Rodney Cove-Smith

Dr John Rodney Cove-Smith (born 26 January 1943, London 3 February 2004, Middlesbrough) was the son of Ronald Cove-Smith, a distinguished English physician and captain of the English rugby team. He was educated first at Rugby, where he was head boy, then, following his father's footsteps, he read medicine at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, later specialising in nephrology.[1] A keen sportsman, he played hockey for England Schoolboys and Cambridge. In 1978 he was appointed consultant in Middlesbrough, where he remained until his death from metastatic prostate cancer in 2004. He also championed the cause of postgraduate and, more recently, of undergraduate medical training on Teesside. He was clinical tutor from 1987 to 1990, was a prime mover in the expansion of the Durham and Newcastle Medical School to the Stockton Queen's Campus and, as chief of the academic division in the James Cook University Hospital, he led the development of the academic centre there.[2] In recognition of this he was awarded an honorary chair by Durham University, and the new medical library bears his name.

Personal life

In 1969 he married Jacqueline Morgan, a doctor, who had studied at Cambridge with him. They had three daughters, Julia, Andi and Laura, two of whom are doctors.

He continued playing hockey and squash until failing health intervened, and was a member of two choral societies.

gollark: This honestly looks like satire.
gollark: Bitcoin's thing (and most others) is basically just "bruteforce a really low hash value".
gollark: Ethereum charges you for on-blockchain computing power in some way, but since the NFTs mean basically nothing and are just pointers to external things, they can totally have turing machines if they want to.
gollark: The issue with that is that mining has to be hard to *do* but easy to *verify*.
gollark: I suppose there's some ambiguity on where it would actually revoke from.

References

  1. Carr, David. "Munksroll Obituary". Retrieved 27 March 2013.
  2. Cove-Smith, Jacqueline. "BMJ Obituary". Retrieved 27 March 2013.
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