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Superdocs UCSF’s Shepherding America’s top scientific institutions HOMECOMING | SURGEON GENERAL RICHARD CARMONA | HONOR ROLL fall 2004 volume 45 | no 2 Medical Alumni M A G A Z I N E

Medical Alumni Magazine

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Page 1: Medical Alumni Magazine

SuperdocsUCSF’s

Shepherding America’s top scientific institutions

H O M E C O M I N G | S U R G E O N G E N E R A L R I C H A R D C A R M O N A | H O N O R R O L L

fall 2004volume 45 | no 2

MedicalAlumniM A G A Z I N E

Page 2: Medical Alumni Magazine

MedicalAlumniFall 2004 Volume 45, Number 2Editor-in-Chief: Kenneth H. Fye, M.D. ’68Managing Editor: Patrick DelahuntContributing Editors: Peter Bejger, Ellen LehmanEditorial Assistant: Gina MartinezDesign and Production: Artefact Design, Menlo Park

Administrative Council 2004-2005

OFFICERSJohn C. Fletcher, M.D. ’57, President; Judith A. Luce, M.D. ’74, President-Elect; David N. Schindler, M.D. ’66, Vice Presi-dent (No. California); H. John Blossom, M.D. ’70, Vice President (Central Califor-nia); Ronald P. Karlsberg, M.D. ’73, Vice President (So. California)

COUNCILORS AT LARGEKenneth M. Bermudez, M.D. ’92; Neal H. Cohen, M.D. ’71; Timothy J. Crowley, M.D. ’80; Gordon L. Fung, M.D. ’79; Albert D. Hall, M.D. ’52; Robert C. Lim, M.D. ’60; Susan D. Wall, M.D. ’78; Harlan B. Watkins, M.D. ’63; Teresa L. McGuin-ness, M.D., Ph.D., President, Association of the Clinical Faculty

PAST PRESIDENTSEileen Z. Aicardi, M.D. ’74; André R. Campbell, M.D. ’85; Kenneth H. Fye, M.D. ’68

HOUSESTAFF REPRESENTATIVEDonna Hoghooghi, M.D. ’98

STUDENT REPRESENTATIVESTom Chi and Ron Jou

EX-OFFICIOJ. Michael Bishop, M.D., Chancellor; Da-vid A. Kessler, M.D., Dean, UCSF School of Medicine

Medical Alumni AssociationUCSF School of Medicine745 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0970San Francisco, CA 94143-0970(415) 476-1471; fax (415) 476-9570e-mail: [email protected]: www.ucsf.edu/alumni© 2004 UCSF School of Medicine, MAA. All rights reserved.

table of contents

departments1 from the editor Dr. Fye asks “What is the problem?”12 class notes find out who is doing what13 events don’t miss out on Homecoming 2005

3 UCSF’S SUPERDOCS

The list of health crises and contro-

versies facing the world today is

growing at an alarming rate. And

leading the fight on many fronts is

an extraordinary corps of UCSF-

trained physicians and scientists.

8 COMMENCEMENTWhen you come to med school as

a 30-year-old English teacher, med

students are scary.

features

center HONOR ROLL OF GIVINGAlumni from 70 classes contributed to the

School of Medicine in fiscal year 2003-2004.

Page 3: Medical Alumni Magazine

The University of California,

San Francisco, is the pre-

mier public medical school

in the country. By any measure you

can name—the quality and diversity of

our students, housestaff, and faculty;

the accomplishments of our basic and

clinical research efforts; the esteem

by which we are held throughout the

world—UCSF stands apart as an insti-

tution that inspires awe and envy.

As alumni we share a medical school

education that was for all of us, in

one way or another, a life-altering

experience. Our alma mater is one of

which we can all be enormously proud,

and those of us who are members of

the Medical Alumni Association are

proud to support the University’s on-

going efforts to provide our medical

students with the best medical

education in the world. Our association

supports the entering freshmen with

an introductory dinner. We fund the

White Coat ceremony. We provide

funds to help graduating seniors with

the expenses of moving on to their

post-graduate positions. We pay for

the homecoming/graduation gala.

We are active in fundraising for the

medical school. In fact, the Medical

Alumni Association plays a major role

in campus life and in the totality of the

experience of UCSF medical students.

from the editor

What is the problem?In light of the prominence and

importance that the alumni play in the

lives of UCSF medical students, why is

it that only 1600 of the many thousands

of UCSF medical school graduates

are members of the Medical Alumni

Association? Is $50 a year too much to

pay for membership in an organization

directed primarily toward continuing

a tradition of supporting the next

generation of medical students? Is it so

easy to move on without making some

effort to acknowledge what the University

has given you? Does not the School

of Medicine deserve some recognition

and support for the role it has played in

making all of us who we are?

The fee for membership in the Medical

Alumni Association is not meant to

replace the generous gifts alumni

already give to UCSF. The fee is used

only to support the activities of the

alumni association, activities that are

expanding and becoming more relevant

each year.

Am I unreasonable in being embar-

rassed by the huge number of gradu-

ates who have decided not to partici-

pate, even in some small way, in the

affairs of their medical school? Why

have so few chosen to join the Medi-

cal Alumni Association? I would really

like to know. In fact, I challenge the

readers of the magazine to respond. Tell

us what we are doing wrong. How can

we increase interest in our association?

“I challenge the

readers of the

magazine to

respond.”

medical alumni magazine | 1

How can we do better? Legitimate

responses to this challenge will be pub-

lished (I can only dream that we’ll get so

many responses we’ll have to pick and

choose among them). What, exactly, is

the problem?

Kenneth H. Fye, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.R.

.

Page 4: Medical Alumni Magazine

The growing panic over the shortage of the flu vaccine. The highly-charged debate surrounding stem cell research. The AIDS wildfire sweeping through the countries of the former Soviet Union, Africa, and Asia. The emerging epidemic of obesity in American children. The list of health crises and controversies facing the world today is growing at an alarming rate. And leading the fight on many fronts is an extraordinary corps of UCSF-trained physicians and scientists.

2 | fall 2004

SuperdocsUCSF’s

Shepherding America’s top scientific institutions

Page 5: Medical Alumni Magazine

Termed the “UCSF medical mafia” in a

Business Week story last year, there’s

no doubt that as the University has

emerged as a medical and scientific

powerhouse over the past several de-

cades, UCSF alumni and faculty have

assumed some of the most influential

positions in public health in this country

and around the world.

But a more fitting descriptor than “medi-

cal mafia” might be “superdocs,” for

while they may not sport large S’s on

their chests, they are definitely devot-

ing their considerable skills and talents

to fighting illness and disease—often

accomplishing the medical equivalent of

leaping tall buildings in a single bound.

On the front lines

At the Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention (CDC), influenza, West Nile

virus, anthrax, and SARS (severe acute

respiratory syndrome) are all in a day’s

work for director Julie Gerberding. She

recalls that it was during her UCSF

internship and residency that she first

became interested in infectious dis-

eases. “I started my training at UCSF, at

the very beginning of the AIDS epidemic

and took care of the earliest patients

there, who, in retrospect, we recognize

had AIDS,” she recalled in an interview

in her undergraduate alma mater’s Case

Magazine in 2003.

Her passion for infectious diseases led

to pioneering studies on HIV infections

in healthcare workers, and to the cre-

ation of guidelines to prevent them. No

longer a stranger to new and emerging

diseases, Dr. Gerberding played a major

role in leading the CDC’s response

to the anthrax bioterrorism attacks in

2001. And as SARS swept through Asia

last year, she spearheaded an interna-

tional effort to track down its causes

and prevent its continuing spread.

In addition to Dr. Gerberding, there are

now more than two dozen former or

current alumni or affiliates of UCSF at

the CDC working on a wide range of ur-

gent public health issues from HIV/AIDS

to Ebola to influenza.

They include Walter Orenstein, who

did two years of a pediatric residency

at UCSF in the early 1970s and is now

director of the CDC’s National Immuni-

UCSF’s top docs

zation Program. Dr. Orenstein spent last

winter fighting to stave off an especially

virulent form of influenza.

Another UCSF alumnus at the CDC is

Mark Lobato, who earned his medical

degree from UCSF in 1989 and, like Dr.

Orenstein, did a pediatric residency at

UCSF. Dr. Lobato now serves as a medical

officer in the CDC’s Division of TB Elimina-

tion. While the incidence of tuberculosis

has diminished in the United States, in

the rest of the world it is gaining ground,

triggered by the fast-moving HIV epidemic.

In fact, in sub-Saharan Africa, TB has

become the number-one killer.

At the World Health Organization (WHO),

where Assistant Director-General Jack

Chow (M.D.’87) heads the new HIV/AIDS,

tuberculosis, and malaria department,

infectious diseases are also taking center

stage.

Here Dr. Chow, who was previously U.S.

Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for

Health and Science, will marshal resources

and leadership around the globe to com-

bat these devastating diseases, which

frequently strike together. Like Dr. Ger-

Bruce Alberts, Ph.D. Richard Carmona, M.D. Jack Chow, M.D. Julie Gerberding, M.D. Harold Varmus, M.D.

Dr. Alberts is president of the National Academy of Sciences.

Dr. Gerberding is director of the Centers for Disease Control.

Dr. Carmona is the U.S. Surgeon General.

Dr. Chow is the assistant director-general at the World Health Organization, where he heads the HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria department.

Dr. Varmus was director of the NIH and is now presi-dent and CEO of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

medical alumni magazine | 3

Page 6: Medical Alumni Magazine

berding, Dr. Chow became interested

in HIV/AIDS during the early days of the

disease, when he saw friends in medical

school dying from it. “I pledged to do all

I could,” he told the Associated Press.

At a conference in Ukraine last year, Dr.

Chow referred to AIDS as “the viral wild-

fire burning on the human population.”

In the U.S. Surgeon General’s Office,

where Richard Carmona (M.D.’79) took

the helm in 2002 (see related article,

page 5), childhood asthma, obesity,

and substance abuse are heading the

agenda of the nation’s top doctor. All

are issues that disproportionately affect

the poor in this country, and reflect Dr.

Carmona’s commitment “to reach out to

the underserved,” as he told the alumni

magazine of the University of Arizona,

where he was professor of surgery,

public health, and family and community

medicine before assuming his role as

Surgeon General.

And Dr. Carmona doesn’t shy away

from highlighting unpleasant truths in his

quest to improve the nation’s health. “I

brought Secretary (Tommy) Thompson

to Arizona to show him what a Third

World country looks like in our back

yard—our Native American reserva-

tion right there at San Xavier. He was

overwhelmed.”

The list goes on, including former UCSF

professor and Nobel laureate Harold

Varmus, who served as director of the

National Institutes of Health for six years

during the Clinton Administration and

is now president and CEO of Memorial

Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

Dr. Varmus, who was on the UCSF

faculty for 23 years, is known for his

work, with J. Michael Bishop (now

UCSF Chancellor), that revealed the

cellular origins of the oncogene of a

chicken retrovirus. Their discovery led to

the isolation of many cellular genes that

normally control growth and develop-

ment, and are frequently mutated in

human cancer. For their work Dr. Bishop

and Dr. Varmus were awarded the 1989

Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.

The list also includes former professor

and chair of the UCSF Department of

Biochemistry and Biophysics Bruce

Alberts, who is serving his second term

as president of the National Academy

of Sciences, where he launched the

Academy’s publication Teaching About

Evolution and the Nature of Science,

a book designed to help the nation’s

science teachers improve the way they

teach biology. Dr. Alberts has also taken

a strong stand in the debate over stem

cell research, leading the Academy’s

appeal to the United Nations to refrain

from again considering a resolution that

would call upon nations to outlaw all

research on cloning. His formal state-

ment urged the U.N. “not to jeopardize

the potential and far-reaching medical

benefits that may arise from cloning for

research and therapeutic purposes.”

And in August, distinguished neurosci-

entist Susan Hockfield was named the

16th president of the Massachusetts In-

stitute of Technology. Dr. Hockfield, who

did her post-doctoral work at UCSF,

was most recently provost of Yale Uni-

versity. In her work as a neuroscientist,

she has focused on a particularly fatal

type of brain tumor—gliomas that can

4 | fall 2004

travel across healthy tissue and prolifer-

ate through the brain. With her research

group at Yale, Dr. Hockfield identified a

gene known as brevican and its family

of proteins that appear to be key players

in glioma transportation, a finding that

could lead to future therapies against

these devastating tumors.

No signs of slowing down

UCSF’s continued influence on both the

national and international fronts seemed

assured last year when the School of

Medicine again ranked among the top

ten in U.S. News and World Report’s

annual survey of the best American

graduate schools. It ranked sixth in the

quality of its research training, the high-

est rating for any public institution in the

nation, and eighth in the quality of its

primary care training.

With so many UCSF alumni and fac-

ulty going east to assume positions of

leadership, in at least one instance the

tables were turned when Dr. David Kes-

sler, formerly head of the Food and Drug

Administration and most recently dean

of the Yale School of Medicine, moved

west to become dean of the UCSF

School of Medicine.

When asked why UCSF’s star has risen

so quickly, he suggested two possibili-

ties: No undergraduates and no athletic

programs. “There’s a lot to be said for a

place whose purpose and mission are

unambiguous. There’s really a sense

here that nothing’s impossible.” ■

Page 7: Medical Alumni Magazine

“We are the last resource for science.”

A Report from the Surgeon General of the United States

“At 17 I was running around the streets. I was going to end up dead, in jail, or com-pletely marginalized.”

United States Surgeon General Richard

Carmona, in a colorful address at

UCSF’s Alumni House on May 21,

2004, recounted a dramatic youth in

New York City’s East Harlem before he

got on track to become the nation’s top

doctor. “My parents had trouble with

substance abuse and I was homeless

at six years old. But somebody took an

interest and helped me along. I joined

the Army and the military gave me a

mission, focus, and sense of duty. I also

got a skill set.”

The struggle to attain the Ameri-

can dream can be a clichéd theme.

Dr. Carmona’s remarkable odyssey,

however, underlines the role chance,

dedication, and opportunity can have in

reshaping the trajectory of a life. “After

the military, I went back to school. I was

tenacious. I was ecstatic when I got to

UCSF. Everybody here, everyone one of

you gave me a chance. This is truly an

extraordinary place.”

After leaving UCSF, Dr. Carmona went

to Arizona to pursue a career “off the

academic food chain.” Late one night

he checked his messages. “It was the

eighth voice mail, a young man had

called from the White House.” With that

call Dr. Carmona entered another level

of public service, a level in the glare of

an often contentious national arena oc-

cupied by the Surgeon General’s office.

“Public health is a minefield,” acknowl-

edged Dr. Carmona. “The challenge

is to stay pure—to fight off excursions

from the left and the right. As Surgeon

General, you have the biggest practice

in the world—290 million people. You

have to protect the integrity and sanctity

of the office, for it is the most credible

position in government. You can inform,

cajole, and give an opinion to shape

policy. But the elected officials ultimately

decide.”

“I formulate an evidence-based agenda

in my work,” he noted. The first and most

important point on his agenda is preven-

tion. “In the U.S. we’re great on treat-

ment, but lousy in preventive health care.”

Preparedness, especially after 9/11,

is another priority. “How do we raise

the health literacy of a population that

was always secure within its borders?

Emergency Medical Services have to

understand the threats and we must

have systems in place. Pathogens and

planes are now weapons.”

Health disparities and overcoming lan-

guage and cultural barriers in raising the

health literacy of a diverse population

round out Dr. Carmona’s agenda.

“How can we deliver culturally compe-

tent messages to affect the behavior

of citizens so they may improve their

health?”

One of the most vexing cultural issues

Dr. Carmona addresses is the grow-

ing concern with obesity among both

American adults and children. “We put

it very high on the radar screen. But

how do you deal with it? There are

medical alumni magazine | 5

by Peter Bejger

Page 8: Medical Alumni Magazine

lawsuits against corporations. Why not

offer better choices? We went to the

corporations to help us. We talked to

McDonalds. There is now a ‘Happy

Meal’ for adults. But it will take time to

reacculturate America.”

In responses to questions, Dr. Carmona

also tackled other controversial public

health issues. Regarding the increas-

ingly heated debate over stem cell

research, he said, “The American public

is disengaged from this debate. We

want to increase health literacy on this

issue. This would increase demand for

potential services from this research.”

Despite the political challenges and

media controversies inherent in his job,

Dr. Carmona remains committed, and

very mindful of the legacy his work may

leave. “I stay because I’m at the table

and they have to hear me. I speak to

the CEO of the nation, and my office

stands between the politicians and the

people. We are the last resource for sci-

ence, and an evidence-based

approach.”

So what is the legacy Dr. Carmona

would like to bequeath? “People see

me as a UCSF export. I’m proud that a

UCSF person got this position. When

I finish my term I will ask myself, ‘did I

serve with dignity and integrity?” And I

would like to answer, ‘I was the doctor

to the citizens of this nation and earned

their respect.’” ■

Dr. Richard CarmonaA biographical sketch

Vice Admiral Richard H. Carmona was sworn in as the 17th Surgeon General of the

United States Public Health Service on August 5, 2002.

Born and raised in New York City, Dr. Carmona dropped out of high school and en-

listed in the U.S. Army in 1967. He received his Army General Equivalency Diploma,

joined the Army’s Special Forces—where he became a combat-decorated Vietnam

veteran—and began his career in medicine.

After leaving active duty, Dr. Carmona attended Bronx Community College of the

City University of New York, where he earned his associate of arts degree. He

graduated from the University of California, San Francisco with a bachelor of sci-

ence degree in 1977 and a medical degree in 1979. Dr. Carmona was awarded the

prestigious Gold-Headed Cane Award as the top graduate of the UCSF School of

Medicine. He earned a masters of public health from the University of Arizona in

1998.

Dr. Carmona completed a surgical residency at UCSF and a National Institutes of

Health-sponsored fellowship in trauma, burns, and critical care. He is a Fellow of

the American College of Surgeons, and also certified in correctional health care and

quality assurance.

Dr. Carmona was the chairman of the State of Arizona Southern Regional Emer-

gency Medical System, a professor of surgery, public health, and family and com-

munity medicine at the University of Arizona.

Having served as Pima County Sheriff’s Department surgeon and deputy sheriff,

Dr. Carmona has also been chief medical officer, hospital chief executive officer,

public health officer, and finally chief executive officer of the Pima County health

care system. He has served as medical director of police and fire departments and

is a fully qualified peace officer with expertise in special operations and emergency

preparedness, including weapons of mass destruction.

Dr. Carmona has published extensively and through his numerous awards has

received local and national recognition for his achievements. A strong supporter of

community service, Dr. Carmona has served on community and national boards in

addition to providing leadership to many diverse organizations. ■

6 | fall 2004

Dr. Eileen Aicardi and Dr. Richard Carmona

Page 9: Medical Alumni Magazine

Honor roll of alumni giving

Honor Roll of Alumni Giving 2003/2004

Leadership Giving

We are pleased to offer special recognition for alumni who have made leadership-level gifts to the UCSF School of Medicine.

Dear Alumni,

As graduates of the UCSF School of Medicine, you are counted among a most distinguished group of leaders at the forefront of research and health care policy in the U.S. UCSF physicians have reached the highest ranks of the nation’s most esteemed scientific and public health institutions, from the Surgeon General to the heads of the National Academy of Sciences and Centers for Disease Control.

UCSF-trained leaders are now shaping the direction of the nation’s health and health policy that will have an impact for years to come, and their UCSF roots have served them well. In fact, Julie Gerberding relates in these pages that she first became interested in infectious diseases while at UCSF, treating patients later recognized to have AIDS on the wards at San Francisco General Hospital.

I am very proud to be the dean of an institution with such an illustrious membership. My job is to select, support, and inspire the next generation of physicians to be prepared to one day assume such national leadership as well.

I can’t do this without your help. Your support is critical to identifying candidates, volunteering time, serving as preceptors, and paying dues to support vital Alumni Association programs for students. In addition, your generous contributions support a whole range of programs, from building the Clinical Skills Center to funding student scholarships. These pages acknowledge that generous support, and we hope will encourage wider participation from all alumni.

Together we can maintain and build upon UCSF’s treasured reputation for national leadership in the health sciences and in health care policy. Thank you for your support—we’re counting on it.

Sincerely,

David A. Kessler Dean, UCSF School of Medicine

Dean’s Associates Life MembersEllen Brown, M.D.Frederick M. Byl, M.D.Haw Chan, M.D.James M. Diamond, M.D.Henry E. Fourcade, M.D.Edmund D. Jung, M.D.Daniel J. Kanada, M.D.John A. Kerner, M.D.Donald W. Moline, M.D.Robert A. O’Reilly, M.D.Robert A. Schindler, M.D.Maurice Sokolow, M.D.L. James Strand, M.D.Frank W. Torres III, M.D.Howard J. Weinberger, M.D.Sophia Yen, M.D.

Heritage CircleT. Edward Bailly, Jr., M.D. ’40Karen Bane-Devich, M.D. ’68Ellen Brown, M.D. ’39Allen B. Cagle, M.D. ’69John B. Castiglione, M.D. ’42Haw Chan, M.D. ’44H. James Cornelius, M.D. ’62Lawrence Z. Feigenbaum, M.D. ’48Harold P. Johnson, M.D. ’46Edmund D. Jung, M.D. ’44Bernard Lowenstein, M.D. ’33Kent M. Matsuda, M.D. ’86Donald W. Moline, M.D. ’46Robert A. O’Reilly, M.D. ’55Peter Packard, M.D. ’48Robert T. Porter, M.D. ’43Henry J. Ralston III, M.D. ’59Morton A. Rosenblum, M.D. ’54Adolph Segal, M.D. ’42Bernard S. Sorkin, M.D. ’53Walter M. Tasem, M.D. ’42David E. Thorburn, M.D. ’77James R. Tillotson, M.D. ’59Bernhard A. Votteri, M.D. ’64Ralph O. Wallerstein, M.D. ’45Clair S. Weenig, M.D. ’69Howard J. Weinberger, M.D. ’42George S. Wong, M.D. ’57Louise A. Yeazell, M.D. ’38

Robert J. Albo, M.D., F.A.C.S. ’59M. Christina Benson, M.D. ’74Selvyn B. Bleifer, M.D. ’55Virginia C. Broudy, M.D. ’80Richard C. Burnett, M.D. ’49Frederick M. Byl, M.D. ’64Robert D. Cardiff, M.D., Ph.D. ’62Sara Canfield Carpenter, M.D. ’94Dennis Casciato, M.D. ’54John T. Castagna, M.D. ’66Arthur Z. Cerf, M.D. ’50Albert K. Chin, M.D.Henry D. W. Chu, M.D. ’79David J. Costanza, M.D. ’57Philip D. Darney, M.D. ’68Alfred A. de Lorimier, M.D. ’56Robert H. De Riemer, M.D. ’50Susan E. Detweiler, M.D. ’71Nancy E. Doyle, M.D. ’71Raymond R. Fay, M.D. ’67Delbert A. Fisher, M.D. ’53Christine S. Fukui, M.D. ’74Gordon L. Fung, M.D., M.P.H. ’79Adolfo D. Garnica, M.D. ’69William G. Gerber, M.D. ’71Brian S. Gould, M.D. ’73George A. Gregory, M.D. ’63Bradley J. Harlan, M.D. ’69Michael F. Hein, M.D. ’58Leslie G. Hilger, Jr., M.D. ’70M. Silvija Hoag, M.D. ’52Roger W. Hoag, M.D. ’50Julian B. Holt, M.D. ’62Douglas A. Horst, M.D. ’74Carol J. Jessop, M.D. ’78Allen H. Johnson, M.D. ’46Werner W. Ju, M.D. ’79Harold L. Karpman, M.D. ’54Edward W. Kim, M.D. ’75Judith A. Lamberti, M.D. ’78

Hugh H. Toland SocietyLevi H.K. Lee, M.D. ’66Arthur M. Liu, M.D. ’62Robert L. Lopez, M.D. ’79 Jeanne Quivey Mandell, M.D. ’70Peter J. Mandell, M.D. ’70Kent M. Matsuda, M.D. ’86Ruth Hase Matsuura, M.D. ’54Donald B. McKean, M.D. ’54Charles C. L. McNair, Jr., M.D. ’78Bruce L. Miller, Jr., M.D. ’01J. George Moore, M.D. ’42Donald L. Morton, M.D. ’58Samuel Nelson, M.D. ’62William G. Obana, M.D. ’87Richard L. Oken, M.D. ’71Henry M. Pearce, M.D. ’59Jack Rabin, M.D. ’51H.J. Peter Ralston, M.D. ’59Francisco C. Rico, M.D. ’69Robert L. Roe, M.D. ’66Pablo Romero, M.D. ’80Stanley W. Ruggles, M.D. ’63 Patrick M. Ryan, M.D. ’63H. Quintus Sakai, M.D. ’51David N. Schindler, M.D. ’66Theodore R. Schrock, M.D. ’64Briant W. Smith, M.D. ’86L. James Strand, M.D. ’66Darryl Y. Sue, M.D. ’74Michael M. Sugawara, M.D. ’64 Bernhard A. Votteri, M.D. ’64 Duard L. Walker, M.D. ’45A. Eugene Washington, M.D., M.Sc. ’76Clair Weenig, M.D. ’69Kenneth B. Wells, M.D., M.P.H. ’74 Joan Rosenau Wheelwright, M.D. ’51Jeanine P. Wiener-Kronish, M.D. ’76

Page 10: Medical Alumni Magazine

19541949

1944

19391934

Class Giving

The Class Giving

Section recognizes

all alumni who

made gifts to the

School of Medicine

from July 1, 2003

to June 30, 2004.

1929Total $250Participation 33%Dan Brodovsky, M.D.B15

1932Total $100Participation 33%Walter D. Birnbaum, Sr., M.D.*

1933Total $100Participation 33%John T. Heavey, M.D.B5

ReunionTotal $100Participation 25%Ralph D. Cressman, M.D.

ReunionTotal $1,000Participation 5%William Brock, M.D.A

1940Total $2,100Participation 20%Emile J. Gough Jr., M.D.Janet Chan Lee, M.D.A

Sidney Rosin, M.D.B11 A

1941Total $300Participation 13%Wayne S. Hansen, M.D.Harry Levitt, M.D.

1942Total $4,400Participation 17%Susanna Atwell, M.D.B14 A

Arthur Feinfield, M.D.B20 A

H. Donald Grant, M.D.A

Richard L. Johnson, M.D.Hilliard J. Katz, M.D.B10 A

Roy W. Leeper, M.D.Robert A. Mendle, M.D.B8

Willard J. Zinn, M.D.

1943Total $9,724Participation 25%Gordon M. Binder, M.D.B10

Houghton Gifford, M.D.A

Daniel Gorman, M.D.B21 A

Benjamin F. Gundelfinger, M.D.Robert O. Holmes, M.D.B6 A

John A. Kerner, M.D.B10 A L

Felix O. Kolb, M.D.Eugene Loopesko, M.D.B10

Robert H. Palmer, M.D.Robert T. Porter, M.D.B8 A H

Francis G. Preston, M.D.W. Eugene Stern, M.D.B10 A

Alex Weisskopf, M.D.A

ReunionTotal $1,750Participation 25%Donald C. Barbour, M.D.B5

George C. Blanton, Jr., M.D.Leroy W. Bowersox, M.D.Jack L. Dolhinow, M.D.Col. David J. Edwards, M.D.B5 A

Consuelo Keller Tagiuri, M.D.B13

Maurice Yettra, M.D.

1945Total $4,100Participation 25%Harold L. Berkman, M.D.Raymond M. deHay, M.D.Edwin E. Kerr, M.D.A

Walter S. Mazen, M.D.B7

Harold Mills, M.D.H. Robert Ripley, M.D.Ernest W. Shaw, M.D.A

Jack D. Thorburn, M.D.B21

Ralph O. Wallerstein, M.D.H

1946Total $5,700Participation 23%James H. Bennett, M.D.B7

Francis J. Charlton, M.D.William H. Clark, M.D.Orrin S. Cook, M.D.Wallace G. Elliott, M.D.B5 A

Irving Fine, M.D.B11

Nadine Foreman, M.D., J.D.Karl H. Hanson, M.D.B6

Joan E. Hodgman, M.D.B7 A

Allen H. Johnson, M.D.T

Harold P. Johnson, M.D.B11 A H

William J. Koser, Jr., M.D.B6

Thomas L. Nelson, M.D., Jr.Edward J. Smith, M.D.Malcolm A. Sowers, M.D.G. James Tobias, M.D.Robert E. Westfall, M.D.

1947Total $4,650Participation 28%Harrison M. Baker, M.D.Quentin Bonser, M.D.B8 A

Reynold F. Brown, M.D.Dorothy Colodny, M.D.B5

Hugh P. Curtis, M.D.B10

Lloyd W. Espen, M.D.Douglas W. Frerichs, M.D.Richard C. Onofrio, M.D.B13 A

David S. Wilder, M.D.Jack J. Williams, M.D.A

1948Total $5,000Participation 26%Joyce L. Beecher, M.D.A

Donald A. Carlyle, M.D.

Lawrence Z. Feigenbaum, M.D.B8 A H

William Y. Fong, M.D.Thurid Lininger Meckel, M.D.James A. Merrill, M.D.Peter Packard, M.D.B13 A H

Mary Gardner Schottstaedt, M.D.A

William W. Schottstaedt, M.D.B13 A

Wilton E. Vannier, M.D.

ReunionTotal $3,350Participation 17%S. William Levy, M.D.Wylda Hammond Nelson, M.D.David W. Rabak, M.D.William Silen, M.D.Grace M. Waldrop, M.D.A

E. Paul White, Jr., M.D.B7 A

1950Total $19,325Participation 27%Arthur Z. Cerf, M.D.B7 A T

Roger W. Hoag, M.D.A T

Joseph H. Kushner, M.D.Herman A. Lorberbaum, M.D.A

Stanley Marcus, M.D.B11

J. Peter Mark, M.D.A

Donald G. McLeod, M.D.Jacquelin Perry, M.D.Thomas G. Sayeg, M.D.Paul H. Trotta, M.D.Miriam Geisendorfer Wilson, M.D.A

1951Total $4,350Participation 22%Frank A. Gotch, M.D.A

Albert K. Mineta, M.D.B8

Jerome A. Motto, M.D.B21 A

Norman Panting, M.D.H. Quintus Sakai, M.D.T

Gordon J. Sproul, M.D.Joan Rosenau Wheelwright, M.D.B6 A T

1952Total $16,425Participation 15%Helen V. Christensen, M.D.A

John H. Epstein, M.D.Albert D. Hall, M.D., FACSA

M. Silvija Hoag, M.D.A T

T. Hans Newton, M.D.A

Lionel W. Sorenson, M.D.Morton J. Thoshinsky, M.DA

1953Total $2,000Participation 22%Alfred D. Chamberlain, M.D.Alfred M. Dashe, M.D.B7

Shirley Gaebler Hall, M.D.A

Mitsuo Inouye, M.D.Robert S. Johnson, M.D.B5

Ernest W. Klatte, M.D.Jerry M. Koplowitz, M.D.Kenneth H. Root, M.D.B8

Arthur M. Storment Jr., M.D.James D. Tovey, M.D.

ReunionTotal $52,025Participation 60%Aubrey L. Abramson, M.D.J. Willison Allen, M.D.Charles Aronberg, M.D.Mervyn F. Burke, M.D.A

Theodore L. Bushnell, M.D.B6

Adolph E. Christ, M.D.Leland H. Cohn, M.D.Olga Daiber, M.D.B12 A

Leroy H. Dart, M.D.Richard K. Freeman, M.D.Ephraim Friedman, M.D.B7 A

Murray B. Gardner, M.D.

Charles R. Geiberger, M.D.A

Mary L. Hanes, M.D.A

Harriet Burns Hanson, M.D.A

J. Harold Hanson, M.D.A

Kenneth G. Hanson, M.D.B8 A

George K. Hurwitz, M.D.A

Paul H. Johanson, M.D.A

Daniel E. Kaplan, M.D.A

Harold L. Karpman, M.D.A T V

Ruth Hase Matsuura, M.D.A T

Donald B. McKean, M.D.A

Dwight H. Murray, Jr., M.D.A

V. Thery Ness, M.D.Warren J. Newswanger, M.D.A

Thomas E. Ogden, M.D., Ph.D.Jerome H. Patmont, M.D.A

Morton A. Rosenblum, M.D.H

Harry L. Roth, M.D.A V

Joseph D. Sabella, M.D.A

Hubert J. Van Peenen III, M.D.B6 A

Ray H. Wiser, M.D.

1955Total $9,775Participation 28%Jack O. Benson, M.D.Selvyn B. Bleifer, M.D.B6 A T

Charles A. Borgia, M.D.B11

Thomas A. Daane, M.D.B8 A

Kinman Gong, M.D.Mary E. Holland, M.D.Charles R. Jacobson, M.D.Irwin Kempler, M.D.B8

Samuel R. Leavitt, M.D.B21

Rolland C. Lowe, M.D.A

Gerald V. Mon Pere, M.D.Stephen J. Plank, M.D.John A. Ross, M.D.Robert S. Seipel, M.D.Captane P. Thomson, M.D.B6

Roy S. Wagner, M.D.B5

UCSF School of Medicine

Key:

A Dean’s Associates donors of $1,000 or more this fiscal year

B5 True Blues donors in five or more consecutive years (number indicates how many years)

L Life Members of the Dean’s Associates donors of $100,000 or more within any single year

H Heritage Circle donors who have made deferred gifts T Toland Society donors of $10,000 or more to the School of Medicine Annual Fund

V Reunion Campaign Volunteer

* Deceased

Page 11: Medical Alumni Magazine

1964

1959

1956Total $7,250Participation 31%Abdul Al-Shamma, M.D.Wayne B. Bigelow, M.D.B10

David L. Breithaupt, M.D.Donald L. Browning, M.D.Joyce L. Erickson, M.D.B11

F. William Heer, M.D.Robert A. Hersch, M.D.B5

William S. Hiatt, M.D.Paul R. Jensen, M.D.C. Michael Knauer, M.D.B6

Harrison J. Kornfield, M.D.Henry A. Leighton, M.D.B20

Ronald S. Lever, M.D.John Mumma, M.D.Robert G. O’Connor, M.D.Joel F. Panish, M.D.A

Eric Roberts, M.D.Gunther H. Schmitt, M.D.A

John W. Williamson, M.D.

1957Total $9,520Participation 37%Donald N. Adler, M.D.John S. Baker, M.D.B11

Donald R. Bjornson, M.D.Ronald L. Branson, M.D.Melvin K. Call, M.D.Charles D. Capp, M.D., F.A.C.P.B5

David J. Costanza, M.D.T

John C. Fletcher, M.D.E. Joan Furnas- Corstanje, M.D.K. Hawley Jackson, M.D.Melvyn H. Krause, M.D.A

David Meltzer, M.D.B8

Richard L. Mercer, M.D.C. Ken Miura, M.D.B13

Harlan S. Parks, M.D.Benjamin D. Parmeter, M.D.Melvin L. Rubin, M.D.Donald E. Silvius, M.D.B6 A

Kennett G. Sublette, M.D.*Thomas L. Thomason, M.D.B9

James O. Trowbridge, M.D.B13

Peter F. Van Peenen, M.D.Roger M. Vogelzang, M.D.B11

Richard A. Wigod, M.D.Charles L. Wilson, M.D.

1958Total $14,900Participation 25%Marvin A. Brownstein, M.D.B5

Robert A. Campbell, M.D.Willard M. Daggett, Jr., M.D.Herbert H. Dedo, M.D.A

William A. Dworsky, M.D.Stanley Fahn, M.D.Michael F. Hein, M.D.T

Mardi J. Horowitz, M.D.C. David Jensen, M.D.W. J. Kulik, M.D.B8

E. James Lieberman, M.D.Aubrey W. Metcalf, M.D.B7A

Donald L. Morton, M.D.T

Lloyd J. Old, M.D.A

Bernard Sosner, M.D.B8

Francis R. Spinelli, Jr., M.D.James H. Williams, M.D.B5

Dean H. Zobell, M.D.

ReunionTotal $64,191Participation 59%Richard W. Akin, M.D.B6

Robert J. Albo, M.D., F.A.C.S.T

Bernard Arias, M.D.B5

Daniel N. Berez, M.D.Welby W. Bigelow, Jr., M.D.B8AV

Barton Byers, M.D.Allen B. Casebolt, M.D.Roy E. Christian, M.D.A

Alan J. Davidson, M.D.A

Mathews B. Fish, M.D.A

Stephen A. Gaal, M.D.Charles R. Gherman, M.D.A

Donald R. Gillies, M.D.B8

Michael T. Gyepes, M.D.Gerald C. Hays, M.D.Norman C. Headley, M.D.A

Lawrence E. Isom, M.D.John J. Kao, M.D.A

Carol K. Kasper, M.D.James W. Kern, M.D.Herbert J. Konkoff, M.D.Lydia A. Lukian, M.D.B7 A

Malcolm R. MacKenzie, M.D.A

Sidney M. Marchasin, M.D.Richard L. Miller, M.D.B13

Wesley S. Moore, M.D.A

Philip Morrissey, M.D.A

Karen Barkas Nelson, M.D.B11A

Henry M. Pearce, M.D.A T

Janet Westberg Peterson, M.D.Henry J. Ralston III, M.D.B12AHV

Carolyn Wood Sparks, M.D.Ronald J. Stoney, M.D.A

Dale L. Tipton, M.D.A

Edmund E. Van Brunt, M.D., Sc.D.A

Belson J. Weinstein, M.D.A

1960Total $18,700Participation 33%Arthur A. Biedermann, M.D.Donald E. Bosshardt, M.D.B5

Marvin D. Call, M.D.Constance Covington Dallmann, M.D.A

Robert J. Fallat, M.D.Donald F. German, M.D.B21

John P. Geyman, M.D.B7

Richard A. Gladden, M.D.Kenneth L. Jue, M.D.A

Ann M. Lawrence, M.D.B6

Robert C. Lim, Jr., M.D.Leonard Lipman, M.D.B5

Reed E. Miller, M.D.Frank A. Moore, M.D.B6

Naomi Nakashima, M.D.A

Dwayne M. Reed, M.D.Joseph H. Rose, M.D.

Howard L. Rosenfeld, M.D.Bruce F. Scrivens, M.D.Edwin M. Shonfeld, M.D.A

Robert Stevenson, M.D.David L. Swanson, M.D.T. Miriam Tani, M.D.

1961Total $2,270Participation 22%Carol A. Bell, M.D.Russell J. Erickson, M.D.Vincent Fausone, Jr., M.D.Robert Ilko, M.D.B7

Gary G. Kardos, M.D.Barbara A. Manildi, M.D.Allan R. Morrison, M.D.Surl L. Nielsen, M.D.Yoshio Setoguchi, M.D.B12

Coy E. Swanson, M.D.B8

Merlyn B. Thompson, M.D.B14

Wallace Tsang, M.D.Robert G. Wells, M.D.

1962Total $12,125Participation 35%Donald L. Allari, M.D.B16

Walter Birnbaum, Jr., M.D.Jean Shinoda Bolen, M.D.A

Frank A. Elliott, M.D.Joel A. Feigenbaum, M.D.B6

William K. Gourley, M.D.Julian B. Holt, M.D.B11 T

A. Robert Kagan, M.D.Benjamin Kaufman, M.D.Donald M. Kay, M.D.B21

Richard J. Keene, M.D.Lawrence H. Leiman, M.D.B21

Norman W. Luebkeman, M.D.B11

Jack E. Maidman, M.D.Mary Malloy, M.D.A

Jay E. McGee, M.D.Michael E. Musicant, M.D.Samuel Nelson, M.D.B5 T

Jon H. Pegg, M.D.Richard Posthuma, M.D.A

Andrea S.B. Powell, M.D.Sandro R. Sandri, M.D.Francis R. Simon, M.D.Emmett L. Smith, M.D.A

Ronald S. Swerdloff, M.D.William A. Tasto, M.D.Raymond Tom, M.D.B20 A

H. Charles Wallner, M.D.Mark J. Westervelt, M.D.Robert P. Wisner, M.D.

1963Total $9,375Participation 28%Ronald P. Bachman, M.D.Henry I. Goldberg, M.D.B15 A

Gerald S. Green, M.D.A

George A. Gregory, M.D.B7 T

John S. Hege, M.D.B7

Robert F. Hickey, M.D.Stanley C. Karz, M.D.

Donald B. Kaufman, M.D.Elizabeth Hutchinson Kaufman, M.D.Elena Young Krause, M.D.B7

Lon R. Mc Canne, M.D.James W. Miller, M.D.Gordon Mo, M.D.B8

George J. Monteverdi, M.D.Diane Gordon Oliver, M.D.Robert C. Rock, Sr., M.D.B8

Patrick M. Ryan, M.D.B19 T

Ellen E. Schapiro, M.D.Frederick R. Singer, M.D.B13 A

Patricia Tsang, M.D.A

Stewart A. White, M.D.William J. Wolfenden, Jr., M.D.Weyman W. Wong, M.D.B11 A

Raymond L. Zouhar, M.D.

ReunionTotal $66,325Participation 46%Jonathan Abrams, M.D.Roy T. Adachi, M.D.A

Robert E. Bechard, M.D.A

Donald M. Blackman, M.D.Michael F. Bogner, M.D.Gregory G. Brott, M.D.A

Thomas Bruce, M.D.B12 A

Joelle Bunting, M.D.Frederick M. Byl, M.D.A L T

Richard A. Carter, M.D.B10 A

Dennis A. Casciato, M.D.A

Lennig W. Chang, M.D.B14

Gary P. Crawford, M.D.A

Arthur D. Daily, M.D.A

Harlean Chin Donaldson, M.D.B8

Jacqueline Grey Etemad, M.D.James W. Forsythe, M.D.Jonathan Francis, M.D.R. Ronald Hare, M.D.Kevin D. Harrington, M.D.A V

Paul W. Hoffmann, M.D.Nicholas P. Kovacevich, M.D.B21A

Roger A. Lang, M.D.B6 A

Richard D. Long, M.D.A

Robert Mendez II, M.D.Carolyn K. Montgomery, M.D.Michael R. Nagel, M.D., MPA., FACCLawrence E. Nelson, M.D.Donald M. Okada, M.D.Collin P. Quock, M.D.A

Robert J. Riopelle, M.D.Ronald B. Rushford, M.D.Theodore R. Schrock, M.D.B21 A T

G. F. Scidmore, Jr., M.D.David E. Smith, M.D.A

Michael M. Sugawara, M.D.AT

Dennis J. Sullivan, M.D.A

Tamara C. Suslov, M.D.Richard A. Van Druten, M.D.William R. Vincent, M.D.A

Bernhard A. Votteri, M.D.B8 A H T V

1965Total $3,685Participation 23%John W. Bristow, M.D.Stuart Davidson, M.D.Barry S. Dorfman, M.D., M.P.H.Willa Mahler Fisher, M.D.B7

Philip L. Gardner, M.D.Jon M. Hazen, M.D.Edward Helmer, M.D.Lee M. Hoffmann, M.D.B16

Leroy W. Hunsaker, M.D.David C. Hurwitz, M.D.Daniel B. Jenkins, M.D.Michael R. Lachowicz, M.D.B5

Myron Lee, M.D.B8

Jeremy Levenson, M.D.John B. Montin, M.D.Harvey W. Olsen, M.D.C. Mervyn Rasmussen, M.D.Anthony Sebastian, M.D.Patricia Shoenfeld Sebastian, M.D.B5

Robert A. Shain, M.D.Alain L. Traig, M.D.B8

1966Total $12,017Participation 20%Itamar B. Abrass, M.D.Christian Bellardi, M.D.A

Kathleen E. Briscoe, M.D.John T. Castagna, M.D.T

Frank L. Dwinnell, Jr., M.D.B10 A

Stephen P. Ginsberg, M.D.Carolyn P. Greenberg, M.D.A

Ronald P. Gruber, M.D.Robert L.M. Hetland, M.D.Darlene Lanka, M.D.B6

Levi H.K. Lee, M.D.T

James S. Newman, M.D.Kent D. Pearson, M.D.Max Savin, M.D.B8

L. James Strand, M.D.A L T

Myron M. Turbow, M.D.Alfred M. Venturini, M.D.Donald K. Wilkerson, M.D.

1967Total $4,425Participation 24%Gary H. Baker, M.D.B8

Kenneth Barnes, M.D.Dennis C. Brydon, M.D.John L. Chase, M.D.Ronald P. Converse, M.D., J.D.Raymond R. Fay, M.D.T

Alan L. Freeman, M.D.Bruce H. Gallaway, M.D.Michael D. Grossman, M.D.B8

Nelson J. Gurll, M.D.Lawrence N. Hill, M.D., FACPRalph R. Lake, M.D.William G. Lavelle, M.D.

Honor Roll of Alumni Giving 2003/2004

Page 12: Medical Alumni Magazine

1974

1969

George H. Mollett, M.D.A

Judith Harrison Monge, M.D.Mary O’Keeffe O’Shea, M.D.Laurence S. Reisner, M.D.John W. Remo, M.D.John W. Richey, M.D.B6

Susan Sniderman, M.D.R. Lawrence Sullivan, Jr., M.D.Robert D. Urrea, M.D.

1968Total $10,920Participation 27%Ernest E. Arras, Jr., M.D.Homer A. Boushey, Jr., M.D.Catherine H. Briggs, M.D.Robert A. Bush, Jr., M.D., FACSRobert B. Calson, M.D.B7

Ronald D. Caruso, M.D.Byron M. Chong, M.D.Edgar E. Clark, Jr., M.D.B6

Janet R. Clark, M.D.B6

Philip D. Darney, M.D.B7 T

Paul B. Dean, M.D.A

Brian P. Dolan, M.D.John L. Dolan, M.D.John D. Eckstein, M.D.B12

Donald Fong, M.D.Kenneth H. Fye, M.D.Karen Herzog, M.D.B10

Gary L. Hillman, M.D.Pamela S. Jensen, M.D.B5 A

Stuart A. Kauffman, M.D.Laura C. Knight, M.D.A

Philip J. Knight, M.D.A

John M. Lee, M.D.Alvin R. Loosli, M.D.John T. Lundgren, M.D.Patricia D. Peterson, M.D.Richard C. Rentz, M.D.Eugene P. Shatkin, M.D.Marita Angleton Sheehan, M.D.Robert S. Shulman, M.D.N. Lee Smith, M.D.Helen O’Keeffe Vajk, M.D.B6

Myron B. Wacholder, M.D.A

ReunionTotal $77,008Participation 36%Stephen L. Abbott, M.D.Daniel S. Berman, M.D.Allen B. Cagle, M.D.A H

Anthony A. Eason, M.D.A

Marsha A. Epstein, M.D.Michael A. Fein, M.D.Faith T. Fitzgerald, M.D.A

Lawrence M. Friedlander, M.D.B9

Adolfo D. Garnica, M.D.B6 A T

Steven T. Gotanda, M.D.Martin L. Graham, M.D.J. Anthony Guichard, M.D.B7 A V

Richard L. Hardcastle, M.D.Bradley J. Harlan, M.D.B9 A T V

Michael E. Humphrey, M.D.B21A

James C. Jones, M.D.Mark T. Kuge, M.D.B11

Paul P. Lee, M.D.A

Michael O. Liff, M.D.B9 A

Gifford Lum, M.D.Lenore Ravin McKnight, M.D.B6A

Myron Mitzenmacher, M.D.J. Kim Brubaker Morris, M.D.Philip B. Morris, M.D.Judy Palmer Naiman, M.D.Richard W. Peters, M.D.A

Francisco C. Rico, M.D.B19 A T

Robert M. Rosenblatt, M.D.Janet H. Roth, M.D.A

James D. Salerno, M.D.A

James R. Saunders, M.D.Thomas J. Sherry, M.D.Joseph T. Spaulding, M.D.A

Gary H. Spivey, M.D.B6

John Stoner III, M.D.A

Richard W. Terry, M.D.A

Jeannette J. Townsend, M.D.B11A

Donald G. Tretheway, M.D.A

Patrick L. Twomey, M.D.Philip D. Walson, M.D.Clair S. Weenig, M.D.A H

Nicholai Zelneronok, M.D.A

1970Total $11,022Participation 22%William R. Amsterlaw, M.D.Robert E. Belknap, M.D.James C. Budde, M.D.James H. Buxman, M.D.B7

Michael H. Criqui, M.D.B8

Alan D. Engelberg, M.D.Richard A. Francoz, M.D.Marc E. Goldyne, M.D., Ph.D.A

Leslie G. Hilger, Jr., M.D.T

Robert D. Hunt, M.D.Allen C. Krohn, M.D.Michael H. Malone, M.D.Jeanne Quivey Mandell, M.D.T

Peter J. Mandell, M.D.T

Peter S. Moskowitz, M.D.B21

Michael V. Pittier, M.D.John Putnam, M.D.Owen G. Reese, Jr., M.D.B8

John F. Scavulli, M.D.Edward Schneider, M.D.B17

David R. Schumacher, M.D.B6

Michael Sugarman, M.D.Roger D. Weeks, M.D.M. J. Whitehouse, M.D.Joyce K. Yano-Maggiora, M.D.

1971Total $18,832Participation 27%Barbara A. Bergmann, M.D.Edward M. Blumenstock, M.D.William H. Boyd, M.D.Neal H. Cohen, M.D.B21 A

John V. Collin, M.D.B12

Alan B. Compton, M.D.Susan E. Detweiler, M.D.B9 T

Brian W. Dorman, M.D.Nancy E. Doyle, M.D.T

Denis W. Drew, M.D.

Eric A. Ford, M.D.B21

Melvyn J. Froese, M.D.A

Charles E. Irwin, Jr., M.D.Peter C. Jensen, M.D.Helene Olson Johnson, M.D.Robert W. Kalayjian, M.D.James S. Kaufman, M.D.B21

F. Burt McDowell, M.D.Edward L. Merrin, M.D.Edward J. Meyer, M.D.B7

Frank L. Meyskens, Jr., M.D.Peter Navolanic, M.D.B5

Richard L. Oken, M.D.B21 T

Douglas D. Pile, M.D.A

Michael F. Roizen, M.D.B9 A

Martin Rose, M.D.A

John C. Russell, M.D.James K. Schmitt, M.D.B12

Norma McKenzie Schmitt, M.D.B5

Peter W. Sullivan, M.D.B5

Richard K. Thompson, M.D.Bonita Klahn Vestal, M.D.Loring H. Winthrop, M.D.Kathleen O. Yamaguchi, M.D.B7

1972Total $7,488Participation 24%James K. Bauriedel, M.D.Fred K. Berger, M.D.Maxwell M. Chait, M.D.B8

Stephen D. Covington, M.D.O. Brian Craig, M.D.A

Robert D. Crawford, M.D.Roger D. Fast, M.D.B6

David G. Grubb, M.D.B5

Donald J. Grubb, M.D.N. William Hagbom, M.D.B9

Penny Brody Harris, M.D.B13

Larry K. Heath, M.D.Elizabeth A. Herb, M.D.Ernest M. Mak, M.D.David K. Manchester, M.D.Richard L. Mentzer, M.D.Richard B. Morgan, M.D.Lewis T. Nerenberg, M.D.James J. Peck, M.D.Harry Rockoff, M.D.Joseph E.V. Rubin, M.D.Steven E. Salomon, M.D.Barrie Von Smith, M.D.Richard E. Stiefler, M.D.James D. Wolfe, M.D.Barbara A. Wood, M.D.James J. Woods, M.D.B6

Kent T. Yamaguchi, M.D.B8

Frank Yang, M.D.A

1973Total $6,925Participation 18%John S. Abele, M.D.B6

Janet L. Abrahm, M.D.B8 A

Daniel J. Barry III, M.D.Brian R. Bigelow, M.D.Richard S. Breiman, M.D.Herbert D. Brosbe, M.D.Willis P. Callins, M.D.Ralph Camacho, Jr., M.D.

Gerald R. Corn, M.D.A

Brian S. Gould, M.D.B18 T

Stephen A. Imbeau, M.D.B7

Theodore C. Kruse, M.D.May Loo, M.D.Ronald E. Mertens, M.D.Brownell H. Payne, M.D.Kenneth T. Roost, M.D.J. Kenyon Rupnik, M.D.B12

Robert A. Schor, M.D.Tetsuo T. Shigyo, M.D.B11

Harvey C. Slocum, Jr., M.D.Barry A. Tuch, M.D.

ReunionTotal $65,600Participation 32%Eileen Ziomek Aicardi, M.D.A V

Stephen P. Angel, M.D.Stephen N. Bauer, M.D.B6 A

Barry B. Behrstock, M.D.M. Christina Benson, M.D.A T

Janet Bancroft Bodle, M.D.Edward Y. C. Chan, M.D.A

Stephen P. Fortmann, M.D.Christine S. Fukui, M.D.B6 A T

Lenora V. Fung, M.D.A

Glenn G. Hakanson, M.D.A

Dean R. Hirabayashi, M.D.B6

Douglas A. Horst, M.D.B17 A T

John W. Howar, M.D.B14

James I. Ito, Jr., M.D.A

Daniel P. Kronish, M.D.Albert P. Lee, M.D.A

Dolores M. Leon, M.D.A

John M. Luce, M.D.A

Judith Aldridge Luce, M.D.A

Gustavo A. Machicado, M.D.David R. Minor, M.D.Leonard R. Moore, M.D.James N. Nishio, M.D.Francisco Pena, M.D.B8

Stuart F. Quan, M.D.Angela J. Rabkin, M.D.John M. Raines, M.D.A

Dennis W. Rowe, M.D.Brian E. Schindler, M.D.B8 A

William J. Schwartz, M.D.A

Yoram Sorokin, M.D.A

Susan K. Stewart, M.D.Darryl Y. Sue, M.D.A T V

Anne Tang, M.D.Alfonso Velasco, M.D.B6

Kenneth B. Wells, M.D., M.P.H.A T

David N. Whitten, M.D., Ph.D.Brian J. Wilson, M.D.Bernard A. Wolf, M.D.A

1975Total $17,977Participation 32%Dolores E. Ali, M.D.Howard D. Backer, M.D.B8

Barry C. Baron, M.D.Michael J. Blumlein, M.D.Karl Brandspigel, M.D.Ronald N. Chaplan, M.D.Diane Lewis Chauffe, M.D.A

Lambert H.K. Chee, M.D.A

Suzanne M. Connolly, M.D.Beverly E. Corry, M.D.Mary Cueva, M.D.Michael V. Drake, M.D.A

Paul A. Feigenbaum, M.D.B5

Judith E. Fradkin, M.D.David F. Giansiracusa, M.D.Michael B. Glowalla, M.D.B16

Charles H. Hanson, M.D.Wendy Whitmer Hirsh, M.D.Stanford K. Ishihara, M.D.B14

Henry J. Kahn, M.D.B7 A

Edward W. Kim, M.D.A T

Oren T.H. Leong, M.D.Peter L. Levine, M.D.A

Stephen R. Luber, M.D.Jennifer Thomas McAfee, M.D.Henry B. Moon, M.D.B21

Kenneth S. Peters, M.D.B5

Lucy M. Reifel, M.D.Linda A. Rudolph, M.D.James K. Saiki, M.D.Leonard R. Sanders, M.D.Barbara S. Tittle, M.D.Stanley M. Toy, Jr., M.D.A

Frank E. Veltri, M.D.Richard R. Wilber, M.D.Mary Ann Wilson, M.D.Kay Yatabe, M.D.

1976Total $21,225Participation 33%Terence B. Allen, M.D.Leon Axel, M.D., Ph.D.Mark R. Bertoglio, M.D.Susan K. Bowers, M.D.Charles H. Burns, M.D.B5

Mitchell S. Cairo, M.D.John A. Carver, M.D.Frank E. Churchill, Jr., M.D.*David L. Coleman, M.D.Joanne A. De Phillips, M.D., M.P.H.William P. Doherty, Ph.D., M.D.John E. Dunphy, Jr., M.D.R. Blair Evans, M.D.Kyle I. Fuchs, M.D.Glenn Y. Gee, M.D.Joshua S. Gettinger, M.D.Eric F. Glassy, M.D.Michael M. Graham, M.D.Carl L. Hanson, M.D.B9

Guillermo Hess, M.D.Sammy T. Hung, M.D.Joseph R. Jimenez, M.D.Robert A. Kaye, M.D.Chuk W. Kwan, M.D.Barbara A. Levin, M.D.Wai-Bong Lok, M.D.B7 A

Alfredo R. Lopez, M.D.B7

Helen Bergado Lovell, M.D.B7

Robert C. Lowery, Jr., M.D.A

Don D. McAfee, M.D.Lee Mei, M.D.Arnelle Stone Midley, M.D.Dennis A. Nakata, M.D.B7

Martha L. Neighbor, M.D.Paul E. Pepe, M.D., M.P.H.

UCSF School of Medicine

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1979

Steven J. Petrakis, M.D.B9

Helaine B. Pleet, M.D.Michael S. Policar, M.D., M.P.H.David C. Potter, M.D.A

Roman Rodriguez, M.D.Eugene D. Shapiro, M.D.Raymond A. Sobel, M.D.B5

Richard S. Stern, M.D.B5

Lloyd M. Stoolman, M.D.Kim Marie Thorburn, M.D., M.P.H.A. Eugene Washington, M.D., M.SB15 T

Michael S. Weiss, M.D.B21 A

Jeanine P. Wiener-Kronish, M.D.T

Chi-Kwan Yen, M.D.

1977Total $26,850Participation 39%William G. Bradley, Jr., M.D., Ph.DA

James W. Buehler, M.D.Mark R. Burns, M.D.David E. Bush, M.D.John R. Butterly, M.D.Paul R. Cary, M.D.Joseph C. Chan, M.D.B6

Kenneth P. Chin, M.D.William B. Crede, M.D.A

E. Michael Darby, M.D.Christine C. Deignan, M.D.Barry L. Engelstad, M.D.Linda Page Engelstad, M.D.Martin F. Ernster, M.D.Ilona J. Frieden, M.D.B8 A

Charles E. Fuchs, M.D.Humberto A. Galleno, M.D.A

Bertha M. Gee-Lew, M.D.B12

Erica Tucker Goode, M.D.B10

Harvey J. Green, M.D.Richard A. Haas, M.D.Khati L. Hendry, M.D.B8

Arlen R. Hoh, M.D., M.P.H.B5

David R. Holtzclaw, M.D.Roger M. Iliff, M.D.Robert Islas, M.D.Marion S. Johnson, M.D.Thomas G. Karagianes, M.D.Matthew C. Kidd, M.D.Benjamin H. Lewis, M.D.A

Penny A. Lowenstein, M.D.B6

Craig R. Malloy, M.D.Toni L. Martin, M.D.Jane S. Melnick, M.D.A

Colin R. Raitiere, M.D.William E. Reece, M.D.A

Kenneth M. Riff, M.D.Warren Roston, M.D.B9

Parmela Sawhney, M.D.A

Charles D. Sooy, M.D.Frank A. Spellman, M.D.David E. Thorburn, M.D.B18 A H

Richard C. Unger, Ph.D., M.D.Tonia B. Vyenielo, M.D.Gail M. Wagner, M.D.Wendell W. Wenneker, M.D.B13A

Reardon C. West, M.D.A

Richard G. Younge, M.D., MPHB8

1978Total $13,855Participation 23%Penny H. Ablin, M.D.B12 A

Euphemie A. Brown, M.D.Ryszard J. Chetkowski, M.D.B5

Daryl H. Chinn, M.D.Stephen O. Cunnion, M.D.Deborah S. Dain, M.D.John C. Eckels, M.D.B21

Stuart J. Eisendrath, M.D.Gerald E. Eliaser, M.D.David J. Ellis, M.D.Jessica L. Fewkes, M.D.Katherine A. Foster, M.D.Neil Gesundheit, M.D.B5

Steven L. Hubbard, M.D.B5

Judith A. Lamberti, M.D.T

Russell E. Leong, M.D.Monica Lau Leung, M.D.A

Ralph A. Libet, M.D.Myrl R. Manley, M.D.Charles C. L. McNair, Jr., M.D.B7 T

Anthony J. Molina, M.D.B7

Reginaldo R. Molina, M.D.Thomas G. Padgett, M.D.Ann Petru, M.D.B7

Paul E. Prusiner, M.D., Ph.D.B6

Andrew A. Raubitschek, M.D.Gwynn L. Simon, M.D.Susan D. Wall, M.D.B7 A

Lawrence G. Walsh, M.D.Susan E. Waters, M.D.Charles A. Weber, M.D.Mary Erskine Wheat, M.D.B18

Brian D. Wong, M.D., M.P.H.B12

Wilson S. Wong, M.D.

ReunionTotal $57,820Participation 34%George M. Ajalat, M.D.Deborah J. Anderson, M.D.Frederick W. Bialy, M.D.B13 A

Paula A. Braveman, M.D.Curtis L. Caughey, M.D.A

Henry D. W. Chu, M.D.B5 A T

Thomas R. Farrell III, M.D.A

Donna M. Ferriero, M.D.B15 V

Gordon L. Fung, M.D., M.P.H.B11 A T V

Terry T. Gerritsen, M.D.Elie M. Gindi, M.D.B5

Philip L. Glick, M.D.B6 A

Ruth B. Goldstein, M.D.B13

Henry P. Gong, M.D.Mark T. Grattan, M.D.A

Lisa E. Heikoff, M.D.B12 A

Werner W. Ju, M.D.B9 A T

David R. Kenigsberg, M.D.Sundra S. Kim, M.D.A

Cynthia J. Kirsten, M.D.Eleanor G. Levin, M.D.Rhonda L. Levitt, M.D.Robert L. Lopez, M.D.B11 A

Mark H. Luoto, M.D.B5

James D. Marks, M.D., Ph.D.Roberto D. Mendez, M.D.Lani J. Miller, M.D.Loretta Churchill Miramontes, MDRonnie B. Ranz, M.D.Karen A. Ratliff, M.D.Carolyn Rees, M.D.Mark L. Renneker, M.D.Gerald A. Ridge, M.D.Michael C. Rowbotham, M.D.JaNahn C. Scalapino, M.D.Anne B. Simons, M.D.B6

Diane M. Sklar, M.D.B9 A

Ruth P. Tabancay, M.D.John I. Takahashi, M.D.Elizabeth K. Tam, M.D.A

Debra A. Tanner-Abell, M.D.Beth Taylor, M.D.Elizabeth F. Thomas, M.D.B15

Ann C. Tipton, M.D.Gerald E. Van Wieren, M.D.B11

Catherine Wille-Armstrong, M.D.B9

Mario S. Yco, M.D.A

Stephen D. Yee, M.D.B11

Sherrylyn R. Young, M.D.

1980Total $18,575Participation 30%Maria G. Benedet, M.D.Faustino Bernadett, Jr., M.D.A

Peter N. Bretan, Jr., M.D., F.A.C.S.Virginia C. Broudy, M.D.B5 T

Edmund Chong, M.D.Howard L. Corren, M.D.B5

Timothy J. Crowley, M.D.A

Diane E. Dakin, M.D.B6

Linda D. Dow, M.D.B5

Darlene J. Elias, M.D.A

Charles W. Evans, M.D.Susan A. Fertig, M.D.Patricia Rhyner Hudgins, M.D.B13

David I. Kaufman, M.D.Peter J. Knoblich, M.D.Joyce A. Kobori, M.D.John C. Kofoed, Jr., M.D.Gretchen E. Kunitz, M.D.Cynthia Lee, M.D.B6

Raymond W. Lee, M.D.A

Robert E. Lee, M.D.A

Candace Lew, M.D.Paul L. Ludmer, M.D.Margaret A. MacLeod, M.D.Inez Marshburn, M.D.Sheila G. Moore, M.D.B6 A

James A. Morgenstern, M.D.B5

Darian W. Morray, M.D.Pablo Romero, M.D.T

James A. Schwarz, M.D.Mark A. Singleton, M.D.James D. Sutherland, M.D.B7 A

Gregory W. Thomas, M.D.Catherine A. Trejo, M.D.B8

Jeffrey V. Tubbs, M.D.B5 A

Christopher J. Vasil, M.D.A

Alan P. Venook, M.D.Alan C. Werblin, M.D.Kevin J. Wingert, M.D.Bryan M. Wong, M.D.Johnson T. Wong, M.D.Melvin H. C. Yee, M.D.

1981Total $27,685Participation 31%Randal W. Anderson, M.D.Brian T. Andrews, M.D., F.A.C.S.B10

Ajit S. Arora, M.D.A

Erica Buhrmann, M.D.Peter L. Candell, M.D.Charles B. Cauldwell, M.D., Ph.D.Janet L. Dietrich, M.D.Quan-Yang Duh, M.D.Christopher C. Dunford, M.D.A

Paul Dybbro, M.D.A

Robert E. Feinfield, M.D.Anne Arbetter Fischell, M.D.James T. Flick, M.D.Cheri J. Forrester, M.D.Richard M. Hambley, M.D.B6

Daniel R. Hightower, M.D.Robert A. Hong, M.D.Milton V. Icenogle, M.D.Mark A. Jacobson, M.D.B6 A

Mark H. Johnson, M.D.Karen M. Johnston, M.D.Jeffrey L. Kang, M.D.A

Raymond Leung, M.D.A

Nathan D. Mann, M.D.Jairo Marin, M.D.Alma M. Martinez, M.D.A

Reginald D. Mason, M.D.Daniel T. Matulich, M.D.B5

Beverly F. McLeod, M.D.Kenneth R. McQuaid, M.D.Elizabeth S. Menkin, M.D.B19

Marcia A. Moore, M.D.My-Ngoc Nguyen, M.D.Elizabeth K. Patterson, M.D.A

John W. Peabody, M.D., Ph.D.A

Lewis D. Pepper, M.D.Marc L. Rivo, M.D.Eliott Romero, M.D.Roberta Rose, M.D.Lisa G. Sandles, M.D.Mitchell J. Schoen, M.D.Paul H. Stepak, M.D.Betsy Y.C. Strong, M.D.B5

Eddy Tamura, M.D.Corito S. Tolentino, M.D.B7

Herbert Toy, M.D.B7

Fernando G. Ulloa, M.D.Serena Young, M.D.B5 A

Maurice S. Zwass, M.D.

1982Total $7,600Participation 25%Ludmila Bojman, M.D.Lani M. Desaulniers, M.D.B5

James C. Eisenach, M.D.Charles E. Evans, M.D.Denise A. Flaherty, M.D.

Richard L. Gilbert, M.D.Hector A. Gonzalez, M.D.Laurene L. Howell, M.D.David H. Irwin, M.D.Warren C. Jensen, M.D.Diane R. Krieger, M.D,Sally Ling, M.D.Judith M. Lyding, M.D.B8

Henry C. Markman, M.D.Lorraine Gates Massa, M.D.Marlene Sockol Mills, M.D.B14

Lisa J. Morrison, M.D.Diane R. Newton, M.D.Nancy L. Orchard, M.D.Barbara G. Orrok, M.D.Matilde Parente, M.D.Josephine Martinez Perez, M.D.A

Kenneth K. Renwick, Jr., M.D.Steven H. Richeimer, M.D.Ross T. Sutton, M.D.Ronald Tamaru, M.D.B8

Bruce Turetsky, M.D.Ronald Tyrus, M.D.John C. Vallandigham, M.D.Shawn R. Van Bockel, M.D.Sara Velasco, M.D.Fred S. Vernacchia, M.D.Eric H. Whyte, M.D.Stephen Wong, M.D.Matthew S. Zealear, M.D.

1983Total $6,260Participation 23%Paul M. Belsky, M.D.Gregory A. Broderick, M.D.Robert Castro, M.D.Anthony C. Cheng, M.D.Albert K. Chin, M.D.T

Manuel G. Diaz, M.D.William W. Eggimann, M.D.B10 A

Sara E. Forhan, M.D.Susan J. Friedland, M.D.David S. Gettinger, M.D.B9

George A. Guerra, M.D.Cherie A. Hargis, M.D.Glenn J. Jaffe, M.D.David C. Kaslow, M.D.Jonathan Kay, M.D.Karl C. Klontz, M.D.B9

Richard L. Kravitz, M.D.Linda Van Le, M.D.Arturo Martinez, M.D.A

Denise A. McNamara, M.D.Hildy B. Meyers, M.D.B5

Mary Gray Patton, M.D.Allan E. Pineda, M.D.David M. Pon, M.D.Phillip B. Rolfe, M.D.B10

Debra Bolding Rosenthal, M.D.Jane Satter, M.D.Gary E. Schwartz, M.D.Sheila A. Stewart, M.D.Laura Rees Willett, M.D.Robert L. Willett, M.D.Winston F. Wong, M.D., M.S.C. Spencer Yost, M.D.B9

Honor Roll of Alumni Giving 2003/2004

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1989

1984ReunionTotal $18,725Participation 35%Mary Taher Abed, M.D.Kent M. Adler, M.D.David M. Ashkenaze, M.D.Paul A. Beck, M.D.A

Rose A. Berwald, M.D.Kerry L. Blacker, M.D.Sara J. Bunting, M.D.Connie Locke Celum, M.D.Steven L. Chuck, M.D.Moira A. Cunningham, M.D.Paul H. Dossick, M.D.Huong T. Duong, M.D.A

Daniel A. Egerter, M.D.Calvin T. Eng, M.D.David J. Erle, M.D.B6

Arthur E. Flynn, M.D.Lillian Hitomi Fujimoto, M.D.Kenneth K. Gee, M.D.A

Jerry M. Gonzales, M.D.B15

Daniel J. Highkin, M.D.Dana F. Hoch, M.D.Renee Howard, M.D.B6

Henry H. Hsu, M.D.A

Ellen F. Hughes, M.D., Ph.D.Ming C. Isinhue, M.D.B11

Fay Read Kagan, M.D.Cynthia K. Kapjian, M.D.Todd H. Katzman, M.D.A

Scott D. Kelley, M.D.A V

Kanwal Khanna, M.D.Laura B. Klein, M.D.Kelvin C. Lee, M.D.Peter M. Liljeberg, M.D.Enraquita Lopez, M.D.Todd P. Margolis, M.D., Ph.D.Lorna McFarland, M.D.Constance E. Gaulter, M.D.Linda Yankowski O’Leary, M.D.Andrew B. Oliveira, M.D., M.H.A.Susan L. Orloff, M.D.Dennis S. Orwig, M.D.B6

Sarah E. Royce, M.D.Susan E. Schaefer, M.D.A

Steven H. Segerstrom, M.D.Gerald W. Smetana, M.D.Marta T. Spain, M.D.Barton J. Sparagon, M.D.Frank R. Tamura, M.D.B11A

Don M. Yoshimura, M.D.

1985Total $12,190Participation 26%Jeoffrey P. Benson, M.D., Ph.D.Craig D. Berlinberg, M.D.Gregory F. Bland, M.D.Sarah J. Braun, M.D.David A. Bull, M.D.A

Andre R. Campbell, M.D.A

Grace Meigs Dammann, M.D.Joseph F. Elson, M.D.Jason M. Gilbert, M.D.Kevin L. Grumbach, M.D.B7

Susan C. Hellerstein, M.D.Timothy P. Hofer, M.D., M.P.H.Paul E. Johnson, M.D.Helen L. J. Jones, M.D.Donald D. Kim, M.D.A

Joan L. King-Angell, M.D.Jordan L. Kramer, M.D.Harry W. Lampiris, M.D.Marsha A. Lavoie, M.D.Karen Lee Li, M.D.Ferdinand J. Liotta, M.D.Maria L. Martins, M.D.Sarah B. McCarthy, M.D.Mary P. Naughton, M.D.A

Randall A. Pierce, M.D.A

Judy Schwartz, M.D.Karen Beth Sokal-Gutierrez, M.DB5

Sheryl Lamb Sun, M.D.Jean Vierra, M.D.Elizabeth Vilardo-Morgan, M.D.Judith L. Walker, M.D.Christopher D. White, M.D.

1986Total $25,665Participation 29%Randolph S. Acedo, M.D.Catherine M. Borchert, M.D.Anne Butler, M.D.B17

Walter F. Combs Jr., M.D.A

Vivien Smith D’Andrea, M.D.Karen J. Doyle, M.D., Ph.D.B9

Michael I. Echavez, M.D.Jay W. Ellison, M.D.Roger C. Furlong, M.D.Jonathan E. Grisham, M.D.Russell W. Jennings, M.D.Todd B. Kaye, M.D.B5

Catherine Contreras Kramer, M.D.A

Christopher M. Kramer, M.D.A

Michael E. Lee, M.D.Phyllis E. Lee, M.D.Haywon Lieh, M.D.Michael P. Mah, M.D.Jane E. Mahoney, M.D.Kent M. Matsuda, M.D.B6 H T

Brigid R. McCaw, M.D., M.P.H., M.S.Anthony C. Miller, M.D.Myhanh T. Nguyen, M.D.Claudia S. Pinilla, M.D.Georgia Pung Villanueva, M.D.Bradley A. Richie, M.D.B10

Gregg K. Satow, M.D.Michael L. Schmitz, M.D.B11

Audrey D. Sellers, M.D.B6

Briant W. Smith, M.D.B7 A T

Chris Stookey, M.D.B5

Michael A. Sweeney, M.D.Ofelia M. Utset, M.D.Juanito S. Villanueva, M.D.B5

Michael L. Wang, M.D.

1987Total $7,235Participation 21%Janet E. Arnesty, M.D.Catherine A. Chin, M.D.Iris B. S. Choo, M.D.B10

Vicki Martinez Dawson, M.D.Harry L. Dennis, M.D.Matthew A. Eisenberg, M.D.Frank C. Galli III, M.D.Gerald Gollin, M.D.Yvonne Lanza Gollin, M.D.Erin N. Heath, M.D.Monica Kraft, M.D.Tracy A. Lieu, M.D.Marketa Limova, M.D.Philip N. Lomas, M.D.B5

Lucille Lomas Marchand, M.D.B5

Katherine J. McClure, M.D.B5 A

Mark W. Melberg, M.D.B6

Linda R. Mignano, M.D.Jose M. Miramontes, M.D.B12 A

Richard G. Obregon, M.D.Lynne G. Pappas, M.D.B5 A

Ronald S. Pobiel, M.D.Dominique N. Quincy, M.D.Steven C. Russak, M.D.Charlotte P. Saxby, M.D.Clifford A. Schmiesing, M.D.Eric G. Sletten, M.D.B13

Anson J. C. Smith, M.D.K. Bradford Snyder, M.D.

1988Total $8,885Participation 27%Alfred C. Aparicio, M.D.A

Karen L. Axelsson, M.D.B7 A

Robert M. Barr, M.D.B7 A

Katherine A. Baumann, M.D.B11

Joan P. Baumbach, M.D.Eleanor K. Becker-Melles, M.D.Jorge R. Bernett, M.D.Michelle L. Bourgault, M.D.Thomas C. L. Chen, M.D.Sheila Gaughan Cooper, M.D.B8

Kenneth E. Covinsky, M.D.B8

Sara R. Dacey, M.D.B12

Gregory H. Enders, M.D., Ph.D.Francis J. M. Felix, M.D.Linda Miner Fox, M.D.B7

James H. Glauber, M.D.Geoffrey C. Gurtner, M.D.Ellen Haller, M.D.Ronald M. Harris, M.D.Kristen M. Hege, M.D.John S. Kim, M.D.Denise Koo, M.D., M.P.H.Deborah Levine, M.D.David B. Levitsky, M.D.Chieko M. Lin, M.D.Richard Z. Lin, M.D.Dennis M. Lindeborg, M.D.J. Dougal MacKinnon, Ph.D., M.D.

Randolph S. Marshall, M.D.Gamin M. Marugg- Thomason, M.D.Maria C. Munoz, M.D.Cathryn L. Nation, M.D.David H. Persing, M.D., Ph.D.Ann N. Poncelet, M.D.Lissa K. Rechtin, M.D.Mary Ann Wilkinson Sims, M.D.Holly Pederson Smedira, M.D.Erin R. Stucky, M.D.B5

Judy K. Tam, M.D.B9

Alan K. Uba, M.D.Willem J. Van Der Werf, M.D.

ReunionTotal $10,321Participation 31%Paul G. Alagna, M.D.Frank M. Basich, M.D.David S. Becker, M.D.A

Patrick M. Bennett, M.D.B10

Darrel S. Brodke, M.D.Andrew F. Calman, M.D., Ph.D.Marshall H. Chin, M.D.B6

Laurel G. Coleman, M.D.B11

Stephanie Galbraith Cooper, M.D.Samuel J. Dardick, M.D.Sheryl S. Dickstein, M.D.B6

Keith R. Dveirin, M.D.Laura A. Eberhard, M.D.Paul G. Fisher, M.D.Sergio R. Flores, M.D.Jeffrey L. Groffsky, M.D.B7

Eve Askanas Kerr, M.D.B7

Phine Kiang, M.D.B6

Alice J. Lawrence, M.D.A

Edward C. Lee, M.D.Gregory M. Lim, M.D.Mark N. Lobato, M.D.Scott F. Loeliger, M.D.David S. Marks, M.D.Candi McCoy, M.D.Cynthia Morris, M.D.M. Thomas Morrissey, M.D.Debra Mund, M.D.Steven Z. Pantilat, M.D.Richard S. Ponce, M.D.Joseph A. Scott, M.D.Debra Shapiro, M.D.Sara G. Shields, M.D.Ronald D. Shiell, M.D.James C. Stapakis, M.D.Alexander G. Targ, M.D.B5

Duane J. Vajgrt, M.D.A

Andrew J. West, M.D.Natalie D. Wu, M.D.B6

1990Total $5,545Participation 28%Melissa C. Bartick, M.D.Megan M. Burns, M.D.Melissa E. Clarke, M.D.Thomas E. Clough Jr., M.D.Frederic J. Curlin, M.D.Charles P. Daly, M.D.Jerome B. Deck, Jr., M.D.

Gretchen E. Dennison, M.D.Jessica Fielden, M.D.Stuart B. Forman, M.D.George E. Georges, M.D.Mark A. Goldsmith, M.D., Ph.D.Daphne A. Haas-Kogan, M.D.Ann Harvey, M.D.Martha Cox Ho, M.D.Adam B. Howard, M.D.Glenn K. Ikawa, M.D.Ronda M. Macchello, M.D.Andrew J. Matthews, M.D.Scott H. Mittman, M.D., Ph.D.B5

Michael E. Mollerus, M.D.Kenneth D. Montgomery, M.D.Marc W. Mora, M.D.Willis H. Navarro, M.D.Kamshad Raiszadeh, M.D.Barry L. Rotman, M.D.Daniel Stromberg, M.D.B5

Thomas Tayeri, M.D.A

Frances Y. Teng, M.D.Daniel J. Thwaites, M.D.B7

Kimberly K. Whitesell, M.D.Lesley Klumpp Wilkinson, M.D.David C. Wu-Pong, M.D.

1991Total $8,930Participation 34%Pierre R. Alfred, M.D.Tara Nakayama Barr, M.D.B6 A

Nathalie L. Bera, M.D., M.P.H.Alison Gilmore Boudreaux, M.D.B6

Charles A. Boudreaux, M.D.B7

Erica V. Breneman, M.D.Jeremiah J. Brown, Jr., M.D.Nancy J. Burnside, M.D.Thomas A. Ciulla, M.D.Carol J. Cornejo, M.D.B6

Korina F. De Bruyne, M.D.B10

Margaret Nelson Decker, M.D.Albert R. Di Piero, M.D.Rashmi B. Dixit, M.D., Ph.D.Susan L. Donner, M.D.Brad S. Elkins, M.D.Harris S. Goodman, M.D.B5

William L. Greene, M.D.B14

Kenneth E. Grullon, M.D.Blake D. Hamilton, M.D.B5

Peter H. Hwang, M.D.David P. Inadomi, M.D.B9

Suparna Bhattacharya Jain, M.D.Peter L. Karlsberg, M.D.Rachel A. Knopoff, M.D.A

Scott C. Kogan, M.D.Uri Ladabaum, M.D.Jairam R. Lingappa, M.D., Ph.DLawrence R. Lustig, M.D.Elizabeth Riggs McCarthy, M.D.

UCSF School of Medicine

Page 15: Medical Alumni Magazine

1999

1994

Leslie Lopez Montgomery, M.D.Caroline E. Mulder, M.D.Denise E. Paasche, M.D.B7

Carmen M. Parrott, M.D.Chantal T. Pham, M.D.Somnath Saha, M.D.Eric C. Schneider, M.D.B5

Glenn M. Strome, M.D.Ashley K. Weinert, M.D.B6

Margaret Carroll Wilcots, M.D.B5

Dave E. Williams, M.D.Julie E. Yeggy, M.D.B10

1992Total $7,000Participation 24%Manish D. Assar, M.D.Colette L. Auerswald, M.DVictoria A. Behrman, M.D.Kenneth M. Bermudez, M.D.Claude D. Borowsky, M.D.B5

Barbara J. Cannon, M.D.Monika Upadhye Curlin, M.D.B5

Maria L. Daehler, M.D.Martin E. Edep, M.D.Joan E. Etzell, M.D.John J.J. Feng, M.D.Jeffrey L. Garrison, M.D.Abbeselom Ghermay, M.D.Joy C. Gathe-Ghermay, M.D.David M. Hough, M.D.B5

Mary Cavill Hough, M.D.B5

William M. Isenberg, M.D., Ph.D.A

Elizabeth A. Jacobs, M.D.Sharad Jain, M.D.Steven Joffe, M.D.B6

Christina S. Kong, M.D.Steven R. Long, M.D.Paul B. Meyer, M.D.Emily Brandenfels Mora, M.D.Laurence Peiperl, M.D.Geoffrey I. Phillips, M.D.Madelyn A. Rapp, M.D.Kathryn Rensenbrink, M.D.David Y. Suh, M.D.Lydia A. Tinajero-Deck, M.D.B5

Genesa R. Wagoner, M.D.Steven F. Wolfe, M.D.B6

1993Total $7,270Participation 28%Carol Bozarth Ahern, M.D.B5

Lisa M. Baumeister, M.D.Paulo Berger, M.D.Ninetta M. Bond, M.D.Lee Anna Schwartz Botkin, M.D.Todd G. Broberg, M.D.Lori Wilson Brown, M.D.B5

Lisanne Ryner Burkholder, M.D.Marianna Caponigro, M.D.B12

Laura D. Castleman, M.D., M.P.H.Hugo Q. Cheng, M.D.

David E. Chinn, M.D.Thomas L. Dugoni, M.D.B6

Maxwell A. Fung, M.D.Janet B. Goldman, M.D.Cindy A. Grijalva, M.D.Jonathan Hartman, M.D.A

Karen E. Hauer, M.D.Christine S. Ho, M.D.Catherine Marshall Hurt, M.D.Jeffrey W. Hutchinson, M.D.Roberta L. Keller, M.D.B8

Manjeev K. Khush, M.D.Russell C. Klein, M.D.Sandeep Kunwar, M.D.Quynh-Thu X. Le, M.D.Jennifer S. Levy, M.D.Susan S. Lo, M.D.B5

Anthony J. Matan, M.D.Silvia Teran-Matan, M.D.Brian R. Miura, M.D.Kenneth A. Nudelman, M.D.B8

Timothy P. Ong, M.D.Christian P. Pavlovich, M.D.Kathryn Pearson Peyton, M.D.B5

Michael P. Pignone, M.D.Claude B. Sirlin, M.D.Jeanne Hepler Smith, M.D.B6

Leighton J. Smith, M.D.B12

Lisa A. Thomas, M.D.Steve T. Tseng, M.D.Orlando R. Valdez, M.D.Kirsten K. Vin-Christian, M.D.Aviva Jacoby Zigman, M.D.B5

ReunionTotal $14,155Participation 23%John K. Amory, M.D.Manuel Aranda, Jr., M.D.Renee A. Armstrong, M.D.Jeanette Aviles, M.D.Shawn Herman Becker, M.D.Kevin J. Bozic, M.D.Gordon C. Brandt, M.D.A

Daniel C. Burnham, M.D.Sara Canfield Carpenter, M.D.A T

David Ferrazares, M.D.Maria Castro Garcia, M.D.Tanveer F. Hussain, M.D.Salim D. Islam, M.D.Maya Kato, M.D.Jane M. Lee, M.D.Joseph E. Marine, M.D.Andrew D. Michaels, M.D.Paradi Mirmirani, M.D.Allen B. Nalbandian, M.D.Ann Corbett Neuhaus, M.D.Susan M. Pepin, M.D.Johnny Perez, M.D., Ph.D.Mary Ellis Pickett, M.D.Christopher A. Price, M.D.Loren C. Rauch, M.D.Steven G. Roberts, M.D.V

Mario A. Robinson, M.D.Kirsten L. Searfus, M.D.Irene Shih, M.D.Mark L. Silverberg, M.D.Paul M. Silvestre, M.D.B6

Jeffrey A. Tice, M.D.

Sondra S. Vazirani, M.D.B11

Jennifer Reikes Willert, M.D.B5

1995Total $4,265Participation 26%David J. Anick, M.D.Hilary Feeser Bhatt, M.D.Perry S. Brown, Jr., M.D.Shawn Franklin Bullock, M.D.Jose Luis Cervantes, M.D.Cynthia R. Chatterjee, M.D. B6

Huiju C. Chen, M.D.Cecilia A. Florio, M.D.Edward P. Frothingham, M.D.B5 A

Victoria M. Hall, M.D.Roy C. Hammond, M.D.B10

Masami Hattori, M.D.Melissa A. Hawkins, M.D.Catherine A. Hoffman, M.D.B8

Dalia Amezquita Hunt, M.D.B6

Brian M. Ilfeld, M.D.B8

Clarissa M. Johnston, M.D.B5

Jeffrey B. Kahn, M.D.Ann Lenox Kellams, M.D.Bryce S. Kellams, M.D.Todd A. Kessinger, M.D.Caroline Lee, M.D.Joshua Lee, M.D.George A. Lopez, Ph.D., M.D.David C. Mabrie, M.D.Tomas A. Magana, M.D.B5

Steven E. Magee, M.D.Julia L. Marx, M.D.B10

Robert H. Meints, M.D.Andrew S. Plump, M.D.Noel D. Saks, M.D.Brett J. Sevilla, M.D.Dennis C. Shay, M.D.B5

Lisa L. Strate, M.D.B5

Alejandro Sweet-Cordero, M.D.Joe Wong, M.D.B10

1996Total $4,815Participation 20%Christina Y. Amaya, M.D.Brad G. Angeja, M.D.Rowell S. Ashford, M.D.Lalit Bajaj, M.D.Christopher B. Behrens, M.D.Lisa M. Britton, M.D.Derrick L. Butler, M.D.Tai-Ho Chen, M.D.David L. Conant, M.D.A

Rebecca E. Conant, M.D.A

Sandip K. Datta, M.D.Joshua J. Fenton, M.D.Amy S. Gordon, M.D.Sarah Cahn Handelsman, M.D.Christopher M. Hicks, M.D.Kathleen S. Kearns, M.D.Conrad N. Lai, M.D.Olivia Lang, M.D.Ha Q. Le, M.D.Catherine T. Lee, M.D.Joseph C.S. Lin, M.D.

Norman H. Liu, M.D.B5

Elena Martinez, M.D.Jennifer Domingo Mihalko, M.D.B6

Eric N. Novack, M.D.Samantha I. Pitts, M.D.Akiko Tsuzuki, M.D.Katherine Van Kessel, M.D.Derek B. Wall, M.D.B5

Mark W. Wilson, M.D.B9

1997Total $2,240Participation 21%Josephine Harris Amory, M.D.Matthew Bailey, M.D.Kristina Gutierrez Barela, M.D.William H. Birdsong, M.D.Susan S. Chung, M.D.Bruce C. Cree, M.D., Ph.D.Kerry L. Davidson, M.D.Charles Della Santina, M.D.,Ph.DKarin M. Dydell, M.D.B5

Anne M. Fleming, M.D.Renata C. Gallagher, M.D., Ph.D.Andrea L. Haller, M.D.Elena R. Hammond, M.D.Jennifer M. Harris, M.D.Benjamin Hernandez- Velasco, M.D.T. James Lawrence, M.D.B8

Sung W. Lee, M.D.Nikki A. Levin, M.D., Ph.D.B8

Katherine Ludington, M.D.Karen E. Mark, M.D.Nicholas H. Mayper, M.D.Jeanne E. Montal, M.D.Delia Morgan, M.D.B8

Emily K. Myers, M.D.Mary A. Norman, M.D.Uptal D. Patel, M.D.Amy K. Reisenauer, M.D.Henry J. Youga, M.D.

1998Total $4,356Participation 23%Catherine K. Allan, M.D.Ethan J. Alpern, M.D.Lynne L. Bartholomew, M.D.Heather Vandermolen Bejenaru, M.D.Cynthia Strand Braun, M.D.Caley M. Castelein, M.D.Edwin S. Cheng, M.D.A

Linda H. Chung, M.D.Wetona S. Eidson-Ton, M.D.Robert A. Equi, M.D.Erick A. Falconer, M.D.Monica R. Gerber, M.D., Ph.D.Mark S. Groves, M.D.Lucas R. Hoffman, M.D., Ph.D.Donna Hoghooghi, M.D.B7

Adam R. Holmes, M.D.Jennie C. Hsu-Lumetta, M.D.Prajoy P. Kadkade, M.D.Lana Kang, M.D.

Monte R. Klaudt, M.D.Eric M. Levander, M.D.Denise M. Lugo, M.D.Francisco L. Melero, M.D.Monica R. Quezada, M.D.Shawn J. Rangel, M.D.Robert C. Rosenbloom, M.D.Roman G. Rubio, M.D.Joshua S. Schindler, M.D.B7

Peter Ser, M.D.Brad J. Shapiro, M.D.Nina Souders, M.D.Hendry Ton, M.D.Hao Wang, M.D., Ph.D.Lisa J. Zwerling, M.D.

ReunionTotal $2,368Participation 21%Sonia Y. Angell, M.D.Mark F. Barrett, M.D.Elizabeth Bromley, M.D., M.A.Heather W. Clague, M.D.Tessa Collins, M.D.Terrence R. Cronin, M.D.Walter N. Dehority, M.D.Susan P. Ehrlich, M.D.Amir A. Fassihi, M.D.Frank M. Fontaine, M.D.Elizabeth M. Foster, M.D.Ligia E. Giese, M.D.Arturo Gomez, M.D.Andrea S. Herzka, M.D.Douglas Jimenez, M.D.B6

Lisa A. Jimenez, M.D.Matthew S. Keefer, M.D.Susanne Ching Klaudt, M.D.Arthur E. Li, M.D.Glenda N. Lovell, M.D.Norma Martinez, M.D.Marilyn N. Metz, M.D.V

Melissa B. Nothnagle, M.D.David Z. Presser, M.D.Nicole R. Rimpel, M.D.Nicholas G. Ross, M.D.Annie L. Stapleton, M.D.Kim H. Tran-Fontaine, M.D.Patricia Tsai, M.D.Peter G. Tucker, M.D.Julie L. Vails, M.D.Douglas A.E. White, M.D.

2000Total $2,075Participation 23%Leonard R. Allmond, M.D.Brian T. Bast, M.D.Rameen Beroukhim, M.D.B5

Priti D. Bhansali, M.D.Michelle Chapin, M.D.Cynthia S. Chiu, M.D.Edward R. Conner, M.D.B5

Lynn E.Connolly, M.D., Ph.D.Geoffrey I. Criqui, M.D.Steven G. DuBois, M.D.B5

Francesca G. Dyrud, M.D.Peter J. Freed, M.D.Sonya E. Garcia, M.D.Brian K. Golden, M.D.

Honor Roll of Alumni Giving 2003/2004

Page 16: Medical Alumni Magazine

Sarah V. Graff, M.D.Philip M. Grant, M.D.Cora R. Hoover, M.D.Lily J. Huang, M.D.Kristen A. Jacobs, M.D.Thomas L. Kasten, M.D.Alfred C. Kuo, Ph.D., M.D.Dennis J. Kuo, M.D.John Sang Lee, M.D.Diana H. Mahar, M.D.Jean P. Makris, M.D.Joshua H. Mandelberg, M.D.Berenice Y. Perez, M.D.Rajni K. Rao, M.D.B5

Joshua D. Reagan, M.D.Jessica B. Sampat, M.D.Michelle C. Serlin, M.D.Gabriela Diaz Sullivan, M.D.William C. Wood, M.D.B5

Sara A. Woolf, M.D.B5

Veronika M. Zantop, M.D.B5

2001Total $3,595Participation 18%Amy L. Berlin, M.D.Eric J. Chow, M.D.Brinton C. Clark, M.D.Creighton W. Don, M.D.Courtney D. Fitzhugh, M.D.Kimberly D. Freeman, M.D.Kimberly A. Gibson, M.D., M.P.H.Elizabeth H. Humphreys, M.D.Debra R. Kahn, M.D.Lisa Stephens Kalar, M.D.Giliel S. Kryger, M.D.Robyn M. Lew, M.D.Matthew J. Mazurek, M.D.Steven Dain Millar, M.D.Bruce L. Miller, Jr., M.D.A T

Samuel Augustin Mireles, M.D.Nora Y. Osman, M.D.Shanti M. Perkins, M.D.John R. Rayher, M.D., D.D.S.Deborah Rabitz Samberg, M.D.Jigna S. Shah, M.D.Michael A. Singer, M.D.Jody L. Stonehocker, M.D.Maya P. Strange, M.D.Vanessa L. Teplin, M.D.Amy K. Whitaker, M.D.

2002Total $1,515Participation 20%Sarah Ahrens, M.D.Richard D. Almeida, M.D.Jennifer Armstrong-Wells, M.D., MPHAmanda D. Camposagrado, M.D.Frederic E. Cirillo, M.D.Stephanie R. Green, M.D.Heather E. Gunnarson- Wilburn, M.D.Malkeet Gupta, M.D.

Felipe JR Hernandez, M.D.Wilmer Huang, M.D.Moses M. Kim, M.D.Susan M. S. Laubach, M.D.Kavita K. Mishra, M.D.Kelly Murray, M.D.Karen J. Ng, M.D.Omondi L. Nyong’o, M.D.Justin Ortiz, M.D.Alex Papanastassiou, M.D.Laura J. Phang, M.D.Nina Rakhlin, M.D.Scott E. Regenbogen, M.D.Beri M. Ridgeway, M.D.Andrea E. Sandler, M.D.Eric Schnell, M.D., Ph.D.Rebecca Swain, M.D.Rebecca Spies Swain, M.D.Lily Esther Tang, M.D.Claudia P. Taylor, M.D.Sara Tolaney, M.D.

2003Total $1,216Participation 14%Sarah Altman, M.D.Naomi S. Bardach, M.D.Alexander Disston, M.D.Garrett G. Eggers, M.D.Ralph P. Ermoian, M.D.Tania Esakoff, M.D.Joanne Feldman, M.D.Rachel R. Pruyn Goldstein, M.D.Radmila Grin, M.D.Allison M. Himmel, M.D.Christopher J. Hobart, M.D.Josie L. Howard, M.D.Bryan J. Huang, M.D.Helen S. Kao, M.D.Ingrid T. Katz, M.D.Mary Margaretten, M.D.Nancy K. Palmer, M.D.Dr. Mathilde H. RossLydia C. Siegel, M.D.James Song, M.D.Dai H. Vo, M.D.Adam B. Wang, M.D.Veronica A. Yank, M.D.

2004Total $3,153Participation 99%Elda Aghaian, M.D.Rachel N. Agrin, M.D.Maria Dolores Alcocer, M.D.Renchell J. Andres, M.D.Kendall H. Backstrand, M.D.Dana Bae, M.D.Richard Bailey, M.D.Emily Baldwin, M.D.Abiona Berkeley, M.D.Jesse Biebesheimer, M.D.Kristen B. Brooks, M.D.Cynthia J. Camden, M.D.Stacie Carney, M.D.Janice A. Casamina, M.D.Monica T. Caselli, M.D.Edward F. Chang, M.D.Teri Young Chew, M.D.

Juliet Eunhe Chung, M.D.Uri Cohen, M.D.John S. Cupp, M.D.Nicole Dabby, M.D.Alexis Bao Chuyen Dang, M.D.Justin Davis, M.D.Rishi Desai, M.D.Glenn Diekmann, M.D.Caesar Djavaherian, M.D.Vanja C. Douglas, M.D.Maya Dulay, M.D.Joan H. Dunlop, M.D.David K. Duong, M.D.Matthew J. Ehrlich, M.D.Farhan Fadoo, M.D.Daniel Fazio, M.D.Scott D. Finkelstein, M.D.Kendra L. Fleming, M.D.Christine Fox, M.D.Eric Frankel, M.D.Ezra T. Fraser, M.D.Heather Gilbert, M.D.Emily Harrison Ginsburg, M.D.Daniel K. Gomez, M.D.Kelsey Gray, M.D.W. Scott Green, M.D.Anita Gupta, M.D.Allyson Hart, M.D.Amy E. Helmer, M.D.Stephen G. Hoge, M.D.Jethro Hu, M.D.Wender Hwang, M.D.Rachel T. Idowu, M.D.Joel Johnson, M.D.Kimberly M. Johnson, M.D.Christopher Kagay, M.D.Bharati B. Kamdar, M.D.Elizabeth Ann Kaplan, M.D.Corrine A. Keet, M.D.Jennifer Kerns, M.D.Brian J. Kim, M.D.Irene K. Kim, M.D.Mark A. Knight, M.D.Marta Kochanska, M.D.Thomas S. Konner, M.D.Kavitha J. Krishnan, M.D.Gregory M. Ku, M.D.Elizabeth Kwan, M.D.Steven Lamola, M.D.Joyce Coletta Leary, M.D.Gregory T. Lee, M.D.Linda Lee, D.M.D.Monica S. Y. Lee, M.D.Patrick T. Lee, M.D.Laeben Lester, M.D.Suzanne Hamilton Lester, M.D.Shelby Leuin, M.D.Adam C. Levine, M.D.Jonathan Z. Li, M.D.Kuo-Chiang Lian, M.D.Shirley H. Liu, M.D.Jong P. Lu, M.D.Robert Luu, M.D.Rachel Lynn, M.D.Debra R. Maltenfort, M.D.Dustin Mark, M.D.Daniel Mason, M.D.Erin F. D. Mathes, M.D.Lindsay Mazotti, M.D.Philip E. Moberg, M.D.

Stephen A. Morris, M.D.Linda Knight Nelson, M.D.Mark D. Neuman, M.D.Dennis Huu-Luyen Nguyen, M.D.Jasmine B. Nguyen, M.D.Terrence R. O’Connor, M.D.Oji A. Oji, M.D.Stephen F. Oster, M.D.Lily N. Pang, M.D.Clinton Park, M.D.Andrew K. Patel, M.D.Jermey Perlman, M.D.Craig Pollack, M.D.Kamakshi L. Raimondo, M.D.Tushar Ranchod, M.D.David P. Redlin, M.D.Naheed Rehman, M.D.Teri Reynolds, M.D.Jenny S. Riley, M.D.Dr. Alejandrina RinconNicole Riza, M.D.Aylin Rodan, M.D.Nicholette Roemer, M.D.Janell Routh, M.D.Yousoff Samiramis, M.D.Melissa D. Sandoval, M.D.Anne Schafer, M.D.Yael Schenker, M.D.Kanade Shinkai, M.D.Anubhav Sinha, M.D.James Smithson, M.D.Insoo Suh, M.D.Clifford J. Swap, M.D.Alison Tate, M.D.Hariharan Thangarajah, M.D.Lisa M. Tibor, M.D.Sebastian E. Tongson, M.D.Quy Nguyen-Hoang Tran, M.D.Miranda D. Tsai, M.D.Andrew Vardanian, M.D.Jonathan W. Vlahos, M.D.Mr. John W. VoceMichael Vortmann, M.D.Abby Waller, M.D.Thomas Wallin, M.D.Jonathan C. J. Wang, M.D.Kenneth C. Wang, M.D.Stuart Washington, M.D.Naissan O. Wesley, M.D.Erica J. Wilson, M.D.Emily J. Wingfield, M.D.Emily P. Wood, M.D.Brian P. Worden, M.D.Courtney Wusthoff, M.D.Susan S. Yamanishi, M.D.Molly Yancovitz, M.D.Michael I. Yang, M.D.Kevin C. Yee, M.D.Michael K. Yoon, M.D.Katherine Young, M.D.Elaine W. Yu, M.D.Genevieve Yu, M.D.Gabriel Zada, M.D.

UCSF has made every effort to ensure that this Honor Roll provides a complete and accurate representation of alumni giving between July 1, 2003 and June 30, 2004.

University of California,San FranciscoUniversity Developmentand Alumni RelationsSchool of MedicineAnnual Fund44 Montgomery Street,Suite 2200San Francisco, CA 94143-0248

Toll Free: (877) [email protected]/foundation

UCSF School of Medicine

Page 17: Medical Alumni Magazine

medical alumni magazine | 7

Student fees rise sharply—again

When medical student fees were increased significantly last spring, it was just one more fee hike in a long line of increases. What it meant for today’s students, however, was that the cost of training to become a doctor had reached nearly $20,000 per year.

The numbers tell the story

Driven by declining state funding, fees

for in-state medical students have liter-

ally quadrupled in the past decade.

For example, a student who entered

the School of Medicine in the fall of

1993 paid about $6,000 per year in

registration and educational fees, which

included student health premiums and

Millberry Union membership.

In 1994, a $2,000 “professional school”

fee for medical students was added,

increasing annual fees to approximately

$8,000. Between 1995 and 1997, the

professional school fee increased by an-

other $1,000 a year, driving up the total

to approximately $11,000 for students

entering medical school in 1997.

Fees remained stable through 2002, but

in 2003, the UC Regents approved a

large increase in the professional school

The high cost of Bay Area living

Of course these fees do not include the

high cost of living in the Bay Area. A

twelve-month medical student budget

for housing, food, books and supplies

(including national board application

fees), and transportation adds another

$20,000 to a student’s annual costs.

The bottom line

What does this mean for today’s

medical students? It means that while

a UCSF medical education used to be

within reach for most students, this is

no longer true. It means that we are

now losing promising applicants to pri-

vate schools that can offer more gener-

ous scholarships. And it means that our

students—85 percent of who rely on

scholarship aid to attend UCSF—could

not live their dreams of becoming doc-

tors without alumni contributions to the

School of Medicine Annual Fund. ■

UCSF School of Medicine Fees

$0‘93 ‘94 ‘95 ‘96 ‘97–

‘02‘04‘03

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

fee, from $5,000 to $8,000, thus setting

total fees at $16,000 for the 2003-004

academic year.

Then, in May 2004, the UC Regents

approved yet another hike in the profes-

sional school fee, increasing total fees to

just under $20,000 for students entering

school in the fall of 2004.

Page 18: Medical Alumni Magazine

I want to thank the boy here for holding

off long enough for me to make it to

graduation today. In a week or two, you

will have some serious competition,

but so far, being asked to speak to you

today has been one of the most moving

moments I’ve ever experienced.

When you come to med school as a 30-

year-old English teacher, med students

are scary. In 19th century novels, at their

worst, they’re grave robbers, drunken

louts, and even murderers. At their best,

they’re nihilistic philosophers, pedantic

fops, and awkward dinner companions.

The last thing you expect is to find a

group of people like this.

We have musicians and composers,

puppeteers and pilots, a truly unhealthy

number of triatheletes and surfers—and,

as I discovered at our class play—not

one, but two people who can twirl

flaming batons. We have cartographers,

photographers, writers, teachers, div-

ers, gymnasts, chefs, and, at one point,

even a teenager. Being part of this

group of people has been like nothing

else in my life.

We have become the kind of people to

whom it occurs that bilirubin-UDP-glu-

coronyl-transferase can be sung to the

tune of Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.

We can no longer give directions to a res-

taurant without using the words proximal

and distal, we’ve even lost the ability to

use left and right without pausing first to

see if we mean our own left.

We have changed.

We will hear many stories. We’ll demand

them: What happened? When? How? We

will be readers of our patients’ stories,

and then, we will rewrite them as our

own.

“This is a 55-year-old woman who

presents with…” is our “Once upon a

time…”—no less formulaic, and no less

infinite in its narrative potential. But the

stories we tell are not the same ones

people bring. They are reaction, analysis,

diagnosis, strategy—what we do when

faced with a patient’s narrative.

The ability to take in someone’s story,

to track and contextualize the meaning

of a term—what does this patient mean

when he says painful, when she says

dizzy, when he says weak—this is only

part of the job. We are readers when we

try to understand what has happened

to our patients. We are writers when we

try to understand what has happened to

ourselves.

2004Commencement

The following are excerpts

from an address delivered

by Teri Reynolds, M.D.—

in her eighth month of

pregnancy—at the UCSF

School of Medicine Com-

mencement exercises in

the Masonic Auditorium

on May 20, 2004.

8 | fall 2004

Page 19: Medical Alumni Magazine

Late in The Divine Comedy, Dante is

asked to define faith, and he says:

Fede e’ sostanza di cose sperate ed

argomento delle non parventi.

Faith is the substance of things hoped

for and evidence of those unseen.

Learning to doctor is something we

have done within a network of expecta-

tions and support, of competition and

friendship—a process of learning to

think of ourselves relative to our teach-

ers and our colleagues.

How many times have we paused—

usually it is very early or very late—with

needle or scalpel poised above a patient

and looked briefly sideways—and with

poorly concealed doubt—at the resident

or attending standing beside us, and

had them say, without urgency and

without indulgence, “Go ahead.”

And you move downward with the

needle or the scalpel, not because you

believe you can do this, but because

the person standing next to you be-

lieves you can—and because this is

enough.

How many times have you entered a

room and said “Um, I’m the medical

student on the team—would it be OK if

I …” and had a patient say, with fatigue,

with amusement, with indulgence… but

calmly, “Go ahead.”

How many times have you looked at

your classmates and ...gone ahead be-

cause you thought, “well, they seem to

think we can do this,” not understand-

ing at the time that the rest of us were

also looking to you.

We act above our expectations for

ourselves, because in the end, we are

drawn into competence by the faith of

those around us. This is the substance

of things hoped for, as we search for

evidence of things unseen.

The first time I walked into a patient’s

room, traveling in a little pack of white

coats stiff enough to stand up on their

own—my main concern, since I didn’t

know how to fix anything, was to stay

out of the way. Unfortunately, I looked

down (and this will surprise few of you

who know me) and found toothpaste

on my shirt, and just as the conversa-

tion turned to priapism, backed into a

metal instrument tray. My classmates

froze, the patient smiled, the attending

winced, and at that moment, I decided

I’d better redefine my goals. I was no

good at staying out of the way.

If medicine is only a fight against dis-

ease, if medicine is a zero sum game,

and our definition of success is to win,

then we can, and eventually will lose.

But we can always get in the way.

We can stand between our patients

and confusion, we can stand between

our patients and insurance companies,

we can stand between our patients

and pain. We can mediate our patients’

experience of disease—by placing our-

selves, our words, our skills—the tools

we came in with and those we have

learned to use here—between them

and what is hard.

Here, now that we are at the end of the

beginning, I think the most breathtaking

thing about this training is that we get

real patients so long before we feel like

real doctors....

So in the coming months and years,

when you’re tired, when it’s very early

or very late, and you look sideways and

find yourself alone with the needle or the

scalpel or the pen...as you accumulate

evidence of things unseen, remember

also that there is already substance to

the things you hope for.

Remember this story, these people who

you began to learn to doctor with, and

say quietly to yourself...

Go ahead. Get in the way. ■

Teri Reynolds with her mother at Commencement.

“We have become the kind of people to whom it occurs that bilirubin-UDP-glucoronyl-transferase can be sung to the tune of Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.”

medical alumni magazine | 9

Page 20: Medical Alumni Magazine

homecomingPast

accomplishments and new

beginnings

The UCSF School of Medicine Homecoming 2004 celebrates a reunion at the Mission Bay

campus

Within the glittering marble and glass edi-fice of the newly completed Genentech Hall, UCSF School of Medicine Dean Dr. David Kessler underlined the special role alumni play in establishing and maintain-ing the renown of a medical school. “This is just not about steel and stone. It’s all of you that make UCSF the great and special institution it is.”

Dr. Kessler addressed over 200 alumni who gathered on a gloriously sunny Saturday morning May 15th to celebrate a special presentations and awards pro-gram sponsored by the School of Medi-cine and the Medical Alumni Association. Dr. Kessler, previously at Yale, outlined the special allure of UCSF. “Why leave

an institution with 300 years of history? Because this is probably the most im-portant job in American medicine today. The Mission Bay campus is an incredible investment. For excellence across the board you have to be able to grow. This grand new campus is very impressive evidence of the strength and vitality of this great school and university.”

Dr. Kessler looked both back and ahead in his report on the School of Medi-cine to alumni. “UCSF’s patent income represents 75 percent of all UC pat-ent income. And no students are more deserving or talented. Sixty-nine percent of those entering have a year of study beyond a bachelor’s degree. Fifty-nine

David A. Kessler, M.D.Dean, USCF School of MedicineVice Chancellor, Medical Affairs

Dean Kessler remarked: “There is no university better poised to make use of the rich opportunities before us.”

Mark Renneker, M.D. ’79Associate Clinical Professor,Department of Family and Community Medicine, Founder and President of the Surfer’s Medical Association

Dr. Renneker, who heads a 600-member international organization of surfer-doctors that has provided village health care in Fiji, has applied lessons learned from that experience to his practice of “optimistic medicine” in San Francisco. “The best ideas come from patients and family. I act as a facilitator, cheerleader, and catalyst.”

Bernard Alpert, M.D.Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery, UCSF, Plastic Surgeon & Past President, California Medical Board

“Medicine transcends politics,” observed Dr. Alpert during a presentation of his voluntary work with Iraqi physicians.

A $435,000 check for student research was presented as the Campaign 2004 Gift.

The Sadie E. Berkove Fellowship Award, a scholarship established by Alfred Berkove, Class of 1930, in memory of his wife Sadie Berkove, Class of 1931, to honor outstanding women graduates, was presented to (clockwise) Corinne Keet, Janell Routh, and Anne Schafer.

The Medical Alumni Association Academic Excellence Award, given to a graduating medical student who exhibits excellent work in all areas of medical school, was presented to Mark Neuman.

10 | fall 2004

by Peter Bejger

Page 21: Medical Alumni Magazine

homecomingpercent of the entering class is com-prised of women. This is an egalitarian institution and I encourage you to stay involved.”

Amidst the award ceremonies, a special feature of the morning’s events included a keynote presentation on medical aid to Iraq by Dr. Bernard Alpert, associate clinical professor of surgery at the UCSF School of Medicine. Dr. Alpert recently served as a voluntary surgeon in Iraq and has worked to set up fellowships for Iraqi physicians in the United States.

In a highly dramatic slide presentation, Dr. Alpert outlined the harrowing chal-lenges of providing medical care in the

war-torn country. Gunshot wounds, burns, and trauma are treated by doctors who have suffered intellectual isolation and technological stagnation. Many hos-pitals are not working because they have been looted. Nonetheless, Dr. Alpert is optimistic. “The Iraqi medical community needs to be reintegrated into the world medical community. But it will be an easy reintegration. They are sophisticated and English is the language of medicine in Iraq.”

Constructive and destructive forces are contending for primacy within Iraq and Dr. Alpert posed a rhetorical question that is on the minds of many Americans today. “Do I have hope? Yes. I hope we

win. And winning will mean restoring this country to a family-oriented place.”

As guests adjourned for a campus tour, they saw a remarkable new structure ris-ing on the skyline. Next year’s homecom-ing will feature yet another milestone. Mission Bay will have an impressive new Campus Community Center that will include the largest fitness center in San Francisco as well as a conference hall that can host up to 600 people. Return-ing alumni will have the opportunity to experience an exciting new chapter in the development of UCSF.

50 Year Class Speaker Charles Aronberg, M.D. ’54Ophthalmologist, and former Mayor of Beverly Hills, Chair of Ophthalmology at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Chair of Los Angeles County Hospital Commission

Dr. Aronberg noted, “You can teach them the science, but the art is more important.” He also revealed his tuition was $150 a semester. “I just paid it off.”

The Medical Alumni Association’s highest honor, the Alumnus of the Year Award, was given to Albert D. Hall, M.D. ’52. Dr. Hall was formerly Chief, Surgical Service, at the VA Medical Center San Francisco and was also a Captain in the U.S. Air Force. Dr. Hall trained at UCSF, and has spent 40 years teaching medical students and residents at his alma mater. He has served as President of the Medical Alumni Association.

Introduced by Robert Lim, M.D. ’60. Dr. Hall reflected: “Medicine changes but people in the profession have gladly not changed. We have a repertoire of skills that can provide comfort and perhaps even solutions.”

Philip Moberg, a former marine biologist and future internist from the Class of 2004, presented a graduate’s perspective. Due to a dry-cleaning mishap he had to wear a woman’s pants with a men’s suit coat for his med school interview. And his first student consultation was with a transgender patient from Psychiatric Services. His advice? “Improvise and be flexible!”

Craig Pollack received the Robert H. Crede Student Award, an award created to honor the former associate dean of academic affairs and chair of ambulatory/community medicine, now the Department of Family & Community Medicine. Established in 1990, this award recognizes a graduating medical student who exemplifies the personal and professional characteristics of a primary care physician.

Quy Tran received the Medical Alumni Association Student Service Award, which was established in 1992 to recognize a medical student’s contributions to the community and school through volunteer activities not limited to health care.

medical alumni magazine | 11

Page 22: Medical Alumni Magazine

class notes

12 | fall 2004

1940sCharles C. Wycoff ’43 retired from anesthesiol-ogy and currently resides in San Leandro, CA. He has eight children, 17 grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.

David W. Babak ‘49 was in the USAF from 1973–1984 with a private practice for 32 years. After retiring as a Colonel from the Air Force, he remained active in the Seattle Mountain Reserve Association as well as the 10th Mountain Asso-ciation, where he had served with them prior to USAF during WW II. He volunteered part-time at University of Washington’s School of Medicine as a tutor from 1984–2003. He and his wife, Bar-bara Jean, have three children and two grand-children.

1950sJerome A. Motto ’51 retired from psychiatry in 1991. During his career, he also volunteered at San Mateo County General Hospital, Psychiatric Service for suicidal patients, delivered lectures/seminars to psychiatric personnel in Bay Area hospitals, lead discussion groups, wrote exten-sively regarding the topic of suicide prevention, and reviewed manuscripts, journals, and grant applications. He and his wife, Patricia, reside in San Mateo.

Charles Aronberg ’54 is presently Chair of the Los Angeles County Hospital Commission. He has served as Chief of Ophthalmology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Team Ophthalmologist for U.S. Olympics, Los Angeles Lakers and Kings, Oakland – LA Raiders, and was the Mayor of Beverly Hills for two terms. He and his wife, Sandy, have one daughter who is currently the Deputy Controller of The State of California.

Roy “Gene” Chris-tian ’59 retired in 1991 from ER and clinic work. He says he only has one pa-tient now, himself. Since retiring, he and his wife, Jan, have traveled to Cambo-dia, Yucatan, Japan,

Ecuador, Antarctic, Ukraine and Costa Rica. He has lived in Santa Cruz County for 35 years.

Donald Gillies ’59 retired from private prac-tice of E.N.T. on January 1, 2000. He still sees patients at the local V.A. clinic one afternoon a week. Since retiring, he has taken courses in Botany and Biology. He has also become a do-cent at the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, is on the local whale-watching boards, and leads tours in the Channel Islands National Park. He also still enjoys downhill skiing and racing his sports car.

Gerald “Jerry” Hays ’59 recently retired from full-time work, however, he is working two days a week at Cal Poly Pomona University’s Student Health Services. He and his wife, Karen, are now great-grandparents who are looking forward to a Mediterranean cruise this fall.

1960sSaul Bernstein ’63 is in private practice of pe-diatric orthopedics and spine at the Southern California Orthopedic Institute. He is also a clini-cal professor of orthopedics at the University of Southern California. He and his wife, Leslie, have three children and 11 grandchildren.

Dennis Casciato ’64 and his wife, Joy, just sold their house in Long Valley and now reside in Bell Canyon. His 5th edition of Manual of Clinical On-

cology was published in May 2004. He just com-pleted his first quarter mile of a marathon and has now started beginner piano lessons.

Philip Walson ’69 is currently at the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital as Division of Clinical Pharmacology Director and Medical Director of Clinical Tri-als Office and Cincin-nati Center for Clinical Research. He is also Chair of the American

Academy of Pediatrics’ section on Clinical Phar-macology and Therapeutics. He has two chil-dren and two grandsons.

1970sJanet Bodle ’74 is taking this year off after 26 years of private practice in Marin County. She plans to travel and study non-medical topics and await the birth of her first grandchild. She has run 20 marathons and ultra races including a marathon in Antarctica last year. She is now doing triathlons and plans to do the Escape from Alcatraz race later this year.

Frank Pena ’74 returned to private practice last year after many years of working at a hospital clinic. He and his wife, Maureen, have a ten-year-old grandson who this summer won first prize on his 4-H project at the Washington State Fair.

Deborah “DJ” Anderson ’79 is practicing ob-stetrics & gynecology in San Jose. She started taking Tae Kwon Do in 2002 and has achieved the rank of Purple Belt.

Sundra “Sunny” Kim ’79 has recently accepted a new position as staff geriatrician at the Senior Center in the Medical Center of Plano. It is her dream job.

Rhonda Levitt ’79 has been in private pediatric practice in Seattle for the last two years. She is active on the medical staff of the local children’s hospital.

Michael Rowbotham ’79 currently serves at UCSF in several capacities: Professor of Neu-rology, Director of the Pain Clinical Research Center, and Director of Clinical Research of the Ernest Galio Clinic and Research Center. He and his wife, Karin Peterson, M.D., have twin daugh-ters as of February 2004.

Anne Simons ’79 continues her career with the San Fran-cisco Health Dept. at a community clinic in the Sunset District. She teaches family practice residents and medical students as part of her three-quar-ters time position, and chairs the Community

Health Network Formulary Review Committee. This year she earned her 200-hour yoga teacher certification and teaches seniors in the commu-nity clinic. She and her author husband, Michael Castleman, have two children.

1980sConstance Gaulter ’84 returned to the U.S. in 2000 after 10 years in Haiti, Quebec and Burkina Faso with the State Department. She now is in part-time group practice in the Sierra foothills. She is also enjoying dancing and performing with the Scottish Fiddlers throughout California and Alaska.

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class notes

medical alumni magazine | 13

Andrew Oliveira ’84 is Residency Program Director of 24 family medicine residents within the University of Washington Network. He built a wooden kayak to travel the waterways of the Puget Sound. He and his wife, Robin, have two children ages 16 and 14.

Marian Menninger Adams ’89 accepted the position of Medical Director of the Neonatal In-tensive Care Unit (NICU) at El Camino Hospital in 2002, and remains on staff at Stanford University Hospital and Packard Children’s Hospital as a clinical assistant professor. She has been ac-tive in the Pediatrics Dept. at El Camino Hospital, serving a four year term on the Pediatrics Execu-tive Committee, including one year as Chief of Pediatrics. The NICU is a 16 bed, Level III nurs-ery, with plans for expansion in 2005. She and her husband, David, have four children.

1990sSarah (Cahn) Handelsman ’96 is a pediatrician in Berkeley. She and Mike Handelsman married in March, 2004.

Dorothy E. Swingle ‘97 is currently working as a family physician with a Federally Qualified Health Center in a rural community in Northern California. She writes that the people she serves are wonderful, stimulating, complex persons with social and financial challenges which make every day a new challenge. She also finds time to do community research and is involved in projects relating to family violence, teen pregnancy and geriatric quality of life improvement. In her spare time she is a pianist for local churches.

Matthew Keefer ’99 has joined the Los Angeles Children’s Hospital and is also a faculty member at the University of Southern California. He is happily married with one child and another on the way.

Recent GradsCynthia Chiu ’00 has just started as Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology at Cornell Medical Center, New York Presbyterian Hospital in New York City.

Suzanne Rafidi Sweidan ’03 has completed her internship year in internal medicine at the UC Davis Medical Center. She is taking the next year off as she and her husband are expecting their first child. She will return to residency in the Primary Care Internal Medicine track at UC Davis in mid-2005.

in memoriamWalter D. Birnbaum, Sr. ’32Malcolm B. Hadden ’34John M. Fernald ’35Nathan J. Barlow ’38Louise A. Yeazell ’38John Diamond ’39Arthur M. Pettler ’40Robert W. Godwin ’41Philip K. Ferrier ’42Gordon E. Gibbs ’42Jeanne Ingalls Miller ’43Harding Rees ’43Norman B. Atkins ’46Gregory Bard ’47William J. Morris ’48Robert H. De Riemer ’50Wendell R. Lipscomb ’51Richard G. Devereaux ’54James W. McDaniel ’54David A. Sinclair ’54Alex Rosen ’55Fariborz Amini ’57Kennett G. Sublette ’57Walter E. Carr, Jr. ’62George F. Hilton ’62Robert P. Rood ’63Stephen A. Matlin ’65Robert L. Downie ’73Frank E. Churchill, Jr. ’76Craig T. Clark ’84Sharon D. Leigh ’85Eve Dunn Gorn ’90Phillip A. Holsten ’98

faculty, housestaffJan AlbanThomas A. BarkanMarvin BarkerJohn C.G. ColeridgeFarhad NajiDavid W. GoldeJoseph R. GoodmanSam E. HanzelNikolas J. HartshorneArthur R. HartwigElgin K. KennedyGilbert S. LeeArthur A. McKirdyW. Morris H. NobleEarl R. OlsenHilde S. SchlesingerLewis B. SheinerNatalie J. SmithJames Edward SticklerMichael S. Stulbarg

School of Medicine Homecoming 2005

Class reunions: 1955, 1960, 1965, 1970, 1975, 1980, 1985

Save the dates:Friday, May 13, 2005Class reunion dinners

Saturday May 14, 2005Morning Awards ProgramDinner at Teatro Zinzanni

Four new reasons to attend Homecoming 2005:

• Teatro Zinzanni — “Love, Chaos and Dinner”

Join your classmates for a theatrical experience unique to San Francisco. Enjoy fine cuisine accompanied by an extraordinary combination of theater, cabaret, and comedy rolled into one un-forgettable evening. We have reserved the entire venue for a special homecom-ing celebration.

• Special Half-Century Club luncheon for classes 1954 and earlier

• Afternoon “Young Alumni” event for classes of 1990 to 2005

• Continuing Medical Education courses, at a special alumni discount, will be run-ning concurrently with the homecoming events.

Look for your invitation, with all of the event details, in March 2005.

Page 24: Medical Alumni Magazine

UCSF School of Medicine

Medical Alumni Association

745 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0970

San Francisco, CA 94143-0970

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PAID

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University of CaliforniaSan Francisco

www.ucsf.edu/alumniDon’t forget to register at our online directory. There you

can write your own profile and keep in touch with classmates,

colleagues and friends. This electronic directory also allows you to add your favorite photo (a vacation shot, family photo or whatever you choose). Stay

in touch and register now!

Have you moved? If the address above is incorrect we would appreciate an update. You can email us at [email protected] or write to us at UCSF / Box 0970, San Francisco CA 94143-0970

Got Email? If we do not already have your email address, please send it to us. This is a way we can send you updates on important events such as Homecoming. We never sell, license or otherwise distribute your data. Send to [email protected]

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