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Songs and dance to benefit minority high school students

Medical students strutted their stuff in January at the Seventh Annual Grannum Jamboree, showing once again that they are as familiar with a guitar or dance steps as they are with the 206 bones in the human body. The jamboree’s selections ranged from songs by the Yale Gospel Choir to a humorous song about life in New Haven performed by Mike Fehm and accompanists. LaLisa Alita Anderson read from her collection of oral histories, On the Other Side: African Americans Tell of Healing, to be published next spring by Westminster John Knox Press. Rashida N’Gouamba choreographed a dance set to kweito music from South African black townships.

The show’s proceeds benefit HPREP, the Health Professions Recruitment and Enrichment Program, a 10-week program that brings area high school students to the medical school on Saturday mornings for classes on health-related topics. This year 43 high school students participated and at the end of the program the top students received college scholarships.

The jamboree is held in honor of the late Dr. Peter Grannum, former director of medical studies in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and two-time winner of the Francis Gilman Blake Award for outstanding teaching in the medical sciences. 

 

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I Know What You Did Last Semester

Early in the first act of I Know What You Did Last Semester, the Class of 2002’s second-year show, a heckler in the balcony shouted, “Where’s the plot?” It soon became apparent that this year’s show had none. Presented in February, the show offered a series of songs, dances, skits and videos stitched around the theme of accreditation. LCME accreditors, played by Max Laurans and Premila Bhat, wandered through scenes of the school, comparing the official view to their own observations. “This medical school is out of control!” said the accreditor played by Bhat. “There is an utter lack of discipline!”

The dazzling opening number, choreographed by Jacqueline Park, offered a wild view of life on Cedar Street, with male med students as leering Lotharios and the females as gum-chewing schoolgirls dressed in Mary Janes. The show featured appearances by Dean David A. Kessler as himself, plus cameos by Nancy R. Angoff, M.D. ’90, HS ’93, M.P.H. ’81, associate dean for student affairs, and Ruth Katz, J.D., M.P.H., associate dean for administration, also mocking themselves. Kessler mimicked himself giving a speech and, departing from the script, announced to cheers as well as boos, “This show is the best I have ever seen since coming to Yale.”

The show, produced by Scott Berkowitz and Tracey Cho, also targeted a doctor-patient encounter course conducted by Thomas Duffy, M.D., depicting it as TV’s obnoxious Jerry Springer Show. Another skit made fun of the TV quiz show Who Wants To Be a Millionaire?, with contestants answering medical exam questions and others on the order of “Which third-year student soiled his pants during the boards?” One contestant made the mistake of turning to “lifeline” Pietro De Camilli, M.D., chair of cell biology, for help in choosing between GTP and GDP. For at least three years in a row the show has poked fun at his inflection, which allegedly renders the two abbreviations indistinguishable to students.

During the second act, first-year students took the stage briefly to sing an unintelligible ode to Robert H. Gifford, M.D., HS ’67, the recently retired deputy dean for education, to the tune of a Tom Petty ballad. For a second prank, first-year students hiding in light fixtures above the ceiling dropped ping-pong balls on the stage. Second-years refused to let that pass. A quickly typed message of congratulations soon flashed on the screen behind the stage, followed by a note of surprise. “We didn’t know you had any balls.”

The show ended with the entire Class of 2002 singing “We’re on the Wards,” to the tune of “We Are the World.” “We’re on the wards,” they sang, “but we’re not doctors. We’re the ones in your hospital rooms asking dumb questions.”


Also in Student news:


Grannum Jamboree  
|  I Know What You Did Last Semester  |  Student Research Day  |  Graduate research conference links students across campus  |  Residency placements  |  Class of 2000   

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Originally published in Yale Medicine, Summer 2000.
Copyright © 2000 Yale University School of Medicine. All rights reserved.