2015 Spring - University of Toronto Medical Alumni Association
Transcription
2015 Spring - University of Toronto Medical Alumni Association
Spring 2015 MAAMatters U n i v e r s i t y o f t o r o n t o m e d i c a l a l u m n i a s s o c i at i o n m a g a z i n e TEAM PLAYERS From pro athletes to physicians Thanks to donors • Dr. Peggy Hill lectureship to come TREASURER’S REPORT Dr. Lyndon Mascarenhas (1984) Increased donor support helps to fund important initiatives augment our support to the Medical Society with $ 25,850 in funds for both academic and non-academic initiatives. In November 2014 we inaugurated the Dr. Marguerite (Peggy) Hill (5T2) Annual Lectureship on Indigenous Health with Dr. Evan Adams as the first guest lecturer; it was a successful and inspiring event. We have maintained our commitment in 2014/15 with funding to several student-organized groups, conferences and events, including: the U of T International Health Program (UTIHP) annual health and human rights conference; the Aboriginal Health Elective (funded by the MAA’s 4T6 Memorial Fund); and a Daffydil alumni reception. We are pleased to announce that the MAA hosted its first Leadership Circle fundraising event, with a reception and luncheon in April this year. As of Feb. 28, 2015, with the guidance of Mr. Dennis Babcock of BMO Nesbitt Burns, our portfolio grew to $4,437,492, an increase of 12 per cent from 2014. Thanks to all donors for their support, as well as our volunteer board and Ruth Gillings, our administrator. DEAN’S MESSAGE Photography: Jayson Gallop Donors responded generously in 2013/2014, allowing us to help students with interest-free loans, as well as a number of student-life initiatives. Thanks to your support, we received $335,000 in mail, online and miscellaneous donations, a 36 per cent increase from 2012/2013. We also received over $46,850 in individual bequests and donations to endowed funds, a decrease from the previous year. We disbursed $90,000 in student loans, over $130,000 in awards, scholarships and grants, and were able to DR. TREVOR YOUNG Walking the talk—for ourselves and our patients Medical Alumni Association 2 MAA Matters is published by the Medical Alumni Association in co-operation with the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Medicine. Editor: Fiona Irvine-Goulet Contributors: Dr. Suan-Seh Foo, Ruth Gillings, Dr. Peter Kopplin, Julie Lafford, Dr. Lyndon Mascarenhas, Andrea Santos, Morgan Tilley, Dr. Trevor Young Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr ing 2015 cardiovascular disease, some types of cancer, osteoporosis, diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure, depression, stress and anxiety. But even for us doctors, walking the walk — literally in this case — is a hard thing to do. And because of our profession, people look to us to model healthy lifestyles. So as we put away the winter coats and bring out the shorts and sneakers this spring, let’s challenge ourselves to find ways to work regular exercise into our routines. The answer isn’t necessarily training for a marathon or Cover photo (inset): Dwayne Brown/ Canadian Medical Association Design & Art Director: Luisa De Vito ON THE COVER: (Large photo): World Rowing Champion, Jane Thornton, with her Women’s Eight Rowing team at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. L to R : Lesley Thompson-Willie, Jane Thornton, Darcy Marquardt, Buffy Williams, Romina Stefancic, Ashley Brzozowicz, Sarah Bonikowsky, Andreanne Morin, Heather Mandoli.(Inset photo): Dr. Jane Thornton (2014), member of Toronto’s 2015 PanAm/Parapan Am Athlete Advisory Council. doing one-hour weight-lifting workouts every day. Not all of us can be athletes — like Jane Thornton or any of the other exceptional athlete-physician alumni mentioned in this issue — but all of us can be active. That means making lots of little changes that add up — like taking the stairs or walking to a colleague’s desk rather than sending an email. Then, when we speak to patients about how they can make healthier choices, we can confidently do so from the authority that can only come from personal experience. For more information, please contact: Ruth Gillings, Room 3249, Medical Sciences Building, 1 King’s College Circle Toronto M5S 1A8 Tel.: (416) 978-0991 E-mail: medical.alumni@utoronto.ca Website: http://maautoronto.ca Photography: Faculty of Medicine Now that spring is finally here after a long and cold winter, many of us are excited about getting some fresh air and exercise again. For those of us with busy family and work commitments though, staying active can be a real challenge. If you feel that way, you’re not alone. According to Statistics Canada, only about 15 per cent of Canadians are getting the recommended 150 minutes of exercise per week. As physicians, we know the benefits, of course. Exercise reduces our risk of The MAA respects your privacy. We do not rent, trade or sell our mailing list. If you do not wish to receive MAA Matters, please contact us. Canadian Publications Mail Product CUSTOMER # 7022738 Contract # 41679520 Inaugural Dr. Peggy Hill lecture Dr. Evan Adams on a new model of First Nations health Dr. Evan Adams, former BC Deputy Provincial Health Officer, delivered the first Dr. Peggy Hill Lectureship on Indigenous Health “T here’s an Indian in the doctor’s lounge.” That’s what a fellow resident of Dr. Evan Adams told a hospital security guard the first day of Dr. Adams’s residency at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver. “Better get used to it,” was Dr. Adams’s response. A proud member of the Tla’amin (Sliammon) First Nation in BC, Dr. Adams related this story as part of the inaugural Dr. Marguerite (Peggy) Hill (1952) Lectureship on Indigenous Health this past November. The lectureship was established by a generous bequest from the Dr. Marguerite (Peggy) Hill estate, and supported by the MAA in partnership with the Indigenous Medical Education Office. Spearheaded by MAA vice-president, the late Dr. Don Cowan (1956), the lectureship was created to honour the barrier-breaking work of the late Dr. Marguerite (Peggy) Hill. An Order of Canada recipient, Dr. Hill was the first female chief resident at Toronto General Hospital and a pioneer in establishing a culture of compassionate, interdisciplinary, patient-centred care. Dr. Adams’s lecture touched on many aspects of indigenous health care, weaving his personal story—he is also a playwright and an actor who starred in the 1998 indie hit movie Smoke Signals—throughout his presentation, championing aboriginal health in the BC provincial system. Until December 2014 he was BC Deputy Provincial Health Officer; he has just begun a new position as chief medical officer of the First Nations Health Authority (FNHA) in BC. Dr. Adams put to rest some myths concerning indigenous peoples’ health, noting that despite the often dismal picture we have of aboriginal poverty, housing and health status, there is also a little known middle class that doesn’t fit the stereotypes. He explained that his position as Deputy Provincial Health Officer was to monitor the health of aboriginal people. “Our job is to do more and more surveillance of aboriginal populations and react in real time,” he said. He’s proud of the BC government’s health tracking efforts, something that most other provinces don’t do, making it difficult to get a true picture of health and health care. He presented data that showed that First Nations people are not using the health M ed i cal A lum ni A s s o c ia t io n 3 “ The story of how Dr. Adams grew up on-reserve, balanced studying medicine and the arts, came into his own as a physician, and how he now is involved at a health systems level, is inspiring and encouraging.” care system as much as non-native BC residents, arguing that the notion of aboriginal people frequenting emergency rooms and clinics is wrong. “In fact, we’re staying away,” Dr. Adams said. He believes that the barriers to care, which include a mistrust of physicians and the health care system, must be broken, finding ways to encourage indigenous people to seek services. Citing a 2005 health care initiative struck by the BC provincial and federal governments and the First Nations Leadership Council, Dr. Adams talked about the Transformative Change Accord, which is intended to close the social and economic gap between First Nations and other British Columbians over a 10-year period. In this agreement, First Nations people—bolstered by Dr. Adams’s appointment—are now leaders instead of bystanders in determining their own health care needs. In 2013 the Canada Funding Agreement was created, transferring First Nations health care authority and funding from the federal government to the BC FNHA, supporting the integration of First Nations health care into provincial health services. Now the FNHA has established a new inverted model of health care that moves the emphasis from hospitals and spending resources on later-life care to a model of health promotion and prevention. “We think that’s more culturally appropriate,” Dr. Adams said, “and perhaps reflects better spending.” At the same time, other provincial ministries such as housing and education are coming together to improve the economic and social outlook of First Nations people in BC. The lecture was enthusiastically received: “[Dr. Adams’s] story of how he grew up on-reserve, balanced studying medicine and the arts, came into his own as a physician, and how he now is involved at a health systems level is inspiring and encouraging,” commented med student Ryan Giroux (2017). “I look to physicians like him as a model of how I can develop in my future practice.” Love what you do? Students will too! The Department of Family & Community Medicine needs community family physicians to participate in teaching medical students at U of T. In all four years of medical school, our undergraduates are exposed to enthusiastic family physicians as tutors, lecturers, seminar leaders and as supervising physicians for their pre-clerkship and clerkship courses. Teach at your office. No extra office space is needed. Varying time commitments. No teaching experience required. Share your love of Family Medicine. Be a role model. 4 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr ing 2015 Benefits As a preceptor, you: • Will have the opportunity to apply for a University of Toronto faculty appointment that includes free access to the University’s library system • May participate in further Professional Development programs offered by the DFCM Learn more at uoft.me/dfcm-undergrad Thinking by heart, painting, Hesam Noroozi Thirty-Eight and a Half, photograph, Joe George Feral Painting, Sucheta Sinha Synesthesia art show a great success! Double number of submissions from 2014 The arts are alive and well at the Faculty of Medicine. In a one-day exhibition held on March 24 in the lobby of the Medical Sciences Building, talented medical students, faculty, staff, alumni and artists from other clinical disciplines, displayed their creativity and imagination through paintings, drawings, photography, spoken word poetry and more. Congratulations to the ArtBeat team organizers and all participants! Mindfullness of the Heart, painting, Arfeen Malick 7 Cats in Different Poses, ink on paper, and copper pendant, Dr. Oxford McNeil (5T9) M ed i cal A lum ni A s s o c ia t io n 5 n hometow n in her to rn o h T Dr. Jane B in 2014 ricton, N of Frede Dr. Jane Thornton 6 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr ing 2015 Jocks to docs On the eve of Pan Am/Parapan Am Games, our alums got game What do professional athletes and physicians have in common?? Photo (INSET): The Daily Gleaner/Stephen MacGillivray Photo Photo: Dwayne Brown/Canadian Medical Association If you’re Dr. Jane Thornton (2014), Dr. Emma Robinson (2002) or Dr. Ron Taylor (1977), you might say, “plenty,” given that you left long, gruelling training sessions, a high-pressure atmosphere and huge personal satisfaction in your top-tier athletic career for, um, pretty much the same thing—but in the somewhat more sedentary medical arena. We’re just around the corner from the July/August 2015 Toronto Pan Am/Parapan Am Games, with some events being hosted at U of T, including swimming and wheelchair tennis at U of T Scarborough Campus, and field hockey and archery (among others) at the Downtown St. George campus. With the excitement building, we asked three former athletes turned physicians what it’s like to row and pitch your way into medicine. Dr. Jane Thornton Sports cred:: A 2006 World Rowing Champion in pairs with Darcy Marquardt and a member of eight world championship teams; fourth-place finish in the women’s eights rowing at 2008 Beijing Olympics; three-time national champion and national team member for a decade, from 2001 to 2011; eight-time national university champion. In the medical arena:: Graduated with her MD in 2014; previously received BSc in kinesiology and MSc and PhD in sports medicine. Current playbook:: Doing her residency in rehabilitation medicine in Lausanne, Switzerland, currently in her foundation year in preventive medicine (part of an internal medicine specialty. She is also a member of the Pan Am/Parapan Am TO2015 Athlete Advisory Council and an athlete ambassador for Right to Play Canada. Why medicine:? “It was actually taking up rowing in high school— from being a total non-athlete—that made me understand the im- portance of a healthy lifestyle and I became interested in the science of exercise. That prompted my decision to go into kinesiology and then I did a research project with a sports medicine doctor, which I loved.” I'm passionate about. . . “Health prevention—I love learning about this and recognize that our system needs to move from reactive to more of an emphasis on prevention. Physical inactivity is the fourth greatest reason for mortality. What I saw at U of T, and it ended up being a huge opportunity, is that I didn’t have any exposure to physical activity counselling or prescription through the curriculum. I spoke to Dr. Martin Schreiber, the director of curriculum about it and he challenged me to deliver a presentation to the curriculum committee. They unanimously accepted it and I delivered the first lecture this past December to fourth–year students. It was a huge highlight for me and I think there’s a move afoot in Canada to integrate physical activity into the medicine curriculum.” M ed i cal A lum ni A s s o c ia t io n 7 Dr. Emma Robinson Sports Cred:: Dr. Emma Robinson was a bronze medalist on the women’s eights rowing team at the 2000 Sydney Olympics; silver medalist on women’s eights team at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics; gold medalist (pairs and eights) at the Head of the Charles Regatta, World Cup, Pan Am Games and World Rowing Championships; began her rowing career in 1990 at U of T while completing an undergrad science degree, subsequently winning silver at the World University Games. In the medical arena:: Graduated with her MD in 2002. 8 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr ing 2015 Emma Robinson and Alison Korn, gold medalists, Women’s Pairs, at the 1997 World Rowing Championships Current playbook:: Dr. Robinson is now a radiologist practising in Belleville, ON for Quinte Health Care. Famous for:: In 1999 at age 27, medical student and national team rower Emma Robinson had surgery to remove a cancerous thyroid. Days later she was back in training, juggling radiation treatments and surgeon’s appointments. That same season, she and partner Theresa Luke (who stepped in for the injured Alison Korn), won the pairs world rowing crown. On competing and studying at the same time:: “I took six years to complete medical school with two years off to train and compete. Through undergrad and the first two years of med school it was reasonable to do both. I could fit competitions in during the summers. You just establish what your priorities are. But then there were times when it just wasn’t physically possible to do both. You had to be in Victoria for the tryouts, for instance, so I took time off. . . .I don’t feel like I gave up anything. . . .Training was hard but it was joyful—and I loved school too.” The connection between being a professional athlete and a physician::“I think there’s an intrinsic desire and drive that’s similar in both careers. Once you have a sport that suits your physical body type and nature, it’s similar in choosing a profession that suits your personality and your goals. You want to be as good as you can be in both fields.” Dr. Ron Taylor Ron Taylor, 1969 New York Mets World Series champion Sports cred: A member of two World Series-winning baseball teams, the 1964 St. Louis Cardinals and the 1969 New York Mets, compiling a career record of 45 wins and 43 losses; 72 saves; a 3.93 earned run average and 464 strikeouts in 491 appearances, generally as a relief pitcher. During his seven innings pitched in four World Series relief appearances, he didn’t allow a single hit. He is a member of Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame. In the medical arena: After his major league career ended in his 30s, Dr. Taylor entered medical school at 34, graduating in 1977. He had his own family practice, became team physician for the Toronto Blue Jays in 1979 and helped to found the SC Cooper Sports Medicine Clinic at Mt. Sinai Hospital in Toronto, where the Dr. Ron Taylor Fellowship in Orthopedic Surgery was recently established. He retired in 2014. Fascinating fact: As a 1956 pitching prodigy in Toronto’s Leaside neighbourhood, 17-year-old Ron Taylor was recruited and signed by the Cleveland Indians. But he and his parents negotiated an unprecedented contract: he would spend the next five years missing spring training, joining the Indians’ farm team mid-season so he could finish high school and complete his degree in electrical engineering at U of T in 1961. He worked in the engineering field during the off seasons. Dr. Ron Taylor, team physician for the Toronto Blue Jays, 1992-93 World Series champions How baseball led to medicine: As part of a World Series championship team contingent that volunteered to talk to American troops stationed in Viet Nam, Dr. Taylor spoke to some of the wounded men and became interested in medicine. One of Dr. Taylor’s best friends was a surgeon and recommended he speak to the Dean of Medicine at U of T about applying, despite the fact that he was now 34. “The dean looked at my transcripts—I had very good marks from high school and my engineering degree—and he said, ‘Are these yours?’” After acing some science courses that he had not covered in his undergrad degree, Dr. Taylor was accepted into med school. From one player to another: “As a team physician for the Blue Jays, I always had a good rapport with the players. They knew I was concerned about the quality of care that they received and I always surrounded myself with skilled specialists. At that time because I was a good pitcher, I was also doing some batting practices too.” Despite that, Dr. Taylor made it a point not to talk baseball to the players. “I wanted them to see me as a chief physician and not as a washed-up baseball player.” M ed i cal A lum ni A s s o c ia t io n 9 Dr. Michael Easterbrook (L), former eye surgeon to the Toronto Maple Leafs, checks the vision of (now retired) Leaf captain, Wendel Clark Dr. Doug Richards sweating it out on his bike When your patient is a Raptor, a Blue Jay, or a Pan Am competitor . . . The Faculty of Medicine continues to have an all-star line-up of sports medicine physicians who have made breakthrough contributions to the field—as well as caring for our best-loved athletes. They follow in the footsteps of alumni like the late Dr. Robert Jackson (1956) who is credited with bringing arthroscopic surgery to the Western world, helping thousands of professional athletes continue their careers after devastating knee and shoulder injuries. Dr. Jackson also founded the Canadian Wheelchair Sport Association, sending Canada’s first team to the Paralympic Games in 1968. Another sports medicine leader, the late Dr. David MacIntosh, who completed post-graduate work and taught at the Faculty of Medicine, was one of the first orthopedic surgeons to specialize in sports medicine, working at a clinic for injured athletes at Hart House in the 1950s. Now known as the David L. MacIntosh Sport Medicine Clinic, it’s thought to be the oldest dedicated sports medicine facility in the world. The lead ophthalmologist for the Pan Am/Parapan Am Games in Toronto this summer, Dr. Michael Easterbrook (1965) has seen a lot of sports-related eye injuries in his career. His interest in sports medicine was piqued when he became the eye surgeon for the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey team in 1972, a position he held for 25 years. “I was also seeing many eye injuries in squash players in my practice,” he adds, leading to his involvement with the Survey of Sports Eye Injuries, a groundbreaking investigation of eye injuries in amateur sports. With the (late) Dr. Tom Pashby (an ophthalmologist and pioneer of hockey helmet and face protection) as his mentor, Dr. Easterbrook is passionate about preventing eye injuries in sport at both amateur and professional levels. Now he writes standards for eye injury prevention for sports, working with the Canadian Standards Association. Currently he’s working on improving the visors worn by hockey 10 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 players. “We’re still seeing eye injuries with the half-visor in pro hockey players,” he says. “We need to find out if they’re being worn correctly and if they’re large enough.” Dr. Doug Richards (1979) has been the medical director at U of T’s David L. MacIntosh Sport Medicine Clinic since 1989, so there’s no doubt he’s seen a lot of torn ACL’s in his time. He was also a team physician for the Toronto Raptors for nine years, as well as other varsity and professional teams. A biomechanist who also teaches at U of T’s Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education and whose research interests include concussion in sports, he maintains that, “A knee is a knee regardless of if it belongs to someone paid millions to run or jump on it.” A self-professed “sports nut,” joking that he went into medicine The Faculty because of his mediocre perforof Medicine mance in every sport he played, continues Dr. Richards cycles over 10,000 km per year. But in a 2013 TEDx to have an U of T talk (he was a finalist in the all star line TVO Best Lecturer contest in up of sports 2009) he asks, “Can competitive sport be a ‘healthy’ thing, or is that medicine a holy grail?” While he absolutely physicians maintains that physical activity is who have made the cornerstone of good health, he’s much less convinced that competitive breakthrough sport’s “winning at all costs” mantra contributions and prevalence of violence and injury make it a healthy activity. to the field - - 2015 class reunions Is this your reunion year? THE CLASS of 1945 celebrates its 70th anniversary on Mon., June 1, 2015, at the MAA Convocation Banquet in Hart House. Classmates are also invited to the PreConvocation Ceremony at 10 a.m. on June 2, followed by the Dean’s Luncheon in the MSB. The class is also having a private reception and dinner on Tues., June 2, at the Faculty Club, from 4 p.m. Contact Dr. Harold Kalant at harold. kalant@utoronto.ca; harold.kalant@bell.net. sharing session in the MSB lecture theatre, MS3153, from 9 a.m. – noon on Sat., May 30; and a private reception and dinner on Sat. evening at Massey College, 6 p.m., for dinner at 7 p.m. Also, the class will be invited to some events at U of T’s Spring Reunion 2015 from May 27 –31; and to the Pre-Convocation Ceremony in Convocation Hall at 10 a.m. on Tues., June 2, followed by the Dean’s Luncheon in the MSB. Contact Dr. Don Butt at donbutt@shaw.ca. Happy classmates from 0T4’s 10th reunion last year THE CLASS OF 1946 will celebrate its 69th reunion with a luncheon on Sat., May 30, 2015, at 1 p.m. at the Granite Club. Contact Dr. Bette Stephenson at 60 Forest Ridge Rd., Richmond Hill, ON L4E 3L8. THE CLASS OF 1950 celebrates its 65th anniversary at the MAA Convocation Banquet in Hart House on Mon., June 1, 2015. Classmates are also invited to the Pre-Convocation Ceremony at 10 a.m. on June 2, followed by the Dean’s Luncheon in the MSB. Contact Ruth Gillings at medical. alumni@utoronto.ca; or 416-978-0991. THE CLASS OF 1955 celebrates its 60th anniversary at the MAA Convocation Banquet in Hart House on Mon., June 1, 2015. Classmates are also invited to the Pre-Convocation Ceremony at 10 a.m. on Tues., June 2, followed by the Dean’s Luncheon in the MSB. The class will also have a private reception and lunch on Sun., May 31, at the Gallery Grill, Hart House, from 11:30 a.m. Contact Dr. Bob Ehrlich at rehrlich@sympatico.ca; or (416) 964-6018. THE CLASS OF 1960, celebrates its 55th anniversary with a reception at the Intercontinental Yorkville Hotel, from 5 – 7 p.m. on Fri., May 29; an information THE CLASS OF 1965 celebrates its 50th anniversary at the MAA Convocation Banquet in Hart House on Mon., June 1, 2015. Classmates are also invited to the Pre-Convocation Ceremony at 10 a.m. on Tues., June 2, followed by the Dean’s Luncheon in the MSB. On Sat., May 30, there will be presentations in the MSB lecture theatre MS3153, from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. The class will also enjoy a private reception and dinner on Sat., May 30, at the Intercontinental Toronto Yorkville, 6 p.m. for dinner at 7:30 p.m. Contact Drs. Mel Petersiel at petersiel@sympatico.ca; or Paul Cameron at paulcameronis@rogers.com. THE CLASS of 1970 will celebrate its 45th reunion May 29-30, 2015. Planned activities include a reception on Friday evening at Scallywags, from 7:30-10 p.m.; a continuing education and luncheon event on Sat. afternoon from 1:30 p.m.; and a reception and dinner from 5:30 p.m., all at the Granite Club. Contact Dr. Alex Hukowich at alex@hukowich.ca. THE CLASS of 1975 will celebrate its 40th reunion with a reception and dinner on Sat., June 13, 2015, at Modus Ristorante, 145 King Street W., from 6 p.m., The entire restaurant has been reserved, in anticipation of a great turnout. Contact Dr. Michael Lawrie at lawrieclan@rogers.com. THE CLASS of 1980 will celebrate its 35th reunion June 5-6, 2015, in Toronto. Activities include Friday evening cocktails at Citizen Restaurant, 522 King St. W.; and a Saturday evening reception and dinner at Malaparte at the TIFF Bell Lightbox. Tickets are $250. Space is limited for both events. Contact Dr. Nancy Down at ndown@rogers.com. THE CLASS of 1985 will celebrate its 30th reunion on Sat., Sept. 26, 2015, venue TBA. Contact Dr. Donna McRitchie at donna.mcritchie@nygh.on.ca. THE CLASS of 1990 will celebrate its 25th reunion with a reception, dinner and dance, 6 p.m. for dinner at 7 p.m., at the Faculty Club, on Sat., Sept. 26, 2015. Contact Dr. Sal Spadafora at sal.spadafora@ utoronto.ca; or Lisa Bevasqua at lisa.bevacque@utoronto.ca. THE CLASS of 1995 will celebrate its 20th anniversary with a reception and dinner on Sat., June 13, 2015, at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, 123 Queen St. W. Contact Dr. Lori Hasulo at: lhasulo@hotmail.com. THE CLASS of 2000 has decided to forego a 15th reunion in 2015, with plans for a gala 20th in 2020. Contact Dr. Marcus Law at marcus.law@utoronto.ca. THE CLASS of 2005 will celebrate its 10th reunion in 2015. Celebrations include a family picnic from 1-4 p.m. on June 13, Toronto Island picnic area. Bring your family and food to enjoy/share, and picnic games. The OT5 reunion party will be held Oct. 3-4, venue TBA. Contact Dr. Shannon Wires at shannon.wires@gmail.com. THE CLASS of 2010 is hoping to celebrate its 5th reunion in 2015, details TBA. Contact Drs. Kevin Koo at kevinkoo@gmail.com; or Ali Okhowat at ali.okhowat@gmail.com. For help in organizing reunions, contact Ruth Gillings at the MAA at (416) 978-0991 or medical.alumni@utoronto.ca. M ed i cal A l um ni A s s o c ia t io n 11 paying it forward In appreciation of 2014 MAA donors to dedicated donors, we were able to support deserving med students with interest-free loans, bursaries and awards. We were able to fund initiatives to enhance learning in and beyond the classroom, and help alumni stay connected and informed. We are profoundly grateful to the following donors for their generosity and commitment. 12 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 …after exploring my interests further I decided that general surgery was to me, the ultimate training to pursue as a physician. I feel incredibly satisfied that I am in a position to pursue this specialty, which is not only an area that I love, but that I also have an aptitude for… Dear Dr. Bill Harris and family, I am writing to extend my deepest thanks and appreciation to the Medical Alumni Association and its support from you, Dr. Bill Harris (5T8) and your family. I am honoured and privileged to be the 2014 recipient of the Barbara Hardy Memorial Medical Alumni Association Award in general surgery. I look forward to sharing my appreciation for my educational experience with future generations of medical students just as you have done with your commitment to the Medical Alumni Association…. Dr. Erin Sadler (2014) On behalf of our class, we would like to thank you for your generous contribution to our Transition to Clerkship Dinner…. This is an annual event held to celebrate the midway point in undergraduate medical education…. This year’s dinner was a great success, with over 200 students and 20 faculty members attending. The students highly appreciated Dr. Kopplin’s address. Dr. Nicole Fischer (2014) accepts the Dr. Robert Orange Memorial Award from Dr. Peter Kopplin, MAA President Sandra Huynh and Eric Yao Co-Presidents, Class of 2016 M ed i cal alum ni a s s o c ia t io n 13 leadership giving circle-Partners of the maa donations $25,000 and up Dr. Bill and Penny Harris and family Dr. Sherwood P. and Judith Gebhard Smith, to the Dr. Sherwood P. and Judith Gebhard Smith Memorial Fund donations $10,000 – $24,999 Dr. Nancy Ironside donations $5,000 – $9,999 Dr. Alexandra Berezowskyj Dr. Satyajit Ganguli, Dr. S. Nimu Ganguli and Family Medical Alumni Award in Diagnostic Medical Imaging Fund Mrs. Margaret Howe, to the Mr. John Howe MAA Legacy Scholarship in Global Health Fund Dr. John Campbell Martin donations $1,200 – $4,999 The Alex E.F.D. Macdonald Trust Dr. George Buckley Dr. Patrick Butler* Dr. Benny Chang The Late Dr. Chi-Yiu Cheung The Class of 1952 The Class of 1964 The late Dr. Donald Cowan, In memory of Dr. Barbara Hazlett (4T9) Dr. Karen Cronin* Dr. Lynn From Dr. Karin Hahn* Dr. Gerald Hart* Dr. Aaron Hong Dr. Allan Kemp* Dr. Beverly Lewis-Harris Dr. Lyndon Mascarenhas Dr. Anilkumar Menon Dr. Katherine Mirhady Dr. Robert Nugent Dr. Sophia Pantazi Dr. Gordon Robison* Dr. Donato Ruggiero Dr. Donald Sawula* Dr. Alexandra Schepansky Dr. Robert Shortreed Dr. Rajiv Singal Dr. John Srigley Dr. Taylor Statten Dr. Peter Stroz The Vancouver Foundation Dr. Helen Vosu* Dr. Catharine Whiteside* leadership giving circle-friends of the maa donations $600 – $1199 Dr. Gholam-Abbas Azadian* Dr. Peter Bentz Dr. Alberto Cannitelli* Dr. Donna Cescon Dr. Hugh Chambers Dr. Grant Chen* The Class of 1951 Dr. Deanna Colpitts* Dr. Peter Crassweller Dr. John Crawford Dr. Sheila Doyle The late Dr. John Evans Dr. Christopher Forrest Dr. Donald Gibson, To the Class of 4T6 Memorial Fund Dr. Leonard Ginsberg Dr. Ronald Grossman Dr. Donato Gugliotta* Dr. John Hall Dr. Trudy Hall Dr. Brian Higgins Dr. David Hoffman Dr. Scharley-May Horne Dr. Hilary Hui Dr. Richard Isaac Dr. James Israel Dr. Albert Kirshen Dr. Peter and Mrs. Christine Kopplin Teresa and Wes Kwasnicka, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Weldon Liu Dr.Yuen Liu Dr. Jeremy Lo* 14 Dr. Konstantin Loewig Dr. Brian Louie Dr. Sandy Lowden, In Memory of Dr. Ted Graham (5T6) Dr. William MacEachern Dr. Stuart MacLeod Dr. Milton Margulies Dr. Trisha Mark Dr. Hisashi Matsusaki Dr. Stuart McCluskey, Class of 9T4 Student Fund Dr. John McLean Dr. H. M. Rosemary Meier* Dr. Donald Miettinen Dr. Robert Myers Dr. David Naiberg Dr. Sidney Nusinowitz Dr. William Paul Dr. Paul Pitt* Dr. Brian Power Dr. David Preston Dr. Todd Bastianon Dr. Leonard Raizin Dr. Donald Ranney Dr. Karen Raymer Dr. Steven Richie Dr. Matthias Schmidt* Dr. Helen Schulz Dr. Bernard Silverman Dr.Venkatesan Sivarajan Dr. Brian Steele Dr. Thomas Tam Dr. Richard Tan, Dr. Robert P. Orange Fund Dr. Constance Townsend Dr. Mateya Trinkaus, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Berton Ung* Dr. Anne Wallace Dr. Scott Walsh Dr. Michael Ward Dr. Arthur Weinstein Dr. Hoi Wong Dr. Michael Wong Dr. Wilfred Wong Dr. Sing Wu Dr. Daniel Yim* donors up to $599 The Late Dr. Edwin Abbott Dr. James Abel Dr. Samra Abouchacra Dr. Mark Accardo Dr. Murray Acker Dr. Paul Adam Dr. Rahel Ahmed Dr. Juliann Aitchison Dr. Ryojo Akagami Dr. Carolyn Allan Dr. Edward Allen Dr. Robert Allin Dr. Doron Almagor Dr. Douglas Alton Dr. Catherine Andrew Dr. Janice Andreyko Ms. Colquhoun Anegret Dr. Jonathan Angel* Dr. Crawford Anglin Dr. Michael Aniol Dr. Robert Annis Dr.Viola Antao Dr. Mark Appelby Dr. John Aquino Dr. Arnold Arai Dr. Gerald Arbus 6T3 Reunion Fund Dr. Donald Armitage 6T3 Reunion Fund Dr. Harvey Armstrong Dr. Irene Armstrong Dr. Janice Armstrong Dr. Robin Arnold Dr. Sandra Arnold Dr. Kenneth Asselstine Dr. George Awais Dr. Bernard Awerbuck Dr. Peter Azzopardi* Dr. Robert Babchuk Dr. Mary Ann Badali Dr. Karen Baer Dr. Joseph Bailey Dr. Norma Baker* Dr. Robert Baker Dr. Kayli Balaban, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Melvyn Ball Dr. Donald Barr Dr. Peter Barreca Dr. Thomas Barrington Dr. James Bassingthwaighte Dr. Nancy Baxter Dr. Beverley Bayes Merson The Late Dr. T. Arnold Bayley Dr. E. Geoffrey Beatty Dr. Philippe Bedard Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 Julie Caron (2015) receiving the Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka 0T4 MAA Award in Inner City Health Dr. Mary Bedford-Jones Dr. Nancy Behme Dr. Christena Beintema Dr. Lindsay Belch Dr. Agostino Bellissimo Dr. Maurice Bent Dr. Norman Bier, 6T3 Reunion Fund Dr. Rajiv Bindlish Dr. David Birbrager Dr. Bruce Bird Dr. Catherine Birt Dr. Marilena Biscotti* Dr. Kirsten Blaine* Dr. Shale Blane Dr. Harvey Blankenstein Dr. Paul Blusys Dr. Thomas Bluthardt Dr. John Bohnen Dr. Michael Bonert Dr. Ian Bookman Dr. James Boone Dr. Joel Bordman Dr. Risa Bordman Dr. Elaine Borins, The Dr. Bernard Manace Fund Dr. Mel Borins Dr. Denise Bowes Dr. Branimir Brcic Dr. Louis Brenner Dr. James Bricker Dr. Earl Brightman Dr. Harold Broder Dr. Ruth Brooks Dr. Donald Brown Dr. Alfred Browne Dr. Harvey Bruner Dr. Miriam Buchstein Dr. William Buckton Dr. Ann Bugeja* Dr. Emory Burke Dr. Ronald Burkes Dr. Joseph Burkholder Dr. Timothy Burns Dr. Stephen Butler Dr. Donald Butt Dr. Arthur Cain Dr. Bruce Cameron Dr. Charles Cameron Dr. Gordon Cameron Dr. Iivi Campbell Dr. Susan Campbell*, Class of 9T4 Student Fund Dr. T. Mark Campbell*, Dr. Jonathan Cardella, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Prof. Peter Carlen Dr. Robert Carlen Dr. James Carson Dr. Stanley Cassin Dr. Alberto Castiglione* Dr. John Caverhill Dr. Majda Cerkvenik Dr. Leo Chaikof Dr. Patricia Chaikoff* Dr. Wayne Chamberlain Dr. Benjamin Chan Dr. John Chan Dr. Kwok Chan Dr. Mun Chan Dr. Steven Chan* Dr. Martin Chang Dr. Bryanne Chapman Dr. Hanif Charania Dr. J. Ewert Charters Dr. Hillary Chen Dr. Alice Cheng Dr. Hiu-Chung Cheng Dr. Martin Chepesiuk Dr. Bobby Cheung Dr. Kenneth Cheung Dr. James Chiang Dr. Anne Child Dr. Robert Chisholm Dr. Eugene Chorostecki Dr. Eva Chow Dr.Yun Yee Chow Hartford Dr. John Christensen Dr. Avram Clarfield Dr. Peter Clarke* Dr. Frederick Clinckett Dr. David Cochrane Dr. William Cochrane Dr. Brian Coggins Dr. Gerald Cohen Dr. Joanne Cohen Dr. Michael Cohen, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. William Cohoon Dr. Claire Coire* Dr. Patricia Colangelo* Dr. Aldo Colantonio Dr. Joshua Colby, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Arthur Cole Dr. Terence Colgan Dr. James Colquhoun Dr. Ruth Connelly Dr. Allan Connolly Dr. Earl Consky Dr. Douglas Cook Dr. Perry Cooper, 6T3 Reunion Fund Dr. Harvey Coopersmith Dr. Glenn Corneil Dr. Eugene Cornelius Dr. Colin Couper Dr. Marilyn Crabtree Dr. Ronald Crago Dr. Barbara Craig-Wenstrom, 6T3 Reunion Fund Dr. Robert Creighton Dr. Natascha Crispino* Dr. Donald Cruickshank Dr. William Crysdale Dr. Ann Cuddy Dr. M. Anne Curtis Dr. Judith Cutler Dr. Myron Cybulsky Dr. Roman Dale Dr. Anthony D’Angelo Dr. Edward Davies Dr. William Davies The Late Dr. George Davis Dr. Jacqueline Davis Dr. Ruth Davis Dr. John Dawson* Dr. Dorrit de Demeter Dr. John Deadman Dr. David Dec Dr. David Dellandrea Dr. Walter Delpero Dr. Sandra Demaries Dr. Helen Demshar Dr. James Deutsch Dr. George deVeber Dr. Rueben Devlin Dr. Timothy Devlin Dr. Roland Di Gregorio Dr. Ernest Dick Dr. Robert Dicker Dr. Janet Dickhout Dr. Michael Dickinson Dr. Francis Dicum Dr. D L Chris Diehl Dr. Raouf Dimitry Dr. Corinne Dixon Dr. Peter Dodek Dr. Kwame Donkor Dr. Kenneth Doyle Dr. J. David & Doris Roger Family Fund Dr. Kurt Droll Dr. John Duff Dr. Stuart Dyment Dr. Grant Eckert Dr. Gerald Edelist Dr. Gerald Edelist Dr. Neil Edwards Dr. Dalia Eino Dr. Ivan Elkan Dr. Scott Elliott Dr. Anne Engell Dr. Edward English Dr. Jonathan Ennis Dr. Jerome Epstein Dr. L. Jean Erb Dr. Andrew Evans Dr. Inara Ezers Dr. Michael Fair Dr. Joseph Falletta Dr. Michael Fan Dr. Bernard Farber Dr. Richard Farmer Dr. Ousama Fashho Dr. John Fearon Dr. Fredrick Feldman Dr. Shim Felsen Dr. Ronald Filderman Dr. John Finlay Dr. Marjorie Fish Dr. Sylvia Fishbein Dr. Pietro Flora Dr. Bernard Fogel Dr. Suan-Seh Foo Dr. Paul Forrest Dr.Vito Forte Dr. Richard Fralick Dr. Juliet Franczyk Dr. William Franks* Dr. Harvey Freedman Dr. Gordon Freeman Dr. Arnis Freiberg Dr. Richard Friedman Dr. Gordon Fyffe Dr. Steven Gallinger* Dr. Marvin Gans Dr. William Gardner Dr. Dorothy Gauld Dr. Stephen Gauthier Dr. Edwin Gaviller Dr. John Giannoccaro Dr. Louis Giavedoni Dr. Graham Gibb Dr. Barney Giblon Dr. John Gibson Dr. James Gilbert Dr. Michael Gildiner Dr. Joseph Gilmour Dr. Norman Gladstone Dr. Benjamin Glatt Dr. Ian Gliklich Dr. Jeannette Goguen Dr. Charles Gold Dr. Ronn Goldberg Dr. Gerald Goldman Dr. Mark Goldstein Dr. Susan Goldstein Ms. Pam Gollish, Dr. Irvin (Kelly) Gollish Memorial Fund (5T7) Dr. Charles Gonsalves Dr. Paul Goobie* Dr. Douglas Goodall Dr. Joseph Grader Dr. Andrew Graham Dr. Ronald Graham Dr. William Graham Dr. Maria Grande Dr. Jerry Graner* Dr. Robert Greco Dr. Michael Green Dr. Susan Greenbloom Dr. Rudy Greene Dr. Donald Greenhow Dr. Paul Greenhow Dr. Eric Grief Dr. Steven Griffin Dr. Andrea Grin* Dr. Ann Grise Dr. Lawrence Grossman Dr. Steven Grossman Dr. David Grotell Dr. Leonard Grover Dr. Gershon Growe, 6T3 Reunion Fund Dr. Richard Gruneir Dr. Cyril Gryfe Dr. John Grynoch Dr. William Guest Dr. Michael Guinness Dr. Eddie Gutman Dr. Richard Haber Dr. R. Andrew Hackett Dr. Judy Hagshi Dr. Michael Haiduk* Dr. Irene Hain Dr. Susan Haley Dr. Harry Hall* Dr. Warner Hall Dr. Edward Hambley Dr. Howard Hamer Dr. J. Richard Hamilton Dr. Arvad Hamlet Dr. Brian Hands Dr. William Hanley Dr. Stephen Hardy* Dr. John Harrington Dr. Joan Harrison The Late Dr. Barbara Hazlett, In Memory of Dr. Jack Robinson (4T9) Dr. Robert Heath Dr. Patrick Heffernan Dr. Robert Hegele Dr. Michael Heiber Dr. Karen Held Dr. Donald Henderson Dr. John Henderson Dr. Kathleen Muriel Henderson Dr. Michael Henry Dr. Karen Hershenfield Dr. Gillian Hicks* Dr. Anthony Hii Dr. John Hilditch Dr. Robert Hilliard Dr. William Hipwell Dr. Gail Hirano Dr. Holger Hirte Dr. Lai Ho Dr. John Hodgkinson* Dr. Monica Hoefert Dr. Dorothy Holness Dr. Jayna Holroyd-Leduc* Dr. Jack Holtzman Dr. Rosanna Honig Dr. Jane Hosdil Dr. Harry Hotz Dr. Bent Hougesen Dr. James Houston Dr. Patricia Houston Dr. Barbara Howe Dr. Merle Howes Dr. Jonathan Howlett Dr. Stanley Hsia Dr. Elliot Hudes Dr. David Hughes Dr. Annie Hum Dr. Anne-Marie Humniski Dr. Anita Hunt Dr. Thien Huynh Dr. Frank Ianni Dr. Christopher Ibey Dr. Margaret Ibey Dr. Edsel Ing Dr. Gregory Ip Ms. Fiona Irvine-Goulet Dr. Patricia Irwin Dr.Verner Isaak Dr. Abdel-Raouf Ismail Dr. Edward Istvan Dr. George Jablonsky Dr. Murray Jacobs Dr. Edward Jacobson* Dr. Ivan Jagas Dr. Dayanand Jagdeo Dr. Frances Jamieson Dr. Raymond Jang Dr. Elizabeth Jeney Dr. Laurence Jerry Dr. Joan Jeu Dr. Robert Johnson Dr. Elizabeth Johnston* Dr. Karen Johnston Dr. Richard Johnston Duncan & Robyn Jones Dr. John Jordan Dr. Peter Jose Dr. Robert Jost Dr. Roman Jovey Dr. Robert Joynt Dr. Fred Kahn Dr. Otto Kahn Prof. Harold Kalant Dr. Dagnija Kalnins Dr. Timothy Kam Dr. Brenda Kane Dr. Heather Karn Dr. Helen Karsai Dr. Neema Kasravi Dr. Sydney Kasten, To the Dr. Martin Berger Memorial Fund Dr. Magdi Kayal Dr. Barbara Kee Dr. Peter Keefe Dr. Shirley Kellam Dr. Alvin Kelly Dr. Irwin Keltz Dr. John Kempston Dr. Sylvia Kennedy Dr. Brian Kessel Dr. Donna Keystone* Dr. Michael Kiang Dr. John Kilgour Dr. Don Kim Dr. Charles King Dr. J. Marcus Kirby Dr. Irvin Klinghofer Dr. Gordon Ko Dr. Gerald Koffman Dr. Jerome Kopstein Dr. Stefan Kopytek Dr. Marshall Korenblum Dr. Martin Kosoy, Pediatric Endowment Fund Dr. Susan Kostovcik-Leader Dr. Nicholas Koutras Dr. Jouni Kraft Dr. Stephen Kraft Dr. Michael Kreidstein Dr. Esther Krigstein-Dostrovsky Dr. Jamie Kroft* Dr. Tamara Kruger Dr.Victor Kurdyak Dr. Barry Kurtzer Dr. Willem Kwant Dr. Paul Lai Dr. John Laidlaw Dr. Lorne Laing Dr. Desmond Lam, Class of 9T4 Student Fund Dr. Irina Lam Dr. Patrick Lam Dr. Peter Lam Dr. Bernard Langer Dr. Michael Lawrie Dr. Anne Lazenby Dr. Christie Lee, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Christina Lee Dr. Cindy Lee Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. John Lee Dr. Randolph Lee Dr. Rose Lee Dr. Sonya Lee Ms.Victoria Lee,* In honour of Dr. Philip Hebert Dr. Christopher Leighton Dr. Harriet Lennox Dr. Karen Leone* Dr. Kevin Leung Dr. Ngar-Lin Leung Dr. Richard Levy Dr. Shao-Jin Li Dr. H. Lavina Lickley Dr. Jane Liddle Dr. Jackson Lin Dr.Yulia Lin Dr. George Lindsay Dr. Irving Lipton Dr. James Little Dr. Fei-Fei Liu Dr. Peter Liu Dr. Stanley Liu Dr.Vivian Liu Dr. Abraham Lofchy Dr. Jitka Lom Dr. Luciano Lombardi The Late Dr. E. Milton Loney Dr. Elgin Loney Dr. Alan Lossing Dr. Wallace Lotto* The Late Dr. James Low Dr. Arnold Lowden Dr. David Lowe Dr. Annie Lu Dr. John Lu Dr. Grant Lum Dr. John Lundon Dr. Darlene Lunn Dr. Janis Lusis Dr. David Lynch-Salamon Dr. Doreen Macdonald Dr. Duncan MacDonald Dr. Hugh Mackay* Dr. Laura MacKinnon Dr. Roxanne MacKnight Dr. Gary Magee Dr. Jan Malat, Class of 9T4 Student Fund Dr. Garnet Maley Dr. David Malkin Dr. Oscar Mandel Dr. Pirjo Manninen Dr. Leora Marcovitz Dr. Douglas Margison Dr. Douglas Mark Dr. Frederick Mark Dr. Pamela Mark* Dr. Paul Marks Dr. Newton Markus Dr. Jaanus Marley Dr. Joseph Marotta Dr. Bryan Marshall Dr. John Marshall Dr. James Martin Dr. Paul Martin Dr. Robert Martin Dr. Robert Masih Dr. Edward Masson Dr. Anne Matlow Dr. Florian S. Matsalla Dr. Michael Matthews Dr. Frederick Matzinger Dr. Michael Maurice Dr. Lionel Mausberg Dr. Andrew Maykut Dr. Kenneth McCuaig* Dr. Patrick McDonald Dr. Donald McGillivray Dr. Brian McGrath Dr. John McIlraith Dr. William McIlroy Dr. Janet McKeown* Dr. Mary McKim Mackenzie Dr. David McKnight Dr. Carolyn McLean Dr. William McMullen Dr. Susan McNair Dr. Patricia McNama Dr. David McNeely Dr. Marianne McPhail* Dr. Terence McQuiston Dr. Donna McRitchie Dr. Katherine Michalski Dr. Sunil Mehta, Class of 9T4 Student Fund Dr. Susan Mehta Dr.Yatin Bobby Mehta Dr. Kenneth Melvin Dr. James Menlove Dr. James Mergelas Dr. Norman Mesaglio Dr. Marc Michell Dr. Allan Mickelson Dr. Anna Millers Dr. Nisha Mistry Dr. David Mitchell Dr. Lup-Ho Mo Dr. Gordon Moe Dr. Frederick Moffat Dr. John Moffat Dr. Michael Moffatt Mrs. Esther Moldofsky, In memory of Dr. Jack Moldofsky (4T8) Prof. Harvey Moldofsky Dr. Liliana Monti Dr. Edward Moran Dr. Gary Morningstar Dr. Debra Morrison Dr. George Morrison Dr. Peter Morse Dr. Kathleen Moses Dr. George Moss Dr. David Mowbray Dr. Douglas Munkley Dr. John Murnaghan Dr. Kenneth Mustard Dr. Grant Nadon Dr. Lawrence Naiman* Dr. Domenic Nasso Dr. Paul Newbigging Dr. Douglas Ng Dr. Donald Niece Dr. Richard Nishikawa Dr. Steven Nitzkin Dr. Jane Nixon Dr. Margaret Norman Dr. George Novotny Dr. Marvin Nussbaum Dr. Dennis O’Brien Dr. Richard Ogilvie Dr. Terence O’Heany Dr. Elizabeth Oliver-Malone Dr. Milena F. Ondro Dr. Alice Ordean Dr. K. Shirley O’Reilly Dr. Teddi Orenstein* Dr. John Osborn Dr. Howard Ovens Dr. William Page Dr. Joan Paisley Dr. Rodion Palazij Dr. Sonilal Pancham Dr. Hazel Park Dr. John Parker Dr. David Parratt Dr. James Parrish Dr. Benjamin Pasicov Dr. Norman Patt Dr. Thomas Patterson Dr. Dan Patton Dr. Robert Paulovic Dr. Donald Payne Dr. Charles Pearce Dr. Beverley Pearson Murphy Dr. Jared Peck, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. David Pelton Dr. Richard Penciner Dr. Sunita Penmatcha Dr. Gordon Perkin Dr. Reginald Perkin Dr. Melvyn Petersiel Dr. John Peto* Dr. Nicolae Petrescu Dr. Howard Petroff Dr. Michael Pezim Dr. James Pfaff Dr. Frank Philbrook Dr. Shauna Phillips Dr. Charles Pickett Dr. Terry Picton Dr. P. Gail Pirie Dr. Cheryl-Lynn Pitre Dr. Kim Plaxton Dr. Peeter Poldre Dr. Irene Polidoulis-Giontsis Dr. Michelle Porepa Dr. David Posen Dr. Wayne Potashner Dr. Arthur Price Dr. George Prieditis Dr. W. Ross Prince Dr. Kenneth Pritzker Dr. JJ Mackenzie Dr. William Prost Dr. Gordon Prowse Dr. Michael Pryszlak Dr. Christine Pun Dr. Xerxes Punthakee, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Xuanlu Qu Dr. Corinna Quan Dr. Melanie Quartermain Dr. Arif Qureshi Dr. Sparrow Rabideau Dr. Edward Rabinovitch Dr. Anita Rachlis Dr. Hemi & Anshu Rajput, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Ernest Ranney Dr. David Rapoport Dr. Susan Rapoport-Glick Dr. Henrietta Rappaport Dr. Roshan Razik Dr. Richard Reddick Dr. Sumana Reddy Dr. Juri Reial Dr. Anthony Reid Dr. Raimo Repo Dr. Dorianne Rheaume Dr. Amy Rice Dr. Timothy Richardson Dr. John Ridge Dr. Robert Ridge Dr. Richard Rinn Dr. Kevin Rittenberg Dr. Paul Roberts* Dr. Michael Robinette Dr. Lisa Robinson Dr. Gerald Rockman Dr. Kenneth Rodney Dr. Michael Roe Dr. Lisa Ronback Dr. Michael Rooney Dr. Hugh Rose Dr. Jane Roseborough Dr. Irving Rosen Dr. Frank Rosenberg Dr. Jay Rosenfield Dr. David Rosenthal Dr. Michael Rosset Dr. Lea Rossiter Dr. Morris Rotbard Dr. Sherryn Roth Dr. Irving Rother Dr. Harold Rotman Dr. Tyler Rouse* Dr. Marie Roy Dr. Andrew Royko Dr. Baiba Rozkalns Dr. Sam Rubenzahl Dr. Allan Rubin Dr. Evelyn Rubin The Late Dr. James Ruderman Dr. Peter Rumney Dr. Francis Rundle Dr. George Rungi Dr. Anysia Rusak Dr. Edward Rusiewicz Dr. Clark Russell Dr. Edward Russell Dr. Mitsuko Sada* Dr. Kenneth Sakamoto Dr. Terence Sakamoto* Dr. Takaki Sameshima Mrs. Jane Samis, In memory of Dr. Bill Samis (5T6) Dr. David Saslove* Dr. Sam Schachter Dr. Douglas Schatz, In Memory of Dr. Stanley Schatz (5T3) Dr. Joseph Schatzker Dr. Julie E. Schatzker Dr. Jon Schonblom Dr. Martin Schreiber Dr. Brian Schwartz Dr. Franz Schweiger Dr. Michael Schweitzer Dr. David Scott Dr. James Scott Dr. Hilario See Dr. Avram Selick Dr. Gerald Seligman Dr. Gordon Sellery Gavin Semelhago Dr. Rachelle Sender Dr. Rohan Shahani, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. William Shannon, Class of 9T4 Student Fund Dr. Stephen Shapero Dr. Nadder Sharif* Dr. David Shaul* Dr. Richard Shaul Dr. Erin Shaw Dr. Gerald Sheldon Dr. Dominick Shelton Dr. Anne Shepherd Dr. Robert Sheppard Dr. Rachel Sheps Dr. Donald Shier Dr. Anne Shin Dr. Judith Shindman Dr. Frederica Shore Dr. Jack Shuber Dr. Sandy Shulman Dr. Ferhan Siddiqi Dr. Roger Sider Dr. Tammy Sieminowski Dr. Elaine Silver Dr. Gregory Silverman, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Lloyd Silverman Dr. Katherine Siminovitch Dr. William Simmons Dr. Frederick Simon Dr. Martin Simons Dr. Navpreet Singh, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Sanjeev Singwi* Dr.Vahe Sivaciyan Dr. Gerald Skory Dr. Marat Slessarev Dr. Robert Slinger Dr. David Smith Dr. Donald Smith Dr. Julia Smith Dr. Barry Sniderman Dr. Kenneth Sniderman Dr. Dominic So* Prof. John Sommerauer Dr. Frank Sommers Dr. Ron Somogyi Dr. Marilyn Sonley Dr. Marja Soots Dr. Salvatore Spadafora Dr. Margaret T. Spence Dr. Phyllis Spier Dr. James Spragge Dr. William Squires Dr. Malcolm Stalker Dr. Arthur Stanley Dr. Romas Stas Dr. Bernard Stein Dr. Lawrence Steinberg Dr. Allan Steinhart Dr. Leonard Sternberg Dr. John Stewart Dr. Janet Still Dr. Susan Still Dr. Steven Strasberg Dr. Maurice Strasfeld Dr. Irvin Strathman Dr. Martin Strauss Dr. Ronald Strickler Dr. Janet Strome Dr. Edison Susman Dr. R. Ian Sutherland Dr. Claude Swayze Dr. Denis Sweeney Dr. Suresh Syal Dr. Megan Sykes Dr. Benedykt Syposz Dr. Evelyn Tai Dr. Nigel Tan Dr. Alexander Tang Dr. Richard Tannerya Dr. Charles Tator Dr. Henry Taylor Dr. Saul Taylor Dr. Paul Teague Dr. David Teitel Dr. Jerome Teitel Dr. Martin Tepper Dr. Sharon Terada Dr. James Teresi Dr. Lisa Thain Dr. Judith Thompson Dr. Kay Thompson Dr. Stephen Ticktin Dr. Marvin Tile Dr. Ants Toi Dr. William Tomson Dr. Karl Torbicki Dr. Carolyn Tram Dr. Martina Trinkaus, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Myron Troster Dr. Mary Trotter Dr. Paul Truscott Dr. George Trusler Dr. Scott Tsai Dr. John Ying Choi Tsang Dr. Geming Tu Dr. Allan G. Tucker Dr. Christina Tunzi, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Eugene Turgeon Dr. Katherine Turner Dr. Margaret Tutert Dr. Nancy Tuttle* Dr. Murray Tyber Dr. Felix Tyndel Dr. Eric Uhlig Dr. Martin Unger Dr. Ian Van Praagh Dr. Reet Vanaselja Dr. Ronald Vanhoof Dr. Alexander Varga Dr. Stanley Venis Dr. Jennifer Vergel de Dios Dr. Gary Viner Dr. Harry Vinters Dr. Raymond Viola Dr. Jobst Von Heymann Dr. Nicholas Vozoris, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Bryn Waern Dr. John Wait Dr. Patricia Waite Dr. Robert Wald Dr. Mark Waldron* Dr. Paul Walfish Dr. Allan Walker Dr. David Walker Dr. Harmannus Walker Dr. Frederick Walsh Dr. Lawrence Walters Ms. Krystyna Wasik, Dr. Agnes Kwasnicka (0T4) Memorial Fund Dr. Christopher Watson Dr. David Watson Dr. Robert Watson Dr. William Watt Dr. Marvin Waxman Dr. Peter Webster Dr. Julie Weinstein Dr. Michael Weinstock Dr. Rudolf Weitemeyer Dr. James Welch Dr. Howard Wernick Dr. David Wesson Dr. Karen Weyman* Dr. Peter White Dr. J. David Whitney Dr. William Whittaker Dr. Ruth Wiens The Late Dr. Edward Wilford, In memory of Dr. Agatha Wilford (4T5) Dr. Julie Williams Dr. Tanya-Gay Williams Dr. Wendy Williams Dr. Douglas Wilson Dr. Mark Wise Dr. Sheldon Wise Dr. Jean-Victor Wittenberg Dr. John Wojcik Dr. Wendy Wolfman Dr. Henry Wolstat Dr. Clement Wong Dr. Henry Wong Dr. John Wong Dr. Lai Wong Dr. Lillian Wong Dr. Patrick Yee Hong Wong Dr. Winston Wong Dr. Ian Woolfson Dr. Daniel Wu* Dr. Hing-Tung Wu Dr. Megan Wynne-Jones Dr. Peter Wyshynski Dr. Andrew Yan Dr. Thomas Yates Dr. Doreen Yee* Dr. Lauren Yee Dr. John Yoshioka Dr. Bernita Young Dr. Jennifer Young Dr. Sherylan Young Dr. Chi Sing Yu Dr. Kenneth Yuen Dr. Arthur Zalev Dr. Raymond Zarins Dr. Irving Zelcer If your name was either omitted or included in error, our sincere apologies; please contact us at (416) 978-0991 or at medical. alumni@utoronto.ca. * Indicates monthly donor M ed i cal alum ni a s s o c ia t io n 15 class notes News from your classmates Class of 1944 Dr. Harry HOTZ is enjoying life in Hamilton with Ruth, his wife of 65 years. He has six children, 10 grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren, and loves telling the family stories of his time in the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps. Contact: harryhotz@shaw.ca. Class of 1955 Dr. T. David BRIANT enjoyed a 15-day trip on the Danube River with some members of the U of T Alumni Association. The weather was good, and he recommends others try it. Contact: tcbriant@sympatico.ca. Dr. Alice BRIGGS is working three days a week primarily in clinical allergy consults. She is actively involved with HOPE (Helping Other Parents Everywhere), www.hope4parents.ca. She also volunteers at Evergreen Drop-In Centre, teaching clinical medicine to Sick Kids residents. Contact: abriggs3@sympatico.ca. Dr. Brian COGGINS is having a wonderful time curling all winter, and playing golf in the summer. He is very interested in cosmology. Most importantly, he is proud of his granddaughter who graduates from U of T Meds in 2015. Contact: b.d.cog@rogers.com. Dr. Arthur COLE is still enjoying reasonably good health. He and his wife recently took a 7,000 km road trip to Huntsville, Winnipeg, Iowa, Nebraska, and Denver, visiting family and friends. Contact: (613) 476-6293. Dr. A. Douglas COURTEMANCHE, retired for 21 years, is keeping busy spending time in his wood shop, 16 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 restoring old cars, gardening, and working as a guide at the VanDusen Botanical Garden. He and his wife, Anne, celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary on March 20, 2015. Contact: adcourt@shaw.ca. Drs. May and Gerry COHEN are enjoying retirement in Toronto. May was associate dean and Gerry was undergraduate coordinator, both at McMaster Med School. They both happily retired as professors emeriti and are proud grandparents of seven grandchildren. Contact: cohenmay@ rogers.com; coheng@rogers.com. Dr. Patricia IRWIN regrets not being able to attend the 60th class reunion this spring. Confined to a wheelchair and in long-term care, she still enjoys getting out and about, including concerts and classes. Contact: (613) 938-6698. Dr. Irvine KORMAN gave up his medical practice in 1990. He retired recently at 85, from a 20-year-plus naturopathic practice. Dr. Clark Scott RUSSELL is relishing life as an active golfer, Red Cross volunteer, and a vintage British car enthusiast. He still looks forward to reading the CMAJ. Contact: sandlruss@sympatico.ca. Class of 1959 Dr. R. Gerald GUEST has retired from geriatric medicine after 50 years. He has written and published two books on his favourite subjects: the patron saints of medicine, and the history and archaeology of the medieval monasteries of Ireland. He holds a doctorate of philosophy honoris causa and proudly collected two knighthoods! Contact: thecurragh@hotmail.com. Class of 1960 Dr. Theodore Wilfred AVRUSKIN is still working in Brooklyn, NY, serving the endocrinology community. He is happy to report that they are nearing the end of Hurricane Sandy repairs, including a hockey man-cave (formerly the furnace room), decorated in New York Islander colours. He enjoys an active life with family, friends, and of course, ballroom dancing! Contact: mtav1@optonline.net. Dr. Cornelia BAINES is still involved in controversies surrounding the effectiveness of mammography and health effects of industrial wind turbines. The 25-year follow-up of the Canadian National Breast Screening Study, in which Dr. Baines was a co-principal investigator, became the mostread article of 2014 in the British Medical Journal. Contact: cornelia.baines@utoronto.ca. Dr. Eugene J. CHOROSTECKI still enjoys travelling each summer to canoe in the Arctic. Contact: chorost@attglobal.net. Dr. Douglas GARE continues to work in maternal/fetal medicine at the University Health Network. He also loves spending time with his grandchildren, and golfing. Contact: douglas.gare@utoronto.ca. Dr. Bernard GOLDMAN is vice chair of surgery, inquiries, complaints, reports committee at CPSO. He is also pleased his book was published in May 2014: class notes Mending Hearts, Building Bridges: The Story of Save a Child’s Heart. Contact: berniegoldman@rogers.com. Dr. John HENDERSON has been retired for 10 years, happily spending it with his wife, their four children and six grandchildren. He volunteers for various community organizations, and plays tennis and skis(both downhill and cross-country). Contact: joiceh@shaw.ca. Dr. Harvey GOLOMBEK is teaching residents at Sick Kids Hospital. He also continues with his psychotherapy practice in Parry Sound, and consulting to First Nations. Contact: hgolombek@ rogers.com. Dr. Edward ISTVAN is still assisting in surgery. He loves summer cottage life and spending time with his family, including five grandchildren, the eldest of whom will be graduating from Queen’s this year in mechanical engineering. Contact: chredi@sympatico.ca. Dr. Douglas MANN retired and moved from Calgary to Victoria in 2014, where he bought an old house that he is renovating. He loves life in retirement; his main hobby is boating. Contact: drmann@shaw.ca. Dr. Robert McCALDON retired three years ago. He has published three novels: One Planet Nailed Askew; Outside the Town; and Knight With No Shield, all available on amazon. com. He has also published one fitness title: The Real Trophy, which is available from the author or Novel Idea Bookstore in Kingston. Contact: mccaldon@rogers.com. Dr. Dick OGILVIE is still working at Toronto Western Hospital four days a week, seeing patients with hyper and hypotension. He published his family history that totals an impressive 3,000 pages; no one in the family has read it yet! Contact: ri.ogilvie@utoronto.ca. Dr. Irving ROSEN is working part-time in his radiology practice, but spending time with his eight grandchildren keeps him even busier! Contact: irvingerosen@sympatico.ca. Dr. Gordon SELLERY retired in 2008 from his anesthesia practice. He is professor emeritus at Western University and is enjoying retirement, telling his six children and 12 grandchildren stories of his travelling adventures. He also enjoys curling and is past president of the London Curling Club and the Probus Club of London. Contact: gsellery@rogers.com. Dr. Gerald SHUGAR is happily married with three children and eight grandchildren. He loves family canoe trips, playing guitar and banjo, gardening, making maple syrup with his grandchildren, and travelling. He was inducted into the Ontario Squash Hall of Fame, after winning 36 US and Canadian national titles. He is also still enjoying clinical work at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health at the only all-women’s psychiatric inpatient unit. Contact: geraldshugar@sympatico.ca. Dr. Harvey SOCOL, after a 15-year career in family medicine and 27 years in industrial medicine, is enjoying retirement in California. He still plays golf, goes to lectures and concerts, and spends time with his family, including six grandchildren. One of his sons went into medicine. In June 2014, Dr. Socol turned 80 with a big family celebration. He looks forward to spending his 81st in Toronto in 2015! Contact: ebsocol@aol.com. Dr. Carol VOADEN still works parttime as a family physician, as well as participating on her church health and wellness committee. She also enjoys visiting family, some of whom live on Grand Cayman Island, and she is an active M ed i cal A l um ni A s s o c ia t io n 17 class notes a member of the Toronto University Women’s Club. Dr. John WAIT is retired from a urology practice at St. Joseph’s Health Centre. He is enjoying retirement with his wife of 51 years, spending winters in Naples, FL. He stays active playing golf, travelling, and spending time with his three children and five grandchildren. Contact: johnhwait@aol.com. Class of 1961 Dr. Arnold NOYEK is still active in the Canadian International Scientific Exchange Programme (CISEPO), which he founded. It brings doctors from around the world together to learn from each other and promote understanding. Read more about it at http://www.thestar.com/news/ gta/2014/12/18/doctors_teach_doctors_ on_tv_around_the_world_fiorito.html. Contact: arnold.noyek@utoronto.ca. Class of 1964 Dr. Doug WILSON was awarded the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC) Lifetime Achievement Award in Family Medicine Research in 2014. He was honored for his landmark studies on smoking cessation, in addition to research on lifestyle and health promotion. Contact: dougwil28@yahoo.ca. Class of 1965 Dr. Robert ALLIN is still practising on a part-time basis. He is looking forward to the 6T5 50th reunion this year. 18 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 Contact: r.allin@sympatico.ca. Dr. Jerome BURKE is working as a surgical pathologist/hematophathologist consultant and continues to teach and write. He is happily married and the stepfather of two. He is also a proud grandparent to two, who are the light of his life. Contact: jerome.burke@ comcast.net. Dr. Robert Blake GIBB is enjoying life with his eight grandchildren, and spending time at the cottage, canoeing, kayaking, cross-country skiing, and woodworking. Contact: gibbblake@hotmail.com. Dr. Melvyn GOLDBERG retired in 2008 as the head of thoracic oncology, and the Gloria and Edmund M. Dunn Chair in Thoracic Surgery at the Fort Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. He is relishing retirement at his summer house, and spending time with his wife and grandchildren. Contact: judibake@gmail.com. Dr. Garry HUMPHREYS is enjoying retirement in Peterborough, after he served for 23 years in the Canadian Armed Forces, and 19 years as a medical officer of health for Peterborough County and the City of Peterborough. Contact: hugothedog007@yahoo.ca. Dr. Vern ISAAK is enjoying life with his wife of 51 years, and his six grandchildren. He has travelled to more than 50 countries! He did medical work for two years in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as short-term medical trips to the Dominican Republic, Mexico and Burundi. Contact: visaak@sympatico.ca. Dr. Earle LOCKHART has happily retired to South Carolina, and spends his days enjoying the weather and playing golf. Contact: earlelockhart@msn.com. Dr. William G. MACRAE retired in 2010 from ophthalmic surgery. He moved full-time to Collingwood in 2012, and works part-time in Barrie doing medical ophthalmology. Contact: williammacrae@ rogers.com. Dr. Bob McGEE has been retired for 15 years and enjoys cycling, swimming, hiking, and backpacking. He also loves spending time with his six grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. Contact: rjmcgee@bell.net. Dr. Judith Belick PAKES is happily working part-time in her psychiatric practice. She also enjoys travelling, playing sports, spending time at the cottage, and with her children and grandchildren. She hopes to retire in Israel. Contact: jupakes@hotmail.com. Dr. Thomas B. POKOLY is a fulltime gynecologist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. He served as a medical volunteer in Bolivia, Paraguay, Ecuador, and Peru, learning how to speak Spanish in the process. Contact: tbpokoly@gmail.com. Dr. Linda RAPSON is still working and enjoying her chronic pain practice. In 2013, she was appointed assistant professor in the Department of Family and Community Medicine (DFCM) and selective coordinator for fourth year students taking introductory acupuncture. She is an affiliate scientist at Toronto Rehab Institute (TRI/UHN), doing research on the effectiveness of acupuncture for neuropathic pain. She also finds time to enjoy her 11-year-old twin grandchildren! Contact: drrapson@mac.com. Dr. Bonnie ROBSON CARPENTER, who is retired, recently co-hosted (with Dr. John Chong), the Performing Arts Medicine Association meeting for the class notes Toronto Region at the Royal Conservatory of Music. Contact: bonnie.robson@xplornet.com. Dr. Don SHEPLEY is thoroughly enjoying retirement with Elizabeth, his wife of 53 years. They enjoy cottage life in Muskoka, with frequent visits from family, and friends. Contact: deshep7@sympatico.ca. Dr. Rene SHUMAK is semi-retired but is still working screening for breast cancer, and considers her greatest achievement her three children and six grandchildren. Contact: renes131@gmail.com. Dr. Grant Fergusson STEWART has retired and is happily spending time on voluntary surgical medical missions in remote areas of China, and in the Philippines. He is shown here with surgical residents and a family who lost their home in the mega-typhoon in Eastern Samar, the Phillipines. Contact: grantstewart@shaw.ca. Dr. John SLOANE enjoys splitting his time between his psychiatry and psychoanalysis private practice, and teaching at U of T in psychotherapy supervision. He also finds time to write, play golf and tennis, and spend time with family and friends—and that includes his 12 grandchildren. Contact: john.sloane@rogers.com. Dr. Lorne TAICHMAN retired in 2004 from Stonybrook University; since then, he has been director of science and technology at Windham Venture Partners in New York City. Contact: lorne.taichman@stonybrook.edu. Dr. Richard TAN had a very busy practice in obstetrics in Hong Kong until 2012, when he was doing 30-50 deliveries a month for mostly mainland Chinese mothers. Since 2013, things have changed, and his is now mostly an office practice. Contact: richardtan@biznetvigator.com. Dr. Stanley J. WINE is still in an active dermatology practice, albeit part-time. In addition, he has been a CPSO peer assessor for eight years and keeps busy with tennis, golf, and writing articles for CME journals. Contact: sjwine@rogers.com. Class of 1966 Dr. Vladimir HACHINSKI, in November 2014, presented an outlined approach to preventable dementias at the G7 Dementia Meeting in Tokyo, which was attended by Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. That same month in Stockholm, Dr. Hachinski received the Karolinska Stroke Award for Excellence in Stroke Research. Contact: rebecca.clarke@lhsc.on.ca. Rudy’s Rumination on Rheumatology: A Guide for the Practitioner, Patient and Student, available at amazon.ca. Contact: rudycanuck@aol.com. Dr. Klaus JAKELSKI is the author of Dead Wrong, a novel about the murder of 34 infants at a top Boston hospital, based on the infamous 1980s Susan Nelles case in Toronto. Contact: www.jakelski.com Dr. Catherine ZAHN has been named as a Member of the Order of Canada for her contributions as a neurologist, health care administrator and advocate on behalf of those living with mental illness and addictions. She is a professor in the Departments of Psychiatry and Medicine at U of T, and since 2009, president and CEO, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). Contact: catherine.zahn@camh.ca Class of 1980 Dr. Kim GILL is thrilled by her 18-month-old granddaughter, Maya, and has been enjoying retirement for a year. Contact: kimberleegill1@gmail.com. Dr. Alan KONYER, with his family, Class of 1969 Dr. Jerry FRIEDMAN will be showing his driftwood sculpture at his studio/ workshop at the Artists of the Limberlost Studio Tour on August 15-16, 2015. Visit www.artistsofthelimberlost.ca. Contact: jerryfriedman@rogers.com. Class of 1978 Dr. Rudy GREENE has authored a book, M ed i cal A l um ni A s s o c ia t io n 19 class notes has been volunteering and supporting a children’s home in Uganda for the past two years. It has been an enriching and life-changing experience. Contact: akonyer@hotmail.com. Dr. Arthur VANEK recently closed his private practice to concentrate on hospital work, increase his flexibility and free time. Contact: arthur.vanek@sympatico.ca. Dr. Rose VARON is practising fulltime in general pediatrics in the New York area. She has four children and a beautiful new granddaughter. Contact: REV4894@aol.com. Class of 1982 Dr. Lauralee MORRIS, in 2014, spent time in Sierra Leone working with the Red Cross in their efforts on the Ebola crisis. Read more at http://www.bramptonguardian.com/community-story/4940193brampton-doctor-journeys-to-sierraleone-to-help-ebola-patients/. Contact: lmorris5189@rogers.com. Class of 1990 Dr. Thomas FORBES has returned to Toronto after 15 years at London Health Sciences and Western University. In September 2014, he was appointed professor and chair of the Division of Vascular Surgery at U of T and he has a clinical practice at Toronto General Hospital. He and his wife, Dr. Beth Woodford (MD, U of Ottawa 1990), and their four children are thrilled to be back in Toronto. Contact: thomas.forbes@uhn.ca. Class of 1991 Dr. Mike Dickinson sent in this photo of a group of 1991 classmates on the intramural co-ed basketball team. From top to bottom, L to R: Lynne Schwertfeger, Roxanne MacKnight, Christine Hoffman, Carol Durno, Sabine Liske, Anthony Ocana, Dave MacMillan, John Yoo, Peter Thornton, Lloyd Piszel. Class of 1999 Dr. Roohi QURESHI is the founder of Leaves of Trees (www.leavesoftrees.com), an all-natural, skin-care company sourced from a women’s cooperative in Morocco. Got News? Please email your news and photos to Ruth Gillings at medical.alumni@ utoronto.ca or mail to MAA, Room 3249, Medical Sciences Building, 1 King’s College Circle, Toronto ON M5S 1A8. We will return photos on request. May we email your next issue? Save a tree by having the next issue of MAA Matters sent to you electronically. Email your request using the subject line “Email me the magazine” along with your full name and address to medical.alumni@utoronto.ca. M e di c a l Alum n i Ass o c i ati o n Board of Directors 2014-15 Dr. Trevor Young Honorary President Dr. Peter Kopplin (1963) President Dr. Suan-Seh Foo (1990) Past President Dr. Alexandra Berezowskyj (1982) Vice-President Dr. Lyndon Mascarenhas (1984) Treasurer 20 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 Dr. Michael Wong (1993) Secretary Members-at-Large Dr.Victor Kurdyak (1960) Loan Officer Dr. Barney Giblon (1957) Dr. Martina Trinkaus (2004) Executive Member-at-Large Dr. Peter Wyshynski (1961) Executive Member-at-Large Ms. Ruth Gillings Administrator/Manager Dr. Douglas J. Cook (2004) Dr. Ronn Goldberg (1981) Dr. David Lowe (1988) Dr. David McKnight (1975) Dr. Tom Patterson (1956) Archivist Dr. Peeter Poldre (1978) Dr. Roshan Razik (2010) Dr. Nicolae Pestrescu (2009) Dr. Stephen Gauthier (2012) PARO Rep Narayan Chattergoon (2017) Medical Society President, 2014-2015 in memoriam Lives well lived Medical Alumni Association CLASS OF 1941 Dr. Robert Roy FORSEY, in his 100th year, on Jan. 13, 2015, in Montreal, QC. Dr. Forsey was the long-time chief of dermatology at the Montreal General Hospital, an educator and mentor. A surgeon-lieutenant in the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II, he remained active and interested in many fields until his last days. CLASS OF JULY 1943 Dr. Alan John RICHARDS, in his 97th year, on Feb. 24, 2014, in Collingwood, ON. Dr. Richards loved his radiology practice, retiring at 82. He served in the Royal Canadian Navy and contributed to the community by volunteering for many organizations, including the Rotary Club of Regina. He also loved learning, playing the cello at 52 and buying a laptop when he was 92. CLASS OF 1946 Dr. Peter ALLEN, in his 93rd year, on Nov. 17, 2014, in Oakville, ON. Dr. Allen performed the first open heart procedure in BC in 1957, retiring from surgical practice in 1993 as emeritus professor of clinical surgery in the UBC Faculty of Medicine. His international contributions included performing the first coronary bypass surgery in Cardiff, Wales, and establishing the first cardiac surgical centre in Bhopal, India in 1977, where he became an influential figure in cardiac surgery. Dr. George Martin SANGER, in his 95th year, on Jan. 3, 2015, in Coronado, CA. Dr. Sanger loved delivering babies, of which he delivered over 10,000. At the onset of WWII, in an infamous one-day clearance of all “enemy aliens” from the UK coastal areas, he was taken from his home in Scotland and interned in the wilds of Nova Scotia, along with hundreds of German boys and men. Not wasting his time there, he appealed to his former professors in Aberdeen to send textbooks, which were used to start a school for the young prisoners. Using their connections with associates at U of T, his professors aided in his release from internment after 18 months. A few years ago, Dr. Sanger looked up from Class of 1956 Dr. Don Cowan as remembered by Dr. William Francombe Dr. Donald Henry COWAN, in his 83rd year, on Dec. 22, 2014, in Toronto, ON. I first met Dr. Donald Cowan in 1965 when I was working in the Department of Hematology at the Toronto General Hospital. One of my tasks was to review bone marrow tests with the clinician who had performed them. One day a tall, dark, good-looking fellow walked in, introduced himself and asked to review a marrow he had done. It was Don Cowan. I got the slides and invited him to join me at the double-headed microscope so we could examine the slides together. He asked if he could smoke. Many of us did in those days and I said, “Go ahead.” There may be some who remember the performance Don went through to get his pipe lit! It was my first experience. First the search for the pipe, then the search for the tobacco, followed by the search for the matches, finally the excruciating struggle to get the pipe burning satisfactorily! That task completed, over the next 30 minutes, as we examined the marrow, we exchanged personal information and found we had much in common. By the time we had finished we had formed the basis of a close friendship that lasted almost 50 years. At that time, Don was a junior staff physician in the Department of Medicine at the TGH and was already known as a compassionate physician and excellent teacher. His talents were recognized and he advanced rapidly: first in 1968 to the Princess Margaret Hospital and in 1974 to Sunnybrook as physician-in-chief, a position he occupied with distinction for 12 years. Among many other activities, he later served a three-year term as associate dean, clinical affairs in the Faculty of Medicine and held senior positions with Cancer Care Ontario. He was an active member of the Medical Alumni Association and in 2013 was the recipient of the Dean’s Voluntary Service Award in recognition of his exceptional service. Don had many interests, especially medical history. During his later years, he authored a book on Dr. Vera Peters, a ground-breaking radiation oncologist. The Faculty hopes to publish this book. To so many people Don Cowan was a great friend and a marvellous physician. his newspaper where a new Nobel Prize winner had just been named and said, “I taught him calculus in the camps.” Dr. Joseph J. SCALES, in his 93rd year, on Oct. 9, 2014, in Edmonton, AB. Dr. Scales worked at the Edmonton General Hospital for most of his 45 year career. He and his wife were formidable ballroom dancers and spent many summers enjoying their lakeshore cabin. CLASS OF 1947 Dr. David MILROD, in his 91st year, on March 21, 2015, in New York City, NY. Dr. Milrod practised psychiatry in New York City, where he was a leading psychoanalytic scholar. CLASS OF 1948 Dr. Jack MOLDOFSKY, in May, 2014, in Toronto, ON. Dr. Max SUGAR, in his 90th year, on June 22, 2014, in Denver, CO. Dr. Lionel TANZER, in his 91st year, on Jan. 26, 2015, in Toronto, ON. CLASS OF 1949 Dr. John Gerald CONNOLLY, on Dec. 12, M ed i cal A l um ni A s s o c ia t io n 21 in memoriam 2014, in Toronto, ON. Within the Division of Urology at U of T, Dr. Connolly is remembered as ‘a mentor and an original thinker.’ He was a constant figure in the halls of Women’s College. He loved the outdoors, trekking in the mountains of Quebec and along the beaches of his beloved Miscou Island, New Brunswick, where he subsequently donated land to the Nature Conservancy of Canada. Dr. Barbara McKinnon HAZLETT, in her 88th year, on Nov. 30, 2014, in Elora, ON. In her professional career she was a highly respected clinician, following in the footsteps of old friend Dr. Charley Best, becoming an authority in diabetes. She was a founding member of the KJR Wightman Club, and in retirement was involved in the community, including as a caregiver of the swans in the winter. Dr. James Alexander LOW, in his 90th year, on Feb. 15, 2015, in Kingston, ON. Dr. Robert Arthur STUBBINS, in his 90th year, on Sept. 15, 2014, in Penetanguishene, ON. A wonderful father, proud Canadian and gentle healer, Dr. Stubbins lived every day to the fullest. CLASS OF 1950 Dr. George Edwin Donald Davis, in his 91st year, on Oct. 18, 2014, in Toronto, ON. A dedicated psychiatrist who advocated for his patients for over 60 years, Dr. Davis was an RCAF pilot officer whose lifelong interests included flying, boating and the reforestation of his century farm. He is survived by his beloved wife, Dr. Ruth Montgomery Davis (1951), children and grandchildren. CLASS OF 1951 Dr. Harry C. HARLEY, in his 89th year, on Sept. 27, 2014, in Oakville, ON. Forever challenging himself, Dr. Harley had his own practice as well as positions as an MP in federal politics, Crown Life, and the Salvation Army’s Grace Hospital. Dr. Ronald McMillan TODD, in his 91st year, on Nov. 24, 2014, in Toronto, ON. Remembered by his family as a gentle, thoughtful and good man, Dr. Todd had a family medicine and obstetrics practice at his home in Port Credit, ON. 22 Un i ver s it y o f To ro n t o • Spr i ng 2015 CLASS OF 1952 Dr. William James CORBETT, in his 94th year, in North Vancouver, BC. A respected GP on the North Shore, Dr. Corbett was a past president of BCMA and was Lions Gate Hospital’s first medical director until his retirement in 1986. Dr. John R. EVANS, in his 86th year, on Feb. 13, 2015, in Toronto, ON. Dr. Evans pioneered a new model of medical education as the founding dean of McMaster University Medical School in 1965. He served as president of U of T from 1972 to 1978. He was the first director of the World Bank’s Population, Health and Nutrition Division. He was also the CEO of Allelix, Canada’s first biotechnology company; the chair of TorStar; the first chair of the Canadian Foundation for Innovation; the chair of the Rockefeller Foundation; and most recently, the founding chair of MaRS. Throughout his career and his life, his greatest satisfaction came from caring for others as a clinician, and mentoring colleagues in their careers. Dr. Jack POSNIKOFF, in his 88th year, on Oct. 31, 2014, in Palm Desert, CA. Dr. Posnikoff became what was believed to be the youngest neurosurgeon in Canada. He later became a faculty member of the new UC Irvine medical school in California. He was probably the only person ever to have been a member of the RCAF Reserve and a full colonel in both the US Air Force and the US Army Reserve/California National Guard. CLASS OF 1954 Dr. Beverley Alfretta CLARK BURGESS, on Aug. 22, 2014, in Maryland, PA. An ophthalmic surgeon, Dr. Burgess received a full scholarship to the Julliard School of Music for her singing in her youth, but opted for medical school instead. During med school she was the lead in Daffydil shows, and eventually the national president of MENSA from 1977 to 1979. She was a pioneer in the use of laser for patients with macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy. Dr. Martin KAZDAN, in his 84th year, in Toronto, ON. A respected ophthalmologist, Dr. Kazdan pioneered the use of ocular ultrasound, and was a passionate advocate for eye spasm treatment. In a practice with his father, Dr. Louis Kazdan and his brother, Dr. Jerome Kazdan, Dr. Kazdan retired in 2012 after 40 years of service at U of T, 49 years at North York General and 50 years at Mt. Sinai. CLASS OF 1956 Dr. Richard P. NERO, in his 83rd year, on Nov. 15, 2014, in Madison, IN. An OBGYN specialist, Dr. Nero introduced ultrasound technology to the Scarborough Centenary Hospital, later moving to Madisonville, KY, and then Indiana, where he practised until his retirement in 2004. Highly involved in the community, he was also a gifted sprinter in his younger days. CLASS OF 1957 Dr. John T. BATE, in his 83rd year, on Oct. 15, 2014, in Toronto, ON. Dr. Bate was an OBGYN at York Central Hospital (now Mackenzie Health) for over 40 years. An accomplished swimmer, enthusiastic bridge player, avid golfer and all-round ‘trained athlete,’ he led an energetic and full life. Dr. Margaret “Joan” KYLE, in her 83rd year, on Sept. 8, 2014, in Thunder Bay, ON. Dr. Kyle obtained her license in nuclear medicine and joined the Nuclear Medicine Lab at St. Joseph’s Hospital, where she worked for 32 years. In 1991, after joining Cancer Care Ontario, she worked to bring breast screening and the van to Northwestern Ontario. CLASS OF 1959 Dr. David Alan HALDENBY, in his 80th year, on Nov. 14, 2014, in Waterloo, ON. Practising for over 40 years as a dedicated physician and surgeon in England, Toronto, and Waterloo, Dr. Haldenby was an adventure seeker by nature and had a thirst for knowledge and history. Dr. Paul A. NOLAN, on Oct. 3, 2014, in Sudbury, ON. Dr. Nolan received his fellowship in ophthalmology from both the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons (Canada) and a fellowship in the American Academy of Ophthalmology. He practised for over 40 years at the former Sudbury General Hospital where he pioneered the use of laser in memoriam technology for eye surgery in Sudbury. A man of many talents, he was a musician, pilot, artist and outdoorsman. Toronto Marathon and several running clubs. The latter part of his career was devoted solely to sports medicine and rehabilitation. CLASS OF 1960 Dr. Vincent ING, in his 82nd year, on Sept. 27, 2014, in Halifax, NS. Known for his sense of humour and wit, Dr. Ing was an accomplished and published internal medicine and hematology specialist who devoted his life and career to saving the lives of Atlantic Canadians. He taught part-time at Dalhousie Medical School and also spent the later years of his career treating patients in clinics in the HRM, Cape Breton, Windsor, and Yellowknife, NWT. Dr. Caroline Cecil WRIGHT, in her 79th year, on Sept. 28, 2014, in Orillia, ON. CLASS OF 1966 Dr. Robert Bruce Ian SINCLAIR, in his 73rd year, on Feb. 14, 2015, in Abbotsford, BC. Dr. Sinclair had a family practice in Kimberley, BC, then moving to Seattle to study anesthesiology in 1979, which became his speciality. A superb athlete, in his mature years he was a dedicated marathoner who three times made the cut for the Boston Marathon. CLASS OF 1961 Dr. Robert STITT, in his 79th year, on Feb. 7, 2015, in Scarborough, ON. Dr. Stitt was passionate about his career at the Scarborough Hospital in surgery and at the Breast Clinic. With his gentle manner, he loved his family deeply and will be missed for his wonderfully practical and pragmatic outlook. CLASS OF 1962 Dr. Jacob Loeb STEIN, in his 77th year, on Dec. 27, 2014, in Toronto, ON. After completing his fellowship in rheumatology, Dr. Stein spent his career working and teaching at Scarborough General Hospital. Much loved by his patients, one wrote upon Dr. Stein’s retirement: “You’ve made such an incredible difference in the quality of my life, tending to both my medical and emotional concerns, caring for my life as well as my illness.” CLASS OF 1963 Dr. Wilma V. BASSER-JAKOBOVITS, on Dec. 12, 2014, in Toronto, ON. CLASS OF 1965 Dr. Robert Bruce EDEY, in his 75th year, on Feb. 10, 2015, in Mississauga, ON. Dr. Edey was the director of emergency medicine at St. Joseph’s Health Centre for 10 years, then becoming the first team physician for the Toronto Blue Jays, a medical consultant for CLASS OF 1969 Dr. Peter Neil COLE, in his 70th year, on March 4, 2015, in Orangeville, ON. Dr. Gordon A. McLORIE, in his 70th year, in Telluride, CO. Dr. McLorie pursued fellowship training in oncology at UCLA followed by pediatric urology training in Boston. As a teacher, a surgeon, an innovator and a pioneer in his very specialized and technical trade, he was globally recognized as a leader in the medical community. CLASS OF 1970 Dr. Elliot Melvin MINTZ, on his 70th birthday, March 12, 2015, in Vancouver BC. Dr. Mintz was a dedicated, compassionate family physician in Vancouver for 43 years. CLASS OF 1975 Dr. James RUDERMAN, on Jan. 29, 2015, in Toronto, ON. An outstanding leader, a published researcher and a highly respected teacher, Dr. Ruderman has been honoured by Women’s College Hospital, which has recently established the Jim Ruderman Lecture on Leadership and Innovation. The CFPC has also created the Jim Ruderman Academic Family Medicine Leadership Award, which will be awarded in 2015 at the Family Medicine Forum. CLASS OF 1978 Dr. Richard J. LACHOWSKI, in his 61st year, on Nov. 27, 2014, in Hamilton, ON. An orthopedic surgeon with a special interest in joint replacement and trauma, Dr. Lachowski worked at St. Joseph’s Hospital for the past 16 years. He was associate clinical professor at McMaster University and was also director of alumni affairs for the MacOrtho Society. He derived immense satisfaction from instructing medical students, clerks and residents. Dr. Vytas Jonas “Vyt” ZULYS, in his 63rd year, on Jan. 19, 2015, in Mississauga, ON. CLASS OF 1980 Dr. Andre RIVET, in his 59th year, on Dec. 24, 2014, in North Bay, ON. Dr. Rivet was dedicated to his wife and family and was honoured to be a physician to the people of North Bay for over 30 years. CLASS OF 1981 Dr. David SHUMKA, on Oct. 31, 2014, in Newmarket, ON. Dr. Shumka practised anesthesia and pain management medicine for many years. He was also a talented keyboardist whose love of music was a dominant force in his life. With Dr. David White, he established Lifebeat, a musical variety show featuring the talents of health care professionals that raised over $1 million for charity. Dr. Joseph Ka Hoi WONG, in his 60th year, on Aug. 13, 2014, in Toronto, ON. A romantic idealist, an inspiring leader, a soldier for social justice, a selfless healer, a family pillar, a loving husband and father, Dr. Wong was a facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon. He served in leading positions for various international plastic surgery societies, as well as in editorial and teaching positions. CLASS OF 1983 Dr. Robert Philip DAIN, in his 54th year, on Jan. 5, 2015, in Kingston, ON. Always a top student, Dr. Dain also graduated in nuclear medicine from the University of Western Ontario in 1988 and in radiology at Queen’s University in 1991. Dr. Paul H. GRANT, in his 57th year, on Nov. 8, 2014, in Newmarket, ON. Dr. Grant was greatly loved and respected by all his family, friends, colleagues and patients and he will be greatly missed. M ed i cal A l um ni A s s o c ia t io n 23 ways of giving Monthly giving an increasingly popular choice A convenient way to support your MAA • More MAA donors are choosing to give to the MAA through an automatic monthly deduction from their credit or debit card. It’s easy to see why: • You have the good feeling that comes from helping deserving med students achieve their dreams through the MAA’s financial support, bursaries or awards. • You have the convenience of spreading your gift throughout the entire year. • You have the satisfaction of knowing that monthly giving helps the MAA to plan more effectively, relying on a stable source of funding. This helps to reduce costs. Making a donation of $50 a month is fast and easy, and can be cancelled at any time. To sign up, email Ruth Gillings at the MAA at medical.alumni@utoronto. ca with “Monthly giving” as the subject line, or phone (416) 978-0991. Yes, I’ll support the MAA q $50 q $100 q $250 q Other $ ________ q I’ve included a cheque payable to the “Medical Alumni Association.” q VISA q MasterCard Card # Signature Expiry Date Full Name (with title) Home Address Business Address Phone: Work Phone: Home E-mail Grad Year q I would like to make a monthly contribution: q $15 q $25 q $35 q $50 q Other $_______ q From my Credit Card q VISA q MASTERCARD Card # Signature Expiry Date q From My Chequing Account (I have enclosed a signed cheque marked “Void”) Signature Please reply by mail using the envelope provided or by fax at (416) 978-0959. Your generous support will be recognized in MAA Matters. Please check here q if you do not wish to be listed. A tax receipt will be issued promptly. Tel.: (416) 978-0991 Fax: (416) 978-0959 E-mail: medical.alumni@utoronto.ca To make an online donation, please visit the MAA website at www.maautoronto.ca.Thank you for reaching out to our students through your gift to the Medical Alumni Association. 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