University of Florida College of Medicine - Retrospectroscope Yearbook (Gainesville, FL)
- Class of 1965
Page 1 of 132
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 132 of the 1965 volume:
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UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
CLASS OF 1965
Retrospectroscopez Vol. II
Piank R, Fnmnnnn Ednor
Pepper Printing Company
Gainesville, Florida
1965
1
STAFF
Assistant Editor: Larry B. Holder
Rudy Gertner Fred Courington
Ed Ballard Duncan Finlay
,lim Deford Barbara Davis
George Dinter Norman Ditchek
Bill Hewson Marty Steiner
Martin Kornreich
INTRODUCTION
Not only those listed above but every member of the class of
1965 aided in the production of this book. The Department of Med-
ical Illustration, the Office of Student Affairs, and the Office of Health
Center Relations were of great help. Special thanks go to Charles
Peterson and Perry Berman, not only for their help in the production
of this volume, but for the guidelines they established with the cre-
ation of the Retrospectroscope, Volume I.
Some people wanted this annual to be filled with funny pictures
and embarrassing captionsg others desired a volume describing' the
evils of our time, throwing barbs at the faculty for such incidents
as the Miller affairj This is not a joke book nor is it a social docu-
ment., This book merely records the memories, both good and bad,
of four years in medical school.
Frank R. Freemon
2
"Everything seems clearer
when it is viewed through
the retrospectroscopef'
3
ADMINISTRATION
EMANUEL SUTER, M.D.
Dean,
College of Medicine
GEORGE T. HARRELL, M.D
Dean, College of Medicine
University of Florida
1954 to 1964
4
GEROLD L. SCHIEBLER, M.D., Ph.D.
Advisor to the Class of 1965
SAMUEL P. MARTIN, M.D.
Provost,
J. Hillis Miller Health Center
HUGH M. HILL, M.D.
Assistant Dean for Student Affairs
5
fi
-53...
The CLASS of 1965
F
University of Florida
College of Medicine
EDGAR THOMAS BALLARD
Largo, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
Cincinnati General,
Interest: Pediatrics
Pediatrics
CHARLES EUGENE BORING, JR.
Key West, Florida
B. S., Biology
Florida State University
Union Memorial, Baltimore, Medicine
Interest: Internal Medicine
ROBERT KENNETH CASEY
Paducah, Kentucky
B. A., Religion
Baylor University
Duval Medical Center, Jacksonville, Medicine
Interest: General Practice
JACK COPPERMAN
Bay Harbor, Florida
B. A., Political Science
University of Florida
Mount Zion, San Francisco, Rotating
Interest: Internal Medicine
FREDERICK WILTON COURINGTON
Tavares, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
Rollins College
Parkland Memorial,
Interest: Radiology
Dallas, Rotating
JEROME JAMES CUNNINGHAM
St. Petersburg, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Parkland Memorial, Dallas, Medicine
Interest: Academic Urology
8
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BRIAN FRANCIS DAVIS
Omaha, Nebraska
B. S., Psychology
University of Florida
Lakeland General, Rotating
Interest: Psychiatry
JAMES WILLIAM DeFORD
Ohio State
GEORGE DINTER
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
B. S., Pharmacy
University of Florida
Harvard Service, Boston
Interest: Ophthalmology
Winter Park, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
University, Columbus, Medicine
Interest: Internal Medicine
City Hospital, Medicine
MARK WILSON EASTLAND, III
Tampa, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Strong Memorial, Rochester, Surgery
GEORGE DUNCAN
Blountstown, Florida
B. S., Biology
University of Florida
Interest: Thoracic Surgery
FINLAY, JR.
Grady Memorial, Atlanta, Medicine
Interest: Academic Medicine
FRANK REED FREEMON
St. Petersburg, Florida
B. S., Mathematics
University of Florida
Illinois Research, Chicago, Medicine
Interest: Academic Neurology
9
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HAROLD RUDOLPH GERTNER, JR.
Gainesville, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Surgery
Interest: General
Surgery
SAMUEL CURTIS GRESHAM
Orlando, Florida
B. S., Psychology
University of Florida
Union Memorial, Baltimore, Medicine
Interest: Neurology
DONALD GAMMON HALL
Blountstown, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Union Memorial, Baltimore, Medicine
Interest: Academic Cardiology
GERALD GEORGE HAZOURI
Jacksonville, Florida
B. S., Mathematics
IKM' 'N-
University of Florida
Ben Taub General, Houston, Medicine
Interest: Internal Medicine
WILLIAM ADDINELL HEWSON
Lake Park, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Charlotte Memorial, Rotating
Interest: Urology
LARRY BENSON HOLDER
Belleview, Florida
B. A., Chemistry
Florida State University
Charlotte Memorial, Rotating
Interest: Obstetrics and Gynecology
10
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MARTIN ALLEN KORNREICH
New York City, New York
B. A., Biology
New York University, Heights College
North Carolina Baptist, Winston Salem, Mixed Med.-Peds
Interest: Orthopedics -
WALTER WISHART LANE
Tampa, Florida
B. S., General Natural Sciences
University of Tampa
Lloyd Noland, Birmingham, Rotating'
Interest: General Practice
'Q
HENRY HUTSON MESSER
Tallahassee, Florida
B. S., Pre-Med Group Major
Washington and Lee University
Medical College of South Carolina, Mixed Med.-ObG.
Interest: Obstetrics and Gynecology
RICHARD LEE PARKER, JR.
Jacksonville, Florida
B. E. E., fElectrical Engineeringb
University of Florida
Ben Taub General, Houston, Medicine
Interest: Neurology
JOE DANIEL PEREZ
Tampa, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Tampa General, Rotating
Interest: Pediatrics
CARL LOUIS REDDERSON
Gulfport, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Grady Memorial, Atlanta, Mixed Med.-Peds.
Interest: Pediatrics
ROBB EUGENE ROSS
Clearwater, Florida
B. S., Pharmacy
University of Florida
Lakeland General, Rotating
Interest: General Practice
DAVID FRIOR SCALES
Winter Haven, Florida
B. S., Physics, M. S., Psychology
University of Florida
San Francisco General, Mixed Med.-Surpf.
Interest: Neurology
EDWARD MICHAEL SCHLEIN
Hollywood, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Eugene Talmadge General, Augusta, Medicine
Interest: Renal Medicine Kz Neurology
MEREDITH LEE SCOTT
Sanford, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Cincinnati General, Rotating:
Interest: Orthopedics Kr Internal Medicine
BERNARD SHEPEN
Mount Vernon, New York
B. A., Biology
City College of New York
Hadassah Med. Center, Jerusalem, Israel, Medicine
Interest: Cardiology
EDWARD SHMUNES
Jacksonville, Florida
University of Florida
Public Health Service, New Orleans, Rotating
Interest: Communicable Diseases and Public Health
12
SHIRLEY ROSE SIMPSON
Pierce, Florida
B. S., Education
Florida State University
Lakeland General, Rotating
Interest: General Practice
JAMES ROBERT SPENCER
Milton, Florida
B. Ch. E., 1Chemical Engineeringj
Georgia Institute of Technology
Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Medicine
Interest: Internal Medicine
JOEL MITCHEL STEIN
Jacksonville, Florida
B. A., Psychology
Emory University
University of Florida, Pediatrics
Interest: Child Psychiatry
RICHARD MARK STEINBOOK
Miami Beach, Florida
B. S., Psychology
University of Florida
Jackson Memorial, Miami, Medicine
Interest: Psychosomatic Medicine
MARTIN HOWARD STERN
Miami, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Florida
Jackson Memorial, Miami, Medicine
Interest: Cardiology
CAROLYN REYNOLDS SUNDERMAN
Chestertown Mar land
v Y
B. A., Physiology
Mount Holyoke College
University of Florida, Pediatrics
Interest: Pediatrics
13
HARVEY THALBLUM
North Miami Beach, Florida
B. S., Chemistry
University of Miami
Charlotte Memorial, Rotating
Interest: Neurosurgery
GEORGE ALVIN TURMAIL, JR.
Boca Raton, Florida
B. S., Biology
University of Florida
University of California, Los Angeles, Surgery
Interest: Plastic Surgery
CHARLES GORDON WALKER
Miami, Florida
B. Ch. E. fCll8H1lCfll Engineeringlg M. S., Civil Engineering
University of Florida
Eugene Talmadge Memorial, Augusta, Medicine
Interest: Psychiatry and Psychosomatic Illnesses
GEORGE LEWIS WARREN
Jacksonville, Florida
B. S., Psychology
University of Florida
Universityiof Florida, Surgery
Interest: General Surgery 8: Psychiatry
ANDERSON RODDENBERY WILLIAMS, JR.
Ocala, Florida
B. S., Mathematics and Chemistry
University of Florida
Eugene Talmadge Memorial, Augusta, Medicine
Interest: Internal Medicine
HOWARD TODD WILLSON
Hollywood, Florida
B. S., Education
Florida State University
Andrews Air Force Base, Washington, D. C., Rotating
Interest: General Practice
THOMAS HARRIS WYATT
Ormond Beach, Florida
B. A., Chemistry
Florida State University
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Surgery
Interest: Obstetrics and Gynecology
14
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THE
FOUR
YEARS
GAIN ESVILLE
The College of Medicine with the rest of the University of Florida is located in the
north-central Florida town of Gainesville. The surrounding countryside was described
by a traveler in 1791:
"The extensive Alachua savanna is a level green plain. It is encircled with high,
sloping hills, covered with waving forests and fragrant orange groves, rising from an
exuberantly fertile soil. Herds of sprightly deer, squadrons of the beautiful fleet Sem-
inole horse, flocks of turkey, civilized communities of the sonorous watchful crane mix
together, till disturbed and afrighted by the warrior man."
The warrior man made his first permanent settlement on the Alachua savanna
with the founding of Gainesville in 1854. During the War Between the States two
fierce skirmishes were fought between local citizens and Union raiding parties from
the Federal bases at St. Augustine and JackSOI1Vill6. In the latter years Of the nine-
teenth century the surrounding farms were studded by orange groves but a succession
of freezes caused a change of crops. Gainesville remained a small farming and trad-
ing settlement until the arrival and subsequent growth Of the UUiVe1'Si'CY of Fl01'ida-
16
THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
In 1905 several institutions of higher learning scattered about the state were
moved to Gainesville and were combined into one university. Since that time the
University of Florida has steadily grown to its present size of approximately 15,000
students.
J. Hillis Miller, president of the University from 1947 until his death in 1953 was
the key figure in the early planning for the medical complex which bears his name.
George T. Harrell, then research professor of medicine at Bowman Gray, was named
dean of the College of Medicine in 1954 and construction of the Health Center was
begun. The Medical Sciences Building was opened in 1956 and the Teaching Hospital
in 1958.
17
Spencer
In September of 1961, to the Uni- Finlay
versity of Florida at Gainesville Hall
came the Class of 1965 to study
medicine.
1 .N 18
Messer
Casey
Nebr.
Hazouri
Parker
Shmunes
Stein
Warren
Gertner
Williams
Holder Wyatt
Simpson
Scott
Courington
Deford
Gresham
Ballard Lane
Eastland
Perez
Ross
Cunningham
Redderson
Freemon Scales
Ky.
Davis
Borin n
NY
Shepen
I 1
Kornreich
Md.
Sunderman
Hewson
Turmail
Dinter
Schlein
Thalblum Coppermgn
Walker Stem
Steinbook
Willson
I'
FIRST YEAR
Some say that the first year is the hardest. From the citric acid
cycle to the circle of Willis, the medical student memorizes. Through this
great fog of facts emerge the basic principles and concepts that govern
the function of the human body and mind.
The medical student digs in to learn human anatomy and no matter
how thoroughly he washes he is never quite free of the odor of formalde-
hyde and the reek of the dead. Anesthetized dogs give their lives that
the medical student may learn the principles of physiology. Shriveled,
trembling rats demonstrate the results of vitamin deficiency. Frogs, tur-
tles, mice, guinea pigs, cats march by telling the observers the principles
of life.
CENTRAL GRAY
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BIOCHEMISTRY
"Of all the scientists that have been
born into this world, 9076 are still liv-
ing."
Frank W. Putnam, Ph.D.
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James G. Wilson
Ph.D.
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ANATOMY
"Virtually every physician has a copy
of Gray's Anatomy on his office book-
shelf."
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Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D.
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Arthur B. Otis
Ph.D.
PHYSIOLOGY
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Cassin, S. Fregly, M. J. Stainsby, W. N. Wright, E. B.
Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D.
Scales, Scott, and a dog
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Stainsby, Hewson, Hazouri, and Cassin discussing physi
ology and Volkswagens.
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During our basic physiology course we had our
'drst contact with one of the great men at the Health
Center. Dr. Lester R. Dragstedt is not only an ac-
tive and aggressive researcher but also an excellent
and stimulating teacher. At that time he was the
only member of the National Academy of Sciences
in the state and a much sought after speaker. Even
with these responsibilities he found time to teach
an elective course in experimental surgery. During
this time we repeated several of the classical exper-
iments in gastrointestinal physiology. It was his
purpose to teach us that an open mind and the abil-
ity for keen observation are two of the most impor-
tant assets of a good physician and scientist. I am
sure we will always be grateful for our stimulating
and instructive experience with Dr. Dragstedt.
Rudy Gertner
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SECOND YEAR
The second year is devoted to the understanding of the abnormal proc-
esses of the human body and mind. The student attempts to find the an-
swer to the question: how does man function in disease states?
The study of disease begins in strict academic fashion with the pres-
entation of various affiictions and their theoretical mumbo-jumbo causes.
But after a few months of observation and dissection in the- autopsy
suite, the power of disease and the inadequacies of modern medicine as-
sume more than academic interest. The little tiny bugs that can create
disease are studied: bugs you see with a microscope and bugs that you
just think about. The medical student learns something of how the
human body protects itself against these bugs and how these protective
mechanisms when deranged can create their own diseases.
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Emanuel Suter
M.D.
Bates, H. A.
MICROBIOLOGY
"The understanding and control of bac-
terial and parasitic disease is medi-
cine's only real accomplishment."
Cebra, J. J.
Crandall, R. B. Gifford, G. E. Hunter, G. W., III
Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D.
Ph.D. Ph.D.
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Shands introduces Stern
to Ouchterlony.
27
PATHOLOGY
"Where the living learn
from the dead."
Joshua L. Edwards
M.D.
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Arean, V. M.
M.D.
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Shanklin, D. R.
M.D.
Sunderman, F. W., Jr.
M.D.
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Let those who interdict the opening of bodies well
understand their errors. When the cause of a disease
is obscure, in opposing the dissection of a corpse who
must soon become the food of worms, they do no good
to the inanimate mass, and they cause a grave damage
to the rest of mankindg for they prevent the physicians
from acquiring a knowledge which may afford the
means of great relief, eventually, to individuals at-
tacked by a similar disease. No less blame is appli-
cable to those delicate physicians, who from laziness
or repugnance, love better to remain in the dark of
ignorance than to scrutinize laboriously, the truthg
not reiiecting that by such conduct they render them-
selves culpable toward God, toward themselves, and
toward society at large.
Theophilus Bonetus, 1680
29
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PHARMACOLOGY
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30
INTRODUCTION I
TO
MEDICINE
Introduction to Medicine Cknown affectionately as Mousel, which was a part of
' t f to ics. The first
the freshman and of the sophomore years, covered a Wide varie y 0 p
semester of the first year we had statistics under the supervision of the Red Roach
and genetics starring Froggie the Gremlin. In the former course the major objec-
' h d 't
tive was finding someone who had already done the sample problem and had a 1 cor-
rected. Human beings were occasionally mentioned in the genetics course and we soon
learned that anything that goes wrong in genetics could be explained on the basis of
"incomplete penetrancen.
The second semester of the freshman year was primarily a study of behavior at the
l
P K Yonge Laboratory School, as well as various panels and seminars. Many pear s
were handed out during these sessions and these can best be exemplified by Dr. Sam
Martin's classic: "I cannot tolerate a junior Jehovah." Other interesting discussions
. . d
involved such things as "I wonder how Sandy really felt as she picked her nose, an
what added significance is there when she eats it ?',
The sophomore year portion of the course was concerned entirely with psychia-
try and this is when we learned from Dr. Pete Regan that "You should always let your
feelings serve as your best source of data." Classes were conducted by Dr. W. C.
fBuckJ Ruffin who through his witty anecdotes gave us a typical psychiatrists' view
of psychiatry. An example of the excellent teaching that occurred during the ses-
sions was demonstrated when an interested student Cwho desires to remain anony-
mousl asked "What do you mean by delineation?" and obtained the reply: "Where
ya been, Jack?"
In summary it is very difficult to evaluate what we got out of Introduction to Med-
icine but I'm sure that everyone will agree that it was a very meaningful experience.
Gerald Hazouri
31
THE GRAND FLIP
M
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The winner for is it the loser?J
The above photo which shows a group of young
men all obviously in deep thought and undivided at-
tention does not represent a seminar on the cra-
nial nerves of the African Sand Fleag no it is merely
a group caught in the act of the "grand flip". The
"grand flip" represents a coin flipping contest at
the end of some delightful lab exercise to designate
who will present the sparkling data. As you have
already probably guessed the "winner" is really the
loserg he must stand before faculty and classmates
with straight face and strong voice and blurt out
the results of all our blunderings in the fastest pos-
sible manner-and on Saturday morning!
Brian Davis
32
BASIC CLERKSHIP
Toward the end of the second year we underwent a process called the basic clerkship. In addition to
learning how to do physicals and the simple lab procedures we met, for the first time, the patients. The time
had at last arrived when we "hit the wards". We had ample vigor, curiosity and a snootful of BS CBasic
Sciencel. But we only knew a little about patients' responses to invasions by green medical students. The
executioner of our initiation into the wards was the patient himself, who soon became, also, our generous
teacher. Our initiation seemed merciless, but, nevertheless, rewarding in its humor as well as its seriousness.
Handy tricks of the trade are acquired with experience. Bernie Shepen, eager and efficient, learned that
hair crackling beneath a stethoscope can be silenced by wetting. Unfortunately, the bedside water jars bore
a deceptive resemblance to the male urinals. With haste to auscult the chest of his hairy patient, MS2
Shepen whisked the filled urinal over the fuzzy figure. The simple, yet resounding response of the patient
was, "No! No! Don't pour any p- on me!"
Thrombocytopenia purpura revealed itself in living color to Rod Williams and George Warren on the arm
of a fair-skinned young woman who had reluctantly consented to a tourniquet test .... Never will forget
Doctor Bird calmly inquiring in crescendo, "Why? Why? Why? WHHYYYYV' . . . Nor the response,
"But, Dr. Bird, we are primarily students, and, besides, it was his idea!"
A functioning colostomy and bag is intriguing to the virgin eye, as Duncan Finlay learned. Abdominal
inspection and palpation began routinely but ended with the following percussion note: SPLOOSH! Quick-
ly following from Finlay were the two words that were to become the mainstay of the third year: "Oh,
nuRSE . . . "
Learning experiences? After all, we're primarily students.
Lasting memories? Definitely! After all, we're only virgins once.
Tom Wyatt
Introduction to the art of physical examination
The
basic
laboratory
procedures
33
in Qs
T
hy 'S' 'S
X
Y THIRD
9
The third year of medical school is
spent rotating through the 'five major
clinical services: obstetrics and gyne-
cology, pediatrics, psychiatry, medicine,
and surgery. The memorization of fac-
tual material is deemphasizedg the ob-
servation and understanding of clinical
problems is paramount.
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OB-GYN
PEDIATRICS
YEAR
MEDICINE
PSYCHIATRY
7' lys-
MQQY'
SURGERY
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The third year student is the con-
tinuous butt of all medical jokes: he
is the ten-thumbed, left-footed, Alice in
Wonderland who knows nothing and is
slow to learn. Only when the next
year's class comes on in June does the
third year student realize what a tre-
mendous amount of clinical knowledge
he has accumulated.
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Harry Prystowsky
M.D.
OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY
"Use your left hand, doctah 5
the right hand is for fahmahsv.
S 7.5 :J i gf.
Hill, H. M. McKerns, K. W. Stenger, V. G.
M.D. Ph.D. M.D.
36
Who's
first up ?
There is a story that must be told,
Not of Medicine, Pediatrics, Psychiatry or Surgery,
But rather, my friends, listen as the story unfolds
Of our unforgettable clerkship in Obstetrics and
Gynecology.
From the cherub faced, naive country lads
To the sophisticated men from cosmopolitan towns,
All were assembled as a medly to be had
Eagerly awaiting the Professor and his rounds.
As at the sound of a mystic command
The column of hierarchy moved through the hall,
Chief resident, residents, junior students to the
man,
Ever alert to the Professor's beck and call.
Into a room and around a bed,
Trooped the entire pearl gathering clan.
Shoulder to shoulder, some looking quite dead,
The Professor would soon extol his plan.
History and physical were presented verbatum,
Always the privilege of the medical student attend-
ing.
Nausea, vomiting, and a looseness in the rectum
All seemed to point to a story never ending.
Into the operating room at the crack of light,
Professor, residents, junior students and anesthesi-
ology
Working to remove the source of the patient's
fright:
Obstruction from adhesions secondary to multiple
surgery.
Surgery over and the operation a success,
The patient needed help for some water to pass.
Back on the floor IV fluids caused distress
But only because there is no passing of gas.
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i
Uneventful is the course until seven days post-op
When the student arrives to work his perfection,
Alas and behold, the sutures have popped,
Wound dehiscence and another staph infection.
Over the corridors the word spreads fast,
The Professor himself is the first to come.
Looking like the spector of the ancient past,
This must be the work of the Jolly Green Thumb.
Charlie Walker
Richard T. Smith
M .D.
Ellis, E. F.
Eitzman, D. V.
M.D. M.D.
PEDIATRICS
"The child is NOT a small adult."
Wx
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Evans, J.
M.D.
C. Krovetz, L. J. Lorincz, A. E
M.D., Ph.D. M.D.
Pearson, H. T.
M,D, M.D., Ph.D.
Schiebler, G. L.
s
Weil, w., Jr. Robbins, J. B.
M.D. M.D.
38
Q
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f , , A,
as W H - -E
,fm 42.
Q
V in-Ji 45- K
3.
"Now you men may think that we overemphasize breast feeding here."
-QQ
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39
va
4
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Robert L. Williams
Adams, P. L.
M.D.
Coggins, D. R.
M.D.
Pattishall, E. G.
Ph.D., M.D.
.
sf' . .,
.,.
.
Ainslie, J. D.
M.D.
s.
m l
-'ksi
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Fabrick, A. L.
M.S.W.
Ruffin, W. C.
M.D.
LEA
PSYCHIATRY
"You must never overlook
the emotional factors".
,l ll. . ff' -ff, . .f.- J
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Anton, A. H. Beach, S. R. Clemmons, R. S. Coddington, R. D.
Ph.D. M.S.W. M.D. M.D.
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Hutchinson, H. Jones, M. B. Newman, G. Offord, D. R.
Ph.D. Ph.D. M.D. M.D.
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Schwab, J. J. Vaughn, R. N. Wilson, D- T-
h. .
M.D. 40 M.D. P D
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In the beginning of madness, which the patients
are too apt to increase by drinking strong liquors
to excess and by unnecessary hurries into which
they put themselves, quiet and confinement Cnot
under the care of their own servants, but rather
of strangers of whom they stand in some awel will
often restore them to their senses without the help
of medicines. But where they are at all disposed
to be costive or have heated themselves by their
imprudent manner of living, they have been greatly
assisted in their recovery by the use of some purg-
ing physic. Opium has also been sometimes useful
in composing their minds by procuring them sleep.
Besides these, and what may be further necessary
to put their general health in good order and to keep
it so, I have observed nothing which has been of
any service in removing this great affliction.
William Heberden, 1782
KL
gm
And all Wilmer ever talks about now is sigmoidoscopyf'
MEDICINE
"Of course you all know what we mean
when we say idiopathic: idio means I
don't know and pathic, a damn thing
about it."
ia
Richard P. Schmidt
M.D.
J. 3
-
BR.
1 . if
Bird, E. M. Cade, J. R. Coggins, W. J. Crevasse, L. E. Freund, G.
M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D.
Greer, M. Kniffen, J. C. Martin, S. P. Meleney, H. E. Nevis, A. H.
M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D., Ph.D.
af if 1 ' . I 'Q 3
I xt gf? f!gv'ff ,A:,h.,
1 ,QT p Xa' xl.,
Green, J. R.
M.D.
Newcomb, T. F
M.D.
Noyes, W. D. Shipp, J. C. Taylor, W. J. 42 Thomas, W. C. Weaver, R. A. Wright, S. S.
M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D.
! l
43
9 1 .. ,. ' , ' ' f-wwf
ef .V u f, 255 , '
f :'-::L."i1!2E-12955:-"fl .-
: :ff M
.
4
i "
"In the present day and age, the only
way to cure cancer is with a wide sur-
gical excision".
Edward R. Woodward
M.D.
YQ ,
Andersen, N. B. Andersen, T. W. Bartley, T. D. Copenhaver, R. Eisenberg, M. M. Enneking, W. F
M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D.
WW?
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J' 'R
f fiii ff '
3 ...,. f Fry, R. M. Garcia, F. Gravenstein, J. S. Jurkiewicz, M. J. Kaufman, H. E. Miller, G. H.
M.D. M.D. M.D. D.D.S., M.D. M.D. M.D.
Perkins, H. M. Roberts, H. L. Rubin, M. 44 Singleton, G. T. Walton, Bl E. Wheat, M. W.
M.D. - Ph.D., M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D.
Typical posture of the third year stud in the middle of an operation.
T
Haz and Miller
in the ER
Qs
45
Shmunes
in the OR
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in i
15
3,
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!
Hepatorenal
Symposium.
Neurology-Neurosurgery
Conference.
I
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Open heart surgery
with the heart-lung
machine.
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ee
FOURTH YEAR
The fourth year provides the leisure and the elective time to
incubate the material of the first three years and to survey the career
horizons ahead before plunging into the frenzy of the internship.
mmm
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Thomas H. Maren
M.D.
PHARMACOLOGY
"lt is entirely possible that all drugs
act on enzyme systems. We just don't
know the enzymes."
aft'
QU
Byvoet, P. Leibman, K. C. Muther, T. F. Palmer, R. F. Tl'8ViS, D- M-
M.D. Ph.D. Ph.D. M.D. M.D.
48
Roger Palmer is the director of the fourth
year pharmacology course, which is unique
in American medical education. But when
guest lecturers wander from the subject, he
can be seen to writhe and squirm, and occa-
sionally to mumble, "Oh, no, don't talk about
Diamox again."
Dr. Gravenstein
waits for Hazouri
to finish the
Florida Times-Union
before beginning
his lecture on
anesthesia.
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Brian Davis is in
good hands as he
receives an IV drip
of epinephrine.
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GENERAL MEDICAL CLINIC
ae y
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Basic
Sclence
Conference
N
x
The Question:
. "What is the main prc
lem that brings you to s
us today."
The Answer:
"Well, there are ma
things. Oh where shall
start? I've felt weak a
tired and shaky over 1
whole body for the last for
years."
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f llle s
Clyde M. Williams
M.D.
RADIOLOGY
"The shadow merchants"
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Us
I
Agee, 0- F- COWU1, G- A- B- Dunavant, B. G. Fitzgerald, L. T. Hodges, P. C. Mauderli,
M.D. M.D.
IL X m::.:M
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H
Ph.D. M.S. M.D. D.Sc.
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51
W
ELECTIVES
The fourth year student spends five to seven
months pursuing and slaying medical dragons of
his own choosing. Some use their abundant elec-
tive time to sample various specialties that they
are considering as careers. Others fill out areas of
knowledge in which they feel that they are inade-
quately prepared.
l
l
Surgical Specialities
l- 1,
19
it if Mit
4
ti
12 -
as
General Practice
.- -gem, f an
ui
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iniww-HIV rw
tim
Internal Medicine
Cardiology
ELECTIVES
ASIA
'P
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g.w' p .
Q V .Ay .
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ML Q W- I A, A .J-. . .
vgvlnuv
Sarawak is located on the island of Borneo and is a part of the rapidly developing
and progressive Federation of Malaysia. It is one of the few places remaining in the world
where one can still observe conditions in which the influence of witchcraft and animistic be-
liefs is ubiquitous and where hygienic and sanitary conditions are more unknown than the
outboard motor. Christ Hospital is a 60 bed general hospital supported by the Methodist
Church located in the small village of Kapit which is 90 miles upriver through dense jungles
from the nearest airport or roads. It is here that the world of modern medicine meets the
primitive Ibans who until recently still engaged in head hunting as a Way of seeking the
status of warriorship. Carolyn and I spent ten never-to-be-forgotten weeks there as recipi-
ents of a SKF Foreign Fellowship and participated in the treatment of diseases long since
virtually eradicated by preventive health measures here in the United States.
George Warren
fi- -f ,Q .,
A
BG . 'Y
K S e
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rkr . ff K,
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-6: L" 4 af -vw" ... K 4
.ft v. I t V , AW, f a. f A " f .ggi V -W a '
""l'k,,:-,n , ,, ,,.,.fs+-' - , My A y .
J, . ' W M 'f' ... A
53
ELECTIVES
ll..
fig.
-si 5 ,
Spending two months at the London Hospital
was eye opening in several regards. The oppor-
tunity to observe socialized medicine at work, the
formal English teaching philosophy, a hospital with
twenty-bed wards, nurses that start IVs and draw
blood, the medical student as an observer rather
than a participant-these things, in addition to
pubs, made the trip worthwhile.
Wilson Eastland
EUROPE
I spent a month on a medical Ward at the Kom-
munehospitalet in Copenhagen, Denmark. I had
excellent rapport with the patients, they spoke no
English and I spoke even less Danish. The Danish
beer is excellent and the Women are all beautifulg
well, almost all of them. I didn't learn much medi-
cine there but it prepared me philosophically and
spiritually for my elective rotation in the emergency
room at Jackson Memorial in Miami.
Marty Stern
54
EVENTS
and
ORGANIZATIONS
Colle W
ge of Medicinexclass f
0 1963
Fourth Annual
S
per COU I 3
D 8
ro LL
Q
8:30 RM
Jerry Cunningham stars in the television pro-
gram "The Man in White", produced by WJXT,
CBS Jacksonville.
Dean Harrell presents the Roche
award to George Dinter.
55
Year
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
-'I'-'-'zap
Jack Copperman was tapped for Florida Blue Key while
a medical student.
Chairman
Walter Lane
George Dinter
Jerry Cunningham
Rod Williams
Harvey Thalblum
Vice-Chairman
Gerry Zel
Charles Boring
Charles Boring
Rudy Gertner
Bob Spencer
SAMA representatives: Jack Copperman, Duncan Finlay
Representatives to the University legislative body: Doug Deurloo,
Member of the Honor Court: Jack Copperman
56
Dave Scales
ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA
fs?
The Alpha Omega Alpha Honorary Medical Fraternity was organ-
ized at the College of Medicine, University of Illinois on August 25, 1902,
by William W. Root, M.D. The name Fraternity was replaced by Society
in 1934.
The motto of the Society is: "To be worthy to serve the suiferingf'
The spirit of the Society is set forth in the motto and in a modern inter-
pretation of the Hippocratic Oath. It is the duty of members to promote
its ideals, to foster the scientific and philosophical features of the medical
profession, and in all ways to ennoble the profession of medicine.
57
H37
X T
3
H z
I t
pk
THE LIBRARY
! Je
RESEARCH
2 ag
Effie
. ..
.' 'xii
:av .
,ag
2-f is
V f -'gre W' '
'jig .
The primate facility.
...Af
The University of Florida now has eight elec-
tron microscopes, five of which are located in
the Health Center.
59
If any individual desires, and is anxious
not merely to adhere to and make use of
present discoveries, but to penetrate still
further, and not to overcome his adversaries
in dispute but nature by labor, not in short
to give elegant and specious opinions but to
know to a certainty and demonstration, let
him as a true son of science tif such be his
wishl join with usp that when he has left
the antechambers of nature trodden by the
multitude, an entrance may at last be dis-
covered to her inner apartments.
Francis Bacon, 1620
Crevasse, L. E., W. A. Hewson, G. G. Hazouri, and J. C. Shipp. Glucose
metabolism of red blood cells: a study of the effect of triiodothyronine on
red cell metabolism. J. Lab. Sz Clin. Medicine, in press.
Freemon, F. R., H. W. Agnew, Jr., and R. L. Williams. An electroenceph-
alographic study of the effects of meprobamate on human sleep. Clin.
Pharm. 85 Ther., in press.
Gertner, H. R., Jr., J. R. Wilson, and E. R. Woodward. Parathormone
bioassay of plasma in hypercalcemic tumor rabbits. Proc. Soc. Exptl.
Biol. KL Med. 116: 177, 1964.
Goodman, D. C., J. A. Horel, and F.
R. Freemon. Functional localization
in the cerebellum of the bird and its
bearing on the evolution of cerebellar
function. J. Comp. Neurol. 123:45,
1964.
Gresham, S. C., W. B. Webb, and R.
L. Williams. Alcohol and caffeine:
effect on inferred visual dreaming.
Science 140: 1226, 1963.
Hendrickson, E. R., C. G. Walker, and
V. D. Chapnerkar. Identification of
nonsulfur organic compounds in the
stack gases from pulp mills. Amer.
Indust. Hygiene Assoc. J. 24:121,
1963.
Holder, L. B., S. L. Hayes, and T. H.
Maren. Diffusion of sulfonamides in
aqueous buffer and into red cells. J.
of Molecular Pharm., in press.
Jaeger, M. J., R. L. Parker, Jr., and
A. B. Otis. Pressure and work to
convective acceleration of gas in the
airways. The Physiologist 6: 209,
1963.
Redderson, C. L., and J. S. Graven-
stein. Untersuchungen uber die
wirkung des sauerstoffes und des he-
lium auf den kreislauf. Der Anaes-
thesist 13: 135, 1964.
Schwab, J. J., R. S. Clemmons, F. R.
Freemon, and M. L. Scott. Prob-
lems in psychosomatic diagnosis: I.
A controlled study of medical inpa-
tients. Psychosomatics 5: 369, 1964.
.ii
.,,..,
Schwab, J. J ., R. S. Clemmons, F. R. Freemon, and M. L. Scott. Differen-
tial characteristics of medical inpatients referred for psychiatric consulta-
tion: a controlled study. Psychosomatic Medicine, in press.
Shanklin, D. R., and J . J. Cunningham. Vagatomy-oxygen synergism in
the pathogenesis of hyaline membrane disease. Am. J. Path., in press.
Shipp, J. C., J. R. Spencer, and L. E. Crevasse. Buffer distribution in
isolated perfused rat heart measured by rubidium 86. Amer. J. of Physiol.
206: 905, 1964.
Steinbook, R. M., M. B. Jones, and J. Ainslie. Suggestibility and the pla-
cebo response. JNMD, in press.
Sunderman, C. R., W. Ballinger, and F. W. Sunderman, Jr. Measurement
of serum vanilmandilic acid in a patient with pheochromocytoma. Am. J .
Clin. Path., in press.
Warren, G. L., and N. D. Schuman. A report of the incidence of positive
tuberculosis skin test reactors and the incidence of active tuberculosis
among school children in the Methodist schools, Kapit District, Sarawak,
Malaysia. Med. J . of Malaya, in press.
Warren, G. L., C. K. Warren, and N. D. Schuman. Heights and weights
of school children of the Methodist schools of the Kapit District, Sarawak,
Malaysia. Sarawak Museum J., in press.
l, A
-an
flu
to
was
61
Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace!
Where there hatred . . . let me sow love.
Where there injury . . . pardon.
Where there doubt . . . faith.
Where there despair . . . hope.
Where there darkness . . . light.
Where there sadness . . . joy.
O Divine Master, grant that
I may not so much seek
To be consoled . . . as to console.
To be understood . . . as to understand.
To be loved . . . as to love.
for
It is in giving . . . that we receive.
It is in pardoning, that we are pardoned.
It is in dying . . . that we are born to eternal life.
St. Francis of Assisi
1182-1226
62
RELIGIOUS LIFE
Whither thou goest, I will go-g and Where tl
lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my peo1
and thy God my God."
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mr. and
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs.
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs.
Mrs
Mrs.
Mrs
Mrs.
Mrs
Mrs
Mrs
Book of Ruth
Edgar T. Ballard
Fred Courington
James W. DeFord
Donald G. Hall
Gerald G. Hazouri
Larry B. Holder
Martin A. Kornreich
Carl L. Redderson
Edward M. Schlein
Edward Shmunes
F. William Sunderman
Harvey Thalblum
George A. Turmail
Charles G. Walker
George L. Warren
Anderson R. Williams
Bernie Shepen
xi E.
..g-
E
is
X
x
e. M.
Bob Casey
jk
M05 QI
Quan..-A,
Zin Memory nf
Qnn 9. igallarh
Ann lost her life in an auto accident
on February 4, 1964.
"Lf, 5
Ron lost his life in a hunting
accident, Jziiiiizwy 3, 1965
lin Memory of
iliunalb Q. Euliau
U. S. Navy
medical
corpsman
V
'S ,
His wife: Gail
His children:
Sheila, 8 years
Bob, 7 years
John, 11 months
f'
l
mx gm K 5. W , ,.
"Strange is our situation here upon earth. Each of us comes
for a short visit, not knowing why, yet sometimes seeming to di-
vine a purpose. From the standpoint of daily life, however, there is
one thing we knowg that man is here for the sake of other men.":"
It is certain that Ron Julian knew his purpose and was diligently
preparing himself for life in the service of other men. He was in-
terested in reconstructive surgery and realized that knowledge of
transplantation phenomena is vital to what he wished to do. That
he would have made a superb surgeon is certain. He had motive, de-
sire, courage, and intelligence. The tragedy of his death will remain
unmeasured.
M. J. Jurkiewicz, M.D.
Chief, Plastic Surgery
.gfnmfi .. 44,,:..,.... . ...M
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3'
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All tFl ,t
y, Philosuh
L
THE WIVES
4
1st row:
2nd row:
3rd row
Sandy Walker, Ruthann Hewson, Sharon Ross, Helen Scott, Jane Turmail
Skip Dinter, Teri DeFord, Pat Spencer, Barbara Davis, Evelyn Casey
: Leone Holder, Gaye Scales, Therrell Williams, Dee Gresham.
An active pastime for the Wives of medical stu-
dents has been Medical Dames. Although function-
ing partly as a social organization, Dames has, over
the last five years, initiated several projects and
functions useful to the Health Center and commu-
nity.
Perhaps the major accomplishment during the
64-65 academic year has been the activation of the
Pediatrics Project-involving the coordination of all
fourteen Dames groups on the campus to spend two
hours each week day with the children on the 7th
floor of the Teaching Hospital. Girls were available
each day to feed, entertain, or assist patients, and
the months of October through May were covered.
Barbara Boring
The Flavets and
Schucht Village.
66
W? ,
,-Q
.vu
These four years in med school
Have flown by quite fast.
One leg of our journey
Is over at last.
But as we remember,
It was not all bad,
Think back on those four years
And the good times we had.
That first year as freshman
Was quite hectic all right.
We didn't see hubby
Long enough for a fight.
And then when he'd come home,
We would be very glad,
Till we realized he'd come
From anatomy lab.
The sophomore year was
Just a little more tame.
Hubby's hours weren't so bad,
He was learning the game.
And then next came the peak
Of his med school career.
We hardly did see him
For the whole junior year.
When we finally did see him,
After two days or more,
Our children would say,
Who's that man at our door?
lst row: Jane Willson
Skip Dinter
Carolyn Warren
2nd row: Pat Parker
Donna Thalblum
Rosemary Kornreich
3rd row: Leecy Wyatt
Barbara Boring
Jackie Stein
It was rather tricky,
Around meal time back then,
To keep dinner ready
From 4:30 till 10:00.
And when we wives made plans,
For some social delight,
More often than not,
He'd be called in that night.
On a Saturday night,
What could be more fun,
Than sitting at home
And twiddling our thumbs.
Then the fourth year arrived
With its glory and fame.
We were able to see
Every home football game.
Their hours were much better,
Not too busy at all,
And when they weren't working,
They were playing handball.
There was an adjustment
To be made in our house,
To learn over again,
How to live with a spouse.
Ruthann Hewson
THE
CHILDREN
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LIFE in the CUBES
"Each student in the College is individually assigned a unique study cubicle,
on his arrival, which serves as his personal base between classes and after hours.
Comprising a locker, desk, and storage shelves, these facilities encourage the pat-
tern of study which the practice of medicine requires: a never-ending process of
self education. In the study cubicle, the medical student collects observations and
other data, critically evaluates them and intelligently draws his conclusions. Located
in the Medical Sciences Building for the first two years of the curriculum, and in the
Teaching Hospital for the last two years, the cubicles provide an ever-ready at-
mosphere for quiet review or quick reference to aproblem. Grouped together, but
individually partitioned, the cubicles are centrally accessible to and from the major
areas of concurrent student activity."
College of Medicine Catalog, 1964
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SCENERY
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PARTIES
Swinging at the Va1entine's Day party.
Eating at a Ned Otey dinner.
Drinking at a Schucht Village party.
The Bullet
gyrates.
Jim White
twists.
Eastland ,.
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shirt. "
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75
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for the first time.
i
A combination of electives, vacations, and internship
quests led many members of the class of 1965 across the
continent to San Francisco. Included in the cross-country
group were Cunningham, Finlay, Freemon, Gertner, Haz-
ouri, Parker, Scales, Schlein, Turmail, and Warren. Most
of these people stopped in to visit with their old classmate,
Rebel Bellamy, who will be graduating from the University
of California College of Medicine in June of 1965.
77
SPORTS
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In addition to the traditional medical student avocations
of guzzling the foamy potion and oogling the nurses, we oc-
casionally partook of other sporting activities. Included were
football, basketball, handball, and sundry others. In back of
the Medical Sciences Building the handball courts were much
used. There was even a phone there so your wife and! or girl
friend could reach you and tell you to "get your a- home" or
some such trivia. The football field was frequented by numer-
ous pigskin stars. Remember the time "Tank" Davis ran 100
yards for a touchdown . . . backwards? . . . or the shattering
crash when "Hulker" Hall and "Slammer" Scales collided in
mid-air going after one of "Muscles" Hewson's 60-yard pass-
es? . . . or "Fleets" Finlay doing a face-down surface dive in
the big mud puddle while chasing "Sneaky" Schlein? Even
with all this most of us managed to get fatter and sassier
over the four years, but nothing could have relieved the test
tension better . . . especially like thinking of T.M:'s wrinkled
head when you kicked that 50 yard punt.
Charlie Boring
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78
L
BULL SESSIONS
In the coffee shop, by the mail boxes, waiting for the elevators, in
the cubicles, between classes, at the coke machines: wherever you see a
group of medical students' you are observing a bull session. They may be
talking about the up-again, down-again Gators or digitalis, but sooner or
later the conversation turns to medical education.
Looks like you got a pamphlet
from one of the drug companies
Walt. I don't think I've got that
one. Let me quick memorize it
You know, Gresham, that I,went
into theology because I had had a
divine visitation. That is from
Freud, of course.
,,..-f-a"'l
79
M3 Q
3
A layman viewing modern medical education is
very apt to misjudge its complexity and, in particu-
lar, underestimate the number of pathways which
the fledgling medical student may follow. Even
though one of the major assets of our chosen pro-
fession is the multiple and ever increasing oppor-
tunity, only those most familiar with the process
can appreciate fully the effect of this heterogeneity.
Thus, we ourselves have begun only lately to real-
ize how impossible it is to even approach a knowl-
edge of the modern literature or to achieve full pro-
ficiency in the smallest subspecialty. Boredom or
complacency need never be our concern.
But each advantage of diversity brings diverse
decision. There are, of course, those of us who de-
cided early upon an ultimate goal and thereby elim-
inated from consideration a large body of alterna-
tives. Their track is that much the less compli-
cated for having done so-and still the task is not
easy. More the pity for those who vacillate among
the confusing array of possibilities, all of which offer
the chance for genuine satisfaction in an esteemed
position. No background of personal familiarity is
available to assist us in reaching a precise decision,
the voices of experience of our faculty and acquaint-
ances are welcome but often only add more consid-
erations to an already excessive number.
How, then, do we proceed? A special providence
allows our decision, just as it has for generations of
students before and will for generations after. In
some manner, we survive our crises, embrace our
selections and achieve our aims. As the fog of un-
certainty is slowly dissipated we find our niche.
Decisions never cease to come, but each new one,
once made, affords an increment of understand-
ing for tomorrow. Someday, with our retrospectro-
scope, we will wonder how it could have been other-
wise.
J. R. Spencer
In the past several years we've experienced a
lot of joyous, if not enlightening days, and there
have been a few sad ones too. I feel that now that
the degree is about to be conferred I know just about
everything there is to know. As a matter of fact
there's just one more thing that needs to be eluci-
dated-what the hell is a clamp potential??!
Before I leave this institution I want to clear up
a few rumors. First of all, Wilson Eastland did
take the oral comprehensive examination and would
have passed had he not just up and Walked out in
the middle of a sentence. No, Frank Freemon, is not
a robot with a transistorized brain-he just walks
that way. And what's more Dick Steinbook did not
sell a million copies of his record "Squeeze Me Tight-
er and Tighter". He did, however, publish a book
entitled "Of Hamsters and Humans". Finally, I
think it should be stated once and for all that there
is no such thing as a left-handed Arab with a forked
tongue-they just don't exist in this part of the
World.
It's a shame the four years is over now, but at
least Ed Schlein caught some fish, Joe Perez lost
40 pounds and George Warren got to see the world,
and fthank Godl Rod and Therrell Williams finally
closed their epiphyses.
Dave Scales
-56. ,-
The craving to understand appears to be one
of the characteristic incentives of the human spe-
cies. With primitive races the form of understand-
ing sought is a kind that is useful to man in his
daily struggle for existence. In later periods, sheer
curiosity becomes the main driving force, and We
find men seeking knowledge for its own sake. But
though the urge to acquire knowledge is as old as
the human race, an effective method for acquiring
knowledge was not available until Galileo and New-
ton, in the seventeenth century, developed the sci-
entific method. The three stages of the method,
the observation stage, the experimentation stage,
and the theoretical and mathematical stage, are
based on the concepts of measure and the mathe-
matical expression of the measured quantities. The
method is usually applied to open-end systems with
the variables reduced in number to as few as pos-
sible and is analytical in approach. The mathemat-
ical third stage enables the investigative scientist
to predict and generalize, with accuracy, relative to
the variables of the limited experimental system un-
der observation. With the exception of the statisti-
cal laws, all the physical laws formulated by this
method prior to the quantum theory can be ex-
pressed by the means of differential equations of
one type or another.
The applied natural scientist, faced with the
problem of synthesizing multivariable closed-loop
systems fservomechanisms, feedback systems, con-
trol systems, learning machinesl has found the
mathematically expressed physical laws to be of
value in predicting the behavior of the open-end
elements of his closed-loop systems. He has de-
veloped additional mathematical techniques for in-
corporating these elemental expressions into com-
posite expressions or groups of expressions capable
of predicting the over-all behavior of large multi-
variable closed-loop systems. Statistical techniques
have been developed when the number of variables
became too unwieldy for closed mathematical ex-
pressions. Collectively these mathematical and sta-
tistical techniques have been labeled communication
and control theory. The basic philosophy underly-
ing this method of system synthesis and analysis
has been labeled the systems approach. Practical
application of the systems approach to system de-
sign has played a major role in creating this na-
tion's high level of military preparedness and stand-
ard of living.
As the systems engineer developed the concept
of closed-loop systems, during the past three dec-
ades, he noted the similarity between the machines
which he designed himself and the living state ma-
chines which we call animals. Therefore, his sphere
of interest was expanded to include living machines,
and the term cybernetics was coined by Norbert
Wiener in 1948 to designate the entire field of com-
munication and control theory whether the problem
be related to non-living state design or living state
analysis.
In the area of biocybernetics, theoretical consid-
erations have developed more rapidly than experi-
mental investigation largely due to lack of accurate
living state measuring techniques. However, there
have been areas of experimental advance, such as
peripheral nerve analysis, where experimental meas-
uring techniques have been developed.
In the future, with the application of communi-
cation and control theory, the feedback loops that
collectively form living state machines will be de-
scribed' in a more precise manner, and composite
multiloop symbolic representation will be developed
for living state machines as they have been developed
for man-made machines. The objective of such an
approach, naturally, is precision of thought. For
as Lord Kelvin stated in 1883, "When you can meas-
ure what you are speaking about, and express it in
numbers, you know something about it, but when
you cannot measure it, when you cannot express it
in numbers, your knowledge is of a meagre and
unsatisfactory kind: it may be the beginning of
knowledge, but you have scarcely, in your thoughts,
advanced to the stage of science, whatever the mat-
ter may be."
Richard Lee Parker, Jr.
Frederick Banting discovered insulin working on
a wild hunch while his erstwhile mentor was Vaca-
tioning in Europe. Jay McLean discovered heparin
while skipping lectures as a sophomore medical stu-
dent.. It is the oddthinkers and malcontents who
make the great breakthroughs in scientific medi-
cine.
The University of Florida College of Medicine
under the leadership of Dean George T. Harrell has
created a soil in which scientific accomplishment
can grow. Banting would marvel at the fourth year
at Florida, in which the student spends five to seven
months in electives. MacLean would glory in the
UF Department of Medicine, which allows the stu-
dent to dig out knowledge of disease for himself
without a required series of spoon feeding lectures.
Let the oddthinkers like Banting and MacLean
come to Florida, because here is the climate in which
their unconventional ideas can blossom.
Frank Freemon
A medical education is obtained through several
avenues of experience. The genesis is formulated
from textbooks, lectures, labs, conferences, and jour-
nals. To this is added ones personal clinical exper-
ience in the observation, diagnosis, and attempts to
understand and treat mankind's many maladies.
But the most rewarding facet of a medical educa-
tion is derived from observing the daily actions of
ones teacher, whether it be in a setting with his
family, in the research laboratory, in the coffee
shop, or on the ward as he works in his own unique
manner with his patients and deals with the pa-
tient's family. Especially instructive are the situa-
tions in which the teacher is called upon to render
medical attention to the student or a close family
member. It is during such occasions that 'one ap-
preciates for the first time the distinction between
a job and a profession. Finally on the threshold of
a medical career, it becomes painfully evident that
the student shall be unable to fully repay his teach-
er directly. Rather, the student's gratitude can
only be expressed through his attempt to be as
meaningful to someone in the future as the teacher
has been to him in the past, even as Plato learned
from Socrates and taught Aristotle.
Larry Holder
The problems that we face as the medical scientists and practioners of the
future are at first glance overwhelming. Scientific productivity is greater today
than ever before and it cannot fail to multiply at an incomprehensible rate.
Improvement of medical communication channels will be helpful, but will the
necessary increase in specialization further dehumanize the medical profession and
will compartmentalization of knowledge force us to rely even more heavily on de-
crees from above or conventional thought for our information? Such questions
are even more disturbing when we consider the many medical areas in which "con-
ventional wisdom" holds forth. A rece nt example of this is the innovation in the
treatment of shock, replacing in many situations, the universally acknowledged
treatment with what appears to be its direct opposite. It is just such "obvious
fact" that often stands in the way of scientific advancement. We must remain con-
stantly on guard lest in response to this frustrating situation we succumb to the
temptation of relying on the comfort of conventional wisdom.
"It is far, far better thing to have a Hrm anchor in nonsense than to put
out on the troubled seas of thought" fGalbraithJ.
Dick Steinbook
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It is logical to stand in awe of the tremendous progress in the medical world.
A most disturbing aspect, however, is the complications which accompany these
advances. An example might be the development of new organisms resistant even
to powerful antiprotoplasmic agents. A more far-reaching aspect is the lag in the
development of a new moral code since it becomes increasingly difficult to apply ten-
ets conceived when medicine was more or less an organized placebo to the com-
plex situations of today. Such contemporary questions begging for an answer
might include: who shall benefit from life-saving facilities such as open heart sur-
gery when the supply is scant and afflicted are many, what will happen when we
destroy epidemic diseases in world areas where population situations are precari-
ousg should we endeavor to save the lives of patients suffering from diseases which
have disastrous irreversible consequences. Clearly, the next subsubspecialty to
arise will be Medical Ethics and Morality.
Jerry Cunningham
83
Whoever is to acquire a competent knowledge of medi-
cine ought to be possessed of the following advantages:
a natural dispositiong instructiong a favorable position for
studyg early tuitiong love of laborg leisure. First of all, a
natural talent is required, for when Nature opposes every-
thing else is in vain, but when Nature leads the way to
what is most excellent, instruction in the art takes place,
which the student must try to appropriate to himself by
reflection, becoming an early pupil in a place well adapted
for instruction. He must also bring to the task a love of
labor and perseverance, so that the instruction taking root
may bring forth proper and abundant fruits.
Instruction in medicine is like the culture of the'pro-
ductions of the earth. For our natural disposition is, as
it were, the soil, the tenets of our teacher are, as it Were,
the seed, instruction in youth is like the planting of the
seed in the ground at the proper season, the place where
the instruction is communicated is like the food imparted
to vegetables by the atmosphere: diligent study is like the
cultivation of the fieldsg and it is time which imparts
strength to all things and brings them to maturity.
Having brought all these requisites to the study of
medicine, and having acquired a true knowledge of it, we
shall thus, in traveling through the cities, be esteemed
physicians not only in name but in reality.
Hippocrates
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1.2
...I
if
Chesnut: "I still say it smells like tomato juice."
Caspari, Ditchek, Cobb: 'Alt sure doesn't taste like tomato juice."
88
WF
Happiness is a last row
seat at an 8 a.m. lecture
4 ... .,
R?
"Can it, Lovejoy"
"Can it, Lovejoy
1
Each student . . . is provided with a unique
' ' .study cubicle . . . or Thinking Office
89
Muni' '-
. 44"
A M
xwsw'
A point from Jones
Then the farmer said to the
traveling salesman ....
A ,n,,,M,..,t,,.Ywl..m.,.Mw1. 452 '
1
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in
The meeting of the "We Sweat it Club"
will begin as soon as Cook gets here . . .
H5
L
Jones, makes his poinT. And this end E095 OU to
90
the belly button
A
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,e Q1 i Htl
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- 454
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I
i x
CLASS OF 1967
Chairman-Ken Safko Vice-Chairman--David Bryant
i n
.
Gear I
an-, N?
8- . D
Class of '67 Yearbook Committee-J. Murray Fadial, Ellen Moskowitz,
Joseph Onne, Michael Peskin, Marcia Schmidt, Martin Steiner, Barry
Weckesser.
91
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96
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BARNEY BARRON
JOHN BAXT
TERRELL BOUNDS
DAVID BRYANT
DAVID BURNSED
DONALD CAMPBELL
PAUL CLAYTON
RAY COLUMBARO
WILLIAM COLVIN
G. MADISON CRAVEY
JOHN EDMUNDS
J. MURRAY FADIAL
RONALD FISCHER
KAY GILMOUR
EDWARD GOTTI
DUDLEY GOULDEN
ROBERT GREENBERG
ROGER HALL
JOHN HENDRIX
PAUL HOFFMAN
RONNIE KLUGE
MICHAEL KOHEN
JOEL KREPS
KENNETH LASSITER
PATRICK LAWRENCE
JOE LEVI
FRANK McBRIDE
MERCER MCCLURE
LAMBERT McLAURIN
WILLIAM MALZONE
BURTON MARSH
MAXINE MOODY
SAM MOORER
WILLIAM MORGAN
ELLEN MOSKOWITZ
JAMES O'LEARY
JOSEPH ONNE
JAMES PENROD
JOHN PERCHALSKI
MICHAEL PESKIN
JOAN PETERSON
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DAVID POWERS . ,
DENNIS PUPELLO O F.
LEE PURCELL
ROBERT RHODES i
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Q '15--r . I '-
In I X 5 V . - 1
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KENNETH SAFKO
VI T fs ' I:
DUKE SCOTT I I ... ' Qi
JOHN SH-IPPEY E 3 V
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BERNARD SIMBARI
RUSSELL SIMBARI E h
MARTIN STEINER , Lx
JAMES THOMAS . I
STEPHEN VOGEL
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JOHN WALTON
BARRY WEOKESSER -
STEPHEN ZELLNER H5 9, ,
A A' I 4 A 'Q
93
K, tb
E 4
"And don't let him out
of the locker until the
orals are over"
Grrr-Keep out of my cube!
"Not only do
they look alike .
Doctors - the statement is
"That's more than I care to
know" - not Hwho gives a
big fat damn."
94
'Now, that's a beautiful
"And we had this
patient today . . .
If I can't memorize
them, maybe I can
digest them.
"Charlie, we're only studying
together .... Charlie! Charlie!
stool specimen-it's mine."
95
1'
at
Gee Kay, you do a mean frug!
f'I'll never ask
another stupid
question"
e ne
Boy, only 31 more chapters of Psych
and I'll be finished with this week's assignment.
96
"Subjective grade?" . . "Hell, I like him
lI'he tensions of medicine-
ife and death decisions in
:he hospital-"One no-
rump"
Onesy - Twosy
Skip and
Hop
97
But I thought autopsy call was
suspended after 9 P.M.
"Malzone . . . I can't really
believe you ate that"
What a sedative placebo!
-001-w
'Hqupi'
HE
THE "MEDS"
FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS-GAINESVILLE-1964-65
is
ill 423 f3l f4l 155
153 473 Q33 49?
TEAM MEMBERS
find Year Ist Year 3rd Year
Pat O'Leary-CAPT C55 Bob Greenberg Q41 -lack Bartlett C33 Bill Bennett
Dave Bryant 123 Jim Penrod Q93 Dlck Jones
Ray Columbaroflj Dave Powers Q71 Uh Yellf' Jim MCCHUIGY
Ron Fischer Q81 Dennis Pupello 165 Duncan Finley
David Scales
Proving that medical students could be athletic as well as studious, a proud segment of our
group left their study cubicles to form a rag-football team that in its first year of action, WON
the City Champiorship! Under the leadership of Pat O'Leary, the backing of our own "well-
rounded" sophomores and active participants from other classes, the team was able to compile
an impressive 10-0-0 record. The greatest moment for the team, though, was their 13-12 victory
over the Law Schocl All-Stars-right here on the lawn of ole Hilly Milly!
J. Onne
98
CLASS OF 1968
Retrospectroscope Staff: Barbara and Dale Braman, Bill Greenman, Elizabeth O. Vaughan
ALONSO, KEN
BARTLETT, JACK
BETHENCOURT, TONY
BLOOM, TERRY
I ,fi W
f ll
Q If
BRUCE, DOUG
BRAMAN, DALE
CAFFEE, HOLLIS
CHINOY, DAVE
COX, CHARLES
DENNIS, MIKE
DOBBINS, PAT
ELLWOOD, LESLIE
in
sl? 135 ,
'ff
FAN N I N , RAY
FEELY, BOB
FENNELL, BOB
FEVRIER, FRED
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99
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GREENMAN, BILL
HAMMERSBERG, JON
HALL, RICHARD
HELFERT, BRUCE
,
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HUBER, GEORGE
JENKINS, ORVIN
KASDIN, JACK
KOHLER, BILL
RQ! r
k
MARTIN, HUGH
MILLER, CECIL
MURPHY, BILL
NETZLOFF, MIKE
100
PEARCE, HARRY
POLLY, STUART
RAULERSON, JIM
ROGERS. WOODS
RUSH, JEFF
SCHANG, STEVE
CHIFF D V
s , A E
scHwARTz, ROBERT
31
'K
43"
5 f wel?
SEAY, MARY BETH
SIEGEL, EDWARD
STERN, RICHARD
STORRIE, MIKE
'Www
-- . -,g,,. '..:? Q
V
,va I 4
Y o
SWYERS, JERRY
SYFRE'I'I', FRANK
VAUGHN, ELIZABETH
WALBROEL, CHARLIE
RQ'
WEAVER. RICHARD
WEINSIER, ROLAND
Reflection is startling for the year old class that has made its way into the world of white coats and
stethescopes. The diligent application of mind and hands to the sobering task of conquering the great store
of medical knowledge has imprinted the minds of all. Yet work was not spared of the lighter thoughts that
have brought humor and uplifting to the conquest. We had our hours and hours of serious study, BUT . . .
101
'2-
3
X
A
NOW, ACCORDING TO THE LAB MANUAL
THE EFFECTS OF ACETYLCHOLINE ON THE
NEUROMUSCULAR FUNCTION ARE . . .
DILIGENT APPLICATION OF MIND
"I TRIED TO TELL THEM ABOUT BIRTH
CONTROL!"
HEIGHTS THE POINT."
NOW FOR THE PAUSE THAT REFRESHES!
'NOT ME! IT'S THE REST OF YOU!"' AND ASPIRIN DOESN'T UPSET MY STOMACH!
""V'-f--N.. ,
I "SAY, DICK, HOW ABOUT HAVING
A SKULL-SESSION TONIGHT?"
N
A 3
THEY ARE ALWAYS RUNNINGVOUT I AM GOING TO PASS THIS COURSE
HAT IT TAKES!
OF PAPER TOWELS-OR SOME- NO MATTER W
THING 103
Our Sincere Appreciation To Those Who Have
Supported The 1965
RETROSPECTROSCOPE
Agee, O. F., M.D.
Ainslie, John D., M.D.
Anderson, William H., Jr., M.D
Andrews, John W., M.D.
Brady, Louis P., M.D.
Coddingfon, R. Dean, M.D.
Coker, John L., D.D.S.
Dragsfedf, Lesfer R., M.D., Ph.D.
Edwards, Joshua L., M.D.
Enneking, William F., M.D.
Fregly, Melvin J., Ph.D.
Freund, Gerhard, M.D.
Goodman, Donald C., Ph.D.
Graham, Henry H., M.D.
Greer, Melvin, M.D.
Green, J. Russell, Jr., M.D.
Hill, Hugh M., M.D.
Hodges, Paul C., M.D.
Horel, James A., Ph.D.
Hunter, George W., Ill, Ph.D.
Ingram, James,M., M.D.
Ingram, William, Jr., M.D.
Kissam, Edward B., M.D.
Lorincz, Andrew E., M.D.
Lucas, Howard C., M.D.
Million, Rodney R., M.D.
Offord, David R., M.D.
Palmer, Roger F., M.D.
Robbins, John R., M.D.
Ruffin, William C., Jr., M.D.
Schiebler, Gerald L., M.D., Ph.D
Schwab, John J., M.D.
Scoff, Thomas E., Jr., M.D.
Shanklin, Douglas R., M.D.
Smifh, Richard T., M.D.
Stanford, F. DeWitt, M.D.
Sfenger, Vincent G., M.D.
Sufer, E., M.D.
Thomas, William C., M.D.
Thomas, William C., Jr., M.D.
Travis, David M., M.D.
Vaughn, Marie C.
Vaughn, Rufus M., M.D.
Walfon, Bruce E., M.D.
Weigel, Walter W., M.D.
Weil, William, M.D.
Wheaf, Myron W., Jr., M.D.
Williams, Clyde M., M.D.
Williams, Robert L., M.D.
Wilson, James G., Ph.D.
Wolfson, Sorrell L., M.D.
Woodward, Edward R., M.D.
SPONSORS
Congratulations to the Class of 1965
from the
Pharmacists of Gainesville
Canova Drug Company McCollum Drug Company
Canova Prescription Center Medical Pharmacy
City Drug Company 13th Pharmacy
Florida Pharmacy Vidal Drug Company
Gresham Drug Store Westside Pharmacy
Hoffman Pharmacy Wise's Drug Store
Liggett Rexall Drug Store Wise,s Pharmacy
105
Surveying village health needs, an SKGF Foreign Fellow examines a child in
Kurali, near New Delhi, India.
INDIA
TAIIGAIIYIKA
IRAN
GUATEMALA
At hospitals and medical outposts a long way from
the classroom, medical students learn to cope with
unfamiliar diseases, help to provide much-needed
medical services to people in underdeveloped areas of
the world, and contribute to international under-
standing and good will.
This unusual opportunity to work and study in for-
eign countries is offered to students through the
Foreign Fellowships Program of Smith Kline Kc French
Laboratories. Administered by the Association of
American Medical Colleges, the program has enabled
123 students to work in 40 different countries during
the past four years. Iunior and senior medical stu-
dents are eligible to apply for Fellowships, which
provide for an average of 12 weeks' work abroad to
be completed before internship.
Students who are interested in Fellowships should
apply through the deans of their schools.
Smith Kline 81 French Laboratories
106
ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION' RARITAN, NEW IERSEY
For a complete choice of medically accepted pfoductg fozzplanned conception control
' Gnu orc
M 'IE
I 'iii de
Ai. is si 5 f
NM,
UI'
J5-
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.x ,
-4?
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Best Wishes from Citizens Bank of Gainesville,
Gainesvi1Ie's Progressive Bank on the Go.
Our friendly stafif will be glad To explain our full bank services
and how we may best serve you.
"OUR MOST IMPORTANT ASSET . . . IS YOU"
OF GAINESVILLE
NORTH MAIN ST. AT NORTHEAST 4TH AVE. 0 GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA 0 MEMBER FDIC
108
l
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE
"The Professional Mon's Company"
.1 ..... ,
CC plete Financing Availableb Jim L. Cooper C. Emory Cross
"THERE IS A DIFFERENCE"
215 N.W. 10th Ave. 0 Phone 378-1391 0 Gainesville, Fl d
Congrafulafions rom fAe
-xjfzalfh Cenfer ,Book SLOP-
'Uie 5i,,ie.i, f7.,i,,fi,,, mf 5e,,f,f some Cine, fi, iii Jaiiii cm'
Services xgncluvle
Cemplefe Bee! Service eflfli eree copes
ajlfleabcal Supphes SfuJenf Supphes
greefing Cerde .professional Coats
:mob Wepnisging
KEY
PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. ,
MIAMI 37, FLORIDA
FloridcI's Leading Elhicol Drug Monufocfurer
NITROGLYN PROTERNOI.
CARBAMINE TI-IEO-NAR
AMSUSTAIN SPASTICQI. I
'Mfg ,cus F
I-IYASOREI PENICILLIN
THE HOUSE OF SUSTAINED ACTION MEDICATION
I 'f Aiwi Q ia' I
DR. ,AMES C, MUNCH fui ,,,f f " BERNARD FRIEDLAND I 2 T
Medical Diredor Assisfani Medical Director
Y IW iiI'L4Ap',g, 6315?
I i'ITEI 15-
K EEI
ay,
JACK McGRlFF EARL SCARBOROUGH GUS MCGRIFF
537 Northeast First Street
Phone 376-2451 376-8393
Goinesville, Florido
l 7 P. O. Drawer M
S McGriff-Scarborough and Associates
0 Insurance Brokers
0 Deferred Premium Program For Medical Students
and Physicians
0 Presently Working with Over 30 Estates of
Physicians at the Medical Center.
IH Estate Analysts H Employee Benefit Plans D Tax and Financial Planning
Tampa Gazmfwfle
.xdnalemon Surgicaf .Siaplofy Company
gLSLl'UiCe 30 me eACa!pf0A:fJi0n yor Wealjg a v
fl Pefmbarcg Orlando
-,E
M A I
I
7 S ' I
,U
I . h o
1 p cur-rnaceuhcal cornpang
FINE PHARMACEUTICALS FOR THE MEDICAL PROFESSION
P. Q. BOX TZZZZT ZZTTZZSW STA. MANUTScSfZZ'i TQTSPW'
GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA GREENVILLE, SO, CAROLINA
PHONE FR 2-1735 PHONE CE 5-0488
I
L
ON SED El' ' 0 NEO BRONSED Tablets 0 BUDON Tablets 0 BUDON Elixir 0 BUFADYNE Tablets
0 BECYTE Capsules 0 BECYTE with B12 Iniectable 0 BR - lxlr -
0 CYTE Tablets 0 DEX-TEND Tablets 0 DYNSED Tablets I HYP-SED Capsules 0 HYP-SED Elixir 0 SALBUDON Tablets 0 PREDSO Tablets
' SOMIDE Tablets 0 SOMIDE Suspension U 50-OTIC Drops U SORBI-CYTE Elixir 0 SORBI-CYTE FORTE Elixir 0 S0-TAB Tablets 0 SOPEN-400 Capsules
' SO-TOPIC Cream 0 SPC-PLUS Capsules 0 SYN Tablets U TET Capsules U TET Syrup U Vl-CITRIMIN Tablets 0 IOLACIN Tablets
OUR CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE UNIVERSITY HEALTH CENTER
AND THE CLASS OF 1965
Gainesville Automobile Dealers Association
B 84 G Motor Co. Inc. 2001 N.W. 13th Street
Cadillac 84 Oldsmobile
Crane Lincoln Mercury 506 E. University Avenue
Lincoln-Mercury-Comet 81 English Ford
General Finance Corp. 718 N. Main Street
Hawes-Powers Motor Co. 204 N. Main Street
Chrysler-Imperial-Plymouth 81 Valiant
Melton Motor Co., 703 N. Main Street
Buick-Opel
Miller-Brown Motors Inc. 4222 N.W. 13th
Volkswagen 84 Porche
Pool-Gable Motors 119 S.E. 1st Ave.
Dodge -l- Cars 84 Trucks
Ridgway Motor Co. 1 132 S. Main Street
Rambler-Jeep
,Shaw 81 Keeter Motor Co. 238 N.W. University
Ford-Fairlane-Falcon-Mustang
Tropical Pontiac 220 N.W. 8th Ave.
Pontiac-Austin Healy 84 GMC Trucks
University Chevrolet 1515 N. Main Street
Chevrolet-Chevy II-Corvair-Corvette
114
376-7515
372-4251
376-251 1
372-2561
376-7571
376-4552
372-4343
372-8433
376-5371
372-2583
376-7581
Compliments of
WYNN'S AMOCO SERVICE
506 N.W. 13th Street
Gainesville, Fla.
FR 6-6939
WINDY'S BARBER SHOPS
1125 W. University Ave.
and
W. University and 34th Street
HOTEL THOMAS
CTHE CORNISH ARMSJ
Bar and Cocktail Lounge
We Serve Good Food Three
Times Daily with a Very
Popular Buffet Each Sunday
615 N.E. 2nd Street FR 2-9501
Compliments of
ROBERT G. KOPP
5424 Sanders Road
Jacksonville, Fla.
Gainesvilleis Famous
B A M B I
MOTEL
1,5 Mile South of University of Florida
U. S. 441 South Phone 376-2622
'lg'-s,,s"rNN . l M
,f'1"f.l is I unavergryrl
.swan .VL i and - -
iii- '-1, """' LQ- --N ,, lx
I EI igglge M -, , .E W RW- ...Rl
.llllllligrwirz-.nmmnunnumeimini llilmuin g ,A 'E l Em i i IE 5 .. , II -
ir , ! ' ' nf . iii. gag: lp: I I... ""!L
iii . 4? lllil r... 5 I lilll I I Nl H ULL' L I
'3 N W- Q Q mi H l -3. 2 1 1 V 1
wi.: as gi, I 1---F15 u : .,:21'i51f. ,I I 1 V.. M M .-
ce :-Z X " M f ,
..-f--"4""' .. if '
.fdmericafa jineaf 'f NE?vfgllEiYig,:gEST 0, ,
.ilouaeleeperdn 'ffli?. i,:f" 6 BLOCKS SOUTH OF CAMPUS ON U. S. 441 O W
. siz:AxrAsr o LUNCH H up eww! 'hon
v DINNER
0 SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN
TO PRIVATE PARTIES
FROM 2 TO 500 PERSONS
0 250 Free Parking Spaces
0 Free Advance Reservation Serv.
0 American Express Credit Cards
0 IOI QUALITY ROOMS
0 RESTAURANT 6' COFFEE SHOP
0 FREE RADIO Cr TV - EVERY ROOM
0 SWIMMING POOL
0 AIR CONDITIONED Cr HEATED
KINDIVIDUAL Room CONTROLSI
0 HEALTH CLUB
Cocldail Lounge
Gourmef Sfeak Room
Package Liquors
l
E
S RFRA Cl
1
M N
, .,,,,,,
While Youre Here,
,W LeT Us Serve You
I l i UN 'VE rr..
is -
174 , If- -..:,,, ,4 -1 L.: 5 1' GAINESVILLI: o FLORIDA
nr' 1' R
' '
, Q L
'E' ' Affer You Finish Your Srciy
ESVILLE. FLA ALBANY,
?'W"iT"sT ' ' T2',fS,lE':' ' in Gainesville, Remember Us!
0 TEPHEN F. wANDz oci-i, n
116
2
W
ev
F F 5
F. g , A W.,
After on Operation, f Ai b ii 'X' MN f A' 1 A 1 1
There's Nofhin Like o A , X l " m'g:,'
K. C. smp sfeik A A wg A no R
'E ' 5 J A
S A ,,W,,. e,,,v,,, im.. 'W W
Best of Luck To All V ,RZ
9
LARRY S WONDERHOUSE
14 S.W. lsT STreeT 372-2405
Compliments of bring
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS begsfth
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF GAINESVILLE
'The Place to Saveu ""' "U"
249 W' University z 516 N.W. 13th Street Q 3' P
Gainesville, Florida H Q 'Qt ,
if " 'Q.: alll' .
A : f
sw ll Z ffiqmiigi fi,
pi an-5
,W 4, F-
GAINESVILLE COCA-COLA
BOTTLING CO.
929 East University Ave.
orida 3
D. LUCIEN PHAKTOR, The Greek Phenomenon, Presents:
WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BETA-CHAIN?
Filmed on the Beautiful Isle ot Langerhans in Ancient' Thalasemia
And Starring: TIM PANIC as "HOSS" MOSIS lthe Star ot "My Pal, Pebral"l
ANGIE O'TENSlN, The Girl with the Vitreous Body,
as "ELECTRA" PHORESIS l"Shockingly revealing . . . J. Bioch.l
And Introducing that new French Sensation: PIER ESIS as GANONG, The Unwanted
with a cast ot MILLIONS! lCasting Director-E. Colil
Filmed in Colorful GIEMSASTAIN 90
SEE: The Showdown at Neuromuscular Junction . . .
SEE: "Hoss" crawl through the Crypts ot Colon, where the Horrible LIEBERKUHN waits in
ambush with his Mucous Machine.
HEAR: Two new songs by the Irish Composers, Terry Goid and Jeannie O'Glossus
"Red Cells in the Sunset" "Bye, Bye Cuspid"
What the Critics say: "The Sweetest Story Ever Told" . . . Fried
"This Film has Amazing Action Potential" . . . Wright
. . RIGHT . . . . . Olson
-Freshman Clas
I
WILLIAMS-THOMAS
FUNERAL HOME
404 North Main
Gainesville, Florida
Best Wishes
IDEAL LAUNDRY
81 CLEANING SERVICE
517 S.W. 2nd Ave.
372-8521
Jqerwhg Alachua mm'
furroundmg COMWIZBJ
Mare 1890
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Phone 376-7556
118
TOM W. DOBSON
and
FREDDIE DOBSON
Sales 0 Rentals 0 Loans
Insurance 0 Bonds
2908 N.W. 13fh Street 372-1473
Compliments of
SOUTHERN BELL
TEL. 31 TEL. Co.
400 S.W. 2nd Ave.
Phone 372-9001
DAN BYRD
ASSOCIATES, INC.
Complete Insurance Coverage
For Car, Home, and Business
372-2511 825 N.W. 13th Street
. 'e 1 g
N . .4.. L
'lf
Compliments of
HIL-TOP MOTOR COURT
372-4319 3103 N.W. 13th Street
JONES-JOHNSON
FUNERAL HOME
Harold A. Johnson
REGISTERED FUNERAL DIRECTOR
Men a ER
to .1 K I 9 o
NP l0IL g!ixQ QHM
Iuvmw-1'o
24 Hour lAir Conditioned! Ambulance Service
FRankIin 6-5361
SOUTH MAIN AT FOURTH AVENUE
GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA
119
' pm N-W -.zgmi
...-at.
ft W' 1
E it , L ui
glggziw
'53 .HOIYIQ of
S .7Le Origina! .gfafian .gyanelwicl
Kina Size Saaaufiehes
Spaghetti
Pizza
Draft l6'eer
819 Yflniuerdify Jduenue 1608 N.W. 1sT Ave.
E Plone 372-6582 FOR TAKE OUT AND FREE DELIVERY
120
Best Wishes
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
COMPLETE BANKING FACILITIES
ESTABLISHED I888
376-5351 104 N. Main Street
FRANKL.. 3676
FRANKLIN B656
is
Q., o erfson ewe ers
Ig.,.:' Ws 211 w. UNIVERSITY AVE.
A.. c3AINEsvII.I.E. FLORIDA
W
..l'gif'gI K
NAT ROBERTSON
REGISTEFIE NNELER N
ER
Complimenis of
F9 I'
QI
'1
' .
ll "
go
U
Kal . MIWIIZHIMI
Mo!! Defimble Apparel for Men and Women
225 W. Universily Ave. Gainesville, Florida
Phone 376-3502
Best Wishes Class of 1965
THE HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT
K..
AND
GEN ERAL GAINES
If .rv STEAK ROOM 84 LOUNGE
I ,.., it, . R, i
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I' ' 1 Complete Facilities
I I W-si I
I For All Occasions
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Off
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2' 0 ' ' ee
Phone: 376-8266
urfiend
rufi,
CHARLES De BOLT
Agent
Life insurance, that is. fSame
good deal as State Farm car in-
surance.J State Farm's new line
of life insurance gives you a
choice of 26 policies with loads
of new features for up-to-date
protection at down-to-earth
costs. For full details, see your
friend for life.
.-.
HAT! IAIM
INBUIANCI
0
State Farm Life Insurance Company,
Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois.
Off. Phone: 376-0170
Res. Phone: 376-2710
824 West University Ave.
Gainesville, Florida 32601
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Mr. 8g Mrs. Byron Wynn
Invite You To Enjoy
PRIMROSE INN
214 W. University Ave.
and
WINNJAMMER
520 S.W. 2nd Ave.
A Spenelihe Nigtit e
Vh . Where the Priceis Right"
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4170 SQ W. 13TH STREET U GA3NE5VlLLE. FLA.
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PHDNE GMNESVILLS. FLA. FR. 6-46367
AMERQCAN EXPRESS CFQFDIT CARIIJQ HONORELY
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372-0406
Compliments of
VANN TRANSFER Q
STORAGE CO., INC
Complete Moving Service
For I:I1e 3641 in Life Insurance
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL
We encouroge you To compore The new cosT record ond The
conTrocT provisions of This IO7 yeor old, 4V2 billion dollor Tinonciorl
insTiTuTion. IT moy sove you Thousonds of dollors To leorn why
nearly holf of oll new insuronce purchoised yeor oTTer yeor is
purchosed by our exisTing policyowners coming bock Tor more.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL PHONE 378-1774
BILL CASH GARY FROID
505 S.W. 28Th ST. 2100 FirsT Avenue N.
Gainesville, Florida ST. Petersburg, Florida
"THERE IS A DIFFERENCE .....
AND THE DIFFERENCE GROWS"
123
CUNGRATULATIONS
CLASS 0F 1965
THIRSTY GATOR
IB API
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”
Suggestions in the University of Florida College of Medicine - Retrospectroscope Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) collection:
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