Medicine@Yale Magazine

Medicine@Yale.

August/September 2005   Volume 1 Issue 2

Inside this issue

Cover stories

YALE PROJECTS FOR GLOBAL HEALTH RECEIVE MAJOR FUNDING

Mouse breakthrough will speed vaccines

Finding new perfumes to foil a femme fatale

A new front in the war on antibiotic-resistant bacteria

New look at how resistant bugs dodge drugs

From the pages of Cell to The Tonight Show’s stage

Using laser light, team guides flies by remote control

Applera Corp. boosts education

Fund will honor mentor, aid students

Partnerships

A quest to detect earliest signs of autism

Yale visit brings hope to paralyzed veterans

Grants and contracts

People

Lifelines: Arthur Horwich, seeking what’s never been seen.

New president of alumni body sees a bright future ahead

Out & about

Awards & honors

Science

Connecticut’s $100 million stem cell program good news for Yale

Advances: Taking a toll on parasitic infections |  New kidney discovery may help heart | A chink in malignant melanoma’s armor?

Health

Ovarian cancer test exposes quiet killer

From humble start at Yale, REMEDY thrives

Advances: Patient to surgeon: I hear a symphony

Education

Student explorations in the world of research

Notable teachers receive high honors at Commencement

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New president of alumni body sees a bright future ahead

Frank Lobo, M.D., has roots that run deep at the School of Medicine. He earned his medical degree here in 1992, and for many years served as a faculty member in immunology, within the Department of Medicine. After seven years as an officer and executive committee member of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine (AYAM), he was elected the alumni group’s president in June.

Lobo says that he’s looking forward to his two-year term, in particular because of the strength of the school’s current leadership. “This is an extremely positive moment for the medical school,” he says. “Our new dean [Robert Alpern] really has demonstrated a great understanding not only of what’s so magical about Yale, but also of the challenges that the school faces. He appears to have a very strategic vision about how to make the appropriate changes.”

Frank Lobo.

Frank Lobo

Lobo, who was the AYAM vice president for the last two years, began his term July 1. He succeeds Donald E. Moore, M.D., M.P.H., and he says he’ll pick up where Moore left off.

“The plans are to carry on with the mission of the AYAM, which is to involve the alumni in the affairs of the medical school and contribute to its welfare in any way we can,” Lobo says. “We have a vigorous expansion of the missions of research and patient care, as well as a very appropriate sensitivity to the uniqueness of our educational mission by our new dean. That will be a very easy and exciting message to bring to the alumni.”

Jocelyn S. Malkin, M.D., was elected vice president of the association. Malkin, a psychiatrist in private practice in Maryland, has served on the AYAM executive committee and as a delegate and member of the board of governors of the Association of Yale Alumni. Christine Walsh, M.D., serves as secretary until June, 2006.

The AYAM helps shape and lead all the school’s alumni programs, including class reunions each June, outreach events around the country and activities in greater New Haven. The group will host an outing to the Yale-Harvard Game on November 19.  

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Copyright 2005, Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. Email comments or suggestions to: editor@info.med.yale.edu.