DEDICATION
This report is dedicated to the captain and crew of the M.V. Liktanur. For ten years the Liktanurs

II and III have served as home and workplace for much of each medical mission to the Marshall

Islands. Throughout this time it has been the good fortune of the medical program to have the
excellent support of the ship’s crew. More importantly, that good fortune was extended to the
population served by the medical team; the emergency rigging of oxygen tanks to treat hypoxic
patients, lighting of a small airstrip at night to facilitate an emergency air evacuation, radio liaison,
transport of patients betweenthe atolls and to and from shore, and the emergencyrepair of medical
equipment are just some of the nonnautical activities that benefited the medical missions. Now, a new
support vessel for work in the Marshall Islands has come undercontract to the Departmentof Energy.
Therefore, on the departure of the Liktanur, we would like to acknowledge our debt to Capt. Keith
Coberly; Monroe Wightman, engineer; Jim Whitney and Jan Kocian,first mates; Cisco Peru, cook; Les
Nunes, boatswain; Tony Ned and Mathan Almen, seamen; and other crew members who, for shorter
periods, also contributed to the effectiveness of the missions. We thank them for a job well done.

IN MEMORIAM
Two former membersof the Brookhaven medical team who participated in several surveys died
during the past year. Colonel Austin Lowrey, Jr., died at the age of eighty-six. He was a well-known
ophthalmologist with a long career in the army. He was a most kind and generous person and
contributed a great dealto the evaluationof possible radiation effects on eyes. Dr. Leo Meyer, who died
at age eighty-two, was a well-known hematologist and was Director of the Sickle Cell Anemia Program
of the Veterans’ Administration. He made outstanding contributions to the program in evaluating
hematological radiation effects. Leo will be rememberedfor his joviality, for always having ajoke ready
to cheerus. Both of these men were well liked by medical teams and the Marshallese people, and we
shall truly miss them.
Robert A. Conard, M.D.
January 23, 1989

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