Cornell University Medical College - Samaritan Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1948
Page 1 of 80
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 80 of the 1948 volume:
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I 1 4 . V' . if -, X. ir. 1 4 A V x A . v I , 4 J I ' 1 5 .J 'J '4 '1 I iw! xxwwvvv dill SAIIIAIIIIAII FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY I898-I9A8 ' A, i i CORNELL UNIVERSITY MEDICAL COLLEGE I3OO YORK AVENUE, NEW YORK 21, NEW YORK Editor RICHARD HORACE GRANGER Bafinen' Manager NANCY MARIE PETERS Secretary DOUGLAS A. HADDOW Treasurer JAMES WHITE SAYRE Photography Editor BERNARD RODIER E DED1cATE the 1948 SAMARITAN to the late Dr. Henricus Stander, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, in warm appre- ciation of the thoroughness of his teaching and his sincere interest in our welfare. DEDICATIO 1 1 1 t 4 A celel be 2 recti It is invo PIQS1 fact be hopj may prob g Tl frenu poli of Q1 here the tl In if YEARS NY FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY is an occasion for celebration. In the case of a medical school it must also be a time for a recapitulation and re-evaluation of the di- rection taken by the school in its half-century of existence. It is perhaps presumptuous for us, as senior students still involved in the processes we are discussing, to attempt to present our analysis of these trends. But we feel that the fact that we are still engaged in the business of learning to be physicians certainly entitles us to our opinions. We hope that these, carefully weighed and deliberately delivered, may prove to be of some use to those who would study the problem in all its aspects. I ,The present essay is intended as a comparison of the trends in medical education between 1898 and 1948. The political and financial struggles surrounding the founding of Cornell are recounted elsewhere in this book. We are here primarily concerned with the philo-sophical climate of the times. In 1898 there were few university-affiliated medical schools in the country. There were, rather many proprietary schools owned by their faculties, supported solely by tuitions and fees, casually located, and inadequately staffed and supplied. Some of them-in large cities, near large hospitals, with famous physicians on their staffs-obviously offered superior medical education to others which were in smaller towns with only a few teaching physicians. The entire method of education was primitive. Students followed a physician on rounds of his patients for a given period of time-a year or two-and then were admitted to a series off lectures to which they purchased admission. They sat through the jojo same series of lectures for two successive years and then were given a short oral examination after which they were allowed to practice. The calibre of lectures and examinations varied greatly with the location and dignity of the individual school-so, obviously, did the calibre of the men attracted to their staffs and student bodies. The smaller schools, dependent for survival on the fees paid by the students had to keep admitting a sufficient number or fail to survive. They could not afford to be fussy about the kind of men they took in and later graduated as doctors. The larger, endowed schools were much more careful but still required no more than a high school education or its equivalent for admission. The highest level was that of the few un-iversity schools-Harvard, Columbia, johns Hopkins and Pennsyl- vania among the most widely known. . more richly In the 1890's Osler at Hopkins initiated a revolutionary method of medical education. The course was lengthened and bedside instruction of medical students on the wards of the hospital was introduced. The students followed a gradated course beginning with the more fundamental, pre- clinical subjects and progressing through these to the actual study and practice of bedside medicine. Not only were patients brought into the amphitheaters, but the students vis-i-ted the wards, examined the patients and followed their course. The men who founded Cornell were imbued with the spirit of this innovation. They foresaw its tremendous in- fluence on all medical education and had endeavored to in- stitute at least some of its principles in the school they ran i . . . the .fludentr virited the wards, exam- ined the patientr and followed their c0zzr.re. ' before it affiliated with the university. Their belief in the new teaching method was assuredly one of the factors in their decision to withdraw from the unhappy arrangement with New York University. They demanded autonomy in the arrangement o-f their medical curriculum and the free- dom to appoint the men they wanted to teach the way they wanted. At the same time that the revolution in the teaching of clinical medicine occurred another radical change was being effected in the opposite direction-that was the establish- ment of laboratories in the clinical subjects with work in them required of the students. Until shortly before the turn of the century the anatomy dissecting lab was the only one fou-nd consistently at all medical schools and the only one at any of them in which the students were required to -participate. However, in Europe, especially in Germany, the physiology, bacteriology and chemistry laboratories were legion in number and had been turning out important re- searches for many years. Americans interested in those sub- jects to any degree had to go to Europe to learn the tech- niques and even the subject matter. Although the two trends seem to be in opposite direc- tions they really stem from the same source-the wide- spread i-ntroduction into clinical medicine of the scientific method and its basic procedures. The theory of infection was relatively newly proven, human physiology and nutri- tion were i-n their infancyg biochemistry was a newly coined word. Above alll, case studies were being carried out in a more systematic fashion and with more understanding of the underlying mechanisms of pathology and pathophysi- ology. The spheres overlapped in the use of laboratory procedures in the workup of the patient-the cultures, the blood studies in ever-increasing number. To the art of medicine was fused the added dimension of laboratory sci- ence. To cope with it the student now had to learn and understand the tests and their bases. No longer could medicine be apprehended from the following of the prac- titioner on his private rounds and the listening to a series of didactic lectures. The new medicine was essentially hospital medicine. The procedures became more complicated than the routine phy- sician could perform in the home or office. The complete study of the patient required close surveillance for a period of time. It was becoming increasingly advantageous for any medical school to be associated closely with a large '6 hospital whose wards would be filled with a variety of cases for study. The new Corne'll's needs were largely hlled by its intimate , connection with Bellevue and then with the New York Hospital and other scattered units in which the various medical specialties were emphasized. The students began to spend more and more time in the hospi- tal itself. Simultaneous with the need for more hospital space was the -need for more laboratory space. With only anatomy as a lab course previously little or no room was needed to house a medical school. A dissecting room, a few offices and classrooms-that was all. Now, suddenly, many labo- ratories were needed with divers types of equipment and physical arrangement. Many amphitheaters-some with provisions for demonstrating patients-were called for. Many classrooms with facilities 'for demonstrations had to be provided. All of these were included in the new, won- derful building donated by Colonel Payne and designed by the medical faculty. It was a model building and one of the most elabora-te belonging to any medical college. The superior facilities attracted superior students and superior men to the faculty and accounted in no small measure for the rapid growth in prestige of the new institution. The increasing -complexity in subject matter and physical plant brought about a compensatory increase in the size of the staff. The natural outcome of this was the appo-intment of .full time departments in the pre-clinical subjects and the gradually increasing use of full -time men in the clinical subjects as well. New departments were created and en- larged as .the need for them became apparent. It was felt that to cope with the broadening field of the medical school curriculum students really needed more than a high school background. They actually needed a firm grounding in the basic sciences which had only recently begun to become organized in their own right. Accordingly, the final step in the organization of the new school was actually taken several years later when a college degree was made a requirement for admission. This was considered a daring step for a fledgling school to take, and the conse- quences were promptly noted in the reduced size of -the student body which inevitably followed. Within a few years, how- ever, a new, large body of well qualified candidates pre- sented itself for admission and the school has always since that time had many more applicants than it could admit. ha Stl ph di' de of pr: gm ins --l the pro me W bi' tial lon, and inir the day 'I ting old addr cine of t port sooq exce. sity pern dcisi tural Tl possi educz more ratioi it pc 3 C0 other subje that 1 But all this is but the setting of medical education. It had a two-fo'ld effect on the students. It produced, first of all, the first generation of physicians trained for institutional practice rather than in- dividual private practice. It produced secondly a grou a , P dedicated to the furtherance of medicine through the pursuit type of training given the of the basic sciences and their implications in clinical practice. In.itially these trends were complementary-both groups of men needed to cluster around the large teachin ' 8 institutions of medicine where facilities for intensive study -clinical and laboratory-were available. In many cases the groups overlapped, with men working along both ap- proaches. The need for medical centers lavish with equip- ment and material arose g the need was inevitably fulfilled. With the knowledge churned up in increasing quantity by workers along both avenues of investigation their essen- tial dichotomy has become more and more marked. No longer is it possible for one worker to straddle the clinical and purely laboratory fields. And the necessity of determ- ining the amount of stress to be laid on each approach in the medical curriculum is responsible for the split in present day education wh.ich will be discussed later. The original faculty of the medical school was a dis- tinguished one and as new departments were organized, or old ones re-organized many more outstanding men were added to lit. Because of the important contributions to medi- cine made by these men, as well as the progressive policies of the school, Cornell rapidly became one of the most im- portant medical schools in the country. Its rapid growth soon made clear the inevitable insufficiency even of the excellent building opposite Bellevue. This, plus the neces- sity of tying up with some voluntary hospitall, led to the permanent afiiliation with New York Hospital and the dcision to consolidate the two institutions in one architec- tural unit. This had more than a symbolic importance. It made it possible for the first time for the two phases of education, the pre-clinical and the clinical, to be integrated more completely. It recognized the need for such integ- ration on the higher level of faculty co-operation. It made it possible for both groups of workers to be associated in a common organization and to mee-t informally in each others work areas and formally in joint conferences whose subject matter was of interest to -both. The assurance that the students will carry over into their clinical work medical the essentials of the basic courses of the first two years is predicated on the mutual respect of the teachers in both groups. In the years that the school was located on First Avenue there was a more complete physical severance between the ' an there is in the new two sections of the curriculum th consolidated unit. This split was minimized by the very competent and brilliant instruction of the faculty members and their participation in 'both clinical and pre-clinical work. These men were mainly responsible for the shape of Cor- nellfs development in those years and also laid the attern P for the type of instruction that has continued to be given at the institution. If the pre-clinical teachers do not indicate the tieups the student must make between the courses of his first two years and those of his later career, and if the clinical pro- fessors do not strongly outline the fundamental basis of the clinical entities they are describing, the student will never be a successful practitioner of modern medicine. The con- nection is not often an easy one to trace and the task of making the student see the natural evolution of disease from the processes of physiology and chemistry -he has previously learned is one that takes inhnite pain in its carrying out. Much that has been written in recent years on the subject of medical education .has been aimed at pointing out this fact and suggesting new schemes for accomplishing the rapprochement more effectively. These will be discussed more fully further on. Another important result of the establishment of the medical center was the gathering together in one functional unit of leading workers in all the various medical special- ties. This made it possible for the most thorough and up- to-date methods of attack to be leveled at medical problems from all angles at once. The internist working on diabetes, for example, now had the advantage of expert ophthalmo- logic, endocrinologic, surgical, laboratory advice and assist- ance. He had also close at hand facilities for cllinical and fundamental research on the problem. He had frequent conferences with other men on the staff in which he could glean the most recent advances in their work and their recent clinical experiences. But with this he also acquired the obligation to synthe- size this wealth of experience and transmit it to the student in its clearest and most available fo-rm. The function of a medical center such as ours is threefold. It must first of . . . wzzrdr filled wills az wzriezy of carer for .ftzzdy. all provide better than adequate care for the sick. It must carry out far-reaching research plans in medicine to en- rich our cultural base and eventually make even better medi- call care possible. And it must teach-must train its students to carry on -both the other parts of its program with com- petence and assurance. Let us now examine how that is 'being done at the present time at the Cornell-New York Hospital Medical Center. When the medical school first moved uptown to its present quarters and assumed its impressive hybrid title, a most important change was made in the nature of the faculty that requires some discussion. At that time the men responsi'b'le for the shaping of the new unit felt that the job of running its various subdlivisions required the undivided attention of the men in charge. Accordingly, the professorships of the major clinical departments were made for the first time full time positions. It was required that the men who filled these positions should hold no others and should have no private practice outside the hospital. Many of the men who already had large and lucrative practices naturally felt unwilling to give them up so that the personnel shifted sharply with the move. This was the logical culmination. of the trend to hospital medicine-to the picture of the physician as a specialist. The new men were themselves products of the new training and their efforts were oriented to it. With the rapid ad- vances in laboratory techniques and the overwhelmingly massive addition of source information to each facet of medicine the institution of full time clinical professors foredestined the Cornell student to be slanted for spe- cialization. Surprisingly the curriculum and the methods of teaching have had to be changed very little to point the way to the new medicine. The student spends the first two years of his course in the classrooms and laboratories of the five buildings fronting on York Avenue. He takes anatomy and biochemistry, physiology and bacteriology, pathology and pharmacology. He is then briefly introduced to physical di- agnosis. The third year he spends on the wards of the various clinical specialties. The fourth year he spends mainly in the out-patient departments. The variable factor is not, obviously, the subjects taught, but the orientation of the men who do the teaching. The increasing segmentation of labor at all levels is the phenomenon of our age. The expanding complexities of Kipx Bay-Yorkville Health Center. Stadentf get first Ivana' experience u in pnblir health work. civilization have brought us to a point where no one can hope to follow it all-few can hope to fo-llow more than one or two threads. This is especially true in medicine where the geometrically multiplying data are inexorably eradicating the general practitioner. In his place is spring- ing up a veritable horde of specialists. The specialties are formed and then sub-divided. As the divisions overlap one with the other, they split again. The orderly procession of it all must delight the Aristotelian lover of the syllogism, but it cannot help but confound us who hope to find somewhere in the maze a niche of our own. Faced with this situation the school can do nothing else but try to fit us for the specialist future, and this it is doing. In so doing it is forced to choose carefully the weightqof each course, each fragment of course, in the curriculum. For that reason it must weed out not just that which is completely valueless but also that which is of relatively little use in train- ing us for the future that has been chosen for us. The preclinical courses are taught, with minor excep- tions, with an eye to the clinical problems and procedures that arise from them. Especially in the dynamic sciences of physiology and biochemistry we are early madeto see the . . . laboratory advice and arrirtancef' D80 --,tt Q-L 'al W Q. clinia learn the 1 is thi beconi based into often, most Rathe basic Mu widely the pf ology there bemoa search of thi eries 2 llle W4 made trainin ITIOIE 1 Thei Certain Q and rn Which trainini flecessa all, me is a lil of lengths bfi add, ratio al This HFC of infc his foul Out th, Orin the if dang . . .rurprififzgly little change in cw'rirzzlzzm. D clinical implications of the fundamental pninciples we are learning. The effect is to focus our attention away from the fundamentals and on their implications, for after all, is this not what we have come to medical school for? We become not men of science, but physicians, with our feet based on the 'loam of science and our heads stretched up into the ether that is still clinical medicine. We are told, often, that the best physician is the one who knows the most basic science. But our training does not bear this out. Rather the best physician is the one who knows enough basic scientific theory to temper the art of medicine. Much has been written about this in the literature. It is widely claimed that too much time has been allotted to the preclinical subjects. Anatomy should be shortened. Physi- ology and chemistry should be combined. Perhaps. But there is an increasingly insistent cry that on the other hand bemoans the dwindling number of men delivered into re- s h b ' earc y the medical schools of the country. The holders of this view point out that most of our important discov- eries are being made by men who are not physiciansg that the work in -the areas in which medical progress must be made is being done by men who have had no medical training. Thisview demands more theory, more technique, more stimulus to do original investigative work. There canno Certainly men trained in 'both approaches are needed g that they cannot be trained in both at once has become more and more apparent. Each school must choose, must decide which type of training .it will stress and then give that tra. .A . . . ining without introducing more of the other than is necessary to give the student a solid foundation For after ll a , medical school is still only 'four years lon and th g, ere is a limit to how much one can assimilate in that period of time Already this time factor h b t be a right and a wrong to this problem. r. Mor1'ill. Q . . . anzpbilbefzten wizb fezciliti Delivery Room. er for demofzslmlizzg paziiefztff' groups meez in each ozlzerhf work azrenzff' Dr. Model! and Dr. Gold . . . Me five bzzildizzgf fronlifzg on York Avenue. A. ta , as een attacked by the lengthening house staff training. Much more time cannot y be added at any point without making the trainingf practice p M pi A ty, fafio atbSufd1Y lafge- This is the approach to the group problem. In it we are likely to lose sight of the individual problem. The mass S Mm ff ttsi of information that must be presented to the student in P p 1 .fs2 i f his four years is great and fairly well standardized throughf' fp yppfi out the country, with the emphasis varying according to 7 p the orientation to the problems outlined above. This makes .H i it dangerously easy for the teach-ing methods to rely heavily ,tvzv ' 09a -- . . . the pre-clifzicfzl courses. Bacteriology labemtory. on didactic lectures and parrotted procedures. This will give the student the factual material he must have and it will promote physical dexterity-but it will not promote mental dexterity and this is certainly the physician's most valuable asset. It is an undeniable fact that, although the classes in medical schools are small, and the facultyfstudent ratio high, the students have less time for individual exploration and expression than in any other graduate training. Efforts are made to alleviate this by the smalll group arrangement of laboratory time, the requirement of special theses in several departments, the ward case study and the small tutor groups of the clinical years. But even much of this time is unfortunately dedicated to senseless repetition of the didactic material. Actual elective time is at a minimum. The 'benefit the student will derive from the work he does in small units is often directly related to the interest and capability of the tutor at hand. This type of -teaching requires more skill than the giving of lectures, and it is perhaps the greatest fault of our medical education that our teachers give more thought to their medicine than to their teaching-more thought to their content than to their method. By this we do not imply that they do not do enough spoon feediingf' Quite the opposite-in most cases they do not do enough to stimulate the student to think through and beyond the problems with which he is confronted. It is not enough to tell the student that he must work things out for himself. The approach to medical problems is largely unfamiliar to the student until late in his career and its aspects are confusing. A certain amount of further effort must be expended to point out to the student in which areas, and by which methods, he may most fruitfully work on his own. This is especially important in the third year where the student must do a good deal of unpleasant, routine work in which he is very likely to bog down unless his interests are steered into more inspiring channels. lf the clinical work is not intelligently supervised, the student .10. . . . the mm!! group mwzfzgement of labomlory time. Pbyriology experiment. may fail to make the necessary extrapolations from his individual case work. Studies in education during the recent war brought to light precepts which may be of use to us in concluding our survey of medical teaching. Over and over again it was proven that by using the newly developed visual and other aids it was possible to teach a large amount of material to a large number of students in a relatively short period of time. The material thus presented was generally well assimilated so that it was long remembered and easily available for implementation. It is possible that some of these methods may take their place in the teaching of college level courses and the preclinical work in medical school. If so, they may significantly shorten the amount of time needed to train students in these subjects. But this must be the only way in which such shortening can come about-through the introduction of new and more efficient teaching methods. For the other important lesson the war taught us was that students were ill equipped to cope with graduate study when their undergraduate training was actually curtailed under the existing methods. This was just as true in medical school as in any other, and we must guard carefully against letting a similar situa- tion develop because of -our own efforts to shorten the preparatory time in medicine. The clinical subjects may also benefit to some extent from these new systems, but clinical teaching is already well suited to its subject matter and requires only the more careful training in teaching of those who do it. In the first fifty years of its history Cornell has developed from its uncertain, strife-riddeni inception to one of the foremost medical schools in the world, This growth was possible because of the progressive spirit prevailing among the men who directed its destiny. We certainly trust that in the future a similar spirit of enlightenment will carry Cornell to even greater heights. Richard Horace Granger. Field zrip-puhlie health. V -1 ll I I 4 ll Ill I E4 ' - we hope Zo jifzd ez niehe of our own. 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W, V1 T51-i w 1 Q 'ai i,, , .- fm if ' - N ' H - X 455 -W if -12 in - - 1 fvf pfz xiii' 1' ' fAN '. N'-T 5, ei ,f 1 . A1-N-.,.,v-M-..,... wh, , -14 ,- .. fv- ? f 1 f ,fa-4' 'Q' A 'r e'Wf:::. 1 f ,. ,xii f:, ,.. if- ',f.1t 1fi,:+, ,T ,'.' .4..Z,,.1,1'e.. M- .. . 5' , M iifei f ff ff il fi X Hg ' 'A Ig 'f er' U A 3 1 xi ' ',1,,,0 -V1 igfjf gi , , ' ' Q.: wr Y Q7 -S frm-.'fie:5,r r,Q3,. 'Y -1' - g U M. 2,1-. zegfv-,--39,,,:,:',5g, , .. we posall In fa had a The to be ,difiicu cal sci tion c closed For versity which, impart. Physiol establis Elf Ifilai the H64 ment fi pitais should Colo partmer beneficc iii mee been fc L- Looi fhaf f01 cal schc the H1-5 instituti. ThrOug1 monk 3 Which 1 College the Unix Schufma dai' of A- B. Q and on E011 of inaugllra In order Wafhinqi of the kg .Mo for 0 RNELL UN co Msmc I ARLY IN THE posals were made for the establishment of a medical schooli In fact, one such move took place before the university h d d ' ' a opene its doors to students, in 1866. Three times subsequently the issue was revived but h d 21 to be abandoned because of financial and organizational ,difficul-ties. The nearest approach to the founding of a medi- cal school was the estabilishmen-t in 1887 under the d' , , irec- tion of Mr. W. A, Viall, of a school of pharmacy, which l cosed three years later because of lack of interest For many years there existed in connection with the un' 1- versity what had been termed a medical preparatory course which, under the efficient direction of Dr. B. G. Wilder, imparted instruction in comparative and human anatomy and physiology, also in microscopy and biology. The thought of establishing a medical school in connection with the universit Y at Ithaca appealed strongly to the trustees, but they recognized th . . . e necessity of securing in advance an adequate endow- ment for its -support, as well as the establishment of hos- pitals or wards in the vicinity of the university which h ld s ou supply. the necessary clinical and hospital practice Colonel Oliver Hazard Payne founded the Medical Be- partment of Cornell University in 1898. This far-reaching, b 5 . . ene cent act was the expression of a deep-seated interest in medical education, an interest which had grown and been fostered largely through an association with Dr. Alfred L. Loomis, his physician and friend. Colonel Payne saw that for the proper development of the best type of medi- cal school it should be an integral part of a university of the first class, and he selected Cornell University as the institution best suited to fulfill the ideals he had in mind. Through the judicious management of Mr. Henry F. Dim- mock and Dr. Lewis A. Stimson, plans were perfected which resulted in the acceptance by Cornell of a Medical College fully equipped in all particulars. On the part of the university, arrangements. had been entrusted to President Schurman, Mr, Wil'liam H. Sage, and Mr. Samuel D. Halli- day of the trustees. Mr. Horace White and ex-Governor A. B. Cornell were subsequently added to this committee, and on April 14, 1898, upon theiunanimous recommenda- tion of the committee, the Cornell Medical College was inaugurated. The school was established in New York City in order that it might have adequate facilities for clinical teaching, but arrangements were made for the duplication of the Hrst two years of study at- Ithaca. ' HISTORY of Cornell University pro IVERSITY AL CCLLEGE In the words of President Dr. jacob Gould Schurman who spoke along with Dr Lewis A Stimson Th od 7 . . , e ore Roosevelt fthen the Governor of New Yorkj, and Seth L .V . . . ow fPres1dent of Columbia Universityj at the official opening of the school building in 1900 The ori in of : 8 the Cornell University Medical College remin.ds one of th b' ' e irth of Minerva. That goddess, you remember, sprang full-armed from the brain of love Our medical coll . ege is almost as miraculous a creation. A year ago no one d . . . reamt of its existence. Today it stands before the world with an actual organization and a potency of achievement which seem to presage its manifest destiny as the American A . A . . cropolis of Aesculapius. I know no better illustration of Professor Huxley's saying that 'the question of medicl a education is, in a very large and broad sense a question f o financef Most assuredly this institution could not have come into existence but for the unlimited capital which a wise head and generous hand have furnished for its foundation and support. That munificent gift is the offer- ing to humanity of one who feels deep sympath with hi y I s suffering fellow men, and who believes that their lot is to be ameliorated by the elevation of medical education. 'I suppose,' this generous benefactor once said to me, 'we all want to do some good in the world, and I should like to do something by improving the education of that profession which cares for the lives of men, heals their wounds, and alleviates their suffering' Of such a compassionate heart and intelligent understanding was the Cornell University Medical College born. Oliver Hazard Payne was bo-rn in Cleveland, the son of U. S. Senator Henry B. Payne and Mary Perry fwhence he derived his given name after the Commodorej. He was a menmber of the class of 1863 at Yale and it was there he formed the close friendship with Lewis A. Stimson, a classmate, later Dr. Stimson, which was to have such a pro- found influence on the history of our school. fFortunately for Cornell, legal difficulties prevented Yale from sponsor- ing the New York medical school, in 1898j. He left Yale to join the Union forces and rose from First Lieutenant to Lieutenant Colonel in the 124th Ohio Infantry by Sep- tember, 1862, and in january, 1863, was made Colo-nel at the head of the regiment, which was to see much hard Hghting in the Army of the Tennessee. Colonel Payne was wounded, returned to service, and when the war closed held the brevet rank of Brigadier General of Volunteers 0130 2 for faithful and meritorious service . He was an iron manufacturer and oil refiner in Cleveland from 1866 to 1884, at which time he moved to New York. Dr. Lewis A. Conner describes Colonel Payne in his later years as a tall, spare, quiet man, still a bachelor, in whom modesty, simplicity, and gentleness were dominant char- acteristics. He despised ostentation and publicity and his gift to the Cornell School was made with the understanding that his name should not be made public in connection with it. ' The school is founded . . . a contemporary account It behooves us now to examine the story behind the story of the founding of Cornell Medical School. Time has worn away some of the bitter feelings of those early years, and we may now examine objectively a contemporary ac- count in the Evening Post of April 16, 1898: A serious dissension divides the council of trustees of New York University, it may be stated upon authority, and such friends of the University as are informed of the state of affairs fear that unless 'peace with honor' shall be estab- lished at an early day, there wil-lf ensue complications det- rimental to the good name and to the prosperity and useful- ness of a seat of learning which had just attained a prospect of winning a place in the front rank. The latest visible consequence of the council's internal discord is the secession of the eminent surgeons and physicians who have so long given distinction to the Medical School of the University, and their attachment in a body to the medical department which Cornell University has just established in this city. How a result so deplorable to the New York University- so fortunate on the other hand for Cornell University-has been 'brought about, is a question to which all the sons and supporters of the former institution eagerly desire answer. A gentleman who is thoroughly familiar with the whole situation in all of its details has given to the Even- ing Post the following explanation of the seeming mystery: 'From the year 1841 to the year 1887 there was a medical department of the New York University. The whole control of that department was vested in a governing faculty, who accepted the entire financial responsibility and collected and disposed of the tuition fees. Their compensation was limited to such fees, after payment of expenses. The eight govern- ing professors were elected by the council, but only on the recommendation of the medical faculty, all other professors were selected and appointed by the governing faculty of physicians. The University conferred degrees of medicine upon the recommendation of the medical faculty. 'From time to time gifts were made to this governing faculty, as individuals, with which monies, in 1883, they purchased large buildings on East Twenty-Sixth Street, at a net expense of somewhat over 3150,000, of which 390,000 had been borrowed upon bond and mortgage, 340,000 had been contributed by the faculty themselves, and about 320,000 received from subscribers. 'In 1885 a corporation was formed, called the Medical College Laboratory, and individual members of the govern- ing faculty, who then held certificates representing their interests in the property, conveyed the property to the Medi- cal College Laboratory, as a convenient method of holding 3 . s E scam Broome Street downiowfz extension clinic old N. Y. H. title. Thereafter the governing faculty contributed additional amounts. In 1892, Colonel Payne, a friend of the medical governing faculty, 'contributed 3150,000 to the Medical Col- lege Laboratory, with which he satisfied the mortgages upon the buildings, and cancelled the certificates of interests held by the members of the governing faculty, so that the title to the property, free and unencumbered, thereafter stood in the name of the Medical College Laboratory. That amount in effect represented the entire value of the -property, part of the additional sum contributed before that 'by the faculty and their friends having been spent in the care of the insti- tution and in repairs and alterations which added little or nothing to its value. 'Early in 1897, the Chancellor of the University, Dr. Henry M. MacCracken, represented to the governing faculty that it would be much for their interest, as well as that of the University, if the system of self-government, which had hitherto prevailed as to the medical department, should be abandoned, and if, in place of a fluctuating income, de- pendent on the amount earned from year to year, the faculty should receive fixed salaries, to be -paid by the University, and that, to enable the University to meet such salaries and expenses, the property owned by the Medical College Laboratory should be conveyed to the University. He also ' agreed medical mittee 4 lected t committ in every to be rr of the of salary by 'Clie 1 agreed t College agreemen were full of the ot 'There mittee ol wants an. Payne, W to put th With tho: satisfied, , -l:2lCl1liy Sup mittee thg E- Miller, New York Were Prom University mittee wh, Mr- Cllarlc Charles E- 'Sh01'tly .of discord PFOPO-5lll0n Wh the th, Plan That tell throuotl allflbutinf ihe Ullixirs ij, The C0111 e medical fel' to tl l The New York H orpilal, lVeJt 16117 Slreel, efzznzfzfe gate. Completed in 1877 tbir was lbe recom! N. Y. H. and was used for the fore of pfzliefzlf znzlil llae prerem' hospital was opened ill 1932. agreed that, if such change were made, the conduct of the medical department would be carried on by a medical com- mittee of the University, to be composed of gentlemen se- lected by the then governing faculty, and that such medical committee shouldin effect represent the wishes of the facult Y in every respect as to the appointment of professors, changes to be made in the professorships, and general management of the medical department, always excepting the amount of salary to be paid the professors, which was to be fixed by the council. These matters being fully understood and agreed upon, the property was conveyed by the Medical College Laboratory to the University. The conditions and agreements were not included in the terms of the deed, but were fully understood, each party relying on the good faith of the other. 'There were then two gentlemen on the medical com- mittee of the University, thor-oughly acquainted with its wants and needs, and one of whom, Colonel Oliver H. Payne, was the gentleman who had given the 2I5150,000 to put the Medical College Laboratory upon a firm basis. With those two gentlemen the governing faculty were fully satisfied. At the request of the Chancellor, the governing .faculty suggested as the other two members of the medical com- mittee the names of Mr. Henry F. Dimmock and Mr. Charles E. Miller. These gentlemen, although not graduates of the New York University, or connected with it in any manner, were promptly eleoted members of the council of New York University and appointed members of the medical com- mittee which thus consisted of Colonel Oliver I-I. Payne Mr. Charles T. Barney, Mr. Henry F. Dimmock, and Mr., Charles E. Miller. 'Sho Of discord was introduced by Chancellor MacCracken by a proposition to unite the faculty of Bellevue Medical College with the then existing medical department of the University. That plan, after numerous conferences and negotiations, fell through. The Chancellor was bitterly disappointed, and, attributing the loss of the lan to the medical faculty of spite upon away from rtly thereafter a new and entirely unexpected element the University, promptly prdieeded to vent his lt. The control of the medical faculty was taken the medical committee of the Universi-ty by him, and trans- ferred to the executive committee of the council, a body of which only one The faculty was out consultation medical faculty. committee voted they could earn of the medical committee was a member. ,appointed by the executive committee, with- with either the medical committee or the No salaries were fixed, but the executive that compensation should be limited to what by their own labors, not crediting them in any manner with the property which they had given to the University, and imposing upon them numerous charges and expenses with which they were not properly chargeable and which they had not hitherto paid. There was one nota'ble ex- ception in the case of the dean, Dr. LeFevre, who was a friend of the Chancellor, and whose salary was fixed without reference to what might have been earned. It is needless to say that his appointment was not only not approved by the faculty of the medical department or the medical com- mittee, but was very objectionable to them. 'Measures of this character followed thick and fast, until it became manifest that it was the purpose of the University council to violate the agreement upon which they had got possession of the property of the medical laboratory, and to drive the old faculty out, leaving the University the possessors of property acquired under false pretences, and without the burden of consulting or advising any gentlemen to whose generosity they were indebted for the property. 'The next step that followed was at the annual election for trustees of the university council, 'fin the month of November, 1897. In pursuance of the above plan, Mr. Henry F. Dimmock was dropped from -the council at the elec- tion, after a spirited contest in which many of the leading members of the council strongly disapproved of the ac-tion taken. The failure to reelect Mr. Dimmock was immediately .followed by the resignation from the council of Colonel Oliver H. Payne and Messers. Barney and Miller. 'It was, however, apparent to many members of the Council that they could not violate all the pledges given, under which they had obtained the property of the Medi- cal College Laboratory, and still continue to hold such property, and thereupon, on the motion of a member of the council, a resolution was adopted appointing a com- mittee of six members of the council to investigate the matter of the property of the medical department and -15' recommend to the council what action should be. taken re- specting it. What -thereafter took place is shown in the fol- lowing correspondence: New York, March 24, 1898. Israel C. Pierson, Esq., Secretary: ' Dear Sir: On behalf of the Medical College Laboratory, I beg to acknowledge receipt of your communication to its several members, dated March 7, 1898, advising it that at a meeting of the coun- cil of New York University, held March 7, 1898, the following action was taken: Resolved, That the council of New York Uni- versity is willing to submit to arbitration any dif- ferences between it, on the one hand, and the Medical College and Loomis Laboratories, on the other handg and if those corporations also desire an arbitration, the officers of the council and the Chancellor be authorized to make the necessary arrangements and agree on the appointment of three arbitratorsng and to state: There are no mat- ters indifference between the New York University and the Medical College Laboratory to which the Loomis Laboratory is a party, and we confine our reply to the matters in differencce between the New York University and our college. They are briefly set forth in our letter to the council of the New York University, bearing date january 8, 1898, a copy of which is as follows: New York, January 8, 1898, The Council of the New York University: Dear Sirs: About a year ago we transferred to your institution property representing the results of the labor of our faculty for Hfty years. That transfer was made with the object of bringing the medical department and your institution into closer touch, and with the understanding that the eonrrol and management of that property should remain with the medical department, and for that purpose the interests of our faculty should be represented by a medical committee selected by your institution composed of gentlemen of the faculty, to whoni should be entrusted the entire and exclusive man- agement of affairs appertaining to ir, The expectations of that transfer have not been attained. The experience of the past few months has shown that you are unable to carry out that understanding. The control of the medical depart- ment has been taken by you from the medical committeeg the expenses and salaries of the officers of the medical department have been fixed without their consent and without consultation with the medical committee, the personnel of the medical committee has been changed by you, and one of the gentlemen selected by our faculty to guard and protect their interests 'has been dropped from your council in direct opposition to the wishes of those who represent our faculty, and in direct violation of the understanding. Under these circumstances, we consider that you must necessarily be unwilling to retain the property which we gave to you on the foregoing understanding. By a restoration of that property to us, we trust to be able, as we have always been in the past, to carry on our institution with success, and by harmonious action, which under the present circumstances is impossible of attainment, to pro- mote the prosperity of both our institutions. We request that you will give the matter your immediate attention and re-transfer to us our prop- erty transferred to you last year. We remain, Yours very respectfully, D. Willis james, President Charles E. Miller, Vice President Francis Lynde Stetson, DireCtOr M. Polk, Director Lewis A. Stimson, Director R. A. Witthaus, Director Gilman Thompson, DireCf0f Prior to that time a committee had been ap- pointed by your President, Dr. William A1160 Butler, in pursuance of a resolution of the council dated November 5, 1897, adopted without any re- quest from us, directing the appointment of a com- mittee to investigate -the matter of the properly of the medical department and recommend to the llVard, Jecozrd New York Horpilal. Sha by Ibe First and Second Medical Division red r. c0UnCi That Hall, Fredfflf 8, ter is 35 mittee, ff .Deaf 5 to take U sirous Of You' I 3. illness of of Placing 'When resulted lf the PFOPC tion, my 1 some of fl poration. I gentlemen have more fore consie stand fully tion wisro? gentlemen that l enter and dehnit case the pr erly and tl matters rela in a medic agreement c mittee sm . by the cou Glmstances, turned or-er 'I feel rt when givin, and ml' out felumed. W1-lliS QQ iilt council bers in 3 O .The l L01 '1fl'lYQd .H , v u K F0 8 . P in Bloonriwdr., Y If 1 r -ur MMI: u'1'l flip.. v 4414.1 7, -4 1 1 : 1 K l 1 I 1 1. lb 1 1 Sb-Wea' Vfjfomig 1 1 1 U 1 1 S 1 ,t 1 1 1 1 t 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 1 .,. L12 1 1 1 1 1 E council what action should be taken respecting it. That committee consisted of the Rev. Dr. john Hall, Dr. William Allen Butler, your President, and Messrs. William S. Opdyke, john Claflin, Frederic Baker, and William Wheelock. Our com- munication was laid before that committee. A letter of Colonel Oliver H. Payne, bearing date january 8, 1898, was also sent to that committee. That let- ter is as follows: 'New York, january 8, 1898 'To the Reverend Doctor Hafll, Chairman Com- mittee, etc.: 'Dear Sir: I understand your committee is about to take up the matters referred to you,-, and is de- sirous of having all the parties interested' before you. I am called out of the city by the serious illness of my sister, and therefore take this means of placing before you my relation to the matter. 'When the negotiations were in progress which resulted in the turning over to the University of the property 'by the Medical Laboratory Corpora- tion, my advice was sought by the physicians, and some of the latter, or members of the latter, cor- poration. I felt that from my past relations to those gentlemen and their institution, my advice might have m-ore weight than it was entitled to. I there- fore considered myself peculiarly bound to under- stand fully the conditions upon which the transac- tion was to be made. I repeatedly conferred with these gentlemen and the Chancellor, and the result was that I entertained no doubt but that it was fully and definitely understood by all parties that in case the property was turned over, both the prop- erty and the entire direction and control of all matters relating to medical affairs should. be vested in a medical committee, to 'be constituted by an agreement on the individuals by name. Such a com- mittee was constituted, two gentlemen being elected by the council for that purpose. Under such cir- cumstances, alone, I advised that the property be turned over, otherwise I should not have so advised. 'I feel that the agreement upon which I relied when giving the advice has been entirely violated, and my own honor demands that the property be returned. ' 'Yours very truly, O. H. Paynef This action and that of the committee and- of the council is stated as follows by one of its mem- bers in a circular letter addressed to all the mem- bers of the council: The committee, Mr. Wheelock being 211353112 arrived at the unanimous conclusion that the Uni- versity could not honorably retain P0SSCSSi0f1 of the property conveyed to it 'by the Medical College Bloofningdafe Sanitarinm-as it appeared when il war opened in 1821- 11 wa! Iocaled near the Jenen-mile .ftone on the Bloomingdale Road, now 116th Streel and Broadway. Laboratory Association, while continuing to use prOperty in such a way contrary to the wishes of the donors. The report of the special committee was not accepted by the council, although the emi- nent lawyers in the council, with one accord, urged the adoption of its conclusions on the highest grounds of hono-r and right. I In the light of this action of your committee and your council, it is difficult to see what more can be accomplished by an arbitration. No facts could be submitted by you which your committee has not already investigated and passed upon ad- versely to you, and nothing could be developed which would affect our firm conviction that you cannot honorably retain our property, given to you upon representation which you have failed to carry out. Nevertheless, we are willing to submit to arbit- ration the question whether you should return to us the property which we donated to you, provided such arbitration be confined to the question of what is right, just and equitable on your part, eliminating all legal technicalities. As it is import- ant for us that our position in regard to the property 'be speedily determined, we must make it a condition that you send us, within five days, a list of gentlemen, impartial in the matter, with whom you would be satisfied as arbitrators, and a proposed submission, on receipt of which we will either adopt your names and plan of submis- sion or submit to you another list, and any modih- cation of the submission which we desire, the arbitration to be commenced within two weeks from this date, and completed within ten days thereafter. No question of our future relations to each other or affecting the Loomis Laboratory to be co-nsidered by the arbitrators. Yours truly, QSignedj Charles E. Miller, Vice President. In everything that the medical faculty has done it has had the cordial support and approval of Colonel Payne and of every one of its own members. Colonel Payne, as is well known, has taken a very active interest in medical matters, and in addition to his generous contribution to the Medical College Laboratory, founded and supported the Loomis Laboratory at fi' Z. Z' ! ly Old Lying In Horpiml, 17ilo Street and Sefond 1414672113- his own expense. He is bitterly disappointed that the New York University, in whose future he took such a warm interest at one time, should have so utterly betrayed his expectations. It can be added authoritatively that several of the most prominent members of the council are practically sure to resign in the event of Chancellor MacCracken and his majority of the trustees refusing to return to the Medical College Laboratory the property conveyed to the University, that a number of other trustees are likely to take the same action, and that litigation will ensue. It is asserted that in the division of the council the men of real weight and influence in the community are arrayed against the Chancellor. An opportunity was offered to Chancellor MacCracken fully to state in these columns his side of the controversy, but he positively refused to discuss the matter. Chancellor MacCracken's campaign was destined for fail- ure and the services and resources of the Medical College Laboratory were lost to New York University for all time. In rapid succession thereafter: Q11 the dissident group formed its forces from the faculties of the old New York University and Bellevue Hospital Medical schools and all their adherents, including 215 students of the Cgmbingd schools, set up under the banner of Cornell Medical School, using a small building on the Bellevue Hospital grounds, near the Twenty-Sixth Street entrance, and -the,Loomis Lab- oratory, Q21 Colonel Payne put up 351,500,000 and Plans were started immediately for the erection of what was planned to be the finest medical school plant in the country, Q31 legal proceedings were initiated to decide once and for all the distribution of the properties in dispute between the two institutions, Q41 Bellevue Hospital Medical School became the graduate medical school for New York Uni- versity, combining forces with the remnants of the old New York University medical faculty, under the name New York University Medical School. In the autumn of 1898 the new Cornell School opened its doors with an enrollment of 245 students 3 64 of whom were in the first year class, 83 in the second, and 98 in the two upper classes. Of these latter some were expecting to be graduated at the end of their third year, while the rema-inder were pursuing a fOur-year course in accordance with a recent ruling of the State Re- gents, which was to be made obligatory for al-l subsequent classes. The legal disputes between the two schools were carried to the S-tate Supreme Court, the Apellate Division of the Supreme Court and finally to the Court of Appeals of the State and all decisions were in favor of the Medical College Laboratory group whose legal counsel, incidentally, was Elihu Root, later to be Secretary of State. Another interest- ing aftermath of the split between the two schools 'was the graduation ceremony of the New York University Medi- cal School in May, 11898, during which Drs. William M, Polk, Lewis A. Stimson, W. Gilman Thompson, George Woolsey, Henry P. Loomis, J. Clifton Edgar, Frederick W, Gwyer and Irving S. Haynes, who were interested in the establishmen-t of the new Cornell University Medical C01- lege, sat on the stage and heard themselves publicly and roundly criticised 'by the Chancellor. One of the students typed out his impression of what the commencement exercises should include: Programme Metropolitan Opera House Annual Commencement Exercises, New York University Medical College, Wednesday, May 18, 1898 Musice Qlntroductory March1 Oh Boys we'll never go there any more . I. Roll-call of the Council by the exActing Dean. Music: QSchottische1 Miss Mulligan's home-made pie . II. Conferring of the degree of M.D. QMacCracken's Dishonor1 by the Lord High Chancellor. Music: QAdaptation from the Mikado1 I've'got him on the list . III. Students' Farewell Oration: The Old Homestead . Music: QTwo Step1 I don't want to play in your yard . IV. Distribution of Prizes: Q11 A first prize of S150 to the chap who has corraled the greatest number of students for Cornell. Q21 A second prize of 55100 to the physical diag- nosis student who has most accurately mea- sured the size of the Old Man's spleen. Q 31 A third prize of 350 to the nervous student who can make a diagnosis between the Old Man and a Kleptomaniac. Music: QOriginal composition for the evening1 Cornell Quickstep . QDuring this performance the audience are most earnestly requested to keep their seats.1 V. Oration by Citizen George Francis Train: Terri- ggfial, Aggrandizement and some home aspects of ar . Music: QEthiopian Oddity1 A Bullfrog am no Nightingale - VI. Brief Q?1 Address by the Very Reverend Dr. Hen- nery M. MacCracken, D.D., LL.D.: Why I am a Pedagogue . V Music: QSong1 No one to love me, none to caress . . VII. Grand Finale: Public incineration of the Will of the late Valentine Mott. March Funebre. Exeunt omnes-allegro con moto. ? ' 2, Q , . Z I 1.0 1 , , 449 ,, W., M Jo. ' if 41 X I ,,4. ., 1 I ww , I xg 7 4--5 .zur , TMS' if' :IQ ff- ff, -sw - -f'vi4,m,,,Q ,,. . s z 4 X A X XM ' I v I, 1 I '-.11 if f -5.2 If 0 ,ffl I: V V s' ,mf 7,5 , f 'S f 4, f if . I -' ff 5 f g , ff V' w, 1'- . 20X 4' ..',f JP - .. , . 1 U.: I , ff Q ' , J' 0 91 A, yy 1 X V ,.: . .HV 1 50 f 1. 35g,,,2f, X, X AG, A ! 'I V ff f .en . -Qfmf., f , ,. .. 6. 1 X - 'Vi .:2 f55Sl2i l74 V+ X 'Wfiif fr- ' ' M7 I M www I , yf-smfm-fr ww f' ' - f , l f THE LOOMIS LABORATORY QIN THE FOREGROUNDQ AND THE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL COLLEGE ON EAST TWENTY-SIXTH STREET, WITH THE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL COLLEGE, 1896. ' Dr. William H. Thomson Dr. Charles L. Pardee Dr. W. M. Polk Dr. Lewis A. Stimson Dr. Rudolph A. Witthaus Dr. W. Gilman Thompson Dr. Henry P. Loomis Dr. George Woolsey 0190 The Founding Faculty The faculty at the opening of Cornell Medical School was made up as follows. Dr. William M. Polk, Dean and Professor of Gynecology. Dr. Lewis A. Stimson, Professor of Surgery. Dr. W. Gilman Thompson, Professor of Medicine. Dr. R. A. Witthaus, Professor of Chemistry and Toxi- cology. Dr. Austin -Flint fthe youngerj, Professor of Physiology. Dr. H. P. Loomis, Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. Dr. I. Clifton Edgar, Professor of Obstetrics. Dr. George Woolsey, Professor of Anatomy. The Chair of Pathology had not then been filled, but one year later an event of far reaching' importance to the welfare of the school occurred in the appointment to that Chair of Dr. james Ewing, a man who contributed greatly to the advancement of the school. A few years later the appointment of Professor Graham Lusk to the Chair of Physiology marked another event of prime importance. Dr. Lewis A. Conner, an instructor with the original fac- ulty and later Professor of Medicine, in an earlier historical paper, made the following comments: While it is im- possible to refer to each member of the new faculty, my attempt to give you some picture of the school in its early days would fail completely were I not to give you some impression of the personality of the two men upon whom the responsibilities and burdens of the new school chiefly rested. These were the Dean and the Professor of Sur er They had been colleagues and friends f g yi or many years, had served together on the faculty of the old New York Uni- versity School, had fought side by side for what they gon- ceived to be their rights in the ill-fated merger , and were the ones responsible for the decision of Colonel Payne to offer Hnancial support to the new school. With both of them the welfare of the school was their first thought and consideration. Both in their very different ways were re- markable men. .Both, as it happened,. had served as young officers in the Civil War-the one on the Confederate Side the other with the Union Army. , 0 Dr. lVilliam Merklefzbufg Polk First Dean, Cornell Ufziveriizy Medical College Dr, Polk, a native of Tennessee, was the son of the Rev. Leonid-as Polk, the famous lighting bishop, and a Major General of the Confederate Army. Dr. Polk had all the courtesy and charm of manner that characterized the gentlemen of the Old South, but behind his handsome presence and his gracious manner he possessed a vigorous personality and an executive forcefulness which watched over every detail of the school's administration and was the mainspring of its every activity. Dr, Stimson was a native New Yorker, had had a dis- tinguished career as a surgeon, and was the author of a treatise on fractures and dislocations, which was the standard textbook on those subjects throughout the country. He had been a classmate at Yale of Colonel Payne and was the latter's intimate and confidential friend. His somewhat re- served manner and cold' exterior hid a generous and kindly disposition, which showed itself particularly in his relations with his subordinates. He was guide, philosopher and friend to the members of his house staff and indeed to every struggling young doctor whom he thought deserving of help. Dr. Sti-mson had, I think, the most lucid and penetrating intellect of anyone that I have ever known. A mathemati- cian of no mean order, deeply scholarly and cultivated in his tastes, he was the envy and the despair of those Of us younger men who sought to emulate him. Such then were the characteristics of the two men upon whose shoulders the responsibilities of the school were chiefly borne during the first twenty years of its existence. Some special problems . . Women and Degrees By the summer of 1900 the new Cornell School building and its equipment were complete and -the old Bellevue building was abandoned. At the very outset of the establishment of the school O06 problem arose which at the time, and for some Yf-fats afterward, caused much concern and much solemn shakmg 20' of l its ' w0I'Il that reVOl UPOIT 5Cfl0 failu woul 5ClCC3 their was Possi It occul shoul Case two 1 woml Ithac life were requi the f influc grour to sp only was r to th no sl progr Schoc ceptet not a woulc Wl missic nish to the of Re were that w of heads. From the very beginning of Cornell University its various departments and colleges had been open to women, and in the new medical school no exception to that firmly established rule could be permitted. Such a revolutionary policy as the admission of women was looked upon by a good many members of the faculty as a very serious matter, and as likely to foreordain the school to failure. It was argued that many prospective men students would turn aside from a co-educational school and would select one where their associates would be only those of their own sex. But as the issue had to be faced, a plan was devised to minimize the alleged handicap as much as possible. It had been planned that the preclinical subjects which occupy the first two years of the medical school course should be given at Ithaca as well as at New York. In the case of the men students it was optional whether the first two years- should be spent- at either place. In the case of the women, however, the spending of the first two years at Ithaca was made obligatory. During the early years of the life of the College in New York then, women students were present' only during the third and fourth years. It required only a few years, however, to convince most of the faculty members that the early fears as to the blighting influence of the gentler sex upon the school were quite groundless, and so the rule requiring the women students to spend the first two years at Ithaca was modified to apply only to the first year, and eventually even that restriction was removed. It would be pleasant to point to this admission to the school of women in those early days when almost no schools accepted women as only another sign of the progressive and broadminded policies on which the Cornell School was founded. But the truth is that the school ac- cepted women students because it was compelled to, and not at all from conviction and from foresight as to what would later become an almost universal policy. When in 1898 the Cornell School was opened, the ad- mission requirements were as follows: Students must fur- nish evidence of ' good moral character and must conform to the rules and regulations of the New York State Board of Regents. That is to say, the requirements for entrance were merely those of a good high school education, and that was the requirement in the case of most of the good '21 schools. A year or two -later the requirements were raised slightly with respect to the amount of chemistry and physics required. But even with this slight raising of the barriers there came to be a growing feeling in the faculty that the efforts -to turn out really highly trained physicians were to some extent nullihed by the lack on the part of a good many of the students of an adequate pre-medical education. Too much time in the medical school had to be given to subjects which properly belonged in the pre-medical course. The discussions of this su'bject in the faculty were long and serious. It was felt that if the school was to live up to the ideal set for it by the founders, some radical change in the entrance requirements, which would ensure a more advanced type of student, was required, and the change in everyone's mind was the requirement of a baccalaureate degree. At that time there were only two schools in the country in which a college degree was required for entrance, Harvard and johns Hopkins. To establish such a conspic- uously high standard of entrance requirements seemed pos- sible only for schools firmly established and with great prestige. Could the new and relatively little-known Cornell School hope to maintain life in such a rarefied atmosphere? Were there enough applicants able to satisfy these high requirements to make it probab-le that Cornell would get even a modest quota? It was a very serious question for the reason that there could be no answer to it short of an actual trial. If the number of students were to be cut down to a mere handful, would the school be able to live financially? Fortunately there was a ready answer to that question. The situation was placed before Colonel Payne, upon whose hnancial support the school had depended. He was prompt in assuring the faculty that if it was confidently felt that such a radical step was for the ultimate good of the school and of medical education, his support would be forthcom- ing, no matter how small the classes might be. As the discussion of the matter continued over two or three years, the sentiment in favor of such a step became stronger and more assured. It was felt that if the school had justified its existence and really deserved to live, it would pass through this critical period successfully and would thereby win a place amongst the foremost schools of the country. Dr. Lewir Alterbury Stimmn Fin! Profeffor of Surgery, 1898-1917 Stinzron Hall, Itbaca. Erectecl 1902. Tbir building for tbe Ilbaca Dinirion of tbe Medical College was given Zo Cornell by Dean Sage of Albany. It war named, by bi: wirb, in recognition of tbe rernicer rendered to tbe erlablirbmenl of zbe medical college by Lewir A. Stimron, M.D., LL.D. A meeting of the faculty for Hnal action upon the matter was called for November 15, 1907. The faculty room was crowded and there was a portentous stillness about the meeting that told of the seriousness of the issue that was to be decided. The chair was occupied 'by Dr. Schurman, the President of the University, whose sympathetic under- standing of the situation and quiet optimism did much to inspire confidence in the members of the faculty. After much grave discussion, the motion was finally put and the faculty voted unanimously in favor of the change. That resolution stipulated that in and after 1908 candidates for admission to the school must be: fly Graduates of approved colleges or scientific schools, or Q21 Seniors in good standing in Cornell University or in any approved college whose faculty will permit them to substitute the first year of a' professional course for the fourth year in arts and sciences and who will confer upon them a- bacheloris degree upon the satis- factory completion of the first year ofthe course in the Cornell University Medical College, or QBQ Persons who, while not possessing a bachelor's degree, give evidence by examination that they have acquired an equivalent education and a training sufficient to enable them to profit by the instruction offered in the Medical College. That important step once taken, it remained only to see what the result would be upon the size of the next entering class. Wlien the college opened in the fall of 1908, the first year class in New York numbered three, and one of these fell out during the year. However, at Ithaca there were seven first year students, and as two more were later ad- mitted with advanced standing, the class was graduated in 1912 with a membership of eleven. In this small pioneer class of eleven, two lost their lives in the service of their country during World War I. The entering class the follow- ing year numbered Hfteen in New York and nine at Ithaca -a total of 24 students-and from that time on there was a steady increase each year until in 1920 it became neces- sary to put a limit on the size of the classes. The Final Step . . . Affiliation with New York Hospital. As medical education has improved and the importance of bedside teaching has become more and more apparent, the need of medical schools for close connection with 'large general hospitals has become evident. Since its beginning the Cornell School has had the use of the wards of Bellevue and New York Hospitals, but in the case of the latter only by reason of the fact that certain of its teachers happened to be members of the medical and surgical staffs of that hospital. In 1913, however, through the mediation of Df- Stimson, the school and the New York Hospital entered into an agreement 'by which the school was to be granted not only teaching rights in the hospital, but, as well, the privilege of nominating appointments to the medical and Surgical staff of one-half of the hospital. In 1912 and 1913 president of the First National Bank, George F. Baker, and Colonel Oliver H. Payne, pledged or gave over two million and over four million dollars respectively to the two insti- tutions with the generally understood idea that the tW0 ins gch the see Pro sch' beti to Sym mos unifl betv thot was both heir almc nego for l togel the immf it W2 medii 'Ili millic with and a in 19 ment quires of th board hospit ll institutions would work together. Not only were the medical schools feeling the need for closer hospital connections, but the hospitals, or at least the more progressive and far- seeing ones, were coming to realize that their welfare and progress required the co-operation. of a university medical school. This contract marked the first formal understanding between the New York Hospi-tal and the School, and was to lead, many years later, to the close union which is symbolized in the inspiring group of buildings in which most of our medical student days are now spent. That union was the result of long years of patient negotiation between the Governors of the New York Hospital and au- thorities of the University and the Medical School, and was made possible chiefly by the deep interest shown in both institu.tions by Mr. Payne Whitney, the nephew and heir of Colonel Payne. His sudden, untimely death came almost at the moment of the final conclusion of the long negotiations. The munificent bequests provided in his will for both the New York Hospital and the Cornell School, together with the very generous gift to the school from the General Education Board, opened the way for the immediate putting into effect of the grandiose plan which it was hoped would have such far-reaching influence upon medical science and medical education. Through the generosity of the late james Douglas, copper millionaire and philanthropist, who provided the hospital with an endowment for the study and treatment of cancer and allied diseases, the Memorial Hospital became affiliated in 1914 with Cornell University Medical College. The agree- ment between the Memorial Hospital and the College re- quires that the professional staff be named by the council of the Medical College subject to the approval of the board of managers of the hospital. The facilities of the hospital, which are of exceptional value in the field of cancer, are available for study in this field by the mem- bers of the hospital staff, and unusual opportunities are afforded for instruction in the pathology, diagnosis, and treatment of neoplastic diseases. Dr. james Ewing was for many years a revered leader in this unit. The Russell Sage Institute of Pathology has been asso- ciated with Cornell University Med-ical College since 1913 and moved from its earlier location at Bellevue Hospital to New York Hospital in 1952. The Institute has supported work in metabolism studies for many years under the direc- tion of Dr. Eugene E. DuBois, Professor of Physiology. The New York Nursery 8a Child's Hospital and the Lying-In Hospital of New York also became amalgamated in the new unit and their staffs became the members of the new Departments of Pediatrics Sc Obstetrics and Gyne- cology respectively. In addition to the teaching facilities available for Cornell Medical students at New York Hospital, Bellevue Hospital and Memorial Hospital there are at present arrangements whereby instruction may be gained at Manhattan State Hos- pital, Willard Parker Hospital, and Lincoln Hospital, chiefly through the mediation of members of the Cornell Medical- New York Hospital staff, as has beenarranged with other hospitals in the past along similar lines. In june, 1927, an agreement was entered into between Cornell University and the New York Hospital by which the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical College Associa- tion was formed for the purpose of bringing together their facilities and cooperating in the care of patients, in medical education, and in medical research. In order to harmonize the interests of the hospital and of the medical college, the Joint Administration Board was formed consisting of three representatives of each institution and a seventh mem- ber elected by those appointed by the hospital and by the IVe5tcf9e.rler Division. N. Y. H. 23' , RH . IV,-W ..,.Q.',fa- ,,,,, . ,nw 4-I ,fa--fejyfw am Vi V5 Rerpiraziozz calorimeter of the Rage!! Sage Irzrtizale of Pallaology. Formerly in medical bzzildirzg al Bellevue. Moved lo N. Y. H. irz 1932. university. Additional endowments were secured by each in- stitution, the group of buildings was erected along the East River between 68th and 71st Streets, adjoining the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, and a plant was thus afforded including separate buildings for the various laboratory departments, approximately 1000 hospital beds, and provision for medicine, surgery, obstetrics and gyne- cology, pediatrics, and psychiatry in ive distinct clinical units. The faculty of the medical college and the profes- sional staff of the hospital are organized so as to form one body established on a university basis. The new plant affords very favorable conditions for the conduct of medical edu- cation, for the pursuit of medical research, and for the care of patients in all phases of medical practice. R. T. BREED A. B. CRAIG ACklZ01UlEdg67lZ8lllJ.' Waterman T. Hewett Lewis A. Conner Irving S. Haynes Cornell University publications Society of the New York Hospital v MN' X Memorial Hospital. New addition, 1948. ACQF6 0 J4 minidfrafion DAYTON J. EDWARDS Affimzfzl Dean of the Medical College JOSEPH C. HINSEY, Demz of the Medical College STANHOPE BAYNE-JONES Coorflimztor of the New York Hofpltal- Cornell U7ZlU?1'JlfjlM66llC4Z C efzfer '25' C The Cath of H1ppocrates SWEHR by Hpollo the phys1c1an Sc Hesculap1us Sc I-Iyge1a and Danacea and all the gods and goddesses that accordmg to my Hblllty and Judgment I w1ll keep th1s oath and th1s st1pula t1on to reckon h1m who taught me th1s Hrt equally dear to me as my parents to share my substance w1th h1m and rel1eve h1s necess1t1es 1 requ1red to look upon h1s offspmng as my own brothers and to teach them th1s Hrt 1 they shall w1sh to learn IC w1thout ee or st1pulat1on and that by precept lecture and every other mode o 1nstruct1on I w1ll 1mpart a knowledge o the Hrt to my own sons and those o my teachers and to d1SC1PlCS bound by a st1pulat1on and oath accordmg to the law o med1c1ne but to none others I Wlll ollow that system o reg1men wh1ch accordmg to my Hblllty and Judgment I cons1der or the benellt o my pat1ents and absta1n rom whatever IS deleter1ous and m1sch1evous I Wlll g1ve no deadly med1c1ne to anyone 1 asked nor suggest any such counsel and 1n l1ke manner I w1ll not g1VC to a woman a pessary to pro duce abort1on W1th PUTIEY and w1th hol1ness I w1ll pass my l1 e and prachse my Hrt I w1ll not cut persons labormg under the stone but Wlll leave th1s to be done by men who are PTHHIIEIOUCTS o th1s work Into whatever houses I enter I Wlll go 1nto them or the beneflt o the s1ck and W1ll3.lJSt2.1l1 rom every voluntary act o m1sch1e and corrupt1on 6: urther rom the seduchon o emales or males o reemen and slaves Whatever 1n connechon w1th my pro ess1onal pracbce or not 1n connec t1on w1th It I see or hear 1n the l1 e o men wh1ch ought not to be spoken o abroad I W1lll1Ot d1vulge as reckomng that all such should be kept secret Wh1le I cont1nue to keep th1s oath unv1olated may lt be granted to me to enjoy l1 e and the PTHEIICC o the Hrt respected by all men 6: all t1mes But should I trespass and v1olate th1s oath may the reverse be my lot f 9 9 7 1 , . 9 1 ' ' 11 I ' f 1 I ' 1 1 I ' J , 1 1 1 f , 1 1 I ' ' f ' I 0 af 9 7 . f' , I J 1 1 P 1 1 I 1 I f 1, 1 f I' ' , - f 1 1 f 1 1 I 1 , . 1 1 11 1f 7 1 1 1 1 ' f 9 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1f 1 1 1 ' J ' 1 11 f .1 1 1 f f 1 ' 'f f 1 1f 1 . , f f ' ff 9 2 ' 1 1 1 , , , J f 2 f f f 1 , I 7 j . 1 , I I I 1 1f , f I , o '26- 5, eniolf' CLASS JOSEPH ANTHONY BONTA 1393 Republic Avenue, Columlbus, Ohio Colgate Un-iversity New York Hospital. Surgery EDWARD GRENELLE BRADLEY 3781 Oliver St., N.W., Washington, D. C. A.B. 1945 Harvard University Orange Memorial Hospital, Orange, N. J. Rotating ROBERT THOMSON BREED 61 Nahant Street, Lynn, Mass. A.B. 1937 Amherst College Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass. Surgery HECTOR MASON BROWN 330 East 72nd Street, New York, N. Y. B.S. 1945 University of Washington Knickerbocker Hospital, N. Y. C. Rotating SUZANNE CHADWICK 25 Parkview Avenue, Bronxville, N. Y. A.B. 1944 Bryn Mawr College Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, N. Y. Rotating JAMES MELVIN COLVILLE 1802 Houstonia Avenue, Royal Oak, Mich. Michigan State College New York Hospital. Medicine MILTON COOPER 43 West 36th Street, Bayonne, N. J. A,B, 1945 Dartmouth College Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Hanover, N. H. Rotating ALBERT BURCHFIELD CRAIG, JR. Creek Drive, Sewickley, Penn. Princeton University Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, N. Y. Medirine ARTHUR NEWTON DADIRRIAN 30 Shipherd Avenue, Lynbrook, N. Y. A.B. 1946 Cornell University Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, N. Y. Rotating CHRISTIAN DEWINTER 11 Maryland Ave., N.E., Grand Rapids, Mich. A.B. 1942 Calvin College, M.S. 1943 University of Michigan New York Hospital. Obrtetricr Gynerology ROBERT LEROY DOW Maple Road, Baldwinsville, N. Y. A.B. 1943 Cornell University New York Hospital. Surgery WILLIAM DUBILIER, JR. 72 Esplanade, New Rochelle, N. Y. B.S. 1945 Yale University Kings County Hospital, L. I. Division. Rotating 6 Medieine GERARD 1947 AB' Bell6Vue JOSEPH Wat Str Delaware HC Rotating DONALD 57 28 Osborne R1 B.S. 1945 Hol Boston City H DONALD FR. 439 South 44th Columbia Uniw United States A Oliver General JOHN HENRY 31E35t70ihSt1 A.B. 1945 swam 7 Bellevue Hospit a Aven , Q L Rest-aigii Cornftll Med' ch Fellows, lciii College- GERARD LESTER EASTMAN 179 Manor Avenue, Westbury, N. Y. AIB. 1947 Columbia University Bellevue Hospital, Div. II. Medicine JOSEPH ADRIAN ELLIOTT 714 West Street, Laurel, Delaware AB, 1943 Western Maryland College Delaware Hospital, Wilmington, Del. Rolatifzg , DONALD STEPHEN ELLIS 28 Osborne Road, East Milton, Mass. B.S. 1945 Holy Cross College Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass. Surgery DONALD FRANCIS FARRELL 439 South 44th Street, Philadelphia, Penn Columbia University United States Army Hospital, Oliver General Hospital. Roiazing JOHN HENRY FERGER 231 East 70th Street, New York, N. Y AB- 1945 Swarthmore College Bellevue Hospital, Div. II. Medicine MANUEL FURER 589 Eighth Avenue, New York, N. Y. AB- 1944 Cornell University Resear h F C ellowship, Cornell University Medical College. Pbyriology EDWIN MUNROE KNIGHTS, JR. 84 Lorimer Avenue, Providence 6, R. I. Brown University Bellevue Hospital, Div. II. Surgery SHELDON CECIL KRAVITZ 318 East 66th Street, New York, N. Y. A.B. 1945 Cornell University New York Hospital. Medirine SHERMAN KUPFER 927 East 27th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Cornell University Mount Sinai Hospital, N. Y. C. Rotating GEORGE EARL LACROIX 970 Centre Street, Newton Centre, Mass. Cornell University New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn. Surgery-Obrletricr 6 Gynecology JOHN HENRY LARAGH 51 Park Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Cornell University Presbyterian Hospital, N. Y. C. Medicine LUDWIG GERALD LAUFER 161 Jones Street, Wilkes Barre, Penn. Bucknell University Jersey City Hospital, Jersey City, N. J. Rotating ' NORVAI 2044 220 Univenif Bellevue FLOREN' 1415 A152 AB. 1944 New York JOHN Tl P. O. Box B.S. 1958 f M.S. 1940 Buffalo Ge Mixed Mez HARLEY' Q 210 Angell A.B, 19461 Rhode Islam Rotating ROBERT J. 31 Middxefaf B-S 1945 H New Haven Medifjne, GREGORY 175 Cornell East 62:1 U ' New Yivrknli NORVAL MASON MARR, JR. 1 2044 22nd Avenue N., St. Petersburg, Florida University of Virginia Bellevue Hospital, Div. II. Medicine FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE MARSHALL 1415 Alsace Road, Reading, Penn. A.B. 1944 Wellesley College New York Hospital. Medicine JOHN THOMAS McHENRY P. O. Box 291, Son-ora, Cal. B.S. 1938 Santa Clara University, M.S. 1940 University of Hawaii Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y. Mixed Medicine 6 Surgery HARLEY' BRYCE MESSINGER 210 Angell Street, Providence 6, R. I. A.B. 1946 Brown University Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, R. I. Rotating ROBERT JOSEPH MOLLOY 31 Middlefield Drive, West Hartford, Conn. B.S. 1945 Holy Cross College New 'Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn. Medicine GREGORY THOMAS O'CONOR 175 East 62nd Street, New York, N. Y. COrnell University New York Hospital. Obfletricx 6 Gynecology l DAVID ELLIOTT ROGERS 1 5844 Stony Island Avenue, Chicago Ill Ohio State University johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md Medicine ANDREW KEOGH RUOTOLO p 538 Summer Avenue, Newark, N, J, ? B.s. 1945 Yale University Newark City Hospital, Newark, N, J, 1 Rotating F l WARREN GLEA SARRELL Q 34 Etowah Dr-ive, Cartersville, Ga. E Bs. 1946 West virginia University A North Carolina Baptist Hospital, Winston-Salem, N. C. Medicine I l I I n I r JAMES WHITE SAYRE 264 North Drexel Avenue, Columbus, Ohio Weslesyan' University I Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. Rotating , l OLIN GRIGSBY SHIVERS, JR. Chipley, Florida Cornell University , l Vanderbilt University Hospital, i Nashville, Tenn. Pediatrifr l l ROBERT HENRY SMITH V 76-O9 34th Avenue, jackson Heights, N- Y- 3 Ohio State University , Bellevue Hospital, Div. I. Medfrnle 1 l 5.5. 1946, CinCiflf'3U Rofglilll PAUL 1802 West Lincoln EDWARD Tunnel Roat Cornell Uni' New York I THEODORI 309 West Se Cornell Unis Hartford Hr GUY WEA 509 Tisdale A-B. 1945 E Hlrtford HK i9XY1ind,0r Bflleyue H 2 i DONALD KARL STOCKDALE 504 Grand Street, Morgantown, W. Va. B,S, 1946 West Virginia University Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. Romtizzg l A PAUL LLOYD SUMMERS 1802 Liberty Street, Parkersburg, W. Va. West Virginia University 1 Lincoln Hospital, N. Y. C. Rolafifzg l 1 1 EDWARD AUPRINCE TENEYCK Q Tunnel Road, Santa Barbara, Cal. 1 Cornell University New York Hospital. Obrtetricr G Gynecology l l 1 l 4 1 1 n 1 I i 1 I l i THEODORE FARRINGTON THOMAS 309 West Seneca Street, Oswego, N. Y. 1io Cornell University , Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. Rowling rating 1 GUY WEAVER VAN SYCKLE 509 Tisdale Place, Woodbridge, N. I. AB- 1945 Dartmouth College Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. Rotafiog GEORGE HENRY VOGT ' 2 'Y 9 Windsor Place, Glen Ridge, N. J. N' ' . E AB' 1945 Dartmouth College Bellevue H05Pif21l, Div. II. Surgery 5 Bari: Baur Bell, Blur! Bogz Burt, Capf Carrl C1166 Chen Cook Craig Cranr Cubb Dave Dickf Dock Doylc l Abel, Amst Austi Barr, Bartlc Berks Bippa Break Browl Bulmn Burgc Burto: Carlsc Chara Clark: Comp Come Come Crago Dealyr L Ackler Allan: Beede Befggl Billini Bltflbg Blair, Bossm Botwi Brawl Bullilf Bllfgg Burror Cdfeys Cami: COIQW Crank Cufflg DHHS, Davis. Davis. L jkircl Mar Barber, joan K. Bauman, Arthur W. Bell, john A. Blumer, Abraham Boggs, Isafbelle G. Burt, Agnes S. Capron, Frances M. Carrier, Edith L. Cheeseman, Sumner A. Cheng, Chia-I Cook, Ferris E., jr. Craighead, John T. Crandell, Daniel L. Cubberley, Robert B. Davolos, Dominick D. Dickson, Robert H. Dockweiler, john E. S. Doyle, Thomas L., jr. add Duncan, James A., Ir, Epstein, Norman Evans, Harold W. Felix, Robert E. Flandreau, Richard H. Floyd, William H., jr. Gerig, janet C. Gilmore, james Golloway, Glenn G. Goodman, Melvin B. Gregory, Ledford G. Haggerty, Robert Harned, Ben K., jr. Hennessey, Ruth M. Herbert, Earle A. Herm, Robert J. Inness-Brown, Hugh A. King, Robert J. econcl Mar gay! Abel, Jean H. Amster, Bernard Austin, Richard C. Barr, David Bartley, Donald F. Berkenfield, jules A. Bippart, Charles H. Breakey, Arnold S. Browning, Francis E. Bulmer, Malcolm W. Burgoyne, Robert H. Burton, Sarah A. Carlson, Eric T. Charash, Leon I. Clarke, Robert L. Compton, Alfred D. Cornelison, Floyd Cornell, George N. Crago, john A. Dealy, Margaret N. girfif year Ackles, Robert Allan, james D. Beede, Robert B. Bergamini, Herbert V. W. Billings, Preston Birnbaum, Stanley I. Blair, Albert I., jr. Bossart, Peter A. Botwinick, Isaiah S. Braveman, Warren Bulkley, Andrew D. Burgoyne, David S. Burroughs, Robert Carey, justin P. Carman, George H. Cole, Nancy J. Cramer, Harry C., jr. Curtis, Robert H. Davis, Elmer W., jr. Davis, Grayson,B. Davis, Herbert A. . de Prosse, Charles A. Diehl, Carolyn H. Eichenwald, Heinz F. Evans, Martin Ginsburg, Selig M. Given, james B. Goldfarb, William Goldsmith, Edward I. Greenwood, Robert W. Guild, Warren R. Hafford, Robert C.. Hagamen, Wilbur D., Hall, Irving E., Jr. Helfrich, Harry M. Helfrich, Nancy Rankin Helgans,,Marjorie F. Hollis, William C. Howard, john L.' Hudson, Dean G. Jepson, William W. arid' Decker, Elisaibeth B. Ervin, Lawrence M. Evans, Frederic M.. Fincher, Esther M. Flach, Frederic F. Foertmeyer, Ross L. Gershberg, Jack M. Gildenhorn, Hyman L. Gray, james G. Herbert, Philip S., jr. Hirsch, Robert L. Hood, Henry L. Janulis, Peter T. Ieffreys, William H. johnson, Anne B. Kiss, George T. Klinkerfuss, William Koczyk, Henry R. Kopf, Alfred W. Kruesi, Oscar R. Lechner, Edith A. Lawson, Donald E. Lewis, Ray Love, Drury M. Lundquist, James A. McCann, William P. McCormick, john McManus, Dorothy Tinker Mar Dock, Julian Matthews, Sanford Mayers, Robert A. Michela, Bernard Mueller, Harry L., jr. Newman, Samuel Purnell, Robert H. Regan, Peter F., III Rieser, Dorothy H. Rogatz, Peter Rogers, john G. ohnston ames Lowell Lowell McLellan Arthur Mannix, Henry M. Johnsen, Sigurd I , I S. Marcus, Ruth R. o A Margarida, Leopold E. Melencio, Emilina . Meyer, Kenneth H. Miller, Tilford D. Monahan, Eugene T. Mitchell, Frederick M. Moffitt, Francis X. Moore, Bertha L. Morris, John O'Brien, joseph L. O'Hare, William Perrone, Francis S. Pond, Sidney M. Porter, William C., Jr. Levy, Allan M. Liddle, Harold V. Lochhead, Roger P. Lucas, Howard C. Lynn, Walter L., jr. McArdle, John H. McGraw, Thomas,A. McKenna, Robert I. MacKinnon, Ian Menninger, Roy W. Mulrow, Patrick Munyan, Earl A., jr. Neibart, Emil Nelson, Dewey A. Nichols, Philip A. Organick, Avrum B. Palmer, Walter M., Pert, james H. Pugh, George F., jr. Pugh, George B. Reiss, Sanford M. Rogers, Wayne S. Russell, David W. Schlyen, Samuel M. Schmidlapp, jean C. Shafer, Alan D. Shultis, Lester D. Simpson, Barbara F. Sommer, Ross B. Sonabend, David H. Stumpe, Alfred R. Stypula, Richard W. Swann, Margaret G. Sweeney, William J., III Toole, james F. Tuttle, Stewart G. Weiman, Clinton G. Welch, Edmund T., jr. Wentworth, Frederick H Williams, David H. ' Quinn, Donn R. Redo, Saverio F. Rider, Joan E. Roberts, Douglas J., jr. Robertson, Donald Robinson, Alan S. Rubin, Albert L. Saviers, George B. Smith, Craig N. Stockfisch, john F. Thompson, Hartwell G Thompson, Willard C. Trapp, Claude C., jr. Van Wagoner, Merrill Y Vomacka, Robert P. Whitmore, Mason Williams, Charles R. Winslow, William A. Wood, Francis A. Remmer, Carol Roth, Kenneth Rusnack, Theodore Russell, Edwin P., jr. Simpson, George A. Skelton, jay B. Smith, Lyle R. Sprague, Elizabeth H. Stephenson, james H. Stuart, jack F. Sullivan, Walter ' Swain, Edward B. Thomson, Kenneth S. Triebel, William A. vom Eigen, Paul R. Ward, William W. Wierum, Carl Wilber, Mary M. Wilkinson, Robert H Wynn, james O., jr. J gacferiofogy .36. Ctdfiag Wemdm P1'0f6J'J07' of Anatomy JOSEPH C. HINSEY P1'ofe.rJo1' of Clinical Anatomy GEORGE PAPANICOLAOU Afforiczte Profeffofxr of Anatomy CHARLES V. MORRILL GUSTAVE J. NOBACK Affiflant P1'ofef.fo1'.r of Amftomy CHARLES BERRY WILLIAM A. GEOHEGAN JOHN MACLEOD lfzftrzzctorf in Anatomy WARREN F. EBERHART ERNEST W. LAMPE JOHN L. NORRIS Profeffof' of Bacteriology and Iffzmzzfzology JAMES M. NEILL Afyociofe P1'ofeJJo1'5 of Bczc1fe1'i0f08J' and Immfnzology THOMAS P. MAGILL JOHN SUGG Affimzfzt Profefxor of Bacteri0f08J' and I 122112111201 o gy EDWARD HEHRE Affiftmzf in Bacteriology and Immnfzology DORIS M. HAMILTON Pfff Aff! J 1 J R615 I IN I mfr, CI IN Rem V E Affif, E I C I Profel JC CC Anon LE Anim SA CI CI I l?,f1'I'Il4 TI Afiiff, EL JA CI- EL AP EB GI Re,fgL: J- Ai Rfifezz' HI Leflllr, PA JU MI If Lrff li. 7 . M. Profeffor of Biochemiftry VINCENT DU VIGNEAUD Affiftafzt Profe.rJo1'J of Biochemiftry ROY W. BONSNES JOSEPH P. CHANDLER COSMO G. MACKENZIE DONALD B. MELVILLE JULIAN R. RACHELE Research Ayfociatey in Biochemiftry FREDERICK H. CARPENTER DOROTHY S. GENGHOF HELENA GILDER ARTHUR H. LIVERMORE LESTER REED GARDNER W. STACY MARY ELIZABETH WRIGHT Imt1'actor.r in Biochemiftry GEORGE B. BROWN NANCY CROSS Refearch Fellow: in Biochemiftry WILLIAM R. CARROLL DORIANO CAVALLINI Affiftafztf itz Bjochemi.ft1'y MARTHA F. FERGER ELIZABETH B. KELLER JOHANNA M. LEE CHESTER W. PARTRIDGE JOHN E. WILSON Profefforf of Pathology JOHN G. KIDD CORNELIUS P. RHOADS Auociate Profeuof' of Pathology LEWIS D. STEVENSON Affiftafzt P1'ofeJ.fo1'.r of Pathology SAMUEL W. DOOLEY, Pediatric CURTIS M. FLORY CHARLES T. OLCOTT Imtrzzctof' 272 Pathology THEODORE ROBERTSON Affiytahtx in Pathology ELLSWORTH C. ALVORD JAMES W. CORRELL CHARLES E. DOUGHERTY ELMER E. KRAMER ANTHONY T. LADD EBEN D. TISDALE GERALD F. WHALEN Refearch Affociate in Pathology AARON KELLNER Refearch Affiftaht in Pathology HELENE M. TOOLAN Lectarerf in Pathology PAUL E. DEGARA JULES FREUND MILTON HELPERN Vifitifzg Fellow in Pathology MAX AUFDERMAUR goo emirifry eobcine Profeffor of Medicine DAVID P. BARR Piofeyforf of Clinical Medicine RUSSELL L. CECIL CONNIE M. GUION LOUIS HAUSMAN FOSTER KENNEDY WILLIAM S. LADD ASA L. LINCOLN PAUL REZNIKOFF JOSEPH C. ROPER LEWIS D. STEVENSON Amociale Profeuorf of Medicine JOHN E. DEITRICK WALSH MCDERMOTT ADE T. MILHORAT EPHRAIM SHORR HAROLD J. STEWART ROBERT P. WATSON HAROLD G. WOLEF Affociate Profeffom' of Clinical Medicine HORACE S. BALDWIN CARY EGGLESTON CLAUDE E. FORKNER RICHARD H. FREYBERG GEORGE M. LEWIS CARL MUSCHENHEIM HAROLD E. B. PARDEE JOHN H. RICHARDS HENRY B. RICHARDSON EDWARD TOLSTOI BRUCE P. WEBSTER IRVING S. WRIGHT Affiftanc Profeffom of Medicine THOMAS P. ALMY ROBERT F. FURCHGOTT, Biocbemimfy GEORGE A. SCHUMACHER J. JAMES SMITH RALPH G. ' STILLMAN, Clinical Pathology RALPH R. TOMPSETT GEORGE W. WHEELER STEWART G. WOLF, JR. BENJAMIN W. ZWEIEACH, Pbyfiology - Afyiftant Profeffocf of Clinical Medicine ANDREW AKELAITIS BENJAMIN I. ASHE JACOB BUCKSTEIN LLOYD F. CRAVER EDWARD CUSSLER PETER G. DENKER HENRY S. DUNNING CONSTANCE FRIESS EDWIN T. HAUSER MILTON HELPERN LEON I. LEVINE SOL S. LICHTMAN MARY E. H. LOVELESS EDGAR MAYER THEODORE W. OPPEL DOUGLASS PALMER FRANK H. PETERS NORMAN PLUMMER DONALD SIMONS CHARLES H. WHEELER . Inflrziclorc in Medicine ELIZABETH ADAMS ABRAHAM A. ANTOVILLE z. TAYLOR BERCOVITZ RUTH P. BERKELEY ROBERT M. BIRD KEEVE BRODMAN VERONICA BROWN EDWARD A. BURKHARDT KATHERINE BUTLER HENRY A. CARR ANNE C. CARTER EUGENE J. COHEN FRANK E. CORMIA HENRY A. CROMWELL EMERSON DAY FRANCOIS J. DEPRUME MONROE K. DIAMOND EDWARD M. DODD ALBERT J. ERDMAN, JR. EMIL A. FALK LAWRENCE FARMER AARON FEDER WILLIAM T. POLEY JOHN MARTIN GIBBONS THOMAS N. GRAHAM SIDNEY GREENBERG . KEITH O. GUTHRIE, JR. LOUIS A. HAUSER GEORGE W. HEBARD REID R. HEFFNER I HERMAN G. HELPERN LEONARD L. HEIMOPP DELAVAN V. HOLMAN EVELYN HOLT FREDDY HOMBURGER LESLIE A. HOMRICH EUGENE L. HORGER LEIP Y. JACOBSEN SCOTT JOHNSON WILLIAM H. KAMMERER GEORGE L. KAUER, JR. HERBERT KOTEEN MILTON L. KRAMER CHARLES E. KUNKLE, JR. JOHN S. LADUE MICHAEL LAKE ROGER P. LAPHAM EDGAR A. LAWRENCE DOROTHEA LEMCKE WILLIAM H. LEWIS, JR. ROBERT M. LINTZ ROBERT O. LOEBEL MARSH MCCALL A. PARKS MCCOMBS RICHARD R. MCCORMICK KIRBY MARTIN ROBERT H. MELCHIONNA RAYMOND E. MILLER L. MARY MOENCH ' WILLIS A. MURPHY CHARLES H. RESSLER JULIUS L. ROGOFF SOPHIE A. ROOT JOSEPH P. SABBATINO THERESA SCANLAN C. WALLACE SORENSON AARON D. SPIELMAN ISRAEL STEINBERG JOHN W. STICKNEY Continued on page 39 C01 ReIJ Ren I I I I I I I I I r II1. I I I I I E I I I I I I I I I Il I I C I I Lech I JJ II B Continued from page 38 WILLIAM D. STUBENBORD ARTHUR M. SUTHERLAND KATHARINE W. SWIFT HENRY J. TAGNON ALPHONSE TIMPANELLI MAURICE TULIN RUSSELL TWISS MARIAN TYNDALL FREDERICK C. WEBER, JR. ERWIN A. WERNER G. DONALD WHEDON BYARD WILLIAMS GEORGE A. WOLF, JR. SEYMOUR ZUCKER Refenrcb Affocinlef in Medicine BEATRICE BERLE GEORGE DRAPER ABRAHAM MAZUR BELA MITTELMANN RALPH S. OVERMAN Refenrcb Fellowf in Medicine WAYNE BARKER VICTOR G. DRWOLE CHARLES H. DUNCAN HELEN GOODELL WILLIAM J. GRACE LAWRENCE W. HANLON PREDERIC G. HIRSCH MARY ELLEN HOPPER JACK V. KNIGHT ROBERT M. MARCUSSEN CHARLES D. MARPLE ABBOTT A. NEWMAN MARY J ANN PAYNE GEORGE E. PEABODY CLEMENT B. POTELUNAS GEORGE G. READER IAN P. STEVENSON LEONARD R. STRAUB CLARA TORDA THEODORE E. TREUTING Aniftrznlf in Mecliciiie FRANK K. ABBOT GEORGE C. ARMISTEAD, IR. FARRINGTON DANIELS, JR. ROBERT E. ECKARDT ROSEMARY V. GORMAN SUSAN J. HADLEY J LAWRENCE E. HINKLE, JR. LAWRENCE B. HOBSON PRED KERN, JR. ALLYN B. LEY ALAN P. MACEARLANE JOHN E. MARCHAND JOHN B. PPEIEPER EDWARD M. SHEPARD WILLIAM P. SIMMONDS RICHMOND W. SMITH WILLIAM C. THOMAS, JR. DAVID B. THOMPSON GEORGE A. WALDRIFF HAROLD N. WILLARD WILLIAM G. WOODIN Lecturer! in M eclicine HARRY A. BRAY IGNAZ W. OLJENICK MATTHEW WALZER ROBERT L. YEAGER W Ogollellnicfb wine! gyyymeco ogy Profeuor o f Olmfetricf and Gynecology HENRICUS J. STANDER Profefcoi' of Clinical Obftetricf nncl Gynecology JAMES A. HARRAR Awociczte Profeffom of Clinical Obfletricf nncl Gynecology R. GORDON DOUGLAS BYRON HQ GOFF WILLIAM P. HEALY HERVEY C. WILLIAMSON Afyifcont Profexfow of Clinical Obftetricy and Gynecology WILLIAM H. CARY OGDEN F. CONKEY EDWARD H. DENNEN RALPH W. GAUSE W. HALL HAWKINS HOWARD S. MCCANDLISH JOHN E. MCGRATH CHARLES M. MCLANE CURTIS L. MENDELSON JOHN A. O'REGAN MEYER ROSENSOHN FRANK R. SMITH Auiflnfzt Profeyfoff of Ob.Yl6f1'iCJ' and Gynecology ROY W. BONSNES, Biocbenz- im' y CARL T. JAVERT Inmwctorf in Obfteh-icy czncl Gynecology ROBERT L. CRAIG WILLIAM P. FINN LYNN L. FULKERSON ARTHUR V. GREELEY HENRY D. HUMPHREY DONALD G. JOHNSON JOSEPH N. NATHANSON JOHN B. PASTORE NELSON B. SACKETT JACOB T. SHERMAN HOWARD L. WILCOX Affimzntf in Obftelricf and Gynecology THOMAS L. BALL JUSTIN T. CALLAHAN STUART M. CHRISTHILF, JR. JOHN T. COLE CHARLES E. DOUGHERTY FREDERICK W. FINN J. RANDOLPH GEPFERT OSCAR GLASSMAN ELMER E. KRAMER RICHARD C. MORRISON PAUL E. MULLER JOHN W. SCHLEICHER ERWIN FLETCHER SMITH CHARLES T. SNYDER ARCHIBALD W. THOMSON, JR EBEN D. TISDALE ARTHUR L. WILSON lzckafricd Profeffor of Pediaffriar SAMUEL Z. LEVINE Profexfor of Clinical Pedi4ztric.r OSCAR M. SCHLOSS Afforifzle Profeyfor 'of Pediairicf in Pqfcbiatry MILTON J. E. SENN Auociate Profeffoff of Clinical Pedi- 6Zl1'iCJ' CARL H. SMITH PHILIP M. STIMSON MAY G. WILSON Afxiyimzl Profefforf of Pedidzfrirf HENRY L. BARNETT MARGARET DANN SAMUEL W. DOOLEY, Pathol- 083' Affjfldlll Profefforf of Clifziml Pedialficf HAROLD B. ADAMS ARTHUR F. ANDERSON LEONA BAUMGARTNER CLEMENT B. P. COBB HAROLD W. K. DARGEON ROBERT O. DU BOIS MARTIN J. GLYNN, JR. HELEN HARRINGTON FREDERICK C. HUNT HEDWIG KOENIG MILTON I. LEVINE CHARLES H. O'REGAN JESSE F. SAMMIS MARJORIE A. WHEATLEY I1zm'z1ct0I'f in Pediatficf EVELYN J. EASILE WALTER T. CARPENTER, JR JOHN H. DALE, JR. PAUL F, de-GARA HELENE ELIASBERG LEWIS M. FRAAD JOHN E. FRANKLIN JAMES Q. HARALAMEIE . EDMUND N. JOYNER, III PHYLLIS H. KOTEEN MARTHA F. LEONARD LUIGI LUZZATTI MARION MQILVEEN SHIRLEY A. MAYER THOMAS E. MOSHER LOIS M. SMEDLEY ALFRED J. VIGNEC LOUIS E. WEYMULLER GEORGE M. WHEATLEY Fellowf in Pediatrics ALAN W. FRASER WILLIAM V. LULOW MARY E. MERCER RICHARD E. WOLF Refefzrch Fellowf in Pediatrics NATHAN EPSTEIN HENRY P. GOLDBERG R6.f86I7'L'b Affociate in Pediazf1'ic.f KENDRICK HARE Axfiflmztf in PediazM'ic.f ELAINE ALLEN WILLIAM D. ALSEVER W. RANDAL BELL MARGARET E. GEIB BARBARA M. KORSCI-I ROWLAND L. MINDLIN THOMAS L. RIDER FREDERICK K. SARGENT DANIEL M. TOLMACH WILLIAM E. WILLIAMS I. ROBERT WOOD STANLEY S. ZIPSER .J Prof I Prof. I- AJJIJ IN I V II Ifzfirf. XX RW Refeax OI Refeaz D1 LA C11 W WACLPHQCLCO Ogg Profefyor of Pharmacology MCKEEN CATTELL Profeffor of Clinical Pharmacology HARRY GOLD Amiflahl Profefforf of Pharmacology MAYNARD E. CHENOWETH 'WALTER E. RIKER, JR. JANET TRAVELL Irzftracforf in Pharmacology WALTER MODELL RALPH E. TOMPSETT Refearch Affociale in Pharmacology OSCAR BODANSKY Refearch Fellowf in Pharmacology DONALD A. CLARKE LAWRENCE W. HANLON CARLTON C. HUNT W. CLARKE WESCOE 10 Lydia ogg Profeffor of Phyfiology EUGENE E. DU BOIS Affociate Profeffory of Phyfiology DAYTON J. EDWARDS JAMES D. HARDY I mtracforf in Ph yfiol o gy ROBERT FURCHGOTT DOYLE JOSLIN JOHN MACLEOD CHARLES H. RICHARDS Refearch Affociatex m Phyfiology HUGH DE HAVEN JOHN DAVID EVANS Refearch Ayfiftahff in Phyfiology JOHN ALLEN CLEMENTS LAWRENCE R. PROUTY lqgciiafrg Profeffor 0fP5ycl2iat1'y lnI!1'izci01'f in Pfycbialry OSKAR DIETHELM Profeffofu' of Clinical Pfycbiatry CLARENCE O. CHENEY PHYLLIS GREENACRE Auocia-te P1'0fe5I01'.r of Pfycbiatry ADE T. MILHORAT, Medicine THOMAS A. C. RENNIE MILTON J. E. SENN, Peclialricf HAROLD G. WOLFF Affiflanf Profefforf 0 f ' Clinical Pfychialry EDWIN J. DOTY WILLIAM H. DUNN GEORGE W. HENRY JAMES H. WALL Afyiffanl Profefforf of Pfycbialry HERBERT S. RIPLEY FRED V. ROCKWELL Afmciale P1'0fe.rf0rf of Clinical Piycbiatry CARL A. BINGER J. LOUISE DESPERT GERALD R. JAMEISON NORVELLE C. LAMAR ALEXANDER H. LEIGHTON JOHN H. TRAVIS Axfiyiant Profefmr of Pyycbology AH LIVINGSTON WELCH EDWARD B. ALLEN VALER BARBU SARA A. BONNETT A. LOUISE BRUSH JOHN M. COTTON HELEN E. DANIELLS CHARLES A. KNEHR RICHARD N. KOHL WILLIAM T. LHAMON HAROLD W. LOVELL LILLIAN MCGOWAN EDA L. PRIEST HOWARD C.. ROBBINS MARY JANE SHEREEY DONALD I. SIMONS WILLIAM D. STANCIL NOBE E. STEIN HANS SYZ NATHANIEL WARNER KATHERINE E. WOODWARD Refearch Affociatef in Pyychiatry BELA MITTELMANN EMIL OBERHOLZER Affiytanlf in Pfycbiatry ELEANOR CRISSEY WILLIAM T. DIXON ALAN T. FRASER NICHOLAS FISH EDWARD L. HAMMOND RALPH R. HARLOW WILLIAM V. LULOW MARY E. MERCER iyla-nf in Pfycbology ELIZABETH V. NEW 0 0 Fulbc Film fl an lqeeuenfiue Weokcine Profeffor of Public Healtb and Preventive Medicine WILSON G. SMILLIE Affociate Profeffor of Public I-Iealtb and Preventive Medicine MORTON C. KAHN Affiftant Profefforf of Public Healtb and Preventive Medicine MICHAEL ANTELL LEONA BAUMGARTNER EMERSON DAY HERBERT R. EDWARDS FRANKLIN M. FOOTE ELISE L'ESPERANCE Inftructory in Public H ealtb and Preventive Medicine SAMUEL R. BERENBERG AARON D. CHAVES PHILIP OLLSTEIN IRVING RAPPAPORT RALPH R. TOMPSETT P Affiftant in Public Healtb and Preventive Medicine STERLING B. BRINKLEY Refearcb Awiftanty in Public Healtb and Preventive Medicine ARNOLD W. PRATT WALTER WOODWARD Lecturer in Public H ealtb and Preventive Medicine JOHN 0. MCCALL 1e..a.,t,,, Profeffor of Radiology HAROLD L. TEMPLE Afsociate Profeyfor of Clinical Radiology SYDNEY WEINTRAUB Affiftant Profeyforf of Radiology ALFRED E. HOCKER LEONIDAS D. MARINELLI ROBERT S. SHERMAN JOSEPH V. SULLIVAN STEPHEN WHITE I nftructorf in Radiology JOHN H. DALE, JR. ELIZABETH F. FOCHT GEORGE JASPIN ALFRED W. KANY IRVING SCHWARTZ ARTHUR TILLINGHAST Lecturerf in Radiology LUCILLE M. BOND E. FORREST MERRILL MK A blfgefg Pro feffor o f Surgery FRANK GLENN Profeffor of Surgical Pathology N. CHANDLER FOOT Profe.Uor.f of Clinical Surgery WILLIAM DEW. ANDRUS ALEXANDER BRUNSCHWIG CHARLES E. FARR JOHN M. MCLEAN Axfociate Profeffor of Surgical Pathology FRED W. STEWART Anociale Profefxorf of Clinical Surgery FRANK E. ADAIR WILLIAM A. BARNES C. GARDNER CHILD, III HERBERT CONWAY WILLIAM A. COOPER NELSON W. CORNELL PAUL A. DINEEN GUILFORD S. DUDLEY JOHN H. ECKEL CRANSTON W. HOLMAN ROBERT S. HOTCHKISS HOWARD S. JECK FREDERICK L. LIEBOLT GERVAIS W. MCAULIFFE WILLIAM F. MACFEE VICTOR F. MARSHALL SAMUEL W. MOORE ARTHUR PALMER RUSSELL H. PATTERSON E. COOPER PERSON, JR. BRONSON S. RAY MORRIS K. SMITH . PRESTON A. WADE Affiftafzl Profefyory of Clinical Surgery IRVIN BALENSWEIG BENJAMIN S. BARRINGER MILTON L. BERLINER BRADLEY L. COLEY ARCHIE L. DEAN JAMES A. DINGWALL JOHN W. DRAPER, JR. SEWARD ERDMAN JOHN C.. A. GERSTER KRISTIAN G. HANSSON GUSTAVUS A. HUMPHREYS SAMUEL F. KELLEY ERNEST W. LAMPE ALLISTER M. MCLELLAN HAYES MARTIN LAURENCE MISCALL JAMES A. MOORE WILLIAM F. NICKEL, JR. GEORGE T. PACK HERBERT J. RIEKERT JOHN G. SCHMIDT MARY WARD Irzftruclorf in Surgery JACOB APPLEBAUM JOSEPH F. ARTUSIO, JR. WILLIAM H. AYRES ANNE M. BELCHER EDWARD C. COATS ARTHUR D. CONSOLE CARLETON M. CORNELL MICHAEL R. DEDDISH J. EDWIN DREW WADE DULEY EDWARD A. DUNLAP FRANK W. FARRELL THOMAS J. GARRICK HAROLD GENVERT DAN C. GILL DAN M. GORDON ROBERT T. HENDRICKS NORMAN L. HIGINBOTHAM JAMES M. HOLMAN RUSSELL H. HOOKER SUZANNE A. L. HOWE FRANK J. HYNES D. REES JENSEN JOSEPH T. KAUER JOSEPH E. J. KING ANNE E. KUHNER RAYMOND K. J. LUOMANEN DAVID LYALL FRANK J. MCGOWAN FREDERICK C. MCLELLAN DAVID H. MACFARLAND HERBERT C. MAIER BERNARD MAISEL LEOPOLD MEHLER EDMONDE D. NEER JOHN B. OGILVIE WILLIAM C. QUINN ERIC C. RICHARDSON GEORGE W. SLAUGHTER STUART S. SNYDER NORMAN TREVES WILLIAM L. WATSON WILLET E. WHITMORE, JR Refeareh Fellow: in Surgery RUTH S. HOFFMAN EDWARD B. C. KEEFER WILLIS M. WEEDEN PAUL E. MESSIER CHARLES L. NEILL, JR. Fellow in Plaftic Surgery CHARLES NEUMANN Aysiylarztf in Surgery ROSE ANDRE JOHN M. BEAL, JR. SAM R. BURNETT CHARLES F. CHANDLER WILLIAM W. DANIEL JAMES E. DAVIS ROBERT D. DEANS HOWARD S. DUNBAR RICHARD A. GAILLARD JOHN GLASSON ARTHUR L. GORE VINCENT A. GORMAN LOUIS HAMMAN, JR. GLEN S. HARMAN BRUCE R. HEINZEN . GEORGE R. HOLSWADE FRANCIS C. JACKSON GERALD I. KURTZ JIM F. LINCOLN THOMAS M. NORTON EARL A. O'NEILL WARD D. OSULLIVAN CARL J. SCHMIDLAPP, III DAVID S. SPEER ROSCOE S. WILCOX Editor Dr. Edwfzrdr and Ad77Zil7iIf7'!lli1!6 Office Stajjz Mrf. Lemezz, Min N ewtozz, Min Rainey. CORNELL MEDICAL JOURNAL Senior EditorJ Morton David Bogdonoff Robert Leroy Dow David Elliott Rogers Arrorifzte Editorf Agnes Burt William Peter McCann Bztrirzerf MdIZdg67'J , r,,. - .,,.,.,.,.,,. Albert Burchheld Craig, Ir. Lowell Lowell Editorial Staff joan Kay Barber Eric Theodore Carlson John Alfred Crago Frederick Francis Flach Robert William Kircher John Henry Laragh Norval Mason Marr Francis Assman Wood - Editorial Adoiror George Wolf, jr, M.D. THE SAMARITAN Florence Nightingale Marshall Richard Horace Granger Editorial Board john james O'Donnell, jr. Robert Archer Wood Pullman Morton David Bogdonoff Robert Thomson Breed Albert Burchfield Crai Michael Rapak Roderick Clark Richards Warren Glea Sarrell. Olin Gri sb Shivers r. 8 John Henry Laragh David Elliott Rogers Donald Karl Stockdale Burinerr Manager Nancy Marie Peters Tredfurer James White Sayre Bufinerf Board James Melvin Colville Christian J. DeWinter g ay , I james Tuthill Weston Warren Harry Williams Photography Editor Bernard Rodier Pbotogrtzitby Board Alan Iddles Norval Mason Marr, Ir. Olin Grigsby Shivers, lf' Theodore Farrington Thomas , Milf Mary E. Gletzfozz, Exemtive Secretary Clayton Rlfh, Jr' C.U.M.C. Alumni Affotiatiozz. Gerard Lester Eastman Art Sidi? Douglas Arbuckle Haddow Gerard Lester Eastman Robffft Charles Hardy Edwin Munroe Knights, jr. Geofge Henry Vogt .450 IS MODERN MEDICINE OBSOLETE? A tired young fellow Who felt far from mellow Came into the clinic one May. He was charted and graded And later persuaded To come back on a subsequent day. In june he returned Feeling rather concerned Said, My sex life's been rather imprudent. I've made quite a splash, I've a sore and a rash, And Ilm sick. He was seen by a student. The student was keen. He knew what he'd seen. Addisonian crisis, he swore. The attending was sage, Of conservative age, Said, This man must be seen on the floor. Then up to the ward With a bill for his board. His urine and blood count were done, stat. The plasma cells mounted Each time they were counted Till the intern was ordered to run that. Plasma chlorides were high, AfG ratio awry, He had seventeen pounds of urea, The Mazzini was doubtful, The urease goutful, Molar lactate proved no panacea. Ophthalmologists implored That his iris be explored. By the sinus plate the house staff men were shaken. Cardiologists all faltered For the T-waves seemed unaltered, Or perhaps had digitalis not been taken. He was covered with wheals From his ears to his heels. His own finger nail beds were indicted. Allergy made broad hints That some long bamboo splints Should be shoved neath his nails and ignited. 01 The Art of Physical Diagnosis - 5' ap , .al 9-.A Q if tl W I X tg 1- H -t- fb And now Mir: Goldfogel let me reayrure you once again that we helieue your zrouhle ir all in your head. There were rales at the base And spots on his face. g The spleen was pushed to the axilla. The palate was cleft, BUT toe movements were deft. The eyelids ptosed down the maxilla. The thyroid was small, And the man had no gall. His B. M.'s were whiter than snow. Though his prostate protruded No sperm were exuded. He'd come about as fur as he could go. The neurologist came And pronounced a strange name. This man has no cauda equinaf' The urologist frowned. He could not pass a sound Through the calyces,'major or mina. ENT wasn't sure Whether hearing was poor. At least the carina was pink. Roentgenology conceded That repeated plates were needed. The xiphoid suggested a kink. V in J i I9 -f r-sf N Ah, I knew I had hroughl it along - .46. The surgeons decided Time couldn't lbe bided. - Direct observation was urgent. Dermatology debated For the soap brand wasn't stated. They ordered a sulphur detergent. GYN then requested That estrone be tested. The belly was really quite big. But GI denied A fetus inside And called for a thingamajig. There was a suspicion A pediatrician Had too strictly managed his early nutrition A startling remission Of this sad condition Was wrought by a beauteous, young dietitian. The pathologists proved If a piece were removed They could -muddle the problem with ease. Orthopedics had doted, And arthritis noted, The turbulent state of his knees. But to answer the call I With just one amytal Came the probers of Medicine A. They explored his life history, Unravelled the mystery, And had this quite simply to say: You have all done your best With appropriate zest But deserve only slight commendation. This is perfectly clear, You'll agree when you hear, That it's purely his life situation. Envoi: Oh, it's only his life situation, boys, It's only his life situation. This is perfectly clear, You'l1 agree when you hear, That it's only his life situation. Morton David Bogdonof Richard Horace Granger e a h Q X ' 5 33 sex e, Q Ive Bwlm Mme-V-He cfm!! Play Il. Dr. Bam Perfo17225-Fafzzlly-Senior After the Ball 117:11 Over. B eer Party. Bioryfzzbeyix-Marcia and AI Iddlex. Medina! Slzzdefztf and Nurxef Give F:zfbi0zz Show. Cardiac Cezperf-Free Beer. .470 1' ,, ' 1, x f ,Z V .fu Proud Papa-Ray Haag and Daughter WS? 5,351 If .. ,if 1 ' 5751 Mai X X Y X X wav A . Q 2 ,X ? Q f ,. Y W agf- N - Q X 4 J 1:5 . Me:-::-N N 65 X N ,sz ig , 0 Y 3 X xi X X S e 6 Q., x '- Wx ,c ' ' , a f f 'W X 1 V- QQ . g 1 2 ASK' ' X ' N gf l 5 4 'S Q ,fd ,ada Omega .xg laAa . . . HONOR MEDICAL SOCIETY Founded in 1902 at the C-ollege of Medicine of the University of Illinois. Beta of New York Chapter founded at Cornell University Medical College in 1910 OFFICERS James Melvin Colville Preridefzl-Frederick Theodore Kirkham, Jr. 221355 Fifi lgssivman Secretary-Treazrurer-Robert LeRoy Dow Manuel purer FOURTH YEAR Howard Conger Hewitt John Henry Laragh Florence Nightingale Marsha Morton David Bogdonoif Robert Joseph Molloy joseph Anthony Bonta Robert Jacob Oehrig ' W U! f A Omen 6 e wa ziaoccafion FOURTH YEAR Janet C. Gerig . R h M. H Suzanne Chadwlck Dgiothy T.elN1fI1ccMzfhus Jf1HffK-,HWS Dorothy H. Rieser lane Hobson Jean C. Schmidlapp Mama- 6 man Barbara F. Simpson Florence N. Marshall Margaret G Swann Nancy M.- Peters ' SEC.OND YEAR THIRD YEAR Jean H- Abel Joan K. Barber Sarah A. Burton Isabelle G. Boggs Margaret N. Dealy Agnes S. Burt Carolyn H. Diehl Frances M. Capron Nancy R. Helfrich Edith L. Carrier Marjorie F. Helgans C U, ll Founded in 1882 at the University of Michigan Medical College. Tau Cha ter founded at Cornell Universit Medical Colle e in 1900. P Y 8 OFFICERS President-John J. O'Donnell, Jr. Vice-Preridefzz-James M. Colville Trearuref-Richard H. Flandreau Secretary-John A. Crago FOURTH YEAR Frank L. Bird Joseph A. Bonta Edward G. Bradley Hector M. Brown James M. Colville Albert B. Craig, Jr. Arthur N. Dadirrian, Jr. Robert L. Dow Donald S. Ellis Donald F. Farrell Ray A. Haag Craig R. Hope Alan Iddles George E. LaCroix John H. Laragh Ludwig G. Laufer Robert J. Molloy I0l1I1 J. O'Donnell, Jr Roderick C. Richards David E. Rogers Andrew K. Ruotolo James W. Sayre Olin G. Shivers, Jr. Paul L. Summers J05ePh A. Worrall, Jr. THIRD YEAR C. Chia-I Cheng Ferris E. Cook, Jr. John T. Craighead Daniel L. Crandell Dominick D. Davolos John E. S, Dockweiler Richard H. Flandreau Hugh A. Innes-Brown, Jr. Robert A. Mayers Thomas J. McBryan John J.. McCormick Bernard M. Michela Lester D. Shultis Alfred R. Sturnpe Richard W. Stypula Edmund T. Wfelch, Jr. SECOND YEAR Richard C. Austin Charles H. Bippart, Jr. George N. Cornell John A. Crago Warren R. Guild Irving E. Hall, Jr. Harry M. Helfrich, Jr. Dean G. Hudson A Sigurd E. Johnsen James S. Johnston Arthur S. McLellan Sidney M. Pond Douglas M. Roberts, Jr. George B. Saviers, Jr. Hartwell G. Thompson, If- Charles R. Williams .49. ll R. A. Rees Pritchett David Elliott Rogers THIRD YEAR Robert Johns Haggerty William Peter McCann John Grove Rogers James Francis Toole Lowell Lowell Ruth R. Marcus Emelina A. Melencia Bertha L. Moore Joan E. Rider FIRST YEAR Nancy J. Cole Elisabeth B. Decker Esther M. Fincher Anne B. Johnson Edith A. Lechner Carol Remmer Elizabeth H. Sprague . Mary M. Wilber FIRST YEAR Herbert V. W. Bergamini Francis E. Browning George H. Carman E. William Davis Grayson B. Davis Herbert A. Davis Ross L. Foertmeyer Heinz Eichenwald Henry Hood William H. Jeffreys George Kiss Alfred Kopf W. J. Klinkerfuss Henry R. Koczyk Oscar R. Kruesi Harrold Licldle Roger P. Lochhead Ian MacKinnon Thomas A. McGraw Roy Menninger Emil Neibart Phillip A. Nichols George F. Pugh Theodore J. Rusnack Edwin R. Russell Lyle Smith George Simpson J. B. Skelton Walter James Sullivan Edward Swain Kenneth S. Thomson Paul R. vom Eigen Carl Weirum 67 ' , 3 r 2s x , V fv X Q X, fy. R X 5 1' 1529? ':E X As yy!-Agig, lifsjfix X Q99 xx X x N S .ask pai Gif Founded in 1889 at the University of Vermont College of Medicine. Rho Delta Chapter founded at Cornell University Medical College in OFFICERS Preridifzg Senior-Robert Thomson Breed Preriding fr.-Frederick Hunt Wentworth Secrezm-y-Floyd Shovington Cornelison, Jr. TreaJzz1'er-Harold Warren Evans judge Advorate-Sanford John Matthews Cbapler Edilor-Robert Leslie Clarke Rzzrlaing-Arnold Steward Breakey William Clayton Porter, Jr. Sofia!-Arthur William Bauman Ross Baker Sommer FOURTH YEAR William David Arnold William Bancroft Anderton Bentley Robert Thomson Breed Christian junior DeWinter Robert Charles Hardy Edwin Munroe Knights John Thomas McHenry Norval Mason Marr Harley Bryce Messinger Gregory Thomas O'Conor Robert Henry Smith Donald Karl Stockdale Warren Harry Williams Mi .f4laAa Sggma THIRD YEAR Arthur William Bauman Thomas Leonard Doyle, Jr. Harold Warren Evans Ben King Harned, Jr. Earle Avery Herbert Drury McMillan Love james Andrew Lundquist William Peter McCann Sanford John Matthews Robert Heywood Purnell Peter Francis Regan III john'Grove Rogers Wayne Spitz Rogers Alan Dale Shafer Ross Baker Sommer William Joseph Sweeney III james Francis Toole Clinton George Weiman Frederick Hunt Wentworth SECOND YEAR Arnold Stewart Breakey Eric Theodore Carlson Robert Leslie Clarke Alfred Donaldson Compton, jr. Floyd Shovington Cornelison, Ir. Founded in 1886 at Bellevue Hospital Medical School. Gamma Chapter founded at Cornell University Medical College in 1898 OFFICERS Primariur-Michael Rapak Sub-Priizzmiur-Robert John Haggerty Scribur-Charles Alexander deProsse Themuri Cumzr-Robert James Herm FOURTH YEAR Carlos Enrique Bertran Hamilton Howard Blackshear Gerard Lester Eastman joseph Adrian Elliot Albert Adolphe Plentl 1041 mega gyadi on Founded in 1904 at Cornell University Medical College. Alpha OFFICERS Cof1.rul-Bernard Rodier Vice Cofzrzzl-Richard Horace Granger Semzzorr-Milton Cooper John Leroy Howard Trerzrzzrer-Peter Rogatz Serrelfzry-Selig Moses Ginsburg FOURTH YEAR Morton David Bogdonoff Milton Cooper Robert Archer Wood Pullman Michael Rapak james Ballard Rentfro Harry Lane Robinson James Tuthill Weston ' Frederick Carr White James Wallace Wilkes, Jr. john Marion Wilson, Jr. THIRD YEAR Robert Johns Haggerty Robert james Herm William Dubilier, jr. Manuel Furer Richard Horace Granger William Hitzig Bernard Rodier THIRD YEAR g Abraham Blumer Norman Epstein Melvin Bernard Goodman Samuel jacob Newman Peter Rogatz Samuel Marcus Schlyen David Howard Sonabend 0510 l 92 1. Chapter. Robert Walton Greenwood Robert Clinton Halford William Warner Jepson Henry Matthew Mannix Tilford Day Miller Frederick Michael Mitchell Francis Xavier MoHitt Eugene Thomas Monahan john de La Salle Morris Joseph Louis O'Brien Francis Salvatore Perrone William Clayton Porter, Jr. Donald Robertson Craig Neelands Smith Willard Chandler Thompson, jr Claude Wilkes Trapp, jr. FIRST YEAR Robert Churchill Ackles Preston Stuart Billings Robert W. Burroughs justin Paul Carey james Graham Gray Philip Sidney Herbert, Ir. Howard Charles Lucas Patrick Joseph Mulrow Earl Addis Munyan, Jr. Dewey Allen Nelson Walter Matthew Palmer, Jr. Donald Edward Lawson Julian Mar Dock Harry Louis Mueller, jr. SECOND YEAR Charles Alexander de Prosse james Bartley Given William Carroll Hollis Leopoldo Enrique Margarida Saverio Frank Redo Merrill Y. Van Wagoner Mason Whitmore Francis Assman Wood SECOND YEAR Selig Moses Ginsburg Edward Ira Goldsmith john Leroy Howard Albert Louis Rubin FIRST YEAR Robert Bedzofsky Beede Isaiah Samuel Botwinick Warren Samuel Braverman Hyman Louis Gildenhorn Avrum Bernard Organick Sanford Maxwell Reiss Kenneth Roth Bafebnll in Cer2lr:1IPork. , ,, . . AA f 1 f f 0? M A- x .,,' f ' 1-W 1:-.-. Z X ' 2 , 1 3 ' , - M :ss-L:::..,: ' ' X y 1.4 ,K ,K 'i .eff .w .ES- 1-.1-V33 .-v?'o:?:' ,J f T ' ' R , A: ' ' ' 'e 3 I.: x t '- f i Z 2. 0 Norwzl Marr and Vfzmliorz Catch. C.U.M.C.'J Refrmliomzl Farililiey-Cerzlral Park. Favorite Indoor Sport. 5 Bnfeball at Bear Mozzrzzairz. , .x s Q I if ? 17 I Lower Come Bark io Me. by . rss! A sri v I'mez11ellAj1j1er1m11re from Pilzlflfflll, HXIHIKIIIIJ, Iddlef. Bark-Nelda 11177, ELUJ fait Talk-011 zz Sumzy Day. WN -52' 'E' Ufnrrezz UVilfif1mJ Adoerzifef Yearbook Dmzre. QQ Oh, for the Life of a , W ' F iii QQ? , :ZX f R X JE? I :.f:-'.gf5gs',3gxf- --' AKE ONE NORMAL, lovable female, and one normal lovable male, add the ingredients of mutual interests, sense of humor, respect, plus that precious spark the gods called love, and you should have, in this, oh, so fairly realistic world of ours, certain established results. Either the ingredi- ents resist one another and the 'boy and girl part with regret, or they fall in love and eventually get married. Whether that sounds anticlimactic and even rather dull depends solely on the individual's opinion+and particularly on his marital status. Today, in the midst of the post-war confusion newly married couples fall in-to two groups. One, the college veteran and his wife, with either or both in undergraduate or graduate school. fWe have heard a great deal about this groupj Two, the traditional one--the pattern of the young businessman and his wife, who are attempting to achieve success in the harsh world of reality. Logically that just about covers the young marriage situation in the U. S. But somehow logic just doesn't hold water in this case. There is an exception to the young marriage formula in our society. And that exception is-you've guessed it-the case of the stalwart medical student and his adored but abandoned wife. The case of the medical student and his wife fits neither fof the customary marriage patterns, because the medical student himself fits neither class. He's a hybrid. Theoretically he is a student, and is so designated by the government. During his first two .years in medical college he is required to read the great books of Gray, Bodansky, Best and Taylor. Throughout his career he will enjoy classifying him- self as a student-but only within the secret confines of his heart, or at future conventions. However, elsewhere, as in clinics-he is an authority, there to aid the suffering and prescribe cures. With his professors, attending physicians and the house staff he is classified and treated as a student. But with the layman, the medical student is considered a medical authority. justifiably then we can call the medical student a hybrid. How does the wife reconcile her husband's dual roles? First of all, she gives him no other areas of worry. She must be the competent, practical housewife, and mother, who will run the house, manage the money, fif there is anyj, and bring up the children tif there are anyj. Hubby's whole waking existence can be devoted to Na- tional Boards, Public Health papers, exams, graphs and sedi- mentation rates. The future MD. must never know that scrub- bing floors causes aching backs, or that standing in market lines produce fallen arches. The medical student hears I '53 Med. Students Wife! By CORKY ROGERS enough of pain and complaints at the hospital. When he arrives home he expects a bright and cheerful helpmate to greet him, bring him his slippers and pipe, a well con- cocted old-fashioned, a plate of canapes, and then to place before him a succulent four-course dinner fmedical students have enormous appetitesj. During this hour long orgy of eating, her sole function is to remain clamlike, save for sympathetic clucks or innocuous statements designed to lead him on to further tales of his activities. The medical student will demand- that his wife show an interest in his work. But, you wives and future wives, don't be so naive as to take this demand literally. He wants you to be interested and even fairly intelligent about his work, bzzzf not foo ifzzfelligefzt. In his home the medical student can work out many of his problems of frustration. The wife can encourage what I like to call authoritarian therapy . At home the student always will be the authority and his wife always the student. So, don't become so intelligent that you thwart his authoritarian tendencies. If you ignore this advice don't be alarmed the evening the plates become flying discs, because you have interrupted his eulogy on Tolstoi's prin- ciples on diabetes to ask why Joslin, White and Root don't quite agree. The wives of all Cornell medical students must be plagued by similar nightmares. These ghoulish visions have but one plot-one interminable, ever agonizing and never ending plot. There are three stock characters-hero, heroine and villain. The medical student is the hero, his wife the heroine, but the villain-ah, there is absolutely nothing familiar about this villain. The villain is not so innocuous as the conventional leering, top-hatted devil. This villain is some 24 stories high, is large and 'broad and his arms stretch far over the city and enfold all peoples, rich and poor, educated and illiterate. Those people go scurrying to him, usually only for a short time. But, there are those he enfolds so strongly he never relinquishes them, his arms crush them and he so strangles them that they are lost forever from the world of reality. This ogre is no competition for ordinary mortals, because he wages his battles on the side of good. This combination of strength and virtue is powerful and one which no medical student or his wife fwho is usually the protagonist in these nightmares, can hope to beat. I well remember the first time I experienced this phantasy. I woke up screaming because my poor husband was being pulled apart. I was bracing myself against the door to our apartment, imploring him not to forsake his loving wife, but I could not hold him. The long arms of the New York Hospital were too strong for me, the tall tower of the Great White Whistle Works bent down and irrevocably tore him from my grasp. And the last wordsil heard were Hurry, hurry, hurry-Mrs. Eootz needs a pericardectomy and you're the only one to do it . And thus he left me. All my dreams are the same. I never win. In reality, the situation is not that bad. But it's close- close. So I warn you future wives, be prepared to live a life of husband starvation . Expect no sympathy from your heroic spouse. After a few weeks in medical school he is so imbued with the spirit of doing good, and give credit where credit is due, so interested in his work, that he sincerely believes no sacrifice too great for his noble purposes. If you persist in trying to claim his time you run the danger of being accused of undermining his morale and becoming subversive . flf the word subversive can apply to non-conformists and those unaccepting of social mores of all types, as it seems to, it can also be descriptive of you.j You must add one more qualification to your personalityg the ability to keep a stiff upper lip. When at the last minute you must cancel a theatre engagement to which you have looked forward for months because your noble husband suddenly remembers he must be the lab man that night, never complain. Send him off with smiles of encouragement and a loving gesture. Only when the door is safely closed may you cleave the general ear with horrid speech-and amaze indeed the very faculties of eyes and ears .. There is yet another puzzle in the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Medical Student. Yes, I'm speaking of the ever-pressing question-how to remain solvent during this inflation, and don't naively say- but you know, two can live as cheaply as one . That might be the case were the hospital or medical school generous enough to provide some good, but very cheap housing for its married students and families, or if there was not an inflation, or if they did not have to live in New York. But the fact remains that there is no cheap housing in the vicinity, there is an inflation, and Cornell Medical College is destined to remain at 1300 York Avenue. Everyone knows apartments are scarce as the proverbial hens' teeth and expensive. Food, clothing and minimum of enter- tainment are also essential, and they all cost solid coin. The solution is-money, and the surest way to get that is a job. But who has the time to spend on a job? You're right-you're right, none other than the plucky wife of the ever earnest medical student. There are other reasons, of course, for the medical student's wife to have a job. She probably would die of 'boredom or become neurotic if she didn't have something else to do besides keep house and wait for a wandering husband. But that reason detracts too much from my hard luck story. So I hurriedly pass on. Despite the various reasons prompting our wife to take a job, there is no doubt that the money she earns is a neces- sary implement to keep them together, body and soul. While dealing with the outside world , let me add a word of advice. Not only must you wives be financial supporters , but you must carry an even more taxing re- sponsibility. You it must be who will bring, in succinct form, cultural, political and social notes of importance to your medically isolated husband. It will be your duty to force him to read the paper, an interesting article or a book, or to have digested the facts yourself so that you can deliver them to him, unobtrusively, preferably over the dinner table. You might say something like this: Umm, this stew is fairly good- umm-darling, did you know that the Mitsui and Mitsibushi corporation in Japan may be forced to sell its stock on the open market ?-umm-but I should have put more onion in it . As is inevitably the case, such pithy condensations require much time and not a little gray matter. Naturally you have time to spare for such a worthy cause, and I tell you it is a worthy cause, if only to switch the dinner conversation from cirrhosis of the liver, or Add'ison's disease to other topics. So far now we have accumulated an im osin arra of u P 8' Y qualifications for our typical medical student's wife. There is just one more small point, but, although minor in im- portance, it might well be the straw that breaks the camel's back . The wife of the future M. D. also must be attractive. Now that doesn't sound too difficult a feat to perform, given the right clothes, and the time to be well groomed. The point is that the medical student wants his wife to be attractive come a New York blizzard, or summer heat. He wants her to look attractive any hour of the day or night. He wants this-and here I dare to risk repetition, because at the hospital he sees too many dumpy, sick, malformed and unattractive women . QQuote husband in unprofessional momentsj Only his wife, his symbol of all femininity, can make him believe that the world is still populated by nor- mal, healthy and well groomed women. He wantsthis illu- sion preserved, without having to sweat out cold cream, bobby pin booby traps, and assorted feminine aids. Frankly, it seems like an impossible situation. The only solution I can offer is to take advantage of Dr. Stander's generous edict that medical students on OB must live in . Use those sixty days to cold cream and generally restore your once normal beauty. Who knows, maybe the omnipotent Dr. Stander, despite his overwhelming knowledge of a woman's inner works, still had an eye for feminine pulchritude, or else a wife with forceful insight. Faced as wives and future wives are, therefore, with the problem of living happily with a dual personality medical student, you have before you a profound challenge. To ful- fill these extensive and imposing standards would require a twenty-eight hour day. A normal day in your life might run like this. Rise at six, so as to be attractive when your husband awakes. Have breakfast ready by 7:30. At 8 see your husband off to the hospital with a smile and a kiss. Then quickly wash the dishes, clean the house, dress, do the marketing, so as to be at work by 9. Even though you put in an eight hour working day, you must be home in time to prepare dinner, get cleaned up, welcome him at 6. During dinner listen to him orate on various medical problems, limiting your comments to sympathetic murmurs. Then wash the dishes, sweep, scrub, while your studious husband catches up on his medical reading. Later in the evening you darn his socks and shorts, and wash your hair, in between moments of absorbing more cultural knowledge. By 12, if you are ilucky, you should fbe in bed, trying to crowd in the necessary eight hours of sleep. Exaggerated as this schedule is, it should still prove that such requirements are not possible for the normal woman to meet faultlessly. If, .by any chance there is a medical student's wife or fiancee able to fulfill such standards, may I merely comment that her talents are wasted on a medical student. She should be in far greater fields of human en- deavor-serving as a corporation president, diplomat par excellence, or even as chief executive of our noble land. For those wives among us who are merely normal I only hope these weighty desires of our husbands never intrude too prominently into reality. And to you-the medical stu- dent-my only retort is, if you have even a reasonable fac- simile of this paragon lurking in your kitchen, be wholly thankful that God found such excellent use for Adam's rib. Amen! 54- DIRECTORY OF ALUMNI Tbif if of fonzplele o lining of zlae lining alumni of Cornell Uninerfily Mezliml College or it war ponible zo :nuke nl foil 137729. Tloe!gnzldre5.teJ are nzoinly.fronz lloe filei in the alumni ojjzice. If yonry ir wrong, pleofe notify Min Glenron of any manga. T e .rpeczolly clofilficnlzonf are from the Mediml Dirertory. Intzfnzzfrb or the 1942 book wax ine only one available for nzncb of the country, nzony of llaexe clouzfcalzoni are ulzovozdobly on! of dole. lVe lruyz you will not luke perform! JZHTOIII ol any onzixfioni. 1899 W. D. Banks, 31 Washington St., East Orange, N. J. Frances Sage Bradley, 1910 Kalorama Rd. N.W., Washington, D. C. Frank L. Christian, 716 West 2nd St., Elmira, N. Y. William D. Farrell, 418 Seventh Ave. S.E., Aberdeen, S. D. is. Robert K. Grove, 250 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Frederick Guy Hall, 464 Cowles St., Long Beach 6, Cal. Julia Elizabeth Hatton, 400 No. Grand Bly d., San Fernando, Cal. Jacob lleller, 201 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob.-Gyn. F. A. llenkle, Mohioan Hotel, New London, Conn. George A. Henriquez, 121 West 79th St.. N. Y. C. Frederick L. Keays, Great Neck, N. Y. Morris Kleimuan, 18 West 192nd St., N. Y. C. William Levy, 777 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Abraham Lustgarten, 311 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach, Fla. Augustus H. Mandell, 101 School St., New Bedford, Mass. Delia M. O'Connel1, 63 Maple St., Marlboro, Mass. Edward W. Peterson, 525 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Gertrude Rochester, 1414 Second Ave., Spring Lake, N. J. .loseph C. Roper, 168 East 74th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. lda S. Scudder, Christian Medical College, Vellore, N. Arcot Dist.. So. India llerman F. Sentfner. 115 Franklin St., Westtield, Mass. Walter A. Shoales, 7 Miller St., Norwich, N. Y. John Harold Tallman, 171 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Ernest Tutschulte, Osseo Park, Monroe, N. Y. Francis Joseph Van Noort, 498 East 29th St., Paterson, N. J. 1900 Jane North Baldwin, 131 College Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. A125521 Hess Brown. 341 N. Arden Blvd.. Los Angeles 4, Cal. e . Coryell Clark, 18 Fair St., Cold Spring, N. Y. Surg. Emelyn Coolidge, 220 West 98th St.. N. Y. C. Alice Divine, 185 Canal St., Ellenville, N. Y. Lillian K. P. Farrar, 380 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C. Henry J. Fischer, 361 West 19th St., N. Y. C. Ped. David Gingold, 286 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ped. Isadore Ginzburg, 134 West 13th St.. N. Y. C. Helen D. Given, 5425 Connecticut Avo., N.W., Washington, D. C. Francis Glasebrook, 111 Broadway, N. Y. C. Surg. Marie G1'und, Rhinebeck. N. Y. Edward Hand, 230 East 71st St., N. Y. C. Shirley N. C. Hicks, 89-47 163rd St., Jamaica, N. Y. David M. Kaplan, 302 West 87th St., N. Y. C. Aiitdiur Armin Landsman, 545 West End Ave., N. Y. C. rocto. Joseph Manisof, 675 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Thomas D. McMenamin, Highland Falls, N. Y. Nathan Hale Rachlin, 901 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Orth. Emilie C. Schirmer, 222 Kenmore Road, Havertown, Pa. Anesthes. Edith E. Shears, P. O. Box 72, Lakeville, Conn. Charles I. Silk. 236 High Street, Perth Amboy, N. J. Surg William H. Smith, Danville, Kentucky Surg. Michael Joseph Sullivan, 77 West Main St., Meriden, Conn. Ludwig R. vonRoeder. 32 West 87th St., N. Y. C. Gertrude Ward, 41 Park Place, Bloomfield, N. J. Joseph Weinberg, 240 Central Park South, N. Y. C. Obs. Figlzgnk Yeomans, 11 Drury Lane, Great Neck, N. Y. roc o. 1901 Jane S. Anderson, 5 East Union Ave., Bound Brook, N. J. Emily Dunning Barringer, Talmadge Hill, New Canaan, Conn. Gyn. Margaret P. Brewster, 501 West 113th St., N. Y. C. Maude Glasgow. 360 Central Park West, N. Y. C. Robert Francis McDonald, 405 Parkside Ave., Brooklyn N. Y . . Int. Med. William A. McIntire iMrs.J, 410 N. Oleander Ave., Daytona, Fla. Ellen P. O'Flaherty, 140 Main St., Hartford, Conn. Ped. James Parker lMrs.l, 100 Franklin St., Boston, Mass. Isrdore Ritte1'. 1050 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Elizabeth Sweet, 229 Grand View Drive, Redlands. Cal. Joseph B. Swighart, 137 West 69th St., N. Y. C. 1902 J. Lewis Amster, 1882 Grand Concourse. N. Y. YC. Y Surg- Benjamin S. Barringer, 114 East 54th St., N. Y C. Urol. Stella Stevens Bradford. 16 Seymour St.. Montclair. N. J- Frank Merritt Dyer, 51 Main St.. Binghamton, N . Y. Surg. Theodore J. Edlich, 155 East 45th St., N. Y. C. Simon Ehrlich, 312 West 76th St.. N. Y. C. Anestlies. Frederick L. Everett, 120 Clinton St., Gouverncur, lN. Y. James S. Greene, 61 Irving Place. N. Y. C. Alice Gregory, 955 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. William J. I-lammer, New York Life Insurance Co.. 51 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. v Ethel H. Hitchcock, 204 East 39th St., N. Y. C. Elizabeth C. Jagle, 201 West 79th St., N. Y. C. Y Y Christian VV. Janson, 978 Bushwick Ave., Brooklyn, IN. Y. Harry I. Johnston, 79 Main St., Binghamton, N. Obs. Dean Miltimore, 70 North Broadway. Nyack, N. Y. David Sheitlis, 250 West 85th St.. N. Y. C. Willis Mack Stevenson. 14 Lincoln St.. North Easton. Mass. Charles Lucius Stone, 471 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, lN. Y Anna. I. Von Sholly, 145 East 35th St., N. Y. C. Royden Andeville Vose, 112 East Seneca St.. Ithaca. N- Y- Surg. W. H. Alonzo WVi1l'l1Cl', 444 Central Ave.. East Orange. N. J. Willets Wilson, 210 West Green St., Ithaca, N. Y. Henry E. Woelfie, 907 Summit Ave., Jersey City. N. J. Surg- 1905 Geoffrey C. ll. Burns, Demarest, N. J. Psvch. Charles Willard l'hapin. Georgetown, Madison County. N. Y. Clarence Cor-yell,'495 Fort Washington Ave., N. Y. C. Etgvard E. Cunmife, 2515 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. urg. Paul Dolan, 1882 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Surg. Sigmund Epstein. 15 West 44th St., N. Y. C. Orth. Archie Max Fisher, Spencer, N. Y. Joseph H. Gettinger, 115 'West 73rd St., N. Y. C. Clark S. Gould, 10 Townsend St., Walton, N. Y. Obs. Anthony H. Hanson. 36-18 West Dr., Douglaston, N. Y. Julius J. Hertz, 55 East 86th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Frank McElroy Huntoon, Onondaga Sanitarium, Syracuse, N. Y. Dwight Johnson, Newark, N. Y. Louis M. Kommel, 691 Prospect Ave.. Bronx, N. Y. Obs. Eliot W. Lawrence. 47 West 73rd St., N. Y. C. Louis F. Licht, Lake Success. N. Y. Surg. Murdoch D. MacLeod, 204 East 105th St., N. Y. C. Wgliain H. Magill, 116 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. yn. Dean Miltimore tMrs.l, 41 North Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. William H. Palmer, 59 Elmwood Avc., Providence, R. I. Indust. Med. Henry Pearson. Conway Center RFD, N. H. Surg. Jaglesgx. Quigley, 26 South Goodman St.. Rochester, N. Y. 1- yn. Benjamin Sheitlis, 250 XVest 85th St., N. Y. C. Abraham Strachstein, 138 East 58th St., N. Y. C. Urol. Isaac Streep, 1192 Decatur St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Alice Bugbee Ward. 18 Greeland Ave., Milford, Conn. Edlwagd E. Weber. 170 Maple Ave., White Plains. N. Y. e . Floyd R. Wright, 1946 Swatzel Rd., Kansas City, Kan. Eugene J. Zeiner. 517 Broadway. Paterson, N. J. 1904 ' Arthur W. Albones, 113 East Main St., Frankfort. N. Y. Helen Carter Anderson, Route 2, Box 356, Escondido, Cal. Harry Aranow, 1882 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Ob-Gyn. Henry Clinton Becker, 312 VVest 103rd St., N. Y. C. Samuel J. Bernfeld. 40 East 10th St., N. Y. C. Theodore Bliss, 119 East 19th St., N. Y. C. ' Abraham L. Ceasar, 135 1Vest 79th St.. N. Y. C. George W. Cottis. 636 Wilson St.. Jamestown, N. Y. Surg. Gerry Brown Dudley, 511.Jackson Ave., Charleston, Ill. Harry Eno, Colon. Panama Jacob M. Golbey, 253 Stuyvesant Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Harold Booth Judd. 40 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Raymond F. C. Kieb, Magnolia Manor, Beacon, N. Y. Psych. K Neur. . David Lazarus, 562 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Ob.-Gyn. David W. Mackenzie. 305 Medical Arts Bldg.. Montreal, Canada. Urol. Samuel Milbank, 117 East 65th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Carroll Leja Nichols, 25 Monroe Place. Brooklyn, N. Y. Psych. K Neur. Sylvester F. 0'Day. 151 West 105th St., N. Y. C. Louis Allen Parmenter, Palmer Ave.. Corinth, N. Y. Indus. Med. William VValter Rose, 149 North Seneca St.. Wecdsport. N. Y. v Isidor Rosenthal, 1657-51st St., Brooklyn. N. Y Pauline Rosenthal. 113 East 19th St., N. Y. C. Joseph Slavit., 141 East 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Charles H. Wlebster. Xvhite Park Pl., Ithaca, N. Y. McLeod C. Wilson. 700 Main St.. Hartford, Conn. 1905 Edith Loeber Ballard. Bay St. Louis. Miss. Albert M. Beckary, Indian Lake. N. Y. Y 7 1 Leopold H. Berliner, 300 Central Park West. IX. X. L. William F. Bozenhardt, 6298 Forest St., Brooklyn, N. Y. S . Chalilgs W. O. Bunker, 5312 Moorland Lane. Washington, D. C. Surg. F Y V Milton Chapman, 277 Alexander St., Rochester 4. lN. Y. Surg. Rose Cohen, 164 West 74th St.. Y. C. I George W. Cottis tMrs.J, 636 Winsor St., Jamestown, N. Y J. Homer Cudmore, 216 East 39th St.. N. X. C. Int. Med. Edmund 0. Darbois, 601-79th St.. B1'00li1y11. N. Y. Gyll- Dudley B. Deming tMrs.l. Country Club Road, 1 W t 'I Conn. Jose1iJieDl1 lftocco, 28 Vernon Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg Bertrand F. Drake, Pr0fcssi0na1Build1ng, Ocala, Fla. J Otto L. Goehle, 15701 Detroit Ave.. Lakewood, Ohio 1 ed. Charles A. Gordon, 32 Remsen St.. BFOORIYII. N- 1- Ob.-G ' . , H. P. Grqdlcsbeck, 45 Ballt-own Rd., Schenectady, Y. VVilliam Hinz, Columbiavllle, 'Columbia Co.. IN. Y. Robert L. Hutton, 1009 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Harry E. Isaacs, 1150 Park Ave.. N- Y- C. h Sllftfi , XVilliam M. Kerr, 1617 Myrtle Ave.. San Diego. Calif. Herbert P. Ma-cGreI5or. 59 West 69th St.. N. Y. C. Y James M. MacKellar, 26 East Clinton Ave.. Tenafly, lN. J. Surg. Jacob Maybaum, 1070 Park Ave., Y. C. Otolaryn. William A. McMurtrie, 20 Franklin St.. Morristown. N. J. . M d. ' Loggi Buigh Mount, 1224 11th St., St. Petersburg, Fla. D . . GeoE,fEglA. Newton, 50 Brooklyn Ave., Freeport, N. Y. V Surg Robert R. Patterson, 55 Webster Ave., Rochester, N. Y JoSgllgLRicliards, 44 East 76th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. George L. Rohdenburg, 530 Park Ave., Y. C. Path, J, Van Wagner Smith, 11 Broad St., Middletown. N. 1. Herbert E. Stein, 35 East 84th St.. N. Y- C1 SHPE. Alfred A. Walker, Highland Plaza Apts.. Birmingham, Ala. Blllsrgi G. Wasoh, S71 Park Pl.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Radiol. Arthur M. Wright, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Surg. ' Joseph Ziporkes. 160 West 73rd St.. N. Y. C. ODth. 0550 1906 llenry Aronson, 482-14th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. Michael ll. Barsky, 16 East -llst St., N. Y. C. lndust. Med. Charlotte Bltun, 601 West 110th St... N. Y. C. A. E. Chaco, 11 Linden Pl., Middletown, N. Y. Surg. Barney J. Dryfuss. 420 West End Ave.. N. Y. C. Proet. Bernard II. Eliasberg, 275 Central Park West., N. Y. C. Anesth. Edward L. Friedman, 6057-108th St., Forest llills, N. Y. Abraham L. Garbat, 103 East 7Sth St., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. llarry N. Golding, 180 Carroll St., Paterson, N. J. Radiol. Frank P. Goodwin. 312 Prendergast Ave., Jamestown, N. Y. Int. Med. John P. Hanley, 7 Church St., Stafford Springs, Conn. Samuel Hollander, 427 West 5th St., Los Angeles, Cal. Milton J. Jolmson, 115 Maple St., Jamestown, N. Y. Surg. Charles G. Koehler, J1'., 445 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Mary H. R. Lechtrecker, 62 Rockaway Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. XVilliam Lintz, 36 Plaza St., Brooklyn, N. Y. lnt. Med. Edgvard Bond Markey, 227 Willow Wood Dr.. Dayton, Ohio urg, Artlmr H. Martin, 125 West 87th St., N. Y. C. Ob. -X: Gyn. Walter A. McLaren, 1104 Beverly Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. John A. McNevins. 2487 Marion Ave.. N. Y. C. Clarence P. Oberndorf, 40 West 59th St., N. Y. C. Psych. R Neur. Louis J. Placek, 225 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. A. J. Price, 107 East 'Lake Rd., Canandaigua, N. Y. Anna E. Ray Robinson, 37 Oakme1'e Dr., Baldwin, N. Y. Pub. Health Frank H. Richardson. Black Mountain, N. C. Ped. Ralph Robinson, 628 East 185th St., Cleveland, Ohio Max J. Rush. 1756 East 2nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Nina Dennis Schall, 221 S. 47th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Leo F. Schiff, 46 Cornelia St., Plattsburg. N. Y. Urol. A. Sophian, 1405 Bryant Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. lnt. Med William Henry Specht. Germantown, N. Y. Samuel Tietze, 2334 Main St., llartford, Conn. Thomas G. Tousey, Lunenburg, Mass. Flgyd S. Winslow. 734 S. Plymouth Ave., Rochester, N. Y. urg. 1907 Francis W. Baldwin, 1060 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. llcn1'y Charles Barkhorn, 115 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. .l. Otolaryn. Ida Laird Barroll, 2517 K. St., N.W., WVashington, D. C. Jolm Ruskin Bradley, 2380 South Union St.. Spencerport, N. Y. Frank A. M. Bruant, 4966 Sencola Ave., N. llollywood, Cal. Ob. X Gyn. Harry Cohen, 45 Gramercy Park, N. Y. C. Surg. Samuel A. Cosgrove, S8 Clifton Pl., Jersey City, N. .l. Ohs. Mary M. Crawford, 333 East 57th St., N. Y. C. Ind. Med. Edward J. Eckel, 449 James St.. Syracuse, N. Y. Cary Eggleston, 125 East 74th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Simon D. Ehrlich, 300 Jackson St., Hollywood, Fla. Henry Eichel, 817 YVest End Ave., N. Y. C. Joseph Engel, 24 Johnson Ave., Newark, N. J. Brayton E. Failing. 31 Lincoln Pk.. Newark. N. J. Ophth. K: Otolaryn. Royale Hamilton Fowler, 744 Broad St., Newark, N. .l. S 1 'ff i ig. Frank Harnden, Box 93, Pittsfield, Mass. Edgtlh E. Jolmson, 375 Hawthorne Ave., Palo Alto, Cal. s. Ernest Ellsworth Keet, 150-8-1-87th Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. Frank C. Keil, 660 Madison Ave.. N. Y. C. Ophth. 1-Ienry Kresky, 5403-15th Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Thomas F. Laurie, Medical Arts Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y. Urol. Max Lehman, S501 Myrtle Avo., Glendale, N. Y. George T. Longbothum, 208 Dunellen Ave.. Dunellcn, N. J. Walter E. Lowthian, Emerson Drug Co., Baltimore, Md. Florence L. McKay, 42 Mount Vernon St., Boston, Mass. Pub. Health Arthur C. Martin, 131 Fulton Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. Ob. lk Gyn. Henry E. B. Meye1', 625 Knickerbocker Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y George H. Palmer, 114 Kilburn Road, Garden City, N. Y. Urol. Esther E. Parker, 116 East State St., Ithaca, N. Y. George N. Pease. 1020 S. W. Taylor St.. Corona del Mar, Cal. Surg. Howard L. Prince. 277 Alexander St.. Rochester, N. Y. Surg. Meyer A. Rabinowitz, 651 St. Mark's Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Daniel R. Reilly, S9 North Main St.. Cortland, N. Y. SHUI Joshua Ronshein, R. D. No. 1, Middletown, N. Y. Ob. 8 Gyn. Benjamin Schwartz, 270 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Benjamin W. Seaman, Professional Bldg., Hempstead, N. Y. Surg. Isador M. Shapiro, 30 Chelmsford Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Ophth. k Otolaryn. Nathan Israel Slutsky, 1286 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. U ol. Bella Thomas, Bayshore Royal Hotel, Tampa, Fla. Jerome Wagner, 57 West 57th St.. N. Y. C. Proctol. Henry Weinstein, Hotel Beacon, Broadway 8 75th St.. N. Y. C. Edward M. Wellberry, Main St., Richfield Springs, N. Y. Indust. Med. Edward M. Welles, 455 Broadway, Troy. N. Y. Ophth. George W. 1Vheeler, 235 East 73rd St.. N. Y. C. Path. Anthony C. Zehnder, 188 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. Ophth. 1908 Charles Brendler, 101 East 93rd St., N. Y. C. Morris J. Clurman, 1515-48th St.. B1'00lilyH. N- Y- SHPE. Mark Cohn, 2827 Valentine St.. Bronx. N- Y. James A. Cooley, 46 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Directory of Alumni fcontinuecll Benjamin Davidson, 1457 Union St., Brooklyn, N . Y. Int. Med. . William Denton, 14 East Main St., Port Jervis. N. Y. Harold DeWolf, Briston, R. I. 7 Phebe L. DuBois, 150 East 73rd St., N. Y C. Path. Frederic J. Farnell, 51 East 90th St., N. Y. C. Psych. Arthur T. Gillette. Woodbury, Conn. Benjamin Ginsburg, 346 Saratoga Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ophth. Lewis A. Gould, Interlaken, N. Y. Gaylord W. Graves, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Leon Harris, 147 Fourth Ave., N. Y. C. . - . V William E. Hartigan, U. S. Veterans Facilities, Bath, N. 1 . Anesth. Arthur E. Hoag, 760 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Richard 1-I. Hoffman, 870 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Psych. Benjamin Jablons, 149 West 58th St.. N. Y. C. Int. Med. Wallace Krugler, 667 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Gyn. Milton A. Lampert, 1378 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob. K: Gyn. r Mark Liebert, 62 Hanson Pl., Brooklyn, N. 1. Philip Liebling, 1100 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Oh. re Gyn. H. Clifton Luke, 40 East 61st St.. N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Max Marsh, 55 East 86th St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. John F. McGrath, 30 East 40th St., N. Y. C. Ob. LE Gyn. M. Foster Murray, 80 Hanson Pl., Brooklyn, Y. Tbc. Leander A. Newman, Beacon Hill, Port Waslnngton, N. Y. Max Norman, 194 Utica Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Charles L. O'Neill, 11 North 7th St., Newark, N. J. T Harold M. Rabinowitz, 184 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. Alexander H. Rubinowitz, 288 N. Y. Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Psych. Leo Samson Schwartz. 849 Park Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gyn. Harry V. Spaulding, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Surg. Williagn1F. Steinbugler, 515 Ocean Ave., Bl'00k1Yll, N. Y. O t a . Geoigge D. Stilson, 117 East 8th St., Long Beach, Cal. Urol. William Tomkins, 105 Fairmount Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. William J. Walker, 840 Morris Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Abraham Walzer, 20 Plaza St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Derm. Rodney R. Williams, Children's Village, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Psych. 8.: Neur. U Ray Baldwin Wynkoop, 217 Park Pl., Ashtabula, Ohio Surg. Jeisonae Zuckerman, 222 Central Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. e . 1909 Victor W. Anderson, 157 Riverside Ave.,-Westport. Conn. Clayton M. Axtell, 195 Front St., Deposit, N. Y. Valentine C. Baker, 619 West 140th St., N. Y. C. Derm. Edward L. Berger, 903 Park Pl., Brooklyn, N. 1. Samuel G. Blum, 852 Prospect Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob. Sa Gyn. Jacob Bower, 940 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Harold F. Budington, 958 State St., Springfield, Mass. William H. Curley. 70 Linden Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Surg. Franlalaeriniston., 915 N. E. 2nd St., Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. a io . Edgvard Dowdle, 2501 W. Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. urg. Albert C. Durand, Hancock, Maine Ophthal. Morris Farkas, 163 High St., West Orange, N. J. Bernard Feldstein., St. Johnsville, N. Y. Morris Frank, 920 Avenue C, Bayonne, N. J. Ortho. William Goldstein, 2830 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. John C. Graham, 80 Hanson Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Derm. Albert D. Green, 915 Palisade Ave., Union City, N. J. Allergy Mary L. Hamblet, 120 Federal St., Salem, Mass. Theodore C. Hascall, 48 Lincoln Ave., Riverside, R. I. Richard T. Hopkins, Orotlno, Idaho John H. Isquith, 215 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Adolph Jacoby, 151 West 77th St., N. Y. C. 0b. 8: Gyn. George E. Kanouse. 20 Lenox Rd., Summit, N. J. J. Stanley Kenney, 924 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Card. Edwin G. Langrock, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Obs. Edward H. Marsh, 7 Leith Pl., White Plains, N. Y. Pub. H al h e t Carl E. McCombs, Chappaqua, N. Y. Peter K. Olitsky, Rockefeller Institute, 66th St. 8: York Ave., N. Y. C. Rusdolph Daniel Orth, 149-19 38th Ave., Flushing, N. Y. urg. E. T. Rulison, Route 3, Box 402, Santa Cruz, Cal. Surg. Saul Schlegman, 12 Chester Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Ped. Reuben S. Simpson, Lyons, N. Y. Meyer Solomon, 5426 East View Pk., Chicago, Ill. Psych. 8: Neur. Morris Streen, 908 Bergen St., Newark, N. J. Irving Tran, 748 St. Mark's Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob. 8 Gyn. Louis A. Van Kleeck, Manhasset, N. Y. Pcd. James H. Vanmarter, 207 Linden Ave., Ithaca, N. Y. Obs, S. Nordeman Weber, 109 East 56th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Samuel Weiss. 760 Market St., San Francisco, Cal. Luvia M. Willard, 147-49 8-lth Road, Jamaica, N. Y. Ped, Charles Wolf, 1 West 81st St., N. Y. C. Derm. 1910 Charles Allaben, 114 Murray St., Binghamton, N. Y. Orth. James E. Baker, 1238-56th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Jennie Dean Beaver, 43 Elm St.. Morristown. N. J. Allergy Harrison Betts, 363 Palisade Ave.. Yonkers, N. Y. Surg. James H. Biram, 18 Birch Road, W. Hartford, Conn. lndust. Med. Charles Breitman, 210 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter H. Brundage, 219 Pelhamdale Ave., Pelham. N. Y. Int. Med. John C. Carmer. 17 Lawrence St., Lyons, N. Y. Surg. Halbert W. Chappel. 134 S. Norton Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. rth. R. J. Gaffney, 20 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Edwin F. Gibson, 93 N. Broad St., Norwick, N. Y. Isaac Goldberg. 2310 Avenue J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Jacob Grossman. 1018 East 163rd St., Bronx, N. Y. Orth Urius Himmelstein, 70 East 96th St.. N. Y. C. Ped. David B. Hirschfeld, 2 East 102nd St., N. Y. C. Gcmrge Francis Ilooh. 115 East 61st St.. N. Y. C. Urol. Edward lloenig, 146 Central Park West, N. Y. C. Oh. rt Gyn. William L. Howell. 1111 Medico-Dental Bldg., San Diego. Cal. Charles I. Hyde, 5811 Noble Ave.. Van Nuys, Cal. John Fgancis Kelly, 1607 Sanderson Ave., Scranton, Pa, oc . Louis Korowitz, 600 West 111th.St.. N. Y. C. Irving B. Krellenstein, 877 1113511113 Rd.. Glenda-10- Cal- Ob. 85 Gyn- Y N Y I t Bled Berton Lattin, 3 Bretton Rd., Scarsdale, . 1 ll - - Saul M. Levy, 5411 Sixth Ave.. Brooklyn,,N-,Xb Perry M. Lichtenstein, 155 Leonard St.. 1.N.Y Sur Y Samuel Linder, 889 St. Mark s Pl., Brooklyflr - - I, d 5- Maud Loeber,4315035rit:gE1aEt., New grlqgllb. Lil- C - Jacob Luftig, 9- ., T00 I YH' - - Francis J. McCormick, 112-114 N. Aurora St., Ithaca, N- Y- Surg. , , Gerald L. Moench, 27 West 55th St., N. YYC. Ob.1k Gyn- Josephine B. Neal, 60 Gramercy Park, N. Y. C. N LHP. AbrahamCJ. N e?IvrnTan, I13g.b1anh attan Ave. , Jerse it . . . a 10 . , . Jesse RYPavi1,ling, 100 Stone St., Watertown, N. Y. Radiol. Nathan Pulsifer, 473 Beacon St., Lowell, Mass. Clarence A. Read, 421 Hugenot St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Int. Med. Romeo Roberto, 25 Buckingham Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. Radiol. Ransom Smith Robertson, 631 East 18th St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Jacob Sachs, 63 Bay 32nd St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. William St. Lawrence, 983 Park Ave.. N. Y. C. Ped. ' H. E. Schorr, 26 Lincoln Parkway. Bay0l1-110. N- J- , Cald- Max Schultz, 1494 Eastern Parkway. Br00li1yrl. N- Y- Albert E. Schwallie, Ripley, Ohio 7 Jesse D. Schwartz, 320 Central Park West, N. 1. C. Charles Shookhoff, 690 St. Mark s Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Samuel Silverman, 605 Empire Blvd., Brooklyn. N. Y. Malcolm K. Smith. 22 Madison Ave.. Morristown, N. J. Sidney D. Smith, 216 Lafayette Building, Waterloo, Iowa Jesse B. Stark, 46 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Onhth. Earl Vincent Sweet, 300 Broadway, Newark. N. J. Belle Richens Walker, 373 Melville Ave., Palo Alto, Cal. John Sayer Ware, 396 Van Duzer St., Stapleton. N. Y. O th. Raylinond C. Wearne, Wassaic, N. Y. Psych. Adeline M. Wwtcott. 231 Liberty St., Newburgh, N. Y. Path. 1911 Alvira Dean Abell, Loantaka Way, Madison, N. J. George T. Banker, 1145 East Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J. Int. Med. J. Hudson Blauvelt, 16 Hart Pl., Nyack. N. Y. PSYCII- Roscoe C. Borst, 258 Genesee St.. Utica, N. Y. Urol. Harry Gifford Bull. 817 East State St., Ithaca, N. 1. Ped. Harry G. Bull tMrsJ., S17 East State St., Ithaca, N. Y. S. B. Burk, 27 East 631'd St., N. Y. C. Surg. Thomas W. Carey, 146 East 37th St., N. Y. C. l Francisco R. De Jesus, Christina No. 7, Ponce. Puerto Rico Surg. George R. Dempsey. Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y. , Florence T. Donovan, 100 Central Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. Urol. William G. Doran, 43 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Orth. Nathan B. Eddy, 7055 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Irving Friedenreich, 825 Gerard Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Radiol. Jesse D. Friedman, 1115-45th Ave., Long Island City, N. Y. Oscar C. Frundt, 92 Bartholde St., Jersey City, N. J. Ralph H. Garlick, 217-80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob. 8.1 Gyn. Serafino Genovese, 390 Main St., Danbury, Conn. Derm. William B. Glanville. Southampton, N. Y. Surg. Harold H. Golding, 914 Paulding St., Peekskill, N. Y. Arthur W. Justin, 41 Fulton St., Weehawken, N. J. Int. Med. Henry R. Kutil, 164 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. Allergy W. Forrest Lee, 536 Thurston Ave., Ithaca. N. Y. Su1'g. Albert Lewis Levy, 17 West 71st St., N. Y. C. Orth. Nils Oscar Lundell, 1105 Beach Channel Drive, Far Rockaway, N. Y. Surg. Edward Mahler, 120 East 89th St., N. Y. C, Louise Auerbach Mand, 157 S. Vermont Ave.. Los Angeles. Cal. Walter L. Mattick, 290 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. J Radilqlii d NI C ames 1 war 1 c ormick, 775 Eliza ,, StNeivark, N. J. beth Ave an ey H. Mellen, 370 Belleville Ave., B Leopold Rein, Massapequa, N, Y, loomneld' N' J A. G. Sacco, 2200 New York Ave., Union City, N, J, . Otolaryn. Henry L. Sherman, 875 West End Ave., N. Y, C, agrees Slilogtac, 333 East 79th St., N. Y. C. Obs 1 iam . omervi e, 4 ' James Steinbe ' 1052 165 East 124th St N' Y' C' IE, W. Gth St Los Angeles Calif Urol. -701lgfgdPhi11iDs Stout. 165 Jewett Ave., Jersey City, N, Herbert H. Straub, 1 Tower D '., M 19 James F. Vavasour, 96 Brettori Rd.iLIYoiikgg,IN, JY, Psych Julius L. Waterman., R. D. 2, 131-adfordl Pa. - May G. W11S0n, N. Y. Hospital, 1300 York A . N. Y Ped. ve ' ' C' Thomas B. Wood, S78 Park Pl., Brooklyn, N, Y, Otolal-yn, 19 12 Dav-id N. Barrows, 114 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. Ob. 8: G .1 Stiles Efegullen, 128 Crosman Terrace, Rochester, N. Y. 5 L Nggggil Feflde, 80 Jefferson Blvd., Annadale, S, I,, N, Y, Ed6lgHaE3Vlf94I91'S0U, 26 S. Goodman St., Rochester, N, Y, 112122. Agnes Martin. 165 Robinson St.. Binghamton, N, Y, George C. Payne. 49 West 49th St. N Y C R03gkt'D. Schrock, 831 Medical Arts Bldg.,'Omaha, Neb, Chester H. Waters, 107 S. 17th St.. Omaha, Nob Sm... 1913 Isadore Adler, 147 Bidwell P . l' ' ' B 1 ' . Joseph S. Baldwin 116 lliltlaalidxliggf Bilmifllgoi N' L Ped' Eleanor Bertme, 108 East 38th sc.. N. noe max: Y' Surg- A. Graham Biddle, 48 East 68th St. N Y i 1 bb ch' Frank N. Dealy, 89-04 148th St.. Jainaica 'lN?'Y gm... E- N- Dflddv 156 Fifth Ave.. N. Y. C. ini. Med ' 5' Gu1lfordyS. Dudley, 653 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Siirg Gegggeslicggnlfeld, 135 Eastern Parkway, Brggklyn, N' Y, 0560 Harry W. Mayes, 494 First St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob. 8: Gyn. 1-Ienry Richard Muller. Vassar Bros. H0SDita1, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Path. Jacob Piller, 152 Buena Vista Ave., Hawthorne, N. J. Surg Walter A. Reiter, 50 DeForest Ave., Summit, N. J, Maurice I. Smith, Natl. Inst. of Health, Bethesda. Md. Nils Westby, Madison, Minn. Surg. James W. Wiltsie, 107 Oaks St.. Binghamton, N. Y. Proetol. 1914 David P. Barr, Cornell Medical College, 1300 York Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Alfred K. Bates, 27 Groves St., Auburn, N. Y. Surg. Smiley Blanton, 115 E. 61st St., N. Y. C. Psych. Joseph Harkavy, 1165 Park Ave., N. Y. C. James W. McChesney, 68 Merrick Rd., Baldwin, N. Y. Sur . John Iglenry Nugent, Hampton Rd., Southampton, N. Y. Helen L. Palliser, 20 Parway Blvd.. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. William D. Rolph, 640 National Ave., National City, Cal. Surg. Isadore Rosen, 5000-15th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Benjamin J. Slater, Med. Dept., Kodak Pk., Rochester, N. Y. lndust. Med. Max Soley, 770 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Anesth. Philip M. Stimson, 25 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C. Ped. William H. Sugarman, 1263 President St., Brooklyn, N, Y, I t. Med. Aniie Tjomsland, 821 Bergen Ave.. Jersey City, N. J. Geraldine E. Watson, 75 Ea-st 55th St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. 1915 Rowland P. Blythe, 30 Springfield Ave., Cranford, N. J. Obs. Jacob Buckstein, 1150 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Reginald Burbank, 6 East 78th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Paul Clinton Cook, 21 Glen Ave., Edgewood, R. I. Int. Med. Albert S. Crawford, 727 Edison, Detroit, Mich. Psych. 85 Neur. Leon E. DeYoe, 602 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. Surg. Leo Edelman, 975 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Urol. Gegrge G. Fawcett, 8 Washington St., Norwalk, Conn. urg. . Roscoe C. Giles, 3541 S. State St.. Chicago. Ill. Surg. Lazarus G. Hadjopoulos, 6 East 78th St., N. Y. C. Kenneth Johnson, 168 East 74th St., N . Y. C. Surg. Gertrude Fisher McCann, 112 Berkeley St., Rochester, N. Y. Pub. Health William Sharp McCann, 260 Crittenden Blvd., Rochester, N. Y. Int. Med. Katherine Degnan Miller, 63 North St.. Greenwich, Conn. John Miller, 63 North St., G1'eenwich, Conn. Otolaryn. Mary Blanche Norton, Holmquist School, New Hope, Pa. Arthur Palmer, 667 Madison Ave.. N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Re Plas. Surg. Douglass Palmer, 16 Park Ave.. N. Y. C. Proct. Guy McMaster Parkhurst, 101 E. Steuben St., Bath, N. Y. Alfred Edward Phelps, 114 East 7 2nd St., N. Y. C. 1916 Alexander Altschul, 1085 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Alan Benner, 30 El Camino Real, San Mateo, Calif. Ob. QQ Gyn. , Addison H. Bissell, 65 South St., Stamford, Conn. Su1'g. Robert S. Cleaver, 114 Main St., Brewster, N. Y. John Anthony Colucci, 663 East 226th St., Bronx, N. Y. Aigiadltleegman Daniels, 270 West End Ave.. N. Y. C. a io . Gegrge S. Hackett, 616 First Natl. Bank Bldg., Canton. Ohio urg. Cagl Clifford Harvey, 119 Main St., Middletown, Conn. urg. Louis Hausma'n, 140 East 54th St.. N. Y. C. Psych. k Neur. William Vincent Healey, 660 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Eugenia Ingerman. 27 Washington Square N.. N. Y. C. Edward A. Lane, 75 Lakeview Ave., Hartsdale, N. Y. Pub. Health Nils P. Larsen, 1133 Punchbowl St., Honolulu, T.H. Pub. Health Michael J. Lynch. 3113 Kingsbridge Ave., Bronx, N. Y. John Lyttle, Children's Hosp., Sunset tk Vermont Aves., Los Angeles. Cal. P d s e . Arthur S. McQuillan, 121 East 60th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Henry Joseph Meister, 304 N. Park Ave., Warren, Ohio Atflll0 Milici. 55 VVest 11th St.. N. Y. C. Surg. Charles T. Olcott, 325 East 41st St., N. Y. C. Path. Theodore Bymgton Reed, 168 East 74th St., N. Y. C. Ob. 8: Gyn. Ezra Burt Sanford, 23 Oakland Ave.. Warwick, N. Y. Int. Med. I Regal Francis Sengstacken, 3 Mansfield Ave., Suffern, N. Y. urg. Louise Townsend, 235 West 11th St., N. Y. C. James F. Trimble, 22 WV. Pittsburgh St., Greensburgh, Pa. Philip L. Tltrner, 1922 Genesee St.. Utica.. N. Y. Surg. I-Injclsrin J. Wilson. lst Natl. Bank Bldg., Ithaca, N. Y. o aryn. 1917 Solomon Berger, 911 Walton Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Archie L. Dean, Jr., 30 East 40th St., N. Y. C. Urol. Hilda W. Eidson, 70 East 77th St.. N. Y. C. Psych. Alllierztlli. Ferguson, 1101 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. a io. EclvvarclIPd Flood, 910 Grand Concourse, Bronx. N. Y. n . 1 e . Joseph H. Globus. 960 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Psych. ic Neur. L0ll1S'Gl'Sll10l', 8358 Wilshire Blvd.. Beverly Hills. Cal. Connie M. Guion, 147 East 50th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Hglry Haywood, 146 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N . J- urg. David Rathburn Higbee, 3705 Pringle St., San Diego, Cal. Otolaryn. Edward Hollander. 1230 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Gastroent. Abraham Kardincr, 1100 Park Avo., N. Y. C. Psych. QQ Neur. Thomas J. Kirwin. 1 East 63rd St., N. Y. C. Urol. Warren Post Kortright, Huntington.. N. Y. Radiol. G. Haven Mankin, 6629 East Ave.. Chevy Chase, Md. Otolaryn. Directory of Alumni fcontinuedj Merle Mosier Potter, 209 University Ave., Providence, R. I. Gastroent. , Ralph D. Reid, 1200 Van Antwerp Rd., Schenectady, N. 1. S :5- DanLiel Schultheis, 33-80 162nd St., Flushing. N. Y. Galen Fisher Scudder, Rani-Pettai, Madras Presidency, I d'a Heifimin Sharlit, 32 East 64th St.. N. Y. C. Derm. John Lazear Sly, 382 Springfield Ave., Summit, N. J. Otolaryn. Ramsay Spillman, 115 East 61st Street, N. Y. C. Radiol. Lawrence Emerson Sprout, 208 W. Thomas St., Rome, N. Y. U 1. Kaiginan Wallach, 41 West 06th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. 1918 Irving Balensweig, 667 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Orth. John Vail Bissett, 20 Hawthorne Ave., E. Orange, N. J. Ophth., Otolaryn. A George T. Blydenburgh, 21 Woodland Ave., Delaware, Ohio Jacob A. Cantor, 21 West 86th St.. N. Y. C. Sidney Barnett Conger, 150 S. Main St., Akron, Ohio Ob. 8: Gyn. . Lloyd Freeman Craver, 1340 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. A 7 Birdina Crosby, Freedonia. N. Y. v William Robert Delzell, 045 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. Urol. Hartley G. Dewey, 415 N. Camden Drive., Beverly Hills, Cal. Cmdr. Walter E. Divine, U. S. Naval Hospital, Dublin. Ga. Haynes Harold Fellows, 27 Salter Pl., Maplewood, N. J. lndust. Med. Samuel C. Johnson, 30 East 40th St., N. Y. C. Arthur M. Kimberly, 756 Pleasant St.. Worcester, Mass. Ped. Leila C. Knox, 7 East 86th St.. N. Y. C. Path. Leo Loewe, 177 New York Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Merwin Elliott Marsland, 202 Beach Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Ped. Jeannette Stobo Pensel, Lake Placid Club, Lake Placid, N. Y. . Alfred L. Potter, 171 Angell St., Providence, R. I. Ob. 8 Gyn. Maurice Timothy Root, 51 N. Main St., XV. Hartford, Conn. Morton Ryder, 1 Grand View Ave., Rye, N. Y. lnt. Med. Samuel Schwadron, 2784 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Abraham M. Spindle1', 225 West 86tl1 St., N. Y. C. Ped. Helen Isabel Walbridge, 118 Fire Island Ave., Babylon, N. Y. Indust. Med. Walter Weller, Bellerose Bank Bldg., Bellerose, N. Y. Surg Joseph J. Wells, 2021 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Surg 1919 Frank E. Barnes, 165 Horton Highway, Mineola, N. Y. Sol Biloon, 1882 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Howard Reid Craig, 2 East 103rd St., N. Y. C. T. Wallis Davis, 250 East 431-d St., N. Y. C. Harold Himwich, Chief of Research Branch. Edgewood Arsenal. Md. Ira Hinsdale, 1239 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. George H. Hyslop, 120 East 60th St., N. Y. C. William J. Jackson, 55 East 10th St., N. Y. C.. Helen Jolmston, 1314 Equitable Bldg., Des Momcs, Iowa Henry H. Kessler, 53 Lincoln Park, Newark, N. J. Myer Joseph Lossow, 2134 Vyse Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Joseph Mandelberg, 1450 48th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. C. B. Mazurowski, 1065 Crane St., Schenectady, N. Y. Gustav Kielland Oxholm, 209 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y, Jean A. Pattison. 103 East 78th St.. N. Y. C. Margaret A. Ribble, 59 West 12th St.. N. Y. C. Michael Ringer, 425 'West End Ave., N. Y. C. E. Warren Ripley, 0 I-lighmont Terrace, Montclair, N. J. William Alexander Rogers, 10 Bradford Road, Wellesly, Mass. Sophie Andrews Root, 51 N. Main St., W. Hartford, Conn. Dean F. Smiley, American Med. Assn., 35 N. Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill. William Randolph Smith, Doctor's Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Arthur M. Stokes, Mt. Morris Tuberculosis Hosp.. 'MEt. Morris, N. Y. Ruth Wadsworth, New Canaan, Conn. Matthew Walzer, 20 Plaza St., Brooklyn, N. Y. George Waterman, 155 Thayer St., Providence, R. I. William Morris Weeden, 114 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. 1920 Harold B. Adams, 05 Central Ave., Rye, N. Y. Frederica Alexander, Hotel Wellington, N. Y. C. Else A. Barthel, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Robert J. Beck, 10 Hope St., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Ophth. Anne S. Belcher, 20 East 53rd St., N. Y. C. Harold S. Belcher, 111 Broadway, N. Y. C. Donald C. Bell, Box 97, Ojaii, Cal. Ralph Blumberg, 3622 Ave. M, Brooklyn, N. Y. E. Irene Boardman, R. D. No. 2, NVaterbury, Prospect, Conn. Mary Frances Brew, 145 Arondale Place., Syracuse, N. Y. Psych. Hcgward N. Cooper, Woolworth Bldg., Watertown, N. Y. urg. Raymond S. Crispell, Durham, N. C. Psych. Alexander G. Davidson, 05 Eastern Pkway., Brooklyn, N. Y. Wilson D. Dodd, Mt. Hermon School, Northfield, Mass. Richmond Douglass, Herman Biggs Memorial Hosp., Ithaca, N. Y. Rufus L. Durfee, 140 Chapin St.. Binghamton, N. Y. Cora. H. Morris Ehrenclou, 925 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Thomas M. French, 43 E. Ohio St., Chicago, Ill. Stella M. Ferguson, 12 Cameron St., Hornell, N. Y. Margaret E. Fries, 21 West 80th St., N. Y. C. Walter I. Galland, 110 East 87th St., N. Y. C. Maurice Gelb, V. A. Hospital Regional Office, Montgomery, Ala. Abraham R. Harber, 001 Walton Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Meyer M. Harris, 722 West 168th St.. N. Y. C. Louis Hodes, 444 Central Park W., N. Y. C. Doris Hoffman, 324 Vigo St., Vincennes, Ind. Thomas B. Joyce. 13 Oak St., Brattleboro, Vt. Abraham Landy, 2821 Valentine Ave.. Bronx, N. Y. Samuel Z. Levine, 528 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Ped. Arturo Martinez, 500 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Laura. Miller, G. P. O. Box 477, N. Y. C. Maxwell Mitchell. 200 W. Merrick Road, Baldwin, N. Y. Harry E. Montero, 156 Washington St., Bloomfield. N. J. Walter Francis Phelan, 124 Chilton St., Elizabeth, N. J. Barrett Pincus, 351 West 42nd St., N. Y. C. Mary Reesor, 1751 W. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y. Georgia Reid. 10 West 95th St., N. Y. C. Ob. N Gyn. Paul Reznikoff, 1300 York Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Edwin P. Russell, 105 W. Court St., Rome, N. Y. Int. Med. Ernest Frederick Russell, 101 E. Constance Ave., Santa. Barbara. Cal. Jacob Smith. 1027 Ave. St. John, Bronx, N. Y. John E. Sutton, 136 East 64th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Margaret Nelson Yickers. Wanakena, N. Y. Guy M. Wells, 124 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. Int. Med. 1921 Horace S. Baldwin. 136 E. 64th St., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. George F. Bock, 300 Woolworth Bldg., Watertown, N. Y. lnt. Med. Reginald Caddick tMrs.J, 5 Market Hill, Calne, Wistshire, England Johgicltufsel Carty, 18 Beachknoll Road. Forest llills, N. Y. a io. William S. Collens, 123 8th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Nelson Warren, 1045 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Madeline Fries, 4324 220th Place, Bayside, N. Y. Elizabeth M. Fulton, Massena, St. Lawrence Co., N. Y. Wayne Willard Hall, 240 Prospect St., Paterson, N. J. 'yn. Figtnk Charles Henry, 214 Smith St., Perth Amboy, N. J. urg. George F. I-Ierben, Ilouse of Rest, Yonkers. N. Y. Tbc. Harriet I-losmer, 84 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N . Y. Obst. Godel I. Hunter, 30 West 00th St.. N. Y. C. Ped. Pasquale J. Imperato, 418 Sackett St., Brooklyn, N. Y. lndust. Med. Charles J. Kaufman, Veterans Adminis. Hosp., Castle Point. N. Y. Dwight Rufus Knapp, Kerrville, Texas Solomon. S. Lichtman, 170 East 79th St., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Robert O. Loebel, 67 East 50th St., N. Y. C. S. Bell Lucent. 2 First Ave., Little Falls, N. .I. Maxi Bernard Lurie, Phipps Institute, Philadelphia, Pa. c. Arthur M. Master, 125 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Ix. D. Maynard, 304 E. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. Obs. Robert Bush McGraw, 2 East 85th St., N. Y. C. Psych. Joseph Rosenblum. 28 East 10th St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Paul F. Russell, Rockefeller Institute, N. Y. C. Ralph William Schaeffer, 200 S. Pacific Ave., Redondo Beach, Cal. Irving Schwartz, 45 East 66th St., N. Y. C. Radiol. Samson A. Seley, 1382 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gastroent. Lewis J. Silvers, 2233 Andrews Ave. N., Bronx, N. Y. Otolaryn. Adelaide Ross Smith, 172 Sullivan St., N. Y. C. Walter Fox Smith, 185 Stone St., Watertown. N. Y. Robert G. Stewart, 79 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J. Surg. William M. Stobbs. 63 Bank St., Attleboro. Mass. Henry B. Sutton, 106 East State St., Ithaca, N. Y. Surg. Curtis C. Tripp. 416 County St., New Bedford, Mass. Surg. David Warshaw, 876 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Hyla Stowell Watters, Wuhu General Hosp., Wuhu. Anhwei, China. Harry Weaver, 2532 Grand Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Radiol. Edward T. Wilkes, 2 Sutton Pl. S.. N. Y. C. Ped. 1922 Otelia J. Bengtsson. 77 Hunter St., Ossining, N. Y. Allergy Albert Blau. 102 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Camillo A. Cerchiara, 100 Park Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Obs. Joseph Henry Diamond, 105 Westervelt Ave., New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Int. Med. Dorothy Edwards, 122 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. Ob. k Gyn. Jeannette Evans, Hygiene Dept., Cornell U., Ithaca, N. Y. Lester M. Felton, 37 Commodore Road, Worcester, Mass. Urol. Abraham Fine, 025 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ophth. k Otolaryn. Sidney T. Friedman, 4405 Fieldston Road. N. Y. Surg. Helen Gavin, 147 East 50th St.. N. Y. C. Int. Med. Jacob Goeller, 1165 W. Clinton Ave., Irvington, N. J. Anesth. Harry Gold, 7 East 82nd St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Kenneth G, Ha-ncher, 8 Pelbrook Hall, 5th Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Edwin Toal Hauser, 850 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Katherine Havard, 2705 Prytania St., New Orleans. La. Ob. k Gyn. Reuben Kayser, 442 Bay Ridge Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Otolaryn. Michael Lake. 6 East 70th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Leo Paul Larkin, Savings Bank Bldg., Ithaca, N. Y. Radiol. Callie H. Larrabee, 10 Irving Pl.. Summit. N. J. Leon Isaac Levine, 1060 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Elizabeth Mar-Naughtan, XValpole, N. H. Mary E. C. McGregor, Chatham, N. J. Walter Russell Mead, 105 West Cheves St., Florence, S. C. Int. Med. Charles S. Miller, 37-38 Alburtis Ave., Corona, N. Y. De 1. DeanrrC. Moore, 138 N. Arlington Ave., E. Orange, N. J. Surg. Logis Jerome Morse, 103-15 11-ith St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. urg. Irving Newman, 345 West 55th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Paul F. Nugent, Da.vid's Lane, East Hampton, N. Y. Roger Sherman Palmer, 331 Investment Bldg., Pomona, Cal Ortho. Ainsworth L. Smith, 603 Third St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. Carl H. Smith, 103 East 84th St.. N. Y. C. Ped. Mary B. Spahr, Ithaca. N. Y. Ped. Charles Stahl. 650 Sanford St., Newark. N. J. John A. Taylor, 2 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Urol. Lawrence D. Thompson, 634 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. Int. Med. Harry Vesell, 1124 Park Ave.. N. Y. C. Int. Med. 1925 C ll Adl 'll , 1 YVeSt 85th St., N. Y. C. Surg. JziLoiJnAppl4eiJaSn1i, 260 West, 72nd St.. N. Y. C. Lionel S. Auster, 21 East 82nd St., N. Y. C. Surg. e570 Ruth Morris Bakwln, 132 East 71st St., N. 1. C. Ped. V Margaret Witter Barnard, 183 Emerson Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Pub. Health . Francis J. Bean, Putnam Memorial Hosp.. Bennington, Vt. Jacob B. Berglass, 406 Ave. F, B1'00li15'I1, N- Harry Sidney Berkoff, 130 East 30th St., N. vi. C. .Joseph J. Berkowitz, 226 East 53rd St.. N. Y. C. Earl C. Bonnett. 1 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Sarah A. Bonnet, S05 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Psych. r Melvin M. Brodie, 566 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn,VN. Y. Charles S. Byron, S05 Park Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. lnt. Mod. David Dannis, 027 Fox St., N. Y. C. Samuel Donner, 41 Hebron St., Hartford. AConn. Ylnt. Med. William P. Elliott. S. Main St., New Berlin, N. Y. Y Abraham Feitelberg, 1835 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Alfred E. Fischer, 73 East 90th St., N. Y. C. Ped. Alfred G. Flagg, 4-10 West 34th St., N. Y. C. lndust. Med. Sidney ll. Freilieh, 1377 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. 1. Ortho. Jerome Glaser, 300 S. Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. Ped. Isabel Globus, 1733 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. K. G. Hansson, 525 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Physio. Surg. Samuel Hochnian, 325 West 86th St., N. Y. C. Gyn. Marjorie R. Hopper, 278 N. Midland Ave., Nyack. N. Y. Michael Iserman, 12 E. 76th St., N. Y. C. Myron .Iackson lMrs.J, Oyster Bay, N. Y. Ped. Myron Robinson Jackson, Oyster Bay, N. Y. Surg. Benjamin Jacobs, Camarillo State Hosp., Camarillo, Cal. Leif G. Jensen, Port Richmond, S. l. Surg. Hyman Klein, 158 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob. R Gyn. Harry Kroin, 40-15 81st St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Philip Levine, Route No. 20, Ortho Research Foundation. Raritan. N. J. Leo Marquith, 720 Ft. Washington Ave., N. Y. C. John Francis McDermott, Hartford, Conn. Trust Bldg., Hartford, Conn. Ortho. Gladys M. Muller, 263 East 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Pub. Health Eleanor Murphy, 608 Tompkins Ave., Maniaroneck, N. Y. Samuel H. Nerenstone, 860 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Proct. Louis Leo Perkel, 2801 Hudson Blvd., Jersey City, N. J. Gastroent. Philip Reichert, 480 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Cardiology. Lester Rosenberg, 1156 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ped. Joseph Shiffer, 110-11 107th Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Otolaryng. Samuel Silber, 805 Park Pl., Brooklyn. N. Y. Ped. Signcy A. Thompson, 161 Mason St., Greenwich. Conn. urg. Edward Tolstoi, 2 East 04th St.. N. Y. C. Int. Med. Samuel W. Vernick, 50 Manhattan Ave., N. Y. C. Cb. 8: Gyn. William Allen Walker, 220 East 73rd St., N. Y. C. Ortho. Samuel M. Weinreb, 374 S. 2nd St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Samuel Weinstein, 441 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Otolaryn. Hag:-let M. White, 85-11 120th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. 1 is. Abraham L. Wincor, 2010 Crotona Ave., N. Y. C. Ophth, Margaret M. Wurts, 27 Wellesley Road, Upper Montclair, N. J. 1924 Alice Gibb Abel, 330 Union Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Allergy Henri E. Abel, 330 Union Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Derm. Benjamin I. Ashe, 880 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Samuel H. Bassett, 265 Avalon Drive, Rochester, N. Y. Int. Med. Charles Edward H. Bates, 350 Post St., San Francisco, Cal. Otolaryn. Barbara Beattie, Littleton, N. H. Ped. Lefoy Vtiagon Black, 30 W. Passaic Ave., Rutherford, N. J. nt. . e . Riithdlfoster Crabtree, 289 Liberty St., Newburgh, N. Y. e . F. A. Cracco, 211 Palisade Ave., Union City, N. J. David L. Drabkin, University of Pennsylvania Med. College, Philadelphia. Pa. Phys. Chem. Robert G. M. Dimovant, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Ob. tk Gyn. Gagrett DeNyse Duryea, 30 Landing Road, Glencove, N. Y. urg. Bernard Fein, 585 Elizabeth Ave.. Newark, N. J. Ped. Robert K. Felter, 155 East 73rd St., N. Y. C. Irene Davis Ferguson, 1213 Deniston Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Pub. Health Wilfried Kirk Freeman, Cedar Hill, Greenwich, Conn. Julian M. Freston, 1349 Lexington Ave.. N. Y. C. Int. Med. Thomas .I. Garrick, 332 Park Ave., Manhasset, N. Y. Otolaryn. Harlan S. Heim, Humbolt, Neb. Joseph Herzstein, 115 East 02nd St., N. Y. C. Martin.F. Hession, 3003 Decatur Ave., N. Y. C. Hall Gillam Holder, 233 A St., San Diego, Cal. Surg. Evelyn .I-Iolt, 70 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit, N. J. Int. Med. Iugoshi Hosoi, 400 S. Beretania St., Honolulu, Hawaii urg. Russell I-I. Iler, 383 Clinton Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Ped. S. R. Jagger, Westhampton Beach. N. Y. Logs? E. Keasbey. 002 Worsham Drive. Whittier, Cal. a 1. Frank Evarts Kelhier, 214 W. Court St.. Rome, N. Y. Willis S. Knighton, 121 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Ophth. James R. Lomauro, 184 Lexington Ave., Passaic, N. J. Ob. it Gyn. William C. Menninger, 3617 W. 6th St., Topeka, Kan. syc 1. Katherine Brooks Merrifield, 1014 Elmwood Ave., Wilmette, Ill. Z. Rita Parker, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Ped. Harry Sidney Pizer, 1726 Davidson Ave.. Bronx, N. Y. Ped Curtis T. Prout, 121 Westchester Ave., NVhite Plains, N. Y. Psych. k Neur. Edward M. Pullen, 30 East 40th St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Douglas L. Root, 536 Madison Ave., Albany, N. J. Jo e h Rosenheck 1015 Grand Concourse Bronx N Y S D , , - , - - - Evarts F. Sands, 600 Broadway, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Graco M. Santoro. 95 N. Main St., Waterbury. Conn. Paul S. Seager, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. Otolaryn. Frank Z. Serman, 711 Broadway, N. Y. C. Anne Lardner Moore Shannon, 66 S. Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J. Otolaryn. Alfred Snedeker. S56 Veterans' Administration, Washington, D. C. Psych. 8 Neur. Martha C. Soutcr, 3360 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. Sutliff, Kennedy Veterans Hosp. 41, Memphis, Tenn. Int. Med. Directory of Alumni tcontinuedi Le 1' R. Taber, 232 N. Maple Ave., Ridgewood. N. J. s ie M. M. Tetelman, 17 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. John Henry Trescher, 103 W. 39th St., Baltimore, Md. Int. Med. D William H. Von Oehsen, 409 Fifth Ave., Bradley Beach, N. J. A Glenn L. Voorhees, 1750 W. Santa Barbara ve., Los Angeles, Cal. Frederick L. Vosburgh, 675 N. Terrace Ave.. Mt Vernon N. Y. B h Cal. Walter F. Weiton, Professional Bldg. 441, Long eac , U ol. David Wexler, 103 East 86th St., N. Y. C. Ophth. Stephen White. 57 West 57th St., N. Y. C. Radiol. 1925 . Y. C. Anesth. Rose Henri Andre, 220 East 73rd St.. N Walter J. Becker, 516 Munro Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. Dorothy Bell, 510 East 79th St., N. Y. Radiol. William Berman, 204 Martine Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Psych. Elizabeth F. Bigelow, Londonderry, Vt. Ped. Nelson S. Bigelow, Londonderry, Vt. 0b. 8: Gyn. George L. Birnbaum, Veterans' Hosp., Castle Point, N. Y. S 'g. Victblr A. Blenkle, 140 Chadwick Road, Teaneck, N. J. Ped. Knox Brittain, 28 Lyell Ave., Spencerport, Monroe Co., N. Y. Proct. Sidney Brooks, 380 12th Ave., Paterson, N. J. Ortho. - Enid C. Brown. 596 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. 1. Ped. Harold Burg, 1791 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. David Davis, 416 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass. Edward V. Denneen, 120 East 75th St., N. Y. C. Surg. William Courtney Douglass, 15 Olcott Ave., Bernardsville, N. J. Theodore Dunham, Jr., 545 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill, Mass. . Marie F. Gregory Eckhardt, 50 Green Village Rd., Madison, N. J. Ped. Ralph Augustine Eckhardt, 50 Green Village Rd., Madison, N. J. Walter J. Farr, 955 Queen Anne Rd., Teaneck, N. J. Surg. Harry Hanfling, 148-05 87th Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. v Raymond O. Hitchcock, P. O. Box 441, Alfred, N. Y. Surg. James Frederic Hollister, 53 S. Cottage St., Valley Stream, N. Y. Surg. Edward Jacobs. 308 East 79th St.. N. Y. C. Urol. Sigurd W. Johnsen, 149 Prospect St., Passaic, N. J. Int. Med. Tsae Ngoo Kwong, Methodist Women's College, Shanghai, China Merrill D. Lipsey, 20 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Fred Mather, 431-75th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Rebecca C. McConnell, 80 Standish Blvd., Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Ped. Katherine Brooks Merrifield, 1014 Elmwood Ave., Wilmette, Ill. Irving Wright Parkhurst, 213 St. John's Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lyndon F. Peer, 15 Washington St., Newark, N. J. S . Plast. 1 urg Thomas M. Proctor, Mattewan State Hosp., Beacon, N. Y. Psych. Ada Chree Reid, 1 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. , W. P. Sherrill. 342 W. McDowell St., Phoenix, Ariz. Ped. Max Michael Simon, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Surg. H. U. Solovay, 416 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. Int. Med. Neil Stone, 69 Montgomery St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. fe . Frances E. Vosburgh. 891 Madison Ave., Albany. N. Y. Preston A. Vvade, 898 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Albert John Ward. 39 Elm St., Morristown, N. J. Surg. William L. Watson, 1088 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Alice Dora VVeber, 27 Ft. Charles Pl., N. Y. C. Tbc. Virginia T. VVeeks. 20 Willow St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. Ped. Thomas J. VVhite, 221 Union St., Jersey City, N. J. Int. Med. Harold A. Wilson, 52 Maiden Lane, Kingston, N. Y. Otolaryn. Eske Harry Windsberg, 223 Thayer St., Providence, R. T. Surg. Chauncey B. Wright, 206 Guaranty Bank Bldg., Huntington, W. Va.. Surg. 1926 Robert S. Ackerly, 1 Salem Lane, Port Washington, N. I-1. C. Aitken, 1521 Hawthorne Terrace, Berkeley, Cal. Walter I. Akana, 132 W. Dominick St.. Rome. N. Y. Irwin Alters, Hotel St. George, 51 Clark St., Brooklyn, N, Y. Catherine Amatruda, 430 Humphrey St., New Haven, Conn. Y. Obs. Ped. Philip B. Armstrong, University College of Medicine, Syracuse, N. Y. Myron August, 215 Osborn Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio Int. Med. Stanley D. Banks, 166 Western Ave., Brattleboro, Vt. Aaron Bell, 57 West 57th St., N. Y. C. Psych. 8: Neur. Beatrice M. Belser, 302 Western Ave., Albany. N. Y. Elizabeth Brakely, 71 Myrtle Ave., Montclair, N. J. Ped. Roswell K. Brown, 596 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Surg. Lyman Burnham, 229 Engle St., Englewood, N. J. 0b. 8: Gyn. John S. Carman, Christian Medical College, Vellore, No. Arcot District, India Julius Chasnoff, 8 East 83rd St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Kenneth Mead Clough, 11 Oak St., Plattsburg, N. Y. Robert L. Craig, 104 East 74th St., N. Y. C. Ob. eb Gyn. Fritz J. Cramer, 16 East 84th St., N. Y. C. Neurosurg. Roy G. S. Dougall, 17 Clinton Circle, Cobleskill, N. Y. Wade Duley, 15 East 91st St.. N. Y. C. Surg. Emanuel Z. Epstein, 897 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. B. Mildred Evans, 130 East 67th St., N. Y. C. Paul Fagin, 1000 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C. Frank M. Falconer, 115 East 61st St.. N. Y. C. Int. Med. Irving Graef, 360 East 55th St.. N. Y. C. Path. Jacob Greenstein., 143 Prairie Ave., Providence, R. I. Int. Med. Dayton R. Griffith, 6 West State St., Dolgeville, N. Y. Katharine Burnet Hahn, 372 Thornden St., South Orange, N. J. Milton Helpern, 106 East 85th St., N. Y. C. Path, T. G. Holzsager, 243 XVest 70th St., N. Y. C. Ped. Edward K. Horton, 106 Hamilton St., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Marion Josephi, 114 Frederick St., San Francisco, Cal. Edward Lawrence Keyes, 4952 Maryland Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Surg. Edwina Kittredge. 29 Shonnard Place, Yonkers, N. Y. Joseph H. Lapin, 350 Corlies Ave., Pelham. N- Y- I McKinley London, Rose Building, Cleveland, Ohio Allergy Roland L. Maier, 121 East 60th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Dean W. Marquis, 11 Park Place, Short Hills, N. J. Int. Med. J. B. Mathewson, 315 The Parkway, Ithaca, N. Y. Derm. John G. McGrath, Imola. Cal.- George S. Meister, 669 Van Siclen Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Raymond J. Millemann, 8844-195th St.. Hollis, N- Y- 1 Norman S. Moore, Cornell Univ. Infirmary, Ithaca, N. Y. Int. Med. Nathan Nemerson, Monticello, N. Y. Ovhth. Irving H. Page, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio Int. Med. 7 Norman Papae, 415 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y Samuel Pennell, 1187 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Norman H. Plummer, 434 East 70th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Perry A. Proudfoot, 527 Walnut St., Roselle, N. J. John S. Staneslow, 21 Holmes Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Int. Med. Y C Int Med Leonard Tarr, 12 East 76th St., . . . ' . Janet Travell, 34 Harmon Place, Pelham, N. Y.P Ink Med. Bertina Warburg, 130 East 67th St., N. Y. C. syc Herbert S. VVeichsel, 471 Park Ave., N. Y. C. James H. Whaley, Jr., 785 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Gastroent. DeGraef Woodman, 156 East 37th St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Leverett S. Woodworth, Mass. Memorial Hospital, Boston, Mass. Irving S. Wright. 400 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. George4J. Young, 60 Maple Ave., Morristown, N. J. Int. Med. 1927 Frederick Amendola, 540 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Anthony F. Angello, 117 South Second Ave., Alt. Vernon, N. Y. Surg. Charles W. Barkhorn, 223 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. Otolaryn. Shirley H. Baron, 710 El Amino Del Mar, San Francisco. Cal. Thgmas I. Brennan, 2291 University Ave., Bronx, N. Y. rtho. Henry A. Christian, 111 Fairview Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Arthur E. Corwith, Hildreth Lane, Bridgehampton, N. Y. Anthony James Delario, 316 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. Radiol. Peter G. Denker, 140 East 57th St., N. Y. C. Psych. -Neuro. Helen Elston, Cornell Infirmary, Ithaca, N. Y. William L. Ferber, 114 East 52nd St., N. Y. C. Urol. Lyman G. Fussell. 218 Harrison St., Mineola, N. Y. William T. Gibb, 1834 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Washington. D. C. C. Malcolm B. Gilman, Blossom Cove Road, Red Bank, N. J. George J. Ginandes, 275 Central Park West, N. Y. C. Ped. Befgamin F. Glasser, 3722 73rd St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. CF357 Henry Goldberg, 910 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C. Radiol. Horace Greeley, Jr., 7603 Ridge Blvd. Brooklyn, N. Y. Leander A. Guite, 9 Gilman St., Waterville, Maine Surg. Walter G. Hanlon. 315 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Surg. J. H. Harrington, 40 East Main St., Rockaway, N. J. Charles F. Hawkins, 76 Bay St., Glen Falls, N. Y. Frank E. Holmberg, Sag Harbor, N. Y. Nathan Hudes, 11940 Union Tpke., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Thgmas Killipp, II, 11 North Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. ro . George Ladas, 305 Cherry St., Elizabeth, N. J. Surg. Solomon Lasky, 8415 4th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Allergy Milton I. Levine, 1111 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Ped. Robert M. Lintz, 1100 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Wallace Lisbon, 928 Smith St., Providence, R. I. Victor W. Logan, 176 South Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. Int. Med. Henry Lowey, 114-69 202nd St., St. Albans, N. Y. Alexander G. Manuel, 110 William St., N. Y. C. Indust. Med. Chauncey J. Mardis, Fidelity Medical Bldg., Dayton, Ohio Comdr. Malcolm W. Mason, M.C., U. S. Naval Hospital, Newport, R. I. Carlotta Mendez, 224 East 15th St., N. Y. C. Jessie L. Gillespie Morin, Bolton Landing, N. Y. Ob-Gyn. Joseph Harold Merin, Bolton Landing, N. Y. Saul Moress, 252 South Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. Ob, Loo Joseph O'Donnell, 70 East 80th St., N. Y. C. Ob-Gyn. Anna R. Schults, 25 Abington Ave., Newark, N. J. Anthony Skur, 483 East 152nd St., Cleveland. 10, Ohio Raymond D. Snyder, Cornith, N. Y. Paul J. Soley. Professional Bldg., Hempstead. N. Y. Karl P. Stadlinger. 145 North 3rd St., Burbank, Cal. Comdr. John Sgubenbord. M.C., U. S. Naval Hospital, Charleston, John P. Stump, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Orth, Margaret G. Taber, 43 Hillcrest Rd., Madison, N, J, ViCf0I' E. TIIOIIIUS. 595 E. Colorado St., Pasadena, Cal. Int. Med. Ilarry Beal Torrey. 2801 Stuart St., Oakland, Cal. Elsie Ward, 110 North Main St., Gloversville. N. Y. Florence E. Warner, 78 Front St., Binghamton, N, Y, Hanrg B. Wightman, 312 Highland Rd., Ithaca, N. Y. e . H. Lynn Wilson, 25 Courtland St., Noiwicl -ff snmmuwmmewnnmnnmsnofgyzSmm Psych. St Neuro. 1928 Charles E. Bauer, 11 Canon St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Ophth. Leon A. Beardsley, 222 North Albany St., Ithaca, N. Y. Nathan Beckenstein, 681 Clarkson St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Irving ll. Beckwith, 9 Chester Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Ob-Gyn. Eben T. Breed. 821 Franklin Ave., Garden City, N. Y. George A. Bullwinkel, 125 Milton Rd., Rye, N, Y, Francis Michael Conway. 30 East 40th St., N. Y. C Snrff Edwin C. Coyne, 51 Park Ave., Yonke1's, N. Y, ' B' Samuel Dimond, 435 Ocean Pkway., Brooklyn, N Y Ped Ruth Earp. 15 Olcott Ave., Bernardsville, N. J. I ' ' James F. Flattery, 575 West 172nd St.. N. Y. C. Int, Bled George C. Freedman. Valley Rd., Millington, N, J MgtonGGoldberger, 17 Brenton Ave., Providence, lt. I, 1- Xll. Milton S. Goodfried, 33 West 81 t St., N. Y Lloyd P, Gi-ay, -no Hugunin St.?C1ayton, N. qi Iifgih Sidney Greenberg, 70 Central Park West. N. Y.'C ' ' 1151.1 J. G1r?fie, 855 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. Ob-Gyn 4 war 4 emmon - ,J'.,114 WA- , ' Ithaca, N. Y. 0bZfGynT Lbt Buffqlo St Lindbrook Drive., Westwood, '58- Louise Hunt, Bedford Hills, N. Y. James H. Kidder, 155 East 62nd St., N. Y. C. Surg. Henry B. Kirkland, 12 East 86th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med, Milton Kissin, 4 East 7-ith St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Samuel H. Klein, 16 East 65th St., N. Y. C. v Surg. Ernest Hall Kline, 63 N. Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. Surg. Joseph A. Latona, 78 Main St., Lodi, N. J. Dorothea Lemcke, 155 East 73rd St., N. Y. C. Isabel M. Loudon, 103 North 4th Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Edward F. Malloy, 90 Hubbard Ave., Stamford, Conn. P oct. Artliur F. Mangelsdorff, Martinsville, N. J. ' Duncan T. McEwan, 110 E. Central Ave., Orlando, Fla. Surg A. T. Milhorat, F-371, N. Y. Hospital, N. Y. C. Int. Med. Max Moses, Spring Valley, N. Y. Samuel Myerson, 430 East 86th St., N. Y. C. Gastro-ent. Grace T. Newman, 339 Grove St., Montclair, N. J. Gyn, Valentine A. Nowicki, 215 Palisade Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Allergy Tsung-Tsong Nyi, 13 Tsoong Zen Kai, Kunining, China David H. Paley, 7 East 87th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Madelin Perry, Craig Colony. Sonyea, N. Y. Florence Dean Prosser, 158 Main St., Putnam, Conn. Armond J . Quick, 561 North 15th St., Milwaukee, Wise, Ped. K: Int. Med. C. H. Rothfuss, 62 Green St., Woodbridge, N. J. Col. Joseph R. Shaffer, M.C., Gorgas Hospital, Box 0, Ancon, Canal Zone. R. P. Edward F. Shnaycrson. 550 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Rose Speigel, 55 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Hilda Crosby Standish, Sunset Farm, West Hartford, Conn. Anest. Morton S. Stern, 371 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Int. Med. Marcy L. Sussman, 1 East 100th St., N. Y. C.. Radiol. Jesse Tolmach, 11 Berry St., Lynbrook, N. Y. Ortho. Calvin Clark Torrance. 100 East 5th St., Jamestown, N. Y. Donald Denni3T?ntum, 208 Fenton Bldg., J amestown, Reuben Turner, 21 East 87th St., N. Y. C. Ped. Stratford C. Wallace, 151 East 83rd St.. N. Y. C. Arthur A. Weinberg, 2235 Glenwood Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. Joseph G. Welling, Babylon, N. Y. A616 Vafhitehouse, 200 West Second St., Lexington, Ky. - yn James Isadore Yanick. 226 Main St., Hornell, N. Y. I. C. Zuckerman, 1601 Beverly Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. Ethelyn J. C. Anderson, 195 Euclid Ave.. Ridgefield Park, N. J. . 1929 Abraham A. Antoville, 70 Central Park West, N. Y. C. lnt. Med. n S. Averett Arnold, 46 Ocean Ave., Bay Shore, N. Y. Surg. Sarah Bass, 333 East 80th St., N. Y. C. Anesthes. J. Randolph Beard, Jr., 300 Broadway. Newark, N. J. Arthur R. Beil, 29 Montgomery Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ob-Gyn. William Benenson, 36-40 Bowne St., Flushing, N. Y. Int. Med-Vasc. Joseph Brody, 60-61 Linden, Ridgewood, Brooklyn, N. Y. Paul W. Cohen, 1749 Grand Concourse. N. Y. C. Radiol. Thomas F. Crowley, 137 Fair St., Kingston, N. Y. Ernani D'Angelo, 90-26 150th St., Jamaica, N. Y. Psych. k Neuro. Charles H. Deichman, 39 Elm 'St., Morristown, N. J. Ped. .Dominic H. DeSanto, 470 Sea Lane Dr., La Jolla, Cal. Harold H. Dodds, Marcy State Hospital, Marcy, N. Y. Psych. 8: Neuro. Albert H. Douglas, 8714 Midland Pkway., Jamaica, N. Y. Int. Med. v Frank M. Falkenbury, 41 Sherman Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y. Surg. Ruth B. Ferriss, 8 Wetmore Ave., Morristown, N. J. Ob-Gyn. - John Shanley Fitzgerald, 264 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. Urol. Winifred Hope Franklin, 10 East 90th St., N. Y. C. Bernard Fread, 45 East 85th St., N. Y. C. Ophth. Y Albert H. Garafaflo, 647 West Onondago St., Syracuse, N. Sure. , iviiuiin P. Garver, 646 Rose Bldg., cleveland, 01110 Allergy Herman Glassman, 2014 7 6th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Jack Goltman, 995 Madison Ave., Memphis, Tenn. Int Med. Charles Kemm Good, 2 East 54th st., N. Y. c. Derm. 8: Syph. Richard B Good 4619 Park Ave., Union City, N. J. Sur if 5. Harry Gordon, Uiiiversity School of Medicine, Denver, Colo. Ped. Grant Guillemont, 545 4th St., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Int. Med. Eiginlli. Gutmann. 3258 Hudson Blvd., Jersey City. N. J. ro . Vigginia Clay Hamilton, 900 Washington St., Bath, Maine yn. Aipiglaur J. Harrington, 177 No. Grand Ave., Baldwin, N. Y. c. Edwin H. Heller, East Hampton, Suffolk Co., N. Y. Saul I. Heller, 40 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Psych. M N William M. Hitzig, 787 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Frances L. Ile 14 Davenport Ave , New Haven 11, Conn. Qlll' Raymond Janies Kay, 314 East Lancaster Ave., Wayne, Pa. Le?Ioyn? Kelly, 95 North Main St,, Waterbury, Conn. nt. 1' e . George H. Kittell, 88-28 161st St., Jamaica, N. Y. Surg- Estelle E. Kleiber, 131 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Card. Charles A. Landshof, 27 Broadman Pkway., Jersey City, N. J. Int. Med. Frank S. Linane, 1533 East 14th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Kenneth M. MacLeod, 10 Harley St., London, W. I., E112- Elizabeth MacNaugher, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Ophtl A. Parks McCombs, 147 East 50th St., N. Y. C. Pompey S. Milici, Kings Park State Hospital, Kings Park N Y Psvch d John Noll 101 Lincoln Ave.,'Youngstown, Ohio Int. Me . Herbert Pbiiaek, 45 East oem st., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Albert G. Rapp, 327 State St., New London, Conn. Ophth. k Otolaryn. Eisenc L. Richmond, 390 Main St., Worcester, Mass. I urg. Adelaide Romaine, 35 West 9th St., N. Y. C. , Y 7 Hrgold C. Rosenthal, 71 Hooker Ave., Poughkeepsie, lX. X. . urg. S. Lawrence- Samuels, 219 VV. 7th St.. Plainfield, N. J. Louis Schneider. 941 Dewey Ave., Rochester. N. Y. Frederick G. Scovel, Hwai Yuan Hospital, Anwei, China 0 1 Directory of Alumni icontinuedi Robert T. Spicer, 1901 Brickell Ave , Miami Fla. Ob G 'n. Herman Tannenbaum, 601 West 113th St.. N. Y. C. I- 5 Ortho. Albert Vander Veer, 224 State St., Albany, N. Y. Surg. Henry Ambrose Wahn, 1227 Theriot Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Joseph Waxelbaum, 2423 Avenue I, Brooklyn, N. Y. Wilfrid D. Wingebach, 1045 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Neurosurg. Jogn E. Wirth, U. S. Marine Hospital, Baltimore, Md. urg. 1930 Alfred S. Ambler, 13-14 122nd St., College Point, N. Y. Rowland T. Bellows, 222 Prof'essional Bldg., Charlotte, N. C. Neurosurg. Herman J. Christensen, 299 Church St., Poughkeepsie, N . Y E. Craig Coats, 65 East 66tl1 St., N. Y. C. Urol. Peter J. De Bell, 65 Summer St., Passaic, N. J. Arthur J. Dick, 149-01 Barclay Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Benjamin V. Dilorio, 1024 Park Ave., Utica, N. Y. Anesth. Henry S. Dunning, 525 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Neurol. John A. Fallon, 27 Washington Square No., N. Y. C. Surg Ben B. Gelfand, 1615 Isabella St., Sioux City, Iowa Roland Goldstein, 1160 Monroe Ave., Rochester, N. Y. Gastroent. Lillian I-lellstrom, 147 East 50th St., N. Y. C. Tbc. James F. 1-Iickey, 330 East 71st St., N. Y. C. George F. Hilker, 258 Maple St., Perth Amboy, N. J . Anesth. ' Mabel C. Husehka, 410 East 75th St.. N. Y. C. Psych. Alfred A. Imperato, 101-68 94th St., Ozone Park, N. Y. Evelyn Rogers Inkster, 153 Main St.. Ridgefield, Conn. James Henry Inkster, 153 Main St., Ridgefield, Conn. Margaret A. Kennard, 544 East 83rd St., N. Y. C. Marguerite Kingsbury, Mary Fletcher Hospital, Burlington, Vt. Nathaniel T. Kwit. 7 East 82nd St., N. Y. C. William A. Lange, 610-2nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. Virginia Langvvorthy, Popham Hall, 45 Popham Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Mcirriis B. Lerned, 116 N. Madison Ave., Pasadena, Cal. e . Edwin R. Levine, Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Ill. Mack Lipkin, 135 Central Park West, N. Y. C. Edlguigvidgf. Lynch, Cornell Med. College, 1300 York Ave., Robert R. McLaughlin, 98 Grcenridge Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Derm. Charles L. Medd, 146 Onderdonck Ave., Manhasset, N, Y. Obs. Lasrence Miscall, 176 Slocum Crescent, Forest Hills, N. Y. urg. Edward J. Moress, 1524 Maple Ave., Hillside, N. J. Ped. John C. Muccigrosso, 9 Seminary St., Yonkers, N. Y. Surg. Charles G. Murdock, Jr., 100 Sunnycrest Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. Ped. Irving Ostrow, 41 Hooker Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Ophth. 8: Otolaryn. Helen H. Owen, Altamont, Albany County. N. Y. Pub. Health Warren J. Pashley, 49 South Main St., Cortland, N. Y. Surg. Mildred Pellens, 1278 East Main St., Bridgeport, Conn. Neuropsych. Madeline Penke, 104-27 41st Ave., Corona, N. Y. Path. Louis Penn, 1718 Crotona Park E., Bronx, N. Y. Paul Preu, 16 North Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. Psych. K: Neuro. Solomon Rauch, 14,47 Union St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Ped. Walter Rautenstrauch, Jr., 405 12th Ave., N.E., St. Petersburg, Fla. Samuel H. Rosen, Montefiore Hospital. N. Y. C. Path. Frank D. Rossomondo, 415 West 21st St., N. Y. C. Tbc. Dzgiel L. Rothschild, 101 Parker Ave., Maplewood, N. J. is. John Sassani, 110 Henry St.. Bingliamton. N. Y. Obs. Walter J. Schmidt, 7601-85th Dr., Woodhaven, N. Y. lnt. Med. George W. Slaughter. 745 Fifth Ave.. N. Y. C. Tlrol. David Soloway, 201 Elm St., Valley Stream. N. Y. Leo H. Speno, 306 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca, N. Y. Surg. John D. Stroud, 586 No. Main St., Pomona, Cal. William D. Thibodeau, 184 Main St.. Nashua, N. H. Surg. Michael P. Vinciguerra.. 103-16 Van Wyck Blvd., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Surg. 1931 Jesse Besthoff Aronson, 1344 52nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Alberto Barroso-Bernier, Nahma, Mich. Harold W. Beaty, Wells, N. Y. Graham Lewis Bennett, 461 West 43rd St., N. Y. C. Charles Beninger, Jr., 1180 Floral Ave., Oroville, Cal. James D. Bowen, 536 Westchester Rd., Topeka, Kan. Surg. Chgzrles M. Brane, 139 Locust Hill Ave., Yonkers, N . Y. urg. Walter S. Britt, Veterans Admin. Rating Board, Roanoke, Va. Keeve Brodman., 68 East 86th St., N. Y. C. Carpenter, 116 Murray St., Binghamton, N. Y. r . Francis Lee Carroll, 154 W. 5th St., Oswego, N. Y. Ob-Gyn. W. H. Cassebaum, 565 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. John S. Cregar, 440 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. Ophth. l-Isgry Degenhardt, 36-11 31st Ave., Long Island City, N. Y. urg. Ira H. Degenhardt, 51 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. Ped. John W. Draper, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Urol. Leonard J. Druckerman, 933 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Harmon S. Ephron, 147 East 50th St., N. Y. C. Psych. Benjamin Esterman, 983 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Ophth. Lygnan R. Fisher, 210 North Aurora St., Ithaca, N. Y. urg. Elizabeth P. Fleming, 19 Wallis St., Beverly, Mass. Pub. Health Frank S. French, 2101 New Hampshire Ave., N.W., Washington, D. C. A Oliver H. Gaeble1', 18410 Northlawn Ave., Detroit, Mich. Eugene W. Green, Medical Center for Fed. Prisoners, Springfield, Mo. Germaine A. Guntzer, 15 Webster Place, Port Chester, N. Y Thomas Hale Ham, 84 Upland Rd., Brookline, Mass. Ruth F. Harral, 6201 Greene St., Philadelphia, Pa. Anesth. - Herbert E. Helm, 719 North 2nd St., Harrisburg, Pa. Psych. 8: Neuro. Rogaert T, Henkle, 51 Federal St., New London, Conn. urg. Rachel Holloway, Route 209, Kcrhonkson, N. Y. Mary Brickett Holt, Pilgrim State Hospital, Brentwood, N. Y. Psych. Elizabeth Humeston, 528 Church Lane, Germantown, Phila., Pa. Eugene M. K-atzin, 50 Baldwin Ave.. Newark, N. J. Charles E. Kiesslmg, 37-22 Bown. Flushing, N. Y. Hgllg P- Lange, 34 Prospect Park XV., Brooklyn, N. Y. r 1. Irving LoBell, 825 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Ped. Hyman Levy, 1185 Park Ave., N, Y, C, Int. Ried- S. W. Levy, Gilchrist Co., Tranton, Fla. Abraham Lieberson, 237 East 20tl1 St., N, Y, C, Card Alfred Lilienfeld, 44 East 67th St.. N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Marion C. Loizeaux, 75 W. Cedar St., Boston, Mass, Martin 11. Lutz, 47 Plaza. Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. Julius Marcus, 251 West 57lth St., N. Y. C. lndust. Med. Robert C. Markey, 1149 Tlurd National Bldg., Dayton, Ohio Joseph John McEvoy, 104-17 115th St.. Richmondlllill, N. Y CIFLLB. Owens, 426 East Foster Ave., State College, Pa. Leo Price. 160 West 26th St., N. Y. C. Julius Ronofr, 145 East 49th St., N. Y. C. Herman Rothman, 1188 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C. Frank W. Samuels. 748 Manor Dr., Reno, Nev. Obs. Albert C. Santy, 1192 Park Ave., N. Y. C. C. Douglas Sawyer, 625 3rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Surg. J. Jacob Schneider, Willard State Hospital, Willard. N. Y. Ro6:JanGGeorge Schweizer, 36 Summit Rd., Elizabeth, N. J. .- yn. William Seldeen. 76 Union Ave., Amityville. N. Y. Morris C. Snitkoff, 28 Rutland Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. Charles Spark, 57-12 Junction Blvd., Elmhurst, N. Y. Vernon O. Stahl, 105 West C Street, Ontario, Cal. William D. Stubenbord, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Elisha B. Van Deusen, 317 Main St., Catskill, N. Y. Obs. Laevrefnce S. Ward, 325 State St., New London, Conn. ar . Mosetta C. White, 461 West 43rd St., N. Y. C. Duncan T. Whitehead, 681 Clarkson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Psych. tk Neuro. llirbgrt M. Williams, 119 80th Rd., Kew Gardens, N. Y. e . 1932 Orrin E. Anderson, 17 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Philip Ashman. Johnstown, Pa. Thomas R. Austin, Cranford, N. J. Rudolf F. Bachmann, 910 Main St., Fitchburg, Mass. Charles J. Baker, 403 Carver Bldg., Fort Dodge, Iowa Ped. Vincent l-I. Beeaker, 85 Wood St., Lewiston, Maine Charles K. Bogoshian, 9 Harvard Court, White Plains, N. Y Tbc. May Annette Borquist, 2436 42nd St., Seattle, Wash. David J. Bradley. Amityville, N. Y. Obs. Daniel F. Brophy 315 East 68th St.. N. Y. C. Frederic S. Carr, 17 Pearl St., Kingston, N. Y. Surg. John G. Connell, 718 Plandome Rd., Manhasset., N. Y. William A. Cooper. 1215 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Clgtrles H. Cornish, 673 Prospect St., Maplewood, N. J. bs. Jesse P. Eddy, IIT, 131 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. Surg. Marion Fairfield, Nashua, N. H. Obs. Havelock F. Fraser, National Institute of Health. Bethesda, Md. Constance Friess, 345 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Raymond Gcttinger, 73-40 195th St., Flushing, N. Y. Path. William S. Godwin, S844-87th St., Woodhavcn. N. Y. Ped. Maj. Donald Carr Griffin, Garrison. N. Y. Harriet L. Hardy, 81 Brattle St., Cambridge, Mass. Ped. Michael J. Hogan, 450 Sutter St., San Francisco, Cal. Allan L. Jacobs, 1243 Stuyvesant Ave., Union, N. J. Surg. Leif Y. Jacobsen, 104 Hollywood Ave., Douglaston, N. Y. Int. Med. Carl C. Janowsky, 1713 Riverview Dr., Endicott, N. Y. Otolaryn. Herbert M, Jones, 51 E. Genesee St., Auburn. N. Y. Surg. Edmund N. Joyner, III, 1155 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Ped. Margaret M. Klumpp. 114 East 54th St., N.. Y. C. Derm. Henry C. Lawson, 124 Franklin St.. Fall River, Mass. Ob.-Gyn. Joseph H. Marvin, 211 Central Park West, N. Y. C. Urol. Jack Masur, 48 Fenimore Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. William B. McDonough, 1065 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. H. Russell Myers. University Hospital, Iowa City. Iowa Walter Modell, 1300 York Ave., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Lincoln Rahman, 624 S. Norton Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Salvatore Rainone, U. S. Veterans Administration. Lyons. N. Y. Mary D. Ridgway, Brooktondale, N. Y. Harry M. Rose, 631 West 238th St., N. Y. C. Max Rosen, 723 Boston Road Road. Ryo, N. Y. Otolaryn. Robert E. Rothenberg. 100 Central Park South, N. Y. C. Surg. Dorothy K. Scheidell, 181 Adams St., Ouincy, Mass, Surg. Abley David Seley, 155 East 62nd St., N.'Y. C. Ob.-Gvn. Howard P. Serrell, Tiaconic Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Surg. Thomas E. Shaffer. Ohio State University, Columbus, Oluo Stephen Sherman. Burns Clinic. Petoskey, Mich. Thomas Richard Slagle. Sylva, N. C. Frank A. Spellman, 328 Mamaroneck Ave.. White Plains, N. Y. Mariory Nelson Suellman, 44 Winfield Ave.. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Anasth. Albert N. Stevenson. 60 Mackey Ave., - rf n N Y. Suiff Po tWashin.to , . '... Joseiih A. Tamerin, 44 East 67th St., N. Y. C. Plast. Suri! Ynez Coit Tyler, 41 Hill Rd., Berkeley, Cal. 1 John P. VVcst, 215 East 72nd St., N. Y. CU. Surg. 1 Herman E. Wirth, 41-25 170th St., Flushing, N. Y. Alexander Wolfe, 11 East 68th St.. N. Y, C. Seymour Zucker, 127 East 70th St., N. 1. C. Int. Med. 1933 John L. Alley, 225 Lincoln Pl., Brooklyn. N. Y. Charles W. Beattie, Wallkill, N. X. V Alberic H, Bei-lerose, 19 West St., Rutlan-d, 1 t. Donald W. Bogart, 20 East 53rd St., N. Y, C. 01111111- Nils W. Bolduan. 1515 State St., Santa Barbara,-Cal. William J. Bi-uclmer, 129 Whitney Ave- New HHW11- C01111- Int Med 1 Frank A. M. Bryant, 3875 WilshireABlvd., Los Angeles, Ca Ob. 8 Gyn. 059. Phillips Kay Champion, 527 Shafer Blvd., Dayton, Ohio Willard James Chapin, Perry, N. Y. Ped. Virgil A. Christensen, 699 E. S. Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah Ob. 8: Gyn. Mario S. Cioifari, 18667 Snowdon, Detroit, Mich. Ped. A. Reynolds Crane, 623 Glenmary Rd., Radnor, Pa. Path. Ob. A: Gyn. Jolm Haag Eckel, N. Y. Hosp., 525 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Leon ll. Ehrlich, 211 Central Pk. W., N. Y. C. Ophth. Francis Fagan, 68 Pratt St., llartford, Conn. Ob. K Gyn. Katherine Falconer-Slater, 117 Bentley Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Wayne W. Fox, 2726 Payne St., Evanston, 111. Ped. 8: lnt. Med. Francis G. Genin, 229 W. Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va. Ophth. k Otolaryn. Walter H. Hagen, 85 Harrison St., E. Orange, N. Y. Ortho. Eihvard A. Hagmann, 2720 11th Ave., N., Billings, Mont. 'ed. Thomas Gray Harvey, Mars llill, Maine llarold G. Higgins, 14-18 Milner Crescent, Birmingham, Ala. Lt. Col. R. J. Hoagland, Station Hosp., U.S.M.A., West Point, N. Y. lnt. Mod. Willard L. Hogeboom, Gowanda State llosp., . Hclmuth, N. Y. Psych. Robert 1. Hood, 209 Wall St., Corning, N. Y. Ob. k Gyn. R. Scott Howland, 531 W. Water St., Elmira, N. Y. Ob. k Gyn. Betty Huse, Childi-en's Bureau, Dept, of Labor, Washington, D. C. Ped. Elinor Ives, 3439 Linda Vista. Terrace, Los Angeles, Cal. Margaret H. Jones, State Dept. Public llealth. Cheyenne, Wyo. Ped. Gerald Klatskin, 107 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn. lnt. Med. Harold II. Lowonstcin, Veterans Administration Hosp., Columbia, S. C. Ophth. John G. Malia, 306 E. Main St., Endicott, N. Y. Norman C. Margolius, 52 llolmes Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Ob. k Gyn. Virgil A. Mason, 144 Harrison St., E. Orange, N. J. Surg. Paul T, McAlpine, 129 Summit Ave., Sununit, N. J. Ophth. George J. McDonnell, 80 W. Main St., Freehold, N. J. Tbc. F. Hamilton Merrill, Woodstock, Vt. G. Burroughs Mider, Strong Memorial Hosp., Rochester, N. Y. Ruth Lyman Mider, 1320 Highland Avo., Rochester, N. Y. William J. Neidlinger, 576 Farmington Ave., Hartford. Conn. Otolaryn. Colgate B. Phillips, 135 Park, Bronxrille, N. Y. George Benjamin Putnam, 423 N. Kansas Ave., Marceline, Mo. Surg. Clrarles Rieser, 1633 Paces Ferry Road N.W., Atlanta, Ga. ro . Dagid John Roberts, 149 Bennington Rd., Akron, Ohio l11'i-.'. Elise G. Schlosser, Byram Shore, Port Chester, N. Y. Rudolph C. Schrctzmann, 60 Donaldson Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Ob. k Gyn. WVallace T. Smith, 24 Rhame Avo., E. Rockaway, N. Y. William B. Stocking, 71 Grand Blvd., Binghamton, N. Y. William J. Sullivan, 132 Pondfleld Pkway., Bronxville, N. Y. H. D. Vickers, Little Falls, N. Y. Surg. Emily Eliot Sturgis Warfield, 363 N. Broadway, Lexington, Ky. Eleanor A. Webb, 887 Springfield Ave.. Summit, N. J. Ped. William Wuester, 238 Exeter Way, Hillside, N. J. Surg. 1934 Elizabeth Adams, 132 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. Frank M. Adams, 301 14th Ave., Dillon, S. C. lnt. Med. George N. Ballcntine, Med. Arts Bldg., Williamsport, Pa. Obs. T .C. Bauerlein, 1228 E. S. Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah Michael S. Brody, Oxford Gardens, E. Rockaway, N. Y. Frederick R. Brown, 39 West 55th St., N. Y. C. Veronica C. Brown, 315 East 68th St.. N. Y. C. Virginia. Buckley, 2 Platt St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. . Peter L. Carnesale, Veterans Administration. Wood, Wis. Lt. Col. Robert L. Cavenaugh, 716 S. Adams, Arlington, Va. Walter I. Chapman, Jr., 944 Hudson Blvd., Bayonne, N. J. Ortho. Charles G. Child, 528 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Nathaniel Coope1', Calhoun Co. Health Dept., Marshall, Mich. Pub. Health ' Maj. William T. Doran, Post Grad. Inst. Veterans Admin. R-. 826, Washington, D. C. Surg. l William H. Eberle, 1945 East 4-ith St., Ashtabula, Olno Ped. NVilliam A. Epstein, 45 East 85th St.. N. Y. C. Ob. K Gyn. Kenneth Fairfax, 423 Main St., Geneva, N. Y. Ophth. Gladys Fashena, 4585 Belfort, Dallas, Texas. Ped. Dorothy Loomis Frame, 15 Highland Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. , Nathan B. Friedman, Army Inst. of Path.. lvashington, D. C. Path. Otto S. Hensle, 210 Main St.. Hackensak, N. J. Otolaryn. John W. Hirshfield. 106 E. State St., Ithaca, Y. Surg. Marion Hotopp, 1204 Galisteo Pkway. Santa lf e, N. M. Pub. Health Heloisc B, Hough, G00 WVest 116th St., N. Y. C. Joseph J. Kanich, 3608 Noble Ave., Richmond, Va. Irving L. Kohn, 37 East 65th St., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Earl P. Lasher, 59 Olive Way, Seattle, Wash. Leon S. Loizeaux, 4 East 88th St.. N. Y. C. Ob. K Gyn. Donald C. Malcolm, Alexandria, Pa. T. Poultney Matthews, 33-82 159th St., Flushing. N. Y. Thistle M. McKee, 203 S. Columbus St., Alexandria, Va. E. Allan McLean, 29 Deering St., Portland, Me. Jolm M. McLean, 525 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Ophth. Adolph Mcltzer, 257 May St., YVorcester, Mass. James A. Moore, 490 Western Ave., Albany, N. Y. Robert E. Mountain, Mountain Clinic, Olean, N. Y. Surg. Henry M. Murphy. 57 Tillinghast Pl.. Buffalo, N. Y. Roger B. Nelson, 525 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Ob. 8: Gyn. Frederick W. Rea, 650 Bexley Ave., Marion, Ohio Ped. Ernest. V. Reynolds, 14 S. Main St., Barre, Vt. Edward P. Riemer, 1 W. Main St., Madison, Wis. Surg. Thornton Scott. 20 W. Second St., Lexington, Ky. Vincent J, Simon, 814 N. 6th St., Temple, Texas Pub. Health YVilson Fitch Smith, 576 Farmington Ave., llartford, Conn. lnt. bled. Henry Strongin, 156 Woodruff Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ped. Ob. .Q Gyn. Howard T. Stuch, 228 Trowbridge St., Allegan, Mich. Surg. William A. Thornhill, 810 Atlas Bldg., Charleston, W. Va. lnt. Med. Bernard Tillman, 115 State St., Springfield, Mass. Directory of Alumni fcontinuedl HarryAG. Tounge, Camde11, Maine I Karl L. Van Horn, 1200 Locust Ave., Fairmont, W. Va. Otfolaryn. William R. Ward, 112 Chancellor Ave., Newark, N. J. LeRoy H. Wardner, 680 Aubrey Ave., Ardmore, Pa. William P. Whalen, 4619 Blackstone Pl., Riverdale, N. Y. Surg. E. T. Yorke, 2300 Summit Terrace, Linden, N. J. 1935 Maxwell Rufus Berry, Doctors Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Perry S. Boynton, 71 East 77th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Cornelius P. Brink, 268 N. Main St., Chambersburg, Pa. Walter F. Bugden, 708 James St.. Syracuse, N. Y. Surg. John Heckman Burke, Jr., 697 N. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. Orth. Katherine Butler, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. John Cannon, Thornycroft Apts., Scarsdale, N. Y. Tvbc. John H. Carlquist, 1332 Laird Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah Henry Ashley Carr, 345 East 68th St., N. 1. C. D. Innes Dann, 315 N. 2nd St., Harrisburg, Pa. Arthur Gerard DeV oe, 537 RI0llf.8l'3,y Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Ophth. Marshall F. Driggs, 242 Engle St., Englewood, N. J. Ralph Howard Edson, 77 Oak Ave., Shelton,,Conn. John Arthur Evans, 1 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. H. Calvin Fisher, 1012 Tremont St., Denver, Colo. George G. Flenner, 401 Park Ave., Ham1lto11, Ohio Floyd Fortuin, 325 N. 11th St., Paterson, N. J. Carl F. Freese, 105 Fifth St., Garden City, N. Y. Surg. Lt. Col. David Gold, Go1'gas Hosp., Ancon, Canal Zone W. H. Hanna, 1801 K St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Ophth. Stephen H. Harris, 22 Forest Ave., Valley Falls, R. I. Robert W. Hedges, 45 East 62nd St., N. Y. C. Ob. Ak Gyn. Henry Heim 1-lenderson, 4515 Leonard Pkway., Richmond, Va. I 1-Ic11ry M. Imboden, 850 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Radiol. Charles E. Jacobson, Jr., 50 Farmington Ave., Hartford, Conn. Edward Francis Keefe, 141 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Ob. ik Gyn. Sa11l R. Kelson, 270 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Alexander D. Langmuir, Peekskill, N. Y. Pub. Health Edwin Vance Lawry, 2121 Waverly St., Palo Alto, Cal. John G. Leuthner, 2294 University Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Otolaryn. I I Elgageth Lowry, 1779 Humboldt Ave., Minneapolis, M111n. e . Thomas Lowry, 629 Medical Arts Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. William D. McCarthy, 631 Hillgiat Circle, Oakland, Cal. William T. Medl, 111 East 71st St., N. Y. C. Surs. Robert E. Merritt, 116 Tuscaloosa Ave., Atherton, Cal. Surg. Mary Compton Moss, 5 Mountain Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Edgar Cooper Person, N. Y. Hosp., 1300 York Ave., N. 1. C Surg. Boris Petroif, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Richard Rower, Jr., 504 Empire Bldg., St. Petersburg, Fla. Ernest V. Reynolds, 14 S. Main St., Baree, Vt. Surg. Lucien G. Rice. Jr.. 100 S. Armo St., Albuquerque, N. M. William R. Richards, 364 Oak St., New Haven. Conn. Herbert J. Riekert, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Orth. Chauncey Lake Roystcr, 1809 White Oaks Rd., Raleigh, N. C. George G. Sale, 216 Dixon Bldg., Missoula, Mont. Otolaryn. George Benton Sanders, 1417 Hayburn Bldg., Louisville, Ky Grant Sanger, P. O. Box 449, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Surg. Phyllis Dooley Schaefer, 41 Oakland Pl., Summit, N. J. Psych. Alfred A. Scharbius, 11, 2 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Eleanor Scott, 2903 N. Charles St.. Baltimore, Md. Ob. 8: Gyn. William A. Sihrans. 130 Glenwood St., Anderson. S. C. Edward F. Stanton, 950 Park Ave.. N. Y. C. Ob. k Gyn. Charles G. Stetson, 46 Robert Treat Pkway., Milford, Conn. Joseph R. Strauss, 41-51 69th St., Woodside, N. Y. Everett D. Sugarbarker, Jefferson City, Mo. Howard Townsend, 37 S. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Jefferson Weed, 300 Broadway, Newark, N. J. Charles H. Wheeler, 943 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Hans Wichman, 2672 Hudson Blvd., Jersey City, N. J. urs. - Albert M. Yunich, 75 Willett St., Albany, N. Y. 1936 Henry J. Babers, Jr., 1432 Livingston Ave., Gainesville, Fla. Donald Nelson Ball, 25 Prospect Pl., N. Y. C. John N. Barboy, 80 Ashburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Henry K. Bcling, 532 State St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Viola W. Bernard, 930 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. Ped. Mary Heiss Boynton, 136 East 67th St.. N. Y. C. E. Tremain Bradley, 29 EI111 St., New Canaan, Conn. Surg William P. Colvin, Box 782, Carmel, Cal. Ped. Crispin Cooke, 22 Oakwood Ave., Huntington, N. Y. Robert A. Cosgrove. 88 Clifton Pl., Jersey City, N. J. Oli. X Gyn. Arthur C. Davis, 7 Notre Dame St.. Glens Falls, N. Y. 1G..1234 CR jbc Rzgph S. Emerson, 115 XVarner St., Roslyn lleiglits, N. Y. Surg. Hy111an Engclberg, 803 N. Mansfield, Los Angeles, Cal. Int. Bled. Leston F. Fitch. 573 Elm St.. Crossctt, Ark. Charles C. Foote, 135 East 65111 St.. N. Y. C. Leo D. Freyberg, 114 2nd St., Troy. N. Y. Jogeph Gaster, 2007 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal. 'lll'g. Joseph P. Gold, 418 Warren St., Hudson, N. Y. Edward M. Goodwin, 80 Arden St., N. Y. C. John F. Grirl'i11, 1 Plaza St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Urol. Samuel P. l-larbison, 123 University Pl.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Edward A. Hardy, 346 Corlies Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Ped. George W. Hebard, Elin St., New Canaan, Conn. Frederick G. Hirsch George G. Hollins, Jr., 300 Wainwright Bldg.. Norfolk. Ya. Herbert B. Jol1nso11, 18 Green St., Kingston, N. Y. Ped. Marriott C. Jolmson, 942 Central Ave., Woodmere, N. Y. Edward Kaye, Laurel Ave., Gustine, Cal. Francis Raymond Keating, Jr., Mayo Clinic, Rochester. Mi11n. Int. Med. Henry A. Iflll2Sblll'j', 654 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Surg. Wolfgang W. Klemperer, 501 Medical-Dental Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Julius A. Klosterman, 335 River Rd., Bogota, N. J. Bacty. Dell-art Krans, Veterans Hospital, Perry Point, Md. Phligp J. Kunderman, 215 Harper St., Highland Park, N. J. c. John W. Lachter, 44 Center St., Oneonta, N. Y. Gyn. Kenneth B. Lewis, 25 S. Village Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. I , Evarts G. Loomis, 638 N. Hoover Ave., VVh1tt1e1', C211- Alvira Looram, R. D. 1, Santa Fe, N. M. Bernard C. Meyer, 1200 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C. W. B. Mitchell, Tom's River, N. J. I , Charles Neumann, N. Y. Hosp., N. 1. C. Sure. John A. Northridge, Riverhead, N . Y. Erwin E. Peters, 1220 Central Ave., Evanston, Ill. Francis O. Pfarf, 258 Main St., Oneida, N. Y. Edmund Piehler, 74 Front St., Worcester, Mass. Ped. George E. Pittinos, 100 Central Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. Ped. I I , William H. Power, 59 Lakeside Drive, Baldwin, N . Y. Albert C. Redmond, Barneveld, N . Y. George A. Schumacher, 43 Pinecrest Pkway., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Donald Shafer, 210 East 64th St., N. Y. C. 7 Stuart B. Smith, 132 Lincoln Ave., Tuckahoe, N. 1. Gordon A. Spencer, Morgan Hill, Cal. Martin H. Stci11, 1100 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Jean Rose Stifler, 312 Southway, Balt1111ore, Md. Christopher B. Stockton, 519 A St., Bakersfield, Cal. Dana M. Street, Veterans Adininis., Kennedy Hosp., Memphis, Te11n. Ira Teicher, 44 Prospect Pk. W., Brooklyn, N. Y. Alphonse Tiinpanelli, 1045 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Charles L. Whittemore, 116 East 68tl1 St., N. Y. C. Charles S. Wohl, 336 Batavia St., Toledo, Ohio 1937 Shepard G. Aronson, 44 West 55th St., IN. Y. C. Stanley S. Atkins, 283 Biltmore, Asheville, N . C. Orth. William A. Barnes, 525 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Ruth Barnhart, R.R. 5, Box 104, Roanoke, Va. Ped. Frank Albert Baumann, 29 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y. Surg. James Frederick Bing, 311 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. l-lenry Seavey Blake, 1735 Randolph St., Topeka, Kan. John. H. Branson, 1 South St., Concord, N. H. J. Scott Butterworth, 121 East 60th St., N. IY. IC. lnt. Med Arthur 1. Chenoweth, 1923 20tl1 Ave., S., Biriningham, Ala. Bliss B. Clark, 55 West Main St., New Britain, Con11. Surg. David A. Connors, 131-07 86th Rd., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Carleton M. Cornell, 115 East 61st St., N. Y. C. Surg. Donald T. Dodge, 1216-19 S. Texas Bldg., San Antonio, Texas Neuro. Walton M. Edwards, 200 Yerba Buena Ave., San Francisco, Cal. Ped. Walter E. Fleischer, 604 Highland Ave., Towson, Md. Edgar P. Fleisohmaim, 11 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Surg. William T. Foley, 400 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Francis J. Galbraith LMrs.J, American Consulate, Hamburg, APO 751, N. Y. Cornelia Gaskill, 4900 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans, La. Ob. k Gyn. Ira Gore. 1571 East 3rd St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. Ecgvard James Hehre, C0l'll61l Med. College, N. Y. C. acty. Palaemon L. Hilsman, 2422 Broad St., Albany, Ga. Surg. Aaron Himmelstein, 70 East 96th St., N. Y. C. Surg. William Holden, 2195 Demington Dr., Cleveland., Ohio Janet Cobb Holden, 2195 Demington Dr., Cleveland, Ohio Elmer L. Horst, 422 Walnut St., Reading, Pa. Psych. tk Neuro. Comdr. Horace L. Jones. M.C.. USN, USS Repose, Fleet P. 0. San Francisco, Cal. George L. Kauer, Jr., 230 East 71st St., N. Y. C. lnt. Med. Joseph T. Kauer, 96-16 72nd Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. Surg. Ernest G. Keet, Jr., 150-84 87th Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. Int. Med. Francis C. Keil. Jr., 22 Oakwood Ave., Huntington, N. Y. Otolaryn. Putnam C. Kennedy, 210 N. Central Ave., Glendale, Cal. Newton Krumdieck, Mary McClellan Hospital, Cambridge, N. Y. Andrew O. Laakso, 27 Broad St., Danielson, Co11n. William C. Layton, 23 2nd Ave., San Mateo, Cal. Harold Lohnaas, Box 1348, Trans-Arabian Pipeline Co., - Beirut, Syria Eugene L. Lozner, 333 Westmoreland Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Norman W. MacLeod, 60 West 34th St., N. Y. C. Henry B. Marshall, 408 W. Church St., Elmira, N. Y. U1-01, George Meneely, Vanderbilt Univ. Med. School, Nashville. Tenn. Int. Med. William E. Moore. 901 Second National Bldg., A.kl'Oll, Ohio Helen J. Neave, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Dcrm. William A. Paff. 208 West Marion St., Elkhart, Ind. W. H. Pettus. Jr., 1103 Queens Rd. West, Charlotte. N. C. D011211f1 BUYHS Read, 223 Woodland Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Indust. Med. Charles- H. Richards, Cornell Univ. Med. Coll., N. Y. C. C lgiysliol. . ur ing Roesch, 121 Ft. Greene Pl, , B - l'l' , Y. '. Arthur M. Rogers, 133 South 36th St.TCPl1ilac2g11?liiaf12s George P. Rousse. Jr., 2031 Locust St.. Philadelphia, Pa. George Schaefer, 98-11 Queens Blvd., Forest Hills, N. Y. P 0b. kdGgn. yilynion c iwartz, 1015 No. H'gl 1, d St., A'l' 2 '1 Arthur W. Seligmann, Jr.. 940Pa1'k12Xve., N. Y.mCt0n' X L Int. Med. ' Ecgvifitlhl. Shepard, 1106 Virginia St., Charleston, XV. Ya, pi 1. Irving E. Sisnian, 8415 Bay Parl'1'. ', B' kl ' N ' sam M. sman, 210 East 68th stffdf Yfg? Rn' ' X' Wlfsych. Neuro. 1 iam emnerg, T l. U H d. ., New Orleans, Lay. ll 'ine 1111 1 e Coll Fay King Stroud. 1323 Spring St., Seattle, Wash II Psycih. genre. ' venne 1 . Yler. Box 424, Go d' g. Id h , i Daniel Gilroy Unangst, 429 Kiiiiligll Av2.,0Yo1?lvec1:s N Y Dorothea Deimel Vann, 201 E. Palisade Ave. L ' ' ' T Fnfllewoocl. N. J. Ped. ' at wart '. Vincent, 193' Y il -' Rd., L 'I -' - - want-r Eugene vom. 171-30eXI3lyEeld Rd. IN' Y Chauncey Prentiss Ward. 112 Chancellor Ave Newark. N' I Charles O. Warren, 405 East 72nd St., N. Y 6 ' ' ' G90l'gQY1Vlll9blll:L'll, 230 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. Surg, 305581-523:f,eZ:g.ood11'ard, 2606 N. E. Broadway, ' 1938 Taltccgt Bates, Box 1071, 460 Pierce St., Monterey Cal e . ' ' Ann Martin Beare, 1370 Pcabodv St., Memphis, Tenn Ruth Pirkle Berkeley, 5 W t lsltl ' Ki11SS1ey Bisl10p,xPhila? Genegral IIosi?1'I1iiR1dcgpl1ia, Pa, -eo- , , B1 1 lt, 120 Genesee St., Auburn, N. Y. Xiisgin Piulggleman. Jr., 1223 Virginia Ave., Bronx, N. Y, Int. Med. Raymond M. Brown. 3017 Lame CIIDUOII Rd., Santa Barbara, Cal. Louis T. Campbell, 1162 Willamette St., Eugene, Ore. Cornelia M. Carithers, 1824 Donald St., Jacksonville, Fla. Walter T. Carpenter, Jr., 22 Oakwood Ave., Huntington, N. Y. Ped. Eugene J. Cohen, N. Y. Hosp., N. Y. C. Int. Med. William H. Curley, Jr., 881 Lafayette St., Bridgeport, Conn, Surg. Bridgeport. Conn. Ob. 8.: Gyn. I Gilbert L. Klemann, 1731 Holly Hill Rd., Augusta, Ga. lnt. Med. I I Gustave J. Dammin, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Path. Wilbur G. Downs, Calle Viena 26, Mexico D. F., Mexico Maj. Thomas J. Dring, Walter Reed Hosp., Washington, D. C. Orth. Kingsley Bishop Ducharme, R. D. N 0. 3, Box 178, Orla11do, Fla. R. Stuart Dyer, 612 Glenwood Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Psych. Sa Neuro. Aaron R. Edwards, 1130 Hill, Ann Arbor, Mich. Ped. Alan H. Fenton, 368 Grand St., Newburgh, N. Y. Surg. Wesley Fenton Fitzpatrick, 85 East Ave., Nonvalk, Conn. William 1. Glass, Mt. Sinai Hosp., N. Y. C. Ophth. Stephen L. Gu111port, 75 Centra.l Pk. W., N. Y. C. Surg. Laivrence W. Hanlon, N. Y. Hosp., N . Y. C. Path. Hele11 Stevens Haskell, 1078 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Emerson R. Hatcher, 188 E. State St., Columbus, Ohio Int. Med. Martin J. Healy, Jr., 35 Outlook Dr., Tuckahoe, N . Y. A. Wesley Hildreth, 207 Washington St., Pottsville, Pa. C. S. Hitchins, 59 Trumbull St., New Haven, Conn. Frederick J. Hughes John D. Hunter, 960 Plandome Rd., Manhasset, N. Y. Richard G. Jackson, Univ. Hosp., Ann Arbor, Mich. Quentin M. Jones, 12 Ballantyne Brac, Utica., N. Y. Frederick Stephen Kinder, 144 Golden Hill St., George M. Knapp, 123 S. Stanford St., Albuquerque, N. M. Robert M. Laughlin, 438 Sulgrave Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. , lnt. Med. C. A. Lippincott, 705 Irving Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. Ob. 8: Gy11. Malcolm J. Mann, Strong Memorial Hosp., Rochester, N. Y, A. Edward Maumenee, Jr., Johns Hopkins Hosp., Baltimore, Md. Stephen G. Meigher, 1367 Union St., Schenectady, N. Y. Surg. C111-tis L. Mendelson, 205 East 69th St., N. Y. C. Clifford W. Mills, 84 West Ave., S. Norwalk, Conn. 0b. 8: Gyn. Alvin Robert Mintz, 32 Maple Ave., 1IOFl'lSt0XVl1,'N. J. Ped. Stanley F. Morse, Beaufort, S. C. Charles W. Neill, N. Y. Hosp., N. Y. C. Neurosurg. Robert C. Nydegger, 5 N. State St., Concord, N. H. Surg. Barnard B. Patterson, 33 Fairview St., Huntington, N. Y. Elizabeth Stout Ransch, R. D. No. 2, Schoharie, N . Y. Charles Ressler, 955 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Joseph G. Riekert, 945 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C. Charles E. Robinson, Jr., 428 Ovington Ave., Brooklyn, N . Y Elmer Kay Sanders, 2745 Pike Rd., Birmi11gl1a1n, Ala. Stuart Sanger, 1901 E. Mable St., Tucson, Ariz. Int. Med. Ralph H. Seeley, Jr.. 19 E. Center St., Rutland, Vt. Otolaryn. Madeline Burlingame Shier. 132 Middlesex Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. J. J. Smith. 434 East 70tl1 St., N. Y. C. Hoyt C. Taylor, 455 Broad St., Meriden, Conn. Ob. 8: Gyn. Norman Thetford, 68 South St., Eatontown, N. J. Marvin L. Thompson, 72 Brunswick Ave., Metuchen, N. J. Frederick C. Thorne. Grand Isle, Vt. Stephen H. Tolins, 14 Washington Pl.. N. Y. C. Dzgngl Michael Tolmach, 953 Paulding St., Peekskill, N. Y. 9 . Arthur F. Valenstein, 89 Trowbridge St., Cambridge, Mass. Robert J. Van Amberg, 295 N. Moimtain Ave., Montclair, N. J. S. A. Wilkins. Jr., 444 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Edwin T. Williams, 1850 Gilpin St., Denver, Colo. Roger G. Windsor. 520 D St., Sparrows Point, Md. Griffith J. Winthrop, 121 Main St. N., Canandaigua. N. Y Herbert J. Wright, Jr., 1144 Wendell Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. 1939 Thomas P. Almy, 525 East 68tl1 St., N. Y. C. I11t. Med. - William S. Armour, Hamot Hospital, Erie, Pa. 0rtl1. Thomas L. Ball, New York 1-lospital, N. Y. C. Ob. X Gyn. Henry S. Berkan, 410 Memorial Dr., Cambridge, Mass. Ray1no11d M. Brown, 3017 Lamo Canyon Rd., Santa Barbara, Cal. I William Gunton Budington, U. S. Public Health Service, Washington, D. C. Walter R. Buerger, 1550 Rand Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y. Ped. Francis Guy Casey, 497 13th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. I Nathaniel Co111den, 1361 Union St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Int. Med. I John H. Dale. J1'., 436 East 73rd St., N. Y. C. Ped. Radiol Alfred D. Dennison, Jr., 601 Ridgewood Rd., Maplewood. N. J. Int. Med. Tl1o111as J. Dring, 420 East 59tl1 St., N. Y. C. Herman Feinstein. 130 W. Kingsbridge Rd., Bronx, N- Y- Sarah E. Flanders, 1 West 72nd St.. N. Y. C. Surg. J. Scott Gardner, 7935 S. W. 10th Ave., Portland, Ore. Regina Gluck, 845 Central Ave., Woodmere, N. Y. Ped. Henry Goebel, Jr., 2277 N. Main St., Bethleliem, Pa. Jugag P. Griffin, Baltimore City Hospital, Baltimore, Md. e . Harvey P. Groesbeck. Jr., 45 Balltown Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. G. S. Gudernatsch, Sharon, Conn. Arthur D. Hengerer, 425 State St., Albany, N. Y. Gyn. Edgar R. Hyde, 12 Slate St., Nortliiield, Vt. Leroy Hyde, 5811 Noble Ave., Van Nuys, Cal. Ivan Isaacs, 115 West 71st St.. N. Y. C. I Richard G. J ackson, University Hospital, Ann Arbor, M1cl1. Louis R. Kent, 1974 St. Georges Ave., Rahway, N. J. Ausiist M. Kleeman, Jr.. 10 Colonial Ave.. Warwick. N. Y. 1Tl'lE'dl'lC1l J. Knocke, 2616 Arlington St., N. Y. C. lu. Charles Kunkle, 33 Oneida Ave., Mt. Vernon, N . Y. Robert Landesman, 175 Riverside Dr.. N. Y. C. Vincent Larkin, 1060 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Ped. Ivar J. Larsen, Hospital for Special Surgery, N. Y. C. A. L. L1cl1t1na11. 311 East 72nd St., N. Y. C. Surg. James H. Lockhart, Jr., Genesco. N. Y. John-H. Mayer, Jr.. Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, Mo. Hamilton M. McCroskery, 471 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. Donald Morrison, 426 East 143rd St., N. Y. C. Directory of Alumni fcontinuedl High isniuan. 112 East 73rd st., N. Y. c. Equip. WV. Munnell, 842 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Gyn. George E. Poucher, 1414 Clark Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. P icl. Fraicisl Z. Reinus. 310 West 106th St., N. Y. C. Surg. Charles E. Robinson, Jr., 428 Ovington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Karl D. Rundell, 145 Washington Ave., Endicott, N. Y. Int. Med. Augustus W. Sainsbury, 42 N. Main St., Canandaigua, N. Y. Charles Adrian Sand, 63-19 Burns St.. Forest Hills, N. Y. Addison B. Scoville, Jr., 2000 Galbraith Ave., Nashville, Tenn. Lt. Comdr. A. G. Simpson, M.C., Brooklyn Naval Hospital. Brooklyn, N. Y. Lois M. Smedley, 35 Greenway Ter., Forest Hills, N. Y. P d. Chaeiles B. Steenburg, Spencer, N. Y. Raymond A. Sterett, 425 Main St.. Southport, Conn. I t. Med. Richard H. Stevens, 104 Scarsdale Rd., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Joseph Deuel Sullivan, 300 E. Tremont Ave.. Bronx, N. Y. Psych. Vivian A. Tenney, 555 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Ralph R. Tompsett. New York Hospital, N. Y. C. LeRoy Otten Travis, 44 South Drive, Great Neck, N. Y. George A. Vassos, Jr., 26 Mulberry St., Springfield, Mass. Surg. Robert Joseph Whipple, Medical Center, Jersey City, N. J. Frederick A. Wilson, 131 Fulton St., Hempstead, N. Y. Otolaryn. William Graves Woodin, 60 East 5Sth St., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Harold S. Wright, Knoll St., Riverside, Conn. Psych. 1940 Edward T. Adelson, 30 East 60th St., N. Y. C. Katherine Andersoilrf 455 N. Sprint-I St., inston-Salem, . . Frggik L. Armstrong, Homer Folks Hospital, Oneonta, N. Y. ' nt. Med. Lgmson Blaney, 111 Broadway, Carney's Point, N. J. Indust. Med. I Ha.rry A. Bradley, Jr., 9 Washington St., So. Norwalk, Conn. I Everett C. Bragg, 654 Madison Ave.. N. Y. C. W. H. Brauns, 234 WV. Beauregard St., San Angelo, Texas Ezra V. Bridge, 110 Highland Pkway., Rochester, N. Y. Tbc. Robert B. Bryant, 628 State Tower Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y. Surg. William H. Burke, Margaret Hague Hospital, Jersey City, N. J. Alvin M. Cahan, 276 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Int. Med. I Maj. Donald Campbell, M.C., Walter Reed Hospital, Washington, D. C. Surg. James D. Carter, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md. Psych. John M. Chapman, Paul Smith Bldg., Saranac Lake, N. Y. Frgncis P. Coombs, 1103 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo. erm. George L. Crane, 7 Temple St., Stonington, Conn. John J. Creedon, 16 East 90th St., N. Y. C. George BL Davis, 256 N. Maple Ave., Kingston. Pa. James A. Dingwall. III, New York Hosp., N. Y. C. Surg. William A. Donnelly, 2112 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Lisgar B. Eckardt, 45 Front St., Hempstead, N. Y. Int. Med. k Neuro. William F. Finn. 530 East 70th St.. N. Y. C. Ob. th Gyn. Herman I. Frank, 98 W. 35th St., Bayonne. N. J. Orth. Helena Gilder, Cornell Univ. Med. Coll., N. Y. C. Biochem. M. Elizabeth Grant, Cambridge, N. Y. Robert P. G1'ant, 3530 Carondale Ave.. New Orleans, La. Jollln AII Grimshaw, Winter General Hospital, Topeka, Kan. sye . Comdr. W. H. Gulledge, MCUSNR, Phila. Naval Hosp., Philadelphia, Pa. Orth. Keith G. Guthrie, Jr., 1303 York Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. Samuel A. Guttman, 255 So. 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Thomas S. Harbin, 309 E. 3rd St., Rome. Georgia John R. Herman. Club Dr., Hewlett, N. Y. Surg. Suzanne A. L. Howe, 53 Summer St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Otolaryn. Charles W. Kirby. University Hospital, 3400 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Surg. William M. M. Kirby, Stanford Univ. Hospital, San Francisco. Cal. Robert A. Kritzler, 630 West 168th St., N. Y. C. Path. Francw S. Lansdown, 108 East 81st St., N. Y. C. Comdr. Edmond P. Larkin, MCUSN, St. Albans Naval Hosp., St. Albans. N. Y. Charles H. Loomis. 7710 East End Ave. Chicago, Ill. Sur Kenneth G. MacDonald, Lenox Hill Hosp., N. Y. C. Surg?- L. Wayland MacFarlane, 930 E. 3rd South, Salt Lake City, Utah. Int. Med. William W. Manson, Sidney, N. Y. Comdr. John L. Messersmith, 456 Mountain Ave., Westfield, N. J. Arghur Gordon Murphy, 268 Midland Ave., Montclair, N. J. urg. Francis J- Murray. Univ. schooi of Medicine. Syracuse. N. Y. William M. Parke, Jr., 1275 California Rd., Tucakhoe, N. Y. Ethel B. Powell, 1719 E. 3rd St., Long Beach. Cal. Edwin R.I Raymaley, Jr., 1 Beekman St., Plattsburgh, N. Y Helen Seibert Reardon. University Hospital, Ann Arbor Mich. Ped. ROAJSIIE M, Richman, 9 Rebeau Dr., Larchmont, N. Y. Samuel A. Robb, 69 E. Main St., Meriden. Conn. Urol. HfIIgva,rdI C. Robbins, Payne Whitney Hospital, N. Y .C. syc . James Bryant Rooney, 63 No. Broadway. Nyack, N. Y. Walter A. Russell. New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Radiol. Gerald S. Ryan, 140 East 54th St., N. Y. C. Otolaryn. Carl J.I Schmidlapp, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Urol. Cornelius E. Sedgwick. Lahey Clinic, Boston. Mass. Surg. Edward M. Shepard, New York Hosp., N. Y. C. Int. Med. RobertIW. Shreve, 50 Euclid Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson. N. Y. Elizabeth E. Spaulding, 115 East 61st St.. N. Y. C. Donald Stokes. 450 Hillside Pl., South Orange, N. J. 011515192185 Strateman, 70 East 80th St., N. Y. C. - ' yn. John A. Strazza, 183 Broad St., Bloomfield, N. J. Walter I. Sullivan, 132 Pondtleld Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Walter C. Vail, 6 Homer Ave., Cortland, N. Y. Wlllyam W. Walker, 840 Morris Park Ave., Bronx. N. Y. William E. Williams, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Ped. John Evans Wilson, 646 Broadway, Rochester, N. Y. 1941 Joffre V. Achin, P. 0. Box 75, Charlton, Mass. Clifford A. Bachrach, 670 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Pub. Health Mzirgairet Bashford, 421 llugenot St., New Rochelle, N. Y. 'e . Louis V. Belott, 529 Park Ave., Orange, N. J. Morley L. Bernstein, 5401 S. Cornell, Chicago, Ill. Orth. H. Meredith Berry, Roosevelt Hospital, N. Y. C. Surg. Mildred Thompson Bohne, 62 Elm St., Summit, N. J. Thomas J. Bridges, Jr., 44 West 77th St., N. Y. C. Neurosurg. Wilbur Buholtz, Churchville, N. Y. Benjamin W. Bullen, Jr., 149 Field Point Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Ped. William Nesbit Chambers, Hanover, N. H. Int. Med. Elizabeth N. Conover, Scotch Plains, N. J. A. Dale Console, New York Hospital, N . Y.C. Neurosurg. Francis L. Cooper. Montauk, N. Y. Helen Daniells, 525 East 08th St., N. Y. C. Psych. Eric W. Davidson, 295 Montgomery St., Bloomfield, N. J. Xvilbur M. Dixon, 79 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y. Ob. th Gyn. Charles E. Dougherty, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Ob. k Gyn. W. J. Eise-nmenger, 2965 Marion Ave., Bronx, N. Y. E. Alden Ellison, 121 Westchester Ave., White Plains, N. Y. John E. Emmett, 1300 York Ave., N. Y. C. Pub. Health Hayden O. Evans, 637 High St., Pottstown. Pa. Lawrence H. Gahagan, 21 East 82nd St., N. Y. C. Psych. Oscar E. Goldstein, 260 Gregory Ave., Passaic, N. J. Int. Med. Henry H. Graham, Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, Mo. Int. Med. Ottis E. Hanes, Syracuse Univ. Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y. Rigliard G. Hardenbrook, 552 Colusa Ave., El Cerrito, Cal. urg. Rogoert T. Hendricks, 544 E. 42nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. urg. Charles E. Holzer, Jr., First Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio Andrgw D. Hunt, 951 Glenbrook Ave., Bryn Mawr. Pa. Pe . Charles S. Jones. Medical Arts Bldg., Atlanta. Ga. Surg. Elgs QIV. Jones, Jr., 3529 Clement St., San Francisco, Cal. rt . Christian Keedy, 1001 Du Pont Bldg., Miami, Fla. Neurosurg. Park D. Keller, 569 Elm St.. Crossett, Ark. Orth. Qgverett Koop, 1740 Bainbridge St., Philadelphia, Pa. urg. Joseph A. Leonard, 7340 W. Colfax Ave., Lakewood, Colo. Robert O. Loomis, 702 S. Beach St., Syracuse, N. Y. Grover A. Lyon, 2009 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Alexander S. MacDonald, 4 Ravenscroft Rd., Winchester. Mass. Ped. Elizabeth McN. Main, Times Medical Bldg.. Ardmore. Pa. Richard R. McCormack, 1359 York Ave., N. Y. C. Int. Med. John J. Morris, 280 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C. Surg. Charles B. Mosher, 523 Central Ave.. Dunkirk, N. Y. Foster D. Park, Margaret Hague Hosp., Jersey City, N. J. Ob. tk GYI1. I I liligton R. Porter, 176 Kensington Rd., Garden City, N Y. Edwgdd A. Raymond. 12 Walworth Ave.. Searsdale, N. Y. John Francis Reed, Hartford Hospital, Hartford. Conn. Surg. James B. Ridley, 1967 Anthony Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Surg. Edward C. Riley, 116 Everest Circle. Oak Ridge, Tenn. Edwin C. Rowe, 19 East 71st St., N. Y. C. G. Rogers Saunders. Old Saybrook. Conn Stanley D. Simon, 161 IVest 54th St., N. Y. C. Orth. Richard Stark, Kingsbridge V. A. Hosp., Bronx. N. Y. Plast. Surg. John J. Thorpe. 245 East 39th St., N. Y. C. Eben D. Tisdale. New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Ob. ik Gyn. Preston S. Weadon, Lahey Clinic, Boston. Mass. Surg. WVinthrop S. Welch, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. Ob. k Gyn. Roscoe S. Wilcox. New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Surg. Wolf Tr 943 Lexington Ave N Y C. Int. Med. GcorgeA. 1 ,- . - ,- Emanuel Yvolinsky, Trudeau, N. Y. Int. Med. Robert P. Worden, 111 East 76th St.. N. Y. C. Surg. 1942 A. Norton Benner. 630 Hayne Rd., S211 Mateo, Cal, George C. Blanchard, 705 Milledge Rd., Augusta, Ga. S. Hillell Blondheim, 345 East 77th St., N. Y. C. I Charles Breedis, Univ. of Pa. Med. Coll., Philadelphia, Pa. Seymour M. Bulkley, Spencer, N. Y. Whitmore Burtner, 215 East 73rd St., N. Maynard B. Chenoweth, 1300 York Ave., IN. Y. C. John G: Chesney, Univ. Hosp., Ann Arbor, Mich. Margaret Austin Child, 175 East 71st Street,I N. Y. C. George W. Dana, Johns Hopkins Univ. Hospital, Baltimore, Md. William H. Dean, St. Joseph's Infirmary, Atlanta, Ga. J. Herbert Dietz, Jr., 1 West 72nd St., N. Y. C. I Richard B. Donaldson, Crile Clinic, Cleveland, 0hl0I I William R. Eastman, 1703 Saledad Ave., LaIJolla.. Calif. Bruce R. Esplin, 1025 N. W. 51st St.,9'I1am1, F111- John T. Flynn, 52 West 12th St., N. Y. C. Robert E. Foley, 17 Circuit Ave., Worcester, Mass. I Bettina Garthwaite, 180 Ft. Wisl1ingt0gAg9-bN- 5- C- illiam A. Geohegan, 1300 Yort Ave. ,... I W ie C Gerwi T1 307 Roycioft Blvd Buffalo N Y Th C1 ' . S,-'-, . ' L Ongljovg A. Gordon, 3rd, Westp0FC-011-1-'like Chammam' N- X- Vincent Gorman, N. Y. Hospital, N. Y: C. William J. Grace, N. Y. Hospital. N. Y C. I John B. Graham, Univ. Med. Coll., Chapel Hlll, N- C, William A. Harvey, 240 East 22nd St., N. Y. C. George Hathaway, 149IProspect St.. Passaic, J. Herbert C. Hickey, Univ. Hosp., Iowa City, Iowa John Stone I-Jloosey. 1302 Hempstead Ave., Rockville en re, . . I Carlton C. Hunt, Jr., N. Y. Hospital. N. Y. C. John H. Huss, 81 Lydale Pl., Meriden, Conn. I Daniel R. Keating, 11803 Ablewhite, Cleveland, Ohio I Robert M. Kiskaddon, 2424 Ohio Ave., Y0l1I1i1St0Wl1, 02110 C. M. Landmesstir, 7812 Windrim Ave., Hlghlilnd Park, er Darb ', a. , Lalgizgncc Lee? Jr., Baltimore City Hosp., Baltimore, Md. Daniel E. Lester, Albany Med. Coll., Albany, N. Freeman D. Love, 109 Willow St.. Brooklyn, N- 1. Robert A. Love, 167 Clinton St., Brooklyn. Y. David H. MacFarland, 1103 Pkway. E., UUCHI, N- Y- Richard V. Mansell, 450 East 162nd St.. N. Y C. Robert G. Marks, 140 East 81st St., N. Y. C. John B. Mayes, 576 75th St., Brooklyn, N- Y- -61' Frederic B. Mayo, 144 Beach Blutl' Ave., Swampscott. Mass. John F. McGrath, 30 East 40th St., N. Y. C. William T. Mosenthal, 17 Wildwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N. .l. Thomas E. Mosher, N. Y. Hospital, N. Y. C. Ped. I Robert G. Murphy, Winter Veterans Hosp., Topeka, Ran, Carleton Mcli. Neil, Box 512. lludson lleights, N. J. XVard D. O'Sullivau, N. Y. Hospital. N. Y. C. Albert M. Patten, 18 S. Ogden St.. Denver, Colo. Arthur N. Pauly, 297 W. Summit St., Somerville, N. J. Raymond Pearson. 201 Worth St., lthaca, N. Y. John M. Peck, 322 West 55th St., N. Y. C. Charles R. Pcrryman, Univ. Hosp., Philadelphia, Pa. John B. Pfeiffer, Jr., 184-20 89th Ave.. Hollis, N. Y. Arthur D. Philson, 449 Highbrook Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Robert S. Pollack, 315 East 68th St., N. Y. C. Oliver J. Purnell, 1200 E. Marshall St.. Richmond, Va. Franklin Robinson. 25 East 86th St., N. Y. C. llerbert H. Ryan, Jr., Holy Cross Hosp., Salt Lake City, Utah Irving Sarnotf, 17 State St., Ossining. N. Y. Robert J. Schaffer, Syracuse Memorial Hosp., Syracuse, N. Y. Joseph S. Shapiro, 375 Broadway. Paterson, N, J. S. V. Sordillo, 1221 York Ave.. N. Y. C. Walter J. Spcrling, 29 Oxford St., Montclair, N. J. Charles A. L. Stephens, Jr., 4 E. Congress St., Tucson. Ariz. Katherine W. Swift, N. Y. Hospital. N. Y. C. Ralph P. Townsend, 98 Mercer Ave., Hartsdalc, N. Y. William E. Wakely, Jr., 432 Page Terrace. S. Orange, N. J. Willet F. Whitmore, 1410 York Ave., N. Y. C. John R. Willoughby, Jr., 361 Homewood Ave., Warren, Ohio T. Scudder Winslow, 107 East 67th Street. N. Y. C. JOESSEIIQIIF. Artusio, Jr., New York Hospital, N. Y. C. . 1. John Badenoch, S Grange Park Rd., Scyton, London, England. Joseph Blanchard. 30 Crane Rd., Scarsdalc. N. Y. Samuel Gilbert Blount, 207 Admiral St., Providence, R. I James W. Boyd. 531 E. 20th St., N. Y. C. Joseph Lee Butler, 104 Lamar Ave.. Selma, Ala. Wayne A. Chesledon, 2328 Brook Manor Dr.. Colton. Ore Robert Martin Clyne, 1794 Guion Place, N, Y, C, Robert M. Dalrymple, 1729 Harvard Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah. Ethel S. Dana, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert D. Deans, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Surg. Mai. J. C. Denslow. M. C., 7135 7th St., N Washington, D. C. Peter DeWitt. St. Luke's Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert H. Draddy, 116-01 Nashville Blvd., St. Albans, N. Y. ' Albert A. Dunn, Lenox Hill Hospital, N. Y. C. Henry J. Ehresman, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Med. Alan W. Fraser. 525 E. 68th St., N. Y. C. John Glasson, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Surg. Rosemary V. Gorman, 434 E. 70th St.. N. Y. C. Frances S. Greenspan, 2008 Laguna St., San Francisco, Cal. Edward S. Holcomb, Jr., 651 E. 14th St.. N. Y. C. Thomas H. Holmes III. New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Edward G. Howe, 74 Argyle Ave.. West Hartford, Conn. Bemard Hyde, 6333 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. Cal. Cedric C. Jimerson, 434 E. 70th St., N. Y. C. Arthur D. Josephson, 27 Fungston Ave., Spring Valley, N. Y. Charles Fred Laycock, Abington Memorial Hosp., Abington. Pa. Benjamin F. Levy, 717 E. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y. Matthew Locks, 142 Main St., Westport, Conn. A. Duncan MacDougall, 242 Thames St., Groton, Conn. . TV., John B. Manning, lVth Medical Service, Boston City Hosp., Boston, Mass. Robert M, Marcussen, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert G. lllarquardt, 43 Matthews St., Binghamton. N. Y Guy B. Maynard, 29 Oakland St., Lexington. Mass. William C. McDermott, 35 W. 12th St., N. Y. C. Henry C. McDuff, 325 E. 72nd St., N. Y. C. Frank Hamilton McNutt, Ford City, Pa. Richard V. Meaney, Roper Hospital, Charleston, S. C. John S. Mertz, 349 State St., Albany, N. Y. Paul P. Messier, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Ophth. Robert J. Michtom, 35 Maple St., Malverne, N. Y. Harold Cecil Miles, 602 Washington St., Olean, N. Y. Earl .T. Netzow. Lake Mills, Wisconsin James Newell, 29 Glen Alpine Rd., Piedmont. Cal. John L. Norris, Box 101, Manasquan. N. J. Mervin G. Olinger. 186 Franklin St., Bloomfield, N. J. Richard S. Osenkop. 380 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C. Thomas P. Potter, Jr., 1359 N. Hudson, Chicago, Ill. Alden Raisbeck, 912 S. Wood St.. Chicago, Ill. Ralph W. Reynolds. 863 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y. John M. Richards, 831 W. Anapamu St., Santa Barbara, Cal. Walter F. Riker. 1300 York Avc., N. Y. C. Theodore Robertson, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert Misner Rose. 511 S. Niagara St., Tonawanda, N. Y. Seymour E. Rosenthal, 728 Montgomery St., Brooklyn. N. Y. Frank P. Sainburg, 17 E. 84th St., N. Y. C. Frederick Sargent, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Ped. John William Schleichcr, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Oh. th Gyn. William Eidson Smith, Crawford Long Hospital, Atlanta. Ga. Leyland E. Stevens, Star Route. YVatertown, Conn. John H, Stover. Jr., Gallagher Rd., Wayne, Pa. A. W. Thompson, Jr. 324 E. 74th St., N. Y. C. F. Lovejoy Timmons. 2800 W. Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. Elmer H. Tuttle. 133 Ransom Rd., Clarence, N. Y. Bruce R. Valentine. Abington, Conn. Samuel Grand Waddill, New York Hospital, N. Y. Ob. at Gyn. James K. Ward. The Hartford Retreat, Hartford, Conn. Walter C. Watkins, Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore. Md. I William J. Wedell, 2211 Post St., San Francisco, Cal. Susan M. Williamson, Sloane Hosp. for Women, N. Y. C. Walter Edward Wright, Bridge Rd.. Orleans, Cape Cod, Mass. Ernest Hugh Yelton, Rutherfordstown, N. C. ' 1943 Robert Eugene Ahcarn, 314 Ferndale Dr., Binghamton, N. Y. I Harold S. Auerhan. 263 Brook Ave., Passaic, N. J. Frederick A. Beardsley, New Haven Hosp., New Haven, Conn. I I Juan M. Bertran. Jr., N. Y. Polyclinic Hosp., N. Y. C. Charles William Boozan, 7 Salem Park, Elizabeth, N. J. Directory of Alumni tcontinuedl Nathalie J. Brooks, 71 Grand St., Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. Claude A. Burnett, Jr., Maine General Hosp.. Portland. Maine. I Waldo E. Burnett, 220 W. Locust St., San Antonio, Texas. Clarence E. Case, Jr., 254 Altamont Rd., Somerville, N. J. Julia D. Cuddeback, 21 E. Main St., Port Jervis. N. Y. William A. Dickson, 266 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. John Joseph Drucker, 7148 Juno St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Henry Rolfe Eagle, San Francisco Hosp., ' San Francisco, Calif. John Victor Ellis, 5 Belletrees Grove, London, S. W. 16, England Frederick R. Fenning. 1075 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Lt. Frank C. Fermison, Jr., Tilton General Hosp., Fort Dix, N. J. Solomon Garb, 755 West End Ave., N. Y. C. David M. Gerber. Bellevue Hosp., N. Y. C. Otto George Goldkamn, 195 Jacoby St., Maplewood. N. J. James L. Green, 1010 Carlisle St., Tarentum, Pa. James Thomas Grimes, Gibson Clinic, Enterprise, Ala. Mordecai Halpern, 2 N. Broadway, White Plains, N. Y. Peter Edward Hanlon, 5 Aspen St., Florcl Park, N. Y. Irving B. Harrison, 142 Caryl Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Maj. James B. Hartgering, Tripler General Hosp.. Honolulu, Hawaii Henry J. Heimlich, 30 W. 90th St., N. Y. C. Carl K. Heins, Harris, N. Y. Herbert F. Hempel, 30 Gramatan Dr.. Yonkers, N. Y. Daniel V. Hickey, 41-32 44th St., Long Island City, N. Y. George R. Holswade. N. Y. Hosp.. N. Y. C. . Guy R. Hopper, 147 Elmer St., Westfield. N. J. C. Roy Huggins. Andes, N. Y. Sherwin A. Kaufman, 270 West End Ave., N. Y. C. Robert 0. Kellogg. 1032 Sterling Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Allen H, Kenniston, 21 E. Main St., Port Jervis, N. Y. Lt. R. E. Kobilak, Letterman General Hosp., San Francisco, Calif. Marian Lambert, Princeton, Mo. Alfred L. Lane, 13 Winter St.. Arlington. Mass. John W. Little, Jr., Twin Hill Rd., Petersburgh, N. Y. John E. Littlejohn, St. Helena Sanitarium, Sanatarium, Calif. Ben Lord, Crile V. A. Hosp., 7300 York Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Charles G. Lovingood. 807 Broadway, Maryville. Tenn. William J. MacDonald, 56 Walnut St., E. Providence, R. I. Alan MacFarlane, N. Y. Hosp., N. Y. C. Frank F. Martin, 4245 W. Pine St., St. Louis, Mo. J. A. Mclilurrin, Cincinnati General Hosp., Cincinnati, Ohio Granville R. E. Naylor, 17 Kimberley Rd.. Cambridge, England Nathalie J. Brooks Naylor, 17 Kimberley Rd., Cambridge. England George P. Pilling, IV, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, Mass. Harry T. Powers, 1 Park Lane. Mt. Vernon. N. Y. Lawrence R. Prouty. Cornell Med. Coll., N. Y. C. George Gordon Reader, 112 Midland Ave., Rye, N. Y. Linwood M. Rowe, Rumford. Maine Morrison Rutherford, 221 Newcomb St.. S. E., Washington, D. C. Francis S. Schwarz, 2314 Longfellow, Detroit, Mich. John F. Sevbolt. Cornell Med. Coll.. N. Y. C. John W. Shepard, 239-11 87th Ave., Bellerose, N. Y. William P, Simmonds, 16 E. 90th St., N. Y. C. J. W, Smillie, USPHS, 605 Volunteer B'ldg. Atlanta. Ga. Stephen Smith. III, Las Encinas, Pasadena, Calif. Benneth Leonard Snider, 96 Arden St., N. Y. C. Leonard R. Straub. 33-11 89th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Bernard Robert Swan. 1096 Noble Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Lawrence Sweeney. 601 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Henry Tesluk, 7 Ontario St., Buffalo. N. Y. William Clark Thomas. Jr., N. Y. Hosp., N. Y. C. David R. Tomlinson, 2144 Burdett Ave.. Troy, N. Y. James N. Trousdell, Thompson Park. Glen Cove. N. Y. Philip H. Vorhees, Cornell Med. Coll.. N. Y. C. Walter Wahrenberger, 1016 Arcadian Way, -Palisade, N. J. George M. WVa.lker, 78 Orchard St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Frederick XV. Wehmeyer, Jr., 5200 Wright Ave., Baltimore. Md. Ivan Robert Wood, N. Y.' Hosp., N. Y. C. 1944 David W. Barton, 83 Pleasant Ave., Troy, N. Y. William Batiuchok, 2065 Adelbert Rd., Cleveland, Ohio Morton A, Beer, 2330 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Edward A. Brady, Jr.. 11 Stone St., New Brunswick, N. J. James D, Brew. Jr., Georgetown Univ. Hosp., Washington, D. C. Joshua B. Burnett, 355 Walnut St., Newtonville, Mass. Ellison V. M. Capers, Shenandoah Farms, Clinton Corners, N. Y. Anne Cohen Carter, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Charles E. Carter. 66 Outer Dr., Oak Ridge, Tenn. Phyllis Cassedy, Zephyr Hill Sanitorium, Asheville, N. C. Herbert A. Codington, Jr., 3401 Brook Rd., Richmond. Va. James William Correll, 112 Edgehill Rd., Fairfield. Conn. Charles T. Dotter, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Howard S. Dunbar. New York Hospital, N, Y. C. Warren Frank Eberhart, 119 S. 14th Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Jolm Henry Eck. 117 S. Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J. Kathe1'1ne S. Fraser, 140 Leroy Ave., Darien, Conn. Lt. George J. Friou, M. C.. U. S. Naval Hosp., Dublin. Ga. Bennett L. Gemson, 19 E. 98th St., N. Y. C. Lt. William Price Given, M. C., Bolling Field Station Hosp., Wash., D. C. Arthur L. Gore. New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Allan Lee Goulding, 1315 York Ave., N. Y, C, Robert Edward Green, John Hopkins Hosp., Baltimore, Md. Susan J. Hadley, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Frederick D. Haffner, 3860 Middleton Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Gerald J. IIalton, 1456 Northampton St., Holyoke, Mass. Daniel M. Hays, 4415 5th St., Riverside, Cal. Robert E. Healy, New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Conn. John Field Hubbard, Waterford. Me. Robert D. Huebner, cfo Riker, 940 Park Ave., N. Y, C, Charles Oliver Humphries, 84 Edwin Place, Asheville. N. C. Arthur Martin Joost, Jr., Maple Lane, Southold, N. Y. Richard C. Karl, 628 James St., Pelham Manor, N. Y. John U. Keating. 1238 First St.. S. W.. Rochester, Minn. George Richard Kellar, 1435 Univ. Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Leroy John Kendrew, 2 Briggs St., Easthampton, Mass. Edwin D. Kilbourne, 219 Phelps Rd., Ridgewood. N. J. George Knauer, Jr., 930 Elizabeth Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Burritt S. Lacy, Jr., 2211 W. 2nd St., Topeka, Kan. Richard W. Lawton, Dartmouth Med. Coll., Hanover, N. H. Harold H. Leider, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert N. Lundberg, Hartford Hospital. Hartford. Conn. William Albert Maddox, Abbeville, Ala. Lt. Ross S. McElwee, Jr., M. C., Station Hosp.. Chanute Field. Ill. Clyde Davis McLallen, Jr., 2623 10th Ave. S.. Birmingham, Ala. l I Edward Waite Miller, Boston City Hospital. Boston, Mass. . William P. Nelson. III, Cushing V. A. Hosp.. Framingham, Mass. . 7 Marie Nyswander, Bellevue Hospital. N. 1. C. John A. O'Hern, 33 Wilson St.. Hartsdale. N. Y. U Y Solon Palmer, Jr., 152 S. Mountain Ave., Montclyair. N J. George E. Peabody, 415 Seneca St., Ithaca-. N- 3- V John M. Phillips, 296 Rich Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . Henry Renfert, Jr., University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich. Thomas Gerald Rigney, 48-11 88th St.. Elmhurst, N. Y. Jolm G. Ritzenthaler, 262 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Jolm R. Roberts, 48 Clifton Ave., Columbus, Ga. Hugh S. Robertson, Jr., R. D. 2, Corapolis. Pa. Lewis S. Sharman, 10 Hillcrest Dr. ,. Tuscaloosa, Ala. Richard Chandler Slocum, New Britain Hosp., New Britain, Conn. Pliny W, Smith, 159 Colon St., Beverley, Mass. f 'h 1211 W Ainslie St Chica o Ill Robb X. Smit . . .. 2 , . , Jack Morton Spitalny, 315 New Scotland Ave.. Albany, N. Y Edwin P. Stabins. 1153 State St.. Watertown, N. Y.. Raymond J. Stark, U. S. Veterans Hosp., Wood. Wise. v Irving D. Steinhardt, S8-12 Elmhurst Ave., Elmhurst. N. Y. William J. Taggart, 375 E. Mosholu Pkway. N., Bronx, N. Y. l William Alexander Taylor, Glenburn, Alexandria, Dumbartonshire, Scotland Warren R. Tepper. 10 Custer St.. Lawrence. Mass. James Louis Tucker, 338 Park Dr., San Antonio, Texas William C. von der Lieth, 156 Jewett Ave.. Jersey City, N. J. l Burton Lincoln Wales, 36 Walnut St.. Abington, Mass. William H. Walker, 2533 9th Walk. Northern Blvd.. Jackson Hts., N. Y. William Clarke Wescoe, O. D. Chemical Research, Aberdeen, Md. Harold N. Wessel, 309 E. 49th St.. N. Y. C Gerald Francis Whalen, 262 Fisher Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Howard Wilcox. New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Arthur L. Wilson, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. 1945 William E. Achilles. Jr., 8 Park Pl., Geneva. N. Y. Burton August, 1691 E. 15th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lt. CJ. GJ C. A. Bailey, M. C.. Naval Med. Research Inst., Bethesda, Md. George B. Banister, 445 KVestchester Ave., Port Chester, N. Y. Irving Baras, 2032 E. 13th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Hugh Norman Bennett, 21 Center St., Poland. Ohio Frank E. Bixby, Jr., 33 Oakwood Ave.. Rye. N. Y. Randall W. Briggs, The Homestead, Deposit. N. Y. David S. Brown. 211 Park St., Hlestfield, N. J. Charlotte Rush Brown, Children's Memorial Hosp., Chicago. Ill. . William H. Burke, 193 Maple St., Naugatuck, Conn. Foo Chu, 47 Mott St., N. Y. C. Robert S. Cleaver. Brewster. N. Y. Emily Townsend Crane, 195 Marsh St.. Belmont, Mass. Harold J. Delchamps, Jr., 99 Pocono Rd., Mountain Lakes. N. J. William P. Doremus, East Northport, N. Y. Edward K. DuVivier, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. George E. Eddins, 3554 80th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Howard M. Edwards, 822 Chula Vista. Dixon, Ill. Forrest C. Eggleston, 215 E. 72nd St., N. Y. C. Robert C. Emmel, 734 Jewett Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. Donald Giles Fahy, Bridgehampton, N. Y. Paul Richard Foote. 322 Owasco Rd., Auburn, N. Y. Lt. George T. Grimmer M. C. Old Cantonmei Ho D . . it sp.. Fort Knox, Ky. Hugh Halsey II, 306 N. Fullerton St.. Montclair, N. J. J. Gilbert M. Harper, 1025 Brook Lane, Plainfield. N. J. Jay Frederick Harris, 258 YV. 22nd St., N. Y. C. Robert W. Hart, 7427 East Blvd., North Bergen, N. J. Richard B. Harvey. 48 Cleveland Lane, Princeton, N. J. John W. Higgins, 1181 W. lst Ave., Columbus, Ohio David L. Hoffman. 120 Cabrini Blvd.. Bronx. N. Y. Byron E. Howe, Veterans Admin.. Little Rock, Ark. Lt. Gordon W. Howe, M. C., Veterans Admin., Little Rock, Ark. Howard S. Jeck, Jr., 12 Rayfield Rd., Westport, Conn. Lt. tJGl D. E. Johnstone, M. C., Naval Dispensary, Naval Dept., Wash., D. C. Rudolph W. Jones. Jr., 236 Stanislaus Circle, Macon. Ga. Donald S. Kent, 524 Belgravia Centre, Louisville, Ky. Philip A. Kilbourne, 219 Phelphs Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. Mitchell Kohn, Jr.. 1174 Ardsley Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. Anthony T. Ladd, 315 Libby Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Hugh Francis Lena, Jr., 160 Broad St., New London, Conn. William H. Loery, 83 Taylor St., S. I., N, Y. William H. Lohman, Jr.. 314 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. George M. Longbothum, 208 Dunellen Ave., Dunellen. N. J. Donald H, MacLean, 4714 W. Willow St., Seattle, Wash. Merle M. Mahr, Seward, Neb. Richard A. Malgren. U. S. Marine Hosp., Cleveland Ohio Phyllis R. Mann, 15 Claremont Ave.. Bronx, N. Y, Earle D. Mason, 144 S. McCarthy Dr., Beverly Hills, Cal, William R. Maurer, Jr., 311 De Mott Ave., Teaneck, N, J, Richard B. Maxwell, Jr., 1937 Derry St., Harrisburg. Pa. Frederick D. McCandless, cfo Mrs. F. Darlington, Great Barrington, Mass. Herbert I. McCoy, 436 E. 73rd St., N. Y. C, James A. McLeod. Florence, S. C. Alton Meister, 3404 C St. S. E.. Washington, D. C. Andrew L. Morgan, 3966 Pali Rd., Honolulu, Hawaii C. Russell Parker, 2836 S. E. Rex St., Portland, Ore. George F. Parton, Jr., 30 Sturgis Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Mary Anne Payne, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert M. Quay. 569 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N, J, William C. Robbins, 15 Dellwood Circle, Bronxville, N. Y George Robinson, 311 E. 72nd St., N. Y. C. I Henry MacM. Rodney, 2016 Manito Pl., Spokane, Wash Harry A. Schroer, 297 Frederick Ave., S. Floral Park N .Y Irving L. Selvage, Jr., 367 Woodland Pl., ' l ' WS? 01'ffH1L.'CglN. J. i iam . . iera, 14 Ridgewood St., Scars , ' Sherborne B. Simonds, 10 Morningside Rdflale N' X' Worcester. Mass. Arthur Cook Smith, S61 Hoffman St.. Elmira., N, Y Jolm J. snoagi-ass, 444 cam st., N. Y. C. ' John S. Stewart. Jr., 325 E. 72nd St., N. Y, C, .620 Parker Vanamec, Cape Elizabeth, Me. Frank C. Vogt, 8215 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lt. Warren H. Walker, M. C., V. A. Hosp., Gulfport, Miss. A Charles A. Werner, 181 VVr1ght Ave., Malverne, N. Y. Robert YV. Williams, Northwick, Southampton, N. Y, Thomas H. Williams, Forestview, Newton, Ala. Lt. E. Allen Williford, Jr.. V. A.. Little Rock, Ark. . 1946 Ellsworth C. Alvord, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Frederick N. Bailey, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Seward J. Baker, 145 Hunter Ave., No. Tarrytown, N. Y. Howard D. Balensweig, Jr., 300 E. 57th St.. N. Y. C. William H. Bell, J1'., St. Thomas-Vanderbilt Hosp., Nashville. Tenn. U h John Joseph Bowe. 3052 Bainbridge Bd., N. Y. C. Donald L. Burnham, Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hosp., Hanover, N. I-l. . . Andre S. Capidaglis, 510 N. E. 57th St.. Miami. Fla. Scott P. Christensen, 122 N. lst West, Brigham, Utah Ralph WV. Clements, Valley Forge Genl. Hosp., Phoenixville. Pa. I . George V. Coleman, 974 Smith St.. Providence, R. I. Harold Niles Cooley, 1322 N. 31st St., Birmingham. Ala. Charles Herbert Crane. 78 Farley AVG.. N9W21I'k. N. J. Lt. tJGJ Henry Devoe Crane, MC, Chelsea Naval Hosp., Chelsea, Mass. James Aylmer Doucett, Jr., 1 Glenwood Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. I Arthur Brooks DuBois, 1215 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Merlin K. DuVa1, Jr., 333 E. 69th St., N. Y. C. Franklin G. Ebaugh, 1788 Glencoe St., Denver. Colo. Lt. David S. Ellison, MC, Station Hosp. Ob. R Gyn.. Fort Worth, Texas Lt. Louis A. Farchione, MC. 98th Genl. Hosp., O1718568, APO 427, N. Y. C. . Raymond D. Fear, 35 Market St.. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Francis X. Fellers, 52 Fearing St., Amherst, Mass. Lt. tJGl Oscar L. Frick, MC, U. S. Naval Hosp., Quantico. Va. . Cyrus R. Friedman, 225 Coleridge St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Francis John Gilroy, 63 Edgewater Pl.. Edgewater, N. J. Stanley Gittelson, 2815 Ave. I, Brooklyn.. N. Y. Lt. William Leonard Greene, MC, 35-lth Airforce Base Unit, Rapid City. S. D. Sanford W. Harvey, 20 Silver St., Middletown. Conn. Lt. T. E. Hauser, MC, Fitzsimmons Genl. Hosp., Denver, Colo. Lt. Jacob William Heins, MC, Station Hosp., Selfridge Field, Mich. Charles F. Hesselbach, Middlebrook, Rd., Bound Brook, N. J. Robert George Hicks, 718 W. 178th St.. N. Y. C. Thomas C. Hill, Jr., S0 Church St., Hazelton, Pa. Gilbert I-Iouston III, 57 E. Greenwich Ave., West Warwick. R. I. Lt. Joseph E. Kalbaeher, MC. Army Navy Genl. Hosp., Hot Springs, Ark. Alfred Miller Keirle, 314 N. Broad St., Hazelton, Howard Joseph Kesseler, 142 E. 81st St., N. Y. C. William F. Iiroener, 502 N. Painter Ave.. Oceanside, Cal. John Frederick Lee, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. John Robert Lee, 70 78th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Jerrold S. Lieberman, 390 West End Ave.. N. Y. C. Jim F. Lincoln, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Pa. Lyman Maass, 214 Camelo Lane, S. San Francisco, Cal. Robert E. Martin, 89 Hazard Ave., Providence, R. I. James R. McCarroll, 223 Second Ave.. N. Y. C. Peter John McDonnell, 166 Bloomfield Ave., Paterson, N. J. Lt. W. D. McLarn, MC, 427 AFBU. Srl. M.. Roswell Army Air Field. N. M. Gordon Merriam, 49 Winding Way. W. Orange, N. J. Walter Taylor Miller, Dunalastein, Stonehaven, Scodand Harold C, Murphree. 208 N. 'Walnut St., Wilmore Ixy . Warren Byrne Nestler, 194 Centre Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y Edward W. D. Norton, 26 Fennimore Ave., Yonkers. N. Y Everett A. Orbeton, 140 Grant St.. Bangor, Me. Frank John Palumbo, 538 Portage Rd., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Charles Edward Pierson, 108 Vreeland Ave., Nutley, N. J. Robert Kay Quinnell, 27 Hillcrest Ave., Watertown, Conn. Wallace J. Redner, Knickerbocker Hospital, N. Y. C. Walter Jolm Richar, 492 Wilson Ave., Lyndhurst, N. J. William D. Rolph, Jr., Roosevelt Hospital. N. Y. C. Lt. CJGJ George F. Sager, MC, Chelsea Naval Hosp., Chelsea. Mass. Arthur Schwartz. 2100 Bronx Park East, Bronx, N. Y. Milton Shoskes, 112 Hansbury Ave., Newark, N. J. Harry Addison Sinclaire. 415 Edgewood Pl., Rutherford, N. J. Lt. Stanley E. Smith, MC, Davis-Monthan Field Hosp.. Tucson, Ariz. Alexander R. Stevens, Jr., 35 Exeter St., Forest Hills. N. Y. Lt. Franklin H. Streitfcld, MC, 01718055, 120th Station Hosp.. APO 696. NYC John Joseph Sullivan, 229 Flower Ave. W., Watertown. N. Y. Robert W. Tawse, 520 Edgewood Rd., Mansfield, Ohio Lt. fJGl S. M. Tenney, MC, U. S. Naval Hosp.. Portsmouth, Va. David Duvall Thompson, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Helen Poucher Thompson, Rockefeller Institute. N. Y. C. Lt. Joseph G. Tifft, MC, Station Hosp., Bolling Field. D. C. Daniel Harris Welner, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Roe Edwin Wells. Jr.. 55 E. 58th St.. N. Y. C. Roy Glen Wiggans, Jr., 60 Fairview Ave., Stamford, Conn. Hudson J. Wilson, Jr., 407 Mitchell Pl., Ithaca, N. Y. George YV. Wood III, 901 Castile Ave., Coral Gables, Fla. John Alden Woodcock, 150 Union St., Bangor, Me. 1947 Gerard James Aitken, Jr.. Brooklyn Hospital. Brooklyn, N. Y. Richard Morris Alexander. Mt. Sinai Hospital, N. Y. C. Charles Allen Ashley, Mary Imogene Basset Hosp., Cooperstown. N. Y. Kent Franke Balls, Bryn Mawr Hospital, Bryn Mawr, Pa. William Jacob Beard, Robert Packer Hospital, Sayre, Pa. Carol Helen Brach, Newark City Hospital. Newark. N. J. Richard Braddock Brown, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. Christopher Bull. Genesee Hospital. Rochester. N. Y. Directory of Alumni fcontinueell Thomas Walter Caldroney, University Hospital, -- , N. Y. Thiirigsnligood Carr, Albany Hospital, Albany, N. Y. Robert Allen Clark, Jr., Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Tohn Allen Clements, Cornell University Med. Coll. N. Y. bavid Austin Cofrin, Milwauliee Hospital, ' l' , W'sc. Joiiitltlixrilgtiis Cinle, Peter Bent Brigham Hosp., Boston. Mass- ' Ham. 3fgCa.rthy DePan, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. A. P. Dineen. New York Hospital, Y. C. ghgiles Frederick Dyer, New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Rodney Holder Dusinberre, Strong Memorial Hosp., Rochester. N- Y- , , . ,. Richard Warren Eells, New York Hospital, N. Y C. Aaron Hirsh Esman, Bellevue Hospital., N. Y. C. Robert Bernard Fath, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert Francis Freeman, St. Vinoent's Hosp., I d' polls. Ind. Q . wiiiifiriilii. Gallagher, Jr., St. Louis City Hosp., St. Louis. MO. . Thomas J. Gilmour, Jr., Monmouth Memorial Hosp., Long Branch, N. J. - Joseph Lawrence Gluck, Michael Reese Hosp., Chicago. Ill. . . Ernest Gosline, Methodist-Episcopal Hosp., Brooklyn. N. Y. Robert Howard Gosling, S7 Harborne Rd.. Birmingham. Ellglfllld , William James Grant, Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, N. Y. Samuel Hutson Hale, Good Samaritan Hosp.. Phoenix, Ariz. C. Richard B. H. 'lt , R . v ' f William Kendfrrrii on oosevelt Hospital N 5 C ricv Hare, New Y -l' H . xt' 1, N. i ' Robert Dean llarwick, Bellevue ciflospictgilii if C' James Dutney Haves St Francis Hos P ' ' Thomas Reed Hedges' St'Lul-e'S II Y AD msbumh' Pa' - D . . . f ., 1 - ' Thomas Henrv Hoover, New York IifoSs?1ita?,el?1i?.dC9hl0 Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. ger, Jr., Rhode Island Hosp., Susannah K. Horger, 1-I. Richard Hornber Providence, R. I. Marvin Leroy Huyck Rochester, N. Y. John Alfred Jacquez, 129 W. 56th St., N. Y. C. Robert' R. Johnson, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. F1'Sd61'1Ck T- Kirkliam. Jr., New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Mary M. knight, Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, N. Y. Robert Galen Knight, Grasslands Hosp., Valhalla, N. Y. Charles A. LeMaistre, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Harold E. Harden. Jr., Mountainsicle Hosp., Montclair, N. J. Sarah Matteson, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Dorothy E. McCann, Chi1dren's Hospital. Boston, 112155, Thomas P. McCann, Jr., St. Vincent's Hosp., N. Y. C. Fletcher H, McDowell, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Arthur E. McElfresh, Jr.. New York Hospital. N. Y. C. George R. Mc-Near, Jr., New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Thomas W. Meldruni, Lankenau Hospital, Phila., Pa. John J. Meyerdierks, Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, N. J. William S. Montgomery, Univ. Med. Center, Syracuse, N. Y. Grover C. Murchison, Jr., New York Hospital, N. Y. C, James W. Murphy, Cumberland Hospital, Brooklyn, N, Y. Robert A. Nelson, Jr.. Johns Hopkins Hosp., Baltimore, Md. . Rochester Genl. Hosp., Nelson Robinson Niles, New Britain Genl. Hosp., New Britain, Conn. Richardson K. Noback, New York Ilospital. N. Y. C. Robert C. I'arten.heinier, Orange Memorial Hosp., Orange, N. J. Jerome Peacock, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Fred Plum, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Donald Pyle, Monmouth Memorial Hosp., Long Branch. N. J Charles F. Reeder, Bryn Mawr Hosp., Bryn Mawr. Pa Walt I ' - ' ' ' I er A Reiter, Ji., Englewood Hosp lunglewood, N. b .aco Robbins, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. John Thornton Rogers, Detroit Receiving Hosp., Detroit, Mich. Harold Wilbur Schell, Jr., Hartford Hosp., Hartford. Conn. Robert Joseph Schlitt. Long Island Coll. IIosp., Brooklyn, N. Y. Lester Jules Schnell, Jr, Brooklvn Hosp Brool'lvn N Boris Schwartz, Kings County Hosp, Brooklyn N Y Gilbert Irvine Smith, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Peter William Stone, New York Hospital, N. Y. C. Roy Craig Swan, Jr., New York Hospital. N. Y. C. Frances E. Thomsen, Strong Memorial Hosp., Rochester, N. Y. Peter Samuel Tolins, Mt. Sinai Hosp., N. Y. C. James Michael Toolan. St. Vince-nt's Hosp., N. Y. C. Claude Orian Truss, Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert B. Wallace, Lenox Hill Hospital, N. Y. C. Robert Eaton Wolf, Genesee Hosp., Rochester, N. Y. Norman B. Your-ish, Hosp. for Joint Diseases, N. Y. C. The Alumni Assooiotion ot our ivleolicol College, ot which oll the Senior Closs will loecome inolivioluol members ot grocluoition, is on oictive ond usetul port ot the University tomily. We welcome you to its ronlcs. The reputoition ot ci medicol college is boseol on the stonding, occom- plishments onoi eruolition ot its groduotes. Close cohesion omong the olumni hos proven o voiuoble osset in building ond mointoiining this stonol- ing with the meclicol protession onol the public ot lorge. An essentiol toctoriin the enthusiostic ond vigorous porticipotion ot eoch closs in our common proiectis your whole-heorted cooperotion with your closs secretory. .63- Providing o Service we!! known ond recognized by fhe sfoffs of Cornell Medicoi Coifege ond New York Hospifo! for mony years-- Phones CLAYTON 81 EDWARD, Chemisfs RE9en+ 7 H47 Third Avenue Corner 67II'1 Slrreef REgenI' 4 6000 Exf 600 MEDICAL BOOKS of All Publishers in All Longuoges ed Q DIAGNQSTIC EQUIPMENT T H McKENNA, INC. venue New York 2I, N. Y. S BUHer19eld 8-6603-4-5 odor o V ll X Y olgplwxx 6 YN For lhe prochcnng phys1c:1on lhere con be no more useful wolch lhon o HELBROS Chronogroloh Thus llne unslrumenl wolch IS especlolly des1gned lo serve nol only os on hmekeeper loulr for Jrlrnung rnohon meosuring sound ond counhng revoluhons P Helbros Wc1+ch Co owg' Scuenhllcolly occurole eosuly reod elumunoles guesswork olwoys dependoble Hs o HELBROS Orngunol one of Jrhe mony superbly desngned occurole world- lomous l-IELBROS wolches ovculoble ol loeller lewelers lnc 6 Wes1'48l'h Slreei' New York I9 New York , ff ,'1i'Lsggi'Qii,':f11:11 1 Cx no X M 'QED Q06 f X6 0 ig - ,R was Z ,f .Aww V 'gx 1,1 eff g 8' X Co ' NK ' Q05 l ' ,I - , 1 IIlIl exb fs, A ..- f ,I s. M mmfx K I r 5 Q, I hh-...hu-H iii ,S b N g y 1 , x Y- L Q ' I N 'J r so 5 f I 1- 1 ' ' ' 1 70 55 1 x ' ' 9 . 1 , 15 5, 44 7 'A , -li 2 1' ' N C 1 xx Vx 4 x fr C Qs , Q 'Wa ' 'ff a ..:'-..: Q... Q , .H 1 42 ' 25? Q r 6' 6' Z I r V1 ,Il -.QI fb fi Q 2 7 .-., ,, ., ,,.3,f,h,,1.f . , N A v I , .4,bIy,KI,N , .5 , ,4,4.,,,.,..s.,,. ,., ,, fo sill-' -. :.1 'Q -is s 9 SV' Q ,I x I , sp ,..g1.,Q- a4z 1,ft9?'f ' Q - 0 : S ,'-1,1-L eyes-, ,I-,s:f.',.f--If--aff : H- .- I ,L in-,i :fAg!',.1 i':fsif-3. 5- . ff,-4 A '1 ,1-'gr-s.s: N'--sei -Q ' 3 gl 9 7 K x 3 U !T,':S:,q3QgEkgf:gf ' A . fr ,L-ff g' ,N xx ,1 o Q , ,1 WA 5 N x A 'G c 'N 1 u 4. S' . 1 0 5 n ,Lg 1 ' sf- H 0,7 Mais mu N 1 I ' I 1 Iso mu W , 0 K X 'N 1 -65- CHIDNGFF STUDIO 550 Fnclrlw Avenue New York Officio! Phofogropher for fhe I948 SAMARITAN Telephones: Monlwollon: ENclicoH 2-4200 Bronx: Mlflrose 5-465I Brooklyn: Slerling 3-5555 Queens: l-lAvemeyer 9-7500 Weslchesler: Dicil Opero+or -7!fe Qleafi ln! The lirsl' of o wlwole new Heel of long, slreomlineol Coolilloc: ombulonces. Any ocldress in Monnollon, Brooklyn, Bronx or Queens con be quickly reoclweol from our seven convenienl slolions oloy or niglml. Q vlcl: fcqfllq-'flfaltorzf Pmvxn: nMnvl.ANcl: 5 oxvcm THERAPY S I UM N Coll EN+erprise 62461 S C U l. - O N o66o' Look to 0 Sfor all thats ew' 5702 Norlrhern Boulevo Woodside f 98I DSMOBILE SIXES AN EIGH .o o o ' PARAGON OLDSMGBILE Inc rd, o ' o 0 mr: xnnrn KEEFE AWAITS YOUR CAll mom BUmnrmo 8 0400 'Q Also Passenger Car CbnVers1on Ambulances for Senszhve Pczbents 888 LEXINGIIONAVENUE CORNER 66th ST NEW YORK 21 7 Ann x0 ASK FOR FOLDER and Exe' .QWMMZ Qklzwie E Q F V xv, E 5.9 0 day or ru ht - GREGORY S FLORIST Formerly Coppersm'+I1 Yorkvllles Leading Florlsf for Over Flffy Years ARTISTIC DESIGNS AND DECORATIONS OUR SPECIALTY Flornslr for Cornell Umversfry Ivleollcczl College I282 FIRST AVENUE NEW YORK 2I N Y Tel BUIIerI1eId 8 8759 I I Flowers Telegrophecl Everywhere 168' ' MAC JESS V v 4 E vo, Formulo for Fine Foocl: C.S. -r C.S. CGRNELL STUDENTS go Jro The ' CUP and SAUCER A good ,oloce fo meef ond eof-- jusf ocross fhe sfreef. I325 York Avenue REQSNT 4-9l25 . 69 . NEAR CONVENIENT RUSH DELIVERY YCDRK WHNEANDIJQUORSTQRE RI-IineIonder 4-3656 A D'scounIs up +o I5f by The Case T I R D E L L B R O S YORK AVENUE N. Y. Neor Cor 67II1 SIreeI Ewa! 1421! Inc I305 YORK AVENUE N-EW YORK 2l N Y RI-Iinelonder 4-6I89 REgenJr 7-593 I CLEANERS AND DYERS OE DISTINCTION 1300 CAFE v FIRST AVENUE Come 7OII1 STREET NEW YORK N. Y. REgenI 4-9I6I ' MIKE BRENNAN BILL RYAN NIEDICZRAIFT UNWQRMS fo Hue Medical Profession Flfhngs and Alferoflons Free - I3I3 YORK AVENUE QI 7OII1 STREET ' NEW YORK N. Y. BUHerfIeIcI 8-7I28-7I29 44 P , r I Oo I 24 I , , . I.-5053 l ' . O Q I 0700 BACKGROUND Three Decades of Clinical Experience The use of cow's mIllc, waTer and corbohy drafe mixTures represenTs The one sysTem of InTanT feeding ThaT consIsTenTly, Tor Three decades, has received universal pedIaTrIc recognITIon. No carbohydraTe employed In This sysTem of InTanT feeding enloys so rich and enduring a background ol: auThorITaTIve clinical experience as DexTrI lvlalTose DEXTRI MALTOSE No l wTh 2 sod um chloride for normal bab es DEXTRI MALTOSE No 2 free perml' sall' modfcahons by 'lhe phy clan DEXTRI MALTOSE No 3 wI'rh 3 p Toss um bIcarbonaTe 'For consT paTed bab es These produc'ls are hypo allergenic DEXTRI MALTOSE I I To I ' I. I . lplain, sall' l. is ii ' . si ' . ' ' I ' fn O h I ' H I. I I . Please enclose professional card when reques'ring samples of Mead Johnson producis To cooperafe in prevenTing Their reaching unauThor- ized persons-Mead Johnson 81 Company, Evansville, Ind., U. S. A. Tired of eafing of The hospifai? TRY STEVE'S YORK AVENUE RESTAURANT I368 YORK AVENUE, Corner 73rd STreeT SEA FOOD STEAKS Cl-lOPS N EW E N G LA N D MUTUAL LIFE INSU RIANCE C O M P A N Y Specializing Only in Docilors SELBY L. TURNER ISO BROADWAY, NEW YORK 7, N. Y RAIMONDI THE TAILOR Cleaning Pressing A Herafions 430 EAST 7OTh STREET, NEW YORK ft-as 1 1. -ax- 1 K 'X 1 I. ,. 1 i , is gl I 4 . , x x pl. v r 'T I E. 4 '. E 5 , ,F fi Tf .-.3 x an iq.. xv 'T xii 4 ,162 ze in f 1 '-X t r., L' f QE , G X, 1. :fi :': 5.-, ke' . I 1 1 P4 - 1 X 1 s L f rf ,M f I4 ,,,,,,,..,,.....,,,..,.,.....z,...... .,..,.,,-,,-f...,......,...Mf..,....,::. . nw. 'far' 'f.'xlFC7U3N'i'HFW . .M . . , , . , ....-..-..-- 1 A 1 1 H 1 1 4 , 1 ff-.4 1:
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