Medicine@Yale publication

Medicine@Yale.

January/February 2006   Volume 2 Issue 1

Inside this issue

Cover stories

Making a major impact in Science

Neuroscientists target disorders of the brain and spinal cord

Banner year for Yale as six on faculty join Institute of Medicine

Partnerships

New collaboration with museum aims to improve science literacy

Yale, VA supporting troops on the home front

Unlikely allies, common goals in fight against obesity

Medical school welcomes first Gilliam Fellows

Grants & contracts

People

Lifelines: Edward Chu, moving cancer drugs into the clinic

Graduate council bestows top honor on residency dean

L. Veronica Lee champions prevention and women’s cardiovascular health

Cell biologist Mellman elected to European academy

Alumnus receives Yale Medal for his decades of service

Out & about

Science

Science

Advances: Restoring flexibility to heal broken brains | Mad cow’s small impact explained?

Health

Advances: Take sleep apnea seriously, says study | Cool therapy helps after troubled births

 

 



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Alumnus receives Yale Medal for his decades of service

Nicholas P.R. Spinelli group photo.

At the end of World War II, Nicholas P.R. Spinelli, M.D., took leave from his Army unit in Germany and hitched a ride on a cargo plane to Rome. From there he traveled to Faeto, a village in southern Italy overlooking the Adriatic Sea that his parents had left 30 years earlier, and where the villagers celebrated the arrival of their native son. “I was there for three nights,” says Spinelli, a 1941 alumnus of Yale College and 1944 alumnus of the School of Medicine. “I had to make rounds and visit every sick person in the village.”

His triumphant return to his family’s ancestral community was the result of his parents’ belief in education and Spinelli’s own belief in the value of his education at Yale. Had they stayed in Italy, Spinelli said, his parents would never have been able to educate their yet unborn children, Nicholas and his sister, Viola. “Education was a passion with both my parents,” he says. “That was why they were working so hard.”

Throughout his career, Spinelli has shown his loyalty to Yale by raising money for the medical school, joining with his classmates to establish a scholarship fund, serving as the medical school’s director of alumni affairs and sponsoring the first White Coat ceremony, in which newly admitted medical students receive white physician’s coats from leaders of the School of Medicine, in 1992.

In November the Association of Yale Alumni awarded Spinelli the Yale Medal, which, since 1952, has honored outstanding service to the university. In this recognition, Spinelli joins such other medical school graduates and faculty members as pediatrician Grover F. Powers, M.D.; Russell B. Scobie, M.D.; William L. Kissick, M.D., M.P.H., Dr.PH.; Muriel DuBrow Wolf, M.D., and former Dean Milton C. Winternitz, M.D.

Spinelli’s path to Yale began in Stratford, Conn., where his parents had settled. His father ran several businesses, including a gas station and a restaurant on the Boston Post Road, then the main thoroughfare between New York and Boston.

In 1937 Spinelli entered Yale College, planning to become a writer. At the end of his freshman year, however, he took a job in a biology laboratory, where a professor encouraged him to study medicine, and in the fall of 1941 he entered the School of Medicine.

A few months later, while preparing for an anatomy exam, he heard President Roosevelt announce on the radio that the nation was at war. Spinelli and his 43 classmates were inducted into the Army, and their medical education was accelerated to meet wartime needs. Upon his discharge Spinelli returned to Stratford to practice internal medicine. A heart attack forced his retirement in 1958, but he began a second career as director of medical education at Bridgeport Hospital. In the 1980s his second career gave way to a third, as director of alumni affairs at the medical school. His main concern there was on what he called “incubating alumni,” strengthening relations with students and bringing them into the fold by including them in alumni events. At that time he helped create the Committee on the Well-being of Students, which makes a report each year on issues of concern to students.

Perhaps his greatest gift to the medical school was at his 40th reunion in 1984, when he asked his classmates to contribute to a scholarship fund over the next decade. By then, he said, the fund would be large enough to offer its first scholarship. In 1994, with 100 percent participation from the class, the fund paid half the expenses of a first-year student; it now supports three students through their first year. “I have gotten letters from students who have been given the scholarship, saying how important it was and how they couldn’t have gone to medical school without it,” Spinelli says.

For his service to Yale, Spinelli received the Distinguished Service Award from the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine in 1987 and the Peter Parker Medal in 1994. In recognition of his contributions to the medical school, two rooms were dedicated in Spinelli’s honor in 2000, one at the PVA/EPVA Neuroscience and Regeneration Research Center at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System in West Haven and the other at the medical school’s Office of Alumni Affairs.

But no honor, he says, surpasses one he received when he was 16 years old: “The greatest gift I got was the letter saying I was accepted to Yale.”

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Copyright 2006, Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved. Email comments or suggestions to: editor@info.med.yale.edu