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COVID-19 Fund to Support Faculty with Family Caregiving Responsibilities

Megan H. Bair-Merritt, MD, MSCE, professor of pediatrics, and Tuhina Neogi, MD, PhD, professor of medicine and epidemiology, have been awarded a two-year, $550,000 grant funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation through the COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists collaborative. The award was made possible through the support of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation.

The COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists provides grants for US medical schools that are evolving to strengthen policies, practices, and processes to support the research productivity and retention of early-career faculty with family caregiving responsibilities. “Caregiving challenges were magnified during the pandemic but will continue to fuel inequities for the foreseeable future,” says Bair-Merritt. “This grant will further our momentum in implementing sustainable efforts that prioritize diversity and normalize caregiving, allowing us to more effectively retain and promote exceptional early-career researchers.”

With this support, Bair-Merritt and Neogi will launch Creating and Advancing Research Equity (CARE) across BUSM. Housed within Boston University’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI), the program aims to support, advance, and retain diverse early-career physician scientists who are conducting transformational health research and balancing productivity and caregiving responsibilities by providing the career development programs and mentorship necessary to ensure success. The program will contribute to a Universitywide culture that normalizes caregiving and prioritizes gender and racial equity.

With additional support provided by departmental leadership, supplemental funding will be available for up to 17 earlycareer BUSM and BMC investigators conducting clinical research projects that may be used to support research staff such as technicians or coordinators, grant-writing, or to reduce clinical commitment to allow more time for research. In addition to receiving funding, recipients will participate in monthly peer networking meetings, coaching sessions, and appropriate CTSI and career development programs through the Faculty Development office. The BU-CTSI will also provide $5,000 vouchers to each awardee to fund additional research-related resources such as staff and supplies.

The culmination of these resources will significantly improve support available to early-career BUSM and BMC investigators with caregiving responsibilities. “CARE across BUSM strongly aligns with our institutional objectives and efforts to conduct transformational science, support caregiving, and enhance diversity and equity,” says BUMC Provost and BUSM Dean Karen Antman, MD. “This grant will complement our current and enduring commitments.” n

“Caregiving challenges were magnified during the pandemic but will continue to fuel inequities for the foreseeable future,” says Bair-Merritt. “This grant will further our momentum in implementing sustainable efforts that prioritize diversity and normalize caregiving, allowing us to more effectively retain and promote exceptional early-career researchers.”

Kathleen Berentsen Swenson Receives $1.76M to Increase Diversity in Field of Genetic Counseling

Kathleen Berentsen Swenson, MS, MPH, CGC, director of the Master’s Program in Genetic Counseling (BUGCP), will colead an initiative to increase diversity in the genetic counseling field.

She will join directors of four other genetic counseling programs in the Alliance to Increase Diversity in Genetic Counseling, a five-year, $9.5M project supported by the Warren Alpert Foundation, with $1.76M coming to BUSM.

According to the National Society of Genetic Counselors, 94 percent of genetic counselors are female and 90 percent are white. To address this issue and to educate a genetic counseling workforce that improves support for patients from underrepresented backgrounds, the alliance will expand all dimensions of diversity.

The other participating institutions are Rutgers University, Sarah Lawrence College, the University of Maryland, and the University of Pennsylvania, which will lead the initiative.

Across the five schools, 10 students will be selected yearly to receive full tuition support and a cost-of-living stipend. “There has never been funding of this magnitude for trainee scholarships in this field,” Swenson says. “The alliance will accelerate our field’s efforts to broaden the diversity and perspectives of the genetic counseling profession.” n

Renewed Funding to Improve Well-Being of Women Veterans

The Walmart and Bob Woodruff Foundations have renewed their support of work led by Tara Galovski, PhD, and Amy Street, PhD, both associate professors of psychiatry and leaders of the Women’s Health Sciences Division of the National Center for PTSD at the VA Boston Healthcare System. This is the second grant from the Bob Woodruff Foundation for the Women Veterans Network (WoVeN) and the fourth from the Walmart Foundation. Together, they have provided WoVeN with more than $1.4 million to date.

The most recent grants will continue to advance the work of WoVeN, an evidencebased, peer support network designed to target the unique needs of women veterans. Since the program’s inception in 2017, WoVeN has served more than 1,500 women.

Thanks to the current Bob Woodruff Foundation grant, WoVeN will build capacity to serve more women, through enhanced enrollment technology and training processes, both of which will increase the numbers of peer leaders and women veterans enrolled in online and in-person groups. The foundation’s support also will enable the development and implementation of alumni groups for women who have completed the core WoVeN program.

“The grant from the Bob Woodruff Foundation will help us to enroll substantially more women who are now on our waiting list of hundreds,” says Galovski, director of the Women Veterans Network. “And it will respond to the question we hear from so many women completing WoVeN groups: ‘What’s next?’ Women veterans tell us that they benefit tremendously from the support of women who have walked a similar life path and are looking for more opportunities to sustain and deepen those connections.”

The Walmart Foundation grant will address another challenge frequently faced by veterans, transitioning to a new career, by focusing on women in their last year of military service and first year of reintegration into civilian life. Also based on a peer-to-peer model, this program, BRIDGES, will match women veterans with women who are preparing to leave military service. With support from the Walmart Foundation, program leaders will refine the BRIDGES curriculum piloted in 2021 and build partnerships with veteranserving organizations such as Hire Heroes USA and others.

Women have conveyed a need for more resources as they make the enormous shift from military to civilian life. In spite of an abundance of organizations designed for veterans, it is not always easy to know where to turn,” says Street, codirector of WoVeN and BRIDGES. “With its foundation of peer support, evidence-informed programming, and vetted organizations, BRIDGES will expand on the WoVeN model and reach women earlier in their transition.” n

Honoring a Mentor Who Changed Lives

The life of Charles Michael Bliss, Sr. (MED’63, Parent MED’89), changed dramatically in 1965, when esteemed BU Professor Franz J. Ingelfinger, MD, offered him a position in the BUSM Gastroenterology Fellowship Training Program, which Ingelfinger had founded in 1945.

Bliss had just returned from a year as a medic in Vietnam, caring for injured soldiers. He had served as an intern under Ingelfinger and even saw him “for a moment,” he says, in Vietnam, where Ingelfinger was investigating the causes of diarrhea among the troops.

“When I completed my army career, I visited Dr. Ingelfinger and asked him if he had any jobs available for me,” says Bliss. “And he said, ‘Well, Mike, I’m sorry, there’s no room for your residency, but how would you like to be a gastroenterology fellow?’ I said to him, knowing full well that he knew that I knew I had no other choice, ‘Well, is gastroenterology any good?’ He answered, very seriously, ‘Well it’s always been very good to me.’ “Now, I told that story to a large group of famous gastroenterologists at an annual American Gastroenterological Association meeting in 2001 when I received a Distinguished Clinician Award. And this group of prominent docs laughed out loud. They thought it was a great story.”

Ingelfinger served as chief of the gastroenterology clinic at Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals, which later became Boston Medical Center (BMC).

“I really fell in love with gastroenterology because of him and his teachings,” says Bliss.

Ingelfinger retired from BU in 1967 to become the editor of the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine. But he still came by, says Bliss, to do grand rounds. “He was always very kind and very thoughtful, and just a wonderful man.”

In honor of his mentor, Bliss and his wife, Barbara, established a charitable gift annuity, with the remainder to go to the Franz J. Ingelfinger, MD, Professorship in Gastroenterology.

Bliss fondly recalls Ingelfinger’s gift for making clinical practice and rigorous science accessible to young doctors, and the affection he had for his fellows. “Dr. Ingelfinger used to call his fellows ‘Fingerlings,’” he laughs. “As it turned out, I was his last Fingerling.”

Bliss devoted himself to gastroenterology, completing his fellowship at BU under Robert Donaldson, MD. He served on the school’s faculty from 1970 until he fully retired, in 2006, as an associate professor of medicine, teaching his own students—as he had been taught—that care for the whole patient was paramount.

“Gastroenterology is exciting; different,” says Bliss. “You deal with many different organs: the stomach, the intestines, the liver, the pancreas. It’s hands-on, with a lot of unknowns.”

He transferred that love of discovery to his son, Charles Michael Bliss, Jr. (MED’89), who followed in his footsteps. After earning his medical degree, the younger Bliss did his internship and residency in medicine and his fellowship in gastroenterology at BMC (then Boston City Hospital). Today, he is an assistant professor of medicine at MED.

His father is proud of their legacy. “My son took over a lot of my patients when I retired,” he says. “He still tells me, ‘Oh, Mrs. Jones sends you a big hug.’”

Bliss credits long-standing traditions of BUSM culture—such as manning the front lines for the underserved and warmly supporting deans—with nurturing his exploratory spirit. “I got wonderful training from the School of Medicine and from Boston City Hospital, and all of the faculty who were there,” he says. “I wanted to repay some of that, the best way I could.” n

Barbara and Michael Bliss, MD (MED’63).

“I got wonderful training from the School of Medicine and from Boston City Hospital, and all of the faculty who were there,” Bliss says. “I wanted to repay some of that, the best way I could.”

FY21 Gifts from the Dean’s Advisory Board, Alumni, Faculty and Staff, Parents, and Friends

Scan for a complete list of BUSM’s FY21 donors.

Boston University School of Medicine is extremely grateful to be able to recognize our donors for their contributions during the past year. Their gifts have greatly helped the School of Medicine support the vitally important study and practice of medicine and research. We thank our donors for the powerful impact they have made on our school, our students, and our research.

This year, the FY21 (July 1, 2020, to June 30, 2021) BUSM donor rosters have been moved to an online format. In this issue, only the Dean’s Advisory Board and the Chester S. Keefer, MD Society are listed. For a complete list of BUSM’s FY21 donors, including all individual and foundation giving, please scan the QR code above or visit our website (bumc.bu.edu/busm/giving/who-gives/) for the full listing of all donors.

DONOR REPORT

Thank you, donors.

GIVING LEVELS:

$50,000–$99,999 Mercury members • Invitation to the spring Chester

S. Keefer, MD Society Dinner • Honorary plaque $100,000–$249,999 Bronze members • All of the previously listed benefits • Invitation to and preferred seating, when available, at select BU/BUSM events throughout the year $250,000–$499,999 Silver members • All of the previously listed benefits • Personalized tour of research/ clinical area of your choice at

BU Medical Campus $500,000–$999,999 Gold members • All of the previously listed benefits • Direct communication with the recipients of your generosity (students, faculty, researchers) $1,000,000+ Platinum members • All of the previously listed benefits • Private lunch with the Dean and other leadership of the

School of Medicine n 2021 Donor n Deceased n Class of 2021 The Chester S. Keefer, MD Society• The Chester S. Keefer, MD Society was established as a means of recognizing individuals whose personal philanthropy has helped advance the dual research and education missions of Boston University School of Medicine. The society is named in honor of Dr. Chester S. Keefer, whose foresight and determination in roles as chairman of the Department of Medicine, dean of Boston University School of Medicine, and director of the Medical Center were responsible for laying the foundation for the Boston University Medical Center. As dean of the School of Medicine, he established a tradition of cutting-edge research that continues to this day. In memory of his spirit, we honor the outstanding generosity of donors whose total contributions to the School of Medicine have reached $50,000 or more.

PLATINUM Joel J. Alpert n and Barbara W. Alpert (SPH’79) n Merwyn Bagan (MED’62, SPH’95) and Carol J. Bagan Nancy L. Bucher n Howard D. Buzzee n Shamim A. Dahod (MED’87, CGS’76,

CAS’78) and Ashraf M. Dahod n Richard H. Egdahl, MD n and Cynthia Egdahl (GRS’77) Alan Gerry and Sandra Gerry Jonathan P. Gertler (Questrom’99) and Jane R. Clark n Albert M. Ghassemian n Audrey & Martin Gruss Foundation Lewis Heafitz and Ina B. Heafitz n Stephen R. Karp (CAS’63) and Jill E. Karp Sarkis J. Kechejian (MED’63) n Stanley H. Konefal (MED’47) n and Catherine M. Konefal n Sherry M. Leventhal and Alan M. Leventhal (Hon.’09) n Inez Lopez n Frank J. Miselis (MED’45) n and Theodora T. Miselis n Carl A. Olsson (MED’63) and Mary D. Olsson n Jerome S. Serchuck and Joan S. Serchuck n Richard C. Shipley (Questrom’68,’72) n Wesley R. Skinner n and Charlotte A. Skinner n Jack N. Spivack n Christine E. Stiefel n Helen L. Tarlow n and Sherwood J. Tarlow n Diane Tauber and Laszlo N. Tauber n GOLD Norman W. Alpert and Jane D. Alpert n Karen H. Antman and Elliott Antman Nancy Baler Anita B. Barkan (CAS’46) n and Donald B. Barkan (MED’45) n George A. Finley III and Phyllis A. Finley John L. Hall II (CAS’65) and Ann T. Hall Paul F. Nace, Jr. Joelyn L. Rohman and Michael Rohman (MED ’50) n n Albert Rosenthaler and Debbie Rosenthaler n Paul Rothbaum and Jean Rothbaum n Elayne Russek Thomas J. Ryan n and Nancy T. Ryan Robert E. Schiesske (MET’78,

Questrom’82) n Andrew Yee and Mirta Yee n SILVER William Y. Au (MED’55, CAS’51) and Beverly N. Au n n Donna R. Barnard (MED’65) and Douglas E. Barnard (MED’65) n Gerald Besson (MED’50) n and Eleanore S. Besson n Mary Ann Blount and James A. Blount, Jr. Paul C. Burke and Gloria J. Burke n Helen L. Burr n and George Burr n David J. Caron and Susan M. Caron n Lin Castre and Abraham D. Gosman n Richard J. Cavell (MED’61) and Bonnie Cavell Ann C. Cea (MED’67) and Anthony Tedeschi n Aram V. Chobanian (Hon.’06) and Jasmine Chobanian n n Mary Lou Cohn and Arthur B. Wein (MED’39) n Andrew B. Crummy, Jr. (MED’55) and Elsa E. Crummy n n Elizabeth C. Dooling (MED’65) n Idea S. Fiering n Robert C. Green and Sally E. McNagny Rod F. Hochman (MED’79, CAS’79) and Nancy J. Hochman (Sargent’77,’83) Hideo H. Itabashi (MED’54, CAS’49) n and Yoko O. Itabashi n Reshma Kewalramani (MED’98, CAS’98) and Abhijit R. Kulkarni (ENG’93,’97) n Joseph J. Konefal (MED’77) and Karen G. Konefal n Lenore Larkin and Harold S. Larkin n Susan E. Leeman Douglas N. MacInnis (MED’46) n Barry M. Manuel (MED’58, CAS’54) and Patricia D. Manuel (SON’78,

Wheelock’86) n Rita Z. Mehos Steven A. Miller (MED’70, CAS’70) and Jacqueline H. Miller (CAS’70) n Joseph B. Mizgerd and Ann F. Mizgerd n n John H. Nichols, Jr. n Simon C. Parisier (MED’61) and Elaine S. Parisier n Peter E. Pochi (MED’55) n Jeffrey D. Tripp and M. Douglass Poirier (MED’76, CAS’73) n Ronald L. Ragland (MED’82) n Alexander M. Rodger n Richard D. Scott and Mary Scott n

DEAN’S ADVISORY BOARD

Erika Natalie Ebbel Angle, PhD (MED‘12,’12) n Gabriella J. Avellino, MD (MED’09,’13) John T. Avellino n Steven L. Berk, MD (MED’75) n H. Kim Bottomly, PhD n Elizabeth R. Brown, MD n Richard J. Catrambone, MD, DMD (MED’92) n Ann Christine Cea, MD (MED’67) n Harold N. Chefitz (CGS’53, COM’55) n Jane R. Clark, MD n Illaria Conti, MD, PhD Suzanne Cutler, PhD (Questrom’61) n

Shamim A. Dahod, MD (MED’87, CGS’76, CAS’78) n David R. Edelstein, MD (MED‘80) n Mary Jane R. England, MD (MED’64, Hon.’98) n Joseph S. Fastow, MD (MED’70) n

Maurice R. Ferre, MD (MED’92, CGS’81, SPH’92) n Dan R. Fishbein, MD (MED’85, CAS’85) n Jonathan P. Gertler, MD (Questrom’99) n Shahram S. Gholami, MD (MED’96) Burton P. Golub, MD (MED’65) n Lewis Heafitz n Rod F. Hochman, MD (MED‘79, CAS‘79) n Christine Spitaels Hunter, MD (MED’80, CAS’80) n Jeffrey Robert Jay, MD (CAS’83, MED’83) n Donald Martin Kaplan, MD (MED’73) n Sarkis J. Kechejian, MD (MED’63) n Reshma Kewalramani, MD (MED‘98, CAS‘98) n Sherry M. Leventhal n Douglas M. Macdonald, PhD (MED’98, GRS’92) n J. Kenneth Menges, Jr., Esq (Questrom’79) Simon C. Parisier, MD (MED’61) n Peter T. Paul (Questrom’71) n Terry R. Peel Albert Rosenthaler n Pedram Salimpour, MD (MED’96,’00) Robert William Schulze, MD (CAS’86, GRS’88,

MED’92, Questrom’17) Jerome S. Serchuck n Leslie Karen Serchuck, MD (MED’90) n Richard C. Shipley (Questrom’68,’72) n Lee Bryan Silver, MD (MED’82, CAS’82) n Rachelle L. Silver n Louis Wade Sullivan, MD (MED’58, Hon.’90) n Patricia J. Williams, MD (MED’89, CAS’84) n Emily M. Wise Shanahan, MD (MED’09) n

n FY21 Donor

New DAB Members in Italics

Lee B. Silver (MED’82, CAS’82) and Rachelle L. Silver n Louis W. Sullivan (MED’58,

Hon.’90) and E. Ginger Sullivan n Mary U. Taylor n A. Raymond Tye (Questrom’47) n Martin L. Vogel (MED’53) and Phyllis M. Vogel n Madeline Wikler and Joseph M.

Wikler n Deborah W. Wilson (GRS’72) and John Wilson n Amber Wong Arnold Wong, Jr. BRONZE Anonymous (4) n Carmela R. Abraham and Menachem E. Abraham n Winston D. Alt (MED’80) and Deborah A. Gribbon n Gerhard R. Andlinger n and Jeanne D. Andlinger Erika Ebbel Angle (MED’12) and Colin Angle n Michael L. Apuzzo (MED’65) n Edward Avedisian (CFA’59,’61) and Pamela A. Avedisian n John T. Avellino and R. Ellen

Avellino n Ruth M. Batson (Wheelock’76) n Melvin R. Berlin n and Randy L.

Berlin Jag Bhawan and Pratibha G.

Bhawan David G. Bradley and Katherine

B. Bradley Alan J. Brody n Elizabeth R. Brown n Richard J. Catrambone (MED’92) and Sophia Catrambone n Robert D. Champion and Marjorie Champion Harold N. Chefitz (COM’55,

CGS’53) and Charlotte M. Chefitz n Hsi-Pin Chen (MED’96,’96,

CAS’89, SPH’91) and Kenneth

E. Hancock (ENG’92,’01) n Yi-Chuan Ching (MED’58) and Helen Yu-Ching n n Michael J. Critelli and Joyce M.

Critelli Suzanne Cutler (Questrom’61) n Jodi Dome Linger and Nicholas T.

Linger n Paul R. Dooling n and Sandra A.

Danussi E. Elaine Erbey (Wheelock’72) Joseph S. Fastow (MED’70) and Ellen K. Fastow n Maurice R. Ferré (MED’92,

CGS’81, SPH’92) and Maria

D. Ferré n Joseph T. Ferrucci and Brenda

Ferrucci Samuel Finkielsztein and Gala

Finkielsztein Frederick L. Fox (MED’68) and

Gail P. Fox n Charles N. Freed n and Marlene

Freed Patricia L. Freysinger (SON’82) Ralph G. Ganick (MED’67,

CAS’67) and Lois B. Ganick n Shahram S. Gholami (MED’96) and Neda Gholami n Godley Family Foundation Burton P. Golub (MED’65) and Lee H. Golub n Malcolm Gordon (MED’48) and Nan Miller n Donald J. Grande (MED’73) and Elena M. Grande n Jack C. Guden n Haynes Family Foundation n Lea Highet and Ian Highet Michael F. Holick and Sally A.

Holick Jeffrey R. Jay (MED’83, CAS’83) and Mary Ellen A. Jay n Donald M. Kaplan (MED’73) and Edna E. Kaplan (COM’88) n Denise S. Katsaros (Wheelock’69) and Arthur T. Katsaros n Earl G. Kendrick, Jr. and Randy

Kendrick The Kessler Family Nasir A. Khan n Elaine B. Kirshenbaum (CAS’71,

Wheelock’72, SPH’79) n and Howard D. Kirshenbaum n Shirley P. Klein (MED’68,

CAS’68) n Rose Ann Kornfeld and Lewis F. Kornfeld, Jr. n Lawrence E. Langsam (Questrom’57) and Hannah S. Langsam Estella I. Leach n Patricia M. Leavitt (CAS’54,

MED’58) Richard S. Leghorn Ruth R. Levine n and Martin J. Levine n Henry T. Lew (MED’62) and Winifred Lew Rita E. Loos n James H. Lowell II and Susan W. Lowell The Estate of Lillian A. Luksis Jules N. Manger (CGS’66) n and Janis G. Manger n Rocco S. Marino (MED’42) n Allan P. Markin and Patricia Markin n JoAnn McGrath Robert B. Melikian (CGS’60,

CAS’62) Ruth A. Moorman (CAS’88,

Wheelock’89,’09) and Sheldon N. Simon Charles Mosesian n Peter J. Mozden (MED’53) n Carolann S. Najarian (MED’80) and K. George Najarian John Noble n and Ewa Kuligowska Wilson Nolen and Eliot Nolen Zein E. Obagi and Samar A. Obagi Paul I. Ossen (MED’43) n William Patty and Eliot Patty Louise E. Penta and P. A. Penta (MED’51) n Carol C. Pohl (MED’67) and Alan L. Pohl n Theodore Polos (MED’47) and Jean Polos Allen Questrom (Questrom’64,

Hon.’15) and Kelli Questrom (Hon.’15) n Elihu Rose and Susan W. Rose Doris M. Russell and

Robert F. Russell (MED’46) n Paulette Samowitz n The Schulze Family Charles L. Schwager (Questrom’66) and Evelyn C.

Schwager (Questrom’66) Richard Seeborg Florence Seldin and Ira L. Seldin n Leslie K. Serchuck (MED’90) n Muriel Shapiro and Arnold Shapiro n Stuart E. Siegel (MED’67, CAS’67) n John Silber (Hon.’95) n and

Kathryn U. Silber (Hon.’01) n Sumner Stone (MED’58) and Martha Skinner n Charles W. Smith and Hazel Smith n Gordon L. Snider n Edward Spindell (MED’53) n and Judith K. Spindell Eliot B. Stewart and John M. Stewart n n Elliott H. Sweetser (MED’43) n and Aileen B. Sweetser n Nevart Talanian Gloria P. Talis n and George J. Talis (MED’50) n Alfred I. Tauber and Paula Fredriksen Gerald Treece and Patricia Treece Yolande Tsampalieros and Gabriel Tsampalieros n Burton White (MED’61) and June S. White n Marcelle M. Willock (Questrom’89) n Henry R. Wolfe (MED’45) n and Grace A. Wolfe n Herbert H. Wotiz n Sam S. Wu (MED’92, CAS’87,

GRS’90, SPH’92) and Patricia

C. Tsang (MED’92, CAS’92,

GRS’92) Lawrence A. Yannuzzi (MED’64) and Julie Yannuzzi n Jeremiah O. Young (MED’62) and Beverly A. Young n Larry C. Young and Sue Young n Lily M. Young (MED’65) and John G. Johansson n The Family of Alan Ziskind n MERCURY Anonymous (2) n Lawrence D. Ackman and Ronnie Ackman Noubar B. Afeyan and Anna Afeyan Gerald Ajemian and Lucille Ajemian Dwight M. Akers (MED’53) n and Beverly R. Akers n

Max M. April (MED’85, CAS’81) and Pamela T. April (Questrom’83) Sonya Nersessian (LAW’85) and Richard K. Babayan n Steven Baker n and Shirley Baker n Elizabeth D. Barnett (MED’85) and

Suleiman N.

Mustafa-Kutana n Paul C. Barsam (STH’52) and Joyce L. Barsam Howard C. Beane (MED’57) n and Shirley

T. Beane Robert M. Beazley n John H. Bechtel (MED’50) n and Shirley F. Bechtel Franklyn D. Berry (MED’41) n David W. Bishop (MED’46) n Elsa C. Bodon (MED’41) n James F. Bopp, Jr. S. Arthur Boruchoff (MED’51) n and Anna

Silverman-Boruchoff (MED’49) n Yvonne K. Brockman and Stanley K.

Brockman (MED’55) n n Robert A. Cameron n Robert J. Carey (MED’54) n and Mary E.

Carey (Wheelock’55) Russell K. Carney and Geraldine Carney Edmond E. Charrette (MED’62) and Maria

T. Charrette n Jeremy Chess (MED’70, CAS’70) David J. Chronley (MED’74) and Marianne K. Chronley n Frank Citrone, Jr. and Carol Citrone John P. Cloherty (MED’62) n John F. Cogan, Jr. n and Mary L. Cornille (GRS’87) Alan S. Cohen (MED’52) n and Joan P. Cohen Patricia A. Connolly (MED’84) n Marian M. Cook Ronald B. Corley and Janice Corley nn Sidney Covich n Brit D’Arbeloff and Alexander V. D’Arbeloff n R. Gordon Darby nn Paul E. Dixon, Jr. and Rebecca K. Dixon n Thomas J. Dowling, Jr. (MED’81, CAS’81) and Rosemary Dowling Hilda R. Dressler (MED’34) n Carol A. Dyer and Gene Gordon (MED’46) n Alan M. Edelstein (Questrom’47, LAW’49) n and Sybil Edelstein David R. Edelstein (MED’80) and Eve L. Edelstein n Alvin N. Eden (MED’52) and Elaine R. Eden Mary Jane R. England (MED’64, Hon.’98) n Michael J. Esposito (MED’49) n Geraldine L. Feldman (MED’69, CAS’69) n Judith N. Feldman Bertha Offenbach Fineberg (MED’36) n and Nathan L. Fineberg (MED’30) n Nicholas J. Fiumara (MED’39) n Daphne H. Foster (CAS’79, Questrom’82) and Lawrence Foster Beverly R. Franklin (CAS’44) and William E.

Franklin (MED’46) n Myrna Franzblau (Wheelock’73) and Carl

Franzblau Monte Friedkin and Skeets Friedkin Ray A. Garver n and Donna L. Garver n Marion L. Gendron (PAL’26) n George E. Ghareeb (MED’62) and Nancy B. Ghareeb n Arnold Goldenberg (MED’54) and Gloria Goldenberg n Dorothy A. Gottlieb (CAS’76) and Leonard S. Gottlieb n Doris Grabosky and Jack Grabosky Ellen R. Grass n David T. Greenleaf (MED’65) and

Katherine O. Greenleaf Robert E. Griffin and Cathleen Griffin Morton S. Grossman (MET’42) n and

Sylvia Grossman n Kenneth M. Grundfast and Ruthanne Grundfast Fritz Grunebaum (Hon.’79) n Robert W. Healy (MED’67) and Bonnie M. Healy n Juan D. Hernandez Batista n and Maria A. Tavarez-De Hernandez Arnold S. Hiatt George L. Hines (MED’69, CAS’69) and Helene A. Hines (Sargent’69) n Ann S. Hintlian n and Deran Hintlian Michael G. Hirsh (MED’63) and Carol N. Hirsh n Betsy E. Horen n Arline Housman n and Herbert E. Housman n Charles Housman Edward L. Housman (Questrom’42) n and Charlotte Housman n James B. Howell (MED’65) and Marlene A. Howell Bernard L. Huang (MED’62, CAS’57) n and Ann M. Huang Richard E. Hunter (MED’44) and Minta L. Hunter David Ingall (MED’57, CAS’52, GRS’53) and Carol Ingall Patricia K. Issarescu (MED’61) n Joseph A. Izzi, Sr. and Barbara A. Izzi Peter F. Jeffries (MED’60) n and Jeanne F. Arnold (MED’61) n Clinton W. Josey, Jr. and Betty Josey n Esther B. Kahn (Wheelock’55, Hon.’86) n Charlotte A. Kaitz n and Louis L. Kaitz n Damon J. Keith n The Kibrick Family Burton I. Korelitz (MED’51) and Ann Z. Korelitz n Conan Kornetsky n Edward E. Krukonis (MED’63) and Priscilla J. Krukonis n Saul Kurlat n n Cecelia Lance n Charna C. Larkin and Alan B. Larkin n Robert E. Leach and Laurine Leach Brian Levine and Beth Levine Brigette Lonner and Joseph J. Lonner n Thomas A. MacLean (MED’64) and Colleen K. MacLean William I. Malamud (MED’54) n and Camille C. Malamud n William M. Manger and Lynn S. Manger Richard C. Marcus Stella C. Martin and Clive R. Martin Ronald P. McCaffrey and Maureen McCaffrey John F. McCahan and Kathleen B. McCahan n n Edward J. McDonald, Jr. and Catherine A. McDonald Jean E. McPhail n Robert F. Meenan (MED’72,

Questrom’89) n Daniel E. Moalli (MED’61) and Glenna M. Moalli nn Jordan Monocandilos Rodney A. Montag and Sally A. Montag Sanford R. Montag and Nancy L. Montag Thomas J. Moore and Mary C. Moore n Sunit Mukherjee (MED’89, CAS’89) and Sumeeta Mukherjee n Michael F. Mullarkey (MED’70) and Dawn Mullarkey (CAS’68) G. Vijaya Naidu Newton Family Fund Merel G. Nissenberg Dawn B. Norcia and David J. Norcia N. Stephen Ober (MED’86, CAS’82) Anne W. O’Connor and John F. O’Connor (MED’57) n Hytho H. Pantazelos (MED’63) and Peter G. Pantazelos n n Dianne M. Parrotte (MED’79, CAS’79) Edward F. Parsons (MED’65) n Jordan C. Paul and Valerie J. Paul n Lita Perkins n and John S. Perkins n Jona A. Perlmutter and Donna Perlmutter Astrid O. Peterson (MED’77, CAS’74) N. Neal Pike (LAW’37) n John I. Polk (MED’74, Wheelock’13) and

Mary C. Nugent Polk (SON’76,’77) n Helen S. Ratner and Frank Ratner (MED’47) n n Iver S. Ravin (MED’40) n Nancy E. Rice (MED’65) and Millard J. Hyland n Martin S. Rifkin (Questrom’82) and Judy A. Rifkin nn Joel A. Roffman (MED’75, CAS’72) and Nancy C. Roffman n Gerald L. Ross n Melanie Rothbaum and David Rothbaum (MED’82) n Richard A. Rudders n Stephen W. Russell (MED’55) and Gail D. Russell Ralph L. Sacco (MED’83) and Scott Dutcher n Hannah E. Sandson and John I. Sandson n Francis P. Saunders (MED’58) and Lydia M. Saunders Frank J. Schaberg, Jr. (MED’68, CAS’68) and Monica J. Schaberg (MED’68,

CAS’68) n Alan L. Schechter (MED’78) and Genevieve Schechter Harold S. Schell (MED’70) and Antoinette M. Schell n Rocco Schelzi n Herman Selinsky (MED’24) n Richard J. Shemin (MED’74, CAS’72) and Susan H. Shemin Norton L. Sherman n and Claire M. Sherman William F. Shields (MED’94, GRS’90) nn The Shooshan Family n Barry E. Sieger (MED’68) and Margarete Sieger Richard L. Simmons (MED’59) n Simon L. Strong (ENG’79, Questrom’91) and Sarah A. Strong Lois N. Talis (PAL’49) n Tony Y. Tannoury and Viviane Tannoury Stephen M. Tringale (MED’90, CAS’80,

GRS’86) n Sanford W. Udis (MED’44) n Marian A. Vita Franz Waldeck n Carl W. Walter n and Margaret H. Walter n Murray Weinstock (MED’65) and Gloria Weinstock n Sue Rosenwasser Weiss and Seymour Rosenwasser n Anthony Weldon Judith F. Wellington and Peter S. Wellington n Jerrold Wexler and Joan Wexler Robert H. Wexler n and Joanna B. Wexler n Alan Winters and Hope Winters Robert A. Witzburg (MED’77) and

Lorraine G. Witzburg (Wheelock’06) n Peak Woo (MED’78, CAS’78) n Earle G. Woodman (MED’58) n Moshe Yanai and Rachel Yanai Charles R. Young n and Marion L. Young n Frances W. Young n Barry S. Zuckerman and Pamela A. Zuckerman

HONORARY Dorothy C. Keefer (PAL’46,’48) n Ishebel K. Lyle n and Carl Lyle n

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