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

 - Class of 1954

Page 1 of 120

 

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



Page 6, 1954 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1954 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1954 volume:

-4' I r'- ,,..,-l J., ,C-.rf V -In 1 , F' 4 F, y ,,.:' rn ,A fu -, :V -I. fx. 1 V . 'Is'- . s ,h e u ..,l- IIIIAL f 3: xw -.vu . .uw bi, - c-If-Nr' l k 'HQ' 1 ' Qlnlmnhia Qininersitp in1l1eQEitpnf3HrmQnrk THE LIBRARIES mfr' ON f as .r, ve-6 Q 'o,Q,Q 5 3 if f 1 7 J 7 - 1 ' O O .?JEiQ'Q1. 2' A li! :sig M 4? o '9WA1o9'xx flklebical library -' ry-i Q' M gif- T ' 51-i ' . x, 1f.1gyLgQgi4gffg4 ' , '-fc:-312 'LF .L 1- , L.-.Q fr ., , ,- fc. ',.f- : , 41 F 'X 111, W Q lrff :K'f X -f-4f': ' V Xi'-fa' 3' , , ', iw Qfffff ' , L2 uk-l N ! , F r I 1, r ' U -Q9 111' -j-111 1111 -1-111 3111 1111 111 17 'gf-Z' Q- . --Illn, THF -llllldlif a--SBSH if-QQ 'fi -K -.V CQLL' f Q . ' 1 tf fi' tw-sf - ,OC-io, - A ' F fuer- b g ,, Rublished by the Fourth Year Class of I The CoHege of Physhians and Surgeons Columbia University in the City of New York 511' K.--'W Q N 1 Q K , r -gg K 11 V sls, -4 lpn: I ,.. 'iw X-s I .-- E f,,,,.,. - 1 Qmeobcafion jo JM-H! Qfinfm- :WLM-, Jffe, .ffJf, f L.1, I Q,-JzwAfL a,,zA.,,-, M4042 e,,tA,4Jifmn, wif. f .,., I ,J erfe , Jfiumm fnlflfy me pcwf, crydafnze Me ,:reJenf. aiu! mzafyze My Z.f,.,.Q Ly Lriclfging Me gap Leiween Me Amir Jciencw am! the Ln! ml., -JAM 4004 ij gI'Clf2!Llf!i! ant! fnojf llfllflllflgl Jelhmfefl if 33 :i ,I fp: lr f',.. D I skein. ,wwf germ, 104.321 !'9l'0fL7JJ0I' tif !9Al'll'l7lllf0!I09y r .Nl IF 1 wwx 'I -uv uladi' I w win-' ! ll , 'll lg .ifjil ' -Ui? ..w. g!. ll:'E:i '. l-.ENV ' .Hi 7, ' 1 . .l W?i5' .1 lfflx,- , A . . , , Qgvi HQ fl MQQ- H 2 1,11 Ufiifmlu H Q Sl 3 .4 'iflb - 'UU' f-Q'-i U. 1: ulF W X ! U. ,... 'Al . 'If JH!- + I A A'1 - L 'V - , lg A- ,p'Agw 1,411 ff ,ti- 5V.:s!', 1 1fm'.!E? Xu 'I .1,l.'.'x,':, L E I r E If ' 'S' 1 n,- ,u -1 ..'l!l 1 g. li' . ,-F , ll -' '1-Y! .l.1j', ill 1 1:22-HW n HIIEHPQ H ii tak-- .., .Q-' ' ,L ,k'5x ., 73,1-XIII., - 1 ?X.It'!u3 X, H E I 15 I -.. s..- vv if: ,. . 4 i .. vfw ' ...ff f' x 1 4-f 9 x 1 'I ll ul 1' 1- ! AL-- 1 511 1 Hyun? W, v , U, Ex IW L' -,--ff ll zz., Q, ll! pu!! 'gl Q lllf f UH H nur p , .- .,u5.'V'-A li E .41 My ' Q xx!! ' .1 S:-'V wxffx-.T 0 I Kwan' ' ' -gxn' W - X.. X Y 6 r ,.-- The Cath of I-Iippoerates SWEHR by Hpollo the Physician, 6: Hesculapius, 6: Hygeia, and Danacea, and all the gods and goddesses,that according to my ability and judgment I will keep this oath and this stipulaf tion: to reckon him who taught me this Hrt equally dear to me as my Parents, to share my substance with him and relieve his necessities if required 5 to look upon his offspring as my own brothers and to teach them this Hrt, if they shall wish to learn it, without fee or stipulation, and that by Precept, lecture, and every other mode of instruction I will impart a knowledge ofthe Hrt to my own sons and those ofmy teachers, and to disciples bound by a stipulation and oath according to the law of medicine, but to none others. I will follow that system ofregimen which according to my ability and judgment I consider for the benefit of my Patients, and abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous. I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such counsel, and in like manner I will not give to a woman a Pessary to Prof duce abortion. With Purity and with holiness I will Pass my life and Practise my Hrt. I will not cut Persons laboring under the stone, but will leave this to be done by men who are Practitioners of this work. Into whatever houses I enter I will go into them for the benefit ofthe sick and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption 5 64 further, from the seduction of females or males, of freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connection with my Professional Practice or not in connecf tion with it, I see or hear in the life ofmen which ought not to be spoken of abroad,I will not divulge,as reckoning that all such should be kept secret. While I continue to keep this oath unviolated may it be granted to me to enjoy life and the Practice ofthe Hrt, respected by all men Sc all times. But should I trespass and violate this oath may the reverse be my lot. Aura Edward Severinghaus A M , Ph D, ASSOCIGTG Deon Williclrd Cole Rappleye AM, M D, Sf: D., Med SC D Deon ffl, Q ,Ik , nd 1w 4rn-va . U L J,- Y in the beginning was the word , dp' Y ZA' CLASS OFFICERS President-Mayo Iohnson Vice-President-Tenlci Tenduf-Ia Secreterry-Tre-c1surersGordon Brown ninhi' nnfl Any IIII ' K V3 1 ., ' H 1 . 'fin' : 1 ' '-Eff Ha .- nl . iff L' ei .-- 1 4. 1 ,1 J , .E I V' V? T ,I 'Q ' A ., 1 x-. X wf H. x l N 'A ' QF First Row: Gene Baumann, Henry Buchnald. Vincent S. Beltrani. Ronald Allman. Second Row: Charles Buckxnan. Roger Boulay. Hugo Deaton. Steve Barrett. Francis Breen. Gerald Adler. Lee Anderson. Richard Bettingole. George Bercovici. Third Row: Donald Armstrong, Charles Burkhart. Iohn Davis. Ir., I. William Dodd, Anthony Dede. Robert Bertsch. Hohert Ambrose. Edward Danielski. is gl 4 .nan , ,-1 k 'T - H .. V J 1 First Row: Stanley Finke. Robert Grossman. Donald Gerber. Donald Harter. Arnold Xoll. Vincent Bono Iamshid Iavid. Second Row: Ruth Ann Iordon. Marcia Kepler. Susan Kepler. Isobel Kegel. 'Alice Gutmann. Iona Horowitz. Third Row: Gordon Brown. Gene Kell . Daniel Kimbzerg. Charles Hirsch. Norman Ertel. Robert Kwit, George Drake. Allan Iackman, Lewis xrnow. Paul Kennedy. Manuel Hinds. Earle Hammer. Fourth Row: Michael Bryson, Mayo Iohnson. Arthur Glauback, Dick Hyde. Frank Iewell. Iohn Boname. Burton Lerner. Charles Foveriu. .. ,ig , .- --57550. 4. ... , 'V ti V Y 5 lar. I :A . ee an X , if K ., Lethn--' Y, 1 if l y 4 , as t. .f N xl? First Row: Henry Metzger, Sterling Tigncsr. Charles Shields. Dennis Laler. Eric Strauss. Second Row: Michael Lazay. loan Platt. Ruth Selden. Robert Rogen. Martin Nydick. Third Row: lohn Roberts, lohn Scmrraz Paul Mooring, Harvey Zarem. Harlow Unger. Bodlcy Stites. Carl Lyle, Vert Mooney. Pier Mancusx-Ungaro. Frederick Zuckerman. Ray Mutter. Fourth Row: Robert Wallace. Martin Wah, Iohn Ormsby. Alan Osborne. Ronald Linsky. Iohn Rathe. Iohn Richardson. Robert Leach. I, 'X' l 047 Qi R T 'G 1 N . Q u Q First Row: Peg Vorhouse. Robert Waltzer. Tenki Tendul-La. Charlotte Ziskind. Kay Ritchie, C. 'Evans Roberts. M. Philip Neri. Second Row: Ioseph Bockol. Dwight Robinson. Stanley Piotrowski. William Weir. Thomas Staley. Bart Saunders. lames Mason. Elliott Weser. Simeon Pollack. Robert Weiner. Third Row: Ralph Wharton, Donald Traeger. Lyman Page. Thomas McDonaugh. Robert Reilly. Thomas Theobald. Richard Freeman. Donald Wilcox. work J -I k ?,5.,1- nv Y- , x , ,- -- ,-...Q-f' . ' 5 v- r ' N- N. W -.ml V -. - . . s ., .. .-:. .uv fu! s and ,M . , ,,f,,, - J.,- K sy, L' f .-. v N J ,F fi, X I. 2 fd, ff x 1 1,1 '11 plav 1 ' 1 -J A x Me. am Q.. ...observing the nature of things . . . X! X ,, at . I 'J' nt gr ai' 1, Q . 1 l , - ,' N ' v. 4 un nthehd x 1 VA 4 .. fr! .ig fi. XAB 'f ust Clflon E' X ff, .mm I' . 1 . Ju. f f '. , -. K . 4, - K I' ' A f . ' ' fm l L .57 1. A Q . 1- V - 9. ' ,f--- 4 .1 'Qs . cxqqfessw 51. .4 gqv-. ,L X with scientific objectivity INSIDE 'I'HE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 14th FLOOR CLASS OFFICERS ent-W'Il' S tory 1 lam Healy i ent-Ted Robinson Marianne Beatrice I gb:-' CLASS OF 1956 ETTERS .,,, W. OUR FUTURE DOCTORS Sirs: How about a story on the future doctors of America? Surely, in all the medical schools in this country. there must be a class whose mem- bers typify the ideal medical student. What do I mean by ideal ? Well, to begin with, it applies to both sexes. They would be personable: their white jackets would be wom as a symbol of their profession and not as mess jackets: they would be good students without being grinds : they'd take exams in their stride and never clutch, On the social side, they'd throw great parties and put on hit class shows. Above all, they stay loose. Finding such a class may be a large order, but I know you can do it. lohn Smith, Pres. Society for Prevention of Arteriosclerosis in Young Doctors. New York City. New York. We found them. Class of 1955, College of Physicians and Surgeons.aED. '..J.- N , , I Edelstein. D. Kndorcr M. Boatric Bnck Row: K. Gcrnom. , W W. CFI lv f lv' Back Row: O. Cobb. I. Davidson, F. Council. N. Clements. E. Brown. E. Burka. Third Row: F. Williams T. Robinson, D. Andrews. W. Chastain. P. Barry. C. Donaldson. R. Bartlett- I. Casey. D. Dubin, B Second How: K. Curtis. N. Dectrmin. B. Crosby. S. Carver, K. Dawson. First Row: A. Burland H. Burker. H. Baruch. I.. Dunn, P. Black. P. Brodsky. .F .X gf Y , D i .fs Wig. 'M B, I 'ff K Y gg -ur I If A X X .t , :ge m - . in J fl I'-- . -aa ' M DW I ? r S. Ionas. L. Clark, W. Hoady. H. Gilbert. R. Cogenhaver. D. Gleason. W. Healy. H. Hirsh M. Iossic. Third Row: E. Haber. C. Hodgman. R. eldman. V. Hogan. W. Hatfield. B. Hardin bck. P. Gammella. I. Hulkn. D. Frnnklin. R. Herrick. R, Gentile. Second Row: I. Hovespion e. M. Hackman. I. Elderkin. First Rowe R. Goodale, E. Futtcrman. D. Koulman. I. Iacobs. A YUGU. , Ginn X 7' 5 N ' i W nn- ,N GC-E I . . r .. f . ' v 'N I v ,. . x 1 P Buck Row: I. Mutlaney, H. Prilchard, l. Moore. I. Leddy. P. McLoughlin. H. Prull. Third Row: B. Lewis R. Montroy. R. Maslausky. L. Putman. C. Meier. H. Nay. I. Montana. I. Lilsky. S. Lobell. Second Row: S. Mahew. I. Kuehner. C. Lawrence. C. Liachowiiz. Firs! How: F. Largomcxrsino. K. Kohn. W. Myers, F. Katz. M. Mohoi. R. Osnos. A A , 4 V 4, g, . . 41. 4' .I u I 1' X H r , .14 ag NX is Al' vu V 'A 1 In 1- A ,,, I-v N V 'u I ' .Q A . Q ,I . 1 1 1 - -.sie . . I. QM., . - -. 0 - , 7 , V -' I :ffm i L, .. , --A.:-.1.r, ,,, Back Row: R. Spier, H. ficxdwin. W. Weiss. H. Triedman. I. Sweciing. R. Skilbred. F. Puslernack. N. Taylor. Third How: W. Winner. C. Sicklcs, C. Spina, V. Wendt. H. Kichler, A. Vundersluis. C. Tuievech. W. Westover. M. Wosnilzer. Second Row: R. Walzer. N. Yankopoulos. B. Williams, D. Wall. C. Wu. First How: T. Truonq. R, Tyson, I. Silverman. I. Yardley. T. Turney. Good to the las! drop. Lisiening to a Flynn answer N ,fl I1 worked: we can leave now! 1 f . -.35 I. Z K xi! Q 1 Tiger and Ihe Lady fx, L . Alaska Winter 'L-x ' Q 7 or x:.l-Y: l 'V A. Y V, x SX'-W Qi Alas, Ax I I, -,,.. .L Damn If - 2 ' 1 4, V Zu I Ju' 43 r. '35 E 2 sw , 'D 9 poor Yonck 4- K, we had eight mice yesterday T r is 't Q 5 The Rover Boys k -11 ' i ' Q M, ,.,, wgggdff ,.kWx.', r - wa 'V mi 7 ' ' 4 xg ' I 5 ' r A , F ey A, 5 . 1 . , s - J- , ' .! X , ' 1 - A L ,, Well-I admit the sample answer wasn't really . . .' l :1 . , l fr 0' . all, look-cardiac muscle- mt do we do in lab today. Ian? x Encephalitis 'i . '5 l x nc ' TSE: ' I xy S N Q ' e t l A l l About that last test. sir M'- .4 , Art-ist At Work .pit r. , Messy-isn't it- 5. Q. 1' r 4 Wu 1 y - X-ara-V -AN as W x U ' x But does it have less N S F? 3 Now look here gentlemen l NEW FARCES OF '53 six x, K, 553 K L 1 Whxch Doctor -, MY, MN fl ni Osnos Dxes Agcxm iw And for one-tenth of cz Bard Hall Tonxghl We Squash Them JL. Where dxd you that shape' Clinical Obi9CliVllY E SPLEEN IS GREEN y V x, K 1 ,N Ylxj? Y l'1 , 1 N4 x sa There Are Bad Times Iust Around The Comer- I Thought I Said Heliotrope . . Once You're Hit By Bac-T . . rr if 5, 5'-W..-l ff Q We Want To Be Doctorsl ,' 1 I 'F ..',flZ , 1 Venezuela W v. , V 4 LY f 'L 1 iw' Ill' I ,. - S-es hx . I ll ll l - v tw' XX A 5 S Y xxlll l . - l I , NWN ' V , - :rw f' Vi-J, I. Nrmi' Al sf l- Greal X 4 A -'why . . . Dr. Flynn . . . Twas Q cold W1hl9lS evenmg the guests were all lecxvmg fs., 'S' A l . w , , 4' 76 5 x V V ' , L'm s T1mBERRR . . . X r f .1 . J ,bv X F ttf Dr. Dutton Thinks I 1 L 1' ,K 5411 0- ligne- l recent experiment involving 120 volunteers . 1 Il lg? A .1 int V' . ,- . J f' A 4 'Ni 1 Scorekeeper Y '77 , I' ' 1 Champ -lf , gg A E Early Candidates lor u Myocardial lnlcxrct 2 V he A r c ' it A ef- ' ,Q S . .L , t V 'Y v ' L -: l ' H Ol Mice and Men V 4 HABBITS didn't complain Very vulnerable indeed - Poor Ice: HE be surprised! I Lunch hour it 'ef - And then I said to the Dean's assistant . . 1 will 1 . Q I l -fil- r' CM Geez: another twenty cents Kilroy . t.: A - 5 . - V-Y - ' ,I 2, 45 J. ,- l Y Y I 4 I- 1 f , vi' l If J! Ja ,. - 'ufl S V ' '3 Q ,IQ ht., U I 4 ,, ' 45 Ji- X ' T 1' ,- lv- If Dgiw 2-.1 . -rf XXT 0 0 ISP haw! ,J, CLASS OFFICERS Presxde-nt: Dick Elias Vice President Dcm Pettee Secretary: Icme Heiimcm v l . 1 . 4 ! 1 1 Z' First Row: Ellen Newman. Lestra Carpe. Richard Elias. Ann Bingham, Men-ree King. Second Row: Allan Gordon. Andrew Frantz. Charles Griege. Stanley Bergen. Dudley Rochester. Peter Wegterholl. Tracy Scudder. Robert Sheridan. Third Row: Robert Stuckey. Simon Ohanessian. Edwin Rudmger. William F R Everett. Dorsey Makin, Robert Langmann. Richard QS::at-backl Brunsletter. t :ll l ,: ll l F J N534 QW? X, rs: rrst Row: Manuel Qchoa. ljlarold Spalter. Robert Roth. Burton Polansk . H bet N . S d R y EI I CHI ECDD CWI xchard Hermann. Richard Pierson. Arthur Gordon. Maxwell Lai. Bard Cosman. Walter DeVault. Peter Rowley. Norman Colbert, Q :nf :ia KQIIC1 11- , :ummm Y Hill ' ' N V ' X ' W v T l .I , , .5 5 r 1 N : H lH A I EQ' Q' 'Q - I L - .Pj . fy ' 1 l 1 ' f ' .Q P T .fri if ' A ,L . I, li ' , j f. X ' s . g Q 54 ' '-ive Rf First Row: Barnett Miller. David Berman, lane Heilmaun, lohn Griswold, Daniel Petlee. Secfmd How: Hoy Funoni. Robert Eismger. Arlhur Verdcsca. Richard Eberly. Iohn Heggie. Harvey Hesnnk. Henry Hosell, Maurice Van Besian, Robert Best, Alan Feld. lk if' svlb A r Z First How: Iohn Wilson. Marilyn Heins, Darling Pew. Harrie! Halpern. Haber! Siegel. Second How: Daniel Leary. William Ciaravino. Ioseph Stocks. Al Masi. William Lovekin. Warren Leeds, Paul Adams. Felix Battat. Third Row: Quenlin Del-Iaan. Elias Kairnakliolis, Peter Fleming. Thorpe Kelly, George Nesbill. Lloyd Fisher. Richard Nacye. W 1 wt 94' lt finally came. The third year started out with a church. Everyone was getting married, some in spite ot themselves. But there were a t t ' ew o us holding out tor bigger and better things. T wait for daylight to come to get over to the wards. And of course everyone looked lorwa d r to the afternoon tea with Bobbie Loeb and the compulsory elective tennis matches with Dr. Wegria. he summer was delightful We just couldn't Dr. Dalton scared us into liking radiology, and ' was even nice enough to let us mark our own attendance. Ot course no one missed any- way. But We did learn, thanks to a classmate, that by using a chest X-ray, one could demon- t s rate the presence or absence of patholog in Y the lungs! What won't they do next? Probably the most enioyable afternoons ct the week were those spent in psychosornatics at least for those ot us who didn't get enough sleep at night. lt was wonderful to cast the books aside in exchange tor a bed Cwe needed itll. How the patients would love to see us first thing in the re particularly disturbed if we didn't allow them to belong to the hematoma club tor the day. Well, we didn't become good technicians. but at least they could have made us glorified technicians. morning, and we il-1 R-4. Jus: 1,10 w' . mg 'H Ir Om ww., , S Isla Then there came Surgery and Anesthesia, when the alarm would go off just after we'd gotten in bed It was stunning. How wonderful you lelt being able to pass a laryngoscope blindly, and once we even got into the operat- ing room CSomeone had to wheel the patient inll T he mofhedy 1 oufh. Pe aCe of . mind '. - -1' 1, 1 'ft .. .fi Irdfliqn Stylgi -1, Qi! X. ,WX till Els-Q1-lo! og sees th. lllllgxlsl I its III MM jill t IM! ll IIIIW it , it 1 . 4 tj A x I - 5 N' V17 J. The class tell back on instinct when we got to Pediatrics Everyone was a father or mother or at least wanted to be, and it was even sug- gested by some that there be an exchange ot students for patients, How sympathetic we were to the young mothers, realizing ot course this was their first. ln most cases they were wonderful and you just had to pat the baby on the back once and the mother only three times. And the sweet little brats, the wonderful trickle of the ultratiltrate down your arms tjust tor youj and the passage ot the meconium tor which you were then to thank them, They were very cooperative and in many cases taught us what we should have already known. The class, by handtulls, took a rapid tour ot the specialties. Here, those whose lives had direction gave bold assistance to the group. Now, conceding to popular demand in the class, those who were to be Psychiatrists tossed natural shyness and humility to the winds, and volunteered their rich experience ot sex and sanity for the benetit of all Psychiatry was in the malcingl And what material Dr Pollatin had to work Withl One would have thought that before taking Opthalmology one would learn how to use the ophthalmoscope, but one was certainly dis- illusioned They heard we didn't get enough in the 2nd year Lantern slides are a lot better anyway Af 's supposed to be Orthopedics. N ---.-1, t '- v r 415. Brilliant diagnosticians were being made in ENT, Everything from acoustic neuroma to hemangiomata of the cords, but oh how many times we overlooked the torisillitis and pharyn- gitisl But these aren't important anyway, they're not rare. Dermatology will be different Curitil we had it, but once we had it, we really had itll And then comes that most enjoyable period, the elective, which takes classmates wide and far, from California to Maine, from pool halls to beaches. The class gave sanctuary to fugitives fleeing other citadels of truth, Lloyd Fisher, a modest tmodest l-lellll fellow of questionable repute and always pleasant company tat beer any- wayl had gone as far as he could at Dartmouth tfor further details see Fleming? Pete Fleming had gone much too far at l-lanover, At least there was a growing sentiment in New Hamp- shire that either Fleming or that accordion would have to go. Whereupon he headed south, accordion and all, There was another student CAl Kessler, l believel who, l'm told, had broken all records at a second rate school in Boston and had gone as lar as he could possibly go there, so he decided to leave Bos- ton and learn a little more in the big city, He was a great addition to the 3rd year basketball team, the record now stands at one win in three years, What wondersl The class was still naive for the most part about its future, The small number of individ- uals who felt positive at this stage of a direction in their lives were perhaps the most naive of all. ln this year of relative freedom from super- vision, the only dependable truth was the elusiveness of material: the basic science not really mastered, the clinical pictures so quickly forgotten, and iournals piling up, month after month, unread ln the face of so much indiges- tion it was a hopeful note that the great ma- jority of these boys and girls, daddies, hus- bands and wives, recognized the pitfalls of committing their minds too early to a decision. ,34- iii'rtc , , The gloatmg parents That's where they all should be. -. l 5 fill iw .fl 5- l W1 - ' yixzm- is, .- i i i X -Q I Q , Tum about is fair play. UN' E , 1 . . tl at L, ii c 5 .. t Y I ii' Gourmands he look that kills. What a team! W-l. L-9? Cardiac catheterization. 0, -Q . x J , N ly Cal at the wheel. xr 4 THE CLERK'S LAMENT lor of the most high cometh spieling From ct r:1i'.'-em, from 3 :3:',':: Maklng rounjs an eight :md :fri-2, Dwefl this-2 jerki, the ilzhzclf rlerks, And Zfielr Jyhirer, t-'te'i.C:r.f- the world is your oyster. son: three months in Loebs pearl market On my e'.'en1ng,, 9:1 IIQQ' ,. . ..... VI., Oh my H1'glltClilL1EO d:'.'xnfq Thou cm coummg ce-..: :omver ,. ,, . .JfE'1JILll.'3Ff'f, lf'.i9YY'.9 fI,1T. telephone service to Bard Hall was mysteriously cut the night of the Iuly blizzard. in 1953 Light his head was lil:-2 J fEJfllET, Dr Loeb he vrsulj Jutihme Cardzoard ii:-za-,z '.f.'llhi'A Test tub-5.3 :Jr to fest miie ROUND cardboard boxes. son Oh my history, Q31 my ,a'i:x:t.1f','. Oh my lab '.-ron: llit Sian' 1:29, flflrrie L3 if-.i:?1ley, Dani: F.!Chl'3yM Where 5 'fini .ilflll 'ZF',' EUKAT' Llglll Like '.-.':z.m'if1ke J IJJQ' 'Uni-2 her sugar ply: ii ,T Thought having rat 3' fxcvzzze It 'f'J:5?ted She :cali :13'.'f1 TT ' .:'f- she might like rats Dr-ev: proChr3rr.LLr.5, ,.-27,12 7 . Every marnzzg what at re'.'e:1 113111: :r.e3.1ure.a '.'ff:i .. f Tnei T3 P1992 he: Qu' if. Ori :sf :ar.:r.g Jn :ny ccruxj Le' .f be dre.,.'e:i?0n1ght:in1r.e Up-er3,1neltre,E:1rJ :mi '.':.n.r.g, rf' -,Q .L ..,,-,.31.l -.,,-- H,,j.-..f,Q ,. ...., ,..,,t . H... .f,, ,,...- T ?ff'J S W jdomad .AHCJQFJOH To his many lriends at PGS, the sudden, untimely death ol Tom Anderson was a deep personal loss. Always a vital personality, Tom conveyed to all an unending good humor, The easy fashion in which he handled the many crises, large and small, ot academic lite was contagious. To some, his gift of anecdote surprised and brightened lite. To others the ready strum of the Anderson guitar signalled the beginning ot conviviality, To all, he was a sincere friend ready to give a helping hand. Tom was always an outstanding person. At Lewis and Clarke High School in Spokane, Washington, he was a standout member of many winning toot- ball teams. He was active in school clubs and still had time to be Saluditorian of his class. Following graduation he attended Yale University Where he was an active member ot Trumbull College, participating in athletics and the Student Council, He was a member ot Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity, Because ot his outstanding personal attributes and scholastic ability Tom was elected to Skull and Bones Senior Society. He graduated with a BA degree in Soci- ology, Psychology and History in l95l, Tom showed a lite-long interest in medicine. To this end he maintained an unswerving dedication. He was uniquely endowed with those qualities ot humanity, humility, and integrity which make his loss an irreplaceable one to medicine and mankind, Thomas Hill Anderson was born Ianuary l3, l929 in Spokane, Washington. Son of George Herman Anderson and Ruth Ellen Weisdorter Anderson. He died May 28, l953 near Columbus, Ohio on his way to Spokane, 0611 .xdrlamj Wakew Born May 3, 1929, New Haven, Conn. Son of Harold Iohn lvfahew and Lucy Adams Mahew. Married: August 30, 1952, to Shirley Ann Ran- dall pa , Passed on September 19, 1952, pl Prepared at Oakwood Friends School, Pough- keepsie, N, Y. Class of '47, president of his class four years there BS Earlhan College, Richmond, Indiana 1951. Attended Columbia University College of Phy- sicians ii- Surgeons, Sept. 13, 1951 to Sept. 19. 1952, Class of 1955. Assistant to Dr I Wister Meigs at Yale Univer- sity on basic cancer research, summers 1950, 1951, 1952 Beneath his ready humor and consuming interest in science, specifically medical science, was a steady kindliness and readiness to do for those around him. He was clear, however, in his conviction that you really help people only when you do for them that which they cannot do for themselves. The Iohn Adams Mahew Loan Fund, available through the Dean's Office to students facing emergencies, is in keeping with Iohn's readiness to lend a helping hand at the time it was needed, Among his last words was a recitation of I Corinthians XIII which he had memorized The passage ends, AND NOW ABIDETH FAITH, HOPE, LOVE, THESE THREE BUT THE GREATEST OE THESE IS LOVE. Iohn mentioned that this means not only love of family, but also love of God and love of all mankind 2:- M AURA Q 9 I l,:':Ay' A ..- ' Mi 4 x X. v I' I I E 1 gm WX 9 W 1 X l I 1 ull' .L '25 X x X -1' wg, ,f , V, 5 f xi! i ,I 4 L ,E-1, X XX 5 I 1, I xx 'A li P- r-V-'., I , fi V' fx ,-' Q,- ' , I I Q-YA-5 X A J 1 ' .LW -1 V : , A , ' -4-X , ' -3 ., ' ., .H 'Q' -fr: - ff 5 JJQFH.-' ' 1 - ' .4 u 2- shi- I H' :cum . - 'f mf' . - .1 .1 .3 511.64 W1 -fl Hilti 2' 'pi 4 H' il . E, U U Gtriri 0 fri I 1 'Y '77 Glenn A. Lcmger Class President AB., Colgate, l95U Pearl River, N. Y. f A A ,W Robert M. Hollister P Q Class Vice-President - BS., Davidson, 1950 P X New Bern, N. C. ary Martha R. B. Adams Class Secretary-Treasurer AB., Wellesley, l943 Iamestown, R. l. ,cf 5 'l a U! l 1:8 47, p1 1' - ' ' , ,lil f I e, 5I'4 -il' , , 'D , .as 6' A W 0.14 A f s av' N Q 'ff' V-F Kenneih A. Altman Edward D. Angell AB, Cornell, 1959 AB, Yole, 195C New York Clty New York Clty 5 , ,,,4u-1.7. ?R': .. Y -1-nv 5 1 , David H. Bcrrnhouse Berl G. Bass AB, 1-lorvcxrd, 195C AB, 1-lomrlton, 1950 Doylestcwrr, Fo Newark, N. I Alfred A. Azzoni 1 A B, Upsolo, 1950 1 New York Clty L 1 Y 1 William F. Bemcrrt AB, Prmceton, 1950 New Conoon, Conn. 1 .. ' I . 1 - .. I x f 1 . .--f'-wiv s, r 35 ,X A . Wffwf- 72.2-x, , f N X I, ,ji , V' , ' if fr H 1 , 1155+ carl? 163 V . IL. ,L , . V . ' . -.3 MA M, M 4 I If Pi. A E. Foster Conklin AB., Yale, 1950 Hackensack, N. I. ,K I X 1 5 . 0, 4,9 Cid? xxijbfx Q0 'vw +0 Cfiok vi? 50 , se ok fE+4' O0 we 3,9 45' OXKXQ, XX x . 'NX 60 6 Qi- CJ Q9 QZQNKO 5' Cl Q0 Ygg..GQ.QNQ Iohn Q. Duriey AB., Amherst, 1950 Springfield, Ohio in ,Q we 9 Q- Q . OGQQXOWEXO 'xl Y kggxvwu Q . N N , 'g 'R R11 ,1 Q ' SI' ws A s ' L 1 ' -V q.-QL, W K W I A .Lf A' 33 CMV! Y 1 ' ' S A5 .IJ 1 Q H J . ' 1:2 :Lgf N g L, , 1. ' ' 1 , -r if Patience Dalhouse Des Prez R 'dsonm AB., Co1umb1cf, 1950 Oger pqu1-LDGZS, WSU West Englewood, 11 I AB, QUIZ-xDesN Prez HQYVOXAOSS Ch moufnl 195 A211.uXorxd, 1. lcqgoy IH I 5. 1 X w I I f- r-. r Of .J Iohn B. Ellison Robert S. Engle: David G. Faris AB., Columbia, 1950 BS, Yule, 1950 BS., Arlzonc, 1950 New York City Sccirsdole, N, Y, Van Nuys, Calif, i C, saei 'll v V Walter A. Bonney, Ir. BS., Alabama, 1950 Enterprise, Miss. i William T. Caldwell. III AB., Princeton, i950 Moorestown, N. I. x. .'I Thomas B. Bradley. Ir. AB., Hamilton, l950 Utica, N, Y. 'lb U-an N fx A i . Alfred I. Cannon AB., Columbia, 1950 Westbury, N. Y. an-f' ' 1 X Philip W. Brickner AB., Swarthmore, l950 New York City 3 3 .1 'Sf 'GIO- i Rodman D. Carter AB., Harvard, l950 Cromwell, Conn. S. Pecuce Browning, IH AB, Prmce-ton, 1950 New Cancun, Conn, Charles A. Chidsey, III BS., Trinity, 1950 Port Huron, Mich, X 1-'df x. fin gg Q U' X x '1 X s. 1, LX 1 Lawrence M. Bugbee AB, Brown, 1949 Short H111s, N, I, 'r ,au we N, wr' , '13- , gl. f - ' I -AN, ' l - tb 5 SZ? ' .Q 1 1 '5 fi- ff 1 Ziff- gi.,2, 2, --' . Ama-t N: .fe .f N2 ff? Vincent P. Butler AB, St, Peter's, 1949 Iersey Crty, N, 1. 1 1 1 ' A 7, lf , ...1 el , 5 I f Burton D. Cohen AB., Yale, 1950 Waterbury, Conn. i -ls. i' I M. Robert Coles AB, lrlcxrvurd, 1950 Boston, llflcss, 'lf' X ? E. Iames Feeley AB, Yale, 1950 1-larrlson, N Y X. 1:Q- : Zd,,,v1.-1, 1 ' ' A ' xl C : r' 1 V X ' I , f .g , ' Qlgggliyrih ' P YI, . .4 4. - Enoch Gordis AB., Columbia, 1950 Belle Harbor, N Y ni? ,X ,. ff.: . :YI T 41 , Q ,,, Pi: X A Q ' 1 1 N, 1 ' L: , rio, , fl ? If ' 0,2 ,. ,Q sg x ww A if - v '12 Al,-ffgii. Iames H. Foster , , 41-. A ' 'Q ul 1 I , n ff' .l ' . AXA Q1 me Hx A B, Haverford, 1950 I ' l-lamden, Conn Eugene L. Gotiiried AB., Columbm, l95U East Orange, N. I N 5' 1 f 1'P . 5 . X I' 4 A KT Icxmes MCB. Garvey. Ir AB., Prmceton, 1959 Cincmnatl. Olin: Herbert L. Gould A B, Bowdom, 1950 Boston, Mass, K Marguerite I. Gates AB., Columbia, l951 New York Cm' ly-,V 3.3 R1 ' 90 A -QQ. 4' 3 I . '.Y-11 :I . '- . 1 Q. 7-Q 'M . 4' '- '5Ji?E.+2?ffg1 ,. 39+ '-,.'f'.?ff:'91-, iwlib-Llp .- :ii N if: 5. 1.72 R. William Glover A B, Prlncctgfn, WSL' BfOCll'1l'5'I'l, N 'Y Y '1? Neville Grant Y , ':l9, 195' Sl l,,w11.w, 1 N .AWN laik' if Mehran Gouliczn AB,C:lu1llb:i:, l'?' '1 l ' l Wee:1 '.': 1-2:1 ,Q ga GI. r 7 , T 1 4-9 Eugene L. Goldberg A B, Prmcetorx, l95U New York City Q t . l f W . X.. .1 l ' ff., A ,, Ll' l Y 'l i r I , l Paul F. Gulycxssy A EZ lf Il'?, l'?5l'l l'lllCl'l'?l lll, lflffllll Iames W. Hcmway AB., Yale, 1950 Pelham, N, Y, Kevin Hill AB., Colby, l950 Waterville, Maine 257- A' Iames B. Hastings AB., Haverford, 1950 Upper Montclair, N. I, if i 'dh , 'F?. al 'TQE14-:f , mf QQ 'lfflnl-r-:1i'5i11l.i , Iohn H. Hobart AB, Haverford, 1950 Philadelphia, Pa. Y- 1-K ' Q i. ':7, A pr-'. 'Y x 'x -1 qgnvf' X . lx! , i ,.5',' U . ' Ji-' ' iii-.st A ' . -'5' 7, 5 U. ftixx ' fi-Y' :, in aw il 1 73: 1, 5, . . ? 'LNf.f1 L 'L .ef ' ' L Hx!! xl T ll 'If' ' Priy- V P X William F. Haynes. Ir AB., Princeton, lQ50 Orange, N, I, A . 1 V f? ' , ! X X George H. Hogle BS Yale, 1930 Salt Lake City, Utaii 1 X 1. 'V 11 Y 5 . S . 1 ' -:4 Z 1 If my R? x Hia 5 . 'Ll' ', . , Richard M. Hays AB, Harvard, 1949 Norwd1k, Conn, -v' Thomas R. Holland AB, Princeton, 19551 1f'1OTY1SfO'N'I'l, N 1 QQGT A wr' 5 ' . X 1 I, r g I L. Andrew Healey. Ir. BS., Fordham, 195U New York City .gi gg I 'I' Henry B. Holle 1? N-r I Ronee I. Herrmann A B, Stanford, 1953 New York Clty ' 3' 15-J S' AB., Harvard, 1950 New York City Q51 2-ll' Harold I. Hoops, Ir. AB., Lehigh, 1950 Tenofly, N, 1 X F d' . arg, A V 5' EMT: E, W- L. lGCl'5orf35Q B glullddbmif' rlw' Ek yyxlflglno ' E ' 4 v'4l' X u Samuel Korman BS., College of the Clty ol New York, 1946 M.S., Fordham, 1947 New York City I ' 'N be , X, I ,Wk T U T, ,Q Q ,. i -if ' Rodger W. Ielliife AB., Harvard, 1950 Cleveland, Ohio K'- Milencx L. Lewis AB., Bryn Mawr, 1950 New York City A?ugfKeUfin9 FO ' ale, 1948 rt Lee' N I rl 1 k - 1. ., , 1 , 1' Arlhur A. Like BS., College of the City ol New York, 1950 West Englewood, N, I. ra Q 'x- Lf 'B 5 Frederick A. Klipstein AB., Wxllicms, 1950 Greenwich, Conn, 'l F Gfwarf Yfq, 0 1 1 ,f -it-il E I. S56 4,3 'Fiqh fff5g,,fZfe Q If 01-E SSP? fv 3350 N' I' , 'ML Max 6' lgsfo 1 ' 'oswjscfgo , f K ' ' ' O01 IO , AJ',', l Of Q I 9 ,- 51.1 4: i , of 42950 1, ,T - .I 7 Z J 4 - lj M L ' gf , - ' 1 Q, 0, 'Mfg' - 1 rx! oo .99 ' 1 1 3 - if ' l if 640445 ff r E. Rambo Lindsay AB., Princeton, Chester, Po 1950 J: 9 3.11 x ' Y 4 1 - 2' -s :V ,,,.,.., ,Alfa ,Q QZQ 1-1 1 Marvin M. Lipman 3 AB., Columbia, 1949 b f J'-'KN' x ' fig! W ' f W A 11 'W xxx I 1 L 1 1 if 1 1 1 Brooklyn, N Y. ' fa n , Q Iohn Lunt BS., Cornell, 1950 Wheatland, Wyo. vi 14 'gn . 45 -1' Chalmers A. Loughridge BS, Colorado, 1941 Gallup, N, Me:-1. A 'TI' T of Daniel Malcolm Paul W. Mayer Peyton H, Mead AB, CO1UIT11D1G, l95U Younaslown, 0111-3 A B' Nvlllrgmg, 1950 AM., Indiana, 1950 West Hartford, Conn. New York City mf? ,f ,za -a 5 'Z lf 1Qi 1Q .. 'f Q, Agfa! fl q:nQ.1i,'ff .1 Ioseph L. McDaniel A B, Columbia, 1950 Kokomo, lnd. in + if : J Richard L. Milward AB., Columbia, 1950 Youngstown, Ohio .nfl I 'K ,, -7 ' , . 7 . ' - .- - 'P .,. 'i ' ,z , V, is Q, ,- Al' 1 4 Q . .- qi ' i Q , gg, . 4 ng, ' I 3 'M :'7 ' n , 1 1 ' ' 62 5 'V 9 ' F, ' V il y F1 'u , Lonnie MacDonald BS., Antioch, 1950 Chester, Pa Ioseph E. Mackie AB., Yale, 1950 Brockton, Mass 1 5 In ,Q A- 'l: X -,.1, .P W 'W' V,-1 ' 1 H yr, , A ' 1 - :gt i 1 f A . its Amold Mittelman William R. Muir A B, Columbia, 1950 AB, Virginia Military lnstitute, 19 New York City New York City F-.- . PM X i A if oi.. 5 ni AF ' 'uv . 'I A Robert A. Munsick AB., Cornell, 1950 Morristown, N. I. .w w YS 1'f,,'!..X an - - L A ' - in ix SM I We W1 KVM LNWL' 'A 'WAR A WY .ik . ' Douglass C. Pennoyer A.B. Harvard 1950 West Boothbay Harbor Maine 1 I I 4, . 4 B! 1 -1 f ' R f 16' 5 'Sr 1 , 1 M ,.', 5' f 715552 'A ' nw , 4-1.252 , 115254:-,':65. 1.1?ngs..1fx:2 .- 'frbyijjf i . . '7Ff:T-3-.: '. , sam: k mf ' 2-ze.-.p '.'Z-3-. fsifhif. ' 1 53 -, - qkififwxzm 1 ' f . ,A 1-ml A-2,111 ' 4.-,wait L L . 1. 4,..Lv3-Q ' f.g.vt1-'41 ', ,nj K :' .. 1 1fsE1Giag.gngi? . in ,is J f . 1' f '-vrT.',,i K' fit: if rrff tfi' 'ef-1-arm: if fe-- iv: 1-2 - 'f :A,-1454. T. Nr -4 1 A-4 'X ,:., HG .-J -tv 1752: .- 3111 33 .fi .-,- ' -1, Jz'-Qtr:-'ze-'rf ': 7 ' '- RW 1. -..:!'u5:z-1' 4.9-,,.: , .1 ,.- , . , , G. Richard O'Connor AB., Harvard, 1950 Cincinnati, Ohio ,, 1' .wif 2 . . n 2 M . .. ,. N C P '251 Doris S. Pennoyer AB., Smith, 1950 Latrobe, Pa. Donald E. Oken BS., Columbia, 1950 Laurelton, N. Y. YN T Robert T. Pottenger, Ir. AB., Princeton, 1950 San Marino, Calif. Edgar B. O'Neill E S, Cclumbza NSC New York CHQ: Hichard M. Prickett AB., Columbma, 195C Wacdhaven, IT, Y fl' N N as' ' 'f' David B. Palmer AB, Yale, l95O Stamford, Conn. r, 41: 1 5 4 .gif 1 N l x X lohn H. Phillips AB., Cornell, l95C Devon, Pa, - -I :gg eelf if -6 ' I Bonita I. Peterson AB., Cahfornia, l95O Turlock, California I f-,fart lohn Ramsndell AB, Yale, 1549 I Wnite Plans, fl Y Iames W. Rathe AB., Carleton, 1950 Waverly, lowcx 7-1 -r T 5 . l q l F P gg 4 l r 451 T ,F e fm 5 h 54 'Z N Q J lb Fifi C J ' WE X PPS6-XQ fgf?-I l ?, 1 QW Ng 9 O43 gb Qr 955 429509 --in Q N ' . Q3 Oofo :Tam b,,.0QQ+Ow Tiff all S Qbl . 4:95 QOLGQ SO Q O Q-' 'V Y. Samuel C. Silipo AB., Wesleyan, l95O Trenton, N. I, . x5 we bg, ag' GYQEZP' X QS woe! Op! Q , Q59 ' ' lfgeilei ' go Q 'B N sf! ' 3 G. -fe on 3 Q ft .xy I ,V 1 .-15 , 2 40 ,,, A f -unq- 11 1 1 f X 1 A .v X N! 12:-'fiitlk gg 4? 'nr' - Charles L. Schocket , X Schmmgg AB., George Wcxshmgton, 1952 Bernard Dqxuexuwbil- 11? East Orange, N. I BS, Cduschoenbe PMB? Cltouqgy ' Brookjfnblqi Nndd fn, N Y 1 Baia' I I 'wx 'Q' 'i Anneliese L. Sitcxrz Harold H. Stocker Herbert M. Swartz AB., Bryn 1f1c:1'.-Jr, 1950 AHB, Princeton IQSQ A B, Prmceton, 19511 Summit, N I, ' 1 Seattle, Wash, Norfolk, JG 41. , 2' l 5 4 F b L ,.......9. ' -Q' XX Q 51 ' . 1 .-qi Sj7i4 - A Q4 . -- 1 .11 X . lx 1' .f5,,,e Edward A. Theurkcrul. Ir. K BS., Princeton, 1950 ' M' ' ii 1-lolmclel, N I Iames C. Taylor AB., Princeton, 1950 Walter Tuchmcm Morgcinton, N. C. - N , 'uv 5' X ri 'CX Ioan M. Weiss AB., Columbia, 1950 New York City Earl A. Wheaton, Ir. A.B., Princeton, 1950 Ridgewood, N. I.. 9' R' fi ' si D 1 9 fl Y 1 N. -Q AB., Brooklyn, 1950 Brooklyn, N, Y 5 .- A 1. W I 29 ' x 1 L Herbert Wohl AB., Cornell, 1948 New York City wfw A .1 f I 43- .f 6' Q .al-' T P. Roy Vagelos A B, Pennsylvania, 1950 Rcxhwcy, N, 1. 1 i I Kathleen M. Wood BS., Arizona, 1950 Phoenix, Ariz P' gl M W: Iohn A. Vecchiolla AB Yale 1950 Rye N Y William A. Vessie AB, Columbia, 1948 Greenwich, Conn .-,Alla wgnwflm if M- . if N. A s if ' '1 rs. I consumi n ASSE. J Cul h 41? 5- the News . . .dl L4 gif . I 4? 1 fl,g' lm xi. AE lf' X 3iff'?z Y gn 'ir 'W ,5 a'i.N ,W .-Q G ZX? , ZX 99: .wi 'Y T um . V r.r'f7Xx'4 l .1 i 1 i 'VQF' st .I I 'T -1 Il in .--f.,s YEGITX GDCE . . . F '71 4 N H h 1 ' 4 Y!! -In 4 Q, 1: F 4 X C455 wg, ' xr. F' 'le X 1? I 1 f VV .k. 43 Sinbad 'I' 'Q 'N L 'K w. -' ' ' , , , 1 I' Q x ,gffi 1 N5 r .E I Fsf-1 , 5 f' , in R' 'NN Ni 3 M 55?-LX . Af? L Two years before the mcxsi . lx - E r I ' 4 Take back your mink . . 'ff' ffit' 2 f Q52 .2g,. ' 1'5 f v .Ms Q, it 11 +35 lip' YJ .--t rlq W Hebephrenic FL-..o 4-A . .5-C' -v-qw, , C ' -p , f'5 .- ' V-:1:t:.-'ffs' ' ' l,f.'T.s..F-wif. I, ' ,J-1 ' vw' -, it ' ' .,. ,. -A . I ,, x o , V i Lost, Iohn? 6 'lx Simple schiz H, du. f' :- ,fi-v' af' Whats so funny Rodgers and Hammerstein. XJ' A? 'w A- gp - i 'ff Q4 I :,3-71-YQYQX' x .- D2 . x 5, 7' , 'D E E A: gg . I Nice pussy 4 I x w P- '7 'u.--- v. rl'-fu. F me .i V f.- 5 f. Y' . I -iz.-a 'x'?'vt E5 , -2? 6 I -f' 7 -if Q J , 252 2. ,Ml A ' r 12 A 1 S !- 'T i 'QU '4 -J YN mgbu 1 X .A r Never underes K ,F Q A-'f' f'3 f 1 ? G r' 5' R6 The TH J 'J Y, l speakin u QS 'QV , 1 - ' M I e , y rf' L... e- t K.. , gl' .Q x I- IT 'av I X 1 - ., I 1 l nt. Q we A - x ll '15 . ltr L S y l, , J Be ause of ou - ' ',. 1 X X me Y 'Q - , t , Smile 'E - 3 '32, f 'W 4- cg' 475- '... ff Boy scientist A5V x A - x 1 sf'- V U pw-Qu'-1 Qf we ' ...U- 'V :S ,,,. J-'eil 'E'- ' 4 F e if fi 45? X .fi ,rg 'af uv i., 7 5 Y Q !'t I' Q This is the story. the uncensored lore Of the fabulous class of 'fifty-four: The greatest group to ever bless The sacred walls of PGS: A brilliant. eager but modest throng. One hundred and twelve strong. ffileven being girls.l We arrived in September, iust a twig Fresh from the roots of the lvy League: Bewildered. confused as many before We wandered about: the lost sixth floor: And where Charley's Desk got its name: And why elevators never came: Rnd how lecture seats could be so hard: And who was the creep in charge of Bard: And where were the patients. and who's Uncle Hnd exactly what was Rappleye's iob. fThe latter we still don't know.l After a fortune in books had been acquired. ln spotless coats we sat inspired As Sevy called us cr lucky crew. Out of thousands to be the chosen few. So we filled the forms and paid the fees And settled back to become M.D.'s. fWe were just freshmen and didn't lcnow.l Bob FIRST YEAR I We started with Elftman who descriptively scanned The multifonn functions of the mammary gland. And introduced .us all at last 4? To the thirty less fortunate in the class. fThat's not including Albert.l Silent Ely and Daddy Det- Wiler land wilderl. How could we forget: The Saturday momings when no one came Anatomists all taking off for the game: The fill-in exams, and trying to cram The brachial plexus from Cunningham: The hawt saund machine that went out of whack: Skipping rope to a portion of the intestinal tract tAnd cleaning out the samel: Playing musical chairs. and the fruitless try In fifteen seconds to identify With one tenth knowledge and nine tenths luck A mummified. misplaced cystic duct: Dissecting the neck with precision and grace To have Agate spill ashes all over the place: Long Iohn and No-Hands and Ronnee's scream Over surgical procedures in the perineum: Olympian tops and the other chants About Oswald's -i-' and Tilly's pants. f Censored-Ed.l These we remember but fiddle-dee-dee We've forgotten the rest of anatomy. There's histology too, remember the way We memorized Baily from Z to A? The mad rush to join the front row boys For fear that Whispering would lower his voice: The practical slides made from pulverized skin: The mass migration for coffee at ten: Copenhaver's monotone. Dr. Iohnson's legs. And Engel implanting fertilized eggs. fAll of it is best forgotten., tWe almost forgot embryological nods To Daddy Detwiler and the book by Dodds.J And neuroanatony where Elwyn would keep Tuming on lights so we couldn't sleep. fThe maiority slept anyway.J Q Noback's lectures if that's the word For garbled Greek. incomprehensibly slurred. But we got our revenge the memorable day When Stooky threw one of the Questions his way And Noback didn't know the answer. The bimanual dexterity of Riley's art. And the many times we were tom apart By Dr. Stookey. The search for a seat he might overlook, The pointing finger. the knees that shook As we approached the pit in anxiety sweat, And left it with scivies perceptively wet. The box of slides we overlooked By copving pictures out of the book. Our first oral quizzes. and trying to guess What was peripheral and what C. N. S. These we remember but fiddle-dee-dee We've forgotten neuroanatomy. From mid-year on we had to cope With biochem and making soap: , Taking quizzes, and with moans and groans Trying to solve those damned unknowns A tWith clues from Dr. Gillespiej. There were many experiments we quietly shirked, X. And Coles proved to all the shower worked. 1 Sperry considered cholesterol i ' While Miller mentioned the millemole. There was farmer Foster and Doctor Clark tThe biochemist's patriarch.J We sat through their lectures in acid-burned coats Then thanked the Almighty for Tony's notes. That was biochem, pristine and pure In sharp contrast to the eleventh floor. tNow to grind some axes.J What is it? ,P . T3 ., X ,L A s N V Iohnson - sim' 4 I The physiology lads. forever employed With a humor that would shock even Dr. Freud. The gray-haired Magnus in charge of the crew. Whose claim to fame is Evans Blue. Who obliged the class by a well timed skip To the Pacific Isles on a two months trip. tBut we still had to look at the pictures.l 'E' N 1 I A,- v . V, , . tl -f 'fs Engel From here to etemit net Tony's notes? 14' I A 8 'r --.- Ln r , QQ., :. Saving lives L.. 5? e I Big Bov iw, lf' C 1 .Y - ' .5 X t wr ' ,nv ' . ii Q , t ii .1 ' ' 'Y -' 4' i M f 4 -NA., Q A J Q. . , 'Q 'vjxn .,. , vu -Q l if f-L e- s.m.- ...f L ' And next to him Root. who let us down flat Ja I . 0 ' 5 i : X 2. ,Q 'ee tQ3 .4 'f N 'In 9 4 Wang. -,X X, X . Vicarious thrill .3 i . I Can-Can ,5.i'. I :,' F5 ii' fi .V 1 is Tl NL ,Ki K. - Ms if With his lectures on SEX fin the decorticate catl. And we can't forget Wang. our faithful mentor Lecturing on wagus and womiting center And pulling his moth-eaten morsel of ioy: What you got there-tiger, boy? Cizak's glee at our diuresis: The week's vacation for a ten page thesis: Pithing the poor defenseless frogs: Cannulating mangy. mongrel dogs: Smoking the drums. shellacking the same Rnd cursing the day that we ever came To medical school. So much for the classes. they were iust a crumb. A minor part of the curriculum. For the test tube. kimograph. and dissecting knife Took second place to our social life. ln late October we were able to throw Our first class party with a first class show, A roaring success. a drunken brawl And immediately apparent to all That our brilliant class. though medically inclined Were rivals to Rodgers and Hammerstein. fNot to mention Rodgers and l'Iart.l Our Saturdays were spent with alumni zeal At Princeton. New Haven. or Baker Field. And Sundays with aspirin. attempting to right The gross indiscretions of Saturday night. There was fall rushing too. and the terrible three: Phi Chi. Nu Sig. and P. D. E. The autumn passed. like a ship in the night And Christmas vacation soon hove into sight. And before vacation the dance at Bard Where bona fide carols are annually starred: fDig that crazy pun. man.l Where the first year find out. if they find out at all The squash courts have uses beyond playing ball: Where the moming after, for those who might go Dr. Elwyn downs pitchers of HO. Hill of the above is so traditional there's ivy Then after vacation back to the grind To wrap up anatomy and leave it behind For greener pastures. the springtime glee ln biochem and physiology. When spring had sprung. like birds and bees We found our life was one of ease With many repressions to gratify So Gracious Living became the cry. Out of the labs by half past two. For a quick game of tennis. then a T. G. brew. Then after supper we had our pick Between bridge and TV and the Uptown flick. ln addition to all this. how we don't know We had time to compose our second show. QThat was where the eight donned curls. Danced their debut as Can-Can girls. And made the show a roaring hit With bras that fell and tights that split.l Our spring was spent in revelry Interrupted in only a minor degree By final exams. which we managed to pass In spite of the efforts of the second year class To keep us awake until six a.m. On the night belore our biochem. fWith bagpipes, et. al.l With the end of exams. came the end of school, on it Muntz and Klip went to Europe as did Prickett and Gould Doug and Dorie got married. and as for the rest Some went to camp and some went west: Some combed the beaches and slept and ate And tried to forget the horrible fate Awaiting us with sadistic leer ln the form of a man-eating second year. It was our last vacation for quite a spell So we sowed our oats and raised our hell And found the summer too quickly passed With September rolling around at last. So shot and bent and broken and beat. With heavy hearts and stumbling feet, We staggered back from our three months' spree To Harry Rose and Smith, H. P., AND THE AXE FELL. SECOND YEAR To the fourteenth floor. our second year home. We dedicate this part of the poem. To the fourteenth floor with the faucets that leaked The broken stools, the air that reeked Of autopsied humans, and the urineous smell Of clinical path. We remember well The hours we wasted doing CBC's. Drawing cartoon replicas of human disease. Doing thousands of Gram stains, and hunting like fools For worms in some Puerto Rican's stools: And the four hour quizzes we patiently took Filling blue book on blue book on top of blue book fl-lnd all of it so much . Most of all we recall that day in May When we emptied the desks and stole away With kyphotic backs and tails that bore Scars from the seats of the fourteenth floor. But in spite of the rat-race, in spite of the strife, We were well prepared for our future life In the Great Beyond. for we know damned well There's a fourteenth floor someplace in hell Where we'll be perfectly at home. But we must retum from our reverie To the sacred subject of pathologv. The basis of medicine. so we're told. In mid-September, back in the fold With erasors and razors and pencils three And specific instructions from bespectacled H. P.. We leamed how to draw and tested our skill By dotting in dots in the basophile. We found that eos were red. nucleoli blue. And plasma cells had a purplish hue: But try as we might we couldn't win, What was too big for Coon was too small for Flynn: What suited Steward was abstract to King. And Seronde would ask: What the devil's that thing? As he pointed to the portrait we'd done so well Of the typical. atypical anarchistic cell. fSurrounded, of course. by po1icemen.l Like nightmares we'l1 remember the rest of our life: The Gunfighter wielding a wicked knife: Coming lated to lecture fif we came at alll When H. P. would cry, and the heavens would fall On the next weekly quiz where questions would pour From subjects we'd covered two months before: The gross path meetings and the sterile string Of Priceless Pearls from Donny King fFor example. the incidence of suspected argyria Since 1903 in southem Siberial: The oral sessions, oh horrible bore With cowboys and Indians and the fire-fighting corps: Or if Flynn were present the endless feed Of questions to MISS Lewis and D. T. Read: The marathon exams, for four hours straight Beating our brains to regurgitate Pathological reams of mimeographed notes Filled with Pickwickian Smithian quotes: Taking exams. then waiting with fear X H For the infamous S- List to appear. Although it was grim. it had its bright half ln the streamlined course of neuropath: With Abner's lectures: l!:: pretty pic . . . And Abner's notes ::::: o retoric ..ll And Abner's lab .,::- Where were we ????l! f Fast asleep ::: dark room p.c. ll! There were autopsy days, awaited with glee Since they kept us away from pathology: There were many peepshows which saved us the part Of composing inscriptions to go with our art: There was Vassar as British as afternoon tea With an Americans interest in the feminine knee. And Flynn as American as Coney Isle Dressed in the latest London style: And last but not least. the Flynn-Plimpton fight Bringing humor to an otherwise humorless plight. 1 In addition to path during the fall Bacteriology stained us all. Surrounded by microbes from our head to our toes, With detailed instructions from bow-tied H. Rose. We massacred rats and grew diplopic Trying to see all those bugs microscopic: We grew our own cocci fexcepting GCD: Seeded our lungs with bovine TB: Learned to produce with incredible ease Synonymous names for human disease. fI.ues. rubella. AFB. etc.J: We iniected the thrombosed ear of the rabbit With some witch's brew concocted by Kabat: 1 Sambo l 5 - .-1 that tive Ain't she sweet l5th Floor Suite in Ar ' f'. . f: Bled each other. grew deaf to the groan As the end ol the needle struck solid bone: Awaited with fear the typhoid days And the resulting period oi general malaise: Sat in confusion. in utter dismay Through the immunochemistry of Kabat. P.. fTo quote: They overlap because they go at the same rate, either because the concentration ot antibodies was different so that they overlap. A. Kabat. October 26. l95l.l Though Howe was a master, Rose was a whizz At constructing a merciless short-answer quizz Where the answer was plain as plain could be That only God could pass bacti. ln December we bid a fond adieu To Harry Rose. and passed into K The waiting arms of Doctor G. And his department of pharmacology. Gilman sitting cross-legged and generously Teaching us the physiology ' We hadn't been taught before. Like Abner Wolf, in Kolle we lound A second man who could out talk sound: Going like the proverbial bat out ol hell He lectured on drugs we couldn't spell fMuch the less rememberl. And Bartlestone. Doctor of Dentistry. Professing on anesthesiology And cleverly assuring the house would be packed By always having his wife in the back. And all too frequently we were blessed By a multiple choice. hour-long test: fWith two hours worth of questions.l But worse than the quizzes. we found ourselves vexed With Goodman and Gilman's medieval text. Although they promised that they would bring The new edition out that spring. flt's two springs later and we're still waiting.l So much for the second year's so-called big three: Pharm and path and. of course. bacti. But strike up a tune and lead a small cheer To the minor quartet which complete second year. Let's sing a song. with a cynical laugh To the nonlclinical course in clinical path: To the punctured fingers and futilities Of normal urines and CBC's: From Helen and Charlie and the rest of the bunch ' fWho left at l0:45 for their lunchl To the Dragon Lady and Iumping loe They can take their quizzes and quietly go Back to the salt mines. And another song in a minor key To dog days in second year surgery. To Lattes and Harvey and V. K. Frantz Who gave us the longfawaited chance To examine authentic flll surgical drains And use our hands instead of our brains Q By inflicting wounds and trying to sew And watching granulations grow ln patients of questionable pedigrees Who were literally nothing but SOB's. And particularly we liked the convenient way They died ot distemper on the first post-op day Thus saving us from the dubious sport Of having to write a progress report. fhs if anyone ever reads them anyway.l But we really can't gripe lor we wouldn't have missed Seeing Humphreys serving as a second assist. Another song we'd like to submit To Dr. Brown and parasit Rnd all ol the wild life that mn around loose fTo put it politelyl in human refuse: The worms that turn and squirm and roll on Down to their home in the distal colon Where they lay their eggs and perpetrate Eight kinds of hell in the seats ofthe great. And a linal song. or rather a cheer. To the spring-time part ol the second year When we assumed at last a clinical look With a stethoscope and a little black book: When we eagerly awaited the days we would go To Seegal's super-colossal side show. Or to Bellevue with two beds in one bed's space And RFB all over the place. With Kneeland's description we became entrar By the area of auscultatory romance: Although we found when we turned our ear There were many murmurs we couldn't hear, Or to put it vice-versa. there was always the blair Of a mitral stenosis which wasn't there. he vi Elvin t li 1 if'J I -v -4 Y. That big? VX. Harry M 'PS 1, 'Jw t Q, , tw hi. it f In P s ig.: ' t ' 56' X P Q ' Grrrrrrrrrr . . . ,F in au. ', . Consultation 1 L 7- 6' I 6. gl i ,s- .- -rr . if- IM f V . 't Hyman and friend 1 1 1' x . t 7 5 I ff ta Y f Frantz and Harvey ' Q lt wiggles iii?-iii i, That was second year but before we go There's a couple of laurels we'd like to throw: To Angell's demonstration. so lucid and clear, That anaphylaxis can happen here: To Millie for arranging her gestation To take advantage of spring vacation: To those in Bard with their paper bombs Which hastened the resignation of Toms: To the Epididymis Boys, all on the ball, At the show to end shows during the fall: To Kneeland for his many quotable quotes: To Gene and Paul for the bacti notes: And special praise was earned by those 1 . , X 1 -A ., 'A . 2 --1' r Who took Daddy Det's course in the eye. ear, and nose: To Conklin s Carol. the New Iersey lass, Who's at lectures more often than most of the class: To the few who would make weekend escapes: To Alice Knox and Daisv Mapes: To the many hepars which must have been scarred By that final party on the roof at Bard: And last but not least, a rousing cheer To those who must still face second year. fThey'll wish they had gone into banking. THIRD YEAR Urethra X L '-':.. I1 Y... -'Y' Safe on third, second year was through. In lune of nineteen fifty two. Clinicians all, with pockets distended. The woes of the sciences basic had ended. Armed with tables of values normal. Replete with theory fanatomic and hormonall. We descended upon the hapless clinics To spread our knowledge of medical gimmicks. Our frozen minds were becoming thawed. When out the blue-came the National Board. Three days of brow knitting. all were concemed. Realizing we'd forgotten more than we learned. But this too passed. despite many discussions. Perhaps it was all a plot of the Russians. Rnd so-all assembled. the sound of the gun- Cries of They're off, third year had begun. From service to service. in three month rotations fanticipating our fourth year vacationsb. Five weeks of thinking pediatrically. Oh! Those aftemoons in the OPD. At Miss Barry we hurled invectives, For all the normals and mental defectives. Her smiling face was a daily treat. As we signed our names on the attendance sheet. Then- No, mother, he's not ferocious. fust a bit sexually precocious. Or- As far as we can ascertain. Your little brat is perfectly sane. And- Don't change the name from Iohn to Alice. That's the length of a nonnal phallus. Examing each child with care and fuss. Leaming more from the moms than they from us! The newborn nursery drove us mad! What healthy streams those bastards had! Lusty cries and dirty diapers- Our glasses needed windshield wipers. We became familiar with kiddy disease, The meaning of swollen tummies and knees. Tb, celiac. and cystic fibrosis. And all the theories of lipoid nephrosis. Hattie. Rusty. Riley. and Day Each had quite a lot to say. But time was short, our stay was through- Surgery beckoned. Orthopedics. tool The former consisted of many trustrations. Watching the intem sew lacerations. - if ,, W i J- f segff aisy vw tl 2 N .A Preceptor meetings with surgeons great. ll! ' Day after day: I'll be late, please wait. We were there on the dot of nine. Hare was the doc who was ever on time. N With hemiorrhaphies the OR's were buzzin'- ' We saw ingrown toenails by the dozen. But we waited in vain for something trickier Than the diagnosis of a paronychia. To Orthopedics we then progressed And learned of things we'd never guessed. McLaughlin's bar, just to begin. ls not a place for drinking gin. Smith4Peterson. the sly old fox, Was one man. not a pair of docs. -n .fkl 'x . my Xxx :S .9 rl 4 , v 1 't I, l 'T 1 1 J l r 'Q X WI. i ' 4 n :ex tl.. t u i tn 'Qtr fp A. . ,ft 'rhsif 5? --4 1 ' o ' f W- 'l pi' . l i.. .1 is , The su-in exam???? g,2'1s r ' - 'F' . F .o . ee. - ., ab.. , Q f 4 4, - 'K' ea H 1 K , X ff' X' ,J fl, ,X U 'Q Oh. come now! Shifting Dullness , X . , 1 sf Q 1 xw-,1 - ' it A midnight f 'T v 1 I MEDICINE 'KD' A Iudet head. it now came clear. Cannot be found on a glass of beer. Periosteal elevators. to our amazement. Will never take you to Macy's basement. We watched the use of chisel and file. Of saw and hammer, but all the while. Trying to leam the laws of traction, With pulleys and sandbags. and forces of action Body in spica and arm in cast- If it doesn't come ofl. we'll have to blast! But iust as we were getting the knack Of diagnosing the low back. The gong sounded, we opened the doors. Here East was East and West was West. Those on Center thought theirs was best. Though some of us put up resistance. We all became intems' assistants. We quickly leamed the ward routine- Howto keep syringes clean! And how to keep distinctions clear. Which is she: Nurse? Aid? Volunteer? We learned what scut work could be like, At midnight bending o'er the mike. Bloods. urines. and all the rest- What became of the old sink test? Our noses upturned at our foul plight- Oh! Say can you smell by the dawn's early lig How often we thought. while steeped in stool. I should have gone to dental school! But we found the iob had its moments of glory As we listened to the patient's story. Call me doctor. became our motto. Questioning patients in voce sotto: Where were you bom? How much did you trave How long has it been since your urine had gravel? How did grandpaw lose his life? And-do you like your present wife? You probe each patient-body and soul- You've got to see him as a whole: His skin. his eyes. his thinning hair, His spleen. his heart. his derriere. His fingernails, his chest. his ears. His income, and his groundless fears. Each ailing soul you thus disturb. So you can cope with Dr. Loeb. The night before the fatal day You brief each patient not to say That you have erred in any part Of leaming his long tale by heart. You move the beds around the floor. To get the good ones near the door. First on the right. for a guy who's bold- Sameone who knows his patient cold. This done you hurry to the dorm To memorize the Atchley form. Pacing the floor. you stay awake Until the dawn begins to break. At nine o'clock the bugle sounds. The Silver Fox is starting rounds. The Professor nods. and smiles your way- Pale and breathless. you begin to say: This is the first PH admission Of this obese, iazz musician. Who finds that he's been out of tune Ever since the first of Iune. And on and on your voice relates Signs and symptoms. facts and dates. You stumble on. and near the end. The Professor smiles: he seems your friend. You think you're doing brilliantly. But does he think so? Fiddle-dee-dee : Strange to say. these three months flew. And we went on to something new, We could now afford to be selective, And each one chose his own elective. To Frisco. Chicago. Sir Guy's. and LA. On the Atcheson, Topeka, and the Santa Fe. Some studied hard. They had ambition. Others became expert at fist-iin'. But all retumed with that certain hunch. That his elective was the best of the bunch. t , ,A 6 MM l And marched from the fifth to the eighth and ninth floors On specialties, you were really a dunce, Ii you cou1dn't do fifteen things at once. We teamed the eye. in ten short days. By memorizing chalpters in Adler and May's Ophthalmoplegias and coloboma. The Middle East incidence of trachoma, Keratitis. scleritis. and synechiae, And what diabetes does to the eye. The many causes of choroiditis. Anomalies never ceased to delight us. From the A-R pupil and opacities. To the cherry red spot of Tay Sach's disease. The terms came so thick and fast- As a new one was learned, we forgot the last. During this time, we also did hear. Of ills of the nose. the throat. and the ear. Each P.M. we performed in clinic. Under the eye of Bilchik, the cynic. He raved and ranted. but promised great things To the clerk who could visualize five tracheal rings. We learned of otitis and colds in the snout, And reasons for taking tonsils out. To tell allergy from diseases of contagia, The etiology of headache and dysphagia. From the heademirror glare and the clinic din, We next came to diseases of the skin. We learned after looking at picture books- 1-: A disease is named for the way it looks. - The macule. the papule. and comedone. The vesicle, pustule, and hair ingrown. Lichen planus, and impetigo. Eczyma and vitiligo. The erythemas: multiform and nodosum, Also epidemiolysis bullosum. 1 Psoriasis occurs on the elbows and knees, A The calves of the legs lor Bazin's disease. ' The treatment of these is very simple, Whether you're peeling or have a pimple. It all comes in a little white jar- Containing Lotio Alba or just coal tar. x Thence to Neuro, with hammers and pins, To stick patients' feet and tap their shins. ' We leamed to make the diagnosis Of CVA and multiple sclerosis, Tabes dorsalis. and ALS. Astrocytoma? What's your guess? Syringomyelia or cercival rib. ln octogenarians and babes in a crib. Psychiatry taught us to know our lives. Reasons for beating our mothers and wives. How we act, what we say, Why some work and others play. Why some drink, and others fear spaces. And even why some like to bet on races. But Pollitin says: Have no fear. Even if swinging from a chandelier. Or other such places quite informal- If it P in V-brother, its normal! 7' Ya.. l , :ii - ' F f ii, Chow S its in QJ Mechanisms like symbolization, 'Q' Suppression, displacement. and sublimation. Reaction formation. and introiection- All exist for our own protection! , Our interactions with society Tend to create anxiety: And those of us who go overboard Wind up on the Psycho ward. And there to stay, for all to see- There. but for the grace of God, go wel And so-a wonderful year was through, tWe should mention Ob lectures, Public Health, tool. Now we'd nearly reached the height- X X 1,5 .,, -W A Z 1-as . J 5 l ig iii gf As our last-fourth-year rolled into sightl ' TT 1' .JQYCSGL FOURTH YEAR V h f Rus., . Came the fourth year our fate was fixed V 4 , When we were split into equal sixths, N I And days to weeks to months might pass , . -9 j' Without seeing anyone else in class. , Z-M I 5 For some were on Group. taking care ' T ' Of well-worn medical chinaware: - . - fArmed with a love of honest work I ' ' and the manual of Dr. Merckj The senile male with SOB. BPH. and PND: The flashing lady of forty-eight Who's constipated and overweight. Who burps and tingles. and occasionally faints. And has a written list of chief complaints: 'x Who's the student . . . ? s '- . - q Gracious Living and fne I I -..aw I 1 'S x The Puerto Rican with mucho dolor. With incomprehensible troubles galore- And an interpreter who speaks no English. tAll the above. by the way. Usually come labelled Interest B, And mention should be made ol the Interest C's With periarteritis and Whipple's disease.l Others were spending their two months down At St. Luke's. Roosevelt. Cooperstown Or at Goldwater getting the initial thrills Oi playing doctor and pushing pills. And learning the panacean way Oi TLC and ASA. Some were on specialties, that jubilee. Where you go to class lrom ten to three With two hours oli for lunch. Where the mornings are spent on an X-Ray rack. And the aftemcons with the GU tract: Where we lerried to Staten Island to see The dire results ol P. in V. But specialties' major justification Was: it preceded-or followed-our month's vacation. Those down at Bellevue joined the race To lind an empty parking space, j Then headed lor wards so closely knit fs . The patients have no place to sit- tFooled youll Where one can scan the EKG Oi boozers from the Bowery. And every patient aims to please By having more than one disease. R month where everything you ask ls filtered through a paper mask. Where every breath of air you take May make your apices opaque. tMan, we're real Ghon.l Some were on surgery. slicing disease, I' Becoming clinical orderlies - By drawing the bloods and other chores Like starting infusions and scrubbing lloors: Standing lor hours without lood or rest While they shunted their shunts and removed their breasts. And ii you were lucky. once in a while. Tying a knot on some stray pile. ' Others at Babies. with infinite pains. are Iamming man-sized needles into child-sized veins: K i? Examining the monsters. learning to shun The endless screams. being P-P'd upon. Q And acting as a neurotic mother's guide As we contemplated infanticide. While some in pajamas would sweat and strain Where liie's just one big labor pain. ' With sleepless nights and restless days. With LOT's and DOI-i's: The residents roaring in constant alarm. X The double-decked dorm with its neighboring farm. N The calm multip. who just lor fun , . t Delivers baby on the run. J 1 Come lune with the oath ot Hippocrates. We'll emerge at last mature M.D.'s. Out on our own to cure disease. To heal the sick. and split the lees: With a wonder drug for each low back, Suave with the hypochondriac. A confident linger in the cul de sac. We'll drive around in our Cadillac tOn high test gasolinel. For lour long years we've struggled hard. Q ' Our backs are bent. our brains are scarred. The passing parade we can't retard. So we bid larewell to lile at Bard: Our high estate we abdicate And one last pearl we dedicate To those who would us emulate: tPardon us while we lacrimatel. NE ILLEGITIMI CARBORUNDUM. 1 '59 1 X x 4 . I 1 All ol this . . . was writ by me. Gene. and Foster. and Marv l. C. el 5 -. F., 1. SY x, fer Aj l- :Q AQ T -, A Z 'Y E iv' , Xe. 7 1 5 .,,f ! I-.liste ...Q Ji-'di ., 3,5 'rf V. + Bottoms up ,cf 'K I X uv' t. I . 7 f' n 'N Surpriseisurprisel W. Q e Labor room: 8-4 Public Health? 52531 Vx' Q . . L via i 5.1: M1944 1 -1 5 -, X 1 1 vim P g .- ai, ,, '22 Q 1 15 5 . F ' 1 '44, du f gqqxavs Q 5'3 ' 7104? 7 3 5 3 K I I A 1 , N ' --' . . , v , J H. 1,3 59 ,W f Q .Zlfiiii Tyan, 'V -- ,4,6'uJ-4 I 'fi r 1 3 -,- ' A' pglik' 11 Llgahri-, ,H ,, A .415 -X ' - , ,11 I ',,... a ' ,,, - . . k x Lf. r,,N- JA , 9 .fl 12 .:'?,:, H ' 4- s V A ..L... I A V QL Y h ', , . . I 'S 'Z' ' ' 9 KV . 1 A' ' ' -- E4 .3 ,6 'E --' ' . . , . I ' - F 12:1 I .1 - P .u.. -119' , : AA' '1 .. rift W: it -- , M. if f'wiff:.:,TI1 if mv::h:lA'1i.gffJ 4- A ..,,.,3 ' x A w I , 1.2 J. . 4 3 .,, ,-Q V n ' 4 1 if .x i 'Ir , I ' ' F41 pw Ny 5 AL 3 1 -fy + ' E55 A wr ' ag 7- 1 1 ,.,. , , , ITS fl, 'I 1:9 55 5 asf? 'i Q4 I .A x nr -' 'WN fx YT: N K' 1 , h-ff A -vw X N Vx xji: K. 11, .4 A 1, UA Zig '-,Q 5, I I X- - 1 . N rx '9 'fx ,M 'JW U1 N 7: ,ag 'L J' W - ' 11 ' ' 1 ff A 41, Q, vi 1 ri -.f 1 2 Q X 'K ' ' M. f ' ' n . 'fl 1 1 QW Jan' X My in-ad - it X 1 A K Y sl-+ in In 5 le 5: . :I 'f' ' '- z'.'-' 1-f: .+ '2. 2 E 29- T5 'Q Q 333--l..-1+ ': 1 ' ' a 'J iX5:2gf,g.f'f'Z51: E' E :A . f Q as 'Q ab 5 W - F 6. V 2 T B e xx ' .95 Vi ii 2 v , ' 'Zia E 3 452 51 5 1 .'.- 'W' - nw- . , ,F 3 -my---3-4 E .fr vga Bw! .-,,,.....-- 67 TW 1 ol JJMN . ig A' 1' .-7'g . ftf! X. f iq- if 1 9 Q 1 gif, L LX f NM., x ,Q T TX l 1 --T S T - ' - . in V g A 1. f. '7 , .F nf' ' A' ,fx -1 'X ' T' - 9 ' ' ff , 4 '-A L , .. The dining room where we eat, the lounge where we lounge, and the roof where we sun. The swimming pool where we swim, the card room where we bid, and the squash Courts where we play. Freddie at the front desk, Stella in the grill, Mary watching our rooms, and three different managers during the past four years. Parties in the grill, parties in the lounge and parties in the PGS club room. Paper bombs pouring from the windows, beer bottles raining from the roof, and explosions echoing in the halls. Radiators that wont heat, elevators that Won't come, T, V. sets that Won't televise, and forbidden second and third floors. Finally the rooms where we often partied, occasionally studied, and seldom slept. This is Bard I-lalll .H I --i e CMJ ,N A qi, , .-,J I f H, X I H . . xxx- ' 1 H v fl X'+1.,T V If , 7 Qu -+21-'?i1's jg 'V ' 'MW' iv ll 3 -, ' , -sw' , Y nv' Am ' '15 --gpg epefkhh -par 45 . .st O M .LS d 3H N3 14, 'Y .1 OFFICERS Prssldemi Kevin Hill Vice-President Anneliese Secretory' Ralph Richter Sitcxrz x In Q5 f-Ike VV '1cD uf ,,-.. U, A 5 v 1 Qs , I 1 et. W! ,, v g.x Since 1928 when it was founded as an associate of the Intercollegiate YMCA, the PGS Club has played a leading part in planning and carrying out many of the extra-curricular activities of its members-all the students at PGS. Expert guidance is given the Club by a director salaried by the YMCA and by the members of the faculty advisory board, all of whom are board members by virtue of their interest in the students. Under the leadership of a president, vice-president, and secretary, all elected yearly from the student body, the Club runs a program ranging from bi-weekly feature films to speakers on non-medical subjects, from bas- ketball and squash tournaments to weekly vesper services in the Harkness Memorial Chapel ln fact, it is one of the primary aims of the PGS Club to be as flexible and responsive to student needs as possible. Last year, to assure continuity of the PGS Yearbook, the Club assumed responsibility for its annual publication by making the yearbok staff a per- manent club committee, ln September a special program of welcome for the entering class pro- vided, by means of talks, tours of the Medical Center, and informal socializing, a pleasant introduction to a memorable four years. This was such a success that it is intended as a permanent part of the club activities. Another valuable part of the program is the work of the Benefits Committee, which collects used textbooks, clothing, and lab equipment to aid the Salonika Medical School in Thesalonika, Greece ln these activities, as in the planning and implementation of theater parties. square dances, ping-pong tournamentsfnot to mention the two biggest social events of the school year, the Christmas Party and the Spring Festival- the enthusiasm and ideas of the students participating is the reason for their great success, are mafroor ,sw Co-editors Bob Engler Anneliese Sitarz Business Managers Gene Goldberg lim Hastings Photographers Pearce Browning Gene Gottfried Hal Hoops George Hogle Publicity Kevin Hill Doug and Doris Pennoyer Roy Vagelos Literary Statf Foster Conklin Gene Goldberg Roger Ielliffe Marve Lipman Dave Palmer I. C. Taylor Ioan Weiss Art Dick Hays First Year Staff Gordon Brown. Editor Don Armstrong Dan Kimberg, Photographer Denny Lafer, Photographer Second Year Staff Barbara Williams, Editor Dick Kaufman. Photographer Nat Taylor, Photographer Al Burland. Art Sue Carver, Sales Third Year Staff Dick Elias, Editor Dick Pierson Fusl Row Gordon Brown. lim Hastings. Bob Goodale. I lc D ' . S cl R - Al Dm' Pause fC0l'f93P0Ud9U'l' Mike H0955 lDiractorl. Lggnie lmcDoT:.2?1, Ts: Moore Iolan Durf . Ab I: B b S ' if 51 it ey sen o alerno. Dave Bamhousa, Rod Carter. and Bill Hhangos. The Bards' reputation as one of the finest non-professional singing groups of its kind has become well established, lt no longer seems necessary to retrace its history or recreate its origins on these pages, for the group has achieved in the short space of eight years a verierableness and respect usually reserved for clubs with only the most ancient and dusty of traditions. The Bards also have their traditions, some of which are uncommonly moist as traditions go, but very traditional as close harmony groups go, and other traditions which mutely evidence those spirits of fellowship and Congeniality which have always characterized the successful blending of good voices and personable young men. Singing at many of the more interesting girls' col- leges and at certain parties and dances associated with the Medical Center has provided relief from and contrast with their normal medical school routine, Be-longing to the Bards has always been a privilege and an enjoyment to its members, These sentiments are constantly reaffirmed as old graduate members nostalgically return to the informal rehearsals at Bard Hall and join in once more-very spiritually if not accurately-with the current generation, forming a constantly swelling throng whose voices mount like the whirling wind -our Bards. fled? it rv i rv ol Seated: Iaae Heitmann. Marianna Beatrice. Glenn Langer. Tenki Tendul-La. Standing: Ted Robinson, Dick Elias. Mayo Iohnson. Bob Hollister, Bill Healey. Dan Pette. Not present: Gordon Brown, Martha Adams. we .gluclenf Counci The Council is composed ot the class officers of the four classes at PGS. lt concerns itself with problems in the student sphere and in matters of student- faculty relations, and is the overall representative organization tor the entire student body. we mziiclenfit ommiffee Functioning as the student governing body of Bard Hall, The Residents Council is corri- posed ot elected representa- tives frorn each tloor as Well as tour members-at-large. Seated: Sue Carver. Al Feld. Ianet Kushner. Standing: Fred Lagomarsina, Bill Dodd. Martha Adams. Pete Westerhotl. Charles Buckuam. Not Present: Margaret Heckman. Harvey Resnik. Carl Meier. Arthur Green. Bob Eng!er. Bob Walzer, Nev Grant. SAB .gllllellf jacuhg .S70CiCl,! Cfblfllfliftee The Student-Faculty S:c1f1l Commtttee ns CI selt-perpetucxtmg group at stu- dents '.-.those purpose ts te provtde cm occasion where students and faculty can rzzeet trt Q strtctly men-crccxdezutc atmosphere Thzs rs done by means of monthly cccl-:tml parties which are attractrrtfg ever mcreasmg numbers C socially mcltrted mdivzducls ,Q 33 Seated. Icxnei Kuehner. Dxck and Sylvia Cruess. Iohn Rumsdell. Stundmq: Carl Lyle. Bill Wen. B b angler. Pul Brodsky. QSM, QQQXCXCNS 0,513ULdjiDfii4d0?y 5:45 l M9 Uxrtttlv . NNQA. 509' NWWOJ QQQQONMXOQ ru eww !.4 First How: Dick Elias. Don Brown. Bill Ciarcxvino, Felix Battat. Si Chunessian. Hal Hoops. Second How: Clyde Wu. Ray Wunderlich. Ed Rudinger. Dave Sampson. Bob Engler. Dr. Huw Smith. Dr. Iames Mathers. Dr. Iosepb Flynn. Third Row: Dan Pettee. Vince Bono. Ev Roberts. Don att, lim McCartney, Bob Sheridan, Dave Mnssie. Bob Pottenger, Dick Milward. Doug Pennoyer. Dick Kaaxman. Fourth Flow: Max Lai. George Drake. Lee Clark. Al Vnndersluis. Bob Montroy. Hugo Denton. Ice Stocks. Norm Cobert. Vern Wendt. Absent: Walter Bonney, Vince Butler. Al Cannon. lim Feeley. Paul Gulyassy. Hue King. Bill Muir. Sam Silipo. Iohn Vecchiolla. Bob Bishop. Skip Del-loan, Art Gordon. Al Kaplan, Dan Leary, Rl Masi. Bob Rawclitle, Harv Resuik, Dick Rilkind. Tracy Scudder. Mark Winiield. Pete Barry. Roy Bartlett. Iim Casey. Dick Copenhaver. Frank Council. Ron Feldman. Bob Gilbert. Ierry Iacobs. Don Kadernbek. Fred Lagomarsino. Iohn Leddy. Gerry Litzky. Bob Maslanskwg Pat McLoughlin. Ierry Montana. Ralph Richter. Charlie Sickles, Wendell Hatfield. Bill Winner. Gordon rown. Iohn Bonome. Bob Raven. PM Clif With unusual devotion to the finer things ol lite, Upsilon Sigma ot Phi Chi this year has continued the tradition of playing a role in both the social and intellectual milieux, Phi Chi's two-fold answer to Pearl Mesta, Charlie Sickles and Bill Ciaravino, with many assists, have enveloped the Chapter in numerous dance-parties, all ot which were delightful lpleasing, eriioyable, attractive, that ist The interstitial spaces were filled with a number of stag beer parties lreserved gatherings, brawls, songfestsl with the almost inevitable result ot having the 'combined chorus raise its voice to horrendous heights in accompaniment to Don Watts guitar, Then, ot course, there was the annual New Yorl: Phi Chi lnterchapter Dance at Bard Hall in niid-Winter And thus it went! Serving as a neat transition between the purely social and the purely intel- lectual were the ireauent dinner meetings with guest speakers, topped, per- haps, by the Fall lnitiation Banquet, when we were fortunate enough to have as our guest Dr, Louis Bauer, Secretary-General of the World Medical Asso- ciation. Then, too, we managed a lew beery bull-sessions with some ot our numerous faculty alumni-topics ranged considerably. At the strictly intellectual end ol the spectrum of activities, we were blessed by the lecture series initiated by Hay Wunderlich. Subiects ranged from the sublime- Cor Triloculare Biatriatumw presented by Dan Pettee-to the psychopathic--'Childhood Schizophrenia presented by Dick Rilkind. As is inevitable, it was a good yearl 4 ll 15' X , A M . I ' ' ti nf y A 1 OFFICERS Pre-fzzdlng Serum:-r Robert S. Engler Premdrna lumcr David M. Sampson S?'C'6lCIl'Y William I. Ciaravino Treasurer Daniel S. Peiiee Iudac Advocate Iames R. McCartney Srnfmel Vemon E. Wendt Mi .ibedla gilariign 45 .- C '. N .K ox 1. 1 ,- .., -x x I Q h r i. , .NQVTFF 1 1 ,.,- -1- Mh Year: Eugene Goldberg. Enoch Gordis. Sherwin Kevy. Arthur Like. Marvin Lipman. 3rd Year: Bard Cosn-ran. Gurstin Goldin. Richard Herrmann. Norton Kolomeyer. Nathan Kosovsky. Barnett Mille-r. Henry Rosen. Robert Silberzweig. Harold Spalter. 2nd Year: Hans Baruch. Peter Gan-nella. Marvin Iassie. Fred Katz. Robert Osnos. Theodore Robinson. ls! Year: Ronald Allman. Norman Erlnl. Sl-anley Finke. Donald Gerber. Arthur Glaubach. Robert Grossman, Earle Han-Amer, Daniel Kimberg. Ronald Linslcy. I r 1 l o OFFICERS Consul: Harold Spcxlter Vice Consul: Henry Rosett Scribe: Robert Osnos Treasurer. Fred Katz Historian: Theodore Robinson Senators. Sherwin Kevy Marvin Lipman The Gamma chapter of Phi Delta Epsilon is in the process of enjoying one of its most successful years in recent history, and this year also had the benefit of a large pledge group, The activities of the fraternity began immediately alter the start of the school year. In October a dance was held at Bard Hall, and as a part of the chapters policy of activities with other metropolitan chapters, the Flower Fifth Ave, chapter was invited, The fraternity continued with its series of chapter dinners, and at the initiaf tion dinner Dr, Emmanuel Papper, Professor of Anaesthesiology at PSS, dis- cussed some of the non-technical aspects of his field This year the chapters rushing program included an innovation, namely, inviting several alumni in Phi Delta Epsilon to one of the rushing parties and giving them the opportunity to discuss post-graduate aspects of fraternity membership, lt is hoped to continue this policy in the future Returning to the social field, the fraternity had another dance on lonuary' Qth with Phi Delta Epsilon men from Cornell, Bellevue, and New Yorl-: State Medical School in Brooklyn ln the spring the chapter held its annual lnter- chapter dance, also at Bard Hall First How: Danielski. Bertsch. Leach, Westover, l. Ruthe, Haynes. Richardson, Mcxhoi. Second Row: Frantz. Rowley, Pierson, Westerhoti, Burka. Pasterncrck, Dawson. Third Row: Worcester, Donaldson, Lcrngmann, Bergen. Eherly, Mutter, Skilbred. Kelly, Hatha. E. Brown. Muncusi-Ungcrro. Kennedy, Her- mann. Fourth Row: Burland, Griege. Wilcox. De Vault, Dodds, Meier, Ambrose. Black. Wu .Sigma u lt was just seventy-two years ago that tive second year students at the University of Michigan Medical School gathered in a small room on Ann Street in Ann Arbor to found Nu Sigma Nu. Of these five lwho all graduated the following year, since medical school then was never longer than three yearsl, the name William I. Mayo stands out most prominently, since he went on to found another great institution-the Mayo Clinic. Nu Sigma Nu may have changed a great deal since those early days . . . its current membership reaches astronomical figures, in widespread local chapters . . . but the caliber of its men clearly has not changed one iota. At a dinner in the early part of the year, Dr. Edmund P. Fowler, chairman of the Department of Otolaryngology, asked for time to make a special presentation. He had been given a rather well-constructed anatomical model to be awarded to a capable and deserving student at PGS, His choice-our president, Pete Westerhoff. Indeed, Osler, Welch, Cushing, Zinsser, Blalock, and all the other famous old members may yet be relegated to places of obscurity by the 'tyoung blood of Nu Sigl i l VVhen the fraternity 'srxslies to confer an honor urian a truly outstanding member, it may name nina Honorary Aesculapius at ine cz its his-nn.al Cign- ventions l'lowever, during our welcoming dinner lor the new members the usual process '.-was reversed, and Aesculapius this time receffed the licrizr His award was a grand tour of Presbyterian Hospital with Dr Calvin ll. Plimpton, to the great delight at all listeners 'Dr Plzmpton may :ina Ihrrisell dubbed Honorary Aesculapius lor that effort alone-l The hilarity that has become traditicnal '.-:ith lata chapter '.-:as as much in evidence as ever Meetings were well supplied with beer, dances boasted a well-stocked bar and lively music Cruel inflation did rear its ugly head ierietly, leavina us with somewhat higher dues and more ez-:pensive drinlzs, but the uridaunted spirit of Nu Sigma Nu leads bravely on and the steadily grew.-f,na membership must follow. OFFICERS President Peter Westerhoff Vice-President Richard Pierson Secretary, Edward Burka Treasurer' Peter Rowley Historian' Charles Donaldson Keeper of the Keg, Fred Pastemack Rushing Chairman Roy Brown S First Row: Strauss, Tignor, Laler, Sciarra. Wilson. Fields, Young, Second Row: Lewis, Smith, Bradley Hezsheld, Unger. Third How: Roberts, Wallace, Bucknam. Hogan, Chastain, Bettigole Stites, Kwit Stocker. Fourth How: Hyde, I. C. Taylor. Healey. Iellille, Bernart. Freeman. Palmer. ABSENT--Fourth Year: Angell, Azzoni. Bradley, Bugbee, Caldwell. Conklin, Davidson, Garvey, Grant Hanway, Hastings. Haynes. Holland. Hollister, Iackson. Keating. Klipstein, McDaniel, O'Neil, Prickett Hamsdell. Salerno. Swartz. Third Year: Anderson. Baumgartner. Bilbao. Cruess. Everett. Fields, Griswold Halstead. Hegqia, Krotzer. Nesbitt. Hanck. Renthal. Robinson. Rochester. Rogers. Selly, H. Taylor Wheelock. Second Year: Andrews, Brodsky, R. Brown, Clements, Cobb. Curtis. I. Davidson. Federowitz Gleason, Goodale, Hirsch. Hodgman. Hulka, Lee. Moore, Nay. Putnam. Radwin, Scion. Silverman Triedman, Tulevech. Tyson, Wosnitzer. First Yewg Chandler. Lyle. Mooney, Osborne. Hhangos. Weiner ee er. t f f l 1 I Front Row: Mehran Gouliun. G. Richard O'Connor. Icxmes Rathe. Donald Reisfield. Back How: Thomas Y' Bradley. Ir.. Charles Schocket. E, James Feeley. George Hogle. Glenn Langer. William Bernart. Earl rt Wheaton, Ir., ldmes C. Taylor, Roger Des lfrez. No! Present: Eugene Gottfried. Paul Gulyassy. Marvin ,' Lipman. loan Weiss. Herbert Wahl. Hoy Vagelos. r I t Alpha Omega Alpha is a national medical honor society which has been represented at PGS since 1907. The initials AOA. are derived from the first letters of three Greek words meaning: To be worthy to serve the suffering With this motto, the society aims at fostering both the scientific and philo- sophical aspects of medicine, lt encourages research and attempts to recog- nize those who have attained distinction or made some particular contribution to medicine and its allied fields. t Twice a year candidates from the student body are elected to membership on the basis of scholarship alone The functions of the group are social and 1 , . , . . . X intellectual banquets and social gatherings are combined with seminars, l colloquia, or lectures on various topics I ws, L 4 cf I-.1 First How: R, Speir. A. Frantz. S. Ionas. N. Xosovsky. Second Row: W. Ciaravino, R. Lcrniirnann. R. Pierson. I. Worcester. B. Miller. Third How: H. Hollister. P. Brodsky. D. Andrews. M. Lai. . Taylor. R. Brown, H. Pritchard. A. Harland. A. Kaplan. M, Hogan. Fourth Row: P. Westerhofl, H. Eberly. H. Nay. W, Bernart. L. Bugbee. I. Garvey. R. Engler. Not Present: A. Cannon. I. Foster, P. Keating. R. Milward. I. Phillips. I. Hamsdell. E. Wheaton. I. C. Taylor. K. Young. H. Rogers, P. Hawley. B. Lee. Ill. H1290 The Omega Club is a society composed of forty-live undergraduate members from the second, third and fourth year classes, faculty members and about six hundred graduate physicians practicing throughout the country. lt was founded in l892, its activities have alternated between academic and social functions During the past few years they have been chiefly sc- cial and have consisted of several cocktail parties each jrear and an annual banquet, 1' uilrmfolcti RECORDS Q 25134 .fdnnivmarg Zi 'I 2 HL' urriiuonmi.-i1fDItAiCEN'fER M of Me fl 4 SERVING AHUNIIS 1-lil FUNCTIONS TEACNANG SIXIM , oiosv III! E tic: f f I l-:J U t,tr::1 U AS OF TODAV s ..WttrnsrrtttVt'i ' MUNILM ION DISUKUUQ WH 'WMUUI COM zs mins or PROGRESS 2 F W I t . 'mfg Ml ' , ' ' lm 11 W 'Mifgfi-ZW iff 'tx t tmm gf 9 K. ' 1' 1 1 ,A l IWI 1.20-VA ALP? MU ,k. ,vp U, ,, Cogcmgia-predggferiafz mica! Cenfer On October 12, l953 the Columbia-Presby terian Medical Center celebrated its twenty' fifth anniversary with an outstanding series o seminars and exhibits. No Yearbook would bel complete without some recognition of this: event. We feel, as Dean Rappleye did in his American Iournal ot Medicine Editoriali that there is no more appropriate way of doing this than by quoting the Words of President Nicholas Murray Butler at the ground-breaking ceremonies in l928-for we have seen the full fillment of his far-reaching predictions. W The first turning of the soil on this spot i: the . . . beginning of the accomplishment of c dream that has been in the minds of many o' us for a generation past. lt signifies that at last the two aspects of medicine-the scientific ann' the philanthropic-are to be united . , , as par of a new and vital union of organization, ct purpose, and of public service. lt means that ct fully equipped university shall hereafter havft at the service of its teachers in medicine at ample and thoroughly modern series of laboral tories and clinics. lt means that a noble hos. pital . , , commands the very best that science academic experience and personal devotion can give to ground the service of the hospita on the unshakeable foundation of moderr, science in all of its many sided phases. 1 Here on this site , , we propose to build c monument more lasting than bronze whicl shall testify alike to the growing power o human knowledge to minister to the physica' and mental ills of man and to the zeal of civil ized rnan to help and to cure his less fortunate fellows. 1 l t 'American lournol ol Medicine XV 750, l953 ,145 ., .P--it 'N' ' '-' . f, ' 'if' --1 .', TJ-v.4i. ' .1 ' ilk' V ' Qlstfo -E N. ff i 5' -A 'il - T...,.Q':mnaiii2 It pCl.fl 0l'l:f of the 1954 PGS Yearbook Elmore L. Andrews Shaker Heights, Ohio Marvin I. Bauman Flushing, New York Mr. and Mrs. Putnam Brodsky New York, N. Y. C. E. Brown Grand Rapids, Mich. H. E. Bryson Tenatly, N. I. Bev. Edwin B. Carter Cromwell, Conn. George H. Drake Maplewood, N. I. Eugene I. lfeeley, Sr. Harrison, N. Y. I. M. Garvey Cincinnati, Ohio H. M. Harter, MD. Kew Gardens, N. Y. Alan W. Hastings Upper Montclair, N. I. Mrs. Wm. Eorby Haynes Orange, N. I. Dr. H. B. Hermann Brooklyn, N. Y. R. Wohl Bronx, N. Y. August Klipstein Greenwich, Conn. Louis B. Lipman Brooklyn, N. Y. Iames L. Marcus New York, N. Y. Mrs. George I. Mead West Hartford, Conn. S. Mittleman New York, N. Y. Herbert I. Osborne Summit, N. I. H. W. Bathe, MD. Waverly, lowa Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Biech Pittsburgh, Pa. Ioseph M. Shields Silver Springs, Md. Edward A. Theurkauf Holmdel, N. I. Samuel H. Traeger Brooklyn, N. Y. Iess Vanderslius Cleveland, Ohio Charles E. Visokay, Sr. Bridgeport, Conn, 'T xl Adams, Martha R. Altman, Kenneth A. Angell, Edward D. Azzoni, Alfred A. Barnhouse, David H. Bass, Berl G. Bernart, William F., Jr. Bonney, Walter A., Jr. Bradley, Thomas B., Jr. Brickner, Philip W. Browning, S. Pearce, Ill Bugbee, Lawrence Butler, Vincent P., Jr. Caldwell, William T., lll Cannon, J. Alfred Carter, Rodman D. Chidsey, Charles A., lll Cohen, Burton D. Coles, Marlin R. Conklin, E. Foster Craig, Hope Cucchiarella, Armando Dallas, Donald P. Davidson, Paul L. Des Prez, Patience D. Des Prez, Roger M. Durfey, John Q. Ellison, John B. Engler, Robert S. Faris, David G. Feeley, E. James Foster, James H. Garvey, James M., Jr. Gates, Marguerite J. Glover, Ronald W. Goldberg, Eugene L. Gordis, Enoch Gottfried, Eugene L. Gould, Herbert L. Goulian, Mehran Grant, Neville Gulyassy, Paul F. Hanway, James W. Hastings, James B. Haynes, William F., Jr. Hays, Richard M. Healey, Louis A., Jr. Hermann, Ronee l. Hill, Kevin Hobart, John H. Hogle, George H. Holland, Thomas R. Holle, Henry B. Hollister, Robert M. Hoops, Harold J., Jr. Jackson, John L. Jellitte, Roger W. H. Montefiore Hospital, New York City Lenox Hill Hospital, New York City 94 Grace-New Haven Hospital, New Haven Bellevue Hospital, New York City Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester Bellevue Hospital, New York City Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston University Hosps. of Cleveland, Cleveland Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Bellevue Hospital, New York City Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami Los Angeles County Hospital, Los Angeles Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown Bellevue Hospital, New York City Bellevue Hospital, New York City Univ. ot Chicago Clinics, Chicago Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati St. Vincent's Hospital, New York City St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Boston City Hospital, Boston White Plains Hospital, White Plains New York Hospital, New York City Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Bellevue Hospital, New York City Lenox Hill Hospital, New York City U. ot Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia Barnes Hospital, St. Louis Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati RR No. l, Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati San Diego Naval Hospital, San Diego Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York City Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York City l53 Beach l33rd St., Belle Harbor, L. l., N. Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Bellevue Hospital, New York City Barnes Hospital, St. Louis Barnes Hospital, St. Louis U, of-California, San Francisco St, Luke's Hospital, New York City Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Beth Israel Hospital, Boston King County Hospital, Seattle Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York City Massachusetts Memorial Hospital, Boston Univ. of Chicago Clinics, Chicago Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Albany Hospital, Albany Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester St. Albans Naval Hospital, Queens Barnes Hospital, St. Louis Univ. Hosps. of Cleveland, Cleveland Calvert Pl., Jamestown, R. l. O Grand Concourse, New York 56, N .Y. lOO Haven Ave., New York 32, N. Y. 3l62 Decatur Ave., New York 67, N. Y. Doylestown, Pa. l95 N. 7th St., Newark, N. J. 56 Ponus St., New Caanan, Conn. Enterprise, Miss. l2 lrving Pl., Utica 3, N. Y. 504 W. llOth St., New York 25, N. Y. Rosebrook Rd., New Caanan, Conn. 2 Forest Drive, Short Hills, N. J. 33 Bentley Ave., Jersey City 4, N. J. l22 Colonial Ridge, Moorestown, N. J. 526 Cross St., Westbury, N. Y. 367 Main St., Cromwell, Conn. 50 Haven Ave., New York 32, N. Y. 526 Hudson St., New York l4, N. Y. l58 Ballou Ave., Boston 24, Mass. 336 Prospect Ave., Hackensack, N. J. 450 E. 63rd St., New York 2l, N. Y. 624 Morris Ave., Bronx 5l, N. Y. 209 Bennett Ave., New York 33, N. Y. 3071 Edwin Ave., Fort Lee, N. J. 85l W. l77th St., New York 33, N. Y. 851 W. l77th St., New York 33, l622 Woodrow Dr., Springfield, Ohio N. Y. l65 Sherman Ave., New York 34, N. Y. ll8 Evandale Rd., Scarsdale, 6449 Peach Ave., Van Nuys, Calif. 59 Donner Ave., Harrison, N. Y. 88 Blake Rd., Hamden l4, Conn. Ohio N. Shawnee Run Rd., Cincinnati, 25 E. 86th St., New York 28, Y. 360 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn 5, N. Y. ll55 Walton Ave., New York 52, N. Y. Y. 74 S. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. l6 Eaton St., Boston l4, Mass. 56 Argyle Ave., West Hartford, Conn. 96 Aberdeen Pl., St. Louis 5, Mo. 558 Bostwick Ave., Bridgeport 5, Conn. l4 Oak Lane, Pelham 65, N. Y. 30 Elston Rd., Upper Montclair, N. J. 449 Main St., Orange, N. J. James St., Norwalk, Conn. 43 Clifford Ave., Pelham, N. Y. ll85 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 50 Burleigh, Waterville, Maine Pendle Hill, Wallingford, Pa. l32 Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah Normandy Pkwy., Morristown, N. J. 2 Peter Cooper Rd., New York lO, N. Y. 1604 Rhem Ave., New Bern, N. C. N. J. Ala. l2427 Fairhill Rd., Cleveland, Ohio 25 Woodland Park Dr., Tenafly, i820 Welington Rd., Birmingham, N. Y. l Keating, Paul Kevy, Sherwin V. King, Hueston C. Kleinfeld, George Klipstein, Frederick A. Korman, Samuel Langer, Glenn A. Lewis, Milena L. Like, Arthur A. Lindsay, Elmer R. Lipman, Marvin M. Loughridge, Chalmers Lunt, John McDaniel, Joseph L. MacDonald, Lonnie Mackie, Joseph E. Malcolm, Daniel Mayer, Paul W. Mead, Peyton H. Milward, Richard L. Mittleman, Arnold Muir, William R. Munsick, Robert A. O'Connor, George R. Oken, Donald E. O'Neill, Edgar B. Palmer, David B. A. Pennoyer, Doris Stewart Pennoyer, Douglass C. Peterson, Bonita J. Phillips, John H. Pottenger, Robert T. Prickett lBriggsl, Richard M. Ramsdell, John A. Rathe, James W. Read, David T. Reislield, Donald R. Salerno, Robert A. Schmitt, Daniel Schocket, Charles L. Schoenberg, Bernard Silipo, Samuel C. Sitarz, Anneliese L. Stocker, Harold H. Swartz, Herbert M. Taylor, James C. Theurkauf, Edward A. Tuchman, Walter Vagelos, P. Roy Vecchiollo, John A. Vessie, William A. Weiss, Joan M. Wheaton, Earl A., Jr. Wohl, Herbert Wood, Kathleen St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Childrens Hospital, Boston Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Beth lsrael Hospital, New York City Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston Bellevue Hospital, New York City Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester University Hospitals, Madison Presbyterian Hospital, New York City 221 1B Center Ave., Fort Lee, N. J. 1419 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, 2337 Hudson Ter., Coytesville, 9616 Ave. M, Brooklyn 36, Round Hill Rd., Greenwich, N. Y. N. J. N. Y. Conn. 29 Ave. D., New York 9, N. Y. 195 W. Central Ave., Pearl River, N. Y. 195 N. 7th St., Newark, N. J. 258 Winthrop Rd., W. Englewood, N. J. 1 W. High St., Carlisle, Po. 616 W. 165th St., New York 32, N. Y. Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia 511 E. Green, Gallup, N. M. Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Wheatland, Wyoming Univ. Hosps. of Cleveland, Cleveland 609 W. Mulberry St., Kokomo, Ind. Bellevue Hospital, New York City 32 Tilghman St., Chester, Pa. Bellevue Hosiptol, New York City 26 Rutland St., Brockton, Mass. Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn 225 W. 86th St., New York, N. Y. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown 372 Fairgreen Ave., Youngstown, O. Hartford Hospital, Hartford 941 Mountain Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn 114 W. Madison Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore U. of Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston Edward J. Meyer Hospital, Buffalo Albany Hospital, Albany St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Roosevelt Hospital, New York City U. of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City King County Hospital, Seattle Son Francisco Hospital, San Francisco St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Bellevue Hospital, New York City Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami Grace-New Haven Hospital, New Haven Presbyterian Hospital, New York City St. Luke's Hospital, New York City Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York City Boston City Hospital, Boston Hartford Hospital, Hartford Childrens Hospital, Boston Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati Brooklyn Hospital, Brooklyn Bellevue Hospital, New York City Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia Bellevue Hospital, New York City Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston Boston City Hospital, Boston Roosevelt Hospital, New York City Presbyterian Hospital, New York City Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester 89 Thayer St., New York 34, 2725 Sedgwick Ave., New York, Beechwood Dr., Morristown, N. Y. N. Y. N. J. 3396 Bishop St., Cincinnati, Ohio 1228 Edwards Ave., Orlando, Fla. 1801 Loring Pl., New York 53, N. Y. 293 Bridge St., Stamford, Conn. West Boothbay Harbor, Maine West Boothbay Harbor, Maine 409 W. Olive, Turlock, Hawthorne Rd., New Caanan, 2101 Oak Knoll Ave., San Marino, Orford, 14 Winslow Rd., White Plains, 122 Fifth St., N.W., Waverly, 1533 Northland Ave., Lakewood 3, 423 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick 148 Bock St., Rochester 9, 34 Grove St., Middletown, 141-70 85th Rd., Jamaica, 95 Pulaski St., Brooklyn 6, 242 Hamilton Ave., Trenton 69 Edgewood Rd., Summit, Calif. Conn. Calif. N. H. N. Y. Iowa Ohio N. J. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. J. N. J. 705 33rd St., Everett, Wash. 122 San Miguel Rd., Pasadena, Broadoaks, Morgantown, Holmdel 3130 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, 911 Pierpont St., Rahway 31 Summit Ave., Rye 100 Haven Ave., New York 32: 1 Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown 3508 Kings College Pl., N. Y. 67 206A Faller Dr., New Milford, N. J. Presbyterian Hospital, New York City 225 E. Mosholu Pkwy., New York 67 514 N. sth sf., Phoeniui, Calif. N. C. N. J. N. Y. N. J. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. Ariz. .!4CLI'l0lllAJgl'l'l8l'lt1f The Editors Wish to extend their profound thanks to all those who contributed, in a multitude of Ways, to the creation of this book, and especially- To the management of Bard Hall, The PGS Club, and Engineer lames Perkins for, respectively, providing the space for, financ- ing, and supervising the construction of the dark room Which proved invaluable to the Yearbook photographers. To Miss Nicola Russell and Mr. Hansel Baugh for their Willing assistance in the sales and distribution of this book. To Mr. Robert W. Kelly, Mr. Fred Fuchs, and Mr. Harry Mellor for their advice, encouragement, and cooperation in the pub- lication of this book. To Mr. Murray Tarr for his formal portraits, group pictures and candids. To Crosley Radio, lnc. for their contribution of the two Crosley Radios used in the Yearbook fund-raising campaign. To Liebmann Breweries, Inc., makers of Rheingold Beer, for their contribution to the Yearbook fund-raising Carnival. I f X l r ' HUB? EE:n IP .. 7 5, ' s . ' ' Q f, 5i. f 1' , 2 ' ' T J' new 2 LE 1' E I 4 -ni :gall gi I I ' .fdvfuerfiding .gzcfion 1, E if IT ' F. 71 . js in .X 1 1 Q ,Z 1 I. Z '. 4 EE , . -W - -k -' f,' V The subscribers who have pur- chased adverfising space on fhe following pages have done so largely fo help defray fhe large cosf of publicafion of fhis book. Please hold fheir names in grafeful appreciafion in fhe fufure. The Edifors Phone: WAshingfon l-leiqhfs 7-1753 ELBERON CLEANERS 81 LAUNDERERS BCHEERFUL SERVICE' 4OI5 BROADWAY S. W, Corner Ib9'n Sfree-T NEW YORK, N. Y. Excellenf Service - Priced Righf M. PRICE BeH'er Grade lnfern Uniforms 3l3 E, Zofh Sf., N, Y. HENRY LAU Barber Snop -:Oil BROAENVA: Ne.-. Ycfl 3- N, Y For good fhings fo eaf S. 8: R. DELICATESSEN 4020 Broadway WA 3-0700 SANI GO0DY The World's Largesf Record Dealer 30 0 OFF Long Playing Records lS3.I5 lisf price and abovel SAM GOODY 235 Wes? 49fh Sf., New York Cify Complimenfs of CASSEL STUDIO Porfraifs - Candids - 3D also Mofion Picfures 3958 Broadway af l68fh Sfreef TO 7-O2 I 2 - i TIE SEI: , , . qx,-3 1- i TTI ll flaws: lor oy o.Jfs'if3.rq 'nec 1 VVf e For ccrnoefe cefelsooe Z I X I I 'W' GRUNE 8: STRATTON, INC. D Medical Publishers X - 33l l3ouf'li Aveme NSW Yfifl' I6 N Y . L THE JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE An Educafional Journal of Neuropsyclniafry SI4.00 per YearfQuIside Conlinenlal U. S.-SI5.5O THE PSYCHOANALYTIC REVIEW An Educa+ional Journal of Psychoanalysis 38.50 per Year-Oulside Conlinenlal U. SF-59.50 NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE MONOC-BRAPHS NOLAN D. C. LEWIS, M.D.. Managing Edilor TI-IE WILLIAMS 81 WILKINS CO., PUBLISHERS I-A2 Pzye aw GJ fc'-11 Avemes BALTIMORE 2 MP RYLF ND THE STUDENTS' LAMENT . . Said Harry M. to Elvin A. One bright and sunny moming Oh, Elvin, dear. come over here, I've something nice to show you. So Elvin A. did take a look At what his friend had wrote And thereupon the shout arose, Now that will get their goat. So now my friends the rumor's out IThough we're really all in doubt? On THIS exam there'll be no endless dribble For the choice is ours-the answers are multiple. And as the weekend sadly nears And hours ot study rule the day We'll think again of days gone by When men were men-and Bac T questions essa A question is a dirty thing To make you trip and fall. A quiz is bad-exams are worse Le!'s have no tests at all. SELBY L. TURNER Lite Member ot Leador's Association Specialist in Insurance tor Protessional Men ISO BROADWAY NEW YORK 38, N. Y. BEelcman 3-6620 Compliments ot The Golden Age Restaurant Sclnratttk Ice Cream Served Evclusively 4OI9 BROADWAY at I69tti Street NEW YORK CITY 32 Fully Air Conditioned THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE Special Rate tor Medical Students and First-year Interns 55.00 per Year Haircut or a Manicure V. LA PORTA 8: SON Six Experts 4005 BROADWAY Ne-xr Iokitli Street Vv'A S-49lO THE BARBER SHOP NEAREST THE MEDICAL CENTER Courtesy Cards CENTER PHARMACY Prescription Specialists A I :ur EYE descriptions 'rip e ilerea, Ierilc- distilled water used, Electrical mixers and In:'nr:z:rni:er.. used cn der'na'i':J':a' cint -ent. andil-3-tions. V WAcIswortl1 34258 43OI Broadway Between IoStI1 and I69tIw Ste. New Yorl' 32, N. Y. VVAJ5,-.rcrtn 7f53I4 Elcwersii-3' ix'OZ:a5i r . 7 2 ' CA PZJ J f0lll0I'J 4031 BROADWAY Bam-een IbQ't, and I7Orh Stree-'s NEW YORK CITY Wedding Bouquets Our Specialty 5. SOTERALIS, Prop F t-.eri le elraulned Ever-,it ,3 S See-as VIE TEZTE ANSWER iElEPHUNES.H ,...g .l Jn., i If: WE I Ast BY iilmu 3 DOCTORS TELEPHONE SERVICE ' 224 East 381h St., New York 'I6 Pictureil aliuve is our otlice at 205 East TSth Street, one of our 14 iieigglilmrlioofl Answering Ollices, In this otlice we hanmlle Doctor's Emergency Service spunsoreil by the New York County Medical Society. In our 29 years of service to the physicians anil dentists of New York, we have done everything in our power to create happy and congenial working conilitions for our girls. This is reflected in tlieirwn1'li. Our reputation for courtesy, intelligence and etliciency is unsur- passed. We are lionesl, tlepentlalile anil accurate. Telanserphone has come to he known as the voice of experience. Nominal rates -Monthly hasis-No contract. Phone for Information Tclmzserplzoizr' 1110. MUrraVHiII7-B580 HEIGHTS CAMERA CENTER The Leading Brands in Photo Equipment and Supplies AT SPECIAL PRICES The Finest Qualify in Photo Finishing Done on Premises IZ29 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. Between l7lff an: l72r'd Shree? NEW YORK 32, N. Y. WA 3-3698 . . . AND WHAT CAME OF IT! Said Harry M. to Elvin A. Tuesday should be a happy day For members of the present class Who wonder if the-y're going to pass. But they all have reason to reioice. When given a chance at multiple choice The cmswer's plain as plain should be For anyone who knows Bac T. l F5 Service Qur Specially We service Reslauranls, Lunclieoneffes, I-Iofels, Scliool and Colleges, wiIl'1 Table Linens, Uniforms and Towels CADET LINEN SERVICE 49-O8 Skillman Avenue Woodside, L. I. NE 9-6433 Lionel A. Schiff Serving Ilne Medical ProTession Tor THE PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. 60 EAST 42nd STREET NEW YORK 17. N. Y. MUrray Hill 2-8 I 2 I Laboralory Apparalus SuppIies - CI'1emicaIs scievnnc eLAsSBLovviNe- E. MACHLETT 81 SON E-'laloliened IE97 220 EAST 23rd STREET New Yom io. N. Y. REME RESTAU RANT 402I BROADWAY Cifmi-r l69IIw Slrinj-I NEW YORK CITY Food of Disiinclion Air C ndilvnei NEWELL, ORR 8: WALSH, Inc. Flooring Conlracmrs RocxEPELL5R csmm 630 FIFTI-I AVENUE NEW' 'TORIQ 20, N. Y. Clfi-Ie 6-37QI may 4-4560-l-2 WESTCHESTER FARMS, Inc. Wholesale Milk and Cream Dislrribulors JOSEPH L. GREENBERG 430 EAST lO8+h STREET NEW YORK CITY 29 The Journal M Clinical Invesfigafion Special Subscripfion Rafe-s for Sludenfs, lnlernes and Residenls Pre-sbylerian l-lospilal, Sflw Floor, Room I34 622 WEST l68Jrl'1 STREET New Yorlc 32, N. Y. Complimenls BARD HALL Compliment OI THE TROPICAL GARDENS BAR AND RESTAURANT I69Ih Sfreef and Broadway WA 3-2424 NSG, I' WMI, FIC... MEDICAL CENTER FLOWER SHOP CAPDASIS, INC, ELOPIST Ar'rIi.IIc Decorafions Eor AII Occasno - , Ihr- Eniwal SI'.I.p I'Ir1,3rI- 2 IvIf-JIJ1 Cr-nw wE TELEG-RAPH FLOWERS 4003 BROADWAY ff- rf VIS V. A' lamb Sh-em NEW YORK 32, N. Y. ALL GARMENTS INSURED ,, . V , . E fr E'rfvnDI Crm and EIQ-nvory Servan- Cu- WAfnInIqI4'-n IIeIi1I'.'s 7-3:54 DAVE APPEI- E2'1I'EF'T TAIIIEIR ANEI EURBIEFI Cheaners and Dyers 230 ET. WASHINGTON AVE. BOB REMICK - ED NADEL , Life Insurance Represen+aIIves The NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. The Schmid? Agency 270 Madison Avenue New Yorlf I7, N. Y. MUrray Hill 5-7200 WA 3-8978 G-IL'S LUNCHEONETTE Famous For Our BreaIcIasIs Lunches and DInners AII CZZIMQ EI-in-3 Cn Prerr-1563 228 ET. VVASI-IINGTON AVENUE Cn. Ih9:In SI, New Yorl B-aa Llx if Eraiev-nIIy and CIALS ParIy Needs UPTOWN WINE 81 LIOUOR STORE Choke Wines and LIquors See Mr. Schusier 4056 BROADWAY Nc-ar I7 I ST Sfrf-Q' LO S-ZIOO CompIIrnenI5 of JOHN H. BUNGER f G'I'OCE'V 'H 226 ET. WASHINQTON AVE. CA r. IBQIII Sha-5-I BWI-,fr--r ILIQII1 wI l7O'h Eur-Q---M VVA 7-1770 raw'-W THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE PresenI's Today's Medicine for Tomorrow's Use The BXXXQAQKXXXQQWA Publifhes We combined SraI'I Conference Irom .. Q Oixxcmmn X We CoIIeqe QI Physiciawrs and Surgeons: aIso G slrfeen Qrrrer Sfaff Corferemcea eaglw year? Hwe reporfs JI Iwo Research Socieiest Iwo Symposia and over ISOO pages OI new KLZQX medrcaI Irmdrmqs yeariy. E1r'frZf 9'i'j'?'B EH. 5 M E, NL.-V Yirl Advisory Board Sruderrf Subacrlpfiom S, AJ-EIO yearIy Efwfo P. Burr, MII., Ne.-. rw frrezw I ear T, Weare, M E' , C efe J'C1 THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, Inc. 49 WEST 45II1 STREET NEIN YCRK 36, N. T. M9 OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE I954 P. 8. S. YEARBOOK Murra Iarr Studios Inc. 9 wesr 46+h smear NEW YORK, N. Y. COPIES OF PHOTOGRAPHS APPEARING IN THIS BOOK CAN BE PURCHASED AT ANY TIME CANDID WEDDING ALBUMS AND WEDDING PORTRAITS SPECIAL RATES FOR STUDENTS AND THEIR FAMILIES THE MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE EXTENDS ITS SINCEREST GOOD WISHES TO THE CLASS OF I954 110 HAROLD S. MAU ER fiirzfllzce' :mel lIlSlll'fH1l'f' Colzlzsrflnl for TIM' .Ilevfiulf lJfUf'f'S.Nl.HIl 342 MADISON AVENUE New Yorl I7, N. Y. TPIOIIIIUIIP MUrray Hill 7-5560 EsIaIe PIannImq SILVER PALM LUNCHEONETTE 400i BROADWAY' Cui wp: I6SIIv fired THE FRIENDLY SHOP SociaI and CommerciaI SIaI'ionery and Gvreefing Carda 4007 BROADWAY WA 312: I5 BELL RADIO 81 APPLIANCE CO., Inc. Il7O ST. NICHOLAS AVE. IBeIween P6801 and I69IIi Sfs.I NEW YORK 32, N. Y. INe-ar Me-dicai Carve-fj IeI.: WAd5wOrIh 7-3I94 Our SI2gan: Te-ai? Yi-ur EKI aw It Have More Cami. Meang Jus: When I? Says SpeciaI Discounfs for Hospifal Personnel Wx'-cIsv.'3f+Iw 7-5700 Lic. 532 M. CITARELLA, Inc. Wines and Liquors 39I5 BROADWAY Nea' I64IIi SHGQI NEW YORK 32, N. Y. WAsIwing+on Heiqhfs 7-3233 Armory Bar 81 Grill, Inc. LARRY ORIN 40II Broadway JEWELER Cenfer Res'rauranI' 8: Bar, Inc. 394I Broadway Halian-American Cuisine JOS. M. GAUDIO, Pres. EIecIronicaIIy Iesfed Wafch Repairs 4009 BROALIWAY NEW YORR 32, N, Y, Special Discounfs for HospiIaI PersonneI RIF LEBTIDIIS OF you and your classmates upon your scbool lite acliieve immortality in a carefully planned and executed yearbook. From tlwe arid desert ol: Arizona, and tlwe sultry green island ol: puerto l2ico, to tlwe snow-blanlceted slopes ot Nortlwern New England, we l'iave traveled, lwappy and proud to have been an instrument in tlwe translating into print, tlwe lriumor patlwos, excitement, and sentiment Found in tlie campus lilo ot over seventy-tive colleges and preparatory scbools. As tormer members ol: yearbook staffs in our sclwool days, we bring into our professional duties a real understanding ol: tlie many promems contronting eaclw yearboolc editor. ee y .ll-5 5 'S ' 7 f'V'-'71Z':T:'7' ,I Q fini .. in , V , f. ,, , 1 - . 5 1.h .15j,f- , ' ., h 5' f ., fn 1 lu '. 4 ' ,..:- 'I ' -. t ii, 17 g V . , 1 V Q, ' A -'- 1- ffl - izkfll ,J , - ' --,e 1' ff. .- . .',f- , . '. :gigff ,' - - :1a,v?,. wwf . ?f?'7,'-' ' 'ffl ' V235 .1 ffl. ' , H 4 ' f JL'-Y'1. .1- ' 3-5A -v I v- .' ' .rf lj 1,-4 1,-L. J . 'rf' ' 1 41: .-1 ' Un V' . .,, 1--ka-:en-. -wgiuf ,ali ms-35 .1 f. Q., 4 '.:f'5 X X 9, 'XJ' 4 cu- ivm Sf? 3 . U' vw' fv- n . 4 EQ. .. . ' in ,L- , A ix x , , Q, ,-if iff -ff N' 1 V , I ,pi 4, 1' ' . 4A A' , . .X sv , :G x f , -ga.: 4' v- 1? 1 M.. . , , ,Q . F A.. ,ff 1 , QA - -s ,.,.f.,.. THB-, ,, Lg.. 4 w ..'-ar -31 1. f ' 1. ..f-fe ....-,-gf? , A 3 '. ,W-V. . 4.-':E , 4, 'ff F v,, 1 I -I - A.. -5- ffl' aufyf fl' - -9 - if 9 1 1. , 1 ,' 4 A1 t' -: Il 4 K' -n-Z ...a-.L COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 0064277631 'II IU Un y . 'f I' 1. I gf. Columbia Universit b y. C ll Physlcians 5,5 Surgeons. ege Year' book .. 1954 APR 1 fffgew, l ' f jfx I I A Q gh C6 IQLQ I' Vx I, x. , ,I ,,,-3 .wr ..f ,- , - .V bij, -f , v j'!, ' I - Q .fb I, I I lv xdlxf 112535 1 lv gi 'Q ILL' 'T Da' . ki ,Q Ad.,-4 f - x .3 I ' V -- ,4 ..,. , Y f, I 1 V 'f ,


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, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

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

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Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

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Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

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