The
2011
graduation
ceremony
is a
family
affair
Many
graduates
receive
ceremonial
hoods
from
parents,
other
family
members
during
OU-COM’s
32nd
Commencement

(ATHENS,
Ohio—June
4)
Family
played
an
important
role
during
Commencement
for
the
108
new
physicians
who
graduated
from
the
Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopathic
Medicine
today.
More
than
2,000
family
members
and
friends
of
the
OU-COM
Class
of
2011
gathered
in
Athens
to
watch
the
graduates
receive
their
doctorates
of
osteopathic
medicine,
and
many
family
members
actually
participated
in
the
ceremony.

Leonard H. Calabrese, D.O., delivered the keynote address at the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Commencement on June 4, 2011. Calabrese’s daughter, Cassandra Marie Calabrese, D.O., received her Doctorate of Osteopathic Medicine during the ceremony.
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It
was
a
family
affair
for
keynote
speaker
Leonard
H.
Calabrese,
D.O.,
director
of
the
R.J.
Fasenmyer
Center
for
Rheumatic
and
Immunologic
Diseases
at
the
Cleveland
Clinic
and
the
head
of
their
clinical
immunology
section.
His
daughter,
Cassandra,
was
among
the
graduating
class.
The
newest
Dr.
Calabrese,
whose
grandfather
is
also
an
osteopathic
physician,
received
her
ceremonial
hood
from
her
father
--
and
mentor.
“This
is
an
exciting
day
for
me
and
my
family,”
the
senior
Dr.
Calabrese
said
at
the
beginning
of
his
address.
Instead
of a
traditional
speech,
Calabrese
asked
the
new
graduates
and
the
audience
to
share
in a
“family
discussion,”
which
included
advice
he
had
for
Cassandra.
Given
the
“fast
knowledge
or
rapid
advances
in
medicine
that
students
and
practicing
physicians
are
expected
to
keep
pace
with,
Calabrese
wanted
to
offer
graduates
what
he
called
“slow
knowledge,”
or
timeless
wisdom
that
remains
the
same
now
as
it
may
have
100
years
ago.
Calabrese
recommended
the
new
graduates
follow
three
simple
“do’s”
and
three
simple
“do
not’s.”
The
“do
not’s”
were
greed,
arrogance
and
intellectual
laziness,
and
the
“do’s”
were
to
avoid
complaining,
to
learn
humility
and
to
actively
engage
in
reflection
about
life.
“Without
reflection,
you
are
vulnerable
to
losing
the
joy
of
being
a
physician.
It’s
not
about
just
being
a
doctor;
to
me
it’s
about
the
meaning
of
life,”
he
said.
Besides
Cassandra
Calabrese,
D.O,
at
least
11
other
graduates
received
their
ceremonial
hoods
from
physician
mentors
who
were
either
parents
or
other
family
members..

| Chad Keller, D.O., addresses his classmates during Commencement at the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine on June 4, 2011. Keller asked father, Charles Keller, D.O., a family physician from Logan, to serve as his mentor. |
“It
was
a
privilege
for
me
to
be
his
mentor,”
said
Charles
Keller,
D.O.,
a
family
medicine
physician
from
Logan
who
draped
the
ceremonial
hood
around
the
shoulders
of
his
son,
Chad
Robert
Keller,
D.O.
The
senior
Dr.
Keller
said
he
was
proud
and
honored
to
be
able
to
hood
his
son.
The
younger
Dr.
Keller
said
there
was
no
hesitation
on
his
part
about
asking
his
father
to
serve
as
his
mentor.
“Well,
for
starters,
he’s
my
dad,
and
we’re
really
close.
As a
physician,
I
really
respect
him
a
lot.”
Chad
Keller
will
enter
the
otorhinolaryngology/orofacial
plastic
surgery
residency
program
at
OhioHealth
Doctors
Hospital
in
Columbus.
The
mentors,
physicians
who
provide
guidance
and
expertise
to
help
the
students
advance
their
careers,
are
selected
by
the
students.
Of
the
108
graduates
in
the
Class
of
2011,
61selected
mentors,
21
of
which
are
OU-COM
alumni.
Kristen
Michelle
Astrom,
D.O.,
received
her
diploma
in
the
same
building
where
her
grandparents
graduated
from
Ohio
University
in
June
of
1941—
the
Templeton-Blackburn
Alumni
Memorial
Auditorium.
Dr.
Astrom’s
grandmother,
Sarah
Jane
Kuchenrither,
who
earned
degrees
in
home
economics
and
French
70
years
ago,
watched
her
granddaughter
via
live
web
broadcast
from
her
home
in
Belleville,
Ill.
“We
got
her
set
up
with
a
computer
so
she
could
be a
part
of
today,”
said
Dr.
Astrom,
who
begins
a
family
medicine
residency
at
St.
Joseph
Health
Center
in
Warren
this
summer.
Astrom,
who
earned
a
Bachelor
of
Science
degree
from
Ohio
University
in
2000,
is
the
daughter
of
Francie
Astrom,
a
nutrition
counselor
at
WellWorks,
Ohio
University’s
wellness
program.
“I
wanted
to
go
into
osteopathic
medicine,
so I
naturally
had
to
come
here,”
Dr.
Astrom
said.
Of
the
108
new
osteopathic
physicians
who
graduated
on
Saturday,
63
percent
will
continue
their
postdoctoral
education
in
Ohio.
Forty
percent
will
enter
residency
programs
in
one
of
the
26
hospitals
throughout
Ohio
that
partner
with
OU-COM
in
the
Centers
for
Osteopathic
Research
(CORE),
which
has
been
described
as
the
“gold
standard”
for
osteopathic
postdoctoral
training
nationally,
said
OU-COM
Dean
Jack
Brose,
D.O.
Others
will
go
onto
postdoctoral
training
at
such
respected
institutions
as
the
Cleveland
Clinic,
Penn
State
Milton
S.
Hershey
Medical
Center,
Akron
Children’s
Hospital,
University
of
Pittsburgh
Medical
Center,
The
Ohio
State
University
Medical
Center,
the
University
of
Kentucky
Medical
Center
and
Miami
Children’s
Hospital.
Two
OU-COM
graduates
will
enter
military
medical
residencies,
one
at
Walter
Reed
Army
Medical
Center
and
the
second
at
the
Naval
Medical
Center
in
Portsmouth
in
Maine.
“We
take
great
pride
in
all
of
our
graduates,”
Brose
said.
“Each
new
OU-COM
graduate
physician
and
surgeon
will
take
with
her
or
him
the
respect,
integrity,
and
compassion
that
is
the
heart
of
osteopathic
medical
training.
Wherever
they
train,
we
will
be
forever
proud
that
they
are
osteopathic
physicians
and
that
they
represent
the
College
of
Osteopathic
Medicine
and
Ohio
University.”
Kevin
B.
Lake,
D.O.
('92),
a
member
of
the
Ohio
University
Board
of
Trustees,
convened
the
ceremony.
Other
speakers
included
Ohio
University
President
Roderick
J.
McDavis,
Ph.D.;
Albert
M.
Salomon,
D.O.,
president
of
the
Ohio
Osteopathic
Association;
Jeffrey
A.
Stanley,
D.O.
('82),
president
of
the
OU-COM
Society
of
Alumni
and
Friends;
and
Tejal
Ramesh
Patel,
D.O.,
president
of
the
OU-COM
Class
of
2011.
Patel
will
begin
a
family
medicine
residency
this
summer
at
OhioHealth’s
Doctors
Hospital
in
Columbus.
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