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MOREHOUSE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
830 Westview Drive, S.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30314

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DR. LOUIS W. SULLIVAN, 50, became dean and director of the School of Medicine at Morehouse College in July, 1975. 

A former professor of medicine at Boston University, Dr. Sullivan is a native of Atlanta and an alumnus of Morehouse, graduating magna cum laude in 1954.

He received his medical degree cum laude from Boston University in 1958 and completed his internship (1958-59) and medical residency (1959-60) at New York Hospital—Cornell Medical Center.

In 1960, Dr. Sullivan returned to Boston for a general pathology residency at Massachusetts General Hospital. From 1961 to 1963 he was a Research Fellow in Medicine (Hematology) at the Thorndike Memorial Laboratory, Boston City Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Sullivan was both an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School and a research associate at the Thorndike Memorial Laboratory from 1963 to 1964. 

Dr. Sullivan was Assistant Professor of Medicine at the New Jersey College of Medicine from 1964 to 1966. During that time, he was first an Assistant Attending Physician and later an Associate Attending Physician at the Medical Center, Jersey City, New Jersey.

He returned to Boston in 1966 to become Co-Director of Hematology at Boston University Medical Center. From 1966 to 1968, he was Assistant Professor of Medicine at Boston University School of Medicine and an Assistant Visiting Physician, University Hospital and Boston City Hospital. Dr. Sullivan served as Associate Professor of Medicine from 1968 to 1974 and Associate Professor of Physiology from 1970 to 1974 at Boston University School of Medicine. During the period from 1968 to 1974, he was also Associate Visiting Physician at University Hospital and Boston City Hospital.

In addition to his other duties, Dr. Sullivan was Co-Project Director of the Boston Sickle Cell Center from 1972 to 1973, and Project Director from 1973 to 1975, and Director of Hematology at Boston City Hospital from 1973 to 1975.

From 1974 to 1975, Dr. Sullivan was Professor of Medicine and Physiology at Boston University School of Medicine, Professor of Nutrition at Boston University School of Dentistry and Visiting Physician at University Hospital and Boston City Hospital.

In 1975, Dr. Sullivan moved to Atlanta to his present position.

Honors received by Dr. Sullivan include election to the Begg Honor Medical Society of Boston University in 1956; Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society in 1957; receipt of a John Hay Whitney Foundation Opportunity Fellowship in 1960; receipt of a U.S. Public Health Service Research Center Development Award in 1956; election to Phi Beta Kappa; and election to the Institute of Medicine (National Academy of Sciences) in 1975.

Dr. Sullivan served as Secretary-Treasurer for the Society for the Study of Blood (New York) from 1965 to 1966. He was Secretary of the Boston Blood Club from 1968 to 1969 and served as its Chairman from 1969 to 1970. He served on the Medical Advisory Board of the National Leukemia Association from 1968 to 1970, and was its Chairman in 1970. From 1969 to 1973, he served as Special Consultant to the General Clinical Research Center Committee, Division of Research Facilities and Resources, National Institutes of Health.

Dr. Sullivan became a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation in 1972. He was a member of the Training Committee of the American Society of Hematology from 1969 to 1970. He also served on the Ad Hoc Panel on Blood Diseases, National Heart, Lung and Blood Disease Bureau from 1972 to 1973, and as a member of the Advisory Committee to the Division of Blood Diseases and Blood Resources, National Heart and Lung Institute (NIH), 1974-76. He was elected to Fellowship in the American College of Physicians in 1980. He is a

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Student Affairs
Class of '86

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[[caption]] First Row: Louis W. Sullivan, M.D., president and dean. Barbra Green-Muldrow, Kathryn Council, Kaye Barefield, Cynthia Stevens, Judith Bennett, Linda Eley, Venise Curry, Heidi Tull, Janet Bryant, Terri Phillips and Milford W. Greene, Ph.D., M.P.H., assistant dean for admissions and academic affairs. Second Row: Michelene Hearth-Holmes, Steven Dawkins, Robert deGourville, James Jackson, Lisa Moreland, Floyd Willis, Cleveland Chambliss, Lisa Bynes, and Edwin Ashley. Third Row: Robert Kaufmann, Felecia Dawson, Timothy Crim, Richard Margolin, Tanya Dotson, Kathy Williams, Joel Hackett, Georges Maliha, James Zuppa, and Stanley Hubbard. Fourth Row: Raymond Barreras, Ph.D., assistant director of admissions/registrar, Doy Gay, Karyn Butler, Dorcas Morgan, John Moorhead, Kelvin White, and Ronald Mason. [[/caption]]

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[[caption]] Thomas E. Norris, Ph.D. associate dean for academic affairs, lectures on biochemistry to freshmen students in new classroom facilities. The Class of '86 is shown here in one of the first classes to be held in the Basic Medical Sciences Building. [[/caption]]

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