean for Alumni and Public Affairs

and the Graduate Program

Mark LaFontaine

Dean for Development

Asha Rangappa

Dean of Admissions

Mark Templeton

Dean for Finance & Human Resources

Mike Thompson

Dean for Facilities

Jan Conroy

Director of Communications

Judith Calvert

Registrar

Pat Barnes

Director of Financial Aid

Behind them stand many, many others whom I encourage you to meet personally.You will spend much of the days ahead learning from these new friends how the school really operates.They will tell each of you that you have the opportunity to craft an extraordinary law school experience, because you have joined a supportive community that will offer you the resources you need.Let me spend my time this morning discussing a somewhat different question: not how do I study law? But how do I think about studying law? That is what we like to call here: the meta question.As the late Professor Leon Lipson once said, “At Yale, we believe that anything you can do, I can do meta.”

How exactly do you think about this brave new world that you are entering? This world of Law and Law Talk?

Well, first, the good news.As my predecessor, Dean Guido Calabresi, famously told the entering class each year, “My friends, you are off the treadmill now.” After years of carefully triangulating your course to get to this place, you‟ve made it!You don‟t have to do anything here just to get ahead.Here at Yale Law School, we have no class rank.All of you can succeed here.All of you should succeed here.But sadly, there are too many lawyers in this world who remember the day they started law school as the day they began the rat race.But in the words of Yale‟s chaplain, William Sloane Coffin: “Remember that even if you win the rat race, you are still a rat.”

I ask you to think about your law school career differently.I ask you to think about it, not as a competition, but as an adventure.Yale Law School is an adventure, which should have at least three elements:

First, trying new things.Second, combining theory with practice.Third, deciding what you stand for.Let me say a word about each.First, trying new things.Experimentation.Explore the rare intellectual freedom that this school offers.We have very few rules.We have minimal required curriculum.Make the most of that freedom.Don‟t spend your time repeating things you already know you can do.Instead, try things you‟ve never tried.So if you are a good writer, try public speaking.If you are an accomplished debater, join a law journal.If you are a poet, study law and economics.And if you are a mathematician or number cruncher by training, take law and literature.By entering law school, you are not ending your education in the liberal arts;you are extending it.The same goes for your summers.If you have lived your whole life in the States, work for a human rights group in Africa.If you always wanted to be a criminal defense lawyer, try working in a prosecutor‟s office.If you are convinced you want to be a corporate lawyer, spend a summer doing legal aid, and vice versa.Exercise all your intellectual muscles, not just one.At Yale, we intend our approach to legal education to be interdisciplinary, interprofessional, and international.What does that mean?

By an interdisciplinary approach, we mean to show you how the intellectual discipline of law connects with other academic disciplines, some of which you studied before you got here.Law is not the only discipline in this great university.We have a great law faculty, whose members hold advanced degrees in law, of course;but many also hold advanced degrees in philosophy, history, political science, sociology, economics, and medicine.Two of these professors will deliver introductory lectures on their subjects of specialty.Tomorrow afternoon, Professor Jules Coleman will give an introductory lecture on “law and philosophy for physicists.” On September 2, Professor Carol Rose will give an introductory lecture on “law and economics for poets.”

They will ask you to start viewing the law through many lenses, not just one.That will begin this afternoon, when you hear the first two lectures in our Introductions series, from Professor Bill Eskridge, who will give you a tour of the American legal system, and Professor John Langbein who will introduce you to the history of legal education and the Yale Law School.Those will be followed later this week by lectures tomorrow on professional responsibility by Professor Jean Koh Peters;and on Friday, Sept.5, on public interest law by Professor Brett Dignam.And in the weeks ahead, you will also hear from two accomplished graduates of our school who made their mark in different fields: one, Ben Heineman, who became corporate counsel of one of the largest economies in the world, the General Electric Co., speaking on values and vision in legal practice, and another, Margaret Marshall, who was born in South Africa, but after her JD here became Chief Justice of her home state of Massachusetts.Please attend these introductions.They are designed to cast new light on your coursework.You will find them fascinating and useful in seeing how law relates to other concepts in the world of ideas.In addition to being interdisciplinary, I mentioned that our approach is interprofessional.By interprofessional, we mean that we are not the only professional school in this university.You should think hard about how the profession of law relates to these other professions, some of them professions in which you have already engaged: law and business, law and public health, law and media, and law and the environment.Law shapes these fields, and these fields generate new law.To lead these fields, we need lawyers who are genuinely bilingual, who are versatile enough to lead these coordinate fields, so in each of these areas, we are developing joint programs with the other professional schools here at Yale.It is not an accident that in each of these other professional fields, graduates of Yale Law School are leaders as well.That is because if there is one common feature of Yale Law graduates, it is their entrepreneurial spirit, their willingness to take chances.The Dean‟s Program on the Profession is a speaker series that features Yale Law School graduates who have made a special mark within the law or who have moved outside the law to become leaders of the entertainment field, the health care industry, professional sports, venture capital, you name it.What their careers tell you is that just because you are studying law, it does not mean that a lawyer is all you will ever be.To explore your full potential, they will tell you, you must take risks.And if you, the most privileged law students in the world, don‟t have the courage to take risks, who else will?

In entering law and its related fields, you will need to learn how to write again, and you will need to learn how to read again.The most important suggestion I can make is to read closely.Read more closely than you have read before.Read like your client‟s life depends on it, because believe me, it will.And as you read, think of the judges who wrote those opinions as real people, trying to make real decisions.Imagine how you would have made those decisions had they been yours to make.And at some point, I assure you, the magic moment will come, described this way by Hector in The History Boys:

The best moments in reading are when you come across something—a thought, a feeling, a way of looking at things—which you had thought special and particular to you.Now here it is, set down by someone else, a person you have never met, someone even who is long dead.And it is as if a hand has come out and taken yours.1

But reading alone is not enough.Which leads me to my second suggestion, in all you do here: Combine Theory with Practice

When you come to my office, as all of you should, you will see on my wall, in Chinese characters, one of my favorite sayings: “Theory without practice is as lifeless as practice without theory is thoughtless.” Alan Bennett, The History Boys 56.Yale Law School is and must always remain the world‟s premier center of legal theory.We believe that no single intellectual discipline has a monopoly on wisdom: that is what it means to be an interdisciplinary law school.How do we get nations to obey the law? The answer to that question lies not just in the law itself, but in such related disciplines as psychology, economics, philosophy, sociology, political science, anthropology.But if you want to understand the relationship between law and justice, you must look not just to the Uniform Commercial Code and the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure but to the humanities: great plays like Shakespeare‟s Henry V or The Merchant of Venice, novels like Melville‟s Billy Budd, or works of art like Picasso‟s Guernica.If you don‟t know those disciplines, use your time here to introduce yourselves to them.Spend your time not just in our phenomenal Law Library, but at Yale Repertory Theater, the newly renovated Art Gallery, the Center for British Art, the Globalization Center, and the Macmillan Center for International and Area Studies.Most of all, the study of law is the search for ideas.A professor of mine once said, “Ideas are not butterflies.They are butterfly nets.” Ideas help you to capture insights, organize experience, impose intellectual order on natural disorder.Which is why you chose to attend a great law school in a great university.Once you begin practicing law, you soon find yourself with precious little time to read, reflect, or get new ideas.Law firms have no English departments.Legal aid clinics don‟t teach you economics.If you want to understand more deeply what is right, not just what is right for your client, what is the truth, not just what argument works, you need to study ideas.You need to study theory.But for every yin there is a yang.Theory without practice is as lifeless, as practice without theory is thoughtless.Theory alone cannot change the world;lawyers must actually be skilled in the practice of law to change the world.When the judge asks you why your client should win, your answer cannot be, “Because John Rawls said so.”

Great lawyers are made, not born.Which is why each and every one of you should take a course or more in our superb clinical program.Use internships, externships, and summer practice to understand better how you can use your legal skills to change the world.Which brings me to the subtle virtues of New Haven, your new home away from home.A poll in the Anchorage Daily Times reported that New Haven has two of the top ten pizza restaurants in America.It is the home of two Tony-award winning theaters.Some of the best music and the best arts and ideas festival in the country.And it has a remarkable legal history.But most relevant for our purposes, New Haven is a model laboratory for the practice of law.Over the years, Yale law students have helped to build day care centers for unwed mothers, to create nonprofit corporations to shelter the homeless, to found a leading Charter School and community bank, to do the legal work for the Shaw‟s Grocery Store on Whalley Ave.Three decades ago, two contemporaries both worked in the clinical program here;each said it was the best experience they had at Yale Law School.Their names are Bill Clinton and Clarence Thomas.If each of them can do it, and get something out of it, then so can you.In our clinic, we think locally, but we act globally.We do not limit our clinical work to the confines of New Haven.Over the years, our human rights clinic has promoted human rights around the world.It has represented Haitian and Cuban refugees at the Supreme Court, exposed abuses in East Timor, sent students to Bosnia and Kosovo and Sierra Leone and Cambodia, supported international prosecutors in The Hague, and helped think about the structure of constitutional democracy in Iraq.Yale graduates, professors and students in our 9/11 Clinic participated on all sides of Supreme Court‟s military commissions decision last year, and filed several of the briefs in Boumediene, the Guantanamo case that will be argued this fall.Our Supreme Court Clinic has several cases pending on the Supreme Court‟s September docket list.And when Homeland Security arrested two dozen workers this summer, first-year students dropped everything to represent each and every one of them at expedited bond hearings, and our Workers and Immigrants Rights Clinic continues that work today.That brings me, of course, to the issue of our day: globalization.As I said, your legal education should be not just interdisciplinary and interprofessional, but international.In the last four terms of the U.S.Supreme Court, no fewer than 25 cases involved globalization.On Friday morning, I will give you an introduction to transnational law that I hope will start you thinking about the relationship between law and globalization.And later this September, 20 of the world‟s leading constitutional court judges, including Justices Anthony Kennedy and Stephen Breyer of our Supreme Court, will come to this building to talk about how the world‟s leading courts now deal with such diverse, yet common, global issues as torture, reproductive rights, affirmative action, terrorism, and same-sex marriage.These issues occupy our headlines.And what presidential candidate recently wrote this? “We Americans recall the words of our founders in the declaration of

independence, that we must pay „decent respect to the opinions of

mankind.‟ Our great power does not mean we can do whatever we

want whenever we want, nor should we assume we have all the

wisdom and knowledge necessary to succeed…We all have to live up

to our own high standards of morality and international responsibility.We cannot torture or treat inhumanely the suspected terrorists that we

have captured.We will fight the terrorists and at the same time defend

the rights that are the foundations of our society.”2

The speaker, of course, was John McCain, speaking in Europe.And we hope you will all join together in helping us address what is perhaps the greatest globalization challenge of our day: sustainability.As global citizens, one of the challenges that we all face As Tom Friedman of The New York Times recently noted, last year was by far the worst year for freedom in the world since the end of the Cold War.Almost four times as many states — 38 — declined in their freedom scores as improved.3 Strikingly, the least democratic countries in the world are those who derive most of their revenues from oil.So as the price of fuel rises, and with it the price of food and housing, every community must cut its reliance on fossil fuels, not just to save money, not just to protect the environment from global warming, not just to promote our national security, but to promote the rule of law that is this law school‟s mission.Sustainability begins at home.So we will start that conversation with Professor Dan Esty in his introductory lecture on environmental law on Sept.19.The Law School is joining with Yale University‟s sustainability efforts4 on a number of green initiatives designed to reduce the Law School‟s carbon footprint and help us work together as a community of faculty, staff, and students toward a more sustainable future for our campus.Some of these ideas are small changes we can make right away, like turning off lights and computer monitors, carpooling or usingpublic transportation, or using mugs and silverware instead of disposable items.In addition, the Law School‟s “Green Team,” headed by Associate Director of Student Affairs Maura Sichol-Sprague(maura.sichol-sprague@yale.edu)and Director of Alumni Affairs Abby Roth(abigail.roth@yale.edu), is working on larger Law John McCain, Op-ed, Financial Times(March 18, 2008);

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2008年全国优秀院长 第6篇

今年4月,口突发疫情,在这个不平凡的春天,有一些人坚守在在防疫一线,闪烁着最动人的模样。也用小家大爱“画”出更大守护“圆”。

在口社区卫生服务中心,口主任正凝望办公室内一面面鲜艳的锦旗。这些锦旗不仅是一份份荣誉,更凝聚了她走过的历程和回忆。今年春天的疫情曾让整个城市静默下来,防控形势严峻,口辖区内包含了高铁机场等重点防控场所及学校五十多所,日常采样将近17万,防控任务极其艰巨。但强大的工作量并没有使她退缩,相反,口主任现场指导调度的身影无处不在。即便是处在女儿高考的关键期,她也顾不得回家照看。她单薄却勇毅坚定的身影,形成一道美丽的生命守护风景线,也深深带动着每一个奔赴在一线的白衣战士。

我和口主任一起工作呢将近十年的时间,在工作期间很多工作口主任都亲力亲为,带动大家一起完成上级交付的工作,在疫情发生以来,口主任始终工作在疫情防控一线,带领大家凝心聚力,为我们辖区的疫情防控工作顺利的完成做出了突出的贡献。

虽然我们的医务人员非常辛苦,但是能守护辖区居民的健康和平安也是我们的一份职责和心愿。不仅是防控疫情,提升社区卫生服务中心综合能力也尤为重要。去年她带领团队积极开展“国家优质服务基层行”活动的创建并顺利通过验收,通过创建活动的开展,中心改善了诊疗环境,优化了服务模式,规范了机构管理,提升了服务质量和服务水平,荣获国家卫生健康委办公厅表彰。

我们在全力保障疫情防控工作的同时,也不忘做好中心日常服务能力的提升工作,让辖区居民就近享受到“优质、安全、高效、便捷”的社区卫生服务。白衣执甲,坚守抗疫一线,勇当战疫先锋的医务人员还有很多,从小受到父亲医德医风的熏陶下的口自毕业以来,便凭借着满腔热血和精湛的医疗技术投身到卫生健康事业,至今已经三十载了。虽然卫生院偏远,但是酒香不怕巷子深,他致力于创建特色专科,外科,成为了口东辖区乡镇卫生院中第一个可以开展腹腔镜普外科手术的医院,优秀的医疗水平吸引了周边乡镇的群众放心就医。

在他和妻子的熏陶下,儿子也走上了从医的道路,一家三代,医者仁心,不变的是传承下去的济世情。

口两口和儿子儿媳虽然都在不同的医院工作,但平时一家多爱团聚。但当今年四月接到防疫通知的时候,看着五岁大的孙子,口一家毅然决然的选择奔赴不同的防控点,全家近一个月没回家,只得让邻居帮忙照看孙子。在这个夹杂些许寒意的春天,他们一家用实际行动在抗疫一线发挥着自己的光和热,舍小家,勇毅逆行,诠释着舍小家为大家的精神。

口东区口中心卫生院院长

口说:“今年4月份当时接到防疫通知,全家连夜去支援,也顾不上家了。虽然我们一家在那段时间见不上面,但是我们深深知道,我们守护群众的心情是一样的。”

卫生院院长优秀先进事迹材料(四)

他们用心血打造成一个综合实力显著的卫生院,他们用真情与责任“扛”起防疫大旗。

位于口县的口镇卫生院曾经是环境脏乱差,科室人员涣散,难以留住周边诊疗群众的老大难卫生院。可仅仅历时三年,卫生院就“改头换面”了,破烂的小院通过改造绿化,使整齐又明亮的科室大楼跃入眼前。不仅从不能开展手术到可以开展一类二类手术,还增设了康复科,外科,慢性病预防和治疗等,不仅让周边老百姓能就近治疗常见病,而且年收入也突破千万元大关跃居全县前三甲。要说这些成绩的取得,都离不开院长口背后的努力。

三年来,口全年无休致力于加强院容院貌改善,选派人员进修,在日常管理中关心职工所想所盼,提高人员待遇,亲自教学,让医护人员业务水平不断攀升,吸引了周边群众放心就诊。

我们职工各方面也都提升了不少,我们职工劲往一处使,让我们工作人员在工作期间,能找到一个家一样的感觉。口作为一个乡镇卫生院院长,我们应该承担得起责任和扛得起压力。通过这几年的努力,历经过一些艰难险阻,能得到群众满意,我内心很欣慰。

两年前的春节,一场前所未有的新冠疫情悄然而至,口口区口口卫生院院长口接到指挥部防控命令时,还未来得及吃年夜饭,就转身投入到一线战斗。面对当时从未听说过的新冠肺炎疫情,人们心里难免充满了恐慌,但关键时刻他扛起责任担当,带领团队背着70斤消毒设备,上门消杀,不仅控制了小区疫情没有外溢,还很好的控制了疫情没有在小区内传播。并且他还组织医务工作者,出征口,远赴口,支援铜陵、口上。到目前为止,还有远赴外地支援的白衣战士没有归来。

口口区口口卫生院内科执业医师口说:“新冠肺炎来口的时候,大家在院长的带领下没有退缩,一起共克难关。”

口口区口口卫生院党支部书记院长口说:“当时没有犹豫的,也不想着害怕,就想着赶紧行动,以最快的速度和疫情赛跑,确保我们的一方群众安全。

当周边出现疫情,需要我们支援的时候,我带领我们的团队,一批又一批地奔赴在疫情的第一线,这依托我们强大的执行力和必胜的信念。”

在抗击疫情的同时,为了医院更好的发展,口院长也通过与市五院合作,让专家下沉坐诊,不断提高医护人员业务水平,在日常工作的同时他也亲自带教,致力打造一个有温度的卫生院。

对我们在工作和生活中都有很好的关心,希望我们五院和卫生院,在院领导的带领下,将来会有越来越好的发展。

“十佳”乡镇卫生院院长(一)

乡镇卫生院可以为农村群众提供安全、有效、方便、价廉的医疗卫生服务。而这优质服务的背后,离不开“十佳”乡镇卫生院院长的努力。今天,就让我们走进他们的故事。

口口县口镇卫生院曾经是全县基层卫生院中基础条件较差的单位,在上级主管与口院长的奋力谋划下,历时三年,卫生院的院貌焕然一新。虽然大幅改善了群众就医需求,但提升服务质量也是他的心头大事,他深深知道,有些病群众是等不起的。于是服务承诺书因时因需制订起来。针对收费、药房、医技科室就诊等待问题三个方面做好提升服务,在不断改善中,用“心”贴近群众。

口口县口镇卫生院党支部书记

院长

口说:“卫生院新建业务综合大楼启用起来,就诊量需求增大,部分群众疾病不能等。针对患者反映情况,我院结合实际情况制定科室服务承诺书,对就诊患者公开承诺,对工作人员要求持续提升卫生院服务质量,致力提高群众满意度。”

口口县口镇距离县城50公里,常驻人口5万多人。路途遥远,人口量多一直是就医体系的压力。而农村精神疾病发病率较高,没有精神卫生专科的医疗空白,一直是院长口的牵挂。在偏远的口镇,顾不上照看家人的他,却在脱贫攻坚过程中,立刻抓住基层医疗提升这一契机,在2019年开始建设新区,建设面积近一万平米。医养结合的医疗体系落成掀开了新篇章,切实解决农村精神疾病患者就医不便问题。

(原)口口县口中心卫生院党支部书记

院长

口说:“为了缓解群众精神疾病就诊需求,我们选派了一名口床医生和一名护士,到口市第三人民医院进修学习,进修学习以后我们准备设立精神专科,我们也希望能够为周边的精神疾病患者带来就医方便,为口周边群众更好地提供优质医疗卫生服务。”

“十佳”乡镇卫生院院长(二)

由市卫健委联合市委组织部共同评选的“首届口市十佳乡镇卫生院党组织书记(院长)”结果已公布。其中,不忘基层群众的“金牌”全科医生口,和扛起防疫任务的“白衣”共产党员口榜上有名。今天,就让我们聆听他们的故事。

说起口区口镇中心卫生院,不得不提起一位特殊的“院长”口。虽然在院长办公室甚少见到他,但无论是内科,外科还是口床科室,都少不了他忙碌的身影。自1998年进院以来,他不断加强医院管理使院收入稳步增长,还常年亲自坐镇诊疗,成为院内“金牌”全科医生。

患者丈夫

口说:“今年八十多了,两个都八十多了。小孩比较忙,都有事。院长看到以后找车接下来的,服务态度确实好。”

春秋轮换二十余年,人生最美丽的青春和汗水早已融入了这片热土,没有轰轰烈烈的事迹,但充实的每一天在平凡中更凸显真实。工作是他生活的一条主线,而在这条线上,病人就是他工作的全部。

荣获“口乡名医”的他,用自己的赤诚带领全院医护人员埋头苦干,使当地就诊群众满意度达到98%以上。

口区第六人民医院口分院党支部书记、院长

口说:“我是九八年过来做院长的,扎根基层二十余年了。我也是一名全科医生,没有丢业务,因为我喜欢跟群众打交道。我内科外科,口床手术都在做,一直在进修,病人需要就是我的岗位。服务要好嘛,对病人真心、热心、耐心、细心。这就是我秉承的事儿。”

在今年四月初一个深夜。当口上县口镇卫生院的口院长接到县卫健委通知连夜支援隔离点建设任务时,这一刻,他没有犹豫,因为,能够战胜新冠疫情,是一名身着白衣共产党员最大的心愿。

口上县口镇卫生院党支部书记、院长

口说:“当时已经是深夜了,我迅速地带领值全体值夜班的同事,迅速把二百多病床分装上车,以最快地速度搬到隔离点。”

安装每张病床,年轻医生都累到行走困难,手脚发麻,当他们最后回院时已是凌晨5点30分,身着白衣,心有锦缎,再苦再累,一往前行。他用实际行动履行一位院长守护健康的职责,展现一位共产党员的担当与责任。荣获省卫健委颁发的首届“口乡名医”的他,也不忘一心做好“杏林人”,凭借一生的扎实经验,致力全院人才培养,成为年轻医生的“领路人”。

口上县口镇卫生院副院长

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