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.
ELI KENNERLY MARSHALL JR., A&S 1911 (PhD), Med 1917, was head of the Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics for more than two decades and was considered one of the most renowned pharmacologists of his time. After earning his doctorate in chemistry, he joined the medical faculty while earning his…
Read MoreHENRY J. KNOTT was a builder and outstanding developer whose companies constructed thousands of homes and businesses in Baltimore. A longtime hospital trustee, he was awarded an honorary degree in 1986. With his wife, MARION I. KNOTT, he made contributions to cultural institutions in the Baltimore region in excess of…
Read MoreISAAC MORRIS HAY, a general practitioner, established the first and only hospital in Melbourne, Florida, in 1929. His wife, LUCILLE ELIZABETH HAY, assisted with administrative and caretaker duties in addition to raising three children. The private hospital weathered the Great Depression and eventually obtained much-needed outside support when it…
Read MoreMICHAEL and ANN HANKIN met at Emory University and went on to share the same educational background, graduating from Emory in 1979 with both a BA and an MA along with Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude honors. They also graduated together from the University of Virginia School of…
Read MoreEDWARD BAYARD HALSTED was a longtime friend of the university and cousin of famed Hopkins surgeon William Halsted. Mr. Halsted had been a stockbroker in New York City. His generous bequest, according to the terms of his estate, was to "be forever devoted to research work for the advancement of…
Read MoreIn 1849, when he was seven years old, JOSEPH R. DeLAMAR stowed away on a ship bound from his Amsterdam home for the Dutch Indies. The journey lasted 18 months, but he was eventually returned to his parents and to school. As a young man, he continued to seek adventure,…
Read MoreLOUIS J. BOURY moved from Baltimore with his family when he was still a young boy. Many years later, Mr. Boury, who had become an important member of the New York Produce Exchange, remembered the town of his birth with a generous donation to Johns Hopkins--creating this professorship, as well…
Read MorePHILIP BARD joined the faculty as professor of physiology in 1933. In the course of his 31-year career at Hopkins, Dr. Bard went on to lead his department, serve for four years as dean of the School of Medicine, and win countless honors and awards in recognition of his important…
Read MoreC. MICHAEL ARMSTRONG, the eldest of three sons born in pre-World War II Detroit, Michigan, was president of his high school senior class, and earned college football scholarships to the University of Michigan, Western Michigan University, and Miami University in Ohio. Mr. Armstrong attended Miami University, where he earned a…
Read MoreJOHN JACOB ABEL was Hopkins' first professor of pharmacology, serving on the faculty from 1893 to 1932 and continuing his research until his death in 1938. Dr. Abel is widely regarded as the father of American pharmacology, and was dedicated to the view that chemistry held the clue to solving…
Read MoreGracious, warm, and caring, the Weiss family is notable for their business success and their belief in the power of philanthropy. Devoted to his wife, VIRGINIA, and their family, ABRAHAM WEISS was the consummate gentleman with a ready sense of humor and warm personality that put people immediately at ease.…
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