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MEDICINE Bu etin Fall 2020 • Volume 105 • Number 2 A New Era in Admissions

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  • MEDICINEBu etinFall 2020 • Volume 105 • Number 2

    A New Era in Admissions

  • #35in the nation

    for Cancer Care

    The UM Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center’s physician-scientists are on the forefront of the treatment and diagnosis of cancer. They invented GammaPod™, irradiating early stage breast cancer more quickly and less invasively, and aromatase inhibitors. They are the nation’s first to disrupt the blood-brain barrier to offer improved brain tumor treatment. As national leaders in advancing CAR-T immunotherapy, they equip patients’ own cells with the healing power to destroy cancer. And they invent new drugs, like galeterone, shown to significantly slow the advancement of prostate cancer and now being investigated as a new treatment for pancreatic cancer.

    Learn more at umgccc.orgVisit our Physician Video Channel at physicians.umm.edu

    Affiliated with the University of Maryland School of Medicine

    Pictured left to right: John A. Olson, Jr., MD, PhD; Kevin J. Cullen, MD; William F. Regine, MD, FACR, FACRO

    Leaders in Safe and Advanced Care

  • Fall 2020 • Volume 105 • Number 2

    18 The MAA Honor RollOur fall issue includes a list of alumni, faculty, and friends who made contributions to the Medical Alumni Association during FY20. Preceding the honor roll is a listing of the John Beale Davidge Alliance, the school’s permanent recognition society for major donors.

    38 Alumnus Profile: Scott A. Sigman, ’90High on Opioid SparingOrthopaedic surgeon Scott Sigman, ’90, realized early on that over pre-scribing opioids for post-operative pain management was a problem in our country. In 2013, he got on the lecture circuit, appealing to physicians and anyone who would listen. It didn’t take long, as hundreds would soon pack venues to hear him speak. Last year, in recognition of his efforts, he was nominated and became a fellow at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.

    40 Alumnus Profile: Paul King, ’96Getting Patients Back on Their FeetHe performs 600 hip and knee replacements each year at Anne Arundel Medical Center—the busiest joint replacement center in Maryland. And, in addition to developing unique post-op protocols, orthopaedic surgeon Paul King, ’96, is deep in clinical research on racial disparities and improving outcomes for African-American patients undergoing total joint replacement.

    2 Dean’s Message 3 Remembered 4 News & Innovations 16 Faculty News

    Departments

    36 Medicina Memoriae 42 Advancement43 Managing Money

    44 Recollections 45 Class Notes 46 In Memoriam

    8 Cover story

    Bulletin Editorial BoardHarry C. Knipp, ’76ChairmanGary D. Plotnick, ’66Vice ChairmanJohn Allen, ’14 Frank M. Calia, MD, MACPKatherine E. Duncan, ’12 Nidhi Goel, ’10 G. Thomas Grace, ’83 Christopher HardwickSachin D. Kalyani, ’03 George C. Kochman III, ’08 Brad D. Lerner, ’84 Jennifer LitchmanPhilip Mackowiak, ’70Stanford H. Malinow, ’68 Carole B. Miller, ’84 Larry PitrofMichael E. Reichel, ’74 Ernesto Rivera, ’66Walker L. Robinson, ’70 Julie RosenJerome Ross, ’60 Tuanh Tonnu, ’90Joseph S. McLaughlin, ’56Chairman Emeritus

    Medical Alumni AssociationBoard of DirectorsBrad D. Lerner, ’84 PresidentPaul A. Tarantino, ’87 President-ElectWalker L. Robinson, ’70 Vice PresidentHarry A. Oken, ’83TreasurerGeorge C. Kochman, III, ’08SecretaryJohn Allen, ’14Katherine E. Duncan, ’12 Nidhi Goel, ’10G. Thomas Grace, ’83 Sachin D. Kalyani, ’03Carole B. Miller, ’84 Michael E. Reichel, ’74Tuanh Tonnu, ’90Directors Richard Keller, ’58Honorary Regional Vice PresidentStanford H. Malinow, ’68 Gary D. Plotnick, ’66Adrianna Lee, ’21 Dr. E. Albert Reece, DeanEx-OfficioLarry PitrofExecutive Director

    University of Maryland School of Medicine Board of VisitorsCynthia L. EganChairLouis F. Angelos, Esq. Peter G. Angelos, Esq.Norman Augustine Kenneth R. BanksAlfred R. Berkeley, III Marc P. Blum, PhD, LLB, CPA Jocelyn Cheryl BrambleCalvin G. Butler, Jr.Marco A. Chacon, PhDMichael E. CryorRobert E. Fischell, ScDNeda Frayha, ’06 Carolyn B. FrenkilMichael I. GreenebaumWilliam E. Kirwan, PhD Harry C. Knipp, ’76Belkis Leong-Hong Stanford Malinow Patricia J. MitchellEdward Magruder Passano, Jr.Jacqueline Young Perrins Abba David Poliakoff, Esq.Maurice Reid, ’99 Melvin Sharoky, ’76Richard L. Taylor, ’75

    A New Era in AdmissionsWhen Sandra Quezada, ’06, took over the office of admissions last year her focus was to increase diversity at the school. For committee members that meant undergoing unconscious bias train-ing and conducting interviews without the applicants’ GPA and MCAT scores at their fingertips. What she could not have antici-pated was the international public health crisis, resulting in these interviews now being conducted virtually for the incoming class of 2025. (On the cover: Sandra Quezada, ’06. Photo by Richard Lippenholz)

    The University of Maryland Medicine Bulletin, America’s oldest medical alumni magazine, is produced by the Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc., with support from the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the University of Maryland Medical System.

    The acceptance of advertising by this publication does not in any way constitute endorsement or approval by the Medical Alumni Association.

    Requests to reproduce articles should be directed to: Editor, Medicine Bulletin, 522 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201-1636, or by email: [email protected].

    Subscriptions are $20 per year (domestic) and $25 (overseas)

    Editor-in-Chief Larry Pitrof

    Design Brushwood Graphics Design Group

    Art Director Nancy Johnston

    For information on advertising, please contact: The Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc. email: [email protected]

    www.medicalalumni.orgCopyright © 2020 Medical Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, Inc. All rights reserved.

    MEDICINEBu etin

  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [2] [3] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    s we head into Autumn our nation is still far from the end of the challenges that have con-fronted us this year. Many segments across the country have experienced setbacks. However, we can see a bright light at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. We continue to make progress on some of our highest-level goals. This is largely due to our extraordinary faculty and staff who have invested their lives’ work in our mission.

    With the recent passing of three longstanding, prominent luminaries, our community is grieving the loss of exceptional talent, distinguished character, and significant contribu-tions toward a better institution, a better state, and a better nation. I am personally grieving the loss of irreplaceable friends and true confidants. Reflecting on the lives and careers of Dr. Nancy Lowitt, Dr. Milford “Mickey” Foxwell, Jr., and Dr. Michael Shipley reminds us of the aspiration and excellence that have fueled throughout the School of Medicine for decades.

    The impact of the work of Dr. lowitt, Dr. Foxwell, and Dr. Shipley is evident in what they and their teams produced. Dr. lowitt’s legacy will grow as the quality of our medical educa-tion and faculty development continues to increase; Dr. Foxwell’s influence will persist in admissions and mentorship for generations to come; and the School of Medicine will remem-ber Dr. Shipley in the advancement of neuroscience and the institutional recognition for his discoveries and innovations.

    A significant product of Dr. Foxwell’s leadership is the admissions office, which measures its success in part by the diversity and high caliber of student classes that matriculate at the school. Featured as the cover story in this issue of the Bulletin, admissions face a new set of challenges in this COvID-19-restrictive environment. virtual interviews are difficult for those conducting them and equally difficult for the applicants. Discerning whether or not an applicant will make a successful medical student requires thorough evaluation. While our methods across the school may look different for the time being, our activities undoubt-edly retain the same elements of success, including the lingering impact of those leaders who inspired thousands of people and the exceptional teams, offices, and departments working harder than ever today.

    When I hear about successful alumni, like Scott Sigman, ’90, who is profiled in this issue of the Bulletin, I am even more proud of our people and our process which have proven effec-tive over the years. Dr. Sigman serves as a popular orthopaedic surgeon in Massachusetts with a strong, personal commitment to reduce the societal burden of the opioid crisis through his opioid-sparing initiatives. While this particular public health epidemic began as Dr. Sigman graduated from medical school, I greatly admire the personal responsibility he has taken to end it. His significant contributions to humanity represent some of the reasons we work as hard as we do to recruit to our school the top talent from across the nation.

    They also represent the reasons we celebrate the school’s generous benefactors in the Medical Alumni Association’s Honor Roll of Donors, featured in this issue of the magazine. Our donors make the education of surgeons like Dr. Sigman possible.

    I continue to be grateful for each and every one of our alumni and the integral roles you play in keeping this institution not only functioning, but flourishing during this challenging season. Please stay safe, stay productive, and stay hopeful that we will emerge from these dif-ficult times stronger than ever.

    E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBAUniversity Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and Dean, University of Maryland School of Medicine

    A significant product of

    Dr. Foxwell’s leadership

    is the admissions office,

    which measures its

    success in part by the

    diversity and high caliber

    of student classes

    that matriculate at the

    school.

    DeaN’s message

    Milford M. “Mickey” Foxwell, Jr., ’80, associate dean of admissions at Maryland from 1989 to 2018, died at his home in Cambridge, Md., on July 16, 2020.

    Born and raised on Maryland’s eastern shore, Foxwell attended local schools including Cambridge High School before receiving his undergraduate degree from the University of Maryland College Park.

    After medical school graduation, he interned at Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C., before returning to Maryland for residency training in internal medicine. In 1983, he served as chief resident and joined the full-time faculty the following year as an assistant professor of medicine. He was a compassionate physician and gifted teacher, having been recipient of the school’s golden apple award for teaching.

    In 1989, medical school dean John M. Dennis, ’45, appointed Foxwell head of admissions. During his tenure, Foxwell oversaw acceptances of more than 4,000 students—nearly half of the school’s living alumni.

    “Mickey was and always will be part of the soul of our medical school,” says Donna L. Parker, ’86, associate professor of medicine and senior associate dean for undergraduate medical education at Maryland. “He cared so deeply about our students, the staff, and the faculty, treating everyone with the same kindness and respect. Our medical education team has lost a consummate colleague and a true friend.”

    Foxwell had a passion for history. For more than 20 years he chaired the Davidge Hall Restora-tion Committee and served as treasurer for the Trustees of the endowment of the University of Maryland, Inc., which manages an endowment for the medical school. In 2018, the MAA Board of Directors announced that the second-floor dissecting laboratory in Davidge Hall would be named in his honor. And at convocation ceremonies in 2019, he was awarded the dean’s gold medal for his service to the institution. Foxwell was a member of the John Beale Davidge Alli-ance, the school’s society for major donors. He donated many of his antique medical books to the special collections department of the UMB Health Sciences and Human Services library.

    Baseball was his passion, and Foxwell had a keen interest in eastern shore players who made it to the major leagues. His collection of baseball memorabilia was extensive, as he traveled the country to attend shows and auctions and meet players to talk baseball. He also had a love for animals—his two dogs, an array of kittens, and his beloved peacocks.

    Survivors include wife Sue and son louis.A celebration of his life is planned for May 1, 2021, when his class returns to campus for its

    rescheduled 40th medical school graduation anniversary celebration. Memorial gifts to the Foxwell Davidge Hall Fund are being warmly received at:

    MAA, 522 W lombard Street, Baltimore, Md., 21201.

    Milford M. “Mickey” Foxwell, Jr., ’80Remembered A

  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [4]

    The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences announced that Karen Williams, ’85, will co-lead an anti-racism coalition at the institution. Williams is a former chief of anesthesiology at the National Institutes of Health and a retired asso-ciate professor of anesthesiology at GW.

    The coalition will focus on the individual, inter-personal, institutional, and structural pillars of anti-racism work. Williams grew up in the Washington, D.C., area during the civil rights movement of the 1960s and lost her father in a racially motivated shooting.

    News INNOVaTIONs

    [5] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Williams, ’85, Leading Anti-Racism Coalition at GW

    Artwork Brightens Up Pearl StreetThe University has brightened up the Pearl Street walkway between Fayette and West lexington Streets. The outdoor gallery space features works from the inaugural University of Maryland, Baltimore art and literary journal 1807. It is published annually and showcases all forms of art produced by members of the university community. TRANSITIONS

    Bert W. O’Malley, Jr., MD, has been appointed president and CeO of the University of Maryland Medical Center. O’Malley served on Maryland’s fac-ulty from 1999 to 2003 as professor of surgery and chief of otolaryngology and was most recently vice president of the University of Pennsylvania Health System and the Gabriel Tucker Professor and Chair of the department of oto-rhinolaryngology at Penn. He succeeds Mohan Suntha, MD, who vacated the position to become president and CeO of the University of Maryland Medical System.

    Adam M. Robinson, Jr., MBA, head of the vA Maryland Health Care System, was named director of the vA Pacific Island Health Care System where he will over-see the delivery of health care to an estimated 129,000 veterans. Robinson had served as head of the vA Maryland system since 2015.

    Kerri Thom, MD, professor of epide-miology and public health, was named associate dean for student affairs. In this role, Thom will be responsible for the day-to-day management of the office in providing mentor-ing guidance to medical students including overseeing the writing of their Medical Student Performance evaluations. She previously served as the assistant dean for student research and education and succeeds Donna L. Parker, ’86, who was promoted to senior associate dean for undergradu-ate medical education.

    Lohman, ’96, Receives NSF Business Grant for COVID InnovationCheryl D. Lohman, ’96, founder and CeO of MedApptic llC, in Germantown, Md., received a National Science Foundation Small Business Innovation Research Grant to develop an automated medi-cal supply dispenser to decrease the spread of COvID-19 to healthcare professionals.

    She began developing the device a few years ago after realizing the significant time lapse between patients’ requests for as-needed pain medi-cations and the actual time those medications were administered by a nurse. This project will protect nurses and healthcare workers through the automated delivery of essential medical supplies such as hand sanitizers and supportive care. The project will also focus on advancing integration of this device with the electronic health record.

    The award is $225,000 and becomes eligible for a Phase II grant of up to $1 million with the potential for receiving up to $500,000 in addi-tional matching funds with qualifying third-party investment or sales.

    The outdoor Pearl Street Gallery

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  • INNOVATIONS●

    MAA Board Purchases Care Packages, Diagnostic Kits for Students

    News INNOVaTIONs

    Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [6]

    To welcome the class of 2024, help usher in the new Renaissance curriculum at Maryland, and in light of the public health crisis, the MAA Board of Directors re-directed a portion of its funding for students this fall. With all social events on hold,

    it authorized $4,000 to purchase care packages for the incoming class—masks, thermometers,

    hand sanitizers, and fanny packs. It also earmarked $20,000 to purchase

    diagnostic kits for the class. The kits include stethoscopes, sphygmomanom-eters, reflex hammers, and otoscopes/

    ophthalmoscopes. The curricular reforms call for students to do physical exams earlier

    in their educations and both earmarks have been warmly received. Over the past several years,

    much of the funding for student activities has come from philanthropist Carolyn Frenkil, a member of the school’s board of visitors. The board also utilized annual fund revenues to complete the transaction. The Bulletin magazine thanks alumni for their continuing support to make these gestures possible.

    Closing its doors on March 14 due to the international pan-demic, the Carnegie Science Center in Pittsburgh, featuring Mummies of the World: The Exhibition, reopened on June 27. eleven pieces of the Medical Alumni Association’s Alan Burns Collection of Anatomical Specimens are traveling with the show. Recognized as the largest collection of human and animal mummies and related artifacts ever assembled, Mummies is now entering its seventh year of touring America and the world.

    The Burns Collection was brought to Maryland from Scotland in 1820 by Granville Pattison, professor of anat-omy and surgery who was later elected dean. The teaching

    Mummies Exhibit Back in Business at Carnegie Science Centeraids were considered quite valu-able and utilized well into the 20th century. Also traveling in the show is the Maryland Mummy. The cadaver was mummified in 1994 by Ronn Wade, retired head of the Maryland State Anatomy Board, using techniques of the ancient egyptians.

    To abide by social distancing guidelines, the number of visitors has been limited to 25 percent of regular capacity at the museum.

    Breathing Safely in Car Seats

    Maryland study has found wide variations through the United States in the way hospitals ensure that premature or low birth weight infants can breathe safely in car seats before discharging them. Their study, published in the August Pediatrics journal, found the same infant who passed a screening in one hospital’s newborn nursery may fail in similar facilities at another. The authors conclude that further guidance on screening practices and failure criteria is needed in order to bet-

    ter protect the vulnerable newborns.Research indicates that 63 percent of infant sleep-related deaths that occur in sitting devices are in car

    seats, according to lead author Natalie L. Davis, MD, MMSc, associate professor of pediatrics and a neona-tologist at the University of Maryland Children’s Hospital.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends a car seat tolerance screen for all premature newborns in order to identify any heart or breathing risks that could make use of a car seat unsafe for babies whose lungs are not fully developed.

    Contributing writers to News/Innovations include: Bill Seiler • Karen Warmkessel • Julie Rosen Photos by: John Seebode • Mark Teske • Tom Jemski • Richard Lippenholz

    [7] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Jarrell Named President of UMBBruce E. Jarrell, MD, interim presi-dent of the University of Maryland, Baltimore, since early January, was named president by the University System of Maryland Board of Regents on September 10. He succeeds Jay A. Perman, MD, who resigned to become chancellor of the University System of Maryland. Jarrell has been affiliated with the university since 1997 when he was appointed chair of the department of surgery. In 2012, he became UMB’s chief academic and research officer and senior vice president.

  • B y C h r i s t i a n n a M c C a u s l a n d

    A N e w e r A i N Fe a t u re

    ADMISSIONS

    he process of applying to medical school is sacrosanct, and a fundamental part of the traditional path to admission is the in-person interview. However, the coronavirus pandemic cares little for engraved protocols. As the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States continues to rise, Maryland made the decision to take its interview process 100 percent online for the 2021 cycle. The change comes as the office of admissions, under new leadership, also seeks to increase class diversity.

    Sandra M. Quezada, ’06, is the associate dean for admissions, a position she undertook in 2018 after the retirement of the late Milford “Mickey” Foxwell, Jr., ’80, who held the position for nearly three decades. Quezada is also assistant dean for academic and multicultural affairs and course director for Medical Spanish. She says the decision to move the in-person interviews online was not taken lightly.

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  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [10]

    Still, medical schools across the country wrestled with the best way to manage the interview process in this time of pandemic. Some wanted to begin in-person and switch to remote. Others wanted to do the opposite—start virtu-ally and move in-person in the spring with the hope that the pandemic will be under better control.

    each was problematic. What if you begin in-person and there’s a spike in cases that causes a new lockdown or restriction? you could have a candidate scheduled to fly out who is left to deal with the expense and hassle of canceling travel plans at the last minute. If you begin vir-tual and switch to in-person in the spring you run the risk of being overwhelmed with candidates who put-off the process until they can get that in-person interview and its perceived or real advantages.

    In the end, it came down to uniformity. While

    [11] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Fe a t u re

    “The ideal scenario is always in-person because there is a different level of warmth and connection to be made between the applicant and the interviewer that cannot be equally achieved by phone or video chat,” she explains. “It’s mutually beneficial; for the interviewer, it’s the ideal opportu-nity for evaluation. For the candidate, it’s ideal to be here, to see the campus, engage with the city, speak to students, and walk through the hospital to see clinical care in action.”

    While the loss of in-person interviews is lamentable, Quezada states that the public health risk involved with having applicants traveling from around the world and even around the country, was simply too great. even if the number of cases in the United States were to stabilize, there is the added com-plication of state-by-state mandated quarantine periods and travel restrictions.

    “We couldn’t have someone travel here and then ask them to quarantine in a hotel for two weeks for their interview,” Quezada notes.

    For all its nuanced complexities, the move to online interviews could have an unintended benefit, one that dovetails with the school’s goal to increase the diversity of its student body. While students have always managed to get to campus for their interviews, they do so at great expense. By removing the high cost of travel for interviews—often to multiple medical schools—one more barrier to entry is taken away.

    MD Program Class of 2024 Class of 2023 Class of 2022

    Total Applications (AMCAS) 4,884 5,185 4,851

    Applicants Interviewed 546 589 592

    Acceptances Offered 286 327 311

    Class Size 152 148 156

    Percentage, Male/Female 39/61 40/60 40/60

    Percentage, Resident/Non-Resident 72/28 61/39 74/26

    Percentage, Underrepresented in Medicine 24 13 12

    Percentage, Students of Color 54 54 —

    Age Range 20-32 21-35 21-33

    Colleges/Universities Represented 63 68 69

    Average GPA: Science 3.74 3.82 3.76

    Average GPA: Overall 3.79 3.83 3.80

    Average MCAT Score 513 514 513

    entering Class Three-Year Comparisons

    Quezada notes that there have been occasional chal-lenges to in-person interviews in the past (mostly for interviews engaged in international experiences), appli-cants have always found a way to get to campus and, for consistency’s sake, interviews were always done in-person with no exceptions. It is for that same reason that all

    interviews will be conducted entirely online this year.

    “If we were to start remote and switch to in-person there’s an issue of fairness—how might the format of the interview impact how a candidate is evaluated?” she explains. “And if someone were to opt-out of an in-per-son interview, could they be perceived as less interested?”

    The decision was made: all interviews would be conducted online using the Zoom platform

    already interfaced with the school’s online application system. The next step was to create an experience online that replicates the personal interaction of a campus visit.

    “We consistently receive feedback that the interview day plays a large role in applicant decision making,” says Quezada. “The challenge is, how do we present ourselves in an exciting and engaging way in a virtual platform?”

    Students have always played a key role in the admis-sions process, taking applicants on tours and hosting a lunch. This year, students created a virtual tour video presentation that will be narrated by a current student in real-time via Zoom. Because applicants won’t be physi-cally walking around the campus for tours, the interview day will be shorter. This extra time has enabled admis-sions to bring in a new component to the interview day: faculty.

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  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [12]

    that keep us from being a more diverse profession, we need to look at how we’ve made it harder for people of limited financial means to be included, and how that has limited diversity even beyond race and ethnicity.”

    “you think that if you’re bright and committed and motivated and will be an amazing physician, it shouldn’t matter whether you are able to buy the plane tickets and pay for the hotels, but that’s often how it plays out,” she continues. “There are people who are so committed and want this so badly, but their means are so limited that they will only apply to a small number of schools. It’s unfortunate, but their likelihood of success is going to be really low because people today apply to 30 plus schools at a huge cost.”

    Unconscious Bias TrainingHow virtual interviews might impact the applicant pool remains to be seen, but other more intentional programs are already having a positive impact on improving diver-sity at the school. In 2018, the admissions committee underwent unconscious bias training, delivered by its own faculty trained through the Association of American Medical Colleges using the Cook Ross everyday Bias model. In 2019, all interviewers were trained, too. Quezada and Kristin Reavis, ’09, assistant professor of family and community medicine and director of student diversity and inclusion, both became certified uncon-scious bias trainers.

    Reavis has been an applicant interviewer for six years and on the admissions committee for four. After the unconscious bias training she shifted to apply more of

    a diversity-based lens to the review and presentation of applications. Reavis explains that it is important to understand unconscious bias because while an inter-viewer will most likely answer “no” if asked if he or she is, for example, racist, they may hold other beliefs that could disproportionately impact applicants of color, like bias against certain schools or places of origin.

    “The tenants of unconscious bias are to allow people to understand they have biases and that while they may not be right or wrong, their biases have impacts,” Reavis explains.

    The coursework the committee undertakes is interac-tive, allowing people to share their biases or experiences with bias. Reavis says the impacts of the training are visible. She notes that there have been times in applicant review sessions when a committee member will raise the point that unconscious bias could be impacting that applicant and the committee will take the time to talk that possibility through.

    “The goal is to have a medical community that reflects the diversity in our country,” says Reavis. “There are statistics that show patients tend to have better outcomes where there is a more diverse workforce, and we know that our medical workforce is not reflective of our US population. especially in a city like Baltimore, we want to celebrate diversity and make sure our medical center reflects the populations we serve.”

    [13] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    “Usually applicants interact mostly with students, their interviewers, and a few administrators,” says Quezada. “We’re making the best use of our extra time to cre-ate another video where we highlight some of our faculty and provide short clips of them sharing what they love about our school.”

    Applicants will receive a packet of information including tips for how to have a productive Zoom interview, like wearing a suit. The school is offering some neutral back-grounds for those who can use them, but interviewers are also asked to be understanding in this unprecedented process. It’s possible the applicant might not be able to get to a quiet place or could be doing the interview in their bedroom. Interviewers are cautioned not to let these things become distracting.

    For all its nuanced complexities, the move to online interviews could have an unintended benefit, one that dovetails with the school’s goal to increase the diversity of its student body. While students have always managed to get to campus for their interviews, they do so at great expense. By removing the high cost of travel for interviews—often to multiple medical schools—one more barrier to entry is taken away.

    “We can’t deny that unfortunately there’s an association between race and ethnicity and income,” says Quezada. “If we’re thinking about diversity in a very real way and the barriers

    Fe a t u re

    MD/PhD Program Class of 2024 Class of 2023 Class of 2022

    Total Applications 233 242 198

    Applicants Interviewed 47 43 37

    Acceptances Offered 19 29 28

    New entrants 9 8 10

    entering Class Three-Year Comparisons

    The tenants of unconscious bias are to allow people to understand they have biases and that while they may not be right or wrong, their biases have impacts.”

    One way the school is trying to remove unconscious bias from the interview process is by removing an applicant’s GPA and MCAT scores from the interviewer’s materials. An internal school analysis demonstrated that the MCAT does not strongly correlate to success in medical school.

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  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [14]

    removing GPA and MCAT Scores from the interviewOne way the school is trying to remove unconscious bias from the interview process is by removing an applicant’s GPA and MCAT scores from the interviewer’s materi-als. An internal school analysis demonstrated that the MCAT does not strongly correlate to success in medical school. While higher MCAT scores have shown some correlation to improved USlMe Step 1 performance, it’s a slim connection at best and seems to stop predicting success by the time of residency. Of course, neither metric indicates whether an applicant has the humanistic and other qualities required to be a quality physician. What both scores can often indicate is the socio-economic means to take expensive test preparatory courses.

    “I got some pushback on removing test scores because some interviewers said they couldn’t properly assess a candidate without those numbers, even though we never ask our interviewers to assess academic performance—every candidate invited for an interview has already been deemed academically capable,” says Quezada. “At the end of the day, from the interview we want to know an applicant’s inter-personal communication capacity, how well they can hold a conversation and build rapport as they will need to with patients and colleagues.”

    Some of the changes the school has made are relatively small yet have big impacts. For example, in 2019 admis-sions switched to electronic applications instead of paper. The switch proved prophetic; during the state-ordered shelter-in-place earlier this year due to the pandemic, admissions officers could easily access files versus having to manage thousands of paper applications in the office. More importantly, it introduced greater efficiencies in organizing applicants. The school receives roughly 5,000 applications per year for about 140 spots. Using the electronic system Quezada says it’s much easier to sort applicants by state of residence, for example, or race.

    “It really helps me navigate those 5,000 applications and understand what’s going on there.”

    Many of these steps toward better equity are likely a benefit to many students, regardless of race, gender, or socio-economic background. However, it seems appar-ent that the changes are having a positive impact on diversity. The incoming class of 2020-21 is the school’s most diverse yet including 60 percent women (on par with previous years) and 54 percent minority (defined as “non-white”). However, 24 percent come from groups tra-ditionally under-represented in medicine, which includes African Americans, Hispanics, Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans. That number is nearly double what it’s been for the past 15 years, where it’s been stalled at approximately 10-13 percent.

    Across the country, schools of medicine were waiting to see what the impacts of the pandemic might be. Could fewer students apply to medical school? Might more students, put off by travel and the prospect of online coursework, defer their start to medical school?

    Quezada says there is no indication that this time of incredible upheaval and change has dampened the spirit of future medical students. As of August 26, Quezada says the number of applications received thus far was 4,294, on par with a normal year. even more inspiring is the incoming first year class that began course work in August. The class was intended to be 140 students, but admissions ended up with 152. Admissions officers contacted each student and offered a one-year deferral option: their spot would be 100 percent guaranteed if they would simply put off medical school attendance for one year.

    “Not a single person took us up on it,” says Quezada. “We have some very motivated students and they’re rar-ing to go.”

    Fe a t u re

    MD/Master’s Program Class of 2024 Class of 2023 Class of 2022

    Total Applications 114 123 118

    Applicants Interviewed 29 23 31

    Acceptances Offered 17 14 18

    New entrants 8 2 3

    entering Class Three-Year Comparisons

    Charitable Gift Annuities (CGA) are simple contracts between a donor and the University of Maryland Baltimore Foundation, Inc. (UMBF)* that benefit the University of Maryland School of Medicine. In exchange for a gift of cash or appreciated securities, UMBF pays fixed income for life to one or two beneficiaries. When the obligation to make life income payments ends, the balance of the account can be used for scholarships, faculty enhancement, or almost any other need of the School of Medicine designated by the donor.

    Gift annuities generate a federal income tax deduction and pay beneficiaries partially tax-free income. Annuities funded with appreciated securities have additional tax and financial advantages.

    A deferred Charitable Gift Annuity allows the donor to defer the start of income payments for any number of years, thus making it both a retirement and charitable planning tool. A longer deferral period results in a higher annuity rate and a larger tax deduction.

    In addition to Charitable Gift Annuities, donors also support the School of Medicine through estate gifts and other planning strategies that are customizable to changing financial situations. Whatever form your legacy gift takes, you can have an impact on the future of medicine.

    YourLEGACY...it’s Personal

    PLANNED GIVING | Charitable Gift Annuity

    Age Rate*

    65 4.2%

    70 4.7%

    75 5.4%

    80 6.5%

    85 7.6%

    90+ 8.6%

    *Rates as of July 1, 2020 and are subject to change.

    Single Life

    For more information about CGAs, bequests, gifts that pay income for life, and other innovative ways to support the School of Medicine, please visit: www.umbfplannedgiving.org.

    How will you inspire others with your legacy?

    Or contact: Marjorie BrayDirector of Development, AlumniUniversity of Maryland School of [email protected]

    *PLEASE NOTE: Legacy gifts should be made payable to the University of Maryland Baltimore Foundation, Inc., for the benefit of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

    a d m i ss i o n s

  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [16]

    ❖ David Serre, PhD, associate profes-sor, Matthew Cannon, PhD, research associate, both from the department of microbiology and immunology, Institute for Genome Sciences, were among the co-authors of “(2020) Single-Cell Transcription Analysis of Plasmodium Vivax Blood-Stage Parasites Identifies Stage- and Species-Specific Profiles of Expression,” published in PLoS Biology in May.

    ❖ Hervé Tettelin, PhD, profes-sor, department of microbiology and immunology, Institute for Genome Sciences, co-edited and was among the chapter authors of the new open access

    book “The Pangenome: Diversity, Dynamics and Evolution of Genomes,” published in Springer Nature in May.

    ❖ Charles White, MD, professor, department of diagnostic radiol-ogy and nuclear medicine, was among the authors of “Management of Lung Nodules and Lung Cancer Screening During the COVID-19 Pandemic: CHEST Expert Panel Report,” published in Chest in April.

    Patents ❖ Feyruz Rassool, PhD, professor, department of radiation oncol-ogy, received a European patent for “Therapy Regimen and Methods to Sensitize Cancer Cells Treated with

    Epigenetic Therapy to PARP Inhibitors to Ovarian Cancer.”

    Appointments❖ Donna Calu, PhD, assistant professor, depart-ment of anatomy and neurobiology, joined the editorial board of Decision Neuroscience, including Frontiers in Neuroscience and

    Frontiers in Psychology as review editor.

    Grants & Contracts*❖ Eugene Albrecht, PhD, professor, depart-ment of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sci-ences, received a five-year, $3,506,350 grant from the National Institute of Health for “Estrogen Regulation of Fetal Microvessel Development During Primate Pregnancy: Impact on Insulin Sensitivity in Offspring.”

    ❖ Tracy Bale PhD, professor, depart-ment of pharmacology and director, center for epigenetic research in child health and brain development, received a five-year, $3,394,308 R37 MERIT award from the National Institute of Mental Health for “Paternal Stress and Epigenetic Programming of Offspring Neurodevelopment.”

    ❖ Linda Chang, MD, MS, and Thomas Ernst, Dr rer nat, both from the department of diagnostic radiol-ogy and nuclear medicine, and PIs of UMB’s site of the landmark adoles-cent brain cognitive

    development study, were awarded a seven-year, $13,098,568 grant renewal.

    ❖ Mary Kay Lobo, PhD, profes-sor, department of anatomy and neurobiology and Seth Ament, PhD, assistant profes-sor, department of psychiatry, Institute for Genome

    Sciences, along with a colleague at State University of New York at Buffalo, received a $1,823,772 grant from the National Institute of Drug Abuse for “Heroin-Induced Fenomic Regulation of Ventral Pallidum Neuron Subtypes.”

    ❖ Jonathan Morrison, PhD, FRCS, FEBVS, assistant professor of surgery, chief of endovascular surgery, attend-ing trauma and vascular surgeon for the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center; Louis DeTolla, VMD, MS, PhD, DACLAM, profes-sor, departments of pathology, medicine, and epidemiology & public health, pro-fessor and founding director, program of comparative medi-cine; and Rigoberto Sanchez, PhD, RQAP-GLP, assistant professor of pathol-ogy, and director of pre-clinical research for the comparative medicine program, received a $1.2 million contract from the U.S. Department of Defense, in collabora-tion with the University of Alabama Medical Center, for a good laboratory practice study compliant with Title 21 Part 58 of the Code of Federal Regulations, entitled “Evaluation of 17a-Ethynylestradiol-3-Sulfate in Severe Hemorrhage and Poly-Trauma.”

    ❖ Jean-Pierre Raufman, MD, professor, depart-ment of medicine, received a five-year, $2,103,549, grant from the National Institute of Diabetes,

    Digestive and Kidney Diseases for renewal of a T32 program “Research Training in Gastroenterology and Hepatology.”

    ❖ Zeljko Vujaskovic, MD, PhD, professor, department of radiation oncology, received a five-year $12,239,361 award from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

    for “Intercollaborative Radiation Countermeasure Consortium for Advanced Development of Medical Countermeasures to Mitigate/Treat Acute and Delayed Radiation Syndromes.” As part of the award, Maryland becomes a member of the NIAID Centers for Medical Countermeasures Against Radiation Consortium.

    ❖ Junfang Wu, BM, PhD, asso-ciate professor, department of anesthesiology, along with Long-Jun Wu, PhD, from Mayo Clinic, received a five-year, $2,392,596 R01 grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke for “The Function and Mechanisms of Voltage-Gated Proton Channel Hv1 in Spinal Cord Injury.”

    ❖ Peixin Yang, PhD, profes-sor, department of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sci-ences, was awarded a five-year, $2.56 million R01 renewal for “Autophagy and

    Its Regulation in Diabetic Embryopathy.”

    *Grants & Contracts of $1 million and above

    Publications ❖ Tracy Bale, PhD, professor, department of pharmacology, and director, center for epigenetic research in child health and brain develop-ment (CERCH), and Yasmine Cissé PhD, postdoc-

    toral fellow, also from the department of pharmacology and CERCH, were authors of “Brain and Placental Transcriptional Responses as a Readout of Maternal and Paternal Preconception Stress are Fetal Sex Specific,” published in Placenta in July.

    ❖ Eli Bar, PhD, associate professor, department of pathology, was among the authors of “Spatial Enrichment of Cellular States in Glioblastoma,” published in Acta Neuropathologica in July.

    ❖ Maureen Black, PhD, The John A. Scholl, MD and Mary Louise Scholl, MD Professor in Pediatrics, and Angela Trude, PhD, postdoctoral fellow, also from the department of pediatrics, published a commentary, “All Children Surviving and Thriving: Re-envisioning UNICEF’s Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition,” published in the June Editorial Pick of The Lancet Global Health.

    ❖ Matthew Frieman, PhD, associate professor; Stuart Weston, PhD, research fel-low; James Logue, graduate research assistant; and

    Robert Haupt, all from the department of microbiology and immunology, were among the authors of “High-Throughput Effort Using Both Humanized Mice and Convalescent Humans Yields SARS-Cov-2 Antibody Cocktail,” published in the June issue of Science.

    ❖ Ronna Hertzano, MD, PhD, associate pro-fessor, department of otorhinolaryngol-ogy head and neck surgery, Institute for Genome Sciences, was among the co-authors of “Characterization of

    the Development of The Mouse Cochlear Epithelium at the Single Cell Level,” pub-lished in Nature Communications in May and highlighted in a press release by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.

    ❖ Kazi Hoque, PhD, research associate; Eryn Dixon, student; Victoria Halperin Kuhns, PhD, post-doctoral fellow; and Owen Woodward, PhD, assistant pro-fessor, all from the department of phys-iology, were among the co-authors of “The ABCG2 Q141K Hyperuricemia and Gout Associated Variant Illuminates the Physiology of Human Urate Excretion,” published in Nature Communications in June.

    ❖ Pratap Karki, PhD, assistant professor, depart-ment of medicine, and Konstantin Birukov, MD, pro-fessor, department of anesthesiology, were the co-authors of “Oxidized Phospholipids in

    Healthy and Diseased Endothelium,” pub-lished in Cells in April.

    FaCulTy

    news

    [17] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Hervé Tettelin, PhD

    Tracy Bale, PhD

    Maureen Black, PhD

    Matthew Frieman, PhD

    Ronna Hertzano, MD, PhD

    Owen Woodward, PhD

    Pratap Karki, PhD

    Donna Calu, PhD

    Eugene Albrecht, PhD

    Charles White, MD

    Feyruz Rassool, PhDLinda Chang, MD, MS

    Mary Kay Lobo, PhD

    Louis DeTolla, VMD, MS, PhD, DACLAM

    Jean-Pierre Raufman, MD

    Zeljko Vujaskovic, MD, PhD

    Junfang Wu, BM, PhD

    Peixin Yang, PhD

  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2015 [18] [19] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Each year the Medical Alumni Association publishes its honor roll of donors in the fall Medicine Bulletin. The list includes names of alumni, faculty, and friends whose gifts were received between July 1, 2014 and June 30, 2015. Preceding the honor roll is a listing of the John Beale Davidge Alliance, a permanent recognition society for donors of $10,000 and above. The Medical Alumni Association and University of Maryland School of Medicine gratefully acknowledge your support!

    honor roll 2015The John Beale Davidge Alliance1895Frank C. Bressler

    1897Isaac Dickson

    1904A. Lee Ellis

    1921Moses Paulson

    1926Max Trubek

    1930Maxwell Hurston

    1931 Harry S. Shelley

    1932Mortimer D. Abrashkin Herbert Berger John C. Dumler

    1933 Sam Beanstock Mark Thumim

    1934 M. Paul Mains

    1935 Milton I. Robinson John M. Shaul Benjamin M. Stein

    1937 David A. Barker James & Carolyn Frenkil Lawrence Perlman Albert Shapiro

    1938 John Z. & Akiko K. Bowers Celeste L. Woodward

    Theodore E. Woodward

    1940 Ross Z. & Grace S. Pierpont 1941 Christian F. Richter Raymond Kief Thompson

    1942 Louis O.J. Manganiello Mary L. Scholl

    1943M Irving J. Taylor

    1943D John M. Recht Arthur M. Rinehart Wm. B. Rogers

    1944 John M. Bloxom III Michael R. Ramundo

    1945 David H. Barker Benjamin Berdann Oscar B. Camp Mary Dorcas Clark John M. Dennis Joseph B. Ganey Allen J. O’Neill

    1946 Allan H. Macht David & Norma Sills Jr.

    1947 James M. & Alma Trench

    1948 Clark Whitehorn

    1949 Robert R. Rosen

    1950 Grace Hofsteter William H. Yeager

    1951 Kathleen R. McGrady Robert J. Venrose

    1952 Lee W. Elgin Jr. Paul H. Gislason C. Edward Graybeal Robert A. Grubb Morton M. Krieger

    1953 Robert Berkow Sylvan & May Frieman John W. Heisse George C. Peck Israel H. Weiner

    1954 Thomas E. Hunt Jr.

    1955 Vernon M. Gelhaus Paul C. Hudson Morton D. Kramer

    1956 Theodore R. Carski Joseph S. McLaughlin Marvin S. Platt G. Edward Reahl Jr.

    1957 Selina Balco Baumgardner Paul K. Hanashiro George A. Lentz Frederick W. Plugge IV Walter M. Shaw Leonard M. Zullo

    1958

    John T. Alexander George R. Baumgardner Frank P. Greene William J. Marshall

    1959 Jack C. & Cynthia Lewis Morton M. Mower Lawrence D. Pinkner Hans R. Wilhelmsen

    1960 Leonard P. Berger Wilson A. Heefner Ronald E. Keyser Selvin & Sylvia Passen Morton I. Rapoport Bernice Sigman Nathan Stofberg

    1961 Neil Arbegast Jay S. Goodman David E. Litrenta

    1962 Jon B. Closson W. Haddox Sothoron

    1963 Leland M. Garrison Kosta Stojanovich

    1964I. Frank Hartman II

    1965 Edward S. Hoffman Donald Cornelius Roane

    1966 Arnold S. & Donna R.

    Blaustein William R. Bosley Elizabeth C. Hosick Franklin L. Johnson Lloyd I. Kramer Carolyn J. Pass Richard M. Susel

    The John Beale Davidge Alliance

    Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [18] [19] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Each year the Medical Alumni Association publishes its honor roll of donors in the fall Medicine Bulletin. This list includes names of alumni, faculty, friends, corporations and foundations whose gifts were received by the Association the prior fiscal year (July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020). Preceding the honor roll is a listing of the John Beale Davide Alliance, a permanent recognition society for donors of $10,000 and above. The Medical Alumni Association and University of Maryland School of Medicine gratefully acknowledge your support!

    honor roll 2020

    The John Beale Davidge Alliance

    The 1807 CircleThe 1807 Circle is the highest honors level of the Alliance, recognizing donors for gifts of $50,000 and above. The 1807 Circle was established in 1993.

    1895Frank C. Bressler

    1897Isaac Dickson

    1904A. lee ellis

    1914Austin W. Wood

    1921Moses Paulson

    1926Antonio F. D’AngeloMax Trubek

    1930Maxwell Hurston

    1931Rachel K. GundryHarry S. Shelley

    1932Mortimer D. AbrashkinHerbert BergerJohn C. Dumler

    1933Sam BeanstockMark Thumim

    1934M. Paul Mains

    1935Milton I. Robinson John M. Shaul Benjamin M. Stein

    1937 David A. BarkerJames & Carolyn Frenkillawrence PerlmanAlbert Shapiro

    1938John Z. & Akiko K. BowersCeleste l. WoodwardTheodore e. Woodward

    1940Ross Z. & Grace S. Pierpont

    1941Christian F. RichterRaymond Kief Thompson

    1942louis O.J. ManganielloMary l. Scholl

    1943MIrving J. Taylor

    1943DJohn M. Recht Arthur M. RinehartWm. B. Rogers

    1944John M. Bloxom, IIIMichael R. Ramundo

    1945David H. BarkerBenjamin BerdannOscar B. CampMary Dorcas ClarkJohn M. DennisJoseph B. GaneyDaniel lemenAllen J. O’Neill

    1946Abraham A. GoetzAllan H. MachtJohn A. MitchellDavid & Norma Sills, Jr.

    1947James M. & Alma Trench

    1948leonard H. GolombekClark Whitehorn

    1949Robert R. Rosen

    1950Stanley W. Henson, Jr.Grace Hofsteter William H. yeager

    1951Kathleen R. McGradyRobert J. venrose

    1952lee W. elgin, Jr. Paul H. GislasonC. edward GraybealRobert A. GrubbMorton M. Krieger

    1953 Robert BerkowSylvan & May FriemanJohn W. HeisseGeorge C. PeckIsrael H. Weiner

    1954Charles J. HammerThomas e. Hunt, Jr.

    1955vernon M. GelhausPaul C. HudsonMorton D. Kramer

    1956Robert J. ByrneTheodore R. CarskiJoseph S. MclaughlinMarvin S. PlattG. edward Reahl, Jr.

    1957Selina Balco BaumgardnerPaul K. HanashiroGeorge A. lentzFrederick W. Plugge, IvWalter M. Shawlandon Clarke Stoutleonard M. Zullo

    1958John T. Alexander, Sr.George R. Baumgardner Frank P. GreeneWilliam J. Marshall

    1959Jack C. & Cynthia lewis Morton M. Mower lawrence D. PinknerHans R. Wilhelmsen

    1960Anonymousleonard P. BergerS. H. economonJulio e. & Myriam Figueroa Wilson A. HeefnerRonald e. Keyser Selvin & Sylvia Passen Morton I. Rapoport Clinton l. RogersMartha e. StaufferNathan Stofberg

    1961Neil R. ArbegastJay S. GoodmanDavid e. & Shirley litrenta

    1962Jon B. Closson W. Haddox Sothoron

    1963Robert M. Beazleyleland M. GarrisonDonald H. GildenJanet e. Mules Kosta Stojanovich

    1964I. Frank Hartman, II

    1965edward S. HoffmanDonald Cornelius Roane

    1966Arnold S. & Donna R.

    BlausteinWilliam R. BosleyWilliam D. ertagelizabeth C. HosickFranklin l. Johnsonlloyd I. KramerCarolyn J. PassJames W. SpenceRichard M. SuselStuart H. & eleanor H. yuspa

    1967elizabeth A. AbelFrancis D. DrakeJohn Wm. GareisJack lichtensteinJohn R. Rowell

    1968Gordon l. & Judith C. levinWilliam B. long, IIIBert F. MortonJoel Wm. RenbaumBarry J. Schlossberg

    1969John C. BlaskoDonald W. BryanBarry H. & Marsha lee

    FriedmanM. Fredrica GodshalkRobert A. HelselReynold M. & Janet M. KarrArthur v. Milholland & Dr.

    lucille A. MostelloMalcolm D. PaulBrian S. & Patricia A.

    SaundersW. Winslow Schrank Kristin Stueber

    1970John P. CaulfieldJoseph N. FriendDavid B. Posnerlouis A. ShpritzStanley S. Tseng

    1971T. Noble Jarrell, IIIJack S. lissauerJoel N. Shlian

    1972William G. ArmigerJeffrey C. Blumelizabeth R. BrownRichard B. KlineStanley A. MorrisonJohn A. NiziolRichard H. and Jane ShermanDeborah M. Shlian

    1973Michael J. Dodd Nelson H. Goldberg Steven J. & Dr. enid K. GrossRonald J. Taylor

    1974Jeffrey P. BlockJohn R. Martinedward l. Perl David l. Zisow

    1975Stephen H. & Patricia PollockRichard l. & Kathie Taylor

    1976Harry Clarke KnippNancy & Geoffrey B. lissMelvin SharokyCarol & Benjamin K. yorkoff

    1977Dahlia R. HirschPaul A. OffitClyde A. StrangBarry A. Wohl

    1978Ira J. Kalis CohenMorris FunkDavid e. & Carole A. Kelley elizabeth M. KingsleyRuth A. Robinellen l. & Dr. Bruce TaylorStephen A. valenti

    1979 Stephen R. Izzi G. S. Malouf, Jr.

    Dorothy Snowelizabeth l. TsoA. F. Woodward, Jr.erik B. & Joyce young

    1980Mehtap Atagun AygunJane l. ChenMichael R. Kessler

    1981Robert A. Fuld

    1982AnonymousBrian K. Cooley

    1983Harry A. OkenGeorge C. Peck, Jr.August J. Troendle

    1984Dale R. Meyer

    1985Charles S. HamesAlan R. Malouf

    1986Barbara B. Fleming & James

    Walker Fleming, IIISeth D. Rosen

    1987Stephen l. HouffG. Michael Maresca

    1989John T. Alexander, IIMary Carmel DeckelmanJoy l. Meyerloreli Smith

    1990Carolyn M. AppleMartin I. PassenTuanh Tonnu

    1992Geoffrey lahn Rosenthal

    1993Thomas H. yau

    1994Scott e. laBorwit

    1998lisa S. laBorwit

    1999Maurice N. Reid

    Physical TherapyAnonymousCarolyn Chanoski, ’87leslie B. Glickman, ’64 &

    Dr. David R. GlickmanGeorge R. Hepburn, ’74Dr. Mary M. RodgersJane S. Satterfield, ’64

    Faculty & StaffAnonymousDrs. edson X. Albuquerque &

    edna Rezende AlbuquerqueDr. & Mrs. Bizhan AarabiDr. Robert A. BarishDr. Stephen T. BartlettDr. Monique Bellefleur & Dr. J.

    Marc SimardDr. & Mrs. Michael A. BermanDr. Steven BernsteinDr. Christopher T. Bever Jr. &

    Dr. Patricia A. ThomasDr. Mordecai P. BlausteinDr. Angela BrodieDr. Joseph W. Burnett Dr. Frank M. Calia Dr. William T. CarpenterDrs. M. Carlyle & lillian

    Blackmon-Crenshaw Dr. Kevin J. CullenMr. Brian J. DeFilippisDr. Howard M. eisenberg Dr. & Mrs. James P. G. FlynnDr. Claire M. FraserDr. David R. GensDr. J. laurance HillDr. Anthony l. ImbemboDr. & Mrs. Guiseppe Inesi Drs. Bruce e. Jarrell & leslie

    S. RobinsonDr. Joseph P. KaoDrs. James B. Kaper & Carol

    O. Tacket Dr. John A. KastorDr. lisa D. KellyDr. Allen KrumholzDr. Patricia langenbergDr. Myron M. & Mrs. Suzanne

    G. levineDrs. M. Jane Matjasko &

    Shao-Huang ChiuDr. Colin MackenzieDr. James & Mrs. Nancy

    MixsonDr. Taghi M. Modarressi & Ms.

    Anne Tyler

    The John Beale Davidge Alliance is a permanent recognition society for major donors of the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Established in 1978, the Alliance is named in memory of Dr. John Beale Davidge,

    the medical school’s founder and first dean who in 1812 raised the necessary capital to fund construction of the school’s first medical building. The society includes alumni, faculty, and friends of the medical school.

  • Mr. William e. Brown & Mrs. Sally Brown

    Dr. George C. ButtonMr. Michael J. & Mrs. Barbara

    CannizzoHon. & Mrs. Frank C.

    CarlucciMrs. Agnes CaulfieldThe Cawley Family

    FoundationMs. viorica M. Cazan Mr. Walter Channing, Jr.Dr. Jean ChengMr. Chuck ChokshiMr. Alan ClahrMr. Francis J. Clark, Jr.Mrs. Mary Gray Cobey & Mr.

    William W. CobeyMr. Ronald S. & Mrs. Carolyn

    CooperDr. M. Carlyle Crenshaw, Jr.Creston G. Tate & Betty Jane

    Tate FoundationDr. John M. DavisThe Gaeton and JoAnn

    DeCesaris Family Foundation

    Mrs. Helen DenitMr. George l. Doetsch, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. leo G. DominiqueDr. Merrill & Karen egorin &

    FamilyDr. Florence einsteinMrs. Margaret B. ellisThe emmert Hobbs

    FoundationDr. John e. Faber, Jr.Mr. Joseph & Mrs. Ann FardaDr. Robert e. & Mrs. Susan

    FischellMs. Mary A. Fish Mr. Alan H. & Mrs. Cynthia

    A. FosterFrank C. Marino FoundationMr. Robert J. FranksMrs. esther l. FriedmanThe louis and Phyllis

    Friedman FoundationMr. edward A. GannonMs. elizabeth GaultGeorge S. Rich Family

    Foundation, Inc.Mr. Anthony GeraceMr. Myron D. GerberMr. Fred & Mrs. Roben I.

    Gerson

    Mr. Freddie TraubMrs. Alma N. TrenchMs. Marguerite villaSantaMr. Michael vinciguerraMs. esther virosDr. Gladys e. WadsworthMr. Daniel e. WagnerMr. leonard WeinglassMr. Richard F. WeltyMr. Jeffrey WendelMr. Gunther WertheimerMrs. Alvin S. WolpoffMs. Margaret S. WuMr. Hansjorg WyssPhilip A. Zaffere Foundation,

    Inc.

    The Silver CircleThe Silver Circle is an honors level within the John Beale Davidge Alliance and recognizes donors for gifts of $25,000–$49,999. The Silver Circle was established in 1996.

    1932Abraham N. & Gertrude

    Kaplan

    1934William l. Howard

    1936Milton H. Stapen

    1938Daniel J. AbramsonJoseph M. George, Jr.Florence Gottdiemer

    1939elizabeth B. Cannon-Hall

    1941Gene A. CroceJacob B. Mandel

    1943DW.N. CorpeningCliff Ratliff, Jr.

    1943MHarry D. CohenJose M. Torres-GomezRobert e. Wise

    1945Joseph W. Baggett

    William A. Holbrookleonard T. KurlandHenry F. MaguireJohn J. Tansey

    1946John A. Mitchell

    1948John R. Hankins

    1949Nathan Schnaper

    1951Nancy Blades GeilerHenry D. Perry

    1952Richard e. Ahlquist, Jr.William l. HeimerBella F. SchimmelDonald A. Wolfel

    1953Thomas J. BurkartWilliam S. KiserJohn W. MetcalfJoel S. Webster

    1954Stuart M. BrownArthur v. Whittaker

    1955Foster l. BullardJoseph W. CavallaroHenry A. DiederichsHenry Booth HigmanRichard F. leightonFrank R. Nataro

    1956Webb S. HerspergerAlbert v. KannerH. Coleman KramerHerbert M. MartonIrvin P. Pollackvirginia T. Sherr

    1958Meredith S. HaleAlbert F. HeckRichard H. KellerCharles e. Parker

    1959Milton B. ColeJohn W. Coursey William J.R. DunseathWilliam F. Falls Jr.

    Marvin M. KirshDonald R. lewisRamon F. Roig, Jr.Howard J. Rubenstein

    1960I. William GrossmanPaul D. MeyerDamon F. MillsNeil RobinsonJerome RossMichael S. Tenner

    1961George e. BandyCarl F. BernerJohn N. Browellleonard W. GlassRonald l. GutberletJohn P. lightRoger MehlDavid Rosen

    1962Raymond D. BahrBruce Broughtonlouis R. CaplanArthur W. Traum

    1963Merrill M. KnopfMitchell C. SollodKarl Stecher, Jr.edward C. Werner

    1964Salvatore R. & edith M.

    DonohueDonald T. lewersJoel S. MindelRichard G. Shugarman

    1965John C. Dumler, Jr.David R. HarrisJohn W. MaunGeorge Peterslarry A. Snyder

    1966George e. GallahornAlfred A. Serritella

    1967Gerard D. & Shirley J.

    DobrzyckiHenry FeuerRobert O. FranceStuart H. lessansFred R. Nelson

    The John Beale Davidge Alliancehonor roll 2020

    The John Beale Davidge Alliance

    Dr. & Mrs. e. Albert ReeceDr. Richard D. RichardsDr. Thomas M. ScaleaDr. & Mrs. Stephen C.

    SchimpffDr. David StewartDrs. William J. Weiner & lisa

    M. Shulman Dr. John A. TalbotDr. Matthew R. WeirDr. & Mrs. Donald e. WilsonDr. Paul J. yarowskyDr. Cedric yu

    FriendsThe Abell Foundation Inc.Adalman-Goodwin

    FoundationThe Frank and Sunny Adams

    Family FoundationMr. Richard AlterMr. Peter G. AngelosAnonymousHelen S. & Merrill l. Bank

    FoundationMr. Andrew N. BaurMs. Florence BaurMr. Harold G. BellMrs. Florence S. BerdannDr. Michael BermanMr. Jerome Beser Ms. Ruth BlandinJacob & Hilda Blaustein

    FoundationMs. Gloria BlizzardMs. Marc Blumlois & Irving Blum

    FoundationBodman Family FoundationMs. lenore J. BohmMr. Harry C. Bowie, III Mr. D. Stuart BowersMr. Michael & Mrs. eugenia

    BrinThe Norman and Florence

    Brody Family Foundation Mr. William & Mrs. Susan

    Brody Mr. eddie & Mrs. Sylvia

    BrownMr. Howard S. Brown

    Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [20] [21] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    Ms. Dorothy GetzMr. Allan R. GilbertDr. Bert M. GlaserMrs. evelyn Grollman GlickThe Gluck FamilyMrs. Rachel GoidlThe Hon. louis l. & Mrs.

    Goldstein Ms. louisa H. GoldsteinPeter J. Golueke FoundationMrs. Hilda Perl GoodwinThe Hon. Kingdon Gould, Jr.Mr. Robert Keith GrayMrs. Marlene & Mr. Stewart J.

    GreenebaumMr. Benjamin H. Griswold, IIIMrs. Bessie & Mr. Simon

    Grollman The Family of the late Dr.

    Israel GrossmanHomer & Martha Gudelsky

    Family FoundationMr. Willard & Mrs. lillian

    HackermanThe Hales Family Foundation,

    Inc.Ms. leah A. HardmanMr. Jeffrey l. Hargrave Ms. Marion S. HaydenMrs. Magda Schaler-Haynes &

    Mr. Michael HayesHeinz Family Foundation Mr. edwin & Mrs. Dorothy l.

    HellerMr. edmund J. & Mrs. Mary C.

    Hevey Ms. Megan e. Hills Mr. Roderick M. HillsMr. Richard & Mrs. Margaret

    HimelfarbCharles O. HollandSarah virginia HufferMr. & Mrs. Richard e. HugMrs. Kim W. HughesIndependent Dialysis

    FoundationJoseph William JacquesMs. Martha T. JarmanJohn Templeton FoundationMr. Carl T. JulioKahlert FoundationHon. Francis X. Kelly & Mrs.

    Janet D. KellyJames lawrence Kernan

    endowment Fund

    Ms. Thelma M. KimmelMrs. Ann KlineDr. edward KowalewskiThe Zanvyl & Isabelle Krieger

    FundSir & lady Maurice laingKatharine l. lanham Mr. Michael lasky & Mrs.

    Margaret einhornDr. Benjamin levineMr. David & Mrs. Ruth levineMr. Roger C. lipitzlundy Family FoundationMr. Harry lundy, Jr.Ms. laurie lundyDr. George S. Malouf, Sr.Ms. Stacey MannMr. Frank M. Masters, Jr.Dr. Theodore R. MathenyMr. Hugh P. McCormick, Jr. Mr. Hugh P. McCormick,

    III & Mrs. Joyce Norton McCormick

    Mr. George W. & Mrs. Carol M. McGowan

    M. Mark Mendel, esq.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas MetzMr. Samuel F. MeyerMrs. Michele H. MittelmanMrs. Nancy MixsonMrs. Anne Tyler ModarressiMr. & Mrs. Terry MontesiMr. Samuel W. Moore, Jr.Mr. Samuel A. MorrisonMr. William G. MorrisonMr. Sylvan J. NaronDr. Cheriyath R. NathMr. & Mrs. Irvin NaylorDr. A. Robert NeurathRosalyn Newman, esq.Nicholl Family FoundationMr. Thomas R. & Mrs. Pamela

    NowellMrs. laurel OleynickOrokawa FundationMr. & Mrs. Hamish S.

    OsborneDr. Hillel PanitchMs. Mary e. ParkerMs. Shannon ParksMs. Martha ParsonsMr. e. Magruder Passano, Jr. Mr. William M. Passano, Jr.Mrs. Holly PassenMrs. Helen Golden PaulsonMs. emma M. Pearce

    The Pearlstein FoundationMr. & Mrs. Abe & Irene PollinPrince Charitable TrustMs. Kathleen H. PritchardDr. Carol G. PryorDr. Jeronimo J. RamirezRathmann Family FoundationMr. Timothy J. ReganMr. George S. RichMr. & Mrs. William S.

    RichbourgMr. Richard & Mrs. Debra

    RiederMrs. Doris S. RiefMr. John H. Riehl III & Mrs.

    Margaret Knott RiehlDr. & Mrs. Scott M. RifkinRoux Family FoundationMr. David & Mrs. Barbara

    RouxMrs. elizabeth R. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Arthur &

    Josephine RosewallMr. Howard SavalMr. Charles SchramekMrs. Corinne C. SchwartzRobert & Caroline Schwartz

    FoundationMr. Thomas H. & Mrs. Clair

    Zamoiski SegalMrs. Caroline A. SeverinMs. elizabeth ShamburgerMs. Alexias SharokyThe Sharoky Family

    FoundationMs. Mary H. Shea Mrs. Harry S. ShelleyMs. Norma H. SillsMs. Carol Shaffer SmithMr. Martin J. & Mrs. Sharon

    SmithMs. Susan J. SmithMrs. Mary e. Staples Mrs. Judith H. StollDr. Susan SwiftMr. Atwood B. TateMr. Creston G. TateMrs. Susan TashMr. David S. TaubMs. Fern Tauber Ms. Debra e. TaylorJack Taylor Family Foundation

    Inc.Mr. Guangqi TianMs. Dorothy K. Tooma

  • 1946Walter J. Benavent Sidney & Bernice R. ClymanThomas B. ConnorJoseph D’AntonioGuy K. DriggsSamuel D. Gabyerwin. R. JenningsHerbert J. & virginia levickas James A. Roberts

    1947George W. FisherArlie R. Mansberger, Jr.

    1948leonard H. GolombekRaymond H. KaufmanRobert l. Rudolph Kyle y. SwisherJohn D. Wilson

    1949Robert A. Abraham Margaret lee SherrardMeredith P. Smithedward W. StevensonJohn F. Strahan

    1950Joseph B. Bronushasleonard G. Hamberryvirginia HufferMilton R. Righetti O. Ralph RothHenry H. Startzman, Jr.

    1951Frederick J. HatemCharles W. McGrady John T. Scully

    1952 Timothy D. BakerJonas R. RappeportDavid R. TaxdalHoward N. Weeks

    1953Richard M. Baldwin Werner e. Kaese

    1954Samuel J. AbramsRobert B. GoldsteinJohn F. HartmanMorris RainessMarshall A. SimpsonJ. Walter SmythRufus Thames

    1929Abraham JacobsWilliam yudkoff

    1931William M. Seabold

    1932Francis N. Taylor

    1935Jeannette R. HeghinianIrving KlompusHoward B. MaysHarry M. Robinson, Jr.

    1936leo M. CurtisJaye GrollmanHoward T. KnoblochRichard H. Pembroke, Jr.Samuel Steinberg

    1937 Jack A. Kapland

    1938Aaron FederBernard J. SabatinoBernard O. Thomas, Jr.H. leonard Warres

    1939Bernard S. Kleiman

    1940Benjamin H. Inloes, Jr.William S. M. ling A. Frank Thompson, Jr.William I. Wolff

    1941Julius GelberJacob B. MandelBenjamin Pasamanick

    1942James N. McCoshlouis H. Shuman

    1943DRuth W. Baldwineli GalitzJack C. Morgan

    1944Patricia DoddW. Carl ebeling, III & Claire

    Krantz

    1945eugene H. ConnerWilliam H. Frank

    Mr. lynn M. Garrison & Mrs. Carolyn Chamioski

    Mr. A.l. (Tom) GiannopoulosMs. Ronnie GlaserMr. Brian D. GoldmanDr. David A. GrossmanMr. Craig A. & Mrs. Susan

    Coda GrubeMr. Wes GuckertMs. Shirley D. GutberletMr. & Mrs. Michael HaynesMr. Fred HittmanMrs. Calvert Jones HollowayMrs. Shirley HorensteinMrs. Rosalie C. & Mr. Peter P.

    Houlihan, Jr.Betty Huse FoundationDr. Frederic Huppe-GourguesMr. Reggie JacksonMrs. Jacquelyn J. JohnsonMr. William B. JohnsonMrs. Gertrude KaplanMr. M. Scot KaufmanMs. Audrey KillenMr. John W. Kingleroy & Irene Kirby

    Charitable Fund Inc.Mr. Roger l. Kohn & Ms. Kay

    M. GilbertMr. Barrett B. Kollme Mr. and Mrs. Paul KozloffDr. David & Ms. Nikki

    ledbetterMs. Joan leonardMrs. Audrey levine & Mr.

    Arthur levineMr. Terry liermanMrs. Beth lineDrs. Dan & Nancy S. longoMrs. Ruth W. yudkoff loveMr. George N. Manis & Mrs.

    Anastasia ManisMr. Stanley J. MarcussMr. George v. McGowanMr. John P. McKennaDr. John e. MillerMs. elaine S. MintzesMr. Fred F. MirmiranDr. Taghi M. ModarressiMr. Alvin MyerbergMr. & Mrs. J. Gordon

    NeuberthMr. Michael & Mrs. Pamela

    NobleMs. Dorothea e. Owens Mr. David S. Penn

    Dr. Carol l. GreeneDr. William HenrichDr. Frederic Huppe-GourguesDr. Harry W. Johnson, Jr.Kenneth P. JohnsonDr. laure A. KesslerDr. Patricia langenbergDrs. Gail M. & Robert A. lissDr. Jay S. MagazinerDr. Carl MansfieldDr. John e. MillerDr. vincent D. PellegriniDr. William RegineDr. Mary M. RodgersDr. John H. SadlerDr. Jill Whitall

    FriendsDr. lee AbramsonMr. & Mrs. larry AkmanMr. Raymond M. Albers &

    Mrs. Margaret J. RhianMr. Daniel P. & Mrs. Kathleen

    v. AmosAnonymous (3)Ms. Penny BankDavid Blanken & Barbara

    FriedmanThe Herbert Bearman

    FoundationMr. Gary C. & Mrs. Melissa

    BrownMr. Scott BurgerDr. Belisario R. CabanillaMr. Michael A. Campbell &

    Ms. Tracy lynn McCreadyDr. Benito S. ChanMr. John R. CochranMs. Barbara CohenDr. Akiva S. CohenMrs. R Adams Cowley & Mr.

    R Adams Cowley, IIMr. Michael e. CryorMr. & Mrs. James J. CrystalMr. James DahlDr. John M. DavisMr. Daniel DentMr. Walter v. DiscenzaDr. edith M. DonohueMr. Billy Bruce DuncanDr. Charles A. DunningMr. Robert C. embryMr. Wilbur S. ervinMr. Ronald & Mrs. Mindy

    FishkindMr. Richard J. Gannon

    Carole B. MillerMartin l. Schwartzluette S. Semmes

    1985Joanna D. BrandtFrederick M. GessnerRobert C. Greenwell, Jr.Sharon M. HenryDonald R. lewis

    1986Ira louis FedderDennis KurganskyDonna lynn ParkerNevins W. Todd, III

    1987Timothy D. NicholsRichard D. & elizabeth C.

    PattenD.v. Woytowitz

    1989Neri M. CohenNiloufar GuivDavid A. GnegyRichard I. Weinstein

    1992Filipe C. AlbuquerqueAnnette Fineberg

    1993Kathryn M. ConnorMichael A. Cushner

    1994Bahador Momeni

    1997Rachel v. KramerAnthony Reina, Jr.

    1998David Chiu

    1999Nancy S. longo, PhD

    2001Camille Hammond

    2002David J. Wang

    2003Judy K. Wang

    FacultyDr. Patricia & Mr. Gary

    AttmanDr. Meredith BondDr. Robert H. Christenson

    Jeffrey l. QuartnerSandra D. l. QuartnerGregory B. RichardsonRobert e. RobyGary B. Ruppert Michael B. Stewart

    1976Janet F. BrownWilliam G. BrownD. Stewart Ginsberglee S. Simon

    1977Frederic T. FarraRichard J. FeldmanRobert T. Fisherlinda GeorgeAlan S. GertlerDoris S. GertlerMarlene T. HaymanKatherine C. White

    1978Andrew P. FridbergMarianne N. FridbergDonald T. & Carolyn F.

    Weglein

    1980Judith Falloonlee J. HelmanMarian F. KellnerTimothy P. MclaughlinKeith D. OsbornRoger J. Robertsonvictoria W. SmootRoy T. Smoot Jr.ladd Spiegel & Curtis

    leland Cole

    1981Mark C. & Shelly lakshmananAndrew M. Malinow

    1982John M. DiGraziaPatrick F. Gartland

    1983Ali J. AfrooktehGeorge M. BoyerHarry A. BrandtMonica A. BuescherProtagoras N. CutchisGeorge Thomas GraceMary Jo Johnson

    1984Roy e. Bands, Jr.Brad D. lerner

    1968Sheldon B. Bearman R.S. BuddingtonRonald S. GlickJames G. Kane Anthony l. MerlisCharles S. Samorodin

    1969edward F. AstonJames O. Ballardemile A. BenditConstance l. Holbrook

    1970Arthur O. AndersonDavid H. BerkeleyHenry A. BrieleMichael A. Grasso Stephen B. GreenbergKenneth M. Hoffman Thomas F. KlineWalker l. RobinsonRobert F. SarlinCharles I. Weiner

    1971R. Henry Richards

    1972Robert J. BauerMark J. levineJerald P. WaldmanHoward J. WeinsteinRobert B. & Barbara Whitney

    1973W. edwin ConnerDavid J. Greifingerlouis e. Harman, III

    1974Charles P. Adamoluis A. Queral

    1975AnonymousCharles e. Andrews Robert J. BeachNoel M. Chiantella Karl W. Diehnl. Thomas DivilioCharles F. HoeschKenneth v. IsersonThomas F. KrajewskiThom e. lobeKathryn A. Peroutkal. edward Perraut, Jr.

    Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [22] [23] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    honor roll 2020

    The John Beale Davidge Alliance

    Mr. James & Mrs. Dine Perrine Dr. Julius S. PiverMs. Rosemary QuinnMs. Julie RegineMs. Caroline RoccoDr. Milton RockMrs. Mary e. RollinsMr. Gerard R. RuelMr. Bruce W. SanfordMr. leroy & Mrs. Donna

    ShapiroMr. William ShatnerMrs. Diana Sue SingerMs. Doris SniderMrs. Susan W. TalbottMs. Jane TakeuchidelsonDr. M. S. TaleghaniMr. Mark TaubenfeldMr. Jimmy ThermiotisMs. lucia Maria valleDr. lucy R. WaletzkyMrs. Carolyn WegleinMr. & Mrs. Paul S. WhiteMr. Jerry W. WilliamsMrs. edith R. WolpoffMs. Jane Zee

    The Elm SocietyThe Elm Society recognizes donors for gifts of $10,000–$24,999.

    1879Charles Getz

    1907Julius e. Gross

    1910Walter M. Winters

    1916Frank C. Marino

    1917Charles R. Thomas

    1925eva F. DodgeJoseph NataroW.A. Sinton

    1927Abraham H. FinkelsteinCharles e. Gill

    1928Aaron I. GrollmanAaron H. MeisterMorris H. Saffron

    The John Beale Davidge Alliance

  • 1955Neal C. CapelDonald H. DemboWalter e. & Jane R. JamesJohn P. McGowanGeorge l. Morningstarleonard J. Morse

    1956 John e. AdamsMathew H. M. leeJohn B. littletonCharles A. SanislowW. A. Sinton, Jr.

    1957Marvin S. Aronsvirginia y. BlacklidgeCharles M. HendersonPeter P. lynchNevins W. Todd, Jr.

    1958Stuart H. BragerG.T. McInerneyGranger G. SuttonWilliam T. Ward

    1959Robert J. DawsonAugust D. King, Jr.William KrautArthur l. PoffenbargerStanley N. SnyderRobert J. Thomas

    1960Aristides C. AlevizatosCharles earl Hilllawrence F. HonickAllen R. Myerselijah Saundersemanuel H. Silversteinlois A. young

    1961James R. AppletonJames J. CerdaJohn N. DiaconisCarlos e. GirodRonald l. & Shirley D.

    GutberletGerald C. KempthornePaul A. Reeder, Jr.

    1962Herbert GaitherBernard S. KarpersPaul A. KohlheppTheodore C. Patterson

    1963Richard l. GoldmanAlice B. HeislerChris P. Tountas

    1964Sigmund A. AmitinRichard M. ProtzelHarold S. Standiford

    1965verner Albertsenlarry C. ChongF. R. lewis, Jr.Fred N. SugarPhillip P. Toskes

    1966James e. Arnold Jay Martin BarrashPhilip P. BrousStuart l. FineRichard l. FlaxDwight N. FortierDean H. Griffinlarry T. & Catherine IngleStephen MachizJane C. McCaffreyIrvin M. Sopher

    1967 David M. Hadden Gary M. lattinBoyd D. MyersJoseph C. Orlando

    1968elliot S. CohenWilliam N. Goldstein Frank A. KulikCharles J. lancelottaStanford MalinowBurton S. SchonfeldHoward SeminsJon M. valigorskyeugene Willis, Jr.

    1969Mark M. ApplefeldSanders H. BerkGeorge R. BrownPaul J. ConnorsHoward A. DavidovGraham Gilmer, III

    Roy R. GoodmanArnold Herskovicedwin e. MohlerO. lee MullisAlan J. Segal

    1970Francis A. Bartek David H. Bermanleo A. Courtney, IIIlouis S. HalikmanDennis J. HurwitzPhilip A. MackowiakJoseph P. MichalskiJames S. MurphyJohn H. Poehlmanedward J. ProsticRobert F. SarlinNorman W. TaylorStanley M. Zaborowski

    1971Sachiko T. CochranCharles F. Hobelmann, Jr.

    1972Walter H. DormanMatthew J. Gibney IIISheila A. GibneyRobert B. GrossmanNelson H. Hendler Michael R. PetriellaPeter D. vashDean l. vassarBrian J. WinterCeleste l. Woodward

    1973edwin A. DeitchRaymond D. Drapkin G. Reed Failing, Jr.Joseph D. JenciDenis Wm. MacDonaldMark P. MillerBernard G. Milton Ira M. StoneT. S. Templeton, IIHarold TuckerRoberta S. Tucker Richard M. Weisman

    1974Michael H. HotchkissJames Jay McMillenSheldon D. MilnerDenis A. NinerMichael e. ReichelW.R. Weisburger

    1975Bruce e. Beacham Gary F. HarneDonald S. HornerDorothy S. Hsiao M.C. KowalewskiCharles e. MannerScott M. McCloskey Parry A. Mooreedward l. MorrisFrank H. MorrisNicolette Orlando-MorrisHarvey B. PatsMichael e. Weinblatt

    1976John W. BowieMichael e. Cox Christopher Feifarekellen B. FeifarekJose R. FuentesBradford A. KleinmanJames e. Mark

    1977Anonymouselwood A. CobeyRichard J. FeldmanSamuel D. & Fern Friedeledward B. MishnerSteven H. ResnickRobert l. SmithDouglas N. SteinRichard J. ZangaraStuart A. Zipper

    1978Philip A. Adeslouis J. DomeniciGary C. Prada

    1979Karen C. CarrollJudith B. DillmanPeter e. GodfreyMartin F. Joyce-BradyTimothy J. lowBruce C. MarshallWayne A. McWilliamslinda D. OaksPeter e. RorkHarlan WeismanPerri laverson WittgroveH. Russell Wright, Jr.

    Theodore y. Kimedward P. NastR. Matthew ReveillePaul R. RingelmanJoshua Z. SickelKatherine D. TobinHelen Walker

    1985Jeffrey D. BennerJeffrey JonesDavid A. O’KeeffeMichael A. Sylvalaura A. Tang

    1986Samuel R. AkmanN. eric Carnelllucy Changeric J.W. ChoeScott W. FoskoSangwoon Hanlee A. KleimanJeffrey Robert MclaughlinSteven C. Resnick

    1987Charles P. FitchRichard W. Freemanelizabeth R. HatcherKathleen Devine HearneKevin e. HohlJames P. NataroSusan S. NesbittPaul A. TarantinoThomas S. Wilson

    1988Carol C. Coulson Jay C. KoonsStanley J. Shin

    1989David A. BurnsWing C. ChauRandolph B. GormanStephen F. HatemSteven e. HearneBabak J. JamasbiMerdad v. ParseyDavid P. SmackGregg Wolff

    1990Jennifer P. CorderCarl e. GessnerKelly O’DonnellScott A. SigmanJames e. Thompson

    1991Jeffrey S. Masinlee Anne Matthews

    1992Geoffrey RosenthalJohn M. vaeth

    1993Angela BrownPaulette e. BrowneCraig Collivervirginia ColliverAmal MattuDavid B. Sigman

    1994Deborah S. Hopkins louis B. Malinow

    1995John W. Butler Kevin M. Dooley Jessica H. KimOlayemi O. Osiyemi

    1996Michele M. CooperRobert F. CorderTeresa M. CoxF. Thomas D. Kaplanlisa MartinezJames y. Wang

    1997Troy Andre BrijbasiRuwanthi Samaranayake

    CampanoKester I.H. Cross, Jr.Rajesh v. MehtaAndrew Ward Morton

    1998Aaron M. Bates Percy BoatengZafar S. KhanJoseph MartinezOtha MylesMegan O’BrienPeter A. ReyesKenneth S. Schwartz

    1999Thomas D. HorstCharlotte M. Jones-BurtonAndrew C. KramerBimal G. RamiMallory Williams

    1980Terence D. CampbellRobert P. CervenkaDale K. DedrickCraig A. DickmanJames F. FiastroMilford M. Foxwell, Jr.Richard M. Galitz Peter J. & Mrs. valerie

    GoluekeKaren M. HladikCharita C. HoyleJeffrey A. Kleiman Susan l. laessigMichael R. lundeWilliam J. OktavecRussell K. PortenoyMichael F. Pratt

    1981Alice Magner CondroDaniel FerrickNeal M. Friedlanderlawrence A. GalitzKaren R. KingryCarol MarshallHoward l. Siegelelizabeth e. WackBrian & Dianne WamsleySamuel A. yousem

    1982Wayne l. Barber Thomas W. Conway Darryl B. KurlandRalph T. SalvagnoMarc H. Siegelbaum Mark l. Stillwell

    1983e. Allan AtwellGeorge B. CavanaghStephen W. DejterNeil B. FriedmanScott D. HagamanThomas R. HornickHarry Huo-tsin HuangMary I. JumbelicGarry l. MuellerChristopher M. O’ConnorSonia M. SaraccoJeannine l. SaundersFrederick W. Schaerf

    1984Mary T. Behrenslindsay Golden

    2000Ndidi F. FeinbergBonaventure B. NguMilad PooranMatthew D. Sedgley

    2001Adebisi AjalaAllison BoesterSuneel N. Nagda

    2002Kisa Crosse

    Physical Therapyvincent Conroy ’05Florence P. Kendall ’99Ruth latimer ’75Richard A. lopez, ’78Howard e. Neels, ’63Steven H. Tepper, ’90Arlene Ross ’93 & Dr.

    Warren RossJon C. Waxham, ’96Thomas W. yates, ’96

    Faculty & Staff (and former)AnonymousDr. Ashkay N. AminMs. Jane e. AndersonDr. C. William BalkeDr. Claudia BaquetDr. Nathan CarlinerDr. Thomas C. ChalmersDr. Robert H. ChristensonDr. Richard P. DuttonDr. Brian D. eurleDr. Kevin S. FerentzDrs. Paul S. Fishman &

    elizabeth BarryDr. Carol l. GreeneDr. Bartley P. GriffithMr. Gregory F. & Mrs. Ina

    HandlirDr. eve J. Higginbotham & Dr.

    Frank C. WilliamsDr. Harry W. JohnsonDr. Kenneth P. JohnsonDr. Gerald S. JohnstonDr. Harold KaplanDr. Christian R. KlimtDr. Allan KrumholzDrs. vinod & Bina lakhanpal Dr. Stephen W. longMr. Patrick Madden & Mrs.

    Megan M. Arthur Dr. James e. McNameeDr. Herbert l. Muncie, Jr.

    Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [24] [25] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    honor roll 2020

    The John Beale Davidge AllianceThe John Beale Davidge Alliance

  • Medicine Bulletin Fall 2020 [26] [27] UNIveRSITy OF MARylAND

    The FY20 Honor Roll

    The following contributed to the Medical Alumni Association with a gift or membership between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020.

    Joseph C. laughlinGeorge A. lentz, Jr.William J. RappoportRichard C. RebaGeorge W. ReverWalter M. Shawlandon Clarke Stout, Jr.leonard Zullo

    1958John T. Alexander, Sr.George R. BaumgardnerGerald e. BloomGaylord l. Clark, Jr.Robert e. Cranley, Jr.Gilbert B. CushnerRonald l. DienerStanley N. FarbFrank P. GreeneAlbert F. HeckWilliam J. HickenRichard H. KellerFrank K. Kriz, Jr.Howard S. levinAntonio Perez-SantiagoJerome TillesWilliam T. Ward

    1959Aristides C. AlevizatosGerson Asraellawrence F. Awalt, Jr. William N. CohenRobert J. DawsonAugust D. King, Jr.Marvin M. KirshMartin S. KleinmanWilliam KrautJose O. MoralesGeorge S. TrotterHans Richard Wilhelmsen, Sr.

    1960leonard P. BergerArnold BrennerDonald W. DatlowJulio e. FigueroaAlvin GlassBurton J. GoldsteinC. earl HillRonald e. KeyserWilliam e. latimerRichard C. lavyMichael H. leakanJohn C. MortonJerrod NormanlySelvin PassenNeil RobinsonClinton Rogers

    Herbert l. Blumenfeldefrain A. DefendiniMorton J. ellinRobert H. ellisDaniel H. FrammCharles J. HammerRobert C. Holcombeedward S. Klohr, Jr.Herbert J. levinMoses l. NafzingerJean C. O’ConnorDavid H. PattenArthur v. WhittakerWilliam O. WildRobert e. yim

    1955James M. Close Roger W. ColeDonald H. Dembovernon M. GelhausJulian R. GoldbergAlvin HeckerWalter e. JamesWilliam P. KeefeWilliam F. Krone, Jr.Richard F. leightonJoan Raskin

    1956Stephen BarchetJames A. BurwellRobert J. ByrneTheodore R. CarskiJames Castellano, Jr.edward D. FrohlichRobert N. HeadleyWebb S. HerspergerCharles H. KingScheldon KressJoseph G. lanziGerald N. MaggidHerbert M. MartonJoseph S. MclaughlinClark l. OsteenMarvin S. PlattG. edward Reahl, Jr.Charles A. Sanislowvirginia T. SherrJohn Z. WilliamsHarry D. Wilson, Jr.

    1957Marvin S. AronsJames K. BouzoukisMary C. BurchellRobert A. CarlinAllen S. GerberPaul K. Hanashiro

    1945Oliver Winslow

    1947Irvin H. CohenStanley CohenRobert C. Duvall, Jr.Jose G. valderas

    1948leonard H. Golombek

    1949leonard BachmanMeredith P. SmithCarolyn D. Watson

    1950Harry H. Bleecker, Jr.Joseph W. Cavallarol. Guy CheltonMiriam S. DalyHenry H. Startzman, Jr.Harriet H. WootenWilliam H. yeager, Jr.

    1951Francis S. Gardner, Jr.Nancy Blades GeilerHomer l. Twigg, Jr.

    1952Charles B. Adams, Jr.C. edward GraybealWilliam R. GrecoWilliam l. HeimerFrank M. KlineIrving KramerWilliam A. MathewsBella F. SchimmelRichard A. SindlerDonald A. Wolfel

    1953Scott B. Berkeley, Jr.Walter H. ByerlyWerner e. KaeseRobert C. KingsburyWilliam S. KiserBenjamin B. leeRafael longo-CorderoJohn W. Metcalf, Jr.James e. MightGeorge H. MillerGeorge C. PeckJoel S. Webster

    1954Arthur Baitch

    Jerome RossRobert P. SarniGeorge I. Smith, Jr.Morton e. SmithW. e. StandifordMartha e. StaufferNathan StofbergMichael S. TennerTheodore Zanker

    1961Andre Acosta-OteroJames R. AppletonGeorge e. BandyOscar H. BingBarry BlumAnthony R. BoccutiThomas G. BreslinMilton H. BuschmanWilliam R. FlemingCarlos e. Girodleonard W. GlassJay S. GoodmanGerald A. HofkinJohn P. lightRoger l. MehlRobert J. MyerburgMichael B. OldstoneDavid RosenRichard M. Sarleslarry G. TilleyGeorge e. Urban, Jr.

    1962Raymond D. BahrMark edmund Bradleylouis C. BreschiBruce D. BroughtonJon B. ClossonFrederick S. FelserMayer M. KatzStanley A. KlatskyRonald l. KlimesPaul A. KohlheppMelvin D. KopilnickAlan B. lachmanRobert A. McCormickDavid G. MusgjerdDonald D. PetW. Haddox SothoronOsmar P. Steinwald, Jr.Richard R. StephensonArthur W. TraumWilliam H. Wood, Jr.

    1963lee David BrauerRussell C. BufalinoRobert M. Byers

    Dr. David A. NageyMr. Dennis NarangoDr. Chris PapadopoulosDr. Krishna C.v.G. RaoDr. Rafael M. RodriguezDr. Douglas D. RossDr. Bahram SinaDr. Sue SongDr. Philip A. TempletonDr. Gunvant ThakerDr. Benjamin F. TrumpDr. & Mrs. Umberto

    villaSanta Dr. Debra S. WertheimerDr. Nancy O. WhitleyDr. John F. Wilber

    FriendsAnonymousMr. & Mrs. George

    Andreadakis Drs. Jocelyn Apollon & Gerald

    ApollonPhyllis l. & leonard J.

    Attman FoundationMrs. Frederick J. Balsam Mr. Burton & Mrs. Ameile

    BankMs. Penny Bankestate of Merlin John

    BankenbushMr. & Mrs. Michael Baron Ms. Mary A. BatchMs. Julia BeckerMr. David J. Bederman & Ms.

    lorre B. CuzzeMr. Scott BergesonMr. Cliff & Mrs. Arlene BlakerMr. George R. Brown, Jr.Mrs. Dawn M. BurgerMr. & Mrs. Dennis C. CarderDr. Thomas C. Chalmers Dr. Cornelia P. Channing Mr. & Mrs. Robert A.

    ChrencikMrs. Jean B. ClaytonMr. & Mrs. edward A.

    Cockey, III

    Mr. Atwood Collins IIIMr. William C. & Mrs. lotte

    B. CopelandDr. Quintina CortezaDr. Frederick Coulston Ms. Dawn CraftonMr. Ronald DaviesMrs. Marie S. De Oms Mr. M. Gregg DiamondMs. elizabeth DrigotasMr. James C. egan, Jr.Mr. eugene eidenbergMs. Gretta estey Mr. & Mrs. Donald evansMr. & Mrs. Burton J. Field Mr. & Mrs. Alvin B. FilbertMr. Richard M. FirestoneMr. Henry M. Ford, Jr. Mr. Henry G. FordMrs. & Mrs. William C.

    FormaMrs. Reva F. FoxMr. Bennett FriedmanMrs. Doris N. FriemanMrs. lillian Fuentes Dr. James Nowell GaneyMr. Ronald e. GeeseyMr. Nicholas GiannarisMrs. Freda Gill The Gilmore FamilyJames A. & Patricia

    O. Goodyear Family Foundation

    Mr. Jay GoozhMrs. Bertha Gudelsky Mr. Judah S. GudelskyMr. Carlton K. GutschickMr. Neil & Mrs. Janice

    HarrisonMr. Richard HarveyMs. Amanda HawesMr. Anthony T. Hawkins Mr. Robert T. HeltzelMrs. Jean HepnerMrs. Zoh M. HieronimousHills Family FoundationMs. Julianna A. HinesDr. Donald J. HobartMr. & Mrs. leRoy Hoffberg