Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA)

 - Class of 1935

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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 212 of the 1935 volume:

imm m0 it . t r zr - ' S t 19 3 5 n. e X - r a uf M C V EGYPTIAN BUILDING • 1844 PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE STUDENTS OF THE MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA AT RICHM Samuel L Elfmon Editor Coleman D.Booker i Manaqer f • WiLIAM T. SANGER • PRESIDENT OF THE I c COLLEGE ' ' After deliberate appraisal I am convinced that the future of our college in development, permanence, and service can best be achieved by maximal strengthening of our four-fold plan of education for the health- service professions, both undergraduates and graduates, through well-coordinated cooperating schools of medi- _ cine, dentistry, pharmacy and nursing and ulti- li mately I hope, public health nursing ' « « 1)1 a single statement President Sanger has set forth his ideals for the institution to the accom- plishment of which he has devoted his fine talents without reserve for the ten years he has been President. For distinguished service in shaping our policy to this worthy end and for his profound inter- est in, not only the professional but also the personal development of every student who comes to the college for training, this book, i gratefully and affectionately dedicated to him. • • CHESEPIAN BAY VIRGINIA r e In the making of the yearbook for 1935 , the X-Ray staff has used an historical theme, one representing important events in the history of Virginia. Each division page in this volume is suggestive of some event in the history of Medicine in the Old Dominion, and we hope that each one will he a reminder of the invaluable contributions that this state has made to the progress and development of medicine over a period of several centuries. M lA tx : m HENRY KENTON • sen + I n FIRST ENGLISH PHYSICIAN TO LAND IN AMERICA • IN 1603 DR. G. PAUL LaROQUE 1876-1934 IN MEMORIAM JOHN V. WILLIAMS, Esq., Member of the Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia, Clerk, State House of Delegates. Died November 5, 19 54. VICTOR LAV, Junior in Medical School of the Medical College of Virginia. Died August 6. 19?4. 935 x-rau fhe 193 RESOLUTIONS PRESENTED TO THE RICHMOND ACADEMY OF MEDICINE ON THE DEATH OF G. PAUL LaROQUE It is a difficult task to evaluate the life of a man in a few short sentences or to sum up hi contribu- tion to his fellow man in a page or two of words. And yet this is what your Committee has been asked to do in the sad circumstance in which we, his friends and colleagues, now find ourselves. G. Paul LaRoque was born in Lenoir County, North Carolina, June i6, 1876. He was the son of the late Walter Dunn LaRoque and Annie Parrott LaRoque. His early and premedical education was received in his own State. After leaving the Universi ty of North Carolina he received his medical education and was graduated from the University of Penn- sylvania in 1902. For the next three years he served as intern and resident at the University Hospital. It was here that he first attracted attention by his close and intelligent application to his duties and his aptitude for writing. It is no secret that at this time he helped in the writing of some of our lead- ing text-books on surgery. He came to Richmond in 1905 and was soon after appointed instructor in the practice of surgery in the University College of Medicine, and continuously held ascending positions in the surgical faculty until he became Associate Professor of Surgery. He held the same chair in the Medical College of Virginia after the merger took place, and in 1928 he was made Professor of Clin- ical Surgery, which position he occupied until his death which occurred on A ' ednesday, M ay the ihth, I9U- He was a member of this organization, the Med- ical Society of Virginia, the Southern Medical Asso- ciation, the Tri-State Medical Association, the Southern Surgical Association, and was also a Fel- low of the American College of Surgeons. Dr. LaRoque ivas a prolific writer and contributed ar- ticles on various surgical topics to the leading med- ical and surgical periodicals of the country. He was a clear, forceful writer and covered many important fields of work. His contributions to the surgery of the blood vessels and his original operation for her- nia stand almost as classics. The great object of his life was teaching. It was his work and his play, his hobby, his pastime and his recreation. To teach, to leach well, and to be al- lowed the privilege of teaching was the goal of life to him. Perhaps the two years when he was Acting Professor of Surgery were the happiest period of his life. Surroundecl by a little group of residents and interns he could be found almost any hour of day or night hurrying from ward to ward always impart- ing some lesson, at times caustically, again whim- sically, at times with great gentleness, but always with the dominant object ahead, to drive some mes- sage home. There was no length to which he would not go, no pains he would not take, whether for an Individual, a group, or a class, if only he could leave a lasting imprint of some important fact. Unlike so many of his felln v North Carolinians he was in no way aii orator. He was, however, a flu- ent speaker depending on logic and accumulated facts rather than upon figures of speech. While not an orator he was no mean debater as many an un- wary antagonist has found out to his discomfiture. He was humorous, quick at repartee, sharp and sud- den in reply. It might be said of him as was said of a similar unique character of simple trusting ex- terior, Surely this simple fellow carrieth a thorn beneath his tongue. In the past forty years no teacher of medicine in this part of the country could fairly be called his peer. Should one doubt this statement let him ask any one of a thousand students who have passed under his tutelage. In April, 1915, he was married to Miss Eva Page Murdock of this city. To them no children were born, but to him the children of other members of his family were a continuous source of pleasure and diversion. The little children of the wards were his special delight and for them he would perform any service. His kindness to the poor of his wards was one of his outstanding characteristics. He was an individ- ual of few wants and simple habits. To him money meant little. After serving two years as Acting Professor of Surgery to the College and its hospitals, though his own private practice suffered severely by reason of his increased duties, he declined a sub- stantial sum vhich the College voted him. When it was presented to him again, he again declined, stat- ing that if he had to accept it he would promptly donate it to the hospital where it was greatly needed to care for more patients in its wards. Money was simply not his medium of exchange. He gave his time, his talents, his labors, and himself to his work and received for them gratitude, loyalty and af- fection. These he bartered for happiness and re- ceived full measure in return. No summary of his life would be complete with- out a tribute to his high personal courage and self- control. He was as honest professionally as per- sonally and was quick to admit an error of judg- ment or of execution. In critical periods of his pro- fessional career, when he has stood with his back to the wall, he has never faltered. No one could have told by the quiver of a muscle or one single modula- tion of his voice that anything unusual was hap- pening, though those closest to him knew full well that the heated iron was in his soul. He died as he would have wished to die in full possession of all his splendid faculties, in the full tide of his usefulness, borne to his last resting place by the men in white with whom he had labored just as he would have had it. This epitaph upon a simple slab would doubtless be more pleasing to him than any other: G. P.AUL L.aRoque Teacher of Surgery Born June 16, 1876 Died May 16, 1934 Respectfully 1934: submitted this 22nd day of May W. Lowndes Peple, Chairman, Stuart McGuire, J.AMES K. Hall. The Old Powder Horn and the Christopher Wrenn Courthouse in Williamsburg. The first attempt to teach medicine in Virginia was made in 1779 at the College of William and Mary. Other medical schools were built early in the 18th century in Winchester, Charlottes- ville, Richmond, and Prince Edward County. flDMINISTRRTION W i; : IWT 1 . K BOARD OF VISITORS William T. Reed Chairman Stlart McClire, M.D., LL.D lin-Chatrman T. R. McCallev Sccrilary-Tr, usurer Robert T. Bartox, Jr., Esq., .lllomry-al-La ' u: Richmond, Charles P. Caruwell, Esq., .IIIorn,y-al-L iK Richmond, V F. Cleveland Davis, Esq., Pharmacisl Lexington, V H. V. Ellerson, Esq., Pres ' uiinl The .lllnmarlc Pii ' rr Manufacturviy Co. . . . Richmond, J. B. Fisher, M.D., Pliysician Midlothian, V. L. Harris, M.D., Physician Norfolk, Jl;lie H. Hill, Esq., Prfsid,nl Statr-Planlcrs Bank and Trust Co Richmond, Eppa Huston, IV., Esq., Allomcy-al-Lati: Richmond, J. D. Johnston, Esq., Illomcy-al-Lav: Ronnoke, V. D. Kendig, M.D., Physician Kenbridgc, V Hunter H. McC.uire, .M.P Winchester Stuart McCXire, M.D., LL.D., Surr con Richmond W. R. Miller, Esq., Secretary-Treasurer I ' ninn Theoloijical Seminary .... Richmond R. J. PA NE, iVLD., Physician FrcderickslmrK, V WiLl.LWl r. Reed, Esq., President Larus and fSro. C.-i Richmond, V William H. Schu arszchild, Esq., President Central Xntinnal Bank Richmond, V Douglas vndkr Hoof, M.D., Physician Richmond W. W. Wilkinson. M.D., Physician LaCrosse IniiN Hell Williams, Fh.G., D.D.S., Dentist Richmond, V ExFci Ti n Committee of the Ro.ard of Visitors H. W. Ellerson HiiEN IL Hill SruART McGuire, Chairman Dolgi.as ' ANnERHoOF William R. Miller Wii LiA.M ' F. Sanger. lix-Officio Eppa Hunton, IV William T. Reed ihe 1935 xrau xra LI r. J 1 . ji L. X i AA K. McCaulev ADMINISTRATION OF THE COLLEGE WiM.iAM T. Sanger, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D Pnsld.nl J. R. McCaulev Sicrilary-Tn-asurir Lewis E. Jarrei r, Ph.G., M.D Su iiii:l,iiJ iil nf Ilospilah H. L. OsTERUi), A.M., Ph.D. . S. F. Bradei., B.MeF.., D.D.S. J. A. Reese, B.S. in Phar. . . Lui.u K. Woi.i , B.S.. R.X. . E. C. L. Mii.LER, M.D. . . . . SfOrlary nf llir M, J it ill Faculty . Sccrclaiy of tlic Drntal Faculty Secretary nf the I ' harmacy Faculty Secretary of the Xursiiiij Faculty Direetincj Librarian Florence McRae Librarian Pauline Williams, M.D Dean nf Jl ' nmen DEANS Lee E. Sutton, Jr., B.S., NLD. . ?L RRv Bear, D.D.S., F.A.C.D. . WoRTLEV F. RuDi), M.A., Pn.B. Frances H. Zeicler. B.S., R.N. . . School of Medicine . Sihonl of Dentistry School of Pharmacy . School of Nursing STUART McGUIRE, M.D.. LL.D. Prciidtnl Emcrilui Medical Collcce of Virginia 35 fh A SHORT HISTORY OF MEDICAL EDUCATION IN VIRGINIA INTRODUCTION MEDICINE in Virginia in the early colonial days was not creative nor epoch-making: nor did it altogether reflect continental medicine. Accord- ing to the exigencies of the time, it assumed features which were peculiarly in- digenous. Without cities, hospitals, professional contacts, books, or instruments, the early colonial doctor acquired a resourcefulness, independence of action, courage, and ingenuity bred only in the school of real necessity. Medicine in the 17th cen- tury in Virginia was the same as in the other colonies. It was not a productive but a fallow time out of which some very real contributions flowered during the suc- ceeding centuries. The first Cesarean section and the first oophorectomy in America were performed by a pioneer Virginia doctor. The priority in America for the opjration of cleft palate and club foot, in the use of plaster cast for the treatment of tuberculosis of the spine, and in the use of metallic sutures in vesico-vaginal repair, belongs to Vir- ginia. A Virginian promulgated the theory of evolution before Darwin, another described typhoid fever 113 years before Louis, another advocated the use of steam in the disinfection of infected ships. The first American pharmacopeia, the first autopsy, the first hospital, the first insane asylum on this continent were Virginia achievements. The earliest bill governing medical practice was drawn by the Vir- ginia Assembly; while the first American college to teach comparative anatomy, to institute the ten-months medical course, and to take a stand for adequate premedica! education was the University of Virginia. With these facts in mind, we shall recite briefly the facts in the development of medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, and nursing, in this state, and the founding and establishment of the Medical College of Virginia. Edilur ' s A o , — rhc X-Rav is Kiatcfullv iiulchtcd to Ilr. Wymlhani H. HIantnn tor liis kind permission to the editorial staff to iim- liis various hooks, and cuts appearing; therein, in the writing of this history. MEDICINE Dl K1N(; tlic i7tli aiul iSlh ceiUurieN dnctor- born ami educated in England dominated the prn- fesj-ion in America. Henry Kenton, in 1603, was the first English surgeon to land on the American continent. He was killed, along with four other men, by Indians when they landed on the shores of th? Chesapeake Kay. These early English physicians who came to this country were trained tlirough apprentice- ships, a means of education wliich remained long in vogue. Medicine was not taught systematically in this coun- try until the latter part of the i8th century. In 1765 the College of Philadelphia, which soon became the I ' niversity of PeinisyK anin. wa founded; King ' s Col- lege followed in i7 ' S; Howard Medical School in 17S3; and nartmiiuth in 179S. In ' irginia there is mention only of the Medical Department of the College of William and Mary, organized in 1779, and lasting ordy three years. Most of the students from the College of William and Mary completed their training in English and Scotch universities, preferring to take their higher degrees in the foreign schools. It was be- cause of this lax system in American schools of med- icine that many ' irginia youths during the iSth cen- tury took advantage of excellent opportunities for study abroad and, as a result, ac(|uired a pre-eminence in their professioti upon their return to practice in .Amer- ica. These latter year? vitnessed also the rise of truly .American medicine. It was at this tiine that medical societies, hospitals, and a native literature had their beginnings. Americans made notable contributions toward inoculation; there was laring frontier surgery, good botanical observation, the development of first- hand knowledge of certain epidemic di-eases, and a notable tendencv on the part of oi:t tanding men to enter the medical profession. .Mthough the i8th century ' irginia doctor was bet- ter educated than his predecessor ol ihe 17th centur . and although he had .-i inore intelligent clientele, more book-, ami a better means ol c-nmniunication, he wa- seriously handicappe l by hi- devotion to theory, and it is doubtful if his notions of medical practice or therapy were very much in advance of those of the preceding century, lie had nothing upon which to base any im- provement. His method ol examination ol patients and his conception of the cause and mechanisin of disease were full ' as fault) ' as they were 100 years before. .Although Morgagni ' s lie Sedibu- Cau-i-, the first real work on pathologv, wa- written in i- ' n. there is onlv one mention of it in the existing catalogues of the libraries of the century. The ' irginia doctor continued to s veat, purge, blister, vomit, and bleed his patients with the same traditional faith and with th ' same inevitable results. Thus in N ' irginia, uiuil the Civil War, medicine was vhat it had always been, a dignified and respected profession follo ved by inen of good-breeding and edu- cation, trained largely in the north and in Europe, but none the less wedded to anti(|ue theories and possess- ing strange veneration for authority. However, .American medical education made rapid strides during the 19th century. From a single institu- tion in 1765, the nuinber of medical schools in 1903 had risen to 160; some of them good, some of them bad, many of them worthless. Charters were easily secured, candidates were abundant, and there were few- examining boards to bar the way to public preferment. The American Medical Association in 1848 recom- mended that the medical course be extended from four to six months, that every school have as many as seven professor-, anil that dissection and clinical opportuni- ties be stressed. In 1907 came the greatest reform when the .American Medical .Association graded the col- leges upon their preliminary educational requirements, character of curriculum, physical equipment, clinical facilities, number of fulltime professors, and the extent to which profits of the faculty entered into the opera- tion of the school. The merciless publicity of the asso- ciation ' s figures rapidly raised the standards of med- ical education in the country so that by 1925, only 80 schools survived. In ' irginia there were no medical schools during the first ijuarter of the 19th century; apprenticeship was still popular. .A medical education in England and in France was still highlv regarded and those who coidd afford it crossed the seas to study. The majority of ' irginia students went north to study. However, many received their medical education or at least a good part of it in medical schools in Virginia. From these schools gradually evolved the medical schools of today. Three separate attempts were made to teach medicine at the College of William and Mary, the first being in 1779 and aborted three years later. The next ap- pr.ach to a department of medicine at that school was in 1S24, but this was unsuccessful. In iS+i the teach- ing of medicine was again attempted at ihi- school, but this trial lasted only seven years. In 182,, an act was passed by the General .A--cmbly incorporating the College of Ph -ician- of the N ' alley fh x-ra u of Virginia, at Winchester, under the auspices of Dr. John Esten Cooke and Hugh Holmes McGuire. This undertaking vas short-lived and the school closed its doors in 1S29. Medical education was revived in Win- chester in 1847 and under a new charter the Wincliester Medical College opened its doors. On this fncullv we find, along with others, Hugh II. McOuire and his son, Hunter McGuire. Grave robbing was in vogue and the professor of anatomy was in charge of students detailed f or such nocturnal prowlings. The school was forced to close during the Civil War. The Medical Department of Randolph-Macon Col- lege in 1848 under the Mettauer family gained great distinction. Thomas Jefferson in 1824 provided for a medical department at the University of Virginia. This school of medicine has been continuously active except for a short period during the Civd War, and together with the present Medical College of Virginia are the only schools of medicine in the state. The Medical Department of llanipden-Sydiiey Col- lege was organized in 1839. In 1S41; it vas reorgan- ized and has since then been known as the Medical College of Virginia. Thus laboring under the handi- cap of war, the reconstruction period, and poverty, Vir- ginia naturally lagged in medicine after i860. Yet in spite of the utter lack of endowed institutions for re- search, the progress of medicine went on. In time medical societies sprang up, hospitals were organized in every town of importance, trained nurses came to stay, the new gospel of sanitation was preached, a state examining board and state board of health were organ- ized, specialization became popular, dentistry came into its own, better medicine flourished, and a higher order of surgery developed. FOUNDERS OF THE MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINLA 1. Socrates Maupin. 2. John Ciillcn. 3. Richard Lafon Bohannan. 4. Lewis Webb Chambcrlaync. 1 I DENTISTRY L- DKN riS ' I ' RV was well known to tin- ancients. Cnn- siderahle progress hail been made in it 4,000 years ago. The mouths of Egyptian mummies, vith their hllecl, pivoted and artificial teeth hear silent witness to the proficiency of the dentists of the Phara- ohs. Up to the 1 6th century dentistry was a part of medicine, but during that and the s ucceeding centuries dental practice was almost exclusively in the hands of the barber surgeons. Real progress vas not made un- til the 1 8th century, when dentistry first became a sep- arate art. The new specialty was born in France. The dental operations practiced by Fouchard in his fdrty years ' experience and enumerated by him in 1728, in- cluded cleaning, straightening, shortening, scraping cauterizing, filling with lead, fastening, reino -ing, re- placing, transplanting, and artificially constructing teeth. Thus was summarized dental knowledge of that lime. In colonial ' irginia of the 17th century doctors antl chirurgeons practiced what dentistry there was. Their work was limited to extraction and the treatment of toothache. In the i8th century the advances of den- tistry in Europe began to reach these shores, but phvsi- cians still did most of the business. Itinerant dentists were popular at this period. They were usually from England and called themselves sur- geon dentists. Modern dentistry is the product of the 19th century. Ihitil well into the fourth decade of the century, there had been few changes in dental practice for the past two hundred years. There was no real dental profes- sion. Teeth were neglected until they fell out or were pulled out. Toothache was treated by local applica- tions or by extraction, and physicians were called upon for both. The term surgeon dentist was generally applied to the members of the profession until 1839. After that they preferred to be ktinw n as dental sur- geons. Dentistry in the Tnited States after 1830 began its autonomous development and rapidly took the leader- ship away from France and Great Britain. Dental education in Virginia made a slow start due in part to the proximity of an excellent school in Baltimore. This college graduated three men in its second class, and two of them were from ' irginia — J. B. Savier and W. W. H. Thaxton. On October 3, 1S93, the first formal dental teaching in Virginia was inaugurated, ivhen a faculty of Rich- mond physicians and dentists was organized as the Department of Dentistry of the University College of Medicine. Dr. Lewis M. Cowardin became dean of the faculty which was composed of seven physicians and one other dentist, Dr. Charles L. Steel. Cowardin taught the principles and practice of dentistry, together with clinical and oral surgery. Steel taught orthodon- tia and dental prosthesis. A. R. Bowles and A. R. Stratford acted as demonstrators. At the time of its organization this was the only school of dentistry east of Nashville, between Washington and Atlanta. The teaching of dentistry in a medical school on a parity Avith the branches was a new de ' elopment in the South. In 1897 the Medical College of Virginia followed suit by organizing a department in dentistry under Henry C. Jones, D.D.S. This faculty was also top heavy with physicians who outnumbered the dentists five to two. In lieu of a high school or college di- ploma, admission to the department was by examina- tion. There was but one graduate in 1898. These two schools amalgamated in 191 3 to form the present School of Dentistry in the Medical College of ' irginia. PHARMACY TIIK Ki-nenl(ijj of the miidern ilruKK ' st goes back to tin- N ' orinan coMi|ucst , u lien the Mercerv, whose scene of operation in London was known as the Mercery, controlled the trade in drugs and spices. This Inisiness then passed into the hands of pep- perers, spicers. and later was absorbed by the gro- cers. The apothecaries in 1617 succeeded over the pro- test of the grocers in securing a charter of their own. King James asserted with finality that (irncers arc but merchants. The business of an apothecary is a my- tcr . The rising importance of the apothecary in England accounted for the fact that the London Company sent two apothecaries to the ' irginia Colony before 1624. After that we hear nothing of th;m in Virginia until the iSth century. During the i8th century the drug business in ' irginia was in the hands of physicians who manufactured arid imported drugs from England. riie physician usually compounded his own prescrip- tions, charging fcr his medicine as well as for his islls. The majority of apothecaries, like physicians, learned their trade in this country in an apprenticeship of from three to six ears, serving under a physician or expe- rienced pharmacist. Their masters sent them into th ■ woods in search of popular Indian medicine, such a- Indian hemp, papoose root, Indian tobacco, blood root and mandrake. Later, in the shops, they dried and ex- tracted their drugs in huge kettles, or busied themselves rolling pills on slabs, spreading plasters, and clanging the iron mortar and pestle. In 17S+ at the Pennsylvania Hospital were written the first prcnriptions to be fillid h an apothccnr In the Tnited States. Abraham C ' hauvet, who came to Philadelphia in 1770, was the first practicing physician in this country to write his own prescriptions. In ' ir- ginia, 1771, was probably the first time prescriptions were being filled by apothecaries. Much of the atmosphere of older class adhere to an old pharmac in .Mexandria. The I.eadbetter Orug Store was established in 1792 and is still to be seen oti the corner of King and Fairfax Streets. Here th.- Washingions and Lees and other Northern Neck ' ir- ginians dealt. .Most of the pharmacists of the 19th century received their training in apprenticeships of from three to four ears. . few were graduates of northern schools. The first college to teach pharmacy in this country was in Philadelphia in 1821. Instruction in pharmacy was early a part of the medical curriculum at the Univer- sity of ' irginia. Pharmacy was taught as a part of the Medical course in the Medical College of Virginia friMTi its ery begiiuiing in 1838. In the college cat- alogues of 18S0 notice was gi ' en of courses in materia nudica, therapeutics, chemistry and pharmacy. To- gether they were designated as the School of Phar- macy and led to a special diploma. In 1882 students h;) had had two years in some approved drug store were declared graduates in pharmacy if they had successfully taken examinations in chemistry and ma- teria medica. In 1S93 the rnlvcrsity College of Meilicine was or- ganized in Richmond with a separate department of pharmacy. T. Ashley Miller was the first dean of the pharmacy faculty. In 1897 the old Medical College of irginia followed suit, and divided itself into three departments: medicine, dentistry, and pharmacy. The school of pharmacy offered a two-year graded course. Ketween 1877-1S99, twentv-one pharmacists were grad- uated from the Medical College of Virginia. Several of these graduates are living today. It is interesting to note that on March 3, 18S6, An ait to incorporate the ' irginia Pharmaceutical .Associa- tion, and to regulate the practice of pharmacy, and to guard the sale of poisons in the state of ' irginia, was passed. It permitted only registered pharmacists and practicing physicians to retail, compound, or dis- pense medicines or poisons, or to conduct a pharmacy. Merchants vere permitted to sell such common drugs as (|uinine, epsom salts, and castor oil, calomel, and opium. In order to be registered, a pharmacist had to be a graduate of a recognized college of pharmacy, or to have served three ears as an apprentice in some drug store, or be a licentiate of pharmacy of the Vir- ginia Board of Pharmacy, which was created by the same act. By 1S94 every drug store was re(|uired to have a registered pharmacist in charge. fh I I t I w vj x-r OS M ■3 •fi (N NURSING II u:is in .S5(, tliMI llu-o(l(in- FriiiliuT (ipciuil at Kais runrth, tht- tir-t hHoc)! lor ilcacoiu ' s c-s ; rS ' .o. lu-lnri- Flort ' iR-c N ' i)iluin ;:ili- sut nliout tc-achinj; tlu- first EiiKlish trained nurses at St. Thomas ' ; 1873, b?- fore a trained nnrsc was produced in America; and 1S86, before X ' iryinia ioined the movement. The 17th centurv ua- tlu- dark aj r of nursi[i,i; and the care of the sick sank a low as the hospital in which it va5 practiced. Conditions were little chaiiKcd two hundred years later; when Dickens im- mortalized Saircy (lamp, she with her perkv umbrella and talk of the pudK , slatternly, dowdy-looking fe- male of drunken and didiious habits who was the nurse of that ila . In ' ir inia we encoutitcr nurses as earlv as itii2 iyi the Hospital at Menricopolis, which was supplied with keepers to attend the sick and wounded. These were probably male nurses. While listers ol charity minis- tered to the siek on ihr Ciuitinent, all the I ' .nslish mil- itary hospitaK used soldiers fiu nurses until the middle of the rc;th century. Nursing; in the 17th century was indeed a task tor men eiitailint; plusical labor that would horrify the inodern nurse. I ' he duties of th.- 17th century nurse were not to take the temperature, record the pulse, give daily baths or follow elaborate orders Irom phxsicians, but to prepare food, ijive the droughts reuid;n-| , wash the linen, watch bv the bedside, and hen death came to shroud the body, and to furnish entertaiiuncnt for those vho came to the funeral. Ourint; the iSth cuiiurx niirsini; still maintained th ■ same level as that of the preiediu) cenlur . We can be sure tli.il ini the women of ' iri;inia homes rested th • rhief respon ibilit lor tlu care of the sick, a duty that even the ailvent of specialized nursing has not entirely lifted; however, a new figure did appear during this period, the negro mirse. . ' s maminy, inidwife, wet nurse or nurse maid, she becaiiu ' a figure of increasing importance In C(dnnial N ' irginia. ' irginia owes a lebt of gratitude to ilu various or- ders of Si-ler- which were established during the mi.l- dle part ol the ndh eenlurx. iviting ami nur ng the siek were once .a prominent pan .d tlu .luties of these sisters, luit in recent years, the sisters have given less arul less attention to the professional care of the sick. Such conditions prevailed until 1S60 vhen Florence Nightingale began to turn out the new style nurses. It vas 1873, however, before training schools were established in this country — first at Bellevue Hospital in New York, and later in New Haven at the Massa- chusetts Cleneral Hospital, and then at Johns Hopkins IIo v this movement swept the country aiul fired the imagination of women ever vhere, until toda , when 125,000 trained nurses serve the .Vmerican public, is one of the proud chapters of American medicine. I was one of the most important movements of the 19th century aiul Miss Nightingale, who must be included in any list of great Victorians, was the sole genius be- hinil it. Her conception of a nurse — chaste, sober, hon- est, trulhfid, trustworthy, cpiiet, cheerful, thinking of her patient alone, became the ideal of the oung pro- fession. The first training schoid for nurses in X ' irginia was established at St. Luke ' s Hospital in Richmond in 1886 In 1893 • ' 1 ' training schools opened in Richmond — one at the Retreat for the Sick Hospital, and one at the University College of Medicine Hospital, The Vir- ginia Hospital aiul Training School for Nurses. In 1895 a similar school, comprising a two-year course, was organized by the Medical College of Virginia at the Old Dominion Hospital in Richmond. An effort was made to put this school at once upon a plane of unusual cHiciencx and statiding. The authorities turned to Johns Hopkins Hospital, from which the drew their superintendent. Miss Sadie Heath Cabaniss. a then re- cent graduate mider Miss Hampton. Miss Cabaniss, a native of Petersburg, was a graduate of St. Timothy ' s School before beginning the study of nursing in the Johns Hopkins Hospital. She had hardly taken charge of the nursing school in Richmond before her strong personality was felt. Her education, training, ideals, aiul force ol character contributed to the formation of a schoid ol nii.sing w hos,- Idgh standards ar still pointed 01 with pride and gratiliule. ._y x-rc MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA IN 1S38 tin- Mt ' di Sydney College v was hoped that the ne of the four hundred al nciKirlinent of Ilanipilen- :it- established in Richmond. It iV institution woidd attract sim,- and more students -who were every day leaving Virginia for study in northern med- ical schools. The founders were an exceptional group of men. Augustus L. Warner ( -1S47), graduate of the University of Maryland and fresh froTii the Chair of Anatomy and Surgery in the University ' of ' irginia, became dean and professor of surgerv and surgical anat- omy, lie was the moving spirit in the new enter- prise, for he possessed marked ability as an adminis- trator anil surgeon. John C ullen (1797-1S49), nati ' e of Ireland and graduate of the Uni ersit of Pennsyl- ' ania, vas accorded the chair of the theor and prac- tice of medicine, adorning it until his death in 1849 Lewis Webb Chamberlayne (1798-1854), of proud ' ir- ginia ancestry, likewise a graduate of the University of Pennsyh ' ania, Ivjld tiie chair of inateria medica and therapeutics. Socrates Maupin (1808-1871), a (|uiet little gentleman and ,1 graduate of the Medical De- partment of the University of ' irginia, assumed th ■ chair of chemistry and pharmacy. In 1853 he re- signed to accept a similar position in his Ahna Mater, where he was shortly honored by being made chair- man of the faculty. Richard I.afon Hohannon ( 1SS7), also a graduate of the University of Pennsyl- vania, was made professor of obstetrics and the dis- eases of women and children, a position he acceptably filled until his death in 1S87. Thomas Johnson became professor of anatomy and physiology. He had enjoyed the advantages of study in France under Laennec and had recentl ' taught anatomy and surgery in the T ' ni- ' ersity of A ' irginia. The old Union Hotel on East Main Street became the site of the new college. The old building had been converted into creditable teaching quarters and an in- firmary ' . In a short while plans were under way for a much more elaborate building, and an entirely new structure on Shockoe Hill was soon ready for occu- pancy. The Egyptian building, as it is still called, was erected on land donated by the city with money loaned by the Legislature from its Literary Fund. Lec- ture rooms, dissecting hall, infirmar ' were all under one roof. The enrollment steadily greiv from 46 in 1S3S to Sj in 1851. The attendance did [lot exceed this number until the Civil War, when classes of more than 200 were taught. Ninet per cent of the students were from A ' irginia. The tickets of each professor were paid TH£ EdYPTIAN BUILDINCr for separately, and for many years averaged between fifteen and t vent dollars a subject. The older ncnthern schools served as models upon which was based the course of instruction of the new school. It consisted of two sessions of four months each, the second a repetition of the first. Graduation was contingent on two terms of study preceded by a vear under some reputable physician, or attendance on the summer course, a thesis, an oral examination, and a fee of twenty-five dollars. In the catalogues, stress was laid upon the advantages the school had to offer South- ern students — unlimited material for anatomical dissec- tion, bedside instruction in an infirinary purposely housed under the same roof as the college, and the op- portunity to study diseases peculiar to the South in their native habitat. In fact, the type of clinical instruction given, offering as it did, ready access to ward patients an l ample opportunity to follow in each case the prog- ress of disease, was Invully proclaimed as superior to the amphitheater method vhich was then so popular in Philadelphia. Fii 1X4 , .iTi unhappy schism arose out of a disagree- imiu ;i tci who hail the risht to appoint new mein- liers to the medical faculty, the Hoard of Hampden- Sydncy C ' oJIeKe or the medical faculty itself. Th (|uarrel assumed lar xe proportions and excited a heated pamphlet warfare. It was ultimately settled h the legislature ' s granling the medical facult a new and separate charter. I ' hereafler the school %vas kno;vn as the Medical rolligi- nf S ' irginia. This new freedom was dearly bought, for, from this time on, a large element of the profession of Virginia was allied against the institution. The medical jour- nals of the state were under contrr)l of this element, and until the Civil War, this same group violently attacked the faculty, relentlessly exposing every weak- ness of the college. Dr. 15. R. Wcllford, the professor of materia medica and therapeutics, a man of national reputation and unimpeachable character, bore the brunt of the attacks, choising as he did to become the mouth- piece of the faculty. The institution made progress anil during thi - period some exceptional names were to be found in her faculty. Jeffries Wyman succeeded Thomas Johnson and gave great and lasting impidse to the teaching of anatomy in the school. Tuder him the anatomical and pathological museums grew apace. ' man left Richmond to be- come Ilervcy professor of analiim at Harvard. Mere- dith C ' l jner, who held the chair of medicine from 1S4S- 18+9, subsequently achieved distinction in the field nf nervous and mental disease. More memorable was th ■ brief occupancv of the chair of the Institutes of Med- icine b Charles Kdward Hrow ii-Se piard. The famous -avaru taught in the college for a single session. He filled the basemcril of the college with experimental animals, let down into hi own stoinach ■•pnnges on strings, withdrew them before the class to demonstrate digestive fluids in acliiui, and flid many another novel and startling thing to the delight and wonder of his cla-s. Hi; passionate love of science and the facility h- possessed of compelling nature to reveal her secrets for first-hand observation, made .1 Listing iinpres ' ion on his students. In the fall of i.S;;9 Dr. Hunter McC.uire was suc- cissfully conducting an extramural school in Philadel- phia. Through his personal influence and effort the Soiillurn vtudent . in both the Inivcr-itv of Pennsvl- ania and Jefferson were a-sembled and transferretl en masse to Riihmond. Main of these students elected to continue their course in the Medical College of Virginia. I ' his trebled the student body and taxed the institution to capacil . The Legislature voted ihirt thousand dollars fm- a new hospital which wa- shortl erected adjacent to tin- cojhge. ihronghoul the perloil of the war the faculty taught at fever heat, giving two courses a year. It was the only Southern medical school which never closed its doors during the period of ho - tilities. Thousands uf soldiers were cared for by the faculty and students. Charles Hell (iibson, professor of siirger , was surgeon-in-chief for the irginia forces. James B. McCiaw, professor of cheinistry and phar- macy, was in charge of the Chimborazo Hospital, an institution that cared for more than 7 ,000 sick and wounded during the war. The graduation of larn-e medical classes twice a year and the entrance of these graduates into the medical service of the Confederacy was no small part of the contribution of the colleg to the cause of the South. Post-bellum reconstruction was bravely faced. In spite of poverty and a student bcdy reduced at one time to a bare corporal ' s guard, efforts were steadily made to improve the standards of teaching and to give th; students access to better clinical material. Clinical in- struction was offered in Howard ' s Grove Hospital — an institution of live hundred beds — the college hospital, the Richmond .-Mmshouse and the City Dispensary. The facult , after the war, was composed of R. T. Coleman in the chair of obstetrics, D. H. Tucker in inetlicine, J. S. Wellford in therapeutics, J. H. McGaw In chemistrv, A. E. Peticolas in anatomy, and Hunter McCiiiire in surgery. Naturall man changes were vrought as time went on. In iS.Si Hunter McCiuire resigned and was succeeded by J. S. O. Cullcn, of almost equally illustrious war record. Frank D. Cun- ningham followed Samuel Logan in anatomy in 1867 L. S. Gaillard, editor of Gaillard ' s Medical Journal, taught pathology from 1867-68. Levin S. Joynes and Otis F. Manson were added to the faculty. The elevation of standards came slo vly — too slowly for the critics of the college. The old charge of a closed corporation, an institution run for personal advantage, began to appear in the journals. The fees were said to have been cut, scholarships abused, and the two short courses for graduation were held to be entirely iiiadei|uate in preparation for the practice of inedicine. Criticism against the -cliool Incame so a l- erse that the governor of the state was forced to take a hand and appointed an entirely new board of trus- tees. .• fter months of futile effort to obtain control of ihe college, the matter wa settled in the court- in favor ot Ihe old board. ' Ihe I ni cr-vitx Cnllege of Medicine was organized in Richmond in Mi , 1893, with Hunter McGuire as its head, . boul him a large faculty was gathered to leach medicine, dentistry, and pharmacy as the three departments of the new school. From the first this school attracted a large attendance. Ihe enrollment xrr the second year was nne luiiidrecl eiiility. A graded course was offered in all departments anil, in niediciiie, extended over three years. The institution first occu- pied the former residence of Alexander II. Stephen, vice-president of the Confederacy. In a few ears it was in possession of a new building of its own. . disastrous fire in 1910 produced a desperate situation from which the institution was rescued by the munifi- cent contribution of $100,000 from the citizens of Rich- mond tcuvard the erection of another wew building I ' he N ' irginia Hospital with 125 beds, a training school and ' a large corps of trained nurses was close by and under the entire control of the faculty. This new school was an admirable stimulus to better medical teaching in Richmond. The old college began at once to look to its laurels. The facult vas enlargetl and George Ben Johnston, who at this time liecame pro- fessor of surgery, asserting his natural gift of leader- ship, assumed much the same role in the old school that Dr. McGuire did in the new. .It became thence- forward a battle between these superior men and their respective faculties. The old school began by reorganizing its hospital, Avhich after 1895 was known as the Old Dominion Hos- pital. A school of nursing was instituted by Miss Sadie Heath Cabaniss, a graduate of Johns Hopkins Hos- pital, under Miss Isabel Hampton. Under her high ideals and strict discipline it became a school to b ' proud of. The medical curriculum was expanded and length- ened until in 1894 it became a three-year gradetl course of instruction. In 1899 the four-year course was adopted. The presence of a competitor instead of re- ducing its enrollment, increased it, so that by 1895 its students numbered one hundred thirty-nine. The in- tense rivalry of the two institutions created t vo hitter factions in the medical profession in Richmond, Init it put nearly every physician to studying and teaching medicine and accomplished what the old schcxd alon? had not been able to do — it stemmed the tide of ' lr- ginia students seeking a medical education in the North. In a single year Virginia medical students in Virginia institutions increased from 225 to 450. Such a situation in a city as small as Richmond could not always endure. It became more and more difHcult to find money to support both schools, for both had radically reduced tuitions. Leaders wearied of the in- cessant struggle and longed to exert their united strength in the general cause of medical education. In 1913, old differences were forgotten. The boards of 1 liimOlLll THE MEMORIAL HO, PITAL the two institutions met in joint session, amalgamated the two schools and selected a new faculty. Since that time, the Old Dominion Hospital, i860, has been replaced b St. Philip Hospital, 1920; Lab- oratory Building, 1896, replaced by Dooley Hospital, 1920; McGuire Hall and Old Virginia Hospital ac- quired by consolidation with the University College of Medicine, 1913; Memorial Hospital completed 1903, ac- quired by the college, 1913; Cabaniss Hall, 1928; St. Philip Dormitory, 1931; and the Library, 1932. The plant of the college is practically one-half coinplete. A new outpatient department and labora- tory building, a central heating plant, a new hospital for white patients adjoining the outpatient department, a dental school building, general remodeling of the in- complete top floor of McGuire Hall for experimental surgery with animals and other activities, and the fire- proofing of the Egyptian Building as a museum are some of the projects to be accomplished in the future. Their fulfillment will depend upon better financial con- ditions and the continued support of loyal, generous friends, and appropriatitins b the State. ' hen this plant has been ci:impletcd the luimber in the student body will even be less than at present. There will be, however, a fellowship system in graduate education, the emphasis in all schools and departments to be placed upon quality and not quantity. SCHOOL OF MEDICINE LEE E. SUTTON, JR. 8.S.. M.D. DEAN THE DEANS OF HARRY BEAR D D S.. FA. CD. SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY r z 5 xra H i I J - ' 1 J SCHOOL OF PHARMACY WORTLEY F. RUDD Ph.B., M.A DEAN OUR COLLEGE FRANCES HELEN ZEIGLFR B.S., R,N. DEAN SCHOOL OF NURSING sVt Hi.AcKw Ki.i., IJi. ANION, Call, Ckockf.it, CiRA ' s, Hicciss, Hill, Lyons MEDICAL COLLE FACULTY GE OF VIRGINIA 1934-1935 Alderman, Dr. Ernksj II. Ilislru.lor in M.-nliil ;iiicl N. ' Andersen, Mr. ' rnANNiNr; W. ciali. I M I .224 Bellevu? Ave. .s nis,.a. L..-! (Nl College . . Memiirial llo-pital 2r,iS (Ji-nxe Ave. Meiliial . rt- iiiiiUlint; . Saint I.uke llnvpital Meili.al Alts Hiiiklinti 26 Ninth Laurel Street i.t I.iike ' v Hospital AN ' nERsoN, Dr. Paul V. Assoi ' iiUi- Pi ' olf.isor Nl (M-N) Anderson, Miss Rorena . Hospital l )i isimi, M. C. V. Instruetiir ami Supervi.-ior nl I ' r.liiilii. Nui-.siin; XI As.sI.slaiU In Pudlalries (M) Anderson, Dr. S. A., Jr. . . 2326 West Cirace Street A.s.«oeiate in Peiliatriis iMl Appkrlv, Dr. Frank I ColleKe I ' nifeSKiir or Path.ilouy IM-Li-X) Armistead, Dr. D. H. . Assi.stant In M. ' dl.in.- C Haii.ev, Dr. 1. M. . . A.sslslant ' in Midlcin.. a Baker, Dr. James P., Ik. Instrwtcir In Mi dl.-in. I Harnes, Dr. Werster P. A.s.sn.-luti ' in SlMX-.ry I M Harnett, Dr. T. Neii.i, AssoelatL- In Mi-dlcln. Bauchman. Dr. Creer Pror.-K,s-or or Ol.st. ' trirs ( .M ) Beach, Dr. C. H Sa Instrui tor in I ' ir.st Ai.l ( I ' l Beai.e, Mr. V. I Meninrial Hospital Instru t .|- In Ec-nnolnl. ' a (M I Bear, Dr. Harry College Pi-orc..s.Mi r of Kxndontin anil . Tu..stlu.si:i iin.I ..f Prin- ■ ipl.s of Pr.-u-lliT. (M-li) Bear, Dr. Joseph 301 East Franklin St. A.s.sialant Pri r.-s.snr of nl,sl..lriis (M) BiccER, Dr. Isaac A Meinnrial Hospital Prnre.s.iol- id ' Sui ' t,-iT.v (M-Nl Blackvvei.l, Dr. Karl L. . . Medieai . rts Huililin Pi-ofo. ' i. ior of Otolor.vni,-oloi.-.v iM-Ni Blair, Miss Beiilah Professiiuial Unildini; .As.slstard In 0|dillialni. lnu-.v (Mi Blanton, Dr. V ndii. m . . . S28 West Fr.mklin St. Prorussoi- or HLslor.v or M.di. In.. (M) Bond, Dr. William R College Prorc.-Jsor or PhysioloKy (JI-Ii-P-N) A.i.iorlato Proro.s.sor of Pli:irni:u-..l..i;y I. I-I -P1 Bowles, Dr. Charles F. Professional HuiUling Profi s.-ior of Ortliodonlhi iln Bradel, Dr. S. F College .Vsslstant Profe.s-.soi- of Crown an. I Tlridi;.- Prostli.-si.s and Lii-ntal MotalluiKy lli) liRENi, Dr. Meade S., Central State Hospital, Petersburg In.siruilor in . . rv..u.s and M. nlal Disfa. ii s (Ml Brinki.ey, Dr. A. S Medicil .Arts Building .Assooialc Professor of Surgery (Ml Brown, Miss Aileen . . Hospital Dixisimi, M. C. ' . A.ssoi ' iate in .Nutrition and Cookery (Nl Brvce, Miss Evelyn C College Assistant in BaeU-riology (M-l ' -I ' -Ni BlLLARD, Dr. [. B iioo West Franklin St. As.-o.iali- in Mi-di..ine (It I Bush, Miss ' irginia P Memorial Hospital Instin.tor and Suin.rvisor of Em..rg.ney Nursini; (.V) Call, Dr. Manfred Stuart Circle Hospital Ploli..ssor of Clinieal Medicine (.Ml Call, Dr. Mankred, III . . , Stuart Circle Hospital Instruetor in Medicine (M) Camp, Dr. P. D Professional Building Instru.tor in Medicine CM) Chapman, Dr. D. G. . . . Saint Elizabeth ' s Hospital Instructor in Medicine (M) Chevalier, Dr. P. 1 1 100 West Franklin St. Professor of Crown and Bridge Prosllie.sis (D) CiiiLDREY, Mr. Roy College Assn. iaie Profi.s.sor of Practical Pharmacy (P) CoGHiLL, Dr. H. DeT looi East Clav St. .■Associate in Nervous and Mental nisi ' a.s.s .-ind in Pediatrics (M) Cole, Dr. Dean B Professional Building A.ssoclatc in Medicine (M) Collman, Dr. C. C Professional Huildlng Pi..l..ss.ir .if .Neurological Surgel-y (M-N I Cuiisultant m (iral Surgery (Dl Collier, Dr. J. E Soy West Franklin St. . ssisl.int In Mi-dicine (Ml Copley, Dr. E. 1 12s LiWn Ave. . .ssistant in M.-di.-lne CoiRTNEV, Dr. R. H Professional Bldg. . sB,..ial.. Pr..r.ss..r ..f Hi.lithalniol.iuy (M-.Nl Ckeekmur, Dr. R. L. . . . 1100 West Franklin St. .Vss.iciat.. in Oi.nilo-frinary Surg.ry I Ml Crockeit, Dr. W. G College Pin P) Crui CHIT ELD, Dr. W. CtAYI.e . . 2235 Miiiuinient Ave. Assistant I ' rofessor of X,.urological .siniK.ry (.Ml Dai.ton, Dr. L H iioo West Franklin St. Inslruitor ' ln Orthopedic Surgery (Ml D.VRDEN, Dr. O. B Westbrook Sanaloriimi Assoclati- in Nervous and Mental diseases (Ml D.Wis, Dr. T. D Professional Building Assistant Professor of Medicine 1 M-I.M r DousoN, Dr. a. I Medical Arts Building Prolossor nf Geiuto-tTriiiary SurgL-iy (M-N) Dudley, Dr. |. N Memorial Hospital Assistant in Pediatrics (M) DuNC-VN, Dr. George W. . . Professional IJuikiinp; Associate in Dental Anatomy and Operative iuiitistry (D) Egcleston, Dr. Eugene C. . . . 1200 Bainbrldgc St. Associate in Gynecology (M) Faulkner, Dr. D. M. . . . Medical Arts Building Associate in Orthopedic Surgery (M) Fav, Dr. F. O Memorial Hospital Instructor in Ophthalmology (N) Assistant in Ophthalmology (M) FiTTS, Dr. J. Blair 917 West Franklin St. Associate in Orthopedic Surgery (M-N I Fletcher, Dr. F. P 2317 East Broad St. Associate Professor of First Aid (P) Forbes, Dr. J. C College Associate Professor of Chemistry (M-D) Associate Professor of Chemistry and Llirector of Re- search (P) Franks, Miss Anne Sl.i ter, Hospital Division, M. C. V. Instructor in Nursing and Supervisor of Outpatient Department (N) Fravser, Mr. W. M. . . . . 1603 Oakwond Ave. Instructor in Pharmacy (P) Friend, Miss Gordon Memorial Hospital Social Service, Outpati.nt Department Galvin, Dr. Louise .... Memorial Hospital Instructor in Pediatrics (M) Instructor In Pediatrics and Communical.le Diseases (N) CJardner, Dr. Emily .... iioo West Franklin St. Instructor in Pediatrics (M) Gay, Dr. George, HI College Instructor in Chemistry (M-D-P-N) CJayle, Dr. R. Finley .... Professional Building A.ssoeiate Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases (M) Gordon, Dr. Marsh.all P. . . Medical . ' Xris Building Instructor in Genito-Urinarv Surgery (M) . ssistant in Urology (N) Graham, Dr. A. Stephens . Medical .Arts Building Instructor in Surgery (M) (iRAHAM, Dr. W. T Medical Arts Building Professor of Orthopedic Surg.ry (Ml Gray, Dr Ben H Stuart Circle Hospital Professor of Clinical Obstetrics (M) Griffin, Dr. V. H Memorial Hospital Instructor in Surgery (M-N) Grinels, Mrs. Alm, College Instructor in Nursing (N) Grinnan, Dr. St. George T. . .92=; ' est (Jrace St. Professor of Pediatrics (M) Gurley, Dr. W. B College Assistant Professor of Operative Dentistry (D) H.a.. g, Dr. H. B College Professor of Pharniacolosv (M-D-P) Associate Professor of Physiology I M-D-P) Harper, Dr. E. C Professional Building Instructor in Medicine (M) Haynes, Dr. W. Tyler . . Medical Arts Building Associate in Orthodontia (D) Heitshu, Miss Kathrvn . Hospital Division, M. C. V. Instructor in Nutrition and CooUery (N) Henry, Dr. H. C. . Central State Hospital, Petersburg Associate in Nervous and Mental Eiiseases (M HiGGiNS, Dr. W. H. ... Medical Arts Building Professor of Clinical Medicine (M) Hill, Dr. Emory Pr.ifcssional Building Professor of Ophthalmology (M-N) HiNCHMAN, Dr. F. E 415 North 25tli St. Associate in Genito- Urinary Surgery (M) Hite, Dr. Oscar L Professional BIdg. Instructor in Medicine (M) Hoge, Dr. Randolph H. . . . Medical Arts Building Associate in Anotomy and Surgery (M) Horsley, Dr. Guy . . Saint Elizabeth ' s Hospital Instructor in Surgery (M) HOKSLEY, Dr. John S., Jr . Saint Elizabeth ' s Hospital Assistant Professor of Surgery (Ml Hurt, Dr. A. S., ]r. ■ 1028 West Franklin St. Instructor in P ' ediatrics (M) Hutcheson, Dr. T. Morrison . . Professional Building Professor of Clinical Medicine (M) Ingersoll, Dr. Everett H College Assistant Prof ssor of Anatomy I Ml Irving, Miss Hazel Memorial Hospital Assistant in Medicine (M) Instructor in Clinical Pathology (N) JANTZ, Dr. J. G College Assistant Professor of Anatomy (Dl Jennings, Dr. G A. C. . . . Medical -Arts Building Associate in Clinical P dodontia (Dl Johns, Dr. F. S Johnston-Willis Hospital Associate Professor of Surgery (Ml Tones, Dr. T. D Medical .Arts Building .Associate in Pediatrics IM) Jones, Miss Queenes ' . . . . Memorial Hospital Instructor and Supervisor of Operating Room Technic (N) fORDAN, Dr. William R . Medical Arts Building Instructor in Medicine (Ml Kellum, Dr. E. L 2614 Grove .Ave. . ssociate in Mediiine (Ml Ketchum, Dr, P. D Memorial Hospital -Assistant in Otolaryngology (Ml King, Miss Margaret E . Hospital Division, M. C. V. Instructor in Nutrition and Cookery (N) Kleinmann, Dr. Hans College Associate in Pathology (M) Kraus- Miss Myrtle Memorial Hospital Instructor in Disp using Pharmacy (Pi Miller, Osterud, Pori er, Ross, Tali.ev, Tucker, Wa.mpler, Ware Ai ' PERLV, Bauchman, Bowles, Brapel, Bond. Chevalier, Dodson MEDICAL COLLE FACULTY Lacv, Miss Alice K. . Hospital Division, M. C. ' . Inslrui-lur anil Supervisor uf Obstetrical Nursing (N) LArRATTA, Dr. Carl V 413 North 23d St. Instructor in Gjnecology LaNeave, Dr. VV. T Memorial Hospital Assistant in Surgiry (M) Little, Dr. Arthur Paul College Piol ' essor of Prostlietic Dentistry ( Li I Lyeri.v, Dr. J. G Medical Arts Building Professor of Oral Surgery (Dl Assistant Professor of Neui ' ological Suigery (M) Lyon ' S, Dr. Harry ... . Professional Building Profe.ssor of Periodontia anil Oi-al Pathology (M-D) Mais, Dr. RoLi.Avn | College Assistant Plofessor of Physiology and Pharmacology (M-D-Pl Masters, Dr. Howard R. . . . Tucker Sanatorium Associate in Nervous and .Mental Diseases (Ml MauCK, Dr. H. Page . . . Professional Building Assoeiat ■ in Orthoi)edic Surgeiy O ' I McCauley, Miss Grace Elizabeth, Memorial Hospital Instructor and Supervisor of Medical Nursing iN) McCoy, Dr. S. J. . . . . 1106 West Franklin St. Associate Profe.ssor of English (P) McCrackan, Mr. Robert F College Associate Prolessor of Chemistry (M-P) McGavock, Dr. E. P Medical Arts Building Professor of Dermatology and Syphilology OI-N) McGee, Dr. V. Ambrose . . . 261S Grove . ve. Associate In Pediatrics (Mi McGlN-N-ES. Dr. G. F. State Board of Hcaltli Associate in Preventive Medi. ine (Mi McNeil, Dr. I. G Memorial Hospital A,sslstant in Surgery (Ml Michaux. Dr. Stuart .... Stuart Circle Hospital Professor of Clinical Gynecology (Ml Miller, Dr. Clifton M. . Stuart Circle Ho pi:al Associate- Pi-ofessor of Otolaryngology (Mi Miller, Dr. Roshier V 2401 North .■ ve. Profe.ssor of Materia Medi. -a and Thi-raju ut ics (Pi Mills, Miss ' irgima .... Memorial Hospital Assistant in Ba.teiiology and Parasitolo gy IM) Moore, Miss Viroima B. . Hospital Division, M. C. V. Instructor and Supervisor of Operating Room Teohnic (N) MORIIART. Dr. C. V College Instructor in Prosth.-tic Dentistry (ID MuRREi.L, Dr. Thomas V 17 East Grace St. A.ssociate Professor of Dermatology and Syphilology (M-N) GE OF VIRGINIA 1934-1935 Neai.e, Evi;iA s C Memorial Hospital Instructor in Nutrition and Cookery (Ni Neale, Mr. R C College Assistant in Clinical Pathology (N) Necus, Dr. Sidney S ... College Professor of Chemistry (M-D-P-Ni Nelson, Dr. Charles M Memorial Hospital Assistant in Surgery (Mi Nelson. Dr. Kinloch ... Saint Lukes Hospital Associate in Medicin • (.N) Nichols, Dr. Angus R., Jr. . . . 2618 Grove -A.ve. Associate in Anatomy and Gynecology (M) NoBi.iN, Miss Frances E . .... College Instructor in Physical Education (N) Oliver Dr. Oris College instructor in Exodontia and Operative Dentistry (D) 03TERUD, Dr. H. L College Professor of Anatomy IM-D-N) OuiLAND Dr. C L 312 North Ninth St. . ssociate in Preventive Medicine iMi Parker, Dr. William H. . 602 West Franklin St. eraduate Manager of . thletics (M-D-Pi Parrish, Mr. W. T. JR- • ■ ■ Mutual Building Associate in Medical Jurisprudenc ■ (Ml Parsons. Miss Anne F. . . . Memorial Hospiial Instruitor in Nursing (N) PENNiNcrroN, Mrs. Margaret ... College Instructor in Anatomy and Physiology (Nl Pepi.e, Dr. W. L Saint Luke ' s Hospital Profe.ssor of Clinical Surgery (M) PiNCKNEV, Dr M. M 82S West Franklin St. Assistant in Nervous and Menial Diseases IMI Pins Mr. F P College Assistant Professor of Chemistiv (D-Pl PdRi er Dr. William B Meitiorial Hospital Professor of Merti lne (M-N) Presion. Dr. Robert S . . . Profess! ,nal Building Associate Professor of Medicin,- iMi PuGH. Miss IlArriE Hospital Division, M. C. V. Instructor in Pediatrii s mii.I in Ctmununicable Diseases (N) PuscH, Dr. Lewis C College Associate Professor of Pathology (Mi R.mcliffe, Dr. W. A. . . Medical .Arts Building Associate in Op.-rative Dentistry (D) Refse, Mr. Tf.ss A College As.sociate in Pharniacy (Pi Robins, Dr. Charles R. . Stuart Circle Hospital Professor of Gynecology (M Ross, Dr. Ci.SDE F Professional Biiililing Picfessor of Clinical Genito-Urinary Sui-gery (M) Professor of Clinical Urology (N) RuDD, Mr. WoRTi.EV F College Professor of Chemistry (D-P-N) Santord, Dr. H B 840 West Cirace St. Associate in Obstetrics (M) Schools, Dr. P. E Pine Camp Hospital Assorlate In MLdicine (M) SiiAw, Or. Frederick W College I ' li.frssor or Bacteriology and Parasitology (M-P) i ' r f s, or of Bacteriology (D-N) Siuii ' iiKRi), Dr. W. a 206 West Grace St. Associate Professor ot Medicine (M) Shiei.d, Dr. J. Asa The Tucker Sanatorinni Associate in Nervous and Mental Diseases {III SIMMS, Dr. Rlibek F 211 West Grace Si. Instructor in Preventive Medicine (Ml Simpson, Dr. R. L 301 East Franklin St. Professor of Clinical Practic; ' (D) SiNTON, Dr. a. C 1015 West Franklin St. Associate Professor of Gynecology (M-Xl Smhh, Dr, James H Saint Lnke ' s Hospital Professor ot Clinical Medicine (11) SouTinvARD, Dr. W. R lOo North BoulevartI Instructor in Surgery (M) Spalding, Dr. H. C Menimial Hospital Instructor In Obstetrics M) Stai.kv, Dr. Hugh O Memorial Hospital Assistant in Surgery (M) Stern, Dr. H. S 807 West Franklin St. .-Vssistant Professor of Pediatrics (M) Stone, Dr. J. B . 20+2 Park Ave. Associate in Pediatrics (Ml Stoneburner, Dr. L. T Medical Arts Bltlg. Associate in Medicine (M) Stratford, Dr. A. L, Jr. . 1108 ' est Franklin St. Associate in Obstetrics (M) Succs, Dr. William D. . . . Stuart Circle Hospital Associate in Obstetrics (M) SurrON, Dr. Lee E., Jr College Associate Professor of Pediatrics (M-N) Tabb, Dr. J. L Medical Arts Boilding Associate Professor of Roentgenology (M-D) Tallev, Dr. Daniel D. . . . Professi mal Building Professor of Roentgenology (M) Terrell, Dr. E. H . . . . Medical Arts Building Associate Professor of Surgery (M) Thomas, Dr. Herman P. . University of Richmond Instructor in Economics and Sociology ' (P Thomason, Dr. Rudolph C. . . 109 South Boulevard Instructor in Ophthalmology (M-N) Tucker, Dr. Beverly R. . The Tucker Sanatorium Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases (M) Tucker, Dr. J. T Medical Arts Building Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery (Ml Turner, Dr. N. H 200 East Franklin St. Associate in 1 i|.lil lialiimloKy (M-N) Underwood, Mi;. Mii 1 nii K. College A -i .1. Ml III I ii,.lc. v and Parasitology (M-P) Ass,,. i.M. in |:,H n , i-lcuy (D-N) Vaughan, Miss M in Bkvan . . Memorial Hospital Instructor in Nursing and Night Supervision (N) Vaughan, Dr. R. W. . . . Medical Arts Building Associate in Otolaryngology (M) Vermilya, Dr. George D. . . . Memorial Hospital Assistant in Surgery (M) Walker, Dr. Harry Professional Building Associate in Medicine (Ml Associate in Medicine and Materia Medica (N) Wallerstein, Dr. E. U. . . . Professional Building Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology (M) Wampler, Dr. Fred J. . . College Professor of Preventive Mcdicin. and Director of the Outpatient Department (JI-. ) Ware, Dr. H. Hudnall, Jr. . . Memorial Hospital Associate Professor of Obstetrics (M-N) Warthen, Dr. Harry J. . . Medical Arts Building Assistant Professor of Surgery (M-N) Wash, Dr. A. M Medical Arts Building Associate Professor of Dental Roentgenology and o£ E.xodontia and Anaesthesia (M-D) Associate in Oral Surgei-y (D) Washington, Dr. T. B. . . . 407 West Grace St. Associate in Genito-Ui inary Surgery (M) Whitehead, Dr. L. J Professional Building Associate in Roentgenology (M) Whitmore, Dr. W. Herman . . 200 North Fifth St. Instructor in Medicine (M) Williams, Dr. Carrincton . . Saint Luke ' s Hospital Associate Professor of Surgery (M) Williams, Dr. Edward H. . Westbrook Sanatorium Instructor in Medicine (Ml Assistant in Nervous and Mental (Ml Instructor in Nervous and Mental Diseases (N) Williams, Dr. Ennion S. . 4015 Hermitage Road Instructor in Medicin ■ (Ml Williams, Dr. James N. , . Professional Building Instructor in Medicine (M) Instructor in Nervous and Mental Diseases (M) Williams, Miss Lillian May . . Memorial Hospital Instructor and Assistant Supervisor of Operating Room Technic (N) Williams, Dr. J. Powell . . . Saint Luke ' s Hospital Assistant Professor of Medicine (Ml Williams, Dr. Pauline College Associate Professor of Pathology (M-D-N) Williams. Miss Virginia, Crippled Children ' s Hospital Instructor in Orthopedic Nursing (N) Wolf, Miss Lulu K College A,ssistant Professor of Nursing (N) Wright, Miss Hazel Dora . . . Memorial Hospital Instructor and Supervisor of Surgical Nursing (N) Zeigler, Miss Frances Helen College Professor of Nursing (N) Griwan, Haag, Little, Negus, Robins, Sh. w, Simpson Medicdl School i«ti Ct5;-s?afC-iV f-.-S- ' ' -u:=i7J--:-t. ' The honours go to Doctor Jesse Bennett, a country practitioner in the Valley of Virginia, for performing the first Cesarean operation in America in 1794. The patient was the doctor ' s wife. Laudanum was given and with the assistance of two negro women, the pa- tient was placed on two planks, supported by barrels. Mother and child survived the operation. il School 1 y Ky o TO EXPRESS THE RESPECT AND ADMIRATION OF THE SENIOR CLASS FOR DR. I. A. BIGGER FOR HIS FINE QUALITIES AS A MAN, PATIENT TOLERANCE AS A TEACHER, AND SINCERE UNDER- STANDING AS A COUNSELLOR. SENIOR CLASS SCHOOL OF MEDICINE J. Marun llAr.Ki., Jk President Lksikr Dlsmw lice-President KsiA I.KW Secretary and Treasurer Wiii.iAM II, MAriiii; v3 Exeeiili ' ve Council W ' liiiAM LiNFKsn Honor Council Maois C. Row e Historian C. R. W ' ATKiNS It ilctics j. K. Hi;M)I:r -Ray lliMKR E. Frischkorn Skull and Bones J. Marmv IIahi:i., Jr. PnsiJ.nl A HISTORY OF THE SENIOR CLASS FOUR years ago a trembling group was herded into the amphitheatre of McGuire Hall to re- ceive Dr. Osterud ' s blessing and instruction. A remnant of this same group is still being herded about the campus receiving blessings of one sort or another; and instruction; they tremble no less — indeed more if anything, for one improves with practice, even in the gentle art of trembling. Dur- ing this period there have been certain happenings which stand out as landmarks. One readily re- calls the first day in Bacteriology with its little controversy between Dr. Shaw and Bro. Spinks, i. e., the matter of smoking in class. Dr. Shaw could, it seems, understand the desire for the solace of tobacco in trying times; but aforesaid Bro. Spinks made the mistake of a final drag before discarding the fag. What followed constitutes the landmark. Be the smoking as it may, one must admit that a welcome of a large order greeted the class; in fact, one of our chief arguments had to do with the degree of perfection possible in a mere human-being (provided he be a fraternity man). Any one of the numerous organizations of this nature could guarantee with certainty that a fresh- man entering its fold automatically acquired an immunity to professorial wrath; the collections of quizzes of a by-gone day plus association with the older men promised excellence as a student; social prestige of course was too self-evident to deserve serious comment. Each chapter ' s treasury was de- picted as a never-ending source of marvelous so- cial functions with beautiful and gracious com- panions to be had for the asking. The following fall found us rwearing with fervor to these and similar claims for the glory of the lodge of our choice! Sophomore year undoubtedly developed at least c?rtain traits in the class — notably a healthy re- spect for pathology as uttered with a British ac- cent, and the tendency to sprout goose-flesh at be- ing called Mister So-and-So with the accent on the Mis part of the Mister. At one stage of the game it was rumored that Dr. Haag was doing some research work on the effects of pharmacology on the student. Regardless of what conclusions he reached, he had the satisfaction of knowing he had John R. Saunders climbing poles in lab. Per- haps the good doctor decided that if the mere read- ing of drug actions did that he had best relegate that phase of his work to other institutions better equipped to handle such characters. One can un- derstand such an interpretation — even if those of us who saw Johnnie every day didn ' t notice any great departure from his normal. Sophomore year had its compensations though; for instance, the privilege of wearing a stethoscope and being taken on Ward-rounds. We still feel that we might have learned more Physical Diagnosis had our attention not been distracted by our instruc- tor ' s mode of dress: it was an even bet all last term as to whether the class could learn enough of the physics of sound to get by before Dr. Williams ' belt gave up the ghost and dropped his trousers. There ought to be a law; prospective medicos are sensitive souls anyway. And now for the year of the shining trousers ' seats and beaded tuber ischii! The memory of the seats in 410 is still too painfully fresh to allow any great amount of levity in that direction. Dr. Paul Anderson did his best to fatten us up for the work by copious feeding of fried chicken. Your humble scribe will venture a small wager to the effect that Dr. Anderson wouldn ' t offer to fill Bill Linfesty up again. If chickens had any frater- nalism about them they would most of a certainty gang up and do something to William for his in- terpretation of Rhapsody On a Drum-Stick as reveled one spring morning in Williamsburg. The Junior Class considered doing something, but after all, chicken via a stomach tube is of small use to anyone. All told it was a good year, but there still was a fly in the old ointment. Just to think that a transfer had to teach us the latest styles in the wearing of stethoscopes. Why, not one of us se- riously considered a scope in the light of neckware for a busy Saturday afternoon in front of Miller and Rhoads until one of our newly acquired brothers showed us how simple it could be. Talk of the final round brings O. B. to mind. It has long been whispered around that sudden changes of weather serve to bring action along obstetrical lines; section IV being of a scientific turn naturally argued as to whether change in bar- ometric pressure or noise of thunder accomplished the end in view; in making some experiments on the subject, the stove in O. B. quarters was blown up with such results that your scribe was pasted against the north wall of the building and a negro boy who formerly shined shoes in the neighborhood gave birth to a burst of speed which has probably never been equalled by one of his race. When last seen he was sweeping over the brow of Church Hill headed for the Atlantic Seaboard. The event was reported by Bro. Saunders, who was up to his usual tricks — i. e., chasing milk wagons in that neighborhood. In closing — any of you who need occult advice see Fergus — he is psychic, man, with a pair of dice anyway. That ' s one thing learned in Petersburg. Thus endeth the last lesson — here! Historian. 1935 SENIOR CLASS JOHN EMANTFL ALKXANDER NORIOl.K, VA. B.S., College of William and Mary, 1935; Coach Swimming Team, ' 3+- ' 35; Basketball, ' 33. BENJAMIN RANDOLPH AII.EN RICHMOND, VA. H.S., I ' nivtrsity of Richinnnci, 1932. HERBERT M. BE DO ' CHARLESTON, . VA. i B ri A.H., Wcslcyan ( illese, 1922; B.S , West Virginia rnivtrsitx, 1933; Reveler ' s ()uartette, ' 33- ' 34; ' 34- ' 35. JOHN ROBERT BENDER JACKSONVII.I.F., N. C. I ' 1 B.A., Wake Forest College. 1931: B.S., Wake Forest College, 1933; . ' -R Representative, 193+; Cotillion Club. CHARI.F.S A. HI.AND KKII.MOMI, A. B.S., Wake Forest College, 1930; Medical R. O. T. C, ' 3 1 - ' 3 5; X. H. T. ; Tail Sigma Epsilon ; Kappa Phi Kappa (Wake Forest) ; Track Team, ' 27- ' 28 ; Acrobatic Team, ' 27- ' 28- ' 29; Instructor of Science and Mathe- matics Edward Best High School and Athletic Coach, ' 3o- ' 3i- GEORGE STEEI. BOWERS RlCHMONIl, A. l X U.S., Ilampden-Sydney, 1931. I ). P. BIRI.FSON, JR. SI ' Kl CI I ' lM, S. C. A K K H.S.. King ' s College, 19 1; X-R. i Staff, ' 3+- ' 35; Membe, R. O. F. C. Wll MAM IIOI.MFS CHAPMAN. JR. SNH rill IKl.l), VA. ' !• X H.S., t ' niversity of Richmond, 1930; Brmvn-Seipiard SocieU ; Sigma Zita ; ( K-rinan Club; President lunior Class. THAI CHANG CHOI SONGDO, KOREA LEON A. DICKF.RSON SCARnORO, V. VA. !■ B n .S., West ir inia rni ' ersit ' SOLOMON DISICK BROOKLYN, N . V. B.S., College of Citv of New York, 1931; Brown- Sequard Srciety ; Sigma Zeta : R. O. T. C. ; City Home Interne; Honor Council. JOSEPH M. DIXON ROANOKE, VA. P. T ' 1 ' R. O. T. C; City Home Interne. LESTER E. DCNMAN MULLENS, V. VA. X Cotillion Cluh; Vice-President Senior Class JESSE BURNS EARLE RICHMOND. VA. B.S., King ' s College, 1929; Athletic Representative, ' 33-34; President Athletic Association, ' 3+- ' 35 ; Man- ager Basketball, ' 34. CARROLL E. L. EASTERDAY UNION BRIDGE, MD. O T A.B., Vestern Maryland College; Cotillion Club. CH. RLES NEIL ECKERSON CHARLESTON, XV. VA. a T i Manager Swimming Team, ' 33-3+. SENIOR CLASS I 935 1935 SENIOR CLASS IirOH STEPHENSOX KOWARDS PmRRSBLRC, A. H.S., W ' akf Forest College, 1932; Gamm.i Sigma Epsilon. SAMIEL LEON ELFMON RICHMONB, VA. A E B.S., riiiver -it of Richmond, 11)32; Cotillic Assi.vtaiit Business Manager Skull ii ' ij liums ' 3+ ' 35; Associate Editor X-Ra , ' 33- ' 3+; Edit ' ' 34- ' 35; Class Basketball. 33- 3+ r X-RA EDWIN P. EWERS PITTSBURGH, PA. A K K A.B., Transxivania College, 1929. LE ROV CLARK FERGUS WTI.MISCnON ' , V. c. 4 P r Biisine ' s Manager Skull and Bnn.s: Cotillion CUih. lUNTER BERNARD FRISCHKORN KICIIMOM), A. t ' X JAMES OriNCV GANT, JR. COI.LMBLS, OHIO ! p :: B.. ., Ohio State riiivcrsitv, 1930: . LSc.. Ohio State Iniversity, 1931. II. .MRKLIA GILL RlCll.VIOM), VA. . .B., Westhainpton College, 1926; .A.M., Duke Iniver- sitx, 1930; Secretary and Treasurer of Sophomore Class if Medicine, ' 32- ' 33; Secretary and Treasurer of Bro v[i-Scquard Society, ' 34- ' 35; Recording Secretary . . E. I. Fraternity, ' 34- ' 3 5. GE0Rc;E ADRIAN CII.ASS CARTERET. N. J. 1 A IC .• .B., Cnivcrsin of Richmond, 193 ' ; N ' icc-President Sophomore Class; Cotillion Cluh; Sigma Zeta ; Brown- Seijuard; Skull and Bnnis Editorial Staff; Editor Skull aud Hones; Revelers; Class Basketball. AMES M. HABEL, JR. JF.TERSVIl.I.E, VA. H.S., College of William and Mary, 1931; Phi Kappa Tail; Dramatic Cluh, ' 3i- ' 32; Director Dramatics, ' 3-- ' 33; President Revelers, ' 33- ' 3+- ' 35; Ex. Honor Council, ' 32- ' 33; Honor Council, ' 33- ' 3)-; President Co- tillion Chib, ' 34- ' 3,; President Senior Class. CORNELIUS E. HAGAN, JR. I.VKBROOK, I.. I., N. V. JOHN D. HAMNER, JR. RICHMOND, V.A. O K FEDERICO HERN.ANDEZ VEGA ALIA, PlKKin RICO e K ! ' Si ma Zeta. HERMAN KEITH HERRIN EVERGREEN ' , N. C. i p ;: B.S., Wake Forest, 1933. HERMAN HENRY HINES BRISTOL, VA. B II Ph.G., Medical College of ' irginia, 1930; Cotillion Cliih. I MAX LEONARD HOLLAND K LOGAN, V. VA. X A.B., West Virginia L ' niversity, 1931 EDMUND MOSELEV LA PR. ' XDE RICHMOND, VA. A K K SENIOR CLASS 1935 I 935 SENIOR CLASS KAI PII M. LECHAISSE M J)ISOS, WIS. B.A., rnivcrsity of Wisconsin, 1930. RECTOR S. LE GARDE DAMASCLS, VA. p :: B.S., Kingr ' s College, 1931. SAMIEI. LEVINE SUAS LAKE, . V. H.S., I ' niversity (if Mississippi, 1932. ESTA JOYCE LEW SUFFOLK, VA. A E I Secretarv-Treasurer Senior Clas JOHN Wll 1 lAM I.IN ' FESTY i.om; BKACir, cai.. AM., Stanford I ' niversity, ■93 ; Bro vn-Scquard ; Si ma Zeta ; Revelers; Director of Dramatics, ' 33- ' 3+; Honor Council, ' 34-35; Cotillion Club. LOnS LOVENSTEIN R[CllMO n, VA. K.S., rnivcrsity of ' ir ;inia, 1927; M.S., Cniversity of ' irKinia. 192S; .X sociate Editor -Rav, ' 34- ' 35; As- sociate Editor Skull and linius, ' 3+- ' 3 5. JOHN I ' HH.ir EV.XCH ST. PETERSBURG, F1,A. V. T + . .B.. W ' nsliin toii I.cc rnivcrsity, 1930; Phi Beta Kappa; Si ma Zeta; Bro vn-Se(|uard. WAVEAND NASH McKENZIE ORwnon, N. c. p :: CAMERON MACRAE, JR. RICHMOND, VA. H.S., I ' liiversity of North Carolina, 1933. WILLIAM H. MATTHEWS DANTE, A. e K -I ' Executive Council, ' 3+- ' 35; Cotillion Club; R. O. T. C. SAM MII.CHIN RICHMOND, VA. A E B.S., University of Richmond, 1932; Class Basketball. LOUIS MOOSEV MONONGAH, W. VA. e K ! ' B.S., ' est ' irginia I ' niversity, 1933. HOLLAND THOMAS MYERS LEXINCnON, N. C. P 2 B.S., Wake Forest College; Cotillion Club. JAMES T. O ' NEAL A.MEI.IA, VA. A K K D.WID POLLACK RICHiMOND, VA. A K A.B.. Cornell Cniversitv, 1931. RENO RCSSELL PORTER RICHMOND, A. p :: A.B., Washington and Lee University, 1931; President of the Freshman Class, ' 31; German Club; Sigma Zeta; President of Bronn-Se juard Society, ' 35: Pres- ident of Student Body, ' 35. SENIOR CLASS 1935 I 935 SENIOR CLASS RIPFRT WENDELL POWELL MI]KI:AV ]0« N, W . A. A.H., West Virginia t iii crsity, 1 929 ; B.S., West ' irginia riiivcrsity, 1930; Heta Sigma; Kappa Kappa Psi ; Revellers. 4 ' 3 • ' ' W ' . Wn LL M 1II()NL S PVLES KICHMOM), VA. SOLOMON RAHIN ' OWLLZ nudOKi vs ' , . . U.S., I ' niversity nf N ' lirth Carolina, 1933; Phi Beta Kappa: Ilnniir Roll, ' 29- ' 30. WELLFORO C. REED RICHMOND, VA. ' i ' X H.S., llamp.len-Syclncy College, 1931; Ckrman Cliih. IL A. RICH MIIRf;AMO V, W. A. H K . .K.. West X ' irginia rrii ersity, 1932; B.S., West ' ir- ginia Cniversitv. 1933. EDISON E. RH TER SAI.KM, V. VA. ' .; T •! . ' .B., Salem College. NL- SO C. KOWE .MOMCO.Mlin , .MA. ' 1 ' 1 ' i; B.S., King Calle.ge. 1931. SOON r. i R ANc; SOSiaiO, KOREA JOHN ' RICHARD SAIXDERS, JR. SAI.UDA, VA. X B.S., Hampden-Sydney College, 1931 ; Historian Fresh- ma[i Class; President Sophomore Class; Tennis Team, ' 32- ' 33- ' 34, Captain, ' 34; Basketball Squad, ' 33; Ger- man Club. SEV K)rR SCHOTZ PATERSUN ' , -V. J. A K B.S., New York University, 1930; M.S., University of Richmond, 1931. E. BOWIE SHEPHERD RICHMOND, VA. B.A., Universitv of Richmond, 1931 ; Secretarv Y. M. C. A., •33- ' 34; President Y. M. C. A., •34- ' 35. JOHN JOSEPH SPERANDEO BROOKLYN, N. . A.B., West ' irginia University, 1931; B.S., West ' ir- ginia University, 1933. J. B. SPIXKS S. CHARLESTON, V. VA. B n Cotillion Club; X-Rav Staff, •32- ' 33- ' 34; Skull and Bones; Representative Sophomore Class. BENNETTE EDWARD STEPtlENSGN, JR. WEI.DON, N. C. X HACK U. STEPHENSON, JR. RICH.VIOND, VA. B.A., University of Richmond, 1931; Sigma Zeta ; Interne Crippled Children ' s Hospital. ALFRED ROBERT STORK CHARLESTON, V. VA. B n B.S., West Virginia University, 1933; Tennis Tea ' 34- ' 35; S vimming Team, ' 34- ' 35. SENIOR CLASS I 935 I 935 SENIOR CLASS CLARRV C. TRICE I.OLISA, V. . Ph.G., Medical OilleKe of Viryiiiia, 1931; ' ice- Presidi ' iit Freshman ( lass; Direitor Orchestra, '  3- ' 34. m -a JiV fi ' L JAMES CARL TR1 ' ETT GEORGES FORK, VA. e K R, O. T. C. LEO LOUIS TVLEC MERIDKN ' , CONN, n T I ' Urnwn-Seiiuarcl ; Si ma Zeta ; Junidr I[Ucrnship City Home; R. O. T. C. WILLIAM R. TYSON NORFOLK, VA. V. W. TYSON MEBANE, N. C. ■I X ANGEI.O JOSEPH VILLANI NEW HAVEN ' , CONN. Ph.G., Connecticut Cnllege nf Pharmacv, 192S; H.. ., Cniversity of Richmond, 1931; Colilli n Chih ; Tennis Team. Will 1AM JOHANNES W.MHOJA Cl NIER MORICHES, I.. I., N. ■( . .• .H., rnivcrsity of Alabama, 1931. IIAKOIJ) WA NK WARO CI Al, V. VA. A.B., Mnskingiim College, 1930. p CHARLES EUGENE WATKINS CHARLESTON, V. VA. i B n A.B., West ' ir[;inia rniversity, 1931; B.S., West Vir- Rinia I ' niversity, 1933; Tennis, ' 34- ' 35; Basketball Manager, ' 34- ' 35. THOMAS DUN ' AL WAT IS CLIFKORB, VA. T Sigina Zeta ; Brown-Setjuard ; Jiin ' mr Internship, Wi- ginia Home for Incurables; R. O. T. C. AVER CROTCH WHITLEY STOW POINT, VA. e K I ' R. O. T. C. WASHINGTON CARLYLE WINN KEVSVILLE, VA. A.B., University of Richmond; Sigma Zeta; Brown- Sefjuard Society; Junior Internship, ' irginia Home for Incurables. RECEPTION AT CABANISS HALL Students are greeted by the faculty and administra- tion. m ' mm. STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEET This occasion sponsored annually hy the college and student body is a great factor in maintaining congenial relations between student and professor. SENIOR CLASS 1935 Two ' tlh 1 .7 Doilor out- time oicnui it far. .hut drovf said iniilor tar nn Hill, . lit siriitrj palicnls ttcar and far, ll ' il i bonrs Ino sn l. or -viins loo hriillr, .htd tnutty a matt ttt dtrr dtslrrss, .htd ready to iji ' V: up life ' s lialllr. Was leiitpted to yet up attd dress If ieiteer lie heard its eheerjiil rallle. Due day the lar ijol liadly stalled— The doctor eoitldit ' t tiiahe it ijo. elnd, ijellinij to a phone, lie called .1 repair-man that he chanced to knini-. This Expert took the car aix-ay, .htd kept it in his shop until The Doctor thotiijlil ' lii-as ijone to stay. Hut then the car came lunh — xiilh hill. ■7 had lo -varnish all the -ziheels, .hid put H ti- air in all the tires; Fi.x the rear a.xle -li-here il njueals, .hid insulate ' most all ihc ii ' ires; I had lo lake the fan-hell off. .hid re-upholster all the seats; The enijinc had an aicful couijh lit has yet — zchen il o-ver heals). I ha, I to get neiv piston rings; The larburelor needed fi.xiny ; I had lo tii hten all the springs — found the oil and gas ' u:ere ini.xinij ; .III of the gearing needed juic, . .hid so I gr,ased them, c-eery one; I found tlie differeuluti loose. .hi, I changed all spark-plugs — hut it ' s done ■■The .T4o;7, ' lias taken lots of lime. .In, I marly all my e.rira parts. Hul -Lihiii you lia-i e a hill to dimh Please note hoi.v easily it slarls. I ' ve done the best thai I could do. .htd if you don ' t gel in a icreck, II ought to be as good us ;; ■;;■. One hundred dollar.!— please send iheck. II One day the Expert ' s inife took sick ll ' tlli chills, convulsions, and a fever, lie Si nl to get a Doctor, cjuick, ISecause she i.iouldn ' 1 lit him have her. The Doctor had not paid his bill. .Ind, ix ' lien he came, looked very solemn; Told them she lias extremely ill — The zi:ords he used vi-outd fill a column lie called lo see her every day. Thinking up ills of ncu: descriptions, htd every time he went that way lie left a couple more preseriptir.ns ; Recovering, after several v:eeks. If ' ilh nice plump fat in all the hollow, .In, I rich red roses on lur cheeks. The Doctor sent his bill, as follows: found your wife about all in — .V ;( ' ha,l no melaboli, rate; II, r ihoritx ready lo fall in. .hi, I Iwenly-six pounds und,r weight ; Her arteries were all sclerosed. Her cerebellum very dusty, I ' ale and anemic as a ghost, .hid all her joints were weak and rusty. ' ■Her hair ttaj getting gray and dry. Her stomach ruined by sweets and starche ,S7 ■ had choked disks in either eye. .hid nystagmus — also falling arches; Her tonsils had to be cut out. lieiiiuse of chronic tonsillitis; :htd soon you ' ll find her nice and stout — She hasn ' t any more phlebitis. I ' m sure from o-Ti ' on, she will be .Is good as the first day you met her— Healthy as either you or m,— I never saw a lady better. I notice that your bill was for One hundred dollars— so is mine. That ' s all there is — there is no more. .htd we are even — ain ' l that fine? 035 x-ra H 1 1 -- v.. Fkrhuson, Noni,i JUNIOR MEDICAL CLASS Officers J. G. Welch Pn-fiJr C. V. ' AKREN- firr-l ' rrsiclml II. E. Ferguson ' Siirr. ' ary mid Tiiiisiinr Jack Sruiowhz Ex,(ul ' i-vc Cnumil Louis DeAncei.is Honnr Cnunc ' ii Francis E. Nobi.in liislnr ' ian T. EwiN TA ■LOR Itlilrliis C. A. Wflchons -P -ay A. M. Tacorson Shi ' A S Bo us HISTORY OF THE JUNIOR CLASS IN MEDICINE There ' s romance in medicine tnr tlm e who wish to tint! it, said Dr. Osternd in our first anatomy lecture, and if romance is snpposid to ha e its nps and dnwiis, we ' ve found it. ] Thanksgiving of that fall of ' 32, our Freshman nmnber of 88 was reduced by the untimely death of Albert Shine. In spite of boning over hones, and midnight struggles with Anatomy, the end of the first semester further reduced our fold, till Dr. Negus found a discouraging number on which to try his wares. By the vay, the doctor is In cahoots with the Bacteriology Department — he pulls guinea pigs right out of his pocliet for them. Dr. Shaw even admits that they aren ' t that good at dear old Colton and not even in the Philippines. With a few new recruits, we ligan our Sophomore year more hopefully, only to have Hilly Bond and Oxford Apperly throw us into a physio-pathological state, which left us at such a Io v level that b ' the time ve reached the second seinester we couldn ' t tell a cadaver from a physiology frog. The deaths of Dr. ii. Paid LaRoque, beloved professor, and ' ictor C. I.n , classmate, were a great loss to us. To our surprise, the fall of ' 34 fouTul us classed as Juniors. Once again our numbers swelled — transfers; they rolled in from West by-gawd ' irginia, down from the frozen North, and up from dear old Carolina and Gawgia. They ' re a swell crowd, and we ' re glad to have them. It would be an all-fired shatne to have the poo-poo pediatrics all to ourselves. And who ' d miss that dramatic moment when Dr. Murrell leaps to his feet and says, Who ' s afraid of leprosy anyway? Anybody got a cigarette they ' d give me? All that ' s left is the future. Historian. p-- ... - . h. i . :J3 JUNIOR CLASS IN MEDICINE R. r. Ai.i.isoN Charles R. Arp Jones T. Ashley NicuTov A. Beetov • C. P. Berger Benjamin Bocieinsky ' DoMiMCK Brusca O. V. Campbell DoROrnv ' . Clark EmVARIJ Q. CodKE Arthlk Da m)MAn LoLis De Angelis • Oscar K. Dlxmond Lee F. DoBns. |r. E. V. iVoDi), Jr. Rdiieri R. Eason • James W ' m. Ellioi Elcene R. Evans Glover H. Evans Vm. H. Evans • II. E. Feroison Vm. F. Fidler Charles T. Front V. V. Fuller • W. . Ci. KRErr Michael A. Gavdosh F. C. GooDALL, Jr. Raymond H. Harmon MaRMN R. 11(11 CK Thomas E. Hunter HosEA D. Ireland A. M. Jacobson • . . K. Johnston John Hobari Judson Max KOENIGSBERG Manuel Kogan • I.. X. KoiIPlNSKl ]. II. Kkiss E. W. I.ACY, Jr. W. F. NIcFarlani) A ' o 111 j ' lclurc Malcolm II. Banion HoMi r B ri ley y v_ o JUNIOR CLASS IN - MEDICINE v. y. mavo C. W. Meador E Ei.v - A. Meadows L. A. Micou R. H. Mitchell T. D. Morgan ' J. T. Moore, Jr. R. H. Moorfield I[ A Frances Moser John H. Murrv Edwin R. Nelson Francis E. Noblin R. A. Nunez Sid C. Odell H. H. Pettrv Frank . Pole Charles W. Reavis N. C. Richards Spotswood a. Robins Ralph G. Rohner Milton Sai.asky Richard W. Sharpe Lerov Smith George Sneidman • Jack Srulowitz I. EwEN Tailor J. Christine Thelen Louis S. Trostler • M. K. Underwood A. L. Van Name, Jr. Thos. r. ' ermili.ion ' . E. Vermilva Robert E. Walker Hilda Tane Walters C. W. Warren S. E. Warshauer • J. GwvN Welch G. A. Wei.chons C. B. White Robert B, Woodhull Wm. a. Young When doctors disagree Hi- looLcil at iii toiiLrui-, and hu sliiiok his hi-ad — This was Doctor Smart — Ik- rliiiin]u-il ijii ni chest, and tlicn he said: Ah, there it is! Your Heart! ' ou mustn ' t run, (iu mustn ' t lunr ! ou mustn ' t work, you mustn ' t worry! just sit down and take it cool; ou ma li e tor years. I cannot say. But in the meantime, make it a rule To take this medicine twice a day. He looked at m ' tongue, and he shook his head- This was Doctor Wise — ' our li er is a total wreck, he said. ou must take more exercise! You mustn ' t eat sweets, ou mustn ' t eat meats, ' ou must walk and leap, you must also run, ou mustn ' t sit down in the dull old way, ( let out with the bo s and ha e some tun — And take three doses of this a day! He looked .it iii tonirue, and he shook his head — This was Doctor Bright — I ' m afraid your lungs are gone, he said, And (iur kidney isn ' t right. A change of scene is what ou need, oiir case is desperate, indeed. And bread is a thing you mustn ' t eat — For much starch — but, b the way, ou must heiicefor:h li e on onh meats — And take six doses of this a d;iy! ' ' Perhaps they were right, and perhaps the knew. It isn ' t tor me to s,-i ; .Ma hap I erred when I madly threw ' I heir hitter stiift awa ; But I ' m li ing et .ind am on m teet. And grass isn ' t all 1 d.ire to eat. And 1 walk ;md 1 run ami 1 worry, too, ]5ut to save my life I cannot see What some of the able doctors would do If there were no fools like ou and me. I I H Kkaiivh, Dick, H.wcncK, Manlta SOPHOMORE MEDICAL CLASS Offichrs R. A. Keating Prrs ' uini! Frank A. Dick yicr-Prrsutrni H. J. Hancock Secretary and Treasurer C. F. Jaskif.weicz Executive Council Charles S. Davis Ho?ior Council Morris Manuta ■ Historian Paul C. Soulsbv . .lililctics E. B. QuARl.ES -Ray V. C. I.ANIER Skull S Rones HISTORY OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS IN MEDICINE In September of 1933, there were gathered within nur portals a motley crew of freshmen. Little had our instructors suspected that in the near future a deluge of petition-writing maniacs would descend upon them. Therefore with pomp and ceremony, greetings and salutations, we were welcomed. Bones, Grav ' s Anatomy, and the sweating process were next in order — not to mention the newlv discovered lure of the microscope, and Dr. Shaw ' s keen lectures. In the natural course of events, the politicians got to work and elections were held. George Shetter was elected president with Brott, Doyle, and Stonehurner as his associates in crime. As were quizzes — the two-day .nnatomy exam taught us what a real grilling was like. Came the second semester! .A weekly iiuiz in Chemistry was like duck soup after a semester of Anatomy. A.11 too soon the year rushed down hill and ended, . fter trials and tribulations worthy of Job, we had become sophomores, some of us. We returned this second year glowing with an internal spiritual fire. Our sadly depleted ranks had been reorganiz.d; new victims had been procured, especially one fair victim from out Minnesota way. With an astuteness worthy of a Farley, the politicians stacked the deck; the elections were so quiet and well-greased that they were completed before most of the class knew the object of the meeting. Bob Keating was elected president with Dick, Ja kicwicz, Lanier, Soulsby, Manuta and sundry others as his fellow officers. It ' s been pretty good so far, and we are on our way to the clinical years a smaller, sadder, and I hope a trifle wiser bunch of medicos.. Historian. SOPHOMORE CLASS MEDICINE John M. A nERSos- W. P. ASHBROOK L. V. Barksdale D. C. Booker James O. Birke J. S. Blri.eson v. m. burlesos William S. Burton- Robert L. CAL ERT E. N. Carter David T. Carr V. F. Cavedo Angel R. Cestero John V. Clark Gl;v ' . Oalcviihrtv Charles S. Davis Frank A. Dick John Edward Dovle J. P. Eastham F. W. Feightner Lendall C. Gav S. R. Gillespie Homer I. Hancock Waiter G. Hardv Trving R. 1 . IAN S. J. Hei.lman ;. G. IIlMMElAV RIGII I, Jr. R. I.. llni.RovD M. H. Hoover C. F. JASKIEWIC J . Pail Jones R. A. Keating • ' . C. I.ANIER M. I.oiisE Lei.and Eol IS LiPMAN T. T. Llewellyn A ' ill I ' ll lure W. W. Ckaddock O ' ' K j SOPHOMORE CLASS IN MEDICINE U. C. LovEjov R. G. McAllister Robert B. McEwen D. B. Manley Morris Manuta H. I. Markowitz R. A. Michaux W. S. Morgan Theodore J. Moss J. J. O Sullivan James C. Parrish Margaret Pennington Wm. a. Pennington H. M. Price Aaron Pushkin e. b. quarles M. B. Raiford F. A. Rodriguez J. B. Ruffin H. P. Ruth H. N. Schwartz Jack D. Sedwtck H. H. Seiler G. A. Shetter Julius Snyder 0. W. Snyder Paul C. Soulsby L. I. Stoneburner R. N. Stroup George D. Vaughn, Jr. J. A. Wallace Morris Weiner Roger Williams Wm. L. Wingfield John A. ' RIGHT, Jr. . . ff£L: Not in Picture A. W. NORRIS T. D. Saunders Harold Megibow ife Just One More 77 , ' i iiiil,s of n ' ujiil - nr jallitiij josi, It ' iiii lliroiiiih III, ' Jim-lil hall lluii: pass, J. .In Obstclriiiau iti ,il ami i oiin,.!, Who murinuriii, ,y,s h, ill mi ill, ' i ioiiiij, ■■II ,11, h,-r, ' s on,- iiicji,- -ExtclMur!) ' .( Iliir, -,.:j,,l;s. no-,::, liiii,- V - htm in hiil, Jiisl on, inor, . ' , lh,in, ami I II h,- diad: I %vish lh,s.- -LLoinin -,.Liiu ' .d da lliinijs r ' lijlil, And d,lk;r l y day, inshiid of hy ni, hl, ll main ' s nw suit. lUil lh,y s,-m In lak,- a supr,-mc diiii hl. In hnldimi riff unlil lal, ' al niijhl. And llu-y sa-ve ivcry one of lliiir labor pains Vnlil some ivild niijhl, -Lihen il sno-j.s or rains This must he ihc door. lie enle irilh a Lay the Ifilh a red; and I here, on a iiiie ii-hile hed, bundle of pillon s henealh her head, poor primipara, pale as death, hnundinij heart and lahorinij breath, ver there before. Ifilh a rjenlle s-,. eep of those hands of hi. from the xiphoid do- in to llie symphysis. He located the parts in ihe usual -rvay, Il icvii r hal he hoped lor. an I.. O. A. As most of them are. The nurs, stood r,ady, r vilh ;,lo-i ;s and f an, .Is the rhythmic contractions and pains bei an, And sloii-ly hut surely the fains inccascd. The contractions also, and nc-ver , ,ascd I ' ulil all li-as o ' er. The baby, as most babies are, ivas blue. But he ija-ve it a e ood sharp slap or Iil ' o ; II started to breathe, and to cry, and yell. And the Obstetrician kne all zvas ii-ell, Leil. and dosed the door. lie ffot to his oivn house, by and by, .hid ihouejht that he heard an infant cry, .Ind he said. There is sometliinij -irony liilh my For ii-, ' ve n,-v,r bad any babies here — Hear that fool ihin, roar. hid then be heard bis poor -e.iie moan. She had iiisl bad a baby all alone. Hut III hadn ' t seen her for -■:eeks. and so, fori ot she ii-as prer nani — that ' s hoiv ihini s Il lias just one more. — UuCKi.EV. f uz ne 1935 xra 1 Page, SnldtT. .S.ult. Flen FRESHMAN MEDICAL CLASS S. G. Page, Jr I ' lfsidrul G. E. Snider I ' n ,•- ' ,, siJ, til Eari. S. Scoi I Seci ' rtnry and Ti i asm ri E. H. HADuncK Execulive Conunillie V. T. Thompson, Jr Honor Cnnnril S. W. Fleming Historian George C. Hope ilhlrlics Gray M. Broaddus -Ray El). C. Sharp Skull and Hvn,s HISTORY OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS IN MEDICINE Freshmen in Medicine — a title nohiy given to eighty-tive striving youths of Hippocrates. I ' he sombre silence of an unacquainted partnership demonstrated early enough that new faces had assembled from the campuses of thirty-six universities, traceable from the distant warmths of Puerto Rico and California to the colder clime of Connecticut. As the light of a later day appeared and freshman timidity became less, there seemed to come the distinct awareness that there is something awe-inspiring, noble, and intricate about this business of bodies and bugs; ambitions raise l to Olympic heights with the first crude incision into the cadaver. Abdominal dissection completely vrecked what was once describable viscera. Al- though the unsuspecting anatomical piece knew naught of our doings, it would not take much poetry to know that medical vultures had already griped his guts. With the dimming of the first year, it becomes indicative that we are about to rest on the top of the first step of a four-year accomplishment. We, as the Centennial graduating class, can look forward with some measure of anticipation to taking part in the one one hundredth anniversary of our Alma Mater. A constant diligence cannot be denied. ' e trust that the ever watching Hippocrates — and a few bespectacled professors — will be satisfied with freshmen endeavor. Historian. FRESHMAN CLASS MEDICINE I,EO An SOS ' J5. B. Bagbv, Jr. E. L. Bagbv — -Sylvan H. Bank • Robert E. Bell R. S. Blackman H. D. Booth Grw M. BROAnnus • Haves V. Calwell — Rai Smith Campbell R. N. Carrier Julius F. Chairsei.l • Phillips L. Claud — j. v. colrinev • ' . . Covington A. M. Earle, Jr. ■Nathaniel C. Ewing LouLS J. Fernandez — A. J. Fielder Stanley J. Fink • S. W. Fleming George S. Fultz, Jr. J. F. Gibson James Thomas Gill • m er goldschmidt Edward E. Haddock CiriRD ' IN I ). H LL Wai n er I.. Hill • A. A. Hoffman —George C. Hope I. C. Huffman C. F. James, Jr. • John ' I ' . Iaukfii G. I!. Kv. 1 —PailRoiieri KiNUAin N ' lUMAN I .. King .• l BERT KOSSOVE NOT IN PICTURE F, EL N M. H l I nA ID M. C ' licillhl L W. 11. CopLE Hiberi n. Cran ( ri and kes Howard Lee Fout —F. A. Frayser, Jr. r -7 uz u FRESHMAN CLASS IN MEDICINE Mis ' NiE Lew C. S. I.INGAMI El.TER, ]R. W. H. McCaix —J. F. M.ARTIN -E. C. Mii.i.ER, Jr. Earle B. Morgan- John F. Morris Pal ' i, J. Nuiter • S. G. Page, Jr. C. B. Power C. RODRIIJUKZ G. R. Rosenbaum • H. G. Rlffin Albert J. Russo J. W. D. Santiago I. M. SCHOR • Earl S. Scott W. V. Scott Edward G. Sharp Darwin E. Smith • Howard G. Snead ■ G. E. Snider — Carl F. Stevens —Evelyn P. Sturces • V. i. P. Terry - F. W. Thompson V. T. Thompson, Jr. — B. W. Tucker • G. R. Tyler G. H. ' II,1.IAMS H. J. Williams J. S. Williams Margaret Williams Wm. Hart Woodson — C. S. Wright — Randolph M. York NOT IN PICTURE M. H. McRae F. K. Whitfield, Jr. — D. P. Wlhti.ey — Ti LER J. Young Professiotial Mclical I ' r.ilcrnlly for l-oi.nded at Ann Arbor. Michigan, iu 1S99 PI CHAPTER Founded at the Medical ( ollege of Virginia in 192} I ALPHA EPSILON IOTA OFFICERS EsTA I.i: I ' risidcnl DriKirwiy Ci.ark . lice-Prcsidtnl II. Alkkiia Oiii Sccriiary Francks E. Nijp.i.is ' Treasurer and Cnrres ' oiidint Secretary Fr ATRns IX Coi.i.rcio 5( mors II. . i Rii.iA (mm. Esia Lew J I III ' I IS Fr sl ' i:s p.. Noni.iv PoRmm Clark Fratrcs in iJrhc (Xril ill Picture) Dr. Makn Hwr.ii.MAs Or, I.oi ise Galvin- Dr. Rf:(,i:na Bkck Dr. P. ui.ise Williams Page «2 fhe IQ3 5 x-rau fh u Cy c y - - ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA OFFICERS Har Ev H. Pettri Prciidint John T. Moore Vu r-Piisidini John, S. Burleson ' CornsponJhitj Sio-ftary I ' ei. C. Lovejov RrcorJiti Sicretmy W ' li.i.ARi) N. Burleson Treasurer David p. Buik-so Seniors Etlwai-a L. Ewe] Ednuincl IL LaPiade J uriiors Hobert Judson Ha.-v.-v H. Pi-ttr Louis A. Mifou Ral].li G, P.ohm-i John T. Moore Walter Vermilv; Sophomores Jolm S. Buiiesc Willard X. Bur Robert L. Calve Willi: Fraul; A. Dick m Uel C. Lovejoy David Manley A. Pennington Freshmen Howard Booth Hayes W. Caldwell Williai Not in Pictur Howard L. Fout Professional Medical Fraternity Founded at Dartmouth College, Sep- tember 29. 1888 ALPHA KAPPA CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia, November 12, 1906 Paga 63 m FoKndcd al the Viiircruty of Pills- hurgh. US ' )I PHI PSI CHAPTER Eslahlhhcd al the Medical College of Virginia. 1901 PHI BETA PI OFFICERS Lee E. Dobbs President Homer Ferguson I ' ice-Presideiil II.i H. Seii.er Secretary lACK PARRISH H. M. B ddnw L . Dickerson J. M. Dixon ,T. B. Earle L. DoAim-elis L. E. Dolihs J. W. Elliott ir. FoiEUSon E. X. ( ' :ulc ' r J. E. U.iyl,. K, R. Gill S|,i W. B. Hoovi. I-. E. East. I-. N, E.l . !■. K. ll.m; 11. H. Hill. F. Fltll.T 1-. E. Flout M. A. Onvilosh F. Gootlnll Seniors J. p. Lvnch E. Ritter r. ,1. B. Spinks A. R. Stork Juniors .-. M. a.ior Soph( r. V. .la V. . ' . I,.- V. M..n Treasurer 7. J. C. Parrisli E. B. Quarlos J. SiTlwirk Pledges V. V. Scott Not in Pie iire II. llarll.-y H. Wn.ihvlne I,. I.. Tvl. .■ .-. E. Walliii •|-. 1 . Walts H. H. Soilor a. II. Vauglin J. A. Wallace 111 I J vJ x-ra 1 i-rf-J-- ' ■ P H ! CHI OFFICERS John R. Saundfrs PnsiJrni QuiMON ' Cooke I ' ici-Frcsidcnt O. P. Campbell Secretary Frank Pale Treasurer Seniors George S. Bowers Hunter Frischkorn. Jr. J. R. Saunders. Jr. Wm. H. Chapman, Jr. M. L. Holland B. E. Stephenson. Jr. Lester Dunman Wellord Ri ed W. W. Tyson Ju?iiors O. p. Camphrll K. Q. Cooke E. V. La.v Frank Pole Paul K. L ' andler Robert Eason T. Alli.- on Morgan Rkhard W. Sharpe Sopliomrjrcs G. M. Broadrtus G. G. HimmeU right. Jr. G. A. Shelter J. V. Clark John Llewellyn Richard Michaux Pledffes Lee Barksdale Julius P. Chairsell John T. Jarrett W. T. Thomnson. Jr. D. C. Booker S. W. Flemmlng C. F. James G. R. Tyler James O. Burke James T. Gill John Paul Jones George Williams Ray Smith Campbell Edward Haddock Wm. H. McCall H J AVilliams William F. Cayedo Gordon D. Hall S. G. Pag:-. Jr. Jo • William.s George C. Hope L. L Stoneburner Not in Picture Garland Dyehes F. K. Whitlield. Jr. M. H. McRae Page 45 Professional Medical Fraternity Founded at the University of Ver- mont in 1889 THETA ETA CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia in 1899 PHIDELTAEPSILON V ° -- . OFFICERS J S. L. El.FMON President |ii|4 . A 1b ' ' |il C;eorce a. Glass ria-Pnsidnit ' iQ 9 al Sidney Hei.lman Sitrrlary A ■ ' Jf Samuel E. Washai i:r Treasurer Saimi.l EIl?ii..n c-orcp A. Glass s.iTii Mil.hln Osc-;n- u Diiimnnd Miltnn Salnsky Mnx KaonlKslK-iK Jack J. Srulowltz Professional Medical Fraternity Samui i;. Warshauir Founded at Cornell University n .; • ' 9(M riiarlcs Pavis Haloid Markowitz Siilm-y 11. lliiiatl Harold Mcglbow ALPHA MU CHAPTER ' ' ' - ' ' Established at the Medical Colhac - Frrshmcn ,,. . . ,_,, L M. Sclior All...|-t Kossouo I irgmia, 1924 M.yvr Goldsclunidt Page 6i PHI RHO SIGMA OFFICERS J. M. Haeei President T. r. ' ermii.i,ion Vice-President A. L. ' a Name, Jr Secretary L. C. Fergus Treasurer Seniors J. R. Bender H. K. Henin W. X. McKenzie L. C. Fergus Rector Le Garde R. R. Porter J. Q. Gant. Jr. J. V. Linfesty M. C. Rowe Juniors V. H. Evans W. V. Fuller Robert Mitchell A. L. Van Name. Jr. T. U. Vermillion Sophomores W. p. Ashbrook G. W. Dauglierty J. J. O ' Sulllvan David T. Carr R. A. Keatins Rot;er Williams Robert McBwen Pledges Stanle.v J. Fink Walter L. Hill J. F. Martin W. Glenn Hardy George B. Ke.cley Herbert G. Ruffin Carl S. Lingamfelter Page 67 Professiotial Medical Fraternity Founded at Northwestern Medical School in 1890 UPSILON CHAPTER Founded at Medical College of Vir- ginia in 1906 Prnjv ' innal Medu.d l ' r„lrr„ily Founded al the Medie.d College of llrginia in 1S79 BETA CHAPTER Eilablhhed hi 1879 THETA KAPPA PSI OFFICERS John Gw w Welch President John Henr Mlrrv I ' ice-Presidrnt HoMRK Jackson Hancock Secrelary John PiruT.ip Easiham Treasurer Seniors John D. Hamn.T. Jr. l...iiis M.ios.v ll.imnn A. Rlill KlvtU-rifo HeniaiKlfz lliii it v. I ' ow.ll .l.iiius r. Trivott Willinm H. Matthews Av,r c. WhIU.-y Juniors Ua I.y I-. Allij...ii l;:ivni ii.l II. Harmon r.ala.l .A. Nim. z I ' . Ua.vnir.nd An. Maiiniii R. llomk .si, I |-. (TH.-II J. ri.y T. .A.-ihUv ll.is.-a ! . Ir.lan.l .l.ihn G. V.l h Ellvit W. Dndcl L.iiiis X. Knllpiniski Ciori,-. ' A. Wel.-hon.s John H, Muiry Soplio iiorrs Jnlin T. I5a.-illi.ini II. iik.l W. Tri.-.- J:i.I s6n llani-oi:!; Fn sit lien ( Phdi cs) r.. V. H. ' Il l.ouis F.-rnand. ' Z E. D. Mo-.;an R. S. Bla.kman I.fn.lall C. Ga.v . . J. Russo A. R. fi-.st-ro J. V. Gll., !on J. V. SantiaKo P. L. Claud N. E. Kinu- J. . ' Sulh.rlaiul J. W. Couilniy v. E. Mill :r. Jr. Fi.d W. Thompson V. V. CovhiRton Wm. H. Vo...l.v-.,n Page 68 [he IQ35 x-ra u J PHI LAMBDA KAPPA OFFICERS Benjamin- Bogeinskv President Aaron Pushkin J ' icc-President JiLius Snyder Secretary Jack Kress Treasurer Seniors David Polhi.k Soymour Scliotz Juniors Benjamin Bogeinsliy AIk- M. Jacobson Arthur Davidman ja,k Kress Sophomores Irving K. Hayman Julius Snvder Aaron Pushlcin M..rris Weiner I ' resli nen Leon J. Anson Ben W. Tucker Earl S. Scott Professional Medical Fraternity Founded at the University of Pennsyl- vania in 1907 SIGMA CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia in 1924 SIGMA ZETA OFFICERS V. II. CiiAPMW Master St ' unlist R. R. FoRii R rice-MasIrr ScienlisI J. P. I.vNcii Rccordcr-Treasuri-r II. r. SiKPriKSSdN Editor r. . Blanil w. n, cii.ii.ii Active Mcinln .1. V. I.iiir.-.- ly .1. p. l.VTHh U. K. P.irt. r GAMMA CHAPTER National Honorary Fraternity Recog- nizing Scholarship in Scientific fVork .1 ssoiiiilc M( III lis .Sol. Iii.-i.U F. ll.riliiliil.. K. W. Sh.ill. T. I I. Wall. ; J, G. W.h ll G. A. W.l.llr fhe 193 1 I 1 c? I BROWN-SEQUARD SOCIETY OFFICERS Rkno R. Porter Piriiiiftit W. Holmes Chapman- l ui-l ' i,udrnt H. AURELIA Gill Srn,lary-Tr,asurcr Active Senior Menilurs SOLOMAN niSICK J. W ' njJAM LiNFESTY W. Holmes C hapman Reno R. Porter Washington C. Winn H. AURELLX Gn.L 4. George A. Glass Les L. Tvlec Jiiuirjr Active McDibcrs Thomas D. Watis John P. Lynch George A. Welchons John G. Welch ' hI JAM V. (iARRETT E. Wn.Lis Lacy 1935 Professional Honorary Medical Society Founded at the Medical College of Virginia in 1931 Dentdl School J. B. Savier and W. W. H. Thaxton of Virginia re- ceiving their D.D.S. degrees from the Baltimore Col- lege of Dental Surgery in 1842. Dental education in Virginia made a slow start due to the proximity of this excellent school in Baltimore. This College graduated three men in its second class and two of those were the above mentioned. Savier and Thaxton were the first practicing Virginia dentists to hold this degree. School vj f .-— ■« 1 1 WE, THE SENIOR CLASS IN DENTISTRY, HONOR DR. WEBB B. GURLEY GENTLEMAN AND SCHOLAR WHOSE UNTIRING ASSISTANCE AND INSPIRATION TO HIS DISCIPLES, HELPFUL COOPERATION WITH HIS ASSOCIATES, MORAL AND SCIENTIFIC PROG- RESS IN THE PROFESSION, AND SERVICE TO HU- MANITY MAY BE SOMEWHAT REWARDED BY OUR APPRECIATION. SENIOR CLASS SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY R. L. Simpson S. S. SUTPHIN T. C. Bradshaw A. L. Phillips A. C. DeSanto M. H. Bowman President Vice-President Sec. and Treas. Executive Council Honor Council Historian J. H. Francis Athletics R. I.. Simpson I ' lisidttil HISTORY OF THE SENIOR CLASS IN DENTISTRY T HAVE longed for the wisdom of • ■ Socrates or the genius of Herodotus in giving to the world the deeds of this Senior Class. The chronicling of our history is a task worthy of one of the above, but since there are none such among our number this attempt on mv part must of necessity be incomplete. Some classes climb mountains, some appear in four-act plays, some present themselves in a diseased condition for four years of treatment while still oth- ers present the bare facts. We haven ' t climbed any mountains; we haven ' t appeared in any acts of a play; we have been mentally and phys- ically ill from time to time, but we didn ' t come here for treatment. After all, we haven ' t accomplished the impos- sible, nor do we set ourselves up as su- perior individuals who have surpassed hum an attainments. We are just a group of average human beings striving to attain that which is required of our chosen profession to gain a livelihood. Others have accomplished that which we hope to accomplish. If we should confess that the years of training have been difficult ones, then we, by our con- fession, would be admitting that the task was too great for our skill and in- telligence. We take this opportunity to pay tri- bute to those who taught us. They LL_ fhel935 X .ilphin, BraclslK have given us the best they know. If we become a burden on society we can- not blame them. It ' s neither fish, fowl, nor good red herring, gentlemen — absolutely, without a doubt — the margins are good but where are your supplemental grooves — I ' m going to say more about that later — Use the three-pin attachment and avoid showing gold — Well, I don ' t know — You will make ' good average dentists ' with clumsy hands if you avoid ' ash-tray breath ' — What do you think? — Moreover, not invariably so, however — The mounted police always get their man — unless you spend fifteen years in the Philippines. The history of this class has yet to be written. With the use of solder pull, calculus burrs, enamel dust, denture shrinkers, festooning ma- chine, pink amalgam, nasal sup- positories ' and many other fantastic concoctions; who knows but that some day there will be a history to write? Historian. I 935 SENIOR CLASS AI.BF.Rl- D.Win AI.FAAN ' DER OR10r.K, VA. i; A Cotillion Cluli; X-Rav. dandridc;e blanton allen BI.AMONS, VA. A i: A MOFFETT IIALLEV BOWMAN ROANOKE, VA. B.S., College of William ami Man, 1929: Hi torian Senior Class; Vice-President Student CJovernincnt; Sl.-„ll and H nu-s. THOMAS CL. RKE BRADSJl.VW BURKEVII.LE, VA. Secretar -Treasurer Senior Clas-; Cerman Club; X-Ra Representative. ANTONIO C. niSANTO BROW, . V. Z -i ' Honor Council. MAURICE EDWARD EKJHME RAI.EIGII, . C. n JAMFS II. RM()N FRANCIS AI.KX WORI . VA, A :i Ji LOnS IR I (; KEREN WASIIINCION, ). c. Page 80 JAMES MADISON KVLE WOODI.AVVN, VA. ELWOOD FORBES MACRURY MANCllKSIER, .V. II. ARTHIR J. NAGY NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. A Q ROBERT C. NININGER ST. HOI.I.IN ' S, VA. ALONZO LAFAYETTE PHILLIPS RICIIMnSD, VA. Vice-President Y. M. C. A.; Honor Council. RICHARD LEE SIMPSON PAROMAN ' SPRINGS, A. President Senior Class; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. SOMMERS DAVID STANCELL .NEWPOORT NEWS, VA. 3 t $ SHERIDAN S. SUTPHIN BECKLEV, W. VA. 3 1 ' !• German Club; ' ice-President Senior Class, GUS REEVES STEVENS NEWPORT, KV. SENIOR CLASS 1935 Eastman, Luw, Russell, Spitlu JUNIOR DENTAL CLASS R. F. E, siM. Pr,siA,nl J. R. L. v J ' ici-Prcsidcnt A. G. Rl ' Sskix Secrriary and Triasurcr V. S. MiLRs Excculi-vc Council T. E. M. RTiv Honor Council R. A. Spitz i:r Historian J. J. Goi.nM.w Itlilclics M. H. CosBV Skull and Bones JUNIOR CLASS IN DENTISTRY lilS I(IK Jt ' c Ini-vc linncslty tahnrcd r uilc iiidushiously n-vrr s mrl, infrcr ucnl prrinds of time. IVe have, on one or Iil-o iL-eck-ends . iuiliilt ed in llie iinilation of adions reseinhlinci those froduccitl hy the iiilcrnal actions of al( o iid-i onlainini hevcrai es. II ' e have ahsenled ourscl ' ves from an (laasional i lass and r ivcn a siik cxi use ivhen acetyl salicylic acid in moderate doses zuould have alleviated the condition proniptini such action. Il ' e have made frequent mistakes ami so have become firm advocates of the theory c ' ostulalinr the educational qualifications of cxf c- rience. Il ' e have undertaken almost every undertakinii li-e liad no business undertakin ivlth results raniiinrj from the Monday mornimi •olicc courts to (almost) matrimony. He have become very intcrestnl in our v ork and secretly have hiijli hopes of bciomini) Doctors of Dental Surijcry. Il ' e have our v.;cak momeuls tool HiSTORI.W. ! J J o • J- w JUNIOR CLASS IN DENTISTRY M. P. Adkersov Arthur Cohek M. J. C0 ' EM, M. H. CosBV R. F. Eastman J. R. Eggi.eston C. R. FOLTZ J. J. Goi nMA ' M. A. Joyce S. P. Kamivskv T. R. I.wv J. E. Martin- T. E. Martin W. S. Miles P. D. Miller C. R. MlNGES Nathan Nevman R. R. Owens A. G. Russell A. F. Schecter Arthur Siegel Glenn Spitler Herbert Tobias H. T. Ware NOT IN PICTURE A. R. Spitzer H. Kaminester u SOPHOMORE DENTAL CLASS B. L. Brooks President Jacob Weisser ' V ice-President J. L. Mears Secretary and Treasurer L. A. Martone Executhe Council Irving Harris Honor Council W. H. Traynham Historian N. G. Sedelkow Athletics T. M. Hunter X-Ray S. E. Buxton Skull and Bones HISTORY OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS IN DENTISTRY Now has come the time to review a few of the events of the past two years of the class of ' 37 in Dentistry. We started out 28 strong, but a few of the boys dropped out, due to a process of ehmination by the faculty. However, the remaining ones are now wading through amalgams and plugging through foils with great hopes that some day they might be dentists. The first year, W. E. Snipes, Jr., was elected president of the class with Ben Ma- gun as vice-president, B. L. Brooks as sec- retary-treasurer, and Art Gollobin as histo- rian. Under the capable guidance of these officers, 19 out of the 28 went into their sec- ond year of drilling and grinding. The second year, B. L. Brooks was elected president of the class, with J. Weisser, J. L. Mears, Jr., and W. H. Traynham, Jr., as his associates. With these men at our head, the remainder of the group hopes to get through this year without a decrease in the number. Being not as green as we were the first year, and having an idea of what it ' s all about, we feel that we are going to make a good show- ing and raise ourselves in the eyes of the faculty, and in our own opinions as well. We must not neglect to mention that the able care given us by our mascot, Moshus R. Moschides, suitably named Park your Car cass by Dr. Gurley, will help us gain our end. Historian. SOPHOMORE CLASS IN DENTISTRY C. R Armistead I!. L. Brooks J. P. Butler S. E. Buxton- Arthur GOI.I.OBIX S. F. GuTows D. Q. HAKnv Irving Harris W. C. Henderson T. M. Hunter Nathaniel Janicer W. C. KuHS Benjamin Macun L. A. Martone J. L. Mears N. G. Sedei.kow R- E. Smithev W. H. Travnham Jacob Weisser NOT IN PICTURE E. W. Payne Bowling. Pilfhc-r, Elam. Marple. FRESHMAN DENTAL CLASS V. C. Bowling Prestdenl John M. Pilcher Vice-President Elizabeth Elam Secretary and Treasurer W. C. Neale Executive Council H. M. Hanna Honor Council NovENA Marple Historian Norman Davis Athletics W. B. Irby X-Ray S. A. LiPFORD Skull and Bones HISTORY OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS IN September, nineteen-thirty-four, twenty- four young men and two young women enrolled in the Freshman Class of the School of Dentistry to prepare for their chosen pro- fession. A small but determined group, this, dauntless of the years of preparation that lie ahead. Although our class has not made much his tory in the few months that have elapsed since we began, we have become much better acquainted with each other and have found out how many fine fellows are in our group. Our officers are a follows: President, Wallace Bowling; Vice-President, John Pil- cher; Secretarv, Marv Elizabeth E ' am; Exec- utive Council, W. E. Neale; Honor Council, H. M. Hanna; Historian, Novena Marple. The class of 38 boasts of a novelty in its class roll — for the first time in ten ' ears girls have entered the Dental School. The nov- elty is even greater if we go back further and find that two girls have never entered the dental school in one vear. The guiding thought of those who go far in any of the professions in the medical world is, we believe, the code of ethics — one which invites only those with mental forti- tude and undaunted spiritual courage to con- tinue in our midst — and this thought shall be the guide of the class of ' 38. Historian. fh FRESHMAN CLASS DENTISTRY SinNEV ' . Am.E!V E. D. Baker E. L. Bavton ' W. C. Bnwi.iKG Flavius II. Brown- H. E. Coleman R. A. Dam El, Norman Davis Davis Driscoll Elizabeth Ei.am H. M. Hanna W. B. IRBV S. L. JOHKOW D. M. Jones S. A. LiPFORn NOVENA Marple Dan Montague V. C. Neal M. M. Neale A. G. Orphanidvs Perry Parker John M. Pii.cher j. p. rucker B. L. Saunder Harry Weiner NOT IN PICTURE Anthony DeMuth ■y ' , . rijin ' cA Patient ' s Lament III itiiiuls hisiili tin turturc chair ' ' In qu ' ut cast . i I full tm irc Of his I ' ii fi i ' s (ui ' iniziuii s ari , The dentist. ) Dure (ill priiiuil np iiith ixnncs giilorc As to ichy. (7i this, ynu ' vi nut liirkem l his iloc lie naves them aside — he ' s heard them before. The di ntist. So till drill htr ins it ' i arindiiiij sonii, The patient ' s Ik ad rini s liki a t one . lie says. It hurts, hut it Ji ' .n ' t he long. The dentist. Perhaps, some day. at a distant date. Til stand outside the Pearly Cate. Jnil irateli him repair some an jel ' s plate. The lie ntist. Or perhaps it will In on a red hot grill. He ' ll stand veith his ever fatthfnl drill. (, ' riitin poor damii ' d souls nitli tieth to fill. The di ntist, DUSMOS. --N -7 r Professional Dental Fraternity OMICRON OMICRON CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia, 1931 I ■ Professional Dcnitil Fraternity founded at the Baltimore College of Dental Siirj-ery. 1S92 GAMMA OMICRON CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia, 1908 t j- tm - T- P S I OMEGA OFFICERS Mori 1:11 II. HowM.w Prisidnil James Kvi.f. ricc-PrcsiJrnt John R. Law Secretary Thomas C. Urahsii aw Treasurer St tiiors M..IT.II H..wiii:iii Th.iiiiiis I-. I ' .ia.lsh.iw M. K. KiKlimi- .hini,.s Kylr Kclurt Nlningcr J utiinrs .l. lin U. I,:i v Uol.crt R. Owflis S ' lphdinnrcs l:.ii.i:imin I,. nn.,,ks l.nriil.r.w M:utone B. I... H..TI.1.1-.-..11 Jani.s I.. JIual-s Will. II. Tra lili;iin Fledges W.illiui ' ]!.. vliMt; 11. M. llaliiia Miltnii N.-nle Norman li.ivis I! ii.ianiiii F. lil.y John M. Pilcher Aii.l.i-M,, l.i|,l,„.l A hi ill I ' ll t lire aus .Stina ns . . l;. SiiHz.t E. V. Payne Pags 90 11. X 1 PS 1 PHI OFFICERS Sheridan S. Sutphis ' . . . A C DiSwTO President Robert F. Eastman . . . Secretary S. D. Stan-cell .... Treasurer Seniors A. C. DlSanto S. D. Stancell .Slieiidan S. Sutjjhiii Juniors M. J. Cornell EoLeit F. Eastman J. R. Eggleston Milton A. Ju Sophomores Pledges E. A. Daniels W. C. Kuhs 5fi % 14, Professional Denial Fraternity Founded at the University of Mich- igan in 1889 XI CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia in 1903 Phdrmdcy School A pharmacy in Alexandria, Virginia, in 1799. Slaves from some nearby estate — possibly slaves of Mrs. Washington of Mount Vernon — vait wnile a prescription is being compounded. Pharma y School fh THE SENIOR CLASS IN PHARMACY WISHES IN THIS MANNER TO EXPRESS ITS ESTEEM FOR MR. J. A. REESE HE GAVE THE FRUIT OF PATIENCE, HUMOR, TOIL, TO US WHOSE NAMES AND RECORDS FOLLOW HERE FLAVORY REFRESHING DI D THE FRUIT APPEAR MAY THE SEED FIND US NOT IN BARREN SOIL. SENIOR CLASS SCHOOL OF PHARMACY C. E. Green ' , Jr. PrisUent C. E. Green. Jr. .■ President Norman Sollod Vice-Preside7it Virginia Carmines Secretary and Treasurer E. K. Walters Executive Council I. E. Pixel Honor Council David Jacobson Historian J. C. Nottingham Athletics David Jacobson X-Ray L. A. Bennett Skull and Bones HISTORY OF THE SENIOR CLASS IN PHARMACY VZE are the tragic class of 1935. We cannot begin with our Fresh- man year and trace ourselves back to the end. Alas! We have had no Freshman year! You see, we are the odd class. Some of us have been here three years and others only two. Our Freshman years have been spent at other institutions. Alas and alack. Yet, the editor demands our history. First, we ' ll describe certain definite experiences. In the university, we fh xr lilt? 1 had met Mr. Shakespeare; we had analyzed the formula, HO; we had fought with the problems of physics; we knew many things. Then upon entering ye Medical College, we were faced with a new world. We met spatulas, mortars, powders, pills, capsules, suppositories, physiology, materia medica, and what not! It was an interesting world; we loved it. We await the day when we can go into yon cold world and practice it. We then hope to apply this acquired knowledge to further improve and advance med- ical therapy. Our history should not forget our professors. We owe much to Dr. Crockett, Mr. Childrey, Mr. Reese, Dr. Roshier Miller, Mr. Underwood, Mr. Pitts, Miss Bridgers, Mr. Fraser, and their associates. They imparted to us the fundamentals of this new pharmaceutical world. We can dis- pense prescriptions accurately, honestly, and skillfully. We have been told that A prescription does not represent a mere commercial transaction. It is a messenger which carries a tale of human suifering and furnishes the pharmacist with an opportunity to relieve pain and restore health to some unfortunate person. To Webster, history is a narration of facts and events arranged chro- nologically with causes and effects. To us history is knowledge and serv- HlSTORIAN. 1935 SENIOR CLASS LAWRENCE ALEXAN ' OER BENNETT KILII.VIONI), A. Shill and lloti.s Kc-prcsriitnllvc. IR(;lXIA ANNE CARMINES IIAMI ' ION , . . Secretarv-Treasiirir Si-ninr Clas ; Mcirtar PestK- Cliilv IR I c; KHWIN riXEE BRONX, S ' . . Ilunor C.iunril. CHARLES EI ' ) VARn CIREEN, JR. RICUMOM), A. K I ' I ' l-f-iilt-iit Sfiiicir Cla-s; Cu-rmaii Club; Secrctai l ' rL-a uicr Miirtar-Pcstlc Club. T. CIRTIS NOTTINGIL M SI. CIIKKIION, A. K ! ' Secrc-larv Sliulenl Bculv; Proicb-nl M.utnr-PcMle Club Nic.-I ' rcsldcrit Cennan Club. NOR.NLW SOLLOn PEIKRSni ' RG, VA. ! X N ' iri-l ' rcMcliiit Scni; r Clasv; ' ice-RreM(lt-uI Moria arul PcMie Club. K. K. W.VLLERS woRI liiMricis, x . VA. ' 1 ' A . A.B., Inivi-isitv lit Wi-t Xirninia, C.Min,!!. PAVin JACdBSON KKllMllMi, A. ' .; X X-Ra , Shill iiii.l lliniis. Eilitnr-in-Cliicf, ' jj- ' .W; M r- lar and Polk- Club; IlisKirian. i i. Pharmacy School On road to Washington The Famous Hall Ford jails on the return run Led by Gordon Hall, they each look the situation over D. Jacobson suggests more oil Sims and Vaughan agreed and thus they returned rviser but poorer Barnes, Freeman, Tompkins, Vaughan and Hall have re- fuelled The New Home of T he Amer- ican Institute of Pharmacy is about to be dedicated Dean Rudd and other notables at the dedication ceremonies SENIOR CLASS I 935 JUNIOR PHARMACY CLASS K. W. 1Ii:kkis(; Prrsidnii J. R. lIiKT liif-Prrsidi-nt F. H. Garland Secretary and Treasurer Gko. a. Kki.s Execulh ' c Coiiiuil C. II. Williams Ilniior Coundl J. V. RiioDKS Ilislorian J, Fraikin Ilhletus F. E. Parkkr -Ray Tack P. Maiioex S7-h and linnes JUNIOR CLASS IN PHARMACY IIISIX)RY After a summer of varatirii in whiili some of us worked and others hetook ourselves to pleasure, we came hack to the Medical College of ir,i;inia with a greater determina- tion than ever to fall in line and to do our hest to make this, our Junior year, a most pleasant and profitable year of stud and accomplishment. Although 1 ur numher has been greatly reduced, we who were fortunate enough to return soon fcnmd ourselves delving into the problems of organic cheniistrv. M thi point we want to give our approval to a statement made in a past X-Rav: In the beginning scien- tists created Organic Chemistry. Six centuries did they labor (and had no rest in the seventh) for it was their intention to uphold the now famous war cr , ' They shall not pass, ' How ii.ililv tlu succeeded, but with chnracleri-lic optimism we carrv (Ui. Each student in the imiior class is looking for vard to becoming a senior next year. Our greatest a-piralion i to graduate next ear. Wc hope that cur w i hc- will be ful- filled and that we xvill be the pharmacists ( t tomorrow. Historian ' . JUNIOR CLASS IN PHARMACY H. BococK M. Early F. H. G.ARLAXD T. C. Hamlett J. R. Hurt .M. L. Plotrix CK P. Maddex C. H. Williams A. T- Early J. Fratkix A. Grossman R. W. Herrint, George E. Kels J. AV. Rhodes F. E. Parker M. ] I. ZlN ' RERG IBBrrSiK lith, Hudson, Sheer, Jennings. SOPHOMORE PHARMACY CLASS B. Smith President John R. Hudson Vice-President Abe Sheer Secretary and Treasurer A. W. Abbitt Executive Council J. C. Gilbert Honor Council F. C. Jennings Historian W. P. Lewis Athletics N. A. RooKE X-Ray C. E. Wheeler Skull and Bones HISTORY OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS IN PHARMACY THE good ship Frosh-Pharm, after passing through storms and fogs, finally came listing into port at the end of its nine months ' cruise with a good deal of damage and a small loss in the number of its crew. These less fortunate mates were lost at sc Before the ship left port for its second cruise, it was overhauled, put in exxellent con- dition and rechristened for a new deal, Soph-Pharm. The crew consisted of men who were able to survive the gruelling test of the previous cruise and also other seamen coming from various ports in the United States. The crew that was to man this ship was larger in number and also more skilled than the preceding one. These men having realized that they had experienced some of the hardships, found out that to overcome them they must battle with the weapon hon- est, diligent study. Having gained this knowledge they looked forward to this sec- ond cruise with hope and determination of sailing a due course to the land of Junior Pharmacy. At last the command of Hoist Anchor for the Sophomore year was given and duly e.xecuted. Since that time we have encoun- tered many storms, fogs and turbulent wa- ters, such as Chemistry, Economics, Physics, and others. We sincerely hope to reach the shore — Junior Pharmacy — without loss of officer or crew. Historian. r xra fhe jo O x-ra 1 SOPHOMORE CLASS PHARMACY A. W. AniiiTT W. R. BVRIM C. A. Barnes, Jr. J. C. GiLRERT Reii) R. Cr xtham J. G. Holmes F. C. Jexxings J. T. Martix R. B. S (ITH, Jr. F. B. Gribus )HX RoHERT HUDSOX W. P. Lewi Are Sheer C. E. AVheeler NOT IN PICT URE . L i i Lb  - y . - ' ■ l A. L. Fuller T. H. Ti Jewell. Vaughan. Martin, Witten FRESHMAN PHARMACY CLASS H. Jewei.i Presiden O. O. V.MGHAS t ' io-Pr,siJ,ril J. L. Martin Secretary and Treasurer C;. R. Jf.an Exeeuli-ve Couiuil CiEORCE E. Harrow . . , Honor Couneil Beairice Rahman Historian Samuel H. nnni) Illilrtics J. A. WiTTEN -Ray J. 0. Wallace Skutt and Bones FRESHMAN PHARMACY HISTORY The advent nf the Freshman Pharmacy class last September marks a date that will not snon be forgotten by those connected with the colleKe and assuredly not by its members. ' e begin the first full foiir- ear course in pharmacy. . t the end of these four ears we are given a B. S. fU-gree. Adfled to this distinction is the fact that thi honor will be bestowed upon us in the year when our school will hold its centennial celebration. Therefore knowing the Faculty ' s solicitous feeling fcr us, we began our college careers with great confidence and high spirits. We are proud and happy to say that no member of our class has fallen by the wayside this year, and we hope that our luck will continue throughout our four years. We wish to thank all the members of the Faculty who have helped us during our first year here. We hope m measure up to ihtir expeetalions ; to go forth to the expiration ot our course better men and women tm lia ing served our tirtie in the classical shade of the Meilical Colleg? of ' irginia; to practice our profession, fully ecpiipped, in a manner which will reflect honor upon our . lma Mater, our Facidt and ourselves. IllSIORlAN. -7 r FRESHMAN CLASS IN PHARMACY George E. Harrow vv. j. co-mstock. SAi ruEL H. DoDi), Jr. • Pearl E. Eberhard C. O. Fore R. H. Gardiner 11. W. Graham G. C Habel G. R. Jean • S. H. Jewell W. W. Johnson Nan ' cev B. King • A. R. Martin J. L. Martin A. P. M EH FORD • S. K. Ml NSEv Beatrice Rahman Se- molr Rosen • LODELL SaRII.LE E. L. Shanks M. E. Smith • O. O. Vaughan J. O. AVallace J. A. Written NOT IN PICTURE R. E. Da ij W. A. R ANSDNE, Jr. KAPPA P S I J. Clktis Nottingham . . C. E. Grhev, Jr R. Hl.ACKW KIT. Smiiii, Jr. . .1. K. Hudson . . . ' . . C. E. C.rocn. Jr. OFFICERS Si iii( rs President . . . I ' ice-Prcsidcnl Secretary Treasurer J. Curti.s N.Mliiii;ham A. J. Earl.v J tin tors J. M. Kaily T. E. Hamlet Pr ojcsiional Pharmaceutical Fraternity J. C. Cllben S ' l hijiniircs .1. U. Ilii.ls..n T. .-. .l.-nuillKS V. V. I.iui.s l;. Bla. kw. II Smith. Jr. otitidi d at the Medical College I ' irgiiiia in 1879 THETA CHAPTER of A. W. AM. ill Gunrgr Darruw. Ill Ph dgcs S. II. I.., M ];..l..rt Ji-au Stanlu.v J. will I.loyrt Martin Oakley Vaughaii 1 ' , E. Whciler ilabli lied at the Medical College Virginia in 1879 of Not in Picture Ur. W. G. Crocli.tt I . I - N -7 i rhe Is xj xr PHI DELTA CHI OFFICERS J. ' . Rhodes PiisiJiut T. E. Garland J ' icc-Prcsident George Kels Secretary Rlssei.l Herring Triasurer J iiniors F. H. Garland Jack Maddex R. W. Herring F. E. Parker A. E. Kels J. V. Rhodes Sophomores Frank Grubbs Not in Picture W. A. Ransone, Jr. Projcssional Pharynaceiitical and Chemical Fraleruity ALPHA DELTA CHAPTER Established at the Medical College of Virginia in WOMAN A MINEROLOSICAL ANALYSIS OF THE COMPARATIVELY UNKNOWN ELEMENT Element: Woman. Occurrence: Found wherever man exists. Seldom in the free state. With few exceptions, the combined state is preferred. Physical Properties: AH colors and sizes. Usually in disguised condition. Face covered by a film of composite material. Backs at nothing and may freeze at any moment. However, melts when properly treated. Very bitter if not well used. Cheynical Properties: Very active, possesses great affinity for gold, silver, platinum, and precious stones, violent reaction when left alone. Ability to absorb expensive food at any time. Undissolved by liquids, but activity greatly increased when saturated with a spirited solution. Sometimes yields to pressure. Turns green when placed beside a better look- ing specimen. Ages very rapidly. Fresh variety has a great magnetic attraction. Note: Highly explosive when in inexperienced hands. Beau Geste — Analyst. THE MORTAR AND PESTLE CLUB OFFICERS J. Curtis Nottixgham President NoR.MAX SoLLon J ' iee-President Charles Edward CjREex Secretiiry-Trensurer 1 he Mortar and Pestle Club, student pharmaceutical organi- zation, has tor its purpose the jironiotion of siood fellowship and the interests of pharmacy at large. The club contributes materially to the traininf: of the students. It presents speakers of national prominence at arious times. This year, as in the past, the club has fostereil ilebatintr. Contests with various other schools of [iharmacy ha e been held with reasonable success. This club has been the means by which oratorical ability has been uncovered among the students. As the name indicates, it is strictly a pharmaceutical group. ( MORTAR AND PESTLE CLUB Rdi.i. Lawrkvck Ai.i: . m)f:r Bknsett ' iK0iMA Awe Cakmisks Irvmm; Fji ' .mn Fixf.l K. K. W ' Ar iKRs Davh) Jacobson ' J. H. HococK A. J. Early J. M. Early J. Fraikin F. H. (.;aRI AND A. Grossman- T. C. IlAMLKlT R. U ' . IlFiRRLSC J. R. Hlrt (i. E. Ker.s J. P. Maddex F. E. Parker M. L. Ploikin J. W. Riioi.HS C. H. Williams M. M. ZiMitRG A. W. AniiiiT v. A. H KMs, Jr. W. R. H rlm J. C. Gilbert Rmi R. Gramil m F. K. Gri nns J. c;. Holmes Joii Rorerl IIldsov F. C. Iknmngs [he 1935 x-ra H [he 1935 x-ra II MORTAR AND PESTLE CLUB Roll ' . P. Lewis J. T. Martin- Abe Sheer R. B. Smith, Jr. C. E. WllKEI.ER George E. Barroxv w. j. comstock Samuel D, Dodo, Jr. Pearl E. Eberhard C. O. Fore R. H. Gardiner, Jr. H. U ' . Graham c;. C. Habel G. R. JEAN- S. H. Jewell y. W. Johnson Nancv B. King A. R. Martin J. L. Martin A. P. Mehford S. K. Mlnsev Be.verice Radman Seimour Rosen Lodell Saville E. L. Shanks M. E. S-MiiH O. O. Vaughan J. O. Wallace J. A. Witten — -s ' ' ' Nursing School THE MODERN NURSE 1835 — A typical sick room in Virginia — no aseptic technic — negro servant attendant — no trained nurses — no hospitals. 1935 — The Modern Hospital — a typical operating room — aseptic technic — trained doctors, nurses and anaesthetist — scientific equipment. -c -,7-. ' ; 1 ' •. V -r T if ( ' y c -cy 1935 g School THE GRADUATING CLASS HONORS VOU MISS LULU K. WOLF, B.S., R.N. FOR YOUR UNTIRING EFFORTS AS OUR TEACHER, ADVISOR AND LEADER AND FOR YOUR SINCERE FRIENDSHIP AND INTEREST IN EACH OF US AS STUDENTS AND FUTURE GRADUATES. SENIOR CLASS SCHOOL OF NURSING H. i i.isi: John PrrslA.ut Pauline Johnson .... President Helen Watson . . . Vice-President Inez Baer . Secretary and Treasurer Audrey Long . . Executive Council Francis Cash . . . Honor Council Leah Nichols . . . Honor Council Erna Leide Historian Jane Harvey X-Ray Gaynelle Stuck ey . Skull and Bones Marjorie Rich . Chm. Social Committee HISTORY OF THE SENIOR CLASS IN NURSING On a bright and clear September day. Almost three years in all, A husky Class of ' 36 Rolled into Cabaniss Hall, Not knowing of the struggles that nould Come with every irhim. We tried our best to carry the face That always wore a grin. There were girls from every section. State and county, countryside. Though we all were unacquainted. Tune did friends for each provide. Four long months with Do ' s and Don ' t ' s ' Oh. would it e er pass. When uniforms of purest white ] ould rain upon the class? And just the time nhen everyone II as brimming o ' er with glee For now that group nas made a Part of dear old M. C. I ' . The freshman year sped swiftly On with gains on every hand As onnard- -onward sped the time Toward the Promised Land. ' ' fhe 1935 x-ra u fhe 1935 x-ra 1 Vatso , Baer, Leide The fall of 1933 Made Juniors of us all When with the pleasure came The grief (and heavy did it fall). The Father seemed to hare a choice. A member would He take. And now the group with tear-stained Face adjustments had to make. But nith us joined a husky bunch From Winchester they did had To battle as the ships at sea Against an angry gale. Dan Cupid seemed to have his way Among these lassies dear. And four were chosen — married A home to share and cheer. And then at last ' twas ' 34, Black bands were on their way. That humble piece of velvet that had Almost bid us stay. October brought that long sought Prize and those caps of white With narrow bands of ribbon — black. Which gave us pure delight. Th: time is hastily passing by. Our places we must leave To those who follow m our tracks and With the work proceed. But thanks a lot. Old M. C. V. You ' ve brought us to the place When all success depends on us Let ' s hope we ' ll win the race. Historian. 1935 SENIOR CLASS INEZ MARIE BAER COR MA MA, W. VA. Secretary and Ireasiirer Senior Class; Dramatic Club, ' 33- ' 34. ' 3+- ' 3=;; -;it-i- Cli ' K ' 33- ' 3+. ' 3+- ' 35; Basket- ball, ' 33- ' 34, ' 3+- ' 35; Manager Baskethall, ' 3+- ' 35. ALLIE BLUE SOL ' THERS PINES, ' . C. ELSIE MARIE BURROWS )ii ro , . . . President of Class, 1932; Basketball, 1932. CHARLOTTE LOITSE CARR WINnSOR, VA. FRANCES CATHERINE CASH MAX MEADOWS, VA. Hnnor Council; Glee Club, ' 33- ' 34. ALLIE IRGINIA CLEEK HOT SPRINGS, VA. Basketball Squad, ' 33- ' 34. .■ LMA FLORINE COLLIER DF-NnRON, VA. Honor Council, ' 33- ' 34. ALICE E. DAVIS ET.IZABEIH CITV, . C. Treasurer Student Body; Glee Club, ' 32- ' 33- ' 34. i Page 122 EVA FARR ASUKVII.I.E, N. C. Honor Council, ' 33; Dramatics, ' 33. MARJORIK 1R(.;1NIA FREEMAN JEFFERSON , CA. Honor Council, ' 33- ' 34; Cliairuian of Social Committee, ' 33; Haskethall, ' 3+. RHODA LILLIAN FRIES STEPHENS CITV, VA. VIVIAN LICILLE HARRIS CHAPEI. HIT. I,, N. C J AVNE MARIE HARVEY BAl ARM, V. VA. RCHAMAII WILSON HENSllAW BERRVMLI.E, VA. Glee Club, ' 34- ' 35. MAUDE ACCrSTA HUDSON CARl ERSVH.l.E, VA. P.A.ULINE JOHNSON BENSON, N. C. President Senior Class; Secretary Freshman Class, ' 32- ' 33; Honor Council, ' 32- ' 33. Glee Club, ' 33- ' 34; Secretary Glee Club, ' 34.; Basket- ball, ' 34; X-Rav Representative, ' 34. SENIOR CLASS 1935 I 935 SENIOR CLASS ESTHER RHOOA KECKLEV WAKDESSVll.I.F, V. VA. Cite Club, ' 34- ' 35. GEORGIA MAE EANKEORO STEVENSVII.l K, VA. Dramatics, ' 33- ' 34; tilee Club, ' 32- ' 33- ' 3+. ERNA ANNETTE LEIDE TERRVVII.I.E, COKN. Cla-s Ilistnrinn; Baski-tball, ■32- ' 34. ALICE AIDREV LONG SUEI.I.TOW , Ml). Glee Club, •3+- ' 3 5; Hnnnr Council, ' 3 IRENE NANCE ASHKVll.I.E, . C. A.H., Greensbrirn College; Treasurer Class, ' 32; Three Year Club. MARTHA LEAH NICIIOLES SL ' MTER, S. C. Honor Council, ' 3+- ' 35. MARJORIE K. RICH M U I ' llRI MA S, A. Chairman oj Social Committc I KMl (.1 KIKCOE SACRA Minnl.EBL RC, VA. Baskelball, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; tilee Club, •34- ' 35. Page 124 HAZEL CHRISTINE SPIGGLE Maurontown, Va. lilee Cluh, •3+- ' 35- MARGARET GAVNELLE STTCKEV I I.ORENCK, S. C. President Freshmai) Class; President Junior Class; Representative f Skull and Banrs. ' 3+- ' 3.i 1 Member of X-Rav Staff, u- ' 3 ; Haskethall, ■32- ' 33- ' 34. HELEN MARGCERITE THACKER RE1I)3V1I.I.E, . C. ODESSA SENACNEV THOMPSON NAIURAI. BRIDCE, VA. Basketball, ' 34- ' 35; Glee Club. HELEN HOPEWELL WATSON STFPIIEVS cn V, A. Glee Club, ■33- ' 34; Basketball, ' 3+; ViceT ' .esident Senior Class. CARRIE WEBB APPOMATTOX, VA. Vice-President, ' 33-3+; Cbairman of Honor Council, ' 34- ' 35- RECEPTION COMMITTEE These charming hostesses are students in the nursino school — here. REINFORCT.MENTS Mr. McCauIey, Mr. Larrick, Mr. Childrey in the back- ground. SENIOR CLASS 1935 Farley, Sclimitier, Thackc-r. Williams. JUNIOR NURSING CLASS Nancy Jane Farley Preside:i: Louise Schnieder . .■ Vice-President Elsie Thacker Secretary and Treasurer Josephine Vance Executive Council Inez Davis Honor Council Ruth Myers Honor Council Mae Belle Williams Historian Catherine Crockett X-Ray Martha Carpenter Chairman Social Committee HISTORY OF THE JUNIOR CLASS IN NURSING Members of our class, in looking back over the historical events of the year of 1933, will not forget that it was in that year we made our advent into the professional world. It was a typical September day at the close of which thirty noble-hearted young ladies, representing both the North and the South, had officially registered in the office of Cabaniss Hall. During our Prelim period we, e. periencing a new life, new friends, new environ- ment, and being held under the powers of upper classmen, soon found our chosen pro- fession was not to be an easy one. With new achievements and high ideals in mind, and with the aid of our faculty and upper classmen, we have succeeded in overcoming the:e difficulties and in the beginning of our Freshmen year, twenty-four Survivals of the fittest received with much joy a cap which gave each of us added self-confidence and renewed zeal. Our enthusiasms and interests have not been limited to our work alone, but have been equally displayed in the social and athletic life of our Alma Mater. And now as Juniors we consider it a privilege and a delight to set an example for the class behind us, but we Jtill look to those superior to us for guidance. In our time here we have learned much, but as we eagerly look forward to our Senior year we realize that even greater things are ahead, and it is with enthusiasm and eagerness that we are striv- ing to Give to the ideals and standards of Nursing the best that we have. Historian, Class of ' 36. I rie j kJ O JUNIOR NURSES Grace Brite Martha Carpenter Nellie Clark Catharine Crockett Riin- Crowder Inez Da is Nance Jane Farley Madge Flippo Elizabeth Fitzgerald Esther Head Ursula Hickam Mildred Horak Rlth Myers Elenora Parker Mary E. Pinnel Mary Ralston Louise Schneider Elsie Thacker Ella Mae Thompson Josephine Vance Elizabeth Weems E -a Whitehead Mae Belle Villia.ms Nancy Wolfe Lane. JIaishall. ■ Villiforcl. JoiKS, Ci Mi-Namara, Moore Hanes. Lawrence. Mills. Dobyns. IngoKl. aig, Montgomery. Smith. Sumniero Bowie. Pan-ish. Thoma.s. Beaslo; B:ach, Israel. Raiford. Smith. Davis. Raike. Thweatt. Lane. Price. Cooke. Bui-fc-ess. Oliver, Ecldins. Cooke, McCorquedale, Burgandine. She Pritchctt. Wel.sigcr. Godwin. Tyler. Priddy. FRESHMAN CLASS IN NURSING Ririi P .i.i . Rr;rii Ukacii Bkli.aii Ei.i . iiin ii Hanks Raciiki. Hilda ISi ' Asi.ki Sara I )rv Incoi.d Helen Frances Boxvie Nina Sle Israel Carolyn ' irginia BurgandineMarv Bethel Jones Orpha Anne Burgess I ' .DNA Anne Cooke Kamierine Ellen Cooke I ' a E) N ' iRGiNiA Craig Marian K.mhrvn Davis NiRGiNiA Allison Dnni ns Barrara Eli aheiii Eihhn Elma Rlih (;oin iN Edith Miller Lane Helen Elizabeth Laurence Ei.izABEiii Gertrude Pritciiett N ' iRGiNiA Davis Raiiord l ' )oRRis Gustava Raike Ruby Dare Sheets Edith Sanderson Smith Irene Marion Smith SllIRI.E ■ Maxine McCorquedale Dorothy Elizabeth Slmmerour Mabel Howard McNamara Sallie Marshall Ida Elizabeth Mills 1 1, A Fay Montgomery . nna Lee Moore MAR Edna Oli er Pearl Irene Parrish Margarei Mlriel Price K i iiMEN Pari iin PRll)D Fa Franklin Thomas ' iRi;iNiA Harrison Thweait Julia Louise Tyler Ei.LiE Hancock Weisiger Elizabeth Pearce Wh.i.iford -- -7 1 — ThelSl urse There ' s a whole lot worth while In the voice with a smile — Laughing eyes make the whole world seem brighter And the dimples that chase O ' er a nice nurse ' s face Make the greatest of pains seem much lighter; It can ' t be much fun. But I ' ve never met one (Though Vve traveled from Richmond to Dover) Without a bright smile. Every inch in the mile. A-smilc, all the while, and all over. Whether upstairs or down. Not a sign of a frown — No suggestion of sadness or sorrow; In the morning ' s gray dawn. Or when daylight is gone. Today — or tonight — or tomorrow; Like a heaven-sent ray. She spreads light through the day — It ' s no wonder the patients all love her. With her smile all the while, Every inch in the mile. With her smile — all the while — and all over! . A Brown , Heitshu, Neale, Graham, Bock Grantham. Porter, R., Fori er, M., Tull DIETITIANS ' CLUB Aii.EEN Brown, 1;.S Director of Dicletlcs Kathr n V. lIiTTSHL, B.S Is:iil,iii! Diirdor. T lirrapctttic D ' utilian E Ei.VN Carrom, Neai.e, B.S hsulani Uvr.li.r. Pri ;,h PavUImn Dutilian F.MAi.EEN ' Graham, B S., M.S IssisUiiil Dirnlm, .hlministralhv, Di.lilian Margaret Emzabeih T-ock, B.S Icliiiii .IssishuU Dirrclor. Staj] Diiiiiiii Room Dirtiliun STUDENT DIETITIANS Alice CIranhiam, B.S SluJ.nl Di.lUuin Rose Pokier. B.S Sludiiil Di,l ' uiiiii Mari.arei Pokier. B.S SluJrii Dicliliiui PvOUENA Tlt.i., B.S Sliul.nl Di.lilum r 7 uz a H Irving, Mills, Swisher, Anderson, Cashon, Patterson Brvce, Reavis, KuyKj Leanard Davis TECHNICIANS CLUB Hazel Irving Chief Tichiiician V. Mills Tctliiii ian, Oul I ' lili.Jil I),f tiilinenl JEJSIE Lee Swisher Clinuat Tic inidiin Mildred E. Anderson . . Da( l.riolat iuil uiij Siiioloi iral Technician (iRACE Cashon Miialioiic and Electrocareioi raphist Oi.GA Patterson Clinical Technician Evelyn Brvce liacterioloc ical Technician Charles Reavis Relief Technician STUDENT TECHNICIANS Roberta Kuyk Sludenl Technitian Bessie Leanard SttuienI Technician Margaret Davis Student Technician A drama such as miglit have played at the Richmond Theatre previous to its destruction by nre in 1811. No doubt members of the medical pro- fession often found relaxation here. ACTIVITIES Page 133 y STUDENT Reno R. Portfr President MoFFETT H. Bowman ' ice-President Curtis Nottingham Secretary Alice E. Davis Treasurer Reno R. Porter BELIEVING that self-government in college is a fitting preparation for self-government in life following graduation, the ideals of our student representative organization have long been expressed in fact, through the medium of our representative body in student affairs. No more praise or noteworthy deeds can be recorded in the activ- ities of our student executives than the confidence and responsibility reposed in them by popular vote. Acting on behalf of the students, these executives are quick to carry out the desires of a majority in the welfare of the student body. A noteworthy achievement and addition to student activities can be recorded as a precedent and added to the time-honored customs of our school is the dance held at the termination of the college year. It is indeed an instrument designed for fond farewells and the cementing of friendships. MOH El 1 II. HuUMAM fhe 1935 xra H J w ' J GOVERNMENT EXECUTIVE AND HONOR COUNCIL Miduinc Mtilicine W. H. Matthews ' ILLIAM LlNFEST Jack Srulowitz LoLiis DeAncelis C. F. Jaskieweicz C. S. Davis E. H. Haddock W. T. Thompson Dentistry Dentistry A. I,. Pud.LIPS A. C. DiSanto W. S. Miles T. E. Martin L. A. Martoke Irving Harris W. C. Neal H. M. Hanna Pharmacy Fhiinnacy E. K. Walters I. E. Fixel Geo. a. Kels C. H. ' h.liams A. W. Abbitt J. C. Gilbert G. R. Jean- G. E. Barrow Niirsing Xiirsinff Josephine ' ance Audrey Long Inez Davis Francis Cash Rlth Mvers Leah Nichols c f Curtis Nottingham Page 135 Alice E. Dams THE 193 5 Samuel L. Elfmon Editor-in-Chief may desire a brief resume of the history of the school. The history of medicine in this country was for a long time the history of medicine in Virginia. The staff, therefore, has con- sidered it appropriate to use the 1935 X-Ray as a means to portray to you, in word and EDITORIAL STAFF With the coming of the Centennial of the Medical College of Virginia in 1938, it is our sincere wish that this book may prove of some value to the students and alumni who STAFF Homer Earle Ferguson . . . Assistant Editor Louis Lon ' enstein Associate Editor Samuel P. Kaminskv .... Assistant Editor E. Bryan Quarles Medical Editor Hawley H. Seii.er . . Assistant Medical Editor Benjamin Bogeinskv . Assistant Medical Editor Albert Alexander Dental Editor P. D. Miller .... Associate Dental Editor David Jacobson Pharmacy Editor Norman Sollod . . . Associate Pharmacy Editor Miss Gaynelle Stuckey . . . Nursing Editor ' r. v ' xrau m I i- ' a I y O ; Ir 1 1 X-RAY D. Coleman Booker Business Manager picture, some of the important events per- taining to this science, which have occurred in the course of the history of the Old Do minion. The drawings throughout the book were made by Mr. Dugald Stewart Walker. To Dr. Wyndham B. Blanton we are deeply MANAGERIAL STAFF grateful for suggestions referable to the drawings and for permission to use his va rious books as sources of information in the writing of A Short History of Medical Ed- ucation in Virginia. STAFF Dr. S. S. Negus Faculty Adnsor CcRNELius E. Hagan . . . Photographic Editor Jack Goldman Fraternity Editor Soon Tai Ryang . . . Assistant Photographer D. P. BuRLESCN Joke Editor D. D. Brusca Joke Editor A. A. Hoffman Literary Editor I. ScHOR Literary Editor Miss Rosalie Ottolingue . . General Assistant David T. Carr . . . Assistant Business Manager J. B. Hancock . . . Assistant Business Manager Page 137 SKULL AND BONES 1935 George A. Glass Edilor-m-Chief four schools in bringing you the news of the day. An innovation was inaugurated this past year with the addition of the Collegiate Di- gest, which met with the unanimous ap- proval of the student body at large. Through the ability of L. C. Fergus, per- severing Business Manager, and an untiring EDITORIAL STAFF Under the skillful direction of George Glass as Editor-in-Chief, the Skull and Bones has advanced another step forward in achiev- ing the ideals of a college newspaper, name ' to be as representative as possible among our STAFF Louis Lovenstein Associate Editor Benjamin Bogeinsky .... Managing Editor D. D. Brusca Sports Editor R. B. Smith .... Assistant Managing Editor Mgffett Bowman . . Assistant Managing Editor Miss Gaynelle Stuckey . Asst. Managing Editor George Welchons Reporter D. Jacobson Reporter 1935 x-ra u SKULL AND BONES 1935 L. C. Fergus Business Manager business staff, the Skull and Bones has main- tained an excellent financial standard. Much thanks are due to the rest of the staff who have devoted their untiring efforts to snooping around our school for news and to the faculty who cooperated by sup- plying them not only with events of interest that occurred in their departments, but also MANAGERIAL with information concerning the activities of the Executive Administration Body. We feel that in contributing our work to a successful year, we have laid a firm founda- tion for the future Skull and Bones. STAFF H. I. Markowitz Reporter Jules Snyder Reporter A. J. Russo Reporter L. J. Anson Reporter A. A. Hoffman Reporter Frank Pole. Jr. . . Assistant Business Manager R. S. Williams . . Assistant Business Manager Fred Martin . . . Assistant Business Manager YOUNG E. B. Shkpherd An event which brings these facts to us forcibly is Student Activity Night, held annually at the Central Y. M. C A. Such occasions prove that the Y. M. C. A. does much to foster more mu- tual relations and a greater feeling of congen- iality, not only between students but also between students and faculty. As an indispensable unit in our student life, the Y. M. C A. of the Medical Col- lege of Virginia has made its influence widespread. In 1916, a farsighted group of men first began the organization of our Y. M. C. A. which today, through its new facilities recently added in the basement of the New Library Building, has been able to reach a new peak in its service to the student body. Under the leadership of our old relia- ble, ever-helpful Father Larrick, an op- portunitv for religious, moral welfare, and athletic activities are offered every man. ]i Ml I.AKRICK Gciiiial Sinilary fh c 7 vj O X ra 1 MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Officers and Cabinet E. B. Shepherd PrrsH ■ Ai.oNzo Phillips l ' icc-Pnud,ni J. R. Hurt Treasurer Sr-oiswoon Robins Reeordino Secretary R. L. Simpson Membership ' •■■ • Poi-E Puhluity M. B. R.AiFORn Social J. R. Maddex Church .1 ffilialion . ' • ' • ' - ' ' - Missionary Church Representatives C. R. Armistead C. G. Himmelwright P. D. Miller W. H. Trav.nham J. E. Alexander A. R. Johnston V. S. Morgan T. V. ' ermillion ' D. C. Booker R. A. Keating L. T. Stoneburner C. B. White G. W. Daughertv a. LiPfORo c. A. Shetter S. E. Warshauer H. E. Ferguson R. C. McAllister O. W. Snvmer G. A. Welchons Committee of Management R. F. McCrackan .... r-i ■ Chairman Dr. (iREER Baughman r,ce-Chair,nan Dr. George Duncan Secretary-Treasurer Thanking W. Andersen Hunter Frischkorn, Jr. Dr. V. A. McGee Dr. I. A. Bigger Dr. D.avid S. Garner Willia.m R. Miller Dr. Karl S. Blackwell Dr. Tvler Havnes Dr. S. S. Negus Dr. Wvndha.vi Blanton Dr. W. H. Hicgins Dr. Wm. H. Parker Rov Childrev Dr. C. L. Outland E. B. Shepherd Dr. T. Dewev Davis J. R. McCauley Dr. R. L. Simpson Phillips, Hurt, Robins, Simpson Pole, Raiford, Maddex, Lynch The Sur geon Hands His Face? I know not whether it be fair, Or lined and grayed to mark the slipping years. His Eyes? I do not glimpse the pity there. Or try to probe their depths for hopes or fears. Only upon his wondrous hands I gaze. And search my memory through so fittingly To voice their loveliness. In still amaze, I bow before their quiet dignity. They make the crooked s traight and heal old sores; The blind to see. the war-torn clean and whole. Throughout the suffering world they touch the doors That open wide to life. The bitter bowl Of pain they sweeten till the weary rest. As though the hands of God had served and blest. — Rev. James Gallegher. fhe 1935 xra 1 THE REVELERS Jifci J L James M. Habel President We owe much to the Revelers of the Medical College of Virginia in contributing to and expanding the activities of our college. The activity directors consist of: W. W. Craddock, Orchestra; D. T. Carr, Dra matics; and Russell G. McAllister, College Quartet and Girls ' Glee Club. Under their tutelage and fine leadership, many students have become enriched in the cul- tural field of music, while others were given the opportunity to maintain and continue their interest begun at other schools. Since its inception in 1925, the Revelers have steadily advanced until today they have reached the pinnacle of success in organization and ability. We wish to thank every member of the Revelers for their efforts in mak- ing this a most successful year, and to the Faculty Advisory Committee, Dr. W. T. Sanger, Dr. Greer Baughman, and Dr. W. G. Crockett, our heart- felt appreciation for their heartv cooperation. R. G. McAi.LisTF.R Ouartcl and Glee Club D. T. Carr Drainalics F J l t ' li ■ ii 4iiiil-M C w W ' KC mJHH l i X y K tr Bi .jci mTi1 H Sponsr ri .1 tin it illy h Flu Rlin Su iiiri Fr itrrnity DRAMATICS HALLOWE ' EN DANCE LlNCAMFEl.TER, TllACKTR, FiVK, ' AISn , ImiNSnV, FnZCERAI.l) M KM . Bair, liRnADiiLs, IIarma, Kkatino I I I - 7 r I -- I X 3 V,J u GLEE CLUB BURCANDINK, W ' lllIAMS, SMITH, SUMMEROUR, HaNES, RAIKK, McAlI.ISTER, ShEETS, Head, Keci.ev, TH0iMPS0 , Craig, Thweati. Bowie, Weisigek, Davis, La kford, Harvev, Vatso , Beasi.ev, Baer, McCorciuedale. QUARTETTE Dams, Hl atdn, harpi:, McAllister, Blddow COTILLION CLUB I. ASDKRSON ' W. P. ASIIBKOOK RdRI. Hhl.l. I. R. Hfsdik n. C. lldUKhK W. I . Cavedo I.. Dr ASCEI.IS Oscar Diamond F. Dick C ' ari. F.Asr eri)a j. P. Easiham S. F.I.KMOV I.. C. Fergus W. F. Fui.i.KR G. Glass ]. M. llAREI, S, 11 EI. I. MAN R. H. Harmon C. Front H. II. HiNES c;. iiAi.E R, A. Keating Ci. H. Kcci.EV X. King R. Le Garde K i.: ii Lechalsse R. C. LlNGAMI EM ER Morris Maniia Harom) Markoutiz F. Martin F. Nelson lOHN O ' SUIIIVAN J. B. Spinks Jack Sri liumtz Angello ' illani A. I . Van Name 1 ' . X ' ermiilion I. A. Wallace C. Warren S. K. Warsmaler Roger Williams rji ill ] ' i( line C. F. IIXGAN W I.INI ESIA [he 1 3 5 x-ra u y I • ' - u GERMAN CLUB Officers Holmes Chapman I ' residciil Curt Nottingham rUi-Pn ' sideul Pat Sltpihn Siinlaty- Tn cis Me.mhkrs Tomm Braoshaw Rkno Porter C U RT N OTIT N G H A M Wll.LlF. Rf.ei) John Sal ndcrs H. r. Stephenson Holmes Chapman Pat Sutphin Mike Joyce KoB Robins Bob Eastman Llck Lacy John Law Lero Smllh O. Cook Cal Calvert Charles Watkins Frank Pole Ben N ' iiriE Buck Russell Bob Eason Gray Broaddus Bob Hudson- Bill VOUNC Gabel Himmelricht P.OB Smith John Clark Dick Michaux Pike Bowman En Hunter Charlie James A 0 ill Picture Red Spitzer n li: . i ATHLETICS ne ra M WILLIAM H. PARKER, M.D. GRADUATE MANAGER OF ATHLETICS Dr. Parker graduated as a Doctor of Med- icine from the University College of Med- icine in 1895. In 1924, the athletic organization at the M. C. V. was reorganized and a new system established. Dr. Parker was at this time elected to the position of Graduate Manager. He is the first and only man to officiate in this capacity. He has performed his duties most con- scientiously, maintaining M. C. V. athletics on a very active and sportsman-like basis. OTIS OLIVER, D.D.S. COACH Dr. Oliver came here in 1928 from Blue- field College, Bluefield, West Virginia. There he received his pre-dental education. While there he took an active part in base- ball, basketball, football and track. As a student at the M. C. V. (1928-1932) he participated in baseball and basketball. Today, he is an active member on the staff of the Dental School. We are proud to have this alumnus as coach at M. C. V. ATHLETIC MEDICAL COLLEGE J. B. Earle President Officers • l ' ' RI-l Presidcut Al.Kc (Ikoss.max lici-I ' i tsiilint j. K. DoM.ii Sta-itiuy j. R. .McC.AUI.EV Trcauirtr MEMBERS School of Medicine C. R. V. TKl -s Fail C. Soi i.shv T. Ewiix Tam.dr (;i;c)R(,e C. Hope School of Dentistry j. M. Frwcis . G. Sedei.kow J. J. (Jol. D.MAX NdR.M AX DWIS School of Pharnidcy .(. C. NOTTIXGH ,M W . P. I.IWIS J. Fratkin Samiki. ii. Doni) fh 1 J v_x -, . ._. U ASSOCIATION MEDICALCOLLEGE j Jonah P. Larrick | _ General Manager Kf ATHLETIC COUNCIL Otis T. Oluer .Ithlrt ' u Coaili Faculty Members Dr. S. S. Xe(U s School of Fhannacv Dr. V. B. Porter School of Medicine Dr. Vebb B. GuRLEV School of Dentistry Managers Dr. W.m. H. Parker Cinuliuitc Mannger J. J. Shapiro Buschall C. E. Vatkixs Bdskcthall Spotswood Robins Tennis C. E. HagaN, Jr Siciinming Robins, Shapiro. Hacan , W.atkiss Page 151 BASEBALL I 934 R. C. SlERSEMA Coat It R, C. SiKKSEMA Coach C. S. FiNNEV . . . Ca plain J. J. Shapiro ... Manaijir Sqlad Mos. ' ic;o.MCRV Short Slop SlERSF.MA Third Base Fi.vSEV .... Second Base DovLE Calcher Armisteao FirsI Base Wright Pilcher Pope Pilcher RiLEV Riijhl Field Tii.i,.viA Pilcher Meadow Oul field Sdui.sb - Outfield Harding Outfield Sn- der Outfield Lewis Outfield VARSITY BASEBALL SSVDER, MONTGOMERI, SSMIER, HARDING, WRlfMll, LEWIS, RlLEV, MeADOWS Onvi.E. Pope, Siershma, Fiwtv L rks, Sollsdv, Tillman, Ar.mistead [he IQ3 5 x-ra u v_y O xra 1 •!_ «r -Ut yfr . ' !— Doyle Lewis Snyder Riley Pope Tillman SCHEDULE, 1934 U. of R tluie .M. C. V. Hampden-S dney there M. C. V. Union Theological Seminary there M. C. V. Randolph-] Iacon there M. C. V. Randolph-Macon here M. C. V. Bridgewater h?re M. C. V. Randolph-AIacon here M. C. V. Hampden-Sydney here Al. C. V. Bridgewater there M. C. V. r 1 Wright Harding Page 153 ,tD ' ' C j, ; ■ - '  ' Meadows Hi t 1 — .. Montgomery Bf.ddow, Dome, Grossman , SouI.SB , n.wciiF.RT-s, Wright, White BASKETBALL, 1935 Dr. Oti.s Oi.infr, (- lull Chari.e.s Watkixs, Manager SQUAD 11. -M. Haxna Pal I. C. SoiLSB - Ch.xrles Wheeler Alex C]r().s.sm. x JoHxxv Dovle I. A. Wright Jack Jarrhtt Charles Froxt C. R. Arp ( L ' i ' Dalghertv J. Ale.x Vittex VILLL M H. Woonsox C. H. White Robert GARmxER S. H. Dodd VARSITY BASKETBALL Oliver, Parker, .McFariand, Donn, ' nFEii-R, Ilxi. gheria, Wright, IIasna, Jarreti, Wai kiss, Larrick Front, Arp, Martin, Gardiner, Whitley, Soui.sbv, Grossman, White, Dome 111 - ' I I VwJ u SCHEDULE _.., . 1934-1935 .U. C. r. Pliur OfM ' ' M. C. V here . . Vilso Teachers ' College M. C V there . . . L nixersitj ' of Richmond M. C. ' here Hampden-Sydney M. C V here .... American University M. C ' here Randolph-Macon -M. C ' there .... William and IVIary M. C. V here Lynchburg M. C. V here . . . University of Richmond M. C. Y. there Randolph-IVIacon I. C. V there Hampden-Sydney M. C. V there Union Theological M. C. V ' here Alumni ! I. C. V here Union Theological M. C. V there . . ilson Teachers ' College M. C. V there .... American Universitv ' Father L.arrick INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONS SOPHOMORE CLASS IN MEDICINE Stoxeburner, V.auch.xn ' , Doyle, Lipm.ax SOULSBV, DAUGIIERrV, Keatisg IIiCKiM, MvF.Rs, Raike, Horak, W ' oi.fe, Tm.er, Weems Lacv, SiMMHKOi r, I ' fAvis, FARI. : . Thomas, Baer, MnriRE. Coach Noblin GIRLS ' BASKETBALL TEAM, 1935 Miss Frances Nobi.in Miss Alice Laci Fuiiiliy Id-viso, Squad Inez Davis Forii:ard Nancy Wolfe Jane Farley Forii-ard Nell Clarke Fay Thomas Forward Edna Oliver Doris Raike For=u:ard Mildred Horak Dorothy Summerour Foricard Muriel Price Ruth Myers Guard Marion Davis (iEORCL Weems Guard Julia Tyler Inez, Bafr Guard Anna Lee Moore Trslla Hickum Center Coach SCHEDULE. 1934-1935 M. C. Place 0 f,onrnl i4 M. C. . . Tig Saw. M. C. . . . . lieri.- ... W. and M. Extension - F M. C. . . . . there . . . Hlaek. trine Girls College ■ m M. C. . . . here . . . . here . . . . here M C ' K M. C. . . . BI.ick tone Cirls Colleg- M. C. .... here . Couriril N JKhhnrhond Finns. . A M. C. . . . . here . . . . here . . . . there J M. C. k. M. C. .... « ' . and M. Extension K M. C. .... here . . . . there . . . . Buddies M. C. . . St. Elizabeth Cnaeh V o Stoneburker, Kuhs, A ' aughav, Coach Alexander Bell, Montagi k, Janiger, J skif vicz, Keatikg SWIMMING TEAM, 1935 JOHX AlexaN-DER Coa.k C. H. H.xGAX M imiffcr William C. Kuhs 220-vard Free Style Nathaxiel Jaxicer 2,„.-.,,. p,. gj;,, Dax .AIoxtague 220-vard Free Style JoHx Alexaxder ■ B,. 3 j S ,. - I- ' L Breast Stroke K. h. Bell p„ i o i T, T- tJack Stroke Robert Keatixg ... t-.- • Robert McEwex P,. S .j C. F. jASRiE yicz F,. , Style Dash  jI Relay Team  V E| Robert Keatixg Johx Alexaxder • Robert McEwEx Lewis Stoxeburxer t Schedule, 1934-1935 V| K - - ■ • ■ ■ ■ . Raiidolplv.Macon V - C. V. . there . AVashington ■. M. C. A. . j- -AI. C. V. . there V P I J. E. .A[.E. AXDER  . 1 . i. Coach AI. C. . . here L . of R. Sharp, McFari and, Pope De Angei.is, Front, Robins, Woodai.l TENNIS TEAM, 1934-1935 Spotswooi) Riir.iNs, Manager Squad LoL IS I)e Axgelis Frank Pole Spotswooii Robixs Robert Wood.all Charles Froxt W. T. TiioMPSov R. W. Sharpe E. Sharpe Hlbert Crow ' |LLL M MlFaRLAXI) -Mai rice Fighme Schedule, 1934 yi, C. 11 • .1 nion Theological Seminary M. C. ' l -t Hcrinitagi. ' Country Club M. C. ' thc-ri. ' Hampilcn-Syilncy M. C. ' there Hridgcwatcr MONOGRAM CLUB Mourx rams .livaij, l May 12. IQS-f. al Allilrtic Baiif iul. (JlKLs ' HaSKETBALL Marjorie Freeman, Canilvn lUiina, Nancv Mevers, Elizabeth Weems, l ' at ' olf, Eva Farlev, Inez Davis, Ursala Hickam, Rutii Whitehead, Nancv Wolf, Mildred Horack, Frances Noblin, Coach. 1) ASEI ' .AI.I, Claude Finney, Cpiaii,.- Chester Rilev, Tom 11. rillman, C. Armiste.id, l.lin O.ivle, Alex Pope, Joe Meadows, R. S. Montnomerv, ' F. Wright, J. Chapiro, Muiiiui,i ; Ra Siersma, Coach. l!() .s ' Basketball R. S, Montgomery, Captain; John, Doyle, ligan, J. L. Jennings, Pete Pastore, Sam Sil- Alc.x Wright, Ale.x Grossman, llarrv Perl- ver, W. R. Hiitchinsoji, ]. H. Earle, Manager ; stein, Jake Fratkln, C. B. White, Ralph Mul- Ray Siersema, Cnadi. SWLMAIING A. D. Alexander, Robert Keating, . . R. Stoncbnrner, A. L. Phillips, N. Janiger, W. Stork, Robert McEwcn, Alex Grossman, I,. T. ' ermilya, C. N. Eckerson, Maiuii rK: J. E. .Alexander, Coach. Texxis J. R. Saunders, Frank Pole, Spotswond Rob- in,, C. E. Watkms, A. R. Stork, L. De. ngelis. Two Mox()gra: is Marj ' rie Freeman, Tom Pope, . lex (iross- stein, lake Fratkin, Joe Shapiro, F. II. Fill- man, C. B. White, J. B. Earle, Flarrv Perl- man, Frank Pole, lohn Dnvie, . lex Wright, A. R. Stork. . THLETIC BA-XQLET, 1934, BCCKROE BE. CH Dancing the Sir Roger de Coverly in Rising Sun Tavern, on Mam Street, Ricnmond, wnicn was ire- quented by the blooas ana bleeaers of early eighteen hundreas. rar nr— r- •■ 5 ' 111 I Wl • ' . ' ' V ' - - ♦ '  ' . ' 1- ' ' 1  ' ' . ' ' i . '  ' ' ' ' ' ' - ' XT ' - J r. J«K ' ii FEATURES SPONSORS rs. L. Slfmon SPONSOR FOR The X-Ray S. L. Elfmon Editor-in-Chief Mrs. J. m. Habel SPONSOR FOR The Revelers J. M. Habel. Jr. President iss Margaret King SPONSOR FOR Student Government Reno R. Porter President Miss oAllie lue SPONSOR FOR Cotillion Club J. M. Habel, Jr. President D. Coleman Booker Manager I I v_ 1 y xra 1 iss cAnn %yan SPONSOR FOR Business Staff of X-Ray t iss ( extrude ' ' Dyson SPONSOR FOR Skull and Bones Roger Williams Busmesi Staff Milker, Franks, Jarrett MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Ci.iriOK M. Mii.i.ER, M.n Prcsidciil Ei.isHA Barksiiai.e, M.n rici-Pii-siJiiil W. N. HonCKiN, n.D.S Srcond I ' hc-Pnsidcnt T. L. Howard, Ph.G Third tice-President Anne Franks, R.N Fminli r ' uc-Prcsidcnl Lewis E. Jarrett, Pii.Ci., M.D Sicrclary F. H. Beaw.es, M.D Tnasiircr ExECUTiVR Committee CririON M. Mii.i.er, M.D Cliairman Lewis E. Jarrett, Ph.G., NLD Srciiiary F. FL Beadles, M.D Treasurer J. B. Fisher, M.D. Roshier W. Miller, M.D. L. C. Bird, Ph.G. C. L. OuiLAND, M.D. K. S. Blackwell Anne Franks, U.N. F. S. Johns, M.D. W. FL Street, D.D.S. MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA NURSING SECTION OF ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION , NE Slater Franks, K.X Cliainnan DiiA Steele, R.N Ik r-C hair man Mrs. Ei.iZAiiiiM ( ' iL i iii lliii, K.X Secretary Mrs. Marh l a Shi lii liicii, R.N ' ( ' .nrresl nJiiii Secretary ircinia P i:i. Hlsh, R.N Treasurer I ' ANSi Fleuiiik, R.. Member nf llnard of Direelors Ilii.DRED Bauserm.w, R.N Member of Board nf Directors Ellen Goss, R.N Member of Board of Direelors Jennie Jones, R.N Member of Board of Directors ro H E [he 1935 x-ra 1 REUNION ' OF NLRSING SCHOOL Ar.l.MNAE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION It is the sincere hope of th.- Alumni Association that the nienihers of the Class of 1935 will maintain close and lasting association with their Alma Mater, indi- vidually and through the Alumni organizations. The entire Class of 1935. through the suggestion of Dr. Jarrett antl the kind- ness of the student body, has hecome paid-up members of our Alumni Association. This same spirit prevails also among our older alumni — iiro e(l by the organization and reorganization of chapters e erywhere. These Alimini clubs in cities throughout the country keep ali e the spirit of M. C. V. and supply the channels which gi e direction and expression to that con- tinuing interest in the college and its affairs which is a part of the heritage of every graduate. Alumni clubs, composed of graduates in Medicine, Dentistr , Pharmac and Nursing, foster friendships, cooperation and progress among men and women whose life work is centered around the Health Sciences. Every person who graduates from this college is a member of the (leneral Alumni Association, vour education allocates you in a professional group, ()ur place of resi- dence is the basis for membership in a local alumni club. 1 hese are the fields of alumni interest and acti ity i[i which every graduate should partake. SCHOOL OF NURSING Frances Helen Zeicler Plgh Franks McCaulev Jones Parsons Wolf Johns! ON Anderson cA Q ' xrl llcvited ll ' antid — a girl iritli hi ' iuily and yracc. Xot vi-ry fast Hull a (lassual jatr. I!y •rrfrriiiii- — a 0 ' ' ' l Is nfl.ii I call, ' .Slill jurnish the carriage To go lo llic hall. Il ' aiiird — a i irl ol joiul ' of drii ' cs, .hid iv io li-il ioiil ftirliiig Pleasure dcrii ' es. Il ' anlcd — a girl ll ' lio is hnnesi cnougli To lei a man kuoii; ll ' lirn she ' s out on a bluff. ' Wanted — a girl ll ' lio. v:lien asked for a dance. Won ' t hold up five fingers. With iL-aleh for your chance. ' ll ' anted — a girl Who does not feel hound To push a goodthing When it happens around. .1 girl .-e ith one heart, One rriind and one face — . queen among iiomen, .1 ficiress of grace. If a girl like this. Can e-vcr he found, I favor you ' ll do me If you bring her around. THREE PACES THE PHYSICIAN HATH Faculty •SMurphy and ' purses ' T redorninate Sightseeing in Richmond v f ' p ' ■ M. C. V. at ' Nuchal ' each c5Wen cAbout School «l .l cAnybody ' s Page Dr. oAndersons Senior ' Picnic w ' Dentistry ' Predominates Of qA Saturday ight AV 1111, Old ' Bacchus Inn .Ifler the study of the ' week is June .Ini my mind so uneased must be I seek to find a iliiee of fun, Jiisl lo sil and drink and see. l- ' iiolsleps ijuided hy a hii( hler li it Lead to the Old tlaeehus Inn. ' Where Sony and tauejhter iiafts the hliyht Il ' rouijht by ivork and its dismal din. U-ver there I see my old pal .lim — lie ' s had a sip, perhaps ' tis l iain. four years of thi; and a fiijure trim Has thinned ' itself in deep disdain. I ill mi ' dtiiin and lake a drink .Ind look around the spacious room, Too soon I ' m made lo say and think — ' ■TV come. I ' m liere, I ' ve lost my gloom! Coiklaih and lobblers. iiines and beers, Mine led and mi.xed in t lasses aplenty. I smiled. I lauijhed, I shed some tears. If one 1 drink — musi haiic twenty! I drank and drank, so studies be fon ot, Par flunij :. orriis m, lied like sno v. The lonaer I stayed, ihe drunker I , ot— liven if I li-anled lo. I louldn ' t i oj .1 drunken man at Ihe Old Hac hus door, .hid the penciled pictures on the iLall Remind scenes and sonr s of years before. Riinemberinc s in llie realms of recall. Ind so amidst all this and thus Serjuel drinks their tales have lold. I found myself a drunken cuss If here before I --vas bashful. noK I ' m bold. ' Xoii. ' a headjul of hops and a bellyful of beer fats of my time and make me i anl sleep. My eyelids arc.-:. ' heavy amid all the cheer. . . liul si.x student days is an aveful Ion, =is.-eek. ' I drank my drinks one after another, I pitied and helped so all could see; I talked, counseled, as father and mother — llul everyone else ti-as pityin me! I luas ' oloe ies lauc hinci. c loomy and c lum ; I ii-as limber and limp, doubtful and sure. My lips ' Zi-ere movinc . but vcords didn ' t come If hat care I. for r vbal I ' m drinkinc i: pure. ' .Imid the siu ' ine and dancinci and shout I left for home, all humble and meek. . . Here, so they say. I pasted rit ht out — Hut I q.L-oke up on Monda and ti-as ready for Ihe KCck. ' Ai, Risso. 1 , ET CETERA aluLMon- I L ilu L} j7ital Richmond, Virginia VIEW OF HOSPITAL AND NURSES HOME FROM FAMOUS BATTLE ABBEY A general private hospital and School of Nursing, located in the quiet West End residential section. Modern throughout, with separate surgical and obstetrical departments. Air-conditioned rooms. Complete clinical and X-rav laboratories.  5 EXTRA! EXTRA! VOLUME II M. C. v., MAY 15, 1935 EDITION II A CLINICAL REPORT Syinplomatoloffy: Respiration rising to 65 and then suddenly suspended. Face is fluslied, tiie eyes are glazed and half- closed. There is obviously a subnormal reaction to external stimuli. A Hy upon the ear is unnoticed. The auditory nerve is anesthetic. There is a swaying of the whole body and an apparent failure of co- ordination, probably the effect of some dis- turbance in the semi-circular canals of the ear. The hands tremble and then clutch wildly. The head is inclined forward as if to approach some object on a level with ihe shoulder. The mouth stands partly open and the lips puckered and damp. Of a sudden there is a sound of a deep and labored inspiration, suggesting the upward curve of Cheynestokes breathing. Then comes silence for 40 seconds, followed by a quick relaxation of the whole body and a sharp gasp. Diagnosis: One of the internes ha kissed a nurse. (A note found on a piece of paper in a chart at Memorial Hospital.) Fraternity Facts Phi Chi Our existence based on the law of av- erages. We pledged 1,000 and find 10 survivors. Phi Beta Pi In unity there is strength. Survival by absorption. Alpha Kappa Kappa ' e desire the best material (but don ' t seem to get it). Phi Delta Epsilon We edit M. C. V. Publication. (Pol- itics, Oil! no.) Phi Rho Sigma No forwarding address. Send mail in care of the V . S. A. Theta Kappa Psi We pledge in wholesale lots (in self de- fense). ANOTHER ERROR Customer: Look here, I bought a bottle of your hair restorer last week, and all I ' ve got for using it is a couple of large bumps on my head. Druggist: Good gracious, I must have gi en ou a bottle of our Bust Developer b mistake. Chemical Cnaracterization of Love Do You Remember — — when J. R. Saunders asked Dr. Inger- soll on a quizz what anna-mollies (anom- alies) were? — vhen Dr. Haag asked J. B. Spink ' , the dose of Epsom Salts? Vou remember thj reply, so do we ! — when Bill Ciarret was asked in Med- icine b - Dr. Baker the treatment for worms — his reply was oleoresin aspidium No! said Dr. Baker but male fern. — when Dr. Murrell asked for a match in class one dav — twenty hands went to their pockets — What a class, savs Dr. Mur- rell. — when the Juniors ever had a class and R. W. Sharpe didn ' t talk to the Profes- r afterxvards — except when Dr. Robert lectured one morning? — when David Carr really thought he was a real pla ' flirector? — the da ' Dr. Bigger came to surger linic without his roll book — and all wa at ease with the world? — when Micheal Gaydosh reallv said a sensible phrase — the one and only proctol- ogist ? — when Malciilm Bonton told Dr. Porter ' hat the epi-trochlear lymph gland was in he antecubital fossa? — when Mr. Holland was married, what a change was wrought? — when J. B. Earle took the same part- ■ler to the basketball game twice? — when the O. V - P. fraternitv amalga- mated with P. B. P. fraternity? — wh°n the students bought textbooks for Dr. Wamnler ' s Public Health course? —when r ill Hoover came to class vithout ' li lather? — when ) ob Keating wrote a perfect (Cnn:inu i on Par c j.J POOR JOHNNY Jidmny handed the following note from his mother to the teacher one morning: Dere Teecher: You keep tell in ' my bov to breathe with his diafram. Maybe rich children have got diaframs, but how about when their father only makes two dollars 1 dav and has got five children to keep? First it ' s one thing, then it ' s another, and n ' nv it ' diaframs. That ' s the worst et. New Understanding Cited By Dr. I. No Nothing. It has been discovered that the old ele- uuiii, love, has many distressing proper- lie that characterize it. I ' hysiiat Properties: It is a material found existing in the very young. It is always found where there is a mixture of ihe male and female species, homosapiens. It is found in the impure state and is sel- d om obtained purified. It is seldom found in the concentrated state among the male pecies, but is found somewhat stronger in :he female species. Many people are often .ooled by a similar substance that is very unstable. It is often feigned by both spe- cies, usually when there is a great dif- ference in age and wealth, to gain a mon- etary advantage. In the younger species, it is often used to gain frozen concoctions of casein and butter fat emulsified in water (ice cream), and flavored masses of dex- trose and levoluse (candy). Chemical Properties: It is often formed from hate, the latter being treated by un- usual circumstances and a little kindness. Fhis is a reversible reaction and may re- verse at any time under any circumstances. ' hen the male and female species are mi ed among the very young a very vio- lent reaction takes place, often with lib- eration of poetry and hot air. A large dose affects the heart greatly, often ending in disastrous results such as marriage, to- iiether with rolling pins and bad cooking. The reaction continues and often ends in n state called divorce. When warmth i ' ' supplied to love it continues, but when warmth ceases the reaction stops suddenly with the liberation of tears and heart- aches, which usually results in month! ' - pavments of alimonv. The liberation of much hot air keeps the reaction constantly going. The presence of flowers and boxes (Continued on Page 3.) TIME is Too slow for those who wait, Too swift for those who fear, Too long for those who grieve, Too short for those who rejoice. But for those who love is eternity THE CROSSRAY THE CROSSRAY niur points ill ilnily roulim- or oU ' M. C. V. hlstniy. Being compi-ised nr latest happen- ings, memoiics, poetry anil foi ' t ' otttn scan- dal. Entcretl as ABC Class Matt.-i- at Riclimornl. Vil-ginia. with partial .dms nt or tli,- Sin- di-nts anri |-a ' iilty and with pnstal authority. VOLUME II EDITION II THE STAFF Editor Mk. II. E. Foocii Bus ' uuss .Maiiai rr . . . Mr. II. FOGGii lir ' url.r Mr. E. h. Fogcii Faiully .Id-visor . . . Dr. S. S. Gacui EDITORIAL In the beginning, it is the earnest hope ihit all persons both contribinnrs arid suli- jeets herein iiseii will take ivhat is -aid in tile manner and spirit it is Kiven. We all ciimprisc a great bofl.v, cnme Irom all walks of life, and together we must stand, for apart we will fall. Again, the edif.r wislus to thank all those who made it possible for this issue ol the Crossray to go to press h sending in the many articles and we regret very much not being able to pnblivh all of the material gi cn due to limited space. In the years to come, glance at the Cross- ray and laugh at the days of fun, worry and wisdom. We vish you much success, ever. El)l IIIKIAI. SlAIK. RUNT and trihnlation.,. ,,i no.s |.,„„ ,niiniiy p.n . farmer ' s dot (time iiiln Icivn Mis Christian lutinc was Runt. .7 nnhlr prdiyric had he Nohiessc ohliijc his stunt; .hid as he trotted down the street ' T was heaittiful to see His work on every corner, His uor .- on every tree. lie iLcilrred e-very i iiteiLay. too; lie never missed a fiost, I III pljdiin ii-as his speeialty, I nd fiidillin was his honst. I ' he lily eiirs looked on amazed With deep and jealous rat e III see a simple country dor ' I he piddler of his ac e. Then all the doi s from everywhere ll ' ere summoned hy a yell To sniff the strane er o ' er .hid jiidt e him hy his smell. Some Ihoui ht that he a kintj mi, hi In Beneath his tail a rose, .So e-very city pup drew near .hid sniffed it up his nose. They smelled him one hy one They smelled him two hy two, hid noble Runt in hir h disdain Stood still till they were throui h. Then just to show the whole shebanrj He didn ' t t ive a damn, Ue trotted to the , rocery store .hid piddled on the ham. Ue piddled on the mackeral kci). He piddled on the floor, .hid when the c roeer kicked him oul. He piddled throuijh the door, liehind him all the city dogs Lined up with instinct true To start a piddlini carni-val .hid see the sirani rr tlirouc h. They showed liim every piddlini post Tliey had in all the town, .hid started in with a wink To sec the stranc er down. Thev sent for champion piddlers, It ' ho were always on the go. Who sometime ' did a piddling stunt Or gave a piddling show. They sprann this on him suddenly. When midway in tlie town. Runt onlv smiled and polished off The ablest white or brown. Tor l uut was with them, every trick, With vigor and with vim; I thousand puldlers more or less Were all the same to him. So he was wetting merrily With hind legs kicking high. When most were hoi ' ting legs in bluff hid piddlinc mighty dry. Then on and on. Runt sought new ground. TSy piles of scrap and rust Till every city dog went dry .hid only piddled dust. But on and on went noble Runt. .Is wet as any rill, hid all the c hampion city pups Were peed to a dead standstill. Then Runt did free-hand piddling Willi fancy Hirts and frills. Like doiihle-dry. the gimlet twist. .hid all those graceful thrills. hid all this time thit country dog Did never wink or i rln. But piddled hiitheh ' nut of town .Is he came piddlina in. lias The city doii convention held To ask. What did defeat us? Bill no one ever f ' ll them wi ' e That Runt had diabetes. Tn.st A Tnrnor to ?i er Ench (la -. the patients that come to the Oiilnaticiit Penartinent have to be inter- iewed bv some inember of the Social Spr -icp Dennrfmeiit before going to the nnrtirular clinic for their v.-irions com- nlicafions and treatments. It !s nerpss.irv in ' his Intervi ' nv to tret a ireneral idea ns to inst wh-if is bothorlnir them to be able to send them to the right deprirtment. This is the conversation that took place sevfrnl da s aero: Interviewer: Mar , wh did ou come to this clinic? ' Mary: I want to see a doctor. Interviewer: Sure you want to see a doctor, but how are you suffering ? Mary: I wants to see a doctor. Interviewer: Mary we have numbers of doctors here and it is necessary for me to know just your ailments so that I might send you to the right doctor. Mary: Well, sa, I ' ze just got a nine months tumor. Interviewer: With :i slgb. the patient was sriil In ol-;. CLASSIFIED ADS W.AN TED — More daily professors to con- |ner, and draw pictures for, in our spare moments. Apply to the Sopho- more Class in Medicine. W. ' NTED — More sickness among the in- terne staff. (So we can show our tal- ents.) Dickerson, Reed, Earle, Porter, Hagan, Ritter, LeGarde. FOR S. LE — Four years of medical edu- cation all bound in one complete vol- ume. Price that will thrill you and knowledge that will satisfy even the dimibest. Apply any time after June 6th to me, in person. Solomon Disick. W.ANTED — More and better sputum from the F. E. R. A workers. .Apph to Or Forbes. WANTED — A book on styles and how to live up to them. Mr. Pettry. WANTED — The voung student that stole a kiss in the dark the other night to re- turn same and no questions will be asked. Miss Davis. W.ANl ED — More space to study while waiting for victims. The Junior Den- tal Class. W. ' XNTED — More admirers to admire my collection of rare and (juaint specimens in the Pathology Museum. Dr. Frank I.. .Apperly. I.dS ' F- -M ini tes frc in I la s r lutine b dis- Cllssll g ho. v 1 1 olle CI m mev. J jnior Class m M edi ■in WANTED— More and better Skull and Bones. Student Body. (Note: You shall get out of life what you put into it. Why not the Skull and Bones?) FOR HIRE— Will hire out on part time projects or fu ' l time jobs as time-keeper and pay-master. Will consider a job as bill collector. Have had considerable experience in both fields. Write I. R. McC, care of M. C. V. STOLEN— Stolen from the O. P. D. one afternoon a tan camel-hair overcoat with a letter in the inside pocket. -Any information leading to the whereabouts of same will be appreciated. I must answer the letter (from mv girl). Mr. Tavlor. WANTED— More than two weeks on the G -N service. Dr. Gavdosh. THE CROSSRAY FAMOUS SAYINGS BY FAMOUS MEN We Reynember These:- Mr. McC ' aiile ; W ' e imi t have nviMcy, Ur. Sanger: The Medical Ccillege of ' irginia was founded as a part of Hamp- den-Sydney College. Or. HIackwell : I went on a cfiocolate bat. Or. AppcrK : Evervbndv should have a hohby. Dr. Ingersoll: There ' s nothing fairer than the point system. Dr. Main: The sex glands produce hormones. Dr. Shaw: — so I surrounded the five head-hunters. Dr. Nelson: Oh! Miss Bowles. Dr. Osterud : The human skeleton is an engineering feat. Dr. Porter: There has been much lit- erature writt en on the subject. Dr. Grinnin: The treatment is cod liver oil, protein milk, and sunlight. Dr. Baughman: Oh, gentlemen, this is so important. Dr. Haag: o-o-o-o-O-O-H-h-II ! Rob- ert. Dr. Bigger: I ' ll ask you some c|ues- tions. Dr. Murrell: We ' ll just ha e a little informal discussion. Dr. Michau.x: Thank you gentlemen, thank you very much. Dr. Wampler: Privies ina have star or crescent-shaped holes at the top. Famous Sayings by Famous Students Mr. Gant: I ' m hungry. Mr. Pollack: Aw, let ' s see a show. Mr. Linfesty: Have you heard the latest rumor? Mr. Lynch: My cow. Mr. ' ermilya : Beep: Beep! Mr. Po vell: Drs. Bigger, Porter, and I. Mr. Ritter: Up in Salem, we have a gasoline well — Mr. Lechausse: So I sez to Mac West— Mr. Disick: Mv pal, Whitlev, Mr. Whitley: Do you know mv rcfiex? Mr. Pyles: — three bass swimming up the ri ' er neck and neck. Mr. Ward: That ' s sissv stuff. Mr. Chni: Kadishitul. ' Mr. Beddow: I would suggest, Dr Wampler, that — Mr. Hoover: We want a petition. Mr. Spinks: Half a nickel box Mr. Jaskiewicz: Who stole my beans? Mr. Garrett: Gee, whiz, Buck. Mr. Carter: Who stole mv car? Mr. Gillispie: I ' ll bet I get a ' D ' . Mr. Seller: ' onder where Miss Le- land is? A PRAYER A Freshman Medico was overheard praying one night. . . Please, God, get me a bid to the German Club. Two pints, one quart ; Two quarts, one fight; One fight, two cops; I ' wo cops, one judge; One judge, thirty days. . mini ' s a fiiiit lo lii ' r in i ricf, ll ' lirn he uin yet coinplcic nliii : .1 i nod l rescriplion, iwu: and llirn. is iclished by the hcsl of nun. ll ' iUii- ijnt some Paris green, Dropped il on the soup tureen, Mother liiiii hed outrie ht in (tie. Ain ' t he smart at Chemistry: ' If hen Rastus Johnson ' s son arr ' i-vrd. He looked just like his poppy. In fact the doctor done declared He ii-as a carbon copy. .laik and . ill -.;■■« up the hill. Like dutiful son and dauc hter; Noiv .lack has typhoid, Jill t ill — They didn ' t boil the ii:ater. COLORED AILMENTS mellow ianndice White plague Black measles Blues Roseola Green apple (|uick-step Pink-e ' e Rro vn Taste Scarlet fever. IT IS TRUE Sii n on an np ' irlmenl huildinci: Xo Children dllor.ved in Thi Buildin, ■ III Drii-veris Must Be Mad- in the Rack Yard. NEWS ITEM Announces Baby In Uniaue Way .A Daih newspaper published on- time on lv, bv J. J. Scott, editor of th- Loivcsmllc Tini ' S, announces the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Scott. The child was born Fridav at Riverside hos- pital. Mrs. Scott is a daughter of Mrs R. E. Barrimore of West Avenue. Edifor Scott ' s vest-nocket A- - D-ib ' News reported that father is diine well and under a headline savin ' New Model Societv Reporter Announced. states: We announce a new bab ' - eirl, Mo ' fe ' No. 2 S ripfv Reporter, named Lillian ' ir- ginia Scott. J. J. Scott is the designer and chief en- gineer. Lilli-in V. Scott is nrodu ' -tion manager. Dr. B. R. Garv, technic.Tl assistant. The model was released Fridii ' morn- ing, Tanuarv i8. at 8: 2, at the Riverside hospital in Newport News, weighing y ' j pounds, with the followinrr features: Two-Uing Dower, free souealing scream-liopd bodv, economical feed, water- cooled and changeable seat cover. With his imnrovement to our staff, th Times editor assures th- pub ' ic there wi ' l be no more ne v models during the bal- ance of this vear. Do You Remember — Continued from I ' ai e I.) paper in Public Health tpiizz section and signed Dr. Wampler ' s name ? The class does. — when the Burleson Brothers took Dr. Baker to the President ' s Ball — their grades ivere A number one? — when Mr. Ingersoll became Dr. ? — when instructors liked to pronounce names as Kolipinski, Srulowitz, and Jas- kiewicz on the roll — was a struggle? — when Sam Elfmon realb put out a good X-Rav? — when 0. B. grades were never less than C ? — when Father Larrick missed a college function, from a ping poiig game to the introduction of a lecturer? Chemical Characterization (Continued from Pacje I.) of candv often results in oscillation im- pulses, with the liberation mush and soft soap. It has an affinity for sweet words and embraces. Vses: When in a mistaken form fools are often a result of it. It is used to give a thrill to the thrill-seekers. It is used by the female on rich males to gain a liveli- hood, and in less frequent cases by the males on rich females for the same reason. On long winter evenings it often keeps the home fires burning, thereby saving coal to the provider for the unmarried female. Itarninc : Love is a very dangerous compound and is likely to result disas- trouslv if handled by inexperienced hands. — Critogr.- ph. WORDS OF WISDOM Men are children at heart, particularly where the bottle is concerned. When woman was made from the man ' s rib. someone pulled a boner. . girl loves a man, and then decides xvhv. ■ Girls look short in knickers, but men look longer. Diplomacy is all right— if it gets the (linloma. In the honor svstem. the professors have ' he honor and the students have the sys- tem. . ' neglected wife is like jam — a sweet thing put on a shelf. Manv brides are like inferior fabric — ' hev won ' t launder. For vears the two sevcs have reached for suDremacy. Now they have settled to neck and neck. G-d made the earth and then rested God made Man and then rested again Hut since God made Woman, neither Gnd nor Man has rested. Two mav live as cheapiv as one. hut not near as quietlv. Discord starts when someone horns in on your affairs. Lif- ' of Senior ' all remind u ' If ' e should stri-i - to dn our beU, :lvrl departoinn. leave behind us Notebooks thit iinll hi-lp the r est Girh r ji-hrn thev wnt out to sicim Once dressed lik- Mother Hubbard; N - ' - the- Itai ' c a bolder icliim. They dress more like her cupboard. WESTBROOK SANATORIUM Richmond, Virginia A Private Sanatorium for the Treatment of Mental Diseases, Nervous Diseases and Select Habit Cases There are fourteen buildings, situated in the midst of 120 acres just outside of Richmond, providing accommodations for 150 pa- tients. Nurses and attendants trained for this special nork. Department for M.en DR. J. K. HALL DR. O. B. DARDEN DR. E. H. ALDERMAN Department for w omen DR. P. V. ANDERSON DR. E. H. WILLIAMS FINANCIAL PRESCRIPTION Impressed, after a fifty-year practice, with the financial devastation among his colleagues during the past few years, Dr. J. N. Hall, professor emeritus of the Colo- rado School of Medicine, says: I wish young physicians could learn early in their life- work to put all their savings for the first ten or twenty years into life insurance, with its guarantee of financial security for their families. Tne Lire Insurance Company or Virginia Established 1871 Richmond, Virginia WILL PIPE SMOKING help you get A JOB? MANY outstanding employers we have met look upon pipe smokers as the men most likely to be thinking men, men who make deci- sions calmly, men who can concen- trate. Men of this calibre, they say, prefer a good pipe and tobacco . . . Perhaps it is true, then, that pipe smoking sometimes does have a share in helping a man to get a job. And for pipe smokers, there ' s one tobacco which, above all others, is just right for pipes. That is Edg?- worth — the one smoking tobacco that combines slow-burning mild- ness and coolness with a rich to- baccoflavor. La rus lBro. Co., Tobac- conists since 1877, Richmond, Va. EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO ST. ELIZABETH ' S HOSPITAL RICHMOND. VIRGINIA STAFF j. SHi:i r()N ' H()Ksl.i: . ALL) Siirt ay mul Cynti ' ilogy jiilix S. HoRSI,K , JR.. AI.D Plastu (uiil (!i ruidl Siirycry (]l W. rioRsr.lI ' i-. M.D (ic icnil Slir (iy I). (;. ClIAI ' Al AX, M.I) Internal Mcdicim W ' .M. 11. HicciN ' S, M.I) (Jonsiiltan in Inlnniil Mcdhbu Al STIX I. DoDSOX, ] I.I) Vrolofjy Viu ' .n M. Hodges, M.D R(jini( cn(jl jgy Tho.ma.s ' . WdOl), D.D.S Dail il Siirycry HrLEX LoRRAIxh Mfilicat Illustration ADMINISTRATION . El. .Mori: Pati;, Maniu ir ElOISE M. LaXFORI), R.X., Siipcrint( mhnt of Xiincs IN THE END 1 ••Do this tn vn 1 ha ■e t(i ee a ilcictor tn rret 1 i(|Uor ill ■•Nil, (|..ct.ir :ift Iv K , t the A. B.C. Stc ra . f r PRACTICING re ami then the Wl maiicic 1 b a- Hr. Hill TvMiii m V the College lilirarian evere y repri- He appL-iK ix cai frnir ;z;ht ah.eiit-iniiuledlv removiiiL; the the h:ink he « a reading. y HERE IT IS Dr. I ' .i tc-r W ' h liiokinu arniiml t , .uall.uve.l the e le r.i.mi Inr the Ridi irc W. ,Sh:irpe: -ilere ' v o f -f le, Hr. P..rler! THINK HARD, NOW Mr. . i iUr- 1 tin .11 (ill llivtnl,,«v 1 iiseucl ivlratitied - Clavs): ipiaiiKH -here V eelly? .i •l-x| :m (. from thr (la-.. Mr. gaii tl at m (prcniipliiij;) : large, aii.l then s riiiiik . ...ill. 1 ail nr HOW APPROPRIATE! F.liiier K. Walters ( tn ii.am.nv, carr ing picka- iiiiuiv) : And what is the little fellow ' s name. ' Mammy: Ah call him Prescription. E. K. Walters; What an odd name! Whv tin ou call him Prescription.- ' Mammv: Been: ' Ah has such a hard time Kettin ' him filled. ill BE REASONABLE P..lieiil: CIreat Sinit, doctor! Wh.it an awful hill tnr niilv ni.e Week ' s treatment! Ilnctor: Mv dear fellow, if v.m knew what .111 inlerestiii : case mums was, and how stroiiK- I was temptei! lo lei il l ' o In a post-mortem. xnii wouldn ' t yriimhle al a hill three limes as bin 1 1 i Ciirl ' s N ' oice: lloi. ' t unbutton that I ( Silence) tlirl ' s ' nice: Please don ' t take ihat off! (Silence) Ciirl ' s Voice: Poes that have tn cn.iie ntf tnn? (Silence) (lirl ' s dice: Stop, vnu ' re hurtini; me! (orl ' s Mnilur: Stop vour fussing. Marv. (Hire all wet, ..iid if I don ' t Ret these clothes off vnu ' ll suielv calch cnld. SURGICAL AND DENTAL SUPPLIES POWERS ANDERSON SurgU-al Imtrutncnti 603 E. Main Street RICHMOND, VIRGINIA POWERS ANDERSON DENTAL COMPANY 603 E. Mam Street RICHMOND, VIRGINIA POWERS ANDERSON SURGICAL INSTRUMENT COMPANY 503 Granby Street NORFOLK, VIRGINIA POWERS ANDERSON DENTAL COMPANY Farmers Bank Building WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA POWERS ANDERSON DENTAL COMPANY 326 Nor:h Tryon Street CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA POWERS ANDERSON DENTAL COMPANY Allied Arts Building LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA THE BODEKER DRUG CO. Established 1848 Incorporated 1898 II. F. Mii.LER, PnsiJiiil C. J. Mii.i.ER, I ' ici-I ' rcsidcnt W. C. Mii.i.ER, Treasurer I ' .. M. Mii.i.ER. Siirrlary IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS 1414-1420 East Main Street RICHMOND, VA. WlKit ciuUI he S eder? a ked Linle.ty as he yazcd at lvi roiisiii Sven ' s new tow-headed haliv. Pvles: Isn ' t it ahout time the bahy learned to call me ' daddv ' ? Mrs. P le : -I ' ve decided mil to let him know (iu are initil the darling yets a little stronger. iloim: iiovs, will nii j4i e nie a dime tor a vniduich? (iani: Let ' s see the sanilwich. A Inwildered man entered a ladie ' specials shop. I want a cor-et for mv wife, he said, What 1.1,., . ■ Slid the clerk. xXothinf;, they iiist wore out. Harris Dental Co. Incorporated Medical Arts Building NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Medical Arts Building RICHMOND, VIRGINIA ORAL HYGIENE .a monthly dental magazine, will be sent to all Dental Students, upon request, with our compliments. GRACE CLEANING WORKS n ' ork Called For and Delirercd Phone 2-7001 311 N. Laurel St. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA .A. little non-ensc now and then Is relished by the wisest men. ill Mr. Jacohson: Miss IL, there has been soine- tliinj; trembliiiK on my lips for months and months. Mis- H.: Yes, so I see. Whv .lon ' t you shave it otf. , She: Pnn ' t mui dare kiss me asain. lie: .All right, I ' ll stop. Mie: Don ' t oii d.ire! Kiss me again. r llr. Bigger: Please close the winrlow-. h i- very c.ld without mv clothes on. Patient: .Xnd it ' s still colder with your belly open. STUART CIRCLE HOSPITAL Richmond, Virginia General Surgery: Robert C. Brv.w, M.D., F.A.C.S. Stuart N. Michau ' x. M.D., F.A.C.S. Chari.es R. Robins, M.D., F.A.C.S. Charles R. Robins, Jr., M.D. A. Stephens Graham, M.D., F.A.C.S. Obstetrics; Greer Baughman, M.D.. F.A C.S. Ben H. Gray, M.D., F.A.C.S. Vm. Dlrwooi) Surcs, M.D. Urology : Joseph F. Geisinger, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Roentgenology : Fred M. Hodges, M.D. Internal Medicine: O. O. Ashworth, M.D. Ale xander G. Brown, Jr., M.D. Manfred Call, M.D. Manfred Call, III, M.D. Ophthalmology — Oto-Laryngology : Clifton M. Miller, M.D., F.A.C.S. R. H. Wright, M.D., F.A.C.S. Oral Surgery: Guv R. Harrison, D.D.S. Pathology: Regina Beck, A.M., M.D. Physiotherapy : Elsa Lange, B.S. With consulting (iffice fcir tlic -tatf : well equipped laboratories, ob tetri(■al and ur ical operating rooms, nin t mipdern eleetnicardiographic station, physiotherapy department and a class A school of nursiiiK, the Stuart Circle Hospital offers excellent facilities for diagnosis and treatment of private patients. Charlotte Pfeiffer, R.N., Superintendent LOEWS RICHMOND ' S FINEST THEATRE EXTENDS BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF ' 35 Motion pictures entertiinment fur- nishes ideal relaxation from class- room worries— you ' ll find the best at Loews. GET THE LOEWS HABIT — IT PAYS BEN PARKER FLORIST Say It With Floners From Ben Flowers for All Occasions MEMBER A. T. F. 202 E. Grace St. Dial 3-3056 RICHMOND. VIRGINIA CORRECT Que stion ( Civil Exain) : Where ina V a car cinom a of the cer iix meta tasi ze? Ans wer (briRht student) : ■ •q liver, stomach. fir pro tate. ' ' Dr. Walker (a .plving V teth iscope) : I don ' t like ( ur heart action. Yin hax •e had s. me trou- hie v th angina p cctori;,. 0. n« Male 1 atient ( shee pi hlv): Vou ' re ri-ht, doctor. Oi ly that va r ' t her name. ■ He: There are two thii li ' - like abc ut vou. She •What are thev. He: •■Mv arm-. ' f ■ Pro .: Who i that hhn viiig that tro mlione? Slue ent: I ' hat ' Kolipii ski answerii g to the roll ca 11. TANTILLA GARDEN RICHMOND ' S FAVORITE D.ANCE RENDEZVOUS Arrange to Hold Your Dances At Tantilla SPECIAL RATES FOR P.ARTIES DIAL 5-9151 THE THEATRE BEAUTIFUL THE BYRD RICHMOND ' S HOME OF R-KO RADIO PICTURES You Will Always Find a Good Show At the Byrd When You Need a Little Relaxation This book is bound in a MOLLOV-MADE COVER, for which there is no substitute or equivalent. MOI.LOV- MADE COVERS, produced by the oldest organization in the cover field, are to- day, as alv avs. the standard of excellence. Your book bound in a MOLLOY-MADE COVER ' ill give you the finest obtainable. ]i ' rite for Information and Prices to the — David J. Molloy Plant 2857 N. Western Ave. Chicago PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ST. LUKE ' S HOSPITAL Conducted by McGUIRE CLINIC Medical and Surgical Staff General Medicine James H. Smith, M.D. Hlnter H. McGlire, M.D. M.ARC.ARET NOLTIN ' C, M.D. John ' Powell Willums, M.D. KiNLOCK Nelson ' , M.D. Clifford Be. ch, M.D. Pathology and Radiology S. W. Bliii), M.D. Roentgenology J. L. T. BB, M.D. Urology Austin I. Dodsok, M.D. General Surgery Sxu.iRT McGuire, M.D. W. LowvDEs Peple, M.D. C-ARRINCTON WlLLUMS, M.D. W. p. B,ARNES, M.D. Orthopedic Surgery WllLIA.M r. CiRAHAM, M.D. D. M. Falikner, M.D. J. T. Tucker, M.D. Dental Surgery John Bell Williams D.D.S. ' ,v R. Harrison, D.D.S. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat F. H. Lee, M.D. Obstetrics H. HuDNALL Ware, Jr., M.LI. 1000 West Grace Street Richmond, Virginia MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA (State Institution) WILLIAM T. SANGER. Ph.D.. LL.D. Preside,, I J. R. McCAULEY Secretary-Treasurer School of Medicine .- LEE E. SUTTON. JR., B.S., M.D., Dea,t School of Dentistry H.A.RRY BE. R, D.D.S., Deau School of Pharmacy WORTLEY F. RUDD. Ph.G., M.A., Dean .School of Nursing FRANCES HELEN ZEIGLER, B.S., R.N., Dean The College Hospitals L. E. JARRETT, M.D., Superintendent THE COLLEGE — Coordinated but separately organized schools of medicine, dentistry, phar- macy, and nursing, offering standard preparation for the health-service professions. Clinics and practical experience generously available. ITS HOSPITAL— In the Memorial, Dooley, St. Philip, and Crippled Children ' s Hospitals there are 484 beds for ward and private patients; a large out-patient department is maintained. Charges are modest. Patients share in the advantages of a teaching institution. MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA RICHMOND. VIRGINIA TKe Tucker Sanatorium INC. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA TKe Private Sanatorium of DRS. TUCKER, MASTERS AND SHIELD for Nervous and Endocrine Diseases Give Your Business to a Good Wholesaler OWENS MINOR DRUG CO. V. M. Ksox. I ' rrsiJ.nl lAS. U. HdWKKS. fir,-Pr,-sid.nl C. (;. MiMiR, JR., lio-l ' rrsiJint W. . MiMiR, S,irflii ' ::-Triiisiir(i I m orters and wholesalers RICHMOND, VIRGINIA MURPHYJr HOTEL gathering place for collegiate---here you d distinctive service, ent food and reason- tes. phy ' s fias been a mecca liege students and amilies for more than score years. A. S. ALOE COMPANY ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI SERVING THE MEDICAL PROFESSION FOR 75 YEARS 1860-1935 COMPLETE LINE OF MEDICAL. SURGICAL AND OFFICE EQUIPMENT W. O. HESTER, State Representative 308 North Twelfth Street PHONE 4-6612 RICHMOND, VA. MODERN IDEAS ON THERAPEUTICS The modern concept of rstional therapeutics no longer permits one to rely upon the slogan of the heahng power of nature. For nature in the past has been overburdened in the per- formance of her duties. With our present knowledge of drug therapy no clinician would dare project his imagination into the belief that nature has a panacea for all diseased con- ditions. At present the science of medicine is two-fold; preventive and curative. During the past two decades the communicable diseases have been practically eradicated and it is within the province of every physician to continue the campaign so successfully begun. We shall have to continue to practice the curative phase of medicine, for a large portion of our population, it matters not how intensive our preventive campaign may be, will not seek medical attention until disease has entered the body and death is knocking at the door. Our objectives should be to hold fast to those remedies of established value and to try to understand and use them more efficaciously; to evaluate the new products which are constantly being marketed and delete those of questionable value. By so doing one could prevent the repetition of some of the saddest pages of the history of mankind connected with the failure of physicians to realize the therapeutic possibilities of well-established drugs. WM. P. POYTHRESS COMPANY, Inc. Manufacturing C.hcni ' nts RICHMOND. VIRGINIA MAKE THESE HOTELS YOUR HEADQUARTERS INCOMPARABLE IN SERVICE, FACILITIES, SURROUNDINGS AND CUISINE THE JOHN MARSHALL THOMAS GRESHAM, Manager FRANKLIN AT FIFTH THE RICHMOND W. E. HOCKETT, Manager NINTH AT GRACE THE WILLIAM BYRD A. A. WILLIAMS, Manager OPPOSITE BROAD ST. STATION WIRE OR WRITE FOR RESERVATIONS EX-OFFICIO X-RAY STAFF MEMBERS Due to the lack of space in the preceding pages, we have been unable to give due credit to exofficio members of our staff who have played an important part in making this book what it is. The Birds who waste our time by turning in lists to the X-Ray when we ask for them alphabetically and according to their class and school. The gang who set up an awful squawk, when we begged, pleaded and implored them to have their picture taken, and then raise H — if their pic- tures are not in the book. The gink who comes in after all the copy is made and wants to add four pledges to his fraternity — taken in on the day the manuscript is sent to press. The Dubs who write The Poor House on their cards for honors. The Elite who turn in copy on the assumption that the staff is composed of mind readers and handwriting experts. The Bum who thinks the jokes pulled on his pal in the Crossray ' are rich and bursts his sides with laughter until he reads a raw one on himself, then he threatens to kick the editor out of college. The Bozo who misspells his own name on the identification card, but gives the editor — well — if he leaves out his middle name — Thosderazioe. The fellow who opposes thj publication of the X-Ray, refuses to co- operate to make it the kind of a book he wants, and then starts knocking it a week before it comes out. The organizations which wait lunil !are in the year to amalgamate and necessitate an entire change in the manuscript and engraving. The organizations which spend their last cent ho ' ding a big annual blow- out, forgetting all about a page debt for X-Ra i ' representation. The bird who thinks the X-Ra-t ' is a good graft and th? staff a bimch of mugs trying to rob the student body. With such an able body of assistants, compiling and editing the 1935 X-Ray could easily have been one grand, sweet affair. Fovemost iel nnual n THIS BOOK PRINTED BY. The WORLD ' S LARGEST PUBLISHERS OF COLLEGE ANNUALS EN SON iPRINTINC CO. NASHVILLE COLLEGE ANNUAL HEADOtUARTERS r i, ANION, N ' i:cis, Pastore, Fre ' sdhck APPRECIATION In presenting this edition of the X-Ray, I wish to express my sincere appreciation and thanks to all those who have made pos- sible the successful completion of this volume and especially to the following: Dr. Wyndham Blanton — Author, History of Medicine in Virginia. Dr. Sidney S. Negus, Faculty Advisor. Dr. Pete N. Pastore, Editor of ' 34 X-Ray. Mr. Max Freydeck, Photographer. Mr. W. A. Daniel, Benson Printing Company. Mr. Dugald Stewart Walker, Artist. Miss Virginia Staub, Miss Florence McRae, Miss Margaret McCluer, Librarians. Mr. Harry Horton, Apeda Studio. Mr. Clyde Bareman, Capitol Engraving Company. Mr. R. G. Benson. Mr. Sanders. Miss Lilly Payne, Artist. Members of The Staff. Signed, S. L. Elfmon, Editor-in-Chief. Au Revoir We have presented to you a pduorama of the events of 1934-193 ' ) . Our sin- cere desire is that in future years, when you again turn these pciges, it will bring hack memories so that you may live again your college life at the Medical College of Virginia. May it he an in- spiration that will ever stimulate your efforts toward her future progress. r T ' f Z - P ' % ii i : VLIAIN ' AJ cAiitograpbs cAutographs . • ' . -


Suggestions in the Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) collection:

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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