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  • Aspiring surgeon knew the way to his dreams

    Times Picayune, LA
    May 5 2005

    Aspiring surgeon knew the way to his dreams
    Tulane standout was on eve of graduating

    By Keith O'Brien
    Staff writer

    John Berberian was close -- so close -- to finishing a long, hard
    journey that began at the Tulane University School of Medicine four
    years ago.

    His course work was done. Graduation was just three weeks away. And
    his departure, even closer. Berberian, 29, was two days away from
    leaving New Orleans. He had a neurosurgery residency awaiting him at
    Georgetown University. And while his time in New Orleans had been
    great, it was over. He told the school to mail him his diploma. As
    always, he had dreamed up bigger and better plans. He was going to
    Italy with his family.

    And then, in a freakishly cruel caprice of fate, Berberian's life
    was snuffed out, his body and bicycle mangled by an 18-wheeler as he
    pedaled along St. Claude Avenue last Thursday afternoon.

    On Wednesday, friends and family buried the young man in Fresno,
    Calif., and began packing for a trip to New Orleans rather than
    Italy. Richard Berberian, John's father, said Wednesday that he and
    his wife, Barbara, will attend a May 19 memorial service Tulane has
    scheduled in Berberian's honor as well as the May 21 graduation
    ceremony their son planned to skip. The grieving father wants to
    meet the classmates who loved his son so much and be there to hear
    him called doctor.

    "His spirit," he said, "will be graduating."

    Berberian was riding his bicycle west on St. Claude when the 18-wheeler
    traveling in the same direction veered right onto Elysian Fields
    Avenue, cutting him off, police said.

    Berberian died at the scene. His father forswore vengeful thoughts
    and instead expressed pity for the driver, who was not charged.

    On the day he died Berberian was coming from the Navy office on Poland
    Avenue, freshly promoted from ensign to lieutenant by the service
    that had financed his medical education in exchange for a four-year
    hitch upon its completion. In quiet testimony to that milestone -- and
    to Berberian's humility about his many accomplishments -- a friend,
    Dr. Lori Summers, found three photos in the dead man's pockets when
    she retrieved his clothing from the coroner's office Wednesday.

    They documented the oath he had taken at his naval commissioning: a big
    moment, one that comes with graduation, but that he had never mentioned
    to Summers, even though she, too, is in the Navy. It was classic
    "Johnny B," his friends agreed, the mark of a humble and unassuming
    man who in many ways was still just a kid who grew up on a California
    citrus farm, even as he spun wild stories or crafted grand theories.

    "I remember," classmate Ron Shatzmiller recalled Wednesday, "that
    I really wanted to be friends with him. Because when we went out to
    parties with the class -- when we were first-year students -- he was
    the most entertaining, the most well-spoken."

    Berberian was smart. He had three degrees from Stanford University:
    a bachelor's and two master's, one of them in political science. He
    juggled dreams, Shatzmiller said, of becoming, at times, an astronaut,
    a CIA agent and even president. According to Summers, he was "the
    best medical student I ever had."

    But it wasn't until July 2003, when Berberian began a surgery rotation
    and met Summers, that he finally stopped juggling dreams and decided
    he wanted to become a neurosurgeon. It's one of the most challenging
    and competitive medical specialties. Tulane, for example, accepts
    only one neurosurgery resident a year, Dr. Miguel Melgar said. But
    Melgar thought Berberian was perfect for the job.

    "He told me, 'This is what I want to do,' " recalled Melgar, a skull
    base and cerebral vascular surgeon at Tulane and the training director
    at Charity Hospital. "I said, 'Listen. You're from California. You
    guys have a nice lifestyle. Remember, you've got to be a commando
    here. You can probably do something less demanding.' .
    . He said, 'No, Dr. Melgar. This is what I want to do.' " .

    Focused, Berberian was soon outpacing some first- and second-year
    residents, Melgar and Summers said. He worked with patients suffering
    from brain tumors, aneurysms and trauma injuries, and he did so well
    treating them that Melgar said he would have given Tulane's sole
    neurosurgery residency spot to Berberian if he had asked for it.

    Instead Berberian decided he wanted to go somewhere new. He matched
    at Georgetown University in the winter, traveled to Armenia, where
    his ancestors had once lived, and returned last month for his final
    weeks in New Orleans.

    It was nice, Shatzmiller said Wednesday, to finally just hang out
    with his friend with no worries about school weighing on them, to
    listen to his stories and laugh at his theories: on everything from
    whom his friends should date to the logistics of commuting to med
    school from a house on the beach. Now it is his classmates who are
    telling stories about him.

    "The thing that kills us," Shatzmiller said, "is that he was the best
    of us."
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