Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1970
Page 1 of 152
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 152 of the 1970 volume:
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Vw, V..1x,:b.x:VV-V. ,'V:--1-.V.--- V.. .fam ,V:1 V Q I --V V 5: ': V5 1,-KV 7,-,fl -D, E V A.. ., g' ga-M 5 ,: l'm7VHV,V.:4-gg.:-.1,' Aff., -fig.-2 -yah: 11 .41 -Vw-' I-13-lyiva 4:,:'1.:g--Le.-:VL-, Q-tvlfb ,, ...nz ' fifiv- I '---- 5- nfrggg, - 4 .-,V.-1 -.-p.V -V 5 .VV . ay.: V- . a-L31 ,-'-?'6qfgj'V'.Za,-, 'EVA-a,y4f:.V.g.g. . a.V.4-Q' '-H'-V-.z?.g'r, 15-3 g',1'.'1'-12555-:VJ-r-95-fpp 1-xv -T4 -QV-Vgg.j,1.-2'--'V- ' 11-4 V P1-5r2,'V.-: '- ,V VV V S , ,F f V 'ffh-.--.V-:'4v'if'5. f - '- :bi-Vzfqlfff?-'Zi gnu-r:.iyg'VVffi?f1g5-5Hy.-',.gL.gz,'g4:Vfi1Ve,E?5?i-2ZQ??a9EP'P2'::x.:-av-f??t1iV:s2izfev202',g.ffw? 5 , I V V- 1:3 ' . 2t'r5'.6,-Z-5-11'!?1:2F:'Z':4!??f''4 ?4-51ii:-2if'2-5'V.1-V12-'2'LV4'Z ? If-f'f'2V3'r1.V-V.'--Q'-WV 1 . J? 'A , , as vb, .Vx 1 N r 1 . r 1,4 .-,314 Ir 4, In Aiqfgipiiz a,-. . 4 N' I X' R I v ' ' . fx VF' 39 NOHDEIHS UNV SNVIDISJIHJ :IO EIDIITYOD M 1970 YEARBOOK Vg. Nix ,J .! Iflsli Q H '. 4871.1 3 vw., . .J n 41 vu 4, Na , - ,- + K Q N 3 . YI' X M, l jf? 'Y f 'W gf 1? 351' ggi :fffa i. .fu-X - .':, ,am r-', er 'rf- 4 X 'Y 2 ,z-' 7- in s. . it l N Q -. ' ff ,J i' lift, .. ,ff 1 1 W V X L l I 1 F L Y Y , lv X 5:1 if J KN . -QAf!'v' gf' .,A,g-.lxlflfh 'A'l'! ' U1 .wa 1' - .1 111.1 f'4 NL Q - x x N K X N T X iid U wf' W, ' -T14 uw evo , X ff .J isaeass C19 I-' in if f X IL in K - Y , ,.,, V six lf f 'S .N, , NMI' 5 K X :Sli ' 1 X Q i' A K v W Xi .-Q i X ' 'QQ f Wa fu -- I H1 mm, 1 MllMuMuu1, .1 Hn AN m ...WM mmm N W ln M M K H Wm ll mlllllimm HHN! MXKNMWNlklWW!1NlllkkkNhhNwwwumhhhhnuuw R W mlwmm ,NW W X N iii if ,W . IN MEMORIAM DR DAVID RITTENBERG If., . A, 1906-1970 We all know the teachers who have reached out and touched us in the past few years, and they have been very few indeed. Dr. Rittenberg was one of those teachers. We could only guess at his scientific accomplishments, but his genius for delighting the wit and inspiring the minds of his students was obvious to all who learned from him. Most of us have forgotten the tortuous pathways of our tirst Biochemistry lecture, but can still hear the Professors closing remark: Look, only one of you 126 guys is the stupidest person in the class. Those are still pretty good odds. My own personal recollections of Dr. Rittenberg, however, are dominated by the bacchanalian rout which occurred at his home above the palisades late in the Fall of 1966. One blustery evening after classes the majority of our seminar group bundled into the rear seat of the Professor's Volkswagen and roared off. Our first stop was a Palestinian bakery. where we purchased several loaves of hard, heavy bread baked in the shape of a frisbee. The Professor then disagpeared into an un- marked and rather dilapidated storefront nearby, and emerge laden with several bottles of Greek wine, and enormous bag of real Greek black olives, and about a dozen of the fattest, blackest cigars I had ever seen. You guys are really going to eat tonight, he predicted as we dodged trattic on the George Washington bridge. And we really did. The frisbees. it turned out, we broke into pieces and emp oyed to devour a Middle Eastern version of Califor- nia dip. The meal itself, cooked by Dr. Rittenberg's good-natured and highly indul- gent wife, was stupendous. l still have a nice white shirt with two hand-sized wine stains on the front. But the coup de grace came post prandially. He led us into the drawing room. producing a bottle of ouzo. a vile and potent Greek liqueur, gave each of us one of the big black stogies. and settled back to hear what we had to say. I certainly don't remember much of our remarks, but I know that his interest and delight in having us in his home filled the room, and that whatever we said. he was listening to us. J. Madigan 16 QQ ,ITTWW X Q X 'fl ff dw Q Q3-040019 vlofgg or G M 't .-1' jr 6 co 'P Pvev' 'lf' 4 O L3 ff 5 'QR' 2 Z U1 as Ra i, -- - Q, 0 ff, 'A'b,'if x'3 ,Q 4004? +f'P Mfg :JAG 07 T ' OZ O lk xi fx 0 'Vw go ' dr NI O 1591 mn V196 DEDI CA TI ON Harold W, Brown. B.A., Kalamazoo, 1924,' M.S.. Kansa.: Slate, 1925: Sc.D., Johns Hopkins, 19285 MD., Vanderbilt, 1933: Dr.P.H., Harvard 19365 L. H.D. Kalamazoo, 19455 LL.D., Puerto Rico, 1954. Come on in and sit down, Dave. What can I do for you? Dr. Brown, I'm happy to be the one to come and tell you that our class has selected you for the dedication of our yearbook. Thank you . . . I consider it a great honorf' And Dr. Brown did consider it a great honor. Hels that kind of man. He has traveled the world again and again, helped found medical schools in underdevel- oped jungle countries. been instrumental in the creation of numerous programs to bring medical care to the teeming masses, received countless medals and citations from grateful governments and people, and yet still feels genuinely honored when a group of students he has helped takes time out to express their thanks. Dr. Brown glanced briefly out the window at the world he understands and loves to share. He took a slow deep breath, and as he unhurriedly looked back toward me again, I settled back happily into my chair, knowing I was in for a treat. is BROWN ON TEACHING: There is nothing a physician in a medi- cal center ought to enjoy more than teaching . . . The priorities here should be teaching. then medical care. then research . , . The greatest product we have is 125 students each year . . . Every class has been good in my 26 years here . . . Money spent on any education is worth- while. BROWN ON STUDENTS: fregarding the student petition asking the administration to allow him to stay beyond retirementj With stu- dents behind you. you have the most powerful influence behind you in the medical center . . . I don't agree with some of the ways they do things, but I'm in favor of student initiated change. BROWN ON PEOPLE: I feel very strongly about respect . . . I always try to give others credit - the only important thing is getting the work done . . . The most important contribution we can make is to treat people as human beings. BROWN ON CHANGE: If you're right. youlre going to win out in the end . . . I've been working with Orientals for over 13 years: they're in no hurry and I've learned to go at the pace that people are comfortable at . . . If our administration was fundamentally interested in teaching, changes would have been made long ago. f BROWN ON HIMSELF: If everyone in this class tinds their niche as I ' have. they will be happy . . . I always felt I ot 'ht to be paying Columbia for letting me work here. As I sat listening I found it hard to separate my agreement with the aphorisms from my en- joyment ofthe man. His vehicle - the story: I'd heard most of them before. maybe a couple of times, but I found myself enthralled again. His knack like any good storyteller was not in the story, but in the telling. The reorganization of the Taiwan Medical School and the initial or- ganization ofthe Puerto Rico Medical School were told as Sagas with bits of practical advice intermixed. And always there was the wry, tongue-in-cheek humor: I see nothing wrong with a pass-fail system. If the students want it. fine. My comments will read: This student passed. he is an A student. Or, this student passed, he is a C student . . . Parasitology never has been very important around here. And it makes sense that a disease like hook- worm which affects only 700,000,000 people with a blood loss of 7.000.000 quarts daily would be considered lightly. This year is the last as chairman of the Para- 19 sitology Department, but his mind is still active in planning. His plan for P8rS is twofold: lj To set up a Department of Interna- tional Medicine with a major interest in the study of nutrition and population and a major goal of serving as a train- ing center and exchange depot for U.S. and foreign M.D.s interested in the two problems. His attitude for this Medical School: Let's take on the world. 23 To reorganize the delivery of medical care in this area with storefront clinics and self-insurance pre-payment pro- grams for employees and neighborhood residents. Come back again. Dave. soon, We'll talk some more. My door is always open. I was leaving smiling and enriched once again. And very glad our dedication is to Dr. Brown . . . because his dedication is to us. S. David Lang GEORGE A. PERERA YT .A Dean of Admissions 1 ,X f 'K Director of Placement Professor of Medicine . 20 Dean of Students 1 Q-vtrgpggyyg. ---ww-:lx-,-.. P8zS. by any yardstick. is one of the world's leading schools of medicine. Although it ranks among the highest on such scales as size and scope. facilities. researc productivity and its support. the endowment of students. and the repute of faculty. its tradition of excel ence does not stem from bricks. mortar. decimal points or dollar signs. Rather. the secret of success of Columbia College of hysicians and Surgeons comes from emphasis on Who instead of What. its special emphasis wit regard to the personal qualities and attitudes of its learners and teachers in addition to their scholarly characteristics and their pursuit of knowledge and of truth. The future of P815 is another matter. Throughout the nation. fingers are being pointed and voices are being raised. directed especially at medical schools and their related hospitals. There are widespread concerns about iigustice and inequality. new challenges of professional authority. vociterous emands to provide the public with health care and access to it. and a clamor for more attention to be devoted to the prevention of disease. the maintenance of individual health. and to the obliteration of the poisons and evils which threaten the health of groups and of society. In the opinion of many. crisis is at hand already. a crisis in which you and we and P815 will be involved for some period to come. Matters will et worse before they get better. Manpower and means are stretched to the limit. the demands will imgose even more load. and no single solution will solve the problems. nce again the answer. if we are to move ahead. must come from the qualities and attitudes of people. of physicians. of you and of us. To plan imaginatively. to develop more professional and allied health personnel. to experiment in new forms of delivery of health services, and to participate as fully as possible while not overdiluting our primary objectives. these call for the same attributes which we have sought for this school and which have made it what it is. Only through your integrity and sense of responsibility. only through your continued recognition of the need to work together, and only through your awareness that service and learning and the acquisition of new knowledge are intertwined rather than separate can we come through on top. Loyalty. trust. and team play are not meaningless words. Mixed with concern, artistry. imagination, and a smile, they are essential for survival. Even after your graduation as full-fledged physicians. know that our interest and affection will continue. But know also that we will need your support and that we hope you will need ours as mutual advocates of the role of P8cS to medicine and o medicine to the nation's health. GEORGE A. PHRERA, NLD. Associate Deairi 21 x 1, Y -1 A 51? S --+- -- -Q P 4 o Q 4 f 25. I ' Q. ..-q ff . WSL. ar'-, 1. ff' 'EE-. Q 1 A- 0, Bull METAMORPHOSIS his chair stiff, the light dim. winter's wind chilling his skin his mind is full of people he cares that Pete and David have left he dreams of caressing a breast whose nipple will rise he is a lst year student he hears the cries of dogsfhe cracks the skulls of mice he hears the cries of catslhe scays the skull of man he sees woman's husband draw his last breath then practices needling his 2nd ICS he sees womanls husband sip his last drink then washes his liver in a path-lab sink he attends both funeralsg then he is wamed . . you must not get involved with your patientsw he stabs steel into veinsfinto bonesfinlo spine he tears of gauze scab from nerve-raw red wounds his chair stiff, the light dim, wir1ter's wind chilling his skin his mind is full of facts he cares about his internship he dreams of touching a breast and feeling no lumps he is a 4th year student E. G. Howe, III 23 J L K x A 'f 3 5525i :fi 1 15 'Q 5' f '- .4:-r-4'2:S1sKi-11:4,:w5'p.f.-U 1.5 ' gp- -- 4- ' t xrretb' -'lm R 9 Q .,,,, A. I 2 ' A H if ', ' ff ' ' ig , :fig it ' ffiffr P f I V h -5 if N I ' x . 4 I f 1-Q.. Q' Wlzcllever will be, is GW: Y Affwx 1. ,fgfrq iii b :Pi - . , 2 1 Q 'i-:.':4 2f,',fg 'Q . -My! bf, 32-2- mag? S L. 4 -L., x KENNETH GEORGE BENQIT ma. ,ii 'K' 2- 3 5 , .. QD: m..,+.- , 1 nc -. - ,v--,.. r -1... i Nl., 'ETKQFPYRQ 3:51, ' -4 I '. f':':f?f-A ,I . . - , , .... - .,..3.,?,.x ---'.v .. . .M A fi :Q Q QV :-, 15 -:Q 5:-N3 -'-3:5 j .-:A 'fi ' 4:N:-:S qs X . ,154 jg1.5::. - -- ,.4.::- x , ' ' ., -:-:-1-:-1-' 54 .95 LAR 5 -X -- f '4' -+ 6 .b.-:im f'n. J ,iw q--rr Y -Q- v 1 HOWARD LAWRENCE BLANK JOHN ROBERT BOGDASARIAN .S iff, Q-0' JAMES BORDLEY IV RICHARD CHARLES BOUCHER ARTHUR STUART BROWN GEORGE CLIFFORD BROWN 1' W' .7 5' I , .va Q STEVEN CLYDE BUCHANAN .asf-A f'4 w, Y JOHN MALLORY BURKS I In 1 X. 3 ' , I as 1 FREDERICK MILTON BRUNN Qff-r PETER PAUL BUDETTI 4-57 A wi ' . ! U I ' i I A Vi ' DAVID A. BU RTON : , 1'-T. '-41-1l .. 1L,,,,,u wx' x .1 , - ,, CHARDG 'ARACARLSON isa, -1 , f iv 1- DANIEL HERBERT CARMICHAEL FRE' 4' YY? f ' BRUCE ALAN CASSIDY J V x ' P1 Q , ' L.,-i . : ' ' 1-' -' 1 ' I an Q Z.: AV -fx 5 fr-Cv Liijr' ' -, i - 1 H ': ' J ' I . . w 1 'F ' . f . 1 . 'Wi'-- H-.M . :- F Q s4f5fff'.,xiY'Ag X Jil 4 Q5 TT FF ' ' CHANG ,, .DAVID EI-IAISJLER' CHARLESWORTH 0 'Y -3 al I . ' A gg Q in ' ef I' 1 ggi? I 9 S JAMES ZUBOW CINBERG STEPHEN ADAMS COLE ROBERT LAWSON COMBS Lea-np. ' x DAVID MICHAEL CORCORAN ALAN WHITTEMORE CROSS Pfa- il, iv Ny 1 U -'gi-.J .5 png ,rf ' rr. J N ' 1 -' if - L v PHILEMON DICKINSON 6' Y GEORGE PETER DINGELDEIN, .TR X ,fv- RONALD BARRY FAUER 1 V f f r f RUSSELL STEPHEN DILLEY f ,wx 'wx 5- .9-.. If ' M.,-5 E. ,1' J.-K '1 -ff Wx A, 3, Q 'K' JOHN LOUIS ESPOSITO f f ,, QTY ? ml- GARY NEAL FOULKS 'Q 'it' '-...,,..Sb .1 W l ig 1, GOODMAN ' - Y Rx, Me .-1 -.cg , '-u. K 5' , ,rl . -2- FRED ARNOLD FURGANG -1 ,GEOFEREY R 4-. Mk. -1 f YN .r .. .x ,QE .QQFM X HARRY BERNARD SSN . ' .. '- 'HH Cx N, mv NAM' -AX' A X mas:-f,'f,r:f4?7':-,xzzkx writ-ff. an E ni n, 'Q 3 - I Qi , Q X n fa nr' ' GUSBERG PAUL FRE JR GORDON PAGE GUTHRIE mill' z.x'i'!L,,-- ,V , ,, ,PQ A6 'EY' 1 ig Q-V . - 'M-9 41- 5 ' ' ' Hvvvwf-'R -' ---- ' 3,1 MA1-mgw ,DEL GUY WILLIAM LAWRENCE HAZARD j KAREN KRAMi-in HEIN 'Hn' ' ' Q:'F'f5' ?.'1A, T- Y H. gg, :if ' 'T'9'4 ' N .--Y: ?34gzf X r . .6155-kv.: f 2.. I.. , is-D' 3-9. CHARLES VERNON HELMING I. CRAIG HENDERSON frm ----- ---- - . K! I . f' ' N , , ,Al PAUL ROBERT HICKEY JOHN PHILIP HOCHE PETER L. HOFMANN EDMUND GRANT HOWE, III '51 5. EDWARD CLYDE JONES SALLY J. KASPAREK RICHARD JOEL KATES X, . f rj' ' If ' 1 '31, ' I . IR 0,1 ,xl Q o ,.-I' Q- ' 1 N X Y . STEVE KOHL GRETCHEN BLAIR KRONENBERG HENRY Momus KRONENBERG Mifg .- f'-IAQ l - 9. N' pmiim lfrtkvm 5, iii? -'QR ' K XSRX.:-H L x '- w N QSXQ3... ARTHUR ROY LIBERMAN S fx- 5 x x Al X uf 'F v DIANE LIPSON DANNE ROY LORIEO 'Flin-fs. QT'-11 WALTER B. LUNDBERG .......,-.,,f.., ,.if,-Y,,7,.. I F , be . Q-.-Q s. WILLIAM R. MCFARLANE, IR. JONATHAN CLARK MCMATH if nge' ,, , - .....- 45- x, . K . . . ,A 4. f x . x W 4, ,fag ,' .- K , 3 x -. f , 4,9 f .,, 2 , ,. ' ' , w r px 575 , A' H- -Z' f 3 r I f fwfr ? CALLANAN ? 5 I 4 W 5 E 4m W N N PETER HATT MOYER GILBERT HORTON 19? -.JT RO B ERT STACY A K..-. Qi? X RO MAN NOWYG ROD 7 , fb- THOMAS HOLDEN PATTERSON K I HAROLD HOLMES ,OSBQRN .L -E3 4 . ! un .ser '? if Q K ik' 'sn ANTHONY JOHN PEPE j' 'f in 'K' NJ -fr MICHAEL FRANK PARRY gi 5 sf X f . wi , X LIN DA FAITH PESSAR . . . . .'3:::551:51? .4 ..,g 1 . .. --:aw '-I-,-A,-2.-.,1. 'V -A . -. 19 : ' ' ,.4.f:. ' I' .E 1. .- 2511,-I:-sf-:.,Q ' - - 2 1 ' ..'.,-.:e:2fa-iv ..1.?1'5-512' ir A5 54 eZ?53f:.?S1i5f:i, 5:51 PHILLIP KEITH PETERSON DONALD OLIVER QUEST 495. -IUKX QM.,- CAROL ANN RAVIOLA MARTHA MON SON PROVINE I-NTSC- 5 .1-. - ' ' . F1??1,l'Z3 -- -3.11 - ' rf'-11 Trix. , WILLIAM HENRY RAMSEY A I THOMAS AUDET RICE 36' 1! ' v Wu 119' RICHARDSON, JR. ' CAROLINE ARMISTEAD RIELY 2 Ly. - Q4 I gefx '- u 'Ai 1 EX wig RONALD NEIL ROTHENBERG -.-.. 4 . w if' M x, i, 5. W . BERNARD PINSKER scHACx-WEL . Vw 1- ,-J ,v-,,, 4,5 V 535.1511 1 I Z f f ' fm All w lft'v.,,.'1i.e M ROBERT MILTON SCHMIDT E, BALDWIN SELF, JR. STEPHEN QUENTIN SHAFER mwfvfv 1 ' . Rf ,wx L YA' MARK IRWIN SINGER SAMUEL GIDDING SlRlS RICHARD MARC SPIEGEI. .rv , ' '- l 4 We 'af .IUDITH MCCONNELL SONDHEIMER HENRY MELVILLE SONDHEIMER ALAN JEFFREY SPOTNITZ iv! I S- GORDON ALAN STARKEBAUM W'lLLlAM AUSTIN TANSEY. Ill 4 V? Q15 .3 'Wi x li , r '. ' 'A ' ,1 S Y MICHAEL L. TAPPER JAMES LANE TAYLOR ' fi? .Q 'f'::.3,- 3- 'v' 'xx ALAN DOUGLAS TICE A 62' I7 RICHARD STEVEN TINDALL RONALD WALLACH f V XHXVQ? ia --sw' gig.. 1' im' 1 , 41 .tl . . I , A ,. fgxgxri 75. wALw'gm-pig ' ' fx 'X ED ARQZIRBSFR WALWORTH 1 as ,L V +f 'W X3 r - M 7' ' L ah M ' ' X 9:5 xx . L' aa fergig -x'if' f ' - X X ,wi R A N - 3: J., . x 5 ' A M ill sif x 'r ' . S1f,,3f'i Y f fd ' 5 Q. X OLIN LESLIE WEST, III . If Y ANTHONY DUNSTER WHHTEMORE MARK AUSTIN WIGHTMAN 1 . , 4-At, .' 'L' 'wif 4' Lf 4 A nd W A ZX Q. ' ! J g THOMAS MARK WOODCOCK .'x.- , ZVETAN NICHOLAS ZAKOV 1-' -1 v , JM , x k f. xi. - . . .Q 'XX .N fig 11,1 X'-'an . - ns 3 3:2 ANDREW WALTER ZIMMERMAN ALAN ELLIOT ZUCKERMAN ,X , .:5f5 Sai? ' ff 2? W KEITH ALLEN WRIGLEY, JR. I' ' . Q , . 9 , ,. v f o 0 - ' , , O. ,1 1 .I 0 . ilk' . ' st ,, Q. JV 1 if , 642151 W v?'a-P Qv - --EAA PM . If 1 ?'.2'iE- N. 'ax 'S-'L . Q- ' J J' NQQH' 5 Q I hx.. ,, ,'ffjfqfi. I 44' ' gl ', - '.'1 rf 4 ni? 44 , . J :llmlw l sf' ' -QW 29 -Q-Am V .-E 1F52 ring, .. , .. :QUE meifff A Q kiwi Qfblif 1 'HIS 5 JJ Q. I V 1 uk - --Q ggi r It 2 A' ffw'M'e1- U 'S' 2-X s -1- J ,Ya -E eq 46 1 'MKQ4E'g 3 -. 3 P 2 V ::f,,, 'ffgiflf 5, , fa :E .5 GQ' .fgif 7 H -3 Iiwh -gs Q' 1a'ffQfX,5?f 2 iwwif , ' ff'-'few IJQEF7 fwkfly -.3 ,mga . f- 'aff ffwfs r . r 'pf' :+rss,v's'.1sfS?+ff':s'2v X' Q J Sul-,M'l -nm , '1' 'ffaff'r'- rf St I to thee A ppl t Op n your iron portals t G tly F are frail of knowledge d Hd A nce. St mistress, me to thee A h'ld fd k . t bl' g I ld f Ight d 'g 11 b b ty A d d 48 1 1 w ,,gv1h. ...av .,,,. fr- 7---I-.-s -'Q535'32'i'.LL'- X ' 'f ff ehsfgirfwg' Eff TCI' N ' .t ' . 4 Y 533' u gt .f- .-:A , 'Nz 2,-f ,- ,- ga v' g if tx4e,,.4 1 at ff, ,., -7 -- gy. A' el gk: . if X K ' X.: 17 15565, Q 134351.-2-S QGFIV. ' X . H gr , ' fr Q 0. . A , 2 - .Uf I - Qtr X-X s ,S .5 QTS' B33 5591 - F'..Q-I-5 I ' i, ' - ' ,' , Z .X -,Lip -'E 5 NJEU V I . if t te sei'- H fffwfniikx A 3? ?b- ' 1. 5 '!ifi!,iw -. 1 87' 5 'I ,qt gf ' ll'5E4l'x'., -. inf ' I Q ' .2 fi Ilxs s IR.. Q1 E V ?5 I X -1 N! e vw! 1 :leg .. ' .' t .e it a t if I il Q ,.i gui. 3 es , ' Q 21 ' it . f ll l' N swf EJ lfiii .Q ' ' : ' I ' ii: lit I ' Y--El W' f'fs!'A5:' .- -' - .', '1 Q , W1 ' . ' . , - 1 fd ll.. l 1 wi In , y -fo ' neil. . if-Elf ii e Stern mistress. we come to thee As earnest, though unworthy scholars. A force beyond our understanding has brought us. Open your vast book to us so that we may learn. Sweet stern mistress. we come to thee To seek thy gift and do thy bidding. Equip our being with eyes for seeing, And hearts of feeling. and hands of healing. 49 S. Siris Our first building blocks were books, and l ' l iii, Y ,g v if-...,,, 'hh' - ,:,r? - N' . f? '--2-.A ' Ti, r ' if 4'-Q-.4 ll :N N .iff- SEPTEMBER 566 CCILITCS, I BRIGHT-EYED AND GREEN SO MUCH WAS UNKNOWN and labs, For a while we called Bard 1, , Hall home. ' and loneliness. Those were days of personalities. of the Eisenberg Uncertainty Principle . the Penn Effect . and Baileys Lawn. On Halloween. the Krebs cycle ap- peared on the sidewalks of the medi- cal center. the presumed work of some friendly hobglobulin. ry and somehow we survived. we f 2 EP i 'iq , , i 4 ' -Q 194 ,gif LHICI OUT emotional releases I'I13.ILlfCC1. fix 5' sr ,- f-K I xx R Bucks our rokesk S 0 den Siu THE ' X llllllllllll. 006 699 Wagga J rg 10,016 , 'W 0565 Q x f 5- 0 ,JL E fx: , Af ffgigi ' fx 'LN V, ,Q .. U V' f,.'vi':, ' fx: 1. v V .WI ww A f 'EQ 5 'li Q4 A , ff if 13? l 7 QQ'-A W ifi We 'J' '9' isp a 0 we 5,5 of fc: Wo W If -' -. mio N b AND THEN IT WAS THE SECOND YEAR .- Filled with germs 1 L 1 ,g V. s -- uiwyli Zywis N f '5f '571i .W Nfl' .' , 1,4 s- Qc. . ,' vii' 3,' QW.. 7' ' A Bef . A gifs .ar . .Af - , 3 ' fin? 'ig '51 - ' T... 14? 'ew 1 :'V??f5gf'1,:?7'1,'i,.' 'P a W '- 1. 0 , Eilzaqti A In , 1 .gig--K M L' 5-in J. and things -X x T' C 'xr and upathobiologyf' and drugs In those days, the key words were Hultrastructure 54 AND THERE WILL BE ANOTHER QUIZ NEXT M ON DA Y We persevered. L. and sometimes caught X glim F d pses of why. nf NATIONS The Nuclear Arsenals: A Balance of '1 e ygin JQ96, f 4Zm'QfQ' OHNSON ASKS END NIGERIA Y. . H QS S is Q7 S WW Q .QL Qpmfgifsx X T SSSQNQ ' NR Q1 5 ff LJ 6 P ' Y, .V , YIETGONG' ans Ta' 1'Bomb111g S f ' ' 0- Ohio i f , ex Io X 'swam -I Y, ded O X1 1 - N1 MARINES swmsv dk 9 MABEAS NEAR DMZ od HH Q M Z Rf' v QIIQIAM -QCEZZ. 9, 9' Y 'WSIS . . We 5 lm K T5 1 if sour:-1 1 5 13013 pew G06 2 A if Bn Vfefdffer 25 QQSYM R galmg Week I X3 X' WSW RKSWW 5 I A mm A nrfo nm nrnnrnn ifiiiinnr A mr' NT D 0661. Cp I,g,s RUN W Wlkoxem ,Ll :fn MQ A , I 1 . i Y anth6f5 4?f5e,, Mifdifhyix . Q? 4 '- W A IESSBGQQQ? QQ xv'6gfXiw a'5Q' i YPKQU 0' This was Chicagapyaffacek , , 0 Waosx 9300 ,A FOR . ww P' . . -b swab G IE N ge 5 P, srae , nypt an mast Planes Trade fa f T . Costly Raids? 4 XA'fcb GONIMON MARKET ab . andfln IN OUR THIRD YEAR WE MOVED INTO N ENTIRELY NEW A WORLD, Early on we learned about the physical . . . We worshipped the g The clinical world . . . and history. iHI1lS- We held the hooks. 58 -.ui N n V 1 We pursued the pearls . . . AS OUR 24 HOUR DAY STRETCHED LA! morning n OOI1 . . . and were pursued by scut 'Ii' -.,, .I and night. 1-1, 1 41,11 W 1, 1, ,-,1v.. 1,1 ' 1 !11 .ww 1 11 1, 1' 111' '111 11 14 ,11 1131111 1., 1, 11 1 1ff1?1' 1 R ,,1,5,N.1, 111 A '1',2.'1:' .,, 1, 1 ,I 1 11, 41' ,211i111,,'-1 iq' f111 1 ,11111 M ' 11111 1 1111 1 I 1 111 . 1 I N51 11 M Z!! ,1 ,11,.1, 11' X 1'.1,. N' J 5 ' - WI! 11 11 -1' 1' l 1,,,, , '11 1 Hgunfulfllle 1' ff 'V 11111111 I L sf- 12191. ig 515 fin rw-3 v. K 'E' , 11 sz , v , KQ R wr: GAME IN PEAGE F011 ALL MANKINDV 7 'f-A , i 5 s is 1969 QWYV 5 ?54vx Wig: P1 AND THE FOURTH YEAR BROUGHT L It became our job . . . 'kxf- -T Y ...J 1 . and X-rays and patienfs minds. It New worlds to conquer to read charts, We applied ourselves to night duty, 62 h - Qlauzgr ul l'hvsm.m.o .um buxgumu gugolgngg game: bu: hu Sudan!- nmsl nn un not m' stmrrrn IJTI-ISK!! AIYLILKTIK , PLLGE msc. u sou: Is mssnu. W EL' UAH LYUL ALL All GQGUTY-I1 ax. anna 1 faux. ' APPROVED INTERNSHIPS '09 and dreams of internships. 59 .43 Then one magic moment . . and suddenly it mattered. D-. l x Z' l someone said What do you think. Doctor? 63 Y I5 Y, Nu-dn v 1 LJ THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS di SURGEONS HGUSTO MERRITT Vice President in Charge of Medical Ajairs and Dean of the Facultv of Medicine He came up from North Carolina with a soft accent. keen mind, a sense of humor and in time made an indelible mark in his chosen held. The ill that have benefited from his efforts number in the millions, the reknown and respect he has won is international in scope. He is our Dean and this June is as significant to him as 1t is to us, for as we depart from the secure confines of P8LS nervously clutch- ing our diplomas, Dr. Merritt will be retiring as Dean of the Faculty of Medicine. And rather than ask him to write a graduation note to us, we decided to print a few words about him. 66 animal model of epilepsy he developed led directly to his in lag introduction of diphenylhydantoin 25 years ago, still the prima Item: An The good dean came to Columbia near the end of World War Il after spending several years setting things right in Cambridgj. He was elevated to Chairman o' the Neurology Department and Chief of the eurological service in l948 and ten years later assumed the honors and burdens of being Dean and Vice-President of the University. His record of achievements over the years is astounding in quality. quantity, and variety. He is a rare personification of the man of diverse abilities: teacher, clinician, scientist. author. administrator. ' a . . n, -124' . anti-convulsant in use today. But he is probably best known in neurorllf : ' ogy for his original work in elucidating the dynamics of the CSF and its diagnostic importance. Another area of major work has been in clar- ifying the effects of neurosyphilis. and he has received awards for his contributions to the eiforts against multigle sclerosis and cerebral palsfy. Item: Since 1930 Dr. Merritt has pu lished well over 200 scienti c articles, edited six books in various fields of Neurologv and authored five texts of his own including his Textbook of Neurofogy. Now in its fourth edition, this latter work is considered by most as the best neurol- ogy text in the English language and is one of the few definitive sin- glpe-authored works remaining in medicine. Item: Besides his duties at Columbia the Dean has served as presi- dent of numerous national neurological organizations. sat on various government committees, been an honorary member of medical and neurological societies in several foreign countries and other states. and has acted as President or Vice-President of several international con- gresses. I The American Neurology Association summed up things well in the citation for presentinlg its JACOBY AWARD to 'him in 1965: As exemplary clinician, teacher. ucid writer and outstanding scholar. he has for many years presented Neurology in its best light and he remains an inspirational influence to a host of students and resident physicians. As administrator and counselor he has strongly influenced the development of the specialty at Harvard and Columbia Univer- sities, in America and the World. But we his students think of him in a somewhat different light. not so much the man called to a foreign dictator's sick-bed, but the slightly rotund elf that read Twas the Night Before Christmas Cwith his own slight modilicationsj at our annual Christmas Party. He was the Great Man lecturing to the lowly second year students who could hslpeak louder. but can't be any funnier. On his rounds we were impressed with t e vast store of experience he could call upon and also by the Babmski he elicited when removing a slipper. Dr. Merritt. Richard M. Spiegel President. Class of 70 67 He is a man with a funny story always ready, with a natural ability to put people at ease. He is a wise, justly world famous man for his inte ectual achievements, but he is also a warm person with an unassumingl nature that makes us regret we did not have more contact wit him during our years at P8LS For our class we thank him for what he tau ht us about disease and about people, for our school we thani him for his leader ship and the personal prestige he added to the institution To him, a great physician and a great man, we add our best wishes for a productive future in retirement. Ave azque Vale EDWARD W. DEMPSEY Sorry I missedyau. FREDERIC J. AGATE ls it lhe cigar or lhe lab that winks WILFRED M. COPENHAVER I xupposeyoufolks have come to wake me up for another year. CHARLES A. ELY The Grey Beret HERBERT O. ELFTMAN I hme here In np' hands a device fha! u III keep lhe students awake for my entire lecture. MALCOLM B. CARPENTER Dun 'I umrrxg' rl all rnrmxv mgclhur nz lhe em! CHARLES R. NOBACH Yeah weIl,'1'a know. . MELVIN L. MOSS F 'ul NX L v The gospel according ro SI. Melvin. GEORGE D PAPPAS Her,-vnu know. lhese .vaginal sevtions gel K l 5 beller eveQy'reur, ,Zhi RICHARD P. BUNGE How much do 'Fm you remember? NANCY TROTFER I Once upon a time there 69 was a Iinle bile Canaliculus. Q P, f ,L ,f ,-f- -3 .. PARITHYCHERY SRINIVASAN 5-RNA-vasun Wif K ' 1' Ili ALVIN I. KRASNA lf they are basic building blocks, why call them acids CBIO cinzmlscqvy SEYMOUR LIEBERMAN I DVI N Y I ,,.,-swf Lieberman 's the name. steroids the game, DAVID NACHMANSOHN AI Einstein? Ofcourse, I knew him well. 'I 1- 1 DAVID SHEMIN You want my blood? MAX A. EISEINIBERG We'II take these pathwqvs in 1hree's,' aper all, tri- cycles are kid stuff x 70 4-I A WILLIAM L. NASTL K Xu om' will evcr ln'll4'ru nn' arlmn polennul, JOHN S, BRITTEN Igor los: somewhere in the ileum, is ox RAIMOND EMMERS I Ihoughl I heard an aferen! wallqv. -il l JOHN v. TAGG-ART The krdnqr is really an arnsnc structure - look ar lheso ionic columns. fPfi-IQJSIOEOGTJ SHU CHIEN I 'rn forming a new bus company serving New Jersqvfrom upper Manhallan. LOUIS T. CIZEK Marv your canoe never leak on Ihe river nephron. Da . , r ,5, Is marrow responsive I0 4 MERO NOCENTI endocrinefeed back? p 7 MARTIN BLANK .. ., AJ. 71 .7 Q' l'. '.:'f' CALDERON HOWE I go buggy over Bach. wr I .X PBox A ..- xs Q 1 I v Q , N- ., .. w 9 t E ' X 31555. 4 l vet. 0 'QNX 3 355 HERBERT S. ROSENKRANZ DNA analvsis is scintillating. PAUL D, ELLNER Getting GC. fam toilet seats is a privilege reserved for the clergv. ELVIN A. KABAT board E f 4 . W-3. GABRIEL C. GODMAN X W COUNCILMAN MORGAN Happiness is an EM wen of conjugation Everything I know is on that , . ' N 2 Q n 1- Y. , -A-M SHIN-CHUN WANG H'lzr you nu wmmlf ' . BRIAN F. HOFFMAN . I F0.v:glove is a lovelv bush to give Ihe hear! such extra push. HERBERT J, BARTELSTONE 1'll have lu ask Molher. WILBUR H. SAWYER I slwpedpilressin in Lou Ci:ek's urea bolrle, NORMAN KAHN Phase Il block is not ufoolball signal E535 1 QPR Y Q HSUEH-HWA WANG Mme, GREENBAUM The Hislamine Kid LOWELL M. ,,--- FREDERICK G. HOFMANN Our hero in secondyear. V w-vw ,yi i ,av fPACfHOIlOC5'H DAVID SPIRO 1 don? care Wht1l,l'0ll read in Robbins, ,- . I v -QP' F AUSTIN D. JOHNSTON A nd the marrow holds l00cc of80 proof JOSEPH WEINER As secondyear mediral siudenls you have no righl Io lake aposilion on arlvlhing, J 966, 1967 DONALD WEST KING Don'l worrvg you can sell rhem Io nexlyear 's class. I' lf HENRY A. AZAR Jus: call me Kala. BERNARD M. WAGNER NexI year welll sell popcorn dl Il16 CPC's, WILLIAM A. BLANC Zees ee: a floppy balgv. 'N FF' Ad gp?-3 . 'f'- K I .4-4 Q11 ., -H! 'U ti Q o 'L M. , JE. I 1 1 1 NATHAN LANE 'lane is .iwzurzbwnottx wtth path. , DAVID CQWEN RAFFAELE LATFES M7014 dm ' 'f'f0g '5e me Wh the Soyuz: want to dn the autopqr together, lights on, if APRASIGOEOGQ4 KATHLEEN L. HUSSEY H'hat's this crap on ntx' mzcrosmpefn ANGELO 4A Lzghrs, A ' camera. , y act. . . Angelo. '- J' at 1' ' HAROLD W. BROWN l?r1 endowmg the Brown Stool for Parasttologr N :.n.- L H ALBERT R LAMB, Jr, I put those grippe tabs somewhere! STANLEY E. BRADLEY ALBERT We What do you Coll il, z1'iai1'.vis? fi C U RRAN Let1v run over the medieations. GEORGE L. GROKOEST Grow it wh ereyou can. HARRY W. FRITTS lt Iv settled: I do believe in clear thought and slow talk. .L If s.C' K ... 1 fauna--L - 4 DONALD F. TAPLEY Q I p 'U The man with ,N GEORGE W uw- 7 me W X MELCHER' ' 1 f 'fiarhmil We1f0me to A 7' a ' L group clinic. 'L HAMILTON Q, SOUTHWORTH ' ' I wish ther made these tables higher. DANA W. ATCHLEY Perhaps weH better begin L1lll'Wql'.H 1'II give a nickel for am' disease 1 haven 'I heard of -I l xl , ' +-- +'1l1uh. ,- T. :mm 'lm' fi.: JOHN H. LARAGH 'Tlrisjizroselmde reallx' works ,- i Q -'- x ? A v f CHARLES A. RAGAN I heard the slrelchers don 'I ji! in Ihe elevators 'iw W i I GERARD M. TURINO Next year lhe clinics will be on Sundav ' , -5 b ajernoonf' fig ELIOT F. K. OSSERMAN N A nd then one of 'Q them said, Ifyozfve 'N j seen oneyou 've , . X , seen them all. 14 ' 45' 'V .TQQ1-is ' xx 4 1 -' DONALD A. HOLUB THE NOBLEMEN ANDRE F. COURNAND DICKINSON W. RICHARDS - - f I . as' s' . 1 .ff y 1 , L 1 1 1 Y I ...-I f ! gf , If 'R I HENRY ARANOW Oh doctor. I've heard so much abou! your physical diagnosis DEWITT s. GOODMAN . h A' SIDNEY C, WERNER JOHN N. LOEB .V 2 dim. Don'r Isl anyone ff Q li iw -AYXO ' O knawyou caughl y fbi i f ,KJ me silting down T 'D ' , 4. S E' ' I e-A - ' 'I 'F 5 Q I , ug. Z? .Z bs I X I DAVID J GOCKE I don 1 mmd vour snoring but zdea, Dr Gocke my kldnev HYMIE L. NOSSEL To C101 . . . or nor I0 rlol. STUART W. COSGRIFF ., P21 E. CARWILLE 'QA 5 1' LEROY E ' P q . I ' NP na f 1 -L A .1 1 1 It '- . THOMAS Q. MORRIS Leu get the Res HAROLD C. NEU Sure I'II do another CPC. HT! - A 'N L x REJANE HARVEY lf-rou think Harlem Hospilal x-favs are bad. you should have been ar Belleviewn PAUL J. CANNON DANIEL V. KIMBERG . ,good looking, hard- working gaslroenlerologisl will lake Cul in salafv, seeks posirion in cooler climaie. 4'2- ' I T I X 'Z' ' 'ffl' V. ,.,.f- '- I FELIX E, DEMARTINI Hire mu sure -1 mold Palmer started like lhis. TJ' JOHN E. CLTMAN Good-live Slanler. good-hw LIONEL GROSSBARD M. IRENE FERRER , . compatible wllh rnvocardial disease andlor drug eject. iw. w .rv Ff- ,Q 5 xx ' I CHARLES A. FLOOD Ga5Irosfop1c Sllldt' of fha rectum revealed a rep' -fhghlen ed panenl, JOHN BUCHANAN Chug-a-lug RICHARD J. STOCK 1 gi ' :iv U fR 'E fR J GEORGE HUMPHREYS FWF U' 111-Y1- FREDERIC P. HERTER Inherit the wind. PHILIP D. WIEDEL DAVID V. HABIF Prince Philqz Then, if all else fails . . l HAROLD G. BARKER 'i ' 1-as an I 4 W t , I - '- :-:,.. - I g V 1: 3- . V . , , .1 I I, 'xx in ' V X5 ix ik gm - . EY 1. 1 f . e 'ru R f .. 'J . S ff x--- A' Qi C' Ha, I knew it was a slider. .5 'U '-5 5 D U Vx FERDINAND F. MCALLISTER ALFRED JARETZKI :ii A Iways keep your feet I'd suggest if , above your head mediaslinoscagy. I' , WN' MILTON R. PORTER X If ff Q rg :Sv 1 I Ii , X V. L f... ...- JOHN M. KINNEY Burns, ballr. burns. Q , ' ' u GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR JusI nosing around, JOHN N. SCHULLINGER Small bowel, small wonder. gx Y Y .- ,1 ,E fx . I 5-Q' ' 6 Vg ,. ,--. hw .HL 'H' . I sf l ., L ' 4' 'K Sizggiff 1 lf If53 'NF -:P 5 -.f xi A an I ROBERT H. WYLIE Bft'dllIlL1lilIIg 8 fix ,. lg, 5 'L il 'D Q r i SHIVAJI B. BHONSLAY A Lumpg where? 1,1 2 .9 3 it-1:8 Ks fy ARTHUR B. VOORH EES Non -pulsed Here kiddies, kiddies. IE- THOMAS V. SANTU LLI iv ,J L ff , - , A J ,M 0 '1 9, ,, JOHN A. BUDA At lang last, Stan. f H JOHN B, PRICE. JR. Oh no, :nv wye is having liver again Ionighl. CUSHMAN D. HAAGENSEN For ofthe mos! high Cometh healing. Z' l SVEN KISTER Take ojfver blouse! f JOHN PRUDDEN ROBERT B. HIATT ' iv Hasn'l changed I see no need ta dillv-dally. - a bil. U P ff' ' W'VR'F-'TT771 ' ., L.. 7. I , I . I . Q Q. . . - 5' K . FRANK GUMP I J P A ,L gg . tj EDMUND N. GOODMAN -.. L N 7+ i ' ,z ..:-,.:4 N f A I ' j 2 5 .4-lf. x 1 if . '1 Q Lfj JAMES R. MALM Lf' Q :,'! WannapIavI1earls? Vcf f 1 R ,,,,, ALFRED M. MARKOWITZ , A --nm Billrolh Ig 'L wha's Billrolh Il? I I 5, A ' ai ' yi A V , 3 F' xt . Y x - -S, A '. A J I I F. Nauvvel S Y' V CD E U 'R O S U 12 6 RICHARD L. MASLAND ji LAXVRENCE pool- E' .-4 nd how didwrou like 1',,, nay going R M CDEZlfROlSOC5'1l 1, Fl ' Y L Q, 3 , . I ' ,G t 1 I, A - 9. 'ff , ll P X, LJ, 4 'lv X '- 'K . J, ,, A If , Q11 ' '- J ' ' 1 '. , - . .gi ku, 4 4 . 5 H. HOUSTON MERRITT CARMINE VICALE LESTER A. MOUNT 1 fm' 'f bf' f1 .1',f1H1'f1ff- bw 1 mn There are no Hope on land and 'ull' loudef- U hystericsg sea, Ihqfre all malingerers. THE SQUASH TEAM X DANIEL SCIARRA i...,,,-, g A' SIDNEY CARTER EDGAR M. HOUSEPIAN ROGER C. DUVOISIN ARNOLD GOLD U A KXE Y L. . r . H Z J 1 .. 4-- lg, . Y s . .-'U if? T A T' A 'xv . , Q.. . . . ,. S , Q' X H, CHARLES M. Thar SIOQVK' in the traveling STEER OiBf6'Uf12 RAYMOND L. VANDE WIELE STANLEY M. BYSSHE Then the fourth year student delivered the Ihirdyear -5' fi student. PC!! .. TW VINCENT FREDA KARLIS ADAMSONS 'iii Henle-men 53' 3 5 'H- 1 ff' ' i , . Q L SOLAN CHAO s, A -- . , Ciao fso-long in Ilulianj ' N. - GILBERT .L VOSBURGH Egzvggwlgg' BOWE I think ill? myjimdusu 3, 5.5 14. X A w, DUANE TODD D K yu TN HLEILY see, is it lb rodqy oryesrerdqv?,, V 1' ,t gp-' A DEPT. OF LABOR RELATIONS 522 R32 E522 EEO E33 .v,l- 1 qw.. l1 Q'25 fL, W I-V fi. K O ORLAND J. MILLER Expert on internal affairs ROBERT E. HALL Legal Counsel --T . .f- 1 5 rQ-. A' i I. WA ' H1-u ftL .5 HAROLD SPEERT Hystoriz1n ,Ja rv' S-0 JERRY C. JACOBS Ah, wha! a lovelv gruup ' JOHN F. NICHOLSON I wlxh Im' mum' wen- John l.emmn ur Rm-gn Slarr. DEAN N. MARTIN 'AEvcfvbodv lovex Sl7NlL'17lltiJ' SOI71L'lUI1L' . fPET9I AGCRICS EDWARD C. CURNEN How do you llznzk lim flinic can be Improved? f. f --Vf FN ' 'IP A-.3 :',Y,,,,fJ if 2 . . A ' L- 4 1 v .fx -,I . I .Vgiw 'x PM GILBERT W. MELLIN I worzdcr If I um mu IHLI.QI1L'lll' mpc' In wrap C1,IFl.YIH11l,Y pre.Kwll.x ' M at , KATHERINE SPRUNT I lll1dt'f,SltH10'll1tll H. Flu grow wall nn celluloid. l'.515 '?' ? . .1 I fx' Y ' Q. ,.. T f. ' 'T ' I' 7' I 4 iUi,,.5.' -44 J. R 'Q X x XJ Q, 46 G 4' ' Q X mx I, A at X SIDENY BLUMENTHAL JAMES A. WOLFF Wha1 big qvcsrrou lmve. I7U't1611I'. ' 'rw SYLVIA P. GRIFFITHS IHS ull a nmltvr qfheurl . . and a llllft' pll as well. L. STANLEY JAMES i ,J im- K 2 '-35 -i h ROBERT W. WINTERS 1' 'I 4 vp Welcome to radiologv. if Zap, you 're sterile 't ' L Qian ix,-' c .A S I . 'MX I x L , .H WALTER E. BERDON Theres an essential dwerence between pediatric and adult rodiologvu MIECZYSLAW FINSTER Passing gas can be exhausting .arf Q CRADIOILO GU KENT ELLIS WelIyes, I agree its a chest x-ravg but can you be more specmeu AACTZESCT-lESI0EOC5'U X Q 1? :WP N' X cu L ,1 , RONALD L. KATZ My thumb keeps twitching. CHARLES E. WOLF Two minutes and fortv five seconds have passed, What are you going to do? ' EMANUEL M PAPPER Southern Comfort 'P S L-XX! RENCE C. KOLB 'tlqrhe I'll ren-rllu tl bunk. HILLIP POLATIN Volx dur? You 1l0n't hvlleve in ECTf ' 'f 'pf 1 A1-VIN M. MESNIKOFF lhinkyer sick. Yer IILHS. Thi: I5 np' lllfflllld don 'l'1'0llfl7I'gE! il. ROBERT MICHELS RICHARD DRUSS l1'lqrure'x'm1 L'0llll74.'Nt'!1' In sum Ilml, Buh Q0 Q XX 'DEfRCDAC 020624 CRE?-l A13 CDEDICICTZE Onlx mx hazrdresser knows or sure. 6 ROBERT C. DARLING Igor.' lgorf ' Yeah bars Q4 .I Q. ' f r .,. JOHN K. LATTIMER I hope you pass your bourdr jus! ax well. I fi - -.4 3-.4 1 x 4 HANS H. ZINSSER AYHer dribbling, you passer! a basketball? 0fPfl-lCfHAECDO1206'l'l DANIEL C. BAKER, JR, UCROEOGTJ X ' - ' ,A . If A MEYER M. MELICOW C1's1s and .vlones mqv break Inv bones. .' v l Q 9 32 ' . Q :ISU 6. , Q 2' L CHARLES A. PERERA There have been ajbw conslricled 'I ' 11 ' nil pupz s Ill ns X-, I ' b J can t .W x .Y ,wha .Q I B5 F A A 1 J H W f 'J r J A. GERARD DeVOE 1,51 Have'vou had your Y 5 qves checked? I LITTLE 'X GEOR E . L , I INDIA NS .9 K SVELSER No, Ilzqv re alwovs OI-AF been plain blue. HAROLDSON, JR, ., I E -.. , Q: IZ, I I A R .I 'fr - ,I - , As..--L ' F152-17? I I . r LAWRENCE SAVETSKY ROBERT M. HUI MILOS BASEK WILMORE NEIDITCH JUERGEN TONNDORF Down Sfopvn 1 5 x FRANK E STINCHFIELD Ir s done muh a um of ll1ou.vand.v MARVIN L. SHELTON A nd watch how she moves il. S. ASHBY GRANTHAM Ha, fooledyou: illv a jlabellaf' . , I' L DAVID L. ANDREWS Wl1dl3' a badjainl like lhix doing in a nice girl like-ron? I' A CHARLES T. RYDER 11l1inki1'.vaf0o1, ANDREW L. BASSETT A xlrelfh nf lhe imagination .. '1 9 ' 5 -F HAROLD M. DICK if f Hi,spar1. CHARLES S. NEER. II Fmejob. but wrong Y shoulder. ROBERT E. CARROLL - Well, il's no! aclualll' I, manual labor. A e .5 I ' e 'x , Q s . Y. SAWNIE R, GASTON I Gap0si.r in Ihe plefana' 1 w , 1, du Iibial , N 3 ' ' A . y 43 , '.,-,ff AfDCDI'llISGfRA'GIOcll as-1 SHIRLEY C. FISK Associate Dean Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine 'E+ fi ' ,... R iff vgkr' .V . I xv 'A' 1 's ' i, ' v Q :Wilt -it., ,. fix .wily DOUGLAS S. DAMROSCH GEORGE I. LYTHCOTT Associate Dean Associate Professor of Administrative Medicine ROBERT H. E. ELLIOTT. JR Associate Dean Professor of Clinical Surgery . I MELVIN D. YAHR Associate Dean Professor of Neurology Early in January of this year it was announced that Dr. Douglas S. Damrosch had been selected to be the first Director of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. The position he will hold as Director is intended to lead the way into the period when CPMC will become more than a hyphenated phrase. Dr. Damrosch, a very able pediatrician before his ten- ure as Associate Dean under Dr. Merritt, is the first per- son to be jointly appointed to a job by the trustees of both the Presbyterian Hospital and Columbia University. The nature of the position will make him responsible for all areas of the medical center in which interest is taken by both the school and the hospital. With the increasing complexity of this and other institutions, the breadth of the job will be enormous. Dr. Damrosch's leadership in this vital new role will be a key factor in the evolution of the Medical Center in the coming years. 90 7 iz lb C Q S TEDENT T ,Ll My Y EUNE REFLECTIO N A YE R GF CHA GE It is dilhcult to conceive of a more fateful year than the last one in the history of PSLS, and the graduating class of 1970 will undoubtedly be long remembered for its major invo vement in the tumultuous events of this period. Troubles have run deep. not only in the Student Bod but in the Faculty as well. No as ect of life ,in our hitherto secure and relatively insulated community has escapedp a dis- comforting reexaminationg long-revered idols have been threatened, and traditional precepts related to education, authority and social responsibility have undergone challenge. It has been a time of questioning and change, and an exciting one. - 4 To say that the troubles besetting the Medical Cen- ter are purely indigenous is no more valid than to as- sert that the changes elfected are all the consequence of student activism. Every educational institution has been subject to the same unrest, and ferment has oc- curred at both faculty and student levels elsewhere, as in our own institution. Yet it cannot be denied that certain local factors illuminated the need for change at P8zS, and that the students greatly accelerated the time schedule of reform. It is not necessary to dilate on the universal causes for protest among the young - they are many and complex. Suthce it to say that the general dissatisfac- tions with the establishment have found expression locally and that the traditionalistic concepts of univer- sity function have come under heaviest attack. Infinitely the most important question posed by the students, in this year of many questions, relates to the social responsibility of a university institution. In specific terms, should the Columbia-Presbyterian Med- ical Center, which until this time has distinguished it- self as an entity devoted to selective medical care, teaching and scholarly pursuit, alter the direction of its attentions towards the rapidly expanding medical and sociological problems of the community? Should not the intellectual resources and energies of our institu- tion be probing methods of health care delivery with ' X an intensity equal to that spent on the study of disease or the education of a doctor? Should we not recognize the incongruity of a medical center existing in the midst of a deprived and medi- cally underserviced pcapulation without one relating in a meaningful way- to the other? Should not goo medical care be a right rather than an economic privilege? These related questions are valid, and they must be answered now - or cer- tainly before they are answered by government or the community itself. Regard- less of how strong the arguments may be against such a commitment - and there are many in the institution who feel that any deviation from the traditional role of the Medical Center in education and scholarship would dilute effort and lessen excellence - the pressures from without are such that some form of commitment to active community service will be mandatory 92 The University has already moved in this direction to a degree. The responsibility for Harlem Hospital has been accepted, albeit reluctantly: an Associate Dean for Community Affairs has been appointed, and in the Washington Heights area. the recently appointed Com- munity Affairs Committee. largely student-directed, has been extremely active. To an innovative University ad- ministration, the challenges in this emerging area of health care delivery are unlimited. and perhaps nowhere in the world does the opportunity for implementing such programs exist to the degree that it does in the vast Co- umLbia medical com lex, situated as its components are in economically andp socially deprived regions of New York. The thrust of the next decade will provide the ima- ' ginative leadership so sadly lacking at the present time. While the conscience of the Medical Center has been awakened in this field. in substantial part through the in- sistent activities of the students. many of the internal workings of our institution have simultaneously under- gone scrutiny and change. again in large part through 1 student participation. Shortly after the Columbia campus confrontations of the spring of I968. a Student-Faculty Affairs Committee was formed at P8151 through this group. student representation in some of the key College committees was effected. The important Curriculum Committee, which has forged new dgpartures in curricular content at PSLS. has been ably assisted in its workings by stu ents. The Presidential Advisory Committee to seek a new Dean has had four representatives from the student body. and I can say from personal experi- ence that they have served responsibly and effectively in this capacity. Moves are now afoot to gain student representation on the Executive Faculty, the Admissions Committee and the Library Committee. No matter what projections can be made for the future of P8zS, there is little question but that henceforth there will be ac- tive student participation in virtually all the policy bodies. This move has been greeted with mixed emotions by the Faculty and Hospital administration. Those who have witnessed the students functioning in responsible positions have become convinced that their participation is of real value. A larger number, however, have seen only the activist fringe at work, and have experi- enced only the defiance, the disrespect and the arbitrary nature of confrontation. To this segment of the establishment , student activities have assumed a destruc- tive and threatening quality which has effectively disguised the more constructive and reasoned liberalism of the student majority. The uneasy lesson learned from other campuses is that confrontation is an effective tacticg its immediate gains, however, are counterbalanced by the fears and hostilities it engenders. I trust that this lesson has been learned also, and that in the future forceful and uninformed protest will not prevail as a substitute for responsible involvement. Perhaps there is too little awareness on the part of the student body that a vast reservoir of re- sponsiveness exists among their peers. ready to be tapped if the approach is an in- telligent one. In balance. I feel that the questions asked and the changes effected during the past year have been good ones. A new spirit of optimism is emerging at all levels in the College and Hospital as a consequence, and I think it more than likely that the next ten years will see our school not only regain its former privileged position among educational institutions, but surpass it. We thank this graduating class for the stimulus it has provided, and we trust that in future years it will see its elTorts well rewarded. V Frederic P. Herter. M.D. The editors wish to thank Dr. Herter for accepting the invitation to reflect on recent events and future promise at PJLS. 93 REFLECTIONS ON CURRICULAR CHAN Last summer the course directors of all of the pre-clinical courses mel to discuss the new curricu- lum. Halfway through the meeting, one ofthe more candid faculty members asked to be introduced to the others. Each teacher then in turn announced his name and department as if he were attending the first meeting of foreign diplomats, The analogy is appropriate because this was the first time that the course directors ever had all gotten together to discuss the curriculum! This striking fact emphasizes both the difficulty and significance of curricular change at Columbia. For the most part the new curriculum is similar to the curricula that most of the country's medical schools are adopting. The emphasis is on fiexibility and earlier introduction of clinical instruction. The most dramatic changes alTect the pre-clinical years. Basic science courses are shortened and clinicians are given a major role in teaching. Thus the largest block of time in the third semester is given to a course on history taking and the physical examination and to another course called Abnomial Human Biology, in which clinicians will demonstrate how basic principles can be applied to clinical problems. The major clinical year is largely unchanged. Noon lectures have been abolished, the specialties quarter has been dismembered, and Urology and fourth-year Ob-Gyn have been modified and put into the major clinical year. These maneuvers leave eighteen months for elective time. Hopefully the basic sci- ence departments will actively participate in these electives both with their own courses and in courses given conjointly with clinical departments. Further, all of the Columbia affiliate hospitals have estab- lished curriculum committees and are offering elective programs. An extensive advisory system will in- crease student-faculty contact and help students plan the use of their extensive elective time. Like lots of good ideas, these changes sound great - but will they work? In one sense, we will never know. because formal evaluation of the curriculum is impossible. First of all, the old curriculum was never objectively evaluated, so we have no control data. National Board scores are a superficial way to judge any course - and the board exams are changing anyway, so their usefulness for evaluating curri- cular change is limited. Too many variables - the preparation of students, for instance - are changing along with the curriculum to ascribe effects to one or another cause. Finally, what criteria can we use to judge the finished product - the doctor? Should we look at performance on examinations, performance during internship, or the dedication and knowledge of the physician twenty years from now? We are thus forced to rely on the impressions of students and faculty alone in evaluating the curriculum. Trial and error will surely be the rule, so it is crucial that mistakes be acknowledged and rectified. If we could evaluate curriculum, we might find that curriculum means not very much compared to the quality and quantity of faculty. Surely a curriculum is only the barest guide to the teaching that goes on at a school. In this context we are faced with serious problems that curricular change cannot solve. Basic science departments are financed largely by research grants. Large portions of clinical teaching are done by doctors who are not paid for their efforts, Promotions in any department are sel- dom based on teaching prowess. It doesn't take a systems analyst to figure out that medical schools are not designed to maximize the quality or quantity of instruction. A cynic could easily make a case for the converse proposition! These limitations on teaching manpower are not vague abstractions, but have concrete consequences. Anyone who spends time designing an imaginative course receives virtually no reward. The consequence is courses whose format has been unchanged in a generation. Basic scientists are busy in their labs in departments much too small to cope with their teaching load, and the consequence is large lecture courses taught by a distant, often uninterested faculty, Finally. a new curriculum is taught by the same old people. Some of the faculty, fortunately a small minority, actively opposed the new curriculum at its onset and may not try as hard as they might to see it succeed. People are slow to change, and feelings are easily hurt. A prerequisite for an effective core curriculum and interdisciplinary electives is interdepartmental cooperation. This cooperation is still almost nonexistent. This article sounds pessimistic because it emphasizes the difficulty of accomplishing change. Yet even our class has already seen what will perhaps be the new curriculum's greatest achievement. For the first time in years teachers are actively examining their courses - and the coursesiof others. Formally and informally faculty have increasingly asked students how well their courses have succeeded. Further. one of the unexpected consequences ofthe new advisory system is that members of every department are becoming aware for the first time of the problems of first-year medical students. This atmosphere of self-evaluation, if it continues, may have consequences far more significant than any specific course plan in the new curriculum. Henry M. Kronenberg 94 CLASS OFFICERS fourth year Richard M. Spiegel President Edward C. Jones Vice-President Linda F. Pessar Secretary William A. Tansey Treasurer Danne Lorieo P815 Club Representative second year Peter H. Moyer President Richard Nl. Spiegel Vice-President Linda F. Pessar S9Cl'9t3l'y Treasurer William A. Tansey Danne Lorieo P815 Club Representative third year Peter H. Moyer Richard M. Spiegel Linda F. Pessar William A, Tansey Danne Lorieo first year Peter H. Moyer Richard M. Spiegel Caroline A. Riely Gretchen Kronenberg Danne Lorieo Search-for-a-Dean Committee Representative: Henry M. Sondheimer Curriculum Committee Representative: Henry M. Kronenberg 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 1969 Philemon Dickinson Paul Robert Hickey Steve Kohl Henry Morris Kronenberg John C. Madigan Phillip Keith Peterson Carol Ann Raviola elected members 95 November 1969 Richard Charles Boucher John Mallory Burks David A. Burton Dennis Anthony Carson Gary Neal Foulks Richard Joel Kates Walter B. Lundberg Barry Michael Massie Michael Frank Parry Donald Oliver Quest Candace Cooper Walworth Alan Elliot Zuckerman . 51 Ex ' P Z 6 5 Boston - N 12' Yi? -SanF cisco g ' X . 9 .' I , Y . ,: W I Q - Gualimal? ,, 0- v -'-5' w- D . 1 'y 5 .1 VX if V Surinam-' I 4 F - L ,V -'- ' ' 555' if 'el' .' M E.: B 1 EXPLORING NEW HORIZGNS England - I W2 il ' a O XO Q B Thad d hs: Korea - Q Taiwan ' N Lb K N0 ggi z H 'Q' ifwu. ,,fe9 49 MEDICINE I The Medicine in the Tropics Program began in 1951 and under its auspices about 300 students and 60 wives have served in hospitals from Guatemala to Taiwan. The popularity of the program is indicated by the growth from 14 students 14 wivesj in 1967 to 32 students 111 wivesl in 1970 with a proposed 37 students 116 wivesl in 1971. The purpose of the program is not to train students to spe- LIBERIA THE TROPICS cialize in tropical medicine but to permit participation in re- sponsible medical care ofthe usual cosmopolitan diseases and specific tropical or parasitic diseases of the area served. Partici- pants become acquainted with the public health e1Torts of the country they choose, learn first hand how other parts of the world live, and enjoy rather wide travels to and from the cho- sen hospital. HThis may explain the deep appeal of the seedy. It is nearer the be inningg Monrovia has begun to build wrong. but at least it has on y begun: it hasn't gone so far away as the smart, the new, the chic, the cerebral. Graham Greene, 1936, Journey With0ut.Maps 5 1 -:Il I. '.- , V' .p' z , 3' - 4 If- - g . 25.5 -15 .',, P, ' ' V41 , '526-fikw. -. so ,' . . s - .et-. '1 - 1' . gi. 1 I-i-2 '-'e ' 'fful'1 , , 6 so I ' 'ifii' ' 'I 5 as-., 7 ' There are very few places in Africa If ' -,e- 1' ' '01 that look like Walt Disney would I - H ' II ,I ' I4 have you believe. Liberia is one. It is L . I ,f:'QgIj,,--,I. 'F' j I I '5' solid jungle complete with palm trees, lifyfi ' I 3 -f ' 'r ' butterflies, humidity, screeching crea- s I I ' I A if-.eg 'I I f' I ' tures and creepy crawlers. Upcountry . I . ' I . ' ' ,, ...QI . one sees very occasional clearirigs in .- ' p' . I 9' - 1' ' I ' ' I the forest crammed with tin roofs if .I .' . 1z5.g,qk, Faq -I ' I- 4 .. the road gloes there, or grass roofs if it '-LY -. doesn't. Ine of the larger aggrega- I 55 .i g tions of tin roofs on 'lThe Zin Zin A ' 1' I, Iii Road, almost up to IGu1neaI is . , ZorZor. Its Lutheran Mission Hospital ' ' ' ' ' t Hof--. and one doctor constitute the main Scores of patients are dimly visible inside the fieldstone andnplaster structure. Some lie on beds, some on the oor, in the aisles, even under the beds. Here the atients bring famil or friends to cook for them. The air is thick with the pungent mixture of alm oil, damp earth, eople. kola nuts and urine. gut back is a cluster olpmud and thatch huts composing the T.B. compound, and down a path in back is a Leper Colony. The hospital surgeon, pediatrician, administra- tor, pharmacist, county health organizer and chief of medicine are all Paul Mertens, M.D., 35 year old Minnesota born and bred Lutheran Mission- ary who holds the keys to every closet in the hos- pital trumor has it that he let a poisonous snake go in the drug stock room to scare off would-be medicine thievesj. Second in command - or per- health care for over 60,000 upcountry Liberians. . 'IQ haps first at times - is a livin legend: Esther Bacon, the missionary nurse who Ianded in a long- boat 28 years ago, marched upcount on foot fno roads yetj, an became nurse, moilier, obstetri- cian, champion of the vacuum extractor, midwi- fery teacher and human whirlwind. What can a fourth year medical student do up there? Anthing one has conhdence enou h to try. Like dentistry - that's where I started. gWith the aid of the Manual of Dental Anesthesia opened to the appropriate page. I tugged and yanked out rotten she ls of former teeth feven tricky wisdom teethj. Then there were the days I played junior surgeon - suturing lacerations for warmup, then first-assisting C-sections, hernia repairs, laparoto- mies, appendectomies, etc. In my spare time I learned to catch babies. Of course, this was in ad- 98 dition to the b11SiC dOCl0rir1g OH Ihr? Wilfdi The Martens and Esther Bacon were there at all hours tirst month I took the adults and the second gf day or night to advise and encourage month I became Pediatrician-in-residence. Dr. The first Saturday after the full moon each month is well-baby clinic. Streams of mothers lined up with their little bobbly-headed kids strapped on their backs with strips of bright cloth. I headed four miles down the road to Fissebu town where. with the help of a male Liberian nurse. I held . open air clinic. No intern. no resident. no senior resident. no ., attending, no consultant. Just a 3 x 5 card of antiparasitic dos- ages. People tiled by with their complaints of fresh cold or fever at night tautomatic response is. Take two chloroquin for four days, l or craw-craw tany sore from imxpetigo to moluscum contagiosuml. Once I traded a tube of A C cream for a necklace of country medicine tlittle mummies of bee's wax and black cloth encasing a bit of 'paper with holy writing in Arabicj. The woman undoubtedly thought I had some secret use in mind for her medicine. Memorabilia: W fa , QW, Lf' - The driver ants move in unbreakable columns anywhere they choose. Their jaws are so strong that they were once used for suturing by allowing them to bite the wound then breaking off their bodies leaving the head. - The women scarify their abdomen or back with elaborate geometric designs. - In the corner of the tax col1ector's oflice is a stack of huge coils A old stills for production of 'fcane juice seized when the men missed their tax deadlines. - As a remembrance of my trip I brought home a souvenir - a fifteen foot python skin. 4V ll - There's mold so potent that it ruins X-rays and etches glass lenses in the microscopes within months. - 2:00 a.m.: Somebody shaking my foot? Probably just Esther wanting me to come help with a delivery. No. a big black rat sitting on my bed gnawing through the blanket and sheet on mv heel! - In the' midst of an operation some flying ants squeezed through the screens on the windows and headed straight for the only li ht. which was illuminating our operating site. They landed. W at to do? Squish and flick land put the patient on post-op antibioticsl. . in-i if The high point of the two months was a bush trip I made with three Liberians deep into the interior to vaccinate against smallpox and hand out some basic medicines fchloroquin. antibioticsj to t e forest folk that rarely make it out to the main tdirtj road. We walked single file down rutted. muddy paths hopping over driver ants and swishing across streams. At each village we were greeted by the chief who wel- comed us into his mud hut and served us rice and soup ta murky mixture of peppers and chunks of meat ranging from wild bush hog to monkey meaty. After some palm wine refreshment we tried to round u some willing victims for our needles. One ni ht I slept in the room oi, an 18 year old girl who had just died from Sie bite of a poisonous snake. Everywhere we went there was one thing we could count on and that was a crowd following me staring at my pale face. Some peo- ple laughed but others were openly afraid. I was the first doctor ever to ave visited those particular villages. You can bring to Africa your medical or technical knowledge but you will carry away with you much more than what you have left be- hind. Karen Kramer Hein 99 T LUKE, St. Luke's Hospital has long been a popular outpost for tenderfoot seniors longing to test their clinical skills. Twenty minutes on' IRT itll, an anxious jog through Columbia's Morningside Campus, and a not so certain elevator ride to Clark 5 for was it 6?p, or Scrymser 4.for was it 3M?J, or maybe Plant 8 was the familiar trail for the enthusiastic sub-intern aiming for 8:30 A.M. Styvesant rounds. Dr. Van Itallie's medical staff impressed us with their ac- cessibility and their learning. Chief Resident Al Muller looked after us with watchful eye to be sure all was well on our floors, to be sure our stay at St. Luke's was instructive, and, yes, to be sure we wouldn't run away with the ECG machine so well secured with tangled links to the closet wall. Times of crisis drew us to the ICU where Betsy Loeb's eager crew so competently protected our charges. Nor could we forget the cafeteria - a cornucopia of culinary delights - where we dined with our mentors and where expense was absorbed around the clock by those little white cards. We also went to Luke's as surgeons, and as pediatricians, and to enjoy the international llavor of forceps handling at the oldest of New York City's women's hospitals. In all departments we experienced responsibility and careful guid- ance. The rotations away from the home ground were re- freshing chances to work hard, to learn, and to reflect upon yet another style of medical practice. ' William A. Tansey dp 11. Qing: nf gif i 1.1.4 I s.. : '11n7l'-I ' ,V Wiimald' , , It-t....,u, J-- Drs. McCrav 8: Ekkers Es s.. ,f I ,'.1 I Q' t t 'X' 1 xf1'Jes W . - - . - .' 1' ,Q NVQ, Q- 2x.'.r'. , ',f 9 Ti 'G -Q , ' '7 '.v T, X 1 4K'Q:'Li e h, 3 ',f 4.MhJ . '- -r QM ' 115i -s..i - T t 1 ' arms mesaf--, gf f 'X t , 4-.iff-'.:f.+, L. , . S' ' 'e 5 very- Q ,Qs ,..-dl..-..-- M 7 ' i l Q ,,,,,.,: hifi-LJ. rising, iwsnwezs .,. . 1.:v'L.' ' QQ' 'V' A - . . 'x,- .I ii -. 4 . LQ A qrfx T JJJ- ',J.,- , Q-irgslji' lf' ' , is wi: ' ' 4 .1513- - if U g.,1U.i!'l'fp!'f4'- av3x:k ..-, j',f'5L31'.1vfv, . ' ' , 'dZf.,- . X iujgivgsijg f P ':. , . 1 3' , H x an ,- t I J.'?'l' S 114 1. BASSETT Those of us who spent some time at the Bassett Hospital found the climate cooler. but the hospital atmosphere considerably warmer. The latter was an espe- cially welcome change. The attending staff Call full-timej and the house staff were for the most part willing and anxious to teach. The sub-intemship programs in both medicine and surgery were set up in such a way that students generally felt that they were useful and functional members of a team and were no longer merely playing doctor. On both services the student was primary physician for all his patients and did not share responsibility with an intem. A though we worked fairly hard. everyone found time to take advantage of the fringe benefits of being out in the sticks. Several memorable golf games took place during the summer between students and house staff, and the studs seemed to have more trouble with the back nine than they did with the tirst two ,years of P8z S. Many golf balls fthe local medium of exchangej changed hands. hose of us with no golf balls passed our free time under less pressure sailing and playing tennis. In the hospital the atmosphere was fairly light-hearted. We did not feel that this detracted from good patient care at all. and it made work considerably more en- joyable. There was a great deal of serious teaching. but interspersed among the more serious bits of knowledge were some gems of surgical principle which should not go unrecorded. One can never forget arey's First Law: Nothing bleeds like the aorta. Nor can one ignore the time tested maxim: The temperature in the op- erating room is indirectly proportional to the skill of the surgeon. The most astute contri ution to medical knowledge. however, was made by Rick Spiegel. He won the coveted Student of the Year Award for pointing out funder great pressurel that the blood su ply to the proximal navicular came from the heart. Generally, we felt that we learned a good deal and enjoyed ourselves doing it. Some of us were not anxious to return to Fun City. James Bordley 101 9 I K f gxql, if ROOSEVELT All the opportunities for you to learn are here. Use them as you wish. If you don't have a good time, itls no one's fault but your own? With this startling in- troductory greeting the first group of students began their surgical sub-internshi s in June of their fourth year. In medicine, surgery, obstetrics, and cardiology, tge message was the same: good medicine can be fun. We had already learned that good medical practice demands hard work. At Roosevelt we found that a enerr ous measure of humor and high house staff morale do not lessen the quaity of care. This attitude had not gone unnoticed by previous P8zS students, and we saw many familiar faces on the house staff. Recollections: . . . Racing to keep up with Roosevelt's perpetual motion ma- chine, Dick Edie . . . EKG conference with Dr. Legato: Obviously it's an ecto- pic, re-entrant, aberrantly conducted, parasystolic Kent system rhyt m with mus- cle twitch interference? . . . Russell 2 to Evans 4 to C-7 to G-8 to Ward 3 - where's the Penthouse, anyway? . . . Liver rounds on Friday, invariably followed by a productive meeting of the West Side Knife-and-Gun Club . . . Yes, Dr. Spieigel, your wife may visit you, but your on-call room is located in the obstetrics war . . . There really were no women on the house staff until Dr. Christy arrived? . . . 4Scrubbed with Dr. Wichern: Can you tell me the eighteen common ty es of hernias?M . . . Duck when you enter the recovery room: You're so bad! qhe experience at Roosevelt was enjoyable and instructive. Many of our class will return for more. John M. Burks it -1 Al 1 D 7 NICHOLAS P. CHRISTY WALTER WICHERN A.l' v t 1 gh'-ix gm X I W Si X - 7552? , 'L2Ql3:.f4j1, I :if fe, jg f 117' V A an . .,,. , 1210-f5 i .41 l c J ,', . gif' 'fc V .W 1 . v we , , vxumcsotb' Ui te: -XS Ma- r.:-s,X.- h ix X 1 xv X Sf' X Y : X .W NSW! .. -2 v , '55 2 Am. . Y., CHARLES A, RAGAN .- --ij' -:L f .af -Sul 'J:ilCi,J?JJDfJq-.l.H1l2i'e: , 5 1 of AJJ?E'WA3f'Qkv1 . . H- L 7 fir. 1 'R uf, K. REJANE M. HARVEY A , LN - HA RLEM This year the fourth-year students did clinical clerkships in four Harlem Hospi- tal services: Medicine, Surgery, Pediatrics, and Cardiology. The clerkships were marked by their flexibility. tudent activities ranged from admitting and following patients, working in the Emergency Room, meeting with preceptors, riding ambu- lances, touring Harlem and its various health facilities for lack thereofj, attending conferences Qincluding Chest: Drs. Harvey and Jones, EKG: Dr. Schmidt, Hema- tology: Dr. Lindenbaum, Neurology: Drs. Breust and Richter, Endocrinology: Dr. Ster ing, and f'Dr. Ragan's rounds j and discussing Harlem, Harlem Hospital, and their problems. Those students in the early part of the year saw the old hospital with its roaches and falling plasterg with its problems of too few nurses, X-ray and lab technicians, inadequate equipment and insuliicient space fbeds overflowed into the hallsy. Those who went after October saw the new hospital with its resultant improved patient morale and loyalty and improved staff morale and performance. However, the main pro lem which faced the old hospital still exists: how to de- liver adequate health care to the vast majority of Harlem's citizens. This problem demands innovative and courageous effort on the part of Columbia, the Harlem Community, and city, state and federal govemments. Whether the answer is satel- lite clinics andfor more community control, etc., is uncertain, but experimental attempts at improvement must be one of Columbia's foremost concerns. Peter H. Moyer 103 DELA FIELD George L. Curran T 1 qw, ,-f, . .. - ,. In the past four years at Columbia P8zS. the medical curriculum has been bat- ted around. Four seems to equal one: one. to be sure. is still one, but also involves most of two: two has experienced inliation and is now three. and poor three, seeing its two confused neighbors, has given up and is waiting for next year. To be sure, in spite of this gran right and eft. Columbia P8LS will still educate good doctors. And with all respect to the Curriculum Committee, this result is due to the simple fact that PXLS can offer unique clinical experience combined with excel- lent teaching. The Medicine rotation at Delalield Hospital is such an experience. The superb teaching of its medical staff permeates the entire medical center, but only a por- tion of each class are afforded the clinical encounter. With no interns at Delafield, the senior students are solely responsible for the day to day management of the patients. And being central figures. their education is no longer tangential to the actual clinical setting. The patients at Delafield cover the full range of the spectrum. If indeed their disease is chronic with a seemingly straightforward management, then the proper questions are surely not asked. And if their Iproblems are more acute, then it is iliicult to know which questions to answer rst. Competence is rarely achieved. but confidence in one's potential is invariably developed. The tribulations are numerous and inescapable. But that is not important now, for they will only blur with the trials of years to come. Delafield breeds responsibility. Responsibility begets reason, and reason fosters respect for disease an people. G. H. Mudge 5 af 'KTQSYSQS 1 U V DT f T X Q ' 2 'a is if limi! X- i QQ ':l wx - 1 ' 'l, I : 5 Arthur R. Wertheim vf ' 1 i I I Q. John A. Buda la AH Moments to be Remembered and Endured Remember: Changing bulbs during the Biochemistry exam 0 'vwv ri 4- ini v .., hiya. -Tim, .U x i .1 i 1 -:-2 ge cm- i. .. o Q 4 i,-,M it v.o'f4 I' -0.0 ' ix, i X1 - - 1 sy reprieve. Ai Ai .ii 'X 4 is Iaretzki explains, Madigan reacts, Mclviath in shock. The Governor Prophecy: issued 3 PETER DINGELDEIN - will change his name . . . to Iohn Dingeldein ' ' . ,ii M ix .Xl .ix M Anybody ever tell you how beautiful your eyes are, Quote: DR. JOHNSTON - I had the great privilege of disrnembering my secretary's bodyi' This is the first Black building admission of, . . 1 .s X. A JK- Say Ah Case of the page 31 Is this an expanding coin lesion or merely a token lesion? fsee pg. 1251 -. N ,- 1 -9' ' V I .-,ks ,Mx , ..., .- .. X V W X' s if x 'N ' .. 4- N, f Q TQQJ W QTCQ . -,l -Q,-5 -4 EA FIV 1 'W 1 ' . ff -ffjx nh-is . 1 fi- 1 4. 10 1 19 Remember: The alarn lock awakening Dilley dur V1 resulting i reading of 6 on the Richte I F I ' f I ee.eeei WW 9 Aa ,A 5 fx h 4 AM airy I 1 If NllT A . 5 fi , 2 e f P r A ' 'EAMKW - N54 I H A , L V3 A ' , Q K , ' X mir' f 1 sax THIS IS THE 21st CPMC ADMISSION A...-gv' ? 5315... L Quote: DR. TAPLEY - If you're not having fun on medicine, let me know. Something's wrong Y- .R A Q L ' f'l'l5E.'-' l Nlnxl wc cliscnss tlm risglit .After dinner' 145 l A ff Q f K K A. A ,Q ,... ! fl Y v 5 -- 1:3 ,g ,af Cuantos dias . . rm 'wt WW but I lhilllf MF Uvlllnil If they 're so smart lion crmie they fffih all speak lvrukun Spznnsli? ' Take il cleep lwreath nncl sin dn-csc. Remember: The first I.V. you had to start. 109 Prophecy: MIKE BERGER and RON ROTHENBERG - will develop a new wonder!!! drug. l wan right. he ix Lin ampntce-l FT ,v 17? 4 XE Remember: Parties in the grill room You think you have problems, tl' The pigs take security, the dogs guard the stairs, the monkeys occupy administration . . Quote. DR. MOORE - I deal with the female body as f A a Qwjhole' Tony! a good Irish name ' vu T5 Secret ingredients to Spiegel's punch v J XVhat would you do if you L-ouldn't be a . doctor? What Pl'0pl1eCy: 1 in we say? HOWIE BLANK - will get angi-y -E45 f Prophecy: STEVE COLE - will be chief gum in residence for Khatmandu As I came in for my second run with the boinlu lmrwting about me . . It's all right officer, hem with us. Remember: Trips to Manhattan State Dick? ff I Q. But Candy, it's the real you. I think it! melting Quote: ASSORTED RUFFIANS - Hey about a little one on one? Bouchel How 2' x S 'Tr f Begin' Dick . . . but it's not us VVell il's Hip and, a. camp . , . Remember: ' X ' Dr. Cerstis smile A 4 ' V ' , . gr' ,U .s '. A S l ' '. . :jy:g::g::g-, , - . - V - ,. l 3 Vg::4,:f::: In 1 I.. . nrx - A Q - lt's a nucleus f I E A ., ' ' V I J-B and it sure is 4 .. --fp ' V ambiguous N - ':-QIQA , l'm not moving 'til they turn that light on again . -L+, 'A ' : 1 z ,, . ., 5: ff., ig. l - :'- l N ks nj wen. its the CNS. ' 1 3 , V: U jf-.I , . . I ,- .4 If George knew there was a Red nucleus here , . . May I be excused for a week or two? Looks like guppies, - wma, .w:- www . ,ag 5, 5. gs. ' 51 .. - U f- Quote: ' wif- 1 - Xl . .. i t H I g 3 jr A X1 X MARTY PROVINE in V.D. chnic - ' I 'el ', , as Smile, you're ou Candid Camera , Q Q - 9 ' A ,, Y ,XR i - il , ..,.'!' ' X l 112 l M . V X ,j x ' , -H - 72' I W 1 lt's a spimchele. pass it on Nearly cvcryolie in Aiiatoinx' rcutls l'.inski Paul likes Remember: Dr, Root spinning in his chair Prophesy: DAVE BURTON will publish his Underlin- ings from the Encyclopedia Britannica Cac, this is fun Rick, lint xoirre foxgginq my glasses the captions Sec, it's right up thcrc. BIOCHEMISTRY Before metaphysicians my hecome orthodocs QCD the MD may pass through a free radical stage LBJ. Much heat is generally given olf in this reaction and the stability of the inter- mediate product is often not great. Thc most extreme form of competitive reaction is the paradocsical shift QDJ in which the MD hccomes diametrically opposed to his collegnes. ms Q I rm P 5 MD M V-C- ' HRRKNES5 ! + rm' E Q fm to? QQ mg... f 4 f ff iv fl 1 59. gl .4 ,, ..,, , ,,,, Y Quotes Dr. George Perera: Hello Bill, er . . . john, er . . . Dave. How's third, er . . . first year treating you? Hypermitotil Process!! A117114 VVe don't do that sort of thi ng at Presbyterian My Cod! My blood! Remember: Dr. Vicale's smile Maybe it's upside down, Bords ,, MA N. R . - lay, 'QQ . - Q 'V' E N- I . J., .ug M ' 5 , -. . : 0 1. '9 sz ' if ' E --2-gf s+,,.5-f 1 a it e ' :- C' 'lb l Q 53 , as 9-P E E 2 'S . . . Don 2 E E 5 2 7 5 ' u 5 E 51: 2 l.. if E .. 5, Q Q 5 -gig 5 Quotes: 2 71' U Dr. XVEINER: Put away your notebooks Q' This won't be on any exams. i , Well. it wus like Hlis. ,t , 'I Then- uns no moon Gee. The long power! been crappy ever -, the mghq I Wm hum since Parisito offv. 7 f :L 13 4 9' . Q' . C Q ' 13,91-'T ,Tv X going fast Case of the page W2 fsee pg. 1245 it ' 4 Ni V Q , 5 xl L, A , 1 . 'Q .ff ' .4 ,., '51 5 . 39 Ve-r-r-y interestingk White man's burden . . . hrmpf! Prophesyz ART BROWN will retire and begin collecting social security after three years in practice. Don't, Howie! She's trying to get better, Remember: Dr. Bradley's smile I Case of the page W3 Quote: DR. CHARLES PERERA: '-Gentlemen, this lady L. is my best patient. ex, .. N g -X X 116 -vw Well that Should lm L-old enough. rw sf .s Af? . 1 1 Z l I 5 I 9 I , 5 Remember: un unl 1 Iur lnnn ' ' Quote: JOHN ESPOSITO fto Dr. Ossermanl: Immunoelectrophoresis? If you've seen one, you've seen them all Now listen, lf you cover for mc Illix week. and you get someone . . , I R 'is -,, . 1 Going to Sloan's in your white jacket and getting asked where the canned foods are. Now let's see. N I ,ff V' ,fl Spirilus Fermenti 1l7 V 51 This noe' f S.., K l e-1 1 l px Remember: Summer vacations Quote: 5 A .. DR. SHAINESS: Multiple organism is impossible. 5 Q 'fii Q I - ' d 'ti' '.Q ' - never experience 1 :E V l f k X ,. L A 1 'Q 4 X , Prophesy: , w - DON QUEST will forsake a demanding neurosurgical practice to return to stunt Hying off the Kitty Hawk. F. 2 I I 1 ' l 1 I 33 f .wm- Remember: l enjoy being a girl Candy VVith a little bit of luck Randy Have a banana Remember: , Panda and Hamilton The Strickman Filter The night they invented champagne Class of '70 Qnote: - PROVINE: 'WVhen did you have your breast removed? Patient: Look again, honey. 3 V Eh.: .-..,.-vi J, ff 19 Ee A I 4 Prophesy : 5'!n' ,315 , . HAROLD OSBORN will serve as president of the AMA. .-qs.. ,- lt'S a machinery murmur Remember: S Center and 9 Center Shades of Krypton! I EAAA. 'I' n . , ISK to s Dex In Sanmcl Barr! S.nnm-I Burl - XYAHIIIIQ lun' .m ' elm .nur l rememlier when she- xnu gmt a lmby huspltdl Quote: DR. MERRITT: No one will be displaced by the building program. 121 .,.f!X V.. V N,-U 1-ll? I 1. v -q fumngm, , 1li'7lr,'lm,. -. q'f'..b'l!mUp. zmfzdsfri if 'b wy ' 135:-::S:::. Iirllilihiti -l'lq'u,,Ng.. 1 ' nh - sli 73 g.':': ' LTI l: n::. I -l 1 '-'llilp- r u I ill' 1- 'Luiz T -L. iiilii .-'ff igrih- K A,..1 f C-fy l 1' Q -'Q Is:-lr ll 'l' y: h pl: :bird I: 'lg'lb W 2 'I l u '4 Hmlllvl 2 mia lfhh I Uv -lv rlggligl Hmylgrl I BVIII 6:1- ..- fa 'if' 1.2.5 u. vw .. E , l,. .. J- uh- pw V T Prophesy: P 6: S will get a new library. Vfaf' .-.X . li, ' ' Q l 4 f , f '- l , i i .. 1 ,IX K . , 1 . f' ,, , ja lin? ff,! . 7-Qlylj pf f ' . 91 fl.: f Q ' d 1 , - , f fu, ' , 1' f ,, e iv. Q-1' - ' l p' ,,f F, i i. ,M .r. -. LG, . . 5 '.4lfl ' j : C. 1 .329 , 'S ' ,. : Q TQ - 5 3 C L A i 2 I F 7- -. fi i , ' f-ff E -' .I 3 2511 E E 5 ' -E' :5fij :U V -1 gj 5 T f H K - r . '. ' . Ll gpg: 31 ,. -..- : I- .'l rm? 1' ' . Iii 1 gg WW F , Fda r as -vpbcm dbrmas Q A ' WITHUUQT RBQARD 'rp ' A 5. mos, omeafn ma oem' lhbC...' ...1-vi -A-.J .in 4-..vlu'1irh'll '31ifrJ -.-...S 5 N ,- A. Uk, 7 - A , ...,. ., ': '?' , ll ' 3:15 'A 7 ' - ff! . '4 ' ' ' 1, ' . 'f i' V ' E EE Ef MH' E x 4, CANDY -COOPER WALVVOBTH: ' 'E Life Will' be EZ .X L Q' ' NAMES '- Mosfpopulars 'V FIRST NAMES: Stephfvjen, Iohn,',WVi'11iam Q61 LAST NAMES: Brown, Sondheimer,,K1onenberg, .Walworth Q22 - - Frustratiuns, even A X 3 N , . N X , ,x.,,3g,w N N 1, , 'X x a ,uv . A N ., . N X X 2 1-M A . .V N - N- X A 9-an-.ZF .,,.m..Ss': X En' '1V.:'f'! .ci -.iidxkr X NAMES 4 Middle names: I L ' N '-,Q 9 Rlm from Armistead and.Audet t0XZinser . and Clyde being' populafxwith '2' each and- everi-,al qwhittembife and one-Faith., 5' ' ' X' ,jx -- . Splendor in the grass, ES - What are they hiding? T. Stephen Balch, G. Peter Dingeldein, I. Craig fl-lenderson, S. David Lang, W. Bruce Lundberg, 1 E. Baldwin Self I2 cr iff' rl Q, Q.. S : -- ' '-:'4 1' aaa.: . V ' ,,,,,,,,. . . n - rip X ' f 1,1-,A . 313- 1 H. X .. V, 1 ir'-- J' .. .' 'ir-fi: 9: 1 ,pr - ,, Q-.f,,.,: li , . ' T.. ' f 'jg V ' t 5 - - . .' ks kva'e,f-4. 2' ' es isiffiif . .f.'rw -.. Q 1 -:. , .ff-ff'-,vas -NAMES - Nicknames: . We have a Punky, Bif, Panda, Oz, Pookie, Win, Blackie -, and Boomer but not one Aescalepius. Home away from home a. .ga le l r-P1 ' ' tb' E 'uhm' we- AU' ..,A.- ' ' - f, ' 'Q , A, .k.,,, .f 'f'f '.2':1'..- 5' V,.. -Q - f Four Seasons - Uptown Quote: EVERYONE: You mean Kohl with a C or Cole with a K? Rather switch than fight ,, l ' fx Fsiiw i' 4 Q 'gil ' .1 1. ' 3 '-, l miami' W VY l K 1, . E V , Q f' X ml. 1 ' l '1 ll I LC. 1 ' ll xl ,X l Q ' wa r l A f'.,f+l . - f A .-1' vga- ' ' , pf. ' ld L l XVhul's wrong with this pictnrc Quote: K DR. BLANC: I think we should keep the placenta and rj throw away the bebef' l l 1 x Your coat 3 il A -1 ' S9 l 3 . Q .A ,I V: ? It's not ready, Whafs this radical stufl? Prophesy: if , g L.X Matt. your mother called again RANDY HOWE will meet an untimely demise when at 98 he 1 Playmate of the accidently trampelled by a passionate hoard of admiring prepubertal Class of '70 teenage female neurotics. ,lg 4 I A ,lfix yn? ,- V.. 124 HA .ini-rg. 1 Cu And all I said was, Cooley, have a heart. Prophesy: TONY PEPE and ART LIBERMAN will be well noted. Your dribbling wan only fair. hut I liked the way you passed it. 8 l 125 tx. ' r . 4 Q -X , I ' . 1 l -. A' Throw a little gravy on it, dearie . . . they won't know the difference. CASE OF THE PAGE - ANSWERS ill Both wrong. As can be seen in adjacent film, this is a rare expanding token lesion. 32' Each to his own devices. 113 Wom1s. Ei! Remember: Sticking with your part of the alphabet for two years Bridge of Sighs K f I Peter C. Albro Harborview Medical Center Seattle, Vtfashington Thomas S. Balch Los .Angeles County U.S.C. Medical Center Los Angeles, Califomia Kenneth G. Benoit Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Michael D. Berger Tucson Hospitals Medical Education Program Tucson, Arizona William L. Bergman Denver General Hospital Denver, Colorado TER Rotating Medicine Surgery Mixed Surgery Mixed Psychiatry Howard L. Blank Slll'gEfy' Bellevue Hospital New York, New York john R. Bogdasarian Surgery University Hosplital Boston, Massac usetts james Bordley, IV Surgery Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, New York Richard C. Boucher M6CliCifl6 Presbvterian Hos ital New York, New York Arthur S. Brown Mixed Harlem Hospital New York, New York Geor e C. Brown Surgery' Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Frederick M. Brunn, jr. Surgery St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Steven C. Buchanan MSdiCil1C Emory University Hospital-V.A. Atlanta, Georgia Peter P. Budetti Mixed Pediatrics San Francisco General San Francisco, California Jghn Bu.-kg Medicine University of California Program San Francisco. Califomia David A. Burton Medicine Massachusetts General Boston, Massachusetts A Richard G. Carlson P61-li8U'lCS Lincoln Hospital New York, New York Daniel H. Carmichael Surgery Bames Hospital St. Louis, Missouri Dennis A. Carson Mf?diC'il1S University Hospital of San Diego County San Diego, California Bruce A. Cassidy Medicine St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Paul Chang Medicine New York-Memorial Hospital New York, New York David C. Charlesworth Surgery Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire james Z. Cinberg Surgery Mount Sinai Hos ital New York, New York Stephen A. Cole Mixed Medicine Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Robert L. Combs Rotating Medicine Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Coo erstown, New York David nl Corcoran Mediflille Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Alan W. Cross Pf?diaU'iCS Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York Philemon Dickinson Surgery Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York HIPS Russell S. Dilley Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, New York George P. Dingeldein . orth Carolina Memorial Hospital Cha el Hill, North Carolina john L. 'Busposito St. L 'e's Hospital New York, New York Ronald B. Fauer Los Angeles County USC. Medical Center Los Angeles, California Gary N. Foulks University Hospital of San Diego County San Diego, Califomia jane Eliot Fried Roosevelt Hospital New York. New York Fred A. Furgang University of Miami Altil. Hospitals Miami, Florida Eugene W. Goldwater New York Polyclinic Hospital New York. New York Neil F. Goodman Beth Israel Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Geoifrey M. Gratwick Harlem Hospital New York, New York Harry B. Greenberg Bellevue Hospital New York, New York Richard Gusberg Pres iyterian Hospital New York. New York Paul F. Gustavson, jr. San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, California Gordon P. Guthrie, jr. Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Matthew Guy Maimonides Hospital New York, New York William L. Hazard Rhode Island Hospital Providence, Rhode Island Karen K. Hein Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, New York Charles V. Helming Beth Israel Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Craig I. Henderson Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Paul R. Hickey Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York john P. Hoche Vanderbilt University Hospital Nashville, Tennessee Peter L. Hofmann Roosevelt Hospital New York. New York Edmund G. Howe, IV Harlem Hospital New York, New York Edward C. jones Roosevelt Hospital New York. New York Sally Kasparek Lenox Hill Hospital New York, New York Richard j. Kates jgxhns Hopkins Hospital altimore, Maryland Steve Kohl Bronx Mtuiicipal Hospital Center New York. New York Gretchen Kronenberg Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Surgery Surgery Medicine Surgery Surgery Pediatrics Mixed Anesthesia Rotating Medicine Medicine Mixed Medicine Medicine Surgery Rotating Medicine Medicine Mixed Medicine Pediatrics Surgery Medicine Surgery Medicine Medicine Mixed Medicine Surgery Medicine Obstetrics Pediatrics Pediatrics Henry M. Kronenberg Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts S. David Lang Harborvieu Medical Center Seattle, Washington jonathan Leichtlin Mount Sinai Iiospital New York, New York Florence C. Li St, Yincents Hospital New York, New York Arthur R. Libennan St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Stephen Lichtenberg St. I..u.ke's Hospital New York, New York Diane Lipson Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Danne R. Lorieo St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Walter B. Lundberg, jr. Beth Israel Hospital Boston, Massachusetts john C. Mad.igan,l-jr. Presbyterian ospital New York, New York Barry M. Massie Belleuie Hospital New York. New York YVilliam R. McFarlane, jr. Bronx Mtmicipal Hospital Center New York, New York jonathan C. McMath Presbyterian Medical Center Denver. Colorado Robert S. Middleton North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Peter H. Moyer Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Cilbert H. Mudge, jr. Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Tom R. Norris, jr. San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, Califomia Roman Nowygrod Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Harold H. Osbom Lincoln Hospital New York. New York Michael F. Parry Presbyterian Hospital New York. New York Thomas H. Patterson University of Alabama Medical Center Binningham, Alabama Anthony j. Pepe Harlem Hospital New York, New York Linda F. Pessar Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Phillip K. Peterson Presbyterian Hospital New York. New York Martha A. M. Provine Maimonides Hospital New York, New York Donald O. Quest Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts William H. Ramsey Harlem Hospital New York, New York Carol A. Raviola University of Califomia Medical Center San Francisco, Califomia Thomas A. Rice San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, Califomia William W. Richardson St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Caroline A. Riely Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Medicine Rotating Surgery Mixed Medicine Medicine Medicine Mixed Medicine Surgery Medicine Surgery Medicine Psychiatry Rotating Surgery Medicine Medicine Mixed Surgery Surgery Pediatrics Medicine Surgery Medicine Medicine Medicine Mixed Medicine Surgery Medicine Surgery Rotating Medicine Medicine john S. Rodman New York-Memorial Hospital New York, New York Ronald N. Rothenberg Childrens Hospital Denver, Colorado Karen A. Samotl I Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, New York Bemard P. Schachtel Yale-New Haven Medical Center New Haven, Connecticut Robert M. Schmidt University Hospital of San Diego Cotmty San Diego, Califomia E. Baldwin Self, jr. Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Stephen Q. Shafer Harlem Hospital New York, New York Mark I. Singer Presbyterian-St. Lnke's Hospital Chicago, Illinois Samuel C. Siris Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York Henry M. Sondheimer Colorado Medical Center Denver, Colorado judith M. Sondheimer Colorado Medical Center Denver, Colorado Richard M. Spiegel Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Alanlj. Spotnitz eth Israel Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Cordon A. Starkebaum Harborview Medical Center Seattle, Washington William A. Tansey, III St. Luke's Hospital New York, New York Michael L. Tapper San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, Califomia james L. Taylor Presbyterian Hospital New York, New York Alan D. Tice Roosevelt Hospital New York, New York Richard S. Tindall University of Minnesota Hospitals Minnea olis, Minnesota Ronald Walllach Presbyterian Hos ital New York, New York Candace C. Walworth Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire Edward Z. Walworth Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire Olin L. West Harlem Hospital New York, New York Anthony D. VVhittemore Presbyterian Hospital New York. New York Mark A. Wightman Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, New York Thomas M. Woodcock New York-Memorial Hospital New York, New York Keith A. Wrigley, jr. Strong emorial Hospital Rochester, New York Zvetan N. Zakov Presbyterian Hos ital New York, New York Andrew W. Zimmennan University of Michigan Affil. Hospital Ann Arbor, Michigan Alan E. Zuckerman johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maylan Mixed Medicine Pediatrics Pediatrics Pcdiatrics Medicine Surgery Medicine Surgery Medicine Pediatrics Pediat rics Surgery Surgery Rotating Medicine Pediatrics Medicine Medicine Surgery Medicine Rotating Rotating Rotating Surgery Rotating Medicine Medicine Surgery Pediatrics Pediat rics '-3,2-'-7'g1,,.:-, , - 13.-'-4,:-if-ma - ml: QV,-..-J up LOOKING BA CK ofv THE CHAMPAGNE CLASS The Class of l97O is made up of people who have spent much of their time turning corners and straddling watershe s. Most of us went to secondary school when peogple in their teens were primarily concerned with being neatly dressed and allen ing the right college. The drug scene was beer. Most of us managed to get out of college just before activism and social awareness became fashionable. Coeducation was something practiced only at state universities and drugs weresome- thing used by a few Dekes down the street. One entered the Dean's otlice by invita- tion onlv and the best known negro on camplus was usually a soccer player from Gambia.. In medical school the social and fas ion revolutions have caught up with us. but once a ain we are about to miss out - for we are departing from Colum- bia immediateiy prior to the full implementation of the most sweeping changes to occur at P815 since its founding. An attempt is now being made to make a Colum- bia medical education responsive to individual needs and relevant to modern clin- ical practice, and we are not really a part of this wide-ranging reform. We are the last doctors of the old school. just as we were the last of the gentlemen scholars. We seem to stand always between the old and the new: forced to abandon the old and yet not really partaking of the new. ln one sense we are cheated out of the fullness of either. for it is difficult to be very enthusiastic about forms which have already been pronounced obsolete and junkable. On the other hand. this unusual intermediate position gives the members of our class a rather unique perspective on the change from old to new. We alone have seen some of both. If a volume such as this - the work of many interested hands - can be said to have specific purposes. one such must certainly be to serve as an example of and a chronicle for some of the changes which have taken place during our stay at med- ical school. The principal national event of the late sixties has clearly been the ascendance of the student class to a position of action and influence long held by similar young people in other countries. The willingness on the part of the young people of this country to accept and utilize this position and the reaction of the non-young to this development constitute the major conflicting. forces we have seen at odds during the last four years. What past changes have become, we have seen and indeed beeng what future changes will be. we shall see and eventually become. On the local scene. it is heartening to see an aged institution such as Columbia P8LS'adding Hexibility and imavination to a basically sound educational program g g . That the College appears to be no longer much of an innovator. but at times a somewhat reluctant tollower is less than heartenin . But at least there is change afoot. There is movement. And if the medical coilege can bestir itself in these matters may we not hold out ho e for further changes - some of which are long overdue. Perhaps someday the lilospital will shake itself loose from the unseen and unsympathetic men into whose hands it has placed its affairs, abandon its policy of aggrandizement. and begin to live its motto. Perhaps real leadership will in the near future be marshalled at the Medical Center. and the precipitous de- cline we have all worried over will cease. It may even be that the Medical Center will one day be looked upon by people in this immediate area as a truly caring and wholly beneficial associate in the drive for community health. Once move- ment has begun nearly anything is possible. You pays your money and you takes your chance. Richard G. Carlson 129 1970 YEARBOOK STAFF EDITORS Richard G. Carlson Ars!! -. v-S ' Q A' ' 1 g Q E . 5 1 J-S' '- Ji '-J'tl5?i: 5 Gordon A. Starkebaurn PHOTOGRAPHERS Gordon A. Starkebaum Elizabeth Wilcox Honorary Stajf Member Samuel G. Siris Gary N. Foulks W1 Mark A. Wightman STAFF Paul Chang Alan W. Cross William A. Tansey. III Richard M, Spiegel .I0l1Il M. BL1I'kS Sgfen D, Lang GCOI'gC P. DlI1gClClClI1. .III Paul F, Guglavggn, Jr RObCI'I M. Schmidt , in WA Danne R, L01'ie0 F? Q' I L if we X CONTRIBUTORS AGP 1 - - Karen Kramer Hein They also Served Edmund G. Howe. III Caroline A, Riely James Bordley. IV Mary Starkebaum Henry M. Kronenberg Sims Foulks Harold H. Osborn IN APPRECIATION The yearbook staff extends thanks to all those who contributed to this volume. Deserving special acknowledgement are: - parent and faculty sponsors and our advertising patrons - Andy Murro of the American Yearbook Company for his ever available counsel -Mr. Tapio of Roger Studios for the excellent senior photographs - Mrs. Eileen Daly of the registrarls oflice for invaluable reference - the Public Relations Office of Presbyterian Hospital for abundant materials - the PSLS and Bard Hall information desks for getting the mail through - the enduring spouses of the beleaguered staff Q ' 4, 'i X. af Nh , V I: like--rf ' -:A 'N' . . ' 'pf'- , 71,112 Q Nfgzf ,Q , f- ,-,, . uw.,-5 ,,... t 1. .f2. ,g.P--X +Nsff,f. -Eitfrl 'ttf-2:1 ' 1' .!:.:gA,,,-, .,- V: 'I 3-1, an-iii' .,,' ' 1 ee- ,,:-f' , ., ' f .2 'tWhat more can I say?,' 131 FA CULTY Faculrv Dr. David L. Andrews Dr. Arthur J. Antenucci Dr. Henry Aranow, Jr. Dr. Arnold L. Bachman Dr. Daniel C. Baker Dr. John M. Baldwin Dr. Harold G. Barker Dr. Milos Basek Dr. A. L. Loomis Bell. Jr. Dr. William A. Blanc Dr. Sidney Blumenthal Dr. Frederick O. Bowman Dr. Stanley Bradley Dr. Ellen Regan Brown Dr. Harold W. Brown Dr. Howard G. Bruenn Dr. Stanley M. Bysshe Dr. G. A. Carden. Jr. Dr. Charles Leigh Christian Dr. James W. Correll Dr. Stuart Cosgriff Dr. Bard Cosman Dr. Andre F. Cournand Dr. George F. Crikelair Dr. E. C. Curnen. Jr. Dr. George L. Curran Dr. Douglas A. Damrosch Dr. Robert C. Darling Dr. Felix DeMartini Dr. A. G. Devoe Dr. R.H.E. Elliot. Jr. Dr. Paul D. Ellner Dr. Carl R. Feind Dr. Marie D. Felix Dr. Charles A. Flood Dr. Andrew G. Frantz Dr. Vincent J. Freda Dr. Henry Clay Frick. II Dr. Harry W. Fritts Dr. Alexander Garcia Dr. Sawnie R. Gaston Dr. Arnold P. Gold Dr. Dewitt S. Goodman Dr. Dean Grandin Dr. S. Ashby Grantham Dr. Albert W. Grokoest Dr. Frederich P. Herter Dr. Robert B. Hiatt Edgar M. Housepian SPONSORS Calderon Howe Robert M. Hui Alfred Jaretski. III Mary Jane Jesse Sven Kister Lawrence C. Kolb Donald S. Kornfeld . John H. Laragh John K. Lattimer Edgar Leifer Dr. O. Robert Levine Dr. John N. Loeb Sponsors Niels, L. Low James R. Malm Alfred M. Markowitz George Melcher George R. Merriam, Jr. H. Houston Merritt Robert Michels . Jay I. Meltzer David B. Moore Charles S. Neer. II S. H. Ngai Mero Nocenti C. P. O'Connell Elliot F. Osserman Charles A. Perera George A. Perera Phillip Polatin J. Lawrence Pool Milton R. Porter Charles A. Ragan, Jr. Frederick R. Randall Harry M. Rose Saul Sanders Grant Sanger . Thomas V. Santulli Malcolm H. Schvey Daniel Sciarra William B. Seaman David Seegal Hamilton Southworth Harold F. Spalter Charles F. Stewart Frank E. Stinchfield Richard J. Stock F. C. Symonds . John V. Taggart Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Donald F. Tapley W. Duane Todd Wolfgang Tretter Ralph J. Veenema Carmine T. Vicale Jules Waltner S. C. Wang A. R. Wertheim Robert T. Whitlock Walter A. Wichern Philip D. Wiedel Dr. Herbert B. Wilcox, Jr. Dr. Susan Williamson Dr. James A. Wollf Dr. Robert Wylie Dr. Hans Zinnser PARENTS Parents Mr. Arthur Dean Berger Dr. Robert Michael Bogdasarian Mr. James Bordley, III Mr Mr. Philip Parks Burks Albert Gunnar Carlson Mrs. Libby Cassidy Dr. Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr. Dr. Mr Dr. Mr Mr Mr Mrs. Dr. Mr Dr. Dr. Mr C. William Chang Louis John Esposito Sidney Saul Farrer and Mrs. Rubin Gay John Newbold Hazard and Mrs. Vernon P. Helming Daniel Robinson Howe Robert Howe Kernohan and Mrs. Irving Kramer Daniel Lichtenberg George Lipson Walter B. Lundberg Earl Rudolph Monson Frank William Parry Edith Maslowski Raviola and Mrs. Sydney M. Siris E. Henry Sondheimer 'Milton B. Spiegel Hyman Spotnitz Norman V. Starkebaum Dr. George Irving Tice Mr Mr Mr we extend apologies to any sponsors whose contribution arrived after this section went to press. 132 Olin L. West. Jr. A. Zimmerman and Mrs. Moses A. Zuckerman G-Hlllcnst. I llmlly bfi att. rms. 3 hun bedrlns. IYQ blhs. tar. ,ln excellent cond tion. A I ltollme. 8.90. AUM REALQY AX I-7575 IG flllllv bfld 6 I 6 + . LA I Walt to woally 'BE IG-8 bdrm Coltlllll-WA battl- lr: nr sctlls-sho -I-sho walk a I 3-7349. E 2-FAM IRICK :ls olrlnerfl-studio lot. 842.990 Q-06 UNION Sl' - FL 3-U68 B-2-hmllf dltldlod. l rms lr rar. 91075. Choice Loatlon. .al 3580360 G tMltdloll Gardens! 51.700 Inn ranch. 2 bths. 2-nr oar. . extras. Broadway. IN l-9000 6 Al lick. 6 nr nn Iarnrir ss2.9sll.m ' ' HOLLIS HILLS - 548600. Set midst towerlnn shade trees. This det 2-Sty slde ha colonial reoresents excell value. 6 TIYIYSHIOOUS rms + Ioe talousled Fla. rm. 2 baths. oar, oversized olot, Low taxes. New klt. tlno extras. KW with us. Dear Prosoectivo Home Owners: Please cal or coma ln to rmlster your needs. '.?Fl.2. ll.St I3. 4. J iC'I'ea.'I? 'I' MS 'RUTI-I COHEN 189-Q UNION joke 479-lssll JAM ET-H lll ood- bl 'Iced at S42.9D7tcti,arnTiilo Nrgrwggandprsalt- 33 E ll e rE'l'3' 3.3.2. EIS? wi.. 'IE' 4 Q l . . . Soil.. fl. auto. AMAlCA'tllL loc IND eacelt I tam, 10 mls. 40xl00 oh? car oar. all mod. Qing Shlk VI 6-ESQ. SPSS 'foifwftti' Sm6lTt'T: 4nSiDTrRTir'lIt tiled oaths. full basement. 2 ur attached oaraoe HEATED 40x25 FT POOL 5.T '5 ?...?.l 3i.'I 5 'l1'I?,L1'il. !'J mlnmnt. CTosed Eaasterxlnday. 516 WA 24937 6324 Northam Blvd., East Norwich lOvo-Rommyllnnl Ciotll'l ?El 00'l 5t2'.S'A lI.'I1.'J ' n , rrns s: olgundg. Too location. Only 543.900 DI 5 bd R h I! 864.900 SAMXROBERQ unc SAABER 6-0550 COMMACK OFFICE 538,900 Meliculous B rm Colonial on I acre. Featuring 4 master size borms. bcautl- ful den wllrblc. Tit: pths. 2 Car tlar. HI- existing mtge. Exc usrve with: D...D!.i.lEl5i5:r1:E.W FE' sm? l..i.i...Y 2Z..' Sill: FIRESIDE 9 ala,-4 Nm bfi, 1? bmi, beaut street. od income. nr eyerythlne I. lot, fln bsmt. 54953. MIG 5405- Cill OWVIPV Ll 4-9334 Ol' 50 1158 E. Jericho Take. Commack Us-M NOHIIIIII Blvd. IW Egan!! Nm Hnialed 6 ISIN S43-S100 . on s-sem rms ' ' f - -Cl II F ILLS VlC,S55,QO0 IV: bths cenll alr cond. lln bsmt. ex Burg zogfyf dl det. Tudor with I rooms. ms. 2V: baths. oarage, gardvn. ANE REALTY Jesus acvo ........ ao aosoo sua sn, .... ...FOREST HILLS ST HILLS 340.000 SET. 2 T r SIS. I bl rr-walk 23 sub cziEl.iEil7a' HUB REALTY . D , 5.525 'LV' 'W'H....i. IST HILLS, REGO PARK VIC ses 8 Ants for sale or rent gag co ao 3,1300 HILIS BRICK- s42.5w rltl 2 kit 2 bth tin bslltt laf. 70-53 Austin st BO H.-63612 Iis Hls-Lge Side Hall NE SLATE CAPE COD bdrrns-216 blhs. 2 car var. nlte-club bsmt. lo taxes. loc 55,000 Owner 479-II67. I BEACH. Llndamvood Soctn. m solid brick 35xl00 plot. Wal large rooms. 3 orlyate eh- 5 fully tiled baths. eat ln dishwashers, 24xlB wood nan- room. sun veranda. all brass , 6+ 3115 rooms now rented. ' month Income. All conven- iall owner. Vi 3-6063. 1524. 51? '..'.I..'.I'! 25tl .?'6' many exn-as saslsoo. arswi U' 'RET' L'.'i .Sl'I 3'3.. rm : 1 Ilya extras. 855.9911 MT 14568 HTS-1 tam brick home. 6119. If rrns+oar. Gas hoat. 5 years once .,,............. 857.990 . MURPHY HI 6-0100 Roosevelt Ave. Jackson Hts. TS-I2-yr-old brlclr. Q? rms 1, ar, terr. enclos ords DWETIS G GAILLARD. lL 7-4143 E I l I1 bFl k. J bd , 5, tin agmt. Tllar, :NIH Q5-20-Rsvlt Ave. OL I-8972 . ESTATES N ....... ,..S44.90D End: 8 Fieldstone Cane with 7 oedrms. D? blhs. large Irvin! enlare. ful drn rm. nite club vet barl oaraoo li much more. I ESTATE N ......... ...S4B.S00 ation! Attractive Gross-Morton lonlal. 7 large rms. 3 bedrms den. We baths. tln bsmti IIY eoulnoed throuohout. ATES 454-200 David H. Btown 6-30-QIION TURNEIKE nas. sJ6,ooo. wloczv. LAURELTON Georola Peach 525,990 new brk duplex. 6 lo rms, Iva bths. oarage. FLAME AX 1-7400 LITTLE NECK 40'S SPRAWLING RANCH .lust listed! ,Florida bound owner offers beautiful 6 -lmmac young home, Llyrm. soaclous dinlns area. mod eat-in kitch. 3 bedrms, 116 baths. Lovely rin bsmt wittl family rm, kitch. bar. Vg btn. Att gar. TaStefullY Iandscaoed. 60xl00 olot. You'll In oroud to own thas. LITTLE NECK REALTY 2.54-13 Northem Blvd 224-0300 CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY ' MIDDLE VILLAGE Excellent condition. 3-bdrm all brick semi-attached bunoalow. ideally located. Z tull baths 220 l.nc. A air-cond'rs. S450 taxes. burglar alarm. flbreglas awnings tront 6 rear, tlbreglas tence. landsc. newly redec, dishwasher, new root L bumer, I6 years young, olastar walls, tln bsmt. I6X2B redwood D001 1f35,.ELCl. DES-7827. NEPOHSIT BRICK House. ocean Wax I7 rms. 3 blhs. n-lald's rm 8. bth, basrrlnt 8. bth, Cabana A btll. oar. 585.000 GR 4-0412 QUEENS vll.uGE ,A 519,990 All brick residence. EXQIIISIIE condition. Ideal. Iooatn. Close to schools 6 subw bus. Lrie rms, modern-age kltch. 2 lone col tlle bth. 20' llvlno rm. Symntuous basement, ww caroeto thruout. All av- ollances Included. lmmed occuoancy. Only 81.000 cash down. LONG ISLAND HOME T68-I2 Hillside Ave. Jam. RE 9-7300 QUEENS VILLAGE 575,990 LEGAL 2-FAM. Decorated. w-w crolg. mod klts li. bths. auto ht. Har. S2000 dn Units, Panld Don. Double Garage. Re- trio. Washer. Dryer. Dishwasher, WIW Caruetlno. Excluslvel RAN DOM 543-7900 COMMACK Srlllthlutlllt 4 bdrms, HI- i2i'ci.'.Sr 2zTlIdb'Z0l12 ziziio ggiilnwriiiisvflizi' Exl'ras,' Prln Only, simon. slaaas-vw COMMACK Blrohwd 3 Bdflll, IV: hth Col central AIC dwshr, wlw. trees. excel loc. 527.500, Owner 516-543-8775 COMMACK, 3 bdrm Col, lndscoed II3 I nnld den. cov'd Patio. eat in kit. WW. 6 aools. extras. S28.500. 516366-6214 COMMACK-3 hdr Ranch W acr. soac latch tin bsmt. lncd bk yd: nr schl 8 okwy low taxes. S2d.00fl 543-1668 DEER PARK IE SIOYY 6 rms, 3 bdrms, full bth. encld llorctl 50xl00 520.000 516-MO 7-8765 adl g braoerty avail DIX HILLS HUNTINGTON 5 Bdrm Coloniol STATELY 8. INVITING thigwmaiestic brick 8. cedar cntr' hall Colonial on a beaut acre orooty ln the heart of true Dix Hills. 5 master size bedrms. 3 woodburnlno brick trot. 2-car att oar. huge bsmt, extras galore. Great home tor the large tam w dlscrlmlnatlns taste. SEE THIS 8. STOP LOOKING! 543.970 Huntington Homes I5I6I HA 3 3700 West Jericho Toke 2 ml W of Rta IIO E. HAMPTON-WATERFRONT Lin 'main c'2'Qiim'lrryn'5ll5. asififmirilg slvkluo I5l6l 324-2753 or rem azsazzl. TILETSERSYE GIEEEN JA 4.-5:90 an 2 bk ll al s. 3 un fin nsrnimsfsf if rh draw? , wne ao. hill brhs. Asking LO S305 TW 9-7382. RICHMOND HILL Solid brick, 3 years, 3, Story, 5731+ 3 room ants. eat in kitchen. dishwasher, luminous Ceilings. 3 fully tiled baths. 6' vanlty. all large rooms. closets galore. Now rented. ln- gelglrsrhsigobgef mgnth. Cglglwnt tn I TTI , . owner, VI 3-6063.0 gage' Ca gOLSED:IALg6wn2 zfam stem:-del Ftlousg. -lon earns, ec . Gm' income. 'm.993. AR ovoozn E ROSEDALE Ra h-3 bed 'I baths. den. tir'iEhed basemgiiif' wak transgortatlog, schools. AR 6-1643 SUNNYSIDE, brick 2 Family nr subway 5 rms avail. -hr Inc A 2 gar 335,990 Q9-y Aflll 74-22 BwaLJ. H. NE 9-6869 EAST HAMPTON Waterfront yr round turn'd 3 bdrms. 2 blhs, I00' ovt ACN on 3 Mile Hbr. Master bdrm-slt'o rrn 24' window o'Iook'g Hbr. full bsmt aoolncs 558.000 516 324-4233 E. HAMPTON 2 ac on Georolca Pond restored lBth cent. tarmhse 3 bdrms 3rd flr skyllte studio. Ask 525.000 516 324-1568: 212 PL 2-7557: YU -6876. E. HAMPTON--3 bdrms I bath, trol, Beat. lugnwveuzcggb wi beach + 27 ft . , REE SLANQTERN slr. 324-1122 EAST HAMPTON. Waterfr G, watery homes J-4 bdrms. on acre B swim oool. ETHEL L. MURRAY t5I61 324-0941 sollt E. ISLIP-Sacrifice sale J bdrm level cor orooerty nr Great So. Bay. S36.S00. Many extras, 516-277-9822. WOODSIDE-our IOVOIY home has crown too small only 3 br lr. fml dr. eat ln kllch. fln hsmt. indry rrn, lots of extras. all brk. seml det cor 50xl00 WA 5-1505 eves G weekends TW 9-0182. RENTALS-QUEENS Nr 179 St. 522.990 ,lmmac rms. 2 bl IND. tree lined st ESTATES NO. Bfaut 6 rm brk hall. IV: baths, excel mnd. too ', reduced to SZ6.5w. RDEN ,HILLS 530.990 lovelv rick home. slde hall. W1 baths basement. oarage. STWOOD REALTY llside Ave JA 3-6015 JAMAICA ESTATES EXCLUSIVE udor brick bunqal I bedrooms. 'Ph bath ln, 2 car garage,-beamed ceiling ce ln llvino room. Aovrox tt of landscaoed orounds. bway. Excellent buy at only By anoalntment only olease: r HILDEGARDE CUNOW RRY BROWN REALTOR Union Tnke. GRj12400 . Oversized att. brick Slde- , 3 bedrvns. aooliances + G. NR SCH'LS LOW TAXES. 90.900 ll.l.s. New orrsrzlrlol ,Fabu- brlck cave. custom built., 4 baths, eat-ln kitchen 2 fire- tlmate nrteclub bsmt. Z car rk-Ilke orounds. .. . S-17.500 rv Brown Rltr. Forrest llll.ls Gardengi-room house! 5 bedrooms. garage. basement subway. immediate, ssoo mo. Owner, Iso B-4173 ROSEDALE-Dunlex house, 6 rms, new, Includes heat 8- hot water: S250 rrlo DATA ISl6I 329-0222. llqlsos-Nassau-Sutlolk ALBERTSON-Wheatley Schls-Dream hsei I9 bdrms. 20x20 tam rm. tin bsrnt Ex- WIJOS M. MULLALY Slo FL- EAST MEADOW-lmmac 3 bdrm. 2 bth snllt eat-ln kltch, tormal drnrm. oanld fam rm. ovrszd lot. many extras. Walk schls. noel 8. oark. 539900. By aovt. C5161 538-2973 tale EAST MEADOW Lakeville sollt: ' : ony over high mtoe. no closing tees S8500 cash: B newly decorated rms. 2 baths. EXPRESS 516 IV I-8500. E. MEADOW Broker-Unusual modem spill 7 lovely rooms narlelcd dcn basement gar. all extras. hr mtge-only 539.990 RURITAN tSl6l IV 3-7900 E MDW-525.500 Brk cent hall. llrchwd 4 bdrm. dlnrm. hsmt. aoolncs. extras 53.500 rsh-G1 mtg. Klar 516-PE 5-1700 Amogonsett-Walk to Ocean E MDW. 322.990 Randall Ranch 4 bd- fm. Irs ornds. low taxes Convenient 3- amz WIS' a f '? 'WCS' woo sh l .- Klar 516-Pe 5-woo 1 - . o 1 .. - ANS f I 6 ST 1 Q T '.- Fairview ranch HW- V' E vcr - - y ornds SIA oct. AMITYVH-Lg' SATB-igk-3,3 C d nllgc. SES.. wner. S16 PE I-8133 ' 9 ar EAST NORWICH-4 bd J Oth, IOSIQY Ufgfgd :iofgfmsf W' WS' PIL en' walls. slooed beam N2 olanlg Ecilos. ' ' 'ar' '99 hvlkhfadfd '0I- tolc. 15126 olayrm wfbar. t.n bsml. S29'99o' cased Eager sun Z' carwalt 9ar.1OyersXF V4 ac Wooded ' a D D . ant' el LOS. SO SUI 3 E OI' CCNA'-'NG 516'- '13Y3 armani, Principals only ssoooo, sie. 5532 liqerq-J:-Rd Massaoeug Ll BABYLON W. 516.750, extreme low taxes. 2 bd, I-story, B0xl00. abt oar. bsmt. wlw carbet. sls, wash mach. refrio 8. stove, walk to show 5 xchla. l nn REL 15163-MO 9-5029. BABYLON NO. 7 RM SPLIT Cl-4 bdrms. IV: baths. fenced. lndscbd. Panld bsmt. walk everything. extras. 826.900, S16-586-0271: 2l2-EB-1-0275 722-3812. EAST QUOGUE I rf t ancll. 4 rms 8. bttl. heat. furilqtli Tir! goat. 516-RA BJISBS wlgwisz 212 HA A-4237 wkdays EAST WILLISTON WHEATLEY 8 rrns. sbac brk snllt, Il3 ac ratflc free str near Golf Course S. all trans. Comolete deluxe landsco. 559.500, IVALENTINE Agency Est 1915 las Mineola Blvd, Mineola 746-7200 BALDWIN Waterfront Old Colonial 3 har.-ne 7 htne+a..a:o rfmsaa lnnylnn I EATONS NECK-4 bdrm Cust built Col ln.. l1..- sf u....-.Ana nr-Wm.. Inn .-nllntrv llnva- lJl..l.l1 avuv l ESTATES SECTION Centerhall colonial. lynn., log burr tolce. dlnnn. mod tarn. slzu kllch, A bdrrhs. 3 bths. Un bsmt, short vi to station. Ht 5 oct. mtln. Only 565. SHAKESPEARIAN COTTAC In a wooded oark-Iuka setting ll wlloq bumlno fnlce. dlnrm. heated Dordt. den. oayrm. lie kitch. 5 bdr 2111 bths. 2 car oar. In bsmt, HI 6 mtoe. Askrnll S79.500. Closed Good Friday G Easter Sunc Will be -ready to show you these cluslve listings on Monday. THE ABOVE EXCLUSIVE LISTINI MAY ONLY BE SEEN WITI TAYLOR-WARNER We am not affiliated with, any ot oltlcc See our many excluslve llstlr 101 7th St. Est 1919 516 Pl 141 GLEN COVE-Saaclous Brick, multl-le located too duality communltY, well- uated on. wooded V2 acre. tall trres o shade. llvlno rm wlkoman brick tn wall. very modern kitchen. den ll DICTUYQ window over-lookino oarden l rounded marble oatlo. also tamily wlhall' bath, 3 bdrms. 2 baths, 2 c-t lmmac. recently redecorated. 546. Goldberg Bros MLS Realtc or Glen st sle on 6-2 GLEN COVE-Immaculate-4 bdnrls 3 yr young Col. ln orestrge area. schools. House has centr air-cond. I baths. lge llv -rm wlfrolc, vanel eat kllch 8, den. din rm. 2-carjar Lml more, I-ll 6 uct. mtoe. Price Lo St wkdys I2I2t WO 6-0231: Sat. 5 l516I 671-7280. GLEN COVE. Luxury home. tull charm. orestlge area, custom blt, - estate sale. a steal at 532.000 l GLEN HEAD. 9 rms. lnl. bl! hr mlge. only 539.900 tor last sale RANGER REALTY I5I61 OR 6-900 GLEN COVE 55,000 BELOW MARK On slunnlno lreed acreage. Just imas almost new lmmac A-5 bdrm wfsl less aaolns A extras ....... . S37.. BARR 765 Glen St 516 OR 1-2 Glen Cove Roxbury 527,00 2-3 bdrm Cano stucco 8- shinag. 2 gar.foI.'k ac. walk to LI sct shoog all aolncs nrin only SI6-OR I-I GLEN COVE-CUL-DE-SAI A bdrm IVQ bths-tam rm-din ln sflsooo. QL6i335 an 4 PM. -V GLEN COVE Colonial charm, 3 I r00mS. slate roof. llvrm. llrgol. baths, 532000. Exclusive with Meehan 516 OR 6-I GLEN COVE Convert oulet St Col s3I. A bdrm 2 bths dln rm fam rm S830 GIL REALTY Greenvale 5I6-ABA-0 GLEN cove , , ssa. Hrs Garden Was HIS Delight Qzliognjealrls 5167633 GLEN Cv-Red. from 97,500 C: Ranch We lrge rms. tio. att UBI .2 1- HW ht. 14 ac. nr RR. shag. bches. 676-2 GLEN HEAD SEA CLIFF OR NEAR HAPPY EASTER youlls RANCH 4 3 Bdrrn, den. 2 oth. Dlnrm 99. FIVE BEDROOM SPREAD Contemporary ranch. 3 bth 845.001 Young colonial. High mort 346.50 Gracious older ranch. Vac 565.00 - CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY FOR REAL ESTATE SEE JOHN MACCRATE 212 SEA CLIFF AV OR 6-I4 GLEN HEAD COLONI FA I-2025 EXCLUSIVE MULTIPLE LISTING Beautiful center hall. choice area. bed. 25 ft. oan'Id lam rmllrol. 15 llv rm. seo din rm, many extras S55.' .IOSEPHINE RUSSO 673 Glen Cove Ave. Glen Head OR 6-2 GLEN HEAD ONE AC CUSTOM RANCHES I 'ZOLOIIIALS 562.000 8. UP 516 OR I0 GREAT NECK BETTER HON Owners Move-Your Goln EXCLUSIVE. Pretty as a olcture cuf bit Col. Beaulllully shruobed olt Ev rm otl' wide C.H.. 4 oversized bdrnls onld den. Quality thruout, Possiblllt for Drol'I set-uo. Lovely orlvate rv area. Asking S70's. RUSSELL GARDENS VERY IST SHOWING-WOW! Anoi C.lrl. Col. in move-ln cond.,4 fam. b rms E. maids. mod lrg krtch, laun on lst fir. Fl bsmntlwet bar 8. b rm. Primo UQ. Young 8. immaculz Only S60's. KINGS POINT EXCLUSIVE Ranch. Unusual lay: Wide CH 3 fam bdrm. enormous stu den with bubbles not natural light, l mod krch. airy. brita ln beavt needs TOPS-ALL, Realtors GREAT NK'S INDEPENDENT BROK 445 Northern Blvd. G.N. SI6-466-31 UN F1 9 45 N0 6 g, L- Q The Qssuciatiun of fb: Qlunmi College uf Bbpsicians anb Surgeons Columbia Glnihcrsitp 2 1 AQ 630 West 168th St1eet,New 'Yor1q,N.'Y. lOO32 Telephones f21Zl 579-3498 or 3804 The Association of the Alumni of the College of Physicians and Surgeons welcomes each member of the Class of 1970 as a member of our Association, and extends its best wishes for your personal happiness and professional success. We would like to be able to keep you informed concerning events at the School and in the lives of your classmates and other alumni. Many of you will have several changes of address in the next few years and it would be helpful if you would keep us informed of such changes. Irving A. Sarot, '32 President 134 .XQXCIANSAN o c- 'P 'V ey -V35 ,L f -,-E N SIIINI1 vii! - n X Milk Q- exs x 2 Zi-,: ' 6 X -fl 0 L ' 'Q x I U w F?'?s. Q O - L Q25 'S f' - .19 . . 3 O ,-tu , 2 :..1, -55 .3 , xg O Z .v v. un o I I 9 '12-f ' fs 0 -1. 1 - - A' at if a ee' - QL M W . X x ' ?05-Quia, I0 ' A1 1-x N CONGRATULATIONS and BEST WISHES to THE CLASS of 1970 from The Manager and Staff of Bard Hall WA. 7-5700 Lic. 532 M. CITARELLA, Inc. WINES AND LIQUORS I Visit Our Wine Cellar 3915 BROADWAY near 164th STREET NEW YORK 10032, N. Y. THE MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE EXTENDS ITS SINCEREST GOOD WISHES THE CLASS OF 1967 VOTE for OTTO - a paid political announcement brought to you by the Dean Search Committee A ONE HOUR MARTINIZING Free Pick-L p amd Duliycry The Most in Dry ClC.lllll'lg -ll '4 B d 417 Ll S l XX X ' 99? SYD'S DENTIST SHOP 'll West Tvlgnn Slrcct, Pcnns Groyci Ncyy Jersey AX W-l 9 Tcctl1 drilled while you wtulf' NELSON'S KOSHER DELICATESSEN AND RESTAURANT C ATERERS Home Cooked Lunchw and Full Couryc Dmncrx Wines - Liquors - Cocktnily Scry cd 4041 Brornlwny' lCornur l7ltth Stl XV:X-3-9606 Best Wishes For a Rewarding and Illustrious Career ROGER STUDIGS PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION 4143 Broadway New York New York 10033 WA 7 7894 We Keep Negatlves of Your Photographs on F1 e for Many Years After Graduatron Potos I E SI I-J O 0 HOSPITAL SUPPLY INC A a lable 7 I B500 Featurlng Equipment 8C Suppll6S COURTESY CARDS For The Doctor 85 Hrs Patlent Medlcal Center pharmacy Complete Ofice Deslgn Jacob Kaplan FA C A Servrce 4013 Broadway bet 168th and 169th Sts WA 3 1258 Speclallsts In Prescrlptlon Compounding 7 sii n ,- ill ' ' ' V i as BROADWAY AT 173RnsTREET'NEwYoRK, N.Y. 10032 Yearbook Staff 12129 . Expert Tailor 8t Cleaners J. FRENK 230 Fort Washington Avenue WA-7-3884 All kinds of Alterations GARDENS Satisfaction guaranteed MANHATTAN UNIFORM CENTER -1030 Broiidwiiy All l7fllh St, Medical Unilornts To I-it All Needs Telephone LO 8-9130 WA. 7-3233 LARRY ORIN JEWELER Electronically Tested Watch Repair ON BROADWAY Bet. 169 and 170 Sts. 4009 Broadway ut 168111 Street New York 32. N. Y. WA-3-8918 Special Discounts tbr Hospital Personnel What to give the girl who has everything . . . Penicillin in handy ointment or suppository form. 139 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 Checking Account. Later on, as your practice grows, we can help you with our Professional Billing Service. Or one of our many Personal Trust Services. So let us help. Stop in at any of our more than 140 offices and ask for our booklet entitled, Professional Finance Plan. Chemical Bank We do more for your money MEMBER F.D.I C 140 'P out ot' 4 P K S men recommend ?3W X ., .-.-. ,...-, .1 ww fmo for pain relief C5H,fU.1J 'I flak!! '37 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 H We Telegraph Flowers 4003 Broadway at 168th Street Pain Reliever 3 out of 4 P Sc S men Recommend CH H OH WAdsworth 7 4000 Silver Palm Restaurant 4001 Bro idway cor 168 St LUIGI'S RESTAURANT 8c BAR Washington Heights' Leading Italian Restaurant 1148 St. Nicholas Ave. 4199 Broadway 167-168th Streets Corner 178 St, WA-39216-7 WA-8-9601 OLYMPIC BARBER SHOP NICK TSAKIRIDIS 4021 Broadway New York 10032 Bet. 169th and 170th Sts, Tel: LO. 8-1230 SELBY L. TURNER Life Membership in Leader's Association Specialist INSURANCE FOR PROFESSIONAL MEN 90 Park Avenue New York N Y 10016 Telephone 687 7130 SELECT PHOTO 1729 ST Nicholas Avenue WAdsworth 3 3698 Greco Bros Como Pizza Inc Hot ti Cold Heros We Deliver 4035 Broadway 8: 170 St NICK and ANGELO H H I I - C - - I I 24 HOUR SERVICE ON COLOR 1: MORRIS CAMERA .SHOP 3934 Broadway f165th St.J Near Medical Center Phone LO. 0-B590 Special Dixcqynv: to Sludenls Armory Restaurant FINE AMERICAN-ITALIAN FooD Newly Redecorated Dining Room 4011 Broadway bet. 168th 81 169th Sls. Wa. 3-9034 'N .-. 402996 B see us for liquor nm UPTOWN Wines 8: Liquor Store Incorporated 4033 Broadway ut 170 Street New York, New York. 10032 LO-8-2100 Compliments of Cory Quality Cleaning Corp. POLLACK'S BAR-B-QUE Bar-b-que Chicken 81 Ribs Fried chicken, Fish. shrimps,sa1ads. dinners roadway WA8-9664 Z ri an Trick or Fick? 143 P 3. 31: 2 1 S582 S V170 , f s N, H. m , , x p X K, , .N ....,. -. 1 5,1 3:13 lx N .- 44,3 A .gpg Egg, ,lv J, -V, 4, 5: 3..- , , , ,N -V .N , , . 1. 'ff 1 , x . 4.5, ,Tm U :sim ,f . if.. -1 rf ' ' Q .. ' 'ix- ..J: '. .' ' 'Q -1-' 4 .-,--h,'.-- .,. . 7.4,- ,:.5.,,.g..,f.,5, , --'f :H :Q 524911. f ' an M -V 51. .f.,i,.ff.:'AwA , K ,- ,. ,x . X '-:.w,.g:-.-.,4,- wx 3 V.-.,., f -. k .,'.-gc'-' .L . . .rxnw-.,,,,.,5fx .STQL , A X f J . spy' in .L'93' Sz 0064260607 W if ' view 1 9- 1 - ,.,,,,g1,W- x- , f ' -'efkfli' f EL -1 - f. - -.1 ' -Mr.. , A ,-f'-,, f..,,1,wg,a f- A A . Qgdjlr' zxgfefz-119,504--5-a+ min. .ar1n'n9n6 ' ' ' 4 mad' Ll COWUWIITQUUUPHITUSIIUrfwaififs V
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