Impactful 黑料传送门 Community Members | 125 Years Through 125 Stories

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125 Years Through 125 Stories

Impactful 黑料传送门 Community Members

Guiding Lights: Illuminating the Path Forward 
125 Years Through 125 Stories


September 4, 2024

In this final compilation of 鈥125 Years Through 125 Stories,鈥 we celebrate some of our guiding lights: visionary leaders, dedicated educators, exceptional alumni and generous benefactors who have shaped the legacy of our College. Their wisdom, commitment, and passion have driven excellence and innovation, illuminating the path forward for future generations of 黑料传送门 students.

Latest Reflection Stories

鈥淒enah鈥檚 a wonderful teacher鈥攕he won a Lindback award鈥攁nd marvelous as an advisor who would level with students, give them great advice about how to go about learning and moving through their careers. She had a motherly approach at times, and also tough love: 鈥極K, this is what you have to do. It can鈥檛 be done for you.鈥欌

Denah M. Appelt, PhD

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Denah M. Appelt, PhD portrait

鈥淭im saw himself as an advocate, and that certainly has been a theme throughout his career. At Horizon House, he developed an intellectual disabilities and behavioral health clinical program. He鈥檚 now the senior executive director of clinical services for Merakey, an organization that works with people with individual intellectual disabilities and behavioral health issues.鈥

Timothy Barksdale, PsyD 鈥12

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Timothy Barksdale, PsyD 鈥12 portrait

鈥淒r. Dickerson trained me, and I was his chief medical resident in 1980鈥81. He was our sole trainer and the chief of medicine鈥攖oday the job is split. He was a person who was multifaceted and could teach on multiple levels, setting the curriculum for medical students and teaching residents as well as setting the standards of certification for osteopathic internists across the country.鈥

William H. Dickerson, DO 鈥54

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William H. Dickerson, DO 鈥54 portrait

鈥淟ater, of course, he became an ophthalmologist, and president of the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Medical Association 鈥 He was also on 黑料传送门鈥檚 faculty for almost 20 years, and he was the team ophthalmologist for the Philadelphia 76ers (he was an avid sports fan). After that, he became a professor and regional dean of clinical medicine at Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine.鈥

Carlo DiMarco, DO 鈥78, MS 鈥90

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Carlo DiMarco, DO 鈥78, MS 鈥90 portrait

鈥淚 often tease that OMT means 鈥渙steopathic magic tricks,鈥 but the truth is, it isn鈥檛 magic, and Dr. E. believed what his hands told him and taught us how as well. 鈥 In our profession, there are doctors and there are teachers, and some people can do one or the other really well. But Dr. E. did both. And he taught his patients, too. He knew everything about his patients鈥攈e remembered every detail, 20 years later.鈥

Walter C. Ehrenfeuchter, DO 鈥79, FAAO

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Walter C. Ehrenfeuchter, DO 鈥79, FAAO portrait

鈥淲hen her husband [Stanley Essl, DO 鈥75] was alive, they were quite active in the 黑料传送门 community, and she has stayed in contact with people from Stanley鈥檚 class. Joyce loves 黑料传送门, and it鈥檚 in honor of Stanley, who had that same dedication. She began to volunteer a few years after he passed away, and that鈥檚 when I first met her. 鈥 The Stanley E. Essl, DO 鈥75 Endowed Memorial Research Fund for Neurodegenerative Diseases was created in his memory.鈥

Joyce Essl

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Joyce Essl portrait

鈥淢y grandfather was short鈥攎aybe five foot two. He was a very petite man, which speaks volumes given what he did in his life, and becoming chief of surgery in a hospital almost a hundred years ago. I remember going to formal dinners, the osteopathic dinners, and Archie winning an award, or giving the awards out, and thinking, 鈥楳y Pop-Pop is such an important person.鈥欌

A. Archie Feinstein, DO 鈥43

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A. Archie Feinstein, DO 鈥43 portrait

鈥淚 met Dr. Fogel in my first trimester at 黑料传送门. The second-year students had told us that Dr. Fogel鈥檚 pathology class would be one of the best鈥攁nd that he was difficult, tough, demanding. 鈥 He told us that somebody鈥檚 life was going to depend on the things he was teaching us. For me, that was when being in medical school first hit home.鈥

Robert M. Fogel, DO 鈥58

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Robert M. Fogel, DO 鈥58 portrait

鈥淢onique was always happy, always upbeat, an incredibly positive person. 鈥 When I was involved with the Esperanza College of Eastern University, I asked her to address 400 high school students from underserved areas around the city of Philadelphia. You could see how engaged they were with her, and how she talked to them, not at them, and encouraged them to follow their passions.鈥

Monique A. Gary, MS/Biomed 鈥05, DO 鈥09, FACS

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Monique A. Gary, MS/Biomed 鈥05, DO 鈥09, FACS portrait

鈥淛oe鈥檚 dad ran a retail pharmacy up in the Poconos, and Joe had been a pharmacist before he went to medical school. He was mature, and he had an understanding of what we were doing that made him a natural leader. 鈥 Joe excelled in his emergency medicine residency. Later, he became very active in the American College of Osteopathic Emergency Physicians, and he got me involved helping the ACOEP with some of their publishing.

Joseph J. Kuchinski, Jr., DO 鈥86, RES 鈥88

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Joseph J. Kuchinski, Jr., DO 鈥86, RES 鈥88 portrait

鈥淗erb鈥檚 wife, Karen, was the daughter of a 黑料传送门 alumnus [Abraham Levin, DO 鈥35], and other members of her family were alumni as well, so she and Herb both became emotionally connected to 黑料传送门 over many years. Ultimately Herb was asked to provide his financial acumen and experience during a very difficult period. He saved the institution by selling off the hospitals and having the College re-focus on its academic roots.鈥

Herbert Lotman, LLD

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Herbert Lotman, LLD portrait

鈥淎s part of our clinical rotation, Floyce and I made house calls together in South Philadelphia to see patients, who were grateful for our care. And that was a wonderful experience together. She had been a public health nurse and had a lot of good advice for me. 鈥 Floyce went into child psychiatry, which she loved. Her practice was right in her home. I imagine people who brought their children to her were blessed with her care.鈥

Floyce D. McCauley, DO 鈥72

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Floyce D. McCauley, DO 鈥72 portrait

As told by A. Scott McNeal, DO 鈥88, vice chairman, 黑料传送门 Board of Trustees

Ethel D. Allen, DO 鈥63鈥滿y first recollection of Dr. Allen wasn鈥檛 connected to 黑料传送门, or even knowing that she was a physician. I was born in the Philadelphia area, and my parents were always socially conscious and politically active. Dr. Allen was held in high regard as a politician. She was the first Black woman to serve on Philadelphia City Council, in 1971, and later she was elected to an at-large Council seat. She was a Republican, which was a little bit different for a Black elected official in Philadelphia, then and now. She repeatedly described herself: as 鈥榓 BFR鈥攁 Black female Republican, an entity as rare as a black elephant and just as smart.鈥 鈥 She entered politics as a byproduct of being a physician. She鈥檇 been interested in becoming a doctor from the time she was a little girl. But as a Black woman, she found that her applications to medical school met with resistance. She later championed and mentored underrepresented minorities in medicine. The Dr. Ethel Allen Endowed Memorial Scholarship at 黑料传送门 continues to support Black women students. 鈥 Dr. Allen treated patients in some of the most underserved communities in Philadelphia, and the socio-economic issues seen in many of these communities are what spurred her to run for elected office. 鈥 Her name came up in the Philadelphia press just recently. A Democrat, Rue Landau, won one of five nominations for at-large seats on the Council, and if elected in November she鈥檒l become the first openly LGBTQ City Council member. The Philadelphia Inquirer said, 鈥業n her victory speech, Landau paid homage to at least two gay Council members who were not out during their political tenure.鈥 One of them was Dr. Allen. 鈥 In 1976, after Governor Milton Shapp had issued an executive order to create the Pennsylvania Council for Sexual Minorities, Dr. Allen successfully lobbied for him to issue a proclamation in support of Gay Pride Week. And in 1979, when Governor Dick Thornburgh appointed her Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, she became the highest-ranking Black woman in the state, and was responsible for Thornburgh declaring June to be Gay Pride Month in Pennsylvania. 鈥 Dr. Allen was a trailblazer: before her time, and looking to serve. She deserves more recognition for her efforts to lift up impoverished people, to improve the health outcomes of underserved communities, and to champion the rights of those who lacked them.鈥

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As told by Christy Y. Finley, EdD, Diversity & Inclusion Program Coordinator, 黑料传送门

Charbel M. Aoun, MS/Biomed 鈥20, MS/ODL 鈥21 (PharmD 鈥25)鈥滻 met Charbel on my first day at 黑料传送门. He and I soon realized we had graduated from the same school, Georgia State University, and even the same program. And his nonprofit, the Georgia First Generation Foundation, is near and dear to my heart, because that鈥檚 my research interest. That鈥檚 how our friendship/mentorship blossomed. 鈥 The foundation started in 2016 as a student club when Charbel was an undergraduate. He is the first in his family to go to college, and he wanted to find ways to help other first gen students. He got a grant to form the foundation, and now it鈥檚 one of 黑料传送门鈥檚 community partners in Suwanee. Valerie Cadet, assistant dean of health equity integration, 黑料传送门 Georgia; Michael Feng, DO 鈥23; and Diana Tran, PharmD 鈥21, serve on the board. The foundation is devoted to providing resources for first generation students who are passionate about achieving academic success after high school. There鈥檚 a focus on Gwinnett County schools. 鈥 Students are introduced to the industry鈥檚 best in various fields, with keynote speakers at an annual summit, student and career panels, and scholarship presentations. Success, Service and Scholarship are the organization鈥檚 three pillars. 鈥 Charbel has two master鈥檚 degrees from 黑料传送门, and now he鈥檚 in a doctoral program, and on top of that he鈥檚 a director of a nonprofit. But he鈥檚 always offering to volunteer, to step in whenever I need him. 鈥楥harbel, I need a healthcare student panel. Can you serve on it?鈥 鈥楽ure, I can do that.鈥 A month after I started in my position, I had to help a middle school with their STEM certification. 鈥楥harbel, are you available?鈥 鈥極f course, I can do that.鈥 鈥 So many of our students want to do community work and want to be involved at so many levels. They have that same drive and determination that Charbel has. 鈥 I鈥檝e heard Charbel speak about the ways in which his Lebanese cultural identity has an impact on how he works and how he presents himself on campus. First gen students are a diverse group, very proud of their backgrounds. Some are the first in their families to be formally educated in this country. My overarching goal is to make sure I support my students in whatever they want to do, whatever goals they have.鈥

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As told by Brian J. Balin, PhD, professor of neuroscience and neuropathology, and director of the Center for Chronic Disorders of Aging, 黑料传送门

Denah M. Appelt, PhD鈥滻 met Denah when we were both at the Medical College of Pennsylvania. I was a new assistant professor, and she was coming back to graduate school after having been in the workforce as a research assistant at the University of Pennsylvania. We hit it off with a conversation about what she was interested in doing and what I was doing with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease research. And she decided she would like to come into my lab and work on her PhD there. That started in 1991, and we worked together until the day she retired last June. 鈥 We did some really interesting and really good science along the way, first studying tau, a major component found in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, and how it became modified, especially enzymatically. And from there we went on to look at how infection could be a causative factor in late onset Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. She was instrumental in all of this work. 鈥 Denah and I always got along. But at times we had different viewpoints, so we would argue. People thought, 鈥楾hey must be husband and wife, the way they鈥檙e arguing,鈥 but then we would move on and end up doing something productive. 鈥 After she finished her graduate work, we kept working together. When we came to 黑料传送门 she had her own lab, I had mine, and we became collaborators and colleagues, and she moved through the ranks to become a full professor. Early on, we were working on different arms of the same project; later, we would still collaborate, exchanging ideas about experimental approaches, things of that nature. Laboratories are realizing you need to bridge your silos, do more team science. We always approached it that way. 鈥 I miss our daily interactions. We were always communicating and always running things by each other鈥攁nything from a single experiment to planning manuscripts and grants 鈥 Denah鈥檚 a wonderful teacher鈥攕he won a Lindback award鈥攁nd marvelous as an advisor who would level with students, give them great advice about how to go about learning and moving through their careers. She had a motherly approach at times, and also tough love: 鈥極K, this is what you have to do. It can鈥檛 be done for you.鈥 Denah was also a mentor to many of our junior colleagues, especially the female colleagues. Being a woman in science is extremely difficult, but Denah always adapted and made it work.鈥

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As told by Robert A. DiTomasso, PhD, ABPP, professor, School of Professional and Applied Psychology, 黑料传送门

Timothy Barksdale, PsyD '12鈥滻 interviewed Tim when he applied to our doctoral program. And I remember being really impressed with him. He was pretty seasoned already, working in community mental health as a master鈥檚-level clinician. I also remember being impressed with how driven he was to address health disparities. As a matter of fact, his dissertation was one of the earliest we had, if not the first, to address health disparities. In particular, he studied clinician factors in psychotherapy disparities for people with intellectual disabilities and co-occurring mental disorders. That was, and in many ways still is, an underserved population. Tim was able to identify that if you educate clinicians about this population, they report being more likely to include them in their practices. 鈥 Even when he was applying to the program, Tim saw himself as an advocate, and that certainly has been a theme throughout his career. At Horizon House, he developed an intellectual disabilities and behavioral health clinical program. He鈥檚 now the senior executive director of clinical services for Merakey, an organization that works with people with individual intellectual disabilities and behavioral health issues. He oversees about 50 clinicians in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Virginia, California and Tennessee. He鈥檚 finishing his term as president of the Pennsylvania Psychological Association, from which he received an early career award in 2016. 黑料传送门 gave him an award for exemplary leadership and advocacy, recognizing his contributions to practice, service, leadership, diversity and advocacy. He鈥檚 on the Board of Directors of Friends Hospital and the National Association of Dual Diagnosis, focusing on intellectual disability and mental health. He is dedicated to serving others. 鈥 We鈥檙e very proud of Tim and his accomplishments. He鈥檚 been an outstanding role model for our students and continues to make contributions in areas that fit very well with our mission鈥攁 focus on the whole person, serving the underserved, and sensitivity to individual differences and diversity and remedying health disparities, all of which he embodies.鈥

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As told by Brian A. Nester, DO 鈥88, MSc 鈥94, MBA, president and chief executive officer, Lehigh Valley Health Network

John Becher, DO, FACOEP-D, FAAEM, 黑料传送门 professor and chair in the department of emergency medicine鈥滵uring my internship at Metropolitan Hospital Central Division, I fell in love with critical care and procedural-based medicine. I reached out to Dr. Becher and asked to speak with him about a potential emergency medicine elective because I hoped to pursue a position in the residency program at 黑料传送门. He said, 鈥榃ell, sure, you can come talk to me. How about next Thursday at 3 a.m.? I鈥檓 working on night shift.鈥 John did grant me the elective. But he told me, 鈥業鈥檝e worked with people one day and said, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e done.鈥 On the other hand, you may do a good job, and it might lead to an opportunity.鈥 I didn鈥檛 get thrown out the first day; I made it through the month. 鈥 Dr. Becher is a very tough guy on the outside. However, he has a reason for everything he does and truly has a big heart. And, as one of the founders of osteopathic emergency medicine, he had to set a really high bar. If he didn鈥檛 produce residents who performed at the highest possible level, the discipline might not take off and become respected. 鈥 I loved my career in emergency medicine, and I attribute that to those early days with Dr. Becher setting up, if you will, a bunch of obstacles in front of me. My job was to recognize them, embrace them, and show that I could push through them. And that鈥檚 also how the residency was. 鈥 He wanted more than just demonstrated interest; he wanted demonstrated commitment. And no one was as committed as he was. He never had you do anything that he didn鈥檛 or wouldn鈥檛 do himself. If anyone was having a tough time with illness or grief, immediately the whole enterprise wrapped around that person and supported them. We were 18 residents at the time, and we were like blood brothers and blood sisters. 鈥 When we left the protection of the residency, we all knew we were going to see stuff we鈥檇 never seen before. A new young attending who鈥檚 alone can hurt someone if they don鈥檛 know what they鈥檙e doing, but none of us had that fear. After all, we could always call the Einstein ER day or night and ask for advice from Dr. Becher. 鈥 That鈥檚 why even today, when we hit a wall in administrative meetings, I still sometimes say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to get the airway,鈥 and my colleagues know exactly what I mean. Being forced to come up with solutions when it鈥檚 impossible鈥攖hat鈥檚 permanently imprinted on me. 鈥 Under Dr. Becher, the answer is 鈥榶es鈥 to everything because you鈥檙e committed and somehow you鈥檙e going to figure it out. We truly hold him as an icon in emergency medicine.鈥

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As told by Joan Grzybowski, DO 鈥87, Assistant Professor, Department of Family Medicine, 黑料传送门

Nicole Heath Bixler, DO/MBA 鈥02, FACOFP, dist.鈥淲hen I first met Nicole, she stood out as if there was a spotlight on her; you just knew early on that she was going to go further in her career, beyond being a great physician. The way she spoke, the way she carried herself鈥攖here was always a memory of something about her, something she said, that you took with you when you left the room. Within the , we were working to involve young students, residents and other physicians in women鈥檚 leadership roles, and she was one of the key players. In life you meet one or two people every few years that you know are going to make a significant difference. Nicole was one of those persons. She did not at all surprise me when she rose to national prominence. 鈥 Nicole is a very good speaker; she commands your attention even when speaking off the cuff. And she carries herself like a leader; she displays confidence. 鈥 In her early days in medicine, Nicole started out in the great state of Pennsylvania, at 黑料传送门. Just out of her graduation and residency, she was already a district leader with the . I think Pennsylvania mourned for a month when we found out she was leaving to move to Florida. Fortunately, there鈥檚 still the national game. Nicole now is the past president of the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians. 鈥 When she began her career, there weren鈥檛 as many women in some leadership positions as there are now. So there were obstacles to overcome, and she showed no hesitation. And now she has become a mentor and role model herself鈥攁 full-time physician and mother of three. If Nicole鈥檚 a shooting star, she鈥檚 still shooting; she鈥檚 not falling yet. Her trail of light continues to illuminate the osteopathic profession.鈥

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As told by Murray Zedeck, DO 鈥62

James H. Black, DO 鈥62, LLD (Hon.), RDML USN (Ret)鈥滼im and I were 黑料传送门 classmates. He completed an internship at the Fort Worth Osteopathic Hospital and then an anesthesiology residency. He practiced in Fort Worth for more than 10 years until he decided to join the Navy and became a flight surgeon [assigned to the USS Ranger (CV-61)] 鈥 Jim is a very private and unassuming person who will not tell you that he retired after many years with the rank of Rear Admiral; that he was Fleet Surgeon for both the Pacific and Atlantic Fleets; that he was Commanding Officer of the Naval Hospital in Oak Harbor, Washington, and of the Naval Hospital in Yokosuka, Japan; that he was Medical Advisor to the Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic, which is the NATO Command. He was the third DO to achieve flag status in the Navy. I learned all this when we became reacquainted when he moved to Broward County to be close to his elderly mother. 鈥 My wife, Lila, and I were fond of cruising to many countries, and Jim and his wife, Joann, were wonderful companions to us and to our son and his family. Jim was like an uncle to our grandchildren during our shared visits to Colorado every summer. 鈥 One of Jim鈥檚 exciting stories鈥擨 recall having dragged it out of him鈥攚as when he was lowered from a helicopter to a surfaced submarine to examine a seaman who had appendicitis. There must be more such stories that I haven鈥檛 heard yet. 鈥 Jim is an active member of the Board of the Navy League of Fort Lauderdale, which supports visiting ships and their crews as well as providing a social and educational platform for retired members of the Navy and Marines. He even got me to join as a supporting member. 鈥 Jim is a man of impeccable ethics and faith and is a patriot of the highest order. He has been a loyal supporter of the College since graduation, presently serving as a member of the 黑料传送门 Board of Trustees. Jim鈥檚 advocacy was instrumental in helping 黑料传送门 students receive Naval scholarships and his work smoothed the way for the commissioning of 黑料传送门 military officers. He has received 黑料传送门鈥檚 highest award, the O.J. Snyder Memorial Medal. No one doesn鈥檛 like and respect Jim Black.鈥

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As told by Pamela J. Ruoff, senior manager, alumni special services, 黑料传送门

Ronald R. Blanck, DO 鈥67, MACP, LTG USA (ret)鈥滻 got to know Dr. Blanck as a . Institutional Advancement has always been very proud of him as our alumnus. He served a tour in Vietnam as a battalion surgeon鈥攐ne of the first DOs to practice medicine as a commissioned Army officer. He later became the Army鈥檚 Surgeon General. He was Commander at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He was the president of the University of North Texas Health Science Center. For the same reasons, though, I was intimidated. Why would he want to talk to me? 鈥 But he is one of the genuinely warmest individuals I have ever met. He has an ease with people and a great deal of humility. 鈥 At one Founders鈥 Day, his wife told me, 鈥楻on鈥檚 been after me to hike the Appalachian Trail with him. I don鈥檛 want to do it, but I don鈥檛 want him to go by himself.鈥 For years, I myself had been wanting to hike the Trail. 鈥 So Ron and I have been hiking the Appalachian in sections for probably 10 years. 鈥 When we鈥檙e done hiking, and we go to a hut or a clearing, I see the same warmth from him that I do in every single setting. He doesn鈥檛 turn it on and off. He makes conversations with everybody. 鈥 Usually, when you鈥檙e hiking a distance, you leave a car in one spot, drive to your other destination, and then hike back to the first car. During one hike, as we were heading toward my car, I had a sudden realization. I said to Ron, 鈥業 have something really bad to tell you.鈥 He said, 鈥楾ell me.鈥 I said, 鈥業 left the keys in the other car鈥欌攖he car that was 40 miles away鈥攁nd he stopped for a second. He was processing it, and he said, 鈥楾hat is really bad.鈥 鈥 It was a horrible rainy day. We got out on the road, and that man stuck his thumb out. He鈥檚 a three-star general on some country road with his thumb out. A German couple that was touring the United States stopped. 鈥 And he never said one word to me about it, not even in a joking way. I see that in how he behaves with everybody he meets. He makes me want to be a better person, because I see his generosity of spirit.鈥

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As told by Barbara Williams-Page, DO 鈥92, associate professor, department of family medicine, 黑料传送门

Oliver C. Bullock, DO 鈥78, faculty and chair of the department of community medicine鈥滻 met Dr. Bullock in 1988 when I started medical school at 黑料传送门, at a time when there were not many physicians or faculty members of color, at a time when diversity and inclusion were not topics of open discussion. Since there were only a few students of color at 黑料传送门, we naturally gravitated to Dr. Bullock. He served as our role model and mentor. Dr. Bullock took us under his wing, nurturing us and making sure we had the resources and encouragement needed to succeed. 鈥 I often reached out to him for guidance. I requested to work with him at in North Philadelphia for my family medicine residency. He made it happen. After completing my family medicine residency, I knew I wanted to work with him as an attending, and again, he made it happen. I worked alongside him from 1995 until his retirement in 2015.  鈥 Dr. Bullock鈥檚 expertise in medicine extended beyond the office. As he walked the neighborhood during his lunch break, he was often approached by patients. He would politely engage in conservation and answer their questions. He was known to provide lunch for patients during their appointment if he suspected they were hungry or give them money for public transportation so they did not have to walk home. Dr. Bullock treated his patients with kindness and respect. He treated them like they were his family. 鈥 Community outreach was one of his passions. His creative mind and love especially for children led him to construct a lively puppet show that he performed at daycares and elementary schools. It disclosed the story of Bear, who was apprehensive about his visit to the doctor. Dr. Bullock put Bear at ease by explaining what the visit entailed and allowed Bear to hold various pieces of medical equipment while he explained the purpose of each. By the end of the show, Bear looked forward to visiting the doctor. Following the shows, he gifted each child with a keepsake coloring book that he designed featuring Bear. 鈥 Eight years since his retirement, Dr. Bullock鈥檚 patients still ask about him. We are doing our best to continue to deliver the same type of holistic care that Dr. Bullock provided for so many years.鈥

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As told by Jay Harris Joseph, DO 鈥56

黑料传送门 anatomy professor Angus G. Cathie, DO 鈥31, MSC, FAAO鈥滵r. Cathie knew anatomy about as well as any person could, and he taught anatomy about as well as anyone possibly could. He had a distinct love of the profession of osteopathic medicine. 鈥 He also had the unbelievable ability to draw anatomic pictures on the blackboard, using multiple colors, with both hands at the same time鈥攚hile he was also lecturing. 鈥 You did hope you would not be called on to participate in a discussion for which you probably would not have the full knowledge he expected. So people were somewhat reticent and would slink back in their chairs during his lectures. 鈥 In those days, a group of four or five students worked together on one body. Dr. Cathie would move diligently from table to table, reviewing the anatomy, correcting our impressions, helping in our dissections. He was absolutely superb in that respect. 鈥 On the other hand, I recall one situation very early in our program when we were doing the dissection, and he was at the front of the class having lunch. That hit some people in a strange way, and a few had to leave the room. 鈥 In the second semester of our junior year, Dr. Cathie taught a class in osteopathic manipulative therapy. Of 100 people in the class, 75 people failed his final exam. Fortunately, I passed, but unfortunately I was the class chairman, and it was incumbent upon me to go down to the dean of the school and say, 鈥業 remember, from my master鈥檚 degree in education, that if an overwhelming majority of your class fails a test, either there was some problem with the test or you didn鈥檛 teach it well.鈥 They then called Dr. Cathie down to discuss the matter with me. And I had to take the onslaught after repeating what I had said to them, but he did agree to give another exam for those 75. I had to withdraw from being the chairman of the class for the rest of the semester, which was about a month or so. But, in retrospect, it didn鈥檛 harm me whatsoever, and it did help the class. I think it was the makeup of the test, to be perfectly honest. He was a wonderful teacher.鈥

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As told by Lillian Hynes-Longendorfer, DO 鈥67

Ruth Waddel Cathie, DO 鈥38鈥滵r. Cathie [at the time, Dr. Waddel] was an excellent teacher and a very hard taskmaster who wanted her students to understand the pathology of the diseases they were going to be seeing in clinical practice. When you first met her in the classroom, you were scared to death of her. I can remember pulling all-nighters just to pass her exams. But when you got to really know her, she was a cupcake. 鈥 She wasn鈥檛 only a good teacher; she was a good student as well. She鈥檚 probably among the first women to be certified in cytopathology, studying under Papanicolaou himself. I asked her to teach me how to do Pap smears, and spent many afternoons after class with her learning how to read them. 鈥 I also had the opportunity to see her on a more personal basis. A few of us women students wanted to form a chapter of Delta Omega, one of the female medical sororities on the campuses of the other medical schools in town. We needed a mentor, and she very graciously and very enthusiastically agreed to take on that role. We had our meetings at her home, where she provided both professional and personal guidance. Some of it dealt with how we were looked upon as women in the profession鈥攇ood advice in terms of just being who you are and doing what you have to do. She was the first woman to chair a basic science department at 黑料传送门 [and at that time, the only woman鈥攐ther than those at Women鈥檚 Medical College鈥攚ho held such a position in the entire City of Philadelphia]. 鈥 Dr. Cathie suggested that I take a career in pathology. But I really didn鈥檛 like the idea of doing a lot of autopsies, and at that time they did a heck of a lot more than we do today. But after about eight years in general practice, I decided to go into something with a lifestyle that was more in line with raising a family at the same time. And I chose pathology and laboratory medicine, which led me to teaching positions and three directorships of hospital laboratories. 鈥 Years after Dr. Cathie had retired, I met her at one of the American Osteopathic Association conventions. She congratulated me on my achievements, and I told her that I had some truly big footsteps to follow in.鈥

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As told by Laura Levy, DHSC, PA-C, chair, department of physician assistant studies, 黑料传送门

John Cavenagh, PhD, PA-C, DFAAPA, former chair and program director of the Physician Assistant (PA) Studies department鈥滼ohn joined 黑料传送门 full time shortly after I did in 1999. He became the Physician Assistant Studies program director in 2003, and held that role until 2016, when I took over. The day he told me he was going to retire, I felt a bit panicked. Faculty and staff were so confident in his leadership, and I wasn鈥檛 sure I could live up to the expectation. But John was always encouraging and supportive. And after I took the position he was here quite a bit, because he continued to teach for about three years. So he would check in and might offer some advice鈥攂ut he would say, 鈥業鈥檓 offering this advice just as a guy, not as a former program director.鈥欌 I remember him sitting in my old office when he told me, 鈥楲et the problems flow through you.鈥 What he meant was that not everything that appears to be a crisis or a difficulty needs a sudden reaction. Many things will take care of themselves. So don鈥檛 charge into problems. Let them come, flow through you, and then decide how you want to react. And that鈥檚 how he conducted himself. He was very measured, very calm. I rarely saw him angry or flustered. He was a private person, but we did know that he grew up in a big Irish Catholic family in Chicago, and he was the oldest, and he had to do a lot of things, to take care of his younger brothers and sisters, and so maybe that was where his leadership skills started. 鈥 In Harrisburg, John advocated for the physician assistant profession, and he would talk to students about professional practice issues, things on the horizon. He was at the forefront of policy, but he was doing it in his quiet way. 鈥 John was at the helm when 黑料传送门 decided to open a cohort in Suwanee, Georgia. And he did all the work with our accreditors. Having a dual campus for a PA program was largely uncharted territory. It was daunting to consider how to have an equivalent program with all of those miles in between. It seemed insurmountable, and John made it happen.鈥

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As told by Matthew O. Elkes, Member, 黑料传送门 Board of Trustees

Gene Chaiken, LLD鈥淚 worked for Gene from 1994 to 2019. I was the CFO of his business, Almo Corporation; he was the chairman and the CEO at the time that I joined. He鈥檚 a very collaborative leader who solicits input from all of his folks, not just his management team. And as a mentor he was always willing to share his knowledge and experience with me as well as with others. He鈥檚 open, approachable, personable. That鈥檚 an extremely effective management style. 鈥 When I was interviewing for the job with Gene, he gave me a tour of one of his warehouse facilities, and as we walked through, an employee greeted us. I was struck by the fact that he and Gene called each other by their first names. That told me an awful lot about Gene and the inclusive culture he had created. I had come out of primarily large corporate public companies鈥攂uttoned up, maybe a little stiff. I went through a period of adjustment, but obviously it worked out. 鈥 Gene always spoke highly of 黑料传送门, and he really enjoyed his 24 years as a trustee, 23 years spent as vice chairman. Around 2013, he asked me if I had an interest in joining the Board, and that鈥檚 how I got to be where I am. 鈥 Gene is loyal to the causes that drive him, and he wants to leave the world in a better place. I think his motivations are compelling and simple and earnest. He has a keen interest in the lives of the people that he鈥檚 talking to. That is a consistent feature of being around Gene. He does not make the conversation about himself, despite his successes and his station in this world. He鈥檚 understated and warm. 鈥 In addition to his financial expertise, Gene is a very good decision maker and has always had a strong interest in supporting programs that help the students at 黑料传送门. He鈥檚 a pretty darn good role model for anybody in the business community who would aspire to lend their talents to worthy organizations or institutions.鈥

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As told by Beverly K. Andre, MS/Biomed 鈥20 (DO 鈥24)

黑料传送门 alum Dr. Meta L. Christy鈥滻 come from a family of immigrants, and I鈥檓 the first in my family to attend medical school. So for me to know the story of Dr. Christy, another Black, minority woman, who did something so unorthodox, really is a motivator. 鈥 She was a pioneer: the College鈥檚 first African American student and the first African American doctor of osteopathic medicine. When she died, she was a widely known and respected osteopathic physician. She healed so many, especially the poor. 鈥 You see pictures hanging on the walls of 黑料传送门 of a lot of people who have had an impact. But when you walk into the College and see the face of someone who looks like you, when you see her name on a new [student housing] building, that鈥檚 very meaningful. 鈥 Dr. Christy had to be a very tough woman to be able to go to medical school when she did [1917鈥1921]. One brother and her father had died by the time she was ten. And her mother, one of the biggest supports she had, passed away just a few years after she graduated from 黑料传送门. Just understanding how courageous she was, how resilient, how she didn鈥檛 let anything keep her back鈥擨 really adore that. 鈥 I鈥檓 transitioning out of my role as the co-president of the Student National Medical Association on campus, which works to increase the presence of minorities in medicine as well as to help support them throughout their journey. I work for the diversity office on campus as well, making presentations for their mentorship program. I鈥檓 also involved in a nonprofit organization, Girls on a Mission with Ambition. I鈥檝e talked to students about being in medical school, and to students already in college or taking a non-traditional route who want to get back into the swing of things. I mentor them mainly because I didn鈥檛 have that. 鈥 When I was in college, Google was my best friend, because I didn鈥檛 have many people in my life who were physicians, let alone physicians who looked like me. So I had to do a lot of the work figuring out what I should study and how to get into medical school. It鈥檚 not just about representation, but it鈥檚 about the resources you provide. 鈥 Now that I鈥檓 here, I have a lot of people I can reach out to, ask questions. They tell me, 鈥業 do this because someone did it for me, and I want you to be able to do it for somebody else.鈥欌

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As told by Jay S. Feldstein, DO 鈥81, President and Chief Executive Officer, 黑料传送门

黑料传送门 anatomy professor Vincent T. Cipolla, DO 鈥46鈥漌hen I first applied for admission to 黑料传送门, Dr. Cipolla was a member of the interview committee. He asked me only one question: 鈥楧o you know who invented spaghetti?鈥 And I said, 鈥楴o.鈥 鈥榃ell,鈥 he told me, 鈥榯he Chinese actually invented spaghetti, not the Italians.鈥 And that was the extent of our interaction. 鈥 The next time I saw him was in the fall of 1977, in my first anatomy lecture held in Evans Hall (now known as the Howard A. Hassman, DO 鈥83 Academic Center). His opening line was, 鈥榊ou gotta know your anatomy, boy, or the guy down the street will.鈥欌 The anatomy lab was at 48th and Spruce Streets, where the old hospital used to be. The anatomy lab was almost like an attic, with the smell of formaldehyde everywhere. It had a great feel to it. 鈥 You had to wear a tie, which on the surface seems absurd. But I think in part the reason was Dr. Cipolla鈥檚 profound respect for the people who had donated their bodies to medical science. In my kind of rebellious way, I would wear a flannel shirt with a tie. One day, early on, Dr. Cipolla just kind of looked at me and grinned, and then that was it. 鈥 In anatomy lab, you have partners, you鈥檇 be helping each other out. And every once in a while, I鈥檇 turn around and, over my shoulder, he鈥檇 be there, listening. 鈥 I loved anatomy. I would often go down to the lab on Saturdays. Dr. Cipolla asked me one day, 鈥榃hy are you here all the time?鈥 I said, 鈥業t鈥檚 a chance to have the cadaver all to myself. I don鈥檛 have to share it with my lab partners.鈥 He got a kick out of that. 鈥 Over the course of time, he鈥檇 walk around during lab, and he鈥檇 ask one table an anatomy question, and if they didn鈥檛 get it, he鈥檇 say, 鈥楬ey, Feldstein. You know the answer.鈥 So we had this mutual respect, an intellectual understanding. 鈥 He was a general surgeon in the Medical Corp and he would throw in tidbits, with clinical correlation, during anatomy lectures鈥攑ractical examples of what you were learning. 鈥 He could be difficult; he was as eccentric as they come鈥攄efinitely the type of individual you either loved or hated. Had I struggled in anatomy, it might not have been as much fun. But he was brilliant.鈥

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As told by Necie Liggeons, MS/ODL 鈥20, chief development and alumni engagement officer, 黑料传送门

William J. Clinton, MA, former director of the Organizational Development and Leadership program鈥滿anaging Emotional Systems in the Workplace was my first class, Bill Clinton鈥檚 last before his retirement in 2017. As a busy working woman going back to school in her forties, I was excited to start my master鈥檚 degree program in Organizational Development and Leadership [ODL]. Little did I know how deeply my first grad school course with Bill would impact my life. 鈥 First class, an all-day Saturday session, Bill handed each of us a lengthy paper he鈥檇 written on the 10 most impactful incidents in his life, including some traumatic episodes. As I read his deeply personal passages, I thought, 鈥榃ow, this guy is really putting himself out here.鈥 鈥 Our first assignment was to lay bare our souls, to do the same sort of self-reflection as Bill had done in his raw and revealing autobiography by chronicling what we could have done differently to better our career and our relationships with our family and friends. 鈥 Bill felt emotional transparency was the key to building trust with your colleagues and to being a strong workplace leader. His mantra: 鈥業 want you to know who I am and to trust who I am so that you can be transparent with me.鈥 He taught that you can only achieve that level of openness by understanding others鈥 points of view, which often meant having difficult conversations and finding closure with those with whom you鈥檇 had thorny relationships. 鈥 It was risky, but the reward of growing into a more empathetic and understanding person made it all worthwhile. Bill taught me to appreciate the person and the personality, not just the work product, because who you are affects everything about you in the workplace. 鈥 Fast forward three years to my capstone project, which focused on my transformative story of personal growth that I rough-drafted in that first grad-school paper. I presented my capstone virtually due to the pandemic. Whose warm and welcoming face did I see smiling back at me on the Zoom meeting? Bill Clinton鈥檚. I was so moved and honored that he was present and that I was one of the last students he taught in his 15 years as director of the College鈥檚 ODL program.鈥

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As told by Robert A. DiTomasso, PhD, ABPP,  dean, School of Professional and Applied Psychology, 黑料传送门

Robert G. Cuzzolino, EdD, former vice president for graduate programs and planning鈥滲ob is one of the most well-rounded people I鈥檝e ever met, and probably the smartest. He has great intellect; he鈥檚 a fabulous writer; he has great analytical skills and a knack for separating the wheat from the chaff. He is truly quite remarkable鈥攐ne in a million, to my mind. 鈥 In all the years I worked with Bob鈥攁nd believe me, we dealt with all kinds of issues鈥擨 never saw a bead of sweat on his brow. Absolutely nothing made him nervous鈥攑ure grit! He knew what he needed to know. He did what he needed to do, and he did it extremely well. He was a great source of mentorship and consultation to me and my staff. We could go to Bob with just about any concerns. 鈥 Bob expertly guided us and 黑料传送门 through getting our programs accredited by the Middle States Commission and specialty accreditors. You could trust that what he told you would work. He鈥檚 an innovator, too. He was essential to the development of the program in clinical psychology, in school psychology, in organizational development and leadership and in our counseling program, not to mention other programs across 黑料传送门鈥檚 campuses. I truly don鈥檛 know how he did it. 鈥 Bob would hold court every day at lunch, and a small group of us would share all kinds of stories鈥攖opical news, what鈥檚 new in higher education and accreditation, and everything you could conceivably imagine. Bob could speak on just about anything, including music trivia. 鈥 With his background in counseling and higher education administration, he was very focused on helping students. We worked together a lot on assessing student outcomes, using that information to drive our programs in a continuous quality improvement cycle. Bob said, sure, we could look at all these academic predictors, which account for a little bit of the variability in outcomes, but the reality is that probably a lot of nonacademic factors come into play. And that, I think, he learned through his involvement with students. Those who got into academic problems often had other life issues going on, and he was sensitive to that. 鈥 Bob had a stellar reputation as a great leader and mentor, and stand-up person with a good heart. 鈥 He鈥檚 the kind of guy you meet along the road of life only once in a lifetime. When Bob retired, he referred to me as his brother. That reference still touches me. I am most honored and proud to know him and consider myself lucky for the opportunity to walk beside him.鈥

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As told by Bruce Kornberg, DO, chair and professor, division of cardiology, 黑料传送门

Albert D鈥橝lonzo, DO 鈥56鈥滱l was an extraordinary man. He was certified in cardiology, but in the 1960s, when he was just starting out, he would lecture when other professors didn鈥檛 show up. On any topic, no notes, no preparation鈥攐ff the top of his head. That鈥檚 how smart he was. 鈥 He was drafted by the Chicago White Sox and played professional baseball up to the double-A level. He had also played four years of varsity baseball at Duke, where he was an honorary All American. He was a tremendous golfer. 鈥 He decided to be a doctor like his brother and his father, and went on to be president of the American College of Osteopathic Internists, president of the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Medical Association, vice chairman of the Department of Internal Medicine at 黑料传送门 for twenty-plus years, acting chairman of the Department of Medicine twice, chief of Cardiology twice. 鈥 He was a dedicated teacher who spent hours teaching students how to read EKGs. And no one could convert a patient鈥檚 sinus rhythm like he did. 鈥 I was his resident, and he gave me my first job, which ended up being my only job. He was in practice for 25 years before I joined him, and we were partners for 15 years. Actually, we were more like a father and son than partners 鈥 A nicer, kinder individual you will never meet. He was extremely slow to anger, a devout Catholic. 鈥 I never heard anyone tell a joke like him. He could take a five-minute joke, extend it out to 15 minutes, and even if I knew the punchline, I was still crying. 鈥 He never answered the pagers. But you could find him. His cigarette butt would be upside down in the windowsill of the nurses station. So if it was still warm, and his doctor鈥檚 bag was there, I knew he was around. 鈥 If you needed something right away, you called me. If you needed to talk to him, you had to find him. He marched to his own drummer. 鈥 He was dedicated to the patients and to the profession. He was Al being Al, and that was the long and the short of it.鈥

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As told by Bruce Kornberg, DO 鈥78, FACC, FACOI, former professor and chair, Department of Cardiology (retired)

William H. Dickerson, DO 鈥54鈥滵r. Dickerson trained me, and I was his chief medical resident in 1980鈥81. He was our sole trainer and the chief of medicine鈥攖oday the job is split. He was a person who was multifaceted and could teach on multiple levels, setting the curriculum for medical students and teaching residents as well as setting the standards of certification for osteopathic internists across the country. He鈥檇 left a lucrative booming private practice in Detroit to pursue academics and raise the standard of internal medicine at 黑料传送门. 鈥 He conducted himself professionally at all times and expected his residents to do likewise. When we did not conduct ourselves in the manner he expected, he never embarrassed us but would, in a classic move, look over his glasses and repeat himself quietly to make sure we knew where our mistakes were and that they were never to be repeated. 鈥 He was beloved by his patients. He took care of my father, who thought he was the greatest guy that walked the face of the earth. I asked my father one day, 鈥榃ho the hell are you talking about?鈥 He said, 鈥楤ill.鈥 I said, 鈥楤ill who?鈥 He said, 鈥楤ill Dickerson. You鈥檙e very lucky to have been trained by him.鈥 I said, 鈥楧ad, I haven鈥檛 spoken his first name, ever.鈥 I probably never called him Bill till he closed his eyes. 鈥 We never really knew how he felt about us. But when he knew he was dying, he planned his own funeral, and he had his residents carry him to the grave. 鈥 He always strived to do the right thing, and he demanded we do the right thing too. He was a devout Catholic and went to church every week. He had no prejudice that I ever saw鈥攖he patient was the patient. It was an honor to be his chief resident. He was a mountain of a man.鈥

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As told by John Becher, DO 鈥70, FACOEP-D, FAAEM, chair and professor, department of emergency medicine, 黑料传送门

Joseph A. Dieterle, DO 鈥70鈥滻鈥檝e known Joe since we were in college together at LaSalle, where we matriculated in 1961 and were both members of the swim team for four years. In 1966, Joe and I were both accepted to 黑料传送门, and were roommates for the first year. We both interned at what was then the Flint Osteopathic Hospital. After his residency, Joe joined the 黑料传送门 faculty in the department of pediatrics. I came back to the College and became the chairman of the department of emergency medicine in 1977. 鈥 More than 50 years after we met, Joe and I attended each other鈥檚 retirement ceremonies. We鈥檙e still friends today, and it鈥檚 been a great relationship. 鈥 Joe was the first osteopathic physician to be accepted as a resident for pediatric training at St. Christopher鈥檚 Hospital, and he became chief resident there in his last year. When he returned to the College, there hadn鈥檛 been a pediatric resident in at least 10 years. With professional ties that he had developed, especially at St. Christopher鈥檚, Joe was able to greatly enhance pediatric training for the residents, not just at the College but in other clinical training areas. 鈥 Nationally and internationally recognized experts came at Joe鈥檚 invitation to the College to make presentations not only to the residents, but to the students. Joe organized and funded an annual pediatric lecture series. He was the president of the American College of Osteopathic Pediatricians and a member of the Osteopathic Pediatric Certification Board for a number of years, making important contributions to the development of the specialty of pediatrics within the osteopathic profession. He was doing all of this in conjunction with his other duties at the College, and even when he became the dean. 鈥 Joe is a guy of significant integrity, a person of his word. These always were the qualities of leadership that others recognized, in whatever the venue. And he did his homework, and he still does his homework as a member of the 黑料传送门 Board of Trustees. 鈥 Put it this way: When Joe talks, people listen.鈥

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As told by Cierra Lewis, MS/Biomed 鈥16, DO 鈥18, MEd

黑料传送门 anatomy professor Camille DiLullo, PhD鈥滻 got to know Dr. DiLullo first when I was in the biomedical sciences program. She was like a mother to me at 黑料传送门. And there were some striking similarities to my own mom in that they鈥檝e both experienced hardships in their lives, gone through a lot of things, but that鈥檚 never been an excuse for them to stop or to stall. You just keep moving forward. She was an amazing woman, and when she passed away, it was like losing a confidant and a best friend. 鈥 Dr. DiLullo was maybe five feet tall, quite petite. She was grace and mercy and strength and beauty. Being a woman in medicine, a woman in a mostly male academic department for a very long time, she had to speak up. If something needed to be addressed, she was going to address it. She thought things through and wasn鈥檛 going to change her mind. 鈥 At times, I questioned her decisions, and she just looked at me, and I thought, 鈥極kay, I鈥檒l go ahead and do the work instead of questioning what you鈥檙e telling me to do.鈥 She was trying to convey to me, 鈥業 know it鈥檚 getting rough, but you鈥檝e got to push through.鈥 And that鈥檚 what I needed. 鈥 The number one thing Dr. DiLullo cared about was the person. She conveyed that to us, when we became medical students, always stressing how your patients come first. 鈥 As an educator and researcher, she was demanding, yet, she was very patient. So she touched a lot of us as mentees because you knew that even though she was pushing you, it鈥檚 because she cared about you. 鈥 When I was an osteopathic medical student, she helped me start the nonprofit Medicine for Education to teach high-school girls from underserved communities how to get into medical school and succeed once they get there. She was unyielding in her commitment to training and mentoring women and inspired my work. 鈥 We also shared a love of fashion, and looking your best and presenting your best to the world. She always did. Dr. DiLullo commanded the whole room鈥攁nd she was the smallest thing in there.鈥

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As told by Robert Biggs, DO 鈥76, FACC, FACOI

Carlo DiMarco, DO 鈥78, MS 鈥90鈥滻n 1979, I was a senior internal medicine resident at 黑料传送门鈥檚 hospital, the Barth Pavillion, and Carlo was a rotating osteopathic intern. Back in that era, we all had to do a rotating internship before we started our residencies. Carlo and I had daily contact, and he also rotated through our service. He was a very reliable professional, and a very handsome young man who had grown up in South Philadelphia鈥攈e had some funny stories about that, and he had an eclectic background. He told me that when he was a teenager, his father sent him to the Ferrari factory in Italy, and he became a master mechanic. In fact, when I knew him he would receive consultations from Center City Cadillac regarding difficult mechanical automotive issues. I remember he tuned up a Ferrari that belonged to Bob Jama [DO 鈥69], who was a trauma surgeon and our chief of surgery. Normally Bob would have had to send it to Connecticut or New York. 鈥 All three of Carlo鈥檚 brothers followed him to 黑料传送门 [Claude, DO 鈥84; Eugene, also DO 鈥84; and Anthony, DO 鈥87]. 鈥 Carlo was always thoughtful and an active participant in our daily rounds. When he was on service, he also participated in our Harrison Club, which I ran. Harrison鈥檚 Principles of Internal Medicine was our bible, and the club met weekly. 鈥 Later, of course, he became an ophthalmologist, and president of the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Medical Association, then president of the American Osteopathic Colleges of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology鈥擧ead and Neck Surgery, and then president of the American Osteopathic Association. So you couldn鈥檛 miss reading about his outstanding career. He was also on 黑料传送门鈥檚 faculty for almost 20 years, and he was the team ophthalmologist for the Philadelphia 76ers (he was an avid sports fan). After that, he became a professor and regional dean of clinical medicine at Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine. 鈥 It was always enjoyable to be around Carlo. I was sad to learn about his passing in 2014.鈥

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As told by Kristie Petree, DO 鈥13, chair, osteopathic manipulative medicine, 黑料传送门 South Georgia

Walter C. Ehrenfeuchter, DO 鈥79, FAAO鈥滵r. E.鈥擨 cannot call him Walt to this day鈥攚as the medical school teacher of your imagination. He was always perfectly pressed鈥攕hirt and tie, clean white coat, nothing out of place. He was calm, serious, and an amazing lecturer. And then the more you got to know him, the more you realized he was quite funny, and had many, many stories to tell, and was a good human, too. He was my teacher, my scholars director, and I later worked as faculty under him. He was my mentor and my friend. 鈥 Dr. E. used to say, 鈥楾he weird finds me,鈥 and it really did. But he also had a way of seeing things that other people didn鈥檛. 鈥 Once, after an OMM lab session when we students had been practicing on one another, my back hurt, and I knew something was wrong. Dr. E. didn鈥檛 know my medical history, but he checked my back, and said, 鈥榊ou are hypermobile, and I think you may have a connective tissue disorder.鈥 I said I was fine, but later found out that my ranges of motion were not normal, fingers should not bend backwards, and he was right. Later he鈥檇 show us how to modify an OMM technique for someone like me, which has been so helpful for me in patient care. 鈥 Another time, on a cervical palpation day in the lab, Dr. E. told one student not to touch her partner鈥檚 neck; 鈥渢hey need X-rays,鈥 he said. Sure enough, he鈥檇 recognized Klippel-Feil syndrome, a rare congenital condition鈥攁 small scapula, and therefore neck issues. That student had neck surgery a month later. I often tease that OMT means 鈥渙steopathic magic tricks,鈥 but the truth is, it isn鈥檛 magic, and Dr. E. believed what his hands told him and taught us how as well. 鈥 In our profession, there are doctors and there are teachers, and some people can do one or the other really well. But Dr. E. did both. And he taught his patients, too. He knew everything about his patients鈥攈e remembered every detail, 20 years later. We would go into the clinic, and do what he had just shown us. And I thought, 鈥業 can do that. You taught me how to do that.鈥欌夆

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As told by Connie Ennis, former director, Advancement Services, 黑料传送门

Joyce Essl鈥滷or many years, Joyce and I had the pleasure of staffing registration for 黑料传送门 golf outings and reunion weekends. Joyce has made it a point to know everyone. As people are walking up to the registration table, she鈥檚 already saying their names. I have great respect for her and how she has continued to help us. She鈥檚 always been invited to these events as a guest. But she has never sat down herself until she鈥檚 sure she鈥檚 finished helping us register people and getting things done. She鈥檚 88 years old, and she still drives all the way down from the Northeast to attend these events. 鈥 When her husband [Stanley Essl, DO 鈥75] was alive, they were quite active in the 黑料传送门 community, and she has stayed in contact with people from Stanley鈥檚 class. Joyce loves 黑料传送门, and it鈥檚 in honor of Stanley, who had that same dedication. She began to volunteer a few years after he passed away, and that鈥檚 when I first met her. 鈥 The Stanley E. Essl, DO 鈥75 Endowed Memorial Research Fund for Neurodegenerative Diseases was created in his memory. And his body was donated to the Center for Chronic Disorders of the Aging Neurodegenerative Research Labs. Joyce has never lost that understanding of the value of research and of making it possible for students to learn. 鈥 Her grandchildren are the light of her life, and she鈥檚 very close to her son and daughter. Family is so important to her, and that鈥檚 why she鈥檚 continued to keep Stanley鈥檚 memory alive at 黑料传送门. And the prospect of finding a cure for the kind of neurodegenerative disease that plagued Stanley has also kept her involved with 黑料传送门 and with Brian Balin, PhD, [director of the CCDA] and his research. 鈥 Joyce has kept a good outlook on life, and when we鈥檙e working together, we鈥檙e always laughing. I retired this May, so I will not see her this year, but I will send her a note to say how much I鈥檝e enjoyed my many years of volunteering with her.鈥

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As told by Patience A. Mason, MEd, chief student affairs officer, 黑料传送门

Paul Evans, DO 鈥79, FAAFP, FACOFP, 黑料传送门 Georgia鈥檚 founding dean and chief academic officer鈥滵r. Evans is a military man, and can be very stern. He expects things to be done in a certain way. If I said, 鈥業 have an idea, and this is what I want to do,鈥 he would tell me, 鈥榃ell, Patience, if it works, you get the glory. But if it doesn鈥檛, you get the blame.鈥 I was comfortable with that; it makes you think twice and consider all the angles. 鈥 At 黑料传送门 Georgia, I found him to be an amazing teacher, and he used every opportunity to teach. You could see him transform when he talked with students and asked them questions. I was privy to a softer side of Dr. Evans, too, in his interactions with my son, whose name is Mason. As a little boy, Mason loved fish and animals in general. Dr. Evans is a bird expert. So they would get in these conversations. 鈥 Mason at one point drew him a little cutout of a fish, colored like a rainbow. Dr. Evans had it taped to his desk for years and even moved it to his desk in Indianapolis when he went to Marian University. 鈥 His philosophy was that in the beginning you had to run a tight ship, and then you could loosen up. Dr. Evans came to trust me and treat me as a confidant. It was a privilege to work for him鈥he culture here in North Georgia is different than in Philadelphia, and part of his job when he served as founding dean and chief academic officer at 黑料传送门 Georgia [2004 to 2010] was to be the bridge between the two cultures. Dr. Evans grew up in the northeast, but he went to school in Miami, and then he joined the military and traveled all over. So he was able to read a room, and I think that鈥檚 also why he was so skilled as a teacher. Perhaps his background as a family physician also helped him do this, as I saw with my kid. He was able to meet someone where they were and explain things to them in a way that suited them. He knew his audience. 鈥 I love Dr. Evans. I saw the colonel, but I got to know the family doctor and the family man, a person who knows how to laugh at himself and with others.鈥

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As told by Erin M. Feinstein, DO 鈥11

A. Archie Feinstein, DO 鈥43鈥滿y grandfather Archie鈥擨 called him Pop-Pop鈥攍ived in Philadelphia, and I was born and raised in San Diego. So I only met him a few times that I can remember. I鈥檓 named after both Archie and his son, my father Michael [DO 鈥74], a family practitioner who has since passed as well. My aunt Katherine [DO 鈥82] was a pediatrician. So none of us went into surgery like Archie did. But all three generations have a passion for osteopathic medicine, and we all became teachers. Now that I know how much work it is to train students, especially from the ground up, I reflect on how much Archie must have really liked teaching, or he wouldn鈥檛 have been involved in residency. 鈥 My grandfather was short鈥攎aybe five foot two. He was a very petite man, which speaks volumes given what he did in his life, and becoming chief of surgery in a hospital almost a hundred years ago. I remember going to formal dinners, the osteopathic dinners, and Archie winning an award, or giving the awards out, and thinking, 鈥楳y Pop-Pop is such an important person.鈥 He was a physician to everyone else, so I think when he visited our house it was a safe space where he could be himself and didn鈥檛 have to be Dr. Feinstein. When Archie visited, he鈥檇 drink hot Lipton tea and eat dark chocolate cookies and fall asleep watching TV with me. 鈥 My father remembered how as the hospital administrator Archie got a new car every year, a Cadillac. My dad also talked about what Archie did for the American Osteopathic Association as president, and for the Pennsylvania chapter of the AOA. That inspired my dad to be very active in the osteopathic community in California. 鈥 My father shared his memories of visiting Archie鈥檚 parents, Yetta and Harris, in Philadelphia. Harris owned a store, and Archie鈥檚 older brother Samuel worked there too to raise enough money to send Archie to college, because Archie was smart. He was so grateful for his education at St. Joseph鈥檚 University. 鈥 My grandfather did not think women should have any role in medicine, and he tried to dissuade his daughter from doing so. Part of that is because there was no work-life balance; there was just work. It鈥檚 not like that anymore, and maybe he couldn鈥檛 imagine it being different. 鈥 He loved penguins. And he loved Gilbert and Sullivan. So did my dad, and so do I.鈥

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As told by Steven G. Eisenberg, DO 鈥96, internist, oncologist, hematologist and author, San Diego, California

Emanuel Fliegelman, DO 鈥42, former 黑料传送门 professor of obstetrics and gynecology鈥滷or years, Uncle Manny addressed the new DO class with his lecture on physician compassion during the White Coat Ceremony. With his piercing blue eyes, bushy goatee and booming voice, he resembled a majestic king from ancient times when he pointed to the lecture hall door and proclaimed, 鈥楢ll of you who cross this threshold who do not have empathy and compassion in your hearts, there is the door.鈥 鈥 Uncle Manny, as Dr. Fliegelman was affectionately known to hundreds of 黑料传送门 students, then shared with his fresh-faced congregation his famous Ten C鈥檚 for being a physician who puts the patient before all else: compassion, contact, creativity, completion, communication, competence, caring, consideration, concern and confidence. Each C was followed by a sentence of explanation. Compassion: Put yourself in their shoes, you have no idea what they鈥檙e dealing with out there in the world outside of your office. Contact: A gentle pat on the back, a warm embrace is undeniably healthy. A framed copy of the piece of notebook paper on which I feverishly jotted down the Ten C鈥檚 some 30 years ago still hangs in my office. 鈥 I tell friends that Uncle Manny taught me all I needed to know on my very first day of medical school, most notably that love is the strongest medicine (which not coincidentally is the title of my own book). He became my mentor and my friend. He guided me through the tough times and the long hours during our many heart-to-hearts in his Rowland Hall office. I鈥檓 forever proud to be the first recipient of the Dr. Emanuel Fliegelman Humanitarian Award for the doctor exhibiting highly compassionate care during residency. 鈥 Uncle Manny was a professor of obstetrics and gynecology. He instituted the 鈥楧oris Program,鈥 which provided every second-year student with the opportunity to administer a gynecological examination to a patient volunteer under his direction and supervision. Before that, students practiced only on anatomical models. There was but one rule: Treat every volunteer with utmost respect鈥攍ike they鈥檙e your own mother or grandmother. 鈥 Uncle Manny passed away in 1998 at age 83 from myelodysplastic syndrome, a bone marrow cancer. He鈥檚 one of the reasons I became an oncologist. Who could benefit more from Uncle Manny鈥檚 teachings than cancer patients?鈥

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As told by Steven Blasi, DO 鈥02

Robert M. Fogel, DO 鈥58鈥滻 met Dr. Fogel in my first trimester at 黑料传送门. The second-year students had told us that Dr. Fogel鈥檚 pathology class would be one of the best鈥攁nd that he was difficult, tough, demanding. 鈥 He told us that somebody鈥檚 life was going to depend on the things he was teaching us. For me, that was when being in medical school first hit home. 鈥 We knew Dr. Fogel had been a pathologist in Oklahoma and a family physician before that. A lot of his slides were his own pathological specimens that he had analyzed. We knew that what was up on the screen was once a human body, flesh and bone. The things he was teaching were things we were going to bring into the art of healing. So we wanted to impress him. 鈥 If you hadn鈥檛 done your reading, if you decided to close your eyes, or God forbid if you wore a hat, you became a target for his line of questioning. There was no penalty if you didn鈥檛 know the answer, though there was a certain amount of humiliation. If you鈥檇 read your Robbins textbook and you did have the answer, it was almost like a fatherly moment. He might flip a quarter to your seat from the floor of the auditorium, and you鈥檇 earned it. 鈥 You always took something away from his classes. You always could think back to what we used to call Fogelisms. He would give you clinical scenarios of a patient coming in with this complaint or that complaint, and he would say, 鈥榃ell, what鈥檚 he got?鈥 As you went through your clinical rotations and your third and fourth years, you would hear in your head, 鈥榃ell, what鈥檚 he got?鈥 I heard that through my internship, my residency, and even after 20 years of clinical practice I can still hear that voice. 鈥 Some of us asked Dr. Fogel to take part in our class Follies, not really expecting him to agree. But he ended up in several skits, memorizing routines, practicing dances, making fun of himself. He had earned our respect, and I think our class had earned his respect as well. He came down from the throne we had put him on, and he became one of us. He was as humble as humble could be. It was a great time and a lot of fun to see that side of him.鈥

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As told by Lisa Finkelstein, DO 鈥87

Les R. Folio, DO 鈥87, MPH, MSc (Rad), MAS, Col. USAF (ret)鈥滾es is pure energy. He probably popped out of his mother inventing something, and he has not stopped. We were classmates at 黑料传送门, and because of the alphabet鈥擣inkelstein, Folio鈥擨 think we shared a cadaver in Anatomy lab. 鈥 It was very apparent that when Les was a medical student, his brain was constantly on fire. He never stopped thinking and doing. He was truly a force of nature. 鈥 He鈥檚 a retired colonel鈥攈e was a radiologist and flight surgeon in the Air Force. Until recently he worked for the National Institutes of Health. Now he鈥檚 at the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa. The guy could never retire; he鈥檚 just got so many years ahead of him to make a difference. 鈥 Les found a role for himself to be able to use his talents in innovation and technology as an interventional radiologist and a cancer radiologist. For people like Les, medical school is a launching pad. He has a master鈥檚 degree in aeronautical science and another in public health. 鈥 And he also is a very compassionate person, very empathetic. 黑料传送门 gave him that foundation of understanding anatomy, physiology, biochemistry. 鈥 Les is a gem鈥攚arm, very welcoming. He has a great imagination. When you engage with him, you just have to be ready. He鈥檚 pretty hilarious. 鈥 He鈥檚 got over a hundred patents. He sees a problem, a gap, and wants to address it. He鈥檚 been ahead of his time for many, many years. He would say, 鈥榃ell, you know, we can fix this by utilizing technology,鈥 whereas most of us had no idea what he was talking about. Now, 25 or 30 years into the future, a lot of those ideas are now coming to fruition. 鈥 Remember in "Star Trek" Dr. McCoy would use his tricorder to look at vital signs? Now we鈥檙e utilizing remote patient monitoring real-time, and we鈥檙e leveraging augmented intelligence to advance cancer imaging analytics and diagnostics. Les鈥檚 鈥楺uadcorder鈥 allows physicians to use hyperlinks to look at patient imaging and pathology slides. 鈥 He鈥檚 a futurist with an understanding of the physician鈥損atient relationship and the challenges of our health care system. And now he鈥檚 putting all this together and trying to fix it.鈥

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As told by Robert G. Cuzzolino, EdD, former vice president for graduate programs and planning

Carol A. Fox, MM, retired associate vice president for enrollment management and alumni relations liaison鈥漌hen Carol started working at 黑料传送门, it was a much smaller place. But even three years ago, when I left, the feeling of family remained, and through her years at 黑料传送门, Carol always embraced that. She really thought of everybody working there as family and friends. 鈥 Some have wondered how those like Carol and me could have such a long tenure in a single institution, but 黑料传送门 was constantly changing, and that made it all exciting. Change is the lifeblood of an institution of higher education, and 黑料传送门 was very alive through all those years. 鈥 In admissions and student affairs, Carol and I spent a lot of time screening applicants and talking about what we wanted our classes to look like. Carol saw every class as the future of osteopathic medicine. 鈥 Today, just about every professional and graduate school is talking about holistic admissions, having come to the realization that beyond MCAT scores and GPAs are those qualities an applicant brings: communication and compassion, being a team player, being an active and involved person, being socially capable. At 黑料传送门, Carol built the model of looking beyond the numbers. I鈥檓 very proud of the classes we brought in, and Carol cared for each student through their program and beyond, demonstrated by her strong relationship with . 鈥 When 黑料传送门 started the psychology and physician assistant programs, forensic medicine, pharmacy, physical therapy, biomedical sciences鈥攖hose were all very different cohorts of students, and an admissions program had to be built for each one. Carol was able to expertly expand her staff, to find the right people to be on her team. 鈥 At 黑料传送门, people can sense if you鈥檙e truly dedicated because it鈥檚 not just a school, it鈥檚 a mission. There was absolutely no doubt that Carol was 100 percent behind the mission of the College. So she was able to build a lot of trust among the people around her. 鈥 You can repeat an admissions program year after year鈥攖alk to students and recruit them, put out the literature, do the interviews. But Carol had a sense for and a talent for building relationships with undergraduate premedical advisors. They knew they could trust her. 鈥 There was something I called 鈥楥arol鈥檚 rule.鈥 Every conference or regional admissions gathering had panels鈥攐ne for medicine, and maybe a panel for dentistry, and a panel for other supporting allied professions. If there was a panel for medical schools that included MDs, but the DO schools were relegated to the 鈥榓lternatives,鈥 we wouldn鈥檛 participate. When it came to standing her ground for osteopathic medicine, Carol was there.鈥

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As told by Stephanie H. Felgoise, PhD, ABPP, associate dean for academic integration, School of Professional and Applied Psychology; department chair, director and professor, clinical PsyD program, 黑料传送门

Arthur Freeman, EdD, ABPP, ACT, founding chair of 黑料传送门鈥檚 Department of Psychology鈥滱rt was one of the most charismatic men I鈥檝e ever met. There was such a charm about him. He was a brilliant psychologist and innovative administrator. He loved to teach. He taught through stories. You learned so much by listening to him. 鈥 He had high expectations for everybody, and he strived to help others meet those expectations. He was supportive, and he motivated his faculty to achieve more. For example, he required us to become board certified at a time when only 10 percent of clinical psychologists would do so. 鈥 Art had original ideas about teaching psychology, and he put those ideas into action. When he founded the College鈥檚 Department of Psychology in 1995, 黑料传送门鈥檚 classrooms were filled with medical students during the day. He chose to launch the program at night. 鈥榃e have a barn, let鈥檚 have a show,鈥 he鈥檇 say. He filled those seats. 鈥 He traveled the world to extend his knowledge and wisdom. When I co-hosted the World Congress of the Association of Cognitive and Behavioral Therapies in 2000, Art had the idea that it would be neat if people could watch experts doing therapy. So he started a grand rounds series during which practitioners could watch experts conduct a therapy session, live on stage, with an actor as a patient. This format was adopted by the association and continues today. 鈥 Art was a world-renowned expert in cognitive therapy, which uses empirically based therapeutic interventions that focus on an individual鈥檚 core beliefs, thoughts, feelings and behaviors, with an emphasis on challenging irrational and maladaptive thoughts or beliefs. He had a knack for working with complex and difficult patients. He was prolific in extending his experience and knowledge. I was honored to co-author two books with him (he authored over 25 books and many more articles). 鈥 Art loved to gather people around him. Every day around noon, he鈥檇 announce that the lunch train was leaving, as he gathered his people to grab a meal with deans, chairs and faculty of other departments. He cared about psychology, he cared about 黑料传送门, and he cared about his colleagues, friends and family. He left 黑料传送门 in 2008 and passed away in 2020. His presence is still felt here at the College. His portrait hangs in the department, and we are grateful for his legacy and for having known him, and fortunate to have called him a colleague and dear friend.鈥

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As told by Denah M. Appelt, PhD, retired professor of neuroscience, 黑料传送门

Monique A. Gary, MS/Biomed 鈥05, DO 鈥09, FACS鈥滿onique is the very definition of a humanitarian, always looking out for the welfare of others. She was a unique student, and from the time she started out in our biomed program, I couldn鈥檛 wait to see where her career would lead her. 鈥 There was no entitlement in Monique鈥檚 past. She did not grow up with a silver spoon in her mouth. But she grew up a caring individual and loved her family dearly. And the work ethic was there. 鈥 When she matriculated as a medical student, she became a work study student in my lab, where I was researching Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. She had amazing technical skills, and one of the things she mastered was the ability to cut sections鈥攖hat鈥檚 very tedious and arduous work, but she was diligent and dedicated. And she was very respectful of everyone she worked with鈥攖he technicians and the other students and the faculty. I鈥檝e seen how she keeps in touch with her fellow students, and how much she really cares for them. 鈥 Monique was always happy, always upbeat, an incredibly positive person. 鈥 When I was involved with the Esperanza College of Eastern University, I asked her to address 400 high school students from underserved areas around the city of Philadelphia. You could see how engaged they were with her, and how she talked to them, not at them, and encouraged them to follow their passions. She was an incredible role model and very giving of her time. It鈥檚 part of her identity for herself to be able to give back. She exudes it, and she empowers others. The same is true when she talks to our medical students as well. 鈥 Her latest project is amazing: , 400 acres in upper Bucks County鈥攁nd Monique was a city kid who grew up in Mount Airy. It鈥檚 a holistic retreat for people with cancer and chronic illness. But it鈥檚 not based on a doctor-patient relationship at all. She鈥檚 a very accomplished breast surgeon, but she felt this was something she could do to give back to the community. 鈥 She鈥檚 spreading her wings now, and her impact on society is huge.鈥

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As told by Kristen Berry, DO '00, Assistant Professor, Department of Family Medicine

Legendary 黑料传送门 professor and doctor William Gilhool, DO鈥滻鈥檝e been at the now for going on 19 years. When I first came, in 2003, Dr. Gilhool was one of the doctors here, and working with him was just such a pleasure. He is a great doctor, with a really good bedside manner. He鈥檚 been retired for three or four years, and the patients still want to know how he鈥檚 doing. 鈥 He was originally a gastroenterologist, and you don鈥檛 always see a specialist who is able to transition back to primary care. For him, it was a no-brainer. 鈥 Dr. Gilhool is very down to earth, very personable. He is probably the best storyteller I鈥檝e ever met. Students would gather around and listen to him talk about his hospital days, his intern days, everything he鈥檇 seen when he was in practice. He can talk to anybody about anything. 鈥 He is a great teacher. He was very much into stopping and making sure students really understood the whole picture, the whole patient. The students loved it and got so much out of it. 鈥 Our offices were right across from each other. We got to know each other personally, and we could see each other鈥檚 patients without there being any lapse in care. 鈥 He relied on me for some things, like the newer technologies, and I relied on him in terms of his experience, the political ins and outs, that kind of thing. He would leave it to me to draw my own conclusions, because he always joked that I had a lot of guts and wasn鈥檛 easily intimidated. He was like that, too. He鈥檇 always say, 鈥楾o thine own self be true.鈥欌 His father had been a prominent OB/GYN physician in North Philadelphia who early on had a stroke, and his mother, a nurse, had to take care of the father. So he had some adversity in his childhood and didn鈥檛 go right into medicine. He went to medical school at Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine in Missouri, and when he first started working here, he probably felt a bit like an outsider. 鈥 Remembering his relationships with the students always reminds me to stop for a minute. We鈥檙e so fast-paced here at the center and trying to do so much at once. Dr. Gilhool always took the time to get to know the students, to talk to them about their aspirations鈥攏ot just in medicine but in the rest of their lives.鈥

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As told by Mindy George-Weinstein, PhD, Chief Research and Science Officer, 黑料传送门

Legendary 黑料传送门 faculty member Charlotte H. Greene, PhD鈥漇oon after I came to 黑料传送门 in 1989, I was asked to serve on a committee to revise the faculty handbook and develop a tenure policy. Charlotte Greene was the chair of the committee, which also included Michael Venditto, DO [now professor and chair, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine]. We had a big job to do. 鈥 Charlotte was very knowledgeable about the multiple roles of faculty in an academic environment. I enjoyed watching her pause for reflection, and if she didn鈥檛 have an immediate response, she鈥檇 dig for information and come back to the table with advice for us. She worked extremely hard in this task and in everything she did. 鈥 When Charlotte spoke, everybody listened. She was never pedantic and always kept an open mind for the opinions of others. 鈥 In her role as educator, Charlotte was responsible for teaching muscle physiology to our Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine and Master's in Biomedical Sciences students. I went to her lectures because this was my area of research. Her goal was to present this conceptually challenging material in a way that students would readily understand and would help them appreciate the relevance to the principles and practice of osteopathic medicine. She encouraged students to ask questions and made them feel that they had identified gaps in our knowledge. 鈥 Where Charlotte really shined was in her research laboratory. She was a terrific and imaginative scientist. Her favorite role was mentoring students in the research process, and they flocked to her lab to be a part of her projects. 鈥 She was a pioneer in research involving tissue regeneration. Charlotte鈥檚 work was recognized by a company that contracted with her to test compounds for their effects on wound healing in a model she developed. She also provided opportunities for surgeons to learn how to perform laparoscopic cholecystectomy in the early days of minimally invasive procedures. 鈥 Charlotte was always thoughtful and never boastful. Although she was passionate about all things academic, she could see both sides of an issue. She loved 黑料传送门 and stood behind the difficult decision to sell our hospital for the good of the College. 鈥 I had so much respect for her as a colleague and an individual. I miss her a lot. She touched the lives of many of our students.鈥

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As told by Alexander S. Nicholas, DO 鈥75, FAAO dist., Professor and Chair, Department of Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine

Legendary 黑料传送门 professor David Heilig, DO '44, MsC (Ost.), FAAO鈥滵r. Heilig was my colleague and my mentor. But when I met him for the first time, I was in seventh grade in my T-shirt and tighty-whities, waiting to get my physical for football. Dr. Heilig told me to turn my head to the side and cough. 鈥 Basically, because of my father [Nicholas S. Nicholas, DO, FAAO], I grew up with him. He was a really important figure in our lives, kind of like a member of the family. But I could never call him Dave; it was 鈥楧r. Dave鈥 or 鈥楧oc Dave.鈥 鈥 I didn鈥檛 see him much while I was in medical school. But when my father was hired full-time to chair what鈥檚 now the OMM department, the first thing he did was hire Dr. Heilig as his vice chair. That was 1974. And in 1977, I joined the department full-time: it was my father, Dr. Heilig and me. 鈥 My father was a very social, extroverted guy鈥攈e was a volcano. And if Dr. Heilig had been like him, it wouldn鈥檛 have worked. They were opposites; they blended perfectly together. Dr. Heilig was a tectonic plate that moved very quietly. 鈥 He was one of the most intelligent, widely educated men I鈥檝e ever met. He was a writer. He could paint and sculpt. He played the cello and bass violin. He was a football player and a diver on the swim team at Swarthmore College. 鈥 Dr. Heilig was probably the most deeply thinking osteopathic physician, as well as osteopathic manipulative medicine physician, teaching osteopathic principles and practice. 鈥 He was a gentleman and a gentle man鈥攁 Quaker, a very spiritual man. I never heard him say anything loud or nasty about anybody. He stood up for his beliefs very strongly, but he did it in a way that was kind and well-thought-out. 鈥 Dr. Heilig was what the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator would call an advocate. He helped everybody鈥攈e鈥檇 put his hands on the students鈥 hands and take them through the maneuvers. 鈥 My father used to say that Dr. Heilig was the greatest manipulative tactician he鈥檇 ever seen. And my father was pretty good. 鈥 When Dr. Heilig retired, I think that was the only time the American Academy of Osteopathy honored someone with an entire day of lectures, just on him. He was loved by the entire osteopathic profession.鈥

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As told by Harry Morris, DO 鈥78, MPH, professor and chair, 黑料传送门 Department of Family Medicine

Carol L. Henwood, DO 鈥83, RES 鈥85, FACOFP dist., board-certified family practice physician 鈥滻f we stand on the shoulders of giants, Carol is among the greatest in the osteopathic medical profession. To start, she鈥檚 an exceptional family medicine physician. She鈥檚 been in private practice and with Main Line Health since 2014. She has worked in the Philadelphia suburbs for more than three decades and has forged such long-lasting relationships with her patients that she鈥檚 cared for five generations of some families. 鈥 No one works harder than a solo practitioner. I鈥檇 often reach out to her at all hours of the day, and she鈥檇 be in her office, seeing patients or finishing up her notes. 鈥 . She is a tireless physician and professional. She is able to juggle the demands of her practice, her personal life, and the advocacy she lends on national and local levels. Nationally, she served as president of the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians, and held leadership positions with the American Osteopathic Association. She has also been a leader with the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Medical Association and the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Family Physicians Society. She was the first woman president of the 黑料传送门 Alumni Association and served with distinction, an inspiration for many. 鈥 When you are in a meeting with Carol, you鈥檒l find that she鈥檚 always engaged. She鈥檚 well informed, and when she addresses an issue, she speaks with authority, based on her broad knowledge and experience. She speaks with the heart of a family doctor. Carol is such a positive person. I鈥檝e never heard her say an unkind word. 鈥 She understands and embodies the distinctiveness of the osteopathic philosophy and its practice. She鈥檚 devoted to keeping that tradition alive for this generation, and for future generations of DO graduates, many of whom she herself teaches and mentors. Carol is a leader in encouraging family medicine residents to take the osteopathic family medicine boards. Her backing resulted in a campaign to raise $2 million for scholarship aid to cover the practical and written portions of the test as well as travel to testing sites through the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians鈥 foundation . 鈥 She鈥檚 not just helping 黑料传送门 students and residents. She鈥檚 also getting recognition for supporting our profession at all levels. She is such a stalwart force.鈥

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As told by Cassandra Donnelly, MD, Regional Medical Director, Piedmont Urgent Care

Joe Tzong-Jyh Huong, DO 鈥09鈥淚 met Joe about 10 years ago as a new physician working at Piedmont Urgent Care, which was known as Wellstreet Urgent Care when we both started. 鈥 Dr. Joe, as we affectionately call him, was a caring physician and a super-helpful colleague if I had a question or was struggling with an electronic medical record in those first days. He had a great bedside manner, and his patients seemed to love him. It was just a joy to work alongside him. 鈥 I recently filled in at a center where he was working. I鈥檓 the regional medical director now; Joe is a senior director. But it felt just like eight years ago, when we last clinically worked side by side. He鈥檚 always jumping in, always making sure that you know he鈥檒l not only carry his load but help you if you need it. 鈥 Dr. Joe is a wonderful clinician. He鈥檚 a listener, and he is intentional. So he finds ways during a visit to connect with the patient, to make sure they know that during that visit, they鈥檙e the only one who matters. He goes out of his way to provide that customer service to a patient who needs it when they are usually at their worst and facing someone they likely have never seen or spoken to before. He has some of the highest patient satisfaction scores. 鈥 At the same time, he鈥檚 really fast! So I imagine what happens is that he is in a hurry, but not in a rush. I think that his patients forget about the length of the visit, because they recognize how meaningful it was. 鈥 He鈥檚 also an excellent clinical teacher. Not everyone will or can latch on to his efficiency; it鈥檚 something that has to be studied and learned. But his goal is for that new physician or new advanced practice provider to take something that they can tuck into their repertoire, and use it when they need to. 鈥 Dr. Joe gives back to his school, to his profession, to his colleagues. He pours out to his patients that which he has learned.鈥

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As told by Kenneth Lumpkin, Jackson EMC Foundation Representative

鈥淛ackson Electric Membership Corporation is one of the largest electric cooperatives in Georgia and the nation. Through our Jackson EMC Foundation, and in particular, our Operation Round Up program, nearly 90 percent of Jackson EMC cooperative members contribute to community-based programs throughout the ten counties we serve. We believe in a collaborative approach to investing in our communities. We were proud to partner with 黑料传送门 and to sponsor program supplies and meals for the 黑料传送门 Georgia Opportunities Academy in 2023. This summer STEM program cultivates interest in science among those traditionally underrepresented in medicine. In this case, the program introduces Gwinnett County high school students to medical topics through lectures, labs and simulation experiences. Ongoing crises in our nation鈥攆rom mental health to opioids鈥攗nderline the urgency to invest in the next generation of healthcare professionals who will provide better care for our communities.鈥

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As told in their own words

Moultrie area real estate developers Dan and Jimmy Jeter鈥漌e acquired 130 acres of land in Moultrie, Colquitt County, right in the center of Southwest Georgia. We donated 30 acres, and kept the remaining 100, and the College built and opened 黑料传送门 South Georgia in 2019. There is the potential for growth; you could have housing on the back half, where you get a nice residential feel, with a spring-fed lake and a creek and pine trees and native grasses. There鈥檚 a whole lot of wildlife back there too: deer, quail, turkey; they all make their home in this little rolling area in the bottomland. 鈥 As real estate developers, we understand the need for medical buildings in Moultrie. We have a development on 15 acres less than a mile to the south of 黑料传送门 South Georgia, right by the hospital. The building started out with one OB/GYN practice, and now we have nine medical buildings there. It was a very positive investment experience, and it gave us the sense of the possibilities if we were to have a school to educate physicians and other healthcare professionals on the tract of land. 鈥 We believed that having a medical school here would be good for the health of South Georgia. National statistics show that when health professionals finish their training, they often settle within 50 or 60 miles of their place of training for the duration of their career. That鈥檚 proved true for the first classes; the majority of those who graduate from 黑料传送门 South Georgia plan to stay in Southwest Georgia. 鈥 We鈥檙e a rural county with poultry processing, cotton, peanuts, soybeans, corn. Our economy is split between agribusiness, government, manufacturing and retail. Our YMCA has been around for 100 years, our arts center is second to none for a community of our size, and our diving facility has attracted Olympians who come here to train. 鈥 People are coming to Southwest Georgia. About 50 percent of our high school graduating classes return to Colquitt County to live and work. They recognize the great quality of life. They desire to live and raise their children here. 鈥 We鈥檙e so glad that 黑料传送门 came into the region with the self-interest of educating healthcare professionals and the shared interest of improving health care for Georgians. The College wanted to make Moultrie a better community, and they certainly have. We are honored to be part of the 黑料传送门 story.鈥

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As told by J. Steven Blake, DO 鈥89, MSc

Leonard W. Johnson, DO 鈥64鈥漊p until the mid-1990s, 黑料传送门鈥檚 entering classes of African American students were very small. In my class (1989), entering in August of 1985, there were five African Americans, four women and myself. Dr. Johnson made it a point to get to know all of us. He made it a point to be nurturing. 鈥 He invited us over to his family medicine practice in West Philadelphia to show us what it was like in private practice in the inner-city African American community, and about the need for giving back and taking care of people that were less fortunate. He also wanted us to see what was required to own and manage a private practice, because most of us did not come from families where Mom, Dad, or any family members were physicians. So he wanted to show us how a practice could be set up鈥攖he functionality of it, the logistics鈥攁nd I think he did an excellent job. 鈥 Dr. Johnson was very devoted to young people and to helping them recognize the importance of postsecondary education. Whether it was to study medicine, engineering, law, nursing, teaching鈥攈e just wanted young people to pursue college. 鈥 He was an amazing man, very driven. He wasn鈥檛 concerned about the number of hours he put into the day. He would make rounds well into the evening after he finished a long day of office hours and community engagements. It wasn鈥檛 unusual for him to go to the hospital to finish rounds at 9 or 10 o鈥檆lock at night. Once office hours ended, it was all about how he could reach out to the community beyond medicine. 鈥 He was engaging and created relationships where patients could feel very comfortable about confiding in him. He was a great mentor in helping to teach us how to osteopathically/holistically interact with patients. He had the respect of everybody throughout the community. He was just a very likeable person. 鈥 Dr. Johnson made a big sacrifice in maintaining a private practice in a less desirable part of the city for well over 30 years. There were a lot of impoverished people in that community, and he didn鈥檛 turn anyone away. His legacy will live on forever.鈥

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As told by Oliver Bullock, DO 鈥78, professor emeritus, 黑料传送门

William M. King, DO 鈥62鈥滻 had been in practice for a year when I attended a continuing medical education conference on new techniques for ENT. I sat across from Dr. Bill King, who said, 鈥業鈥檝e never seen you before.鈥 He ended up inviting me to do some hours in his practice in Germantown. That鈥檚 how it started, and I was there for about two years, before my own practice got too busy for me to continue. A lot of doctors practicing now got their start in Bill King鈥檚 office, picking up a few hours 鈥 Bill practiced in what had been a huge funeral home, with beautiful waiting rooms to make his patients feel valued. It was a very successful business鈥攈e rented space to a pharmacy, an X-ray unit, a big physical therapy unit, all of them managed by his staff. 鈥 Saturday hours were 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., and sometimes we wouldn鈥檛 get out till 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. I think I saw 86 patients one day. 鈥 He was particularly fond of the many children in his practice, remembering most of their names and making up special names for some 鈥 Bill had been a biochemist at the NIH National Heart Institute. On lunch breaks鈥攖hough we were so busy we hardly had any鈥攈e would talk to me about the disease process and how medications affected it. 鈥 Bill had a gorgeous home, like a museum, with stuffed animals and all kinds of carved masks and objects that he collected from his travels around the world. His swimming pool was like a Hollywood setup. But he got delight in seeing others鈥 delight in what he had. Some medical students got married in his house; organizations had their meetings there. . . . What was really his thing was philanthropy. He gave so much to the community. 鈥 He was a Central High alum and the largest contributor to a new media center there, funded by alumni donations, that opened in 2005. It was named for him. 鈥 He derived pleasure from what he was able to do for other people. One day he said to me, 鈥楤ullock, come here. I have something for you.鈥 He showed me a refrigerator full of prime rib. I had never set my eyes on a chunk that big; I had to use a saw to get it into my fridge. It was absolutely the best. That鈥檚 the way he was.鈥

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As told by Mindy George-Weinstein, PhD, Chief Research and Science Officer, 黑料传送门

Jeffrey Kingsley, DO 鈥01, MBA, CPI, FACRP鈥淒r. Kingsley didn鈥檛 start out in medicine as a researcher. But Jeff is every bit the primary care physician he was when he came out of his residency in family medicine. This is one of the most impressive features of who he is as a professional and as a person. He and his clinical trial research company, Centricity, provide the highest level of care to anyone that comes in the door. 鈥 He鈥檚 also committed to education and mentoring. He opens his clinical trial centers for both medical students and residents for rotations. And he feels鈥攁nd I completely agree with him鈥攖hat this is an essential part of training. Healthcare providers have to appreciate and understand the clinical trial process that safeguards advances in medicine. Research underlies evidence-based clinical practice. Jeff makes it possible for students and residents to learn about the process and participate in it, first hand. 鈥 For the past three years, Jeff鈥檚 been invited to give two hours of lecture on clinical trials in our Foundations of Research and Medicine course. I attend them, and I learn something new every time. These extremely popular lectures are beautifully and logically developed, and completely digestible. He gets a ton of great questions afterwards because he inspires curiosity in the students. One point he stresses is the critical need to expand diversity in clinical trials and the challenges you face in doing so, including limitations in patients鈥 knowledge of opportunities to participate, their access to study sites, and comorbidities that may disqualify them because of broad exclusion criteria. Centricity is now across the country and in Canada, which opens tremendous opportunities for inclusion. 鈥 The passion behind his work is fueled by a commitment to providing better care to patients made possible through research and the high standards of clinical trials. 鈥 Jeff is very generous with his time. Despite his intensely busy schedule, he continues to teach medical students and residents in the classroom and in his centers. His contributions to his profession, through training and ensuring the safety and efficacy of new therapeutics, are enormous. He鈥檚 among 黑料传送门鈥檚 most treasured alumni.鈥

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As told by James Bonner, DO 鈥86

Joseph J. Kuchinski, Jr., DO 鈥86, RES 鈥88鈥滼oe and I met as first-year medical students at 黑料传送门 in late summer of 1982. We became close friends during those two didactic years. Our bond grew stronger during our intern year at the former 黑料传送门 hospital. On July 1 at midnight鈥攅xactly when we were to become interns鈥攈ospital workers were going on strike. The night-shift intern crew had to get into the hospital earlier than the picketers. Joe worked the very first overnight, and I was his replacement the next morning. It was an eerie time, and as first-day interns we were appropriately fearful. 鈥 We were interns under the leadership of Dean Dan Wisely, a wonderful man to work for. It was work鈥攜ou had no outside life. But being with Joe through 365 days in that role, as we grew as doctors, we became closer as friends. 鈥 Joe鈥檚 dad ran a retail pharmacy up in the Poconos, and Joe had been a pharmacist before he went to medical school. He was mature, and he had an understanding of what we were doing that made him a natural leader. 鈥 Joe excelled in his emergency medicine residency. Later, he became very active in the American College of Osteopathic Emergency Physicians, and he got me involved helping the ACOEP with some of their publishing. We reconnected at the spring conferences in Arizona, where I met his wife and son, and I would bring my wife and kids out there. We also served together on the board of the and ran the golf tournament for a few years, trying to do whatever we could to help our alma mater. The school gave us the opportunity to become physicians and then to enjoy that role and be able to care for our families, so we felt that we should give back. 鈥 Joe loved emergency medicine, where he was ahead of his time as an early adopter of physician involvement in government affairs. He embraced lobbying activities that I know not everybody is eager to do, even when they love the discipline. He knew there was an important role for advocacy. And he not only preached that, he lived it. He went to DC and worked on behalf of elected officials to move legislation forward. 鈥 Joe passed away in 2021; his greatest legacy perhaps that of devoted husband and father. His son Michael was his pride and joy. He was a good human being and a good clinician鈥攄riven, approachable and enjoyable. Joe was a role model for anyone who鈥檚 trying to do good.鈥

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As told by Michael P. McGuinness, PhD, Professor of Anatomy, Department of Bio-Medical Sciences, 黑料传送门

Tage Kvist, PhD鈥滵r. Kvist was part of the reason I agreed to transition from pharmaceutical research back into academia. I had been out of the teaching environment for probably a decade, so I was nervous. He was a great mentor, able to advise without critiquing my personal style. 鈥 Understanding how to present a dissected specimen to students on an exam might seem straightforward, but there鈥檚 an art to it. And Dr. Kvist was able to guide me and others to make sure we were assessing students in a fair but appropriate manner. When I started here at 黑料传送门, he had us sit down as a department and go through every question on a written exam to make sure the scientific content was accurate. That was his level of commitment to the reputation of the courses. 鈥 He was the first chair of the Department of Bio-Medical Sciences and was instrumental in helping a diverse group of faculty integrate into one umbrella group鈥攁ble to navigate different personalities, and different courses and requirements, and bringing us together so that we worked cohesively. 鈥 Throughout all of this, he was very humble. He wasn鈥檛 looking for recognition. He just did the work he did, including his work as one of the earliest educators to begin plastinating biological specimens for teaching purposes, and he was proud of the work he did. He had been at 黑料传送门 for 39 years when he retired. 鈥 Dr. Kvist had a very dry sense of humor, and it was incorporated into every one of his lectures, but very rarely did you hear students laughing. Later, though, students would tell me, 鈥業 listened to his lecture again, and he鈥檚 really funny!鈥 His humor was so subtle that, in the moment, you could miss the nuances. 鈥 One thing that endeared him to students was that he spent unscheduled hours helping them in the anatomy lab. Medical students took gross anatomy as their first course, and a lot of times they were overwhelmed by volume. He probably helped countless students get through that first term over his years here. 鈥 As a mentor, he gave me a perspective on caring about students and the job that we鈥檙e supposed to be doing: trying our best to make sure that they鈥檙e successful.鈥

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As told by Christine N. McGinn, DO 鈥95

Sherman Leis, DO 鈥67鈥滻 graduated from medical school in 1995, did a year of internship in 1996, and spent four years as a Navy flight surgeon and working with NASA. Then I took a year off for my own transition as a transgender woman. 鈥 I had always hoped and dreamed to be a plastic surgeon, and I went to Abington Hospital to jump back into my career. My reviews were stellar, but they let me go. I was devastated and ended up switching to Suburban Mercy Suburban Hospital for the four remaining years of general surgery. Dr. Leis operated there too, and none of the other residents were interested in plastic surgery, so there was nobody to help him. About a half-dozen plastic surgeons rotated through that hospital, so I ended up getting this incredible plastic surgery experience. I was in the right place at the right time. 鈥 Dr. Leis created the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery residency at 黑料传送门 in 1991, and he鈥檚 really the father of plastic surgery for the osteopathic profession. None of us would be here if it weren鈥檛 for him. When I was trying to get into a plastic surgery residency, there were only three spots in the whole country that a DO could qualify for. I was one of two people selected for the 黑料传送门 program that year. 鈥 At that time, hospitals in Philadelphia were closing, selling, restructuring鈥攊t was like musical chairs. Dr. Leis fought hard to get into places where previously only MDs got in. He wanted to make sure we had a full and balanced education. We were in five or six different hospitals, and it鈥檚 made all the difference in the breadth of my skills. 鈥 In the middle of my rotation with him, he became ill and was out of commission for a couple of months. I had to go make my own residency, which enabled me to get some very specialized training in transgender medicine. 鈥 Dr. Leis listened to people, and everyone came in as an equal. No matter how down and out somebody was when they came to see him, he would listen to them and try to help them. 鈥 He was an innovator, and he didn鈥檛 limit himself. At conferences, he always asked about controversial subjects. He challenged people, and he stood up for what he believed in.鈥

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As told by Thomas J. Gravina, chairman, 黑料传送门 Board of Trustees

Herbert Lotman, LLD鈥滷rom the time my father died when I was a kid, Herb was my mentor and friend. Sometimes great things come from tragedy, and this was one of them. 鈥 Herb started as a butcher in a little store with his father when he was 16 or 17 years old. He ended up building one of the largest privately held companies in the world, Keystone Food Corporation. You can鈥檛 accomplish that type of success unless you treat all the people who work for you in a very positive way. You bring in people that are smarter than you, and you give them authority and responsibility and allow them to help grow the business. 鈥 Herb鈥檚 wife, Karen, was the daughter of a 黑料传送门 alumnus [Abraham Levin, DO 鈥35], and other members of her family were alumni as well, so she and Herb both became emotionally connected to 黑料传送门 over many years. Ultimately Herb was asked to provide his financial acumen and experience during a very difficult period. He saved the institution by selling off the hospitals and having the College re-focus on its academic roots. From there, 黑料传送门 began its rise back to where it is today. 鈥 Twenty-two years ago, Herb asked me if I would consider being part of the Board. I told him I didn鈥檛 know that much about 黑料传送门. But not many people said no to Herb, and there was a reason: Herb was larger than life. When he walked into a room, the room filled with integrity, honor, honesty, and respect. 鈥 Herb was a man who lived up to his word. He wasn鈥檛 afraid to tell you his views, but he was open to discussion and robust conversation. If you could present and articulate an intelligent, cohesive argument or plan, he was open to all of it. He would ask other people鈥檚 opinions, ask very pointed questions, and dig into what was being presented. Ultimately, he would build consensus. 鈥 Herb was a gracious and highly intelligent, kind, and very thoughtful man who used those skills and characteristics to do a lot of wonderful things all over the world. 鈥 As successful as Herb was in business and philanthropy, his family was his priority. His wife Karen, his son and daughter, Jeff and Shelly, and his in-laws, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, and grandchildren were really what Herb was all about. He was a remarkable human being in all regards, but at the end of the day, at his core he was a family man. And 黑料传送门 was also his family.鈥

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As told by Joanne Jones, MBA, Chief of Campus Operations, 黑料传送门 South Georgia

James L. Matney鈥淛im鈥檚 a very interesting man, a real visionary. Sometimes people will say, when they hear one of his ideas, 鈥榃hy Moultrie?鈥 He just says, 鈥榃hy not Moultrie? What鈥檚 stopping us? Nothing鈥檚 stopping us if we want to do something.鈥 That鈥檚 how he lives his life. 鈥 Jim started a family medicine residency to not only help with recruiting physicians to his facility but because he knew that a training program would increase and enhance the quality of care at the hospital. 鈥 After that, Jim felt strongly that the area needed a medical school. He said, 鈥榊ou know, if we give the regional students a place to go to medical school and train them here, we can keep them here.鈥 . . . I鈥檝e watched how he has grown the hospital at Colquitt Regional Medical Center, and I鈥檝e been a recipient of the medical care there. Now there鈥檚 a cancer center, and all kinds of specialties that you would not normally see in a rural medical center. Jim wanted to know why people were going out of town for chemo when we could do that here. 鈥 Jim is a transplant to Moultrie, but he grew up in a small rural town. If he鈥檚 going to raise his family here, he wants them to have the best of everything, the opportunities to grow and prosper. So he does whatever he can do to make things better for the community. 鈥 Rural hospitals spend a lot of money on recruiting physicians. Jim has a 鈥榞row your own鈥 mentality: make them residents, and then they鈥檒l stay. Four graduates out of 黑料传送门 South Georgia鈥檚 first graduating class are now residents over at his hospital. The medical care that he has built to provide to this community is one of our selling points when we hire faculty. 鈥 He鈥檚 built an education center that鈥檚 going to house a simulation lab for CME training for his staff and the residents, and students on rotation will share in all the educational experiences with the residents. 鈥 Jim鈥檚 desire to make things better is infectious. If he thought it was going to better the community to have a bridge over here, he鈥檇 figure out how to get a bridge. So he鈥檚 not done. He鈥檚 always looking.鈥

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As told by Joan Watkins, DO 鈥72

Floyce D. McCauley, DO 鈥72鈥滷loyce and I were in a class of 126 people: 120 men and six women. We women were used to being a small minority鈥攖he class before us had only one. 鈥 Floyce grew up in Pittsburgh, and I grew up in Wheeling, West Virginia, but somehow we connected totally, as friends. And I was alone in Philadelphia. I think I might have felt that a bit, and Floyce and her husband Jimmy were wonderful to me. 鈥 Floyce had attended the University of Pittsburgh. You know, people make their assumptions. I remember one professor looked at the two of us, a white woman and a Black woman, and assumed I was the one who had gone there. But I went to West Liberty State College, because that鈥檚 the one I could afford. 鈥 Floyce and I went through four years of medical school together. I remember that when we graduated, her father came to Philadelphia from Pittsburgh on the bus, carrying a cake the whole way. 鈥 We both did an internship at Suburban General Hospital in Norristown, Pennsylvania, a 150-bed hospital. I got married in my second year and had a civil ceremony in Philadelphia with Floyce as my matron; then I went home and got married in the church by my father, who was a minister. 鈥 As part of our clinical rotation, Floyce and I made house calls together in South Philadelphia to see patients, who were grateful for our care. And that was a wonderful experience together. She had been a public health nurse and had a lot of good advice for me. 鈥 Floyce went into child psychiatry, which she loved. Her practice was right in her home. I imagine people who brought their children to her were blessed with her care. I went into physical medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and later into emergency medicine. So we didn鈥檛 see each other professionally. But we were friends for a long time, and we stayed in contact until she died in 2005. We both had breast cancer and recovered, but her cancer returned. I was able to visit her when she was ill, and we sat together and talked and laughed. She was a wonderful friend.鈥

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As told by Kenneth J. Veit, DO 鈥76, MBA, FACOFP, Provost, Senior Vice President

Legendary 黑料传送门 professor Robert Meals, DO '56鈥滲ob was my teacher and my colleague. As a teacher, he was brilliant. Yet, I don鈥檛 think he ever recognized his own genius鈥攈ow he informed his art with fresh perspective, sage advice and a hint of silliness. 鈥 On the first day of class, we were thrown into a big auditorium. During the course of his radiology presentation, Bob would put up someone鈥檚 picture on that big screen and ask us to answer his clinical question. We usually had no idea what he was talking about. Perhaps that was our first reality check: 鈥楤oy, we鈥檙e really in medical school now.鈥 But very quickly, we realized that he was not concerned about our answers. He was more focused on creating an encouraging educational environment, in every class, to take away some of our paranoia about making a mistake. The wisdom of his teaching was understanding that only when you let go do you open yourself up to learn. 鈥 Years later, I was fortunate to have an office very close to where he taught the third-year students. There was a mandatory radiology clerkship; you had to experience Bob regardless of whether you wanted to be a radiologist or a family doctor or an internist. During the first week, it was kind of quiet in that classroom. By the beginning of the second week, you鈥檇 hear laughter, singing, all kinds of shenanigans. He had puppets; he was Mister Rogers before Mister Rogers. He would have the students whistling, humming, playing guitars, doing skits. 鈥 What could be more embarrassing than standing in front of your peers and singing? But once you got over that embarrassment, you opened yourself up to learning. 鈥 Bob hasn鈥檛 been with us for a number of years; he passed away in 2005. But hospital administrators鈥攁cross the state and region鈥攕till tell me they can identify 黑料传送门 grads because they鈥檙e not intimidated by reading images and films. They never have that deer-in-a-headlight look. They know logically how to look through the film, look at the soft tissue, the anatomical components. 鈥 Bob won teaching awards over and over again. 鈥 He told me, 鈥楾his is how I enjoy teaching.鈥 The excitement, the enthusiasm, the energy that he created in his classroom came back to him, made him more spirited and more inclined to give. 鈥 Even when he got sick at the end, he never retired. His enjoyment of teaching actually penetrated the classroom. You can pick that up as a student. If the teacher is excited about being in front of you, that goes a long way.鈥

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As told by Jessica Glass Kendorski, PhD, NCSP, chair, director and professor, MS and certificate programs in applied behavior analysis, 黑料传送门

Rosemary B. Mennuti, EdD, NCSP, founding director of 黑料传送门鈥檚 graduate degree programs in school psychology鈥漌hen I first joined the College as a young professor, I shadowed Roe. As my faculty mentor, she鈥檇 often meet and walk me from classes and around campus. It always amazed me that we鈥檇 never make it more than a few yards (sometimes a few footsteps) without students, faculty and staff stopping us. Everyone wanted to talk to Roe鈥攑rofessionally. Personally. I think they simply wanted to experience the warmth of her presence, her benevolence. Her authenticity. She puts everyone at ease. 鈥 In psychology, we teach that empathy starts with being present. Roe is always fully present as a person, as a teacher, as a therapist, as a leader. She is a nurturer. At the same time, she is strong, assertive and effective. 鈥  She brought a whole lifetime with her when she came to 黑料传送门. She had been a fourth-grade teacher, a guidance counselor, a school psychologist in the New Jersey public schools. She is also a doting mother to her daughter. She recognized that she had grown and matured throughout her career and the many different facets of it. She worked at 黑料传送门 for nearly a decade (before her retirement in 2014) and during that time developed, implemented and taught three School Psychology programs [PsyD, MS and EdS]. 鈥 Throughout her tenure, Roe was the face of School Psychology. She was also the heartbeat. She upheld the highest academic standards in the field and obtained all the regulatory designations. She drew highly credentialed students at the national level. She committed to them, and they attribute their success to her. 鈥 Her programs thrived鈥攁nd continue to thrive today鈥攏ot just because of their academic rigor but because of their climate. Roe knows how to build relationships. She understands that students (even graduate-level ones) learn and flourish when they establish cooperative and collaborative connections鈥攁uthentic relationships with teachers and with one another. I imagine this stems from her academic passion for and research on school-based mental health and cognitive and behavioral interventions. In this area, she was undoubtedly ahead of her time鈥攔ecognizing that children (with their families) can only reach their fullest potential when they feel safe, valued and appreciated.鈥

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As told by Alexander S. Nicholas, DO 鈥75, FAAO dist., professor and chair, osteopathic manipulative medicine, 黑料传送门

Nicholas S. Nicholas, DO鈥滿y dad was a larger-than-life figure. He came to Philadelphia in 1946 after his discharge from the United States Navy. A first-generation Greek immigrant, he discovered Philadelphia College of Osteopathy on 48th and Spruce streets, where he took continuing medical education classes and soon started teaching osteopathic manipulation treatment to medical students four afternoons a week. 鈥 From 1946 to 1965, he taught medical students for free. That didn鈥檛 sit well with my mother, who couldn鈥檛 understand why he鈥檇 close down his practice each afternoon. 鈥 He was a super-extroverted guy, who was heavy-set and smoked cigars. He often had medical students shadowing him. He鈥檇 meet with students for breakfast at the Garrett Restaurant on 69th Street in Upper Darby. At times there would be lunch or dinner too. 鈥 My dad was one of the first to use osteopathic manual manipulation in sports medicine. He started as the sports physician at Villanova University, from 1946 to 1960, for the school鈥檚 teams in football, basketball and track. He cared for nine Olympic athletes, including pole-vaulter Don Bragg, and long-distance runners Marty Liquori and Eamonn Coghlan. 鈥 He was devoted to developing the osteopathic profession. My brother and I would hear him up on his soapbox; he didn鈥檛 want it taken over by allopathic physicians. 鈥 He believed in osteopathic manipulative treatments and that they were integral to health care. Like A.T. Still, the founder of osteopathic medicine, he felt that the heroics of dangerous chemicals and medicines could be worse than the actual diseases. In 1974, he wrote a textbook called Atlas of Osteopathic Techniques, which detailed what he knew. 鈥 My dad always believed in manual diagnosis, to see if the musculoskeletal system would give signs through palpation of the body. He鈥檇 feel those little reflexes that can cause dysfunction. And he鈥檇 treat that dysfunction to get positive results. And teaching OMT at 黑料传送门 gave him the opportunity to teach hands-on principles. He鈥檇 tell his students, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 why our school is here.鈥欌

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As told by Eddie Williams, PharmD 鈥14

Jason O鈥橬eal, PharmD 鈥14鈥漁ur favorite hangout was the study room. That鈥檚 where you鈥檇 often find Jason, James [Lindsay, PharmD 鈥14] and me, cracking jokes while perusing our pharmacology books. More than a few times, Jason retreated there on his own to lie on the floor and to pray the pain of sickle cell anemia away鈥攐nce in the middle of an exam. 鈥 Our study room now bears Jason鈥檚 name, dedicated in loving memory to my best friend and fellow graduate of 黑料传送门鈥檚 inaugural PharmD class, a lasting tribute to Jason Walton O鈥橬eal鈥檚 grit, gumption and sly smile I鈥檇 do anything to see again. 鈥 Complications from sickle cell disease took Jason from us on August 12, 2016, too young at age 35 and only two years after he鈥檇 accomplished his goal of becoming a pharmacist, which at times seemed like an impossible dream when you consider the many health obstacles he had to overcome during those four years. 鈥 Jason was the first person I met at 黑料传送门 Georgia. We showed up for our pharmacy school interviews together in 2010, nervous and excited and hoping we鈥檇 be accepted into the school. You know how you meet someone for the first time, but you sense you鈥檝e met before? That鈥檚 how it was with Jason and me. Turns out, we had graduated a year apart from Southwest DeKalb High School some 10 years before our paths crossed again. 鈥 The truth is, I didn鈥檛 know how sick Jason really was鈥攏or did his other classmates or professors. Jason kept his illness private and didn鈥檛 want anyone鈥檚 pity. The only outward signs of his disability were a limp in his right leg from a childhood stroke that many mistook for a strut, turned-in fingers on his left hand and his tall (6 foot), slender (130-pound) frame. 鈥 Yet it was hard not to notice all the classes Jason missed while hospitalized with repeated bouts of pneumonia. 鈥楽icklers鈥 are susceptible to lung infections. 鈥榊ou were in the hospital?鈥 classmates would ask when he鈥檇 reappear on campus. 鈥楳an, this is normal for me,鈥 was all he鈥檇 say. 鈥 That was the thing about Jason. He just kept on resisting, persisting and never, ever giving up despite his punishingly cruel and relentlessly unforgiving illness. 鈥 It鈥檚 tough not having him here鈥攊n our daily text messages, at Atlanta Falcons games and at my sons鈥 birthday parties鈥攂ut Jason continues to inspire and amaze me, just as I hope he does for future 黑料传送门 School of Pharmacy students.鈥

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As told by Grace Taylor, MAH, CPFM, former Associate Director of Financial Aid, 黑料传送门

鈥淲orking with students every day, many of us have met someone struggling through a personal or family crisis, trying to navigate medical school through tough times. The OIS Endowed Student Emergency Fund was established in 2022 by the Osteopathic Institute of the South. The fund assists 黑料传送门 Georgia and 黑料传送门 South Georgia students when emergencies arise that cause sudden financial difficulties, impacting education and training. Since the fund鈥檚 inception, the College has been able to help 13 students with a range of challenges such as unexpected medical expenses, vehicle repairs, financial support while caring for a sick loved one, the purchase of textbooks and a computer.鈥

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As told by Bonnie Buxton, PhD, professor, microbiology and immunology, 黑料传送门 Georgia

Mary P. Owen, JD, MS, PhD, CS, the first retired 黑料传送门 Georgia professor to be recognized as a Professor Emerita鈥滻n July 2005, I came with Mary and several others to develop the curriculum that would start in mid-August at the new Georgia campus of 黑料传送门. It was quite a task to get all those ducks in a row, tweaking the Philadelphia curriculum and figuring out who was doing what. For several weeks before our offices were ready, we worked in an old house at the Osteopathic Institute of the South. It drove home the fact that we were starting from the ground up. 鈥 We were from all over the place鈥攅xcept Mary, our only southerner, who was from Alabama. 鈥 Her work and experience in pharmacology helped her put together the initial curriculum. She had so many accomplishments, but she was very humble about them. She was also a very private person, and very independent. 鈥 Mary became an influential person on the Research Committee. And she was also a course director, which is a very important role. When you鈥檙e organizing a course in second year, you鈥檝e got to coordinate basic science and then clinical medicine鈥攁nd we didn鈥檛 have any clinicians then. So she had to make those contacts and coordinate their work鈥攎ake sure each knew what the other was doing. She set up a process that I encouraged other course directors to follow. 鈥 Mary had primarily been a research scientist in the period before she joined 黑料传送门, not heavily involved in teaching. But some people are just naturally good at knowing how to build complexity, from basic foundational concepts to more complex concepts in a way that carries your students with you. She seemed to be able to do that right out of the gate. 鈥 Even with a heavy load of administration and curriculum building, she was interested in maintaining some research. Once we had the Biomedical Sciences program, students could assist with that. 鈥 Students really loved her; it was obvious how much she cared about them. She was really easy to talk to鈥攋ovial and outgoing. When you were in the hallways, you could hear her laughing. But she had a very serious side, too. When she felt strongly about something, she would fight for what she believed in. She retired from 黑料传送门 Georgia in 2019, and continues her legal work. We miss her here.鈥

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As told by Carol A. Fox, MM, Alumni Liaison, 黑料传送门

Gregory Papadeas, DO 鈥88鈥淭here are a handful of students that you just bond with from the very beginning, and Greg was one of them. I was director of admissions when he applied to 黑料传送门, so I would have been the initial reviewer of his application. Coming from San Diego State, Greg considered 黑料传送门 his first choice of schools because of our reputation. 鈥 I got to know Greg well. He was an outstanding student from day one. And he was always participating in what was going on, always volunteering. He took part in a video we made for student recruitment, and I remember him saying that medical school is like hooking yourself up to a fire hydrant and turning it on. 鈥 We often see Greg at professional annual meetings. And although he鈥檚 a Denver native and lives in a Denver suburb now, he visits our campus when he can, and often brings his family with him. He has not lost contact with 黑料传送门 since the day he graduated. 鈥 For almost 10 years, he鈥檚 been contributing to the Dr. and Mrs. Gregory G. Papadeas & Family Endowed Scholarship, which provides tuition support to DO students of Greek heritage. He loved 黑料传送门 from the beginning, and he feels it did well by him and that his 黑料传送门 education propelled him into being an outstanding physician. He鈥檚 proud of the school, and he鈥檚 proud of being a DO. 鈥 In 2019, he hosted a cocktail party at his home for local 黑料传送门 alumni and other DOs. I was thrilled to be invited also. It was a wonderful weekend, the party was magnificent, and we all enjoyed the time spent with his lovely family. Greg is fun to be with, sincere and warm. He is one of the finest 黑料传送门 graduates that I know.鈥

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As told by David Kuo, DO 鈥96, RES 鈥99, associate dean of graduate medical education and associate professor, family medicine, 黑料传送门

Richard A. Pascucci, DO 鈥75, former vice dean for clinical education鈥漅ich was the director of medical education when I was a resident, so I got to know him at morning reports and at lectures. The big thing with Rich is his personality鈥攈e鈥檚 easy to talk to, very engaging, and makes you feel like you鈥檙e the most important person in the room. And he always used humor to break the ice or put people at ease in a meeting. 鈥 He asked me in 2005 to become the associate program director for the Family Medicine residency, and in that position I reported to him. In 2012, when he was the vice dean for clinical education and had other responsibilities requiring more of his time, Rich offered to bring me in part-time to teach me how to be the head of graduate medical education one day. 鈥 What a great mentor Rich is. He鈥檚 taught me so much about professionalism, and how to be patient as well. I鈥檓 a pretty calm guy, but when things would go wrong, he鈥檇 sit me down and help me work it out. 鈥 Rich would say, 鈥楢ll right. What鈥檚 the issue? Let鈥檚 take a step back and think about it unemotionally, and see what鈥檚 going on.鈥 Or 鈥榃hat鈥檚 the other side鈥檚 motivation? How can we work together and compromise to get things done?鈥. 鈥 Over time, he slowly and progressively gave me more to do, and helped me think things through. Early on, I would ask myself, 鈥楬ow would Rich handle this?鈥 But now it鈥檚 ingrained in me because he鈥檚 taught me so well. 鈥 When [allopathic and osteopathic] graduate medical education transitioned to a single accreditation system, beginning in 2015, Rich and I were learning together, and he was handing off to me in a time of turmoil where sometimes we didn鈥檛 know the answer. So we had to figure it out together, along with Joanne Jones [campus officer, 黑料传送门 South Georgia], who was the third person in our triumvirate. 鈥 Rich has always been a teacher to me, even on the golf course! Every time we play together, I learn something from him. And whenever we went golfing in Atlantic City, afterwards we鈥檇 go to the casinos, where we鈥檇 play blackjack together. He taught me strategy, and he鈥檇 say, 鈥楽ometimes you鈥檝e got to take a risk. Roll the dice.鈥欌 I hope he is happy and proud that he trained me. Honestly, he is like a father figure to me.鈥

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As told by Jennifer H. Shaw, PhD, chair and associate professor of physiology, Department of Bio-Medical Sciences, 黑料传送门 South Georgia

Julia Patterson, DO 鈥23鈥滼ulia arrived as one of our inaugural students from a small nearby town, Tifton. I was assigned to check in with her regularly as her faculty mentor 鈥 The first six or eight weeks of the DO program are a bit daunting. Things feel scary and overwhelming. And then, as she worked through that鈥擨 know it鈥檚 a process, but it seemed like a light switch was flipped, a spark ignited. When Julia realized she could do this, she belonged here. What I saw was the change in her confidence鈥攔eally becoming successful in the classroom and seeing herself for who she is and all her talent. 鈥 That inaugural class is very tight. It was a brand-new campus鈥攂rand-new everything鈥攁nd they built strong friendships and provided each other with a lot of support. 鈥 Julia arrived at 黑料传送门 South Georgia with a tremendous service record in rural health working with migrants. She was part of the Moultrie Farmworker Health Project鈥攖his is one of the largest agricultural areas east of the Mississippi. She鈥檚 also worked with Called to Care, a faith-based organization that supplies children in foster care with clothing and necessities. She鈥檚 worked with Habitat for Humanity and Adopt a Mile. She鈥檚 involved with Hope House in Moultrie, a center that helps women with unplanned pregnancies, providing necessities and also parenting education. 鈥 While at 黑料传送门 she participated in the Scholars Program of the Southwest Georgia Area Health Education Center, a community-driven nonprofit seeking to increase access to health care by improving the number and distribution of healthcare providers in 38 counties. This offered hands-on training and the opportunity to work with students in other health professions, as well as increasing her professional contacts. 鈥 Julia will begin her residency as an internal medicine physician at Archbold Hospital in Thomasville, Georgia, which is just 20 miles south of Moultrie and not far from Tifton. Where residency training takes place is where physicians are more likely to stay. 鈥 Julia is exactly the kind of student we were looking for. She鈥檚 South Georgia bred, and when she鈥檚 speaking with patients here, these are the people who helped raise her, the community she grew up within. Patients know she understands their experiences.鈥

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As told by Pat Lannutti, DO '71, MSc, Professor and Chair, Division of General Internal Medicine

Legendary 黑料传送门 faculty member Nicholas C. Pedano, DO '61, FACOS鈥漀ick Pedano was my guide and counselor鈥攁nd also my cousin. My grandmother was a Pedano. 鈥 When I decided I wanted to go to 黑料传送门, Nick wrote a letter for me. Later, when I had a little trouble with anatomy, Nick talked to his close friend Angus Cathie [then chair of the department]. 鈥ick wanted me to be a surgeon, even though I said, 鈥楴ick, I鈥檓 not good with my hands.鈥 鈥 I remember one case, the second operation was 12 hours. I鈥檓 short, so I had to stand on a stool, and I said, 鈥楳aybe it鈥檚 better if I pass out.鈥 After it was over and we were taking the gloves off, I said, 鈥楥uz, this is not for me.鈥 He said, 鈥楢ll right. You鈥檙e going to go into internal medicine.鈥 鈥 Nick could order you to do something and you did it, and then鈥 鈥榃ait a minute, what am I doing?鈥 鈥 The whole family had a commanding presence. Surgeons have to be commanding, and they have to give orders, but they get away with more if the iron fist has a velvet glove. 鈥 There were two parts of Nick鈥檚 personality. He was friendly, and he was bossy鈥攂ut he had a nice way about him. 鈥 He had a house down the shore in Margate, right by the ocean, and he would have a party every year for the interns and for the residents, a beautiful affair. He would wine and dine them because he appreciated what they did for him. And he developed relationships all the way up the line. That was the social Nick. In the operating room, he took no hostages, because he had to get things done the way he wanted them done. 鈥 As chairman of surgery, Nick led the way to the growth of 黑料传送门 by example. He had a massive service, with tons of patients. He went all over the place to nurture family doctors. 鈥 The people who worked with him were indefatigable and inextinguishable. The College is to a large degree where it is because of his absolutely brilliant energy. 鈥 From Nick, I saw that leadership is not totally dictatorial or totally social. It鈥檚 a good mixture of both. So I try to achieve that balance with my house staff. Yes, we work hard. When it comes time for me to be the boss, they look at me as the boss. But then I鈥檒l say, 鈥極kay, it鈥檚 five o鈥檆lock, let鈥檚 go over to the Hilton.鈥欌夆

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As told by Danielle Ward, DO 鈥18

Ashley Roxanne Peterson, DO 鈥19鈥漌hen I began medical school at 黑料传送门 Georgia, I wasn鈥檛 sure what to expect. I was starting on a new journey, in fulfillment of a lifelong dream鈥攊n a new state, in a new city, at a new school, surrounded by new people I did not know. When I met Dr. Peterson, whom I affectionately refer to as Roxy, I knew I had found my person. We connected during orientation week, and while I didn鈥檛 know her age, I was immediately drawn to her ambition, sweet demeanor, and thirst to make waves in the world of medicine. We became friends, and I realized just how phenomenal Roxy was and is. 鈥 Through the years, we worked together in various leadership positions, and I enjoyed watching her grow into an amazing leader. She not only became my little sister, but she was more like a big sister to my own daughter. It was because of Roxy that I was able to be the best version of myself as a single mother and medical student. She often spent her free time watching my daughter so that I could succeed. 鈥 You wouldn鈥檛 have known it from her ability to command the attention of a room or from the invaluable wisdom she imparted to her peers, but Roxy was only 19 when she began medical school. She was among the youngest to graduate from osteopathic medical school when she obtained her degree from 黑料传送门 Georgia at the age of 24. She then went on to complete her family medicine residency at Morehouse School of Medicine. She wasn鈥檛 in residency long when she received the Morehouse School of Medicine inaugural Top 10 Under 40 award, and I remember crying happy tears as I sat in attendance for her recognition at the Atlanta Black 40 Under 40 awards. I was so proud. (Did I mention while doing all of this she also formed excellent content and engaged in interviews for her podcast and ran a clothing business?) 鈥 Today she is board-certified in family medicine and is practicing in a geriatrics clinic. She is married to another wonderful physician; I was blessed to witness their union and continued love. 鈥 Roxy is a true portrait of resilience, grace and what it means to make her family proud. She often speaks about being inspired by her enslaved ancestors and family members who were unwilling participants in the Tuskegee Airmen Study. Roxy inspires me daily.鈥

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As told by Ruth Thornton, PhD, Professor Emerita

JoAnne Pieringer, PhD鈥漌hen I started teaching at 黑料传送门, I listened to tapes that students had made of JoAnne鈥檚 lectures. It was so easy to follow her. JoAnne was a very good teacher. 鈥 She always had a smile. I remember giving one lecture when I had just started teaching. Those lecture rooms are huge, holding about 270 people. And there she was in the audience, near the front. At one point when I looked up, she had the best smile on her face. It was such a wonderful thing to see. 鈥 JoAnne was probably about five foot four or five, with short, straight hair and looked like she would be no-nonsense. And in some cases she was; she was a strong woman. But really, she was just fun. She never got frustrated with me, with students, with anybody. Students loved her! 鈥 When JoAnne met Barbara [now Dr. Thornton鈥檚 spouse] and me, we were a couple. We remember going to events and how welcoming she was of both of us. She was always interested in people. 鈥 JoAnne鈥檚 field was lipids鈥攕o was her husband鈥檚 [Ronald Pieringer, PhD, was Dr. Thornton鈥檚 professor when she was a doctoral student at Temple University]鈥攁nd that鈥檚 not my favorite subject. So she and I complemented each other intellectually. 鈥 JoAnne had her own research. But when Dr. Mochan [Eugene Mochan, PhD, DO 鈥77, then department chair] was there, he had a particular research project in molecular biology he wanted the department to do. JoAnne was able to shift gears on this ongoing project. She was a kind of gung-ho type of person: 鈥業鈥檓 just going to jump in here, and I鈥檓 going to do it. And I鈥檓 going to enjoy it.鈥欌 I became the chair of the department after Dr. Mochan stepped down. I found that a lot of my ideas about how to approach students and how to manage people had come from JoAnne. We only overlapped for perhaps two years before she passed away, and I didn鈥檛 realize at the time how much I was getting from her. There was no expectation of her being my mentor; it just happened. 鈥hen she died, Dr. Mochan, Dr. Ruth Borghaei and I set up a scholarship fund in JoAnne鈥檚 name, along with a brick laid in the Donor Garden outside Evans Hall.鈥

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As told by George McCloskey, PhD, Professor, School Psychology, 黑料传送门

David Michael Poponi, PsyD 鈥09鈥淭here were 17 students in Dave鈥檚 cohort who attended all the classes in the program together and then went on to complete their internships and dissertations. They were a very tight group, and I think Dave was one of the biggest reasons for that. He has a terrific sense of humor; he鈥檚 very positive and open, and the other students warmed up to him quickly. Dave asked excellent questions in class, but he would also make some very funny comments. 鈥 I got to know Dave much better when I served on his dissertation committee. And again, he always had an open mind, a positive attitude, and a willingness to dig in and do what needed to be done. 鈥 After Dave received his degree, he was recruited as one of the adjuncts to teach for us. He was also invited to serve on the 鈥攖o represent our graduate programs. 鈥 Dave loves to teach. He was a positive influence on all of our students, and he has that history of the place that he carries with him and that sets the tone. He knew what we wanted to do for our students and what we had to do to help them be successful. And he had such great experience in the field that he could share with others鈥攖hat ability to teach through example, and have open dialogues with individuals. 鈥 David was always open and willing to listen to other people鈥檚 perspectives and points of view. You just knew that he was on your side, trying to help you get through the program. The students are almost all working full time and coming to school at night; many are raising families too. That鈥檚 a really hard mix, and having gone through it himself, Dave understood that quite well. The great thing about the students in our program is that they鈥檙e always willing to act on feedback, always willing to improve on their performance. And Dave embraced that and carried it forward for us.鈥

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As told by Abigail H. Faerber, DO

Ruth E. Purdy, DO 鈥50鈥漌hen I was a little girl in Columbus, Ohio, my father was head of the Radiology Department at Doctors Hospital. I rode with him to the hospital, and the school bus picked me up at the emergency entrance. So I stood there in the hall looking at the window, waiting for the school bus. Dr. Purdy would come by and say hello to me. She was the first woman physician I knew [and the first at Doctors Hospital鈥攁 woman who would successfully lobby for the first ICU unit in the state.] 鈥 She and my father got along very well. Once, Dr. Purdy鈥檚 Mercedes was making some sort of a noise, and my father said he鈥檇 trade cars with her for two days and figure out what it was. But the next day she gave his back. She鈥檇 been driving on US Highway 33. My father was the chief of the volunteer fire department, and she had somehow flipped the switch in his car that turned the horn into a siren and lights. 鈥 I had been a geologist, and when I decided to go to medical school I could really count on my fingers the number of people who thought that was a good idea. But fortunately my husband [George O. Faerber, DO 鈥61] was on that list, and Dr. Purdy was too. 鈥 When I graduated from medical school, she sent me a card that said, 鈥楥ongratulations on your degree. Now that you鈥檙e done with your academic work, you鈥檒l have to work harder, be smarter. 鈥 鈥 Inside it said, 鈥楤ut being a woman like you, that won鈥檛 be hard.鈥 鈥 I did my training after medical school at Doctors Hospital. She and another woman internist said essentially the same thing to me: I could run something past them with no worry that they were going to say, 鈥榃hat do you mean?鈥 . 鈥 Dr. Purdy was a reserved person, but she was friendly and warm. She cared for her patients, and she cared for her friends. 鈥 Later on, Dr. Purdy and I shared offices. I was in her office, right at the hospital, one morning a week, with her staff, and one morning a week she was in my office, in an urban area with marvelous parking, with my staff. We didn鈥檛 have any financial arrangement. We had a woman鈥檚 handshake on it. That arrangement lasted over a decade, until I sold my practice.鈥

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As told by Robert DiTomasso, PhD, ABPP, Professor, School of Professional and Applied Psychology, 黑料传送门

Harvey and Maddy Rovinsky鈥淎rt Freeman, my late predecessor and mentor, who brought me to 黑料传送门, had a vision for psychology that included not only high-quality education and training but giving back by offering continuing education to practitioners in the community. The department had a program that had been called the Friday Night Speaker Series. But when it became the Rovinsky Family Endowed Lectureship, we were off and running. 鈥 Licensing boards require the completion of continuing education courses in order to maintain your license for practice in the field. In Pennsylvania, for example, they require 30 credits every two years. 鈥 What the Rovinskys have helped us do is fulfill our mission, which was to provide high-quality continuing education in the cognitive behavior therapy realm focusing on serving the underserved through the use of empirically based approaches and with an emphasis on individual and cultural diversity. It鈥檚 also an opportunity for our students to attend as a way of beginning a journey of lifelong learning, a requirement that is so essential to being a mental health practitioner in psychology and counseling. So the contributions the Rovinskys have made are actually contributing to high-quality care through the therapists that get trained in the programs that we offer. . . . There are four lectures scheduled this spring, some of them live webinars. These lectures are amenable to virtual presentations as long as there鈥檚 a live interactive component. So another byproduct of the program is that it鈥檚 a way for people to get to know 黑料传送门. 鈥 The Rovinskys鈥 daughter, Julia, graduated from 黑料传送门 with a PsyD degree in 2010. They have good hearts, and they were looking for a way to give back.鈥

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As told by Pamela J. Ruoff, MS, Senior Manager of Alumni Special Services, 黑料传送门

M. Kimberly Rupert, PhD鈥淲hen the Physician Assistant Studies program began at 黑料传送门鈥攖he first class entered in 1998 and graduated in 2000鈥攊t was one of our first graduate programs besides the DO. We were heading into unchartered waters, and Kimberly and her mother Sara, who was a 1933 graduate of 黑料传送门鈥檚 nursing program, had contacted us about wanting to do something for the College. Sara had always appreciated her nursing education. And since the nursing school had been discontinued in 1960, they thought the PA program might be a good match for them. 鈥 Kimberly and her mother were a shining light on the PA program. Through their interest, they gave it validity and made it important. And their level of support has been unmatched. Initially they endowed a Student Humanitarian Award and a Physician Assistant Scholarship. 鈥 At our Centennial Ball in 1999 to celebrate 黑料传送门鈥檚 100th anniversary, they were there supporting the College. Their physical presence as well as their financial support showcased how important the PA program was to them. 鈥 Kimberly would bring her mother to campus all the time, even when it was a two-and-a-half hour drive from Shippensburg. They came to the Graduate Programs Commencement and for dinner dances. They came to the White Coat ceremony for the PAs; they endowed a fund to provide all those coats, first for the Philadelphia campus and then for Georgia. 鈥 PA students have to take state exams in the fall after they graduate. There are two prep books, and they鈥檙e very expensive. Kimberly made a gift of them to each student when they graduated. You鈥檙e loaded with debt and now have to pay a couple hundred dollars to pass this exam, so this was another way to support the students. 鈥 Sara died in 2008, but Kimberly has been steadfast in her involvement. She has a quiet type of strength鈥攕he doesn鈥檛 talk a lot about herself鈥攁nd her devotion to her mother is and was amazing. They were on the same wavelength. 鈥 I am very grateful to the Rupert family.鈥

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As told by Michelle Hobson, DO 鈥80, clinical assistant professor, Department of Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine, 黑料传送门

Ida C. Schmidt, DO 鈥35, FACGP, FAAO鈥滻 worked with Ida Schmidt one day a week for almost the last 10 years of her life. I had a wonderful experience with her. When I started in the [OMM] lab in 1999, she was in her late eighties鈥攎y senior in many respects. But she had a gift of making you feel comfortable and relating to you on your level. And she really had a desire to teach you what you needed to do with the techniques. That put me at ease. And then I was able to relate in the same way to my students. 鈥 We had an event called Evening with the Stars, modeled after the event at the American Academy of Osteopathy convocation. You get to hear from the more senior, more experienced clinicians on how they would treat certain problems. That night we were doing foot and ankle. Ida was just super鈥攙ery comfortable doing her treatment as well as explaining it to us at the same time. It was second nature to her, as if she were breathing. So it was wonderful to watch how skilled she was, and yet you knew how almost effortless it seemed for her. 鈥 She was seated in her motorized chair, but she was such a pro by then that it didn鈥檛 matter. She knew how to make it work to her best advantage. She had started in osteopathic medicine before there was widespread use of antibiotics, so this was her go-to treatment to make sure that everything was working and aligned as it should be, in order for the body to heal. 鈥 The teaching always invigorated her. She looked forward to coming in. She took her accreditation exam from the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians when she was about 90. You didn鈥檛 need to do that to teach. This was for her own edification. 鈥 She was a very charming woman, very gentle, informal and warm. She was unassuming鈥攏o pretensions. I was so blessed to know her and to learn from her.鈥

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As told by Daniel Parenti, DO 鈥87, FCCP, FACOI, chair and professor, internal medicine, and program director, internal medicine residency, 黑料传送门

John P. Simelaro, DO 鈥71, FCCP, FACOI, 2007 recipient of the O. J. Snyder Memorial Medal鈥滼ohn and I were together for a very long time. I first met John as a medical student through his academic courses and lectures and on his pulmonary service. He also taught me during my internship at Metropolitan Hospital. I went into practice with him in 1995, and we worked together until his retirement in 2018. 鈥 John was an exceptional clinician and a tireless advocate for compassionate patient care. He was also a jokester. He liked to laugh. He had an uncanny ability to connect with people鈥all people at all times. His patients loved him; they would travel great distances to be seen by him. 鈥 He was a beloved teacher. Throughout his career he taught thousands of students, interns and residents. They genuinely adored him鈥攁nd he endearingly referred to them as his 鈥渒ids.鈥 Year after year, he鈥檇 be honored with distinguished teaching awards. 鈥 John was a natural presenter. He had a strong stage presence when he lectured in his field of pulmonary medicine and critical care. He often said that teaching and entertaining are the same thing. 鈥 If you met John, he was the kind of person that you would remember. One time I was at a medical conference in Chicago when a fellow physician saw on my nametag that I was from Philadelphia. 鈥楧o you know Dr. Simelaro?鈥 he asked excitedly. It turned out the physician had attended a lecture by John at a previous conference, and had come back to the current conference in the hope of reconnecting with John. 鈥 John was one of the first pulmonologists to use biologic therapies for patients with asthma. He worked with pharmaceutical companies as they were developing some of these drugs. These monthly injections help people to better control their asthma. He was an expert in using this form of therapy, enabling many of his patients to live better lives. 鈥 John, Mike [Michael A. Venditto, DO 鈥77] and I had a three-person pulmonary practice on City Avenue and in South Philadelphia. It was a small community-type practice. I enjoyed working with John because he was such an outstanding, hardworking physician. He would never ask you to do something he wouldn鈥檛 do himself; he was the kind of partner you want to practice medicine with. He will always be my mentor and friend.鈥

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As told by Alisa Toney, Senior Director of Development, 黑料传送门 Georgia

Clyde and Sandra Strickland鈥淐lyde likes to say that he and Sandra are an open book; what you see is what you get. They are both originally from North Carolina. They love Gwinnett County, they love family; they love God first. They鈥檙e what my great-grandmother would call the salt of the earth鈥攋ust good people. 鈥 Clyde pulled himself up by his own bootstraps. At one point he collected mounds of dirt, and drove out of town to sell them for $5 a load. He realized he could sell four or five loads before he went to his job and make more money than he did from that job, which paid $1.78 an hour. That story stuck with me. When Clyde tells you these stories, you鈥檝e just got to listen, because if you don鈥檛, you will miss something. 鈥 Sandra and Clyde are equally yoked. They have two different skill sets, but I feel that they鈥檙e both primary in their relationship鈥攕trong complements to one another. Sandra likes to call herself a city girl, because in the area of North Carolina where they grew up, she was more in the city. She has the same commitment to God and faith and family, the same commitment to hard work. I would guess that they have not made a major decision one without the other. 鈥 Their name is on everything in this community. We know about the gifts to the hospital, the football field at a local high school, the main stage at a local theater, and their support of community non-profits and education. 鈥 When they made their gift to 黑料传送门, the Clyde and Sandra Strickland Endowed Doctoral Scholarship Fund to support students at 黑料传送门 Georgia, Sandra called me on my personal phone to tell me herself. 鈥楾his is what Clyde and I prayed about,鈥 she said, 鈥榓nd this is what we鈥檝e decided, and I wanted to be the one to tell you.鈥 . . . Sandra and Clyde give over and over again, but they give of their time and their talents as well. They have sat on numerous boards and have been community volunteers for years. Sandra puts together baskets every holiday season and delivers them herself. Both being 80 years old or more, Sandra jokes, 鈥榃e can鈥檛 fold the tables, but can buy the paint.鈥 Their giving has touched the lives of many and reaches beyond Gwinnett County.鈥

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As told by J. Peter Tilley, DO, MSe (Rad.), FAOCR, former president, 黑料传送门

Alice Aline Swift, DO 鈥34, MSc (Ost.)鈥滵r. Swift was a long-term member of the Radiology Department at 黑料传送门 [retired as vice chairman of the department]. I was a resident, and she was one of my mentors. She was a very organized person and believed that if you conducted procedures in an orderly fashion, you would be rewarded with good, accurate outcomes. 鈥 On one occasion, I was attempting to do a barium enema鈥攊ntroduce barium into the patient鈥檚 colon. It was a catastrophe. The barium was not in the patient鈥檚 colon. It was on the patient, on me, on the table, on the floor, on the technician. I had failed in a dramatic and humiliating way. I remember that exam to this day. . . . Dr. Swift looked into the room and said, 鈥楥an I give you a hand?鈥欌 I said a grateful 鈥榊es.鈥 She helped clean up the mess, and we started again. She established a quietly competent atmosphere, and we successfully completed the exam. I expected a sharp critique, but she said, 鈥業 know you know how to do this exam, and you had a bad day. There will be bad days.鈥 鈥 I joined the department after I completed my residency training. She knew when to be critical and when to be just human and supportive. She showed me how to treat the people I was training. 鈥 Dr. Swift was a formal person 99 percent of the time. You knew that there was more to her, but you didn鈥檛 get a look at it very often. 鈥 She did the mammography at the hospital and didn鈥檛 have a lot of time for other things. But I knew that I could go to her and say, 鈥楲ook, I鈥檓 in a conundrum with this particular case. I just don鈥檛 know which way to go.鈥 As a radiologist, you want to be careful not to give people reasons to do a tremendous amount of additional studies that don鈥檛 go anywhere. On the other hand, you don鈥檛 want to overlook anything. Dr. Swift was really good at that. I could count on her.鈥

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As told by Ronald R. Blanck, DO 鈥67, MACP, LTG USA (Ret)

Marina N. Vernalis, DO 鈥77, FACC, Col. MC USA (Ret)鈥滻 met Marina in the mid to late seventies when I started as an attending at National Naval Medical Center, as well as continuing my attending work at Walter Reed. She was one of my first residents, and she impressed me from day one with the clarity and completeness of her presentations. I was thrilled to learn that she was a fellow 黑料传送门 graduate [one of 14 women in her class of 275]. 鈥 At some point after her residency and after her first Navy assignment鈥攕he had a Navy health professions scholarship鈥擬arina decided to come over to the Army, for a variety of reasons. She was on staff at Walter Reed. By then I had gone to the assignments branch, so I kept running into her and seeing her progress. Things were not easy in those days, I鈥檒l tell you quite frankly, for a woman, particularly in cardiology, and there was skepticism about noninvasive cardiology, which was her area. Cardiac ultrasound and all the imaging wasn鈥檛 nearly as sophisticated then as it is today. She did very well, and assumed greater and greater leadership positions. 鈥 Some years later, when I was commander of Walter Reed Medical Center North Atlantic Region Medical Command, again she was one of the people I counted on to provide the leadership, ultimately as chief of Cardiology Services. Marina had the background of being an outstanding clinician and teacher who was also involved in research. 鈥 Upon her retirement from the Army she went to the Integrative Cardiac Health Project at what was then Walter Reed Army Medical Center. It put together education, patient care, and research in a single integrative program. 鈥 Marina has it all. She鈥檚 the complete physician鈥攕he provides superb patient care, she has exceptional communication skills. But then she鈥檚 taken it further, to do what many physicians try to do鈥攖hough not all do it as well as Marina鈥攁nd that is teach. Along with the research skills, the administrative experience鈥攖hey all combine in making her a superb leader.鈥

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As told by Stephen Castellano, MBA, Chief Practice Operations Officer, 黑料传送门

鈥淭he W.W. Smith Charitable Trust has been a vital partner in our Healthcare Centers鈥 mission to provide high-quality, compassionate care to vulnerable patient populations with particular attention to social determinants of health. Thanks to the foundation, over $27,000 was earmarked this past year for this cause. The funds allowed us to redouble on our commitment to onsite food pantries at our Centers at , and , providing nourishment for some 5,000 individuals. Nearly 16 percent of Philadelphians鈥攁lmost 250,000 people鈥 experience food insecurity. Access to healthy food varies widely by race and neighborhood. For many of our patient populations, our partnership with the W.W. Smith Charitable Trust is a critical lifeline to nutritious food. It also embodies our osteopathic philosophy of caring for the whole person and addressing root causes, not just symptoms.鈥

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As told by Patience A. Mason, MEd, Chief Student Affairs Officer

Courtney Arianne Washington, DO 鈥17鈥淐ourtney鈥檚 always been very engaging, very determined鈥攍aser-focused. You knew that she was going to be successful, not because things were going to come easy for her but because she was disciplined, thoughtful, and intentional about her future goals, what her plan was. From that perspective, she always stood out to me. 鈥 Courtney was fun, too. She never let anything get her down. She鈥檚 a strong personality who鈥檚 going to fight for what she believes is right. She had her shares of ups and downs, but you couldn鈥檛 keep her down. Some people may have a setback, and they allow that to dictate where they go in life. Courtney鈥檚 reaction was to say: okay, let me figure out a different way of achieving my goals. You take lemons, and you make lemonade. 鈥 Courtney supported herself financially since a fairly young age. One summer she was in a clinical research program at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, which she described as a phenomenal experience. She was seeking not only to enhance her clinical knowledge but also to earn income. I think it makes you a little bit more compassionate when you understand the extra effort that it takes to be able to survive and succeed when you have some things against you. 鈥 A few years ago, Courtney started a primary care clinic, Fleur-De-Lis, in New Orleans, and she makes it a priority to do community outreach. Now Fleur-De-Lis also has an aesthetics practice鈥攕kincare, Botox, and fillers. Courtney had been interested in dermatology, and she was creative about her professional path, keeping the focus on whole-person, preventative care. That鈥檚 what I鈥檝e seen in her from day one. It鈥檚 a special person that can say, I鈥檓 not going to be sidetracked by these obstacles, because at the end of the day this is where I want to be.鈥

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As told by Sanford A. Gordon, DO 鈥60, President, WAPA

鈥淭he mission of the West Allegheny Physicians Association (WAPA) is to support osteopathic education in Western Pennsylvania. We provide funds to help establish key partnerships between osteopathic medical schools in the Commonwealth and organizations that understand and value osteopathic practice. Fellow 黑料传送门 alumnus Bern J. Bernacki, DO 鈥81, and I were pleased to partner with 黑料传送门 to utilize WAPA funds to establish a new Core Clinical Campus (CCC) at Indiana Regional Medical Center in Indiana, Pennsylvania. CCCs ensure that third-year medical students can perform all of their clerkship rotations at one hospital site. We wish to acknowledge our personal gratitude to 黑料传送门 for their support, direction and dedication to bringing more physicians to an area that is in need of quality patient care.鈥

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As told by Caroline Veronica Ruiz (DO 鈥26)

Harold F. White, DO 鈥61鈥滵r. White was a family doctor who practiced osteopathic medicine in my hometown, Lancaster City, Pennsylvania, for 50 years. My mom came to the United States when she was eight years old, and Dr. White was her first doctor here. He ended up being the primary doctor for three generations of my family. 鈥 He understood the struggle of poverty and empathized with my grandma, who was raising three children in a new city. No matter where you were, or the time of day, if you needed Dr. White, he was there. He even did house calls. He didn鈥檛 care where you were from. He didn鈥檛 care how much money you had or if you had insurance. 鈥 Later in life, Mom had some serious back issues, and Dr. White was the first doctor to treat her with osteopathic manipulation. She had very severe spinal herniations, and no one had ever tried this. I thought, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 going on?,鈥 and he explained it to me when I was a little girl. 鈥 He was very proud of what he learned from 黑料传送门. He had a 黑料传送门 poster in his office, and now his daughter is going to give that poster to me. That鈥檚 a full circle moment. 鈥 When I told him I wanted to be a doctor, he looked at me. Then he grabbed a little piece of scrap paper, and he wrote something鈥擨 remember 鈥榖iology, pre-medicine鈥欌攁nd he handed it to me. He said, 鈥楧o this, and you鈥檙e going to be successful. And don鈥檛 let anyone tell you no.鈥 And that stuck with me. 鈥 Not only was I a first-generation college student, but now I鈥檓 a first-generation osteopathic medical student because of his guidance and faith in me. He was always asking me, 鈥楬ow are those grades? If they鈥檙e not an ace, I don鈥檛 want to know!鈥 He had a sense of humor. 鈥楢n 89? That鈥檚 not good enough! You鈥檝e got to get a 90.鈥 鈥 Dr. White used to tell patients to believe in themselves, to advocate for themselves. He was a true osteopathic physician in that he saw beyond the symptoms. He saw the whole person, and not just the person, but the family. And not only the family, but the future for the family. That鈥檚 something I take very personally. I plan to follow in Dr. White鈥檚 footsteps as a family doctor and look forward to serving the same populations with such a giving heart as he did. Today, I am a mentor for high schoolers and pre-meds, and in that way, I鈥檓 also honoring Dr. White鈥檚 memory.鈥

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黑料传送门 alum and Black female osteopathic physician Edna K. Williams, DO 1926On May 18, 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its Plessy v. Ferguson ruling, which upheld the constitutionality of racial segregation laws within the 鈥渟eparate but equal鈥 doctrine. That was the world Edna D. Kennedy had been born into just five weeks prior. As an African American, she would face challenges in a society that did not offer separate but equal opportunities into the medical profession. Not only would her race limit her access to medical schools; so, too, would her gender. Despite the odds, this native Philadelphian鈥攌nown as Edna K. Williams, DO, throughout her career鈥攚ould follow in the footsteps of Meta L. Christy, DO 1921, as 黑料传送门鈥檚 second African American alumna and a role model for the community and other Black medical professionals.

At the turn of the 20th century, the Kennedy family resided at 625 Pine Street, then an African American and immigrant neighborhood. Edna, the daughter of a laborer, was the eldest of three. By 1910, the family, including one grandmother, moved into a two-story row house in South Philadelphia. Edna attended Philadelphia High School for Girls, followed by a practical education at the Derrick Shorthand School of Philadelphia. Stenography was a reasonable career expectation for a Black woman of her times鈥攁nd, as it turned out, not a bad skill to have for taking notes as a medical student!

But before medical school came marriage, a baby, a divorce and another marriage, all between 1918 and 1920. Husband Dayton H. C. Wilson, a bellman and, in later years, a physician, spent part of their newlywed year on active duty for World War I. While he was deployed, daughter Phylomina was born. By 1920, the estranged couple was living a block apart鈥攚ith their respective parents鈥攁nd Edna Kennedy was employed as a stenographer for a fraternal society. In August 1920, she married Alphonzo L. Williams, a chauffer from the District of Columbia, and this time took her husband鈥檚 name.

Turpy, the treatment guru

As the 1920s roared, this wife and mother hunkered down for life as a medical student, matriculating at 黑料传送门鈥檚 Spring Garden Street location in 1922. Classmates came to know her as 鈥淭urpy.鈥 Comments published in the 黑料传送门 Synapsis yearbook hint at her drive and perseverance. In 1925: 鈥淲e have naught but praises for this young lady as she pioneers in this great science. She exhibits great pluck in carrying on.鈥 And, in 1926:

I see here none other than Edna Williams, hard at work over a new demonstrating machine which enables the beginner to locate lesions by a crier which says 鈥渢hat鈥檚 it鈥 or 鈥渘o, you鈥檙e wrong.鈥 Edna has tried many models, as may be seen by looking around, but this machine is no doubt 鈥渢he鈥 one.

At age 30, Dr. Williams graduated from 黑料传送门, one of 18 women and the only African American woman in her class. 

Dr. Williams started a family practice in a rented three-story row house in Philadelphia鈥檚 Brewerytown neighborhood. She also opened an office in New Jersey. She kept fees very low, particularly to make health care affordable during the Great Depression. By 1935, husband Alphonzo had returned to Washington. Dr. Williams and Phylomina relocated to 219 East Upsal Street (East Mt. Airy), where she ran her family practice that included delivering babies, sometimes in the middle of the night. Patients referred to her as 鈥渢he treatment guru.鈥

Although small in stature鈥攂arely five feet tall鈥擠r. Williams had a stool to stand on and strong therapeutic hands to perform osteopathic manipulative treatment. Valerie Griffin, who later worked with Dr. Williams at Gemedco Medical Center in Germantown, recalls how 鈥淪he surprised a lot of the 200- to 250-pound men who came for treatment and manipulation with the strength of her hands.鈥

A call to minister

While Dr. Williams healed patients physically with her hands, by 1945, she was applying her religious convictions to minister in other ways. Dr. Williams was affiliated with the Third Christian Scientist denomination as a lecturer and teacher. She orated about pathways to spiritual, mental, financial and physical health by channeling God鈥檚 healing life currents; she also discussed reincarnation. One could say she exemplified a holistic approach to medicine. Dr. Williams established a chapel on the second floor of a brownstone at 2307 North Broad Street, where she conducted free weekly lectures, sometimes four times each Sunday.

By 1949, a growing following likely led Dr. Williams to relocate her chapel to 902 Walnut Street and expand her ministry to 鈥淒r. Edna K. Williams Associates.鈥 Her program spread beyond Philadelphia to bases in Baltimore, New York, and Washington, DC, and advertisements for her lectures appeared in Pittsburgh newspapers in the mid-1950s.

In her spare time, Dr. Williams enjoyed singing, which she combined with community service. She belonged to the Western Helpers鈥 Club, which sang Christmas carols to patients at the Children鈥檚 Hospital of Philadelphia. She also performed for a Germantown flower club.

Not the retiring type

When Dr. Williams retired from private practice, she did not stay in retirement for long. William M. King, DO 鈥62, who established the Gemedco Medical Center in 1976, convinced Dr. Williams to come out of retirement to work at the community medical center. She started off working one day a week, seeing 20 to 25 patients a day. Eventually, she slowed down to one morning a week and five to six patients鈥攕till a remarkable effort given that she was approaching 90.

In 1989, Dr. Williams retired for good at age 92. That same year, 黑料传送门 established a scholarship in her name to assist minority and ethnic students. She suffered a stroke and the loss of her daughter before passing away on September 28, 1993. Ms. Griffin remembers Dr. Williams as

quiet and soft spoken, but firm, and a very warm and kind-hearted spirit. She was always willing to share her knowledge of perseverance鈥攇oing through medical school, how hard it was as a woman and a woman of color. She was very much a role model, encouraging others to keep striving and persevere.

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As told by H. William Craver III, DO '87, FACOS, Professor of Surgery; Dean and Chief Academic Officer, Osteopathic Medical Program, 黑料传送门 South Georgia

Legendary 黑料传送门 professor Daniel L. Wisely, DO, FACOS, LLD (Hon.)鈥滵aniel Wisely was a very special gentleman. He came into a profession that was often, and still sometimes is, stigmatized as being rude or blunt. But he was so open, sincere, caring. 鈥 Yes, you had to work hard. You had to always be at your best. You had to bring a hundred percent, all the time. But he also recognized the sacrifices of the profession to your personal life, to your family. 鈥 I can remember him walking around the hospital, and something might be a bit ajar, and he鈥檇 take a moment to help out housekeeping, or pause while a nurse was with a patient rather than come in with a bluster. 鈥 When I was a resident in surgery, there weren鈥檛 that many of us, and you might be unable to get any time off. He鈥檇 say, 鈥業鈥檒l cover for you. I got this. You need to go home; you鈥檝e been on for three weeks in a row.鈥欌 He was a consummate surgeon. I don鈥檛 think I ever saw him falter or sweat. He called himself a little country doctor, but his skills were just phenomenal. He had these big hands but such a subtle touch. 鈥 He was proud of all his residents and graduates, and of their successes over time. He had an ability to see not only people鈥檚 potential, but to take the next step of saying, 鈥榃hat can I do to help?鈥 鈥 He wouldn鈥檛 let you in real close to him personally; he was a quiet and private man. But you knew he really cared. 鈥 He always made the time when the time was necessary. He just seemed to know. He had a great skillset of people understanding鈥攍istening, interpreting, getting to the bottom of something, not just reacting in a moment in time. Today, you can read all the books on management, but this was another era. How did he do it? 鈥 If I鈥檓 going into a difficult situation, whether to talk to a family about a loved one who is maybe going to pass, or to have a difficult conversation about something at work, I often think about the demeanor that he drew upon. And so it鈥檚 more than 鈥榃hat would Dan do?鈥欌攐f course, we never would have called him Dan!鈥攂ut 鈥榃ithout losing himself, how did he find the space to give everyone their due, their necessary attention? What was the essence?鈥欌

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As told by Arthur J. Sesso, DO 鈥81, interim dean, osteopathic medical program; chairman, surgery, 黑料传送门

Galen S. Young, Sr., DO 鈥35, MSc (Sur), FAAO, FACOS, DSc (Hon.), former Chancellor and Chairman of the Department of Surgery鈥滵r. Young was a large figure at the podium, and he took up most of the front of the classroom with his personality. He obviously was teaching surgery, but at same time he seamlessly wove together the different disciplines to make for one medical philosophy. That impressed me quite a bit as a second-year DO student. 鈥 When I was on his service, what struck me was that he knew his patients by their first names and had treated them multiple times. That鈥檚 because he not only had a surgical practice, he had a family medicine practice鈥攈e ran both together. So he wasn鈥檛 just someone a patient encountered at the last moment of a critical phase of their disease. 鈥 I鈥檝e been involved in surgery now for almost 45 years, and I have never seen anybody have dual practices. More importantly, I have never seen anybody have their surgical residents manage both. I think the residents came to appreciate that skill later, as they went into their own practices. 鈥 I was the chairman of the surgery department when Dr. Young had to give up his scalpel. That was one of the first acts I had to perform, and I was very worried about doing it. I went into his room during his last surgery of the day. He seemed to recognize why I was there, without my having to say anything. He turned to me when the case was over; he handed me his scalpel, and he said, 鈥楬ere, you may want to put this on a plaque.鈥 鈥 Dr. Young very much believed in the people he was training, and for him it was a natural thing to hand off what he was doing to someone he had trained. He never regretted it, and that was not typical. 鈥 I operated on Dr. Young when he was close to 100 years old. He was in Florida and had a very serious health issue, but he couldn鈥檛 contemplate a non-DO working on him. And so he got on a plane, and I operated on him the next day. 鈥 To the very end, he always wanted to know how the clinics were running, and if we were getting the right people into the residency, and what cases we were doing. Even though he might not set foot on campus, he was still pulling strings, still trying to get osteopathic surgery to where he wanted it to be: the best in the nation.鈥

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As told by Carrie Collins, JD, PhD, Chief Advancement and Strategic Planning Officer, 黑料传送门

Murray Zedeck, DO 鈥62鈥淲hen I first arrived at 黑料传送门 in 2015, I met with each member of the Board of Trustees to hear their perspectives on the College. It took a fair bit of cajoling for Dr. Zedeck to agree to meet with me, but what was supposed to be a one-hour lunch turned into a three-hour meeting of kindred spirits. My absolute favorite moment was when he explained to me that 鈥榠n order for alumni to be disgruntled, they have to first be gruntled,鈥 and Dr. Zedeck wanted to be gruntled again. From that moment, Dr. Zedeck has been a mentor, guide, critic and friend to me, never one to hesitate to share his ideas and speak his mind. 鈥 Dr. Zedeck鈥檚 creativity and practicality were forged during his career as a pharmacist, then as an osteopathic family medicine physician, and finally as the founder of several community banks in South Florida. We talked at length at that first lunch, and in multiple conversations thereafter, about how frustrated we got when we saw an idea, recognized the positive impact it could have, but couldn鈥檛 get traction. I believe this is what cemented our bond: Dr. Zedeck had an idea, I recognized the positive impact of that idea, and together, we made it happen. 鈥 Incorporating humanities into medical education? Dr. Zedeck funded a lecture series for just that purpose, and I made certain that three lectures were held each year. Giving books of Scottish poetry to graduating DOs? Thanks to my colleague at the University of St. Andrews, Dr. Zedeck and I made that happen. Highlighting alumni and their passions outside of medicine? Our alumni e-newsletter now showcases someone鈥檚 avocation, thanks to Dr. Zedeck鈥檚 idea. Teaching future physicians the foundational principles of business? Dr. Zedeck, I鈥檓 still working on this one! . . . He advocates for the College, supports aspiring healthcare professionals, and works to keep his classmates from the class of 1962 in touch and informed. He recently celebrated a milestone birthday, and his family reached out to me so that 黑料传送门 could be included in the celebratory video. Over the years, I haven鈥檛 been able to make all of Dr. Zedeck鈥檚 ideas a reality, but I was never more tickled than when I received an email from him that said simply, 鈥楥arrie, I am very gruntled.鈥欌夆

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