It isn't on the list, but as part of a class I took my junior year, we attended an open heart surgery on a sheep, performed by med students (may have been residents, I can't remember). I attended UPenn as an undergrad, so I would expect that you need to add Penn to the list.
Edit: I should probably clarify that we didn't see all of the surgery. We (the undergrads in my class) were supposed to be looking at the technological side of things, so we were actually there to see the heart-lung machine and anesthetic machines in action. Furthermore, I'm not sure of whether the surgery was terminal or non-terminal. If it was non-terminal, that is (in my mind), worse in many ways than euthanizing the animal afterward.
I just read the article, and it mentioned that Penn doesn't use live animal labs. I don't know if this is because of a recent change in policy (the surgery I attended was Spring '05), that the class wasn't offered to the med school as a whole (only ~6 people participating in the surgery, not counting people observing), or if I'm totally screwed up in my memory and the surgery was being performed by residents. If it was performed by residents, I think it is kind of deceptive to say that Penn doesn't use live animal labs. I don't know though all the details though, so I won't say too much.
Just as a bit of opinion, I have to say that I think there is a lot of benefit to live animal labs. I've never participated in one, but I can tell you from experience that I have a much better understanding of how to perform surgery on a mouse after working with live animals (current lab) than fixed animals (undergrad biology lab). There are a lot of aspects of physiology that can't be grasped without the real thing. Additionally, anesthesia, from which the animal never wakes up, doesn't really effect the animal. If it will be euthanized anyway, what is the objection to learning from it before it dies, if you aren't putting it into any kind of distress? I'm not arguing that we should be repeating the early experiments in cardiac function (jabbing a pipe into a horse's artery to measure blood pressure anyone?), but if the animals are treated well, I think the benefit of preparing doctors better able to treat humans if infinitely more valuable than just killing a dog without gaining any knowledge in the process.
Just my two cents...