Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1985
Page 1 of 192
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1985 volume:
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Y, .X ' f ---nigh A-J' -1- - N I - -4 , ...f ' 4 f din' V , '13-xi 'f F51 A14 Q.. --mr? -Q ' rf -. J' . f W 1 1 -:tif ,- 1 I J fn- 4 x i v wt, , 0 '3 V' 0115- i '-' 'f 67:7 . 'U N g, HL r I '-4 1 I ' J - 2 ,I ' L., Y, . ' Y. 'Q I l .br 6. V ' J K r , I gps, ,,-. 'xl' J - :,x --fx 1 I V, V rf.- 3' v l ',r.vt' ,' nina Q, -I r9. -'. -gi-I'- - 11: A. A K- ' t . -fl Q ' I A55 - ' an 1 XA L I E glfmlnnnlufmlnmnmrmnmlrmrlg E E E THE LIBRARIES E .E COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY E E E E E E E ET E E E HEALTH SCIENCES E E LIBRARY E i. 1. E E.- E I E Lalwnfm1w-farwnmluwlwulmlwu i I Columbia University College of Physicians and S urgeons Class of 1985 , f' lf' ir ' , 2 5+ 51 1 fAif g,1,.fQ 15 Q ,ff . X VV ,V b X . .--,g... V. , ,..',A ,A ,J ,YL-W,-Ad Q - A -A l Y-nw . , 1 E K f A l ......! i Y 1,1 X f ,k, .- I - !.IGf N. f gf ' -Q ' K.. i ,fxl1,.,q24. u ' A LN f V 1 lags-sry. x ,-' L . Eff ME Xb ' awk -Nav' X gx. N 4' OVDQE 1Y'v . V -15 .-. -4 ' ..'-f ' 2 ' - ' .1-I..-li... Lx. C jk- A . ll' -4 , from Y 1 , , - I 5.11, , i W - -f ,'.-1 L : . WW, ' ..,,y.g x i' A K -as y 'J . ,., .Ni ww.. L. ua . M- y 3 y v .4 1 Q ll Q, 4 'T' -Saw x-'z' J. , u A - r-r-H ASW 1 . -4 I :Wil vu- I H VEN THE FINEST WAT 6685 F FC E 0 P How TCEOKIN1 ll HHIIHWHI' 5, Af fa MQ -.-' xr fxxdg 'n ,., sn.. 5 Y A,f.,l W n .r' , f K 4 - di - 'T' , '-: ,- AQ sm! .Y .-.. gr, Yi 'Q 1 1 P U Q 4 1-iff 4- ,- h, .--- M 'NT V SXW 4., -- . W W ' .Q ,' ' .,,. fi . ' ' in:-,521 r veg-sri i 5 r Q5 1 I fr, .1 1 '1 1 , -Q, -' ? -'14 Q Q I ALE E331 3 in 11 QI PW if Af ? 2, 951 1' I - -Q., ,.,- sz-. XL4 I . u 36' ' ...nhi S 2 7 !f'Y ull .eww , - 55.1215 f1!, t1'1 F .RU ul 1 -QQLQ HQ ' 1 FACULTY President of Columbia University Michael I. Sovern, L.L.B., L.L.D. Vice President for Health Sciences and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine s lr, 3 It ... My warmest congratulations to each and every one of you who have completed four strenuous years in one ofthe finest medical schools in the country. You now have an even more challenging future ahead of you. The years ahead will seem dominated by the explosive pace with which new knowledge and technology become available. Your special responsibility will be to recognize the extent to which knowledge and technology carry with them social ethical, and financial problems. These problems will demand a solution, and throughout your professional lives your lirst concern may be the humanitarian values which you must apply to the solution of these problemsi Henrik H. Bendixen, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs Donald F. Tapley, M.D. Alumni Professor and Senior Deputy Vice President for Health Sciences Dear Class of 1985: In the summer of 1981 the Health Sciences Campus appeared to have insufficient housing for you, yet all were settled in by September 1, 1981. Today Maxwell and Harkness Halls are gone. and Bard Hall remains as the modernization ofthe Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center proceeds. From initial adversity you have exhibited determina- tion. grovdh ofindividual and class personalities. strengths. talents and leadership which initiated a new era ofconstructive activity and exten- sion into the community with involvement long missing on medical school campuses. You have officially represented the College of Physicians and Surgeons at the American Medical Student Association, the New York County Medical Society. the Medical Society of the State of New York. the American Medical Association. the Student National Medical Asso- ciation, the National Association of Minority Medical Educators. the American Medical Women's Association, the Association of American Medical Colleges, and the National Institutes of Health. You have collected awards for outstanding research at the school, city, state and national levels, published classic scientific research. been seen in widely distributed publications, made professional movies and television documentaries, and become missionaries at home and, literally, around the world. All this has been done with an articulate intelligence. quality, enthu- siasm. positivity, ingenuity and diversity which give your class its individuality. From homeless students you have entered into every possible facet of extracurricular activity while maintaining academic excellence. 1 congratulate you on this assumption ofleadership so vital to the future of all of us. 1 thank you for my being a part of it. 1 congratulate you on having done it so very well. Your broad interests. achievements, participation and leadership have been well demon- strated and quite obvious as you have become Physicians and Surgeons. Linda D. Lewis, M.D. Lester M. Geller, Ph.D. Associate Dean for tudent and Curricular Affairs 21 Anatomy and C ell Biology Dr. Michael D. Gershon Drs: Melvin Moss and Letty Salentijn-Moss YJ iw Q x N f of-C K V. Q f , , T. X M 'Kiln Dr. Richard T. Ambron Mr. Rogers Dr. Charles R. Noback -. Dr Ernest XX Aprnl 111 X x r. Eladio A Nunez Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics Dr. Isidore S. Edelmen Dr. Parithychery Srinivasa Dr. Allen M Cold 12' 4 .X 1 , Dr. Richard Axel Y' X f ,4 Dr. Alvin I. Krasna V M iorobiology . . Dr. Harold S. Ginsberg -A f X ixif V Y I ei Dr. Paul D. Ellner , J, yy y 35 . . A 1 I, fi . J x I ' T' I Y N I X ' g fl , X ., 'win ox., I R xx TN, rp Xxxhl X K Al - 1 Y .gk as pf L H 'I 1'x' -rg f Dr. Benvenuto Pernis Dr. Bernard F. Erlanger .uf ' .. xy, ,xxx M N 'v , x xy ' f' xy' of Wo n Dr. Elvin A. Kabat Dr. Saul J. Silverstein Dr. David H. Figurski Nutrition Human Genetics bd' 5 'wr' vs H I 'Q r L S Dr. Myron Winick Dr. William Johnson Pathology Ab E7 'Ir N V n I Dr. John J. Fenoglio Jr. Dr '15 I 'uf' - f, ' 3 K A ' Lf Dr. jay H. Leikowitch ik Phillip E. Duffy -Wi' Dr. S. Raymond Gambino f 'J' - A W Dr. Karl Perzin Dr. Brian F. Hoffman iii? Physiology and Cellular Biophysics Dr. Shu Chien Dr. David Schachter N euml Science 1 -fl 343 f k Dr. Mero N ocenti D L. 1- ' . 1 1- W HAT. N , -1 'S '- A5 .- ' X., lx., Dr james H Sch artz and Steven Greenberg Dr. Eric R. Kandel Anesthesiology Dr. Henrik H. Bendixen Dr. Ellise S. Delphin ff we Dr. Kevin V. Sanborn u W 5 f o W , f , -. F' X W 'x . -wg, ' i b M 1 o MQ Dermatology Dr. Leonard C. Harber Dr. Robert Walther :U--v' 3 A69 1 5 I H xg, Ak ' 1 gap? We . ,ge- 1 Q ' A lug 9. if Internal Medicine . Dr. john P. Bilczikian Dr. Robert M. Glickman V 'N , - F 1 a' 2 F-1-f X ' 1 .v- ,4 Tix, - .W J ' 11 is X X ff' 2- kr if ' 1... X - Dr. Robert T. W'hitlock A I. Dr- John N- Loeb Dr. Glenda 1. Garvey fQ . -A 273 '- 7' Dr. Harold C. Neu Dr. Robert E. Canfield Dr. Ronald E. Drusin ' x V x 5 5--4 Drs. Donald A. Holub and Abbie I. Knowlton S 'F Dr. Qais Al-Awqati 5, N...,,,..'gg.L' 'furfmz L Y D ' Dr. Mario Romagnoli Dr. Andrew C. Frantz M A , , ,A 9 7 . . . 1 'I'-Y - M I w r me My ' - 1 '3 3. ' o . rf, k W-W -, ,, Dr. Brian Scully A r is -Yi. 5 A . '- ' - Dr. Iohn Lmdenbaum 3 fi?'UL r Z A A A 'A Dr. Gerald B, Appel Dr. Robert H. Heisenbuttel Neurology Dr. jay P. Mohr Dr. Lewis P. Rowland WJ LL 'Nl F--4 I I I 4 f 4 Dr. james Hammill -..'..-qgj 1 A o X ,HI Dr. Richard Mayeux ,A 1 T Mr' V+ - --n 1 hs - UROLCfug,-, bf fi: fo M h or ' o 1 h f Q 1 I W 'L 1' v H I I v hzvn .A in .fi J 3' Dr. Michael Fetell I -is V t h - 1 57, 1, A -L .. A '34 Dr. Lucien C016 Dr. Darryl C. DcYiv0 ngl-'Ill sl. A' vi Q '- 'Os A ' '1 N rv 2 X, if Q in I. A H -Q K' , gffyf Rehabilitation Medicine Dr. John A. Downey Dr. Erwin G. Gonzalez Dr. Stanley I. Myers AK.-.5-A 1 lg? 0 Neurological Surgery Dr. Edgar M. Housepian Dr. Bennett M. Stein Dr. Donald O. Quest K' ,arm me 'Y' jx l ll U ff -J I---J? l-- il llll as 'Pas X . . efg. n Z2 W 4 1 , 1 lx was , 1 V A Y K f M i r V F X l Dr. W. Jost Michelson Dr. Peter W. Carmel Q Dr. Kalmon Post 36 Obstetrics and Gynecology Dr. Henry C. Frick II Dr. jack Maidman I li 'Yi , 'I Dr. Elynne B. Margulis Dr. Edward T. Bowe Dr. Laxmi Baxi Orthopedic Surgery Dr. john R. Denton - I ---.4 ......,,,4 ' -wo. mag. , a mtg: ...,,,q,-H. . fl - -any ' 1 D Sf- a+- NE 1- j .,-, ' . ' A W5 D - 4:- ' .- evo 'N' M --has AM -:Q I w-- X, 11- I K ' 3 P 4. 4, Z L 'Q ., Dr. David L. Andrews Dr. Harold M. Dick pi 1. ,1 1 Dr. Robert Carroll 4,...-- ,f Dr. S. Ashby W Grantham .35 fav . Af ,, QQ A x-f f , I F 4 Dr. David P. Roye, jr Dr. Nas Ser Eftekhar Dr. Christopher B. Michelson Dr. Hugo A. Keim ,fxx so fig -N o, ot 3 ,ik ik ow W lx Otolaryngology Npx 'B - Dr. Maxwell Abramson Dr. Soly Baredes Dr. Andrew Blitzer Pediatrics Dr. Michael Katz Dr. Martin Nash Dr. Stephen I. Atwood 'V iv, B I -...., f' 'Fix . Psychiatry Cyp! Dr. Herbert Pardes Dr. Lyle E. Rosnick Dr Stuart C. Yudofsky Qi s-'W 'ga Xl T Dr. Alexander H GIJSSITIAII -N u N CWC Dr Sldney Malitz Dr. Eric Marcus Dr Stan Arkow Radiology Dj ,J . a- .gy 3. XX '-4. i f l Dr. Thane Asch Dr. Walte 4 X-isvf ! - I 1 R f f .. K f fy! if Dr. jeffrey H. Newhouse r E. Berdon IN.. 1..L,- TY A .- il Dr. Kent Ellis ! 1 1 vb i lnll N -A fi : N LI 1 X 6 I Surgery . . Dr. Keith Reemtsma Dr. Thomas C. King Dr. Robert C. Bcrtsch F35 Dr. Paul LoGerf0 4 A, H 1,4 44 - ,, 3 4 . ui- ' my-5 pil? :fy f . 'M V rw ' ..:, ff- .' , ':'j. Eflf , . .,.,. 4 . 1, -'W 5 . 4, .. J 54 VW Dr. Alfred Markowitz nf is 1 V . B' I e X .4 0 lm CPMC , ff- 5, ,wif If JN I. V 1 K J 1 w - X s A li A ' ea, 7, . wg, v 4 u .J x Dr. Frank Gump -ll ,.., Q 'A ' 4 Dr. Henry M. Spotnitz Dr. james R. Malm i T ' ' if ' '- , -NW , V' K w wg Q X--Q., . 7, r 5? . O 9 X f v 1 ' r..-,Y V. A N- Q Dr. Mark A. Hardy Dr, George j, Todd Dr. Eric Rose 4+ f 1 I I X elm 4li Dr. Philip D. NViedel r l M Dr. joseph A. Buda Dr. Roman Nowygrod :L i 3 5 A e IX- ' ,KX A 5, 5 .' g,1: ' X fix ffeff' ' r . - ' Y I V'- fl Shia x XX u , 9 X QQY N X '15 . N Q , im. I X 1 I b : -2'- '- '-'- ' H ' K :I vvvf ttf V, ,,I. Dr. Kenneth A. Forde Dr. john B. Price, jr. pe, 4 Urology Dr. john K. Lattimer Dr. Carl A. Olsson 551 59.155-r1 fll'E I Q fi ,, ., lui? 'la 41- 4? Dr. Kevin E. Burbige EN? AWX1 nl .ff1'i. , ' 'o-'A' Dr. Peter Puchner Dr TerryW Hensle .Ax r fp ' A , .gl QQ: fl- N jk ll 53 A f Q Support Staff af Z Ira ,Qtr - Q- '-- M .1 l 'll Dean's Office: il, to r ijanis Mitchell. Aida Tulskaya ihidclenl, Flora Atkins. Debhie Dillon ihicldenl, Ruth Pataky, Ellen Spilker, lfleta Daniel. Thelma Cuhen, Margaret O'Xeill, joseph Prenzivalli, Francis Ficlclen. Roseclair DuBerry'. Lillian Cottesman I 1 ix af L QQ' -4 cf Y Tony's Desk: Tony Ianis Mitchell. P815 Cluh lui rs . 1' Al ' i KX i N . N, L I I I '15 Q -4 Alumni Office: il, lo r,i Anke- Nolting. Cathy Couchell, Lisa Mayer, Mary Carris Second Year Self-Assessment Exam The following was prepared to test your mastery of the essential information presented during our second year at PES. Remember, this exam will stress general concepts, not specific facts. Sorry, but the proctors are not allowed to answer any questions. Good luck. 1 2 3 M 5 6 7 KB-101 which of the following are included in the DSM-III diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia? A. intense eosinophilia B. delusions of Ramon y Cajal C. lupus D. Going to CPC's on Tuesday afternoons. E. fused foot processes How can you tell that you have become a successful doctor? A. Your colleagues refer their family members to you. B. Dr. Canfield refers his family members to you. C. Dr. Canfield refers his secretary to you. D. Your secretary follows you wherever you go. E. Dr. Canfield's secretary follows you wherever you go. what disease is found predominantly in homosexual, Puerto Rican, Ashkenazi Jewish IV drug abusers from the Cayman Islands? Are Mel Moss and Norman Kahn really the same person? Should you eat raw pork? Should you say Hstirrupsn or ufoot supports?N In light of what you've learned in second year, is it possible to get a net synthesis of glucose from acetyl CoA? Either of the two statements in each sentence may quite possibly be true, or in some cases, also relatively false, and if they are and the ESR is elevated, they may be related Con their mother's side? as to cause and effect. For each pair of statements choose one of the following: Answer lst Statement 2nd Statement Related A definitely true bogus Sure, why not? B probably true wasn't in the ------ syllabus C cosmic makes no sense consanguinous D poorly worded ridiculous ' very E autoimmune bourgeois if the shoe fits 8. There are 184,293 diseases associated with HLA-B27 BECAUSE climate is weather and mood is affect. 9. Birth is usually preceeded by pregnancy BECAUSE Sjogren and Chvostek are first cousins. 10. Given the slight chance that sodium gates actually do exist, the slow inward lithium current is much faster than the slow outward neon current BECAUSE the only cure for pseudopseudohypoparathy- roidism is an anti-antidiuretic. 11. Which of the following may be found at the Bronx Zoo? A. Hippocampus B. Lyonization C. Rhinorrhea . Salmonella . Giardia Lamblia D E 12. A.H.B., a U6 year old white male, presents in the ER with nausea, vomiting, segere bifrontal headache, nuochal rigidity, a temperature of 10M , enough cells and protein in his CSF to choke a horse, and a couple of positive signs. The following tests were performed: AFL, CIO, PPR, RSVP, IUD, IOU, and ET Cphone homel. All were within normal limits except the RSVP, however Dr. Gambino enclosed a personal note warning, nDON'T trust the plasma RSVP!!n As the intern on duty you should: A. Construct a complete pedigree. B. Perform a needle brain biopsy. C. Finish your lunch. D. He's faking. Send the malingerer home. E. Immediately start the patient on thiazide diuretios, but only ofter thoroughly and clearly explaining their mechanism of action. 13. Which of the following is suspected of having an autoimmune etiology? A. Suicide B. Compulsive knitting C. World War II D. Going to dental school E. 504 of all diseases known to medical science ibut we don't know which 5061 14. Who wrote this trash? A. Edinger 8 Westphal B. Goodman, Gilman, 8 Goodman-Gilman C. Erb 8 Duchenne D. Ethics 8 Values E. Laurence, Moon, 8 Biedle F- Warren 8:-'Frenzl G. All of the above Extra Credit: How many geneticists does it take to screw in a light bulb? in S l I I lll ll I U I-, 1 N U! il ll !l ll l lu I ' 2 F545 H , .J L. H5311 :ll H 15533 UH! !!l U 1 ! , t I i .W n l HW' ull ' r e1 J ll :HREF ' Hmm! gg E as 2333552555: suueeeellmli :mel HIIIIHI ni, lllll lilll glial GRADUATES The Hippocratic Oath ttYou do solemnly swear, by whatever each of you holds most sacred That you will be loyal to the Profession of Medicine and just and generous to its members That you will lead your lives and practice your art in uprightness and honor That into whatsoever house you shall enter, it shall be for the good ol the sick to the utmost of your power, your holding yourselves far aloof from wrong, from corruption, from tempting of others to vice That you will exercise your art solely for the cure of your patients even if solicited, far less suggest it That whatsoever you shall see or hear of the lives of your patients which is not fitting to be spoken, you will keep inviolably secret These things you do swear. Let each of you bow the head in sign ol acquiescence And now, if you will be true to this, your oath, may prosperity and good repute be ever yoursg the opposite, if you shall prove yourselves forswornf' and will give no drug, perform no operation, for a criminal pupo President SIS Club I'in E!'illl'lllll liar inx imolveilieut in The PGS Cluh First. it Liave nic' tht- opportunity tu play gi part in prmidiuig t-Xtra-ciirriciilziis diversiuii hir ll-lluw I'kS'ers in the setting ella cuullning curriculum .intl tl coiilliiiiig f- Iieiqlilmrlioricl, Second, it allkircled me the uppurtunitx' tn meet and hecoine personally close tea large number nlilreut pt-tuple lvoth in this Qratluating class and other classes But I must raise my glass to the Clll1lBLlIClil ull this lwtllltilllll relatmiisliip' GOOD LLICK. EVERYONE' - Peter Bolo President Class of 19 5 Iwant to thankyou for the prix iledue of he-uit: Class Prvsideiit I would like tu leave you with the parting words ofthe coinment-einent .address to the PGS Class ul 1979: I congratulate you and please let ine thank vnu for taking un the enormous responsibility that you hax e Y :intl Ihr having the strength to have made it to this day. I dun't knuw how ymrve managed to learn it all, But there is one more thing you can learn about the hotly that only a non-doctor would tell you - and I hope youll always remember this: The head hone is connected to the heart hone - and don't let them come apart Thank you - Alun Aldu, May 1979 wish you all health and happiness in the hiturel - Nancy M arisen COLLEGE OF PHYSICLANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 .xxx-'P' , nn. ci- QW David Abis Linda R. Aboody 1 J . joseph I. Alex .- COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS CLASS 011' 1985 5 fw X - '- i 'Q' E Q S , Q, V. 4 4. 7 . Jr rf!! I A WI Y- sk Q . , -I ' 52, ,' . V N X ' f ' x X 4 -4' A I than E- Aviv K X Evan 1. Bachner jeffrey R. Avner COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS 0171985 john S. Baird . ,.-wx -faq. .. X. . X , QQ -vw 1 . ll f R .-.., 'Q-. - ,V I f David E. Bank .C t' . vf'! X Alice M. Baruch COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS C LA S S OF 1985 EW' W 4 1 Eyal Barzel Anne R. Bass mr 4 I l Odette G. Batik COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 Seth I. Baum ,an . . :fy , --4 -..A A sf -1' .gm- Larry S. Benardo David F. Bindelglass COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Peter M. Bolo VIASS Ol 1965 Frederick L. Brancati ig l L r Peter 1. Branden FUN fm I x ,, COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 'Qi 'fu-uv x I hn P. Brennan B K William C. B Robin R. Brown COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEGNS CLASS Ol 1985 Louis Brusco, Ir. W' -.- ' f N Robert Canning K., wtf' fn- 'UN I3 s:-1 Bernadette Chan I 1 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS CLASS OF1985 John T. Ch Sophia W. Chang Mark A. Ch -4 I 4' J COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS CLASS 01-' was f1 C thia A. Coburn d C C p Eugene A. Coman K -, 'Z I l R. Crim COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 Gregory W. Dalack I ,xl TZ' Ioan E. D ' -fs 'FQPH . f x wr.. ,cf- COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 Nicholas A. Deutsch I RX Lisa C. Diamond K D Sometimes x ou iust 1'9- 'U'- David G. Dickson gotta say, What the he-ckfn A.. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS 0171985 k M. Dirbas f3.1f Robert J. Downey C7 ric D. X COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Cmss or 1955 ff' yy + 5 , I X I Q7 ' 1 ' . Q E f X Il john Edeen I john M. Emery X Martin H. Ehrlich jill! f' - ' 5 ' : fail' frflikw U f COLLEGE OF PHYSICLANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 Brian A. Fallon H ,.. If .,. '53 X kk X , 5 , ,,. '1 sv' 'rf Timothy 1. Flock Judith A. Fayter 1 An Nw11nf'rm+ mob-Am? an onihpodic, s -MQ fs-...ggi jiiwallom Ocwsslbfz 0 AIM wifi zumlazjapq, wil w,f4,4,-6,,1j, ' 2 JK h r, NN ,imitate K .r.-:L , x mu ms -If ' A asfwwa 1 N zmnra-.4 ' W3 Efxjnliffbr fr i, H I 3jg34:Aggoi:13Aor- X 1 WAV. I . I B 5 O: I A A J A Y 0 W , 4 ,.pnf4 -O. , F :guru l t ' 3312+ ip . 68 A - i li , 3 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS CTL,-XSS Ol 1955 F I V ,,.-. Neil I. Freeman Cary N. Frishman jeremy NI. Frend Anasflfwsioxoclcf had M woeb Ollky od' Q , y 'KwuSTlM1-kx-j V L as Q Joumngi x LQ5 gjgfir 5, ?5l Wife If uuuzlzlp COLLEGE OF PHYSICLANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 Paul C. Fritz Arthur 1. Geller Steven D. Glassman fffgcf vx. ' 14? Q-Jiztlmhs: UZ' j ' rf da, 01+-VE,+'.4.d Q If: hafyvu mm-.lunar 0 51-':?':' - PI x'f:41f 5 aW,oafM4M in ' Q tri:- X xx-1.1.-S My M 'f 'ffff'f 1xf Q5 ' 4 , - , ,ft Lx Q Q ' f 'Ld 'e'f d A L Q v 1 f.,A1L...s.. fb 1 . e - . r l.-Q U 3 1133 S if S1 .1 Q Q -Q + Zfw J' -Q U' ' if . , I , L l A 'J 'ty' S A ' ' . f f 8 Ge,-'-'J bl 'ew .. 1 C-1-QT A ha S. Gopal COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS cimss calf ms.-3 F f si Marc L. Gordon .M I+ X C t f X 7 gf COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 , X 22 V , X, ' . 'N X V' K j Manuel E. Grinberg Russell I. Hardy james S. Harding COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CIA SS OI 1985 kD.H 62 , H x 7 .All Terri L. Hill H QA COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 O. Hodges jeffrey C. Hoffman OO? 'lf ' OW A I:Z 'T W3 Y' 1 ' 7...- Roy W. Hong S - 'I Q . F' , ., 'I .., i COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Cmss 011' 195.5 -. .V 3 , A , L x Lf-ch, r -,, QR ? fi X ' 4 . 5 Q ' ri csa' Ad AI Laurie G. Jacobs X X COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 X-7' A 'f fam james I. jones R Juana M. julien A Valerie T. jones Fglgfifgiyfgg RWM : fTYCAD,OGlCAL lqzonmaou Bafmcfancl XXXWSYQNW N' 5 X f , 1 75 1 ,-sf ' f F5 I 3 H W ' !06f ' 'g'mA 000 ',- 5 , JM 8 'A 5 iff fa M 'f U A, . 0 ff, 0 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CIA S S OI 1985 sF I lca j. Ixandel f 1, 'S u n ,W 4 A L ' s ' 4 If r , 117 Andrew H. Kap Albert N. K COLLEGE OF PHYSICLANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 Fi gi 4.-'Q 'PN xg:,' Y xxx. x Robin F. Koeleveld D d I Ixl Douglas WV. L lx COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS ffl--xss 011' 19185 ., - Vs: 5 ,556 . x ll X I 5- ri' f , a J Henrv S L0 topher C. Lin A D . R11 I '. Mary Ann E. Lloyd Q0 fl I ,M ,. QDL X , til da COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS , ,.g Lwfg ,L get .L A 1 fn 344' 1 r g. -s 1 4 'vf Nancy S. Madsen x-'U-2. CLASS OF 1985 I VI . Y 3 . ng X 2 i ' 'Y 5 A f David D. Markowitz Thomas L. Matthew I Q.. ' ,fx-'4',- COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CTIASS OI 1985 If 7.5 John M. McNulty Leonardo Mendez 1' 'A' Tze-Chiang Meng COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS P Lee E. Morrone K 'S-ff X V I an F. Moscoso Richard Nunez '?fff..e COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS d CIASS Ol 19155 Elba M. Pacheco ky COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 . ex- it V I . 0-Q V ' 42 , V nm m A Ygujf 1' N If Hi 2, I I 5 , 4 my ' e A W ff5?5f5f?? J . 11 ' , ' ,. ma vs A . ,I , 17, . ,., Qlisel gf. 7,1 ,Afdu A ,,- sv., . - Jw,-, .j 95.3 f . I - REE , if -.'f'J'f'.' I ,. f Z, gf., , .-M ,V . , 4, gp, ,j L., Y V Kenneth D. Pearsen Roger G. Pollock ,bv COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS cuss or was I Cl -L Radoslovich 1' X . Beth A. R Q janet R. Reiser COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS 0F1985 Y Benjamin E. Rosenstadt -5-.say A. Ro ph COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CIASS OI 1985 Fo R. Russo Karin H. Satra V7 I Schw t COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 W lliam C.R. Seefeld l COLUMB IA MEDICAL S3901- Bruce A. Segal S5352 i t M. Shapiro A QX COLLECECHTPHYSKHANSA CTL4XSh'CJP'1985 RGEO L. -11 if J' 'KJ -Q 'W 4- Mary K. Sheffield Scott A. Shlkora vlllcgu O! Pill-lclxlllw C' Sllrgu-nlw ., Hr. Scott Snlkcra - -wx P554 Box :JJ Dear Hr, Srllkoraz M ..lwlll!l:.. Vwl rl M ll lf June 7 , 1994 Robert G. Sheiman 5 ff Xl lmflj Er Scrub Suits V' 1 1 place-s ig 5u...: 'I un 1 an me nee-lj J nf peers and me publitl 3 A pnslrlon nf lmpzrr- n personnel. It v'SlCianS. You :uve been miflrm-as 3-wwa: rlmeg n-:lt cl publis. xml may me really :nan weurlmg some H- i p Q r-Bile-:tion of 3 me-lror.:, :Qu self e-mance ones lmpzvrnanze m the eyes lmplyl-lg, napefully, one res 'arrlvgdl' ,: , ance. 'rms azclnllde la gram nfcessnl-y fur sllppor - l' mapzee, mauve ,zhj should mn be nec-:ssary . he gen-ral public, r.5l.'Q,er, 5 , -Iitructivi' En- as aggresslve 4 1 or the paclafws mme :nf nesrt ana 1-fry being, were me knll'e. ll- .IQ It would :whom-2 yall :C step . .,-g, V 'Q ,-N 1:-Q- ' -: display o se-as pub.. as lr lg an open-i1spZa5 V 1' Scrub 5711115 1 nffe-nsiw ,zll:1l:'f1 defenseless mom, sw., are tm-fir nelpl-ezsness men --mfler vearzrvg um: sums wcfla-1 me-algal 5- - fn -me 'fi-E1 Nl 3 S: rllrl ul. . . . Qu '. iimlnlil- ' wlll place , lf ywr gmlllazlm. ..- ,., 1 ,, nlllalnga. Trle flex: l sf szreec or ln another punll: place , . crawl-2 leave of awww. wax may likely 1-nay Shbuld you ugh :Q llgfllss cms. 1:1-Iase call my Q' l Ein:-are-115' -X LDLZSIJ xx xfsgxggjf '- lf nn. gl, wud. Asixla me Maxx El' ffl P-25312 Jr.. l:.r:: Advistbr, . Sgfll-P 49 lg lk Q COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS 7 1 'Z'- Edward Shlasko CLASS OF 1985 .,,.-1 S Elizabeth Siderides Mark B. Silbey -R. J - Q COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS frmss 011' 198.5 'F' A ef-'x X p Simkowitz jonathan A. Slater . - Q sl, j 1 1 x S COLLEGE OF PHYSICLLXNS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 198.5 ph F. Sproviero Michael D. Stein N N X Alison T. Stop if COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OI 1985 Anthony I. Straceski fa, xx 1 ',N,nHR'!- ' X ',N,!'p'.' I , ' X . r in , 21 a a2r uw - lift: M V 1 r V -' M .... QL ,, lk Alexander Strachan QE - - ,- ,F'1 x 1'- QV' vc-,..' Barbara G. Strand COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 P l H. Summit 5 Vijay M. Thadani N L James A. Taterka M F. Tissot COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS -XSS OI 1985 Touraj T Step L V ff T Q I U V1 1 hen M. Tr COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS -'ST Alfonso I. Valdes CLASS OF 1985 Robert A. Villegas Benjamin H. Walker COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CIASS OF 195 any TIP' Wayne S. Warren Joel A. Weinthal Robert M. W i.- 1 . if X - 1F45 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 X 'Z David Westrich av, D 'i -2 Ev a fffx U rf I 1.2. , ' Aff, 'N '. A N vi., 'TEN Q.. V. ,. Q. ig izf ' ' 'o , . fl, Q -153 . ln .-' ff E. t ' N , .1419 K A COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS cuss or 19195 0 1' Othon Wiltz X1 David C. WV Jodie C. Wohl 1 A COLLEGE OF PHYSICLANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1985 IIN I. Yarmush Lawrence I. Zeller A :FTW -Xl NI Z ck VY Not Picturcfcl . . Bruce Kaplan Suzanne C. Li Michael J. Palazzolo Anne: C. YVeIty 5, WH.: L 3 ra F' ' DVTHE ww 7 sooo-Y 5 vcxov-.5 J , N A Ng- MA-15 509010675 HA me HW APOUND CN Co JA A 1 I-U5 59554.07 . D A L07 To 65 TLE PRESE LR! f N ,f X M7 NP-'F y? fx H ji, X ' Q .2 La! gli W infix Y- ww my 9 I f X--Q1 'rx jf' x 'Q 0 'X IQXHIXM 2 B .g..L H ilu' I I IIT I I 'lllll lllll lllll ll'lT'l lllT'l lllll lllll IIFII II fl IU I 11' ,. Q I FF. ' '? r V3.1 ll g1Q3::pEiF5'-'I I: fi F Ill' mvu H :ull nn ll' sl! :wh -- xiii: ll iff? ll :za . I! 55:59 ll ima E36- 'iiii'ii -.IIII1 -.Ja Qui Q23 a. t., ali I ' .I 1 v, ' Ji' ii . -, ,- l-:'-- I '-Lg.!! I i---' '- .lull . . . ,.v lY',afu4. -a . .-' --. Q, ,-. . ,K - 3llll1ll L'4-' P1lllIll9f59i': -- rr--i g:1nn!lZ':if:i .g..... ge ,- 9.9. ',1llllllf la,-- :xml ll EEE!3::.. . ll' A 14.51 -Ami, x I Y N 'Ive 'Q' RP' ,,:i 'R nv- s' '1 Qs I!! 'U lllllln J! UI llllliifis 'Qu lll lin 'fl 'Ili ul'!!!illW: I!'lil IIE' Ullgfiivlf Ill ll!iill 'l H' lllllll I I .I Ill lllllllll fl wmv : ACTIVITIE F irst Year Christmas Show gs, i E A W1 H ,.f Q I Y?- v 1 .7 'if .4. .S L A, hz X f if.- AL ?f' ,-,Nix l ' j f' x I !. 'X Z . fi.: ' 'x , ' was ' r J ' ,UL 3-1,NA,N 4 ' rv--'F 7. - ' ' Q I 'E :I j , , H ii- XAJ i ' 1 ' l 1. x N ' ip, x ,A - 54 ...JF . ,I1f' 'v li 4 9' N X 1 9 . p , J H fly-.4 'Q' 101 Bard Hall Players For many of us, the Bard Hall Players are a substantial part of what we will remember when we recall our P618 experience As an audience, we'll remember the shows: Two Gentlemen, M idsummer: C ompany, F iddler, Godspell As You Like I t Mattress: Cabaret, Hair, Hot L, West Side. As a class welll remember the people: Nancy R., Iana, Peter Bolo, Alan, Terri, Peter Branden, Tony Pam Linda Marian Manny, Neil T., Karen, Eric, Neil F., Dave Abis, jake, Iim, and Dave Bank. As Players, we'll remember: Okay, we need somebody to bring up the platformsng But, who s going to direct? How about an evening of one acts? : We,ve only got two weeks so now it's up to young We need places for the parties, so please check with your roommates , Have we got a drummer , QUIET PLEASE thank young Aw, damn, it's not going to work , Does it require trumpets? : OK, we need everyone's body over here , How about 'Three Pennymg Careful, we don't want you to get hurt , Great Show , 'Tm not sure we can handle that now . . . but , Don't worry we'll Hx it : Oh my god, they liked it! Mostly we'll remember lots of fun, lots of work, and incredible warmth. - Terri Hill - Alan Zuckerman Co-chairmen, Bard Hall Players A Midsummer N ightls Dream -X gx ,li xv , I. , -Pm' X 'ie .' . L 3, - an . . ll. Elgar 5 . if Ficlfllcr on thc' Roof 1 r fl! T 'PWf Y ' A -L4 Godspell uv xf. ? V I K, 1 Q 'iv ,-v, , ,- - 1 I Xfiwx 4 X 115 N. N Meanwlnle, bczcks-fage ff 1 r , . ,V k 1. J! ,I Li A QXX, 113 Once Upon A M attress 1 -UU' X K C alla ret ll V3 C hildrenys Players ALJ Black ancl Latin Students, Organizations - 1 tit e ttti fifif Halloween at Babies Hospital Rugby 1 ff Bard Hall Baslcetball League Cremasters wouldnt admit it, but they had competition in the form ofthe uLandshatks, A'169'erS. uSweet Okolef' and Nadi among others. The 1983 B-League championship went to . . . 'Cremastersf' f Z I D 5 . I ii L -1' -5. o D. ' 5 e ' ' r The Lgfe as Imitation 0fArt Club. i ,,,'i 'i,1 rv M , 1 ' n itfsi - ': r ' l il 'ixsdlr . , , -,141- end of the Activity Section already? 119 f 4 ruff WWE ruff fErVI5VFii prUW!f EEF IFF :FFF In FI' Fl' rr rfrr rrrr FV? FF-r C andids Moe, Larry, and Curly go to medical school. y + A -1' wail! 'X 5114 A quiet table for five, please. K w . How sweei it is! -7-7 I Ji-ih fu, ,, ., 2 Come on Lisa, I'm engaged now. Camp Cooperstown. Where's the ejector seat? Where-'s Flock? VVhere are the nurse-sg vida A '-es., 'nfl' 11 45 K 12 .'S- N-f 12-1 4r- I? If this is the Ophthalmology rotation, I can't wait for ENTY I came looking for an F.I.T. woman . . . e Bertsch Boys. 3 ov. -Y., 1 4 E 'C' ,...f i,! l 'e 'Xr 110' ig NN-1- Where else have I put these? XY.nym-, I told you nut tu gix c him an much K.lyvx.1luts' elif' Q xl 21 .J g1AUN , O IIA-xml mm sNvlD1Sy9 - The PGIS sweatshirt. brought to you hy Marty and Ursula. I'l1 be right back: I have to put this in my locker for six weeks, 1:25 I swear I heard an S4 last nightl Come on Touraj, we're supposed to call them footrests, not stirrups. JN ...Y - f 2 I , i Nt. - 'R -41 Hematology hold. 4 J xr '4 fd- 'mf' ,..--4 , , N 4: :ij I 1 v.. 0 !4CDif' 'Twas the night before the Histo final and only 435 slides left to Ifthis is Friday. I x you must be . 4X X Althnw, the Dvun lun a copy ol' the rnaguzim' Zip that zipper hack up! - I rr C xx - X um! wnuggqh 3 1 rf, x 00' 3 Maybe I should've gone to NYI I 128 This is a contrace tive P ., foam?! An oiiicer, a gentleman, a . . . Touraj, is she one of our classmates? A v c fm' . ,c L' If' ff, 1- Who put the Salmonella in the chicken? IP .Q X x r 1 Ni V 2 From the Valley of the jolly fbi Were still waiting for your financial aid questionnaire I signed him up for a Bertsch preceptorship today. VVl1ere are we fellas? 129 f f Hn A ls' , -s ' 'xn- 1 ...FW ,v- 5-I' M IFS a beautiful day in the neighborhood . . . were those gunshots I heard? Ben, take off that blazer! joe's imitation of a neurogenic bladder. L. X fr X .su E l 1 Vijay: May I wash the blackboard? Lee: I already did! xi i .43- x l l mul mxrk to mc. not luck me. VVake up Ed. attending rounds are nu- 1. L, f 'A 1 . X v K In the Days of The Giants , Fall asleep for .1 minute and thefll cn! anything. 'xl 'Ka Ken, this is not the time for a ,guaiacf V Boy do I need something to relieve the tension . . , . . . I feel much better now. s!'1lltl llhhozf' Y P615 was fourth on my match list. Somehow I don't think this is 10 Stem. I S 6 4 -I 1 N. X 1 tix u x 9 1'x tx 1 3 'C Q' Q- ,,, S - -x Rb-f KJL Ill! MII -- n J, 1' QI ,. e 1 nv ., yur ITP HQ? O .0 if jj l tllljllllll xnur puvnts wen- lf-.u mu .lftcr cl m Escape from PGS, Y 3 'Ili x. ffl.. EE S' X , . fr- ,v Xa 1 . -,ls QP-1 , ,-.A ' -H. --af 4: 8' IQ 1 Qs f fan F . - 3- v , ',-- f.4-2-.-f Ie-ff, please dont boot in our stew! gig Anatomy had a lab? 1 ' I l I -v1..X -1, Yr? 4 Q1 ,Qu Respire profundo. 5 5,5 1 A V14 I W4 Y i.4+,- q?:?:5:?:sa5:,1,,,l' ' 6 -1 A X Awe in ni I X, g ,gg 1 Did I ever tell you about the time I dissected the colon? CN X1IPalsy. QQ.. .1 .,,...4f'A I'm not going to another Genetics lecture NYell, what wulnlzl you du uf onlx' ZIV? nf xuur ulmx xwrz- il-nmle-J Come back, little Sheba. X fi .-.---iff Q ' ' :LT ,. I F -7 n JK 5 x . , 3 xgm Elf ' , 4 L 4 ' V n L I f X 45- . ' A. I- . I . IV S., -4 hr A : ... 'T .YQ In N g-4 'TL-2 H1 - ' ' 1 A ia' 1 ' . ' Q '-' -- 1 ' W 4:4 The Epidemiology home-work'?f juan's duing 1t ' -'J UQ V L I ' litlllr' Don't get any ideas juan. H f I 14 I L ,J n g , . Q -of X f ,g ' Q OK E'-WS, Wh0 hid GUI' kfliffiflg needle? I d0n't think this is 10 Stem either 4 Us CE 4, 's L-iff , Q Mi T 1 xx 5 f 5' '-' I - ' X wi 5' VT Fred, you want us to work on the yearbookfd! 136 .V 'wx f if ? f 1'l1 take scotch on the rocks .md my Him- 'Q Y Old chart unavailable, .DN .afar X ,Y K x Xf' i I beat you to this seat again. Come on is this a dental transcript? ff fi p-. i. L- 'Vn.J.l. Bindle, the He-imlich should be lowerf I9 'TS 'i X Q A 1:37 38 ff' HF. I3 l 1 f ,K jr 4 Well, what would you do if 80? of your claus were male? 11' kf iii Y' . 45, f 0 PF' ...f b More than a mouthful is 11 waste. GYN on-call room. .mr f. I ui ,' ' 1 ' 4 4-5' F 447' .1147 ' Huw many of these do you nerd lu drunk tu get esophageal varicesu What number did you get in the lottery. E awk-f I 'J Did I tell ihem that the MB fraction was positive? Club PBIS -1 .E n ., uQ r, Xixi I oy 4 Q A ', 5 S,- . . 4' -- l . 3 ' 3 F 'vu f 4 v 1 I ' Y ,ag W V I U V .N is I E - f--x 1 X 5' Ji -,.,..,'- A V Wk N' I ,ne .. ,7 - f K-1 1. 'M V: x xi Q, . 1 V n , J- r I.. L- 1 . r- . Loooooou 4.31- N x I ,f R.. I x x ll 71 Nh-rvl, youre not an mul xtmh-nl, un' gnu? This may be French vanilla, but it ain't Paris, LL5 ig Ramon and Cajal. Must you bring your mummy everywhere? When I get a break. I like to sit down with coils-e and a good Neuro book. K Q 191 1 Tfgugl on fl all I Q In -X A 4 ' eff' -. . . 2231. flvmalru A lg -1 ' 1 I-42 4 I 1... 7 ... ...I Around the town wzti The I Love Neuro Campaign I wish I could remember where the chapter on memory loss is I like to check out the latest Neuro centeifold. Q Av Kandd and S CII wa rim. . Th' il ' IS text IS ia Juluus U'hu are thc- .IIIIIILWINIJ A llwuuht pmmkmu tc-xt wh ,5.,., .1 --I A ,2 Q I I Where is the section on LTIINIII-il n10tix..4t1wn' And you thought Andy was just a uuxtcr' I' I if .,z 6 A ' ve 7'4- v- I .. ia f f 1 J 143 The call ofthe wild. .- . .gs gl .IL 1 'Q' . --:V S. . Athena, Bacchus and Eros convene on Fire Island. Sightseeing with Lyle Rosnick. What would Freud say? Neil's Angels? U2 1 N, f A Y . The Gucci look. l I s Three wild and crazy guysY in 11' K 7 if n A A , 'Q- Ns, +-- z ?'i'.., n Ui xx XKHQX .V 0-- Do you want to share microscopes? Rob, Tony whv are vou grinning? Tony: I uoed tlie pitcher as a urinalf' 5 THE ME DECEMBER APRIL 21. . -',,s 'Rik ff? +2.24 Exam jrm' J A ' . .i'7 Ps - lXXl ANY x .-.5 -H .' iii SlEl'Tlg Xl BH li 'VCC NIAY NOX EXIBILH el ., L. OCTOBER , . hr AA 1 . .Ii ii 147 Take me. I'm yours. un . , '-r-U ,l L - F- ' 4-1 A . A-rf, just take me! C--.1 -1 ---Q-QQ-ry -NX --X Take me, I'm yours Take me, I'm yours Cartoons by Paul Fritz . ONE An A Maofm STUDENT PRESENTS HfM5fLF T0 HIMSILF f f. ff X , 4 nvis is M1 lsr' GlWYl6!li P05 mdlul Y l 55fClwo! afliulm fm MLS ,zlffp X v i, 9 i R f -Wmfffy-nfs-If, f f MM ,. ,, 7 I Z . pats., 1 1 , si - Uv. ansdafdfnawmrwfyl 'Tag is 'N 51.81.-m ofglumrumal q Z T Y 'fgfffbf fm self-main ,W gf ' Shun VG+ E3 AM www fav .D X ,,'i5ff1?-H Y 2 ' iffy J ' Lewin M fm +00 Jim Z , :far Q, f ' - ' 1 4 wl4 gla....andwvI4- ' ' ' -, -me 'fb ba? lure abrlfz i fl - xv' 9 , A, ' 'lf ' - sf 'fic mmf . . . flfcrna L ' 5 . A l ,- J' is 'Ah 1 Uflfhopadxl GVwu.S ' ,H K. ' 'fyf KF' I' M' Q 1 T Fm1h-nraunhzf W., . ,,., . , llhgfgeunffy mama' Qmygpgafaon Fa . F ,a0 ' 1, 1 , ' , ' , wns nn ROVTIL of Mfmolmn . Q L m as- :, ff,,Q XM' W 1 mwfwffw- M .ff Wasil A What, 4 K no klmgov ofkmlhj zigignfgi 007 'u1'1v4?.5cnfana,afJ1 ,, Q-, .uw me Hadgmnn fV X-'A '41 ruffflwwouf' 'F 'f P 5' J I A ' I A Tlifqf Q , :gr VM., 1 . 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Cf I S kool, xx xi Ld CDV' 'R :Q an A an Goa v u' f ' I .' 1. . J 'f I A Scif 1 1 ga .31 5 ' ' Q 2, f-:L- 1, .A , lr . Q U , 11 HWMW' I LET ME ' X D i XX 'VH My . S . X' ,.... X If Y 'a I f' f' , x x ,- , ., ,, X I ,A .' ,1' X lg: - .1. ff . Hr'ccuPf1'l-HEGRT, eurefas To HE '-ff!9,Dgg,gEf,ALFPA, . .'. W , ' 1 , - -,A V, wrm THE ANSWERU... In J 'fag . .f y 1 .' - 73' N--59 ' 3+ ff , ' f , ',,, 2 L Sod-14.5, CZJYQRVNGQ, X lr XI? If x ff 1, 'D , -I Fjv' , Aff ilqpvw MA' f ws , D--Q. .MRA vx U My wwf x5 l4J6K5Q .... if f ' 52-.Lx-Ki ur' ? ' - Q3 1 4 -'N-f-Q5 Qxf' A V ,jf GIVE HER . li' ,' ,W D A HEAD LOAN! -' D 755g 158 PZJS in Retrospect . By Peter-Andrew Aldea, P615 '83 The first medical instruction in this country was in the form of human dissection and was done as early as 1750 in New York City by Drs. john Bard and Peter Middleton. For the most part, however, the standards of medical care were very poor and loose. On October 21st, 1754, George Il 'iby the grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, etc. proclaimed in a royal charter: Know Ye, that We, considering the premises, do of our special Grace, Certain Knowledge. and meer Motion, by these presents. VVi1l, Grant, Constitute and Ordain, , That there be erected and made on the said Lands, a College, and other Build- ings and Improvements, for the use and conveniency of the same, which shall be Called and Known by the name of Kings College, for the Instruction and Education of Youth in the Leamed Languages, and Liberal Arts and Scienceszn. thus establishing King's College in New York City. The first active effort of starting medical education at King's College was by Dr. james jay Cjohn jay's older brotherj. He left his practice and went to London, in 1763, to raise funds for this purpose, and succeeded in his mission sufficiently to be knighted by King George III. KA scandal arose, however, when he was unable to deliver the full sum raised, prompting him to delay his retum to New York and start a practice in London instead, which he kept until the war broke out.i In 1767, a group ofyoung physicians offered their services to the board of governors ofthe college 'ito institute a medical school within this college, for instructing pupils in the most useful and necessary branches of medicine. Their offer was readily accepted by the board, as it was convinced that such a school 'iwill not only Cby promot- ing the true knowledge of medicinei tend to the honour and reputation of this college in particular, but be also a public benefit to societyw. Thus, was opened, on November 2nd, 1767, the Medical School ofKing's College, the first medical school in America, directly associated with an institution of general learning. Its organizers and faculty were Drs. Samuel Clossy CAnatomyj, john jones tSurgeryJ, Peter Middleton fTheory of Phy- sici, Samuel Bard lPractice ofPhysicl, james Smith CChemistry and Materia Medicai, and john V.B. Tennet tMidwiferyi. The first graduation was held on May 16th, 1769 in Trinity Church. In a ceremony that lasted over five hours the degrees of Bachelor of Medicine CM.B.i were conferred on Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam. Subsequently, the first two M.D. degrees in the colonies were awarded to Robert Tucker, in 1770, and to Samuel Kissam in 1771. fThe latter's graduation thesis was titled An inaugural essay on the antihelmintic quality of the Phafeolus Zuratenfis Siliqua hirfuta, or Cow-Itchi. In 1769, in his speech given at the first graduation ceremony of the medical school, Samuel Bard made a strong plea for building a public hospital in New York. The need for a hospital which would serve the community and afford the best and only means of properly instructing pupils in the practice of medicine, prompted Samuel Bard and the rest of the faculty to petition and obtain, in 1771, a Royal Charter from King George III, authorizing the construction of The New York Hospital. The plans for the hospital were drawn by Dr. jones, Professor of Surgery, the same year, and the oomerstone was laid in 1773. But, the completion of the first New York public hospital suffered repeated setbacks. In 1776, it was damaged in a great fire and in the battle of New York. After new buildings were built in 1782, it sustained damanged in the Doctors' Riot of 1788. A mob angered by rumours of physicians' grave robbing Cresurrec- tionistl activities stormed the hospital, destroyed its anatomical collection and rampaged through doctors' ofiices throughout the city for four days. The hospital finally opened in 1791 and became the first teaching hospital in New York City, 154 The year 1776 polarized the entire population, making the traditional refuge of the medical profession virtually impossible. At the medical school, the faculty became divided into Loyalists tBard, Clossy, and Middletonl and Patriots Cjones and Smithi. As it was becoming clear the war would soon shift from Boston to New York, an army of 20,000, hastily mobilized, untried revolutionaries came to defend the city. In April 1776, medical studies were suspended at Kings College, the students were dispersed, and the college was taken over by the Committee for Safety and then by Washington's troops. Despite accurately anticipating English in- tentions, General Washington was unable to hold the city. His losses in the brief battles of New York and Long Island to General Howe resulted in English domination of New York until 1783. The war, the occupation, and the serious fires of 1776 and 1778 had a devasting effect on the city, whose population shrank to half its pre-war size. In 1783, the city changed hands, the rebuilding began, and the medical void left by the war was quickly filling with physicians and surgeons released from military service. The war, however, did not bring about any remarkable changes in medical education. Medical education remained based predominantly on the apprentice system, in which a few students attended formal courses in addition to their studies in doctors' offices, and even fewer pursued advanced medical education abroad. A newcomer to this post-war New York medical scene was Dr. Nicholas Romayne, who was educated in Edinburgh, Paris and Leyden. In 1784, with the help ofSamuel Bard, the former Kings College reopened as Columbia College. Dr. Romayne was named both Trustee and Professor ofthe Practice of Medicine in the medical school, joining him on the faculty were Samuel Bard CChem- istryi, Charles McKnight fAnatomy and Surgeryl, Benjamin Kissam tlnsti- tutes of Medicinej, and Ebenezer Crosby fMidwiferyJ. Unfortunately, the medical school was short-lived. In addition to personal differences between Homayne and Bard, there was considerable friction conceming the practice of private instruction by members of the faculty. In 1787, Romayne res- igned from the faculty to form his own medical school. Subsequent faculty resigriations shortly thereafter effectively closed down the-school. In 1791, Romayne petitioned the Regents ofthe University ofthe State of New York to recognize his school. However, such action bythe Regents was fought by the trustees of Columbia College, who claimed that only they had the legal right to form a medical school. Subsequently, when the Columbia College Medical School proved a failure, the Regents allowed the Medical Society of the County of New York, in March 1807, to incorporate as a College of Physicians and Surgeons. The president of the society, Dr. Romayne, became the president of the Collegeg joining him on the faculty were Drs. Samuel Mitchell CChemistryl, David Hosack fSurgery, Midwif- ery, Materia Medica and Botanyj, Edward Miller tPractice of Medicinei, Archibald Bruce fMineralogyi, john Augustine Smith fAnatomyi, and Ben- jamin DeWitt tlnstitues of Medicinei. The College was first located at No. 18 Park Place tformerly, Robinson Streetl. At that time, most of the city was below Chambers Street. The wealthier residences were at t.he lower end of Broadway, about the Battery and Bowling Green, with the shops in the upper part ofthe same street. Broadway was paved only to the neighbor- hood ofCanal Street beyond which it continued as a road. Canal Street itself existed only on paper, and was represented by a swamp and a sluggish stream, crossed by a bridge at the intersection of Broadway. Two years later, in 1809, the College moved to No. 553 Pearl Street. In 1810, it was reported that certain misunderstandings having taken place between the then president iDr. Romaynei and the professors prompting the Regents to investigate these differences. In 1811, at the age ofsixty-nine, Samuel Bard was called from retirement to the presidency ofthe College of Physicians and Surgeons. After retuming to New York in 1784 and reorgani7aing Columbia College. Bard fthe former Loyalistl had opened ii very fashion- able and busy practice, which included George Washington Lwliose carbun- cle he successfully incised. in 1789, assisted by his father, Dr. john Bardl. Samuel Bard retired, in 1789, to his estate in Hyde Park, New York to devote his leisure to the care of his estate and to scientific and literary pursuits. The year 1811, also saw the graduation of the first class teight studentsl of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. For the next few years, while the Columbia College Medical School had little more than maintained an existence, fconferring its last degree on Robert Morrel, in 1810l, the College of Physicians and Surgeons had become quite successful. In 1813, it moved again, this time to a three-story building at No. 3 Barclay Street, and in its eighth session 11814-18155, the class numbered 121 students. In 1814, to allow the professors of the Columbia College Medical School to join the faculty of the College of Physicans and Surgeons, all the medical lectures at Columbia were sus- pended and complete union had taken place. In reality, however, there was no true union between the two institutions. In 1860, under the leader- ship of Edward Delafield, the College of Physicans and Surgeons became independent ofthe Regents ofthe State University and became the Medical Department ofColumbia College. In this union, however, both institutions were united only in conferring the M.D. degrees, but remained indepen- dent ofone another. A true union between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and Columbia College, was established only in March 1891, when the latter surrendered its charter, donated all its property fvalued at 1.625 million dollarsl to, and became an integral part of, Columbia University. In 1837, the College moved to No. 67 Crosby Street into facilities unsurpassed by any similar establishment in the Union . This move began along period of quiet and productive growth. In 1841, Dr. Willard Parker, Professor of Surgery, established the College Clinic, where students would observe diagnosis and treatment in an ambulatory care setting. From a single clinic of minor surgery held once a week, the clinic grew by 1876 to include ten different clinics fincluding, Pediatrics, Gynecology, Dermatol- ogy, Venereal Diseases, Medicine, Neurology, and othersl. Indeed, the prominence ofthe College Clinics became so great, that in 1869, it promp- ted the establishment ofa new grade of teachers, lasting to the present, named Clinical Professors, each ofwhom was in charge ofhis special clinic. In the year 1851, Bellevue Hospital joined The New York Hospital as a teaching institution. Thus, medical instruction at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, then more than ever before, covered the entire spectrum of disease from ambulatory care to the more serious and advanced conditions seen in the hospitals. Finally, a significant advancement in medical educa- tion came in 1854 with the passage by the state legislature of the Anatomiml Bill , which secured for medical schools all the unclaimed bodies from the state penal and charitable institutions. Prior to 1854, medical schools were only able to lawfully obtain for dissection the unclaimed bodies of convicts who died in the penitentiaries of Sing Sing and Auburn. Consequently, there was considerable dealing in bodies dug up from the old Potters field cemetary, and such anatomical specimens could only be secured by uncer- tain, illegal and often dangerous nocturnal expeditions. Understandably, in 1819, when the College moved to Barclay Street, for the safety and convenience of the College, an additional building, to answer the pur- pose ofa stable and an entrance, were built in the rear. There is no doubt that this rear entrance and stable were built for the safety and conveni- ence of the Anatomy department. In 1856, the College moved into a four story brick building on 23rd street and 4th Avenue, where is remained for thirty-one years. This period encompassed three important milestones in the history of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Two of these were discussed earlier, namely the 1860 agreement under which the College became indepenedenl of' the Regents, and became the Medical Department ofColumbia College, .ind the rapid rise in the importance and prominence of the Collt-gc Clinics begun, in 1841, by Dr. Parker, with the establishment ofthe new teaching grade ofClinical Professors. Lastly, underthe activeleadershipofPresident Edward Delafield. the Alumni Association ofthe College of Physicians and Surgeons was established in I859 for promoting good feeling and harmony among the graduates ofthe College and to exercise, in a variety ufways. a benehcial influence. In 1884, VVilliam H. Vanderbilt decided, with the influence of his friend and physician, james VV. McLane. Professor ofObstetrics, to give substan- tial aid to the effort to create in New York one ofthe first medical schools in the world . He chose to support the College of Physicians and Surgeons because it was the oldest medical school in the state, and ofequal rank with any in the world. In October 1884, he gave the College the deed to the land enclosed between 9th and 10th Avenues, and 59th and 60th Streets, with a check for three-hundred thousand dollars for building expenses: In all, a gift ofhalf ofa million dollars. However, VV. Vanderbilt never lived to see his project completedg he died in December 1885 of a massive stroke. The College building cornerstone was laid in April 1886, and the building was inaugurated in September 1887. The building consisted of Mthree connected structures: namely, a main building, ... containing ofiices, museums, study and recitation rooms, professors' rooms, and the department of practical Anatony, a middle building occupying the central part ofthe grounds, in which are the main stairway hall. the lecture hall, the amphitheatre, and the rear stairway, and a north building or laboratory wing containing the janitor's quarters, the chemical labor- atories, and the laboratories of the Alumni Association . . . Outside . . . are the boiler house, and a one-story laboratory annex and nearby a carriage house, with rooms on the second floor for the accomodation ofemployees. Moreover, two marble tablets were placed in the main entrance of the building. The tablet placed on the west side of the vestibule listed the different locations of the college since its foundation, and the tablet placed on the east side of the vestibule bore the inscription This College was chartered by the Regents ofthe University ofNew York, March 12th, 1807, and was Co-instituted the Medical Department ofColumbia College, june 6th, l860. Presently. these marble tablets are located in the latest location of the College. After VanderbiIt's death, his family decided to commemorate him and supplement his original gift Cuided by Dr. McLane, they founded two new institutions for the College. In Ianurary, 1886, less than a month after Vanderbilts death, his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W.D. Sloane, donated the funds needed for the building and endowment ofthe Sloane Maternity Hospital. In April 1886, Vanderbilt! four sons donated the funds for the building, endowment, and subsequent expansion ofthe Vanderbilt Clinic, built to house the very busy College Clinics fFig. 91. Excavations for these buildings began in 1886, and both were inaugu- rated in December 1887. In 1928. the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center opened its doors as the worlds first medical center, combining in a single complex complete facilities for patient care, medical education and research. As a fertile ground for investigation and clinical advancement, Columbia has since then occupied a position ofleadership in world medicine. Presently. the medical center has a teaching staffofmore than 2,000, a bed capacity of 1 ,500, and is served by a staff of approximately 950 attending physicians, a house staff body of 400 physicians, and close to 6,000 hospital employees. In retro- spect, the College of Physicians and Surgeons has certainly come a long way sine 1767, when a six man faculty began instructing a class of three students in the most useful and necessary branches of medicine. 155 OUR BLESSING AND CONGRATULATIONS to the CLASS OF 1985 from the PACHECO FAMILY CONGRATULATIONS TO JEFF AND HIS CLASSNIATES from the AVNER FANIILY Congratulations to Lisa Anne Ross and to the Class of1985 Dr. and Mrs. Curlee Ross Carolyn and David With Much Love and Great Pride we congratulate SCOTT SHIKORA on his graduation. The Shikora Family Congratulations and Best Wishes to Frederick M. Dirbas, M.D. and the rest of the Class of1985 Dr. 6: Mrs. Fuad Dirbas joseph Dirhas For eoery parent comes that moment of extreme pride in our children that makes lyfe worthwhile. We thank you Louis, our dear son, for providing us with such a time that will be foreoer unforgettable. Our unhounding looe and pride . . . for what you haoe done . . . for what you will dol Angela and Louis Brusco Sr. on Z0 Me glczfm ofi.985' J 0A , no ymoe 18.98 mm gm, .WWW gm gf Mofcofolfg 6' ' J. N.. M ' . N Congratulations, Peter, for a past Well done and best Wishes for the future yet to come nBreak a Legv Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bolo jr. Congratulations to the Class of 1985 and our Special Best Wishes For Nancy, your Class President SUSANNE AND ROBERT MADSEN DR. AND MRS. ALFRED MARKOWITZ CONGRATULATIONS and BEST YVISHES to the CLASS OF 1985 RUTH AND BARNET CELLER and family Congratulations anal Best NK'isIies to the Class of 1985 Continue Your Eitorts lor the Future Pearl and jesse Weiss Susanna Grinberg, M.D Moises Grinberg, M.D. CONCRATLLATIONS CLASS OF 1985 fiom THE FAMILY OF LISA C. DIAMOND IN HONOR OF ROBERT F. WILLENBUCHER . . . and the greatest of these is LOVE His Aunts: MAME. NORA and KATHLEEN CONGRATULATIONS TO ALBERT and the Class of1985 Howard Eui Chan Kim, M.D. Yvonne Un From the Family of Robert F. Willenbucher Congratulations and Warm Wishes For Success and Happiness Norman Bank, M'D' to the Class of 1985 John B. McNulty, Dr. UI1fg'3gSS,:5g3arZel, M.D. Dr. Aviva S. Barzel Congratulations Congratulations to BRIAN FALLON from Mom and Dad Mom and Dad Debbie, Lenny, Della, Michael and Adam joel Adam Weinthal, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. jack M. Granowitz The Haven Coffee Shop Pizza and Deli Restaurant 228 Fort Washington Ave. 81 169th Street New York, N.Y. 10032 Tel. 927-6685 And Reme's Restaurant 4021 Broadway and 169th Street New York, N.Y. 10032 Tel. 923-5452 The Management and the Personnel of these jine Restaurants Extend Our Congratulations and Best Wishes to All our Dear Friends of P 81 S Class of 1985 of Columbia University for a Successful Career and Brilliant Future! Congratulations to our son, Seth, and the entire Class of 1985 Mr. and Mrs. Morton I. Baum A NEWULDGV WARD My W , 'sm -Ni . XM ,f ig ytzfpf, -f'L'I,'7:- 277 l if E Y' C V rg- Roy Pollack, M.D. Celia N. 0res, M.D. Pauline Ores Michelle Ores DGNQRS The Flock flock Donald Warren Rev. and Mrs. j.M. jones George and Anna Hripcsak Ethel B. Hill Rector T. Davol. M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Taterka Margrit and Diane Ceurts Kurt Hirschliorn, M.D. Iohn and Dorothy Baird Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Lien Anton and Katerina Racloslovicli Hawke and E.C. Fritz David and Ellen Rosenblum 2 CONGRATULATIONS from the VICE PRESIDENT FOR HEALTH SCIENCES DEAN, AND FACULTY ofthe COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SUROEONS CONGRATULATIONS AND ' BEST WISHES FOR A SUCCESSFUL CAREER DEPARTMENT OF RADIOLOGY CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS TO A to the BRAINY CLASS OF 1985 CLASS from the DEPARTMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF NEUROSURGERY PSYCHIATRY THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS EXTENDS CONGRATULATIONS AND A WARM WELCOME TO OUR NEWEST MEMBERS - THE CLASS OF 1985 Congratulations and Best Wishes from the Department of Neurology The Staff of the HEALTH SCIENCES HOUSING OFFICE Extends Their Congratulations To THE CLASS CF 385 Congratulations to Tze-Chiang Meng, The new doctor in our llunily. and Best XYisl1es to his classmates. To Robin Brown: Proud ol' you - The Meng Family LOW lm' - Mom and Dad Columbia Center Deli and Cl b' C t C ff Gum lashigzer 0 ee john A. Downey, Congratulations M- D - Class of 1985 83 Haven Avenue 927-3300 ' W I TEL. 23-7861 ljxlzlaxlm 4'Evi ANG Very Best Vlishes to the como PIZZA Class of1985l PIZZA PIE. HOT8 COLD HEROS DA TAKE OUT ORDERS - CALL US G WE'LL HAVE ORDERS READY 4035 BROADWAY YOU RING INR COR 17OTH ST.I WE BRING NEW YORK CITY Dr. and Mrs. Morris Freeman, '51 CONCRATULATIO TO THE CLASS OF 1985 DR. ROBERT M. CLICK A A D MBER OF THE DEPART ENT OF EDICINE Best XVishes from HELLMAN CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. 79 W'atermill Lane Great Neck, N.Y. 10021 ORDER A GIFT FOR YOUR OFFICE NIAINIONIDES PHYSICIANS HIPPOCRATIC OATH In Illuminated Cold and Silver. in Hebrew and English Calligraphy. Personalized. 14 x 18 custom frarnecl. S50 or S551 unframed S40 lmat onlyl. CONTACT: CREENBERC GALLERY ISA,-X BRIGIITON PATH BROOKLYN. NX.. 11235 QTISH S91-58-I6 68 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GLASS OF 1985 SIDNEY A. SASS ASSOCIATES, INC. Group Insurance Administ1'ato1's for THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE COLLEGE OF P1'1YS1G1ANS AND SURGEONS Columbia University 2200 Nladison Ave. Low Cftygt New York. NY., 10016 - Liil- lttstttntttcv 212-696-4750 - llisnluilitx' lm-mm - Other Pmgituttt CONTINUE YOUR MEDICAL EDUCATION WITH . . . ? YZ A tt.. - THE DEPARTMENT N112 if I Nfwfhgmde. OF X t, t I ournal of edtcmc u l . 7'-..-'f-vii,-T1--11 OBSTETRICS 61 df GYNECOLOGY EXTEND THEIR WARMEST CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GLASS OF 1985 The New England Joumal of Medicine For over 170 years, the Journal has reported advances tn medtcal sctence and treatment to pt-tystctans and med students throughout the worl S t both restden t 440 Ma n Stree CONGRATULATIONS to the . CLASS OF 1985 from MORRISTOWN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL a major teaching affiliate of Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons CONGRATULATIONS, COLLEACUEST The Medical Society of the State of New York 420 Lakeville Road Lake Success, 11042 C516D 488-6100 The Department of Anesthesiology wishes The Class 0f1985 A Happy, Painless Future COIVIPLIIVIENTS OF M S D MERCK SHARPQ. DQHME MAN U FACTU RERS OF Heptavax-Bt CHepatitis Bvaccine I MSDE CCNCRATULATIONS TC THE CLASS OF 1985 CUR BEST WISHES FOR YCUR FUTURE HAPPINESS AND CONTINUED SUCCESS FROM THE DEPARTMENTS OF: ANATOMY AND CELL BIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOPHYSICS HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT MICROBIOLOGY PATHOLOGY PHARMACOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY AND CELLULAR BIOPHYSICS CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES to the , CLASS OF 1985 from THE FACULTY AND STAFF DEPARTMENT OF DERMATOLOGY CONGRATULATIONS to the CLASS OF 1985 THE DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE Graduate M dic IEducation at Overlook Ho pital A majorteaching affiliate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons Overlook, known for its progressive leadership and sound medical practice, is considered one of the nation's foremost community hospitals. A voluntary. non-profit health care center, Overlook provides extensive modern facilities, including 551 beds and 50 bassinets. More than 2,600 employees and a medical staff of 550 offer a broad spectrum of educational and medical- surgical services. At Overlook, quality patient care has been a tradition for more than 75 years. We emphasize the training of primary physicians. Approved residency programs are offered in: Dentistry: Diagnostic Radiology: Emergency Medicine, Family Practice: Internal Medicineg Pediatricsg and a Transitional First Year. Overlook also offers affiliated programs with Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center, New York City, in General Surgery, Urology and Obstetrics-Gynecology. Program directors are outstanding physicians, all Board-certified specialists in their respective fields. At Overlook the administrative and medical staff constantly evaluate new concepts in the delivery of health care, never losing sight ofthe individual, human needs of the patient and the family. It is this commitmentto excellence infamily- centered care that has earned Overlook its outstanding reputation. fi Hg, For information about residency programs at Overlook, contact the Department of Medical Education. 193 Morris Avenue, Summit, New Jersey, 07901, or call l201l 522-2085. Gverlook pital Congratulations to the Class of 1985 from the Department of Surgery The Department of Urology Wislies to Congratulate the Class of 1985 and extend Best Wislies for a Successful Future Congratulations to the Class of 1985 from the Staff of The New York Orthopedic Hospital Department of Orthopedic Surgery Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF ,85 DEPARTMENT OF OTOLARYNCOLOGY The Department of Pediatrics Congratulates the outstanding members of the graduating class and all those who chose fields other than Pediatrics, as Well. BEST WISHES FROM THE COLUMBIA HEALTH SCIENCE LIBRARY STAFF NELSON ,S Delicatessen and Restaurant A Neighborhood Tradition 170th Street and Broadway Telephone: 923-9606 CONGRATULATIDNS T0 THE CLASS OF 1985 Now that you're starting out in your medical career, you'll be spending so much time examining the health of others, you may not have time to examine the state of your own finances. So While you're helping your patients keep physically fit, our goal is to keep you fiscally fit. As a student, you've had the benefits of Chemicals free checking and a ChemBankcard. As a recent graduate, youlre also invited to take advantage of Chemicals free financial counseling as Well as financial planning seminars specially designed for health care professionals. Its Chemicals way of not only wishing you career success, but of ensuring your financial success, too. Chemical Bank Chemical Bank Richard Donatuti, A.V.P. Daisy Yelez. Branch Manager 1146 St. Nicholas Ave. Main Lohhy fat 167th Stl-eetb Columhia Presbyterian Hospital N.Y., N.Y. 10032 168th Street, N.Y., N.Y. 100322 Cl-E M ICALBANC THE CHEMISTRYSAIUST RIGHT AT CHEMICAL Member FDIC ST LUQESXRUOSEVE LT St. Luke's - Roosevelt Hospital Center congratulates the Class of l985, for their efforts in support of patient care at the Hospital Center and Wishes the Class the best in the future. Congratulations to the Class of 1985 We at Columbia Medical Center .Bookstore extend our congratulations to the members ol' the class ot' 1985. We hope that our books have helped you to build a firm foundation for your careers and we look forward to accommodating your future educational needs. The Columbia University Medical Center Bookstore Mr-dural Certtvr hit! W H18 Street New tork 10043 li-I IJIZJ NM alll-l-5 A Service of 8 We carry an extensive selection of the most current medical textbooks and microscopes, as well as current cloth, paper and sale books. We also offer a money saving text buyback service. P S Yearbook 2 The 1985 P615 Yearbook was put together by about fourteen fourth-year students over a period of six months. Its completion, despite interviews and away-electives, attests to the group effort involved. Co-editors IeiTAvner and Peter Bolo were the backbone ofthe team, Although a yearbook neophyte, jeff dazzled all with his ability to conduct, yearbook business while sketching interview travelogs on AAA road maps, Peter, a master of layouts and forei n film, was responsible for putting the finishing touches on and delivering the iook to the printer. Among the others. none was more colorful than Lou i'Risky Business Brusco, who put the yearbook in the black three weeks ahead of schedule. Candid Section editors Robin Brown and jenny Iulien had the unenviable task of trying to collect photos while waging a publicity war with Fred Brancati and his P615 admissions' tours at Tonyls Desk. Lisa Ross, Class Section editor, was on the phone with Thornton Studios so often we almost set up a hotline for her. Considering the experience of our photographers, T.C. Meng did some truly amazing things in his darkroom. Elba Pacheco assisted with layouts for several sections and was nearly rewarded with her own centerfold. Finally, Scott Shikora was instrumental in completing both the Faculty and Business Sections. Ioe Alexander reappeared miraculously after a two-month abscence to do some eleventh-hour typing. Paul Fritz was kind enough to submit some great cartoons. We hope the words and photographs collected in this book will help the Class of'85 to recall memories ofthe i'P6zS Experience. Please direct any correspond- ence to IeffAvner or Peter Bolo cfo Damage Control, Presbyterian Hospital. VV. 168th Street, New York, New York. 10032. Fred Dirbas january, 1985 Editor-in-Chief T' Special Thanks to: The Alumni Association for their continuing finan- cial and emotional support, the Faculty, those Parents who contributed to our fundraising campai ng Janis Mitchell, P615 Club Administrative Aideg Mae X Rudolph and the Public Relations Olficeg joe Donovan and the Hunter Publishing Companyg Ed Thornton, , ' our Class Photographer, our Patrons, for advertising in the publication, our classmates, for their photographs. 'Q'-' Jil, l l I l l E ll . S l E l 1 . l l I l l l Frcd Dirlms Jeff Avncr. Pctcr Bolo Rollin Brown, jenny julicn . . .Lisa Ross. joe Alexander l . -A 454:-09 - -.wr-2-i ty c . . , . - - ,J7 ' l2ClltUI'-lIl'f.lllt'l . . . ....,. , , , . . I Editors ,..,..,, ...,.. X Cunclicl Scctiun , . . . . '., Class Section .,.. . IV Aclvcrtisinsl Section . . . ,....., , . , A A -? ' ' Activities Scction . , . , . A -tx , A 5 Faculty Suction . , . . 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