Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons - P and S Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1984
Page 1 of 192
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1984 volume:
“
I I I E s .ff I fe: 4- ..- V',f- .V 1 1'.?P3 ' ' . Y l9!'l7l dfkL 'ff ly' 'A .29 ' ir W1 Q Q. Q 'M 1. gf. 1 CGLUMBIA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS GF 1984 QSSXCIANS Q , iylmnw A1116 YLRS L , of ! C2 LU Q' Q? 652' 'K CD Bi en? fp Q 72 :J W 5- Z Q1 PJ L ,153 ' E 1 C1 0593 N5 'S 32 ' U3 KJ Li E 'Q . 'QE Q67 45 X X g -nf X 1 'XS ' Y X903 QWMOO X1 S 'UNH xy' I r -- bf.,- Q I -:Jani , .J ., , 7, .Q I V719 A lh..:1L -4.292 - ..+. I-, 'Ks v , gzkx L-I-'ix N. 3? L A53 ' I i 0 , S - 1 ,. , ny' ff i ., 7, .4 -, ,ag 1 'W' Lwvk ,1 'vg' 642, President of Columbia University Provost and Vice President for Health Sciences Michael I. Sovern, L.L.B., L.L.D. Chon.J Robert F. Goldberger, M.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine To the Class of l984: My congratulations to each of you. I congratulate you not only for the completion of your arduous years in school but on your entrance into what I consider the most challenging and most rewarding of all professions. As graduates of one of the finest of all the world's medical schools. you are uniquely prepared to practice that profession. At the same time you bear a special responsibility. to maintain and uphold those standards of scientific skill and humanitarian conduct which have been the hallmark of this school for more than two centuries. I am confident you will make P 84 S proud of you. Good luck and best wishes. Donald F. Tapley. M.D. Dean QM Rcdiscovcrcd N.nmn.nI bnllv.-rx ul Xrl Ium IN l'lHI-WLM 2, l'PX2 L.,- ...- Q V7 1 ' f- 7 X , L-'W-MLW Y X , ' , 7 , Vu- I, 13 'I-L r ' 1 h K ', ii- - , f4 L. X - fa' : ,WA ,y po X 1 55 .Rff X 4 3 zf ,Q - :- if! .1,. -1 W' H . V pq af gg . 7 V f w 1 ! K ' 1 : .1 3 Lis, 4 ka-6 -Nagy pr lib-71' Lei l 'f' Associate Dean for Student Affairs 549043,- For the Class of 1984: Changes!!! Changes have occurred since August 1980. Twelve of you have moved into other classrooms and 13 have joined the Class of 1984. You have matured through 3 Vice Presidents for Health Sciences. Three of7 Associate Deans, 9 of 22 Chairmen, and 16 of 38 Course Directors have changed. You paid 36,500 tuition in 1980 and 511,340 in 1983. Scho- larships given rose from '35850,000 to 951,200,000 Yet the greatest changes have been in you. Coming into P8cS, the Handbook noted your characteristics included kindness, diversity, leadership, stamina and intellectual curiosity. These have led you into a variety of postgraduate pursuits reflecting changes in modern medicine. You are entering oc- cupational, emergency and rehabilitation medicine, patholo- gy research, anesthesiology and radiology as well as medi- cine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics-gynecology and family practice. Most of you have just begun making the decisions which will eventually lead to your specialty endeavors, and these decisions are being made with phenomenal insight, objectivity, concern and empathy. Your outstanding trait as a class is kindness, variously de- fined as natural grouping, species, manner, essence, cate- gory, affectionate, loving, sympathetic, forbearing, benign, merciful, gracious, and simply humaneness. These you brought with you and these you are taking with you as Physi- cians and Surgeons. I congratulate you on this achievement! Linda D. Lewis, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs EA '5- 2 . :Sir-,515 113 ': ' ,,., i , V! J W X 1 .52 .JA ,Ff- J I art, ' ,M - --4 X 1 f' bxfx i . 1'- ,,. -x , X561 gyvvf' ,if H X! fvf' I V ' I' A LJ 5 X F A .. 'vs I 'Iv wg 1 , , 7?'?' ' NORMAN , 'J IS THAT N ' - 9 YOU? -X N. wx , 'U - . r,.,,, Y I I 5. QQ gn. S VU' vfooo 41' 'Q PLN 'N 1 L ' :Z Y h Q- . WS' ? ' N I i5 Y M1 .xi :A ,v my - X 5 Pm C4 D r P15 C y 'fx . .t. .X F T' 5, 7 XS A 9- -,4 ra .v V. A fb 'N N ' x 1 - sy! 4-:gr-' 1' f , A N5 ' 'f '-in U, .- af .df I ' ' A - 4' ,.- 4 4, ,- ,Z 4 rv 1 11..- Q. h A X ,unlim- N. I I 1 I '73 Xe. 'ff- YC-P' 1- GY. - 1 . '.:', H I 5 AMA nc. . , ,bv Xi-L , 4 'h r-if ,XJ ' 'AXW7 we .ini '1' .P - f, . ,. , - 1 4,1 Gt f .pg , A W x- - N. 5 W .- ill. JU' 1 l x l 7.1 51 .1 L! x.f . -ww' ' ut' :- ,,.,.V -, 1' NYT' ,.-f ,- 9 W , J. V C . F' P- 1 r'L - u' fff -1. U I . fl xl' .. .-. -MJ: fm' 1 ' F' 'lf Y' 4f j7:fI'j 'I+ , 1 X ff 4 ' 1-62-if fiffmf ' 1 H , k N -4. -. - 134: ,R 4 ,. ' ga ' 7 .HL Lf, .-'H , hi Q ' -, ..,A, A 1 , 4 A , x .Q 'V f:'- 'FQ' : 4 fi ,C 3 Si'f' dr--Qf 9x ' , f N' ,,.f',,X A 'Q -:v43.,-L' f , QT 5..'E 1'-fr g'f , ,- fi fe. ff . f 'H Ari fe- - i X Af-rf 11 'QQ TWT - QXQS- -rj- 5 In 'ii 5 Y Y v , . V -W V, I I - x ,. 5 . 4 1, 1 Q 9- be -.. ,,, gk x A53 . -. ff' - -seg , M A 'MLP A N S :Nec 1 K mill? v. fa, mf 'ck lf! if Y SQ? 5 X594 ' f-ff Y ., M -A af 'fl :f QJ Y 'V ,L A '- uf. - ' j , .',J,'..' I L ' ' ' ' ' 'f - ' ' f .N .-.ir F 'Q 7 Q27 4' . ,, 4, A 52' 'Q XX , +1 W ai?-'iii 'K BN: Wwxx 2 - 21 .x, X 'F 1 Q , ' 7 x',7.,-1. A B mai v f'r ...1.-.gsgvf ' J, ...N ,.,,,, eral- - ,, I . ,Ani-f. 1 .fi .3--- ' '-'J 3-. 1 . r- ,-.-5 51,0-1, u 4 1 I 9 ll' Nui, n -01155 Y A 4 . fb Z NLS Q, 'Y ., f . ., x 0- , ' , , Fri q3'Y'i'ff'Z e -.v , '- . - f V A 'Y L ws'L.j-5,-,k.i I 'S 1142. 'r' 1 M E5 I! 'W Pig- w XX. We S- 9 l President P 8: S Club HS i r Mark A. Rautenberg President Class of 1984 O LeRoy E. Rabbani Can you believe it's been four years already! I've been told that We have a truly special class and I couldn't agree more. The warmth and camar- aderie We have shared in these four years, I feel has supported us through many trying times. Best ofluck to all in the future. To my classmates - Congratulations on finally making it! Never allow the path ahead to tarnish the basic personal qualities that have collectively made us the truly unique class: dedication, Warmth, sensitivity and camaraderie. Thank you for afford- ing me the privilege of working closely with each of you. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS In colonial America formal medical education as we know it was nonexistent. The only means of obtaining training in the healing arts was via the apprentice system. The apprentice would care for his master's home, office, and perhaps his stable and in return would have access to his master's medical texts, if any, would be taught the preparation of prescriptions. bloodletting and other such effective treatments. and would be allowed to accompany his master on patient visits. There was no government regulation of physicians. On February 15, 1753 William Livingston's Independent Reflector addressed itself to t'The Use and Importance of the Practice of Physic: together with the Difficulty of the Sciences, and the Dismal Havock made by Quacks and Pretenders. He wrote, in part: No man is of greater Service or Detriment to Society than a Physician. If he is skillful, industrious and honest he is of unspeakable Benefit to Mankind: but if incapacity. idleness and Roguery are his characteristics. he is a curse to By Robert Kimball the community. The city of New York in 1760 passed the first colonial law requiring physicians to pass an examination of basic competency. but exempted those already in practice. It was into such a setting that the Medical School' of King's College was born in 1767. A group of six New York City physicians, all of whom had received medical degrees at universities in Europe, wrote to the Governors of King's College proposing the formation of a medical school and offering their services as professors. On August 14, 1767 the Governors passed a resolution creating such a school, with the six physicians who had initiated the proposal appointed to the faculty as follows: Dr. Samuel Clossy. Professor of Anatomyg Dr. Peter Middleton, Professor of Physiology and PatholOgYL Dr. John Jones, Professor of Chirurgeryg Dr. Samuel Bard, Professor of the Theory and Practice of Physic: Dr. James Smith. Professor of Chemistry and the Materia Medica: and Dr. John V. B. Tennent. Professor of , .,, ,,,f, V -.. N, gg.- - --f r'f: -v-ds., - - - , ' Q-' 'ani-Si Ti: --Q '.ff5g 1 5r'Z': -, . f , 4a-.L-ev-we -ii N .,----- , -gil -4 ...x-5.-N .,' . V- - King's College circa 1760 18 Q g 1- -x ..'i :' I Y ' 7 5 V' ,bi . . ,ff 9 lf ,. ' ' 1 . -' ff I YQ-'ff ? .T 4-me . 'U-I ii-. I .ll I... ' 'I' .II E . 1. l i is 1-' 35 1 ,,-1 -0-5. 1-L ...A ' I , 1 ...,.4:. C College of Physicians and Surgeons. 1856 - 1887 Midwifery. Jones, Middleton. and Clossy were all established. respectable New York City physicians. Jones was the foremost surgeon in the province. Clossy already held the Chair of Natural Philosophy ta field which included anatomyl. and Middleton was a highly respected practitioner. The other three men were all recent medical graduates. Of the six. Samuel Bard had perhaps been best prepared for a teaching role. His father was Dr. John Bard who. in 1750, with the aforementioned Dr. Middleton. conducted the tirst instruction of anatomy through dissection in the colonies. Dr. Bard had originally come to New York City at the urging of Benjamin Franklin. and quickly came to be one of the most respected members of the medical profession. Samuel was apprenticed to his father for a time. then enrolled at Kings College where. in his spare time. he received lessons in Greek and Latin. In 1762. at the completion of his third year. Samuel sailed to Europe to attend Edinburgh. He was a diligent student. took private lessons in mathematics and drawing and. over one summer. compiled a botanical collection which won the annual botanical prize. It is apparent that during his stay at Edinburgh he discussed the need for a medical school in the colonies with other American students. including John Morgan. who went on to found the medical department of the College of Philadelphia in 1765. Samuel realized his education entailed considerable expense: but I hope I shall never repent it. and that it will some day be returned with interest. Bard's graduation thesis was a report of observations of the effects of opium on himself and his roommate. He concluded that opium was a sedative. not a stimulant. After receiving his M.D. in 1765. Samuel returned to New York to join practice with his father. A degree in Arts or satisfactory knowledge of Latin and natural philosophy was required for admission to the medical school. In order to receive a degree each student was required to have completed one course of lectures in each field and to have been enrolled for three years. although a three year apprenticeship would reduce this requirement to two years. At the completion of three years. the Bachelor of Medicine was conferred. Another year of study with the preparation and defense of a thesis was needed to acquire the M.D.. 19 f 1 YW. ff Ie' 1 . 1 l Presbyterian Hospital - 70th Street and Madison Avenue The first commencement was held on May 16. 1769 with two students receiving M.B.'s. In May 1770 Robert Tucker received his Doctorate, thus establishing King's College as the first colonial school to award the M.D. in course, The College of Philadelphia awarded the M.B. in 1768, but did not award its first M.D. until 1771. The first honorary M.D, to be awarded in the colonies had been conferred by Yale on one Daniel Tucker, a generous benefactor of the school, in 1723. Detractors of the action suggested that M.D. stood for Multum Donavit. Eighteen individuals received M.D.'s at King's College up until April 1776 when the college property was taken over for military purposes and the students dispersed. Of the faculty, only Drs. Jones and Smith served with the Continental Army during the Revolution: the others remained loyal to the Crown. In 1784 the remnants of King's College were resurrected as Columbia College under the authority of the Regents of the University of the State of New York. Bard was the only original faculty member 20 remaining. One of the newcomers, Dr. Nicholas Romayne. would later exert a major influence on the development of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Columbia, at least in part due to its history of strong ties to the Crown, had a very difficult time obtaining any support. and the members of the medical faculty received no salary from the College. Bard and Romayne soon left Columbia, and there were no medical graduates from 1784-1791. For all practical purposes the school ceased to exist. The Doctor's Riot of 1788 is. perhaps. the most notable event in the medical history of this time period Dr. Richard Bayley, who later was affiliated with Columbia College and New York Hospital. was using one of the rooms of the vacant hospital to conduct private instruction in anatomy. An account of the events which ensued appeared in the New York Packet of April 25. On Sunday the 13th inst. a number of boys. we are informed, who were playing in the 'TRIP 1 i fd, ff-4 gl ,N gg .. , ,gfjfjqx if 45' N I N mf -f -6- From Left to Right - Vanderbilt Clinic. Sloane Hospital for College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1887 - 1928 Women. P845 Dissecting Room. 1887 - 1928 w I' V f e e 3 e he f me all iltil 'le FL. if '15 Neurological Institute - September 28, 1928 rear of the Hospital. perceived a limb which were imported from foreign countries - one was imprudently hung out of a window to or two fresh subjects were also found - all dry: they immediately informed some of which were interred the same evening. persons - a mulmude Soon Collected - The anatomists were saved from the crowd by the entered the Hospital: and' in their fufv actions of various local officials, but the people destroyed a number fi-gf anatsmlcal Id reassembled the next day with the intent of searching l preparauonsz some O Whlc ' We are to ' the houses of the suspected physicians. The militia was 22 E, Babies Hospital - October 29, 1928 called out when the crowd could not be dissuaded peaceably. and in the confrontation which followed several rioters were shot and killed. The next year the New York Legislature passed a law to make the bodies of executed criminals available for dissection. This source did not provide sufficient anatomic material for dissection, and the practice of grave robbing continued. In 1791, Dr. Romayne asked the Regents for a charter for a medical school which he had established with several associates. The Regents favored such a plan but had to wait for the Legislature to pass enabling legislation on March 24, 1791. In the meantime the Columbia Tmstees, spurred on by John Bard, convinced the Regents that they were in the process of upgrading their medical school. and so Romayne was denied his charter. Romayne continued his medical school through an affiliation with Queen's College in New Jersey until that school closed for lack of funds in 1793. Columbia, in 1793. gave up the practice of awarding the M.B.. principally because most of the students who received the M.B. did not go on to obtain the M.D. At this time New York State did not require physicians to possess any medical degree. Columbia's admissions requirements were more stringent than other private schools. For all of these reasons. Columbia continued to do poorly. and awarded only 31 Doctorates from 1793 to 1807. ln 1806 Dr. Romayne. having returned from an extended trip abroad. became president of the New York County Medical Society. As president of the Society. in February 1807 he petitioned the Regents for 23 ,- 11 .-p--' fav-.,,., I.x. -Qp1 '.-P xxj F, W I5- incorporation of the Society as a College of Physicians and Surgeons, This request was granted on March 12. 1807. although in granting the charter the Regents reserved for themselves the power to appoint professors. confer degrees. and to alter the school charter. Romayne was appointed Lecturer in Anatomy, and was elected President by the faculty, The school opened its first session in a rented house at 18 Robinson Street with 53 students. The school grew rapidly and moved to Magazine Street tnow Pearl Streetl at the end of the second year. Problems arose within a few years when the Regents revised the school charter to take upon themselves the determination of a candidates eligibility for a degree. They also acted to raise fees significantly. The fourth session opened in 1810 with so few students that instruction in all courses save Anatomy and Chemistry ceased within a few weeks. Dr. Romayne and several other P845 faculty members resigned to form a private medical school. Instruction at Romayne's new school began in November 1811 with 100 students, the largest medical class in New York history at that time. This clearly indicates that a shortage of students was not the reason for the failure of P845 to attract them. One individual who figured prominently in this period was Dr. David Hosack. For some time he was simultaneously a member of the medical faculty at Columbia College and a Trustee of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It seems that he served as a destabilizing influence for both institutions. One of Hosack's plans was to merge the Columbia College medical faculty with PSLS. He had friends among the Regents, and convinced them that the Columbia faculty would be eager to unite with PSLS. The Regents. in April 1811. released a new list of faculty appointments to P8LS. including the members of the Columbia faculty. only to learn that these men had not been consulted and would not accept the appointments. ln response. the Regents ignored Columbia in their annual report. and the Legislature withheld funding for Columbia. In spite of all of these difficulties the first P8LS commencement was held on May 15. 1811 with eight students receiving M.D.'s. P843 moved to No. 3 Barclay Street in 1813. An agreement was worked out between the Columbia medical professors and PKLS. and in that year the professors accepted faculty appointments at PSLS. This union might have been expected to bring about a stable medical institution. but differences remained between the Regents. Trustees. and the Faculty. The conflict came to a head in April 1826 when the entire medical faculty resigned and set out to form a rival medical school. One small event of 1814 which later came to mean a great deal to Columbia College deserves mention. Columbia College. in a sorry state following many Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center February 26. 1926 25 years of financial neglect by the Legislature, appealed once again for additional funds. In answer, the Legislature gave the Elgin Botanical Garden to Columbia. This was a 19 acre plot of land which had been purchased from the State and converted by Dr. David Hosack into a botanical garden before he later sold it back to the State. There were various stipulations placed on the use of the land which made it, in the short run, more of a burden than an asset. However, in later years tmuch laterl, various individuals took it upon themselves to construct on that site a collection of buildings which we know today as Rockefeller Center. The years 1826-1830 were difficult ones for P8cS. A committee report of that time states that the College generally presented the appearance of a city sacked and deserted by a ruthless enemy. Apparently, however, stability had been achieved. The class size grew and in 1837 the College moved to No. 67 Crosby Street. Prior to 1841 all instruction was conducted by didactic lecture, but in that year the College's first clinic was established. As growth continued, the length of the school term approached five months, the curriculum was broadened. and the clinics were increased to three per week. The Anatomical Bill of 1854 made available for dissection the unclaimed bodies of institutionalized persons: anatomists were finally able to set aside their shovels, and a rear entrance to the medical school was no longer mandatory. The school moved to the corner of 23rd Street and 4th Avenue in 1856, and in 1859 the Association of the Alumni was formed. 1860 was a banner year for the school for two reasons. First, the Regents of the University of the State of New York transferred control of the school to the P8LS Trustees. Second, P818 was made the Medical Department of Columbia College, though the two institutions remained financially and administratively separate. The Civil War led to a decline in enrollment, but by 1876 the school had 413 students with ten separate clinics each week. The growth of clinical teaching parallels changes occuring widely in American medicine at that time. It must be remembered that even the clinical sessions were conducted by the professors in a lecture or demonstration format. Dr. Lewis Connor, an 1890 graduate of P8LS, later recalled: During the last two years we had a few clinical lectures in the Vanderbilt Clinic, but we never came within a mile of touching a patient. In the 1880's the College benefitted from the generous donations of the Vanderbilt family. In 1884 William Vanderbilt donated land and money worth over Si500,000 for the construction of a new college building. Vanderbilt died in 1885, but his daughter. Mrs. William Sloane, and her husband built and endowed the Sloane Maternity Hospital at a cost of over S900,000. Vanderbilt's sons funded the construction of the Vanderbilt Clinic. Enrollment continued to rise. reaching 809 in 1889 with many students from other states and foreign countries. The expenses for 1890 were listed as follows: Annual tuition fees -- S2003 Table Board, 35 weeks - S125-140: Lodging. 35 weeks - S105g Textbooks, society fees, etc. - 515. 1890 saw the first joint commencement of P8cS and Columbia, with the Honorable Seth Low presenting the diplomas. In 1891 a formal union of P8cS with Columbia was established, with the transfer of all P8cS property to Columbia. This seems to mark the beginning of a period of self-betterment for P8cS. The curriculum was expanded to four years in 1895. Admission requirements were gradually made more stringent, with the class entering in 1908 being the first which was required to have had courses in physics and chemistry. Accordingly, the class size decreased considerably, but the quality of P8cS students improved. It was not until 1917, in keeping with the growing recognition of the rights of women, that the school admitted its first female students. 1908 saw the birth of the clinical clerk in New York City, with several hospitals opening their wards to medical students. All of these changes anticipated by some years the sweeping reforms which were instituted following the publication in 1910 of Abraham Flexner's findings on the state of medical education in America. A 1907 report by the AMA Council on Medical Education stated that some schools were no better equipped to teach medicine than is a Turkish bath establishment or a barber shop. Flexner's findings tended to confirm such a statement. Another major event of 1910 was the establishment of an affiliation between P8LS and Presbyterian Hospital which exists to this day. An agreement was reached which made the professor of medicine of P815 responsible for one half of the PH medical service. At this time P848 was located at 59th Street and 10th Avenue, and PH was across town at 70th Street and Park Avenue. Both institutions were desirous of relocating to a common ground, but this was delayed for many years by financial problems, disagreements over a location for the complex, and World War I. Planning for the medical center, the first of its kind, was begun in earnest in 1925. P8cS. with the Sloane Hospital for Women and Vanderbilt Clinic, would join PH on a piece of land in Washington Heights. Babies Hospital and the Neurological Institute were included in the arrangement, and the State Hospital Commission added the New York State Psychiatric Institute. It was this complex which opened in 1928. Bard Hall was built in 1931, the Eye Institute in 1933, the Public Health Building in 1938, Harkness Hall in 1945, and the New York Orthopaedic Hospital in 1950. The '60s and '70s produced further growth with the following additions: William Black Medical Research Building, Atchley Pavillion. Bard Haven Towers, Alumni Auditorium, the new Babies Hospital and the Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center. The most recent addition, the Lawrence C. Kolb Research Laboratories of the New York State Psychiatric Institute, was completed during our years here. ... 2 i I X x i? a T' ' qi Q , . 51 , C - r ' Z I.,--W 3 1' A, g V V. f-.- .VJ . 1 Lg- ,u V- F- - PM F-1 i l tai' if 3511-1 'f' 'Ai 1l Ztiiin V. NI' ' ,1 W Q: -.-1 -L 8 V1 1 I -'V-----ff , ' 1 s n 1 n 5 r 5 1 - T - -1 li i f 7:1222 ' a a af : : 3: 'l1E5'- 1 i n 2 :- ai 1 W-an AM a a I gg -, ,-: ' n ' f 1 I La- - ., li . C- ,,, w I , 1 I -- pa-- a a in I n Q 1 a' ' ' 52 gif- a 5 - n 1 s ' 5 - :E ,v'LTI,1'E-'i n A I a T - A ' -: , ll.: w 1 V W qi: . M 4- T I 'll' 'l - 'i I 53 1 7 V ' 4 ni -Q -.- - -. it -1 - -1 in -. i I - 77 U aaaaai ..-------.f---..---------..-..---.. A a ,.- ,-, ,.1,f' - - --1-xx, 'Ti ' I 1 ..k....,Y4 - ,.....-..1 I ...-.....A..Y, .17-AXP, r- . ,,,.-..'..a.. ... A..N, ,-Jwfkrm, . , A, ff-'I..f ,,, Ynmg-,,sPl .I N- HV- ......-,-. -..- , , -.,.-...L .a . ,, ,..L ..1.,,. 1- -.-VW 1,3 V r C27 -..a a-, r-5- , 1 5 o f,.l'v -.J af- ag. College of Physicians and Surgeons - January 3. 1927 Q I . . , 1 V. ,. fir' -'..' ,M f .,w, -,W pf'- -Q , . , . ,. Y I ,,,., ,f QE -13:5 A ' 11133 27 I fm: ID 737l7!.E!QY? j1!l7hii!W lvl hQQQLE?mff lf5'i'W W 'm37'2Emi IW WWE! ' L5 v ll Y L ' :Q 'lf 14 . , 3' ri 'Qi!f?I'1Tl-I '75 Ri T1i1 : 1f-, E' ZW ' 1 'lf' 31,1 .3 WJ ug X A f '15 Nl my A Ml M Q13-D ' k.P7f.'y!f,5,wE,,1f'4Ph XpEl!!1:1-gif.1111435513 l :.' ya, li:EEl,fijffff1f'g Eiiilw, I Q1 A iw pfllw ' w ' 'N f!-L-1 1 ' .- 'lf -1'- -b .' ' 1 V H:.Zg,'e 1 W ,IH - l S. N- J i g 1. f'r,uf'- f gf' E H' Us ' 1 . ' . ..j,'f,g-1' 1 A 1v.!gf5,fi'i1 !fY,,' xv: ',,. if -f' 7 51,1 .. 1-5, , :'1 f5iyHl1'1 e ?f1'i1WlllL?L'f: If 'W '1' A11ffm,QQ.!JJP'l ' l I W 14 15! ' ' I 2iAE1.fi! 1zmfs:!1?ff 1' I Y- 1 N! llll 4'.4 A! f i f ' fiff'Wf m f'm V . m1swlf Wlfihnfimwmf'1gmg w' 5fWfw1 . Wg? H ,f'J' Q ls: wi 1 ' ?.ia',1l .g5,'MrfI2' ,1iw1ii1I'i v4v+'. ' 5 - 1- 1 LwLi? 3W J 'Ti W 2 ,V ' + '-ai'-Vi 1ngJFrVu1,4L n1?,'v i'f-f-bi! lm T 1 . fq1n115'i ?3 1J...QL1j ,il V 3- 0 X .I r at. N.-,qfm A Rf, 'fx-it i frfwwu :A Z'--' l IH! 'ffl' fl 'vp' , , Q X51 M1 ml,E ,, if 1 551ii1g.x Zi',a:izi W J? -Av: fx?-JW! Wif i J: , f,Ug1'!FtRf5k+igrfii'i1m . ' p.,' M .1 , l. 1,14-V, : ' gui I - -. wh LQ., ' f :Eff fl 'QS 4 4 5 , , , .'fg-. , Aiw iqirgf, .N N,29. , E1!f+.s!y,f-Q , - Eg 5' 5 4 ' U 'mf P.- -7,475 ,Q : - g4eX '-g- -rl X ' 5 eva-yn L. V Tvhqsi fx X np 'OH' Q' 1 ' ' PQNA' f 9 -,- .,-.- ,- ,., . - L. . , , , , W 475 . .r ,. Y x ff ' , , 1 io . f ' 'V f ' 1. , il ,,l. q,,..,.g -- v - -1 ' i ., 9 , gb pq Q s if f-A fd! f' -fn-':: ': -- ' ' ',f,7'b'f.y'4T' 4. - A fx . - A. All-. , ,f I' V' JFS- :.2','f,f::IL'...g'j'f2 1 T , 4 1 1 'T O 2. . i. if gif-'1ff 1..,'1:+,f4f45??41.s?-' 1- -Q - R m - I L ff? 'f '5 ' lf sffffl f1'iQi?S,fff?S.Lf1 W 1-... , A IQ, K xx :um .19 E-9 '4- QVQ- 1, 1' .V-if AI M. I 4- IC- ' -I V wx flag H,jJf,f1 'lr ip, L- ' . I 5 , a fix ez hifi- if ' . lf ' ' W f ' 'Sy .faivif 2... ' Q 28 PRECLINICAL FACULTY .. N -71 1 1 - 1 . f ' 31l.mZi'i?i? ff If X- - sg 'if N' ufgxg' vliyf ' ib5: U.?fYllP.l,i K X x s 1-1-,r 53- .rem 5 V. X ., , n I. '. ,V H L' My N '- , 4: ,IV 'W 'ww 'Fef.Y1fE'!Fg? 'yf:'L H If I 'u rl ff ' ' ,M ,G21,: ' -' 1 f ,F 'Ti' A A S .nf ' , N , .j- A E221 -ig-?.E' fiffipr 7 i 4:5 fzf .hr ,R 6 --A - 'T E !vga'f'vw5w--f'----- -1 1 S , , , H -' 92 . 'Q f Yr?-:lf 1 L- -giiliii '17-' Q UWQWIQX Q YN 1 MQK.-Jfixi, A XMXX' -' lf 7llliiq,.JQ1u 4' 1 3-Y: J 1. I V N AF L,-K iv? A L ' ,f!lpgggwxkfqxkvlplt 'u ef -I 1. Q It ,Y . Q , fb U in - 'ff-'Q . I 2 , I Q ' Q -, LK ' Y , 1.x V' .l 4 .,A.1,-V' 4. S .',, X ' X 4 EX, xy - 553 XXL- ? g.g2'f1 - 5 'nf ug f V V R' I N 'u . - A f ,', :pn 'CJ I l ' t - X I V U I ut gg. ' ggi WN' Yr .xxxmivuhf .X W .. - ' X Nfsz, 12-X '- 'P -myffvy-, 4 ' - NX ,WP Iylf x , AM f X 75 ' -fi-E' J V Y ' 1: Li. .el H p -. , - if ' rf , . N , lH.,,,BEM,H!u U Jil .QQIIPFH . ,V -r ,dllglgk ,fl 4.. -sized, ,,,IlO,W ,?:: .Q X X I l I L wv A.-:xi ,fx 4 El I, - 2 X X ,flptllllup A 3?-,I Q ' ,- yuh I L, O ' -5. L xN..1.,,l ll ' - - Av E -A 1 - I ,- -P X .qjr W- -1 -5 E--52. I4 -f iii-:jUi?AJ.4 -QL. Hz - ' ' 9 .. Z! ' I 5 E E A --r' '1-.5 'E -g ?T -ggi-1 Qi... I , , . qqwifp, 0 ' TQ QM gy, Sm QU' . ..- ' 4114 - -7 ?'... v-'El .i...-. - .4 7 V-L.-.,, 4'-L -.-.1 .--1 . . V- , IV, 29 Anatomy and Cell Biology I ,,,'. A . . ,Q .aimxr-xx Dr. Michael D. Gershon Chairman, Department of Anatomy .V -. 172, 4 145 Y I . I . A., A A ' ALT... Q . ' 'f Q l X ' .' 5 1 '-f e ' 7 iii-i. .44 . -. ' 1 W W9 . Dr. so Eladio A. Nunez Dr. Karl H. Pfenninger V Sp . A -'. Dr. Ernest W. April 4 I fax. b Y Dr. Charles R. Noback DF- MClViH L. Moss 23 Dr. Charles A. Ely Dr. Sharon C. Colacino V! I I -.. 5:4 a ful 3l Biochemistry 4 e ' New! 'Y 'H L..- - wt' LL11 ,. , , 'N 'Z-,V Dr. Allen M. Gold Dr. Isidore S. Edelman Chairman, Department of Biochemistry ,T ,L W , Q E H1 may lx Dr. Alvin I. Krasna 32 ' 4 v. , -J, , X-.f fl i.,, Dr. Richard Axel , ' U Dr. Parlthychery SFIHIVHSHH Dr. James L. Roberts Human Genetics and Development Dr. fi? e , ff W fx A 'I , V ff L75 HGWQQ William Johnson ? U-vgligfgqgaf. , '79 '- ---U. - 1 '.L.'., ' 'SFTL ' 'Sw JPY! f -1 X' -'Z ' Ei'Eli.-3.2292-'T-ilif 'l - Tl'i'ZLf1T5. ' V-P ' A: -- -m:2f3-':L4f:s-g',- F-9inqa.xgeEg:.4-Z: - ' 9 1 , , 1 -, ' ,: , ffzf f 1 :-.:-,-Z..-.1-em-Q1,1:.g-g:-g,4:.',,.:-f.'.-.-,gh.ggi. ', 1, 4 , ., A, .1-J . , . f- -,. X . nl -' . rr f ' 15.1-'E' 'lf-'AfQ5 L,g fy-,ni , , 3. 1' QUE? 12' -. l ::.T , J 'K Q , 'E'-'ii-'ff5319,-'i4.:f'E'EhF54l''fi.,1n- -4'iii3f': L-?4i'ftbjaW'f g if? as fain- gl' ig fa? , f' '. Y 1 - - ml-ill? 'K fon e 1 l 5525 7 e 1 f - . Z if-'of X -:ilk jM'U'fi ':- 45.-, if ff X ff V ' .KW 9215? -FW'-W e '- ' ' V, . l5g5,3l in -R .Q if . ef ' '. ,LJ ' ' ff:-54.1 N - ,gf-g7'1-1.'g.ff?-I ITFAF55 - FE . ' V 2' ,: - . . - . '- 5 .- -' V I f 9 . ' ' H-:hh z 'GQQF1 ':5- ':'5g. : -N ?,,- Q E 525 gfgff- . 'ffJ i2..-11 - 535 ' 'U ff: ' :'5:531'1-112'-E1 .1-iT'fi513','iE' 5 17 ' . ziifffl 1: --,'-' 7' '-f'.-.2':.'1I': Ui .'-Qilxwfa- r ' -- 5' 1 -'isle -L .3-Cfiffi-'xi l V, .Q -, f. , Q' EM- fr xifF4:ie:e2g1f f '- ' fit- j ' 1 19,1 1:1951 ff 'r ' -E:EEYlm'3'fTfZx, 2'-ik uw rg e ,F-4iEiiE,V gg jg, figlfi- :ii 1-1, V., an Q E b .. L ,. A Z .N .5 ci --..f f 6:14, 'E 571 A:-,. , 1 6-gLf,3:1Q,:5jg'3.-.':'.L.Ugg Wx , '. , ff- A ,. 'EH' l , Tggifg' A .M,...lx.x, W W ,,:::,,M::, fi, ? NBQMEEN .. A v ,, ,.,,,,:l g.?Mg.h55T,,',mfg? ca T2 L- ff-1 Sv! ,, ' , ,,. 14: . -P '-NMX lll,.e:Pf'Q2 ' Nfe- ffM yea ef fe' e - RN, of -JI., - '-f-59244: ':y'l '2-.-T-'3l1., ' . 'X 1 ' '-:-1- '. f ' ,, .. ' 'ua xg,-zz -I Y K ' if 1. f- :5 -fF:: i:-3535, ' Xmlwfy. mf? YW 32 ' -' .'+-ff 'i K ' l:'glm'::,.2-f----f-fl' i P 9 iff' -fsiS1-vf- f ' .. 'f1' ' ' 5 Visas: ' LM' ' NW.4.i:-QW' ,Fw , X1 - pe, f, :SYM Q fx 1.1.2 1 - NQ XX f!?ia,,ygg'QgSf'gj,:f.f'4X.. fr-ia'- L . . gl :,!,.n. 1-n LQ -' 'Fiji 'nn X' ' , m fr'-' Nl-: ' .',.:,Tp ' ' lm ff., M5252 ' I .im -ir ENN' , f r ,J , fg. L ' - f' ,ff -' va, -'.1'f'w-.. W . . -' 'A - 4' , kite' L Y .E . ...,,. :?j4:.x..:.5,,1:,N5 Ellmlr.- -gl. - A wus, E C' -11. A - 1 gwxrwx- , --uwwayl..----pl ' A5 'WSW' . lfK, - ' . 'Uk A 111' fum id .N g-.1 , V ,, I I '- '-' 4 K '- -'Ya' ,- gg : L'?'x 'HQ-gg i' 31:- S+. N' x u . 2 fx imfnuwvlwnnu w WV' A V 34 Microbiology 'Sy-,V Q i 993i K 'YA r -4 Q,xl K il ll? wg sa ,Q Dr. Harold S. Ginsberg Chairman, Department of Microbiology Dr. Bernard F. Erlanger za U' Il 3 o Dr David H Figurski Dr. Benvenuto Pernis G ef' , Nutrition It Dr. Myron Winick Director, Institute of Human Nutrition 36 -if ' lf,' 'ii F ,nf Dr. Winick and Maudine A Pathology wr'-S, FN Dr. Phillip E. Duffy X rpg- Chairman. Department of Pathology Dr. Jay Lefkowitch i ' 1' E' Dr. Karl Perzin Dr. Cecilia M. Fcnogli E7 N 1 w x X .A al' Dr. John J. Fenoglio, Jr. Dr. Donald W. King J u 1,-5 -ff W .. , . X , , - I4 - 5 x .J 'QQ ' I . 6, gsgacty N 2 f 'nF 'f 'f' r .E iw: 'T Vr- r T i1 . ' Pharmacology v: 'Q' ix, :th . 1' . 'Q '- s S h 7 X I Dr. Brian F. Hoffman Dr. Norman Kahn Chairman, Department of Pharmacology 'J 1 fl ,,xxxAKQkj1','.fQf I Y I v J X I., I 1 I X 'I 1 f N- NL, 6 , Tx' 5 i . S , ,-- tr. 1 gang F an aff' ffl N x 1 ATE .' ,-H, , Q' i' u mia- 9 r VM a , ' - af 7 A ,I I ,Q . W h A '45 W .l.:2f'i'5-E1 - I F ' ' 2 2 ' 3 ' X Q an 'im-d f ag:-rm fi 3 5 . a ' 'Ei Q a Dr. J. Thomas Bigger. Jr. , 'Q ylw 'I as Dr. Douglas N. Ishii grx , XX l iw 40 Dr. Daniel J. Goldberg '1 l 1 i l Physiology Q Q 3 ..- 1. 11 'fy Davld Schachter Dr. Mero Nocenti .,g1.. Dr John V Taggart Chalrman Department of Physiology ua, f 41 ,i Av .1 I 'SJW as x . 1 - 'M' , YQ, A, ,1'v,fx'-- . ' Dr. Shu Chien Dr. Eric R. Kandel - 23135 . M... lllnnumm Biostatistics, Epidemiology, Parasitology II' Q 4 V XX I Dr. Dickson D. Despommier Dr. Stephen Rosenberg Dr. Joseph L. Fleiss Dr. David Rush S hen N. Rgsgxnberg 'THE ...X-h . ,1 wiv..-'EL fngy -Jr 4' fu, F 'E 7, 4, ,1 tf 1-11 4 ,1- .. BM :r CQaFu+ ward 6'4JWOfCo+oM9f KH Cad-K1 Kwfjfx 'ngfler ,nxanfz I fluvdg Ivy 106 on W7 www CTUUA E116 . Plwuuc ovdfe Mv- CLINICAL FACULTY ' A , if MQ!! 1 2.4 f 0 1' Jeb. N.,-I xx L 171 sv ., 0 .4 I , 9, .ky Vl 1 ' lf, I 4 f .,n,mMlmwU04n11anaullgIW f , ' 11' ,W , -5' .V ,fllflQllfilfll:Mh2UlQ1llfllmiya gisxnxmmn... w L I L 5 ? ' . ' bhlvvi-1' 3 'ff Anesthesiology gt' f f 1 . ,M 12 r 2 R s ,V o Q ' I . ik-7 , K Q 4' I 6 ' l...,.:+!'- V .! , U 0 Dr. Henrik H. Bendixen Dr' Kevin V' Sanborn Chairman, Department of Anesthesiology ,e ' N ' ,SW ' 1 ' meg, o t v, l I H my 'Ty' , Vx I . 46 Dr. Patricia Martin n Dr. Ellise S. Delphm .A Dermatology - A .- -all rl. is , ., f Dr. Leonard C. Harber Chairman, Department of Dermatology D i ws f1T:r.'Qt-'mgii 'oA '?g TQ? 1'? '-f ,LfTj1 rv' W rf'gT fi 'A DT '1 oj5a..,,q--, L D3 jf ,ji ,V Tir' A .taggfir,i15.T, will ffQ.llf,.f1l- 'rf 4 i Lili? 1.1r1',, -,.',,, ,, .-,. L .pw LJ A fh i 'fi '7 ' . .7 7 1 'df' ill-jrajjj ,Qu 11: H QL- --r-' , Q A f U :'fn. HW, 'A ' 'A ' ,, Q..4 , '---W ' 1' - 4 Ll' vhdrqf ,. ,D r-1 -Y , , , ng L-i A . N A. M U3 ' A 'zz f I I Dr. Robert Walther ' A .., Medicine V 'wi Dr. Robert Glickman Chairman, Department of Medicine X. i Dr. Henry Aranow 48 if ,hm 'cvs ' 1.--QL Abbie Knowlton . 1,25 L Q .Wifi , Dr. Gerald Appel Dr. John Bilezikian ,f ,fl -X ! .lf P I Dr. Robert Canfield 49 Dr. Wylie Hembree 1 Egfr Drs. Peter Green and Jeff Stein so JW 1' Dr. Qais Al-Awqati if-E' fi -- Y , A .., ,.f e XJ Wm -J K. V L 1 -...si L I I -3 , ,, . H W, L , -.1 'V' Dr. Vincent Butler Dr. Glenda Garvey in 465, I .I aff ml Dr. Andrew Frantz Dr. Ronald Drusin 1 g f ? V ' 1 A v , . . 1,1 a x f'! V Dr. John Loeb Dr. John Lindenbaum In L' :if of f L. .' A X Lfsx. Dr. Harold Neu f 1' Z- 1 'gf ig .bl H 1 Dr. Carmen Ortiz-Neu ,, Z, ,eau-1 ,yplnnaa , ll c cj Q A 5, ' I 'I sm V ,I A-. Y' fl' ' Tram' A F 'Q.. ' 'tri XJ ,QE -p 4 ' A '77 'VU' gf .FP A 25 G T7 xx is Dr. Thomas Jacobs E 3 ,f ! 53 pina.. , 5' , ,L I I, Dr. Elliot Osserman Dr. Thomas Morris P' Neurology xl' l UMC K' ,il ti X Dr. Arnold Eggers Dr. Lewis P. Rowland Chariman, Department of Neurology 'W ' I 54 Dr, Niels L, LOW Dr. Lucien J. Cote 1 v. E: 34' 5: fa: I : ,-gs-N V ---- .- V. L- -.-,. Qf -+L' 'lib' 2 r - ', -' 4.- VLA 1 'fi ,, Dr. Carmen T. Vicale Dr. Daniel Sciarra VI !!,f v -v 6 ' 1 if-ff :F 1 nun IM ul Q- 1 .I -ff 'S f- .I ' - ff' 'ffijfj Dr. Darryl C. DeVivo Dr. Richard Mayeux Neurological Surgery yi s sf' Dr. Bennett M. Stein Chairman, Department of Neurosurgery 5? A: - ,1 I j..'Hl7 I , XV ,, N-W. ,A I 5 of T f XL , 4 .Y S x . ' - ,I 5' 5x E A f I Dr. Edgar M. Housepian se Q-3.-gl, L N- ill' Dr. Kalmon Post 1 4 .r-I 2- r rrre L- i - yr. -,: xs, '!x er 'Y Dr. John CM. Brust. Jr. Dr. W. Jost Michelsen , 3 1 Dr. Y 1 vi' 1 if Peter W. Carmel Ob! Gyn Dr. Henry C. Frick II 58 Dr. Edward T. Bowe if YW 'x Dr. Roy H. Petrie 4 A . - r, .,, ., .J,, Ortho d' S pe IC urgery at - S - 5: 35 - ,, - 'V-f -if N , f A rj 'kr'-:f v -- -.. ' '- N' -f:'f::-f5,1i',.. 4' J, ' f -, 1 1. .1-- - -, A. - . p .1 1 It -D ,X 'Nb ir? -4 1 x 9 1 3 my ,. 'Mi' I 1 V, I.,-T 'xwggq-.fvj ' 9 af fix aff? ' fi ,ev. ,W37-. ' f f?-F 1 . dag, 1 fu .ad , .2 f ., - I A I, , 1 ,fin fg-2 F. - -' fa - ' if ' -. - ff' 1' ' .rn ' 'Nerf' V Dr. Harold M. Dick NEW YORK ORTHOPAEDIC DISPENSARY fb, HOSPITAL FOLNDED 1866 ISO! RCE: ANDRYS IIURTHOPEDM-J. PARISJ7-al Chairman, Department of Orthopedic Surgery 'N 1' CPMC Y. Dr. S. Ashby Grantham so if Dr. Robert E. Carroll Dr. David L. Andrews -:7, - A P Dr. John R. Denton Otolaryngology fig Dr. Maxwell Abramson Chairman, Department of Otolaryngology .4-rv' . . . X J X . X f jf 'X f ig If 5' 1 S .1 'Ad' L I'-' 'ji f , , W .' ' J' ' V l.ii,.'4-,g.Z.l-23.31 , .I ., ..-, ,,v.:,:..,,, 2 'f . -1? W4 ' ' Tffqv' Q 1: 1'-LH Z. gf , ' '44 -' .e-Y-'5?:,31al. I A D ,.75,f-Lx .1fI'95 '4,fA' .. lp, .- I -1 V J- '.jf'j',-, I-1 ' ' . .. .- ,, ,, -, .-.QW 4-' r -h ni 1 f 5,.,4fa.,A4,:gg1-,ere 'L . Y . .,:5Q'Q?'l1'?,'f 'f-'givgf - . f ' 1:.: .gil . '-f.- L11-gg 2373 A 5 'L L+ ...rr wi 4 - Dr. David P. Roye, Jr. l L A l 1 -I , 7 xl', 4 I Dr. Soly Baredes M Pediatrics u,,. .. ,, , gigs, -t W , f 3 Dr. Stephen J. Atwood c.Pi ' Dr. Michael Katz Chairman, Department of Pediatrics 62 Dr. Martin Nash iv ef Psychiatry 'rf NN Y 'lf' L, ' U: X ENE- Q ...... ' ,,,,,,,g,,f- X V 1 X Wi in s 1 Luzfwf K u-ni Mg---..-NA 1 ' i Dr. Stuart C. Yudofsky X Dr. Eric Marcus Qi 'N . ' .M X1 l . A N X H I Q Dr. Sidney Malitz Acting Chairman. Department of Dr' Stan Arkow 63 Psychiatry Radiology , .3 -mi, 9 ' 1 af l A f . .gd-s a f r e K -iff l t o l Dr. Walter E. Berdon Dr. William B. Seaman Chairman, Department of Radiology ' - a it Ei Dr. Kent Ellis Dr. David H. Baker i 64 Dr. Sara Abramson Dr. John H. Austin Rehabilitation Medicine A--.Nl , ' x Dr. John A. Downey Chairman. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine in Dr. Stanley J. Myers unnunq Dr. Erwin G. Gonzalez Y xi. Surgery O F N.. .J Dr. Carl R. Feind Dr. Keith Reemtsma Chairman, Department of Surgery .1-at t Dr. George J. Todd Dr. Alfred M. Markowitz Dr. Mark A. Hardy ee r I l i' f 1 - ., -vu -. . 49 f 1 Dr. John B. Price. Jr. I K '.r J 17' ' ' EQ' gh A Dr. Sven Kister .i f Dr. Philip D. Wiedel ,ny E E! Dr. Robert G. Bertsch Dr. Kenneth A. Forde 1.3 1 L of i -J x: 2 7 1 I 5 Dr. Paul LoGe1'fo 7 Dr. Thomas C. King KJ, .,, - Dr. Henry M. Spotnitz , in Dr. Eric Rose N ,Q 3 S 'Fi Y nf . a9' '5 I -NM! Q wx 1 N - f A ' ,. g , Q7 V n - J Qf 1 k ' Y N Aw , V I 4 ' Dr. Fred Bowman 0 - Dr. James R. Malm Urology I I . x l - v J 1-1-A I f li' ' ' Dr. Carl A. Olsson Chairman. Department of Urology gg? - Dr. John K. Lattimer ,Q -1' NN Q1 ,Z LWA AA!!-5 I Dr. Peter J. Puchner In Memoriam VE'-.T riff .affh Dr. Raymond L. Vande Wiele 70 K! E .. ng., Dr. Hymie L. Nossel Bard Hall hx . V I ,fn I K .1 V , ll' U: , .. l U, Y Ig. W X I Ag : ',.:.:.l',. ,:.':E1: , f fig 311'-, f-z?':.'L55:, W 1 A xfzf: ' -:.':'- 1.-:ll-. fi , 'AF 5 :f,:. k LQ, J Fwg' A V E ' I A 1 -4 - is .I , 'Li Q .A-- -:gtmgx Q- I R liz, 7l Dean's Office 8. if , f, L ' x 4 -,. ,, . E E ' Aw... ,- ffl f,,?... '0' Y lQF?jEm2ll?5 jLJ km Q I Q- Alumni A Association Tony's Desk Q J College of Physicians 8' Surgeons of Columbia University I New York, N. Y. 10032 Aownggnoms OFFICE 630 won 168th sc ee: February l, 1980 Dear Applicant, Iamhappytoinfomyouthatyouhavebeauadndttedtothenextentering class of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which is to be enrolled in Septarber of 1980. You have survived as arduous a selection process as we have ever experienixd and we are pleased to have this opportunity to weloone you to student rrerbership in the medical profession. Most of you have already mmpleted our entrance requirermzts. If you are one of the few who has not, you should be aware that this offer of admission is contingent on completion of all of our requirements before enrollment in PS-S, and on receipt of your transcript. We must have a copy of the current version of your transcript as soon as possible. when your final transcript is ready, please have your registrar sendusaoopyofthatassoonaspossible. Ifwedonotreoeivetheoopyofyour final transcript by August l, 1380, we will not be able to continue to reserve a place for you in our next entering class: if, however, you cannot have a copy of the final version sent to us by August l, 1980, please tell us why before July l5th. You will find information about the probable costs of your first year here enclosed, as well as a description ofour financial aid policies and a questionnaire which will be used to help us to detenmine the extent of your need for financial aid. If you intend to apply for such aid, please send off the completed questionnaire as prunptly as possible. If you decide to accept our offer of admission, no fee will be required to ensure your place in our next class. You will receive subsequently infomation about our orientation and enrollment schedule. Please consult it as soon as you receive it for you will be expected to enroll cn the date indiczaired. If you will not be able to follow this schedule, please notify us as much in advance as possible. If you decide subsequently to enroll elsewhere, however, the Ccxmfittee on Admissions requests that you inform us of your change in plans as soon as you can. The Ccxmiittee also requests that you respond to our offer of admission by the date indicated on the line beneath: for your convenience, an envelope has been enclosed. If we do not receive your reply by the date indicated, we will assume that you do not intend to enroll in our school. February 22 , 1980 Because our Committee on Admissions has fonmed so high a regard for your potential contributions as a physician, I hope that your reply will be favorable. In any event and regardless of where you ultinately enroll, please regard this offer of admission as an expression of our pleasure at having met someone so well suited to the medical profession. Sincerely, Frederick G. Ho , Ph.D. Associate Dean for Admissions 74 I 4r I 4 l P tx i Cgrzxhuzxtes A1 X Z' 'Lg' ' 5 1 AH Q' 2, ' f f . 1 1 f 1 , 1 ' 1 - 1 f 4 f ' 4 1 3 . f f Ev ' 'ff x- 'N ' Lia- Rl., ,'W?N fl QS ,LQ X , lk jw df EA X I ' Ill 'NN IN 'WI Xxx: 1 1 X ny- 1, 1 .K X I ,Zf N19 ' I 1 J N ' .fi 'ff' ' . '51, ' Q1 3' . ' f 4WV'VH - li ,'A 12-9-- ff' -- ...fv- COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS or 1984 31' 1'3- Elijah S. Adkins, III Robert Aldoroty David Alland Surgery Surgery Medicine rf I I ,ww Michael Arato 1' Surgery , 76 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF I98-I dl.: Y cj Duffield Ashmead Ana L. Baez Surgery Obstetricsffiynecology F 3 Kyra H. Bannister Pediatrics James T. Belisle Pediatrics COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 ,I Alan S. Berkower Gail M. Booker Alessandro S. Boschi Otolaryngology Pediatrics Obstetrics!Gynec0logy in x 78 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Rachel F. Brem Radiology CLASS OF 1984 David B. Brieff Medicine G77 i iF Mariel Brittis Surgery ling i Lx Qi Fey Q ' x -an il , ij, e. -,,-,, ak '. w IT of ff. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS as -- H, S QNX' A X 1 A M592 gl .4-:iw 1 yt.-f, , Michael C. Brown Transitional CLASS OF 1984 49x -:any Amitabh Chak Stephen Chan Medicine Radiology 3,14 f Yi' ,fx - . 1 hw . 80 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Michael Chietero Anesthesiology '-'-J .I r--1 l i 45 iiilix K - ML Q ,L 'ti Kenneth Christopher Transitional CLASS OF 1984 at W3 CP X li ,A get W A lx ,Q Cx - , Q- . if ,J ii 4, I Streamson Chua M.D. Ph.D.. Pediatrics 9-ob. 'DQ x Michael R. Clain Otolaryngology COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 ,. JG Kenneth D. Coburn Family Practice I 82 :ns , '.'N 1 Sally E. Cohen Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 -5 M 41, Terry S. Desser Matthew J. DiFranc0 Radiology Medicine!Pediatrics xx s. . N, S , i,: v , I .71 4 I X .jf ' PH lf mx . ' ! ,-. 0, , .., - 77.7, Aspasia E. Draga Ophthalmology COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Regis F. Fallon Donald C. Fithian George R. Gewirtz Orthopedic Surgery Orthopedic Surgery Medicine .nh-gafr' ' ni-ii L QU' Mark P. Goldberg Neurology 84 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 'N a 'n a ,u ,.n ,q, 1 X 0.0.1 i Jeffrey A. Ooidstein Surgery CLASS OF 1984 , A, 5--A .i1. 5 .'. , - ,fl igf':g -X . .v -- 1 1 A wf:- J ' J. r- if . 1, Christopher P. Gorton Alok Goyal Pediatrics Medicine l F, 85 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS lp,-ff' . . Y i I si' L . . Wayne B. Graff Anesthesiology 86 x K L COLLEGE 0F PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS or 1984 Claire A. Hibbard A Radiology ' A A I I3 A Louls A. Ivey Surgery Ho-Wen Hsu Byron A.. Jackson Pediatrics Medlfflfle ' COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS V 1 i i '72 LUN Valluvan M. Gregory K. Johnson Jeevanandam Orthopedic Surgery Surgery CLASS OF 1984 nr n or Pl xumr: ssmlxr ix rm PUBLIC HOSPITALS UI Nl 'H NUI -55. E ',S'ln.xsuu U.-...H Qfif 1 ,i f if an 'rms TABLET IS ERECTED BY Tut I' xi I LT5, rj, THAT Tl-IE LIESIUIH nl' 'I'Hl'2sh 435 MARTYRS or xnxx xwrr x ,f' xnxx Nor unc: 1 AND THAT TAUGH1' ax' 'rl-:mu 1: -n THE GRADUATES OF Tlill MAY NEVER HESITATE Tn IN THE PERFOnM,xx ' PROFESSIONU- D , QL' if Mg I 1 ' 5' :feb x A Q ' af' - i -l L.. WE' xx' f M A , X 1 N N, V .S -9 U 1' 'ge 4-I., nr 9- Peter S. Johnston Medicine x 7 X , , 5 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Kethy M. Jules Medicine Collins F. Kellogg Medicine CLASS OF 1984 li SN 1 .r lp ' t ,,i'Ei,.J' I Scott M. Karlin Otolaryngology ibn-i-...1..-,,..,,,M4-nf--il v Michael Kazim Ophthalmology COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS RIN ff r E 4 Anthony 1? A H. Kim Psychiatry CLASS OF 1984 Kami Kim Medicine Robert O. Kimball Surgery gx I I K m 'FEM 9,j:'fG:3. gffxxy N ' ,K yfx, A V31 Ox' N sin 8955 gan ,es O X cl K' -S 4 vgxi' x 5239? xge 'tink' ar' ',J gi.: A COLLEGE 0F PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS olf 1984 ' Andrew Ku Radiology Arnon Krongrad Thomas P. Lang Urology Ophthalmology l 7 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 1' Carlo P. LaScala Medicine A Q wgwf Nell Levin Medicine Mark A. Leibenhaut Laura Lib.9l'm3ll Radiglggy MCdlClHC COLLEGE 0F PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Gregory T. Lombardo Psychiatry Averil I. Ma Medicine K Karen A. Love Pediatrics FK, ,D 'PQ, 4. ' . -5' , x J V N -4 l -... I 1 , I . . . .W- , . . 'N . E - 1 L 4 1 X X-Q A L X 5 Q A 'X X1 ' X NX wg ,- X xh x X i L Xe ' 1 1 r- X Israel Lowy '.f - 'Ng 'XA' v ,XX . , xx X X - I.- , 1 xx' f .f X. V 2 K. ,Q M.D. Ph.D., Medicine .. 54 '-:fi -' 4 l gl ings, 10. 4, lil 0 0 194 ,o h Q toqfw -16 ,AML 591 L, so ffl' Q.. OO 1.-A Q.. V' 1 mario '11 falii' Q ',' Q o O A 25.1 JY' of. 54 ' .AI 93 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS All A Jeffrey Magnes Anesthesiology Meg-- Donald M. Mathews Anesthesiology CLASS OF 1984 65 John H. Mahon Orthopedic Surgery 1 l 1 4 Q 1 , ,, J . ,r 3 lf fl W 'p'l ll ' A gl' lilly A 'I 'fa .il Arlene H. Markowitz Otolaryngology 5 , L? .J' ,AF COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS or 1984 J' Steven Z. Miller Pediatrics Frank E. Modic Radiology Barbara L. Milrod William J. Moss Psychiatry Pediatrics COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 S my HW AS ,QS , Kevin P. Mulvey r t Medicine A155355 if lb Now snowing, AT CRITERION II Steven M. Neustein Anesthesiol YJ' Wi Wirff' H' in fri r'i1!ir:',. i.fN!1!i il Katherine Nimkin ogy Radiology COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 5 523' ,, :ers 145-412 iff X ' -'3i3,,,sff 2 Q .-u i h f pq - . vgjxx F 'L . We A , - at t ' , . i fe I ' 1, 5- ,. ' ' . s. ,T Tilrfvr ,I ,X E AQ' -E -- ':,l.... Douglas R. Nordli Richard M. O'Keeffe, Jr. Pediatrics Marc G. Odrich Ophthalmology Orthopedic Surgery axis J-Q.-5' Janet L. Olsen Anesthesiology 41..- mx'- 97 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Beatriz Rodriguez Olson Medicine 'F .rf 5 1 T., ' Maria A. Oquendo ' O Psychiatry Eric J. Olson James Palma Orthopaedic Surgery Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Barbara A. Palmer Rehabilitation Medicine I fi P 45 'El 1 9 -L k Sandra C. Peinado Family Practice 'if l Ann M. Pawlowski Transitional Michael Pearl Rehabilitation Medicine 99 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 fl? 1 I I Benjamin C.H. Peng Urology Robert T. Pero Epidemiology Deborah Pfeffer Psychiatry 1.11CE qs -'Y 'um COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS or 1984 ' 4 1 Lf '-'rw' Maritza Proano Medicine LeRoy E. abbanl Medicine Brian Quinn Mark A. Rautenberg Emergency Medicine Surgery 101 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Elizabeth G. Raymond Obstetrics!Gynecology 'H' in V Philip J. Reilly Surgery 102 CLASS OF 1984 ' Q in wi-, if m Andreas M. Reimold AJ Medicine Douglas A. Rennert Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Q 'N ,uf ii James M. Roberts Surgery Thomas Romano Medicine l V-bm, , 'U v 1 John Rottkamp Anesthesiology im Q W 'l, ' 1 s,,,,.! If 247, 4'?- i- 'lienx 1. 4-Xi .gsx:,g3?fEig'1 ff f ,xuyq-.fi 'f--fl:--.-: 'r'-1.9: ' 'Vw -f-?r':2:: ' .:i2if4,i'3 ',, 5 4.-wi if-'rji :PHP 'Q ,x Ffa!! i:xkNE34'n, 4,-,J ,T gi, ,A--mee :fine 12,41 qg Mlm . :pe '-21Z37L1'N S'-6 N 'ZA w1':- -DI'-: . 4 V' .9 5.5 --Q -iw ' V. 'fa--Lersfv Inge- , 5 ,5Iggg.g..-' , I-' 'vgiff-v1i::.Ef,:.. w., .- -m':w1.:v- -fffrifvi. . ,J .,,.,,-,-:,,rf 21,39-11 -x Mf,q-,.,,- -3. -1-S 5-fra 'N-in , X :-,.. ,- W. ' ,I .,:-M ,.-125. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 4 ,MAJ H .5 ., f f Sl Frank Ruiz Medicine I l V l X x ' A K S Q sc , ., i 1 Mil W me H 5, - .W . Li ,f' n , gl 52 is -W . .leo 54 f . Vincent R. Saladini, Jr. Anesthesiology L 1.1 Annabelle V. Santos Medicine :- 1 TTI? El--. x nr r I 1 .. 4 . 5' . . Q A, .... -Src 'BJ ab' E COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS or 1984 A 1 Robert E. Schoen ' Medicine v, Q . R 4-1 ff? 1 Cary C. Schwartzbach 3 Orthopedic Surgery Norman Schoenberg Donna M. Scuderi Radiology Radiology COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Neal E. Seymour Surgery 15' 'X 2 1 Merlamne B. Singer Psychiatry 106 ' '?'T yr, i COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS or 1984 'xi pre' R 5,s xx! Stefan Somlo , ' R R Qi Robert T. Speirs M d 'R 'N ' J R d' 'l e lcme Mark F. Sorensen a lo ogy Psychiatry John R. Sprlegel Occupational Medicine A X COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Mark D. Stegall Surgery Philip J .S. Stork Pathology Rafael J. Tamargo Surgery COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 ...-- I 0 M., MA...--Q, Faye Teichman Pediatrics fs, j i i 9 Robert J. Tilley Surgery!ENT .., fi ' ' 'Pi Dominic ,I.F. Tong Family Practice l09 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 I fa, 'M R Ramlsln 55- .Torres Pamela A. Weber e mme Maureen Turey Ophthalmology Psychiatry vg 1 7 'L M t Q 3 f V . A lf, 43 Z W xx I' A L 'N' K 'S P 4 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 4.1 , R Y .. w. Robert B. Westermann X, I , Markus A. Whitley M d' ' I R d' l e mme James H. Whitehurst a lo ogy Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Mary E. Whitlock Medicine CLASS OF 1984 1 F fAwvy,..,, bw.. Q5 ---C LYW, VV I- fi Ai ffif 'i iii! li' i I f Julia L. Winston Psychiatry vi' fx Rebecca S. Witham Surgery COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Shing-Chiu Wong Medicine I Jeffrey C. Yuen Radiology Kenneth H. Wong Surgery Catherine Yen Medicine i M: xl. X .1 if ' + Sf I T if LATECOMERS rw tU'f0S f.fl'f2 I 5:4- xx ' in s Robin E. Bell ' Michael R. alignm- Psychiatry ,X Q Surgery Gilda Cardenosa Radiology '71 ut., Aix. Cynthia A. Florin Psychiatry 114 . ni 1 Jean G. Ford Emergency Medicine Phillip S. Freeman Psychiatry COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Christopher L. Gonzalez Medicine!Pathology XJ Marsha K. Hyll Medicine CLASS OF 1984 Jeffrey S. Graham Emergency Medicine X -f -'-o Katherine Kaye Pediatrics l! 4.2-,ir Kenneth L. Haspel Orthopedic Surgery Q- zl f. -X if A I an ..3...2JAAll 1 .-... Douglas G. Lattimer Medicine ll? COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 Yvonne Luyando Family Practice 'vs' Kevin T. McDonagh Medicine Phyllis Schmiedeberg Medicine ll6 A . David L. Schriger Surgery S N James W. Roberts Medicine Andrey S. Shaw Surgery!Pathology I, COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CLASS OF 1984 yi G. Joseph Wiedermann Robert L, Wirth Q Jonathan Barasch Medicine Radiology M.D. Ph.D. Peter Kao L Brian Gallay George Yancopoulos II7 L L, 4'- ,I Q ACTI ITIES CANDID ASW 5 , .I A ' X l ' f4XXX?:QN e ', g,q,A, 'S A ' 'Wm A mmummmmuunm x ,iq r ., 'Y 2 2:2 -A ' mE: ll? It 15 an old, buf QFUE axiom patients' anus is to the rmcroswpe ,che beifgy- Chg tcchnifiafl S' c.1'1ancg5 are of Finding rhoving tropho- zones of ! 'E that the closer the Columbus 4915. ParaS1hC d'5e 5e5 Lab M3711-'51 1 5P m8 .982 118 -gd la L 2. ...ir - 'iggf A ir I -A S lulmuunnumwmfuwl - Wzfy 1 - -' I ' 1 'A I .4 ll .r . 1 7 - r w w,,f T Giardia .U K if Columbia 13.25. 'Para5iti: cligeases Lab Manual , ,Spring i952 Bard Hall Players .ix- M BARD H LOUNGE 50 Nav! llviul NV 'BC ,. 25314253.00 'S gf Q3:f' 53.50 3 PIP PIN AM UL TWG GEQTTEEGXEQT QE WERQHB I 1 .f if 1 , 1.5. tl v 6 , :Av if-1 ful!!! wx ,V H , A Q ' 1 g K , Y 1-5 ' in Y ' Y 3 -sw?-v 1 A l I 'THE IUXRU HHLL. PLAYEYS I'RE1lLEIN'l' ',',1LL:,v4 :HAI-iE.SPEA2zE'S 'T 'N Y ' AS Yip ' I A ',-. r - --1 T J P- ag M 1 im W -5- -I 1' : - 1+ S 1 I 1: . -5- 'Q f I ,. f -, 'NW - iw ,. .W 5 .34 Vframv: -a.e ' H ff 7 ,,.--vw V X GODSPELL NJA' ,T -r' KQUINAS IBBON T H E BARD KYIIWJZ p HAl L Pl AYhRS reSrn! fzw f M0l1Jf' 'ffr1ffmJJ Saturday l,l'kl'I1'll1L'l' IO, 1983 800 Bard Hgll Lounge 'A-T ' g -af 1Nc 75 'Q A , w - J Rugb r-.4+-.f --' ' 41 1- l if lgii ff , -.Fw . -ki 4 1. jiififff- ,V .4 . lv T- V-,nf f, L 'LSE' J' gf x-'J' 3 :'g'f K' x -Q ...W '-.. ? 'Q ' f- sais ,. 3233.9 -yn ', L., 'C' ,z'f. ,-.J ' . -' F-a-1. ,515 ,K .,, Q -ac-- ...Af-1.1 -A.,' L. ff, . gn: ,-1.,4,4:- 655-,,,.' - ..-- af' -' -5 ' r -.ig-H' .yup -.,, ., V.- 1. ,N ..., H, ,.. 1.1. 34..- . ,, ', ,. . FT., -Q -- ,, ,- --. r L, -V .4 , 1 ,rr .r I. . , , Jn: - W -- - , - - . -Q ,:f-- :- , rfgg j,,,.-.A 'QA ,.. - 'n b -H ' A' -. , - ,..ii.T.., 1-. . V-.- W5 R., z-q,a-e'.:-- , 'V 144, -.5 .ggjg ,-,,,Aj-'f,,,.f'1'- 7 '. ' .1 -1' ' R3 -- '-- N- ' - 1'-,-' f - - ' , - 'tri' , ', . LJ. f A TZ .- ff . .2 , T'-f+ f '-ffffzf' H+ -ff - '- -: '- Q - ' A 1-1-.0-' ' 1. 3: V' ff' -:.' '-' , ' fx- ' .---f' , - - ,. .. ' F.. . v -' I .v' 1 1 -,.:.f-f 53-fp j yn, . , ,. A H I . xg, f 4- ,- - N ...- Q. J' fuw- --E-up-..:a - 11 ' ,j-,V-f...,:p ,. 'Q lj- -A ,f'-. -,gh ' -far - ---,.- -.hp-.f ax 53 , 5 -. Q- .. .,, .,,. 9 ' A . - . 1. Q, .pi - .- -- 'V' A ., - - ' ' ,'. ' - LA Q ' - L V .. .f- ,-gk .31 1---1 ,f ffl- 4,.-:f T'- Fi. Q ,-f f-:r-. . .- - .-- A 5 '-1, '- 1' - J 1 ff -I r ' 4 ' , ' 'midi' fi- .se 1 fx 'n . t , 4,51 vga. - , N ,. A . ' il . ' A4 -s Ls - . ,QW . A , Ar ' fifa'-H3 . -Xl , , - f A 1 ,, 1- 1 L.3zA, . v ,A , n . . ' - ,1 fi: fl? 'v ' if . N4 gl 9 J V fu c N x .I , il! f .Is A I W . . QQ' v,.,,, N 'L F ,D-, sf, 7'7 3, 'E H fl-4 f. '. -La, , ',:-' I j -.-.Lg af-, f sl. , .A ug L ,PZ . I' 'pf , . ,, .. 'A , :- 11 - --4 -- A Cixi 1 'i- ,xx -2- .beg -'lr '-'!r-3- Qi- .ryn ,. ,. l , s-, ' L- ik A A., ' A A, . gffga, -V U I 1-auf., If-,,..,8 b 3 12, . -...' ' ,. - ' - 1' aw -- AY' ' 1-f-Qfffiw-ff . -f af?-1 ' 1 rf- 1- JL 5 . A- -Q 125 'J' P 23 ':-vs-gf-vgfiyriul.-:-gg?-E E V FC? Cv: -E-gf CQX, E121 QE gxkiyxi ' 1 . .-.gmgfr -3 -W - V 1 - , - 'L - - Vi , , , - - - .W R.. YQ 1 ' - C 3 5 . '- 1. ,fy w X r M5513-N H1 ms' S E 573-ls .E -4 Ef- 7' 531' f ' COLUMBIA - PRESBYTERIAN 7 5:51, f MEDICAL CENTER A r W, ,vi Y'.:. 'Y' . H .Ex .Q ma-, E - - A A ' L-salma... I Mg! :fi -f' Mi: ' -1:-FL ew ,li F u 1 55 E 'HUIS Qfx Dlx f.. ' x X. A K 'SX 1 Y ,Z '11 New l 7 'Y Fx, Ill lfilllll Hwllillll lrllil lfl NUI I-I llllllllllil llllll IMI IDI IQII-I I ,-- -11. .Jlx fr -1, 21 l 394. S. ,+L -3.5 IV . F' 331 'A - U, is J-A.: ' ve l?l L 3 1 .J--' -D ,, U., 'F' K X 4 Pg l J ' v .L-1 'KET K m ,, N18-I 3.3, vu n If -. --Q-1 BA! ... fl wut x..-..-.........1...-- .nn-n-iiaq-1-an rv- K-.. ' ,n ta? f , 'Iwi 5-ix! Q , if ,'- 4 I3 ' -1 -1-4 -N .xg 15-4 -pifw . if fl-ily.. 1 I A5 22- I 24 ul .I Q I ' af fab K. -1. g-V 6-.N ng-- ': 725' . 'Q -.gr .rf lH 4- . '-' A , . 1 ,. . X. V. 's vii? ' D !f'l 'f 1553 ily FQ?-'9r'f Mi I 'I - kv u if 5 5-:gli :ggglij ' 1 L 4559 X , 4 f ,I D' 7 r Sf' V f'Qf-- - dzfbqx ' 1, 1 'xv ' , -' .1 X Qi ' , . 4. X' ,-.sL . , -X L-g.f :pl 'HT A M L A lr A' 3'--wh rv. ' uf.'.'r?. lg., ,.,,. Wi:-'Zi.,... nm I , ,IJ if A' was ...ns-. Tw.. 7 .,. ff' N, J .S+ v 4 W X 5 i .AA I D v 'H bf-.1 59' If -f--. ,f .I ,.-V VA I' 1-.1 - f ,,, . Lt ,f i 73 ,,..-1-wif .f 4. .-an-1 .7- I v' ..-ii' 1 1 Ji? 1 D 1. I E fi I :-31:11. 1 l I X t r -4 ' f ' :'.-1 M151 1 El ' iii .1 1 fr . QUY' x QT, '-In-., 1 -.,,,,,..-, f .. , , 0. , X' '9.f QkAf.g ,. .- K . . 1 W,-L s Y. w 'S . g,..,X n gg, .- - 4 .05 ,-I ,.-X, if-by , 1 rv-1 1. 7-5 Ki.,-f 15 ,gj Jfvfw-35 1-if rag, ,.,. ,., ,, ' mn 'wr 5 - T V 1 -' - - -5.4 .4 A 4 ,gh Tl' ' Af 1 ,4y' - -'Z J., Q-' .Q . . ' ,.,J..Tx--. H- WL fl xi is uf . .5 1, ,5 Q ' :ggi T Z:-V F-0- NJ . f is 'lx ,S ,1,4 N 78,219 I u bi! 5 - 'Z H x '?' f f gm, ' ,X f -fi 155 'Jw' fif dv 'V' BY 'N-. ,bi- 'EJ ll Nix' 52 x 'C' 4-f wif? P' X WI I .il s r ' 'P , M , ss L43 Q . ,,,'.r',. , . . .3 'I QA? ft. 1 -1. .I . Wt' ,X , Wfffxh I xl fl ' .I . A , ' , X .111 I .A .. ' Y, I -A. fx 1 ,haf ,,,. ss. .ana 5, , . D Wi an. Eff v fm H Y X .... l 1 .2 , w r N I .9 X f' Q. 'fum ' ucv' ui A up fo nada A A N r lov-Al A .5 wus ou-v --v U ww- A- ---.,--. Nw.. - .,,,- ewan v Jin- M .,,, 4 o. K k 0 A ,Mn A A o 4 on ' nog n 4:14 N: u r .Na Ngynqz .0 ' 1 ,, x 91:1 5 oo Q0 ' ' ...Z:'LfmnnooLS 'uns HH' .N N wftnvn ' ' Hs., A . no , :L on a r An l n uf W 4: ,pawn Qhuln 4! no . 0 5 nl I MINI 3 nh ' nv 4 l a I ii RK'- s 4, , X R' 4 x X .L '17 MFQP- 'H - 2 .3322 1.22151 X . 'Q n X J I ' n r A ' , f V ,War JK if Ql Ni' X, .Ll ,-4 rf3.+is:O' f . - I' , J N 5, Q 14 cr-it 'U' Lp -,p '. ' vouvuvwv S A3 19' 1 u ll U I '1 95 +J laaiiggh I 1:1656 -Qi ' .-4-4' la -47' 1 -46 'Q' .-Q., I N, M . 1. I .ti Q . . - - . N, ... N ' ,,. IT... 'rw--Q ww-- ,IIZZIT - Q'-0+ I' 1,4 7 U .IN-4. ,xx O nf? x N, N99 z H Q QJQ. T ' 'Q 'F ,Q 4- 4.1 N M,-.. Wifi.. E ' f' 1 ff , , if ' X QE, FQ Q- X.. xx .V 1 , fr. Xl. X ... . . f, Nw-f-N, Lf M , -1, X . N x X 'v , A is A X :N i I ,Il nh Kr F51 Q 5. 01. 5 A lag 5 I A v N. 0 fS F? NY Ai LF ' 5 I V m.k-we 5 f, 'M f-'Q' A-R W i ge LI g,f 1. If V I . 91 xi 1 C ' f f 3 ll' - A 'TWV' it 1-4-' if . .Lu 5. H r r xf, LU, ' gg 1 lvl qx - Zu 1 L 1 j S: 5414152 3 3 . 'T I, -:. - .4 f 313, ff X ' ' X' I Q T' if 4' . af? I ' 2 2 , F Q El , -X 4 5 1 ' x BBS-y wxsm-:S TO THE CLASS or 13? The Zucker Ra 'N 4 f ,B 53 4 ' v ' FY 1 Ai. NJ? N. Sw ' 'Y' If K N CONGRATULATIONS from the DEAN AND FACULTY of the COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS K J THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS EXTENDS CONGRATULATIONS AND A WARM WELCOME TO OUR NEWEST MEMBERS -- THE CLASS OF 1984 CDNGRATULATIONS T0 THE CLASS 0F 1984 Now that you're starting out in your medical career, youall be spending so much time examining the health of others, you may not have time to examine the state of your own finances. So While youlre helping your patients keep physically fit, our goal is to keep you fiscally fit. As a student, youive had the benefits of Chemicals free checking and a ChemBankcard. As a recent graduate, youire also invited to take advantage of Chemicals free financial counseling as Well as financial planning seminars specially designed for health care professionals. It's Chemicalis Way of not only Wishing you career success, but of ensuring your financial success, too. Chemical Bank Chemical Bank Richard Donatuti, Branch Manager Fleming Graffini. Branch Manager 1 146 St. Nicholas Ave. Main Lobby rat 167th Streetb Columbia Presbyterian Hospital N.Y., N.Y. 10032 168th Street, N.Y., N.Y. 10032 CI-EMICALBANC THE CHEMISTRY'S IUST RIGHT AT CHEMICAL Member FDIC Congratulations Class of THE DEPARTMENT OF 1984 OBSTETRICS sl from GYNECOLOGY EXTEND THEIR WARMEST The Depaitmem of CONGRATULATIONS Psychlaffy TO THE CLASS or 1984 Best Wishes for the future years. DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE Qlnngraiulaiinnz in 11112 613155 nf 1984 frnm ihe Qgepzrrimsni GBE Surgerg The Department of Urology Wishes to Congratulate the Class of 1984 and Extend Best Wishes for a Successful Future Congratulations to the Class of 1984 from the Staff of BESFTDYESES Th N Y h ' ' e ew Hgglgiglrt opaedic CLASS OF ,84 D - DEPARTMENT OF epartmelgtlolgeglsrthopaedic OTGLARYNGOLOGY Columbia - Presbyterian Medical Center CONGRATULATIONS CLASS of '84 BEST WISHES! ANATOMY PATHOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY MICROBIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY PHARMACOLOGY The Department of Pediatrics congratulates the outstanding members of the graduating class and all those who chose fields other than Pediatrics, as vvell. CONGRATULATIONS BEST WISHES T0 A FROM THE BRAINY COLUMBIA CLASS HEALTH SCIENCE DEPARTMENT OF LIBRARY STAFF NEUROSURGERY Gverlook A MAJOR TEACHING AFFILIATE OF THE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Overlook. known for its progressive leadership and sound medical practice, is considered one ofthe nation's foremost community hospitals. A voluntary. non-profit health care center. Overlook provides extensive modern facilities. including 551 beds and 50 bassinets. More than 1900 employees and a medical staffof-150 offer a broad spectrum ofeducational and medical-surgical services. At Overlook. quality patient care has been a tradition for more than 75 years. We emphasize the training of primary physicians. Approved residency programs are offered in: Dentistry: Diagnostic Radiology: Emergen- cy Medicine: Family Practice: Internal Medicine: Pediatrics: and a Transitional First Year. Overlook also offers affiliated programs with Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center. New York City. in General Surgery. Urology and Obstetrics-Gynecology. Program directors are outstanding physicians. all Board-certified specialists in their respective fields. At Overlook the administrative and medical staff constantly evaluate new concepts in the delivery of health care, never losing sight of the individual. human needs of the patient and the family. It is this commitment to excellence in family-centered care that has earned Overlook its outstanding reputation. For information about residency programs at Overlook. contact the Department of Medical Education. 193 Morris Avenue. Summit. New Jersey, 07901. or call 12011 522-2085. CONGRATULATIONS to the Class of 1984 MORRISTOWN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL a major teaching affiliate of Columbia University College of Physicians 84 Surgeons CONTINUE YOUR MEDICAL EDUCATION WITH . . . QNcw1ErngIand I IEW 1 b 3 Iournal of Medicmc The New England Joumal of Medicine For over 170 years, the Journal has reported advances in medical science and treatment to physicians and medical students throughout the world. Special rates are available to b0Ih residents and students. 1440 Main Street o Waltham, MA 02254 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1984 from the COLUMBIA CENTER DELI I2 I 29357-9096 6163829-9293 Hellman Construction Co. Inc. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS JACK HELLMAN 79 WATERMILL LANE RoN HELLMAN GREAT NECK. NY IIOZI CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF '84 BARD HALL MANAGER AND STAFF BRIAN CURRIE NIARY CAFINIEN WILTZ NIAFIY SNIITH X J CONGRATULATIONS, COLLEAGUES ! The Medical Society of the State of New York 420 Lakeville Road Lake Success, N.Y. 11042 C5163 488-6100 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1984 SIDNEY A SASS ASSOCIATES, INC. Association Group Insurance Administrators for THE ASSOCIATION OF THE ALUMNI COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Columbia University 200 Madison Ave. New York 10016 212-696-4780 Congratulations to the Class of 1984 We at Columbia Medical Center Bookstore extend our congratulations to the members of the class of 198-1. We hope that our books have helped you to build a firm foundation for your careers and we look forward to accommodating your future educational needs. The Columbia University Medical Center Bookstore Medical Center M311 XX 'IMS itreet New Nork ltlllll Tel QU, 5114741144 A Service of E We carry an extensive selection of the IIIOSI current medical textbooks and microscopes, as well as current cloth, paper and sale books. We also offer a money saying text buyback service. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1984 THE DEPARTMENT OF ANESTHESIOLOGY WISHES YOU A LIFE FREE OF PAIN HENRIK H. BENDIXEN, M.D. CHAIRMAN CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1984 from THE FACULTY AND STAFF DEPARTMENT OF DERMATOLOGY f K f CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES FOR A SUCCESSFUL CAREER DEPARTMENT OF RADIOLOGY CONGRATULATIONS to the CLASS OF 1984 THE DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE K J I N J N PARENT'S FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN The Yearbook Committee of the Class of 1984 Wishes to thank the following parents and friends for their generous contributions to the 1984 P8LS Yearbook Parent's Fundraising Campaign: BENEFACTORS David Aldoroty Duffield Ashmead III Carol Johnson Bald Mr. 8a Mrs. Harold K. Bell Nicholas J. Brittis, M.D. Kam F. Chan, M.D. Streamson Chua, M.D. Mrs. Ann K. Lombardo Dr. and Mrs. Albert Love Dr. and Mrs. A.M. Markowitz Dr. and Mrs. Ronald B. Odrieh Angel Oquendo, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin B.K. Peng Mr. and Mrs. Vincent R. Saladini, Sr. Deborah Jean Saladini R. James Seymour, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Frank C. Sorensen Dr. and Mrs. William B. Spriegel Thomas K.K. Tong P RE T' FU DRAISI G CAMP IG PATRONS Rachel Frydman Brem Geoffrey Clain Mr. and Mrs. Gordon P. Guthrie Burton B. Pfeffer. M.D. David 81 Lilly Schwartzbach SPONSORS Herbert L. Goldstein Mr. 81 Mrs. Richard A. Gorton Kurt 8L Marilyn Greenbaum Richard M. O'Keeffe Mr. 81 Mrs. Warren H. Palmer E.J. Pawlowski family Werner 84 Anna Schmiedeberg Frank V. Scuderi Dr. 8L Mrs. Jack Spitzberg Gilbert Stork Dr. 8L Mrs. Robert T. Whitlock John S. Winston. M.D. DONORS James N. Bannister Alan V. Brown C.A. Bucknam. M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Pat Chietero Patricia C. Fithian. in memory of William S. Fithian, ll. M.D. P8cS '49 Mrs. Charlotte Karlin Dow Lowy Mr. 8a Mrs. Richard L. Mathews George S. Mauerman. M.D. Al Mitchell. M.D.. P8cS '82 Raymundo J. Santos. Jr. Dr. 8c Mrs. Herman C. Schoen Isac Schoenberg Yearbook Staff Editors Annabelle Santos Vinny Saladini Staff Louis Ivey Kethy Jules Scott Karlin Robert Kimball Andy Ku Karen Love Eric Olson Ben Peng Mark Rautenberg Cary Schwartzbach Julia Winston Artwork Neal Seymour Photography Eric Olson Ben Peng We would like to express our thanks to the following people, without Whom this yearbook would not have been possible: - The Faculty, for their intellectual, emotional. and financial support - Those parents who contributed to our Parent's Fundraising Campaign - Barbara Howells, P Sc S Club Administrative Aide - Joe Donovan and the Hunter Publishing Company - Ed Thornton, our Class Photographer - Our sponsors, for advertising in our book and special thanks to: Steven Gerst for lending us his talent and Neil Freeman for his patience and hospitality. , . , wg. , , VV-1 1 Q- . - W 1, - ' 1 1 ' ., , -' F FFYW f lla'-'il' ,ij -, - flu 1 w 1 . - , - -f 1 ' . . M 5 4 , A 4, Qi . at 94,7g.Y-N at 11 M, ni-Q-' I' -,'1-Lrva .4 .- W 4 I ' ' H! r 1 1wi.Tif1a'f72.V:?f,'lrfU9e6'Hiil ' r W ui .a.., 'X ' '- -iw 1, --, f 5 Q ,f'. :g 'sr F. 3 :'w-.- , . A ' ,-1 ' Ifkkiwctizf. , A '- '-,',j f,, H,f.yf,.7,ff.4 f, f , lk 'fa' ' 4, A' ' ' ,N .,', 'fi ' . Y j '51-glmo 41, 40,0 f 7 -:gh V ..- A 9 'I-' . 1 ix ' W ,f A ,Q A A A il P 1 1' 1 'Y , i ,A -.f -- 'Sf-Y ig -. , by -A gif. Y' X 3. . I ff wr r- A . a ilrt a it ' F l la rte,, ff A f I m'gF.,.5-x 7, -I , 4' L ' Q- 'X EW, 2 e 'A 'ff lr ,- Q .gx V ' Rx- t ,ag ,ig f x , Diff! lr , K ' W r 1 x, A fr if filf1'i '5 , M..-fi 1 I Q05 LJ Nfl The Hippocratic Oath You do solemnly swear, by whatever each of you holds most sacred That you will be loyal to the Profession of Medicine and just and generous to its members That you will lead your lives and practice your art in uprightness and honor That into whatsoever house you shall enter, it shall be for the good of the sick to the utmost of yoiu' power, your holding yourselves far aloof from wrong, from corruption, from tempting of others to vice That you will exercise your art solely for the cure of your patients, and will give no drug, perform no operation, for a criminal purpose, even if solicited, far less suggest it That whatsoever you shall see or hear of the lives of your patients which is not fitting to be spoken, you will keep inviolably secret These things you do swear. Let each of you bow the head in sign of acquiescence And now, if you will be true to this, your oath, may prosperity and good repute be ever yours, the opposite, if you shall prove yourselves forswornf' 8 X , razqvif' ,, 'fwlgv '.:I '..' ,' ' jj ,, ' m O 1 , 7' 3, , ,,I uf! 0' ' 5 . , Kg Q iz' u , y P. Lg 1 nw , ' X , :hy 1, 1 :Y .41 ' ' '-I ,,, , , Wm, , v,, , 'GL ,, W, , 1 In f 1 n -A w t u I , IN x X 1 , W' f ., .f, . , .1 r wg - 47, n, -Atv ', -N I Y'i7 f ' ' r QM ,W . if I ', if ,V , l'g!!:r'm '5', , t ,, film :g,,q',,' ' - lv ' ,.,n !, '1.,e,N Q' H , 1.1, ,,vq'ly,-I W, ld: - A l -if fl A 3' '.-uw'-1J'?,lfg .. ' if ' V '-'iff -7331: 'A V pai-r -' ' 1 1' . ' ' -,'- ' 1 f,5 .f1e. 'I 1 jig V f- lv , . .. Yu. 1, Haig. - 0, . Q, r , A A x a ,ii H izxllw I I. V H 'fi 1, v : Y Y W1 ' xv I ll Q I ni Y ' 'IZ 1 'X y' ,pil-.Q,. ' P Qin, XZ' ,421 !.,AA' M H, N L,,', 'X ,',! !I'i.1'h'E1 V ' ' ' ' 4j1.flQ. A V 5'-fi. .45i'flf,l'.. ' E- 'HQ' 'V' 'M W . '- 4 uf ' :Lulu lkn- J ' n. .aA 1-P ' ,sa H 1 :jk fygj. YL I- fvnl V 1 gyfhf 2 ,,?Yfi'fT:f 3. ff' - v-.., 'Gr al P37512 I .5 lf i fffff' P835- if A24 v , ,,.e,,. ,.., ,ui .1 .1 , 4 1.1 91 xv .. V wr- '- dx' .. Jw 35.5 fi 'N X x 2- Kites?- v '. K M i 5 sn vi IISKW '.',-an-att' L-:N A '31 P' 4 'Hn , s Ap ,Qy.wi1.F 5 ' , TP itwail E25 gl A rib I 5 1 22- I. Su' . .. , g' bg, 5' . n H A 331 5. Q. f , 1 fl 1 I , yi V ,I I ga 12 L- 'JW I' fx . f A3 X. 1 ' ,J 4 ' 3 f MM-2-.g . B :.- L.. ...4. . , . F Qa'g v I 5 X, y 5 1 W , L' ? Q in a .un I la X-fabfp ,, v 4 1 f'!8'v! htm 3 ,.... on w -4 v.i '.u if I '...,'. 'll1u lllggmmm .. x. ,I .1 .YM - 1 ,f V 4. 1 ,s-L. Q . .4 11 f X. N+'J,,,,,. . 'X go 'Eg I f.. .?,. A .- .- ,.s,x!-agg?.gfE- if Q, ' 23 .ff '.'- K A m, ', xx? 'Hn lt' x uf wifi! . . I f 5 I A ,, 4 ' ' ' , 'Q' . 1 . ' .L..x.Q, ,3..,.- ,K my v-,:,,:-..,, -I . Y-I M l x. ,M Q34 X .k9i,N.'-,'---f:4gfipj3,g' .,gf3':?.Q'4:. vii: . v Hugig ' -3 ff' i' 1 !kf2 !'l'?s 'ff-X ' X1 ' 'H - ' ff . , A : --,1 ..f',,4,., V , If-'E 1 A5'f S-' Hi Af X. - ve A' fvff? Ei, '?'.6Z,3'? ' .139 I wk, , ' go' KJV- 'A '?,.'--Q,:f,, f f'g4 -' 9. 'F ,f- . .,-,V -,I . 1, .wla 1 . 1: . -.,, , I - 411 Qgq-'.s..,l31:5'4' .3 f 'Q if ' '46-'. .1 ' , . 'uf' 3 3 : pdf-' - ,. , l . , iff 1' ,.-H7 . ef - J . ., .,,,,, , 4 . ' L -1' ' ' if v--.,. ..:lA ' -:.' X L 9 I' 'ww' new '11 Nt fu. 'DQ 1.7, 1 'TE 1 '. if, I Q-'.'uv'.f,..-ua'-'fx' V p I ,-3-xi ...H-A i 0 1 , ' ,,.. ..V. 1 I ' - Q ' b 3' , M ' on Q 3 , p - - f' -.. ' . '- . A ' 'f'.'.'? rs.,., at I A .Q ' ' V' ' I I ' . 1: 4 -L Q 1, , , 'Q 'A ... ' sl.. Y Q- qv ., v . .-u:-:Nm Jun 76 -
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.