O. Arthur Stiennon

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Dr. O. Arthur Stiennon, Jr. (Green Bay, Wisconsin, November 9, 1919 - Madison, Wisconsin, January 10, 2003) was a clinical radiologist, inventor, radiation treatment pioneer, software and real estate developer in Madison, Wisconsin. He attended the University of Wisconsin-Madison, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1941. He received his M.D. at the University of Wisconsin in 1943 under the wartime accelerated program. He served an internship at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal, P.Q., Canada. After serving in the United States Army from 1944-1947, he served a residency in Diagnostic and Therapeutic Radiology at the University of Michigan Hospitals in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

He received board certification by the American Board of Radiology in 1950. On his return to Madison, he practiced initially with Dr. Lrry Littig, he then opened his own practice serving small hospitals in Darlington and Dodgeville and opening his own office in the Tenney Building at 110 East Main Street in Madison. This practice evolved into Madison Radiologists, S.C. and at the time of his departure in 1973 in addition to an office at 20 S. Park St. in Madison, served St. Mary's Hospital Medical Center, St. Clare's Hospital, Baraboo, and General Hospital Sauk City as well as the hospitals in Darlington and Dodgeville.[1]

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[edit] Radiation treatment center

He opened the Radiation Center, the first private medical center to treat cancer patients with a betatron, at 2716 Marshall Court in the Village of Shorewood Hills a suburb of Madison, Wisconsin, in 1957[2]. The facility employed one of the first Allis Chalmers 25 MeV Betatrons and brought the era of modern megavoltage radiation therapy to the Madison area.

[edit] Stiennon telescopic bowsight

A lifelong entrepreneur, he founded Scientific Sports Equipment in 1963 to manufacture and market his invention of a practical optical bowsight. This archery sight provided a light located on the side of the telescope which was reflected into the viewer's eye to form the appearance of a light in the general area of the target when the bow is properly aligned. The device received Japanese Pat. No. 427,091 dated May 2, 1966[3].

[edit] Software development and publishing

He developed an agricultural software package AgPac, which was sold to Wisconsin Microware which published it in the 1980s. [4]. His MONEY MATRIX, a financial management and accounting software package, was released in 1986.

His long time interest in swallowing function resulted in the publication of a monograph, The Longitudinal Muscle in Esophageal Disease[1], in 1995, by WRS Press[5].

[edit] Agricultural and real estate development

In 1965 he founded Cold Comfort Farms, assembling what eventually grew to more than 4,000 acres in western Dane and eastern Iowa counties, raising purebred Angus, then moving into grain and contract forage production. He developed Shackleton Square Condominium [2]in Shorewood Hills[6] in 1984 and continued to live there until his death.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Obituary, January 12, 2003,Wisconsin State Journal
  2. ^ Wisconsin Alumnus, Volume 58, Number 15 (July 25, 1957)
  3. ^ U.S. Pat. No. 4,220,983
  4. ^ 'Wisconsin Microware, Broadbent & Williams advertising agency website
  5. ^ WRS Press website
  6. ^ Shorewood Hills: An Illustrated History, Thomas D. Brock, p. 203 (1999)

[edit] External references