El VaiM01,4K ;t seigatike, -,40 gRONNEP Ve.40 di H.L. Greenberg: "I always thought my putpose on Earth was to save lives and to improve the quality of life." t* , LYNNE MEREDITH COHN Scene Editor 1ff ost nights, you can find H.L. Greenberg on Lonestar Coffee Co.'s comfortable couches or upstairs at Borders in Birmingham, studying ferociously about diseases and treatments and weird conditions. Or you can find him at the mall. "I really like to study at Somerset, outside Nordstrom at the cafe or the food court," says the 25-year-old med- ical student from Colorado Springs, Colo., now living in Royal Oak. "It's , loud, but I wear headphones, listen to the radio. I like to see people go by." Named after two grandfathers, Harry and Lawrence, H.L. is finally making his life's dream come true. In seventh grade, his Army physician father took Greenberg's biology class to a cardiac catheterization lab to watch him perform an angioplasty. "He showed us pictures of this guy's heart," Greenberg said. "We saw where the obstruction was in the mans coronary artery. I thought my dad was the biggest hero in the world. He saved this guy's 5/29 1998 106 life. I said, 'I want to do that, save peo- ple's lives." But it hasn't been an easy path to Wayne State's med school. The 1994 University of Michigan graduate wasn't accepted to medical school until 1996. At an interview the second time around, someone asked, "What if you don't get in this year?" Greenberg replied, "I'll try again and again t— I'll either come here as a medical student or a cadaver." Walking through surgery, pediatric and obstetrics/gynecology rotations, Greenberg is the one with the bright smile, clean-cut good looks and med- ical-Chemed tie (with pictures of needles and syringes). He could talk for hours about patients he has seen. "One patient came in, a football player for Wayne. He'd been shot three times — in the back of the head, cheek and elbow. [A doctor] called me down and said, 'Greenberg, we need you to sew up this patient."' Having never sutured before, Greenberg approached the guy, hands shaking, afraid to admit his novice sta- tus. "The guy kept saying to me, 'Don't let me die.' It took three hours — nor- mal is half an hour to an hour." Greenberg delivered the baby of a 12-year-old girl and watched an alco- holic die. "It made me never want to drink," he says. He works by the axiom: "How would I want my folks treated if they were sick? No one wants to be a patient." His parents are still in the Army town where he spent most of his child- hood: and his brother now lives in Dallas. Although he treats his years in metro Detroit as an adventure, trying anything once and attending as many Jewish community events as his sched- ule will allow, his heart is in the moun- tains. "I feel very welcome here. Being so far from home, I have a real good grou p of friends in Detroit," Greenberg says. "It makes it easier being away. The tern pies have been very nice. Michael Brooks [at U-M Hillel] has been my spiritual guidance counselor. I'm always trying to meet people." Greenberg especially loves having so many Jewish options here. Growing up, his family attended the town's only synagogue, which had Reform services . on Friday nights and Conservative on Saturday mornings. For his bar mitzvah, Greenberg "did Friday night for my mom, Saturday morning for my dad." Colorado Springs was home to one BBYO chapter, of which Greenberg was president. But until he came to Detroit, he never had a Jewish girlfriend. Of course, that's ancient history. Although he used to date a lot more, before focus- ing solely on med school, he's certainly single and searching. If you can fit into his schedule, that is. That means working around training for the New York marathon in November (Greenberg ran track in col- lege), exercising at the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, in-line skating, water-skiing, snow skiing, reading John Irving or Elie Wiesel and playing basketball on Mondays with fellow grad students. And trying to figure out whether to be a surgeon or an internal medicine physician. "I always thought my purpose on Earth was to save lives and to improve the (II ial ity of life," he says. Better take a number, ladies. CI