Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1951

Page 1 of 100

 

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1951 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1951 volume:

,ff q. '1.1...., -,..,'. ' ' r' -if-f s .' .J-, wha. f f' I 1 5 I , ,I . we . . , ., , 1 s M Q 4 r 4? , , :.3,., 42?-Ht :iw vii, 17 ' 5f2,,2, 4. '. 31 1' ,:' 'Eff' . .21 ..1 L 'kr ' , . J ,.f,. ffm 1 , ,vpn , F s ff:P9:f: 1 ' -3.4,-HA ' ' . ,-45 ' ,' 1:5 , ' .., -......--s....-...,...,...,.,..-, M... A . --AY - --A - ' c'DL L 325115111 M 44 1 1 , vf':'F,: 1 .111 if AAf:f' . , fi fliulumhia Mnmersitp New '21, Q' R, f ' ff'. :jg:i?.I',r V. 1:7 I. '-ij? 5 in of ffm 991-'k ' ,:Qfgg5gg1g V t-T , ggi:-kj .2 A 'A -'- 'fFL7Q: f2 'a ff I lzf l X55 'J N --K ff ,tv .. W , 1 Ar ft 1 f ,L A f ,af f fr- ' , .Q 1. , 2 Q ' 4. 5. 1 s f 5 ' Q f sl 3 -V -. J W A ..-.454 af.. .-f-,,a, .. , -' ii ,, 1-rw , gffkgg, gps.:-V?-, 'J '75f52+1wu2s J AX! ff? W iiL5:f:f'x:5:-af-?4'3'9LjZ-qgxlzq 5 nf g::ii'g,:3f!u43:,:b,,-1 4 ' 7. P, .1 at 'Y' ' If I I -. Q: Y',f', -yr,43.y,-' -1yf.'u1-,A Z' ' fl: :Wa ' -1- '. 11 - .f .sf ,Bin x, ., , ',,5,gs.l,, ,-, ff Ti - lugs: Y-' ': 7fb2g9 .- '- Qllqljgge gt fbggiiikns anb Qurgznns 1 'Lamb' 1 14 Q, 4 554, OX V Aw 'rf V 5 'gy Q fy, K -E 7 154 fa O 0 1 W1 O 'L gill lg xx i -',-:..,-:7', .fir .ai .1 W 4. zierznce library Grosvenor Memorial Fund .-, ,, ,M W J' - ig-4 V 4, ---- 1 r I ue f .L 7 v 1 0 If I ,H ' w f I nigh? 1.A:,-QS-Ssgig-' ' ,,-rg.--aQ .1-,-..,-jf' ff' ' , was,gv ..1 , ,g:::g,g Q- f' Y' . - v , D, Q I r ' .K - 1- , ' , 1,-F' za I ' ,- I K ' ' 4 Q425' , r,5' 1 4' .g . . , 4 az. J v ip' I f 'W .f S 'r' Q , 2 I' A Q -f -. Q, . , ,E f , ' C? 5 Q '1 f' vb' 'A ', iw - i m- -4u:1?.ffyii ' :Qi-'55?.,l 9 - 7' ' ' ' ' . Q-' 1 f ' 555, ' V ' 1, 1' -,. XA-' ' H1---' .r :. -, - Y , M,.'aE- ',-K.,gi '1.2 f , . 'Q-vw 1 Q. f 1,N ' 'SWE :,1r'm, . 1 ,ld 7 1- N XJ ,L I . - .1-V 6.15.1 ,r'Zan54:y vx , d'4g,1pf'5'74Q,- 'X -,hx 5 3 L X ' f ',ff2,4'.ifd',4 ' .' I- - 'Q--1 ,: fj,i.i5E'-- 'L .' f'Q.f'1-W, is K., -V :fn ' 1 4 ' '-.Q E--15-E-A-H -, . n j..A ' 45 f .,--.13 5 'f' mv -ff? 4' SZ! -x- K.. 1 1 ru pf' - fe -ff Aj, - , ' I -, I . 'fffi ' u .1 K' ' 'ff' - ,jfifk 'Q Q '-ff' , -:fa-f-, ' f 'Z H, av .... 1?: w- ' 14 Q JN' . V 4 N, ' 'T nnnzzusu. :gsm . .,,' ' ,a-I. j .,1' z '? if ,,f , ff-'ie , I , ,, if.. 1' 1, 'ab S f . rf'l 4-sf V .. M., '11 H,-X' vp xy, , 16 . M . . ,gl 1 , , 'Q J If 1 , , 1 , Hx, Inv ' ,Nha QU .I ' IV. p'r 111 .. ,uh wa Hmgh 3554 '13 HU 311 H gvmi .1 J' 'T' A iw, . , -Q, W . , ,. w r I 1' 'll' v Qulf N ,HQ 111 ' -,115 Pm. 1 1 l iv, I .111 ' . W. 14-H. 'U 1111 . W , ,I v -1 W H '+' i'+ Wva - tf 1 q111 . ' J D V K 1 .H . - ,lff'7 f 111 ,. ' '!U1 113 - 1 'I 1 g - ' vw- .- 'i 'iff , I h ,, . ', . V ,ll . I K3 ' Q 'tv . fl, 1 'iv ri.. I VLA? VY s 'xi 2 x N' X ' L 'f - yn A , .- , -.,v , . 'll' ,l ' , -PM -A 1, 1, , , , 5 - . ' x -ef' , 4,54 Var' ', Jill' 1 '. N , . f ' Q1-. ,' N . Hi' 5 !r'1 ' x' , i . ' Qub ,V'T'd 'whgf' L vfl,-, at , A .' -,1,.f: h u JV C- d ,.- ' R443 ' ' . 4 f pi, , '- ' 5 '- M , A . 3 ' , ny' A - ff ,J -1 4' ' . 51 ' pit ' , u,.- ' . , I,-. . A Lf f-' Q-W' , d ' . xr: - ' .. .--ft' I ., , fm' '- .f'J .V 4 '11- 4-101-f 14116 -'YOC 'flfrfl 5 5 25 I I College of Physicians and Surgeons Culumbid l'nix'ersity New York, New Yurk .170 , A ' d jw ' . fl .k1. bix ,-'LX ,,Q -S A 3:2551 Q QF M- w ' GW A ' 1,7 17 14: ' 7 is Sf- JH QV? 2629 NN Eels ,M d A555 ' Leumrd M. Mnss. ljlzffm' Stephen K. lfirestein .md Cllurles M, Poser. -. 9 J . i ai- F in- v ' - -w. ' . :Vw It fi ' 1 . yn: i i ,pi ,,,mM 'w ...N- - ,,,--'-j 'f'R . Y . 9 H ,I ggrfw qavg, 6 . Sw img .win 'rfprgg 1 '1 GRAYSON L. KIRK firfizzg Pnaridelzf Columbia University 6 ,J ,.41 'L .,..-cg XYIILLARD COLE RAPPLEYE, MD. Demi College of Physicians and Surgeons AURA EDWARD SEVERINGHAUS flfyfvciute Dean imc! Senefm'-1 Cnllefve of Phvsicians and Surveons D . 'Q Y! Yr' QFQ-Q -'MW ... 5 3 , , A H13 N rl I an 'Y 9' Y .x 5 lf 3 YA H, ' , U E - E my.: I .0 'A' . 4 2 - . J' u . - ' ,ft ' '. fa fe. I iv., 1 ,,,L' 5 5 'K' N- .EJ xg ,fs -' I 'IM M 52 mf. 'WN O A -I . I 7' vf- . 6, 1 N ,S X 4 0 f, - ' fn, A Q I , ge , N 5 6 'N 7wfW SAMUEL R. DETXVILER HANS CLARKE A amfonzy Bi0rbez11iJ!ry UR relations with the OHicers of Instruc- tion of the Faculty of Medicine -for so they are called in the Catalogue-have been be- nign enough, although there were times when we wondered about the reassurances Dr. Truex had given us in First Year. You may remember how he told us 1101 to regard the Faculty as enemies, but as guides along the long road, and so on. Group paranoia, as with any student body, never- theless seized us at times, and we felt a little like rioters behind slender street barricades. flinging futile sticks and stones against the tear gas and Dr, Harry Smith denouncing anarchy among cells, - xc aa 1, ' -:vet fl rr K . ' --1 X:- J .. MAGNLVS I. GREGERSEN HARRY P. SMITH Physiology Pathology heavy artillery of a numerous and ruthless con- stabulary. Who for example, will ever forget Dr. Atkin- S0l'1'S question about the muscles of mastication, with diagrams, on the second exam in Gross Anatomy? Or Dr. Truex's f'let's-tie-all-the-loose- ends-together lectures in which he tore at break- neck speed through the intricacies of the dience- phalon, heedless of the fact that we were miles behind him howling in outer darkness? Or Dr. Harry Smiths lessons in sharpening colored pen- cils with a razor? Or Second Year Surgery with Dr. Gilman pausing to extoll the cat, 'E , .M 1 as tx N5 D li I ffg. V: bu X x ' '1 i .-4 V -ar I 4 4-J, ' wi- X , V 4 ' v ' v . l 'A - ' 'l 1 Dr. Wlilwtt in Plivsiulogv Lib. Dr. McLaughlin and his bone, bone, boneu? Or Dr. Tillman's wonderful slide showing simul- taneously the blood pressure variations during pregnancy of at least 100 patients, all on one graph? Or our lirst exposure to Dr. Moloy's view of the pelvis-android-gynecoid, anthropoid-platyh peloid, android-android, et Cetera? But then there were the times when we could shake off our persecution complexes and sit back to indulge in the students favorite indoor sport- chuckling at the idiosyncrasies of the Professors. Remember Dr. Engle, discussing some minute l Dr. Rilev cnnteiiiplning diuresis in his nephrhtits. structure in the myelin sheath: XVhen you see this, forget it and move on to something impor- tant. And Dr, Stookeys Be specitic, class, and his blood-chilling admonition. You'll never know it if you don't know it now. Wliat ex-clinical clerk can forget Dr. Loeb's Fiddle-dee-dee, Smith, you know and I know -when Smith quite obviously doesn't know? A few privileged ones were on rounds the day Drs. Hanger and Wegria accused one another of being a bucket physi- ologistn and 21 Cosmic pliysiologistf' respectively. And everyone remembers Dr. Hangers This man HARRX' B. v.aN Dvxiz NOLAN D. C. LIZXVIS HAROLD W. BROWN Geoium H. Htuupuams II Pl7ilI'lIIfIt'0!0g-1' P,i'-ymfai.zli'y Pfzblir Htfizlllv Slfrgal'-1' vu JN! J' v in ' li ifvgif I Q -gf... .f A - N '- Q -' ii ' f- -vs. L Y . , pg 'A -1 , -T , ' 0 11 4'-if ' S 3 f i if , ll ' - - J 5 A . 'A li 11 ' '- 'F -,. f, '9- X22 A-,. xi' ' .v a,- 4175. '- Hn- LX ROBERT F. LOEB H. HOUsTON MEIKRITT HOW'ARD C. TAYLOR RUSTIN MQINTOSH lvIf?lffL'f7lE fNT4?lIl'Uf0g'1' Ob,i!el1'im .mtl G-wiernfogy Perfifilmsi has a sick liver, while a few may rerall his char- acterization of liver eongestion as hepatic priap- ismf' And no one within hearing could forget Dr. Kneelands introductory remarks to Physical Diag- nosis, when he disconrsed on frankness in the patient-doctor relationship- By frankness l do fmt mean that you should tell the hapless sullerer, 'My dear fellow, you have irremediable cancer, and if yOu're alive in three months, l'll era! my Jbirff' And then there were our petty triumphs. The time Penny bounced out of a Biorhemistry lec- ture with a lustily-bawling infant on her arm, causing Dr. Rittenberg to do a classic double-take. Bill XValker's exthange with Dr. Loeb on Friday rounds-when asked if eoffeeeground vomitus must necessarily mean gastric bleeding. Walker sagely replied that the patient might have been drinking coffee fthe expected answerj, but went on to add that one usually did not drink the grounds. The Bard Professor admitted defeat. Pirture to yourself Dr. john Taggarts discom- titure when a nameless student, in response to a demand for quantitation in history-taking, de- I taught Physical Dia nnsis . . . .4 ul -A Back at the Old H05 pital when Osler and scribed .1 patient as tec-ling -ti hetter after treatment. And finally, Dr, Virginia Franzk mar- velous sample ot' psy1l1opatI1olo3gy ot everyday life -quizzing Steve Firestein on lumps and bumps she incluired, iixY'VULllLl you recommend that all males be removed? -ineaiiing moles, of' COUFSC. The faculty l1ad its triumphs, too. There was the time .1 student diftidently approached the oper- ating table for the first time, and much to his surprise heard tl1e operator say to the nnsterile nurse, A stool tor tl1e second assistant, please. The clinical clerks face cwhat could be seen be- tween cap and mask, clumsily donnedl brightened for a brief' instant, but was soon dashed by Dr. Bart Stevens' remark, You realize, of course, that this isn't for your comfort, but just to get you out of the way '. Defiant, tl1e clerk replied, I surmised as much. Maestro Titherington, silent till this moment, remarked, I-lah? look at him- three days On the service and he's paranoid al- ready! But first honors for joke of the year go to Dr. Leland of the Bellevue First Medical Divi- sion. Dr. Dinnerstein, at conference, was discuss- ing the great value of saving for histologic ex- amination tonsils, appendices, and all pieces of tissue no matter how seemingly insignificant. which were removed from patients-this in contrast to Bacteriology Conference with Dr Fox. 'ICQ' 1 The Snrhuical Staff reviewing the results of giistrectorny. the older custom of' throwing specimens into the waste basket. He felt, he said, that all these biop- sies might be utilized for diagnostic purposes. From the back of' the room, Dr. Lelands voice piped up- How about circumcisions, doctor? ln sum, tl1e Faculty tlilie the studentsj fur- nished during our four years abundant evidence in support of the motto G. B. Shaw recommended for every physician's shingle+ Ren1ember, I, too. am human. Dr. Rose letting .1 little lilulit into dark corners. W I N 1 .:. ,.,. . , -,,... ., , f' 1? K , lb W 5 ' .X - l'TI'lN - 5 Egg .rx , if ' A 1 .v , v 'I 5 J X Q Q IW N 4234 Zena 3 , l- Q. MARR L. ARMSTRONG Coytesville, N. A.B. Houghton Bellezwe Hoipiffzf, New ELIZABETH F. AUB Belmont, Mass. A.B. Smith York Cily Mc1JfdEZ71lJ?ff,V Gezzernl H ofpiml Boylan, Muff. Qs:-avr .-315'g :-T . 5 f' N . .E 'T' ' it i' 'X GORDON ALLEN Pelham, N. Y. A.B. Harvard U. S. Pzrbfir Health, Stafefz Iflazzd N. Y. EDWARD D. ANDREW Englewood, N. A.B. Princeton Pbiladefpbitz Gelzeral H 011721111 If . FU' gif RICHARD S. BANFIELD, JR. Minneapolis, Minn. A.B, Amherst Brtrrelf AfIe11101'if1l Hoipiffzf. CO0P9I'jf0ll'Ii. N. Y. XVILLIAM F. BEUSCHER jersey City, N. A.B. Drew Air' Faire, ll'llll'I7Z7-1' Hmpital, ll .zlIbn111, lMr1,fJ'. Momiwx A. Bixiwiia Uiiivcriity City. Mo. BS. Yale B.ll IcU HifiA!Uf.r:'. Sf. L uw-, illf -lou? M. BL.iNLL7-D.Xl.Nl.XLi Rio Piulms. Puerto Rilo Lung li.'.:r:.: C nf. gf. Bn-fHi1:. X. Y. L ROBERT H. CARLSON San Francisco. Calif. AB, Stanford 5.171 I7r.1m'1im-S.'.:fifw'J Dx' S.'.:11for.f. C.::'.'f. Kingston. N. Y. X I C ARTHUR G, CARR. II A.B. Dartmoizih Sf. Ln5f'.i Hf .Nick Y 5 ,i l B.-'xRL'Cl-I S. BLVNIBKRLQ Far ROCli.1W.1y. N. Y. BS, Union Bflffz Nr Hff,i!v1.'.z.l, New Y' HOXYARD M. Boiiaijx' Ncxx' York City A.B. Brooklyn Ff '14i1'f,'rlfli flzfzinif Hffifv .Xfzz lofi CIM 76: Nr' ids' '4 - .x ml f 1- l JOHN XY . CARR Flushing. N. Y. AB. Princeton Sf, Lflkffa Hfwpilfff. lxvtll' Yuri? C113 All'RIEL HOPE CHIQVIOUS Brooklyn, N. Y. A,B. Columbia Slmug Alfzzmmzf Hvxpillzl Rf7z'l7EJlcr. XY. Y. A .- S' Y L.. , A I ' an iv. 4' ,Wi ' ,5- 7 -Q iv., 3 . Li, CLARK S. COLLINS XY'nLslIiIIgtOII. D, C, A.B. Columbia l'I111'eI'.Ifl3 of lvlVQflljIl. cm-f.IQff..Q11Ifg.' I BURTON S. COIIINSKY KcWG.1rClcII5. N. Y. A.B. Columbia PI'Lf.IfI.1!LIf.z1.I Hm'fwl.ff. Xen' York Cl!-1 Q. I -..fl . Q S NICHOLAS P. CHIIISTI' New York City AB. Yale PIw'I:j'ler!I1z1 Hofll1i!.If. New York Cilj VUILLIANI T. CLOSE Greenwich. Conn. RfJOIEl'Eff H0,rpjl.1f. New York Cifj' Z- 19 .an- ' hi.. JN CHARLES P. CURTIS. ja. Pelham, N. Y, A.B. Harxxlrd Sf, Lffirlf H9.rp1.'.:I, X: Af.-XXINE E. DARK Greensboro. N. C. A.B. North Caroliru P-LS. North Carolina gb Bfffezlze H9.v'f7f.'.?.J. Xin ' I if 3 fa-1 t' ' 4- , I., R - gi' 4 I. vu ..', J, 1 4. - 'X I 2. -' v rx ' . ,- 19 I D.-A111 5, KJHVTPI R Rmky Ri-. ur. Oluo Ali. Kutyon ll .::'.'u'R1..I'H'f1f1,'.'.J:'. l! .'ff'ff.'g.'wf,'. D. C. XXVILLI.-XM R. Crxxlrx. Ghz. Doxrborn. Miqlm. .-LB. Primuton BL.'.'.:.u. HwA!vf.'..'f. X: 11' You A Q 5A 7 Q , X 'Q' 5, 5' 53326, XYILLIAA1 E. Dani Tucson. Ariz. l'1f1!e.f' S.'.1!e.r IIVIVIAE -Imax L. Drfcman XVhirc P1.1ins.N.Y. A.B. Rirhmond . :..yl'1 C Pu r',,.Cn,..1. . .1 3 - 1 J PIERRE M. DREYFUS New York City BS. Tufts New York Hwpilril, New York CHQ' ALFRED EDINBURGH New York City AB. Columbia Belilv Ifrflnff H0.i'lDjfill. INYEZI' Ynfk Cflj' MARX' ELIZABETH DICKASON Short Hills, N, j. A.B. Smith Pr'e.-'byferimz Hfupiliil. New York City RICHARD B. DOMINICK New York City A.B. Yale Rooierelf Hmpzliil. New York City ': :T 1 io:-:-'oz-:gg fi 'D' --sm, 5 I its-v 23 ROBERT T. EDMUNDS Toledo, Ohio A.B. Harvard Sf, Lllkdli Ho.-'pif.il. New York Cify STEPHEN K, FIRESTEIN New York City AB. Columbia G4r.1i'u-Neil' H.11'e11 COIIIIIIIIIIN-1' Hf1.b'f7ffL1I STI PHl'N lfrrm HI Ii Nux' York City HS, Mirlligln r',.-,Wm r1rr,p.r,f..,r', ffm - , A - -R G. LVI.','I:l,1,'1'1, C.'ff1','1ff,'f',', r, Ufm' f C , V as ' in-f ..- ' A AIURRIN FRI IWIAN , .' - Y 1 11' New York Cray A ' 1 ,l X - A AB. Num York LVIIIXLFSIQ' ' 1 ' D.D.S.Qolumbi.1 R 'i X- K.fIJtg'1CxfI.'1l.'l.1 11frrpf.f.', S, 4 BvmffHv1r1. N. Y. -, -- .T- .6 . sgflio' I , 5. lixmxrlir. A. FRl1'1m.,xN U lr Nun' York City Q , 5 AB. Brooklyn A K BLHcI'll1: Hf1vf1lf.Jl, AXYL'll'5'l1Ii N1 'ZS , - ' ' ' Turoooruf E. Clfxmlfxxo JACK XY . GARNANT New York City A.B. Iowa 6-L Curve-X511 Hrilcll Cfffaffffffzlflj Hmpilaf sa- WLASt Qlldwcll, N. -I. Ali, Prim cton Hmrlffml HflYf7lf,l!, Hrlrlffmf Crum ,. ffr 1, X X' ,.,.- ...- DUN O, GORE T -J -ffffni L. A I.1I'D.1iC.l, B. XV. I. .QW '71, ' ,Mm ffff fi - VA, .-51' A.B. Qolumbu '- I' K gcifwisgkgg , : i 2 -Q iw X--334 . , , . . . :I fr ,I Pr'u.vl:5!w'1Jf1 Hffrflfml, .Nun 5 Uri C113 if :ggi ' ' N , if - 11,391-if f, I 1 ' Q' 'i' 1 Ea' 2r53lf :?i 21 CADVAN O. GRIFFITHS, JR. West New York, N. J. A.B. Columbia P1'e.fbyfw'ir11z Horlzbilrzf, New York Ci!-1' JOHN F. HANLON San Francisco, Calif. A.B. Stanforcl S4111 Fn1m'iJrn-Sfrrflforrl Dizf., Slrmford. Calif. NELSON D. HOLDIQLIIST New York City A.B. Princeton New York H0.rpi!i1l, New York Cily CAROLINE BANKS HUNTER Miallii, Fla. B.S. Miami PfJil.1rlelplmz Geueml Hoypiltlf . -t 1.451-i:Q:-.ww r . ..,,.... . ...,. ,-.,,f1:,.:g:2-fir:-itggm ' ' .,.v.:.. ,,, . -1. if-.-., -' f x V- -.ri-W, W N QQ: ': .A - mm A-x ,lk 'RK ff 'i ki WN A if if' lb. 1 N , 1 551'-' L f 9. X A i -X vez? wi s' if ,Mfr X C? -ness.. RONALD E. HERSON New Rochelle, N. Y. A.B. Columbia Bellezwe Hofpilril, New MONROE HIMELSTEIN Hartford, Conn. A.B. Wesleyan 3 el: Yo: Hm'tf0f'r1' Hmpilalv. Hnrlford ie my . Cami 22 , ,.., Immx L. Luxn mm New Yurk C ily Ali, 1, olumlwm full . 'A rw --, vs X' X , 6 ' 'Y IFRANK XY. IIOHNNUN Indigmapolis. Ind, AB. Swgrthmorc BLA. Columbia Pffv1f.1tfvflIvXvi..' GL mmf H PHXLIP M. .Ionxwx Upper Montt'l.11r.N, .I AB, Dartmouth B,ffff1'11u H ff,1 p1!.1f. Xt: X fax Q0 1 Y'- , Y , . 113. , .. 'Swv it Dr NLAN G, .lmixwx a vlmkson llcighti, N. Y, 1 AB. Amherst ,, .Xltfffmfftf H'ftjw.f.1f, BrffffHA111,,X. 3 figs' cm in 'af X7 ' 1 if' A t xWx t Nl 1 1 5 :ff I1 N K S 'T ' X 'X Q , . NL X '53 fb- 4- 5 X. JLILIAN S. K,-xlslili East Granby, Conn. AB. Yale I-I.11'l1fm'r! I-Imjlimf, H.1z'lffml. Cum Vl1u,.1Nm HIELITN KANICK Rithmond. VJ. AB. Columbil l'11i1t f1'.r 11,1 Hfftjrimf. CftzJ.1f1.f, Of W7 lwfwtltff1'lfHff. !..'.',,Nt11 Yfffl C.,l1 7 f . ,E-JA' X STEPHEN M. KRANI2 New York City A.B. Columbia Mtzymrlalzmtfi' Gene:-L11 H orpifnl , Boflou. Mau. GEORGE W. LAFLASH Hartford, Conn. A.B. Wesleyan K I Y , , Q 45 if 'Af 4 I EQ x , , o ,m f .4?g5i5E5E-51-rI'1I?' 1' :caan . , i ,ff 4 Y' 95? N 4 K, X , 2ff,4':.'f . W9 X If .f.,5Q,, I Sl. Lffke',rHoIpili1l. New York Cily . . L., . 1.-fiff-if 235: 1, :-- 1-:N-. .ir 2 We ,.... 3:-.. , '- . ki' '. iff., -: 2-. , , .rr M 1 ,Wg K.--A -N -:Q . 1 x X:-r DONALD T. KASPRZAK North Tonawanda, N. Y. A,B. Columbia Lenox I-Ii!! Hmpiml. New York Cifj PHILIP A. KHAIRALLAH Beirut, Lebanon A.B. American University, Beirut Duke U17iz'eI1I'ifJ' Hotrpitaf, DIH'l7r1Ul, N. C. gl X Riff -.r dbx: S ,, ,Q-. ' , I ,. ANTHONY D, LEFIQOWITZ f if ' V New York City ?A..:: Q! ,. , q w , BS. Yale aj- V' 1lfIl.Sf11IIiH0.If7ilr1f. ZNvP1l'5'0l'f6 cny - .f5f'PX5E2'- - '19-I ' X r ' iw,-. FRED A. LEWIS, JR. P X x N. Tuscaloosa, Ala. Q A.B. Alabama X-1 I , l , Bellevue Hmpiliil. New York Cilj' X , -, X . 3.55 x N Q .lx S 2-I Gonuwox A. Luo.-KN Of.lI1gL'lWllYg, N. Y. BS. Purdue Mb. Purdue lxfrrq C..lf'n.u'1Hff1!'.','..... L.1...r. ,. .Y 1 Trlrflxlfm M.-un' Lux NL-xx' York City A.B. Huutcr Slrmzg .lIe121ffr.f.1fHff1f Ruullmfn, X, l, K GEORGE C. INIANI Brooklyn, N. Y. A.B. Columbia Brfflezlza Hmfriluf. Nun' Ymolk C111 PALIL E. BIORIINTZ New York City BD. Lutl1cr.u1 Theological AB. Bfuhlcnbcrg lf' :fr ' -.,-1 'Q ' lv S-mrlwzfurzi Hu,-f11f.:f. X114 Yuri Cifg H Q,- 5 N R f Lx l 1 'IoHN C. MCGIFF Dlunkson Heights, N. Y. , E A B.S. Georgetown Nr .F Cmrnlmllf GQ mfml H'llf7lf.l! il .fl 1 f ' . VST 465, ,f ' r . ffffse 1 :L - -::,9:E5d'. lf Y S- VN- SMIVIEI. M,xrm13LL Elmhurst, N. Y. AB, lllinoik Ml. Simi! Hmjwlwl. Xclz' York 113 lr 'bun-.fee ' 6- -1... 25 FRANK L. MORRELL New York City A.B. Columbia Moufefiore Horpilrzl. New Ynrk C215 PATRICIA NOLAN LWORRIELL New York City B.S. Tufts Mmlfejiore Horpiful. New York City 48-u--A AY' rts GEORGE L. NICKLIN, IR. Oil City, Pa. Brzrrerf Nlefzzomzl Hofpilril, C00per.vfazz'f1. N. Y. BARBARA E. O'CONNlELL New York City A.B. Cornell Slrozzg Mwzzorhzl H0.fpi!.1I, Rofbeflezj. N. Y. Sm. 2' LEONARD M. Moss New York City AB. Columbia Beffezwe Hofpimf. New York City ERLAND R. NELSON Cayce, S. C. AB. Carthage LY1Ifl'f?l'.YjIq1' of Illinoir, Rerenrfb and Erz'mu1fi011f1l. Cbimgo. IH. 3 f Y 26 xx 9: 335, , jonx A. Oknxxpmx II New York City AB. H.1rv.1rd .ll.i!'w1 Hi!t'flu'fvt'2 HfwAtv.5.'..'.', H.n1n1'er. X. H. jL'L1.ax ORLlf.xxs Newark. N. A.B. Columbi.1 lllfwlv.rsl Rst-Ie Hff,v'P.5.',1tl. Cfln't'.1g0. lfil. 2-v ' x ' L , llll,H,XRl3 L. O'CoNN13L Nuw York City Ab. Cornell .l.'xNl I' litwm' Oumxxxx' L l1'Ll.'c'.1:':. Hf1,v!Vll.Jf. Rf1L'1lM1lt'l'. X. l l gilt-'Sz' 'Nlcw York City A.B. Mt. Holyokc .ll.rr3 I-I1l't'ffn'm',E Hffwjrmll. H.nm1'e1'. X. H. 2 -IQ... ' 27 Emma PADIBR New York City B.S. College of the City Btlfczna I-ImI!vil.1f. Xen 'L of New H ork York Cilj Lows Z, P.nrP1zLLoNN1z Port of Spain. Trinidld 13.5. Columbia Sf. l if1fw1l',r Hmjvlfaf. Nutz' Yff1',5 4,1-. YY' fag Hn... f - . 4 5 in 1 1 , . 15' ' 1 Egg' 5, V 1 Q JOHN D. RAINLR New York City A.B. Columbia A.M. Columbia Mr. Si1n1iH0.rpjll1f, New York Cify WILLIAM C. REVERCOMB, JR. Charlestown, W. Va. A.B. Princeton U1ziz'er.sily HOJ'lDllr1f, Clwelaaiff, Ohio A .x i .SA T?f.-y-'R Y'.rR.,g3Sif fiiiif' ' T P- :fXI'Rfi? 1251 AISI? +'-.5531 Fl WILLIABI C. POMEROY. JR. Los Angeles, Calif. A.B. California Lf f.i' Awzgtflef CUIIIU-'Q' Hmpmz! CHARLES M. POSER New York City B.S. College of the City of New York Rnn.re1'el! Hmpimf. New York City tif K Nvnnug. EARL C. RISBLCK New York City ri: Q BS. U. S, Merchant Marine Academy N 'it'- 28 Sf. .Lllkifkf H0.1'f7fIrIl. New York Ci!-y l'llERMAN Roiprus New York City AB. Columbia Xen' Y fur' E Hr1i,lfil.1l. New Y fvi' 12 City L.w'RENCii S. Ross Hempstead, N. Y. AB. Columbia Ci11i'fm1.1Ij G6Picl'.1.l Hff i,f11.'.u' ENOCH ll. SAPHIRL New York City A.B. Columbia Buff? I,i'r'.1slHm!Ul.1.l. .XEII Y-fri I ,H ni.. 49' 5, QT' Q--N 'lL'I.IAN B, SCHORR New York City 1lIw'ri,f.111i.1 Hmpjmf. New York Cilj bl,-XDELINE F. SCHXVAB New York City BS. New York University Rfmwz fl! Hfvfflrihzl. .Xvcll Yuri Cilli iq. - 'N f . 1 E , ERNEST Scuxwxuzrz New York City A.B. Columbia A.M. Columbia ga K l'11iz'ef1fil'1 of C.:fJIf01'r:.i.: Ho,-livjlnf. A Sim Fr.:1zri,iro. Calif. ' 'V' -5 FRANK A. Srixas Riverdale. N. Y. A.B. Cornell A.M. Columbia. illozzlefiore Hm'pn'.1f. ,Y ' ' 811 l uf? 2 9 DONALD A. SENHAUSER Dover, Ohio A.B. Columbia Rno.fe1'elr H0.vpil.1!. New York City WYNNI3 SHARPLES Q' ' - ' for IVIOHRIENSCHILDTJ ' Haverford, Pa. -A 1.32 - -is '. .4 . Y .I BS. Rnclclifie 1 'f Y af -:'Tj'21E335f, -Z - x34,.,.A. ,- , , . .gps-Q? -1 3,--ga... B.13'fm' U1111'e1',r1l1' H0,flf7llrI!, X it . V ' 'I 1':E15l'- 'z sf. DLIHLU, Tex.1f ff..-rr, ff? Q DANA M. SHELDON ' W New York City .0 ,gg Y, , Bauer! Aflwzorhrl Hofpinzf, CO0Pk'I'Jf0ll'l?, N. Y. W- Nj-n Jr : af' . -. DAVID B. SIEBERT Q Metuchcn, N. I. --4-4 .51. 5.3 .f2f5g,g:g,Z.ij,, Q' . :' I ' x ' , X 4 A.B. Prmceton . i. 'l. f5 Yiffiwki ' ,T -A '-mf' riff fig. -13 .P . V - f - Si- , 2-ass.:-11 Sl. Luke 1 Ho.-'p1l.z!, IX eu' 1 orb Cm' - N 2- z - L '51 fir' fi .--. ' - ' 1-:.'Ef r1 I ' ROBERT S. Sroossfxr New York Cnty N -xx 5 .B, I . Q7 - t' . . A Wes eym fi? vb . ,X It -3, g l Slroug A'IE7lIOI'fJ! Ho.-jvihrf. R0lAl7E.lnf61', N. Y. -Q. 9' ' if iv Y BARTON P, SMITH ' W Cmajolmrie, N. Y. A.B. Yale Bsffrzmf Hofpil.1f. Avcll' York Cilj 50 Inu N M. S'lHIiAIUN'1' limmlon, Ill. gs.. 15.5. N .llc ad Xlzvffflq Mu zfffv -f.1lIf1fuj1f1.f!. ,nn R f,.'f T n mr, X, Y, if rt lflx,-xmils CQ. Sx MUNDS,v1R. x V Q Brooklyn, N. Y. 3 Y AB. Primcton '1 I'wvf1.3!wi.111 Hwfvffmf. .xdull Yuri Cf! -A I VICTOR M. TORRIZS-RODR1s,L'1fz K ' ' A 'iv Coamo. Puerto RiLo ia, B.S. Puerto Rico RN - ' Q, ,nw ' K Kirlgj' Cfmulj fInlrpi!.rf 3'5.':f 6, - N V Br4mH-311. AN. 1 . V -L .4 -2- ,. A 'R gif' PENELOPIE KINSLIEX' TOSTESON ' I V 17.1115 Church, VJ. - .- N . I AB. Radclme 3 '51 lu, , Q 'X X x 5' V 1' - f? T' ROBERT S. TRUIEMAN Columbus. Ind. BS. Purdue 5.111 F1'.1m'1.1nf-Sf.111ffmf Dil .. Sl.1f1fff1'J. Clfif, Pfwx. P, VAN AuNm31,, -IR. Smttlc. XV.1sl1. Bb. X .llc P1wf1V1lni.111 Hmjwmf. .N111 Yuri . 51 41-,- I? WILLIAM G. WALKER, JR. Brockton, Mass. A.B. Yale T I gifs Bellewle Horpilnf, New York Cify ,rx LILA AMDURSKA WALLIS New York City A.B. Columbia New York Ha,vpiml. New York Cily I 65 -5 'CZ' ,i..- . ' ,f 5' rj X 57 NICHOLAS W. VAN LEEUXWEN Overveen, Holland llwnllez' Reed Horpilaf. llyrzylvizzgtmz. D. C. WILLIAM VOGT, JR. Glen Ridge, N. B.S. Cornell Deceased March 1951 WILLIAM C. WALSH New York City A.B. Virginia Rlmde Iiliznd Ge11em1H05piml, Pr0z'idem'e. R, I. ELIZABETH WATIQINS New York City A.B. Randolph-Macon Pi1.f.mm11t Hofpilnl. Cbimgo. Ill Roar RT -I. W1 rw New York City AB. Gcorgc XY'.1shin BLfJ'11.'u H frI, ,','.:.'. AX -I. Lux Rl NU Wrm XY'zcl1.1xx ken, N. 1. .-LB. Dlrtmourh r '.-., r,,,.' .1I..5,, .... H X. ...... AX 7' VVS ARTHUQ D. XY'11,mx ,t Somerville. N. YI. A.B. Princcton Lezmx Hifi' H ,X L 1. Y if Cffrl XY'.aLT1iR Sr XYYIYN 'rr Snug Harbor. X, Y. A.B. Colurnbil LYIIjIr7'Jf.'Q fff1,',.'wm'r. Runs' PHILIP L. XX'H1T1ir..w' New York City AB. Columbia r1Iff11lgf1ML' Hffr,fv1l,1!. .X EDXY.-XRD K. YVILI.l,-XNIY New York City AB. XYHIILIIIIS Plfxfi-Vef'j.ilI Hffrpmzf. 'GF ,A Wffg X lg' 1 1.- i din Qfa 94 Rox' L. hfCKITTRICK Rocky Ford, Colo. A.B. Colorado Beffezvfe H0.rpif.1f, Xen' York CMJ NIARVIN R. IVIUFSON New York City lMjLxfJc1?! Reere H orpiml, Chicago, Ill. SEYMOUR SCHIFMAN New York City A.B. Brooklyn Where the elite meet fu en. Mrs, Richardson gets the inside story. 5-1 ps p Eduard YI, Thiims. R:r.'.fff,'e ,Il.:i..:: Stella marches uns xxith the gang .icri-ss the counter in the Hard Hall Grill Ba,-J Jia!! ARD HALL. the Hotel on the Hudson. otfers facilities unequalled among medical schools in these parts. It is a complete tommunity. and truth to tell, the social activities centering around the student dormitory are more elaborate than many of us encountered during war-year college careers. Largely owing to the P. X S. Clubs eiforts. one may go dancing with the girls. eat dinner mth the girls. xx atth television. the movies. or listen to a lecture with the girls, For those interested in coeducational indoor sports. the swimming pool. gymnasium. tard room. laundry. and third-floor landing are at our disposal. Ordinarily sedate and 'sell-mannered. Bard Hall has its unhent moments: Those pleasant. sunny. spring afternoons v. hen third-door sundetlt sirens are dispersed hy affectionately guided xxater bombs: Senior Class Night. Sul against a hack- ground of smashing glasses and heer cans hurled from the root. and featuring not long ago a tire hose drill in ankle-deer' skater: the rtzde initiations Ot newly hired hushoys t-,ho periodically tast trays of croeltery down the dish hoist to the scltgash court: and there are. in tart, some souls so ptzerilc as to spend their spare time scaling hoarded shirt eardboards out the window tue neyer tould get one as liar as the parlftb. Indeed. I wish I had a nitkel for every time I dashed from my room in response to some casually tapped tire gong. Iior those who leave this Congenial Cfloister the recollection of P. ix S. has many aspects. the lighter hardly less memorable than the more seri- ous ones. Xia IIIUL tiir supper. Kulcla is on tiiniaht. ki A ci ui'-OLD X, -,. XCR 1 .- ' ,stuff Bei wsu ova-Q AN' i 1 , Give 'H Ei.-,,. 9 c Fife YXBYAGXXY'-- 'i' KAQJXC' Ola QQL-f -1 . , X - . clit ,gait GRP' ,rEs-,.--- K, -l 0950 as-' or,,,,..- :em W' ,ia new F BELO xxjjt ,fe ' B999-of eqi ,-- - aim ,- I gin 046' EQYKR - V plea , 1 . 'xo QR FXTKQS sept .-- gif'-fb -- ' . pix?- COM 9.19-e'5i T E91-- ' .-- T . YKer,5 .-- -1 YN 451649 5'-9,915 JJ,--' ,hya---'H ,ieP5 gen.-- ' 505 3405 ,,.- -, -YO I J.. H..-' 1.-- L,.-- 9031vrdoEjiox-N1,.-- Tgscc.ie-0' 0096: SWB P' V-90 2.5 G QW- ' -.fo thine be.s'1re1z'1z :POPE ftafme ef-'O' 29565: c 6 6 1 Q01- vvfd ILTON was talking about the fallen angels in Hell, but even the most casual look at the accompanying daguerreotypes will convince you that hideous change is not too violent a term for what has been wrought upon these in- nocent faces. They are reproduced with some hesitancy, for it is not pleasant to imagine the horror of a parent suddenly confronted with such an inexact facsimile of the child he has struggled Erstaiic Supplimnt p-wa Abjert and 1011 lazy Ilfere, covering the flood, Under azmzzemezzl of lbeir bideozzr rbangef' -Pfzmdire Lori. I. 311-313. W0gU.2:5 gd to educate. The editors therefore urge those repre- sented here-i.e., those who can recognize them- selves-to rip out this page before the dear ones start thumbing through the bool-:. Treating mem- bers of one's own family for acute psychotic epi- sodes has its peculiar dithculties. Wlmat are these portraits? Models for a Chas. Addams cartoon? Specimens of various deviantsu for use in the Szondi test? Unhappily, none of Wide-ejied Sullen 5? '70 dl' 'B' 43 N P Sbiffy-eyezl Cfllllplidllf these. They .ue YOU. So l'.1r .is the t'.1tulty is ton- eerned, they .IFC you. So l'.1r .is your gmdes are eonterned they 11re you. So t'.1r .is you .ire ton- eerned .1t lllfllhl hrother, yo11'd hetter be ton- eerned-they .IFC you. For it is by l1'IC.1I1S ol these pietures th.1t you .ire pitked out. set .1p11rt from your tl.1ssn1.1tes, .1nd assessed. If you happen to he.1r .1 l'.1t.1l resemblante. th.1t is il' your pitture be.1rs .1 resen1bl.1n1'e to tl1is puerile gdwk or th.1t whey-f.11'ed gargoyle, so inueh the worse for you. THE MACHINE requires th.1t e.11h 1.1rd bkglflllffi one of these horrid photogmphs must h.1ye .1 gr.1de inscribed upon it, 11nd woe hetlde the in- struetor who suhmits to l1e11dclu.1rters il st.1tk ol' oirds with o11e or two un3gr.1ded. His underst.1nd- .xble perplexity oyer the identity of the pittured faces Ilkly' have llHTOl'llII1.llC repertussions. Hente. l'l.1PlCSS one. the 74 tl1ey gave you in Surgiedl OPD ll'lSfC.1kl of the 'Nw you thought you deserved. It is est.1hIished. then, th.1t these ohiets d'.1rt have dogged your footsteps for four ye.1rs. XVh.1t other purpose do they serve? XY'ell. it must he obvious that their C:IllCl'f.1lIHl1CI1f V.1lLlC is immense. C, LNXALLIS M.- :Q :NV- 5 Sueeiiug Shy Pitture the fun the professors must h.1x'e in the solemn 1on1l.11e ot' t'.1111lty meetings with these THINGS in front of them, C111 you ITCLII' the bursts oli r.1ueous l.1Llgl1f!.'I'? Sin1e when is .lIlCI'lLL'Pl1.lly' .1 prerequisite for .idinission to P. N S, 2 XVl1y is lllls photograph p.1sted on upside down-ohf hless my soul. it isn'l Y VC'I1y does lh.1t 111.111 persist in taking three pittures on the s.1n1e negative-1.111't we .ilford to up his hudget .1 little? HhY'l1.1l'S this girl doing witl1 Ll hegird-v111'en't we weeding out the .idrenoigenitdl people now? ll..iLIgllli.'f .lfkl eries ot Hear, he.1rY l The most l'C.1SiLlI'll'lg interpretdtion o11e 1.111 put o11 these dreadful miniiitures is th.1t their n1.1in purpose is to .1n1use. Th.1t is xx h.1t we would like to believe, But it llfhllil .ill he-en l.lLlgl'llCI', The k0ll9LlL'IlllOllS l'.1e11lty member eould not h.1ve supe pressed .111 ity shudder as he tonternplated the l'.11es of tl1is ye.1r's trop ol' interns. Ahjett .ind lost, indeed. CUl1'6dl.'llf Sdlzlllit' Determined Belligereul '-'. '25 ' 1 f-lv fl. f' ' if f ' .fzfaezfza .---. 1 , r 4. H, 4550, f Q 49 I F , , I, .I 4471 fl - fp' 1- ' LAJKQEAL---i - 1 1 -a 6- I I nvgrx me 1 ,.f , Ni .A ' A, 1 Si, 'I ' yu--'f 9' , ' M x X Ama -K I, , ff? K -I- ..'f.,::.f'fi ' f ,gv5fg,'f--:.,f,,, -4.3:g- f' jj:',.-1 5- -553-.5-, 1153! V-:fag-'V Q, ' - :'i'r3k'3' 'M ' 'i::s,f:f?.-,- - ':f.:2:s:f5:,:.:1 sl' ff X ,cy ' 1, 1 Frank and Judy Seixus with Pctcr, three years old, Abigail, nine months old, and Lizzy. . jkell jA0l e Mark and Bert Armstrong with jonathan, one year old. : .kip N '12, Dick Dominick and Oliver, nge seven months. jack and Barbara Rainer with jeffrey. four. .l lull. Ellyn, hw, .lml lN.llNul, vnu pun nll , w ' '!M'l'0 Il'Ul' l.-ll11x.m.l vlmnnx lhmgullllnm xxlth lzllwt-AIIX1, Clurlo .md Ann Curtu with C.hr1xl1n.1, mx .xml h-AMA ll un nm 'mln 1 ll Sim .llltl 'Im' N.nlcll wlth KL'11!1CIll Slcvcn, u .lnll .1 lull vc.1rs nhl, Iiill .md Bcttinc Clnw with Tim, six, Glennie, Lhruc. .md Alux, six months, P an ' 72 U I A ' N ff: E .. fy if 1 -.. f f, Q 7 12. V ' 3 -,, : f' ' .2 1 ' - E 3 warg! - . P X- 5 - .1 FL' ,A -K , XQ T Mi' C .i m .. 2 f K ' 1 4 ' N -T5 E' i ii? '., gf' ' I i F at f ' ' Q - - - Y -'-- 1 v u., e-. 11: xg-ill N fa Z-C NYONE who sits in the Hospital cafeteria for Sunday dinner, and watches the residents totter in with their long-suffering wives and sophisticated children, must realize that the joe College variety of post-graduate medical student is becoming as obsolete as last year's Atom Bomb. The New Order is reflected in our class statis- tics, which show more than 60 per cent marriedg and in this group we boast a full fifteen examples of that great American institution, The Family. Remarkable as it may appear, among the iifteen we note with pride three obstetrical wonders tied for the title of Grand Multip of the Class with three progeny apiece. For the embryo physician blessed with a small bundle or two, there were doubtless many occa- sions on which the quiet of home vied with the atmosphere of Madison Square Garden during a peace rally. The non-parents among us needed only to note the bags beneath the eyes of a recent father to conclude that he had been drafted for Dawn Patrol the night before. But there were compensations as well, like hav- ing a small voice wish Daddy good luck on his g'sams. Then, too, one never had to put up with infantile vocabulary, as junior could tell you that his bladder is full, or that he thought that last tumble hurt his patellaf' The situation is not, however, without its in- herent dangers. Recall the case of the P. tk S. family summering next door to the family of the Chief of Medicine at a well-known Boston hos- pital, and consider the problems arising when P. 8 S. children tell Boston hospital children that 'iMy Daddys a better doctor than yours is! Howie and Rita Boskey with Madeline. Mannie and Judy Friedman, with Penny Tosteson with Heather, four age two months. Lynn Alice, one year old. months old, and Karen, age four years. -Pb ?e5fmmq 2064 45 i 5 ' .1 L1 r--' ! Q . fg I .Ee KV iii! ..-1-,if-fr.: - 4:-. 1, 1 , l : 350 W e I 'Q f , li I ,,i, - '-' I If ,Xe f.. if ' A - - , Q f . ff . ff 554 X ' - '.,1g ,Lia .1 .. I il.--,x .... 'Q , If 1.1-4.- , 41 -- 551 'fee 4- .911 f ern JL i IQJ LUMNI gathered about the international symbol of the brimming beer glass told us a legend about the Great Nightmare that was the 15th of November, old style internship day. Fol- lowing that wild night of telegrams mixed with in vivo pickling, the Senior Class used to settle down to some solid comfort, imbibing to the full that heady brew of ethanol and erotic pleasure recalled in happy memory as the Fourth Year. But sueh was not to be for Us of 19511 for iw are rfijffeiwzl, We detlare this simple fact out of no false pride. People have been telling us we are different ever sinee half the class flunked the bacteriology mid-terin exarn. For us the internship date was pushed bark three months so that the excruciating pleasure of the headless chicken Chase was prolonged over almost half a year. Let us consider the case of a Typical Senior thereafter referred to as HT. Sfb. Brimming with confidence from the Deans initial incendiary pepatalk about applying for in- ternships, T. S. Chose four Impossible Institutions. Full of medical savoir faire and dressed in som- berest clothes, he journeyed from one to another for those wonderful, wonderful interviews, those homey little prototypes of Information Please. All Drs. Loeb and Hanger ladling destiny with a free hand -I2 5 2:49 PM. 5:15 IFN. Must of thu Gps xx.1a lultlucrml in An1pl1itl1u.1tcr A The results wurc tlwc lwit m P, K S luxtnry, mar tum .xnxiuuely .1XY.AlIlDQ tlmir IL'llJl1I,lII'li wl1iul1 warg lnklclun llllflli uf thc stmlcntm guttlng thu p-mtl-vn uf ll1u1r tlrir until 5 PM, ln .1 alum lmx xn llmu Dc.1n'QOthcc, clmicc. 5100 P,lX'f. 10300 P.lVl. ' l I 3 l fi 4 Q' 1-1 if , N-, 1 I ,Q ,luckcyxnp fur pmmun ru.1rl1eLl .1 fc1urisl1 pmk .15 mmm ln .1 luv IAXLN, f,1r11ilu-5 lull lv lm- rw-xml .mkl pl.1m lwspimlx dum.1n1lul .llmuer nmmudinu .111-.-pt.1n1u -ft thuix ruhlrmulnul bu.1u-U 1-f .nn unuxpcqtud mntowxmc. lnturnelup .1ppmnm1cntQ. -1 5 The nervous strain of the waiting period and the joy in the outcome were shared by our patient wives, the way to Boston he practiced saying, I don't known with the correct inflection. Wl1o first described mitral stenosis? Dr. Mitral. A man lights a cigar, and it explodes, Wl1Llf'S the diagnosis? Gastro-colic fistula. How would you eradicate ornithosis in New York?i' Shoot all the pigeons in Central Park. Do you think beryllium is one of the toxic components of smog? Yes, depending on the conditions-that is, depending on whether or not there's beryllium in the smog. Have you ever seen a case of Ber:heim's syndrome? No And so it went. Witli the passage of the Heet- ing weeks T, Sfs confidence in his value to the medical profession soaredg as it did, he became somewhat more reasonable and realistic, submit- ting four more applications to institutions he might be able to get into, like North Bergen Cat and Dog fmixed internshipj, and the Bronx Shirt Hospital Cstraight surgicalj. At long last Twilight Tuesday, the zgth, ar- rived. Amply premedicated with Demerol and scopolamine following a full week on the six- feeding, bland diet, T. S. armed himself with a crossword puzzle and took his place in the amphi- theater, At the appointed time the Dean appeared with a shoebox full of glad tidings, and tele- grams were thrown around like New Year's con- fetti, T. S. calmly kept his place, expecting to make an easy selection among his eight accept- ances. But what if he really were accepted by johns Hopkins, New York Hospital, Presbyterian, and Massachusetts General? Wlien the hubbub subsided, T. S, sat there with his one alternacy and nonchalantly went back to his crossword puzzle. He wasnt going to let those silly old hospitals rattle him. If they didn't want him, their loss. A half hour more of these ruminations, and he finally noticed that he had filled in the last eight words on the desk top. Another halt hour and he joined the patrons of the Bell Telephone Company, and lol-three hours later, his acceptance came through. Theres nothing wrong with the program up at Bronx Shirt, he told his classmates, and be- sides-free uniforms. Celebrations followed at the T, G. The class dissolved its cares in alcohol two days later at Bard Hall. Cfrzsu o 1951 H, the liourth Ye.1r, that xxondcrtiul time ot life, the e.1sy-going stroll up th.u l.1st ivory- coxted lleigllt to Coinmentenient Day. Stmnge to s.1y, most ot' us seemed to surxne the Great .lil'.lX.lll ot' the first three years vthis despite the welter ot LIUIZZQS .ind t-x.inis .ind the necessity of keepiiitg .in eye on tert.iin tl.1ssni.1tes .lt night. for teir ot' ,unikening the next morning with cle.1t nurks up ,ind down ones lurk. Some of us began the liourth Year with more specialties, xvhith whizzed hy so quickly th.1t we recollett little more than the spelling of the tourse titles. Ot' luppy memory .ire Dr, Millers der- matologit sessions in medical Greek .md Latin. f No questions, pledse, just look .it the lesionfj And then there was the little old lady in the Orthopedic Clinits who mme in with low lmek pain .md demurely inquired whether we thought she had tincture-el her cockpit. Mention must Also be made of those sunny afternoons spent The l.idy s.iys she thinks slit-'s dragging something, in f-X J , quill! 1 iuillll nf II l SW l.et ine tell you, this meal ticket de.iI is redlly the husiness. XVLlfLlIlIlg the televised baseball games on the Proshitectoiny Service. Group Clinic ollered .1 relaxed program of daily Damn it, MeGiff. no more uf these routine 'lull'-S.lCl1Sl .itlniission notes. Morris Freeman coming down ROA. pot luck, and at the end of two months most of us could boast a number of really interesting patients in addition to a generous assortment of crockery. This was really the life-the chance to practice medicine in one's own office. Golly! Ultimately some patient would break the spell with a quip like, Thank you very much for ex- amining me, young man, but tell me-when do I get to see the doctor? On to Pediatrics, nicknamed by some the Animal Farm, where for another two months we Studied the vagaries of H. influenzae, jugular punctures, and agitated mothers. The most im- portant lessons in pediatrics seemed to be left out of the textbooks. One afternoon in the Clinic, while scrutinizing an infant's tonsils from the side of the examining table, we were greeted by .1 chronologically appropriate expression of disap- proval, after wiping ourselves off, we resolved thenceforth to stand outside the target area. Equally valuable knowledge involved the graphic dangers of resting a strange infants bottom on the sleeve of ones white jacket. The wards also had their humorous diversions. like the precocious lad of five who bewildered the K 46 lab by returning to it bags full of old lab reportsg and the psychology of a four-year-old veteran of twenty-tive admissions who went around doing pantomime blood counts on all ward personnel. Witlaal good experience, and most of the prospec- tive fathers tried to get through it in time. ' Continuing our junket along the paths of re- gression, we passed from the newborn to the realm of the unbornfan area just full of sur- prises. After the ten-day jiffy course in the intri- cacies of the Great Miracle, we emerged from the labor room fully competent to win the Boy Scout Merit Badge in Midwifery, but were cautioned to refer any diliicult deliveries to the nearest cop or hack-driver. Our Gynecology Clinic experience etched into memory the dangers of large-scale medicine when a pert young thing walked into the examining room clutching her unmentionables in her hand, and asked whether she had at long last found the Neurology Clinic. In the land of infra-umbilical medicine one was recognized as well-trained by Barbara Dominick, Barry Blumberg, Nick Van Leeuwen. and Bet Dickason watching Dr. Rijnders operate in his hospital in Holland. E I T ii. g N t n T , 1' xx, ' :-at J h A ' if. - f kai' Y ' 1:- the successful rlevelopinent ol' the hliddle-Div tance Stare. Down to the Iiast River for Bellevue hlcvlitine ir. wards Iiull ol' pathologic Illllsetllll pietes, Many ot' those chests were so tnll of noises that we didnt dare describe them hetore checking nt-xr door to make sure the elevator wasnt passing by. Here at last We had descended from the Ivory Tower to the land of galloping dandrnti. the sins of the palate, and the little red bug. I-low com- pulsively we strubhed our hands while on the Chest Service! They tell me my lingernails will grow back in a few months. At last the elective: Some ot us spent it on the Aphasia, Incontinence, and Uric Acid Service at Goldwater toccasionally known as The Rocknl, others up at Skiing General Hospital in Coopers- town, while the remainder chose the less exotic haunts of Roosevelt and St. Luke's. Away from home we no longer went into opisthotonus when the attending physicians looked our way during Grand Rounds and our Babinskis At P, X S, brunch means bridge plus lunch. Miss Russell on guard against sliiipliftt-rs. no longer became positive at the drop of 1 cotton ball. As visiting physicians we told the downtown folk at St. Luke's and Roosevelt how it was done at the Big Hospital. Some of us acted as substitute interns during our elective, armed with small black notebooks crammed with pearls written in microprint. Witli all the savoir faire at our disposal we asked our first new admission in our best report-promoting voice, VUhat is your chief complaint? Like a shot came the answer: Doctor, I have paroxysmal anricular tathycardia and it it continues for 50 minutes, I go into pulmonary edema, My attack has been going 20 minutes already. Do some- thing. As the rales slowly gurgled their way up to the clavicles, how we wished We tonld reatl what our little black book said about paroxysmal auricular tachycardia. A short year, really, culminating in the Great Day when being ralled Doctor no longer made us turn around to see who else was in the room. Ci f'if X PM .,-1 Frou! mu'-Ernest Reiner, Robert Silbert. Grirth Dettinger, Denton Cox. Middle mu-Murray Greene. john Bozer. Alvin Margolius, Willem Roosen. P.1ul Beres. Donald l-Iulub, Herbert Mngraim. B452 mu-joseph Shipp. Allyn Kidwell, Leonard Brandon. Marcus Key, George Allen, Robert Flowers, Charles Doolittle. john Hosmer, Arthur Hall. john Ultmann. john O'Loughlin. Harold Orvis. Robert Feldman. Paul Gilbert. ward, let us think back to our lirst try at history- taking, our initial Doctor-Patient relationship. It was L1 two-ugly, give-.ind-take proposition in those days. You give me your history. and I'll take u powder. fThe preteptor bounted those histories like rubber tlietks at the Corn Exchange Bankj. And crystallized in memory was the day that tall. lanky fellow told the Professor olf in front of the whole group. Boy, did he tell him! W'h.1t w.is that 51 fellow's name-you know, the one who never did graduate? We saw all sorts of things that year: the oper- ating rooms. the OPD, the Fracture Seryite. .md surgital pathology slides. XY'ith it came the real- izdtion th.1t well have to do some work before wed know it all. We had .1 highly memorable opportunity to learn r.1dit.1l surgery fleft breast. spleen, and descending tolony, .ts well .15 ton- Les DeGroot doing stat white count for Harkness. servative surgery tright breast, gall bladder, and ascending colonb. If the reader wishes to test for his physiologic age, let him try holding a retrac- tor for eight hours as steadily as he did in the third year. We finished by looking at skin lesions, doing a number of ENT and neurologic examinations, several psychiatric work-ups, and drinking an esti- mated 7,000 cups of coffee in the old Presbyterian Hospital Soda Fountain during the ten weeks on specialties. A poll taken by the authors in that same Soda Fountain on the question, Did you ever really see a pair of vocal cords? returned, Yes YZ. No 469, and Uncertain 5192. We re- gret to say that we were unable to complete a similar survey in regard to certain structures in the eyegrounds due to dihticulties in phrasing the questions in such ri way that .1 representative group in the class could give specific answers. No one will forget the modestly proportioned lecture room on the tenth floor of the College where the Ap- plied Anatomy lectures were given. For those readers who look for more facts in a history of this type, the authors are prepared to produce cer- tified air temperature recordings up to 1530 F. in that room. We listened to the assortment of medical enter- tainment prepared for our class by the Depart- Thosc long hours with the microscope and the umpteen exams xxc wrote were only preparation for... lf. '. 'ti ment of Me-elitine. Eath Saturtlay we were treated to .i paracle of stars who went through their .ltls in the Amphitheatre pit with .1 stage crew spe- eially trainetl in turning the lights on .intl off on cue, flashing sllcles on the screen .intl writing in multicolored luminescent chalk. Dutifully, we asked questions when the presiding pliysieiaii during the closing setontls of the Comhinetl Stall Conference called for comments from the Bark Rows. We know that we will lie forgixen for attending Polgark demonstration of hypnotism rather than the clinic on Bacterial Mutants. We know because most of the Front Rown was in Amphitheatre F with us coneentrating hard .intl exercising their imaginations. It was during the Clinical Pathological Con- ferences that we had an opportunity to match wits with the experts, Making the diagnosis was like betting on the races, you devise a system and play the odds, In women, it's two to one in favor of lupus erythematosis judging from past perform- -r., 52' rising .intl shining with the uld blond wagon, ances, while hemoehroinatosis is a six to live shot in the men's department with such dark horses as cirrhosis, myocardial infarction and hyperten- sion far down on the list of suspects, Vile will Fencing with Uncle Robert .icrnss the betltable. -ui ,li 1.1- 4 .- . V A clean packet, pltase. I've got the tirst bed on the right Friday morning. never forget the time we got the diagnosis Dr. Hanger missed. Sorry, gentlemen, we can not accept your offer of a Presbyterian Hospital ina ternship until next year. It would not be fair to the rest of the class. We sat politely as the brighter lights of the Fourth Year delivered the Friday noon Medicine lectures. In one hour our older brothers wafted us through the worlds literature on the etiology, clinical manifestations, differential diagnosis and treatment of their special topic, and wound up with a coup de gras, the preliminary results of treatment with ACTH in a series of one case. We were ready for a few milligrams of Cortisone our- selves, but managed to live through to the stage of countershock and gave the lecturer his well- earned round of applause. At Willard Parker we were taken by the hand and ushered, clad in white gowns, through the infectious diseases wards, tompulsively washing our hands after even the most imaginary contact with the rashy and sniflling youngsters. Remember Y-, .K K ' 1? ,l 1- fl I better pay up or Ill never get out of the third year. the bravado with which we strode through the measles ward tossing all sterile precautions to the winds? We had the measles at the age of six! And with what reluctance did we sacrifice those sunny spring Saturday afternoons to the Search for pseudomembranes, strawberry tongues and morbilliform eruptions. In fact, some of us will have to make up the sixth session next year. Dr, jaycox proudly demonstrating the handiwork of the cancer killer, -e' '.'t ' vb' V x f i X X I . . -. f '-Sb.. 5 'ti I l . - d NVQ also suffered. Alter .1 full yc-ar of clinical experience we once again dove for the textbooks to overcome the last ohstacle hetwcen us and what is reported to he an easy fourth year. Great was our anguish as we plodded our w.1y through Ophthalmology. ENT, Dermatology and Surgery, in an effort to answer such questions as, XY'hat would you do it' a patient who was hard of hearing came into your oHice? just speaking louder would not be an acceptable answer unless it were gen- erously padded with otological facts and figures, And what .1 job it was reading Cecil from cover to cover as well as all issues of the Green journal over the past two years preparing for the Medi- cine exam. V76 left behind us not only the three required courses of the third year-Medicine, Surgery, and Laying in a seven-day supply. li Specialties-but also .1 wide variety oli work under the heading Electivc : Neurology, Pathology, and Marriage proved to he the most popular sub- jects. Tw elve of us were married during the year. while eight children were horn. Ten diilerent clinical electives were taken, some as far away as California, and SOIHC in the Army. A few of us participated in researth projects. and. needless to say, during that era cancer and tl1e adrenal cortex nlled the stage. It should be recorded that while some were doing this type of work. others were t.1king trips to Vermont for skiing, evenings oft for ll few beers at the Tropical Gardens, dates to the Spring Formal. Did you say Spring Formal? That means . . . THE YEAR IS OVER. Q VMI Q Wg, f 'Ili' -I 'f' 2-'v P . l 'Y , K, ..... . yt! t :lk ..- N . X fx . . . K5 r 'A r ' XF, f E V Xxx Q5 X X- .avi ff, ,f 2 Zena . O- Wy If I 'H 1 . ..- ff ff Ml.. FQ v M J ' q.Q'1 J fs 1 I 1 :Q ni iff X sd? ff- W :fzb .W fi M, 4 i4 . ' A I . I A-A if JM 1 lx-HDR' . V IEEE I mul Le , S Q, , 4 ' I X ' , . 'ig 5, 9 la ' 'X ' -I as , - ' , 5 1 f.: Qs . - I - X . W, 5- A 9 X4 W. 5 pf 2,4 Q 'Q I iz- bt! Lf ---4 1116. W '49fi'4ai-al Zin- C' , . 9 lit L. N1 Frwzl ron'-john Williams, joseph Alpers, Frederick Duhl, Robert Richie, Gardner Fay, Clayton Del-laan, Mlddff mu'-Clifton Howard, john Nork, Bernard Schoenberg, jose Lopez, john Hardie, james Thorpe, john Bryant, james Terry, Arthur Phinney. Bark ron'-Herbert Poch, Benjamin Wright, Paul Errera, Miguel Garcia, Marvin Zimmermann, Robert Milan, Edwin Maynard, Howard Thompson, Robert Beilman, joseph Karns, james Miller. CVM of I953 T started all over again in early September, and after ten minutes of the first lecture we felt as though there hadnt ever been a vacation. The remainder of the morning was spent learning to sharpen pencils, a skill we acquired with rapidity but not without incident. Most of us worked the first pencil into a stump within fifteen minutes, while four hapless ones wound up in the Emer- gency Ward with sliced thumbs. An auspicious beginning! Very few dared look down the long, hard road of the second year, and little did we guess that we would soon be buffeted by a rapid and un- remitting tattoo of quizzes and exams totalling more than eighty-five, to say nothing of the Count- less hours in laboratories, stacks of books, and bushels of lectures. Of BHCT little emerges from the haze of mem- ory except for those joyous hours spent attempting to find out just how patient a rabbit can be. Then X l ' 5. i li, il if fe 'fi-f , , Q., - ' ,j we ,-.yr Ni ' - I X- x A I xlv AZ X figfxl-6 fs i of From' mu-XY'.ilter Renter, Peter Whivs, wllllldlil T.lg'u.1rt, Ronald Pfister, Oscar Krieger, .Incl Markmvitz. Mfjdlt mu'-j.iy Meltzer, Stanley Iidelrmn, Roberta Goldring. Alice Kross, julie Schoepf, Joanne Lloyd-jones, Fletcher Riley. Stanley Einhnrn, LeRoy McDaniel. Bari mu'-Robert Van Hoek, Robert Leeper, Ernest Vmdcweghe, Yhrnes Geurhnrt. Fred Wliitctwmb, Selden Dickinson, blerrill Bradley, George Hyde, Arthur Aronuff, Seymour Kdlechstein, Robert Milch, joseph Kami. Yl.ty Goodkind, james Robinson, Richard Michdels. it luppenecl: Dr. Roses quiet voice spoke, We're going up to the laboratory now, and we're going to sit down with our peneils, .ind were going to have a little quiz. A list went up, .md half the class went down for personal reasstiranee. Wliat noticeable sighs of relief when the orals .ind what- not at long last brought B.1cT to el ulose, and the whole experience faded into the limbo of pain- less Amnesia. By the end of the trimester the elements of inH.1mm.ition and repair had been mastered, and Pathology became an uptown annex of the Art Students' League. The local Rembrandts were till- ing their notebooks with technicolor incarnations of various microscopic nightmares. The first hitch was over, .ind we relaxed with the initial class party, .1 smashing success. The floor show that evening m.ide the Copzitdbaiin revue look like .1 Sunday School Easter pageant. Duhl. Neely, and Company turned out so polished Highlight of the day-lunch. a performance that we began to wonder which was vocation and which was hobby. Our tour of the vagaries of rural plumbing was masterfully conducted by Dr. Brown, whose Would you play that one over again? y . . HM, I-'34 knowledge of the intimate habits of the black widow spider made us aware of the dangers lurk- ing in the dark crevices of quaint wayside sanitary facilities. The only casualty of the course was one luckless character who burst into Horid psychosis with active hallucinations of Taenia Solium scolices in his oatmeal. Blood, sweat, and tears, but mostly blood-that was Clinical Path. Wfe eventually decided that this course was the facultys insidious technique for keeping us divided among ourselvesg for how could you be friends with anybody who stabbed you every day for three months? Neuropath lec- tures providecl a held day for the local Rip Van Winklesg why stay awake when one could get it all from the departments notes, those mimeo- graphed combinations of the Congressional Record and World Almanac? Heeding the Deans admonition to learn by It says U25 year old medical student. doing. some of the students put last ve.ir's em- bryology course into practice, and tigars all around on three occasions vvas the happy outtome. As the year vvore on. the drawing ot' pictures in Path Lab faded to its proper perspective. namely, fewer pictures-this despite departmental brandishing of colored pentils to the accompani- ment ot a Hurry ot' vvhite envelopes. These minor disturbances did not alter the class' enthusiasm for the course. This was nev er better indicated than by the sendoti given Dr. Baumann on his departure for the Army. Although the long arm of Uncle Sam came no closer to us than that. prophylactic enlistments in R. O. T. C. rose sharply. The thumbscrevvs were released for the second time as our trimester ground to a screeching halt. and we celebrated again with home-brewed Bac- chanalia. This fling gave the Amoral Choral f x li. 1 y . ,, a 1. Y . Stop when you rtach luiine. Society its second opportunity to Hex its vocal cords. Coming down the home stretch. a healthy hvperventilation prevailed. Pharmacology raised false hopes ot' lending us our second vvind-but If you diin't sit still. Well give you to the Surgeons. bo. what is iti' j ' -lim Neely, Fred Duhl and Roy McDaniels holding forth at the class party. instead produced almost total apnea which nearly culminated in asphyxia. It was soon apparent that the cats used in the Dr. Baumann being congratulated on his appoint- ment to the U, S. Army. pharmacology laboratory experiments were heartier than we were and by the end of the afternoon were usually in better shape. Finally the mysteries of the autonomic drugs and the vegitative nervous system were solved and, although our revolving drum tracings looked like a cross between an electroencephalogram and an EKG, we knew what tracings we should have gotten. As a course surgery occupied a special place in our heartsg it provided our first Contact with pa- tients-clogs-and also an occasional Homo Sap. In Physical Diagnosis we percussed each other black and blue, and listened innocently with Laennees Marvelous Instrument, entering with Dr. Kneeland the faery realms of auscultatory romance. Heart and lung borders were percussed with Tender Loving Care and blood pressure culfs introduced. lt vv.1s .1 gre.1t shotk to sOl1ie when .1 di.1stOlic murmur vv.1s llulfml over .1 i1.1l's .iorlic .1re.1. With l ClLlLl.lflLC .md .1 blush the instructor w.1s informed .1i1d the murmur turned out to lNe nothing b11t the I1Ol'I'D.1l .Ruff Jxffv. Our debut in the doctor-p.1tient rel.1tionsl11p vv.1s I'l1J.dC in p.11rs tfor Il'lOl'.ll supportl .is ive practiced Osleri.1n t.1ctics .it Cioldvxniter .ind Belle' vue. M.1ny .1 1linic.1l clerk vv.1s told by the NL'.l- soned veter.111s of lI1l1llIUCl'Jl lC hospit.1l .lkil'liiN' sions. Dont listen over there. The Jffrlfii-1 Llillillly hear the murmur here. We crossed the finish line with the help of gallons of coffee, benzedrine tablets to keep us .uvake .1nd notebooks filled with m.1teri.1l to look over .1 few minutes before final ex.1ms. Social The experiment f.1iIe-:l e.1rlv. Tud.1v we he.1r the whole b.1ll game, .rg , , .,,- Did you ever see sllcli .1 sight in your life? activities ceased and tl1e sunrise became .1 familiar site .is Goodman and Gilman became the best seller we cuddled up in bed with. Those who have survived before us say that like all old medis cal student memories. these days will wither and f.1de .1w.1y. After .1 year of quizzes and eonhnement ive were l'C.l1l5' for .1 be informed th.1t Meditine, Surgery resort on tl1e lhllili .1tric or Neurolog It could li.1rdlv soned pl1i'sici.1ns. were one-miiiute long summer Y.1C.lflOIl only to our v.1c.1tion could be spent in or some CC1L1.llly restful elective S of the Hudson sueh .is Psytlii- c.1l institutes. be s.1id of us th.1t we were se.1- but in Dr, Loc-bs words. xve boiled eggs. but good ones. fbi- ,N :Ni ,ST .- ful' as 'x See 'X -A 5 H4 2. .-M .- - 3521 if ' ' 21 2 25 ,Q . fr-1 f Q 1 -41' xl 1.x S M-' , V ?. ',-S .. .. I ' ...QQ -ug-v'guf faz' Zena - 'f f'-'r' 'r ' . f,,, ., 'Q 5 Fi-ml! mu-jay Haft, Kenneth Altman, Vincent Butler, Middlt mu'-Berl Bass, Eugene Gottfried, Milena Lewis, Eugene Eeeley, Enoch Gordis. Bark 1-ou'WPindaros Vagelus, james Rathe, john Vecchiolla, Armando Cuccharella, Wyinn Wfestover, George Hogle. gfaaa o 1954 ONSIDERING the many striking and in- explicable phenomena which the physician will encounter in his later years of practice, his hrst year of medical school provides a perfect background. For proof of this, merely consider the people who with good fortune will graduate in 195-i. Entering as a thoroughly confused group of rugged individualists, within .1 few months we've emerged from the melee as a fused unit 66 known as a class, In .1 short time a name and a face became linked, and soon after that an added factor called personality was attached to the pair, and friendships began. But what produced this fusion? W.1s it the common ordeal of the first anatomy lab with our thirty-one fellow classmates gingerly beckoning to us from their marble thrones? Or was it that initial lecture with a famous neuro-surgeon? There Q X-.I G Graf' Pri-I 1 W f. 1i,A, 'zfvrkfx i QU Fwul mu-Dormlel Reisfclel, D.ivi4.l Rexel, Whiltcr Tuchm.in, Melinin Gouliin. illxtftfft 1uzi+Ritli.iiel Hays, Lonnie M.uDun.ild. Kexin Hill, Mirxin Lipmnn, Roger vlellitfe, Duid P.llll'ICl', Rnhert Pottenger. B.1t'i vnu--I-iscpli Mielue, Sherwin Kevy, john lielcson, Hirnltl Smith, vlirsepll liillmn-, Elmer Lintls.1x'. Rielmnl Puckett. was no need to tell anyone in that audicnee about the oft-repeated importanee of the 55'ITlP.1fl'lCflL nervous system, Wfe were syiiip.itlietit, espetially for the first vietim in the pit. Vlfhile on the subjett of neuro.m.1tomy, how many individuals can hlithely in.1int.iin ii supine position streteheel over four se.its when the lights flash on during gi post-lumheon leelure? '54 his one, and but for the grate of their prod-.ling lu 1 neighbors, possibly three or four. Youll he .lmazcel .lt the number of sleeping positions one can discover in those .1inphithe.1ter sesits. And speaking of the .iiiipliitlieiter seats-Swell. lets not. How many individuals tan shire the common aesthetic experieme of xiewing fallen eigiretle ashes under .1 new niierostopeg or shire the sims- tiuity of that lirst exam-whieli brings to mimi the staireeise gyinnastits of one of our fem.ile mem- bers. For a while there was a running argument on whether she lost more pounds from this activ- ity or from lifting that heavy gold cigarette holder. Where else could you find another girl who takes showers in chemistry lab? Where else could you enjoy the delight of Christmas carols issuing from a corner of the anatomy lab? One of this quartet was an inestimable tenor who won a barber shop quartet contest award by himself for having par-- ticipated in four of the groups. But the real key to our unity lies outside the classroom. Were a collegiate class in a post- graduate institution, and we've made the most of it. Sure, we workg but decibel for decibel we're the best-known group in the dorm, as any second year man would fervently swear. A group of third floor inhabitants called the gracious livers for was it fatty?-we always got confusedj do their share in enhancing our Whooper-rating. We were ACTH at last! Alchemy isnt dead . '-,.- qn s ,353 tiff!!! x H -rf KfL9- ,f A accuewu-f -1-. .ah MN mm NNN iff 15' N114 119' an-u X .1 gt s 5 D Q 'wus enlm. .1 N54 , P19-N155 an? LPM ' 2 , 9 Q ' Z e M ul 0 N91 Q -K Jfffip ' 4 ' . Y: U ff I L . AVF' fl, 2 an Hater- ,,-. V, , - fain -wr .a qgui ' Q -' ,N -' , . -M rim.-:-v 4 'W',i. . ,' -1 -.x i . y 4 ' bg? : W 1 5 ' ' 1 r is 1 . . dl? 0006, 3' Qiiiieumiwump . 1, f . . cu Q M 2.4 'A' .L 9, tv Intimate interludes at first year parties. also a sports-minded class who could just as easily whip up a week-end jaunt to Tremblant as fall down the stairs to the squash courts. If you ask a .5-I member S4 years from now what initiated this thing called class spirit tif he isn't seniley, chames are hell mention the class parties, in particular the first one. For these were really class-wide affairs. Vfhen you have a whole group actively participating in preparations and sharing the fun of the affair itself, you've found a means ot' letting everyone get to know one an- other. Wlao can forget how we nearly brought clown the house with the magnificently ill-con- ceived decoration of a fifty-foot circulatory system plastered on the telling? The bizarre use of sub- stage lamps for stars shows what abortive evil lurks in the hearts ot' our brethren. And what par- ticipant can forget the way in whith a show. whiqh nearly fell apart suddenly, lell together in one evening of frantic rehearsal following a week of exams? Who would have guessed the creative ingenuity of our own Edison with his four- eyed microscope and his automatic pill dispenser? Some day we'll be able to sit back and look at his clear slides of the corps cle ballet of the Cafe Babinski and still howl with delight. On this his- trionic note, who ever thought that a group of med students could be such an inveterate bunch of hams, complete with a Shakespearean actor, a Yankee M. C., and a troupe of song and dance guys and dolls? In looking over our first year at P. St S., one thing that we can still amazedly ask is: Who in the world ever thought that medical school could be such fun? And we can still say-on the eve of flmt refund j'Ez1l'1 WE really know how lucky we are to be here. .oo ' M' G hgh' 0 35 . -1 . '- 5 'P .A fog . Q I 2 ft by ' ID I . 7. l . I ,lk 2.27 35 .X in ,tp Q O- 'l .if ti 2' f i? just write down what Dr. Clarke says and well figure it out later. ,-kzwafcw Ulm IQ E9 S CM ACH medical student admitted to the College of Physicians and Surgeons automatically becomes a member of the P. R S. Club and is wel- come to participate in the various club functions. The P. 8 S, Club provides a wide range of activ- ities and services designed to meet the social, recreational and cultural needs of the students. The actual planning and direction of the P. 8: S. Club is in the hands of a volunteer stu- dent committee made up of about thirty students interested in working on Club activities in their limited free time. A Club director, supplied by the YMCA, works with the student committee and a faculty advisory board to help the committee initiate and develop new activities as Well as carry on established functions. The Club director is also available to the student body for counsel or help with personal problems. The varied P. 8 S, Club activities include bi- weekly movies, a glee club, student-faculty dinners for the first year class, two annual dances, theater parties, informal teas, concerts and a diversified program of speakers. In addition the Club spon- sors most of the athletic activities, bridge parties and exhibits. During the past year, the Student Committee can well be proud of providing their fellow students with a well rounded program of speakers such as Mark Van Doren, Max Ways and 1'-1 90 OSY AND e 1 was I U TIN 'N i it Q 3 IDU' i Xliwg ..,. Da Sus ., it I vlcloh 51' ll 101. . 71-,oeooxbfzfs w, 4 lr bib 743 4 4 6 Dunc johnson pilots the Christmas shuw. Professor Theodore Greene and 11 variety of musical programs including a concert featuring all the musical groups active in Bard Hall. The P. X S, Club was first formed at Columbia Medical School over fifty years ago and for many years prior to the building of Bard Hall main- tained the only dormitory facilities for the stu- Friday night moxie.. lf. L13 Professor Theodore Greene addressing the P. K S. Club. dents and faculty. Today the P. S S. Clubroom on the eleventh floor of Bard Hall provides a center for student meetings, informal dances and lectures. In the past few years in addition to carry' ing on its 'varied program. the Club has played a major part in providing Bard Hall with a radio- phonograph, an amplifier, a large screen television set and a spotlight. Decor courtesy of the P. S S. Club. ...- 3 mv Fwfzl mu'-Cominsky, Dial-mson. Vlfallis, Kanick. S1.md1u,q-Moss, Fl'lCdl'l1.lH, Pnder Inega BURTON S. COMINSIQT JOHN L. DECKER MARS' ELIZABETH DICRAS STEVEN K. FIRESTEIN MORRIS FREEMAN EMANUEL A, FRIEDIIAN RONALD E. HERSON VIRGINIA HELEN KANIQR STEVEN M. KIKANE 74 Freeman, XX'crtl1ur. VIID Arsdel, Rainer, Fircstein. ANTHON. D. LEFKOXVITZ SAIIIUEL MADELL ON LEONARD M. Moss ELIIIER PADER JOHN D, RAINER JAMES M. STORMONT PAUL P. VAN ARSDEL, JR. LILA AIIIDORSRA VUALLIS J. LAXVRENCE WERTHPR 1:1 Edilw' Life 1'.zr 1 EJ!! ffz' Art Erfilor Pbrnlngnzplvy Elflllll' Lllw'.n',1 Smj Eugene Goldberg Arthur I-Iaelig Victor Herbert Robert Austin Milth Nicholas Christy Pi-ser, Moss, Edimr. Giwdkind .md Firestein. earLooL SM!! PZ70l0gl'.II7l7-1 Slillf Baruch Blumberg Pierce Browning XVilli.1m Close Seltlen Dickinson Sitlney Fink Viqtor Herbert 75 Leonard M, Moss Steven K. Firestein Cl 1.ir les M. Poser M. jay Goodkintl B!l,ljIIt?,U SMH Erlgintl Nelson joseph Sthipp Penelope Tosteson mtg if f qiive ' 5565 Front ron'-Benjamin Wright, Rodman Carter, john Durfey, Robert Salerno, Stanley Einhorn. Middle mu'-Allyn Kidwell, Denton Cox, Arthur Hall, Howard Thompson, Lonnie MacDonald. Barb mu'- Anthony Smith, James Hastings. Bart Smith, Paul Van Arsdel, Richard O'Connell, jay Goodkind, David Barnhouse. N L ' ALAN 5 R WX. 76 3412 Z?mL 00'-Qing, Frou! ron-David VC yman, Allyn Kidwell. john jackson, Stanley Einhorn,, Merrill Bradley, James Terry. Middle foil'-Wfinthrop Fish, Burton Cominsky, Archibald jacob, Nicholas Van Leeuwen, Duane Todd, Grove Potter. Denton Cox, Robert Ellsworth, james Neely, Hugh Mc, Caslin. Bark ron -George Allen. Rocco Raduazo. Ralph Suechting. Selden Dickinson, Gary Bivings, Wlilliam Garcelon, Robert Van Horne, Paul Van Arsdel, Munro Proctor, William Mohler, Arthur Hall. David Palmer, Joseph Bilbao, Eugene Shekitka. l nl .Sigma ll 77 ,. ww,- , 'l'1fA- 1 ,Q ,gf - i 1 ' V ' .cb C, ,Q ,f From i'0ir'-William Revertomb, joseph Schipp, john Bozer, Pedro Arroyo, Clayton DeHaan, Robert Milan, Miifille rmvijaines Thorpe, Frank Iaquinta, William Roosen, Leland Vifhite, Arno Macholdt, Albert Aboody. Burk ron'-Robert Flowers, Eugene Speicher, john Orr, james Gerhardt, joseph Mackie, Harold Orvis, john O'Lougl'ilin, john Wheliss, Richard Michaels. Frou! ron'-john Ultmann, Richard Kaufman, Cortland Robinson. Middle ron--Anthony Smith, Frank Symonds, Howard Thompson, Peter Kornfeld. Burk mu'-Garth Dettinger, Eugene Feeley, Robert Carlson, jay Good- kind, james Smith, Rodman Carter, jack Oppenheimer. pb C45 Frou! ron'-Robert Silber, Samuel l-loch, Steven Firestein, Enoch Gordis. zliiddle I'01l'-DOl'1.1lCl Holub. Paul Beres, Monroe Alenick, Paul Gerst, Bark rou'-I-laiyim Schwarz, Stanley Oliver, Marvin Skolnick, Robert Kassriel, Marvin Zimmerman, Herbert Poch, Robert Milch. !9Ai cibeha gpmifon Adding to Vanderbilt Ciinic. Hoist to the eighteenth Hour. Cond ffl! Cti0l'l, l'0gI Lll'l1 I-IE College of Physicians and Surgeons originated in the hrst decade of the nineteenth century through the efforts of the fledgling Medical Society of the County of New York, and occupied at the outset a small building on what is now Park Place, near the Battery. At that time Broadway was paved only as far as Canal Street, and most of the city was below Chambers Street. Two years later the College moved to Pearl Street, and from there in 1813 to a three-story building on Barclay Street, This building was enlarged, and during our stay there we acquired a botanical garden, currently referred to as Rocke- feller Center. As the Barclay Street building became inade- quate, the College packed itself off to Crosby Street, a mile farther uptown, remaining twenty years and then going up to Twenty-third Street for a thirty-year sojourn. It was during this period that we allied ourselves with Columbia College, subsequently expanded into the University. At length, in the middle 18-SOS, Vanderbilt Clinic and the Sloane Hospital were built on Tenth Avenue at Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Streets, and the College then moved to its home opposite Roosevelt Hospital, where it remained until the Medical Center was erected. In the spring of 19-A9 the Medical Center began a recon- struction plan which all of us have watched with interest, and which continues at the present time with the construction of the Memorial Chapel in the Presbyterian Hospital garden. The Development Program was designed to integrate the New York Orthopedic Hospital and Dispensary with the other hos- SO pitals here at the Medital Center, and to expand many ol' the existing facilities essential to the operation ot' the Center. The extensive interior and exterior modifications were accomplished with surprisingly little alteration of the hos- pitals etticiency, and were planned in such a way that no essential service was jeopardize-d at any lime. As eaeh addi- tional section was remodelled, partitions were erected to segre- gate all construction activities and minimize annoyante by dust and noise. Doormats were seen outside the entrances to all areas being repaired. W'elding was substituted for riveting on most of the steelwork so that patients would be disturbed as little as possible. The funds expended in these construction activities were enormous. Early projects were the modernization of the laundry and the construction of a 20-bed Premature Nursery on the second floor ot' Babies Hospital. At about the same time steelwork was going up for the tive-story addition to Vanderbilt Clinic, designed to afford more clinic spate and room for additional laboratories for cancer research. The X-ray Department on the third Hoor of Presbyterian Hospital was enlarged, and a new radiotherapy suite addedg Harkness X-ray also was given addi- tional space. In order to permit modernization of operating room facili- ties on the eighteenth tloor without hindering the operating schedule, a temporary Delivery Suite was constructed on the sixteenth Hoof, and Sloane Hospital delivery rooms were taken over by the surgeons. Additional operating rooms were needed to handle the patient load from New York Orthopedic Hos- pital, McCosh Amphitheater was cleaned out and replaced by Cl surgical recovery room as well as a new home for the Blood Bank on the twentieth floor. Provision for New York Orthopedic Hospital required Toiil sheds in the garden Francis Delaheld bex Memorial Hospital. ll ii ll 81 The old P. 8a S. on 59th Street, 1931. remodelling of the fifth floor of Presbyterian Hospital, and a ramp was built to Babies Hos- pital so that the orthopedists would have a com- plete floor for their use. Final transfer of patients from the old hospital building on East Fifty-ninth Street was accomplished last December during a snowstorm when thirty-four patients were moved in sixteen ambulances. New orthopedic facilities had to be designed in Vanderbilt Clinic. Seventh floor facilities in the main hospital building were remodelled for private service and for a contagious diseases unit. The basement kitchen was modernized and enlarged. The Staff Dining Room and the Per- sonnel Dining Room were both enlarged by ex- tension into the garden, and a new Soda Fountain was constructed. The Record Room was modern- ized, new offices were built in Babies Hospital, and Presbyterian Hospital solaria were enclosed with windows. Facilities were made available for the Hofheimer Speech and Hearing Clinic. Throughout this period the nnal touches were being put on Francis Delalield Hospital for the treatment of cancer. Built by New York City on land contributed by Columbia, the hospital was long delayed by wartime and post-war shortages. Eventually it was completed, however, and put into operation in the fall of 1950. A 500-bed unit, it houses a two-million volt x-ray machine, the largest radiotherapy apparatus in the City Hos- pital system. Most conspicuous at the present time is the Worl-: proceeding in the garden on the foundation of the Memorial Chapel provided for by the john A. Hartford Foundation in memory of Mrs. Hart- ford, wife of a hospital trustee. The old, old Hospital at Park Avenue. i jg A 1 V . .- t, - 0 sw ,!',i.3lQ 41 M . x F F, 9-Qs: - iz. . ., me i .,-- 1 - . T i . T in t . x , 1-of. - T aa - H T . it M fb 'ni :aj 4 , - ,V ix i . :+V H. . ti- - X,,..l.f: ,, - - -V r ' .1144 i s 1 t if-' V i-. if .- si .1 . J- -A' T'T : T Tix T-W 5 ,Lal-,.--G--f 0 - W 5 I l f f : 7 Y I ' TV' Wi si i air- EF '-it-1--f. : . it t 'P .X W-'K'-i.w.xx.xz:w.zr::z-s si '---'T.' . -1- T' 'Q E5 xr. 1 E.. V ff -L. '- QV A F ' t X 'rn A7 ' ' ' A' 'R 'T ' ' ' Q lr- r., - . ' --f - X - ' i s - . WS -H 55 R --f r I ..l.... -NX ,. sl .x '. u if. v - ' i , ' wi ' 'H ' T' ' 131 --'W' PK: Q an res xlg fa- ' Q-V Iv. K I I . .. zz . ,twi S.W,,,...- l:,5,g, ,i..l,,,,,, qiwsgiag f , . ,Q 5.3.-,51 QQ ,a r es-155555-egg, ,. . N M -:gat .i ,.-.11.1-g.,,.'xg,i.:g1w-Q'.j,-11,1.5: 1,Q,S,i,g.Q -- ,,, Q9 D -,,,,'F5s K ' gg.. e 1 4 r- fe . . RPR-.faq A' if. . 'xii-'UA 1'.:f7'XIj':f'R': , r' - i- -U1 4-4 11-qw -tf,.s' -'N -rs.-e5,v2:,fftR i -sus-'xPQfX . v . jc- 2 -. :vg,,Y , 2: ,S . .'. ,3. gg JA . . . QW--2 ia: '-'55 fi 1 ' - C N -'fd i-ti-lf i 'eN3x': 1.'.1 .,.,-li fi.5gIQ545'f. B-sz Q - ' ' .-in -TT: - ' . . ,fffx-A--fa' r 3 s aw . .Q if: -it - i.- .- .. - ' .. ,. v-. . e - - him - 4, .- P I '--- . -. s l 1 . -r - ' r - W -L a .--fa --X-rf' s -- -1:-5s'Z'Q'- ' . xr' ' - T . . .. P - T . 'N' 1. -.1 '---..- - W x- ff? 'P W -Gfiliulish .. 51. 'iz :L e g if-41. . C,'i'b-13i:'4'?'l.'?5tlf4' ff' 1 2- 1 RN '- 5-'nxt' 3.1-gl, .mgfv H ' -T-Eta' N-A-,,.J . . ss -. .Ja .vs f ll i - H ,.t- ar. : .. . The garden .rs it .lppunuui hufuru u-mrrmti-un. The gurdcn in its present cunditinn. The zxrchitcffs concuptmn uf the Mcr1'mri.1l Chapul. W' M if I YH ,lg 'pi' Z'F .-uh N. ark n I V ,, ., 1,f,,,,,, . 3 W.,.:,:,. . . . .,.,- 4, ' Q ' .ay . . win- 1 . Dsl...-,..,..,..-w...,4 -',, -QA - 4. , ,f- - ,. ,1.,.1c ,s A i, Ur. ,xdcgnowdcfgmenfd THE EDITOR WISHES TO EXPRESS His SINCERE GRATITUDE To: Dean Aura E. Severinghaus for his encouragement and guidance. Mi the material used in the text. sses Anna Shackelford and Barbara Phelps for their organization of Miss Nicola Russell and Mr. Hansel Baugh for their part in the dis- tribution of the Yearbook. Mr. Hugh King and Mr. Gus Leona for their invaluable aid at Charlie's Desk. The Alumni News for the use of their fine photographs. Mr. Wharton of the Public Relations Office for the engravings pre- viously used in The Stethoscope. Look Magazine for the use of their photographs of Internship Day. Mr. Robert Kelly and Mr. Harold Halton for their friendly cooperation and technical advice. Mr. E. Atrick for his portraits of the Senior Class. SX Xxx A .e.. X. Xxxc ist, X XX. .srgscgp 84 QW GENS - IARBOE Incorporated fBuz'lderf 96:9 THE BOOKSTORE Extends Its Sizzferest Good Wishes Z0 THE SENIOR CLASS MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE The American ournal of Medicine Presezzls Todays Medicine for Tomorroufs Use The 2,1 QQ Nxekxdxve- Z , ,fl X ,gf ' Pgmqjxenxx XUXKNA E11i1111- ALFXANDER B, Gi'Tsr.xN, sin., X411 H1116 A111 lsory Board n.-win P, BARR, Al,D,, Nell' H me 1R.xNCis ra, r+L.sKr, M.D,. 3.111 F1-.111111t11 Ali'l'HL'R I ISLOOMFIELD, sro., 5.111 F1.111r1. nverwr A STEAD, -ix., mn, D111!1.1111 -IOSEPH T. xvE.mN, TLD., C!e1rl.111J Publishes the rombinecl Stal? Conference from the College ol' Physicians and Surgeonsg also sixteen other Staff Conferences each yearg the reports of three Investigational Societiesg two Symposia and over 1800 pages of new medical findings yearly. STUDENT SUBSCRIPTION rU.S.A.j-S10 yearly REGULAR SUBSCRIPTION rU.S.A.j-S12 yearly THE AMERICAN 'IOURNAL OF MEDICINE, Inc. -L9 WEST 45th STREET NEW YORK 19. N. Y. S6 M. L. OETTEL Incorporated Cozzfrefe C oazstrnfti 011 505 PEARL STREET NEW YORK 7, N. Y. Tclcphoncs: BArIl.1y 7-390-A - BArLlay 7-1269 Cff1f.ff7fjzmfzl,f PAINTING CORP of '31 EAST -IJIMI STREET A F R I E N D xfixx' wmx 1- N Y 'llluph-fm. MI'11.1x Hnlf 1-rw S7 THE JOURNAL OE NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE A11 Ed1n'.1li011,1l jommzl of .N'e1zr0p.v.3flviaIr'y S14.00 Per Year 3 Outside Continental U. S. - 515.50 THE PSYCHOANALYTIC REVIEW A11 Ed1Illl1ff0II.1I AI116J'ffJlI 101117141 of PJ',1Tl70dIIdI'j'.fjA' 58.00 Per Year- Outside Continental U. S. - 88.80 THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OE CHILD BEHAVIOR A fonrnizf Deroted 10 the P7'0bfEl2I.f of Childhood 58.50 Per YeariOutside Continental U. S. -59.50 NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE MONOGRAPHS NOLAN D. C. LENWIS, M.D., Managing Editor 70 PINE STREET NEW YORK 5, N. Y C 0171 1171212261215 Of B A R D H A L L 88 hloresium C bloro pb-yll Produrts RYSTAN COMPANY, INC. INIOUNT VERNON, NEW YORK WIA 3-5265 Say It W'1th Flowers' MEDICAL CENTER FLOXVER SHOP CARDASIS. INC.. FLORIST .'1'1'f:J'fIL' Dgw Y.lf. 'IJ' 'ILM' XI!! OL'.'J,fIffff, The Flower Shop Nmrcst Medical Centur -1003 BROADXVAY At 168th Street NEW' YORK 32. N. Y. CENTER PHARMACY H.-.RK.u'y S KAPLAN 4015 BROADXVAY Bet. msth .md 169th Su. NEXX' YORK. N. Y, 'NWA 5-1298 THE TROPICAL GARDENS BAR 8i RESTAURANT 168th Street and Broadway BELL RADIO 8: APPLIANCE COMPANY, Inc. 1170 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. XEXY' YORK 52. N. Y. XYA -319-I COMPLETE LINE OF Rzdifff - Tcfczigiofg - Rcfmd C1:,1f.'!t': Rsmrdf .md .firtzffovnf Effflmxzf Hume .'IfpJ'.'.1r:t'st SALES AND SERVICE WAdswn'Ortl1 7-5700 Lic. 532 M. CITARELLA, InC. llnruer and Liquor! 3915 BROADWAY Near 164th Street NEW YORK 32, N. Y. Complimezmr of JOHN H. BUNGER NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INS. CO. SELBY L. TURNER Illuzzlffr ffl Le.1JeV'.r fI,lJ0z'f.1IlrHl ' iso BROADWAY NEW' YORK 7, N, Y. BEekmim 3-6620 Specializing in Insurance for Doctors Only Life, Malpractice, Automobile. Fire .ind Theft, etc. ' 0 546 ALFONS D. FELDER y I ' ' N 575 W. 168th ST. W NEW YORK 52. N. Y, Teleplwne WA 8-5299 C11 flow Tailor for Lizdiei' .uid Men FAMOUS FOR SYLVIA'S HOME COOKING GIL'S LUNCHEONETTE Delirium' S.z11dzz'rrbey - Truly S.1!i1Ify Gmrer 228 ET. WASHINGTON AVE. 326 FT. WASHINGTON AVE. Ctir. 11-9th St. WA 38978-9 Cor- 169th Sl- WA 74770 Outguing Orders Prumptly Attended to ALL GARMENTS INSURED For Prompt Call .md Delivery Service Call WAshingtOn Heights 7-3884 D. APPEL Experl T.zi1ur and Fnrritr Cleaners and Dyers 250 ET. XVASI-IINGTON AVE. Between 160th and 170th Streets COIIIPIIUIBIYII of THE GOLDEN AGE RESTAURANT -1019 BROADVUAY Ar mom slim NEW' YORK CITY EOIQNTAIN SERVICE lI lvere live Finer! Fool! If Sfr'z'm ' Open D.iilv: 6 A.M. to 1 AM. FULLY AIR CONDITIONED 1. L. MURPHY, Inc. no EAST nth STREET NEW' YORK, N. Y. ATLANTIC BARBER SHOP AUGUST Hom-TN -4021 BROADWAY Cnr, 169th Struct NEW' YORK. N. Y CENTER HOME APPLIANCES T::Itl'ft'I0lI - Rufio - EfE't'f1'ft'.:f ,'If7f7.!l.1Ilt'c,t 1156 ST. NICHOLAS AVE, Bet. lf1'tI7 .md 16Sth Sts NEW' YORK 32, N. Y. TL-l TOmpk1ns -0328 SILVER PALM CHARLES I. BRANDIN, Inc. GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL NEW' YORK IT N, Y. ML' U-jul' TIIuf.1f Hffvjljluf C.zl2j11E!.r Dw,mf1',s' .mtl C.1l1imflf Sf,zi11lv,-'T Staff Tofu' .Tuff Smit ELLISON BALANCED ENTRANCE DOORS H.IfI't'IIf or .1 lII.1I1fL'lll'L' V. LA PORTA 8a SON Six E.x'f7erl.t -IOU5 BROADXVAY Nur 165th Struct XVA S-'NIU Suu L'5 for Fraternity ,md Cllsx Party Ncctls UPTOXWN XVINE 8: LIQUOR STORE Cfmitr llwlmt ,wtf Li7'lf'fu' Fw ffm Dxtt'2111,f,'f.'.1,','n A -IOOI BROADXVAY rfwrncr lfwrh Srrctr 'MEG BROADXVAY Nur FIN: itrttt LO A-Zlnrn 9 ERIC HOFFMAN, Inc. Cbryfler - Plymouth .Molor Crm SALES St. Nitholas Ave. at 171st St. WAtlsw0rth 3-3283 SERVICE Amsterdam Ave. at 168th St WAdSvs'4srth S-5166 THE TAILOR TO BARD HALL WA 5.9034 THROUGH THE STUDENT AGENCY ARMORY BAR Sc GRILL M. LEVINE INC. S5 HAVEN AVENUE Formerly with Bentham and Phillips Fifth Avenue All Kiaidr nf Drerrzzztzkizzg I lalimz-A 111 erirmz Clzii me 4011 BROADWAY Bet. 168th and 169th SKS. New York. N. Y IOS. M. GAUDIO, PRES. HEIGHTS CAMERA CENTER The Lending Brtz1m'.r in Pbnlogmplm' Supplier and Egllipmezzf .zi Sperm! Prirer THE FINEST QUALITY IN PHOTO FINISHING DONE ON PREMISES 1229 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. Between 171st and 172ncl Streets NEW YORK 52, N, Y. VUA 3-3698 EDWARD ATRICK STUDIOS Offifhzl Yetzrbook Plvofngrtzplver 3 3 3 FIFTH AVENUE NEXY7 YORK 16. N. Y. IxTI.IIl'.lI' Hill 5-25-I7 WAdSv't1rtl1 39722 ORIENT RESTAURANT Cbizlexe-Azzleri I'.1z1 Food ORDERS TO TAKE OUT 1172 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. just Across from Medical Center At 169th Street NEW YORK, N. Y IN GREENXVICI-I it's GRANNICK'S PHARMACY 2-I7 GREENVUICH AVENUE GREENVVICH. CONN. j. BEEBER co., Inc. 558 BROADWAY .n lirh Smut NEW YORK 3. N. Y. AIiI'rfm'nllrw - Of1!l1.1f.11ur 1,n' fnfrw Sleffwf 1'LAf 2 pw' - Sfllvlyf1g01n.1r1w11rfwI Bfnml Ctillllfjllg Slhlm' .zml .ffl AIu.fic.1f Eqllfllllllrllf Fur Intw rr11.1 tu-n C-:nuff Student Reprcscnmtnvc: GENE GOLDBERG BARD HALL Studcnt Rcbatw Cmuplinzezztx of REME FOOD, Inc. -4021 BROADXVAY Corner 169th Street Tcl. VVA 3'9'95 INTERCITY RADIO SERVICE -4066 BROADXVAY 1285 ST. NICHOLAS AVENUE Phone XVA 7-S-H3 Rfnfiof - Plvmznf - YIElEl'f,I'fI7II R.ulm Repair Scrvicu - Puk L'p Suru L INTERSTATE RADIO SERVICE 600 XVEST 171st STREET 405-I BROADWAY' NEW' YORK 55. X. Y. WIA -96-Ili Cvmplcxc Line of R.m'io,r - Telerifimz - H0llLfEll'Jl'L'J Efecfrifxzf fIpZ7H:1IIL'Ej SALES AND SERVICE Cnmplirzlwln of A F R I E N D rrr' 1' LEBTIDIIS ol: you and your classmates upon your school lilie achieve immortality in a caretully planned and executed yearbook. From the arid desert ol: Arizona, and the sultry green island ot Puerto Rico, to the snow-blanlceted slopes ot Northern New England, we have traveled, happy and proud to have been an instrument in the translating into print, the humor pathos, excitement, and sentiment Found in the campus lite ol: over seventy-Five colleges and preparatory schools. As Former members ot yearbook statts in our school days, we bring into our professional duties a real understanding ol: the many problems confronting each yearbook editor. B Cn11g1'.1f1rfI1Iiw1,I Izmf Bur 1V'iIlII,f In rlw CLASS OF 1951 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Keep in Touch with Each Other Through the COLUMBIA ALUMNI NEWS 201-A ALUMNI HOUSE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITX Nm' YORK 27, N. Y. Pzzfzfiylwd zzmzzflvfy zfiflv five exfeplimz of fillgllff mid Suplwzzlzw' fa-I five ALUMNI FEDERATION OF COLUMIIIA UNIVERSITY 95 QW, THE SHARPLES CORPORATION Centrifugal and P cess Efzgineers PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. 1 5 - Wi , 'WWI' r y ,, 'a-. 9 MTW' ,X :AN Q az-.n - .ffl EY rx me E w x fy, - -.':,- fi W. - . .. V N-, , M. 5'f1., 5 I 3,3-fg,.f1z-Q - 5: fo 'H' ' - V. . XJ, .x , - . - K. A I Y' 'RY ' 1 .KA 1 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES This book is due on the date indicated below, or at the expiration of a definite period after the date of borrowing, as provided by the library rules or by special arrangement with the Librarian in charge. 4 4 4 DATE BORROWED DATE DUE DAT ORRQWED DATE DUE , 24,1 wb- Jae 463' 1' wwf .,Jv1 . . ,. as 2.4 N- ,. ri DJJ: l 1 .A 1 -,.f ,.W,S.i,.,,- '52 gs , gs' W ' - 51,171-3551. I we 1 Ig 'I ' 7 . - QS .f f '? If , -N . . eg, 54 , , K-wg,-:yf5.5.. ,gf A f '- A x..- -f if i- 1- 3 -. X. .,,::-.,':efirvP-fn'f'5 . -A . . ' , . ' T -' ,,w'j,f.xg. i J, ' .V , A, - ...VN X ,F , , ., In i,5,5,..,jI'L- ,N:,,,. ,LL 4 .,,, Ii 'ff2-:.r'm-. 'E L' '. -' ' - .,-'- L+S .:.,'i'1fe' ,. 3.-' ,-- .f ' Je.. I 2 -:fi f ff f' - ' ,- - A .Jr- ,-' . . . ,f A 135-9 7 5 , A Wim I' :Hi ff' J' i I .f . 157 ff 4 W 1IX:'rf ' i il 11 ' ' ' .1 N ,G :BE 41-fift-rg -L 53,4962 aus X , Uv cza 0149, soon 71 'Q . - v .. V . vi rw ' ii? b,Lff?f7'c5N .. in if I0 . I ,1 ,z r. I' , ..y,,, f,JLg4,vwQ:1.cL XLVWUMSTKPII 5 Calif? A 'pee S Q- qw '3 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES sg' J' I IHIIIIHII 0 6 277780 P. at S. '51 5.520-4K,'U'Uln.. lc jf ,I In A I Q 1-'Luf f I3 I ,14 MP ,1 ,.1a? A 1559 ggcL 25507 'I SH E-LF M, BESEPN E 'ND 'I . IQ 'Q 'if X XI If 1177 by I I :I-U' KL.-v X.. U' 1 I 5 4,-1 0-I 'I 41.-' 1 -J .I V.


Suggestions in the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.