Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1969
Page 1 of 156
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 156 of the 1969 volume:
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Jlflg ,f-116, .1 't 9 -J'--:. av' ' Jug' , - gf?-4. ,.-6, .Q -. if 4' Uk ' if - A -gf , , . lv! gf:-K. 1 it THE OATH OF HIPPOCRATES I swear by Apollo the physician, and Aesculapius, and Hygeia, and Panacea, and all the gods and goddesses, that according to my ability and judgement I will keep this oath and this stipula- tion: to reckon him who taught me this Art equally dear to me as my parents, to share my substance with hi-m and relieve his necessities if requiredg to look upon his offspring as my own brothers and to teach them this Art, if they shall wish to learn it, without fee or stipulation: and that by precept, lecture, and every other mode of instruction I will impart a knowledge of the Art to my own sons and those of my teachers, and to disciples bound by a stipulation and oath according to the law of medicine, but to none others. I will follow the system of regimen which ac- cording to my ability and judgment I consider for the benefit of my patients, and abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such counsel: and in like manner I will not give to a woman a pessary to produce abortion. With purity and with holiness I will pass my life and practice my Art. I will not cut persons laboring under the stone, but will leave this to be done by men who are practitioners of this work. Into whatever houses I enter I will go into .them for the benefit of the sick and will ab- stain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption: and further, from the seduction of females and males, of freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice or not in connection with it, I see or hear in the life of men which ought not to be spoken of abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such should be kept secret. While I continue to keep this oath unviolated may it be granted to me to enjoy life and the practice of the Art, respected by all men and all times. But should I trespass and violate this oath may the reverse be my lot. ,1', ' 3 i 9656969 QSXCIANS 'W QQ Ox Q0 If 'rf J 0'-59 CL Q Lugz lain ,gm z O E 1 310 F . a IQ C0 Q9 bl y06 Q0 flfg WATO9 O 163' X X OLP in 0 346 f C- CD Q w553w do. f fp w- , 0J gp ' ' H L' 24 0 -oc- Y fx fPiH'HSICIP6DS E5 SUCRGEOCDS 1969 columbia university college of physicians 81 surgeons 630 t168th t t y k y k 10032 Academic life is generally thought to be characterized by quiet calm and the avoidance of any surprising changes of mood or tempo. I thought I had reached that quiet period before the sunset fades , and that my era of surprises was over. Then came your letter and to say the least, I was positively speechless. This was particularly noticeable to my family who have never considered that to be bereft of speech was characteristic of me. Obviously it would be churlish as well as disingenuous not to admit how flattered I am. Personally, I thought that Physical Diagnosis was a fairly important subject and that any student who emerged from medical school without having tried to train his senses was incompletely indoctrinated in medicine. This would probably be considered old-fashioned now, but I still suspect there's truth in it. My heartiest good wishes as well as my thanks. God bless you. 4 de We, the class of 1969, dedicate our yearbook to Dr. Yale Kneeland, Jr., who introduced us to the clinical evaluation of patients in his course in Physical Diagnosis. Dr. Kneeland first came to P 81 S in 1922 as a medical student, and after his graduation in 1926, he completed his training at Presbyterian Hospital. He left only for active duty in World War Il from 1942 through 1945. After the war his work in infectious diseases was supple- mented by his growing interest in the education of medical students. He was made Professor of Medicine in 1958. cation jf' i- DR. YALE KNEELAND, JR. A.B., Yale, 1922 M.D., Columbia, 1926 Dr. Kneeland taught the second year course in Physical Diagnosis with thoroughness and wit. His genial presence dispelled the formal atmosphere of the amphitheater and engaged us actively in his enjoyment of the art of Physical Diagnosis. His anecdotes not only entertained us, but helped to fix his proffered pearls of wisdom firmly in our minds. His enthusiasm for his subject made us eager to begin the detective work of physical examination. Medical practice and the medical school are changing. Laboratory tests frequently overshadow clinical acumen. Columbia has left Bellevue Hospital. The Physical Diagnosis elective and the perfect-score-multiple-choice final exam have been discontinued. Dr. Kneeland has retired. We are grateful that these changes were not completed before our time, and that we had the privilege of being instructed by Dr. Kneeland. He will long be remembered by his students for his warmth, his humor, and his outstanding contribution to medical education. administration H. HOUSTON MERRITT Dean of the Faculty of Medicine Henry and Lucy Moses Professor of Neurology Chairman, Department of Neurology B.A., Vanderbilt, 1922 M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1926 M.A. Qhon.J, Harvard, 1942 GEORGE A. PERERA Associate Dean Professor of Medicine B.A., Princeton, 1933 M.D., Columbia, 1937 Med. Sc.D., 1942 To the graduating class, all our best wishes and congratulations! Although some regard this period of change as one of permissiveness, protest, pills, and pollution, we who know you are thoroughly optimistic. We know that you will continue to seek and to learn. Your graduation is not, we hope, a severing of ties. Rather, it is our opportunity to tell you how much we have enjoyed sharing four years with you and that our interest in you will continue. We trust, in return, that you will become the spokesmen and leaders to guide us and that your interest and loyalty to P815 will go on throughout the years. Addressing you on behalf of the entire faculty and as fellow physicians and friends, I wish each of you great happiness and success. 7 X .vgx ROBERT H. E. ELLIOTT, JR. Associate Dean Professor of Clinical Surgery B.A., Princeton, 1928 M.D., Columbia, 1932 Med. Sci.D., 1938 MELVIN D. YAHR Associate Dean Professor of Neurology B.A., New York University, 1939 M.D., 1943 1 SHIRLEY C. FISK Associate Dean Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine B.A., Yale, 1936 M.D., Columbia, 1940 W I 0 . . as. - Qrfx TN Y DOUGLAS S. DAMROSCH Assistant Dean Associate Professor of Pediatrics B.A., Columbia, 1937 M.D., 1940 A Bum Steroid or Send a Salami to an Ex-Medical Student in the Army Sheep are gregarious, bacteria are clonalg The endocrine system is steroid hormonal, And it's not such a problem to catch them and tame them: It's more of a problem to draw them and name them. lt seems that one day a squalene went berserk, Put his tail in his own mouth and started to work, And he wound up condensed into four lovely rings With all sorts of places for side groups and things. And to all the scientists' great consternation There were two or three names for each variation. But it serves them right: not content with cholesterol, They rolled up their sleeves and invented stilbesteroll Then came estradiol and lots of ergosterol: The sequence was getting completely preposterol. Both those in the fast lane and those in the slow lane Are just going ape over etiocholane: And if you think that is too much for one man alone Just write down the formula for etiocholanolone. Or maybe this will burst your complacent bubble: When a girl has got pregnane, then is she in trouble? And the corticosteroids drive me up a wall, Like 11-dehydrocorticosterol. But the finest-named steroid l've ever known Is pregn-5-ene-3-beta-ol-20-one. And it's bad enough learning the way these are treated, But then we go on and learn how they're excreted, And we work all the day and we go without rest To measure them all by the Zimmermann test. Comes the end of the term and we cram and we cram, And then they throw at us the final exam. On your knowledge of structures you may very well pride yourg Now try to explain what steroids do inside you. One double bond makes you a boy or a girl, Another may make you a mouse or a squirl. The test might as well have been written in Braille, For I fear the whole class is way out in one tail. We'lI go to Dr. Nachmansohn to recover our nerve, Then we'II get Dr. Fertig to work out the curve, And assuming they can't flunk an entire class, By the grace of some First Cause we'lI probably pass. Let's hope we all put down the proper amount- From Abernathy-Kiess and from Lambert-Yount, And wish the biochemists a Christmas serene, Full of DNA HlSStone and HlSStamine. Don Feinfeld 10 IA. .six Seymour Lieberman What is this class - a bunch of snakes or something? ., , -6 'S' T' ' . it Lui Allen M. Gold Y0u'lI eat those lpidsfn frxwvw' - . si., f 'se P33 5 'iii Parithychery Srinivasan I'l1 show them what an untouchable can HU do.. BIOCfHEO3ISCfR'H 4 ,. Ja, .1- 1. S'- l I - I i v 'G .FH jnrd IPTI IIN II! IIR1 pw.. 'EF ,.f----f-'-f' 'UCI David Nachmansohn I am :ick Qf sin. 1 , -1-.T s,:nug.z::i,, 6 'gran 'J n an rs -377. Digi :uni 6 7 A i David Rittenberg What this countqv needs is a good fve-cent cigar - and Israel can give it to them. ' , ii Eff. tg! W my ix 1 i-Q-LM. Pitt?-. Alvin I. Krasna 11 If Mama could onlv see me now! 4 O iP'J-VHSIQLZOGE' I repeat - no more injections bv medical students!!! Richard C. Mason Thej?rst time it happens you rub his nose in it. ,' 'li John S. Britten In tl sense, Ilm somewhere between the oral and John V Taggart the anal phase. ,' Who cares about countercurrent exchange what I want to know is can anvone straighten out mx eyebrows? 7 1 s I E 'iw -1 i .i Mero Nocenti Louis T. Cizek An endocrine gland is like an Italian male: easilv stirnulatecl They've all Ieh - now we're and difficult to suppress. finalll' alone. b , Arnold M. Katz Now - U'we can onlv make it grow hair. . . FLUID BALANCE AND URINE SECRETION IN MAN On this day, limit your intake to one egg, a slice of toast, a small glass of fruit juice and one cup of coffee taken before 8 o'clock. Just before the 9 o'clock lecture, empty your bladder, noting the time accurately. At the beginning of the laboratory period again empty the bladder, noting the time. Save the urine collected. Thereafter collect urine samples at half hour intervals for a total of seven specimens. Immediately after collecting the second urine sample, drink the fluid which has been assigned to you. Consumption of this fluid should be completed within fifteen minutes. The class will be divided into four groups, each of which will receive one of the following: aj 1200 ml tap water bl 1200 ml tap water plus a subcutaneous injection of one to two units of pitressin cl 1200 ml 0.9'X, NaCl dj 1200 ml 2.096 urea Following this experiment the class will meet to discuss results. 13 gg William L. Nastuk P8LS's contribution to the Gentleman's Quarterly A Raimond Emmers Why do you laugh when I say tha! one wallv plus one wallv equals two waIlies? L, a Al 'J 'I Martin Blank Sometimes you just draw a blank. 1 i 2: , 4 qu- 512'-Z. .4u: ' TN, SSP- ACT2A'C'50CD'H Edward W. Dempsey 4 ' Melvin Moss Let me show you lzow we do it at P.cQS. 5 .-' I i A, TEET . ' 5 T337 In Q . .K l ' V il ai 'L ,I K'S0 this is the Department ofAnatonz-V? You must be Malcom' B' Carpenter kiddingfu w A ' Albert I know I hia' that bottle in here someplace. You don? have to be Jewish to love L6lfl S,H xl I Charles A. Ely I can 't understand whv thev don 't want me to heh! them with their dissections . . . gk' Charles R. Noback Frederic J. Agate lin sorry Ma! - I didn 't realize that I'd I've been smoking since 1 was be cuning inm your rqvalties. 15. and now that 1971 40 . . in sections through the lower medulla, the area dorsal to the caudal half of the inferior olivary nucleus and medial to the lateral reticular nucleus is the location of the nucleus reticularis ventralis. at higher levels the reticular area located medial and dorsal to the rostral half of the inferior olivary nucleus is occupied by the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis. the latter nucleus is the rostral continuation of the nucleus reticularis ventralis. truex and carpenter, human neuroanatomy, williams and wilkins, 1964, p. 268. Wilfred M. Copenhaver Went to plqi' hearts? 15 J 1 f-f ' ' an-si George D. Pappas at YV I keep my leuh ear cocked to pick up all the latest information about the elbow joint. Wanna feel my liver? -.. Do you want to play with my election microscope? 'Z Herbert 0. Elftman Nancy Trotter Richard P. Bunge Only my hair dresser knows for sure sm K' , :aq,4 af ' r ' ' fl Q Q i l G l -- ,xs . gn Q F f , 1 4 ,1 iPAfRASI'G0l106'U Harold W. Brown Dedicated to the seats ofthe mightv . . . Meqyf Roger W. Williams Kathleen L. Hussey Yet let me flap this bug with gilded wings f This Thai plqv is the tragedy, 'Manf. and its hero the painted child of dir! that stinks and stings. Conquerer Worm. IA lexmider Popej 17 CDIC420 BIOLOGY ' A- . . R' mem.. .X 'ie 21,7 as ,Law ,pw I wonder this ,U lecture. Harry M. Rose Sam! You forgot to tell them about . . .' 4-YS. Calderon Howe slide is vague enough for my next .QL is Herbert Rosenkranz Bernard F. Erlanger Guildenstern mqv be dead but Rosenkranz is alive and Don't bug me. well at PQS. Paul D. Ellner Hey, listen - is that hair piece ready yet? Councilman Morgan Take a look at the pair of knobs on this inclusion bodyfv Q X. -I 1 5. jx Stuart W. Tanenbaum Then there's xylose, rhamnose, abequose and Godnose , lxa 4'- Sam M. Beiser Theres something erotic about conjugation. 24nd with kidneys at 4842 a poumi that makes f 1 F fPfi-IACRODA Qginidine B1 Procaine Amide DIRECT AND INDIRECT EFFECTS OF Al Low Therapeu Indirectl 1: Automaticity S-A Node I U Atrial Specialized Fibers QSAFJ I A-V Node X3 Herbert J. Bartelstone HlS'P fkmJe SYS'em I H , , Effective Refractory Period This course requires 1i I sophistication. A-v Node D Hi s-Purkinje System X Ventricle X Upsl Electrical Excitability Atrium I,U,D His-Purldnje System X Ventricle X Conductivi -A Node I U or Atrium I. U, D U or A-V Node I His-Purkinje System X I 1 Ventricle X U or Wilbur H. Sawyer -1 Norman Kahn Brian F. Hoffman I onbf charge hal as much as You say man on street know more than me?!?? Bane!-Vane fo' U fi! ing-H ff 9 IRRHYTHMIC DRUGS OSH Concentration U High Toxic Concentration : Total Totalz a 1 D4 I or D 1 X X I or D D to 0, or I I I D I I I L Uasugm 1 15 I, U. D D U D U D 3 U or D D J sl. D D I D ' lor U6 D J U or sl. D D Frederick G. Hofmann 'flust a little to get me through the lecture. 'Xi .r Shih-Chun Wang '24 tropine can be given by mouse. P iv' Lowell M. Greenbaum Histamine, son of histidine. . . 5. Xxsl-'PJ - - sf - ., Sv ii YH P ' ' I , 1 if li E N X Y. ' I X Q ' . b ly ' if. 4, XX.,-2 V H Qu W eP L1'Q-.u,w-64 V . V r I g X X- T I qw ha . N Donald W. King 5 'JJ kk ' if xxx 1 You should have seen his face when I got the r W 4' at jobj- 1 ' h A 2 . S '- 4 ff f V -.nxx I - 5' 'lla 1 I xl Al' A l , . N ., 4 h ' fi-f 5 .- 1' I s V: A ,W 'I .1 ,wig U Focus, Angelo! ' . I X. I . L 'X I . Q . h .41 ' fi -wh h h Vx J ,x 1 h 1' . ,Q f J - Q9 Q 5 Q E1 if 1 . f A ,, E 2' 5: , 1. 1 , ' ' -sw? - , 1 L 4 U H Qfafqfg -1 3,- fi '- , FR 2 .ag-NP A W ,U K :Y ' 2, 'Elf ' . h ' f' I , f-, '71 Isl f' 5. J .j If -. sf .ix J . 11 .. wo of . ' I I 'Q ltd . ,-. i , NK .X ' 1 , al, ' '1 ' . .Q X' J 5. 6 0-dv, I 1 up 5'f'! ' L. 0- David Spiro THE FLOWER The jiower child . 'fb- . . 49 N V G if .A !Tyi . QSEQX 2 0 t A I - - William A. Blanc H. Joachim Wigger Zees ees ze last Babies Hospital admission . . . You must have been a beautyul baby, 'cause baby. look at you now, Q? ! Joseph Wiener Austin D. Johnston You, as second year medical students are in no WeII, fhgfig' yhg breaks-, position to take a stand on anything? J. W: 23 October, 1966 - 71 N I AJ 6. 5. - Q John E. Ultmann Bradley told me when I got to Chicago to look up his fiend Dick Daley. l' Raffaele Lattes I think Bob Lattes would make a great pathology intern. xqk Karl H. Perzin U hair styling did this for me, think what it could do for your teratoma. ', clinical years clinical years clinical years cllmcauiyears clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical yea. s clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical 'years' clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical years clinical clinical years clinical years swf? S Jay I. Meltzer Will you quit kicking the chair! Stanley E. Bradley 'Tween minutes and you still haven't mentioned the chief complaint. H Kermit L. Pines F You see? Itlv not the pqne - my jaws are wired. D Q K T U ff Fx f 3 ' H: I if 'I' I ty' W I : lf! I in . . j I ..-X5 1 .gs - I W: X 'fl K1,itia Q ,fy 5 --xxivkx . 1- 1 1.:' XXX , - . W 'H xx ' 1 ,,,,,,a,,, F, my II A . ,KIIIIII I Who is the Atchley of the Atchley histony form? TI-IIS IS TI-IE 47TI-I CPMC ADMISSION . .. 5 -.Q 1 JT' if fl? ' A I. gb, . f RFE' 7 ', Q, N it M- l ' fi! Hamilton Southworth Honorary member of S.D.S. Charles L. Christian My son has just enrolled at L.E. Charles A. Ragan Thanks a lot. U AF' v Daniel V. Kimberg People have a lol more guts in Bostonf, Prep. haf' I 'l i 1 4 , 4 F' 3' Edgar Leifer BlNGO!! Dr. Goldman, you missed your opportumly. ' rf? f B., -Q if George Perera It hehws improve my rapport with the students . . X' Harry W. Fritts, Jr. I believe in thinking clearbf and talking slowbf, or is it thinking slowbl and talking elearb1? Arthur Wertheim No man is an island. . . 28 P :Arg Qs ui Henry Aranow -and Your mother should be proud . . . P rg-N Eff. na T l f Alfred Gellhom g. r F, ..e Ng And then there were none . . . ---7,-.-n.t.,... William P. Lovejoy So his SGOT is elevated! What do you wanna make of it? 1 .. 'n. 'in H X ?9- .. 'lllll ll ,, V Lb T he picture of a second Harold C. Neu Nu, Harold? '1 John N. Loeb won 't be blurred you take it at H1000 ' 'W I , John L. Buchanan Sidney C. Wemer I didn 't want to bother reading your histories 'fln ghe beginning, Gad created the thyroid this time, so I'1I just flunk you all. U 29 Robert A. Kritzler No wonder hardbf any 0 you know me - I've been locked in this room or fve years! Dickinson W. Richards We can never get So then the King of Sweden said to me . . .' channel 11 on this one. X fx N ..eQ e.e. .N N : or vs 50. egg. E-W 313551--.2 t i A x A rw W xee.. ,..- I John H- Lmsh Alben R. Lamb 'MV BUN may bf' UP buf my Sfffllm is Still 80041 H What do I know fam G6PD? Grlppe Tabs are 30 what you need. Richard J. Stock I'II bet they use the stock calztio the yearbook again this year.' nin l.. Stuart Cosgriff Pneumonia?! Start the heparin STA T! Albert W. Grokoest Lets drink 10 Stan . . .' 2 KMA- R X Y. X X X ' 1- L. 4 F i Paul J. Cannon Charles A. Flood Today we?e going to 31 0ops. . . lforgot to wash my hands. discuss soporifics. U NN LA V W L 'li r ' - .lf of fi Hymie L. Nossel Hemoglobin-Hymie X A xg W th You don't really have to go, you know. You could alwa s re at our clerksh' . 1 Y Pe Y 'P is ou,wE'vE RECEIVED vous: APP I F, y 'Y Looking ahead to the twentieth century. H X 5 L' l , il, ' afwr' '. if ' Siam-faig , ' F' , ' ' 'f' . ' ' 'F gi ee n 3735? ' 4. 15. Donald A. Holub and Lionel Grossbard Lf You better give that patient a small tube oftoothpaste. D 5.3- ig' ' 5. S Q r 1 s X X George W. Melcher This month we're running 279 on completed appraisal notes. if 4 f f James K. Cunningham Some people are born with marrow, some achieve marrow, and some have marrow thrust upon them. ' .T ' - M. Irene Ferrer 'ilust call me M.I. 5.-JI I ........,q if -:J F ill DN... .BUT'.,. . Tp' - ff 'LSA-,1'.'-'-'f-', --FT: ff .Sf -' w,.-'ffff :iz ': 1, 1 , . Z :, ,'.'MF tenzveid .F Robert T. Whitlock Time is whiltling awav my locks. group clinic You'Il never guess what we have for you today. , Good morning, Dr. Weyman. is 5i The first three volumes haven't come up yet . . . You'd better just get started without them. 34 1 - A N 1 . .1- L un -x Slight hypo, slight aniso, slight poikilo r X 'A 7' W' f , -WH my 3 X -X Al 0 9 2 'H 5' P Nl I L A l'm sorry: Dr. Weyman's running a GROUP B K - little late on his follow-ups today. X X N .-7' 1 K Y -f --N 5 ' 1 '-635 ska kin f JW ? up 'ie Z 'Q-'Dug YA,-' DANA W. ATCHLEY You mean to say, Dr. Weyman, that you didn't ask whether her headaches are more frequent on Tuesdays than on Wednesdays? UH...HAVE YOU EVER HAD A PERITONSILLAR ABSCESS? 1 1 V SUCRGECKH F5 :H W ,. r 1 . - s v. 47.8 . , .91 9 r Thomas V. Santulli Do you mean your little bugger has a hernia? Robert H. E. Elliott, Jr. Youre kidding. . . heart transplants? George H Humphreys II You see I fooled you It onbf looked as though I were asleep 4 . r , gmefzpu 'ig Nathan Lane Once upon a time, there was a little pobfp . . . Grant Sanger When Ijinish, every third year student can locate the 5' 1 - t apex of the axzlla' I rm i t ' . Ferdinand F. McAllister 'iAwww, you say it onbl hurts when you walk? .Ia 1,1 E X 33 Ruben H. wylie 'Y think John Wylie would make fine surgical intern. ,xg Cushman D. Haagensen Tit for tat. BD: Isn't there anything we could do to make them come to the rest of the cIasses? Philip D. Wiedel The other day while I was out walking I was hit by cz speedboat. X W , ' - Alfred M. Markowitz Y0u? An intern here??? 38 F Frederick R. Randall 32-'if 0nb' when You make it as an airendin can you wear a , E . moustache and hrpoy glasses. f r Y-.41 David V. Habif Let not her wound dehissf' Q h 11 E John Schullinger Gee.' In rheyearbook? Honesr??! 39 Arthur B. Voorhees filust convicted for graf Q srl r 4, , ,Ir I Sven Kister Think Mammarv. 'sci Alfred Jaretzki III 'T . . when you reach the hilum, call me at the Copa. U 1 G U Shivaii B. Bhonslay, Jr. Funny, you don 't look Guru-ish. James R. Malm i Iatrogenic dextrocardia. - -A Y Bashir Zikria 40 The monday morning blahs. f I CQ. XM F' V George F. Crikelair T11 do your nose Frank, but who will do mine? Let 's see - 1 7 I Frank Gump Bard Cosman B d ,L Z . two noses at S4500 apiece is . . A' ,:.. if Robert G. Berisch I 'Wext time, Birkhojf you'Il do your own rectal. Q s 4 ,i . VV : 506. Wage 9 0 505 A Frederick P. Herter What this place needs is a Young Republicans Club. V419 I ,J v'-Y' 1 John Prudden John B. Price, Jr. . . . and now ladies, aper you've strqnped You,rej?'om the anti-vivisection Ieague?,' the meat from the bone . I 'x X ..., , x g 1 gviQ.,Y'ee.' ,- f. ..,. , .1 , .. ' . 1. . 4 Vi . x 1 - ...AQ , 7 - .'f?jQSf2, I , ,R ' ' 4. 1 'I 3 2 . -. -fl 'A if 'A E . - , fr ' ii Q Q x 4: : ,vw-, r , 2 fl L , fl xii ' L4 L ga- N A? Milton R. Porter I or, keep him on the ta le. . . 5 Harold G. Barker u . . . and on oiening him up I found cross-hatc ed mucosa. 'Wlllllllllllllll was Q5 Q . X vi , 5 ' x I., R 'gr X ' 48 ga . .J J Q N K John A. Buda Charles W. Findlay '24ll right, we're going to start. I want absolute Forever quiet in the 0.R. J.B.. 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968 John M. Kinney The Last of the Mohicans R0ber't B. Hiatt What these damned medical conferences need are a few girls who will Im their skirts. H 43 4i tt 0125340 1 XR if mr. Robert E. Carroll Q :NL S Q T he Wsiting Professor of Anatomy L, A- , , will now explain. . 55 4 E A: wry Av if l' V w W Q ,X -El so ' ,- Q Ps . T l - .533 .P V H l X . , bu. x W ' :S lx ,Q 4 Frank E. Stinchfield 5- Ashby Gfanfham You say you're from the Internal Revenue Service? 'T he hzp bone is connected to the third bone. ,.,, t. Q-fi, l Av ,, ' J r lrl' X r I b J Y X 1 , , s ' N Mawin L. sneuon . , X Q ' ' ' Q- X 'Wow letiv make no bones about it . . . 'Y M. A ' Q. .5 1 Charles T. Ryder Now Charlotte - 'This little piggy . . . AEGDI CS N . Charles S. Neer I I 1' I Oh yes - how manv cars did you say? Joseph E. Salvatore 'Keep his .fingers loose so he can get his wallet out. 31 L Harold M. Dick 0, I should have been a urologisl. VC 's David L. Andrews Frank wired this one for free! . S -9 1 I . 4-fu x V, lfI5.6 ' x x s. Andrew L. Bassett Next year I'll plqv with the Knicks. f iw Q I Ut E LMA h 1 11 'wa ' e E M6 75, 2 2 rl 11's EITHER oNE or REacHERT's Emsno-romv nzpmns on A New Memos or Burn-1 com-ROL CMBSGECCRICS Next year we'lI abolish the course. Edward T. Bowe This machine should speed up my pelvics infnitebff' .ff .Z mf? GTJWQECQECGU - Vi i, .1 , 1 g,1. X H L , .ii X Landrum B. Shettles . . this . . . business . . .you . . . gona work . , .fas1. J. George Moore On a clear day I can see CaIy'ornia. Won't somebody please silence Dr. TiIIman. A gs -W -,Y 5-, I Solan Chao 'ltlv Chao time! Equinn W. Munnell 'How do you spell 'arrhenobIastoma'? Karlis Adamsons, Jr. 'Tregnancy? What is that? 4? f' -+5111 'E M 1, J fi ,. A Y Orlando J. Miller the Mongolsf, I' hx f 5 Wolfgang Tretter This is the wrist action I use for my 350 pelvics. U I. x-t ,f fbi Raymond L. Vande Wiele Be sure to get there on day 14. Genghis Khan was NOT the las! of . --Q92 G .5 M .5 W. Duane Todd There was a professor named Todd Whose manner was pleasantly odd He said, lf you please, Spell my name with two D's, Though one was sufficient for God. i5 X ,, N. ie. Raymond McCaffrey The ability children is sex-linked. Susan Williamson Miss Cuomo, l said in the fundus, not in the Fallopian tube. N QAM . X D X , 1 , tr' Robert Hall You don't understand Dr. Hall, we want this one. to bear j q Gilbert Vosburgh We used to stick our hands in up to the elbows. if -vzf 'H-- I 4' Stanley Bysshe Vincent Freda l Now I have to look for another research project, P., -U, . -j f- Enough of this stuff - show me her pelvis! r .F 'Hi 2 wi , .al Edward C. Curnen, Jr. Cookie break The Cystics: No, we don't have a cure for the common cold, but if you have green, watery stools. . . 5 ve-' 7 Aud, x-, .n 'Ii f x 1 4 Robert W. Winters I'd rather fight than switch. J. -423 i .1 Al -4 Ruth C. Harris Prothrombin time 34? She needs liver biopsy. James A. Wolff And after I transfuse you, I'II teach you how to ski! L., V . 'Ralph B. Dell If it worked for Sampson, maybe Dean N. Martin l'm not checking up on you guys, but I noticed nobody signed up for nights on. l I .tl est? Q ' N H f 1 pn f w 7' i if 5' P K5 5 - Sidney Blumenthal Look what l got from Lilly! Carolyn R. Denning Flower Power 'V I :vii ' Q - . 'A-R. ? it will work for me. fi r RS ..,Q ll' 'Sr .. I .mf 4 kr RL dl! ri fl!! . fl J Katherine Sprunt HeIl's Bells. 19? QQ' we-4 Jerry C. Jacobs For your kid, Doctor, fifty bucks Sylvia P. Griffiths Playmate of next month. QDEUCROILGGH AGED .ii i L. . f i J 5 f 3 55,11 L Robert E. Lovelace Does the patient . . . um . . . ah . . . appreciate sensation in his legs? Daniel Sciarra This one will make a good CPC next year Sidney Carter Carter's Little Brain Pills for little brains. Ny x N Carmine T. Vicale He's lying! He can't feel that! L 56 I I CDEUCROSUCRGECKH Arnold P. Gold And for breakfast we have cafeeau-lait. ii ...A fi n V i il-. .. W H T. z. in Di , . K f Edgar M. Housepian 1- Hello? 6 West? This is Sister Mary Denise and we'd just like to . . . Melvin D. Yahr Y Look what I got from Lilly! J. Lawrence Pool Roger C. Duvoisin I can size up any man by his handshake. He was my first brain transplantp look how well he's doing! vm - ' ' 0 l l . - z A z ij ! I L, Emanuel M. Papper C'mon down! 5 I i 5 ' V Z A-' ' U l A ,,?- , 9 2 . .yi Y . 4 ' . . 1 Q! Mieczyslaw Finster 'Women! . . .they keep me up all night! 1 Paul J. Poppers A-NES-THEE-ZEE-AH 1211.4 1 ' fur? ilbfffg, 79 ..- ' ' if 6 v X re Yi l 4 4 ,n I , . 1 . , ,T is N .. ,Q , , 1. Charles E. Wolf Bob - suppose Ed were choking on a chicken bone - what would you do? l i?+ i N. M is Carl T. Nelson Wrong, stupid. l l l Meyer Melicow I have long fingers! x Q Z, 1 v. John K. Lattimer So you only filled the first two chambers? ,z Hans H. Zinsser Raw clams will raise it. 59 - - 4- ' 1' .f' . , 5 '. z 1.4. Aurelio Uson This paper's a real pisser N. x x ' x ' l '41-if t tk v A. Gerard DeVoe Let me see! Dr. Baker We Bakers know that ENT is all cookbook. I-180- K, if XX N ii 4 . 1 1 V O lg 'l L 'P . 9 1.5 Robert M. Day We treat diplopia with eye patches. li . iii i . C I K .fi 1 Charles A. Perera George told me to get a naircut and a more conservative tie. Jules Waltner To tell the truth, l can't see the vocal cords either l. .1 K I X Ir Olaf Haroldson, Jr. 3 out of 4 doctors recommend Chlortrimeton Milos Basek 3 out of 4 Doctors recommend Chlortrimeton. Lawrence Savetzky 3 out of 4 doctors recommend Chlortrimeton --. eT A . 'Jr if ,f ' Mil Q .Illq!Iq. N Q a Q G . , 1 W 1 Y ,x-. Robert M. Hui Fooey! Y f Q 1 1:82. 1 Juergen Tonndorf We all live in a yellow submarine 1 4 r -.4 ilif . - vw, William B. Seaman It was obvious . . . I don't know why the guys at the M.G.H. didn't get it. . N .Al gp. Q 1 Ralph Schlaeger ... wen, Ed, you dad if again. ft Kent Ellis l Kent do anything Ellis. l 'P xe, . I I L. ll David H. Baker No it's not a bird-headed dwarf. Arnold L. Bachman I think that Don Bachman would make a fine diology resident. 62 QV- 1 .1--r 1 ixwwsmmwwh L ,au-4-.mf.n-.na gg., 9 ,w..mnn:l..mueu Y ,,...,-..-..u...,1..,, 4 - N ' C - f V' ig-X 4 L If f, Walter E. Berdon From the X-rays, I'd say the kid's a schizophrenic. Y I William S. Langford All I do is look at the mother, Donald Kornfeld Just call me 'Korny'. Robert Michels I always do it under the table. Lawrence C. Kolb Personally, I think you need a psychia tristl' ' l Richard Druss HostiIity is normaI. George Wilkie The dean said that long hair is out. ,,- qu' WW .nn,A. .gin John W. Fertig I don't play with numbers since I bet on the Colts. .aft f 'Q ' 3 Q J l C iq' 715-.U -.....,,J Leonard J. Goldwater And to think that we actually breathe this air. 64 i l. l .Q I Robert C. Darling And when they do come, they sleep. 5 r X , the patienfs story 1 1 ,.. v-rffr' A 1 a 4--' K. 1 Q .WWW 1.51 ! . 5 r4li.u if? 'QQ A Ffa.. u' , A B 4 ' -,. ..., F F . A X -,Q-.Lb-Ar 'H' .. x .M ,, 1 1.. - 4 . I4 V. 'I I , .. 1. A It V ,Sw . ,. W ' V 4 ---- w,...v .- V L. .H , W ' ' ,.,, , ,, ' . - ' ' 1' All .- , ,l.-f.j,L., , Q 4 . . 1 r I . 'Hx -1' 1 '- ' , 'ff:l ' v 1 . Jn. r - i Q33 , , ' if ' '- f-3.2 qu.. - 1.1 ., ' Hifi-Q. Q if-,L f Ames... .Q,L'Q ' 2A.'9f5g lf SMC f ' -' 5 .5 : A'I1':, . ggi., fxi ff 'l Q ' 55' ' ' ..ZQ,,:v!aE 1fHQ x- in ' .. 'Q :Q'N:., A , ,- r '. w ' , - 1, My V . ,. 14.4 1.- 1, r L .' vl, .r . , . 1.1 r, w I , 1 . 4 4, IIN 1-M 1 .i .. 'r ,' w K v -ww f '.:..,.pM.'ggQ,'15 1'- 'mm' r-'Intl-s-'-,U .. ,411-,ls Im , ,. A., 1 r.u V, Ll... ,,....-,., Het, 'KT - . .....-,+-,- 4- 3 51 I1 ' w f 1-.Q ' K. ka, 5 4 L Q -iii 4, Q A ' 3? 5.-Eg ' , ,..,1,,. uf: , 1'g, fniyf- ' ' afgzgi-iff, ' ,-.,,. 359' , - -l5ff!'- .Q.,:FluZv.,f.' X ' . '. .r '. X Y ,?,fW7?-1 2' , KA QWQ ' mar: , ., , y.C!i,:'e kj. 4Lvggi3..4.f, . ,, M, , 1,:s,.5f:i'Tfi1fgw 'AI L, 2 ., , 3 ,-1--1' ll, '!ga1e?'g: ' flux 71:ii:V,' A 1 1'i . gi r W ,. -1153145 ' 5 'f'ri4 5'x' nw , M6253 1 W, vw Q, l ,-'fflqgs-5-Wm :-fv:-i If ,I 4, -51, ' riff? .- 4 faiiyfii' , . A, f ,'wQQ' U 1,1 -'W-' , 11 , . ' Y: I 1 .,, L ..-' 4, f..H' 1 .'4f I k IA, 1 AI!! x ,U 1' tv , 'wi I 3 ,J 1 n ,rv if f .,.,.AMm' .1 ,..1!',ui iii?- zf51:j:1fl f 23- ' - w KZ' v' I V 4 f -4--:'fy,,.,!:i'1I.. ff ' , uri, - . , ,.-,..-.- .,, , 4f.,'1 :.:.' W, -.,,., ,M .-- 1 ...Q 5!fk.Q, 5 , zlfvqd, a ,H V. Mai L. 'i , i QU 31 . :'-f 1 u.7,,.. . Il rn: --gi 'fi!'i1' 5 Wil Q .4 X V I ,V :'?'.. ,IWW - V ., ll 'W --'gm g,Qj 1 , L' .'. 'c Jg.. pl 5131 Hu ' ' 'L' 'Mn Q, U-5- 'uf 'le' ', ':w:fffuM,i -. ,VMI 'ru1'w' -'.,, fs-Q, H ' '-fr l,E?ffl' .I ,V Q J, - Zf'ffvE -,H1',:J,:1q Wrxfm' ' liiw, V my-in 1 ' uf, MI' rv I M 1,, VXI, I,i mf-1 ,.' , , l Im' . . 5 - ,JL ,um J-4' 'V J . l Env .-.NN N , ' VH x'A L: 4 KVI!!! ,Mi A ' ll t fl!! A , , x-:3k1Qf711 ,Ik .. gff- 'nf Q mm ' ,5 vga' E114 Wok.. ,fm xl' 1-. W- ' f9'!.'-I V , J Nr, '. hu 1 , xfffmtfw sf . W, , , i, H 1- X UP 13 iq' '11 .' ,gli ,.A it 1,. ,, 'JL ,Vx Q, H, 1 Q' U' ,UVA : A5 11,15 I VP w 1 -,gy -J..gf- x, IH 1. V, 1. V.. .,, N AQ-. 'l 1 Milf ' .f ' Q v ,rv ,1., Y'y ww-.5 ,:,V, Q5 Nl' 7 o 'h MM 33, f J sa . g 'Q' Y 'QR 'iw - I i -' 2 ,4 l 5 , . 4 - 4 ir-1 1 I 1 1 Y 1 I 1 ,, '11 . H fzsiif 4, 5 .i f .: .f 13'--1' . . .'1 4 !. '- N ' ',,.,i 31-1 .-,::- ' . , 41 blip f' , , 1 , ' ,nt iff . f'-f.g..':' ,, . ff fl gl-1:22-Yip Ts. !,.52 K ., 4, 5 vw, x .H Q, ' 'X . 'n' lu X v. V' if :' 5. . ,L ,lex gl I ' .RJ'AR-2-JKKLN :' f ' -l 'l A. ., -m--w! gl W . 'A-511.-...nm , -'H -:2,-,nfwrjzuyw 1 '.l THE PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL I H5555 DETACH THl5 SYUB AND IN 'HE Cn' OF NEW YORK I ENCLOSE WITH REMITTANCE 622 WEST l68TH STREET I NEW Y R , N. Y. 3 ,EL bmi? 91015 mmimmammm I 2 skxg ......... ............. E E5UlLE.'iQf.'iQL .... TREE!!! 0 JA N '19 1 969 ZISIXIISSIBSSSHEBSS BLUE cnoss moumv aeuems uumaen ron sznvucss To: IIIIISKKKBKXXEKXWKBB B 08l6 ESTIMATED 72529 SUMMARY I CHARGES I BLUE cnoss I CREDITS I BALANCE Pnsvuous STATEMENT Tn-us STATEMENT 612.01 611.80 .21 TOTAL I 612.01 I 611.80 I I .21 'mf' uf DATE I SERVICE DESCRIPTION CHARGES BLUE pnoss cnsnrrs RUOM 12128 THRU 12l'31 ?09.00 209.00 12128 X'-RAY-CHEST 22.00 22.00 12l28 LABUPATUQY TEST 6.00 6.00 12128 LABURATURY TEST 7.00 7.00 12128 LARURATDRY TEST 3.00 3.00 onnu rn IMI TL-IDII fX!lf11 IGAJNG IGF--00 , T I IIIIIIIIK , T HI, 11, I IV' ,, man cannot li A133 if gawk 5 ? 1 l 5 m v Q 1 . I O x N, P 'Md alone J , n I . 1 1 X31 ' 5 'T .,! W! . - -in .. . . V , ,Lay M .iq if .v 1 Q? 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' v L- -.yu . - ' f ' iw- fff':A'1+:Zff2'i,1I'1 .Jvw'5'V w H J if 'UE P24 I va.. ' s '. , 'f 4 JG x.,1,,r-A A , l. 1, . I X .4 I X , , 1 rx V , , ' ' 'W ' , 1,20 :A ,jfw ,' f Hi. Hi 1 u W ,,,..4. -- , 'V MA: , V01 6' N tv 'I'-w '4QQ,' ' exit , ' 1 R , ,U 'i V A 1- , ' - . nl, 1 , I' : i'. - . JU' Awww K 'W' -f.M 1'f ! :.t 1' if '- Q' 'ella ' :HSL F -w '!f1Y,ij'5 M ' ' ' 2 AS6'lg?f'1Hirf-V 5311- 5 N r v- M 1 4 , Q 4, .k Q 1.14 llrg, r lv A I I qfnrftfj '-fi'3'-, -: ' -'Jef +I., , ' wl 'lW'1' U, th. 31. .,1.., 1 , ,-X.. , ' .- fi 4 , , 1 . , 31.1, ,Q ,L s I . .. ii. Q fy: ,XM I 'vsluv , 1, M .. UU. 3' ,,, wf..lw 5 '. t wi ' W e A :.jv f,! . ' 4 Y -1, . r Q 9 . 1 ' i ce 42?-1f'5if: ' ' ' WE, ' ' A . 2 l . .hgijfgvf X ' Q Q' 4fly ,pzV . ,, 4 --of-5-ri----1-.LN .. V.. 2 W ' 1 , '4 1 P, H4 11. 4- 1. ,gif L. 1 ga' Y I KY f ' Il . .4 x 4 N0 Pc' rj 'Q S: 'W M Mm 'xd I -1 . x' -sk v' ' H fi. ' 1 41 af' . J 1'--'P H tif P 1 HQ .N N . . V--gw w xl. 'Wit 1 .. 4 1 ,. V ' wS'! i11:- , J, 'lhfp H ,I xr -w I xl. I wt lou R ...' L - -Army., ' r : 5 4 L ' ' Ii . I I f' Ig Q lv Q 1 .La 1 0- nf-4'.s1 fa. !4 WIA iN 0 SUB? 'X 1 we Y , J, fl l ,,.I ,'i' L -'M r,1',,' 1 5.4 ' line? .3 L, 'xfV.'1. , w. 1 , 1 I , .l,,+Nf,,yg,:A If . 'J s , 5 T' .Hula J . .f , '?.ji .VUL '. 4 Bcilnivir-1' I F1 J f- - fa- 14 ff ut. .Y U. Inf I , 'A X f Nw , N. 1 ,Yi ,, n. -.. a , vw 1,- -, 12'-,rp-1,1-.N ,x . Y, 71 . . ? 2'l1fla . x 4 r I ,giff lnlru l -J' nr iff ' l Sub? :W -Ag, W 4 1. , Q . , in mt' ,. 1-1 VV., . . V! ' -1' ' 1 1'.v ,E 1 ,.,...' W. 'u W. ,1 , , A . ,. J, 1 Fa 5 ' iq, f Q 7 K X 1. CU' Q ,rl Q 1 ,fix --V Well babyl , Q N- Doug Wilson: trying for a good bowel PNP Psych at st Jerry Liebowitz : ' Pepe roi rwin Nash x s J pigmwf- IN4 xl 'What would you do for the patient now, Dr. Rundles? Guess again, Dr. RundIes. 79 9 E Jar 51 ' ' 1 A 1,...:' X4 Eric Frische: I think it's already ten-thirty. 'dl Up against the wall, Butler! .f if ., ra ...hw-' W, -1+ 'kd . .1 vb I M J. Hmamr pmwmww .Tern Q50 an BLLLE Room r L i I 1 1 V 6 f 1 i ' 'ling ' ' Where does this go? Miss Adler, would you come down and demonstrate this L point? flu. Right in there. . N I a ,gi kr. xi - Q ' C 'K 4 K, s X 1 ' - ,Q':a,, 'L-51 a- fl 'iw f ' up, 5,4 . L-e1QLi,l'1 5 li 4 lg ll A BO Relax, Dr. Long. r. 1 9 c i nfl: ' ,l ls 3 f , 1 ES .ff is 1' +P I 4 ' A- - 1 . 1 lj E Nl l N1 l I.: Bs . q--, F I Class Poll 1969 A poll was distributed in the middle of the fourth year to all classmates in New York City at the time. A few were sent to students at Bassett, but none to students in Africa. Of 120 students, 105 to 110 probably received polls: 76 returned completed polls. Most of those failing to turn them in kept silent, but some of the non-participants offered excuses which included the following: It's too personal, I lost it, It's too much like taking a Pharmacology exam. Although some results may not fully represent class opinion because of non-participation, the easily measured parameters of sexual and geographic distribution among respondents are directly proportional to those of the class as a whole. Some of the background information was taken from the class list and thus describe the entire class. 81 1 f'T l 5 gf , BACKGROU N D A fair degree of homogeneity is apparent. 55'Mn of the class are from Northeastern states MOM from New York City and environsj and another 151k are from the Middle Atlantic region. 14'-MJ are from the Midwest, 7'Mn from the West Coast and Northwest, and 5M from the South. Two students come from the Southwest and three grew up outside the United States. 4OfM: of poll respondents grew up in the suburbs, 38fMa in major cities, 1596 in cities of less than half a million people, and 6'XJ in rural areas. Nearly 7Ofk of those turning in polls gradu- ated from public schools, 14fMn from boarding schools, 121!2'Kl from private day schools, and 5Vz'M, from parochial schools. Of the class's 110 boys, 53'XJ graduated from Ivy League Colleges and an additional 2OfKs from other Eastern schools. Eight of the eleven girls were drawn from the seven Sister colleges. 79fMn of the class graduated in 1965. One member graduated in 1966 and the rest graduated in or after 1958. Bob Schwarz Craig Edmonds Contrary to traditional beliefs, English was only the third most common major C12'k of respondentsj while biology was at the top with 35 k, and chemistry second with 16fM-,. History was fourth with SWJ, followed by psychology with 7'X1. Of the remaining miscellaneous majors, 1O'MJ were in the humanities, 7fM1 in scientific and mathematical areas, and 5WD in social sciences. FAMILIES 1O'MJ of poll respondents have no siblings, and 39M have only one. 32fM, have two, 14'MJ have 3 and SWJ have four. One has five siblings. Of those with one sib or more, 5O'X1 are first children, 4Ofk are second children, and 1O k are third children. No respondent was a fourth or fifth child. Although 4O4M, stated the occurrence of some significant medical or surgical problem in themselves or their immediate families, less than one third of those C12'M-J of the totaly felt that this had influenced their decision to enter a medical career. A third of our respondents' fathers are from Bob Dunn Dennis Turner the business world fincluding real estate and insurancej. A quarter are physicians and SWJ are dentists. HM are lawyers, 7fXJ are in building trades C from carpenter to architectj, 5'M: work with their hands qe.g. meat cutterj. 4fVo are in civil service Cfire department, Post Officel and 4Wo are ministers. The rest are in less common fields. Over half of the respondent's mothers do not work, but several of these do volunteer work. ISWJ of the mothers are educators, SW1 are nurses and 5M are physicians. Other mothers are listed as scientist, politician, receptionist, factory worker and a wide range of other careers. 54W-J of the respondents are married, and almost all the spouses either study f14'MlJ or work C83'XiJ. About half of the working wives are educators, and 15M are nurses. 1O'Xi of spouses are either M.D.s or medical students. Among the more unusual ways in which wives support their med student husbands are as an interior decorator, anti-poverty administration worker, and investment analyst. Although I-BW, of the respondents claim to want no children, no one wants an only child. 401k want three children, and 27W want two. A sixth wants four or more children. An eighth has no specific number in mind. To control family size, AFM, prefer to have the wife on contraceptive pills. l6CMn prefer alternating the use of the pill with mechanical devices, and 34'M1 prefer mechanical devices alone. A daring Sfk would use nothing, and one respondent advocated rhythm. Another supplements pill use with a prayer wheel and incense. Interestingly, the reported dangers of the pill seem to alarm Northeastern males more than those from the rest of the country. Only 27fKs of those from the Northeast - married or single - would want their wives to rely solely on the Pill, while one half the married and three fourths of the single boys from the rest of the country advocate use of the Pill alone. One male and one female respondent feel that abortion should be completely outlawed. All but one other responding girl felt that it should be freely available to any woman desiring it. 33M of the boys felt it should be available after consideration of individual cases, and more than 6O'Xi thought it should be freely available. Several boys are not sure. Larry Rosenberg Roger Wiederhorn Rich Goodin H1 .4 r iiii. . - ff A 21' ,yi 53? 1:f if 9 A4 The Newells r. x . 7 The Buckners The Barskys A T 'ffl' 55 we LQQXESYQY The Budins ' H nlfgk- I 3 f, 'buf'--T73 -fox.-, ' -A K N xx '7 mf A k,.'k- L,-Q, BARD HALL More than 8596 of the respondents have lived in Bard Hall, though less than 1000 have stayed for 4 years. Most of those who moved out did so for more than one reason. These reasons included marriage C3990 more space C37 MJ, privacy and escape from fellow students t18'MaJ, facilities to entertain guests C7Wo, and to establish a better rounded way of life BMJ. Considered the best aspects of Bard Hall life were the convenient location 132W-JD, the proximity to other students t24WaJ. the athletic facilities 124965, the maid service C15'MpJ, the single rooms KSWOJ, and the social and extracurricular activities CGM. The worst single aspect mentioned was the food C37CX:J. 4O'MJ complained about the atmosphere, which was variably described as immature , reg, imented , monastic , noisy , boring , too communal , lonely , and impersonal . Other objections were the shared hang'ups of compulsive medical students , the lack of freedom , the general dormitory environment , and the feeling of being watched by G. A. P. An additional 7fM-J did not like living with only medical students. 26th had objections to the physical plant: almost V2 of these were to the small size of the rooms, and SWJ objected to the elevators. Miscellaneous architectural complaints related to communal bathrooms, inadequate heat, connecting doors between rooms, and unattractiveness of the dining room. Several students felt entertaining in Bard was impossible. one objected to the quality of the maid service, one objected to the lack of private cooking facilities, and one declared that aside from location of athletic facilities, everything about Bard Hall was terrible. Drawing my own inferences from the results, I feel that the bad aspects of the Bard Hall atmosphere will be perpetuated in the proposed married-students dorms, because of the strict and highly artificial segregation of students from faculty and house staff. l and a number of other married students feel that the planning committee made a serious mistake with this arrangement, which is in the same spirit as the separate entrances and non-communicating facilities planned for the gymnasium on the downtown campus. l S Y i l .-. 3 . H t i 1 Q George Berakha Josie Yeh Ruth 'Qi Beautiful Washington Heights Anne Moore ENTERTAINMENT Reme's is the most popular local establishment, preferred over all others by 26'Xn of the voters. Carvel and Luigi's tie for second with 18fM9 each. 7WD go most often to Nelson's, The Silver Palm, Gold Medal, Armory Bar and Grill, Oak Tavern, and Tropical Gardens each draw a few per cent. SW, prefer to avoid all neighborhood hang-outs. Of P818 club activities, swimming is most popular, enjoyed by 51? of the voters. Basketball and squash tie for second. Class shows and Christmas parties are tied for third, and these are followed in order by tennis, the Arts Festival, the dark room, and the choir. Other activities have only scattered par- ticipation. Our Musicians J 'Ulm 3' Mike Bonnie Claire Smith The Plague Peter M oskovltz 251132 CYCLING: Charlie Brown tw 4 'Sl-'QV' 'r '- - Y - v - , -w ,LA SWIMMING: Charlie Stevenson HUNTING: Chuck Jackson Martin Wolferstan SKIING: Wally Merriam Jack Edelen John Mazzulo David Berke John Birkhoff I Z -'Eg i4JA pr x John Wylie Portrait of the Doctor as a Young Artist l Movies are extremely popular. 5700 of the voters saw more than five movies within the preceding 12 months, other than those shown at Bard Hall, and only 700 had seen none at all. However, 6000 attended no movies at Bard Hall. and most of those who had seen movies at Bard had gone to only one or two. Museums and art galleries drew most of the voters at least twice a year. Broadway plays drew just over 7506 at least once. Concerts drew nearly 7OcKU. usually just once, and zoos and Off-Broadway plays each drew two thirds of the voters at least once. Operas were attended by 6296, and those who went usually went more than once and frequently more than half a dozen times. Sporting events were poorly attended. College games drew 43070, but the most popular professional sport was baseball, which drew less than 23'Mn. Other activities cited by individuals included attending the ballet and the circus, going hunting, and refinishing antique furniture. f-7 9 l Z HABITS We are a pretty restrained lot. 6090 of the poll respondents use no tobacco at all. Of those who do, more than half smoke a pipe in addition to, or instead of, cigars and cigarettes. 1271 of the respondents smoke cigars: one third of these smoke one or more per day, and all but one of the remainder smoke one or less per week. 1370 smoke cigarettes, but of these, two thirds smoke one half pack per day or less, and the heaviest smoker consumes only 1172 packs per day. None of the female respondents use tobacco. 417, of the respondents shun alcohol, 54'M, limit their consumption to one or two drinks at parties. 15fMJ generally drink wine only: 1OfZn drink beer primarily. 17W prefer hard liquor, MCM of these consuming one half to one pint per week, 2'V0 consuming less, and 1040 consuming more. All of the girls drink only one or two drinks at parties. 1371 admit to smoking marijuana, but several of these point out that they have smoked it only infrequently. Half of these smokers are from the Northeast. Of the others, one is from the Northwest, and others from the West Coast. Interestingly, all the Northeastern marijuana smokers also smoke tobacco, while only one of the others does. No one admits to using amphetamines or LSD. None of the girls have smoked marijuana. fi' Nam W7 ' 'W -f-r' Rn... b -.L.h.-L.1',..,.,g 5, -, 6 Q--Q.. . -,V fi I 0 i ..-JM-M T N READING While 12M receive no medical journals at all, 77fM-, receive the New England Journal. The Annals of Internal Medicine is received by Zlfk. JAMA, Lancet, Disease-A-Month, and the American Journal of Medicine each have a few readers. Eighteen other medical journals are read by one or two voters. Time is the most commonly read non-medical magazine, with 43W of the voters subscribing to it. New Republic is second with 16W Life and New York follow with 13V2fXn. The New Yorker comes to IOWJ, Newsweek to SCMJ. Cue and the New York Review of Books each come to ESM. 5M get Scientific American and SWJ get U.S. News and World Report. 56 other magazines are read by one or more class members, including Playboy and Sports Illustrated, a number of art magazines, several religious publications, a few technical journals, and many magazines aimed at hobbies such as skiing, home decorating, hi-fi, photography, television-watching and travel. Almost everyone claimed to read a number of non-medical books each year, many averaging nearly a book per month. BUYING: Leland Dobbs STUDYING: Bob Bethel SLEEPING: Sandy Lieber ,A--f .- 21 Q L3 vw We '25 'DXQXQXFA POLITICAL OPINIONS 48fKa of respondents are registered Democrats, 2296 registered Republicans, 2296 unregistered. and 496 registered Independents. Two students are registered Conservatives and one is a registered Liberal. 5796 voted for Humphrey last November, 1596 for Nixon, two students for McCarthy, and for Eldridge Cleaver. 2496 did not vote. 4396 believe their fathers voted for Humphrey, 4696 for Nixon, 796 for no one, one father for Eldridge Cleaver, and one father for Dick Gregory. Of the mothers, 4891 were thought to have voted for Humphrey, 4596 for Nixon, and Sfk for no one. Of the candidates on the scene in the spring of 1968, Robert Kennedy was the favorite choice for president, winning approval from 34fXa of the respondents. McCarthy was almost as popular with 3296. Rockefeller was supported by 2196, Nixon by 596 , and Humphrey by 496 Two students preferred McGovern and one liked Romney. The respondents seem somewhat more dove-ish than hawk-ish. Only 4941 favor a decisive military victory in Vietnam, 19W advocate a strong military position plus negotiations, 41'k support a military slowdown plus negotiations, and 3691 want immediate and complete withdrawal. Only one-third of the class has ever picketed, but some of those who have picketed have done so for more than one cause. Nearly three-quarters of those picketing have done so for peace, and 6096 have done so for Civil Rights. 2 respondents have joined demonstrations against Columbia University, and 2 others for other causes. -A L The class meeting will now come to order. RELIGION Half of the respondents are involved in some form of organized religion. 2096 practice Judaism, 2091 Protestantism, and 1096 Catholicism. Only 3096 do not plan to involve their children in religion. 5596 definitely plan to, and 1596 are undecided. I. . 'I -143' CURRICULUM AND ADMINISTRATION The desirability of a number of possible changes at P848 was as follows, in order of class preference: More elective time 80 'MJ Earlier introduction of clinical material 78.575 Student on-call rooms 77 WJ Less lab time in first two years 72 'Ki 'Nlore emergency room experience 65 CM-J Greater use of faculty advisers 58 CX: Less scut on the wards 49 'Mn Other suggested changes included free meals to students on call in 3rd and 4th years , first-aid course instead of 2nd year surgery , and a number of requests for seminars, tutorials, and a wider use of preceptors. 7OfM1 of voters support a radical change in curriculum at PSLS, while the remaining 30'X1 are reasonably happy with the current curriculum. While about 47'M: feel that the administration is too concerned with aspects of a student's non-academic life such appearance, many of these voters already wear sideburns, and only 7M felt prevented by administrative censure from wearing beards. 34W felt that the administration is justifiably concerned with matters such as dress. 167, feel that the administration should show greater concern for the non-academic life of its students. REGISTRATION: John Birkoff Peter Workum COURSE EVALUATIONS Courses were ranked by preference for each year. First Year: Physiology was unapproached by any other course for popularity, receiving two thirds of the votes for first place and no votes for last place. The differences between the other four courses were not great. Biochemistry and Neuroanatomy were tied for second, but while Biochemistry's votes fell mostly into third and fourth preferences, Neuranatomy's votes were split between second and last place and were sometimes accompanied by vehemently negative comments. Gross Anatomy and Histology were not far behind Biochem. and Neuro. Like Neuro., Gross's votes included high and low preferences, while those for Histology were less vigorously pro or con. Tony Second Year: Pharmacology was very clearly chosen as the best course in the second year, despite a significant number of low votes. Pathology was second, and Clinical Pathology was not far behind. Parasitology ranked fourth with a number of vigorous defenders and some vocal detractors. Physical Diagnosis was fifth, with Introductory Surgery close behind, and Microbiology was last, though by little. Third Year: The runaway favorite was Medicine, although its popularity was not universal. Pediatrics and Neurology were tied for second place. Psychiatry followed, with Orthopedics not far behind. Surgery was next. Significantly below Surgery came Anesthesiology. Dermatology was another large step lower. ENT and Opthalmology. respectively, had almost no defenders at all, and Public Health was overwhelmingly chosen as the worst course of the third year by 75'My of the voters. Fourth Year: Medicine was, again the favorite, and surgery jumped from fifth to a close second place, apparently indicating a distinct preference by the class for ward participation rather than for the relatively passive learning methods of the third year course. Group Clinic was third. Pediatrics was a close fourth, but this did not indicate a fall in popularity so much as a redistribution of votes for other courses. 53M ranked third year peds either lst, 2nd, or 3rd of eleven courses, while 61M ranked fourth year peds either lst, 2nd, or 3rd of eleven courses. Radiology was fifth, and though a strong favorite with few, was generally well recieved. Ob-gyn was John Jeff John Kay Weisberg Glick sixth and, though highly rated by some, received more last place votes ,than any other fourth year course. fPossibly by those assigned to 16 East?b Fourth year Orthopedics dropped to seventh from fourth place, receiving no votes for lst or 2nd place, while the third year course had been put lst or 2nd by ZWI5 of the class. Differential Diagnosis was eighth, with a wide range of reactions. Urology was ninth, receiving no votes for first or last place, but being ranked everywhere in between. Psychiatry dropped from a popular third to an unpopular tenth place. Dermatology dropped from a solid seventh to the cellar. Overall, third year Medicine and Physiology were the two most popular courses, and Pharmacology was also well liked. No course in the entire curriculum challenged Public Health for last place. CEven Dr. Trussell jumped off the sinking ship.J The rise in popularity of Surgery and the fall of Orthopedics, Psychiatry, and Dermatology probably reflect reaction to the different teaching methods used in different years. SUPPLEMENTARY ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES CPCs were of greatest interest to students in our class. Team rounds were nearly as popular. Combined Clinics were considered by some to be too technical or too repetitive of course material. Medical History lectures were appreciated by a few, but many students never went, and some had never heard of them. Mitch Joel Juan Goldman Budin Garcia g ' W , .u'I X. X Q f l rg .. -rf I . 'Fw '1 Q CAREER Nearly 37'X1 of classmates who voted anticipate a career in internal medicine. 28W plan to enter surgery, and half of these have chosen specialties CEM, -orthopedics, rick neurosurgeiy, 2? plastic surgeryj. Psychiatry will draw l2'Mn of the class, about one fourth of these specializing in child psychiatry. BCX: of the voters plan to enter pediatrics. Of the remaining 14 students 2 are undecided, and 2 each plan to enter ophthalmology, pathology, and radiology. One each plans to enter anes- thesiology, obstetrics, neurology, general practice, family medicine, and community medicine. Only 13M plan full-time private practice, and more than half of these plan to practice in a group. An additional 151k plan full-time academic careers. 56'Mn expect to be part-time academic: 43121 will also do part-time private practice and ZOWJ will do part time research C2 students hope to do some of all threej. Half of those planning part-time practice expect to do so as part of a group. One student plans to work full-time in community medicine clinics, and three expect to do this on a part-time basis. .0 Over 65fMn of the voting students want to practice in a city of more than half a million people. EM want to split city and suburban practice. 20'M1 want to practice in cities of 100,000 to 500,000 and 12M prefer a city of less than 100,000 One third of the class expects to join the AlVlA, one eighth expects not to, and half the class is undecided. However, only 121k would definitely join if membership were not advantageous for obtaining such things as malpractice insuranceg 47W would definitely not join, and 4OfKQ would be undecided. ZOCX-J of the class would like to intern at Presbyterian Hospital, while only 1O'M1 would go to Massachusetts General if guaranteed placement were available. GM, would choose Beth Israel in Boston, 5fX1 lVloffitt, and 4'Ma San Francisco General. Boston Children's University of Colorado, Harlem, Rochester, and Roosevelt were the choice of two students. 2O'k of the class chose hospitals chosen by no others, For 22V2'X1, the mind so boggled at the thought of guaranteed placement, that it was incapable of a decision. Actual internships were chosen on the basis of a large number of factors. Most important was a good medical school affiliation. Good hospital facilities, and the friendliness and morale of the staff were the second most important considerations. Location of the hospital in a large city or in a particular city was the third factor: over half of those considering location important wanted to be in New York. Boston and San Francisco each appealed to MM: the rest were widely scattered. A good on-call schedule Cless often than every other nightj was in fourth place: a good salary was fifth. Emphasis on acute medicine andfor trauma was sixth. Less important factors, listed in order, included: minimal scut, important affiliation for future private practice, good local facilities for family, convenience for spouse's place of business, and the availability of a particular program. Two students specifically sought responsibility in an internship. COMPARISON Comparing our results to those of the class above, our rate of poll return is similar. Our geographic distribution is slightly broader Conly 70M of our class is from the East Coast as opposed to 80th of the Class of 1968.3 A marriage rate of 54fMJ has not varied from last year. More of our class's wives are educators Bill Mike Mrs. Abernathy Newell Townsend gf l kt -1 1 . in 'VX -st TQ Cl 5 .l J fl l f George Bill Saari Tucker and 2'MJ more are nurses. We want smaller families - only 1706 rather than 36041 want more than three children - but we are less enthusiastically controlling family size with the Pill. Although 8OfMi of our class wants more elective time, Qlfk of the previous class wanted it. While we agreed with our predecessors that Medicine instruction was good, we were much less satisfied with Microbiology and Dermatology and more enthusiastic about Physiology and Pharmacology. Our class reads more nonemedical books. More of us read the New England Journal of Medicine. And while the New Yorker is still read by IOWJ, it is now in fourth rather than second place, surpassed this year by the New Republic, Life, and New York. Playboy's popularity has dropped substantially. Fewer of us smoke cigarettes, and those who smoke, smoke fewer per day than those just above us. Either we are much more cautious or much bigger liars with respect to drug use than those in the class of 1968,.as only half as many students admitted smoking marijuana in our class. We have more Democrats, fewer Republicans, and many more religiously active students than the class above us. We seem to have a few more doves and fewer picketers. We are more ovenfvhelmingly in favor of some form of legalized abortion. We are at least as distrustful of the AMA. CONCLUSION We have sometimes thought of ourselves as a more compulsive and less frivolous class than the one above us. Most of us feel more consenfative than the hairier and more vocal students in the classes below. In the second year we felt like the most unlucky class - we enjoyed neither the stability of the old labs nor the convenience of the new, but we instead the schooI's foster children, shunted from hall to closetg we did, however, get a last glimpse of .. VNC? gk we x Wssfx we M Goldwater and Bellevue. After our four years here, many of us will choose to remain if possible, and many more will stay nearby, in New York City's other hospitals. Although Columbia cannot expect to please all of her students all of the time, very few, if any of us, will regret that we spent four years of our lives here listening, watching, and beginning to learn what it means to be a doctor. . 5. .ziiifiv Qs affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations 'affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations affiliations 'HQ' Q Id . 1. ., .ii .fans rg. ' f I , , '5 it , 1 , N ,, 'L .4 4 5 -V ' '3'- 55?lff,3',-l'.,?f'eiif? N 5 ' ,:l.f ,.fjE?3ilf5'f'?' 5 it I 4-'if Q' ' if K' 3 .- -fu A iz. , I 9 , 4 I ii O 1 A, 1 - gzn:.-f-l--- Q..-V ff- W W, X Q ' a - .' 'I - a f ' x D , ll 5 s X .QU A '15 , np mt-' 'IQJV Zi: 1- 'A. gg lr X 1 Z lung, I 1 1 .ls 1' O -f 'm ,4,,s Y! ,Y fy JL r ,z ,ya J, g- I' 1, NN NN I4 ff 92 -V N I ' Q ,nf 1,3 N WALTER WICHERN' And ou et 6 hours off for - Y E Christmas and New Years. FREDERICK AMENDOLA: It's been growing from my umbilicus for over two years. Go somewhere obscure, Vincent, perhaps Minne- sota. My wife thinks I'm working. Mark, since there are three hemorrhoidal veins on the left, why are there two on the right. DONALD MILLER and IAN REISS: We just did a wo thoracodocho- GREGOR JAMESON: Baby, Baby, Can't You Hear My Heart Beat? This SUBintern ordered BP q 45 sec.! NICHOLAS P. CHRISTY: Rodin? Never heard of it. Dear Lilly: I have lost my stethoscope. cnoledocho- MICHAEL LISANTI, CARL LUDWIG, and uretero-eustacho- WILLIAM FRIEND: That's 2 regular and 1 black, ventriculo-ileo Liebowitz. anastomosis! . -ax Charles A. Ragan Next year I'm going on strike A -J .ln fi 2 Af-lv bbw- , I .'. w . A. 5.4 'Q 6' X Ya . Xe. 1 Rejane M. Harvey and Cecil G. Marquez Come, l'II show you where we read them ,- S ielff-2 'SQSK U x bb 5 ., 551 ' ' aj 4MauRGY' yea: E .1 ,Z - ,ax 'Q 'zvvr' , . . . e ., 5 1 Q, . - 4 . , ,I Q- , - 1,-Q. ae. 1,-f. -- -- 5. ' :xr ,T ,, - --- 1,4 .'S'J,,,v iq - ,fr , f' , Q 5,8 . A .midi-'-, F wh N J. h , I , . K-X 4 1 - - - N . . - 4. f VA : 1 f RT. T. 71u:..':2' ,Lapse :. '. Y V ,- w Q- ast515 f'J ' 55 ..u. 41 .:- -, - - . t' ' . - . A qs-:hJ. ,'j1L.l'V.:? . i- 5-Xaaagzt. MARY IMOGENE BASSETT HOSPITAL UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO MEDICAL CENTER THIS PAGE IS DEDICATED TO THosE wl-lo TRAVELED NEAR AND FAR IN QUEST OF. . . GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE 'G-A-sz, UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS OF CLEVELAND 104 FRANCIS DELAFIELD HOSPITAL rx I gui' u AVE ATQUE VALE H. HOUSTON MERRITT, M.D. Ave, students of the Class of 1969. Hail to you who have successfully weathered the storms of four years of anatomy, biochemistry, physiology and many other erudite subjects. Vale, students of Class of 1969. Farewell to you who are leaving these sheltered confines to start your career in medicine. For most of you this will be internal medicine, general surgery or one of the specialties. For some of you, it will be research. For all of you, I hope it will also be a lifetime devoted to the transmission of your knowledge to future generations of students. You may recall that this is one of the clauses in the Hippocratic Oath which you will soon take. lf you are surprised at the emphasis that l am placing on the role of teaching in your life, let me remind you of the shortage of physicians in this and many other countries throughout the world, and the need for teachers to educate them. The increased demand for teachers in medical education is due to many factors. One of these is the evolution of the system of medical education in the United States. ln colonial days the education of a physician was scant indeed and consisted mainly of an apprenticeship. The first medical schools, established in the sixth decade of the seventeenth century, were patterned after those of Scotland, England and Western Europe. Instruction, mainly by lectures and demonstration to large classes, required few teachers. ln fact, medical education was such a prosperous business that in the last half of the nineteenth century, there were more than 400 so-called medical schools in the United States. However, early in this century, there was a great reform, spurred on by the formation of the Council on Medical Education of the American Medical Association and the thorough study by Abraham Flexner in 1910. Dr. Flexner emphasized the need for libraries, laboratories and a full-time faculty in the basic sciences. Approximately a decade later the Rockefeller Foundation recog- nized the need and gave financial support for full-time members of the faculty in the clinical departments. Following World War ll funds for research became available from the Federal Government through the National Institutes of Health, thus making research an integral and important part of medical education. 106 Each one ofthese advancesin nwedmaleducahon has caused anincreasein the size of the faculty. In the past twenty years the size of the full-time and part-time faculties of our schools has more than doubled. Two additional factors have caused increased demands for more medical teachers. The first of these is the establishment of new medical schools and the increase in the enrollment in existing schools. More than a dozen new medical schooh have been opened in the pastten years and the enromnentin the entering classes of older schools has increased approximately ten per cent. Perhaps the greatest factor in the increased dennand for teachers is the radical revision of the curriculum which is being adopted by many schools. The medical curriculum which was established in the latter part of the nineteenth century remained relatively unchanged for almost fifty years. In the past few yeam an entkew new conceptofinedkaleducahon has devdoped whmh E directed toward a reduction in the length of time devoted to the traditional courses and the introduction of many elective courses. The purpose of the new curriculum is to give the individual student a much greater latitude in developing his own talents and interests. At the same time it allows the student to correlate the basic and clinical sciences in a manner which will be more meaningful to him. It is obvious that this requires individualization of teaching and many more teachers. Although you have not been exposed to this new curriculum you have worked with the faculty in the planning of this experiment in medical educatim and will have the opportunity of participating in it as an intern, resident or member of the faculty. We sincerely hope that your four years at P815 have instilled in you the deshe to conunue your educauon and to parhdpatein the educahon of future generations of students throughout your whole career. It is with mixed feelings that I bid farewell to the Class of 1969. l rejoice with you in your completion of the first great lap in your medical education. I regret that I did not get to know you better, and that my contact with you at the bedside of the patient was not as great as l would like for it to have been. HHM:MjS 12!5!68 107 William S. Abernathy University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas City, Kansas David J. Adams University of Washington Affiliated Hospitals Seattle, Washington Donald, M. Bachman Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York William E. Benson Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York George J. Berakha Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maryland David K. Berke Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Carol D. A. Berkowitz Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York David M. Berkowtiz Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Robert A. Bethel Harlem Hospital New York, New York John P. Bilezikian Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Sophie B. Bilezikian St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York John D. Birkhoff University of Chicago Clinics Chicago, Illinois Michael Borecky Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Susan E. Botsford Harlem Hospital New York, New York Malcolm M. Brown Children's Medical Center Boston Massachusetts John H. Buckner Harlem Hospital New York, New York Joel A. Budin Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Donald L. Buehler Stanford University Affiliated Hospitals Palo Alto, California Michael B. Bunim Kaiser Foundation San Francisco, California Robert W. Buntin S Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire Henry E. Butler III Kaiser Foundation San Francisco, California Paul E. Cohart Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York Kenneth G. Cousens Mount Zion Hospital San Francisco, California Edward V. Cox Ill Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York William E. Crouch III Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Rollin K. Daniel Barnes Hospital St. Louis, Missouri Peter B. Davol St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Peter A. De Gregorio Harlem Hospital New York, New York Leland G. Dobbs Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Robert N. Dunn Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York ICllCEfRCllSii-lIfPS Medicine Rotating Surgery Medicine Medicine Medicine Pediatrics Medicine Medicine Medicine Medicine Surgery Medicine Mixed Pediatrics Surgery Surgery Surgery Medicine Rotating Surgery Medicine Mixed Medicine Medicine Surgery Medicine Mixed Medicine Surgery Michael W. Eaton Boston City Hospital CTuftsJ Boston, Massachusetts John S. Edelen Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Craig Edmonds Kaiser Foundation San Francisco, California Donald A. Feinfeld Harlem Hospital New York, New York Jeffrey R. Fisher Harlem Hospital New York, New York Richard L. Fraioli Naval Hospitals - St. Alban's New York Eric E. Frische King County Hospital Seattle, Washington Carol Garvey Washington Hospital Center Washington, D.C. Glenda Garvey Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York John H. Glick Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Surgery Medicine Rotating Medicine Medicine Mixed Rotating Mixed Medicine Medicine Roger L. Goettsche, Jr. Mixed Medicine Presbyterian-Pacific Medical Center San Francisco, California Mitchell A. Goldman Harlem Hospital New York, New York Steven P. Goldsmith Boston Veterans Administration Hos. Boston, Massachusetts Richard C. Goodin Harlem Hospital New York, New York Eugene W. Green, Jr. Barnes Hospital St. Louis. Missouri Thomas Gualtieri Royal Victoria Montreal, Canada Laurance J. Guido St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Thomas M. Hanson Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York John W. Harmon Vth Surgical KHSWBTUJ Boston City Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Chesley C. Herbert Harlem Hospital New York, New York Pietr Hitzig St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Robert N. Holtzman Harlem Hospital New York, New York John S. Hood Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Charles G. Jackson, Jr. Harlem Hospital New York, New York Conrade C. Jaffe San Diego County University Hospital San Diego, California Lynne L. Johnson Harlem Hospital New York, New York Mark E. Josephson Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York Neil B. Kavey St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Jon A. Kay Harlem Hospital New York, New York Mixed Medicine Medicine Medicine Surgery Surgery Medicine Surgery Medicine Medicine Mixed Surgery Mixed Medicine Medicine Medicine Medicine Mixed Robert C. Kiess Mary lmogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, New York Mark C. Lambert University of California Hospitals San Francisco. Calilornla Robert G. Lattes Harlem Hospital New York, New York Virginia A. Li Volsi Presbyterian Hospital New York. New York William A. Lieber Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Jerome H. Liebowitz Mount Zion Hospital San Francisco. California Robert W. Lisle St. Vincent's Hospital New York, New York James T. Long Los Angeles County General Hospital Los Angeles, California Roger A. Lundquist Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Richard A. Maun San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, California John M. Mazzullo lll Harlem Hospital New York, New York Carlos Menendez Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Walter W. Merriam Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Christopher Michelsen Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Anne Moore New York Hospital New York, New York Peter A. Moskovitz George Washington General Hospital Washington, D.C. Irwin Nash Yale New Haven Medical Center New Haven, Connecticut Michael E. Newell San Diego County University Hospital San Diego, California Olufemi 0. Ogundipe Montefiore Hospital New York, New York David S. C. Pao George Washington University Hospital Washington, D.C. Charles M. Peterson Harlem Hospital New York, New York John W. Polachek Montreal General Hospital Montreal, Canada James A. Pollack Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Trevor R. P. Price University of California Hospitals San Francisco, California Andrew C. Przybyla Bronxiebanon Hospital New York, New York Andrew R. Pulito University of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Virginia William W. Reichert Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire James A. Reiffel Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Robert J. Rua Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Dorothy A. Rollefson Bernalillo County Hospital Albuquerque, New Mexico Surgery Medicine Mixed Pathology Surgery Mixed Mixed Rotating Surgery Mixed Surgery Medicine Medicine Medicine Surgery Medicine Surgery Pathology Surgery Mixed Medicine Medicine Medicine Medicine Pediatrics Medicine Medicine Surgery Rotating Medicine Medicine Medicine Lawrence E. Rosenberg San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, California Arthur R. Rosenglick Harlem Hospital New York, New York Charlotte Rundles Bellevue-New York University Hospital New York. New York George J. Saari King County Hospital Seattle, Washington Anthony G. Santomauro Passavant Memorial Hospital Chicago, lllinois Robert D. Schwarz Royal Victoria Hospital Montreal, Canada Thomas P. Sculco Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Steven L. Sholem Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York William H. Southwick Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, New York Demetrius Stasiuk Los Angeles County General Hospital Los Angeles, California Allen C. Steere, Jr. St, Luke's Hospital New York, New York Charles S. Stevenson St, Luke's Hospital New York, New York Walter H. Stingle Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Jeffrey D. Thorley Bernalillo County Hospital Albuquerque, New Mexico Kenneth M. Tittle Beth Isreal Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Robert P. Titzler Hennepin County General Hospital Minneapolis, Minnesota William M. Tucker Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Dennis Turner Harlem Hospital New York. New York Roger P. Vincent University of Minneapolis Hospital Minneapolis, Minnesota Samuel Weinstein Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Jeffrey A. Weisberg Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York Albert K. Weyman Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York A. Roger Wiederhorn Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York John C. Williams University of Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Hugh D. Wilson Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire Martin Wolferstan Charity Tulane Div. Hospital New Orleans, Louisiana Fifield Workum, Jr. Bernalillo County Hospital Albuquerque, New Mexico John V. Wylie Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Josephine C. Yeh lVth George Washington University Hos. Washington, D.C. Billy G. Yount, Jr. University of Chicago Clinics Chicago, Illinois Mixed Medical Medici ne Medicine Rotating Medicine Surgery Surgery Surgery Surgery Mixed Surgery Medicine Surgery Surgery Medicine Medicine Rotating Mixed Mixed Medicine Pediatrics Surgery Surgery Surgery Surgery Medicinal Surgery Mixed Surgery Surgery Medicine Medicine alpha omega alpha Alpha Omega Alpha is a national medical honor society whose members are elected on the basis of scholarship and character. The society's motto, To be worthy to serve the suffering, embodies the spirit of the organization. May, 1968: William Edmunds Benson Joel Aryeh Budin Donald Lyle Buehler Glenda Josephine Garvey James Andrew Reiffel Dorothy Ann Rollefson elected members 110 November 1967 David Kenneth Berke Carol Adler Berkowitz John Paul Bilezikian Malcolm Michael Brown Edmund Vermilye Cox, Ill John S. Edelen John Watson Harmon Marc Eric Josephson Carlos Eugenio Menendez Walter Woodhull Merriam Lawrence Elliot Rosenberg Walter H. Stingle, ll Roger Phillips Vincent class officers Fourth Year President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer P. 81 S. Club Representative Third Year President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer P. 81 S. Club Representative Second Year President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer P. 81 S. Club Representative President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer P. 81 S. Club Representative First Year 111 Malcolm M. Brown John S. Edelen Anne Moore Christopher B. Michelsen Jerome H. Liebowitz Jon Kay Richard A. Maun Malcolm M. Brown Jerome H. Liebowitz Jeffrey Fisher Robert N. Dunn Richard Goodin Michael Newell Jerome H. Liebowitz Jeffrey Fisher Mark Josephson Lynne Johnson Robert N. Dunn Jerome H. Liebowitz WILLIAM SHERWOOD ABERNATHY Omaha, Nebraska B.A., Grinnell, 1965 ARTHUR JOSEPH BARSKY, III New York, New York B.A., Williams, 1964 DAVID JAMES ADAMS New York, New York B.S., Rochester, 1965 ,mb wu.uAM EDMUNDS J X BENSON if 'ff .X .,, Waterbury, Connecticut B.A., Yale, 1965 . N, , 1 ,Q :I-' N-2 J ' ,:.x? '1': ,,,4.,.., ., ,V , 14. ,Q :f A -'-.QS ze. ' 5? , f' Kimi 'Gil ., V tw... .1 - EQ: Cz, ' .-', 51 , La--1 :ff 1 - QV' DONALD MARK BACHMAN 'E New York, New York I R B.A., Columbia, 1965 'S' GEORGE JOSEPH BERAKHA ' I New York, New York U B.S., Columbia, 1965 N. I . I x 1T '9' f2,1'5- ' You NY x, ,,..A- - , - ,,.. Nq'N! DAVID KENNETH BERKE Forest Hills, New York B.A., Columbia. 1965 ,q N 0' '1 if ROBERT ARTHUR BETHEL Rome, Georgia B.S., Davidson, 1965 4 Q CAROL ADLER BERKOWITZ Brooklyn, New York B.A., Barnard, 1965 JOHN PAUL BILEZIKIAN Newtonville, Massachusetts B.A., Harvard, 1965 f.,,.-Y Xi xr, .0-F 4' DAVID MARK BERKOWITZ Brooklyn, New York B.A., Hobart, 1965 E--1 SOPHIE BALLARD BILEZIKIAN Philadelphia, Pennsylvania B.A., Radcliffe, 1965 Tx 'UN l In. Q l JOHN DAVID BIRKHOFF Cambridge, Massachusetts B.A., Harvard, 1964 C. BRUCE BROWN, JR. Rockport, Massachusetts B.A., Bowdoin, 1965 MICHAEL BORECKY Denver, Colorado B.A., Wesleyan, 1965 MALCOLM MICHAEL BROWN Mamaroneck, New York B.A., Harvard, 1965 SUSAN ELIZABETH BOTSFORD New York, New York B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1964 JOHN HERMAN BUCKNER White River Jct., Vermont B.A., Dartmouth, 1966 JOEL ARYEH BUDIN Rockaway Park, New York B.A., Columbia, 1965 PAUL EDWARD COHART New Haven, Connecticut B.A., Yale, 1965 DONALD LYLE BUEHLER Fremont, California B.A., Stanford, 1964 KENNETH GABRIEL COUSENS Highland Park, Illinois B.A., Amherst, 1965 MICHAEL BEN BUNIM Chevy Chase, Maryland B.A., Haverford, 1965 EDWARD VERMILYE COX, III Oyster Bay, New York B.A., Yale, 1965 21' in OW 1-X 9 3 UR .' fr 1 ' Q 'fi qhpgiv . Q TWG TF? Q51 nf-df? ff-at :I iff -Q2 4.55-.jg.s, -1 l 54,455 fag-.fg.1y.g . r ' ,L -,:,g.5,- a,a,'-. I '55-'J-X-:-,lf 4, M. 4 kegikgi-'w 0 .,l 1 RQ-.41-4: ,f.x'J V.. ' . 'K 1iS -' U , I . wygfjfgg-x. YL v A '1!'F'Ir7Sf5 - fiifff Q., r: ,Ig -7,2311-s A 'zum--Q xv. ,, ,. , K., --X.. -3 'Li '? w. ' WILLIAM E. CROUCH, III Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania B.A., Princeton, 1965 PETER A. DEGREGORIO Yonkers, New York B.S., Fordham, 1965 ROLLIN KIMBALL DANIEL Montgomery, Alabama B.A., Vanderbilt, 1965 ROBERT N. DUNN Rutherford, New Jersey B.A., Harvard, 1965 PETER BRADFORD DAVOL Concord, Massachusetts B.A., Harvard, 1964 MICHAEL WINFRED EATON Orinda, California B.A., California, 1965 Q-AJ ,ggi 7-ii . V1 -AN RN JOHN S. EDELEN Grosse Pointe, Michigan B.A., Wesleyan, 1965 JEFFREY ROBERT FISHER Birmingham, Michigan B.A., Princeton, 1965 CRAIG EDMONDS Baltimore, Maryland B.A., Harvard, 1964 RICHARD LORETO FRAIOLI Schenectady, New York B.S., Union, 1965 DONALD ALLEN FEINFELD Rye, New York B.A., Rochester, 1965 JANE ELIOT FRIED Brewster, New York B.A., Vassar, 1964 ERIC ERNST FRISCHE Glen Head, New York B.A., Stanford, 1965 JOHN HARRISON GLICK New York, New York B.A., Princeton, 1965 CAROL WILSON GARVEY Baltimore, Maryland B.A., Radcliffe, 1963 ROGER LYMAN GOETTSCHE, JR. GLEN DA JOSEP GARVEY Wilmette, Illinois' B.A., Yale, 1965 HINE New York, New York B.A., Wellesley, 1964 MITCHELL ALAN GOLDMAN Bayside, New York B.A., Queens, 1965 I ..l,,. igf S Q1-... 'L-f f,l'ff'-, 7- .. 1,-I Q., - 1' nm ,I 'A ,3 j wif N cy ----er' --96? Q., 'TN New York New York B.A. Syracuse 1965 sTEvEN PAUL c.oLDslvnTH 5' V' 75 : -K , , -,g-Ng ' Qs LAURANCE JACOBIUS GUIDO Great Neck, New York B.A., Columbia, 1965 RICHARD CARLYSLE GOODIN N Corona, New York B.A., Dartmouth, 1965 THOMAS MICHAEL HANSON Rye, New York B.A., Dartmouth, 1965 EUGENE WILLARD GREEN JR Columbus Ohio B S Washmgton and Lee 1965 infra, 11 T T7 5 ' JOHN W. HARMON Scarsdale, New York if-' B.A., Harvard, 1965 lil , : , . E ' 5 -A,. Kwan-,Q X . A ,,.. , . . ., xw.Xv,xw ' 1 . , 5. N. . 'gs E he-nd? 'ld CHESLEY CARLISLE HERBERT, III Gastonia, North Carolina B.A., Duke, 1965 JOHN SUDLER HOOD Clearwater, Florida B.S., lVl.l.T., 1965 PIETR HITZIG New York, New York B.A., Harvard, 1964 CHARLES GILBERT JACKSON, JR. Bronxville, New York B.S., Yale, 1965 ROBERT NEIL HOLTZMAN Brooklyn, New York B.A., Harvard, 1964 CONRADE CARL JAFFE Boston, Massachusetts B.S., M.l.T., 1965 YNNE LALOR JOHNSON reenwich, Connecticut .A., Wellesley. 1965 JON ANTHONY KAY Upland, California B.A., Stanford, 1965 MARK ERIC JOSEPHSON Teaneck, New Jersey B.S., Trinity, 1965 ROBERT CHRISTIAN KIESS Williamsport, Pennsylvania B.A., Lycoming, 1964 NEIL BARTON KAVEY Scarsdale, New York B.A., Princeton, 1965 MARK CLAWSON LAMBERT San Francisco, California B.A., Stanford, 1965 Yi -gi A-dz-Q X, , -'T l1', if fwfr ,Ah Nl 'W' Q-ni'- I UK in-4...-.. -.-'aff- W .. H,-or . 43515.-,, I f 2, 1 M. J nv, v lll .7 I ROBERT GEORGE LATTES Teaneck, New Jersey B.A., Columbia, 1963 ROBERT WHEELER LISLE Greenvale, New York B.A., Williams, 1965 WILLIAM ALEXANDER LIEBER Blue Bell, Pennsylvania B.A., Harvard, 1958 VIRGINIA ANNE LIVOLSI New York, New York B.S., Mount St. Vincent, 1965 JEROME! HARVEY LIEBOWITZ Fairlawn, New Jersey B.A., Trinity, 1965 JAMES THEODORE LONG Avondale Estates, Georgia B.A., Yale, 1962 B.D.,4Unlon Theological Seminary, 1965 x. S.- 1'-- , Y .J msg' ..-L r 5 4-:Er ,pulls- 9- 'UN 1.-- wn' g 4 'Y -fi ROGER ALAN LUNDQUIST Red Wing, Minnesota B.S., St. Olaf, 1965 CARLOS EUGENIO MENENDEZ New York, New York B.S., St. Joseph's, 1965 RICHARD ANGU Grosse Pointe, Mich B.A., Yale, 1965 WALTER Che B.A., JOHN MICHAEL MAZZULLO,IIl New Rochelle, New B.A., Rutgers, 1965 S MAUN igan WOODHULL MERRIAM ster, New York Williams, 1965 York CHRISTOPHER BRUCE Boston, MICHELSEN Massacusetts B.A., Bowdoin, 1961 ANNE MOORE Short Hills, New Jersey B.A., Smith, 1965 MICHAEL EUGENE NEWELL Salt Lake City, Utah B.A., Columbia, 1965 'Ui PETER ALAN MOSKOVITZ Scarsdale, New York B.A., Haverford, 1965 OLUFEMI OLUDOLAPO OGUNDIPE 'CII' A . Lagos, Nigeria B.A., Haverford, 1964 IRWIN NASH New York, New York B.S., Yale, 1965 'S xt. Bethesda, Maryland -Q-.lP ' DAVID SIEN CHIN PAO B.S., Swarthmore, 1965 'U' x 31? It J' Cie Wx N- uni? -nr CHARLES MARQUIS PETERSON Seattle, Washington 3 av- B.A., Carleton, 1965 V3 nl'- TREVOR ROBERT PRYCE PRICE Keene, New Hampshire B.A., Yale, 1965 JOHN W. POLACHECK Milwaukee, Wisconsin B.A., Harvard, 1965 ANDREW C. PRZYBYLA New York, New York B.S., Columbia, 1960 Ph.D., Columbia, 1965 JAMES A. POLLACK Binghamton, New York B.A., Hamilton, 1965 ANDREW RAYMOND PULITO East Rockaway, New York B.A., Holy Cross, 1965 -Q, MK' fr K 1 1. .-5' 1? ts ,ns G63 ,fl WILLIAM WALTER REICHERT Indianapolis, Indiana B.A., Yale, 1965 DOROTHY ANN ROLLEFSON Madison, Wisconsin B.A., Stanford, 1965 JAMES ANDREW REIFFEL Scarsdale, New York B.A., Duke, 1965 LAWRENCE ELLIOT ROSENBERG Mamaroneck, New York B.A., Princeton, 1965 ROBERT JOEL REZA Kansas City, Missorui B.A., Columbia, Bala 1965 ARTHUR RUSSELL ROSENGLICK Cynwyd, Pennsylvania B.A., Wesleyan, 1965 I THOMAS PETER SCULCO I Watch Hill, Rhode Island HARLOTTE Runouas wg v, fs! urham, North Carolina .s., Duke, 1965 f , :1- A A 'P P . 'qt' LJ M ROBERT DUBOIS SCHWARZ New York, New York B.A., Harvard, 1965 Eonee JoHN SAARI ibbing, Minnesota .A., St. Olaf, 1965 bm B.A., Brown, 1965 ANTHONY GERARD SANTOMAURO Franklin Square, New York H ' Z? ' B.S,,St.John's,1965 Q U 1 'if' 1' 7 X,' nl' I ..Q F STEVEN LEE SHOLEM New Rochelle, New York B.A., Pennsylvania, 1965 WILLIAM HENRY SOUTHWICK Plainfield, New Jersey BA Princeton 1965 450 CHARLES S. STEVENSON, JR. ,ani 1' Grosse B.A., Diplomat in DEMETRIUS STAS Island, Michigan Princeton, 1959 English Studies, Edinburgh, 1964 IUK West Caldwell, New Jersey BA Princeton 1963 WALTER H. SINGLE New York, New York B.A., Columbia, 1965 1, ALLEN cARuTHERs STEERE I , Fort Wayne, Indiana I- -. '31 ' l B.A., columbia, 1965 ., - ,fs . . 1 , I l :Ei '. W 5' ' . I N E . A JEFFREY DAYNES THORLEY ' Y . ' san Lake City, utah , B.S., Utah, 1965 l X f i. fi' ir 'VN it 'Sr -5, 1 , G. Sr ?3' WN gd' 0-- ROBERT PETER TITZLER New York, New York B.S., City College of New York, 1961 ROGER PHILLIPS VINCENT North Olmsted, Ohio B.A., Hamilton, 1965 WILLIAM MORRIS TUCKER St. Louis, Missouri B.A., Harvard, 1962 M.A., Yale, 1965 SAMUEL WEINSTEIN Great Neck, New York B.A., Yale, 1965 DENNIS CLINTON TURNER Stockton, California B.A., Harvard, 1965 JEFFREY ALAN WEISBERG White Plains, New York B.S., Columbia. 1965 '?9f -fe Il ALBERT KRUG WEYMAN ' U- 5 Zn , v i V , Cincinnati, Ohio l V L ,, Y B.A., Yale, 1965 ,' ,Z f- . . - I 3' I, ' ' Q' V ivn l ii. , i -,L . Q77 HUGH DOUGLAS WILSON Rochester, New York B.A., Wesleyan, 1965 A. ROGER WIEDERHORN White Plains, New York B.A., Princeton, 1965 MARTIN WOLFERSTAN Cambridge, England B.A., Cambridge, 1960 JOHN CLOSS WILLIAMS Glens Falls, New York B.S., Cornell, 1965 FIFIELD WORKUM, JR. Bedford, New York B.A., Harvard, 1961 JOHN VOORHEES WYLIE ina. 'X 1... T New York, New York BA. Yale. 1964 HENRY EMERAON BUTLER, III ,Quix- Los Angeles. California B.A., Harvard, 1964 -. 52 - Q, l ,O Q5 JOSEPHINE CHANG YEH New York, New York B,A., Barnard, 1965 NOT SHOWN ROBERT WARREN BUNTING Wilmington, Delaware B.A., Carleton, 1965 LELAND GEORGE DOBBS Washington, D.C, B.A., Harvard. 1965 X THOMAS GUALTIERI . - 1 :NX fx 1-0 . BILLY GERALD YOUNT, JR. Tulas, Oklahoma B.A,, Princeton, 1965 131 Brooklyn, New York B.A., Columbia, 1965 KENNETH MARVIN TITTLE Vancouver, Washington B.A.. Stanford. 1965 faculty George B. Ambose William Amols Raymond A. Amoury David L. Andrews Arthur J. Antenucci Henry Aranow, Jr. Daniel C. Baker, Jr. John M. Baldwin Harold G. Barker Milos Basek A. L. Loomis Bell, Jr. Shivaji Bhonslay William A. Blanc Sidney Blumenthal Frederick O. Bowman Drs. S. E. and G. P. Bradley Ellen Regan Brown Harold W. Brown Howard G. Bruenn Stanley M. Bysshe G. A. Carden, Jr. Shu Chien Charles Leigh Christian James W. Correll Stuart Cosgriff Bard Cosman George F. Crikelair E. C. Curnen, Jr. George A. Curran Douglas A. Damrosh Robert C. Darling Felix E. Demartini Roger C. Duvoisin A. G. Devoe R. H. E. Elliott, Jr. Paul D. Ellner Carl R. Feind Marie D. Felix Andrew G. Frantz Henry Clay Frick, II Harry W. Fritts Alexander Garcia Sawnie R. Gaston Arnold P. Gold Dewitt S. Goodman Dean Grandin S. Ashby Grantham sponsors Magnus I. Gregersen Albert W. Grokoest Bernard L. Grossman David Habif Frederick P. Herter Edgar M. Housepian Calderon Howe Robert M. Hui George H. Humphreys S. L. James Alfred Jaretski, III Mary Jane Jesse Daniel V. Kimberg Donald W. King Lawrence C. Kolb Donald S. Kornfeld John H. Laragh John K. Lattimer Edgar Leifer John Nicholas Loeb Niels L. Low James R. Malm Alfred M. Markowitz George Melcher George R. Merriam, Jr. H. Houston Merritt Alvin Mesnikoff Robert Michels Charles S. Neer, ll S. H. Ngai Emanuel Papper Howard A. Patterson Charles A. Perera George A. Perera Kermit L. Pines Phillip Polatin J. Lawrence Pool Milton R. Porter Charles A. Ragan, Jr. Frederick R. Randall Harry M. Rose Saul L. Sanders Grant Sanger Thomas V. Santulli Malcolm H. Schvey Daniel Sciarra William B. Seaman Edward B. Self Harold F. Spalter Charles F. Stewart Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Frank E. Stinchfield Richard J. Stock Donald P. Swartz F. C. Symonds John V. Taggart Donald F. Tapley Duane Todd Wolfgang Tretter Ralph J. Veenema Jules Waltner S. C. Wang A. R. Wertheim Robert T. Whitlock Philip D. Wiedel Herbert B. Wilcox, Jr. Susan Williamson Dr. Walter A. Wichern Dr. James A. Wolff Dr. Hans Zinnser parents Mr Dr. Mr Dr. Mr Mr Mr Mr Nat R. Adler and Mrs. Arnold L. Bachman W. A. Bethel and Mrs. C. Bruce Brown and Mrs. Malcolm D. Brown and Mrs. Tsuan-Nien Chang and Mrs. Nicholas DeGregorio George W. Dunn Mrs. C. B. Eaton Mr Dr. Mr Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Dr. Mr. Dr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Carl A. Frische and Mrs. Thomas Q. Garvey, Jr. and Mrs. Leo Goldman and Mrs. Gerald M. Greenspahn William M. Hitzig J. Sudler Hood and Mrs. Charles G. Jackson and Mrs. Milton K. Kavey and Mrs. Scott Lambert Raffaele Lattes Carlos Menendez Walter A. Merriam and Mrs. Jost J. Michelsen and Mrs. Martin L. Reiffel and Mrs. R. Rollefson Frederick A. 0. Schwartz and Mrs. F. Workum Robert Wylie We wish to apologize to any sponsors whose contributions arrived after this page went to press. 132 X31 C3 O O 1:3 C ' . 1' f: ,,.x,1j,E. 3,21 xt. . . fu, 55 ix Az K. . vin- , ,- . E. 1-lf ' 1?-5, x, a 3, g. N, ,K n, N, C-Q 1, N -. .. , va. - .., , A--. HT 2 A C Qercb ' QQ Q Q K f C C - g Q G C ? ' cf X Q P-sir.: -ss!! ' C 2 9: f' C, Q : K5 gs? 2 C--1: Z CONGRATULATIONS and BEST WISHES to THE CLASS of 1969 from The Manager and Staff of Bard Hall THE P 8: S ALUMNI ASSOCIATION EXTENDS TO EACH MEMBER OF THE CLASS OF 1969 ITS CONGRATULATIONS AND SINCEREST BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND SUCCESSFUL CAREER THE MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE EXTENDS COOK HOSPITAL SUPPLY COMPLETE EQUIPMENT AND INSTRUMENTATION FOR THE PHYSICIAN AND HOSPITAL 554 West 168th Street New York, N.Y., 10032 Tel. 212-795-6000 ITS SINCEREST GOOD WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1969 COURTESY CARDS MEDICAL CENTER PHARMACY Jacob Kaplan, F.A.C.A. 4013 Broadway bet. 168th 8- 169 Sts. WA 3-1258 Specialists in Prescription Compounding ARMORY RESTAURANT FINE AMERICAN - ITALIAN FOOD Newly Redecorated Dining Room 4011 Broadway bet. 168th 8. 169th Sts. WA 3-9034 HEIGHTS Camera Center The Leading Brands In Photographic Equipment And Supplies- AT SPECIAL PRICES The Finest Quality In Photo Finishing Done On Premises 1229 ST. NICHOLAS AVENUE Bet. 171st and 172nd Sts. New York, N.Y., 10032 WA 3-3400 VVA 7-3233 LARRY ORIN JEVVELER ELECTRONICALLY TESTED WATCH REPAIR 4009 Broadway at 168th Street New York, N.Y., 10032 Special Discounts for Hospital Personnel Compliments of Realty Hardware Co., Inc. 1235 St. Nicholas Ave. Near 172 St. Tel: LO s-1230 OLYMPIC BARBER SHOP Nick Tsakiridis 4021 Broadway New York 10032 A Bet. 169th and 170th Sts. Expert Tailor A Cleaners J. FRENK 230 Fort Washington Ave. WA 7-3884 All Kinds of Alterations Satisfaction Guaranteed Office 254-3131 Residence 254-3003 Jane Eaton Realtor 21 J Orinda Way, Orinda Plaza Center Lower Level Orinda, California MANHATTAN UNIFORM CENTER 4036 Broadway at 170th Street Medical Uniforms To Fit All Needs Telephone LO 8-9130 TROPICAL GARDENS Il ON BROADWAY Bet. 169 and 170 Sts. WA 3-8918 See us for liquor first U PTOWN Wines 81 Liquor Store Incorporated 4033 Broadway at 170 Street New York, New York, 10032 L0 8-2100 THE GOLD MEDAL Como Pizza, Inc. Hot 81 Cold Heros We Deliver 4035 Broadway Si 170 St NICK and ANGELO When the patient's delirious, Think of Bacterias! THE MEDICAL BACTERIOLOGY LAB P 81 S 12-443 GREETINGS from Chris, Mike, Bill, and the gang RESTAURANT OUR SPECIALTY: Delicious food . . . moderate prices RINGLER-RADOS SURGICAL CORP. Special attention to medical students Surgical 8, Medical Supplies 4019 Broadway at 169 St. Tel. 568-2062 Univ The Bmw Opposite the Medical Center 3958 Broadway WA 7-2152-3 n .N,,,,.,-..-' no-A-A His Nikon microscope graduates with him f1'hrough the years at medical school he benefits from its precision and optical quality, He quickly becomes aware that, unlike so-called student microscopes. this is a professional instrument whose capabilities he will only have begun to discover by the time he is graduated. And discover them he will in the years to follow as the Nikon microscope proves its tlexibility ir coping with the most specialized applications Complete interchangeability of eyepieccs, stages and other components makes it as versatile as his needs. Nikon Hat-Held objectives are avail - X able as original equipment or can be added at anytime without modification of this instrument Nikon SBR, featuring 21 binocular head and rectangular, coaxial, graduated mechanical stage, is the model most frequently chosen by medical students. It ii also widely used in schools, hos pitals and research laboratories. medical student microscope catalog, write: Nikon Inc., Instrument Div., Garden City, N.Y. 11530 Subsidiary of Ehrenreich Photo Opticttl Industries, lnc. ' .Q ,bl 1.--,--' -27 in-Y' fuu- v, . ,Lv yd K COMPLIMENTS OF CRO CHE LABORATORIES JAMES N. ROBERTSON ROBERT P. LIO REPRESENTATIVES 140 FOR THE SUPPLY OF MINI-SCRUB DRESSES MAXI-SCRUB DRESSES AND FREQUENTLY NO SCRUB DRESSES, THE WOMEN OF THE CLASS OF 1969 WISH TO THANK MR. BINKERT AND THE PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL. 5 ,ff- 'xi' AA 2 ly r' 5 A 1- 1 'LL U-1 I X, lf' '41- i X 7 L' im 3 'II' mu- 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 168th Street SELBY L. TURNER Life Membership in Leader's Association Specialist In INSURANCE FOR PROFESSIONAL MEN 233 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10007 BEekman 3-6620 RA M E R SCIENTIFIC coRPoRA 554 WEST 168th STREET, NEW YORK, N,Y 10032 1' SW 5-6000 TION MICROSCOPES, lvncRoToMEs METALLURGICAL AND LABORATORY EQUIPMENT Authorized Distributors: American Optical Bausch 81 Lomb E. Leitz POLLACK'S BAR-B-QUE Bar-b-que Chicken A Ribs Fried chicken, fish, shrimp, salads, dinners 402915 Broadway WA 8-9664 ONE HOUR MARTINIZING Free Pick-Up and Delivery The Most in Dry Cleaning 4083 Broadway f172nd Streetj WA 8-9937 NELSON'S KOSHER DELICATESSEN AND RESTAURANT CATERERS Home Cooked Lunches and Full Course Dinners Wines - Liquors - Cocktails Served 4041 Broadway fCorner 170th SLJ WA 3-9606 LUIGI'S RESTAURANT 81. BAR Washington Heights' Leading Italian Restaurants E 1148 St. Nicholas Ave. 4199 Broadway 167-168th Streets Corner 178th PHYSICIAN'S SUPPLIES, WA3'9216'7 WA M601 I N C - if !' 24 Houn SERVICE ON coLoR MORRIS CAMERA SHOP 3934 Broadway fl65th St.J Near Medical Center Phone LO 8-8590 Special Discounts to Students 521 East 72nd Street New York, N.Y., 10032 Leonard W. McHugh YUkon 8-8080 President TOMMY, JoHNNv, AND Bossv, PLEASE COME HOME. Au. is FORGIVEN. UNCLE SAM QQQ BURROUGHS WELLCOME 8: CO. fU.S.A.j INC. Makers of 'Empirin' Compound And Other Fine Pharmaceuticals 142 Best Wishes For a Rewarding and Illustrious Career RGGER STUDIOS PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION 4143 Broadway New York New York 10033 WA 7 7894 We Keep Negatlves of Your Photographs on Fl e for Many Years After Graduation Develo in tomorrow? harmaceuticals P 8' I . P for toda 'Q h Slclans Y P Y -Ti Sandoz research Center . ANOVER,Nl :Z 144 We speak Doctor: Present and Future At Chemical Bank, we can assist in your present and future personal and professional financial plans. With our complete range of services, we can meet your every banking need. When you first start your practice, we can help you with our Professional Finance Plan and a Check- ing 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 than 140 offices and ask for our booklet entitled. fGProfessional Finance Planf' The Young Professional. When his needs are fi- Ihemical Bank nancial, his reaction is Chemical. CHEMICAL BANK NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY Klenilmr F,D,I,l f, 145 110014 UIHAC 11111139 DI4DLD'G 61015 CO US 146 PHOTOGRAPHERS Roger Vinoent Don Bachman Michael Borecky Art Rosenglick Joel Budin Mitch Goldman 1969 yearbook stajj' EDITORS Chris Michelsen Carol Garvey BUSINESS STAFF Mal Brown Bruce Brown Mike Newell ART STAFF Mike Newell Martin Wolferstan Mark Lambert Jeffrey Weisberg EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Carlos Menendez Geraldine Michelsen Jerome Liebowitz Louise Brown Rhoda Newell Don Feinfeld SPECIAL PHOTOGRAPHER AND HONORARY STAFF MEMBER Elizabeth Wilcox IN APPRECIATION We wish to thank everyone who participated in the creation express our particular appreciation to the following: to our sponsors among the faculty and parents, and to their generous support, to Mr. Tapia of Roger Studios for his distinguished senior to Andy Murro of the American Yearbook Company for his guidance and advice, and especially for his constant accessibility to the yearbook staff, to those at the P 81 S and Bard Hall desks who cheerfully handled the heavy flow of mail, messages, and polls, and to the patient and helpful spouses of the yearbook staff. 147 of this book, and to our advertisers, for photographs: x V5 QS 259 X ,X,155 Xj5iy5 X I Q N lixx F HK5,,,,i.,: X Afewd GOODBYE.. 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