Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1935

Page 1 of 241

 

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 241 of the 1935 volume:

I IMLLW 52 'usd' , fufl - r- - :rg ' e Ka - . ,Q ,J SM. P f' fra? . VN- ,yi-n cl4 1 11-1- - Q. 41 4 ,ja-49 EQQNAUQ xif' -fxfgfs ! 4 ff '50 fl A572539 U, MM ' 5521155 if T-MQ TLT 15 LA a f X NK'QL Sa..-'.i.'i n I ox MAP snowuve THE LJORXD MADE DXSTRIBUUON OF THE DRv65 NHTERIH IWEDICH TAT XN-THflPx NATIVE HHS. 5 FEC' NNCNXKKV 96 5 T mx U 1. v A S 5,11 1 U. fa' 4 I 'Q . 0 , s . . 1,' T1 '1 . , I 4 . x ' ' ' 1 9 L5 I' In I O 4'- 5 w X A !.,Ll. 'Y' o i. Ji. , 4 . ,U-i ',.z ' . 1. . ln I Yah,-'If 4a ' .VI '- 4 f . 1 I xix' I W W--,,. J Wilt' 4 , ., 1 1 . I1,' , I 018. s ,' .1- ? '1 'f.: '...fu' 9 I .ll f N fr .5 ifyq 'gg . f . s . 'qv . - v im r I- 4,1 . --I .--l1 if Copyright 1935 M. P. Thomas, Editor-in-Chief L. B. Thomas. Business Manager 90 4 -q. V' - ' ' r Y V4 K, 'V I-519 .Ov Y n. 3 U 9 N., Y nifpf pu eb 9 - . J ' 1 4 1 . P l 1 v o n '- Muni . lf1e 1 ' w ' ,W V . xl , I 4 7. . I. 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I-,yew U ' K e 5 :wma - 'B , i-If JV- x : 4 1 'Dwi Fig' 1:-fr Ap , .'--Af' 'Q Af, '- . x -. -' X ' -4 'eff' 4 ,gl-, 1'f' 73,-K., ,nl I ' n lzllylxvl t' , 4 , , 1' y If ilfqfg 4 ' x 4 1 f M 4 , 4 1 ' v THE MEDIC 1935 ex fb' G.-1 FN 2447. 519 26 if VX .-vm fr E Tl 3- 5- I 5 E F- 2 1 - A 1-1 2 'S T' ?: LII s'. a l Lx am, - gay Q -5, 1.8 Q . f , A X ,. X 'mf r LQ .XX-N I A sql THE HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE OF PHILADELPHIA WE, THE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND THIRTY - FIVE AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATE THIS VOLUME TO HARRY MARTIN EBERHARD FOR HIS KEEN INTEREST IN OUR WELFARE AS STUDENTS FOR HIS ADMIRABLE KNOWLEDGE OF GASTRO-ENTEROLOGY FOR HIS SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO MEDICAL PROBLEMS 6 HARRY MARTIN EBERHARD, M.A., M.D 7 OfQWOf As this year marks the commemoration of a century of Homeopathic medical education in the Western Hemisphere, our interest and atten- tion turns again to the scholar whose genius gave to the World a system of therapeutics. The art Work in this volume is our humble attempt to strengthen our association with Samuel I-lahnemann. Our hope is that We, as practitioners of medicine, may see the concepts of disease and the use of therapeutic agents, as presented by Samuel l-lahnemann, made ever clearer as the years roll on by the medical language of the time, and that the effective tools he gave us be made more effective by a better knowledge of their use. ORDER OF BOOKS COLLEGE Administration FEATURES CLASSES Fourth Year Third Year Second Year First Year ORGANIZATIONS Fraternities Activities THE CELESTIAL SU RGEON If I have falterea' more or less In my great task of happinessg If I have moved among my race Alnel shown no glorious faeeg If beams from happy human eyes Have mowed me notg if morning skies, Books, ana' my food, and summer rain Knockea' on my sullen heart in vain: Loral, thy most pointed pleasure take Alncl stab my spirit broarl awakeg Or, Loral, if too obclurate I, Choose thou, before that spirit alie, A piercing pain, a killing sin, dna' to my cleaa' heart run them in. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON 10 COLLEGE sam.: Hummmm-from naming by umm umm Collbbtibn of Calvin Kwerr, M.D. EIDBJJOD THE CELESTIAL SURGEON lf I have faltererl more or less In my great task of liappiuessg lf I have moved among my race ,flml shown no glorious faceg If beams from happy human eyes Have moved me notg if morning skies, Books, anrl my food, ana' summer rain Ixnzorked on my sullen heart in vain: lunffl, fliy most poinzfecl pleasure take Jud slab my spiril broad awaleeg Ur, Lord, if too obrlurate I, Choose thou, before that spirit die, A piercing pain, a killing sin, find to my dead heart run them in. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON shvi ,nsilimonlall ainnlsihl yamaha!! Q6 dscitu-Sufi M011-nnwmailaix fsualii .CLK ,TTNYX lfiirlufb X6 163355505 10 5 v w T, ,-'1 I ' nun flxx .' ,-,n, : 1,17-'M A ,04'-I , 'lf Q 1, . pf--eral ' '-Zffn ,.1 .U Q 1 w. tv 'Vi . f.,v'l . 7, YL. 5.11, x lx . I' rf1f:'w'r' ' ,,:A ,U-If .. v., 4 , s' -hw., 'J,' 'K lr V f ' .W,',- if .Q N. ,gp .. , ,- . -f wx ! .r-EJ' . yn. '- X wi' nk, . f w 0 x I au' 5, ,. vL'M.x. . ,. . V, , , ,. , ,4f.. ,. . ' U, L v. ,. ,M 1,-1 if -N NJ. ,mr- 'y ,v,.. .' V' QI '1-Q ,.,. fry. . 4,.. ygf, ,.f '. 'A.L.2 '. 55 Q! 1'-Ff 7 gn , 1. 1 . .' - ' M ' 1il . - 5' '4 ,., -'- , ,4 ' ' , , '.'-' N .. ,-Y, Y. , wg , 3 ,. 'N , . .1 ,4 W. ,-., -f.-'qlmt ,. ., - N V , Q W I .-'- -N' I 'N ffffg' , 1 ,JW .,, . . WV L .N . ' , , f,'U',Q.2,EQE 1 W ' - .2 . , .','-xt. ' IU -HQ' L ' l ' .. , . ' ' -,.' 1. 1' . 'X- fr ' ' ' ' nv' , ' - 71 ' limb , ., F ,.l VT: A 'L . I I' fs 4 - A I -A . dl' ' 'WX L 1 I .n 3, . . , ,. 1. ,M .1 ,-. ' . . .., li,-.. A 3 A ll Il Il Il IT is ll HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL E' , 31 P ' I Tl: V' Q-- ' y zzf., .- ,. , 1 , 1 v-Q., . 'SQ -QQ, wb? .. COLLEGE BUILDING 13 I, '!.'x:1z:1: A.. -N41 N EUROLOGY DISPENSARY DERMATOLOGY DISPENSARY 14 EAR DISPENSARY T v., NOSE AND THROAT DISPENSARY 15 THE 1935 GENITO-URINARY DISPENSARY pam DELIVERY ROOM 16 VIEDI' SURGICAL AMPHITHEATRE SURGICAL AMPHITHEATRE 17 15 b i 'R , Q 'I T , QV' WOMAN'S MEDICAL WARD PEDIATRICS SOLARIUM 18 IVIEDIC BOARD ROOM N RUFUS B. WEAVER MUSEUM 19 THE 1935 ALLENTOWN STATE HOSPITAL MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL fSecond and Luzerne Streets! 20 HERING HALL LOUNGE HERIN G HALL ASSEMBLY . . HAHNEMANN TENNIS COURTS AND ATHLETIC FIELD TENNIS And yet again, our very good friend, The Dean, of quick conception and easy delivery, has conceived and delivered himself of another project in his drive toward a Greater Hahnemannu. Last year he presented us with Hering Hall to serve as an indoor recreation center. Once again, our man of quick conception has conceived. This time the Dean delivered himself of nothing short of an athletic field. His labor was evidently precipitated, because he was not able to get any closer to the Hospital than Twentieth and Callowhill. Two excellent tennis courts, a cinder track, and a miscellaneous field form the latest addition to The Hahnernann Campus. Ed Zwergel and his Student Council placed the courts in charge of Charles Dotterer, who rounded up a tennis team and arranged an Inter-Medic League schedule. Penn, Temple, and leff Medicos were played in return matches, as were several local pre-professional schools. These new courts will not only promise an outlet for the suppressed desire of undergraduates, but The Hahnernann Hospital internes and staff doctors may cultivate the body beautiful here, too. Seriously, Dean Pearson deserves the sincere appreciation of every Son of Hahnemann. His efforts are tireless, his interest endless, and his generosity unfailing. For all this, we thank him. 22 ADMINISTRATION ' -4 - 'rr-In 193 TRUSTEES PRESIDENT CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD LOUIS I. KOLB, B.S., LL.D. CHARLES D. BARNEY, M.A. EoAED OF TRUSTEES CHARLES D. BARNEY IOHN GRIBBEL LOT BOARDMAN THOMAS G. HAWKES GIDEON BOERICKE LOUIS I. KOLB I. WARNER BUTTERWORTH PHILIP C. SNOW WILLIAM H. CLAYTON FREDERIC H. STRAWBRIDGE, IR. IOSEPH S. CON'VV'ELL FREDERIC I. von RAPP A. E. FREEMAN WILLIAM WALLACE GRANVILLE WORRELL 2nd The Board of Trustees of The Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital of Philadelphia extends to the Class of 1935 hearty congratulations on success- fully completing the course in Homeopathic Medicine at Hahnemann. The Board has observed with sympathetic interest and pleasure the progress the members of the Class have made in their medical education, and feels they have acquired knowledge that will enable them successfully to meet the many difficult and important roles that confront physicians, as well as up- holding and lending added dignity and honor to the traditions of their Alma Mater and Homeopathy. I The Board Wishes for each member of the Class of 1935 the greatest possible success in his professional career and that the applied knowledge so arduously obtained will alleviate the suffering of the sick and injured. PHILIP C. SNOW, Secretary. 24 ginnrc COLONEL LOUIS I. KOLB. B.S.. LL.D 25 DEAN'S MESSAGE HE CLASS OF 1935 represents the development of one hundred years of formal Homeopathic education. The first Homeopathic Medical College in the world was organized in Allentown on April 10, 1835. Dr. Constantine Hering, who has been called The American Hahnemann , was active in the organization of The Academy of the Homeopathic Healing Art in 1835 and The Hahnemann Medical College in 1848. His ideal of a comprehensive knowledge of all branches of medicine as well as a thorough knowledge of Homeopathy still prevails. Each member of our splendid faculty has made personal sac- rifices and spent numerous hours to give the Class of 1935 the best information in modern medicine. lt is impossible to compute the amount of expert medical service that will be rendered by this class, but it may be stated with confidence that many precious lives will be saved and thousands of men, women, and children materially assisted. 9.2 26 'rr-is 193-I 4 1 I 1- l 5 WILLIAM A. PEARSON, Dean 27 1' ' l-I' ' 'ras 193 IN MEMORIAM Dr. Arthur Hartley has passed on'to a well- earned reward. He was a faithful friend and teacher and during his association with Hahenmann was always keenly interested in all the various activities of the hospital, not only as a surgeon, but as a mem- ber of the various committees for the development of hospital service. He gave the poor and needy the same gentle expert care and attention as he did those in the best of financial condition. Nor did he fail to continue this service in spite of his own failing physical condition. ln the College his kindly man- ner, his dignity and his careful teaching endeared him to the student body. May he find rest and reward with the Great Physician to whom he has gone . Under the wide and starry sky, Dig the grave and let me lie. Glad did I live and gladly die, And I laid me down with a will. This be the verse you grave for me: 'Here he lies where he longed to beg Home is the sailor, home from the sea, And the hunter home from the hil1'. 28 QIEDIC ARTHUR HARTLEY, M.D., F.A.C.S. ARTHUR HARTLEY, M.D., F.A.C.S. University of Pennsylvania M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1898 Chairman. Anatomical Bureau ot the State ot Pennsylvania American College of Surgeons County and State Homeopathic Medical Societies American Institute of Homeopathy American Medical Association Germantown Club Executive Committee. Hahnemann Medical College Advisory Committee, Hahnemann Hospital Phi Alpha Gamma Union League Professor of Applied Anatomy and Head ot the Department ot Anatomy Associate Professor of Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Surgeon to St. Luke's and Children's Homeo- pathic Hospital Surgeon to Women's Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Surgeon to Delaware County Hospital 29 SAMUEL W. SAPPINGTON, M.D.. F.A.C.P M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1897 Fellow American College ot Physicians Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia Pathological Society American Association oi Immunologists American Society of Clinical Pathologists Society of American Bacteriologists Protessor and Head of the Department of Path- ology and Bacteriology Pathologist to Hahnemann Hospital Physician to Hahnemann Hospital HERBERT L. NORTHROP. M.D.. M.A.. F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1889 American College of Surgeons Hahnemann Medical Club Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia County Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Professor and Head of the Department of Surgery Surgeon-in-Chief to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Surgeon to Abington Memorial Hospital Consulting Surgeon to Pitkin Memorial Hospital Cousulting Surgeon to McKinley Hospital Consulting Surgeon to Crozer Hospital Consulting Surgeon to Women's Homeopathic Hospital f Ll lf -ee 4 . . IOHN EDWIN IAMES., IR., M.D.. F.A.C.S. B.S., University ot Pennsylvania. 1899 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1902 American College ot Surgeons American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Obstetrical Society Hahnemann Club American Institute of Homeopathy Professor and Head of the Department ot Obstetrics Chief Obstetrician of Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Obstetrician Crozer Hospital Consulting Gynecologist of Wilmington Homeo- pathic Hospital WILLIAM A. PEARSON, Ph.C.. Ph.D.. Sc.D.. M.D. Ph.C. University ot Michigan. 1900 Ph.D.. University ot Michigan. 1902 Sc.D., La Salle College, 1926 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1915 American Chemical Society American Pharmaceutical Association American Association ot Clinical Research American Institute ot Homeopathy Research Chemist. Parke-Davis. 1900-1904 Professor ot Chemistry. Ferris Institute. Big Rapids. Michigan. 1904-1906 Professor and Head ot the Department ot Chem istry. 1905 Dean. Hahnemann Medical College, 1913 HARRY S. WEAVER, SR., M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1892 Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Professor and Head of the Department of Laryngology, Rhinoloqy, Ophthalmology and Otology Laryngologist to Hahnemann Hospital FRANK H. WIDMAN, M.D. University ot Pennsylvania M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1893 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Assistant in Biology, 1899-1900 Pi Upsilon Rho Lecturer on Embryology, 1900-1909 Professor of Embryology, 1909-1912 Demonstrator ot Physiology, 1902-1909 Lecturer on Physiology, 1910-1911 Associate Professor of Physiology, 1912-1913 Professor and Head of the Department oi Physiology, 1913 Registrar, Hahnemann Medical College CHARLES SIGMUND RAUE. M.D. University of Pennsylvania M.D.. Hahnemann Madical College, 1895 Philadelphia Pediatric Society American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Professor and Head of the Department of Pediatrics Physician to Children, I-Iahnemann Hospital Consulting Physician to St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Physician to Women's Homeopathic Hospital Head of Department ot Pediatrics St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital LEON T. ASHCHAFT. Ph.B.. A.M., M.D., F.A.C.S. Ph.B., Dickinson College, 1887 A.M.. Dickinson College, 1890 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1890 A.M.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1931 Pi Upsilon Rho American College ot Surgeons Professor and Head ot the Department ot Urology Urologist to Hahnemann Hospital Urologist to Women's Homeopathic Hospital Urologist to Broad Street Hospital Urologist to West Iersey Hospital EDWARD A. STEINHILBER, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1909 Phi Alpha Gamma Professor and Head of the Department of Neurology and Psychiatry Associate Professor ot Histology and Embryol- ogy, 1914-1925 Neurologist to Hahnemann Hospital ------- r-1 vvv 1 :ir 3 ,,,--, 4 HARRY MARTIN EBERHARD, M.A., M.D. M.D.. I-Iahnemann Medical College, 1898 Boas Polyclinic-Berlin Post-Graduate work-University ot Berlin Pi Upsilon Rho Germantown Medical Club Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ot Homeopathy FELLOW-National Society for the Advance- ment of Gastroenterology Philadelphia County Medical Society ASSOCIATE-American College ot Physi- cians FELLOW-American Medical Society Professor and Head of the Department of Gas- troenterology Gastroenteroloqist to Broad Street Hospital Consulting Gastroenteroloqist to Women's Hos- pital. Philadelphia Physician to Hahnemann Hospital G. HARLAN WELLS, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. B.S., University of Delaware, 1898 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1902 Sc.D., University of Delaware, 1934 Pi Upsilon Rho American College of Physicians Former President American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Professor and Head of the Department of Medi- cine Physician-in-Chief to Hahnemann Hospital Physician-in-Chief to Abington Hospital Consulting Physician to the Woman's Homeo- pathic Hospital, the West Iersey Homeopathic Hospital, the Crozer Hospital GAHTH WILKINSON BOERICKE. M.D. University of California M.D., University of Michigan, 1908 Alpha Sigma Past President-American Institute of Homeopathy President-Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medi- cal Society Professor and Head of the Department of Materia Medica and Therapeutics Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Director of Hering Laboratory GILBERT I. PALEN, M.D., l .A.C.S. M.D.,Hahnemann Medical College, 1895 Germantown Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association Professor of Otoloqy EARL B. CRAIG. M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahemann Medical College M.D., Ietterson Medical College. 1908 American College of Surgeons Member of American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology Philadelphia Obstetrical Society Professor and Head of the Department oi Gyne cology Gynecologist to Hahnemann Hospital IACOB WILLIAM FRANK. M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1905 Radiologic Society of North America American Roentgen Ray Society Philadelphia Medical Club Aesculiapian Medical Club Germantown Medical Club Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Medical Society ot Eastern Delaware County Professor oi Roentgenology Roentgenologist to Hahnemann Hospital Roentgenologist to St. Luke's and Children's Hospital RALPH BERNSTEIN, M.D.. F.A.C.P. M.D.. University ot Pennsylvania. 1903 M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1904 Pi Upsilon Rho American College of Physicians Society of Forensic Medicine American Medical Authors Association Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ol Homeopathy Professor and Head ot the Department of Derma tology Dermatologist to Hahnemann Hospital FRANK C. BENSON, IR., ILM., M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1894 A.M., Hahnemann Medical College, 1925 F.A.C.S., 1922 Pi Upsilon Rho Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Pan-American Medical Association American College ol Surgeons Professor of Radiology, Hahnemann Medical College Radioloqist, Hahnemann Hospital IOHN A. BORNEMAN, P.D. P.D.. Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1902 Pi Upsilon Rho Professor of Pharmacy P E. T V' FRANK O. NAGLE, A.M.. M.D. University of Pennsylvania M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1907 University of Breslau, Vienna Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Germantown Medical Club Professor of Ophthalmology Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hospital Associate in Ophthalmological Pathology IOHN A. BROOKE. M.D.. I .A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1896 American College of Surgeons Philadelphia Homeopathic Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Society American Institute of Homeopathy American Medical Association American Academy of Orthopedic Surgery Professor of Orthopedic Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Chief of Orthopedic Department at Hahnemann Hospital Chief of Orthopedic Department at St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital Chief of Orthopedic Department at Broad Street Hospital Chief of Orthopedic Department at West Iersey Homeopathic Hospital Chief of Orthopedic Department Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital 1 WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D.. F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1907 M.D., Ieflerson Medical College, 1908 Phi Alpha Gamma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Pathological Society ol Philadelphia Professor of Anatomy Associate Professor ol Surgery Associate in Surgical Pathology Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Surgeon-in-Chief to Abington Memorial Hospital Surgeon to St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital WILLIAM RENDELL WILLIAMS, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1902 Philadelphia County Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy American Medical Association Professor of Clinical Medicine Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Physician. West Chester Homeopathic Hospital I WAYNE T. KILLIAN. B.S., M.D. B.S., Albright College, 1902 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1906 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association International Anesthetic Society Professor and Head ot the Department ot Anesthesia WARREN C. MERCER, M.D., F.A.C.S. Martin's Academy West Chester Normal School M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. l899 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ot Homeopathy Germantown Medical Society Clinical Research Society Academy ot the Fine Arts Pi Upsilon Rho Professor of Clinical Obstetrics Obstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital President ot The Statt ot Broad Street Hospital Chief Obstetrician to Broad Street Hospital Head ot Department ot Women ot St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospitals Consulting Obstetrician. Women's Homeopathic Hospital, West Chester Consultant, Homeopathic Hospitau and Crozer ol Chester. Pennsylvania Consultant, Mercy Hospital, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania w THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1916 Pi Upsilon Rho Professor oi Histology and Embryology Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology Assistant in Ophthalmological Pathology Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hospital THOMAS W. PHILLIPS. M.D. M.D., Hahnernann Medical College, 1916 University of Pennsylvania, 1923 St. Mark's, London. 1925 Post-Graduate Surgery Post-Graduate Proctology Pi Upsilon Rho Germantown Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Professor of Anatomy GUSTAVE A. VAN LENNEP, M.D., I-'.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1894 American College of Surgeons Germantown Medical Society Tri-County Medical Society Medical Club ot Philadelphia Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Clinical Professor of Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Surgeon. Allentown State Hospital Consulting Surgeon, Pottstown Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Surgeon, West Iersey Homeopathic Hospital DESIDERIO ROMAN, A.M.. M.D., F.A.C.S. A.M.. National College ol Granada. Nicaragua. 1889 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1893 American College ol Surgeons Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ol Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association Member ot the Pan-American Medical Asso- ciation Germantown Medical Society Clinical Professor of Surgery Guest Lecturer, History of Medicine Surgeon-in-Chief to St. Luke's and Children's Hospital Consulting Surgeon to Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital I HERBERT P. LEOPOLD, A.B., A.M.. M.D., F.A.C.S. A.B., Albright College. 1893 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1896 American Institute ot Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Clinical Professor o! Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Surgeon, Consulting Surgeon Hospital Consulting Surgeon Hospital Consulting Surgeon f 1 Allentown State Hospital Wilmington I-Iomeopathlc West Iersey Homeopathic Coatesville Hospital GEORGE HENRY BICKLEY. A.M.. M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1894 Union League Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ot Homeopathy Germantown Club Clinical Professor ol Gastrorflnterology Physician to Hahnemann Hospital IOSEPH V. F. CLAY, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1906 Alpha Sigma American College of Surgeons American Board of Oto-Laryngology Fellow of the American Medical Association Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania State Medical Society Philadelphia Society tor Clinical Research Clinical Proiessor of Otology Otologist to Hahnemann Hospital FRED W. SMITH, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1903 American College ot Surgeons Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American institute ot Homeopathy Clinical Professor oi Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngologist to Hahnemann Hospital Oto-Laryngologist to Abington Memorial Hospital Consulting Oto-Laryngologist to Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Oto-Laryngologist to West Chester Homeopathic Hospital 5 P r LEON CLEMMER. M.D.. F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1912 American College of Surgeons Surgeon U. S. N. B. F. Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Medical Club ol Philadelphia Germantown Medical Society Association of Military Surgeons Clinical Professor ol Obstetrics Senior Obstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital JOSEPH MCELDOWNEY, M.D. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1905 Alpha Sigma American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Clinical Professor ot Medicine Clinical Professor of Physical Diagnosis Physician to Hahnemann Hospital IAMES D. SCHOFiELD, M.D.. F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1902 Associate in Post-Graduate School, University oi Pennsylvania Fellow American Proctologic Society Clinical Professor oi Proctology Proctologist, St. Luke's and Children's Homeo- pathic Hospital Consulting Proctologist, Montgomery Hospital. Norristown, Pa. BENIAMIN K. FLETCHER. Ph.G., M.D. Ph.G., Philadelphia College ot Pharmacy, 1888 M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1895 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute oi Homeopathy Germantown Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Pediatric Society Clinical Professor oi Pediatrics Physician to Children. Hahnemann Hospital 1 DONALD R. FERGUSON, A.B., M.D., F.A.C.P. A.B., Swarthmore College. 1912 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1916 Kappa Sigma Alpha Sigma American College of Physicians American Institute oi Homeopathy Pennsylvania State Medical Society Philadelphia County Medical Society Germantown Medical Society Captain, Medical Corps, U. S. Army Clinical Professor of Medicine Electrocardiographer Assistant Visiting Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Electrocardiographer to Women's Homeopathic Hospital Cardiologist to Children's and St. Luke's Hospital Visiting Physician to Broad Street Hospital HENRY IRVIN KLOPP. Sc.D., M.D., 1-'.A.C.P. Palatinate tAlbrightl College Sc.D., Muhlenberg College, 1927 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1894 Pi Upsilon Rho Lehigh Valley Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy American Psychiatric Association Philadelphia Psychiatric Association American College of Physicians Clinical Professor ot Mental Diseases Superintendent, Allentown State Hospital C. DUDLEY SAUL, M.D. Temple University M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1901 Alpha Sigma American Institute oi Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Germantown Medical Society Clinical Professor of Medicine Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Physician, Allentown State Hospital Chief ot Medicine Staff, St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital E. ROLAND SNADER. IR., B.S., M.D.. l .A.C.P. B.S., Haverford College. 1917 M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College Fellow ot the American College of Physicians Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ol Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association Germantown Medical Society Main Line Branch ot Montgomery County Medical Society Philadelphia Heart Association American Heart Association Society for the Study of Internal Secretions Philadelphia Metabolic Association American Association ot the History of Medicine Clinical Professor of Medicine Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Physician to Allentown State Hospita LINNAEUS E. MARTER, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1896 M.D., Medico-Chirurgical College, 1902 American College of Surgeons Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association Germantown Homeopathic Medical Society Clinical Professor oi Laryngology and Rhinology Larnygologist to Hahnemann Hospital Oto-Laryngologist to Roxborough Memorial Hospital lAMES H. MINES GODFREY, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1904 M.D., lefterson Medical College, 1908 Alpha Sigma State Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical American Institute oi Homeopathy Clinical Professor ot Anesthesia Society I. ANTRIM CRELLIN, B.S., M.D. B.S., Hahnemann Medical College, 1923 M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1925 Phi Alpha Gamma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Delaware County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society Eastern Delaware County Medical Society American Medical Association American Heart Association Clinical Chief of the Medical Out-Patient Department CHARLES B. HOLLIS, M.D.. F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1912 University of Vienna Alpha Sigma Medical Club ot Philadelphia Germantown Medical Society American Institute ot Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society American College ot Surgeons Clinical Professor ol Larynqoloqy and Rhinoloqy Larynqologist to Hahnemann Hospital Consultant, Ear, Nose, and Throat. St. Luke's and Chiidren's Hospital Consultant in Nose and Throat. Allentown State Hospital Consultant in Otology, Institute for Deaf. Trenton. New Iersey THE 1935 WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER. M.D.. F.A.C.S. University oi Pennsylvania M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1895 State Senator American College of Surgeons Associate Professor of Urology Urologist to Hahnemann Hospital FRED C. PETERS, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1911 Alpha Sigma Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology Ophthalmaloqist to Hahnemann Hospital Instructor in Ophthalmological Pathology Ophthalmologist to Allentown State Hospital Chief Ophthalmologist to St. I.uke's and Childre Homeopathic Hospital n's Manic ,H-,gr OTHMAH F. BARTHMAIER. M.D. St. Ioseph's College M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1906 Post-Graduate Study. University oi Vienna Rockefeller Institute, New York City Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute oi Homeopathy Pathological Society of Philadelphia Captain Medical Corps U. S. A. Associate Professor of Pathology Pathologist to St. I.uke's and Children's Hospital IOHN L. REDMAN. M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1896 Philadelphia Medical Society Pennsylvania Medical Society American Institute Homeopathy Germantown Medical Society President Physicians' Motor Club Philadelphia Pediatrics Society Associate Professor ot Pediatrics Physician to Children. Hahnemann Hospital Physician to Children, St. Luke's and Children's Hospital THE 1932 I. LEWIS VAN TINE, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1893 Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute oi Homeopathy Associate Professor of Materia Medica WILLIAM I. TOMLINSON, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1903 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Germantown Homeopathic Medical Society Associate Proiessor of Obstetrics Senior Obstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital 'MEDI C I AUBREY B. WEBSTER, A.B.. M.D.. F.A.C.S. A.B., Acadia University, 1898 M.D., Boston University, 1902 Alpha Sigma American College oi Surgeons Union League Germantown Club Associate Professor oi Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Surgeon to St. Luke's and Children's Homeo- pathic Hospitals IOSEPH SAMUEL HEPBURN, A.B.. A.M., B.S., in Chemistry: M.S.. Ph.D.. M.D. A.B.. Central High School of Philadelphia. 1903 A.M., Central High School ot Philadelphia. 1908 B.S., in Chemistry, University oi Pennsylvania. 1907 ' Ph.D., Columbia University,19l3 M.S.. University of Pennsylvania. 1907 Edward Longstreet Medal oi Merit ol Franklin Institute, 1911 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1934 Pi Upsilon Rho American Institute oi Homeopathy lHonorary Associate Member! American Society of Biological Chemists American Chemical Society Franklin Institute Academy ol Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Physiological Society of Philadelphia Associate Professor ot Chemistry In Charge ot Basal Metabolism, and Secretary of Staff. Women's Homeopathic Hospital Associate in Gastrointestinal and Metabolic Diseases, Broad Street Hospital I , 1 1 I THE1939: FRANK IOSEPH FROSCH, M.D. St. Peter's Academy M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1907 M.D., Iefierson Medical College, 1908 Phi Alpha Gamma Philadelphia Medical Society Pennsylvania Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Medical Association Associate Professor of Gynecology Demonstrator in Gynecologic Pathology Gynecologist to Allentown State Hospital Gynecologist to Hahnemann Hospital IOSEPH CHANDLER, A.B.. Ph.D. A.B.. Colby College. 1909 Ph.D., Iohns Hopkins University, 1912 Delta Upsilon Phi Beta Kappa American Chemical Society Captain, Chemical Warfare Reserve Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University of Louisville, 1912-1914 Instructor and Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Tufts College. 1914-1919 Instructor and Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, 1921-1926 Associate Professor of Chemistry, Hahnemann Medical College, 1927 1 MEDICQ ' EVERETT A. TYLER, Ph.B., M.D. Ph.B., Syracuse University, 1910 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1913 American Institute of Homeopathy American Medical Association Philadelphia Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society -Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society International Anesthesia Research Society International Association of Anesthetists New York Society of Anesthetists Eastern Society of Anesthetists Phi Gamma Delta Alpha Sigma Free and Accepted Masons Associate Professor oi Anesthesia Anesthetist to Hahnemann Hospital Chief, Department ot Anesthesia, St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospitals l HARRY F. HOFFMAN. M.D. University ol Bullalo M.D., Hahnemann Medical Colleqe. 1910 ' Pi Upsilon Rho Psi Omega Associate Professor oi Mental Diseases Lecturer in Psychiatry, Lafayette College Lecturer in Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene. Lehigh University Assistant Superintendent and Clinical Director Allentown State Hospital W 4 THE 193-5 CARROLL F. HAINES, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1919 National, State, and County Homeopathic Medical Societies Germantown Homeopathic Medical Society O. O. and L. Society Union League Alpha Sigma Aronomink Golf Club Philadelphia Rotary Club Engineers Club Woodbury Country Club Associate Professor of Otology IOSEPH R. CRISWELL. M.D. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1913 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society American Medical Association Associate Professor of Otology Assistant Otologist to Hahnemann Hospital Chief of Department of Rhinoloqy, Laryngoloqy and Otoloqy, Women's Homeopathic Hospital li-EDIC GEORGE LORENZ. IR.. B.S., M.D. B.S., Hahnemann Medical College. 1923 M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1924 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy American Medical Association American Society for the Advancement of Gastro-Enterology Associate Professor ot Gastroenterology IOHN C. SCOTT. A.B., Ph.D. A.B., University ol Montana, 1923 Ph.D.. University ot Pennsylvania, 1929 American Psychological Association Associate Professor ol Physiology THE193-E NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemcmn Medical College, 1919 Alpha Sigma Fellow American College of Surgeons Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association Philadelphia Obstetrical Society Associate Professor of Obstetrics CHARLES l. V. FRIES. M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1912 Post-Graduate School, University ot Pennsylvania. 1914 Post-Graduate School. University ot Vienna, 1925 Phi Alpha Gamma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia County Medical Society American Medical Association Associate Professor of Ophthalmology Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hospital Ophthalmologist to Women's Homeopathic Hospital I ED IC HENRY S. RUTH, B.S., M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1928 Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Germantown Medical Society Philadelphia County Medical Society American Medical Association Association ot Anesthetists of U. S. and Canada Anesthetist Travel Club of America International Anesthetist Research Society Eastern Society of Anesthetists American Society of Regional Anesthesia Associate Prolessor of Anesthesia Anesthetist to Hahnemann Hospital Chief of Division of Anesthesia, Philadelphia General Hospital Anesthetist to Broad Street Hospital Anesthetist to Chiidren's and St. Luke's Hospital CHARLES I. WHITE, B.S., M.D. B.S., Hahnemann Medical College, 1923 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1923 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute ot Homeopathy Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association Associate Professor ot Physical Diagnosis - p :rr-us: 193 FACULTY ROLL PROFESSORS PAUL C. WITTMAN, M.D. ................................ Clinical Professor in Dermatology WILLIAM B. GRIGGS, M.D. .... ........ C linical Professor in Pediatrics IAMES B. BERT, M.D. .............. ......... A ssociate Professor in Obstetrics GEORGE D. GECKLER, M.D. .................................. Associate Professor in Medicine ASSOCIATES I. MILLER KENWORTHY, M.D. ................................................ Associate in Urology I. HARWOOD CLOSSEN, 3rd, M.D. ..... ........ A ssociate in Materia Medica CHARLES L. W. RIEGER, M.D. ...... .......... A ssociate in Roentgenology IOHN W. READING, IR., M.D. ....... ....................... A ssociate in Pediatrics GEORGE R. NEFF, M.D. .......... .......... A ssociate in Nervous Diseases E. PAUL KITCHIN, M.D. ..... ........ A ssociate in Ophthalmology WILLIAM I. RYAN, M.D. .............. ........ A ssociate in Ophthalmology MARION W. BENIAMIN, M.D. ...... ........ A ssociate in Ophthalmology H. FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, M.D. ..... ........ A ssociate in Ophthalmology THOMAS F. MALEY, M.D. ..................... ........ A ssociate in Ophthalmology GRANT O. FAVORITE, M.D., F.A.C.P. ............................ Associate in Pathology CARROLL R. MCCLURE, M.D. ................ Associate in Histology and Embryology HARRY S. WEAVER, IR., M.D. ............................ Associate in Ophthalmology N. VOLNEY LUDWICK, M.D. ........ .............. A ssociate in Radiology IOHN I. MCKENNA, M.D. ..... ......... A ssociate in Roentgenology ALFRED E. KRICK, M.D. ...... .......... A ssociate in Roentgenology H. RUSSELL FISHER, M.D. .................................. ........... A ssociate in Pathology LECTURERS NATHAN GRIFFITH, LL.B. ..... ........................ L ecturer on Medical Iurisprudence WILLIAM F. BAKER, M.D. ..... ........ L ecturer on Non-Pharmacal Therapeutics DAVID W. HORN, Ph.D. ..... ........................................... L ecturer on Hygiene RICHARD W. LARER, M.D. .................................... Lecturer on Industrial Medicine CLARENCE L. SI-IOLLENBERGER, M.D., F .A.C.S. .............. Lecturer on Anatomy ALBERT MUTCH, M.D. ........................................................ Lecturer on Obstetrics WILLIAM G. SCI-IMIDT, Ph.D., Lecturer on Bio-Physics and Physical Chemistry THOMAS L. DOYLE, M.D. ........................................ Lecturer on Plastic Surgery 62 MED-IC FACULTY ROLL tconnnuedt WILLIAM L. MARTIN, M.D. .......... ....... L ecturer on Operative Surgery DESIDERIO A. ROMAN, M.D. ..... .............. ....... L e cturer on Obstetrics RICHARD R. GATES, M.D. ................ .......... L ecturer on Obstetrics EDWIN O. GECKLER, M.D., F.A.C.S. ...... .......... L ecturer on Surgery FRANK E. BRISTOL, M.D. ................. ................. L ecturer on Surgery EUGENE H. PAYNE, M.D. ...................... ......... L ecturer on Pharmacology DUNNE W. KIRBY, M.D., F.A.C.P. ....... ............... L ecturer on Medicine MORRIS FITERMAN, M.D. .................... . CHARLES D. FOX, M.D. .......... . ALOYSIUS I. BLAKELY, M.D. ......... . CARL C. FISCHER, M.D., A.A.C.P .......................... . ........Lecturer on Medicine ...........Lecturer on Pediatrics ...........Lecturer on Pediatrics ..............Lecturer on Pediatrics DEMONSTRATORS ROBERT M. HUNTER, M.D. ...................................... Dernonstrator oi Gynecology CHARLES F. KUTTEROFF, M.D. ..... ................ D emonstrator of Gynecology PAUL A. METZGER, M.D. ................................ Dernonstrator of Nervous Diseases RICHARD I. D. COYNE, M.D. ........ Demonstrator ot Laryngology and Rhinology I. CARL CRISWELL, D.D.S ..................................... Dernonstrator ot Dental Surgery LOWELL L. LANE, M.D., F.A.C.P. ....... .............. D emonstrator of Medicine THOMAS I. VISCHER, M.D. .......... .......... D emonstrator ot Medicine ROBERT A. HIBBS, M.D. .................................................. Dernonstrator oi Pediatrics INSTRUCTO RS N. FULMER HOFFMAN, M.D. .................................... ......... I nstructor in Surgery CHARLES F. LEONARD, M.D. ....... ......... I nstructor in Urology B. G. WALKER, M.D. .................................. ......... I nstructor in Urology EDWARD W. CAMPBELL, M.D., F.A.C.S ......... .......... I nstructor in Urology EDWIN HICKS, B.S. ................................... .............. I nstructor in Chemistry GEORGE I. RILLING, M.D. ...................... ........ . EUGENE F. CARPENTER, IR., M.D. ...... . THEODORE C. GEARY, M.D. ......... . RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D. .... . HUNTER S. COOK, M.D. ......... . ALBERT R. RIHL, IR., M.D. .... . 63 .Instructor in Rectal Diseases ..............Instructor in Surgery .........Instructor in Surgery .........lnstructor in Surgery ..........Instructor in Medicine .........Instructor in Obstetrics '1-Ht:'193 FACULTY ROLL tconnnuedt F. LAIRD KENNEDY, M.D. ...................... . .......Instructor in Obstetrics HIRAM FRANCIS SNIDER, B.S., M.S. ..... ..................... I nstructor in Chemistry DONALD T. IONES, M.D. ...................................... Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D., F.A.C.S. ............................ Instructor in Surgery WILLIAM Y. LEE, M.D. ............................... ....... I nstructor in Surgery JAMES A. SELIGMAN, M.D. ....... CHARLES C. THOMPSON, M.D. ...... ...... . HENRY L. SOMERS, M.D. .............. . EDWARD P. VAN TINE, M.D. ...... IULES I. KLAIN, M.D. ................... ....... . HENRY L. CROWTHER, M.D. .... . HENRY D. LAFFERTY, M.D. ........ . WILLIAM G. WOSNACK, M.D. ............................... . DAVID KAHN, M.D. ............................ Instructor in IOI-IN I. MCCUTCHEON, M.D ........... Instructor in Instructor in RAMON MCGRATH, M.D. ............... . RUSSELL D. GEARY, M.D. .... ........ I nstructor in Instructor in WILLIAM K. KISTLER, M.D. ............... . PAUL C. MOOCK, M.D. ..................................... . MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH, M.D. ..................... .............. . HOWARD S. BUSLER, M.D. ................ Instructor in LeROY W. FALKINBURG, M.D. .......................... ..... . MAXWELL F. WHITE, M.D. ..... . IOHN F. ROWLAND, M.D. .... . DAVID D. NORTHROP, M.D. ..... .................. . ERNEST L. ROSATO, M.D. ..... ....... . HARRY B. MARK, M.D. ........ ................................... . ASSISTANTS EDGAR M. BLEW, M.D. ........ .................................. . W. E. KEPLER, M.D. ......................... ....... . PASOUALE G. DAMIANI, M.D. ....... . LEANDER P. TORI, M.D. .......... . HENRY Cf. BLESSING, M.D ........ 64 . u....u.........- ..............Instructor in Surgery .Instructor in Rectal Diseases ........Instructor in Anesthesia ........Instructor in Anesthesia Instructor in Materia Medica ..........Instructor in Obstetrics .......Instructor in Obstetrics ..........Instructor in Obstetrics Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngology and Rhinology Instructor in Obstetrics .Instructor in Medicine Laryngology and Rhinology .........Instructor in Pathology ...........Instructor in Surgery .........Instructor in Anesthesia Instructor in Surgery Instructor in Rectal Diseases ............Instructor in Pediatrics .Assistant in Mental Diseases ..Assistant in Roentgenology ..............Assistant in Urology ........Assistant in Urology ........Assistant in Urology E 1-: in 1 c FACULTY ROLL fffontinuedl HORACE L. WEINSTOCK, M.D ........... ......... A ssistant in Urology WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, Ir., M.D. ..... ................. A ssistant in Urology L H. EARLE TWINING, M.D .............. EDMUND G. HESSERT, M.D ....... MICHAEL I. BENNETT, M.D ....... WILLIAM I. KUEMMEL, M.D ....... WALTER I. SNYDER, M.D .......... IAMES F. TOMPKINS, M.D ................... ROWLAND RICKETTS, A.M., M.D ....... . L. THOMAS SOOY, M.D ............................... THEODORE W. BATTAFARANO, M.D ....... WILLIAM W. YOUNG, M.D .................. SIGMUND S. LEWANDOWSKI, M.D ......... ARTHUR HIRSHORN, M.D .................. WILLIAM KLINMAN, M.D ............ WARREN H. HOENSTINE, M.D ......... HENRY D. STUARD, M.D .............. CHARLES E. LAWSON, M.D .......... HERBERT M. SI-IARKIS, M.D .......... ALFRED R. SERAPHIN, M.D ......... BRUCE V. MacFAYDEN, M.D ......... ROBERT F. ROTH, M.D .............. HARRY D. EVANS, M.D ........... FRANCIS M. IAMES, M.D .......... FREDERICK W. IARVIS, M.D. ..... . MICHELE VIGLIONE, M.D ............ GERALD A. FINCKE, M.D ........ HERMAN KLINE, M.D .................. I. RAVVLINS GINTI-IER, M.D .......... RUSSEL S. MAGEE, M.D ........... IOI-IN V. ALLEN, M.D .......... ELMER F. HERRING, M.D ....... PETER I. WARTER, M.D ......... KARL F. MAYER, M.D ....... 65 ..........Assistant in Dermatology .........Assistant in Gynecology .........Assistant in Gynecology .....................Assistant in Anatomy ....Assistant in Gastro-Enterology ....Assistant in Gastro-Enterology ,........Assistant in Gastro-Enterology ......Assistant in Nervous Diseases ..............Assistant in Physiology ........Assistant in Materia Medica ,........Assistant in Materia Medica Assistant in Otology ...........Assistant in Medicine ...........Assistant in Medicine .......Assistant in Medicine ...........Assistant in Medicine ...........Assistant in Medicine .........Assistant in Gynecology .........Assistant in Gynecology ............Assistant in Gynecology ..........Assistant in Roentgenology ..........Assistant in Physiology .........Assistant in Pediatrics .......Assistant in Medicine ...........Assistant in Medicine ........Assistant in Dermatology ...........Assistant in Dermatology .........Assistant in Materia Medica .........Assistant in Materia Medica ................Assistant in Obstetrics .......Assistant in Medicine .......Assistant in Medicine WALLACE KRATZ This is the young lady whose initials you see at the bottom of all the letters you receive from the Dean. It you are a graduate or a Senior, you may call her Clara- otherwise it is Miss Fisher. Although we may have grown a bit balder, a bit grayer, or a bit heavier in the last four years, Clara's manner and appearance are just the same as when we entered Hahne- mann. She has a word of friendly advice on all the affairs in the school. We will always remember the many kind- nesses that she has extended to us collectively and indi- vidually. MRS. MELITTA TURNER OUR FRIENDS Yes, we all know Wally. He is a tuition expert, a Hahnemann encyclopedia, and a generous benefactor of the student body. As evidence of the last-mentioned fact, we ask who has not received a match or an offer of a shirt from this kindly gentleman? The best part of any request we ever made of him was to listen to the gentle remarks which were emitted in response. We, as Seniors, are sorry to leave Wally. l-le has greeted us for four years with a smile or a word of advice when we needed it. We shall miss him as much as we shall miss the school. li we carry away only one pleasant memory, it will be of that curly-headed chap who lived in the cage . Ut .tn CLARA FISHER, A.B. Since the appointment of Mrs. Turner as College Librarian, many thousand volumes have become accessible to stu- dents and Faculty. lt is well said that to a library a mis- placed book is a lost book . Mrs. Turner is gradually turn- ing the chaos of these lost volumes into orderly and modernly catalogued shelves. One can little realize the vast amount of time and energy required to keep a library oi over 20,000 volumes in perfect running condition . For keeping good natured, smiling, and obliging throughout all her duties-our lone librarian has the admiration of students and Faculty. 66 F EAT U R ES Wllkwg, Samuel Hahnqmamo,-Plaster Plaque from the Collection of CSM WALLACE KRATZ This is the young lady Whose initials you see at ,the bottom of all the letters you receive from the Dean. If you are a graduate or a Senior, you may call her Clara- otherwise it is Miss Fisher. Although we may have grown a bit balder, a bit grayer. or a bit heavier in the last four years, Clara's manner and appearance are just the same as when we entered l-lahne- mann. She has a word of friendly advice on all the affairs in the school. Vlfe will always remember the many kind- ttezses tlxat me has extended to us collectively and indi- vidually. , , I M RS. MELITTA TURNER OUR FRIENDS Yes, we all know Wally. He is a tuition iexpert, a Hahne-mann encyclopedia, and a generous benefactor of the st de b dy. As evidence ol the last-mentioned tact, 463 not received a match or an offer of a El Sl UWTA L L l shir from this kindly gentleman? The best part of any request we ever made of him was to listen to the gentle remarks which were emitted in response. We, as Seniors, are sorry to leave Wally. He has greeted us for four years with c smile or a word of advice when we needed it. We shall miss htm as much as we shall miss the school. It we carry away only one pleasant memory, it will be of that curly-headed chap who lived in the cage . CLARA FISHER, A.B. Since the appointment of Mrs. Turner as College Librarian. many thousand volumes have become accessible to stu- dents and Faculty. It is well said that to a library a mis- placed book is a lost book . Mrs. Turner is gradually turn- ing the chaos of these lost volumes into orderly and modemly catalogued shelves. One can little realize- the vast amount of time and energy required to keep cz library of over 20,000 volumes in perfect running conclztzzrn . For keeping good natured, smiling. ana obliging tlzrcughout all her duties-our lone librarian has the admiration of students and Faculty. S00 silt mot-X, sispnlfl festwlfl-tnsrmrr-pn1laH lwmnZ 66 1' ' 5 6 A 'a 1 ul. 'J xi Kwflf R1 xv! 'vi , 1 L., V ?4 f ,x gr. bin-- L' -.. FI, 'rf-. 'sn . V wai- E-1'k.LL?tdM5 1.1 .I nhl' W1 N X 3 1 THE ONE HUNDRETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FOUNDING OF THE FIRST HOMEOPATHIC MEDICAL COLLEGE IN THE WORLD Nineteen hundred and thirty-five marks the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the first homeopathic medical college in the world. This enter- prise of such far-reaching importance can be appreciated best by an historical summary of events leading up to the establishment of the Allentown Academy in 1835. The introduction of homeopathy into the United States occurred in 1825 when Dr. Hans Burch Gram settled in New York City. Pennsylvania was the second state to embrace the new art of healing. Dr. Henry Detwiller came from Switzerland in 1817 and located at Allentown, Pennsylvania. ln the year 1825, Dr. William Wesselhoeft and Dr. Detwiller found themselves practicing near each other-Dr. Wesselhoeft at Bath, Pennsylvania, and Dr. Detwiller at Hellertown, which was twelve miles south of Bath. These two old-school doctors met frequently in both a social and a professional capacity, and at one of their meetings Dr. Wesselhoeft told his friend that his father and Dr. Stapf in Germany had sent him some books on homeopathy and a box of homeopathic drugs. He requested Dr. Detwiller to investigate this new system of healing. As it happened, Dr. Detwiller had at that time a baffling case of retarded menstruation with severe colic, and, upon careful study, Pulsatilla seemed to be indicated. This remedy he administered Iuly 24, 1828, which resulted in a complete cure. This was the first dose of homeopathic medicine to be prescribed in Pennsylvania. Further investigation of the Law of Similars by these two men convinced them of its basic truth, and soon they abandoned their allopathic practices entirely and devoted themselves wholly to homeopathy. An epidemic of dysentery in 1829 was handled so successfully by the new system that it impressed many old-school physicians and laymen in the vicinity of Allen- town. The phenomenal success of these doctors soon led many other physicians to embrace homeopathy, and it spread over the counties of Lehigh and Northampton. On August 23, 1834, the Homeopathic Society of Northampton and counties adjacent was organized by Doctors Wesselhoeft, Detwiller, Eberhard Freytag Cat this time sixty years oldl, of Bethlehem, Iohn Romig, Charles Becker, of Kreidersvillep Ioseph H. Pulte, who later founded a homeopathic college in Cincinnati, A. Bauer, I. C. Gosewitsch, and several clergymen. The object of this society was the advancement of homeopathy and the interchange of experiences. Even before this time, the leaders of this group of doctors realized the necessity for a school where pupils could be taught the new science and be fitted for its practice. They themselves had received a thorough medical education, but there soon appeared practitioners of homeopathy who had received no medical education at all, or at least a very meagre one, and this state of affairs brought ridicule upon the whole movement. Therefore, on December 30, 1833, Doctors Wesselhoeft, Detwiller and Romig met at the home of Dr. Constantine Hering, lll Vine Street, Philadelphia, and on Ianuary l, 1834-Hering's thirty-fifth birthday-they proposed and adopted a plan for The North American Academy of the Homeopathic Healing Art which was to be located at Allentown. Dr. Hering was elected its President and principal instructor. 67 ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY fCon+inuedj A stock company was formed to raise money for the purpose of purchasing a lot, erecting a building, and for the support of the institution. Subscribers from Allentown, Bethlehem, and New York, contributed to the cause, but a large proportion of the fund was raised in Philadelphia. A square in the center of Allentown bounded by Hamilton, Walnut, Fourth and Penn Streets was purchased, and in a short time plans were formulated for the erection of a main structure of a brick material, with two wings, each sixty by forty feet, and three stories high: and likewise another two-story brick building on Hamilton Street to be used as a chemical laboratory, anatomical and dissecting rooms. Also a botanical garden was stocked with official plants. The academy was thus founded on April 10, l835-Samuel Hahnemann's birthday. The corner stone was laid on May 27th of that year at which time Dr. Hering delivered the inaugural address in the German language on the subject A Few Words Concerning the Necessity and Usefulness of Home- cpathy . The contents of the box in the corner stone were: Hahnemann's Organon and picture: the constitution of the academy and corporation, printed in German and in English: the names of members of the academy household and the incorporators: I-lering's address: Philadelphia newspapers containing an account of homeopathy in Ohio: a copy of Freidenshate : a quantity of homeopathic medicine: the names of state and city officers, and a program of the celebration. By an Act of the Legislature of Pennsylvania at an extra session on june 17, 1836, the North American Academy of the Homeopathic Healing Art was incorporated. The faculty consisted of Hering, Proeses, Wesselhoeft, Detwiller, Freytag, and Romig. Later Dr. I. H. Pulte joined the faculty. The course of instruction was entirely in the German language, and extended from November lst to August 3lst. Preliminary examinations of students before matriculation were held by a committee of the faculty. The first six students to enroll were: Adolph Bauer, A. G. Schmidt, I. W. Baker, L. Ziegler, S. C. Gosewitsch and H. Okie. The high standard of the school is indicated by the comprehensive course of instruction which its founders considered necessary for the complete educa- tion of a physician. As indicated in the constitution of the academy, the following subjects were to be taught: Clinical instructions, examination of the sick and semeiotics: Pharmacodynamics and Materia Medica: Pharmaceutics and medical botany: special therapeutics, surgery and obstetrics: medical jurisprudence: general therapeutics: symptomatology and human pathology: physiology and anatomy: comparative anatomy and comparative physiology: zooloCJYi DhytoloQY Cbacteriologyl and mineralogy: chemistry, physics, geology, astronomy and mathematics: history of medicine and of natural sciences. Candidates for diplomas were required to pass an examination or Col- loquium and to present a Curriculum Vitae and a dissertation on medical subjects. Only those who had attended full courses and passed meritorious examinations in anatomy, physiology, pathology, materia medica, therapeu- tics, surgery, and obstetrics were entitled to a diploma. The final examinations were most rigid and thorough. The professors were graduates of German universities and examined candidates as searchingly as they themselves had been examined at home. Dr. Adolph Lippe said, The possession of an Allentown diploma is an honor to its holder as it was obtained only by worthy applicants. Many who tried to pass were rejected as incapable. Among the students of the academy were: Adolph Bauer, I. G. Schmidt, G. Beichhelm, I. C. Gosewitsch, Charles Haeseler, Major Fehrenthal, I. Geist, Edward Caspari, Adolph Caspari, Adolph Lippe, H. Okie. ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY lCon+inuedl The Allentown Academy was short-lived. The funds of the academy were placed in the Allentown Bank which was undermined by its president and all the resources of the academy were swept away. The founders strove in vain to weather the storm, but finally the buildings and the lot were sold to satisfy a mortgage of S9,000, and the last stockholders' meeting was held in 1843. The Allentown Academy was thus the first institution of its kind in the world, and, although its life was comparatively short, yet the spirit of enterprise and lofty endeavor which motivated its founding have pervaded the homeopathic physicians of the United States during the past century. The leaders of home- opathy have ever striven for the best in medical education. The American Institute of Homeopathy was the first national medical organization established in this country 618445 antedating even the American Medical Association C1846-18481. The Institute was the first national medical body to recommend higher requirements for medical education, and first to advise preliminary examinations before admission to medical college. lt first recommended a three years' graded course of instruction 618707, and later H8901 suggested that it be increased to four years. ln fact, several homeopathic colleges adopted the higher standards in advance of their allopathic contemporaries. Homeopathic colleges sprang up in various centers of the country- Philadelphia, Cleveland, Chicago, New York, Boston, Baltimore, Detroit, Cin- cinnati, Ann Harbor, St. Louis, San Francisco, Denver, Kansas City, Louisville, and Des Moines-so that in 1900 there were twenty-two distinct homeopathic medical colleges fthe total number of medical colleges at that time in the United States was one hundred sixtyl. By 1932, after the most thorough revamping of all phases of medical education in the United States, sixty-six colleges remained which gave four years of instruction tsixty-four allopathic and two homeopathicl. Likewise, the homeopathic Law of Similars introduced in such a modest manner as early as 1825 in this country, has influenced medical thought and today is exemplified in many phases of therapeutics: for example, simplified prescriptionsg reduced doses: vaccine therapy for prophylaxis and cure, in which the causative agent of the same or similar disease is used for its curep the use of radium in skin diseases: asthama desensitization: individualizationp even the so-called specifics-quinine, mercury, emetine,-today are considered not so much as parasiticides, but rather agents whereby the tissues of the body are stimulated to antibody production. Modern experimental pharmacology proves that where large doses of a poisonous substance prove lethal, and smaller doses inhibit, minimal doses of the same poison actually stimulate the vital activity of the same cells . Thus, notwithstanding its short life and untimely end, the Allentown Academy fulfilled an important mission in homeopathic medical education, and its contribution, at least indirectly, must ever be appreciated by every graduate of the Hahnemann Medical College. C. W. LINDEMAN. NOTE: This anniversary of the founding of Homeopathy in America was celebrated by a meeting of the Homeopathic Medical Society of Pennsylvania in Allentown, on Vlfednesday, April 10, 1935. One of the features of the meeting was a short sketch written by Charles S. Cameron and enacted by members of the present Senior class, dramatizing the founding of homeopathic education in America. 69 MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE WAKE, my Saint Iohn, leave all meaner things to vain ambition and the pride of kings. Presume not God to scan. The proper study of mankind is man. CA. Pope.l Today sees us, at long last, members of the medical profession. After years of intensive cerebral ingestion, long past the stage of satiety, we, like a gourmand, lean back, brush the crumbs from our vest, light a cigar and sink into a soliloquy, a state of intellectual congestion not unattended by some misgivings. More or less vague rumors have reached our ears that all is not quiet along the medical Potomac. Articles in both lay and professional pages coming from under the pens of authoritative and non-authoritative persons met our eyes. We have been aware now for some time of occasional discordant notes in the so sacrosanct atmosphere of the academic world in which we have been residing. This is one of those ages when the younger generation looks upon his heritage with a far more critical eye than is ordinarily the case. The unrest in things financial and social, to the point of actual revolution, finds repercussions in this most conservative of human activities, medicine. Young and inquisitive minds have disclosed that the so widely honored peace prize finds its root in wealth amassed by a business which derives its existence from the slaughter it hypocritically aspires to make impossible. A dozen nations have prayed to the same God for aid in the legal murder of their fellow man and with equal authority. Long established financial custom, masquerading as orthodox methods , begins to take on a tinge of well-bred chiselling . Perhaps it would be wise for us to critically examine, at least in brief, this heritage which we have to share in the next half century, in the making of which we have had no part and so for which we need not apologize. Yet before we begin this investigation , which is probably a symptom of the present era, let us adopt a definite policy so that we shall avoid the error of being satisfied with destruction. ln other words, let us not be merely Oslerian in our remarks, nihilistic nor cynical. lnsofar as our youth and inexperience will permit, let us be, at one and the same time, condemnatory and constructive. , ln the imaginary smoke of our imaginary cigar we see re-enacted with a clarity that time has not dimmed, but has sentimentally softened, events in the classroom or laboratory or clinic which have disturbed us. Why? Perhaps we have assumed too much but it was our impression that we entered medical school for the purpose of learning the art as well as the science of medicine, that is, human medicine. How many valuable hours have we wasted, through no fault of our own, in the austere seats of the amphitheatre watching the unimposing back of some surgeon or interne in a struggle to remove some organ, diseased or normal as the case might be. Such sessions served for some of our classmates to catch up on their sleep. Others had the courage and good sense to waste their time elsewhere, or to employ that time to much better advantage. We call to mind the day when the cases were mixed and the surgeon, having met the carcasses for the first time, performed inappropriate operations in the two 70 MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE ICon+inuecII instances. Thanks to the capacity of the human body to withstand much mangling, no ill effects ensued, at least none were reported. This moves us to remark that seldom, if ever, are we aware of the progress of a case after operation. In an inquisitive mood we looked in the literature for such informa- tion and came across an article entitled The reason for failure in one thousand cases of abdominal operations . From thence on we ourselves thought it might be well to spend more time in perusing the literature, less in attention on what might constitute another failure. We are aware that it is almost impossible to teach surgery, individually, if indeed that were the proper thing to do. Fortunately for the laity, not all of us wish to be surgeons. On the other hand it would seem to us that it is a waste of time and the money that it represents, to continue the teaching as it is. If the surgeon must have an audience in order to tickle his fancy or to sate his desire for the theatrical or spectacular, let him get a sandwich man to walk the street and attract those on the streets who have nothing better to do with their time. In four years of schooling twelve whole hours are devoted to a practical teaching of nose, throat, and ear condition. Yet, in actual practice fully fifty percent of the cases come to the physician for such complaints. We suggest that some of the wasted time be employed to remedy this inequality, for the benefit of the student as well as the general public. A short six Weeks are given to the student to initiate himself into the intricacies of medicine in the out patient department. Yet fully eighty percent of his future patients will require some measure of medical attention. Our civilization is producing more and more cases wherein the psycho- logical and psychiatric aspects loom larger and larger yet there is no effort being made in our curriculum to equip us to meet any such exigency. And while such absolute necessities are being neglected we have been required to learn formulae, tests, procedures, and theories which have no slightest bearing on the treatment of the sick. Indeed for two hours a week for six weeks we listened, more or less attentively, to a teacher reading verbatum from a text book practically all there was to know about typhoid fever while such worth- while things as the use of the ophthalmoscope, the otoscope, the prescription of the homeopathic remedy receives insufficient attention. This one course left us with a single impression which was that the same material could have been read by ourselves to better advantage in one or two evenings, but that the instructor himself stood in great need of the training it gave hirn. It would seem to us, in our ignorance and inexperience, that academic medicine is distinctly antiquated and that the faculty is highly satisfied with things as they are. Perhaps we display the impetuosity of youth yet it is also true that progress seldom springs from the ranks of the older, conservative generation. Had we anything to say about the curriculum we would certainly insist that more emphasis be placed on how to ameliorate or cure a given set of circumstances in a patient than is now done. One can count on the fingers of one hand the members of the faculty who have been fertile in therapeutic suggestions. As for text books, let us refer to one. This book contains much of 71 MEANDERINGS IN MGDERN MEDICINE ICon+inuecII a scientific and diagnostic nature but it is useless to the man who seeks to do something other than refer the patient to the author of that same book. Perhaps that was its prime purpose. We do not insist that our instruction be scientific for we have noted little if any science in medicine. We would like to be prepared to give our patients relief or cures. lt has surprised us to find how many people patronize the chiropractor and the osteopath. We say it surprises us. That was until these same patients gave us to understand that these men actually gave them relief. Why is it then that we as graduates of so-called medical schools are denied the knowledge of these ostracised healers? Certainly it is no worse to give a patient relief by massage or manipulation than it is to achieve a similar result by the use of dope or patent medicine. Indeed, if we wished to be really impolite yet far from nonsensical, we might venture the suggestion which we know will be ignored, that those hours spent in watching the removal of a dozen or more normal appendices under one or another pretext, be spent in the college of osteopathy, in Kirkbride's or even with Dr. Locke in Canada. Laugh as we will at the last-named personage, the fact remains that this man delivered the goods in more than one case where highly scientifically trained physicians had failed. We can picture to ourselves this same Dr. Locke biting his nails because he is not ultra-scientific. How much longer will we as students of medicine go with no more intelligent instruction in the treatment of fallen arches than the ordinary chiropodist, the use of pads, supports, braces and what not, putting to no practical use the anatomy and physiology that has been taught us? Our medical course leaves us with the impression that all diseases respond, if at all, to one of three things: the knife, the needle, or the proprietary remedy. Benighted as we are it would appear logically that the first-mentioned remedy deals with the product of disease, the second is definitely heroic and to a very large degree experimental, the third the only scientific method if we are to believe the literature accompanying it. On reflection we marvel not so much at the skill of the surgeon as at the resistance of the body which permits of the mutilation it undergoes and our opinion of Buddha, God, Osiris, or whoever it may have been who made us, is heightened when we consider how this organism still functions minus not a few organs. We recall the surgeon who recommended the routine removal of all appendices in infancy to control appendicitis. Might we suggest, in the same vein, the removal of all female breasts in infancy to control mammery cancer. We are hereby resolved to render honor and glory to that surgeon who first finds a way to replace what he removes or to make that removal unnecessary. And now a word about the money extractors , the diathermy, the sinusodial, the infra-red, the cold quartz. The procedures offer a sure means of livelihood. The salesman and not our Alma Mater will teach us their use. The same thing is true of the medicines in use today. We have found that our teachers have very ephemeral opinions concerning the value of these nostrums. We find that these opinions are not obtained from an academic seat of learning but from the corner druggist or the detail man and we as students get the information second hand. Why not let the various drug houses send to our college a salesman or two to give a course in therapeutics? Then at least we would get first-hand information. Then it would be unnecessary for one of our faculty, in a discussion at a society meeting, to condemn one proprietary 72 MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE IContinuedI remedy and in the next breath advocate the use of three in which he was financially interested. As for the use of the so-called official remedies it would seem that the thing to do is to decide on one which might fit the case, and give it in the usual dose. If that doesn't help, double the dose. If that doesn't help, inject it up the rectum and if that also fails, put it in the vein. This is scientific. We marvel at the wisdom of medicine of this day and age when it places a child of four on insulin, and stops its efforts there. This is indeed a control of diabetes. We have been struck in our exposure to the teachings and opinions of all of a full dozen or more departments at the lack of uniformity of instruction, at the variety and divergence of opinions and at the not infrequent conflict of ideas. Yet, if medicine were scientific, such disharmony could not exist. ln fact, we ourselves, in our childish way, have detected not a little lack of logic in our chosen calling. We are told that the Wasserman reaction is an index of resistance, yet every effort is strained to rid the body of this resistance. In Typhoid to have such a resistance is considered laudable and if the resistance to typhoid is found to be lacking, efforts are made to produce it. Then too, how many times have we seen a patient suspected of syphilis, and to be sus- pected is just as good as having it from the standpoint of the scientific clinician. The patient's blood four times or more is found to be negative, as is his spinal fluid. They give a provocative doseg the medical third degree. Still negative. He is given a course of anti-specifics anyhow. This too, is scientific. What about newer therapies? We certainly do not know. There is the newer artificial pneumothorax, the newest and cheapest test for pregnancy, the Fischer method of hyperaemia of the pelvis, the collodial preparations, pneu- matic treatment for vascular obliteration, have we heard of them? No, and we never shall in the classroom where the Kjeldahl distillation of nitrogen is of vastly more importance from the point of view of everybody but ourselves who are only slightly interested. And now a word about drugs. Why not teach the actions of drugs on the human body and not on tadpoles, rabbits, guinea pigs or rats? We personally feel that these animals, although excellent as potential pets, will hardly form any part of our future clientele. Not only this, but, if we must allow a little actual science to slip into medicine, we will find that facts taught us on the basis of animal experimentation are questionable. But so simple and common sense an axiom means little to such a super-scientific profession as academic medicine. Indeed, our more or less intensive education has left us with the indelible impression that medicine of the twentieth century is still a very great hodge- podge, lacking rhyme or reason, having little or no principle to guide its efforts, smacking of as great empiricism as was common in the time of Rhazes. For instance, in the use of so simple a substitution remedy as insulin, the three foremost authorities differ markedly in their methods and each lesser authority contributes some additional confusion. One department impresses us with the infallibility of the Wasserman Test, while another tells us it is corroborative only, still another says it is of questionable value and we begin to hear rumors to the effect that in not a few cases it is very misleading. Being inquisitive, we 73 I . MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE lContinuedl note that the holder of the first opinion is the pathologist who makes his living from this test, the next authority is a member of a medical department and he of quite high rank, the third authority is a recent authority in immunology. What are we to believe? In this maze of conflicting opinions, which we are led to believe are tinted by the economic interests of their proponents, we sought out some medical specialty that offered something solid, substantial, definite This seemed to be bacteriology. We were almost on the point of believing ourselves at last on solid ground till we learned that Pasteur was a professional phlegarist, was a far greater business man than a scientist, had an acquisitive instinct that far outweighed his yearning for the truth. Then it came to our ears that Koch's laws were being questioned and finally it was read by us in an article by no minor authority that there was such a thing as mutation of bacteria and else- where we read that, and again on good authority, the specific organism does not always produce its associated disease We wonder why more attention is not paid to the human food upon which these same bacteria growp thinking, instead of the isolation of a new specie, about changing the field of growth? Inquiries among our alumni have brought to us the report that vaccine and serum therapies have been productive of discouraging results. Our juvenile enthusiasm was dampened not a little when we found that proprietary drugs such as metaphan were in as great favor among the alumni as the highly scientific products, the specific biologicals. By this time we were becoming thorough agnostics, cynics and Oh yeah men. Still hope sprang eternal in our breast and, as a last resort, we gave ear to the homeopathic spell-binders. We had of course been warned by all and sundry that all of homeopathy was stuff and nonsense, the ramblings of minds enfeebled by a childlike credulity and indeed we had come in contact with so little of this therapeutic method that it seemed rather unreal. Some few instances of true blue homeopathy had, however, met our eyes. There was, for instance, the case of the child who had some disease, either peritonitis or pneumonia, as yet to be decided upon definitely between the pediatric and surgical departments en masse, with all the symptoms of Pyrogen. The chief of staff had, however, never heard of the remedy so he put the child on Bryonia in spite of the antagonism of indications and the child died This is one of the instances where homeopathy had been tried before our eyes and had failed. Then there were the many cases where, in the out patient department, we felt that this single remedy or that was indicated, but were laughed to scorn by the perfect gentleman in authority there when we ventured our immature opinion. In lieu of the homeopathic prescription we were instructed to give two cf more proprietary preparations. Yes indeed, we have seen homeopathy tried and found wanting. But in spite of that, we, in a spirit of fair play, felt it only right to give even the devil a chance to prove his innocence. The last thing we had expected from the department of therapeutics was scientific justification for their gen- erally ridiculed procedures. Imagine our surprise when we found that here, at last, was offered a therapeutic method that employed a well-established set of rules: rules that had not been changed or found wanting for going on two centuries. To put it mildly, we were nonplussed. In spite of a lack of Con- gressional appropriations, we continued our investigation and found that this 74 MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE Klontinuedl man Hahnemann was no nurnbskull, as we had been led to believe by our various instructors and quizz masters, but was actually a doctor of parts, a chemist, a linguist, a botanist, in short, a man of such parts that his critics now began to appear to us as terriers nipping at a giant from a very safe distance. The obvious thing to do was to compare him to Erhlich, another chemist of note. There is a strange fascination in this comparison. Erhlich attempted to subordinate medicine to chemistry and to do this had no hesita- tion in forsaking all semblance of scientific methods, but, giving full play to his imagination and ambitions, invented theories which in their picturesque qualities put the book of Revelations to shame. The so Scientific medical pro- fession swallowed his ramblings, hook, line and sinker. lt is no wonder that today we read of the ill repute of the doctrine of Sterilsans Magna. Hahne- mann, on the other hand, subordinated chemistry to medicine and therefore seems to have deserved condemnation. His imagination also gave rise to many theories and prognostications which, by a mere matter of coincidence, have been entirely substantiated by subsequent researches of a high scientific quality. This also is a matter of coincidence as have been the many cures claimed by that sect: if we are to believe such detractors as use Bryonia when Pyrogen is indicated. This intrigued us and we invaded the very holy of holies of homeopathy in this so staunchly homeopathic institution in search of more information. Indus- triously we followed our suggested collateral reading in the Index Medicus and elsewhere. lt was vastly instructive and Worth-while. We felt like crying Eureka for at last we had discovered a therapeutic method that sought to follow a reliable rule, to be guided by definite principles, to employ reason and not guesswork. Not only this but this method concerned itself first, last, and all the time with human beings. Iust think of it, with human beings. But this was not all, no indeed. Believe it or not, there has arisen in the last hundred years a mass of factual evidence, the result of pure scientific research, that is entirely pro-homeopathic. When it is realized that this research has been undertaken independently, its value is enhanced. To put it mildly, we have been, intentionally or inadvertently, pro-homeopathic. We recall off-hand the following: Hufeland, MacKenzie, Osler, VonBehring, Wright, Waugh, Arndt, Schultz, Kotschau, Solis-Cohen, Manwarring, Luyden, Tiseau, Loiseaux, Nebel, Beckman, and many others, not to mention Marchand de Calvi and Deschamp. Let us note a few of their ideas. Virchow in a lecture brought forth the observation he had made of the marked similarity between the symptoms of Arsenic poisoning and those of Cholera. Osler is quoted in Cushing to the effect that the greatest of medical errors was the over treatment with drugs. Also, that no one individual had done more for the medical profession than Hahnemann. R. A. Millikan is quite prepared to admit the possibility of a potency of l3x. ln fact he has proposed a law to demonstrate its mathematical certainty. Oliver Lodge says: The followers of the similia principle are likely to be the first to realize and apply to the curing of the human body discoveries about the nature of matter and its relation to space . 75 MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE ICon+inuedI Professor C. A. Gilman, New York College of Physicians and Surgeons: Nine tenths of the diseases to which flesh is heir is due to the abuse of allo- pathic medicine in infancy and childhood . Sir Dyce Duckworth, M.D., LL.D., F.R.C.P. Cwho was not a homeopathic studentlz We are, I much fear, suffering in these days from a widely spread spirit of incredulity, timidity and hopelessness in the whole realm of thera- peutics . . . we grievously neglect our main business as healers and mitigators of disease. In short, we are as physicians, drifting into the position of abstract scientists and gradually losing our proper relation to the sick as a skillful healer . VonBehring: You may call me a homeopath if you will but I will say to you that the efficiency of anti-toxin increases with attenuation . Marchand de Calvi in an address before the French Academy stated: In other words, medical literature swarms with facts of which the most part are periodically produced with the most tireless monotony, these are called observations and clinical facts. A number of laborers consider and reconsider particular questions of pathology and therapeutics - that is called original research. The mass of such labors and facts is enormous: no reader can wade through them, but no one has any General Doctrine. The most General Doctrine that does exist is the Doctrine of Homeopathy . Professor Traube of Munich says: Again, it is comprehensible that Hahnemann himself held the position that a remedy in general has no other healing action than aiding the natural efforts of the organism toward restoring health. For they do not change in a general way the course of vital process but rather increase or decrease them. . . . Homeopaths who recognize that the action of a medicine is not the mass but the fine division of the substance that is decisive, are in perfect agreement with the results of the modern colloid teachings. Every colloid chemist knows that the degree of dispersion, i.e., the size of the surface, is determining for the solving of the most varying problems Iabsorption, catalytic action, surface tensionl, and it follows that one millionth or one milliard of a gram may evert just as great a biological action as a whole gram. It is evident from this that there is a thoroughly justified truth in homeo- pathic conceptions . . . If I have arrived, on the basis of my colloidal experience, at the result that there is a healthy kernel within homeopathic observations, I want to have it plainly understood that I know nothing of homeopathic literature, nor do I know but most superficially anything about the curative results, but it certainly seems clear that the smallest amount of a medicine from the physical and chemical grounds must exert many and big actions and that such actions, in numerous cases, are opposite to those pro- duced by larger masses, and again, it is certain that it is not the quantity of a medicine but the degree of its division that determines its action . But then we do not wish to embarrass anyone by insisting that medicine regard scientific substantiation as essential to any therapeutic method, so let this above paragraph be regarded as merely another interesting coincidence. Another and to us much more interesting teaching of this department that sows the seeds of homeopathy is that the proper prescribing of a remedy demands a knowledge of the normal anatomy, physiology, pCltholoCJY, pharmacology and pharmacodynamics and attributes no divine power to remedies to cure such as 76 MEANDERINGS IN MODERN MEDICINE ICon'rinuedI do the drug houses. In other words, homeopathy requires of its practitioners a syndesmology of all the ologies before one can give a drug intelligently. The idea that the medical man should put to some use his knowledge of other branches of medicine in the making of an intelligent prescription seems to be an attribute of this therapeutic method alone. We have been forced then to admit that homeopathy possesses an iota of intelligence as well as science. As for its emphasis on monopharmacy we can only say that that is a precept so axiomatic that we have no hope of academic medicine stumbling over its truth. All this and more in the same vein prompts us to suggest, to our mind a quite constructive measure, that more and more opportunity be given the coming student generations to learn this medicine of the future, homeopathy. We are quite aware that this requires a faculty that understands the subject and it is quite apparent to us that the average teacher in our Alma Mater knows, in this respect, but two things: that Bryonia is worse from motion and Rhus tox is better under the same circumstances. We feel that this condition will not soon be remedied. So this is the tenor of our soliloquy which could be continued ad infinitum. lt is hoped that it is taken as it is meant, in the manner in which it is given, a frank statement of the reaction of the student mind. If there is ever a theme song written to medicine it certainly should have the words, Rest in bed, quiet, avoid excitement, bland diet . Will we ever be able to rid our minds of that phrase, Focus of Infection ? And when will some medical genius come along who will be able to tell us when a focus of infection is such and when it it something else? The spectre of many a mouth completely devoid of teeth, the patient still sick, is a haunting dream. When will that medical ostrich, the nerve blocker, be superseded by a more intelligent bird in medical evolution? All these things and many more we might ask. After four years of medical college we now look forward to a year of clerical work, following orders con- cerning the rationality of which it is not ours to ask. We might well paraphrase the well-known lines: Ours not to reason why, ours but to inject and see the patient die . Perhaps it were best if our swan song should be of this tenor: get the patients and use your own judgment, a judgment which is to be ripened at the bedside, that bedside the intimacy of which has so far been more of a ghost than an actuality with us. And so, good luck and good-bye to the academic life and may the eternal truth always be our guiding light. 77 THE CURRICULUM E, the class of l935, after reading the Suggestions for Improving the Curriculum made by the Class of 1934 and published in the 1934 Medic, wish to state that we approve of a majority of their suggestions. Since these are made in an attempt to improve the opportunities of those students who follow after us and not from a selfish motive, we feel that these suggestions should receive the undivided attention of those college officials who may read them. Should the opinions of the student body who have been exposed to the contents as well as to the Roster Titles of the courses be ignored forever? Should the student's ability to realize the teaching value of the courses that he has finished be given no consideration? The class wishes to re-emphasize or origi- nate the following suggestions and comments: l. The class feels that the presentation of Psychiatry by Dr. Hoffman was of a superior type and that future classes should be allowed to receive more of their instruction from him. 2. Approximately one-half of the student population of the college feels that Hygiene should be taught in the first or the second years. 3. We feel that clinical subjects are not presented to the class soon enoughg that they should be started in the second year. 4. The executives of the school should consider seriously keeping the school library open more hours per day. 5. The administration should carry to a further degree the laudable steps already taken to place Toxicology in its rightful minor role in the curriculum. 6. Since the success of an educational institution depends largely upon the faculty, we feel that the executives and the administrative officers should carefully scrutinize each member in regard to his teaching ability. 7. The emphasis placed on Chemistry in the first year should be balanced with that given the other subjects in the same year, especially Anatomy. 8. Prescription Writing should be given before the last year. 9. The teaching value of each wet clinic should be carefully weighed from the standpoint of the student. lO. A course in Medical Economics and one in Applied Medical Psychol- ogy should be alternated with the Wednesday afternoon surgical clinic over ten-week periods for the three major sections in the fourth year. ll. There should be no classes held during the period allotted for mid-year and final examinations. 12. The members of the student body are pleased to note some improve- ment in the promptness with which they are informed of their scholastic standing. l3. We feel that more care should be exercised in the rnatriculation of students. This contention is upheld by the fact that a large number of students is admitted and relatively few finish. 78 CLASSES Bust of Samuel Hahnemann by Dietrich THE CURRICULUM ' the class of l9'35, after reading the Suggestions for Improving the 11'alrr1culum made by the Class of 1934 and published in the 1934 Medic, wish to state that we approve of a majority of their suggestions. Since these are made in an attempt to improve the opportunities of those students who follow after its and not fro ii oti we feel that these suggestions should receive the u1tdivida Mw Bollege officials who may them. Should the opinions v e stu ent ody who have been exposed to the contents as well as to the Roster Titles of the courses be ignored forever? Should the stu.dent's ability to realize the teaching value of the courses that he has finished be given no consideration? The class wishes to re-emphasize or milli- nate the following suggestions and comments: 1. The class feels that the presentation of Psychiatry by Dr. Hoffman was of a superior type and that future classes should be allowed to receive more of their instruction from him. 2. Approximately one-half of the student population of the college feels that Hygiene should be taught in the first or the second years. 3. W e- feel that clinical subjects are not presented to the class soon enough: that they should be started in the second year. A. The executives of the school should consider seriously keeping the school library open more hours per day. , 5. The administration should carry to a further degree the laudable steps already taken to place Toxicology in its rightful minor role in the curriculum. 6. Since the success of an educational institution depends largely upon the faculty, we feel that the executives and the administrative officers should carefully scrutinize each member in regard to his teaching ability. 7. The emphasis placed on Chemistry in the first year should be balanced with that given the other subjects in the same year, especially Anatomy. 8. Prescription Writing should be given before the last year. 9. The teaching value of each wet clinic should be carefully weighed from the standpoint of the student. 10. A course in Medical Economics and one in Applied Medical Psychol- ogy should be alternated with the Wednesday afternoon surgical clinic over ten-week periods for the three major sections in the fourth year. ll. There should be no classes held during the period allotted for mid-year and final examinations. 12. The members of the student body are pleased to note some improve- ment in the promptness with which they are informed of their scholastic standing. ' 13. We feel that more care should be exercised in the matriculation of students. This contention is upheld by the fact that a large number of students is admitted and rel fSy AaB :wana X. ,wa 78 'T 1 ,ao Hp ...w -.V a A 1 ,.X if A QUNA K 1' .. n. ' .:' TWL 4 ..XX,X-XNXNXBDQXX., NL A I s ' Q If -Lili , X' FX. Xlvi,fXAnfi.'Z ,'X , 'f- 51475:-', Q .f-Q-.f1fEr . .' '-VL rf J-., .Q-.,' ,.. . .. Q ' V' -'N 1-pg'-.. -4 XXX, X. XIXZXXXL..-fr 1. QS,-XT-115 '51, 4 'U- V U f 'L'-f -- ':-rf. xii-. A 'f'.g4X..iX, JIX - '-p'9'1 , 1-ff mg- vw ' 'M fi , 1--1 , , 'X , 1 X q. X 1 -7 ,L L. 1. , V . .,,-fd, J: X,Lf- ,. ,.l, 1 ! A , -1' . .X.w' .X :LX .- .' M. L - I-' -Q-. f , '. , .1 ' i,g,3'w ' V1.4 '- .'1'-fry. . ,.,.,. ,- V ' :N . X z- !'.,V' v'XXX,,.?X- ' ' ','g':eQ, ',1 X f'Ap1.'Qf ',X . ,' 1- xX-, -. Iv , 1.'o,'1 gf' 2- A ,.: ,',.. 'M 'M-L 4 :ff 1 X, 1 ., ,U - V .,,X,.. . , 1 H ,. .. --jk L gX,fX5f,, ..XJX.. 1 1 X X f,X X X 'AK -N J . , X. .. ,C X X ' -' fr' . .jf X, uw .XX4 X I , ' X,n.,' ww , ' , . 4,-.E , '.7 ,3 . ,. v ,. , ,'n 1 X I ' Mfww' . ' 15 ' . -s '.f g.1Q: . 1 1 X, XX,- r Y ' .. Xl'. ' ' . 'Y 1 I - , 'l. 1 X A , .A, .- 1 1 v 1 .1 I . 'HV' ' I - 4 .. ,X ' NN , . . , , v.-I , X 4 4 XX . . 3 . . ' Q FOURTH YEAR F 1 c c c , cm, 7, me-.. E- Ii IOSEPH DOMENIC ANASTASI, A.B. 818 Morris Street Philadelphia. Pen sylvania South Philadelphia ' School: University ot Penn- Il Circolo Italiano: 9'-1: 0 uh: Medic Stait. Frankford Hospital. A Penn Alu f ' shy and timid before the qods o 'nn f eicmdlearninq, j-X when he came to t lhis.,pl,gcg.EinfoRr the worthy sons oi Hahn 'V VGEELXBEE ' One man in'th.'r !6al'l,XLoegw ad to be certain' o b 1 on time For an it tX M,-f fs X Volante, Ns oulglfbe b armed You leave with 1 - Y delinquinfces ,ef ta that his side-kick, s s 7 i our best ' '. J S J x' -ei? lf' V, ,fri Xlgfg It , -H, S 1 ,vt all r3wWH.it 1 , - I A I 9 ' 4 f . ' X S. IAMES QUINBY ATKINSON. BhLB. ,-f f f' 423 East State Street 1' Q V, fp f Trenton, New Iersey ' S ' George School: Brown University. Q! 2 .h ' Phi Alpha Gamma: ExecutivJComgnittee Medic Staff. McKinley Hospital. Trenton, Neyrflersey. lim is the big man,-of the class, 6 feet 4 inches and 210 pounds, sounds like a description oi an All1Arnerican and probably is since he comes from rare old Quaker stock from Iersey. He always had trouble making his 9 o'clocks and this year matters are worse since last luly he took unto him- self a fair damsel named Lucy. Iim will qo far in his choosen profession as he is a qentleman as well as a keen student. Best of luck, lim! 80 7r'- -'--L' iv' r 0 ,,,..i L Y e --- Y --.-.-.L-l.. --.aut -1-.. GRANT WENGER BAMBERGER Lebanon, Pennsylvania Lebanon High Schoo: ickinson College. Kappa Sigma: Pi U Rho: Blue and Gold Commit- tee 4. Hahnemann Hospital, elphia. r X 11 H l 1 . Bammy' has V s giathe mens idol around college. otgglfl g a sceptic by nature, he securi. r lnterne-ship at Broad Street I-lospiialbtp t first-hand med? cal information. Howkmiesc 'iheibleargedji that respect Wefdo npttfknbwgbuttvie clrrlgfiow that his approcfzhjyiothe fair :Sex in dispen- sary was superb. E lrience counts! Little ilustered wxit go slgbn and ever mindful of the pdsgbg,-Mes, Bla,rnmy is heading for a Qreatafui r . XAI' ,xxx A ,,-.Y',, K Ax 'gif O, u ,I . its , rr J ..... Us ,Vi M. vu. Mgt, 'ti H- A- -ve-W -. --- .., .' .' 'x V l hi 1 xx- . WILLIAM BURTON BARROW fir' l f , Elrama, Pennsylvania Qt ' , g 4, , , P J + Clairton High School: Washington and feilxerson College. ' j 'H Kappa Sigma: Pi Upsilon lo: 1-Ydvertising Manager of Medic. I Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospitgl A' It is quite certain Burt's future in the medical profession js a bright one. He has the faculty of attending to the Work at hand in a quiet, unassuming manner that very often leads to success. Even when engaging in his favorite diversion, a friendly bridge game, he has qualities of a good student, , which is shown by his excellent play. Burt V is sincere and has a purpose that cannot be 5 altered. He is a sure card, l L ' l 81 I FREDERICK RUDOLPH BAUSCH. IR.. B.S. 2911 Chew Street, Allentown, Pennsylvania Allentown Preparato chool: Muhlenberg College. Sacred Heart Hospit' llentown, Pennsylvania. t Why, there's . tit' usch. Thus exclaimed one oi the temal i' tes oi the Allentown State Hospital e.. - f ' urned to that institution. Wellf ' roduction, the Doctor, and Bauschl s gysdonlyx nodded with a few Wiqrdl ts. ' entire class ioc nqan on the in it 1 us, ls my sch was a jun'of'i'n'ter ' at the Tispital-so that clarifies tters, 'W such a fine begin- ning, he oul 'ima e' noted psychiatrist. EDWARD CLARENCE BECKL . B. I 122 East Green Street f Nanticoke, Pennsylvania W f Nanticoke High School: Buck U ' r y. Lambda Chi Alpha: Phi Alph Ga a: alph Bernstein Dermatological Society. Mercy Hospital. Wilkes-Barre. nnsylvania. Ed may well be re mbered as one ot the strong, silent gentl en ot the class. Well- groomed, tall, dark and handsome, he has a winning smile and a personality that will bring cheer to many a patient. lt is certain that his innate dignity, loyalty to his friends, and his practical mind will bring to him much success and respect in the future, as it has done at Hahnemann. 82 tif ffl Qt W w HARRY OSCAR BEEMAN, A.B. 13809 Woodworth Road Cleveland, Ohii I East High School. Ole eland: Miami University. Oxford. Ohio. A X 5. Pi Upsilon Rho: P' Sigina Society: President ot Pi Upsilon Rho 3. H12 lily, N i , :X Bethesda Hospital, C'ichftlgti3,0, .X ,N xx 3 I Harry came A ann to study the Art of Healing andio Cofrzelmhued with., the Spirit oi Homefppa-tliyfl. Hfeghas perse- verence and 21 interest invthings medical. of human nature and his have led us to admire his acquaintance. His and assurance will in his patients. undoubtedly be a suc- cess ealer ot Men. ...ZWW ...av A RALPH SIDNEY BELMONT, 8 Bay View Avenue Rogers High School: Rhode lan ta College. Pi Upsilon Rho: Ptolemy S ciet re urer of Ptolemy Society. Waltham General Hospital. altham, Massachuetts. Upon turning to name, Ralph Belmont, we immediately t nk ot an ardent student who studied because he loved the work. Ralph made many friends among his class- mates as well as among his patients. Those who know him respect him as a friend and gentleman. He is going to practice medicine in his home town, Newport, the little City by the Sea. We are all certain that he will be a credit to the profession. Newport, Rhode I Q' 1 -Q fr-gf' cf.-L. Q .JI r ' f viii? ,Z w 83 - ew- - GILBERT WESLEY BENIAMIN. ILB. 5920 North Seventh Street Philadelphia, Pen sylvania Genesee Wesleyan inary: University ot Pennsylvania. Sigma Pi: Glee Clul . Hahnemann Hospital lphia. X G Ben is one t et men of our class. He merely djsays nothing while the rest of us a nga say less. Despite , lisjgierebfqu possesses a, pe' rso 'tytl'wh1ch:hg for him manyffr' s. I e will alvvfrys remember the feeling of rapt te I t pervaded the class room asld r Hyiaestr ' tickled the ivoriesf' His conscii ngpidsness elpfulness, and sense of hum ls oiild Cyl! im far in the medical ,----pf essiongxsid ,fr lf., S H. fl , , 9 tr ,tt ,-st-if ft mwlcqve' X, Y ' t T , lL - - . ' I J, I, , xxx I t Louis IOSEPH BERENATO gf , 1433 seeth Breed Street K- .- t 3 l Philadelphia, Pennsylvania lv A ' T Northeast High seheei. Phthadeiphadt Hhhnemann College ot Science. Aj' pf' St. Agnes' Hospital, Philadelphia. ',t ' A Lou is one of the most popular members t of the class. A goodrnixer and a good sport, he will surely be missed by many members of the class. Lou is the mainstay of that t remarkable Trio which includes Anastasi l and Volante. They have formed a most l unyielding friendship which will stand them in good stead in the future. Always a go- getter, Lou will continue to succeed after leaving our midst. The class Wishes you the T best of success-do not fail us. Y w I l l.. -.- M t-Wu-- ,ui-1 84 ' 'Y' ' 'Tn i 'i'f'-'Q'W'iT 1'? - 9 I . , ,gi .. f e ee. x -. RICHARD WINFIELD BETTS Middletown. Delaware Middletown High School: University of Pennsylvania. Hahnemann Orchestra, Leader. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia. Meet the wiry, erethistic trumpeter. This famous bugler from the ranks of Penn's musicians has been a valuable asset to our orchestra--a foundation stone in its recent existence, they tell us. Who can doubt that? A rare and noble achievement came to him when Dr. Bernstein graciously presented him with the familiar rope , We do believe that there are others more worthy of that honor, but who are We to doubt Dr. Bern- stein's decision? Don't throw it too far, Betts. FRED ANGELINO BISCEGLIA Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Schenley High School: University ot Virginia: University of Pittsburgh. Alpha Phi Delta: Il Circolo Italiano: Newman Club. Vice-President. 3. President, 4: Orchestra. 1, 2, 3. 4: Hahnemann Institute, Vice-President: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society. 3, 4. Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital. The city of Pittsburgh contributed to Hahnemann a man who will never be for- gotten by most of the members of the class. Fred, besides being a diligent student, was a politician of the first magnitude being excelled by the one and only, Guy Campo. Fred participated in many scholastic func- tions, holding several offices during the past four years. Fred intends to carry on in Pittsburgh. May you be as successful professionally as your political ingenuity. 85 ORD CHARLES BLACKLEDGE New Brighton, Pennsylvania New Brighton High ool: Geneva College. Phi Alpha Gamma. X Huron Road Hospitahl qyeland. Ohio. IX . x . . . Ord is one otg olsexlfortunate individuals who always kDO3Q7SfR1x r' is thing to say, when to say it, to keep it to himself. He is dfstiilisg-iigs 'byg his steadi- ness and reliabilityr rdf-develppede a, misplaced eyebrowl which E professional air land, blven sx with rtheftine work he didfvvhilefa Iunior' interne at Broad Street Hosital. Fr, ,P r , t Ah' , l rl' .X N, j ,-- W. ,I A ' xi ,f ' .X . A 7 , e' ,' . 1 L - use so as If ,I ,I 'l 1 lJ'li 4 1 'I N ,-c Y lqz ,..z- Lf . ii .' '- Qc- t. A lb I, A W i , .!,,' Baal TJ , . HV 1' l r' 'U N .QV ,VH A -Y - Vp Ai - - V, ,Ui . 4. . tg ft I x , . RICHARD EUGENE BRENNE AN.,-'A.B R. D. No. 8, York, Pennsylvangcl: 1, I . 1' f .1 ,. York High School: University Apl' Penygsfvania. A 4',- Pi Upsilon Rho: Glee Club, 1 3: Med Staff. Reading Homeopathic Hosp: al. ,+'f,l' +1 4 H - 11 fl Ad, . Dick has been a m ,stery to many of his classmates because oifffhis silence. He is no puzzle, however, to ,Vose who are fortunate to know him inti 4 ely. To them Dick is quiet, reserved and conscientious. He minds his own business and does not do anything to attract attention. ln short, he is a real scholar and a gentleman. With these attri- butes he will no doubt be a success in his chosen profession. Good luck, Dick ! 86 .- New Haven, Connecticut ff . New Haven High School: Yal Hahnemann Orchestra, 1, 2, 4. ,iff Hospital of St. Raphael, New H necticut. X Among the few representatives from New England in our class Ioey Bruno, who hails from Connecti its city of Elms, New Haven. Although-falways serious in his studies, those who were close to him will always remember his ever-ready sociability and friendliness. His hobby is classical music as attested by his participation in the orchestra in all four years. Our good friend will interne in his home-town where he intends to practice his chosen profession. We wish you drums of luck for a successful CCIFGGT. fl U J h ' l IOSEPH IULIUS BRUNO, Ph.B. I-' ., t 345 Norton Street M , !. BENIAMIN GEORGE BROSELOW 2734 West Allegheny Avenue Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Central High School, R lladelphiaz University oi Pennsylvania. tl 'X Chairman Freshman orni Frankford Hospital, Phfadtplphia. ln the fall of l93l'-, thef. bloxers at the University of Pennsy'lvQ'nia',were chagrined that their captainfoui'-bW.n 1little Bennie, for- sook the haunts of Wefightfrian Hall to study medicine at Hahnernahnf Here, as chairman of the committee, hesoon' proved his leader- ship by conducting the most successful Freshman ,dance in thefhistory of the College. At the same time he discovered that he inherited his brothers! interest in finding out the number. of-'Meckelfs diverticuli to be found in the 'cqdqvers -residing at the Meyers' Hotelf' X. . Q X .Nl i lt t ' L I I 'R 1 '44 fl' 'i Y ', Q A I, .V . .I N., W . ' x JW' E f vt: Nj V -L -Y Y ' lg lf, 'IU ,Z,,,,,,. , LI ' 1 4. .J'ib.-ui-.1w.-, i-.- -c IRTY FIVE KARL EMERSON BURI Hartville. Ohio Hartville High School: Ohio State University. St. Ioseph's Hospital, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. We present the Count . That is what his colleagues at the boarding house called this distinguished gentleman. Perhaps the derby and the waxed moustache gave vent to that name. The Count is somewhat of a diction- ary on two legs, and when it comes to talking-well, he just puts Lowell Thomas and Floyd Gibbons to shame. With his friendly smile and facile manner, Karl should have a meteoric rise in his endeavors. CHARLES SHERWOOD CAMERON IR A B. 40 East Pierrepont Avenue Rutherford, New Iersey St. Luke's School: University of Pennsylvania. Phi Alpha Gamma: Executive Committee. 2: Leader ol Glee Club, 2, 3: Blue and Gold Ball Committee, 4: Ralph Bernstein Dermatological Society, 4. Philadelphia General Hospital. Charley gets out among the debs, but it still does not stop him from being well liked by us common folks. At times, he feels sick but Dr. Dotterer manages to see he gets to class on time. Philadelphia General was his ambition and he has made it. We know, as cr class, we can be proud to have him represent our class at that institution. K' 1T. .l, - J ANTHONY GUY CAMPO Philadelphia, Pennsylvania South Philadelphia School: Villanova College. Lambda Kappa Deltd:Xl Circolo Italiano: Newman Club: Vice-President o ass, 1: Dr. Benson's Group: Blue and Goldlr al Committee. 4: Photographic Editor of Medic.xX ,l. QQ , Sacred Heart Hospitah 1 lle towns Pennsylvania. oxx lx '-X ', Guy easily -to E ' as class poli- tician. Wheneverfel ' ere-inthe oiling one found him heEthere xfTd.seirerl'x7v'her at one and the ,h elrldulgf 'tive Henahig-q4eri?rrPo itician, have been, yet he d-natured and ot tion, Guy could a boost in a pinch. chap, in the years to talkative had the an easy always QOO .17 f 1 f ,,,,.l1-- .-1 ,lil-1 I ANTHONY CAPUTI. B.S. - lf! if Allendale. New Iersey 3 I Ramsey High School: Muhlen D Il Circolo Italiano. X e Montreal Homeopathic HMA Cap to some and ' ony to others, one of the physical dimi lves ot our class, and at the same time o ot the really grown-up men, he is quiet, ssurning, and consistent in everything from his rolled socks to his grade average. Cap hails from the wilds ot Northern New Iersey, Allendale. He did his pre-med work along with many hours ot expert bridge-playing at Muhlenberg. Since coming to Hahnemann, however, his tastes turned to pocket-pool, and there he rnet his Waterloo. He leaves college with best wishes for success trorn all ot us. . .. i-, 'tl ,.,. , QU - 89 ., ,nfl .Y 9' 'l LKIl - 5 t . t IOHN BERCHMAN CONWELL. B.S. 238 Roumfort Road Mt. Airy, Pennsyl ania Germantown High Q 1: Hahnemann College of Science. Hahnemann Hospitahxhxilqdelphia. t, X Few people are X rs 'le as Conwell. His father is a lav , t ' o ould be found in the locker ro ing a point of law. As early Gi is fyear he demonstrated his surgical a spiint to a broken hitbox e has the ra ffgbiftgkzgs '?ei.nqjE:I51'? to sleep through 'cturef ia hen show a page of notes as, e result f- is efforts. To pro e hm, love ffor the big house at Broad a ine? ell has decided to lenqthwr3si nemann for another ,f 5Ear asfiri . 5 ff' -ight 05. W'--- 'T my IOSEPH STEPHEN CORBA, B. if ff, 221 lane Street U jf' if Carnegie, Pennsylvania if l .' CHZIQJ ,V if 9 Carnegie High School: Unive ,ity oll,'Pitt urgh. n il, I Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospitalofl' ,if 0, 4-' If ms Having nursed the arrihition to become an M. D. for four long years, Ioe has, at last, achieved that distin 'on. He found life, as a student, very loneg? so one Week-end he returned to his native Pittsburgh and took unto himself a wife. He is a trifle sardonic at times, but earnest and true always. We Wish him all the good luck he so Well deserves. s r , ff b.- - . , ,.i.Y ,.. 77,1-illig 90 .- :boi-- MYER MEDVENE DASHEVSKY, A.B. 6235 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania l A Germantown High School: Temple University. Alpha Gamma: Orches a. West Iersey Homeopalhictlzlospital. l' ', ' .Q . '. St Ask, and ye s'l'1al'l'frece-ive. ltflycr must be well versed with-this ,li lical phraso, for ii there were any'E119Qst'Q652to be aslcod, he always shouted out-,. and rthout duo regard for anything. There are so SRWH6 believe-in remaining silent, aft' lellhing,that1-way. There are fot'hers,wli e Myer, 'who would rather learn' by aslcirrgi Perhaps both ways have their l dvantages. 'With all your queries, Myer, yo should adhfieve success. ls .' 1' .rl - . g--x f ,i., -jj . X K - ,1 4 .. XA t + 7 1 if -1 l ti' ' 1- , my-f -'-E-fb, til34m.3w Q.?1i ,Wi jf' all I MW-'i 'lx lf, 400 Lippincott Avenue QI 'ff' Palmyra. New Iersey fffgifi f.f,, -- Palymra High School: Hahnefdiin e ot Science ' 3 X Alpha Sigma: Glee Club, 1. L . Wilmington Homeopathic Hes? 'A Davie is quiet andy4etiring and avoids WILBUR STAFFORD DAVISO1, 1 if A I IRTY FNB, ,.,-.- n getting into any cont versies, which is not a bad idea. With Q complexion we don't know how he has managed to remain single so long. He is always found sitting right up on the front row-even during examination periods when many ot his neighbors elect to move to the rear. He travels on his merit and will be rewarded accordingly. Wilmington will benefit by this interne. 91 6 lla IOSE NESTOR DE CARDONA. B.S. Aguadilla. Puerto Rico Aguadilla High School: University of Puerto Rico. School of Tropical Medicine and University Hospital, San Iuan, Puerto Rico. loe comes from Puerto Rico. While at Hahnemann he suiiered rnany attacks of appendicitis. During one of these attacks, irorn which he never fully recovered, he left the hospital, in an amorous mood, and captured the heart of one of our most charrn- ing nurses. 'Ne are sure he will be a credit to Hahnernann in his native Puerto Rico, and be successful in his practice of Tropical Medicine. ANDREW DICKENS DECHNIK, A.B. 224 Summit Street Bethlehem. Pennsylvania Liberty High School: Lehigh University. Eta Sigma Phi: Basket Ball, 1, 2: Orchest:a. 1, 2. 3. 4. Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia. Dee-Chink! No, Dek-nik is the Way you pronounce it. Andy carne irom Norway or Denmark at a very early age. He attended Lehigh before rnatriculating at Hahnemann. Being the srnallest man in the class, he seri- ously considered becoming an Obstetrician, but has definitely changed his rnindp in View oi the fact that he is not as small as he thought he was. We wish hirn success in his practice at Bethlehem. 92 LAURENCE PATRICK DEVLIN. B.S. 4712 Richmond Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania St. Ioseph's Preparatory School: Hahnemann College ol Science: Newman Club. St. Luke's and Children's Hospital. Truth is stranger than fiction. This is well borne out by the fact Larry, thc Matador , isa gentleman as well as a scholar hailing from the Wilds of Bridesburg. Not only is Larry well versed on the care and feeding of Heppys rats, but has proven himself quite capable of imitating a prairie dog. His most desired trait and one for which we all envy him is his refusal to worry. Good luck, Sergeant! CHARLES SPIEGEL DOTTERER. IR.. B.S. 520 Iuniper Street Quakertown. Pennsylvania Quakertown High School: Ursinus College. Phi Alpha Gamma: Leader of Glee Club. 3. 4: Basket ball, 4: Chairman of Hahnemann Tennis Club: Ralph Bernstein Dermatoloqical Society: Blue and Gold Ball Committee. 3. 4: Vice-President ot Phi Alpha Gamma. Rhode Island Homeopathic Hospital,'Providence. Rhode Island. Charley , Spiegel, Spicks , hand shaker, back slapper, politician, dapper and enthusi- astic student. Truly a cycloid personality- frivolous one moment and morbidly depressed the next. He was so extremely allergic to any and all members of the weaker sex that even the indicated remedy proved of no avail. Charles will be well remembered as generous, genuine, and possessing the strength of his convictions. With his viva- cious personality and practical mind, we feel certain that success will be his. 93 FRANCIS MICHAEL DOUGHERTY 320 West White Street Summit Hill, Pen sylvania ft Summit Hill High S I: Villanova College. Pi Upsilon Rho: G e lub: Ralph Bernstein Derma- toloqical Society' r surer of Student Council: Blue and Gold Ball -v ee sa. Luke's and Childlzxxis :: - 1 . K x 'E X xx y Alfy came tommy o i sinxgreat strides because of his great 'r orjlinoiggd e is a slick dresseigxnd-g ELQEE1 clothes. Thisfwfli 'la-grdggasx lfy since he pecialihefri gynecology. We are s e th ' efkll be successful in his attempts, ot b cf use of his own ambi- tions, blliga fbec e he comes from a great lin doc , dentists, clergymen, if .Q WH THOMAS FRANCIS DOWD, . 2918 North Howard Street , 1,4 ' Philadelphia, Pennsylvaniafpgllgl-..zf! Mount St. Mary's Preparator cho nt St. Mary's College: Glee Club, 3, Ne I an lub, President. 3: Class Secretary, 2: edic att: alph Bernstein Dermatological Society. St. Mary's Hospital, Philade ia. Behold the Anat mist! Tom early dis- tinguished himselt. at Hahnemann, by his erudite knowledge of anatomy. He will always be remembered, by his classmates, for his vivid description of the cervical fascia. lt is said that Tom conducted evening classes at his home in order to clarify for his friends the many problems encountered in the Fresh- man and Sophomore Years. Tom unques- tionably will carry himself forward in his hospital work and private practice. 'C 9-f 94 'gr-1'v's111 i I - 4 JJ- s ii- ..-' L36--'z l - .e IOSEPH BENEDICT DUFFY, B.S. 114 School Lane Branch Dale, Pennsylvania It Minersville High Schogl: St. Ioseph's College. Newman Club: Medicx tall: Ralph Bernstein Derma- toloqical Society. Hahnemann Hospital, Fhllafielphia. loe is our big, blondflrbighnlan with those nice blue eyes. Nothing fifffhis four years at l-lahnemann has hapjoenedlto' change that contagious smile. The only dif'f'erefnce.ohef can notice is asthinriing bf his hair, Whether it is hard,,WoTk ofiiv ry over some pretty colleen--we do F-not know, since the boy will not talflc. loe, has been one of the leaders of the Newman Clu ,and we, as a class, are just asproudit ve him as a member as isfh,iestclubf. N. ff j 'f ftlt 1 aixtfy for ' - fi it if foot' 'IX 1 , ,I llf ff FRANCIS CASIMIR EKSTER I F . B ,V 2652 Miner street ,W 5' Philadelphia, Pennsylvarif Newman Club. St. I.uke's and Children's Hos lt was an act of Pr dence that sent Frank to l-lahnemann. H s a fine fellow and We can truthfully say at we believe Frank has not a single enemy in the world. St. Ioseph's High School: olleqe. l Frank has attained a fine record scholas- tically and that, coupled with his clear reasoning and steady, deliberate manner, with which he performs all his tasks, is evidence that he will surely succeed in his chosen field of Surgery. 95 'xy' , ,.-.-. - 4 I L ALBERT ESKIN, B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Germantown High School: Villanova College. Phi Lambda Kappa: Lambda Kappa Delta. Women's Homeopathic Hospital. Philadelphia. Al came to us from Villanova where as cheer leader he spurred his teams on to victory, and incidentally acquired a rare ability ot telling stories, the veracity of which we sometimes doubt. But that is only occasionally, and all in all, we feel sure he is in earnest. His ability as a student and keen thinker, we most humbly admire. In Pharmacology, he was one of Dr. Payne's brighties, and that bears out our contention. So we say, good luck, Al-may success be yours. IOHN BAPTIST FABRIELE, B.S. 1112 Avenue C Bayonne, New Iersey Bayonne High School: Villanova College. Business Staff, Medic: Class Treasurer. 3. Medical Center. Iersey City. New lersey. lntroducing the lncornparable, lack Fabriele. One of the smoothest men in the class, yet one of the staunchest friends of most of the members of the class. lack has always insisted on sleeping at least nine hours a night throughout the year. Next to his sleep he relished his books, especially Cecil's book on medicine. lack proved the above statements during our brief stay in Allentown last December. With your firm desire to succeed we feel there Will be nothing to bar your progress in the future. MARTIN IOSEPH FISHER, G.Cp. 2650 South Eighth Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania South Philadelphia High School: Temple University: Villanova College: Business Staff, Medic: Ralph Bernstein Dermatological Society. Sacred Heart Hospital. Allentown, Pennsylvania. Fishers entrance to Hahnernann was heralded by the fact that his previous experi- ence in podiatry would give him an unusual advantage in anatomy. Looking at the string of A's on his yearly report, he must have had previous training in chemistry, physi- ology, and pathology, too. Always a very quiet boy, Martin certainly blew the lid off in Allentown. From all indi- cations, next year's Senior class will have an excellent guide with Fisher at Sacred Heart Hospital. ,Q PAUL HAVENS FLUCK 2826 North 19th Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Temple University High School: Hahnemcmn College ot Science. McKinley Hospital. Trenton, New Iersey. Before you is the Ely Culbertson and pet trickster of our class. That he is a bridge expert has been proven to the entire class, in the old smoking room. He was often sarcastically commanded to attend classes. Paul early distinguished himself as having suffered from enuresis, due to his penchant for Water pistols. However, not all of his time has been devoted to recreation. Always a zealous student, Paul will go far in his chosen field. 97 LOUIS SANTE FORNASIER 1135 South Mole Street Philadelphia, Pen ylvania AE Roman Catholic Hig X hool: Villanova College. Vice-President, Classx 4, Circolo Italiano. Sacred Heart Hospi , 'ladelphia. I Popularly knovm Lou came to Hahnemann four? ith one idea in mind-to acquire, gieywmewill serve him in gool eat ar. Always a quiejhungissinfgihgllth' , as attained hi go ' atifriagginigg-lsec ing a gentlema . ou e reputation of being a good rt- el e es it is better to be a good lo' r th to a gracious winner. The clasfl wi s yo ads of success in all your IV P ing 1 E3 1 ,,,,.l..1- ll If 'i I 'Q CHARLES FREDERICK FOX, l Vandergrift, Pennsylvania Peddie School: Bucknell Universif Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Pi Up n R ce-President ot Class, Z: President oi ss, t nt Council, 4: Dr. Benson's Group: Ra h B ste' Dermatological Society. Mercy Hospital, Wilkes-Barre ennsylvania. Charlie came o us from Bucknell. While at that i itution, and especially while spending a week in Allentown, he found some excellent material for Holly- wood. Charles has been well identified socially as well as in the more serious activi- ties at Hahnemann. His persistence in accomplishing the tasks before him should aid him in readily establishing himself in the medical world. We extend our best wishes to our President for his continued success. Q - H -.-41 GEORGE WILLIAM GAUMER 5112 North Mervine Street Philadelphia. Pe sylvania A x Northeast High Schbol University ot Pennsylvania. X Pi Rho Sigma: Alqx Sigma: Glee Club. 1, 2. 3, 4: Basket Ball: Ch 'rrnan ot Executive Committee. 1. '. , 'X Reading Homeopatllig Hloebqal. . Lx T'-ff FAQ . George is one of iq est and busiest classmates. Wewhave fheard much from him during the p'ast?Ye torjwo very- good the second: andvrnffrst importantpis iavcertain young la V vvlfoizfvwe remember having met Way bag at ouri' ie an Class Dance. He found tif I e dkijing t if year to ask the big question, ndrf e ex e t the knot will be tied in the vef lyearlnjg ,. if , er. 'T '11 I. EDISON GoLDs1vn'rH. B.s. ' Los Angeles. California Ai connellsville High School: Universal f u . Pi Lambda Phi: Alpha Sigma: 1 - LJ- 0- d Ball Committee, 3. 4: Chairma : ciate Editor ot Medic. Cedars of Lebanon Hospital . California. Goldie is a co-founder n ice-president ot one ot our most sele ups, the Pansy Club. As head of the C mittee, he staged the most successful Bl and Gold Ball We have seen during our f r years. On the side, he has done extensive research in organic chemistry with the corn- pound ethanol. l-le is a good and frequent host with an exceptional knowledge of the culinary art. And say!-he did not put the dead rat in Shippen's locker. l Next year, and possibly many thereafter, will be spent on the West Coast. Their gain will be our loss. l 'Q-' 4 -' I - reasons: his Iuniorifmeugqshipftorxogg 'latro nd best wishes tor a suc- 1114 RICHARD BAKER GREENE 5112 Springfield Avenue Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Northeast High School: Lebanon Valley College. Alpha Sigma. Reading Homeopathic Hospital. Uncle Willy's bad boy is quite a problem, especially to Sam Hughes who, as a result, has stopped gaining weight. Dick is a fine fellow and it you want to get an absolutely honest opinion on some sub- ject, he is the man to see. He uses plain language and speaks his true thought. May we suggest that next to Honesty he adopt Diplomacy as one ot his policies? Speaking about diuresis, ask Dick about the one glass test. We hope your virtues will be rewarded by a successful practice. IOHN RICHARD GRANT, B.S. 215 Fortieth Street Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania South Hills High School: Allegheny College. Phi Delta Theta: Alpha Sigma: Blue and Gold Ball Committee, 4. Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital. Iohn is a co-founder and President ot the exclusive Pansy Club. When interviewed, he stated that his preference was tor the red heads every time. He has a stool named after him at the Budweiser and is notorious tor his transient periods of amnesia. Has collaborated with Goldsmith, his roommate, on his researches. His worries as a student have not been about his studies, it you know what we mean. Good luck to Iohn, as he plans to spend his declining years in Pittsburgh. 100 GURDON STANFORD GUILE, A.B. 323 West Second Street Flint, Michigan Flint Senior High Sc -- - University of Michigan: Albion College. Delta Tau Delta- Tr Hurley Hospital, Fli ' qi ' an. C From the land 5 I Q Q t ame a chap to study homeopat Nllqds, he hog kept rolling alon 'l l'gjs'reEQl'red ' qoal. He is qoinq 1 I who, likewisefgpr 's the sg-A uel Hahnema . s earsrrgrfby, we some- time ma ant k w something about a certain , ture e h d in school. lust write to Guile' be se e has notes on every RTY FIVE . .ll-1 .1.-' .s.. bmw 7 Wifi nf ' 1 '1 I 1EssE GEORGE HAFER. B.s. ,J Boyertown, Pennsylvania Reading Hiqh School: Ursinus Alpha Sigma: Glee Club. 2. 4. 4 Sacred Heart Hospital. All nto , P sylvania. Iesse owns that qui oice which always speaks up to ask a q stion just as everyone is ready to dash fo e door. lt is his only fault as we have me to know him and so excuse it in view of his many good qualities. He studiously avoided any notoriety until our trip to Allentown, when his now famous sayinq entitled him to a niche next to Patrick Henry: Will five bucks fix it up? lf conscientious effort is rewarded, Iesse, you need not fear the future. 101 lecture ery rse we have had in 7 if LESTER WILBUR HARRIS Washington. D. C. Central High School: George Washington University. Kappa Alpha: Alpha Sigma: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society. 3. 4. Sibley Memorial Hospital. Washington. D. C. Les seems quiet and studious until you get to know him and then you decide he is not studious but an apt student: not quiet but very particular in the choice of his friends, in the presence of whom he does his share of entertaining. His longest minute was when Dr. Wells had him take a patient's pulse. I-le needs some additional incentive to work, and she is ready and waiting down in Washington. l-Iere's to your success. 'We almost forgot the trombone. PLAY, WILLIAM COWGILL HARRISON, B.S. 8 Main Street Mt. Holly. New Iersey Mt. Holly High School: Peddie School: University ot Pittsburgh. Delta Sigma Phi: Phi Alpha Gamma: Orchestra. McKinley Hospital, Trenton, New Iersey. Early in his medical career he began to sleep in any and all classes, until one day in Bacteriology, Sam said to him, Young man, l'll remember you when exam time rolls around . Since then he has slept in just three classes. He has never known defeat in a water battle and there have been many, yet he has never tailed to produce the goods when necessary, often astounding us with his Wonderful memory. 1 1 1 LESH!! 102 IOHN ROSS HIGERD 153 Washington Avenue Bellevue, Pennsylvania Bellevue High School: University ol Pittsburgh. Alpha Sigma: Hahnqlp nn Undergraduate Society. Pittsburgh Homeopathl Xlilospital. k No hen on a h H piddle ever stepped about more lively tha1i5do'ee, lack CSpats for short? Higerd, and M'9x G.l le wears ants in his pants. if QQ ' The chief vicesbfcgsmiterious lite were discovered at Allenlokr-tn' ocolate bars and peanuts after midn'Tg-ht.,. . 5? is g - His chief gripe, iftlis hard toihoose which is claieifis A 'ur fair city: and he longs for the fresh opegfsp es ot Pittsburgh. We can't beli ve itpis o ly! the town for which he pines: ut,'l'lfi'ere he is going and we will miss him.: fr' IRTY FIVE fx Hi hjicifnfifdnd ability will bring g y Qc- . 40,4114 .. ti , ,I '-- . W1 in - W -fe sm f 1: c sc' i 'iii' 9 ll A ' , 'JLy.l1V.9, - '-' , f' I 1 .K ht if 4' THOMAS RICHARD HOFMA , . 'V San Francisco, California ' 1 Tamalpais School: University o...- J, Alpha Tau Omega: Delta S' a: pha Gamma: Hahnemann Undergrad te net 3, 4: Medic Staii: President of Phi ph a a, 4. San Francisco City and Cou Hcspitcl. Dick is Caliiornia's t to our class. From the University of lifornia he came to Hahnemann. Dick ust like it, because he has only been back home once in tour years. He came to Hahnemann to be a Homeopath, and as a member ot the Hahnemann Under- graduate Society he has taken his work seriously. There can be no doubt that in years to come Dick will be one of the leading exponents of the teachings of Samuel Hahnemann. 103 .l. , ,.. W ,, --- -- ...-..--lq. --'Y V - v. '+ 'Q-1.1 A 5 . M- K Q - ' - l' 6- S- i .4 f' .- - - '-- - or V 5 IAMES IOSEPH HOGAN, B.S. Mount Holly, New Iersey Mount Holly High School: Saint loseph's College. Saint Elizabeth's Hospital, Elizabeth, New lersey. RED came to Hahnemann after taking his pre-medical course at St. loseph's in order to follow in the footsteps of his brother. His big interest outside of medicine is politics. l-le is, at all times, ready to expostulate on the merits of the Democratic Party. Red is a scholar and will doubtlesS follow the example of his brother and uphold the name on the high level at which it now stands. FREDERIC FISHER HOMAN 2501 Ieflerson Street Wilmington, Delaware Wilmington High School: Staunton Military Academy: University of Delaware: Villanova College. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital. Quiet and unassuming in his way, has made Fred one of the best liked fellows in his class. We are told that he made quite a name for himself socially, as a lunior interne at Wilmington this past summer. Fred has a weakness for purchasing books relative to diseases of the chest. With the knowledge gained from these books we know he will become a success in his chosen field of chest diseases. 104 NINCTCCN THTRTY FIVE P' 'F SAMUEL BISHOP HUGHES Corner of Columbia Avenue and Ocean Street Cape May, New ersey Cape May High School, ucknell University. Phi Alpha Gamma. Hahnemann Hospitalilli-'hilaiielphia. Sam, fair, fat,-,plietlioitipfand noisy. The back of the lectuiex frgfins would have seemed vacant if iflbladn' 'een lor his portly frame. Always- hecklinig gsonie-on'e--iii fhfs loud, bass yoE5.'S ,Ph never 'seemedifo grow up, if he 1Wcisn't cing some classmate in a full-N lson fine as carrying out a prac- tical joke W ' 'A sc e ing another The leriflcoasyva' be well covered in a ffearslplza ial physician having a hob ' for-'deep sea fishing. lm' fign 'Q mf 'Q PM 4 il '1 ttyl-l-l- ELDRIDGE WALTON IOHNS ! ff Pitman, New Iersey fb. I, ,I-' Pitman High School: Iohns Ho 'ffl-7' rsity: Hahne. mann College of Scienc X A EW! Phi Kappa Psi: Phi Alpha I mf : siness Staff of Medic: Blue and Gold Ball m ee, 4. Pitkin Memorial Hospital, As ry Park. New Iersey. 4 Pete received a th ough training in micro- projection under t tutelage of our friend, Dr. Thomas Snyder. W'hether environment or instruction, he also obtained the fundamen- tals of building a bay-Window. His motto is Irresistible Blonde Venus , and how the nurses fell for his smooth line. Pete is always smiling, jovial and ready to aid his fellow classmates. A gentleman and a student. With these essentials he shall cer- tainly be successful and his chosen profes- sion Will be filled with happiness. 105 11.19 'mf 'lx Q5 ' Y . . - 3 A , 2- f , ' 2 , A , . a IOHN ALEXANDER KACHMARICK. B.S. 645 Twentieth Street Hazleton. Pennsylvania Mining and Mechanical Institute. Freeland. Pa.: Villanova College. Lambda Kappa Delta. St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia. The originator of the roll number system at Hahnemann must have used Iohn as the inspiration. Almost any morning some pro- fessor would be heard calling him by number. Unofficially, it is rumored that lohn expects to specialize in uroloQY: ask Dr. Damiani. The coal crackers could use a good urologist, lohnp take advantage of it. 'When the internes were being selected, lohn was fortunate to be chosen by two hos- pitals, but the wife said St. Luke's, so next year he will be at St. Luke's and Childrens Hospital. EUGENE IOHN KUTY, B.S. Nazareth, Pennsylvania Nazareth High School: Pennsylvania State College. Orchestra. Hahnemann Hospital. Philadelphia. Carrying the colors of Penn State, Gene entered the Freshman year with good resolu- tions and fine ideals. Scholastically, he more than upheld the Glory of old State , but the resolutions and ideals went the way of all flesh at his first Contact with the weaker sex. Possessing a genial personality and a cap- tivating smile, we wouldn't be surprised to read some morning in the near future Beau- tiful patient elopes with Hahnemann lnterne . 106 LEO LERMAN, B.S. NICHOLAS RAYMOND LAKATOS Nanticoke. Pennsylvania Nanticoke High School: Pennsylvania State College. Newman Club: Dance Committee. 3: Glee Club, Z, 3. 4. Mercy Hospital, Wilkes-Barre. Pennsylvania. Above we see Nick, a diminutive lad, who is also the class wise-cracker . One great change has taken place in Chesty since he entered the portals of Hahnemann, and that is the increasing length of his face. We predict, by the time the State Boards roll around, his hair will only be a memory. Much can be said concerning this gay young Lothario, but a great deal less can be printed. We can expect much of him in the future. 5827 Cobbs Creek Boulevard Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Central High School: Pennsylvania State College. Phi Epsilon Pi: Dance Committee. 1. 2: Blue and Gold Ball Committee. 4: Manager of Orchestra. Hahnemann Hospital. Scranton. Pennsylvania. Here is a true maestro or as our dean says, An excellent violinist. From first violinist at the Stanley to leader of the Ritz-Carlton Orchestra, via Penn State, was accom- plished with ease and then he gave way to his secret ambition to study medicine. The college orchestra will lose its best asset. Making use of his educated fingers, Sch- walsky soon showed us that medicine was an art. We wonder whether the repertoire of beautiful blondes was the result of educated fingers or the accurate doses that he could quote as dose man. Seeking new fields to conquer, Leo is con- templating interneship at Scranton. 107 I i . .XA CLARENCE WILLIAM LINDEMAN, A.B.. M.A., Ph.D. Waynesboro. PF nsylvania Washington Townslii iqh School: Dickinson College: Columbia Univ : New York University. l Phi Beta Kappa: P D a Kappa: Hahnexnann Undergraduate cf 3. 4. NX NX I Allentown General lx 'r Xi l - This is the non X beqnf our class, always calm, alwa . .r er gr X ' warm Hello for Qryiqnif r - gogue himse'lfE'TLi, Via ww inted with the 'TIE , e prollgssors, and so he always ew jffsf at answer to give to any qu f ion. is es friends are Sigafoos and a od, d ni l cigar, from which we seldbl 4' aw ' separated. Lindy, we all ber you as a conscien- tiou ci lb and a close friend. . 2 Wt 1 e--i l-T. ' Q'E1 A PHILIP DOUGLAS LIVOLSI. 'B. ,ff 1709 Tasker Street A47 Philadelphia. Pennsylvania , if .- ' ' I south Philadelphia High sch Jlfltigiiqprsiy oi Pennsylvania. Wy' 4-'X l ' I A ' Il Circolo Italiano: Glee C5 ,II Women's Homeopathic Hospitylffhhiladelphia. yn ,' Vp .' Phil has alwaystifinsisted that a good little man can m I 'h wits with a good big man . Phil is no d for his good sense of humor, the only drawback being that he usually leaves his humor at home. The class has wondered why Philip waited until his Senior year to enter into wedlock. We believe it was just a matter of precaution, as Phil intends to interne at Vtfomen's Homeopathic next year. As a student, they do not come any better than Phil. We feel that your untiring efforts will be fully rewarded in the future. 108 I I -4- 4.4-34'--s..'fQ. QAEA CARL EVERETT LORENZ Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania Germantown Academy: Washington and Lee University: Villanova College. Alpha Sigma: Stude ti Council: Glee Club, l, 2, 3: Blue and Gold ll, Committee, 4: Medic Stall. Hahnemann Hospitali, Vwladelphia. A . Vxfe present Htl, an Winkle's chief rival, whose serene sleep was abruptly terminated during last yearxxyhe'-.he fell off his chair ten minutes before afllectutfe'Was over. Did we say Hterminat milkw E 'ean suspended until the succeedin tied? As a Preshmafixffar prominent because of hisgproipulsive, gait. jlkihtfge Sherlock Holmes 'pi e's was. the pause Later heftook, isrrnoustache seriously, being insp red by twfn of our Gastroenterol- ogists. i W ,X , f Now MQ egfpect Cklprlf' to go out and prove Y FIVE the fallacysofy and we're rooting for ,f f him. fgestg, oi' -l-uc-le! . E f ti . - l -lit- --i 1 , 1 Q1 If ,fu 032 .,' ..- fi if -f , E. .yes- ,I '41 ' rf H. I ALEXANDER BENIAMIN LUK ,gf E 318 East Centre Street n f Shenandoah, Pennsylvania golf' ,if 1. w. cooper High School: Pen fylvgya' tate College. Boxing Committee: New' an lib. Reading Homeopathic Hospital. f ' Dance Committee, 1 2: Gleegib Chairman oi ff' I Alex holds the dis 'Action held by few, that of defeating ther! reat Hamas back in the days when theyfwere both at Penn State. Alex could be seen demonstrating his physi- cal prowess most any afternoon, wrestling with Hughes. He possesses the ability of keeping a cool head at all times and his con- tagious laugh has won him many friends throughout the school. We feel that Reading Homeopathic selected a fine interne in Lukas and that, like his uncle, he will be a big man some day. 109 IAMES HAROLD MacART 143 North Oraton Parkway East Orange, New Iersey East Orange High School: Rutgers University. Phi Gamma Delta. Homeopathic Hospital oi Essex County, East Orange, New Iersey. Mac probably is the most conscientious worker in the class. The best part oi it is, regardless ot how hard pressed he may be by something, he will laugh and pass it off as easy. He was rewarded for his efforts by receiving Dr. Boericke's award for the most complete record of clinics. The Oranges CNew Ierseyl can now feel quite safe about their health problem, now that Mac will interne at the Homeopathic Hospital of Essex County. WILLIAM DUMMETT MAYHEW 122 Columbia Avenue Pitman, New Iersey Woodbury High School, Woodbury, New lersey: Iohns Hopkins University: Hahnemann College ot Science. Alpha Sigma. Pitkin Memorial Hospital, Neptune, New Iersey. Day after day Bill wends his way from alien ground, across the deep waters, carry- ing his heavy satchel behind him Cit really is indispensablel, and that's a days work, He takes less time to write quiz papers than any one else because he states only what he knows. You can depend on what he says, He has more reason to gripe than any man in our class, but rarely does he indulge in this pastime. Bill deserve success and We know he will attain it. 110 IOSEPH GOHEEN MCWILLIAMS Tyrone, Pennsylvania Tyrone High SchoolA ennsylvania State College. Phi Kappa Psi: Blu Xgd Gold Ball Committee, 4. Rhode Island Homeb Hospital. Providence. it 5x N Mac is anotbexr ize package sent by Penn State, to sgti X o us poor dumb medicos at Hahqeitn - - o literally did Mac take thefffgg that when an exam question read ' is ssxbrieflyf he was the first one out 'the McWilliams'9 uriderstood-g !tl'Ht one omitted o5,f'2juEstic?l1w'thout'tryihg to bluff. We thi thqtfitfhe e s who will meet Mac at Prhod Wd eopathic should be warnedx qt ere i real he man woman beatgerfliljw rf ' T' . Q 1 - -' . rf? ii.. 1. 'ME 111193 -1'-' IOSEPH HECTOR CORVER 'Iv . A.B. f Waterville, Maine Waterville High School: Uni 'sity ine. Pi Upsilon Rho. l Lawrence and Memorial As lat Hospitals, New London, Connecticut. The first time that noticed Michaud, We were impressed by is unassuming, unosten- tatious presence ich immediately marked him as a gentleman. During the four years that he has been at Hahnemann, he has done much to substantiate our original impression. Hector unconsciously commands respect and inspires confidence in all who come in contact with him. That alone, not to mention his discerning judgment and thor- ough methods, bears great promise for his success as a fine physician. 111 .... ' U X K L I : CHARLES BELDEN MILLER Cleveland. Ohio East High School, C land: Wittenberg College. Springfield Orchestra l 2 3. Huron Road Hospita C L eland, Ohio. tt Some men m h e s o es conspicuous by their presen . 0' e l eing small of stature and thinKolku,r prove his worth by deed dffdl-act' .55iEd5thisLxwe proportions, hemhalgeslgiaibn thggti gross cap assuinhigga paternal responsibilty iri.jl1'e g a large progeny. There an two ,thingy i separable from little Charlie-is atjbow ti and derby. Perhaps they areX' mulets, knows? ,,4f fXg . .hW ff fjfd m Q' fl -.... in . 1 , .-so --I Q f If W. ,, -- Zf fl I .' ll YI CLEDITH ATEN MILLER gf ' Miiflinville, Pennsylvania tj' ,W I Miftlinville High School: Hahne djinfffovilech Science. Phi Alpha Gamma: Glee cluil, 22,57 Wyoming Valley Homeopat ic ljgspital, Wilkes-Barre. Pennsylvania. .IW 44.7 ff Q A, I I N Well recognized his portly figure, l sleepy gaze and ,ld easy manner, his classmates rate hi ja swell guy . lt was no great surprise to hear of his love- lite terminating in an early marriage. He is a rabid baseball tan, will lay odds l on anything and now and then enveigles well-known gentlemen of the class to turn their two bucks l'm saving to buy a drink at the dance over to him for saiekeeping. However, we all like him a great deal. K 112 think he has ablyiiq Q o CHARLES CHRISTIAN MONTGOMERY. B.S. 924 South Franklin Street Wilkes-Barre. Pennsylvania Newport Township School: Franklin 6. Marshall College: Susquehq ha University. Phi Mu Dena: Alphaxslzl' ,1Blue and Gold Ball Committee, 4. Q. Wyoming Valley Hoitieopathic Hospital. .5 iktk Ak K.-'lg 7- , 1 S ,f Monty did it!'45 ' s the cry when- ever some foolish pgiggqlygurred, but mostly they were wrong. Some peoplejwho do not ' know Monty ,very Well nilgthtthavelllletidea he is a perpetual loklefster. Trohis friends who know himd -he is if swell guy, a good artist, a stuclentf but with orielfaultehe would trust anyone wvlho 'might hand him a sob story: just a nice sucker. ff' fvvvvw . -Vi V A ,fl ,fe-f 'Xa'-lf' '-5- ,JZ '4 for ,ft A , l 1 ---' , W Q Q tg :Zi ,jf YI if ' 1 '-' ,ff 'LL at 1 l.- MICHAEL JAMES MORRONE 1' V! , ff 1711 Fernon Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania J South Philadelphia High Scho Vvill College. i Il Circolo Italiano. St. Agnes' Hospital, Philadelphi!! ff Here is one of the. epresentatives from South Philadelphia. 'Ike has always been 1 one of the best pre ared men in the class, always ready with rapid-fire answer to the many quizzes. l-low he could remember all those answers is something of a marvel. Always quiet in school, Mike seldom entered into the many free-for-all bull ses- 1 sions, to which many of the others devoted much time and energy. We feel you will have a successful interneship in St. Agnes' Hospital. The best to you, Mike , as always. 113 - ev gi.. - . A 4 EDWIN HUGHES NUTTER. A.B. Newark, Delaware DuPont High School: Ohio Wesleyan University. Pi Upsilon Rho. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital, Wilmingion, Delaware. Ed came to Hahnemann so that he could spend his week-ends in Roxborough. His blood-curdling lndian warwhoops during the Allentown trip revealed his western training. Most of the time he is quiet, unassuming, conservative, and studious. Ed has been well liked by his classmates with the excep- tion of a few fraternity brothers who consider him an A-l Kibitzerf' He is just a nutter making good, and we predict that he will have a pleasant and prosperous future. ABRAHAM KAM SAT NG, B.S. 77 New Era Lane Honolulu, T. H. Si. Louis College. Honolulu: University of Hawaii, Honolulu. Pi Upsilon Rho. ln far away Hawaii Mike first saw the light of day. He decided Medicine needed him, but what cosmic urge made him pursue this profession we cannot fathom. Dances and social functions generally found him prominent among those present. Mike proved to be a willing and able student. This can be seen by his fine scholastic rec- ord. After seeing Thuja remove 218 warts, he'll go back to Hawaii a wiser Homeopath. Success to him in the future! l14 LOUIS IOSEPH O'LINI 17 Pierson Place Newark, New Iersey St. Anselmis Preparatory School. Manchester, New Hampshire: Villanova College. Ralph Bernstein Dermatological Society: Class Treasurer, 2. Hospital of St. Barnabas, Newark, New Iersey. Lou will be remembered as the best- dressed man in the class and also as one of the rnost dependable men. Lou can retire at five in the morning and still catch the 8:58 tor Allentown . . . he has the makings of a good Obstetrician. Lou claims it is folly to sleep one's lite away . . . his partner, Fabby , supports the opposite side of the question. Lou was always one ot the bright- est students in the class. We expect you to succeed in a big way in the future. MARTIN BEADENKOPF PENNINGTON The Mermaid . Marshallton, Delaware Wilmington High School: University oi Alabama. Alpha Sigma: Sigma Phi Epsilon: Kappa Beta Phi: Humor Editor of Medic: Treasurer of Class, I: Chairman of Dance Committee, 3: Secretary of Class. 4: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society, 4. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital.k Colonel Pennington, one of our Southern CWilmingtonl gentlemen, has three hobbies: Wine, Women and Work. He boasts of the first two and shields the last, always surpris- ing us when it comes to examination time. Usually happy' Clnd jovial with a joke always at hand Cclon't you like his Depart- ment ot Humor?J, it is a sight to watch him sober up in split seconds as he puts his eagle eye on the professor and holds forth on some topic. Pardon his Southern accent. He's all right. Best ot luck in Wilmington, suhl 115 FRANK GUERINO PRESTILEO 423 North Centre Street Pottsville, Pennsylvania Pottsville High School: Villanova College. Lambda Kappa Delta: Secretary ot Hahnemann Institute: Medic Staff. Women's Homeopathic Hospital. Philadelphia. Presty has taken a lot of kidding from many of our professors, especially Doctor Bernstein. Why? Because he learns every- thing so perfectly that he even knows where to place the commas and the periods in each sentence. So few people have this ability that l think our teachers are envious of Frank. l-le has, however, more than this to his credit: he can apply his knowledge to actual cases so that the future can only be bright for one with such a brilliant mind to back his knowledge. LEONARD RAMBACH Kittanning. Pennsylvania Kittanning High School: Franklin 6. Marshall College. Phi Lambda Kappa: Zeta Beta Tau: Medic Staff: Vice- President, Phi Lambda Kappa. 4. St. Ioseph's Hospital, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Lenny is one of the fountains of knowledge in our class. Vfhen someone wants to know something, just ask Lenny, and he gets the right answer. A most unpretentious type of man, but you have only to talk to him, and soon you will respect him and realize that here is one classmate who will be a credit to our chosen profession. Allentown was just a repetition for him and a good time, because of his past summers work. Lenny certainly had his good time. 116 HAROLD IAMES RICKARD. A.B. Whitemarsh. Pennsylvania Germantown High S ol: University ot Pennsylvania. Alpha Sigma: Ptole - Blue and Gold Ball Committee. 4: Basket Ball: I President. l: Glee Club. 1. 2, ' 3, 4: Student C c . 1: Tennis. Hahnemann Hospit elphia. N A This personablefx ' i 'P edic can hold you enraptured is for hours at a time. He is a gr ffinersandh we like his company evefakswe dcmffrbelieie' heyy he tells, though he ,keeinsxte-resilifze il'1iS. X, 5.41-Y T-2 Tex it, and it runs off his from the proverbial duck. He ities, chief of which Tex desires he will ff' to him and may luck -- .5 --1'-W0 cw cf .ii ry uf Q' I' ' ' f' ,, CARL ADAM BILLING ' if 155 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania i D A It Northeast High School. Philad 'liia: le University. Pi Upsilon Rho: Correspo f ng 'ff re y. Pi Upsilon Rho. 4. li 41 Hahnemann Hospital. Philad ' The old SteinWa 'l in room B was his best companion. : likes red, and Wears it in his neckties. ey said he cut his own hair, like some other Well-known eccentrics, but Belmont did it, as he puts it, just for the . . . ot it. Carl is thorough in his Work, Whether it be theoretical or practical. He leaves us, as a follower ot Hahnemann, on his Way to biqqer fields. We wish him the best of success! 117 ll-XMES IOSEPH RITA 36 Bayard Street Trenton, New Iersey Trenton Senior High School: Temple University. Il Circolo Italiano, Vice President, 4. West lersey Homeopathic Hospital. Camden, New Iersey. Iames Baby Rita, known to his class- mates as Iimmy, was considered the baby of his classy however, this title does not fully describe him in his entirety. lim may be small in stature but quite the opposite in grey matter. Iirnmy proved his mental alert- ness time and time again last summer while serving as a lunior lnterne in a Trenton hos- pital. limmy is best remembered as a text- book picture of Facial Vasomotor Instability. No one could blush like he. The class extends hearty wishes for a hCIDIDY Career. WILLIAM IOSEPH RUGGIERO, A.B. 1819 West Eighth Street Wilmington, Delaware Alexis l. duPont High School: University of Delaware. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital. Willie earned a reputation of being a pretty good diagnostician as early as his lunior interneship in a Wilmington hospital last summer. Bill is one of the unheard-of men in the class, never meddling in the affairs of others, keeping well out of the spot- light. His favorite hobby is one of forcible back-slapping at the expense of a certain classmate who always returned them with interest, to the delight of those around. May your final trip home in lune pave the way for a most profitable career. 118 GEORGE RUDOLPH SCHUBART. B.S. Wheeling. West Virginia Triadelphia High School: Muskingum College. Phi Sigma Kappa: Pi Alpha Chi: Pi Upsilon Rho: Ptolemy: President of Ptolemy. 4. St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Philadelphia. George was a jolly fellow and earned the respect of the whole class. He was a hard worker, earnest student, and a deep thinker. A big smile played constantly over his features, and a hearty hello was surely forthcoming to everyone he met. He was very active in fraternity life and was elected president of the Ptolemy Society during his senior year. George will be our only repre- sentative in West Virginia. We wish him success. CARL LEOPOLD SCHWAB 137 North Street Iohnstown, Pennsylvania Westmont-Upper Yoder: University of Pittsburgh. Ralph Bernstein Dermatological Society: President, 4: Basket Ball, 2. Pottsville Hospital. Carl joined us four short years ago, after taking his pre-medical studies at Pitt. He is very sincere and always ready to lend a helping hand to a fallen friend, regardless of the inconvenience caused him. His popular- ity is well warranted. Carl's character, good judgment, and self- restraint have endeared him to those who know him best. We predict for him a very successful career, as a Dermatologist. 119 if r , QV' ln 'll' RAYMOND EDWIN SEIDEL 1426 Iackson Street Philadelphia, Pen ylvania South Philadelphia :'- School: University of Pennsylvania. X Pi Upsilon Rho: 'rro 1 4: Director of Athletics. St. Luke's and Chil r- spital, Philadelphia. A f' Hay has don -'wh ,o r I and has made himself a very D 44:0 vs able class- mate. He has take rt. mo a gg, ' besides being very fa q- - -o - - Shu: Ray has of oi lo o 'o o vea good, suc u - al prcfdtice. He prob- ably wil o ood in he rapidly enlarging group ot 1 arri me i our class in a short time, so 's join ' wishing him the best ot luck, o f - iut o , .gl I ,.... W l.l1 , 'S IoHN SETTINERI, B.s. .1 'fi 821 South Avenue f' Af Syracuse. New York '4.,ff'fffL?9'-2 ff' 6 , J as J! Alf' A! Blogett Vocational High SCh0yUn of Oklahoma: Gioo ciob. 1, 2. 3, 4. Syracuse General Hospital, S ac e, New York. of Par-don me, Gen lgnen. May We intro- duce Iohn, better own as the Surgeon . How typical, but neath this assumed aus- terity is to be found a sincere and taithiul triend. The mysteries ot Surgery have intrigued lohn since his Freshman year- whence the name. Socially, Iohn has tor- saken the bachelor ranks but, who Wouldn't tor such a sweet cause? lohn, success is oi your choosing. Remember a bit of Savoir Faire with your SaVoir Vivre will ease the way. . 120 wi-2'-I' 9 ,.- L- EUGENE RODMAN SHIPPEN, IR., A.B. 1290 East Park Avenue Winter Park, Florida Brookline High School, Brookline. Massachusetts: Proctor Academy: Haverford College. Phi Alpha Gamma: Glee Club, 1, Z, 3, 4: Orchestra. 1. 2, 3, 4: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society, 3, 4 Homeopathic Hospital ot Rhode Island, Providence. Rod is a man of wide and varied activities A good student, yet auite able to spend much time with his flute, musical saw, 'cello or piano, to say nothing of the interpreting of handwriting, diagnosing of fractures by peering into the deeper recesses of the eye, etc., etc. Whether Rod locates in Miami, Florida, or way points, we know they will be getting an enthusiastic student of Homeopathy and an accomplished physician. We wonder, though, what the Y will do without him. Perhaps some day he'll be their medical director. 121 WARREN BRUNDAGE SHEPARD, IR., B.S. 474 Lincoln Avenue Bellevue, Pennsylvania Bellevue High School: Pennsylvania State College. Kappa Sigma: Alpha Sigma: Student Council. 4: Vicc- President ot Class. 3. Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital. Bud Frankenstein fone of the Iones boys for short? has supplied an ever present need for mirth and gaiety in these past four years when the sun has often been hidden by our latest examination mark. His brain works just as efficiently at wise-cracking as it does in grasping medical knowledge, and Bud is one of our best students. He has inside information on this Pansy Club affair. Ask him to sing his Hello number. His ideas on high and low poten- cies are original. Success to you, Bud, and may you ever keep your sense of humor. IACOB Colmar, Pennsylvania HARVEY SIGAFOOS, A.B. Lansdale High Schoo : niversity of Pennsylvania. Pi Upsilon Rho: Hq 3. 4: Dr. Benson' - ann Undergraduate Society. Hahnemann Hospital lake is quiet He is calm and d Q--' la o s approach to any problem, bestlj gif- spgcise, accu- rate, and a brilliak x .- . Hgzo' 'y-mLeak- ness is a vasomotoy tested by the,eerse filly' BHG, es. For some 'rjlenow A,'reaso'n3'q7:1'ke2 returned from his fllfnior 1 , te ship at Sellersville with a nagiiirest in' edicine and lite in . e up. delphia. x - ga s - ing in manner. . i 'il I general I es ha mapped out tor him a brilliant'fu1'ufre as octor. ,, if ,--.Tan if f, --.-6 I All cf-+' in 11 --ML all '-TE' fi , 1 WILLIAM STANLEY SILVER 'N ly 'I Philadelphia. Pennsylvania fly h, tl ff 'I' 1 V IJ ,Ir Northeast High School. Philadelphimj l3'University. Orchestra, 1, 2. 3, 4. I , v- Phi Lambda Kappa, Secretary. I Presigexg 4: 5 St. I.uke's and Allow us Bill. When down at the 1, K Chi1dren's Hospi .,llJhiladelphia. to introduce smiling, Whistling we hearfa loud, shrill voice other e id ot the hall say, How ya doin', -Bill Sil erman would be a good guess, tor thus he greeted his classmates. Bill played in the orchestra for four years, and, if we must say so-is a violinist ot no mean repute. Whistling is a hobby, espe- cially before class-anything from William Tell to the Student Prince and practically nothing else. Our good wishes, Bill. I 122 l IOHN ALFRED STABILE 116 Hudson Street Trenton. New Iersey Trenton Senior High School: Bucknell University. Delta Eta Chi. McKinley Hospital, Trenton, New Iersey. Iohn may be small in comparison to Atkin- son, but that did not deter him from studying medicine. A quiet, good-natured boy, yet always willing to extend a helping hand. He has never tailed to enter into a discussion where politics was the topic involved-he could always more than hold his own with the celebrated elocutionists of the class. lf your short stay with us is to be taken as a criterion, you are most certain to be a very successful Medica WILLIAM MELVIN SNOWDEN 6312 Sherwood Road Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Terrill Preparatory School, Dallas, Texas: Hobart College. Delta Psi Omega: Orange Key Society. Hahnemann Undergraduate Society. 3, 4: President. 4: Dr. Benson's Group: Glee Club. 2, 3: Associate Editor ot Medic. Homeopathic Hospital of Essex County. East Orange. New Iersey. Mel, with his big smile and fatherly advice, is everyones friend. li you want to know the right remedy to prescribe for your casee ask Snowden. Some ot us may fear to use his high potencies, but he always has a good remedy for you. lt is iaith in Homeopathy such as Mel has that will help to keep it alive when he starts to practice medicine. He will be the kind of family physician that one always reads about in good books. V 123 IOHN CONWELL STOLZ, B.S. 434 North 35th Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Hartwick Academy, Cooperstown, N. Y.: College ot William and Mary. Phi Mu Delta: Glee Club. 2, 3. Mercy Hospital, Altoona, Pennsylvania. Iohn, the younger ot the Stolzes, is the one with the graceful mustache. He also inherited a disposition that is pleasant. lohn already has assumed that professional air which we all hope to attain. His convincing manner of speech and his warm, friendly attitude should bring him many patients. We hope that Paul will be associated with him, because what one has tailed to comprehend the other will surely know. 'lln Union, there is Strength . PAUL KEATLEY STOLZ BA MA 434 North 35th Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ieannette Hiqh School: Bucknell University: Temple University: University of Pennsylvania. Delta Sigma: Glee Club, 2, 3: Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4: Art Editor of Medic. Mercy Hospital. Altoona, Pennsylvania. lt lohn didn't know, Paul always ventured to come to the rescue. And, ot course, many times he was wrong, because Paul has the unique ability ot speaking in generalities. But we must admit that that is also a worthy attribute. What impresses us most, is the fidelity that these brothers show toward each other. Always together, always helping each other. With Pauls pleasing disposition, he should have no trouble in gaining the pin- nacle ot success. 124 EDWARD THEGEN Camden, New Iersey Camden High School: Hahnemann College ot Science Orchestra. Passaic General Hospital. We often wondered why Ed wore that black pot on his head. lt was recently whise pered that he carried his lunch in it every morning all the way from Camden. A relic of the old Science School, Thegen could always be depended on to carry out his end, whether it was in an examination or in general, panning of a department or a prof. Ed, with his fiddler's fingers, soon will be doing podalic versions over in lersey with a dexterity that will put Dr, Potter to sharne. LEWIS BENIAMIN THOMAS, B.S. 329 State Street Nanticoke, Pennsylvania Nanticoke High School: Lafayette College. Pi Upsilon Rho: Business Manager, Medic. Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Kingston. Pennsylvania. lust a big-time coal-cracker and politician from the coal regions and Lafayette. Lew showed his ability in handling various elec- tions and enterprises, such as the business section of this publication. The mastery of the great game of bridge is also among his ambitions. ln back of his rather bold and hard-boiled front, Lew is really one of the kindest, most unselfish, sympathetic and well-liked follows in the class. We wish him luck! 125 MARCEL PAUL THOMAS, B.S. Peru, Indiana Butler Township High School: Ball State Teachers College: Indiana University. Alpha Sigma: Glee Club, 2: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society, 3, 4: Editor-in-Chief of 1935 Medic. Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland. Ohio. The wheels that run Tommie grind slowly, though exceedingly fine, and We mean this as a compliment. As evidence of his thor- oughness we offer this Year Book, of which he is Editor. Usually of serious countenance, no host has a bigger welcoming smile or Warmer hand clasp. He can swap tales with the best, including Colonel Pennington, and many an enjoyable evening have We spent in his com- pany. We can't fail to mention his partner in life-Florence-a perfect match. Loads of happiness and good fortune to you both. ARTHUR HILTON VAUGHN, A.B. 23 Fourth Street East Providence. Rhode Island Classical High School: Brown University. Alpha Tau Omega: Blue and Gold Ball Committee, 4. Homeopathic Hospital of Providence. Without any exaggeration, it can be said that Arthur is a gentleman and a scholar. He possesses the rare ability of making friends Wherever he goes. Almost any afternoon in Pathology, Vaughn could be heard uno, duo, etc., indulging in his favorite game of More. We all know that he just enjoys taking finals in Pathology at 5:30 P. M., especially when he is to meet Ruth in New York at seven. Rhode Island Homeopathic is to be con- gratulated on selecting Arthur as an interne. 126 1 ANTHONY IOSEPH VOLANTE, A.B. 1802 South Chadwick Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania South Philadelphia Hi h School: University ot Pennsylvania. ix Student Council, 3: G1 e Club, l, 2, 3, 4: Blue and Gold Ball Committee, l, St. Mary's Hospital, hiladelphia. Al certainly l List be bound for heaven 'cause the devil dont like music . How- ever, he overlooked the foot that Dr. Chandler didn't either: especiallyr during chem lab. Regardless of theoccasion, whether it be an anatomy quiz or an -Allentown trolley, Al would render his imitation- of all four ,Mills brothers. Next toimusic, :thelgame of More is his favorite avocatfongand Vaughn his favor- ite opponent. i .t 3. Al should tell uslwhat he says when he mumbles to himself before an exam. St. Marys Hospital will be graced by 'fAl's'f'fpre-sence ,next year and we all know that theref was a Woman in the case. ' I ,tx , 3 'll 1 ,,. .T.- flj ,ll ,H -M m :lgJ.1M3'x -1' v A ig at O V -..-X t Q, IIT ltllillllgy -1--E : if ' 5. R My ARTHUR W. W. WADDING N,AA.B. 823 West Cambria Street 5. ,ff -'ii I, Philadelphia, Pennsylvaniajrggflfy.-f' Northeast High School: Urjgersitpjdl Aennsylvania. Alpha Sigma: Secretary of 'lphnyfaigm 3: Dr. Benson's Group- Medic Staff wx ,I Hahnemann Hospital, Phi? phia. Waddy is a quiet, ,andsome, young doctor to whom women fl 'k. Their ailments will be Well handled becduse Arthur spent the past summer Working in the Gynecological Dis- pensary and Wants to continue along this line when he finishes his interneship at Hahnemann. He is such a quiet chap that many in the class might have overlooked him and feel that they do not know him, but some day they will remember him, because Waddy is one boy who is going places. 127 MILTON SOLOMON WEINBERG. B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pottsville High School: Pennsylvania State College. Phi Delta Epsilon: Dance Committee, l: Librarian of Orchestra: Medic Staff. Hahnemann Hospital, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Milt is one boy who deserves to be a doctor. He has not taken part in many activities in school, because his spare time was taken up making ends meet. During the four years he has been at Hahnemann, he has worked for his room and board in a settlement house. Milt did, however, find time just before his Sophomore year to get married. Life can hold only success for one who has worked so hard to be a doctor. HARVEY GLENN WIBLE. B.S. 479 Marion Avenue Mansfield, Ohio South Bend High School: University of Pittsburgh. Glee Club. 1, 2, 3: Class Secretary. 1. Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital. Breaking hearts seems to be Wible's favorite sport. lt appears as if there are very few girls' schools, or nurses' dormitories with which Glenn isn't acquainted. His love for the more beautiful things in life led him to spend an enjoyable vacation on the ninth floor of the hospital twith the nursesl. Wible took the chemistry course so literally that he drove the rest of the class out of the laboratory. As a gynecologist, he specializes in selecting the cards marked and the age under 21. Glenn is returning to Pittsburgh Homeo- pathic to give the local girls a thrill. 128 WILLIAM WORK WIDDOWSON, B.S. Indiana, Pennsylvania Indiana High School: University oi Pilttsburgh. Sigma Pi: Alpha Sigma. St. Luke's and Children's Hospital. Philadelphia. 'Vlfe remember when Bill first came out of the Vifeste-when he had no gray hairs. ln less than four years he came, saw and con- quered, so that now he is a happy husband and a proud father. He takes his work seriously as befits his responsibilities and keeps out of the lime- light. which makes this write-up a difficult matter, Bill will interne at St. Luke's Hospital and we suspect may linger further in this environ- ment. Here's hoping. RUSSELL GORSUCH WITWER 1208 Wakeling Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Northeast High School, Philadelphia: Franklin G Marshall College. Phi Kappa Sigma: Pi Upsilon Rho: Glee Club, 1, 2, 3: Manager, 4: Class President, 3: President of Fraternity, 4: Student Council, 3: Chairman, Class Dance. 2: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society, 4: Dr. Benson's Group. Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Russ had no more than arrived at Hahnemann, when he gained the respect and friendship of his classmates because of his convincing personality. Besides doing Well in the classroom, Russell found time to be lunior Class President. He also distin- guished himself in numerous extra curricular activities. We do not know what Wit's plans are for the future, but we do know that he should consider that ready smile which he possesses-it may be very beneficial. 129 WILLIAM WALLACE ZIMMERMAN, 3rd 821 Washington Street Wilmington, Delaware Culver Military Academy: Miami University, Oxford. Ohio: Hahnemann College ot Science. Allentown General Hospital. Allentown, Pennsylvania. Bill joined our class last year, after taking a few years' leave of absence to establish a bus depot in Vxfilmington. He is a true friend to everyone in the class and always sees that the boys get home for vacations via Greyhound Bus Lines. He is a son of a doctor, who has overcome great odds to be one hirnself. His father would be proud of him, and l am sure we can be proud to say he was a member of our class. EDWARD HENRY ZWERGEL Niles, Michigan Niles High School: Western State Teachers College, Kalamazoo, Michigan: De Pauw University. Alpha Sigma: Ptolemy: Blue and Gold Ball Committee, 2, 3: Glee Club, 2, 3. 4: President ot Class, 2: President of Hahnemann Institute, 4: President of Alpha Sigma, 4: Hahnemann Undergraduate Society, 3, 4: Dr. Benson's Group: Bernstein Der- matological Society. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital. Cur big giant tackle from Michigan had quite a reputation to live up to when he entered Hahnemann. Even this has been surpassed and we nominate Ed as our most popular classmate. Friendly to all and one of the crowd , yet he possesses a reserved air which sets him apart. His smile alone Will relieve a large percentage of his patients: combined with the similia, his prac- tice is bound to be successful. Diplomat superb. Had there been a higher office, Ed would have been chosen for it. Here is a future president of the A. l. H. 130 THE CLASS HISTORY MIRAGE, we are told, is a hallucinatory vision of a tree-girted spring of cool, crystal-clear water, imagined by the thirst-crazed desert traveler in his search for the life-giving liquid. But that which the wanderer seeks so earnestly and toward which he presses so eagerly can never ease the torment in his throat, for when he comes to the envisioned spot, there is only dry sand. Our arrival at Hahnemann was very like that. Most of us had been point- ing toward medical school ever since we had been victims of the childhood diseases and had fallen hard for that saint and scholar, the family doctor. All of us had worked through an infinity of pre-medical preparation-tedious lectures and weary hours of laboratories in chemistry, physics, and zoology. Certainly, for some years previous, we had looked upon medical students as the most courageous and romantic and noble beings now inhabiting the earth. They were indeed the brightest and best -truly gods of a sort. And now-we had arrived. We were in medical school. But where was the joy of our achievement? Where was the old magic in the very name medical student ? Where was the satisfaction we thought we would feel? We felt only timid, strange, and, if the truth be known, a little frightened. Gone entirely was the water-we stood on the dry sand. And so, trying hard to feel that this day was the most momentous in our lives, we became a unit on that early October night when we gathered in the Clinical Amphitheatre to witness the opening exercises of the Eighty-fourth Annual Session of the Hahnemann Medical College. This ceremony was, so to speak, the accouchement at which the Class of 1935 tGod bless us, every one? was born. The obstetrician in charge of the affair was the Dean himself, William A. Pearson, chemist, toxicologist, and Rotarian. His demeanor was jovial, informal, and obviously embarrassed: his welcome was perfunctoryp and we noticed before long that he moved his head from side to side in a most remarkable manner. His assistant accoucheurs included the florid and wealthy Colonel Kolb, President of the Board of Trustees, who whispered what we guess was a welcome: and thin, forceful and well spoken Dr. Ioseph V. F. Clay, who, as speaker of the evening, delivered a masterful address on Medicine as a pro- fession. The representative of the local Y. M. C. A. was introduced late in the third stage to tell us of the glories of living in the Y. lt seems they had set aside a nice eighth floor for the exclusive use of Hahnemann students, where We could study together and revel in the ecstasy of mutual fellowship, although why anyone should make that a selling point we never could fathom. Prayers were supplied through the courtesy of the Reverend lf-theinhold Stolz, a local Lutheran clergyman, whose sons were fortunate enough to be two of us. Thus the travail ended, and thus we were born. lmpressed by the Dean's remarks of the night before about punctuality tnine point zero zero? we presented our bright and shining faces in the third floor lecture room at eight point five five. The Dean was in his gayest master of ceremony form, and put on a hot sketch for our pleasure, presenting the chemistry staff. loseph Samuel Hepburn was a dingy, drab, little man, with finger nails like Fu Manchu: but he disarmed us straightway with his wistful srnile and his timid blue eyes, eyes which proved to be the windows of a brilliant mind. We loved Heppie at first sight. Dr. Ioseph CEd Wynnl Chandler, whose winning the Croix de Guerre is celebrated in song by all sophomores, was in all ways conscientious, harassing himself and us with everything from being premier ether fire-man to taking roll in the labs at ten before noon. Dr. 131 Bill Schmidt, he of the many degrees, looked and talked like a football coach. Edwin Hicks was curator of the English Library fno! not literature, you nit witll and a chemist of small parts, a man who would literally wear himself down in his frenzied answers to simple questions. Young blood was supplied in the person of Hiram Snider, keeper of the unknown urinesg he seemed somewhat schizoid and repressed, but it is our bet, that given three bacardis and an old- fashioned, he would blossom like the wild rose. The Dean himself proved to be the Hahnemann publicity agent without peer, a genial clubman and an exponent of the body beautiful: his lectures on chemistry, however, were uninspired and in the impersonal and abstract manner of a museum guide who has repeated his lines too often. The highlight of the year was the episode of the purloined poisonal copy of Hicks' chem book, and although the real culprit is not known, it was whispered that Iohn Stolz and Shippen were seen looking in the book three weeks before it disappeared. Our anatomy, unlike March, came in like a lamb and went out like a lion. Phillips was the lamb, Sylvis the lion. For the first two months Tommie had us in tow, first explaining the clavicle, then the rest of the skeleton, but especially the clavicle, men. ln December we were allowed to go into the dissecting room for one hour a day to study the dissections being done by the Sopho- mores. lt is hard now to imagine the slight breathlessness and mild excitement which we experienced in our new and very informal approach to a dead man. We soon learned not to look on the object on the marble slab as a man, nor to wonder if anyone mourned his passing, but to regard it as an intricate system of levers and pulleys. The second semester saw us in this same lab, scalpeling cadavers of our own. Once a week, on Fridays, we were quizzed at our tables by the staff. There was solemn and non-committal Phillips, who would let you go on tracing the course of the musculospiral nerve through Scarpa's triangle and never frown a hint at youp strong and silent Shollenberger Chow did a man like that ever get a name like Clarencefllp Rowland Ricketts, thorough and ever ready to help, Mattern, breezy, smiling, and altogether likeable. Bill Lee, exercising his new found authority for all it was worth, asking tricky questions like the difference between the bregma and the smegmag and finally, that portly and puerile photographher, Kuemmel. Bill Sylvis, endowed with a big tummy and a bigger voice, floored us with his prodigious capacity for anatomical detaily we were privileged to hear him thrice weekly. Who can forget the day Big Bill walked in on us as we were preluding his lecture with a healf-hearted rendition of that choral classic, We're a Bunch of Bastardsn? Now , said Bill, your attack is terrible. There's only one way to sing and that is to sing well. Then, as he reached for a pointer, Now follow me and watch the attacks and releases. We sang it as it was never sung before. Such incidents as this brightened our often dismal way. Thomas M. Snyder, M.D., has the distinction of giving the longest course at Hahnemann. It may truly be said of him, with equal distinction, that he probably works harder to make his course live for his students than any other teacher at Hahnemann. His lectures were thoroughly co-ordinated, master- fully delivered and not without frequent dashes of rare good humor. His exam- inations were real fun to take, and yet were thoroughly searching. Tommie endeared himself to us that day, only two weeks after school began, when we learned of the death of a member of our class-the first of many losses. The fact that we had not a had a chance to come to know Ioseph 132 Arnovitz did not make his untimely passing any less shocking. Like a priest, only more philosophically, Tommie spoke tenderly, gently to us. Our affection for him became deep during that half year we were together: and whose throat was without a lump at our last class with Tommie, when we gave him white carnations-and he returned one to us? The one-hour weekly minors CGod bless THEM every one, tool included Medical Terminology by Dr. Magee and History of Medicine by Dr. Roman. In the former We learned what Herpes Zoster and Mons Veneris Ctsk! tskll rneantg in the latter we were told about Hippocrates, Aesculapius and Galen, with his old black bile. Our conclusion was that we were really very well informed young men. The second half brought with it a course in Pharmacy. Under the kind and patient tutelage of Iohn L. Borneman, the rnan with the 30X voice, we busied ourselves with rolling pills, filling capsules, and making noxious broths, then camouflaging them with oil of thyme. We were reminded that we were in a homeopathic school by a weekly visit from Dr. Boericke, the Professor of Materia Medica, who read his little cornpend- The Principles of Homeopathy -to us. Some of his words fell upon stony places CCameron and Goldsmithl where they had not much earth and when the sun was up, they were scorched, and because they had no root, they withered away: And some fell among thorns CDoWd and Shepardl and the thorns sprang up and choked them: But others fell into good ground and brought forth fruit, some an hundred- fold CSnowdenl, some sixty-fold fShippenJ, and some thirty-fold CDavidsonl. Thus ended the first lesson. It had been a year of many casualties, in Cctober we were 143, in Iune 127. THE SCPHOMORE YEAR Feeling more assured than we felt twelve months before, and stimulated by the tanned faces and Warm greetings of our classmates, who had escaped the lash of the executive committee, we trekked back for the second lap. Only a few of us turned out to attend the opening exercises of the 85th annual session of my good friend the Hahnemann Medical College, per se. Again the Dean presided, and we were delighted to see that his head still moved from side to side like the fannie on that blonde in the second row, fourth from the left at the Troc. He introduced as principal speaker a man we were later to know better and to admire, Dr. Iohn A. Brooke. We enjoyed the experience of parad- ing our newly-acquired upper-classmenship before the ill-at-ease Freshmen, looking at thern with expressions of amused sympathy which said, You don't know what you're in for, you poor bastardsp look ,at us-we've been through the mill-we're good! Thus began a year burdened with laboratory courses of all sizes and shape-bacterioloqif, pathology, anatomY, physiology, toxicoloQY, and phar- macology, With a generous supply of lectures to round things out. At the outset, the main topic of interest was the acadernic mortality. We learned that we had parted company with thirteen more of the charter mem- bers. Of these, Red Shaeffer had left to seek health: Harry Mazess, a grand boy, had died. We were presented, at the outset, with nice new shiny cadavers with which to carry on our pursuit of anatomy. Every Friday we were pursued by 133 Friend Phillips, still non-comrnittal and poker-faced: handsome Sholly, who always asked questions too practical to answer: pretty boy Matternp Rowland CFrolich's Syndromel Ricketts ta swell fellow we voted himly and corn-fed Kuemmel, who, if properly handled, could be made to forget about the quizz and tell stories like how Peggy Hopkins Ioyce was found bobbing up and down under an English peer. The remaining three mornings assigned to anatomy were spent smoking in the hall, spitting in the privy, bulling on the balcony, and occasionally getting out the Sartorious . Sylvis was still carrying on three days a week, still roaring, . . . and it breaks up into a lash of branches to supply . . or else loudly likening something or other to the size of a goose quill . But there appeared on the anatomical horizon a new luminary in the person of Dr. Arthur Hartley, Dro- fessor of Applied Anatomy. His loyal department always lent an air of importance to his lectures by meeting him at the elevator and escorting him to the ante-chamber, which George had already made cozy with Lucky Strikes and a glass of water. Iust before the lecture, they would troop in, single file, to take seats in the rear: then-after a properly timed pause-entered the maestro. Tuesday mornings at nine we met that swearing, swashbuckling barrister, Mr. Nathan Griffith, who gives, it is alleged, a course on when and when not to acceed to your college chum's plea to get his girl out of the iam she's in, known as jurisprudence. His insistence on speaking of such dull items as torts and testimonies would have branded his course as so much micturition had he not strychnined us with frequent Aw hells and god damn its . His talk on how to get a patient's consent for operation concluded with, . . . so don't just tell her you're going to take her appendix out, but tell her you're going to take a look up her flue, too . Physiology accounted for two afternoons of every week. A squad consisting of Iames, Battafarano, H. Franklin Flanagan and Vischer, led by Sergeant Scott, with Captain Widman directing operations from his dung-out behind the lines, gave a comprehensive and comprehensible course. His completely unique coiffure, the like of which does not exist any- where, his inscrutability, together with the fact that he, as lord high keeper of the college exchequer, has access to the hidden secrets of all Hahnemann hearts, endow Widman with an aura of a mystic-a prophet-a great Sees All-Knows All. In addition to these natural distinctions, he further embellished his lectures Cat our requestl with a loud speaker, thereby laying claim to further glory as Hahnemann's own Floyd Gibbons. Physiology will always call to mind an eternity of smoking drums, pithing frogs, and rigging up systems of wires, threads, and levers to look like a Rube Goldberg invention. We know what an emotional crisis is . . . yes, we, too, have suffered . . . working for hours getting everything set, recording a perfect kymogram-only to have a trolley rumble down Fifteenth Street and bugger it all up, then to hear Flanagan say You can get a better one than that-try it over . But far and away, the piece de resistance of the year was the long course provided by the Department of Pathology-Sam Sappington and his Patho- logical Boys-the Arhythm Kings. Ever since those early freshmen days we had been immeasurably curious and completely awed by the very quarters of this outfit-that hallowed and mysterious place beyond the legend reading Students must not use this passage at any time . A veritable Olympus was this, wherein dwelt the Gods of Hahnemann, and here, Sappington, the Iupiter of the community, ruled with an iron hand. The lesser gods were Favorite, Rus Fisher, Cook Cas Orpheusl and one called Falkinburg in the role of Bacchus Clatin for conductorl. A heavenly host of technicians busted them- selves with anemic blood and albuminous urine, ever chanting, the while, Glory to Sam in the highest, and in College, peace on you, too, Dean . 134 First, the divine definers of disease taught us how to make broth and blood agar and potato medium twhich makes the tubercle bacillus go hot chall. After two weeks of domestic science we were introduced to the bacteria and told how to tell them apart: finally, the protozoa were presented. Then came Pathology, and with it Barthmaier-a Iohn Boles, Adolph Menjou, and Iohn Gilbert all rolled into one. Suave, dark, handsome, he dressed elegantly, even wearing an ultra-swanky operating gown in which he demonstrated gross specimens. After three months he disappeared, never to be heard from again, just as dark handsome strangers do in the books. As a man who had long walked in the valley of the shadow of death, and who apparently feared no evil, Sappington captured the fancy of us all. And try as he would to shock us with his breezy pungent quips concerning the Grim Reaper, and chatter and scold though he did like an old Salem bitch, and look though he did like the heartless old cuss who forecloses on the mortgage, we all suspected him of hiding a gentle heart, a romantic soul. We like to think that after five o'clock, as he left Hahnemann behind and headed for the tall timber of Ardmore, he played with his dogs, read historical novels by an open fireplace and was altogether unmindful of Nieman-Picks disease and red hepitazation. The second semester saw Anatomy give way to Physical Diagnosis, Minor Surgery, and Bandaging. As a lecturer, Dr. White showed the results of his intensive grammar school training, reading very well indeed, except when he lost his place now and then. Section instructors included Dr. Goldsmith, who proved to be conscien- tious, fatherly, and exceedingly well informed: the freshly-hatched Dr. Finke, the agreeable and eager Dr. Lawson: the even more agreeable and less eager Dr. Fiterman, whose sage words Don't worry about it-you'll get all dis stuff after yer out , always comforted us when we despaired of ever distinguishing bronchovesicular breathing from vesicular. Finally, but surely not the least by any means, there was Crellin-God's gift to Medical students. One question has perplexed us since we had this course. One cold and snowy winter's night we were trying to get caught up on our cultural reading and were absorbed in that great masterpiece of all times, The Catalogue of the H.M.C. for 1934-35 , when we came across the following cryptic remark, Dr. White employs the stethophone in teaching heart and breath sounds . We've been wondering if he employed the stethophone that morning we cut to go to Uncle Antrim's funeral. Bandaging by Shollenberger was hilarious and wild. Mornings were spent putting a bandage on a patiently suffering partner ttime: 10 minutesl, winding up the bandage ttime one hour and 35 minutesl, being bandaged by your partner ttime 10 minutes? and watching partner roll up his gauze ttime: one hour and 40 minutesl. A lovely party was given at the end of the course by Dr. Shollenberger, at which several games were played, including Blind Man's Bluff and another, the name of which now slips our mind, but the object of which was to completely shut off the circulation to your partner's arm or leg or head. Dr. Bristol lectured on Minor Surgery to a soft accompaniment of rustling newspapers, and the heavy breathing of those who sleep. And once a week we heard Doc Wells' boy, Kirby, discuss Applied Science in Medicine . Our good friends, per se, of the Department of Chemistry, not satisfied with their assault of the previous year, sentenced us to another stretch in their alleged laboratories. Toxicology was even more ridiculous than the work of the year before: but it had the saving virtue of being shorter. 135 Pharmacology was given by Dr. Payne. Here ended the second year, and fwe blush to say itl we turned our nates to Hahnemann in anticipation of a few months' respite from lectures and laboratories, for we were truly weary. THE JUNIOR YEAR This, dear reader, is a journal of the flood year. In words of the great French neurologist, it was Grand Mal, which, if my one year of high school French serves me right, means greatly bad or plenty sick . The bewildering barrage of lectures, clinics, and conferences recalled all the tortures of the medieval Trial by Ordeal. Our dear Alma Mater seemed to reason, You have survived two years, now let me put your mettle to the supreme test . The third year was indeed the third degree. Our Missing Persons Bureau reported fourteen academic fatalities incurred over the summer. Among the heartier of these were Donahue, who by now is an osteopath, and Harry Huhn-the only match for Ijlnfant Hughes we ever had. We did not know then that the guillotine had fallen for the last time. Our course in Homeopathy began in earnest now, with weekly lectures on Materia Medica by Dr. Garth Boericke. He did as well as any human being could with a subject such as this, and that, we believe, is high tribute. King Samuel continued to be our chief worry with a valuable course in Clinical Pathology. This peerless pathologist required all of us to buy blood counting outfits CiBl0.00lp and he stamped and stormed before two of us, who had not the wherewithal to buy sets, until we were sure he was chief of the Dolbey stock- holders. Monday afternoons, Sylvis read the late Dr. Elliot's notes on Surgical Pathology: the rest of the afternoon was spent in the path lab, bulling, squirting water, and looking through scopes whenever Sylvis or the conscientious Dickinson popped in the door. The freshly-laid Professor of Gynecology lectured weekly for the first semester, blinking furiously, and emphasizing his points with a vehemence which would have made Cicero bag his head in the folds of his toga. Through- out the year we met that nervous doctor, E. A. Steinhilber, who turned out to be a regular old Lon Chaney, with his amusing and accurate imitations of athetoid movements , pill-rollers' palsy and so on. The Children's Hour, better known to many as the Slumber Hour, came at four on Tuesdays. Com- placent Dr. Bedman never failed to greet us with Good morning, gentlemen , nor did he ever fail to be accompanied by baby-faced Blakely, who occa- sionally conducted a disorderly quizz. The high mark of the course came soon after the mid-year examination, when Redman read us some of the more original answers to his questions. Query number four was, Why does the new-born infant lose Weight during the first few days of life ? and the answer came back, in clear and bold strokes, Because the baby receives only meconium, and there is not much nourishment in that . Our instruction in mid-Wifery began with lectures by Warren L. CBring 'em Out Alivel Mercer, who, like a true knight errant, is ever at the cervix of all women in travail. He was a little homey, chatty man, entirely without a'rs or frills, but not above dropping a broad hint now and then as to how well he could find his way around in a strange and dark vagina. During the second semester, he donned a brown canvas coat and red rubber gloves, like the ones mother used to wear to clean the hopper, and became head man in the obstetrics lab . This was the imposing name of the second floor of that strange item of Hahnemann real estate, the fire house. Here, in the custody of George, were some fifteen so-called manikins, highly salacious and suggestive con- 136 traptions with truncated thighs reaching alluring out to you, bellies that raised up, and vaginas of all sizes and shapes. Some were all leather, but others were of flesh-colored plaster fitted with rubber private parts. Well, hunt the peanut was played twice a week tevery other weekly it went something like this: Wosnack played wet nurse to twenty fetid, frazzled fetuses tclead these twelve long years, come Michelmasi. We would hide our eyes while he stuffed these into the several plaster phonies. After he had thus impregnated a dozen defenseless dames tall in one morning, mind youi we would gaily cry first , second , third , and so on, and then form a line in that order: we then proceeded from one stand to the next, putting our hand eagerly into each cranny, but carefully too, because if a lady said Ouch, you bastard! That hurts -it took ten off your score. Of course, the object of the game was to guess whether Wosnack had put the treasure in the second floor back, or up in Aunt Eugenie's sewing room. He kept score carefully. Sometimes the game was varied by stuffing a lot of rags in around the baby so that it couldn't be budged with a crow-bar, and then he would give us a pair of rusty old ice tongs to try to pull it out. It was all very erotic, especially when Campo would put his cigar in naughty places. Did we ever have fun? Smooth, pert and dapper was Professor Iohn E. Iames, who talked so Goddamnedfastyoucouldn'ttakeabloodynote. He was always attended by the handsome and highly-sarcastic Lafferty. Clemrner, who seemed to know what he was about, used to discuss operative surgery for us once a week. One afternoon, in lieu of a lecture, he announced that if the class would adjourn to the arnphitheatre, he would demonstrate the Caesarean section. We arrived in the clinic and found that Scholfield's stooge, Thompson, was putting the finishing touches to a minor rectal operation. It was then three o'clock. The more stitches he took, the more it bled, he sewed and mopped, while Clemmer made himself obvious, all scrubbed and gloved, and Miss Hervey kept popping in to see if it was over yet. At three-forty Thompson got off his stoolg five minutes later Clemmer was all set to go and in eight more the baby was crying and the mother sewed up. At our next class, Clemrner grinned and winked, Now you see how easy a section is-it's really much simpler than a hemorrhoidectomy . Ashcraft, the aristocrat at the operating table, proved highly diverting. His gentleman-of-the-old-school personality duly impressed us, and so did his clinics which were dramatic exhibitions of flashing steel and gushing blood. Herbert Leopold taught the surgery of hernia and did a swell job of it. ln a series of thorough lectures, quiet Dr. Brooke led up carefully through the mazes of orthopedic surgery. Geckeler fthe tall thin onel covered fractures in grand style. He deserved and received our special gratitude for his outstanding work. Oh, for heaven's sake, fellows-if you don't want to listen, please remem- ber that the man next to you might. l'm doing everything I can for you-l'm treating you as fair and square as I know how, and then you go and act that way. Now, to go on, the pupil in the induction stage of ether anaesthesia is . . . oh, for God's sake, fellows ! Shades of the Reverend Killian. Tyler's gas was hot stuff. Young, but already an authority on his subject, Hen Ruth lectured on regional anaesthesia. Dr. Frank labored patiently with us through the phenomena of the Roent- gen-ray. Weaver, Tommy Snyder and Clay took us by turns in order to explain diseases of the nose, throat, eye, and ear. A man named Baker, really believed to be a well-to-do farmer from Iowa, did a great deal of bitching about laymen directing hospitals and the evils of social service workers. On looking it up in the catalogue, we learned that he was lecturing on Non-pharmacal Therapy. 137 Hahnemann has its own saint in Dr. Benson. His mild, patient and utterly unassuming manner won us immediately, further, we found ourselves uniquely privileged in hearing an outstanding and pioneer radiologist. Didactic medi- cine was in the hands of Drs. Snader and Ferguson. Snader was good, but savored of a text-book. DR. Ferguson CD for Demosthenes, R for Longfellow? suffered from a strange but powerful complex: either he was suppressing an overwhelming desire to be an eloquent attorney or else he was badly frightened in childhood while saying a piece in school. Regardless of etiology, the result is something worth hearing-once. The year was significant in that we contacted, for the first, sick people. In the medical diagnosis conference with McEldowney, in the clinics of Wells and Boericke, in the dispensaries, and in the surgical clinics of Brooke, Ash- craft, and Northrop Cwhose white hair surely hides a halo? we beheld, corn- passionately, at first, the endless stream of the halt, the lame, and the blind- that stream which will always pass close to us until we can see it and hear it no longer. l With a deluge of examinations, twenty to be exact, the end came at last. One afternoon early in Iune found us weak, pale, thin, trying hard to believe that it was over, that we had no exam tomorrow. The realization was not easy. We were too worn out to exult in it anyway. That is, all of us except a bunch of Green Street low liters who undertook to celebrate the event in a beastial orgy of spirits, nudism and hell-raising. They wassailed on the roof of Lew's boarding house carelessly, fearlessly, noisily. Bill fell through the skylight and the entire party donned pants, staggering with him the five squares to the accident ward of the Hahnemann Hospital. THE SENIOR YEAR The business of coming back was by now beginning to be old stuff for us. To be sure, the start of the last lap found us seniors tand all of us, too, although it looked for a while as though Sam were going to lead Lorenz in his swan song? but still we didn't feel like the lords of the manor. As a class, we were divided and sub-divided until we about lost whatever identity we ever had. We all met together for about two hours a day for lectures, but mornings and half-afternoons we went our various ways into sections of thirty tmedicine, surgery, or OBS? and into sub-sections of ten tfor everything elsei. The Hahnemann midwives concluded their teaching with ten weeks of clinical application of the previous year's didactic work. Our friends of the Iunior year carried on Cas Snader would say? and Paxson, Mutch and Gates had a hand in it, too. lt does seem, in obstetrical work, that everybody tries to get his hand in. OBS dispensary was a busy place where you wore gloves made to order for Primo Camera and played civil engineer with colored women's pelves. Craig did pan-hysterectomies on Mondays, and Frosch did them Thurs- days. Robert M. Hunter fowd Bob, 'e wasl livened up the GYN dispensary with strong language and a deal of snorting. G. Harlan Wells alternated with Dr. Williams in presenting daily medical conferences in a little alcove on the sixth floor of the hospital that used to get as hot as hell, a noisy ventilator notwithstanding. After an hour of finding out when the patient first noticed shortness of breath, we worked on our patients in the wards, that is, those which hadn't died the night before. Working on a patient consisted of either taking a history or looking in old Mrs. Cadwalader's water for sugar and amorphous phosphates. It would have been dull business, indeed, had not Ferguson and Kirby supplied the comic relief every day. If Mack Sennett ever spots these two, a new chapter in 138 I . movie comedy history is sure to be written. But Mr. Sennett better act quick, for it is rumored about that the director of the Bronx Zoo has his eye on Ferguson. Medical Dispensary, the Rat Race, was divided into two halves. The first half was spent in prescribing Bryonia for fragrant negroes wid de misery p the other part was taken up with trying to find a doctor to sign the prescription. Crellin was in charge, and was his usual manic self. Surgery was demonstrated in the big clinic by Van Lennep Cyou know- G. A.,l Sylvis, Webster, and Leopold. All the sore feet at Eighteenth and Ham- ilton received our tender care in the Surgical Dispensary, where Dickinson, Seligman, Dick Northrop and a whole raft of young fellows, trying to get ahead, were in attendance. Somewhere early in the year, the Dean let drop the bombshell that the College now had its own Athletic Field-out at Nineteenth and Callowhill, it was. Hering Hall, one of the city's cast-off police stations, and conveniently located next to the Nurses' Home, had been opened during our Iunior year. It turned out to be a place where the cigar-smoking contingent from South Philadelphia could play pool. And they did. A punching bag and two vibra- tor gadgets were on the third floor. No one was ever seen to use these weight- reducing monsters, except an intrepid Freshman who had flunked Chemistry, and didn't care whether he lived or not. He reports that the damned thing shook a trolley token out of his pocket which rolled along the floor and fell through a crack. Fearing he might lose his pants the same way, he turned it off and walked home. The new Athletic Field also has been used once to date: that was the day it served as a background for Dotterer, Zwergel and Rickard to be mugged playing tennis by an Inquirer photographer. The Professor of Dermatology continued to be the chief delight of the Senior class. Bernie's popularity was amply demonstrated by the frequent parties tendered him by his sections in Skin . From the brilliant Masque, held at Hallowe'en, to the colorful St. Patrick's party fthe last held at this writingl, no opportunity has been missed to throw a party for Bernie. ln the interest of completeness, let it be said that we studied Dermatology under a keen diagnos- tician and a powerful teacher. Would to Hippocrates that we had been taught by a hundred more just like him. Boericke was still talking twice a week about sour eructations and excori- ating coryzas, worse while putting coal on the furnace. He flunked the brightest boys in the class in his first exam, but then he might have been figuring Die milde Macht ist gross , which means The little marks are high , or some- thing. He perked up a little in giving us some therapeutics lectures and in conducting the sub-sections in therapeutics. An alleged course in Prescription Writing was given the first semester by Payne assisted by a cosmopolitan group including Battafarano and Messey. Payne and Messey-curious names, aren't they? Van Lennep CG. A., you knowl lectured one half year on abdominal sur- gery, and was succeeded by Northrop KH. LJ who covered the rest of surgery, mostly neuro. Even if he had never opened his mouth, we would have been fascinated by this handsome ruddy-faced gentleman with snow-white hair. But he did open his mouth, and out came the most musical voice we ever hope to hear. We were completely at his feet. Wells gave two lectures weekly on Medicine, in a voice like Cal Coolidge: they were a hOtD1DY mixture of statistics and Wellsian humor, like Many are called, but few get up . Larer's Industrial Medicine and Chambers' Tropical Medicine, not to mention Lorenz's Dietetics, claimed some of our attention, with which we were not over-generous. Raue proved to be a heavy dose of bromide with his half-year course in Pediatrics: Steinhilber followed him with a 139 second semester of clinical NeuroloqY, Which was spoiled by having students conduct the clinics. tThat is, spoiled for everybody except the student clinician.l H. M. Eberhard provided us with a remarkably complete exposition of Gastro-enterology. He was able to do this in the limited time allotted to him by presenting us, with his compliments, masses of mimeographed notes covering the technique of such detailed measures as gastric analysis and non-surgical biliary drainage. He further showed his courtesy by inviting several men of international reputation to speak before us, and indeed, it did our homeopathic hearts good to see such men as Chevalier Jackson, Ir., and George Pfahler potenizing our amphitheatre with their physiological presences. Being Seniors, one of our courses was the Study of Psychiatry. An old Doc by the name of Klopp came down from that insane place in Allentown and mumbled a few unnecessary hours. En masse, we went to Allentown by way of the Philadelphia-Allentown-Toonerville trolley. Here we took over the town, especially the Americus Hotel, for five days. Some of us went out to the State Hospital to see and hear about their prize nuts. The best shows were under that popular master of ceremonies, Dr. Harry Hoffman. Those who failed to attend found other interests in the town. lt was, however, a most enjoyable week, and Dr. Klopp's letter to Dr. Setinhilber more than proved the great value of our week in Allentown. Tears come to our eyes as we recall the last course by Sappington. That is, We guess it's the last. Of course it is well within the range of possibility that some morning ten years from now, we may open the door to our waiting room and find Sam sitting there opening a two-weeks' seminar on Recent Developments in lmmunology for our particular benefit. It would have done your heart good to have seen his eyes light up and his voice tremble with emotion as he showed us how to shake a rack-full of test tubes in the Wasser- man. Somehow related to Pathology was Hygiene. This was presented to the Seniors and luniors together by a bald-headed, Dickensian, little fellow with a voice like a huckster. ln a shower of paper airplanes he roared through such items as sludge, water-closets, and sewerage. He proved no friend of gypsies, however, dubbing them the most bilious members of the human species . A final flurry of exams-and it will be all over. There remains at this writing only the problem of how to wangle a graduation present out of Aunt Agatha without sending her a commencement invitation. Approximately one-third of those present at the start in October, l93l, fell along the way. These were four full years-many blues and many laughs. Like pieces of metal put into a flame, we have grown together, held so by a common sympathy which, we suspect, is peculiar to Medicine. These have been strenuous years, years when we looked a little wistfully at our pre- professional schoolmates taking wives and making homes. But the four strenuous years behind are only a prelude of the forty years ahead. lt will not be easy to say good-bye to each other. There are some with whom We would go hand in hand through the rest of life. The thirteenth of Iune will mark our demise as a unity we shall go a hundred different ways. lust now, as we are about to head for the Academy of Music, where We will be made Doctors of Medicine, and take the time-honored Oath of Hippo- crates, we are still trying hard to feel that We have done something-that we have achieved a great prize-that we are victors. We would like to feel some- thing of the pride which those misty-eyed Mothers and Dads will feel when they see us, capped and gowned, on the Academy stage. But we suppose there will be no water there. Surely we shall still stand on dry sand. C. S. C. 140 -VR , ,xgi-1? ,Ae I . . ff? ' , ' 'x--. v . . ..p - 1 1 1 5 .,'f,,a l - V YL -Y- 'Zi J 5 1 3 Q , f Q fx -I xi f v I ,, X -Q 77,1 I 1 ru . E ' x ', A . --x4 t V f 4 f L: f V 3 g.ll ff ,sw - ' K I 'M 1, ll E . N, wr ' I x 3, 4 r Qu f . J I' a ff M .5 ' gl if Q .ya ' '--' r f, -- QQ rw-X 4 g, I gl ' A U.. 1 1 W: H Q 8 ff ' ff- 7 ff x '--Q cf' . T ,, if 50 -4 .V -ii f z -- , W, , .. D 5 Y' v .f' . X . 4 X A X ' X3 1 'A' Nr- ' f 1 fi- -Q, 4 X 8 I ,f J, 5- 'Q X , I 1 5 7' f V ,. , , n A V . 1 I Sheppard, Fornasier, Fox, Pennington, Sigaioos FOURTH YEAR CLASS OFFICERS President .................................................................................... CHARLES F. FOX, IR. Vice-President ....... ............ L OUIS S. FORNASIER Secretary ............ ......... M ARTIN B. PENNINGTON Treasurer .................... ................. I ACOB H. SIGAFOOS Student Council ................................................................ WARREN B. SHEPARD, IR. President ........... Vice-President ....... Secretary ........... Treasurer ........... Student Council PAST OFFICERS OF CLASS OF 1935 First Year-1931-1932 RICKARD ..........ANTHONY GUY CAMPO ...........HARVEY GLEN WIBLE .........MARTIN B. PENNINGTON EVERETT LORENZ Second Year-1932-1933 President ................. .... ........... ................. E D W ARD HENRY ZWERGEL Vice-President ....... ................. C HARLES F. FOX, IR. Secretary ........... ......... T HOMAS F. DOWD, IR. Treasurer ................... ........................ L OUIS I. O'LINI Student Council ...... ............................................. C LEDITH ATEN MILLER Third Year-1933-1934 President ............. .............. ............................... R U SSELL G. WITWER Vice-President ........ Secretary ............ Treasurer ................ Student Council .........WARREN B. SHEPARD, IR. .............EDWIN HUGHES NUTTER BAPTIST FABRIELE ..........ANTHONY IOSEPH VOLANTE 142 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1931-33 1931-33 1931-33 1931-33 1931-33 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1931-34 1931-33 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-32 1931-33 1931-32 1932-33 ONE TIME MEMBERS OF CLASS OF 1935 C-eorqe Sylvester Adams ...... ....... lohn Ioseph Anastasi .......... Edwin Thomas Ashman ...... Walter Lewis Bossart ......... Iohn Litch Boyer ................. Ioseph Vincent Brennan ........ Norman Lewis Cink ......... Peter Paul Cottone .................. George Anthony DiNicholas William Edward Donohoe .. .Massachusetts .........Pennsylvania , .......... Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania .........New York ..........Pennsylvania ..........New Iersey ..........Pennsylvania Richard Frank ........................ .......... P ennsylvania Everett Edward Genther ....... .......... N ew Iersey Nicholas lohn Grimaldi ........ .......... P ennsylvania Oswald Biddle Grosskreus ...... .......... N ew lersey Ashton Hoblak ................... .......... P ennsylvania Harry Samuel Huhn ..... Harlan Link Kelly ........ Iohn Vinson Keyser ....... Fred Morton Miller ............. Wallace Clark Murray ........ Gerard William Ostheimer .. Barney Benjamin Perifano .. Charles lulius Petriens ........ Wallace Ioseph Poshiatosky Nicholas Lawrence Ricciardi '1'homas Salvator Siciacca .. Charles Rankin Shaffer ...... ..........Pennsylvania ................Missouri ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania ..Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania . ............ New York ..........Pennsylvania ..........New lersey .............New York .......Pennsylvania Frank Anthony Silkowski .... .......... P ennsylvania Henry Sittner, Ir. ................. . Howard Madison Sturqess . Iohn Alden Swartwout ........ Claude Oliver Temple .......... Edward Shannon Walsh .... Floyd Roscoe Ward .............. Charles Wilbur Whipkey .... Melvin Winfield Whitsell .... loseph Iohn Zawislak ........... Anthony Allen Zenzer ....... Willard Aubrey Wilson ...... ..........Pennsylvania .........................Oreqon . ....... Washington, D. C. ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania ............New lersey ..........Pennsylvania ..........Pennsylvania IN MEMORIAM Ioseph Arnovits. B.S.. 1909-1931 Pennsylvania Stale Calleae Dunmore. Pennsylvania Iacob Harry Mazess, B.S.. 1908-1932 Pennsylvania Stale College Scranton. Pennsylvania 144 THIRD YEAR THIRD YEAR CLASS ROLL Ioseph A. Balin, A.B., University of Pennsylvania .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iohn Eugene Barrett, A.B., St. Ioseph's College .................... Bristol, Pennsylvania Tausbee Beckham Beatty, University of Virginia ................ Lexington, Kentucky Robert Eugene Bierwirth, A.B., Washington and Iefferson College, West Newton, Pennsylvania Ellwood Vincent Boger, University of Alabama ............ Collingswood, New Iersey Robert Newcorn Bowen, University of Pennsylvania, Collingswood, New Iersey Charles William Bruton, Temple University ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Edward St. Iarnes Calabrese, A.B., University of Alabama, Bayonne, New Iersey Octavio Anthony Capriotti, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Iarnes Carey, Temple University ................ Girardville, Pennsylvania Peter Ioseph Casterline, B.S., Villanova College .......... Wyoming, Pennsylvania Iames Iohn Chiappetta, University of Rochester ........ New York City, New York Anthony Ciavarelli, Gettysburg College .......................... Ambler, Pennsylvania Augustus Henry Clagett, Ir., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Victor I. Covalesky, St. Thomas College ......... ........ S cranton, Pennsylvania Raymond Daniel Cramer, Lafayette College ........................ Iamaica, New York Salvatore Cucinotta, B.S., Villanova College .......... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Esker William Cullen, BS., University of Pittsburgh ........ Portage, Pennsylvania Donald Allan Davis, University of Pittsburgh ............ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Alfred Michael DiGiacomo, St. Ioseph's College .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Charles Harris Dow, Temple University ........................ Haddonfield, New Iersey Philip Lee Dunkle, Oberlin College ..... ............ C hicopee, Massachusetts Cedric Errol Dunn, Geneva College ....... ......... B eaver Falls, Pennsylvania 146 MEDIC Michael Harold Durante, B.S., Alfred University ................ Rochester, New York Ralph Porter Earle, University of Pennsylvania ................ Aidan, Pennsylvania Theodore William Eastland, University ot Pittsburgh .... Portage, Pennsylvania Harry Eisenberg, B.S., Bucknell University ........................ Bellville, New Iersey loseph Charles Elia, B.S., University oi Pittsburgh ........ Niagara Falls, New York William Ellis, A.B., Colgate University .................... Island Heights, New Iersey Peter Christos Erinakes, A. B., Brown University, West Wormack, Rhode Island Harry Davidson Evans, Villanova College ................ Overbrook, Pennsylvania Benjamin Leonard Falcone, Pennsylvania State College, Bangor, Pennsylvania Harry Everett Fridrich, A.B., Temple University ................ Camden, New lersey Anthony Lawrence Frye, A.B., University ot Alabama, Sharpsville, Herman Elmer Gaumer, Pennsylvania State College, Philadelphia, Edward Myler Glassburn, B.S., Pennsylvania State College, Pittsburgh, Richard Haworth Collings, B.S., University of Pittsburgh, Ierome Melvin Albert Greer, B.S., Ursinus College ................ Glen Ridge Iames Edward Hadley, A.B., Washington and Ieiierson Collegle Oil City Emil Lawrence Harasym, St. Ioseph's College ........ Philadelphia William Robinson Hazzard, Ir., La Salle College, Philadelphia, Henry Monroe Hession, B.S., St. Ioseph's College .... Philadelphia, Charles Henry Hodgkins, Ir., Pennsylvania State College, Pittsburgh, I Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania I Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Iohn Albert Hofta, Temple University ............................ Wauwatasa, Wisconsin Howard Sampson Hudson, A. B., Washington and Lee University I ' Pleasantville, New Iersey Donald lack Iones, University of Pennsylvania ........ Bradford, Pennsylvania Harry Alexander Kansak, B.S., Washington College .... Wilmington, Delaware Iulius Harry Katz, A.B., University of Pennsylvania ........ Beverly, New Iersey Samuel Katz, Villanova College ................................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Ramsey Kavanaugh, University of Minnesota, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania George Iohn Kohut, B.S., Pennsylvania State College, Dickson City, Pennsylvania George Lataif, BACCU, Syracuse University ................ Danbury, Connecticut Ioseph Fook Chan Lau, Washington and leiterson College .................... Hawaii Ioseph Riddick Leigh, William and Mary College ................ Norfolk, Virginia Anthony Francis Magolda, Villanova College ................ Vineland, New Iersey Frank Samuel Mainella, University of Pennsylvania ........ Brooklyn, New York Robert Addison Marquis, Ph.G., Pittsburgh College ot Pharmacy, University of Pittsburgh, Beaver, Pennsylvania Daniel Mario Massey, A.B., Columbia University ........ Bridgeport, Connecticut Saverio Anthony Monaco, Fordham University ................ Newark, New Iersey Kenneth Thompson Moore, University oi Pennsylvania, Collingswood, New Iersey Pius Anthony Narkiewicz, B.A., Pensylvania State College, Minersville, Pennsylvania Ernest Newton Neber, Ir., University of lllinois ................ Carbondale, Illinois 147 THE 1935 Paul Iames Paris, D.D.S., University of Illinois ................................ Murry, Utah Harry Asher Pinsky, A.B., University of Pennsylvania ........ Camden, New Iersey Morris Ioseph Podell, B.S., Temple University ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Irving Redler, Albright College .................................... New York City, New York Iames Herbert Reinish, A.B., Temple University ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Frank Iohn Robertson, Ir., Duke University ........................ Wyncote, Pennsylvania Robert Burgoyne Robertson, A.B., Ohio State University .... Cabool, Missouri Nicholas Iohn Rocco, Temple University .................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Edo Ioseph Salva, B.S., New York University ........ Ridgefield Park, New Iersey Charles Franklin Sampsel, B.S., Rutgers University, Shenandoah, Pennsylvania Richard Thomas Sauer, A.B., Denison University ............ Hamilton, New York Raymond Theodore Saxen, Ohio State University ............ Hopelawn, New Iersey Ernest Scerbo, A.B., University of Alabama ............ Iersey City, New Iersey Joseph Randall Schaeffer, B.S., St. loseph's College, Philadelphia, Abraham Irving Schwartz, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Charles Plattenberger Sell, Muhlenberg College ........ Allentown, Ioseph Victor Selsman, B.S., Villanova College .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania William Stephen Serri, University of Pennsylvania ........ Camden, New Iersey Stanford Pung Tong Seto, A.B., University of Michigan ...... Honolulu, Hawaii Ezra Bernard Sirotta, Franklin and Marshall College, Atlantic City, New Iersey loseph Guy Smith, B.S., Bucknell University ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Francis Butler Smyth, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Charles Markle Spiegel, B.S., Washington and Iefferson College, New Haven, Connecticut David Shellenberger Stayer, Pennsylvania State College, Woodbury, New Iersey Selton Scott Stevens, Lafayette College ........................ Scranton, Fred Iohn Tatarsky, Muhlenberg College ................ Allentown, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Maurice Tepper, B.S., University of Pittsburgh ........ Atlantic City, New Iersey William C. Thoroughgood, B.S., Ursinus College ...... Sharon Hill, William Anthony Tomasco, A.B., Temple University, Philadelphia Frank Tropea, lr., Villanova College ............................ Philadelphia, Alfred Tuttle, B.S., Washington and Iefferson College, Wilkinsburg, Anthony Michael Unice, B.S., St. Thomas' College, Wilkes-Barre, Samuel loseph Wisler, 3rd, Villanova College ........ Villanova, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Cyrus William Yee, B.S., University of Michigan .................... Honolulu, Hawaii Edward Ioseph Zamborsky, Villanova College ............ Freeland, 148 Pennsylvania MEDIC C THIRD YEAR CLASS OFFICERS President ............ ........ C EDRIC ERROL DUNN Vice-President ....... ......... H ARRY ASHER PINSKY Secretary-Treasurer .......................... ......... F RANCIS BUTLER SMYTH Student Council Representative ...... ....... R OBERT EUGENE BIERWORTH Pinsky, Dunn, Bierworth 149 A JUNIOR'S JOURNAL being THE DYSPEPTIC DIARY OF ONE OF THEM Any spot of writing must have constantly in mind its probable reading public-and for the life of me I cannot imagine any public for this particular page. You may suggest that a stray Iunior eye, however jaundiced, might cast a myopic glance this way, and, out of a mistaken sense of class loyalty, read, perhaps, this far. But I think that quite unlikely. In the first place, the book is just lousy with pictures of Seniors-faces with which we have too long been familiar-do you for one moment suspect that Iuniors are going to pay out money to have these hanging around any longer? Then there is the faculty. Yes in spite of our eighty odd years we still retain our faculty and the same photos of these venerable sires will probably grace our feeble effort next year. Why do faculty members seemingly never change from one decade to another? Don't think Iuniors will lay out no inconsiderable pile of ducats for these when we shall have the same daguerreotypes in '36? Of a truth I could regale you with tales of Dr. Bowen's glorified diagnosis of an umbilical cord:-Beatty's inconstancyy Ciaverelli's impeccable coiffureg Kavanaugh's amorous pediatric patient or I.oux's pickaninny, and remark on the foibles of our members generally, but were I to do this, what would there be for next year, when, the gods willing, our own physiognomies will be plastered over too many pages and vanity will make us eager takers in a seller's market? Then of course, I might remind you that this year, as an innovation, Hygiene, or Fun in the Amphitheatre , was offered to both Iuniors and Seniors. Perhaps I shouldn't have mentioned it. Or in a more serious vein I might speculate as to the whereabouts of those 20 men who fell by the wayside at the end of our Sophomore year. We believe I6 ZXSW is too many to be dropped after two years of work-but then we must not wax too editorial. Tennis for all ton two courts? another innovation-and further proof of the agile American mind's ability to evade taxes. Then there is the matter of Dr. Northrop's clinic-our first two years we were not permitted, nor did our schedule allow for attendance-while this year several things contrive to discourage it-first: the best seats, such as they are when a half dozen men gather around the operating table, are tradi- tionally reserved for the Seniors, but those Seniors present require very little roomy then the bulk of the house is comprised of boys from Central High Cgood old Centrali and Brown Prep, with not a cash customer in the bunch. Here and there a student with a matinee date-she trying to look her best, although feeling she is about to pass out, while he assumes his best professional and most assuming air. With their backs to the wall, those Iuniors who were unable to find seats on the last row, slowly begin trailing out about 3:40 and decide to go over and shoot some pool. What would we do without the Aquarium, as we await the beginning of our comprehensive medical education? 150 THE 1935 SECOND YEAR SECOND YEAR CLASS ROLL 14 William Abramson, A.B., Temple University ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Manuel Almes, Temple University ............................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Arthur Anderson, Pennsylvania State College, Glenside, Pennsylvania loseph Ferdinand Annunziata, Villanova College, New York City, New York lames Arnao, Villanova College .................................. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania lack Wendell Arnold, Miami University, Ohio State University, West Salem, New lersey loseph Francis Ascione, B.S., New York University .... New York City, New York Myron Henry Ball, A.B., Dartmouth College ................ Scranton, Pennsylvania Bernard Alfonsus Balsis, University of Pennsylvania, Minersville, Pennsylvania Wade Francis Basinger, A.B., Bluffton College ................ Bluffton, Pennsylvania lames Bernardin, B.S., Villanova College ................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania loseph Francis Lupa Bilotta, Villanova College ............ Hershey, Pennsylvania Paul Leiby Bradford, B.S., Pennsylvania State College .......,......,. Canton, Ohio Bubin Ralph Bresler, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Gerald Charles Brignola, A.B., University of Alabama ...... Hoboken, New lersey Franklin Sidney Buzby, Temple University ................ Frankford, Pennsylvania Harry Albert Carl, Susquehanna University .................... Gordon Pennsylvania Albert Alexander Carp, A.B., Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Albert loseph Carulli, B.S., Villanova College ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iustin Laurence Cashman, B.S., Fordham University, New Haven, Connecticut Durant Kost Charleroy, B.S., Franklin and Marshall College, Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania Frank Emil Cicchino, B.S., University of Pittsburgh .... Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Conrad Keister Clippinger, Otterbein College ...........................,.... Dayton, Ohio 152 MEDIC : Iames Ioseph Colavita, B.S., Bucknell University ................ Trenton, New Iersey Eduard Harry Connor, St. Ioseph's College ...................... Ashland, Pennsylvania Iames Edward Corrigan, A.B., St. Francis College ............ Brooklyn, New York Whitney Carl Corsello, B.S., Bucknell University ........ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Thomas David Cosgrove, B.S., St. Ioseph's College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iohn Peter Cossa, Ir., St. Thomas' College ........................ Scranton, Pennsylvania Philip Lembo Costa, B.S., Ursinus College .......................... Red Bank, New Iersey Louis Paul Costanza, B.S., Villanova College ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Robert Cotton, A.B, Fordham University ........ New York City, New York Raymond Bender Croissant, A.B., Amherst College .... Worcester, Massachusetts Horace Hatch Custis, Ir., B.S., Hampden-Sydney College, Washington, D. C. Iohn Wideman Dabbs, Emory University ............................ Nettleton, Mississippi Alfred Sebastian Damiani, Villanova College ........ Philadelphia Bryan Aston Dawber, Hahnemann College of Science, Philadelphia, Burton Franklin De Chant, B.S., Franklin and Marshall College, Harrisburg, Louis Ioseph Decina, Villanova College .................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania William Iohn D'Elia, B.S., Villanova College .................. Iersey City, New Iersey Anthony Vercellino DiSario, B.S., Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ioseph Iames Dougherty, Mount St. Mary's College of New York, Summit Hill, Pennsylvania Ierorne Sheldon Eisemann, B.S., City College of New York, Carmel, New Iersey Howard Grant Eisenberg, Franklin and Marshall College, b Lincoln Park, Pennsylvania Harry Ertel, B.S., City College of New York ............ Long Island City, New York George Samuel Esayian, Villanova College ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Anthony Louis Esposito, B.S., M.S., Villanova College ........ Corona, New York Vasco August Fanti, B.S., Susquehanna University, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania David Dave Fischer, A.B., Lehigh University ............ Long Branch, New lersey Robert Irving Fleming, University of Rochester, Middleburg, Francis Patrick Gallagher, B.S., St. Ioseph's College, Philadelphia, Pasquale Iulius Caesar Gambescia, Villanova College, Philadelphia, Orlando Mario Ghigiarelli, B.S., St. Thomas College, Old Forge, Andrew Ioseph Giambrone, A.B., University of Rochester, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Rochester, New York Francis F errucio Giannini, B.S., Villanova College, Upper Darby, Pennsylvania Hamlet Richard Giordano, Villanova College ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Samuel Daniel Glaus, B.S., Lafayette College ............ Perth Amboy, New Iersey Paul Kutz Good, B.S., University of Pittsburgh ........ Iohnstown, Pennsylvania Milton Harry Graditor, B.S., University of Pittsburgh, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania Ioseph Cook Grasberger, B.S., Temple University .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Norman Gross, Ir., Emory University ............................ Palatka, Florida Herbert Perrin Harkins, Lafayette College ................ Bala-Cynwyd, Pennsylvania Russel De Witt Harris, Temple University ....... .............. M ilton, Pennsylvania 153 Trai: 1935 Charles Gosling Hill, A.B., Pennsylvania State College, Fort Wayne, Indiana Iames Bertolette Homan, Villanova College ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Ioseph Hornyak, Ph.G., Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania David Fulmer Hottenstein, University of Virginia, University of Munchen, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Louis Aaron Hyman, B.S., New York University, Bronx, New York City, New York Allison Ellwood lrnler, B.S., University oi Pittsburgh ........ Altoona, Pennsylvania Seiei Inamine, A.B., University ot Oregon ............................................ Kobe, Iapan Michael George loup, B.S., University of Pittsburgh .... Altoona, Pennsylvania Carl Otto Keck, Lafayette College ........................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Maximilian Louis Iohn Konieczka, St. Thomas' College, Nanticoke, Pennsylvania Nathaniel Hawthorne Kutcher, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Walter Herbert Lambert, B.S., St. Thomas' College ............ Luzerne, Pennsylvania Alfred Iohn Land, Bucknell University ............................ Minersville, Pennsylvania Kenneth Kimm Chan Lau, University oi Illinois .................... Honolulu, Hawaii Russell Albert Lobb, A.B., Wesleyan University, Wallingsford, Connecticut Salvatore Louis Lombardi, Villanova College ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Noah Kratz Mack, A.B., Lebonan Valley .................... Collegeville, Pennsylvania Philip Ioseph MacLaren, B.S., Fordham University, New York City, New York Mario Francis Mantia, Gettysburg College ................ New Orleans, Louisiana Frederick Eugene Marino, Ph.G., B.S., Duquesne University, Rochester, Pennsylvania Frank Ioseph Martorella, B.S., Fordham University, New York City, New York Fred Lawrence McGee, University of Pennsylvania .... Blawnox, Pennsylvania Christopher Iohn McLoughlin, A.B., St. Ioseph's College, Philadelphia, Thomas Aloysius McMahon, Ir., B.S., St. Iohn's University, Pennsylvania Brooklyn, New York Iohn Morrocco, B.S., Duquesne University .................... Pittsburgh, Herman Carl Mosch, B.S., Temple University ................ Coleton, Arnerico Ioseph Muzi, A.B., St. Thomas' College ........ Old Forge, Matthew Alexander Navitsky, Pennsylvania State College, Shenandoah, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Watson Edward Neiman, Temple University ........................ Camden, New Iersey Thomas Wilbur Nichols, Ir., B.S., University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Sydney Stanley Norwick, B.S., Franklin and Marshall College, Philadelphia, Charles Wallis Ohl, Villanova College .............................. Cynwyd Paul Foster Overs, Ohio State University ..................................... Frederick Adam Parsons, University of Pittsburgh .... Pittsburgh, William Bruce Patterson, University of Pittsburgh ........ Pittsburgh I Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania .....Lodi, Ohio Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Alexander Edgar Pearlstein, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Carmine Louis Pecora, Villanova College ............................ Newark, New Iersey Iohn Wesley Pratt, Dickinson College ............................ Coatesville, Pennsylvania Arthur Lester Price, A.B., Cornell University ....... ............. E ndicott, New York 154 MEDIC Thomas Feger Pugh, University of Pennsylvania .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Robert Henry Reddick, University of Rochester ................ Rochester, New York William Alfred Reishtein, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Emil Edward Reiss, Ir., University of Pittsburgh ........ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Charles Reiter, B.S., Pennsylvania State College ............ Brooklyn, New York Mark Gruber Risser, Ursinus College ............................ Emerald, Pennsylvania Charles Henry Robinson, B.S., Ohio State University, Washington C. H., Ohio Frank Stanley Rozanski, Temple University .................... Plymouth, Pennsylvania Herschel lermone Rubin, B.S., University oi Pittsburgh, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania Karl Stephen Russell, B.S., Potomac State College .... Collingswood, New Iersey lack Savran, Rhode Island State College .................... Providence, Rhode Island Charles Snyder Sherman, B.S., Rutgers College ........ Asbury Park, New Iersey Iohn Francis Shevlin, B.S., St. Thomas' College ...... Carbondale, Pennsylvania Mario Secondo Sindaco, St. Thomas' College .................... Plains, Pennsylvania Clarence Stuart Smith, Duke University .......................... Newport, Pennsylvania Hamilton Mills Smith, Ohio Wesleyan University, Haddon Heights, New Iersey Joseph Hunter Smith, Ir., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Alphonse Charles Smuda, B.S., St. Ioseph's College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Christian L. R. Souder, Ursinus College ........................ Soudertown, Pennsylvania Anselmo Vincent Spano, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, ' Clifton Heights, Pennsylvania George Spota, B.S:, Fordham University ................ New York City, New York Pasquale Anthony Statile, B.S., Fordham University ........ Newark, New Iersey Arthur Iulian Stein, University of Pennsylvania ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iohn Adam Tamarelli, University of Pittsburgh ........ Wilmerding, Pennsylvania Thomas Edward Timney, B.S., University of Notre Dame, Ambridge, Pennsylvania Louis Gerard Torrieri, B.S., Manhattan College .................... Yonkers, New York Philip Iohn Traficanti, B.S., Villanova College ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Milton Unger, B.S., Dickinson College ................................ Newark, New Iersey Frank Anthony Vallario, B.S., New York University ............ Newark, New Jersey Herman Vincent Walker, B.S., University ot Delaware, Tuxedo Park, Delaware Merritt Robert White, B.S., Villanova College ............ West Chester, Pennsylvania Harold Nathaniel Yoh, B.S., Albright College ........ Wernersville, Pennsylvania 155 OFFICERS OF SECOND YEAR CLASS 'I'HE193Sj President .................................................................................... IUSTIN L. CASHMAN Vice-President ........ ................. P AUL K. GOOD Secretory .......... ......... I OI-IN W. DABBS Treasurer ............................................. ........... W ILLIAM DELIA Student Council Representative ......... ......... P AUL L. BRADFORD Good, Cushman, D'E1icr, Dobbs 156 FIRST YEAR THE 1935 F'T1T, ,, Q r:J ,lysmtal FIRST YEAR CLASS ROLL Iohn Louis Acampora, Ir., B.S., Villanova College .... New York City, New York Ercole Anthony Addonizio, B.S., Colby College ........ Chelsea, Massachusetts Peter Michael Agnone, St. Thomas's College ................ Scranton, Pennsylvania Chester Harrison Albright, B.S., Ursinus College, Lansdale, Pennsylvania Anthony Iohn Balsamo, St. Iohn's University ............ Iersey City, New lersey Ioseph Daniel Barbella, A.B., New York University ............ Newark, New lersey Harry Woodrow Bashline, Grove City College ........ Grove City, Pennsylvania Wayne Lamont Bashline, Grove City College ............ Grove City, Pennsylvania Norman Evan Basinger, A.B., Amherst College, Western Reserve University, Elyria, Ohio Clarence Edward Baxter, Western Reserve University ................ Conneaut, Ohio Dominic Anthony Bianchi, B.S., Niagara University ........ Rochester, New York Frank Kenneth Bird, Tusculum College ................................ Warwick, New York Ralph lsadore Bishow, A.B., Temple University ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ioseph Bitman, Temple University .................................... Abington, Pennsylvania larnes Russell Bone, Ohio University ........................................ Chillicothe, Ohio Dennis lames Bonner, Ir., Mount St. Mary's College, Summit Hill, Pennsylvania William Laurence Bonnet, B.S., Rutgers University ........ Trenton, New Iersey Hugh Lowrey Bowman, B.S., Pennsylvania State College, Lansdowne, Pennsylvania Carmel Ioseph Bozzi, B.S., Villanova College .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iohn Taylor Brittingham, Villanova College .................... Chester, Pennsylvania Iesse Sheridan Brown, University oi Pittsburgh ............ Altoona, Pennsylvania Samuel Burtoii, B.S., Villanova College ................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Richard Alden Caldwell, A.B., B.S., Washington and Lee University, Bentleyville, Pennsylvania Michael Albert Cambest, Ir., B.S., University ot Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Basil Salvatore Cannatelli, B.S., St. Ioseph's College, Wilmington, Delaware Michael Thomas Cappola, Ir., B.S., Villanova College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 158 MEDIC Charles Anthony Carabello, Temple University ........ Reading, Pennsylvania William Anton Care-ro, College of Charleston ........ New York City, New York Arnerico Victor Casella, B.S., Catholic University ........ New Haven, Connecticut Alfred lohn Catenacci, A.B., Temple University .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Sylvester Thomas Centrone, B.S., Mount St. Mary's College, Brooklyn, New York Edwin Lawrence Ciccone, A.B., New York University ........ Newark, New lersey Ioseph Eugene Cooper, St. Thomas' College ............ Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Frederick Trevor Cope, B.S., University of Alabama, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iohn Ioseph Curran, Villanova College ............ New Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pasquale Dante, New York University ................................ Millburn, New Iersey Edward Francis Delagi, B.S., Fordham University, New York City, New York George Vallerchamp Derickson, B.S., Lebanon Valley College, Annville, Pennsylvania George Pierre Desjardins, A.B., Bowdoin College ................ Brunswick, Maine Leo Vincent DiCara, A.B., New York University ........ New York City, New York Anthony Iohn DiFabio, B.S., Fordham University ........ New York City, New York Samuel Dinenberg, A.B., LaSalle i'College ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Grimaldo Charles DiStefano, Temple University .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Andrew Alan Doering, Academy ot the New Church, Temple University, Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania Robert Edward Donovan, A.B., M.A., Notre Dame University, Fordham Uni- versity .......................................................................... New York City, New York Iohn Thomas Dougherty, University ot Delaware ........ Wilmington, Delaware Ernest Zoltan Eperiessy, University ot Pittsburgh ........ lohnstown, Pennsylvania Iames Rich Eynon, Pennsylvania State College ........ Collingswood, New lersey Paul George F ago, B.S., Pennsylvania State College ........ Ludlow, Pennsylvania Philip Francis Ferrigno, B.S., Villanova College .... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Philip Ioseph Ferry, B.S., Pennsylvania State College, Kingston, Pennsylvania Frederick Frank Fiedler, B.S., University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Iohn Kent Finley, University of Pennsylvania, St. Ioseph's College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Manuel Albert Flick, B.S., Villanova College, St. loseph's College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Nicholas George Frignito, A.B., St. loseph's College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Willis Andrew Fromhold, Indiana University .................... Indianapolis, Indiana Ioseph Francis Fuselli, B.S., Villanova College ............ New York City, New York Norman William Garwood, B.S., Franklin and Marshall University, Elmer, New lersey Louis Iohn Gatto, 'B.S., St. Iohn's College, Long Island University, New York City, New York Bernard Martin Gilbert, A.B., Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Harold Floyd Gilbert, University of Pennsylvania ........ Mt. Holly, New lersey Iohn Henry Gindhart, Temple University .................... Moorestown, New lersey Albert Harvey Gleason, B.S., Fordham University ........ Asbury Park, New lersey Henry Iacob Gowaty, University of Pittsburgh ........ Logan's Ferry, Pennsylvania lack Benjamin Green, University of Pittsburgh ........ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Iohn Gregory Grego, University of Pittsburgh ................ Leetsdale, Pennsylvania Daniel Dwight Grove, B.S., Lebanon Valley College, Felton, Pennsylvania Francis Paul Grzedzinski, Purdue University ............ Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Burton Adam Hall, Gettysburg College .................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Lester Arthur Halley, University of Pittsburgh ................ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Nicholas Fulmer Hoffman, lr., William and Mary College, Ursinus College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Harold Emerson Houck, B.S., Ursinus College .................... Reading, Pennsylvania Iohn Russell Hubbard, Oklahoma City University, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Harold Franklin Hughes, Temple University ................ Cape May, New Iersey 159 Thomas Edward Hughes, lr., University of Pennsylvania, Camden, New Iersey Charles Keator Ives, A.B., Cornell University .................... Roxbury, New York Nelson Hibbard Iones, B.S., Swarthmore College, Guilford College, Paoli, Walter Stanley Kaminski, St. Ioseph's College ........ Upper Darby, Furman Thomas Kepler, B.S., Dickinson College .... Philadelphia, William George Kirkland, Haverford College .................... Kirklyn Carl Harold Kline, University of Pennsylvania ........ Philadelphia, George Martin Klitch, B.S., Lebanon Valley College, Harrisburg, Martin Richard Krausz, Ir., B.S., Moravian College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Vincent Louis Lamanna, Villanova College ................ Sea Isle City, New lersey Salvatore Anthony Lawrence, B.S., St. Thomas' College, Dunmore, Robert Gustave Lehman, University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Bernard Leibowitz, A.B., University of Delaware ............ Wilmington, Delaware Leo Abraham Levine, B.S., University of Pittsburgh .... Oil City, Pennsylvania Ralph Henry Leyrer, Miami University ........................................ Hamilton, Ohio William Likoff, A.B., Dartmouth College ................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Prank Lima, B.S., St. lohn's College ............................................ Corona, New York Russell Isaiah London, Lehigh University ................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Iohn Richard Lutz, University of Pennsylvania ............ Edgewood, New Iersey Joseph Anthony Maceiunas, B.S., Mount St. Mary's College, Mahanoy City, Pennsylvania Albert Edward Magson, University of Alabama ........ Sharon Hill, Pennsylvania Milton Manette, B.S., Rutgers University ........................ Grantwood, New Iersey Rosario Gilbert Mannino, Dickinson College ........................ Tyrone, Pennsylvania Robert Bremer Marin, B.S., Lafayette College, Columbia University, New York City, New York Robert Iohn McLaughlin, A.B., Lafayette College ........ Kingston, Pennsylvania Eugene George Mellies, St. Louis University ........................ St. Louis, Missouri Nicholas Richard Menna, Villanova College ............ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Lauris Craig Miller, B.S., University of Maine .................................... Orono, Maine Wilfrid Iacques Millet, B.S., University of Vermont ........ Pittsfield, Massachusetts Marlin Charles Moore, Temple University .................... Kulpmont, Pennsylvania Alexander Iohn Mozzer, B.S., Connecticut State College, Manchester, Connecticut Edward William Mulligan, B.S., Gettysburg College ........ Red Bank, New Iersey George lohn Nichols, B.S., Pennsylvania State College, Carbondale, Pennsylvania George Anthony Nitshe, University of West Virginia .... Ocean City, New Iersey Iohn Rue Noon, Ir., Franklin and Marshall College, Philadelphia Max Norman, LaSalle College .................................... Philadelphia, Daniel Ioseph O'Connell, Ir., B.S., St. loseph's College, Collingdale, Alexander Charles Perlino, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, George Stratton Pettis, A.B., Pennsylvania State College, Reading, Edmund Stanley Piszczek, Villanova College ................ Plymouth Ermin Dominick Ioseph Pompizzi, Ir., St. Ioseph's College, Philadelphia Daniel Anthony Porreca, B.S., Villanova College .... Philadelphia Iames David Purvis, B.S., University of Pittsburgh ........ Pittsburgh Iulius Iohn Renger, University of Alabama ................ Philadelphia, Lewis Ioseph Restak, A.B., Gettysburg College .............. Steelton, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania George Ramon Rienzo, A.B., Marietta College ............ lersey City, New Iersey 160 THE 1935 MEDIC Alan Newton Rogers, B.S., Temple University, Cornell University, Norristown, Pennsylvania Iack Iay Rommer, A.B., Ph.G., Upsala College, Rutgers University, Passaic, New Iersey Theodore Ronald Sadock, A.B., Union College ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania George Sahlaney, Allegheny College ........................ Houtzdale, Pennsylvania William Lawrence Salaky, A.B., Ohio University ........ Perth Amboy, New Iersey Iohn Iames Sassaman, B.S., M.S., Villanova College, Muhlenburg College, Allentown, Pennsylvania Harold Philip Shapiro, B.S., Franklin and Marshall University, Newark, New Iersey Maurice Sherman, B.S., Villanova College ................ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Raymond I. Shettel, B.S., Dickinson College ............ Lewisberry, Pennsylvania Ioel Shrager, Temple University .................................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Morris Sigmund Shuman, B.S., Franklin and Marshall College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Anthony Shupis, Ir., Cornell University ............................ Stamford, Connecticut Bernard Siegel, Temple University ............................ Philadelphia, Alfons Iohn Sierocki, St. Thomas' College, Temple University, Nanticoke, Iohn Winslow Smith, Haverford College .................. Philadelphia, Elmo Bauer Sommers, B.S., Ursinus College ............ Collegeville, Peter Louis Steffa, LaSalle University .................... Philadelphia, Iohn William Stephens, University of Pittsburgh .... New Brighton, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Leland Munyan Stetser, Temple University ................ Bridgeport, New Iersey Iohn Chalmers Sutton, Ir., B.S., Washington and Iefferson College, New Brighton, Pennsylvania Patrick Leo Tighe, Ir., B.S., Holy Cross College ............ Scranton, Pennsylvania Francis Stanley Tolodziecki, B.S., University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Martin Tolomeo, B.S., Ursinus College ........................ Bound Brook, New Iersey Ethan Loraine Trexler, B.S., Franklin and Marshall College, Kempton, Pennsylvania Iames Frederick Vincent Trombino, B.S., Pennsylvania State College, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Wilson Douglas Tucker, Pennsylvania State College, Washington and Iefferson College .......................................................... Morganza, Pennsylvania Abraham Ulitsky, B.S., University of Pittsburgh ........ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William Ioseph Vanston, B.S., St. Thomas' College ........ Scranton, Pennsylvania Malcolm Eugene Walker, Colgate University ............................ Utica, New York David Hickman West, University of Alabama, Guilford College, Paulsboro, New Iersey Iohn Charles Whitaker, A.B., Pennsylvania State College, Mt. Carmel, Benjamin Aloysius Wiech, University of Buffalo, Pennsylvania North Tonawanda, New York Albert I. Zimmerman, A.B., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 161 THE 1935 CLASS OFFICERS lFirs+ Yearl President ........ ....................................................................... I OHN KENT FINLEY Vice-President .,.... .......... A LEXANDEH C. PERLINO Secretary ....... .......... G EORGE IOHN NICHOLS Treasurer ............................................. .......... M ANUEL ALBERT FLICK Student Council Representative t .........IOHN I. SASSAMAN Sassman, Pe rlino, Finley, Nichol 162 Flick CJRGANIZATIONS Marble Statue of Samuel Hahnemann by Steinhauser Collection of Calvin Knerr, M.D. ., .-...........- . ,..,..-Q1-fn- ..4..,..- , -,,. --......... .Q ,,, ...-.,-v.. -4 ' 'I' III 193 , -,.- - . ,Y -,l.-v--- . .,- ,., --.. -.v-- Wv- . ,.-.,.-. ,ZMGITASIMADHO CLASS OFHCERS im-,+ Yearl President .......... .....,.................................................................. I OHN KENT FINLEY Vice-Pr-esident ......... ........ A LEXANDER C. PERLINO Sf3Cl'GtCITY .. .. .... ........ G EORGE IOHN NICHOLS Treasurer , ........ . ................................. ........ M ANUEI.. ALBERT FLICK Student Council Representative ...... .......... I OHN I. SASSAMAN t Sussman, Perlino, Finley, Nichols, Flick aah mowl 'vswm!sr3s3?. gd nnnmsndnii Ssumn?. X0 5433.933 sldinll .CLM ,'v'cssvX 836555 to noi3:ssSioD 162 l FRATERNITIES i' i 'rr-IE' 1935 GEM Q f t. iillllllllllu 2 President ...... Vice-President Secretary ........ Treasurer .... Garth W. Boericke, M.D. Lester Leroy Bower, M.D. Edward W. Campbell, M.D., F.A.C.S. Leon Clemmer, M.D., F.A.C.S. Iames H. Closson, 3rd, M.D. Earl B. Craig, M.D., F.A.C.S. Pasquale G. Damiani, M.D. Thomas L. Doyle, M.D. Harry D. Evans, M.D. Donald R. Ferguson, M.D., F.A.C.P. Gerald A. Fincke, M.D. H. Russell Fisher, M.D. Charles D. Fox, M.D. Edwin O. Geckler, M.D. George D. Geckler, M.D. Iames M. Godfrey, M.D. Wilbur Stafford Davidson. B.S. George Williams Gaumer I. Edison Goldsmith, B.S. Iohn Richard Grant, B.S. Richard Baker Greene Iesse George Haier, B.S. Tausbee Beckham Beatty Cedric Errol Dunn Harry Davidson Evans, Ir. ALPHA SIGMA FRATERNITY Founded at New York-1893 Beta Chapter Established at Hahnemann-1897 OFFICERS HENRY ZWERGEL ...............TAUSBEE B. BEATTY ...........HERMAN E. GAUMER B. PENNINGTON FRATERS IN FACULTATE Carroll F. Haines, M.D. Charles B. Hollis, M.D., Donald T. lones, M.D. F. Laird Kennedy, M.D. Wayne T. Killian, M.D. Richard W. Larer, M.D. Russell S. Magee, M.D. Russell K. Mattern, M.D. Carroll R. McClure, M.D. Ioseph McEldowney, M.D. Frank O. Nagle, A.M., M.D. George R. Neff, M.D. Newlin F. Paxson, M.D., F.A.C.S. Fred C. Peters, M.D. Edmund G. l-lessert, M.D. N. Fulmer Hoffman, M.D. F.A.C.S. lohn H. Reading, Ir., M.D. Charles L. W. Rieger, M.D. Henry S. Ruth, M.D. C. Dudley Saul, M.D. lames D. Schofield, M.D. Fred W. Smith, M.D., F.A.C.S. E. Roland Snader, M.D., F.A.C.P. H. Earle Twining, M.D. Everett A. Tyler, Ph.B., M.D. P. Van Tine, M.D. Van Tine, M.D. I. Vischer, M.D. Edward I. Lewis Thomas Harry S. Weaver, M.D., F.A.C.S. Weaver, Ir., M.D. B. Webster, M.D., F.A.C.S. W. Young, M.D. Harry S. Aubrey William FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-tive Lester Wilber Harris Iohn Ross Higerd Carl Everett Lorenz William Dummet Mayhew Martin Beadenkopf Pennington Harold Iames Rickard Warren Brundage Shepard, lr., B.S. Marcel Paul Thomas, B.S. Arthur W. W. Waddington, A.B. William Work Widdowson, B.S. Edward Henry Zwergel Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-six Herman Elmer Gaumer Melvin Albert Greer, B.S. Charles Henry Hodgkins, Class of Nineteen hundred William Arthur Anderson Horace Hatch Custis, Ir. Herbert Perrin Harkins Frederick Adam Parsons Chester Albright, Ir. Fred T. Cope William Bruce Patterson Iohn Wesley Pratt Arthur Lester Price, A.B Emil Edward Reiss, Ir. Robert Addison Marquis, Ph.G. Frank lohn Robertson, Ir. Ir., B.S. and thirty-seven Iohn Francis Shevlin, B.S. Joseph Hunter Smith, lr. Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-eight Iohn Kent Finley Iohn B. Green N. Fulmer Hoffman, Ir. I. William Stephens Pledges Thomas E. Hughes Martin R. Krausz, Ir. Nelson H. Iones Larry Miller 164 FIRST ROVV, left to right--Goldsmith, Shepard, Davison, G. Gaurner, Zwergel, Pennington, Waddington, Lorenz, Grant. SECOND ROW, left to right--Harris, Robertson, Mayhew, Hodgekins, Custis, Widdowson, Thomas, Greene, Stephens, I-Iiqerd. THIRD ROW, left to right- fH. Gaumer, Smith, Chevlin, Harkins, Albright, Finley, Anderson, Reiss, Pratt. ' BACK ROW, left to right'--Price, Parsons, Patterson, Green, Hoffman, Cope. Alpha Sigma was founded at New York Homeopathic Medical College in l893. The Beta Chapter at I-Iahnemann College in Philadelphia was founded in 1897. Since that time the fraternity has prospered steadily, enriching itself with each new member added. Its quota of faculty members deserves mention, both because of the quality and the quantity involved. No small number of department heads are proud to wear the Skull. Edward Zwergel was unanimously elected last spring to pilot the organ- ization through the school year of lQ34 and l935. This he has done skillfully and arduously. The annual Rush Smoker was held early in the Fall, to the mutual benefit of the fraternity and the pledges. The initiation in December was followed by the yearly initiation dance, held at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel. Brother Boericke ably occupied the post of toastmaster at the annual Alumni Banquet, held at the Arcadia International Restaurant. The Senior Dance, to be held in the Spring, will wind up the social calendar for the year. This year marks the founding of an alumni chapter in the Pittsburgh district with the election of Brother Roy Cooper as local president. That the year has been a success for Alpha Sigma, no one can gainsayr the etiology of which can be expressed in one word: Cooperation. 165 THE 1935 W '1e2-:f ' r I, -' QM tt 5 1 In W tl X Qllllumn llllg 'w an g tm I all , my Samuel W. Sappington, M.D., F.A.C.P O. P. Barthmaier, M.D. William M. Sylvis, M.D., E.A.C.S. PHI ALPHA GAMMA Founded in New York Gamma Chapter-Philadelphia-l896 OFFICERS President .............. .................... T . RICHARD HOEMANN Vice-President ........ ...... .......... C H ARLES S. DOTTERER Treasurer ............. ........... O RD C. BLACKLEDGE Secretary .......... ................. I OHN A. HOFPA Editor ......... ......... K ENNETH T. MOORE PRATERS IN EACULTATE Iames Seligman, M.D. David D. Northrop, M.D. I. Miller Kenworthy, M.D. Edward A. Steinhilber, M.D. I. Antrim Crellin, M.D. Lowell L. Lane, M.D., E.A.C.P. Warren S. Hoenstine, M.D. H. Eranklin Flanagan, M.D. Carl C. Fischer, M.D Walter I. Snyder, M.D. Clarence L. Shollenberger, M.D., P.A.C.S. William L. Martin, M.D. Theodore C. Geary, M.D. I. O. Atkinson E. C. Beckley O. C. Blackledge C. S. Cameron, Ir. I. E. Barrett R. N. Bowen O. H. Clagett P. L. Bradford W. E. Brasinger I. L. Cashman I. E. Corrigan I. R. Eynon H. P. Hughes Iohn H. McCutcheon, M.D. Iohn E. Iames, M.D., E.A.C.S. Albert Mutch, M.D. Richard R. Gates, M.D. Henry L. Crawther, M.D. Henry D. Laiierty, M.D. Frank I. Prosch, M.D. Michael I. Bennett, M.D. Bruce U. Maclfeyden, M.D. Alfred R. Seraphin, M.D. FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-five C. S. Dotterer, Ir. T. R. Hofmann E. W. Iohnson C. A. Miller Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-six E. R. Shippen W. C. Harrison S. B. Hughes W. R. Hazzard E. N. Neloer I. A. Hoiia K. T. Moore D. I. Iones Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-seven P. K. Good K. S. Russell C. G. Hill C. S. Smith H. C. Mosch R. H. Reddick Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-eight W. G. Kirkland I. C. Sutton E. L. Trexler 166 M. Tolomeo FIRST ROW-Neber, Cameron, Dotterer, Hofmann, Blackledqe, Shippen, Moore. SECOND ROW-Hornyak, Good, Cashman, Kirkland, Eynon, Sutton, Recldick, lones. THIRD HOW--Corrigan, Bradford, Bassinqer, Russell, Mosch, Trexler, Tolomeo. The movement for the founding of a Medical Fraternity in Hahnemann Medical College first took definite form when on December l, 1896, six kindred spirits of the Class of '98, together with one member of the Senior Class of '97, got together, and behind the closed doors of Alumni Hall, the Fraternity that was destined to become Phi Alpha Gamma had its origin. Meanwhile, there had been formed-Alpha Chapter in New York and Beta Chapter in Boston. Gamma Chapter fostered high ideals from its inception and among them, we find that no member of the teaching staff could be elected to Honorary Membership in the Fraternity, in order that no jealousies might arise as the result of carrying fraternity feelings into the realms of the Faculty. This quite naturally resulted in having all its Faculty members graduates of Hahnemann Medical College. We deeply regret that while we were underclassmen, Dr. Dean Elliott and Dr. Arthur Hartley passed on. Their loyalty to their college and fraternity shall always remain in the memories of all that knew them. Each year finds the Gamma Chapter giving up some of its acquired brain trusts to the medical profession and at the same time instilling new life into the fraternity from the most promising material in the Freshman Class. In this manner Phi Alpha Gamma has maintained its leading position as a National Fraternity. 167 'I' f- .5 'rir B 1935 X? PI UPSILON RHO FRATERNITY Ustion Founded at Chicago--1876 H Local Chapter OrqanizedWl9O2 ' vi orricrns A .: lm-. President ............................. ............................ R Ussru. GORSUCH WITWER , . , Vice-President ...................... .. .. .. ..... . ........ GRANT WENGER BAMBERGER Corresponding Secretary ...... ..................... C ARL ADAM RILLING 9 Treasurer ..............................,.. ........... R AYMOND EDWIN SEIDEL ' Recording Secretary .................................................... IACOB HARVEY SIGAFOOS 'P'-:UP'!P074m ' FRATERS IN FACULTATE F. H. Widman, M.D. L. T. Ashcraft, M.D., F.A.C.S. H. M. Eberhard, M.D. G. H. Wells, M.D., F.A.C.P. G. I. Palen, M.D. Frank C. Benson, Ir., M.A., M.D., F.A.C.S. Ralph Bernstein, M.D., F.A.C.P. I. A. Borneman, P.D. W. C. Mercer, M.D., F.A.C.S. T. W. Phillips, M.D. T. M. Snyder, M.D. H. I. Klopp, M.D., F.A.C.P. P. C. Wittman, M.D. W. B. Griggs, M.D. I. S. Hepburn, Ph.D., M.D. I. B. Bert, M.D. H. F. Hoffman, M.D. Grant Wenger Bamberger William Burton Barrow Harry Oscar Beeman Ralph Sidney Belmont Richard Eugene Brenneman Esker William Cullen Howard Sampson Hudson Durant Kost Charleroy Iohn Wideman Dabbs Bryan Aston Dawber Samuel Daniel Glaus William Lawrence Bonnet Michael Albert Cambest, Ir. George Pierre Desjardins Francis Paul Dodson Paul Foster Overs, '37 Iack Savran, '37 E. H. Payne, M.D. I. R. Criswell, M.D. George Lorenz, M.D. C. I. Vtfhite, M.D. G. O. Favorite, M.D., F.A.C.P. A. E. Krick, M.D. Nathan Griffith, LL.B. W. F. Baker, M.D. W. B. Schmidt, Ph.D. D. W. Kirby, M.D., F.A.C.P. R. M. Hunter, M.D. C. F. Kutteroff, M.D. P. A. Metzgar, M.D. R. A. Hibbs, M.D. G. I. Rillinq, M.D. E. F. Carpenter, M.D. H. S. Cook, M.D. A. R. Rihl, M.D. H. L. Somers, M.D. I. I. Klain, M.D. M. A. Goldsmith, M.D. H. S. Busler, M.D. W. E. Kepler, M.D. L. P. Tori, M.D. H. G. Blessing, M.D. H. T. Sooy, M.D. C. E. Lawson, M.D. F. M. Iames, M.D. I. V. Allen, M.D. Karl F. Mayer, M.D. H. P. Landis, M.D. E. H. Dickinson, M.D., F.A.C.S. FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-tive Francis Michael Dougherty Charles Frederick Fox, Ir. Hector Coverlie Michaud Abraham Kam Sat Ng Carl Adam Rilling Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-six Richard Thomas Sauer I. Guy Smith Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-seven William Norman Gross Carl Otto Keck Philip Ioseph MacLaren Charles Wallis Ohl Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-eight Andrew Alan Doering Norman William Garwood Harold Floyd Gindhart Albert Harvey Gleason Pledges Marlin Charles Moore, '38 Burton Adam Hall, '38 168 George Rudolph Schubart Raymond Edwin Seidel Iacob Harvey Sigafoos Lewis Benjamin Thomas Russell Gorsuch Witwer Collum Anthony Miles Charles Snyder Sherman Thomas Edward Tinney Henry Iacob Gowaty Charles Keator Ives Iames David Purvis Alan Newton Rogers Harold Emerson Houck, '38 FIRST ROW-Schubart, Belmont, Rilling, Bamberger, Witwer, Sigafoos, Seidel, Fox, L. B. Thomas SECOND ROWsSmith, Sherman, Daugherty, MacLaren, Beeman, Nutter, Michaud, Hudson, Barrow, Ng, Brenneman. Third Row-Cullen, Gross, Gindhart, Timney, Gleason, lves, Deering, Ohl, Bennet, Purvis. FOURTH ROW-Savarin, Glaus, Dabbs, Rogers, Moore, Dawber, Dodson, Deslardins, Garwood, Charleroy, Cambest. Dr. A. E. Rocky is remembered as the founder of this organization. He first proposed the society at an informal meeting of five junior students. The Ustion, meaning a light, a burning flame, was organized. This was ac- complished in the school year 1876-1877. The society was kept absolutely secret, and for two years only the members knew of its existence. It was organized at Hahnemann Medical College of Chicago. The first small group found that their organization was so helpful that they decided to share its advantages with their brethren in Cleveland, and a chapter was organized in the Cleveland University Medical School in l896. This met with much disfavor on the part of the University authorities, but it prospered in spite of the disapproval. The need of a governing body, a national body, presented itself at once, so that activities of the various chapters could be made to work together. After considerable delay, the Cleveland Chapter applied for, and received, a charter under the laws of the State of Ohio. A new constitution was framed which provided for a National Fraternity in l9Ol. This was the first National Medical Society known to exist in this country. The first national president was Dr. Benjamin B. Kimmel, of Cleveland, Ohio. The present national president is Dr. Rolland A. Case, of Cleveland. A chapter was founded in 1902 at the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia by a committee from Chicago. In the same year the Chicago Chapter became affiliated with the National body. Chapters were soon provided in Denver Homeopathic College, Detroit, University of Michigan, Ohio State University, and New York Homeopathic Medical College. ln 1909 the Ustion was changed to a Greek letter society, Pi Upsilon Rho. 169 THE1935 0 -i-f-fr'? -i---N Q If ST L PHI LAMBDA KAPPA L 5 'tx R A 'ALI' ' Alpha Beta Chapter 1926 .15 1' 1'-2-if ' I -n. Koo ,ff OFFICERS Worthy Superior ..... ..................... .......... W I LLIAM S. SILVERMAN Worthy Chancellor ....................... .............. L EONARD RAMBACH Worthy Scribe .................................. ............... H ARRY A. PINSKY Worthy Guardian of Exchequer ........................................ CHARLES M. SPIEGEL FRATERS IN FACULTATE Horace L. Weinstock, M.D. Herbert M. Sharlcis, M.D. Morris Fiterman, M.D. Leon A. Frankel, M.D. William Klinman, M.D. Leopold S. Lipsitz, M.D. Ioseph W. Messey, M.D. FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-five William S. Silverman Leonard Rambach Albert Eskin Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-six Harry Eisenberq loseph A. Balin Harry A. Pinslcy Ezra B. Sirotta Charles M. Spiegel Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-seven Sydney S. Norwick William A. Reishstein Nalhaniel H. Kutcher William Abramson Manuel Almes Louis A. Hyman Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-eight Samuel Burtoft Albert Zimmerman Arthur Eqqendort Ralph Bishow Samuel Dinnenberq Abraham Ulitsky Bernard Liebowitz 170 FIRST ROW-Almes, Pinsky, Eskin, Silverman, Rambach, Spiegel, Sirotta. SECOND ROVV--Burtoff, Leibowitz, Bishow, Hyman, Pteishstein, Norwich. THIRD ROW-Ulitsky, Dinenberg, Abramson, Zimmerman, Kutcher It was back in Nineteen hundred and twenty-six, under the able guidance of Drs. Weinstock, Fiterman, and Klinman, who were students then, that a group of Hahnemann undergraduates assembled together and formed a fra- ternity, namely, Alpha Beta Chapter of Phi Lambda Kappa, a national medical fraternity of thirty-eight chapters. Their sole purpose was to promote friendship, help each other, and to create a harmonious relationship between their medical studies and social activities. We have tried to maintain this ideal since the fraternity's inception. It has been our practice to hold various scientific meetings during the school year, at which time various topics of medical interest have been discussed by members of our Faculty, Alumni, and invited guests. The year 1934-35 got well under Way with a scientific meeting, at which time several Alumni gave addresses and for the principal address, Dr. Chandler, of the Chemistry Department, gave an eloquent and most informa- tive presentation on the subject of War Gases . The social festivities of the year were inaugurated on Thanksgiving Eve with a combined chapter dance at the Hotel Pennsylvania, Where alumnus met undergraduate in a most delightful and entertaining frolic. Our next activity was a big turnout in Hering Hall, where a paper was presented by one of the fraters on Sydenham's Chorea , and a most worthy piece of work given by Dr. Frankel, who epito- mized in a comprehensive manner the lectures at the Interstate Post Graduate Medical Convention. On Ianuary 24, initiation of new men took place. In their hands we placed the reins with which to carry on the principles of Phi Lambda Kappa. 171 THE 1935 X? Q-Qin' A - -av: -F' im' 5 5 ,, iz' ,kit IL CIRCOLO ITALIANC Founded at l-lahnemannf-1927 OFFICERS President ............ ......................... ......... A N THONY CAPUTI Vice-President ...... ................................... I AMES I. RITA Secretary ........... ......... P ASQUALE I. C. GAMBESCIA Treasurer ....... ....................... F RED A. BISCEGLIA Counsellor ..... ............ I AMES ARNAO FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class ot Nineteen hundred and thirty-tive Fred A. Bisceqlia Anthony G. Campo Anthony Caputi Louis S. Fornasier Phillip D. LiVolsi Iames I. Rita Class oi Nineteen hundred and thirty-six Anthony G. Ciavarelli Salvatore Cuccinotta Frank S. Mainella Class of Nineteen hundred Iames Arnao Louis I. Decina Pasquale I. C. Gambescia Hamlet R. Giordano Frederick E. Marino Class of Nineteen hundred Basil S. Cannatelli V Michael T. Cappola Charles A. Carabello Alfred I. Catenacci Grimaldo C. DiStefar1o 172 Saverio A. Monaco William A. Tomasco Frank Tropea and thirty-seven Iohn Morrocco Salvatore L. Lombardi Philip S. Traficanti Anthony Vercellino DiSario and thirty-eight Philip F. Ferriqno Nicholas G. Friqnito Vincent L. LaManna Richard Menna FIRST ROWfLiVolsi, Fornasier, Arnao, Rita, Caputi lPres.J, Bisceglia, Gambescia, Campo, Monaco. SECOND ROW-Giordano, Decina, LaManna, Cuccinotta, Cappola, Lombardi, Tomasco. THIRD ROW-Carabello, Catenacci, Pompizzi, DiSteffano, Cannatelli, Ciavarelli. Il Circolo Italiano was founded during the school session of 1927-28, with the sanction of the Executive Committee of the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia. Eligibility for membership is restricted only to the students of Hahnemann Medical College who are of Italian extraction. In purpose, Il Circolo Italiano is constructive and idealistic. First, it enhances medical idealism and respect for the ethical codes as formulated by the profession of Medicine. Second, it promotes the scholastic, the academic, and the social status of its members. Third, it aims to achieve harmony and good fellowship among its members. And fourth, it strives to uphold all the principles and traditions as true and loyal sons of Hahnemenn Medical College. ll Circolo Italiano may well be remembered for the annual dance which is held in December. This affair is characterized by unusual hospitality and is open to all the students and Faculty of Hahnemann Medical College and to members and friends of Il Circolo Italiano. During the school year several socials are held in the auditorium at Hering Hall. Il Circolo Italiano was the first organ- ization to make use of Hering Hall soon after its opening. The conduct and order of the social was such as to merit a letter of praise from Dean Pearson for setting an excellent example for other organizations to follow. The school year is brought to a close with the election of officers, for the following year, and a banquet. All meetings are conducted in Hering Hall. Prom the time of its conception, Il Circolo Italiano has grown in numbers, spirit and faithfulness to the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia. 173 TH E 1935 Ql'E2.llfZIIA1 Q .S 3 PHI DELTA EPSILCN FRATERNITY ,fri Organized Cornell University Medical College-1904 A IX' Beta Zeta Chapter Organized 1929 FIIQQNIIII It OFFICERS Consul ............. ......................... ........ M O RRIS I. PODELL Vice-Consul ....... ......... H ARRY E. FRIDRICH Cl'1CII'1CellOI' .... .......... R UBEN E. BRESLER Scribe ....... Marshal ....... MYRON H. BALL HARRY KATZ FRATERS IN FACULTATE David Kahn, M.D. Herman I. Lubowitz, M.D. FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-five Milton S. Weinberg Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-six Harry Fridrich Samuel Katz I. Harry Katz Maurice Tepper Morris Podell Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-seven Myron Ball Ruben R. Bressler Class of Ioseph Bittmorn William Likoif Bernard Siegel Russel London Nineteen hundred and th 174 Albert Carp irty-eight Milton Manette Maurice Sherman Morrise Shurnan FIRST ROW---I. Katz, Bressler, Fridrich, Podell, Vtleinberq, Ball, Tepper. SECOND ROW-Shuman, Bittman, Carp, Sherman, S. Katz. THIRD BOW-Likoff, London, Siegel, Manette. The Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity was organized at Cornell University Medical School in the fall of 1904, under the leadership of Dr. Aaron Brown. Although a non-sectarian organization, it includes sixty per cent of the Iewish men in Medicine. At the present time there are fifty-five undergraduate chapters and fifteen graduate clubs, the latter being located in the medical centres of the world, including London, Glasgow, and Vienna. Among its members are Dr. Hideyo Noguchi, Dr. Morris Fishbein, of A.M.A. fame: Dr. Samuel Z. Levine, of cardiac fame, and others. In the fall of l928 cr group of Freshmen at Hahnemann, having friends at other schools who were members of Phi Delta Epsilon, with the assistance of Dr. Avarett and Dr. Sussman, of St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, were suc- cessful in establishing the Beta Zeta Chapter of Phi Delta Epsilon. The charter members were Drs. Berd, Broselow, Grossman, Harls, Kurland, Lapin, Lubo- witz, Bosman, Sall, Schuman, and Weinstein. Dr. Walter Grossman was the first consul. Early in the career of the fraternity there was instituted the system of monthly scientific meetings. The guest speakers featured were outstanding men in Medicine, both at Hahnemann and other schools. These meetings are open to the general student body and are looked forward to with eager interest by all. The Beta Zeta Chapter was signally honored in having one of its members, Milton S. Weinberg, as chairman of the Annual Five Chapter Ball Committee. As this is the only inter-chapter office open to an undergraduate, this chapter is to be congratulated for receiving this honor so early in its career. 175 'rirnieas 52.'2'..Q Q, ,KWIIM - 2 ' 4 , l X President ........... VicePresident ...... Secretary ...... Treasurer ....... NEWMAN OFFICERS H....-....unU....-...U--.....-........ ......-.- CLUB FRED A. BISCEGLIA BERNARD ALFONSUS BALSIS I. SASSAMAN FRATERS IN COLLEGIO Class ot Nineteen hundred Fred A. Bisceqlia Iames Ioseph Hogan Thomas F. Dowd Class of Nineteen hundred Emil Lawrence Harasym .........IAMES IOSEPH COLAVITA and thirty-live Ioseph B. Duffy Nicholas R. Lakatos and thirty-six Edward Ioseph Zamloorsky Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-seven Bernard Altonsus Balsis Ioseph Bilotta Iames Ioseph Colavita Frank Emil Cicchino Francis Patrick Gallagher Clas Ercole A. Addonizio Basil S. Cannatelli Iohn K. K. Finley Daniel I. O'Connell Charles Perlino Edmund S. Piszczek s of Nineteen hundred 176 Alfred Iohn Land Salvatore Louis Lombardi Frank Stanley Rozanski Merio Secondo Sindaco and thirty-eight Ioseph Pompizzi Anthony Porreca Iames F. Trombino Iohn I. Sassaman Willis Andrew Fromhold FIRST ROWffI.ucas, Zamborsky, Sassaman, Colavita, Bisceglia, Balsis, Duffy, Lakatos, Dowd. SECOND ROW--Kaminski, Porreca, Dougherty, Piszczelc, O'Conriell, Perlino, Flick, Bonner. THIRD ROW-fO'I..ini, Fabriele, Pompizzi, Pago, Bone, Frornhold. The Newman Club of Hahnemann Medical College is a member of the Federation of College Catholic Clubs. Membership is open to all Catholic students enrolled at Hahnemann Medical College. In the past, the Newman Club drifted along without any specific purpose. The few meetings which were held were discussions by the Chaplain on those Catholic doctrines which have a bearing on certain occasions in the practice of Medicine. Within the past year, a new constitution was adopted which set forth certain ideals. Thus, the Newman Club came into possession of the Intellectual, Spiritual and Social as objectives. The Newman Club is educational in its interest along Medical thought and any related subjects which may be of interest to the members. The Spiritual welfare is purposely neglected in attention by the Newman Club of Hahnemann Medical College because it is properly taken care of elsewhere by those trained to do so. ln place of this, Catholic doctrines, which must be considered in dealing with Catholics as patients, are discussed. Socially, the Newman Club held a smokerp slides of a tour of the Rhine, Dresden, and Bavaria were shown. The Club also held a banquet. All the meetings and socials are held at Hering Hall. Election of officers occurs during the first month of the new school year. The presiding officers end their term with the close of the banquet. At this banquet, some member of the Faculty presides as the main speaker. Thus, the Newman Club of Hahnemann Medical College brings the school season to a close. 177 FIRST ROW--Dr. Payne, Belmont, Schubert, Rickard, Bassinqer. SECOND ROWnOvers, Brittinqham, Zwerqel, Milles, Mosch, Sell. O gms Q PTOLEMY CLUB Q S22 66 Founded 1910 Q gjgfllll 5 c1ddp1df Founded 1921 O Q4 OFFICERS President ............. ............................ Vice-President ...... ..................... Secretary ........... Treasurer ........ ....................................................... Class oi Nineteen hundred and George R. Schubart Edward H. Zwerael Class of Nineteen hundred and Charles P. Sell ........CfEORGE R. SCHUBART ........HAROLD I. RICKARD ........WADE F. BASSINGER ................RALPH S. BELMONT thirty-five Harold I. Rickard Ralph S. Belmont thirty-six Robert A. Marquis Class of Nineteen hundred and thirty-seven Carl O. Keck Paul E. Overs Wade F. Bassinaer Class of Nineteen hundred and Eugene G. Mellies 178 David E. Hoitenstein Herman C. Mosch William Gross thirty-eight Iohn T. Brittinqharn ACTIVITIES 'rl-If: 'teas MEDIC STAFF Editor-in-Chief Marcel Paul Thomas Business Manager Lewis B. 'Thomas EDITORIAL STAFF William Melvin Snowden I. Edison Goldsmith Assistant Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Paul Keatley Stolz Martin B. Pennington Art Editor Humor Editor Iames Q. Atkinson Anthony Guy Campo Faculty Editor Photographic Editor Thomas Francis Dowd Class Historian BUSINESS STAFF William Burton Barrow Assistant Business Manager Eldridge Walton Iohnson Martin Ioseph Fisher Carl Everett Lorenz Charles Sherwood Cameron Thomas Richard Hofmann Arthur W. W. Waddington Milton Solomon Weinberg Leonard Rambach Ioseph Benedict Duffy James Harold MacArt Iohn Baptist Fabriele Ioseph D. Anatasi CGNTRIBUTING STAFF Richard E. Brenneman Frank G. Prestileo Clarence William Lindeman Frank Iohn Robertson, '36 Herbert Perrin Harkins, '37 Iohn Kent Kane Finley, '38. 180 FIRST ROW--Campo, Goldsmith, Snowden, M. P. Thomas, L. B. Thomas, Barrow, Stolz, Pennington. SECOND BOWfLindeman, Hofmann, Fisher, Atkinson, MacArt, Waddington, Anatasi, Rambach. THIRD ROW-Brenneman, lohnson, Prestileo, Duffy, Weinberg. The members of the Class of l935, during their third year at Hahnemann, began thinking about publishing a written and pictorial account of the years they had spent at l-lahnemann. After due and careful consideration, they ventured so far as to select, by ballot, the nucleus of a staff: namely, the Editor and the Business Manager. Up to this point no data was at hand in regard to the probable cost or type of book to be published. From the usually large number of engravers, printers, and photographers, who are waiting to get the contracts for any book, plans and estimates for the publication of The Medic slowly gathered. Since our school years have been closely associated with the financial depression, it was necessary to economize wherever possible. Therefore, it has been the object of the staff to retain all necessary sections and details in the book to make it beautiful, valuable, and interesting, yet materially reduce the total cost of the book. We are proud to say that we believe we have been able to accomplish this objective. This book has been developed with the co-operation of the entire class, staff, contributors, and others. The beautiful art contributions of Mr. Herman Renger have added greatly to it. We are also especially indebted to Dr. Calvin Knerr, of Philadelphia, who has allowed us to reproduce some of the art treasures in his collection. There is only one way to find out how much effort is involved in publishing a Year Book, and that is to do it yourself. However, the 1935 Medic Staff feels amply repaid if their publication has been of interest or value to you. 181 FIRST ROW Fox, Dougherty, Zwergel, Bisceglia, Prestileo SECOND ROW- Bierworth, Shepard, Finley, Sassaman. THE HAHNEMANN INSTITUTE AND STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS or THE INSTITUTE President .......... ............................................................. E DWARD H. ZWERGEL Vice-President .... ............ F RED A. BISCEGLIA Secretary .......... ........... F RANK G. PRESTILEO Treasurer ....... ..,.... F RANCIS M. DOUGHERTY The Hahnemann lnstitute was originated by Dr. Walter Williamson, during the session of 1849-50, for the purpose of acquiring unison in the minds of young men identified with the acquisition of knowledge in Medicine. The organization was composed of students attending lectures in the Homeopathic College of Pennsylvania. The lnstitute has progressed steadily to its present status as ranking organization of Hahnemann Medical College. The four officers: President, Vice-President, Secretary, and Treasurer, are nominated from the incoming Senior Class and voted upon by the entire student body. These officers, working in conjunction with the Student Council, composed of the president and class representative from each class, have assumed an inter- mediate position between the Faculty and the student body. lt is the purpose of the lnstitute to discuss topics of interest to the student body and at the same time judging their deficiencies and irregularities. lt has served to narrow the gap which has existed between the individual student and members of the Faculty. Last year, through the untiring efforts of Dean Pearson, Hering Hall was acquired by the lnstitute to serve as a recreation hall for the students. This year, the Hahnemann Athletic Field at Twentieth and Callowhill Streets, was placed under the supervision of the lnstitute by Dr. Pearson. Mr. Edward Zwergel, president of the lnstitute, has served his position wellp he has at all times been keen, open-hearted, observant, and conspicuous for his natural virtues, for practical judgment, and for accomplishments. 182 FIRST ROW-Shippen, Bisceglia, Snowclen, Zwergel, Witwer. SECOND ROWf-Higerd, Sigafoos, Lindeman, M. P. Thomas, Harris, Pennington, Hofmann. THE HAHNEMANN UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY William Melvin Snowden, President Martin Beadenkopf Pennington Fred Angeline Bisceglia Eugene Rodman Shippen, Ir. Lester Wilber Harris Jacob Harvey Sigafoos Iohn Ross Higerd Marcel Paul Thomas Thomas Richard Hofmann Russell Gorsuch Witwer Clarence William Lindeman Edward Henry Zwergel The Hahnemann Undergraduate Society was organized in October, 1933, for the purpose of promoting a better knowledge of the philosophy, the prac- tice, and the scientific basis of Homeopathy among undergraduates. Further, it answered a need for camradely and liesurely discussions between student and teacher, which was lacking in the extensive and vigorous academic life. The Executive Committee gave its favorable approval and The Hahne- mann Club of Philadelphia gave a vote of interest and co-operation to the society. The membership is limited to twelve men from the Senior Class. The meet- ings are held in the homes of members of the Faculty and practicing physicians of Philadelphia. William Melvin Snowden has served as president of this society during the last year. 183 i 1 FIRST ROW- Cameron, Dougherty, Beckley, Dr. Bernstein, Schwab, Dotterer, Dowd. SECOND ROW feFisher, Fox, Atkinson, Duffy, Zwerqel. RALPH BERNSTEIN DERMATOLOGICAL SOCIETY The Ralph Bernstein Dermatological Society of the Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital of Philadelphia was organized on November 2, 1934, by Carl L. Schwab, Edward C. Beckley, and Iames Q. Atkinson, as a fitting tribute to Professor Ralph Bernstein's thirty years of unselfish devotion to his Alma Mater, in recognition of his exceptional teaching ability, his personal interest, his wise counsel, his many acts of kindness, and as a further tribute to the high esteem and regard in which he is held by the student body. Under Professor Bernstein's mentorship and guidance this society has as its object the furtherance of the study of dermatology, Homeopathic cutaneous therapy, and subscribes to the dictum of Similia Similibus Curentur-Multum in Parvo. The charter officers and members are: Carl L. Schwab, Presidentg Edward H. Zwergel, Vice-President, Edward C. Beckley, Secretary: Francis M. Dougherty, Historiang Iames Q. Atkinson, Charles S. Cameron, Ir., Charles S. Dotterer, Ir., Thomas E. Dowd, Ir., Ioseph B. Duffy, Martin I. Fisher, Charles P. Fox, Ir., Lewis I. O'Lini. 184 ivi E 'Q - itli- - Y. . FIRST ROW-Campo, Bamberger, Fox, Dr. Benson, Zwergel. SECOND ROW-Cameron, Mayhew, Waddington, Sigafoos, Witwer, Shepard Snowden DR. BENSON'S GROUP Grant W. Bamberger Iacob H. Sigafoos A. Guy Campo William M. Snowden Charles S. Cameron, Ir. Arthur W. Waddington Charles F. Fox, lr. Russell G. Witwer William D. Mayhew Edward H. Zwergel Warren B. Shepard, Ir. This organization consists of a group of eleven seniors, chosen by one of the members of the class, for the promotion of the knowledge of new growths, and the various forms of treatment used. Meetings are held every Tuesday evening in the hospital, where lectures are given by Dr. Benson, illustrated with clinical material and moving pictures. Dr. Benson's talks were occasionally supplemented by other specialists in their respective fields, among whom were Drs. Craig and Hollis, who gave interesting talks on new growths of the uterus, nose, and throat. The opening lectures of the year were on growths of the head, then slowly and thoroughly, the entire body was discussed, working downward. Although our teacher claimed that he just touched the subject matter superficially, a com- paratively new ancl fascinating field of Medicine was revealed to the group. The lectures were followed by a period of round table discussion, which proved to be rnost profitable. We take this opportunity to thank the one who has done so much for us. lt was a privilege to be associated with a true scholar, and a great radiologist, who, in his gentlemanly and quiet manner, won our lasting esteem. 185 FIRST ROWf-Dotterer, Bamberger, Vaughn, Goldsmith, Montgomery, Dougherty, Campo. SECOND ROW Grant, Lorenz, Volante, Iohnson, Bowen, Harkins, Cameron, Hudson, Flick. BLUE AND GOLD BALL COMMITTEE This year, the Blue and Gold Ball was again the outstanding social event of the year. As usual, the dance was sponsored by the I-lahnemann Institute, under the chairmanship of I. Edison Goldsmith. Several important changes were made in conducting the program for the evening. The Hahnemann College Orchestra gave a concert before the danc- ing begang another popular feature was the singing of our Glee Club during the intermission. The music for the dancing was provided by that ever-popular maestro, Mal Hallett and his orchestra. The ballroom of the Bellevue-Stratford never looked prettier, and never did it have a more congenial, happy crowd, as it did on May ll, the night of the ball. Those who could not attend are sorry, and those who were fortunate enough to attend, say it was one of the most successful events ever put on by the Institute. 186 v First Row CLeft to riqhtl: Lakatos, Daugherty, Lucas, G. Gaumer, Cameron, Dotterer tLeaderl: Witwer, Shippen, Dowd, Hater, Sell. Second Row: Casterline, Volante, Anastasi, Kavanaugh, Clagett, Harkins, Barrett, Sherman, Dow, Bressler, D'Elia, Eisenberg. Third Bow: Calabrees, Wible, Derrickson, Doering, lves, Carp, Albright, Bruton, Krause, Rogers, Mosch, Overs. GLEE CLU B Leader .................. .................................. C harles S. Dotterer, '35 Manager ................ ........ R ussell G. Witwer, '35 Faculty Advisor ....... ......,... H unter S. Cook, M. D. Pianist .............................................................. Chester H. Albright, '38 Vlfhatever slander we may suffer, let it never be said that we were not artists-every inch of us. Well-nearly every inch. From the tirst day we heard the call for candidates for the Doktorchor, we seen our duty and we went and sung it. Freshman year, when the club was under Larry Kinsell Cusually you couldn't tell who was on topl, only a few ot us had the courage to lay chemistry and anatomy books aside at noon and sing for our free ticket to the Blue and Gold Ball. They do say that Hen Ruth was coach that year. The next year, however, we took over the organization. Charlie Cameron coached and led, and twenty-eight of us formed the Warp and Woof of the club. We woofed land it was often warped? at the Philadelphia General Hospital, St. Paul's Church treally Snowden's Pop's churchl, and, of course, the Blue and Gold Ball. Dotterer ascended the podium Ctsk! tskll for our third year, with Cameron at the piano and still coaching. Christmas Carols on the radio, another radio act in the Spring, and the inevitable Blue and Gold made up our public appearances. As Seniors, a number ot us dropped out, due to pressure of other activities. tPerish the thought that any dropped out because we had received our keys for three years' servicel. Charlie Dotterer took tull command and produced a really creditable program. And it you think trying to make singers out of forty blokes too dumb to be anything but doctors is easy, then you're what the great dermatologist calls a lame-brain. 187 FRONT ROW -Bruno, Bisceqlia, Theqan, Silverman, Betts, Lerman, Dechnik, Harrison, Shippen. SECOND ROW'-Ohl, Stevens, Bitman, MacLaren, Cappola, Esayian, Bashline. THIRD ROW 'Garwood, Serri, DiSario, Podel. A ORCHESTRA Faculty Advisor ........ .................................................. W . A. PEARSON, Dean Director .....,....,......... ................................... .......... L T . IOSEPH FRANKEL Student Leader ....... ..................... Pt . W. BETTS, '35 Manaqer ........... ......................................................... L EO LEBMAN, '35 Librarian ..................... .......................................... M ILTON S. WEINBERG, '35 Assistants ....................... ............. R . A. CALDWELL, '38, N. W. GARWOOD, '38 VlOLlNS CLAFHNETS Leo Lerman, Concert Meister ........ '35 W. L. Bashline ................. F. A. Bisceqlia .................................... '35 H. L. Bowman ................. A. D. Declnnik ........................................ '35 V. L. Larnrnana ...... E. I. Kuty .................... ......... ' 35 I. W. Stevens .................... W. S. Silverman ........ ......... ' 35 SAXOPHONES E. Tlfieqen ................ ......... ' 35 , ' M. 1. Poolell ......... ......... ' 36 S' gferg ' P. I. MacLaren ...... ......... ' 37 G' C'D1Or anno 1. Bnmfm ................ ......... ' 38 ' ' QSIQIGUO '-'---'-'- - - Cappola, IT. ...... ......... ' TRUMPETS C. fl. Carabello ............. ......... ' Hgffiggn ,,,...,,,.,.,.'. VIQLA V. DiSario ................... P. K. Stolz ........................... ......... ' 35 C. W. Ohl ..................... 'CELLO F. GlCII'1Dl1'1l ...................... ......... I Bashhne ..... D E R BASS VIOL ' TBOMBONE . . iippen ........................ ......... 3 5 C. H. Robinson BANIO M. H. Durante ..................... ......... ' 36 I I PIANO FLUTES L. C. M1l-er ......................... P. I. Garnbescia ............. ......... ' 37 DRUMS B. A. Caldwell ........... ......... ' 38 I. I. Bruno ......................... N. W. Garwoocl ........ ......... ' 38 G. S. Esayian ............... 188 l-IUIHOR HDVERTISEMEDTS PRGFESSIGDHL CHRDS 9 We feel that the readers of this book will pay particular attention to the advertisements in the following section. The reputable firms repre- sented obviously have shown their interest in l-lahnemann Medical College and they will greatly appreciate the readers' patronage. ' We Wish to express our sincere thanks and deep appreciation to all who have co-operated to make this book possible. 189 THE FACULTY MEETING Time: 9:03 P. M. Those Present: The entire teaching staff minus the Dean, who is obviously late, but that is neither here nor there. The Action: The Dean rushes in followed by Hiram Cguess who?l, who takes the Dean's coat and hat as he tosses them off and murmurs, Yes, Sir , for no particular reason. Everyone becomes quiet and Lafferty puts the dice in his pocket. The Dean tGod Bless Himl: What time is this meeting scheduled for? Chorus: Nine point zero zero. The Dean tembarrassedl: We will begin this meeting by reciting the oath followed by the Faculty cheer, which will be led by my good friend and associate from the radiology department, Dr. Iacob Frank. tThe entire body arises to its feet. Drs. Sappington, Favorite, Fisher, Cook, and Falkinberg cross their fingers.l The entire body recites: WE, THE FACULTY, PLEDGE OUHSELVES TO UPHOLD THE TEACH- INGS OF SAMUEL HAHNEMANN TO THE TINCTURE OF NUX END, AND EXPRESS OURSELVES IN FAVCR OF SHOBTER VACATIONS FOR STUDENTS AND A PING-PONG TABLE IN EVERY ROOM lN HERING HALL. The Cheer: HSKUNK 'EM, FLUNK 'EM, SIS BOOM BAH, HAHNEMANN, HAHNEMANN, RAI-l, HAH, HAH, SlMlLlA, SIMILIA, SlMlLlA. tThey all sit down again. The Boy Scout takes roll for the fourth time since they came inl The Dean again: You had better check that roll again, Captain: I just saw Paxson pussyfoot out and Ferguson fell in, feinted, and stooled out. We will now continue to the business of the evening. ls there any old business? tThere is no response.l lf not, we will discuss the making of toxicology a major subject, thereby making Hahnemann Medical College the Toxicology Center of the World, to which the elite of the medical profession will flock as pilgrims to a Mecca to find out how to determine the percentage of nicotine in a given sample of Bridge Scrapingsf' Hiram Snider: Yes, Sir. The Entire Faculty with one of two notable exceptions: NUTS. Dr. Clay: This year, in selecting the more fortunate students to flunk out, We have prepared our list to include those who pay their tuition promptly, as this immediately marks them as rather good business men, and by the same token would lead us to believe that they would make the poorest doctors. lf there is no objection, l would like to suggest that we take Charlie Chase in again. Deep Sea Dan: CArises from a deep letharqYl l think so. Clmmediately sinks into semi-coma.l The Dean: All in favor say aye. tDr. Bernstein hastily sketches a likeness of himself on the back of a photograph of himself which he carries in a pocket over his heart, and writes beneath it, The Best Dermatologist in the World. l The Entire Body: No response. The lnevitable Dean: ln that case, we will go on to the subject of making Toxicology? tDrs. Sappington, Sylvis, and several unidentified members of the Department of Medicine, whom nobody recalled as ever having seen before, arise.l They mutter: Let's go: this is where we came in. tThey go.l Dr. Fiterman: A member of da Iunior Class comes up to me de udder day an asts how about teachin' case-takin'. l've told dem guys lotsa times l can teach dat course in tree lectures, so l don't want no more of dere lip. The Dean: Dr, Hepburn and l have been preparing a revision of PGH. CCheers.l The new book will be composed entirely of blank pages in order to enable the students to take more notes. 190 Hiram Snider: Yes, Sir, a good idea, Sir, besides, it will cut printing costs to nothing with a corresponding greater net. Yes, Sir. Dr. Crellin: I am of the HUMBLE opinion that the acoustics of the Physiology Lab could be improved. I find that I do not get the same distance when l say NO to a student in Physical Diagnosis as I do in the Medical Dispen- sary. In the dispensary, I am frequently heard past the Power House, but up on the fourth floor I can scarcely reach the Club Kjeldahl on the third floor. Dr. Young: Far be it from me to criticize another department, but I think Dr. Sappington should not allow Cook and Ealkinberg to cut each other's hair. Dr. Payne: That's not true. Cook, Falkinberg and I cut our own hair. His Lordship, Dr. Ashcraft: Gentlemen, I beseech you, cease this quibblingf' The Dean: ln View of the rising tide of enthusiasm shown for the course in Hygiene, it has been suggested that we confer the title of Outhouse Engi- neer on all students who regularly attend the mid-year and final exami- nation given by Dr. Horn This would materially aid in our appeal to prospective students in the same manner as the fact that Hahnemann was the first Medical College in Philadelphia to install a 388 meter outdoor cinder track on their Athletic Field, and would add another paragraph to the catalogue. Dr. Clay: lt would be fine, except that most of the applicants and especially those we are interested in cannot speak English when they arrive here, so they would hardly know what you are trying to put across. Dr. Schofield: I will not comment. It is out of my line. Dr. Kirby to Dr. Scott: I'll race you down to the corner to see who pays for the beers. CThey withdraw hastily.l The Dean: The time is growing late, so I will call upon Dr. Hepburn to read his timely paper on The Effects of Cold Mashed Potato Sandwiches on Partially Adrenalectomised Rats' This will be followed by the Bene- diction by Reverend Dr. Killian. tCurtainl C. A. DICKSON 234 SO. 8TH ST., PHILA.. PA. MANUFACTURER or PHYSICIANS' CASES SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS MADE TO ORDER CATALOGUE SENT UPON REQUEST 191 192 BEST WISIIES From the Manufacturers of BENZEDRIN E INHALER BENZEDRINE SOLUTION PENTNUCLEOTIDE Smith, Kline G French Laboratories 105-115 N. Sth Street Philadelphia. Pa. Established 1841 WE ARE CELEBRATING THIS YEAR OUR CNE HUNDREDTI-I ANNIVERSARY We thank our friends for their patronage which has made this celebration possible, and pledge ourselves to serve them and homeopathy with the same fidelity in the second century of our business life as we served them in the first. Yours for Homeopathy, BOERICKE G TAFEL. 193 THE PLIGHT OF ANNA STASIS Anna Stasis, the South Philly KUTY, who makes the blood of most boys stand still and is as sweet as LACTOSE, took her SHEPARD dog CAP and went strolling through the woods to the Old Mill. Soon she met a big bad FOX and became afraid as her dog had stopped some distance back to view a tree. She RENNIN ran until she came to the CAMPO a poor WIDDOWSON on BLACKLEDGE of Mud Creek, who hearing the screams of the girl and the barking of the dog, CAMERONing to see what was the puss, fuss, I mean matter. Anna running and yelling CAPSICUM was unable to stop at BLACKLEDGE and plunged into the dirty waters of Mud Creek. The FOX, afraid of Red Hot peppery K'9's, although not of Red Hot Mammas, turned GREENE and fled in a NUTTER direction as the WID- DOWSON turned his attention to the young lady in distress. Luckily, the MILLER'S boys, IOHNSON and DAVIDSON, with Harry the BEEMAN, happened along in time to FISHER out. Harry threw a rope to the poor girl and undoubtedly thought his bull was on the other end for he PULSATILLA yell from Anna slows him. HAFER the love of MIKE cries the MILLER boy, Iohn's son, stop, I VAUGHN you, you are doing more harm than good. Pull her away from the BROWN RAT! I grant you that, replies Harry, but a girl is in danger and you don't help. Shoot the RAT. What if it was your LOUES? Such BAUSCHI HUGHES guys MECCA me sick. How do you EXPECTORATE7' Spit on your hands, says the MILLER boy, Davey's son, and your line won't slip. HHOMAN, a wise guy. Harry retorted, if WIT- WER a mountain you would be a ground-hog's burrow. Finally, Anna was removed from the ZWERGELing waters and laid uncon- scious on BLACKLEDGE. Dusk was falling when she was revived. You water change your clothes, says Harry. Pleased with the suggestion she turns to the WIDDOWSON and says, I WILL BARROW some of your clothes. Before one say Presto-PRESTILEO she had changed. Harry bee-lines to the city to report the incident and the MILLERS go on their way leaving Anna alone with the WIDDOWSON who had already built a camp-fire to make things comfortable. A rustle warned them that someone was approaching and when the WIDDOWSON saw Russ nearing he says, to Anna, We had better keep this thing quiet as RUSS TOX too much. So the three of them spent a quiet evening. In the meantime, I-Iarry had been delayed by IENNY COLOGI, the Tiger Lily, and it was late when he arrived at the Stasis home. Here he found the family worrying as to the where-abouts of Anna. The father, a reputable banana vendor, says to Harry, Come, I will put MacART away and we will look for Angelo Guiseppe Volante, her boy friend. He will go get her. Angelo was found crooning INSOMNIA by tap-room. GAUMER boy and bring my babe home from the woods, pleads Old Man Stasis. Goose Heppyu was not long in arriving at the camp. My love, he croons, I have CAMPHOR you. Your Mamma wants you and your sugar Daddy craves you. HURA sweet boy, Mangy, I mean Angy, sputters Anna between sobs and kisses. On the way home Angelo proposed for the Nth time and was finally accepted. CEPA, says Anna, and if he consents we will spend our honey- moon in RHUMEX in the BELLADONNA Vue Hotel! Two weeks later they moved out of RHUMEX at the request of the man- ager. Crooners, you know, shouldn't get paid and Angelo is no exception, so now the happily married couple spend their time visiting relatives. That's all they have to spend. 194 JOHN A. BORNEMAN HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACIST Thirty-six years' practical experience in manufacturing Homeo- pathic Remedies. Up to date in all matters pharmaceutical. The necessity for ultra purity in strictly I-Iomeopathic remedies is recognized and constantly practised. Manufacturing a lull line of Tinctures, Tablet Triturates, Com- pressed Tablets, Ointments, and Specialties that produce dependable results. STUDENT OUTEIT ORDERS A SPECIALTY Laboratories: Norwood, Delaware County, Pa. Philadelphia Address: 248 N. 15th Street, Phila. Doctors . . . Congratulations! THE PHILADELPHIA HOSPITAL SUPPLY CO. 328 SOUTH 17TH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Specializes in PI-IYSICIANS' CEEICE EQUIPMENT MEDICAL AND SURGICAL SUPPLIES Pay us a visit-You will be agreeably surprised PHONE: PENNYPACKER 3974 195 NEWS FOR HOMEOPATHIC THERAPEUTISTS f The editor being an ardent follower of 1 , Homeopathy and having done a bit of . 1 l T quiet research wishes to suggest the fol- lowing drug: Hahnemann Bullorium, which he believes to be a cure-all for many rare, obsolete, and non-existing conditions. lt is a combination tablet made from the insoluble elements extracted from the floor sweepings after a staff meeting and is triturated into potency by using one part of sweepings and 99 43X 100 parts of Hahnemann Hospital profits. The result- ing tablet, I believe, will revolutionize all medicine. lts specific action is on the entire body, especially of medical students. Mind: Fear of flunking exams. Gripes THE HUMOR EDITOR about everything. Melancholy like after flunking Pathology. Head: Dizzy, sleepy sensation. Head- ache worse after being aroused at the end of a lecture. Feels like a great weight pressing on the brain with every step taken while climbing from the basement to the third floor. Aversion to numbers: i.e., nine point zero zero. Face: Deep circles under the eyes as from studying too late or from doing home work. Turns suddenly from fiery red to ashen white, like from being caught cheating on a quizz. Eyes: Blood shot, look like two burned holes in a blanket, as on morning after Blue and Gold Ball. Ears: Hears many rumors. Hears much whispering during exams. Better by the beautiful swish of organ music. Nose: Bed. Hypersensitive to odors on third floor, also to the delicate perfume used by females. Nasal symptoms made better by pool room smoke, and the delicate aromas abounding in taprooms. Mouth: Tongue thickly coated. Dark brown taste like the bottom of a bird cage. Breath foul like the breeze wafted from an upturned outhouse. Throat: Full feeling, made better by eating filet mignon or by drinking mint juleps. Stomach: Ravenous appetite at five P. M. Great thirst for Martinis. Better by drinking bath tub gin. Adbomen: Great soreness as from swimming on a tin roof. Reduces flabbiness of Seniors. Back: Great aching, weakness and dragged out feeling in the morning. Stool: Bashful like a chorus girl from the Bijou. Sudden diarrhea from shock as hearing that he is to be graduated. Retching relieved by reading a magazine. Rectum: Hemorrhoids from sitting on the hard seats of the big clinic. Better by going to the movies. Urine: Great frequency after drinking. Foul odor when analyzed. Male: Great desire. Better by night life. Much aching of the gonads. Worse talking to Social Service Workers. Female: The female sphere is not well understood because the students are not supposed to keep company with nurses. However, all symptoms are better by going to dances. Respiratory: Hoarse, dry, cough, better by smoking cigarettes. Feels suffocated after running around the athletic field track all Saturday afternoon. 196 Fax f Heart: Great palpitation when called upon to recite in class. Marked weakness and substernal pain during examinations. All symptoms made better by cutting class and by sleeping thirty-nine hours a day. Extremities: Cramps in fingers from taking notes. Calluses on Buttox from sitting through lectures. Blisters on feet from walking down the stairs in the hospital, is better by riding elevators. Skin: Dusky and dirty like 15th Street. Made better by swimming under Water in a Broad Street sewer. Fever: Prickly heat when suddenly discovered talking to a nurse in the Dean's office at noon. Marked temperature when necking on a sofa in a dark room. Modalities: Worse in the morning. Worse coming to school on Saturday. Worse getting up out of a Warm bed after midnight to go home. Worse the morning after the Freshman Dance. Better eating crackers in bed. Better when dating a beautiful girl. Better when playing on the organ. Better after graduation. Better from drinking high-balls. Relationship: Complimentary drugs: Ieffersonian Windbagga GX, Pennsoa Viamedcologia BOX and Templiska Medcolbaum IX. Antidote: Tinctura Lawscholgoa 3X Dose: All potencies are very effective if given one dose yearly for four doses. NY lk -X 1 if . Bun NUTTEQ Gump Millie BAQQOW De5krvss MmJome MCART Deih-ess TMJ. HOMAN f Q ,. . V o, 'tllli ' X . - Q Andy Qhesliy LAKATO5 Qumrl Ivins DUFFY Gum? 5 'S ll .1 ' 4 fq U Y 1 M O f'fCi . - V ' S ' . , - , iff' K 3 if ' 4 i in fi I -Q J, ' ' s A 137 Thank You . . . Class of '35 For Selecting WILLIAMS' STANDARD Pre-Shrunken INTERN E SUITS You will be delighted with their superior work- manship and excellent wearing qualities. Complete line ot Coats, Trousers, Shirts, Operat- ing Suits, and Dissecting Gowns . . . carried in stock, also made to measure. SEND FOR CATALOGUE D, SAMPLES AND PRICES C. D. WILLIAMS 6: COMPANY Designers and Manufacturers No. 230 Coat The Square Deal Firm 246 South Eleventh Street Where Quality Counts Philadelphia. PG. FOR QUALITY See that your Surgical Instruments are stamped HASLAM. Sold by Responsible Dealers to Discriminating Surgeons. Gur entire line of STAINLESS STEEL made in our own factory in the United States. MAKERS OF SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR OVER 80 YEARS Send for Our Latest Catalog On HASLAM'S STAINLESS STEEL INSTRUMENTS and Buy Through Your Dealer Fred Haslam 6. Co., Inc. Brooklyn, N. Y. 198 STARTLING SENSATIONAL STUPENDOUS YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS READING THIS- WONDERS OF SCIENCE DISCLOSED Prominent' Doctor xl' Tells All Too Good To Keep Says Merry Eddy CAfter taking Sir Iames McPansy's Splendid System Builderl SPLENDID SYSTEM BUILDER RENDERS IDIOGENIC FEVER HARMLESS DISEASE CAn unsolicited but nevertheless testy testymoniall I was in a run down condition, felt tired and weary all the time, was continually chewing, and asked silly questions about what do 'out patients' do with their wornout corks and bottles that their pills come in. I went to see a Dr. Von Dergoosen and he advised me to go to bed and get a good social service worker. The advice sounded good but, alas, the treatment was followed by a relapse. CCurses on them.l In the face of fierce opposition, I had my case repertoried and the drugs which proved to suit my condition were Soda Bicarb, Tincture of Aconite, Bern- stein's Hair Tonic, Cold Cream, and a dead herring that was lying around from the last test. tDarnn Pig, I said to rnyself.l One application of this mixture ren- dered my urine alkaline, toned up my stomach, and made my blood redder. In a few weeks I was able to continue my researches and soon found out 'Who Left the Enema Can in the Utility Room.' From that I went on and published a paper on 'Where the Hell DO the Patients Put It All?' You can guess what happened, I had a relapse. A 'detail man' told me I should try McPansy's System Builder ta combination of Noro I-loss Fatesl. Being a scientific man I doubted that it could contain the essentials of a 'good climate' and a 'good soap with no free alkali' all in the same bottle. I tried it because it seemed easier than being treated by those doctors that insist on putting their 'hands on every patient.' To my amazement a few doses cured me. I know that I'm cured because I can now stay in the same room with a Social service worker without any ill effects. YOU, too, can overcome IDIOGENIC FEVER as easily as Dr. Baggy did. We will send you, without charge, a sample of McPansy's Splendid System Builder if you will tear off Dr. Horn's collar, or a reasonably exact facsimile thereof, and send it to us. For two collars you have your choice of a ticket to the Blue and Goldsmith Ball or we will send you Dr. Baggy himself. CGod knows you need more like him.-Ed.l Write to Dr. Baggy in care of Dr. George Meyers' ward in the basement of the college building, for free medical advice. Or, better still, drop into Rat Race No. 7, and get your blood pressure and horoscope reading ABSOLUTELY FREE. IAdvt.I 199 Boericke 6: Runyon HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACISTS 116 S Eleventh Street Philadelphia Penna FRESH PLANT TINCTURES TRITURATE TABLETS COMBINATION TABLETS SPECIALTIES MEDICINE CASES entering into the practice of medicine Catalogue Mailed on Request Publishers of BOERICKES MATERIA MEDICA Ninth Edition I I We solict initial orders of Physicians T. R. Thomson Stationery and Student Supplies 252 NORTH 16TH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PENN A. RICHARD YOUNG Physicians' and Hospital Supplies Surgical Instruments of Ouality Trusses, Elastic Stockings Arch Supporters and Rubber Goods 215-217 N. FIFTEENTH STREET, PHILA.. PA. Telephone: Rittenhouse 6635 Lament of a Medical Student l used to love Madonna smiles, I used to love a silk-soft skinp A hint of maiden's wheedling wiles Too often turned my thoughts to sin. A quizzing glance from shining eyes, t'Twas long ago! once turned my head And kept me bound by mighty ties . . . But now, alas! that love it dead. For I have studied flesh and bone, Disease of blood, the cells and plasma: And one thing sticks and that alonep Madonna smiles are due to asthma! The skin I loved, so soft and pale, I diagnose now as anemia And modest blushes never fail To make me think of hyperemia. And then, the glance that once held bound My love, and promised all Utopia, No longer binds for I have found It due to hyper- or rnyopia. Alas: that e'er I studied healing To learn of that disease or this: I gaze on maidens once appealing, And think only of syphilis. No more my thoughts may turn to sinning: Disease I hold too much in awe. My laughter's changed to sickly grinning, Perhaps I should have studied law . . . Dr. Mutch to Obs. Section: Men, don't use the Gwathrnine Method on your wife or your sweetheart when she has her baby! Ed: She isn't my best girl. lust necks best. Cows may come, And cows may go, But the bull goes on Forever, at I-Iahnernann. Signature on I-Iotel Register after the Blue and Gold Ball: W. E. Arenotman and Wife, Norfrom, Iowa. ,ln '13 ,x X X, XX, 'S u- ' E c ,,t2,,vjf,ggg.. r M f ' EX X t XD ' 5 x ,ir r t K. U ,K ' ' t 1 16' .. nf W ll it Q 5,Xvll',Q'l IX : :II 4fll,t.a, N XJ 0. N - G V l ' '1 .l 1 I, X ll i 1 Q, 1 ff f tw, 71' ' t.,,Wt I '-5,77 Qhyigcr D WAX, L, ,, ,. y y . 7, , i 'A 7 xx If my , ri t - ' , ,f-.SN , E' Xt. 21.10 tw ll if , Th 0 7, V ,Q c. j. , e X -W H ,ll ' i u a . H . Q RH A . f N f:1b'X,gl f ' t .1 1 - A. 'WW 'gf D Q t J lk wfwq, f D , SXQCW f at Q' X f, J X jk-X 2 f A5 G xl K 245 ' N H K . f fs, L I ff ,l7-'yffffl-, , l K ly -. gf ,p , ,Z ' . ' ,- . ,A , M-:fe 'f 'f TEES ,, X Y KL' ,QL , grxx X , .X ,, X E ,. S.--In n SECRETS OF SURGERY AUTO NEWS Surgery is getting more and more secretive. His Lordship keeps secrets even from his assistants, to wit: His Lordship while operating, noticed the inquisitive head oi his assistant peering into the incision. The following was heard: lust a minute, Doctor. lHis lordship peers into the woundl. Now, Doctor, you may look. Pete says: All petting parties are dress-up affairs. It is a sad case, said the Doctor. What is? said Toots. A dozen empties, said the M.D. Volante: Do you use Pluto Water? Campo: Yeh, I'm a regular fellow. We wish to announce the widely an- ticipated event ot 1934-the public showing of the newly-developed Iunior Model known as the Miller Girl. Con- ceived by our engineering department -developed in our own private labora- tory and brought forth by the finest technicians ot the Geisinger Hospital. There is only one model available to the public at this time. Specifications: Weight, seven pounds tour ounces, lungs, leather-lined: hair, yellow: eyes, shut, length, 42 centi- meters: iuel, raw milk, mileage, ZZ diapers per quart of milk, legs, free wheeling, giving increased diaperabil- ityy toes, nose, hands, ears-standard equipmentg speed, 150 wa-wa's per hour. Ask to see it! ,Qld 7 1 7 4 . Mr 111 , Slab- 2- 'l 'l l l' CLUB BREAKFASTS PLATTER LUNCHEONS FULL-COURSE DINNERS V Williams' Restaurant 326 NORTH BROAD STREET PHILADELPHIA. PA. V VARIETY OF SANDWICI-IES COLD-CUT SPECIALS BEER ON DRAUGHT CLASSIFICATION OF THE CLASS 1. Annoyer-Hughes 2. Good natured--Zwergel 3. Sleeper-Lorenz 4. Personality boy-Dotterer 5. Special officer and doctor-MacArt 6. Pediatrist-Rickard 7. Indifference-Harrison 8. Most Worried-Guile 9. Slow Poke-l-lafer 10. Red Nose-l-loman 11. Herring Snatcher-Weinberg 12. The Seagram Boys-Grant, Goldy, Shepard, lohnson 13. Surgeon -Settineri 14. Hell Raiser-Campo. 15. Monkey Man-Sergeant Devlin 16. Belladonna Syndrome-Hogan 17. Brown Rat--Seidel 18. Homeoquack-Snowden 19. Real Homeopath-Shippen 20. Late Man for Class-Zimmerman 21. Womans Home Companion Reader -Betts 22. Wisecrackers-Thegan and McWil- liams 23. Devil with the Gals-Rita 24. Faculty Questioner-Harris 25. Silent Man-Rambach 26. Beer Guzzlers-Higercl, Davison, Waddington 27. True Students-Lindeman, Sigafoos 28. Sheik-O'Lini 29. Yankee+Vaughn 30. Poppa-Miller 31. Pansy Club-Dashevsky, president: Wible, vice-president: Conwell, secretary: Pluck, treasurer Doctor: You must avoid all forms of excitement. Male Patient: But, Doctor, can't I even look at them on the street? Was it a party! The last thing I re- member, Schwab was climbing the clothes tree to chop out the dead limbs. If all the horses say, Nay, where do the little horses come from? Bellhop lknocking at the Bridal Suitel: Did you ring, Sir? Mr. Newlywed Medic Cin a muffled voicel: No, that's my wife. She's tingling all over. The B. O. boys lbestial orqyl Otherwise known as the Pansies -I-he National Academic Cap and Gown Co College Barber 821-23 Arch Street Right Next Door to College Philadelphia, Pa C. W. Clayville, Prop. HAHNEMANN LUNCHEONETTE IFORMERLY GENES? 246 N. 15TH ST. Louis PRoPR1EToR School Suppued By Us All Caps and Gowns Used at This RlTtenhouse 6832 RACE 2864 Colonial Druq Co. SURGICAL APPLIANCES TRUSSES ARCH SUPPORTS ELASTIC HOSIERY ABDOMTNIAL BELTS GRADUATE Fl'I'I'ER A. P. KARSH, PH. G. 201 N. 15th St., Philadelphia Graduate Lady Attendant QNX 'x wht x X Ns tl' f I I SYM I 5 .two-le Chiles wrt. -aww? 0255421 AW BRAEUNINGER Melee E CAL ARTSBW l PHILADELPHIA Old Man's Lament My necking days are over, My parking lights are out, The thing they called my sex appeal Is now my water spout. HAHNEMANN SENIOR CRY Oh give me a moon And make it soon- And throw in a star or two, And give me a bench beneath some trees And a nurse that feels like I do -? Sing a song of Tux pants, Hip pockets full of rye. Four and twenty Rhos Feeling very high. When the dance is over, They'll all be put to bed- Wake up in the morning And wish that they were dead. Supervisor: They say that one evening's dance is equivalent to walk- ing ten miles. Student Nurse: That was in the old style. Now it's equivalent to climbing 100 trees. EHRHART 6. KARL Manufacturing Homoeopathic Pharmaceutists 143 NORTH WABASH AVE. Cor. Randolph CHICAGO TIIE COLLEGE ST0llE EVERY MEDICAL BOOK PUBLISHED Is Available Here l . . INC. 01 y,O N.W COR. I6-rn 8- WALNUT STS. 204 Dr. Pearson: Where's your little red hen? Dr. Hepburn: She died last week. Dr. Pearson: What was the trouble? Dr. Hepburn: Ova work. Dr. Horn in Exam: Will you men stop exchanging notes in the back of the amphitheatre? Senior: Them ain't notes, Doctor, them's cards. We're playing bridge. Dr. Horn: Oh, I beg your pardon. Dr. Wells to Class in Medicine: Gentlemen, the tonsils are the most sinned against organs in the body, and very soon it will be impossible to get the degree of Doctor of Medicine unless these beautiful little lumps ot lymphoid tissue have been removed. However, gentlemen, it seems to me that the tes- ticles are the most sinned with organs in the body and should be removed. But, strange as it may seem, their re- moval has not become so popular. Pennington says: Give me a drink of wine or gin, Or even a glass of beer, It's not as soft as a woman's lips, But a damn sight more sincere. Pansy Club Theme Song Noses are red, Good is our brew, Saturday night We're on stew. Mother to daughter who had just spent a week-end with a Medical Stu- dent: Were you discreet, daughter? Daughter: Yeah, We locked the door. Frosh: Look at the wrinkles on that nurse's back. Senior: Wrinkles, hell! Those are service stripes. Pete: I'm not feeling myself to- night. Kath: You're telling me? Senior's Philosophy: A nurse's past is either scandalously indecent or shamefully uninteresting. Amencus Hotel 6th and Hamilton Streets ALLENTOWN PENNA Center of the City 325 Rooms 325 Baths single rooms S3 00 twin bed rooms twin bed rooms DINING ROOM CAFETERIA GRILLE Parking 25c Motoramp Garage 75c 192 ' .................... . 30 double rooms ..... .. 4.50 70 ' ...... . ...... 5.00 33 ' .............. 6.00 FRANK L. LAGAN cso. H. MCcoNNELL Doctors Are Salesmen. Too Since, more than any other man, the Doctor is judged on appearances, a modernly equipped, attractively arranged office is an income-producing asset. The experience gained from outfitting and arranging hundreds of physicians' offices, within the past few years, is yours for the asking. Write for our list of suggestions and the names of Hahnemann Medical College men whose offices we have equipped. Philadelphia Surgical Instrument Company 1709 SANSOM STREET RITtenhouse 3613 Clippings from Winchell's column in the Allentown Mominq Call which covers the town like an eagle: Who said, Will tive dollars fix it up? and why! Shame on you, Iesse. Who are the six chorus girls in fair Allentown that Si CBrown Rat to you? said were nice girls? Who tried to vamp the boys with a Clark Gable sweater? Why did Weinberg smoke a herring? Who got the dollar? Whispering heard after midnight at the Americus Hotel: You're not so tough! Oh, no? CGenel. Why did Conwell shout out the win- dow? Let me out! -better call the office for a key next time. Who was the blonde that Pretty Boy was so ga-ga about at the public dance hall in Allentown? And why did the little chorine prefer Pretty Boy's wee small mustache to that of the suave Lorenz? Carl Everett should be ashamed ot himself for IO minutes. Why did Snowden tear a telephone book into small bits and throw the paper out of the window? What did the Stolz boys do after hur- riedly getting ott an Allentown street car? . A . i . 206 MICROSCOPES LABORATORY APPARATUS CHEMICALS and INSTRUMENTS MEDICAL BOOKS V EDWARD P. DOLBEY 61 CO. 3621 Woodland Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. Compliments of Medicinal Oxygen Co Medicinal Gases 1718 VINE STREET PHILADELPHIA. PENN A. Sea Food Our Specialty Any Food From A Sandwich to A Meal LaSalle Restaurants WE SERVE THE HIGHEST GRADE Poous FULL COURSE DINNERS EAT WITH US THERE IS A DIFFERENCE 1802 N Broad Street Philadelphia 204 N. Broad Street Hogan to Dr. Payne: You can't make a fool out of me! Dr. Payne: It is too late in the after- noon, Mr. Hogan. Ray Seidel says that his eyesight is so poor that he has to wear his glasses to bed in order to see who he is dream- ing about. Dr. Martin to Conwell: About the only thing that can stay in some people's head longer than twelve hours is a cold. Attention, music lovers! We offer you the opportunity to hear Doctors Craig and Frosh play Rhapsody in Black in D and C Minor on the famous Scru- litzer organ-incidentally this organ has been in use since antiquity. Did you ever see Dr. Paxson's favor- ite uterus? Devlin: I wish that I could be a great doctor. I'd like to be a bone spe- cialist. Dr. Geckler: You have a good head for it. Montgomery to his Landlady: Is my face dirty or is it my imagination? Landlady: Your face is clean. Why did Rita blush when he learned that the average banana weighs 140 grams? Shame on you, Rital A clipping from the Quakertown News: Drive with care, Dotterer, for the child in the street may be your own. What Senior has honey britches about a certain supervisor? NEW SLANTS ON TI-IERAPEUTICS Dr. Ferguson suggests the following treatment for Typhoid Fever: Best in bed, with a good nurse. However, the average student suggests the above treatment for Athletes' Foot, Dandruff, Fallen Arches, Boredom, etc. We have heard that a common cold may be cured by taking a bath in goat's milk with Claudette Colbert. Do you know why milk is given with Chloral 1-lydrate when given by rec- tum? Well, we will tell you. lt is to make the Choral more tasty. The Cadaver song: Don't you dis- member me. THE Adams-Lessack Co. STATIONERS 5. PRINTERS College Supplies Our Specialty No School Item too Hard to Ge! at Anytime 145 N. 15TH STREET PHILA., PA. Locust 1133 Race 1335 VVHAT IS THE REASON FOR THE FOLLOWING NAMES? l. Cape May Goody lHughesl 2 ,, . Old Maestro lCameronl 3. Five Mile Czwergell 4 ll . Fence Post tHarrisl 5. Poppa tStolzl 6. Sonny tStolzl 7. Enuresis? tDottererl 8. Pretty Boy tPtitaJ 9. Director of Public Safety tBettsl 10. Cockle Burr lPenningtonl ll. Lame Brain CL. B. Thomasl 12. Iron Man tKutyJ Patient: Doctor, 1 feel like killing myself. What shall l do? Doctor: lust leave it to me. Dashevsky: Here's a picture of my father at a Sunday School picnic. Fluck: Which one is your father? Dashevsky: How should 1 know? During the recent cold spell, Settineri decided that he wanted his woolies, so he wrote as follows to his wife: Philadelphia, Pa., Thoisday Night. Dear Wife: S. O. S. B. V. D. P. D. Q. C. O. D. Yours lovingly, Surgeon Doctor Cattending patient who had swallowed a half dollarl: How is the boy today? Anxious Mother: No change yet. People who carry glass bottles should not sit on stone benches. Be not too light hearted When reading this sordid fun, For while some of us may become great doctors, -Others might turn out to be just bums. 208 JAMES D. SCIIOFIl'II.D, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Dixfaxrx of tht' Rrrtum and C010 n lf.t'rl14.rf'Ufly 906-908 Medical Arts Buikiiug 16th and Walnut Streets Phihdelphia Pa HLNRX D I XFFI RFX MD Obstetrxrs and Gwzrcologx 750 South 18th Street Phxladelphm Pa Hours by appomtmcnt ALOXSIUEIJ BLXRLLX MD Pnlzatrzfs 3500 Bletgh Street Phnladclphm Pa THOMA9 IXI SNXDILR XID Oplztlmlmolo X XICCIILAI Xrts Butldmg Phxlddelphta P1 XX ILLI XIXI G SCHXIIDT flttorfzfx at La 0 Reg Patent Ittornex Patents Trademarltm Copy rtghts an bn azr Competztzon TIIOXIXS l..XXX'RI'1NL'l'1 DOYl,I'f. XID Plflsliz' mul l:1'lI1'flll Surgrrvv 269 South lfhh Street Plnilztdelpllia, Pat. Hours: 2 to 4 Mon., Tues., Thurs. 11 L d gt! by tppnirlttmrt nd I FI lXVl X VXNIINNIP XID I1 Cnzfml gllfgffX IXIaI1n Hull IXL1lxern Pt XI tlxtrn 7115 EVLRIJIT H DICKINSON XID XL Q Surgrrt 730 Qouth 18th Street Plulzxdelphta P1 Xlormng Honra Pen 381' IIIRBFRFP IIDOPOLD XXI XID F XCS Sur an XIf-dtcal Xrts Butldmg. Phtladelpltm Pa IXXIILS D QCHOFIILD XID I' Dzr asf: of th Rmtum and Colon lftflusl I 906 908 Xledtml Xrts Butldmg. loth and XX alnut Qtreet Phtladelphta Pa X - , . XX d. :ul .2 . ' 1 ' t ' . ,r C ' ', , . CDSM: 'I 4. J ,fffi , I . ., I I V 7 A I .. . . ' 1, . ' , 1. I VZ .- H ' . S I ', '.. ' 5 1 . . .,I u Y ll . .. .. I I 1, . , 1. Mayfair 3566 1' ' ' 'tt . I i,l',. 'I L' .JL .,1.., gf Q ' if 'H I ' ' 1 F . A . . Y .I X ls '- I .c, . 7 V t .I ' I I 4, , . , ,. . .L , ,. . ., .. bv- - T .rli 0 L1 ' ' . .A -' ivy 7 I My 7. .F A A . . 7 d d I t, 5 f , - 209 AUBREY B. WEBSTER, M.D Wll,l.l.XNl Xl. SYIXIS. Nl. IJ., I7..X.C.S. Su,g,.,5. 1930 Chest 1111 t Street Pllilztdelphizt, Pa. G.XR'1'H W. BOERICKE, XID. Internal .llnlirinz Ilahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. CH.-XRLES B. HOLLIS, M.D., F.A.C.S. lfyf, liar, Nose and Throat 1930 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. W. W. YOUNG, M.D. lntfrnal illfdirinf 224 Providence Road West Aldan, Pa. Surgzry Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. FRED W. SMITH, M.D., F.A.C.S. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 1716 Aldine Trust Building Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN A. BROOKE, MD., F..-X.C.S. Orthopfdirs 1431 Spruce Street I'liilqidt-lpliiqt, Pa. ., F.A.C.S. WARREN C. MERCER, MD., F.A.C.S Cynffology and Obstetric: 1925 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pa. RICHARD W. LARER, M.D. Sllfgffy 1407 E. Columbia Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. HARRY S. WE.-XYER, M.D., F.gX.C.S. Eye, liar, Non' and Throat 1433 Spruce Street Pltiladelpliia, Pa. 1'i1JW.XR17 W. C,XX11'Bli1.1., M.D., 1 ..X.C.S. Frology 1316 Medical Arts Building Philadelpliia, Pa. jUSl'Ql'll L'll.lXlJl.l'lR. XB., l'n.lD. f,lll1'lII1l'!ll .l11fll,x'A1',r ul lfffiml 2.15 North 15111 Sll'L'L'l 1'l1ilzitlt-lpliizi, Pu. '1'. W. PHILLIPS, MD. Dixnzxrs of tha' Rfrtum 5133 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. DUNNE W. KIRBY, M.D., F.A.C.P. Internal lllfdicinz and Diagnosis 1703 Montgomery Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. Hours by Appointment HERBERT L. NORTHROP, M.D., F.A.C.S. Surgery 601 Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. E. ROLAND SNADER, JR., M.D., F.A.c.P. Internal flledirine Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. ROWLANID RlCKlf'l l'S, fX1.1J. Czzslrnfrrlrrology llahnc riizi tiri 1 lospital Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH V. F. CLAY, M.D., F.A.C.S Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 1806 Pine Street Philadelphia, Pa. Hours: Daily by Appointment DESIDERIO ROMAN, M.D., F.A.C.S Surgfry 250 South 17th Street Philadelphia, Pa. G. HARLAN WELLS, M.D., F.A.C.P lnlz' z'11 111 ,llfdifinf 1 lziz 1' Diagrioxis 1627 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pa. l'R,XNK O. N.XU1.1'1. K1.D. Uphtfzalntvlugy N li. Cnr. 20th and Chestnut Streets 1'11i1ztt1c1p1tia. Pa. IIORACIQ L. WEINSTOCK, M.D. Urology 2616 South 12th Street Philadelphia, Pa. IOSLP11 S 111 PBLRN B S tw Cmnt r Cnzfml 81010 tra! Clzfvzutu Baxal 1lftabol1.rm 'iw 1North lwth Street Phlladclphtd P1 DON XLD R FLRGUSOY MD 1' XCP lnlfrnal llrdzczne Dzagnoszs flrctrofardzograplzg 1737 Chestnut Street Phtladelphta Pa Hour 10 30 to 1730 and by appointment CXRPLNIPR JR N D Gznfml Slllgffi 664 Lhttrth Lune Xeadon Pt 11011 ARD S BLQLIQR 'XID Lar A 056 and Throat 12 Cor Baltlmore and Owen Menues Iansdottne Pa urb x 4047 Barmgz btrtct Plulftdclplm P1 lmlo x 1807 Qouth lnth Qtrutt Ph11adc1ph1.1 P N 1 XILS JR 3 X 1 1 flu x md Ulutftm 7 O S tmtl th 18th Strtct 11111 tdtlphlq P1 XLB1 RI' NIL FCH XID OM! fmx 1 Jzzz I C mm! Prattzrf 154 XXL t 10 tn Stttct Gum 111101111 X B AAI., .' 4. ., M.S., Pr .D. . ' ' , ' ' Ii. F. . Q , ., . 1. . ' I . 't ' , . . . ' . . 4' . . ' , M. A . . S1101,LIiNB1iRGER, RI.D., F.A.C.S. LEANDER P. TOR1, NI.D. S ,,l.,.v, '. gh. Q, 1.1. ff. .. 1X1.1. .. .C.S. .7 2 ' . . . . . Cy 1r'r gl' 1 ' 'i'5 . r ff ' ' -S .' f .' 5 ' 'fs , Q '1 J ', , ' , ,. , . 212 C. I,. SIIOI,I.IiNIiI'IRiIICR. NI SIl7'gl'I'-V 40-I7 Iizxring Struct I I1IIzuIcIpI1I:1, I':1. RUB ERT KI. I IL'N'l'liR C:1X'IIft'0I0gj' 5601 North 3rd Strv Philzndclplxia 1 - , .IJ.. l'..X.L.h. XX II.I.I.XNI I. 'l'UXII.IN5lJN. XIII.. I XL S , KID. ct Ufulz'll'Ir v X . l-lllb Ng run- SII'l'L'I , . IIn1IguIuIpIn:n I I . ll. I I IiI1NNI1'I I'.NIIJ 'I me . b . fnzkffffm :ml l'x'r1f'mlrw'x' D.. s. ILIIIIZIIIIUXYII IIIIIILNNIUIIQII ISUIIL Bell Phone, LOC ust 75I0 Keystone Phone, Race blld BENJAMIN E EMERY COMPANY I206'I'208 RACE ST ' PHILADELPHIA Printers of the MEDIC ond other school annuals 213 o X' . Las woo IS A CREDIT TO THE STAFF fu ,us ' I I UUR SPE, Q- Xxx ERVICE . . Q 5 , Indlvl gk HB O n, Q 'Ill 1 Mfg, , id KX'-, V 1.', 551' fl, 41 . if Q Lifbu Ilqk I .- Orgam ,- 2,-,L , a - jwf.,-, CZ , Quality jfi 4H A- gp 1 4 -' . X? X N Past recor , 'sf N 1 ,V rmance Largest -Cx - 'B -W ,Lal 1 Pl'0dl1C' tion fac'fl1Qw LJ 5. Y' . gg.- QQ 1., ,fl -,J Many years Ngg, .. s 1 ,fa -f' PHILADELPHIA-WEEKS ENGRAVING COMPANY Cgalucalfonal geparlmenf 29 NORTH SIXTH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. O O 214 SITTINOS BY APPOINTMENT BELL PHONE Our Portraits Live Forever' Hollander ak Pddman i PHOTOGRAPHERS 1705 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. .4-gllgg.. Photographers for the 1935 MEDIC ..qIIy,g.. SPECIALIZING IN SCHOOL AND COLLEGE ANNUALS 215 CIP AFLIHGIDEEHQAEP S 'FXS il EX H. GX, Fa 4' 1 f ' .Y v - yiy I. ' x ' r . ' 44 4.4 f -,. aff ha X ,Q 6' X! W film? ff 1 I 1 WfN- N a1 .,, xy- 2, --1. 'q.,..-1 . .rar X43 ,-:I-' 7-S37 .fSJNf' ix-196' X 4 ?v. ,f X! A15 tj V A sew- 0' UM ' f Kim .. - X16 EZ'-'Fifi Q! 33? zufx-fx umm!-'Vi CW P SHCL-ANG THE CIORXD M1392 DSSTNBUUON OF THX' DRuG5 Lf6fD OF THE Cf.D MHTERNA MEDKA XNTHEIR NATIVE HABITAT Ficvr MCMKKV Pfwtnysron. 5


Suggestions in the Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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