Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1974

Page 1 of 320

 

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 320 of the 1974 volume:

BUILDING LIBRARY it CLASSROOM FOR THE PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE GRAPHIC CHARTS be unpleasant to those that deserve it. Shadwell This application must be filed before January 1st of the calendar year of desired matriculation Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine 4150 City Avenue, Phladelphia, Pennsylvania 19131 APPLICATION FOR ADMISSION To be considered by the Faculty Committee on Admissions this application must be completed in its entirety. For Class entering 19742 Unless otherwise indicated herein. please type or print. If admitted at a modem. you will be required to submit two (2) walkt•sized (2W z 3 ' ) prints of a full-fared photograph which has ban especially photo. graphed in a studio. Male sttn dents arc to wear a coat and tie for the photo. Women au• dents are to wear business or strew site for the photo. of this Application Z 14 PERSONAL INFORMATION Name in full •Inet TIATIC DOLT .1•11C ‘AIEC Home Address -ILI Sot E444e4 .- AMO CCCCC T CITY COVAITT Mailing Address S Date of Birth 14 U. S. Citizenship: Yes (A No ( ) Home Phone Number of Other Single ( ) Married (); Divorced ( ) Children (44 dependents Social S«urity Y Give the name and relationship ofall relatives in the Osteopathic Profession: PARk.C.3.1 4S WCLBY .O. ; se); rthnis ifringe ,D. oi; ToSt D. o. Have you previously applied for admission to this college? No Yes ( ). Applied for class to start September HEALTH HISTORY Give a brief statement as to any physical and psychiatric, minor and major illnesses: surgery; physical impairment: Ate AS yet S Wear glasses: No ( ) Yes (X? Height 0 g _ Weight ep._._. Philadelphia College of Osteopathic • lane SPRUCE STREET AT 48TH PHILADELPHIA. PA. 19139 (210748-1000 April 1, 1970 Mr. H. Madden Walcheck 123 S. Dengrove Avenue LaPorte, Pennsylvania 18626 Dear H. : I am pleased to inform you that your application for admission into the First Year Class in Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine entering September 1970 has been favorably acted upon by the Faculty Committee on Admissions and the Board of Directors. I congratulate you upon your acceptance. You have now taken the first step of your career in osteopathic medicine. In doing so you have assumed certain responsibilities. First, of course, is the fact that your personal and professional life must reflect the highest standards of moral integrity, intellectual effort, social consciousness, and professional dedication. Your immediate responsibility is that of maintaining a high level of academic accomplishment. Should you, for whatever reason, fail to maintain high standards in all these areas your acceptance will be automatically withdrawn. On or before April 27, a non-refundable tuition prepayment of $100 must be received by this office, in order to confirm your acceptance of a place in the Class of 1974. This payment of $100 will be applicable to your tuition payment for the Fall Term of 1970. You are now about to prepare yourself for a career of public service and public trust as an osteopathic physician. No career can bring you more satisfaction. My congratulations to you. We look forward to welcoming you in September. Very truly yours, Thomas M. Rowland, Jr. Vice President Director of Admissions Stocal_s__ I Ovum a I RESPIRATION PULSE RATE TEMPERATURE HOUR of DAY 1 1 I MONTH and DAY I 117r I 1172 1 1172 1 1170 I 0, are.ttei BRP BR? ISRP raft! 1 BRP 1 1 I I I I •°. I I ROd 1 Po. ' gal 1 RO. • o S ' 1 e ' 111111111111111111111111 11,101111111111 iniiimiammil muniminuiii n L• f , 1Mac — I. 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' pi gilm ii mu VALUABLES SHEET • True Professional bow tie - Bobbie Sox (white) • New diagnostic kit — purchased from a graduating senior - Pin-up anatomy text - 1 box of manipulaing bones - Black Bag with foam seat cushion • Unprofessional blue jeans - Crew - cut wig • Rare P.C.O.M. gold ring Valuable Moments Who will ever forget .. . that first day standing in line at P.C.O.M. waiting for your rectal (the first of many). . . . your first first class, the first no-show. . . . the paranoia of the seniors, developing your ability to blend in with the walls. ... meeting your cadaver, recovering from the smell. .. the first class meeting, the beginning of con- fusion. . . . standing in line at distribution, only to find your file without notes. . . the drawings in the anatomy notes, the blanks on the exams. . . . the night chem. labs, the repeat experiments with last year ' s results, guessing the correct unknown. . . . the Bridge games during lunch, Hearts during class. . . . the hours of study, the re-exams, the ability to memorize back tests, Who will ever forget .. . . . . the begining of the second year. another no- show. ... the unlectures in Ob-Gyn, the confidence a well-groomed course instills. . . . the Pathology quizzes, the progressive agony of not being called on for nine weeks. then betting on ;our table and losing. ... sitting in seat 6. only to find yourself being marked absent erased the 1. . . . the monotony of Pharmacology. resembling the monotony of Physiology. ... the new school in Florida. the visions of grandeur from a high. . . . the Microbiology labs where your lunch was contaminated by your neighbor; .ultures and fecal specimens. ... the National Boards Part 1, then facing 20 exams, the revolution that resulted. Who will ever forget .. . .. the clinical year, the Preceptorship in Miami Beach, . . . the Preceptors. watching Them take BP ' s. . . . the Psychiatric rotation, identifying with the paranoids but maintaining a key difference. . . . six weeks in the LaPorte Medical Venter. having single-handedly talked three other students out of that horrible rotation. . . . 20th Street Clinic, your first one-on-one, the specialists help: another no-show. . 48th Street Clinic. where you were allowed to do your first H B P. . . . Clinical Studies at Barth, what can you say? Who will ever forget .. . . . the attempts to liberalize your experience, the trip to Erie. . . . the Naval Hospital. a medical man ' s heaven. then returning to 48th Street. . . . the away Hospitals, the temptations you heard about, the realizations upon returning. . . . Beds at Barth, rather Services at Barth depending on your service, and the nurse on the floor, that ' s the catch. . . . looking back at the Juniors while at 48th Street. wondering if you were as naive. irre- sponsible. and shy, knowing you were. . . . the experiences of the group , the amazing difficulty of deciding on which night to cele- brate the end of Barth and 48th Street rota- tions. w hen the common goal was total oblivion. . . . Part II of the National Boards, another exer- cise in mental gymnastics — what is jurispru- dence (a virgin jury) And finally, who will ever forget . . . . . the rumors, the complaints, the criticisms. the making of your education, your individual experience at P.C.O.M. PHYSICAL EXAM Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine SPRUCE STREET AT 48TH PHILADELPHIA. PA. 19139 (215) 748•1000 HIsToRY-1970 CHIEF COMPLAINT PlisroRy OP CHIEF PAsr ?ERsopAL aisToRy FAMILY RisToey REVIEW OF Systems 0 ComP44 ivrs AT ALI— ALL THE PATIENT 44ANTS To DO is sAy THE RIelT TIE TIME. PATIENT STATES TifAr ElS OvERAWELmW6-DESIEE PLEASE Avy LATER - VIEWER BEGAN APPEoxtnATFery YEARS A60 WHEN FIRST 4PPLymie.To umDEPARADuAra COLLEGE. Tr 2EqcHED ITS PEAK 02 MOMTE5 A60 NH %) HE MIS IscrECutEdED BY ADM(SSIONS COMMITTEE. AT P C.O.m. F1E2E THE A mein ADDED THAT RE WAS A Boy scoot ATTENDED CHURCH AROAMCE soa) RAFFLE TICKETS FOR THE LOCAL. RepwwcAm R4ETY. PATIENT ADMITTFD TO HilutiO6- FVEPY DISEASE HENTiOuED, NE tugs RE - 14WDFO THAT HE RE Sty HAD REEK ACcGVreb To neDicAl- $0100L AND IT WAS NO LONGER NECESSARY To Aseee WITH EvEgy7HM6-. F Lowho6- A VIISIIFt.ESf6N OF RELIEF HE DENIED ANY F02M ILLNESS PATiefor INDIcAmo A POSITIVE HISTaky FOR OsTsopATAy — PATERNAL GRAuDFARIgcmATERNAL RAWER. TIEP..E. Was A FOR Ai-LoPATHy 02 momgopArmy.74e,v HE ADDED THAT THE ABOVE INFORMATION cools) AF MoDineD t DEPANDINF, liP0A) WHO wAs ASiet Cr- MM. HE EN T EXCESSIVE TEARw6- - ctAtLY WITH LETTERS OF REJECTION. eRFAAW6 VOICES -SAYw6 You ' RE SPaIAJIM JAW • FROM smuaN6- AT ALL HIS SwAtaiwia- - TEE LAWS HAAJOEP SOME DieecroesoF ADmisstoms. v OrwSion - uRiNG, N tEWS. PALPI • • - • 0 • NN LmcE -Rom MCWAI. SCHOOLS Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine SPRUCE STREET Ar 48ra PHILADELPHIA. PA. 19139 MS 748.1000 RFSPIIZATORY @MEAT SWEATS WARAYW AKOHT MED BOARDS. ( ' JAUNDICED EYE - WHILE VIEWW6- FAciLiTies AT U.C,L.A.$cmoot. OF MEDICINE. eDIARRMFA -MALABSoRPT1oAJ OF CER.THIA.I PHILOSOPHIES. ONAUSEA- FROM Feleras .A1 M.D. SCHOOLS ksiebsier, JUST ku44T IS AN OSTEOPATH ? . QDYSPEPSIA - HE STATES THAT NEEDS A sTA0N6 STOMACH TO 60 TH0200CH WHAT HE HAS - IF RE ONLY KAJEN WHAT LAY AHEAD! 0.1) ®EARRESIS.DIZIBBL A16- -PATIENT SEERS To BE Law CO.)TROC. OF EvEemmiuG NEOROMUSCUI Ake5TRoMA, it4m0-GRiP -600D WAY To imPeEsS PEOPLE. OcompusiON - WonDEPs Hui HE CAA) HowoR COMMITMENTS POE REsiDEHciES ABTA THE 6 DOCTIR.S WHO 126COMEHDED Ham. 0 PSYCHIATRIC DISORDER - PP4MisE1)ADMIcsiA0S COMMITTEE THAT HE WOULD SERve AnuArreausmP RHEE IF ACCEPTED OCAmmITMETNT DPACEEDHJAS WITATED -HE SfiSHED COI TRACT To THAT EFFECT. PHYSICAL EXAM WFICH-IT-i 30 HEIAHT S`9 170 90 - Q9 P-1.90E- 30 abyemzoLT) 50HELVRAT UNDEPSORASHED, ORVIOOS DisrRess. PFAT) - GRoss EviDexcE Or SYNDROME WITH SRALDwo-VE SiSni - 14Aik HEAT AHOT,DY,Mor Toocm JA- DO NOT EXTEND BELOW EARS, SKIN — mem TATTOO OF OSTIF MEOW!. OVER I, REEAST. EtE -aLEtiinal A EC EACOPIFettue 1244ES COWCED. MOUTM - EAARGED -HEGuESSES THAT HE MUSTrIAJE POT H.S FOOT IN IT Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine SPRUCE STREET sit 48Tx PHILADELPHIA. PA. 19139 (21S) 748.1000 0€Rapa v1 4i MuemorZ OF cumicA(, oUstiFF lc teNCY WITH RANA77oN To doulog YEAR. LUNGS — FAitueE 2ALES in ALL ,I JAIG-Fieu)S-Fem CepEATED Ap?4,;(4rioN MMus. ARDOMFN — ph46Nosis Lgeraeff CAI ASIttie-A) WAS AVE OF out No SHOWS. RECTAL NECESSARY -CLASSES sE6ININ SEPTEMBER. FXTR.EMITIFS-Att 4 PRESENT FvEN TI100661 IIE Grilrep rior HE WOULD HAVE CUTOFF ths ARti.ro SET INTO MEDICAL SCHOOL . SIGN - SLANceilm5 OF SON OVER AREAS OF MEDIAL AND LATERAI MaLtEou -1.1SuAtt..Y seen:ONLY IN GENERAL PEAcrice eEsiDgAns. NEUROI OGIC — e4WEeSEkSirevrrY TO Ce:TICI5M - Av unfroenwAra TRifor CONS DERN TuIe EAR5utio 4 Yen2S. .0. A. SIGN LEFT DoESIYT SEEM To euosu WHAT THE et61-1-T HAND IS DOING. STRUCTURAL EXAM — NO EviDExCE OF SACRAL AS umaveum6- ; NO WationcPATTEtzus • Ai) m SC! -E sPAsms; 110 AREAS OF SOMATIC- i )SF,.. ' Nc i ;Cif WILL 13EzdEvE 5 ?? —SmouLD BE FOuowED CLOSELY sEE ()sr WHAT 4 YEARS OF a ee P. 4415 AND HIS - HATE 5 TECHAllauffSat PO To CORRECT NAP R-27-70 8Y Irv: PROGRESS NOTES I Be ye not the first to have tried. Nor the last to set the old aside 10 2 70 (Freshman Year) SUBJECTIVE: Patient states that his only complaints are severe epigastric pain. fatigue, diarrhea, and palpita- tions at 1:00 P.M. Tuesdays and Thursdays. OBJECTIVE: On observation, the patient appeared disheveled, extremely fatigued, and was hyperventilating. His reactions were somewhat paranoid and he was wearing the color green exclusively because he declared. I don ' t with to be noticed. Hishair was extremely short and well groomed, and he had numerous scrapes on his lace which appeared to be the result of overzealous shaving. He wore a new white lab coat which, despite its newness, had already suffered the ravages of Anatomy Lab. His eyes were somewhat inflamed and he described the ailment as chemical conjunctivitis which was aggrivating his Tired Eye Syndrome. He intermittently babbled numerous Anatomical and Histological terms while alternating with the study of homemade flash cards of the blood constitu- ents. He was noted to have washed his hands three times during his brief examination. It was Friday afternoon but for some reason he seemed depressed. He leafed through his Grays Anatomy and muttered something about another Saturday of that stench. Chest and lungs were within normal limits. Extremities were normal except for chapped hands, bitten fingernails. and a slight tremor believed to be the result of fatigue. The patient contended that his diarrhea ensued with his admission physical and was later aggravated by Dr. Kline and has just now started to abate. NO A nmirrA DEPT. ANATOMY sit ASSESSM ENT: Acute anxiety, depression. paranoia and fatigue. PLAN: 5 mg. Valium T.1.0., rest, will follow Sure. Doc. and Pliny the Elder smoked grass. MECCA . . and then ho tried the old laying on of the hands Jan on me. and I said .. . 0. May I have your attention please? III lose another Dime in this machine . . . . and I say, if we get all the finals done by Tuesday. we can schedule tennis for Wednesday .. But I really do need a stethoscope for Chem lab. Anybody want a ' 53 Ford? Please, Lord, cancel the Chem test What specimen is missing from the lab? WOW! Even Dr. Nicholas couldent correct my Iran- SiStOrS. Research Sure beats Chem lab. 11 2 71 (Sophomore Year) SUBJECTIVE Patient complains of ataxia. myalgia. aerophagia. anorexia, myotonia, syncope and arthralgia. These Symptoms have been present for approximately one month and are said to have started suddenly. Patient emphasizes that these symptoms persisted after an initial episode involving pyrexia. coryza and bronchitis at which time the patient auscultated respiratory stridor. Pt. reported to have visited student health numerous times during Pathology quiz session. Pyrexia vanished at which time enuresis ensued. Pt. claims enuresis is probably a complication of his left testicular pain, his dystuie, his sore buttocks and his generalized abdominal pain which radiates 10 all four quadrants and both flanks and Is knife-like in nature. He cannot correlate his retrosternal chest pain with any of his other symptoms and wishes to be evaluated for coronary artery disease. Pt. noticed a well defined area of anhydrosis surrounding an axitlaty bubo and is concerned he may have a malignancy. No other complaints except for amblyopia which pt. states effects him during Monday Night Football (probably guilt related). OBJECTIVE: Patient seen in room 201 just returning from student health. HO appears exhausted alter CBC.UA. creatinine. blood chemistries, ABG,IVP,EKG. chest X-ray and sigmoidoscopic. Has planned cholecystogram, brain scan, creatinine clearance. PEP. BSP. ANA, spinal tap. LAP, pulmonary function, gastric analysis, GTT, hemoglobin electrophoresis. and barium enema for tomorrow. Has not slept for five days preparing for Or. Greenwald ' s midterm — states he is getting quite proficient at multiple choice exams but still needs some practice with True and False. Pt. noticed to have large scratches on his arms reported to be the result of an attempt to secure freebees. Pt. seemed to be preoccupied with EKG ruler at this time — states he must start studying for the boards. ov: vt r 3 IN:Jvii-MG !ER ' KS GAGMAN ElDERSERRY ITCH, DOC ? SHORE-4%51 ' 10.4 PIRSOIIRTION OUR TOTWGEXRIAL STORE, WHY ?WM BEISIZSM.IFFY MT RER TH ' SCRATCHER Ant WA-Ili TY EV TIP tic PLAN: Will follow. irstirlitternIti Rumor Central? I want to report a rumor. We are aware that the parking situation may be somewhat difficult . . RUGBY ANYONE? PROGRESS NOTES tat ov, .dati - 1317 A b INas0 Mt es.. t.. Ibla w. Date 0 Notes Should Be Signed by Physician e Ai : fri ' 7 -Mies, a-, ei ijsligkirazeL, (SP (S-21-3€) C.. N1 0 Ad. : a to. Z4 el v•te.. else-wt • xlie• dam- a 04 ' V L ' Jr g .... - ea r at n IN 4:IlA ' Se • 4:irol.ar.. r 9 aer 1 4 _ . do.r • 44- ),- 7-A J- el ray : sre.,01-Ac...0 tr., a -. a% eak % tor, r a A 44,AM? r4.6.1 sa av d rms.° •-a. - t 1•J 4 I 44Ohn erene. i t l° a. • • HOSPITAL Potion, cla ' ' envt” htriv 10 2 72 (Junior Year) Patient has no physical complaints at this time and is elated that he won ' t be required to attend classes from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. anymore. However, he is concerned about Anesthesiology and Dermatology courses which haven ' t yet materialized. He thinks that perhaps three general practice preceptorships may be overdoing it a bit but he is looking forward to handling his own patients at 20th Street. He is very disappointed with specialty clinics, but imagines his rotations can ' t get any worse. He slates that the curriculum changes are an improvement but they were too late, too few. and too infr SUBJECTIVE: equent. He is slightly upset that he was assigned his Junior elective but Cost la vie. OBJECTIVE: Patient seen at Barth Pavillion and appears to be healthy, but has changed remarkably in appearance. He has grown a moustache and goatee and his hair is quite a bit longer. His sideburns now extend below the forbidden point — below his earlobes. His stethoscope is curled in his left side pocket and his pediatric ophthalmoscope hangs from his chest pocket. A number of books are stuffed into his right side pocket and he carries a little black bag with tongue blades protruding. He has been seen at a number of area hospitals with his preceptor and is reported to be working as an extern in his spare time. He appears quite a bit calmer and has acquired some degree of confidence especially in H 8 P ' s. but feels lacking in Pharmacology. Pt. has lost contact with most or his classmates but hopes to renew friendships when he returns from his rural preceptorship in Dew Drop. Mississippi. He plans to take a trip In the spring to survey prospective hospitals for internship. -AjAr ( ' r iLrti sal SS OSOIINISPIal. Cons vs sc. A OE gal Vet0 CeSONIAC., OCS estrCisisaGess40 ASSESSM ENT: Patient well on his way to discharge. PLAN: Will follow. Light my lire PHILADELPHIA ' t STATE HOSPITAL Covnomucalth cy Pc-naaylcamo Whoro ' s Archie? Welcome to 20th St. D.EA.8 or C.D.A. all wrong. both. C.A.E. no a nswer Beds at Barth 4 3 74 (Senior Year) SUBJECTIVE: Patient complained of extreme fatigue and loss of contact with his wife and family. He has just returned from a seven week rotation in Erie, Pa. and is now about to start his vacation period. His wile is expecting their first child. He blurted. At least I ' ll never have to return to 20th and 48th St. booths. He is satisfied with his electives but feels compelled to use his vacation period to take his third elective. He hasn ' t had a weekend off in two months since he haS two part time lobs and is trying to keep up with the $250 increase in hospital costs. He is perturbed over the stupidity of the internship match system and thinks it is childish. More perturbing is the fact that he can find no one who can adequately explain the details of the match. He is tempted to intentionally mismatch. Pt. joyfully remarks that his discharge is approaching. OBJECTIVE: Patient appears mentally and physically drainer , however he radiates an air of self-confidence which was previously lacking and feels that his own initiative has added much to his education. He recalled a quote from a former teacher and repeated it in a sage-like manner: Never let your schooling interfere with your The pt ' s physical appearance remains much the same except that now he wears hospital shoes and a scrub suit. His physical exam is unremarkable. During his exam, pt. removed small notebook from his chest pocket and seemes to be studying it intently. He closed it with a wide smile and stated, Only 60 days till June 2nd. IARE TWO ASPIRIN AND GO TO BED Its Mee of you to all me a quack, Mt. Ftgby ... but I ' m really Just an Intern! ni interested in your past medical history ... what did hr. Edelman charge? . . . ■■ did Dr. Wilson charge? ... what did Dr.... ASS ESSM ENT: Discharge imminent. PLAN: Will cease to follow unless otherwise requested. Nobody gives ME a new patient at 3:00 . and the n I met these seven little dwarls. You didn ' t 13-17.1.8.N-27 And what are you doing in a Pap Hide fella? Class Rebellion of 72. I don ' t care if you had an appointment for next year . . . Four years of medical school for this? This ' ll lake out the wrinkles. These long hours are r eally starting to get to ... 1.5fil 4 So mat ' s what goes in a bedpan? What do you mean I ' m the new Ivory Snow person? Who ' s this guy following me? a Could you you come back in about six weeks for the Now that I ' ve got you where I want you Dr. B.. you ' d new doctor? bettor speak up. No. we invitee only the immediate families. In hurt ever since t got here. VVhars that you said about my favorite mayor? Hurry Dr. Frankenstein. before the lightning stops. My you have a deep throat. Linda. Do you think its my breath? This dude in the white coat better not be messin ' wid Cool Earl. nohow. The H P was never even done and the note is signed Smiling Ed. So that ' S how yOu remove a gall bladder. ro- He does look better with cheese on him. What ' s your Chief Complaint? I gots high blood, sugar diabetes. and the miseries. I wish there was something clever to say atter a kid urinates on you. Does this moan we ' re engaged? My hair will grow back if you cut Off what? Bill, lend me a dime for the toilet. I think I used too much thrust. Nature, time and patience are the three great Bohn LADELPIGA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATIDe Lovelace, Linda DOCTORS ORot_es 0.0 coictiaaor 4. CaSIIICALLS IOVISASLItI NOI AiSISISOL TREATMENT. laCOICAThen b 6 • Nixon Richard to fro N. 1.18e (pending) az Nixon 11h- tie Hap ' House e Is as a• Agnew, Ciro T. DIY° Eagles CIICC( YAMS DOCTORS ' ORDERS Israel Of 0 V If GCMCSICALLY f OUIYA4C f 01104 IS Of ACtt•Th161,1t Qv( 7 Riggs, Robert Anestrossg, T. J. Presient, apart ull Gas, In • Arastrong, T. J. President, It[port 011 Gas, Ina. Radar, Ralph 7 PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC ••• ••00 • an 040 4 Irt • en fl • KZ. 00On, CIA...goon .00 0400 - 0000 00 .00 01•400. •vu••• sAA0070 G. Gordon Liddy H. R. Haidertan IttlI NAM DOCTORS ' ORDERS ( Or WC GINCAICAltY COW AAAAA DINGO TREATMENT. MEDICATION DIET 07 ACC CCCCCCC John D. Ehrlich-aan 1.• men ra■ alialPflereTa ICIanal IMINErnir • r ire MiiffiMllrrn WranN IN Maio O Moir, Golda O ritrminnins., two Ana___2M4, d-rR Galore, Pussy oaf t rt-lota is )-icejidllAactistIL , St ctAr deR Totem 0 30 Oh sometimes skies are cloudy And sometimes skies are blue And sometimes they say that you eat the bear And sometimes the bear eats you And sometimes I feel like I should go Far away and hide ' cause I keep a waitin ' for my ship to come in And all that ever comes in is the tide. Jim Croce Hard Time Losiri Man KYW news time 4:30 AM. And now sports. None but the lonely 10 25 73 My Dear Wife. It is 4:30 A.M. and I am extremely lonely, so I decided to break the monotony by writing to you. I am now rotating through night services at the Barth Pavilion and will be doing so for the next two weeks. I work from 7 P.M. to 8 AM., seven days a week. I ' m sorry I haven ' t had a chance to see you since returning home from seven weeks in Erie, but my rotation on nights began the same evening I arrived home. If you get home from your job before 5 P.M., we might be able to spend an hour together before I leave for wor k. I realize there is little chance of this but I don ' t want you to worry about dinner since the Purina Company has agreed to feed us free of charge. Perhaps we can celebrate our one year wedding anniver- sary when I return home from La Porte Clinic next mo nth. I apologize for having to work on Thanksgiving but at lent I have a 50 50 chance of getting Christmas Day off. E. It night service isn ' t all that bad — sometimes I even learn some medicine. However. some things remain the same night or day. The student is always the responsible party, the Scapegoat for wrongdoing. My nights usually begin by hying to obtain a scrub suit to wear. It seems that the orderlies, technicians and cleaning crews have first choice and we are Permitted to wear what they reject. After sorting through the scrub suits and finding only extra large, I make my appearance in the E.R. wearing a ripped, pinned, stained rag. E.R. is a misnomer because the emergency facilities are so abused. It is more like general prac- tice that Is open 24 hours a day. People who don ' t have a regular G.P. and people whose GP. ' s are off for the day just dropin with their colds, stiff backs and sore throats. It wouldn ' t Everyone keeps an eye open for the Great Cricket Night Surgery be difficult to start a Psychiatric practice from this location, nor a D.P.A. practice. Anyway, things run smoothly for about an hour until an X-ray is needed. Then the technician is called in and ar- rives. not without argument, about an hour later. The patient is taken to Radiology by the Junior Intern, since the aides are glued to their chairs and don ' t want to be disturbed while knit- ting or reading Cosmopolitan. Alter another half-hour delay, the X-ray is taken and the routine returns to normal. Contrary to what you may think, it is not difficult to stay awake at night. We are constanly on guard for the Great Clicker that roams the halls. Some say he lives on the fifth floor: others say the third floor next to the EKG room. Some say he is a she. and some oven say it is not a cricket at all, but the sound of Sister Doctor slapping students ' knuckles with a ruler. Regardless, this Cricket vocalizes only after 10 P.M. He echoes throughout the hospital, ' click, click, click, click, Even as I write this letter the Cricket ' s call can be heard. The Cricket has never been seen but his effects are strongly felt. Students are in- structed not to discuss the subject in elevators or in patient ' s rooms to avoid an outbreak of terror. There is even a rumor of student reported missing alter answering a page on the third floor. None of these rumors can be verified, but there is no denying the shrill systematic clicks. We are supposed to call the operator and report when these sounds occur, so that she can be sure that we are safe. These sounds are more frequent at midnight. 2 A.M., 0 A.M. and 6 A.M., but occur all through the night without warning. You can see why we stay awake. Also, there is a constant flow of emp loyees from all parts of the hospi- tal who come to the E.R. and contribute to our night while they drink coffee. clean, and pilfer the food that is supposed to be our dinner. The backless Chairs are designed to make us uncom- fortable and the shrill door bell was especially designed to frus- trate and aggravate us. In the morning hours. when I get bored, I occupy myself by taking pictures of our night crew hard at work. (I have enclosed an example of this for your amusement). In fact, the most exciting injury I treated this evening was the bruised glutimus maximus of a 250 lb. LPN who tumbled from her chair. after falling asleep on the job. I wonder if workman ' s compensa- tion covers that injury. 4 Large, Larger or Extra Large? „ While visions of sugar plums danced in their heads.. . The E.R. was unusally busy this past evening from 10 P.M. till midnight. However, three people had to await treatment in the lobby while the floor buffers did their job. This well-manned group of employees is probably one of the most conscientious teams in the hospital. Their job consists of an initial sweep. followed by a grind, two buffs and a final sweep. I was speaking on the phone to the house physician earlier and wasn ' t able to move out their way,and was almost ground into the floor. It is truly unfortu- nate that patients have to be seen between the hours of 10 and 12. or else the buffers could shine that floor like a mirror. It is only slightly inconvenient for the doctors to speak over the drone of the machines. slip on the floor, step over buckets, mops and brooms. and endlessly move from corner to corner to stay out of the buffers ' way. As a Junior Intern (or student slave) I feel sorry for the buffers. since almost immediately alter they have finished, the bathroom cleaner arrives. Clad in her surgical gown, she swirls her cleanser like a white dust storm. Of the twenty five detergents she carries in her cart, not one is unused. I once used a toilet after she finished cleaning it, and found myself with excoriations on my legs from the abrasive cleanser which was not washed off the seat. Rumor has it that those who tangle with her do not tangle very long. She has even been known to use her cleanser as a weapon, thrusting it into her opponent ' s eyes. One of her unlucky victims is pictured on the next page. Alter the bathroom cleaner departs. trash emp- arrives. It is the job of this gifted individual to empty all the small trash cans into a big plastic bag. He is not permitted to empty the big trash cans at this time lest the maintenance supervisor, who is ex- tremely compulsive, catch him surprising his desig- Grind, anyone? Our corner of the E.R. By this time. it is 6 A.M. and a loud noise resembling a train emerges from the bathroom. We are relieved to learn that it is only the laundry crew which has arrived to mutilate sheets and scrub suits. At 7 AM., we are permitted to eat breakfast if we aren ' t busy. It is almost a pleasant sound to hear the kitchen help ' s arrogant, Wh ' you won? , for then I know my 13 hour shift is coming to an end. Love. Your husband Woeful victim of bathroom cleaner nated job description. He ranks second only to the Dean in executive priveleges. Tonight he is especially on edge since he is training a new buffer. There seems to be a big push to convert 48th St. leaf rakers into City Line floor buffers now that 48th SI. has closed. I don ' t exactly understand this reasoning since it is now that the leaf rakers are drastically needed. After trash completes his task. the E.R. silence is shattered by the mad mopper crashing through the E.R. door. He greets us with a hearty. what ' s up Doer and a devious. Got any pills? , and is quickly about his task mopping only the tile floors, He then takes a break for coffee and at times gets very upset if he can ' t find ade- quate sugar and cream. After piling all the trash neatly against the E.R. door and refilling his bucket with clean water, he leaves. Almost as quickly as he appeared he vanishes. but not before leaving tracks of dirty water on the freshly buffed floor. Shortly alter the mad mopper leaves. trash empiter arrives to empty the big cans and take away all the trash. dragging it to the door. smearing it over the trail of water that the mapper left. The comic relief is usually interrupted rudely at 4 A.M.by a pa- tient complaining of abdominal pain which started six weeks ago and now has become unbearable. The patient is quickly treated and discharged, making room for the daily. early-morning psychotic. Mad !doppyr Yes. Dr. Feinstein, it definitely was the Mad Mapper oat. tared me from behind. S21301i0 • ploorlp uffbq altia S1130110 S,NVI3ISAII4 Date Ordered ............. STAFF ORDERS OF CLINICS P•USW 01,7 ;.aati.P.:3Th.13- DEPARTMENT area fh Cgt No. Date Discontinued (Dy whom) 113111if 6 1 5,, P E e t At • e C.,,,,: eclat ' T 9 4, z yc AAA 0 r ;al frowmi ti,„,t, A, 3 litem. k - 1;iS7,Tu; 1,4-ss -2 ; t Se s men-i nit:1V° t ...- el e 7 1 947. e A. Sizels7s ..r c, 1 r 45P At ii oA Elrer t 4.) Vtnc. r c . ”, r ,r .n 5 no- clv4,75 11.4-7 ir 504... . ,Ct 7,40 • Awl ,L,h4-7 At, 7,7) b 6L, ' n r .% A A V✓dite As ro , i !Al61. , It EsPeceerav ' at AS p g A 4_S Air .up . t :-. i 70 ,..,.:.• ,S :44,,e Nears ✓oie,,,, .• i iereee,...: Pays Date Note progress of east, complication, consultations bang° in diageoan octillion on dmeSarge, instructions to patient. Ito AVE 1 4 473 1 ragaseiranunrie 0 te ofirinnrienexanwerrirr . ,, , ., • • ar .1 m . . ., mrcrerrarsz ; O. v , c • 7 ZTAWr INNIMISAMITInfritiffirl irriney, 1 r hz - 1111•SitraitairriltrefriS : a Sift =EMS Iffinfarl7W, 1,, • t A. di I e...,e INIMINEWZMIWAVVY 3111M Slarafiltri it et II 2 e , _ 0 .., z • :i9errari, war . ' 0 ifiNyinr LIWifirrtatTEgrM, I , ry , u • LF. - Z. Sri . AWZrirr, is .• .as . Mai0 MilliMitrn rfrir .. ,7 . o in ON Ilinnin .; • 4 ., al A. . t „ Fba a• a f - i ‘- 4, • AI G. • ..feya,arlAW0 - , 0 j , , itna„..n • .4.: : a_ . , 1 Ira I A. gs et s e at e gAlY HOSPITALS OF PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE F. H. PAITH PAVILION I STN ST. I I PROGRESS RECORD Date Note progress of case, complicatioar, conraltationa change in diagnosis, condition vs discharge, ' natio tic , to patient. fo evo•v: A A lc , , t.✓i , . E., A s; G i„ IrrWirriTtfrailliturrin. I- 4 111rirelIMMTWW7 e is A _A ,,i fat Lanai Al ONE • LinNP7M17Werillr . se. Z rOMMILerninWei b, m iv bode A - PeAnTar i fly, 01 ITIVi i, , U 0, 0 i 4 nn IM , i :... ,e, s 7 e ' owe_ a Al 4 4 at or a , - a - ,,,, .41! ' MAT Ilif eleria •. i a r • Are ma Aferstr 7 GlEtnird____ • ardrfl , ,t se — Cars o , rardwaintia . ... eximm-- 17 .at 1 E. ;Wit frF we 0 i A e b A dillMilIMILWITINift 4 42 A. tAirearay 6, t A . • a - Asas i 1 6 , he ., Ary__At• em G - Ale 71r z Al Siciene 0 HOSPITALS OF PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE F. H. BARTH PAVILION I 1 48TH ST, I PROGRESS RECORD Date NM. progrts• of as , coandie•tioas, cotsoltationo change in 4invingis, coeditIon on discharge, IzatruttIono to patitat. KAIK is (2UF ties ? : Jo I I ti LA • ,_ . As . ele M 4v o Al it 1 FrInalfrit . , .s• , rii4- it Mon ' , delilErs , i . L. , „ , , , Of,64 a i illiWYWrifielatelEY z • ' 4► el o e .; • i, A va a 7 DIRVITIVfl., . 6 ' , • ? f ' 7117ffinVIIreaffer al • :. I. II , : , I ; a oda t 1, . Pria llialiWYMErl•VIr . , • , • i a. sap . 11:4FREtrarrien - w IS a , „ pa w 6.4711W6 :7 0 et I mail . .:.% o C 1 L. c7,. .4. 44 sov 4 L... ' rar , at we 0 a Ar r i Duet PriftillYt ; • Z et ,Aialrfr:frrAiritarrszr -1• , st timmlint ,, a 4 - .111 OP 9 0 o etre 4° t C nests At vs ,c79 nee Avid HOSPITALS OF PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE F H SAUK PAVILION 1 I 48TH ST. PROGRESS RECORD If a teacher is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the threshold of your own mind. Gibram ALBERT PIERCE KLINE 1910 - 1973 And gladly woad. he learn and gladly ?eche Albert Kline devoted his lire to learning and leaching. He was proud of his membership in the company of scholars and teachers, and directed his energies during a forty year career 10 the advancement of knowledge in his held — chemistry, to the organization ol bodies ot knowledge that hey might be better taught and learned. and especially how to teach better. He was a devout Man who took very senOuSly his reSpOnSibilif les to and for hiS Students. That he was a successful teacher can be demonstrated in a variety of ways. none more telling than the fact that there was a constant strewn of calls, letters and visits from former students seeking advice, help or lug the warm CompanfOnship of one whose lie through teaching had Made ' ' all the difference ' in the lives of others. Dr. Kline was born in Philadelphia. KS education began here. HO was struck blind AS a Child. yet out of this tragedy came an experience which not only enriched the duality of his Own intellectual life, but also Mat of all those who knew him and especially. those Ahem he taught. The experience was That of having his SMOtallter read to him from the clat4Ca The fine young mind abSOrbed nel only the content of what he heard, but was shaped by the quali• ty of the thought, the art and the Spirit which made a work a classic. After he regwned his sight Dr. Kline continued his education under the auspices the Cm•Stean Brothers. thence at Western Maryland College. after Nth he taught an ungraded rural Maryland school wail ho began his graduate studies on chemistry at Johns Hopkins On. yeasty. Upon the completion 01 his graduate studies he toned the faculty 01 Washington College at Chestertown. Maryland. From his P051 he moved to Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine. Here hp and Iwo Scientists whO had studied with him at Hopkins. made a great Contribution to that cotlege ' s development, Or. Kline then taught at Northeast MISSOlar State University in Kit kOnlle until he became associated with Brescia College on Owensboro. Kenligky where his talents as a build- er helped move that college forward rapdtt Dr. Kline tinned the faculty of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine in 1963. His influence was felt immediately and his presence bought a Special SOPtoaCh to concerns are works. He was a thoughtful Counselor. he could. seven the OCCaSiOn Called, be an incisive cube He had Pugh standards and a Capacity to help Others learn to demand the Same of yes Dr. Kline was a loyal and able member of the Philadelphia College of OsteOpathiC Medicine and to 11 he gave the tun measure of his devotion and ellen until he died — still leaching. PAUL BARSKY 1925-1974 Paul Barsky of the Class 01 1947 of the Philadelphia College of OsteOpaihto Medicine died on Avowal 31.1973. Dr. Barsky maintained offices in Philadelphia and Cherry Hill. N J He was certified in his specialty. internal medicine. and al the time of his deal, preadooteleci and member of the board of the Mterican College of Osteopathic Internists and Chairman of the American Os- teopathic Board of Internal Medicine Students 01 the Philadelphia College Of Osteopathic Medicine gratefully remember Dr. Barsky as Visiting Lefilger in Internal Medicine and eSPeCtally his teaching on hospital rounds. He had a great capacity for the Clear presentation Of Cases and for eliciting from students responses and effort which nurtured rapid learning in the facts of a case and a reapornible and sympathetic perforManCe in the art of practice. 0.. Barsky was Chairman of Section foe Chest Diseases at Metropolitan Hospital in Plutadelphta. and Cherry Hill Hospital in New Jersey. He also served as Chairman Of MO Department of Internal Medicine at Washington Memorial Hospital in Turn!! Ole. New Jersey. Or Barsky was an inspired leacher col clinical medicine and a line exemplar of what it is 10 be a ty ue Osteopathic Physician. Md because of these dualities he was a very Successful and respected teacher of clinical medicine. Dr. Earl R. Trievel A graduating senior need only reflect back on what the senior year schedule was like when we began as freshman at PCOM to realize what Dr. A . Archie Feinstein has accomplished as the Assistant Dean for Clinical Training. He has gone to great lengths to secure rotations at teaching institutions across the state. as well adding new elective rotations in Philadelphia area hospitals. In addition to these progressive changes in the fourth year cirriculum Dr. Fein- stein has been of prime importance in arrang- ing for the third year students to get out of the classroom and into a clinical setting. Because of his efforts we will become better physicians and this is why we salute Dr. A. Archie Fein- stein. In recognition of his untiring and devoted ef- forts to further the education of the Class of 1974. and give us the basis and foundation of knowledge in a science which is consid- ered one of the backbones of medicine, we dedicate this space to Or. Earl R. Trievel. In the summer of 1970 when Dr. Angus Cathie died. PCOM called upon Dr. Trievel to teach Anatomy to the Class of 1974. Al- though we did not know Dr. Cathie, we can appreciate his greatness through memories and recognize his abilities. However, Dr. Trievel more than amply provided our class with an understanding and patience which could not be matched by many. His dili- gence and perseverence with our group of neophytes in medicine will be remembered by the 151 Osteopathic Physicians of the Class of 1974. Dr. Earl R. Trievel, we thank you. Dr. A. Archie Feinstein The Class of 1974 offers to Dr. Thomas M. Rowland, Jr. its special recognition for his time and efforts spent in the pursuit of the betterment of this institution. In his 24 years of association with PCOM, Dr. Rowland has served as Registrar, Director of Admissions, Associate Professor, Vice-President for Ad- ministrative Affairs and most recently, Exec- utive Vice-President. In attaining this posi- tion Dr. Rowland has displayed keen capa- bility and insight which has characterized his success. It is our sincere hope that Dr. Rowland continue his efforts so that change and advancement might become a flourishing segment of PCOM. There is, how- ever, one word which best describes what Dr. Rowland represents. This word is dedication. Dr. Rowland, we salute you. Dr. Thomas M. Rowland. Jr. Dr. Morton Greenwald We. the Class of 1974, take pride in acknowledging our collective admira- tion and respect for Dr. Morton Green- wald. Looking back upon the four years during which we were privi- leged to have been his students, his total dedication to the art of teaching and the science of medicine, his un- deniable intellect, and his subtle but unmistakable sense of humor remain the qualities for which we shall always remember him. But perhaps the grea- test tribute to the man lies in the fact that in the opinion of all the graduating classes in recent memory, his name has been synonymous with excellence. We offer to you, then, Dr. Greenwald. a somewhat inadequate but totally sincere, thank you, for all your time and effort on our behalf. ADMINISTRATION Dr. Thomas M. Rowland Executive Vice-President Mrs. Sophie F. Barth Dean of Women Dr. Frederic H. Barth President Dr. Robert England Dean of College Turrirapwor4,. k! Dr. Sherwood Mercer V.P. Educational Affairs Dr. A. Archie Feinstein Dr. Lewis Brandt Dean of Clinical Education Dean of Professional Educ. Col. John Lucas Director of Clinics Mr. James J. Fox Administrator Ms. Carol A. Fox Mr. John DeAngelis Registrar V.P. Financial Affairs Mr. Paul Weatherill Ms. Margaret Ferguson Public Relations Ms. D. Duvanee Bookstore Mr. Harold King Miss Gavighan Financial Aid Mr. and Mrs. Shanker H. Vyas Librarians • Mr. Donald Hulmes Educational Communications 1 r - 1 ab, - • fr. tr:= nix OS eni••! f In MN UM NMI MI • 1 -tialliailliiiiallOg ' 4 LW It lel ltatt•I• • ISMS Oh ' , :9- SO4 1 4111111111111111111111El•S DC . Olt.: 4111111111111111111111111S9 NA 41111111111111 811 k. ttic? RE IP 11111111 Consultation with: Internal Medicine Dr. Albert D ' Alonzo Dr. Clarence Baldwin Chairman Dr. J. Huffnagle Dr. William Daiber Dr. Irving Berkowitz Dr. James Conroy Dr. Lois Pullum 1, Sr Dr. Martin Bascove rARniAr AI Icrl II TATI(IN CARDIAC AUSCULTATION Dr. Joseph Koehler Dr. Albert Fornace Dr. Marvin Rosner Dr. Ralph Tomei Dr. William Nickey Dr. Morton Silver Dr. Alvin Rosen Dr. A. DiPiero Consultation with: PHYSIOLOGY 1 L. 4 Dr. Spencer Bradford Dr. Kodwow Abaidoo Dr. Robert Mancini Mr. George Abbas and Mrs. Lewis Dr. Frank Falbey Mr. Nicholas Grego Dr. Nicholas Renzi Linus Another Quiz?! NO PROIkEM IS 50 Me azsp COMPLICATED THAT IT CANT DE RUN AWAY FROM! Remember When? Consultation With: SURGERY Dr. Robert Erwin Dr. Alexander Chernyk Drs. Pedano and Young Dr. John Fleitz Dr. Harry Binder Dr. Leonard Segal Dr. James Harris Dr. Galen Young Sr. Dr. Henry D ' Alonzo Dr. Thomas Powell How! What?! Hmmm! Dr. H. Steinsnyder Dr. Leonard Finkelstein Irrigantes Bladdericthyes? Dr. Herman Poppe Dr. Thomas Moy Dr. Charles Hemmer Consultation With: E.N.T. Dr. Theodore Mauer Dr. Charles Snyder Dr. Lynn Sumerson Dr. John Sheetz Dr. Calvin Dubrow Dr. Ronald Kirshner Dr. Mahlon Gehman Stuffy Ears!? Dr. Herman Weinberg 7r. J. Ernest Leuzinger Consultation With: ANATOMY Dr. Vincent T. Cipolla Dr. Robert England A • Mrs. Joan Moore Consultation With: PATHOLOGY Dr. Morton Greenwald Dr. Richard Wilner Dr. Syed Saidi Table 3; Quiz 4 p Dr. Dante DiMarzio TIE Dr. Dale Steventon Dr. Roderick Cannatella Consultation With: RADIOLOGY Dr. Robert Meals Dr. David Cragg Dr. Peter Tilley Dr. Paul Lloyd Dr. Aline Swift 4 4.) Dr. Charles Finnell et al. Consultation With: PEDIATRICS Dr. Samuel Caruso 33o - oot. Shoo Bear Dr. Sherwood Berman Out Feeding ? Dr. William Spaeth ) `- i If Dr. F. Munro Purse How About an Enema? Consultation With: PSYCHIATRY Dr. George Guest Dr. Morton Herskowitz Dr. Cecil Harris Dr. Anthony Jannelli Dr. Martin Goldstein Dr. Irwin Rothman Dr. H.M. Zal Dr. I. Jay Oberman Consultation With: OB-GYN fr a Dr. H. Wendelken t Dr. Emmanuel Fleigelman 4)2 bfitfis 453 KiN Nor- circa Dr. L. Kirifides Dr. William Morris Dr. Harry Davis Dr. Charles Neun Consultation With: O.P. P. Dr. Nicholas Nicholas Dr. Marvin Blumberg Dr. David Heilig Dr. Merrill Mirman Dr. J. Sulman Dr. Ronald Meltzer Dr. William Barnhurst Consultation With: MICROBIOLOGY Dr. Robert Stockmal Dr. Philip Lessig Dr. L. D ' Antonio Dr. Emma Allen Mrs. Irene Guthrie Consultation With: DERMATOLOGY Qat Derm Lecture Dr. Edwin Cressman Dr. Walter Willis T. Pallidum Consultation With: Dr. Romano DeMeio Dr. Joseph Piscetelli Dr. Helene Markus Consultation With: CLINICS Dr. E. Masterson Dr. John Gianforte 48th St. Gang Dr. Stanley Travis Dr. Robert Weisberg Dr. Maurice Rosman Dr. Mary Jane Gelnett Dr. James Witt Dr. Anthony Repici Consultation With: INTERNS AND RESIDENTS Dr. Philip Pantie Dr. John Simelaro Dr. Bernard McDonnell Dr. Richard Purse Dr. Ca Dr. Edward Miskiel et al Dr. Ronald Phillips Dr. Willard Stitzell Dr. Charles SchUt1 44 Dr. John Simelaro Dominic Pis ano Dr. Philip Daibert Dr. Robert Crowell Dr. Allan Snyder Dr. Timothy Honderick NO CONSULTATION NEEDED! NURSES NOTES I Oh, theahrewdness of their shrewdness when they ' re shrewd. And the rudeness of their rudeness When they ' re rude; But the shrewdness of their shrewdness and the rudeness of their rudeness, Are nothing to their goodness When they ' re good. Anonymous • IS !ll FS110 rci . --WA nt! Yes, That ' s easy for you to say! A Day In The Life Woke up, fell ouf of bed, Dragged a comb across my head. Found my way downstairs and drank a cup, And looking up I noticed I was late . . The Beatles Dear Diary. 11-1.73 I know this is a little wierd — only chicks are sup- posed to have diaries (and there ' s only three chances in 151 that I ' m a chick) but I just had to preserve this day for posterity. As you know I ' m at the 48th Street Clinic now and it rained today. You knOw what that means, I walked in puddles all day. No, they haven ' t opened the new clinic upstairs yet. Maybe the next group will be lucky but I ' m still in the basement. Anyway, what a day! The guy in the booth before me left me five appointments for today — pre-nasals, neo- natals and post-nalals — and I added four more. I couldn ' t help it, they pleaded with me on the phone yes- terday: Docta. I mus ' see ya I ' m Okay. I said ' tome right over and I ' ll see you. Oh no, It can ' t come in today. I ' ll see ya tomorrow. Docla. It gotta see ya: l ' s can ' t feel nothin ' in my left arm or leg. Docta. can It bring my baby in. He ' s been coughin ' to two weeks. What could I do I scheduled them all. I guess I ' m a soft touch. I got to the clinic at 8:30, or rather I got to the parking lot at 8:30. and then the daily battle with the attendants started. After directing me to the most distant corner of the lot, I was instructed. with much hand waving, to get closer and closer to the car next to me. Finally, the attendant was sa- tisfied: however. I couldn ' t get out of my car. The door wouldn ' t open enough to lel my black bag out, even without my body being attached to it. I had to crawl over my bucket seats and scramble out the other door just as the next poor sucker was being waved closer and closer to my car. My first patient was waiting for me while I reg- istered on the infamous sign in sheer. I grabbed a detainment doughnut. grabbed my junior and said: No conference for us today. Doc. We ' ve got to stamp out pestilence and disease Far out, said my junior. I picked up my slack of Charts and spilled my coffee all in one beautiful sweep of my overdeveloped right wrist.(Overdeveloped from all my days as a noletaker.) After many apologies all around for staining about 12 years worth of records. I took my remaining coffee, my charts, my patient. and my junior and trucked us all into my booth. As an extra added attraction, the patient ' s mother joined us, She was a five month prenatal check- up (the patient not the mother) and was seen early in the AM so she could get to High School on time. Her mother had to get to work and didn ' t like me taking time to chew my doughnut or explain to my junior how to do a pre- natal visit. We were standing in the back of the conference room weighing the patient with my junior holding a bottle of her urine when I told him I was gonna let him draw the blood. Diary. don ' t ever tell a junior he ' s gonna draw blood while he ' s holding a bottle of urine in his hand. After cleaning up that mess we went back to the booth and did it. We drew blood for a type and Rh, CBC, SMA. VDRL, FBS. BUN, Nil. T3. T4. FTI and all the other letters of the alphabet before my junior stuck me with the needle. Pray for a non-reactive or I ' ll never be able to explain it to my girlfriend (or my wife). The next patients were supposed to be an eight week neo-nate and her eight week post-partum mother. How- ever, they weren ' t there yet so we took the hypertensive. diabetic early. Needless to say, we had to wallow through about five inches of old charts since this lady has been a patient since before Orinase and she ' s had every pill invented since. Her blood sugar is always be- tween 160 and 190 no matter what the new Doctor in the booth does to her medication schedule, So. we weighed her. BPed her, Rxed her and managed to get her out of the booth and back on the street in only 37 minutes — a modern day record for efficiency. Our next customer. I mean patient, was a real winner, a 25 year old girl with bumps on her vagina. Her histo- ry read like a Gyn course: GC. PIO. various colored discharges, abortions, syph. breakthrough bleeding. tuba! pregnancy and finally BC pills. I wanted to have her seen in Gyn Clinic, partially for her benefit but mostly for mine. (The amount of gynecology I know could fit in a thimble. Uncle Manny ' s lecturesfstories and assisting on two D C ' s and a hysterectomy does not a gynecologist make.) Unfortunately, the Clinic was cancelled so my junior and I took her alone — with the protection of a nurse of course. This was the patient who had called and begged for an appointment slat ' cause she was bleeding. I expected her to be all anemic and dragging but she practically danced into the gyn room, and while she ar- ranged herself on the table she told us that the bleeding from yesterday wasn ' t exactly bleeding but just some spotting due to trying out a new 80 pill. By now she was in lithotomy and my junior and I took a look at the bumps. ' car out, said my junior. Lord only knows what they were but the nurse told me how to treat them. Ad- mitting my limitations and not knowing if the nurse was right or wrong, I conveyed the treatment to the un- suspecting patient. By this time the neo-nate and mother had strolled in, so my junior and I quickly set up a gyn appointment for bumps and took the eight week old kid into the ex- amine room. My junior had never done a neo-nate physi- Cal SO we started going through it slowly, looking in every hole we could and being wet on by the ones we couldn ' t. After a thorough and detailed examination (in- terrupted by only three phone calls) it was decided that the baby ' s coughing and sneezing warranted putting off the DPT and stuff for a week. While wailing in line to get a Rx signed for the kid ' s cough, I pondered what it would be like to be a cab driver or climb to the highest peaks of the Himalayas and how I could get out of examining the mother. My daydreams were interrupted by cries of. Who ' s next, Who ' s next. While the pen and signing perscriptions and order sheets galore I dropped the fate- ful question: Can we do post-partum exams ourselves or do they have to be done in Gyn Clinic, As the reply of Gyn Clinic crossed his lips. a smile crossed mine for the first time that AM. ' Par out, muttered my breathless junior. I was explaining to the mother that we would set up an appointment for her when I heard my name Called thru the humming of fans and bits of conversations in the nearby booths. This must be the patient who called up and said she was numb on her left side. I thought. I went to pick up the ever-present pink slip with thoughts Of impending CVA ' s. spinal cord tumors and wield syndromes running through my brain. My junior aided the stricken woman into the booth and we Opened her chart reading for clues to the progression of her symptoms. What we found was: Patient seen for chronic complaint of the past six years of weakness in the left arm and leg. Will continue psychiatric treatment. My junior said. I think its time for lunch. I managed to finish up the chronic CVA just as he finished up a Paul ' s Delightful Deli sandwich. A page to Telephone No. 1 filled in spare 20 seconds before Surgery Clinic and had me condemned to hear about the benefits of life insurance from Mutual of Byhalia . a well known company specializing in policies for medical students. Pay nothing now and nothing ' tit age 74 and get nothing if you die. But, here ' s the catch . . . it you die of Tsutsugamushi fever west of the Monogohela River betwee n two and five in the afternoon your heirs get an all expenses paid trip to see Ursinus vs. F S M football game. I actually was glad I was paged to Surgery Clinic. This patient was no big deal. just your or- dinary wound abcoss post-herniorraphy. By now I was moving in slow motion so when I picked up my next pink slip I wasn ' t truly happy to find that it had come in duplicate. The mother whose kid had a two week old cough had decided to bring her other kid too. I Pulled rank on my junior, who had been away at Otorhinolaryngology Clinic (he hasn ' t learned how to say ENT yet), and told him I needed his assistance to do two patients at once. He was more than willing to help and I gave him the five month old and kept the two year old for myself. I must be a masochist, why do I consider being a Pediatrician when these little kids always yell into the stetheScopo and try pull it out of my ears. With the tin- nitus still present I remembered the holding techniques! I held both the kid ' s arms behind his back and squeezed ' III his fingers turned blue. I pressed his legs down to the table with my right thigh, put my left knee in his side and bite his ear (on the side away from the mother, of course). I used my free hand to hold the ' scope against his chest and got a real good listen to his heart and breath sounds, which were faint, irregular and distant (possibly due to the pain and discomfort in his hands and ribs). out. said my junior noting the position. I would ' ve listened longer but I thought I heard a rib snap and besides I was paged to Telephone No. 2. Is you the Docla in boot fineen. the voice asked. I was at the ' mergency room at City Line, an they tor me to get a ' pointment to check ma sugar. An ' l ' s needs some a ma water pills and pressure pills too. I ran out ' bout a couple a months ago an ' I ' m dizzy an ' gets nosebleeds. That ' s why I went to the ' mergency room an ' they tor me to call my boot Meta. Fine, I said. I didn ' t mean it and I gave her an appointment for the day after I leave. Just as I got back to the pediatric menagerie. I got Paged to the front desk. Doctor, you have a new admis- sion! I started to complain but to no avail. No problem is so big or so complicated that it can ' t be run away from, I decided. So I walked up to the patient sitting dociley in the waiting room and spoke: Now that you ' ve completed the first day ' s procedure of registering at the Clinic, we can make an appointment for your physical sometime next week. Before the patient knew what hap- pened, I had an appointment slip in her hand and wisked her out the door. Far out, said my junior who had wit- nessed the scene from afar. We went back to the kids and tested them for oligodendrogliomas which we see in our practice two or three times a millennium. but since they adequately performed adiadochokinesis. we gave them a clean bill of health. There wasn ' t even a trace of the two week old coughing disease which historically seemed to be present only at 2 AM and was related to the child sleeping on a leather pillow with many leaks. The diag- nosis was confirmed when we found a feather in the kids ear and another in his nose. My junior and I conferenced and decided both kids needed DPT ' s and OPV ' s. I told him he could give the shots and expected the normal far out reply. He fooled me with a: It ' s 3 o ' clock so I ' ll give the OPV ' s and see ya tomorrow. It was my turn to mutter: Far out . Using the famous three seconds and duck approach, I made the kids cry and managed to save them from the three dreaded diseases: D. P, and T. Mor e importantly I managed to avoid a round-house left from the two year old when they said goodbye. I added an A.M.F. of my own and slumped into my booth to catch up with my chart writing in peace, finish my morning coffee and hide until the 4 o ' clock cheek-out time. Just think Diary. I only have to go thru this for one more week and then I change rotations. the following week I start Beds at Barth . vosTEOPOlr OBJECT: Each player (student) is to make one complete turn of the board. Each color coded quarter of the board cor- risponds to one year of school at P.C.O.M. After this, the player is eligable for graduation. The object of OSTEOPOLY is, of course, to cooporate and graduate. STARTING THE GAVR: In order to start the game, each:player . must open up his bone box and remove skull. The player whose skull has the most teeth goes first, the player to his left, second, etc. If n one of the skulls have teeth, the player with the most complete bone box goes first. PLAYING I.• , Gt:E: Each player in turn rolls the die and moves the corresponding number of spaces, following the directions thereon. No spaces are to be skipped unless so indicated, Note that in OSTEOTOLY there are more penalties than benefits, In all disputes between players, the rule of the artery is supreme. In all disputes between students and LPXb, forget it. CHANCE: When a player lands on CHANCE , he is to draw a CHANCE CARD and follo ' the directions as per card. CHANCE CARDS are to be cut out from the adjoining page and stacked on board in the appropriate spot. pcwy NENTINq: Occasionally, i.e. every other day, the t will land on CLASS If so, there is just nothing he can do about it but wait it out. If he has been thoughtful enough to bring a lunchAnd dinner, he may eat it now. Otherwise, he mayreel free to expound on his particular philosophy of education, individualism, cooperation, or organized chaos. In lieu of this ' e may laugh at the human condition, and at himself for staying. 3UM0a: If a player lands on TOMB , he must make up a rumor and tell the other players. If they believe him, he gets a free turn and all their Osteopathic Seals, If not, he is the topic of the next CLASS rIMING. WM.ING THE GAM: All players who make one complete rotation of tfle to the rules, win the game. You may not be original, but at least you ' re a winner. THIS IS Y12 01A PPSONAL CPY OF THE OSTEPOLv GAME OIL • Tu tem.sa a.ma or contra ncv MENS ET MANUS CI-LANCE CARDS SE rn .3541 NI N31401110N0)9MYT0V103t1 NIN ' 03SO10 N000 4330 1r40439 133.1 ASVW ' 330 A1tl T 01 Na1113N ' I358011 09a101 WINO =UN AD 313VA0) 1SON $moi 4711MA) a01413)? I no Sfl HaM 4,r NOTIONS DU AA .tpuneti Whom, OSTEOPOLY REGISTERED IN SYNAPSIS Of CE MARCH REGSTRADA Pcam. TRADEMARK CO9 RISI4T 01974 BY SYNAPSIS MADE AT BARTH PAVILLION 0 :91, ii•-• i - t2 CHANCE . - - = n zat m THUS MD THUS- MOIJSTACPE gl TRANSFER- RELOw PAC RARLEP OP uP. JUST VISITING Rts .4 HEAR . S‘E .TES, T•S Alt VEIBEAF av Yet0 PICK up BONL BOX. EMI Activities and Associated Organizations ,f8m Neonatology Society Bariatric Society Radiology Club Society E.N.T. Club r Orthopedic Society Dematology Society Proctology Club Anatomy Club Physiological Chemistry Society Microbiology Club Pediatrics Society Surgery Society Ob-Gyn Society Anesthesia Club Others Interested in Anesthesia Psychiatric Society Cranial Manipulation Society Papanicalou Society Honor Society Thoracic Society S.O.M.A. Student A.O.A. Undergraduate Academy of Applied Osteopathy Lamda Omicron Gamma Phi Sigma Gamma Iota Tau Sigma Atlas Club And then John Reached out toward Marsha, suddenly Ripping off her . . . • I • ir - . (or STUDENT WIVES ASSOCIATION 1974 This year PCOM graduates its largest class and SWA will graduate 41 fourth year wives. We have pushed carts in the halls of 48th St., sold clinic coats, given away doughnuts in Evans lounge, and wined and danced with some of the best D.O. ' s P.C.O.M. has produced, i.e. our husbands! SYNAPSIS 1974 ri re- , Steve Krathen Mike Ziev Andy Meshekow Jerry Olshan Neil Tytler Maury Singer Les Ruppersberger Editor-in-Chief Rich Tucker Tom Baker Nick Tretta HISTORY PHYSICAL I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good therefore that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any fellow creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again. Anonymous v Atli 1-N AO I.IOM. larlevanlOn LOU Mtn 24 HOW.? Yes MO CO OHM ini4 4 ow PAM 2111200WhiliVi)1 F4mI4y Hinpry A STORY OF ikeinctLi2..477oA) 06 I No eh, 0 6thor areas; 7(fie4aY ..506,Tea7 As Eflierene0 en Ites Am rhokr-vc- vii Nis opeom,,✓, 0esaho5E. ,17 the --.4.027:;7; bN eie nie,e7h. 00 (RA inOlt atop ttas of flArylay A IVelrgieon; j eksfized bra-A4Reces As vet( el§ ebe 4G4 efreiteese sareer lo lee A Meal ht, or The thede4C egoptss,4). SoeTtel wit5 Achndred fitesenZfiini spire his ihatr - wlite% suesIded 10 eta weeks ong An -r6f Rethis A97 ,e1:5 op . 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BARTH PAVILION 48TH ST. 1 1 HISTORY Dilt• •1141214 YR 1;4 M Ma,ey - 5eAs ( iittt of nsw 0494 7;); a We 4 se This 1,,nn save us Se u arne-f 6.,ea ,9-s t471::7 ideAffur aimmes, 74e .1 ....s727;77044,- A.77 Sufi vi✓ ) oAdy 47 ' die PA perm s op ?As 4s,6 40:1 tar Edy . Ov t S✓eTte7 hats LeAvE of Ate ' Ak-E AN 4 ' % 74,41 Ant, u, 7S CG Wu T 64;ni , Fxoess,ve s40 4C Ecleno, cons e A • 4xo A hool: el o ye.125 4514 s Iase‘h sor ' Woad! . gin flue a 440A de 6 oi Sae-Tear Sovcchl idtLp 8_4 9 leateu✓..s ours Ve bv..a:11: 7704.5 our ao fro Afratil. As 44,7 aerawr feetAftweAIT Reltec OF hits Symproms. 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Out Suareer tee G90 Aes Remiss Ay of Wt ' s SI 071)71 4-5 0 Al SA A ' ' ' 11) I mese Lit WerzE 0 f g-,,, Lvit ' t me pir Al fr Me -T0 WE E 0 of AA (114) ttitm Symms stga- ,g•xi710 ExIce,cogio M 7is elo week ' s bet- 4-7 4-01y iliostriZs. Miyekre, gfra. 711eleili-bin 0,,:iG. A Mtb ,72.477:1,- ,tia 71; ad ) • As ortrez. ,red Otine-si s , easev fivititiYm(AV at ISevatessiou; ObSEtveCnin S7limmo 9 ' z C4 5447 willio•Z lh fl mita Now fr is ' YU- 1,,Qice .5 p„,,s., NE vc 2 to hvb .8, So ' e KleAe4 IA) Altowi Mato Mt de 00Efies wh;v11 Al osTiv ovM yE4As ilt ,vowleilse. our ? obs of So.bort., kspkointty uriT 94v-s7 971 ' UT sAdv77,9 %fe covet so 7hp m ysfrds, is eims ten-esty Otig So ' biota- 41 44 6 %OS ifim (AA whs7 us Az ' tfogoe . S7 yi-ds (iree r A . yenn-s at- The expe4 eAd..r 74e me4e4ider, 1-04ms wh )ed) pm. Juareer aot saejec-r,in MOE bolt 4 frdi 4,41 iv,c • yeas ao D 0124 215 441,‘ C g .,,, irith 4 tev4- OEvae6. 60 ocit teed) 17 RE.egIui % Locos.. ouournan uenerai I frit 0,9040“,•44 JACK ABARBANEL, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Pennsylvania State Univ. oil • 0--C-4A--1,` ' - A-•-4. MARK I. ACKERMAN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple University PHILIP M. ANDRESS, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. Dickinson College CHARLES T. ANDREWS, D.O. St. Clair, Penna. B.A. Temple Univ. LARRY A. ANTOLICK, D.O. Reading Penna. B.S., Pennsylvania State Univ. THOMAS E. BAKER, D.O. Byhalia, Ohio B.S. Ohio State Univ. DONALD A. BARONE, D.O. Hillsdale, New Jersey A.B., Rutgers State Univ. 64,7,e4c_ dedei2 BARBARA ANN BATTALINO, O.O. North Bergen, New Jersey B.S., College of Mt. St. Vincent JOHN J. BATTALINO, D.O. North Bergen, New Jersey A.B. PMC Colleges LUTHER E. BEIL, D.O. Danielsville, Penna. B.S. in Pharm, Temple U. JOSEPH W. BELL S.O. Fayette City, Penna. B.S., Allegheny College ANTHONY V. BENEDETTO, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. Saint Joseph ' s College (51 NEIL JON BERGER, D.O. Merrick, New York A.B., State University of N.Y. CHARLES M. BOLNO, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Temple University • j H. WILLIAM BONEKAT, D.O. Broomall, Penna. B.S., Clemson University Graduating But Not Photographed Thomas P. Bride, D.O. Cranford, New Jersey A.B., Franklin Marshall College sta THOMAS V. BRISLIN, D.O. Wilkes-Barre, Penna. A.B., University of Pennsylvania FRANK J. BROOKS, D.O. Clarion, Penna. Clarion State College AVROM S. BROWN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple U. WILLIAM P. BROWN, D.O. Troy, Penna. B.S., University of Rochester Graduating But Not Photographed Daniel B. Brubaker, D.O. Ephrata, Penna. B.S., Elizabethtown College DAVID E. BRUCE, D.O. Drexel Hill, Penna. A.B., Franklin Marshall Coll. HARRY JOHN BRULEY, D.O. McAdoo, Penna. 2 Wilkes College WAYNE R. BUCHWALD, D.O. Hawthorne, N.Y. B.S. U. of Pittsburgh JAMES J. BYRNE, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A. B., Rutgers State University 1 DENNIS W. CAKOUROS, D.O. Johnstown, Penna. B.S. U. of Pittsburgh A AVRIM CANTOR, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., C.W. Post College .L1, 0,A VINCENT F. CARR D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., LaSalle College c WILLIAM E. CARROLL, D.O. Saratoga Springs, N.Y. B.S. Indiana Institute of Technology LEON M. CATTOLICO, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. in Pharm, Temple U. GEORGE 0. CHATYRKA, D.O. Collingswood, New Jersey A.B. Rutgers — State U. DAVID H. CLYMER, D.O. Lancaster, Penna. B.S. Millersville State College TIDAL CENTER! A C04,,,, IRVING M. COHEN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple U. JERRY A. COHEN, D.O. Broomall, Penna. A.B., Temple University LARRY W. COHEN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Pennsylvania State Univ. Graduating But Not Photographed Dennis M. Conneen, D.O. Springfield, Penna. B.S., Villanova University DAVID L. COOLEY, D.O. New Castle, Penna. B.S., Youngstown State University STEPHEN P. COWEN Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. St. Joseph ' s College FRED A. COX, D.O. Scranton, Penna. A.B. Franklin Marshall College T. 10F WILLIAM K. DAIBER, D.O. Rydal, Penna. B.S., Trinity College n D4 MICHAEL J. D ' ANGELO, D.O. Lebanon, Penna. B.S.. University Of Pittsburgh. CHARLES E. DAROWISH, D.O. Hazletown, Penna. B.S. St. Joseph ' s College NORMAN A. DEAN, D.O. Silver Spring, Maryland B.S., U.S. Naval Academy JOHN W. DENMAN, D.O. Pennsville, New Jersey A.B., Drew University ' IA ALBERT A DE POLO JR., D.O. Morrisville, Penna. B.S. Pennsylvania State U. HENRY R. DI TOMMASO, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. in Pharm, Temple U. ARTHUR J. DORTORT, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., University of Pennsylvania , 2 NICHOLAS J. DRAGANN, D.O. Penn Valley, Penna. B.S. St. Joseph ' s College ANDREW F. DRAKE, D.O. Norwood, Penna. B.S. Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science 111■10 MICHAEL N. DUBROFF, D.O. Philadelphia Penna. LaSalle College MITCHELL E. EDELSTEIN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B., Temple Universtiy Y‘m JOHN T. FARRELL, Ill, D.O. Glendora, N.J. B.S. Phila. College of Pharmacy and Science MICHAEL J. FEINSTEIN, D.O. Merion Station, Penna. B.S., Muhlenberg College BRUCE D. FELDMAN, D.O. Philadelphia Penna. A.B., Temple University GERALD A. FISHMAN, D.O. Wynnewood, Penna. A.B., LaSalle College HARRY P. FLANAGAN, Ill, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.Sc. Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science DAVID J. FONTAINE, D.O. Portland, Maine A.B., University of Maine JOSEPH C. GAMBONE, D.O. Glenside, Penna. A.B. La Salle College M. JAMES GERRIE, D.O. Fairfield, Maine B.S., Northeast Missouri State College n 7. 4re JOSEPH F. GOLD, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.S., Temple University lbw RALPH GORDON, D.O. Wildwood, New Jersey B.S., PMC Colleges 4 JACK 0. GRATCH, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Phila. College Pharm Sc. 0E4711 Sse.n, STEVEN F. HABUSTA D.O. Parma, Ohio B.S., John Carroll University iL MARTIN A. HACK EL, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Pennsylvania State Univ. -11 1 PWO JAMES M. HARNDEN, D.O. Solon, Ohio B.S., Marietta College Le .•, 0 . • • CARL A. HOFFMAN, D.O. Harrisburg, Penna. A.B., Thiel College a V -04 d FRED B. HOOPER, D.O. New Cumberland, Penna. A.B. Lafayette College V.M.D., U. of P. Sch. of Vet. Med. - EDWARD A. HUBACH, O.O. Maple Heights, Ohio A.B., Case Western Reserve z9a---eo6L4 Jaaa_ DANIEL D. JANIAK, D.O. Pittsbu rgh, Penna. B.S. in Pharm, Duquesne Univ. School of Pharmacy r RAYMOND J. JENSEN, D.O. Lindenhurst, New York B.S., State Univ. Of N.Y. at StonyBrook cC JOHN THOMAS JOHNSON, D.O. Davenport, Iowa B.S. Parsons College RICHARD A. JOHNSON, D.O. McKeesport, Penna. A.B. Thiel College ROBERT R. KANEDA, D.O. Media, Penna. B.S., Lebanon Valley College 7 ' 1 as CHARLES A. KASTENBERG, D.O. Cherry Hill, New Jersey B.S. in Pharm, Rutgers State U. vkck STEVEN KATZ, D.O. Wyncote, Penna. A.B., Temple University C. C. ROGER KENDRICK, D.O. East Greenbush, New York B.S. Siena College M.A. St. Rose College DENNIS KITSKO, D.O. Johnstown, Penna. B.S. University of Pittsburgh XoccAztQ. DEAN T. KOUKOS, D.O. Upper Darby, Penna. B.S., St. Joseph ' s College H I STEPHEN A. KRATHEN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science ARNOLD S. KREMER, D.O. Bala Cynwyd, Penna. B.S., Albright College 47? RICHARD A. LA CAVERA, D.O. Elmer, N.J. B.A. Temple U. ..fc JAMES D. LAVIS, D.O. Ocean City, N.J. B.S. U. of Notre Dame ee, FRANCIS L. LEVIN, D.O. Turnersville, New Jersey A.B., LaSalle College =NW • AARON J. LISTOPAD, D.O. Sharon, Penna. A.B. Thiel College WILLIAM R. McCLINTIC, D.O. Pittsburgh, Penna. A.B., Lehigh University MORRIS E. MCCRAY D.O. Riviera Beach, Fla. B.S. Florida Atlantic University JAMES A. MCLAUGHLIN, D.O. Shaker Heights, Ohio A.B. Baldwin-Wallace College M.S. Syracuse University MICHAEL J. MARKS, D.O. Coraopolis, Penna. B.S. (Pharm) M.S. (Pharm Tox.), Duquesne University ALAN L. MESHEKOW, D.O. Asbury Park, N.J. A.B. University of Rhode Island I ' 17A,L2m., ROBERT M. METZMAN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S.M.E. Drexel U. 4 1 4; -)0 - 1th 11I JULIUS A. MINGRONI, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science MARC A. MINTZ, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Pennsylvania State Univ. ' i21‘14e: BARRY M. MONTAGUE, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Pennsylvania State Univ. ,,,k, v)2, )2,7 , MICHAEL W. MOORE, D.O. Lawrenceville, New Jersey A.B., University of Conneticut KENNETH A. MORRIS, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Temple University CHARLES C. MORRONE, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. (Pharm) Phila. Coll. Pharm Sc. C Paa 97 ielz = 7,111,19111 PAUL D. MORTE, D.O. Marlboro, Mass. A.B. Georgetown University x SQ A FRANCIS X. MURRAY, D.O. Bellmawr, N.J. A.B. La Salle College 4eLAceig6L RICHARD J. NAFTULIN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple U. HARVEY B. NASSAU, D.O. Belle Harbor, N.Y. A.B. City College of New York aga. „.(Af JERRY A. OLSHAN, D.O. Broomall, Pa. A.B. Temple U. • ext., a (9-ahek...., CHERYL ANN OPALACK,D.O. Pottstown, Penna. A.B., Temple University aatatra.. ANDREW J. PANKO, D.O. OW Forge, Penna. B.S., University of Scranton RICHARD G. PAOLINO,D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. (Pharm), Temple Univ, Sch. of Pharm Q RICHARD A. PAPA, D.O. New Castle, Penna. B.S., University of Pittsburgh Ara ROBERT J. PETERSON, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. Pennsylvania State U. -11-1.-041 RICHARD H. PLUMMER, D.O. Wilmington, Delaware B.S., Penn Morton College JOHN V. READ, D.O. Delaware S. Georgetown University THOMAS F. RENNY, D.O. Yonkers, New York A.B., Villanova University HERMAN REYES, D.O. Houston, Texas B.S. University of Houston School of Pharmacy GERALD E. REYNOLDS, D.O. Port Allegany, Penna. B.S., Indiana Univ. of Penna. DAVID J. RISSMILLER, D.O. Hatfield, Penna. B.S., Muhlenberg College ROBERT M. ROESHMAN,D.O. Bryn Mawr, Penna. A.B., B.S., Pennsylvania State Univ. L.A. RUPPERSBERGER, D.O. Philadephia, Penna. A.B., University of Pennsylvania GEORGE W. RUSSIAN, D.O. Mt. Ephraim, New Jersey B.S. Ursinus College tub STEPHEN E. SACHS, D.O. Abington, Penna. B.S. Ursinus College EDWARD J. SARAMA, D.O. Blackwood, New Jersey A.B. St. Francis College JOHN E. SCHULTZ, D.O. Williamsport, Penna. B.S. Juniata College RICHARD A. SCOTT, D.O. Cranston, R.I. • ' ‘! t4 --le d ROBERT H. SCHULTHORPE, D.O. Manasquam, N.J. B.S. U. of Nebraska ■ MITCHELL S. SEIDMAN, D.O. Brooklyn, New York B.S., 0.D., Pennsylvania College of Optometry HOWARD A. SHELDON, D.O. Audubon, New Jersey B.S., University of Pittsburgh STANLEY L. SIMPSON, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S., Temple University MAURICE SINGER, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., M.A., Temple University ' e 1 1r r e MICHAEL S. SLOTOROFF, D.O. Pleasantville, New Jersey A.B., West Virginia University HARVEY A. SOIFER, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple U. WILLIAM J. SOMERSET, D.O. Audobon, New Jersey A.B. Seton Hall U. ...e-rieVt•C 1, Ilk 40 DENNIS M. SPILLER, D.O. Claymont, Delaware A.B., University of Delaware HARVEY T. STARR, O.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple U. FRANKLIN D. STRONG, D.O. Philadelphia. Penna. A.B., Temple University davadCSt5 a 4, ?A EDWARD A. STYDUHAR JR., D.O. Sharon, Penna. B.S. Grove City College 142 cm—•••-• ' GARRY F. SUSSMAN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Temple University MICHAEL TANITSKY, D.O. Cynwyd, Penna. A.B. Pennsylvania State U. EDWARD TAXIN, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. B.S. Muhlenberg College MARC E. TENNENBAUM,D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Franklin College tlY . ■ L. ' • I • MARY JUDE TETER, D.O. Jessup, Penna. A.B., Temple University JOSEPH T. TRETTA, D.O. Drexel Hill, Penna. B.S., St. Joseph ' s College 7-„.7 ,A NICHOLAS D. TRETTA, D.O. Drexel Hill, Penna. A.B. Villanova University __ czAtL, RICHARD G. TUCKER, D.O. Cheltenham, Penna. A.B., LaSalle College NEIL B. TYTLER, D.O. Pottstown, Penna. B.S., Ursinus College D ' haeceA Ltkeloatitteet DONALD P. UNDERWOOD, D.O. Pennsauken, New Jersey A.B., Rutgers State University (5-1Z,)zilL EDWARD J. VECCHIONE, D.O. Newark, New Jersey A.B., Seton Hall University GEORGE D. VERMEIRE, D.O. West Middlesex, Penna. B.S., University of Pittsburgh GLENN N. WAGNER, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B. Temple U. JAY H. WEITBERG, D.O. Cherry Hill, New Jersey B.S., PMC Colleges KENNETH D. WINOKUR, D.O. Philadelphia, Pa. B.S. Ogelthorpe College Cf GARY GLEN WRIGHT, D.O. Eagle Lake, Texas B.S., Pharm., Univ. of Houston School of Pharmacy DENNIS B. ZASLOW, D.O. Havertown, Penna. B.S., Albright College MICHAEL A. ZIEV, D.O. Philadelphia, Penna. A.B., Temple University When business is good it pays to advertise; when business is bad you ' ve got to advertise. Anonymous Congratulations To The Class of 1974 PARKVIEW HOSPITAL 1331 East Wyoming Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19124 Approved For: Anesthesiology Intern Training Residency Training: Internal Medicine Podiatric Internships Obstetrics-Gynecology Pediatrics Presently 172 Beds General Surgery A Planned 225 Bed Facility Radiology We Welcome The Class of 1974 To The ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Of The Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine ART CENTRE HOSPITAL 0$T CO PAT nIC 541$ AVENUE • DETROIT. MICHIGAN 48202 831-6660 OltM. 40U10. ..... Surgery Approved For Intern Training Anesthesiology Approved For Residency Training Internal Medicine Clinical Clerk Elective Radiology Obstetrics-Gynecology Rotations (Internal Medicine, General Surgery, Family Practice, Pediatrics, etc.) For Application Forms and Additional Information Regarding The Above Programs Contact: Director of Educational Programs rrrr rrnir ......., OSTEOPATHIC GENERAL HOSPITAL North Miami Beach, Florida The South ' s Leading Osteopathic Institution. Accredited by Medicare Registered and Approved by American Osteopathic Association Registered and Approved by American Osteopathic Hospital Association Approved to Train Interns Approved to Train Residents Residencies in — Internal Medicine General Surgery Anesthesiology Urological Surgery Orthopedic Surgery Pathology Fine Practice Opportunities In The Area. s STUART PHARMACF.UTICALS ICI Amenca Inc Wilmington. Del 14844 t OSTI:lbrAT 1:c OENERAI frONVITAL Maher. of. MYLANTA MYLANTA-11 SORBITRATE ISOSORBIDE DINITRATE CHEWABLE SORBITRATE ISOSORBIDE DINITRATE Dedicated to the discovery development manufacture and distribution of pharmaceutist in support of the medical profession ORTHO PHARMACEUTICALS Raritan. NewJersey 08869 200 Beds A.O.H. Approved Intern and Residency Program iii TRI-COUNTY HOSPITAL Sproul and Thomson Roads Springfield , Pa. 19064 Residencies In: Anesthesiology, Internal Medicine, Orthopedics, Pediatrics, Radiology and Surgery MEMORIAL OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL 325 S. Belmont Street York, Pennsylvania 17403 Aproved for Intern and Resident Training Congratulations To A Great Senior Class USV Jack R. Mendelsohn C.L.U. Mendelsohn - Lubeck and Co. Insurance and Financial Planning Suite 1919 3 Penn Center Plaza Phila., Pa. LO-1055 USV Pharmaceutical Corp. Tucahoe, N.Y. 10707 Dedicated To the Continued Advancement of Health Through Drug Reaearch. Put SgeME FUN IN you II? I NE 366 DAYS OF THE YEAR For Information on Staff Opportunities Write: SUN COAST HOSPITAL 2025 INDIAN ROCKS ROAD LARGO. FLO RIDA 33540 The Caduceus Chapter of LAMBDA OMICRON GAMMA A r NATIONAL MEDICAL FRATERNITY Extends Best Wishes to THE CLASS OF 1974 And proudly salutes our graduating seniors: Dr. Harvey S. Benn Dr. Steven Katz Dr. Avrom S. Brown Dr. Irving M. Cohen Dr. Jerry A. Cohen Dr. Larry W. Cohen Dr. Mitchell E. Edelstein Dr. Michael J. Feinstein Dr. Bruce C. Feldman Dr. Ralph Gordon Dr. Jack 0. Gratch Dr. Charles A. Kasten berg Dr. Arnold S. Kremer Dr. Alan L. Meshekow Dr. Richard J. Naftulin Dr. Jerry A. Olshan Dr. Howard A. Sheldon Dr. Stanley L. Simpson Dr. Michael S. Slotoroff Dr. Harvey A. Soifer Dr. Harvey T. Starr Dr. Dennis B. Zaslow THE AMERICAN ONCOLOGIC HOSPITAL and THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY invite participation in a postgraduate course: CANCER DETECTION IN OFFICE PRACTICE Acceptable for 20 hours of Category I — General Practice Credit Five consecutive Wednesday Afternoon Sessions Beginning at 12:30 P.M. Joseph G. Strawitz, M.D. — Course Director COURSE OUTLINE Session 1— Introduction and Tour Head and Nock Examination Session II — Isotopes in Cancer Detection Colo-rectal Cancer Session III — Breast Cancer — Mammography and Thermography Lymphangiogralshy Session IV — Pelvic Malignancy Session V Lung Cancer BROW SCHEDULE Group 1 - Sept. 4. 1974 Group 2 • Oct. 9, 1974 Group 3 • Nov. 13, 1974 Group 4 - Jan. 8, 1975 Groups- Feb. 12. 1975 Group 6 - Mar. 19. 1975 Group 7 - Apr. 30, 1975 This postgraduate course has been in progress since May 1968 under the sponsorship of the American Cancer Society. Approximately 400 physicians have participated with enthu- siasm. The program is designed to offer the practicing physician a concentrated view of the canter problem and to help him sharpen his detection techniques and acquire new abilities in connection with special examinations such as indirect mirror laryngoscopy proctosig- moidoscopy and mammography. Participants will examin patients under the supervision of the teaching staff. The empha- sis is on practical application in daily medical practice. Upon completion of the Course. each participant receives a certificate. COURSE HELD AT: American Oncologic Hospital For Further Information Call: Central 8 Shelmire Avenues Mrs. Shirley Dowburd Ph iladelphia. Pa. 19111 RA 2-1900 Ext. 345 CONGRATULATIONS To The Class of 1974 METROPOLITAN HOSPITAL 201 North Eighth Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106 A Non-Profit Osteopathic General Hospital Accredited For Intern And Residency Training MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents Dermatology Rounds This student clearly demonstrates! a) Terminal acne. b) Senile keratosis in a 65 year old freshman. t) Thu result at silting tor two yams on the custom doWonoct soots In 201. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents Radiology Rounds This patient presents to yOu complaining of fullness in the lower adomen. Your first Question to him should be: a) Do you know where your bowling ball is? b) Do you low playing with balloons? C) What typo of insurance do you have? 0 c fr GRAND RAPIDS OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL A GREAT PLACE FOR: TRAINING. U N TRAINING PROGRAMS: Exttenshon Internships ReinIenen)S. OtorInnoraryngdOgY Anesthesiology General Surgery Orthopedics Internal Momone Pathology ObstetrocsIGynecorogy PedratricS Ophthalmology Rammorgy PARAMEDICAL Inhalation Therapy OPEN STAFF Nursing (RN. n 65 Stan Physicians Laboratory Technology 33 Specialists OVERNIGHT ACCOMODATIONS PROVIDED VISITING STUDENTS WITH ADVANCE WRITE OR PHONE: Dr. E.M. Johnson. DO.. Mmacal Director Grand stapes Osteopathic HOSPIlal 1919 Boston Suva. S.E. Grano Rapids. hoboes, 49606 Telephone. (616)4924161 • PRIME RESIDENTIAL AREA • PRIVATE HOUSES AND APARTMENTS ADJACENT TO HOSPITAL. RENT FREE. UTILITIES PAID. FURNISHED. AIR CONDITIONED. • LAUNDRY FACILITIES WITH AUTOMATIC MACHINES • SCHOOLS AND SHOPPING HANDY. • COMPREHENSIVE FAMILYHEALTH . LIBERAL STIPEND ALLOWANCES ANO CASH ALLOWANCES INCLUDING POSTGRADUATE TUITION ALLOWANCES. . ALL SPORTS — SUMMER OR WINTER. HUNT — FISH — GOLF SKI — SKATE— SAIL —SWIM WITHIN 30 MINUTES 183 beds — 56.16% occupancy—BOO baths — 7000 surgeries. Fulitime Emergency Roan Sall. More then 1600 Emergency Room vans yearly. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents For the first time anywhere! Dr. Finkelstein ' s family crest. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents Forgetable Moments In Medicine Which of the following would you most likely wish to forget? a) Those boots were once worn by Smilin ' Ed in that memorable film epic. How To Make Friends and Influence Seniors. b) These boots were found in the Barth Pavilion kitchen at the bottom of a vat of Vegetable Surprise soup. c) A noted P.C.O.M. surgeon wears these boots while operating. CHERRY HILL MEDICAL CENTER Chapel Avenue - Cooper Landing Road Cherry Hill, New Jersey 08034 1-609-665-2000 Bertram Zimmerman Executi ve Director A 266 bed community hospital serving Patients from South Jersey and the Greater Philadelphia area. Approved Internships Rotating Services for 12 months Approved Residencies: Anesthesiology Internal Medicine OB-GYN Orthopedic Surgery Otophinolaryngology Pathology Pediatrics Radiology Surgery Urology MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents O.P. P. Rounds Choose the correct statement: a) This patient is being fitted tor a total spinal prosthesis. b) This senior student began the 1st year with the spine on the left and four years of 0.P. P. Lab cured her troubles. C) This patient is living proof that Webster ' s Triped Theory could use another leg to stand on. cg This patient knows that gentlemen prefer Hanes. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents Pulmonary Rounds The best interpretation for this chest X-ray is: a) Normal Pa chest film. b) Something contrived by Dr. Meals for Radiology I. c) An example of what good Philadelphia air can do to you. d) Cook at Barth Pavilion cafeteria. BEST WISHES FROM THE STAFF OF ALLENTOWN OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents One Picture Is Worth 1000 Words. This man has just: a) Eaten lunch at the P.C.O.M. cafeteria. b) Heard that P.C.O.M. was about to award an hon- orary D.O. degree to Spiro Agnew. c) Learned that his daughter is a professional wres- tler. d) Learned that he will be Dr. G ' s understudy at the 48th Street Clinic. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents Opthalmology Rounds This patient presents with eye pain and excessive tearing. The best diagnosis would be: a) A second year student trying to stay awake during a Physiology lecture. b) A P.C.O.M. professor who told some freshman girls that they should quit school and devote more time to their families. c) A fourth year student alter two weeks of night duty at Barth Pavilion. 111011-:Ss IN St 8r•ci: PROCIt — %ism kkkkkk OW tNIERIC N I ION • Prole% 11.1.11910% Ji 10%4A 1911 III( Prostreleem aseiumed 1952 emit .%rte Gann. Ma•• N J . N 1 • Ore 5% .isle • 1.11r Ite.tirarecti appr rvl R1i9 • lImpet.el C.1.11 apt cal 1!.11:S THE NETTLESHIP COMPANY ' A ‘111.:Clut. i2iXI 31‘1111.• til•illeN.Ird In ‘114111 ' .1111tirelhe .215.1 ' 0.191H WITH BEST WISHES FROM JOHN F. KENNEDY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL STRATFORD, N.J. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents A Medical Milestone Newsbashl Synapsis answers the unanswerable question Just where does that enema water go? As depicted by the arrows. for the first time ever. actual intra-splenic absorption of a two quart saline Pediatric enema! ; pi ;RAI 1-10SPEIAL OSTEOPATHIC 2800 devonshire LANSING michigan 48909 PHONE 517 3728220 R.E. MILLER, ADMINISTRATOR Lansing General Hospital is a 244 bed acute care hospital fully approved fOr ontern and resident training. With the Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine only four minutes away. Lansing General has both the clinical and academic resources to huh merit the label of a teaching Mahar tar For further information. please write or call us collect. MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents FundaSCOPiC Rounds Can you diagnose this interesting bit of pathology? a) Student Council map showing the most direct route to Mermaid Lake. b) An aerial view of proposed traffic patterns on the P.C.O.M. campus. e) Something Solved for breakfast in the Barth Pavil- ion colotorin. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 74 FROM ROCKY MOUNTAIN OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL 4701 E. NINTH ST. DENVER, COLORADO - 80220 AOA APPROVED FOR INTERNSHIPS AND RESIDENCIES MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents EKG Rounds A 28 year old white male presents to you with retros- ternal chest pain. The most likely causitive factor would be: a) Rejection by Harvard Medical School where his father is Director of Admissions. b) He was told that he will be required to repeat his senior year rotations at City Line. c) He was told that he matched 3rd c hoices with P.C.O.M. for an internship. MT. CLEMENS GENERAL HOSPITAL aS MILESTONES IN MEDICINE presents Wnat ' s the beef n umber on your pink slip, dear? This clinic patient seems to be saying: a) But the other doctors never let me go seven weeks between appointments! b) I don ' t care if it is free. you ' re not putting me into any Proctology Clinic. c) In case you ' re interested, honey, my maiden name was Still. MOUNT CLEMENS GENERAL HOSPITAL Mount CACHner1S. Michigan is the county seal of Macomb County locaohl 10 moles noon of tne Detroit city boundary. Mount Clemens General lesspeal is a 270 bed Shona...II genteel laCility with aefirOsed rotating intern training program. 23 Residencies on: Anesthesia Internal Medicine 08 GYN PeoiterKS 01ornmelmyngology AlaStie Orasafieches Surgery Norville H. Snook. Ph. 0, Ma ' am J. Stout Director 011400%a Education Executive Director • Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1974 From the Student Council Healthy Controversy As the Hallmark of Healthy Change J.F. Kennedy Allen Zagoren ' 75 Pres. Timothy Young ' 76 1st V. Pres. Barry Kaplan 76 2nd V. Pres. Roger O ' Conner ' 76 Recording Secretary Christine Kremer ' 76 Corresponding Secretary Vince Baldino ' 76 Treasurer ANGELO B. RATINI, C.L.U. AND ASSOCIATES P.O.M.A. Life Insurance Admin. Low Cost Life Insurance for Osteopathic Physicians 914 Investment Bldg. Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222 Phone (412) 281-8515 (Special rates for students of PCOM) Congratulations From The Brothers of PHI SIGMA GAMMA FRATERNITY Best wishes to our graduating seniors in their medical and personal endeavors. Congratulations to the Class of 1974 from SPUCE HILL MEDICAL BOOK AND SUPPLY STORE 40th Baltimore Ave. Philadelphia, Pa. Telephone: 349-9303 ' 0811N If I only had one year to live I ' d spend it in Philadelphia because it would seem like a lifetime! W.C. Fields easarr ' Vow FsetagiM SIGMA SIGMA PHI ZETA CHAPTER Larry A. Antolick Donald A. Barone Luther E. Beil H. William Bonekat David E. Bruce Harry J. Bruley David H. Clymer Irving M. Cohen William K. Daiber Charles E. Darowish Norman A. Dean Nicholas J. Dragann Joseph C. Gambone James M. Hamden Daniel D. Janiak Richard A. Johnson Richard A. Scott Mitchell S. Seidman Maurice Singer Dennis M. Spiller Edward A. Styduhar. Jr. Garry F. Sussman Joseph T. Tretta Nicholas D. Tretta. Jr. Donald P. Underwood Edward J. Vecchione Internship Appointments, 1974 Andrews. Charles T AMolock. tarry A. Baker. Thomas E. Barone. Donald A Boil. Lithe E. Bell. Joseph W. Berger. Ned J. Bonekat. 14, William Brown. Awom S. Brown. William P. Bruce. David E. Way. Harry J. Buchwald. Wayne R. Byrne. James J. Cakouros. Dennis W. Cantor. Avrim Carr. Vincent F. Candle,. Leon M. Cludyrka. George 0. Clymer. David H. Cohen. Jerry A. Cohen. Larry W. Coolly. David L. Barbee. William K. Darowsh. Charles E. DePoro. Albert A.. Jr. 01 Tommaso. Homy A. Donal. Arthur J. Dragann. Nicholas J. Edelstein. Mitchell E. Fartell. John T. Fantle n. Michael J. Feldman. Bruce D. Flanagan. Harry P., III Fontaine. David J. Gold. Joseph F. Gratch. Jack 0. Habusi a. Steven F. Hackel. Martin A. Hamden. James M. Holtman. Carl A. Jr Hubach. Edward A. Jensen. Raymond J. Johnson. John T. Johnson. Riche 0 A. Kaneda. Robert R. Kastenberg. Charles A. Kendrick. C. Roger Koukos. dean T. Krathen, Stephen A Kremer. Arnold S. Lan5, James D. Lamm. Francis L. Listopad. Aaron J. McCrary, Moms E. McLaughlin. James A, Meshekow. Man L. Metzman, Robert M. MingrOm. Jul ius Mimi. Marc A Montague. Barry M. Morris. Kenneth A. Mot roe . Charles C.. Jr. Murray. Francis K.. Jr No whit. Richard J. Nassau, Harvey B. ashen. Jerry A. Panko, Andrew F. Paolo no. Richard G. Papa. Richard A. Peterson. Robed J. Plummer. Richard Ronny. Thomas F. Allentown Osteopathic Hospital. Allentown. Pa. Allentown Osteopathic HOSpital. Allentown. Pt Doctors Hospital. Columbus. Ohm John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. Allentown Osteopathic Hospital. Allentown. Pt Albany Medical Cantor. Albany. N.Y. Metropolitan Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Flint OsloOpathn Hospital. Flint. Mich, Parknew Houma. Philadelphia. Pa. Community General Osteopathic HoNsil al. HarriSburg. Pa. Grandview Hospital. Dayton. Ohio Allentown Oster:981Na HOSPital. Allentown. Pa F.H. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. InteMoto General Hospital. Suburban General Hospital. Norristown. Pa. Doctors Hospital. Columbus. Ohio FM. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Delaware Valley Hospital. Bristol. Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. Lancaster Osteopathic Hospital. Lancaster. Pa. Metropolitan Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Metropolitan Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Zieger Botslord Osteopathic Hospital. Farmington. Mrch. Community General Osteopathic Hospital. Harrisburg. Pa Community General Osteopathic HOSPilal. Harrisburg. Pa. ShMango Valley Osteopathic Hospital. Farrell. Pa. Delaware Valley Hospital. Bristol, Pa. Shenango Valley Osteopathic Hospital. Farrell. Pa. Lancaster Osteopathic Hospital. Lancaster. Pa. Suburban General Hospital. Norristown. Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. F.M. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Leger Botsford Osteopathic Hospital, Farmington. Mich. Parknew Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. F.H. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Metropolitan Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Metropolitan Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Giandviow Hospital. Dayton, Ohio Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Doctors Hospital. Columbus. Ohio Community General Osteopathic Hospital. Harrisburg. Pa. Grandview Hospital. Dayton. Ohio Intetboto General Hospital. Brooklyn. N.Y. Davenport Osteopathic Hospital. Davenport. Iowa Art Centre Hospital, Detroit. Mich. Memorial Osteopathic HoWital, York. Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. Tri.Counly Hospital, SWingfield, Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. Osteopathic General Hospital. North Miami Beach. Florida Parkview Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Lancaster Osteopathic Maginot. Lancaster, Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Mospil al. Strallord. N.J. Shenango ValleyOsleopathic Hospital. Farrell. Pa. F.H. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Doctors Hospital. Columbus. Ohio Doctors Hospital, Columbus, Ohio John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford, N.J. Mich. PL Metropolitan Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Par kviewKoSpital. Philadelphia. Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Sitatford. N.J. Cherry Hill Medical Center. Cherry Hill. N.J. Abington Memorial Hospital. Abington, Pa. Phoenrx General Hospital. Phonic. AnZOnts Community General Osteopathic Hospital, Harrisburg. Pa. Delaware Valley HOSpilal. Bristol. Pa. Walter Reed Army Medical Corner. Washington. D.C. Putman Hospital. Pluladelphit Pa. F.H. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pt Brentwood Hospital. Warrensville Heights. Ohio Rereads. Jerry PlasmIler. David J. Ruppasberger. Inlet J. Russian. George W. Sarama. Edward J. Scott. Richard A. ScuIthorpe. Robert M. Sheldon, Howard A. Simpson. Stanley L. Singer. Maurice Somerset. William J. Somer. Dennis M. Slyduhar. Edward A.. Jr. Sussman. Garry F. Tenancy. Michael Tann, Edward Tennenbawn. Mare E. Teter. Mary J. Tina, Joseph T. Tama. Nicholas Tucker. Richard G. TpIPL Not B. Underwood. Donald P. germane. George 0. Zailow, Dennis B. Zen.. Michael A. hew banal. Jack A. Battahno. John J. Benedetto. Anthony V. Benjamin. Charles 0. Bann Harvey S. Bride. Thomas P. Win. Thomas V. Brooks. Frank J. Carroll. Witham E. Cashognano. Barbara Ballahno Conan. Dennis M. Cowen. Stephen P. Cox. Fred A. 1) Angeth, Michael J. Denman. John W. Drake. Andrew F. Dubroll. Michael N. Fishman. Gerald A. Gordon. Ralph Janiak. Daniel 0. Wino. Dennis LaCavera, Richard A. McChnith. William R. Marks. Michael J. Reyes. Herman Roeshman, Robert M. Siniwoll. Michael S. Soler. Harvey A. Starr. Harvey T. Strong. Franklin 0. Vecchione. Edward J. Hooper. Fred B. Katz. Seven Read, John V. Seidman. Mitchell S. Andress. Philip PA., Jr. Balm. Charles M. Cohen. Irving M. Dean. Norman A. Garnbone, JOS•ph C. Genie. Matshall J.. Jr. Moore. Michael W. Mona. Paul D. Opalack. away? A. Wagner. Glenn N. Weitberg, Jay H. Winokur. Kenneth 0. Sun Coast Osteopathic Hospital. Largo. Florida Flint OsteOpathic Hospital, thini. Allentown Osteopathic Hospital. Allentown. Pa. Zeger Botslord Osteopathic Hospital. Farmington. Mich. F.H. Guth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pt Oelnait OSteopalhic NOVIal. Detroit. Mich. Green Cross General HOSthlal, Cuyahoga Falls. Ohio Cherry Hill Medical Center. Cherry Hill. N.J. Osteopath General Hospital. North Miami Beach. Florida Parkins Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Art Contra Hospital. Detroit. Mich John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. Oklahoma Osteopathic Hospital. Tulsa. Old a. Suburban General Hospital. Norristown. Pa. Suburban General Hospital. Norristown. Pa. Phoenix General HOW Phoenix. Ara. Cheery Hill Medics Center. Cherry Hill. N.J. P.N. Barth Pavilion Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Brooke Army Medical Center. San Antonio. Texas Detroit OneopathiC Hospital. Detroit. Web John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. Allentown Osteopathic Hospital. AlleNlOwn. Pa. John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital. Stratford. N.J. LegeriBoistord Osteopathic Hospital. IF amungton. Mich. Suburban General Hospital. Norristown, Pa. Parlwiew HOSPI al. Philadelphia. Pa- Epoeepal Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Philadelphia General Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Cleveland Clinic. Cleveland. Ohio Albert Einstein Medical Center. Philadelphia. Pa. Hahnemann Hospital. Philadelphia- Pa Harrisburg POly Clinic. Harrisburg. Pa. Allentown Hospital. Allentown. The Washington Hospital. Washington. Pa. Mercy Catholic Medical Center. Fitzgerald Ow.. Pit la.. Pa. Hahnemann Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Mercy Catholic Medics C enter. Philadelphia. Pa. ethnic Hospital. Philadelphia, Pa. Wilmington Medical Center. Wilmington. Delaware mainsburg Howls,. Harrisburg. Harrisburg Hospital. Harrisburg. Pa. Delaware Valley Hewn. Bristol. Pa. Hahnemann Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Philadelphia General Hospital. Philadelphia, Pa. Temple University Holdiltd, Philadelphia. Pa. The Washington Hospital. Washington. Pa. The Washington HONAal. Washington. Pt Othrol Osteopathic Health al. Detroit. Mich. Allentown General Hospital. AllethOwn. Pa. S. Margaret ' s Memorial Moven Pittsburgh. Pa. Memorial Hospital Stem. Houston, Texas Allentown General HOSpital. Allentown. Pa. Atlantic Cily Medical Center. Atlantic City. N.J. Philadelphia General Honthal, Philadelphia. Pa. Wilmington Medical Center. Wilmington. Delaware Inlerboro General Hospital. Now York Cily. N.V. St. Michael ' s Medical Center. Newark. N.J. Harrisburg Hospital. Keansburg. Pa. tinned Slates Public Health Service United States Public Health Service United Stales Public Health Service Naval Honda ' , Camp Pendelton, Calif. Naval Hospital. Philadelphia. Naval HOSpital. San Diego. Calif. Naval Hospital. San Diego. Calif. Naval HoMm al. Oakland. CAW. Naval Hospital. Pheladsdphi a. Pa. Naval Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Naval Hospital, Philadelphia. Pa. Naval Hospital, Philadelphia. Pa. Naval Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Hahnemann Hospital. P.G.H., Philadelphia. P. Albert Einstein Medical Center. Philadelphia. Pa. SPONSORS DRS. T. MELTZER AND ROBERT A. WEISBERG DR. HENRY D ' ALONZO ASSOC. DR. LOIS E. PULLUM DR. MRS. SAMUEL L. CARUSO DR. MRS. FREDERIC H. BARTH THOMAS M. ROWLAND JR. DR. ROBERT W. ENGLAND DR. A. ARCHIE FEINSTEIN DR. MRS. DAVID HEILIG DR. MRS. SPENCER BRADFORD MR. MRS. GEORGE J. RUSSIAN DR. MRS. CHARLES H. HEMMER DR. MRS. GEORGE H. GUEST GARDNER A. WARNER J.F. KENNEDY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL DR. FREDERICK G. UBERTI BIO-SCIENCE LABORATORIES DR. MELVYN E. SMITH DR. LEONARD H. FINKELSTEIN DR. MERRILL JAY MIRMAN DR. MRS. CHARLES W. SNYDER DR. RALPH J. TOMEI JERRY ' S CORNER EASTWICK CENTER DRS. RAYMOND L. RUBERG AND T.L. RIDDELL DRS. MARVIN P. BACKAL AND RILLARD C. SIMMERS DRS. WARREN SWENSON AND ANTHONY MINISSALE PATRONS NICHOLAS J. GREGO JOHN B. DALTON ANGELO S. MONACO, D.P.M. MS. CAROL A. FOX 11A ....slam. HUNTER PUBLISHING COMPANY kw. C.,... t•1,,- -AM- -ow -,1,..••„ 1. • • c ••• • • ••-• • :nut minium nm: nm: nem mill MN: Hum nnuann thin 111 mm HIM 1:11 • -4,0,A,atatamith-


Suggestions in the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine - Synapsis Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977


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