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Page 33 text:
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'Z .LVIN MARGOLIUS, JR. iorfolk, Va. lirginia, A.B. zlom, schuss, snow-plow, Cristie u may think you're rather shitty. toh, when in the snow you spill, id lie there helpless, cold and still. Jula cracked, mortise split, ink ol gall-skiing quill t JACK THOMAS ORR Chattanooga, Tenn. 1 Chattanooga, B.S. l My model clerk! He does not work. His work he shirks, he has Mercl:'s. He's unusually bright, r especially at night. l 1 And when he parties and plays, he rests days. l l i l l i l l HAROLD H. onvis JR. . TNT rj -'7 , '- J 4 Q. -'51, v Q ' 4 Q- 't f - -XwTr,:...:n . 1 ,g-Pfffi .r x N. . r I ' 1' , 2 ' YQ 6. ,' ,. F .- as , , 'X S. 4, 9.4-131.1-s it i- .We H f ' gr N f .-1--5:-af ' P - iii -wifi 5. 5' 2 s ' JL , . I ' VY .Lp 'r JOHN CUTLER O'l.OUGHLIN Orangeburg, N. Y. Harvard, A.B. Once there were three kitties The tirst lritty loved to catch mice all day The xr.-cond kitty loved to sleep rn the sun all day The third kitty loved to catch dinner mice, sleep rn the sun, chase leaves, and scarnper up tall trees One day a hungry doggie came The first kitty was too busy to hear the bark The second kitty was too sleepy ta hear the bark The third kitty 7 . A .:5,.,,-If . was lrrghtened to hear the bark He ,. 1, :V - I, If 13131:-Q scampered up the tallest tree ,,,,J,- Q. 9-if? ,,' . f'1fefs,nff ' -Qr'-Q : ' 'l-if z-- ' 59 f-'fi 2 f, -xr 'YJ gi ,K 11. F' Ji T -' l i .- N X i . ui 7 LHR. I A HENRY EDWARDS PAYSON far: Norwichtown, Conn. gf I. i 6? New Rochelle, N. Y. Guilford, B.S. The impact ol the last tour years has been a solid one We have all learned, and changed, some ol us possibly in spite of ourselves lie, Newtan's lst law, low i BMR's, I. O 's etct At any rate, the scien- i tilic discipline, the scventilic critique, the l scientific reasoning in short the scientific l Science ol P and S has obeyed the well I known laws ol osmosis and l am glad to have been one ol' the at least semis permeable intellects ol the class at i952 , , 0 -J Harvard, B.S. Adaptabllrty to lortunex of lite is the virtue al a mind mature enough ta be hanest, responsible and sincere, and strong enough to delend its singularity But corn petitive excellence rs still preferred to lhlx quality ns cr quolitication lor medical study So probably most ol us da not possess the scope and depth the titles 'physrcianh and Hdoctori' have implied However, I believe that experiences with patients can help us to gain some ma tunty, and thus greatly increase our chances ol happiness -v :M l ,Le 1 as l . 1 , A ' ----f,s3'.i .r ', . xv 2-:llf ' f. -.. - . 'Li . ' H 1 4'5 ' i 1 A. ' t -7' are ,, . semen V i . I . gs fi .' . 'fi ' - 5 ' gr :1 iffsf- 'J Yi ' V71 L p VPN if-2 fi' 4 if' 'f - IS.. r t 1' . CJ R .4 ' I is -' 01 . ' Fr 1 554: , ti I ,' ,-13 - r . -u 'i 'i ---f Q v I .,
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Page 32 text:
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HENRY W. LOURIA, JR. Brooklyn, N. Y. Colgale, A.B. ll was hcl and close. One could almosl lasle the heal, Visilors from lhe weslern slope would have said lhal il was lhe humidily bul each of the 322 inhabilanls of Cripple Creek, Colorado, knew il wasn'l lhe humidily, il was lhe humanily. ll was common knowledge lhal Scrofulous Som lold Pemphigous Pele lhal lhe lown was loo small for bolh of lhem. Everyone knew lhal Pemphigous Pele had made a pass al Scrofulous Sam's beloved, Porphyria. Sun- down was lhe deadline, Suddenly a shol rang oul. Pemphigous Pele fell lo lhe ground clulching his mid- riff. As if from one lhroal, 322 voices roared in unison, Quick gel ole Doc Louria, lhere's been a shoolin'. He's lhe besl sawbones lhis side of Colorado Springs. One of lhe wiser cilizens was overheard la say, Be sure lo lell him il's a referral, he slill lhinks he's back Easl, and keep his Mrs. oul of lhis. ll's no lime for making link bells. HUGH TOWLES McCASLIN Cincinnati, Ohio Princeton, A.B. The'e's lhis Io be said For lhe life lhal we've led, And lhe life we are going lo lead. ll isn'l disease, Bul lhe birds and lhe bees Thol gives us lhe reason we need. 'U ... ARNO W. MACHOLDT Nyack, N. Y. Columbia, A.B. looks like we're coming lo anolher fork in lhe road, and for some of us, il's going lo be a problem lo choose lhe besl raule from here an. This slrelch for lhe pasl four years has been highly profitable, ale ways inleresling, and generally enloyable, wilh good companionship and lhe besl of guidance. Somehow lhal horizen ahead looks all lhe more appealing as a resull of lhal pasl experience. A word of grali- lude is in order lo all who have helped along lhe way, also lhe besl of luck lo my fellow lravelers-may each allain his ullimale goal! LIZ MACKAY New Haven, Conn. Mount Holyoke, A.B. Firsl year-gleelul enthusiasm-cadavers --eleclion year-red wine-dark beer- counlless dislraclions of New York Cily, Second year-lesls, quizzes, and exami- nalions-our own stethoscope-lirsl brief skirmish with flesh and blood palienls, Third year-grim realilyflife on lhe wards-nighl and weekend duly-inlroduo lion fo lhe psychiolric palienl-gusl like everybody else, Fourlh year-life in lhe raw-pedialrics -labor room-worldly, professional poinl of view-lussel with eleclronic menace- Finis. f 5? rs' 47 2 XX 4' S s ' D x f x , , , i 'key '.,'l5, f, ,L . HERBERT M. MAGRAM Brooklyn, N. Y. Amhersl, A.B., A.M. Be good my child and Ie! who will be cleve
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Page 34 text:
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,Lx- .L I 'IH' . ,jx .-. ., 1 , 22 .3 mf., .-x gg s s -x,-gem .- .15 QQ., a Q-Jlifi' ' .J 5' .. 'fr-1'. '.g':' 4- s- A ' s. I , , 6 s -. ' V fy at i ,A ,K ,G ,I K 4.95 s ' N. .i 5' l ' ,, L fb.. t-cs.. ...rf , . We I. If-Sf' ,t r . 'YL A 1... ' fa. I .233 510- silt.. . his-4 . 4Qi1 !:'2 v NX., ' uffi.i1'.-'I,, 4' .. I .' I.-I N fgfvffli S - Og 'lg- -,. .f . .1-4. lj.. 11 . Q. A J . Fi 5'-'-I :. ' t X 9 N Q l' 'U 1 C in 5.2-Q . mg- T 4Jsl'+-ii V WILLIAM POLLIN Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, A.B. GUSTAVE G. PRINSELL Jersey City, N. J. Houghton, A.B. But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, Then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated, Full al mercy and good fruits, without partiality, And without hypocrisy. James 4:15 ROCCO RADUAZO Concord, N. H. New Hampshire, B.S. Since being in medical school, I have been impressed with a number of things among which are the following: the great value of preventive medicine, especially in pediatrics, the inability, particularly of middle aged women, to use leisure time for anything other than introspection with resultant hypochondriasis, and the grove preoccupation of the average American with his bowel function. WILLEM WESLEY ROOSEN New York, N. Y. Sarah Lawrence, A.B. At the time af near parting, the follow- ing gifts are free and entirely in good will: To Alvin Margoliusf A pair ol skis. To Henry Payson: Safety tires. To Bill Reed: An F. B. l, internship. To Bill Abruzzi: One hour in a cage with Bill Reed. To Rosencrantz: Guildenstern. To Judy Gedney: Win Fish. To Win Fish: Judy Gedney. To Hugh McCaslin: Also Judy Gedney. To Gene Speicher and Frank Curran- More tirecrackers. To Don Gent: A smile. To Paul Gilbert: Binoculars. To Capt. Will Avery. The Flying Enter- prise. To Tony Smith: A quicker trigger linger. To Ellsworth, Orr and Waller. Booze. To the Rest: Internship. r . -135 V. re, E it 2 N Q +- 5 I.. . 'xv , ik W rv f WILLIAM B. REED Washington, D. C. Penn. State, B.S. lt is my humble opinion that we should as doctors realize that we have obligations to our country and God that we must lul- fill. We should pursue our medical careers remembering that as doctors we can play an important part in our communities and in our nation. Since the luture will decide most certainly the late ol our country and its democracy, we can not complacently detach ourselves from the rest at the world whether we be medical researchers or general practitioners. let us humbly pray to God that we will continue to have the blessings ot liberty and lull opporf tunities that our country oFlers.
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