Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)
- Class of 1971
Page 1 of 156
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 156 of the 1971 volume:
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The 1971 Aesculapiad is a se- lection ot photographs and comments from the last tour years intended to create an im- pression of the process vve have gone through to become physicians. We have concen- trated attention on the members of the Class of 1971, tor in many vvays it has been the indi- viduals ot the class, teaching and learning from one another, who have directed our educa- tional experience at Harvard. - William H. Goodson, Ill, editor - Richard H. S. Karpinski, Iayoutfgraphics - Eugene J. McDonald, Jr., exchequer - Janet G. Goodson, moil - Arlan F. Fuller, Jr. Dennis M. C. Landis Ernest K. Manders Mark L. Rosenberg Harry C. Schwartz, photographs - Alice Fuller Nancy McDonald Sandra Manders, composing assistants 1 , , Q1 I: QE! 'f,., , Y 1 .:5-vq 1 1 -55 If I ' Ynuanwwfl- .'-v-y -iw. .X mfg 'rr-nf. -i ...L--LL , ,. ,.-4,- . ..,,, X . I 'lv 1 I ' ' l 1 1 - u:Q1.Q'1lZ' A ' 'LOL 4 Q SCHO ' '- 1321 VARD ' . f 'Q I Him of i. DQENTAL f Q ' MEDUNE f A f .. ' ff t f . 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QS-Q5 ,fa A' ' rl-'Ulf 'ra - -- :N-I 11 .gf ' 1 f ri- Jw?-'af : ' 1' f ,ififgifig F- W, fl: ni Q' .' 0 7' 5 ,J f 7 - 53 tg rg, V' Iiflf V1 ,I 'C C ,pf '-, '- - - . Q V , W' 1 - -' ' '- -wulffl .FJL f' ' ' 1 -vb' -.pn ' ..-N I fc p f f - ' g',f '53' I 'L..-.A A' 4, , . I , .. . - gr JM, . I ,V . ,?MW,f,1, , . f - - f' V' ' lf' -' FTS-i - wg f f f - f Y 1, ' n 1, 1- ' X it A ' ' 1 - 0 1 :. -4 f' ' . 1. My . 1'-Y:-1 Kv,.ZWwf,m:fwq,qn,A4 ym+wwn?,H,,-uvig . f f ' ff ff U7 ? .'n' ' a , 1 lh'- ' A r W' -V- 'SFT k . ...v - - :QS-1 15,345 :Ll OF .. if I X' The relationship of the medical profession to society provides mechanisms that enable the doctor patient relationship to occur. Systems of delivery of medical care are quite properly one of society's main concerns. Whatever the form or system of medical care, the one-to-one doctor patient relationship is the essential unit or building block which, in the aggregate, must always form the edifice of medi- cal care, whatever its ultimate architecture , . . The Art of Medicine is more than a gracious bedside man- nerg it consists of the skillful ap- plication of scientific knowledge for the maintenance of health or the amelioration of disease. To develop the requisite science and art of medicine is the es- sential purpose of the six or seven years of medical school and hospital apprenticeship. - Herrman Blumgart -+l -ik' -. Yi ff WP-1.3.3 iii! , 1967 was a year of transition. Only a rare member of the class of 1971 had a classical biology background, so we had you en- gineer a cardiovascular system on the first day of the course. Some of the power sources pro- posed were so unusual that Harvey would not have recog- nized the Heart as a Pump. We experimented with syllabi on Body Fluids, Capillaries and Lympnatics as substitutes for lectures, and the laboratory was reduced solely to the mammali- an experiment. - A. Clifford Barger l '-1 Richard D. Berlin 10 1 1 f v U Emmanuel G. Cassimatis The Admission Committee sees as its role the conscientious and thorough evaluation of every applicant who applies to Har- vard Medical School and the at- tempt to select from this group those students for whom a l-lar- vard Medical School education gives promise of developing their full potential. Such powers as the ability to control the fu- ture destiny ot American medi- cine and to solve social prob- lems by the selection process have been attributed to the Committee on Admissions. This would appear to be totally naive and unrealistic if one looks at the career choices of all stu- dents compared to their stated or intended initial interest upon applying to the Harvard Medical School. Career choices and contributions to the medical field vvill be determined by the models in the faculty with which the student comes in contact, by the social pressures of socie- ty at large to some extent and by the opportunities both pro- fessionally and academically which become available to the graduate at any given time. Many graduates of Harvard Medical School have multiple careers. In view of these fac- tors, the basic philosophy of the Admission Committee is to se- lect the most promising and ex- citing applicants presented to them in the Applicant Pool-each year and let the Medical School students through mutual cataly- sis strive to reach their poten- tials,, - Perry J. Culver .,, s f. I .. va .X L. -- ' 'rf-fts1fe ' l 1 W ' x w 9-5' 'Q' 117,15 V ku: F x ik W 'L ---ill 2' . Wu ' i vgf, ,. I 1, :H J Leon G. Goldstein - 4 Frank G. Berson xy Juhn R. Pappenheimer il James A. Herd 'II Don W. Fawcett Jw., -1. V L'-2'-.hail ' Roy O. Greep Stanford L. Palay swifdf W , 1 L XT' 1- ,A .A 7.1 ...a TP' fi-.x ix-- 1--xl ?55f1 QiQ1 'N M Y Excerpts from an Interview Feyboy. . . We found that most of the Professors over titty had a tendency to over identify with female medical students. . . There's even an old professor of surgery over there at a place called the Brigham, vvho's been trying for several years to get some girls to go into surgery. He really thinks that this year he might make it with one of the girls. Hippocrates Well, I wish him luck, But after all, he is getting kind of old. Feyboy Way back, at the start of our class, there was a clinic over at Brigham Hospital where they showed a little girl who had been cut by an outboard motor propeller. lt was very impres- sive, and made us realize that surgery wasn't just a lot of aca- demic talk. It wasn't just the business of practicing medicine from the foot of the bed, and making clever pronouncements about the literature and the dit- ferential diagnosis. Surgery ac- tually addressed itself to taking care of people. Hippocrates You mean actually taking care of people? You mean that in a university teach- ing hospital, here at Harvard, there are actually some sick people who need help and are actually taken care of by the doctors there? I can scarcely believe it! Certainly, the SDS says that it isn't so at all. And all those protesting activists have said there are no patients that need any help in any of those hospitals. - Francis D. Moore 14 Lola S.S. lnsel is , .fffp ww J 'mia J. Samuel Chase I -.1 William Koopman A. Travis Abboti ff X ln the spring of the first year there were those among the faculty and students who were astonished that future dentists would spend their time dissecting a leg or deciphering an acid-base nomogram. There were those among the dental stu- dents who expressed similar amaze- mentg there were others who de- cided that medicine would be their career rather than dentistryg but for most, these two years were the proof of their belief that dentistry is a specialty of medicine. - John Kelly iw rj Z' Torsten N. Wiesel David H. Hubel David D. Potter Edwin J. Furshpan 'W'-1,-.1 I' ' I' 'Y L 'fr ...a-f- 'rex V me If 3 9 'F' xiii, L4 rw' . 4 Daniel H. Funkenstein I7 I I Have your stools changed color re- cently? During our Saturday morn- ing correlation clinics, someone would always ask this, THE ques- tion. If any patient who agreed to meet the young doctors had any reservations about the ability of our class to deal with the fundamental issues of life, surely THE question dispelled all doubt. The asking of THE question was a dramatic mo- ment. But there were countless other unforgettable performances which lent to each Saturday the ex- citement of a Broadway opening. At the very first clinic, the guy sitting next to me tainted. As the gory Kod- achromes flashed by, some mem- bers of the audience wished they had eaten less for breakfast and at least a half dozen marched out the front door, suddenly remembering an urgent appointment in the men's room! This is what the critics call impact . But next week's drama stirred up even more autonomic activity. The Duke of Francis Street single- handedly took on a whole platoon of fourth-year students, house-officers, and surgical colleagues, reducing them to whimpering children, shell- shocked and babbling. In the weeks that followed, still other golden moments stand out. One day, as the fatherly nephrologist and his pretty chronic uremic patient took questions from the floor, a lone voice of fate intoned, How long can you keep a person alive on chronic dialysis? One hundred and twelve stomachs bounced. On another oc- casion, a sweet, white-haired lady with cholestatic jaundice informed us that she had imbibed an elixir of youth made from bull's balls. It was the first and last time l saw the girls in our class blush. - Bruce Fi. Leslie I8 John W. Burch Judith L. Alexander 9434 Harvey Goldman Roberta V.A. Pagon 35. ir , ,. ' fr! 1 f -.J Bernard D. Davis 'fu H. ' fi 1 '- -fu ,' .Q-A , -9...--A... 'X -f-Q' ,4-ld4'f E H 20 u T57-HJ fi Harold Amos ,... my .3 1 . Wu.. J' yn!! eq- ii 9 .Af ,,, If c1ggi ' 'r l i we .4 -'J' A -Q ,, A . ,, , , .-, ' Q ff' - Bruce M. and Louise Smith Jonaihan Fi. Beckwith Ronald G. .Stoller Douglas R. Waud eil mv -an 'i in-ni 11 f ' x 9 in 'Wk Q . D . .f ,.. xr 1 C. ,,v--1.4 . N, l lla 1'--. James F. Orme, Jr. fins lA diff: -'51, i 22 L' I vi? if James J. Feeney Samuel Bojar Q nv fin Morris J. Karnovsky David A Lowe John C. Nemiah 23 Michael A. Nierenberg fl gf' YF! .4 Robert S. Fishman 24 A, 1 r , '- ..x. Ullrich G. Trendlenberg 'Wi A. , ig - - gggf , . I ., . ., .V . ,. , Ag . ,Tw 12 , - m,.--... IX! 3 i X. Ernest K. Manders Paul FK. Draskoczy 25 Us . fs A ..f William P. Adams I 26 Valerie E. Charlton I From the first peek behind the lab door at the draped figures, during the day-to-day slicing and shredding through grease and fixative, to the pervasive stench that careful showering and strong aftershave lotion oouldn't quite eradicate. - Harris J. Finberg 27 Frank Seinsheimer, lll As friend to friend, let's redeem life - give it a name - a seman- tic resurrection. Hilda? Hilda it is. Why is it-she here? Suicide, it says on the ident card. Now, stop debating about the irrele- vant and start cutting. Certainly not much was left on the porcelain table. As a fleeting thought before exams, is this all our science can tell us of death? Not very much to work with when confronted by a pa- tient's, or our own, death. Do 28 we as docs need to be con- cerned with the individual ap- proaching death? Not always. lt can be ignored to a point. But patients, and ourselves, expect to face the situation of death. And have we reached a limita- tion of the scientific method - for observation ends with the in- dividual's death, is there more of an explanation of death's sig- nificance and meaning? Gray's for all its verbiage, does not say. -Paul D. Walters Q, Daniel J. Sigman Wie a George Paff B. Timothy Walsh , IN 'X '--4r- Tx Wk Tv i+ rf! 1 RXNJ V 'Nun f Kr V f fg Lg V if 'V - ,Q ,J 1 W., fig,-f , if-,K pfiffa L 1' Y - . :flrv , , , 3 .1 ,, ,.A -Janis! . 551- V .UCI mga-'..iL-. , fi' 5 . ' 7 '- Ei L V 111, - dal. 4 5:1 fy, V., I, , ., -Y . .uf X' 'vb'a1' Aa . r ,,:- . fn :. 'Y Qu' 1, ,LL 1 I xuw I ' fffzziyk' 1 2'-,Y'14- ., Q N 'K 571 -1 fb , Q' f lj f lg Richard E. Coggeshall --.4-L ,. . ll,- -...f k-J p Harvey V. Fineberg , :nu 1 ' w..' pk. N -JP Charles W. Popper J .. 94' r r-div g 31 The post Super Bowl doldrums respond to the VH basketball tourney. These are games with a shade less intensity than the indiana State High School tour- nament, collegiate rules inc dunking, hehl, and a mandatory eight count. Third year vve brought in a pro, and vvon. Yea us. .6-.N f f- 4. ff' Larry Bi'OCkIT18l l 32 The VH tennis court is occupied except at 3-4 AM on Thursdays. Tennis a unique sport at HMS in that there is an occasional smidgeon of talent involved. However, the rest of us soon take the edge off of anybody's game. - Bruce Lytle Thomas Wright I Q9 L11 NYSN u ulff Impd .Y urn., :Q 641 5 6 rwersfnny rn-la 4 :lm fee H pvrnmu 1: :J .1 fan Paul Leary William R. Craig Alexandra J. Murray Richard L. Pohl D Frederick Hashimoto ' 'ffl John F. Hansbrough 35 P AW4 4 ' A f,-.L-: Ah .5 Q ,c 4 g1'5I1g,3 ,Z N5 .1 ,, , .' - i . ' 1 A - 'mg-W,-' 'af 4 1 D Nr ' 5 1 1 ' f r n..A+....Eu -11-3 -vi F1QEf1 , , 1 .5 ' J vt' J Q- 11.--'. 36 .--an , nf 4 - 'G A xx . '-', o G. Thomas Jones H ' 'SQ Lawrence E. Frisch .4 5,5 Collins E, Lewis Kurt and Martha Neumann 37 38 1' HV! f1'X K .il 4 '- N'z swx I X , A b Y FQ - J- w 1 W 3-5 '31 , M y r j Richard H.S, Karpinski John H. Boey Peter D. Echeverria ,., mf ' '- If 1 - ,.n. V if HFM 'i, f21y!Qg!J1Qw Q ' If 3g,.1,:gF:..1 Mx Q .1. 1 , an mfg , ,PP E' fv:'.'4a,1,,.g , ' V 'Q V1 x 1 r Ag Rb 4, . .,.- ' 1 n. . Q -s wh-ld X I 'F 1 1--t' Aux -V .Le I f7'w1'S ' f 4' .Q Q 'rv' J oi .mov ' 'I ,xv gin- ' Corey N. Rigberg 39 L-.ku LL- I Zwif N wx, x lafuvlx. N 15113 -1 ' 1 . nn X O. Lee Haynes, Jr. Cynthia N. Kettyle 41 Roger B. Kellogg C. Fordham and Janet von Reyn I . nf r,.f 'ai r 'av W fn ll 42 -L Robin I. Goodfellow ' - Mfg! X! l Z1 1.1 sf, A and Marcia Finberg 1 r' From the beginning of our asso- ciation we diligently worked to arrange the academic schedule to allow three day weekends. Tom Jones organized many parties during the first two years, and the Columlgis Day picnic at Donaldson's quickly became an eagerly anticipated tradition. Fred Jones assumed 44 l l the role as our first athletic di- rector and initiated the egg toss and blueberry pie eating con- tests. Despite the academic pressures, there always seemed to be enough people available for a basketball, football, or baseball game, and the squash courts were always filled. Many found skiing more interesting than physiology. The high point of these efforts had to be Jim Goodwin's Vanderbilt Hall Happy Hours. These were very well received by students, facul- ty, and the Epicure Liquor Store. - Robert W Bearf Ssu l. Weng Peter M. Banks un, ,,,, ., l 1 in John H. Kissel ' Vladimir Lange 45 William C. MacCarty, Ill 5 x Y -',.- fi I '47v Y I Arlan F. and Alice Fuller 46 fffifs. 4 Anthony F. Posteraro aimi- - M- J 't' ':.. -. ' i- : - V' vi. William P. Boger, Ill William H. Goodson, III Plenty of graft and plenty of crime, Plenty of soot and plenty of grime, Lots-of rats in the streets at night, Plenty of organized gang street fights. So if you vvanta find a home that's great, Boston, Massachusetts is a real swell state. Ln .f Walter E. and Peggy Stamm .. . -,.4. . , 0 cfqfalr Cffoff If V . J el H. Schwartz Cornelis A Kolff Last but not least is that dirty old chap, Talking ot tlatus and rectum and crap. l-le's our mang fart he can. High notes and lovv notes he showed us hovv. He wears a tablecloth instead of undertrough. Hernias can be held up with a tablecloth, wow. Andrew S. Binder Joel S. Greenberger in '53 X i A 'I 1 :'l rg- - , T, .,., M wi im dy 1-t gursex wavy A ,gg fnrvnun, ' ' ,t F 7 ' ,ao .sf 1 .l X. l' lf .I l fl, ts. l dl 3 i J ' N i .W f Robert W. Beart Brian L. Strunk Peter R. Graze Magruder C. Donaldson . . . If you want to know If you are learning your stuff, Paul R. Burnett Don t thunk twice, our advice, that little number is enough. Seventy-one, Seventy-tvvo, Our class year is our average TOO '- Thomas W. Albert Frederick L. JONES Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia. Alleluia alleluia, alleluia. alleluia, alleluia, alleluia alleluia, - Georg Friedrich l-Iendel David J. Lebwohl fsxu l-lovv terriblell-lovv awful! Gen- tlemen, this is a black clay for all of us. We have shot our Waud! -7 John R. Lease Bruce T. Lyman f'N Ann Robbins Stark Most of you will wind up in fat practices on the reservation, but you must at least recognize the needs of certain minority groups in our country. Our fa- thers before us have ignored this problem for years, and look at the results. Roving bands of these long knives, white men, or Europe-Americans, as they have recently preferred to call themselves, are attacking our villages, burning our teepees, killing our women, and raping our buffalo. Jean McClung Goodwin C. Timothy Ablett Robert E. Hickman .fx o 7 The most important rule to re- member in making shepherds pie is to start with a good nour- ishing base .... vve use wood. Q , GP James S. Goodwin Say, Dean Gardella, we upped our summer research . . . David London I met the class of 1971 in De- cember 1968. The acting head of the Department ot Pharma- cology had decided to present a series of voluntary, seminar- style courses and asked me to offer one on The Drug lndustry, The Doctor, and The Patient. That seminar was the first I had ever conducted, and so I was apprehensive. The nature ofthe material, which concerned cor- porate profits and therefore was controversial, had never been considered in detail in any med- ical school as far as I know. It was the hey-day of student con- cern about, social issues, al- though l might not have been as aware of this as you. - W. Richard Burack 58 'MYR .li Allen F. Meye x KV AM, NT 4.-2gaf, if,! X! MEp1cALJm5T . the ..g:.z L-Q-.A A 'I M A L1 ww' em 'f. .fi -Jw fu ch IIT X4 R bk John H. Knowles ?Ef1o ...J F l Rxik 59 .1 m- ,I 132 .f 4., Iii'-5 h ., 0 'f A! N ' U ,luv '54s-,L '- .. , L ','.,j,k N' N we I rf , ' P Robert S. Klein H10 ' u- cv , ' js Q ., . 'Q 1- 5.-.'?7',Qf 5 -R v Mark L, Rosenberg 60 I' 009' X' 'QW sf' 4319? ..'1 '- . 131 J X SM K6 - - sa B I Q, 'A its Q kg X51-1 1- qt -. A -U4 ' Fil lf we were meant to alleviate suffering, then we couldn't watch drug companies gouging sick people, or Nathan Pusey beating up undergraduates, or Lyndon murdering Vietnamese without doing something. Somehow we were expected to remain silent and not confront those leaders who in one de- gree or another destroy the lives we were training to save. But silence implies consent. 62 As we see the pain in one dying patient, we should know better than to forget the pain that has crossed the faces of millions of Vietnamese and half a million Gl's during our short years of training. As we save one sick patient, we must not delude ourselves into thinking that we have fulfilled our quota of good, that we have discharged our duty to those who die out of our Sight- -David Spiegel i l tbrti lham A medical school is not primari- ly an instrument for action, al- thought it can and should pro- mote integration between schol- arship and action by encourag- ing the translation of knowledge to socially useful purposes. Nonetheless, its primary mis- sion remains immutableg it is the only institution available to soci- ety which is equipped to ad- vance and transmit learning. All other activities are secondary. The medical school, or the uni- versity of which it is a part, is not competent to manage oper- ating agencies or to correct sin- gle-handedly all of the ills ot an imperfect society. lt is not hier- archical or authoritariang its fun- damental goals are intellectual rather than practical. lt can, however, catalyze change, de- sign innovate structures, evalu- ate the results, and impart the knowledge and skills that others will use to form social policy and uncover rational solutions. - John O. Norman , I , ' 1.4 J I n Barry R. Fernbach Bruce R. Leslie Pseudemys scripta elegans A ' ' 1 I e A le ,1 t , ?lf I s Q -. 4 ' ' - W , ' ' I X. , x ' I ee. ge n 1 W 'Ar ILNYL if ' -s7'fw . ua 2' I! Chnstlan Raetz -J' Q John M Christiansen David M Bear 5 4 5 ' J K 'Q ' ' ' - 1 Y 5-- '4 ' X - gi f - 5 5 4, . 1 n X 'f x 1 ,- . ,Y I I, , . 2: ' - v I b I, 5' Y - ' 1 x TH r . ,IZ ' Q- -, ' .Q f 125 L 4 . X if M : A 1 . ,,, -x. NX ny ,ff - X n n - N . 5 s , 'X . A I V -. X I , x ' , , . , h ', x dk, ,T ' I ' ' , lx- ' ' L.- 65 Virtually everything important to disease seems cloaked in va- pours and humours. Dealing with these miasmas of misinfor- mation and sheer ignorance vvas supposed to define the art of the physician, as contrasted vvith the Cless impressivej ,,f f -S t-4 Wx Dennis M. C. Landis Stuart H. Orkin science ot the biologist. But lives are too important to con- slgn to a vague art. Perhaps, if one looks closely and imagina- tively, solutions exist for much of human disease. Some of us will spend lives looking as our capacities permit. I suppose . W V William M. Kettyle vve'll have to resign ourselves to the sad reality that amassing re- search skills almost inevitably leads to compromise of overall clinical competence. - Dennis M. D. Landis Howard L. Bleich M is 11-kj. ku -5 SAS, hir Kenneth R. Dardick Oliver B. Cooperman Norman K. Hollenberg Gordon J. Strewler, Jr. Wh- ' , -wg. , Ifvfvi MM M . at . 1 Y -J .X , ' . 'x 6 . XXV John N. Weinstein 9 W 55- t , A Vvnllxam T. Wlckner Y x N L. I V. A. S. 5 1 74. '-.I I xrp ' I 1 ,An A t Q 7. VX. Does information alone consti- tute an education? I think not. Of infinitely greater importance to all aspects of the student's life is the degree to which he has developed his intellectual powersg how clearly does he thinkg how well does he per- ceive the critical datag how discriminating are his infer- encesg how broadly does he make meaningful associationsg how imaginative yet disciplined are his judgements' While there are many ways to accomplish this goal, no aspect of education that I know of de- velops intellectual powers so well as rigorous and original re- search. lt requires the student to perceive and to limit his at- tention to principlesg to assem- ble data with method and orderg to draw inferences wholly con- sonant with the critical datag and to' express considered judgements with balance and precision. No other experience makes it quite so clear to the student that the answers are wholly dependent upon the ob- servations, and no other exer- cise carries the students to greater intellectual depth - Joseph Gardella ,y sf I The class of 1971 found itself straddling old and new and suf- fering from a peculiar form of schizophrenia compounded of concern that it was being cheat- ed of a new experience, relief that it was not being exposed to an untried and experimental program, annoyance that the first year class would be step- ping on its heels, and fear that a 70 ,gi XX N I e'-55.1.1 I ' 1 ' 'I - preoccupied faculty were dis- posing of their obligations to it in desultory fashion while di- recting most of their construc- tive efforts into the new pro- gram, The faculty effort invested in both classes was prodigious, for all were determined that quality should not suffer as a re- sult of the increased pressure. The degree of our success must, in the 'last analysis, be judged by those who took the coursesg some of you may for- get, or perhaps have already forgotten, the problems of the flood-tide year of 1969 but I doubt that any of those who had to teach at this time ever will. - David G. Freiman .A- ununih -unn'GT,i 'i I H IJ I W3 3 A 1 wisiiii F' u'ni'T 332 me Qu HBH H5191 ala-I3 nliiaiili -- ilu- .. 3 ,- 5: -lllr1Il -n-ll Y!! L1 ur V'-rlin 1 up it ny l T gm 14? lg! -RUE IIEU R E IAP METALS ' ETC.4f ' E 'FLT' ., 1 ,Ax .- ,..:,.. yu . H TI. ...:.L' ,F E, ., ..... .,-1 ig215'f f ltr: L1 '13, 1 is 1 11.51. ,y L?1'Q,,' 1 A j . 5 -D 3 419A 1 . 11 V1 ff X .,- Y , Q J. .. y: ,- 154: E 1 'HE Eg ' x x 11 171 ,ix u , , 5, ,jr X ,f X ,jk ,kk -sz:-,P ,M M 5 Q f l 5 -' '-W ' f'i'lW:f:tf'l ji, grznlylgry ,Q -: if 1:5 :gi 1 ' ,-QW,-q:r,,4't' ,' i' H ,. - f 'al'H'+,'fc'U,f'?,,-- Q , rt ,I i gm Lrfgtwifgrrf- , ff-'Fl'- . ly rt- Y. gf at ,'.i.:,l' '-qj'. l: .-. lf.. -.jail - 1' -A ,15-..r:f,.i 5 ..g... .3751 tv ,jfs- 'Al A . 1:'lV'- ml wr .il- gift -C' 1' ' ' '?3'P9fl-1IiIi-1's3'-,-ivf.,l'1: P i ,g , . v . ' L 'AL .1....ii My anxiety was personalg my crisis one of identity. Other stu- dents were cutting their hair, shaving their beards. l-lad the time come to take oft my knife? My heavy steel rigging knife with blade and marlinspike had hung at my hip for six yearsg it helped to carry the air of sum- mer sailing through the dark, Cold, sooty Boston winters - besides which it opened beer cans, sharpened pencils, loos- ened knots and did any number of other odd and handy things. My First Patient was Elmer Davisg he was 61 and had lym- phedema of the left leg. He was depressed - either because of his cancer or because I was to be the fourth HMS to ask him all those damnfool questions. I told him I was Dr. Crofoot and he asked me where I sailed. Be- trayed by the rigging knife. Elmer Davis was from French- boro on Outer Long Islandg his accent was purest Maine and he had Iobstered all the vvaters where I had sailed. I lost my breathless stuttering nervous- ness. He never asked me what my knife was for or why I wore it. He knevv. He talked ani- matedly and answered all the damnfool questions as if for the first time. - David Crofoot 'QSK3-ir' ini X .AQ ' K -4: ,. 'iiy ' st ,fan V, I . Lance E. Olson ssl -1.-. ,-1, L Robert E. Naylor 'Crum X 'X ' X , . ' -.5 'x o 8: -15 I. V: ,.l, Z . + -S: ' gNFT:.,54q, . ..: Xxx- A .SQ-4' 44 ff ' . 3:12 6 N . 1 s o If X , xg 4 , K V Q 0 , ru Q ., A P . , 4. r ,, . 'a l wwf .. '. ,X '- - e ff we , I H Lib John C Finke if J ' W 43' X '- , , W j3 ,'fg1fj 4 ' N .Q:t, 5 5 91,19 M'-:ww U -1- -' Q: 'AN + x ,. nil r,,,,...- David E. Kern Focus on a different moment, one time when mister and doctor cease merely to be prefixes to a family name, on a time when doctor drops its quotation marks, on the time when doctor means Doctor. This time coincides roughly with transition courses that bridge the pre-clinical and the clinical years. Those courses develop and shape most of the attitudes with which students complete their medical school training. Such courses should be taught with extreme care and precision -Q 3-3 ., A E B ' 2 .f...'-.rw lm:-leaf PHE 5 I . - 1'-A Q 1 . ,. It g , ,z. fy ', A '-swf 'V lt's easy to agree that you see a flame hemorrhage vvhen, in point of fact, all you are seeing is the reflection of your own eye through a nevv, expensive op- thalmoscope vvhich you cannot yet use properly. lt's expedient to agree to hear a murmur when you're fourth in a long line and get ten or fifteen sec- onds to listen to a difficult heart. lt's almost impossible to avoid ever making a comment thatvvill worry a patient unnecessarily. - Howard Corning f 1 A1 ir , , F': -1. 4-xjl i s ,v it X -:lf A 4 7-CMH 17:7 ' K Q W - ,,.,- .-L . Pl , . 41'f:.m if 4505 I E David G. Nathan A -I I- 9 ' 4 ,N L, I -SE 3 14 1 W. Gerald Austen Edgaf L. Milford P NS. Alexander S. Nadas ,Aff-gout' 411 .J ? I Paul R. Reich G- QQ! xx l xii yay Dr. Hopkins, what was the stu- dents' diagnosis? - Benjamin Casfleman Jeremiah G. Tilles A nv- - A. i y Pamela A. Trueheart 83 ' N Howard S. Frazier Q' P L li Sanford Ullman l NX Q -' qi . --xr . -- 1 at ' ---7 r F ,W , 84 2 Q-3 jf The amount of factual informa- tion and memorizing pressed upon our students has been de- creased vvith the realization that present students will be at the peak of their careers in the year 2000 when many of today's facts will be superceded by newer, more relevant knowl- edge. - Alexander Leaf X , .'l fy, , ,.,-ax William M. Clark Thx P, pf James H. Jandi .ty lg? 2352:-4? 'ik lg I Za N., l'-6' Carola von Kapff William Fl. Compton ff., g : .Sgr ' I! Henry A. Oster 85 JJ,-gf? 1 4 C, 9. David T. Horio Richard H. Tew 1f ' 11:55 46' Anthony P, Monaco x sl! --Nadi Clinical Medicine isn't formally taught at l-larvard, although the clinical faculty approaches tvvo thousand. The general attitude of most faculty members varies from benign neglect to annoyed indifference. However some senior prima donnas do enjoy the oohs and aahs of stu- dents, and devote at least 45 to 120 minutes per vveek to this form of group masturbation. When l began my major clinical rotations, I vvas not formally given a role: I vvas more or less released upon the vvards and told to be aggressive vvith pa- tients. It was tvvo vveeks before I was reasonably sure that they did not vvant me to beat up pa- tients. Fortunately, the interns vvere kind enoughtotell me that lvvas supposed to do work- ups. After a year and a half l have discovered that vvorkups consist in the follovving: In lvledi- cine, you must sit dovvn with the patient and find out if he had any difficulty breathing, chest pain, or shortness of breath, and when he had rheumatic fever. Next ascertain vvhen -he had TB., l-listoplasmosis, and Brucellosis. End the history by questioning him about the health of his parakeet, the date of his last trip to the San Joa- quin Valley, and whether he could possibly be missing any rare enzymes. During the physi- cal examination you must care- fully examine the neck veins, the carotid arteries, the heart and the thyroid. Enlarged lymph nodes, liver, and spleen make interesting topics for discussion and should be zealously sought after. The workup should also include at least two x-rays fone must be of the chestj, ten serum chemistries, routine urine analysis, CBC and an EKG which at least shows non- specific S-T changes. The prop- er Harvard workup must be a minimum of eight pages, in- clude relevant drawings, be ap- propriately underlined with col- ored ink and contain a discus- sion which makes reference to one review article fpreferable from the green journal J, and one specialty article from the relevant literature. M--fr The surgical workup is much more direct. The history con- sists of simply demanding the patient tell you what is wrong with him. If he spends more than two sentences doing this, all further verbal communica- tion is ignored. The physical must include a careful examina- tion ofthe abdomen for surgical conditions. The inguinal region is examined for hernias, and the breasts of all attractive females under the age of 35 are careful- ly palpated for masses. A surgi- cal workup is grossly incom- plete unless the examiner has stuck his finger in the patient's rectum. lt is considered unman- ly for a medical student not to do so. lt is not nearly so impor- tant to be able to describe the normal or abnormal anatomy of what your finger encountered as it is to be able to say aggres- sively to your resident that you stuck your finger in Mr. So and So's rectum. Gall bladder, upper G I, barium enema, sigmoidos- copy and enzymes shoud be gotten in search of operable disease. The write up must in- clude a discussion of what you think you could take out of lVlr. So and So it given a chanceg and, assuming it takes at least twelve hours post-op to transfer a surgical failure to the medical service, what the operative mor- tality would be. Donald S. Burke After I learned about workups my clinical education was fur- ther enhanced by learning about rounds ln medicine, rounds were essentially the only time that formal teaching oc- curred. During the major variant of medical rounds, visit rounds, the house staff and students sat around one theo- retically knowledgeable physi- cian who would approach every patient through his own particu- lar specialty. Thus, if he special- ized inthe inner ear, myocardial infarction was discussed with respect to its effect on vestibu- lar and auditory function. Dur- ing rounds it is the student's job to be enthusiastic but ignorant so that the visit may have an appropriate straight man to dis- play his highly technical, albeit somewhat limited, knowledge. A student should know all the factual data pertaining to the case, and be well versed in all the rare and unlikely causes for the patient's pathology. Simplic- ity and common sense would scarcely occupy two hours four times a week. Finally, total igno- rance must never be admitted, and may be disguised by rev- erently mumbling certain key phrases such as, cyclic AMP, inappropriate ADH secretion and anion gap. - David A. Lowe ,M I qi- . I Donald J, Gloizer ug .-I-UA' IHQL! ww Richard J. Carmel .f 1 , r ri f .V fa' ' 2 x ' ' .4 wifi-2 ,,,',u f' qrsir .. if fnidifvy ' - C' -wr A' ' .Law ' ' - V -'fm fy' ww ' 'X ' ' fLf,, iwJ:r' Xwrf' if R W X' ifyw Wu ff fl 1m hir! X ,,AA A-- A ,fr .Ar -. r pffwu f Carl F. Nathan ,f .9 1 r ,iw A P, , , : .- ' xx Robert C. Bast fqx Richard E. Thorner Emanuel S. Hellman lx i l ll rl .,' ill- 4. ,..Q -Y 1 'e 'F H J A -x Yi -1, I 90 F 1-- 4. Perry J. Culver Richard H. Tyler . X' l f 9 I 1- . X wb rr- ,VI F' hu I ill fl X, , ga, i, -s-,., w-S S'-.A lg ' .If-? ' -J f W ff-1 ti' ,Z litj seems clear, that the dentist of the future will need more experience in clinical medicine and a number of its sub-specialties it he is to reach his full potential as a member of the health team. With the real prospect that much of the rou- tine technical procedures ot dentistry will soon be assigned to teams ot new types ot ancil- lary personnel under his super- vision, the dentist's skills and knowledge will be concentrated on diagnosis, treatment plan- ning, patient management and those procedures requiring sur- gery of hard and soft tissues. l-low much clinical medicine can be built into the dental stu- dent's core curriculum will depend in part on how much time is spent in the basic science core . . . Two years ago, the School of Dental Medicine managed to break out of this fixed pattern lot the traditional dental curricu- lumj by cutting into the summer vacation period between the third and fourth years. Instead of following the traditional sys- tem of two nine-month clinical years spent almost entirely with- in the School Dental Clinic, we extended the third year to elev- en months, making it the Princi- pal Clinical Year, during which time the fundamentals of clini- cal dentistry were to be taught. The fourth year was divided into two semesters, the first being devoted to hospital rotating dental externships and the sec- ond to elective time. By this one step, several new components were introduced into the dental student's education. First of all, having him take his advanced clinical dentistry in hospitals, neighborhood health centers and other l-larvard-affiliated health clinics, he was provided with the opportunity to break out of his isolated booth and to learn how to function as a member of , the total health team. Secondly, by opening up elective time, he now has the opportunity to explore his own interests in greater depth and escape the look-step ' pattern. - Paul Goldhaber +5Ff,f ' Y 'S f -diff ,N-W.-g,g.f+gg,s,-1 fri if S l I l f-D51 Q' ...Q af,',,.,-tg ' .. - . 99 ,599-gf' . J-'P 1 , 'l vf ?ly IA..-. 'vhx ' .w-awww ' V .' . .. . WV' QSM' .5-f .Q at qui. x ' to . I 1 '4 Wa,,.,.. G ti- 'Ut A ix. . vi'- .xwH ' ,wr-N1 i '-. John J. Lipnicki l fu ,Nww I Harry C. Schwartz 1 r JBFTIGS M. Van Leeuwen Paul Goldhaber James E. Mulvihill Robert L. Bahr 92 A ln. Frank Raymondi A- 'Q George E. Thompson ., . Joseph L. Brackman My iv W -.n Harold Velleman J 'L ,- .5 w A, Edward J. Wing Mark R. Goldman 93 I had the unique experience of being able to study medicine yet not be a medical student. I vvas able to observe and as- similate vvhile retaining the op- tion of decision. It was during this period that I determined the direction of my life's career. I vvas dravvn to medicine . . . - Anthony F. Posteraro iifr J John W. Shepard Jr. 1. Robert J. Thomas I , E V - Jr. I If ...-11 ,it I iff, , ..,, Y , , 11' ' -171.-, -.' 7 ,, 1 W.. I i B -'- - - ' ' I Jeremy N. Ruskin Thomas J. Schnitzer Edward H Kass x V , l V I 11 fi Frank J Richard A. Bloomfield Richard J. Hode ul H' 41 lrkcl: r W. Steves Ring 3 X Herbert N. Brown L 'X IL -I ...Q-.Li P? or - , +32 John M. T. Citron M i X 1 1 .XX TU Ti i 'Til ll 1: A-, 9-ee P4 8' I ii The clinical education ot medical students has become more and more fragmented. The complaint levied against the basic sci- ences, of teaching their subject, as it each medical student was to become a bioche- mist or molecular biologist, is applicable to the clinical sciences as well, The develop- ment ot a core curriculm in the preclini- cal sciences has mitigated the problem somewhat, but clinical specialties teach their material with disregard and almost contempt ot the other clinical specialties. This occurs without regard forthe fact that many students have no intention of be- coming a specialist in that particular specialty. The complaint that physicians play a major role in the fragmentation ot care is partly a result of the failure to teach in an atmosphere where the whole pa- tient is considered. The education of a medical student re- quires the provision ot settings and role models, during the learning experience, which provide value and respect tor the practice of medicine and the care ot pa- tlents. At some time in his training a medical stu- dent should be exposed to a clinical expe- rience with involvement in the care ot the total patient not just the particular organ or disease of the specialty he is currently as- signed to study. - Robert J. Weiss H. Eugene Lindsey, Jr. .1 ' gn.. Albert E. Bothe, Jr. Richard J. Reisman 98 .I f' ,. -l Stephen F. Sullivan Raymond A. Kempf Q is WI'! 'K 17i ES 'iw 5 is If ff' Roger A. Rosenblatt Joel J. Alpert ---1. ,1:u,A,m'..:.'- .- , v xr r we K- Horace O. Fielder William G. Wilkoff J KX Peter C. Kenny, Ill 99 . A! lg . I ' 1 V i Sidney H. Ingbar 100 N ,J Daniel D. Federman When I applied to the Medical School, I noted in my personal statement that the one compro- mise I would demand of my pro- fession vvould be that it allow me enough time with my family. I knevv the compromise vvould be a hard bargain, but I did not knovv hovv hard. Though I have felt richly privileged to be a medical student, I have felt a grovving disappointment in the lack of time for family life. Ivly disappointment has not di- minished my commitment, but it has been sobering. I know that James B. Young somehovv a compromise will be struck and I will engineer time for the joys of raising a family. Yet even novv I live with the con- cern that setting aside time for my family could lead to an unin- tentional lack of care for a pa- tient. l have learned the pa- tient's trust and the physicians responsibility are stronger bonds than I imagined four years ago, and that the neces- sary compromises are more dif- ficult and uncertain. - Ernest K. Manders .X dx If Z Audrey Noreen Koller 'x 1 I H George B. Feldman S an n 'x . - v' Q 'If-' -9 E Q agnos- I C A, -1 x X NX x, -fl X ,f-N, 3-B s f'1-. . ,fmzzocx X .f , 'gm X ,N X ., X x I gl w - i ' ' X -wi .BN Y ,. X f1!Yff'fffi 4 --U ....,..... av.. j l 3,.'.'L '3i'fi'! HP- Ll M' l Lgnfiqzf wr, V 1 -'A ' , '. . ,-xx J David R. Brown John J. Mantos rv fy I 5 na- - 1 f 3 Q Q,-' f I.. gl ff' -. , sl N ,A M, U-ir! . A '81 ..i 1' A 4'- Jeffrey A. Partnow 103 Medicine, its preparation and practice in 1971, is not a te- male-oriented career. For this reason the vvife-medical student combination represents a curi- ous hybrid in the minds of many. This curiosity stems from the possible conflict of interests which many assume is unique in this dual role. Perhaps this assumption vvar- rants re-examination ot what is required. One essential is a hus- band vvho not only supports but also encourages both careers. Equally important is flexibility in I t Jordan A. Sen nett both partners, and the insight which it requires. Finally, all roles - wife, husband, parent, physician - must be kept in perspective, evaluated and re- evaluated against the Golden Mean desired. Clearly these essentials are not unique to the vvite-medical stu- dent couple. Indeed, this non- uniqueness allows the original question to be re-stated: A hus- band and a medical student, hovv can you be both? - Cynthia N. Kettyle .,q , .NX y 4 '- 1 f -+4-.fi :1 Ji f- A ll, or l 1 i R X by ' N Q -'- NT'-N s . 5 x L st Deanna Girshon Ricks-r Barbara A. D. Gilchrest YN QU'-X i 'tb- Q-..,0 L li. Georgia L. Newman Leroy D. Vandam xg! Q Leonard E. Freedburg 105 I0 I' in Bruce W. Lytie g , I 2,1 X. John C. Nelson Stephen M. Krane 6 .Al L. John Clarke 'y H'1u' nv rv,- Richard A. Cooper Marshall D. Sklar Paul B. Serrell A Letitia P. Pierce A -f 4ii7,-ni - M.-if 4-'ffl -Nlvlwn. Li X, 7 John W. ten Broeke 'Wu 108 Peter B. Dean Jane E. Fossum Zia Too much of the teaching in our medical schools is a frantic effort to pour into the student the largest possible number of facts and observations. Teach- ing ought to be conceived as guidance toward knowledge and tovvard the excitement of discovery. l see absolutely no reason why learning should not be fun most ofthe time, and an experience in which the student can discover for himself some ot the things we knovv he must learn, - Lucy Frank Squire .,, ,u E . ,fx -fm. DJ- Eugene J. McDonald, Jr. ,..5rX ,-jj V -an Raymond D. Adams gg. C -ul V W, Jonathan S. Jacobs S -Q lui Paul C. Janicki 0 Peter M. Patricelli .-gi-1-1-vi vang v--1--Q-.1-nu-p U, - O0 Q-i'd Ti'x ' -lu I X . w A Allen M. Spiegei Fi. Waid She V-X N lton, Jr. f ,LMW1 XXXX x5Nx H W Robert P. Allen nn' I' W. Gittinger, Jr. 111 F. Edward Gallagher Q1 gf F x Q 7 PW -ms .IQ It .x-. 3' Jyqgfffl. 1 ..,.U Z A , .,:,z::.1',: fi 'Q -.,a.-ag , i '. F my s--F ' .mq rw 'Q l 1 H' G 'I i i F' 5 fl 'E ll um ' I4 W K ? , I rl i .4 f J I I., 'l2,, ,f F, I 'Jn :WEB , ' ' '14 . Vi t. s N msg, STI, 3 I . 59 Y' f. li 1 , V f its V7 1 HE 5 if 1 .fr 3 x l . l lx l l , 5 ligghgg Ui, I Lawrence J. Eron Questions and not answers be- come the primary concern of six seniors who volunteered to teach Physical Diagnosis at the MGH to second-year students . . . The satisfaction of putting accumulated clinical knowledge to good use at last, we almost vengefully delighted in having someone else reason out an an- swer ''pathophysiologicallyf' and of course we wondered at what an amazing difference two years can make. - Edward VV Bough 1' 17' , V' lar I i. .maqggz w 'js' -lg: jf ' 'U-ff ' E f? I Robert A. Baker lbw' Raymond E. Siatkowski H4 Herman A. Godwin, Jr. l ..- Paul D. Walter ls! -2 i v . giw Ea i William V. McDermott James M Veazey Jr Wllllam Bunch Thomas P. Goss Philip J. Snodgrass lf, :'r . : lu 5. I lj- ll' ill! l .!' lg li l lu- - -l .r., 7 AW If l 1, H 'fs H n argl W .. X l Y ,4 eu J 1 I '53 'S 1 4 lid 11' Ella l ! ,. . I V c-+P: A, . .. ' -, Y 'illlf' Qlik H +g1ll'g4.l,1Fi:Ql 1 L:.. ,Q M '19 , I l KX I , -.Q V-, 1 i, F N +1 1 1 ,- l,,,,,fIl., l A. WW ll '1 Elliot V. Feldbau 116 Phillip E. Compeau wg , gmail! ' 'L.- :ng Frank B. Pease, Jr. Robert A, Wise Robert A. Guyton in -v EZAJ ff' YPQ My M -.4 A. TIWOFTISS lndresano Roman W. DeSanctis ll 7 L 4 , v, .I ,x 5 ' iil L rs.-fi ' . pf ' ?f ' G' .J -Gly! f lf' i, -. - -A -- . . i 'T L-sf-tag., ': Q wi' ' A 'jgf-L' '-,S-fi 11- f. s gl F 4. .v- I' :fl P:-s l 4 aif:faf- :ha-f1'fe1?3 lt is clear that the formerly unas- sailable position of a physician with regard to his practice of medicine is under assault from all sides. Litigation against phy- sicians is commonplace - some say because no other ef- fective methodologies have been developed for setting stan- dards, monitoring and control. Proposed legislation currently before Congress threatens gov- ernmental monitoring, in some instances without peer review. The analogy has been offered of the physician and the com- mercial airline pilot since both constantly take lives in their hands. ls the competence of the physician to be reviewed at reg- ular intervals as in the case of the airline pilot? l-low shall the medical profession cope with this quandry? ls the current pro- liferation of post-graduate courses sufficient or must there be more formalized renewal residencies? Innovative meas- ures and imaginative approach- es must be developed by us to enable the physicians who de- liver the care to maintain their keen capabilities in the face of burgeoning new information. Surely - the best approaches should be supplied by usg if we are tardy, others might provide less useful and perhaps more uncomfortable alternatives. - Vwlliam Silen fi' We were married right before his third year and I never could even ask him it he liked the vvay the furniture vvas arranged. It'iI be so nice when I dontt have to read him his mail over the phone. You soon learn to value the quality, not the quantity of time together. I hated being hit with that little hammer. Has he tried a Babinski on you? His dreams were nightmares for us both. One night he sat up in bed and screamed at me for rip- ping out my I.V.'s. His psychiatric rotation was awful. l-le'd come home and an- alyze me - VVhy did you say that? Yes, and suddenly you've ceased to be a vvife and be- come an object- with emotion- al problems. W 121 Sometimes l'd' leave him Wednesday morning and he vvouldn't show up 'til Friday night - lid attack him at the door. . . . and he talls from fatigue. . . . or says - 'Don't touch me. l haven't washed yet. Every- thing on me is pathological' 122 Ji' We're in limbo like everyone else until March 29th. We don't know Where vve'lI be - West coast, East coast or some- vvhere in betvveen. l-le was offered a nice position in oral surgery. The money was great. We had to decide if vve vvould struggle or take the offerg we decided that vve're young novv and it's nice to struggle. Susan Bahr Pat Cassimatis Alice Fuller Janet Goodson Dale Jacobs Judy Kempf Story Landis Ann Lindsey Sandra Manders Nancy McDonald Karen Nierenberg Roberta Schwartz Peggy Stamm Marcia Sullivan Mary ten Broeke Juliet Weinstein VVe've both decided to encour- age our daughter not to marry a doctor. I23 Rochester, Seattle San Francisco, Los Angeles, Denver, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Cleveland, i' Raleigh-Durham Richmond, Philadelphia, 2 New York, New l-laven, . . . l John R. Whitten Alan Fl. Glass xx xxx XFX S XX, jg-. 115- -. . ' Q X XX 'x Aj - f-Q 3 , ,QF 4, ,, ,, xi. l. 125 Larry and Susan Martel Xf'-I 'rr Q' x 6 - ' f'v1 ? .'T, ,nr -:V up, , , :Q ,J '-f 1,47 QL.- H guru ,,, -- . 5 Fr -. V,,x w NF. 4 n :.'L'w.., V : J r 7. ,L J in ,-3:3-' . P.. 17' ffiafafai-1: ....:, Q - 1' ...,A - .lv I 4. 7 r .1 2, .V Y'-5:,Zo'2 331- z f'.l'yg'ZL..- -.. v' ,zz 45.13 I: LQ, L M5- -- -.-.1 Q 4 - 's x ,, J' f, 1 . -' '4 - 1 f mx - Z: '. - J, 9. w we f. -. mf! -L, 1 W 2 7 A. TRAVIS ABBOTT, Asheville, N.C. CUniv. of North CarolinaD: Children's Orthopedic, Seattle CPD C. TIMOTHY ABLETT, Los Altos, Calif. CGrinnellD: Univ. of Michigan Affiliated, Ann Arbor CMD WILLIAM P. ADAMS, New Wilmington, Pa. CDartmouthD: Massachusetts General, Boston CSD THOMAS W. ALBERT, Beverly, Mass. CUniv. of MassachusettsD: Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston CClinical FeIlowD JUDITH L. ALEXANDER, New York, N.Y. CRadclifleD: Denver, Generaf, Denver CRD ROBERT P. ALLEN, Armonk, N,Y. CAlleghenyD: Los Angeles County Harbor General, Los Angeles CMD ROBERT L. BAHR, Manhasset, N.Y. CWilliamsD: Mount Sinai, New York CMD JOHN T. BAKER, Athens, Pa. CDartmouthD: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham CMD ROBERT A. BAKER, Cleveland, Ohio CDarmouthD: Cleveland Metropolitan General, Cleveland CMD PETER M. BANKS, Quincy, Mass. CWiIliamsD: North Carolina Memorial, Chapel Hill CMD ROBERT C. BAST, Arlington, VA. CWesIeyan Univ.D: Johns Hopkins, Baltimore CMD ALEX J. BAUMER, Auburne, Maine CTuftsD DAVID M. BEAR, Akron, Ohio CHarvardD: Department of Neurology, Boston City, Boston City CDepartment of NeurologyD, Boston CResearchD ROBERT W. BEART, JR., Park Ridge, lil. CPrincetonD: Univ. of Colorado Affiliated, Denver CSD FRANK G. BERSON, Chelsea, Mass. CYaleD: Beth Israel, Boston CSD J. ANDREW BILLINGS, Los Angeles, Calif. CAmherstD: Harvard Medical, leave of absence ANDREW S. BINDER, Teaneck, N.J. CWilliamsD: Univ. of Washington Affiliated, Seattle CMD JOHN H. BOEY, Brooklyn, N.Y. CPrincetonD: Univ. of California, San Francisco CSD WILLIAM P. BOGER, lllg Wayne, Pa. CAmherstD: Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville CRD ALBERT E. BOTHE, JR., Reading, Mass. CJohns HopkinsD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CSD EDWARD W. BOUGH, Chicago, Ill. CLoyola Univ.D: Massachusetts General, Boston CMD JOSEPH L. BRACKMAN, Newton Centre, Mass. CHarvardD: Boston Univ. Grad. School of Dentistry, Boston COrthodonticsD LAWRENCE A. BROCKMAN, Quincy, Mass. CUniv. of MassachusettsD DAVID R. BROWN, McLean, Va. CGrinnelID: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham CPD HERBERT N. BROWN, Arlington, Va. CDartmouthD: Cambridge, Cambridge CRD WILLIAM M. BUNCH, Superior, Ariz. CUniv. of ArizonaD JOHN W. BURCH, Framingham, Mass. CUniv. of MichiganD: Barnes, St. Louis CMD DONALD S. BURKE, Novelty, Ohio CWestern ReserveD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CMD PAUL R. BURNETT, Wakefield, Mass. CUniv. of New HampshireD: Harvard School ol Dental Medicine, Class of 1972 RICHARD J. CARMEL, Los Angeles, Calif. CUniv. of California, BerkeleyD: Univ. Hosp. of San Diego County, San Diego CMD EMMANUEL G. CASSIMATIS, Athens, Greece CUniv. of ChicagoD: Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven CPD ROBERT S. CHAPMAN, Darien, Conn. CHarvardD VALERIE E. CHARLTON, Bronx, N.Y. CRadcliffeD: Chiloren's Hosp. Medical Center, Boston CPD J. SAMUEL CHASE, Waban, Mass. CHarvardD: Mount Zion, San Francisco CMD JOHN M. CHRISTIANSENL Salt Lake City, Utah CI-larvardD: Univ. ol Utah Affiliated, Salt Lake City CMD JOHN M. T. CITRON, North Miami, Fla. CWilliamsD: Kaiser Foundation, San Francisco CRD WILLIAM M. CLARKg Charlotte, N.C. CDavidsonD: Univ. of Colorado Affiliated, Denver CSD L. JOHN CLARK, Buffalo, N.Y. CHarvardD: Univ. of Washington Affiliated, Seattle CMD PHILLIP E. C. COMPEAU, Rochester, N.Y. CUniv. of RocheslerD:' Buffalo General-E.J. Meyer Memorial, Buffalo CMD WILLIAM R. COMPTON, Auburn, Ala. CUtah StateD: Univ. of Utah Affiliated, Sail Lake City CMD GALE S. COOPER, White Plains, N.Y. CSmithD: Massachusetts Mental Health Center CPsyD OLIVER B. COOPERMAN, Fords, N.J. CDartmouthD: Herrick Memorial, Berkeley CRD WILLIAM R. CRAIG, Sacramento, Calif. CUniv. of OregonD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 DAVID D. CROFOOT, Omaha, Nebr. CStanfordD: Mary Hitchcock Memorial, Hanover CMD JOHN G. CURD, Golden, Colo. CPrincetonD: Massachusetts General, Boston CMD KENNETH R. DARDICK, New Haven, Conn. CDartmouthD: Cambridge, Cambridge CRD PETER B. DEAN, Cincinnati, Ohio CCornelI Univ.D: Albany Medical Center, Albany CMD MAGRUDER C. DONALDSON, Lincoln, Mass. CHarvardD: Massachusetts General, Boston CSD DAVID L. DUFFY, Port Washington, N.Y. CAmherstD: Montefiore, New York CMD PETER D. ECHEVERRIA, Providence, R.l. CHarvardD: Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven CPD LAWRENCE J. ERON, Millburn, N.J. CPrincetonD: Massachusetts General. Boston CMD ELLIOT V. FELDBAU, Swampscolt, Mass. CClark Univ.D: Public Health Service, San Francisco CR DentaID GEORGE B. FELDMAN: Union, N.J. CMassachusetts Inst. ol Tech.D: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CSD BARRY R. FERNBACH, Valley Stream, N.Y. CColgateD: Mount Sinai. New York CMD HARRIS J. FINBERG, Providence, R.I. CBrownD: Jewish Hosp. of St. Louis, St. Louis CMD HARVEY V. FINEBERG, Pittsburgh, Pa. CHarvardD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 JOHN C. FINKE, Pierre, S. Dak. CUniv. of South DakotaD: Univ. Hosp. ol Cleveland, Cleveland CMD CHARLES P. FISHER, Falls Church, Va. CHarvardD: Harvard Medical, leave of absence ROBERT S. FISHMAN, Teaneck, N.J. CTuftsD: Mount Sinai, New York CMD JANE E. FOSSUM, Fargo, N. Dak. CVassarD: Univ. Hosp. of Cleveland, Cleveland CPD LEONARD E.,FREEDBURG, Brookline, Mass. CHarvardD: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham CPD LAWRENCE E. FRISCH, Portland, Oregon CReedD: Univ. of Texas Teaching, San Antonio CMD ARLAN F. FULLER, JR., Melrose, Mass. CBowdoinD: Massachusetts General, Boston CSD F. EDWARD GALLAGHER, Worcester, Mass. CPrincetonD: ChiIdren's Hosp. Medical Center CP DentalD BARBARA A. D. GILCHREST, Rye, N.Y. CMassachusetts Inst. of Tech.D: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CMD JOHN W. GITTINGER, JR., Annandale, Va. COberlinD: Barnes, St. Louis CMD ALLAN R. GLASSg Fairfield, Conn. fHarvardI: Mount Sinai, New York fM5 MARK R. GOLDMANg Pittsburgh, Pa. QMassachusetts Inst. ot Tech.J: Massachusetts General, Boston fMj ROBIN I. GOODFELLOWp Yellow Springs, Ohio tWestern Reservejz Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CSI WILLIAM H. GOODSON, Ill, Kansas City, Mo. fUniv. of Missourijz St. Louis Children's, St. Louis CPI JAMES S. GOODWIN, Washington, D.C. fAmherstJ: Los Angeles County Harbor General, Torrance QRJ JEAN MCCLUNG GOODWIN: Lawton, Okla, fRadclitteJ THOMAS P. GOSSg Wenham, Mass. lDartmouthJ: Roosevelt, New York CSI ROBERT M. GOULD, Great Neck, N.Y. fBrownJ: Univ. Hosp. of Cleveland, Cleveland QMJ HOWARD C. GRAVESQ Salt Lake City, Utah fStanfordJ: Harvard Medical, leave of absence PETER R. GRAZEg Jamaica, N.Y. tTuttsJ: Massachusetts General, Boston CMJ JOEL S. GREENBERGERQ Pittsburgh, Pa. fColumbiaJ: Boston City fHarvard Senliceb, Boston CMJ ROBERT A. GUYTONg Jackson, Miss. fUniv. ol Mississippijz Massachusetts General, Boston KSJ JOHN D. HAMlLTONg Arlington, Va. fPrincetonj: Presbyterian-St. Luke's, Chicago CMJ JOHN F. HANSBROUGHQ Madison, Wis. fUniv. ot Wisconsiny Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 FREDERICK HASHIMOTOQ Chicago, Ili. tYaIeb: Mount Zion, San Francisco CMJ O. LEE HAYNES, JR.g Fairmont, W.Va. CWiIIiamsJ: Massachusetts General, Boston CMJ JANET K. G. HICKMANQ Mankato, Minn. tMichigan State Univ.J: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham KMD ROBERT E. HICKMAN, Benton, Ill. tUniv. ol Illinoisjz Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham IMI RICHARD J. HODESp Wantagh, N.Y. tYaIel: Massachusetts General, Boston IMD DAVID T. HORIOQ Honolulu, Hawaii CUniv. of Hawaiijz Presbyterian-St. Luke's, Chicago QMJ JOHN B. HUGHES: Haverford, Pa. fYaleI: New York Hosp. - Memorial Hosp., New York QMJ A. THOMAS INDRESANO3 Melrose, Mass. tBoston Univ.i: Vanderbilt, Nashville tOral Surgj JONATHAN S. JACOBSg Long Beach, N.Y. iUniv. oi Rochesteri: Vanderbilt, Nashville, COral Surgj PAUL C. JANICKIQ Elm Grove, Wis. QMarquetteJ: Univ. Hosp. ot Cleveland, Cleveland CSD FREDERICK L. JONES: Mt. Lebanon, Pa. fUniv. of Virginiajz Univ. ot Michigan Affiliated, Ann Arbor QSI G. THOMAS JONES: Ravenna, Ohio tHarvardJ: Univ. Hosp. of Cleveland, Cleveland QM! ELIZABETH C. KARKQ New York, N.Y. tMount Holyokejz Cleveland Metropolitan General, Cleveland LPJ RICHARD H. S. KARPlNSKlp Philadelphia, Pa. QSI. Joseph's Coll., Pennsylvaniajz Boston City fHarvard Servicej, Boston KSI ROGER B, KELLOGGQ South Pomtret, Vt. CPrincetonl: Roosevelt, New York CMJ JOHN P. W. KELLY: Milton, Mass. tBoston CoIl.J: Massachusetts General, Boston QOral Surgj RAYMOND A. KEMPF1 Utica, N.Y. tFordhamt: Cleveland Metropolitan General, Cleveland CMJ PETER C. KENNY, lllg Great Neck, N.Y. tProvidenceJ: Cleveland Metropolitan General, Cleveland QMJ DAVID E. KERNp Cincinnati, Ohio fPrincetonJ: Presbyterian-St. Luke's, Chicago QMJ CYNTHIA N, KETTYLEg Maplewood, N.J. QMI. Holyoketz North Carolina Memorial, Chapel Hill CPsyJ WILLIAM M. KETTYLEg Maplewood, N.J. tDartmouth7: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham IMI JOHN H. KISSELQ St. Louis, Mo. tGeorgetown Univ.i: Barnes, St. Louis KMJ ROBERT S. KLEIN, Jamaica, N.Y. ICoIumbiaI: Mount Sinai, New York QMJ CORNELIUS A. KOLFF, Cleveland Heights, Ohio tAlIeghenyJ: Children's Orthopedic, Seattle CPI WILLIAM J. KOOPMAN, lllg Knowle, Warwickshire, England tWashington and Jeftersonb: Hanlard Medical. Class ol 1972 DENNIS M, D. LANDISQ Portugese Bend, Calif. tHarvardJ: Univ. Hosp. of San Diego County, San Diego QMJ VLADIMIR LANGEg Flushing, N.Y. CNew York Univ.l: Harvard Medical, Class ol 1972 JOHN R. LEASE: Somerset, Pa. tYaleJ: Univ. of Michigan Aitiliated, Ann Arbor CSI DAVID J. LEBWOHLQ Ossinlng, N.Y. CYaleJ: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston QMJ BRUCE R. LESLlEg Brooklyn, N.Y. fHarvardI: Harvard Medical. Class of 1972 COLLINS E. LEWIS: North Brunswick. N.J. tlfiutgerstz Jewish Hosp. ot St. Louis, St. Louis QMJ JONATHAN D. LlEFFp Newark, N.J. tYaleJ H. EUGENE LINDSEY, JR.g Decatur, Ga. fUniv. of South Carolina: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston KMI JOHN J. LIPNICKI, Bayonne, N.J. fSt. Peter's CoII.J: Veterans Administration, Dallas CR Dentalj C. DAVID LONDON, Beverly Hills, Calif. fHarvardJ: Beth Israel, Boston CSJ DAVID A. LOWEQ Dorchester, Mass. tUniv. ol Massachusettsjz Rhode Island, Providence QRJ BRUCE T. LYMANQ New London, Conn. QBatesJ: Harvard Medical, Class ol 1972 BRUCE W. LYTLEg Fargo, N.Dak. fStaniordJ: Massachusetts General, Boston CSI WILLIAM C. MacCARTY, Illg Norwich, Vt. tDartmouIhi: Mayo Graduate School ol Medicine, Rochester QSJ ERNEST K. MANDERS3 Coos Bay, Oregon fHan1ardJ: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 JOHN J. MANTOSg Boston, Mass. QBoston Coll.J: Univ. of California, San Francisco fPathJ LARRY MARTEL: Central Falls, R.l. fBrownJ: Children's Hosp. Medical Center, Boston IPI EUGENE J. MCDONALD, JR., Washington, D.C. CHarvardi: Univ. Hosp. of Cleveland, Cleveland QMJ ALLEN F. MEYER, Plainsfield, N.J. CYaleJ: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 STEVEN P. MICKLEYQ Belmont, Mass. fBowdoinI: Barnes, St. Louis CMJ EDGAR L. MILFORD, JR.g Nanuet, N.Y. CHarvardJ: Harlem, New York KMJ ALEXANDR J. MURRAYg DeKalb, Ill. tRadclifteI: Bronx Municipal, New York QPJ CARL F. NATHAN: Pound Ridge, N.Y. fHarvardJ: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 EUGENE E. NATTIEQ Ouincy. Ma. CDartmouthJ: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CMJ ROBERT E. NAYLORQ Milton, Mass. fColl. of the Holy Crosstz Univ, Hosp. of San Diego County, San Diego QMI JOHN C. NELSON: Bronxville, N.Y. CStanfordj: Mount Sinai, New York QMJ KURT I-I. NEUMANN3 Royal Oak, Mich. tUniv. of Michiganjz San Francisco General, San Francisco QMJ GEORGIA L. NEWMANg Drexel Hill, Pa. IVassarJ: Cambridge, Cambridge CRJ 129 MICHAEL A. NIERENBERGQ Wilmington, Del. COberlinD: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CMD LANCE E. OLSON, Sturgeon Bay, Wisc, CMichigan StateD: Los Angeles County Harbor General, Torrance CRD STUART H. ORKlNg New York, N.Y. CMassachusetts Inst. of Tech.D: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 JAMES F. ORME, JR,g Salt Lake City, Utah CYaleD: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CMD HENRY A. OSTERQ Ellendate, N.Dak. CUniv. of South DakotaD: Sf. Francis, Wichita CMD ROBERTA V. A. PAGONL Rochester, N.Y. CStanfordD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 JEFFREY A. PARTNOW3 Framingham, Mass. CBrownD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CMD X PETER M. PATRICELLIQ Seattle, Wash. CHarvardD: Rhode Island, Providence CRD FRANCIS B. PEASE, JR., Windsor, Conn. CRutgersD: Massachusetts General, Boston CSD LETITIA P. PIERCEQ Baltimore, Md. CVassarD: Harvard Medical. Class of 1972 RICHARD L. POHLQ Lynbrook, N.Y. CPrincetonD: Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles CRD CHARLES W. POPPERp New York, N.Y. CPrincetonD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 CHRISTIAN R. H. RAETZQ Hamden, Conn. CYaleD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 ANTHONY F. POSTERAROg Larchmont, N.Y. CFordhamD: New York CCornell ServiceD, New York CMD HORACE O. RElDERg Rosemont, Pa. CUniv. of North CarolinaDz Medical Center Hosp. of Vermont,'Burlington CRD RICHARD J. RElSMANg Newton Centre, Mass. CUniv. of MassachusettsD: Mount Sinai, New York COral SurgD DEANNA GIRSHON RICKERQ Jersey City, N.J. CRutgersD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1973 COREY N. RlGBERGg Philadelphia, Pa. CHarvardD: North Shore.Memorial, New York CMD W. STEVES RINGQ Bernardsville, N.J. CBrownD: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham CSD RICHARD B. ROSENBAUMg Portland. Oregon Cl-lanrardD: Stanford Univ. Affiliated, Stanford CMD MARK L. ROSENBERGQ Montclair, N.J. CHarvardD: Harvard Medical, Class ol 1972 ROGER A, ROSENBLATT, Alexandria, Va. CHarvardD: Univ. of Washington Affiliated, Seattle CMD JEREMY N. RUSKlNg Rockville Centre, N.Y. CTuftsD: Beth Israel, Boston CMD THOMAS J. SCHNlTZERg Baltimore, Md. CPrinceto'nD: Johns Hopkins, Baltimore CMD HARRY C. SCHWARTZQ Brooklyn, N.Y. CBrooklyn CoIl.D: Massachusetts General. Boston COral SurgD JOEL H. SCHWARTZQ Brooklyn, N.Y. CUniv. of PennsylvaniaD: Beth Israel, Boston CMD FRANK SEINSHEIMER, lllg Cincinnati, Ohio CYaleD: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CSD JORDAN A. SENNETTg Milwaukee, Wis. CHarvardD: Univ. Hosp. of Cleveland, Cleveland CMD PAUL B. SERRELLQ Garden City, N.J. CHamiltonD: Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville CMD R. WAID SHELTON, JR.g Trussville, Ala. CHarvardD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1973 JOHN W, SHEPARD, JR.q Manhasset, N.Y. CBrownD: Univ. Hosp. of San Diego County, San Diego CMD RAYMOND E. SIATKOWSKIQ Shillington, Pa. CCornellD: Univ. of Connecticut Health Center, Hartford COrlhodonticsD JESSE L. SlGELMANg Staten island, N.Y. CHaverfordD: Roosevelt, New York CSD DANIEL J. SIGMANQ Jersey City, N.J. CUniv. of RochesterD: Boston City CHarvard SenriceD Boston CSD JAMES G. SISEQ Brookline, Mass. CHanrardD: Univ. of Utah Affiliated, Salt Lake City CMD MARSHALL D. SKLAR3 Camden, N.J. CBrownD: Jewish Hosp. of St. Louis, St. Louis CPD BRUCE M. SMITH: Louisville, Ky. CDartmouthD: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham CSD ALLEN M. SPlEGELg Brooklyn, N.Y. CColumbiaD: Massachusetts General, Boston CMD DAVID SPIEGEL: New York, N.Y. CYaleD: Massachusetts Mental Health Center, Boston CPsyD WALTER E. STAMML Portland, Oregon CStanfordD: Univ. ol Washington Affiliated, Seattle CMD ANN ROBBINS STARKg Metuchen, N.J. CMount HolyokeD: St. Louis Childrens, St. Louis CPD JAMES J. STARKQ Palisade, N.J. CYaleD: Barnes, St. Louis CMD LOLA S. STEINBAUMJ Soulhlield, Mich. CUniv. of MichiganD: Massachusetts General, Boston CMD RONALD G. STOLLER3 Flushing, N.Y. CHobartD: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CMD GORDON J. STREWLER. JR.: Duluth, Minn. CDartmouthD: Peter Bent Brigham, Boston CMD BRIAN L. STRUNKQ Coatesville, Pa. CPrincetonD: Hosp, of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia CMD STEPHEN F. SULLIVANL Middleton, Rl. CBrownD: Mount Auburn, Cambridge CMD SYLVESTER C. SVIOKLA, Illg Brockton, Mass. CHarvardD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 JOHN W. TEN BROEKEy Ridgefield, Conn. CWesleyanD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CMD RICHARD H. TEWp Richland, Wash. CUniv. of WashlngtonD: Herrick Memorial, Berkeley CRD ROBERT J. THOMAS: Ossining, N.Y. CBoston CoIl.D: Mount Sinai Medical, Class of 1972 RICHARD E. THORNER, Brooklyn, N.Y. CDartmouthD: Presbyterian, New York CMD PAMELA A. TRUEHEARTg Pittsford, N.Y. CRadcliffeD: Harvard School of Public Health, Boston CCandidate D.Sc. in NutritionD SANFORD ULLMANQ Atlantic Beach, N.Y. CBrownD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CSD JAMES M. VEAZEY, JR.g Decatur, Ga. CMassachusetts Inst. of Tech.D: Mary Hitchcock Memorial, Hanover CMD W. LANE VERLENDEN, lllg Lookout Mountain, Tenn. CUniv. of North CarolinaD: San Francisco General. San Francisco CMD C, FORD VON REYN: Boulder, Colo. CDartmouthD: Beth Israel, Boston CMD FRANK J. VORALIKQ Glendale, Calif. CColumbiaD: Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles CMD ROBERT H. WALLYN3 Homewood, lll. CColl. of the Holy CrossD: Univ. of Michigan Affiliated, Ann Arbor CMD B. TIMOTHY WALSHQ Chevy Chase, Md. CPrincetonD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 PAUL D, WALTER, Johnston, Pa. CUniv. of PiltsburghD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD. Boston CMD JOHN N. WEINSTEIN, San Francisco, Calif. CHarvardD: Stanford Univ. Affiliated, Stanford CMD SSU l. WENGQ New York, N.Y. CRadcliffeD: Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven CPD JOHN R. WHIFFENQ Madison, Wis, CUniv. of VVisconsinD3 Univ. of Michigan Affiliated, CSD Ann Arbor CSD WILLIAM T. WlCKNERg Bethesda, Md. CYaleD: Harvard Medical, Class of 1972 WILLIAM G. WILKOFFQ Pleasanfville, N.Y. CDartmouthD: Duke Univ. Medical Center, Durham CPD EDWARD J. WlNGg Port Washington, N.Y. CWilliamsD: Peter Bent Brigham. Boston CMD ROBERT A. WISE, Washington, D.C. CDartmouthD: Univ. ol Michigan Affiliated, Ann Arbor CMD JAMES B. YOUNG3 Tarentum, Pa. CColl. of WoosterD: Boston City CHarvard ServiceD, Boston CSD ce, I O11 IVE ri' ld. If . . . al' 3 1 T i Q? ' i :f From An Account of the Fox- glove by William Withering MD. BLUE-CHIP PLUS 90-DAY NOTICE ACCOUNT yo'3.S'.?.'3Ee todayooo y .. and tm-guaramee to pay you l Q not less than 5'M,O'f'5 s'?f vif interest thru December 3I, I980! Camhiidgejvlingtun, Belmunt. lexing!on.Cnncon1, litlletnn. 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Our faciliiies are scienIificaIIy designed Io eliminafe any possibiiiiy of cross-con- Iaminaiion beiween clean and soiled diapers. Ex- ciusive germproofing and fhe sfricf siandards of naiional Iaborafory coniroi assure compleie hy- gienic profecfion. For complefe informaiion on Special Services avaii- abie To Docfors, call or wri're our Medical Service Deparfmenf. LOngwood 6-7070 20 Websier S+reeI', Brookline CIRCLE RESTAURANT NOW SERVING DELICIOUS SUBMARINE SANDWICHES TAKE-OUT ORDERS Tel. 566-9486 or 566-8397 737 Hun+ingI'on Avenue Iai' Brigham CircIeI ,,.f! Q ,1 1 7 1 !?f.' Y ' ' z Q.xf:',3r-'f- f 4 Y X .- 31 , fl, if ,fu . -1: ..,'- 'Q '-r ,. .. zu J. - A- fw- r ---f M, f E 2 - , . wx, , 5 .r M. - .,--. 1 5. f 1. v IE: 3 --. Atv x af-612' .P P S :ix For II1e Besi' Dinners Come +0 JIIvI'S RESTAURANT Reasonable Prices COMPLIMENTS OF TOMMIE AND NORMAN aI' CLASSIC BARBERS HAIR STYLISTS 566-948I Sieaks-Chops-Sea Food Orders Io Take Oui , A Open Five Days, 8 fo 6 SPECIALIZING IN H6 Hunhngion venue Closed Wednesdays LONG HAIR 267-70I2 43I Brookline Avenue Bos+on, Mass. FREE DELIVERY LO 6-8484 THE FENWOOD, INC. BEER-WINES-LuouoRs 750 Hun+ingI'on Avenue Bosfon, Mass. MEDICAL CENTER PHARMACY 3I9 Longwood Avenue SURGICAL SUPPLY CO. OF BOSTON, INC. 344 Longwood Avenue Banlcamericard Masfercharge TO SERVE YOU COMPLETELY 73I-56I0 STAVIS o'BYRNE DE WITT AMBULANCE SERVICE, INC. TRAVEL AGENCY ?2'if'8 I576 Tremoni' Sfreei' Roxbury, Mass. 02 I 20 DIIVE IOE lIONETT IUNES CLU CLU 1 W2ffI I W .. ,, I ' .r Hi .. Y 1. J s .L- L FINANCIAL PLANNING AND INSURANCE l CLARENDON STH BQSTON. MAS I I zsv.7n1o NIGHT I6I7I -L Complimenfs of CALUMET MARKET Your Service Slrore BROWN 81 CONNOLLY, INC. MEDICAL, NURSING AND SCIENTIFIC BOOKS I399 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts 022l5 COpIey 7- I 5 I I KWICK-E SUB. SANDWICHES 738 HUNTINGTON AVENUE lNear Brigham Circlel Tel. 566-9449 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS BEST WISHES FRoM FERMOYLE DRUG INC. 722 Huntington Avenue Roxbury, Moss. 232-0863 Sewing the hospital and college community with ci complete line ol drugs, cosmetics, books, ancl medical supplies. DRUGS WITH A' REPUTATION lianifa Qllwnern Launderette Service 729-731 HUNTINGTON AVENUE BEacon 2-7949 Boston, Mass. 02I I5 PAT'S BARBER SHOP Tel. 566-8950 I596 Tremont Street Roxbury, Mass. JOHN H. O'NEILL CO. 566-8300 FREE DELIVERY Let Us Keep You in Good Spirits ' GROCERIES . PROVISIONS 732 Huntington Avenue . SEA FOODS lBrigI1orn Circlel 0 FROZEN GOODS Boston Moss. - Bomeo uouoias ' COMPLETE SELECTION OF . ALL YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGES. I I I643 Tremont Street 566-5640 CHI'-LED WINE' TOO WE HAVE ICE CUBESU WHEREVER MEDICINE IS PRACTICED There 'Ioo, is SUMNER T. WHITE LIFE MEMBER OF MILLION The Largesf Professional CIienI'eIe DOLLAR ROUND TABLE in America, Backed Up by Billion-DoIIar Companies 23 Union Ave. MiIIon, Mass. O2I87 is I 7I 436-2378 Complefe Insurance Service and MuIuaI Funds ENOS BRIGHTON Wesi' Roxbury Area Cambridge Area Brlghfon Area Bosfon CenI'raI Quincy Area HUB DorcI1es+er Area Traine Serving Grea'Ier Bos+on for Over 40 Years ALLON AMBULANCE SERVICE 24 HOUR SERVICE LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE NEW CADILLAC AMBULANCES OXYGEN AND SUCTION EOUIPPED 2 WAY RADIO DISPATCHED 298-3828 327- I 555 354-2727 258-8 I 8 I 482-8 I 8 I 479-2399 was 5-ik? KU cI Courfeous A'H'encIan+s AII Conveniences 'For I'I1e Comforf and Safefy of Our Pa+ien+s HEADQUARTERS: 95 ELIOT STREET, MILTON Welcome to the Class of I97I THE HARVARD MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 25 ShaH'ucIc SI'reeI, BosI'on We Iakerpleasure in sending you as members of Ihe Alumni Associa- Iion Ihe BuIIe+in which is issued Iive Iimes each year: FaII, ChrisImas Winfer, Spring, and Summer. Please send us all address changes. Ethyl: i , I' 5 -- I4 44 Dr. Frederick W. Ackroyd Dr. Offo E. Aufranc Dr. W. Gerald Ausfen Dr. Theodore C. Barfon Dr. Leona Baumgarfner Dr. and Mrs. A. Clifford Barger Dr. Barui Benacerraf Dr. and Mrs. Herberf Benson Dr. Wilfred Bloomberg Dr. George F. Cahill Dr. Mark H. Cooley Dr. Ira Cooper Dr. Rose Cooper Dr. Lewis Dexfer Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Donaldson Dr. Charles L. Easferday Dr. Roberf H. Eberf Dr. Leon Eisenberg Dr. and Mrs. Lewis L. Engel Dr. David G. Freiman Mr. Arlan Fuller Dr. Daniel H. Funkensfein Dr. Harvey Goldman 'PATRONS Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Mr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Mr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Mr Dr. Dr. and Mrs. William H. Goodson, Jr. Df- Mr. and Mrs. William O. Goss Dr. Thomas H. Green, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. D. Lee Hamilfon Dr. J. Harfwell Harrison Dr. Howard H. Hiaff Dr. Yeuf W. Kan Dr. Edward H. Kass Mrs. Raymond A. Kempf Dr. Roberf W. Kisfner Dr. Dr. Mr Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Raymond N. Kiellberg John H. Knowles Alexander Leaf and Mrs. Collins E. Lewis Arfhur J. Linenfhal and Mrs. John Lipnicki, Sr. Herman Lisco Farahe Maloof and Mrs. Eugene McDonald Henry C. Meadow Anfhony P. Monaco Francis D. Moore William J. Mulligan Leslie Offinger David C. Poskanzer Duncan E. Reid and Mrs. Sfanley J. Reiser Paul S. Russell Bernardo A. Sanfamarina Harold C. Schuknechf Cornelius E. Sedgwick and Mrs. Raymond A. Siafkowskl Lucy Frank Squire W. T. Sf. Goar John D. Sfoeckle and Mrs. Edgar B. Taff and Mrs. Paul Thorner Howard Ulfelder Leroy D. Vandam Carl W. Walfer Thomas A. Warfhin Arnold N. Weinberg Claude E. Welch Norman Zamcheck . '- fa- . 'if'-'S ' . Tliglw- - ' -'Vi 2 ' n ,N as . ,.t.j.5r:. .fi JA'5'.,f'A .. 1 -,-,,,. , AJ. :'Q:9wf N 'L - , -.-as . , S., Av- -4- -' . gf,xr'V-Y ,K , . J' ' l., .n, ' up 355 . , I . 'NJN 94 'X 'Lv-111. 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