Dr. Robert Olds, DVM Class of '67 Scholarship
Dr. Olds cites two "wonderful opportunities" in his life.
- The first was going to Washington State. "I love WSU, being a Cougar, all the wonderful experiences and the life it has afforded me," he said. "I served on the board of trustees and help fund-raise for the veterinary college."
- The second wonderful opportunity was marrying Janice, his wife of 42 years, "a wonderful woman, life partner and mother of our two sons. Geoff is a fireman in Maryland, whose wife gave us our first granddaughter last spring. Brian, our other son, is a film editor in Los Angeles."
Celebrating a Legend
Bob Olds always wanted to be a vet. Kids love animals, he says, and he never had any doubt about his path through life. He got his first break in veterinary medicine when he was 13. “I'd always had a love of animals - all young kids do - and I was fortunate to be hired by the late Dr. Bob Stansbury at his practice in Pasadena," Dr. Olds said. “My job was to feed animals, clean cages and record appetite before school in the morning and on weekends. My interest in surgery began while I observed Dr. Stansbury.
At Pasadena High School, Dr. Olds played football alongside Mel Hein Jr. Football fans will recognize the name, as Hein Jr.’s father led the Cougars to the 1931 Rose Bowl and went on to play center for the New York Giants. It was the Heins who endorsed WSU so enthusiastically that Dr. Olds applied there without hesitation.
At Washington State half an hour of physical education was required. Dr. Olds had competed in gymnastics in junior high, at Pasadena High School and at Pasadena City College. When he registered for classes, he selected a course labeled "advanced gymnastics" to meet the PE requirement. “I was told that it was the WSU team time and in college you just don't join a team. You must try out and earn a spot. I did that… I was lucky enough to be undefeated for three years in dual meets and twice was Pacific North west champion on the pommel horse." His best years as a gymnast came after he graduated and joined a team in New York City. “I finished in second place in the national AAU [Amateur Athletic Union] in 1971 and came in first in the National YMCA, which was an AAU-sponsored event." He participated in the Senior Olympics until age 52 when "I started worrying about my hands as a surgeon."
After Dr. Olds earned his veterinary degree from Washington State University in 1967, he was accepted in the internship program at the Animal Medical Center in New York City where he completed a surgical residency. Then he spent nine months in Europe, living in Alpe d' Huez, France, and working at a veterinary practice in Paris. He also helped obtain and transport African animals to a zoo in Frejus, France, before returning to the Animal Center in New York as a service head, teaching interns and residents for four years.
After becoming board certified, he was hired by Dr. Ray Sprowl at Brentwood Pet Clinic in West Los Angeles in 1975. He bought into the practice in 1977 and where he served as medical director at what is now VCA Brentwood Animal Hospital for 40 years.
He enjoys surgery and teaching students and colleagues. "I teach students, my philosophy that there are three components to a successful case: the pet must get better, the owner must be happy in all respects and the bill must be paid. If any one of those elements is missing, you have not succeeded."
Today, he is a jogger, hiker, backpacker and climber. Eleven years ago, he and his sons climbed 17,600 feet to the Mt. Everest base camp. Five years ago, they climbed 19,340 feet to the summit of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.
During his career, Dr. Olds has repaired a congenital femoral deformity in a 10-month-old Begal tiger owned by actress Tippy Hedron, repaired a fractured radius and ulna in a monkey and performed an osteotomy on a chicken with a malunion of the tibia - "the legs were 180 degrees apart, one going forwards and one going backwards," he said. "Of these unusual surgeries, I think the happiest client was the young boy who loved his chicken ," he said.
The case that Dr. Olds remembers best is a story told on television's Dateline 15 years ago. A dog named Charlie was put up for adoption by a family in Oregon. But the person who took Charlie was an agent for a dog dealer and Charlie was sold into a research colony at the VA Hospital in the San Fernando Valley. He was in a cystic fibrosis study and food was placed in to a duodenoscopy and removed from a jejunostomy to check for digestibility. Six electrodes had been implanted into his jejunum to measure motility. Silk sutures were used for the entire surgical procedure and every suture was infected.
"The Oregon Humane Society asked if I could see if Charlie could be helped and returned to the original owner," Dr. Olds recalled. "When I went to the hospital, the VA physicians and researchers said that Charlie should be put to sleep. I walked down to the run [where he was kept] and he ran up to me and curled up in my arms. And I said, 'We're gonna change this.' And they said, 'Nobody's done that before.' And I said, 'This'll be the first time.”
"My nurse, Brenda Stangelan, and I removed all the silk sutures and electrodes and closed both stomas. That was on the day of the Rodney King riots. After a six-week recovery at my house, Charlie was sent back to Oregon. He was a great dog. Six months later, the owner called and said she couldn't keep Charlie any longer. So he came back to me. And he was our dog for 12 years."
Read another story about Dr. Olds from the August 2016 issue of Washington State Magazine.
Questions about giving? Contact Lynne Haley or 509-335-5021.
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