Natalia Trayanova, Biomedical Engineering
Dr. Trayanova’s research centers around understanding the normal and pathological electrophysiological and electromechanical behavior of the heart. She is the Murray B. Sachs Professor.
In 1988, Mrs. LOIS S. DUFFEY vividly remembered the hours she spent in the Johns Hopkins Oncology Center waiting room throughout the many months a family member was being treated for cancer. “I was overwhelmed by the distress of other patients and families there,” she recalled. “There was such confusion…
Read MoreWILLIAM L. CLAYTON, university trustee emeritus and a former member of the SAIS Advisory Council, was a leader in business and international affairs. He served for many years as president of Anderson, Clayton and Company, a Texas-based cotton trading company. In addition, Mr. Clayton served as the first American under…
Read MoreDANA BROCCOLI was a philanthropist, novelist, producer, actress, and creative muse. She collaborated with her husband, ALBERT ROMOLO "CUBBY" BROCCOLI, on the production of more than 15 films. The couple launched the James Bond series, the most successful film franchise in Hollywood history. In recognition of that achievement, Mr. Broccoli…
Read MoreHARRIET LEGUM translated her personal experience with cancer into an opportunity to help others. After successful treatment, she took the helm of a campaign to raise significant funding for breast cancer research at Hopkins. Mrs. Legum, who herself provided generous support, was joined by other donors, including her mother-in-law, NAOMI…
Read MoreIn 2000, under the leadership of then CEO DONALD J. SHEPARD (pictured here), AEGON provided funding to Johns Hopkins cancer initiatives, awarding a grant to Johns Hopkins for fellowships in prostate and breast cancer research. As a result of this and successive grants, scientists at the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center…
Read MoreMARTIN D. ABELOFF, A&S 1963, Med 1966, joined the faculty of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 1972. He served as director of the Cancer Center from 1992 until his death in 2007. Throughout his career, Dr. Abeloff was deeply committed to translational research, the transfer of research…
Read MoreThe BURROUGHS WELLCOME FUND is an independent private foundation dedicated to advancing the medical sciences by supporting research and other scientific and educational activities. It conducts a majority of its grant-making through competitive programs designed to support the career development of young scientists and to build capacity in research areas…
Read MorePAUL K. NEUMANN, who was president of PKN Commercial Real Estate in Baltimore, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 1987. Although he died in 1992 when his cancer returned, Mr. Neumann benefited from the care he received from John L. Cameron, the Alfred Blalock Distinguished Service Professor of Surgery, who…
Read MoreDANIEL NATHANS won the Nobel Prize in medicine in 1978, sharing the honor with his colleague, fellow Hopkins professor Hamilton O. Smith, Med 1956, and Swiss microbiologist Werner M. Arber. Dr. Nathans earned the high honor for his contributions to the discovery and use of a restriction enzyme as "biochemical…
Read MoreBoth RICHARD F. MORTON and KATHLEEN C. MORTON have had a long association with Johns Hopkins. In 1953, Hopkins obstetrician Nicholson J. Eastman invited Richard Morton, sight unseen, to become an intern in OB/GYN. Leaving his bride in England, he spent a year at Hopkins, an experience that left an…
Read MoreVICTOR A. McKUSICK, Med 1946, widely recognized as the father of medical genetics, spent his entire career at Johns Hopkins Medicine. Peers credit him with almost singlehandedly introducing and demonstrating the importance of genetics in the practice of medicine. He became the first to describe the cluster of characteristics of…
Read MoreBESSIE DARLING MASSEY and her husband, J. Alan Massey, owned the Hamilton Hotel in Ocean City, Maryland. Mrs. Massey, a patient of Hopkins physician JOHN E. BORDLEY, Med 1929, honored him with the creation of this professorship. Dr. Bordley was director of the Department of Otolaryngology from 1952 to 1969,…
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