ALUMNI BULLETIN

effersonJEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE • THOMAS JEFFERSON UNIVERSITY • WINTER 2005 — 06

A Gala Moment Francis E. Rosato, MD and Dorrance H. Hamilton On the cover: Francis E. Rosato, MD and Dorrance H. Hamilton at the Jefferson Gala, held this year on October 6 (see page 35).

Contents 2 Letters

3 Dean’s Column: Disparities in Care

6 On Campus: Pestell Appointed Director of the Kimmel Cancer Center

9 Bookshelf

12 Class Notes

16 Alumni Profiles

17 Achievement Award Winner Jim Bagian, MD’77

18 Helping in Katrina-Ravaged New Orleans

20 Giving

ALUMNI BULLETIN Winter 2005 — 06 Address correspondence to: Jefferson Volume 55, Number 1 Editor, Alumni Bulletin Jefferson Medical College of Editor Thomas Jefferson University Malcolm Clendenin 925 Chestnut Street, Suite 110 Staff Writer Philadelphia, PA 19107-4216 Nikki Senecal 215-955-7920 Design Fax: 215-503-5084 JeffGraphics [email protected] www.jefferson.edu/jmc/alumni/bulletin.cfm Bulletin Committee William V. Harrer ’62, Chair The Jefferson community and supporters are Lori Siegel DePersia ’81 welcome to receive the Bulletin on a regular John J. Gartland S’44 basis; please contact the address above. John H. Moore Jr. GS’85 Postmaster: send address changes to the Robert T. Sataloff ’75 address above. Periodicals postage paid at Philadelphia, PA. ISSN-0021-5821 The quarterly magazine Published continuously since 1922 Message from the President

Looking back at the goals we set for shaped beam for brain tumors, and ourselves when I joined this great institu- our labs are engaged in stem cell research tion in the fall of 2004, I am pleased that will improve the treatment for to report that together we have made Parkinson’s disease. significant progress. A key achievement of the past year has Perhaps most visible is Jefferson’s physical been the recruitment of internationally transformation. We have broken ground recognized leaders in surgery and oncolo- for the Hamilton Building and campus gy. We welcomed Charles J. Yeo, MD as the green which will change not only the look Gross Professor and Chair of Surgery, and of our campus, but also the way our three Richard G. Pestell, MD, PhD as Director of colleges collaborate. It will allow us to the Kimmel Cancer Center. They will add increase the size of the medical college stu- to the strength of our clinical practice and dent body to relieve the predicted national our basic and translational research. shortage of . The project The faculty and administration have creat- Robert L. Barchi, MD, PhD includes the expansion of our state-of-the- art Clinical Skills Center. ed a strategic plan to build on Jefferson’s strengths, while maintaining our compre- Partners in We are also establishing the Jefferson hensiveness in clinical care, and staying Breast Care Center within our 1100 Walnut true to our role of teaching and caring for Achieving Street building. It represents a new para- our region. digm in screening and treatment for breast Excellence cancer, using advanced technology yet We couldn’t have done all these things maintaining a patient-centered approach. without the partnership of our alumni and friends. The names listed in the back of Meanwhile, at the Department of this issue are not just contributors, but and the Jefferson Hospital people who share our commitment to aca- “The faculty and for Neuroscience, we have implemented demic excellence and providing the best environment for educating tomorrow’s administration have healthcare leaders. created a strategic Over the past 15 months I’ve come to plan to build on know many Jefferson alumni, and I’m struck by the breadth and depth of Jefferson’s strengths.” Jefferson pride. We have much to be proud of, and we’re on track to add even more. Sincerely,

Robert L. Barchi, MD, PhD President Thomas Jefferson University 2 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin Send your letters to: Editor, Alumni Bulletin Jefferson Medical College 925 Chestnut Street, Suite 110 Philadelphia, PA 19107-4216 or via our website at: www.jefferson.edu/jmc/alumni/bulletin.cfm LettersIs Losing Something? tory canal, removed the anesthetized bee, In the late 1950s and ’60s, house calls were and, in his eyes, achieved immediate saint- still fairly frequent. When one of my gener- Recently, a fellow who looked somewhat hood. More commonly, my lawn chores al-practice patients was pregnant, it familiar introduced himself and asked if I were postponed by those needing a few seemed to be expected that I would be in remembered him. When I replied that I sutures or a tetanus shot. Over the years, I attendance for the delivery, and would didn’t, he told me that he and his family treated many injuries. Folks still approach plan my days so as to be available. During had been patients of mine 40 years ago. To me to show a healed scar, usually of the my 16 years in practice, I often answered refresh my memory, he told me that one face or hand, and ask with a look of thanks, my own phone and always did so at night. evening his son had become hysterical. He “Do you remember?” said, “I came into your living room where A call to your today usually gets you were playing with one of your own There were more dramatic events. One you a recorded message which tells you to kids. You stopped what you were doing, winter night at 2 am, I found myself treat- go to the ER if you’re really sick, and then took us into your office, treated my son, ing a child who was suffering from croup gives you a menu of computerized infor- and helped us.” I had been in general prac- and in acute respiratory distress. The mation. If you’re lucky a secretary or triage tice at the time, with my medical office circumstances were difficult: I had gone person may speak to you. There’s a lot sep- attached to my home. To be honest I only to see him in a remote home without arating folks from contact with their barely recalled the incident, but he was electricity. Though I always carried a physicians. I wonder if medicine might be still grateful after all those years. It really tracheostomy kit, I had never used it and better if doctors put themselves out a bit made my day! didn’t want to. I asked the father to stoke more, and really got to know families. up the kitchen stove, put on a large kettle I do recall other similar events. Once, while of water, and get an umbrella. Soon, steam I cannot imagine a career more fulfilling I was mowing my lawn, a muscular, vigor- was generated. We held the opened than the one I had because it gave me an ous farmer ran up to me crying like a baby umbrella above the kettle to trap the opportunity to get to know and help peo- and holding his big hand over the side of steam and held the patient under it. It ple. I loved Jefferson Medical College and his head. A bee, still alive, had entered his worked; breathing became easier for the the professors who taught me. I hope that ear. We ran into the office where I sprayed child…and everyone else. the young folks now in med school will get some ethyl chloride into the external audi- to experience such close, fond relation- ships with patients during their careers. When they retire, I hope they get to expe- “I cannot imagine a career more fulfilling than rience someone coming up to them and medicine because it gave me an opportunity asking warmly, “Hey, Doc, do you remem- to get to really know and help people.” ber when you took care of me?” Warren W. Brubaker, MD’54 Hershey, PA

September 29—30

Mark Your Calendar! Alumni Banquet on Friday, Reunion Class Dinners on More Details Sept. 29 at the Union League, Saturday, Sept. 30 at the to Come Broad and Sansom Streets Loews Philadelphia Hotel, 12th and Market Streets

For information, call 215-955-9100, toll-free 1-877-JEFF-GIFT, or email [email protected] September 2005 4 The Dean’s Column

Thomas J. Nasca, MD’75

was asked recently to speak about the anesthesia than men, children more than Ichallenges will face in adults, and upper class individuals more the next 20 years. In my talk I outlined than working class. This went on for longer some of the dramatic changes that will than a generation in the United States, take place over the next two decades, until it was replaced by the uniform couching them in the framework outlined administration of anesthesia based on a by Stephen Hawking in his book The new set of principles. Universe in a Nutshell.1 I reviewed the evo- lution of human DNA; the potential for I relate this story because most of us would more rapid “evolution” based on new consider it morally and professionally genetic technology; and changes in the incomprehensible to withhold anesthesia biomechanical and biodigital interface. I or pain relief from a patient based on gen- looked at what deans in der, age, or social class if the patient was 1975 said about the 20 years that would undergoing the placement of sutures, follow,2 and pointed out that they got most never mind an amputation! Yet, were we of it right, though they were much better at able to go back in time to question these predicting what would not happen than 19th century surgeons, I am sure we would what would happen. find that they truly believed they were pro- viding “quality” care for their patients, In rereading my presentation3 I find, how- individualizing to the needs of ever, that one challenge facing medical each patient. Because of the differential education has not changed over Jefferson’s treatment of African Americans at that entire existence of more than 180 years. It time even in Philadelphia, these disparities is, I believe, the greatest challenge that we extended to race. Not until late in the 19th face as a profession. century did the recognition of the need to alleviate iatrogenic pain in all persons take In a fascinating book that delves into the hold, ending this obvious instance of medical context of the introduction of gen- disparities in healthcare. eral anesthesia in the 19th century, Martin Disparities in Pernick4 explores the differential use of Now I ask you to place yourself 100 years anesthesia during the first 50 years of its into the future, and travel back in time to Care: The introduction into practice. In an exhaus- ask your colleagues of today: “How is it tive review of operative records of surgeons that coronary artery revascularization is Undeniable practicing in Philadelphia and New York provided less to African American male during that period, he summarizes the use patients than to white male patients? How Challenge (or nonuse) of anesthesia in procedures is it that white women are more likely than such as amputations on different sub- African American women to receive breast groups of the population. conserving treatments and reconstruction “Eliminating these for breast cancer? (And there are dozens of The well meaning physicians of the 19th similar questions.) Tell me, my fellow disparities is century utilized anesthesia (or performed physicians and surgeons, can’t you see that perhaps the greatest amputations without anesthesia) based on the differences in care that American med- what they believed to be appropriate vari- icine as a whole is providing have no challenge that we ables. Women were more likely to receive medical justification? Can’t you see that face as a profession.” 4 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin “Largely white and relatively affluent, the population of medical schools continues to lag behind the rest of the population in diversity.”

doctors as a group are failing to discover would be guilty of the conscious provision and root out their underlying biases, and of differential healthcare based on race or therefore you are perpetuating the dispari- gender. Rather, most physicians believe ties in care that have existed for so long?” that it is someone else who is practicing in this fashion, not they. This, of course, I hope that your initial reaction would be, makes the problem very difficult to solve, “Not me! I provide the same level of care to because if the physician cannot recognize all of my patients, regardless of their ability the problem, he or she is not likely to to pay, their gender, or their ethnicity!” modify behaviors. There are undoubtedly physicians out there in whose practices no disparity This leads me to the role of medical educa- based on the factors I suggested could be tion in the problem and in the potential found. However, the national data, solution. Medical education has long been whether by state, by region, or by specialty, regarded as ideal in the United States. is compelling. One does not observe the After all, many of the best and the bright- degree of difference in patterns of care est of our young people enter medicine, without many physicians contributing to and students from all over the world come these disparities. to the US for training. Our teaching hospi- tals, where these students are molded, are The problem is insidious, however, because a major component of the safety net for it is more subtle than the binary decision those citizens who are less fortunate, in regarding provision of general anesthesia. addition to being the quaternary care cen- Few physicians decide not to offer coro- ters for high intensity, research based care.5 nary artery evaluation to any African Indeed, the majority of Medicaid admis- American patients. But many are subtly sions to hospitals occur at the fewer than influenced by obscure, nonmedical factors 20% of hospitals that are teaching institu- that result in a net difference of 5% to 10% tions, and at the roughly 120 major or more in comparison to white patients. academic medical centers associated with The behaviors I am writing about are medical schools. In most cities (including either the subtle minimization of signs or Philadelphia), teaching hospitals have symptoms based on gender or race, or the completely replaced indigent care institu- differential provision of based on tions. In cities such as Chicago or Houston gender or race. These, in aggregate, result where separate county facilities still exist, in disparities in healthcare delivery, dispar- they too are associated with medical schools which provide students, residents, “Ask your colleagues this question: How is and faculty who help care for the indigent. it that coronary artery revascularization One would hope that this environment would be the crucible for a career of com- is provided less to African American male passion and voluntarism for students and residents, a place where they would learn patients than to white male patients?” from their role model faculty the commit- ment to serve all, regardless of social, ities which have been proven to persist racial, or economic makeup. We have long even when we statistically adjust for believed that this environment would economic factors, insurance factors, edu- teach them that each person is unique, of cational factors, location, or access to value, and worthy of their best effort. primary or specialty care. The disparities occur largely at the level of the physician’s Indeed, for many students, that is the les- decision making. son they learn. But what about the unwritten curriculum to which students I do not argue that this is done conscious- and residents are exposed in this setting? ly, systematically, or maliciously. I believe that not a single reader of this column Winter 2005 — 06 5

What message does it send when students It is hard to learn to question the subtle Finally, we must systematically instruct all and residents are encouraged to “learn by biases of our youth when the environment our medical students in the subtle nature doing” in the context of caring for patients of our training appears to reinforce those of biases of all varieties. We must accom- in one setting, yet are not permitted to per- perspectives. plish this through myriad actions – but form the same tasks in a “private practice” chief among these is the recruitment of a setting? What message does it send when What can a medical school do? After all, diverse student body. And chief among the students and residents see palatial private no faculty members or administrators or subpopulations that we must nurture is hospitals in affluent areas, where use by students want to believe that we are prop- the African American male physician. In the poor is discouraged by limitation of agating disparities in healthcare. Medical 2004, only 602 African American men access to physicians, or through limitation students remain some of the most idealis- applied to US medical schools, or 1.54% of of capacity of the emergency room? What tic, kind, and compassionate of young the total pool of applicants.7 We must message does it send when the faculty are people. Our faculty are committed to the bring this population into the mainstream care of all, including the uninsured or of American medicine, along with African underinsured who come to our doors. How American women, Hispanic men and “I do not argue that can we approach the problem of dispari- women, and all other minority groups. ties systematically? this is done consciously, We as doctors are engaged in a social con- systematically, or I believe that there are three major tract. That contract affords us a certain initiatives that must be undertaken simul- status in society, but in return, we are maliciously.” taneously in order to address subtle biases, obligated to provide for all citizens fairly and open the door to correcting the and equitably. disparities that are a blemish on our more directly involved in caring for their profession. These three initiatives are inde- It is the responsibility of each of us to be “private” patients than for their “unas- pendent of the question of universal vigilant about our practices and our teach- signed” patients? healthcare insurance coverage, which ing until disparities in healthcare delivery I fear that some of the students and resi- is beyond the unilateral control of our can be proven to have been eliminated. profession. dents receive a very nonaltruistic lesson: With warm wishes for a bright new year, “We learn on these patients, so we can go First, we must all acknowledge frankly that out and care for those patients when we we may, at times, be guilty of differential are finished training.” decision making based on personal biases Perhaps more insidious are the lessons about race or gender. Second, we must Thomas J. Nasca, MD’75, MACP that we all are unwilling to acknowledge: openly acknowledge this problem with our colleagues, as well as our residents and we all come to medical school with Senior Vice President, students. Our students need to be told the ingrained personal biases based on our life Thomas Jefferson University experiences, our family ethos, and the context of, and importance as a safety net, transmitted biases of our parents and ear- of our teaching institutions. They must Dean, Jefferson Medical College lier role models. Largely white and understand that these institutions do not President, Jefferson University Physicians relatively affluent, the population of med- reflect a desire on the part of physicians to ical schools continues to lag behind the have a two tiered healthcare delivery sys- rest of the population in diversity. Hence, tem, but rather reflect the economic and biases are shared by many of the students social policy of generations of politicians due to their similar backgrounds, socioe- of both parties who have largely ignored conomic status, and life experiences, and the plight of the poor, and failed to system- are subtly reinforced as the group enters a atically provide healthcare as a right to all 6 professional world that also has a similar who live in the United States. background.

References 3. Nasca, Thomas J. Challenges for Medical 5.Hill, LD, Madera, J. The Role of Urban Academic Education to Face over the Next 10 to 20 Years. Medical Centers in US Healthcare. JAMA; 294 (17): 1. Hawking, Stephen. The Universe in a Nutshell. Plenary Session. Council on Medical Education, 2219 — 2220. 2005. Bantam Books, New York. 2001. American Medical Association. Chicago, IL. 6.Gladwell, Malcolm. The Moral Hazard Myth. 2.Keyes, JA, Wilson, MP, Becker, J. The Future of July 19, 2005. The Idea Behind Our Failed Healthcare System. Medical Education: Forecast of the Council of 4.Pernick, Martin S. A Calculus of Suffering. The New Yorker. 43 — 49. August 29, 2005. Deans. J. Med. Ed., 50:318 — 327, 1975. Pain, Professionalism, and Anesthesia in 19th 7. Minority Students in Medical Education. Facts and Century America. Columbia University Press, Figures. Association of American Medical Colleges. New York. 1985. Washington, DC. 2005. 6 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

OnCampusJohns Hopkins Pancreas entific papers, abstracts, and book chap- Dr. Pestell comes to Jefferson from the Specialist Joins Jefferson ters, he serves as associate editor of Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at as Chair of Surgery Current Problems in Cancer. Yeo is the co- Georgetown University in Washington, DC, editor of the encyclopedic Shackelford’s where he was Director. He was also the Preeminent pancreatic cancer surgeon Surgery of the Alimentary Tract, fifth edi- Francis L. and Charlotte Gragnani Charles J. Yeo, MD has been appointed tion, published in five volumes in 2002. He Chair of the Department of at the Samuel D. Gross Professor and Chair of is currently preparing the sixth edition for Georgetown University School of Medicine Surgery. Dr. Yeo was previously Chief of the publication in 2006. and Associate Vice President for Division of General and Gastrointestinal Georgetown University Medical Center. Dr. Surgery at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Pestell has brought a number of researchers Professor of Surgery and Oncology at “Dr. Yeo has focused on with him from Georgetown to Jefferson. the Johns Hopkins University School the evaluation of of Medicine. A specialist in hormone-related cancers, Dr. patients with unusual Pestell works toward novel therapies for pancreatic disorders diseases such as breast and prostate cancer. His current research focuses on developing or complex alimentary treatments that specifically target cancer- tract diseases.” ous cells and reduce side effects associated with common cancer therapies such as He received his MD from Hopkins and chemotherapy and radiation. completed an internship and residency in at the Johns Hopkins In his basic science research, Pestell has Hospital in 1985. That same year he joined made significant contributions to under- the Hopkins faculty as an Instructor, rising standing cell cycle regulation and the through the ranks to Professor of Surgery aberrations that can lead to cells turning by 1996. cancerous. His work is aimed at identify- ing molecular markers of pre-malignant Noted Physician-Scientist disease, in order to develop preventive Named Director of the approaches to cancer. Kimmel Cancer Center At Jefferson, Dr. Pestell will build on the Richard G. Pestell, MD, PhD, an interna- Kimmel Cancer Center’s current strengths tionally renowned expert in oncology and in basic cancer biology research while , has been named Director emphasizing growth in translational and Charles J. Yeo, MD of the Kimmel Cancer Center at Jefferson.

Dr. Yeo has focused on the evaluation and “Dr. Pestell will build management of patients with unusual pancreatic disorders or complex alimenta- on the center’s ry tract diseases, and on surgical strengths in basic intervention in patients with acute or chronic pancreatitis. For more than a research while decade, he directed the Pancreas Cancer emphasizing growth Interdisciplinary Working Group at Johns Hopkins, a multidisciplinary group of clini- in translational cians and scientists interested in and clinical research.” furthering knowledge of pancreas cancer and related tumors. He was named the With this appointment, the cancer pro- John L. Cameron, MD Professor in 2002. grams at Jefferson are being restructured. Dr. Pestell will also serve as Professor and Yeo currently serves on the editorial Chair of the newly created Department of boards of Surgery, the Journal of Cancer Biology, Associate Dean for Cancer Gastrointestinal Surgery, Langenbeck’s Programs at Jefferson Medical College, and Archives of Surgery, and the International Vice President for Oncology Services at Journal of Gastrointestinal Cancer. The Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. author of more than 400 peer reviewed sci- Richard G. Pestell, MD, PhD Winter 2005 — 06 7

William M. Keane, MDJohn Ogunkeye Jeffrey Benovic, PhD Tim Manser, PhD Scott Waldman, MD, PhD clinical research. He will also focus on cancers. Under his leadership Jefferson’s and Molecular Biology. Dr. Benovic studies expanding Jefferson’s programs in cancer residency training program in otolaryngol- G protein-coupled receptors, a class of diagnosis and treatment. ogy has earned national renown. proteins that control many biological processes, including nerve cell signal Dr. Pestell’s record of research funding is Dr. Keane received his MD from Harvard transmission, sensory perception, devel- outstanding; his current support, includ- Medical School and completed a residency opment, and cardiovascular and immune ing five National Institutes of Health R01 in otolaryngology at the University of response. These receptors are targets for grants, totals more than $20 million. Pennsylvania, where he remained as a approximately one-half of the drugs cur- He previously was Professor in the member of the full time faculty until rently on the market. His research focuses Department of Medicine and accepting the chairmanship at Jeff in 1991. on understanding how these receptors are Developmental and Molecular Biology at He has been awarded both the Certificate regulated, and how problems with this reg- the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in of Honor and the Distinguished Service ulation can contribute to disease, New York, where he stayed until going to Award by the American Academy of including cancer and various cardiovascu- Georgetown in 2002. Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. lar, neurological, and endocrine disorders. A native of Australia, Dr. Pestell was a Chief Operating Officer Tim Manser, PhD has been named Chair postdoctoral clinical and research fellow in of the Medical College and of the Department of Microbiology and medicine at Massachusetts General JUP Executive Director . Dr. Manser is investigating Hospital and Harvard Medical School from John Ogunkeye has been appointed to the how the activity of B lymphocytes, the 1991 to 1993. newly created position of Chief Operating white blood cells that produce antibodies, Physician Director of Jefferson Officer at Jefferson Medical College. He will contributes to human health and disease. University Physicians continue in his role as Executive Director Normally, these cells help fight viral and and Vice President for Business Affairs at bacterial infections. When the cells go William M. Keane, MD, the Herbert Kean Jefferson University Physicians. awry, autoimmune diseases such as sys- Professor and Chair of Otolaryngology- temic lupus erythematosus (lupus) and B Head and Neck Surgery, has been “John’s apointment has been designed to lymphocyte cancers such as chronic lym- appointed to the additional role of strengthen the alignment of the college’s phocytic leukemia can result. Dr. Manser Physician Director of Jefferson University business functions with that of JUP and TJU,” hopes to discover the key genes regulating Physicians (JUP). This is a multispecialty explained Thomas J. Nasca, MD’75, Dean B lymphocyte activity, and how changing physician practice consisting of the full of the Medical College and President of the expression of these genes contributes to time faculty of Jefferson Medical College. Jefferson University Physicians. autoimmune disease and cancer – perhaps JUP is a nonprofit supporting organization leading to more effective vaccines and ther- of Thomas Jefferson University. At the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine/University of Chicago apies for infectious diseases, as well as new In his new role, Dr. Keane will report to Hospitals, Mr. Ogunkeye served as diagnostic tests and therapies for autoim- Thomas J. Nasca, MD’75, Dean of Jefferson Executive Administrator in the mune diseases and B lymphocyte cancers. Medical College, and be responsible for Department of Surgery from 1995 to 1997. Scott Waldman, MD, PhD’80 has overseeing the JUP practice plan and He has also held positions at the University been named Chair of the newly formed implementing new initiatives for the clini- of Texas Health Sciences Center in Department of Pharmacology and cal practices. He will continue to serve as Houston and at Baylor College of Medicine. Experimental Therapeutics. Much of Dr. Chair of Otolaryngology. Department Chairs Waldman’s research is aimed at detecting Dr. Keane is one of the country’s leading Jeffrey Benovic, PhD has been named the recurrence of advanced colorectal experts on the treatment of head and neck Chair of the Department of Biochemistry cancer, the second leading cause of 8 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

cancer-related death in the United States. System, which is produced by a company Calendar Armed with a five year, $5.6 million grant in California. Ed Trabulsi, MD, U’01, a from the National Cancer Institute, he is urologic oncologist who is an expert in February 22 leading a clinical trial of more than 2,000 laparoscopic prostatectomy, and Costas Alumni Executive Committee meeting patients with colorectal cancer to see if Lallas, MD’98, who completed a robotic at Jefferson Alumni Hall a blood test that he and his colleagues surgery fellowship at the Mayo Clinic in March 5 developed, and which is based on detect- Scottsdale as well as a residency at Duke, Alumni reception at the annual meeting of the American Academy ing the protein that causes traveler’s will lead Jefferson’s first robotic efforts. of , San Francisco, at diarrhea, is a better early detection system the Marriott Hotel than current methods. Testing for the pro- Initially, the robot will assist Department March 8 tein has been shown to be an effective tool of surgeons in performing radical Alumni reception in northern New in determining the extent of a patient’s col- prostatectomies-the most common robot- Jersey, at the Bridgewater Marriott orectal cancer, particularly whether or not ic surgery. More than 8,000 prostate glands March 10 it has spread to the lymph nodes. were removed robotically in 2004, up from Parents Day for the sophomore just 36 in 2000. class at Jefferson Medical College Dean Nasca to Receive the March 22 2006 Daley Founders Award In such procedures, the surgeon’s hands Class Agents Dinner at from the Program Directors never enter the patient. After the initial Jefferson Alumni Hall in incisions are made, robotic arms wielding March 24 a tiny camera and surgical tools make the Alumni reception at the annual The Association of Program Directors in cuts, stanch the blood flow, and sew up meeting of the American Academy Internal Medicine (APDIM) has announced when all is done. The surgeon sits at a con- of Orthopaedic Surgeons, Chicago, that Thomas J. Nasca, MD’75, Dean of at the Four Seasons Hotel sole (see photo) peering at magnified Jefferson Medical College, will receive the views relayed from a camera inside the April 12 2006 APDIM Dema C. Daley Founders Alumni reception in Wilmington, DE, patient. The doctor guides the robot’s at the Wilmington Country Club Award. Dr. Nasca served on the APDIM work with his wrists, fingers, and feet. Council from 1992 to 2001, and was the April 19 Annual business meeting of the Alumni association’s President in 2000. Association, Jefferson Alumni Hall The Dema C. Daley Founders Award hon- April 20 ors a member of the internal medicine Alumni reception in Wilkes-Barre, PA, at the Fox Hill Country Club community recognized nationally as an educator, innovator, and leader. Past May 4 Alumni reception in Pittsburgh, at recipients’ contributions have reshaped the Duquesne Club undergraduate and graduate medical edu- June 10 — 14 cation and the development of training AMA meeting, Chicago, including a programs in internal medicine. Jefferson reception In 2003, APDIM dedicated the award to June 16 Alumni reception in central Dema C. Daley who served as APDIM Pennsylvania, at the Lancaster Executive Director from 1987 to 2000 and By enhancing surgical capabilities, this robot Country Club as Executive Vice President until her death is helping to improve clinical outcomes and August 4 in 2003. standards of care. Results include reduced White Coat Ceremony for the incoming trauma to the body, reduced blood loss and class at Jefferson Medical College Dean Nasca was also recently named a need for transfusions, less postoperative September 29 — 30 Master of the American College of pain and discomfort, shorter hospital stays, Reunion Weekend 2006 Physicians, an honor given to only a small and less scarring. Alumni Banquet on Friday, September fraction of ACP members. 29 at the Union League, Broad and Leonard Gomella, MD, Chair of Urology, Sansom Streets Robotic Surgery Is the Latest notes, “Jefferson was the first institution in Jeff Innovation in the OR the Delaware Valley to offer laparoscopic Reunion Class Dinners on Saturday, September 30 at the Loews Hotel, More and more minimally invasive surger- prostatectomy and we have the most 12th and Market Streets ies are being performed by doctors guiding experience in the region.” Events hotline 215-955-9100 robotic arms by remote control. This fall In the future, Jefferson may use the device Toll-free 1-877-JEFF-GIFT Jefferson joined the fewer than 200 hospi- for cardiothoracic and . [email protected] tals worldwide to host the daVinci Surgical Winter 2005 — 06 9 Bookshelf

Avoiding Common The Quality Solution: Economic Evaluation in Stalking Microbes: A Relentless Neonatal Surgical Errors The Stakeholder’s Guide to U.S. Health Care: Principles Pursuit of Infection Control Edited by Eric Werner Edited by Lisa Marcucci Improving Health Care and Applications Richard P. Wenzel Cambridge University Press and Michael Moritz Edited by David B. Nash Laura T. Pizzi and Author House ISBN: 0521780705 Lippincott Williams and Neil I. Goldfarb Jennifer H. Lofland ISBN: 1420820060 and Wilkins Jones and Bartlett Publishers Jones and Bartlett Publishers ISBN: 0781747422 ISBN: 0763727482 ISBN: 0763727466

Lisa Marcucci, MD’91, an attending measurement and improvement. With sonal experiences of this renowned spe- surgeon in trauma and critical care at contributions by an experienced panel of cialist in microbial disease treatment and Geisinger Medical Center, and Michael authors, The Quality Solution profiles ini- control. Stalking Microbes is an account of Moritz, MD, TRP’86, Chief of Transplan- tiatives by healthcare consumers, payers, a physician who listens to patients in order tation Services at Lehigh Valley Hospital in providers, and employers, and examines to make the right diagnosis and “listens to” Allentown, PA, were two of the three editors how they can work together to improve the organisms to understand the causes of of Avoiding Common Surgical Errors. quality. Both this book and Economic epidemics. In 2001, the National Institutes Directed toward attending physicians, Evaluation in U.S. Health Care (see below) of Health named him one of 10 “Great residents, interns, nurse practitioners, and are used in the MPH program at Jefferson. Teachers” in the category of clinical medi- physician assistants, this pocket-sized book cine. He also was among the leading Laura T. Pizzi, PharmD, MPH, Associate lists 186 errors commonly made when commentators on the SARS outbreak and Jennifer H. working with surgical patients on the Director of Research, and was at the forefront of the national debate ward or in the operating room, Lofland, PharmD, MPH, PhD, Research on smallpox vaccination. Dr. Wenzel will emergency room, or intensive care unit. Assistant Professor in the Department of be President of the International Society Each entry includes an explanation of the Health Policy at Jefferson Medical College, for Infectious Diseases from 2006 to 2008. clinical scenario in which the error can have published Economic Evaluation in U.S. Eric Werner, MD’78, Professor and occur, as well as the relevant anatomy and Health Care: Principles and Applications. Director of Pediatric Hematology/ Oncology pathophysiology. Illustrations of pertinent The steady flow of new pharmaceuticals at the Eastern Virginia Medical School, is instruments and devices are provided, with- and new technology has provided clinicians one of two editors of Neonatal Hematology. in an easy-to-follow format that lists what with an arsenal of effective treatments and Written by practicing physicians specializ- to do, what to do next, what not to do, what diagnostic techniques. However, these ing in pediatric hematology, , to look out for, and signs and symptoms. On interventions come at a price. Based on the immunology, pediatric infectious disease, the web, see surgeryandyou.com. core principles of pharmacoeconomics, this text provides an overview of the methodolo- and , this is a practical David B. Nash, MD, MBA, the Grandon gies that can be applied to both drug guide to the pathogenesis, recognition, and Professor and Chair of Health Policy, and and nondrug interventions, offering health management of hematologic problems. The Neil I. Goldfarb, Program Director for professionals a solid foundation for focus is on clinical issues. Chapters are Research in the Department of Health understanding, interpreting, and applying devoted to disorders of leukocytes, Policy at Jefferson, edited The Quality the tools of economic evaluation. platelets, procoagulant and anticoagulant Solution: The Stakeholder’s Guide to proteins, and disorders of red blood cells. Richard P. Wenzel, MD’65 Improving Health Care. Addressing the , Professor and Neonatal transfusion, malignant disorders “emergency” of poor quality, Chairman of Internal Medicine at the in the newborn, neonatal hemoglobinopa- this book seeks to enlighten and challenge Medical College of Virginia, Virginia thy screening, and harvesting and storage of professionals in public health, medicine, Commonwealth University, has published umbilical-cord stem cells are also covered. health administration, and health law to Stalking Microbes: A Relentless Pursuit of This book updates Frank Orski and participate in the transformation of the Infection Control. This book is a collection Lawrence Naiman’s Hematologic Problems system through the science of quality of eight popular essays describing the per- in the Newborn. 10 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

InMemoriamPaul O. Blake ’29, the last sur- Hospital in Danville, PA and later then at Suburban Hospital in Francis E. Gilbertson ’49 viving member of his class, died at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Washington, DC. died August 10. A Fellow of the July 25, 2005 at age 102. He prac- MN. He is survived by a daughter. American College of Surgeons, ticed in Joseph P. Mudd Jr. ’46 died he was on staff at Riverview Lansdowne, PA and was on staff Page W. Acree J’44 died September 16, 2004. He lived and Hospital in Red Bank, NJ and at at Delaware County Memorial September 29, 2005. He practiced practiced medicine in Jackson, Monmouth Medical Center in Hospital and Haverford Hospital. in Baton Rouge, LA where he AL for over 40 years. He is Long Branch. He also served as Dr. Blake saw active duty in performed the first coronary survived by his wife, Shirley, an Instructor in Surgery at New World War II. He became a vol- artery bypass in the area. He and three daughters. York University School of served as President of the unteer faculty member at John S. Walker ’46 died Medicine. He is survived by Jefferson. He is survived by his Louisiana Heart Association in his wife, Susan. 1965 and was a Clinical Assistant March 15, 2005. He practiced wife, Mildred, two daughters, a in Winston-Salem, NC. stepdaughter, and a son. Professor of Surgery at Tulane Robert A. McKinley ’51 died University School of Medicine. He is survived by his wife, Chieko, September 17. He spent 14 years J. Thompson Millington Sr. He is survived by his wife, Gail, a two daughters, and two sons. on the staff at New York ’36 died April 19. He was in gen- daughter, and a son. James T. Helsper ’47 died Hospital, Westchester Division. eral practice in Wilkes-Barre, PA He then joined the New York Richard S. Refowich J’44 September 24, 2005. He was and served as a medical officer in Professor of Clinical Surgery at State Mental Health System and World War II. In 1954 he was died January 17. He served as served as the founding director Chief of Dermatology at both St. Norris Cancer Hospital and the appointed to a position in the University of Southern California of the Elmira, NY Psychiatric Pennsylvania Department of Luke’s and Muhlenberg Center. He later directed the Hospitals, Bethlehem, PA. He is School of Medicine in Los Health, retiring in 1976. He is Angeles. He is survived by his mental health unit at Saratoga survived by a son and a daughter. survived by his wife, Bernice, a Hospital. He is survived by two son, and a daughter. wife, Carolyn, three sons, and a Son J. T. Millington Jr. is a daughter. sons and two daughters. 1969 Jefferson graduate. Robert W. Hamill ’45 died George M. Meier ’51 died May September 6, 2003. He was a staff Thomas W. Moran Jr. ’47 Leon J. Armalavage ’38 died died June 3, 2004. A Fellow of the 27, 2005. A general practitioner December 13, 2004. Following physician in internal medicine at in Butler, NJ, he was on staff at St. Luke’s Hospital, Kansas City, American College of Surgeons, he World War II military service in was Chief of Surgery at the Chilton Memorial Hospital and which he was awarded a Bronze KS. He is survived by his wife, served on the Butler, NJ, Board of Martha, and four sons. Latrobe Area Hospital, a position Star, he practiced orthopaedic formerly held by his father, T.W. Health. He is survived by his surgery in northwest Indiana James H. Lee Jr. ’45 died Moran Sr., Jefferson 1899. He is wife, Charlotte, a son, and a until retiring in 1977. He was a July 22, 2005. From 1946 to 1967, survived by his wife, Mary, two daughter. past President of the Porter Dr. Lee was a naval medical offi- daughters, and a son. F. Price Peck Jr. ’52 died County Medical Society. He is cer, concluding his career as survived by his wife, Theola, two Millard N. Croll ’48 died June 13. He served as Director Chief of -Gynecology of Regulatory Affairs, Eli Lilly sons, and two daughters. at the Philadelphia Naval Base. August 5, 2005. He served as Chief of at Company, and was Senior John A. Moir ’40 died July 4, He then became involved in Physician at the Lilly Clinic in medical administration and Hahnemann University School 2005. He was in general practice of Medicine in Philadelphia, Indianapolis. He also served as a in Cape May Courthouse, NJ and medical education. He was Clinical Associate Professor of Professor and Chairman of the retiring in 1987, and was co- also was the physician for four editor of the textbook at Indiana University. area schools. He is survived by Department of Obstetrics and He is survived by his wife, Sally, Gynecology at Jefferson from . He is survived his wife, Kristina, a son, and a by his wife, Diane, a son, and and two sons. daughter. 1975 to 1987. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery a daughter. Charles Hal Chaplin ’53 died William H. Robinson III ’40 near Washington, DC with full G. Barrett Heckler ’48 died June 15, 2004. He practiced in died July 12. He practiced and military honors. He is survived July 13. He served as Director Charlotte, NC where he was taught at the by his wife, Bonnie, two sons, of the Department of Medicine Chief of the Department of Menninger Clinic, Topeka, KS. He and a daughter. at Delaware Hospital in at Charlotte is survived by his wife, Thelma, a Memorial Hospital. He was also Charles E. Bickham Jr. ’46 Wilmington. He was a Clinical son, and a daughter. Associate Professor of Medicine the founding President of the died September 22, 2003. A North Carolina Society of Plastic Thomas K. Hepler ’41 at Jefferson. He is survived by his died Fellow of the American College and Reconstructive Surgeons. He June 27, 2003. He was a patholo- of Radiology, he served as Chief wife, Christine, two sons, and a daughter. is survived by his wife, Anne, two gist at Geisinger Memorial of Radiology at Doctors Hospital, sons, and a daughter. Winter 2005 — 06 11

J. Mostyn Davis ’57 died Murray C. Davis III ’66 died Roy Grossman ’76 of Napa, Edwin Sekula died August 20. February 11, 2005. He practiced September 19. He practiced in CA and his 17 year old daughter For 42 years, he worked in family medicine in Shamokin, PA Wellsboro, PA and was on staff at Claire died August 31 when their Jefferson’s Department of for 25 years. A Fellow of the Soldier’s and Sailor’s Memorial Piper Super Cub crashed. Dr. , first as an assistant in American Academy of Family Hospital. He is survived by his Grossman had been a skilled animal experimentation for can- Practice, he later returned to the wife, Marybeth, two daughters, pilot for 25 years. The retired cer research. Later, he assisted Geisinger Clinic to assist in edu- and a son. emergency room physician and professors in the pathology cating residents. He served as outdoor enthusiast was return- course for medical students. President of the Pennsylvania Susan J. Gordon ’66 died July ing from vacation in Jackson While distributing handouts for Academy of Family Physicians in 16. She was a member of Hole, WY. Dr. Grossman is Professor Gonzalo Aponte Jefferson’s faculty from 1971 1957, and in 1989 was voted survived by his wife, Morgan, ’52, he would offer warm greet- Pennsylvania Family Doctor of through 1998. She then became a daughter, and two sons. ings and encouragement to the the Year. He is survived by his Chief of at medical students. They recog- Shane Jarred Litvin ’98 wife, Darthy, three daughters, Graduate Hospital in died nized his kindness and love for and two sons. Philadelphia. She is survived by April 13, 2005. He had been a Jefferson by presenting him with her husband, Leif Hovstaidius. resident in general surgery at a formal photograph. He is sur- Charles Hastings ’57 died Lankenau Hospital, Wynnewood, William D. Jones ’66 died vived by his wife, Mary, four September 14, 2005. He practiced PA. He is survived by his parents, daughters, and five sons. at the Kaiser Medical Center, March 19, 2004. He practiced Sharyn and Alan Litvin, and Santa Clara, CA, and served as at Hartford sister Tara. Abigail Adams Silvers, MD President of the Santa Clara Hospital, Hartford, CT, died June 18. She was Chief of Heart Association and the Santa Connecticut Children’s Hospital, Postgraduate the Oncology Service at Bryn and Manchester Memorial Clara Diabetes Society. He is John F. McGuire NS’53 died Mawr Hospital, Bryn Mawr, PA, Hospital. He is survived by his survived by his wife, Suzanne, May 7, 2005. He was a clinical from 1982 to 1993, and a Clinical wife, Fran, two sons, and two three sons, and two daughters. faculty member in neurosurgery Assistant Professor of Medicine daughters. at Wayne State University School at Jefferson. She is survived by Charles L. Deardorff Jr. ’61 of Medicine in Detroit, and at the her husband, Willys, a son, and a died August 15. He was a Fellow Robert D. Rockfeld ’68 died University of Michigan Medical daughter. of the American College of June 13, 2005. He was a Fellow School in Ann Arbor. He is sur- Surgeons. He served with the of the American Academy of vived by his wife, Marion, and George Strong, MD died Seventh MASH Unit in Vietnam. Orthopaedic Surgeons. He was three daughters. January 1, 2005. Dr. Strong joined He was on staff at St. Joseph’s Chief of Orthopaedics, Gwinnett Jefferson Medical College as an Clinic, Liburn, GA and held an Hospital, Lancaster, PA and con- Patricia M. Shovlin FP’85 Associate in Urology in 1946, and appointment at the Shallowford ducted a surgical practice until died July 19, 2005. She had been a served as a distinguished mem- Hospital. He is survived by 1998. He is survived by his wife, family practitioner in Fairfield, CA. ber of the department until his Carol, two daughters, and a son. three sons. retirement in 1985. Dr. Strong was considered a superb techni- Michael J. Scrak ’63 died Thomas M. Bryan ’71 died Faculty & Staff William E. Kelly, MD died cian and teacher, contributing to September 18. He conducted a August 10, 2004. He served as April 30, 2002. He was a Clinical the education of generations of solo general practice, including Director of the Kline Family Professor of Psychiatry at urologists practicing locally and house calls, in Stroudsburg, PA Practice Center, Harrisburg Jefferson Medical College. He nationally. Well known for his for 30 years. He is survived by his Polyclinic Hospital, Harrisburg, is survived by a son and two work in bladder and prostate wife, Dolores, a son, and a PA, and was a Fellow of the daughters. cancer, his research led to the daughter. American Academy of Family Practice. He is survived by a famous Jewitt-Strong Simon Polan, MD died May 12, Thomas D. Sheppard ’65 son and a daughter. Classification of Bladder Tumors, 2005. He practiced psychiatry in died July 3. He was a Fellow of a predecessor to the TNM classi- Philadelphia and was a preceptor the American Academy of Jonathan J. Rogers ’74 died fication system for cancer which in the psychiatry residency Orthopaedic Surgeons. He prac- July 13, 2005. He was a Fellow is widely used today. He estab- program at Jefferson Medical ticed in Newton, NJ and had staff of the American Academy of lished the Potamkin Strong College for a number of years. He privileges at Newton Memorial Orthopaedic Surgeons. He served Urology Research Fund that has is survived by a son and a daugh- Hospital. He is survived by his as Chief of Orthopaedic Surgery, provided support to the depart- ter. Daughter Ruth Polan Aruj wife, Donna, and two sons. Chestnut Hill Hospital, ment for over 20 years. Dr. Philadelphia. He is survived by is Jefferson ’76. Strong was awarded the Jefferson his wife, Donna, and four sons. Urology Faculty Founders Award last October. 12 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

’45 ’60 ’75 ClassNotesAvery McMurry is still the Edward Lipp is still practicing R. Ted Veve is proud to note residents from Jeff, Penn, Temple, Continuing Medical Education hand surgery three days a week that his son Daniel started at and the Philadelphia College of Coordinator at Cleveland in Vancouver, WA, and reports Jefferson in August 2005, as a Osteopathic Medicine to present Regional Medical Center in that he just had a grandson member of the class of 2009. He their research. During his Shelby, NC, and also serves on (Jefferson class of 2026?). will be the fourth Veve to attend presidency, Squadrito invited the Cancer Committee, even Jefferson, and the seventh family Jefferson alumni to present to after seven years of “retirement.” ’61 member. the organization including Judd Elliott Perlin is currently Moul ’82, Chief of Urology at ’50 working part time at George ’76 Duke, and Michael Grasso Richard S. Tenn of Las Vegas is Washington University Medical Gary Purdue is currently the ’86, Chief of Urology at Saint distinguished in his continuous Center in hematology/medical Director of the Burn Center at Vincent Medical Center in New support of Jefferson’s Annual oncology. The rest of the time he Parkland Memorial Hospital in York. Another speaker was for- Fund. Even when he was earning is playing tennis or senior soft- Dallas, Professor of Surgery mer Jeff faculty member Sandip just $300 per month as a surgical ball, bowling, painting, sculpting, at the University of Texas Vasavada, MD, now Co-Head of resident, he contributed to or completing a book of poetry. Southwestern Medical School, the Section of Female Urology Jefferson. He is the nephew of He and wife Carole have four and President of the American and Voiding Dysfunction at the Fook H. Tong ’30 and the children, including Daniel Burn Association. Cleveland Clinic. father of David T. Tenn ’82. Perlin ’93. ’80 ’81 ’52 ’62 Willis Boyd is employed by Marlon Maus is starting his Jerome Lebovitz of Pittsburgh Joseph W. Sokolowski Jr. Siemens AG as an implementa- third year in the doctoral pro- is still working three days a week has been elected President of the tions consultant in computerized gram in public health at and loving it, but also finds time National Association for Medical physician order entry, having UC-Berkeley. for lots of golf. Direction of Respiratory Care, switched from clinical ob/gyn to an organization of physicians healthcare information technolo- ’82 ’54 formed to address regulatory, gy in 2000. William Bryan Gamble was Joseph Abbott legislative, and payment issues installed as Commander of the of Newtown James L. Sechler remains in their field. Landstuhl Regional Medical Square, PA and his wife Bunny busy with his private Center in Germany, the largest have moved into a lifetime care practice, focusing on heart fail- ’68 American hospital outside the retirement community and ure, in a busy 10-physician group Stephen Kozloff is now US, on August 4. Colonel Gamble "enjoy it very much." in Parma, OH. He and his wife at Geisinger Medical Center has been on active duty in the recently returned from two in Danville, PA as supervisor army for 18 years, and is proud to ’56 weeks in Scotland. Paul Drucker is living in Boca of the ob/gyn residents’ have been chosen to lead one of Raton, FL after having spent continuity clinic. James F. Squadrito recently the busiest medical centers dur- many years practicing ob/gyn in completed a two year term as ing a critical time for the military. Edison, NJ. He is quite active in ’70 President of the Philadelphia community and charitable Christie Goeggel Lamping Urologic Society, one of the ’87 organizations. has lived on Oahu with her oldest urologic educational Jim Jenson is the Training brother and his family since her organizations in the country Director for Child and ’58 husband passed away in 2002. with members from all over the Adolescent Psychiatry at the Delaware Valley. Squadrito Morren Greenburg is still She works at Pearl Harbor Medical College of Wisconsin. presided over the organization’s working full time at Community Makalapa Clinic. four annual meetings of the Clinic in Heritage, PA. He and his ’91 general membership, including a wife are both competitive run- ’71 Francis H. Gannon has been continuing medical education ners in senior programs and have James Barone is Chairman of named Chair of the Department conference. Meeting topics achieved All American status in Surgery at Lincoln Hospital in of Orthopaedic Pathology at ranged from clinical issues to sprints. Dr. Greenburg also the Bronx, NY. “It is very busy, the Armed Forces Institute of societal questions such as coaches track and serves on the exciting, and rewarding work.” Pathology in Washington. malpractice reform, physician local school board. Gannon has served as acting unions, and Medicare changes. chair since 2004, and Chair of the The organization also hosts a Department of Repository and View Reunion Photos Online residents’ night, which allows To view photos of the October 2005 reunions — and to order some Research Services since 2001. for yourself — please visit the website www.vtiphoto.com/gallery and login with username tju and password tju (use lowercase letters). Winter 2005 — 06 13

’93 In 2003 Gannon was awarded Theresa Bell recently opened a 2004, Ali has been living in Port the Meritorious Civilian Service new office in Galloway, NJ, where au Prince, Haiti, training health Award by the AFIP, and was she practices outpatient psychi- care providers on the use of recognized as its Employee of atry. She lives in Galloway Highly Active Antiretroviral the Year in 2000. He has recently Township with her husband Jon Therapy in patients living with received the Commander’s and their three sons, Shane, HIV/AIDS. She will remain in Award for distinguished service Conor, and Kevin. Haiti until June 2008. to the institution. 95 Jeffrey Morrison has opened a In addition to serving as a ’ solo family practice office on Swati Shah reviewer for Clinical wrote prior to Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Orthopaedics and Related Hurricane Katrina that she had a Loyola Recognizes Research and the Journal of busy ob/gyn practice in New Andrew Woldorf is an Slogoff with Its Orthopaedic Research, Gannon Orleans and had decided to go ophthalmologist specializing in Stritch Medal is a member of the International back to school to pursue her retina surgery in central Florida. MPH at Tulane’s School of Public He married Lauren Gendil Stephen Slogoff ’67 was Academy of Pathology and the Health. But Katrina forced her to Woldorf in October 2004. honored with the Stritch Medal International Skeletal Society. He at the annual award dinner of has lectured around the world. evacuate “for the first time ever.” the Loyola University Chicago She has now returned to New ’97 Stritch School of Medicine. The Maria Sophocles is living on Orleans after six weeks away, and Steven A. Johnson medal recognizes outstanding Lake Como in northern Italy with is working to rebuild her practice practices as a general surgeon at service by a graduate or facul- her husband and four children. with the help of the corpora- Christiana Hospital in Newark, ty member. She is taking a break from prac- tion/hospital for which she DE. After serving as Chief Dr. Slogoff is a Professor of tice until their return to the US. works. That hospital, Touro, is Administrative Surgical Resident , retiring Dean the only one that has reopened at Jefferson, he completed a one of the Stritch School of ’92 in the city. Her plans for her year fellowship in trauma and Medicine, and Senior Vice Steven H. Brown and his wife MPH degree are temporarily on critical care surgery at the President for Clinical Affairs hold as all schools have been at Loyola University Health Sandy are pleased to announce University of Maryland’s R. closed for the fall semester. But System. “It’s a humbling the birth of their daughter, Mia Adams Cowley Shock Trauma experience to win an award of Danielle, on November 22, 2004. she declares, “I am among those Center in Baltimore. While there, this stature,” he said. “I am She joins sister Alexandra Nicole who do plan to stay and help he was named a Shock Trauma honored to be part of a series and brother Jacob Hunter. The rebuild this city.” Hero for his work in operating on of medalists with truly distin- family lives in West Hartford, CT. an undercover Baltimore police guished backgrounds.” ’96 officer shot in the line of duty. He Christopher Olbrich has After 12 years at the Douglas Hoffman is Chief of was also named the most out- Maywood campus, Slogoff will recently been named Chairman Pediatric Care at Boston Medical standing trauma fellow. His be remembered for putting a of the Department of Pediatrics Center and Assistant Professor of special interests include preven- new emphasis on standards: at the University of Pittsburgh-St. Pediatrics at Boston University tion of violence and injury and implementing core competen- Margaret Hospital. School of Medicine. He lives with cies that not only tested complex gastrointestinal surgery. students’ clinical knowledge, William Sukovich has been his wife Tera and their two At Christiana Hospital, he is a but also their communication promoted to the rank of com- daughters, Alex and Sarah, in full time faculty member and skills, professionalism, and mander in the US Navy. He Newton, MA. Associate Program Director of commitment to service. For recently returned from a six the general surgical residency. Dr. patients, he developed pro- Alysa Krain holds a faculty month deployment to Kuwait, Johnson also received the acco- grams aimed at improving affiliation as an Assistant lade of Trauma Attending of the safety, including a paperless where he served in an expedi- Professor of Medicine at Cornell medical records system. tionary medical facility supporting Year. He lives in Hockessin, DE Weill Medical College in New with his wife and two daughters. Slogoff even called upon Operation Iraqi Freedom. York. After completing her infec- every staff member and Commander Sukovich is Director tious disease and preventative physician to sign a contract of Orthopaedic Spine Surgery at ’00 regarding patient safety. medicine fellowships at Mount the Naval Medical Center in Sinai Medical Center in New Brian Lally is doing a fellow- The author of more than 50 Portsmouth, VA. He resides in York, she worked in Manhattan ship in translational radiation scientific articles, abstracts, Chesapeake with his wife Kristen for two years treating patients oncology at Wake Forest and book chapters, Slogoff is and their five children. University-Baptist Medical best known for the 1984 living with HIV/AIDS. Since June landmark, multi-institutional continued page 40 14 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Alumni Spotlight

Blazing a Trail to that owned the medical school began emerging shortly after the Highest Levels she took the position, and in 1998, the medical school was caught up in one of the largest healthcare bankruptcies ever. When Barbara F. Atkinson graduated from One of the accrediting authorities who came to call on the Jefferson Medical College school expected to find chaos. Instead, William Neaves found in 1974, she was a member Dr. Atkinson, who he called a “truly heroic” leader at the of a class that was just school. “She had rallied the faculty, inspired them to continue over ten percent women. teaching, and relieved the students’ fears. Her calm and firm She was admitted shortly leadership in the face of unprecedented stress held the before the semester began medical school together.” and had to scramble to Once the school was positioned to come out of bankruptcy, find childcare for her two children at a time when few women Dr. Atkinson stepped down. She was recruited to the needed it. Now, in an era when over 50% of medical students University of Kansas School of Medicine in 2002 as Chair of are women, she is one of only 14 female medical school deans Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, then rose to the position in the country, a job she holds in addition to her position as of Dean and Vice Chancellor. Executive Vice Chancellor of a huge academic medical center at the University of Kansas. She oversees 2,500 faculty and At the same time she remains an active researcher, focused staff and a $311.3 million budget. on the identification and characterization of tumor antigens in cells and tissues, and on the development of techniques It should come as no surprise then that Dr. Atkinson is to recognize tumors and tumor types. committed to mentoring women and expanding the pool of women candidates for leadership positions in academic Her shelf of awards is getting very full: it includes the medicine. She was a founding member and continues to serve Berwick Award for Distinguished Teaching at the University on the advisory board of ELAM - the Hedwig van Ameringen of Pennsylvania, the Lindback Award for Distinguished Executive Leadership in Academic Medicine Program for Teaching at MCP, the Helmuth Spring Award for Residency Women - the nation’s only in-depth program focused on Education at the University of Kansas, and, in 1996, the preparing women faculty at schools of medicine to move into Alumni Achievement Award from Jefferson. positions of leadership. She also served on the Association of American Medical Colleges’ Committee on Increasing With seven books under her belt, including the Atlas of Women’s Leadership in Academic Medicine. Difficult Diagnoses in and a new edition of her Atlas of Cytopathology, she is now one of two editors of a Dr. Atkinson has led practically every organization important new open access web-based journal, Cytojournal, which can to pathologists of either sex. She was elected the first woman be found at www.cytojournal.com/home. Dr. Atkinson has Trustee of the American Board of Pathology and is a past been the principal investigator or co-investigator of seven President of that board, and has been Vice Chair of the funded research grants totaling over five million dollars. Association of Pathology Chairs, Chair of the Ethics Committee of the American Society of Cytopathology, and Dr. Barbara Atkinson is married to Dr. Bill Atkinson ’70, a council member of the American Society for Investigative retired pulmonary disease specialist. They live in the Kansas Pathology. She is currently a board member of the National City suburbs with two birds and a dog, and have two grown Board of Medical Examiners. In 1997, she elected to the children. The couple are avid birders who have exceeded the prestigious Institute of Medicine of the National Academy classic benchmark of identifying over 500 species. It seems of Sciences. that every field Dr. Atkinson explores, she approaches with a passionate thoroughness. Dr. Atkinson credits Drs. Gonzalo Aponte ’52 and Bob Mandle, among others at Jefferson, for her decision to pursue pathology. She took her resident education at the University of Pennsylvania, where she later taught as an Associate Professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Submissions Send your Class Notes to: Medicine. During her time there she served as associate scientist at the Wistar Institute and as a member of the Editor, Alumni Bulletin Pathology Graduate Group. Jefferson Medical College 925 Chestnut Street, Suite 110 Recruited away from Penn in 1987, Dr. Atkinson served as Philadelphia, PA 19107-4216 Professor and Chair in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the Medical College of Pennsylvania. 215-955-7920 When MCP merged with Hahnemann in the mid 1990s, she Fax: 215-503-5084 became the Annenberg Dean of MCP Hahnemann School of or via our website at: Medicine. Financial difficulties at the healthcare conglomerate www.jefferson.edu/jmc/alumni/bulletin.cfm Winter 2005 — 06 15

Center in Winston-Salem, NC. Justin West and Lisa Collea His sister, Sara Lally ’01, will were married on September 25, be doing a fellowship in ocular 2004 at Georgetown University’s oncology at Wills Eye Hospital Dahlgren Chapel. Classmates in Philadephia. Erin Osterman, Kathleen Settle, Jessica Perkins, Amy (Miller) Eric B. Smith completed his Smith, BJ Smith, Raymond orthopaedic surgery residency Conway, Ayis Pyrros, Andrew at Jefferson and received the Super Bowl Doc Burchard, and Elizabeth (Reed) Everett J. Gordon Award as out- Burchard shared in the ceremo- Joseph J. Czarnecki ’95 is a doctor to world champions, as standing chief resident. He is ny. Justin and Lisa live in attested on his Super Bowl ring. Joe was one of the assistant staying at Jeff for a one-year fel- Washington, DC. Both are team physicians for the New England Patriots during the lowship in adult reconstruction. 2004 season, as part of his fellowship train- residents at Georgetown ing at Massachusetts General Hospital with Drs. Bert Zarins University Hospital. and Thomas Gill. In this capacity, he attended most of the ’01 Patriots training camp, all of their home games, and most of Anja Landis and husband Postgraduate their away games. He spent nine days with the team in John Boger ’01 welcomed Alumni Jacksonville for the Super Bowl. The game was contested their first child, a boy. Samuel between the Patriots and Dr. Czarnecki’s favorite team from Marion Brown OBG’82 childhood: the Philadelphia Eagles. He describes the atmos- Nevin Boger was born on volunteers for Physicians for phere the day of the game: “It was an absolutely unbelievable September 30, 2005. John is Human Rights and also volun- feeling — pure electricity — I had chills during kickoff.” He can- currently deployed as a brigade teers in a medical clinic in South not comment on the treatments during that day, but does surgeon in Iraq. Carolina. She has been helping admit, “I realized that I was, at that moment, one of the lucki- est people on the face of the earth.” patients in the New Orleans area ’02 post Hurricane Katrina. Super Bowl rings aren’t designed with understatement in Christina Smith finished a mind. His sports 124 diamonds in all, totaling approximately family medicine residency at Naomi Parish P’82 has five carats. The center features three Lombardi Trophies — Jefferson in June 2005. Now she retired from the practice of psy- representing the three championships the Patriots won in four is enjoying her fellowship in pri- chiatry after 25 years. She has years — each topped by a marquise shaped diamond with the chaired professional committees Patriots logo in the foreground. Twenty-one diamonds, repre- mary care sports medicine at senting the team’s NFL-record-setting 21 consecutive wins, Maine Medical Center “but I for women at the state level in surround the Patriots logo. More diamonds line the perimeter miss Jefferson!” Pennsylvania, and continues to of the ring. Each ring is customized with a last name, including be active in that arena. Dr. Czarnecki’s. One imagines that this sort of jewelry might 03 hamper a surgical career — it weighs over four ounces. Dr. ’ Patrick McManus FP’95 Czarnecki has only worn his twice: once to satisfy the curiosi- Adam Perry won the Peter J. has won the Exemplary Teaching ty of his colleagues and once to surprise his family, especially Gingrass, MD Memorial Award Award for Full-Time Faculty his dad, who had no idea he had received one. (It now resides for the best paper presented by from the Pennsylvania Academy in a safety deposit box.) a medical student or non-plas- of Family Physicians. Patrick is tic surgery resident during the Both of Dr. Czarnecki’s parents were instrumental in his Program Director of Jefferson’s decision to enter medicine. Joe explains, “They have each recent 50th anniversary meet- Family Medicine residency. enjoyed 30 plus years in medicine, despite all the changes in ing of the Plastic Surgery healthcare from the impact of malpractice, HMOs, PPOs, and Research Council. His paper Robert Rapoport R’95 is government regulations.” His mother, Jefferson trustee Nancy examined how breast cancer President and Medical Director Czarnecki, was one of the first women to graduate from cells attract adult bone marrow of Albany Advanced Imaging Jefferson Medical College in 1965. “Despite being told by a stem cells, which the cancer and Clifton Park Advanced few of her classmates during the first week that women were Imaging in Albany, NY, and an not meant to be there and she would not last, she graduated uses to help it survive. attending neuroradiologist at near the top of her class.” Joe continues, “One of her greatest Understanding this fascinating strengths as a physician is her ability to decipher a complex but deadly process holds impli- St. Peter’s Hospital. problem and arrive at the best treatment plan for the cations for earlier detection of Ross Segan GS’04 married patient.” He clearly admires both his parents: “My father’s breast cancer, better staging, Michelle Nemeth, DO in June greatest strength has been the ability to communicate with and more targeted therapies. 2005. They live in Hawaii. Ross patients and learn not only about their medical issues, but Adam is currently in the general also their personal lives and how their problems could impact is Chief of Minimally Invasive surgery residency program at their physical, social, and emotional health.” Surgery and Assistant Program the Medical College of Georgia. Director of the surgery residency continued page 40 at Tripler Army Medical Center. 16 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

AlumniProfilesMaking Robotic History Physician of the Year the healing power of humor. His research led him into the world of comedy perform- in the OR Just nine weeks before he was named 2005 ance and, in 1991, he took a leave from his Michael Treat ’76, an associate attending Family Physician of the Year by the Florida university position to perform in comedy surgeon at New York-Presbyterian Academy of Family Physicians, the practice clubs across the country. Kuhn has collabo- Hospital/Columbia University Medical of Albert Tawil ’62 was ravaged by an elec- rated with Jerry Lewis presenting “The Jerry Center, Associate Professor of Surgery at trical fire. Everything was lost except the Lewis Laughter and Healing Seminar with Columbia University College of Physicians records. But it’s typical of Dr. Tawil that one Dr. Clifford Kuhn” at dozens of medical and Surgeons, and founder of Robotic week later, the office was up and running: schools and universities across the nation. Surgical Tech, Incorporated, recently patients called his wife Judy’s cell phone — introduced the Penelope™ Surgical she’s his office manager — to make appoint- After graduating from Jefferson, Dr. Kuhn Instrument Server, a robotic arm meant to ments, and the doctor saw them at an office received his psychiatric training at the free up the scrub nurse for more important next door to his burnt building. University of Michigan. He has held his fac- tasks. Robotic Surgical Tech is currently ulty position at Louisville since 1974 and The vice president of the Florida Academy funded by the National Science through the years has served as Chief of of Family Physicians reports Tawil was a Foundation, the National Institutes of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry, Director worthy candidate for the honor. “In the Health, and the Defense Advanced of Residency Training, and Associate first 20 years, he never took a vacation. Research Projects Agency — the central Chairman of the Psychiatry Department. This is the kind of guy who, if you called research and development organization Many accolades have recognized his him in the middle of the night, he would be for the Department of Defense. Treat says accomplishments as an academic. his “little start-up” has grown rapidly. (See there for you.” Kuhn was recently featured in Family article on page 8 about another robotic His colleagues liken him to Marcus Welby, Circle magazine in an article on “Why device from a different firm.) working in the old ways: making his own Laughter is Good for You.” Dr. Kuhn, whose rounds at the hospital, seeing patients at his During a procedure in June at New York- work is summarized in his book The Fun office, and making house calls when neces- Presbyterian Hospital to remove a benign Factor, declares, “If medicine could put the sary. He visits all of his patients when they tumor from a patient’s forearm, Penelope health benefits of laughter into a pill, drug are in the hospital. One reports that Tawil handed instruments to the surgeon. companies would be knocking themselves visited her shortly before she underwent Penelope can distinguish between 12 sur- out to get the patent.” Research has shown gall bladder surgery. “He said, ‘You don’t gical tools and will soon be able to that laughter reduces the level of stress think I’m going to let you go through this recognize twice that many. It can respond hormones, stirs the immune system, relax- alone.’ When you go to a doctor like this, you to requests and make predictions based on es muscles, clears the respiratory tract, really don’t want to go to anybody else.” a surgeon’s preferences, which are entered increases circulation, and eases perceived into its database. “The key innovative fea- Tawil is a Clinical Assistant Professor of pain. It can also increase endorphins, ture is Penelope’s use of machine vision. Medicine at the University of South Florida reduce blood pressure, and foster creativi- She has a digital camera that sees the sur- College of Medicine. He has no plans to ty by increasing the flow of oxygen to the gical field, as well as software that can retire, because being a doctor “is all I know brain. “Laughter is there precisely for the identify instruments within that field. But how to do.” purpose of keeping our balance when we what makes our robot truly unique is that get knocked off. It helps counteract things it is autonomous. Most surgical robots What the Doctor Ordered we would otherwise have no control over,” available today are run by the surgeon. The business card of Clifford C. Kuhn ’67 Kuhn asserts. Penelope is a stand-alone coworker,” Treat features his caricature under the motto, explains. “Have Fun, Will Travel.” Dr. Kuhn is the Still in the Anatomy Lab, But Laugh Doctor. In addition to his appoint- It Sure Has Changed Treat would like to respond to the ever ment as Professor of Psychiatry at the One gets the feeling that back in the days widening shortage of nurses by putting a University of Louisville School of Medicine, when Gerry Kaplan ’68 and Jerry Penelope in nearly every hospital across Kuhn has undertaken to show individuals Cotler ’52 were students in Gross the US. “The robot should be able to do and groups that they can enhance health, Anatomy, it was, well, gross. Asked about almost all the tasks a nurse can. performance, and productivity by creating the differences between Gross Anatomy “Leaving instruments inside patients still more fun. The humor therapy groups he runs and Human Form and Development, the happens,” he added. The hope is that for cancer patients are just one example. class taken by today’s students, these vol- Penelope, able to keep track of tools as unteer instructors mention the odor first. Dr. Kuhn’s focus is the field of mind/body they come and go, will put an end to that. Held in the Daniel Baugh Institute on medicine. Decades of work with chronically Clinton Street (now renovated as a ill patients and their families taught him respectable apartment building), the class Winter 2005 — 06 17

focused on bodies preserved in formalde- Although the human body has not hyde. “You couldn’t get the smell off your changed in the past 50 years, there are hands,” Dr. Cotler remembers. “The whole plenty of changes in how it is studied. building smelled of it,” Dr. Kaplan remem- Today’s anatomy course moves much bers. “I couldn’t eat a sandwich for the faster. Where it used to take a whole year, whole semester.” students now cover human anatomy in about three months. In the past, students Human Form and Development is taught took a concurrent section of biochemistry. by a team: Jefferson faculty, advanced Now, students take only one basic science medical students, and a cadre of retired course at a time, which is generally felt to physicians who return to volunteer. Dr. be a more efficient way to learn. Schmidt, the course coordinator, singles out the latter for praise. “They have a real Osterholm believes today’s course is better love for their profession. They’re dedicated organized, and greatly aided by today’s to helping young individuals along that personal computers and course websites. road.” In addition to Drs. Kaplan and Gone are the days of lugging around a Cotler, Jewell Osterholm, MD volunteers. weighty anatomy tome — every bit of the James P. Bagian ’77 “Teaching offers an opportunity to give material (even superb color illustrations) back to Jefferson, and to the field.” Dr. can be downloaded, and can be organized On one thing all these doctors agree: Osterholm says that working with young and indexed at the touch of a button. returning to teach is worth the effort, and people is part of his secret to staying they highly recommend it to other alumni. young: “Don’t have old friends,” he advises Dr. Cotler notices the increased number of “You may have to do some review of the with a laugh. students. Capacity has increased from 226 subtleties that you’ve forgotten after years to 255, to respond to national concerns of practice,” says Dr. Cotler. “But teaching All three doctors have had long and distin- about a physician shortage voiced by the today’s students gives you a new view- guished careers. Dr. Cotler finished his Association of American Medical Colleges. point.” And this time around, with so much residency in orthopaedics at Jefferson in This compares to an average class size of less formaldehyde, you’ll be able to stom- 1957, conducted a successful practice in 160 in the 1950s. “But Jeff has grown with ach that sandwich after class. New Jersey, then returned to Jeff in 1973 as care," Cotler says. "I do feel that we main- a full time member of the orthopaedic fac- tain adequate resources to serve all these Email [email protected] ulty. In 1979 he became co-director of the students. They learn easily because they’re if you are interested in volunteering. Regional Spinal Cord Injury Center at bright, interested, and motivated." Be sure to state what part of the anatomy Jefferson, retiring in 2001. Dr. Kaplan you specialize in. When the same question was posed to Dr. interned at Columbia Presbyterian, then Alumni Achievement Award entered the army, followed by a residency Kaplan, he responded, “The number of Winner Jim Bagian ’77: in general surgery at Temple. He had a solo women in class!” Jefferson, like most other A Path of National Service practice in general surgery until 1985 — medical schools in the US, now has slight- and at the same time became a lawyer ly more women than men. But he’s also This year’s winner of the Alumni (attending night school while practicing). surprised by how young the first year med- Achievement Award — presented each Dr. Osterholm is a former Chair of ical students seem to be (it’s true that year at the Alumni Banquet on Friday Neurosurgery at Jefferson who specialized some are younger because they came from evening of Reunion Weekend — was in spinal cord injury and stroke and estab- accelerated college programs). He remem- James P. Bagian ’77, one of the country’s lished a research program oriented toward bers being older and more sophisticated. leading authorities on reducing medical cerebral re-oxygenation during stroke. Speaking with these three gentlemen errors. Dr. Bagian first came to national shows that the days of stern professors in prominence when he served as a NASA black smocks who taught by rote memo- astronaut from 1980 to 1995 and partici- Submissions rization are gone. Dr. Kaplan says the pated in several space missions. He helped Send your Class Notes to: volunteers try to “give meaning and sense to investigate the 1986 explosion of the Editor, Alumni Bulletin to the anatomy lessons by putting them in Challenger space shuttle, determining how Jefferson Medical College terms of people — how people’s lives are such a catastrophe could be prevented in 925 Chestnut Street, Suite 110 affected — as opposed to emotionless future, and guiding the development of a Philadelphia, PA 19107-4216 cadavers. Students enjoy war stories. If you high altitude pressure suit for crew escape 215-955-7920 can make an impression the story stays as well as other survival equipment to be Fax: 215-503-5084 with them.” used on future missions. or via our website at: www.jefferson.edu/jmc/alumni/bulletin.cfm 18 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Since 1998 Dr. Bagian has been serving as when he was chosen as a finalist for the the first Director of the National Center for Service to America Medal in 2003. That Patient Safety, a part of the Veterans year he was appointed medical consultant Administration that is charged with reduc- to the Columbia Space Shuttle Accident ing avoidable injuries and deaths in the Investigation Board. VA's 173 medical centers and 771 outpa- tient facilities. With its emphasis on In 2001 Bagian received the Dr. Nathan S. “prevention not punishment,” the program Davis Award from the American Medical is working to nurture a culture of safety Association for outstanding public service throughout the system. Under Bagian’s in the advancement of public health. leadership it has become a benchmark for Thomas Jefferson University awarded him patient safety in the US and international- the honorary degree of Doctor of Science ly. Because national estimates show that in 2002. more people die annually from hospital Helping in Katrina-Ravaged based errors than from AIDS, motor vehi- New Orleans cle accidents, or cervical cancer, this accomplishment has a real impact on pub- In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, New Leonard A. Rubinstein, MD, OTO’84 lic health. Orleans needed help, a great deal of it and quickly. Part of the response was provided Later, they traveled to New Orleans itself Recognizing this contribution, Harvard by the National Disaster Medical Systems, to establish a MASH-type unit. “The reality University’s Kennedy School of a division of the US Department of was overwhelming,” Rubinstein says. “The Government awarded Bagian’s program its Homeland Security. Leonard A. entire infrastructure of the city was under- Innovations in American Government Rubinstein, MD, OTO’84 was a member of mined. All support systems were gone. Award in 2001. Bagian himself has been one of these teams. A Federal Medical There was no food, no water, no police, no chosen for the Frank Brown Berry Prize Officer, Rubinstein was an integral part of access to banks or money. All phone lines from the US government. the medical services provided to the evac- were out, and even satellite phones were uees. He is on team FL3 DMAT, stationed not necessarily operational.” From 1995 to 1998 Dr. Bagian served in the in Tampa Bay, Florida. They were called up Environmental Protection Agency, where A lot of the problems were unique to New because of the unit’s special training in he was responsible for air emission poli- Orleans. Because of broken levees, floods bio-hazardous warfare and national disas- cies for vehicles such as cars, planes, and and contaminated water had to be taken ter work. A few days before Katrina struck boats. He has long been a Colonel in the into account when establishing a safe land, they were deployed to Baton Rouge. US Air Force Reserve, working as a para- place to set up the rescue operation. chute rescue flight surgeon with the 920th Under normal conditions, thousands of Because there were no roads, access was Air Rescue Group. Active in the mountain people don’t converge on an emergency difficult and had to be done by helicopter. FL3 needed a location that wouldn’t put “The reality was overwhelming. The entire the rescue group itself in danger from fires, additional flooding, or contact with infrastructure of the city was undermined. chemicals. All support systems were gone.” They set up the operation in the New Orleans Airport because it had not flooded and it had runway capacity. It was a place rescue community, he has participated in room all at once; a busload of patients is from which they could airlift patients and the Denali Medical Research Project on the most one can expect. The sheer num- where they could do intake as well. Mount McKinley and has been a snow- ber of injured and ill people who were and-ice rescue techniques instructor on evacuated from New Orleans led to diffi- As Rubinstein describes it, “New Orleans Mount Hood. culties for local emergency crews who had become a cesspool, with sewage and were not trained in . gas contaminations. The air and the whole In 2000 Bagian was elected to the National When FL3 DMAT arrived, havoc reigned. environment spoke of disease.” Because Academy of Engineering for his accom- Thousands of patients were collected in a patients had been exposed to so much plishments in integrating engineering football stadium. The training of Dr. sewage, the staff were exposed to staph and medical knowledge in practical Rubinstein and his team in handling mass infections, e. coli, pseudomonis, respirato- applications for aerospace systems, envi- disasters allowed them to make sense and ry diseases, and skin infections. Although ronmental technology, and patient safety. order out of that chaos in a day or two. Dr. Rubinstein emphasizes the chaos that His wide contributions were recognized Winter 2005 — 06 19

reigned, he also points out that many, nursing staff, and assisting with the evacu- Dr. Rubinstein’s involvement with the many people – even those with personal ation of patients from the airport facility DMAT is just part of his long history of vol- losses – turned outward to help others. for further medical care. The team treated unteering in . As an Patients would ask if they themselves over 4000 patients and evacuated 45,000 undergraduate at LaSalle, he volunteered could help, offering to pass out meals, people. Although his team headed the for the 50th Ward community ambulance transport other patients, and clean the operation, other DMAT units worked coop- association, and continued his involve- makeshift hospital. eratively with National Forest, army, air ment throughout his years in Philadelphia, force, and other government organizations. eventually establishing an EMT program The medical teams in the New Orleans air- and lecture series. While doing his residen- port encountered all sorts of needs, from Rubinstein saw acute security challenges cies, he worked in emergency rooms. In delivering babies – some who were due at the facility set up in the airport. As he Florida, he identified a need for disaster and some who were born premature describes it, patients were “desperate, medicine doctors because of the hurri- because of stressful conditions – to caring crazy, and out of control. Inmates had canes. He joined the DMAT years ago, for cardiac patients. Patients had been been released from jails. It was a highly assisted Hurricane Charlie rescue efforts, evacuated from hospitals without their volatile situation.” At the makeshift hospi- and stayed active thereafter. medical records. People were showing up tal, there was no organized system of having been without their prescriptions security. Some patients possessed guns or A week after he returned to Florida, for five or six days: patients with kidney knives when they entered for treatment. A Rubinstein was deployed to Houston in disease who had no dialysis, intensive care staff nurse was stabbed by a patient (prob- advance of Hurricane Rita. Despite the cardiac patients who had no treatment, ably suffering from mental illness) who demands, he encourages physicians to diabetics who had not received insulin, was upset that he had not received his step outside of their personal needs and psychotic patients who had gone without lunch in a timely manner. Dr. Rubinstein practices to do this kind of work. “Although their medications. Most of the medical related the security challenges in a face to it may take you out of your regular staff worked 20 hour shifts. face meeting with Senate Majority Leader schedule, out of your routine, at an incon- Bill Frist. Eventually, the army had to be venient time, the rewards are great.” Rubinstein’s responsibilities included called upon. Finally, people coming into attending to patients, running the triage the airport were checked for weapons. unit, coordinating volunteer physician and

“Revitalizing” Service to Others Another Jefferson alumnus who has seen active duty in hurricane emergency relief is Max M. Koppel ’57. In 1989, he was deployed from Maryland to the US Virgin Islands in the wake of Hurricane Hugo. As a member of the Public Health Service Ready Reserves, he was deployed to St. Croix Hospital. Because the hospital had been too badly damaged to use, he worked with other members of the Public Health Service in a temporary facility that had been set up by preceding DMAT teams.

Recently, Dr. Koppel was featured in the Washington Post. Koppel first enlisted between the Korean and Vietnam wars. Today, at 71, the urologist is deployed to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, DC. His tour at Walter Reed should reach more than 350 days before it ends. It follows three dozen shorter tours across the United States. In addition to his time in St. Croix, Koppel worked at a small county hospital in North Dakota, traveled to Alaska to help after the Exxon Valdez oil spill, and assisted at a migrant worker camp near the Snake River in Idaho. He spent several tours in rural Alabama and several more caring for Native American families in remote areas of Montana.

He did much of this as an inactive reservist of the US Public Health Service. Last fall, Dr. Koppel was recognized by US Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona, MD with an exemplary service medal. Capt. James Sayers, Director of the health ser- vice’s Office of Reserve Affairs, calls Koppel “our all-time hero.”

Koppel calls his service “revitalizing.” 20 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

1918 1942 J1944 GivingContributor to the Class Winged Ox Society Samuel D. Gross Associates Class Totals: Class Totals: Joanna G. Gabel Herbert M. Wolff Louis Leventhal 10 Gifts Totaling $5,250.00 17 Gifts Totaling $5,782.36 in memory of Samuel D. Gross Associates Louis C. Riegert 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Reynold S. Griffith + J. E. Berk John P. Rudolph 10 Gifts Totaling $5,250.00 17 Gifts Totaling $5,682.36 McClellan Merit Society McClellan Merit Society 50% Total Class Participation 33% Total Class Participation 1929 Joseph M. Dziob Blaine R. Garner Century Club Sustaining Members Sustaining Members Class Totals: Additional Contributors Ambrose P. Clunan James A. Heckman + William Wasnick 1 Gift Totaling $2,500.00 J. T. Millington Sr. + Samuel D. Gross Associates Samuel D. Gross Associates Additional Contributors Additional Contributors 57th Annual Appeal Totals: David D. Dunn Edgar T. Gibson John B. Movelle 1 Gift Totaling $2,500.00 to the Class Mary J. Ishler Ruben R. Pottash Joseph W. Stayman Jr. Edward A. Shafer Arthur B. Van Gundy 50% Total Class Participation in memory of H. R. Ishler + Additional Contributors McClellan Merit Society Joseph N. Marino McClellan Merit Society Jefferson Society to the Class Anthony G. Zale John DeCarlo Jr. Anthony F. DePalma + 1937 Sara J. Bers in memory of Sol N. Bers + Century Club Century Club Class Totals: Margaret G. Covington-Nelson Vincent W. Ciacci John C. Beard Jr. 4 Gifts Totaling $850.11 1931 in memory of Robert Eckley Julian C. Brantley Jr. Class Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Furman P. Covington + Edmund T. Hackman Bernard L. Braveman 1 Gift Totaling $50.00 3 Gifts Totaling $300.11 Howard S. Hussey Jr. Lin T. Chun 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 29% Total Class Participation 1940 John L. Ranson Jr. William H. Gehron Jr. 1 Gift Totaling $50.00 Additional Contributors Edgar D. Knerr Jr. McClellan Merit Society Class Totals: to the Class John G. Oliver 25% Total Class Participation Robert S. Garber 5 Gifts Totaling $1,800.00 Gertrude E. Pohowsky Donald B. Witmer Contributor Century Club 57th Annual Appeal Totals: in memory of Additional Contributors Edward Gipstein Russell E. Allyn 5 Gifts Totaling $1,800.00 Alex Pohowsky + A. M. Bertsch Carl G. Whitbeck 29% Total Class Participation Gail Davis Frank H. Butt Additional Contributors in memory of J. W. Davis + Frank Clark 1932 Samuel D. Gross Associates Allen W. Henderson George W. Plonk Contributor to the Class Randolph V. Seligman Additional Contributors Mrs. Benjamin Provisor 1943 to the Class McClellan Merit Society in memory of S1944 Eloise Bowers John F. King Class Totals: Benjamin Provisor + 13 Gifts Totaling $7,875.00 in memory of Paul A. Bowers + William H. Robinson III + Class Totals: Century Club 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 21 Gifts Totaling $12,183.10 1933 1938 John F. Shaffer 14 Gifts Totaling $2,825.00 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Class Totals: Additional Contributors 36% Total Class Participation 21 Gifts Totaling $12,183.10 Class Totals: 1 Gift Totaling $750.00 Richard C. Kaar + 43% Total Class Participation 8 Gifts Totaling $2,300.00 Samuel D. Gross Associates Additional Contributors 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Davis G. Durham Jefferson Associates 57th Annual Appeal Totals: to the Class 1 Gift Totaling $750.00 William S. Rothermel 8 Gifts Totaling $2,250.00 Thelma M. Saylor McClellan Merit Society 100% Total Class 31% Total Class Participation in memory of Blair W. Saylor + George G. Willis Sustaining Members Participation Century Club John J. Gartland Sustaining Members Samuel D. Gross Associates Harry V. Armitage Samuel D. Gross Associates Edward V. Platt 1941 Howard R. Patton Louis G. Bush Milton N. Kitei Century Club Class Totals: 9 Gifts Totaling Leonard S. Davitch Carol H. Konhaus Perry Albert $5,300.00 Adolph Friedman Harold Wilf 1935 Paul E. Chodoff 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Albert J. Kolarsick McClellan Merit Society Class Totals: Martin Cooperman 10 Gifts Totaling $5,300.00 Bernard J. Miller Warren C. Herrold 2 Gifts Totaling $200.00 R. H. Lackay + 43% Total Class Participation Franklin L. Reed Jr. Peter P. Midura Vernon W. Taylor Jr. 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Andrew C. Ruoff III Henry S. Wentz 2 Gifts Totaling $200.00 Samuel D. Ulrich Sustaining Members Alvin P. Wenger Jr. + John Y. Templeton III Century Club 29% Total Class Participation Additional Contributors James T. Wright James Beebe Jr. William I. Heine Samuel D. Gross Associates Additional Contributors Kenneth K. Hanford Century Club Charles N. Burns Edwin J. Levy Robert H. Holland Joseph L. Finn Abol H. Fotouhi 1939 Additional Contributors Emil Howanitz Paul M. Riffert Edward A. Ricketts Class Totals: to the Class Wallace B. Hussong Additional Contributors 9 Gifts Totaling $8,360.45 McClellan Merit Society Mary P. Gibbons Albert D. Kapcar to the Class Vincent S. Palmisano in memory of Robert M. Kerr Marcella S. Theodos 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Century Club Robert J. Gibbons + Charles L. Liggett in memory of 9 Gifts Totaling $8,360.45 Dewitt E. DeLawter Betty E. Deardorff William A. Morton Jr. Peter A. Theodos + 50% Total Class Participation Robert H. Peters Jr. in memory of Stephen Mourat John E. Deardorff + Jefferson Society Charles L. Schucker John C. Reganis 1936 James J. Kelly Harry N. Webster Jr. Kenan B. Williams Class Totals: Sustaining Members Additional Contributors Additional Contributors 4 Gifts Totaling $26,525.00 Hymen D. Stein to the Class Ray H. Flory 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Mary A. Hoffman Additional Contributors 3 Gifts Totaling $1,525.00 in memory of to the Class Arthur F. Hoffman + 44% Total Class Participation Marcia G. Shaffer in memory of Jerome D. Shaffer +

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 21

1945 Class Totals: Additional Contributors Leonard J. Levick 25 Gifts Totaling $78,560.00 to the Class James V. Mackell 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Dorothy N. Koch Harold Meyer 22 Gifts Totaling $11,950.00 in memory of Melvin L. Reitz Joseph C. Koch + Henry A. Seidenberg 38% Total Class Participation Martha S. MacKelcan G. R. Senita Winged Ox Society in memory of Bernard D. Sherer Raymond C. Grandon Douglas W. MacKelcan + William M. Woodward Jefferson Associates Additional Contributors Leonard Apt 1946 Charles C. Dugan Sustaining Members Class Totals: Sidney Koretsky Edward H. McGehee 28 Gifts Totaling $12,306.00 Louis F. LaNoce Samuel D. Gross Associates 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Stephen F. Balshi 29 Gifts Totaling $12,196.00 1947 John M. Bear Class Totals: 38% Total Class Participation David B. Heller Ruth Yingling Daniel J. Collinson 28 Gifts Totaling $8,407.73 Edward J. Klopp Jr. in memory of McClellan Merit Society Jefferson Associates 57th Annual Appeal Totals: John A. Koltes Jr. Nathaniel D. Yingling + W. P. Ellis Jr. David G. Simons 27 Gifts Totaling $8,207.73 David W. Levin William T. Lineberry Jr. Samuel D. Gross Associates C. T. McChesney Jr. Francis L. McNelis Robert A. Grugan 45% Total Class Participation 1948 Menzie McKim Jr. Ralph J. Veenema Robert E. Sass Samuel D. Gross Associates Alfred M. Mintz Class Totals: John M. Vesey Robert H. Baker 40 Gifts Totaling $27,625.00 McClellan Merit Society Edgar C. Smith Walter V. Matteucci George F. Tibbens Century Club Arthur R. Vaughn Jr. 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Michael J. McAndrew Jr. Bruce Van Vranken Joseph S. Brown Jr. Samuel Younger 38 Gifts Totaling $15,125.00 Lloyd S. Call Randall M. McLaughlin Robert Yannaccone Additional Contributors 52% Total Class Participation James R. Cavett Jr. Clarence M. Miller Jr. McClellan Merit Society Michael Bucan Daniel H. Coleman Enio W. Tobia Joseph M. Corson Winged Ox Society Warren A. Miller Benson Krieger Gerald D. Dodd Henry R. Liss Century Club Charles J. Rodgers Robert H. Leaming Harold H. Alderfer Roy Korson Richard M. Sproch Sustaining Members James H. Lee Jr. + Gustav W. Anderson Albert G. Schran Ernest G. Shander Frank A. Mattei Homer W. Boysen Nathan M. Smukler Additional Contributors Stanley E. Zeeman Avery W. McMurry Harry L. Collins Jr. to the Class Century Club Catherine Babskie Samuel D. Gross Associates Desmond S. O’Doherty John P. Decker David W. Bostian in memory of Chester F. Cullen Gustav E. Rosenheim George N. Eriksen Alfred S. Cook Jr. Robert F. Babskie + Charles D. Foster III Joseph F. Ziemba James B. Gilbert Luther F. Corley Jr. Patricia M. Coghlan James Kleckner Additional Contributors Charles W. Korbonits Harris G. Fister in memory of Thomas J. McBride Edward W. Cubler Joseph B. Krisanda Edgar C. Hanks George J. O’Donnell Robert E. Rowand William Coghlan +

To Make Your Annual Giving Contribution, Simply Clip Out This Coupon and Envelope ✁ 22 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Norman J. Quinn Jr. George A. Winch W. E. Powell Edward Scull Century Club Additional Contributors McClellan Merit Society Francis T. Au to the Class Richard P. Alexander Scott J. Boley Mary F. Kermon William H. Annesley Jr. Peter L. Eichman in memory of Donald G. Birrell Canzio E. Giuliucci Louis T. Kermon + Meyer Edelman Paul Hartstein Hulda T. Wood Valerio J. Federici W. B. Kinlaw Jr. in memory of Alexander Goulard Jr. Koon T. Ma Sherrod N. Wood + Barrett G. Heckler + Gerald J. Marks Edward J. Jahnke Edward H. Robinson 1951 George R. Pechstein Edward A. Schauer Class Totals: Clermont S. Powell Robert E. Schulz 40 Gifts Totaling $10,245.16 Century Club Harold L. Strause Jr. Joseph E. Bartos George B. Voigt 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 39 Gifts Totaling $10,045.16 John D. Bealer Additional Contributors Breaking ground for the education building are James Keen, Robert J. Carabasi Victor A. Bressler 40% Total Class Participation PhD, Dean of the Jefferson College of Graduate Studies; C. H. Cohn Howard Mazer Brian Harrison, Chair of the Board of Trustees; longtime Sustaining Members Trustee Dorrance H. “Dodo” Hamilton; Robert L. Barchi, MD, Paul C. Eiseman Jr. Conrad Zagory Simon C. Brumbaugh Jr. PhD, University President; Thomas J. Nasca, MD’75, Dean of Edward A. Felder Additional Contributors Harold Fishman Jefferson Medical College; and James B. Erdmann, PhD, Eugene P. Hughes Sr. to the Class Samuel D. Gross Associates Dean of the Jefferson College of Health Professions. Robert C. Laning Susan C. Lindell Irwin L. Stoloff John L. McCormack in memory of George F. Risi Marvin M. Lindell + McClellan Merit Society Daniel S. Rowe Harry Boretsky Watch Jefferson’s Building Ralph J. Schlosser Bernard W. Mayer Progress on the Web 1950 Century Club R. A. Schofield + Ground was broken on October 7 for Lee S. Serfas Class Totals: Andrew J. Barger William E. Sheely 30 Gifts Totaling $17,890.00 J. B. Cheyney II the Dorrance H. Hamilton Building and Thomas C. Turner 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Peter Chodoff adjacent campus green, a project that will John E. Weyher Jr. 29 Gifts Totaling $18,390.00 John H. Deam transform Jefferson’s campus and serve as Harry M. Zutz 41% Total Class Participation Herbert C. Dodge an educational hub for all three colleges of Additional Contributors Glen M. Ebersole Thomas Jefferson University. It will be ready J. E. McKinney Jefferson Society Daniel T. Erhard for students arriving in August 2007. This Richard L. Rovit Joseph C. Flynn Earl S. Moyer historic step forward is being made possible Richard S. Tenn Russell L. Gingrich Jr. Additional Contributors Sustaining Members Murray Glickman Esq. by the contributions of alumni, trustees, to the Class faculty, and friends. You can watch the Maria DePersia Erich A. Everts-Suarez Victor F. Greco progress of construction on a live web cam in memory of Donald P. Franks Willard Y. Grubb Rudolph T. DePersia + Herbert A. Yantes James C. Hitchner at www.pagnes.com/pagnes_webcam.htm. Mrs. Daniel L. Shaw Samuel D. Gross Associates John R. Jackson in memory of Robert C. Bair John W. Langley Daniel L. Shaw + Marvin Goldstein H. E. LaVoice Jr. Ilene Swartz Charles R. Henkelmann David A. Levitsky in memory of Jay W. MacMoran Gordon W. Lupin James F. Masterson Jr. Curtis H. Swartz + McClellan Merit Society John R. Ball James C. McLaughlin 1949 John R. Evans George M. Meier + Maurice R. Turcotte Howard C. Mofenson Class Totals: Robert L. Mulligan 26 Gifts Totaling $11,325.00 Century Club Dean B. Olewiler Drew E. Courtney Talbot F. Parker Jr. 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Leonard M. DelVecchio Sr. Paul D. Rahter 25 Gifts Totaling $11,975.00 Leonard A. Erdman William H. Reifsnyder III 31% Total Class Participation William J. Jacoby Jr. Ross E. Richardson Robert E. Karns Jefferson Society Morton A. Rosenblatt Murray A. Kessler Norman J. Fisher Leon Shmokler Bernard A. Kirshbaum Verne L. Smith Jr. Sustaining Members Frank E. McElree Jr. Joseph M. Hopen Donald I. Meyers Richard M. Whittington James R. Milligan Samuel D. Gross Associates Richard L. Murtland Using the web-based controls, you can pan and Richard L. Bryson Aaron Rosenthal tilt the camera to get a live view of the construction John R. Healy Donald K. Sass of the Dorrance H. Hamilton Building and the Joseph M. Valloti Aris M. Sophocles campus green. McClellan Merit Society Howard E. Strawcutter S. J. Bascove William H. Winchell Rinard Z. Hart Additional Contributors Benjamin E. Longenecker Jr. George W. O’Brien

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 23

Norman S. Amer Jerome Dersh G. R. Dickersin Malvin J. Dougherty John W. Goldschmidt Joseph B. Green Paul D. Griesmer Christopher K. Hood Milton Ivker Merle H. Katzman Stanley R. Kern Harris Lavine Stanley N. Levick Donald L. Minter Nelson F. Moury Jr. John B. Nelson III Harry H. Steinmeyer Jr. Laurence P. Cloud Jay A. Nadel Additional Contributors Fred W. Wachtel Edward W. Ditto III Vincent P. Pisula to the Class Warren W. Nichols Henry W. Pletcher William J. Duhigg Robert Poole Katherine R. Watkins Additional Contributors John S. Purnell Jr. Philip F. Dunn Frederick S. Wilson in memory of Daniel R. DeMeo Charles A. Rankin Jr. Irving P. Eney Jack G. Watkins + Bruce W. Raffensperger McClellan Merit Society William L. Rodgers James J. Fitzpatrick Jr. Fayne M. Holland Additional Contributors Joseph J. Armao Lewis P. Scott III Bernard W. Fong in memory of to the Class William E. Bittner Alfred G. Scottolini Louis G. Graff III Edward F. Holland + Colleen Chen-See Robert L. Frank Samuel G. Southwick Paul L. Hermany Mrs. Thomas M. Ullmann in memory of Robert J. Rubin Eugene G. Stec Oscar G. Hoerner in memory of Jasper G. Chen-See + Claude A. Smith Harold R. Weidaw James M. Hofford Thomas M. Ullmann + Helen C. Farr Richard O. Stader James F. Welsh Howard K. Huxster in memory of Joseph L. Farr + Earl W. Wharton William A. West Eugene E. Kegel Century Club 1954 Ralph H. Williams Millard S. Leute Harold Y. Allen Class Totals: Andrew J. Zweifler 1952 I. H. Lutterloh Richard G. Barr 67 Gifts Totaling $42,541.57 Additional Contributors Class Totals: William F. Lynch Hampton P. Corson Thomas Aceto Jr. 55 Gifts Totaling $46,445.00 Edward M. McAninch 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Norman C. Crill Frank J. Beasley John J. Moran 64 Gifts Totaling $31,638.77 57th Annual Appeal Totals: W. E. Duling Lambert G. Eichner John G. O’Hurley 64% Total Class Participation 53 Gifts Totaling $39,970.00 John C. Herrman Milton R. Okun Joseph C. Raymond 59% Total Class Participation Richard W. Hill Jefferson Associates Charles H. Powell William Stepansky Werner J. Hollendonner Alfred P. Spivack H. A. Smith Jr. Winged Ox Society George T. Wolff William K. Jenson Walther T. Weylman E. F. Stone Franklin J. Chinn Additional Contributors Milton W. Johns Jefferson Society Charles S. Tippetts Jr. Jefferson Society Robert A. Ebersole David F. Kennedy Marvin Dannenberg Robert F. Early Sr. Warren P. Goldburgh Leonard Klinghoffer Sustaining Members Sustaining Members Elmer E. Mears David W. Kulp 1955 Warren W. Brubaker Albert L. Amshel Paige V. Sencindiver George A. Lundberg Jr. Class Totals: Howard L. Field Arthur N. Avella Charles A. Syms Guy R. Musser 55 Gifts Totaling $22,858.80 Jack W. Fink William T. Brinton Jr. Additional Contributors Joseph L. Owens Jr. 57th Annual Appeal Totals: John J. Goodwin Jr. Jerome M. Cotler to the Class Harold J. Reinhard 54 Gifts Totaling $20,118.80 Earl T. Lewis DeWitt T. Dabback Ruth M. Bare Stuart K. Remley Harold Lipschutz 50% Total Class Participation in memory of Harold W. Rushton Samuel D. Gross Associates John R. Loughead Jr. Wesley W. Bare + Russell W. Schaedler Jefferson Society Donald C. Davidson John R. Patterson Helen Bittner George L. Sexton Jr. Herbert E. Cohn William S. Davis Edward M. Podgorski William R. Hill in memory of Dean C. Shore Sustaining Members Kurt E. Lauer Donald L. Bittner + Marvin C. Snyder Samuel D. Gross Associates Joseph S. Harun William V. Martinez June S. Eyerly Donald B. Stein Jr. Robert M. Allen Michael F. Joyce Charles T. Coyne Joseph H. Sloss in memory of Max J. Stierstorfer Jr. Samuel D. Gross Associates Henry S. Trostle Robert C. Eyerly + Nichols Vorys Dwight G. Davis Jr. Robert A. Brown John S. Hamilton Additional Contributors Joseph R. John McClellan Merit Society C. W. Hassel Jr. William E. Delaney III Ben Kline Frank S. Bakewell Jr. 1953 Gilbert A. Martin Jr. Kenneth Dollinger Norman Gladsden Harry G. Light Class Totals: McClellan Merit Society Thomas A. Gardner 54 Gifts Totaling $16,629.49 Roy H. Hand William A. Lista Allan B. Gould Jr. Eugene A. Jaeger Robert G. Bucher Joseph I. Maguire 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Rudolph C. Camishion Jerome J. Lebovitz Charles T. Johnson Jr. McClellan Merit Society 51 Gifts Totaling $14,331.69 Paul W. McIlvaine Henry A. Kane David W. Croft Earl L. Bernstine Albert H. Wilkinson Jr. 55% Total Class Participation Robert M. Mead Thomas A. Hodge Robert E. Berry John E. Metheny Francis M. Kopack Century Club Sustaining Members Theodore G. Duncan Michael J. Murphy John M. Patterson John O. Hewlett Nelson P. Aspen Franz Goldstein William H. Taylor David M. Barry James H. Thomas Richard F. Robinson Richard E. Hicks Stanley S. Schneider Edward Tober James A. Murray Jerome I. Brody Samuel D. Gross Associates Dana M. Wheelock Thornton A. Vandersall Alfred A. Rosenblatt Matthew G. Brown Thurman Gillespy Jr. Philip Woollcott Jr. Burton Schaffer William K. Carlile August F. Herff Jr. Century Club Robert C. Spagnoli John M. Carper Irvin Jacobs Kjell H. Christiansen Joseph L. Abbott Thomas B. Templeton 24 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

View Reunion Photos Online To view photos of the October 2005 reunions — and to order some for yourself — please visit the website www.vtiphoto.com/gallery and login with username tju and password tju (use lowercase letters).

William C. Weintraub Ernest R. Griffith David I. Hill Century Club 1956 Albert H. Grollman 1957 Abram M. Hostetter Dewey J. Bailey Jr. Class Totals: Dale A. Grove Jr. Class Totals: William D. Inglis Burton S. Benovitz 73 Gifts Totaling $29,625.00 Edward R. Hagopian 65 Gifts Totaling $69,600.28 H. D. Knox Joseph M. Blackburn 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Charles H. Hemminger 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Gerald Labriola Carl W. Boyer Jr. 70 Gifts Totaling $20,825.00 John W. Holdcraft 63 Gifts Totaling $66,350.14 William T. Lampe II J. H. Housman Allan W. Lazar Edward C. Bradley, SJ 59% Total Class Participation 52% Total Class Participation Richard F. Brams Frank J. Kessler Robert E. Lynch J. H. Conner Jefferson Associates Donald G. Levitt Winged Ox Society Thomas R. Mainzer Robert D. Cordier Hyman R. Kahn James H. Loucks Max M. Koppel Bronson J. McNierney Eugene A. Curtin Sustaining Members Edward W. Luczynski Jr. Jefferson Associates John S. Mest Reginald B. Gemmill John M. Daniel Rex G. Mabey James E. Culbert Walter R. Morgan John J. Hoch Paul Drucker Joseph L. Magrath Phillip J. Marone John R. Prehatny C. T. Rotz Jr. William T. Holland Jr. Robert C. Magley Joseph A. McCadden Sustaining Members Penn P. Shelley Cecil G. Jenkins Charles J. Stahl III Robert L. Meckelnburg Herbert G. Aaronson Grafton F. Sieber William L. Kanenson + Henry L. Yim Wallace T. Miller Otto Y. Au Thomas L. Singley III Donald J. Manz Edmund V. Niklewski David H. Black Samuel D. Gross Associates Joseph M. Skutches John A. Marchesani Karl G. Klinges Patrick S. Pasquariello Jr. T. C. Corson III Richard N. Smith John A. McCarthy C. W. Koehl Jr. Robert M. Pearl Donald P. Elliott Walter Spelsberg Ernest L. McKenna Jr. Anthony F. Merlino Richard T. Price Fernand N. Parent Jr. David C. Weibel Michael J. McNally James R. Regan Antonio Ramos-Barroso Raymond G. Tronzo Bertram H. Shapiro Additional Contributors Joseph A. Miller Edwin L. Rothfeld Samuel D. Gross Associates Thomas D. Stine Ernest H. Coleman Jr. Judson S. Millhon McClellan Merit Society Gaylord W. Bennett James L. Stone Bertram H. Frohman Joseph P. O’Connell Arland A. Adams Gust Boulis Robert B. Weimann Joseph B. Hess Guy L. Schless Vincent C. Andracchio Vincent D. Cuddy Claude M. Williams James R. Stull Victor G. Schorn Joseph L. Bard John F. Kennard Stephen K. Williams Additional Contributors J. D. Schultz Kenneth N. Beers Sr. Marvin L. Lewbart Noyes E. Yale Jr. to the Class Richard H. Schwarz Joseph P. Bering Sr. Ronald M. Match James G. Zangrilli Adrienne M. Rodgers John A. Shoener Bernard Berne James C. Newton James A. Singleton Additional Contributors in memory of Raymond W. Brust Jr. Harold S. Orchow Joseph F. Rodgers + F. W. Sunderman Jr. Irwin R. Fisch Paul E. Frank Morton J. Robinson Thomas H. Voshell Jr. Wilton R. Kane Mrs. Barbara Schaebler Hilliard C. Gersten Charles D. Thomas in memory of Additional Contributors Sheldon B. Meyerson Philip S. Green McClellan Merit Society M. Lee Schaebler, MD + Robert W. Lukens Jr. Robert J. Maro Sr. Additional Contributors Nathan Brillman Hugh S. Pershing Walter E. Mokychic to the Class Richard B. Freeman Donald V. Powers Joseph P. Ravin Nancy B. Davis Charles L. Knecht III 1958 John N. Sourbeer Robert R. Schwartz in memory of Stanley L. Kocot Class Totals: Thomas G. Davis + Charles T. Storm Century Club Arthur C. Krepps II 48 Gifts Totaling $18,670.00 Mary Louise H. McLaughlin Additional Contributors George M. Arnas Divo A. Messori 57th Annual Appeal Totals: in memory of to the Class Albert Arouh Howard S. Richter 50 Gifts Totaling $18,370.00 Christine C. Elmer Edward D. McLaughlin + William D. Bacon Emil S. Trellis 38% Total Class Participation in memory of Alfred Elmer + Richard P. Baker Jr. Joan A. Paoletti in memory of Century Club James P. Boland Cesare R. Antoniacci Sustaining Members Michael A. Paoletti + Eugene F. Bonacci Richard A. Bedford Elmo J. Lilli + Sandra First Charles L. Brennan Jr. John M. Bender Gino Mori in memory of Thomas L. Carter Martin G. Blechman Leon P. Scicchitano Stewart E. First + Owen A. Chang Franc Brodar Samuel D. Gross Associates Ruth Hobbs William E. Clendenning Robert S. Brodstein Guy J. Carnabuci in memory of Charles E. Cole Joseph D. Cionni Richard A. Cautilli Joseph H. Hobbs + William A. Coyle Edward I. Cooper Edward K. Fine John B. Davies Arthur N. DiNicola David B. Propert Paul J. Dugan Richard E. Easler Paul M. Roediger Nasrola Edalatpour John R. Hansell Joel L. Seres Eugene Glick Stephen J. Herceg Robert G. Somers

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 25

1959 1960 1961 1962 Class Totals: Class Totals: Class Totals: Class Totals: 46 Gifts Totaling $24,559.30 52 Gifts Totaling $25,505.51 52 Gifts Totaling $22,725.00 39 Gifts Totaling $20,095.00 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 45 Gifts Totaling $21,375.20 52 Gifts Totaling $26,030.51 49 Gifts Totaling $19,750.00 36 Gifts Totaling $16,360.00 38% Total Class Participation 37% Total Class Participation 37% Total Class Participation 32% Total Class Participation

Jefferson Associates Jefferson Society Jefferson Society Jefferson Society Elliot Zaleznik Lee P. Haacker Louis Brown William V. Harrer Jefferson Society Richard R. Soricelli Richard T. Padula Sustaining Members James T. Howard Jr. Sustaining Members Stanton N. Smullens Stephan Billstein Sustaining Members Thomas Kelso Sustaining Members Melvin L. Moses Patrick V. Castellano William H. Mahood William J. Antognoli Joseph W. Sokolowski Jr. Charles L. McDowell Francis W. Wachter Samuel D. Gross Associates Stephen G. Vasso Frank A. Milani Samuel D. Gross Associates Kenneth M. Given Samuel D. Gross Associates Samuel D. Gross Associates John J. Coyle Gerald Salen Henry Gelband McClellan Merit Society Peter J. Andrews Neil R. Feins McClellan Merit Society Richard Hamilton William F. Bauer Edward J. Baranski H. G. Hostetter William T. Anderson Peter Haynicz John H. Bowman Pasqualino Ioffreda Terence L. O’Rourke William A. Browne Robert J. Neviaser Vernon F. Bradley Richard S. Kolecki Harvey W. Oshrin E. S. Emanuel Eugene W. Pelczar William W. Clements Carl I. Simons Robert A. Senft John H. Gould Jerome Rudnitzky Philip D. Volk William E. Staas Jr. Richard E. Eshbach McClellan Merit Society Karl R. Herwig James M. LaBraico James R. Delp McClellan Merit Society William D. McCann McClellan Merit Society Richard R. Vanderbeek Lewis C. Druffner Jr. Gerald P. Collins Jerome Spivack Robert M. Glazer Century Club Richard W. Godshall Alfred J. Finn Jr. David K. Subin Robert C. Nuss Barry L. Altman Malcolm Kates David A. Ginns W. S. Taylor Mark Pliskin Christopher J. Beetel Walter L. McConnell J. H. Hannemann Robert B. Tesh Jerald M. Rosenbaum Paul E. Berkebile Lawrence J. Mellon Jr. John M. Hess James Vorosmarti Jr. David E. Rosenthal Robert D. Bloemendaal Martin Rubel Marvin E. Jaffe Century Club Willis W. Willard III Roger H. Brodkin Casimir J. Wanczyk Herbert D. Kleber Arlo C. Anderson Century Club Edward B. Lipp Jay S. Cox Century Club Lewis G. Anthony Stanley Bernstein James J. O’Brien Donald N. Dubrow L. R. Altemus Joseph D. Avellino Thomas B. Carmany George N. Riffle II John L. Dunn Nahum M. Balotin, MD, PhD Arthur D. Boxer W. L. Drew Peter Wadewitz Mark C. Eisenstein N. C. Baumm J. J. Cohen Norman A. Goldstein Robert A. Weiss Joseph J. Glorioso Harris R. Clearfield William J. Farrell Ronald F. Green George A. Griggs Marvin C. Daley Century Club Joel B. Goldstein Richard J. Hamburger John E. Kostinas Donald I. Gallagher Robert E. Barkett David J. Graubard Arnold I. Hollander Robert Bridenbaugh Kenneth A. Greenawald Courtney M. Malcarney John K. Kreider David M. Geetter James D. Brubaker Jerry D. Harrell Joel A. Mason Victor Panitch Trevor D. Glenn Gary G. Carpenter James S. Harrop George E. McCarthy Jr. Lloyd G. Plummer Leonard F. Greenberg Ernest C. Dunn Eric M. Kahn Clark D. McKeever Daniel T. Pompey Thomas F. Gumina Jr. Alan N. Fleckner John P. Keefe Sheldon L. Morris John T. Rightor Burritt L. Haag John P. Galgon Samuel Krain G. S. Nicoll Marvin Z. Rotman Norman C. Jablon J. F. Hiehle James A. Lehman Jr. Stanford M. Steinberg Samuel F. Rudolph Jr. John E. Kelly John A. Ruffini William F. Hushion Maurice J. Lewis Harvey Steinberg James A. McCallum Harold J. Kobb Irvin M. Liebman Arnold Singer Edward K. Poole Additional Contributors William T. Lemmon Jr. Aaron M. Longacre Jerrold C. Bonn Arthur M. Spiegleman Gary P. Romisher Vincent T. McDermott Jr. Elliott Perlin Alan R. Freedman James M. Stern William E. Ryan Paul L. Mitchell Howard A. Platt Joseph Honigman V. M. Vaccaro John J. Schubert James M. Walker Bruce B. Montgomery Gerald M. Polin James T. Kauders Marvin N. Schwartz Robert A. Nichols William B. Pratt Albert B. Wolbach Jr. Robert B. Matthews Alan I. Snyder E. D. Nordberg Donald K. Roeder Additional Contributors John W. Miller Jr. Alfred C. Speirs Myron E. Rosenfeld Joseph H. Rosen Jerome I. Cohen Willis G. Stose Frank K. Rykiel William M. Shue Richard J. Hanratty Samuel L. Stover Frederick H. Shisler Frank P. Silver 1963 Bertram D. Hurowitz John C. Vance Jr. Robert H. Stine Raymond L. Sphar Jr. Class Totals: Dean D. Monaco James R. Wiant Luke G. Tedeschi H. D. Sponaugle 41 Gifts Totaling $37,225.00 Hilbert E. Oskin Additional Contributors Joel R. Temple Paul R. Sweterlitsch 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Additional Contributors Stephen R. Murray William J. West Furman T. Updike 40 Gifts Totaling $33,125.00 to the Class George Pappas Walter K. Young James A. Walsh Elizabeth Hopwood 32% Total Class Participation Albert C. Price Additional Contributors Benjamin Wolfson in memory of Additional Contributors Gene Adams William D. Ziegenfus Winged Ox Society Herbert G. Hopwood + Jay K. Salwen to the Class G. R. Constable Additional Contributors Nancy Seidel Levy Baka David Green Herbert H. Butler Jr. Jefferson Associates in memory of in memory of Joseph Baka + Maury Hoberman Richard A. DiMeo Ronald V. Pellegrini Henry E. Seidel + Additional Contributors Jefferson Society to the Class John M. Fenlin Jr. Janet W. Sugden Stanley C. Ushinski in memory of William A. Sustaining Members Sugden + J. T. Williams Jr. 26 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Women’s Forum and CME at Alumni Weekend

Samuel D. Gross Associates Darryl B. Tisherman Thomas J. Schneider William W. Atkinson Norman M. Woldorf Joseph W. Smiley Charles A. Binder Marion K. Yoder Arthur N. Triester John M. Dick Century Club Bruce W. Weissman Joseph C. Flanagan David A. Brian Richard P. Wenzel Marvin R. Hyett David M. Capuzzi Phillip H. Winslow Steven J. Munzer Richard T. Ebert Additional Contributors Henry F. Smith Peter M. Fahrney Carolyn P. Decker Robert Zavod William A. Freeman Earl J. Fleegler McClellan Merit Society Lawrence Green John A. Hildreth Joseph T. Curti James S. Grim Allen S. Laub Robert M. Davis Anthony M. Harrison Allen P. Schlein Joseph M. Farber John P. Heilman Jr. Richard C. Wilson David L. Forde John K. Howe Robert C. Gallo Joseph A. Lieberman III 1966 Ronald O. Gilcher Gilles A. Marchand Thomas D. Schonauer J. F. Laucius H. D. Kreider Eli O. Meltzer Class Totals: 55 Gifts Totaling $32,464.00 Howard Silberman David H. Miller William S. Mainker Theodore F. Mucha James V. Snyder Stanton I. Moldovan Irving P. Ratner L. R. Trabulsi 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Harvey J. Sugerman Lloyd W. Moseley Jr. Donald Rothfeld Robert A. White 54 Gifts Totaling $30,814.00 Robert G. Timmons Carl P. Mulveny + Charles L. Wasilewski Jr. John W. Yunginger 39% Total Class Participation Richard A. Ulrich Andrew J. Pryharski Century Club Additional Contributors Charles L. Woodruff Philip A. Rosenfeld Jefferson Associates Matthew N. Boulis Nils G. Herdelin Jr. John E. Stambaugh Jr. Additional Contributors Vance R. Stouffer Jr. Harry D. Carrozza Solon L. Rhode Michael C. Coplon Anne M. Thompson George H. Cohen Jefferson Society Vincent J. Varano Timothy J. Michals Robert Fisher Frederick L. Dankmyer 1965 Robert H. Lerman L. R. Walker Jr. Richard U. Delp Frank J. Szarko Don C. Weiser Class Totals: Michael L. Popolow Peter J. Devine Sustaining Members Matthew White 44 Gifts Totaling $16,175.00 George M. Tai Nick J. Haddad William R. Collini David W. Vastine David E. Williams Joseph C. Hohl 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Susan J. Gordon + Mark H. Zeitlin Additional Contributors Charles B. Kahn 43 Gifts Totaling $15,125.00 Nicholas J. Ruggiero Robert G. Little Jr. Manfred W. Lichtmann 31% Total Class Participation Samuel D. Gross Associates Theodore J. Wilf Richard D. Lippe Charles T. Curtin 1967 Arthur D. Magilner Sustaining Members Frances P. Freed Class Totals: 1968 Paul A. Meunier George L. Hamilton Thomas J. Green 40 Gifts Totaling $24,558.00 Bruce D. Hopper Class Totals: Herbert C. Rader Warren D. Lambright 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 50 Gifts Totaling $18,950.00 B. H. Rosania Lionel W. Rosen Thomas V. Lloyd III 41 Gifts Totaling $21,908.00 Michael H. Weller Samuel D. Gross Associates 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Burton Mass 26% Total Class Participation Additional Contributors Harvey J. Bellin Paul A. Pupi 47 Gifts Totaling $15,420.00 Bruce K. Leinweber Nancy S. Czarnecki Roger D. Raymond Jefferson Associates 35% Total Class Participation Frank N. Federico John T. Sack Michael R. Leone Nathan B. Hirsch Sustaining Members McClellan Merit Society Jefferson Society 1964 Joseph P. Glaser James F. Lally Joseph B. Blood Jr. Charles H. Klieman Class Totals: Steven L. Lefrak William B. Wood Donald M. Booth Edward M. Sorr 37 Gifts Totaling $22,090.00 Edward A. Wrobleski McClellan Merit Society Jay B. Bosniak Sustaining Members 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Robert M. Cohen Louis J. Centrella Robert R. Madigan Samuel D. Gross Associates 34 Gifts Totaling $17,890.00 Edward R. Corcoran Jr. Franklyn R. Cook James M. Sumerson Bonnie L. Ashby 27% Total Class Participation Joseph Y. Dwoskin Robert L. Fronduti John V. Zeok David A. Berd David G. Jones Kenneth P. Heaps Richard L. Davies Jefferson Associates Samuel D. Gross Associates Alan E. Feen Michael A. Kutell W. R. Hodges III Robert F. Hall II John P. Whitecar Jr. Thomas J. Gal Samuel Salen Gary R. Leach Elliot J. Rayfield Joseph F. Kestner Jr. Jefferson Society Century Club Harry M. Love Stephen Slogoff Ignatius S. Hneleski Jr. Jon S. Adler Michael C. Snyder William E. Logan Stanford B. Trachtenberg McClellan Merit Society Bruce Stevens Thomas L. Bauer Century Club Robert G. Altschuler McClellan Merit Society Sustaining Members Robert A. Beggs Carter M. Becker David A. Balling John T. Dawson Jr. Gerald A. Hiatt Elmer C. Bigley Jr. James F. Burke Jr. Daniel C. Harrer John B. Humphrey Jr. Samuel D. Gross Associates Frederic W. Bost G. D. Clarke Barry A. Silver Garth A. Koniver James C. Barton Bernard S. Casel Murray C. Davis III John S. Wills Robert C. Kurtz Martin J. Cosgrove Stanley S. Chaplin James S. Dyer Alan H. Wolson Norman Label James C. Hirschy Edwin E. Cohen Robert L. Erdman James Wong Martina M. Martin David L. Paskin James L. Conrad Joseph A. Girone John A. Yauch Charles W. Snyder McClellan Merit Society James E. Copeland Jr. Robert A. Greenstein Norman J. Kramer Century Club Mark R. Stein William R. Boben Jr. Joseph R. Hooper Allan M. Arbeter Robert E. Longnecker Leon H. Venier James M. Delaplane Daniel J. Kelly H. Jane M. Breck Gerard L. MacDonald Malcolm S. Weiss Donald F. Eipper Paul J. Maher Campbell M. Davis William F. Pharr Century Club Stanley C. Foster John A. Manfredi Joseph E. Franger Robert M. Pilewski Gill R. Alderfer I. B. Keller Carl L. Reams Joseph S. Klemek Ronald K. Sandberg Joel M. Barish Edward M. Magargee David C. Rising Michael B. Kodroff Steven C. Sandler William H. Barnaby Charles O. Thompson Alan S. Roberts Clifford C. Kuhn

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 27

Jay B. Berger Philip H. Geetter Samuel D. Gross Associates Bruce M. Fishbane John D. Frost Michael J. Ginieczki Allan P. Freedman 1971 Stephen S. Frost Stephen L. Hershey William J. Heim David I. Lintz Class Totals: Arthur H. Glaser Lawrence V. Hofmann Linda K. Izquierdo Parker M. Seymour 68 Gifts Totaling $34,072.00 Phillip Glass Jacob Klein Jonathan S. Kaplan McClellan Merit Society 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Ronald D. Grossman John Lazarchick Robert A. Lustig William D. Bloomer 61 Gifts Totaling $30,497.00 Gerald M. Klein Glen W. Metz Meredith K. Pang Cynthia L. Lehr-Janus Richard D. Davenport 38% Total Class Participation Morris L. Orocofsky Alan Schein Michael D. Ellis Michael C. Margulies Joseph E. Palascak John W. Shigeoka Stephen C. Glassberg Jefferson Society James G. McBride Charles E. Probst Jr. McClellan Merit Society Larry S. Myers Harry R. Cramer Jr. Thomas F. Mullins Kenneth B. Reynard Stanley N. Brand James N. Nutt III Joseph L. Seltzer James P. Noone Thomas S. Scott Frederick J. Dudenhoefer Harry S. Polsky Sustaining Members Susan M. Pacheco Stewart D. Shull Kathleen C. Dudenhoefer Charles E. Quaglieri Arthur E. Brown Barry H. Penchansky Jay A. Townsend Robert D. Meringolo David J. Randell Thomas W. Fiss Jr. Elizabeth A. Rogers James B. Turchik Jay S. Skyler Charles R. Schleifer Ronald H. Hirokawa Richard P. Schwimmer Charles E. Webber Jr. Kenneth L. Wible Rose K. Slizewski W. M. Pryor Arthur M. Segal Stephen E. Werner Century Club Richard G. Sowden Gregory J. Salko Stephen C. Silver Additional Contributors Alan S. Bricklin John V. Whitbeck Michael E. Starrels Arthur K. Smith Cyrus E. Beekey Jr. Marvin E. Cramer Century Club Samuel D. Gross Associates Barbara L. Tenney Robert E. Bellet Robert W. Egdell Edward J. Barylak Warren Appleman Timothy E. Urbanski John L. Berardinelli Howard I. Finkle Barbara B. Berniker Mary K. Craddock Jeffrey C. Weiss Sarah J. Richards Peter A. Gehret Ronald I. Blum T. J. Dmochowski George S. Wineburgh Nelson Sirlin Michael R. Goldin Edward B. Bower George R. Freeland Additional Contributors Charles E. Sparks H. R. Hansen Joseph A. Breslin Jr. Ronald A. Hoffman Alexander T. Baskous Ira R. Tannebaum James D. Heckman Richard H. Charney Jerome W. Jordan Gary K. Buffington Vincent M. Vaccaro Thomas M. Kain III Paul H. Douglass Edward B. Ruby Theodore W. Fetter Harold A. Yocum Vincent T. Randazzo Michael K. Farrell Robert C. Snyder David H. Hennessey Additional Contributors Andrew B. Walker Richard M. Feldman Julie E. Timins Theodore G. Probst to the Class Linda L. Weinberg Joseph S. Fisher Nancy L. Wong Paul M. Weinberg Stephanie K. Epple Louis A. Freeman McClellan Merit Society 1972 in memory of Walter D. Epple + Jesse H. Wright III Laurence Goldstein James E. Barone Class Totals: Additional Contributors Richard H. Goodwin Jr. John A. Belis David J. Addis 63 Gifts Totaling $22,172.50 Frederick E. Hampf Jr. Peter M. Caravello Sr. 1969 Richard L. Allman 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Irwin Ingwer James R. Dooley Class Totals: Donna L. Cooper 58 Gifts Totaling $18,697.50 Robert C. Kane Robert B. Falk Jr. 43 Gifts Totaling $38,725.00 James Winter Marilyn S. Kershner William F. Fell Jr. 35% Total Class Participation 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Steven A. Klein Paul M. Fernhoff 39 Gifts Totaling $24,775.00 Robert M. Lumish Jefferson Society 1970 Francisco J. Garcia-Torres Craig T. Haytmanek 28% Total Class Participation Class Totals: Seth A. Malin William R. Henrick Sustaining Members 55 Gifts Totaling $30,075.00 Robert J. Malovany Howard S. Robin Winged Ox Society Christopher L. Brown Ronald J. Palmieri Daniel G. Sommer Edward B. Yellig 57th Annual Appeal Totals: David R. Pashman Alex B. Juhasz 52 Gifts Totaling $20,575.00 Norman E. Wilson Jefferson Associates John Reichel III Samuel D. Gross Associates Century Club S. R. Freedman 36% Total Class Participation Samuel K. Ackerman Marie V. Russell Christopher K. Balkany Sustaining Members J. M. Shovlin William D. Boswell Jr. Jefferson Society Michael J. Blecker Richard E. Brennan Stanley Benzel James W. Fox IV Aris M. Sophocles Jr. Gregory P. Borkowski Gail T. Jacoby Alexander C. Gellman Peter V. Scoles Calvin L. Weisberger Terrence S. Carden Jr. Helen A. Leibowitz Gerald A. Mandell David G. Wetterholt Robert E. Chandlee Sustaining Members Sandra S. Mossbrook John C. Schiro Additional Contributors Lawrence J. Chase James B. Carty Jr. Barry P. Skeist Suzanne S. Zeok George W. Anstadt Cora L. Christian Alan M. Gold Thaddeus R. Szydlowski Samuel D. Gross Associates John T. Martsolf Carolyn S. Crawford Thomas R. Kay Stephen A. Volk Elizabeth S. Bussard W. C. Lambert Robert Davidson John R. Bussard James R. LaMorgese Mary L. Evitts Walter J. Finnegan Harvey B. Lefton Edwin P. Ewing Jr. 28 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

McClellan Merit Society Joseph W. Sassani Stephen J. Gordin McClellan Merit Society Anthony J. Calabrese 1973 David S. Schwartz Robert E. Hobbs Gerard T. Berry Herbert T. Caskey Class Totals: Daniel J. Schwartz Bradley R. Hoch Robert S. Fields Sanford Fitzig 52 Gifts Totaling $24,700.00 Eugene M. Shaffer Robert M. Johnson Paul E. Goldberg Alan S. Friedman 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Frank M. Taylor III Franklin C. Kelton Jr. Margaret B. Griffin Philip C. Hoffman 48 Gifts Totaling $18,225.00 Emilian J. Wasserman James W. Kessel Michael J. Griffin Ronald L. Kabler Leonard A. Wisneski Michael A. Kutcher John E. Griggs Jr. 30% Total Class Participation Robert D. McKay Additional Contributors Stephen B. Lichtenstein John E. Hocutt Jr. Robert E. Rinaldi Jefferson Society Earl H. Brown Georgetta D. Lupold Mary L. Kundrat Anthony R. Rooklin Robert P. Good Michael H. Bryant Bruce P. Meinhard Ellis R. Levin William J. Thomas Jr. Sustaining Members Stephen P. Muller William I. Miller H. D. Lipsitz Century Club Rodney A. Appell Michael S. Wrigley Frank J. Pearl John M. McGowan Gerald G. Abelow Kenneth R. Barmach Joel C. Rosenfeld David H. Moore A. J. Behrend Eric W. Blomain 1974 Kenneth L. Savage Craig L. Muetterties Richard J. Bonanno Jeffrey J. Dekret Jay S. Schinfeld Michael D. Perilstein Mary F. Buechler Peter R. Hulick Class Totals: Ira Schwartz Paul R. Pirigyi 49 Gifts Totaling $31,945.00 Howard J. Caplan Stanford N. Sullum L. P. Soraruf IV John P. Rogers Arthur Sitelman John N. Carson III Samuel D. Gross Associates 57th Annual Appeal Totals: George E. Thorpe Harry S. Cooper Arthur W. Colbourn 47 Gifts Totaling $19,920.00 Additional Contributors Keith M. Staiman Philip J. DiGiacomo Jr. Larry E. Goldstein 27% Total Class Participation William J. Gibbons Century Club Richard M. Donner Michael H. Greenhawt Michael C. Leo Robert B. Baker Winged Ox Society Alexander E. Ehrlich David A. Jacoby Gary L. Shugar Gary S. Clark Bartley P. Griffith Michael L. Eisemann Michael J. Schmerin Alfred G. Vasta David L. Clinton Richard C. Fiorelli Ronald L. Souder Jefferson Society Joseph DiSaverio Marsha J. Fishbane John V. Cattie John H. Doherty Jr. McClellan Merit Society Steven M. Wenner 1975 Gerald P. Durkan Martin J. Fliegelman Paul A. Bialas Class Totals: Robert H. Gordon James T. Hay Ben P. Bradenham Sustaining Members 74 Gifts Totaling $41,420.00 Leonard Grossman William J. Hyde Paul Casadonte James A. Kenning 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Kathryn L. Hall Mark Josephs Richard S. Chalfant John P. Lubicky 70 Gifts Totaling $36,410.00 Geoffrey G. Hallock Norman W. Lindenmuth Michael M. Cohen Robert J. Wasnick Lawrence M. Hurvitz Carey M. Marder Anthony M. Colatrella Samuel D. Gross Associates 35% Total Class Participation Richard S. Jackson Jr. Jeffrey A. Mattes Benjamin Gerson Albert L. Blumberg Jefferson Associates Jonathan L. Kates Richard R. McCurdy Robert A. Gordon Robert L. Breckenridge Jr. Thomas J. Nasca Jonathan Kay Glenn C. Nye Ivan H. Jacobs H. M. Horst William F. Rosner Marilyn C. Kay James W. Redka Priscilla J. Kistler Scott I. Lampert Jefferson Society Randall F. Maguire Edward R. Russell Joseph A. Kuhn Allen E. Meyer Bruce S. Saltzman William J. Kitei Richard P. Marcello Eugenia M. Miller McClellan Merit Society Sustaining Members David P. Mayer Lawrence R. Schiller Mark S. Pascal Bruce C. Berger William A. Biermann John F. Nansteel Jr. Barton L. Schneyer Louis T. Broad C. R. Seiler Century Club Paul J. Ruschak Paul A. Piccini Peter C. Amadio Allen B. Filstein Allen Sonstein Robert T. Sataloff Randall E. Pitone Marc L. Bernstein Mitchell M. Greenspan John R. Tyler David L. Weiss John D. Rauth Alan N. Binnick Jacob D. Kanofsky William M. Wixted Samuel D. Gross Associates Norbert D. Scharff Bruce S. Bleiman Frank T. Kucer Timothy C. Wolfgang Robert R. Houston Jere F. Seelaus Joseph R. Car Conrad Lindes Joseph J. Korey Jr. William A. Spohn Additional Contributors Paul F. Cerza Raymond W. Merrell Janine A. Matsko Arthur C. St. Andre Paul M. Dainer Gary R. Fleisher Guy M. Nardella Jr. Geno J. Merli John M. Van Summern Gene H. Ginsberg Joseph F. Frazer Alan K. Roberts L. D. Pepper Paul M. Wall Joseph P. Horstmann Marc R. Goldenberg Edward J. Share Thomas H. Sprague Michael Z. Weiner Rosemary A. Horstmann Fredric R. Gottlieb Century Club R. T. Veve Douglas H. West David P. Hughes Alan S. Josselson Barbara F. Atkinson Robert E. Wall Additional Contributors Stanley R. Jacobs Anton P. Kemps Elizabeth K. Blackwell Bradley D. Wong Warren C. Daniels Myles K. Krieger Thomas R. Layton Tom E. Campbell James C. Delehanty Warren F. MacDonald Jr. Gary J. Levin Raymond J. Gaspari Mark L. Dembert Rosalie K. Marinari Louis M. Palermo Victoria A. Gillis

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 29

Joseph B. Giletto Mark D. Lichtenstein Carolyn D. Runowicz Thomas J. Danyliw Vance A. Good John S. Liggett Jr. Stanley P. Solinsky 1978 John C. Dethoff Frank R. Penater Paul R. Long Virginia C. Wood Class Totals: Steven B. Edson Sheryl L. Silfen Robert J. McCunney Marc T. Zubrow 96 Gifts Totaling $34,969.25 Steven B. Eisner Marc E. Sternberg Manuel R. Morman Century Club 57th Annual Appeal Totals: William G. Ellien David O. Thayer A. J. Morris III Leonard J. Adelson 90 Gifts Totaling $27,969.25 Patricia G. Fitzpatrick Nathan Wei Gordon J. Ostrum Jr. Charles K. Foulsham II Leigh Baltuch 44% Total Class Participation Richard J. Pierotti J. H. Bowen III George C. Francos 1976 I. S. Porter Thomas J. Campfield Jefferson Society Susan M. Ginsberg Gary F. Purdue R. A. Carabasi III Glenn A. Hyatt Peter J. Gkonos Class Totals: Eric D. Glasofer Samuel R. Ruby Mark W. Cooper Sustaining Members 55 Gifts Totaling $24,032.50 Gregory C. Griffin Kent A. Sallee Margaret M. Dunn Charles B. Austin Jr. Bruce C. Hall 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Jeffrey J. Sands David S. Eisner L. C. Grad Marilyn M. Hart 52 Gifts Totaling $17,737.50 Melissa R. Spevak Stephen Fehnel Patricia H. Petrozza Thomas K. Jones 27% Total Class Participation Amy A. Sukati John A. Ferriss Charles D. Stutzman Allen S. Josephs David W. Willis Michael E. Fischer Jefferson Society Samuel D. Gross Associates Daniel P. Kegel Dean L. Winslow Richard M. Fornadel Robert G. McCairns Jr. David A. Brillman Marian B. Klepser Sheldon J. Freedman Nadine P. Wenner Additional Contributors Marciana D. Filippone Rudolph M. Krafft David S. Batt Gary R. Hopen Sustaining Members Harry A. Frankel Gaylyn G. Li Barry S. Brenner William J. Krywicki Judith F. Grem Eric W. Jahnke Robert M. Lintz Gary A. Emmett Gary W. Lawrence Lydia M. Lasichak Carol A. Love Curtis R. Liu Barbara L. Katz Eugene A. Lechmanick Raymond T. Pekala Samuel D. Gross Associates Alexander C. Mamourian Stephen K. Katz Thomas W. McLaughlin Robert H. Peters III Elizabeth J. Buechler Francis A. Marro Marc J. Medway Ann E. Reilly Glenn B. Charlton Alexander McArthur III Jay S. Mendelsohn Chi-Lun C. Wang John R. Cohn 1977 Kenneth A. Neifeld Mary E. O’Connor Douglas B. Yingling Barry E. Packman Neal Flomenberg Class Totals: Donald E. Playfoot Scott M. Goldman 60 Gifts Totaling $25,715.81 McClellan Merit Society Clifford H. Pemberton Kevin G. Robinson Joseph A. Petrozza Roy Grossman Richard P. Abramowitz 57th Annual Appeal Totals: David M. Rodgers Paul E. Pilgram Paul J. Hoyer Gerald L. Andriole Jr. 55 Gifts Totaling $23,247.56 Alan D. Roumm Almerindo G. Portfolio Jr. Jonathan D. Ralph Robert B. Berger 30% Total Class Participation Donald J. Savage Michael P. Russo Steven R. Ytterberg Richard S. Buza Robert C. Savage Jeffrey W. Dietz Thomas B. Scott McClellan Merit Society Jefferson Associates Cynthia L. Sears Robert S. Finkelhor Neil H. Shusterman Robert A. Krall Gregory A. Hoffman Lawrence T. Smyth Jr. Louis Hammerman Ira U. Smith Kathleen A. Kucer Sustaining Members Paul R. Weber Robert H. Huxster David W. Stepansky James P. McCann Robert J. Woodhouse Michael G. Weinberg Raymond R. Jones R. B. Summersgill Robert I. Michaelson Samuel D. Gross Associates Richard A. Wolitz Eric J. Michael Bernard L. Ullman John E. Plastino Jeffrey S. Adam Additional Contributors James T. Muffly Eric J. Werner John W. Thompson Wynn W. Adam Elyse C. Dubin Bob L. Pansick John D. Wofford Jr. Century Club Sylvia L. Beimfohr Jay Ginsberg Warren L. Robinson Jr. Frank J. Yohe Carl N. Zenz John D. Blannett Jr. James F. Burke Jeffrey B. Gross Norman G. Rosenblum Carol F. Boerner George E. Connerton David C. Nickeson Duncan Salmon Additional Contributors Robert L. Boyd Jeffrey F. Minteer Jay A. Peacock Boris J. Sawula Jeffrey B. Bronstein Ira Brenner Anthony F. Naples Brad S. Rogers David H. Trump Daniel B. DiCola David C. Brock Karen L. Ytterberg Dale C. Tucker Sally L. Herpst Francis A. Chervenak McClellan Merit Society Deborah E. Hoellein Joseph D. Conti Century Club Howard S. Klein Thomas C. Benfield Andrew J. Baron Jr. Vincent F. Deeney M. D. Lauter Thomas J. Delehanty Kimberly R. Best-Long Michael S. Goodman Alfred E. Levy Victor A. Ferraris Robert P. Boran Jr. Philip C. Grem Francis M. Metkus Bruce Heller Michael W. Border Roderick B. Groomes Paul W. Montigney Jeffrey M. Koffler Ellen F. Brooks Robert A. Kloss Albert A. Rizzo Samuel M. Lesko Douglas P. Brozell John J. Lammie Janice Starsnic William B. McNamee Jr. Katharyn M. Byrne Ivor F. Lewis John W. Peters Marc I. Surkin Harry L. Chaikin Burton J. Williams 30 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Jeffrey R. Haag Marie V. Spagnoli Jodi K. Laxer 1979 Creston C. Herold Jr. John E. Widger 1981 Pamela L. Leib Class Totals: Joseph Kavchok Jr. McClellan Merit Society Class Totals: Eric W. Longenbach 67 Gifts Totaling $35,800.00 Steven Kazenoff Lawrence P. Bressler 54 Gifts Totaling $28,881.75 Dennis T. Monteiro 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Steven Levenberg Thomas R. Corley 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Paul M. Newell 63 Gifts Totaling $31,600.00 William S. Miller Gary Dukart 51 Gifts Totaling $23,856.75 Mark G. Rubin Carol A. Narkevic Corey K. Ruth 32% Total Class Participation Paul L. Gorsuch Jr. 24% Total Class Participation Michael D. Overbeck Joyce A. Korvick Richard C. Silver Winged Ox Society Thomas P. Phiambolis Mark J. Krawitz Jefferson Society Stephen Sorokanich Jr. Dale E. Johnston Kathleen K. Quadro Thomas P. Lehman Robert R. Kester Warren J. Ventriglia Jefferson Society Robert M. Rose John E. McManigle F. M. Rommel John P. Welch Robert T. Reichman Max C. Rudansky James H. Spigel Sustaining Members Robert L. Witt Michael H. Snedden Martin E. Scott Paul E. Stander Francis P. Day Additional Contributors Sustaining Members Mitchell F. Shmokler John R. Starynski David J. Ellis Samuel S. Laucks II Virginia L. Smith Frederick M. Fellin Century Club James M. McWeeney James B. Lam William J. Steinour Hugh M. Carlin Anne L. Rosenberg 1982 Joseph R. Spiegel Michael D. Stulpin Jeffrey B. Cohn Samuel D. Gross Associates Donn S. Tokairin Class Totals: Samuel D. Gross Associates Charles J. Dunton Lawrence M. Correnti Sandra Willingmyre 56 Gifts Totaling $34,220.96 Michael J. Axe Marjorie P. Gillespy G. M. Edmondson John M. Yindra 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Anthony C. Cetrone Thurman Gillespy III Cynthia Liskov Richard W. Ziegler 52 Gifts Totaling $20,411.96 Alan R. Erickson Thomas A. Grabiak Fredric J. Matlin Michael J. Guarino Additional Contributors Joseph G. Grover David C. Slagle 26% Total Class Participation Christine E. Dotterer Edward J. Jahnke Craig L. Stabler Steven L. Mendelsohn Winged Ox Society Philip J. Dzwonczyk Mark A. Staffaroni McClellan Merit Society Neeraj K. Kanwal Patricia M. McGuire Frans A. Vossenberg III David G. Baer Susan G. Kaplan Felix K. Tam Barbara P. Seizert Jefferson Society Lawrence H. Brent S. G. Kipa Sophia C. Young Linda A. Sherman Gary L. Feinberg Mary A. Facciolo Gerard F. Klinzing McClellan Merit Society Jeffrey A. Sunshine Pauline K. Park Barbara A. Hobbs Jerome L. Korinchak Daniel T. Biles Kathleen S. Sunshine Sustaining Members Michael J. Kibelbek Eric J. Margolis Wayne C. Herrick Robert M. Gorsen Janet B. Leventhal Robert J. Maro Jr. Michael P. O’Leary Richard L. Jahnle Michael J. McGlaughlin 1980 Arthur W. Mellen IV Michael H. Rittenberg M. D. Metzger Lawrence S. Miller Class Totals: Barbara E. Swan Samuel D. Gross Associates Michael X. Repka 59 Gifts Totaling $30,870.00 Mark C. Norris David M. Swan Michael F. Hagerty James P. Paskert Thomas S. Wilson David P. Maguire Sandra F. Schnall 57th Annual Appeal Totals: David M. Robinson II Richard M. Yelovich Cynthia McMurty Thomas M. Williams 59 Gifts Totaling $20,045.00 Arthur H. Shedden Maureen L. Yelovich Randall W. Ryan Century Club 27% Total Class Participation Christine K. Stabler Joel M. Sumfest Terry B. Bachow Century Club Randy R. Westgate Paul B. Bartos Jefferson Associates Jonathan D. Adams McClellan Merit Society Carol A. Wheeler Robert L. Bashore Barbara G. Frieman Jeffrey A. Amer Russell S. Breish Terrence J. Wilson Theodore F. Berk Jefferson Society John D. Angstadt Franklin J. Chinn Jr. Jeffrey C. Brandon Catherine T. Rommel Additional Contributors Alfred E. Bacon III Marian M. Huang Raymond C. Andries Edward Lubat Peter L. Choyke Sustaining Members Linda D. Barrasse Patricia E. Clancy John S. Monk Jr. Peter J. Christ Mark D. Chilton Kenneth A. Buckwalter Donald P. DeLorenzo Jr. Howard A. Moritz J. D. Cunningham Jane M. Longacre George R. Coar Margaret M. DeLorenzo S. M. Rivitz Allen W. Ditto David B. Nagel Arnold J. Cramer Rae A. Joselson Albert M. Signorella Robert S. Djergaian James F. Squadrito Jr. Donald A. DiIenno Robert S. Kiefner Andrew A. Farkas Brian M. Uniacke Geoffrey P. Dunn Samuel D. Gross Associates Angela E. Lin Richard G. Feduska Richard T. Fields Martin K. Fallor Century Club James W. Lockard Jr. Donn S. Fishbein Evan K. Bash Bernadette Genz-Remshard Thomas D. Griffin Bernard C. Proy Jr. Anthony A. Gaspari Randall T. Bashore Alan H. Goldberg Paul A. Kearney Jr. E. S. Hahn Robert H. Boretsky Michael L. Graybeal Henry L. Maxwell Jr. David G. Hershberger Ronald J. Brockman Richard H. Greenberg William E. McLemore W. D. Hiller Bruce S. Cohick Stephen S. Grubbs James L. Sechler Gordon M. Langston Walter W. Dearolf III

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 31

Albert DiGerolamo Richard J. Greco James P. Daubert Angus T. Gillis Century Club Dirk M. Elston Jeffrey A. Keenan Joseph M. DellaCroce Dan J. Gzesh Loren M. Aguiar Christopher M. Eriksen David J. Kramer Nathan B. Duer Randall J. Hoobler Joseph G. Bell J. R. Evans Glenn A. Mackin Andrew J. Glick Gayle A. Hopper Eugene Bunnell Larry M. Gersten Samuel H. Markind Kathleen S. Guarnieri Mark J. Hummel W. B. Carter Richard C. Kovach Philip M. Maurer Gregory Halenda Steven H. Kalchman David M. Cohen Charles B. Krespan Ann B. Olewnik Steven A. Katz Joseph J. Kesselring Greg R. Dragon O. S. Lauter Daniel G. Orr Jean M. Lien J. S. Long William R. Gallivan Jr. John F. Lawlis III Craig M. Palmer Robert A. Moyer Kevin N. Lorah John H. Gould R. B. Lutz III Joel F. Rach Martin E. Orlick Rex G. Mabey Jr. Valerie T. Greco-Hunt John C. Lystash Mark I. Rubinstein Steven H. Rappaport Marc S. McMorris Kurt P. Hofmann Ralph J. Marino Debra B. Sager Benjamin A. Rosenblum Robert J. Motley Joanne S. Hummel Robert M. McNamara Timothy P. Walsh Michael I. Schoen David A. Nardi Dan D. Kessler Judd W. Moul Additional Contributors Kathleen R. Sempeles Donald T. Nardone Sarah E. Kohl George R. Rohrer Jr. Ellen K. Blair-Pierce Lincoln M. Snyder Thomas M. O’Brien Karen B. Lauer Craig H. Sherman Debbie R. Carter Laurie E. Spence Michael J. Patti Steven P. Levin Ira S. Solomon Joseph J. Drabick Charles K. Stevens Sumanth D. Prabhu Edward R. Magargee Richard A. Szucs Suzanne Holdcraft Janet H. Tabas George R. Pronesti Kenneth B. Margulies Lloyd L. Trujillo Glenn S. Madara Lisa C. Wolf Kathryn A. Reihard Suzanne F. Matunis Julius S. von Clef III Lynda C. Schneider Additional Contributors Dale J. Rosenberg Michelle A. Mead Joseph P. Walls Leonard I. Zon Herbert T. Cohen Patricia L. Skypala Gregory Mokrynski Additional Contributors James A. Cook Ronald P. Travitz Todd A. Morrow Vincent T. Armenti 1984 J. C. Daniel Kenneth D. Truscott Jr. Kathryn A. O’Connor Sherry L. Blumenthal Robert L. Davoli Additional Contributors Robert L. O’Connor III Richard D. Bruehlman Class Totals: Angela M. DeAntonio Teresa A. Borkowski Michael J. O’Donnell 66 Gifts Totaling $27,855.00 Marie E. Bush Michael Henrickson John I. Lane Michael W. Paluzzi Kim L. Carpenter 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Louis A. Kazal Jr. Sharon S. Lehman William F. Phifer Michael A. Franchetti 65 Gifts Totaling $27,255.00 Evan Y. Liu Marlon T. Maus Mark A. Shelly Stanford D. Gittlen 32% Total Class Participation Joel N. Maslow Louis J. Tedesco Patricia A. Shuster Robert P. Hinks, PhD Michael J. McGee Beth A. Zeeman James A. Smith Madalyn Schaefgen Jefferson Society Daniel G. Megivern Leonard Tachmes Robert B. Schlesinger Robert L. Schmouder Robert W. Meikle 1986 Stephen F. Wawrose Sustaining Members John W. Spurlock William J. West Jr. Class Totals: 1983 Francis R. Colangelo Additional Contributors Jonathan S. Daitch 1985 60 Gifts Totaling $30,175.50 Paul J. Fisch Class Totals: John J. Kelly III 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Kent E. Kester 44 Gifts Totaling $14,420.00 Thomas A. Moore II Class Totals: 58 Gifts Totaling $26,000.50 Patricia A. McCormack 51 Gifts Totaling $26,550.50 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Samuel D. Gross Associates 27% Total Class Participation Deborah A. Snyderman 43 Gifts Totaling $13,770.00 John F. Cox 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Robert A. Solomon Jefferson Associates 22% Total Class Participation Basil Dolphin 43 Gifts Totaling $14,400.50 Keith R. Superdock George P. Valko Carrie A. Hufnal-Miller 25% Total Class Participation Sustaining Members Charles F. Leinberry Jr. Jefferson Society 1987 Ferdinand E. Massari Randolph J. Miller Winged Ox Society Robert L. Robles Thomas J. Spinuzza Nicholas J. Barna Class Totals: Joseph M. Montella Sustaining Members 35 Gifts Totaling $41,179.00 Samuel D. Gross Associates Aldo J. Prosperi Jefferson Society Gary J. Cortina Thomas Carnevale Donna M. DiCenzo 57th Annual Appeal Totals: McClellan Merit Society Samuel D. Gross Associates Barry S. Clemson Vincent L. Angeloni Samuel D. Gross Associates Gail R. Corson 33 Gifts Totaling $24,979.00 Bruce J. Gould Daniel J. Cole Melanie M. Chaputa-Cherry Walter R. Cox 17% Total Class Participation Wayne K. Ross Terry L. Edwards Kenneth L. Cherry Jr. Mario Deguchi Winged Ox Society McClellan Merit Society Cynthia M. Coughlin-Hanna Douglas T. Hutchinson Michael Grasso III Bertram T. Chinn Elcinda L. Bergethon James J. Kerrigan Mark H. Hassel David R. Haas Jefferson Associates Richard P. Buyalos Jr. Paul M. Kiproff McClellan Merit Society Mari B. Ito J. C. Hess Vincent I. MacAndrew Jr. Peter J. Andrews Jr. Louis L. Keeler III John F. Wilson Paul F. Mansfield John C. Oberholtzer Arthur T. Androkites Luisa E. Lehrer Sustaining Members Gregory J. Mazanek Deborah Panitch William T. Felmly William P. Rumbaugh John F. Henzes III Edward M. Podgorski Jr. Janice E. Nevin John W. Rhee Scott Kruger McClellan Merit Society Frederick W. Ruthardt Jr. David A. Rivas David S. Seres William J. Belles Charles A. Pohl Century Club Karl G. Schwabe Robert K. Sigal Michael T. Brown Samuel D. Gross Associates Richard P. Baker III Guy M. Stofman Mark R. Versland Patti J. Brown Kenneth S. Breslin Peter R. Bergethon Randle H. Storm Century Club John C. Cardone Mark D. Falls Aaron D. Bleznak Robert D. Wallace Kenneth J. Arnold John F. Danella Richard E. Ioffreda Thomas A. Cacciola Century Club Paula R. Bennett Steven P. Gohsler Gregory C. Kane Mark E. Chasteney Mary F. Barber Daniel M. Bubenheim Bruce J. Keyser William E. Kropp Dean A. Christian Michael H. Basista Thomas P. Canty Bernard L. Lopez McClellan Merit Society Todd L. Demmy Richard A. Beers James E. Devlin Rosalie Pepe Morgan Y. Chen Alex Feinstein Gerald T. Celestine Bonni S. Field Robert S. Ream Ellen A. Liu Ellen K. Feldman Steve T. Chen Gary E. Fishbein Karen D. Novielli Michael L. Fetterolf Joseph W. Chow Linda A. Frantz David A. Goodman Frederick J. Cook Mary C. Gibbons 32 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

1990 Century Club James G. Zangrilli Jr. Class Totals: McClellan Merit Society Additional Contributors Laura R. Bond Claire Zilber 41 Gifts Totaling $12,658.00 Wayne B. Bauerle Christopher M. Brian David J. Bozentka Gunnar W. Zorn III 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Lina P. O’Brien David L. Carter Michael L. Cohan Pamela J. Zorn 38 Gifts Totaling $8,131.00 Shailesh D. Patel Sharon S. Conslato Andrew J. Cosgarea Howard S. Pittle Paul M. Conslato Additional Contributors 21% Total Class Participation Caesar A. DeLeo III Richard R. Clark Peter M. Witherell Michael A. Friedman Lynnanne Kasarda David D. Harrell Jefferson Society Century Club Howard E. Greenberg James W. Kurtz Brett W. Katzen William B. Morrison Kathy E. Baylor-Giorgio Jon F. Lasota Jeffrey J. Larkin Eileen K. Lambroza Sustaining Members M. Linda Burke Sheryl G. Li Mark E. Liebreich Frances E. Marchant Mohan Suntharalingam Robert J. Cabry Ann M. McGeehan Jeffrey E. Liu Allison B. Ochsner Michael C. Munin Samuel D. Gross Associates Jeffrey W. Campbell Randal J. Liu Helen K. Sava Suzanne P. Olivieri-O’Donnell Elizabeth G. Snedden Anthony M. Carrato Lynne O. Mroz C. Anthony Wolfe Jr. Cynthia A. Sacharok Toby K. Soble Joan R. Cohen Louis R. Petrone Kai D. Saukkonen Clayton J. Cowan McClellan Merit Society Patrick M. Reilly Mary C. Dougherty Richard D. Shih Thomas J. Allardyce 1993 Anne F. Reilly Jeffrey S. Driben Carol J. Winton Michael J. Dannenberg Class Totals: Jodi S. Sassoon Pamela T. Johnson Timothy J. Farrell 28 Gifts Totaling $12,487.50 R. M. Siatkowski Jeffrey R. Lukish 1989 Michael G. Katlan Catherine M. Silva John L. Panico 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Michael A. Kline Class Totals: Pankaj H. Patel 28 Gifts Totaling $9312.50 Additional Contributors Daniel J. Leonard III Errol M. Aksu 35 Gifts Totaling $8,580.00 Donald H. Perlo 14% Total Class Participation Daniel P. Pellegrini Rachel I. Chastanet 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Brenda J. Regier Karen A. Roperti Jefferson Associates Steven A. Maser 36 Gifts Totaling $4,780.00 Carolyn S. Repke Englok Yap James J. Purtill Martin J. O’Riordan 16% Total Class Participation Shailen S. Shah Century Club Samuel M. Ventrella Sustaining Members 1988 Jefferson Society Christine A. Arenson Stephen R. Whitmoyer Suzette J. Song Douglas S. Coslett Evangelos V. Badiavas Steven P. Woratyla Samuel D. Gross Associates Class Totals: Samuel D. Gross Associates Dole P. Baker Jr. Douglas T. Corwin Jr. 46 Gifts Totaling $17,075.00 Andrea R. Bates Additional Contributors Denise G. Voloshin John P. Brennan Jason B. Lee David E. Driban 57th Annual Appeal Totals: McClellan Merit Society Francis P. Colizzo McClellan Merit Society Angelo Grillo 45 Gifts Totaling $13,900.00 Debra S. Copit James T. Fitzpatrick John A. Kutz Robert E. Guilday 21% Total Class Participation Jan Dombrowski George E. Gibbons Jr. Stephen R. Orlevitch Richard H. Hunn Erol M. Kosar Christopher S. Levey Mary Ann H. Trephan Jefferson Associates Maury A. Jayson Sanjiv C. Patel Roman A. Klufas Century Club Vikram S. Kashyap Century Club Nancy P. Weinschenk David C. Adams Jefferson Society Gregory M. Braccia Barbara M. Leighton Gavin C. Barr Jr. Steven E. Copit Michael K. Conway Gordon C. Manin Theresa Q. Bell Michael J. Demangone Jennifer L. Sabol 1992 Samuel D. Gross Associates Alan A. Farabaugh Kathy M. Clewell M. C. Santora Class Totals: Steven E. Goldberg Eric K. Fowler Benjamin M. Kline Mark P. Seraly 32 Gifts Totaling $4,825.00 Brian T. Pelczar David L. Litt Deborah T. Gobetz Amitabh Singh Brenda L. Raphael 57th Annual Appeal Totals: David L. Manuel William V. Harrer III Susan F. Slovin PhD McClellan Merit Society 32 Gifts Totaling $4,825.00 Daniel I. Perlin Angelica E. Honsberg Lenore M. Tietjens-Grillo Patricia M. Curtin David J. Kessler 15% Total Class Participation Claire G. Shernoff Philip H. O’Donnell Kurt S. Kodroff Additional Contributors Michael C. Sokol Alan K. Berger Todd E. Phillips Mark T. Lau Samuel D. Gross Associates Mark J. Syms Ronald S. Berne Christopher P. Ruffini Jonathan C. Lowry Adam E. Klein Paula R. Taylor Todd M. Butz Michael J. Walker John H. Marks McClellan Merit Society Toshimasa Tsuda David A. Horvath Century Club Wynne A. Morley Iqbal Anwar John P. Parente Jr. Additional Contributors Joseph P. Bering Jr. Crystal D. Reed Spyros G. Mezitis Lisa S. Bellin Catherine F. Pipas Linda L. Casteel John C. Rodgers William Sukovich Barbara A. Carter Alice Reich Gerard A. DelGrippo Jr. Heidi R. Russ Century Club Eileen R. Conti Mark J. Sangimino John M. Dodge Sotiere E. Savopoulos Lawrence H. Albinski Joseph A. Iocono Ursula R. Sangimino Diane M. Flynn Mark G. Schlitt Darron A. Bacal Karen A. Kofsky Marshall W. Stafford William S. Gillen Michele D. Thomas Steven H. Brown Philip D. Kousoubris Sharon W. Gould Marla R. Triano-Rodgers Orlando J. Cicilioni Jr. Michele L. Marziano Deborah A. Kulp-Hugues Charles D. Tullius 1991 Alicia L. Daniels Hermann A. Moreno Jeffrey A. Lederman Michael A. Gold Kathleen O. Ververeli Class Totals: Additional Contributors Thomas A. Londergan Prodromos Ververeli 35 Gifts Totaling $10,370.00 Barry E. Kenneally to the Class Erich G. Metzler Daria Yanez Paul F. Kleidermacher 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Sarah S. Batcheler Gregory T. Narzikul Thomas A. Mann Additional Contributors 33 Gifts Totaling $7,170.00 in memory of Philip S. Mintz + John W. Reynolds Margaret H. Duffy Kevin M. McGrath 17% Total Class Participation John T. Rich Jr. Jeffrey C. Eschbach James J. McKeith Craig G. Richman Jody Ghosh Jefferson Society Randy B. Miller Bruce L. Rollman David T. Sawyer Daniel M. Radack Christopher D. Olbrich Brian Stello Adam C. Sobel Deborah V. Tesler Sustaining Members David A. Williams Kenneth A. Songy Jr. Kevin R. Muzzio Randolph W. Wong Theresa C. Wallace Scott L. Worman Samuel D. Gross Associates Amy Yavorek Joseph J. Andrews

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 33

1994 Class Totals: Mary L. Schuler Century Club Annual Fund Supports 25 Gifts Totaling $6,512.50 Lawrence M. Buono Lara C. Weinstein Financial Aid 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Additional Contributors Jaime L. Checkoff 24 Gifts Totaling $6,202.50 Miya R. Asato Anthony J. Cornetta Where do annual giving dollars go? A key area Edward A. Dachowski Thomas A. Balsbaugh is student financial aid. Medical students face 12% Total Class Participation Andrew E. Denker Carter W. Chang a burden of debt which may discourage them Sustaining Members Maria G. Katsoulis-Emnace Christopher I. Doty from entering lower-paying specialties where Carl E. Becker II Louis P. Melchiorre Jr. David H. Finkelstein Thomas G. Green Donald L. Preate Jr. Richard B. Horenstein their Jefferson expertise is most needed. Samuel D. Gross Associates Richard J. Saad Kevin F. Krenitsky And students from financially disadvantaged Reba Mukerjee Craig R. Smith Tracy A. MacEachern backgrounds may not be able to attend Charles P. McClure McClellan Merit Society Jon E. Woo medical school. Annual fund donations can Roy J. Park George L. Becker III Subooha Zafar make the difference. Sayjal J. Patel David M. Capuzzi Jr. Michelle T. Pelle Century Club 1996 Joseph B. Straton Jeffrey Chao Class Totals: Elizabeth G. Teperov JMC Tuition $34,565 Carl M. Charnetski 33 Gifts Totaling $5,387.50 William A. Tyndall Raymond K. Chung (2003 — 04 figures) 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Matthew L. Wiesinger Chris T. Derk 31 Gifts Totaling $4,137.50 Jane H. Williams Barry R. Fuller Joshua T. Green 14% Total Class Participation Additional Contributors Louis C. Blaum III Paula A. Lundgren Total Budget $52,357 Samuel D. Gross Associates Scott W. Cowan George O. Maish III (including supplies and living costs) Emran S. Sheikh Jennifer T. Cowan Holli S. Pheasant-Viscusi McClellan Merit Society Katherine A. Crutchlow-Belden Daniel S. Rifkin Richard N. Hamilton Steven A. Esser Mary M. Stephens Lawrence D. Mass Kartik S. Giri Bambi L. Taylor JMC Student Indebtedness by Year Allessandro A. Girolamo Jr. Michael S. Weinstein Century Club Suri N. Appa Thomas G. Greidanus First year $38,840 Additional Contributors Eugene D. Cox Mira Kautzky John B. Bruder III William F. D’Ambruoso L. J. Klunk Second year $71,046 Danielle C. Bruder Kristin L. DeSimone David L. Lawrence Robert Y. Chang John K. Findley David K. Nelson Third year $103,615 Suzanne K. Freitag Jack M. Hsu Michael J. Pellini Carole D. Levy Tiffany A. Hughes Amanda G. Smith Fourth year $121,589 Michael A. Marciello Edwin M. Kase Jennifer Thull-Freedman Charles M. Vollmer Jr. Bret M. Levy William K. Wong Jr. Nicholas P. LoPresti 1995 Stephen W. McManus 1998 Jeffrey A. Morrison Class Totals: Class Totals: Jennifer D. Nuss JMC Student Indebtedness at Graduation 34 Gifts Totaling $6,505.00 24 Gifts Totaling $3,822.50 Stephanie A. Silos Amount % of students 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 33 Gifts Totaling $5,905.00 Bret R. Sokoloff Martha L. White 22 Gifts Totaling $2,222.50 up to $30,000 6 16% Total Class Participation Jason G. Wilmoth 11% Total Class Participation Samuel D. Gross Associates Andrew H. Woldorf 30,000 — 50,000 12 Samuel D. Gross Associates Gary E. Penner David E. Wrobleski George M. Zagger William V. Arnold 50,000 — 70,000 6 McClellan Merit Society McClellan Merit Society Additional Contributors Glenn A. Articolo Jeffrey B. Ellis 70,000 — 90,000 7 Alyssa S. Becker Karyl L. Andolina Richard B. Claytor Patrick T. Mooney Roy H. Loo Jessica L. Van Tuyle 90,000 — 110,000 6 Glenn R. McLintock Ryan P. Gallivan Christine G. Johnston Century Club Jay C. Rudd Patrick V. Acevedo 110,000 — 130,000 6 Swati J. Shah Eleanor M. Kelly Patrick T. McGinley Tami L. Bach-Slonis Paul R. Stauffer 130,000 — 150,000 9 Jeffrey A. Owens Douglas C. Harris Century Club Kathleen M. Pollock William C. Huang Thomas A. Baudo 150,000 + 45 Michele A. Purvis Shirley B. McElhattan Nancy R. Beran Theoklis E. Zaoutis Matthew A. Torrington Jessica Berliner Additional Contributors William F. Bond 1997 Lauren P. Adey Megan J. Bray Michael F. Crutchlow Marielaina S. DeRose Class Totals: Thomas P. Drake Elyse H. Harrop 37 Gifts Totaling $4,329.97 Ernest C. Dunn Jr. James S. Harrop Jr. 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Sing-Yi Feng Julius S. Heyman 34 Gifts Totaling $3,429.97 Jonathan S. Harris Steven M. Huang 17% Total Class Participation Richard S. Lee Cynthia S. Lin Judy M. Lin Steven A. Oberlender McClellan Merit Society Paul M. Morrissey Karlyn B. Paglia Carl Barsigian Jill R. Ripper Barbara I. Rappaport John S. Kauh 34 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Geoffrey P. Schwartz Gautam V. Ramani Kimberly L. Dulaney Glenn M. Dragon ’95 Gonzalo C. Vicente Stefan P. Rosenbach Tara R . Herzberg 2003 Melissa A. Ehlers ’99 Patty A. Vitale Jonathan H. Salvin Kevin P. Hill Class Totals: Linda R. Fagan ’97 Gordon G. Wisbach III Additional Contributors Jennifer M. King 6 Gifts Totaling $295.00 Robert A. Garvin ’93 Gregory S. Adey Sara E. Lally 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Slobodan Grujic ’01 1999 Michael A. Baumholtz Anja O. Landis 6 Gifts Totaling $295.00 Edward H. Leonard ’94 Rebecca E. Mancoll Stephen E. McNulty ’85 Danielle P. Benaviv-Meskin 3% Total Class Participation Class Totals: 17 Gifts Totaling David J. McCulley Louis J. Raso ’90 $2,279.00 David M. Censits Reid F. Conant Ryan L. Neff Century Club Scott E. Rosenthal ’99 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 15 Katherine C. Dallow Bridget A. O’Rourke Andrew B. Brown Howard J. Schwartz ’96 Gifts Totaling $1,679.00 Jeffrey S. Kim Nieta G. Shapiro Michael J. Ward Steven A. Stein ’94 Joseph E. Welsh ’99 8% Total Class Participation Seth W. Meskin Heather M. Stec Additional Contributors Eyal Muscal Merritt J. Van Pelt Joseph M. Carabetta Additional Contributors McClellan Merit Society Daniel R. Orcutt Edward A. White Edward J. Caterson Louis M. Boxer ’96 Lisa M. Filippone Joseph M. Sewards Steven C. Wing Matthew D. Eichenbaum Michael J. Davis ’97 Christopher A. Haines Adam E. Silverblatt Kurt R. Weiss Mary R. Festa ’02 Century Club Sammy Zakaria Melvin C. Gitlin ’84 Alynn B. Alexander 2002 Aung Gyi ’97 Clare E. Feigl Class Totals: 2004 Suzanne Huffnagle ’92 Richard R. Gasparre 2001 22 Gifts Totaling $1,517.00 Class Totals: Robert W. O’Leary ’98 Jay S. Jenoff Class Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 3 Gifts Totaling $226.00 Deborah E. Ritter ’77 Kevin W. Johnson 33 Gifts Totaling $3,460.00 17 Gifts Totaling $1,045.00 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Christalene L. Saldanha ’97 David C. Santamore ’99 Alix O. Paget-Brown 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 10% Total Class Participation 2 Gifts Totaling $220.00 Alexa R. Raymond Hui Zhu ’02 29 Gifts Totaling $2,360.00 1% Total Class Participation Century Club Additional Contributors 15% Total Class Participation Dermatology Damian M. Andrisani Michael E. Ciminiello Century Club Kate L. Fronheiser Elena Nirenberg Specialty Totals: 7 Gifts Stephanie A. Caterson Samuel D. Gross Associates Totaling $10,975.00 Pia B. Fenimore Chris P. Lupold Alexander D. Fuld Additional Contributors Catherine S. Kim 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 6 Laura B. Frank McClellan Merit Society Julie Z. Belcher Gifts Totaling $5,775.00 Louis M. Giangiulio Lisa D. Grunebaum David P. Larson Andrew P. Chen Andrew R. Haas Brian C. Kung Karen J. Lefrak Salvin 9% Total Class Participation Steven B. Holsten Jr. Victoria M. Wakeley Century Club Winged Ox Society Additional Contributors Matthew B. Zavod Monica K. Crane Postgraduate Young C. Kauh ’71 Scott H. Davis John M. Balaicuis Robin E. Canada Alumni McClellan Merit Society 2000 Daniel T. Ellis Sal LaForgia ’99 Elizabeth O. Fagan Scott J. Engel Class Totals: Anesthesiology Gregory L. Freimer David Z. Frankel Century Club 22 Gifts Totaling $1,706.50 Basil M. Harris Specialty Totals: Sabatino Ciatti ’97 Peter J. Hulick 30 Gifts Totaling $5,272.00 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Luke Madigan Jean H. Hoffman-Censits Paula A. Giudici ’88 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 19 Gifts Totaling $1,447.50 Koren L. Miller Allyson A. Kreshak Douglas E. Kligman ’94 29 Gifts Totaling $4,420.00 10% Total Class Participation David J. Osborn Justin P. Kubeck Kehua Li ’02 Joseph P. McFarland ’77 Lawrence M. Phillips Kelly V. Liang 10% Total Class Participation Century Club Kristie A. Robson Kimberly P. Liang Wendy B. Abramson Fiona R. Pasternack Sustaining Members Emergency Medicine Eddie Chang Additional Contributors John T. Powell Mona E. Abdel-Misih ’83 Specialty Totals: Wendy L. Babitt 4 Gifts Totaling $620.00 John A. Dorsey Brian L. Ratigan Samuel D. Gross Associates Brian C. Bigler Michelle M. Eisenhower Irina G. Rosewater Donna M. Pisera ’85 57th Annual Appeal Totals: John A. Boger Brian E. Lally Christopher J. Smolock McClellan Merit Society Matthew R. Craig 2 Gifts Totaling $200.00 Thomas P. Love Amy J. Paczkoskie ’97 Timothy P. Pastore ’95 3% Total Class Participation Century Club Century Club Lydia R. Barringer ’69 Theodore A. Christopher ’86 Lawrence D. Berman ’92 Everett C. Embrey III ’96 Michael A. Borkowski ’94 John P. McGoff ’87 David P. Shiller ’92

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 35

Family Medicine Additional Contributors Century Club Medicine David L. Rashduni ’01 Specialty Totals: Malcolm S. Harris ’79 Samuel J. Beran ’95 Specialty Totals: Abbas Raza ’04 16 Gifts Totaling $9,940.00 Sigrid A. Larson ’03 Wei-Fan Chen ’74 81 Gifts Totaling $19,801.62 Gregory P. Zollner ’93 Judith U. Reynolds ’80 Joseph G. De Santis ’89 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Century Club Sarah E. Sa'adah ’99 L. I. Echenique ’86 5 Gifts Totaling $275.00 66 Gifts Totaling $14,950.00 Kamal E. Ahmed ’96 Peter Hyans ’91 Dudley B. Anderson ’71 10% Total Class Participation 8% Total Class Participation General Surgery Gerald A. Isenberg ’88 G. W. Atkinson ’70 Specialty Totals: Jefferson Society Richard C. Morrison Jr. ’01 Sustaining Members Doris G. Bartuska ’58 22 Gifts Totaling $8,475.00 Robert L. Perkel ’81 Michael Ormont ’02 Harvey S. Brodovsky ’61 Jennifer C. Bellino ’02 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Francis P. Sutter ’86 Sustaining Members Lewis J. Rose ’81 Mark S. Berger ’84 16 Gifts Totaling $4,600.00 Suzanne L. Topalian ’85 Richard C. Wender ’82 Samuel D. Gross Associates Steven J. Daniels ’80 Fred Weber ’79 15% Total Class Participation Ronald I. Cantor ’75 Joseph A. DeSimone ’99 Samuel D. Gross Associates Stephen M. Weiss ’79 Clement C. Au ’85 Guillermo Garcia-Manero ’99 Robert S. Dudnick ’91 Jefferson Society Additional Contributors Peter D. Ennis ’96 Fred W. Markham Jr. ’79 John H. Moore Jr. ’84 Francis X. Keeley ’60 Christopher C. Derivaux ’99 James J. Thornton ’72 Kendra J. Feeney ’00 Century Club Samuel D. Gross Associates Roger A. Orsini ’83 Andres Ferber ’00 McClellan Merit Society Michael R. Ashton ’02 Maryalice Cheney ’87 Rajeev Prasad ’01 Mark G. Graham ’81 Gertrude Findley-Christian ’90 Joshua H. Barash ’99 Damian Szewczyk ’01 Leslie R. Fleischer ’78 Bernard J. Birnbaum ’02 Farid I. Haurani ’58 McClellan Merit Society Pramod Lele ’85 Frederick A. Furia ’76 Ralph O. Bischof ’95 James Dasher ’98 William J. Gaughan ’88 J. D. Bryant ’82 Jose Martinez ’69 James E. O’Brien Jr. ’99 Michael C. Giudici ’88 Marcy I. Hersh ’00 Edward F. McClay ’86 Peter Pastuszko ’03 Marun S. Haddad ’76 Michael P. Rosenthal ’84 Krishna K. Mohan ’79 Howard Slotoroff ’70 Robert V. Smith ’78 Anacleto T. Ordinario ’76 Walter M. Herman ’67

Gala Benefits New Breast Care Center Thomas Jefferson University and Thomas Jefferson University Eastern Virginia Medical School to establish its Department of Hospital honored surgeon Francis E. Rosato, MD and philanthropist Surgery. In 1978, he returned to Philadelphia to accept the post of Dorrance H. “Dodo” Hamilton at the third annual Jefferson Gala on Samuel D. Gross Professor and Chair at Jefferson. October 6. Proceeds from the event benefited the Jefferson Breast Care Center, to be created within the 1100 Walnut Street building. Dr. Rosato is the coauthor of Post Mastectomy Breast The center will consolidate breast imaging and treatment options in a Reconstruction and the Atlas of General Surgical Technique, and patient oriented facility that offers state-of-the-art equipment and coeditor of Surgery of the Breast. He has served as a Governor highly trained clinicians. It will be a gateway to Jefferson’s vast can- of the American College of Surgeons, and Chair of the Test cer resources and practitioners and a focal point for clinical research. Committee of the National Board of Medical Examiners. Hundreds of students, house staff, and faculty have looked to him as a Dr. Rosato, past Gross Professor and Chair of Surgery at Jefferson, mentor and role model. received the Achievement Award in Medicine, while Mrs. Hamilton received the Award of Merit. Dorrance H. “Dodo” Hamilton has been a philanthropic leader at Jefferson for decades. A University Trustee since 1972, she chaired Early in his distinguished career, Dr. Rosato rose quickly through the the Jefferson 2000 Fund, a highly successful capital campaign. Most academic ranks at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine recently, a landmark gift of $25 million from Mrs. Hamilton is helping from Assistant Instructor in Surgery in 1960 to Professor of Surgery Jefferson to transform its campus through the construction of a in 1972. He served as Chief of Penn’s solid tumor program and Co- campus green and a medical education building, one of the world’s Director of the neoplastic chemotherapy clinic. He left for the new most advanced. Mrs. Hamilton’s gift, the largest Jefferson has ever received, will help Jefferson to define the future of clinical care.

Dr. Rosato, holding his award, with (standing) Robert L. Barchi, MD, PhD, Mrs. Hamilton, flanked by her sons S. Matthews V. Hamilton and N. Peter University President; James W. Fox IV, MD’70, a co-chair of the Gala; and Hamilton, with (at left) Robert L. Barchi, MD, PhD, University President, and (at Thomas J. Lewis, Hospital President and CEO. right) Thomas J. Lewis, Hospital President and CEO. 36 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Jackeline Iacovella ’97 Obstetrics & Sustaining Members Century Club Laird G. Jackson ’62 Gynecology Joseph P. Falcone ’98 Tina Edmonston ’03 Raymond E. Joseph ’79 William J. Markmann ’79 Carol A. Filomena ’90 Specialty Totals: Ying Guo ’99 Louis La Luna ’98 17 Gifts Totaling $4,500.00 Samuel D. Gross Associates Jack C. Lee ’96 D. G. Anderson ’01 Julian W. Potok ’74 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Barry D. Mangel ’91 Mark H. Henderson Jr. ’90 Vasiliki Saitas ’93 18 Gifts Totaling $4,325.00 Michael J. Mastrangelo ’71 Michael A. Puniak ’99 Additional Contributors Robert A. Maxwell Jr. ’63 8% Total Class Participation Stephanie Sweet ’99 Edward J. Burkhard Jr. ’67 Robert E. Measley Jr. ’87 Jefferson Society McClellan Merit Society Christina S. Michael ’96 Pediatrics Lorraine C. King ’77 Nicholas A. Abidi ’96 Beckie Michael ’94 Victor R. Kalman ’94 Specialty Totals: Anna T. Monias ’00 McClellan Merit Society 36 Gifts Totaling $9,745.45 Christine Wu ’91 Robert C. Petrucelli ’81 John C. Mueller ’71 Peter F. Sharkey ’90 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Century Club Dean V. Papoutsis ’92 Rajiv V. Taliwal ’00 34 Gifts Totaling $8,347.50 Kyong B. Park ’96 Jandel T. Allen-Davis ’88 Century Club 9% Total Class Participation Angara K. Rao ’79 Kazem Behnam ’78 Jeffrey S. Abrams ’85 Century Club Remy Rodriguez ’52 Marion L. Brown ’82 Margaret R. Albanese ’82 Jefferson Society John E. Graham III ’72 Robert K. Roush Jr. ’91 Wendy W. Fuzesi ’86 Clara A. Callahan ’82 Daniel A. Caligiuri ’92 Dimitri Markov ’03 Richard G. SantaMaria ’00 Paul Gabos ’67 S. T. Canale ’73 Samuel D. Gross Associates Vasantha Orocofsky ’80 Ronald M. Schlansky ’80 Sandra M. Rappe ’01 Richard H. Dyer Jr. ’71 Shobhana A. Desai ’80 Naomi A. Parish ’82 Deepak Shah ’93 Joseph A. Riggs ’64 Allen C. Egloff ’76 Peter-Paul U. Nwokeji ’88 Ruth P. Zager ’55 Jamie E. Siegel ’82 John J. Rubino ’81 Donald A. Fonte ’70 McClellan Merit Society Additional Contributors Magdolna Solti ’04 Edward A. Slotnick ’71 Frank B. Giacobetti ’97 Denise A. DiPrimio-Kalman ’92 Mary E. Donovan ’95 Albert I. Soriano ’98 Samuel Tarantino ’89 Erik S. Larsen ’99 Marla J. Farrell ’94 Tanis Gaitens ’98 Alan A. Tambe ’63 Additional Contributors Mas G. Massoumi ’74 Eugene A. Gatti ’87 Dennis A. Tighe Jr. ’93 Jeffrey T. Gibson ’84 Radiation Oncology David M. Goodner ’72 E. L. Peak ’03 Arturo R. Hervada ’58 Joseph N. Tropea ’00 Specialty Totals: Jane N. Laeger ’83 Charles E. Silberstein ’64 Evelyn D. Schmidt ’54 Louis A. Wasserman ’77 6 Gifts Totaling $2,265.00 Marianne Ruby ’81 Daniel I. Singer ’85 Paula G. Zollner ’91 Additional Contributors Christine J. Sigal ’00 Thomas A. St. John ’01 Century Club 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Olcay A. Batuman ’83 John F. Toton ’72 Gerard M. Cleary ’97 3 Gifts Totaling $1,850.00 Joseph A. Cable ’83 Ophthalmology Marc S. Zimmerman ’80 Joann C. Cozza ’91 Ray Y. Chen ’00 8% Total Class Participation Specialty Totals: Additional Contributors Mahmoud K. Effat ’90 Edward A. Favis ’57 11 Gifts Totaling $11,100.00 Bernard B. Bacevich ’72 Shakthi M. Kumar ’01 Sustaining Members Sarah H. Fenton ’95 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Christian S. Fahey ’04 Susan P. Magargee ’89 Donald C. Tilton ’74 David K. Ginsberg ’60 10 Gifts Totaling $10,100.00 Eric L. Hume ’83 Shoshana T. Melman ’87 McClellan Merit Society Walter K. Kraft ’99 Dwaraki Bai Y. Penugonda ’71 Mahroo Haghbin ’84 Gregory S. Lenchner ’80 24% Total Class Participation Otolaryngology Robert J. Perin ’81 Century Club Carl M. Levitsky ’77 Jefferson Associates Specialty Totals: Albert L. Pizzica ’78 Courtney C. Coke ’97 Ryan D. Madanick ’01 Dion R. Ehrlich ’77 8 Gifts Totaling $3,275.00 Linda M. Powers ’89 Judith L. Lightsey-Alford ’90 Jonathan P. Oline ’89 Jefferson Society 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Donna P. Scott ’93 Cornelius I. Turalba ’78 Andrew Renny ’83 Edward A. Jaeger ’64 7 Gifts Totaling $2,225.00 Cynthia D. Villasis ’81 Additional Contributors Jeffrey M. Riggio ’00 Bonnie M. Zehr ’94 Candido E. Rivera ’92 Samuel D. Gross Associates 9% Total Class Participation Sucha O. Asbell ’71 Richard J. Dobies ’65 Additional Contributors Stephen J. Scholand ’04 Samuel D. Gross Associates Donna L. Brosbe ’83 Radiology Miles H. Sigler ’58 McClellan Merit Society Mark L. Belafsky ’71 Lisa Flaherty ’84 Specialty Totals: Michael F. Smith ’95 Herbert L. Blatt ’77 Herbert Kean ’60 Kenneth J. Gelman ’97 80 Gifts Totaling $65,096.00 Michael B. Steinberg ’97 Lewis A. Dalburg Jr. ’62 McClellan Merit Society Bram Greenberg ’84 Century Club 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Robert B. Belafsky ’77 Stephen T. Higgins ’95 Neurosurgery John J. Dagianis ’80 20 Gifts Totaling $4,200.00 Ron L. Moses ’98 Ying L. Higgins ’93 Specialty Totals: Ellin B. Effinger-Kassow ’79 18% Total Class Participation Meher S. Khan ’88 2 Gifts Totaling $600.00 Mark T. Shapiro ’76 Century Club Bruce I. Stark ’82 Gregory N. Boger ’01 Elaine K. Kravitz ’87 Winged Ox Society 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Stuart A. Kravitz ’81 Gudrun Cobb ’96 1 Gifts Totaling $100.00 Joseph C. Toland ’67 John A. Coleman Jr. ’68 Nawal G. Metry ’87 Isam J. Zakhour ’80 Additional Contributors Jefferson Associates 4% Total Class Participation William L. Cantor ’70 Harry J. Sacks ’89 Oksana H. Baltarowich ’81 Paul A. Shapero ’82 McClellan Merit Society Orthopaedic Surgery Daniel D. Rabuzzi ’66 Jefferson Society Hagop L. Der Krikorian ’81 Specialty Totals: Lisa B. Zaoutis ’98 Sung M. Kim ’88 35 Gifts Totaling $57,800.00 Pathology Robert M. Zuckerman ’88 Century Club Alfred B. Kurtz ’78 Specialty Totals: Raymond M. Joson ’61 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Psychiatry Anthony J. Limberakis ’83 24 Gifts Totaling $12,700.00 8 Gifts Totaling $1,320.00 Catherine W. Piccoli ’89 Specialty Totals: Vijay M. Rao ’78 12% Total Class Participation 57th Annual Appeal Totals: 9 Gifts Totaling $1,625.00 8 Gifts Totaling $1,300.00 Sustaining Members Winged Ox Society 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Kalpana S. Deshmukh ’81 Todd J. Albert ’92 11% Total Class Participation 10 Gifts Totaling $1,500.00 Rick I. Feld ’88 Jefferson Associates McClellan Merit Society 5% Total Class Participation Joseph B. Furlong ’04 Richard H. Rothman ’68 Henry L. Kazal ’55 Vartan Igidbashian ’88 Mary P. McHugh ’94 Samuel D. Gross Associates Jefferson Society Shivkumar S. Hatti ’80 Charles M. Intenzo ’86 Michael G. Ciccotti ’91 Anna S. Lev-Toaff ’85 Michael R. Piazza ’89 McClellan Merit Society Charles E. Martin ’97 Alexander R. Vaccaro ’92 Sonny V. Joseph ’90 Laurence Needleman ’83 Gautham P. Reddy ’96 Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 37

Faculty Carl M. Sandler ’75 other than Irving M. Shapiro Rik S. Sen ’02 Sandor S. Shapiro Hongyu Shi ’03 JMC Alumni James S. Studdiford Evan S. Siegelman ’94 194 Gifts Totaling $405,431.70 William S. Tasman Howard L. Spector ’82 Eugene Tolpin Laurence J. Spitzer ’03 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Perry Weiner 99 Gifts Totaling $40,875.00 Elizabeth L. Tan ’99 Century Club Additional Contributors Winged Ox Society Susan C. Adeniyi-Jones Robert J. Brosbe ’82 Serge Duckett George W. Ainslie Alvin W. Finestone ’54 Hideko Kaji Michael A. Alexander Morton G. Murdock ’64 Jeffrey L. Miller Peter S. Amenta Rita S. Patel ’97 Stephen D. Silberstein Hwyda A. Arafat Antonio J. Simoes Richard A. Baker Rehabilitation Jefferson Associates Ernest M. Baran Medicine Paul C. Brucker Carol L. Beck Jason Sagerman ’91 John A. Curtis ’76 Specialty Totals: William M. Keane Jeffrey L. Benovic Stacy C. Stevens ’01 Eric W. Emig ’96 8 Gifts Totaling $1,150.00 John L. Melvin Irving M. Berkowitz Jean M. Torrisi ’93 Victoria K. Endo ’96 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Marion J. Siegman Vitaliano Bernardino Jr. Corinne Winston ’95 Robert E. Epstein ’95 7 Gifts Totaling $850.00 Jefferson Society George C. Brainard Samuel D. Gross Associates Alan B. Evantash ’75 Jerome G. Buescher 7% Total Class Participation Lewis W. Bluemle Jr. Raphael Caccese Jr. ’92 Laura M. Fayad ’02 James B. Erdmann Gaetano G. Cardi Gerard L. Helinek ’90 Adam Flanders ’89 Century Club Hie-Won Y. Hann Robert B. Catalano Michael D. Hollander ’98 Robyn Frankel-Tiger ’97 Peggy L. Abrams ’85 David C. Levin Rex B. Conn Levon N. Nazarian ’92 Carin F. Gonsalves ’99 Pamela E. Cohen ’86 Leona E. Markson, ScD Adrian D. Copeland Dinesh K. Sharma ’99 David M. Hovsepian ’93 Cynthia A. Farrell ’86 A. E. O’Hara Allan R. DeJong John F. Ditunno Jr. McClellan Merit Society Eric A. Huettl ’93 Mitchell K. Freedman ’86 Sustaining Members Andrew S. Gallant ’92 Stephen V. Klein ’89 David H. Kim ’96 Rafaat Z. Abdel-Misih Henry J. Doherty Jr. Neil R. Kramer ’85 Philip S. Lim ’00 Carolyn L. Kinney ’84 Demetrius H. Bagley Katherine L. Esterly Denis R. Lincoln ’94 Barry J. Livstone ’03 Additional Contributors Marluce Bibbo Patricia A. Fenn Robert J. Rapoport ’95 Soroosh Mahboubi ’73 Ling-Ling Cheng ’95 Timothy P. Brigham Thomas N. Ferraro Neil A. Roach ’94 John Matzko ’96 Judith R. Peterson ’90 T. E. Figueroa Phyllis Flomenberg Vijay K. Sadhu ’78 Douglas D. Montgomery ’03 Leonard G. Gomella David P. Friedman Mitchell S. Sandler ’82 Robert E. Morales ’99 Urology Joseph S. Gonnella Barry B. Goldberg Sharon R. Segal ’87 Jonathan A. Morgan ’02 Specialty Totals: J. A. Parellada Ruth P. Gottlieb Kevin L. Sullivan ’86 Harold Moskowitz ’64 20 Gifts Totaling $7,140.00 Robert D. Reinecke Steven S. Greenbaum Century Club Steven G. Moss ’99 57th Annual Appeal Totals: Michael J. Vergare Jay S. Greenspan Jennifer H. Park ’01 Michael A. Grosso Rajkumari B. Balchandani ’79 1 Gifts Totaling $150.00 Samuel D. Gross Associates Rajesh I. Patel ’95 Gerald B. Grunwald Sandip Basak ’01 36% Total Class Participation Su C. Brackman Marvin S. Podolnick ’65 David M. Guarnieri Ric A. Bradford ’99 Brenda Byrne Tariq A. Quraishi ’04 David T. Harris Kenneth G. Carter ’72 Sustaining Members Carlo M. Croce Paul D. Radecki ’94 P. K. Brownstein ’76 Irvin H. Hirsch Paul T. Collura ’75 Ajit M. Desai Michael S. Ramjattansingh ’99 Richard W. Hole Jr. Ronald J. Costanzo ’96 Samuel D. Gross Associates Anthony J. DiMarino Jr. Jeffrey F. Rueda ’00 Cindy S. Isaacson Kevin M. Cregan ’97 Leonard A. Frank ’68 Gerald J. Herbison Kathryn Kash McClellan Merit Society F. K. Huebner Richard I. Katz Allen N. Chiura ’98 Patrick J. Hunt Lawrence C. Kenyon Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation (PS Form 3526) Nathan P. Goldin ’83 George C. Lewis Jr. James J. Kocsis (required by 39 U.S.C. 3685, United States Postal Service) Stuart N. Liberman ’96 Ronald J. Librizzi Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin Susan P. Lanza-Jacoby David E. McGinnis ’93 Diran O. Mikaelian Publication number: 00215821 Edmund C. Lattime Date of filing: 10/05 Frank M. Nezu ’04 Michael A. Naidoff Paul L. Lewis Issue frequency: 4 per year Mehrdad Soroush ’00 A. L. Osterman Complete mailing address of office of publication: 925 Chestnut Street, Suite 110, Ji-Bin Liu Howard K. Rabinowitz Philadelphia, PA 19107 Century Club Daniel Z. Louis Fredric Rieders Mailing address of general business office of publisher: same as above Gregory L. Chen ’99 Peter A. McCue Publisher: Thomas Jefferson University (address above) Lawrence H. Schneider Kenneth J. Fitzpatrick ’99 Steven E. McKenzie Bondholders, mortgages, and other security holders owning or holding one percent or Jouni Uitto more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities: none Mohamed T. Ismail ’04 Christopher R. Merritt Ronald J. Weigel For nonprofit organizations authorized to mail at special rates: Louis L. Keeler Jr. ’67 Diane E. Merry the purpose, function, and nonprofit status of the organization, and the exempt status for Jose G. Moreno ’95 McClellan Merit Society federal income tax purposes have not changed during the preceding 12 months Frank H. Michaels Peter J. Muench ’88 John L. Abruzzo Robert A. Middleberg Extent and nature of circulation Average Number Copies Actual Number Copies Jose A. Perez ’61 Robert D. Aiken Donald G. Mitchell of Each Issue During of Single Issue Published Skaukat M. Qureshi ’82 Rodney D. Bell Raymond M. Montecalvo Preceding 12 months Nearest to Filling Date Ravi R. Rajan ’00 Robert L. Capizzi Total number of copies (net press run) 20,000 20,000 Sheila A. Murphey Paid and/or requested circulation Stephen E. Strup ’94 Paul J. Green David B. Nash 1. Sales through dealers, carriers, Edouard J. Trabulsi ’01 Wieslawa Kaczanowska Faith E. Nathan street vendors, counter sales 0 0 Additional Contributors Ronald Kaiser 2. Paid and/or requested J. D. Ogilby mail subscriptions 19,400 19,400 Richard E. Landau ’89 Mitchell Machtay John M. Parenti Total paid and/or requested circulation 19,400 19,400 Steven Mandel David A. Paul Free distribution by mail 290 290 Morton S. Mandell Free distribution outside the mail 300 300 David S. Poll Total distribution 20,000 20,000 S. G. Mulholland Roy Proujansky Copies not distributed 10 10 Scott Murphy Birgit Rakel TOTAL 20,000 20,000 Abdolmohamad Rostami David T. Reed Percent paid and/or requested circulation 98% 98% Takami Sato 38 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Francis E. Rosato Stephen A. Pearlman Douglas T. Corwin, MD + George B. Hood, MD + Mr. Christopher Spooner Marc R. Rosen Eugene R. Principato Mrs. Madeline Corwin Ms. Elizabeth Ennis Summit County Leonard M. Rosenfeld Ralph J. Riviello J. Wallace Davis, MD + Ms. Sally Silk Elks Lodge No. 2561 Judith L. Ross Jonathan B. Rosefsky Edmund T. Hackman, MD Ms. Lillian M. White Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Swisher Marie Savard Harold Rosen Ms. Gail Taylor Anthony F. DePalma, MD Herbert G. Hopwood Jr., MD + Steven M. Selbst Robert W. Saunderson Jr. + Ms. Jacqueline S. Tempest William A. Coyle, MD Mrs. Elizabeth Hopwood Cynthia G. Silber Margo M. Schleman Leopold S. Loewenberg, MD + Edwin W. Shearburn Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Pascal DePalma Joseph A. Jacobs, MD + J. B. Smith Ms. Carol H. Dedov Harry L. Smith Jr. Robert Snyder Ms. Mary Jo C. Hewitt Alan S. Josselson, MD Martin M. Mandel, MD + George L. Spaeth Anna E. Tobia Mr. Edgar J. Jalbert Jay J. Jacoby, MD, PhD + Gerald D. Dodd, MD Joseph Spina Jr. Thomas O. Willcox Jr. Phillip J. Marone, MD Donna M. Pisera, MD Charles L. McDowell, MD Lisa Marie Tartaglino Abigail Wolf Jack Jenofsky, MD + Robert A. Matthews, MD + Marilyn J. Woolkalis Ms. Anna Palmieri Madhukar L. Thakur Mrs. Rita D. Annocke Mrs. Patricia M. Coghlan Katherine T. Worzala Mrs. Bruner H. Strawbridge John L. Wagner Phillip J. Marone, MD Victor Mayer, MD + Stephen P. Weinstein David Zwillenberg J. Thomas Williams Jr., MD Peter A. Justin, MD + David P. Mayer, MD Louis Weinstein Marc S. Ebel, MD + Jennifer L. Sabol, MD Albert M. Murtland, MD + Alan Schein, MD Clifton F. West Jr. Gifts in Richard L. Murtland, MD Leslie W. Whitney Jay S. Skyler, MD Jeffrey K. Kanefield, MD + Luisa E. Lehrer, MD David E. Nutter, MD + Louis Wiederhold Memory of Jack Edeiken, MD + Samuel R. Ruby, MD Faren H. Williams Peter Amadio Jr., MD + Richard E. Brennan, MD William F. Kellow, MD + Carol M. Wojenski Stephen J. Gordin, MD George L. Packer, MD + Clement C. Au, MD Milton B. Emanuel, MD + Elaine Wolk Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Fred William Markham Jr., MD E. Stephen Emanuel, MD O. Dhodanand Kowlessar, MD + John W. Yarbro William N. Mebane III, MD Bernadette Genz-Remshard, MD Hilberman Samuel M. Eppley, MD + Carter Zeleznik Michael P. Rosenthal, MD James J. Thornton, MD Stephen E. Pascucci Sr., MD + William M. Shue, MD Additional Contributors Richard R. Vanderbeek, MD Joseph S. Gonnella, MD Ms. Doris M. Stephens Simon Kramer, MD + Stanley R. Askin Gonzalo E. Aponte, MD + Westside Radiation Oncology, Inc. John F. Henzes III, MD Walter J. Filipek, MD + Ita S. Brandman Erich A. Everts-Suarez, MD Julius R. Pearson, MD + Richard J. Butcher Craig T. Haytmanek, MD Edward M. Laska, MD + Thomas Behrendt, MD + Michael K. Farrell, MD Edward Gipstein, MD Christopher W. Canino Stewart E. First, MD + Rodney B. Bell, MD Mrs. Julius Pearson Esther K. Chung Mrs. Sandra First Lewis Lehrer, MD + Mitchell J. Cohen Joseph S. Gonnella, MD Luisa E. Lehrer, MD Henry Pechstein, MD + Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Hershman William Fraimow, MD + Mrs. Mary L. McSherry William H. Duncan Glenn R. Leonard, MD + Michael Anastasio Produce, Inc. Robert G. McCairns Jr., MD Leonard M. Eisenman Ms. Phyllis S. Alexander Edward N. Pell III, MD + Mr. Robert Louis Speziale Elmer H. Funk Jr., MD + Emmanuel Farber Mr. and Mrs. William E. Thomas V. Lloyd III, MD Ms. Barbara R. Cobb Alan T. Forstater Leon L. Berns, MD + Anderson Theodore Pick, MD + Mr. and Mrs. Murray Dodge Irving Freeman Richard I Katz, MD Ms. Jay Breen Ms. Jane Ann Mills Robert J. Gill, MD Robert J. Gill Bonita R. Silverman, MS Mr. and Mrs. Ray W. Christian Joseph S. Gonnella, MD Joseph F. Rodgers, MD + James M. Gill Amanda Grant Smith, MD Ms. Janice Cisneros Karen M. Glaser David B. Heller, MD David M. Capuzzi, MD, PhD Paul R. Bosanac, MD + Ms. Joan Deffke Arthur E. Helfand, DPM Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Jenkins Adam E. Klein, MD Richard L. Allman, MD Ms. Elizabeth Drennen Robert T. Henry, VMD John A. Koltes Jr., MD Mrs. Adrienne M. Rodgers Ms. Nancy G. Elberson Kathleen E. Herb Robert L. Breckenridge, MD + Ms. Luann C. Marziani Mr. and Mrs. David R. Rodgers Mrs. Barbara J. Goss M. B. Hermel Robert L. Breckenridge Jr., MD C. Thomas McChesney Jr., MD Robert H. Roy, MD + Hodges/Marvin Architects, Inc. Joannes B. Hoek Harvey J. Breslin, MD + Mr. Lambert B. Ott Randall M. McLaughlin, MD Ms. Donna D. Hultin William A. Hohman Kenneth S. Breslin, MD John R. Patterson, MD Human Services, Inc. J. Woodrow Savacool, MD + Ronald P. Jensh Ms. Carol M. Pyle Elizabeth Brown-Gibson, MD + Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Jenkins William E. Delaney III, MD Laurie Katz Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Saunders Karen Baker Lauer, MD Ms. Barbara W. Lee James M. LaBraico, MD Leslie J. Katz Peter V. Scoles, MD Phillip J. Marone, MD Elisabeth J. Kunkel, MDCM Salvatore R. Carrabba, MD + Mrs. Glenn Leonard George F. Tibbens, MD Mr. and Mrs. James F. Monteith Lynn M. Lucas-Fehm Randall M. McLaughlin, MD Mr. Mark W. Long and Michael A. Geha, MD + Ms. Gail M. Gordon Richard T. Price, MD Stephen J. McGeady Jay I. Castle, MD + James G. McBride, MD William N. Mebane III David A. Jacoby, MD Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Melville Paul C. Schroy, MD + Barry C. Gross MD Bruce E. Northrup Gail T. Jacoby, MD + Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Richardson Ms. Shirley S. Hersey Charles S. Owen Robert A. Lustig, MD Mr. and Mrs. James M. Robinson

Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Winter 2005 — 06 39

Charitable Contribution Tip #37 Morton Schwimmer, MD + Steven A. Klein, MD Marc W. Shapiro, MD + Big Savings with Stock Gifts! David A. Jacoby, MD Gail T. Jacoby, MD Giving appreciated stock has a dual benefit to the donor. First, you avoid all Ann O. Shigeoka, MD + capital gains tax (15% if the asset is held longer than one year), and second, John W. Shigeoka, MD you get a charitable deduction equal to the total amount of your gift. To take Linda L. Weinberg, MD Paul M. Weinberg, MD a hypothetical example: Kenneth L. Wible, MD Paul Smey, MD + 100 shares of XYZ stock Rodney A. Appell, MD ($10.00/share) purchased on 9/1/2002 Bruce S. Bleiman, MD value: $1,000.00 Eugene L. Timins, MD + Ms. Beverly Timins Value of 100 shares of XYZ stock Julie E. Kelter Timins, MD on 9/1/2005 Frederick B. Wagner Jr., MD + Joseph S. Gonnella, MD value: $1,800.00 Gifts in If you were to sell the shares outright, you would pay $120.00 in capital gains taxes (15% of $800.00 gain). Your net proceeds from the sale would be $1,680.00. Honor of Transferring the shares to Jefferson would give you an $1,800.00 charitable Christine A. Arenson, MD contribution and a tax deduction for the original cost of $1,000.00. In addition, Mr. and Mrs. Dominic M. Cermele Demetrius H. Bagley, MD you would pay no capital gains taxes. You win on both sides. Mr. Leslie R. Clemmer Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Clemson For more information on making a stock transfer to Jefferson, Mr. and Mrs. Amadeo Guglielmi please call Paul M. Hurd Jr., Executive Director of Alumni Ms. Kelli M. Harman Mr. Michael C. Hrabal and Planned Giving, toll-free at 1-877-533-3443, or Mr. Douglas E. Jetter Sr. email to [email protected]. Mr. Stefan Keller Mr. and Mrs. Vincent N. Mancini Varsha R. Nalavade Mr. John J. Neary Mr. Dale Nice Ms. Muriel Onni Ms. Ann M. Toner Ms. Lenore Turteltaub Judge Thomasine Tynes Alyssa S. Gelmann Becker, MD Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program George L. Becker III, MD Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Walter S. Bloes, MD Ms. Judith A. Bloes P. Kenneth Brownstein, MD AP3C, Inc. Mr. Carlos A. Bado David A. Berd, MD Ms. Ruth Black Mr. William A. Carr Dr. Marvin Chamlin Mr. Isadore Cogan Mr. Robert W. Cole Mr. Domenic A. Dienno Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Ellenbogen Elliott-Lewis Corporation George C. Francos, MD Mr. William J. Goulding Eugene Greenfield, MD Dr. and Mrs. S. Warren Gross Mr. and Mrs. Melvin B. Herrin Mr. Gerald S. Kates Mr. Clive B. Klatzkin 40 Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin

Slogoff continued from page 13

Cardiac Artery Surgery Study (CASS). His research helped outline operating room procedures for anesthesiologists and surgeons that are followed to this day. CASS remains a widely cited study for bypass surgery and angioplasty outcomes after a diagnosis of coronary artery disease.

Slogoff spent much of his clinical career at the Texas Heart Institute in Houston, but his time at Loyola leaves behind a legacy that will affect medical students and patients for years to come. Mr. Stephen Klein Karl G. Klinges, MD Mr. Richard I. Lees Noyes E. Yale Jr., MD JMC Friends Czarnecki continued from page 15 Mr. Gary H. Levinson David C. Levin, MD 29 Gifts Totaling $57,722.00 George C. Lewis Jr., MD Gautham P. Reddy, MD 57th Annual Appeal Totals: After graduating from JMC, Dr. Czarnecki Mrs. and Mrs. Eugene J. Mendlow Phillip J. Marone, MD 10 Gifts Totaling $4,985.00 did his residency in general surgery at Mr. and Mrs. Brian G. O’Neill Mr. Bernard J. Pietrini Winged Ox Society Massachusetts General Hospital. He was a staff Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Ostrow Mr. Charles H. Wolfinger Mr. Enrique J. Pujals Martha R. Coyne physician in the US Air Force, stationed at Dyess William B. Morrison, MD Mr. Percell A. Robinson Jefferson Associates Air Force Base. Later, he went to Harvard for a Joseph B. Furlong, MD Mr. Allan Schneirov Glenn R. Leonard combined orthopaedic residency. He recently Ms. Sherrie Weiner Dr. and Mrs. Scott Murphy Thomas J. Lewis III completed a Harvard/Mass General sports Ronald I. Cantor, MD Mr. Michael Cianfrani David F. Simon, Esq. medicine fellowship. He has joined Excel Dr. and Mrs. Adolf Schreiber Thomas J. Nasca, MD Herman A. Tolz Orthopaedic Specialists, which was founded Edward B. Christian, PhD Lawrence H. Schneider, MD Jefferson Society by Barry C. Dorn ’67. Patrick Vincent Acevedo, MD Joseph J. Oleksick, MD Michael J. Bradley Herbert E. Cohen, MD Mr. and Mrs. John M. Oleksick Joseph J. McLaughlin His decision to enter sports medicine, in partic- Mr. Joseph Hand Robert Perkel, MD Prashant K. Mukerjee ular, was influenced partly by his father, Dr. Roger Bruce Daniels, MD Elliot Zaleznik, MD Sustaining Members Joseph E. Czarnecki. Dr. Czarnecki senior is the Jewish Federation of Vijay M. Rao, MD Paul P. Duzmati team physician for Holy Ghost Prep High School Greater Philadelphia Robert J. Rapoport, MD Samuel D. Gross Associates in Bensalem, Pennsylvania, in addition to a long Anthony J. DiMarino Jr., MD Barry P. Skeist, MD Richard J. Braemer, Esq. career in family practice, and still drives across Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wilenzik Robert H. Rosenwasser, MD Lawrence E. Forrest Sidney Smith the state to Holy Ghost games, “never for a Arthur N. DiNicola, MD Mr. Erik L. Huebner Ms. June R. Huebner salary but for the love of the game and its play- Abram M. Hostetter, MD McClellan Merit Society Ms. Mariaelena Patch Jack F. Adler Jr. ers and coaches.” Joe says it’s no different for Lionel Gold, DDS Takami Sato, MD, PhD James F. Monteith him, “whether it be for a Red Sox game, or one Mrs. Meyer L. Abrams Mr. Eli Harry Century Club of the local high schools north of Boston” that Dr. and Mrs. Melvin Hennisch Mr. Basim Jamal Robert M. Simons, MD William S. Chen he covers. Joe was an assistant team physician Jewish Community Foundation Carl I. Simons, MD Kirk E. Gorman for the Boston Red Sox this season under the Robert W. Hershman Franz Goldstein, MD James S. Studdiford, MD direction of Dr. Gill. Farid I. Haurani, MD Mr. Ajay J. Creshkoff Marcia Kaplan-Epstein William B. Murray Reyer O. Swan, MD Dr. Czarnecki’s practice includes all areas of Scott D. Goldstein, MD Rush B. Smith Ms. Sherrie Weiner Barbara E. Swan, MD sports medicine with particular interest in disor- David M. Swan, MD Additional Contributors Leonard G. Gomella, MD Rita D. Annocke ders of the shoulder, knee, and ankle. His Dr. Milton A. Wohl George P. Valko, MD Barbara Bateman interest in shoulder conditions includes arthro- GlaxoSmithKline Foundation Mrs. Valla Amsterdam Dorethea G. Cubler scopic rotator cuff and instability repairs and Mr. Harry F. Hight Paul M. Weinberg, MD Allan Kates joint replacements. Regarding the knee, he Mr. Clive B. Klatzkin Ms. Marilyn A. Cohen Audrey Knowles focuses on joint preserving techniques and par- Arnold J. Greenspon, MD Richard C. Wender, MD Jane A. Mills tial or total knee replacement. Concerning the Mrs. Arline Schwarzman Mr. Thomas G. Direnzo Sally Silk ankle, he particularly treats cartilage lesions, John R. Griffith, MD J. Donald Wentzler, MD Marguerite Stadvec tendon injuries, instability, and arthritis. Ms. Mary M. Taulane Ms. Marion Malone Milton Ivker, MD Elaine Wolk, MD If earning Super Bowl rings is to be a tradition Nadine P. Wenner, MD Catherine Welch Piccoli, MD passed down to the next generation, it will have Steven M. Wenner, MD William B. Young, MD to be through medicine: Dr. Czarnecki’s boys Eric Paul Kleinbaum, MD Dry Family Charitable have elected not to play tackle football. He and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford G. Kleinbaum Foundation his wife Wendy — “the best coach I’ve ever met, Mrs. Benjamin Provisor even better than Belichick” — have three sons (ages 10, seven, and two). The older boys play team baseball, basketball, and soccer. There’s plenty of sports medicine involved there. Gifts received July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2005. + Deceased Jefferson Medical and Health Science Bookstore

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1009 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia 215-955-7922 • Fax: 215-923-1844 Toll Free: 1-888-TJU-BOOK www.jefferson.edu/bookstore A Jefferson Planned Gift: An Investment in the Future

Distribute Your Property According to Your Wishes Without a will, the laws of your state determine who will receive your property after you are gone. This may not reflect your preferences or the needs of those you want to benefit. Likewise, an outdated will that does not reflect your current wishes and circumstances may result in an undesirable distribution.

Protect Your Family Even with the availability of various estate planning alternatives, a properly drafted will is the foundation of your planning. It is comforting to know that you have provided for your family’s long-term security.

Create a Legacy Your will should include provisions to save taxes and conserve your property for those who will benefit. Provisions can include guidance and care for your children. Remembering Jefferson in your will can help you achieve these goals and also enable you to join the Thomas Eakins Society.

For more information about wills or other estate planning opportunities • Complete and return the postcard in this magazine.

• Call Paul Hurd, Executive Director of Alumni and Planned Giving, at 1-877-JEFF GIFT (1-877-533-3443).

• Email your questions to [email protected].

• Visit the Jefferson Foundation website at www.jefferson.edu/jeffgiving where you can also click on Jefferson’s gift calculator to calculate estimated benefits of a life income gift.

We recommend you consult your attorney or tax advisor before making financial decisions.