Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1947
Page 1 of 104
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 104 of the 1947 volume:
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i F I I 1 r I I I r. QD 'F' 3 nl' :I M H W 1-1 T? WIHHI WH U lllnlnui' IIITIIHIII TIT ,A 1 !nnn U! ITU lu xUUU Vllll IU 'll N ru I ll lixbh QQ-- 'FUI U 4 gi QQQ-.. !!!I lun: .,,..-5 v --- v.. .nnnn I llllll llllll Rlllll lUUL rn r1ff'fV'U fy Y 3 l ' Wf,eiH llllll lll'!,.,l 'wll To our knowledge this is the first year- book to be published by a graduating class of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in all the years of its existence. Parturition in our primiparous state was not without difficulty, and, indeed, we felt the pains of first labor severely. Now, like the mother who sees her child for the first time, we are both amazed and proud. -I Q 534' -'nk f- Q 7 ' Q' f. F?-?,i.ih 'U : , 253- 111: K Z- giif ' 1 -.. 4 F 1-ff . .4524 U'-4-ri! 1-5 -w,v.f'6tWQl' I 7 - '. -iw . PdcS'4 THE YEARBO0K 0F The College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University in the fitg of New York 630 lVest I68th Street, New York, N. Y. C pyfigm 1947 by P a S '41, 630 Wes! 168th 5 N YC I i 1 I i 'i -E, if ii il fi E PS1-iii i E Z ' gi IE , 5., - .. ' QL'::Ei - an 5 I 'F : yii- A -vez, x ' ' : 1-x,.f--' 'Q-tu -.,a,'x. - ., ?.n -r 1- Gs, 's, f uf--H aah ' 535' 1 vw I 'V' 'fn-f .--1' , x A .uf -:sv-H, 'vwwufunrq M1122 'E It 'F' Q' 0 6 , . -f' Q '.'K QV? '- 'gpzif 'Q pi Aura Edward Serorlnghaus, T ' B. S.. A. JI.. Ph. D. Anaoellle Dean and Secretary Willard Colo Rapploge, A. NL, Ill. D., Sc. D. Dean I' ll g lPhysl1'lanl d Surgeons .-.W V ff N MA' ,n 6 Q 'CDXX NNX'wX NDN -WOR mpc! - QOXAE' L S-O THE' CNW ' OV - . -YY-vboxls -10 -vmow wxxvfsv, V mu bk axe- - . BY,-X1-KNOWN nw mae- mo --sfmsvwm Aiea-pxquxgimxwwe movin- ov WASH Q -www ,www 'YAXSXHG 1-KP' TBD -THE STU Yovdvw,-D 0? - NWO TRP-T -92093 OS-XO - QEYYXI 0 -wx-5 -Diwo PS0 - comma GCT OR ' mxmeo -wo Q me-5 -wwx xv-X12 . gmsm R-swf - -AC, SCM! - P60 'X into Oi - TAB PN - 0 as-sxorlw-wi oe 1 me - fpmwc - -be - ammo - pxvxuua we 01:8 -O? -new - ow -wowspmn -'awe - xmwvtbv- P359 BEEN ' P1 NNNNWS Q .gpg . KN-XXI? 009- ' oopm VRNXXLGES- vs -4301255 -W - we' vvxsxwam - - 0? - ':MLOxC,v5-E - 9-vs-wwf CAN- Y xml-161, -209-'VL ,qty K W3 WfILLIAM GEORGE ABEL, III Columbia Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. PERRY GWYNNE MORE AUSTIN, JR. 5913 Corso di Napoli, Long Beach, Calif. Princeton Los Angeles General Hospital, Los Angeles, Calif. Y. A WILLIAIWI ALLEN BAUMAN Harvard lg PETER BECK Alburg, Vt. Dartmouth Mary Fletcher Hospital, Burlington, Vt. 17 Linwood Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Kings County Hospital, New York, N. Y. CHARLES R. BENTON 1436 WY. University Ave., Gainesville, Fla. Florida Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N. Y. ,gn- EDGAR W. BRANYON, JR. Hamilton, Ala. Alabama Louisville General Hospital, Louisville, Ky. ?o rp- STANLEY BURTON BRAHAM 144 Van Guilder Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Columbia Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, N. Y. EDWARD S. BUCKLEY, JR. Louella and Pembroke, Wayne, Pa. Yale Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass. RUPERT C. BURTAN 3003 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y Massachusetts Institute of Technology St Columbia :A Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, N. Y. ALEXANDER CAEMMERER, JR. 165 Fairview Ave., Westwood, N. J. Princeton Methodist Hospital, New York, N. Y. ENOCH CALLAWAY, III 310 Broad St., LaGrange, Ga. Columbia Grady Hospital, Atlanta, Ca. 'I 1 .M NICHOLAS ERNEST CAPECI 248 N. Regent St., Port Chester, N. Y. Harvard ORSON P. CARDON 932 N. Euclid, Tucson, Ariz. Arizona ' Long Island College Hospital, New York, N. Y. HUGH CHAPLIN, JR. 16 E. 96th St., New York, N. Y. Princeton Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass. GRANGE SIMONS COFFIN 2 Fountain Square, Larchmont, N. Y. Yale Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y. JEAN LAWRENCE COOK, JR. Q .Q - 824 E. 165111 St., New York, N. Y. fi , Columbia pf I ,-' Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y. l A F WILLIAM HOWARD COX, JR. 11 Annwood Lane, Cincinnati, O. Yale Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati T MORTON CHARLES CREDITOR 874 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Purdue Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. GEORGE CYTROEN Q 1255 Stratford Avenue, New York, N. Y. Columbia ,i Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass. Q if GABRIEL ALEXIS D'AMATO 600 W. 161st St., New York, N. Y. Seton Hall Orange Memorial Hospital, Orange, N. J. ,0. WALTER L. DAVIS 6726 Ditman St., Philadelphia, Pa. Hamilton Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. 7175 5- WALKER DEMPSEY Red Bay, Ala. Alabama Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, R. I. JOE WILLIAM DENSON Boaz, Ala. Alabama Charity Hospital, New Orleans, La. STEPHEN HENRI DESCHAMPS 4 W. 31st St., New York, N. Y. Columbia New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn -G JOSEPH MICHAEL DI CAPRIO 420 Knickerbocker Ave., Paterson, N. J . Columbia Long Island College Hospital, New York, N. Y '55 1 WILLIAM C. L. DIEFENBACH III 25-40 30th Rd., Long Island City, N. Y. Columbia Albany City Hospital, Albany, N. Y. ROBERT M. DONAUER , 34 Bedford Rd., Summit, N. J. Princeton Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, N. Y. FRANK C. DRESDALE 248 Broadway, East Paterson, N. J. Brown Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. PHILIP E. DUFFY A 600 W. 115th St., New York, N. Y. Columbia Kings County Hospital, New York, N. Y. ARTHUR WILLIAM EPSTEIN 300 W. 108th St., New York, N. Y. Columbia Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, N. Y. ARTHUR EDWARD FALK 910 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. Columbia Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, N. Y. ,ar e '45 .4 '-ff f A sz if - to N 5 . N J ANTHONY B. FELICE 643 W. l72nd St., New York, N. Y. Fordham Fordham Hospital, New York, N. Y. E. MAURICE FLINT 52 Avondale Park, Rochester, N. Y. Oberlin Methodist Hospital, New York, N. Y. WILMOT D. FOSTER 2626 N. E. 23rd Ave., Portland, Ore. Oregon St. Vincent's Hospital, Portland, Ore. J. GEORGE FUREY Colgate ROBERT AYRES FURMAN 31 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. .l Princeton Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, O. 'Sf- 31 Harvard Terrace, West Orange, N. J. Methodist Hospital, New York, N. Y. 1 '7 K Swirl' EDWARD B. GARDNER 88 Haven Ave., New York, Y. Harvard Beth Israel Hospital, New York, N. Y. GILBERT LEE GORDON New York, N. Y. Yale New Haven Hospital, New York, N. Y. STUART GRAVES, JR. 90 Highlands, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Alabama St. Luke's Hospital, New York, N. Y. S.. CHRISTOPHER A. GUARINO, JR. 2925 Oneil Place, New York. N. Y. Columbia Fordham Hospital, New York, N. Y. - L 'KN :1 'l- 2: A ROBERT S. HAGSTROM 132 Clarencedale Ave., Youngstown, O. Ohio State Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N. Y. Q1 1 ' I Q . 3 , 'M I ,V GEORGE NICHOLLS HAZLEHURST Clover Hill, Spotswood, N. J. Princeton Roosevelt Hospital, New York., N. Y. ' THOMAS CLAIBORNE GUTHRIE III 550 Parker St., Newark, N. J. Princeton Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. Q..-f Q ROBERT ELLIOTT HALL 5619 Fair Oaks St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Harvard St. Luke's Hospital, New York, N. Y. FREDERICK W. HEHRE 17 Elizabeth Ave., Arlington, N. J. Columbia St. Clare's Hospital, New York, N. Y. tr- ROBERT E. HINDMAN Salix, Ia. Iowa State Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. JAMES FREDERICK HOLLAND Normandy Parkway, Morristown, N. J. Princeton Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y. Q.,f 3 .,. ,.,, Q .,. ' Q' '- u CHARLES PETER HYSLOP E- 5.7, 3447 80th St., Jackson Hights, N. Y. , f qv 1, 3 i Yale if I ' I. 4 ' Brooklyn Hospital, New York, N. Y. gi 1 'ASQ 'iff -'R fb N CARRY CURTISS JACOBUS 856 Wolfram Street, Chicago, Ill. Dartmouth NV 'Q 1. PIERRE .IOHANNET 155 E. 73rd St., New York, N. Y. Columbia Orange Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, Ill. Orange, N. J. ROBERT B. JOHNSON 1047 E. Lester, Tucson, Ariz. Arizona ',.. AUSTIN DAVID JOHNSTON 6 Lady Musgrave Rd., Hall'-Way-Tree, A jamaica, B. W. I. Columbia Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York, N. Y. Baylor University Hospital, Dallas, Tex OLE THOR JONASSEN 34 Horatio St., New York 'N 1 Columbia Kings County Hospital, New York 'N ,L,. GLORIA KARSHAN 420 Riverside Drive, New York N Y Vassar Beth Israel Hospital, New York N Y lq.. KENNETH D. KITTLESON 535 Wall St., N. Mankato, Minn. Wesleyan White Plains General Hospital, White Plains, N. Y. STEWART A. KING 2173 Park Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Harvard Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mas WARREN HARDING KNAUER L 'fa- 930 Elizabeth Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Princeton St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, N. Y. ALFRED GEORGE KNUDSON, JR. 210 Western Ave., Glendale, Calif. California Institute of Technology Huntington Memorial Hospital, Pasadena, Calif. 22 Jih- fbw LOUIS LASAGNA 255 W. 23rd St., New York, N. Y. Rutgers Molult Sinai Hospital, New York, N. Y. 4... , ,VN 1 1',:N 1 i?mfl'qf1 -.wr. I if?fA3gj4:,Ef5.j,gf:5f, VANCE LAUDERDALE, JR. fef f V Forest Drive, Short Hills, N. J. ,. Harvard gg' Kings County Hospital, New York, N. Y. RICHARD E. LEE 96 Morgan St., New Bedford, Mass. Harvard New York Hospital, New York, N. Y. 'ws DAVID H. LEWIS City Home, Welfare Island, New York, N. Y Columbia Bellevue Hospital, New York, N, Y. A lp F. WILSON LITTLE 365 E. 193rd St., New York, N. Y. Columbia Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y. A KENNETH M. LEWIS, JR. 1160 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Yale Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y. l 9, DANIEL STANLEY LUKAS 70 Rutgers Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Columbia New York Hospital, New York, N. Y. EDWIN TUTT LONG Skyhigh, West Redding, Conn. Columbia Methodist Hospital, New York, N. Y. ROBERT RIDER LUTTRELL 33 Summit Dr., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Williams Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Hanover, N. H. New York Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. EDWARD McDONNELL MANGAN 4 Dartmouth St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Columbia St. Vincenfs Hospital, New York, N. Y. LESTER JOEL MARTENS 98 Liberty Pl., Vveehawken, N. J. Columbia Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. ROBERT GREGORY McGOVERN 139 Baiseley Ave., East Rockaway, N. Y. l 4? -'swf' ' I MARGARET ESTHER MILLER 4930 Goodridge Ave., New York, N. Y. Vassar St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington, D. C MALCOLM MOLEY Santa Barbara, Calif. Harvard Hospital of The Good Samaritan, Los Angeles, Calif. JAMES CLINTON MONTEITH 75 N. Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. Yale St. Lukeis Hospital, New York, N. Y. 'WRQ-Y .Sz . V, Zi., 'Vf SL- . xi. . DRYDEN PHELPS MORSE 40 Battle Rd., Princeton, N. J. Harvard Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. HIRUMICHI TSUDA NARAHAHA 174 Nagle Ave., New York, N. Y. Columbia Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. r-Q , 14 if b WILLIAINI C. OFFENKRANTZ 72 Hansbury Ave., Newark, N. J. Rutgers Jersey City Medical Center, Jersey City, N. J. MAURICE M. OSBORNE, JR. 367 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. Harvard Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. Y 5. -Q ' 5 ELLIOTT F. OSSERMAN 975 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y. 1:5 EDWARD FINCH PARSONS Percy St., Flushing, N. Y. Yale JOHN SANFORD PECK, JR. 12 Nickel Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Columbia Methodist Hospital, New York, N. Y. PEARL STEWART PITT Wilmington, Mass. Tufts HELEN MARGARET RANNEY RFD 1, Locke, N. Y. Barnard Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y. Bryn Mawr Hospital, Bryn Mawr, Pa. was f A-J JAMES ARTHUR REILLY 47 Franklin Ct., Garden City, N. Y. Princeton Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. Q' fl' ISAIAH AARON RUBIN MATTHEW' ROSENSCHEIN, JR. 211 Fort Washington Ave., New York, N. Y Columbia Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, N. Y. Q 124 W. 87th St., New York Columbia Hospital for Joint Diseases New York, N. Y. 'Q' FREDERICK RUECKERT 115 W. llth St., New York, N. Y. Hamilton Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. j' Cb: SYLVESTER J. RYAN 3337 Sedgwick Ave., New York, N. Y. Yale New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn. FRANCIS ROBERT RUSSO 1758 Popham Ave., New York, N. Y. Columbia Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y. X THOMAS CLARK SCANLAN 473 14th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Yale 8- JOHN T. SHARP 704 4th St., Canyon, Tex. Antioch Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y. he als. ALBERT C. SHERVVIN 215 W. 88th St., New York, N. Y. Columbia Hospital for Joint Diseases New York, N. Y. .,..... ALEXANDER CHARLES SMITH 978 Plandome Rd., Manhasset, N. Y. Holy Cross Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. 47 Qs JAMES B. SIDBURY, JR. 15 N. Fifth St., Wilmington, N. C. Yale Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y. X. LEONARD S. SUMMER 11 Taft St., Springfield, Mass. Yale Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass. kv' 'bw CHESTER M. SOUTHAM 626 W. 165th St., New York, N. Y. Idaho Presbyterian Hospital, New ANNA L. S. SOUTHAM 626 W. 165th St., New York, N. Y. Idaho Bellevue Hospital, lNew York, N. Y. T York, N. Y. ROBERT STRAGNELL 426 Toyopa Dr., Pacific Palisades, Calif. Virginia Huntington Memorial Hospital., Pasadena, Calif. RICHARD JOHN STOCK 110 Wrexham Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Yale Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y into THOMAS T. TAMLYN 221-28 Edmore Ave., Queens Village, N. Y. Columbia Philadelphia General Hospital, 7-5? Philadelphia, Pa. CHARLES BUNNELL TERHUNE 44 Myrtle Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Princeton f Kings County Hospital, New York, N. Y. JAMES RUFUS TRIMBLE 115 Cooper Ave., Montclair, N. J. Princeton St. Vincent's Hospital, Portland, Ore. ROGER H. UNGER 15 Heathcote Rd., Scarsdale, N, Y. Yale Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. JOHN M. VAN BUREN 30 Maltbie Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Dartmouth ' Hanover, N. H. EDWARD FRANCIS VASTOLA 120 Cables Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Yale Montefiore Hospital, New York, N. Y. f Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, 5- WILLIAM EDWARD WILLIAMS I- ' Farmington, Conn. X Yale PS Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. 'Q ww 5 1- li, . ni ' 4 . 5 U . ,mr 1 ' '. A 4 6 JOHN COLVER WILSEY 138 Heller Pkwy., Newark, N. J. Princeton Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y. HOWARD LEROY WILSON Box 131, Atglen, Pa. Columbia Lancaster General Hospital, Lancaster, Pa. -1-.. THOMAS S. ROCK pn- Q. CHARLES M. YERGAN 22 Hamilton Terrace, New York, N. Y. Columbia Harlem Hospital, New York, N. Y. 24 University St., Leominster, Mass. Columbia Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Hanover, N. H. LAWRENCE LEONARD WEED 32 Mills Ave., Middletown, N. Y. Hamilton Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, O. HENRY J. WHEELWRIGHT, JR. R.F.D. 7, Bangor, Me. Yale Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y 9 Standing: Braham, Holland, Davis, Furman, Epstein, Knudson, Narahara. Sitting: Creditor Chaplin Lasagna, Osborne, Karowe, Osserman. LPII UMEGA ALPII Harris E. Karowe, Vice Pres. Hugh Chaplin, Jr., Secy. Louis C. Lasagna, Treas. Leonard S. Sommer, Comm. Stanley B. Braham Morton C. Creditor Walter L. Davis Stephen H. Deschamps 36 Chairman Arthur W. Epstein Robert A. Furman .lames F. Holland Alfred G. Knudson Hiromichi T. Narahara Elliott F. Oeserman Helen M. Ranney Sylvester J. Ryan Richard .l. Stock THE OATH OF HIPPOCRATES O O O I SWEAR BY APOLLO THE PHYSICIAN' AND AESCULAPIUS ' AND HEALTH 'AND ALL-HEAL ' AND ALL THE GODS AND GODDESSES ' THAT ' ACCORDING TO MY ABILITY AND IUDGMENT ' I WILL KEEP THIS OATH AND THIS STIPULATION- TO RECKON HIM WHO TAUGHT ME TH.IS ART EQUALLY DEARTO ME AS MY PARENTS ' TO SHARE MY SUBSTANCE WITH HIM 'Sz RELIEVE HIS NECESSITIES IF REQUIRED ' TO LOOK UPON HIS OFFSPRING IN THE SAME FOOTING AS MY OWN BROTHERS ' AND TO TEACH THEM THIS ART ' IF THEY SHALL WISH TO LEARN IT ' WITHOUT FEE OR STIPULATION 'AND THAT BY PRECEPT ' LECTURE ' Sr EVERY OTHER MODE OF INSTRUCTION 'I WILL IMPARTA KNOWLEDGE OF THE ART TO MY OWN SONS ' AND THOSE OF MY TEACHERS 'AND TO DISCIPLES BOUND BY A STIPULATION AN D OATH ACCORDING TO THELAW OF MEDICINE ' BUT TO NONE OTHERS-'I XVILL FOLLOW THAT SYSTEM OF REGIMEN WHICH ' ACCORDING TO MY ABILITY AND IUDGMENT ' I CONSIDER FORTHE BENEFIT OF MY PATIENTS ' AND ABSTAIN FROM VIHATEVER IS DELETERIOUS AND MISCHIEVOUS H I WILL GIVE NO DEADLY MEDICINE TO ANYONE IF ASKED' NOR SUGGEST ANY SUCH COUNSEL ' AND IN LIKE MANNER I WILL NOT GIVE TO A WOMAN A PESSARY TO PRODUCE ABORTION V7ITH PURITY Sr WITH HOLINESS I WILL PASS MY LIFE St PRACTICE MY ART I WILL NOT CUT PERSONS LABORING UNDER THE STONE ' BUT WILL LEAVE TI-IIS TO BE DONE BY MEN WHO ARE PRACTITIONERS OF THIS WORK 1' INTO WHAT- EVER HOUSES I ENTER ' IWILL GO INTO THEM FOR 'THE BENEFIT OF THE SICK ' AND WILL ABSTAIN FROM EVERY VOLUNTARY ACT OP MISCHIEF S CORRUPTION ' AND FURTHER ' FROM THE SEDUCTION OF FEMALES OR MALES ' OF FREEMEN AND SLAVES VfHATEVER' IN CONNECTION YVITH MY PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE ' OR NOT IN CON- NECTIONWITHIT'ISEEORHEAR'INTHELIFEOPMEN'WH.ICH OUGHT NOT TO BE SPOKEN OF ABROAD ' I WILL NOT DIVULGE AS RECKONING THAT ALL SUCH SHOULD BE KEPT SECRET -'WHILE I CONTINUE TO KEEP '1'HIS OATH UNVIOLATED ' MAY I'T BE GRANTED TO ME TO ENIOY LIFEANDTHE PRACTICE OF '1'HE ART'RESPECTED BYALLMENJN ALL'TIMES'BUT SHOULD I TRESPASS AND VIOLATE THISOA'TH'M.AYTHE REVERSEBEMYLOT 5.65 gx N Top Row CL. to RJ: Sillman, Iannone, Sherpick, Fletcher, Bradley, Nydick, Turino, Thompson, Elder, Levy, Tator, Robinson, Crecca., Shinefield, Gammill, Smith, Pastel, Fisher. 3rd Row CL. to RJ: Amberson, Seibert, Rossa, Adams, French, Etz, Krakauer, Blair, Lusskin, Horwitz, Holt,' Walser, Burke, Gardner, Cidro-Frank, Kluger, Greenwald, Capeci, Iezzone, Francis. 2nd Row CL. to RJ: Sayre, Halsted, Bennett, Ollstein, Parker, Zentner, Quintero, Miningham, Jegge, Weaver, Malhes, Ottenstein, Meyer, Erlanger, Yealy, Crary. Bottom Row CL. to RJ: Bard, MacCormack, Krakaur, Shimm, Unger, Colp, Bess, Semel, Rogers, Bassett, Marshall, Taylor, Talbott, Case, Crumbach. THIRD YE ,Q Yxiil ff -'4v I f X ,, X . Xi' 'i' er Y 1- ,X K ...S s , . . . Sleep that knits up the ravell'd sleeve of ca CLASS Q,- QEMBA 'ef A 21 ,..wii' v Nui X We W , 51? B la A ks s 39 fglxl sfg I4 l l I V8 ,ll L f WW f nil 1 A M21-gil f' . 'a Top Row Cl to R J Marks Hatterer Bullantyne Ward Couch Mullen Payne Fellows Fisher Munter Ro'-ml Starr qllver 3rd Row Cl to RJ Kanter Cmnasrol qhlllll Sault Wyker Hardy Wood look Melia Johnson Middleton Zlsmnn Wallop bold fuputl Butterworth Fulop 2nd Row fl to RJ Hlllcr Sdmur PJUIUQ Manlver Read Marshall Brown D Marka Morgan Davls Jones Huleatl Rl ney Blumenthal Bottom How Cl to RJ Flthlan Boro Brand Updlke Brodey Baron Bello Bull Boll Malm ,t n F IQ' , 5 Q- il 2,0 FQ ,1'4 , . ' .I Q 'of' ' l.'Ad S 'E ' A IPIIYUNSITOLOG CLASS sl H311 -1. -1, 'p-gm, 4 A' ' i ff iz 5 ' TP . I, W ?1 i ga, f? O .Z 1, Top Row CL. to RJ: Neuberg, Rilterband, Lucas, Lopez, Allen., Aycrigg, Aplhorp, Hume, Nicholas MacKenzie, Blanco-Dalmau, Blake. 3rd Row CL. to RJ: Pyle, DeYoanna, Colon, Morss, Tompkins, Jaffee, Lebendiger, Gussen, Gross, Adler Messer, DeWitt, Jones, Conroy. 2nd Row QL. to RJ: Reisner, Burnett, Lewis, Brown, Griffin, Oliver, Edmonds, Kerr, Ling, Estes Moynahan, Crosby, Ackerman. Bottom Row QL. to RJ: Wilhelmi, Johnson, Westover, Van Leeuwen, Blair, Wagner, Agzarian, Rizack Parsons, Dorn. FIRST YEA Q9 QQ 3 IPR Z X firm MUSE f Nm f ,ix A, lg? . If i 'f1 ff L N5 i'm FIRST 'pnf ' s 1 x ' K T V' nv ' V' i. i p A V B 1, i V 4. , . Q v, i if 'T 'JP- -+ 'jr 1 - 4 .hx 1 ev 5, ' Q , I V ' r .1539 Top Row QL. to RJ: Tschudy, Coodlmdy, Trudeau, W'agner, MacDonald, Taylor, Sluhring, Silverberg Ader, Johnsen, W'ilson., Dunne. ' 2nd Row QL. to RJ: Tamler, Weisharl, Spechl, Silbersweig, Snyder, Haul, Feind, Jameson, Gluber jahn, Jampel, Sioussat, Crandall, Billings. Bottom Row CL. to RJ: W'eiss, Sarno. Gundell, Linhart, Tepper, Ballantine, Brown Diefenbach Dan 7 7 ' aher, Van Poznak, Harris, Jones, Junker. CLASS s Q9-'F UN . +7 il K 44 I' i . E 1 6 I '51 4TH YEAR . . . GROUP CLINIC INTERNSHIP APPOINTMENTS . . . PLUMBING . . . BELLEVUE CHEST . . . COOPERSTOWN . . . LEGAL BEAGLE . . . MISS KEEFE'S VOICE . . . A MULTICP ON THE TABLE 1, kj . L..A if Q. A X' H V 'fha , 1 46 ' ' ' 3- I 47 Qliulumhia Qtlnihersitp Presbyterian Ianspital MEDICAL HISTORY CLASS or 1947 UNIT 4186-T1824 CHIEF COMPLAINT: Vague sensations of Graduation PERSONAL HISTORY: 1. Born: Between 1917 and 1925 in various parts of the United States, Jamaica and Paris, not to mention the deep South, but predom- inantly in New York City. Nearest thing to the tropics for most of the class were short trips to the Tropical Gardens and the Ha- waiian Room. 2. fllarried: 2770 l30fll3l at last count. But values change so quickly that it is diffi- cult to keep track. Class as a whole thinks marriage is fine. 3. Habits: Unpredictable and erratic. Class says Buckley and Callaway sleep fine at any time, but that Braham and Deschamps hardly ever sleep. Tea: None. Coffee: Several gal- lons o.d. by Miller, Lauderdale, Pitt inee Stewartj and Hehre in A-floor Soda Fountain. Tobacco: Innumerable packs o.d. by most, Vastola's lip is to the plate. HUfIYl'LF 712 ' la J' 'Fl i . I I i Dr. McIntosh on porch rounds. and a perpetually fuming, incredibly aro- matic pipe 24 hours a day by Dick Lee. Hab- its of eating: Ed Vastola shortens plate-to- mouth distance to minimum. Exercise: A little mayhem in the Bard gym by the West Side Athletic club, Rock, Reilly, B. Johnson, Stragnell, Martens, Cardon, Moley et.al., and Grange Coffin practicing weight lifting with piles of Physiological Re- views. 4. Occupation: Class has never done any steady work but off and on has taken small jobs to pass the time, such as Anatomy, Path- ology and Medicine. Most of the time is spent in futile efforts at self-analysis and specula- tion on the future, and a throat-cutting scramble for internships. An enormous amount of time is spent in travelling to and from various appointments. Several members of the Class were unable to reach Bellevue more than two or three times in the year, as the weather was nice and the train somehow mysteriously wound up at Forest Hills and the tennis matches. 5. Weight: Average not known by Class, but thinks best weight is in Stu Graves, who shows no sign of wasting away. PREVIOUS HEALTH AND ILLNESSES: General health excellent. A. I. D.: None except chicken pox by Muffy Miller and Matty Rosenschein after the last visit to Willard Parker. Chaplin . . . Group Clinic . . . 9:30 A. M. Bunny and the missus. 1 A-L Sublimation by Sharp, Austin and Cnemmerer. Immunizations: Shotgun immunization of most of the Class hy Army and Navy, with usual sequelae of deltoid myalgia requiring absence from Physiology lab. Most members effectively immunized against virulent ideas by lectures in hot, stuffy, dark ampitheatres. Allergies: Finch Parsons said by Class to he hypersensitive to humor, being instantly seized hy anaphylactic spasm of the diaphragm. Bilateral phrenic avulsion advocated, hut not as yet carried out. Operations and Injuries: Five men lost after First. six after and during Second year and two lost after Third year. Six fresh, healthy Alabama and Dartmouth men grafted on in Third year. Graft apparently took well. Offenkrantz seeks enlightenment HEAD: Headaches: One very severe by Jim Reilly after his excursion into alcoholism. Eyes: Wvatch Sidbury without his glasses. ENT: Almost constant po:t-nasal drip, rhin- orrhea and vigorous self treatment with drops, instillations and nuchal hyperexten- sion by Pete Mangan in lecture, on rounds, and at lunch in the Alps. RESPIRATORY: A few symptoms of ex- piratory hyperventilation, with stridor, pro- ductive of 2f3 hucketfuls o.d. of Cant, tru- isms, bland references to My Experience and journalese. Particularly distressing on rounds. 49 CARDIAC: Frequent palpitations during the first two years chieHy in connection with examinations . . . have diminished with ap- pointment to internships. Recurrent pre- cordial twinges cured in each case by getting married to the cause. G.I.: Mild dysphagia encountered by attempt- ing to swallow the Freudian doctrine too fast. G.U.: Class was either too reticent or too ver- bose and overanxious to get to this part of the history to permit accurate appraisal. Con- sidering the nature of the Class, there were surprisingly few incidents of Methylenuria. NEUROMUSCULAR: Some very interesting and unorthodox convulsions had by Noch Callaway following a hotfoot in Clinical Anatomy, Type unknown. EMOTIONAL: Class as a whole demonstrates great lack of orientation, with persistent hal- lucinations of success, illusions of being sav- iours of the human race, or at least of being contributors to science and frequent neol- ogisms or 'Lword-salads and is, in short. probably schizophrenic. In its rare contacts with reality, it tends to violent forms of amusement such as beer parties, trips in Model A Fords to Vassar, dances on the llth floor of Bard, and occasionally, a daring trip to the almost unknown regions south of 59th street. However it always regresses to its former state. At least two of its members have been observed to act out their hallucinatory experiences in public, Gabe d'Amato and Matty Rosenschein. PRESENT ILLNESS The Class's trouble dates back to January 1944 when it registered for school at 630 West 168th Street, although it feels there may have been vague symptoms as early as a year before when it sent for the application blanks. Disregarding these earlier manifesta- tions, however, we find the real syndrome be- ginning with a combination of Anatomy, His- tology and Embryology early in January. At first ill-defined and fleeting, these troubles soon settled into non-radiating, fixed,nagging, boring, gnawing pains, relieved only by deep sleep or a weekend, only to return with re- newed force afterwards. Often, in a particu- larly severe attack of Anatomy, the patient in desperate search for relief, as shown by Tom Osborne views latest communique Drs. McCune and Alexander after hours Life- saviour Luttrell ljf xv. 11. -n..,1 ,W Dr. Draper: Now, Dr. Cahill, constitutionally speaking . . . I Q Q- Food for thought Dr. Colden: . . . and your interpretation, doc- tor? N, Confederate Headquarters I- Q Scanlan, Jeff W'heelwright, Mac Osborne and Pete Hyslop would be driven to singing quar- tets in the lab or importing illicit beer. The patient complained of a haunting undefinable odor which seemed to hang around him wherever he went, and began to have per- secutory feelings of avoidance by people in the elevator. The Class was learning to par- tially relieve itself of Histology by readjust- ing its microscopes to look at its neighbors' faces, and had begun to become accustomed to its complaints when a series of new and baffling symptoms seized it . . . perpetual fatigue and somnolence, particularly in Neuroanatomy lectures. These new attacks usually started out by a buzzing in the ears, at first distinctly saying . . . great ascending tract, crossing over like this, and wandering off into the fields of the Substantia Nigra, . . . 'i but this soon became fainter and fainter, and finally fading out altogether. At first the Class made frantic efforts to stay awake, with Bob Donauer and Frank Dres- dale writing valiantly in the fading light of 256 fiashlights, but soon would be largely asleep. This was not a too distressing symp- tom to the Class till it tried it out in Dr. Stookey's lectures, where it gave way to acute anxiety as the relentless questions jangled them violently into trembling consciousness. In the spring the entire class was seized with a paroxysm of Physiology, which lasted through the rest of the year, unrelieved ex- cept for illuminating comments on the phil- osophy of the wagi by the local Confucius. A course in Biochemistry was instituted at this time, with some relief and considerable diuresis. The only untoward result of this was the finding of some sugar in Rog Unger's specimen, carefully placed there by ,lim Trimble: and Roger's pathetic appeals to his friends to stick by him in his diabetic con- dition. In September 1944 there was a violent out- burst of all symptoms in the formes frustes called Examinations, and five members suc- cumbed completely. For the others, however, there followed a remarkable remission for about two weeks from which Terhune re- appeared with a Model-A Ford, which was 5I Muffy and Pearl to afford considerable relief from symptoms of many of the Class. The patient soon found that a fresh set of symptoms had appeared from those of the First Year, and in some instances as constant, but by and large, the Class had begun to take its troubles for granted, and to talk of them with the fond whine of a true hypochondriac. True, some continued to crack and Grange Coffin began to take out his aggressions with some histamine on a bunch of rabbits on O- Floor, as well as with some flawless Bach on the Bard piano. .lim Reilly became a con- firmed alcoholic for the most hilarious hour ever seen by F-ampitheatre, and one of Ken Lewis' long bones got dislocated and turned up under his microscope in Amateur Hour. However, most of the Class were settling re- signedly into Lheir invalidism, and were buy- ing stethoscopes, opthalmoscopes, tuning forks, rubber hammers and measuring tapes at a furious rate and sticking them into the pockets of their white coats. 52 The first time the Class may be said to have noticed sex was when the four female mem- bers of the group began to disappear during the Physical Diagnosis sessions, and for a while, the males had a glimmering that there was something different about the girls after all, and that it might be quite intriguing. Some date the commencement of Bill A.bel's researches earlier than this, but we prefer to describe this as the tuming point. The marriage rate which had been low, soared after this stage, Chaplin, Foster, Hindman, Holland, Hyslop, Jonassen, Lewis, Little, Rock and Stock becoming interested in rapid succession. Others, either more doubtful or less virile, were to follow. With the Third Year the most violent symptoms had subsided and the Class was seen to be subjected to a subacute condition, gradually becoming irreversible, of progres- sively split personality. There were Medical, Surgical and Specialty facets of the ailment, the latter subdivided around five symptoms. More food for thought - ' ill- . 7' v - .--- tae. gi. . . 5 - . 1--hhzfflsx Cytroen establishes rapport In the Medical side of the picture were evi- dent very disturbing derangements . . . illu- sions of grandeur, with assumption of vast knowledge, word-salads apparently derived from the Journals, but having no relation to reality, and inappropriate laughter. Many of the Class undergoing this phase showed an interesting symbolization of the common deities in Loeb, Atchley and Kneeland, with occasionally an interesting mother-symbol seen in the worship of Knowlton or Boyle. Also the Class was observed to have an ab- normal and almost constant preoccupation with stools, urine and human blood, which they would examine by the hour, even to the exclusion of other functions. Numerous ani- mal fantasies were recorded ,... Bill Offen- Bet it's a-. E H, 'A krantz imagined he had seen a whale in a specimen and reported it as unremarl-cable to his attending. That part of the Class in the so-called Surgical Phase of the disease displayed a great apathy, disinclination to talk and a pe- culiar form of Cerea Flexibilitas which they called Second-Assisting from which many could be aroused only by a rap on the knuckles with a clamp by Dr. Whipple, a savage personal attack by Dr. Haagensen, but seldom by anything else. The only known 1 . . . and to teach them this art. . . . person to make an impression on this part of the Class was Dr. V. K. Frantz, who, instead of examining them, plied them with beer and pretzels and succeeded in getting av few of them to talk. There were a few hyper- kinetic episodes, with extreme anxiety dur- ing a week on Anesthesia, in which sub- jects would be heard to whisper hoarsely, 50h God! Oh God!! Machine's running away with me . . . machine's running away with me!!! Frequent appeals to a goddess named Apgar were made also during this period. But certainly the most bizarre symptoms 53 were seen in the Specialty phase. Here the Class wandered aimlessly from clinic to clinic, occasionally getting as far as Montefiore Hos- pital. This was perhaps the happiest stage, as they had very little to do, but there was some- thing pathetic about it, for the Class in this phase showed slight degrees of insight into its condition and began to grope back with trembling hands for the old normality of life. They played basketball and Moley got into fights. They played squash and Osserman and Gordon rose from comparative obscurity to near-brilliance. They played bridge and Buckley, Hyslop, Stragnell et. al., took the crowd. They made music and Al Sherwin, Gabe d'Amato, and, to a lesser extent, Al Caemmerer and Mac Osborne gave the Grand Piano a hard time. They witnessed sports and Charlie Yergan, Howie Wilson and their consorts outdid the sportswriters. They fell in love and Bob Hagstrom could be seen everywhere with his girl. They began, in short, to see how far they were gone in the Scanlan and Sidbury Freddie and the flamethrower N . - 3.3, Great Medical Psychosis, and to make des- perate amends, but it was too late. For Fourth Year was beginning, and some of them who had been to Bellevue, Roose- velt or Cooperstown came back with the dam- aging news that there were other people JUST LIKE THEM! And so the final decline into happy unawareness of disease began. No longer did they feel that there was anything queer about wearing a stethoscope to the theatre, and they became ultimately split into four distinct phasesg Medicine and Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pedia- trics and Urology, and Bellevue. What's more they obviously did not care, but gleefully re- counted and lived out their symptoms as if they were entirely normal. And there is the devilish part, because they actually began to look normal. No longer the cowering, suffer- ing, miserable herd of First Year, aware of every assault on sanity, they now confidently, proudly, and effectively blazoned their state to as much of the world as would listen. It Jim Reilly in the Blood Bank Buddy! I ! J ? A In-I in --.-1 'Q v X Q . 4 ... X F li vs 2 , , -J 'AR xt. . , . -v V 1 E Maestro Sherwin directs Ksrvwe and I-illle keelfng UP i0 dale Christmas puny' 1946 ' i ' began to seem perfectly right for Fred Hehre to seem like an obstetrician, for Alex Caein- merer to turn one's every remark into a pro- found psychosexual revelation, and for ,lim Monteith to be seen lovingly fingering a it-12 French catheter. That Chaplin could spend his youth sidling up to a cageful of recalci- trant guinea-pigs with a syringe was no longer an insult, but a happy confirmation . . . we were all crazy. The business of intemeships only strengthened the delusion . . . true, some of the Class missed out and were terribly dis- appointed, but certainly if they had been sane they would have gone cheerfully into bootlegging or some such recognized industry. Now the Class approaches graduation, which is, in 99.912 of the cases equivalent with ir- revocable tenure of the Medical Frame of Mind. The prognosis from here on is ex- tremely guarded, except that the Class will find many thousands like themselves, happy eccentrics, and the best thing to find will be that they are not all in Medicine. Pediatrics conference Oh, Holy Night Hazlehurst 'L-2. Hii I.7if1,f . w Q .- 'F '15 'S , Rounds at Goldwater nl K2 v-.., . W 4, if '.. 3 li Q Dr. Amherson's Rounds Oil immersion . . . Naralmra Lauderdale and the Times ' 1, . 11 The arch of triumph Dr. Richards Buck plays a hard one Crescendo We aim to please I 8' Dr. Howard Taylor MCPAQB clearu Gabe nl the grand Osserman serves lo Gordon , -1 x Callaway sculpa X. Nicholas, don't be ridiculous! Dr. D'Esopo dons working clolhes Cleaning up at Roosevelt 3RD YEAR . . . MEDICINE ROUNDS . . . SHIFTING DULL- NESS . . . RETRACTORS . . . A QUICK LOOK AT THE SPECIAL- TIES . . . ATCHLEY HISTORIES ...CBC'S...BLOODS... VENIPUNCTURE 0N THE WABDS aw 58 li M r-- 'x- 11 i l I i 8' I Li-J IJ 75 'rf 75,1 ET ' Q TT 1' X Y x 5 Dr. Atchley's rounds A piercing shriek and a blood-spattered naked woman dashed down the hall, followed by a blood-spattered Erlanger wielding a venous pressure machine with aseptic tech- nique. This awoke the disinterested clerks who weren't nodding in assent to Domenic's exhaustive review of Paroxysmal Furuncu- losisf' Dropping their bridge hands, Tator, Nydick, Kluger and Pastel rushed out of the doctor's station and tripped over a stooping mass, which proved on further inspection to be Carl Alexander, tucking in the leg of his union suit. Bassett, setting down his glass of Lord Calvert's, also joined the milling mob, attired impeccably in one of his Finch- ley-tailored long white lab coats. Putting aside the galley-proofs of his newest book, How To Live Calmly Under Tension, May- nard quickly restored order. The group there- fore resigned themselves to the task of begin- ning rounds. At the first bed, Dottie looked lovingly at Jim while he read the thermometer. They were not surprised to find Ted Capeci with a temperature of 1120, suffering from Kuh fever. Norma Keitel smiled benignly on the multip 114th child! across the ward. And the wave of common understanding that spread between two such Old Troupersw pervaded all the rest of the room and left the clerks with a feeling of unmistakable pseudocyesis. Gene Sillman quickly broke the spell of 60 this Momism in the group by his off-stage remark, L'Everyone's trying to get into the act.', Talbot groped his way to the next bed, assisted by Cricket, his Seeing Eye dog, and thereupon ordered 50 gms. of paraldehyde stat for the patient, whom all others recog- nized as Rip Vani' Ottenstein, suffering from incurable somnolence, as a sequellae to the pfevious week's parasitology lecture on L'The Statistical Significance Between Yesterday's Bard Hall Hash and Today's Bouef a la Mode ,lardiniere de Fifi McDonald.', This incident brought a smile to the lips of Don Blair, who was quickly bumed to death over an open alcohol lamp flame by his fellow students who resented his over- indulgent emotional display. Moving on, the group found Messrs. Lester and Polatin hold- ing up Rorschach Card No. 3 in front of a senile psychotic, who immediately reacted by yelling, HI know. It's a Grumbach! Y The peace was again disturbed by iniiexible Joe Bennett, who insisted for the 17th time that it was only 9:30, even though Larry War- basse's 5 o'clock shadow contested this point. Fisher, content with the accuracy of Stand- ard Warbasse Time, left for the Sterility clin- ic, brushing aside Dr. Gregersen, who was standing in the doorway attired in a T-1824 fEvan's Blues suit, with a curt, I haven't got time now, sonny, see me some other time. Aufses DEMANDED that an immediate bi- lateral pneumonectomy be done on the next patient, whose only complaint up to that Dr. Loeb expounds E' time had been epidermophytosis of the left big toe. At the next bed, Siebert explained that the patient's great grand aunt had lived at 32 Cvuaiac Boulevard, Kabul, .-Xfganistan. and smoked Bugler's pipe tobacco. ,lim Gammill endeared himself to twenty members of the group who concealed themselves behind his petite silhouette to avoid the searing gaze of Dr. Werner. Mary Stu modestly retired from the group, as they and Dr. Wegria began a heated dis- cussion about the P-wave. Late, as usual, Janie Magill was in convulsive laughter be- cause ot' Dan Choy's caricature of the morn- ing's gynecological session, and of Mining- hamis caricature of Choy at said session. Not far behind. but also late. were French and Francis, with sleeping bags and elephant guns, who had just returned from a weekend hunting trip on the grounds of Maxwell Hall. At this moment the ward FROZE LY ITS TR.-KCKSIY Bedpans fell!! Four orderlies Sink test Every Thursday afternoon blew silver trumpets, and Drs. Loeb, Palmer and Hanger quickly took their places. pros- trating themselves on the Hoor, as Lothar Gidro-Frank, attired in royal ermine, stepped from his litter onto the purple carpet which two groveling internes rolled before him, used his riding crop to bludgeon Sayer in the kidneys for having dropped his end of the sedan chair and proceeded to do a WBC and Diff on his patient, with the running commentary, Look, no hands! in In his wake, Bob Campbell, in chartreuse tights, pirouetted into the swirling mists of the Utility room, there to find the contem- plative Bunker in one of his mesmeric reve- ries. Close on Campbell's heels was Bob Adams, untwisting his opera cape which had be- come all fouled 'up with the librettos of Ernie Aitelli's great new peoples' opera, L'The B.Y.D.'s Itchethf' It was rumored through the halls that Bob Gardner had been arrested for emptying The orthopods In third year we assist ff -F the mustard pots at the Yalta, secreting the contents in. a skillfully concealed receptacle in his sports coat, to later use the rare mater- ial for his new research project. Then Meph- am burst into the Treatment room and waved an ecclesiastical admonishing finger at Sween- ey and Etz who were playing 'GMonopoly with two Maxwell queens iMiss Conrad take note! l ly, ' The group was accused en masse of doing off with one of Dick Krakaur's Drosophilia, Metchnikoff by name, one of the 5000 beast- ies which inhabit his modest research labora- n 11.4 ' Fw X , f ,1 -sg basis- - YJ emi-A D . X .2 ,., 1 ,ff Z' Doctors, this man has a sick liver. tory at the end of the lab, which by the way is dedicated to the memory of Joshua Leder- berg. From the other end of the lab came cries of excitement, when Gloria refused to take the two dollars payment in Confederate notes, which Mathes had been fined for mix- ing mint juleps in the venous clotting time tub. Back in the ward, .lim Marshall fascinated the gathering by trying to revive his latest anesthesia victim by reading stimulating quo- tations from the day's stock market reports. EKC's . . . Corona Corona . . . Dr. Wegria 62 Drs. Humphreys and Whipple Dr. Atchley nodded approvingly as Herb Peyser remarked that the history of they pa- tient, a member of N.Y.C.'s Sewage Disposal Corps, was incomplete, especially when Herb suggested the following diagnostic questions: 6'Do you find that on waking up in the morn- ing you have a feeling that you have been asleep? Does your cocker spaniel have Pink Tooth Brush? Willem sailing on your yacht, do you sleep with the porthole open or closed? Given satisfactory answers to these questions, the diagnosis of Suprahypopyo- enteroplacebotitic Syndrome was made, also known as Schmidlapp-Ficklefingefs Disease. At this point, Joe Parker dropped to the 'Cl' v x l floor, weak from the exhaustion of carrying his 39 volumes of notes from the last six Pub- lic Health lectures. Dr. Bull happened to amble through the ward, and a voice, un- mistakably Shinefield's, was heard to say, in no less than 40 decibels, Gee, Fellows!! lsn't Dr. Bull a suh-well guy? Disgusted with all these Cairns-on, Blair Rogers stalked out of the ward, waving his New Yorker in one hand, and remarked, 'lUgl1!! Yumpin' Yim- miny, Ay tank Ay go bek to Sveden vw Research is indispensable Dr. Cannon shows the boys Moral suasion Q' 1 . ,. 5 1 I I -v . I. .wr ' 35 'I - f Bassett and P 81 S Club projector Scrubmp Must have been funny Dempsey and Gammill interview guest speaker Professional relations Nightlife at Bard Dr. Stout and students You name il! Xu 'Nfgf -.F 8 Aff Wishing the fragments into plac en Dr. George Perera 1 ENT with Dr. Wailner Dr. Surgica fx 'U 1 O ,pf 'T7 1 N N .4 52' S, ' if Technique: Silk. Altendings' row l. Nolan, D. C. Lewis I Staff conference Applied anatomy 'Bi 'f -.'- 44 'Pyu 1 2ND YEAR . . . NEURO AT MON- TEFIORE . . . COLORED BUGS . . . THE ART OF AUSCULTA- TION . . . MAGIC DRUGS . . WORMS . . . DOG SURGEONS . . . GROSS P A T H DEMONSTRA- TIONS . . . G AUTOPSIES 1 Q S 66 11, , 3 v-Sk. ,f V ,r .pf ,N -fl .l The advent of the twentieth century L'Forty- ninersn took place on October 1, 1945, when a motley group of 'gswab-jockeys, 'Ldog-facesw and civilians, and er-ah-h-h females, for the want of better nomenclature, attained the distinction of being termed medical students. On that day, those who matriculated from a naval hospital were to embark on a journey in which they were to learn that the Navy's ahead was a bit different from that which the anatomy department was to teach them, while those who found their way through the ASTP course were to find that the term Cl also had another meaning. .Our class is first in many respects. We are the first post-World War II class to enter the realms of Rappleye, Severinghaus., et. al. We are the first to contain such a large number of international mouse units of estrogen. Our early days found us wandering between amphitheatre-H, the histology lab, and that den of horrors, the Anatomy lab. After the class had adjusted itself and taken a few quizzes-ffor the benefit of the unindoctrin- ated, a quiz may last anywhere from ten min- utes to four hoursj-certain little anecdotes began to appear, either about the faculty or the class. Among the former is one concern- ing a prominent member of the Histology 'uf fj 'X X 'I ' A 68 Dr. Van Dyke, pharmacology dept. One of our esteemed classmates was riding up to the ninth floor in order to take the Histology final, when he found that he and the aforementioned faculty member were the only passengers on that mechan- ical pogo-stick freferred to by the more elite as an elevatorl . Looking for conversation, our hero asked his companion, I suppose you're not as nervous as I am this morning? A whispered response, Uh-h, what was that? Again he inquired and this time received the answer, No, it wasn't too crowded on the subway this morning. In the following months the Anatomy lab saw much activity. Heinrich Himmler Truex and his cohorts descended on us in force, snatching student anatomists at random from the peace and quiet of the perineum, in or- der to take them to the Buchenwald of the Anatomy lab, a lonely cadaver in the corner. About the same time a long haired blonde began modeling musculature for an eminent neuro-surgeon. ' Other courses came and went, all having their anecdotes, but none to compare with that which took place in the Monday Physi- ology lab, when a few overzealous neophytic doctors, having a custom of post-experimental review of the anatomy of the cat, introduced an embryo into the thorax via a slight slit in the diaphragm. An unsuspicious member Dr. Dochez, bacleriology Cross pathology session of this group, whom I will refer to as ,l.C., very anxious to dissect his allotted portion tnaturally the thorax P, went about his work, and soon the lab walls were heard to echo, Hey, fellows! Look! An ectopic pregnancy! Of course, none of you could know that we had a physiologist in his incipience in our midst. He is R.B., who has done much re- search on Gazelle Units. Such research was precipitated as a result of his inquiry Lafter recovering from a short slumber! of a class- mate as to what the units along the abscissa of a graph represented. His classmate, eager to help his fellow, told him they were the aforementioned Gazelle units. Nothing more was said until our research physiologist raised the question to the conductor of one of the conference sections. Needless to say, R.B. nearly went into shock, due to the increase in volume of the capillary beds lying in his facial epithelium. Our Class soon had become well amalgam- ated, and we elected our first year officers, who were responsible in a large part for the two successful parties held while they were in office. They were: Jack Smith, presidentg Marvin Brodey, vice-president: and Nonie Tapley, secretary-treasurer. Prior to this elec- tion, we had broken a precedent by making a provision for the annual election of class oliicers. Further organization was seen when a sex- tet appeared, consisting of Middleton, John- son, Wallop, Butterworth, Fifer and Neun- schwander, whose close harmony was only excelled by that of the Physiology Dept. when asked by one of their number if they were in agreement with him. An important occurance in our first year was the metamorphosis from the service to civilian life which was experienced by all of us, either objectively or subjectively. The eclectics of sartorial elegance manifested themselves in various ways, the most promi- nent being the ties which bore a remarkable resemblance to many pathology drawings. 69 4- 1 Huleatt and Rigney discuss the lesion Sick call -yi Dr. H. Houston Merritt tests AJ. fi 5 0 - This year saw us electing as class officers: Worm Neslen, president: Nonie Tapley, vice- presidentg and Yvie Townsend, secretary- treasurer, Already we have had one fine party, and others will materialize fafter pathology, no doubt P . Up to the moment of writing, much path- ology has gone by the board, the department being aided f?P to no little degree by mem- bers of the class who profess to be profes- sors. A bit of news which I picked up the other day from the department is that they are in the process of grooming a protege whom they luckily discovered in our midst. BE. is the discoverer of a new liver lesion, a circumcised infarct. Much food has passed through the-gut, and many of us have attempted to increase the efficiency of the Bacteriology Department through its solicited suggestions. We are well on our way to attain notoriety if we manage to pass through the present famine persisting at Bard Hall. And now I see that the Plaster room has finished laundering our white coats, so I'd better see Charlie and get mine so that I can start prying open the pockets and pushing my upper extremities into the sleeves. Dr. Homer Kesten M .. ffl 4 1 . u 'Nw .kp- 3 -Q fm , -in . A 4Oll 5' 5 ' i f .4 f E ,fr 'N AU' sl ., .. ' '..L,N:L 1ST YEAR . . . ANATOMY LAB . . . PURKINJE FIBERS . . . PYRA- MIDAL DECUSSATION S SMOKED DRUMS . . . CARBOHY- DRATE CYCLES . . . CORRELA- TION LECTURES . . . w x Q N? AND M 0BE ANATUMY my A ', AAAA t ,1f., 72 lf ,rf p 'lash' ff F -' 1.5 . 21'-QF f 4. 4. 3 x',' M.-. ., . ' .. nf: - S1-Ii: , you saw the class of 1950 arriving. The day was the twelfth of September, 1946. There were 112 of us, all very different in some ways and alike in others. We came from all over the country, from Europe and Asia IDU. Thirty-six states are represented, and fifty- seven colleges. With that many schools, you can see that no particular school is repre- sented by many people. Maybe you haven't heard of some of our alma maters. It's a small college, but there are those who love her. Ask Ralph Junker, who's from Carle- ton, or Dwight Morss who's from Ursinus. A few of us decided we were going to be doctors years ago. For some of us, the war interrupted our plans, and seventy-seven of us are veterans. Some fought in Europe, or in the Pacific, or flew a bomber over the Ruhr, or parachuted into Burma or Indo- China for the O.S.S. One of us was shot down over Germany, another was with the Swedish Navy, another in the Dutch underground. W'e sailed with the amphibious fleet, with Task Force 58, and in subs into Japanese waters. Others of us trained in the states, or trained others to go overseas. Please don't assume we're an average bunch. We may look alright, but there isn't anyone who exactly tits an average. We run all the way from Julia Ling up. Julia is the smallest, but where the top is 1 don't know. Dan De- Witt still had his hand up when the prof got up above 190 pounds. The prof wanted the maximum for comparison, looked at Dan 74 Dr. Detwiler and said, How about 195? Keep going, Doc! Dan cried. Having seen s'Miss Susie Slagle's we weren't prepared for its latter day counterpart, Bard Hall, with its transient elevator men shouting HOP! and making like a yo-yo around every stop. The College presented elevator prob- lems too, in the personalities of the elevator operators. The day one of the cars went through the roof, the hope was expressed that 'LOld Smiley was at the controls and went through with it. We got our white coats, carefully selecting the ones with the P815 pocket patch, and struck up an acquaintance with George El- liot, our caterer in fine books for the next four years. Albert checked us outcadavers and bone boxes. Dave Reisner did.u't open his, assuming that it was necessary to collect the bones as each area of dissection was fin- ished, and carefully locked his in the locker. During the next week we attended labs for the whole period, but Ivy-league football weekends took a toll of Saturday attendance in Anatomy. First week confusions were straightened out. Ray Jaffe found out that HSE on a slide label didn't mean Histology and Embryology, and the hospital found out that the first forty chest x-rays of the class had identical shadows in the right lung, proving a similarity between us that no one had suspected. It was discovered that ninety minutes of an evening could easily be spent nourishing the body in the Bard Grille, and Stan Gross So round, so firm . . . XXX x Microanatomist, Dr. P. E. Smith made the mistake of being the last to leave a table on which an ingenious pyramid of bottles and plates had been built. Stella nailed him and gave him detailed instruc- tions for several turgid minutes while he un- stacked and restacked them on the serving table. A custom was initiated that included coffee at the Alps or Rands during Histology lab. First dissection was hectic. We proceeded with caution into the abdomen, and disclosed an organ tentatively identified as the spleen. Before we remove it, suggested Arnie Rit- terband, we'd better be sure whether its a right spleen or a left onef, Dr. Gramlich cautioned us about working on the elbow: You've got to be careful what you do around this jointf, Correlation lectures opened our eycs and Dr. Draper proved how little we observed when a score of us had peered into a patient's face without noticing his glass eye. Our other- wise excellent powers of observation have The petrous portion . . . been noted in medical practice as a syn- drome, bearing the name of one of the class, recognized as rotation of head, stimulated by passage of well-turned ankle. Wie watched operations, and were as ill at ease as the patient below, who, under local anesthesia, was still curious enough to ask a nurse who the people were in the balcony and then to thumb his nose at them. Al Sny- der, with considerable presence of mind, thumbed his right back. First examinations made us pale. Maury Goodbody predicted, as the bell rang in the Anatomy practical, that the only thing right on his paper would be his name. Dwight Morss turned in an Histology paper and ad- mitted that he couldn't recognize liver unless it had two slices of bacon around it. A thought provoking poster tacked up by George Harris. queried, Why gamble on your future? ,loin the lf.S. Army. Wie celebrated the end of the first dissec- tion with our first class party. There was 75 plenty of beer, mostly in barrels with re- luctant bungs. Al Lebendiger allowed that he could end this difliculty with a hammer and gave the bystanders a beer bath. Five o'clock on Friday seemed to indicate Armory Bar and Grille to Jim Apthorp, Mike Hume, and Gil Burnett. Over the mahogony they got into a profound discussion with a refrigeration expert about a mysterious plas- tic bird that perpetually drank from a jigger on the cash register. They are now joined there every Friday by a score of rare bird fanciers, including ,lean Donaher, Buck Jones, Greg Jameson, Lou Pyle and others. The refrigeration expert has been appointed to the Audubon Chair in the Department of Omithology. Dr. Truex, trying to approximate the posi- tion of a cadaver with a plaster model of the pelvis, said, This is probably the view most of you are getting of this area. The broad wooden base of the model's stand was all that was visible from where most of us were sit- ting. Two class babies came after Thanksgiving: Thomas Bardon Goodbody and Richard Shep- ard. The wind that blows around the corner of Bard blew Cynia Brown oli' the sidewalk and into the street. A first year octet including John Sarno, John Wilson, Mike Hume, Chuck Blair, Houston YVestover, George Aycrigg, Doug Tompkins and Dwight Morss began to practice for the Christmas party. Bob Mc- Kenna won the squash tournament, and five basketball enthusiasts, Livy Parsons, Chuck Crandall, Charley Lewis, Bob McKenna and Doug Tompkins beat a team from Psychiatric. The center from Psychiatric remarked, You may notice that some of the other four tend to get a little excited. New courses were introduced. Dr. Elwyn made every effort to keep the class with him in lecture. Those awakening with a start learned to recognize his gestures. When he motioned above his head he was describing the ascending spinal tracts, when he rubbed his stomach he was discussing the mid-brain, and so on down to the hind-brain. Dr. Stookey Maximdm stimulus 76 'a To the end point Dr. M. I. Gregersen 'W stimulated a whole gamut of reflexes-hys- terical paralysis. spastic tongue-tie, and a tendency to look around to the next person when pointed at. However we managed to make our point in the amphitheatre when necessary. Bob Sioussat and ,lim Foulks gave able demonstration of the thumb and fifth finger with a Boy Scout salute. Audrey Brown demonstrated pilmotor control by skin-pinch- ing even when the patient insisted on putting his arm around her. The Christmas party arrived and Aimee Diefenbach and Tom Cheves helped decorate the Bard Hall Lounge. There was a huge dance, eggnogg, and the Glee Club sang. As the snow fell outside the anatomy lab the next afternoon, the class put away the first term's work, and sang Christmas carols all over again. The New Year ushered in a jingle: 'LLittle .lack Horner sat in the comer, Displaying his symptoms three., A pupil small, a sunken eyeball, And a lid that drooped down to his knee. S5311 R..--f Dr. Raymond C. Truex Dr. Elwyn considered the morality of the loose fiber tracks, and ,lohn Dunne took a pro- fessor completely off guard by announcing, when presented by a hand so deformed that it looked like a foot: Obviously a nerve in- jury. In Physiology lab, Ray Wilhelm was so hyperventilated that he produced a windbag containing 21.4 liters, and Doug Tompkins celebrated the first Biochem lab by taking up 50 cc. more of dichromate cleaning solu- tion than his pipette would hold. After treat' ment, he explained, 'tlt tastes rather like a hangover. For the benefit of those who have never tasted dichromate solution, and of course, those who have never had a hang- over . . . Twas the night before . 77 US! F Il' QL I- if 1 lv JI I x - ..4'-fig, , , M, I 1 , M , -V :'l 4 . .... .I . W. ,-if Q5 ' x 'iv' fdfi s, . H, sh in ' . -,JA Sf 4 'L' DQ wg, i, ..,' . ,iq J . , 17 x SKY N w .0 ' .uf Qfqauhll- 71. 5 .' r.: ' Nl. V VV g he 1 A W' , , 72 v I Ak, 9-. 1: 'Qu' mr ,J if- X! 'ff i 1' :AQ . lg us-f-' 1- X , 0 ' -, .' G A . 1 X - In W .ff 3, ,N F ..jvf' -,' 3 - f - 1 ff. ' 'alle' 4.4! U- Fu , A A-Plaxq'lNrqqq I,-1 in fi, Standing: Krakauer, Grumbach, Rigney, Krakaur, Jameson, Parker, Cox, Diefenbach, Couch, Johnson Malm, Hume, Burtan. Sitting: Long, Miller, Donauer, Cylroen, Hehre, Lukas, A. Diefenbach, Basset! YE BBO0K TAFF llllIX'1,1'.- 'F-QTQSISLXIJ' 1 f 'i.'Ei5C a IRZi T'-' 7 5 T1 f : Just a lninute, Doc . . . Wed like to have a few words with you on the prenatal course of this yearbook. At the very onset we were faced with an early threatened abortion on the basis of impecunity. Were it not for the kind and hearty financial ministrations of our patrons, P 8: S '47 would have gone the way of all defective embryos. There were a myriad of other problems and tasks, and a host of people with assorted talents willingly came to the fore to grapple with them. Some, we feel, extended themselves above and beyond the call of duty, and in general proved to be of comfort in time of trial. We cite Bill Bauman, who, as treasurer of the organization, not only ruled the coffers with an exacting hand, but gave freely of his services on many occa- sions, Andy Bassett, technical adviser and chief quartermaster of the Photogra- phy Committee, whose shots were taken with a Speed Graphic, generously loaned by Bill Cox, Jim Couch, who wrote the second year chronicle between shooting pictures, Rupert Burtan, indefatigable as a cameraman and gentle gadfly to the entire Photography Committee, Finch Parsons, who almost single- handedly tackled the momentous and monumentous task of enlisting patrons, Muffy Miller, manager of circulation and publicity, Aime Diefenbach, whose influence was felt in many fields, Brother Bill Diefenbach, creator of cartoons and the cover design, Frank Rigney and Bill Miningham, the results of whose satirical brushes are i.n evidence on the section dividers and elsewhere, Mac Osborne, author of the fourth year story, a group of four third-year gentlemen who prefer to remain as Alcoholics Unanimous , Mike Hume, who in the first year chronicle brought back the memories of that fearful year, Ed Long, pro- curer of advertisements and doer of necessary odd jobs, Tom Guthrie, who patiently read and blue-penciled proofs, Mr. Fullweiler of the Public Relations Dept. of Presbyterian Hospital, who provided us with some pictures, and Mr. John Jackson of the Campus Publishing Co., patient and reassuring as chief physician and obstetrician to P Sc S '47, We further cite Perry Austin, Joe Di Caprio, John Peck, George Hazlehurst, Tom Scanlan, Alex Caemmerer, Charlie Benton, Les Martens, Dick Krakaur and Henry Krakauer, Dom Iezzone, Joe Parker, Jim Malm and Dunc Johnson for their work with the Business Committee, Greg Jameson for his editorial efforts, and Ole Jonassen and Vance Lauderdale for their pictures. It was a privilege and a pleasure to have worked with them all in keeping the fetal heart beating. GEORGE CYTROEN, Chairmen, Editorial Committee FREDERICK W. HI-:I-ms, DANIEL S. LUKAS, Chairman, Photography Committee ROBERT M. DONAUER, Chairman, Business Committee TBONS Dr. Hattie E. Alexander Dr. J. Burns Amberson Dr. Virginia Apgar Dr. Dana W. Atchley Dr. Robert P. Ball Dr. Louis Bauman Dr. Arthur H. Blakemore Dr. John H. Boyd Dr. Harold W. Brown Dr. Charles L. Buxton Dr. George F. Cahill Dr. A. Benson Cannon Dr. John Caifey Dr. Hans T. Clarke Miss Margaret E. Conrad Dr. Henry S. F. Cooper Dr. Wilfred M. Copenhaver Dr. James A. Corscaden Mr. James Cunningham Dr. George E. Daniels Dr. Robert C. Darling Dr. William Darrach Dr. D. Anthony D,Esopo Dr. Samuel R. Detwiler Dr. A. Raymond Dochez Dr. John H. Dunnington Dr. Earl T. Engle The Hon. Edward R. Finch Mr. Henry L. Finch Dr. Goodwin LeB. Foster Dr. Virginia K. Frantz Dr. Ross Golden Dr. Magnus I. Gregersen Dr. Alexander B. Gutman Dr. Cushman D. Haagensen Dr. John M. Hanford Dr. Harold D. Harvey Dr. Leland E. Hinsie Dr. Bruce Hogg Dr. Joseph G. Hopkins Dr. George H. Humphreys, II Mr. George Janesky Dr. Julia M. Jones John D. Kernan Yale Kneeland, Jr. Albert R. Lamb. Sr. Albert R. Lamb, Jr. Robert L. Levy Nolan D. C. Lewis Robert F. Loeb Donovan J. McCune Rustin McIntosh Harrison L. McLaughlin Edgar M. Medlar Frank L. Meleney H. Houston Merritt Katherine K. Merritt Edgar G. Miller, Jr. J. Lowry Miller Clay Ray Murray Harry S. Mustard John L. Nickerson Walter WL Palmer William B. Parsons George Perera Willard C. Rappleye Dickinson W. Richards, Jr Henry A. Riley Walter S. Root Harry M. Rose Fordyce B. St. John Jolm E. Scartl' Aura E. Severinghaus Lawrence W. Sloan Alan DeF. Smith Frederick M. Smith Harry P. Smith Philip E. Smith William H. Stearns Barbara B. Stimson Byron Stookey Arthur P. Stout William E. Studdiford, Jr. Howard C. Taylor, Jr. Harry B. Van Dyke Benjamin P. Watson Jerome P. Webster Rene W egria Randolph West ' I Browsing in the Bookstore i 3 i gxr 'A E Sirk? Ten-minute break -y 1. fi 4 -. N ' Q, h smmn, Joe , X ZA T' Nhgggg, of qi!! I K , .. I 3, Drs. Severinghaus and Rappleye Lukas looks 'em over K R Group Conference at Bellevue Johnslon outside nurses' quarters King reposes 1 5 ' I I V Slragnell gels inside information wysrllawk 525555 4 .. I i i x ' 4 rf' -QA... ,, i Pediatrics case presentationg Dr. Day presiding R'-'Esker' and Russo Martens makes an appointment Burlan on the ball ' 500 cc. of thick, yellow fluid N Dr. Anderson presides over Pediatrics path conference W gi, .'l Emma rings one up Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham Our gal Stella With the Compliments of BARD HALL 87 GQSSSN 'I ll. 5E5'fI1 1 'IWNNNZ IVE, ,.-mgglx - -1.6, FII IQ- - , EIIESII-I fs 52511211 1:5-:111 '- Hull Q l.l'.'I. . :UIIIQLX 1 , 1111 - III' ' jiI11N21-131111 IW,,.fu,hI111I WI' I11'JI3I: 111111 -' ' 111117 H I II II II 1317111 1111111 H 1 111 1I'II llll I 11111 5 ffm? 111111 H Iii mm fu 111111I1:c '24 .,v-7 W E 'fB'nTui Q 0 rr g, :E -- rr 112171. . F517 :QSQI iff: ' 77 EC C: NSHHN ff rr r: gg if cr rg ,E H gr EE rg H H F FC CC Ep H F Hr: cc If F FE rr rr rg FF rc rt rr rr rr rc rr rs nc Uh v :: c: 532754551 :c if 41, ,,1. jg! -IW Wm, C 1,f , 11114 I '1 E 5 3 111I1I1 '- 4 -E mgz z a v R: -Ir? T i 'INC IINICN CCN TRAC LIFE INSURANCE CII., CINCINNATI 'k W. HOWARD 00X PRESIDENT ETS 0VER S559,000,0 88 'I 'I I T 'I qI I I I Q I ,O III III I ' III .III I 1 I 1 ' 1 III III I .p III III I III III I f.g,,1fE . I EI I - 'Q f4 '-'Lg ,' l: j'- I !4vl.:.. 1 5 'III- III I -4 -r III III I .5 'III III I :T-, 7 'I ,T 45 III III I fj.,,: III III I IE If iv E WITH THE COMPLIMENTS OF MAKERS OF STEROID HORMONES AND FINE PHARMACEUTICALS CIBA PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTS, INC SUMMIT, NEWJERSEY cf BACKGROUND Three Decades cf Clinical Experience HE use of cow's milk, water and carbohydrate mixtures represents the one system of infant feeding that consist- ently, for three decades, has received universal pediatric recognition. No carbohydrate employed in this system of infant feeding enjoys so rich and enduring a background of authoritative clinical experience as Dextri-Mcrltose. DEXTRI-MALTOSE No, 1 lwith Zola sodium chloridel, for normal babies, DEXTRI-MALTOSE No, 2 lplain, salt lreel, permits salt modifications by the phy- sician. DEXTRI-MALTOSE No. 3 lwith 3 !a potassium bicarbonatel, for consiipated babies. These products are hypo-allorganic DEXTRI-MALTCSE Pltxzri' imlmi fvwfttimmll turd nlfiu vrqlxrillmg -,miftliw ffj .ll-.Jil jffltrztffrz fwfwlfitf- .HI 1ff'flv.f.l.'i in fvtztulnru llun ri'.1rlvillg lm.111llw11:i'ilfwrmllf, Altar! jffffvwfz G Cffrflfmrfj. lfiilffillllt, lml., Lf S. .'l. Compliments of REME F OOD. INC. 4021 Broadway Corner 169th Street Tel. WA 3-9795 VO ,Q 1 U 1 I cg-cAezin DEDIC TID A Illtftlifill sivlwnl gl'LUillL1liUIl is inmx- than i ll CllIllIllt'Ill'CIIlClli. to its new dm-tors. ll is ll declicallimi In Ll iiifiillll' uf swvicc. tu wurlx- ing and studying for lhe hctternlent ul' lhf- puhliv hculth. The cluvtoi' mntililief lu learn tilfiillsfil internship. 1'esiileln'y. pr4u'lii-e- unrl 1-linivail SlllIlit'4. lkwlii-ati-il tn his assistulivc am- mguiiixiiliuiis nf gre-at leclnni-ul l'FSOl1l'1't'S, whose- goal is to Inmvicle for him lhe tools uf his pmfessiml. In thc- Heh! nf vinlm-riimlngy. Schering. Ll leader in rese111'i-li anal IllLlllllfLlL'lllI't' of ilUI'Il1UIlC IW1'CIlLl1'LU.i4ll!S, is dedicated ln the 1-Kpqinsirni nl' ixI1llYYit'iigjH glnml to uvnstunt udvaillce in thi- tech- lliflllvs nf pmflin-limi and umlniinistratifm of ein'Im'-riries. - - - v i KIORPUR 'XTIHN ' BI,1HlNIFIEI.D ' KRW JERSEY ixa.xx.xn.x.si'iir.1c1xuunix-nliiximx I.l5lIlIill.MIINIIKICAI 91 i i 4 i i i I i 4 efficient, treatment of ulcerative colitis with I I Phfhalylsulfafhiazole this nontoxic, low-dosage, enteric sulfonamide is excep- tionally effective against acute and chronic ulcerative colitis, and recently proved successful in the treatment of 76 out of 80 patientsl with this disease. After therapy with the drug, stools become formed and odorless, blood in stools disappears, cramping in abdomen subsides within 48 hours, and evacuations are reduced substantially? 'SULFATHALIDINE, phtlmlylsuyatliiazole is indicated also in the treatment of regional ileitis, as a supplement to the therapy of amebiasis, giardiasis and paratyphoid infections, and as an adjunct to intestinal surgery, 'SULFATHALIDINE' phtlzaiy-IsuUatlziazole maintains a high bacteriostatic concentration in the gastrointestinal tract H250 mg. per centl. An average of only SZ' of the drug is absorbed from the bowel and this is rapidly excreted by the kidneys. Administered in daily doses of only 0.05 Cm. to 0.1 Gm. per kilogram of body weight. Supplied in 0.5-Gm. compressed tab- lets in bottles of 100, 500 and 1,000. Sharp X Dohme, Philadelphia 1, Pa. 8 SHARP 1. I.A.M.A. I29:l080. Dec.15. 1915 D01-IME 2. Illinois M. J. 88:85, August, 19-1-5 92 WE HAVE YOUR OFFICE EQUIPMENT IN STOCK WE ARE ALWAYS READY TO HELP YOU For twenty years we have devoted ourselves to one prime idea. SERVICE TO THE PHYSICIAN Quality Merchandise at Reasonable Prices Items Varying from a Needle to an X-Ray Machine X-Rays - Fluoroscopes - Whirlpool Baths - Short Waves Metabolors - Electrocardiographs Office, Waiting Room and Examining Room Furniture - Supplies f'if:!S1 f Oculists' Prescriptions Filled Wholesale or Retail It Work Done On Premises OPTICAL 5: MEDICAL SUPPLIES Distributors and Exporters CROWN OPTICAL COMPANY 800 - 8th Avenue NEW YORK. N. Y. Between 48th G 49th Sts. The ALPS TEA ROOM THE ALPS CANDY SHOPS, Inc 4001 Broadway Corner 168th Street Haircut or a Manicure V. LCIPORTA :S SON SIX EXPERTS 4005 Broadway Near 168th Street Tel C1 6-8767 W1-Xdsworth 8-4910 THE BOOKSTORE EXTENDS ITS SINCEEEST GOOD WISHES TO THE SENIOR CLASS MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE Compliments of THE YALTA OPEN KITCHEN 4019 Broadway at 169th sua-at NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. Where the Finest Food is Served OPEN EVERY DAY ATLANTIC BARBER SHOP AUGUST HOEHN 4021 Broadway. Cor. 169th St. NEW YORK, N. Y. PAUL SEMEL I WUI, IEWELER aaa OPTICIAN 4009 Bfaaaway at 168th street LL! Ya WAshingtorI Heights 7-3233 E, ALL GARMENTS INSURED For Prompt Call cmd Delivery Service Call WAshington Heights 7-3884 D. APPEL EXPERT TAILOR AND FURRIER Cleaners and Dyers 230 Ft. Washmgton Avenue Bet. 169th cmd 170 Streets 94 The Iournal of Nervous and Mental Disease An Educational Iournal of Neuropsychiatry S1000 Per Year - Outside Continental U. S.-511.00 i' The Psychoanalytic Review An Educational American Iournal of Psychoanalysis 257.00 Per Year - Outside Continental U. S.-57.70 Nervous and Mental Disease Monographs NOLAN D. C. LEWIS, M.D., Managing Editor 70 Pine Street, New York City 5. N. Y. All negatives of Senior Formal photographs appearing in this book are in our files. Additional finished portraits may be pur- chased at special school rates. APEDA STUDIO, INC. 212 West 48th Street NEW YORK 19, N. Y. Clrcle 5-0790 Phone: WAshington Heights 7-1753 ELBERON HAND LAUNDRY DRY CLEANERS The Laundry of Cheerful Service S. W. Cor. 169th Street 4015 Broadway NEW YORK 32, N. Y. CENTER PHARMACY THE REXALL STORE 4013 Broadway Bet. 168th and 169th Sts. NEW YORK, N. Y. I. A. Harkavy - I. Kaplan WAdsworth 3-1258 1 ,,., 1... , 7 . 1 A' .1 . 1: I , . . Ll1'L' 115 111'ucss111'1' 111 1111' 17L111L11l1g 1,11 L1 11116 1'1'111'I1111111 L15 11101 are 111 t11c c1,111s11'111g111111 1111 Ll s111sc1'11l1c1'. 11010 111 QNLIITTPLIS we 111116 g111111-11-11. 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