John J. Sung and Janet Sung.

Janet H. Sung, MD, recently made another $1 million donation to the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences in honor of her late husband, John J. Sung, MBA.

Sung Family Honors Patriarch With $1M Donation to UB

By Dirk Hoffman

Published June 22, 2026

(EDITOR’S NOTE: This story was originally published in the spring 2026 issue of the UB Medicine alumni magazine.)

A new $1 million gift from philanthropist Janet H. Sung, MD, to the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at the University at Buffalo is honoring the memory of her late husband, John J. Sung, MBA, and continuing the couple’s long commitment to supporting future physicians.

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“John and Janet Sung built their lives, careers and the American dream here in Buffalo, and they have given back to this community with exceptional generosity. ”
UB’s vice president for health sciences and dean of the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

The donation, made this year following John Sung’s death in December 2025, brings the family’s total giving to the Jacobs School to $3 million in support of the John J. and Janet H. Sung Scholarship.

“Our family just wants to honor John’s lifelong dream of helping students gain an education,” Janet Sung says. “Hopefully, they will benefit from this, will be good citizens and return the gift to society.”

The Sungs first established the endowed scholarship in 1999 with a $1 million gift. The scholarship is awarded to one medical student in each incoming class. In 2015, after selling their medical imaging business and retiring to Florida, the couple expanded the fund with another $1 million donation.

“We just wanted the scholarship to be bigger and to help more students,” Janet says.

Nationally Recognized Radiologist Specializing in Women’s Imaging

The Sungs founded Windsong Radiology Park in Western New York, one of the largest freestanding diagnostic imaging centers in the United States. Janet Sung is a nationally recognized radiologist specializing in women’s imaging who has pioneered numerous diagnostic procedures, while John Sung was widely regarded as a driving force behind the operational and financial success of Windsong Radiology.

Through their continued philanthropy, the Sungs’ scholarship support has helped generations of medical students pursue their education at the Jacobs School.

“John and Janet Sung built their lives, careers and the American dream here in Buffalo, and they have given back to this community with exceptional generosity,” says Allison Brashear, MD, MBA, UB’s vice president for health sciences and dean of the Jacobs School. “This gift is a beautiful tribute to John’s vision and reflects the family’s unwavering belief in expanding opportunity for our students. Their impact on the Jacobs School is immeasurable.”

Janet says the couple originally decided to fund medical school scholarships because of the hardships they faced as students in their native South Korea.

“John grew up in the countryside until he went to high school in Seoul for a better education, which would lead to a chance to go to university and have a better life,” she says. “He went through tough times to meet basic necessities and pay tuition throughout his school days.”

“Scholarship wasn’t easy during those days in Korea although he was smart and lucky enough to receive it many times. It was always in his mind that he would set up scholarships for less fortunate hard-working students.”

Hardships Growing Up Inspired Altruism

Janet says her father, a junior lieutenant, was the first Korean soldier killed in the Korean War on June 26, 1950. She was 3 years old at the time and her mother became a widow in her mid-20s.

“I was raised by a mother who never remarried. She was the one who forced me to go to medical school,” she says. “In Korea, the ladies never worked; it was always being a housewife. But at that moment, she determined that I wouldn’t have to go through what she did. So, in her mind, I had to be a professional.”

Janet earned her medical degree from Korea University College of Medicine in 1971, and she and John arrived in New Jersey a year later with $200, the maximum amount South Korea allowed its emigrants at the time.

While Janet completed her residency training, John earned his MBA from Seton Hall University and completed his CPA training.

In 1977, they moved to Buffalo where Janet held positions in radiology with area hospitals. John worked first for the accounting firm Peat Marwick Mitchell then taught at Daemen College and had his own office before working full-time with Janet.

“My first job was at Sisters of Charity Hospital and then I moved to St. Joseph. At St. Joe’s they had 50 percent hospital practice and 50 percent outpatient practice,” Janet says.

“I realized in the hospital setting, it’s not that easy to have much direct contact with the patient. Radiology was usually just taking a picture and then sitting and waiting anxiously in the waiting room.”

‘Patient-Centered Radiological Practice’

Janet was certain that a radiologist’s communication with the patient and the primary care provider was an important part of health care and wanted to pursue a “patient-centered radiological practice.”

“When I got home, we’d talk about our day, and John was the one who listened to my complaints. I had ideas for different approaches for the practice but could not convince my superiors.”

“He saw the potential and was gutsy and brave so he kept saying ‘you can do this, let’s do it,’” Janet says. “John was the one who managed to start the practice.”

The Harlem Radiology Center had a modest beginning in 1987 when the Sungs, after pooling their assets and taking out a loan, greeted 55 patients on their first day of operation at a renovated Pizza Hut in Cheektowaga.

Janet was the only doctor and had only one X-ray, one mammogram and one ultrasound machine. 

Within five years, they outgrew the site and relocated to Williamsville, changing the practice’s name to Windsong Radiology. Its motto, “Where Patients Come First,” reflects its focus on making every patient a priority each day.

John acted as CEO and his strategic leadership, financial acumen, and commitment to community investment helped transform a small family practice into a nationally recognized diagnostic imaging institution with six locations and more than 200 employees.

“Education for the less fortunate kids was always on John’s mind. That was the main reason we did scholarships,” Janet says, noting that the Jacobs School was an obvious choice as a beneficiary because “we achieved the American dream at Buffalo through our medical practice.”

Janet notes she and John began donating to UB after their daughter, Janice, was accepted into the Jacobs School. Janice Sung, MD ’03, followed in her mother’s footsteps and is currently a professor of radiology at Columbia University. The couple’s son, Brian, earned a Juris Doctor degree from Fordham University School of Law, and is in finance in Massachusetts.

Janet says because she is of the Korean War generation, she has a firm idea of what her next charitable cause will be.

“During the Korean War, 30,000 Americans died for us,” she says. “Therefore, my next charity will be for the wounded or sacrificed soldiers in America. I want to show them how grateful Koreans are.”