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May 25, 2007|Volume 35, Number 29|Three-Week Issue


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Karen Morris will soon become the first grandmother ever to graduate from the School of Medicine.



'Oprah Show' hails first grandmother
to earn Yale M.D.

A44-year-old mother of five and grandmother who once thought admissions officers would simply laugh at her application to the Yale School of Medicine was celebrated recently for her perseverance on "The Oprah Winfrey Show."

Karen Morris, who will soon become the first grandmother ever to graduate from the School of Medicine, was honored as part of Winfrey's "Cheers to You!"episode of her show. Her determination not only earned her a surprise visit from Oprah's "Cheers to You!" team at the School of Medicine, but also resulted in one company's decision to pay off all of Morris' student debts.

Morris first thought about becoming a doctor during high school, when she saw doctors taking care of her ill grandmother and was in "awe" of them, she says. However, her plans for a medical career were put on hold when she became pregnant at 16. "I was supposed to be the first one [in the family] to go to college," she told "The Oprah Winfrey Show." "I felt like I let everyone down. I was devastated, and it devastated my family as well."

Morris managed to stay in high school and earn her diploma. By age 29, she had five children. She still wanted to go to college, but her then husband did not support that dream.

"He didn't think we had the time or the money," Morris said. "I finally realized that he was never going to say it was the time. I enrolled without telling him."

Morris eventually left her husband and began pursuing a career as a nurse, thinking that she'd never be able to get into medical school with five children. She worked two -- and sometimes three -- jobs while also juggling motherhood and school.

Morris became a nurse and a grandmother, but says that she still dreamt of being a doctor.

"I finally had to admit to myself that I still wanted to be a doctor," she said. "I could not bring myself to say it out loud to anyone. I was just so afraid that people would think I was crazy."

She also feared that her applications to medical schools would be "laughed off" the desks of admissions officers.

There were no laughs at the Yale School of Medicine, which admitted her as its first-ever student-grandmother.

"It just blew me away," said Morris. "When I was dreaming, I don't think I had dreamt this big."

Morris was in for another surprise recently when she and her medical school classmates were called into a lecture hall, purportedly for an important graduation meeting. Inside the lecture hall, a video was cued and Winfrey appeared on the screen to say, "Here on 'The Oprah Show' we're doing a show called 'Cheers to You.' I just happened to hear about a remarkable person in your class. Will Karen Morris please stand up?"

Morris' classmates began cheering as Winfrey continued, "Your classmates say your enthusiasm and your curiosity and your dedication are an inspiration to all of them. So I want everyone to stand up and join me in giving Karen a big 'Cheers to You!'" Winfrey then invited Morris to appear on her show several days later.

In yet another surprise for Morris, her entire family, including grandchildren, also flew out to Chicago to give her a cheer on the show. Her oldest daughter, Nikki, told Winfrey and her audience that her mom is a "wonderful woman," adding, "Growing up with her, she just inspired all of us."

Morris also has a new husband, and she noted that he married her despite her school loan debt. "I'll be a senior citizen when I pay it off, but that's okay," she said on Winfrey's show.

In a dramatic moment, Morris then learned from Winfrey that AMBI Skin Care has taken away her worry about paying off loans: The company will take care of all of Morris' medical school debts.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

University will hold its 306th Commencement May 28

'Oprah Show' hails first grandmother to earn Yale M.D.

Global health expert to head Yale's World Fellows Program

Trachtenberg reflects on her 20 years as 'Betty T.'

Inside the Forbidden City

Summertime at Yale

University to host international symposium on music education ...

Law School to train legal journalists, media lawyers

Campus celebrates its first African-American graduate

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

University names its first director of sustainable transportation systems

Graduate School students applaud faculty mentors

Eight faculty members elected to the AAAS

Three Yale scholars are new members of the APS

Peter Reinhardt named director of Yale's Office of Environmental ...

Kim Bottomly named president of Wellesley College

First-Year Building Program's 40th anniversary

Festival highlights 'revolutionary' artists and thinkers

Peabody Museum exhibit to showcase award-winning wildlife photography

Study finds dynamin 1 gene is critical for sophisticated brain function

Researchers examine why children (and some adults) are resistant ...

Three student scientists win Goldwater Scholarships

Archer named one of Glamour's 'Top 10 College Women'

Council of Masters presents awards to 10 juniors for their contributions

Ten Yale-China Teaching Fellows to begin appointments this summer

Top judges reach 'verdict' in law students' moot court trial

Dr. Lockwood's latest honors include 'Pulitzer Prize of the business press'

Campus Notes


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