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University News

Contact:
Gila Z. Reckess - (314) 3114-286-0109
reckessg@msnotes.wustl.edu
University-wide
Center for Aging established

[St. Louis, MO., 2-22-02]

To meet the needs of the increasing population of
older Americans, Washington University has established
a new, University-wide Center for Aging.
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Morris |
This
collaborative effort will apply the Universitys
resources to help older adults achieve a more satisfying
quality of life.
The centers focus is on productive aging,
says John C. Morris, M.D., director of the center
and the Harvey A. and Dorismae Hacker Friedman Professor
of Neurology in the School of Medicine. Our
goal is to enable older adults to remain engaged and
live happier, healthier and longer lives.
The center is made possible by a gift from Harvey
A. and Dorismae Hacker Friedman, who have had a longstanding
interest in aging-related endeavors at the University.
Their financial contributions in the past, including
an endowed professorship, and their more recent support
of the research component of the Center for Aging,
named in their honor, have facilitated the Universitys
advancements in aging.
Representatives from each of the Universitys
eight schools are involved in coordinating the centers
efforts, and the project is financially supported
by both the University and its schools.
We are very excited about this new initiative,
Chancellor Mark S. Wrighton said. The older
adult population is rapidly growing, and Washington
University is committed to helping meet their needs.
By combining a wide range of the Universitys
resources and those of other community organizations,
both the University and St. Louis communities will
benefit.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
the older adult population will more than double to
70 million by 2030, with one in every five Americans
at the age of 65 or older.
For years, Harvey Friedman has provided the
vision that Washington University is the appropriate
place to focus on aging, said William A. Peck,
M.D., executive vice chancellor for medical affairs
and dean of the School of Medicine. With John
Morris leadership and the Universitys
diverse expertise, I am confident that this new center
will further our excellence in aging research and
clinical care.
The new center is organized around three main programs:
research, education and service.
The Harvey A. and Dorismae Hacker Friedman Research
Program will foster and support studies of aging,
ranging from the molecular genetics of longevity to
community initiatives that improve quality of life
for older adults.
The center will award grants to University researchers
from a wide range of disciplines for pilot studies
on aging that can lead to larger grants from national
agencies. It also will support aging-related programs
already under way in the St. Louis community and will
serve as a link between the University and these community
organizations, fostering reciprocal opportunities.
We dont want to reinvent the wheel,
Morris said. We want to work with programs that
already are geared toward the elderly population to
learn how we can keep older people functioning in
the community.
One such collaborative opportunity is with the Older
Adult Service and Information System (OASIS), a national,
nonprofit organization with University links. OASIS
provides educational, health, technology and volunteer
programs to 100,000 older adults in the St. Louis
region. The center plans to investigate what skills
are most needed for seniors who enroll in OASIS
new computer training program.
The Education Program of the Center for Aging will
facilitate learning opportunities for older adults
and educate younger individuals about aging.
A speakers bureau of University faculty with
expertise in aging will help promote intergenerational
learning experiences that benefit both old and young.
The center also will recognize students and faculty
who demonstrate excellence in educational initiatives,
including summer programs for high school students
interested in experiencing laboratory research focused
on aging.
The Lifelong Learning Institute at University College
in Arts & Sciences is another established program
with which the center will partner.
One of the most visible of the centers service
initiatives will be the annual Friedman Lecture on
Aging. Peck presented the inaugural lecture in May
2001. The second Friedman lecture will be held on
the Hilltop Campus April 9 and will feature John W.
Rowe, M.D., co-author of the widely read book Successful
Aging.
Harvey Friedman attended Washington University in
the early 1940s and was an instructor at University
College in the 1950s. He now is a semiretired businessman
whose career has included health care, banking and
real estate development.
From 1979-1996, Friedman was a trustee of the Jewish
Hospital of St. Louis. He currently sits on the board
of the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation.
He was a delegate to the first White House Conference
on Aging and has served as a member of the National
Council on Aging of the National Institute on Aging.
Friedman also has been vice chairman of the advisory
board of the Salvation Army Midland Division, chairman
of the board of trustees of the Metropolitan St. Louis
Sewer District, a trustee and financial vice president
of the Missouri Historical Society, a trustee of Lindenwood
College and a trustee of the Jewish Center for the
Aged.
In 1942, Dorismae Hacker Friedman graduated from the
College of Arts & Sciences at the University,
where she was a homecoming queen. She has served on
the board of trustees of the Saint Louis Art Museum,
where she was a docent for many years.
Building on this interest, Harvey Friedman established
the Saint Louis Art Museum Annual Dorismae Friedman
Docent Enrichment Program in conjunction with the
James D. Burke International Award in Fine Arts.
Dorismae Hacker Friedman also was corresponding secretary
for the St. Louis section of the National Council
of Jewish Women and for the United Order of True Sisters
Miriam #17, where she also was chair of Cancer Services.
She was a member of the board of the Brandeis University
Women's Auxiliary of Naples, Fla.
The Friedmans have been married for 57 years. They
have two daughters, three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
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