Valedictorian and Salutatorians
This year’s valedictorian and salutatorians have two big things in common: all three are from USC Dornsife and all want to be doctors. Medicine is a tough profession that has come under fire lately, but Jana Shapiro, Jared Sokol and Brian Lentz aren’t fazed. Optimism and a passion for bettering the world and helping others are what drive these inspiring Trojans.
Valedictorian Jana Shapiro
“I was fortunate enough to be raised by two physicians who really love their careers. Of course we have a lot of stress ahead of us. Medicine will be very different when we are practicing it than when my parents started. But I think when you follow your heart, the rest will follow.
In the past few years, the idea of the doctor having this untouchable elite status is breaking down. For the first time — because we have the Internet and platforms for people to speak their minds — we’re seeing patients fighting back, talking about what frustrates them, what they don’t like about the health care system, what irks them about their doctor. For a physician who is tired and stressed and overworked, that can be really hard to hear and disheartening. But for the next generation of physicians, it’s an invitation to respond. It’s an invitation to make those changes. I think our generation has this really cool opportunity.”
Vital Stats
• Hometown: Northbrook, Ill.
• Major: psychology; minors: applied theatre arts and natural science
• Activities: USC Troy Camp counselor (four years), USC Global Medical Brigades volunteer and leader (three years); study abroad in Prague, Czech Republic; Alpha Delta Pi sorority (2013 Greek valedictorian).
• Hobbies: Dance, theater, the arts and, “cheesy as it sounds, reading. I’m a huge reader. I read every night.”
• Favorite Trojan memory: “My first summer at Troy Camp. Because it was the first time that I really got to spend extended amounts of time with kids from the surrounding areas of USC. There was this one moment, I remember watching a camper ride a horse for the first time, and later that night, he was talking about how he’d never seen the stars as clearly as they were at that moment. It was really wonderful — that moment of being close to nature but also close to the USC community.”
• Future plans: One last week of volunteering at Troy Camp, then traveling to Peru and Machu Pichu with her family. Starting first-year med school at Northwestern University.
USC 2014 Salutatorian Jared Sokol
“I think medicine is so integral in each of our lives. For me, it’s important just seeing how it can change people, change someone’s confidence, make their life so much better. Even though changes are coming, having a positive mindset and still trying to provide the best care possible is the overarching goal at the core of medicine. It’s something I want to achieve: To be able to create a very high standard of care and to love what I’m doing, to help people realize their own potential and to have them accomplish their goals.
The relationship between the doctor and the patient is two-way — the doctor must listen to the patient and see the patient’s needs. That relationship can never be altered by what’s happening in the political arena.”
Vital Stats
• Hometown: Englewood, Colorado
• Major: Biological sciences
• Activities: USC Supplemental Instruction tutor (chemistry), USC Hillel student leadership, summer study abroad at Cambridge University, England, and University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia; USC Alternative Winter Break volunteer in Chiang Mai, Thailand; USC Ski and Snowboard team, Alpha Mu fraternity.
• Favorite Trojan memory: “Staying in a rural Thai hill tribe, sleeping in the school, all in the same classroom, and being able to interact with these Thai children. Seeing how they approached life with such passion and love for their families and the new people they meet around them.”
• Hobbies: Downhill skiing, guitar, drums, piano, drawing. “This summer I’ve been thinking about taking up woodworking.”
• Future plans: Traveling to Nepal and the Everest base camp, continuing a research project on prostate cancer epidemiology at USC Norris Cancer Center. Starting first-year med school at University of Chicago.
USC 2014 Salutatorian Brian Lentz
“You read all these pessimistic things in the news. Occasionally we’ve all been shadowing in the medical facilities, and we see physicians who are stressed and overworked. They may say they’re unhappy. But for every one of those I see, I meet an outstanding physician who absolutely loves what he does, who is passionate about it. And who provides just the highest quality of care, and impacts so many peoples’ lives in a positive way. When I see that, I know that’s the kind of person I want to be and what I want to do with my career.
We can bring a higher level of ethics to medicine. We can bring a higher level of respect to the patient. Even from a business side, hopefully we can make it more efficient. We can be part of that change, we can change it for the better.”
Vital Stats
• Hometown: Iowa City, Iowa
• Major: biology; simultaneous M.S. in marine/environmental biology
• Activities: Trojan Marching Band (tenor sax), USC Triathlon Team (2010-12), USC OUTreach, USC Teaching Ethics Program, Trojan Health Volunteers, USC Global Medical Brigades service trip to Honduras, Jimmy Miller Wounded Warrior Foundation volunteer surfing instructor, California Science Center volunteer scuba diver, Los Angeles Orthopedic Institute for Children volunteer Spanish interpreter.
• Favorite Trojan memory: “My first year in Trojan Marching Band, we played for weeks and weeks and weeks, practicing for hours in the hot sun on Cromwell Field. People fainted, some people quit. Then the first game day, we marched down Trousdale, in front of Tommy Trojan, and I remember having students, community members, the whole Trojan Family lined up. And we played ‘Tribute to Troy’ for the first time in front of an audience. Just seeing the look on their faces, the excitement that it gave them, was really memorable.”
• Hobbies: Saxophone, surfing, scuba diving, mountaineering, backpacking, cross-country skiing and, after a two-year hiatus due to a serious knee injury, triathlon. “I did a race last weekend. I got 9th out of 900,” says the former USC Triathlon Team vice president and 2011 world championship silver medalist.
• Future plans: Finishing honors thesis research in USC Dornsife marine scientist Donal Manahan’s lab, then taking a year off to travel, starting with a 40-day mountaineering course in the Indian Himalayas. Working and volunteering in Costa Rica to perfect his Spanish (“so I can treat Spanish-speaking patients”), followed by applying to medical schools for Fall 2015.