Brody welcomes Class of 2012

Class includes four Brody Scholars

Seventy-six new medical students capped their first week at the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University today as they received their symbolic white coats.

This class is the largest in school history, topping last year’s 73 entering students. As usual, all students are North Carolina residents representing 32 counties from across the state. Thirty-nine are women, 37 are men. They range in age from 20 to 32. They have degrees from 29 different schools, led by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (18), ECU (13) and N.C. State University (12). Ten students have graduate degrees.

From left, Brody Scholars Mary Windham, Wesley O'Neal, Bryan Howington and Nabeel Arastu are among the 76 students who began medical school at ECU this week. Shown with them is Carole Novick, president of the ECU Medical & Health Sciences Foundation.

From left, Brody Scholars Mary Windham, Wesley O’Neal, Bryan Howington and Nabeel Arastu are among the 76 students who began medical school at ECU this week. Shown with them is Carole Novick, president of the ECU Medical & Health Sciences Foundation.

Greg Harris, a second-year student and president of the Medical Student Council, recalled his excitement at his own white coat ceremony. “And then biochemistry started on Monday,” he said with a groan.

Among the class of 2012 are the four newest Brody Scholars: Nabeel H. Arastu of Greenville, Bryan Howington of Pembroke, Wesley Thomas O’Neal of Wilson and Mary Elizabeth Windham of Greenville.

Arastu enters ECU having already co-written a book about cancer survivorship among those who were diagnosed with cancer as a child. Arastu worked with Dr. Aziza Shad and nurse practitioner Karen Hennessy of the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University to write “The Next Step: Crossing the Bridge to Survivorship.”

The Brody Scholars program honors J. S. “Sammy” Brody, who died in 1994. He and his brother, Leo, were among the earliest supporters of medical education in eastern North Carolina. The legacy continues through the dedicated efforts of Hyman Brody and David Brody. Subsequent gifts through the Brody Foundation have enabled the medical school to educate new physicians, conduct important research and improve health care in eastern North Carolina.

The scholarship is administered through the ECU Medical & Health Sciences Foundation.

Another student, Sohale C. Vu, has received a Fullerton Foundation Medical Scholarship worth $20,000 a year. Vu is from Oxford and is a graduate of Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia. Vu was nominated for the scholarship by the ECU medical foundation.

New medical student Adam Strickland of Fayetteville said he’s enjoyed getting to know his classmates this week and is looking forward to the next four years of study.

“It’s going to be challenging, but it’s going to be rewarding,” said Strickland, a graduate of N.C. State.