Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1976
Page 1 of 168
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1976 volume:
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AY . I A f 'T . + 2 ' ' X . 9 ,4 xl' 1 r. Q 4 I 1 .. ,-1 1 fr 11 1 I M who L ..-,Q s, r v ,,...... MU 1 1 1 1 1 1 u v 1 1 - 1 c 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 c v 1 - 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 -n 1 14 f. L, . .N,,.m1A .. , , ,Z .,., ., Q, fy. H 1,0 Z vm .',, ,V 0,1 N . Mfr!!-. x 'Way , frm , .'G .n 9513 1... .fri M V l , 4' -' 1' ' . , ff 2. ,, .. 'lm QP' L' . A w ff1v1,5.A97- 43 , Hi 'N4 FIQZT, -' ab ' . -W n..L' .1 -, ' Q -11:1 'NJ' 1 F,--1 r- QA X if 1' 14' In :El -X-4 .1-rl' , 'fjjiifg faq, F' g 11: ' ' ' ' . 31 fb COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 1 976 W 5 ' 4' .1- 'XL'4-vw'f , iv 3' af 'pl Wi' 4 'I M f' N1 ' If gnI 2 M' l ii , lhllf 1 kiln' mg' U' Vlni 1,1 f 'ff ' ' Lal' ' 1 ' f l l 1 I ' I I I l X E f S , I f 10 ' Hr?-' f . tl: i,'ILQ'f 1 Il I I. Wim ,ff llnilllfliiz in .:'Q mf ! Q 4W nv ' f 1,1 1, ai i Y 9 5' pi If f:, M M l ..-we nr .. ,Bl 7,m?,?l1, i' zu y ,ini 1 W.. V! X . v r 42, FFR f 3lil'l 7'Tf ' - in 1 ' 1 L ,- Lam E 5 . we J F- - Q fa 1 Q K : 1- ii 4 '.... ? 1... -.il ---f Y.. ,.. , -.f . , ---- ':'! --,-. - ww.- .f-iv: , v -fri f- my -f - FOR OF THE ' 'TOST HIGH CCD? XETH HEALXNG f j f 7 'HE PRES Yf5R ANO PM N TV E C11 - 2 ' Av ' N' ' YJ-:Qi 1 rl ' ! 11 ,Y- N.: FS... if-g.pzkE1if.,. 571 4' ,Q , . . .. f F :sw-Q. -. -MAY-. , 'ani .. EP .SE'P -,,.---' REMISES 5 'Y' QSO,- I 1 ' A if? .,,. .-xQi'x , 0 t 1? lui li: If ff H'l.L..,.-155.5345-aunig , - , 2-1:--tnuujj egg' -----.. -up y rf - - AL ,f .N , 4, Lg,-5: .gk-ci - an ...,u Q. Q . . I . -:JA X 3 .f.w..l1 - . .. 599.1 Wx ll . .I Q. -.f ' ' l x: Y' - .- .. - J -I' 'mx ' uf ,T'.eT'g,-fa! . 5' 'Z' 1.-,3j'e' gfgiffh f' '. . X , - , 44.1-- -- . , nal- - ' , V . axfr It, 34-. I . . 1 4 - 1' u, 1 -9 'Q .f V - 1 1 . : - -W ,Q - -W - --iff---use v J Zyl . D I. . I 44 1:1 :'f4m-Sf af- f , -f .':1, 4:5-.?'sV I xr I. wf,, .,, V A ,Q 1 I A- . A I ' . - x s,- ' ,?,,1 - :..- ' ' A.-. rfk. .gr VHHPZL .iigk-xl ' a , v ' 'A NX: 5 .Pad ' L w- fuil- i QI-I A-1 ' 'A : 4-gli, ,IQ 13140 'M' ' -. i?,Hf'-FjZ,20 -I1 -1-u-n. M V A rv - 4' If 'ar r 7 Q- 51, E 'gg fJ'o? 4. Q sf' pfxf' --'T pl' 4 I Y auf L' f WN 9 . m 5.1 LW .Qi ' . 1'-:A . 5. . 1?fCT 1' , X ' 'I-' 'QW-42? k ffm P 1 A ,. N I0 wlLuAM J. McGlLL, Ph. D., L.H.D., LL.D i iHoN.y President, Columbia University administration J Y Q PAUL A. MARKS, M.D. Vice-Presidenf for Heolfh Sciences :V ..- .r. 1 A f A QQ, me .. h 7 'I' ' Q i ' 1, 3, l 'i A fi' iq! DONALD F. TAPLEY, M.D. Deon of fhe Focuify of Medicine 1. ANN S. PETERSON, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs MESSAGE TO THE CLASS GF 1976 It is a great pleasure to see the return of the class yearbook at P8lS. We are all indebted to the editorial staff who have de t d vo e so much time and effort to :nsure the success of this book. M . . any years from now, as you reminisce about friends and PSKS this yearbook will have deeper meaning than it does tod . I ln ay . ope that your memories will be pleasant ones and that the intervening years will have b . rought you good health, happiness and success. Ann S. Peterson, M.D. pre-clinical years Dammit, Susie can'f you get Luckeif over here now? m LEE 'P f If ., . mg W R w XV M45 R W , DR, RAY C, HENRIKSON: Cgckfail pgrfy?? DR. ERNEST APRIL: Hmmm .. . Lef's see, nexf yeor's class is 362, women. RGYIGW of . -I ,-S DR, PHILIP BRANDT: The epigloffis is like a garbage can lid. 'i Jim Almas after ihe firsf lab practical. 1 DR. CHARLES ELY: Anofomy is a laugh! I6 X Shih DR. ALFONSO SOLIMENE: This is my primitive venfrol surface. Lef's see yours. x DR. A.S. DHAWAN: You haff afhked me ro difhecf out fhe grrreot fhophenoufh vein. DR. MELVIN MOSS: And I have seen these so-called pafienfs, quife liferally hurl themselves off fhe fop of fhe roof of fhe Block Building! X DR. GERARD PEREIRA: Eef iz zee T cells that have that ie ne sais quoi. 1 ffl ,.Q:.1'x I X .I 4 , ,.-5 Y . 1 ff, in I -Q 44. n-.r l X., .ll fl I, ALBERT: For myself, l've picked fhe fable in the corner with fhe sunshine. I7 ,Av .Q v neuroanatom DR. CHARLES NOBACK: Now, what was I saying? DR. MALCOLM B. CARPENTER: If never fails: whatever I do today Charlie will undo tomorrow. 18 physiology .Q 1, .ri f'- U' .4 f ff . if ' lm I Ig, L 'X ' - .!iy Sy K X Q' g 4 1 iiwlf A if .- - X .fi A ' DR. JOHN TAGGART: You, sir, epifomize fhof ineffable G.,-QQ 3 ' -X K-5 . :Ja , , .'-,-,I I , , I A , . ff 1, ' 'C -fff.,fff,,,h qualify of flond msecunfy so chorocfenshc of the TYPICAL 3 ' ' .3 ' S' K I first-year sfudenf. DR. MERO NOCENTI: Firsf comes MIT, next comes DIT . . ., fhen fhere-'s friiodothyronine. A 4 JL N . 1 N! . V,,- g af' -. ' - - ll' ' N xx . N ' y '1 X 'I N I 1 DR. LOUIS CIZEK: I fold you to wofch fhof total body wafer! I9 ll I 1 e f 1 1 ef! v I ' ' X 1 L . e , DR. SHU CHIEN: I did NOT inject myself with Dexfran fo measure my circulafion Time. 20 DR. RAIMOND EMMERS: And now for The unveiling of the only afferent wolley in copfivify. .,F ..Y X 1 1 -' Y' 1' f 5 5,4 f A I N , J ,ff ll , ',Q if ' 1 X I k . X DR. WILLIAM NASTUK: No, The sodium pump is nal hy- draulically operated. ,fy DR. DAVID SCHACHTER: l've always got fha? gul feeling. .. 1 L X ' N 21 M- , --Jia . . 5 3' CN Qx DR. ALVIN KRASNA: Wanna see my egg trick? 4 ,A DR. PHILIP FEIGELSON: Negaf e 22 JY? DR. SEYMOUR LIEBERMAN: Did you hear Phe one about Methyl-Ethyl Chicken wire? v -4 ' .ff wr' W- N' 'X I 1 Q, I i A I r fu ,- I b M 4 X1 N '-3-K . ob i, i 1 DR. PARITHYCHERY SRINIVASAN: Would you like fo hear the one about the Rabbi or the Frog ond the Scorpion? 23 -A,-F , N DR. HARRY ROSE: Do you always wear those silver boots, Mr. Kremberg? ' n i l -Q-uyv M microbiolog l fs I4 ,Y 5 L 5 ' - l- kev- X I N 5 -1 1 V F-We-x-,,,.,-.5 j. ,. x ,,- -Q51-? . .rg-gy-..:qg:. . V in .-6. XX. 4 - ' X 'vis xx-xv l 1 1 xl R l 1 N 1 0 X 1 - - .f R 1 K' .. x DR. HAROLD GINSBERG: Dr. Rose warned me about you guys. Now for the last time there will be NO multiple choice exams this semester. 24 DR, ELVIN KABAT: And then I injected dextran myself. You'll find it all in Structural Concepts. A ' L,-f into 95 fix 4 l ' J R l 'Q ,I , VX 6: I -L N X: .I - DR. HERBERT ROSENKRANZ: Guildensfern maybe, buf not me! .,i.A Q ' x Ka- Hx 1 X J env' L 'n li' I , s ,l lg 5 A l I 9 DR. PAUL ELLNER: And the fly leaves the oufhouse, goes fhrough fhe hole in lhe screen and lands on Mrs, Smifl1's pie. DR. DONALD HARTER: Some of the nicesf people I know have Scrapie. 25 AQ' 'GN I fix DR COUNCILMAN MORGAN You wan! me fo sh DR. BERNARD ERLANGER: I relax with the the Sfingruys. -5-me music of Louis and 'hem my Councilman body? How nice! A note from fhe Mi- crobiology Depurfmenf .... gs, ! , IU Sf, W Q 26 rmiff 'Yami S Syvy OW ,.-4- Q ., :X ns X N 5, DR. LESTER GELLER: If you're nice fo me l'll let you 1 fulk fo Dr. King N D i f pathology 1 o-- f ts ffffigv N . ,gf J L n - DR. DONALD WEST KING: And now, point four seconds on fhe Class of 76. ' 'gay t vX.' V f 7- 'nj :A I f I I Q i.. , . ff' DR. S. RAYMOND GAMBINO AND DR. A. WHITLEY BRANWOOD: And now fhe next confesfcnf. 27 -1 1 E 3 'Qu .ix X DR. ROBERT PASCAL: The nice thing about being a Pathologist is that nobody ex- pects you to wear o tie. , 'MANQ I Na., A .WFXZNNK r, ' '- ,-..' 7 I x. x Wg ,L DR. WILLIAM BLANC: I wonder what Virchow would do now .W i VV gr N N DR. H. JOACHIM WIGGER: Mein Gott! Not an- other foreskin! 28 ? gy 2 1 DR. KARL PERZlN: Friends, please don'f sit on my spoons. Egypt was more excifing X f RAFFAELE LATTES: l'm afraid I don'f yodel. L3 N ,,!' 5 29 xr DR. MARIANNE WOLFF: Hmm . . . 1 wonder howfiany wmwmupwday? Nieves or Nevus, that is fhe quesfion 30 3 pharmacology X . R S X 1, DR. NORMAN KAHN: Almas through Koster in Amphitheater l. Kremberg through Zoltick in Amphitheater 8. And I'll see Miss Salmon in my office! Q Un: fy: .W ,J . fu. 'l ff fl, .pf 1,2 Q S ,, I I' qi: -t4 F .. , ,,c L gf 'Z V . , xl - 1 ' i it 6 of ' Q N G 2 i ,. x il - 1 1 ' ' 51. 'L :is P v ,ffl f . lf: 'ff ,ai , Yr 0- F f. . ?,:Y,? .9 . rro E3 r ' - V , ,. wg! 'V , 1 X' DR, BRIAN HOFFMAN: And occasionally Norman allows me to im- DR. WILBUR SAWYER: Yes, that's one of the PGH my wisdom to the second year class. more interesting effects of alcohol on ADH secretion. 3 I .., .gm vf an ', 'N DR. FREDERICK HOFMANN: Basically, your acceptance here was cr case of mistaken identity. : DR. ELSA GIARDINA: No, l'm not related to the Lamblias! l , rJ A Q fl, 1' Q lt's the REAL thing! X. . alflf W '- f 'mm' ':k.:.' 1 l 'tw ,A - .FJ .,. 3 2 l DR. MICHAEL KATZ: And if Dr. Despommier fries fo scoop me on another punchline, he'll find himself lecturing of Down parasitolog G fa' Whafs gefilfe fish? genetics . i . X A u cnnomosonf or MAN L E L L , N DR. DOROTHY WARBUKTON: And which one are you missing? 34 . . DR. ROBERT KROOTH: And this is merely a case of non-disjunction. .,4 f'ilX,J Mai L DR. SOL SPIEGELMAN: l want to congratulate your classmate Bill Peters for volunteering to be immunized with mouse mammary tu- mor virus. B S CLUB me M lf HM n, ,, ff - f . AVVJJA P f'J'z '12 Ji! - 4 1 'Q 5, fx g N 'mf' If-1 4-' ' lr M 'A W IIWf,, it V V l .jj I 1 'vu I .y0.A I ' , ' ' gdf flint. y rf' 1 H' ' ,f ' 1 , J.1 ,f, ,. L, 1 1 i,...l.K,, , , .U mf 741 '.',,,JLx ' ,, Mu, .4 V , Dr, Clzffi' :-alt ,ffly Ji, ,,J,,4mr 'I Af CQJaf Eff 'NI-x 'fff ' I A' 1- f-- 1 Y gprmgf 5 ' ,Xml ,' ,A k .V T gf, , T, C0716 .JTJXJ1 Q S P13111 ' ,IA ' .1 iran k ff- ,, 'A , .' ,X 'ff ,' W , ', f.1 ' V s I Q - 7 Q X ' i' pg., f - , ,X X H. ,I Q. jg :- 3, FE . , 4 , xx K., 1- ' fr 'B C H ' 5 Q 5'5I1,5 r wwf? 4 :I W A N-A XJ . ,J . J .f' 'K ,154 1 Q f5,,X, ,fw n , '3i.', ' +35 Y ff! 1 X 'Q' 1 I, f Y x , Vkfxlixi. Ax A , ' Y' f 0 ' - , ,' ' 1 t X ff? 4 fx fy 5 J . , 3' f' ' -1 K Y F Q I qu , 5 E1 x , im 1, A ff I ff ,W . 17 f l , GOOD L.0cK!,f,f Jw I5 Vx Y Y I 'lf 'bv 4: - fail f I' .X .--u . . -.,sM X wp Lwglksl' ,:'F,'Q,,4, S 6- Q.. -- -r .. ---1.11 A ,..r S .. ,A-A f. A.. ,. -nv -E ' 1 - x 'tai' -'V , r- . :4,... - 2f.,. 1 , ., ,N 4-i,:v:0 !..jQ,.'.-gal ' ' A -vw' i .,. -. 1.1 I -.. 35 . X 1, x - .411 - rw If , t 'C ':. , e471 .J . 'Sri--N' YIM: ll I , 1 ,554 , ' - . fx . . ,. f. if 2 Q- Q-'M.r:1'E, 4 . ,. L 5- , wx, ' 1.- x 1 1 Q iz: . r zvxgg.. :QI . '-WJ' Qxfax. w 'fi31l1l3f. ' tk . ,Jr 'R- ' . Q 3 . f r 9 ' x if V N'fff+?f.,1?'f2:3' Q. R -Iv Ekqstb af 1 uw: 'ln L 'L Xxx 5, 1 -rl flu MOM UH, vm 'X ' w it 46 Y 1 X A 4 4 J? . -I.-'--5, NA O Q O. I Q fifbf Svb Gge 'IXQ Q 5 X3g36,6 95 v Y , OQXQEQKZQ ' fkfp I ff? ,-LQ' ' xox' iff' 9 6 ' X. .e V . Qs A ' zz: 0xQQ46 4 Ofif 5 N579gWQfSe Q O SYQ !?A v V , 1 5- fl V qv Lira? . if 5,5 G15 or JE R3 ni' fr if I x W 1 1 : - 1 I f f 4 -nu ,L -.p 1 x , 1 vvv-uv il :mf . 191225 A R 51 N. 1' A 3 T '1' ' , '-1'1 . ' , '5.f 'f5'53iw1 5... A, ii: , R. . . , .I ,1-,i,,iL?..,,,3 f h f 3 'ge:'.rV- X .'2-hllgilizb,-L. 5 ':14f',:A 'f'l.. ' V - Fwiffl.-,ft , 53- 9 5-1 E,vp5g,55fK5,v,,'-,,.j,-,Q,m f x 1 1 ' ,V 'E' ' f- f-43 'ir Y ': ,Q A- ' . ,, 7 - f . - ' . , 1 1.1-Y' '5 ..',,j-'- 7-r i-' . -.'.,:. I -. ' ' 3,21 V, 3v:e!1wg 357' 5,5 1 ..,.--..,,ql' - 5 , u ff v ,,-..: wv,, . . ,. 1,. n' 2?-f'.'f'- x1.5'f7 ',, l '- f 4, N?-iffretgzaf-QA Q A.f'f,2?f3.'f+4g7T:-5'-ST' ' j K-'.,:-11.54 .4:.,.ff 1- - 5. V' 25 ny-, .1 K Q Q r 1 k J fl -I KVA-,IQ linical ears f V DR. CHARLES RAGAN1 In belween smokes I have a lof fo say af Chief- of-Service rounds. K lqgelev M . -eK. ,f - I 'ik me . . X . E E UW 0' N - 1 ' I1 ' P I Ev - R N X I A V V X X 1 D 3 '.,n.w vb X-, ebvv A V 4 W ,X , . .X . 1 ' . i Af-J, on-'i I 1 l DR. HENRY ARANOW, Jr.: They senf in fhe second DR. THOMAS Q. MORRIS: l'll be glad to show you your string. evaluations. Bur fell me, are you easily offended? 44 i 4 I . ' qw ,,7,..- i fe fl , 1.1 DR. ANDREW FRANTZ: No, Bill, a slightly elevated Pro- lactin level does not warrant 3 months of bedrest in DR. HAMILTON SOUTHWORTH: No, scratching out the liver has nothing to do with pruritus. Majorca. in 1? N-I ...X Sf .ow 9Vg 1'- ia. DR. REJANE HARVEY: What do you mean, my ST segments are sagging? 45 'F' i I X X! ' wif ii i . . . and the Affending still said l was ill-equipped fo X . ' - 'N . Y? Sf'-T 2 'v' ,A 4 ll A 1 L be a physician. 46 Q. lx Y -'ff I DR. STANLEY E. BRADLEY: Don r jump! DR. ELLIOT OSSERMAN: Ta I l ke if like c man! ,pl rl' 'I NX. '. .X If . 1. f. Q' ,y 'V af- JR. ROBERT CANFIELD: ln o 67 year old woman with o rerum calcium of 75, idiopathic hypercalcemia of infancy s not part of the differential. 1 gl 1. i-WEEK - R - R' - R icq. , qv.. E M cwfzzyige 35.-a . . '. ' 'Xml , -, -, 1 1 . ', N, - X 'ei X Y + , i X 1 -4, l N ff'- Q l 'Z , 'yi DR. DANA ATCHLEY: Would you like me to autograph your Atchley form? vt- DR. ANDRE COURNAND: l'm still living . , . off my Nobel Prize money. 47 DRS J THOMAS BIGGER JR and ROBERT HEISSENBUTTEL Hmmm fhe hearf IS Indeed o wfre 9. L ,Qin 3 XR: Qi K. f' 4 DR GLENDA GARVEY U HI d mg xx rf' ,N ' E .,X 5 0 , C T ' Walker Block? DRS, RICHARD RIFKIND and ARTHUR BANK: Do your lymph nodes ache offer you drink Johnnie N N 'ff' Cr. T,--T ll' f' a QQ xx wg- X al' A 'AV' ... nf , If I xr 'A ' 1 ln. 4 di- 1.-,A ,T i1Lrg1fE .4 f ..- D Q 5 ...dh DR. VINCENT BUTLER: I wonder if l'H ever find Big Burso ! D-in-I-L... J ,wif A lim B Ji DR. WENDELL HATFIELD: Where are my three sons? KU f, 5 , Q E ., .-!, L ' :'.,1 'lfln -C.. A 2' 'flxfihf'- L f ' xr 5332553 , V, 1 H if ' ' - , , . ' f !7FE45j:S5Ri:'55 1 ' .- V',, 3i.'1?Y?4fi3': 1 A 253612:-,' 5 s, i:52w.:ff.z l fswffiziiffzqf ' , A sg' ,i4t'ag'g.,2' ,- '1xyy,?yv:- X, . , we- 'w.:, : :. -:K-me FEMS? hyfiegz 'yhiw X fl L. . . 1 f I I gmli ,W SK x L DR. GERARD TURINO: l'm gonna make you on offer you ccn'f refuse! 50 DR. PETER CALDWELL: I don? buy the yearbook L. V' -1 T Fi tl 4 I. i ' 1 , i aloof: Nh. , i ,rs Q Xfff f 9 Fl M , - ll I rm I' I ri:--1 f J, R 'w V du DR. NORMA BRAUN: This is the latest in Chinese DR. HARVEY SCHNEIER: This write-up is fine, But it wasn't backscrotchers. really necessary to ask about the sex life of the potient's teen-age daughter. A l 1. I v' .1 J DR. JOHN LOEB: Bob, you must be mistaken. That is not the ghost of my father standing over there by the centrifuge. 51 pf ., V f mga, -. 9-' Al., DR. DONALD HOLUB: PTU before RAI before KI before OR before RIP! gwwiesq It DR. RICHARD RIVLIN: Unfortunately, even the vitamins can't keep you from getting old and crochety. 52 'S Q ,J .I , 5 I 1 Q X X . R DR. EDGAR LEIFER: What do you mean I'm unnerving you by constantly interrupting your presentation? 'dx ' ' - 4, t I fi T NL fi Fly - .eg V I i-ur' .- Q .fm A xf V - fa, 4-'VN- Vf A 'n ' i , 4 xii ,415 ' ,fr , 'I-U. p' ' Q' '- ,.-ff' DR. GERALD THOMPSON: Even I have fo pay off the driver of the Harlem shuffle bus! l'7'T'? ' 'lgmi Q D 'J 'Q-+11 by My 1 f , 1 DR. JOHN LINDENBAUM: Anyone who insisls on com- Demonsfrafion of proper technique for gram staining one's paring my vocalizafion fo Ed Sullivan mighf be a can- fingers. didafe for infrafhecal melhofrexafe! 53 .wx DR. HAROLD NEU: I can'f believe fha! you don'f know the percenfage of sensifivifies of Erysipelofhrix insidiosc fo sfrepfomycin! is 3-3.2. Q 1 A J ' 1 If Q l , l i , l ,a ' X DR. ROBERT WHITLOCK: Tefrahydocannabinol isn'l bad DR- JOSEPH SWEETI af all. Please pass fhe pofafo chips. NG: Enemas are the purgers of the soul. , A - as K ' u .I 0 'F. N X L f . I 1 I. I 1 . ' 1 . r- ' + D 7 i 7 -. . T -I ,H-'i 1 .Z -5.'i, . 'lv x V l 1' , ' .75 f , f . Q Y -r -A .ul L i if 5 . V, i X - . J 4 , . , ' ,VVVVV XA ' A 1 Y Y lk. W' p 4 ' ! E Q . ' L I l Qi x DR. CARWILE LeROYg The most common naturally occur- DR. JAY BROWN: Did you hear abou? the slrealrer on ing graf? is fhe felus, fhe second is New York City. Columbia 's campus who was wearing nothing buf a haller monilor? 55 is EXW DR. KEITH REEMTSMA: A car occidenf? Gef Dr. Hardy! , A X f if . 9'- an 1 N , T V, X 1: AX .-,gr --1 DR. THOMAS KING: You don? have fo spit in the perifoneum 56 3 - ' -e A 1 C e s 4 , 1 Y x NX ' ', f X 4 Y X .El , ,- - .. ' R 1a-'rfwai 5? . K , DR. GEORGE CRICKELAIR: Ofher fhon your nose, what DR. FRANK GUMP: Chicken Gumpo is my favorite soup. else do you wonf fixed? --. 'Rs x X Q ' ... My M f X . R. fi' f Q 'R , IWA- 1' 4: an I iLfr rX D- R R Gosh fhaf's excifing, Dick! 57 w 'N 4129 4 ,, cv-3.1, 4. ' , FREDERIC HERTER: Cut! QW t fl 1 'N Q 1 f 4, 1: 1 X R .A ' .fy X . - F' ' mx ' V js , 1 Al D DR. ROBERT BERTSCH: Are you sure you want me to read your evaluation? - ' ' , ' U V . V Y AJ ' W 'R 'R , xr :,. Af f' X A 'M V , ' DR. PHILIP WIEDEL: If you're fat, forty, fertile, ond fe- x 5'- YV' Alf ' 4 5 'Af' 'F mole, then you need c prophylactic cholecystectomy. 7 DR. JOSEPH BUDA: I'll smile, buf I won'I sir cross-legged. nn., ,..1..l ,g l B... I T 1 5 I i X 15, l V 4 A 2 ' 0. fo ' . Wmmil, 0-JZ 1 ? -V50 9? 'V . ? 10 Q A' :fl To nb 21 Q Y L f X2 - I - 1 -nxf ,' , f DR. JAMES MALM: Seems fha? we're a quarf short S x-af Vos- Tris ILA-C ' x X R J, 'l 1 x -' -- DR. ALFRED MARKOWITZ: Do cows have cholecysfifis? DR. FERDINAND MCALLISTER: My vessels runnefh over. - at ' ella lf I A, ' 1 1 f , r ,F K , I i 3 of R A ff we 1- .. DR. ALFRED JARETZKI: I've always thought if ironic that a coin lesion usually winds up cost- ing 51500. 60 a ff- 'i x DR. DONALD HEIMLICH: And these are our honeymoon pictures. f A 'Y -'A i fwx' x i A g x1 ,- Q .1 DR. ARTHUR VOORHEES: And this is the same mug shot that I sent out on my applications for surgical internship. DR. DAVID HABIF: Portrait of the surgeon as a young man. 61 '-L Sv... 5 ,E F' J k . L34-L .-,,J.4. DR. FREDERICK BOWMAN: Sure, you can scrub with me, but just don't ask any stupid questions . . . In fact, don't ask any questions! -1, .3 62 DR. KENNETH FORDE: Yet, who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him. lAct V, Scene I Macbeth j 1.4 ,. . -.. ci -ff ,...-' f 4 -? 7' I HENRIK BENDIXEN: Who fold you that anesfhesiologists jus? si? on srools passing gas? anesthesiolog DR. MIECZYSLAW FINSTER: If all else fails you can al ways fry Brahms lullaby. l orthopedics DR. FRANK STINCHFIELD: When I gel older losing my hair, Many years from now. Will you slill be sending me a Valentine Birthday greelings boHle of wine. lf I'd been ouf till quarler lo lhree Would you lock lhe door, Will you slill need me, will you slill feed me, When l'm sixty-five. Iwifhouf permission from the Beallesj .VA ., Yo l. ff! VY y.,.f N . ii::f' '1 'X X 'l l Q f 1,771 ' x DR. DAVID ANDREWS: Another clinical example of shiff- DR. HAROLD DICK: Tolipes who? ing dullness. ,l .4 , I 5? I I 'W -4 I ' ' H In ' r I I I l sl I! Iv fr 7 ' a I 'Q 1 I DRS. ALEXANDER GARCIA and HUGO KEIM: You know, Alex, scoliosis is my business . . . my only business! Q-N4 YN- . I oc' J o o c a n cocoa ooo c o oo O Q t o c ooo I . .. r f no If , f I DR. C. ANDREW BASSETT: I find bones really DR. ROBERT CARROLL: What, will these hands ne'er be electrifying. clegng X if 66 R U I A452 9 ' 4 fx ' l 9 2 lt X ,ff Lg' Q, Q. i 9' , lAcf V, Scene I Mocbeth j DR. NAS EFTEKHAR: Sometimes I wonder what all those little old ladies are doing with their femoral necks at 3 A.M. urolog Q A .. 1 .1 -xi I 1 -. al I .,,w' hz 1-Rx A xx DR. JOHN LATTIMER: The fhree sexual ages R'-1 1 f 1 of 0 human mole are fri-weekly, fry weekly, ' ' D and fry, weakly. ff' , Q 4. wi ' . 4 A I, QA X x ,iff 1 , 1 5 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 -XS DRS. MYRON ROBERTS ond NICHOLAS ROMAS: We can'f woif fo gel our hands on Gerry Ford's prostofe. 67 A lf ', F53 - 197- ,-'i'f'n U' A 0 .' , . i'--J'-5' Swell Lf? :'x,:Qa'.'.?f DRS. PETER PUCHNER and STANLEY BRA- 'ug' HAM: Hey Sfan, can you say, Pefer Puchner 43,2 .1 picked a peck of pickled prosfafesu fhree ' fimes rapidly. if . . DR. RALPH VEENEMA: No, I don'f fake my Thio-Tepo with fwo lumps of sugar. .Z N in il. DR. MICHAEL WECHSLER: l'm noi quife sure whof Mas- DR. MEYER MELICOW: Come into my office and I'II show fers and Johnson would say abou! that you my efchings. fr V I r- 7 -X. mx J 1-Qbgwl, 0 , g ig if 1 -f -.- ' ,JT jk fi ' rx T . ' .,-', tl?-,, I ' 'F If :. ' E: ' , A' .An I 1,'4'., I: w i' 1, sl 1 M , A-9 .05. 'ij V f J f Y 1' , W4 ' f 5 -may ff! V r -I ' X h w : -K' ., 1 -' . 1 1 X ,ff , vs nl WNW' E56 dwg, J W , - wi' r ' A ,f'.zff.,u , .. ,Quo QLJA M ,M ' , - , M- V V QV homZZdh!jZi:jxhet1oiZ?limc eyes 1!ou'nql.6O Haig Hea5a.,, d'EAmH A wa- 'Y nuff A o mf. f to r'mnd3 'nr-ng and ciu.bfoJC 4U-+Ll.YE mf m' MA ia 69 A-1 'qs 'Fi Nr' 7 vz ii- neurolog 'E' DR. H. HOUSTON MERRITT: lf's only 55,00 exfro fo have on AUTOGRAPHED copy of my book. 70 DR. LEWIS ROWLAND1 Everyone fries fo topple the Chief of Rowlond's Rounds! DR. AUDREY PENN: Show me your muscles. I . l DR. RICHARD MASLAND: I fhink a liffle phenobarbifal might help you. -I LZ DR. SID GILMAN: The cerebellum is fhe heart of the universe. 5 X bf 5 -AX H . If Q ' . ' R .Y D L . - ' A M, ,Q . xg . . A '1- D 511' 'SBI-Q-: '.-' 'V ' 1 Q.-I DR. LINDA LEWIS: Somefimes I fhink you have a worn but spirochete for a synapse in your parietal lobe. 7I 1- r . fee, l Quai? ' f .. 1' fl . . x ' X- f AV N 7- X4 ---f --.. V. iw, wt' , DR. EARL ZIMMERMAN: My research involves using ' Q chicken soup in replacing losses in CSF rhlnorrhea. f x' inf Q T-ijgx '- K un 9 DR. STANLEY FAHN: I use to have flcs myself, buf haloperidol really helps. R uv. QE ..,, V , f I. 13' 7 , 4 1 Q Y 'V K ALA DR. JOHN BRUST, Jr.: lf fhe pafienl can open the door, walk in, shake my hand and sif down, he passes the neurological exam. 72 QQ . QQQQQ QQ 89964 .49 Q VQQQ4 4 e X Qtr! Di DANIEL SCIARRA: llike fo mink of the spinal cord Us DR- WILUAM ISGREEN: Would you like fo see a chore-i a tube of vermicelli, f0ff11 dflflfe? i Q . , f 1 0 A A ' DR. ARNOLD GOLD: Now sfick ou? your fongue! 73 MV i .ik ig F ATQQQ., X fy DR. ABE CHUTORIAN: Look deep info my eyes! ,- ,-mux. 'MQTPYA ., . -1- '- j.:-I . X .zu ,n ,f ,.-I 1, -W.. ,L Q' ',', , f . 1, .1 ...J I ,,. 'SA ff. ,. 15.1. 5. ' .H Na-P-.. , ,-L' W 1 74 ,gf What did you say abou? kneeding a jerk? v 'Q ,l I , U . - Q neurological N urgery Q WELL. , DR. EDWARD SCHLESINGER: l feel lucky Today. Lefs f drill. U Q, V I 36 ' 'FW 'u fi 5 ' , ' xx f X .pr y x NJ ' ! ll 1 V 'bb ,I . n ' 'l': '.' L I an' 9 wav.. ,' , ' :I-'ff-: A ' - .r' ' - ' y 15 E , 25435, It X: l ' 5 'f l fzgxz' . DR. EDGAR HOUSEPIAN: So you fhlnk you need cv fronfcll V n ' 1211 lobofomy. r' B - 'A 1-H N, , a 4 A ' .f5,,g.'f1 '-Iia'sSi' 9 f- 2. fy.-gh 5 ' fffi:--xg , 8' .12 . 'KW' K DR. W. JOST MICHELSON: Off with his colvarium! X- A V X ' DR. LESTER MOUNT: The class of 7976 has some of The besf gray moHer l've seen. 76 ' FYR i , I p diatrics 'E ' 315 .1wfX i ! DR. ROBERT MELLINS: I fhin'k you're cz prod- DR. RICHARD BEHRMAN: Nexf week's Grand Rounds will be on ucf of a VIQ mismatch. How big frees from liffle acorns grow. Nl DRS. JOHN DRISCOLL and L. STANLEY JAMES: We gef upsef over liffle fhings! '44, IE... . Nzggfi Lf - 7 i - , i iii' A' 1149 f LA. we 1 I . . . ,Pfwlif X , ' hwy X rf V f sz... L.. D I DR. WELTON GERSONY: Maybe if you didn't press so hard with your stethoscope he wouldn 't get circumoral cyanosis. DR. WILLIAM BAUMAN: I lifce this new invitatio faculty home dinners . . . B.Y.O.B. n for the DR. SUSAN GORDON: No, she doesn't have the strawberry tongue of niacin deficiency. She just finished a cherry lollipop. 7B .1 ' Z F -gi . 5 Pf- . I- - i if 1 . '. Q 1. 'n.,,,qz J ff DR. MARTIN LORIN: Put me down for fifty on Gotcha Baby in the fiffh. kf Q i X if' h , -L' I ,il . . 1 ' X P. yu , 5 1- 5 4 I J I x il- Qx- ,, X R JUN' A . X , A X . A DR. ARTHUR BLOOM: You look like you need some gen- DR. ROBERT WINTERS: Why don'f you just read if in my efic counseling! 7 Bible. 79 3 i .17 ' 'I ' I .UQ A E 'A if Wig. . Q y af y E !:,'W!f if 4 ' I I -: I. if ii ll' li R in i 1 ' X '+L 1 J' 'E v ' . ,' .- V v -N- 4 -Y. . . i' A,..7'1.Agn.. . lx '. DR. RUTH HARRIS: l've always dreamed of having my name in bili-lights. 41 DRS. CATHERINE DeANGELlS and MARGARET MCHUGH: Did you say fha! obese child had Pra der-Willi Syndrome or that his name was Willie Prader? A K 'e v ' x ' ' e- -Y , A f ef L , 7 Qin? A A f A' . F f -I DRS. AKIRA MORISHIMA and JENNIFER BELL: Would DR. RUSSELL ASNES: lseem fo be geffing some fonal in you like fo see our growth curves? ferference here. 81 n X X N A K 4. 7 X DR. MARY ANN COLENDA: Well, fellas, it's time for an Enfamil break. 'TCW ' ff. fi' . ' yd' ' ffl. -. ,.-- . -gs, .am ,N i 1 ' ,F P73 4. 4 543 ' Simi r EQf,i3i L,el, , 4. -,.l sl f . : fs -. ' qv. g iff 'ev '. P Qt g gr if . ' at 1'l-' I 'r 9' A ' , sw --wi q l - ei' Q' Y x' ,r 1 l U H DR. MARTIN NASH: I actually prefer playing backgam- DR. JANE PITT: And these data are the results of my hu- mon to playing with acid-base balance. man breast milk experiments. 82 If X . 41 . ld 1 F P , . , f ' ' E fl 1 , -' if IJ-r- -J f l ' W - XV ! Y l 'O L .W-:iw ' 'UN vs I in s - rr - y 'f' L l A :Q , d - ' I -gn-J :ef or il' 1 ' .Qs ' l 5 ,ey I . 2 , Q .f ' -1 L iii, A .I DR. JAMES WOLFF: My protocol for Bloody Mary is: fo one fiffh vodka add one can fomafo juice, Va cup lemon juice, one fsp. each of Worcestershire sauce and freshly ground cyfoxan. I qs- S V , h ' 7 xx V DR. NEILS LOW: Before you leave Blyfhedale, I wont fo show you our super-duper coin- operafed wheelchair, B3 radiolog f X50 .UT K' 4: ' fr? , I 1 .I 1. I I DR. WILLIAM SEAMAN: Never Lower TilIie's Pants, Mother Might Come Home! ,pfv- x A II gif! ' ,IGQQL . -I - W IW X I -- ff, - X I I DR. DAVID FOLLE'I'I': When lSN'T on IVP indicated? DR. KENT ELLIS: Do I really have fo give those firsf-year BA Iecfures agcun? ,. 1 V- f-f R DR. GUY POTTER: Zap! You're sferile! Y Lynne' JM DR. RUTH GUTTMAN: l'm nofed for my super volfage. DR. FRIEDA FELDMAN: White Horse! 1' ll's fha! Difzl 'xi L..f Jorefzki on a 85 .,.,-wf 1 n DR. JOHN AUSTIN: To gef a good apical lordofic, the ra- diologisf should be in the missionary position. J l ? DR. WALTER BERDON: lf's noi Sunfan. IFS X-ray fan! 86 R -2- . -'I ' ,Q S-141 '4 x K V Y i N 14 f... -., .ala x R I X xii, t Y , 1 0 2 R ti '1 2' ' . , V V ' ' M I 1 ' vi v Qi it? ...J-ln obstetrics and gynecolog Near Honors technique for forceps delivery. 87 f Q ,. x . ., Y-xi Q Wm ,,... .N Vx.. ,-i '- - f',ff.ff.:'1'-,fii I, ,, , .i ...sf 1 I , DR. SUSAN WILLIAMSON: Gracious Grondmofher fo Growing Gynecologists. I 5 A -f.-,har Z' 0 .Gare , sf: ma-xiii-?:7' --1-'41 4. .4 -, - - 'J L.: g:,:5:-,rg ' DR. SOLAN CHAO: Aging begins of conception. l . A A , 5 5- gg ' vi . i ,,5v'-- , Q, A 1 , , I 4 i l V ' J K , DR. EDWARD BOWE: Afler fhis Bard Hall musical is over, I Think l'll I' h d B8 ry my an of some gynecology again, Z L4 1 ' hi my 'f-.3 on I K ,If ,I .eg fl-i I T J , KH: ' mr G . 1 ' ' ' A ' .. A 5 'Ax a DR. W. DUANE TODD: Jusf because you fhink the delivery room isn'l properly equipped doesn'f give you the righf to do a high forceps delivery with o five iron! A -Q DR. ROY PETRIE: Dr. Lafe Deccelerofion. DR. GILBERT VOSBURGH: With some deliveries fhe Smelley maneuver is just fhaf. 89 And what have' you been doing lately? rehabilitation medicine DR. JOHN DOWNEY: Would you believe that the or - I V .5 - 1 g, . f - . , , .T n v- - Q 4, - X, Q' Y Harlem Globe Trolfers were once on Neuro 8? l - - . -, ' 3-h -Q. 3 .-i ' E-.L......Qa..f,T' -'li ,- 7 A T ell - v Ei! l ..-.1-in J 1 91 f , ' .7624 3 'L ' 1 A- 1' ' , l Q , 5' A '4 1 ', A . gf Q ' 'F ,Z R , s ' . x 1, 1 I IR -2: mega' I DR. ROBERT DARLING: How do you like my mask-like DR. STANLEY MYERS: This is our floor model. focies? SPECIAL SALE-Manual of Orfhopedic Surgery, regularly 52.50, now ONLY 53.95 plus fax! .six HOU 'T 51 ,fji L A an. 92 ophthalmolog X DR. CHARLES CAMPBELL: Someday I hope my fundus pic fures are as good as my soup. - .... .Y --'r xW DR. ROBERT ELLSWORTH: So if's all se!-fhe Solf 81 Pepper of 3 P.M. on Friday. 93 109. . r, fl!-9 . 'GP K I K ,L- 1 , u.' 1-.ry f F L ,-'fakff A -5. X ,X ,f . NN '. A I .---.-,......: T, ,Y u , 1 Z' 75 I av A. GERARD D VOE: The Key Y J .,, 1 ...r M.---1 . 4. .1'. ' nk.. th b is confc f rmatolog DR. LEONARD phofosensifizing. 1 -nu! ' 00? 'iv-3, 1 5735' 4 X 21 K, F f v .. ' '51 'slr L11, f YK HARBER: I hope your camera flash isn't DRS. SWEENEY and ALEXANDER YOUNG: I think you're sfrefching if a bit to include fhe Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome in the differential. 95 otolar ngolog 7 I -- DR. ROBERT HUI: Bleeding always slops. Y. .. . .ef SA ' X it Em V1- W, lr . 3: '3 f ' -f Q- 1 ' ' ' . id. ccllx DR. MILOS BASEK: We've got a special package deal DRS. LAWRENCE SAVETSKY and FRANK MIGNOGNA: fhis monfh only-you pay full price for your T8.A, and fhen lf's not fha? I'm camera shy, buf my malpractice insurance you get your DEC free. jus! ran ouf. 96 DR. LAWRENCE KOLB: Surgeons know nothing but do everything, intermsts know everything but do nothing, psychiatrists know nothing ond do nothing, and pathologists know everything and do everything, but too late! o re' I ' A Y ' ' A'f1.I'V' N 2 f- .-'Rf ' 1 - 7x,N - ,Z . VC5 Y DR. SAMUEL PERRY III: -1-'ms U? --gg rim: 771 'BG- ,. They coll me fhe 8 A.M. Johnny Carson. 1 96 iii if xi f j X Role identification. DR. ANNE BERNSTEIN: Acfucilly The Nutcracker Suife is c ballef inspired by basic Freudian fhoughf. ....S.... , A-.MM-1 .l DR. RICHARD FRIEDMAN: Yes, l'd figure it would cost you about 52.50 to see these same tapes on 42nd Street. DR. WINSLOW HUNT: We psychiatrists what we 're cracked up to be. Aga llill :sun .. N :gr AILI1! .ya ful 'ZF - mn--ull '-'l RF. 1 --1 wsu -F - 1. ,. QQ u l nazi ull: ll, N S., ' A iw lair rg. , 'J Q u nu L... ,Aix N r-Ll 'I l-'Sf ,init-:iL.B4L..Q' The men of Manhattan State. 'Hr ,,T,, 14. ' F' are not 99 ' ' ' W: l -J public health DR, STEPHEN ROSENBERG: The prime requisite for your Community Health Project oral presentation is that it keeps us awake. ri A -Q, f 5 Club: ' , -gil i , 100 P315 CLUB 'Sf ig , WAVE UE MST fl F MOUTHS Beevv 5,-77-,Aw no DIUU? 606 ffllve 755 Entrez- EMFDy H055 57,00 WM za fr Cor-fs THF gpxb ya-F412 Hzery Tyuesmfy .zfzg foo PM , 7' ?' F? i ff IO Swv 0 ,,., Clgvl- PM-A .,,,- fx fOLLl'.fnl1f,l' PHXbILlAFNS XND SL RCJLONS EVALUATWN UFSTUDENTPERFORMANCE Ari YA ,V Y frrrr iw HWYW U, VY CIJSil1f1976 MTU, P-lD07R Suhinfz-rnshln ln Ingeirnal Mediglne 7 nl. El.-lnvw X Pv.-sghmml , Datuso1Asslgnrnem A NarCh,L1975 , , , , r,gv-- .4 -' w J x-1-ullamtwv M vm- '-In M1113 gn-vfn,yrvv1.1vwcL', wmhcdlmg the- scrtwnql wo vvlmlh tm pwf4mfvw,m+.u: x.'v..1xLIlr':r'Yv1:',iJVul1HH: , 1,.1,.,fJ, F , ,mum wr, nf,-1.-,,1,,,, .,,f.w,,1w.1,, n.,..f,F- dam F-,vw u,mn,11uz.,I . nfvww-rm WI1.Avwp.mm,-,v1M1unurw-.armmllli f.',,1, vm Mylhu. wg wi-J ,Y Uv N. ,,,-,,, vw lv. rm- -w w,xt'x'1' ll wmfll.,-rgru-1' mmaxi-ty .ami Army m',wwIhL'w.'L', ZW !mu1ofqf1m-1.12rnrgzi-CJ! L 1y,x HM- I gl, 3541!l.',l 1vXfg,vv1w'lv wwvf . xVf1q4'wf,lwf'gv' w'--' 41g rf'1 Yovvwmv U- Y.-vm-I wmh .mr-:mon L1 ruvwarn-vury ,md in-rfdv'n,w0: ln rhy- '- -,M f '1-N 1- 5' v1...1 Tx L 'wmv L, :wi gvlv, 4,X1' , ln '1,m'vy uf gwvvwvuhuvn, 7 guciqn vv'f vt, 81 Urr:fv'uuw'w.1l 'lulnlj umi ,nv vmlw 1 wrix 4 rw' cm' lrwviufr, 'v1I,1Iu', ' nxmvwnl 1, 'mvwrlhv-N1 A11 lvlrwuwww .xml 9b w.Jtwovvsl'w,ps .zvfw p.1l.f:,r,.nH1!h,,w flnunm-N l v ,ml Mmm dv Aw, mlm-' ll ,v.v fxdrmw, ,1gng,:np:n.:I I 1 rlw ll--,L pf wf.r- 'zhoulni lv wgimluri Tm::w'vvl:1.wsN,mN,1 uqvxluflfw-.-IVn,1 www n,- suv-'vv:m fxv' gwrfwwdrm- 1'-1 ,J wif--,nrlprwl M 'Vw toni 5 rv'v iofrvmwug rfmpluvwg uw, of thu 'Ulm-.wvw ,u,1yec.twv'-gs ,mul-:Ml,'dvy, ',dm1s4!wvf,, qomi wx, -' , gvmlf 1--glglhfvn uv onI1.r.v:d'v1 Pwfhvwrcn, uv.1lLm7ww:-, 'zlmulri pwwzifx au much v Lm11.muvw lf -Mum'-11.1-2 ,N 171- stmrtuvr- M Hn wourw- .md Vhw- fvwlmm uf +m,4-rwrmn w1Hpv-rnur Pr, served a suhinrernshln on the Medical Service Hurino vhs mon-H of March, 1975. The stndenf was judged by the avr-ndinn, Ur, , and Ph- senior rnsldenr, Dr. to neva rhn innate infvllecrual caoaclty of s moron, Wownvor, he was consld-rod ro he an average srudent cnmnared ro his year crown, hr, fund of knowledpp grew considerably dwrinw Php one mon'h oeriod ro tho point where he was ahls to use fownlnw nndifal jarqon and Oalned famlllarltv wirh at leasr Tan Msdloal 'srwq, his nnnformanoe level was unusually consisrent. Horn nisforlps and nhvsirals were zood, demonstrating a vivid imnoivprion and ramhllnp nrose form. msn qrndorf's nresoncaflone mera dlrecr, co vhs nolnt, and ln -v no-lv door fnsrn, Cliniral judqemenfs wer! oresenred with fonf4dAnfs and in ronvlncino sfvle, rhoueh often not ro rho narienvs' Ha-pfif, iif mocr uri-vous faulr was ln vurnlnw a case over to 'hs Wurasofc, Fr, was usually honesr, rhouoh he onoe svolp Q nnqffnr from an old ladv. he was qultP industrious, had no fni'1a'ivQ Po QUPHR of, and handled criticism in a unlque manner, -f was 'sons ro Lsvchnmnror seizures wh-n informed of his nrozrnss. 'P wovld f'wvvsr a swrkun For a nossihls temooral lohe leslon. 's rplarpd well ro fawllies and natlents alike. In cwmmarv his overall nerformanve was verv good ro excellrnt. Assistant Clinical Professor v rvl ' of Nedlclni rmdirinp Koosevelr yu 4 - - Hmm., Fnml Flzlllng for thv Cnursv Honorsi,- Pass.,L,,, Fall.,-1 OFFICE OF THE DEAN COPY 6' qu' Wm '55g.., 1 y g Wax X 'FK-.-,, 'I-:TI Q. A ' tw .. 4, any-.. ' I My ' 'V v 1 AY b 'M 'f-H- 3 W K 5? do X 4 4- . . .. , nn., ' -pf Q, . QM - V , nu , , QL., 1QM.,,,.-V in wi 5 . .,. bf, - .X- ii!- -. ,, .- . . LV , W. ' 'L ' 'x. '.x! ll '. ' I I -T-au, 7 uJ:uFh 4 f ' P -uh I- xg J :I x If I A,-pvfy.-I 5 Jw.. ,J 'wx I -1xx r 'H I K ' 1 J Q I 'f J h I 1 in x ll ,4. . .' . ' 54 G I IK.. :r..:N.i V It -, ls, Q-A ,yuh QL .A -. A 1 , 'm' - ' 5 . 1 ' . 'VI 'xvkl L'.'111..11 ' h h Q Vg Us ...QTQ 'Nxt 'mv-aus' H 5'fLv-9Qx + .Qi WL' Y' .Ng A hxjnkx lu. - 1 fli? .. I - ! w 'x' L. af xy f ,x 153. 'gl in Ji 'jf 32 19' a n r. -95 351- ' 21 ' I . A Xwff A Q P 1 ' 1 4. . A O6 43' 3 ,SP P:L? -.WW Q' s fx 1- O8 ,QM -V b was X i 1 . . X , -r, P-3 ., , ' 5- Q 2' he -g ,waig 1:9 fl 1 -54. 1- ,Q 1. . . sxz Ill ,zlgi fx ii 1 ' 'Ii ii ,i, T--:F1 I T X ' yn- 8 X V f J X pts 4 0, 4 -ij, A ,ff B: if A, Q -Q-A: Aj ' fb ll, V Fifi! 4, '.j?T-xi fig' NSA! tv k S . f 4' ,' M 4 1- Q- 1, , XV ,Lf ,-Vi, V lfjxfl , K f SMF 5 ' AL' ', Lp , - 5 X .. I , . ? y is Y: . 5 ri i - L ,Miva l A x .lv VV: ' .Q ' x a I V' S ' ,xl T Y hr. 4 b 1- 3, . N A - v- A- ' ' rgrf ,-e2X ,,ff,5L5g., :W - 3' fig f' ,M gui., , L, K ,1 ' ,:L g,.,f-af ghqiul-ljtlY,x 7 .JA D -w C N 47 p . 'f ,559 Lf P YQ '72 1 K B 'lf 1. 1 v W 'sk W ALL f4kc+x4.ov Q2QuLSf5 rg gg N Egroaf gpm 'mv 90 ' fpggk . 1 AF 31- s 35:9 'QJ5 ', 3 'ng' 5' nl a,.,:.1, 1 .' 311.4 . 7 cw: - if 4, -5 Xe: 5 -i .- qt f-. , f 42. xi. me mx' ' -4. Q -L 1 J? ,J . ffl H7 ,fu 5:53, Yi' V I- A. . I ,AN I Ki? , 'Lf' If 4 f 'n - .V1 ' ' T' si A-1 . . X . A - 4 fF,:lgxx'xN -' 5 f Q - 6'g,xx l 5. fx! 96, . -1 ' I '- ' E- f' gl ,' A 5 J iii' c 5 alumni highlight for the class of 1976: america's bicentennial year 6 fi ,. W.. .1 bt hd? ee.-QL' :YQ Q Y is U, -- - fs, '- . A. frz'-'-' ,vi -. ' 'ti ef' ' f s. pg.. 2T'!'7w f' -' . f .x , . 9 , , L, - . of t Q , W, ,1 Y, 4. A, -- - X I ,, ,L ' . ' v M, , , -' - ,- ,, , ,P . 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I .,, g -s , sl 1 A 'AL' ' 4 , 1- . . -- ,, T ' . , ith - rag- x gf 1 it - , .,r'-. A Y F- ,T .' .. ,,, - ,g ,., :W I . ' Q 1 0 .J--1' 1 ,. ,. 4 . , 2f,,t3g.2f , M . ..1fyg51.e'.f5-ir' if-?'Qf,.fi-552.255-'ZH W ' ' ' MM ' I - rv ' 'L 21 J .,-. V '--' . 13 '7 l 9?- if352f-'dai ' ' 7 7 -- '-3' 'N'-'-if' ' V - - i ' vc? 1 - Leftffj ' ff ' . . ,,- ' ' -- c ' if Q- ' ' . ' ' . -. . 1-'-ifixffyfuf-f 'ft ., . - ' ' King's College around T770 Your medical school, founded in l767, awarded the first M.D. degree in colonial America to Robert Tucker, the one-man class of l77O. Our colonial civilization was going through the pains of giving birth to a new nation during the same years that gave birth to medical education in America. Benjamin Franklin was an assistant accoucheur for both! During the 206 years from l77O lwith its class of onel to l976 lyour group of 1451, we have bestowed l6,275 plus T45 M.D. degrees. You are now an alumnus of a medical school which, with all modesty, can say that it has been a leader in the development of medical educa- tion and practice, not only in America, but in the entire world. lt all started in 1731, when John Bard of Philadelphia, age TS, became apprenticed to John Kearsley, M.D., one of the few physicians in the new world who actually had an M.D. degree. Later, as a practitioner in Philadelphia, he came to the attention of Beniamin Franklin, who was favorably impressed and recommended to Bard that he go to New York City, where there was a good opening due to the recent deaths of three local doctors. 112 ln T746, Bard took this advice and was soon a leading New York physician. John Bard's son, Samuel, after graduating from King's College, went to Edinburgh to obtain his M.D. degree. There he became a close friend to a fellow student from Philadelphia, John Morton. During their European studies, they worked out a set of lofty standards for medical schools, as well as requirements for admission and gradu- ation. They returned to America at the same time, each determined to start a medical school in his home town. Both were successful. During those early years, the Weekly Society of Gen- tlemen, which Beniamin Franklin had assisted John Bard in organizing, worked hard for the establishment of a medical school at King's College. At the same time, Franklin was also trying to get a medical school started in Philadelphia. lFranklin, now over 60, suffered from blad- der stones and was occasionally in New York consulting John Jones, the foremost lithotomist in the colonies.l Samuel Bard, now in practice with his father, was de- termined that o medical school be started and, insisted that its requirements for receiving an M.D. be just as high V7 DR. SAMUEL BA RD as those in Edinburgh. When the King's College Medical School was founded in I767, he, at age 25, was the first professor of the practice of physik. His father, John Bard, still the leading physician in the area and a prime worker for the medical school, but lacking an M.D. degree, was not mentioned for the faculty. ln fact, history does not record much more about him, as his son's star rose, ex- cept that he remained behind the scenes using his in- fluence to help both his son and the new medical school. The first star in our alumni crown must go to John Bard, our spiritual godfather, a man who, in i759-a century before anesthesia and a half century before McDowell's famous first abdominal operation to remove an ovarian cyst-diagnosed and successfully removed an ectopic pregnancy: the first such surgery documentedli in the world. He was perhaps the most influential person in spar- king the establishment of our medical school. The second star must go to his son Samuel-the out- standing leader of our first Medical Faculty. His day- book, which graces the exhibit case in Bard Hall, contains notations of his visits to all the familiar New York fam- ilies, as well as to General Washington. The standards set up by Drs. Samuel Bard and John Morgan while students at Edinburgh and used in founding King's College School of Medicine and the Philadelphia Medical College sound interestingly familiar: l. A medical school ought to be an integral part of a college or university. 2. Hospital instruction should form an integral part of instruction in a medical school. 3, Young men should come to the study of medicine with a liberal education. 4. The curriculum should follow a graded order from anatomy to clinical instruction and experience. 5. Teachers should have time to experiment and search for the secrets of nature. The first faculty consisted of: Samuel Classy, M.D., Anatomy Peter Middleton, M.D., Pathology and Physiology John Jones, M.D., Surgery James Smith, M.D., Chemistry and Materia Medica Samuel Bard, M.D., Theory and Practice of Medicine John V.B. Tennant, M.D., Midwifery Ipublished in Fothergill's Medical Observations and ln- quiries, 7760. fCourtesty of the New York Academy of Medicine.J l X - ' T .' ' f 1' ,,, .1 W f cz , , -Q A j, iiiuii .j-.X -1 l ,.' Y , ' 3S5.3.Te:1Q.w .-i..wi1.n l ' .5 Sli Fl ' I . in cg.: L- milf, I fs ,- .Q ' - 'Q egg, Q 4 ' -. :sling-ll ..3.!f : 'Z Zi-gf. cg.. . 'Q c. ,L .1 HEL 1 4. - - 1: 51' H - -I-i' 491' . ' .1 ' I . .. L-- fr ' 3,5 Q ' xi-4 il .5 'xt' fr. ' - J L-f 4 me :1 1' Q'-? .'r1'.,:X if' f -r lessen 'gl-f'L. 'u ' ' '- gli'-f - is--1: fr-fr . Il3 Q-, . - ,f . Q -.- -- --v i'fl - P ., .73 M ,LM Qylf' F9 ,. 'Q 1 if 'fr Cf. ,,-. 'QQ' ' ,., . -M '51 , r. M ' '- .-' . K , ilfi l f l ii it ' ill' till flu lllt lf! llll' Cwllvuuffjl'lz,x-xiiitlrzwni1rl.S1i1'yiw1zi, l,N'7fu John Jones, the next candidate, is perhaps the best proto- type for the stars of our early alumni and faculty. P He was as highly trained as any medical man could be in those days. He was our first Professor of Surgery. He drew the plans for building the first New York Hospital. He was the leading lithotomist in the colonies and is credited with at least 150 such procedures. In 1775, he wrote and published the first book on medicine in America entitled, Plain, Con- cise, Practical Remarks an the Treatment of Wounds and Fractures. 6. As an avocation, he was interested in meter orological observations and, for ten years before the war, prepared them for the press. 7. When the Revolutionary War broke out and King's College was closed, Drs. Smith and Jones were the only two physicians of the medical fac- ulty to go with the Continental Army. 8. As a patriot, he wrote, Every man has it in his power to contribute something. If he cannot cure the fatal disease of this unfortunate country, it will at least afford him some consolation to have poured a little balm into ca bleeding wound. 9. He established camp hospitals for the Continen- tal Army and became George Washington's per- sonal physician. After the war, Jones moved to Philadelphia, where he continued to teach and practice until his death in 1791. lt is to be noted that his patients, President George Washington and Beniamin Franklin, lived in Philadelphia at this time too. 10. The first medical school entrance and graduation re- quirements were so stiff that, by the time the Revolution- ary War forced the closing of the school, only a few M.D. degrees had been awarded. Emerging from the war as part of the New York State I.. i T2 iii :- . ' ' X If . 4 by '59, .gi V a-.Q-A x 1 ill.-ssl-lfftgf'.l 'ffrf'-fff - is .fp-T 1 ssss ' I Wsgjf 'Y' I A t g yy it-as - s 4' ' , il 'itl iillii f fi f . 'ti ll lf ' is 1 7 ll T, . w ill 1 .,. 1 Lil, ' is -wt ., X tl.. ,. iff T n r , .5 . 'Jil l fislfislilismsftf-7 if w 1 fi: thi' 7 'fzlui ilf A-'.A5q,llg'l!i: li, .'Q...fw-59: if- lffi. 1 L- . A ::lT' p,l f l i f l,51pis,. ,Q i '2-Mft.-1 :gfiv ,,,l 1 - K- A T X... -sr'-11 1, , . r , 'e - If tsrso A lla - . - A r 1831.The The first home of the College of Physicians and Surgeons lthe house marked Xj Park Place, N. Y. in cupola of Columbia College is visible in the right background. ' 114 sm .4 ff W. tg. , .125 -.. 1,1 'j' f ,. ,ss Q ' T 341' 7 - V .-?f- QS! -5 .g... .. f Q-' : 1, fri . ESF? - ' f Qzwgg XQ J tai J i-is 51.11, University, the King's College Medical School was re- opened as the Columbia College, Faculty of Medicine. Instruction was resumed in 1784 using similarly high stan- dards. They were so high that from 1784 to 1791 there were no graduates. The population of New York was ex- ploding and physicians were in great demand, but Colum- bia would not lower the standards set up by Bard, and there were not enough scholars in the colonies to qualify. The medical school in Philadelphia was having the same problem. Thus, the only two medical schools in the new world were not providing enough trained physicians. ln 1807, the New York State Regents lowered the aca- demic bars to make medical education more available. Columbia would not accept this-so some of her medical faculty joined with several equally highly trained physi- cians with M.D. degrees and started a rival school which they called the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It opened with less rigid requirements and graduated eight men in 1811. From 1767 to 1813 Columbia had awarded only 35 M.D. degrees. ln 1814, it gave up and amalgamated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons. There were 70 students in the first combined class and 192 in the school by 1817. The combined faculty of the new P8-S was the finest that could be put together in America-a stan- dard which we have strived to maintain through these two centuries. Dr. David Hosack had been on both Columbia and P8.S faculties, and became Professor of Clinical Medicine of the combined staff. He was a dynamic teacher, but the storm petrel of his time. Dr. Hosack deserves a star be- cause he started the little botany garden on land later given to P815 and which Columbia University still owns. Despite several vigorous efforts to unload it on various church groups, today it is the enormously valuable site of Rockefeller Center, a source of lifesaving university income. ln the galaxy of early P8-S graduates, Valentine Mott stands out. ln 1806, at the age of 21, he received his M.D. degree from Columbia and was elected, when 29, to the chair of Principles and Practice of Surgery at the new PSS. He was an early president of the New York Academy of Medicine and belonged to surgical societies in London, Brussels, Paris and Ireland. Mott's biographer declared that he was a prodigious worker, performing a greater number of important operations lincluding 190 lithotomiesj than any surgeon who ever lived. It is inter- esting to observe the difference in surgical activity of our predecessors. There were no surgical specialists and Mott attempted any surgery that needed to be done on the hu- man body. During the Civil War, he prepared instructions for first aid to wounded soldiers on the field of battle and a paper on the use of anesthetics for army surgeons. Our present professorship in surgery is named after him. Between 1810 and 1840, twenty-six new unregulated medical schools were started in the United States with forty-seven more by 1876, the American Centennial year. Dr. David Hosack 1 1 5 Before this dismal situation was brought under control, as a result of the Flexner report of 1910, over 457 medical schools had sprung up in this country. They were mostly diploma mills. The fabulous Flexner report which helped bring the situ- ation under control, mentions Columbia on twenty-one,oc- casions. Reading it makes one proud to be a P8-S gradu- ate. lt credits the P8-S alumni, under the leadership of Dr. Francis Delafield, for establishing at P815 the first medical school laboratory, quickly emulated by Bellevue and later by Johns Hopkins. lt said: The dispensary attached to P8-S represents the school dispensary at its best. In reading about the graduates of each class in succes- sive years, it becomes apparent that they were influential on policy making bodies guiding the affairs of the city, the state, and the nation. Many were active in fields other than medicine. ln 1858, Dr. Frederick Shrady fthe first of several PSS Shradysl was the founder and long-time edi- Dr. Valentine Mott tor of the Medical Record, apparently the first viable American medical periodical. ln 1857 came the first of several Lamberts. One, Samuel W. Lambert, was Dean, 1904-1919. He perhaps deserves a star as a great medi- cal teacher and administrator, but we shall award him one for being the Dean under whom the first women were ad- mitted to P8-S in 1917. A big star must go to Dr. Gulli Lindh Muller who was the most influential in overcoming the Dean's resistance to women in medicine--she was in the first group of women admitted and graduated at the head of the Class of 1921. ln 1864 we found Dr. Ja- neway, who became Professor of Pharmacology and Pathological Anatomy and later Commissioner of Health. Williard Parker gained so much fame that the Hospital for Infectious Diseases in New York City was named after him. We know that while President Grant was dying 116 Q-new I. I., I s-- '31 ff N., X - 4 w v 'Q 1 X 1 Gulli Lindh Muller, M.D. ' slowly of carcinoma of the throat, P8.S graduate Has- brouch Shrady tried to make his lost days more comfort- able as the ex-president hurried to complete his memoirs in order to leave his destitute family with a saleable book. We know of the fame of surgeon McCosh, after whom the large surgical amphitheatre in the original medical center was named, and we still use the Otis urethrotome. There are pages of distinguished older alumni, too nu- merous to list, and it is still too early to know which of the present generation will be tagged for fame. However, it can give one a start of pleasure to go into the highest of- fices of medical government and medical policy-making itqliflljli E A A lhllfgiilyr X lllillii' ,. pls- 1 X ea iFUl'!,5 gxll T if'-X. i X C E X li fit f we s 1 . .lag i V 'ali -Lftiliiiij ,Vi I 1 - .Y-I I , Blrll-l ll? iq .is . r -.C -A . organizations, to discover that there are P8.S graduates at every level. The P85 family gains an additional dimen- sion, if you also regard your teachers from the Presby- terian Hospitol programs as fellow alumni. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of being a P8-S alumnus is the fact that no matter where you go, any- where in the world, in medical circles, you will be pleased with the number of influential doctors who come and in- troduce themselves as fellow P8.S alumni. When Beniamin Franklin came up here 200 years ago for advice about his bladder stone and prostate, he knew what he was doing. John K. Lattimer, M.D., Sc.D. 'Printed with permission from the P815 Quarterly. ! im A Q. e vw N kk lit f ,V . ,1uJ ' x. Ethan Allen descendant John K. Lattimer captures Fart Ticonderoga from the British, ln the Name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress, during the bicentennial reenactment on May 70, 7975. ll f I 7 alpha omega alpha Daniel B. Carr Thomas J. Castellano Jean M. Chin Catherine Eng Nancy E. Epstein Patricia E, Gilhooly Bert M. Glaser Stephen E. Glinick Andrew M. Goldmann Jerome E. Groopman Jonathan D. Kaunitz Jose M. Marcal Harry J. Marshall Ill one viewpoint I-, . ,,,,.,.A,, sa.-. .,,,Y.., s- .Y ,....-.. ......f..,,v-.. l xx Cynthia and Renard Charity ll8 Marguerite B. McDonald James W. McNally Dennis S. Miura Andrew J. Packer Malcolm C. Phillips Clifford M. Ratner Jane E. Salmon Robert L. Schiffman Robert T. Schoen Robert W. Schultz Steven A. Stuchin Kamehameha K.M. Wong Jr. Attitudes toward women in medicine have changed greatly in recent years. The enrollment of women in medical school has in- creased yearly, along with that of Black students. Yet the mar- ried woman with a family is still looked upon as a poor risk med- ical school applicant. Numerous reasons are offered as to why women are unlikely to complete their medical training and be- come practicing physicians. But despite these attitudes, more married women with families are pursuing medical careers, and inroads are slowly being made. At least now there is an oppor- tunity where there once was none. Being a wife and mother is gratifying, yet a career in medicine enhances this fulfillment and favors the achievement of a happy, productive, and useful life, Time is often at a premium, especially in our household, where the mother is a medical student and the father is an obstetri- cian-gynecologist. Understanding, tolerance, and patience are essential on the part of all the family members. l can say that the past four years have been enjoyable, thanks to the help from my husband and son. It has been taxing at times, but anything worth having usually is. I feel it is important to make a commitment and then use the available resources to achieve that goal, V 'Y L Bob Rubin Mrs. Peter Libby, was Beryl Rica Benacerraf Qi .pi Qi' sol' , 1 'SP-1. , 'QQ' K +2 f' ' ' -r W. 'r , Q. 'Eff It '9 '. fi' 705' .5 it-if 5 e 1 0 5 4 gf-it , 5 .f to , .0 o Wg... ' s gi, 9 rr i it '4 rl. ov, --. 7 xi sau Y u U I' ,,.! V P F 5 f 4 I I L L l 1 E s l2l 1A Y 'N'kk ',, my K , W W WA iiiifiliiiii l'Is:llllfi:v I. ' ' s lf! ,v' - -'A ., F 'W7'-P39 11 rr :'tsx::'dI2':.1S X1 :il-A iw, pf. . !go',,,3L:'-uk gg wb. I I I ff 1 ' ,, aj af 'E' W gf WI' 'F IRI U H' '1 4' fe gi -- u .lwiunillxilg ' - 1 '-v-. , . . P 1'-lil 1 .'. .:1,.,5. A n u b,X,44M,':' 'O :l!c:..:::.:x:!u: : 'l l r-1 r'r-r 'I' 3. the class of 1976 in-rv? JAMES P ALMAS B.A., Stanford 1972 AGL., SOLY BAREDES B.A., Columbia 1 972 RAYMOND I.. AZZI B.S., M.I.T., 1972 A. sTevEN BARNETT B.A., obeflm, 1972 ,gl 195 LISA GWENDOLYN BARBERA B.S., Vasser, 1972 CHARLES M. BLATT B.A., Harvard, 1972 F-3 X-7 JOHN ANDREW BOWE B.S., Pennsylvania 1972 ALLAN BURKE B.A. Haverford 1971 1 , X RICHARD LAWRENCE BRONZO B.A., Hofstra, 1972 DOROTHY V. CALABRESE B.A., N.Y.u., 1972 LARRY K. BROWN B.S., Maryland 1972 DANIEL B. CARR B.A., Columbia 1968 -bi ag! CHRISTINA B. '93 CASALS-ARIET B.A. Fordham 1972 FLORENCE Y. CHAN B.S., Minnesota AJ 1972 ni- -1-J THOMAS CASTELLANO ' ' B.A., Harvard 1972 CYNTHIA MCCLENNON CHARITY B.A., Vanderbilt 1 969 Nall to-V11 T fi Wrj KENNETH CERNY 'li' ' ' B.A., Cornell 1972 JEA N MARGUERITE CHIN BA Hollins 1972 'W' 'wi YONG S. CHYUN F v' ' ' 7 i B.A., Cose Western Reserve, 1972 RONALD S. COHEN B.A., Columbia 1972 lvfmweewe MARY H. CLARK B.A., Middlebury 1971 KENNETH H. COHN B.A., Rochester 1972 MICHELLE OLIVETTE CLARK x --4 if 'sf B.A., Hunter, 1972 ROBERT L. DANIELS B.A., Princeton 1972 A? JEFFREY M. DAVIS B.A., Princeton 1972 CATHERINE ENG B.A., Wellesley 1972 QQJ ul--ug LAWRENCE DILLER B.A., Clark, 1972 NANCY EPSTEIN B.A., Barnard 1 972 'wif- JAMES V. DUNFORD, Jr. B.A., Syracuse 1972 JOSEPH M. FAZIO B.A., Holy Cross 1971 wo-J -f --'- --iv ----ly EDWARD S. FELDMAN B.A., Harvard 1972 IRA JAY FOX B.A., Harvard, 1972 CORNELIUS FLOWERS B.S., Southern Mississippi, 1972 1 DAVID HALL FRASZ B.A., Princeton 1968 SUSAN H FORSTER I4 v-'V B.A., Radcliffe 1972 LINDA NANCY FREEMAN B.A., PennsyIvania 1972 sl '17 H 'x ' 1 9 R EMANUEL FRIEDMAN B.S., Newark College of Englneermg 1972 EDMUND A. GELLER B.A., N.Y.U., 1972 O I IJ' ,..v-P YEE FUNG X B.S.E., Princeton 1 1972 DAVID A. GILDER B.A., Harvard 1972 IN, .-' I' 945 JAY M GALST B.S., Wlsconsln 1972 PATRICIA EILEEN GILHOOLY B.A., Manhatfonvnlle 1972 C I-91 a .H Qai- R' we-J , .,.,, BRENT W. GINSBERG B.A., Princeton 1972 ANDREW MILTON GOLDMANN B.A., Cornell, 1972 BERT M. GLASER B.A., N.Y.u., 1970 FREDERICK A. GONZALEZ B.A., Boston, 1972 STEPHEN E. GLINICK 5 ,J-' ,3 B.A., Bowdoin 1971 TONEY GRAHAM, JR. B.S., Cloflin, 1972 AP 1'- P N..-1 ROSALIE GREENBERG B.A., N.Y.u., 1972 GARY GROSS B.A., Sworfhmore 1 970 PETER KIM GREGERSEN B.S., Johns Hopkins 1972 'Wg 'Vin--. HARRY EDWARD GWIRTSMAN B.A., Yule, 1972 fi.gi,J1gff, ..-A fffff' 'V 1--L 4 av 13? . ,,,g,n,.:. ,, - 'i',', A- -. .1213-j ij? . 1' ' f-1 W, 132 JEROME ELLIOT GROOPMAN B.A., Columbia 1972 HUNTER A. HAMMILL B.S., Boston College 1971 MADELEINE HARBISON B.A., Wellesley 1971 iv Fi 'W 5- Ni H w-5--rr Y-Q Z f 2 X' fe.. AE' '- - JOYCE lLsoN D lb fs' ' 1 1 B.s., cafy College ' ffx'il51ll ' 1972 '14 .A JOHN S. HOPPOCK ' B.A., Princeton 1968 ..,,,! 1 ANDREW GLENN ISRAEL B.A., Stanford 1972 'K SHEPARD HURWITZ l?T'T ' B.A., Columbia 1972 MATTEETHRA C. JACOB B.S.E.E., Madras 1970. M.S., Imperial College lLondonl, 1971 S-J 1 133 gi JUDITH JAFFE B.A., Barnard 1972 Zi K, STUART KALMANOWITZ B.A., Princeton 1972 ' 'figs BABATUNDE A. JINADU 1 B.S., Central State QOhlo1, 1972 GEORG E ISAAC KARP B.A., Columbsa 1972 T CHARLES E. E 1 41...-r .-.1'? ,. gr' -- v 1. .mx S A W Ln n -nl,-1. -5lnJ'x.r 4 ,.v- v- JOHNSTON, II B.A., Yale, 1971 JONATHAN D. KAUNITZ B.A., Columbia 1 972 1 THOMAS KINASZCZUK JR B A Prmceton 1972 JAMES JOSEPH KUCHERA B.S., Scranton BETH KOSTER 1972 s-Q B.A., Smaih, 1973 MARVIN ROY ESTHER HO KUNG B.A., Hunter, 1972 IVX 1--Q ff? 2? KREMBERG B.A., Brooklyn, 1972 PAMELA A. LAWRENCE B.A., Stanford 1968 ra .f-- . -vw xx 1972 105 MARY ELLEN LEDER B.A., Rochester STANLEY A. LOPYAN Queens College JAY H. LEFKOWITCH B.A., Clark, 1972 BARBARA R. LOWE B.S., Tufts, 1972 BRUCE E LEITER ,wwf 794 ' Y L E X It B S Dartmouth 1972 6 M. PHILIP LUBER B.A., Pennsylvania 1972 if JEANNE MANDELBLATI' B.A., Southern Calufornla, 1972 MARGUERITE B. ll V MCDONALD , 2 B.A., Manhattanville 115' 1972 L. JOSE M. MARCAL B.A., Hamllton 0-' 1972 STEPHEN A. MCGUIRE B.S. Idaho 1970 M.S., Mlchlgan State, 1972 .4 if 4-I HARRY J. MARSHALL IW' B.s., M.1.1., 1969 JAMES W.McNALLY s.s., M.I.T., 1972 7 'ffl .xqf ad' 45 A FRANCIS MENDOZA A ' B.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1968 M.S., N.Y.U., 1970 WILLIAM A. MITCHELL, JR. B.A., Penn State 1972 WOODSON C. MERRELL B.A., Amherst, 1971 ROGER C. MIXTER B.A., Amherst, 1971 ffuv' 43 .,,.4-47 Z 138 ROBERT A. MEYERS B.A., Dartmouth 1972 PHILIP M. MOUNT B.A., Oberlin, 1963 M.A., Wake Forest, 1968. Ph.D., Tulane 1972 ALFRED I. NEUGUT B.A., Columbia 1972 O. HOWARD OGILVIE B.S., Utah, 1972 ft' WALTER L. NIEVE5 A an 1'- sf' ,.-- B.S., City College 1972 EMILIE H.S. OSBORN BA Radcliffe 1969 BRIAN T. NOLAN B.S., Yale, 1972 HARRY OSTRER M I T 1 .,-.4 . A , 139 ANDREW J. PACKER B.A., Princeton 1972 WILLIAM P. PETERS xi Penn State, SEBASTIAN T. PADRON 1972 vol B.A., Indiana, 1971 40 MALCOLM CHARLES 'lv' Q-0' wa B.A., Amherst, PHILLIPS 1972 'E ONEALL E. PARRIS B.S., Yale, 1972 CLIFFORD M. RATNER B.A., Pennsylvania 1967 wav! i AF R- MARIO F. ROMAGNOLI B.S., Fordham, 1972 SARAN S. ROSNER B.A., Dartmouth 1972 STEPHEN M. ROSENTHAL B.A., Yale, 1972 MARVIN I. RUDERMAN B.A., Pennsylvania 1972 in ,.4 .4 ,-Au., Q?- MEL ROSENWASSER B.A., Johns Hopkins 1972 JANE SALMON B.A., N.Y.U., 1972 4 '4, 141 GUILLERMO R. SANCHEZ B.S., Seton Hall 1966. Ph.D., Columbia, 1970 HARRY DAVID B.A., Culy College 1966. M A Queens 1971 Ph D Clfy College 1972 CLYDE SCHECHTER B.A., Columbla 1967 LOUISA BEA SCHNEIDER B.S., Queens 1971 ROBERT L SCHIFFMAN B.A., Horvord, 1972 MICHAEL J SCHNUR B.A., N Y U 1 2 ' qui ROBERT T. SCHOEN B.A., Horvord, T972 99 DAVID SILVERMAN W. .gm B.A., Columbia 9' - iff? 1972 Eg: O Ez, ROBERT SCHULTZ 4, B.S., Notre Dome, 1972 H I -fr' il iv' b ALFRED ABE STEINBERGER . B.S.,Cify College, 1972 LL A iq ELAINE CAROLE SHOJI BS Collfornla flrvunej T972 Y ' Nr' tg? ,.-7 MICHAEL STERNSCHEIN B.A., Oberlin, T970 T4 FT x L , 44 -6 'N-L STEVEN A. STUCHIN B.A. Yale 1972 ROBERT P. TURNER B.A. Princeton 1972 NEIL S. TALON v f-fi i , B.A., Michigan I972 PHILIP C. URSELL B.A., Haverford I972 I WI, HOWARD TAYLOR B.S., Hobart, I972 I MARY E.L. VERNON Q s.s., soufh Carolina State, I972 .J FRANK A. VETERAN B.A., Harvard, 1972 KAMEHAMEHA K. WONG B.A., Johns Hopkms 1972 ELIZABETH ANN 62 WELCH B.A., N.Y.U., 1972 JOHN WOOD B.A., Columbia 1972 GREGORY A. WILLETS B.A., Wisconsin 147 K 3 1972 PHILLIPA G. WOODRIFFE B.S., Molloy, 1972 GG aj wr 'V 14 146 MIKE YAREMCHUK BA Yale 1972 U ,nav NOT PICTURED Barbara L. Binkerf Barry Breaux Barry G. Chaiken David M. Chernock Eric J. Drimmer Warren O. Ferris Louis Jimenez Joseph P. Kleaveland Roberi A. Rosenberg Paul C. Ruesfow Douglas J. Van der Heide JEREL ZOLTICK B.A., Princeton 1972 2 JOHN YERGAN B.A., Columbia 1972 K MEDICAL SCIENTIST TRAINING PROGRAM Students Graduating in 1978 Alfred I. Neugut VWIIiam P. Peters Robert A. Rosenberg Jane E. Salmon fs-. lux ' '- '5' .1 - . , ,-'-inf' '- 1 '1-1 ,J A f ' , V ,, Q ' :'29 gy-ff L, x .' .gg W xl-4'5 5t..5'f'.'i'4 r'.:j,,,y,' A - , 1. W., H, , 9 Q.,,,.L,4.,:LL.z,.,,3 ..,,,.,. .M I ' V A -nw-, -4: --4,-1 e.w,r. , 147 The correct answer, of course, is B II and 31. You couId not copulate or eat without your heart. ATIO AL BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMI ERS - .. ..,. ,K ,.-- Men, . . O 'T -5' 'Im 5? j Ln' - '. J I9 I5 52 'I ' vjfv Vx- if KC.,,.,.ff ao- own 3595355.95 O3OCC.Qu1'+o vi 4 C 3'-.Q fDU'5L:'j66'OQ- Q91-nE.:.g9.: g 3u'Q. '0 -1 :r 'U- v-.,o :Uma-5. Eivgfmgma O I'11 33t5:'5 54 -.7.'o.6. -f C4'L'.:-' 073111 Q00 2rnS4fE:3.5'- ffDXO1cD 0 3' -+C' I, '0m E'9,'o 3'3ojm 3'rpQ1 .4 33-.0 - '03mDS..fPrn gngfbmwgs'-'G .mv-TO' 'Des 1 .oC35ZXIvi Qwoslomc-Ego-O52 fD39+S42fD5 4 - . FDU' 3 U'2-Q-3390 o-cm OCE- -I sioigffaea rn QEBLDT3 3.0: O 00-21 10 3 Q..,.2-n0fD-.- MZ-'0fDF1 -1 'Oieewzgfn om5'g-rn3 ' -P gEo'wg'gfo.o 032-1025 '0:1:'-.Q--3 mVl'15'DI.n3 afsjaww -FD QQQ i '39,.33,,1 CI1' -. Evra'-+12: f'D3m:'rD-+ -v-.W fp-1--O 9-.Tg2o.Ing OU'Q:1'-0 L2?.f3'D:+5 ,,,Qfn-.9,o., U.-,-13-.-13-Z vi3r.n0oo-5' -'mg-:QDCD Q :a ,,,-1,-D-. OO-Q-.g3'Q3 :r-IIE'-T.0.9+39. USA DIRECTIONS For each statement, ONE or MORE of the completions given is correct. On the answer sheet, fill in the circle containing A if only I, 2 and 3 are correct B if only I and 3 are correct C if onIy 2 and 4 are correct D if only 4 is correct E if all are correct SAMPLE QUESTION The heart is an organ of which systemfsj. I. Reproductive 2. Nervous system 3. Digestive system 4. The Soviet State Police GO G550Jelbl.5Ha. f Natmnaj 5635 J Fw.kQF1f4g1l 0. ,-1. a ww1:1Pv'5 Qu-TIIC Aum m4?W fi w Phase, color' m the following NAME- if r,zfe2f'fr,:1:.,zs?n2f.: 512351 mmf ADDRESS EIL 'lm I' 0l Tl Q1ffLL1fl1TTT 0 Year or may UW Clam! mr UW Us Ue'Lljj1'L1jl8 139'L1jj10 fj1na'g312 Social Sccufiiy number 1 I I l 10' Pet dogs. registry number fwhere appmpriatd Career inte,-est : U Urology El Anesthesiology U Other Reasons Qu- entering medicine: C1 Prestige, U Financial reward U Pushy parents U Othef Best Ending on a recent physical exam you did: E154 gallop Uclubbing Upgpilleclema f:1Chancre DBTMR D A-PUC-3' 0 0! flhnswers -Har this Section are to be Filled in below. Wu will Find not 6119149 gpm-.ee available Har the number- OF Questions asKed. This gives you a mediocre score, to :Cas-F with, and we thereby have you. over a barrel, I We aseumm most of your answers are auesses, so if goes without 53 5 that ou should ness when unsure of proper fespanse. yyg I Here is usuagy Ofliy one nor-rect answer, howevuq the-,fe may be -Five! FILL 1N BOXES snow: O 23 C6 3 CS Tha term Lues reQrs to a disease a..O P11-st' described by Sample 3 ti : Myguess isl 1. '10 000040120 36- Us on 2.00000 57- O 3.00000 as. 00000 4 O O 0 O O OOO O Loue11a 'Pav-sans O 59- 5.00000 +o. 00000 lg, 0 Em-Jernic To medic-d Studai-1 L C.. O Transmitted by using dia-Z7 6.00000 OOOOO ffngerbown, QQQQQ d,QNorxeoffUweabov2. ' OOOOO F , , G Q 1 223332 00000 TBDOQQQQMZZQML tO'fLfb,2je1-9' OOOOO 'becnomitted 1500000 QQQQQ Pmbablg' 21 0 0 0 0 0 dxwiautfor UOOOOO 00000 you. . 29.00000 00000 30-OOOOO OOOOO 31.00000 QOCQQ 32-OOOOO 33.00000 OOOOO s4.00000 55.00000 SS-00000 00000 J 1 . 2. 150 123 ALL CORRECT SUMMARY OF DIRECTIONS A B C D E , , 1,3 2,4 4 Study the photograph of the patient on the right, and choose the correct answerisj. 1. This is a simple case of Thrush in a young medical student. 2. This is a patient who, among other problems, has a typical Gilles de la Tourette's disease, refractory to Haloperidol. 3. This patient could be helped by long term Lithium therapy. 4. A complete work up of this patient would include inspection of his gummas. The patient shown here in the Drinker is receiving therapeutic transnasal aspiration. The physician appears to be ..... 1. Sodistic 2. A sadomasochist 3. A chiropractor 4. Kind and gentle l ' B L, -A X A A- L 1 , L l-.. L 'eau L. 'l by 1 s. 3. - s. 4. X: il SUMMARY OF DIRECTIONS A B C D E ALL CORRECT The slide shown here under the miscroscope represents: I. Artifact 2. A mutant strain of Aspergillus 3. Highly differentiated testicular seminomci 4. Gicrdio gambinolosis suMMARY or DIRECTIONS A is c 1,2,3 1,3 2,4 You are a first year resident in Neurology, and are presenting a patient with Wilson's Disease. During the presentation you real- ize that you have forgotten the most re- cent ceruloplasm level. You should . . . l. Asked to be excused for pressing per- sonal reasons. 2. Wait until you are asked, then say: Ceruloplasm?!? What's that? 3. Insist that the serum procelain level is 80. 4. Say They don't do ceruloplcisms at night at this hospital. You are in the Coronary Care Unit one night in a small hospital in Alaska, when you notice that the EKG on your patient shows 3 per second spike and wave forms. You should . . . I. Tell the nurse, we control the horizon- tal, you control the vertical! 2. Change the channel. 3. Diagnose atrial fibrillation and treat with rectal exams lie. digitalizel 4. Shout HARREST, STAT, Presbyterian Hospital, 9th floor . . 52 SUMMARY OF DIRECTIONS A B C D E I, 2, 3 T, 3 2, 4 4 ALL CORRECT f EVVT -1 A ,xx A -1' L5, x Q 1 6. You are a physician in the Department of Medicine at a large metropolitan hospital. A 26 year old woman comes to you for a routine physical examination. During the exam she begins to cry and tells you that she has never experienced orgasm. You should . . . T. Set a date between the patient and your Chief Resident. 2. Call the patient's husband to ask him to try harder. 3. Send the patient to the Psychiatry clinic where she will be treated by a second year medical student. 4. Tell her, l'm sorry lady, but that's not my problem. ' l , X 4 V ' Q F A X r 3 . .., . LsEMm:z,.w...fT , 8 1 Hiya. - hge. I H, V 4----. . X 'x STOP 1976 yearbook staff Co-editors-in-chief I Patricia E. Cilhooly and Marvin I. Ruderman photography editors business manager and Catherine Eng associate editor COVER AND ARTWORK JAY LEFKOWITCH CONTRIBUTORS EMILIE OSBORN TOM KINASZCZUK STEPHEN GLINICK MARIO ROMAGNOLI GUILLERMO SANCHEZ MELVIN ROSENWASSER RONALD COHEN CLYDE SCHECHTER JUDITH JAFFE BABATUNDE JINADU Av X I I. 7- , X - 1 X , E, -,A Q r r-':'-eff' The past four years of our lives at P 8- S seem to have gone by with incredible speed. During this time we changed from a group of first year medical students all taking the same courses at the same hours to a very diversified body of physicians pursuing different medical careers with different life-styles. As we move farther away from this stage in our lives, our years together as students will seem remote, and perhaps more nostalgic. The purpose of this yearbook has been to capture some of our iaint memories and preserve them primarily for our classmates. As you may know, the yearbook had been discontinued at P 8. S after l97O, following 24 years of publication. When we initiated work on this book three years ago, our feelings were that the endeavor was worth our time and effort. We have learned that it was no small effort, and required a great deal of time. Many long hours have gone into the photography, photographic processing, layout, type sheets, and proof-reading, to mention only a part of the iob. It was our hope to include as many candid photographs of every- one in our class and of as many faculty as possible. Unfortunately, due to circumstances beyond our control, our intent was not fully realized. However, there have been no intentional omissions. We would like to extend our thanks to those contributors who helped with various stages. We are grateful to Cathy Eng who acted as our sole assistant during much of the seeming eternity in- vovled in the production of the layout pages and typesheets. We wish to thank the Public Relations Office for the use of a number of their photographs, We thank Carol Studios, Inc. and photographer Joe Gagliano for the excellent class photographs, The Alumni Association has been most helpful and we gratefully acknowledge the support they have given the yearbook. Additional thanks to Dr. John Lattimer and Dr. Stanford Pulrang for their his- torical perspective. We are deeply appreciative of the advertising support rendered by Sidney A. Sass Associates, lnc., and we wish to thank the Bookstore as well for their support. Our thanks to Miss Johanna Farley and the P 8 S Club for the generous assistance in the early stages of the planning of the book. Dr. Ann S. Peterson has always been encouraging to us and we thank her for her assis- tance in contacting our classmates by mail. We also thank Tony at the P 81 S Information Desk for his help with our mail. The assis- tance of Herff-.lanes Yearbooks and representative Tom Swift was appreciated. Finally, this yearbook could not have been published without the enthusiastic support of those parents and faculty members who acted as our Sponsors. We especially wish to thank President Wil- liam McGill for his generous contribution to the Yearbook. W mm. ....,,- . .- '- for-v i ' ,,.1.- L. , . il. V.'. 2- 5 g....... Y...... .. . If . s tx - , ,s....i l W ' ' Eli-,l , A-. V ' t V I Jw.. If xx A LM X 1 i li ,YL QY i ' . . cu 1 ,f -.ii I ii o lai k 4 iw ,gg wt J, Nl di J , 'fx Ii! 't- .Ju 1 it 3 -if .Mille , I - -1 ,gs , Q, ' Ll5ffl 'f gg N, - 4 vfr 11' 1 X X , xl ,D - ' 9 '. g .fl rgf ' 52:7 .Z 'P we . i'9 ff' '- lf you 1Iu11'l lIIllll1,PU.t . jiri! f11'11r1',t,r ilu' HIIIIS zuitlmiil jfliiliiiiijflfiznfg iilniifl filinul llic fiiijilx iliwiiivi limit tlirli irmirlf' SPONSORS Dr. and Mrs. D.J. Almas Dr. Henry Aranow, Jr. Dr. David H. Baker Harold G. Barker, M.D. Arthur M. Barnett Milos Basek, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. William A. Bauman Dr. Richard Behrman H.H. Bendixen, M.D. Dr. Frederick O. Bowman, Jr. John Bryant, M.D. Sidney B. Burke, M.D. Vincent P. Butler, M.D. Charles J. Campbell, M.D. Dorothy W. Castellano Bernard H. Chaiken, M.D. Bernard Challenor, M.D. Dr. Shu Chien Drs. Charles and Margaret Clark Wilburforce Clark, Jr. Louis Z. Cooper, M.D. Edward C. Curnen, Jr., M.D. Lawrence Daniels Felix E. Demartini, M.D. H.M. Dick, M.D. John A. Downey, M.D. Robert M. Ellsworth, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Carl R. Feind Dr. A.L. Feldman Andrew G. Frantz, M.D. Henry Clay Frick, ll, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Gambino Glenda Garvey, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Max Geller Welton M. Gersony, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Gilhooly Sid Gilman, M.D. Harold S. Ginsberg, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Glinick ISO Mr. and Mrs. David Gold Dr. DeWitt S. Goodman Susan G. Gordon, M.D. Dr. Albert Grokaest Groopman Family Ruth T. Gross, M.D. David V. Habif, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. James F. Hammill Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Harbison Dr. F.G. Hofmann E.M. Housepian, M.D. Robert M. Hui, M.D. Herbert Jaffe, Inc. Austin D. Johnston, M.D. Dr. Norman Kahn Dr. and Mrs. Paul E. Kaunitz Dr. and Mrs. John M. Kinney Lawrence C. Kolb, M.D. Donald S. Kornfeld, M.D. Dr. Seymour Koster Robert S. Krooth, M.D. Dr. John K. Lattimer Edgar Leifer, M.D. Laban W. Leiter, M.D. Dr. John N. Loeb Rochelle Lopyan Dr. and Mrs. Martin Lorin Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Luber William J. McGill Sidney Malitz, M.D. Paul Marks, M.D. George W. Melcher, Jr. Jay l. Meltzer, M.D. W. Jost Michelsen, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. William A. Mitchell Councilman Morgan, M.D. Thomas Q. Morris, M.D. Charles S. Neer, Il, M.D. Dr. Mero R. Nocenti Dr. H.L. Nossel Dr. Ann S. Peterson Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Phillips Kermit L. Pines, M.D. Kathryn F. Prescott, M.D. C.A. Rogan, Jr., M.D. Keith Reemtsma, M.D. Mario Romagnoli Matilda Romagnoli Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rosenwasser Samuel Rosner, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ruderman Thomas V. Santulli, M.D. Joseph F. Schultz Daniel Sciarra, M.D. William B. Seaman, M.D. Harold F. Spalter, M.D. Alex Steinberger Frank E. Stinchfield, M.D. Dr. Robert J. Stock F.C. Symonds, M.D. John V. Taggart, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Talon Donald F. Tapley, M.D. Gerard M. Turino, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Howard G. Turner Anthony E. Veteran Carmine T. Vicale, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. T.H. Welch Walter A. Wichern, Jr., M.D. Philip D. Wiedel, M.D. Susan Williamson, M.D. Dr. Myron Winick Samuel David Winner, M.D. Marianne Wolff, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. William Woodriffe Dr. B.A. Zikria THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OE THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURC-EONS EXTENDS CONGRATULATIONS AND A WARM WELCOME TO OUR NEWEST MEMBERS THE CLASS OF 1976 fm Zia Cf!m4Qff976 ADMINISTRATORS OF the OFFICIAL GROUP INSURANCE PROGRAMS for the Alumni Association College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University FEATURING THE ENDORSED LOW-COST LIFE INSURANCE PLAN INCOME PROTECTION PLAN 58 n A-gr, .c-'A' 5-4-X l A IS'-:-- 4, ,. -,,,..... .-.- - - .. -,z'L. J, ...J ..-- - -114- -.4 -,--a' .,.s. .. . Y ,,,..u:.,T, Ha? xi Nr 3' -1. .Dyk lx' ' 1 L A 13' f' Ago jiqk , V fi, ' QV -myrb ,' , Afg x. 1-f ' . in A,,,l Y . S ir gqyjp vig f Zo W X N.- I, x ' 1' L Q - 1? A K f 11 A ' ' ' 2 v ' ' ff Roo 'HWfk i - T . ' . WE- E, 3 -T 'f ,Y LM' ' Li! -A 41 - z , X 'z E. K Rh?-. -. --tg: L XX cnlL'ull1r11lmxN1u!ux.nM uulur lhmkxlorc cxluml om l'or1gr,nuI.m-mx In thc mcnxhuu ot' Ihc dow ot WW XX L' .mlm hope thot our lwmkx will hcl x.-,,h.,,1,14, 5l'l P lirm loumI.mon ilu your fululu cam-mx innw mln our NI--rc .ami Iulk gut .nv quxnntcd he xxllldoourMwtlohcVpn1.4kc thc lmrmln-n Ihmuuh nun nn-Llnoxl ulmkxf vn .X sn .ml A pow' N K The Columbia Univursllv Medical Center Bookstore oath of hippocrates I swear by Apollo the physician, and Aesculapius, and Hygeia, and Panacea, and all the gods and god- desses, that according to my ability and iudgment I will keep this oath and this stipulation: to reckon him who taught me this Art equally dear to me as my parents, to share my substance with him and relieve his neces- sities if required, to look upon his offspring as my own brothers and to teach them this Art, if they shall wish to learn it, without fee or stipulation, and that by pre- cept, lecture, and every other mode of instruction I will impart a knowledge of the Artlto my own sons and those of my teachers, and to disciples bound by a sti- pulation and oath according to the law of medicine, but to none others. I will follow that system of regimen wich according to my ability and iudgment I consider for the benefit of my patients, and abstain from what- ever is deleterious and mischievous. I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest' any such counsel, and in like manner I will not give to a woman a pessary to produce abortion. With purity and with holiness I will pass my life and practice my Art. I will not cut persons laboring under the stone, but will leave this to be done by men who are practitioners of this work. Into whatever houses I enter I will go into them for the benefit of the sick and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption, and further, from the seduction of females and freemen and slaves. Whatever, in professional practice or not in or hear in the life of men which of abroad. I will not divulge, as such should be kept secret. While I this oath unviolated may it be life and the practice of the Art, respected by all men and all'times. But should I trespass and violate this oath may the reverse be my Iiit. ,V 3 I - ' '-' . ' .vs qt.: ' Alnwywf .,.. . .1 If ' .,,,m in x , x. -.. M-Lax fi 'Ji' , -s..vir5L L1 . All f!'7'.,c I r 'ff new A ,, ,-I--f' -ii xx .2 V49 .I-I 1. 2-p . Emir I f!'!'.-Cibfw ' A- , A 3?532'5'Ei1ff 5:2 WI., H? ,. , 1 1 q.,,,Ax , 4 'f n 0. ,- f N -aff: H - ,fr 'W' .. .,: vwqfa. ,- . ,+,,,f1g,-1'f- ,J L: , t -1-. 4z,:13'W94fsE4-1 ' 'ff ' f.1:'Rizf,fQ4y'r,,-l Q, ' -if . f,.4 f.,f-fu' .,y., ,X V ,--, .. , 1 Y ' e..L .r z .V J.Xrm KQV, L. . -v Y - 1 -.. Q . Q . ll .--- . ..- Q 4 . -,-4. 'Q N'-151 1i'x3-,., - f-gb, , dam-' 4 h . . I I w 1 I.. V- -z,. ' . --.' :,.1L-5 . ' n I . gn. ,A 'A-5 1' PYT, .,d a a -I i I -e 1 0 . . ' 0 . ' s 1 ' nl c- O U 9 .cargo an Q-1 you u'cI0'l '0'u f l 'I' O'.' .' ...' '. . . t., , . - - .. . n QQ it be 01 sit - Q Q 1 Q 1 -Q Q.
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