Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 44

 

Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1967 Edition, Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1967 Edition, Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 44 of the 1967 volume:

r'!'fYU Ki af- ! , . ,. 1 Qg,f 'E 3 ff' if ' 5 Fri J ' f, ' , ' -3--' . '15 Jigf- I ,. HL-144,-L V- i 1 '- ,Ji ruffflm' 3, lf ,f 1 35' 5 Qtr'-1, ffgw M.,- ff ! xx- Q .NN 'S . J +15 4,4 F 3' 'V 4? 1'!'J 1 '.iiLi.,3.' f,g,?.:,:A'., v ,gi 'i ii-,.x,N2, .,!,V.?rf.L le- F Hug. 'V Y ..-1 1 JL ' 'qffl' 1-z'p',4,'.fi.: Z1 1 f 1 11. V' yi ff. i ii .- .E?J1ifQi'?' ,A V 'V . ' fe 0:19 ,ifl ' ' i -are j ' as . fry . A 2-.cp ' 43,325.55-, 1 ' 1 1 1 if jj- ' 'giyqiggli-1. , ,,,,, ,V iy. pi.-V7,..i Q - f ,1 -, fpfm , , . 5-2-15:6-.V - f4:b f.,g-. , . . 'V N5--Gbvh ' we 5:2-at -.Q-9: .1 w , , fb? , i 'Z 0, f , ,g1,.e., ' H11 4'-ih ' itll Wm Wir The Faculty of the School and the University Administration join in con' gratulating you on completing your studies and in wishing you success in your future careers. Few fields of professional endeavor are changing as rapidly as that of Public Health and Administrative Medicine. Such changes require perspective, skills and adaptability. It is our hope that your time with us will prove to have been advantageous in all three respects as you seek to better serve the public interest. Our best wishes go with you. rf 6-L gl XIX- VN-30 f' Ray E. Trussell, lVl.D.. lVl.P.H. Director 7 55 if is iv- . an Sn Wa- 3 n .a I 1 sv H. . +P ,fl ...aa .:. . .,,k. J. x 2 'P'.2'f:33if52? 1,- q I' ' -.-'-51' 'ff- ' -p 'ez ,-'- G-A 1'71i'- -f'4,sf.' 'Y ,-.fgQ.yv' 5 ,- . -,u. - , 2 . X ff- J 1, . , . , -4 . I .1 . ' 'q.. 4 A Q ,..w- 'fi-iZ?A:I' ' , X . I' 111 5 4 lf . 12 ,Y I aq- 4 6 :Zig ,- fb ,JZ 1- wi 5 1 F. . N.. , .-f K 5 K --,f ..-r. . . v. . c. ,fn . -.xx is Il- .,.,. , , 5, . 1420 ,v .'.-. 23 7-1. 1:--M 5:7 ., 5 .ur rp, Q--, 5:41 L - 44 221. 'Y 'S' sff- jf? ...r .Ml ... .A ,' fl: 'Q' fr ,:-Q :' I -4' , -'n. ,- E, X Qui ! Q, .': ,J vi -LT ' .A. - . ' 4 3 'ar K -1 ' 2 . aff ' 1 5' :v1fw.?ifb' 'il A fi , . if . .... - l , ,T f 5 'D' ' ax R' 1 ' A -- , 1 , ., -. L 4 , 4, -A -1 Xpg. f ' ff I 1 ' ., A-v, V I .,-lv k . 2-ag 1 f f 4k-in f -. 1 1 ' f , A f , 1 Si, '., rrviywyi .VM Columbia University was established as King's College in 1754 by a Royal grant from George Il of England, For the lnstructive Sciences. The American Revolution interrupted its program, but in 1784 the school was re-opened as Columbia College. The title was changed in 1912 to Columbia University in the City' of New York. King's College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North ,American Colonies to confer the course degree of Doctor of Medicine. Instruction in medicine was given until the occupation of New York by the British and was not resumed until December of 1784. The Trustees of Columbia University, on May 2, 1921, establshed an Institute of Public Health under the medical faculty and provided for its maintenance from the income of the DeLamar Endowment Fund in accordance with the will of Joseph R. DeLamar. By action of the trustees, the designation Institute was changed to that of School of Public Health as of July 1, 1945. On July 1, 1955, the designation School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine CCUSPHAMJ became the official title. This Yearbook is affectionately dedicated to Herman Hilleboe, M.D., M.P.H. DeLc1mar Professor of Public Health Practice. Formerly Commissioner of Health, State of New York. For his depth in teaching that Ends the student as well as the problem, and for a personal strength that communicates the man. 1-: 4 A' . . + j ', '2A., A ' ' -V ., .. 3f 'Au' ,g:1ff'l41Q'1.'7-.. -3 ' V ' V f - ' 515152Sf-'E.'--y ., gi.,-'2 -.,1 o4.fg1..n.4.-51. V f Yi . - . Q1-' -' A ,.,, A '- x ',', . 2 T .1 ' '1 J . N ' . 1 t ' V X I tj ,.!v Y,-4,V 3 V: V V L .4,, .- A ' 3,AQ1V'. Z 3 ,.,' I' v.... V 'V ., I' 'V 'V 'V A- J' if ' 5- V ' V A V-1A, . . 1 1 V b. V' ffi'ffif fl flfg,.Qgj. V '.'. . 52- ,gf -b .gn -'A- :TQ .f V Q V V .A f A -...f-1 -v,' .'v, . A ey ' '- 1 A ' fl. .L ,. - . i :f1?'Wwff ' f .. if - 4 ? '.i, '.- . V , f f . . 5. A4V' ,'VV f 1 1 2- ' 'V f l V V . ,i'f,f-f- 2 . . . . . ANn. M .V VV'. 4 V'V'.'. VV P Az 1 '-Vg. A .. 1 'N tis 'I' yimlwi WM Top, left to right: John Kevany, Harold Applewhite, Herbert Williams tPres.l. Bottom, left to right: Ruth Hutchison, Nancy Skorupski, Ester Anghel, Marcia Kerwit. Missing: Paul Landman and Rodolfo Sobel. 4 an hfkcu The Gcrruczelat Down the street, this long street, he come Fiddling that bone violin, crackling His white boneprints into Harlem. settling them. Nobody hides calcium in Harlem, nor Music which whitens the air, 'til You could taste the failure. This musician come a long way, fiddling Eight thousand miles, his sound of five hundred years. Only he won't find no stop here, Baby! 'Cept one or two, or what he drags ot them Scared musicians Crackling down the street. This long street of Bali, Peru. and places maybe Blacker than our African urban. Where hell is a coal that can't burn. Them actors! They clown twenty feet high, by the look of them Hands, white enough to fasten in sun For an instant Of parchment grins sweet past this window. And that Patience. the one sitting and Knowing better than you and me, about The masked lady on the floor Dancing five hundred years With a flea That come from a rat. The lady on the floor, a beauty under that mask, And breasted more as bravery, the way she lies, So's no man would think she died as Others who keep love in their chests. l lean watching that fiddler in the street, bone crackling From someplace we go all the time, If only by knowing Of the rats and fleas we got too, in our walls. He plays white. I can't see myself no more In that fiddling! Who'll I talk to about this? About the chalk traveler and the music I swear l heard once in a closed-out band, That sent me home to tell the woman. Lord knows Who don't ever hear a-tal what l say Less'n l scream a white sound Colder to her than the chalk traveler Who crackles Bali songs, Peru songs Along our streets of Harlem springtime As a winter clown playing Yellow pikes and swords upon this window. With bonesteps crackling the way paper do In a Department store Easter, lVly woman lying here, she dont measure this street Long street, with her fix the way they do When they's hurricanes outside. or plagues, And she got a door. This street goes a long way! l tell her. It goes Eight thousand miles ago and tive hundred years around lt got Bali songs, Peru songs. Only the woman don't know, 'Cept when she hears the street While lying still, listening to Yesterdays footsteps where Her children play. - HENRY BIRNE . ,, ,Jr-rx .f iff 1.,, . ' 1 1 -wx, .1 'air' vw fir L 51 ' 1 fi., 'V . X1 4 mg-,g., Neff' . w 5 -an 1 f 'ea ,- ' li HX , . , , QS X34 A MESSAGE TO OUR CLASS: THE ERADICATION CONCEPT IN COMMUNICABLE DISEASE PREVENTION Fred L. Soper, M. D., Dr. P. H. 1 Special Consultant,. Office of International Health, U. S. Public Health Service. In the early flush of bacteriology in the 19th century, workers glibly talked of disease eradication. In 1884, the Congress created the Bureau of Animal Industry to eradicate contagious bovine pleuropneumonia and to prevent the export of animal diseases from the United States. Pleuropneumonia was eradicated, but the problem of permanent exclusion, or prevention of reinfection, remained. The first attempt to eradicate a disease, as contrasted with efforts to eliminate from an individual country, was the Rockefeller Foundation-sponsored effort to eradicate yellow fever from the world. This effort failed because of the previously unrecognized jungle yellow fever from which reinfection can come. In recent decades much more has been done on the national elimina- tion of animal diseases than of human infections. The contrary is true in the international field, international health organizations are coordinating programs for the eradication of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, the urban vector of yellow fever, of malaria, of small- pox, and of yaws. The greater ease of excluding animal than human diseases is probably responsible for this difference in development. The present is a period when those working in animal disease pre- vention are recognizing the necessity of international collabora- tion and coordination of efforts. The United States participated financially and administratively in the elimination of foot-and-mouth disease from Mexico some years ago while the disease was far from its own frontier, in 1966, the Congress of the United States author- ized cooperation in the elimination of the screwworm from northern Mexico in order to establish a more economically defensible frontier between infested and clean areas at the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. But the regional and global animal disease eradication efforts are logging behind such efforts related to human diseases. At the same time, public health workers in the United States are searching for administrative means of coordinating disease prevention activities of cities, states, and counties in national elimination programs. The professional health administrator, working in the prevention of both human and animal diseases, is in the coming years going to become more and more involved in the development of national elimination programs and the coordination of these in true regional and global eradication efforts. II-Ionorary Member, American Veterinary Medical Association. Washington, D. C. 7 April 1967 1934 o 4'7's',r,.'a'1'5ft Pmzfznmban Smuiag Bwmu, Rgyz2vzafQj'12:e gfm f s?? 'x ---5565 PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION woRl.D HEALTH ORGANIZATION-li--1 '7?' sz: 1'w:N1'Y-11-uno smart. N.w.. wAsHlNG'roN. D. c. zoos? U.S.A. CABLE ADDRESS: oFsANPAN IN RIP'-Y REHR T02 D Ll- April 1.957 TELEPHONE zzs-Hoo STATEMENT BY DOCTOR ABRAHAM HORWITZ, DIRECTOR OF THE PAN AMERICAN SANITARY BUREAU, REGIONAL OFFICE FOR THE AMERICAS OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION FOR YEARBOOK OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND ADMINISTRATIVE MEDICINE - 1967 Our subject is international health. Our theme, the mutual relationship between health care and development. Our environment is the Americas. The Hemisphere as a whole, and particularly the Latin American Coimtries, are going through a deep process of change that should progressively involve the whole structure of society. The aim is to improve conditions of life and contribute to progress and well-being Specific goals have been set for economic growth and social development Concerted efforts to reach them have shown the weaknesses in the orgamzatronal and admmistrative processes indispensable to prevent disease cure the sick and prolong hfe It has become apparent that health care 1S not a separate entity in a dynamic social order If influences and is bemg influenced by economic growth and total development Health becomes an end in itself for each individual and at the same time a means to foster welfare of commumties and larger aggregates of population Public health both as a philosophy and as a service needs to be adapted to the emerging situations m which the confluence of civilizations creates part1cular conditions for the application of modern science and techniques It will need to penetrate through research into the study of the relationship of the myriad of forces at the root of societies It should become truly multidisciplmary in 1ts approach to welfare and well bemg Joining efforts with the biological the behavioral and the economic sciences If we really want to shorten the gap between the technologically advanced and the developmg coimtries it will be imperative for the health workers to enlarge the scope of their objectives to look at health care beyond its immediate results sum to consider man as a biological unity a rational entity and a soc1al being Yo s sincerely, V7 X Abraham Ho t Direc X I 7 ' I , . . , I 7 n. ,... . .i I . 'IIS' -7 -.' -4 t V Z ' ORGANISATION MONDIALE W O R L D H E A L T H K QQ ORGANIZATION QI V DE LA SANTE S Avenue Appia NZ? Avenue Appl: IZII GENEVA-SWITZERLAND 1111 GENEVE-SUISSE I'cIegr,: LNISANTE-Gcncxn Tel- 346061 Telex' 21335 Teligrx UNISANTE-Geneve I ply please refer no I' rc de ra Icr Ia rel' W 4 April 1967 Dear Dr. Birne, I have just seen your letter of 17 March, upon my return from a trip. Perhaps you can use the following. One of the major challenges and opportunities facing those individuals who have received their basic training in veterinary medicine is in the field of comparative medicine. I define this, somewhat arbitrarily, as the smdy by comparison of spontaneously occurring diseases in vertebrate animals other than man. The information derived from such studies provides useful leads in understanding analogous processes affecting human beings. Such leads can be exploited by designing experimental situations in which variables are limited as much as possible so that the results of experimental set-ups might gradually ' mbination of factors that determine a specific reveal the prime cause or co disease process. The main areas now being explored in studies of comparative medicine concern the problems of cancer and cardiovascular disease. lt is not difficult to see the extension of such an approach to rheumatoid diseases and other connective tissue disorders, and perhaps even to behavioural aberrations. Work in comparative medicine involves the application of advanced principles of epidemiology as well as of basic biological sciences, and cannot be performed effectively unless there is a thorough understanding of both clinical and highly technical components bearing on the specific diseases being studied. This is not an easy task, but it is an imperative necessity if veterinary ' ' bl' health of which it is capable. medicine i s to make the contribution to pu ic Sincerely yours, Martin M. Kaplan, V.M.D. Chief, Veterinary Public Health Division of Communicable Diseases Dr. H. Birne Chairman, Yearbook Committee Columbia University School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine 600 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032 Statistical Summary of CUSPHAM Students, 1966-67x KN : 1033 PROGRAM Master of Public Health ........,.. .... 3 2 Administrative Medicine ...,.. .... 1 5 Hospital Administration ...... .... 1 5 Community Psychiatry ..... .... 1 O Nutrition ....................... ..,. 1 7 Biostatistics ........ .. ,... .... 6 Parasitology .......... .... 2 Special Students ..,.......... .... 6 SEX i Male ....... ................ .... 6 6 Female ..... ........... . . 37 AGE Mean : 33.3 20-24 ..... ,.... ...... ......... .... 1 6 25-29 ..... .... . 25 30-34 ..... 21 35-39 .... 16 40-44 1-2 45-49 .... I 9 so-54 ..... 3 55-59 1 ...............................,............. . crrizemsi-ue ev REGION. aaai U.S.A. flmainlandj ......... ............ Q ...,.... . gf. 71 Puerto Rico ....:.. ,.....V . :....k ..... .-...V 2 Canada, .......... Q ...................... .' ...... ' ,. 2 Central-America, Caribbean ..... .... ...... . ' , 2 South America. ........,.. - ..,.. ..- c... ...., . 4 . 6 Europe ............. .... North Africa .... .. - Africa, other .141 Vt: Near East ......... .... 4 Southeast Asia .... 9 Asia, oth'er'Qf.IQ.. Q... '3 CITIZENSHIP OTHER THAN U.'S-A- . Argentina .L ................................................ 2 Canada' 2 china Q,...Q .... ...' . 'T 1 Colombia .... .... 2 Denmark 1.-- . 1 Germany' ...... . 1 Guatemala ..... .... 1 Hungary ...... .... 1 India ......... ..,. 4 Iran ..Q ...... .... 1 Ireland ..... ....' 2 israel I ...... .... 3 Japan ., ...,.., 5 ..... . 1 Netherlands . 1 Pakistan ...,.. . 1 Philippines .. . 1 Thailand ...... .... 4 Trinidad .... . ............ . ......................... Q ....... . 1 S Preliminary figures, as of Oct. 1966. First registration only: does not include students continuing in same program from previous yearisy. A GREAT COHORT- RETROSPECTIVELY SPEAKING Statistics never tell the story. They build buildings and arrange programs, but they can not tell a story. For instance, when it comes to saying good-by, try saying it with numbers. Try putting it into a normal curve, even where the curve slopes. That won 't tell the story. It needs a few words to measure the time. Only when the words become too many, they are too rich and they cloud the memory and you don't want to see. l hold to the statistics now for it is easier. lt is not ten years later, or twenty. The office tells me we have an average age of 33.3 and 66 of us are males and 37 females. That will look good on a punch card. But how many of those nutritionists are dimpled? Can we put those on a punch card and sacrifice them to a computor's steel fingers? How about Marcia Kerwit's method acting of Mrs. Stanislaus, or when Jim Bush defended the budget in Public Health Practice? What can a computor do to Harold Applewhite's smile and warmth, to pretty Emily lVloore's folk-dancing, to Henry Birne's production of the memorable Christmas play, to Richard Marx's beard shaped to all his well-pointed questions? To what part of the normal curve shall we place the Warkomski limp, the Lacot lectures to the professors, John Varadi's cosmopolitan accent, Ruth Hutchison's amiability, John Kevany -the disciplined leprechaun? There are many many more. But it may be better to keep the steel. A punch card, a cabinet, a place to go for the substance of the memory. Only time can leave it exactly as it has been. - Herb Williams -1 ax 9.15 xx 4 74.-q W , -Z In L, -'55, -.Q '-, , 'ja .gf-if' gif' fl.. 1 P - -5. 5 ., .. -,. -g.: if ez- ,. 4.4. v-,n al -3 Q- Q. I P Ill! 25 .. u-.tink 2 W .-'. L v .iQ lf ITNCHMJREQ INSUTUTE I4 SHT 4 nu., if ri!! ,,, .1 N... nu, .FDI iX'Til271'iEi7'll'iL' 1 v'f in JFQQTIYU If no f Cbwafzodaffa' or ZWMJZW' Uuflmudfic ffewffh If r 1 ill 7 ' in ,, M 1, H fv b 1 1 1 r H, If f 5 .f .1 ' i L fl ,ryan-' if 1 '11 fri: - ,f.h'.:W5:E,3 5 Im, N .'-ifvi.L Li1 - wig gi' ff. .1 ,.f:.f :JF ' ,, , GJ 2 3 1 . .Xt ,, i i +,,, A , wif 1 4, lr: kwf 'I 1 1 ,Q r ,Ii i Q 21751, . ':-Qif.,z:5- ,:'1C.5'11 :f HAROLD L. APPLEWHITE, D.D.S. 1482 Carroll Street Brooklyn 13, New York EDWARD D. CDATES, M.D. 811 Cairnsmuir Lane New City, New York 10956 . ., 1,1-v-::,.- 'ifvyfsgt K -' . , 2?,f..fP 5' ' 7 - -if .GNN -. E 1 4-,Y ew' it Naya: ' . . . 5' . swf' A T ., .fx mi , 2-.rpg-fi- :f, i' gfwffgic-, ,Nj .,-i tiki- t 2'fxQ1g-3, ':1f3I:iE',.3..1..L ,, ,. .,-ag--f-.1.-1339WWEQRLS. i ', ', 'ix1'1 ' 1::..:, -vlhfii. - ri J 9-2 1:1--inf iLir.v:..1IF1ig- MARGARET THORNE GROSSI, M.D. 520 East 82nd Street 'YQ-.-1 York, New York 10028 SIGRID BIRK, FLN., 8.8. Loegdsgaard lkast, Denmark 1 ,if ,f LINDA LEE CDHEN, B.A., M.S., M.D. 5814 Orion Road Louisville, Kentucky 110222 ' 'LQ ' -ge, -' 1521 , .' ' , , 1:12 : . ,L A '52 L. , 1 l. .mf .- 'L 'WN ' -. ll 1 , , ' ,., ,, ,V ,. . Mt N1 if Je 1' iii--Iffi, flf-3, EV: . f T' M, -'IL 'v. .L '. HDLGER HANSEN. M.D. 362 Harrison Avenue Lodi, New Jersey 076114 1 , HENRY BIRNE, D.V.M., D,V. 110 Shore Boulevard Brooklyn, New York 11235 LUIS EIL, M.D., M.S. 77 Puritan Avenue Yonkers, New York 10710 CHEN-YA HUANG, M.D. 90, Chung-Cheng Road Shung-Sheng District Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China 1: I L ff . IIMMIE W. BUSH, B.A., M.D. Box 232 Wingate North Carolina WILLIAM 1. FARRELL, M.D. 42 Cross Street Bronxville, New York 10708 tit?-5 tjoils?-t'.1X ?LSiQJy 'x ts. as-.V RUTH REAGAN HUTCHISDN, R.N., B.S. 16 Linda Place Fairfield, New Jersey JOSEPH KANTOR, B.A., M.D. 61-55 98th Street Rego Park, New York 11374 LEONARO A. LEVY, B.A., POD.O. 1261 Central Avenue Far Rockaway, New York 11691 BARBARA ROSE ROBERTSON, B.S. Home Economics, Dietetic lnterneship Diploma Dept. of Public Health B Welfare City of Halifax Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada IOHN PATRICK KEVANY, BA., M.B,, B.Ch., B.A.O. Trudder Grange Newtown Mount Kennedy County Wicklow, Ireland LEON MONROSE, MD. clo Solomon. 270 Convent Avenue New York, New York 10031 CAROL S. SCHACHNER, BA., M.D. 1411-36 27th Avenue Flushing, New York 113511 crry ,rea , v,l I' . ' A 4., W ,E ' F I 1' ', Ll... A . Bi: fi. . pil, g t y ' ' Q ',,,' - , I PAUL D. LANDMAN, B.S., M.S,H.Ed. 1950 Andrewez Avenue New York, New York HERBERT l. LEVIN, BA, M,S., 0.D,S Manor Houzo, Apt 2C 3901 lndependgrico Avenue Riverdale, New York 10463 GERALDINE A, MOWBRAV, M.D. 295 Sterling Place Brooklyn, New York JOSEPH A, PONNIAH, M.B.B.S. Central Leprosy Teaching and Researnh lnztltute Madras, india c ' ,lj ,' A '15 DUNBAR WALLACE SMITH, GRACE C. THOMAS, R.N, B.S. in B.S., M.D., 0.N.B., D.T,M.3rH. Education 227 West 46th Street -GJ Malden Lane New York, New York 10036 Little Ferry, New Jersey 07643 1 THF: 'v.s'?s'1y2mmL 'EWQ ,2f,Q,yt52MQ,?'gg.:.,, . , ,f' l A 'P- -.f RAYMDND A. TDBIA, B.S. M. SYLVESTER VALA, M.D. IUHN VARADI, B.A. 16 Lillian Drive 1365 St. Nicholas Avenue 36-54 35th Street Spring Valley, New York New York, New York 10033 Long Island City, New York SYDELL D. MILLER, M.D ANNA ADRIANA HUBERTINA MARIA CHARLES P. WARKDMSKI, D.D.S. C. DESMDND WDDDING, M.B.B.S. VERSCHUUREN, U-D-S 249 Howard sneer P. o. Box 75 Valkenswaard, Holland Kingston, Pennsylvania Montserrat, British West Indies fwm:fz'dw!ff'.5fbf JDUZTIUZ7' Ufpilbflof Heuffh HD VAN CHAM, M.D., M.S. D. LALIT MDHAN NATH. Hue, Vietnam M-B-B-S-1 M5- New Delhi, India gn-r. X 'Ui J - XY' Lx Q- , C1111ff1'zf1J!11s'jbffILf.x'!z'f' Qf1S1fv7r'fJf'f' 171 fffawfffff.'1ff1Jff1JxIs'!ff1f!ffJn 8 Q r GLAOYS D. BACHMANN, R.N., B.S. 736 George Street Teaneck, New Jersey 07666 LOUIS I. FREEDMAN, A.B., M.S.P.H. 200 East 27th Street New York, New York 10016 MARTIN LEVINE, B.S. 9840 57th Avenue Rego Park, New York a RAYMOND B, BECICH, B.A, EUGENE BELLE, B.S. 1425 121st Street Whrtrng, lndrana 1163911 Lmcoin, Massachusetts 'inf W, SAUL H. GOLDFARB, P.T. IOSEPH A. GORDON, BA. 42-55 Cotden Street 10 Terrace Avenue Ftushrng. New York 11355 Nanoet, New York H. LERUY UEABLER. BCA. SQA Howard Drrvc Bergentretd, New Iersey ROBERT H. GRATTEPANCHE, B.S 1111 North Broadway Whale Plarns, New York 10603 ENRIGUE MALAMUO, MD WISIT PHIIAISANIT, M,D. HARVEY I.. PLESKOW, BA., B.S. Z5 de Mayo 611 EE I Charansamtwong Road 1555 Kearsmg Parkway Bama Blanca, Argentrna Tttapra, Barrgeokyor Monaey, New York 10952 Bangkok, Thartand i .nw ,, . If: V Zlf- 'M-1 :VE F' v , 1 ' r,,,,' . , Wg, Y, Q1 P' ,. G 'Y If A DAVID G. POCKELL, B.S. RODOLFO SOBEL, M.D., M,P.H. 226 Wellbrook Avenue Belgrano 2079 Staten Island, New York Buenos Aires, Argentina SISTER MARY LABDURNE BOEGEI., GLENISS S. SCHONHOLZ, B.S., M.A. 35- New York, New York Jamaica, New York I Q' U O5 Y qdfrxq 2595 . 4 ix mwah .D i ,,,......, 1 ARTHUR C. WILLMAN, B.S. 37 Evergreen Avenue Staten Island, New York 10304 NESAMDNI LYSANDER, B.A., D.M.S., D.P.H. Yeotmal, Maharashtra, India JOHN E. BENASICH, JR., B.8.A Englewood, New Jersey RAYMOND P. LA FALCE. B.S. Piainview, New York 'K' -.rL'g1QfQ'.-NW- 35:Q49 V ' H JOHN R. KRESS. B.A. SISTER MARGARET MARION KIELY. WILLIAM J. FLAHERTY, B.A. JOHN N. BDWDEN, JR., -B.S. Bronx' New ymk B.S., M.Ed. Bronx, New York Wynnewood, Pennsylvania Suffern, New York Car2z1722171JZ'f.s' .Mr Maxfff' cyftgfcfwace M Azfmmefyfnrfwr MFM!aI'?WF 55-b HOWARD L, BARRON, A.B. 88 Catherine Road Scarsdale, New York 10583 MARCIA KERWIT, B.A. 16 West 95th Street New York, New York 10025 . .f Q' , ,I li 1 TX?-' 5. SISTER M. VIRGINIA CLAR BEARD, E U.P., R.N., M.S. Nursing 152-11 89th Avenue Jamaica, New York 11432 ALLAN R. GLUCK, B.S. 1665 York Avenue New York, New York 10028 5- , - 5 nf? Sf F We 'Q' 1 fx . . . ' U f ffwtw, - 1 9: 1 , , iffifiil . - E A 4 , lv 1, fm? . , 'Pt ' 5 .' ,yr-.1 '15 . .. J':,' A A 1' nf: ff -Y Y - . V w 133 E 5 I . f 1, :Nah L N -. -, 'N I -1 M ' -1' Y ' vffci' ,X- QE-: j , Y rx.. A I , Q ., 1,4 XYIA Af, aw: STUART KUBLENZ, A.B., M.D. Bellerose. New York ANTERO LACUT, B.S., M.D. 42,119 Colden Street Flushing, New York 11355 2 INGE F. GULDSTEIN, B.A., M.S 1222 Kensington Road Teaneck, New lersey 190.- RICHARD A. MARX, B.A. 4523 Broadway New York, New York A IA' .mp EMILY MOORE. B.A., M.A. 149 West 75th Street New York, New York 10023 D.P., R.N., M.S. 152-11 89th Avenue lamaica, New York 11432 ' . V1 I 1:12 Q QW ffzf J .. 'V--29. F 1 4 ' ..'.', Y , f ? Xb .5 fn. , I . ,' If f , , , M - .' . ' 4' .' .?ff'3i'- DONALD RUBIN. B.A. New York, New York HERBERT W. WILLIAMS, B.A. 1267 6th Street Valley Stream, New York Cz112d2'1fa!e5fbf Docfwf' Qf'Ph7'!0.wphy' M J'11Ia'fW2JI7N:5'f7'6IZ1!DWcr?' Medzkzwe MARILYN A. BERGNER MARGERY M. BRAREN ROBERT GALTDN ELEANUR P. KDSTANT RAYMOND C. LERNER ATHILIA E. SIEGMANN RONALD B. STUCKEY LILLIAN Z. WARREN 'S ' 1 ,, My I Q I f in n ff 1 V 'fr I W' Q 1 ,Rfk xg? pf vlfwlfi I Q -4 ,Y -. SISTER M. RUSEANNE 0'KEEFE. DDNALD L. PATRICK, A.B. 627 East D Street Springfield, Oregon 97477 RICHARD ZARIN, B.A. 310 Verona Avenue Elizabeth, New Jersey BARRY HALBER. B.A., M.P.A. MARILYN A. SCIIDENFELD, A.B 71-50 Parsons Boulevard 4146 Wickham Avenue Flushing, New York 11365 Bronx 66, New York CPJ12ff1Yf1Jfr'.s'g fbi' flLJ.s'!f'f' vESv!'!af'1JI'f' fn fwffffffwf .gg f' gli ESTER ANGHEL. B.S. GILBERTO CHAVARRIAGA, M.D. IACKIE R. GDUGEDN, B.S, 9 Sderot Smuts Avenrda 3B Norte :ASN-75 5490 10th Avenue Tel-Aviv, Israel Call, Colombla, South Amerlca Rosemount. Montreal, Ouebec - ,.T ' 'j ...ap un-, LESLIE N. KAHN. B.S. KENNETH KRELL, B.A. EDWARD LAZAR, B.A. 67 West Erie Street 325 Riversrde Drlve 2112 East 10th Street Albany, New York New York, New York 10025 New York. New York 7 I 0 we 'S' r f ' -gr wg A .. ear ,Q v '5 1 IAIME A. PAEZ, M.D., M.P.H. ANTDNID PAIIDU PERAZA, M.D. IAMIIA RANA, M.B.B.S. Carrera 28 -446-88 Bogota. DE. 1 13 Calle 11-66 Zona 2 3 1 Mann Gulberg, Rana Road Columbia, South America Ciudad de Guatemala Lahore 'West Palfrstan, Republrca de Guatemala Centro America pn. JUS '1'3' w YDKD ITD, B.A. 8 Shrcnrku Shrrnogrshrcno Krtaeku, Kyoto, Japan fi: 1 Q .V S'Ls.i ring , ' xc ,' 'f - ' ef , , 12- -WI, Q ' I 7 ' A- f flflgdp. ' A+' A .-2213, A inf' 15121. -. Z - . ' J -f-if' ., ' fi ' X' H' - ei Viv. -aqui. 1581- Q ' . me-. r a VAKULABHARANAM MADHAVI, B.S., Dip, Diet. 111-259 lrlanaranipet PD. Vrsakhapatnarn lAP,l India , o I xg I 'f?'1F5f 5.1113 :e1E f'fQ'5'. BALASUBRAMANYAM SHARADAMBAI.. B.S. Srrilrrrnashrlrrgam Horne Science College Cormbatore. 11 Madras Stale. India NANCY ANN SKORUPSKI, B.S. PREMA SRIKANTHAN, M.S. SUVIMAL TANSUPHASIRI, B.S. VARUNEE VDNGSA, B.S 371 Huxley Drive O3 Vikram Bang 75 Lumpoo Road Bangkok, Thailand Buffalo, New York 14225 Pratap gunl, Baroda-2, India Bangkok, Thailand lCf1'Il2Ij47YZ!7fa?J'wfbi' fwzwiw' QfS6Z,6MC6 in Mllfffwfnfjf fwmsing 19 ZFWZKWIEUI num M. nsuuunfn, a.s. LINDA HAMLIN, n.s. mcg Fm WWLETUNY Bis- 2214 West 66th Place Rochester, New York D Oh. Cleveland, Ohio ayton' 'O Krrzzffxffrrfffyjrbf' fWf1.w'f1' 1gf'45Yf'f'fwr'ff he Bfm'!11!ffr'ffr:s' GT' CARMEN M. ALLENDE, B.S., M.P.H. GLORIA H. BLUCK, B,A. HANNAH L. KASSAB, B,S., M D. PURLAINE M LIEBERMAN, B A 838 Kurices Street New York, New York Phrladelphra, Penosytvanra New York, New York Rro Piedras, Puerto Rico Sr I1 . A . V KHUQ., If: rr -ff-- f r. . ' A .LJ LUIS A. LOPEZ, B.S., M.D,, M.P.H. ARTHUR L. MICHELSON, B.A. MARY S, MITTELMAN, A.B. ABRAHAM ORBACH, B.S. Puerto Neuyo, Puerto Rrco Brooklyn, New York New York, New York 794 Mudwood Street Brooklyn, New York :QQ W 'ttf er-fy ANTHONY M. ORLANDO, B.B.A. LINDA PAXTON, B.S.N. ANNETTE RADICK, B.A. BARRY SIRUTKIN, BA. 217 East 7th Street McLean, Vrrgima 170 East Atrr Street Erocutyo News Yo'k Brooklyn, New York 11218 Brooklyn New York ALICE DLAOUE Uandzbfafexqfbr Moxie? Wtycziewce m Adm mffyffwime fWedzZ'z'ne:' Commun My Hrfycfo M ZW AVWSYP II. KEITH BRUITIE, A.B., M.D. Rosebrook Road New Canaan, Connecticut BERNIIZE GLUZEK, M.D. Brooklyn, New York Fe? I5 Q. 'C' 3 . , ,,, Q1 ,Vi ,- .A 'ET A ','-,fa fgmfi 12 . V. ' ,'-,. . -: , , 1 WEL? J Y f GVSAIL fi' -wx-.3 gg.-f H . . A 6543. I y:.,gQ fri-,.,.' . p 'i ' ' SL :.4.r:2gj .4 3:12 ,. ' 'vow eff-..:.i51..N., Y X qw t 1. COR DEHART, B.S., M,D. LAWRENCE M. EISENSTEIN, B.I-I., M.D. GII.DA F. EPSTEIN, Ph.D. Brooklyn, New York 72 Wadsworth Terrace New York, New York 10040 Brooklyn, New York STANLEY HAMMONS, M.D. JAMES I. IIANNUN, M.D. PATRICK M. HUGHES, M.D. Route 2, Box 39 202 Riverside Drive 1117 East 85th Street Manchester, Kentucky 40962 New York, New York New York, New York 10028 SUSANNAH KREHBIEL, A.B., M.D. 240 Monterey Avenue Pelham, New York J. DAVID MILLER, A.B., M.D. 12 East 97th Street New York, New York 10029 'J A.Vq I SANFORD W. STEIN, A.B., M.D. Forest Hrlls, New York HENRY DURIJST, M.D, ' 1-fm I ELENA I. MANZANERA, A,P.l. Chacabuco 1566 Buenos Arres, Argentrna KENNETH R. LUCKE, A.B.. M.D. San Francrsco. Calrtornia ':'A. KENDUN W. SMITH, M.D. 159-311 Rrverslde Drive W. New York, New York 10032 NICHDLAS SAMIOS. B.A., M.D. Astoria, New York er, A fl A A RDBERT SUSSMAN, B.A., M.D. MEHDI L. YEGANEH, M.D. 103 East 86th Street 166 Pleasant Avenue New York, New York Bergentreld. New Jersey 07621 I DELE GATES FROM THE NNSTITUTE off Nuwamou Sciewces To 'THE XN'iEv.NA'noNAi. Coucmess 09 NAL N U'l'RlTi0N 1 'J A X f ' V Ki Ii A . 1.1 , 12' lVlrs, And Her She Stanislaus is sickly, she don't see so good. English is atrocious! won't eat when she should. MRS. STANISLAUS' DILEMMA Cari someone help poor Mrs. S. To be socially acceptable? Her behavior is so immature And her value systems terrible. Group Processes might help her Her perceptions are in stereo, Her bathrobe - coloured red. She's prejudiced toward the patient ln the Hcatty-corner bed. She must know it you are Polack, lf you're.not, she's-agin you, The staff won't tell her nothing! She's suspicious ot the menu. When she cries about her eyesight The nurse says, t'Listen, hon, Go get your BIVIR test, We know what should be done. They stick and squeeze and poke and choke, They treat you like a pig, here. Sighs Mrs. S. in moaning tones. But the staff -they do not dig her. They havent time to listen To an old gal who says w'every, Communications interferred with And our patient walls in misery. ri Plus a dose of TLC 'Cause her threshold limit value Has dropped from A to Z. Shall we prescribe a two-step flow To get her on a normal curve? lf we don', her natural history lVlay use up her reserve. Let's conceptualize the problem, Then move epi- sub- and ortho- Betore she's bitten by a vector, Or becomes a victim of her ego. Group participation is the answer, We need social interaction, Let's try the team approach here To improve communication. - Barbara Robertson ' A I r X Jag Fr? , . ' 'S-. 'Q -X I-V ,Q A 'X , 'L , 1 , 1 .ff N '93:5E-iii sw 5 phi 5, '- .-f 1 ' , , ' ' -- -if-ix.,,f:.-i2?rgj '- . Eg:--1 . H , .L 4 2- ' A -' ?f'f::1-1112112 f:.:ff-If ,. . . Sb 3 in 3 7 '1 P i , .q ' 1 , 'I 'KP F-1' ri .49 I 21 Ilf- T' 1 --L J, 1 -,ie-1 -1' ,T b 11 1 All ,' -s 3 , w, wb m ! I 0 fn X I X X , X 1 , 1 A h I ' 'L jj: 'My I y X 'X il'--9 , Wnaffug xxx D P ' 1 1 Zu, , ' N r . W. x 'f ff 1 ffmv ' ri r ' X .Q I, M I ff , X ,X W J 'W X W s f',,,,. .1 wwix A ,iii fy- S54-fs i '- an ,. -I mfg I' ,I .lf 1- 13 J 1 wr 'T ,- - I, -. 1,-I' . 4:84-n..v Y IHE nr fxrnnslon .L ,fp uw Ji- wgnfi 5 .'EL...1 Illia U' MW WM qfyfmi W? I I p COLUMBIA - PRESEYTERIAN MEDICAL CENTER MORE QNXXXK f0!, N 'lb 'J x 1 F... ,- A ,, If LESS 7 W . Z-I f , 1 A I - , Q-1 xg-' Mu-Un WY , nm vw-um I Huxaxiuxllx ' lx 3, F 1lhl,n vN J E gl 'Nm-ll--HM11 . I , 1-5, V :Mx-1 mrull l 'f nun 31 A n2Ul1 :lx1:Ul' F --- --- Zac A V . x-mlvuum M ms ' S1 .T .- -A . ,xnxnwlmi 'i WiU1'I'M.:f..-.--- - A 1n'u:vfl..s1n:I,,', +Nl:u.mw vX1:1::::::7f' ' , fx?-:naman ll11h V '7 Tiff' '1': ' I rwuxxu' ammigmq, -,--.-- - Ixx1,xx',xlN xLAyn---....,- - 1 5lli'IlrlH N------ X mmnulll V N 'JP' ---- -- X ' ' 'x':: ::':1.' 1HffHH ,ff - - ---1: , , x-utr E Nw ,-.-,---- , I .',L,l ag 11 1 In 3 lu:'R'x'x:mHx'nx ,uallixhr , - - - Z l2 .'1'If . '5xNy,ljll? nm-g.,,,-It MUN U ,,,-..,..-,L--L -V: - ,',,,fuIH 9UhnUlh4P lllldlllllrfr-iv ---......- -,,, ...- ' F U 1 '1x1n xxnpllUlllU' Ii im' l'u -------' 1 u w. Lad 'lpi kXgkHlVlNNl' 1llllglIIl :'Nf...------ ----1- ff, ... , X T .. tn' xl t ,,gL 1Qnxl!v:I1xx,I vrx HAIIH N ,ii rd-t .- I 1 V 0 4 1, g ws 5 6 '1 2 515572676 m'nezfy'jbem'eni Qfww' .sfzezfwzis fame 0wZ.w'de Mae WUTWZUX wwwe-2 W SPECIALIST X G msn.-xL1sT xx n HZ , 24:3-f 41 X 25 ,22 J ggid In Q 1 r If . '.' 1.4 ' 3 ,H ' 4 XI 'f 'I 'lf - - R P 5222:-5: Qzhl 7 5 4 Q W' , Q 44251 Y' ' ?Z':f'f, 5 fi: , S i Wm ff? , .. ,- X ,J Ffif- :emi , i'ZZ?f'11 ' ' W S 'EW 9 ' af J -1 .- u 7 Mm Q43 'WUUQYE EAN PEUPZE SURE I READ IT. BUT THOSE T.V. COMMERCIALS . . . IF YOU STOP SMOKING, THE GIRL WON'T SIT IN YOUR LAP. IN AMERICA, I THOUGHT THE WORM EGGS WOULD AT LEAST BE A LITTLE DIFFERENT. THE YEARBOOK? SURE WE HAVE SOME MONEY. YOU GET THE PAPER . . . A BILLION DOLLAR BUDGET? FINE. NOW IF WE CAN FIND A PROGRAM . . . 3, LIGHT BILL, S27.00g PHONE BILL, SI8.00g THE RENT IS DUE . . . .V-, TEENAGE GIRLS, THEY SHOULD BE TOLD. OUR PROJECT FOR TODAY IS . . . PROBLEM SOME VIRUSES WALK THIS WAY. MENTALLY, HE WAS ALL RIGHT. BUT THOSE SIX LEGS . . . fs YOU MEAN, YOUNG MAN, YOU HAVE NOTHING TO READ THIS WEEKEND? 4 I SWEAR, THAT TAPEWORM WAS THICK AS AN AUTOMOBILE TIRE. - ' linuii ' -' PA., , b f 'L' ' A . . I A 4 if ig - !.- KA' SEARCH THESE PLAYBOY SLIOES ARE GETTING BETTER AND BETTER . . . ODE TO SPH On the Columbia School of Public Health lVly data is biased lcollected by stealthj. First, to define this population - They're self-selected from many a nation, Each making a stay of varied duration, For the purpose of varying cerebration. Their behavior is odd - By guess or by God, They assess epidemic Or factors systemic: They plan and they program, They progress and regress, Till incidents prevalent in this location One way or another, steer each toward the Egress So, before being transmitted, Let each agent toast The nurturant environment Provided by our host. - Gilda F. Epstein .... 1 P'-. u -'-'H-,,,. x X f--' X' '. K X .oil Y 4 t.. .gn KV, 'E ,nur ' - 4 , , - ... -. .A .,v 1 w N m, K I l .5 4- U K , un


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Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Columbia University School of Public Health - Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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