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Volume 104, number 2
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Bu etin MEDICINE Fall 2019 • Volume 104 • Number 2
A Bold New Vision on Blood Research
#1 in Maryland and TOP 10 in the nation for Ear, Nose and Throat
Pictured left to right: Nidhi Gupta, MD; John F. Biedlingmaier, MD; Rodney J. Taylor, MD; Kyle Monroe Hatten, MD; David J. Eisenman, MD; Kalpesh Tarun Vakharia, MD; Kevin D. Pereira, MD; Jeffrey S. Wolf, MD, FACS; Amal Isaiah, MD, PhD; Elizabeth Anne Guardiani, MD Not pictured above:
The Otorhinolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery program at University of Maryland Medical Center leads in advanced care. The department provides expertise in conditions that span pediatric disorders, voice and swallowing difficulties, ear disease and hearing loss, sinus and allergic disease, plastic and reconstructive surgery and head and neck neoplasms. The team continually improves surgical care for head and neck tumors by increasingly employing transoral robotic surgery (TORS) and the endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA). These minimally invasive approaches result in less morbidity, easier recoveries and better cosmesis for patients. From innovative research to better understand the molecular basis of congenital and acquired hearing loss, to studying the ZSCAN4 gene in hopes of targeting cancer cells and advance regenerative medicine on a larger scale, the Otorhinolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery program is pioneering advancements in the field. Learn more at umm.edu/ent Visit our Physician Video Channel at physicians.umm.edu
Affiliated with the University of Maryland School of Medicine
Ronna P. Hertzano, MD, PhD
Andrea Michelle Hebert, MD
Bu etin MEDICINE
Bulletin Editorial Board Harry C. Knipp, ’76 Chairman Gary D. Plotnick, ’66 Vice Chairman John Allen, ’14 Frank M. Calia, MD, MACP Triesta Fowler-Lee, ’99 Nidhi Goel, ’10 Christopher Hardwick Sachin D. Kalyani, ’03 George C. Kochman III, ’08 Brad D. Lerner, ’84 Jennifer Litchman Philip Mackowiak, ’70 Larry Pitrof Michael E. Reichel, ’74 Ernesto Rivera, ’66 Walker L. Robinson, ’70 Julie Rosen Jerome Ross, ’60 Semhar Z. Tewelde, ’09 Tuanh Tonnu, ’90 Joseph S. McLaughlin, ’56 Chairman Emeritus
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A Bold New Vision on Blood Research Maryland’s Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis opened in June. Among the center’s goals is development of an artificial blood product that can serve as a life-saving bridge therapy in places like a battlefield or rural community where blood products are not readily available. Heading the initiative is Allan Doctor, MD, who joins Maryland from Washington University in St. Louis.
Medical Alumni Association Board of Directors Stanford H. Malinow, ’68 President Brad D. Lerner, ’84 President-Elect Elizabeth L. Tso, ’79 Vice President Paul A. Tarantino, ’87 Treasurer Harry A. Oken, ’83 Secretary John Allen, ’14 Triesta Fowler-Lee, 99 Nidhi Goel, ’10 Sachin D. Kalyani, ’03 George C. Kochman, Jr., ‘08 Michael E. Reichel, ’74 Walker L. Robinson, ’70 Semhar Z. Tewelde, ’09 Tuanh Tonnu, ’90 Directors Richard Keller, ’58 Honorary Regional Vice President Gary D. Plotnick, ’66 Neda Frayha, ’06 Helen Cheung, ’20 Dr. E. Albert Reece, Dean Ex-Officio Larry Pitrof Executive Director University of Maryland School of Medicine Board of Visitors Michael E. Cryor Chair Louis F. Angelos, Esq. Peter G. Angelos, Esq. Norman Augustine Kenneth R. Banks Alfred R. Berkeley, III Marc P. Blum, PhD, LLB, CPA Jocelyn Cheryl Bramble Scott Burger Cynthia L. Egan Robert E. Fischell, ScD Neda Frayha, ’06 Carolyn B. Frenkil Michael I. Greenebaum Jeffrey L. Hargrave William E. Kirwan, PhD Harry C. Knipp, ’76 Stanford Malinow Valencia McClure Patricia J. Mitchell Edward Magruder Passano, Jr. Jacqueline Young Perrins Abba David Poliakoff, Esq. Timothy J. Regan Maurice Reid, ’99 Melvin Sharoky, ’76 Richard L. Taylor, ’75
Cover story
(On the cover: Dr. Allan Doctor. Photo by Richard Lippenholz)
18 The MAA Honor Roll This fall issue of the alumni Bulletin magazine includes a list of alumni, faculty, and friends who made contributions to the Medical Alumni Association during the prior fiscal year. Preceding the honor roll is a listing of the John Beale Davidge Alliance—the school’s permanent recognition society for major donors.
42 Alumna Profile: Margaret Chisolm, ’88 The Heart of Medicine
In her youth, Margaret Chisolm, ’88, had one passion in her life—art. Accepted into the New York University graduate program in cinema studies, she wondered what her future would hold. After reading a novel about a country doctor in England, she decided to return to school and apply to medical school. Today she is professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University, teaching a pilot course which introduces art as a stimulus to help students better understand themselves as well as their patients.
Departments 2
Dean’s Message
3
Remembered
4
News & Innovations
16 Faculty News
39 Medicina Memoriae 44 Advancement
47 Student Activities 48 Class Notes
45 Managing Money 46 Recollections
51 In Memoriam
The University of Maryland Medicine Bulletin, America’s oldest medical alumni magazine, is produced by the Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc., with support from the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the University of Maryland Medical System. The acceptance of advertising by this publication does not in any way constitute endorsement or approval by the Medical Alumni Association. Requests to reproduce articles should be directed to: Editor, Medicine Bulletin, 522 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201-1636, or by email: [email protected]. Subscriptions are $20 per year (domestic) and $25 (overseas)
For information on advertising, please contact: The Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc. email: [email protected]
www.medicalalumni.org Copyright © 1916 Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc. All rights reserved.
Editor-in-Chief Larry Pitrof
Design
Brushwood Graphics Design Group
Art Director
Nancy Johnston Fall 2019
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Volume 104
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dean’s
This new research center [Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis] and Dr. Doctor’s leadership bring the promise of critical advances in the field of hematology.
his time of year provides an excellent opportunity to greet and get to know our new students, faculty, and staff. The new academic year brings fresh goals, fresh perspectives, and fresh motivation, yet we remain committed to productive, ongoing efforts like the culture transformation initiative (CTI). The CTI enforces the school’s dedication to cultivating our culture into a national model for a respectful, inclusive, and professional work environment. I recently welcomed all our new medical students in the class of 2023. In addition to a majority representation of women among our entering classes, the Bressler Research Building’s new lobby commemorates some of the most remarkable women in our medical and scientific history. I look forward to the conversations, reminiscence, and inspiration that this exhibit will elicit. One of the new members of our community is Allan Doctor, MD, professor of pediatrics. Featured in this issue of the Bulletin, Dr. Doctor leads the new Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis and the effort to develop an artificial blood product for trauma settings, like battlefields or rural areas with limited access to donated blood for transfusions. This new research center and Dr. Doctor’s leadership bring the promise of critical advances in the field of hematology. Many rural communities in the United States experience an extreme lack of health care. According to a recent article in The Washington Post, “the federal government now estimates that a record 50 million rural Americans live in what it calls ‘health care shortage areas,’ where the number of hospitals, family doctors, surgeons and paramedics has declined to 20-year lows.” The fact that so many of our neighbors live without access to the same health resources and conveniences that we are so privileged to have is astounding. This summer we received a new opportunity to address this need with the support from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, which awarded our department of family and community medicine a three-year grant to establish a residency program in rural eastern shore communities. As critical as the need for our students, residents, trainees, physicians, and researchers to maintain the expertise and interest in the many health challenges that exist, so, too, is the need for resources and mechanisms to fuel those efforts. I am grateful to celebrate the school’s generous benefactors in the honor roll of donors in this issue of the magazine. Our community of dedicated donors tells me a lot about the experience people have with the school. I am proud that we represent a community that cares. This issue’s alumni profile features a member of our Baltimore community, Margaret Chisolm, ’88. Dr. Chisolm serves as the vice chair for education, psychiatry and behavioral sciences, and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Dr. Chisolm’s many contributions include a particular compassion for patients, demonstrated by her priority to connect and build relationships with them for personalized care results. I am eager to present our own accomplishments in this area and many more, at this year’s state of the school address on October 30, 2019 in Leadership Hall. The stories we are sharing this year will highlight our commitment to education, research and clinical care, which has led to history-making innovations and a deep investment in shaping the future of medicine. Later this fall, on November 21, we will focus on some of our global health research initiatives at the University of Maryland School of Medicine Festival of Science. Presenters from the Institute of Human Virology and the Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health will speak on their latest groundbreaking research. We will welcome back Robert Redfield, MD, director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to provide the keynote address. I invite all friends of the school to help us kick off what I know will be another exceptional academic year, and to join me for these exciting events.
Remembered Theodore C. Patterson, ’62 Theodore C. Patterson, ’62, the Medical Alumni Association’s first African-American president in 1989, died July 9 at the age of 86. Born and raised in Dundalk, Md., Patterson earned his bachelor’s degree from Morgan State College and was a graduate student at Howard University following active duty in the U.S. Army. He began his medical studies at Maryland in 1958 and graduated four years later. Upon graduation, Patterson trained at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore and became the first African-American resident at South Baltimore General Hospital. After training in 1964, he began private practice in Dundalk where he remained until retirement in 1993. His routine included making house calls on evenings and weekends. In addition to his practice, Patterson served as medical director for the Meridian-Heritage Nursing Center, was associate medical director of the Church Hospital Dundalk Center, and was the first African-American attending physician at Franklin Square Hospital. He also served as the first African-American president of the Baltimore County Medical Association. In 1994 the American Academy of Family Physicians named Patterson physician of the year. During his entire working career, Patterson remained active in higher education and social services, and in 1978 was elected to the Maryland Democratic State Central Committee. He sat on the boards of the Dundalk Chamber of Commerce and the Patapsco Federal Savings and Loan Association. In 1986, Patterson joined the Medical Alumni Association Board of Directors and was elected president in 1989, the first African-American graduate to win election. In addition to his work on the alumni board, he also served on the university’s task force on the recruitment and retention of minority students and was co-founder of an alumni/student mentoring program. Patterson also provided seed money for the University of Maryland Baltimore Lois YoungThomas Minority Scholarship Leadership Guild. He was a member of the Elm Society of the John Beale Davidge Alliance—Maryland’s society for major donors to the medical school. In 1997, the Association recognized his service to the school by awarding him the MAA Distinguished Service Award. Patterson enjoyed golf, tennis, travel, and flower arranging. He was preceded in death by daughter Gina who worked in the medical school’s admissions office. Survivors include wife Sylvia, one daughter, one son, and five grandchildren.
E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA University Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and Dean, University of Maryland School of Medicine Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
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news INNOVATIONS
Alumni Gather in Hawaii During NMA
Davidge Elm II Healthy Periodically the alumni office receives inquiries from graduates asking about Davidge Elm II. The tree grew from a clipping taken from the original elm which stood beside Davidge Hall from 1812 until its demise in 2001. In fact, several clippings were taken to a nursery in North Carolina and offered to alumni eight years later. Davidge Elm II was purchased by Richard L. Taylor, ’75, and gifted to the University in 2012 on the 200-year anniversary of the building. Experts say it’s healthy with one caveat: it’s a dwarf. Now standing about 12 feet tall, they don’t expect it to grow much taller.
Oldstone, ’61, Receives Scripps Honor The Scripps Research Institute recently honored Michael B. A. Oldstone, ’61, for his life in science. Specifically, the award recognized his work establishing the viral immune pathogenesis field, as over the past five decades he has contributed to a plethora of seminal basic science discoveries and provided the intellectual foundation for translational research with clinical implications for human diseases. Oldstone trained in internal medicine at Maryland after graduation and later served a three-year fellowship in the department of experimental pathology at Scripps. In 1976, he was appointed head of the Scripps viral immunobiology laboratory.
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More than 40 alumni and guests gathered in Honolulu during a reception held in conjunction with the National Medical Association annual meeting on July 29. Robert M. Phillips, ’82, and Willarda V. Edwards, ’77, co-hosted the event. Special guests included Robert McLean, ’88, president of the American College of Physicians, and Patricia Harris, MD, president of the NMA. The reception was held at the Hilton Hawaiian Village. Reception co-hosts Robert M. Phillips, ’82 and Willarda V. Edwards, ’77, with Robert McLean, ’88, and Patricia Harris, MD
Medical School Transitions
Christine Lau, MD, MBA, was named chair of the department of surgery and chief of surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center. Lau joins the Maryland faculty from the University of Virginia where she was professor of surgery and chief of the division of thoracic surgery. She begins her position on December 1.
Victoria Marchese, PhD, PT, was named chair of the department of physical therapy and rehabilitation science. Marchese joined the faculty in 1994 as an assistant professor and had been serving as interim chair. She assumed the post on August 15. Her expertise is in the rehabilitation of children diagnosed with cancer.
Michael Shipley, PhD, has stepped down as chair of the department of anatomy and neurobiology, a position he has held since 1994. He has also retired as founding director of the program in neuroscience but remains on the faculty as the Donald E. Wilson, MD, MACP, Distinguished Professor.
Rodney J. Taylor, MD, MPH, was named chair of the department of otorhinolaryngology-head & neck surgery. Taylor, a professor in the department, has been serving as acting chair since the resignation of Scott Strome, MD, FACS, who became vice chancellor and executive dean of the University of Tennessee College of Medicine last year.
Contributing writers to News/Innovations include: Bill Seiler • Karen Warmkessel • Julie Rosen Photos by: John Seebode • Mark Teske • Tom Jemski • Richard Lippenholz
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University of Maryland
news INNOVATIONS
Lavy, ’60, Receives Honorary Appointment
Pediatrics chair Steven J. Czinn, Dean E. Albert Reece, Richard Lavy, ’60, and wife Numa
The medical school honored a long-time volunteer faculty member this summer. Richard C. Lavy, ’60, an expert in pediatric allergy, asthma, and clinical immunology, was named a dean’s honorary clinical professor on June 26. Lavy received his training here after graduation and maintained a private practice in Edgewater from 1967 to 1987. He joined Maryland’s volunteer faculty in 1968 as a part-time clinical professor in the departments of pediatrics and community and family medicine, a position he maintained until 2017.
Mummy Exhibition Showing in Pittsburgh Mummies of the World: The Exhibition II, which includes 11 pieces from the Medical Alumni Association’s Alan Burns Collection of Anatomical Specimens, is now showing at the Carnegie Science Center in Pittsburgh. Organized by Exhibitions International, the traveling show is the largest collection of human and animal mummies and related artifacts ever assembled and has been on tour for five years. The Burns Collection was brought to Maryland from Scotland in 1820 by Granville Pattison, professor of anatomy and surgery who later served as dean. The pieces were used as
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
teaching aids and utilized through the early 20th century. They were preserved by Burns who developed a curing solution consisting of salt and sugar—revolutionary for its time. The Maryland Mummy is also traveling in the show. The cadaver was mummified in 1994 by Ronn Wade, former director of the Maryland State Anatomy Board who used tools and techniques of the ancient Egyptians. The exhibit will remain in Pittsburgh through April 2020.
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PLANNED GIVING Realized Bequest
Your LEGACY... it’s
Personal
Paths crossing often result in life-changing outcomes, as was the case when Alston Gordon Lanham, MD ’31 found his mentor in Charles Reid Edwards, MD ’13. Dr. Edwards was an inspirational teacher whose clinical training was complimented by his colleagues as “unsurpassed.” Remembering the lessons he learned and those who taught them at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Dr. Lanham established the Charles Reid Edwards, MD Professorship in Surgery. His realized bequest now benefits Dr. Joseph Friedberg, the inaugural holder of this esteemed professorship endowment. Dr. Friedberg’s commitment to improving mesothelioma treatment is helping patients and inspiring the School’s trainees and students, as Dr. Edwards did for Dr. Lanham.
How will you inspire others with your legacy? Legacy gifts to the University of Maryland Baltimore Foundation cost nothing up front. Whether your beneficiary designation is through your will, IRA, pension plan, a Charitable Gift Annuity (CGA), or life insurance policy, your gift is customizable and adaptable to changing financial situations.
“I am honored by the
prestige of the Charles Reid Edwards Endowed Professorship and I hope to continue to represent this title with distinction.”
—Joseph Friedberg, MD
Your gift can:
• build an endowment; • support faculty; • advance research;
• provide scholarships; • support the School of
Medicine’s other critical needs.
Whatever form your legacy gift takes, you can have an impact on the future of medicine. For more information about bequests, gifts that pay income for life, and other innovative ways to support the School of Medicine, please visit: www.umbfplannedgiving.org. Or contact: Marjorie Bray Director of Development, Alumni University of Maryland School of Medicine 410-706-0418 [email protected] *PLEASE NOTE: Legacy gifts should be made payable to the University of Maryland Baltimore Foundation, Inc., for the benefit of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Charles Reid Edwards, MD ’13
Alston Gordon Lanham, MD ’31
Feature
A Bold New Vision on
By Christianna McCausland
Blood Research New Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis will develop diagnostics and therapeutics that could revolutionize emergency and critical care medicine
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Blood Research
preventable deaths caused by blood loss in the United States. In the U.S. military, uncontrolled blood loss is noted as the leading cause of death in 90 percent of potentially survivable battlefield casualties. The opening of a new research center at Maryland holds the potential to reverse some of these devastating statistics. The Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis opened in June 2019. The interdisciplinary center brings together physicians, biochemists and engineers to explore challenging questions related to blood function in the critical care setting. Among the Center’s goals will be the advancement of an artificial blood product that holds the potential to become a life-saving bridge therapy in environments where blood products are not readily available such as battlefields or remote rural communities.
Innovative Leadership The Center is led by nationally recognized physicianscientist Allan Doctor, MD, who was most recently a tenured professor of pediatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and served as director of its division of pediatric critical care medicine (2006–2016). Doctor is board certified in four specialties—emergency medicine, pediatric emergency medicine, pediatrics, and pediatric critical care—and has been noted as one of the “Best Doctors in America” since 2013. He joins Maryland as a professor of pediatrics. “We are extremely pleased to welcome Dr. Allan Doctor, an esteemed physician-scientist and innovator, to our faculty and are excited to see the opening of the Center that will provide important advances in the hematology field,” says Steven J. Czinn, MD, the Drs.
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A Circuitous Route While Doctor’s work on artificial blood is understandably capturing the limelight, he never intended to get into the field of blood substitutes. His original training was in emergency medicine, which led to an interest in critically ill children. “The problem I was most focused on in training was managing disrupted oxygen distribution in the body during physiologic stress; this problem commonly complicated a wide range of primary pathologies in critically ill children” he explains, stating that neither medical nor mechanical support was adequate to the task of normalizing blood flow distribution, which resulted in the loss of patients for whom the original pathology (such as infection or trauma) was otherwise successfully treatable. It was about this same time that Jonathan Stamler, MD, then at Duke University, discovered the role red blood cells play in blood flow routing and, specifically,
Photo by Richard Lippenholz
E
ach year there are perhaps as many as 20,000
Rouben and Violet Jiji Endowed Professor, chair of the department of pediatrics at Maryland and director of the University of Maryland Children’s Hospital. “He brings tremendous research strengths to the department of pediatrics and is a perfect complement to Maryland’s renowned strengths and leadership in trauma and critical care medicine.” Alan L. Schwartz, MD, endowed alumni professor of pediatrics and chairman of the department of pediatrics at Washington University School of Medicine and chairman of the department of pediatrics at Washington University from 1995–2016, can still recall the first time he met Doctor. Doctor had given a talk on his innovative work on how nitric oxide signaling from red blood cells regulates the vasculature and helps match oxygen delivery to tissue demand. Schwartz says he was so overwhelmed by the deeply thoughtful scientific inquiry demonstrated by Doctor he immediately invited him out for a beer. Two years later, Schwartz recruited Doctor to head the critical care medicine division of pediatrics. “As a scholar, Allan is exceptionally creative and, frankly, it is unusual today to have someone who is a true expert in body physiology in addition to being an expert in cutting-edge molecular science,” says Schwartz. “As a clinician, he is a master clinician of the most critically ill patients.”
Allan Doctor, MD
Feature
the role of nitric oxide carried by hemoglobin in maintaining dynamic coupling between regional blood flow and specific tissue need for oxygen delivery. Doctor uses the metaphor of a thermostat, explaining that red cells are constantly asking whether there is enough oxygen available and either releasing nitric oxide or drawing it back in to ‘keep a consistent temperature.’ “If you have an area of intense inflammation or suffer certain types of significant systemic stress there are chemical changes to the red blood cells that break the thermostat…now you have problems with distribution of blood flow,” says Doctor. “What my laboratory is working on is how systemic disease—diabetes , kidney failure, sepsis, trauma—affects a red cell’s ability to control distribution of blood flow.” While Doctor may not have been working on a blood substitute, a call he initially thought was a prank changed everything.
The Power of a Donut Dipanjan Pan, PhD, was working at the Washington University School of Medicine exploring the capacity of nanoparticles for imaging and drug delivery. His lab realized that if the nanoparticles moved from a sphere shape to a disk shape—
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As a scholar, Allan is exceptionally creative and, frankly, it is unusual today to have someone who is a true expert in body physiology in addition to being an expert in cuttingedge molecular science.
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University of Maryland
Blood Research
Feature
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
Photo by Richard Lippenholz
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a donut—the surface of the particle held more potential for innovation. Initially Pan’s group thought this would have applications in MRI but a new idea emerged. “These particles resembled so much a red blood cell,” says Pan, “but I had no experience or expertise in the area of blood substitutes.” Through another investigator at Washington University, Pan connected with Doctor who, once he realized the call was not a prank, agreed to meet. After three years of collaboration they created a design for an artificial red blood cell that worked on the bench. Washington University/ St. Louis Children’s Hospital provided the team $1 million in seed funding to move the research forward. The grant was a vote of confidence in a field marred by skepticism: In the ’70s and ’80s, at the height of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, there was a push to create artificial blood substitutes, but problems with toxicity caused the FDA to shut down the entire industry. “The artificial blood and oxygen carrier field tanked and there was a huge gap in this area,” says Pan. “We wanted to create an agent that solved the problems associated with all previous artificial blood products.” Together, Pan and Doctor co-founded the forprofit company KaloCyte to develop ErythroMer, nano-encapsulated human hemoglobin, for which
they have obtained numerous grants including $2 million from NIH. Pan moves from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to join Doctor in Baltimore with a dual appointment: professor of radiology at Maryland and professor of chemical, biochemical, and environmental engineering at UMBC. A third co-founder and co-inventor, Philip Spinella, MD, currently remains at Washington University where he is a professor of pediatrics. He is also director of the pediatric critical care translational research program at St Louis Children’s Hospital. An expert in transfusion medicine and the resuscitation of hemorrhagic shock, Spinella served 15 years in the U.S. Army and is an Iraq War veteran. ErythroMer is distinct from previous blood substitutes in several important ways. First, the hemoglobin is sheathed in a bio-mimetic sheath that is structurally and functionally modeled after a red cell, ending the challenge of toxicity previously encountered when hemoglobin was free in plasma. Additionally, the product has a chemically gated system to control oxygen affinity and the shell is designed to modulate nitric oxide movement through the particle shell. Because it is synthetic, ErythroMer is equivalent to universal donor blood and it clears the bloodstream in three to seven hours. Perhaps most important, the product is freeze-dried so it is shelf stable until it is reconstituted with sterile water. “This isn’t intended as a substitute for blood, it’s intended to allow transfusion where we can’t deliver blood: rural environments, austere environments, military settings, a cruise ship, a space shuttle, Mars, a submarine,” says Doctor. The product’s success would be revolutionary. Military medics could carry pouches of freeze dried blood to stabilize injured soldiers in remote locations; a developing country with a compromised blood donor pool (or no blood bank) would have access to a safe, short-term transfusable option. Doctor states that the product could have applications including extending the life of organs destined for transplant and even building a national
Rerouting to Baltimore Doctor states that he was content in St. Louis. In addition to its work on the blood substitute, his lab studies how non-hematologic disease affects red blood cell performance. The lab also studies the decision-making process related to identifying which patients should receive a blood transfusion with the aim of creating better protocols for when to administer blood and for dosing. Still, he was struggling to connect with collaborators to address these complex, interdisciplinary questions. Many of his colleagues were spread all over the country. A call from Dean E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA, provided an offer it would be hard to refuse. The dean was looking for scientists who could bring an intact group
Photo by Richard Lippenholz
Dipanjan Pan, PhD
Together, Pan and Doctor co-founded the for-profit company KaloCyte to develop ErythroMer, nanoencapsulated human hemoglobin, for which they have obtained numerous grants including $2 million from NIH.
stockpile of safe blood in case of a dirty bomb or a mass casualty scenario. KaloCyte is the only enterprise in the world working on a nanoparticle design and it has achieved success in rodents and rabbits. The company is in the process of an FDA filing and hopes to be in human trials in two years.
Perhaps most important, the product is freeze-dried so it is shelf stable until it is reconstituted with sterile water.
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Doctor stated for his part, he wanted to create a design space where he could bring together engineers, physiologists, and physicians to address problems related to oxygen transport and hemostasis. At Maryland, Doctor would have access to the Schools of Medicine, Engineering, Shock Trauma, and a host of physicians. The Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis was born.
to Maryland to bridge existing expertise there. Doctor stated for his part, he wanted to create a design space where he could bring together engineers, physiologists, and physicians to address problems related to oxygen transport and hemostasis. At Maryland, Doctor would have access to the Schools of Medicine, Engineering, Shock Trauma, and a host of physicians. The Center for Blood Oxygen Transport & Hemostasis was born. Doctor says the combination of projects in one center makes it unique.
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“Normally these things are siloed in universities and often across universities,” he explains. “What is unique about this center is the opportunity to connect these projects where a cross-disciplinary team is working on both blood oxygen distribution and blood clotting as well as basic transfusion medicine and related therapeutics.” He is also excited to create a set of core resources at the center. “We’ll have special cores in the center to evaluate red cell performance, blood clot formation, the chemistry associated with control of regional blood flow, the ability to make and evaluate nanoparticles as therapeutics, and the ability to evaluate animal models to allow us to study oxygen transport and hemostasis,” he continues. “It’s very difficult and expensive to create all these platforms and putting it together in one place creates efficiencies for the scientists who are part of the center.”
Discovery and Translation Having the center located in Baltimore will provide innumerable efficiencies. Doctor and his team are already connecting with their colleagues at Shock Trauma, for example, as well as physicians in the acute radiation group, and others researching problems of hypoxia
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and trauma. Proximity to Fort Dietrich, the FDA, NIH and other agencies will prove advantageous. Another draw that persuaded Doctor and his team to relocate to Baltimore was the existence of the University of Maryland Biopark. In addition to his lab, KaloCyte has leased space in the center along with another of Pan’s other small start-ups. The center hopes to form new companies, too. “One of the real challenges in institutions traditionally in the business of pure science is they haven’t yet figured out how to handle faculty entrepreneurship,” says Doctor. “While appropriate, conventional safeguards can make it difficult to have efficient maturation of technology once you’ve spun out of the lab. UMB was very willing to be open-minded and allow KaloCyte to lease space and have access to the core laboratories, so that creates efficiency and synergy.” Pan states that having that synergy is crucial, particularly at this pivotal time in the development of ErythroMer.
“This is not a simple problem we’re trying to solve so we need to have all the best brains come together,” says Pan. “We’re talking about particle design, in vitro and in vivo studies, regulatory and intellectual property steps all combined together, so it is in our best interest that the company and the academic lab connect on a daily basis.” Whether working to develop novel therapeutics for acquired injuries to red blood cells or bringing 21st century engineering to bear on transfusion medicine, Doctor wants to create an atmosphere of translation at the center. “Rather than being discovery focused, which is what a lot of traditional research centers have as their mission, this is therapeutically-oriented,” he says of the center. “We’re of course interested in discovery, but prioritizing discovery that can be applied to new therapies. It’s very much a translationally-oriented mission.”
A Bold Vision Doctor’s former colleague, Alan Schwartz, says bringing medicine to those in need is a trademark of Doctor’s ethos. “Allan wants to bring this to patients and he and his colleagues will do that. It’s test tube science literally brought to patients via clinical trials,” says Schwartz. “This Center has the opportunity to significantly change how we think about oxygen delivery in states of physiologic disorder.” Schwartz claims that if he was 25 years younger he would jump at the opportunity to be a part of the new center. Pan says that in addition to being an acclaimed scientist and a delightful person to work with, Allan Doctor is a visionary. “His vision for the center is outstanding, so bold and so up-to-the-moment,” says Pan. The opening of the new center has certainly brought with it an undercurrent of excitement as its potentially revolutionary research explores new possibilities for emergency medicine, critically ill patients, and the community at large.
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Photo by Richard Lippenholz
This isn’t intended as a substitute for blood, it’s intended to allow transfusion where we can’t deliver blood: rural environments, austere environments, military settings, a cruise ship, a space shuttle, Mars, a submarine.
Blood Research
Feature
University of Maryland
Faculty
news Publications ❖ Ngozi Akabudike, MD, assistant professor, and Motomi EnomotoIwamoto, PhD, associate professor, both from the department Ngozi Akabudike, MD of orthopaedics, were among the co-authors of “Control of Glucose Metabolism is Important in Tenogenic Differentiation of Progenitors Derived from Human Injured Tendons,” published in PLoS One in March. ❖ Vasken Dilsizian, MD, professor, department of diagnostic radiology & nuclear medicine, coauthored “Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction: Clinical Vasken Dilsizian, MD Considerations and Noninvasive Diagnosis,” published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Cardiovascular Imaging 2019 on April 11. ❖ Karen Kotloff, MD, professor, department of pediatrics; Dilruba Nasrin, MBBS, PhD, assistant professor, department of medicine; William Karen Kotloff, MD Blackwelder, PhD, adjunct professor, department of epidemiology & public health; Samba Sow, MD, MS, adjunct professor, department of medicine; Sharon Tennant, PhD, associate professor, department of medicine; and Myron Levine, MD, DTPH, the Simon and Bessie Grollman Distinguished Professor of Medicine and associate dean for global health, vaccinology and infectious disease, were among the authors of “The Incidence, Aetiology, and Adverse Clinical
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
Consequences of Less Severe Diarrhoeal Episodes Among Infants and Children Residing in Low-Income and Middle-Income Countries: A 12-Month Case-Control Study As a Follow-On to the Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS),” published in Lancet Global Health on May 7. ❖ Miriam Laufer, MD, professor of pediatrics at the Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health, wrote the commentary “Beyond Birthweight: Benefits and Risks of Miriam Laufer, MD Preventing Malaria in Pregnancy,” published in the Lancet on March 22. ❖ Robert Miller, MD, professor, department of radiation oncology, was among the authors of “Cost of Acute and Follow-Up Care in Patients with PreExisting Psychiatric Robert Miller, MD Diagnoses Undergoing Radiation Therapy,” published in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics on March 21. In addition, Dr. Miller was among the authors of “Effect of Doxepin Mouthwash or Diphenhydramine-Lidocaine-Antacid Mouthwash vs Placebo on RadiotherapyRelated Oral Mucositis Pain: The Alliance A221304 Randomized Clinical Trial,” published in JAMA on April 6. ❖ Mohan Suntha, MD, the Marlene & Stewart Greenebaum Professorship in Radiation Oncology and president and CEO of the University of Maryland Medical Center, was Mohan Suntha, MD among the authors of “Prophylactic Cranial Irradiation vs Observation in Patients with Locally Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Long-Term Update of the NRG Oncology/RTOG 0214 Phase 3 Randomized Clinical Trial,” published in JAMA Oncology on March 14.
[16]
Patents ❖ Colin Mackenzie, MB, CHB, MD, professor emeritus; Peter Hu, PhD, associate professor; Shiming Yang, PhD, assistant professor, all from Colin Mackenzie, MB, the department of CHB, MD anesthesiology; and Hegang Chen, PhD, professor, department of epidemiology & public health, are co-inventors for U.S. patent #10258292 “Method and Apparatus for Predicting a Need for a Blood Transfusion,” effective April 16.
Awards & Honors ❖ Donna Calu, PhD, assistant professor, department of anatomy and neurobiology, was honored by U.S. President Donald Trump as a recipient of the Presidential Donna Calu, PhD Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers, the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on science and engineering professionals in the early stages of their independent research careers. ❖ William Carpenter, MD, professor, department of psychiatry, was recently named the 2019 lifetime achievement awardee from the Schizophrenia William Carpenter, MD International Research Society (SIRS). Founded in 2005, SIRS brings together scientists from around the world to exchange the latest advances in biological and psychosocial research in schizophrenia. The award honors a scientist who has made a significant contribution to the advancement of schizophrenia research.
❖ David Feliciano, MD, clinical professor, department of surgery, was one of 36 surgeons nationally inducted into the inaugural class of the American College of Surgeons Academy of Master Surgeon Educators.
William Regine, MD, FACR, FACRO
❖ William Regine, MD, FACR, FACRO, the Isadore & Fannie Schneider Foxman Chair of the Department of Radiation Oncology, received a lifetime achievement award as a 2019 Daily Record Health Care Hero.
Appointments ❖ Seemant Chaturvedi, MD, the Stewart J. Greenebaum Endowed Professor in Stroke Neurology, and Steven Kittner, MD, MPH, professor, both from the department of neurology, have been appointed to the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA) guidelines writing committee for secondary prevention of stroke. The AHA/ASA guidelines will update a previous 2014 scientific statement and will provide guidance for clinicians on optimal methods for stroke prevention. ❖ Roy Film, PT, MPT, DPT, OCS, FAAOMPT, assistant professor, department of physical therapy and rehabilitation science, has been appointed Roy Film, PT, MPT, DPT, to serve on the OCS, FAAOMPT American Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists three-person committee to prepare and present the United States’ bid to host the 2024 International Federation of Orthopaedic Manipulative Physical Therapists (IFOMPT) Conference. Film will help to coordinate the presentation of the US bid during the IFOMPT 2020 Conference in Melbourne, Australia. The proposed US bid city has not yet been named. ❖ Geoffrey Rosenthal, MD, PhD, professor, department of pediatrics, was appointed to be on the Committee on Federal Government Affairs.
Grants & Contracts* ❖ Wei Chao, MD, PhD, FAHA, Anesthesiology Endowed Professor in Translational Research, director, Translational Research Program, vicechair for Translational Research, associate director, Center for Shock, Trauma and Anesthesiology Research; Junfang Wu, BM, PhD, associate professor; and Lin Zou, PhD, assistant professor, all from the department of anesthesiology and the Center for Shock, Trauma and Anesthesiology Research, received a five-year, $2,549,260 grant (MPI R01) from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke for “Targeting Brain Inflammation and Neurological Dysfunction in Sepsis.” ❖ Alan Cross, MD, professor of medicine, Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health, received an extension of $413,000 for his Astellas Alan Cross, MD grant: “E. coli Epidemiology and PSL Study,” now totaling $7.2 million. ❖ Alan Faden, MD, the David S. Brown Professor in Trauma; Bogdan Stoica, MD, associate professor; and David Loane, PhD, adjunct associate professor, all from the department of anesthesiology, received a five-year, $2,254,990 grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke for “Reprogramming Microglial Epigenetic Pathways to Promote Cognitive Recovery After Brain Trauma.” ❖ Steven Fisher, MD, professor, department of medicine, received a four-year, $1,390,500 award from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute for Steven Fisher, MD “Precision Editing of Myosin Phosphatase for Vasodilator Sensitization in Hypertension.” ❖ Christopher Jewell, PhD, associate professor, department of microbiology
[17]
and immunology, received a four-year, $1,602,366 grant from National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease to use biomaterials to improve compliance in patients receiving immunotherapy. ❖ Marcelo Sztein, MD, professor of pediatrics, Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health, was awarded a fiveyear, $2.84 million R01 grant from the Marcelo Sztein, MD National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for “Immune Mechanisms of Protection in S. Typhi infection.” ❖ Matthew Trudeau, PhD, associate professor, department of physiology, received a fouryear, $1,321,001 R01 grant from the National Institute Matthew Trudeau, PhD of General Medical Sciences for “Regulatory and Functional Mechanisms in hERG Ion Channels.” ❖ Emerson Wickwire, PhD, associate professor, departments of psychiatry and medicine, received a two-year, $2,000,000 award through a joint partnerEmerson Wickwire, PhD ship with the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command and the Medical Technology Enterprise Consortium. The funding will support the development of mobile sleep therapies for military service members with sleep disorders. ❖ Natalie Zlebnik, PhD, postdoctoral fellow, department of anatomy and neurobiology, was awarded a $1,061,248 K99/R00 Pathway to Independence Grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse for “Effects of Exercise on Dopaminergic Mechanisms of Cocaine Relapse.”
*Grants & Contracts of $1 million and above
University of Maryland
honor roll
2015 2019
Each Eachyear yearthe theMedical MedicalAlumni AlumniAssociation Associationpublishes publishesits itshonor honorroll rollofofdonors donorsininthe thefall fallMedicine MedicineBulletin Bulletin. .The Thelist listincludes includes names namesofofalumni, alumni,faculty, faculty,and andfriends friendswhose whosegifts giftswere werereceived receivedbybetween the Association July 1, 2014 between and June July30, 1, 2018 2015.and Preceding June 30,the 2019. Preceding honor rollthe is ahonor listingroll of is thea John listingBeale of theDavidge John Beale Alliance, Davide a permanent Alliance, arecognition permanentsociety recognition for donors societyoffor $10,000 donorsand of $10,000 above. and Theabove. MedicalTheAlumni Medical Association Alumni Association and University and University of MarylandofSchool Maryland of Medicine School ofgratefully Medicine acknowledge gratefully acknowledge your support! your support!
The John Beale AllianceDavidge Alliance TheDavidge John Beale The John Beale Davidge Alliance is a permanent recognition society for major donors of the John University of Maryland T. Alexander Theodore E. Woodward 1950 School of Medicine. Established in 1978, the Alliance is named in memory of Dr. John Beale Davidge, George R. Baumgardner Frank C. Bressler Grace Hofsteter Frank P. Greene 1940 the medical school’s founder and first dean who in 1812 raised the necessary of the school’s William H. Yeager capital to fund construction William J. Marshall 1897 Ross Z. & Grace S. Pierpont first medical building. The society includes alumni, faculty, and friends of the medical school. Isaac Dickson 1895
1904 A. Lee Ellis
The 1807 Circle The 1807 Circle is the highest 1921 level of the Alliance, honors Moses Paulson recognizing donors for gifts of $50,000 and above. The 1926 1807 Circle was established Max Trubek in 1993. 1930 1895
Maxwell Hurston Frank C. Bressler
1897
1931 Isaac Dickson Harry S. Shelley
1904
A. Lee Ellis 1932 Mortimer D. Abrashkin 1914 Herbert Austin W. Berger Wood John C. Dumler
1921
Moses 1933 Paulson Sam Beanstock 1926 Mark Thumim Antonio F. D’Angelo Max Trubek 1934 1930 M. Paul Mains Maxwell Hurston 1935 1931 Milton Robinson Rachel K.I.Gundry John M. Shaul Harry S. Shelley Benjamin M. Stein
1932
1941 Christian F. Richter 1935 Raymond Kief Thompson Milton I. Robinson John M. Shaul 1942 Benjamin M. Stein Louis O.J. Manganiello 1937 Mary L. Scholl David A. Barker James & Carolyn Frenkil 1943M Lawrence Irving J. Perlman Taylor Albert Shapiro
1944 Ross Z. & Grace S. Pierpont John M. Bloxom III 1941 Michael R. Ramundo Christian F. Richter Raymond Kief Thompson 1945 David H. Barker 1942 Benjamin Berdann Louis O.J. Manganiello Oscar B. Camp Mary L. Scholl Mary Dorcas Clark 1943M John M. Dennis Irving J. Taylor Joseph B. Ganey Allen 1943DJ. O’Neill
1955 Kathleen R. McGrady Vernon M. Gelhaus Robert J. Venrose Paul C. Hudson 1952 Morton D. Kramer Lee W. Elgin, Jr. Paul H. Gislason 1956 C.Theodore Edward Graybeal R. Carski Robert JosephA.S.Grubb McLaughlin Morton MarvinM. S.Krieger Platt G. Edward Reahl Jr.
1953
1944
1948 David H. Barker Clark BenjaminWhitehorn Berdann
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019 2015
1951
John M. Recht 1946 Arthur M. Rinehart Allan Macht Wm. B. H. Rogers David & Norma Sills Jr.
Lawrence Perlman 1933
M. Paul Mains John Z. & Akiko K. Bowers Celeste L. Woodward
1948
1953 Leonard H. Golombek Robert Berkow Clark Whitehorn Sylvan & May Frieman 1949 John W. Heisse Robert R.C. Rosen George Peck Israel H. Weiner 1950 Stanley W. Henson, Jr. 1954 Grace Hofsteter ThomasH.E.Yeager Hunt Jr. William
1940
John M. Bloxom III 1947 Michael R. & Ramundo James M. Alma Trench
1934 1938
1946
1952 Abraham A. Goetz Allan H. Macht LeeA. W.Mitchell Elgin Jr. John Paul & H.Norma Gislason David Sills, Jr. C. Edward Graybeal 1947 Robert A. Grubb James M. & Trench Morton M.Alma Krieger
1943D 1938 JohnZ.M. John & Recht Akiko K. Bowers ArthurL.M. Rinehart Celeste Woodward Wm. B. Rogers Theodore E. Woodward
Mortimer D. Abrashkin 1937 Herbert Berger David A. Barker John C. Dumler James & Carolyn Frenkil Albert Shapiro Sam Beanstock Mark Thumim
1951 Daniel Lemen Kathleen R. McGrady Allen J. RobertO’Neill J. Venrose
Robert Berkow 1957 Sylvan & May Frieman Selina Balco Baumgardner John W. Heisse Paul K. Hanashiro George C. Peck George A. Lentz Israel H. Weiner Frederick W. Plugge IV 1954 Walter M. Shaw Charles J. Hammer Leonard M. Zullo Thomas E. Hunt, Jr. 1958
1945
Oscar B. Camp 1949 Mary Dorcas Clark Robert R. Rosen John M. Dennis Joseph B. Ganey
[[1818]]
1959 Jack C. & Cynthia Lewis 1955 Morton M. Mower Vernon M. Gelhaus Lawrence D. Pinkner Paul C. Hudson Hans R. Wilhelmsen Morton D. Kramer
1956 1960 Robert J. Byrne Leonard P. Berger Theodore R. Heefner Carski Wilson A. Joseph S. E. McLaughlin Ronald Keyser Marvin SelvinS.&Platt Sylvia Passen G.Morton EdwardI.Reahl, Jr. Rapoport Bernice Sigman 1957 Nathan Stofberg Selina Balco Baumgardner Paul K. Hanashiro George A. Lentz 1961 Frederick W. Plugge, IV Neil Arbegast Walter M. Shaw Jay S. Goodman Landon Clarke Stout David E. Litrenta Leonard M. Zullo
1958 1962
John T. Closson Alexander, Sr. Jon B. George R. Baumgardner W. Haddox Sothoron Frank P. Greene William J. Marshall 1963 Leland 1959 M. Garrison Kosta Stojanovich Jack C. & Cynthia Lewis
The John Beale Davidge Alliance 1961
1990
Neil R. Arbegast Jay S. Goodman David E. & Shirley Litrenta
Carolyn M. Apple Martin I. Passen Tuanh Tonnu
1962
1992
Jon B. Closson W. Haddox Sothoron
Jeffrey Lahn Rosenthal
1963
Thomas H. Yau
Robert M. Beazley Leland M. Garrison Donald H. Gilden Janet E. Mules Kosta Stojanovich
1964 I. Frank Hartman, II
1965 Edward S. Hoffman Donald Cornelius Roane
1966 Arnold S. & Donna R. Blaustein William R. Bosley Elizabeth C. Hosick Franklin L. Johnson Lloyd I. Kramer Carolyn J. Pass Richard M. Susel James W. Spence Stuart H. & Eleanor H. Yuspa
1967 Elizabeth A. Abel Francis D. Drake John Wm. Gareis Jack Lichtenstein John R. Rowell
1968
Morton M. Mower 1964 D. Pinkner Lawrence I. Frank II Hans R. Hartman Wilhelmsen
Gordon L. & Judith C. Levin William B. Long, III Bert F. Morton Joel Wm. Renbaum Barry J. Schlossberg
1960 1965
1969
Anonymous Edward S. Hoffman Leonard Berger Roane DonaldP.Cornelius S. H. Economon Julio 1966 E. & Myriam Figueroa Wilson A.S.Heefner Arnold & Donna R. Ronald E. Keyser Blaustein Selvin & Sylvia Passen William R. Bosley Morton I. Rapoport Elizabeth C. Hosick Clinton L. L. Rogers Franklin Johnson Martha E. Stauffer Lloyd I. Kramer Nathan Stofberg Carolyn J. Pass Richard M. Susel
John C. Blasko Barry H. & Marsha Lee Friedman Reynold M. & Janet M. Karr Arthur V. Milholland & Dr. Lucille A. Mostello Malcolm D. Paul Brian S. & Patricia A. Saunders W. Winslow Schrank Kristin Stueber
1993 1994 Scott E. LaBorwitt
1998
Reunion 2019
Lisa S. LaBorwit
1970
1978
1999
John P. Caulfield Joseph N. Friend David B. Posner Louis A. Shpritz Stanley S. Tseng
Morris Funk David E. & Carole A. Kelley Elizabeth M. Kingsley Ruth A. Robin Ellen L. & Dr. Bruce Taylor Stephen A. Valenti
Maurice N. Reid
1971
1979
T. Noble Jarrell, III Jack S. Lissauer Joel N. Shlian
Stephen R. Izzi G. S. Malouf Jr. Dorothy Snow Elizabeth L. Tso A. F. Woodward, Jr. Erik B. & Joyce Young
1972 William G. Armiger Jeffrey C. Blum Elizabeth R. Brown Richard B. Kline Stanley A. Morrison John A. Niziol Richard H. and Jane Sherman Deborah M. Shlian
1980 Mehtap Atagun Aygun Jane L. Chen
1981 Robert A. Fuld
1973
1982
Michael J. Dodd Nelson H. Goldberg Steven J. & Dr. Enid K. Gross Ronald J. Taylor
Anonymous Brian K. Cooley
1983 Harry A. Oken George C. Peck, Jr. August J. Troendle
1974 Edward L. Perl David L. Zisow
1985
1975
Alan R. Malouf
Stephen H. & Patricia Pollock Richard L. & Kathie Taylor
1986 Barbara B. Fleming & James Walker Fleming, III Seth D. Rosen
1976 Harry Clarke Knipp Nancy & Geoffrey B. Liss Melvin Sharoky Carol & Benjamin K. Yorkoff
1987 Stephen L. Houff G. Michael Maresca
1977
1989
Dahlia R. Hirsch Clyde A. Strang Barry A. Wohl
Physical Therapy Anonymous Leslie B. Glickman, ’64 & Dr. David R. Glickman Jane S. Satterfield, ’64 George R. Hepburn, ’74
Faculty & Staff Anonymous Drs. Edson X. Albuquerque & Edna Rezende Albuquerque Dr. & Mrs. Bizhan Aarabi Dr. Robert A. Barish Dr. Stephen T. Bartlett Dr. Monique Bellefleur & Dr. J. Marc Simard Dr. & Mrs. Michael A. Berman Dr. Steven Bernstein Dr. Christopher T. Bever Jr. & Dr. Patricia A. Thomas Dr. Mordecai P. Blaustein Dr. Angela Brodie Dr. Joseph W. Burnett Dr. Frank M. Calia Dr. William T. Carpenter Drs. M. Carlyle & Lillian Blackmon-Crenshaw Dr. Kevin J. Cullen Mr. Brian J. DeFilippis Dr. Howard M. Eisenberg Dr. & Mrs. James P. G. Flynn Dr. Claire M. Fraser Dr. David R. Gen Dr. J. Laurance Hill Dr. Anthony L. Imbembo Dr. & Mrs. Guiseppe Inesi Drs. Bruce E. Jarrell & Leslie S. Robinson
John T. Alexander, II Mary Carmel Deckelman
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University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 Dr. Joseph P. Kao Drs. James B. Kaper & Carol O. Tacket Dr. John A. Kastor Dr. Lisa D. Kelly Dr. Allen Krumholz Dr. Patricia Langenberg Drs. M. Jane Matjasko & Shao-Huang Chiu Dr. Colin Mackenzie Dr. James & Mrs. Nancy Mixson Dr. Taghi M. Modarressi & Ms. Anne Tyler Dr. & Mrs. E. Albert Reece Dr. Richard D. Richards Dr. Thomas M. Scalea Dr. & Mrs. Stephen C. Schimpff Dr. David Stewart Drs. William J. Weiner & Lisa M. Shulman Dr. John A. Talbot Dr. Matthew R. Weir Dr. & Mrs. Donald E. Wilson Dr. Paul J. Yarowsky Dr. Cedric Yu
Bodman Family Foundation Ms. Lenore J. Bohm Mr. Harry C. Bowie, III Mr. D. Stuart Bowers Mr. Michael & Mrs. Eugenia Brin The Norman and Florence Brody Family Foundation Mr. William & Mrs. Susan Brody Mr. Eddie & Mrs. Sylvia Brown Mr. Howard S. Brown Mr. William E. Brown & Mrs. Sally Brown Dr. George C. Button Mr. Michael J. & Mrs. Barbara Cannizzo Hon. & Mrs. Frank C. Carlucci Mrs. Agnes Caulfield The Cawley Family Foundation Ms. Viorica M. Cazan Mr. Walter Channing, Jr.
The Gaeton and JoAnn DeCesaris Family Foundation Mrs. Helen Denit Mr. George L. Doetsch, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Leo G. Dominique Dr. Merrill & Karen Egorin & Family Dr. Florence Einstein Mrs. Margaret B. Ellis The Emmert Hobbs Foundation Dr. John E. Faber, Jr. Mr. Joseph & Mrs. Ann Farda Dr. Robert E. & Mrs. Susan Fischell Ms. Mary A. Fish Mr. Alan H. & Mrs. Cynthia A. Foster Frank C. Marino Foundation Mr. Robert J. Franks Mrs. Esther L. Friedman The Louis and Phyllis Friedman Foundation Mr. Edward A. Gannon
Friends The Abell Foundation Inc. Adalman-Goodwin Foundation The Frank and Sunny Adams Family Foundation Mr. Richard Alter Mr. Peter G. Angelos Anonymous Helen S. & Merrill L. Bank Foundation Mr. Andrew N. Baur Ms. Florence Baur Mr. Harold G. Bell Mrs. Florence S. Berdann Dr. Michael Berman Mr. Jerome Beser Ms. Ruth Blandin Jacob & Hilda Blaustein Foundation Ms. Gloria Blizzard Ms. Marc Blum Lois & Irving Blum Foundation
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The John Beale Davidge Alliance
The John Beale Davidge Alliance
Reunion 2019 Dr. Jean Cheng Mr. Chuck Chokshi Mr. Alan Clahr Mr. Francis J. Clark, Jr. Mrs. Mary Gray Cobey & Mr. William W. Cobey Mr. Ronald S. & Mrs. Carolyn Cooper Dr. M. Carlyle Crenshaw, Jr. Creston G. Tate & Betty Jane Tate Foundation Dr. John M. Davis
Ms. Elizabeth Gault Mr. Anthony Gerace Mr. Myron D. Gerber Mr. Fred & Mrs. Roben I. Gerson Ms. Dorothy Getz Mr. Allan R. Gilbert Dr. Bert M. Glaser Mrs. Evelyn Grollman Glick The Gluck Family Mrs. Rachel Goidl
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The Hon. Louis L. & Mrs. Goldstein Ms. Louisa H. Goldstein Peter J. Golueke Foundation Mrs. Hilda Perl Goodwin The Hon. Kingdon Gould, Jr. Mr. Robert Keith Gray Mrs. Marlene & Mr. Stewart J. Greenebaum Mr. Benjamin H. Griswold, III Mrs. Bessie & Mr. Simon Grollman The Family of the Late Dr. Israel Grossman Homer & Martha Gudelsky Family Foundation Mr. Willard & Mrs. Lillian Hackerman The Hales Family Foundation, Inc. Ms. Leah A. Hardman Mr. Jeffrey L. Hargrave Ms. Marion S. Hayden Mrs. Magda Schaler-Haynes & Mr. Michael Hayes Heinz Family Foundation Mr. Edwin & Mrs. Dorothy L. Heller Mr. Edmund J. & Mrs. Mary C. Hevey Ms. Megan E. Hills Mr. Roderick M. Hills Mr. Richard & Mrs. Margaret Himelfarb Charles O. Holland Sarah Virginia Huffer Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Hug Mrs. Kim W. Hughes Independent Dialysis Foundation Joseph William Jacques Ms. Martha T. Jarman John Templeton Foundation Mr. Carl T. Julio Kahlert Foundation Hon. Francis X. Kelly & Mrs. Janet D. Kelly James Lawrence Kernan Endowment Fund Ms. Thelma M. Kimmel Mrs. Ann Kline Dr. Edward Kowalewski The Zanvyl & Isabelle Krieger Fund Sir & Lady Maurice Laing Katharine L. Lanham
Mr. Michael Lasky & Mrs. Margaret Einhorn Dr. Benjamin Levine Mr. David & Mrs. Ruth Levine Mr. Roger C. Lipitz Lundy Family Foundation Mr. Harry Lundy, Jr. Ms. Laurie Lundy Dr. George S. Malouf, Sr. Ms. Stacey Mann Mr. Frank M. Masters, Jr. Dr. Theodore R. Matheny Mr. Hugh P. McCormick, Jr. Mr. Hugh P. McCormick, III & Mrs. Joyce Norton McCormick Mr. George W. & Mrs. Carol M. McGowan M. Mark Mendel, Esq. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Metz Mr. Samuel F. Meyer Mrs. Michele H. Mittelman Mrs. Nancy Mixson Mrs. Anne Tyler Modarressi Mr. & Mrs. Terry Montesi Mr. Samuel W. Moore, Jr. Mr. Samuel A. Morrison Mr. William G. Morrison Mr. Sylvan J. Naron Dr. Cheriyath R. Nath Mr. & Mrs. Irvin Naylor Dr. A. Robert Neurath Rosalyn Newman, Esq. Nicholl Family Foundation Mr. Thomas R. & Mrs. Pamela Nowell Mrs. Laurel Oleynick Orokawa Fundation Mr. & Mrs. Hamish S. Osborne Dr. Hillel Panitch Ms. Mary E. Parker Ms. Shannon Parks Ms. Martha Parsons Mr. E. Magruder Passano, Jr. Mr. William M. Passano, Jr. Mrs. Holly Passen Mrs. Helen Golden Paulson Ms. Emma M. Pearce The Pearlstein Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Abe & Irene Pollin Prince Charitable Trust Ms. Kathleen H. Pritchard Dr. Carol G. Pryor Dr. Jeronimo J. Ramirez
Rathmann Family Foundation Mr. Timothy J. Regan Mr. George S. Rich George S. Rich Family Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. William S. Richbourg Mr. Richard & Mrs. Debra Rieder Mrs. Doris S. Rief Mr. John H. Riehl III & Mrs. Margaret Knott Riehl Dr. & Mrs. Scott M. Rifkin Roux Family Foundation Mr. David & Mrs. Barbara Roux Mrs. Elizabeth R. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Arthur & Josephine Rosewall Mr. Howard Saval Mr. Charles Schramek Mrs. Corinne C. Schwartz Robert & Caroline Schwartz Foundation Mr. Thomas H. & Mrs. Clair Zamoiski Segal Mrs. Caroline A. Severin Ms. Elizabeth Shamburger Ms. Alexias Sharoky The Sharoky Family Foundation Ms. Mary H. Shea Mrs. Harry S. Shelley Ms. Norma H. Sills Ms. Carol Shaffer Smith Mr. Martin J. & Mrs. Sharon Smith Ms. Susan J. Smith Mrs. Mary E. Staples Mrs. Judith H. Stoll Dr. Susan Swift Mr. Atwood B. Tate Mr. Creston G. Tate Mrs. Susan Tash Mr. David S. Taub Ms. Fern Tauber Ms. Debra E. Taylor Jack Taylor Family Foundation Inc. Mr. Guangqi Tian Ms. Dorothy K. Tooma Mr. Freddie Traub Mrs. Alma N. Trench Ms. Marguerite VillaSanta Mr. Michael Vinciguerra
Ms. Esther Viros Dr. Gladys E. Wadsworth Mr. Daniel E. Wagner Mr. Leonard Weinglass Mr. Richard F. Welty Mr. Jeffrey Wendel Mr. Gunther Wertheimer Mrs. Alvin S. Wolpoff Ms. Margaret S. Wu Mr. Hansjorg Wyss Philip A. Zaffere Foundation, Inc.
The Silver Circle The Silver Circle is an honors level within the John Beale Davidge Alliance and recognizes donors for gifts of $25,000–$49,999. The Silver Circle was established in 1996. 1932 Abraham N. & Gertrude Kaplan
1946 John A. Mitchell
1948 John R. Hankins
1949 Nathan Schnaper
1951 Nancy Blades Geiler Henry D. Perry
1952 Richard E. Ahlquist, Jr. Bella F. Schimmel Donald A. Wolfel
1953 Thomas J. Burkart William S. Kiser John W. Metcalf
1954 Stuart M. Brown Arthur V. Whittaker
1955
Milton H. Stapen
Foster L. Bullard Joseph W. Cavallaro Henry A. Diederichs Henry Booth Higman Richard F. Leighton Frank R. Nataro
1938
1956
1934 William L. Howard
1936
Daniel J. Abramson Joseph M. George, Jr. Florence Gottdiemer
1939 Elizabeth B. Cannon-Hall
1941 Gene A. Croce Jacob B. Mandel
1943D W.N. Corpening Cliff Ratliff, Jr.
1943M Harry D. Cohen Jose M. Torres-Gomez Robert E. Wise
1945 Joseph W. Baggett William A. Holbrook Leonard T. Kurland Henry F. Maguire John J. Tansey
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Webb S. Hersperger Albert V. Kanner H. Coleman Kramer Herbert M. Marton Irvin P. Pollack Virginia T. Sherr
1958 Meredith S. Hale Richard H. Keller Charles E. Parker
1959 Milton B. Cole John W. Coursey William J.R. Dunseath William F. Falls, Jr. Marvin M. Kirsh Donald R. Lewis Ramon F. Roig, Jr. Howard J. Rubenstein
1960 I. William Grossman Paul D. Meyer
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 Damon F. Mills Jerome Ross Michael S. Tenner
1961 George E. Bandy Carl F. Berner John N. Browell Leonard W. Glass Ronald L. Gutberlet John P. Light Roger Mehl David Rosen
1962 Raymond D. Bahr Bruce Broughton Louis R. Caplan Arthur W. Traum
1963 Merrill M. Knopf Mitchell C. Sollod Karl Stecher, Jr. Edward C. Werner
1964 Salvatore R. & Edith M. Donohue Donald T. Lewers Joel S. Mindel Richard G. Shugarman
1969
1977
Emile A. Bendit M. Fredrica Godshalk Constance L. Holbrook
Frederic T. Farra Robert T. Fisher Alan S. Gertler Doris S. Gertler Marlene T. Hayman Paul A. Offit Katherine C. White
1970 Arthur O. Anderson David H. Berkeley Henry A. Briele Michael A. Grasso Stephen B. Greenberg Kenneth M. Hoffman Thomas F. Kline Walker L. Robinson Charles I. Weiner
Robert J. Bauer Mark J. LeVine Jerald P. Waldman Howard J. Weinstein Robert B. & Barbara Whitney
1973 David J. Greifinger Louis E. Harman, III Charles P. Adamo Jeffrey P. Block Luis A. Queral
1967
Sheldon B. Bearman R.S. Buddington James G. Kane Anthony L. Merlis
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
1989 Neri M. Cohen David A. Gnegy Richard I. Weinstein
1993 Kathryn M. Connor
2001
1983 Ali J. Afrookteh George M. Boyer Harry A. Brandt Monica A. Buescher Protagoras N. Cutchis George Thomas Grace Mary Jo Johnson
Bahador Momeni
1997 Rachel V. Kramer Anthony Reina, Jr.
1998 David Chiu
1999 Nancy S. Longo Camille Hammond
Physical Therapy Carolyn Chanoski, ’87 & Mr. Lynn Garrison
Faculty
Joanna D. Brandt Frederick M. Gessner Robert C. Greenwell, Jr. Sharon M. Henry Donald R. Lewis
Dr. Patricia & Mr. Gary Attman Dr. Meredith Bond Dr. Robert H. Christenson Dr. Carol L. Greene Dr. William Henrich Dr. Frederic Huppe-Gourgues Dr. Harry W. Johnson, Jr. Kenneth P. Johnson Dr. Laure A. Kessler Dr. Patricia Langenberg Drs. Gail M. & Robert A. Liss Dr. Jay S. Magaziner Dr. Carl Mansfield Dr. John E. Miller Dr. Vincent D. Pellegrini Dr. William Regine Dr. Mary M. Rodgers Dr. John H. Sadler Dr. Jill Whitall
1986
Friends
1984 Roy E. Bands, Jr. Brad D. Lerner Carole B. Miller Martin L. Schwartz Luette S. Semmes
1985
Ira Louis Fedder Dennis Kurgansky
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Timothy D. Nichols Richard D. & Elizabeth C. Patten D.V. Woytowitz
1981
John M. DiGrazia
Janet F. Brown William G. Brown D. Stewart Ginsberg Lee S. Simon
1987
1994
1982
1975
Donna Lynn Parker Nevins W. Todd, III
Judith Falloon Lee J. Helman Marian F. Kellner Timothy P. McLaughlin Keith D. Osborn Roger J. Robertson Victoria W. Smoot Roy T. Smoot Jr. Ladd Spiegel & Curtis Leland Cole Mark C. & Shelly Lakshmanan Andrew M. Malinow
1974
1976
William D. Ertag George E. Gallahorn Franklin L. Johnson Alfred A. Serritella
1980
1972
1968
1966
Andrew P. Fridberg Marianne N. Fridberg Donald T. & Carolyn F. Weglein
R. Henry Richards
Gerard D. & Shirley J. Dobrzycki Robert O. France Stuart H. Lessans Fred R. Nelson
John C. Dumler, Jr. David R. Harris John W. Maun George Peters Larry A. Snyder
1978
1971
Anonymous Charles E. Andrews Robert J. Beach Noel M. Chiantella Karl W. Diehn L. Thomas Divilio Charles F. Hoesch Kenneth V. Iserson Thomas F. Krajewski Thom E. Lobe Kathryn A. Peroutka L. Edward Perraut, Jr. Jeffrey L. Quartner Sandra D. L. Quartner Gregory B. Richardson Robert E. Roby Gary B. Ruppert Michael B. Stewart
1965
The John Beale Davidge Alliance
The John Beale Davidge Alliance
Dr. Lee Abramson Mr. & Mrs. Larry Akman
Mr. Raymond M. Albers & Mrs. Margaret J. Rhian Mr. Daniel P. & Mrs. Kathleen V. Amos Anonymous (3) Ms. Penny Bank David Blanken & Barbara Friedman The Herbert Bearman Foundation Mr. Scott Burger Dr. Belisario R. Cabanilla Mr. Michael A. Campbell & Ms. Tracy Lynn McCready Dr. Benito S. Chan Mr. John R. Cochran Ms. Barbara Cohen Dr. Akiva S. Cohen Mrs. R Adams Cowley & Mr. R Adams Cowley, II Mr. Michael E. Cryor Mr. & Mrs. James J. Crystal Mr. James Dahl Dr. John M. Davis Mr. Daniel Dent Mr. Walter V. Discenza Dr. Edith M. Donohue Mr. Billy Bruce Duncan Dr. Charles A. Dunning Mr. Robert C. Embry Mr. Wilbur S. Ervin Mr. Richard J. Gannon Mr. Lynn M. Garrison & Mrs. Carolyn Chamioski Mr. A.L. (Tom) Giannopoulos Ms. Ronnie Glaser Mr. Brian D. Goldman Dr. David A. Grossman Mr. Craig A. & Mrs. Susan Coda Grube Mr. Wes Guckert Ms. Shirley D. Gutberlet Mr. & Mrs. Michael Haynes Mr. Fred Hittman Mrs. Calvert Jones Holloway Mrs. Shirley Horenstein Mrs. Rosalie C. & Mr. Peter P. Houlihan, Jr. Betty Huse Foundation Dr. Frederic Huppe-Gourgues Mr. Reggie Jackson Mrs. Jacquelyn J. Johnson Mr. William B. Johnson Mrs. Gertrude Kaplan Mr. M. Scot Kaufman Ms. Audrey Killen Mr. John W. King
Leroy & Irene Kirby Charitable Fund Inc. Mr. Roger L. Kohn & Ms. Kay M. Gilbert Mr. Barrett B. Kollme Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kozloff Dr. David & Ms. Nikki Ledbetter Ms. Joan Leonard Mrs. Audrey Levine & Mr. Arthur Levine Mr. Terry Lierman Mrs. Beth Line Drs. Dan & Nancy S. Longo Mrs. Ruth W. Yudkoff Love Mr. George N. Manis & Mrs. Anastasia Manis Mr. Stanley J. Marcuss Mr. George V. McGowan Mr. John P. McKenna Dr. John E. Miller Ms. Elaine S. Mintzes Mr. Fred F. Mirmiran Dr. Taghi M. Modarressi Mr. Alvin Myerberg Mr. & Mrs. J. Gordon Neuberth Mr. Michael & Mrs. Pamela Noble Ms. Dorothea E. Owens Mr. David S. Penn Mr. James & Mrs. Dine Perrine Dr. Julius S. Piver Ms. Rosemary Quinn Ms. Julie Regine Ms. Caroline Rocco Dr. Milton Rock Mrs. Mary E. Rollins Mr. Gerard R. Ruel Mr. Bruce W. Sanford Mr. Leroy & Mrs. Donna Shapiro Mr. William Shatner Mrs. Diana Sue Singer Ms. Doris Snider Mrs. Susan W. Talbott Ms. Jane Takeuchidelson Dr. M. S. Taleghani Mr. Mark Taubenfeld Mr. Jimmy Thermiotis Ms. Lucia Maria Valle Dr. Lucy R. Waletzky Mrs. Carolyn Weglein Mr. & Mrs. Paul S. White Mr. Jerry W. Williams Mrs. Edith R. Wolpoff Ms. Jane Zee
The Elm Society
1938
The Elm Society recognizes donors for gifts of $10,000– $24,999.
Aaron Feder Bernard J. Sabatino Bernard O. Thomas, Jr. H. Leonard Warres
1879
1939
Charles Getz
1907 Julius E. Gross
1910 Walter M. Winters
1916 Frank C. Marino
Bernard S. Kleiman
1940 Benjamin H. Inloes, Jr. William S. M. Ling A. Frank Thompson, Jr. William I. Wolff
1941
Charles R. Thomas
Julius Gelber Jacob B. Mandel Benjamin Pasamanick
1925
1942
1917
Eva F. Dodge Joseph Nataro W.A. Sinton
1927
James N. McCosh Louis H. Shuman
1943D
Abraham H. Finkelstein Charles E. Gill
Ruth W. Baldwin Eli Galitz Jack C. Morgan
1928
1944
Aaron I. Grollman Aaron H. Meister Morris H. Saffron
1929 Abraham Jacobs William Yudkoff
1931 William M. Seabold
Patricia Dodd W. Carl Ebeling, III & Claire Krantz
1945 Eugene H. Conner William H. Frank
1946
Jeannette R. Heghinian Irving Klompus Howard B. Mays Harry M. Robinson, Jr.
Walter J. Benavent Sidney & Bernice R. Clyman Thomas B. Connor Joseph D’Antonio Guy K. Driggs Samuel D. Gaby Erwin. R. Jennings Herbert J. & Virginia Levickas James A. Roberts
1936
1947
1932 Francis N. Taylor
1935
Leo M. Curtis Jaye Grollman Howard T. Knobloch Richard H. Pembroke, Jr. Samuel Steinberg
1937 Jack A. Kapland
[23]
George W. Fisher Arlie R. Mansberger, Jr.
1948 Leonard H. Golombek Raymond H. Kaufman Robert L. Rudolph Kyle Y. Swisher John D. Wilson
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 1949 Robert A. Abraham Margaret Lee Sherrard Meredith P. Smith Edward W. Stevenson John F. Strahan
1950 Joseph B. Bronushas Leonard G. Hamberry Virginia Huffer Milton R. Righetti O. Ralph Roth Henry H. Startzman, Jr.
1951 Frederick J. Hatem Charles W. McGrady John T. Scully
1957
1959 Robert J. Dawson August D. King, Jr. William Kraut Arthur L. Poffenbarger Stanley N. Snyder Robert J. Thomas
1955 Neal C. Capel Donald H. Dembo Walter E. & Jane R. James John P. McGowan George L. Morningstar Leonard J. Morse
1956 John E. Adams Mathew H. M. Lee John B. Littleton Charles A. Sanislow W. A. Sinton, Jr.
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
1967 Henry Feuer David M. Hadden Gary M. Lattin Boyd D. Myers Joseph C. Orlando
1960
1961
Samuel J. Abrams Robert B. Goldstein John F. Hartman Morris Rainess Marshall A. Simpson J. Walter Smyth Rufus Thames
James E. Arnold Jay Martin Barrash Philip P. Brous Stuart L. Fine Richard L. Flax Dwight N. Fortier Dean H. Griffin Larry T. & Catherine Ingle Stephen Machiz Jane C. McCaffrey Irvin M. Sopher Stuart H. Yuspa
Stuart H. Brager Albert F. Heck G.T. McInerney Granger G. Sutton William T. Ward
1953
1954
1966
1958
Timothy D. Baker William L. Heimer Jonas R. Rappeport David R. Taxdal Howard N. Weeks Richard M. Baldwin Werner E. Kaese Joel S. Webster
F. R. Lewis, Jr. Fred N. Sugar Phillip P. Toskes
Marvin S. Arons Virginia Y. Blacklidge Charles M. Henderson Peter P. Lynch Nevins W. Todd, Jr.
Aristides C. Alevizatos Charles Earl Hill Lawrence F. Honick Allen R. Myers Elijah Saunders Emanuel H. Silverstein Lois A. Young
1952
The John Beale Davidge Alliance
The John Beale Davidge Alliance
1968 Elliot S. Cohen Ronald S. Glick William N. Goldstein Frank A. Kulik Charles J. Lancelotta Stanford Malinow Charles S. Samorodin Burton S. Schonfeld Howard Semins Jon M. Valigorsky Eugene Willis, Jr.
James R. Appleton James J. Cerda John N. Diaconis Carlos E. Girod Ronald L. & Shirley D. Gutberlet Gerald C. Kempthorne Paul A. Reeder, Jr.
1969 Mark M. Applefeld James O. Ballard George R. Brown Donald W. Bryan Paul J. Connors Howard A. Davidov Graham Gilmer, III Roy R. Goodman Robert A. Helsel Arnold Herskovic Edwin E. Mohler O. Lee Mullis Alan J. Segal
1962 Herbert Gaither Bernard S. Karpers Paul A. Kohlhepp Theodore C. Patterson
1963 Richard L. Goldman Alice B. Heisler Chris P. Tountas
1964 Sigmund A. Amitin Richard M. Protzel Harold S. Standiford
1970 Francis A. Bartek Leo A. Courtney, III Louis S. Halikman Dennis J. Hurwitz
1965 Larry C. Chong
[24]
Joseph P. Michalski James S. Murphy John H. Poehlman Edward J. Prostic Norman W. Taylor
1971 Sachiko T. Cochran Charles F. Hobelmann, Jr.
1972 Walter H. Dorman Matthew J. Gibney, III Sheila A. Gibney Robert B. Grossman Nelson H. Hendler Michael R. Petriella Peter D. Vash Dean L. Vassar Brian J. Winter Celeste L. Woodward
1973
1976 Michael E. Cox Christopher Feifarek Ellen B. Feifarek Jose R. Fuentes Bradford A. Kleinman James E. Mark
Neal M. Friedlander Lawrence A. Galitz Karen R. Kingry Carol Marshall Howard L. Siegel Brian & Dianne Wamsley Samuel A. Yousem
1977
1982
Anonymous Elwood A. Cobey Linda George Steven H. Resnick Robert L. Smith Douglas N. Stein Richard J. Zangara Stuart A. Zipper
Wayne L. Barber Thomas W. Conway Patrick F. Gartland Darryl B. Kurland Ralph T. Salvagno Marc H. Siegelbaum Mark L. Stillwell
1978
E. Allan Atwell George B. Cavanagh Stephen W. Dejter Neil B. Friedman Scott D. Hagaman Thomas R. Hornick Harry Huo-tsin Huang Garry L. Mueller Christopher M. O’Connor Sonia M. Saracco Jeannine L. Saunders Frederick W. Schaerf
Philip A. Ades Ira J. Kalis Cohen Louis J. Domenici
W. Edwin Conner Edwin A. Deitch Raymond D. Drapkin G. Reed Failing, Jr. Joseph D. Jenci Denis Wm. MacDonald Mark P. Miller Bernard G. Milton Ira M. Stone T. S. Templeton, II Harold Tucker Roberta S. Tucker Richard M. Weisman
1979
1974
Terence D. Campbell Robert P. Cervenka Dale K. Dedrick Craig A. Dickman Milford M. Foxwell, Jr. Richard M. Galitz Peter J. & Mrs. Valerie Golueke Charita C. Hoyle Michael R. Kessler Jeffrey A. Kleiman Susan L. Laessig Michael R. Lunde William J. Oktavec Russell K. Portenoy Michael F. Pratt
Michael H. Hotchkiss James Jay McMillen Sheldon D. Milner Denis A. Niner Michael E. Reichel W.R. Weisburger
1975 Bruce E. Beacham Gary F. Harne Donald S. Horner Dorothy S. Hsiao M.C. Kowalewski Charles E. Manner Scott M. McCloskey Parry A. Moore Frank H. Morris Nicolette Orlando-Morris Harvey B. Pats Michael E. Weinblatt
Karen C. Carroll Judith B. Dillman Peter E. Godfrey Timothy J. Low Bruce C. Marshall Wayne A. McWilliams Linda D. Oaks Peter E. Rork Harlan Weisman Perri Laverson Wittgrove H. Russell Wright, Jr.
1980
1981 Alice Magner Condro Daniel Ferrick
1983
1984 Mary T. Behrens Theodore Y. Kim Dale R. Meyer Edward P. Nast R. Matthew Reveille Paul R. Ringelman Katherine D. Tobin Helen Walker
1985 Charles S. Hames Jeffrey Jones David A. O’Keeffe Michael A. Sylva Laura A. Tang
1986 Samuel R. Akman N. Eric Carnell Lucy Chang Eric J.W. Choe Scott W. Fosko Sangwoon Han Lee A. Kleiman Jeffrey Robert McLaughlin Steven C. Resnick
1987 Charles P. Fitch Richard W. Freeman Elizabeth R. Hatcher Kathleen Devine Hearne Kevin E. Hohl James P. Nataro Susan S. Nesbitt Paul A. Tarantino Thomas S. Wilson
1988 Carol C. Coulson Jay C. Koons Stanley J. Shin
1989 David A. Burns Wing C. Chau Randolph B. Gorman Stephen F. Hatem Steven E. Hearne Babak J. Jamasbi Joy L. Meyer Merdad V. Parsey David P. Smack Gregg Wolff
1990 Jennifer P. Corder Carl E. Gessner Kelly O’Donnell James E. Thompson
1991
Lisa Martinez James Y. Wang
1997 Ruwanthi Samaranayake Campano Kester I.H. Cross, Jr. Andrew Ward Morton
1998 Aaron M. Bates Percy Boateng Zafar S. Khan Joseph Martinez Otha Myles Megan O’Brien Peter A. Reyes Kenneth S. Schwartz
1999 Thomas D. Horst Charlotte M. Jones-Burton Andrew C. Kramer Bimal G. Rami Mallory Williams
2000 Milad Pooran
2001 Adebisi Ajala Suneel N. Nagda
2002 Kisa Crosse David J. Wang
Jeffrey S. Masin Lee Anne Matthews
2003
1992
Physical Therapy
Annette Fineberg Geoffrey Rosenthal John M. Vaeth
Judy K. Wang
Paulette E. Browne Craig Colliver Virginia Colliver Michael A. Cushner Amal Mattu David B. Sigman
Vincent Conroy ’05 Florence P. Kendall ’99 Ruth Latimer ’75 Richard A. Lopez, ’78 Howard E. Neels, ’63 Steven H. Tepper, ’90 Arlene Ross ’93 & Dr. Warren Ross Jon C. Waxham, ’96 Thomas W. Yates, ’96
1994
Faculty & Staff (and former)
1993
Deborah S. Hopkins
1996 Michele M. Cooper Robert F. Corder Teresa M. Cox F. Thomas D. Kaplan Louis B. Malinow
[25]
Anonymous Dr. Ashkay N. Amin Ms. Jane E. Anderson Dr. C. William Balke Dr. Claudia Baquet Dr. Nathan Carliner Dr. Thomas C. Chalmers
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 Dr. Robert H. Christenson Dr. Richard P. Dutton Dr. Brian D. Eurle Dr. Kevin S. Ferentz Drs. Paul S. Fishman & Elizabeth Barry Dr. Carol L. Greene Dr. Bartley P. Griffith Mr. Gregory F. & Mrs. Ina Handlir Dr. Eve J. Higginbotham & Dr. Frank C. Williams Dr. Harry W. Johnson Dr. Kenneth P. Johnson Dr. Gerald S. Johnston Dr. Harold Kaplan Dr. Christian R. Klimt Dr. Allan Krumholz Drs. Vinod & Bina Lakhanpal Dr. Stephen W. Long Mr. Patrick Madden & Mrs. Megan M. Arthur Dr. James E. McNamee Dr. Herbert L. Muncie, Jr. Dr. David A. Nagey Mr. Dennis Narango Dr. Chris Papadopoulos Dr. Krishna C.V.G. Rao Dr. Rafael M. Rodriguez Dr. Douglas D. Ross Dr. Bahram Sina Dr. Sue Song Dr. Philip A. Templeton Dr. Gunvant Thaker Dr. Benjamin F. Trump Dr. & Mrs. Umberto VillaSanta Dr. Debra S. Wertheimer Dr. Nancy O. Whitley Dr. John F. Wilber
Friends Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. George Andreadakis Drs. Jocelyn Apollon & Gerald Apollon Phyllis L. & Leonard J. Attman Foundation Mrs. Frederick J. Balsam
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The John Beale Davidge Alliance Mr. Burton & Mrs. Ameile Bank Ms. Penny Bank Estate of Merlin John Bankenbush Mr. & Mrs. Michael Baron Ms. Mary A. Batch Ms. Julia Becker Mr. David J. Bederman & Ms. Lorre B. Cuzze Mr. Scott Bergeson Mr. Cliff & Mrs. Arlene Blaker Mr. George R. Brown, Jr. Mrs. Dawn M. Burger Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Carder Dr. Thomas C. Chalmers Dr. Cornelia P. Channing Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Chrencik Mrs. Jean B. Clayton Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Cockey, III Mr. Atwood Collins, III Mr. William C. & Mrs. Lotte B. Copeland Dr. Quintina Corteza Dr. Frederick Coulston Ms. Dawn Crafton Mr. Ronald Davies Mrs. Marie S. De Oms Mr. M. Gregg Diamond Ms. Elizabeth Drigotas Mr. James C. Egan, Jr. Mr. Eugene Eidenberg Ms. Gretta Estey Mr. & Mrs. Donald Evans Mr. & Mrs. Burton J. Field Mr. & Mrs. Alvin B. Filbert Mr. Richard M. Firestone Mr. Henry M. Ford, Jr. Mr. Henry G. Ford Mrs. & Mrs. William C. Forma Mrs. Reva F. Fox Mr. Bennett Friedman Mrs. Doris N. Frieman Mrs. Lillian Fuentes Dr. James Nowell Ganey Mr. Ronald E. Geesey Mr. Nicholas Giannaris Mrs. Freda Gill The Gilmore Family
James A. & Patricia O. Goodyear Family Foundation Mr. Jay Goozh Mrs. Bertha Gudelsky Mr. Carlton K. Gutschick Mr. Neil & Mrs. Janice Harrison Mr. Richard Harvey Ms. Amanda Hawes Mr. Anthony T. Hawkins Mr. Robert T. Heltzel Mrs. Jean Hepner Mrs. Zoh M. Hieronimous Hills Family Foundation Ms. Julianna A. Hines Dr. Donald J. Hobart Mr. & Mrs. LeRoy Hoffberger Mrs. Calvert Jones Holloway Mr. Gene S. Humphrey Mr. Woodland Hurtt Ms. Elise M. Janthey H. McKee Jarboe Fund Dr. Gerald S. Johnston Mr. Irving B. Kahn Dr. Harold & Mrs. Joan Kaplan Dr. Richard I. & Mrs. Linda B. Katz Mr. Ronald E. King, Sr. Ms. Irene L. Kols Mrs. Claire Krantz Ebeling Mr. & Mrs. Stephen A. Lazinsky Mr. Gerald G. & Mrs. Lilo J. Leeds Dr. Nathan Levin Mr. Thomas M. Li Mr. & Mrs. William Lockwood The Lois & Richard England Family Foundation Inc. Mr. David & Mrs. Cynthia MacLean Mr. Michael E. Marino Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Mathias Mr. & Mrs. Philip Matz Mr. Robert I. Matz Mr. Charles W. McGrady Dr. James E. & Mrs. Susan O. McNamee Mr. Lee Melsby Mr. & Mrs. Jack W. Merrill Mr. Harvey M. Meyerhoff Mrs. Jeanne Michel Mr. Chris Miller
[26]
The following contributed to the Medical Alumni Association with a gift or membership payment between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2019.
Mr. & Mrs. Milton H. Miller, Sr. Ms. Katherine O’Neal-Brady Dr. Theodore T. Otani Mr. John H. Park & Ms. Jennifer I. Chu Mr. David Paulson Mr. Howard L. Perlow Mr. Parker H. Petit Mr. & Mrs. Brice R. Phillips Dr. Laurent Pierre Philippe Mr. Lewis S. Ranieri Mr. Martin R. Resnick Mr. Hallie P. Rice Dr. Sonya & Mrs. Thomas Ricketts Rosenthal-Statter Foundation Dr. Warren Ross The Safra Family Mrs. Evelyn & Mr. Jeffrey Sasmor Mr. Howard Saval Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Scarlett, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James M. Schmitt Dr. Roger E. Schneider Dr. and Mrs. Morton Schwartz Mr. M. Gerald Sellman Dr. Sylvan M. Shane Mr. David K. Shipler Ms. Elizabeth K. Shufflebotham Mr. Richard Singer Mr. James Smith & Mrs. Patricia Smith Beazley Mrs. Judith L. Strauch The Hon. Michael L. Subin Mrs. Barbara U. Sutton Dr. Mitso Suzuki Jimmie Swartz Foundation Mrs. Jean D. Thompson Dr. Rodrigo Toro Mary & James G. Wallach Foundation Mr. Robert Watt Ms. Marlene E. Wheeler Dr. Sharon Wilks Dr. Stephen L. Wills Mr. Robert F. Wilson Mr. Charles A. Wunder Mr. Harvey Zeller
The FY 2019 Honor Roll 1943
1953
Charles A. Kemper
Scott B. Berkeley, Jr. Walter H. Byerly Charles F. Carroll John W. Heisse, Jr. Werner E. Kaese Robert C. Kingsbury William S. Kiser Benjamin B. Lee Rafael Longo-Cordero John W. Metcalf, Jr. James E. Might George H. Miller George C. Peck Joel S. Webster
1945 Oliver Winslow, Jr.
1946 Sidney G. Clyman
1947 Irvin H. Cohen Stanley Cohen Robert C. Duvall, Jr. Jose G. Valderas
1948 John R. Shell
1949 Leonard Bachman Harry W. Gray Meredith P. Smith John A. Spittell, Jr. Carolyn D. Watson
1950 William A. Andersen Harry H. Bleecker, Jr. L. Guy Chelton Jerome J. Coller Thomas N. Corpening Miriam S. Daly Virginia M. Reynaud Henry H. Startzman, Jr. Elizabeth Stockly Harriet H. Wooten William H. Yeager, Jr.
1951 Francis S. Gardner, Jr. Nancy Blades Geiler Homer L. Twigg, Jr.
1952 Charles B. Adams, Jr. George C. Alderman C. Edward Graybeal William R. Greco Irving Kramer Morton M. Krieger William A. Mathews Bella F. Schimmel Richard A. Sindler Alvin A. Stambler Howard N. Weeks Donald A. Wolfel
1954 Arthur Baitch Herbert L. Blumenfeld Morton J. Ellin Robert H. Ellis Daniel H. Framm Robert C. Holcombe Edward S. Klohr, Jr. Herbert J. Levin Moses L. Nafzinger Jean C. O’Connor David H. Patten Arthur V. Whittaker William O. Wild Robert E. Yim
1955 Roger W. Cole Donald H. Dembo Vernon M. Gelhaus Julian R. Goldberg Walter E. James William P. Keefe C. Ronald Koons Morton D. Kramer William F. Krone, Jr. Richard F. Leighton Leonard J. Morse James P. Neeley, Jr. Joan Raskin
1956 Stephen Barchet James A. Burwell James Castellano, Jr. Thomas H. Collawn Giraud V. Foster Robert N. Headley Webb S. Hersperger Charles H. King Joseph G. Lanzi
Herbert M. Marton Joseph S. McLaughlin Clark L. Osteen Marvin S. Platt Richard L. Plumb Charles A. Sanislow Virginia T. Sherr John Z. Williams Harry D. Wilson, Jr.
1957 James K. Bouzoukis Mary C. Burchell Robert A. Carlin Sebastian J. Gallo Allen S. Gerber Paul K. Hanashiro Joseph C. Laughlin George A. Lentz, Jr. William J. Rappoport Richard C. Reba George W. Rever Walter M. Shaw Landon Clarke Stout, Jr. Nevins W. Todd, Jr. Leonard Zullo
1958 John T. Alexander, Sr. George R. Baumgardner Gaylord L. Clark, Jr. Robert E. Cranley, Jr. Gilbert B. Cushner Ronald L. Diener Stanley N. Farb Frank P. Greene Albert F. Heck William J. Hicken Robert Harvey Johnson Richard H. Keller Frank K. Kriz, Jr. Howard S. Levin Antonio Perez-Santiago Jerome Tilles
1959 Gerson Asrael William N. Cohen Robert J. Dawson William F. Falls, Jr. August D. King, Jr. Marvin M. Kirsh William Kraut Jose O. Morales Beverly J. Stump George S. Trotter Hans Richard Wilhelmsen, Sr.
[27]
1960 Aristides C. Alevizatos Lawrence F. Awalt, Jr. Leonard P. Berger Donald W. Datlow Michael J. Fellner Julio E. Figueroa Alvin Glass C. Earl Hill Ronald E. Keyser William E. Latimer Richard C. Lavy John C. Morton Allen R. Myers Jerrod Normanly Selvin Passen Neil Robinson Clinton Rogers Jerome Ross Robert P. Sarni Bernice Sigman George I. Smith, Jr. Morton E. Smith W. E. Standiford Martha E. Stauffer Nathan Stofberg Harold Tritch, Jr. Theodore Zanker
1961 James R. Appleton George E. Bandy Oscar H. Bing Barry Blum Anthony R. Boccuti Thomas G. Breslin Milton H. Buschman William R. Fleming Carlos E. Girod Jay S. Goodman Gerald A. Hofkin John P. Light Roger L. Mehl Michael B. Oldstone Richard M. Sarles Larry G. Tilley
1962 Raymond D. Bahr Merrill I. Berman Mark Edmund Bradley Louis C. Breschi Bruce D. Broughton Jon B. Closson Frederick S. Felser Stanley A. Klatsky Ronald L. Klimes Paul A. Kohlhepp
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 Melvin D. Kopilnick Alan B. Lachman Robert A. McCormick David G. Musgjerd Donald D. Pet Phyllis K. Pullen W. Haddox Sothoron Richard R. Stephenson William B. Weglicki, Jr. William H. Wood, Jr.
1963 Robert M. Beazley Lee David Brauer Robert M. Byers Harold J. Campbell, Jr. Peter C. Fuchs Leland M. Garrison B. Robert Giangrandi Joel S. Gordon Michael G. Hayes David R. Hess, Jr. Thomas V. Inglesby Arnold J. Jules Paul F. Kaminski Merrill M. Knopf Michael L. Levin Eric Everett Lindstrom Barbara A. McLean Mayer Schwartz Mitchell C. Sollod Alice M. Stolzberg Frank J. Travisano Joseph R. Wilson Aron Wolf
1964 Sigmund A. Amitin Lynn B. Baker Donald A. Deinlein Frank M. Detorie Lee E. Gresser Rosalind P. Kaplan Ellen Ann Kingsbury Mark E. Krugman Charles Dudley Lee, Jr. Donald Ted Lewers D. V. Lindenstruth Ruth E. Luddy M. S. Michaelis Joel S. Mindel Thomas J. Porter Jose D. Quinones Jerome P. Reichmister Barry N. Rosenbaum Eric D. Schmitter Allen D. Schwartz Perry S. Shelton Richard G. Shugarman Lawrence F. Solomon Gershon J. Spector
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The Honor Roll
The Honor Roll Harold C. Standiford Jonathan D. Tuerk Marston A. Young
Allan J. Monfried Carolyn J. Pass Gary D. Plotnick Samuel E. Press C. Downey Price James A. Quinlan Dudley A. Raine, Jr. Ernesto Rivera Sandra Zucker Salan David S. Schwartz Richard D. Shuger David J. Steinbauer Jeffrey S. Stier Richard M. Susel Robert R. Young
1965 Verner Albertsen Brian J. Baldwin Jeffrey L. Brown William H. Choate John C. Dumler, Jr. Allen A. Frey Ronald Goldner Mike Gould Robert L. Handwerger David R. Harris Charles S. Harrison Frederick S. Herold Terren M. Himelfarb John C. Hisley Allen H. Judman Allan Land Frank R. Lewis, Jr. Susan H. Mather John W. Maun George Peters Donald C. Roane Alfred B. Rosenstein Sig L. Sattenspiel George C. Sjolund, Jr. Larry A. Snyder John M. Steffy Louis E. Steinberg Fred N. Sugar Harry D. Tabor Elliot S. Tokar Philip J. Whelan
Michael L. Sherman John R. Stephens Larry J. Warner Allan M. Wexler Alan F. Wolf
1968 Richard A. Baum Sheldon B. Bearman Michael W. Benenson Barry A. Blum Morton B. Blumberg Robert Brull Richard S. Buddington Joseph F. Callaghan
Reunion 2019 1967 Colvin H. Carter Edward R. Cohen Francis D. Drake Harris J. Feldman Henry Feuer Eric M. Fine Robert O. France John W. Gareis Joseph S. Gimbel Joel H. Goffman James L. Hamby Robert W. Hertzog Arthur L. Hughes Michael A. Kaliner Eugene F. Kester James G. Konrad George A. Lapes Gary M. Lattin Stuart H. Lessans Richard H. Mack Sheldon L. Markowitz Alan H. Mitnick Fred R. Nelson Edward B. Ostroff Arnold Z. Paritzky C. Jean Posner-Gordon Allan S. Pristoop John F. Rogers John R. Rowell, Jr.
1966 Jay M. Barrash Arnold S. Blaustein Mark J. Brown Michael P. Buchness Charles H. Classen, Jr. Henry S. Crist William D. Ertag Stuart L. Fine Richard L. Flax Dwight N. Fortier J. M. France, Jr. George E. Gallahorn Richard S. Glass Dennis H. Gordon Stephen F. Gordon John G. Green Dean H. Griffin Michael J. Haney William O. Harrison Thomas M. Hill Ronald H. Koenig Joel A. Krackow Stephen Machiz Joseph B. Marcus William T. Mason Jane C. McCaffrey Albert T. Miller
[28]
Todd D. Clopper Elliot S. Cohen Allen C. Egloff Kenneth E. Fligsten John G. Frizzera John D. Gelin Ronald S. Glick Gerald I. Green George F. Hyman Barry A. Lazarus Abraham A. Litt Stanford H. Malinow Karl F. Mech, Jr. Herbert E. Mendelsohn Bruce L. Miller Joel Wm. Renbaum David J. Riley Rorick T. Rimash Stephen D. Rosenbaum Charles S. Samorodin Barry J. Schlossberg Burton G. Schonfeld Howard Semins Stuart H. Spielman W. Bryan Staufer Jon M. Valigorsky Pedro J. Vergne-Marini Edward E. Volcjak William M. Williams Stuart Winakur Edward J. Young
1969 Mark M. Applefeld Edward E. Aston James O. Ballard, III Emile A. Bendit Barry B. Bercu Sanders H. Berk John C. Blasko Roberta M. Braun George Brown Douglas A. Brownell Stanley Brull Donald W. Bryan Edward Allen Carter Vaughn D. Cohan Paul J. Connors Jay Copeland Leonard D. Cutler Howard A. Davidov Ronald L. Elson Howard S. Faden Richard E. Fisher Donna L. Gibbas Graham Gilmer, III M. Fredrica Godshalk Samuel D. Goldberg Roy R. Goodman Marvin J. Gordon Julieta D. Grosh Robert A. Helsel Constance L. Holbrook Mark D. Kappelman Reynold M. Karr, Jr. Ronald A. Katz Felix L. Kaufman Donald W. Krause Daniel J. Ladd Arnold I. Levinson Murray L. Margolis Charles W. McCluggage John R. McCormick Michael E. McCutcheon Edwin E. Mohler Ronald R. Parks Wayne H. Parris Frederick N. Pearson R. Wayne Phillips Barbara Eby Phillips-Seitz Harry Rabinovich Leon Reinstein David R. Richmond Polly B. Roberts Allan I. Rubin Brian S. Saunders Ronald L. Schneider W. Winslow Schrank John W. Shaffer David M. Shobin Kathryn F. Skitarelic William I. Smulyan David H. Snyder David A. Solomon Tracy N. Spencer, III Kristin Stueber Kenneth C. Ullman
Haven N. Wall David A. Wike
1970 Willie A. Andersen Arthur O. Anderson Alva S. Baker, III David H. Berkeley David H. Berman Charles N. Bookoff Martin Braun, III John P. Caulfield Leo A. Courtney, III Joseph H. Cunningham, Jr. Joseph N. Friend Julian A. Gordon Michael A. Grasso Stephen B. Greenberg William D. Hakkarinen Louis S. Halikman Donald H. Hislop Lin H. Ho Kenneth M. Hoffman Whitney Houghton Robert S. Katz Michael Kilham Thomas F. Kline James A. Kopper Bennett L. Lavenstein Donald L. Leass Philip A. Mackowiak C. B. Marek, Jr. Joseph P. Michalski Thomas P. Miles Lawrence Mills, Jr. James S. Murphy P. David Myerowitz David A. Perry Leslie P. Plotnick Richard B. Pollard, Jr. Gerald M. Rehert Walker L. Robinson Robert F. Sarlin Louis A. Shpritz Gregory T. Sobczak Ronald J. Stanfield Arthur M. Warwick Charles I. Weiner Stanley M. Zaborowski Bernard E. Zeligman
1971 Brian M. Benson Elliott S. Bondi Richard A. Bordow George H. Brouillet, Jr. Ronald P. Byank Michael R. Camp Sachiko T. Cochran Daniel L. Cohen Steven A. Feig Fredric B. Flax Maury L. Fradkin Burton J. Glass Robert E. Greenspan
Robert B. Greifinger Peter M. Hartmann Jerry Herbst Ben T. Ho Charles F. Hobelmann, Jr. Gwynne L. Horwits T. Noble Jarrell, III Jerald Kay Richard C. Keown John B. Kramer William R. Linthicum Jack S. Lissauer Michael J. Maloney Michael L. Mattern Robert M. Mentzer, Jr. Robert J. Neborsky Susan S. Perlstein R. Henry Richards Donald M. Rocklin Paul T. Rogers Henry Sacks JoAnn C. Santos Gerald N. Schaffer Ralph E. Seligmann Robert E. Sharrock Panayiotis L. Sitaras Marshall K. Steele, III Benedict A. Termini Robert H. Weinfeld C. T. Woolsey, Jr.
1972 Jack J. Applefeld Robert W. Ashmore Robert J. Bauer James H. Biddison Roy C. Blank John Wolfe Blotzer Deborah J. Brandchaft-Matro Brenda M. Brandon Cary D. Brown Elizabeth R. Brown Neil F. Cannon Howard N. Caplan Irvin M. Cohen Walter H. Dorman Karen S. Fountain Darryl J. Garfinkel Matthew J. Gibney, III Sheila A. Gibney Michael E. Golembieski Sumner H. Goodman Robert B. Grossman John C. Harris Joseph K. Jamaris Neil B. Kappelman Jeffrey J. Kline Mark J. LeVine Robert H. Malstrom George A. Metzger Stanley A. Morrison John A. Niziol John M. Oday Michael R. Petriella
[29]
Marlene E. Rogers Martin S. Rosenthal Charles J. Schleupner H. Hershey Sollod Thomas J. Toner Peter D. Vash Dean L. Vassar Jerald P. Waldman Eliot M. Wallack Howard J. Weinstein Robert B. Whitney Thomas V. Whitten Richard H. Wingert Brian J. Winter Celeste L. Woodward
1973 Jeffrey C. Blum Thomas Robert Calame Charles R. Clark W. Edwin Conner Gregory A. Denari Michael J. Dodd Steven H. Dolinsky Charles Gregory Elliott John W. Foreman Denis Franks Nelson H. Goldberg David Goldscher David J. Greifinger Louis E. Harman, III David E. Herman Mark Jacobs Allan S. Jaffe Michael Francis Jaworski Joseph D. Jenci Erich Kim Walter B. Koppel Tom Lapsa Margo M. Leahy Stephen K. Lemon Gary M. Levinson Jeffrey S. Lobel Samuel V. Mace Thomas Mansfield Christopher S. Michel Clarence Dennis Miller Mark P. Miller Donald J. Russ Howard I. Saiontz Ronald A. Seff Gregory B. Shankman Gary Mark Shapiro Ronald F. Sher Barbara W. Siskind Robert B. Stifler Ira M. Stone Harold Tucker Roberta Tucker Charles B. Watson Richard M. Weisman John L. Whitlock Alan L. Whitney Michael P. Zimring
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 1974 Charles P. Adamo Jonathan Bedri Samuel I. Benesh Lynn M. Billingsley Jeffrey P. Block Richard A. Block James G. Chaconas Randolph P. Christianson Thomas C. Doerner Stephen B. Fleishman Susan Ford Stark Alan E. Gober William L. Gonzalez Edward S. Gratz Robert M. Guthrie Charles M. Jaffe Ronald Kaplan Robert D. Katz Laslo E. Kolta Howard G. Lanham Merral B. Lewis Stephen R. Matz Terrance P. McHugh James J. McMillen Stephen E. Metzner Joel B. Miller Sheldon D. Milner Thomas M. Milroy Susan R. Panny Jeffrey M. Pargament Edward L. Perl Jay A. Phillips Clayton L. Raab James M. Raver Sue Raver Bruce L. Regan Michael E. Reichel June K. Robinson John M. Schnell Edward N. Sherman Mitchell T. Smolkin Elise W. Van der Jagt Steven A. Vogel Emerson C. Walden, Jr. M. H. Wojtanowski Stephen N. Xenakis Robert S. Yasner Allen C. Zechowy David L. Zisow
1975 Charles E. Andrews, Jr. James L. Atkins Robert J. Beach Bruce E. Beacham Jonathan D. Book James J. Campbell John H. Carrill
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The Honor Roll
The Honor Roll Seth B. Cutler Karl W. Diehn L. Thomas Divilio James R. Evans Patricia R. Falcao Louis Fox Gary F. Harne Darvin L. Hege Charles F. Hoesch Dorothy Shih Yi Hsiao Kenneth V. Iserson Marion C. Kowalewski Thomas F. Krajewski Mary Lou Kramer Kenneth D. Krause Thom E. Lobe Frank E. Long Edmund J. Maclaughlin W. Peter Marwede Jeffrey L. Metzner Edward M. Miller Thomas L. Moffatt Parry A. Moore Frank H. Morris Nicolette Orlando-Morris Harvey B. Pats Kathryn A. Peroutka L. Edward Perraut, Jr. Jeffrey L. Quartner Sandra D. Quartner John W. Rose Andrew B. Rudo James H. Somerville Michael B. Stewart George A. Taler Richard L. Taylor Lloyd M. Van Lunen, Jr. Robert A. Vegors Gary J. Waxman Michael E. Weinblatt Julius David Zant William H. Zeidler, Jr.
Harry Clarke Knipp Albin O. Kuhn, II Barry K. Levin Miriam Yudkoff Lloyd Bruce Evan Lockman James E. Mark Arnold B. Merin Stanley G. Middleton James S. Novick Gary P. Posner Robert N. Pyle Mitchell H. Rubenstein Melvin Sharoky Moshe J. Shmuklarsky Bruce A. Silver Lee Stuart Simon James Srour Jerry N. Stein William B. Tauber Joseph R. Tiralla Sherry Lynn Werner Susan M. Willard Pamela A. Wilson Daniel J. Winn Benjamin K. Yorkoff Arno L. Zaritsky Joseph W. Zebley, III Robert G. Zeller
1976
Reunion 2019
Stephen Paul Adams Lawrence W. Adler Timothy E. Bainum Steven M. Berlin Damian E. Birchess John W. Bowie Janet F. Brown William G. Brown Michael E. Cox Vincent W. DeLaGarza Suzanne Ray Dixon Edward F. Driscoll Christopher J. Feifarek Ellen B. Feifarek Allan D. Friedman D. Stewart Ginsberg Ira E. Hantman Patricia D. Kellogg Jacqueline Kelly Bradford A. Kleinman
1977 Katherine Ackerman Michael F. Adinolfi Stuart B. Bell Michael P. Bey Marc S. Bresler David E. Bright Marie D. Chatham Elwood A. Cobey William J. Dichtel, Jr. Michael John Domanski Willarda V. Edwards Rona B. Eisen Frederic T. Farra James Feld Richard J. Feldman Robert T. Fisher, Jr. Donna Lucas Frankel
[30]
Samuel D. Friedel Linda L. George Alan S. Gertler Doris L. Gertler Anne C. Goldberg Beverli S. Goldberg Neil D. Goldberg Donald J. Gordon Charles E. Green Norman Harris Marlene T. Hayman Martin Isaac Herman Dahlia R. Hirsch Christopher F. James Curtis A. Johnston Ronald L. Kahn Martin Koller Sheldon H. Lerman Judith A. Maslar Paul A. McClelland Ellis Mez John P. Miller, III Edward B. Mishner Coleman A. Mosley, Jr. Paul A. Offit Lee R. Pennington Gerald P. Perman Steven H. Resnick Michael S. Sellman Richard B. Silver Bruce H. Sindler Robert L. Smith Clyde A. Strang David Strobel Raymond C. Talucci, II Michelle Uhl Jonathan R. Walburn Bennett E. Werner Katherine C. White Barry A. Wohl Richard J. Zangara Stephen M. Zemel Stuart A. Zipper
1978 Philip A. Ades Robert E. Applebaum Sr. Susanne S. Ashton Deborah J. Biller Adam Billet Steven Billet Edward N. Bodurian Howard Boltansky Dale B. Call David E. Cohen Louis J. Domenici Franklin M. Douglis Jonathan A. Edlow Ian S. Elliot John L. Fiore Andrew P. Fridberg Marianne F. Fridberg Morris Funk Paul E. Gilliam, Jr.
C alls for
2020 Awards Nominations! Alumni, faculty, and friends are invited to send in their nominations for two MAAsponsored awards by November 1, 2019. The Honor Award & Gold Key is presented to a living graduate for outstanding contributions to medicine and distinguished service to mankind. Factors considered in the selection process include impact of accomplishments, local, national, and international recognition, supporting letters, and publications. The Distinguished Service Award is presented for outstanding service to the Medical Alumni Association and University of Maryland School of Medicine. The awards are to be presented during the annual Reunion Recognition Luncheon on Friday, May 1, 2020. Letters of nomination for both awards must include a curriculum vitae and should be addressed to:
George C. Kochman, Jr., ’08, Chair, MAA Awards Committee, 522 W. Lombard St., Baltimore, MD 21201-1636 or emailed to: [email protected]
Michael D. Gotts Cynthia L. Graves Richard H. Hallock Michael J. Ichniowski Stuart L. Jacobs David E. Kelley Elizabeth M. Kingsley Douglas L. Kozlowski Pamela G. Krahl Alan J. Levin Mark D. Lisberger Michael N. Macklin Jeffrey G. Middleton Royann C. Mraz David G. Oelberg Gary C. Prada Jay G. Prensky Susan H. Prouty James F. Rooney Ronald J. Ross, Jr. Lawrence D. Sandler S. E. Shawver-Matthews Robert S. Shayne Francisco Alberto Smith Alexis B. Sokil
Stuart R. Stark Eileen K. Stork Ellen L. Taylor Stephen A. Valenti Neil E. Warres Donald T. Weglein Bruce E. Weneck
1979 Arthur E. Bakal Joanne L. Blum Karen C. Carroll James A. Cockey Burt I. Feldman Mitchell Finkel Mark F. Fisher Christopher S. Formal Scott D. Friedman Jeffrey D. Gaber Leon W. Gibble Peter E. Godfrey Joyce Y. Gross A. Stephen Hansman Charles I. Highstein
Jan M. Hoffman Martin F. Joyce-Brady James W. Karesh Bruce D. Koehler Max D. Koenigsberg Bernard F. Kozlovsky Owen Lee Susan M. Levy Timothy J. Low George S. Malouf, Jr. Bruce R. McCurdy Melissa A. McDiarmid Wayne A. McWilliams Kathleen H. Miller William O. Richards Peter E. Rork Bruce Rosenberg Jeffrey A. Schuldenfrei Radames Sierra-Zorita Michael J. Smith Dorothy A. Snow Kevin B. St John David B. Tapper James A. Tegeler Elizabeth L. Tso Thomas B. Volatile Harlan F. Weisman Perri Laverson Wittgrove Arthur F. Woodward, Jr. H. Russell Wright, Jr. Erik B. Young Kristen A. Zarfos
1980 Robert C. Ammlung Umur M. Atabek Douglas R. Brunner Terence D. Campbell Wayne E. Cascio Robert P. Cervenka Jane L. Chen Joseph P. Crawford Catherine Crute Kirk D. Cylus Dale K. Dedrick Craig A. Dickman Paul E. Driscoll Judith Falloon James F. Fiastro Milford M. Foxwell, Jr. Cathy Powers Friedman Vincent W. Gatto, Jr. Grace K. Gelletly Alan I. Gelman Marcia P. Goldmark Christine L. Helinski Lee J. Helman Michael J. Hoffman Marian F. Kellner Michael R. Kessler Jeffrey A. Kleiman David S. Klein Kenneth C. Kunze Susan Lamme Laessig Anne Dunlavey Lane
[31]
Charles E. Lee John R. Livengood Michael R. Lunde Robert Y. Maggin Teri A. Manolio Richard A. Marasa Karen J. Marcus John N. Margolis Margaret E. McCahill Timothy P. McLaughlin Steven M. Miller Judah A. Minkove Thomas P. Moran Michael J. Moritz Eric M. Orenstein Keith D. Osborn David I. Otto Craig H. Paul Russell K. Portenoy Guy H. Posey Michael F. Pratt James P. Richardson Paul M. Rivas Roger J. Robertson James W. Ruppel Roy T. Smoot, Jr. Victoria W. Smoot Catherine N. Smoot-Haselnus Marc D. Sokolow Sally E. Sondergaard Ladd Spiegel Henry H. Startzman, III Henry W. Sundermier Phuong D. Trinh Emily Ulmer Michelsen Eric Van Buskirk Francis L. Wiegmann, Jr. Charles A. Wilkes
1981 Michael D. Blanchard James M. Carlton Linda L. Chambers William Z. Cohen Alice M. Condro Lloyd G. Cox, II Kevin J. Doyle Paula A. Ehrlich Daniel P. Ferrick Frederick G. Flaccavento Elizabeth A. Fronc Hope U. Griffin Warren S. Groff Howard T. Jacobs Marc A. Jaffe Brian H. Kahn Karen R. Kingry-Olson Mark C. Lakshmanan Andrew M. Malinow Gordon L. Mandell Carol S. Marshall Samuel O. Matz Scott T. Maurer David W. McClure
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019
Corina J. Waldman David L. Waxman
R. Craig Cook Ellen S. Deutsch John R. Downs Lindsay I. Golden Charles T. Gordon, III Heidi D. Gorsuch-Rafferty Todd H. Hillman Frank Kim Theodore Y. Kim N. W. Koutrelakos Frederick E. Kuhn, Jr. Susan M. Lancelotta Brad D. Lerner Lynn M. Ludmer Dale R. Meyer Carole B. Miller Vinay M. Nadkarni Edward P. Nast Phillip L. Pearl Gregory S. Pokrywka R. Matthew Reveille Paul R. Ringelman
1983 Marc Okun James L. Pertsch Alan R. Pollack Deborah R. Pollack Linda J. Rever Lorinda Richardson Donna L. Rinis Howard N. Robinson Lauren A. Schnaper Howard L. Siegel Samuel Smith Carl Sperling Michael T. Stowell Brian W. Wamsley Samuel A. Yousem Laurie T. Zimmerman
1982 Guillermo W. Arnaud Wayne L. Barber David Christopher Barnes Kenneth A. Blank Paul S. Brockman Michael W. Brown Charles Carroll Joseph P. Connelly Thomas William Conway Brian K. Cooley Patrick J. Dennis John M. DiGrazia Jonathan S. Elias Rebecca Elmaleh Robert J. Fadden Patrick F. Gartland Warren Gibbs George E. Groleau J. Philip Hall C. William Hicks, III James D. Holt Constance J. Johnson Bruce A. Kaup Darryl B. Kurland Carole R. Lerman Gary M. Levine Jonathan D. Lowenthal Charles T. Lucey, II Paul R. Miller Andrew V. Panagos Steven H. Parker Robert M. Phillips Allan Jay Raskin Sheri L. Rowen Ralph T. Salvagno John A. Shutta Eliot L. Siegel Marc H. Siegelbaum Ellen A. Spurrier Laura L. Stephenson Mark L. Stillwell Leon Strauss Harry Strothers
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The Honor Roll
The Honor Roll
Ali J. Afrookteh Nancy Ashburn Edward Allan Atwell Jeffrey J. Bernstein George M. Boyer Harry A. Brandt Peter G. Brassard Monica A. Buescher Michael A. Caplan George B. Cavanagh, Jr. Beverly A. Collins Craig E. Collins Protagoras N. Cutchis George W. Daneker Ludwig J. Eglseder, III Neil B. Friedman G. Thomas Grace Scott D. Hagaman Charles E. Hendricks James D. Herr Harry Huo-tsin Huang Nathaniel W. James, IV David P. Johnson Mary Jo Johnson Mary I. Jumbelic Karen M. Kabat Michael R. Kammerman Alan B. Kravitz Gary F. Kuhns Michael K. McEvoy Karen F. Meckler Jeffrey K. Moore Garry Leland Mueller Christopher M. O’Connor Harry A. Oken Nancy E. Prosser Mark E. Richards Marc S. Rocklin Edward Q. Rogers Jeannine L. Saunders David J. Schamp Robert B. Shochet M. Steve Sniadach Alfred D. Sparks James D. Spiegel Lee M. Stenzler Michael A. Stoiko William Fleet Umhau Victoria Ann Vanik Margaret M. Vaughan Emmanuel B. Walter, Jr. Barbara C. Williamson
Nicholas B. Argento Susan Barrows Wendy J. Bergman Joanna D. Brandt Margaret O. Burke Peter F. Burns Rudolph C. Cane, Jr. Christopher F. Due Mark Jay Ehrenreich David A. Gelber Frederick M. Gessner Daniel I. Ginsberg Dean S. Glaros Peter R. Gray Robert C. Greenwell, Jr. Charles S. Hames Sharon M. Henry Sean E. Hunt Thomas B. Johnson Jeffrey D. Jones Marc A. Kaufman Joanne L. Kinney
Reunion 2019 Lee M. Schmidt Martin L. Schwartz Luette S. Semmes Matthew M. Shuster Joshua Z. Sickel Barbara G. Silverman Carmela A. Sofia Allen J. Solomon William G. Tan Sharon R. Tapper Robert W. Tarr Katherine D. Tobin Timothy C. Trageser Helen E. Walker Jeremy P. Weiner Mitchell H. Weiss Michael W. Wingo Christopher J. Zajac Lawrence A. Zimnoch
1984 Joseph A. Adams Stephen C. Anderson Roy E. Bands, Jr. Linda F. Barr Donald M. Beckstead Mark D. Bullock John F. Cary
1985 Carl F. Alessi Richmond P. Allan Ira S. Allen James P. Amerena
[32]
Jay K. Kolls Donald R. Lewis, Jr. Alan R. Malouf Paul C. Marinelli David J. Mauterer Mark S. McBride David A. O’Keeffe Patricia A. Patterson Michael J. Platto David W. Porter Michael P. Riggleman Hari C. Sachs Sharon B. Samuels Michael J. Sicuranza Eric C. Sklarew Michael A. Sylva Laura A. Tang Robert A. Van Besien H. Von Marensdorff Paul R. Weiner Stephen P. Yeagle
1986 Jeffrey R. Abrams Samuel R. Akman
Marilyn F. Althoff Stephanie H. Applebaum Bryan K. Bartle N. Eric Carnell Lucy Chang Eugenio R. Chinea Eric J. W. Choe Colleen L. Cook Jeffrey P. Cramer Steven F. Crawford James A. Dicke Donna L. Dow Charles W. Emala Barbara B. Fleming Brian Kenny Flowers Les B. Forgosh Scott W. Fosko David L. Gold Albert S. Hammond, III Sangwoon Han Elizabeth Lee Herrera Craig D. Hochstein Paul E. Hogsten Abby I. Huang Thomas E. Kelly, III Lee A. Kleiman Jan M. Koppelman Dennis Kurgansky Boris W. Kuvshinoff Karen A. Lavoie-Starr Marsh R. McEachrane Jeffrey R. McLaughlin Scott A. Milsteen David W. Oldach Joan Ordman Donna L. Parker Stephan Pavlos Steven C. Resnick Toby A. Ritterhoff Seth D. Rosen Judith L. Rowen John F. Rubin Lisa A. Scheinin Jonathan S. Schwab Nadine B. Semer Asad U. Sheikh Debra D. Taylor Nevins W. Todd, III Nicholus Visnich, Jr. Mark J. Vocci
1987 Susan Goldberg Baruch Kathleen A. Devine Anne Marie A. Dietrich Mary K. Ewing C. Patrick Fitch Michael P. Flanagan Heidi L. Frankel Richard W. Freeman Bruce D. Greenwald Ralph R. Gregg Elizabeth R. Hatcher Kevin E. Hohl G. Michael Maresca Raymond W. Moy
Thomas B. Mulford James P. Nataro Susan Suholet Nesbitt Timothy D. Nichols Jennifer R. Pyle David C. Rubin Thomas L. Seymour, Jr. Michael E. Silverman Paul A. Tarantino Shelly Wong Woodward Donald V. Woytowitz, Jr. Kathleen M. York-Jordan
1988 Charles I. Berul Margaret S. Chisolm Carol C. Coulson Paula DeCandido Jose E. Dominguez Matthew R. Dukehart James V. Ferris Mark H. Fraiman Martha L. Galli-Leslie Rebecca A. Goedeke Nancy M. Hammond Gregg L. Heacock Jay C. Koons Kenneth W. Kotz Roger J. Levin Richard D. Patten Stuart M. Pollack Jeffrey P. Ross Jonathan A. Seidenberg Geoffrey N. Sklar Steven K. Snyder Marcos A. Ugarte Raymond A. Wittstadt Monford A. Wolf Marcella Ann Wozniak Pamela Wright
1989 John T. Alexander, II Louis I. Bezold, III Susan B. Brinkley David M. Chatham Angela I. Choe Neri M. Cohen Joseph W. Cook, IV Steven R. Daviss Clarita G. Dawson Carmel Deckelman Michael O. Duhaney Brian J. Eastridge David S. Geckle Randal D. Getz David A. Gnegy Randolph B. Gorman Niloufar Guiv Ned H. Gutman Robert R. Haddon Ann S. Hagen Stephen F. Hatem Steven E. Hearne Judith Hutchinson
Babak J. Jamasbi Jeffrey R. Kaiser Cheryl Dungan Leonardi Norman A. Lester Robert T. Maupin, Jr. Joy L. Meyer Jean M. Naples Lawrence G. Narun Mary E. Pagan David A. Riseberg Glenn L. Sandler Lise K. Satterfield David S. Scharff David P. Smack David A. Stone Patricia M. Sullivan Tackson Tam William E. Venanzi, Jr. Richard I. Weinstein Irving V. Westney Robin Williams Gregg Wolff
1990 Samuel M. Alaish Carolyn M. Apple David H. Balaban William P. Cook Peter E. Darwin John C. Davis, Jr. Carl E. Gessner Marc S. Goldman Mary K. Hoffman Teresa H. Hoffman Philip R. Mc Dowell Robert F. Musselman Leigh A. Naughton Martin I. Passen Michael E. Rauser Jeffrey Rosenfeld Morris Lee Scherlis Dwayne T. Shuhart James E. Thompson Tuanh Tonnu Marisa J. Werner Amy A. Zimmerman Bruce W. Zukerberg
1991 Yared Aklilu Renato G. Albaran Michael Lynn Ault Karen Elizabeth Brown Elizabeth W. Capacio Jan Foxman Cardinale Robert M. Cardinale Beth G. Diamond Michael A. Dias Robert B. Donegan Fazeela Ferouz Angela S. Guarda Jennifer A. Hollywood Thomas B. Kelso Matthew G. Kramer Jeffrey S. Masin
[33]
Lee Anne Matthews Arman C. Moshyedi Ali Nasseri Janet M. O’Mahony Bertan Ozgun John Joseph Pagan Zinon Mark Pappas Mary B.W. Porter Cynthia N. Schaeffer Christianne Schoedel Linda E. Smiddy-Nelson David Lee Taragin Andrew D. Vennos Marjorie K. Warden
1992 Evan B. Alpert Bimal H. Ashar Clint E. Behrend Linda Matsas Berger Nechama Bernhardt Catherine Booth Heilman John A. Bridgman Catherine I. Brophy Ramzi N. Dagher Jeffrey S. Dubin Annette E. Fineberg David W. Gentry Anthony H. Guarino Donna S. Hanes Samia Hasan David W. Kossoff Jonathan Krome Jean E. Lighthall Jerome E. Lopez Kendall A. Marcus Joyce L. Owens Virginia A. Powel Lisa Kolste Rakowski Ronald T. Rakowski Morton R. Rinder Tony L. Robucci Geoffrey Lahn Rosenthal Monisha Doedhar Saste Elizabeth A. Scarito Richard H. Seidel, II Lawrence G. Seiden Joel A. Turner John M. Vaeth Seymour G. Williams
1993 Christian D. Bounds Gregory M. Brouse Susan M. Brouse Paulette E. Browne Virginia P. Carangal Craig P. Colliver Kathryn M. Connor Michael A. Cushner Valerie R. Dyke Marc D. Hamburger Steven Hockstein Debra B. Hurtt Barbara A. Hutchinson
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 Patricia P. Jett Amal Mattu Ursula B. Mc Clymont Stacy Y. Oshry George A. Porter, Jr. Douglas H. Seeb Aminatu J. Shehu David B. Sigman Douglas A. Smith Michael W. Stasko Christopher J. Welsh John C. White Lore B. Wootton Thomas H. Yau Charles D. Yim
1994 Richard Y. Bae Paul M. Berger Faina Caplan Sandra Buchman Collins Charles W. Curtis, Jr. Kathleen M. Flores-Dahms Demitrous Frazier Stacy D. Gittleson Fisher Thomas A. Hensing Christopher Scott Highfill Deborah S. Hopkins Jun W. Kim Claudia C. Krasnoff Scott E. LaBorwit Philip S. Lim Louis B. Malinow Bahador Momeni Christopher P. Moore Jay B. Penafiel Kenneth Sibila Richard G. Silver Jon E. Simon Andrew L. Smock Santosh J. Vetticaden
1995 Shuchi Bhatt Michael C. Bond Susan J. Boyd Beth Marie-Arciprete Comeau Sean M. Curtin Veronica Deza Kevin M. Dooley Stephen N. Fisher Gail Granof-Warner Shelly L. Hairston-Jones James M. Heltzer David A. Hinkle Sanjay B. Jagannath Meredith S. Josephs Jana L. Kaplan-Fastow Inna Kats Sanford R. Katz
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The Honor Roll
The Honor Roll Mitesh B. Kothari Charles J. Lancelotta, III Gwendolyn R. Lee James L. Liszewski Edward L. McDaniel Charlotte Harward Miller John P. Moriarty Olayemi O. Osiyemi Duke G. Pao Theodore Sunao Takata James Blake Trumble David T. Vroman Deanna D. Vroman Michael Rebert Warner Scott K. Winiecki Joyce S. Wong
Kerry R. Shaab Bradley J. Wasserman Katherine N. Wex Jianping Yang Michael Yim Thomas Chizen Yu
2001
Reunion 2019
1996
Sapna P. Kuehl B. Mark Landrum Hubert S. Lin Lee A. Maddox Thomas E. Maslen Edward C. McCarron Rajesh V. Mehta Andrew Ward Morton Victoria C. Pierce Y. Pritham Raj Elizabeth Reece G. Anthony Reina, Jr. Darlene Y. Robinson Debbie P. Spencer Ed G. Ziedins
Lara Queen Barringer Brian M. Cantor Eric J. Carr Neeraj Chopra Teresa M. Cox Mary E. Craig-Buckholtz Robert J. Dausch Donna O. Donoghue Christine A. Eagleson Vicki E. Ellis Ellie P. Goldbloom Carol S. Goundry Joseph M. Herman Janet Y. Higgins Julie A. Hurlock Allison A. Jensen F. Thomas D. Kaplan Paul J. King Sara B. Levin Chimene L. Liburd David Louis Mandell Mary B. Martello Lisa Kilburg Martinez Lisa N. Miller Robyn M. Miller Monica D. Sarang Stephanie D. Silverman Angela D. Smedley Brenda L. Stokes Kenneth Benjamin Tepper Walter J. Wojcik Stefan M. Zechowy
1998 Paul E. Anderson John T. Antoniades Aaron M. Bates Brendan C. Berry Percy Boateng Herlene Chatha David Chiu Jacqueline A. Corrigan-Curay John M. Cox Jonathan E. Davis Illy Dominitz Elizabeth D. Feldman Anuj Gupta Thomas J. Kenney, III Erika S. Kenney Lisa S. LaBorwit Aneel Mandava Joseph P. Martinez Margaret E. McCusker Otha Myles Monique V. Nolan Megan O’Brien Rajesh M. Prabhu Adebowale Prest Karen R. Raksis Kevin C. Reed Rachel Exelbert Schreiber Kenneth S. Schwartz Lisa M. Sloat Tin A. Way
1997 Jennifer K. Beall Troy Andre Brijbasi Margaret Kelly Burkhead Ruwanthi Samaranayake Campano Regina Clark Abhulimen Carol S. Cox Ronald K. De Venecia Daniel C. Farber Matthew J. Gerber Heidi Ginter Matthew R. Howie Risa Weiner Huber Rachel V. Kramer
[34]
1999 David Asrael Humphrey O. Atiemo Seth M. Cohen Leonard S. Feldman Robert D. Flint, Jr. Thomas D. Horst Douglas A. Jacobstein Jennifer S. Landy Thomas P. McIntyre Susan S. Mclaughlin James L. Medina Thuy D. Ngo Bimalkumar G. Rami Maurice N. Reid Stacey G. Robert Anne E. Rothman Andrew R. Rubin Mark G. Saba Kristin M. Stackpole Ursina R. Teitelbaum Kenneth A. White Mallory Williams Stephen T. Woods Shahid A. Zaidi Alla Zilberman
2000 Leslie M. Belloso Morgen J. Bernius Tammy Lipman Burgunder Ivan D. Cardona Dawn N. Delavallade Esther E. Elliott Amy R. Evenson Kristine M. Griffin James P. Hamilton Riple J. Hansalia Sharon E. Henderson Gerard J. Hogan Robert A. Lenz Nancy M. McGreal Bonaventure B. Ngu Allison P. Niemi Claudia U. Pfeil Bingjing Z. Roberts Joanne DeAusen Saxour Matthew D. Sedgley
Adebisi M. Ajala Julia S. Anixt Allison W. Brindle Christopher W. Calabria Rajwinder S. Deu Etosha D. Dixon Darren R. Feldman Joshua S. Forman Camille T. Hammond Joseph G. Hobelmann Vladimir Ioffe Jakub Kahl Eric O. Klineberg Teresa I. Kulie Barton F. Lane Richard A. Mackey, Jr. Suneel N. Nagda Robert I. Pargament Chinh N. Pham Igor M. Poltinnikov Trisha A. Prossick Lana L. Rigby Joshua L. Roffman Kathy J. Weishaar Marcie O. Wertlieb
2002 Karen L. Bauer Ron K. Brathwaite Ealena S. Callender Jenna H. Choi Brian N. Corwell Jennifer B. Cox Steven H. Epstein Eve Fields Kendall K. Garing Erin P. Gibbons Steven B. Ingle Daniel R. Kauffman Matthew R. Keysor Peter Michael Kuehl Matthew D. Kwan Eugenia C. Robertson Keith A. Robinson Charles A. Sansur Francis M. Segreti Adam M. Spivak David J. Wang
2003 Jared R. Berkowitz Stephanie Y. Borum Calvin Y. Choi Thomas C. Dean Marijka A. Grey Sharla R. Hart Bridget A. Hilliard Jeffrey Todd Hobelmann
Nathaniel L. Holzman Erica N. Johnson Sachin D. Kalyani Hilary Koprowski, II Jason M. Lee-Llacer Rana Malek Mohammed H. Manasawala Ryan G. Miyamoto Vikram V. Nayar Matthew L. Ortman Abbe J. Penziner-Bokde Jinsil K. Sung Karen M. Sutton Tasios G. Vakkas Judy K. Wang
2004 Michael A. Abramson Robert G. Davidson Richard Ericson Anis R. Frayha Manjula V. Gunawardane Robert J. Habicht Christine Hayes Wu Allison Kessler Hobelmann Christopher R. Hydorn Corinne Sokolik Jackson Michael E. Perraut Marek Polomsky Kathryn S. Robinett Jonathan S. Rogers Ryan S. Shugarman Kristina D. Suson Romina M. Thomas Willis M. Wu Gina N. Zilioli
Katherine A. Connor Tara E. Cook Ashley W. Davidson Brian J. DelliGatti Laurence M. Edelman Rachel J. Ellsworth Neda Frayha Adam D. Friedlander Katherine R. Goetzinger Andrew L. Heath James C. Johnston Leah C. Jones Cathleen Sybert Khandelwal Regina A. Macatangay Elise Malecki Jeffrey T. Mason Jesse B. Mez Timothy T. Owolabi Tameka J. Pyles Sandra M. Quezada Norman F. Retener Erica M. Richards Kristin C. Roussillon Mark S. Schneyer Darlene A. Week
Reunion 2019
2005 Alexandra D. Bentley Michael R. Boivin Natalie M. Branagan Robin L. Cohen Timothy J. Decapite Michelle A. Folsom Elder Christopher K. Grybauskas Michael S. Hampton Keri N. Jacobs Anjali Kaushiva Benjamin L. Laskin Bryan J. Loeffler Janelle M. Martin Jennifer Roth Maynard Nora C. Meenaghan Kimberly Kesler O’Rourke Marissa J. Perman-Laskin Pulak Ray Daniela B. Smith Jennifer L. Sullivan Lee-Ann M. Wagner Regina F. Wong
2006 Michael R. Banihashemi Kathryn E. Berryman Patricia L. Carlson Nadia N. Chaudhri
2007 Temilolu O. Aje Megan Niziol Alcock Sara E. Clark Latrica K. Cook Ryan H. Fitzgerald Kathryn L. Gloyer Joshua D. Holyoak Kathryn A. Karges Elisa J. Knutsen Amanda M. Kramer Bradley R. Kramer Elizabeth M. Lamos Adriana J. Laser Benjamin S. Laser Susan M. Mabrouk Paula E. Max-Wright Mercy Okoye Andersson Tania R. Peters Cedric C. Regelin Troy M. Sofinowski Jennifer C. Sri Theodore J. Sung Owen C. Thomas Claudia H. Viens Roger D. Wu
[35]
2008 Jodi K. Bond David J. Carlberg Stephenie R. Fleegle Ruth E. Gardner Nadine T. Himelfarb Stephanie L. Kahntroff Elizabeth L. Kochman George C. Kochman Jennie Y. Law Michelle M. Levender Jessica D. Lewis Michelle A. Melo Elizabeth M. Nichols Laura N. Silverstein Gregory A. Small Luke R. Smart Erik R. Strauss Amanda L. Weavil Christian C. Wright Andrew J. Young
2009 John A. Douglas Lindsay B. Goicochea John P. Hemming J. Daniel Hess William W. Ide Esther J. Kim Doee Kitessa Louis E. Kovacs Smitha G. Kuppalli Shavonne L. Massey Lisa J. Meister Kelly J. Norsworthy Lesley Wojcik Raphael Kristin Powell Reavis Tianbo Ren Zachary J. Roberts Teresa M. Ross Michael J. Santiago Kathleen A. Sterling Semhar Z. Tewelde Ethan M. Weinberg Rebecca E. Wright
2010 Ijeoma E. Akunyili Jamil J. Bashir Paulina Gorney Brown Richard C. Bryson Rebecca Carter Sara Edeiken Nidhi Goel Robin S. Goldman David J. Halpin Christian R. Halvorson Kyle M. Hatten Aaron G. Ilano Nicholas A. Kessides Andrew P. Lee Daniel H. MacArthur Horatiu Muresan Paul W. Perdue Fernanda Porto Carreiro
University of Maryland
honor roll
2019 Jeffrey F. Rasmussen Thomas E. Reznik Ashina D. Singh Donald F. Slack Melanie P. Slack Alison F. Ward
2011 Katherine M. Bever Christina M. Boyd Michael B. Chang Consuelo David Andreas R. de Biasi Meghan E. Geraghty Jamie L. Goldberg Lindsay F. Holiday Jeffrey E. Keenan Elizabeth L. Kenez Nancy A. Lentz Meghan E. Marmillion
Maxim D. Orlov Andrew J. Riggin Hemal N. Sampat Samuel S. Travis Heon Soo Yi
Paige Luneburg Joseph Mechak Kelly F. Moyer Sreela S. Namboodiri Rachel O’Brian Melissa Sieber
2013
2015
Michael N. Brodeur Sara W. Coulbourn Stephen Orion Courtin Elizabeth A. Donahoo Livingstone S. Dore Lauren E. Drake Russell J. Goldstein Danielle E. Goodrich Ravindra Gopaul Reney A. Henderson Adam J. Kalwerisky David A. Lapides Megan Lee Skyler A. Lentz Sarah K. Lynam Christopher W. McMullen Adam K. Meeks
Jonah E. Abraham Michael H. Baca-Atlas Lydia Barlow Stephen T. Biederman Caitlin Carnell Timothy J. Chryssikos Andrew Dubina Kriti Gandhi Matthew J. Grant Patrick Greenwell Daniel J. Helman Ariana Khaladj-Ghom David H. Kim Ann Miller Meaghan C. Moxley Gopal L. Narang Kenneth R. Nugent Aurora D. Rivendale Alexis Salerno Alexander Skog Sarah E. Skog Mary E. Walterhoefer
2016 Haoxing Chen Andrew Delapenha Chuncong S. Du Lillian J. Dubiel Emily Tyler Maxwell Christina Morris-Berry Samuel F. Oliver Kevin W. O’Malley Rachel L. Troch Jonathan M. Watson Shelly Watson Jessie L. Werner
Reunion 2019 Catherine W. Njathi-Ori Brian C. Phillips Diane Claire Pressman Brian Shiu Allison J. Siegel Kathleen S. Stephanos
2012 John R. Bergquist Claire A. Cunniff Janna Becker Davis Katherine E. Duncan Lindsay Goodstein Patricia F. Groleau Melissa A. Heuer David L. Levitt Lindsay H. Morrell Latasha N. Murphy Adriana Naim Brian P. Neuman
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
The Honor Roll
The Honor Roll
Julia Sarsfield Merti Jenna B. Noveau Courtney Schnell Pearson Timothy P. Pearson Rebecca A. Switzer Sarah Ullah Christen L. Vagts
2017 Kerry S. Campbell Andrea V. Carnie Donique A. Cross Kathryn M. Davis Taylor M. Douglas Adam Fisch Mitra H. Haeri Max C. Hamaker Dina Ioffe Angelina S. June Daphna T. Katz Anthony P. Kronfli Jeffrey P. Lane Andrew H. Lutz Sheila Razdan Michelle E. Romeo Timothy E. Ryan
2014 John C. Allen Nicole Cimino-Fiallos Laurel Cummings Michael P. DeWane Nizar Dowla Marissa Flaherty Danielle Glick Meredith Goodloe Brian L. Heiss Priya Kamath David E. Knipp
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2018 Ashley H. Barnes Carleigh L. Benton Charles J. Blevins Sarah M. Chang Christopher R. Chanock Yifei Chen Nuval K. Cherian Richard J. Edgar Sara E. Francomacaro Sarah R. Kaslow Zulqarnain Khan Dong W. Kim Logan C. Kolakowski Timothy P. Lancaster Petya L. Lozanova Melissa R. Lutz Katherine L. Mistretta Shari A. Orenstein Priya B. Patel Claire B. Rosen Craig S. Schneider David W. Spivey
Corporations, Foundations, Faculty & Staff Abraham L. Adler AmazonSmile Ms. Jane E. Anderson Mr. C. Daniel Askin Mrs. Barbara Atkinson Mr. Samuel Barrera Ms. Judith Barrett Mr. Harold G. Bell Ms. Barbara Berkowitz Ms. Elizabeth Berrera Ms. Wendy Branoff Ms. Robynne Braun Mr. William Burke Ms. Judy K. Cahn Ms. Mildred K. Caplan CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield Ms. Eileen M. Cohen Mr. Jonas M. Cohen Mr. Robert A. Cohen Vincent Conroy Mr. Joseph A. Cooper Raymond K. Cross, MD Dr. Joseph Cunningham Steven J. Czinn, MD Ms. Mary Jean Davidge Mr. William Martin Davidge, IV Ms. Reta S. Davis Mrs. Leatrice Dembo Mr. John H. Denick Diagnostic Imaging Specialists, PA Mr. Steven DiFrancesco Mr. Jack P. Finkelstein Mr. Ryan Fleming Mrs. Suzanne W. Foxwell Mr. Earle S. Freedman Ms. Carolyn B. Frenkil Ms. Sonia L. Gann Ms. Jean Gogel
Mr. Richard J. Gopen Mr. Martin Grand Ms. Toby A. Greenberg Ms. Trudy Greenberg Ms. Tara Gregorio Mr. Jeffrey K. Hettleman Mrs. Linda T. Himmelrich Mr. Barry H. Hirschowitz Mr. Jonathan A. Howard Mrs. Catherine Ingle James and Carolyn Frenkil Charitable Foundation Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies Mrs. Barbara Kehoe Ms. Susan Keller Ms. Joan Klein Mr. Stephen I. Kolodny Ms. Myra Krieger Dr. Dianne Jones Landrum Law Offices Benjamin J. Dychala Jr., ESQ Ms. Harriet E. Legum Mr. Jeffrey Legum Rhona L. Levin, L.C.S.W.-C Mrs. Gayle R. Levy Mrs. Shirley Litrenta Ms. Cathy Lucafo MAA Holding Account Ms. Mary Macchiaroli Colin MacKenzie, MD Ms. Carol Madow Mr. Marshall I. Madow, DDS
Ms. Laurie Ann Mazur Ms. Lorinda R. McColgan Mr. Craig C. McKirgan Mr. Harvey M. Meyerhoff Michael R. Miyamoto, DDS Ms. Judith F. Ng Mrs. Holly E. Nichols Ms. Kathleen O’Brien Dr. S. Michael Plaut Mrs. Marlene Pollack Mrs. Mary Pooton Mr. Ronald Powell Provost Companies Ms. Isabel C. Rappaport Mrs. Gail Schonfeld Ms. Ruth A. Seif Mr. David E. Sellinger Mr. Michael Setzer Mrs. Donna Shapiro Ms. Mary A. Shearon Mr. I. Gerald Sidle Mr. Robert Siegmeister Ms. Barbara Silverman Ms. Judith Silverstein Ms. Sharon Skarda Mr. Brad Smith Mrs. Patricia Smith Mr. Charles A. Spadafora Adam J. Spanier, MD Taylor Foundation Incorporated Ms. Judie Tenenbaum The Vermont Community Foundation
University of Maryland Faculty Physicians, Inc. University of Maryland Medical System Mr. Manasa Vallabhaneni Mr. Herman Venick Mr. & Mrs. Richard Wasserkrug Dr. Charles S. White Ms. Christina Wills Wingate Healthcare, Inc. Mrs. Carolyn Winter Ms. Deborah A. Wolff The Trustees of the Endowment Fund
During Fiscal Year 2019, gifts were made in honor/memory of the following: Larry Becker, ’64 Abraham & Elise Bodurian Robert Bokat, ’62 Francis J. Borges, ’50 Violet A. Branagan Jane B. Brown Frank M. Calia, MD, MACP Diana & Mel Carlson Mary D. Clark, ’45 Harold L. Daly, Jr., ’50 Stuart Eisen Gregory Emory, ’77 Milford M. Foxwell, Jr., ’80 Len Frank, PhD
Ruth George Mary Jane Gordon Barry S. Handwerger, ’68 Clifton Henry Sharon M. Henry, ’85 Murray M. Kappelman, ’55 Helen Kirsh Edward Kowalski Dr. Vernon E. Krahl Morton M. Krieger, ’52 Philip Lerman, ’44 David E. Litrenta, ’61 Noah Samuel Lockman Irene H. Mathews William S. Parker, MD Theodore C. Patterson, ’62 Michael Phelan, MD Neil W. Randall, ’83 Marshall Rennels, PhD Paul Richardson, ’50 Burton Schonfeld, ’68 Leroy Shapiro Betty Sherman William Sinton, ’56 Harry L. Sponseller, ’79 Alvin A. Stambler, ’52 Ira N. Tublin, ’54 James H. Tyer, ’58 George Vash, MD Dr. Walter Weintraub Barry M. Wolk, ’72 John D. Young, Jr., ’41 Lois Young, ’60
13th Annual
celebr ating Reception and Dinner
SAVE TH E DATE
NOW ACCEPTING NOMINATIONS FOR THE CELEBRATING DIVERSITY ALUMNI AWARD to be presented to an SOM Graduate who has contributed to advancing diversity in medicine
For additional information, please contact Ashley Hines at [email protected] or 410-706-0820.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 2020
Renaissance Baltimore Harborplace Hotel
202 E Pratt Street | Baltimore, MD
6:30 pm PRESENTING SPONSOR
Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc. Proceeds will benefit the Dean Emeritus Donald E. Wilson Endowed Scholarship Fund
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University of Maryland
Famous figures. Mysterious illnesses. Theories.
Medicina Memoriae
By Wayne Millan
Experts shared their insights at this year’s historical CPC during reunion weekend. If you missed it or enjoyed it so much and would like to experience it again, it’s now available for viewing by dues-paying members of the Association in our video library at www.medicalalumni.org.
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2019 CPC Prominent Historical Figure:
“St. Francis of Assisi Died of Leprosy”
n August 21 of 1890, the Baltimore Sun published one of its regular reports on events in the nation’s capital. The unnamed writer of that newspaper’s Washington Letters column told of the departure of President Benjamin Harrison for a week’s stay in Cape May, New Jersey; of a significant decrease in the net rate of death for Washington from what it had been only a few years earlier; of the near-completion of a pneumatic streetcar line just north of downtown D.C.; and of a “plague of rats and fleas” on Capitol Hill. This plague had been let loose by the start of construction for what was then referred to as the “National Library,” but which not long after became the main (now Thomas Jefferson) building of the Library of Congress. According to the Sun, a “rookery” of old buildings directly behind the Capitol had been taken down to make way for the new library structure. In this process, thousands of rats and fleas fled from the demolishing workmen. The building had been a prison so long that it is said each rat carried on his hide half a gill [2 oz] of flees [sic]…while the increase of rats in wider quarters has been in arithmetic proportion, the fleas have multiplied in more than the same ratio until now they have become a veritable plague.
T H e 143 r d M e d i c a l a l u M n i a s s o c i a T i o n r e u n i o n scienTiFic prograM
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
Rats in High Places
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University of Maryland
Medicina Memoriae The White House’s 1889 rat infestation was explicitly blamed on the cutting of holes to run water, gas, and fresh air lines— in other words, some of the new technologies that were intended to improve life even as they generated unintended consequences. lines—in other words, some of the new technologies that were The Sun reporter concluded this section of his Letters with a intended to improve life even as they generated unintended call for “weasels, terriers, and cats without number” to combat consequences. The Post/Tribune report did not make specific the swarm. He also commented that “mosquitoes are forgotten” mention of the fact the Harrisons had only been in residence in the citizens’ eagerness to rid their city of these now-homeless since the spring of that year; yet it did assert that the last such fleas. The reporter failed to mention that some members of effort, or “rat fight,” took place during the administration of the genus Rattus can grow to be as large and as strong as a General Grant, when ferrets were also employed. Rodents had domesticated short-hair cat, which are better employed to go “gradually crept back and were somewhat annoying during the after mice instead. [Grover] Cleveland regime.” Only the year before, President Harrison’s official residence Rats and other rodents carry or indirectly transmit many had itself been the subject of a press report on a growing pathogens, including leptospirosis and murine typhus; yet problem with rodents in the seat of power. Newspapers as far probably the most dreaded disease they can give to humans is away as Chicago picked up the story: that city’s Daily Tribune the one now known to be caused by Yersinia pestis. Yersinia is copied a Washington Post story of November 7, 1889, about a the bacillus responsible for “the plague” in its various forms: full-scale assault having been made on White House rodents. bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic. Recent archaeological The newspapers risked embarrassing a then-new president who work has confirmed Yersinia’s presence in or around various nonetheless had the unique civic background of being both human cultures as far back as the Neolithic era. Its complicated the grandson of a previous commander-in-chief and the greatvectoring for infecting the human body was not known to grandson of a signer of the U.S. Declaration of Independence. reporters or rat-catchers of late-19th century Washington, yet Benjamin Harrison and family had only moved into the it did not remain a mystery for much longer. Two young Executive Mansion—“White House” was not yet an official physicians were close on the trail and would almost term—that March, yet they found a building so badly simultaneously discover the cause of plague during the infested that “the gnawing of the rats in their efforts to summer of 1894. make new openings and their races between the walls Alexandre Yersin was a Swiss physician who, and under the floors made sleep well nigh impossible.” by the early 1890s, had trained in both Paris and A contract rat catcher named Frank Hosmer was called Yersin Berlin. He then traveled to southeast Asia, including in, and after a two-week campaign that included the use Vietnam (then French Indochina), and was sent to of ferrets and some form of “long-haired terrier,” Hosmer Hong Kong by the Pasteur Institute to study an outbreak of claimed that “there is not a rat in the upper portion of the plague that was sometimes taking the pneumonic form, where house now.” mortality is higher than with bubonic. This outbreak is now Stewards and cooks at the Executive Mansion had long recognized as part of the most recent widespread pandemic complained that their chickens were being killed by rats and of plague, one which by June of 1894 was that prepared foods were even sometimes dragged from table blamed for killing tens of thousands in tops. Many of the rodents forced out by Hosmer and his crew Hong Kong and nearby cities. were reported to have headed to the gardens by the mansion’s From his investigations, Yersin was south lawn. There his rat-catchers smeared fresh holes with a able to isolate and describe the bacillus tar mixture that was said to be “poisonous,” by which he likely responsible. At almost exactly the same meant heavy with arsenic. Shibasaburo date, during the summer of 1894, and The White House’s 1889 rat infestation was explicitly also in Hong Kong, his result was obtained blamed on the cutting of holes to run water, gas, and fresh air
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
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Rats and other rodents carry or indirectly transmit many pathogens, including leptospirosis and murine typhus; yet probably the most dreaded disease they can give to humans is the one now known to be caused by Yersinia pestis. by a Japanese physician, Kitasato Shibasaburo. The latter middle to late 1940s. In December of 1948, the director of the investigator had worked in the laboratory of Robert Koch (as city’s office of environmental hygiene, George W. Schucker, had Yersin if for not as long nor as successfully) before returning stated publicly that use of poison was insufficient without other to Asia. Due to complex reasons typical of such discoveries, the measures, such as control of food waste. Schucker affirmed that species name was eventually granted to the Swiss doctor alone, otherwise rat populations would keep at their current level, as Yersinia pestis, although Kitasato enjoyed an even more which his department believed were twice what they had distinguished scientific career. been at the start of WWII and now numbered perhaps It was another French-trained physician, Paulover a million within the city limits. Louis Simond, who only a few years later established Baltimore City had enacted an ordinance in 1941 plague’s vectoring of flea (from the Xenopsylla to require residents themselves to keep their dwellings genus) to rodent to human. Simond began his “free of vermin or rodent infestation.” The wartime scientific career working on leprosy. Like Yersin, he problem quickly became so severe, however, that city Simond then sailed to Asia under sponsorship of the Pasteur administrators felt compelled to call in the eminent Institute, where he had been called to fill a position in biologist Dr. Curt Richter of Johns Hopkins (sometimes India originally held by Yersin. After his work on the unfairly called the “rat torture” doctor) to try to deal with the plague vector was published, Simond left for South infestation. Things did eventually improve, and by 1958 the America: there he helped to replicate the findings city’s director of rodent control, John A. Childs, was quoted in of Walter Reed and his team—including James the Sun as stating that the rodent population had been halved Carroll, Class of 1891—on yellow fever. over the course of a decade. Yet budget cuts in 1958, the year of Public accounts of rodent infestation have a major if brief economic recession, had reduced his staff from long been a mainstay of the press, and for nine to six, and Childs reported that rat and rodent problems Carroll good reasons other than sensationalism and the were in general again on the increase. selling of newspapers. This writer learned that Human structures both large and small, public or private, 35 years ago when, early in his teaching career and seem likely to continue to attract rats and other rodents, which while living in Maryland, he found himself working with a are easily characterized as opportunistic. Humans can flee them student whose older sister, and only sibling, had died of plague if not always successfully. Yersin did not remain in the rodentafter a visit to the American Southwest. That young victim infested cities of his youth but stayed instead in Vietnam where was not diagnosed promptly despite having recently traveled he settled eventually at the coastal town of Nha Trang. He also to a part of the world where Yersinia pestis was known to have helped to found the medical school in Hanoi, and he died in a reservoir. Before the 1980s it had also been established that Nha Trang during the WWII Japanese occupation. Both he certain well-known antibiotics were effective treatments if and Kitasato lived into their late 70s, and each man today has a given promptly after exposure. For a modern American to university bearing his name. become infected and then die in such a way—and far from the rats of urban Maryland—was a profound shock as well as a deep Wayne Millan has served for many years as consultant to the University of Maryland Historical Clinico-Pathological family tragedy. Conference. Since 2010, he has been a lecturer in classics In Baltimore itself, as in other major cities, stories and public at The George Washington University, and in collaboration discussions of rodent problems have turned up periodically with Dr. Victor Weedn of GWU, he is now at work on a first-ever modern translation of the Four Books on since as far back as written records have been kept. Perhaps Evidence Given by Doctors published in 1602. The Four because of the dramatic increase in shipping activity during Books (“Libri Quatuor”) were written in Latin by a Sicilian physician Fortunato Fedele who was the first known practitioner of forensic pathology. World War II, the existing rat infestation grew worse by the
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University of Maryland
By Sandra McKee
alumna
profile Margaret S. Chisolm, ’88
Photo by Greg Dohler
The Heart of Medicine
…Chisolm has stored away many insights. Top among them: It is the people, the human element, brought by the patients in need of care—and by the doctors who provide that care— that is at the heart of the medical profession.
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
To Margaret Chisolm, ’88, the art of medicine is not just some catchphrase used to give the medical field a scholarly or academic aura. Part art historian, part teacher and part physician, she finds the phrase encapsulates her very essence. To the point that this fall, Chisolm, a professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University, is embarking on teaching a pilot course in which she is using art to help future doctors better understand themselves and their patients. “I’m hoping this course will help them remember why they wanted to become doctors, and will have a lasting impact on how they treat their patients,” says Chisolm, 61. “Fourth-year students will have already finished all the work they needed to do to get into a residency program. This elective, focused on the big questions, allows them to spend four weeks in art museums reflecting on what it means to be human and to be a physician.” While growing up in Columbia, Md., Chisolm had no interest in medicine—only art. It led her to the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), where she graduated magna cum laude with a degree in visual arts with a concentration in film. Shortly after graduation, she married Richard, a cinematographer, whom she met at UMBC, and they both continued on their individual career paths. She was accepted into the New York University graduate program in cinema studies, which was “arguably the most prestigious graduate school in cinema film history in the country.” But she wondered where her course of study would lead. What kind of job would she get? What would she do that was meaningful? And then she read a book, A Fortunate Man by John Berger, an art critic who also wrote novels and this biography. It told the story of a country doctor in England, and her life was changed forever. She went back to UMBC, took all the courses she needed to take the MCAT exam and applied to Maryland, writing an essay on how her art study could be useful in a medical career, though, at that point, she may not have foreseen just how useful. She came to Maryland thinking she might like being an obstetrician. But she liked the surgery side of OB and her general surgery rotation even more, so she thought she would be a surgeon. She had no interest in psychiatry, until it came to her in her next-to-last rotation. “I liked it equally to surgery,” Chisolm says. “And I thought it brought out the best in me and would allow me to flourish as a human being.”
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And, it has, as she has gained firsthand experience in her 30-plus-year medical career. Now professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences with a secondary appointment in medicine, she is only the third woman physician ever to be promoted to full professor in Johns Hopkins’ department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences. It is an amazing achievement for a woman who grew up in the 1960s, had no association with medicine and “didn’t even think becoming a doctor was possible,” let alone becoming a full professor at JHU. Dedicated to the profession, Chisolm has stored away many insights. Top among them: It is the people, the human element, brought by the patients in need of care—and by the doctors who provide that care—that is at the heart of the medical profession. “Part of my interest in helping medical students become more humanistic physicians grows out of my work in psychiatry, including patients with addiction, who are not always treated with the most respect by physicians,” says Chisolm, who spent 10 years working at the Center for Addiction and Pregnancy after joining the full-time faculty at Johns Hopkins in 2006. “So, part of my work comes from that passion to ensure that all patients are treated with respect and dignity. That’s probably the thing that motivates me to do the work I’m doing more than anything else.” Those working experiences gave her the understanding that medicine isn’t just a clinical, unfeeling thing. That came closest to home when her brother took his own life in 2012, after years of struggling with depression and addiction. That experience validated her belief that for medicine to be good, it has to embrace the people it serves. She wants her students to look into themselves and answer very personal questions about their own humanity. Did they only want to become physicians to take care of people like themselves? Or is it to take care of people who are less well-liked by society, who have been rejected by even their friends and family? “And so, what is the purpose of medicine? What’s the role of the physician? Those, to me, are central questions that if people reflect on them, it might help doctors provide more humanistic care,” Chisolm says. They are questions she hopes they will be able to answer as they study art through their eyes as soon-to-be-physicians. “I am not teaching art appreciation,” Chisolm says. “I don’t care if they know the name of the painting or even the artist. I want them to look at it and observe, draw options about what is happening by observing people in the paintings and backing up their answers.” She sees the course building skills in observation, communication, listening, collaboration and deductions, through grounding in evidence. This course is different from art-related courses elsewhere because it is designed for fourth-year students, instead of first- and second-year students, and is focused more on professional identity formation than on physical examination skills. While introspection might be a limited commodity in medical school, Chisolm says her current position allows time for thinking and creativity. “It’s what I like best,” she says. “I can be creative and do something meaningful. I can come up with an idea I want to test and explore—like this idea that an art museum is going to help people, transform them into doctors who are flourishing and will help their patients flourish, and I can test that idea out. That’s great. I love what I do. Maybe a little too much.” Then she smiles. She still finds time to take a daily hour long walk with her husband, and time to spend with their son Jasper, 26. And, she still watches lots of movies. She loves psychological thrillers, loves to be scared. “It’s my only thrill,” she says. To which someone who knows her might be tempted to respond, “Hardly.”
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She wants her students to look into themselves and answer very personal questions about their own humanity. Did they only want to become physicians to take care of people like themselves? Or is it to take care of people who are less wellliked by society, who have been rejected by even their friends and family?
University of Maryland
Advancement
S
Money
Reid, ’99, Helps Turn Proposed Curricular Reform into Reality
Some things may never change. But the way Maryland students learn to become physicians is about to change, says Donna L. Parker, ’86, associate dean for student affairs and senior associate dean for undergraduate medical education. Parker is spearheading a curriculum renewal project, a school-wide effort, incorporating the input of nearly 100 faculty, students, and staff to bring the curriculum more in line with 21st-century learning. “We’re moving toward more active learning for the students, which is something they have become accustomed to in their high school and undergraduate years,” says Parker. “And they like to be more engaged.” Students access and process information differently than they did 25 years ago, and they often utilize team-based and experiential learning to supplement traditional methods. By updating the curriculum, Maryland will be focusing less on standard modalities, like lectures, and more on skills that promote clinical thinking in a rapidly changing environment to develop habits for life-long learning. Part of this involves overhauling the more than 100-year-old curriculum model of two years of pre-clinical studies in the classroom, followed by two years of clinical training. “Like a lot of schools around the country, we are moving to an integrated model of teaching,” says Parker. “For instance, when the students learn about the heart, they’ll do the anatomy of the heart, the physiology of the heart, the histopathology of the heart, the pathophysiology of the heart, and the history and exam of the heart all together.” Other enhancements include teaching students to work in teams and to obtain scientific information through a multitude of electronic resources, as well as offering a shorter pre-clinical time and an earlier timeline for specialty selection.
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
Managing
Inspired by the project, Reid made a $500,000 pledge to establish The Maurice Reid, M.D. Classroom Fund, which provides current-use support for the renovation and maintenance of classrooms that promote team-based learning. Despite all these changes, says Parker, one core value will remain the same. “Students obviously still have to memorize a lot of material—there’s no getting around it,” she says. “But now we will focus more on teaching them how to think like physicians.” Implementing these new learning methods requires renovations to many of the current teaching spaces. And building renovations require funding. “We’ve got big lecture halls and we have some small group rooms, but they’re not really set up to do this type of active learning,” she says. “So, we thought that it would be wonderful to be able to renovate some existing space.” For inspiration, the team toured the Edward St. John Learning & Teaching Center at the University of Maryland College Park, a model facility that supports a variety of teaching styles. Classrooms have flexible technology and furniture—wireless screen sharing, removable benches and tables, movable walls to combine smaller rooms into
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large ones—to encourage student collaboration and team building in classes of all sizes. “When we saw it, we really became inspired and began talking with the people about how to make that happen here,” Parker says. Among those consulted was Maurice Reid, ’99, a former assistant professor of emergency medicine and current CEO and medical director of ExpressCare. As a member of the school’s board of visitors, Reid heard of the plans while attending a retreat. “I was impressed by what they were trying to accomplish, not only integrating traditional pathology with clinical medicine, but also expanding the teaching and classrooms to give students a more relaxed setting to study and learn,” he says. “It is just so very innovative—I wish we could have had that opportunity when I was a student!” Inspired by the project, Reid made a $500,000 pledge to establish The Maurice Reid, M.D. Classroom Fund, which provides current-use support for the renovation and maintenance of classrooms that promote team-based learning. “We are absolutely thrilled to have a new, beautiful space ready for the type of teaching we’re going to be doing,” Parker says. “This gift is a big, big deal.” Reid simply sees his gift as a winning investment in the future of medicine. “As somebody who’s really proud of what the school is trying to do, and grateful for the experience it provided me, I thought it was a good opportunity to just step in and contribute,” Reid says. “The next person who’s going to potentially discover a cure for cancer or HIV could be one of our medical students. So why not put as many resources as we can into that endeavor through alumni giving back.”
Does Your Generation Know Best When It Comes to Money? Hint: Maybe not. Across age groups financial decision making is surprisingly similar. These three tips can help us make better decisions together. Human beings spend a lot of time pondering the differences in how other humans think and behave. As someone who aspires to help families make better decisions about money, one particular case in point resonates: the generational differences—and similarities—in approaches to money. The most productive family conversations about money identify generational similarities and differences in values and perspectives, and respectfully address those differences to ultimately find common ground. In this way, families can collaborate effectively to move closer to their shared financial goals. To shed light on this complicated topic, we conducted global research across 11 different countries with 1,500 participants. Here, we offer research-based tips to encourage cross-generational communication and collaboration and, ultimately, promote better outcomes. Collaboration in action Tip 1: Talk more about money. Older generations can take a cue from the younger ones, who spend far more time discussing important money matters. In our survey, 51% of respondents 21–35 years old said they spent more than four hours in the past week talking about money versus only 23% of those over 50. And remember, the key is to be intentional about the time you spend. How to get there: Consider setting up a weekly or a monthly meeting for your immediate family where you talk only about important money matters. You might begin with a “gratitude circle,” where each individual talks about what they have been grateful for during the past week. Tip 2: Plan together. Ask yourself: Do I know the path my family members want to take with money over time? If you’re not 100% sure of the answer, there’s a reason to start planning together across generations. How to get there: As a practical first step, consider sharing what your intentions are across generations. Are you aiming to grow your wealth over time and even beyond your lifetime? Or are you looking to spend or give everything away? For example, if the goal is to grow wealth forever, then it’s critical to understand how younger generations are expected to participate in that effort. Tip 3: Keep your confidence in check. About 75% of participants rated themselves an “8” or higher on a 10-point confidence scale. Confidence is good, but overconfidence can be counterproductive when it leads to excessive trading or an action-bias. And regardless of age, education can benefit everyone in the family. How to get there: Many families may choose to arrange educational sessions as a family unit. For example, on the power of compounding. The subject resonates because people often vastly underestimate the opportunity cost of delayed saving and investment. To those in the older generations: Have you talked to younger family members about the importance of investing early and often? And to the younger generations: Are you taking enough risk in your own financial life?
Scott D. Canuel, CFA, CFP© J.P. Morgan Private Bank [email protected] Disclosures: The information expressed is being provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. You should carefully consider your needs and objectives before making any decisions. For specific guidance on how this information should be applied to your situation, you should consult your qualified representative. The information provided may inform you of certain products and services offered by J.P. Morgan’s wealth management businesses, part of JPMorgan Chase & Co. (“JPM”). The views and strategies described in the material may not be suitable for all investors and are subject to risks. This material is confidential and intended for your personal use. It should not be circulated to or used by any other person, or duplicated for non-personal use, without our permission.
Final thoughts The most productive money conversations are collaborative, with each generation benefiting from the other’s life experiences and drawing on shared perspectives. We think our three tips—talk more, plan together, keep confidence in check—can help you work together across generations to reach your family’s financial goals. With apologies to author C. S. Lewis, two (or more) heads are better than one, “not because either is infallible, but because they are unlikely to go wrong in the same direction.”
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University of Maryland
Recollections
studentactivities
A look back at America’s fifth oldest medical school and its illustrious alumni
195 Years Ago}
Class Stats
Class of 2023 by the Numbers The incoming class of 2023 reported to campus in August. It consists of 148 students from 68 different colleges and universities with women outnumbering men 3–2. The students were selected from an applicant pool of just under 5,200. Here are the numbers:
In 1825, Ephraim McDowell, acclaimed as the Father of Abdominal Surgery, received an honorary medical degree from Maryland, the only degree he ever received. In 1809, McDowell removed a 20-pound abdominal tumor from the abdomen of Jane Crawford, who would enjoy good health for another 30 years. While many debated the wisdom of McDowell’s courageous procedure, Maryland’s faculty understood its significance and conferred its honor upon him.
MD Program
MD/PhD Program
Total Applications:
5,185
Total Applications
242
Number of Applicants Interviewed
589
Number of Applicants Interviewed
43
Number of Acceptances Offered
327
Number of Acceptances Offered
29
Class Size
148
Class Size
8
Female/Male Percentages
60/40
Resident/Non-Resident Percentages
61/39
Age Range
21–35
Colleges/Universities Represented
68
MD/Master’s Program
Underrepresented in Medicine Percentage 13
{115 Years Ago Maryland professors began depositing lecture fees in a central fund and began earning salaries rather than selling classroom tickets directly to students (as had been the case since 1807). This was an attempt to mitigate the ongoing financial difficulties created by the proprietary system.
60 Years Ago }
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
Students of Color Percentage
54
Median GPA in Science
3.82
Median GPA overall
3.83
Median MCAT Score
514
(91st Percentile)
123
Number of Applicants Interviewed
23
Number of Acceptances Offered
14
Class Size
2
Lerner Named to All-European Lacrosse Team Megan Lerner, ’20, led the Israeli Women’s National Team to a secondplace finish in the 2019 European Women’s Lacrosse Championship Tournament last summer and was named to the all-European team. Twenty countries competed in the event held in Netanya, Israel, during mid-July. The host team lost to top-seeded England in the championship game. Lerner, a defender, is in her fourth year at Maryland with plans to pursue residency training in urology. She holds dual citizenship.
In 1959, Joseph E. Schenthal, class of 1939, established the Tulane Medical Computer Center, the first of its kind, and from 1960 to 1963 published several articles in the Journal of the American Medical Association on the role of computers in medicine. He served on the faculty at Tulane in the department of medicine and preventive medicine.
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Total Applications
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University of Maryland
classnotes
classnotes Meredith P. Smith 1940s of1949: Seattle reports that he
remains active at age 94. Harry H. Bleecker, 1950s 1950: Jr., of San Pedro, Calif., continues working part-time. He recently returned from a cruise to Norway and hopes to make the 70th reunion in May. ❖ Miriam S. Daly of Chelsea, Mich., turns 95 in January. She takes exercise and balance classes six days a week and remains in good health. ❖ Henry H. Startzman, Jr., has moved into a retirement home in Timonium, Md., following the death of wife Peggy last October. He is expecting his fifth great-grandchild and will be named Henry V. 1953: Rafael Longo-Cordero of San Juan, Puerto Rico, was sad to hear about the recent loss of classmates. He spends half of his time living in Newnam, Ga. ❖ Joseph F. Palmisano of Ocean Pines, Md., and classmate George C. Peck of North Palm Beach, Fla., recently celebrated their 92nd birthdays together in Spring Lake, N.J. 1954: Arthur Baitch of Baltimore was delighted that he, Dan Framm, and Ed Klohr were able to attend the 65th Reunion last spring. 1955: Richard F. Leighton of Savannah, Ga., authored Reflections of a Hessian, a historical fiction about an ancestor who arrives in America as a Hessian soldier in the Revolutionary War who defects to become a farmer in what is now West Virginia. 1957: Walter M. Shaw of Bonita, Calif., recently celebrated his 90th birthday and reports that retirement is going well. ❖ Landon Clarke Stout of Galveston, Tex., holds emeritus status at the University of Texas Medical Branch with resident teaching and pathology research four days each
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
week. 1958: Robert E. Cranley, Jr., of Las Vegas was able to reconnect with classmate Bill Bartlett and catch up on life since graduation. ❖ Ronald L. Diener of Pikesville, Md., is proud to have his granddaughter in third year of medical school at Maryland. 1959: August D. King, Jr., and wife Netta of Lutherville, Md., recently celebrated their 61st wedding anniversary.
1960s Paradise Valley, Ariz., and wife 1961: George E. Bandy of
Shirley are looking forward to the 60th class reunion in 2021. Bandy plays golf three times a week. ❖ George E. Urban, Jr., of Silver Spring, Md., had hip replacement surgery in April and he reports it was a piece of cake. He is hopeful for a great-grandchild soon, as the first of his 15 grandchildren was recently married. 1964: Lawrence F. Solomon of Baltimore retired September 30 after 51 years in private internal medicine practice. He is in good health and is looking forward to an active retirement. 1965: Ronald Goldner of Baltimore retired from the practice of dermatology on June 30 after 52 years in practice. This included service on Maryland’s faculty, and on September 8 a retirement party was staged by the department of dermatology to recognize his contributions to the school and the profession 1966: Stuart L. Fine and wife Ellie are living in Winston Salem, N.C., but spend summers in Carbondale, Colo., where they
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attend the Aspen Ideas Festival, lectures at the Aspen Institute, and performances at the Aspen Music Festival. ❖ Dennis H. Gordon reports that he is living the good life in Park City, Utah. ❖ Stephen F. Gordon of Savannah, Ga., reports that his daughter Penny, a tenured professor at the University of North Carolina, has been named associate dean of research, and his granddaughter is a freshman at Duke University. ❖ Carl J. Orfuss of Los Angeles continues to work part-time in the practice of neurology at UCLA and is looking forward to the next class of reunion in 2021. 1967: Stuart H. Lessans and wife Ellen of Rockville, Md., recently visited twins Matthew and Faye in Israel where they were studying. This follows their graduations from the Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School. ❖ Allan S. Pristoop of Owings Mills, Md., reports that life is good. 1968: Todd D. Clopper of Wellesley Island, N.Y., is fully retired (for the third time) from the practice of radiology. He winters in Bonita Springs, Fla. ❖ Frank A. Franklin, Jr., and wife Cindy report that they are thriving in Birmingham, Ala. Franklin continues to teach, conduct community health research, and he enjoys improvisational storytelling. Donald H. Hislop 1970s 1970: of Annapolis, Md., reports that retirement is not yet in sight, as he continues to enjoy aerospace medicine. ❖ C. B. Mark of Middle River, Md., is happily retired from the practice of gynecology. He enjoys the Chesapeake Bay as well as Fort Myers Beach, Fla. He and wife Nancy also spend time with their grandchildren. ❖ Robert I. White of Southwick, Mass., retired in January from the practice of urologic surgery. 1974: Edward N. Sherman and wife Gail of Reisterstown, Md., have four grandchildren: Morgan, Madison, Caleb and Wesley. 1975: Kenneth V. Iserson of Tucson, Ariz., published the 9th edition of Iserson’s Getting into a Residency: A Guide for Medical Students. While he continues
his non-clinical teaching at the University of Arizona, Iserson is a member of the permanent faculty at the Vanderbiltinitiated emergency medicine residency program at the Georgetown Public Hospital in Guyana. ❖ Robert Vegors of Jackson, Tenn., received the 2019 Tennessee Outstanding Physician Award from the Tennessee Medical Association, recognizing eight years of service on its board and many more on its committees. He has also given more than 20 years of his time on the Tennessee ACP Council. Vegors continues working full-time as a geriatrician with plans to continue through the decade. 1976: Vincent W. DeLaGarza of Morgantown, W.Va., has retired from family practice and is looking forward to the 50th class reunion in 2026. ❖ Harry Knipp of Reisterstown, Md., reports that son John continues on Google’s Team Pixel where his photos are featured. And, filmed at the Knipp lake house, his recent short film drama Deep Creek is now in submission to various film festivals. ❖ James S. Novick of Baltimore served as president of the Baltimore Medical Society from 2017 to 2018. ❖ Robert N. Pyle of Raleigh, N.C., retired from orthopaedics after 36 years and traveled to Denmark and Sweden for three weeks. 1977: Richard J. Feldman of Edgewater, Md., retired
from his practice of internal medicine and geriatrics. He is enjoying travel, hobbies, and no calls. ❖ Robert T. Fisher of Frederick, Md., retired July 1 after 37 years in the practice of orthopaedic surgery. He and wife Elizabeth are enjoying travel and spending time with their four grandchildren. ❖ Beverli S. Goldberg of Catonsville, Md., has started an energy healing practice, following graduation from the Barbara Brennan School of Healing.❖ Marlene T. Hayman of Rockville, Md., reports that she remains happily retired from the practice of internal medicine and has nearly completed funding of the Marlene Hayman, M.D. ’77 and Kathleen Fitzgibbon, M.D. ’15 Scholarship Endowment at Maryland. She encourages everyone to consider doing something similar because you can’t take it with you. ❖ Martin Herman and wife Lynette of Tupelo, Miss., welcomed their six grandchild in June 2018. Herman has been retired since 2015 and relocated to Tupelo to be closer to Lynette’s family. He reports that retiring was the best move to make for his health and family. He enjoys playing and competing in pickleball events and takes a motorcycle ride now and again. ❖ Gregory N. Pinkerton of Winston Salem, N.C., retired from his hospitalist position on January 1. ❖ David Strobel and wife Kathleen of Ellicott City, Md., announce the birth of their fourth grandchild, Yardley, on January 25. 1978: Charles W. Bennett retired from family practice in his hometown of Lusby, Md., in November 2018. He is now spending more time with wife Gail and family. ❖ Michael Ichniowski of Lutherville, Md., retired from his pediatric practice in August but continues his work with the Maryland chapter of AAP on environmental health issues. ❖ Jacob A. Rosenberg of Moraga, Calif., practices pain management. ❖ Alexis B. Sokil of Merion Station, Pa., reports that daughter Laura is in year one of an orthopaedic residency at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland after graduation from Thomas Jefferson. 1979: Philip
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Barr of Hillsborough, N.C., is on the staff at the Duke University Center for Integrative Medicine as lead physician. ❖ Max D. Koenigsberg of Chicago is an emeritus emergency physician after retiring in November 2017, serving with just one ER for more than 37 years. Son Sam is a second-year medical student at Kansas City College of Osteopathic Medicine. ❖ Richard A. Lebow of Hunt Valley, Md., wishes son Hunter success as he enters Bucknell University. ❖ Owen Lee and wife Elizabeth of Newark, Ohio, are enjoying being grandparents to their new granddaughter. ❖ Peter Rork of Jackson, Wyo., a pilot, recently transported his 12,000th dog at risk for euthanasia. ❖ Harold Wright, Jr., of Riderwood, Md., reports that wife Judy graduated from Loyola University with a master’s degree in pastoral and spiritual care, and daughter Morgan graduated from Columbia University with a master’s degree in nursing. Wright attended World Scout Jamboree 2019 this past summer as a physician. Louis M. Bell of 1980s 1980: Philadelphia is professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania and division chief of general pediatrics and associate chair of the department at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He’s looking forward to the upcoming Reunion. ❖ Michael R. Kessler of Denver is looking forward to the 40th reunion in spring. ❖ John W. Middleton of Westminster, Md., is medical director at Carroll Hospice. ❖ Craig H. Paul of Dallas retired from the practice of internal medicine after 36 years. 1981: Orly Korat of Ocean Ridge, Fla., reports son Eric is serving a cornea fellowship at Cornell Weill Medical College. Husband Larry Feldman is a proud grandfather of Maxwell, who lives in San Antonio with parents Sam and Alexa. ❖ Wayne L. Barber of Owings Mills, Md., reports that son Gregory, ’18, is in his second year of residency training in psychiatry at Maryland. 1983:
University of Maryland
classnotes in memoriam !@ Alfred D. Sparks of Bel Air, Md., reports that daughter Bailey has completed her internship year in internal medicine at the University of Pittsburgh. ❖ Lee M. Stenzler of Stockton, Calif., reports that his oldest son works in Sacramento and his youngest daughter has started college at UCLA. 1987: Donald V. Woytowitz of Wexford, Pa., is teaching in Thailand for six months and remains interested in medicine. Son James works on a co-op from Northeastern University at a biotech firm to cure Hemophilia B. 1989: Jean M. Naples of Suffern, N.Y., is board certified in family medicine and general surgery. William P. Cook 1990s 1990: of Joppa, Md., is president of Saint Agnes Medical Group. ❖ Mary Hoffman is practicing ophthalmology with Wilmington Eye in Southport, N.C. 1993: Kathryn M. Connor of
Flourtown, Pa., has retired. ❖ Marc Hamburger of Clarksville, Md., is excited to report that daughter Emily is a member of Maryland’s medical school class of 2023. 1994: Paul M. Berger of Macungie, Pa., practices urology with St. Luke’s Center for Urology in Allentown. 1995: Avolonne Morgan Kimble of Pearland, Tex., practices pediatrics with the University of Texas Medical Branch. She has two sets of twins ages nine and 16, and for four seasons she has appeared on Outdaughtered, broadcast on TLC. ❖ Lisa Smith of Rochester, N.Y., is president of the Monroe County Medical Society and is looking forward to the 25th class reunion in spring. 1997: George Antonopoulos and wife Alessia of Durham, Conn., have three children: Francesca, age 16 and a junior at Choate Rosemary Hall; Cristina, age 12; and Alexandros, age 10. Antonopoulos is in private practice. 1999: Richard Rosol
Our Medical Alumni Association Mission: The Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc., in continuous operation since 1875, is an independent charitable organization dedicated to supporting the University of Maryland School of Medicine and Davidge Hall. Board Structure: The MAA is governed by a board consisting of five officers and nine board members. Each year more than 100 alumni participate on its seven standing committees and special anniversary class reunion committees. Membership: Annual dues are $85. Dues are complimentary the first four years after graduation and can be extended until the graduate has completed training. Dues are waived for members reaching their 50th graduation anniversary or have turned 70 years of age. Revenues support salaries for two full-time and five part-time employees, as well as general office expenses to
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
maintain the alumni data base, produce the quarterly Bulletin magazine, stage social events for alumni and students, administer a revolving student loan fund, and oversee conservation of Davidge Hall and maintain its museum. Annual Fund: The association administers the annual fund on behalf of the medical school. Gift revenues support student loans and scholarships, lectureships, professorships, capital projects—including Davidge Hall conservation—plus direct support to departments for special projects and unrestricted support to the dean. The Morton M. Krieger, MD, Medical Alumni Center is located on the second floor of Davidge Hall, located at 522 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, MD, 212011636, telephone 410.706.7454, fax 410.706.3658, website www.medicalalumni.org, and email [email protected].
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of Providence, R.I., owns and operates TattooMedics, a practice devoted to laser tattoo removal. He is also writing a TV series and awaiting calls from Amazon and Netflix. Eugenia Robertson 2000s of2002: Severna Park, Md., has moved on to her own personalized medicine primary care practice. 2005: Ni-Cheng Liang, a pulmonologist in San Diego was recently honored as the American Lung Association San Diego Lung Health Provider of the Year, also receiving its inaugural Outstanding Mother Award. She was recognized as a San Diego top doctor in 2017 and 2019. 2008: Alexandra Milloff Butler of Portland, Oreg., is currently on leave as a pediatric hospitalist at Randall Children’s Hospital after being diagnosed with anaplastic oligodendroglioma. After two surgeries and chemotherapy she is working tirelessly to fund research for the disease, serving as a board member for the non-profit Cansano—a unique crowd-funding platform for medical research, as well as with Oligo Nation. Andrew Riggin 2010s 2012: of Easton, Md., is board certified in urology. He and wife Erin celebrated the birth of Teague, their second, in December 2018. ❖ Brian Toan Ngoc Nguyen of Lancaster, Pa., who specializes in physical medicine and rehabilitation, was featured on his local television news station for incorporating card tricks into his bedside manner at Wellspan Surgery and Rehabilitation Hospital. 2015: Shaun Moeller and wife Emily of Baltimore welcomed their second son Henry Robert on July 18. He joins brother George Lewis, who will turn two soon. ❖ Alison P. Williams La Badie and husband Kris live in Glenside, Pa., with three-year-old daughter Lucy. Williams La Badie is a neonatologist who mentors U Penn undergraduate students interested in medicine. 2019: Stephanie M. Hess has begun her residency in emergency medicine at Brown University.
Thomas E. Wheeler, ’45 General Practitioner Towson, Md. June 21, 2019 In 1937, Dr. Wheeler enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve and attended medical school in the accelerated program after World War II began. Upcoming completion of his medical studies, he received training at South Baltimore General Hospital and was assigned to active duty aboard the battleship USS Texas, the destroyer USS Tattnall, and the fleet repair ship USS Cadmus. Wheeler later served at Little Creek Naval Base in Norfolk, Va. Although discharged in 1948, he remained a reservist until 1955, retiring with the rank of lieutenant commander. Wheeler opened a private practice in Randallstown in 1949 where he remained until retirement in 1995. He enjoyed following the Baltimore Colts and Orioles as well as travel. Wheeler was preceded in death by wife Charlotte, one son, and one daughter, and is survived by one son, five grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren. His father, H. Laurance Wheeler, was a 1917 graduate of our medical school. Jack Fine, ’52 Anesthesiology Bradenton, Fla. October 18, 2018 Prior to medical school, Dr. Fine served in the U.S. Navy and was assigned to the USS Sperry during world War II as a diver and pharmacist’s mate. Upon medical school graduation he interned at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore followed by residency training at ColumbiaPresbyterian Medical Center in New York City. He practiced anesthesiology in Baltimore, serving as director of anesthesiology at South Baltimore General Hospital. Fine enjoyed golf and fishing. Survivors include wife Karen, four daughters, and two grandchildren. Charles F. Carroll, ’53 Pathology Concord, N.C. July 2, 2019
Prior to medical school Dr. Carroll enlisted in the U.S. Navy and during World War II served as a radioman on the aircraft carrier USS San Jacinto. Upon medical school graduation and training, Carroll returned to his home state of North Carolina, settling in Concord in 1958 where he served as a pathologist and medical examiner for 39 years at Cabarrus Memorial Hospital and Northeast Medical Center. Carroll enjoyed bridge, carpentry, genealogy, golf, amateur radio, and reading. He and wife Marilyn traveled to all seven continents and later spent winters in Punta Gorda, Fla. Carroll was preceded in death by one son, one daughter-in-law, and one great grandchild. Survivors include Marilyn, six children, 13 grandchildren, and five greatgrandchildren. Henry A. Diederichs, ’55 Anatomic & Clinical Pathology Springfield, Ohio August 3, 2019 Ohio State University Health Center in Columbus was the location of Dr. Diederichs internship, followed by residency training at St. Vincent DePaul Hospital in Norfolk, Va., and with the 10th Medical Laboratory in Landstuhl, West Germany, with the U.S. Army Medical Corps. Dr. Diederichs maintained a fulltime pathology practice and served as director of the clinical laboratory of Grady Memorial Hospital in Delaware, Ohio, until retirement in 2007. He held faculty appointments at Ohio State and Wright State Medical Schools. Diederichs also served as a delegate from Ohio to the College of American Pathologists House of Delegates. He was a member of John Beale Davidge Alliance Silver Circle— Maryland’s recognition society for major donors. Survivors include wife Ardeth, five children, and several grandchildren. George N. Polis, ’55 Internal Medicine Bethesda, Md. September 16, 2019
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Dr. Polis practiced internal medicine in Washington, D.C., for 53 years. He was chief of the division of general internal medicine at Sibley Hospital and was later joined in practice by son Nicholas, ’90. Survivors include wife Angela, four children, eight grandchildren, and one great-grandson. Edward D. Frohlich, ’56 Internal Medicine Metairie, La. August 16, 2019 After graduation Dr. Frohlich interned at Washington, D.C. General Hospital and received residency training at Georgetown University. In 1964, he received a master’s degree in physiology from Northwestern University. He spent five years as a staff physician at the Cleveland Clinic before joining the faculty at the University of Oklahoma. Then from 1976 until retirement, Frohlich was the Alton Ochsner Distinguished Scientist at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation. He was internationally recognized for his investigative work in clinical and experimental hypertension. Frohlich served on numerous editorial boards of peer reviewed journals and was editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical and Clinical Research and Hypertension. He authored more than 1,100 peer reviewed papers, chapters, editorials, and textbooks including Pathophysiology: Altered Regulatory Mechanisms in Diseases. Survivors include wife Sherry, three children, and three grandchildren, Ernest E. Moore, ’58 Family Medicine Cedar Bluff, Va. July 22, 2019 Before practicing family medicine, Dr. Moore served as a captain in the U.S. Army Medical Corps. He practiced in Richlands, Virginia, area until retirement in 2003. He had privileges at Mattie Williams Hospital and also served the Washington Square Clinic. Preceded in death by wife Mary and one granddaughter, Moore is
University of Maryland
in memoriam !@
Jerry Salan, ’60 Cardiovascular Disease & Internal Medicine Waldorf, Md. June 21, 2019 Dr. Salan’s training in internal medicine and cardiology fellowship occurred at Maryland, and afterwards he served as chief resident in medicine. He remained on the faculty after training where he designed and opened the first coronary care unit in the State of Maryland. Salan went into the private practice of cardiology in 1973 at St. Agnes Hospital. From 1979 to 1985, he was on active duty in the U.S. Air Force at Andrews Air Force Base. From 1985 until retirement in 2001, Salan served as medical director for the National Security Agency, designing and implementing several programs including a unique first responder AED training program for NSA security personnel that was implemented worldwide. Survivors include wife, Sandra Zucker Salan, ’66, four children, seven grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren. Kenneth W. Tuttle, ’62 Gastroenterology Gainesville, Ga. October 1, 2018 Thomas J. Porter, ’64 Pediatrics Anchorage, Ala. May 29, 2019 Dr. Porter attended Maryland on the GI bill, as prior to medical school he served in the U.S. Army. In 1961, he joined the U.S. Public Health Service where he remained until 1988. His internship was performed at the USPHS Hospital in Baltimore, followed by two years of residency training in Norfolk, Va. From 1969 to 1971, Porter received residency training in pediatrics at the University of
Medicine Bulletin Fall 2019
Oregon Medical School in Portland. In 1972, he moved to Anchorage to work at the Alaskan Native Medical Center. From 1989 to 2002, Porter was medical director for the State of Alaska Medicaid and finished his career in part-time fashion as a pediatrics consultant with the Social Security Administration. In retirement he collected vintage cars, worked in a motorcycle repair shop, gardened, traveled and provided sanctuary for stray animals. Survivors include four children and five grandchildren. Philip J. Whelan, ’65 Pathology Mechanicsburg, Pa. June 15, 2019 Upon graduation, Dr. Whelan received a rotating internship at St. Agnes Hospital where he remained for residency training. This was interrupted by military service, as he attended the U.S. Navy School of Submarine Medicine from 1967 to 1969. Whelan completed residency and then received fellowship training with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore City. From 1974 until retirement in 2009, he was a pathologist at Maryland General Hospital where he served as chief of pathology from 1986 to 2003. Whelan enjoyed reading, traveling, stamp collecting, gardening, and spending time with family. Survivors include wife Katherine, two daughters, and seven grandchildren. Samuel I. Benesh, ’74 Internal Medicine & Cardiology Baltimore, Md. September 2, 2019 Dr. Benesh received residency training at Maryland and practiced with the Crossroads Medical Group and later MDVIP. He was affiliated with Sinai and Northwest Hospitals. Benesh enjoyed tennis, golf, and classical music. Survivors include wife Elaine, two daughters, one son, and four grandchildren.
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in memoriam !@
survived by two daughters, two sons, four grandchildren, and five greatgrandchildren.
Memorial gifts are warmly received by: Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc. 522 West Lombard Street Baltimore, Maryland, 21201-1636, or for more information simply call 410.706.7454.
John L. Fiore, ’78 Internal Medicine Warwick, N.Y. May 30, 2019 After graduation, Dr. Fiore interned at Westchester Medical Center and received residency training at Hackensack Medical Center. He was certified in internal medicine, geriatrics, and hospice/ palliative care. His private practice in internal medicine spanned 35 years, and Fiore also served as medical director for several nursing homes. Survivors include wife Barbara, five children, and eight grandchildren. Charles E. Chambers, ’81 Interventional Cardiology Hummelstown, Pa. June 9, 2019 After graduation Dr. Chambers received residency training at Fletcher Allen Health Care and became board certified in internal medicine, cardiovascular disease, and interventional cardiology. Chambers was affiliated with several hospitals including Geisinger Medical Center and Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. He rose to the top of his field in the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, creating national standard guidelines for radiation safety. Positions included professor of medicine and radiology, and director of nuclear cardiology. Chambers enjoyed reading, refinishing furniture, and eating at restaurants along the water. Survivors include wife Linda, ’81, three children, and three grandchildren.
#16
in the nation for Cancer Care
Pictured left to right: John A. Olson, Jr., MD, PhD; Kevin J. Cullen, MD; William F. Regine, MD, FACR, FACRO
The UM Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center’s physician-scientists are on the forefront of the treatment and diagnosis of cancer. They invented GammaPod™, irradiating early-stage breast cancer more quickly and less invasively, and aromatase inhibitors. They are the nation’s first to disrupt the blood-brain barrier to offer improved brain tumor treatment. And they are national leaders in advancing CAR-T immunotherapy, equipping patients’ own cells with the healing power to destroy cancer.
Learn more at umgccc.org Visit our Physician Video Channel at physicians.umm.edu
Affiliated with the University of Maryland School of Medicine
Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc.
Morton M. Krieger, MD, Medical Alumni Center 522 West Lombard Street Baltimore, MD 21201-1636 www.medicalalumni.org
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Bu etin Fall 2019
reunion
2020
Mark your calendars!
145th Medical Alumni Reunion May 1-2, 2020 Classes celebrating milestone reunions include: 1955, 1960, 1965, 1970, 1975, 1980, 1985, 1990, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2010, 2015