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Page 25 text:
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PROF. JAMES INGALLS: A wit who, if he chose to give up teaching this very day, could easily find himself an enviable position in the world of entertainment making people laugh. A lecturer without equal in this institution, he is a very able lab instructor as Well as investigator. His work in sulfagu- anidine won him a doctorate, and he keeps right on doing this type of scientific investigation. PROF. AUGUST E. WILKOC: He filled our junior Year with descriptions of bones, tissues, organs and a play-by-play account of all his aches and ills. In the Senior Year, in a course CPD called Tox and Pos, he taught us how to kill off our competition with one small dose. A course which was not appreciated by some other members of the faculty, who were seen testing their food for traces of cyanide, etc. MR LEO GREENBERG: One of the best liked men on the faculty. His lecture was an hour of knowledge. We would have liked to have attended a lab in the course, but, since there was no provision for a lab, it was pretty hard to at- tend one. We will always remember his company on the Lilly trip, where he displayed his usual sense of humor and good fellowship. MR. WILLIAM PEARL: His great assistance in Pharma- cology lab will always be appreciated. For this we thank him, the frogs thank him, the guinea pigs thank him and the ro- dents thank him. We will always remember his gentleness with the experimental animals. He is an able biologist, and is truly an asset to the Materia Medica Department. Twenty-one
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Page 24 text:
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Twenty PROF. RALPH H. CHENEY: His two hour lecture each Monday morning during our Sophomore Year was a pleasant relief and a good cure for a hectic weekend. His lectures on life cycles opened new vistas to many of us fespecially the Polysiphonia in the classj. PROF BENJAMIN MILANA: This well versed, dignified looking professor was an integral part of our last two years at B.C.P. He introduced us to the study of drugs in phar- macognosy, and really laced it into us in our Senior Year which had often been referred to as the next course. Many of us developed swollen Hngernaceae in lectures and Usweated it out in two quiz classes. But in reality, we were quite for- tunate in having such a qualified professor for this diilicult course. , f8l lCl, 6bC6L
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Page 26 text:
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mm yy 25 ie i 1 PROF. BERL S. ALSTODT: He taught us a lot of chemistry, with time out for boobs, jackasses, and assorted forms of Dummies. We will never for- get the Boob Assignment he gave to most of us after the Midyear Exams. His philosophy throughout the Senior Year seemed to scare us into studying, and judging from the results, he did a very thorough job. K l if Twenty-two PROF. ELMER L. SARGENT: A professor in the truest sense of the word. A man, who by his very presence demands respect, not only because of his knowledge, but for the way he shares it with others. His method of teaching by associa- tion of ideas rather than by Chinese Memory is true educa- tion. Many just present material before you and expect you to grasp it, but it takes a pedagogue to teach you. PROF. COSMO LIGORIO: His name is presented in the brochure of the college suffixed by a multiplicity of degrees. In his course we were introduced to the scientific method of writing a report, determining the acoustics of a room, and most significant, memorizing a hundred or so standards. Per- haps if we would have had a few samples of his collection of fine liquor the course would have been even more enjoyable.
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