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

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 136

 

Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1967 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1967 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
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Page 10, 1967 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1967 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
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Page 8, 1967 Edition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1967 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 - 136 of the 1967 volume:

'K -DX ' V ' K - , 5 . My ., , W'Wo Q C ' z 1, SV NX QNQ-La..41w' r-' 5 H . I ,-16 X ' -X A N NF L fl Q A-KX N g,QwQk'Y 'Nk x Lk L x iv . L ,If , X yxf YN ' jr' Lv --MPH . X xv + HH f?,5 ' - . T 14-4 Vi' W- Bgs., Xyfsjx' J- tl A X Q3 XVMM iii- X 5,5 MS- ' b w fy? V' ' 1 'f,gr..Ff 'kt J X X ' . i - xX:'v'9'M7fI 5' Q X 5 H xmgg' 'f'T XX NNQQQMXJL X Wd T X-.Z-I ' 3 X , , X5-QFN f xx, I .. UNH I 1 - CGLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CQIIEG PI-IYSICIANS AND SURGEONS F OF NEW YORK CITY ER Q,1Q'l5xClA S44b 551 Q0 6 ON d ll. nffo Q5 may .352 272, E A ,fm 3. , fmvsf 4 ES E I 2 J - , , 0 Z i q .... ,.... , O7 wigs, ,Q 'P ff 54 EH 0403 1, ,III I : 5 v905 N 63' I pf f11Nn vw CITY X49 i 1 P I PMS I , . ' 'Z ,il -i 1 5 :P I A I A J E 1 D. -si N Q- P'IYSlClANS .A.rgQ,5L! '1 '-,vgff-.a ':g',-.ww mrxtasm umm In K I x 1' wwf'--a--'rv - ...Q A AESCULAPIAN 1 967 THE OATH OF HIPPOCRATES I swear by Apollo the physician. and Aesculapius, and Hy- geia, and Panacea, and all the gods and goddesses, that accord- ing to my ability and judgement I will keep this oath and this stipulation: to reckon him who taught me this Art equally dear to me as my parents, to share my substance with him um re- lieve his necessities if required, to look upon his offsprih as my own brothers and to teach them this Art, if they shall sh to learn it, without fee or stipulationg and that by prg t, lecture, and every other mode of instruction I will imw N a knowledge of the Art to my own sons and those of my ch- ers, and to disciples bound by a stipulation and oath a g rd- ing to the law of medicine, but to none others. I will fqflglow that system of regimen which according to my abilityignd judgement I consider for the benefit of my patien'-ts,Q?3a'nd abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievoru'S..-5317-lfiililll, give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor sugfge - y such counsel, and in like manner I will not givebtovgig hn' I m. an a pessary to produce abortion. With purity and wi '- liness I will pass my life and practice my Art. lit persons laboring under the stone, but will leavejth s 7 y be done by men who are practitioners of this work.Into a, ' er houses I enter I will go into them for the benefit oil ,AII I he ick and will abstain from every voluntary act of mfisci ieif-L and corruptiong and further, from the seduction of,,fem ies nd males, of freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connectl n- ith my professional practice or not in connection with it. se or hear in the life of men which ought not torbe spoken of br ad I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such SAIl0llld.' 0 gint. secret. While I continue to keep this oath unviolatedtt 1 granted to me to enjoy life and the practicegof spected by all men and all times. But should I trespas9 violate this oath may the reverse be my lot. A 5, , ill -l J tv 5 To Harold W. Brown 1 This yearbook is dedicated to Dr. Harold W. Brown by the members of the class of 1967. In 1943. as Professor of Parasitology, he organized the first separate course in Parasitic Diseases given at P 61 S. It is in recognition ofthe quality of this course and the broad contribution it has made to our education that we wish to remember Dr. Brown. His lectures are a delight-beautifully organized, clearly presented, and filled with relevant humor. His textbook shows these same characteristics and is remarkable for a medical textbook in the ease and effectiveness with which it communicates. Apart from the excellence of his course, we shall remember him for his enthusiasm and human values. Dr. Brown points out the world-wide importance of diseases seldom seen in our country and the relationship of ignorance, poverty, religion, and customs to their spread. He has enabled many of us to participate in these medical problems first-hand in his overseas program. Medicine in the Tropics. Dr. Brown is a dedicated teacher who obviously enjoys life. The world has been his classroom. He organized the medical school ofthe University of Puerto Rico and reorganized the medical school of the National Taiwan University. Ethiopia, Haiti, lava, Bali, Malaysia, and Korea all know him. We students sense his enjoyment of teaching. NVe respond to it. Learning becomes stimulating, and, of great importance, fun. To the Class of 1967 Dun' Collcnguus. You muy lic sun' tlnit I lniyt- gn-utly cnjoy ml tlit- plvusurt- olbyoui' coinpuiiy ovcr tliv past loin' yvurs. in the lcctnro lmll. l.lI1Ul'llIUI'y. I'i'csliytcriuii llospitul wurcls. und in liospituls uln'ounl during tlii- Nletlicinu in tlic Tropics L-lt-utixcs. Ecluciition is not u ont--wiiy iitlliir. lvut gi mutually stimulating activity. The class ol' 1967 lizis iultlt-cl inut-li to iny 1-tliimtioii. iintl I liopt- I linux- contrilnitvtl por- nmnently to yours. Patient care is inost iinportiint Lnitl it is obvious tlint you ure seriously coiiu-i'in-tl witli your paitients' Inecliuul prolmlems. The patient is also u pt-rson :intl sliould Inc so truntctl. us liis clisc-use is only ai part ol' liiin, Importnint its it is that we tnkt- our inc-tlicul work seriously. on tlit- otlivi' lnnitl. life is more enjoyulilt- wln-n onc clot-s not tnkc liiinsvll' too seriously. Fcw physicians. evt-n P1'OI.L'SS0l'S. are omniscient. Xl? ol' tlit' incdiciil profcssion ure tloulily lilcssctl for wc go tlirougli life doing soinv good and at the stunt- tinu- enjoying our work iinnicnsely. Making our living is int-usurctl Ivy wliut wt- get. and our lift- Ivy what wt- gina Slay your tootstt-ps lie lortunutt- and your slmclows never grow loss. I IA HOLD XV. BIN JXYN Dr. Brown workccl on tlic' trmt- In 1954, lit' 1't'veiuvfl un lionorurz L.L.D. clcfviwc' rom . 7' . ment Qfll00klL'0l'llljI7l' the Frontier tlic I.IIlILAL'l'SIflf of Pufrto Rico ivlierc' lic orgunzzczl flzczr xllll'-SIIIQ St'ruiz'c', Kwztiwkq, 1929. I7lC'C1Il'llI .s'clzooI. ADMINISTRATIO FEE Wu X Il. HOUSTON NIERRITT Dean fffllt' Fuvulty Qf-.xICl'IfL'fIlL' Henry and Lucy Blu.w.s P1'Qf2'.S'.s'm' tif Nezzrnlugy Clllliflllllll, Dl'lIllffI71CI1fQfN'l'1lI'UIUgU BA.. Vanderbilt. 1922 NLD.. johns Hopkius.1926 NIA. qhon.b. I'I1lI'X'il!'ll. 1942 XIELYIN D. YAHR .XNSf,Sf!lI1f Dean P1'nU'l's1mrQfXcz1rnIngy BMX.. NLM' York Enix L'l'SifX . 19391 xm.. 19413 ' GEORGE,X.PEl1l-QNX .'XS.YUl'ilIfL' Dum: Pllgflwwl' qf,NI1'z1i4'im' B.qX.. Pl'illL'L't4lll, 19:33 Xl.D.. Cull11l1l1i.l. 19537: XIvd.S4'.lJ.. 1942 g! .QF I gx, vi, Agn j. FREDERICK EAGLE A-S'Si-Sftlllf Dum AVs1sm'iz1tv PrcU2'.s'.s'or of Pvdiatrizxs' HJX.. YLLIC. 19-LU NLD.. C20l1llUl7i.l. 1943 1, N r X I X f X 'x , - I ,Qi 1 l I iifsrg PRECLINICAL YEAR pf'Ig.gf , ,wma 15' .71 4 If-' 5 4 F?9 q f: !s3',fi ,seg-!f'gQ1,?5!f5i5gS2giwz'.a5. .1 :Eff-Qf'.f,g1'gjf sgo 9531150 a gal A f if H -w fy. L - qiig Lrggc-g,4A.,,f f-- 59:-a.5'aH1ggx1,5-ngxffhdhi was - wig? G4vffQE6Q.fefvb . Eff ' ff' 55'SfiGs'aW.4wc. 5ei 9iS1o53 V'- l,g'5qips..42 r aff' V53Gw,,x wfslsqfw-oa ' E .Z ' .-CL' '-1-'xiii-3ggq 3P'wfJg, .5531 si 'Q 3 Tl gr fr- '-: Y. 4.2- i' 'vp Q , ' f g!1'aeQoQ1w YFGLX'-A-1524 'J' F00 1 6 2 'fllf-.i:'M ' 3He535k'37fs'Ts?nfQ?. 'if 5 HQ-new.-gi:.f-Q if F Deion . Wise . s.f 'T' A . vu .. Q' Q . M , ., . , A21 Soma vm1...1.,... Q T- ' T '-F-1 Q-V aizggai' i17 fiv 3?l - A fafwlg, k 0ca,,w.:ooa,N -Q., , ,1-!.:- ,ai gl U L ., ' ?.'s',5.g'2i .:ff'9+J.1.'.'0 ll An atom . . fn .a Q J If A ,, 'ff .fl F n , 5 . L XX , ' N J X 6' 'J ' e i F' ,ii ig. We :.. ,,,:1fA-1 3- !fq. fra J 1' -1 zb- F hff ff' i f '-,. Y, E' rf: Q - A ,ff-ful-4-S1254 RICHARD P. BUNGE For my re- search this year Fm working on the Sassoon phenomenon. he if N' at , . J , .5 yi? Q 23 af R I, MELVIN L. Moss Yeah, I used to be a tooth jockey. What ofit? V Xa A-Lx- 9 YVILFRED NI. COPENHAVER By popular de- mand Fm repeating my red cell lecture. GEORGE D. PAPPAS Sure FII pose for you U'you'II promise to let me show you my electron microscope. wi-W J if -vi 1 1 -1? N' O , Ya h A -x HERBERT O. ELFTNIAX They tell me Qfyou lock u monkey in a room with I1 typewriter 11511 eventually pllblf-S11 a book. CHARLES R. XOBACK Hey. trait tl minute-this i.5'n't ll brain. ! f X L Q: Qi?- J ,,,M, t t 1 J 1: 121-:rr , --2 r ' r - ,, f - -- : -5 - ' i Q I . 1 0 R. .L 5' f - . j X4 9 1 - : - - '- - - - 4,9 Ax- - ' X ' Y 1-,rw I Y i , ! ' ,, if A9 x fl, 1 f ' 5:0 3 u I -1,57 91 ' 'iii 0 'V' NI,xLc:0Lx1 B. CARPENTER I Can never remember the cranial IIUVUC-S' without my favorite rlmemonic-O11. Oil. Oh, T0 Touch and F001 AA... l 'Q is 1 K' Sgr A Lv El.. It'II all make Sense in the endPF' 'Y sg. .--vu W. A 'Q' - ...T '-3 I A gf 1' C ' :YP ,er i' 1 2 'Jszff ' ' C 4 4 '7LQ W GY I ' c 7 NAI' ,.. isa., NANCY TROTTER Should I pull Y l 1' ,Q e my skirt up alittle more? A ,' 'If' A . f ,N I' '- - . 0 ,, ,. ms, 5 l ALBERT For an extra five I can get you something from the fash- ionable upper east side. f rf , Cs' T' 5 -sf' '11, ,,..l5m Q., NVILLIANI M ROGERS If the ma- Llzme doesnt work I can always do i my anzmal Il7'1f7l1fl1f10HS f f ' a DAVID RITTEXBEHC Yffll gn! tl QU QrurIc'f11'z1 li1JL'l'lI1llI'f-N nzojor-un If. 0 ' ., H 'Q W , Q 5 2 The HO-HO phenomenon ' I 'Q' M ' I I X . , x 2 'A 'v r v,i X SEYxI0L'R LIEBERMAX Ikejllsf dis- covered a new hormone that fakes hair off your head and puts it on yourjhce. Biochemistry 2 --,g 5 94 -Ho N . N 4' DAVID SHENIIX they flmff Iikw my llilirubin Icftlfre I um tlllL'll!f5' go Imck fu the Mr. Clean z'rmz111c'l'z'iz1Is. MAX A. EISEXBEHG cy Cozzrscx 2-I-lzour urine ,S'I7E'C'fI7lUI1S can bv zz Init c11nzIJC1'.so11zc'. T 'a 4 ' . ' F Y I z 1 . 1 -V 1257- ' 31 3- I 1 .. , i fl -n- :XLYIX I. KHASYA C7110 llli, ,l , 1 l7lt'fllfOI1flH' nmltcd f'm1zi11g ERWIN CHAHCAFF I fllirlli this DNA .st11jfi.s j11.s't ll pu.szs'i11g ful. PARITIIYCHERY SHIXIYASAX Cj11I0l'0IJ11UN lllllkl'-S' your brcclfll liiS-S'fl1Q s'u'f'c'f. D ' - l- .. yx F K L 16 gxxx-rwsx A sxqiix .Nav Dum X xa'n1x1.xxsu11x I mmmr In-Ii I 1 ll1t7fl1l'l' llllfllfl' !l'tPllIl1llt1l'l' if 111111 utlzrr u 1 I m 'ff W Physiology JOHN Y. TAGG.-XHT You dmft have to read Bard from cover to Cover. You can always repcat the course in tlu' SIIIIIYTIUV. XYILLIANI L. NASTUK As Iong as yolfre up, get me I1 giant .squid axon on the r0Ck.s'. K. 4 Ati X! .Ajax I , M4-' Q ,-Ax QQ N' 2, MARTIN BLANK Thisyez1rI'n1 uohmtvcr- ing my head us II dialysis bug. ... I . A 'QSW7 gi, ,Qi RICHARD C. MASON XVhut do you slzpposc' this Iittlc thing is? NIEHO NOCENTI I'wju.sr .syfzrlwb-i:,tffI ll ncut Sex harmmuh I think I'II tvs! it un Dr. Hoot. W XYILLIANI XY. XYALCOTT Nou' yurfuc' dom' it. Your turtle' is in cnrrgvstiu' hvurt wftlillllli .X L 1 2 If-i --- QM -' P -n2E ' uv 1 R x1x1oND Exlxluzs I'rut1P-z11u'n'Imm'. SHL' CHIEX Bu! sir. fun m'z1c1'.v tif-fzlfflllll' vuokirs will i11f'1'va1.sr rfuur gjz1.striL' nzufilitzf fIL'Cif2w1f1. Q 5 ', f ivj x - 'N N. 4 . l 4 , . n . X BRIAN F. HOF!-'MAN You dorft understand the vxmn. The idea is not to get the cnrrvct urz.su'cr. but to Ollfgllf'-9-S' the departzmfnf. J I K W, Pharmacolog r-IQ , I,. , I r IL., LOWELL NI. GREENBADNI Hou' Ullllllf bugs Qf nickel HP y 5:1522 3 P , th . 2 - -T, ni 5 ' 'fi , . -'-'ii 5 ,, A L '. ,. .S X . ,, .. 'ff 16,214 :gi . ,J in was-A--. , ,,,-nivPoq,f,' x.1. ,A HERBERT BARTELSTONE This ought to really mess up his autonomic nervous Sys- tem. V Y ...4 I Z? f f X 's V In , W A4 1 5' ff Y . ix. 1 1 E7 9' ydsiiii Lf 111 1 i 'l4F'15' ' i .,e ' 'S' 1 1 -2 -. J, .f 1 . SHIH-CHVN XV.-XNC XVatclz him womit. 20 XVILBUR H. SAXYYER Smile, you're on Cdlldld Camera. DONALD H. SINGER XVinner ofthe McBride Auvardfor public speaking, FREDERICK G. Horfxmxx YVant nfx KI L1 - 2' A4 CALDERON HOWE XVIIU .s'r11w1rc'fIji'cc.s' on the eyepiece? ., Ex 'E rs. ix. , 'Qa- . I f , ef? Ge SAM NI. BEISER My grin grew out E. onli. WI E Microbiology 1 x 1.1 K .X HARRY NI. HOSE In his sparc time this well- known pianist serves as dzuirmfzn of the Depart- nzvnt zyf Jlicrobiology. GABRIEL C. CODNIAN You probllbly didn? recognize nu' zcitlzout my :lurk f'Ir1.s'.s'z',s'. H ELYIX A. KABAT I think l'lj8Vf2llICll in lore with Annu Plzylclxis. fl NJ Q ,. v j.C.1.'s pIuyn1z1tUzy'tl1c' month 5 J 'X L fx x s-4 'J , I, , . , f-- 'Jw-' , , . 423595 g 71 3-1,f , gn.. ' .ij ' L f ' .' x N A CoUNc1Lx1.xN MORGAN Admittedly I ' A 57, my ,sfientyic uc'l1iCuc111r'r1t.s' have been 1- ' ' znicroscupic. . fl n 1 HERBERT ROSENKRAXZ Hello. -security: better send up ll Couplz' 1y'men, Rosen- krun: is playing with thc' machine' again. PAUL D. ELLXER COIN? in and pull up ll louse brfnun stonl. L a,.J, ,q ! . ' ' 4 , N X X X X-K -it- 32: . 6 Q i I I I , BERNARD EHL4-XXCER You look Ifkf youCoulclstunduIittIvc'uIt1:rv. TV? p-an Q JOSEPH XVII-ZNER I think 121 llvttvr gn In the nzvnfs mum. KJ UWi DAVID SPIRO lfl dtlflvf gc! my nvvrz back, c'rcryl1nr1yj?ziI.s. Pathology L ,MIL r x , F DUN-xl.D Cl, XIQK.-U' You .my UUllvL'CVf2JllIllI' 1 4'zl.s'f'1L'itl1 NO i11t1'z11'z1.u'11Iz11' clotting? STANLEY SINIBOXIS XYlzut, mc' uiarry? 'mit , .izxrg s xvyltxx gtg 'A ax EI if XV l A ,Q?.t'mf:' Q,s e,5fsf lf' I., ' ' s L 5 XX!- 'g..,i:i'1 I , - - ' . j' Xf,'gQi Q'f ' ' cgi, -1 44i1: j' .1167 i p'-' 1' il ' MJ. 'P JJ A ,JVA ' 4 'ISE 1 Qi S ,, !fig? , i V 1 ' X Mem , ' '15'I'4'f ' ' ' f x g . 1 S HENRY A. AZAP. Had any lately? S I I . it . WILLIANI A. BLANC Zank heaven for iv if , , K DAVID COWEN He puts me to sleep too. little girls. ABNER XVOLF Z::.::::: .... Z' f QI ks 0' if? MBI QW' 9 ff L f If Q! xx gf 1' 8 5,165 41 I WA E IN '1'ZffN?' 1 L , iQ1Q' -ap-Q Bi ilff?-' 0 If L' SVJ, , jf D 4 X 'nl' MT g' 71 1 J.. w !. A '1 gf- -4L31g:+,f I Nfl.. Q F 4 Q :- Lp Y E, Y'-il' AUSTIN D. JOHNSTON YVrup if up pr my dog. if NATHAN LANE At the Bard Hall cafeteria this specimen Curried a diaglzosis of lamb curry. MEYER NI. BIELICOW The biopsy slzclzccfclfluricl lmzzcynwon cy,s'titi.s. RAFFAELE LATTES 'KNO 1111111110 is so iridescent orflouts longer than that blown by the -S'llCCC5ZSjql1 teacher. OSLER - 1 CLINICAL YEARS 1965-67 Medicine ..-I J X G x it , I a i X XX HENRY ARANOXX' My son, the doctor. ., STANLEY E. BRADLEY Charts, slides, tape record- ings, movies-yes. But dancing girls? CHARLES A. RAGAN l'd rather switch than fgh t. A im 5' . A V' ' X 4 ' ' f .. u X xi few A R + A - ' . N x I r - to 'GX DANIEL V. KIMBERC Talk of your science! after all is Q said! Thereis nothing like a bare and shiny head. -' O. W. Holmes ,- '--- 'D 10-wx V ,... 9. f R -' -M1 -14ii?2'eg24'L?.2ii1?3??5:9 iff' 1 K l '-me ' l gt-5? 553333 x 1 ' 1 si ' 0.90 ai? -U-zawbxx s-.:' ' T 1 1+ vu l A 2: - -fy - ' ' - 32 5 , ' 'fwim ' ' 'N HT-P36-:JTS-:X ,,. W -1 -Y I' 1 K X i Civ '13 Dr. Bradley, it's right on the tip of my finger. ' if Q fjafl -711.1 v joux E. LLTNI.-NNN I uill gyfyt only my name. rank. und lzcmo globin. STUART W. COSGRIFF U anticoagulation ' doesnt work u.'e'lI have to Iigate the sper- matic vein. RICHARD STOCK Letfs see, 0.25 mg. of HENRY O. XYHEELER Hey, George, get a T J digoxin plus 0.25 mg. ofdigoxin equals ..., I load ofthe next case. x I l 4 .M , 3 ., fig DANA XY. ATCIILEY How many ffl7lC'.S' ll zcccfk? NICHOLAS P. CHRISTY I think ymfll gvf Ilcttcr fl'C'llfI7'lC'Ilf at RU0.s-r'LvL'If. 5 I FELIX E. DEXIARTINI YVlmt beauti- jzl rlzvznnatnid nnd11IC.s'y0u lzuucff .- i Q A in .x ' 5 SlDNE'1'C.XVEHNERAIllI10fLl1DI!lHClu1 I '- ., V.-5 1 I Igvm 54 -dx -Xxx' Y.: Q AXIJHIC F. CUl'HN.'XXD DICKINSON XV. RICIIAHDS Wimu'r.s' qftlu' Nolncl Pri:.vfQu' flzrir zrnrk nn wurclif1-pulnxmmry plzyxi- ulngy. Q1 ' Nl. IRENE FEHHER Take the S110l'fL'llf to 3-ith Street 111 rouglz thc' BllllIHCQfKL'l1f. Q if Y ' CEURGE W. NIELQ: praisal note Stirlks. Q 'x CHARLES A. FLOOD T11 is is a great pas- trami sandwich. HER That ap- x l ,-,.,..-.-1:11 ' r 4 FJ - P .x,. A I- 1 X Q, . mx I JL. A 4, Y- .gl DEWITT GOODMAN He had DAVID SCHACHTER . . . by the in- CHARLES L. CHRISTIAN . . . an elevated serum sour uerted gllfS!lCk technique. . . lL'l1fClI did not respond to cream . . . steroids. REJANE M. HARVEY XVanna fight about it? 32 ALFRED P. FISHMAN Sir, did you say you wanted your cojffee black? I I 2 1 '3 1 ,H ALBERT R. LAMB. -ln. Wim-11 l'flHl!'Y-fi fl1c.sy.s-folic-ur llill-8'fU1il':J N., ,J FREDERICK A. KLIPSTEIN A protvn fuse' ofpustrunli-jQ1.s-t uchlorllydriu. rs! ' x ! 1 P qX1.Bl'.liI XX. C,liUM1l',sl 11111 frm! fight rifyf hull, AIOHX ll. I..XR.fXClll 1 zlmfi lzrzzlcrxwlzlml it 4'it1z1'1',l111t if'.8'1ll7Ul1.f2Pl'llIHfIffl?tllH'l'-N. .Xl,FIili1J Cl1Q1,1.mmx HA lgfk um gmrlu und flu' L'IL'1r11'11t.s su nzixnd in him llml Htlfllft'IIIfQl1fNflll1fl up mul my tu all flu' zrurlzl that this zL'f1.s' ll ll1!lll.u sllLllxL'5l7l'All'L' A A. , . , Q ai 'F ' 'f A f ' I , A U ' ff'N -. lf , H ' V 1 ,V . 1 4 is -. I I i l I, I A is X g ,I - P Q-1 nf fi, V ROBERT F. LOEB Bard Professor Eincri- tus 0fMedicine .N x TNNX DONALD F. TAPLEY Alice said, 'I wish you wouldnt keep appearing and vanishing so Suddeniyg you make ani' quita giddyfl 'All rightf Said the Catg and this time it ljtllliS,1E'd quita slowly. beginning with thv and of the tail and ending with the grin which re- mained smnc' time after the rvst ofit had gone. Lewis Carroll g KEHMIT L. PINES Fgfty dollars to win on Sugar Daddy. HAMILTON SOUTHWORTH lftlze lecture so instructinfca why was I thc' only one ta .ZJ was king I10fC.S: w X .1 ARTHUR R. XVERTHEINI D0n't feel sorry for the patients, Foe been here longer than they haue. YALE KX1iEL,.-XMB, 111. lf fl1L'l'L',8 11111f!11i1zg lL'11lL'll 110- fI'lltl1S' 1111 lII7ltlfl'lll'. ills 1110 m1111111'1' 111 10111111 111' par! Cl!.k'Sl'S. l lltilllf Curr' lL'11lll you HEAR 1511011 pc'1'1'11.vs- ing. butfn' G111l.s-11km-, nmkc' if LOOK p1'Qf1'.s',s'i111111l.' XVCII, I lllll-S'f say I'm not i111pr'1'.s'sccI 111111 t1111.x'1' l'tlll'.S'. ,V-di' 'QT 1 'r 7 ix :Lx .,t, -W ' I , ff,-f,f ,- ' Q -V Xi . f' ! ' r '.'f:J ELLIOTT F. OSSERNIAN just the usual- CBC, urinalysis, and immunoelectro plwresis. 1 F GEORGE A. PERERA What happened to me was a little pill Called Compoz.. GER,-KRD KI. TURIXO NULL' fllflf left. .. N , x ll Al has .- 'swf- ffl T 'fs 'H Ly, ,751 'fi FREDERICK R. BAILEY Nothing is more esti- mable than a physician who, having studied nature from his youth, knows the properties if the human body, the diseases which assail it, the remedies which will benefit it, exercises his art with Caution, and pays equal attention to the rich and the poor? Voltaire EDGAR LEIFER Boy, I like it up here at Mary Harknz'.Ss. .,.,.Q,,Z3,if M 9 511 n IQZI V lbw. 11- A t. H- Ef' 5 M' wr U ' The medical student suns' the patierxtfirst. Cl-Ul!1lL'llfCI' l7lCdiL'i71C Z urgery Nat , 1 , . X , X ,u l l I S l A y ' A N. Q GEORGE H. HUMPHREYS II But how A can a whole department have adynamic Hens? S 4 , -fx i ,t 1. v if ROBERT B. HIATT Why, yes, they did nzunc' the Hiatus hernia after mc. JOHN M. KIXNEY I think l'II have to refer you to a .s'1irgi'0njQ1r this problem. GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR Did you hear about the plastic surgeon who hung him- WU? In Q A 2, 0 I I .A I 1 . U x . N I CUSHNIAX D. HAACENSI-IX Xur.yc'. this patient is-11 nmlc. if 'f 0 4 1 JAMES R. MALM lfs .simplex I use' Helena Rubz'n.stvin pancakv. q i S3 f' 'Q V-9.2 -,fix i gm . nv:-qw . -.- ' g,' CARL R. FEIND Handle it curzjially, ifs a hot nodule. ROBERT H.E. ELLIOTT. ju, I think it'.s'11n indirect hernia. HUGH -XL'C'HIYC'LOSS R XVII! dl fhcu' A , , , I . J 1 ' students write such damned long histories? K l .V , 54 XX wr ,V N- i ' Z - - MILTON R. PORTER ln the Navy wc ,f used tojust mpc' it back on. DAVID Y. HABIF lluuc I got .s-mm' rzmzors' to toll you! ' W Vv v' 2'f- 7 '7 027077-I y , ' 'IJ . 1. k, , u V 1 ' .s.-- r-era: sea . 5 .-as - 7 '- , N4 Q0 'W f' Q. SX ,X 9' FERDIX.-NND F. Xlcp-X1,L1sT1iu Still !IllII1lJfllQ,l'l1.U .0 .. ,I ., .. 4 I n u we zo zu r 14 za za 11 an N lv S .-. . ., ,..J , ' .N X , f., 5 LJ ,M ,Q ,, ,11- V K4 .5 - tx 'T K 1 1: v ' - X. . Ng If h A 1 1 HAROLD G, BARKEH Wcll .... lum- IIIHCII crm you zzffvrdfg E I . . xx! A-, I 1 'r RUBHHT Ii,Wx1,lr1 U'rl1mkm1:,- zfmzlrhjzzst Iuka' it wut, PHILIP D. XYIEDIEI. IDU ILT' ALI. 1ItIl'l'fUI7Illkl'l'UIlI1l1-Sllf lIurIum3 jwux SKLDDI-ili Iliff. L-,fun Iuzrlf mm my fflmw joux PRLDDEN II1l1il'!lfftllI,L' . . . -f2u11'y4'z1rs Qfil1fl'llt'fflI1IL' llfflfllfll, xv ' - nu? ANT SKXCQER Cu. fllllkl HIT Ulf' 17114 P . utffmw 1l'z'1l'z'r 8117! LV,--9-:iff X S- - I Q 3- X k G4- , ,figs -1 fl-.X w .1 x, ' ' 5 Q. . 1 X N 1 ARTHUR B. VOORHEES WIIO Said I ,UIUC a Napoleonic complex? THOMAS V. SANTULLI I fllillk my Colostorny bag is leaking. f- A ,: ':1 .. ' 2,1 L . A L-Z Azkslg-' Q'-V- 'f, JOSE 51. FERRER Me read an EKG? SHIVAJI B. BHONSLAY, IR. Holy Cow! I lmtc my eleplmnt parked in u tozraway zonc. ' 'Y 'N'-Ev! L -f. 1 '? '-92 QC it -, 57 ' S -r fig' 5' f5 2 ?T5'?i 2 1 1 y , u a , ll .I Ill nl 0 lIcIp,I'nz1mfvm1d11c'tiL'1' Anesthesiolog I Q, 'V ,L:.1tg , ig F ' ', '1.N GABRIEL C. NAHAS They arezft polka dots. tlzegfre Cyclopropane nwlecwlzfs. 'I' 'fg- E I .-- EW 'I -AIX RICHARD KITZ BC ENIANUEL NI. PAPPER The Kifzenpapper Kids GERALD L. VVOLF An anesthetist is someone at . . -., ' 31 'J ii -I the head ofthe table wh0's Img awake keeping the patient l1aU'asIeep. V 1 2 --. I GI 6 SHIH-HSUN NC.-XI You all took gas OIT y0lll' CXUITI. VIRGINIA .-XPGAR A Score' of 11? Imp0ssiIJIc'.' A Y - y iff ' ff I sv VF. . , ,-7 X .,4, fi' , if ,, ' - ,i ' mg. 1 ,PS-QPL' X LX A LEox.-mn j. c:o1.1Jxx1x1Qr:R Guid- -Hngvr Physical Medicine ROBERT C. DAHLIXC Insert a tube this size and the paraIy.s'i.s' di.s'appear.s. Pediatrics EDWARD C. CURN1-LN, ju, Hi, Welcome I0 Smilin Edys gang. boys and girls! x R, +4 i A? . ff KJ if SIDNEY BLUMENTHAL SZ HOXVARD BRUENN fMedicinej Sidney, you sure lay down a good Tine test, XYILIAI XXI fx, SlI,X'liliXIAN uvllllf IIN gnu .Wy r 1 u Illlbfff' , ' 3 N .ig vs -' PL , , ' X I Ni. L. STANLEY JAMES I vt11.s1r1cIIitm j. FHEDEHICIQ EAGLE Geurgv is fmt of fowng can Ilzelp you? DOUGLAS S. DANIROSCH If worse 0011108 to worse. FII teach all the rxzzrscs nzysclf RUTH C. HARRIS XVlzat's this reczpe or kidney pie doing in my Iiverfile F' 590' C-O I . F l J ' x. , -I' IANIES A. NYOLFF Cough up SUITIC murruu R A-f -R km, W if 1 ' g . in A x Ng ROBERT XY. YYINTEHS Nobody under- .s-tand.s mc. -4' IOHX F, NICHOLSON You .say you JQmnd.90l11Cl10dyu'lzospG11k.s'Ezlglislt' GILBERT XY. NIELLIN Hmmm, acid Imsnf IJl1IllI1l'L':J XVOlldCI'lI.'I1lIffI1l ' - lf77lClll1.S. ur' lfgguf . v ,-4' -..fi HATTIE E. ALEXANDER Hattic' Iatvly? F We S u af.-V S V, j ' V' I 7 l .v 4 U. his Dt'L'L'It?lJillQ ll rapport with the pa tivnf. Dirty old man. Getting to the seat qftluf problem. Otolar ngolog ROBERT M. HUI They want mc' in the Red Guard. IULES XVALTNER lfhe can't afford an operation we'IIjust touch up his x-rays. Q.,' i I DANIEL C. BAKER, JR. Tonsils are my meat MILOS BASEK Somebody stop this room from spinning. X- N .X ,X si 5 x 4 F. PHILIP LUNVEN- FISH Thafs not ll Chronic dernlutitisf IFS my nmstaehe. ANTHONY IDUHON- KOS This should be ll winning entry annual flernultology round-up in May. CARL T. NELSON But we have to take attendance and give exams. I Q,- 41 I CHARLES A. PERERA For you, George, lzahfprice. Dermatolog x phthalmolog A. CERARD DEVOE You mean to say you didnit like your third year Ophthalmology? .71 Q I Ob-G n N E' in f 1 N22 1. GEORGE MOORE In psychiatry you learn to look at the patient as ll whole, but here we re- verse th is procedure. HOVVARD C. TAYLOR, IH. Yes, if is a bitter pill to swallow. A v Jin KARLIS ADANISONS, ju. Bt VINCENT j. FRED.-X The blackout was here, and look at this peak nine months later. CHARLES M. STEER Well, Mrs. Brown, my calcula- tions indicate that tonite is prime time. ALBERT A. PLENTL Tonite at my private olfiee . . . one thousand dollars Cash. nuuuuu-qu N 'Hai ' Tglnf ' Mr.. 's ,. , :Q QI 'WSJ 1 f X , LJ Hnxloxlb L. Vxxlblg YYIELE Clu- lllillllfllt' tid qzzzlcls. I' J ANNA L. SOUTH.-XXI .s-and dollars? ? 1 X X 1 I ,ll ur' f X hgh! 1 1' lu s N Huw 04,4 ' ' 2474 QW fi! J.. 4' mx-+ M 16 IW W ,, . . . !l'ip11'f.s'. qifl . . . ,iwmf f Z X .,, . .4 if 'x -,ix Hgx, Q ,,1's' W I! ,ffsxx 1' ff f 4 If If L: X 4, ,1 1 I ff n .2 'mfg' ff 4- uf. H M5246 ' f .. A Q ' I Ffatff, ,gg3 - 'V V 'n' fi ' ,ff ff f , XYWM f . fffw f D1 ' ' if I f ' ,f f I '14, ',7,'l V f .0 f!'1II'!ff, -'WF , 1 15,1 Va, ,A ,jfs-fi--31, 4 rx .i75'1fP,,,'1 if w- ww 1 ff Q x, 1' ylfvflf . 01. 3. Nl :I nl , I gl 'IL ,'a!l'r' lr f , I J I .,v 'I ' ally , ,. ,J-Q, . ,.4'+.. ,. f-pgfgg.: ROBERT H.-XLL To AB or not to ABP Thu! is thc' questiml. ' N W. DLANE TODD '. Artyicial fILS'!3ITLfl1llff0IlP I lzauerft done one in I months. 4 L za A thou- HAROLD SPEERT These skin mags rcally turn III? Oil. 'N ' j g , pg I . 4 I 4 Sf' Iv ' . I 4 , 'f' -I .5- - l f. as , ' 6, W D. ANTHONY D'EsoPo Are you trying to seduce me, M iss Galore? v 1-H-. SAUL B. GUSBERC A Wouldnt you rather .seduce me, M iss Galore? GILBERT VOSBURGH Would you be- lieve thisfed youfor nine months? I YVILLIANI Y. CAVANAGH Yes, 1 still like to keep myjinger in the pie. LANDRUM B. SI-IETTLES Is this a dagger which l see before me, the handle toward my hand?D h.....,.V , ,, Y ,. fl . , b. Shakespeare ORLANDO j. MILLER I dream of Harry with the light brourn genes. 54 XL-. N l I.. I K---vw .a 5 SIDNEY CARTER Quick get ll tongue blade, Fm having my aura! Neurolo g H. HOUSTON MERRITT All this is my domain CARM1NE T. VICALE Very good, Mrs. it from your lej? axzllu to your pubic 'X Ai jones. Now take your rightheel and run symphysis. MELVIN D. YAHR You say you have diplopiai' 1, xv- ,C , gf I I ff T W . . k . ' Lg' Y . 'Y W 5 5 I A x' I A ' j. LAWRENCE POOL fNeuro- if 7 surgeryj A hemispherectomy is .. , 4 . actually a very innocuous pro- A 4 cedure. rthopedics f 9 N X 'fa 'ff C , P ., t .,,,... Y CHARLES S. NBER II Nobody passed the exam, but you set a new record for total amount of cofee consumed. 'N' '- 'N ' FRANK E. STINCHFIELD 'Wl1at! don? you know what a Sawlaones is, Sir?,, inquired Mr. Weller. 'I thought everybody lcnoufd as a Saw- bones was a Surgeon' P' Charles Dickens CHARLES T. RYDER I say the whosis is con- X n SAWNIE R CASTON Honest nected to the whatclm- Hldllllll, it actually feels good. is 1 Q l f macallit. I'I.-XHRISON XICLAUCHLIN 1'lUlL' fl0 I treat ll Collos f'lll'fll7'l'P XVlzy, Ijustjix it. t ,mf t A. 'N 'TI gy! N611-3417? S Q- Q -U m x 1 ,. f Q V' I If M .iq lf' I H , 1 1 ff . FQEERT E. CARROLL You fIon't know wluzt this -9771011-5' W f ilu A C. ANDREW' L. B.-XSSETT YUS, I know itls IOULZ7 sfje, but lzaumft you got sometlzing softer? ALEXANDER GARCI.-Xu l1E'l'c' are all my St11clc'11tsP Tlzeyll be latvjbr the www' lzrcok. JOSEPH E. SALVATOHE -o I get thirtyjiue dollars for this x JJ ' ' one, but, of course, itls ll dollar ' it Cxtro lfl use gloves. ' V DAVID L. ANDHEXYS Mander of broken limbs 57 Psychiatr LAWRENCE C. KOLB Your screening tests show that you're immature, psychically promiscuous, borderline alcoholic, and a past chapter pre.si- dent ofthe DAR. 7 fi., 5 DONALD BELL lk ROBIN BELL Ding dong bells. 58 Jil WILLIAM A. HORWITZ Take it away Chet in Washington. V .-4, .. ,X 4 X PT. SIDNEY MALITZ Actually I have a batch brewing in my cellar right now. DONALD S. KORNFELD You're neither psy- chotic nor neurotic. You're just a stupid jerk. I I K' Y 'K+ x f,.,.f ff ,-ii XX l 1 V x , Mf,f fl 'K ,f X 1 ' f' ' 14' ' lag, ,J X Ea -ref, ': 575111 LQn. r - . -g1l', S f I . 5 QQ ' l O U, , 'J 0' l K 0 X l il D Slll1l'llfL'!1lOl'l!ll plzvlzmlzwzzz ISRAEL KESSELBREXXER All!! IICXF lvll lik? to present .,.. julim CIIC'-Sllf. PHILLIP POLATIX If you mink nezzrosis is bad, you slzould try lzernorlzoids. -as, 4y', Q J XYILLIANI S. LANG!-'ORD Wlzy lllllllf be silly. I.5'cn11c'tinze.s wat tl1C bed I71ySC'lf H. DONALD DUNTON IFS 0f1.s'y once you learn to love the little brats. li- I 4-,rl 1 Radiolog I JUAN M. TAVERAS Too dumb to take a I1 istoryk' Heres why. WILLIAM B. SEAMAN They said we weren't allowed to develop this kind 0 pictures. f -Nw RALPH SCHLAECER I X Notice the positive A Schlaegefs sign. DAVID H. BAKER Youfndforeign bod ies in the strangest places. KENT ELLIS How long do l have to retain this barium? f v 'i . N4 jollx K. Ltx'l I'lxlEH l,sr1idIr'tgu,' v f' 4 HANS H. ZINSSER Su slu' told mc' to kvcp my Hans tu zlzysctf Urology GEORGE XV. FISH GCG whiz! 3 5 - 1 ,Lg ri .y Q ir f 2 f HW 22 , .. N , Nl JV- ,fu X It AP-CHIE L. DEAN Dorftjfzrc ,til you sac the wlzites of their thighs. VERNON SMITH Ifyou can get your finger in. you can get yourfoot in. 3 .m 2, 1 - ,ii ,.,,.., ,. if THE CLASS GF 'f 1967 'F 'fl , 73 V V., .vs is .W ' f .. 3 71 I f f ' T J' P mlllll. QL. 'Db sl : EG 549' -4---Q, ,Q is ALEXANDER MCF. ACKLEY, IR. 29 Cross Cates Madison, B.S.E., Princeton, 1962 MEDICINE NILE L. ALBRIC-HT 167 Dudley Road Newton Center, Mass. A.B., Harvard. 1961 VASCULAR SURGERY, IMMUNOLOCY HELEN GARSHANIN ALBANESE 217 Haven Ave. New York, N.Y. B.A., N.Y.U., 1962 PSYCHIATRY RONALD C. ALLISON 225 Highland Ave. New Kensington, Pa. A.B., Yale,1963 SURGERY RICHARD A. ALBANESE 217 Haven Ave. New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1962 MEDICINE VVILLIAM B. ANDREW S Whitaker Mill Road joppa, Maryland A.B., Princeton,1963 PEDIATRICS 42' if if' J. -as-A .4-X Q25-r CHARLES NLBAI1 II 2637 BllI'I'II1gfU1l Driu Toledo, Ohio If ff 71111-flu, 190'-I SUIIGICIIY Toun H1II F um Lf1IxevlIIc Conn A.B., Prznaeton 1967 JOSEPH M. BALLO 1420 Parkchester Road New York, N.Y. B.S., Munhattc1n,I962 PATHOLOCY WALTER E BERCER III 18 eITerson Street Carden C1tV N H B.S.E., Princeton 1960 RICHARD D, BANYARD 32220 Netherland Ave New York, N.Y. AB., Princeton,1963 OPI'ITI'IALfNIOLOCY IANIESD BILES III 1442 Coodbar Ave Memphis Tenn ROBERT G. BLABEY, . JR. 22 N. Pine Ave. Albany, N.Y. A.B., Hamilton, 1963 SURGERY 155 if HOWARD L. BRENSILVER 990 Dana Ave. Valley Stream, N.Y. A.B., Columbia, 1963 MEDICINE IOHN C. BOVVEN, III 528 Knight Ave. Forrest City, Ark. B.A., Yale, 1963 SURGERY aw 'S ' DAVID C. BREWSTEP. 45 Christopher St. New York, N.Y. B.A., Trinity, 1963 SURGERY ' M ' i h YTT FRANKLIN E. MEDICINE E 1, 1 BRAGG, II I fig 11 Graham Ave. . Bangor, Maine ' B.A., Amherst, 1963 JOHN M. BRILEY, IR. West River Road Perrysburg, Ohio A.B., Harvard, 1963 PEDIATRICS ur' ROGER P. CHRISTENSEX 1-145 N. Nye Ave. Fremont, Neb. AB., Grinnell,1963 MEDICINE ROBERT A. CLARK 107 Concord Place A.B., THOMAS B. CHRISTENSEN 14-15 N. Nye Ave. Fremont, Neb. A.B., Grinnell, 1963 MEDICINE Syracuse, NX. Syracuse, 1963 MEDICIN E BERNARD H. COHEN 59 Locust Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa. A.B., YV1lltes, 1963 DERMATOLOCY PRESTON R. CLARK, IR. 107 Genesee Street New Hartford, N.Y. A.B., Cornell, 1963 SURGERY MH LES COHEN 4019 Santa Ana Dr. E1 Paso, Texas A.B., Prmceton, 1963 SURGERY Nia' ' M fv' ,- 'Tx Q-Q QE rf ,-Z ,4 MICHAEL R. CURCI 1777 Grand Concourse Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1963 SURGERY ROGER T. JOHN H. FEIBEL 9002 Daly Road Cincinatti, Ohio B.A., Pennsylvania, 1963 SURGERY DQANGELIS 27 Windsor Terrace Yonkers, N .Y A.B., Columbia, 1963 SURGERY FREDRIC O. FINKELSTEIN 45 Sutton Place South New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1963 MEDICINE MICHAEL A. DREW 15 River Glen H astings-on- Hudson, B.S., M.l.T., 1959 SURGERY THOMAS C. FLEMING 211 Fort WVash1ngton Ave. New York, N.Y. A.B., Kenyon, 1963 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 15 Qs.,- 077541 bv rr Y , 'fin' - G ' u 'ST' l IV! 9-4 jOHN XVILLIANI FOLLOWS. JR. 4:2 Greenwax' Terrace Forest Hillsl NX. BA., Yah: 1963 OHTHOPEDIC SL' HGERY JOHN E. GAINES 105 East 80th Street New York. N.Y. B.S., Trinify,1963 RICHARD FRANK S9-T1 217 Street Queens Village, N.Y. B..-K., Columbia, 1963 SURGERY OB-CYN DANIEL 1. GARNETT 285 Lexington Ave. Passaic, AB., Dartmouth, 1964 KAREN K. FL' F3, Nlirador Mansion Nathan Road. Kowloon Hong Kong, B.C.C. B.A., Barnard, 1963 RADIOLOGY SURGERY . '17 STEPHEN L. GARRELL 2708 Avenue P Brooklyn, N.Y. B.Clz.E., Cornell, 1963 MEDICINE dsx All qgf' ,J 'l-T7 mls fbi 4a! ,r A 'Mk ,.b MARCIA GETZ GERBER 52 Marlon Ave. Hartsdale, N.Y. A.B., Vassar, 1963 MEDICINE LESLIE HARTLEY GISE 8 East 96th Street New York, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1963 PEDIATRICS, PSYCHIATRY HAROLD GERMAN 140 Glenwood Ave. Iersey City, NJ. A.B., Princeton, 1963 MEDICINE DULANEY GLEN Muttontown Rd., Box 195 Syosset, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1955 MEDICINE FREDERICK M. GISE 8 East 96th Street New York, N.Y. A.B., Columbia, 1963 MEDICINE ROBERT A. CREENBERCER 14 Melmore Gardens East Orange, N.j. B.A., Rutgers, 1963 OB-CYN mmvyp-'al 'TTI' - ,ofN 205 sh- Q iN ROBERT A. GROSSMAN Frenchtown, N.1. A.B., Lafayettc.1963 MEDICINE CHAR LES 1. HODGE, JP.. 2195 Central Road Fort Lee, NJ. A. B., Princeton, 1963 SURGERY CHARLES HAMLIN 270 Benefit Street Providence, R.I. B.A., Yale, 1961 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY FREDERICK C. HOLSCHUH 56 Cove Road Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Rensselaer, 1963 PEDIATRICS, MISSIONARY MEDICINE ERNST HEILBRUNN 589 Shaler Blvd. Ridgefield, NJ. B.M.E., c.c.N.Y., 19 MEDICINE 57 JOHN S. HOWLAND Teewaddle Hill Road Amherst, Mass. B.A., Yale, 1963 PSYCHIATRY 105' ,-nm. ' i V V 9: 4... IAA.-. 1539 N I 1 Www . K M52 iiiff-5' .1 ni., Z 16 37 -wwf .Qi RICHARD A. HURD, 994 Buckingham Circle N.W. Atlanta, Georgia Emory, 1963 SURGERY BRUCE C. JOHNSTON ANTHONY L. IMBEMBO 1201 San Rafael St. San Leandro, Calif. A.B., Stanford, 1962 PSYCHIATRY 2641 Marion Ave. Bronx, N .Y. A.B., Columbia, 1963 SURGERY Yr' . ROBERT DeW1TT s. jONES 315 Foster Drive Des Moines, Iowa B.A., Yale, 1963 SURGERY E w TENT WILLIAM C. 3511, 'fi , JOHNSON Q 2221 Beechwood Ave. Wilmette, Illinois A.B., Princeton, 1963 MEDICINE if N, ' I 1 T. STEPHEN JONES, ' JR. ' 88 Columbink Road Milton, Mass. B.A., YaIa,1963 MEDICINE Q CAROL A. K A IS Ii H '11 13 I Qi' if' Beaver Drive' Locust Yullvv. NY, 3.5- 7uq1S,1963 MEDICINE HOBEIII A . IxXr-XPP 659 XY. 162nd Strcct NL-xv York, XX. B.A.. 1l11rrarf1'.1962 MEDICINE KATE KILLEBREXY 5410 Shriver Ave, Des Moines. I OXYLI B..-I., SlL'fll'fl1l7l0I'L',1961 ll..-X.. Rl1c1c'1Q'fC. 1962 MEDICINE coanoxy BENET KOLNIAN 113 Creenacres Brevard, NC. AB., Haruard, 1963 MEDICINE KIRSCHBERG 4742 Lacombe Ave. Montreal. Que., Canada B.S., MCC-iI1,1963 N EYROLOCY GORDON I. KL STILR 116 Grove Street Tarrytoxvn. N.Y. B.A., Y1110,196-3 MEDICINE tb 'wg H 323' - A -Q, ' an 'ik r r F, WILLIAM M. LEE 2688 Crompond Road Yorktown Heights, N.Y. A.B., Amherst, 1963 MEDICINE RICHARD 1. MACKLER 99 Mohawk Drive West Hartford, Conn. A.B., Harvard, 1961, M .A., 1963 MEDICINE NELSON L. LEVY 571 Watchung Road Bound Brook, NJ. B.A., Yale, 1963 PEDIATRIC SURGERY DOUGLAS D. U. MCKANE 35 Roosevelt Street X Carden City, N.Y, A B.A., Adelphi, 1963 M3 :silk SURGERY g.gg.1-355' JOSEPH A. MacFARI..AND Elmont, N .Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1961 M EDICINE THOMAS E. ---- MCNAMARA 8352 s. Marshfield Ave. Chicago, Illinois B.A.,johns Hopkins, 1963 SURGERY 9 'WN CRIER H. MERXVIN 4113 -19th Street NAV. XVashington. D.C. A.B., Duke,196-3 SURGERY. LROLOCY ALEXANDER C. MORGAN 3445 Stratford Road Atlanta, Georgia B,S., Davidson, 1963 MEDICINE life? MV' ANN M. BOYER MILIC -104 XV. 116th Street New Horlx, NJ. B.S., Columbia, 1961 M EDICINE, OB- GYN ROBERT P. MYERS 15 West Street Waterville, Maine A.B., Yale, 1963 MEDICINE EDWARD MILLER 133 Riverlawn Ave. Watertown, Wis. A.B., Harvard, 1963 MEDICINE KENNETH K. NAKANO 1143 S. Victoria Ave. Los Angeles, Calif. B.A., Pomona, 1963 NEUROLOCY T.: 'C' fve GORDON L. NOEL -112 Beverly Missoula, Mont. A,B., Harvard, 1963 MEDICINE CORNELIUS OLCOTT, IV 218 E. Harrison Harlingen, Texas A.B., Princeton, 1963 SURGERY STANLEY F. NOVAK 5000 Broadway New York, N.Y. B.A., C.C.N.Y., 196.3 PEDIATRICS DAVID D. OLDS 1160 Windsor Ave. Windsor, Conn. B.A., Yale, 1960 MEDICINE GEORGE S. NOVALIS 6044 Spencer Ave. New York, N.Y. A.B., Columbia, 1963 OPI-ITHALMOLOGY DANIEL B. PENNEB 65 E. 96th Street New York, N.Y. A.B., Yule, 1962 MEDICINE Sr A SAMUEL XY. PERRY. X alhalla New Castle. Pa, AB., PrinCet0n.1963 PSYCHIATRY IS5 A RTHUR C. POLLACK Erasmus Street Brooklvn, N.Y. B.S., HuI1drt.1963 SURGERY FRANK A. PETITO. IR. S9 Galbreath Drive Princeton. B..-Y., Princet0n,1963 N EUROLOCY DANIEL S. RAABE. JR. 132 Ramsev Ave, Yonkere. N.Y. B..-Y., Colgate, 1963 CAROLYN NI. PIERI 9 XY. Putteney Street Coming. N.Y. B..-X., OIJerIin.196-3 PSYCHIATRY PEDIATRICS NIEDICINE ROBERT RODYIEN 3050 Fairfield Ave. Riverdale. N.Y. A.B.. C01un11Jia,1963 XIEDICINE 3? CK,- if - 1 Yr? 2 .9,. 4 5:7 5- IAY B. ROHRLICH 96 5th Avenue , e' ' U New York, N.Y. A B.A., WilIiamS,196-3 PSYCHIATRY 'ine if GERALD STEPHEN ROSENBLUM , V A . .533 22 Lawrence Street 1f I New Hyde Park, N .Y. B.A.,AmhefSf,1963 .25 -'1-ffsfffwf: fl! .5 rf: My '-a1!1.,T.tlk1w M E D IC I N E QUINN B. ROSEFSKY I Stratford Place 4. Binghamton, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1963 MEDICINE '?'-x 10x ROBERT M. RUSSELL 52 Leonard Street Gloucester Mass A.B., Haruard,1963 MEDICINE ' MARVIN ROSEN Q 4--3 RK' 43 Indiana Ave. Long Beach, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1963 PEDIATRICS .p-- DAX ID SCHEINHORN 190 E Loines Ave Merrrck, NJ. A.B., Princet0n,1963 MEDICINE PAULA A. SCHMIDT Denmark, Maine B.S., Bates, 1963 PEDIATRICS HENRY ASCHER SELLNER 98 Park Terrace East New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1963 RICHARD P. SCHNEIDER 515 Hawthorne Trail Lakeland, Florida B.A., Emory,1963 MEDICINE OB-CYN STANLEY SHERMAN 2146 79th Street Brooklyn, N.Y. A.B., Columbia, 1963 HARVEY A. SCHNEIER 32 Clover Park Drive Rochester, N.Y, A.B., Columbia,1963 MEDICINE SURGERY LEONARD 1. SHUKOVSKY 197 Beach 187 Street Belle Harbor, N.Y. AB., Dartmouth, 1963 RADIOLOGY jg. PA.- .....,.. . .. ...l H..- -1 lx l -.., , inn. Q an .4 97 FRED E. SILVERSTEIN 105 Oakland Ave. Monroe N Y B.A., AU'red, 1963 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY BALACHANDRAB DOBLI SRINIVASAN 23 Haven Ave. New York N Y B.A., Bard, 19.99 Ph.D., Columbia,1964 RESEARCH, OPHTHALMOLOCY ROBERT E. SLOANE 15 S. Main street 9 W Randolph, Mass. 4 A.B., Harvard, 1963 SURGERY CHARLES H. SRODES 604 Pitcairn Place Pxttsburgh. Pa. B.A., Wesleyan, 1963 MEDICINE ROGER D. SPIER 3 Standish Terrace Dexvltt. N.Y. B.A.. Hobart, 1963 SURGERY SHERMAN C. STEIN T418 Malvern Ave. Plliludelplliu, Pu. A.B., Pmznsylrzzlzizl.1963 N El'ROSL'RCERY S4 ig if -459 ,qi ROBERT A. STO1 PRICI- I-I5 Pl'itcIn1u'cIAxv. Corning. XY. AB.,llmr1iltmz,1FJ63 ff' fx 1 .Q- '1 OB-CIYN if 'Q' wus.. sl.-XX II. 'I'II.,I.ISCII IU69 Plummer Lune Rm-In-ster. Nliun. B..-I., Ylllll 1952 MEDICINE -IANIES C. SXYEENEY 51538 Post Road New York. XX. BS., Al!lI1l1llffllll.I963 SVRCEHY 1 bu DIANE COLDBERC TRACIIT 283 Barr Ave. Tcurlcck, AB., Bryn Jlauqr, 1957 RADIOLOGY RICHARD R. TAYERNETTI 46 Maplewood Drive Salinas, Calif B.S.,ClllIfI7fI1I!l.1960 SURGERY 5- -A GEORGE A. VIOLIN 356 Fort Uhshington Ave. New York, N.Y. A B Columbia 1963 OI HTIIALXIOLOCI '64 if' 'sf' CYS Q? ' LUCY A. WASKELL 78 S. Welles Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa. B.S., Penn State, 1963 MEDICINE RICHARD N. WINICKOFF 2100 Linwood Ave. Fort Lee, N.I. B.A., Harvard, 1963 MEDICINE BARRY D. WENCLIN 111 '-lr' 620 Fort Washington Ave. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1963 MEDICINE SAMUEL D. WINNER 2745 Edge Hill Road Huntingdon Valley, Pa. B.A., Trinity, 1963 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY JAMES R. WILSON, JR. 563 66th Street Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1963 SURGERY RICHARD L. NVINSLOXV 23 Coolidge Ave. Caribou, Maine B.A., Bowdoin, 1963 MEDICINE 'sub' 'ib- S 1963-1964 President: Barry Wenglin Vice-Presklent: John Briley Secretary: Marcia Gerber Treasurer: Alec Morgan P dr S Club Representative: 1964-1965 President: Barry Wenglin Vice-President: NVillie Lee Secretary: Marcia Gerber Treasurer' Alec Mor an . g . P ir S Club Secretary: T. Stephen jones SALLY F. XVISELEY 625 XV. 169th Street New York, N.Y. A,B., Radcljfe. 1955 MEDICINE Q 102 . x F I' 4 PETER F. 9 5...- WOHLAUER - 3230 S. High Englewood, Colo. A.B., Harvard, 1962 PSYCHIATRY 1965-1966 Preszklent: Frank Bragg Vibe-President: Dan Raabe Secretary: Carol Kaiser Treasurer: Alec Morgan john Howland P if S Club Vice-President: Mike Curci 1966-1967 Preszdent: Dave Brewster Vice-President: Carl Srodes Secretary: Dee Tracht Treasurer: Harry German P if S Club President: Mike Curci 1963-1967 Honor Committee Representatives: john Bowen Harvey Schneier Alpha Omega Alpha l Alpha Omega Alpha is a national medical honor society whose spirit is set forth in its motto, 'To be worthy to serve the suffering. lt is the duty of members to promote its ideals, to foster the scientific and philosophical features of the medical profession, to look beyond self to the welfare of the profession and of the public, to cultivate so- cial mindedness as well as an individualistic attitude toward responsibilities, to show respect for colleagues and especially for elders and teachers, to foster research, and in all ways to ennoble the profession of medicine and advance it in public opinion. It is equally a duty to avoid what is unworthy, including the commercial spirit and all prac- tices injurious to the welfare of patients, the public or the profession .... The most prominent requisite of membership is high scholarship in a broad sense. Scholarship is more than a record of high average grades and facility in memorizing information. It connotes continuous industry, effectiveness in method of work, facility in correlating facts and in intellectual grasp that permits application of information to new problems. As aspects of and indispensable to true scholarship come open-mindeclness. indivicl' uality, originality, demonstration of a studious attitude independent of teacher require- ments, and promise of intellectual growth. These are the qualities that must sustain the individual in his professional career .... Equal to these qualities comes moral character in its broadest sense, including un- selfishness, appreciation of obligation, reliability and honesty in all the affairs of life. From the Preamble and Constitution of Alpha Omega Alpha MEMBERS ELECTED MAY 1966 n1,i2c71'i:u Novmrsm 1966 XValter E. Berger III Flllllklili E. Bragg II David C. Brewster Robert A. Clark Anthony L, Imbembo, President xvllliillll NI. Lee Gordon I. Kirschberg joseph A. NIacFarland Robert E. Sloane. Secretary-Treasurer Richard I. Mackler Richard N, XViniQk0ff Cornelius Olcott IV Arthur C. Pollack Marvin Rosen Harvey A. Schneier Fred E. Silverstein James C. Sweeney Ccorge A. Violin 84 Class Histor I, Proteus, all things to all men, swarmer over all, seer and knower of all things pertinent to the class of 1967 of P615 am honored to be chosen to chronicle the epic saga of this class. No better man could have been chosen to cover this scene fif I may sayj, for I know just how many months it took for Frank and Carol to come to terms, how Barry XVenglin got elected Hrst year, and how Mr. Barton chooses his hired ezine helpers. The proper seer must first know and understand the past and record it for genera- tions yet unborn, for what is past is prologue and all that sort of thing. It all began when the Dean garnered us from the land, held our applications in the palm of his hand, etc.. etc. But things really got underway when the aforesaid dean told us not to take our Stethoscopes jwho had one?D on the subway and Hail them about. Dr. Cumen the following morning showed us what a typi- cal lecture would he like and off we went. Where? XVell, the first week we didn't really know. but it all became clear after a while. XVe found out where Rittenberg was to break his famous egg. and where O. I. Miller would teach genetics for the obstetrician. KVhat we weren't prepared for was afferent wol- leyi' Emmers and the 'Kzick and Zin filaments of Nachmansohn. Nor r -Q could anyone fexcept for myself, naturallyj see the dark clouds on the horizon that foretold the Note Group Storm that was to come. But as the storm brewed it became a matter of honor for some not to be a member and for others a prag- matic matter, in fact a necessity, to join. Those who joined signified that they had given up learning the conventional way our grandfathers had used. To back up their position they invoked the ever widening horizon of medical facts, each one more indigestible than the last. Those who refused to join stuck with our forefathers, in- voked Herbert Hoover's and Dana Atchley's doctrine of hard work, and wondered whether those pro-note group weren't communist sympa- thizers. The Dean foresaw, with not a little rectitude, that the eventual outcome of the trend toward recording the spoken medical word might be closed circuit TV in every room in Bard Hall with re-runs in the evenings for those who spent their days appearing on quiz shows down- town. To thwart the trend his program of a x'oluntzu'y cease-and-desist was strongly sug- gested, Those convinced that the old way was the best way had won the day. Poor Arthur Schlesinger. Ir. had just taken a room in Bard to chronicle the New Medical Education Deal. He had conferred with Sandy Ackley long enough to write his second Crisis of the Old Order when the news hit and he was sent packing back to Washington. Spring brought us to our sense-sg we gained confidence as we worked our way down the arm to the hand and finally threw away the legs. . Ev f' Q ' f 5 S . .1 HQ: 4 7 s On we went to the first year show. The medi- cal center community had the privilege of wit- nessing a most singular event, a clean AND funny first year show. John Daley said N , Walter Kerr said, Go see it, and Edwin Barton said, Not in ten years has there been a show like it. Who would have said john Howland could put Karen Fu and Sam Winner on the same stage and come out the better for it? I would have said so, of course. x . i A 1 1 YD fl, 'B H0 :-if J Zim' fs! lt: rzsm: nba' Q' If first year dulled the senses, second year was the winter of our discontent. As the study material became vaguely medical the amount of what seemed absurd nit-picking Qthe stuff of medicine, after alll became astronomical. Dr. NVang described his Qhold your nose when you say itj chemoreceptor trigger zone and could make a poor dog vomit at will or whoever else happened to be in the front row. The patholo- gists asked an illegal question-something not said in lecture at all. Dr. Spiro stumbled onto the 8:19 to .Chappaqua without his overcoat after the Path party and Frank Bragg got a B-plus for returning it the next day. --ex.:-' if -2- Spring came again! The sun was bright as we climbed on the subway fstethoscopes flailingj or careened down to Bellevue on our newly- bought motorcycles. The smell of the East River from VVelfare Island mingled daily with the Parasitology lab odors and young love was everywhere. That summer the scientist turned clinician as hundreds of Vacutainers drove deep into the flesh, not veins, of hundreds of ante-cubital fossae and psychiatric interviews left many otherwise well meaning students asking the question, Why do you ask? to everything from VVhat's your name?l' to How long do I have to sit here?,' XVe held the hooks, ca.rried a healthy looking Pres Clark around during an Emergency Drill, got drunk with the Professor of Path- ology in the Great Blackout, and made a dis- grace of the class at the Christmas show. Fred and Leslie became the class' first nuptial product. Our third year spring and summer found Bruce Johnston and Sam Perry at the beach and Harry German playing the fat boy from jersey Cityv stunt on every tennis pro in the Borscht Belt. Steve jones was planning rainy day activi- ties for the Cape while Dave Scheinhorn an- nounced that he liked girls 'Aa bit fat. Innumera- ble others began seeking surgical intemships on the XVest Coast-double heresy. As we waded into the fourth year the aware- ness that Summer was for working was over- whelming. School began to seem more like job and portents of the intem's year were all around us. The class became so fragmented that no one could recall just how many children Del Glen had or was having or how short Ann Boyer Milic's skirts really were. Dean Perera spoke to each of us thus: 'Snodgrass was a quiet boy from a nice family in Scarsdale-er Greenwich and did fairly well at Kentucky-ah. oh, yes, Yale, but then he came to P6tS .... Firestone telegraphed Dr. Brown when Mike Drew still hadn't arrived ten days after the beginning of the month-he'd started five days early. Dick NVinickoff couldn't remember his name at the Mass General interview. Harry German, the class treasurer, was called in to explain to the gl' 1 llil ,lt i :f i ,. I . ' . T. k. S' a 4 I-..'. Il 1 ' 'NJ 1 1 -,-.. 5 1--F Q V- yr. I f K.. Z. T ,, i 1 E ,-1-P.. ' ' X-',5..s,. ' A ,4- . .2 gli? Dean how he could be sixth-ranked in Eastern tennis and still tear through the rugged fourth year curriculum. A stampede to the altar re- sulted when certain members of the class con- templated a cold. lonely. debilitating internship after four cold, lonely, debilitating years of medical school, The fateful trips around the country to sell our wares resembled one-man road shows. Finally The List was drawn up. The unanswcrahle question became: Should I put down Xlother Cabrini or risk going un- matched? Even the word has an unpleasant sound. Matching Day finally arrived and the fates of hundreds of lives were decided in seconds, it seemed. For some there was joy, for others justice. and for a few heartaches and second thoughts. Could we have known which internship was bestg Could we but choose where we would get more rest, A chance to learn, with clerks to bum, Some emdite and some not quite. A few MI's, low PBI's. And lest we run away with erudition, Once in a while a night-time admission To keep us on our toes and still in touch, XVithout disturbing sleeping very much. Some brilliant nurses to take care of all, And do the scut fwith clerksj and never call. A lab which doesn't holler QNS A page that doesn't always end Arrest, Attendings saying sensibly and well That really the ward doesrft look like hell. A place where each can do just as he will And win the battle of the pulse and pill. Proteus mirabilis B7 INTERNSHIP PLACEMENTS Ackley, Alexander MCF., Jr. Medicine Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Albanese, Helen G. Rotating Mountainside Hospital Montclair, N.J. Albanese, Richard A. Rotating Mountainside Hospital Montclair, N.J. Albright, Nile L. Surgery Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Allison, Ronald C. Surgery Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital Center Palo Alto, Calif. Andrews, William B. Pediatrics Children's Medical Center University of Washington Seattle, Wash. Balch, Charles M. Surgery Duke Hospital Durham, N.C. Ballo, Joseph M. Pathology Boston City Hospital Mallory Institute of Pathology Boston, Mass. Banyard, Richard D. Rotating Greenwich Hospital Greenwich, Conn. Belcher, Jonathan K. Rotating San Diego County-University Hospital San Diego, Calif. Berger, Walter E., III Medicine H. C. Moffitt'University of California Hospitals San Francisco, Calif. Biles, James D., III Surgery Charity Hospital of Louisiana Tulane University Division New Orleans, La. Blabey, Robert G., Jr. Surgery Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Bowen, John C., III Surgery University Hospitals of Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio Bragg, Franklin E., II Medicine Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Brensilver, Howard L. Medicine New England Medical Center Hospitals Boston, Mass. Brewster, David C. Surgery Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Mass. Briley, John M., Jr. Pediatrics Boston City Hospital Boston University Division Boston, Mass. Christensen, Roger P. Medicine University of Colorado Medical Center Denver, Colo. Christensen, Thomas B. Medicine King County Hospital Seattle, Wash. Clark, Preston R., Jr. Rotating Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, N.H. Clark, Robert A. Medicine University of Washington Hospitals Seattle, Wash. Cohen, Bemard H. Medicine Emory University Hospital Atlanta, Ga. Cohen, Myles J. Surgery University of Califomia Hospital Los Angeles, Calif. Curci, Michael R. Surgery Yale-New Haven Medical Center New Haven, Conn. DeAngelis, Roger T. Surgery St. Luke's Hospital New York, N.Y. Drew, Michael A. Surgery University of Colorado Medical Center Denver, Colo. Feibel, John H. Surgery Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, N.Y. Finkelstein, Fredric O. Medicine Bellevue Hospital Center Columbia Ist Medical Division New York, N.Y. . Fleming, Thomas C. Rotating Bemalillo County-Indian Hospital University of New Mexico Albuquerque, N.M. Follows, John W., Jr. Rotating Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, N.H. Frank, Richard Surgery Mount Sinai Hospital New York, N.Y. Fu, Karen K.-W. Rotating Montreal General Hospital Montreal, Quebec, Canada Gaines, John E. Medicine Bellevue Hospital Center Columbia Ist Medical Division New York, N.Y. Garnett, Daniel J. Surgery King County Hospital Seattle, Wash. Garrell, Stephen L. Medicine Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital Cleveland, Ohio Gerber, Marcia G. Medicine State University-Kings County Medical Center Brooklyn, N.Y. German, Harold Rotating Lenox Hill Hospital New York, N.Y. Gise, Frederick M. Medicine Mount Sinai Hospital New York, N.Y. Gise, Leslie H. Medicine Mount Sinai Hospital New York, N.Y. Glen, Dulaney Medicine St. Luke's Hospital New York, N.Y. Greenberger, Robert A. Rotating Los Angeles County Harbor General Hospital Torrance, Calif. Grossman, Robert A. Medicine Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. Hamlin, Charles Surgery Roosevelt Hospital New York, N.Y. Heilbrunn, Emst Rotating Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center New York, N.Y. Hodge, Charles J., Jr. Surgery Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Holschuh, Frederick C. Rotating Queen's Hospital Honolulu, Hawaii Howland, John S. Rotating Mary Fletcher Hospital Burlington, Vt. Hurd, Richard A., Jr. Surgery Emory University Hospital Atlanta, Ga. Imbembo, Anthony L. Surgery Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Mass. Johnson, William G. Medicine New York Hospital New York, N.Y. Johnston, Bruce C. Medicine St. Luke's Hospital New York, N.Y. Jones, R. DeWitt S. Rotating Queen's Hospital Honolulu, Hawaii Jones, T. Stephen, Jr. Medicine Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital Center Palo Alto, Calif. Kaiser, Carol A. Medicine Bellevue Hospital Center Columbia Ist Medical Division New York, N.Y. Killehrew, Kate Medicine University of Washington Hospitals Seattle, Wash. Kirschberg, Gordon J. Rotating Royal Victoria Hospital Montreal, Quebec, Canada Knapp, Robert V. Rotating San Diego County-University Hospital San Diego, Calif. Kolman, Benet S. Medicine University of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Va. Kuster, Gordon I. Medicine Bellevue Hospital Center Columbia lst Medical Division New York, N.Y. Lee, VVilliam M. Medicine Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Levy, Nelson L. Surgery University of Colorado Medical Center Denver, Colo. MacFarland, Joseph A. Medicine University Hospital Ann Arbor, Michigan Maclder, Richard J. Medicine Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, N.Y. McKane, Douglas D. Surgery St. Luke-'s Hospital New York, N.Y. McNamara, Thomas E. Surgery St. Vincent's Hospital New York, N.Y. Merwin, Grier H. Surgery University of Chicago Hospitals and Clinics Chicago, Ill. Milic, Ann B. Fellowship in Ob-Gyn Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Miller, Edward J. Medicine Buffalo General Hospital Buffalo, N.Y. Morgan, Alexander C. Medicine Cambridge City Hospital Cambridge, Mass. Myers, Robert P. Medicine Vanderbilt University Hospital Nashville, Tenn. Nakano, Kenneth K. Rotating Queen's Hospital Honolulu, Hawaii Noel, Gordon L. Medicine University of Chicago Hospitals and Clinics Chicago, Ill. Novak, Stanley F. Pediatrics Strong Memorial Hospital of the University of Rochester Rochester, N.Y. Novalis, George S. Rotating Greenwich Hospital Greenwich, Conn. Olcott. Comelius, IV Surgery H. C. Mofiitt-University of Califomia Hospitals San Francisco, Calif. Olds. David D. Medicine St. Luke's Hospital New York, N.Y. at Penner, Daniel B, Medicine State University of New York Upstate Medical Center Syracuse, N.Y. Perry, Samuel XV., III Rotating Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, N.Y. Petito, Frank A., jr. M New York Hospital New York, N.Y. edicine Pieri, Carolyn M, Pediatrics Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia Pollack, Arthur C. Surgery Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Raabe. Daniel S., Ir. Medicine University Hospital Ann Arbor, Michigan Rodvien, Robert Medicine New England Medical Boston, Mass. Center Rohrlich, jay B. Medicine Lon Island College H Brooizlyn, N.Y. ospital Rosefsky, Quinn B. Medicine Health Center Hospitals of the University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pa. Rosen, Marvin Pediatrics Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, N.Y. Rosenblum, Gerald S. Medicine Presbyterian-St. Luke's Chicago, Ill. Hospital Russell, Robert M. Medicine University of Chicago and Clinics Chica o Ill Hospitals g , - Scheinhom, David I. Medicine University Hospital Ann Arbor, Michigan Hospitals Schmidt. Paula A, Pediatrics New England Medical Center Hospitals Boston, Mass. Schneider, Richard P. Medicine Grady Memorial Hospital Atlanta, Ga. Schneier, Harvey A, Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, N.C. Sellner, Henry A. Medicine University Hospitals of Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio Sherman, Stanley Surgery St. Vincent's Hospital New York, N.Y. Shukovsky. Leonard I. Rotating Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Silverstein, Fred E. Rotating King County Hospital Seattle, XVash. Sloane, Robert E. Surgery Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Mass, Spier, Roger D, Surgery Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, N.Y. Srinivasan, Balachandran D. Rotating Queen's Hospital Honolulu, Hawaii Srodes, Charles H, Medicine Duke Hospital Durham, N.C. Stein, Sherman C. Rotating Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Stookey. Robert A, Ob-Gyn Strong Memorial Hospital of the University of Rochester Rochester, N.Y. SUMMARY OF SPECIALTIES Medicine - 48 Neurology - 3 Adelphi - 1 Surgery - 30 Radiology - 3 Alfred - 1 Pediatrics - 7 Urology - 2 Amherst - 4 Psychiatry - 7 Dermatology - 1 Bard - 1 Orthopedics - 5 Neurosurgery - 1 Bamard - 1 Ob-Gyn - 4 Pathology - 1 Bates - 1 Ophthalmology - 4 Total - 116 Bowdoin - 1 Bryn Mawr - 2 Califomia - 1 CCNY - 2 Colgate - 1 Columbia - 14 Comell - 2 Dartmouth - 2 Davidson - 1 Duke - 1 Emory - 2 Grinnell - 2 Hamilton - 2 SUMMARY OF INTERNSHIPS Harvard - 11 Hobart - 2 Medicine - 49 Pediatrics - 6 johns Hopkins Surgery - 30 Ob-Cyn - 1 Kenyon - 1 Rotating - 28 Pathology - 1 Lafayette - 1 Sweeney, james G. Surgery Charity Hospital of Louisiana Tulane University Division New Orleans, La. Tavernetti, Richard R. Surgery Los Angeles County Harbor General Hospital Torrance, Calif, Tillisch, jan H. Medicine University of California Hospital Los Angeles, Calif. Tracht, Diane G. Rotating St. Vincent's Hospital New York, N.Y. Violin. George A. Medicine Mount Sinai Hospital New York, N.Y. WVaskell, Lucy A. Rotating San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, Calif. Wenglin, Barry D. Medicine University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas City, Kansas Wilson. James R. Rotating Greenwich Hospital Greenwich, Conn. Winickoil, Richard N. Medicine Presbyterian Hospital New York, N.Y. Winner, Samuel D. Surgery St. Luke's Hospital New York, N.Y. Winslow, Richard L. Medicine Bellevue Hospital Center Columbia 1st Medical Division New York, N.Y. Wiseley, Sally F. Rotating University of Kentucky Medical Center Lexington, Ky. Wohlauer, Peter F. Rotating Greenwich Hospital Greenwich, Conn. SUMMARY OF UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGES Manhattan - 3 MIT - 1 McGill - 1 NYU - 1 Oberlin - 1 Pennsylvania - 2 Penn State - 1 Pomona - 1 Princeton - 15 Radcliffe - 1 Rensselaer - 1 Rutgers - 1 Stanford - 1 Swarthmore - 1 Syracuse - 1 Toledo - 1 Trinity - 1 Tufts - 1 Vassar - 1 Wesleyan - 2 Wilkes - 1 Williams - 1 Yale - 16 Total - 116 89 'Q 'rf . ji - -.. ,fig M. 5 f 'f NVE K. .l 'jfs 4- f'f '?-:iii 1 H'-nl .7 . J -A, nw,--vu, Tia . 35251: 75-' in ' The Flower Man The Blz Qard of 67 The P 81 S Club Seventy-three years ago the PSS Club had its inception at the College of Physicians and Sur- geons. The fact that its founder, John R. Mott, was later awarded the Nobel Peace Prize may well have presaged a distinguished history for the most enduring of student organizations in the annals of American medical colleges. Mott, who was then the National Student Secretary for the YMCA. named the organization The Young Mens Christian Association at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The 1910 annual report shows that the name had become the PGS Association by that year, and Dr. Ralph Socleman who was the Executive Secretary in 1911-12 tells us that the P618 Club had adopted its permanent name by his first year of service. The Clubs early activities revolved around a house on 57th Street which was purchased with contributed funds. lt contained a library. a student eating club. meeting rooms, and up- stairs accommodations where sixteen students roomed. Early reports tell of guest speaker pro- grams, discussion groups, Bible study. a student band. and student projects such as free medical examinations for Boy Scouts and a rooming advisory service which found good rooms for new students. The P615 Club was to outgrow its quarters two times in its earlier years, and achieve some of its best known services before coming to VVashington Heights. Notable among these was the raising of funds to purchase a steam launch in 1917. The craft was delivered in the spring and used for picnics on the Hudson, but in May it was loaded aboard an ocean steamer bound for Labrador. With it went two fourth year PSZS Club members who delivered the launch to the famed Labrador physician, Sir XVilliam Gren- fell. The boat was used by the Grenfell mission to take medical services to the Eskimo and Indian Hshermen on isolated islands along the Labrador coast. In succeeding summers other PGS seniors returned to man the P615 Club launch in its missions of mercy along the Labra- dor coast. Today the P615 Club ranks as the most active and comprehensive student activity organiza- tion in American medical education. Believed Q1 , 33: V l I EDWIN M. BARTON Director of Student Activities of the responsibility of building services by the existence of Bard Hall as a residence and student activity center, the P615 Club directs itself to the fostering of an extra-curricular program that helps make the years of undergraduate medical school a period of personal growth and enjoy- ment. lt is student led and faculty advised, with the major part of its administrative work load borne by its staff of director and office secretary. Last year almost three hundred scheduled events were held. with just under fifteen thousand attendants and participants. not including ath- letic contests. Some of its projects are routine. a few are courageous-but its overall goal is to keep its members attuned to worthy goals of service and wholesome development of the highest order. Edwin NI. Barton CPMC Builds Vi ll llnlf 40 Xb. 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I u 'llll lllll lllll Notes on the History of the College of Physicians and Surgeons on the Occasion of its Bicentennial The College of Physicians and Surgeons traces its origins to prerevolutionary times and the story of its founding is closely tied to the con- temporary medical education in colonial New York. In the mid-eighteenth century the colonies had no medical schools. A lad desiring to become a physician could apprentice himself to an estab- lished practitioner at as early an age as fifteen. During an apprenticeship lasting from two to seven years he would be taught to prepare pre- scriptions, to bleed and cup, and gradually be led into active participation in the care of patients. Yet the number of skilled practitioners did not match the need for their services. As one colonial historian wrote: few physicians amongst us are eminent for their skill. Quacks abound like the locusts in Egypt. Yet among these few were a number of excellent physicians, eminent both in their skill and their training. For many American physicians had spent years studying at the great European centers of med- ical learning such as Edinburgh, London, and Leyden. It was among this group of men that the need for a colonial medical school was clearly realized. Shortly after the founding of King's College in New York in 1754 efforts were made to start a medical school in conjunction with it. The Cov- emors of the College were reluctant to act, however, and it was only in 1767 that the King's College Medical School, the forerunner of PGS, was founded, the first medical school in New York and the second in America. The faculty were among the outstanding colonial practitioners of medicine and surgery. Samuel Bard, who had graduated from Edin- burgh with highest honors, was professor of the Theory and Practice of Physick. He was later to become president of PGS. Iohn jones, also a graduate of Edinburgh who had . studied as well in London and Paris, was Professor of Surgery. He wrote early works on military surgery, performed the first lithotomy in New York City, and cared for Benjamin Franklin and George YVashington. Samuel Clossy, a graduate of Trinity College in Dublin, was Professor of Anatomy. He had lectured in anatomy since 1763 at King's College in New York and was among the few practitioners of his time to have had extensive experience in clinico-pathological cor- relation. Peter Middleton. a graduate of St. Andrews in Scotland, was professor of Path- ology and Physiology. In 1750 he had injected the blood vessels and performed the first anat- omic dissections for medical instruction in the colonies. james Smith, a graduate of Leyden, was Professor of Chemistry and Materia Medica. John Tennent, who had studied at Princeton and taken his medical degree at Edinburgh, held the Professorship of Midwifery, the first such chair in this country. The professors received no salary, but were paid fees by the students attending their courses. Admission requirements, course of study, and examinations were closely modelled after those of the European universities. For admission a student needed either a Bachelor of Arts degree or proof by examination of complete knowledge of Latin and of certain branches of Natural Philosophy. The course of study for the bache- lor's degree in medicine was two years for those The College of Physicians and Surgeons at 18 Robinson Street, New York City 718082 x. 144 E Ilxfn galil 4. -' J ,VFVUF 'Qzfl 2'- ' 'WFf ' V5 '. J at .41 ' 1 eg - -' - ,f I 2 it 'V ' ff- , 2.17 Q' EJ: V7 11 A ' ,1- fi if J W U 1 ' ' ' if ' 7-1' .:.:.,4..f. 1 il-1 ' 1h E571 L.--l ,iz -- A s -5 .5 -H' il-4 i ft' l - 'nf' e -' 1- 1 :...L '..... -T,,f'1.'?? -ji' fdfyx . N qY':!i at W e 3- f ,r g-f i- in rn .'1?Tr 1: H- ll Y 1' '-..3 .',:.' ,'-, i mi l 5UlE1I'f--f in 1, s 9 .gfqfivigrrlre 1 E- 'ft fliii f' M, , i . .7 -ATI I-E-bfi-5.'yj - I ' ' ' Y t'-2---',' ' ' 1 - -- --1-A,-rs. who had previously been apprenticed to a reputable physician, or three years otherwise. The M.D. degree was obtainable after one fur- ther year provided the student had faithfully attended two courses under each professor, pub- licly defended a medical thesis, and attained the age of 22 years. Three students were ad- mitted in the first year of the medical school, 1767, and in 1769 the Bachelor of Medicine degree was conferred on two students, Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam. The following year Tucker was granted the M.D. degree, the first doctorate of medicine to be conferred in this country. Thus King's College Medical School was from its inception, as Dr. Byron Stookey points out, a medical school in the full sense of that term. The Medical School of the College of Philadelphia f later University of Pennsyl- vaniaj, though it opened its doors two years earlier, could boast a faculty of only two young men, both recent graduates with little clinical experienceg it made no requirements for admis- sion and its curriculum fell far short of the medical educational standards of the day. From 1770 to the outbreak of hostilities in 1776 a total of twelve M.D. degrees were con- ferred by the medical school of King's College. The Revolution of 1776 or the Rebellion as some preferred to call it, was a disaster for the col- lege. This was due in part to the Loyalist sympathies of some of the faculty and in part to the British occupation of New York City. In any event, faculty and students scattered to serve on the side of their choice. The year 1784 saw revival of the medical school and a change in the name from King's College to Columbia College. The reconstituted faculty consisted of five professors, Samuel Bard, now Professor of Chemistry, being the only member of the original teaching staff of 1767. The school prospered for some years, but soon insufficient funds and reorganizational difficul- ties caused a period of decline. It was during this period that the New York County Nledical Society was organized and a charter obtained in 1807 incorporating the Society as a College of Physicians and Surgeons. The College was a success from the start under the presidency of Xicholas Romayne, the first American to bc honored by election to the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. Fifty-three students matriculated at PRS in its first year, 76 in 1808. and 82 in 1809. Eight students received degrees at its first commencement in 1811. The annual session was four months in duration. Lectures were given in a house on Robinson Street Know Park Placej and clinical instruction was carried out at the New York Hospital and the Alms- TWUJHN. '94 P i 4 IPM- G35 I 7 - -- --.,-45 es. 25: -. - I- - ' - 1 oIIrj 1'HfIIllI.YII'f1IH.S'flIIlfgIlI'f'lUI1SllI3 Burc'Iu11S 1 ISI ? I ?7l house Cnow Bellevuej. Meanwhile medical in struction at Columbia College was suspended and in 1813 the medical faculty of Columbia merged with P615 Among the most outstanding of the PAS faculty of those years was Valentine Mott, the greatest American surgeon of his time. He made it a rule nex er to operate unless he would choose e operation for himself were he the patient is the first on record to hgate successfully e innominate and common carotid arteries for aneurvsml and he repaired harelip deformities with remarkable success. The Valentine Mott Professorship of Surgery xx as established at PGS in 1931 in his honor Bv the early part of the nineteenth centurv New York City s population had grown to S0 000 And bv 1837 when PSS moved from its location at 3 Barclay Street to 67 Crosby Street enroll ment had passed 200. A new method of select ing professors was established whereby they were tried outi' as lecturers for one session be fore appointment. Another advance in medical education was the establishment bv XVillard Parker in 1841 of the College Clinic where out patients were brought to the college for exami nation and treatment in front of the classes Parker, a Professor of Surgery, also became the first to incise and drain an abscessed appendix in 1848. In 1860 PRS officially became a part of Colum- bia College with which it had long been asso- ciated. and in 1891 the union was legalized when Columbia became a university. The alumni of the college first joined together in 1859 forming ' i V' -5 - LQ- .5?3tfJirgf.2if.-7 ' wig, ' wg 'V -...rj A PLY 1 ' AT r 1 i I r v fl .' iffgg Q, ,I 'X '- 1 .13, 1 -- a . ' 1 :Z ' A 'i yY ,, l i. .. ,,,- R- - - '- 1, ' 1 ' 3 -M 'T w ii 'Ll' iff .-if vi I .lt ' . ' -' H 41' .11 iijllimt ..i i1 mllmWl. ii lllliii.'IllllIlillliiE it iii. 1 1 ' f'fi.'. fQ,.'I, . , il k ,..,. lf il 7 , - , . ,, . . .' . - 8. th ' ' Q ' . He ' ' ' ' th ' ' - ' ' t -s wr- 1:- R ET? wg-,IT 1533111 I an WIN 1'-J 1 'L-o S' U11-lb-L-Q fp l fi N -35,3'-':::- 'ffe-A: ' . .- f - - - -1- --fx 7 1' gi.---, 1 j 11 q iig- B.-.T-Waz'-.ir-:'5 ' -v. 16' -3' l 1'3 i .. . .1 1 ig 1 Tri --It-..f L , Q ,M fl L'j .9',f':' 1 I ul -. 11, 7 X . -' Y-,li law? 4 gvT-'4'1L.l,+ i1 -. . 'lr .v,'.', . 1 4 Q' '- ' -- .- -- ' J ' ' - 5 ' .. ef- ff? . - '-:f a'x,u, 4- ..'. N .I H H .L 1. - , ff-1' r --' 2 ,- ifzl -A fi A, ' fr ' - 2221-L: :'T 7 -1 . 711. -Q-Q.--13 245114 12- 7- are a ll -f ,,1.-. 4-El ' ' '- . ' g'f'e ' ' ' mf- rr 'P leg 1' Bllflllliltf on lfourllr :1L't'I1Ilt' and 23111 Slrw! 4 IS56-fRN7l the Alumni Association. The Association was incorporated in 1873 as a group to promote the interests of PGS in the work of medical educa- tion and the cultivation of social intercourse among the alumni. In that same year funds were raised to establish a professorial chair and build laboratories. During these years the college term was lengthened to seven months. In 1884 1Villiam H. Vanderbilt gave P615 the largest gift ever made to an American medical school, observing that the health, comfort, and lives of the whole community are so dependent upon skilled physicians that no profession re- quires more care in the preparation of its prac- titioners. P6zS soon moved from its Fourth Avenue and 23rd Street location to its new land on 59th and 60th Streets between Ninth and Tenth Avenue, and two years later Vanderbilt's four sons made possible the building of the Vanderbilt Clinic for outpatients. By 1901 Van- derbilt Clinic was treating 42.000 patients an- nually. In 1888 the academic term was lengthened to eight months and graduation theses were abolished. The student body had grown enor- mouslyg by 1876 there were some 500 students, by 1886 more than 600, and by 1887. 809. How- ever, admissions standards were raised in 1903 so that enrollment had dropped to 550 in 1904 and 428 in 1905. It has remained at about that level ever since. An important innovation in instruction of this period was the institution of two month clinical clerkships for fourth year students at various hospitals around the city. 1917 was an important year for it saw admission of women to the faculty and student body for the first time. It had long been apparent that the college required a large modern hospital for effective instruction in clinical medicine. First steps were taken in this direction by Dean Samuel Lambert in 1910 when he instituted a close alliance be- tween PSQS and Presbyterian Hospital. But it remained for his successor, Dean XVilliam Dar- rach to lay plans and raise funds for the Colum- bia Presbyterian Medical Center which has become the most recent home of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The Medical Center opened its doors officially in 1927. The Pres- byterian Hospital, the College, Sloane Hospital. Vanderbilt Clinic, Babies Hospital, Harkness Pavillion, the Neurological Institute, and the Psychiatric Institute were completed on land which was the gift of Edward S. Harkness. Two years later Harkness gave the college a medical residence which was named Bard Hall after Samuel Bard, the second president of PGS. The College of Physicians and Surgeons has made much progress as a part of the Medical Center. Among the many PGS contributions to healing the sick and advancing medical knowl- edge have been Dr. Robert F. Loeb's work on Addison's disease. Dr. Michael Heidelbergers work with the organisms of pneumonia, Dr. Frederick Cayls research on leprosy, the intro- duction of radioisotopes in the study of inter- mediary metaholism, the development of quan- titative immunochemistry. the first clinical use of vitamin B-12, the discovery of bacitracin, the development of the portacaval shunt in the treatment of cirrhosis, the chemical recognition of pheochromocytoma, and the first successful resection of the head of the pancreas for car- cinoma. Improvements in the teaching of medi- cine continue to be made, such as the institution in 1946 of the Group Clinic for outpatients as a part of the fourth year teaching program. As PGS looks back on 200 years of successful teaching of medicine, there are no signs of slowing down. In fact, P618 now finds itself in the midst of its greatest building program since the construction of the Medical Center. Those of us who leave now to become Doctors of Medicine can remain confident that PSIS will continue to be, as it has been for 200 years. a strong and respected institution for the effective instruction of young men and women in the art and science of clinical medicine. XYilliam C. johnson Art Show P 8 CWI? R Ny. EW- tfff ' ra,,. Ls. A' -Q - 4 - 1 2.1 I BELV 1 fUl 'g WL- , I A I 'N' ' Q I ax ' ' Y . ' HL PAINTlM'..f, fi, SQULPTQTT ' QNX! HRT PK ' exams mom 1 , , ENTRY Pom mmm - -1 QONTEST Quai: PM l U '- A HQ ART FESTEXJAL Screen in Silhmzeffe by Robert Myers THREE PENNY OPERA E.. 5 fl '. kin 'WYE .W-rr ba UR 99 J W QA XV 1 W r I I -- 117 ' X m r N H , lk .210 A ,fy L I X , 4 r ,fuw We I rrfmd F'i4 , 4'9 Q My 2 W IIIM X i, v 1 xff ,M I ' T in x ' ,f , X W 'Luv' X A xxx ' ' 5 xi - ri J if 5, 5 1 JF' A -: ' 1 U f S WM J f fk aff. 'f 'iif , ,- --pu xf ' ' ng XQ A Short History of Bellevue Hospital It is fortunate, gentlemen, that here at the Bellevue and Almshouse Establishments you will never lack of cases of every form and type of disorder, . . . New York is not only the city of excess in taxation, but she is the place of the ample provision for the acquisition of knowledge in almost every department of human pur- suit. tjohn Wakefield Francis, Consulting Physician, Bellevue Hospital, 1847-18617. Bellevue is the third oldest hospital in the United States, it is also the home of the oldest and one of the most illustrious medical traditions in this country. In its now ancient buildings have trained students and house staffs for 160 years. And for 230 years an extra- ordinary succession of great medical practitioners, teachers, and scientists has worked within its wards and laboratories. A hospital to care for the destitute ill was estab- lished as early as 1658 in Dutch Colonial New Amster- dam, but the new colony quickly outgrew it, and a series of odd buildings was subsequently used. It was not until 1734 that the settlement., then under British control, finally provided an infirmary-a decision which was necessitated by an epidemic of smallpox which laid terrible waste to the 8600 people then living on the southern tip of Manhattan. In 1736 the six bed hospital which ultimately became Bellevue was opened in a second floor room of the new Publick Workhouse and House of Correction, under the direction of its first visiting physician, Dr. john van Beuran. Medicine in colonial New York was largely a hap- hazard affair. There were neither professional nor royal restrictions on practice, and chirurgeons, barber-sur- geons, bone setters, charlatans, and quacks were free to treat illness according to their own bias. In the colony itself water was drawn from wells lying beside the open sewers that ran among the houses carrying every form of waste to the rivers. Pigs rooted in the mud of Broadway. Epidemics of smallpox, typhus, cholera, and yellow fever seemed to begin with every new boatload of arrivals from Europe or the Indies and spread without hindrance among the tiny houses crowded along the waterfront. The little inHrmary in the workhouse was quickly overfilled with as many as 300 patients and the grounds around it-now the site of New York's City Hall-filled with additions and outbuildings. Following the Revolu- tion the number of poor in the city increased enor- mously and among them the repeated storms of yellow fever which struck the city in the 1790's were par- ticularly fatal. ln 1794 it was decided to isolate the victims of the epidemic from the rest of the population by extending the facilities of the hospital to a large farm at Kip's Bay on the East River, a place known as Belle View. By lSl2 the need for a larger hospital to replace the original infirmary and fever hospital at Belle View was finally recognized and in 1816 the new Bellevue was opened adjacent to the latter. The Bellevue Estab- lishment, as it was called, was not only a hospital, but a jail, an almshouse, and a school for the poor as well. Within the buildings which stood until the beginning of this century the hospital services gradually replaced the others. It was at about this time that the new Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons and the older Columbia tformerly King's Collegel Medical School merged. One of the first professors of the combined schools was Dr. David Hosack. Visiting physician at Bellevue, daring surgeon. outstanding physician of such citizens as Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton., botanist of international standing, Hosack was probably the greatest practitioner in early 19th century New York. Among Hosack's associates at P8rS and Bellevue were Iohn Yllakefield Francis fthe first graduate of the Col- lege. in 1811! and Valentine Mott Cwho took his M.D. at Columbia in 18061. Francis and Mott initiated clini- cal lectures at Bellevue in 1849, the beginning of large- scale public medical education in the institution. The events which led up to this are revealing of a pattcm which has recurred many times at Bellevue: gradual disorganization resulting from political mismanagement and medical neglect, terminated and reversed with the emergence of a strong willed, dynamic medical leader. In this instance the disorganization increased between 1832 and 1847 as a result of the political corruption of the City Council known then as the Forty Thieves , plundering by the hospital stewards, and several catas- trophic epidemics of cholera and typhus. And the leader who appeared to force a repair of these conditions was jimmy Wood, a 35 year old surgeon who established a despotism at the hospital, fought City Hall on its own harsh terms, and founded Bellevue's traditi0n 35 2 teaching hospital. He created a Board of visiting physi- cians and surgeons from the best practitioners and teachers in New York-such men as Mott, Francis, Alonzo Clark, the obstetrician, and YVillard Parker, the surgeon. He had an amphitheatre built to accommodate the clinical teaching program and opened Bellevue to all students of medicine, he replaced the political ap- pointment of interns by a system of competitive exami- nations which drew such young doctors as YVilliam Henry Welch, William Stewart Halsted, and YVilliam Crawford Corgas who conquered yellow fever and malaria in Panama. As effective a surgeon as an admin- istrator, jimmy Wood once resected an entire mandible leaving behind the periosteum from which a new bone regenerated within a few weeks. He devised his own treatment of tic douloureux by removing the trigeminal ganglion. He pushed through the state legislature the first law to legalize the dissection of unclaimed bodies. He was one of the founders of the Bellevue Medical College, which later became New York University School of Medicine. VVhat Jimmy IVood was to the evolution of Bellevue as a world famed teaching hospital, his contemporary Dr. Stephen Smith was to the emergence of an aware- ness of public health and sanitation in New York City. Dr. Smith interned at Bellevue under IVood and for two years he directed the typhus hospital on Blackwell's Know Welfarel Island. He formed the Sanitary Associa- tion and with the help of Peter Cooper, John Jacob Astor, and other leading citizens he launched an attack on City Hall and the Tweed Ring to improve the city's streets, sewers, water supply, and tenements. By 1866 he had pushed through New York's first Metropolitan Health Law and was appointed the city's first health commissioner, he had the politically appointed health inspectors tone of whom defined hygiene as the vapor which rises from stagnant water l replaced with trained workers. he ripped out filthy public markets by moon- light when their scoliing owners were drunk or asleep, he pressed for mass smallpox vaccination, and he placed the Blackwell's Island epidemic hospital under the care of the Sisters of Charity. replacing the ten-day drunks. These were women who were serving jail terms for bad conduct of one sort or another-rarely very charitable to the ill and never trained-who until that time had provided most of the nursing care at Bellevue and on the island. Though Commissioner of Health until 1875, Smith still carried a full time teaching and operating schedule at Bellevue and was a pioneer in the aseptic surgical technique of Lister. Beyond this he helped to organize Roosevelt and Johns Hopkins hospitals. With the passing of the Civil War one more innova- tion appeared at Bellevue. Dr. Edward Dalton, just re- turned from the war, introduced the first ambulance service in the world with two sombre black carriages each with its own driver. surgeon, and supply of medi- cal equipment. The post-war period saw the organiza- tion of Bellevue into four medical and three surgical services for indwelling patients, and the formation of the first outpatient service in America. the Bureau of Medical and Surgical Relief for the Outdoor Poor. As part of the outpatient department the childrens clinic was formed by Stephen Sn1ith's brother. Dr. J. Lewis Smith, and Dr. Abraham Jacobi who together originated the specialty of pediatrics in the United States with this clinic. Two other great medical figures at Bellevue in the lSGO's were Dr. Lewis Sayre, founder of orthopedic surgery at Bellevue. whose operative and mechanical .E x Operating amplzitheatrc at Bellerue, about 1885. innovations were legendary, and Dr. Edward Janeway. The latter was a pathologist, anatomist, and physician of the first order. Alert and intense, he brought back from his European studies a conviction that most of the drugs then in use were useless or actually harmful, and in his time most of them did drop from common use. Though his practice was immense he charged the rich and the poor the same small fees and frequently, to Mrs. janeway's domestic distress, failed to charge any- thing at all. The condition of my patients is of first importance. The condition of my pocketbook is as Cod wills it, he told his students. The closing years of the 19th century were extra- ordinary ones for Bellevue for although the buildings were in great need of repair and enlargement. and in spite of the chronic shortage of money, the talent that had accumulated under jimmy YVood's guidance had begun to flower. This was the age of microbiology, of pathology, and of surgery under anesthesia. At Bellevue it was the age of tVelch, of Biggs, and of Halsted. XVilliam Henry XVelch was a graduate of Yale College and P815 and in 1876 he became an intem at Bellevue. There he met the pathologist Francis Delafield and fomied an interest in pathology. Subsequently he spent two years in Europe studying pathology and bacteriology before retuming to Bellevue where he set up the first laboratory course in pathology in an American medical school in a few tiny rooms beneath a stairway. WVhen Koch discovered the tubercle bacillus in Europe, Welch was soon demonstrating it to his students and colleagues at Bellevue. His success as a demonstrator in anatomy and pathology led to the Chair of Pathological Anatomy at Bellevue Medical School-and a similar offer from PGS, but no salary! Welch who had been desperately poor during all of his years at Bellevue and had had to teach cram courses on the side in order to live, could no longer endure the political complications and lack of freedom to pursue research at Bellevue and in 1885 he accepted the chair of pathology at Johns Hopkins where he gathered about him a faculty of young men who were soon to be famous: Osler. Cushing. Council- man, I-Ialsted. Kelly. Halsted. like S1'elch, was trained at P615 and Belle- vue. During his early surgical career at Bellevue he grew to have a reputation as an aloof, austere perfec- tionist. a surgeon who labored hours over the simplest operations. whose techniques became standards of sur- gical excellence. 1Vhen Halstcd was appointed visiting surgeon at Bellevue in 1883 he refused to operate in the antiquated surgical amphitheatre and asked the City to provide him with a new operating room. Failing at this, he installed a great outdoor tent, well ventilated and lighted at a personal expense of S10,000: he was not a man who gave in to obstruction easily. Halsted's in- terest in cocaine as a local anesthetic. which he was the Hrst in America to use, was very nearly his undoing for through his experimentation on himself with the drug he discovered its addicting properties. His phenomenal surgical prowess and his self confidence rapidly dwind- led: hc suffered several breakdowns and had to leave the city. Finally. a shattered, stooped. shy man, he was asked by YVelch, an old friend, to ioin the faculty at Johns Hopkins. lt was YVelch's humanity and compassion that saved Halsted. for though he never escaped his addiction entirely, his genius, skill, and confidence gradually returned. One of Welch's most influential students in the little classroom beneath the stairs in the old Bellevue was Herman Biggs, the man who proved spitting unsanitary as well as impolite. In 1885, when Welch left for johns Hopkins, Biggs took over his laboratory and soon be- came chief of the new Carnegie Laboratory, the first laboratory for research in pathology to be built in America. During this period when epidemics of cholera were assailing the world, Biggs proved by culture sus- pected cases arriving by ship from Europe, preventing spread of the disease through the city. Shonly after- wards a quarantine station was established by the City Health Department at Biggs' instigation. In 1889 Biggs and H. P. Loomis at Bellevue and T. Mitchell Pmdden at PGS wrote a report which concluded that tuberculosis was a preventable, acquired disease-contrary to the suppositions of the medical profession-spread by in- halation of sputum droplets and ingested with milk and meat: this was the beginning of a long campaign of public education, sanitation and isolation of cases which Biggs carried on throughout his life. The culmination of this effort came in 1906 when Biggs and Prudden con- vinced the health department to make reporting of cases of tuberculosis compulsory. Biggs' other major accom- plishment in the field of public health was the diagnosis of diphtheria by culture and the development of an anti- toxin successful against established cases of diphtheria. With the beginning of the 20th century came another of the periodic upheavals at Bellevue. The hospital was desperately overcrowded and the buildings were over 85 years old. The plumbing leaked, electric wires-a late 19th century afterthought-were draped randomly be- tween buildings, rumors were daily spawned in the city about the misery and brutality of the insane pavillion. Forty-three interns were packed into sixteen rooms. The conditions in the prison ward were execrable. At long last Bellevue's administration was removed from the Department of Charities and Correction and given to an independent board of trustees whose report on the con- ditions at Bellevue had one immediate result: funds were provided for a new Bellevue. Dr. Alexander Lambert was the new medical chief and his staff included Drs. Austin Flint, Francis Delafield, Edward Janeway, and Abraham Jacobi: the surgeons were Drs. Frederick Dennis and George Stewart. A psychologist and neurolo- gist were appointed to each division. It was at this time, too, that the Bellevue Nursing School-the first training school for nurses in America, inspired by Florence Nightingale-was made a part of New York University. One of the young members of Dr. Lambert's staff in 1903 was a PGS graduate named James Alexander Miller. Inspired by Biggs he developed a deep interest in Bellevue's tuberculosis patients, at a time when 10,000 people a year were dying of the disease he organized the formerly neglected tuberculosis patients into an independent service under Columbia's auspices, had all tuberculosis patients transferred to the service, founded an outpatient clinic, had an old ferryboat moored in the East River beside Bellevue to provide a fresh air day camp, and from some source provided his patients with an adequate diet. At first Miller virtually had to beg for funds to pay for these innovations, but in 1926 he obtained the support of Mayor Iimmy WValker, whose brother he had treated for TB, and for the first time the tuberculosis service received money from the city budget. When in 1938 the chest service got its own modern building, it had become a world center in tuber- culosis research and teaching, a status which it has held to this day. In 1912 Dr. Lambert set up one of the country's first electrocardiographs at Bellevue and in 1914 he estab- lished in the outpatient department a cardiac clinic, a prototype of many similar clinics formed around the Cvuntry. In 1909 a young Bellevue clinician named Warren Coleman revolutionized the treatment of typhoid fever by feeding rather than starving his patientsg he demonstrated that the starvation and not the fever ac- counted for a large proportion of those dying from the disease. More important his experiment raised questions about the role of metabolism in disease. Within a few years the great Comell physiologist Graham Lusk, Dr. Eugene F. DuBois, a pathologist at Presbyterian Hos- pital, and Dr. Coleman had joined together in a labora- tory adjacent to a Bellevue ward and were experiment- ing with their respiration calorimeter -now preserved at the Smithsonian Institute. Here in the first metabol- ism service in America they precisely measured carbon dioxide, water, and oxygen exchange and body tempera- The first use of demerol as an analgesic occurred in Bellevue's Department of Anesthesia. The radium treatment of carcinoma of the cervix was developed at Bellevue. Tremendous advances in thoracic surgery were made by Drs. Adrian Lambert, Frank Berry. and Robert Wylie. The gluten- free diet for the treatment of non- tropical sprue was introduced in Q ' Bellevue's Second Medical Division. . -H ' , -1.4--., Q 'YA Important hcontributions ini the su? . Y Q , Q! Z - A -,..-C r ' gery o t e pancreas an stomac T I . 1 ' . ' , -.5 ll T' -9 1.5. Qi were made by Drs. Iohn Mulholland, f 4 1 H ' U 954- -- - - I 1 --J M P 1 d w'n' H' - . . .- l V-5-+11 lm . 1 1 U1!Nl4 ,1 ,pf il E. ft E UM, .:-1,4 ax oppe., an 1 iam mton. di ' ,J ' g ' 5 5 -. , ff'-an 'fy fl., -fgfrag, Another important development at ' if,-,s X l:..iiU . jx .V , 1 fiii.'f'ff'5f- 'gi ' rl Bellevue during this century has been A-Lv I-Q I- '63-gtg --X A V.-Q.,,5,-1:-., - .- A fe 'f..j, '5 the growth of the Psychiatric Service. ' -' -' tif v'-:jj ,,.g -- F T l llift-' ll'l,flf5 if' Always under verbal siege because 3 ' l gg-in - Y, ' -P 'Q v 2 . ,V-if-1 of its indescribably wretched condi- 1 4 ' . ' f'L...' j ' L35 Y-2: 1-,-'Q' tions, under its dynamic director from Q 1-.gc ' l A . 'Q If' ' A ,,,.--- ' I l f -L-H14 ll 1904 to 1934. Menas Gregory, it M ,II ,- 'T' ,V . , ... I -, 4 4 9 , f '., pioneered in environmental, phar- K ,L V N . I W T f- 1 . .. - T, . , V '- I of macological, and psychological re- 'lf 'lr- rl mt I -e, , -, T ' Y .,.,.,, 'h V- - search and treatment of mental dis- -,515-r VQUX A Va' -- - - ' I .,, ' ease. From its crowded wards came 4 N ' I , .' important studies of childhood schizo- V . I A, ,f ,. - Q! -eff' -.' -53 ' phrenia, the relation of dietary defi- I - '?frl1 '-if' - -- .221 L Us ciencies to alcoholic psychoses and 104 Bellevue Hospital in. 1879. ture in all forms of illness in the large sealed box of the calorimeter. They defined the concepts of high and low metabolism and the relation of thyroid activity to these states. Perhaps a more important product of the laboratory was its human oneg many of America's great- est researchers-among them Peters of Yale, Peabody, Aub, and Weiss of Harvard, and Barr and Richardson of New York-were schooled in the science of metabol- ism by DuBois, whose intellectual vitality, accuracy, and integrity set an inspiring standard. Perhaps the most exciting place in the Bellevue of the 30's was Dr. Miller's Columbia Chest Service. Here Dr. Andre Cournand, a young Frenchman who had come to complete his training in Dr. Miller's clinic, met Dr. Dickinson Richards, then doing research in cardiac and pulmonary disease at PHS. Over the next ten years Richards and Cournand developed techniques of measur- ing cardiac output and cardiopulmonary function using the method of cardiac catheterization discovered in 1929 by Forssmann in Germany-work for which the three were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine and Physi- ology in 1956. Extending this work with the collabora- tion of Dr. Eleanor Baldwin at Presbyterian Hospital, they contributed much valuable information on the nature and treatment of shock during the Second VVorId WVarg after the war they pushed their studies into the mechanisms. diagnosis, and treatment of congenital heart disease, cardiac failure, and chronic lung disease. The research achievements occurring at Bellevue dur- ing the past fifty years cannot all be collected here, though their stories make pleasant telling. But a few can be briefly listed: Bellevue pathologist Dr. Douglas Symmers introduced the serum treatment of erysipelas and wrote the classical description of the lymphomas. Dr. William Tillett, director of the Third Medical Serv- ice from 1938 to 1958, discovered the streptococcal enzymes streptodornase and streptokinase. providing important insights into the mechanisms of infection. blood coagulation. and fibrinolysis. Dr. L. Emmet Holt. son of the founder of Babies Hospital. became director of the Bellevue Pediatric Service in the 30's and formed there a vigorous research program. Under his leadership were made the first observations of streptomycin treat- ment of tuberculosis, the role of fats and certain sugars in the diet. the relation of vitamin deficiencies and over- dosages to several congenital malformations. and the nature of passive immunization in prevention of infec- tious hepatitis among neonates. the use of insulin shock therapy were worked out. The Bellevue-VVechsler I.Q. test has achieved wide recogni- tion. An all too brief mention should be made of the first non-military com- plete patient rehabilitation service, organized at Bellevue in 1947 by Drs. George Deaver and Howard Rusk. Such, thcn, has been the history of Bellevue Hospital, hastily retold, with too little of the genius, humanity. and temperament of its great physicians and surgeons preserved. Valentine Mott, David Hosack, john YVake- field Francis, Jimmy YVoocl, Al0l'lZ0 Clark. WVillard Parker. Stephen Smith, Abraham Jacobi, Edward Dalton, I. Lewis Smith, Lewis Sayre, Edward Janeway. Francis Delafield. Austin Flint, YVilliam Henry VVelch, William Stewart Halsted, Hermann Biggs. Alexander Lambert, James Alexander Miller, George David Stew- art, YVarren Coleman, Eugene DuBois, Menas Gregory, L. Emmet Holt, Andre Cournand. Dickinson Richards- these men were truly giants. not in New York City or America alone, but the world over. For 230 years Belle- vue has served the poor of New York. City. It is a tribute to the skill. intellectual vigor, and devotion of Bellevue's interns, residents. and attending physi- cians that this service has been rendered in constantly overcrowded, understafled, inadequate facilities. sub- ject to the whims of political fortune and natural dis- aster. In 1957 Dr. Dickinson Richards. then director of Columbia's First Medical Division. began a campaign for yet another new Bellevue. But while the new buildings are rising all around the old. one suspects that the long tradition of Bellevue Medicine-including the chronic shortage of money and excess of patients- will continue unchanged: superb medical care. excel- lent teaching, outstanding social and scientific achieve- ment. Gordon L. Noel Bellevue Hospital today. x l il 1 x L ' 9 In il llllll' vv11xv.F '! ., ,- -Il '21 .7 l gl? xii ., I1 mfg I X pf fi S 5- 5 . gf ' , l 'x M First ycur tea, Sey1Im11IJc'i'. 1963, Welcome to PSS. it Tropical Medicine 4, Dr, Fi,S'i1II1llIL Ilippuurzlfzw of Ostiu and Dr. Rirlz11rfI,s'. MR. BARTON gif? F 4 2. . x W 1' I PM-in JJ ..-12' P pw 1 -if f+z ' is ' M 9 ' F' H z f . 9. . ,I . ,Y . g-. 5. , ,F ff , 95' .4 Q 5- ' Y J1 if 3.5.8-F ' .A ,Y Diszzster drill. Itfs only kffclzup. Imprcssing tlzv girls' with our bodies. TONY RUTH P. - x A - la, p- GUS Seq 4 is .-1 J'- AI fvv :W o If 9 'g :A Q .55 f. , Y W h 1 ,lu --A' ' ,,j-i,:,i'1i'i55 W - iff KZ-:Q-I-T-23'1ji'3'3:-'-zg:4. g14Ig'-T - ' pqmxv.-r.cc'.c0.,-'-..'.-.',-. .- -. 5:94,-',45f-'?:P 515:23:f152-F-4'-:511:-:- :1:?.1'3'-?- ' 1. ' '4-:1.'f'1f?-y:4--'-CgCS'l:':-1-L-: -:3:'7:I:I:f:-5 ' -T 6222 -'-'C'-gy -I-A-?':'5'I1.q-6:4-I-1-I - - ' .-.-1 4:-:4:5:iv:':-:4:fr4:-EC,-:iz-Zfggzg. - ff 1 ..aff-:ZIFIZf'F:1:fk7:f:51f1f1' .:f:1:?.1t'i-2 1 '11 ' f-. ,++'ff? X .zor-, :-2-1:15:16:f:C:-I-9:5-1g2:l'i:': I -I'q':. 'Q . A f. 1' DEXVHT P65 CL UB C hristmas 108 ED on bass. KAREN ' Party JOHN x sn- fj A Lf' x iQ f wk! 1 S C0041 for nz -Q X , I V Q NK -x W 1 x'X 5, NIIKE TR.-KCIIT??? I always zuantcd to marry a Iewislr docfor. I f Y x Z S n Z ff ' :I ,z , 1 V 1 X N! :I N N A f. V '.-' :'- f Gfqflgkh Xa , V p 4 .iv 'u fi I 'Q I qqffw41g9gii2'f:gj7fa 'W ff, ' If X ,Lu ' ifziiiwfflipd , HU 1' '- x '.v. ' f If .4?:fly .Alai Aki! 1 I jijlxlll fin 555711, lug. K I I IW 1 ' 1 'I f fl ff A In Ky X W - i 1 T. STEVE I rs V if - I .f I f- Q - .- ' ' 'ifff ' l ,,,, L --- 315 - I A , ' 'R H PRES ,gif ' Y Av Z' A 1 and 2.80, pick ,em. T RICKY 5. Path0logi.s't Extraordinaire My Idol Q R EH: '9T' 3, ... , . I l , Xxx T ' C M- 5 X JELJ . I. .71 MYLES X '33 ' I .V 'li-Els 4 - N z - ' 1 MQ, 7' 1 :HN-4 . 'N Cast Party Y F. R X ' lx v X W'hy do you ask? T X, ix P' LQ.,- Burning the midnight oil -Q..- -...N -....... ' - --xi SAM, Howns, and GORDIE relax during DR. BHODEY's session on politkal dermatology. Relax, you're in good hands. .J Who wants to work-up a 98 year old lady with constipation? u I I Q A E V tough day in Group Clinic - 6 , D t x Lw S west dreams! Q 6,0 I x ,A - A 2 PGS Class of 1991 5, ' f STEVE, CAROL, and Kuuzx 4354? ECB K--ff PAT . 'I .' 0' Q N 4 -x- , BOB EBHLY s 7 dr Armazw ff .. . ' Tx ,A Soor LEVY 1 E fn :,, - l '9-'H L 51 :,, l 3? N 55 M.-lf fff TIWHODGB at the beach '-I ' 7 ..- - -Ne- Q s , 5 5' , . f f,'g .1 VL ,E . . , 'I' .S5.v5f, 'ff gl Fourth year pruritus! I S. X Muna 1, Home away from home Group i Clinic Pediatrics subinternshi p Slept through thc' Combined Clinic I ,E-'E' T x again! -,-.,..jT- - 1... .kgffv I ! y 1.B AMOS 4 f Lk ' ' 1 Rmco CHARLIE takes a coffee break. 'W r' 2 , ' JOHN I Young DR. HOLSCHUH gan-Q 1 QP' ka x ,A L, J 1 xx ff 4- ,. .ue-, . ig, vw I 4 ' If Sf-L and Mrs. Raymond A. Amoury David L. Andrews Arthur Antenucci Arnold L. Bachman and Mrs. Frederick R. Bailey and Mrs. Daniel C. Baker, Jr. and Mrs. Iohn M. Baldwin, Ir. Harold G. Barker Milos Basek A. L. Loomis Bell, jr. lfVilliam A. Blanc Sidney Blumenthal and Mrs. Stanley E. Bradley and Mrs. Everett C. Bragg Alfred E. Brewer and Mrs. William A. Briscoe Harold W. Brown Gordon M. Bruce Howard G. Bruenn Charles Leigh Christian and Mrs. Wilfred M. Copenhaver Iames W. Correll Stuart W. Cosgriff Bard Cosman john M. Cotton George F. Crikelair and Mrs. E. C. Curnen, jr. and Mrs. George L. Curran Virgil G. Damon Sponsors Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Darling Dr. Archie L. Dean, Ir. Dr. Felix E. Demartini Dr. A. G. DeVoe Dr. Frederick Eagle, Ir. Dr. and Mrs. R, H. E. Elliott, jr. Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr DI. Dr DI. Dr Marynia R. Farnham Carl R. Feind Charles XV. Findlay, Ir. and Mrs. Charles A. Flood joseph L. Goldman and Mrs. Dean Grandin Magnus I. Gregersen Albert XY. Grokoest David V. Habit Frederic P. Herter Robert B. Hiatt William M. Hitzig and Mrs. Paul F. A. Hoefer and Mrs. Brian F. Hoffman M'illiam A. Horwitz Edgar M. Housepian and Mrs. Calderon Howe Robert M. Hui George H. Humphreys II and Mrs. Elvin A. Kabat and Mrs. john Martin Kinney Lawrence C. Kolb and Mrs. Donald S. Kornfeld Albert R. Lamb. Ir. john H. Laragh and Mrs. Raffaele Lattes John K. Lattimer and Mrs. Edgar Leifer John Nichols Loeb Frank W. Longo Mary C. Mac-Kay and Mrs. Sidney Malitz A. M. Markowitz Jay I. Meltzer and Mrs. George R. Merriam, H. Houston Merritt and Mrs. Robert Michels J. Lowry Miller and Mrs. Orlando I. Miller and Mrs. Charles Neer II and Mrs. s. H. Ngai C. Paul OlConnell and Mrs. Emanuel M. Papper Howard A. Patterson Charles A. Perera George A. Perera and Mrs. Phillip Polatin and Mrs. I. Lawrence Pool ' and Mrs. Milton R. Porter John F. Prudden Charles A. Ragan, Ir. Ellen F. Regan Harry Rose Saul L. Sanders Grant Sanger Dr. and Mrs. Thomas V. Santulli Malcolm H. Schvey William B. Seaman and Mrs. David Seegal and Mrs. Edward B. Self Sheldon C. Sommers Dr. and Mrs. Hamilton Southworth Harold F. Spalter Frank E. Stinchlield F. C. Symonds john V. Taggart and Mrs. Donald F. Tapley XV. Duane Todd and Mrs. Ray E. Trussell Raymond L. Vande Wiele Ralph I. Veenema Carmine T. Vicale C. A. Vicens Jules Waltner and Mrs. S. C. VVang A. R. YVertheim Henry O. VVheeler Philip D. Wiedel Herbert B. VVilc0x, Ir. james N. Vllorcester, Ir. Robert H. Wylie B. A. Zikria Hans Zinsser 2 X lA'l'l' liiii I iizg N! Q ss! ' 'H T 15137 F B ,il i Y Y ff I , ,f in-2 X km 5 -1 I-,.' S ' ' 1 3, X QQ .fri ' R f , - A .v .L . ' ' il A I ,' CONGRATULATIONS and BEST WISHES to THE CLASS OF 1967 from The Manager and Staff of Bard Hall COOK HOSPITAL SUPPLY QDivision of Kramer Surgical Stores, Inc.P COMPLETE EQUIPMENT AND INSTRUMENTATION FOR THE PHYSICIAN AND HOSPITAL AND KRAMER SCIENTIFIC CORP. NIICROSCOPES, MICROTOIVIES LABORATORY EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES 55-1 XYest 168th Street. New York, NY. 10032 Tel. 212-795-6000 'Rin 'Q' W WA. 3-2424 Say It With Flowers Medical Center Flower Shop CARDASIS, INC., FLORIST ARTISTIC DECORATION FOR ALL OCCASIONS The Flower Shop Nearest The Medical Center We Telegraph Flowers 4003 Broadway at 'I68th Street REME RESTAURANT room or oisTlNcTloN , 4021 Broadway, Corner 'I69th St. New York City Air Conditioned Como Pizza, Inc. Hot ll: Cold Heros We Deliver 4035 Broadway 8: I70 St. NICK and ANGELO couizresv cnos Medical Center Pharmacy Armory Restaurant FINE AMERICAN-ITALIAN Fooo Newly Redecorated Dining Room 401 I Broadway bet. 168th 81 I69th Sts. Jacob Kaplan, F.A.C.A. WU- 3-9034 4013 Broadway bat. I6.l'Il and 169th Sh. WA. 3-1258 Specialists In Prescription Compounding WA e.9s45 LO e.:-:vs GOLDEN AGE RESTAURANT G 5 t SPECIALIZING IN SEAFOOD. STEAKS AND CHOPS SODA FOUNTAIN SERVICE Kzwi Fooos mc. 4019 enomw.-.Y The Leading Brands In Photographic C Rm '89 S E' N W 'W' N' Y Equipment And Supplies PT AT SPECIAL PRICES . U Wines 81 Liquor Store Incorporated The Finest Quality ln Photo Finishing Done On Premises 1229 ST. NICHOLAS AVENUE Bet. 'I7Ist and 'l72nd Sta. NEW YORK 32, N. Y. WA. 3-3698 4033 Broadway at I70 Street New York 32, New York Lo. s-z1ob FROM AN ICE CREAM SODA SILVER PALM TO A FULL. COURSE DINNER Broadway at 168th Street ! , 1 f -ITIL, gg , : A- A 1. ' ' L, ' fi ' -+ 'VA Y An eminent role in medical practice 0 Clinicians throughout the world con- sider meprobamate a therapeutic standard in the management of anxi- ety and tension. 0The high safety-efficacy ratio of 'Miltotsn' has been demonstrated by more than a decade of clinical use. Miltowns lmeprobamatel .---X n I milfs , I Indications: Nleprobamate is effective in relief of anxiety and tension states, Also .is adjunctive therapy when anvi- Ely may be a causative or otherwise disturbing factor. Although not a hyp- notic, meprobamate fosters normal sleep through both its .init-anxiety and muscle-relaxant properties. Contraindieationsz Previous allergic or idiosyncratic reactions to meprobamate or meprobamate-containing drugs. Precautions: Careful supervision of dose and amounts prescribed is advised. Consider possibility of dependence, particularly in patients with history of drug or alcohol addiction. xxithdraw gradually after use for weeks or months at excessive dosage. Abrupt xtithdravval may precipitate recurrence of prc-exist- ing symptoms. or vvithdravvtil reactions including, rarely, eptleptiform sei7ures. Should meprobamate cause drowsiness or visual disturbances, the dose should be reduced and operation of motor vc- hicles or machinery or other activity re- quiring alertness should be avoided if these symptoms are present. Ellects of cxcessivc alcohol may possibly be in- creased by meprobamate. Grand mal seizures may be precipitated in persons suffering from both grand and petit mal. Prescribc cautiously and in small quantities to patients with suicidal tend- cncies, Side effects: Drowsiness may occur and, rarely, ataxia. usually controlled by decreasing the dose. Allergic or idio- syncratic TCBCIIOHS are rare, generally developing after one to four doses. E'-af F' fbggh is Mild reactions are characterized by an urticarial or erythematous, maculopap- ular rash. Acute nonthrombocytopenie purpura with peripheral edema and fever, transient lcukopenia, and a single case of fatal bullous dermatitis after ad- ministration of meprobamate .ind pred- nisolonehavebecnreportedhloreseverc and very rare cases of hypersensitivity may produce fever, chills, fainting spells, angiorieurotic edema, bronchial spasms, hypotensive crises tl fatal easel, anuria, anaphylaxis, stomatitis and proctitis. Treatment should be symptomatic in such cases, and the drug should not be reinstituted. Isolated cases of agran- ulocytosis thrombocytopenic purpura, and a single fatal instance of aplastic anemia have been reported, but only uhcn other drugs knoxvn to elicit these conditions were given conconutantly. Fast EEG activity has been reported, usually after excessive meprobamate dosage. Suicidal attempts may produce lethargy, stupor, atavia, coma, shock, vasomotor and respiratory collapse. lisual atlult dosage: One or tivo 400 mg. tablets three times daily. Doses above 2400 mg. daily are not recom- mended. Supplied: 'kliltown' tmeprobamatel is available in two strengths: -100 mg. scored tablets and 100 mg, coated tab- lets. 'Meprotabs' tmeprobamateh is available as -100 mg. white, coated, un- marked tablets. Before prescribing, con- xnll package flrcnlur. W Wallace Pharmaceuticals Cmnbury, N. J. WA. 7-3233 LARRY ORIN J E W E L E R Electronically Tested Watch Repair 4009 Broadway at 168th Street New York 32, N. Y. Special Discounts for Hospital Personnel 24 HOUR SERVICE ON COLOR fO'1 ll MORRIS CAMERA j,liOP 3934 Broadway f165th St.J Near Medical Center Phone LO. B-B590 Sp I Dixcqqnts to Students Compliments of Excel Pastry 3929 Broadway, near l65 St. Tel: LO. B-1230 OLYMPIC BARBER SHOP NICK TSAKIRIDIS 4021 Broadway New Y0l'k 32 Bef. 169th Gnd 110th Sh. EVERYTHING For HOME 81 SCHOOL WADSWORTH 5 85 104i STORES 4050 Broadway at l70 St. THE MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE EXTENDS ITS SINCEREST GOOD WISHES THE CLASS OF 1967 Cl IB RN ik We speak Doctor. Present and Future. At Cl1en1ical New York, we can assist in your pres ent a11d future personal and professional financial plans. With our complete range of services, we can meet your every banking need. When you first start yo11r practice, we can help you with our Professional Finance Plan and a Checking Account. Later on, as your practice grows, we can help you with our Professional Billing Service. Or one of our many Personal Trust services. So let us help. Stop in at any of our more tllall 135 offices and ask for our booklet entitled, 66Professional Finance Planf' A11d find out why we're known as the bank tl1at works hardest for you. Chemical NewYork T C ,V 'VIbFD 'UN swf ff- The Brewsters Expert Custom Photography For All Occasions ROGER TUDIOS PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION 4143 Broadway New York, New York 10033 WA 7,7894 KEEP NEGATIVES OF YOUR PHOTOGRAPHS ON FOR MANY YEARS AFTER GRADUATION FILE SAN DO RESEARCH CENTER a new addition to Pharmaceutical Progress A kl'lL' ' i l r p Ll ll'l,'iiil' P lt l l ti ii 1'- The new Sandoz Research Center is one ofthe most modern and best equipped research facilities in the nation. Here we will seek to acquire fresh knowledge in the field of therapeutics. Although much ofthe research will be at the Ubasicl' level, special emphasis will be given to the search for compounds with potential therapeutic value. lt is our expectation that the outcome of basic and applied research will be new drugs-the sign of steady progress toward directed goals. The Center dedicates itself to improving the future of manls health by helping to make the vision of a cure or treatment for every type of disease become a reality. SANDOZ PHARMACEUNCALS HANOVER N J ORIGWAL RESEARCH SERVlNG THE PHYSlCIAN SANDOZ COMPLIMENTS OF THE P 84 S ALUMNI ASSGCIATION To Each Member Of The Class Of 1967 The P 81 S Alumni Association Extends Its Best Wishes For A Happy ' And Successful Career. , EXPERT TAILOR 6: CLEANERS NELSON s mm KOSHER DELICATESSEN 8: RESTAURANT ' A 230 Fort Washington Ave VVA 7-3884 C A T E R E R S All Kinds of Alterations - Satisfaction Guaranteed Home Cooked Lunches and Full Course Dinners Wines - Liquors - Cocktails Served 4041 Broadway iCorner 'l70th St.l WA. 3-9606 Manhattan Uniform Center 4036 Broadway at l70 Street Medical Uniforms To Fit All Needs Telephone LO 8-9I30 SELBY L. TURNER Life Membership in Leader's Association Specialist In INSURANCE FOR PROFESSIONAL MEN 233 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. BEekman 3-6620 RINGLER-RADOS SURGICAL CORP Surgical 61 Medical Supplies Only The Beef, Opposite the Medical Center 3958 Broadway VVA 7-2152-3 TROPICAL EAHDE 5 QQ ON BROADWAY see. iam .na worn semi. WA. 3-8918 WA. 7-5700 Lic. 532 M. CITARELLA, Inc WINES AND LIQUORS Visit Our Wine Cellar 3915 BROADWAY near 164th STREET NEW YORK 32, N. Y. 1967 Aesculapian Staff EDITOR Robert A. Clark BUSINESS Robert P. Myers, Manager Caifrroxs Harold German, Chairman T. Stephen jones Ronald Allison Howard Brensilver EDITORIALS Richard Winickoi-I, Chairman Roger Christensen Vtfilliam johnson Thomas Christensen yvilj-iam Lee Bernard Cohen Cordon Noel lohn Gaines Richard Hurd AR-r Fred Silverstein, Chairman C'0fd0n,KU5Chbefg Richard Frank Benet kolman Kenneth Nakano Roger Spier Richard Tavernetti Barry XVenglin Samuel Winner Richard XVinickol'f PHOTOGRAPHY Kenneth Nakano Quinn Rosefsky PROOFREADING Patricia Clark :Sr TYPING Emily Myers Many long hours and much hard work have gone into the 1967 Aesculapian, the 21st edition Of the PGS Yearbook. Thanks is due to all those who have helped to make this publication possible. Those members of the Class of 1967 who gave of their time and talents deserve special thanks. XVe are particularly grateful to Mrs. Elizabeth XVilcOx for the use of many of her line photographs. The P815 Alumni Association has been most helpful in many ways. The staff also wishes to express thanks to Mr. Emil Schmidt and the firm of Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill, Inc. for their assistance, patience, and good advice. The continued support of our advertising patrons is also appreciated. VVe chose to dedicate our yearbook to Dr. Harold XV. Brown, a man for whom we have great admiration. He is in a sense representative of the entire faculty and it is to this remarkable group of men and Women that We owe our greatest debt of gratitude for their extraordinary generosity in support of the yearbook as well as for their success in making our four years here at PGS en- joyable and worthwhile. ROBERT A. CLARK .ll rl 1 '1 L I J 'fi I U' 1' ll' W M4 --J- '14 rn ld if H+ li '4- le, lil IH 1+ I4-I+ - v- 'W' 1+ wa 4'-fr +'+ afi Ill II ll ll 4, COLUMBIA UNIVETISITV lTIBFf!AFlIES l W 1 +1 1 H' ' . ssu1uygnMg1QLyus u U


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Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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