
Three to
receive Phillips Medal of Public Service at Convocation Ceremony
by Kevin M. Sanders
On Saturday, Sept. 11, Ann Womer
Benjamin, J.D., director of the Ohio Department of Insurance, will
deliver the keynote address at the college’s Convocation Ceremony.
The ceremony — which takes place at 11 a.m. in Nelson Commons —
welcomes OU-COM’s incoming class of medical students. OU-COM Dean
Jack Brose, D.O., will serve as master of ceremonies at the 29th
Convocation.
Welcoming the Class of 2008 to the
University will be President Roderick McDavis,
Ph.D., who became president at the beginning of July. McDavis
is the second alumnus to head the University and its first
African-American president.
The Class of 2008 is
comprised of 114 students, of which there are 46 females and 68
males.
Almost one out of four
(28 of 114) of the class is a minority student. Also, 15 of the
class are from Southeastern Ohio. The class is 86 percent Ohio
residents, 40 percent female and 24 percent minority.
The Class of 2008, said
the Office of Admissions, is another academically strong group of
students and represents a wide-ranging group of individuals.
The Sept. 11 Convocation also
includes the school’s White Coat Ceremony, during which the members
of the Class of 2008 receive their white coats.
Thomas Anderson, D.O. (’83),
president of the OU-COM Society of Alumni and Friends, will preside.
The white coats donned during the ceremony are provided by the Ohio
Osteopathic Foundation.
“The Convocation,” said Brose “also affords our college the
opportunity to award the Phillips Medal of Public Service, the
college’s highest honor, to individuals who have made great
contributions to health care, education and public service. The
recipients have been very supportive of medical education in our
college, state and nation.”
The Phillips Medal is named for Jody
Galbreath Phillips and her late husband, J. Wallace, both longtime
friends of Ohio University. It has been awarded to outstanding men
and women since OU-COM’s inception in 1976.
Keynote speaker Benjamin is one of
three recipients of the Phillips Medal. In addition to Benjamin,
this year’s recipients of the Phillips Medal are Roy Chew, Ph.D.,
president of Grandview/Southview Hospitals, and Boyd Bowden, D.O.,
member of the American Osteopathic Association Board of Trustees and
the Osteopathic Heritage Foundation
Board of Trustees.
Benjamin, the 45th
director of the department and the first woman to head it, was a key
figure in securing the passage of professional liability insurance
(medical malpractice) reform through House Bill 281. In 2001 she was
the Aurora Chamber of Commerce’s Citizen of the Year, received the
Coleman Professional Services’ Distinguished Service Award and was
named Legislator of the Year by the Ohio Nurses Association. She
served as a House representative for four terms, passing 20 bills,
including legislation that toughened Ohio rape laws, secured the
State Victims of Crime Fund and allowed judges to suspend the
driver’s licenses of those charged with vehicular homicide.
Chew, president of
nationally recognized Grandview/Southview Hospitals and president of
the Ohio Osteopathic Hospital Association, served Kettering Medical
Center in several administrative capacities before its merger into
Grandview/Southview Hospitals. Under his leadership Grandview has
received many national honors including a five-star designation from
HealthGrades, recognition as one of the preeminent teaching
hospitals named in America’s “Top 100 Hospitals” and named as one of
the country’s best medical centers by US News and World Report’s
in its “America’s Best Hospitals” issue.
Bowden, a
board-certified orthopedic surgeon, has served the osteopathic
profession for the last 30 years as a distinguished physician,
educator and leader. Among numerous positions served, Bowden was the
president of the American Osteopathic Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons
and president of the Osteopathic Academy of Orthopedics Hand
Society, and chaired internship and residency training programs at
Doctors Hospital, in addition to being chief-of-staff at Doctors.
Currently a member of the American Osteopathic Association Board of
Trustees, he has sought to bolster the prominence of research at
osteopathic medical schools throughout the nation. As a member of
the Osteopathic Heritage Foundation Board of Trustees, he helped
establish the J.O. Watson, D.O., Endowed Research Chair, a major
component of OU-COM’s diabetes and cardiovascular research and
clinical initiatives.
Also participating in the ceremony
and making medal presentations with Brose are Alan Geiger, Ph.D.,
assistant to the president of the University, and Jeffrey
Stanley, D.O. (’82), president of
the Ohio Osteopathic Association.
Students will give tours
of the college from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. The tours leave from the
lobby of Grosvenor Hall on the West Green.
For more information on the
Convocation, contact Carol Blue, assistant to the dean, at (740)
593-2178.
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