2016 Free Listing Submission Deadline: May 9, 2016 The Jewish News will honor all Jewish students who are graduating this spring from Michigan high schools in our Cap & Gown Yearbook 2016. The Yearbook will be published in our May 26 issue. Go online to submit your free listings to: www.thejewishnews.com/contact/cap-and- gown/free-listing/ All cap and gown submission MUST go through the website. If you have any questions, call Jackie Headapohl, Editor, at (248) 351-5110. 30 May 5 • 2016 Teaching From The Heart PHOTO COURTESY OF MONNI MUST Cap & Gown YEARBOOK metro » Dr. George Mogill to receive WSU lifetime achievement citation. Andrea Westfall | Special to the Jewish News G eorge Mogill, M.D., class of 1942, may never hang up his stethoscope, at least symbolically. The Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit will honor the 98-year-old alumnus with a one-time Lifetime Achievement Citation for his loyalty and commitment to the school, the field of medicine, and the teaching and mentoring of medical students and residents. The citation will be presented by WSU School of Medicine Dean Jack D. Sobel, M.D., at the Medical Alumni Reunion Day lunch program May 14 in Scott Hall. “I am exceedingly honored,” the Bloomfield Hills resident said. “Medicine was and is my life, along with my family.” Mogill is a retired family medi- cine physician affiliated with William Beaumont Hospital. He received his bachelor’s degree in biological sci- ences from WSU in 1937. He graduated from the Wayne University College of Medicine in 1942, completed a one-year surgery internship and then joined the U.S. Army Medical Corps in 1943. He landed in Normandy four days after D-Day, caring for patients in the Army’s 8th Field Hospital in France and Germany. He moved home to complete his residency when the war ended. “Jewish doctors were not welcome at many hospitals in the area. Grace Hospital in the medical center gave me a home. They gave me privileges as a gen- eral practitioner,” he said. He opened his Detroit office on Second Avenue between Peterboro and Charlotte streets, near the Masonic Temple, and rounded at Grace in the morning and at lunch, seeing 30 to 40 patients a day. He refused to segregate, becoming the third doctor in Detroit to have office hours where patients of all colors sat in the same room on the same day. He moved his practice to Royal Oak for a time before returning to a WSU- affiliated medical school clinic to secure the school’s family medicine residency. He joined the School of Medicine’s fac- ulty in 1972 as a clinical instructor in the Department of Family Medicine. Mogill taught throughout the 1990s and into the 21st century. WSU Department of Family Medicine Chair and Professor Tsveti Markova, M.D., met him in 2001 when she became the Family Medicine residency program director for Sinai-Grace Hospital. “He taught the heart of medicine,” she said. Mogill was chief of the Department of Family Practice at Harper-Grace Hospital from 1977 to 1984 and later at Sinai-Grace Hospital. Among his honors, he is a lifetime member and former board member of the School of Medicine Alumni Association. In addi- tion, the George Mogill, M.D., Endowed Award for Family Medicine — a gift to the school established in 2000 by his former patient— is presented annually during Match Day to a graduating senior committed to specializing in family medicine. Class of 2017 medical student Dana Sugar credits Mogill for affecting her decision to become a physician. Sugar’s sister, Liza, is married to Mogill’s grand- son Jonathan Lauter, M.D., a pediatrician who graduated from the WSU School of Medicine in 2008. Sugar — who described Mogill as a “strong, stubborn and very sweet man” — considered becoming a physician’s assistant instead of a doctor for a few years. “He was ruthless and adamant in his conviction that I should choose M.D.,” she said. “It became a conversation we would debate nearly every time we saw each other.” He even cornered her at synagogue. “It was at the aufruf before Jon and my sister Liza’s wedding. This is the religious service held on the Shabbat before the wedding. It was a long service at a con- servative shul. George was in front of me in the synagogue, and he would turn around in between prayers to convince me to go to medical school. I kid you not. There was no escaping this conver- sation; we were in shul!” she said. Mogill and wife, Irma, who died in 2012, have three children, eight grand- children and five great-grandchildren. * Andrea Westfall is in public affairs for WSU School of Medicine.