Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1931
Page 1 of 352
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 352 of the 1931 volume:
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I B- Q35 imimewiaaiigk - '1 . . . -jf' . 14 . . 4 - . r , , 'ft f fx- X. . - . -' . -. 1- -I.3f- - .xggclj 'fir ' 1 'f'2'g'-'.'7!.7 f? --W' I' ffl if .. - '- -L ' ma ' ,. , , ,X u 51 A 1 1 :ft-1 ' ' ' ' A 'f ,5.,-.-.- Q ,,-dwg. .N ., l Li!! 4 -V J.. 9 f Z' ' . Q ' 1 ' , . -:A A., V. - ' if D - ,A ' ' ' . 4'g3gff: f,'?.i-5, . V 'J , 3 7 - f 1. V ' .7 Q 3 -e' 1 Fi -1 ' '1 K 5n.Qj?,j,.,fQ5.'qf 1 .5 5. ,vu 6 -- w ' . 7155 1 1 - ,P ' . sa , M ,,- gm-. M V- .- .-1 -1.2 x f ' - .,2m'jf2T3x:'vaff?'i'Q'f'1,b1 .': '5Qf: If V Q..E.?:'fL':Q3D g 'EZ 'J A ' ' V i ffiil' .,- faq? . fl'-il '1 .xgf73'1 , Q -1 5 , ,. - sf . 1 ,I H 5 . . -ll' Q. 1 f . 1 ' 7 'nr f , .' Z. , Z-1 Wing .sz 'V -. baggy? us .mff:.1qf.'1'Ig, ,M gs ' v 'h 7' .4 A-'J W '- ' uv. 4 h 23123-' .' . 3 . .. i ' -.s - 'J'-ffff .. 4' . -A , , .. .....,5' .'-iii 'V ' 1- L' J-xv -an . FCJREWORD he prepara+ion of lhis Medic has 'raken more 'rime and eFFor'r 'rhan we as s+uden'rs could offen afford +0 expend. The fask was increased by our ambilions lo creaie wiih our hands a finer and greaier book. This feeling was engendered byiour own proud apiilude for doing and ge'r'ring ihai which is 'lo be desired, and noi' for gain or remunerarion in 'rhe empirical sense. We have 'lhis year ggiven io our Facul'l'y +he prominence +ha+ +hey deserve. There was an op- por+uni+y in 'lhis for us +o edii biographies under each por+rai+, bu+ we have desis+ed from +his ver- bosi+y, believing +ha1' as 'few words as possible is +he mosf laudable choice in any wrifing. The personal commen'rs on each s+uden+ were wriH'en in secrel session as ii were, coniribuiions being accep'red from various sources and finally collaled by one man. Each'wri+ing aH'emp'I's io be a s'rudy of fhe man as we knew him and avoids all saccharine s'l'uFF abou+ fhe mos'r wise, mos+ lov- able and mos1' friendly. If we have wriH'en down men as human beings fhen no cri+icism can desiroy fhe vic+ory. Coming +o an explanaiion of Humor we lay down 'rhe pen wi+h +he afore+hough+ +ha'r +here has been so much gaye'I'y among us ihai' wha'r is wrif- +en is only a weak commen+ary. All of 'ihis aH'emp+ed reasoning means only Thai we, in ediforial fancy, have lived, dreamed and walked arm in arm for so long wi'rh The Medic of '31, and would no+ deserf now al 'fhis ceremony of publicaiion. THEME odernism and Biology are fhe fhing. Queer disforfions of animafe life fumbling againsf columns, resfing on shaffs of lighf, sliding info shadow-block, embellish our remofe fhoughf wifh an adequafe symbol. Biology here de- picfs fhe corporafe plan of our winnings and Modernily gives if flavor, a bi+ of spice. So now we unife fwo age-old fefiches, fwo evergreen pre- fensions info fhe pages of our youfhful record. There is no more pofenf charm againsf fhe ab- sorpfion of fhe infimacies, fhe comminglemenf of fancies, and fhe zealous faifhs of our sfudenfship fhan fhis idea of Biology, which has fhe sagacify fo never be finished in ifs own eyes. Sef adequafely againsl' a sfern, sfoney, modern background wifh heavy and unreal arches, angles and affifudes, fhese old and young dreams may never die, for fhaf which is modern is an elasfic experience becoming fomorrow, foday and yesferday. Many liffle devils will have become sainfs before fhis archive will be only a cover and a number of pages. Many days will have become bygones be- fore a record of our yearnings and complacencies will have become nebulous. From our fray of magic, we have dispensed fhe fwin pofencies of Life and Living, Biology and Modernism, fo upsef fhose who advise forgeffing and forbearing. As Biology and Modernism have become con- gruous here and in all fime, so shall we unife Acfion and Memory. ln fhe end fhere shall be only a meagre separafion. Perchance, we shall go deeply info ourselves, our irrefrievable selves, and fall onfo fhe subiecf of our advenfures in learning so sfeadily fhaf we should desire fo recapifulafe and fo do over. ln fhaf evenf, and expecfing fhis, we pro- iecf fhe spell info fhose fanfasfic years by fhe creafion of our book of personalifies, giving if fhe magnifude of a poefical fheme fo nurfure fhose dreams, and praying fhaf our livings may nof be all prose. Dr. Herbert L. Northrop l 1 . DEDICATION he Class of l93l, expecr- ing a fulfillmenl' of faifh in iheir own professional lives, dedicaie ihis record +o rhe principles which embrace 'rhal' faifh. The life of Dr. Herberr L. Norfhrop so expresses 'rhe code +ha'r we aHach him now as our pa+ron, knowing +ha+ we can never for- gel his idealily and inspiraiion. We may never acquire 'fhe dexferiiy, 'rhe skill, +he powers of diagnosis 'rhai' he so apily displayed. We may never realize 'rhe voice and dicrion of a scholar or rhe manner of his cul+ure. .We can, however, sfrive 'For 1'he charm, +he grace and 'the friendliness which marks his presence. I+ is wifh ges'rures of respeci and congra+ula+ion for his own siandards 'rhar we dedicaie 'ro him 'fhis Medic. Above all else, we are for+una+e for fhe good example which he placed so early in our lives when we needed ii' mosr. MEDIC STAFF Edi+or-in-Chief Charles M. Thompson, ll Business Manager Assisfanr Business Manager Michele Viqlione Carl Nash Ware ASSOCIATE EDITORS His+ory Humor Facul+y Richard F. Norlhrop Jacob S. Lehman l-l. Ernesl Tompkins ART Dividers Carfoons Seciion Endings Richard E. l-l. Duisberg James B. Burler James W. Hughes. Jr ASSISTANTS Humor E. Cv. Louis Wiebusch Paul Millron Kisller Ac+ivi+ies Danle J. Bevilacqua Edward Merlon Hill Melvin F. Ames Circularion Douglas C. Wasley Scripf Waller R. Seip l-lenry J. Kohler I. INTRODUCTION II. COLLEGE HISTORIC VIEWS ADMINISTRATION FACULTY CLASSES SENIOR CLASS HISTORY III. HOSPITAL HISTORIC INTERIORS IV. ACTIVITIES ORGANIZATION FRATERNITIES ' ATHLETICS V. HUMOR VI. PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY VII. ADVERTISING CONTRIBUTORS CONTENTS DR. GEORGE MORRIS GOLDEN DR. GEORGE MORRIS GOLDEN Died January I2, I93l Son of Alberl Samuel and Rachel Daniels Golden. Born in Philadelphia, March I4, I876. Early educaiionz Public Schools oi Philadelphia, Cenlral Manual Training School, Philadelphia, and Universiiy of Pennsylvania. Mairicuaied al l-lahnemann Medical College oi Philadel- phia, Seplrember 18, l895, and graduafed May IO, l899. Married Lorana Pelouze, November I4, ICIO6. Member of +he Alumni Associalion, l-lahnemann College, Ameri- can lnsfiiule of l-lomeopaihy, Easlern l-lomeopaihic Medi- cal Associalion, l-lomeopaihic Medical Sociely oi lhe Sialre of Pennsylvania, l-lomeopaihic Medical Sociely oi 'rhe Couniy of Philadelphia, Germaniown Medical Club, William B. Van Lennep Club and l-lahnemann Club, ln- lerne oi l-lahnemann l-lospilal, Philadelphia-I899-IQOO. Physician io l-lahnemann l-lospilal, S+. l.ul4e's l-lomeopalrhic l-lospiial and consulling physician io vari- ous insfilulions, held various leach- ing posilions in line oi promolion in medical deparlmeni oi l-lahne- mann College of Philadelphia, be- coming proiessor oi medicine and head oi The deparlmeni ol medi- cine in l925. l-le achieved high professional siandards, an elhical liie and lhe friendship and admiralion of all who knew him as sludenls, palienls or colleagues. X A-1'nv ' 6 fv N' ' Q 5 I o JM ,,.. . fR.5'b1,:,1r. lgqgg .I F ' a O O 0 ' O0 I' O .. I o 'Q ' 0 lo Q 1 v F ,1. VQQQIP ' Q 1 , A i tx: rg! 1 fm aa 'M - J , 5 ' 0 U .U-:C . -0- . H ' 09 if Q ' una? ,, ,sm 'J igQ rs,-g...f1, .ff 'Qi-'ss -Je ' v AN EVENT HISTORIC N 1825 Hans Burch came to America with the seed of enthusiasm for Homeopathy, that was later to grow into an established system of medif cine. He was unable to devote himself to a definite and 5 A-gg-Q .A-. ,i useful research for reasons of maintenance. Instead, he apf ff plied the thesis of the new teaching in his active practice. The years brought friends and new enthusiasts. Ten years after his original adventure The New York Homeopathic Society was founded. This organization met with authenticated opposition from the dominant college of the day. Only the spirit and zeal of the initiators transgressed all discourageinent and, in the end, saved from defeat the young cause. With the same order that characterized Hahnemann's personal efforts, the pioneers in America chartered their own scientific lives. Up to this time, the education of a voluntary applicant for homeopathic training had been the task of some appointed preceptor. The final establishment of a school opened the way for a practical didactic experience. The North American Academy of the Homeopathic Healing Art, afterwards referred to as The Allentown Academy, was dedicated in 1836. This was the first Homeopathic Medical College. The enthusiasm and influence of Dr. Constantine Hering was the moving force behind its establishment. Dr. Hcring was the first president. The school was chartered june 17, 1836, and was entitled to confer the degree of Doctor of Homeopathy upon its graduates. The venture did not meet with the expected success. Adequate finances were lacking. There had been no careful preparation. Certain powers had insisted on the use of German in the lecture room. The combination of all these hazards lcd to the dissolution of the college a few years after its dedication. The committees dis- banded and the buildings were sold to liquidate a mortgage on them. So passed away that seed from which all things came. , Later a structure with the same purposes was to rise phoenix' 'A like from the ashes. The cornerstone of the Academy, in which the Qrganon and Hahnemann's picture were laid, held together the hopes of a new school for a brief time. It never relinquished the glory of bearing a new challenge to medical thought. In 1846 a National Medical Convention was organized, meeting annually. In May, 1847, during a convocation, it was resolved that the teaching of Homeopathy should not flourish, and that the organized society was to obstruct such teaching. This was .1 direct blow to the education of the Homeof pathie physician. The attack was from the parent of the American Medical Association and possessed the power of authenticity. It became apparent then, that the only course was distinct segregation in a Homeopathic college. The failure of the Hrst attempt at a separate instructive identity did not deter another group from looking to this goal. Fifteen A 1 A A 1 There was a meeting at the house of Dr. Jeanes in Philadelphia where he and Doctors Hering and Williamsoii talked of another venture. The matter was talked of by others in the Homeopathic profession here. There was much scattered opposif This feeling was tion to the project, developed from the fear of another failure. warranted since another upset would have been too discouraging for any further or immediate attempt. The more bold counsels prevailed. The ardor of Dr. Hering was a beacon in the presence of moderate interest. He was eager to advance the cause to which he had devoted his life, He and his intimate friends together make the picture which a biographer depicts- There have been few subjects in the history of medicine more worthy of the artist's pencil than that of those three men, sitting in that council chamber, with the responsibility of the hour pressing upon them. We can almost picture to ourselves their appearance as they sat in that council: Hering, fortyfeight years of age: jeanes, fortyfseveng Willianissoii, thirtyfseveng all past the reckless enthusiasm of youth and in full vigor of ripe and matured manhood: the German scholar, the Philadelphia Quaker, and the descendant of the Pennsyl- vania pioneerz unlike, yet strong, typical, representative, each supporting and supple' menting the other. A petition to legislature was prepared, and in two days it had been signed by eighteen physicians and numerous laymen, asking for an Act incorporating the Homeopathic Medical College of Penn' sylvania with all the rights belonging to other medical colleges in the commonweath, including the right to confer the degree of Doctor of Homeopathic Medicine. The bill passed the House February 12, the Senate April 5, and was signed by the Governor on April 8, 1848. The first meeting of the corporators was held on Hahnef mann's birthday, April 10, 1348, in the Athenaeum Build' ing on the southeast corner of Sixth and Adelphi Streets. opposite Washiiigttiii Square. lt marked the first official organilation of the managing group of the college. Com' mittees were appointed and officers elected. On August 31, 1848, it was decided to open a dis' pensarypand at a meeting a month later the committee voted to seek subscriptions to raise the sum of 31,500.00 for establishing a clinical department and that friends be asked -wxsxx to contribute not less than 37.00 each for that purpose. The first college building was at 229 Arch Street and all meetings were held there. Most conspicuous of the original faculty members, Dr. Hering resigned the first meeting after he was elected. . Other members were Doctors bleanes, Neidhard, Williiinissoii. .'.g i-V-fgj., .jjg . Sims, and Semple. ff, Throughout the summer of 1843, the members of the ,35 :f.QQ'fl,'-Q3 l.'T various committees were very busy. Among the important business was the decision on a location. The rear portion 'P ' ' of a large building at 229 Arch Street was rented at a ' A quarterly rental of 375,011 The present number of the builder I ,L ing is 639 Arch Street and is still standing. ' The day for the formal opening drew near, Fifteen men fl fkil responded to the invitation of the announcement and on October lo, 1848, the introductory lecture was given.. n The purpose of the three enthusiasts had been fulfilled: the Homeopathic Mediczil College of Pennsylvania! was an accomplished fact. A session had been held successfully and ' 'T' ' 'f .1 of the fifteen men who had attended lectures, six, who had Sixteen already attended lectures elsewhere, received the degree of Doctor of Homeopathic Mediciiie. Only one course of lectures was given in the building on Arch Street. A meeting of the faculty was held in the College Building and this was their last assembly there. The next record is of a residence in a new building at 1105 Filbert Street. The entrance to this college was almost exactly similar to the one of the college building on Broad Street later. Both, now demolished, have their ghosts and comrade spirits walking up and down stone steps into school, out again, in thc habit of students with perpetual grace. Here they assemble, here they disband. now they read and there they whisper stories, but in their ghost hearts is the old dream of their living and dying. The second session of the new college began under much more favorable circumstances than the first one. It was not too soon for the members of the Homeopathic profession to have a college of their own faith. There were changes in the faculty. The second commencement occurred Mzirch 2, 1350, at the Musical Fund Hall. The degree was conferred upon twenty graduates. The third announcement appeared. In this pamphlet was included among the introductory remarks of explanation: Nor will the student be less deeply grounded in surgery and midwifery, which in their therapeutical part will be entirely reformed or at least greatly modified by the Homeopathic doctrine, so that onefhalf of all the surgical operations may be dispensed with. By means of a judicious treatment of a woman's ailments before labor and by means of strengthening her constitution, the act of parturition will become more and more natural, so that the mechanical and forcible means which have to be resorted to at the present may, in the future, mostly be set aside. But the necessary mechanical proceedings in their most improved form will not be overlooked in the lectures on this subject. This was in the year 1850. Ar a meeting of the faculty this same year, it was decided that 312.00 be the price for attendance at each of the professors lecture courses. During the course of 1S50f51 the lecture room was given to the students on Sunday evening for religious purposes. These meetings were well attended. About this time, the Dean reported a modest balance of 213242.06 in his hands. Evidently the subscribers were rather slow in the payment of their dues. This caused no immediate catastrophe. The financial department ingeniously had decided: First, that sufficient money be retained by the Dean to pay the current expenses of the college. Second, that on the first of December and April whatever money remains in the treasury, after deducting a sufficient sum to meet the expenses of the college, shall be divided among the professors. Seventeen The professors were modest in those early days fand the present writer would like to make a note on a similar difficulty he hadj for in February the class asked them to each have a lithograph likeness taken and they declined. 1 During the summer of 1852, a building had been leased ' on Chestnut Street, near the bridge, and opened as a p Homeopathic Hospital. This was an advance in the clinical 1 plan. It was not long after the college had been opened, that certain members of the profession overseas looked here for a special diploma. In October, 1851, the Dean read a letter from Dr. Dudgeon of Edinburgh, in relation to granting a diploma to Mr. Albert Crosby Pope. Shortly after this Mr. Pope was recommended to receive the special degree of the college. This began the dispensations to foreign students. On February 19, 1857, we have record of the first enter' tainment of the students by the faculty. This was held at the Girard House at 4.30 P. M. On january 16, 1859, it was resolved at a faculty meeting, that a committee be appointed for the consideration of reorganization of the college, to secure it a permanent existence and progressive development. Doctors Hempel, Beakley and Reed were elected. For the year of 1860, we hear mention of economics, inventories, retrenchments, and recommendations for new systems in personnel and management. It had become apparent that there was need for sound business administration. Efficiency and thrift became shibboleths against the imminence of penury. The action was a lifefsaver. The college foundation became more stable. A dental clinic was organized in 1860 by Dr. Griffiths. The committee bought a dental chair, some forceps, and a probe. Dr Griffiths was properly and grandly installedg but as the dental chair was sold in 1861, it seems that this clinic was not a success. The same year, a Mr. Warriiier began his lectures on M , . . , . 8 Hb 'i'l 'l'UM'r :ir the subject of Medical Jurisprudence. Notes were taken. , 1 ji! The lecturer was a lawyer. l 1 1 1 ,fl , ., 1 1 ., x At the commencement in 1861, at Musical Fund Hall, , , 1 1 , there were twentyfnve graduates. Six special degrees were 1, UFVKIBJ , 1 Tp gp 0 l ' ii granted. , ., . L il- -I,ll'5u T 1 . . . . f,,a.i-- 1 f All of this time the faculty underwent many changes in , X1 1 W , 1 personnel, so numerous that they cannot be mentioned and , 1. mv still preserve interest in a mere narrative. There were resig- p , , A ,gi V-,iz nations, appointments, dismissals, promotions, and deaths, all ii iiylyillllfllll- so confusing in this panoramic study as to make the early 5 'l 'Hy history appear a hodgefpodge of upsfandfdowns and infandf ,I outs. le- digit? During the summer of 1862 the anatomical room was Eighteen 4 ra 1 as i -5 .W l l l -i -1 ,I 4 il JZ si .37 'Y l 1 . ,T .1 . j . 1 . 1 1 .f . -1 -Q .2 . ' Ti 4 ft LJ' Q 2 U -'i Ti ' .'.'J si' ff .153 . Hcp.. .Tffgg si -'-3 if-.5 art l .f--fi 4' fl? X' .X-1',?4 R Q 58.53 , 'Q 'I Q W lf. l 1 improvedg a skylight was added: a dispensary was also opened in the rear of the college and connected with this amphitheatre. The students had before this been attending the other hospitals of the city for clinical study. ' There is no note on the effect of the Civil War. Undoubtedly, there were enlistments, rollfcalls, and banded groups. On this score the record is silent. The college now was on a steadier basis. The period between 1865 and 1868 marked reconstruction. With this came the birth of a journal. The Halinemannian Monthly was published for the express purpose of printing lectures and other points of interest occurring in the college. In 1865, Dr. H. N. Guernsey became Dean and the Board of Trustees elected a Faculty. At a meeting in 1865 the Faculty voted to allow ladies to sit in the antefroom to listen to the lectures. This was the first concession made to the fair sex by the college and evidently the last. In 1866 Dr. Hering proposed that Dr. F. E. Boerickc be authorized to prepare a standard Homeopathic Pharma' copoeia. At the same time it was voted that the secretary be a committee to sell at not less than cost the allopathic medical journals in the library. It may be mentioned that they were not sold. The neglect of this motion was in tone with the later acceptance by this school of a dual therapeutic armamentarium. There is record of Boericke and Tafel hav' ing presented to the dispensary copies of the Standard Materia Medica of the day. it 'Wi N11 Zs m? s - I , A t,. 'l 4 is ii lnlMf:,5,'w E 12,-EY W., 1 Xgmxkv- Ei iv l G x --xx 'E :W fx .,. f. -Q 45+ as ,Z - E Tags F, N Nw 9 L j l'Il X 7 ii , f ill V 4 11 i 4, 1 fl V38 iii? is 'five Q' gi fm - .P If in lil, Ilia ' si 1 1 My I Nilfj ' Mi, : - ii 1 -. jar ii'--e -',,4 ll 121125- 3 A crisis now occurred when Dr. Lippe, who controlled most of the stock of the college, declared that the Chair of Pathology and Diagnostics was contrary to pure ii v ' , rm .A . . . j'--if., f.f2,f- if .1,-'1'-1 'L 1: .. Ii1::.- 'f ' , ' ' f'1:.i'5q 1 ---Tex' - 'A ' .':'-1--'.1 ,. 4 4 -.-I . x 1 ZH 'Jer-f-Ligzi -n l 1 Q sfcmfvsuvzm- 251 7, 1 ? x .-:.. lf f 1' T aq if i:'Ei:xig qf2 i3tc -e in ' jle ,AA 'N -y' , , - Homeopathy and should be abolished. Dr. Hering objected to this position and due to the autocratic manner in which Dr. Lippe maintained it, he withdrew from the chair to which he had returned after an absence. Efforts at conciliation were futile. Dr. Hering organized a new college. The original college continued sessions. This was the new Hahnemann Medical College instituting itself as a rival to the old Homeopathic School. Both sides were alternately conciliatory and depreciative. There were no cordial relations between the students of the two rival colleges. Bitter accusations were made from both sides. The time was ripe for the Homeopathic Schools to start cutting their own throats. There had to be a victor and victory. It seemed that the contest was onefsided. The last meeting of the old Homeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania was held February 27, 1869. The professors split the financial balance. - Nineteen - D I C - 31 This leads the historian to the sound inception of the 11.-pier. .s If Hahnemann Medical College. Dr. Hering secured the charter and completed the organization. He designed the seal. The ' ,:',gr: P ji '- 7p1,V If -V , lu' , ,liiigvr-1' 5, original college same over to his side and joined hands, There was a short period of residence in a building on Chestnut Street but this soon became inadequate for the uses of the college and arrangements were made for a permanent lguilding. The change was made to 16 and 18 North Tenth treet. Dr. A. R. Thomas was appointed to the Chair of Anatomy and Dr. F. E., Boericke became lecturer on Homeof pathic Therapeutics. Dr. Thomas, in his initial address, spoke of the success of the institute. At the end of this year a dividend of 35135.00 was declared to each of the members of 'T ' ' 1 the faculty. i t ' ':7.f5i5T5'1f5 9 if i i Q-'jf f.,g, 'A ,,F... ,,.,gg V , : ll ' ..'. .- A 0 ' ' LQ' So we have passed from a purpose to a realizationg from seed to a flower. We have followed the history of Hahnemann from the original congress of idealists to the division and later amalgamation of factions resulting in the establishment of the authentic college. The years then hold less important details, though still presenting periods dated by new administrations and new advances. Now our history becomes more detached and less circumspective. In the span from 1870 to 1880 we read of money being raised for a new hospital and are reminded that if events do not always recur in cycles, at least history does repeat itself. The clinical plan was continually extending through the college life and advancing its resources. At this period, the first commencement was held at the Academy of Music, Fiftyffour were graduated. Dr. Constantine Hering died July 23, 1880. He had been very intimately related to the interests of the college. At the time of his death he was Professor Emeritus of Materia Medica. Between the years of 1879 and 1882 the need of a new college was debated. The building on Filbert Street had become inadequate. The hospital had been established in the rear building since 1870. The old building on Cuthbert Street had been repaired and rebuilt for that purpose. It was in a back street. It was built over a sewer and its accommodations were scanty for a hospital. After the formation of committees, and after the initial tasks were completed, efforts were made to find a situation suitable for the erection of both college and hospital buildings. A plot of ground was selected on Broad Street between Race and Vine Streets and extending from Broad Street to Fifteenth Street. The premises on Broad Street were bought from the Cavit Estate for Si70,000, subject to ground rent. On Thursday, November 6, 1884, at 3.00 P. M., the cornerstone was laid. The college was on Broad Street. The Twenty VT .J-.' :.-, , sr' V' an 1 iii. '. .lil , icf, izvs' -212-L 51.15 9 F: .., ffm.. IZ ' , . -YQ ?Agx.A 871 'f':- V fi?-5 lv .1 ,. 3 .V 5,3 I lp, W7 ' 1 1 . if 0.52 lf 1'-Q . 1-.EQ . 1 - 12 -l V lg - E . 4 lj. . lffffg X . 5, . lt f1.A 1 lg? .. if A' , . lf. l . ' 4 J,1 Z7 'I 1 I.,.1 v .i -1 J 41 wi WNXI, 155' , .e .Aa . ,J C J I, xixu 'f'TLl .Ya .4 1 K F , ,1- ' f 5 3 ' ' ifiifl . 5. 1- , , I Q iX .'x3'.ff . fl xl' gif! 'HSL ring, 115-1- eff-as 2:52 ' 'XE N241 r Jai . I' is . s.i,f F rs jg '. .5 , . . , , ' , . . ,s v, , 19 - MEDIC .sl Governor of Pennsylvania spoke. The ceremonies were conducted by the Masonic Lodge of Pennsylvania. In the cornerstone, among other sundries, were placed the Organon, Philadelphia daily papers, medals in com' ss we-5 t ' -'NN 51 if --fQ4X, memoration of the Centennial, and lists of Alumni. This year X in Z the Alumni was formally organized. Dedication week of 51,1 ryf iqf- the new hospital and college was held during September 20 fifiifwg' .. K 1 .N -- N'--'L 2. 11. to 25, 1886. ,IM 55 ' 1152. 1 I , - 1 14, icxe-' I xxx .I Y Aa Q K ' l M' . 'M ' 177 ' ., , , , f 7 , .' I9 Lfgflbi I j ld,I ii,lfr ' ll fl ll f .4 The historian states: That the students who came to attend lectures in 1886 came to a magnificent building situated on one of the world's finest streets. ,J . .R xnxx... . v t In 1887 a threefyear course was made obligatory. This l i, I fl El? -f, -, 4 was the first step in the gradual extension of the medical curriculum. There is no other comment. Hahnemann was il H1 .q . ...., , V 3' igj?.?? Y'-I l g I 11 I 'i X' U i':..:.P,'U-'- i 253' 'f I L7 -' 22811, '. I ,7 2 i 5-,g rew ,,, U 3-e.,. 1' . . 5-'- . wif- f Z ' , g E the first college in the country to advocate a threefyear study. . ,. W The announcements of 1890 and 1891 later spoke of ' TATU I I the advisability of a fourfyear course and a plan was offered in anticipation of the next meeting of the Faculty to decide this. After the session of 1894 and 1895 the fourfyear course became obligatory. Again Hahnemann took the lead in this scholastic innovation. During the summer of 1894 changes were made in the Faculty. Dr. W. B. Van Lennep became Associate Professor of Surgery. Dr. O. S. Haines became Clinical Professor of Medicine. Dr. H. L. Northrop became Adjunct Professor of Anatomy. Later Dr. Van Lennep became Professor of Surgery. Cn October 1, 1894, there were over seventyffive matriculates. The next year the Senior Class at graduation numbered sixtyffive. The place of Dr. A. R. Thomas, who was ill at this time, was taken by Dr. J. E. James as acting Dean. In 1895 the death of Dr. A. R. Thomas, who had been Dean for twentyfone years and largely responsible for the purchase of the property and building on Broad Street and f the building of the Hahncmann Hospital on Fifteenth Street, ushered in a new era in the history of the Hahnemann Medical College. XX Dr. Thomas was succeeded by Dr. H. L. Northrop in the Chair of Anatomy. Dr. Pemberton Dudley, a devoted apostle of Samuel Halinemann, was elected Dean and served until 1904, when Dr. Charles M. Thomas, the son of Dr. A. R. Thomas, a M brilliant surgeon, was elected Dean. 7 .frf . VU: 41' ?EgA N Wx yl 'hifi 3 I X' NW Ml' He tai X rx 1 Y? riff In 1906 Dr. Herbert L. Northrop was elected Dean and served for four years, being succeeded by Dr. Williaiim B. Van Lennep in 1910, and he by Dr. Willizim A. Pearson in 1914. Twentyone ,-Q. w 1. F Hit ai . rg. , .5 The work of the college and hospital has been increased so greatly that three new buildings, the nurses' home, the women's building, and the powerhouse were constructed in 1906 at a cost of three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Dr. Van Lennep completely reorganized the medical curriculum and made it conform to rigid standards. Eight professors were engaged to devote all of their time to the work of the college and soon other fullftinie men were added to the Faculty. In 1913, at the request of the Pennsylvania Bureau of Professional Education, prefmedical instruction was inauguf rated. A onefyear prefmedical course was given until 1917, when the charter was revised to permit the granting of the Bachelor of Science degree after two years of prefmedical instruction and two years of medical instruction. The twofyear prefmedical course was continued until 1929, when it was abandoned largely because hundreds applied for matriculation, who had had more than two years of pref medical training. During the World War a Hahnemann Students' Army Training Corps was established and the students housed in the Armory at Broad and Callowhill Streets. Colonel John H. Lockwood was our first commanding officer. He was followed by Captain William Frazee. Two hundred and eightyfsix graduates of the Hahnemann Medical College were ofhcially enlisted in the army and navy medical corps and nine lost their lives in military service. In 1927, after a successful campaign for two million dolf lars the college on Broad Street was razed and tem orar , s g pn I Y quarters were engaged for the college in a large building adjacent. A twentyfstory hospital was built on the site of the old college. The former hospital was then completely remod eled for college purposes. During this period of thirty years, from 1900 to 1930, thrrteen hundred and fortyfnine men were graduated in medicine and one hundred and sixtyfnine received the degree of Bachelor of Science. This sketchy perusal of these latter years makes them no less important. The detail of history was spent in the analysis of those early beginnings, when so much can be said and so much can be interesting. All that has gone before is a birds' eye view, a panoramic study. Bits of chronicle have been joined here and there, to depict a gradual and portentous development. The commencement of the Class of '31 ends our story. 'Twentyftwo I v I lllll ,i11lllllllll111i. 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'. v -.': ' ': 'fi it-F .. -c-'1Z-- ' 'Iff--lr:f1'.-.1 19 - MEDIC - 31 1 'Ti 4 1 3 5+ 1 ,QQ 5752 x sn. ,L COLONEL LOUIS JOHN KOLB ,f V' L. L 1. EQ 111-- if S In .3 A4 4,-. 3 -T -.1 P1 -u ml iv. s .5 11' Jr .-. . 1, if., A , , f,, ' 4 X I L F-of - 74. . 7. , lu ,- rr Eb ,Pu Lf '1- Lw. -. rr fu ,U x -e. Cf' ,rg ,,l.. Si y. f-T Y 2 ,X H.. x s E., Qu 5'-' fa ge .,, wil as '. K, 2'l Z D Vs C , ,. . mb,- f , gi 1- L' ,Q gf , nj A .- Eg, .LL .Lt :V A., 7, '44 My za'- .. .fn ,--L li' if '. , Ia. f 'I . --sf K.r, M- -M. N. ,...., E- 3- fi . VL E, r x 1 1 ,,f C ix Q. ka mg, E. L J ri ,N x I if: E 2 7-T r 7 1 'PF I-li lu! 57 Q if V was 19 .:, ,. E2 .gh .vi TX .-I, 1: . 3.1- xx, :j'.:' ff? .- :L ?f' if ' rt! sf UI' SZ' 3. .1 1A . 'T N -f, r-A ,T-. 12. I j' 1 L. K. v L 19 - MEDIC A 31 TRUSTEES President Chairman of the Board Louis 1. KOLB, B.S., LL.D. CHARLES D. BARNEY, MA. VlCE'Cl1dTTmd71 of the Board WALTER E. HERING, M.S.. MA. Vice-Presidents IOI-IN GRIBBEL. M.A.. LL.D. WILLIAM WALLACE Secretary PHILIP C. SNOW' Treasurer FIDELITYPIAIILADELPI-IIA TRUST COMPANY BOARD OF TRUSTEES Charles D. Barney Albert E. Freeman Isaac W. .leanes Gideon Boericke John Cribbel Louis Kolb Robert Brunker Charles S. Hebard Philip C. Snow William C. Davidson Walter E. Hering Frederick H. Strawbridge, Jr. William Wallace COLONEL LOUlS JOHN KOLB INCE Colonel Kolb became affiliated with Hahnemann Hospital and Medical College several years ago, great strides have been made in the material advance! ment of homeopathy. During this time he has been a power in the construction and administration of hospital and college, as member of the Board of Trustees, Chairman of the Building Committee, and since May, 1930, as President of the Board of Trustees and Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees. The new Hahnemann Hospital and Medical College stands as a mark of disf tinction among medical centers. As Chairman of the Building Committee, Colonel Kolb was largely responsible for the successful construction of that great edifice. The task which his committee undertook in assuming responsibility for its construction was not a small one, and the industry and elfort which they exercised is to be commended. As a member of the College Committee of the Board of Trustees during our time at Hahnemann, Colonel Kolb has come even nearer to us as individuals. The enlarge' ment of the student body, equipment and opportunities for study have transpired in this period. As a student body we have made various requests for accommodations to this committee, and in all its judgments our welfare as students has been paramount. Following the resignation of Mr. Walter E. Hering in May, 1930, Colonel Kolb was elected president of the Board of Trustees. During this short time regular and frequent tours of inspection of hospital and college have made him familiar with the details of administration and have served as a means of appreciation of students and scholastic activities. Colonel Kolb, however, does not restrict his hospital associations to Hahnemann. For many years he has been a director of St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospitals, and Graduate Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Colonel Kolb was born in New York june 27, 1867, son of john Gqtlieb and Sarah Elizabeth Kaiser Kolb. He attended and graduated from Rugby Academy in Philadelphia, entered the University of Pennsylvania, and in 1887 graduated as Bachelor of Arts. Following this, he entered business, in which his numbered and varied associations have been principally centered in Philadelphia. His wide scope of business, civic, social and philanthropic activities served to augment an appreciation of his character. During the incumbency of Governor Brumbaugh of Pennsylvania, Colonel Kolb served as Lt.fColonel and aidefdefcamp on the governor's staff. In more recent years he has received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from Ursinus College of Collegeville, Pa., and a similar degree from Juniata College of Huntingdon, Pa. Colonel Kolb is also a director of the Union League of Philadelphia. 'l'wentyfnine DR. WILLIAM A. PEARSON, Dean 1 Q ,xm- ff 1, HE Class of 1931 deserves hearty congratulations upon the publication of this class book. The vast amount of time and labor required will be appreciated by all who scan its contents. This is the largest class that has ever graduated from The Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia, num' bering over ninety highfgrade young men, who have dedif cated their lives to medical service. No one can estimate the amount of good these graduates will accomplish, but it is vvellfknown that the average professional life of a physician is about twenty years and that the average physician ministers to approxif mately sixteen thousand patients. It is my sincere wish that every member of the Class of 1931 vvifl live long and maintain the highest traditions of the medical profession. The Class of 1931 will contribute much toward making the world a better place in which to live. 9..f X .. V5 '1' 1 . - '.- 1... 53,5 ' 177L3r-.. .Z .. l .I .- 1 - ' r' 5' '-' ' '. f- ' ' - 'ff-1N: 1x-.'. L- ' 15-45 1 Plia-w1'e,g.j? 5. 2-r. ' f 1- .:y,f ' J- M ' 'I f 'qw---.f .r -' ,H 5996-f:ff+5f-zgp - 1L'1zf. S . A-H -J -::i'l:,r :Lis . ,'-1-1-911--, . fi.-.f,-,iw 5' ..'- ,-QP ..,, ,-.. 245, 1 ,. . .-4. -w..--A - A hw - - P 1.--EA .. ., 5, .,,.f'a?' : '4 . 1.' 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KA - - ,-- - , . . ,. . h-,J - ..,.f.J. ,- -.-, r. 14, '- 4' . -. -. ., ' ...v . ' 72 .f ' f-fr.---.,.:,, ' -..1 - vi-.if :Yi-g..,:f.:,5 'S W- f, , - .r.- ,f.4.:.Z- .4 f. F 1 ,C J., In 4 . - - -5-fgmgif-.-Q-mL:5..., , A-' xi: hgfggujh 1. . :-, J-F' '- V- ga. ' . 1j2.5.x ' 4 'Q s.:QLl:iij..- iff: ?.f,,ff4 5-f5Qi'i,g- -, -:t,.,-., 1.-3.. Hf.Q13,' nf in 'ff' . .V v jf: 7j'Q, ' 'fl 'Q --433.4 If v 'J.g',' , Q ' .Hay 45' P w,,fw,,. 4' ...,' f' ..1 ,fi gff'xf.a . c - - .mf 1. ,-v....,',,,..,..3 wg., M ., V. , .M QKQM.-. 1E'11??1-- v'f5-. - ' L , ' 1 .154- +-4u',i4f:ig,, -i:'k'5,.f.- f fi Hy: sf'..'1.'! 'f'.4za-if? 4-',,.gg,,::fAI-r.,4v'a ,. --:ff ,V .- 4 b 1:5 :gl yn. .V .4 r ,,'. ....,. v'.3.,X . ' :ff 5,-. - ' ' ' J.-1:.,C'i:. RUFUS B. WEAVER AND HIS WCRK ELDOM does the view of lifeless specimen evoke thoughts of an actual life. To glance at Dr. Rufus B. Weaver's dissection of the cerehrofspinal nervous system without lreing assailed vividly and instantly hy a succession of interesting thoughts ref garding the life of its author, is to admit that one is lacking in imagination and sensihility. Born at Gettysburg on January 10, 1841, he early acquired a deep and fascinated interest in anatomy and physiology through a hook on these suhjects, which had come into his possession. Their study hecame his goal and, accordingly, after ohtaining, in 1362, the degree of Bachelor of Arts from Pennsylvania College, he matriculated in the Pennsylvania Medical College. Three years later, upon graduation, he was still ardently striving for greater 1 knowledge in this hranch of science. Further courses followed at the Unif versity of Pennsylvania and jefferson Medical College. Eighteenfseventy marked his appointf ment as Denionstrator of Anatomy at l-lahnemann. Nine years later, he hecame Lecturer in Surgical Anatomy. In 1891, Hahnemann College conferred upon him the honorary degree of Doctor of Medicine. He hecame Professor of Regional and Applied Anatomy in 1397 and filled this post until his resignation in 1929. In all these years, he remained true in reverence hy his students. Slight of one dissecting tahle to another, always science, in whose character were traits to his ideals, faithful to his work, and held stature, we can visualize him passing from teaching, always encouraging. A man of of loyalty and kindness glowing forth so vividly, that he not only evoked the respect and reverence, hut even the love of his lsoysf' His dissections were done not purely for the love of research, hut also with the purpose of helping his students gain a deeper knowledge of the secrets he knew and was so willing to share. The College Museum was his hohhy. Before his advent, it had already attained appreciahle proportions, hut it lacked proper care, and many of the specimens were antiquated. First mention of it is made in records dated 1850. Dr. Weziver assumed charge in 1880, From this time it took on new life. Old and useless specimens were discarded. new ones made to replace them, new ones added. Soon articulated skeletons and 'I'l1irty'fo14r 1 1.1 if Tii ri T1 .1 Fi 1 1 1 4 4 1 1 3 'i 1 41 l .1 -1 Ii 1 1 1 J . 1 1 1 1 fl 1 1 1 1 . 1 4 - 4. '1 N fi 'ii 1 IE x Q , rs , v ' 1 J., ,,' 41 'L s ,. J ii , 31 f' , 1 fl '1 , , . if fs , 1 x ,. ' , ' 1 -Y . 1 9 li 11 1 t 1 f.:-v .-Z.. , . . Y. ,, minute and delicate dissections of the eye, wet specimens and dried specimens, anatomical specimens, and pathological specimens filled every case and every corner, all made with the greatest care, patience and skill. The masterpiece is I-larrietf' To her, in April, 1888, as she floated lazily in her vat, was designated a destiny of unique perpetuation upon this earth. Her body was an ideal subject, being poorly endowed with superfluous fat and resistant to the deterioration occurring in cadavers despite the most careful preparation. Actual work was initiated on April 9, 1888, after a few days devoted to the treatment of the body with :inc chloride. Dissection continued uninterruptedly until late in june of 1888. Each nerve was removed. from the tenacious tissues which natural afiinity had almost made inseparable. Much delicate teasing of tissues was necessary Lines of cleavage were found or created. Every tiny filament was traced to its point of mergence with less specialized tissues. As the dissection progressed, the clean nerves were encased in protective sheaths consisting of a layer of thin gauze and a second layer of cotton soaked in alcohol. Repeated treatment with alcohol imparted moisture to the nerve and saved that pliaf bility needed for an undistorted mounting of the specimen in its natural relationships. Two weeks of what we may facetiously term nervefracking work were spent prying the brain and the spinal cord from their resistant bony armour. Bones had to be broken blindly without the incidental breaking of nervesean accident common even to skillful dissectors. And then the opening of the dura matter, the exposure of the brain, the guarded penetration of the brain substance, the tracting of the cerebral nerves to their origins- this indeed was an anatomical adventure. The eyes were not severed from the optic nerves in order to preserve the integrity of the nervous system. Their presence also made the specimen more impressive. From july to September 15, 1888, more unremitting work was expended upon the mounting of the specimen. To align the nerves properly, to show natural relaf tionships, and still to keep within the requirements imposed by a plane mounting' board was a problem replete with suggestions of failure. Myriads of pins and tiny ligatures were used to support the nerves, which do not rest on the board, being separated from it by a quarter of an inch space. As the specimen dried and hardened many of the pinfprops were removed. Every advantage of the contour and consistency of the nerve tissue was utilized, so that while most of the pins were removed those which remain almost escape detection. The dissection, bearing a ribbon won at the World's Fair in 1893, is now kept securely locked in a large safe in the Museum. To see it we had to induce George to accompany us. Always willing, he would swing open the heavy steel door proudly and we marveled as we gazed at it as Freshmen, marveled more as Seniors. Then George would carefully, almost reverently, lock the door of the safe and bow us out of the room. 'Ne feel regret that advancing years deprived us of Dr. Weaverls acquaintance. This essay is our humble tribute to his patience and dexterity, to his boldness of intellect, which dared to conceive the thought, to his constancy of purpose, which led to the realization of the thought. It is our tribute to his love and his loyalty for his students and their school. Thirtyfjive J ' 5, 1 . if ', H- C115 .QI A? m '. 1' HERBERT L. NORTHROP, M.D. M,D,, Halinemzmn Medical College. 1889 , F.A.C.S. American College of Surgeons Halinemavm Medical Club Plirladelpliia Homeoputliic Medical Society Pliifadelpliia. Medical Society Awmricavz Institute of Homeopathy Professor and Head of Department of Surgery SurgeonfinfChief to Halmemami Hospital Dean of Halmemann Medical College, 19064910 Professor of Anatomy, 18944920 Anestldetist to Hahnemami Hospital, 18904897 Demonstrator in Histology, 1890-1893 Tliivtyfsix 1 fi 2 sl If . In 7 A SAMUEL W. SAPPINGTON, M M.D.. Hahnemann Mediczxl College, 1897 .D., F.A.C.P. Plu Alpha Gamma Amencan College of Physicians Amencan Institute of Homeopathy Pe1msyl1'ama Homeopathic Medical Society Plnladelpllza Homeopathic Medtcal SOC1C'fj' Plizladelplua Pathological Society American ASSOCidIlO7l of Immun' ologists Professor and Head of Department of Pathology and Bacteriology Pathologist to Hahnemaxm Hospital Physician to Hahnemaim Hospital 'Tliirtyfseven l D. BUSHROD JAMES, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1896 Plnladelpllia Medical Soczety Pennsylvania Medlcal Society Amencan lnsmtute of Homeopatlz Germantown Medzcal Society Union League Professor and Head of Department of Gynecology Gynecologfist to Hahnemann Hospital Tltzrtyezgllt WILLIAM A. PEARSON. Ph.D., Ph.C., M.D., Sc.D. Ph.C., University of Michigan, 1900 Ph.D.. University of Michigan, 1902 M,D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1915 Sc.D.. LaSalle College. 1926 Research Chemist, Parke Davis, 1900f1904. American Chemical Society American Pharmaceutical Associaf tion American Association of Clinical Research American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia Rotary Club Union League Cynwyd Club Author, Medical Chemistry Physiological and Clinical Chemistry Professor of Chemistry, Ferris Institute, Big Rapids, Michigan, 1904f1906. Professor of Chemistry, Hahnemann Medical College, 1906f Dean, I-Iahnemann Medical College, 1913f 'fhirtyfnine 19 W MEDI C -31 FRANK H. WIDMAN, M.D. University of Pennsylvania Pi Upsilon Rho M.D.. Hahnemann Mftdical College. 1893 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Registrar, Hahnemnnn Medical College Assistant in Biology, 18994900 Lecturer on Embryology, 19004909 Professor of Embryology, 19094912 Demonstrator of Physiology, 19021909 Lecturer on Physiology, 19104911 Associate Professor of Physiology, 1912 Professor of Physiology, 1913f Forty f1913 American Institute of Homeopathy Cynwyd Club :ri ,l 1 V .Vg 1 fl-. . f 4 , rf Y' ',' L. ff ,.. t, l P l 1 l 1. 1, l . 4 s V ,g if ' ri ,- , 19 - MEDIC -Bl HARRY S. WEAVER, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1892 Alplia Sigma Union League Manufacturers Club Philadelphia Country Club American Institute of Homeopatliy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Pliiladelpliia Homeopathic Medical Society Professor and Head of Department of Laryngology, Rhinology, Ophthalmology and Ctology Laryngologist to Halmemann Hospital Fortyfone . 'qt -v LEON T. ASHCRAFT, Pl-1.B., A.M.. M.D., F.A.C.S. Ph,B,, Dickinson College. 1887 American College of Surgeons A.M., Dickinson College. 1890 University Club M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1890 Plnlaclelpliia Country Club Menon Cricket Club Professor and Head of Department of Urology Urologist to Hahnemann Hospital Fortyftwo 1 0 f Fifi 2 - i i I l l . it C api P i i i l 1 .. fi i- l l .1 l l l l CHARLES SIGMUND RAUE, M.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1892 Philadelphia Pediatric Society Hahnemann Medical College, 1895 American Ingtitutg of I-Igmggpafliy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Union League Author. Diseases of Children by Professor and Head of Department of Pediatrics Physician to Children, Hahnemann Hospital ll 'e-, Consulting Physician to St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Physician to WOHICIIQS Homeopathic Hospital . .i . -1 A, 'Y Forty-three li? 2- MEDIC 31 HARRY MARTIN EBERHARD, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Nledical College. 1898 Pi Upsilon Rho Boas Polyclinic. Berlin University of Berlin Professor and Head of Department of Gastro-Enterology GastrofEnterologist to Broad Street Hospital Wi7m3I1lS Homeopathic Hospital Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Iwirtyffozw n 1 EDWARD A. STEINHILBER, M.D. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1909 P111 Alpha Gamma Professor and Head of Department of Neurology and Psychiatry Associate Professor of Histology and Embryology, 191-P1925 Neurologist to Hahnemami Hospital Fortyfivc 4 l 1' , .4 4 ARTHUR HARTLEY, M.D., F.A.C.S. University of Pennsylvania M,D,. Hahnemann Medical College. 1898 Associate Professor of Surgery Professor of Applied Anatomy Head of Department of Anatomy Surgeon to Surgeon to Surgeon to Consulting Hahnemann Hospital Cliairman, Anatomical Bureau of the State of Pennsylvania American College of Surgeons County and State Homeopathic Medical Societies American Institute of .Homeopathy American Medical Association Germantown Club Executive Committee, Halinemann Nlcdical College Advisory Committee, Halinemann Hospital Plii Alplia Gamma Union League St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospital WOm6Il.S Homeopathic Hospital Surgeon to Delaware County Hospital Fortyfsix 1 9 5 lf? 7 ici 'Q G-ARTH WILKINSON BOERICKE, M.D. University of California Beta Theta Pi M.D., University of Michigan, 1908 Alpha Sigma Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Director of Hering Laboratory First Clinical Assistant, Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, 1919492 l Assistant Clinical Professor of Applied Homeopathy, University of California, 192106 Forzyfseven I J l RALPH BERNSTEIN, M.D., F.A.C.P. lVl.D.. University ol Peririsylvgiriiu, l94l3 P1 Upsilrm Klip M.D., Hill1liC!1I2ll1Il Mediczil College. 1913-l Society of Forenxic Nfedicine Amerzcrm Mt'd1cr1l Autlmrs Asxoria' Lion American College of Pliyusicianx National, State, and County Medical SUCICIICS Autlmr of Elementary Derma' trilogy Professor and Head of Department of Dermatology Consulting Dermatologist to Halinernann Hospital Clinical Chief, Section of Dermatology, Hahnemzinn Hospital Dispensary Lecturer on Dermatology, School for Nurses, l'lal1ne1nz1nn Hospital FUYlf 81gllI V JACOB WILLIAM FRANK, M.D., Hahnemann Medical College Professor of Roentgenology l M.D. Radiologic Society of North America American Roentgen Ray Society Philadelphia Roentgen Ray Society Philadelphia Medical Club Aesculapian Medical Club Germantown Medical Club American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic llleclical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Penn Athletic Club Roentgenologist to Hahnemann Hospital Fortyfnine 'W 9 - ikfl E D l I 3 T JOHN A. BORNEMAN, P.D. P.D., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. 1902 Pi Upsilon Rho Professor of Pharmacy Chief Pharmacist, Hahnemami Hospital Temple University, Instructor and Lecturer on Homeopathic Pharmacy fifty ,ff Fila .fix L. , fl nc ,-.. .., up, 15.5 in X Qfi r,-1: c 4, fir? ff ji 9.11. kb:- Q , rw., ,y -9- r wif ki 'J S vi :rj xi. l I .1-. lla' f , V, 1-Q51 1 , -Q 1: ix' H' I. Lf 1 V , I I V, . i L I r L, L F, ,L,., 2, Si - F, .ll 'Sli' ,.-.- ef. yn' NM FRANK C. BENSON, JR., A. M., M.D., F.A.C.S. NLD.. Halmemann Medical College, 189-X Pllllddtlpllld County Medical Society .-XM.. Halmemann Mcdmal College, 1927 State Hwmeopazlnc lvledical Associaf 11071 Amerzctm Medical Association Amerxcan College of Surgeons Professor of Radiology Department of Surgery, 189919211 Radium Therapcutist to I-Ialmemarm Hospital Fifty-one '19 - MEDIC - 31 1 l JOHN EDWIN JAMES, JR., B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S. B.S.. University of Pennsylvania, 1899 Phi Gamma Delta M,D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1902 Phi Alpha Gamma American College of Surgeons University Club Philadelphia Country Club Professor and Head of Department of Obstetrics Chief Obstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital Fiftytwo y .rf-L 'I Q. Q, n ,i-x,- A v ,- ,rxi 4 H. r. ,fx r. 511, .lv ' 'I , 1 A' ,X ig, .-4, - 5- 'X 5 - ' c- ya? -x. hiixg 1.1 SYS' ' all '21 'ff' -if . 5213? Q Eigfgj .f. YQ. . ,X 'Refs' ' f' , . 'D' ' ,e gr'-f' 'A 193,19 xlfgaq' E551 ', K5 Fgfrv' ' ,, . ...- - .5 . :full 9.22-I ,- qw- , T 7 ucv Eiir, ,A 0,71 ',: , ., ,, , . ,I '-J, s A- ' - C-I . f'.: ' ' fri ' 71' ' gli! , 4 'ffff f, .m.- :nf 7-'EB' 3 'L - x ,Y , Nl-jx ?'.'F,1i ,, -uf -- x -. -'. f 4 . 13: if f A :WI f .' 'xv 1 :Lf ' T' 1f'f'e swf ,IRQ . '1 5' ' -u' f' ,-'1 ,P ' V . .' 1 5 I-7, 1 ' , .l 51 . f' , 11 f. 262:11 V v tr. . .xl ,'.'gQ.L' 7, Y xlir Q 'ff ! r1- , ls 4 .11 ' .a ,am ,. .x - ' -x ,V . , N, ,fl , -7 Q, 'is - ,,. ' 1 iw, . - A g -:- ii .4 EJ - ff J X I V 1 U -.- . , I-51, QR 4 1.4 A cz'- I 1 A , rr . Lys, . --fh f' ftfff :WN ' in rg I,-, h 5,4 gif, , 4- ,, ELL.. JOHN A. BROOKE, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D,, Hahnemann Medical College, 1896 Amemcan College of Surgeons Professor of Orthopedic Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemarm Hospital Lecturer on MechanofTherapeutics Eftvftlwce f X FRANK O. NAGLE, M.D. University of Pennsylvania M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1907 University of Breslau Professor of Ophthalmology Alpha Sigma Germantown Club American Institute of Homeopathy Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Qphthalrnologist to Hahnemann Hospital Associate in Ophthalinological Pathology Fiftyfouv G. HARLAN WELLS, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. B.S., University of Delaware. 1898 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1902 Professor of Clinical Medicine Pi Upsilon Rho Union League Philadelphia Country Club American College of Physicians Former President of American ln- stitute of Homeopathy Permsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Physiciar1finfChief to Hahnemarm Hospital Fiftyfflve Ilf-fl E, I C BI 1 S WILLIAM RENDELL WILLIAMS, M.D. MID., Hahncmann Medical College. 1902 Professor of Clinical Mediciiie Physician to I-Iahnemann Hospital Pliiladelpliia County Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy American Medical Association Consulting Physician, Roxborough Memorial Hospital Fifty-six 19 - MEDIC - 31 WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1902 Phi A M.D., jefferson Medical College, 1908 Professor of Anatomy Associate Professor of Surgery Associate in Surgical Pathology Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Surgeon to Abington Hospital Fiftyfseven lpha Gamma l Q Q Bl WARREN C. MERCER. M.D. Pliiladelpliia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Germantown Medical Society Clinical Research Society Association of Internal Societies Academy of the Fine Arts West Chester Normal School M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1899 Professor of Clinical Obstetrics Cbstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital President of The Staif of Broad Street Hospital Chief Obstetrician to Broad Street Hospital Head of Department of Women of St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Cbstetrician, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, West Chester Homeopathic Hospital and Crozer Hospital of Chester, Pa. Fiftyeeiglit 9 V rr. L I li i l 1. 1 r L it E. l H-, ,M .4 . ,X J 1 f' Y 1 Q DESIDERIO ROMAN, A.M., M.D., F.A.C.S. A.M.. National College of Granada, Nicaragua, 1899 M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1893 Clinical Professor of Surgery Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Germantown Medical Society Union League American College of Surgeons Surgeon-infChief to St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospital Lecturer in History of Medicine Consulting Surgeon to Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Fiftyfnine l l GUSTAVE A. VAN LENNEP, MD., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahncmzmn Medical Collcgc, 1894 American College of Surgeons Clinical Professor of Surgery American Institute of Homeopathy Penrisylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Surgeon to Halmemann Hospital SlXYy GEORGE F. BICKLEY, MD. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1894 Union League Pluladelpliia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Germantown Club Clinical Professor of Gastrofenterology Physician to Halmemarm Hospital Sixtyone li 31 HERBERT P. LEOPOLD, A.B., M.D., F.A.C.S. .-XB.. Albright College. 1893 American Institute of Homeopathy M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1896 Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Union League Clinical Professor of Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Surgical Chief, St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Surgeon, Allentown State Hospital Consulting Surgeon, Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Consulting Surgeon, West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital Sixzyfrwo ,Q . . 'L ii, 4 1 L , , Q 1 1: ll.: eil 4 i, l lx Q -f .1 i V l FRED W. SMITH, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1903 Alpha Sigma American College of Surgeons Clinical Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngologist to Halmemann Hospital Sixtyfthree -ug ' I5 ' lf- 'Q - ly -f 5 4.2 JOSEPH V. F. CLAY, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, l9U6 American College of Surgeons American Board of Otolaryngology Clinical Professor of Utology Gtologist to Hahnemann Hospital Ophthalmologist to Childrens and St. Luke's Homeopathic Hospital Head of Department of Ophthalmology, Ctology, and Rhinology, WOHICHQS Homeopathic Hospital SlXIf fUllT JOSEPH MCELDOWNEY, M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1905 M.D. Alpha Szgma American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeoparluic Medical Society Pliiladelplucl Homeopatlzic Medical Society Clinical Professor of Physical Diagnosis Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Sixtyfjive 19 - MEDIC - 31 7 .. -T X.. ii. v r.. f i , .i .f s V, Ar' ll - -,i 3, -ul ' A 5,4 ,f .cf W 1.1-L 56- 'Pill ' 1. - . E.-.--, i 1. . ... ,'. f if A 7' Z' Y 'Q' lf' . A .. ,PI -. x r A fl 'iff , 5 ,. , , ' 'ff , gig. LEON CLEMMER, MD., F.A.C.S. M,D., Halmemann Medical College, 1912 American College of Surgeons Clinical Professor of Obstetrics Z Senior Cbstetrican to Halmemann Hospital fiat 4, . . ,Je . , - .T g,-Q, . - Sigma fr. a':3,', -.. -' lf, ha A . if-fi 1 aj- . -am,-. L.-U ff-.4 F212-' .'ji'- ' .M , ,-C AJZ . ff. 4, 'pp' ' :Q V .-,I V ,I V: Exif .,i V I-N, 'ZD5 1:' Eve.. . it .ir Eh? .ffgi Egfr, rig? l Ti 11? 1-S- 'Frf 15 ' 51. ll' 'flu e :fy ,':m . Q.. if 1' 'Q'. 51.1, E 1. L4 Sixtyfsix .- 11, i -'H .9- ,Ai ,Y 'bi JJ :'! it 2' 1 4 gr! f 3 .. .vb -4, A. 1.- .-., T I, ,A '1 S x M- I -.-113 wan f 1 s . .sr .1 Ln: 1 1 9 M to U l if JOHN DEAN ELLIOTT, MD., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1901 Clinical Professor of Surgery Associate in Surgical Pathology Surgeon to Hahnernann Hospital Plii Alpha Gamma American College of Surgeons Surgeon to Abington Memorial Hospital Sixtyfseven v M E D IC 31 A BENJAMIN K. FLETCHER, PI-1. G., M.D. Ph.G., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1888 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1895 Clinical Professor of Pediatrics Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Physician to Children, Hahnemann Hospital Sixtyfeight A H 19 - MEDIC A 31 -1 1 .I r rs-1 L -,. .rf vff .1 K 1 , -. in F-VL? , 1 1 ' l rv, 1 1,11 ..,. ,11 f-- . A.: f- . H 1 'fi w u if 'fl 1Q-. ,. 1,-r iii 12,1 , w. ..-, X .1 Cv- j! A , JAMES D. SCHOFIELD, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1904 Alpha Sigma Clinical Professor of Proctology Lecturer on Rectal Diseases Associate in Postfgraduate School, University of Pennsylvania 4 ' A. ,f Sixty-nine 1' 9 -- lvl E DIC - 31 C C l l l l z . .z r w l i v HENRY IRVIN KLOPP, M.D., F.A.C.P., Sc. D. Pi Upsilon Rho Lehigh Valley Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American American Palatinate fAlbrightJ College M.D., Halinemann Medical College, 1894 Sc.D. Muhlenberg College, 1927 Institute of Homeopathy Psychiatric Association American College of Physicians Associate Professor of Mental Diseases Superintendent, Allentown State Hospital Seventy Es-4 ' V-.4 Eiif fill' eil: W7 . 11x f Il I . .ir cd 5.151 'f-V.: Sli?-:f f .45' . igvif ETSIQ' ' iran' .iff . pri .-rj' ,Ty ,L 'AIM QW? -kfizfg 5:95 - 195 4- - f Iii: PSC! QW' . lust: F115 ffffvg Qi: V SW. 1 SJ . ,1 N: . I , .c 3 7. 'L ' x iv- 1-'-' -s. 1 - .f ,., .b wllffr ' gd. . iq, , Fxw'-, 'aff ,:' A ,-3: n 1 ,lf-',, f . iv.. . - -l . -i.-: 515' p . af,-, 3 lf-.f npr . , ,l,. , li? fi rf .Ai lu lx is if ' fy. L ,- iq'- lla ' V22 'N if I 1-fl . ., ab' 'f?f. .V n tj-y ,f,4-QQ' :J ' ,- ,2 l all l-:gr ' Zlvg r :5i' 1' f'- . . 1. , -i iff: I fi, 4' I L.. E. 1 135' Li --., ol R , ,I ICT' I-w-. v I ly '.'- .r .:-I5 . ' .f H I 3-'. nr 'xi 1 4,1 J I V , 351, - t 322- ' 'arf al i 'CMV I if dit' X , 5 Eliltil , :QU I 11,1 ' l l .'V ,I A ' 4 1 Q. 1 1 345. 1 la sim .. i 19-M F, - w 1. . 'J EDIC 37 V .gl ' i i i -l :fii WILLIAM coseizove HUNSICKER fi MD., F.A.c.s. , University of Pennsylvania 1 VQIQZZ M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1897 State Senator T Ptolemy 1 American College of Surgeons .35 Associate Professor of Urology , Urologist to Hahnemann Hospital - 'Fl L 1 , , 4 ,Ai fi 3 A , V DEACON STEINMETZ, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1895 x ' l American College of Surgeons Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical 4 Society I American Institute of Homeopathy 1 11, Clinical Professor of Surgery ' Former Demonstrator of Anatomy 'I Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital - 2 ci I v ' 1 il i S! 1 Seventy-one JOHN L. REDMAN, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1896 Philadelphia Medical Society Pennsylvania Medical Society American Instiute of Homeopathy Formerly President, Germantown Medical Society Associate Professor of Pediatrics Physician to Children. Hahnemann Hospital ,, I Seventyftwo OTHMAR F. BARTHMAIER, M.D. St. Josephs College M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1906 Postfgraduate Study, University of Vienna Rockefeller Institute. New York City Penn Athletic Club Philopatrian Club State Homeopathic Society American Institute of Homeopathy Bacteriological Society of. Phila' delphia Pathological Society of Philadelphia Captain, Medical Corps, U. S. Army Associate Professor of Pathology Pathologist, St. Lukas Hospital WILLIAM I. TOMLINSON, MD. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1903 Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society ' Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical i Society l American Institute of Homeopathy Associate Professor of Cbstetrics Senior Obstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital Assistant in Pathology, 190311907 Assistant in Medicine, 1903f1909 nology pital LINNAEUS E. MARTER, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1896 M.D., MedicofChirurgical College, 1902 American College of Surgeons Philadelphia Medical Society Pennsylvania Medical Society American Medical Association Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Ptolemy Associate Professor of Laryngology and Rliif Laryngologist to Hahnemann Hospital Otolaryngologist to Roxborougli Memorial Huis' Seventyfthree M.D., I-Iahnemann Medical College, 1893 Associate peutics F1 -'wi lmlllx ai.. ... f. 1a JOHN L. VAN TINE, M.D. Alpha Sigma Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Professor of Materia Medica and Theraf Seventyffour JOSEPH SAMUEL HEPBURN. B.S., M.S.. Ph. D. B.S. in Chem., lVI.S., University of Pennsylvania, 1907 Ph,D., Columbia University, 1913 Edward Longstreth Medal of Merit from the Franklin Institute. 1921 Sigma Xi Pi Upsilon Rho American Society of Biological Chemists American Chemical Society Franklin Institute Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Physiological Society of Philadelphia American Institute of Homeopatliy fI'Ionorary Associate Member! Associate Professor of Chemistry THOMAS A. SNYDER, M.D. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1916 Pi Upsilon Rlio Associate Professor of Histology and Embryology Lecturer on Ophthalmology Assistant in Opthalmological Pathology Ophtlialmologist to Hahnemann Hospital r l AUBREY B. WEBSTER, A.B., M.D., F.A.C.S A,B., Acadia University, 1898 M.D., Boston University, 1902 Alpha Sigma American College of Pllysicians Union League Germantown Club Associate Professor of Surgery Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital Patliic Hospital Surgeon to Roxboro Memorial Hospital Seuentyqive Surgeon to St. Luke's and Childreifs Homeof CHARLES B. HOLLIS, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1912 University of Vienna Alpha Sigma Union League Medical Club of Philaclelphia Germantown Medical Society American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society American College of Surgeons Associate Professor of Rhinology and Laryn- gology A Laryngologist to Hahnemann Hospital Chiel, Ear, Nose and Throat, St. Lulce's :incl Children's Homeopathic Hospital Consultant in Nose and Throat, Allentown State Hospital Consultant in Ctology, Institute for Deaf, Tren' ton, N. THOMAS W. PHILLIPS. M.D. MAD.. Hahnemann Medical College, l9l6 University of Pennsylvania Pi Upsilon Rho Ptolemy Associate Professor of Anatomy Assistant Proctologist to Hahnemann Hospital Seventy-six FREDERICK C. PETERS, M.D M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1911 Alpha Sigma Associate Professor of Ophthalmology Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hospital Instructor in Ophthalmological Pathology JOSEPH CHANDLER, A.B., Ph.D. AB., Colby College, 1909 Ph.D., johns Hopkins University. 1912 Delta Upsilon Phi Beta Kappa American Chemical Society Honorary Captain, Chemical Vvfar- fare Reserve Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University of Louisville, 1912f1914 Instructor and Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Tufts College, 19144919 Instructor and Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Boston University School of Mediciiic, 1921f 1926 Associate Professor of Chemistry. The Hahnef mann Medical College. 1927f Seventyfseuen EARL B. CRAIG, M.D., F.A.C.S. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1906 M.D,, jefferson Medical College, 1908 Al lm Si ma P ZZ American College of Surgeons Clinical Professor of Gynecology Cynccologist to Hahiicmariii Hospital l i FRANK JOSEPH FROSCH. M.D. St. Peterl Academy M.Dr, Hzihnemann Medical College. 1907 M.D..jei1erson Medical College. 19U8 Plii Alplia Gamma Pliiladelplua Medical Society Peiinsvlvama Medical Society Pluladelplna Homeopatliic Medical Society Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society American Medical Association American Institute of Homeopathy Associate Professor of Cyriecology Demonstratior in Gynecologic Pathology Cyriecologist to Hahnemann Hospital Seventyfeight Vi 'll -.1 1. 1 x 19 Q Mlillli NJ X -. X , 1 ii' 4 .KA .kg ,, 'T .Ns w w -1. 3 w P 1 v '1 A 1 , I 1 1 -l i' 1894 Qs 1? DONALD R. FERGUSON, A.B., Mn., F.A.C.P. . A AB.. Swarthmore College. 1912 Q. M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1916 l Kappa Sigma Alpha Sigma American College of Physicians ' American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania State Medical Society f Philadelphia County Medical Society - Germantown Medical Society Captain, Medical Corps, U. S. Army Associate Professor of Medicine 1 Electrocardiographer 'V' Assistant Visiting Physician to Hahnemann Hos- . pital 4 N. Seventyfnine -31 OLIVER B. WAIT, M.D. M.D.. New York Homeopathic Medical College, American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Associate Professor of Obstetrics Obstetrician to Hahnemann Hospital EDWARD ROLAND SNADER. JR. B.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. B.S., Haverford College. 1917 M.D,, Hahnemann Medical College, 1921 Alpha Sigma University Club Germantown Medical Society Associate Professor of Medicine Lecturer on Physical Diagnosis Assistant Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Electrofcardiographer to Hahnemann Hospital Eighty C. DUDLEY SAUL, M.D. Temple University M,D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1901, Alpha Sigma American Institute of Homeopathy Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society Germantown Medical Society Associate Professor of Medicine Lecturer of Allergic Diseases Assistant Visiting Physician to Hahnemann Hospital Consulting Physician. Allentown State Hospital Ii-. CARL V. VISCHER, M.D., F.A.C.P. M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1919 Hahnemann College of Science. 1915 Alpha Sigma American College of Pl1ysicians Philadelphia County Medical Society Pennsylvania State Medical Society American Medical Association American Institute of Homeopathy Chief, Medical OutfPatient Department, Hahne' mann Hospital Assistant Visiting Physician, Hahneniann Hos' pital Lecturer in Medicine HARRY F. HOFFMAN, M.D. University of Buffalo M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1910 Pi Upsilon Rho Psi Omega Associate Professor of Mental Diseases Lecturer in Psychiatry, Lafayette College Lecturer in Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene, Lehigh University Assistant Superintendent, Allentown State Hosf pital Eightyfone P77 M E D I C 31 PROFESSORS GILBERT J. PALEN, M.D. . . . . WAYNE T. KILLIAN, M.D. .. WILLIAM STEELE, M.D. ..... . WILLIAM B. GRIGGs, M.D. JAMES B. BERT, M.D. lcon+inuedJ . . . . . . . . .Professor of Otology . . . . . .Professor of Anesthesia Clinical Professor of Medicine . . . . . .Professor of Therapeutics . . . .Professor of Obstetrics ASSOCIATES J. MILLER KENVJORTHY, M.D. .............,.. ......... U rology JAMES H. CLOSSON, M.D. .... .... M ateria Medica ALFRED E. KRIGK, M.D. . ...... ..... P harmacology CHARLES L. W. RIEGER, M.D. .... .... R oentgenology JOHN I-I. READING, JR., M.D. ................. Pediatrics J. DEAN ELLIOT, M.D. ....... ........... S urgical Pathology FRANK O. N.AGLE, M.D. .. .... Ophthalmological Pathology FRANK J. FROSCH, M.D. .... ...... G ynecological Pathology WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D. .... ...... S urgical Pathology GEORGE R. NEFF, M.D. .... ........... N eurology JOHN C. SCOTT, Ph.D. ....... ........... P hysiology GEORGE LORENZ, JR., M.D. ..... GastrofEnterology DEMONSTRATORS MARION W. BENJAMIN, M.D. JOSEPH R. CRISWELL, M.D. E. PAUL KITCHIN, M.D. ..... . ROBERT M. HUNTER, M.D. .. CARROLL F. HIAINES, M.D. CHARLES F. KUTTEROFF, M.D. PAUL A. METZGER, M.D. .... . WILLIAM J. RYAN, M.D. .... . FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, M.D. DESIDERIO A. ROMAN, M.D. . RICHARD R. GATES, M.D. .. CHARLES D. Fox, M.D. Eightyftwo . . .Ophthalmology ........Otology . . .Ophthalmology . . . . .Gynecology ........Otology . . . . .Gynecology . . . . . .Neurology . . .Ophthalmology . . . .Ophthalmology . . . . .Obstetrics . . . . .Obstetrics . . . . .Pediatrics 3 -r TTU 'i 4' u I . .' .4 LECTURERS DUNC.AN CAMPBELL, M.D. .. N.ATH.-KN GRIFFITH, LL.B. WiLL1.AM P. BAKER, M.D. D.AVID W. HORN, Ph.D. .. . .. RICHARD W. LARER, M.D. .. GEORGE D. GECKELER, M.D. . . JOHN J. MCKENNA, MD. . .. H. E. ROEPKE, M.D. ...... . CLARENCE L. SHOLLENBERGER W1LL1.AM R. LEVIS M.D. A. R. SERAPHIN M.D JAMES H. CLOSSON, M.D THOMAS M. SNYDER MD CHARLES J. V. FRIES, M.D. ALBERT MUTCH, M.D. .... . NEWLIN F. PAXSOILI, M.D. .. B W1LL1.AM G. SCHMIDT, A.M., GEORGE D. GECKELER, M.D. CARL V. VISCHER, M.D. .... . THOMAS L. DOYLE, M.D. .... . . . .lvledical Terminology Medical Jurisprudence . . .NonfPharmacal Therapeutics .................Hygiene 'iii 6iQ.i5.,' Liii f. . CLARENCE L. SHOLLENBERCER, M.D. .. VJILLIAM L. MARr1N, M.D. .. l WALLACE K. KRATZ Secrefary . . .Industrial Medicine . . . . . . . .Physiology . . . . . .Roentgenology . . . .Physical Diagnosis ............Anatomy . . . .Tropical Medicine . . . . . . . .Ohstctrics . . . . . .Medicine . . . . . .Neurology . . . .Ophthalmology . . . .Ophthalmology . . . . . . .Ohstetrics . . . .BiofPhySics . . . .Medicine . . . . . . .Medicine . . . .Plastic Surgery ............Surgery . . . .Operative Surgery Friend, lnfimafe Counselor and Recorder for All Time Eightyftliree ' E D I C 31 INSTRUCTORS JAMES M. GODFREY, M.D. .... . EVERETT A. TYLER, Ph.B., M.D. N. FULLER HOFFMAN, M.D. CHAS. F. LEONARD, M.D. . .. B. G. WALKER, M.D. .... . A. M. MALDEIS, M.D. FRANK E. BRISTOL, M.D. .... . HENRY S. RUTH, B.S., M.D. W. S. JOHNSON, M.D. ...... . EDWARD C. CAMPBELL, M.D. .. CHARLES J. WHITE, M.D. .... . BENJAMIN W. GRIFFITH, M. D. .. THOMAS J. VISCHER, M.D. HARRY A. FISHER, JR., M.D. EDWIN O. GECKELER, M.D. . . .. MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH, M.D. CARROLL F. HAINES, M.D. .... . W. S. EISENMENGER, M.S., Ph.D. EDWIN HICKS, B.S. . ......... .. RICHARD J. D. COYNE, MD. . .. ALBERT V. HALLOWELL, M.D. . GEORGE P. GLENN, M.D. H. M. SYLVESTER, M.D. .. FRED C. PETERS, MD. LEON CLEMMER, M.D. .... . THOMAS M. SNYDER, MD. .. .. NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D. .. GRANT O. FAVORITE, M.D. . . . .Anesthesia . . . .Anesthesia . . . .Surgery . . . . ...Urology .........Urology . . . . .Ophthalmology .........Surgery . . . . .Anesthesia . . . . .Pediatrics . . . .Urology . . . . .Medicine . . . .Surgery .........0bstetrics ...Anesthesia . . . . .Orthopedic Surgery ............lvIedicine ...........0tOlogy ...............Chemistry ...............Chemistry Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngology and Rhinology Laryngology and Rhinology .Therapeutics Ophthalmological Pathology . . .Gynecological Pathology Ophthalmological Pathology . . .Gynecological Pathology ................Pathology J. ANTRIM CRELLIN, M.D. ...... ....... A nesthesia GEORGE J. RILLING, MD. ......... ..... R ectal Diseases EUGENE F. CARPENTER, JR., MD. ........ Surgery THEODORE C. GEARY, M.D. ........ .... S urgery RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D. . .. .... Surgery Eighty-four 19 - MEDIC ASSISTANTS RAYMOND T. BRIGGS, M.D. .. JOHN P. MAYER, M.D. .... . EDGAR M. BLEW, M.D. . . . A. B. KATZ, M.D. .... . GEO. J. RILLING, M.D. ALBERT R. RIHL, JR., M.D. . KARL F. MAYER, M.D. .... . W. E. KEPLER, M.D. ...... . DAVID KAHN, M.D. .......... . JOHN H. MGCUTGHEON, M.D. .. ROLAND B. BRIGKBAUER, M.D. RAYMOND MCGRATH, M.D. .. RUSSELL D. GEARY, M.D. ALBERT R. RIHL, JR., M.D. . F. LAIRD KENNEDY, M.D. PASQUALE G. DAMLANI, M.D. LEANDER P. TORI, M.D. . HENRY G. BLESSING, M.D. .. HORAGE L. WEINSTOGK, M.D. .g . ,I 1 . . . .Laryngology and Rhinology . . . .Gynecology . . .Mental Diseases . . . .Laryngology . . . .Laryngology . . . .Laryngology . . . .Laryngology WILLIAM C. HUNSIGKER, JR., M.D. JULES J. KLAIN, M.D. ............ . JAMES E. SPALDING, M.D. .... . NATHANIEL V. LUDWIGK, M.D. .. ALOYSIUS J. BLAKELY, M.D. CARL C. FISCHER, M.D. ..... . H. EARLE TXVINING, M.D. HUNTER S. COOK, M.D. .... . MORRIS FITERMAN, M.D. ..... . JOSEPH W. SHALLGROSS, M.D. .. DUNNE WILSON KIRBY, M.D. H. RUSSELL FISHER, M.D. KENNETH L. ATHEY, M.D. . .. HUNTER S. COOK, M.D. HAROLD K. EYNON, M.D. . .. FRANK T. J. AIKEN, M.D. .... CARROLL R. MGCLURE, M.D. WILLIAM J. KUEMMEL, M.D. . RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D. . . . . . . .Medicine . . . . .Medicine . . . . . .Medicine . . . . . .Medicine .Roentgenology and Rhinology and Rhinology .......CtOlogy and Rhinology and Rhinology . . . . .Obstetrics . . . .Obstetrics . . . .Urology . . . .Urology . . . .Urology .. . . ...Urology .. . . . . .Urology . . .Materia Medica . . .Materia Medica . . . . .Radiology . . . .Pediatrics . . . . .Pediatrics . . .Dermatology . . . .Medicine . . . .Medicine . . . .Medicine . . . .Medicine . . . .Pathology . . . . .Pathology . . . . .Pathology . . . . . . . .GaStrofEnterology . . . . . . . . .GaStrofEnterology . . . .Histology and Embryology JAMES A. NELSON, B.S. in Chem.. . .. EDWARD P. VAN TINE, M.D.. Eightyefve . .. ...Anatomy . . . .Anatomy . . . . . .Anatomy . . . .Gynecology . , - xg v MQ , ' ' mix , . pg :Y J 1 1 1 Q iw , 1 1 . 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I K:-ZZ., Q 5 VVJiy.,-, . ,- 1.4 1 riff ,Pau-Y 1-5l.,,fw.,f.--fr if ' 'big 'C' 'FW :V A i- - 'f V' Q Alffzf--fw ' 'A f ' ,- 'V' f,-ix : . Q '-17.3 V- . , ,v-:g ', . - - '-f,'Y:fV 'fL uv r-V' X.. 1 r ' : ,Ah mf y . v X l g.j- - 1,4 - - gag, A- , .. rf-,ac ' 55, -...br 1 --:.,.. V- , - nv- , Q f' ..:-' , 4. A. - -.. . ,.. .f..w.f'.-ff. , . . ' if V . f - -, '.1f 535i2'fSPw- ,. v, , -V I- ?,,3 ,3l f. '2i7Ji L5':1:x 541: jf,-'-. Ugg ' , ' ' :Q QL :L ' ' i75,j,'Q:L1-5Q:fggw L, , - : ..1.':rg:.:' ,.. rl' : 5- - ' fm- . V '2.'f ' 1: . : '- .. if - -Q V . f -f '.-,: , P - A,z,,-- , .,,,Arc,g.,ffq b ,.j- ., .az-1: V, V.u,1.,Qflw'e'L . , V VLA.. , - -. A , V. ,, ' V .r- . V..f.-5.9-,4V ,.,g,,.-..,n ' -1' '1 - i - '- -4-1 V . V V. 5 4, A Q ,. - - 2 ,2- '-:1 ' .- ' .' . ..z' Q . -f .- -a71Yl..,g. .lv se m'2': :a..-. .94 - f ' 'IQ l r rw, - ,V- . ...-. .Lp 5.,t..g:....-. 'EL-..-xaf,-.' , f'-vf .--1151.-Riga-Aj1V-, 1'-, --.-,pg if V - x.1 :,g.a,-g ,Q .11 wt.-V-r , 1 ff. E' . 1 1 fx ,C' A r x 1- lx f .1 'X 'fl ii: . .N .V -,Y Lf .1 1 rf f X wmb' VL. v. W. E. 5 E E rf-1 fl, W E. Ek: If V P I , n i 1 I :Q - N rg V I, a I 1 . 1 . H5 r ' - 1 5: if! 1 , fa-1 :QQ , ll.. N1 1. N' ,xl f 1 .V-I mi if v' rr V1-A T . F. ,. rf, 112 5. . r1 if 2-4 1 7 l FX.. 1 9 K U l if 4 ,1 is . 4 i . i l L' f. 7 tl - al ,J ' F fi' L ' i fi? Q V ' 1 rg -. L. ' -i I 5 , i , ' 1 ' i , 2' 411 ' RICHARD EMERSON ALLEN Tiffin, Ohio Heidelberg College Phi Alpha Gamma, Junior Interne at Crozier Hospital, Chester, Pa. ll ICKH was Dr. Snyder's pet target in Histology recitation. In the upper corner of the room in the fire house, slouched in his seat with his feet on someone's back below him, he quietly answered correctly each question. He was never disturbed, when after the question had passed through many others unanswered, the grinning doctor called on him. Then those next in line would be relieved by his disposal of the problem. This quality of helping others in danger engendered respect and admiraf tion. Dick was a lively figure at all of our dances. After the affairs it was not uncommon for him to get mixed up in the swinging doors of Lintons. He discussed such things rather quietly, and the next morning he sat in his usual frontfrow seat as routinely busy with his notebook. During the Xfray demonstration when the lights went out he found good support against the wall for his head. He could become militant in class debate. It wasn't easy to scuttle his arguments in any conversation. Everything he said was with a forced emphasis in his beliefs. Slow speech, moods, industry, good times and gravity-as we knew him. Homeopafhic Hospital, Providence, R. I. Obsfehics - Eighzyfnine 1 E 19 - MEDIC - 31 I I ,TY .. H. 4 Q' .I Q . .E ' T1 L' :A If' ' - 2: , 51 7, .5 lv I '? L? . 'i I: T' w J I ., . r Ei rr 5 4- I -4 .Y I . K1 ,. f . IZ 1 'f L I - L If ' I9 ' 1' lf-il , 1 J . -H Jg 1 rr A 1 ii 52 V. as I 1 'V I-Q W .'. .. ,L , .i Vs , 1 l .1 ' 1 Pa . . .Q T2 if i' 1. i I - .Q R .,, Q 3 DQ- I ', l V 1. I 1' I , .- U x vi 'Q A 1 5. .1 ,. i , I'- E. li 51 I ' , I' 1' . gl' T' rl- ' in I Vi lf 'Ffa ,. W, . it at 'Tai-ATT 3 if l ,, me--N. me -4 ee- e . strait MELVIN FRANCIS AMES Ipswich, MHSS- Hahnemann College of Science Glee Clubg MEDIC Staffg Phi Alpha Gamma ll EL came from way down east with his distinct New England manners. He joined our class in the second year after a remission in his education. By the time of this union he was moderately wellfacquainted through his own and the experience of older brothers, with the prominences and failures in the curriculum. His speech was soft and evenly modulated. It reminded us of something traditional, way back and wellffounded. It was akin to that Southern talk which we alls and over yondersu when not careful. He sang, too. Cften, when unconscious of any listener, he deeply went through some refrain. He said corking when pleased so that it sounded like caulking It is reputed that he was the only man to get a real smile out of Wally Kratz-when that noteworthy was peeved. He very deliberately listened when addressed and hesitated before making answer, probably blinking first and setting up his tortoisefshell rimmed glasses. When he joked, he interpolated understandable remarks with a sincere chuckle. His confabs with intimates were revealing. It was difficult to write personally of a man in an armor of gentility. Rhode Island Homeopafhic Hospiial, Providence, R. I. Materia Medica Ninety 'J S al t ,. 'D ,v l . W4 l I i l l M: '4 J 1 l ii 4 . si , l V fr 1 l J 5 , 131 ' 1 l zu. ' -1 -1+ :fig -, ,gl --4 . 4 4.1 10 - L 'i J DAVID L. ANDRUS Camden, N. Hahnemann College of Science ll AVE had reserved for him in lecture one seat on the front row by the aisle. Probably no one else ever sat there, We caught a picture of him bending over his notefbook, taking notes word for word by the stroking of his greenftinted pen. No one can say that he ever missed a classg his seat seemed always filled. His notes were neat and artistically perfect. For one who missed a lecture, Dave's notes were the most reliable for copy. The general property of his person illustrated detail and precision. His hands were almost the proverbial nlilyfwhitef' His kerchief always looked debonnair in the corner of his coat pocket. There were times when he was hypercritical and in the extremes of this he could 'become bitterly derisive. He flushed easily and the prominence of his seat gave this weakness no privacy. Many a lecture was scattered with his questions. The categories and most difficult names were received by Dave with a How do you spell that, Doctor? He aligned himself with a few close friends and dispensed no confidences beyond them. This was only a character in the totality of his private person. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine Ninetyfone 19 - MEDIC - 31 rw-i if 1 Q44 E 1 i if ii l . 53 K 1 4, 5 .F El .Q , Y. f - I . A 1 i iw 1' rn . li LF r' ii S' .. ff 1 33: 3 I gi' lg 15 ' i WJ 14 2 ix 1 1. if is 5 V. If ' f i -A ll ?'1f 31- .55 V. pi fi C' Z. fl if 2 . 4 -i ' , .fl t . ' is-1 1 s t 'Il QF Lf a ui ' l 'Q :HI bf j l is A' if Riff q Q Y 'Q ws , 1 A ff - Rl free,-2 ffl f- 5 is l i . ,-. . 4 'V ' 712' f T T' JA l will ri '- N i Q 'ij I . 3 if ,J k uv ' if f '. - rl .. . DANTE JOHN BEVILACQUA Philadelphia, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, BS. Pi Upsilon Rho, MEDIC Staff, Il Circolo Italianog President Il Circolo Italiano ll HIEFM carried on as the big organization man. He served on committees. He managed athletics. He campaigned for dances, In his own Italian camaraderie he was the little corporal, a type of dominance and leadership. Baseball took most of his time in springtime between reviewing the professionals and organizing class teams. At these times, when a schedule of games was due, he could be seen going from one class representative to another with challenges. He was derisive of teams that forfeited in the interclass play. His political force was never openly displayed, rather it played gracefully and unseen toward the desired result. He considered the union of fraternal groups as an expediency superior to divided tickets. He could talk circles around more loud orators and always with the same dark Latin emphasis and life. We often saw him shake his shoulder, throw his hands down and turn away with a halffscornful remark when certain attentions or advisements were distasteful. He most often walked into class with a black look on his face, turned to the rostrum, and noticing no one there, looked up to smile la very white smilej and call Save me a seat. Prefoccupation, deep thought, and spontaneous gaiety make the word picture of Chief Woman's Homeopa+hic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Materia Medica Ninetyftwo g. . qf-',', v , V ki . Y. .ia .v ' f 'ltl Y -'Vi 4 ' 4- .,.. , . ef, Vim., Qu. - , :.i A h 'wi n-i. I if AQ . 'Y' u .Ii 5. 2111: ' .lgi M- . .. ,, I' ,Q - A 1: ,v . iff f.'f , :gi .' 174 ' ' 2.1117 , 4- -- fl - -' Qi!! J fel' . .. +G, , up . . gf. 5:1 fiil' f , V 'I'::.z . gf' r 4' ' , ' I 2 .- 421 ' fx . ' .,:V. .Vi . . J -. . ., .-fm. r X , .. , Eff - Q LZ. ' ' -'fx' . -' ' ' Nfl - 4 -. ' .V X t 1- l -' 2 'haf . . :- XQYN u' ,- ' pi' ,F LY. fr.. . . . pi' . l..,: ' 4.5 PLZ? . 'fiilh fl? 1 iris- .l 'H-lvl' ' f .,. . 55'-,Q . my 2 f ' FE , ff v- r I'-fa, r.. E112 52 'J is ,- I' - . f--1 . sf ,- J, . ll' . ag, ..., FQ: iv.- ..-1... ral. i ' I:':.s ,. -' I-lg. at -s .- -3, .. .' L1- na. . .-.. . .N . .. , 1. as -5 ,' mn. . an ', . .4 CVE' , '!. ,, ,... -fr - , .-,.., ,, qs' lu -I .,. .iff -7 v . ID! ' I a x 1 - is . .-' - v L . ig: i. - .. , zo, 'it f' ig- . L '1. fa .xo . '.- 'Tf' - I -'v' '. X Tfgr. i fi - .sf ,. , . 1.-w .' 1 Al 4.2 ' Af' ' 'iz-'-' Guy, AJ' ,- ZW' Six . ,:, 4: i.f, 15' '. i:: -' 1. ,- fri, 12 H - , 'IN . . . --V I .Q- ff: ' lily' ' ' 'vi - . -:rn -- ' ,AQ , Li. :lv- Wil All-4.1 1 Q P' ii .i l T JASON LOUIS BLEVINS Richmond, Ky. University of Kentucky Alpha Tau Omegag Mercer Univeflvlacon, Gal-Ph.G. LEVINS leisurely swaggercd into our first class session with the distinction of a man from Kentucky. On all occasions he was quietly humorous and revealed his local color only when he talked. Anecdotes and stories relative to any discussed subject were his most important utterances. The liquid smoothness of his speech made a more serious topic an easy chatter and pleasant to hear. Wheii he was a Freshman on rainy days he walked down Fifteenth Street wearing a yellow slicker placardecl with a great black NU. of Kf' and hatless. This was our original collegiate habit. His most constant companion was Sloan. To the observer this was a rather taciturn relationship. They were always together and yet rarely appeared to be in animated discussion. They walked around with a nonchalance and an acquired composure. Here's hoping they both develop big corporations. Few will forget the day that Blevins overlooked where one lecture ended and the other began. Time will never edge the humor of that error. If horsefracing and sleep are at all analogous he had found excellent diversions. No one ever came from Kentucky who wasn't blessed, and Blevins was no different from his brothers and sisters. Huron Road Hospifal, Cleveland, Ohio Pathology Ninetythree 9 - E D l C - 3 l Y.. I , if i LESTER LEROY BOWER Berwick, Pa. Gettysburg College Kappa Delta Rhog Alpha Sigma, Glee Club fl, CJ, Crchestra fl, Zj ll IGERH began his onslaught of the faculty in our first year, when after the demonstration in Anatomy he would corner Dr. Phillips and ask him names of minute foramina and the insertion of minor ligaments. From the deeper rows after a pause in lecture we would hear, Question, Doctor? and know that Tiger was on the job. In the most pacific discussion he would suddenly assert, No, but what burn me up and if there was any opposition to this speech he would just as suddenly snap out, Scram! We won't forget that, We ought to get a break sometime around here. There was a time when they gave him a break in allowing him to play his clarinet at a concert. After the grand chance he found his instrument stuffed with paper. They passed Tiger up six rows of seats in the firehouse one day. His good humor took this treatment sportingly and no one was devoured by Tiger in counterfattack. He wore octagonal spectacles after the fashion of old Ben Franklin. At times he came home without them and the next morning Tiger was looking in deskfdrawers and under his bed. His watchfchain must have been dropped by an R. R. brakeman. The links together resembled a handcuff. All he needed was an Elks tooth pendant, and a horseshoe stickfpin. Tiger went in for riding boots, golf clubs and summer camps. In all he adapted himself well to both curriculum and social companionship. Montreal Homeopathic Hospi+al, Province of Quebec Medicine Ninetyffour 19 - MEDIC -l 31 I , i TTT? Via 1 -Lil ' H 'M '. V - 4 in i 5. v' ' .15 V fi 15 . ,X in l -4 3 Y , 11 Q f -'M If A ' l Q' . is ii -f ' xi P1 J T liar. L- , 7 'SL pl l it ,H l b , '?3 di 'lg 7 ., ,a .. fl 33 :iii ' ' 5 a Y ,al -. T5 -ff 1, Ei 1 ly i ' ':f V' f fiji 'D . i ' K 1 A 4 . i .fl , i .fi Ei fi I Ll. fl if: i L 'wi 2' 2- u 1 wi W . 3. ,- I.: '-4' K' L, 7 ' -,,- -.. ,AY ,, h- E, AAKY Wi' L4 -if BERNARD SAMUEL BRETHERICK Colwyn. Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S Pi Upsilon Rhog Orchestra fl, 2, 3, 41 E SHALL not deviate from our established program of truthfulness. 'Then again character delineation is attained by more ways than one. Widespread inquiry about Bretherick brought out the unique fact that no one knew much about him. Since medical parlance is second nature with us-we may say that Bretherick's history is negative. His foibles have escaped the critical attention of the class-perhaps because he has none. There is no peculiarity in his behavior. He does not sing, swear or shout even when it is most necessary and pardonable. Unobtrusiveness is an art with him. Whether he had interests other than those associated with a medical career is a problem of imaginative but unreliable conjectures. Enough of these vague suppositions! One fact is notable. He looks upon the approach of an examination with unfeinted trepidation. I don't know a thing, is his favorite exclamation. Selffdepreciation because of its rarity is almost a virtue. We admire Bretherick for having the courage to voice that fear which most of us feel about impending examinaf tions. And so in our appraisal of Bretherick we borrow those indennite and yet so signincant words, made famous by our Dean- He's a fine fellow. Woman's Homeopafhic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine Ninetyfjive 19 L- MEDIC - 31 vc. E VA 1 3 L H .. L., K H. , ,, .. 1 . ig .vi i, if Qi 'if . ' I f . fl 2 K . lv , ,r ,, -' L ., . . i., L V-L .' Q51 JAMES BELL BUTLER SW9d9Sb01'0, N. J. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Secretary of Institute 141, Pi Upsilon Rhog Art Editor of MED1Cg Treasurer of Pi Upsilon Rho Q10 ll IMMIEM took the prize in the second year when he bent double on late after' noons dissecting the arterial system. He had red dye all over him and all things proximal. In the end they put the job in a glass case to scare th-e Freshmen into study. There was nothing mobile about jimmie's countenance. It at once could conceal interest or indifference, worry or relief. He usually sat on the front row, where he took actual notes. Cther times when he was in the middle section he drew classy auto' mobiles with stream lines and goggled drivers. just as often he would say How 'bout that? Isn't that somethingf' And in the development of stream lines he drew posters for dances on which girls were rampant in the briefest of costumes. His caricature of the lecturing doctor was most often the painful truth. He could draw bald heads and double chins perfectly. While drawing cartoons for the Medic, he complained at first of a dearth of ideas, and then when we became concerned opened up with a whole bag of them. Cigars were usually on his person in active duty and he chewed on the butts. He walked around quietly, apparently very remote. However, inquiry or stimulation uncovered a diversity of preoccupations in that mind from the realm of work and play. U. S. Navy Neurology Ninetyfsix pw- r 1 'Vw pu 'III H. tif. -Xxx ra .. .1 vc, is HJ fix f.. I .31 iff 9. .ll -W if laik Kg V, :- m. -it for -,. rj. I1 -iii, .., L34 ji N. x. ,- ,-y V1 .fu .pq . v -'Y s-. 4, 'Yi y... f. ff. E. V. 1 . V. l li fqj l. r F? E , E. Q. L. F 1, ,,. in -FF A A.. p. s 'ZA 5' ,J iw' V51 JUDAH LOUIS CAPLAN Philadelphia, Pa. P. C. P., Penn State, Temple Phi Lambda Kappa APLAN had about him an air of professional dignity. This attitude was not born of affectation. It was the result of natural endowment in the form of a nicely placed alopecia areata and a tall personage, both suggestive of sedateness. Agreeableness and condescension were an integral part of his aloofness so that it was never objectionable nor marked enough to obtrude itself violently on one's attention. He was characterized by a multiplicity of passions. The foregoing statement is a lofty way of saying that he loved his wife, internal medicine and that abominable game of bridge. The Hrst two loves were recent and excusable acquisitions. Bridge, we believe, antedated the other two loves and constituted a rival distraction upon which he lavished much time and thought. His informal discussions regarding the different types of bids and his glib quoting of bridge authorities prove the variety of forms which intellectual perversions can assume. Perhaps the keen interest he betrayed in his work was the explanation for the great number of times he was seen in post' lecture colloquy with our professors. Perhaps he was explaining the intricacies of bridge-but we doubt it. At the end of the lecture he most consistently went up to ask his residual question and could been seen walking out of the door with his ear turned to some instructive doctor. He had all of the appearance and all of the quality of an interested student. Norfhern Liberties Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine Ninetyfseven - MEDIC - 31 1, .3 L ti T1 .5 ' ' J 1 72 g ,.,, L . , .14 , 3 ff Q, 1 J 5 il ' .l .1 Q , --1 if i M ia V 'Qi ,F 'S 1 'g 3- f ci -f W 1 1 - 3 4, 3 QQ? .1 7,. 7' ,.. . . .if 1-15 M ff. F71 2 .. 2 'A li ' , 57 . l if .3 H F7 L2,,'E W- ,- s-- ---.ij . i ,LL ,, Avi, .iq ,., , J .X i J' 5 ,, gf L Q-- . ,F tl- R W-i X L. . ,, 'fi P.. ai + ,E ,Q jf ., H1 K fn- rn .2 9. - M .. ' .: 1 lc. -L F A vi , N, -,A - it N. V ,V ,- , 7. ,- j ff, ig: if gf -,N 4 ...- 0 1 Y. K, , HERBERT GREASON CARTER E?-St0I'1, Pa. Lafayette College, B.S. Phi Delta Theta ERE is Nick of unfailing equanimity, noted for his tolerance, his ardor at times, his weekfend jaunts, and the most perfect black moustache in the class. He was not one of violent likes and dislikes, of flaming prejudices or passions. He carried no Haunting banners of heraldry, of challenge. He had the quality of a judge in the placing of his decisions, his enactments. Steadiness was so prominent that we feared the look of a vapidfvamp could scarcely upset his decorum. For years in lieu of folly he suppressed a desire to see the girls at the Trocadero. This is a strange conception of our proper subject. In further study of his pleasurefpersonality we mention that in every year he learned to make the most out of weekfends. He always had a Hock of good stories on hand, prefacing each with his special fever hear the one about, and then on to some more dirt. For all of his lighter moments he gave one the appearance of erudition. He was diligent, and at times when his principles were assaulted he was hardfheaded. He will interne in Reading, reaching his decision when he learned that there he would receive movie passes, ball'game tickets, and spacious grazing privileges generally, if you please. Reading Homeopathic Hospital Obsfehics Nmetyfeight 2,1 '54 il:-4 ik., ' E'-' , ij ci lil ' R C ,i i lfif. F-'fb gr, . I, .P 1- - SQ., . 'ri-. 'Qs .. .i,.- ' lf. ll . 'EZx ' ,N-, Zz 1 . ua, ' .1 cp.. lgflf 12' .Kg 'g Y . . :, Sf? 1: 7.4. . +w' . up . 171- , 4-, EC' yu' P? U' :J-5. . 1,1 . ,720 '. X 7l.', 19 -3 MEDIC i 'fri i 4 . i H . 1 W i 'Q .9 l .1 .. .fl X .4 .., ,X I '3 .fi E '. A,- Q 4 .x .1 'i - . .aa,ccaaa. a SOLOMON CHARTOCK Philadelphia Q' I Temple University Basebal,i'ynPhi' Lambda Kappa ll OL was characterized byfazi air ofassurance. This: so to speak was the keyf note symptom. His oniyfdistraction was.the blonde fiancee. Bridge ranked as the second distraction-perhaps' not sox attractive as the pfirst, but nonetheless absorbing. When he was nociplaying bridgef hisioflicial capacity was that of an advisory committee to the other bridge players. Of'course, itcwas a sclffappointed duty and hence sometimes objectionable to his classmates. Vv'c have it on good authority and we accept it in good faith that. So'l wore his brothershhatg Since this description is supposed to be an intimate revelation of Sol's character, we will go so far as to say that he wore heavy underwear all the year around. Whether this fact is true or not, it is certainly in keeping with the care whichxhe took of his health. He selected his food with care. Vkfhenever he ate something disagreeable to his stomach, he developed a fourthfclass determinative symptom-that is, his right elbow began to hurt. Gradually he discarded the habit of insisting upon the correctness of his opinions. In his perennial arguments with Katz, Sol learned to concede victory once in a while. He rose in our esteem from year to year. We learned to tolerate his faults and value his invariable preparedness in the classroom. Mount Sinai Hospilal, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine Ninety-nine .13 19 - MEDIC - 31 , 1 . . Ei. l i ll.- T T fa ' J ' Ea ,. ..4, l i '33 .ii 4 r ga' is I ,K - A . V5 'ii lL . ff- if .K . R A '- . E aj lv hr. f P5 92 1 S4 '-' 'Z-.-4 QL -1 L-X 1 , -: 'Q , , gn. 1 if Q FL iii if bi, E T af' 'if 152 1 s li if T 5 il Lg, IJ .l if - ' Q' FS- ec l . L l -4--'H Y -- f----.-.,.,-- ...,..,,.... rg rf I DONALD FRANKS CLOSTERMAN Germantown College of Science, B.S. Class President Clg Circulation Manager MEDICQ Alpha Sigma LITTLE chap wearing large glasses find a -rdguish moustache came through successfully despite a doleful outlook- upon his, ghances to pass every exam he has taken. Don, a good studentglookeci. unfavorabley- as the class, year after year, became less boisterous and noisv,',to 'grow into a unit prematurely settled. He was one of the prime movers, in the Cult of Fun. The 'friends he picked strengthened our belief in the quality of his youth. He never became too serious to relax in some happy, humorous camaraderie. He often took thai- part of someone being criticized, and at such times he would .shake his finger and say, 'Now guard that tongue! His pointed finger was indispensable.irr'debates and he gestured vigorously with it. He would say Now Albert! 'at nhe pertinent time and the addressed would quiet down docilely. Don was very apt at appearing very serious even in the presence of some internal wit. He had a very serious mien and a coaxing voice when he addressed our class as president. This manner was effective in controlling the class. In some quaint Camden 'ltemple of philosophy he may talk much and to the end we listen. Ann May Memorial Hospifal, Spring Lake, N. J. Obsfe+rics One hundred 19 - MED.C - 3? . , l E Fa F .v c. ..- ., J 1, l l' fl l ill l lf? 75 4 551 ' l vi. ii 1 i I, ln .4 ,., . , ..a -1, .f 5 'Q 4 5' ' ,qu . iq T ' Q! f , . 'Le' a-L-- . ,L -, . ,-W is T ,,,.-1 , . . FRANKLIN BETTES COOPER Oakmont, Pa. Washington and jefferson College, BS. Delta Tau Deltag Glee Club f4j, Alpha Sigma, Phi Sigma N THE early years of our college experience Frank paraded around with his severely dignified gait, somewhat resembling a lordosis, and made little noise outside of his clique. Later when he did expand beyond that intimate group he showed his bag of tricks. We who did not suspect such humor behind such quietness were surprised. No doctor who lectured to us was safe from his mimicry. In falsetto tones, he imitated the professor of pathology, and did just as well with the roaring Bill in his deepest efforts. Frank, when we uncovered some personal man' nerism, jokingly declared that we were awful, and that he did not know anyone more terrible than us. Kistler, who chuckled spontaneously during the quiet of a lecture, never knew when Frank would order L'Throw him out, Doctor. This team together could upset the mighty from their pedestals. Frank became interested in xfray plates one summer. He kept several with a personal touch in his desk and referred seriously to the danger area in the petrous portion of the temporal bone, In our last year we passed by his door most every night to see him, book, slippers and all, biting a tooth pick and reading one of his Systems of Medicine. When Bower became especially effusive, Frank shaking his finger at him would say Now you cut that out. Most often then the Navy was being discussed. Nothing better could be said of any man than this-he found humor in all things. PiHsburgh Homeopathic Hospital Medicine One hundred one A9 - MEDIC - 31 - -- it--Y Y-,.., --,,,. ,,,.,,,, 75,7 -M -Y Y. ,--in Jw , i BENJAMIN JOSEPH COTTONE Dunmore, Pa. Temple University, St. Thomas College, Muhlenburg College Clee Club Q, 413 Il Circolo Italianog Newman Club ll EN notably sported red ties with big loose knots and wore collars that could be slipped over his head without unbuttoning. There was harmony between his ties and his complexion when he blushed, as both were very red. It is difficult to speak of him without going over his appearance, and so we must comment on hair that glistened like ice and never knew a ruffle. Early in our student days he was more restrained by the pressure of possible failure, but in the latter years confidence could be seen blooming all through him. It was then that he became our merry song and dance man with some very light jest for even the most serious situation. His studying was rather erratic at times. It was always going full speed before an exam. By the time he reached his senior year he had become prohcient in methods of study suggested by Shirinian. When he talked it was always with half a laugh hidden somewhere and with gestures that never explained anything. The discipline and routine of pathology laboratory were irksome at times, and Ben never did fall in love with a microscope, In clinics of medicine he usually sat on the front seating row, and for such prominence he most often was hit by the cannonballs from the upper amphitheatre. He was assiduous in his noteftaking, and those most intimate say that he read these notes by his apartment window. Hahnemann Hospital, Scranfon, Pa. Obsfefrics One hundred two - sa- , if-T? iffslf' EDWARD DOTY DAKE Rochester, N. Yq Hahnemann College of Science Glee Club OJ, Phi Alpha Gamma ll QTY began the medical years as the clown and humour column of the class. When he walked into the classroom, he was greeted by facetious cheers and stamping of feet. He in return would bow and genuflect, smiling broadlly down on his little children. Later he too wore the cloak of dignity, though not as conf spicuously as some others. He still had the charm of a hearty laugh, a good joke and tricks up his sleeve. There was always something attractively humorous about him, even at those terrible occasions when he explained himself out of difficulty and wrinkled his forehead. At the most critical time, he would laugh and excitedly gesture, Now listen! There were many in the class who underwent the point of his comical analysis. He spent a lot of his time in an old Ford, and with this he carried, in the evening you know, some of those diversities that life hands out in colored packages. He tried to mimic personalities, but was only successful when they fitted into his own jolly pattern. On the way to Allentown, he organized crime and cheering. He startled everyone out of their lethargy. Before the trip was over he had become physically static, but no one will forget that he started the old ball a'rollin'. Genesee Hospifal, Rochesfer, N. Y. Maferia Medica One hundred three 'il fill l 3 l EDGAR JAMES DEISSLER Meadville, Pa. Allegheny College Alpha Sigmag Alpha Chi Rhog Delta Sigma Rho ll OC was the man who sat near the front row, humped up in his seat like a camel, with his knee on the back of the seat before him. Most often he wrote notes diligently, but then in some lapse of thinking he would hold the end of a pen in his mouth and appear very detached. No one can but admit his extreme seriousness and his apparent concentration. So perfect was this serious mien that rarely did he laugh aloud, and we were surprised when he entered into any excited debate. He was noted for the inclusion of a distinct coterie of friends. In this group he handled some sort of magic by which he acquired a subtle leadership. Few recognized this, but it was a force unseen and powerful. Into his fraternity group he carried this same intangible leadership. His virtue was telling the truth, no matter how much it hurt. He was frank and ingenuous at all times. It was only fun when he began to ride his acquaintances. In the last year he suddenly became more ndoctorishf' We have visions of him in medical dispensary with his box filled with the cards of his patients. He had a propensity for blushing in tone similar to the color of his hair. At West Chester Homeopathic as a junior interne he planned for bigger and better things. Millard Fillmore Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y. Obslefrics One lumdred four l 4 .111 . . 475 Q . . ..-Q ng , . . I l 4 i 1 1 , 1 'I '. N l ffl 1111 1 flfw 1 .-4 -r s .til sub .1151 . ,. 1 f x ' . F Q :T if-if ' .-11,2 .- gl- iff? . iJil 4 3,3 af. f J.. , .. 'L 1.211 ' 51151 V x'J 4 ,.,,.,. l' 25: E61 ,qi '. 32? 3552 1,131 ' .x .C',?' 3 .1 I .53 , .. .J-' ,A 19 - MEDIC - 31 , - , l . 1 l i l . l . V? l r . 1 5 g . f 5- ', ' .3 Gi , - 33 52 5 l 5 Avn. ' .-i , ' il, 1, jr 5 W W sg 1 . L ' '47 'ill L . ri .. A .. . f :lil , V -V i 1 1 .-, , ' . Il V15 ' ' .3 '11 gi: . 5 1 'Zi l A 'Q' as 3 i.,- fs.. 'd K ,ag .N LH ff: Ur Hy! 'ft .1 ,J ' lr 'wr ' ' .3'+':l' iw ' l rl' H :J .Qu V . 1 'il lr' W ' .ji -lf. w, V 55:15 l W .nl ,,,,,-T-j, A A YYY Vim, A Y-,wif YA, FERNANDEZ FERNANDO DE LA VARA Gibara, Cuba Temple University, Muhlenberg College HE little hot tamale from Cuba who pretended to be unknowing and who conf cealed some rare secrets was our concept of Dee At times, we forgot that he was still in our class. About once a month, we would see him prominently standing down in the front of the room before lecture, one finger in his vest pocket looking up for someone or a seat. When he spoke it was in a strident voice and in broken Spanish attractively tuned to his chic person. He was one of the group of foreigners who had the doctors wondering what they were talking about. It could have been any' thing. Underneath quietness there was excitability and fire that expressed themselves notably in two situations. First, in the contradiction of a point when he shouted, No, no-not that way, I'll tell you, gesticulating and red-faced. Second, in the perusal of the ladies projected on the silver screen before Doctor Sylvis's lecture, when in the dark he sort of glowed and said Babee! His eyes was very bright at anytime. His face was very red. His manner was very quiet. His person was very neat. In composite, the zealous Cuban ready for a conquest. La ncasfer General Hospifal Medicine One hundred five JOHN ADAM DOERING BFYH Athyll, PH- Bryn Athyn Academy Sigma Deta Pig Pi Upsilon Rho F SOMEONE patted you on the back in an enthusiastic fashion, when you turned it would be john most often. He possessed an ingratiating manner of always going about making friends. He was always keeping in touch with people, How have you been? - Where have you been? were the common queries. He didn't especially companion with one or two men, but, in the same ingratiating manner, he moved about the groups putting in his word, his pat on the back, and his smile. At times he resembled that legendary power behind the throne with his subtle and unexpected presence. John was a born campaigner. He campaigned once for the most inconf spicuous absence, but lost when in his later years he enthusiastically followed clinics and dispensary work. About 1930 there was a furore in the central community on the wisdom of a social amendement. Chestnut Street was headquarters. John invited the disgruntled citizens in the door of the office, where he passed out red buttons and pamphlets. Half the class were wearing these buttons. He was a clever lobbyist-the designation was more accurately a Crusader, Heppy was worried by his unusual questions. These were only the result of Johns appointed quest to find out. When interested in a cause he displayed great zeal. Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospifal, Pifisburgh, Pa. Psychiahy One hundred six 16.22 jx . ., fglfplfm . . ' V -1' J . Q: - . JOHN JOSEPH DOMANSKI Philadelphia, Pa. Villanova College Polish Intercollegiate Clubg Lambda Kappa Deltag Newman Club OHN didn't walk into Hahnemanng he marched in. From the start he was pugnacious and carried the attitude of a devil may care. He was proud and independent. The other side of him carried a certain interest and a certain obsession in gayety. What this entailed, though it was very evident superlicially, was not clearly apparent to those of us who were not on the inside, Evidently it was a career in fancy which could be rather intense, emphatic, and interesting. His successful enterprise on the side of Pan did not umbrage the quality of his studentship. The same intensity that he carried into all things marked his book career. He fought into the problem of study as aggressively as he challenged in any group. He made an awful noise in the lower lecture room when Saji put that window up, and was prone to call the cold ones uconsumptivesf' etc. john, when a class financial program was being debated, would very likely challenge in the name of the poorer men as their knight templar. It is creditable of him that through personal hardship he fought to the iinish. S+. Vincen+'s Hospiial, Erie, Pa. Medicine One hundred seven - MEDIC 1 31 ir, f ,W DOMINIC DONISI Dayton, Ohio Dayton University Baseball Manager QSM Il Circolo Italiano OMINIC started riding a mechanical horse in our first year and jolted over many miles of wearisome nothing. He tried Indian clubs, medicine balls, rowing machines, diets, and Lucky Strikes. In all this effort he lost a few pounds of excess avoirdupois. It was enough to make his clothes look baggy, which, by the way, were made by Umar the Tentflvlaker. He was the original shadow for the cigarette copy, Coming events cast their shadows before. Typical of a fat man he had a voracious appetite and a lively humor. Whenever he talked it was with an emphaf sizing finger between your ribs, At the slightest interruption this finger dug a little deeper. In the necessity of being serious or even angry, Dominic would shrug his tonnage and cast a black, black look at an adversary, start to walk way, but then turn and come back for more. When we were very young and very green he told us a lot about the oil game in the Wild West. We caught the spectacle of Dominic with gum coat and boots rushing through storms of oil putting corks in the holes. In lecture room he was always on the end seat and-the aisle. The man beside him just tried to write notes. To prophesy lean years for him is like prophesying an eclipse without first looking at the almanac. Bethesda Hospital, Cincinnafi, Ohio Anatomy One hundred eight l 3, HOWARD JUSTIN DRISCOLL Philadelphia Georgetown University, A.B. Orchestra UL Glee Club fl, IJ ll HIC carried the banner of Ireland with him through his college years. The esprit de corps of the group which he assembled upheld the green in many an argument with assailants. Fighting spirit was in his blood. Any retort he made was pointed and effective. It was useless to attempt to harass him with mere words. At the least intrusion of criticism he delivered about two sidelong utterances which left one biting his tongue and feeling useless. His mind was acutely tuned to such clever responses and very adaptive. He was confident of himself at all times and possessed some of the excellence of human pride. When he spoke it was with authority and surety. We remember him saying many times, Just let me take care of it, and he would be off on another big thing. Evidently he had been around, for in a debate on prohibition he could describe the flavors and favors from the West Coast to Amsterf dam. Chicky was another of the singing and' dancing men. This attribute with his quick wit made him adept once on the professional stage. He covered a circuit of vaudeville. Most of the oldftime gayety in him was covered by a veneer of indifference. It was very easy to meet Chic,l' and his complex of jokes and spirit attached many friends. As a junior interne at Childrens he came to class many mornings sleepyfeyed and looking at his watch every few minutes. Obsfefrics and Surgery One hundred nine zf'1iEDIC - 31 ' V. ,A . 1 l? 'ni , , 1 it il ' i- , To ,. V K . J- - I ' ' i... T . 5 Q5 Q , .,: gg RZ f U-,N--ifTAwV fig W H- X' g mv-HAL, i-L-1 RICHARD E. H. DUISBERG GGFIHPIHEOWI1 Hahnemann College of Science Alpha Sigmag Boxing Team, Art Editor of MEDIC, 531 ll ICKN land there are those who may say Dunkelbergerj could frown and sneer like a VonfStroheim. If he came into a class late, it was always with the same fighting look that he carried into his gymnasium workouts. One hand was always in his pockets and the other held the ubiquitous black Lefax. This note-book held stranger things than lectures. Such creatures as Krazy Kats with long black tails and NVhifflefHounds with whiskers and asterisks for eyes interpolated a dissertation on the sheet anchors of stomach complaints or the hotfmilks of therapeutics. He and Hughes would sit side by side and compete for the ugliest and queerest of creations. It was usually Dick who won. So in the course of evolution he became our Staff Artist, when apes and dinosaurs stirred about the pages never to die. He drove a cab during the Hrst years and that experience made him one of our most dangerous drivers. When exams threatened we heard lots about preparation for the night before. At these gatherings in his room, posted with drawings of beautiful women, study was rather secondary. Come in and have some wine and then we will study a little, was the usual invitation. The wine was very good. In the course of a certain debate, Dick would complain, Aw, you don't understand her. There was something in his manner of cynical calm and a flavor of adventure which made him no less a dreamer. Ann May Memorial Homeopathic Hospital, Spring Laine, N. J. Psychiatry One hundred ten 19 S- - 31 l l ei '1 J l I 'R :.4 ., up 'Y - . .1 - V 4. i ,Qi fl A z' ii 1 'i i Ei .L+ at ,. . W Cgrrr HARVEY FRANK ENYEART Greensburg, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Pi Upsilon Rho, Class Treasurer QU, Secretary, Glee Club fl, 2, 3, 41 ARVEY was the prize crossfexaminer of our class. No professor was immune to the barrage of questions from front row, first seat on the right side of the aisle. This seat was always in reservation for him. At time when some consciencefstricken student from the last snoring row came down for salvation and looked for a place on the scholar's bench, he was sure to ind a black notefbook in this place before Harvey came. His loyalty to that piece of wood should have made it grow leaves again when he left. It was from this rostrum that he kept the human encyclopedias stepping. Dr. Frank, who took Harvey under wing in one of our latter years, was rifled with questions about the physics and mechanics of those infernal machines he showed us. Something happened in the Senior year and Harvey questioned less. Monday morning there was talk about the church meeting and someone told us that Harvey led in the singing. He was active in most organization work, and in the general class politics he was a quiet but active factor. Those big clear eyes appeared so unknowing and so naive but in these growing years they should strain to the lure of knowing and questions answered. Wesf Jersey Homeopathic, Camden, N. J. Materia Medica One hundred eleven E i 3 19 - MEDIC - 31 ARTHUR LEWIS EVANS Pittsburgh, Pa. Muskingum College, B.S. Phi Alpha Gamma ll RT attracted our attention with his casual grin. This was a goodfnatured expansion of his lips and an inclusive display of many teeth. It was a gesture of amusement, derision, embarrassment, or indifference. The grin became a convertf ible symbol of many moods. He was notable for choreiform movements and actions, His body at times seemed to move in sections. It was really snakeflike. Art was a prophet on the details of an examination. He knew what was going to be asked, what to study, and what was important. In the position of prophet he assembled a minor clique before the forecasted dates and discussed Probable questions. He smoked a pipe. When he placed it in his mouth it appeared as if he were going to swallow it. His mouth opened generously around it. Art was a quiet and careful student. He worked methodically. Going to drama was his diversion. A friend in answer to an inquiry said L'He is crazy about them. Wesf Jersey Homeopathic Hospifal Medicine One hundred twelve 3 -. 1 4 .3 .1 1 ' 4 . Y-:Q EFI 19 I Ml.. D I C ei ffr- -A'f'- ------'A- -' -' -' f f 'Y -- --W - V .. -c l i LE ROY WILKINS FALKINBURG. B. S. Collingswood, N. J. Hahnernann College of Science ERGY was master of the nomenclatures and hidden wells of obscure learning. In the routine duties he was always technically prepared. His aloofness had some of the charm of constancy broken only by a passive smile. Some might have said he was deeply engrossed in books as if this were unnatural. Rather that he found in those books real living things and a singular devotion. We wish that he had told us more of those ideals. He would walk into the library at luncheon hour to consult with the attendant on matters of publication or he would sit and read, eating peanuts. Often he would be seen wandering through the old section where the dust was thick and the mantels held only more remote journals. When he was in this atmosphere he was blind to anything external. Sometimes his questions in class involved heavy statistics and cumbersome measurements expressed in many decimals. The references he made to the ultrafscientific progress of the laboratory gave us a picture of this very distinct personality. Gradually, we knew that Max Gottlieb, the fictionfpathologist of Arrowsmith, was his prototype. The analogy was prefeminent in the one feature of his very scientific scrutiny and laboratory mind. Some day he may give up those Prussian haircuts and be less astute, but then some day too we expect him to be a pathologist dissecting rabbits with Prussianic acumen. Wesf Jersey Homeopathic Hospifal, Camden, N. J. Medicine One hundred thirteen Zi s -1 , I TV? HOWARD A. FELDING PiCtSbUrgh, Pa. Duquesne University, B.S. ll EDS qualihed for the position of chief class wit. He was a master in the art of making superfluous and pointed remarks. No one of his group was safe from his witty references and nwisefcracksf' He would come bouncing up the aisle of the lecture room and say Here! just as his name was being called. This was the signal for Schmidt and his coterie to make an extra noise. He came in with a shiny Palmolive glow on his face, maidenish and all that. To some extent he derived a nickname from this. The glow was increased when certain references were made to it. His answers to serious questions were often sharp and unexpected. He was always capable of doing the unanticipated and surprising. Reds was interesting for the development of his friendships. A good fellow among all, he usually became attached to some quiet man, whose thoughts and actions were hidden from the rest of the class. As camerafman for certain of the darkfroom lecturers, he had to stay awake while about him camped his resting cronies. At times he made mistakes in the operation of his machine. These ranged from projecting the picture upside down to displaying on the screen slim hosiery advertisements, illustrated. The latter were received with cheers and applause and cries of More! More! Reds then with a grin would project a boney pelvis from De Lee. Piffsburgh Homeopafhic Hospifal, Piffsburgh, Pa. Obsfefrics One liimdred fourteen 1 9 - D I C lf? l 'i ,,. i l EDWIN H. FENTON Ann Arbor, Mich. University of Michigan Pi Upsilon Rho fPresident 41 'I DDIEN began his career at Hahnemann by being homesick and lonely. It was an indefinitely short time that this feeling lasted. Before the end of the semester he had attached to himself enough of diversities to replace his loneliness. He had an aversion for crudity and quickly repressed the association of any who didn't act quite nice. Prompt in his response to studies, the night before an exam, sleepyfeyed, he often said, I don't give a damm, I just dion't feel like studying tonight. I'm going to bed early. The urging of the rest of the gang was of no avail. The next morning he made out just as well as the others. His favorite study seemed to be human nature on moonlit nights. The study involved a course of soft cadences and delicate whispers. Eddie controlled the factor of environment and usually was dominant. The Words were rather personal. Gay haberdashery and the cultivation of a pointed mustache were part of his personality. He closely lived within his cult of close associations. At times, he was real reticent, and at such times we judged he was serious until he released some gay remark. Grace Hospifal, Defroif, Michigan Obsiefrics One hundred fifteen 19 - MEDIC - 31 1 l l i ' 'Tl SFT -' 1,4 . . C' A 'ea . 1- -' la . 4 U ,. Q i ' l RL' 1 . Z T5 , ,,.- if za V' is A ' 1 E? l lei ' ' li. nj .lf it S.,-f 1 s . .f , .. . 3.-f f A. I ld l V i . V' 'I ' I' l, i'-1 iff. ii L. L j,' i F. ff 7' . H.. i L 5 H' li' ll ' Tqi lil, ffl' '1 -.EX ,El 1 . ' lf so 21 ' i ta? - TJ, C1 lx' -.1 , r. qs- ,4L..-- ...,..-,, , ,M , Y-,-, U ,, i GERALD PAYNE FINCKE Hatb0f0, PH- University of Pennsylvania, V.M.D. Class Secretary fl, 313 Treasurer of Institute Council f4jg Alpha Sigmag Alpha Psi, Undine B. C. ll ERRYM started off correctly by beginning to work on horses. As a graduate veterinary he was doctor before any of usg i. e., before the Junior year when everyone suddenly was introduced as doctor In any class election Jerry was usually on the lists. Most often we saw him prominently standing down at the desk after the election as one of the counters of the white ballots. He did things slowly but deliberately. He was most typicaly a big brother personality. Jerry expressed this character in most all his relationships, and in this span we ind his attention to college ties, fraternal bonds and feminine interest. As big brother to nurses he successfully found time to play bridge, confer and joke with them. Jerry gave one the impression of excellence and thoroughness in his performance of duties. We suspected that he was always desirious of making a good impression. Rarely did he become actively antagonisticg most often his severest remark was colored by an open smile. He was a partisan to athletics and professional sports. After the meal, over a cigarette and a cup of coffee, he would read scores and averages. He characteristically said, Now, wait a minuteln, in discussion. He was an amateur oarsman, and so he went on meatless diets, drank much milk, and spoke of the necessity of keeping in shape. Jerry was exemplar of simple living. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred sixteen gg' 4 : W . if E, 3. ,.,!.N. rf, , x 1 at ' fe. F5 .' QI'-f .1 , ffifv , 1,2 ., i , rl. ...QV ., .i :lag-i N., mfg? if .. . if 5. 'fig' ,K .. . . ,I ,,. .., X2 '--. c Us-r' ff., ,.,x,, . Eg, -. 5:55 .- .,': .. gas' uf.,- ii'-Q. k... , ., VJ., ,, . A' if! if-3.'L lit.. i A ef!! ,V - H -, ,I ,sh-,, dry A 1' HV- Q -' 'L .' ..-. L . 1 W ', ix T ., L -ga, -. ,gg :A Q. - kvx.,,:,. 'H 1,3 1' ,-.:. gay,-m... -, V, -i... fi' Z zif,-'nfl . ., .- ra 'Y ' . 1 , n. t 3. 153525 7 tif? Simi L rr ,r rc V J - A wifi.. v wk.- -, - lx K ' ':'..-,L 5-If . ,uh , g KX - ' Wm, . ,rv -A . l' ' : I X-- ,, 4.-l. . ,D i . . T T -,J -f. 'Y l rl: '. :k3,. 5, .'- r T' -. '-if . ,fgf .aff : swf if r: 'af q ci- 1-1+ in ii. gk. . 19 - MEDIC Bi T -' ' 'i i eff if f i 1 . la 'a- 'N r 34 .1' 3 . if 3 ,jl Y :il 'i .. x, ,i 71 :J ,, Ll' ,..a..?...-L,,-,, -,-g -sn Z 7,7 W N M-grin, JAMES EDGAR FLINN Pittsburgh, Pa. University of Pittsburgh, BS. Phi Gamma Delta, Glee Club fl, 2, 3, 4jg Phi Alpha Gamma, Basketball Coach Q-1-jg Basketball QI, 2, 3, 4, ll OCTQR, wouldn't CarbofVeg. be indicated in that case? jim has spoken and at the same time he fingers his ancient leatherfbound Materia Medica of the ages. There was usually no dispute, for more than likely he had prepared for each trick question by hours on the similia. Hill often entered into rare congress with Jim, Then the celestial magic of the highest potencies became real. In medical dispensary jim would offer some very obscure remedy when we were stuck on our therapeutics. Cccasionally we wrote the prescription under his direction and the prescription returned from the pharmacy with a not in stock notation. Then jim became mildly critical of the inadequacy of things. It was notable that he held up many underfclassmen while he prescribed for them. His fingers were always in use while he enumerated the points of quality in some remedy. He really couldn't prescribe without them, sticking them up, and knocking them down in grand fashion. In between classes we heard Let Me Call You Sweetheart in jim's tenor voice. Evidently the request was granted for in August, 1928, jim married her for better or worse. We make a rather juvenile note that he walked the floor at nights, and that he could accurately diagnose infant's colic. Piffsburgh Homeopa'l'hic Hospital Materia Medica One hundred seventeen :R lp. 4 lx 4 MORRIS GALLEN Philadelphia, Pa. La Salle College, BS., Temple University, Ph.G. RCM start to finish we watched this quiet man in a masque reveal himself in rare expressions. The reproduction of anything he said would never be as humorous as his own delivery with his own intonations and accent. A careful student, he was markedly fearful of failure. At times, when catastrophe was imminent during a quiz he bargained with the professor. With a persistent manner of holding on to his opportunities, he kept himself above average difficulty when the question was a little too hard. If in anatomy review he were asked about the temporal bone which he may have neglected, he was sure to protest for another question on that which he has just gone over. He was always out for news. News about the coming exams, the marks of the last one, which doctor would not come in, and the fate of scholars. Under any personal scrutiny or reference, he became rather starched. He didnit miss classes, he didn't fall asleep, he didn't fail to study and so on-rather model. But how he hated too many exams at one time. Captain considered himself one of the older men. Children's and Sf. Luke's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One lnmdred eighteen 1 -u . -12 'l .,., 1 . Q 1 ,u .. JI . 1 1 ' 4 J wifi 19 - MEDIC - 31 l i s l 'fr i ri Q' P -4 .-4 .1 :f J .1 1 i Q Li 1, .1 . ' 1, gf .- . ., L 'L - l .A .-Q. fi, f K1 fil 4 -- .1 1: ' 5' fl Q! 1 ig. Q1 - 4 1 j .,-. DQ, 1, - f V. .. , ,4 7 . 5' .4 54 'Hi j. fi C14 1 s. L. 1 T2 - . 5. sg 1 4- 1 ,f I V. ,-i'Li A 1 ,, Sl: .. . , .YWYYYW HARRY MILLER GARDINER Narbeth, Pa Hahnemann College of Science Orchestra ARRY in a deep, quiet voice spoke of proper things at proper times. He rarely deflected from the routine of doing everything as it should have been done. He was modest in the opinion of others. Possibly this was only a guise for his indisposition to enter into exhibition and word display. He made much progress in the transition from the Sophomore to the Junior years. From the quiet schoolfboy type he grew maturely into a personality of deliberate manner and professional astuteness. At times his voice seemed tremulous. Most often his answer to indefinite conversation was a weak smile that just about meant something. Extrafcurricularly he was not prominent. He was not a joiner or in the parlance a good fellow. The dances did not attract him. Steadily he went on forever growing. As a Junior interne at West Philadelphia he gathered experience. It was after this we witnessed another great change, another step forward in inward growth. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Physiology One hundred nineteen .1 2 D r' OSCAR EUGENE HEIM GCYWHHUWVI1, PH- Franklin and Marshall College Delta Kappa Sigma: Phi Alpha Gamma AKE up the purple curtain and reveal Qscar, who between the acts changed from plebian to an intellectual and so had changed continuously through many other acts back and forth from one role to the other. He was the severest of scholars walking about, head down, with a library under his arm. He never handled compends or briefs, and the daily notes were only steppingfstones for his mind. Out of some fivefpound volume he thumbed indexes until he had made many references. He was always going in for deep research. One summer vacation he toyed with little white mice and guinea pigs for science. Out of this attitude came many theories. He was as changeable as the position of the sun. He read with zeal authors who derided Babbits and who considered paltry monetary gain just Nfiddlesticksf' Remote and obscure, literary passages had charm for him. He became cynically modern. At all times, he held together a sane and studious dignity. He nurtured the dream of a superman from the sect of Nietzche. Oscar responded to a question by looking up into your face and smiling, Yes, doctor. How he could become plebeian, and dance, and drop nickels in the music box, or even masquerade at dances for the enchantment of the blind? Then who shall forget that happy chuckle in class when all was quiet, even too quiet? Roxborougli Memorial Hospital Gynecology One hundred twenty 19 - MEDIC - 31 l , , i i l I l l I i 1 9 ,Wi W , . .3 y 1 ' ' 1 .1 ,v- ' if lr 1 c , 11, .E . fi? Q ii U T' T - 1 -2 3 :I 'f x 'pa ' . iii' n ' .3 E '-1 .J 'ij -ri ,Ai l -4 I . il' 'l V .1 f Q3 , . 4' ' Y ELMER FRANKLIN HERRING Harrisburg, Pa. Penn State College, B.S. Ptolemy Societyg F. and A. M. EDICAL students must be irreverent and inventive. By common consent and without benefit of clergy, Herring was dubbed Fish There was no connecf tion here between him and the sea, for his favorite god was Morpheus and not Neptune. To slumber soundly and silently among others who slept just as soundly but not as silently is not an art-it is a gift. Unlike the Lachesis patient he never slept into an aggravation but always awoke with quiet dignity and in good humor. Bridge exercised no hypnotic effect upon him. He was an ardent specialist in this line. He was always in the nick of time or a few seconds late in getting the elevated to school. It was the duty of the Hrst friend he met to listen to an account of this daily occurrence. We must speak of his outstanding good qualities. He accepted examinations as a matter of fact and passed them as a matter of course. His poise suggested contacts with a world other then the academic one and exterior to our observation. For all of his dignity and restraint he could, on the right kind of stimulus, relax in a good time. Hahnemann Hospital. Philadelphia, Pa. Obsfefrics One hundred twentyeone ' im? l in 'I ,. .. v- V V l HOMER LORENZO HILES Edgewood, PH- University of Pittsburgh Alpha Sigma, Baseball E NOMINATE for the Hall of Fame, Homer, affectionately called Peep, not because he plays an infallible game of auction bridge, still likes Spring Lake, trims his moustache with a straight razor, likes Duke Ellington, sits in the amen corner of the Lecture Room A, dreams of Greta Garbo, but because he once answered Thuya. It was the day before a Christmas holiday and the gesturing lecturer was handing out his maxims from Stevens, then Homer peeped, Thuya. From then on there were muckers among us. A memory of Homer recalls him in the Chemistry lab. He dabbled with varifcolored solutions and compounds. On questioning him as to the nature of the experiment, he answered, I really don't know myself. Later there were rumors that these works were the foundations for the now famous Pink Elephants. Homer at the least chance made witty remarks in class. During a summer's interneship at Spring Lake Hospital he was on the welcoming staff for all Hahncmannians. At his departure the staff presented him with the usual gifts to internes fgowns, gloves, scissors, needles, SfTf37j. Back to the Allegheny Mountains, there's gold in them hills, and after this we have his plans for the future. Piffsburgh Homeopaihic Hospital, Piffsburgh, Pa. Surgery One lmndred fLU87lffJ'ILUO 19-QAEIC-31 l s tif F77 f., :Z 4 .,,. 4 -YJ' ,.- , is i 3 C li 'L' V rc I ' 11 EF i ,-. , ' 1 L 9 ' 1-. sr, , ' . JI ' C, I, ,, -Ti K 'Q 1: F I-Lil A 1 , YQ l 1 f - 5 is .7 F1 ' .fi 'n H' xi. f?L,f':f Q5 xi: li' bv ?t , y- X. .-v. up up . Q l 5 'yi cu ff 1 i 5.1 , ,V 4 my - ,.. - , i L i -1 1lii.w is iii .fl - ,. , nr' . I, H- ,, l WX?-v 5 H-A , , H, , L-'V-f., 5 -- 1, I ., ,. ,. i- sf +A 1 tn '- ' ?-A iii Fi' ' iid nj : ig 1 13 ,- , 1 ,if 3 , x ,U 1.x V , if Q -, iff' x '- 72 :.,.3'f . I- 'J 1 'V ' g ,H l .Af 1191- , ' ul- : Q L s . -- ,V ff' ll A, ,, ,fr ,-,. 1 , , i -- ff i . .., i , . f if fi.: Lf X- if if -It ., F '- , l..i,-fryq if rt Q t 5 a V , 24, ii- I 5 ff Qt if . ,I W, if ff.-Y-fi avi, yr 1 -f ei A ., , ' h'LllL..l.E-i EDWARD MERTON HILL Pittston, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Glee Club fl, 21, Council Q, 31, Class President QED, Basketball, Baseballg Phi Alpha Gamma, President f4jg Grand VicefPresident of Phi Alpha Gamma MEDIC Staff ll HAT'S the hot milk, great man? Open your book with the worn pages. Pass through the repertory and give to us the remedy-Phosphoric acid BX? So we have found, through asking, something for a cold, or a headache, or a more serious indisposition. Mert was one of our most ardent specialists in Homeopathic Materia Medica. From him we heard of obscure remedies with outlandish names, but with triturated powers. He had prepared an armarnentarium from which he dispensed the indicated similia. He always carried a bottle along, and at the satisfactory interval turned aside, shook something, threw his head back, and swallowed his pills. Then we learned that it was great stuff or- the hot milk. He was keenly alive to the jokes in all situations. One day the Dean told us, while we were completing our answers on the white slips, to put a caboose on it. Mert turned in his answer sheet with a sturdy caboose as his signature. In the middle of any group, thoughtful Mert could be seen sucking on his pipe and waiting for a chance to speak. All of the doctors will remember Mert's intelligent questions, and how, when they answered him, he nodded and nodded, or questioned and asked them some more. Ann May Memorial Hospital, Spring Lake, N. J. Maferia Medica One hundred twenty-three 19 - MEDIC - 31 , fa-1 . fi i l l ,S , 'xl Yi 5 I V 1 .U W i 5 l Bi l - -1 :i n' 1 i i 3 l if -Q rw Q 4 ,ai - 11 SI if ' -. i '. 5' 1 - if 1' . f V 1 l . gif 'L' ' , 'F' f- dl' 1 A: gl pw. ' 1 Jn 7 rr .1 E? ia ' , v i V, ,fy 'x. : 1.2 Wi II -w x. ig . ru 4 -'J 1 M , L. , ,tr I. 1 'f i. : gi il' 5. ' lt V. c. 1 ,V H1 V- i' f f' ll' : I I Y. . .Li -Lwigf .., .hi .-.-as JAMES WILLIAM HUGHES, JR. Atlantic City, N. Hahnemann College of Science Art Editor of MEDIC, '31 ll ILL was our dandy. His clothes were masterly fashioned and perfect in every detail. Six months out of the year he wore spats. We could almost point to the seasons by the appearance of these. He was the type to say, They're wearing these in New York, and we, less tutored in style, accepted these words as final. He said very little that was not necessary. He was very expressive on paper. With Duisberg he brought to life those strange Heyfcats with marble eyes and whiskers a foot long. A picture of a flask with wings flying away was another of his ironic sketches. He drew a complicated engine once directed on pulleys which he suggested as a means of obstetrical extraction. It was never accepted by anyone, but a few amateurs among us who after several long vigils at a bedside still had hopes of a mechanical impnovement on nature. There were days when Bill suggested, lLet's go to a movie and found his usual companions ready. He had a weakness for Nboopfoopfafdoopw and heyfhey themes. His summers as beach surgeon at Atlantic City must have been eventful. However, the reserve that marked his personality kept back the details from us. Was there any reason for doing the same thing twice if not eventfully and successfully? Ailaniic Ci+y Hospital Pathology One hundred twentyffour 3 1 'ff - .L ,4 f, -f. w .- '4 . Nr Ar. ,:. 1 . X. . 'ir '.1 -. ,L 'au . ,. 61 .,- E15 f l g, x L gif' ri' S3 . gg , W r l .Sf J :V . 5 , dx- '5 , if l J 'Tj' , :QQ ' F' , C . 2- 1 . -11 f F ' K Y. . ' t., . . :QA , . f :. . . - .' .ff EP: sa Y, .A,- my 5 'fj- QQ :ff E 'F' 'B' Q 7 ig- f . ,fl-U SL 5- ' 6 ' -. ,-. 1-, . Lin. sf . . A .iw-.1 'f,!I- ' 5, , 2' ' Igiifi ,. 1. 1' if, L gi - gf . A his ' ' J ' p... Y- i E . . C l U ,, i :,. ,, I Q: ' . fi-.. . fi :ea- L1 ' get lift '. Vi . . 1. zw, - tif' 71 A ' ,IL I Civ.. rs. , .W :vf ' Km. . x JW. 3515-- Wffp 'L i- I Q iff , -,:' J-Q6 . - - , . 'Nl - 1 J-,-5 ' . . .-,I ,J V . ff ' 35.5.1 . I, qu' :lip 53' 1 '. . 'iw E. if A Q51 a..+. fill' 19 - MEDIC -f 31 Tv ' C. I 1 5-it ,. 5 1 3 fi Zz' ' f ji: 'li .- .L.1.L.fdt-.w- rw, or ,,,,, gg N of ,L Mbgg ggi- HAROLD HERBERT HUNTER Atlantic City, N. J. Hahnemann College of Science E WAS always wondering what was going to happen next? What was the world coming to? He didn't know how we got there or how we stayed. Harold was a fatalist, who accepted anything as predestined and inevitable. If he ever worried it was with the adjunct knowledge of What's the use? and 'LWho cares? He rather believed in the lucrative practice of shooting pool and claimed it as the one diversion of his loose hours. As the oflicial pitcher of the class baseball team he wound up and twisted like a steam engine. He was noted for the speed of his delivery. This was in the springtime. All the rest of the year he and his companion, Andrus, battled through notebooks together. He was capable at all times of resignation to the powers that be. Dave occasionally had a diilicult time keeping him out of the ruts of despond. He was diligent and attentive. Every day, commuting from Atlantic City, studying on trains, early hours, and late hours, kept his schedule heaving. He came to college in the winter to rest up from working so hard in the summer. Most often, in the fall he told us of carrying ice in the preceding vacation. Stalwart in his endeavor to finish, Harold accomplished this end. He attained a quiet but powerful purpose. West Jersey Homeopathic Hospiial, Camden, N. J. Surgery One lmndvecl twentyfjive 111- .Q v . . 4 ...JSC W 39 ARTHUR HUSTON, JR. Pittsburgh, Pa. University of Pittsburgh, B.S. Alpha Sigma UST why this member of our class was able to go through four years of med school and still retain the nickname Doc when the rest of us were forced to drop that same moniker in front of the college steps at 8.59 A. M., September 30, 1927, was one of the mysteries of our Alma Mater. Perhaps it was because of that baffling, bewildering, and portentous case of ?.OOx potencies which he opposed to all earth's pathologies. While waiting for the higher potencies to work, fDoc concentrated on one of those very serious bridge games where he sat quietly smoking, with his collar and tie off, and his eyes, halffclosed, fixed on his cards. Any day between twelve and one, and even later, the smoking room was the meeting place for Doc and Homer Peep. 'kDoc never intimately companioned with anyone except of his inner group. He lived, worked, and cavorted with a circle of close friends. Beyond this he very seriously was decorous and silent. He with others made excursions to that citadel at Spring Lake. At any big time, Doc was outfitted and ready for action. It was a favorite trick of his roommate to remind him that he was raised under an icefboxf' He was always ready with some answer to such notices. Doc, entering our class after a remission in his education, rather quickly went to his nest of friends and associates. Piifsburgh, Homeopaihic Hospital, Pifisburgh, Pa. Medicine One hundred twentyfsix 19 2 l C 2 ISADORE JOHN ISKOVITZ Philadelphia Temple University E HAVE here not a case of mistaken identity, but one of associated identity. The theme of this biography is shadow and substance-that is Iskovitz and Packman. The first was thin-in subtlety we may portray the first as gaunt asceticism, and the second as pampered flesh. Iskovitz possessed a peculiar gait fnonfpathologicalj which singled him out of a group. He swayed from side to side, and when his feet struck the ground before moving them, his body would raise itself quickly for two or three inches. It was a bobbing gait which even Dr. Steinhilber could not explain. Nor can we explain the habit he had of cutting a class and as a sort of gesture of defiance walking repeatedly by the open door. In his Senior year, he developed another peculiarity. This time it was mental and assumed the form of a nonchalant attitude. Perhaps a sense of elation or security prompted the attitude. Its presence however was as undeniable as his perennial friendliness and good cheer. He was an arduous student and successfully met every problem on the curriculum. He was especially prominent when he left the room among the first after an examination. He took such ordeals with the same spirit of nonchalance that colored his other habits. Children's and S+. Luke's Homeopa+hic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Surgery One hundred twentyfseven 19 - MEDIC - 31 ' 7+- , L1 15 . I :M if a . 'J I . ,V L . p I' ,. ,N r. I. .-v DANIEL IRWIN JAMISON, JR. Pittsburgh, PH- University of Pittsburgh Pi Rho Delta: Aero Club of Pittsburghg Officers' Reserve Corpsg Ptolemy fPresident, 193Of31jg Islam Grottog F. and A. M. II AN first was noticed walking through our temporary quarters on Broad Street with books, topcoat, and hat in both arms. It must have been some time before he found his way to the locker and Mrs. Slocum. Again he was conspicuous in chemistry lab at the center of Hell'sfcorner, where the ether fires originated. He rarely started them, but he did have a good time helping Georgie put them out. Dan started his career at Hahnemann with a quiet military decorum. At the end of that career he had not lost his stride. His counsel and judgment were accepted as rather wise, if not a little paternal. Someone called him Pop and the name explained his position in our thoughts. Who will forget the picture of Pop during the humdrum of some lecture, when one could be tired profitably, very comfortably couched in his seat, glasses on and his head bent down. The subconscious mind must have been working, for in the vital detail of a course he was expert and practical. On Wednesday, at surgical clinic, glasses and all, he often came in with the interested Mrs. Jamison. She was the official hostess for many familiar groups at Dan's place. These usually gathered on Saturday nights and were very convivial. Mrs. Jamison was naturally and easily hospitable. Remember the adages he gave to us amateur ones about the felicity of married life and how we listened? It was a practical course given by the good example. Maybe that was the source of his success. Pittsburgh Homeopathic Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology One hundred twenty-eight :ffl- , nf 'ful L- ff kj ' , V X. ff ' fl . -If nv, wi' -1. .., ,Y , r,w 1. ng N Q I. , t 1.1 iw . .- -5' L JZ'- 42' I L 'A . I .- in . f . .4- f.-I . uf' LY' i I . 1 f I QQ. ,, ,. -'X flfiyk . cs YSL' . ' . ML., .7 ,. . ,. - -4.5, , ., I , bs :if ' , . W1 '- Q.-if: N ,I L55 is . Ziif ' mic' - Qi- ,T ,QV-,T-. ,-. ,.. ,. ii -2 1 s VK' I.-11, 2 E113 ' Fir E1 L' 'Q' l . pi-J tiff , . LJ.. galil Jig.. - L-1. a-IF.: .1 f '. 1 . ti ' r. 1 . rf' lf-f ' ' :.'::- .wi . -2.11 5 . -'W R '::., --T . 7 '- -' X wt- g. V rf -. 3.-X . 'ri rw. .5122 '15 'J L as -'Lf . E..-f 44 - ,, . k- I .- . V if... Ff V I... . . . I Q., .- -,lf , - ,. . -, 1 'T V ., v K E 'T' r.. :E ,. I 4 'gy' .- 1 5,-ft A I rs.: I , A I T Li .' .,. Jr- f'7 if Ein, . 'l9 - .fy-'li r l C - 31 1 l A It .1 . X A. I -J if 1 i f . , -'l ,1 dz, A, ls' V 'Q '54 -K , 5. 'T L .f . '1 in 'M X , i - 'Vx . .Y 2' . Y.. -'fl fx . . 1.1 if . - ' ' ' 'Jr' Y ff' f ?,g,..,.g,.,+ -,. ,,,, AY, . ,, N Y ,YN Y-W BENJAMIN RICHARD KATZ Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa ll EN was most proficient in the art of making himself inconspicuous. He was a member of that army of students whose merits escape notice because of their reticence. Only in his arguments with Chartock did he deviate from a policy of sustained quietness. Perhaps he argued in selffdefense to forestall verbal defeat at the hands of his friend. To those medically educated their arguments suggested gastric ulcers. The arguments were chronic in duration and periodic in occurrence. Bridge to Ben was not a bridge of sighs, but a game to be played correctly and vociferously. For when he played that game the art of cussing was exalted to its highest glory. While nothing took precedence to study, Ben was not averse to an occasional spree. His capacity for enjoyment was, what shall we say, very capacious. Another claim to distinction and one not to be ignored was the fact that he was associated with the AllfAmerican Anatomists-Viglione, Molony, Cottone, Shirinian, and Chartock. Not to be supercilious we insist that this group knew more about anatomy than the mere location of an eyebrow. Ben could at any time climb down from his reticent position to confer with any other student on matters of study and lecture. Rarely did he extend his utterances beyond a grave consideration of the curriculum with its promise of new and more diflicult examinations. Northern Liberfies Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Anafomy One hundred twentyfnine 19 - MEDIC - 31 V I l l l l 3 A7 ii I ll lj ll . A is .E 5 ' ,A 7. 1-Q 'l .5 l fi fi 21 :- -rf I 1' fi? if I ,iff I if 171 1 L! ll' iff 2' . .. :J .V -, . if I ,Q x .' H ', Y- E' Et 1 ' . -' l': . 'J .4 i I iw Q fr .1 A-r - .- . , E ,, .Q 'zu W T 1, .. ,, Q' .. 4 .f 5 .L if -25 TE .a 5: . 'VZ 3 r I .:, .r 1 -5- f lf' .1 p A- : 1, . , ., , . . -if l , , ,j, fi I Qr' f. 911 ' 1. 'A .. - 5' .1 JE 5 -' f .f ,Q . ' . . V ' 1' . L fu: W ,K I KU NJ BEHARI KICH LU Srinagar, Kashmir, India University of Illinois University of Michigan, B.S. Associate Memher Institute of Electrical Engineersg President Hindustan Club, P. and A. M., Ptolemy E HAVE wondered in our association of ideas where Kichlu parked his elephant in the mornings. This darkfskinned, quiet, restless person who came from Hinduf stan brought pictures of something rare and ceremonial on his person. He was friendly and serious at all times, altogether like one of us and not so very exciting after we knew him. His preliminary training as an engineer gifted him with excellent powers of logic and thought. He very quickly understood formulae and the processes of calculation. In the course of personal difficulties his friends found help and explanations proferred by Kichlu. He became a real occidental habitue when in moment of trial he let out shucks.'l This was his characteristic explosive. In the realm of thought he drew from the richest sources of philosophy. It was not often though that he spoke generally. He was usually close to the person of a few confreres. Long walks and tennis embraced his diversions. Walks on the Parkway on summer evenings with his wife, out and back again to his apartment on Race Street. In the summer of 1930 he worked seriously on outside obstetrical cases. He was an ardent internationalist. Work in a maternity outfpatient department would engender such a standard. Sf. Vincenfs Hospital, Erie, Pa. Medicine One hundred thirty Cz: r, . D f iff FF- ' , I I 3-V Ll. all :I ir..- ,xkf-, '. nfl, . an-' fn.-7 E tif? all' rj. I 5-3. lj-V. r?- -v Q-xg . 1: r ? I' ' H-1' 1,-I - ae, :TI 18 ru' ' yu' J:?' 1 Ili, . 'fn ' full. 19 - MEDIC H 31 1 n V l rf? if: V- 1 li , , F w 'L -4 l. M 3 Ll ff: .14 ld 1 ,Ag Fi .vq lx , -. ' ' , l. Qi , , i, V 55 u l 'ii .. l w-1 ' Ee 5 Iliff l if if .1-1 . .2 A aff? s - as y I ' 1 'S - i i . ax. -:, if, -- 1 'Z ,vii N1 - , 1 L -' ' 'lvfffl-' r li l B1 L-J. ' 1 , a., 1. r A 1? fs 2 '3 '1 ,U. I., V' ff- 233. T? l 5 451 f.. , .til--'w 1' l .. 74 1,4 X 1 sul '4 -, 1 I J. 1 I! ff - Q 7.1 ,yrgj - , irq 5 ig, L, f . . .X I. ,. r pl Q f- L ' 'N 'R U -, .. . ., ,?--...Q..--.. .-, rQE..!iL. .L , PAUL MILTON KISTLER Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Swarthmore College Phi Sigma Kappag Phi Alpha Gammag Orchestra QSM MEDIC Staifg Chairman, Blue and Gold Ballg Manager, Musical Clubs AUL was the original Hahnemann Sugar Daddy, always working up the business. He was a hound for lavish entertainment and the big time. As chairman of dances and member to concerts he successfully engineered many a college affair. It was an unexpected speech when after certain gigolos had called, Let's have a dance, Paul soberly reminded them that the last one had only modest support and 'Lwhy not wait? He came to Hahnemann with great college enthusiasms and reverence for old Swarthmore. He roomed with Cooper for two years, and so they never got over sitting together and riding one another. Together they found interest in the manner' isms of lecturing doctors, and at any time could be heard their united grunts of amusement. Someone started calling Paul, Doorknob, and soon this was heard from every end of the room as the 16th or 26th Kistler walked into class. QReally the 31st.j He passed up and down halls flopping his feet like a mechanical man. Throwing his shoulders and jerking his head from side to sideg he imitated some poor subject. He was an expert in this art of repeating in his own fashion gestures and words of someone else. At most any time he could be seen conferring with some important person, most usually the Dean. As our big European traveler and tourist guide, it was his delight to pose with Dutch girls in wooden shoes. The Kistler repertory was international. Abingfon Memorial Hospital, Abington, Pa. Homeopathic Maferia Medica One hundred thirtyfone ii D I C T 31 51 ,T w g,,. ,V LTL . F. Ss. I., r ,., I., M ,1 ,f 2 -VA-V . - .f , , iff- ........ ..- . ,bf MA,--J HENRY J. KOHLER Philadelphia, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Glee Club, MEDIC Staff, Pi Upsilon Rho fVicefPresident, 45 N NOVEMBER of Utwentyfeightf' during the sophomore year, the Associate in Pathology told Myouse guys that it was the date of a memorable occasion. He may not have expressed it that way, but as written it implies the thought. Henry being married, we were dismissed early that afternoon. After this preliminary, we heard little until the birth of a successor. Then Henry, proudly talking to his group, marked progress in terms of cutting teeth and quietly mentioned the less attractive feature of night calls from the new patient. He was the perfect napper. He could doze like a scholar on the front row, nodding and catching himself from falling. We must note that this was only exceptional and after a night of ministering to his own or the Obs ladies As a member of Dr. Mercer's loyal summer gang he went up many dark alleys and met many dark people. He read Fu Manchu tales regularly. It was noticeable that he sometimes came in late up the lecture room incline. So we came to know that his time was always occupied. There was the appearance of industry about him. Gee, it's hot in heres' would mark his reaction to spring days spent in class. Spring fever devastated him. In the end, we saw him collecting money for dances with clerical gestures. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Materia Medica One lnmdred thirtyftwo 19 - MEDIC 37 I PP in ' ui bl ?f ,Q .M .- 1 l VE? l-5 L CF it l' ., ' 4 l 3 lif iii, 'f Eg, : , QL, ML, -4 . ' 'FL 3 li' Q , V39 f :iz bi ' H -i -1 1' av i 'V' '24 3 54 ' X 'il 2 if , .V . .f .fl f 'i 'Q if i IJ . .5 -1 .' l K- -'il 5 , . -i L Q-14. Qi LOUIS PHILIP KOSTER Philadelphia, Pa. Pennsylvania State College, B.S. University of Pennsylvania, V.M.D. Captain, Veterinary Corps, World Warg Ptolemy Society, Professor of Anatomy at College of Veterinary Science., University of Philippines CSTER had a background of travel and experience in foreign lands. It was reputed that he crossed the Atlantic fifteen times each way, which is no petty record. He had crossed the Pacific to China cross the way, had resided in the Philippines and visited japan. Such variety of living made him necessarily mature and settled. He sat in class smoking his habitual pipe saying little till the lecture began. Then again he sat attentively listening, but rarely making notes, taking each word into the permanency of his memory. He planned things on a rational basis. The appearance of meditation cloaked his actions. He took life in an easy fashion, never upsetting the tradition of his maturity. At luncheon hour he would walk through the basement eating a bar of chocolate. Another of his phases of quiet enactment came at the end of the day when he stretched himself and said, Well, I guess I'll go home. He frequented card games as a partner or as observer over someone's shoulder. Had he said more we might make tabloid exposures, but a quiet man made such sensationalism futile. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred thirty-tliree tl fl :J D l C - 31 l i i-I il r fl , JACOB STAUFFER LEHMAN Bristol, Pa. College of Science, B.S. Associate Editor of MED1Cg Phi Alpha Gamma ll AKEN was one who combined the rare qualities of the genuis with those of the perfect gentleman. None but a genius could obtain such remarkable grades with so little application and study. In the tenor of a perfect gentleman he was renowned as the perfect host. At any gathering, in an unobstrusive fashion, Jake moved from circle to circle with his offerings of wit, wisdom and vice. In direct opposition to the virtuous personality so portrayed, he was evidently the laziest man in class. By this, We mean, he was so eflicient that Without apparent effort he accomplished as much as the rest of us. Picture jake climbing listlessly to the rear seat for the afternoon lectures with shining morning face and then solving cross' word puzzles. He was the prize example of calm and complacency. He was rarely seen to express his enthusiasms, for most often he moved quietly. with them. His greatest interest was in Radium and Xfray work. Jake's evenings were spent in extensive postfgraduate studies, with his mind deep in the subject of Bone Tumours. Add to all this his quiet delight in social activities, and jake stands before you serious, and unashamed. Hahnemann Medical College, Philadelphia, Pa. Radiology One hundred thirtyffour F i.- il, QA XA. L, .W I . F L .Gp if--J nl. . - ,,. .4 -sz, .,, ,I .. sk. Rx. IE, Eric N . Je - f-'ff -i ci Y, -. x-ff f,.. .Jw J'- l li- L, X V ri- Q l L.. . J..- .'.' 1 l l i l f a'lt im' MM Y. 1 r V 1 l i i , . L l 1 I , pp. f. l E-, Ha l, v.1', 5., P, H a 1: . Y 'Jftfv 19 - MEDIC M 31 l .qv lf, ,, ill -il i 1 1 A., .: 3 .- . ,yr ,- -Ii :I .f .N ' 1 rr .Ti V5 3 .- if all . .F . f , 3 V ,fl 1. . -4 . d . I ' '- ai F! , 'V .' 'QI --3 . , ' Z '- k. 1 4 fl sl . H . ,Q . 4.f....i--1.-.??,,, H , in , - A., - ,Ah , , wif, , in Y NORMAN LEPPER Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, Ph.G. Alpha Sigma NOTHER of those married and happy ones. Having reached the climax suited to all good souls in the Freshman year he very steadily set his purpose and found it. Norm was easily agitated and often forgot his train of thought at the most crucial time. In conference with his group he was never sure of the things said and did. He hesitatingly said Now, but, or But listen to this. Then through a maze of ideas he struggled to the point he desired to put over. At times, he was the picture of confusion, slowly interpreting and slowly questioning. He proficiently interrupted. It happened that some of his questions were difficult to answer. In section, for most every case, he suggested a complete blood analysis or a spinal puncture to complete the diagnosis. The appearance of concern was part of him. He was of the class' solicitous that asked you after exams how you made out. From earlier training in pharmacy he had mastered dosages and prescriptions before we had begun. So in the course of events he became counselor in pharrnaceutics. He was not lacking in close association and friendship. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Urology 3 lf . gm O ne hundred thirtyffiue 19 - MEDIC - 31 f l l w if-F - . l-1 i 'Z V- l , LA L5 Q if 1 , . .:, xg, f E if FT K . r 3 5? Q: 3 571' Q' ff it 22 ,, 1 4 1 f gi nf. ' l . 'J lit .4 za, 4- 1 . .LA f W' A . J ,,.. W -A ,,. M l .4 Self i t is E. . 12 lfk Vx 'ff . , 1 5,1 1 ...I . , ., tp , if N R. ,A V it ' 'Ia A- -. 5 . .,.. -T: if il .' iq 5 T' f'f Q rf- li 2 R ' it , if Q it l . . ,t ,- . . ia- ' : L11 N , V-J Kg V, fi, ,q , P, Y -. - e me Fi . V ...L-car. - ,, Liar. A LEOPOLD SEYMOUR LIPSITZ Camden, N. J. Haverford College, A.B. Phi Lambda Kappa fPresidentQg Orchestra ll EO came into class with all of the appearance of a thoughtful intellectual, usually late, to gaze around with his very innocent expression for a place to hide and cover up. As the last one was seated, the door was opened cautiously and in peeped Leo, sliding in, closing the door quietly and tipftoeing behind the lecturer. He had the grace of a gazelle at these times. Many times he stopped in his slow advent to sit down at the table in the front of the room Where he took notes assiduously. Leo most often revealed himself during some laboratory hour, when he clung to a microscope and talked across the table about books and current drama. From the stack of theatre programmes he carried we concluded that he followed stage shows interestedly. With all his appearance of quiet innocence he betrayed a clever and adept mind, trained in literary and artistic matters. We can't forget his easy and meaningless grin, and the flush that slowly covered his face under scrutiny. He possessed the charm of a deep and mysterious refinement. Wes? Jersey Homeopafhic Hospital, Camden, N. J. Gasfro-Enferology One hundred thirtyfsix 2.-.5 ' Hin . ...v . r M.. . 351 ,cf - . ,JP-bf g' 'P ' i e.-if? .Q f. . -,.. gf. iff' ,,.,, :CC- W :'5'lf ji-:iv xbgf, Elia'- P5! 5 .014 ... 5 .3 'R'-.ff 9,32 ' 5-ul . ufsrf NM: 'elf 31: Ls., ,. av: H 1 I 35,1 -SL: '. B i . :gig i r., 4- - lf-l '-,I TEL Of, N 'vf - ,- ,A sap- 2. 'A' ' 1,1 lx, , fir' il k 1 .4 .51 4 . , J l Il, ,L - .- Flu-1. VA lf . . e-if - i r '- ..'4,r. M sf' of K Ju tl-A 'j,,.-. Q.. ,in 1 19 5 MEDICQ E 3? 1 1 I ,mi V. ' A1 A ll X, i J . fn ni Y j , 3? i . I .il E f QF , . HUGH JAMES McADAMS Philadelphia, Pa. La Salle College, A.B. ll AC obtained to a diversity of knowledge. Cur first introduction to this forte was his accomplishment in the field of language. He could say more different things to us in more different tongues than the class as a whole could under' stand. He could tell the smoothest jokes or sing the rowdiest songs in such a fashion that they were innocently unintelligent and harmless. As class interpreter he explained words that were only symbols to us. With all of the appearance of a scholar- high forehead, upset, wavy, graying hair, and a filled brief case, he walked in the fashion of a jaunty cock of the walk, bouncing on his toes. He smoked cigarettes as if he feared them, just letting the smoke reach his anterior pillars, then blowing it out entirely. At times he was great for standing in front of the class and with a definite pose flourish a brandfnew cigar. Again he was very prominent in the column of words and noise. His laugh often fell into the tone of bellowing. He was restive in his makefup and before class he could be seen moving hurlyfburly from group to group spreading the line. Ur he would suddenly settle down to one lone companion and, with his arm around his shoulder, feet on the desk ahead, between puffs on the uncomfortable cigarette, speak of you know what and I could have told you that. Wim and wigorf' an electric mind, alertness and jollity complete the sketch. Children's 8: S+. Lulre's Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Obsfefrics One hundred thirtyfsevcn i lil' - iglwjrll I C U JAMES READ MCKENDRY Philadelphia, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science Glee Clubg Track Team CMEONE characterized Mac as quiet, unassuming, thoughtful and droll. All other manifestations of his personality were hidden behind this masque of thought and silence so that even his droll utterances were preciously saved for a commentary. The sense of humor that was attributed to him was withheld until he desired to reveal it. Certain things he said and certain actions were colored by some innate cynicism in him. He could clearly and cooly, in a few words, make all manner of fun with a satirical reference. He was active in almost every worthfwhile field, yet he never took stellar honors in any. In the research of some thesis, or the training routine of a track team he was equally diligent. All through the sophomore and junior years he tested blood pressure variations under psychic excitement, using electrical points to shock subjects into a mild reaction. In training for our track team he practiced regularly for the ultimate purpose of having tried. Endeavor and activity meant much to Mac for their own worth only and not for gain. He was our disciple of ars causa artisf' He made little things worthwhile. Homeopathic Hospifal of Providence, Providence, R. l. Medicine One li imdred tliirtyfeiglzt l f 19 - MEDlC e 31 WALTER JAMES MOLONY Providence, R. I. Providence College, Ph.B. Albertinum Society E STRUTTED, he developed professionalities among us. Molony was proud of his technic. He managed at the end of four years to have mastered a very laudable pose. He went to Spring Lake in the embryo as a junior interne and, surviving the hazards of gaiety there, he returned with great tales of things accom- plished as if he had been completely developed while there. His line was one of the smoothest we have ever heard. It could be alternately enthusiastic and softfspoken. It was as capable of harangue, as it was of something delicate and impetuous into ears that listened. Suddenly he would become very serious, as if he were going to forsake certain of his lighter habits. At these times, he would work on Shirinian for better or worse. They were companionable. His speech, typically of Down East, made over ordinary words in new clothing. Everything agreeable was Hpuifectf' This expression was outstanding. Rosy cheeks, going places, big shots, golden opporf tunities were added as features in the parade. At the dances Walter was a center for certain lighter ceremonies, where he would laugh, joke, bow and shake hands with himself. Then turning to one of his college companions he would grandly slap him on the back and say, Now, Doctah!- He attempted to perform all social duties grandly, and in the perfection of a gay moment he succeeded. Sf. Joseph's Hospital, Providence, R. I. Neurology One hundred thirtyfnin 3 19 EDlC - 31 -f rf, Q R , F3 , ,W II. 1 7? 1 il Y ff 5 'r' 1 ij 3 ' N' nj La f 1 Q 3. av: , ,Y , f V V . if if 1 ' E if 3. , f,. ,. . 3 J , e Q L .I ', V ' 1 If , t i fi ji L Q .4 1 1-.e .4 - fe i A il r: . A, 'L FT L, A v is -i. i, ,' -4 gig if i - iff Q1 .il ,,. i., 5- 2' A 14 . , pr, 5, I, I ' er h 711 ,, ,, ,,,,, -wr -U , . . - .. . -...l.... -.T f-. ---..-Y4:2.., -- J . STANLEY MOHR MOYER QUHk?ftOWIl Ursinus College, A.B. Phi Alpha Gammag Alpha Rho Epsilon UIET, unruffled by external things, placid, he moved among us. In him was a holy combination of dignity and easy humor. Somewhat different from the common tone, this character of humor was intelligent and at times almost artistic in its perfection. He expressed mild amusement at all that occurred about him. His detachment and survey were suggestive of a halffcynical pose. This thought was shadowed, however, by the quality of his genuine goodfnaturedness. His voice, raspy and falsetto at times, addressed witty remarks at something and nothing, but always with the same wholesome pertincnce. He managed a deft philosophical scrutiny of his associates, and in most intimate circles he made use of a wide vocabulary to pattern a phrasey caricature of anyone. He modestly let others think he was insigf nificant while he, like an owl in a tree with one eye open, studied their very entrails. A bland, complacent smile that did not cover a multitude of evils was part of his character masque. He was the first to leave the last lecture of the day. About fifteen minutes before the hour he decided to leave and take the train home. Later he conspired with friends to abandon commuting and so he took up residence at Hahnemann. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred forty 19 - Mg.l3ilC - 31 ers: W- V El i i Li: r- . :tw T- T 1' YQ 7. I QQ 21 ., Ffa ! 1 'ill 5- . iq . . ,V -H 1 'ri -J ' '.' 3 .- , wi! fl -as J f.-4 E1 I1 . ,W gn 3 ' ' Y r 1 .1 i ,Q i- Fil 'W-' ' 1- ,. ,i ,hm 'A . .1 1- 1' -E 1 S 5 'Ci . .1 1, , i ' .,, V., 1 'T fi W .- 5131 a a -1.' D5 -Lil, . -it . nf Vi . -.....,....i ,ia ., , .,,, g -- ,,, ,T,, , ,A , .. iv PAUL MOYER NASE Blooming Glen, Pa. Millersville State Teachers College Franklin and Marshall Alpha Pi Upsilong Pi Upsilon Rho N ACCENTS slow and modulated, Paul spoke among us. He was conspicuously quiet. Words were most often passed over in a broad white smile. He rarely disputed a point and superficially he appeared acquiescent. Most often though, when in disagreement with a subject, he retained his own convictions while he merely smiled. He came from the country and probably this was the origin of his even temper. In line with the rural habit he had 'quite an appetite. He characteristically asked, When do we eat? The food at Hahnemann certainly satisfied him. Also in the custom of the outfdistricts he got nine hours sleep each night, arose early, and always looked fresh and beaming. He rarely joined the sleepyfeyed galley in the classroom. Most often he was alert and in active duty. When he said, Hot dawg, it was different from any other expression of that epithet. Again slowly, deeply, and quietly, with the same broad white smile. At times, he walked around as if he were very old, he appeared so settled and undisturbed by vagaries. Then, to wipe away this delusion, he became enthusiastic, though still quietly, as he talked of his hobbies, his plans, from baseball to T efford, Pa. Allen+own General Hospifal, Allentown, Pa. Pediatrics One hundred fortyone s., :tar tr F7522 19 -2 .SAEDIC - 31 r ii 1 Q 5 1 Q1 s . - , xi: E 4 In 25 I: z fi Fi at . i' ,J V, -i J . X -- 4 3 'f sf. .V - ' 1 Q- . jf . ,- if 1' A is 7-Qt 1 it ., Q.. 5 1 ui ,lg i . Y- fli, e 'r l , tt. K -. e. f 5 ' 1. ,L .W L. z C' l u'- Q - -ff 5' I I ,K L. :QV L, rx. 1 ' f va V1 l j- roi'-l 'C Q Cr, 7 'T N ' '. i- 5 '. A' 'f X ii, V -rag Y, -X. g , -y. .Ll i WILLIAM FRANK NEIDE Philadelphia, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science Pi Upsilon Rho, Phi Sigma Chi ll ILL was the picture of despair on the other side of the table in Chemistry lab, behind a fence of titration tubes, bunsen burners and crucibles, when things went wrong. There never was anything as serious as an explosion or an ether fire, but there were times when things boiled over, or reagents fumed, or the paint was burnt olf the desk by some corrosive and stuck to everything else. He was very prominent during this period smoking a cigarette in the outside lecture room or on the balcony. He was a bear for discussion on any subject. At these times he was very critical of anyone who attempted to be impressive with a few quoted paraphrases without recognizing their origin. The best characterization of his part in a conversaf tion is that he was sharp and pointed and very original. Sometimes he upset an adversary so well with a few words that things were ended. He was rather robust and healthy looking, and not being plastic, he neither gained nor lost physically in four years. At the end the red cheeks had not paled and the girth had not gone down. Bill was constant to a personal cause. There was nothing rakish in his presentation. He usually wore black bowfties loyally. On Saturday nights, after a certain routine, he played pinochle if he had a partner. Ctherwise he read stories from the weekly periodicals and on Monday he usually pressfagented them among us. Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Pediafrics One hundred fortyftwo :wr g. I' ETH 'f : 1' fi-ft ff.. ' V i it -L. 1. i . af Il A .,., . if. 3 .:. 'F :ff 9 -5' fi' if-H .Ax- ,. .... , f? ',. nf-' -I V 'C E11- una' .X K ' . 2: lplf. if WY. ' Lf I nw .b '..' C 1 A QL. K y ' ' -N X.. Q uf' , gi. j- F M 1 .Q . Q. .3 Q ii . 2.1. . Ci .1 ' L...i. 4 1 X 19 - ?vlE.Dl 31 if .5 1 3 xml , 'xi . .1 l! F i 3 . 5 i i .3 . gi . 1 , -3 V.. li . e F' .1 V-fi J 'fm .. 1 .L 4 ..... 5-. fl ,-4 . ,-54 T .- '1 Qi'-l ,Z Q . If -1 ,i ,A ,Q . T ,154 ff e li Ii, 1, Mfr 1+ H '-1 1 .rm ,,. lfxi 3, 1 I. 5 .Fi it ,z , X W t.iia.W '- , if 74 Q., ALBERT HENRY NIEBAUM Brooklyn, N. Y. Hahnemann College of Science, BS. Pi Upsilon Rho ll L, THE man with puns and wisefcracks and problems up his sleeve. His wit, at times unexpected, was alternately easy and diihcult to understand. He stood close to certain alliances in his fraternity. From this source comes stories of Al wrestling with anyone handy, leading bull sessions as the chief shooter, playing pinochle, and occasionally upsetting the dope with an adventure into the Nurses' Home. He went to his books trampled by fears of misadventure or failure. He left them with remnants of the same worry before an exam, but usually passed through without bad results. His voice was nasal. The bull sessions in class and outside heard from Al, in such tones, the wit at no one's expense, the tincture of doubt, and the quizzical cracks. He was mild except on the provocation of criticism, when he became vigorously defensive. When he found someone in trouble he became the best old man for serious advice. He had interest in another's problems, and claimed that he was always a friend. His prowess at pinochle made him just a little bit of ri gamester. Reading Homeopathic Hospifal, Reading, Pa. Surgery One hundred forty-three l S flied. I C - . V .nf : 1 W - ,i ii'- lf ,zv ,'- DAVID DANIEL NORTH ROP M9lf059 Park, Pa. Pennsylvania Military College Penn State College Sigma Nug Theta Nu Epsilong Penn State Thespian Clubg Phi Alpha Cammag Orchestra fl, 'DQ Clee Club My Blue and Gold Ball Committee QI, 3, 4, ll AVE was the personality behind a blueflit drum. We recall hearing much of his active band, the jobs they did and of a few broadcasts. He came down from Penn State with the reputation of a song and dance man in college theatricals. Dave never made much noise about himself and so anything of former successes was only learned through the cofoperation of his brother. He was sincerely modest- a familial taint. He made many friends in the happy casual fashion of a Hhailffellow, well met. Associated with a gang he extended his friendships beyond its limits. Somehow he reminded us of a typical fraternity man. His colored shirts were more convincing. Dave was at times excitable and then words would start to drop out of his mouth, too fast for any order, until he put on the brakes. At the same time, his eyes would blink quickly and probably he would want to ask VJfwfwhat d'ya think? He was close to his brother at all times, if not in actual person, then by some manner he had of acting, speaking, or doing near Dick. He was very enthusiastic about parties and was adept at finding the corner and the lady. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Surgery One hundred fortyffour 19 - M E D I C 31 Vg.,-,,m- .- .rr ---CC E W1 .11 1 :I Y I . 1 . 'I , ia I . I 1 ll - as 15 ' 'J . . I .1-g..:iL-.MWMiMj . ,. . ,,, M, ,Y , ,, , RICHARD FRANCIS NORTH RCP Melrose Park, Pa. Pennsylvania Military College Hahnemann College of Science, BS. Orchestra fl, 21, Associate Editor of MEDIC, '31, Student Council Representative Q4-jg Phi Alpha Cammag Editor of Quarterly Q41 ll ICK rather quietly bore the honor of being the son of our Chief. His close personal contact with the important experiences of our hospital never prompted him to any display of privilege. We would speak of him as a scholar and a gentle' man. He was one of the backfrow gang. It was the common thing to see him writing notes as carefully as those nearest the front. At times, he brought to class the words of some new and strange ditty, and soon after this the whole class would be singing with Jerry at the piano. Dick's voice would sound above the rest. The usual accompaniment included the banging of chairs, the closing of books, and the jingling of keys, in close harmony. He knew enough of books and the origins of books to deserve the character of literary. Rather refreshing were his comments on Medical Follies. We delegated to him the writing of our class history. This was in keeping with his propensities. He was alert to the cleverness of a xvellfdone phrase and was sure to quote. Nights and nights he played a saxophone in his brother's orchestra. Waltz or foxftrot, this quiet literary man might have stopped pumping to remark, Gee, there's a smooth babe. It is time to conclude that Dick found space for gayety which, added to his other virtues, gained for him the admiration of a whole class. Hahnemann Hospilal, Philadelphia, Pa. Surgery One hundred forty-,Eve 19 - MEDHC - 31 - sa. is , . .- if: - W 1 . 6 1 M, W -f , fa' . H WI . FG tr . V. .. T . 5 . 7 vi 1 - r. . , .L Q .V K. - lu E5 '- 'Fl if 1 17 , V lf' i .4 ' Fei' ' . T .4 fs, C 4 F .u ' 11 K. 1 ' L I Chi . it lt rs s-- 'V , , ,, . 521 iq 1. ' u-. Q 1 . P9 4. P Z.. l Q - -WF Y Q - V Y Y gk V v Y EQ. ANDREW JOHN O'NEILL C0USh0h0CkCf1, PH- Villanova College La Salle College, B.S. Pi Upsilon Rho NDY was one of our most serious men. At least if he ever felt carefree his expression of concern never revealed it. He was always close on the heels of every class assignment and was very uneasy, especially during recitation, when he had neglected them. Tuesday afternoon in Dr. Steinhilher's quiz Andy was very quiet and tense until the last question. Everything on the curriculum was a grave problem to him. He had another face which only his nearest associates saw. He it was who periodically drove out in his jordan with motives less profound than study. It was the social Andy excursioning without a care. Those companions at that time were varied and numerous. But always he came to class quietly and with iron reserve equipped with new plans for study and offensive on hooks. In the locker room at the end of the day he rushed through the huddles to catch an early train to home. It was useless to try to corner him then. He was punctual in that appointment always. In other acts this virtue was prominent. He may grow a mustache if he tries hard and then he will show his other face again-to those intimate companions. Lancas+er General Hospi'I'al, Lancaster, Pa. Medicine One hundred forty-six . Ii: by al' l Jw 12.15. . irq- V ', ' 312' . by- xg .' -M ,dxf fi' ,Qu ,E ,Q ,., V. , .l of ,ix , figs g :Yay ,,, U.. . TQ-,.' -.1 ' 'gl - v-. ,WJ . AXE... -f 52:21 'l ffljf Wg? E521 - ii? .,-of L.: ':'.j -7 f inf. I B 11.9 Q...-V , Qfwf J, - .. 'fi' 117+ 7' 5 ' .. '. Q 11.2 -r Eli iff: . :!l' 7.3 '1- . It . -I We ,, , , 1 1-, , M.- -,cx . -,.' .3 nrt, , A -' ,1-' . L- --rr. . .,.4 if F! aiigf. , 1. ij., M.. . f . , . wgrg .sly . lg -E ey., gf.. Vi, . r - . 5: , F115 ' ff.. ,. -. 1-,J Q ll.: 1,1 uri 1 l mg v 01 ' - . I 5-A' IV- .L f r 'xl-.' V 5-.I .tl A 2: 1' l . M. 5. 'r.. , -,Y 'I Nl. v N.- .ff , 3, 'Cv' l lj. l1 51 ww' A ,I J, ' ' JV. 1 ' 1 z 2511. i 1 l ,1--A at .,.l 7 , .Q ' via 'Q 1 Eff 7 ffl if r Eeglr, .rg gh -in ji -. Qf, 55: if ' ...V - ,:,.. - 1 .Av 1 nz 1 Q ' :fill All if -1 MARTIN PACKMAN Philadelphia, PH- Temple University, Ph.G. La Salle College, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa ll ARTYH could walk directly out of the Exchange with cigar, spats, and roseate flush on his face, expectorate a few times, and we would have a picture of a prosperous stockfbroker. The position of a halffchewed wet cigar in the corner of his mouth was only changed by the nofsmoking rule of the lecture hour. To complete the ubigfbusinessu ensemble he displayed white spats at the least provocation of weather and without this. Physically he was large around the waist although during four years there was no observable change in the dimension up or down. This added to his personal suggestion of oldftime prosperity. He was always alert to a neglected point, an overlooked principle, a forgotten hypothesis. This insight characterized his class utterances in group or during the apathy of lecture hour. He would sit on the back of a chair with his feet on another behind and shake the ashes off his cigar while he attempted to upset the dope. Sometimes in lecture his questioning voice would sound an interrupting note. Qccasionally the interruption was unpopular and the class joined in the classical razzberry. As coach in the principles of prescripf tion writing, and as blackboard demonstrator, he assisted many of us weaker and more disinterested students of dose and dosages. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred forty-seven i. LLOYD CLIFFORD PlERSOL Lamasfef, PH- Franklin and Marshall College Urchestra fl, 2, 3, 4jg Basketball, Pi Upsilon Rho LOYD in class was the textfbook picture of the serious student. He rarely did anything but sit in his seat between lectures and read from his notes. He would read a while and then look up while his lips moved-cultivating that memory no doubt. He was always anticipating examinations and his look was one of foreboding evil. At the critical time, he would ask, Do you think he marks them carefully? or How much does that course mean, anyway? He was dutyfbound to his books. When he walked through the hall from the steps around to the library he was the distinct contemplative scholar, books, gait, dignity, and destination. Ware dispersed some water one day in pathology lab and then started an awful upheaval when he sadly advised Lloyd that is was luetic spinal fluid. Some of the liquid had entered his eye and he disappeared to return shortly with argyrol stains all over the eyeflids. From then on the villain on the other side of the table was old Hspinalf' Lloyd carried a halffdozen different sized stethoscopes for the various sizes of chests and was interested in new improvements on old implements. He was neat of person and didn't demur at being dainty. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred fortyfeigllt F . ff. ,sg :.,' . 1 i, ri-I ki' r ,. fl .A it -1 r.,' .,. -5 .., . .1-, ff ' r - ' i pri ,' 4 ' gy., 72- ., ,yd IA ' gl rf 7 ' ., . jfgji '- ,. mf ff Ita, N, '-'.',.- . ,,i 1-,, 1 34, .. L 'LJ' 1 l.- -,. L VT' . , rg? .. ' L' fjaf' .-1.4 . li' si . Y . . 'ffll , f , . r-N ' a 1.19 QU Q -'ff Ivy. V' r k . !4 . Vx. W x FQ 'iq' ' r V H? 1 . 1, 1 Y f ' l - ,. .. y l , , Q . l l- l J .1 ' l . , ' I l ' .3 L, ' lla' ff. .xii dl I - vu ,T .I 5. .jf l li 5 2 il-ill ff X -i of' 1g 5- ,N .,- '. l F . ,. T 5, ' E 'li -. .- .5,.l. Exp. Jiil Eff , Egg 1 9 E ANTHONY PINO Philadelphia Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Glee Club fl, 2, 3, 41g Newman Clubg Il Circolo Italiano ll CNY is another member of our class who succumbed to the lure of spats and a moustache. The moustache, we must admit, was not of the languid variety and justified its existence not only in the face of Tony but also in the face of all contrary opinion. In addition to these professional props, Pino sported a boutonniere. Since we have often been reminded of the variety and extensiveness of a doctors' armamenf tarium perhaps it is proper to suppose that spats, a moustache, and a boutonniere are ethical members of the armamentarium. Tony purchased compends of all descripf tion and read avidly many reference books. If reading doth make a full man, then Pino had expanded, yea even unto the mythical fourth dimension. His appearance suggested activity. At a glance one was impressed with the fact that Tony had somewhere to go and something to do. He and Rubba were often seen together, and when seen alone the sight of one brought the other to mind. Their association recalled the Damon and Pythias episode. Tony had an engaging personality, for he was often seen engaging a professor in conversation after a lecture period. If the information gleaned from these extrafcurricular conversations is at all vital, Tony will save many lives when he is actively practicing medicine. Mounfainside Hospital, Mont Clair, N. J. Surgery One hundred fortyfnme 4 W f I, , , 1 FIC 31 . L. i F GERALD OGDEN POOLE VJilmington, Del. Delaware University Secretary of Senior Class, Sigma Nu, Alpha Sigma, Druids ll ERRYH made quick time into the spirit of the class when he responded to the call for Hmusicsplay us a song. He was discovered after a year, and then there was no rest for his fingers till the lecturer began. He would sit at the old scratched piano without a top, tapping his feet, and swinging his head while his fingers ran over the keys. Every little movement had a meaning of its own. He played everything from those licentious songs that we can't bring home, to old sweet- heart ballads and modern slow croonings. After the lecturer came in, jerry kept on playing till he finished the last bar. The indulgence of the doctors saved him from any infamy on this account. He carried around with him one of those big, good' friend smiles. At times, he seemed to be very boyish He laughed aloud without restraint, he stamped the hardest with his feet when managing applause, and he never forgot the certain tricks and jokes. Poole, Powell, Leper was a triad for history, there union had no weak links. jerry with his starched and pressed person, his touch and his nieeties was prefeminently a center for sociability. Wilmingfon Homeopathic Hospifal, Wilmington, Del. Medicine One hundred fifty 4' - 1 TB M TQ E .ill l i 4 LAWRENCE BAILEY POWELL Moorestown, N. J. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Alpha Sigma ll ARRYN would smile gently and say proper things at all times. He was part of the alliance with Poole and Lepper. They grouped together from the days of a Freshman's beginnings till the last day on the roster. Although young com' paratively in years Larry impressed us with his quiet sense of responsibility. This characteristic developed from his position of family head in a sense. He had a reputation for being fond of sports. His friends spoke of his prowess while at Moorestown Friends School and his flair for soccer. Naturally this was all old business to us. He was also reputed to be a man of all trades. At home he acted as painter, plasterer, electrician, carpenter and business man. Congeniality was the one outstanding feature of his character. In a voice, which very closely simulated that of Dr. Phillips, he spoke seriously and jestingly at different times. He went in a big way for light-colored grey suits. These he wore winter and summer. They fitted well his habit of dressiness. Through all seasons he carried a filled brief case and through as many seasons he made extensive notes to include in this case. He was usually inconspicuous, after the fashion of a scholar, except in the close conferences of his two most constant companions. 1 Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred jiftyfone ' if ffl l ff. MICHAEL PAUL PRIMIANO Philadelphia, Pa. Temple University Haverford College Secretary of Il Circolo Italiano HQ ll lKE never quite recovered from the announcement of an exam until outside of the door where the little blue books were collected and then he skirted from one group to another inquiring into your answer and mine. VVhen our answers agreed he congratulated us with a slap on the back, or a hardy grip and an I told you so smile. Wheii they didn't-well, possibly you had read the notes wrong or there was a mistake in your sheet. Old man gloom had many a tussle with Mike. He always recovered about the time of a vacation furlough or a class dance. His penchant for gliding over the floor to modern rhythms made him prominent at these functions. He characteristically took long and deep bending steps and he was sure to have a companion who was his peer in the vogue. He was sure to remind his associates of the cuts they had and of the importance of' being earnest. However, it was common to see Mike in lighter colors. In laboratory he would leave his bench to bend over someone's head and whisper in their ear in a manner very diverting. Every time the big door opened he fell about ten feet sideways to his own bench and had his eye resting on the microscope piece. Ambitions are to be a pathologist and to sleep late. The opinion is that he will succeed in both. Sf. Mary's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. -Materia Medica One hundred fiftytwo GEORGE W. PRUTZMAN Palmerton, Pa. Pennsylvania State College, B.S. Alpha Sigma EORGE WASHINGTGN PRUTZMAN, otherwise Prutz, was the original No hope phantom with the rumor complexes. He would walk in before an exam, when everyone sat on the fence doing last minute surveys, and write on the board No hope in a startlingly pessimistic fashion. One look at his poor scared face as he turned to his seat revealed his personal belief in the statement. After waiting ten minutes for the lecture we would hear mighty George bellow Let's go in the same voice that won for him a nhogfcallingn contest at Pcnn State. The verity of this achievement is testified to by Ware, who engaged with George in some awful tussles about the agricultural features of this college. George occaf sionally came out with a classical wisefcrack like, Yes, sir, that's Bower's baby or Go home and tell your mother, when the nurse carried an infant into the class in surgery. He would worry sometimes, but after a while would force a grin across his face and say, It don't mean anything. Then he would look serious until you agreed with him. He was always griping about something and speaking about thousands of dollars and great opportunities. Night accident service prostrated him and he lay in his bed as though paralyzed in the morning, oblivious to many loud summons from the outside. His good humor and kindness were outstanding and his rumors have quietly died long ago. Homeopafhic Hospi+al of Reading. Reading, Pa. Medicine One hundred fifty-lliree . . 4 - . lt P , fiEFf!C -8 31 1 l. . i- JOSEPH BROAD RADDIN BCHVCF, PH- Carnegie Tech, B.S. Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Delta Upsilong Phi Alpha Gamma 1' OE was a student who was unusually quiet and had his own ideas about everyf thing. The character of these ideas was not always evident to strangers. He kept about himself a very impregnable shell of dignity. He said very little. He never expressed any very obvious action. He lived with his own thoughts and ideas. joe was always ready to argue with the professor. Even in the consideration of some lecture he had his own personal ideas relative to it. At times there was the quality of pugnacity about his actions. He very definitely expressed himself with the assurance of selffconhdence. With this air of will, he owned to a certain cynicism which prompted him to say at times, I doubt that! This characteristic prominently developed in the course of a general debate. joe was an active and industrious student, who kept close to his notefbooks and his lectures. He carried with him the straight effective pose of the scholar. He did not deflect from this attitude. Si. Luke's and Ch?ldren's Hospifal Pediahics l . One hundred fifty-four L l l I .1 il l l 'i 1 .ly - l . 3, . ,U ,JT3 1 Q fc I A , Tl. - ft- . l Q , , , , V ' I ARTHUR BAILEY REAM Bowersville, Ohio Wilmiiigtoii College, BS. Sigma Zeta, Alpha Psi Omegag Alpha Phi Gamma, Phi Ro Sigma, Ptolemy, Cvlee Club FINISHED diplomat, Art would suavely listen and agree to all expressed conf victions and arguments. Behind this deference he concealed his own personal thoughts on the matter, restraining any unwise expression to protect his friendships. He never desired to offend anyone. It is not remarkable that he never did. He kept himself securely in a clothing of many smiles, considerations, and generosities. He would stop anywhere, anytime, and talk to anyone who appeared genial. His leisure moments in college were spent between the card room and the pingfpong tables. His prowess at the latter made his challenges considerably important to certain enthusiasts. He went to Glee Club rehearsals at 12.30 P. M., and it was reputed that he had a Hne bass voice. An occasional outburst of song revealed his deep undertones. One day we asked him in our routine investigation what his plans were for the future and were surprised and pleased by his whimsical answer, to do the best I can. Miami Valley Hospifal, Dayfon, Ohio Maferia Medica One hundred fftyfive E D I C 1 31 -.S LOUIS M. RODI Hammonton, N. University of Pennsylvania, A.B. IS admiration for Hahnemann is of long standing. He was a member of that Hammonton High Football Team which once defeated the doughty doctors of Hahnemann in a legitimate football encounter. He wore hats of distinction. They had three major corners and many minor dents and angles and sat precariously on his head. The rakish hats together with the jauntily tilted pipe and the violently colored ties constituted a triad of unmistakable signs. Rodi looked the picture of youthful exuberance and on occasions behaved in keeping with his appearance. With' out provocation and just as often without warning, he and his friends would be seen engaged in a scuffle that had respect neither for the sombre atmosphere of a medical college nor for the delicate adjustments of the human body. Whenever it was possible and he had no time for the impossible-he played cards. He played cards with gusto and with Roth, Shriner and Rabidilla. His features do not suggest irresolution. Yet about two or three or four o'clock in the afternoon he would be seen fingering his locker key and asking anyone within reach, Gee, I'd like to go- I guess I better stay-do you think he'll call the roll. His deliberation was invariably conclusive-that is, he ended the day in school. We have set a premium on originality in writing these histories so that we will not end Rodi's history by taking a slam at New jersey. To begin with, it is not necessary. Secondly, he lives there and is robust enough to show his rough resentment. Wesf Jersey Homeopafhic Hospifal, Camden, N. J. Medicine One hundred ffty-six ap. -Q, Q9- 4. i u ., H V .1 V. i if i 1 l ..., -A - Q .4 bfi l 4 i W l ' 1 .,. 3 151, gig. 5 'QF' 1.42 11.4 , , F19 1 . . :Jig , Q' M., 1 1 vp QQQ 1131 ,, , x n 1-JJ 13,54 QA, .1-S11 N 3 :F 'ET1'-. 1422 479' ' L I-Y tv It .ull fi! Y! 311. T +531 -1 L 1' rv jf' .Qi HIE' .,y ff! , . .,. 55' iff: . lj HF: A,-,, 19 - MEDIC - 31 75 3 .n Y: T .p 'fi l cy -3 gf ri El 4' fi '- 33 G . - v ir ,M . :il . gd . .. :Qi - -.11 t YQ 'ff . iq . i -4 . -w X L. - ' v ,-if Y . Y - ,,i,+ ,A,-, .M ,-m ,?zi ei. ,7, WILLIAM FRITCHEY ROTH, JR. Kingston, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. ILL was a model of cautiousness. He never spoke out of turn. He never an- tagonized anyone and never by some excusable misbehavior excited the notice of any professor. These were admirable but they never lead to recognition. Occaf sionally when he was sure of his ground Bill would stoutly maintain the correctness of his opinions or the inaccuracy of someone else's statements. Bill's proficiency at bridge was a matter of knowledge to his friends and a matter of concern to his social adversaries at the card table. He was a member of that exclusive clique composed of Roth, Rodi, Shreiner nd Smith. The exclusiveness of this group was not of the Obnoxious variety and had its origin solely in the fact that it took four to play bridge and that alphabetical proximity sometimes promotes friendships. Two things conf spired to lend him an air of distinction. One was conferred by nature-the other by an oculist. The irst was a moustache and a quiet professional demeanor, the second was a pair of hexagonal spectacles. From the appearance of studious and efficient attitude it is prophesied that he will survive both. Wyoming Valley Hospiial Obstetrics -K, I ..gJ, One hundred fftyfseuen SDIC RUSSELL RUBBA HHmmO11fOD, N- Lehigh University, Ch.E. Hahnemann College of Science Il Circolo Italiano, Orchestra, Maiiager 141, Blue and Cold Ball Committee Q41 UBBA already had completed an engineering course when he attempted the hazards of a medical studentship. He introduced himself to us with a smile and a quick twist of the head. From that earlier day on these were to be the emblems of his presencesa smile and abrupt gestures. He could turn around in his seat at a signal quicker than any other. His movements were rapid and tense. Into this format of speed and tension was added a staccato voice. So words were spoken sharply and with an exciting emphasis. Usually quiet and unheard he could on the right or wrong kind of stimulus became alternately very gay and companionable or very critical. At these times his face lit up with the intensity of his speech and theme. His physical unit was a mass of activity and Njumpinessf' Always interested, he entered into his duties with enthusiasm. Then, outside this sometimes vacant realm, he found opportunity for the expansion of this activeness on the dancing floor. From Atlantic City to Philadelphia, winter or summer, he followed the dances. Abandoning editorial decorum, we make note to mention the swell damesn he escorted. He was interested in institutions, plants, and foundations, probably all part of the engineering complex. Wesf Jersey Homeopathic Hospiial, Camden, N. J. Gasfro-Enierology One hundred jiftyfeight T 1 I gy SHIGEKATA SAJI Tane, Higashiazaifgun, Omi, japan Fourth National College, Kanazawa, japan, BS. O ONE was clever enough to develop a nickname for Saji, our good friend. Each doctor, in taking roll, gave it enough variety to appear in nicknames, but this was only the difficulty of pronunciation. The great problem seemed to be whether to have the silent or expressed. The professor of obstetrics sharply called out in his best manner, Say ye, followed by a terse, Right? and let it go at that Fortunately none attempted the surname. There was something attractive about this quiet little man from so far away whose favorite studies in the oriental fashion were Pathology and Philosophy. After a lecture as we passed out we saw him still ponder' ing with his little feet resting on the chair ahead, smoking a cigarette and oblivious to motion. It was not easy to conjecture what his thoughts were. Home, the little flower girl, bridges to cross, oceans, constellations, many religions, all fitted into that mind. His diversions were smoking, rowing, and mathematics, a hodgefpodge of shapes which he molded smoothly into the pattern of his leisure. He smiled broadly when questioned about his home and told us about it so that streets lived. How permanent that Oriental ideal is, we knew, when he told us he had a girl, but he hadn't written to her for three years. He wrote for us about himself, He likes solitude and yet shows an exceeding joy when he meets a most congenial friend. He seems to be happy when his time is spent well, and seems to be irritable when his time is wasted. When he gets irritable he forgets lots of things and does funny things. He likes to say we are all brothers and sisters after all. Expecfs fo refurn fo Japan Surgery One hundred fiftyfnine ' :. .I ' l , 1 l i BERT LYNN SAVITZ Leighton, PH. Nluhlenberg College, B.S. Orchestra fl, 2, 3, 4j AVITZ never worried about examinations. His idea of preparation was a good movie or going to bed early while his roomfmate burned the proverbial oil. He accomplished such ease and conhdence by attending every class regularly and on very few occasions was he late. In the morning before nine he would be sitting in his seat by the lantern ten minutes before the hour. He played a violin and mandolin. These performances were so wrought with squeaky noises and discord that his room' mate's only resource was to go out for the evening. Savitz was sure to say with emphasis that he could play songs if he had the music. Fortunately this was always missing. In the Freshman year he had strange ideas about the control of cancer with formic acid. Chemistry lab hour found him testing the PH of the juice from a bee's sting. Dr. Chandler and he entered into queer disputations as to how the apparatus should be arranged. He walked over to Vine Street at luncheon to eat oyster stews with Prutzman. At Westborough Hospital he spent a whole summer as Junior interne. He returned to college after this experience with more gravity and fewer schemes. Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospi+al, Johnsfown, Pa. Medicine One hundred sixty V L. E K7 v is fl E, ic. V. E, l -ri ,wp if l. ,J rf D iv 4 1 l r ,. 1. 1. l. l. li 5 li FP if L Q. ff?- I Q f I I C 31 an ' L ' 5' 1 1 7 f . ' v THOMAS JOSEPH DANIEL SCANLAN Germantown, Phila., Pa. St. Josephs College La Salle College Glee Club E WAS just so big but in walking he could outdistance the tallest. He went along with the speed and grace of a sandfpiper, without apparent effort, swaying from side to side. Tommie was another of the Let's go group who were evident after the lapse of ten minutes. Until that time he was studiously quiet with his note' book or talking with Andy. He was noted for his likes and dislikes, and his fiery convictions. Pathology and its assortments were on the black list and often he argued the impracticability in general practice of abstruse science. At the end of the hall on the first floor he was suddenly silent and the passage of the figure in the white coat found him in the background. In recitation he got up steam by answering, Yes, doctor -mildly, to say the least. He was one of the fighting Irish who joined in the alliance against the aspersions of the Dutch and the English. His friends were multitude through all the classes. Tommy was usually of one temper all of the time, rarely varying. He did seem too serious at times. A brieffcase was part of his personal habit and daily he carried it up and down the subway. His lip was cut and bruised one day. In explanation he told us that he was forced to aid in a fight the night before. This was part of his heroic battle for the accomplishment of his educaf tion. He worked nights in a recreation center. Reading Homeopafhic Hospital, Reading, Pa. Orthopedics One hundred sixty-one MEDIC 2 31 1.4 ' -----fm --- - -------A' - - f - - .-- .- -in ALBERT F. SCHMIDT Phill'-dflphill, PH- College of Science, B.S. Glec Club, Boxing Team, Alpha Sigma ll L, Smitty, Schmeit, 'l' gk ? I !, von Friedrich, are a few of the many names given to this popular Teuton, He began to attract attention in pref medical school by the statues he contrived on the doctor's desk before the lecture. These statue impersonations must have been worth something, for we heard the rumble of their popularity in every year when someone called, Statue, Schmidt! Later, Al abandoned this one art for the development of another, when he became enthusiastic about the Glee Club. About 12.30 of the rehearsal day, we could see Albert going around urging everyone indiscriminately to go up for practice. He always assured us that the quality of your voice was secondary, that they only needed numbers. Some of the men, especially Don, expressed a paternal interest in Al. This probably nurtured his virginal modesty. For two years he was our prize representative on the Boxing Team. His aggressive stance in the ring will not soon be forgotten. Like a Teuton, he proudly bore the scars of battle. Al resented it when the whole class answered Here! as his name was called at the roll. In our last year he was quieter, older, though as active in merriment as ever, and the statue order was less often heard. Ann May Memorial Hospi+al, Spring Lalxe, N. J. Obsfefrics One li undred szxtyfzwo n 'A p f fi '. ,4:. . 'sa : 19 if Pi l F GLEN SCHREINER Nanticoke, Pa. Lafayette College, AB. Phi Alpha Gamma LEN was a quiet companion. His silence hid from strangers the deeper qualities he possessed. Endowed with horsefsense and enough gray matter to avoid too much scholastic concentration, he went through the years successfully without distinguishing himself. We would look for him in some corner or recess about the college to find him crouched over a makeshift table with a group of cronies playing pinochle, as if life depended upon such things as a meld or an undiscovered widow. Philadelphia's movie houses were his favorite retreats and in the same fashion as in the card game he would Crouch up in his seat and watch life on a screen, Few difficulties caused him even mild annoyance, somehow worry was no part of him. Externally appearing so sober, we were left suspecting that gayety and sport were planted in him. He was of the type that would give you the proverbial shirt off his back. Marked were the easy gait, the hair on his forehead, the twinkle in his eyeg hidden were the play, the game, they reckless spirit that only for a while revealed themselves in a chuckle, a grin, or a dusty answer. Wyoming Valley Homeopafhic Hospifal, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Medicine One lzzmdrecl sixtytiwee -x 'S .M M U C - 31 R i 4 ff, 3 , i , I , F I l ' is 5 r.. l fj, Q E, .1 li i ,. i lv I L' , fl :rf ' L. 'r' X. V, 'is' rw ,ary 72 15 l , icfff 1 lflf fl l yt if , fp. -my 1 , ff if - iff rf. QQ i R, V,, iw.. , ,, A-,. .41 f. . -, L ' 1-,. be 1-Lf , a ' sz. rf: fi, ' 255 -'r .f 3 L. fs- - C-,il wi 1 H-1 f. V i Y rr ii--f i ii V' ' ' K. .P ' r' ' ff.- , CY EQ' 'xi i - ii i r iii i :f t ,, Y WALTER R. SEIP Pittsburgh, Pa. University of Pittsburgh Glee Clubg Phi Alpha Gammag MEDIC Staff ALTER impressed us with his niceties of speech and manner. Rarely did he deflect from his position of coolness and easiness in the face of difficulty. It was not strange that with this quality he made numerous friendships. He could be very serious about things which often seemed trivial but he was always sensitive to the humor in a situation, once he found it. Then he would laugh openly and put a friendly arm about his companions shoulder. He was one of the many who cherished what was left of falling hairs and assiduously used that now famous hair tonic. In his makefup there was a notable absence of fickleness. This constancy affected his detached and collegiate habits. He was not inclined to digress from the proverbial ustraightfandfnarrowf' He adhered to this principle more by natural im' pulse than by the suasion of some personal philosophy. As a member of the Glee Club he encamped with the other songsters at twelvefthirtv for the routine rehearsal. The subject of Pittsburgh and its environs occupied much of his daily conversation. In this he revealed the same personal constancy to a cause and to a destination. Piffsburgh Homeopathic Hospifal Obsfefrics One hundred sixtyffour '. ,L fl? ' . Q E Eff' tl Q il Ja , ,ip 'i . fi? , 'ffl L.. 1.1, C 5 r . . 1 ,. - .fi 21? f.-' ' F. .jafrj . iv, 3 5,7-. iv., - 7fl,' ff, ' -. if ' if fl- f.E..g , R.. . EG, frat I . fi-5 '- 'k,':i,'. i. Eff- 411' 'cs ra: ,Lg LAX. Dx . It ' ' 5- 635 f ' rf aq- .L-,i 1,315 . - -'C . it ' ,9 . L 'S fry. . Stk. .1 .,. ,Gln , . .Ae U gi. J- IU ' sa-. ' :N VL? EI. vi' in , I U,- axg . -g 19 E M MC l 7 L l i NEVIN HEATHCOTE SEITZ Glen Rock, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Orchestra fl, 2, 3, 41g Clee Club fl, 2, 3, 4jg VicefPresident of Class Q, 31g President of Class Mfg President of Student Council f4jg President of Institute f4jg Secretary of Pi Upsilon Rho f4jg Pi Upsilon Rho HIS is about the Dean's typical fine fellow. Nevin probably had no more dangerous expression than, OhJ the dickensf' and he was very upset when he went this far. He was prefeminently under control at all times. His smile was attractively all over his face at once at the same time. This was rather indicative of his good humor and successful adaptation. We suspected that he was very free of complexes. His philosophy was that perfect form which never disturbed or hindered its subject. He was an effective leader and rose to prominence in our class slowly but steadily by the recognition of his worth. When he walked he leered from side to side and on laughing his shoulders bounced up and down as if they were on springs. He went to church. He had athletic diversions. He received packages from home and ate the nuts and pretzels they bought. His hair was falling out and so he used Dr. Bernsterin's tonic. This didn't worry him. He joked about it, true to form. He was respected by all who knew him. His position rather prefeminently gained for him the distinction of fine fellow. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One lumdred sixtyffire RICHARD PAUL SHIRINIAN Edgewood, R. I. Providence College, Ph.B. Glee Club ll ICKH had one great difficulty in keeping down a very black beard all through our four years together. From nine o'clock to five he could change from a cleanfshaven fellow into a marooned explorer type with a heavy growth. He was carefree and unconcerned in most matters of routine. However, he was always preparing elaborate outlines of every course. At the most untimely occasions he would burst into song. He and his partner Flynn often came through the halls together, each attempting to reach the higher key on the scale. And the songs they sang! Some were sad and dreamy about way out in the west or over the hill and others were just plain rotten about--. This place marks a censor's erasion. Dick was always looking for some group argument where he could push in and, with one foot on a chair, start gesturing and talking about basic philosophy. Some' times these dissertations were hopelessly unclear, but they had all the charm of the unknown. His uhappyfgo-lucky manner relieved these talks of any too serious strain. Singing, jesting, or working Dick never lost his happy method. S+. Joseph's Hospital, Providence, R. l. Surgery One hundred sixtyfsix 19 - MEDEC I s 1 GERALD H. SLOAN Carroltown, Pa. St. Francis College Knights of Columbus LGAN, partner to the union with Blevins, more silent, more distant as the years went by. He grew in this reserve as others grew in frivolity. None could con- jecture his deepest thoughts. Superficially he revealed interest only in the other man alongside of him. During lecture, it was his feature to talk irregularly to the one beside him. References were made to the thesis of the lecture, to the presentation, or to subjects very extraneous. At any rate, the remarks were lost in the general plan of things. He spoke of things as if he didn't care. Nonchalance, savoirffaire, and all that. The beard on his face was always very black. It was so heavy that even after tending it, the black stubs still made him a little too virile looking. At any time, pertinent or not, he characteristically spoke above a relatively quiet class. He was mildly sarcastic. He could laugh louder than any other. We suspected that he was skeptical of all things. This broad sweep of philosophy included professors and their dogmas. A quiet worker who got there for all his apparent indiiferencc, he took life with an easy flourish and never worried about anything. Children's and Sf. Luke's Hospi+al Medicine One hundred sixtyfseven 19 - MEDIC - BE If ...- .vg if 1 I er 12. . 1 '-U' Li Q .1 4 . ,. U 3 . .if 1 N ,? Q l In 1 1.5 .3 Q 91 11 5' 1 1 -f Q 21. if 1 1.1 'il Eg 1 1 3 ig 3 . I 3 vi- 1 , ag up ,I + 51 i- 3 1 H :f 1 1 1. s. A :J , K 1- ' 1 2 1.. . V 'ir f gf. 1.' ,. Q1 T- g,. , -. . . .L V N V I L1 1 '- ' 4, 1. Q 1 if 1 ii LQ 1 1 1 1 . 1 1,5 R T.. , , W: J 1 ' f- ,L 5. . :Q XL -P .V If L 9: , . Vg F' 1' - P-1 'f nf - -- - - - - E ,a lea F. ALAN EUGENE SMITH BYOOHYU, N- Y- Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Orchestra fl, 2, 3, 41g Newman Club ll MITTY, we called him. It was not at all elegant but rather fitted this very young man among us. He sat on the first seat by the rostrum in the fire house with a medical dictionary tracing off a certain professor's mistakes in spelling. It was rather a vantage point for taking notes and there began the historic mimeograph sheets which were passed out the next day for a nickel apiece. Many a man found in the lecture room a cozy corner where he could rest and dream while Smitty sat on his front seat and took the notes. It was a service that none forgot. He made as much out of the class as possible, but had to retire when some of the doctors discovered that he was stealing their thunder. After that he was urged many times to return to his old form, but he looked back and saw the compulsion of the faculty over his shoulder. In our later years he started buying Colliers and Saturday Evening Posts to read in his numbered seat on Friday afternoons. On Thursday at clinic hour we would hear a call and turn to see Smitty hold the newfdated Post as if a dis' covery. He developed a razZberry once and when the lights went out he ordered a change of slide by this terrible noise. How this little man has grown? He has reached the third stage in the cycle of Will Shakespeare and the other four are to COIT16. Hahnemann Hospifal, Scranion, Pa. Obsfefrics One hundred sixtyfeight N . N., 1, Y-: XM51. 'Qu . 1113: 1: in 1 1 X Zz, F 'ti 1 -ns. 5 1 ' 1 'fill ' 'I7f':.g' 4 .. 1 452' 124.-.51 Ji V'-71 1 g, ,. . .Z - L 5 .l 1 F-, 1 , -.. 1 uf .1 .lug 1.1 1- 5 J Iii-T . l ...uf - .xp g 2.3. 11' . nt I .' ,- 143-- 41'1. FJ Yrs .wa 1 1 1 V l ijt' xl S' 1 ' 1 .qijr E jf 1 321' l 1 .fvf 5 i, l .U 1 I I 1 'fVf,.Ll VC.-ful 1 i ffm- 1 1 .,...,J 'lg' z BERTRAM HARTZELL SMITH Haddon Heights, N. J. Wheatoii College, AB. Orchestra ERTRAMVS academic debut as far as the class was concerned was spectacular. As a Freshman he delivered a lecture on the vascular system of the human body. Those of the class who were awake testify to the merits and accuracy of his dissertation. Intellectual interests are certainly too abstract to suifer hereditary transmission, yet this is the probable source of his interest in medicine. Most of us envied him for his early contacts with the sick which it was possible for him to establish as assistant to Dr Smith, Senior. This early training was not evident from any of Bert's own display. His silence was a masque for more than one instinctive virtue. He openly revealed an interest in bridge. His companions were so wellfknown in this pastime that it is not necessary to comment now. When his amusement was attuned to some incident that brought forth general laughter, Bert roared above the rest. He was quick to change in his manner from that of quietness to that of easy merriment. His friends and associates were wellfacquainted with this quality. West Jersey Homeopafhic Hospifal Medicine One hundred sixtyfnine CHARLES MIDDLETON THOMPSON. Il AMUEYOI1, PH- Transylvania University flientuckyj Gamma Eta Kappag Pi Kappa Alphag EditorfinfChief of MEDIC Q41 HE walls of his room were adorned with satirical prints. His deskftop, holding papers of record, histories of persons, outlines of pages was as disheveled as a poet's hair. The gradual editing of the MEDIC found him closer to these papers which later grew into an orderly annual. He began his job with the argument that he wanted something different in our book that it was to be less namateurishf' His speeches at staiffmeetings were punctuated with blinking eyeflids and a wildly moving finger. In class when a tedious lecture provoked him, he made protests against certain colorless phases in the curriculum. Dalliance with nebulous ideas was a keen pleasure to him. He showed a tendency to shun the commonplace and to be interested by the bizarre. Nature endowed Charley with a passion for beauty in the abstract, perfect phrases, perfect lines of color and all symmetrical things. He was by no means a languishing esthete-for his escapades were numerous enough to excite the concern of his friend, Ware. To the latter's halffjoking remonstrances, Charley listened quietly but in the end he would assert, When I work, I work: when I play, I play. Capable of great efforts, Charley was indolent about things distasteful to him. He was a man of many and colored moods, changing as the winds or in reaction to the latest book. Silence and merriment occupied his mind alternately. Abington Memorial Hospifal, Abingfon, Pa. Infernal Medicine One hundred seventy HARRY ERNEST TOMPKINS Germantown, Phila., Pa. College of science, Bs. Track Team Captain Qjg Associate Editor IVIEDICQ Phi Alpha Gamma ll RNIB was prominently smooth and mannered but at times when irritated he could paradoxically end an argument with Nutz or some other vulgarian epithet. Again after luncheon he had a flair for asking, Got a toothpick? and using one rather publicly in the next few minutes. These were the most serious anomalies in his makefup but most often he was a conformist. Conservatism was the mark of his activities and he was sure to attempt to dampen overfenthusiasm or rabid judgments. With this quality it was irregular that he should be mildly cynical. He forever said that he had to see to believe, with especial reference to therapeutics. Apparently this was a healthy state of mind that it should encourage his deeper studies and his attenf tion to bibliography. He was markedly reserved at many times but became very animate'when asked for an opinion. He introduced many new books and pamphlets into our class. His compends were original and indispensable. He was alive to the importance of extrafcurricular reading. We should speak of neckwear which impressed itself on a class on Monday morning and encouraged all sorts of whistles to blare forth. His greatest interest was in the clinic of internal medicine. Abingfon Memorial Hospifal, Abingfon, Pa. Infernal Medicine One li unclred seventy-one 19 - MEDIC - 31 ,,? 7+ , 4 - r. 4 .5 'ry . E' , ,Q -1 V. --r' , L IW 1, ,. - ,- -: L. ' L . 2' fi , Q -,- .3 5 'Q S W ' vi' -' 5. ,ti N 1 r- l. , 1 ,A .2 .V .. .Lk-N J: lf -3 . 7 ' L 4' f. 'Q I , , li, . .' - I . . I 'Y . 4 . , . v , jf . - b kt E -. 1 - k .h ,. . 5 VI. . 52 El. I g,' ., La. V. I Q L2 if . g I, .L , . A ,,.-YY' Y An, Y af., , , ,, Sf.. MICHELE VIGLIONE Philadelphia, Pa. Hahnemann College of Science Circolo Italiano fl, Zjg Class VicefPresident HQ, VicefPresident of Institute f4jg Business Manager of MEDICg Class Secretary QU ll IKE compassed about three centuries of medical advance when he grew up from the barbers' trade to the position of the twentiethfcentury physician. He studied Histology then in an empty chair between customers, and with the usual efficiency of a master technician in any chosen trade. He was graceful in his choice of words, and the power of his intellect could be revealed by his fluent logic. He had the quality of giving to every question a very different aspect. So different often that it was easier to forget the subject than to retrace, or to gainsay Mike. He didn't trust himself to any favorite study. He would be just as satisfied as a lawyer, a poet, a salesman, or a tradesman, if he could be an expert. A little wine loosens the tongue was one of his sidelong utterances, emphasized with a Chesire Cat grin and a chuckle. This may have been relevant to his Wet sympathies, but surely Mike was never so obvious. In everything he said we suspected something deep and cryptic. Shelley and the Elizabethan poets most often flavored his literary personality. There is a resemblance here between him and these figures. Mike would have been a worthy guest in The Mermaid Tavern. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Infernal Medicine One lmndred seventyftwo l Y . A , -1.. 4, .x' i'A'i I l i as l . l l .' W , - l l I ' ' i - ' i ,Ln Ff- l Y li-V ' C41 vi, if-' E-:. :ff Wh . iff ' Cf' ' P1 'fi . is . ii 1 19 Miffvlf . ll . x.. L ' Qi oil il A fi aa 1 vi ,Q ia i lvl -F Q l . av. .. .:L. . .,.. --Y.. .. .1-.---?-Yi.i..,...-Y .- . ..,-,,-...A.., . . '- CARL NASH WARE Millville, N. J. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Virginia Military Institute, B. S. Theta Nu Epsilong Assistant Business Maiiager of MEDIC ARL entered from military school. This early education colored his personality for the four long years. Though his speech, which was characteristically slow and hesitant, never was sharp or staccato, he never forgot the old army stride and how to pound those heels. Somehow he typified virility. He could by shaking up his hair a little and clawing those big hands look the part of the roughest character in an age. Then he could polish up and look the part of real gentility. Trans' formations like this were easy for Carl. He could one minute sit in his room as the very serious student discouraging any interruption, and the next join the rest of the quarters gang in throwing grapes or fixing someone's room. Carl had the en' campment taste for ballads and ditties. He presented much rhyme and music to the class. Certain ones like My Girl Lil and Oh, Sister You'll Be Called On became so accepted that they resembled class anthems, and were only kept from actual recognif tion by their indelicate humor. We remember his restful nature and his ability for sitting semifmilitary fashion, head down, waiting for the bell. He was master at the art of riding someone, but kept quiet at the mention of f1refescapes. Week' ends were his failing and how he took them! Thompson and he were never separated. The union started the Hrst day in the Freshman year. They regularly bought each other unemployed apples. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Gynecology I 3 One hundred seventyfthree l Tilf I 31 - J avr ., DOUGLAS CLAUSER WASLEY Sl'16I1HI'1dOHh, PH. Hahnemann College of Science, B.S. Orchestra Cl, 2, 3, 413 Glee Club O, 413 Phi Alpha Gammag F. and A. M. ll OUGN was the exemplar of that big brother spirit, especially from the fraternity aspect. He carried with him and his bowfties and colored shirts a modest grin that was more prominent when he laughed boldly. At times, this happy mien was only a masque for some internal trepidation, some deep excitement. He would sit on the bench outside the sacred office with the other, it doesn't mean anything boys and appear very easily until his turn, when he would look very uneasy, eyes become big, and nervously explain Aw, gees, I have forgot everything I ever knew. Then out of his confusion he would find the way to correct answers and to reflect the perfect study. Doug at times was gullible. There was no end to telling him fairy tales and getting attention. He believed almost any probable fable until disillusioned, and then he goodfnaturedly laughed to tell you that he knew you were fooling. He took long walks, and when coming through the halls he still was the sturdy hiker where he pounded his loud leather heels. Gymnastics rounded out curves where biceps and triceps were planted, and he became one of our physical men. At Reading Hospital as a junior Interne he wrote histories and once they say he attempted a tonsilectomy. Hahnemann Hospifal, Philadelphia, Pa. Surgery One lnmdred .seventyffouv iw i Iii 2 ISADORE WESSEL Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania, AB. Il ESS is of that mighty host whose sojourn to slumberland is frequent and periodic. The explanation for this is far afield. She lives in Wilmiiigton and despite this fact is still elegible for Wessel's affections. We are under oath not to reveal the source of the information which brings to our attention the fact that Wessel bought round trip tickets to Wilmington in great lots. In the prominence and squareness of his chin one conjures a picture of quiet aggressiveness and an intolerance for sentiment. Unfortunately his ruffled curly hair explodes this illusion. He will spend one year at the Women's Homeopathic Hospital. During his Senior year his notes were a model of authenticity for they were written on the official Hahnemann stationery, He was very complacent and rarely perturbed. He never betrayed signs of alarm before, during or after an examination. His nonchalant acceptance of these necessary evils excites our admiration. His manner of walking about suggested a pompous and strict dignity. He didn't waiver, he didn't become excited, he didn't emote. After knowing him for these long years it is natural to add that the manner was generally admired. Women's Homeopathic Hospi+al Infernal Diagnosis One hundred seventy-fue 5 31 5. ,, , J .Q I' 1' v' 1. KENNETH ROBERT WESTON Allentown, Pa. Penn State College, B.S. President of Class QU, Student Council GQ, Clee Club Q2, 3, 41, Basketball 12, SJ, Sigma Omicron Sigma, Phi Alpha Gamma, Theta Xi ll EN left Penn State renowned for his activity in football and in student assof ciation. As president of our Freshman Class he often needed a heavy gavel to keep the unruly discussions in order. He always found time to keep his averages high, even though he was an inveterate movie fan. Any spare time he could afford was spent in learning card tricks and making quarters disappear. For all of his modesty and dignity Ken possessed a certain amount of buifoonery. He could appear to be very serious and quiet, then noticing someone's attention he could just as suddenly go through the passages of some trick or repeat some halffbaked joke. At these times his face would light up at his own amusement. Once he had been set on an idea, hell, highfwater, and hardfpulling horses couldn't dislodge it. In the most noisy class debate we could expect a quiet word from Ken, which would be like oil on angry waters. We canlt forget his earnest promotion of class comrade' ship. Ken carried the same sincere feeling into his deeper friendships. Allenfown General Hospifal, Allentown, Pa Orthopedics One hundred sevewtyfsix 1 9 H l C al ' ...J ,. . if . ERNEST GEORGE LOUIS WIEBUSCH Waco, Texas Baylor University, AB. E. and A. M., Glee Club 141, Order of Mystic Shrine, Phi Alpha Cammag Treasurer f4jg Class Treasurer QQ, 3, 4jg Ptolemy Secretary G15 Ensign in U. S. Naval Flying Corps During World Warg MEDIC Staff ll EX tells us that he will likely locate in or near his home town in the Lone Star State. Of that we know little. It is of thc years between when he was prodigal that we write. His memorable announcement will not soon be forgotten. The finale of a class meeting was usually, The following fellows have not paid their dues. Then began the personal interviews, Tex holding a black receipt book, with an outstretched hand. His vigorous speeches before the class exhorting us in the name of patriots, fellow countrymen, etc., rivaled the enthusiasm of Patrick Henry of Virginia. Tex should have had an army to lead or a bailiwick to muster. At times he was trying hard to get Texas into the union. He was great for standing on his hands. He followed batting averages closely. Early in the morning he went into Ping Pong room and had an hour's practice with George Myers. During the tournaf ment one year Tex almost reached the finals, The whole partisan class was there, urging him on so much that Tex almost went to pieces. It is rather noteworthy that he always spoke with respect for everyone. His methodical daily program, his precision make this Texan a man of the hour. Clara Barton Memorial Hospital, Los Angeles, Calif. Pediatrics One hundred seventy-seven Y r JOHN HARMON WILSON, JR. CYUWYCL PH- University of Penna. Franklin and Marshall Glee Club fl, 3, 41, Phi Alpha Gamma: Sigma Phi Sigma ll ACK, who was sometimes converted in jock, was the magnet that attracted Yarrington. We are not sure which end of the combination was the attracting end, but the union was rather tenacious. jack had to dispense chewing gum and lifef savers to his partner and sometimes he was requested in a friendly sort of way to finish that history on their case. To this he would react conspicuously by looking up and prof testing, What dya mean. This brave gesture usually was followed by a quick smile and a chuckle that preceded jacks walk down the hall to do that particular and bother' some history. He chewed gum thoughtfully and with finesse. Everything was done with the same perfect form and delicacy. jacks hair was curly, he wore bowlfshaped trousers, doublefbreasted suits and sported a silk kerchief. These with a big, wooley overcoat and a derby completed his debonnair costume. He went in for the extravaganza of good times in the intervals between his periods of serious study. He usually had the best date on any party. He found time for extrafcurricular social excursions. He said little about these and left us only to conjecture. Mounfainside Hospital, Monfclair, N J. Surgery One hundred seventyeight Q ff Pg P F 1 .za f..-V , -A. CHARLES THOMAS YARINGTON Wandy, New York Hobart College, BS. Basketball fl, 2, 31g Phi Delta Theta: Phi Alpha Gammag F. and A. M4 Ptolemy NE of Charlie's favorite diversions was telling stories of how tough he was in college. He came to Hahnemann with a big, bold, bad front and a broad smile that was part of him most of the time. He could say Huh? harder than any other man, and developed something new when he said Geepers Cryprersf' He was always calling for Skookum fCooperQ. This facility for fitting people to names was characteristic of him. It was fun for the observer to hear him attempt to ride someone. Everything he said in such play was goodfnatured and harmless, and no one was hurt. The attractive note in Charlie's makeup was his absolute selffindependence. He was no different in his manner before the interviewing staff or the class meeting. He was unaffected and natural in any environment. He could put more humor into an ordinary experience than a professional clown. He worked hard, he played hard, and he slept hard-rather Rooseveltian. He was notorious for the number of ladies he attached at one time and then let drop. Once he explained that he hadn't made up his mind on an internship for he might fall into a big practice on graduating. He laughed and we laughed over this-we knowing that such selffassertion had colored the man among us. Rober+ Packer Hospifal, Sayre, Pa. Obsfefrics One hundred seventy-nine Q V7 'J D l C - i I l rr - 4. i . .9 , if, 1 . fi ig? Q. , 'i .1 i C JOHN ZAPPALA Philadelphia, Pa. Temple University' Haverford College Baseball, Il Circolo Italiano ffreasurerj APPALA was a model of inconspicuousness until the senior year. It was then that the belated miracle of metamorphosis occurred. Perhaps his courage was bolstered by a moustache and one summer of medical experience. Next to Viglione he enjoyed the irritating pleasure of having his name consistently mispronounced. Before the senior year the shell of reticence was broken only during the baseball season. At that time, authoritatively and without blushing, he discussed his favorite sport and quoted the number of hits made by the second substitute infielder for the Pittsburgh Team of 1910. Then his boldness extended from the confines of sport to every phase of student activity. Why it was nothing for him to ask questions in class! He did it with an urbanity that defied not only description but also professional dignity. His close relation to Primiano prove that friendship thrives on disagree' ment. These two would disagree. everywhere, anytime, and for no reason at all. They argued decidedly but not decisively. Johns poise was so perfect that he became a competent master of ceremonies-fearlessly introducing many people into the world because of his flair for Ubstetrics. He even learned to fall asleep as quickly as Dr. Mercer. Sf. Mary's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Medicine One hundred eighty af - , , ls 'if .x .F ...4..-i .....4V-V.i cn, , . . ,,,.. . - . H .nw Y ----..- , CHARLES JOSEPH ZELINSKI Vxfest Collingswood, N. J. Hahnemann College of Science, BS. Hahnemann Orchestra fl, 2, 3, 411 Kappa Pi Sigma ERE is one of the many who claimed an interest in Obstetrics. Charlie may have been sincere in this very laudable choice, but wasn't the remark made before Dr. Mercer started his phone calling in the early morning? It was Charlie who in recitation flushed so deeply when called on. He took the question with a gulp, climbed up onto it, slid back, climbed some more, then stumbled for a loss until he finally laughed nervously as if it were all in fun. In the meantime from the collar up he was on fire. Charlie walked into class stiifly like a generalissimo in the Polish army. He was as straight and as tense as a board. In the summer of 1927 he sailed for Europe. Evidently he saw Paris. The tales he told us during lectures the following fall about the dancing girls, the tambourines, and so forth. made us hope' lessly unsettled about a choice of profession. Some of us considered being gigolos with a retinue of dancing partners. Finally in his talk he got to Poland, but after a while we had him back to our favorite stoppingfplace. The doctor, in taking the roll, ended with Charlieis name. This was the signal for the opening of notefbooks. Charlie's common expression in the early years was I got a date tonight. After his marriage in August, 1929, this was taken for granted. S+. Mary's Hospi+aI, Philadelphia, Pa. Obsfefrics One hundred eightyfonc ,4- I t fv- 3 XX? Xlf. fm' xx xx 5 I X X X I x X X X X 'N-wx E453 , M 9., i x A I fi J w '5 , I 1 3 4 i w 2 , l 5 1 '3 TRL ' 67 . Q L Q 'lf 2 'J v jp 4 .mf . .4 -3 ' HISTORY ENERALLY the story of an individual begins at the moment of his birth. The first lusty cry of the infant is the signal that starts the biographical pens to scratching and the paternal relatives to bragging. But in the Orient a more scientific viewpoint is held. There, age is def termined from the time of conception. In reviewing the lifefspan of a class in medicine is it not proper that we should, for the moment, turn Oriental and chronicle our class from its scientific beginning? And so begins our Book of Genesis, the story of the creation of the Class of '31. As Adam was formed from the dust of the earth, so was the class formed from a stack of papers on a mahogany desk. From the north came sounds of tumbling walls, of murderous hammers, of grunting trucks, as the old Hahnemann College building was erased. Under Broad Street, to the east, burrowed the subway, evidenced by an avalanche of thundering, pounding, shouting, whistling, rending noise. Noise, noise, noise, dust, vibration, heat, smoke, noise! Noise was everywhere. And in the midst of it, oblivious to it, seemingly reveling in it, Doctor Pearson sat moulding his creation from that stack of papers. He worked rapidly, almost feverishly, in his deliberate, methodic fashion so peculiar to him. Here was a letter from an applicant, here one from a physics professor in Wichita, Kansas: here was one from a suspender manufacturer in Brooklyng here one from an alumnus, and still another from a doctor in South Philadelphia. Each must be read and weighedg each must be answeredg each represented a part of that whole he was forming. Gradually, carefully, he built. A unit from Delaware was utilized, another from Texas, from Rhode Island, Kentucky and japan, from India, Massachusetts, Cuba, Ohio and New Jersey, Michigan and Pennsylvania. Material from all these states was used by the worthy doctor in his labor. And finally, after days of tireless effort, he called to his side his secref tary and handed him a list. These are accepted, he said simply. His creative effort was concluded, and the class was conceived. Into the waste basket went the scraps that were left. What possif bilities went with them? What Listers? What Pasteurs? What Mayos? What Oslers might those applications have contained? Perhaps there was one who would have borne the blue and gold banners of Hahnemann to the pinnacles of medical or surgical success. We say, perhaps! But the best remained on that precious list in the secretary's hands. the chosen people of Doctor Pearson. On the evening of October the third, nineteen hundred and twenty' seven, into the Elkins Amphitheatre marched the one hundred and twenty' seven select. In the pit sat strange members of a strange faculty. One of these stood forth and spoke seriously of noble traditions-, endless studyf, midnight oil-, illustrious graduates-, cofoperation between student and teacher-, self sacrifice-. He was applauded and sat down. Doctor Pearson glanced about. Could this possibly be the result of his careful planning and moulding? Why, that one fellow up there looks like an idiot! And I'll swear that chap beside him never completed a high school course. That bald headed one looks as though he might turn out to be a good chemist. I wonder if that is Doctor Smith's son? How did I ever choose that silly looking lad with the spectacles and moustache? The life of a dean is certainly a trying one. Soon the assembly disbanded and the eightieth annual session had begun. One hundred eightyffve 4? - MEDIC - 31 FRESHMAN YEAR AHINEMANN Medical College and Hospital during that year was not a very edifying institution. The hospital building and the nurse's home, both on Fifteenth Street, were built of an unattractive mud colored stone. The fire house, temporary quarters of Anatomy and Histology, was sheepishly hiding behind the Medicine FIRST YEAR-FIRST HALF I is 1 gn.. iw-HMw.v1mUm.v 9-I0 Physiolrvgucal and Chnlcal Chemistry 0-ll lxcuares and Labor: L- P mn. Hepburn 1 c ai , I2-I l 17, Anatomy imvuns ' Phillips :mama 34 l Tefmmxsgy Leanne l I Cam,-mail :iff im-.I-in flncludmz Nc-um-Il W.: - ia-um-5 and mmfaidfy OW - Snyder and Lmfm FIRST YEKR-SECOND HALF 'ws l M' -1 l I vi r.w..t.,.vi rm... .5 fa .ln will l..1wm.,f , 'muon Ile:-mmf. 1,-cwfc, nan-,my l Anammy ,yn,,i,,m,. mlnm Pm-ps i gym, f A Ana:-,mv , - - -i Lsrnmm, I 1 Y ill ' n I. TY, l - l x Pnymxfwsn and cnmui criemiwy g f Y-l x mummy Lectures ana Lamramfy rwn. Hfllbum and Chsndl Embr 'ol0x:Y x ami district police station. On Broad Street were being laid the foundations of the new hospital, and just to the south, brazen, ugly and unadorned stood the college building. During its youth and middle age this structure had served as a garage, but now, as though alilicted with General Paresis, it strutted and posed in the role of Hahnemann Medi' cal College. As far as we can remember, the ground floor was comprised of an OutfPatient Department, a grand piano, a bust of Samuel Hahnemann, and a huge sign on the wall saying BLOW YOUR HORN. The second floor, much more interesting to the student's appraising eye, harbored the technicians and the Pathology laboratory. The third floor was the seat of the Physiology Depart' ment and the smoking room, while the fourth floor-, ah yes, the fourth floor-, was the happy hunting grounds of the Chemistry Department, where Fresh' men were always in season. The build' ing was fitted throughout with concrete floors, frail wooden partitions, and noise. Who can forget that noise? Who can say he doesn't recall in horror those snorting steam shovels that spoiled every lecture, and the riveting guns that beat a tattoo throughout the year? Noise! The very word is terrifying. On the fourth floor of this humble building the Class of '31 was actually born. It blinked its eyes and stared about at its strange constituents, spoke shyly to them, shook their hands, smiled and felt at home. Then in walked its creator, Doctor Pearson, Dean and head of the Department of Chemistry. He stepped to the platform, looked at his watch and said briskly, Genf Q3 ,Qf,.g tlemen, it's exactly nine o'clock. That's all right. We are getting if ,fx off to a prompt and punctual beginning. Don't ever let it be said 3 that a single minute is wasted in this department. Now if my good I friend Doctor Chandler will distribute-. 9 The gist of that opening lecture will remain always a delight X in our memories. It began with a detailed description of the inf rf tricacies and thoroughness of the modern factory. It pictured the f raw materialiriding on endless belts past workmen who tempered it, cut it and pieced it together, the inspectors who checked the work, the wrappers, the clerks and finally, the finished product in the hands of the public, Very cleverly One hundred eightysix nl 9 our dean drew his analogies. Hahnemann College is a factory where physicians are made. We were the raw material, entering on Broad Street. We too were to be tempered and cut and fitted together, and inspected, wrapped, labelled and turned out on Fifteenth Street to an unmerciful public. Would we meet the rigid demands of the inspectors? Would our minds and bodies withstand the long hours, the countless examinations and the pitiful sights we were to encounter? The lecture seemed to convey the thought All hope abandon, ye who enter here. But it had the desired effect. In our breasts swelled the spirit of conflict. We shall gird our loins and go forth to meet and conquer these menacing ogres. We are not afraid. We, Doctor Pearson, shall justify your selection. You will be proud of your son. This spirit walked with us as we passed up Fifteenth Street at one o'clock: it lagged behind as we turned in past the police station and it completely disappeared at the entrance of the ire house. Here was the stronghold of Anatomy, that mighty demon whose language awed us and whose immensity frightened us. Truly, we quaked and trembled as we awaited his Hrst word. Doctor Phillips was formally known as Associate Professor of Anatomy. He it was who talked fwe won't say lecturedj to the Freshf . - men each day at one o'clock. His voice was quiet and sincere, his gestures unassuming, his every action was retiring and reticent. Can't c Ng I we see him now as he stood before us in his white coat with the cuffs X31 iff turned up, piece of chalk in hand, drawing childflike sketches on the .-V board to illustrate the triangles of the neck? Can't we see him again, puffing out his cheeks to demonstrate the action of the Buccinator I muscle? His immeasurable value seemed to lay in his ability to inspire in us a desire to be like him, a student and a man. E , , it-SXSW The class as a whole reacted well to the course in Anatomy. They semed to enjoy taking home a bag of bones on that first night, and they liked the sketching hour each day from one 'til two. And Georges, yes, of course, George-, hobbling silently about, with polite salutations and inevitable cigars, surf rounded always with an atmosphere of mystery through which broke occasionally a vague story of Daddy Weaver and his inseparable Harriet. We shan't forget those first days of Anatomy. But things were brightening. Already we had met two of our professors and they seemed strangely human. The individual members of the class, too, were becomf ing acquainted. They found that the idiot was a Phi Beta man from State: and that bald headed one knew more of liqueurs than chemistryg and the silly looking lad with the spectacles and moustache knew three nurses in the training school. They found that one could eat for twofbits in the automat if one weren't too particular about spilled soup and elbows. They found that sitting on running boards on Broad Street was, from an esthetic standpoint, an excellent means of studying Anatomy. But Anatomy, from a Histologic standpoint, was in the oifing, and at two o'clock the course began. Gentlemen-, but lots of times we didn't have anye, at the third week the foetus-, hasn't that girl a longi, the epithelium, lining the uriniferous tubules is-, Smith, how do you spell-. All these phrases are intimately linked with the name Doctor Snyder. His lectures were delightful, no other word can describe them. A dry subject bored him even more than it bored his listeners. Consequently One huncirecl eightyseueii ' fn - ' . 74-1 fan, 19' if we find his more involved talks studded with pleasantries and jokes making Histology acceptable,-even enjoyable. To most of us he will always remain a mystery. Who was Doctor Snyder? The pokerffaced tyrant who examined us . orally? The jovial, smiling, joking Tommy we sometimes knew? f ' The methodic, sincere scientist who lectured? Cr was he the austere W j Thomas M. Snyder who promenaded up Fifteenth Street, with cane -Q jj and boutonniere on those sunshiny Indian Summer days? Of only Lftfk one thing are we sureg tyrant or scientist, smiling or austere, he was first and last our friend. l The first day was past. To their various homes and apartments went the students. Out came the address books, the phone numbers. The ice tinkled happily in the glasses and the conversation of friends was pleasant. The Class of '31 was standing out from shore, every sail filled. 44 CD How refreshing are the memories of those school days! Would that we could live them again. Tales are told of the happy student life in Berlin and Vienna, of the beer gardens and cafes, where classmates and teachers were wont to gather of an evening and toast the ladies with foaming steins, and discuss the contemporary problems of science and politics. Students throughout the world are in essence the same, they are brothers under the skin. What matter if it be Berlin or Philadelphia? In den 'Zelten or Mount Vernon Street? Fraulein Schmidt or Miss Smith? Beer or synthetic gin? The underlying spirit remains the same. Youth at heart is a worf shipper of Bacchus, and the Class of '31 was young. You say you've forgotten? Why, I remember well the evening you dropped in to see Bill and me. You said the night was too still and hot and you couldn't stay alone. LBesides,' you added, 'the moon will be full tonight and I've worked awfully hard' So you took off your coat and put on a record. I can hear it now, it was 'Blue Skiesf And then we mixed a few, and called Ruth and Betty, and that dark eyed girl who lived on Rittenhouse Square. Cf course! I knew you hadn't forgotten. When, I wonder, shall we meet again under such happy stars? But our thoughts wander, and seee, it is already Wednesday. Today we are to have class elections. But first we must meet again the Chemistry Department. Doctor Pearson was ably assisted in his teaching by Doctor joseph Hepburn, A.M., B.S. in Chemistry, M.S., Ph.D. We cannot forget him. He was Bill Lentrfs worst customer. He wore a derby in the summer time. He was slouchy and small. He could lecture even ff? aff ' while pictures were being removed from the wall and handed about. lr jg He could tell the dullest jokes we ever heard. He could lean bf X49 X against a wall that wasn't there. It was said that he lived and Zqji mfg- talked with albino rats, and that he had reduced the task of eating to the mere taking of a pill. To him went the students, the nurses, the faculty, the staff members, with their probelms. Were you pref paring a paper on The Spinal Cordu? Were you thwarted by a problem in Physics? Had you patient developed Paralytic Ileus? Doctor Hepburn was the man you sought. And you were received as one of equal knowledge. You were advised, instructed and helped. Of course you were! Because Doctor Hepburn was a scientist, a teacher and a gentleman. Too much respect cannot be paid him, too many flattering superlatives cannot be used in describing him. Doctor Chandler, the third member of that chemical triumvirate, specialized in One hundred eiglltyfeiglfzt i C: ether fires. Like a well bred bird dog in a field he would stalk through the maze of students and laboratory tables, delicate 'MFQQA nose uplifted, eyes shining, his every muscle tense and trembling Rfk with anticipation. Stealthily, warily he would advance. Suddenly i X see-, what? A quail frightened from a thicket7 A pheasant ' Qi! winging away? No! An ether fire-ln Then would ensue a short A -T vicious struggle, in which the offending fire was extinguished and X the luckless student berated. And that evening, in the Chandler home, we could imagine our proud hero telling of his catch and ff wistfully describing the one that got away. The course in Blood Chemistry, as taught by Doctor Chandler, would have been better named A Course In Blue Blood Chemistry. We found it a delightful mixture of New England dialect and-, well, New England dialect. That he was sincere in his effort to make us gentlemen and chemists, we are thoroughly convinced. Perhaps no one ever told him the fable of the silk purse and the sow's ear. TES! . . . -. . . My there would be a rustle, a crash, a shout and we would look to i - 1-.Ml , , 4. 'll s tlfff F 7 The organized minority warring against the unorganized majority--, how often we have seen it! And who wins? Among the voters at the first election for class officers was a group of men from the Hahnemann College of Science. Their candidate was picked and they were behind him to a man. Cn the other hand, the unorganized faction was composed of representatives of a score of colleges. They had never met before and were unconscious of the merits of their classmates. Whom should they choose? Weston, someone suggested. Whru is he? Let's see him, were the shouted replies. Weston stood up, and the die was cast. When the ballots were counted it was announced that Weston's magnetic personality had sufliced to weld those tottering strangers into a solid majority. Beneath his name in another portion of this record you may read the legend Class President I. Now the academic year was flowing swiftly and surely past us. Fraternity rushing held our minds for a space. Clee Club and Crchestra called for candidates. A class smoker, held in the Gladstone Apartment, further cemented our fast growing amenity. Abe's drug store and Smith's soda fountain were discovered. A fight behind a garage recalled Frank Merriwell days. Some men found that just around the corner was a restaurant where twentyffive and twenty equaled fifteen. In short, we were becoming acclimated. Even the Histology quizzes failed to excite us. We were on our way, gathering momentum and happy. Christmas approached. Holidays! Home! Turkey! Then back to the Kjeldahls, the unknowns, the ether fires, the muscles, the microscopes. Time and tide wait for no man, says the adage. Midfyear examinations came ominously and faded in the dim, dead past. February brought us a new sensation in the shape of Doctor Sylvis, Professor of Anatomy. We wonder beneath what star was Doctor Sylvis born? Perhaps, if you know something of Astrology, you f can determine the star from his description. He was a pompous man, somewhat given to blustering and cigars, after WN the manner of Theodore Roosevelt. His every remark was GJ emphasized with accentuated actions. For example, if he fx, D were describing the lumbar plexus of nerves, he would xi '- X say, -comes forth in a lash of branches--, and he would 7 ,J pull back his coat and indicate with sweeping hands the if-9 course of the nerves in question, starting hack in the lumbar ff' region and following forward over an immensity of waist' coat and trousers to the groins. Then he would step back from the screen. Next picture, he would say. You see, he always lectured with One hundred eigfztyfnine , f-:Ji the lights out and the pictures in Gray's Anatomy reflected on the screen. From across the inky blackness his voice would come booming: -and the anterior branch divides dichotomously into-, and the students went on sleeping soundly through the most complete series of anatomical lectures ever given. For, first and last, above all else, Doctor Sylvis was an anatomist. No tiny blood vessel, no obscure nerve tract evaded his notice. And with February too, came Doctor Bornemann and his course in Pharmacy. Gently and rapidly to the first two rows he spoke of the art of concocting divers solutions and emulsions. In our memory is a period where mortars, beakers, powders, suppositories, filters, pills and ointments run about in riotous confusion like so many goblins on Halloween. One day we made Red Iodide of Mercury tablets. How proud we were when the little pink discs tumbled clean and sym- metrical from the porcelain tile. To think that here, with one flour' ishing gesture, were enough pills to cure a thousand agonized throats! Why, it semed incredible. And again one day Doctor Bornemann took us walking through the woods and fields of Delaware County. To some of us, his observations on the Rhus Toxidendron and Dandef , lion were interesting, but to others a swimming hole was more allurf 5,-i ing. The trip was merely another attestation of the completeness of I the course in Pharmacy. All praise and thanks to Doctor Bornemann, P the L'Whispering Baritone, whose chief desire was to strengthen the bonds that unite physician and pharmacist. If only all of his prof fession were as patient, as gentle and as quiet as he! ,f-2 W f P e J 'X 5 1 .-3 .. . . Q X , 3? March came in, with its Histology finals, like a lion, and went out, carrying anatomy dissection, like a lamb. Peaceful passive afternoons in the fire house-, white coats and scalpels-, ball games at Shibe Park-, this was the order. The class, in a selection honoring all that is diplomatic, suave, gentle and calm, elected Closterman to its Sophomore presidency. In this choice we can see the effect of the happy, pacific existence we were living, we can see the influence of such men as Phillips, Bornemann and Shollenberger. And so the year drew to a close. There was no wild celebration, no blaring trumpet, no weeping, no display. Trolleys kept running down Fifteenth Streetg carpenters and plumbers worked on noisily in the new Hospital, the subway con-' tinued to evolve. Qnly thisi, one day the college failed to open. The students had gone home-, that's all. Owe hundred ninety x ' 'F .AT .f 19 T .B X. . SOPHCMORE YEAR -Q: YEAR ago it was a muddy hole. A year ago men shouted in its depths and giant machines labored. just a year ago, how ugly it was! We had cursed the bedlam which arose from the abyss: we had dammed the cause of such turf moil. just a year ago! How impossible it is to describe the thrill we experienced when we first saw the new Hahnemann Hospital. There it was, be' Medicine SECOND YEAR-FIRST HALF yond doubt, soaring clean and majestically TWH MW' 'eJllf.i'.3i'Tw,ff1f,Sff Mm F 'SQQQLX . . urupm' Recllallon RQCILBDOII into the autumn sky. Our hospital! Our 9-10 LW .- u ASSETS T-'iu'i ., , , Anvlwd U vnu- Hahnemann! Certainly pride was our 10-1, LQSSIZEL A525431 5327 , Phillips L, nine! foremost reaction. We would stand across H 1, W' W' fIQ..cf: ' . . I - en -qu e 'll 2 Broad Street and admire its serene im' IH K 'k K k mensity. We would look for it as we 2 Pwfw rg-naaomy - - .2321 'ff' approached from a distance. We would Wd 5 . , 2-3 Sm Baclr.r1ol0t?Y take our friends past and say carelessly, -3-7 'i5vL3fJGi'y Ll ',QE3?f:id'f.fQN,uu0M That's our new hospital. Rather nice, 'Ts Sm F.?'2.'.1':E?'h'r3... isn't it? To us it promised a brighter S - . . T SECOND YEAR-SECOND HALF future, bettir 1Il5ffUCt10f1, a more Inodern Hmm Mmwmv I 'mmnv lwmmunul 'muusmvl numv isnuam . . . . - ,ies vr-ysaal Mama: , education, increased opportunities and 9.10 'i?:Z..,.?.5'.'2,'T..?'s1'3:i.L? M . . Sn!! Fr ,nfl U! rl conveniences and above all, a fitting monuf I0-H Tam, Bmmmuim ment to our creed Homeopathy. Pwwni -.4 '2'l Y liwfgwvw li 3 Phvsncal niwwm Pnsbnyeology mclgmfi Pharlgrfeou' Q H-,Z Slrgxfgoqflzf sm-llmzmgu ma Bnsml mg, We were indeed a happy group as we I2-I Wh-le H'-fr flung our hats into the ring and started the Q Puzmxy 5355353 A Exim t second year of medicine. And why 2 5743.55 F1H?::fn Ei shouldn't we be happy? There was VJ ally 2-3 Krat: frowning good naturedly from his H mmm cage, there were old friends to greet, there 5 f u ' F n ' M S b Nl lu chi-ifhlt. was Mrs. Slocum distributing locker keys, there was the new roster to be conquered, there were parties to be planned. Who wouldn't be happy? But alas, all wasn't sunshine. Not in vain had the guns of Chemistry, Histology and Anatomy bombarded our ranks. Nineteen names were missing from our roll, nineteen classmates had stumbled. We recalled Kipling's phrases I've drunk 'is beer a score of times, and 'Is cot was right 'and cot to mine. Poor fellows-! Nathan Griffith, LLB., was the first professor we met. Perhaps the less said about his course the better. In fact, what can we say about his course! Our def scription would certainly invite criticism. Let's merely state that the subject of Medical Jurisprudence was ably presented on Tuesday mornings at nine o'clock and that Colonel Tucker supervised the final examination. Isn't that enough? And then came a continuance of Anatomical dissection. The roster called for attendance on four mornings of the week but we found that a little expert anatomizf ing on one morning permitted wholesale cutting on the others. It was usual through' out that year, and throughout the junior and Senior years as well, to hear at noon one student question another, Did he call the roll this morning? Oh! They were happy and careless days. One hundred ninetyone , rg- I.. 4, fl? fl! U1 . f. 4 - ' - 1-.1 .J And the Anatomy Department presented another continued series of lectures from Doctor Sylvis-. As in the Freshman year, his excellent discussions on the Brain and Spinal Cord failed to stay the hand of tired Natures sweet restorer, balmy sleep. But the Sophomore Year was not entirely without its premier performances. We met for the Hrst time the Professor and Head of the Department of Physiology, Doctor Widman. Muscle tonusu was his most characteristic expression and fishing his hobby. One day he stopped lecturing and stepped into the smoking room to rebuke the Science School students who, with noisy antics and sportive N gamboling, were disturbing his talk. How we laughed when he returned, chagrined, to report that instead of Science men, these ,S roisterers were dignified Seniors. His course, like his per' ,Hi 7 D sonality, was quiet and pleasant. Even in his final examinations lf - W Z Doctor Widman was meticulously complete. It was not un' P gms y usual for him to quiz one man for a full hour. that he never interrupted our preflecture songs. At one o'clock, while we chanted the immortal strains of We'll Sing, VVe'll Sing, We'll Sing to Lydia Pinkhamf' or Glory, Glory, Dear Old Hahnemannf' he would tread patiently back and forth until the last echo of AI.et's raise hell while we're here, died away in the farthest corner of the building. And while on the subject of songs, let's not forget Oh Sister, You'll Be Called On, and the Christmas hymns in December, and the host of popular tunes that Jerry played so well on the piano. ir 1 X And still speaking of Doctor XVidman, we must remember K 1 But to return to Physiology. There were the laboratory periods, where hundreds of frogs were sacrificed daily at the command of -1 Doctor Scott. Pith a frog, he would say. We would forthwith rush to the buckets in the corner and search for a big bullffrog with strong muscles. Returning to our desks we would pith the poor creature - and surmount him on shiny apparatus that to assemble would test as the ingenuity of a master mind. Snap would go the contact: kick W3 2 would go the muscle: zip would go the lever, and there, on the l I smoked drum, was a record of a contraction. OKed by Doctor X Scott, dipped in shellac, hung to dry, its ultimate fate was in a ly voluminous laboratory report. Frogs, levers, drums, shellac, hours on hours without end-, that was Physiology. Samuel W. Sappington, M.D.! Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology and Bacteriology! Here is the name that was most feared in college, most often heard at examination time and most respected always. In short, here was the ubogey man of Hahnemann. As Sophomores he terrified us, as Juniors he appalled us and as 'S Seniors he awed us. Wheresoever he went respectful and fearful , X ,I silence preceded and followed. Clothed in an immaculate white l -2'i?f,lQ ', coat, he would scamper mouselike here and there, always accurate, fx 'ill' always hurrying. Into the lecture room he would rush. In rapid, I? f high pitched voice he would deliver a magnificent lecture. Then W out again, leaving us to scribble on for five minutes. Wouldn't tm we like to have a copy of his lecture on Syphilis! -and after the Crusaders had passed through, he said, all of Italy was syphilizedf' Witty? Yes. Scientific? Indeed. A teacher? Of One hundred ninetyftwo ia f P course. Humane? Well-l We liked to call him a representative member of our faculty. Associated with the Pathology Department and conducting its laboratory hours were Doctors Hopp, Favorite and Fohlweiler. The latter two we called The Hap' piness Boys -, no one knows why, but it was a name suggested by some wit and adopted by the class. The first named, Doctor Hopp, was indeed a character. Youse'll never be sturgeons unless you study the Typhord Bacillus, he would say. And then he would arrange us in single file and march us about the room to collect microscopes, cans, slides and sputum. Contrary to custom and predictions, the class appreciated Doctor Hopp and was genuinely sorry to see him leave. Wednesday mornings, throughout the year, brought us a course in Applied Anatomy presented by Doctor Hartley, Head of the De- partment. Here we learned the practical application of the mass of N information we had been accumulating. The layers of the scalp, jg N the triangles of the neck, assumed undreamed importance when dis' ' P cussed from the surgical viewpoint. We cannot forget the morning when Doctor Hartley, scarce noticing his chart and to the huge delight of the class, described in detail the outlines of the stomach the while his vagrant pointer followed the picture of the liver. vN Wednesday mornings, too, brought us Doctor Krick on the subject of Phar' macology. This was our first experience with a young general practitioner on a purely medical and practical topic. Fagerly we drank in his stories of patients and cures, breathlessly we listened to his tales of battle with disease, of drugs and of scrums. In typical school boy fashion, we named him The Miracle Man. During the Christmas holidays in nineteen twentyfeight the transformation of the old hospital on Fifteenth Street was completed and on the arch over the entrance was chisled the inscription Hahnemann Medical College. How different it was from that garage! Here, everything was still and orderly. Here, in the basement, was a student recreation room where a fellow could play decent bridge. Here was locker space in abundance. Classroom A was terraced and large. And on the first floor was Wally's new cage, and the administration offices, and the Pathology departmentg not to mention a modern library and reading room. The second floor immediately proclaimed to the Olfactory nerve endings that here was the seat of Anatomy, with its counterpart, Histology. Afnd on the third floor numerous laboratories and lecture rooms provided a new happy hunting ground for the chemical triumvirate. Finally, beneath the roof, Doctor Widman's Physiology department held sway, sporting two lecture rooms and a huge and modern laboratory. Into these ample quarters we gladly moved when we returned in january of twentyfnine. One hundred ninetyfthree F E D l C M 1 But in spite of the change and the different atmosphere, school ff life went on as usual. The second semester gave us a course in K Physical Diagnosis, taught by E. Roland Snader. For weeks we drew ' Q - lines on each other's torsos and memorized the outlines of the heart Lf , 7 and lungs. Then for more weeks we percussed the same torsos, -Q' X imagining dullness here and resonance there And finally, day of Q! days, we bought stethoscopes and applied them to heart and lungs. What a sensation it was to hear for the first time the lub dub of a QA fx heart, and to distinguish bronchial and tubular breathing. And suddenly, a trolley car or a truck would pass on the street below and our sensitive ears would swear it was an extra systole. From group to group, from man to man Doctor Snader would wander, insisting always on the value of Physical Diagnosis, always earnest, always teaching. In the vote for junior president, Mert Hill received the plurality. Again the class chose an entirely new type of personality. Hill represented the politician, the modern statesman whose ready wit and pleasant speeches made him an instant favorite. Fra' ternity politics was rife at each of our elections, but in none was its influence seriously felt. It merely added a glamour, a certain romance. From Washiiigton Irving's Legend of Sleepy Hollow we quote a passage that, abstractly, may remind us of those hum-drum summery school days in laboratory and lecture room when the very monotony of our existence drugged us and transported us into a world that has since seemed unreal. Speaking of a school house he says: From hence the low murmur of his pupils' voices, conning over their lessons, might be heard of a drowsy summers day like the hum of a beehive, interrupted now and then by the authoritative voice of the master in the tone of menace or command-. One hundred ninetyfour l -1 L it 1 l 'x l ' ' ' 1 . ,1 .. JUNIOR OCTOR PEARSON has promised us that in the interim between Sophof more and junior years we would evolve YEAR Medi I from boys to men. We all rather dreaded 1-Huwcvgfn , Humis I Mnmuv I 'mpsmv lwznwmnvl num A, ,,,,,, -H M, that thought. We liked to be boys, to 'gm -Qimim 0.555555 sul, ' gum '3m75m9 ' l gglg lvdifn mlm: I E' Jams Ashnan lgzslrxrsr Lecture, b d f gk, I uomike D umm WCMWU umm MP' glvilliffs sing aw y songs, to put rogs in pot cts, C,m,,,,,,,m, ,Wg-ff io-ii Pnlh-may-Lmifi.i.,fy A-iifipsii-S Pgigfgglgil-figfizfw mam to play hooky and see ball games. We , ,,'g3g,f11'g1g1g wif? vaginal., Rlggggg-on , 5 I .fam-mi work jx on Sfnfim rigs!!-:tis didn t want to be men. 'Hi sESZ.1i','l1'.LlfZZ.,, siffjlfi ifffr,f,ffl'f,l,,,..,n D553 12-1 siilfflar CWM-ler i And so, rather fearfully we returned to --2 I C. , . d v aus: annlltzxrlniieogxrpungry and srl Hahnemann as juniors and, perhaps, as 2!3 Q ,I SMm.,ia..,d,,. , , Pa:Laf:,, , men. Anxiously we scanned each face, H 351313, 'i1':'J?P CERT? - i , In smnmiber sur fn and Gun hi eagerly we watched each actiong and T 'QIj,'ff ' ',,,,,,,,,,, NCR? , , . M , , - syn., Lulu.: 0 on mam: mags: A, happily we broke forth, Oh well sing, 'S Redman Rein. Hits., 1 - , V . . .,, sn wean Q, well sing, well sing to Lydia Pinkham. h K mm vranislgiikciir SCHEDULE We hadnqt evolved? We were boys and 5 mms! M-:mn I TuLmn lWnNzsnAvl'h1Ul1suAvl I-wmv lsnunm- , q Ez.Ear sera, K the dean was wrong. True, Doctor Smith s ' 'fgfi 3514 son had raised a mustache-, but look, he's ZA DSQLAQH 'Hifi' H3532 , , , 50, lsvwsary U uznsal D going off to the movies. Yes, the bald . is-S? 95522535 r headed one had married-, but see, he's 22 iifxflziua' betting five dollars on the Athletics. im, ' Phvsul Pnyuui , F , S Digizzii. f s , , . HJR Palliigld Mf-Ekiwnry N 'P::'m-1' McEldo:i-e Nwinlsgnml- But wasn t the lunior year different from L riifzffgy 3223222.55 'fllfedfi 'iaifffxzry fi373da'3 if . ' ii RJ..-..,f., F'T5'Ii .'Z'nfY P'E'?5'Z3'.'Jkz?' the preceding? Lecture after lecture faced Sznrm ma. L-. E333 Fm 'l9i.'5aZ'2 ' - Y - HAL' Um: Eh'-lredas Qrmavegu us. Behind us were the endless hours in YM LMS: 'ifggg HSM: Egger , . . Palm WVU Q laboratory, behind us was the bloodfthirsty sum-mn-na mm' N Chemical Triumvirateg before us stood new li professors, new subjects, beckoning, calling A us on. 5 1 W rl . . Gynecology, with Doctor Earl Craig! Here was a man who never called the roll, but whose lectures were always well attended. What better applause could we give than that? To emphasize a fi . 'N sentence he would dash across the room and dip and rush backf z Llp ward. Then to the side he would plunge and with a magnificent l xp I gesture, say dramatically, Gentlemen--, never treat an infected I cervix for fear of carrying infection up. He tried mightily to teach jf? I well, and he succeeded. And conducting a parallel course was Doctor Mercer, Professor Qt of Clinical Obstetrics. From him came wild stories of midnight dashes ' fi from home to hospital, when the head was on the perineum and the V Ford had two flat tires. Youll learn to sleep standing up, he'd -5: say, and -one big pain and out she pops, right in your hands. Q45 'ffl One hundredfninetyqive ,-., JS! '. . vw? r F Q ji. iq ft .. 'ff Lg' I. 9, ,v- We could see by the notes he carried that he had a definite, ordered series of lectures to deliver, but his love of story telling always com' pletely overpowered him and back and forth he would pace, with lX perpetually smiling mouth and constant black bow tie, telling story -S 5 5 after story. At the end of a lecture, our papers were blank but our QA heads were full of practical obstetrical facts. -if j But Neurology! Ah yes, that was different. When Doctor I 'X . . . . I Steinhilber finished talking all pens were dry and all note pads were l filled. His voice was monotonously singfsong and his inflections were monotonously uniform. Monotonously he would repeat important phrases-, sometimes twice, sometimes thrice, Never make a diagnosis of Embolus without a cardiac etiologic factor. Never make a diagnosis of Embolus without a cardiac etiologic factor, was char' acteristic. But who, may we ask, had time to be bored by monotony when writing about a million words a minute? VVho didnit thank K' gy, God for those repetitions that permitted breathing space? And who X ' NW, jj didn't sigh with relief at the end of the year and say, Well, we 'iv - ' ' ' 7 X f certainly were given a good course in Neurology. Li 1 Doctor Sappington was there again to heckle us. He was wittier than ever, this time on the subject of Clinical Pathology. And K Doctor Boericke, of whom later we shall have more to say, injected pleasure into the dry subject of Materia Medica. But the prize lectures of the year came from Doctor Ashcraft, Professor and Head of the Department of Urology. At nine o'clock of a Thursday morning the door in the right wall of Lecture Room B would open and admit a tall dignified man, with double breasted blue coat and picadilly collar, with hair turned silvery white and with a mouth that continually smiled, as though its owner were ever happy f, and amused by an intensely funny world. He would walk to the QW pedestal, take a pair of glasses from his vest pocket, adjust them to his 1 jf nose and peering over them, smile graciously at the class. Gentlemen, JXl,? he said once, the three most important specialities are Obstetrics, Gas' tj 4, trofEnterology and Urology. At this point he would remove his glasses, replace them in his vest pocket and again smile at the class. X? Then he would blink, produce another pair of glasses from his right coat I 46 pocket and continue: I call these the most important specialities bee cause by the first we are born, by the second we live and by the third, gentlemen, we die. Returning his glasses to his right pocket, he would smile, blink and produce still another pair from his left pocket. Out- standing among his lectures was the one on his beloved Tumors of the Bladder. Doctor Ashcraft, we feel sure, will ever remember the class of '31 as a group of men who knew when and when not to laugh at a joke. I One hundred ninety-six Q., . 'l if Doctor F,lliot's course in Surgical Pathology was a paramount feaf ture of that Junior year. There are some who insist that Doctor Elliot was once a sailor, but you know, and we know that his habit of hitch-f ing up his pants was nothing more than a tic Thoughtfully and wisely, before each of his lectures, there were distributed printed sheets containing the subject to be covered. Thus it was unnecessary for us to take notes and gladly we sat and listened to this boyish looking surgeon with the Buster Brown Collar as he related manifold facts drawn from a wealth of clinical experience And when at three o clock the lecture was completed we would journey with reluctant steps to our two hours of torment in the labora tory where Doctors Sylvis Dickinson Favorite and Fisher held sway ', ,x iii I ,f f as l All afternoon we would stare at one slide, until our minds were alive with wrath and our tired eyes could see nothing but the slowfmoving minute hand of time. Laboraf tories! By now they had come to bear the hue of dungeons and the scowl of night. And speaking of tormentk, but wait! On Fifteenth Street, just below the college, was a store where Liberty magazines were sold. Toward the end of each copy were two crossfword puzzles. On Friday afternoons and on Saturday mornings dozens of copies of Liberty were sold to members of the Junior class. Crossfword therapy we found to be specific in the treatment of acute or chronic boredom. Do you suppose the publishers of Liberty had anything to do with the appointment of-7 Forgive us if we interrupt-, but hark! Do you hear that strange voice? It comes from a trim little man with gray hair and a mustache and it repeats over and over, Danger to the life of the mother, danger to the life of the child and uterine inferftiaf' How rapidly he talks, it's 5 silly to attempt to take proper notes on such lectures, we'll buy them from Smitty. Who is the man? Why, surely you remember! It's Q X Doctor James. Of course! Who else has that habit of smacking his f lim , ,,, F lips after each sentence, as though to say Gosh that was good 7 And certainly no one else could teach Obstetrics so thoroughly or so rapidly. ff Doctor Clemmer? Well yes, he hurried too. but not quite as much as Doctor james. Suddenly we found ourselves in the midst of a mad pack of examinations. Wildly they leaped at our throats, they tore our clothes and our fleshg they snarled and bared huge fangs, dripping with bloody saliva. A more intimidating assemblage we had never seen. From all sides they came, Materia Medica, Gynecology, Medicine, Pathology, Obstetrics, Surgery-g no sooner would we conquer the one than another would take its place. We weakened, we fell to our knees and raised our failing arms for protection. Saved! At the eleventh hour! By the Christmas Holidays! How blessed they were that year, after our battle with the examinationsg how refreshing to some of us who, perhaps a bit more impressionable than others, were unnerved by the pathos and the suffering which prevails in a hospital. The magnificent Elkins Amphitheatre saw us officially for the first time in our Junior year. There, on Wednesday afternoon we attended Doctor Northrop's surgical clinics. There we met Doctor Williams and heard his splendid lecture on Digitalis. There Doctors Golden, Wells and Boericke presented their cases. But best of all, it One hundred ninetyseuen 2- : .1 5, - -1':.nx - ,-fa T lf 3 L, A 31 ii was in this marble arena that we first saw the Orthopedic Department J in action. Doctor J. A. Brooke, its head, was a rather diminutive l figure in comparison with his henchmen. These last were a tall and ' . brawny lot, with lowering expressions and bulging muscles, reminding ' us of a wrecking crew. And indeed, a wrecking crew they seemed when a poor little tot with bowed legs or clubbed feet, was wheeled X in. While Doctor Brooke was presenting the case, Doctor Tyler g? would anaesthetize the patient. And then all of them, four or five . , gf X V i in number, would pounce upon the helpless kiddie and with mallets and chisels, with saws and gimlets they would hack away at an arm or a leg, until from sheer exhaustion they would stop and sew up the wounds. Doctor Brooke, in his habit of physically demonstrating certain deformities, reminded us of Doctor Phillips. In the midst of a lecture he would hobble about the room with lordosed back, or again he would stiifen his leg, turn in his foot and comically imitate the walk associated with hip dislocation. And so, with diligent study, with lectures, comedy, pathos, clinics and laboratory, the year moved on. Courses under Doctors Redman, Leopold, Hunsicker and Killian occupied us for a time. The last name showed us what real sincerity in a teacher meant. His lectures to him were a religion, so much so that his whole attitude and bearing became almost ecclesiastical and we sacrilegiously nickfnamed him Reverend And then there was Doctor Frank Frosch, Associate Professor of Gynecology. He continued Doctor Craig's series of lectures. Rotund, quiet Doctor Frosch! Have you forgotten how terribly careful he was to pronounce each syllable and how laboriously he would say such words as pathogenicity and introitus ? Thc fact that he was an ardent pathologist was shown by his insistence on the biopsy Look again at the notes you took during his lecf tures and you will remember at once the thoroughness and wisdom of this man. , it c. Q43 XJ , The roster shows Dispensary work in the GenitofUrinary, Orthopedic and Nose and Throat Departments. It shows Physical Diagnosis under likable Doctor McElf downey and Xfray with Doctor Frank. Doctors Schofield and Shallcross were added to our list of acquaintances. All of these courses and events we met smilingly. Exam- inations attacked us again and kept attacking until in two weeks we had taken twenty' four difficult finals. The year was drawing rapidly to a close. A meeting, called hastily between classes, resulted in the election of the follow' ing officers for the Senior year: President-Nevin H. Seitz. VicefPresideiit-Michele Viglione. Secretary-Gerald O. Poole. Treasurer-E. G. L. Wiebusch. Council Representative-R. F. Northrop. Here again, the class showed remarkable wisdom in the selection of its leader. Seitz was a man of deep and profound seriousness, who hadn't an enemy in the class or among the faculty members, and who utterly deserved the highest tribute we could pay him. We were proud to call him representative and happy in the shelter of his leadership. A One hundred ninetyfeight if L 1 .U - A . ?'v-4-'1 l -:wtf-7-jrj' ,L 44 J J 'A '77 MT. i 1 li L i K calls were few. Everyone seemed worn out 14. SENIOR INETYfTHREE men reported for classes in September of nineteenfthirty. Ninetyfthree of the original one hundred F Tu 1 YEAR if i Medicine FOURTH YEAR 5 :imma i Mfwmv I Tummy lwz DNEsnAv I TN-3 wxnAv I Pa-un gsmw., and twentyfseven had w e a t h e r e d the Q 'STEPS buffetings of three years. And they showed ll 0 fi the results of the struggle. These were not df the boys of the Freshman yearg these were ' ' mm, not the Sophomores who kept Green Street ' ia 4 ...mN..N,.DN,,.Na,,aN.,Na,,..,.w.,.k alive at nightg nor were they the juniors i Mswwhmm who sang hilariously before each lecture. PEQQQQQZH A ialerlz Sum Mmm They were men, serious, earnest and quiet. Hr' NSQFLT.-,N TTSFJW' Some came from hos itals where the had V935 -' P Y Bm., H,,,,,,, Neurological served as junior internes, and others came 4-5 KOQEQM Qggiiiff from their homes. Some commuted daily whiff-'MMQOURTH YEAR-memmnmmmmwmk to nearby hospitalsg some acted as juniors WI Mom I Mm Iwenmgjvllthjnwtyl I M at Hahnemann. The dean's prediction had S . Mm... Na...a Medicine Mai .... Nm... 3 come true-, one year late. No singing 2 Na-C-N Mama Me-NNN Ma-GN Na-c-N if now! No happy, laughing faces! Menl- if ww-Q fhwfulfm fhefwfuw fhmww ner-I-H--G 1 We were all men' 4 1' hcra peuncs Therapeutics Thmpeums Tnuapwua Thznpzulxm y- 3 5 Ptdlalnts Prdlalhd Pedla IYICS Ptdialriu Pdlllriu 3 The class was so divided and separated 6 Neurology N eufs M, N fufu an N rifo .W Na,.,..,,,, 3 into Obstetrical, Medical and Surgical sec' 1 Si an Skin Sim I Slam 1 tions that days would pass in which we B fsgsfflwmndihm- - 1 would see nothing of some of our classf Q as-cms R ON-ma Q 0b.i.m..,ya., S... H... X ON ,...N :S G,Na..,.,, 1 mates. Absences were common, since roll 'O I Oh S--1 nf' Ohm-Q Ohms Oh Slf' ns UMM mmm 1 On sum-any .nemmm the senior urudenxu wlu no 1 sn. Luke'u me Children! Hamm plum Houpltll lor ienpveekn lngtruc clan. and anxious to hurry through the year as quickly and easily as possible. Vacations weren't long enough and the threefyear grind was showing its effect. However, there at least was one lecture which everyone attended, in spite of the fact that there was no rollfcall. This was the Surgical lecture presented by Doctor H. L. Northrop, Professor and Head of the Department of Surgery. To him we had unanimously voted to dedicate our book. We looked upon him as the acme of professional dignity and the wholefhearted friend of every AA student. He had rushed one hundred and fifty miles to aid two of our classmates who were injured. He had sped from Phila' delphia to Trenton on a similar mission. His life belonged to Q Jes, suffering mankind and to his pupils, Can't you picture his 7 L genial, ruddy face as he stood lecturing in Room HBH? Can't X- ' you recall his recitation of countless cases to prove that the L31 l acute abdomen should be opened? I remember a man from n 7 Darby, who worked in Strawbridge's as a tie salesman. One , , 'X , day as he was returning from work, he was struck at Broad and J Filbert by a hansom cabef' His memory for details was ff 4 amazing and his vocabulary, together with his method of def livery, was well nigh perfect. Never shall we forget his lectures on Highlights of One hundred ninetyfnine i ffm 'L 5 1 I f j . Q the Abdomen and Fractures of the Skull. It was an unforgettable pleasure to take a course under this distinguished, scholarly surgeon. And equally pleasurable was it to attend the classes of Doctor Harry Eberhard, Professor of Gastro-Enterology. Under his glowing description, his Chestnut Street office assumed the proportions of a repair shop where gastric ills were treated and cured by the thousands, where technicians in trim white frocks passed interminable duodenal tubes, where electrical appliances were used in the ultrafscientific treat' ment of simple constipation and bellyfachesg in short, where mountains were made of molehills. We were his boys, eager and anxious to learn, and his course enlarged from the prescribed fifteen weeks to almost a complete year. Gold nuggets and sheet anchors studded his courseg earnest enthusiasm and sincerity marked his lectures.. Doctor Garth Boericke may well have been called the best known man on the faculty. For four years he had lectured to us on the subjects of Homeopathy, Pharmacology, Materia Medica and Therapeutics. Surely there is not an alumnus living who can forget his preambles and his fourth class determinative symptoms. Here is something to hang your hat on, he would say, and again, this remedy is the hot stuff. In his suave and sophistif cated way he was a born humorist whose witticisms we feel sure would have made him an instant favorite in the most sedate of regal courts. And as a teacher he was ideal. It was his un' happy lot to present the driest and most difficult course on the Senior roster and yet we found ourselves listening eagerly to his drug pictures. None of us could appreciate the labor involved as j in preparing and delivering a lecture on Homeopathic Materia Medica, else we surely at the year's end, would have presented Doctor Boericke with an appropriate bouquet. , , ,. 29, ' lml. 1 k 1 Z bex!! ffl? A. J. The trip to Allentown was perhaps the most noteworthy feature of that year. It occurred just before the Christmas holidays and was nothing more nor less than a wild orgy of beer drinking and insanity. The condition of some of the inmates certainly drove some of us to beer, but there were others who didn't need any driving-g in fact, some didn't see any inmates. But that is neither here nor there, your memories can never forget Allentown. Let us merely remind you of the excellent clinics conducted by Doctor Hoffman and then, if you please, let us hurry on. The death of Doctor G. Morris Golden was a shock which stunned us for some time. Coming as it did in the very midst of his lectures, we felt the loss keenly. His chubby, earnest countenance, his habit of saying again, his attention to the tiniest detail, all made a remarkable impression on us which time has had great difficulty in erasing. We attended his funeral services in a body and saluted the memory of this friend and teacher. What a mad jumble that Senior year was! Surgery clinics each morning with Doctors Ashcraft, Leopold, Webster, Steinmetz and Elliott! Gbstetrics lectures from Doctor Wait or Doctor james or Doctor Clemmer! Medical lectures! Gastro' Enterology! Doctor Bert on Saturday mornings! Dispcnsaries in Medicine, Gynef cology, Surgery, Neurology, Gbstetrics and Pediatrics! D. B. james! It was awful. And what a load it was to throw on the shoulders of men who were tired out at the very beginning. Two hundred l' i Dermatology dispensary we shall never forget. Doctor Bernstein sat at his desk, attired in frock coat, piccadilly collar and spats, and wisef cracked for two hours at each and every one of us. He remarked on our enunciation, our pronunciation, our habitation, our habiliment, our ancestry-, on anything and everything. If you tried to explain, 0 he would hand you a rope and say Tie it outside. He was bald- I and advocated the use of Bernstein's Hair Tonic, insisting that ,L it was nonfpoisonous contained a high percentage of alcohol and mixed well with giner ale or White Rock. He swore shouted ' 3 P , , fy stormed, tore his hair fwe beg your pardon, figuratively he tore his hairjg he wispered, laughed, joked-! No, we never shall forget ' if Doctor Bernstein. V' 'G Nor shall we forget Doctor Wells, the man who so characterf istically would say, Put out your tongue, and Class be excused. . .. . He appeared extremely young and reminded us, in a way, of Calvin Coolidge. He rarely became dramatic, and seldom digressed from XVI, the subject at hand, even to the slightest degree. It was his custom IE' YA to appoint a student to write symptoms or treatment on the black' board, and then, when the time came to refer to the list, he would erase it carelessly and write down entirely different views. Why in ' thunder he ever did it we haven't yet decided. But his lectures were 'lg clearfcut and understandable and his discussions of Homeopathic treatment were beyond comparison. itll 'ilk' 1Qg J x - 5 1 v' 1 L f And in the Medical Department too, was Doctor Williams. When we first saw him we said What is this banker doing in the lecture room? He had the typical appearance of the business man S5 who cuts coupons all morning and golfs all afternoon. But when he started to speak we could easily understand why he was there. 'X J mi 5 ygb s Lf , ff, X More complete lectures we shall never hear, especially on the sub' - ' jects of Diabetes and Heart Disease. He, and we too, deplored the 1 fact that we had to take notes in his lectures. He flatteringly taught ff, us as though we were physicians. Doctor Williams was remarkably well liked and respected by the class, both for his sincerity and for his ability. - X Q And finally, let us recall Doctor Saul, who in our Junior year, lectured on Allergy and in our Senior year, on Medicine. As he 'ff Dj! talked we closed our eyes and imagined him in his oflice of an evef ' f ning, attired in stylish evening clothes, discussing Diabetes or Obesity LA with his ultraffashionable patients, the while their chauifeurs waited f in PiercefArrows and RollsfRoyces. Because that is the type of ,V ff man he was! He lectured artlessly and heartily on various modish jflln diseases, principally his beloved Allergy. It was a pleasure to sit U1 . . 7 and listen to this gentleman of morning suits and spats. And why, we wondered, have so many doctors such boyish faces? There was installed in the hospital during that year and amid much ballyf hooing and publicity, an infernal contraption called the Scialyscope. It was supposed to project a view of the field of operation onto a screen in a different room. The voice of the operator was transmitted through a loud speaker. Because of this-, this Two hundred one , ff? M, . l i - A .X , ,Q . machine, many of us were robbed of an opportunity to advantage' ously hear and see one of our most eminent faculty members, namely 'X Doctor D. B. James, Professor and Head of the Department of 'ax , L W X Gynecology. Nevertheless, we learned to know his husky voice as he 'X stood in the Women's Operating Room, peering up at our faces , VA Xp- Nr! . . . . fj J Q lf' and speaking quietly and thoroughly on his subject. We ref L5 X, ' membered that once his oratory assumed dramatic proportions when XS f A he discussed the causative social factor of Specific Salpingitis. And then there came a time when everything seemed to go VX wrong. The roster was a mess, the lectures were awful, we couldn't study, histories and physicalsh nauseated usg dispensaries were boring, in general, we were breaking down. And as June ap' proached, we became even more careless. Spring days came and monotonyy-, a few hurried weeks of preparation, and the finals. Several grand brawlsl Hangovers! The Academy of Music! Speeches! Diplomas! Hurried good-byes! A few tears! And there we were-, graduates in Medicine. It all seemed so easy, so utterly silly. Why, only yesterday we were Freshmen! What has happened? Where are we? Pls Pk Pk Pk 24 als Pls wk Like bits of wreckage which, meeting on an empty sea, cling together for a moment before they are separated by the tides and the wind. Like varidestined birds who gather for the night in the one tree, and in the morning depart for divers worlds-. Thus of friends speaks a modern writer. And we add, Like the pigeons who made their home on the window ledge at Hahnemann and huddled close through the icy nights of winterg. The pigeons who flung across Philadelphia's skyline on glorious vernal mornings-, who brought to the colleges grim reality a suggestion of sunny glades and fields afar-. Look back, 0 Classmate, on those school days. Close your eyes, and lo-you are sitting again in the laboratory, in the lecture room, at the bridge table-g you are walking happily to lunchg you are pouring drinks for the party. Who was your best friend? Who sat with you? Walked with you? Drank with you? Oh, it is pleasing to recall his words and his thoughts. Now turn to his picture in the MEDIC and the memory is complete. We charge you, Classmate, never to forget us. Frienships more beautiful than love, were formed during those years, only to be dissolved by the merciless hand of Time. Friendships, that in a world less cruel would have endured through ages, were shattered by grinning Necessity. Two hundred two rf-4 fi .1 'v I. if r ' v s- ,.1 .. 2- my -Vg? it . Vis. J? '- 'I ' Gflilf . ZF. 4 . . il -. . ,J X, 1-I ,f .. 4! ' JSA . - A., . .. mf- 5. I g.:: X f A 1 'A :fl I 'x A 1 I .', . ' . ' ' -Ai -. .l , - ,. fl. .fd-J ze ' N 'i 175' ' ' I 'L . ' -f T ' v . 'o'-. ' 1 .jx . fi' 6' 4 - ff . . I, . , .A 'lb ' .X Z Q, ff . 'A -.LW ,, . ls- ' if' . . . :V f .vi A4 -is .egg Sig? iii? . ff. -544 V 5A,:i . . ' -4 1 fn ' 'E sg .-A 7 g.,' if . -F72 ' '. !. 'f':' :J fy V-Q' 'j Aff ,' 1 .'.f '-Qrlf lizgin d ' gli' ,mfg ic. f . '1 IX' 'gtg 21111 ' 75. V - xr-,Q 7- ' 17s 123' lqjf .jxgigr J., l -:CQ 5.3 .v,', L I- in-L I., iff!! Jr, . 1 '15 'ig sm. V'-If .- apr Zi.: -'sy - ...A . ,- .. , I A. .3 ' vga 322 iz 21 S1374 . Q1 1744 .' r I' X 15 1 R .. .. , NA: 1. fly s,-i 1-A 157 1 .V - -Qu .r.r.. .1 r. ,HJ r N .-P. -'a .3 . ,el 4-'af .asp .. J ... .- I11'. lf' 5- 3. .ff n- 1-x -:' Rai wr Sa ,J- e yi lf' lg . 3 -' . .X 'c 3. njfrt . was sf. ., . il- fs 5 :Ll ' -bi-' , ,-. 'X ,N .' '4 .55 , . .xl ' 13 LP:-' ' 'ci rp' If .V it-N 19 - MEDIC - 31 Fling out your banners, Members of '31. Come! Shoulder to shoulder and arm in arm we will advance. as we advanced to meet grim visaged Anatomy, to do battle with these more formidable foes. Time! Necessity! The World! Hah! What care we for this mighty array. Onward! Memory is our weapon, and with Memory we shall destroy them. Together we shall scale their walls and dwell in the Past, that glorious land of friendship which they guard so jealously. Cnce again will the old building ring with our songsg once again will the glasses he raised in a toast to youth Come with us, Classmate, we beg you. And ere we turn our faces again to the future, let us build here in the Past an altarf We must fashion it somewhat like a window ledge. And on it, pagan like, we shall enshrine our own symbol of friendship-, two pigeons, huddled close-. RICHARD F. NORTHROP. FINIS 3 Two hundred three L ,. K' p. .WI '. fikl ,.- 'f . ,I , 'zo-J 'ffl-1 I,-,: 1? qw, 311:- 'SIX' TC 12:54. '1 ar., . ,ju is ff hh f fl. ,Li . at--, F'-lr' Jn? ga, u 78, Y' .1 ,J .1 3? .fY.r ,Ji fi , I N. 25:76 Lp. mf, Eff: :fh- .I .M J. .3-1, F., LMC ' .fd 2:1 ---, rv, J2...: ?i2f' lc.: 1-Q12 ., uv 5554'- if' ilk.. 1 -iv -. .Y .,. npr .Alf !T'f, lil' il 1 if l vii' ln Nl l' -.1 f'-. wg. K 4' .. Ll.Y'i lf--V iii' lg lf f if 4 R .Jn 4 Elf ai... .,.r 2 1-. Qi rx l Z X ff Z 4 Z Z? Ill f W ?.,,'4 f 75 At-AYvAYvA K I-S ir iA Qfffffi AxvrAf Y Y it Ji gA?Q ?j , -. if-f, A .1 1 ll If umm: ff f . -6-ww:--i-f'-1:-'-,..--ff--.1-,J-Q . V.: . . V ,.,.- .AZ'--I- '-.2-1' nz . ' 6:4-w . ,ugiii-.3 -,Q : .f- :fsyi-I: - -.TJBRJJ L ,, x -J, . ..-..,,-, 1 . '9f.w,. . 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A:'?'.1,Q ' I ,3. 1' 5 my 1- 'J-. ' ,rg lk ff: , ga Y ' ' . 'f:5Jr,,?'i' .7-I -' 1- xf ix ' ' gf..-effgfl '-5 . ,, ff'- W-zu ' 5 H .ggi '-0.59 If 'ig y r- S QQLQQQ, ,. ,, -' . . Q , 4, -- '- x 'f -. A,' ,'fff f -' V . '. : A -.. ,- ' , x, L ' 55,1 . ' N- - zz ,- , F Q, -- . --.fn--, 3'-J-1 - ,J ' ' .,1-,,e-.'-fv'- ...Y Il- .N an t fn 6' -gf , -. .- - , . -.Q-..-,.. . lf? JUNIOR CLASS, I932 ' OFFICERS President ...... ....... A NTHONY josEPH D1 IELSI VicefP-resident .. .. ............ DAVID SHARKIS 'Treasurer .... .............. M ANUE1. SALL Secretary ........ .... R AYFORD ELXVOOD WR1t:HT Student Council .... ...ROBERT VJILLIAM BOBEN Ellis Herman Allar Ephraim Raymond Ambler, jr. Louis Abraham Amdur David Arbit Nathan Artsis Russell Samuel Ash Harry Lon Aussprung Charles Philamore Bailey Herbert William Barron john Thaler Beddall Irvin Benjamin Berd j. Garwood Bridgman David Daniel Broselow Carmine Paul Bruno William Augustus Buck Vincent Ralph Campana Louis Robert Cohen Howard Arthur Coyer Charles Michael Cunningham joseph Martin D'Agostino Carroll Burnell Danner john Harvey Dempsey Virgil Alfred Hudson joseph james Hynes Hubert Nathaniel jones Seymour Samuel Kimmel Laurance Wilkie Kinsell Andrew james Klembara, jr. Olive Arthur Kobisk jacob john Kohlhas john Anthony Koreywo David Howard Krochmal Abram Bernard Kurland Harry Paul Landis. jr. Richard Paul Laney Louis Lapin Anthony La Russo Alphonse Albert Lepis Earl Carl Leyrer Frederick Charles Licks Andrew john Lotz Herman j. Lubowitz Edwin Duncan MacKinnon George Robert Mankus Nathan Manus Anthony Marsico Nicholas Dominic Mauriello Patrick john McGlynn Henry George McKeown Vw'adsworth Lee Miller Rc-bert Elmer Mitchell Raymond Christman Moyer George Thurman Noden Emmett Francis Q'Gara Dimitry Simon Dibich Anthony Domenick Diodati Ralph MacFarland Donaldso Vfilliam Henry Driebelbis Walter Lewis Eckert, jr. Hyman Epstein Harold Alvin Erlenbach Thomas Sheldon Fannin, jr. Nathan Albert Fegley Laurence Everett Finney Leon Allyn Frankel Richard Mathew Free Ray Clifton Gabler Nathan Nieman Ginsburg Andrew Wirt Goodwin, jr. Vxfalter Grossman Charles Frazer Hadley, jr. William Weaver Haines Philip Halpern Two hundred seven H Bernard Hark Robert Saul Heller Harry Samuel Hoffman Stephen Arthur Oliva joseph Francis Pacelli Anthony Picollo Frank Anthony Quattromani Santiago jorge Rabadilla David Francis Reilly Donald Wood Richie Frederick A. Riemann. jr. Isaac Harry Rigberg Earl William Roles Daniel Merrill Rosman lsedore Kenneth Rosner Vance McCormick Rothrock Henry George Sahl john William Scheuer Nathan Geoffrey Schuman Manuel Heine Shear Muse Alfred Sheppard Malachi Wilson Sloan, jr. Walter Anthony Spelyng Barney Anton Stegura Ignace Bernard Stegura Charles William Straub Martin Elias Swiecicki Kurt William Thum Harold LeRoy Trexler Vsfarren Leon Trexler Henry Symforayn Urbaniak Frank Clinger Wagensellcr Robert Wible Wallace jack Leslie Weinstein Frederick Charles Witwer Adam Follmer Yerg I la xx 'NWN f f fffg V - W 71 'W :ff KW. If if i ,. X ff Ax fi ffl? A ' if 43 f A I MW f1,A 1 -W - Y, -X3 V-, ffff--ia, S476 , K 5 .X Xxhfff f f I .- V l4 MM I -xx i: f 4,4 -3 - 7 gl., -v f x -Y ii- -Y '1 f , I. -L' n Q ,p I. IIIII: I ..,- , :Hr . . Y' rr ' . . . ' 11,' ,- ':'-'ffr:, . .Ig II 5 . II .. -,i ,JI I-.117 'I 3. :I ff ' ' 7-. - ,, .. . -I. 1 'Q s-.. , . ..- '45 ,L-.. -- .. 'r'- 1 1. . - 1.. . 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SOPHGMORE CLASS, l933 OFFICERS President ..... .......... H ARRY ELBERT DARRAH Vice'President .... .... T Hoivifxs LIVEZEY LAUGHLIN, jR. Treasurer .... ....... E DXM-XRD STUART MAGEE Secretary ........ .... D ONOVAN MEREDITH jENKiNs Student Council. . . .... HoRAcE FENELON DAR1.1NoToN john Michael Amore john Lewis Anspach Edward Lewis Axelman Russell Henry Barnes Samuel Stanley Barr George William Beacher, jr. Melchior Edward Becker, jr. Isaac Watson Betts, jr. Maskell Bates Black Arthur Gaius Blazey Frank Clinton Bowers Ralph Mackay L. Buchanan jesse Evans Pierman Burns john Dominick Caggiano Albert Angelo Cammaroti Orlando Mario Carozzino Livingston Chunn Frank Patrick Colizzo Vkfilliam Edward Connelly Benjamin Cooperman Curtis Franklin Culp, jr. john Holmes Davie Charles Spencer Davison Nicholas Derrico Peter Gerardo Di Bono Anthony james Di Marino Aurelio George Di Renzo Anthony Angelo Donato Romeo Raphael D'Onofrio Harry Eugene Douds George james Dwyer Herbert Henry Eighmy james Nicholas Evanoff Samuel Stephen Farago Robert Hirst Farringer james Cyril Flemming Gladstone Edwin Francisco Gustav Alfred Frank VJillis Cadwallader Gerhart Ernest Peter Gigliotti Floyd Dare Gindhart Donald Geoffrey Gladish Charles Earl Green Theodore Lawrence Greenwald XVilliam Pemberton G regg George William Grenhart Oscar Broughton Griggs john Ross Hague Earl Stephen Hallinger, jr. William LeRoy Hann Paul Sylvester Herr john Danes Hubbard Gerald Lee Inheld john joseph jablonski Paul Marshall james Charles john jaworski Richard Chisholm johnson Alexander Dillon jordan Roosevelt juele Nubar Karakashian john Mumford Keese, 3rd Edward john Keiza Howard Anderson Kerr C. j. Kleinguenther, 3rd joseph Vincent Kowalski William Daniel Krazinski Robert Donald Leonard Carl Raymond Madera Wesley Franklin McCahan Lewis Ross McCauley joseph William McHugh, jr. Robert john McNeill, jr. Ralph Bates Megahan Eugene Harold Mercer Theodore Linton Mercer joseph William Messey Karl Fenton Metzger john Scott Miller, jr. Samuel Robert Miller, jr. Harry McDuffy Moore Harry joseph Morrin Dwight Lester Moyer Lewis Leon Newman Anthony Philip Nicosia Edward Ignace Ornaf, jr. Thomas Ewing Patton Carlyle Allen Payne Robert Penington. jr. Domenic Matthew Pescatore Two hundred eleven Chas. Buckley Peterson, jr. john Pickering Alfonso Louis Pierro john Anton Postner Edward VVright Provost William Henry Quinn, jr. Robert Francis Rapp Robert Lowell Redfield Vv'illiam Leon Ritter Samuel Sample Romagosa Thomas A. Ruddell, jr. Roberto Sandoval Brant Burdell Sankey Caesar Frank Sarni Ralph Elmer Schachterle Carl William Schoenau Allen Colby Service Kenneth Lee Shaver Robert Elliott Slemmer Keum Sung Sohn Francis Davis Speer Edward Brandt Strahan Stanislaus joseph Sulkowski Otto Carl Tomec Paul jay Tomlinson Robert William Traganza john Termini Valenti Ralph Charles Venturo Thomas Visgilio, jr. Carl P. Wagoner Crothers Emerson Walker joseph Albert Vw alker William Arthur Vkfeaver, jr. Roland john Whitacre Byron Donald Wilkins Stanley Osborn Wilkins Arthur Abraham Wilner Arthur jerome Wise Vfm. F. Wittenborn Ralph Chadwick Worrell Charles Frederick Yeager Metard Atche Yessian Samuel Earl Young ' George Clayton Zimmerman Wm. 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'V'1 :-y 7- ?- 9 .ff ' . 3.- gy , -. - . . ' . , in-.QQ 'f,:E,l--,,ig,qg-glQj1ff-- 5 f 'fir' f-'4..:tTr 5.-'.1 -3. i .- -fffiy? , 'EJ U ' , L ' , -- J ' ,pf : v .f x- I Q. .or 1 ,.,- ff.-':'. 4,, -4 f, .i .41-.lx-.7-.--ggffj,::f e9Q:-w ..:j,.H,5. -4- .5 ,Q A Liu- ,b ill .4 . 1 . .4 ..g,y , -Lv . L-T.. - . . - -30 . . .... ..., A, 'x - 1 .Q- : - . ' ' A x' '-'- :'.V'w-. ., . , .,. ---'A 5 QQ, -lx F fs, 1 gy 65 , . ' ' kia - g' F-31 .,-5 M., gwfif :L-.,. ' S ? 'ff 'E 1- fi ,xg . ,W -'if ' V R , aff 'Y' I s 1 f - N -W 2.0--a fk A f- V N' - nun V X - 'W 1 f , ,fz15p,:.- - KA, -4 v X- 41 W' f ,qi-' 'iv -'Q A. WA. .-'flag , ..,,,,,, A , ,- Q AC J: .Qi 3g'i'sM , , v .5331 ii, Oz 'Q 3... LA . -J-rv W, , .' -.Q fi 1- ' . A i T9 Fffliml BBW J ii . 1 FRESHMAN CLASS, l934 OFFICERS President ....... ........ W ILLIAM JAMES McELRoY VicefPresidenr .... ......... J oi-IN VJILLIAM I-IARDY Treasurer ...... .... E DWARD D.-XLLETT SHARPLESS Secretary ......... .... P ETER JOSEPH LABOWSKIE Student Council .... . . .GEORGE M1LToN KNAUE Horst Albert Agerty Charles Alfano John Joseph Anastasi Emrys William Andrews David Anthony Albert Carl Armbruster Charles Henry Baldwin Frank George Barnard joseph Knight Beans Harry Oscar Beeman john joseph Bender Louis Joseph Berenato Alfred Burt Borden, jr. Frederick Alton Bowdle John Lich Boyer joseph Vincent Brennan William jones Brooks James -Ioseph Bruno John Francis Burke John Paul Burkett Edwin Wetmore Caufheld Vfilliam Paxson Chalfant, jr Frank Albert Cheganski John Ioseph Coletta Thomas Agnew Conway john Berchman Conwell john Robert Cox, jr. john Joseph Curtin Vsfalter Kenneth Czerwinski Vifilbur Stafford Davison Vxfilliam Francis Delaney Anthony Emil De Tullio Albert Emanuel Deutsch Laurence Patrick Devlin Edward Miller Dicks Louis Charles Di joseph Francisco D'lmperio George Anthony Di Nicholas Dominic Anthony Donio William Edward Donohoe Edmund Eugene Duredski Lewis Albert Easer John Benton Egee Hugh Wilson Eikenberry Homer Burkert Fegley john Rutherford Felch john Boleslaus Filip james Stuart Fleming David Adamson Fluck Edward John Ford Yxfilliam Henry Frazee, jr. Edward I. Geller Everett Edward Genther lohn Robertson Glassburn jesse Theodore Glazier joseph Stanley Glinka Michael Grasso Royce Vansant Haines Marvin Benjamin Hand Arthur Ashton Hartley Robert La Mer Hoke james Frederick Horlacher joseph Arthur Horneff Williani Vernon Hostelley Samuel Bishop Hughes Harry Samuel Huhn Samuel Snyder Huntzberger Sigmund Mitchell jaczack Walter Anthony Jarzab Marcos Rodriguez Jimenez. Eldridge Walton Johnson Aharon Moses Tarnez Kalashian joseph Kassab David Keyser john Vinson Keyser Reginald john Konopka Abraham Kramer Edward Nathan Lamson James Garren Langford Samuel Benjamin Lapin Samuel George Lastick Clarence Andrew Laubscher George Anthony Laux Wilbert Garheld Layton Arland Arthur Lebo Edmund S, Lewandowski Yale Sander Lewine Otto john Libener Louis Davis Lippitt Carl Everett Lorenz Nicholas Edward Marchione Philip Marshall Lewlie Irwin Maske William Dummett Mayhew George Henry Clay McKeown XVilliam Charles Meineke. jr. Charles Belden Miller Cledith Aten Miller Edwin Ephron Miller Paul Reveri Miraglia Two hundred fifteen Harold Schrope Morgan Vifasel Muholelage. -Ir. john Anthony Napoleon. I Ross Nelson Noll Louis Cornelius Nuyens Joseph Francis O'Neill Vincent Renato Pessolano Michael Peters Charles Mathew Pohl Samuel Clayton Polcino John Kenneth Potter Marcel Alexander Powidski Emerson Augustine Read Walter Alday Rihl Frank john Robertson, 3rd Frederick August Ruotf Gatian Frank Santor Paul Shelley Schantz Clinton Ridgway Schneider George Rudolph Schubart Vfalter Anthony Schultz Zdzislaw john Stankiewicz Shermer Haines Stradley, jr Theodore Brooks Sutnick Edward Thegen Roscoe Marlin Thome Seward Myers Transue Francis james Trunzo Charles Burkle Turnblacer Placido Venuto joseph Clement Vosefski Frank james Walenista Richard Franklin Wallace Floyd Roscoe Ward Matthew Patrick Ward Harvey Crema Warren james Clyde Warrington Charles Millard Waters William Noel Wesner Vfilliam Work Widdowson Willard Aubrey Wilson Russell Gorshuch Witwer -lohn Dowling Woodward Richard johnson Worst Robert Edwin Wright john Hislop Yeaman Edward William Zak joseph john Zawislak Anthony Allen Zenszer Edward Henry Zwergel I' R fn S5 X f. 1 x rf X x f4 Jg Q . Qgxw X . 1 grub-,ixxx-'QR X , 5 X F 5 5' 'piff 1 5 ff' S V4 I v ki I if ae f 5 'gig i . f i 5 1- xg L5 'S E L 'Y 1 T y 1 pm ,eff I .Q O O 4 O ,v , 3.1 0 'I c-' J- .fvq w. . O - 1 -0 -'I - 1 9.1 ! R b lv s, in I, 5 r o- 49 ,5 A 19 - MEDIC - 31 THE NEW HOSPITAL 1 HE new nineteenfstory Hahnemann Hospital on North Broad Street is one of the finest additions to modern advance in hospital structure. Erected after infinite labors and planning, it stands in testimony to the ardor of its creators. There is nothing more imposing than an inspecf tion of this great institution, which was con- ceived and dedicated for the express purpose of service. The idea of a new hospital building was dis' cussed several years before the actual organizaf tion of a unified committee. In january, 1927, the first committees were organized at a private meeting of the hospital associations. At this time the appointment of a Campaign Manager was authorized. This official was to be a prof fessional and disinterested person who would efficiently lead the financial foundation. Colonel Louis J. Kolb was appointed Chairman of the Building Committee. The Campaign Committee JOHN M. SMITH was formed of six members of the Board of 5uperin+en,den+ Trustees, with Mr. Walter Hering, as Chairman. The campaign began actively in the spring of 1927, in the month of April. The goal was set for two million dollars. Early in June at a general banquet of all interested persons at the BellevuefStratford Hotel the Campaign was closed and the results were announced. Two million, seven thousand dollars had been subscribed. Work on the architectural plan was started at once. The old college building on Broad Street was demolished. This work was started on Commencement Day, june, 1927, and was a spectacular event. The oldest living graduate dug out the first bricks. There were speeches by prominent members of the college and hospital staff. The demolishment was completed in August of the same year. The next scholastic year was convened in a building temporarily rented just south of the old structure on Broad Street. The foundations were placed in September. Through' out the next fall students in the laboratory between exerf cises would look down on the rising mass of concrete bases. In january, 1928, they were very much interested in watch' ing clumsy derricks lift up great arms of steel. Cn April 23, 1928, the GOING UP cornerstone was laid. At this Two hundred, seventeen W .EEEE 1 grif , llfi ll ,fm M nl MW llfllf 3? 11' mfr, mv 1 V! W tt l .-K. 'il xx , , time there were appropriate ceref monies. The programme included addresses from alumni, faculty and staff. The college had a short recess in observance of the event. The process of transfer from the old hospital to the new began on Sep' tember 30, 1928. The tenth, eleventh and twelfth floors were first occupied. The moving was completed on Decemf ber 24, 1930. The metamorphosis had occurred. A great cause nurtured in the dreams of its founders was realized in the new structure. The quest had been fulfilled. Nothing had been taken for granted. Every facility, every bit of equipment had been added to the general arrange' ments. The new hospital had achieved a modern and efficient station. Wheii the first patients were naoved from the old to the new building they were visibly impressed. Fifteen of the finest hospitals in the country, nine of them affiliated with medical colleges, were thoughtfully studied at first hand and many experil ments with equipment were conducted DR. R. W. PLUMMER Medical Direcfor 1 Q -'. i'g ii ' 'f W . , . ' .'l Huh' 'I ' .'- ' ' I ll ll '-lf'-H I. ' 'll' u g I U1 ll, I l I U1 ll 7 I!I,:n:rn lllni,,,m:: '!ll!!h1nl l!!!!!u!w lgguursui uuiwfvs' NIU -' l!. 'i 'ggi' l!!' 'Jin' ii' 1 H1 I '. I F READY FOR OCCUPANCY before selections for the new hospital were decided. The private room system was especially elaborate. There were constructed 185 single private rooms on the tenth to the seventeenth floors. Fiftyftwo of these had complete bathfrooms, including showers. The tenth floor, devoted to maternity work, had private rooms in the front half and semifprivate rooms in the rear half. It also contained a spacious and wellfplanned nursery. Every private room had a nurses' call system, a telephone, a radio installaf tion, special night lights built into the wall near the floor, sidelights for general illumination and conf nections for reading lamps and other electrical conveniences. The finest in hospitalization was offered for the comfort and convenience of the sick. The plan of a new ideal in hospital service was encouraged and realized in the entire scheme. It was especially indicative of the spirit and cof operation of the student body when they contributed almost en masse during the early days of the camf paign. This contribution, in the form of pledges, was their share in the erection of the new hospital. Two hundred nineteen Muuma f-.U Fm V-k I .th , V,,,--Q.-M . , T-Q naw- 156.-' if? f 5' f.. .Q4,.- -J 1 f , 1 1 4 U , ff !'..'...3.v...4Nn. Qk,.L:.2'f:., pg., . ,1:...,, V, ,-'lw,..:.1.,, x f,g4,,4'L,g5,r,3',,-wiv.,-. ,f , , ,. r--ui-C ,q.4...,. f'4'4:-'- A.-A.4,. 1,. 'L x 'jffri , K A fy I. Q'5 '1 f': .-?':iL '1'1'1 -?1'l'? LA N ' ' - - if-,-. .. Q ST. LUKE'S AND CHILDREN'S HOMEOPATHIC HOSPITAL W9 . .. .Q a E w , . A . an Q ,f s 5, . 1 ,lib 122 K X 4 v 1 ' f J. , W.- N in 525 ici 1 3. 7' RT 'Il' Q ef 4 xi ' f ,W.,,. Q,.q, 1 , ,,. 1 A , 1 Q? wk , kg 2 W ,fi ly, ,T ,,,, ,wh ,,,,..,..... -... ,fi w .ki SHTAL HO AL W MUhHC THE SCIALYSCOPE 'I 7 THE MODERN CLINIC HE hospital system is constantly extending itself. Most recently we have witnessed those great advances in mechanics and equipment which have given to this era its reputation of scientific aggressiveness. We have been fortunate in growing these new thingsg so receiving them in our education naturally and without the marvel that casts a haze over the appreciation of an invention. In our clinical experience as students we were introduced to the Respirator and the Scialyscope. Both, still in the experimental stage, signify, as they stand, for a greater expertness in the handling of modern teaching and therapeutic problems. The Respirator, installed on the seventh floor of the hospital, in the Pediatrics Department, has been already successfully applied in those cases of respiratory failure from muscular palf sey. Notable publicity has been given l to stunts and unusual cures, but the excitement having passed away, a rational evaluation has given this inf strument its proper estimate. The corps of nurses and assistants in the Pediatrics Department have been trained to both rapidly and efficiently place an emergency case in the Respirator. Its installation was part of the hospital program of giving to each modern advance a worthy trial. The Scialyscope was installed about the same time. All who see it are impressed with its massive and imposing construction, curious to know its history and its prinf ciple. It was developed about two years ago from the original Scialytic. This was invented by Verain, Professor of Industrial Physics at the University of Algiers. The Scialytic was a beacon lens of numerous mirrors which were so arranged as to give the operative field a faultless illumination. This lens is the unit of the Scialyscope. The Scialytic makes use of a light source which is surrounded by a Fresnel lens, giving to the rays a horizontal direction. These rays reflect on the trapezoidal mirrors which cover the interior periphery of a metal dome. The inclinaf tion of these mirrors is such that the rays come from all sides, converging toward the operating field, which is evenly illuminated. The use of such an arrangement in the Scialytic permitted the development of the Scialyscopef' Un the axis of the dome and below the Fresnel lens is the system of projection. It is a metallic tube capable of movements on a spring. In this is an objective. The rays after crossing this come to a pentagonal prism which permits the exposition of the image integrally redressed. This image is received on a transparent screen fixed in a partition of the adjacent room. This tube resembles the frustrum of a cone, the base of which is fitted to the area of the screen. The projected image is enlarged three times. This is presented in natural colors by a spectral change in the tinted prismatic lens. The operator's voice is carried through a suspended microphone piece to a loudfspeaker in the projection room. The didactic course is thus presented to the students. THE RESPIRATOR 'Two hundred twentyftlzree Tl - . , '- . 1 . ww 4- Vrzc ' V-. , .. ff' . .f...VV,q-:,, , .. -1.--1,-.M ., - Mfg., - -- J -,-I Ig.-,,-.gI5.V . , , - , , an - - - -. v 12 -A W P fc. 4 . I Sv., Az.. , Q . l . v. ,... .- .. V V.-V' ' . . .-. V . -fam-u 7 ,Ni-v.:y'1 -:fx .4-IQ.-,,f.'.V3' .- afzyggy- . ' -- Vf ' . . m' ,If I'yi1.gk:'j, ,I 9 -Lv- - . VV. V ..f-if V 443-fi:-P, . rv 2,-V... -Jw. 1-Q - e. V' V .Q ,: 'l a .. .-'-5 .-1-pf-:59.'w.,-QIIq.., -if .. V ff: ' f - -' L -- -. , J 'f ,, fy- ng:-x -W , f 1-,.:: V. 1' '- - f V- -- 24 - -ei-aw .s v ..1..-Aa. .-1,.LQ::.,f.'ss.--V...2395 :V - V ff 9 V 'I-N's:GZ?:-,QM .f,i.g,g'fV . --'ijg--5.3.-:f,.ggg,5Af f' .4IfIfw::'gIf, gg? 5 -'f..V:: ,iw . Af, 2 -2133? Wlisi,-Q'5?..-V.4fQ.:V.. '..f3zFx'?2?'?f?'?i-. 1 W-1 F if 25 -E? ff-' - . J. .. ?5b4v 1'c'6:x :iv t2:-Ztqfl':kL'f'7-21:21:91 fir-1 v- - V 3. 42,-.fi I, -3 -,: Q7 g:.II5?3?jb,,g1,f-s,5I,5I',V g.., 5 1 V-It ca, fx- P fwf'1'T Tri ' Y' 5'?.f.M'.c'5?' '-V51-,.Si. 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II 4 45,1 II I gba. - , .Sur .,3w'-If V p' J 5 ' -,F ,f,- , . 1-. .- .v 5, -I' -- , .ggi . -I W.. . if ': ' - ig- Sf ifiii ' 5, V 3, if '1 ':'n ,y7?'7Z li -'rg' Y V. Jun'-' Q- ' Q f , .. ' -'ff 1. -- 1 5 --- 1- .V'-:Y .-'-I . V .xl Vx --sV - -1 fy- 14.. -':- ,V -vu I . . I ' .. . Q- .S - . V 1 I V Sn. - .III-,J V V,-,iI I,I.f.I I. I. I I . I 4 3. . .I .L 'I .. I,I I I III ,nI..QI5 III ? I -- ,f , , X ' A V-, '. ' ..-' - 1 ' xi , ga... , ,-, - .V .-- V .U '. : -L I 1: i1': ?,-'j, .ff - f ' . 1 Q , 75f -fs A: WA, 'J 'ff V ?. '-ff-11'--Ve-2... . f'F.'::-S-1. ' i ff-.'.-awe.-..--'-,T 7 1 '5,Cf 'T .I.I,V,,,-.,Vf-'W .rs-,HEI ,..I'I,I,.,- , mx-..,Y...V.. ws- .- . , , . . .... - . Y: ' I fi 3 is in ,. fp 1 L e I 1 4, . V A , . J 5 A P- x 2 .5 Ag , Wm- .gf 0. A Y 111, 3-X Ind..- W DR. NORTH ROP'S CLINIC 1 1 1 - 1 r w 1 I' 1 1. 1 . 1 .f.. p74 , -'I .Y.,. -i I.. I . .. Q., l il-4 J. .Q '23 . 1 1 'Q 4 1 l 1 I J 4 1 2 A 1 1 1.1 if 1 da ,-'1 :fl 511 .31 ii X .,,1 4 f 3 W- .eq ,iq qi 4, is fj- 'in 1' Qs gb 45.1.9 ECU? ' 43- .H LIL: 'ff .Jani ,-.- ., ,cg ,L iq: 4.,.,.1 . HJ- W? , 771 .'-1 . L- 'fit i 1 Q H - if? The Surgical Clinic of Dr. Herberi' L. Norfhrop RCM 1890 to 1895 Dr. Northrop served as anaesthetist in the clinic of Dr. C. M. Thomas and Dr. Wm. B. Van Lennep. Later he be' came associated with Dr. Van Lennep as his clinical assistant. In 1897 he held his first subfclinic on Monday afternoons for Senior students. In 1918, after the death of Dr. Van Lennep, he became chief of the clinic which to us seems to be so great a part of his personality. There are between a hundred and twentyffive and a hundred and forty cases treated annually. These cover the variety of most surgical diseases. After some inquiry it was reported from Dr. Northrop that his most difficult case in the clinic was one of spasmodic tortifcollis in which he resected the spinal accessory and four posterior cervical nerves, Dr. Rufus B. Weaver, ever interested in the human nervous system, attended. The patient ref covered completely. Dr. Northrop's most enjoyable work depends upon its didactic possibilities, and includes Thoracic and Head Surgery. Patients are sent to the clinic by Alumni, stalf physicians and through the usual dis' pensary channels. The junior and Senior Classes with a scattering of inf terested outsiders make up the audience. Dr. Northrop is never so deeply engrossed in his operative method to forget his assembly of students. His instructive commentary, both scientific and informally casual, colors his clinic. He is at heart a teacher. At four- thirtygwhen the Senior Class leaves for another lecture, he is visibly disf appointed, desiring that they could stay by him until the last case was pref sented. It is usually six o'clock before he leaves for his dinner in Melrose Park. Dr. Northrop considers the general clinic valuable and utile because it gives the larger number of students the opportunity to see the greater number of cases and that it advertises legitimately the surgical work done at Hahnemann. He believes that it gives a proper and legitimate stage effect, showing off the operative method in an elevated surgical environment which is warranted and desirable. We can't soon forget the clinic of our chief and patron. We shall always remember his ambidextrous grace, his gentility and his friendliness while demonstrating to the students a finer and more perfect surgical technique. Two hundred twentyfseverz THE LIBRARY DR. BOERICKES OFFICE 'Two hundred twentyfeight I ..,-.f-. A I In J I I I I I I I3 I I, If I I. I I2 I I, 'I I I I I, I. lg I, If If In Q F, ,. I 5 IL Iv, ,, If I ,E I. L. Ig I. I I Il r . I F' If I IL, I I .r CONTRIBUTOR'S ROOM DR. SNYDER'S OFFICE Two lzzmdvfd twcntyfmne WALLY'S OFFICE . nf? STUDENT'S ROOM Tum ll1.l.71dTCd tlurty I'- 1 'M N k 2' is ,lf 'fvf 53 W Y 4' ANATOMY LABO RATO RY PHYSIOLOGY RESEARCH 'Two hlmdred fhlTIy'071C -41 PATH OLOGY LA BO RATO RY MEDICAL DISPENSARY Two hundred Ihl7ly'I1L'U Wil 5 1 l SURGICAL WARD MEDICAL WARD Two hundred thirty-three A STAFF ROOM HOSPITAL CORRIDOR Two hundred thwtyffom' PRIVATE OPERATING ROOM ACCIDENT WARD Two hundred thirtyfjive '9 MEDIC U :V 7' - DELIVERY ROOM CYSTOSCOPY ROOM Two hundred thinyfsix PRIVATE ROOM I ' f Q N lf X-RAY Two I1 undred thirtyfseuen PHYSIOTHERAPY ,Q I' DEEP X-RAY THERAPY Two 11 zmdred tllwtyfelght I GYNECOLOGY EXAMINING ROOM PHARMACY Two hundred thirty'-nine I 1 I WWW ff M Q- :S f f-ij-f,T mm. 1 W f 1 1 fr 1 .fir 3. .ww-. X 1 4 mb L I 2 V :gf N ll P A1 f I l 1, .',.,,'.A . , I, Q I l , a ., ,-.,. S. 'I 9 N I R v Y . tb' I1 ' -Q, 1 l ' 'I S Ao I4. I o -'Nl A . I ' I ff mf ' -H I-4 -9' - z .M 5 Y 2:-C4-14 O- J' s Quia . ,5 ZA 57 S vxfy Q ig QQ-92 Q3 X59 lg Q5 THE , ,- NIU Vw ., l -Y, f,. V S x q h gx x x X? X -ax Q ygv . NP ' ,112 N x M 1 V ,X jf F gg AS X M N ' aghfva: 1 1 ' f ffii-me All WSE? ,N mg l -.'A5ff 'j fix Zi X XX ' Q ff-5 V J We l N 5? A f X5 ,gfamii-if ' 1, r Q ' XX f' A r mm X3 WE! , Kb Y , xt Wx U 7 'E fx -:ff X ,,7 3' 5 .N M5925 T .. F9 1 7 f fifg . QZQ f 45ff'kLff' 4? Nik ea 7 -VW ' . V X, P 'i bA.1 , Q fag U fx 5?SiKQa54 aa,mp.ww, 'L-'1 mmf-X 34 , ix- 4'n XJ .4 ,ii, 1,,.A 6252355 X -. X K xx I X ff, 'X X w , A 7 .1 0 sf . V V 5 ' w 1 I. 1.1 F. 51 If n 1 K N L, iQ , p STUDENT COUNCIL President ............................... NEVIN H. SEITZ VicefPres1dent . . . . .MICHELE X7IGLIONE Secretary ................. ..... 5 IAMES B. BUTLER Treasurer ................. ..... G ERALD P. Emerge Senior Class Representative. .. HRICHARD F. NoRTHRoP junior Class Representative ............... VJILLIAM BoBEN Sophomore Class Representative ..... HORACE F. DARLINGTON Freshman Class Representative ............. GEORGE KNAIQF HAHNEMANNIAN INSTITUTE INCE the opening of the college on its present site in 1885, there has functioned a student organization known as The Hahnemannian Institute. and popularly known among the students as thc Institute. Old records of its activities are found in the minute books of the Institute that repose in the college library. They tell a very interesting story. In the early days of the organization, it was the custom of the members to meet weekly and discuss subjects pertinent to medicine and Homeopathy. Many interesting conferences are recorded. Dues were levied and assignments were made for presentation at later meetings. The student body being small and more homogenous. the meetings were very successful, lt was the custom for each member to append his name to the minute book. The signal honor of the organization was the presentation to each member of the graduating class a diploma of graduation from the Institute, Many of these certihcates have been preserved from the early days of the organization. In 193061. the officers were. Nevin Seitz, '31, President: Vice-President. Michael Viglione, '31: Secretary. james Butler. '3l: and Treasurer. Gerald P. Fincke, 'f'il. A better group of officers could not have been elected from the student body and their work warrant:d the students' conndence. The Institute sponsored a smoker at the start of school to make the new students familiar with tht older men. The smoker always served its purpose. Later on. near Thanksgiving. the social calendar called for an informal dance. As a climax the Institute concentrated its energy on the Blue and Cold Ball. Two hundred forty-three G-LEE CLUB , .V Q,-ax 1 19 1 ll : U l 1 GLEE CLUB Conductor ......... ...HENRY S. RUTH, M.D. Student Conductor. . . ............ KENNETH R. WEsTcaN Manager ................... . ........ ALBERT F. SCHMIDT FIRST TENOR jacob j. Kohlas, '32 Charles S. Davison, '3 J. Scott Miller, jr., '33 john J. Bender, '34 SECOND TENOR Nevin H. Seitz, '31 Herbert W. Barron, '32 Harold A. Erlenbach, '32 Virgil A. Hudson, '32 Ceorge T. Noden, '32 FIRST BASS David D. Northrop, '31 Walter R. Seip, '31 J. Harmon Wilson, '31 E. Raymond Ambler, '32 SECOND BASS Douglas C. Wasley, '31 Ernest G. L. Wiebusch, '31 Nathan A. Fegley, '32 Paul Tomlinson, '33 Richard P. Shirinian, '31 Ralph M. Donaldson, '32 Bernard Hark, '32 Harry S. Hoffman, '32 Melvin F. Ames, '31 Benjamin Cottone, '31 James E. Flinn, '31 Richard F. Northrop, '31 Anthony Pino, '31 Lester L. Bower, '31 E. Doty Dake, '31 Harvey F. Enyeart, '31 Henry J. Kohler, '31 Franklin B. Cooper, '31 Gerald P. Fincke, '31 E. Merton Hill, '31 Arthur B. Ream, '31 'W Wilbur S. Davison, 34 Dominic A. Donio, '34 Carl E. Lorenz, '34 Russell G. Witwer, '34 Horace F. Darlington, ' Thomas L. Laughlin, ,lr w John J. lablonski, '33 Robert Penington, Jr., Lawrence W. Kinsell, ' Earl C. Leyrer, '32 Rayford E. Wright, '32 Ralph B. Megahan, '33 Crothers E. Walker, '3 w Edward il. Ford, '34 William H. Frazee, '34 HE first Clee Club at Hahnemann was organized in the year 19110, and the organization persisted since that time. The club for the most part was run by student leaders and student managers. At one time, some few members of the faculty, who were sufficiently interested, contributed funds for the purpose of obtaining a prof fessional coach. This was done for two years and meeting with no unqualified success, the plan was abandoned. Following this, the club was fortunate enough to persuade Dr. Henry S. Ruth to devote some of his time to the training of the club. A word or two of appreciation is most certainly in order here. As student leader in his undergraduate days, Dr. Ruth was directly responsible for one of the bestftrained clubs ever produced at the college. The club was deeply indebted to him for his interest and appreciated very much the time he gave and the work he did in its behalf. It is hoped that he will continue to act in this capacity. This year there has been a complete reorganization of the club and all prospective members, new and old, were given tryfouts. As a result, Dr. Ruth was able to assemble fortyffive good voices. The club has been faithful in its rehearsals and the society has been able to put on one of the best programs in recent years. As an added feature, the club presented The Hahnemann High Hatters, a trio singing in the modern manner. This trio is composed of D. Northrop, R. Northrop and R. Ambler. Kenneth R. Weston has acted as Student Leader and has been successful in holding together the club which numbers among its members twentyfthree of his Senior classmates. Paul M. Kistler has been the combined manager of the musical clubs. Up to this time, the club has presented concerts for the Rotary Club, International Students' House, WFI, and for the Annual Blue and Gold Ball. These concerts have been well received and other concerts are being planned for the remainder of the season. Two hundred forty-five THE ORCHESTRA THE ORCHESTRA Coach .... . . ,LlEUT. Josspn FRANKEI. Director ........ ......... D AVID SHARKis Business Nlamiger . . . ....... .... R USSELL R. RUBBA VICLINS Domenic A. Donio Willianu C. Meinecke Leon A. Frankel Atche Yession Douglas C. Wasley Wesley F. McCann Dwight L. Moyer CELLO Marcus jimine: STRING BASS AND TROMBONE James Andrew Klimbara TRUMPETS Nevin H. Seit: Vx'atson I. Betts, Jr. Irvin B. Berd TROM BON ES Jesse P. Burns CLARINETS Nathan N. Ginsburg Chas B. Miller Edward Thegem Savit: Joseph S. Clinka George Di Nicholas Russell R. Rubba Leopold S. Lipsitl Williaiii C. Meincke Maral A. Pourdski OBOE Burdel B. Sankey FLUTE Emerson A. Reed DRUMS Harry Leon Armsprung PIANO Orlando M. Carrozzino LIBRARIAN Wm. C. Meinecke ASSISTANT LIBRARIANS Dwight L. Moyer Louis A. Amdur HE Hahnemann Orchestra has developed from a minor unit in the college activities to a state of maturity in a short period of time. In our Senior year it numbered twentyffive members-the instrumentation being well balanced with strings, reeds, woodwind, brass and percussion. The members attended weekly rehearsals conducted after school hours. The interest was well reflected in the concerts given from time to time By means of these concerts and a broadcasting program, the orchestra did its share to uphold the reputation of Hahnemann in the social features. The orchestra was under the direction of David Sharkis, '32, a graduate and a professional musician. Lieutenant joseph Frankel, wellfknown band leader, has been of material benefit to the orchestra, lending his active interest, time and skill to rehearsals. The combined efforts of the leaders resulted in placing the orchestra on a very high plane. The details involved in the maintenance of the orchestra were ably and faithfully attended bythe manager, R. Rubba. The spirit of cofoperation, combined with the loyalty and interest displayed by the individual members, reflected credit to such an organization. Two hundred fortyfseven THE BLUE AND GOLD BALL Cliairmtm PAUL M. KISTLFR Davin D. NK7RTHRl?P GERALD P. FINCRE -Iaeois J. Konus HENRX' NI. KoHi.ER RUSSELL R. RLTBB.-X HoRi-iCE F. Di-XRLINGTON ALIRERT F. SIYHMIDT WILL1.aM R. BoBEN fiEURf5E M. KNAWE Faculty Adiiism' DR. HENRY' S, RUTH HE Fourth Annual Blue and Gold Ball and Concert was held in the main ballroom of the Penn Athletic Club on Saturday evening. April eleventh. This annual prom has been rapidly gaining impetus since its inception four years ago and this year's atlair far surpassed the preceding balls both in entertainment and attendance. The committee with Dr. Henry S. Ruth as faculty advisor and Paul M. Kistler as chairman. secured ninety patronesses. These wives of the faculty and alumni and friends received after the concert in their respective boxes in the Diamond Circle and added great charm to the evening. The orchestra opened the concert with a stirring overture following which the Glee Club ,ind High Hatters alternated until the musical clubs had brought their program to a close with the Hahnemanii Song, At the next curtainvwith a rolling of drums and a flourish of baton the Casa Loma Orchestra of Detroit were revealed, banked with high palms and seated on a terraced Dlatform. Vv'1th this entrance. to the closing strains in the wee hours, the band furnished dance music of the highest order which delighted even the most critical. As the last curtain was drawn. the students and alumni parted with one more pleasant memory nl dear old Hahnemann to muse over in the days to follow. Tub liimdred furtyfezglit 19 - MEDEC - 31 BASKETBALL Coach .... .. .JAMEs E. FLINN Manager . . . ........ ...... . . .TINY KOREYWO William Brooks Floyd Gindhart Edward Zweiger Fred Bowles Paul Herr Fred Ruoif Herbert Eighmey Heine Sheer Albert Lepis James S. Fleming Charles jaworski H. Becker David Broslow Charles Turnblaser NE of the few opportunities afforded to anyone who desired scholastic athletic diversion was the basketball team. This organization represented Hahnemann for twelve years as an active unit. I Obviously, basketball was a sport only for the undergraduate, to be later relegated, in the accumulation of dignity, with all the other strenuous pastimes. It did, however, give a certain group the opportunityi to escape a completely sedentary life and its attended ills. The devotees, although capable of real personal conquest, entered into this sport with the amateur purpose of playing the game for the game's sake. Dean Pearson deserved the credit for supporting the basketball enterprise. When funds from general source were inadequate, he generously contributed with his perf sonal check. His love for sports and exercise not directed to professional competition made him an active patron. Hahnemann was represented in the City College League, including Peirce, Pharmacy, Textile, South Jersey Law, and Optometry. At every contest our quintet presented a strong and competitive spirit. Outside of the league, there were sundry games with local small colleges. The games and practice meetings were held at the Central Y. lvl. C. A. Two hundred fovtyfnine ff X ff if ,X 1 1 X, , . x XX! X ff X I f I if 'wLf f ,Z . - gild- , . . . ' ' -ff7!312cw'?.:i -' ' :..w...f1 5:5-:Q .-,qv ' 3- T-::..'r1.':.w:fr-F' --. - :-.Vr.Vs'f.- 1:5-1.15. . . ' - .2 . -f 1 ' --' 1 ' - . - ., '--'V'-'7V 7r z 315 '- -T? 'i1:-:1 - . .ul 73- -'2 '.. - . .. - f if fs: -vzukaiifn . .'5'1'fff':f-' -- Q-.1 V ' KV. wg.:-I L -X .-1 Lf-. 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'P' Q .-.. .ff 5 'Q gg :rw 3.5! 5 f'-'-fy-4, - ' sf --'f'1i'-if -'xiii Zififf - an QV if ' Q-a+:'fhL-. x- 'V ,' , :ly A I T: rpv .- . '-- tit! 't--j ' Q -fi-575'-s-'2:r1.,11':,,,:L, 'V 32- -V f. if 2 1. :' 2-'Q -5 -- mf 35:'1f..'f f- -' - - - --. ' - - -:V - A- ' ' -1 ' ,. MH .., .'.: - 12'1i:.'- ks..-'ff--L -:-r. J: K, L fem. - - 7:54 .tg 'X - -LV... 1:- ,gg '1 - - -- -V. '-. q,5'4E.4z:aC' - ff , M - 44a . .,,...-,..-F 5-viwagfizg f x .4 -,4:-vs-n,,.A.,f 'A-:A:1:. - .,V,. .',V 'L ' 'Q ' X . , Y Y iw: 1 - .1 . 4 '-Y V 4 ' 1 'J'l 'v',: j rg 112- ' ' 'P ' xx is '-T -.-12.4 f - 1- .'.i,f.fr' -HV -f' - - 1... - -'gg-f5:,,f-25.-I-f-V ma.. 33- W- -11::FffriGf'1' V 'D' ' 1'-15 ' 'WH' ' - 41 ' - .-,gf V.-eg.-.:2'ff i 1L'f:'- +f'i': -'P . 1.--. 1' ' 'H -Q v-.. -um... ' 2- f :L'1 5'- gf ! 'FEE'f - '3R 5 .i--'f2f-'-1.2--fp-fVf1m31 aTiii'-Lf-5 - .,f3..1.. ffm- --:.':t-:cam -- :4.f1fT1SfIfE5'-f? A. Jziiiifffx 'iiz ggq . ,va Qu! VicefPresident. . Secretary. 'Treasurer . Editor. . . Richard E. Allen Melvin Francis Ames Edward Doty Dake Arthur L. Evans James E. Flinn Oscar Eugene Heim E. Merton Hill E. Raymond Ambler, J Lawrence W. Kinsell Olive A. Kobish F. Clinton Bower Ralph M. L. Buchanan John H. Davie Willis C. Gerhart Horst A. Agerty A. Carl Armbruster Frank G. Barnard joseph K. Beans, III Fred A. Bowdle J. Paul Burkett Edwin W. Cauihcld PHI 'ips nlllln in 'A ll Illlll lIl' H umm lla ' I 0 OFFICERS ALPHA GAMMA MERToN HILL President ........ . .... CHARLEs T. YARR1NGToN .. . . . . . .jacois JOHN KO!-ILH.-XS ..........E. G. Louis WIEBUSCII . . . . . . . .RICHARD FRANCIS NoRTHRoP CLASS OF I93l Paul Milton Kistler Jacob S. Lehman Stanley Mohr Moyer David Daniel Northrop Richard Francis Northrop joseph B. Raddin Walter Rinehart Seip CLASS OF I932 jacob John Kohlhas Malachi W. Sloan Harold L. Trexler CLASS OF I933 John D. Hubbard john M. Keese, III Robert D. Leonard C. R. Madiera CLASS OF I934 W. Paxson Chalfont Edward M. Dicks Royce V. Haines john W. Hardy Arthur A. Hartley Samuel B. Hughes Eldridge W. Johnson 'Two lmndred fiftylthree Glenwood R. Schreiner H. Ernest Tompkins Douglas Clauser Wasley Kenneth Robert Weston E. G. Louis Wiebusch john Harmon Wilson Charles Thomas Yarrington Warren L. Trexler Henry S. Urbaniak Frederick C. Witwer Robert J. McNeill, Jr. Ralph B. Megahan Robert Penington, Jr. C. A. Laubscher Cledith A. Miller George Clay McKeown Dallett Sharpless Charles B. Turnblacer T v ll 'l GEM! f x llllllllllll 2 ALPHA SIGMA OFFICERS President ....... ........... G ERALD P. FINCKE, '31 Vice'President .... ,.... R AYMoND C. MoYER, '32 Secretary ....... ..... R AYFORD E. WR1c:Hr, '32 Treasurer ..... ......... L AXVRENCE B. POVUELL, '31 Donald F. Closterman Franklin B. Cooper Edgar J. Deissler William R. Boben William A. Buck Howard A. Coyer I. Watson Betts, Jr. Charles S. Davison Gerald L. Infield Edward S. Magee joseph W. McHugh, jr. John S. Miller, jr. Thomas A. Conway Wilbur S. Davison Hugh Wilson Eichenherry CLASS OF I93I Richard E. H. Duisher Gerald P. Fincke Norman Lepper Gerald O. Poole CLASS OF nm Walter L. Eckert, Jr. Andrew Goodwin Edwin D. lVIcKinnon Raymond C. Moyer CLASS OF I933 Thomas E. Patton Rohert F. Rapp Robert L. Redield B. Burdell Sankey Francis D. Speer Otto C. F. Tomec CLASS OF I934 Vkfilliam H. Frazee, jr. B. Marviii Hand Edward N. Lamson Carl Everett Lorenz Two hundred jiftyfjive Lawrence B. Powell George W. Prutzman Alhert F. Schmidt W. Lee Miller Rayford E. Wright A. Follmer Yerg Carl P. Wagoner William A. Weaver, Jr Byron D. Wilkiiis Stanley O. Wilkins Arthur J. Wise C. Fred Yeager William sl. McElroy Shermer Haines Stradley Jr Edward H. Zwergel 4. Sw' - ,x , oi. 'U' T w- . Q igiix . 31.574038 i qnmjf PI UPSILON RHO OFFICERS President ...... .............. VicefPresident Secretary .... Corresponding Treasurer .... James B. Butler Harvey Frank Enyeart Nevin H. Seit: John A. Doering Charles W. Straub Charles F. Hadley Richard F. Free Ray C. Gabler George T. Noden Floyd D. Gindhart Paul M. James Howard A. Kerr Horace F. Darlington Thomas L. Laughlin Ross Hague James N. Evanoff John Kenneth Potter Harvey C. Warren William D. Mayhew James G. Langford John J. Bender ...EDWIN H. FENTUN HENRH' J. KoHLER . . . . . .NEVIN H. SEITZ Secretary .............. l'l.-XRVEY F. EN YE.-KRT CLASS OF I93I Paul M. Nase Dante J. Bevilacqua William Frank Neide Henry Kohler Lloyd Clifford Piersol CLASS OF I932 Robert E. Mitchell Earl C. Leyrer Muse A. Sheppard Carrol B. Danner Thomas S. Fannin Martin E. Sweicicki CLASS OF I933 Crothers E. Walker E. Stephen Hallinger Oscar B. Griggs Christian J. Kleinguenther Edward W. Provost Russell H. Barnes T. Linton Mercer E. Harold Mercer CLASS OF I934 Clinton R. Schneider PLEDGES George R. Schubart Joseph A. Horneff Paul S. Schantz Two hundred fiftyfseven JAMES B. BUTLER Albert H. Niebauni Bernard Bretherick Andrew John C'Neil Edwin Hunt Fenton Harry P. Landis Henry G. McKeown Harold A. Erlenbach Frank C. Wagenseller Robert W. Wallace John Pickering George W. Beacher Robert E. Slemmer Paul J. Tomlinson H. Eugene Douds Ralph C. Worrell Maskell B. Black John Robert Cox John L. Boyer William V. Hostelley Russell G. Witwer Harry C. Beeman T I l 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 ff EAA M 11A Y 1 E. V l 5' 1 1 1-, ' 1 ' 1 . 1 1 1 5 4 1 1 A 1 , 1.1 1 .N 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1, 1 1 1 A ' 1 W 1 7.1 ,, X I ' 1 1 1 k 1 1:1 1 17 1 F ',!A.x ' 1- : i 1' 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 11 , 1 F. 1 1 ' 1 1- 1 EQ, I 1w' 13.5 fx. 5, 1 E, A VI 1? if, 5 1: , 1 ! 1' 1 1 , 1 , 1 1 ' 1 1T 1' 1 . 1 1 It 1 1' A 1 1- 1 I 1 IL President ..... Secretary ..... Vice-President Treasurer .. . . Counsellor . . Dante j. Bevilacqua Benjamin J. Cottone Domenic P. Donisi Carmine P. Bruno Vincent Campana joseph D'Agostino Anthony J. Delelsi .lohn lvl. Amore john D. Caggiano Alhcrt A. Cammaroti Frank P. Colizzo Nicholas Derrico Peter Di Bono Louis C. Di joseph Charles Alfano John LI. Anastasi Louis LI. Bernato John -I. Coletta Anthony F. De Tullio Louis C. Di joseph L gl 5 Sa P N :Eggs X .Q . , Ce bf' , ,IX x I X ll ' ll i :N ,F ll : ii: l i.... A . lg,i.. fSr 1. l F I' I l ' . 1 t ,Q V P CIRCOLO ITALIANO OFFICERS . . . .D.fXNTE J. BEX'IL:XCQLTgX . . .Mici-IAEL P. PRIMI.-KNO BENJAMIN J. CoTToNE . . . . . . . . . .jo1iN ZNPPALA CLASS OF I93l Anthony Pino Michael P. Prirniano Louis Rocli CLASS OF I932 Anthony J Dilelsi Anthony La Russo Alphonse A. Lepis Anthony Marsico Nicholas D. Mauriello CLASS OF I933 Anthony Di Marino George A. Di Renzo Romeo R. D'Onofrio Anthony A. Donato Ernst P. Gigliotti Roosevelt juele John A, Napoleon CLASS OF I934 Paul R. Miraglia Francisco D'I1nperio George A. Di Nicholas Doinenic A. Donio Michael Grasso Otto LI. Lihener Nicholas E. Marchione Two luuidrecl jiftyfnme MICHELE VICILIKUNE Russell Ruhha Michele Viglione john Zappala Stephen A. Oliva Joseph F. Pacelli Anthony Picollo Frank A, Quattromani Anthony P. Nicosia Domenic M. Pescatore Alfonso L. Pierro Caesar F. Sarni john T. Valenti Charles R. Venturo John A. Napoleon, jr Michael Peters Samuel C. Polcino Gatian F. Santor Francis J. Tronao Placido Venuto 7 0 President ...... VicefPreside1It. . Secretary . . Treasurer . Daniel Irwin Jamison, Jr. E. C. Louis Wiehusch Louis A. Amdur John Scott Miller, Jr. David Anthony K. F. Mayer N. F. Ludwick H. H. Hunsicker W. Wentz M. J. Bennett C. J. White Maxwell White Henry Somers Wallace C. Madden Clifford E. Schott QOOOOOQ :DU f-'FEI A og Q5 Q JH Q A ,' o o PTOLEMY SOCIETY OFFICERS ... . . . . .DANIEL IRWIN J.-XMISUN, JR. .FRED C. Licks ........STANLEY O. WILKINS ............JoIHIN Soorr MILLER, JR. CLASS OF I93I Charles T. Yarington Arthur D. Ream Louis Philip Koster CLASS OF l932 Fred C. Licks CLASS OF I933 Thomas E. Patton Stanley O. Wilkins CLASS OF I934 John D. Woodward ALUMNI Henry D. Stuard William S. Terwilleger Ed. Wm. Campbell Henry S. Ruth J. H. Closson, 3rd L. F. Marter Arthur Hartley J. L. Van Tine W. T. Killian Two hundred sixtyfone Elmer F. Herring Kunj B. Kichlu Herhert Williaiii Barron Kenneth Lee Shaver Samuel C. Polcino Wm. Sylvis Clarence Shollenherger Wm. C. Hunsicker Chas. L. W. Rieger Paul C. Moock William A. Boyson Harold L. Collom Warren S. Hoenstine Frederick Wayne Jarvis Thomas W. Phillips , W w' r . X Y I -' , w , 1 , w W w 1., X .V X ' ra ' C 4 C ...limi 13 f i s it , A -A-ei Rf' 'JS 6 W -f H me Aocwbdot ssa PH! LAMBDA KAPPA-ALPHA BETA OFFICERS President ....... Vice-President. . . Secretary ......... Treasiwer ....... GuardianfatfArms .................. sl. Louis Caplan Solomon Chartock Louis Arndier David Arbit Harry L. Aussprung Leon A. Frankel Edward L. Axelman Samuel S. Barr Edward I. Geller David Keyser ....... .....LEoPoLD S. L1PSI'IZ . . .DAVID H. KROCHMAI. . . . . .RoBERT S. HELLER HARRY L. AUssPRUNc: CLASS OF l93l Benjamin R. Kat: CLASS OF l932 Nathan N. Ginsburg Robert S. Heller Harry S. Hoffman Seymour S. Kimmel David H. Kroehmal CLASS OF I933 Benjamin Cooperman CLASS OF I934 Abraham Kramer Two li imdred Sixtyftlzree .SEYMoUR S. KIMMUL Leopold S. Lipsit: Isadore Wessel Nathan Mames Nathan Marius Isaac H. Rigberg David Sharkis Gustav Frank Joseph VV. lvlessey Philip Marshall Edwin Ephion Miller Fm! 2 Q .1 1 9 1 ' Consul . . . V1ce'Consul Scribe .... Chancellor Senators ' Marshal . . 1 .9 A i Ln: ... Wlmlf 11 3' E AN 5 8 KFRNYQ o sg Z' LZ, QA Q ,Q l-.I Ti' PHI DELTA EPSILON . ...MANUEL SALL . . . .BERNARD HARK DAVID D. BROSELOW JACK L. WEINSTEIN . . .D. MERRIL ROSMAN VJALTER GROSSMAN . . . . .IRVIN B. BERD Louis Lapin Abram B. Kurland Herman J. Luhowitz Arthur Wilner N. Geoffrey Schumann Yale Lewine Nathan Artsis Theodore Sutnik 'Two hundred sixty 'fue I f f A 5 W., 0, W vm? img f -1 if lf. A Z QW, mxxw, 'WNW Mm' -wwf ' ' -ew? W, f 3 ,. . .. ,gr Mm, , v ,-.-. , .gb , ..,,afl W? .,..,x,-e ,'?4i'b 5 55. 1 ' - if gy, .. 'S vw , r ...kv 1, FE, --1 M, HUMCR Though wearied now of life's dull cares, Though now the eyes our old age hares, Though arteries grow cold and hard, Though now with prostates sleep is hatred Though gout and rheumatism creep, Though livers whine and kidneys weep, Though hones are old and calcified, Though all life's pleasures he denied, We still retain our Humor. We still sit down for just a space, Recall the jokes, the men, the place Of four past years at Hahnemann. And if these pages bring to mind The humor that we left behind Then matters not what we forgot, We still retain our Humor. il 292. I 0 Q M vf l -if- . .ii ll, .,-- .... ..- f Wil 01 u if I r f 0 S A 4 5 ' - f A 0 il A J , u sl - If l Ml i 'l T , Tim hundred xixtyeiglit QE Lx , i L W jf M Q5 ,-1, fy 9 x, x, , -, Bra '57 1 - 5 Ya by if IX ' X X 1 Ai VX y f 4 , ' 'Af K ' Q 4 I kx T , L N 1? R5 1 1 ffmf A QQ' QQ I4 LTL G J? Q! I 'QI , w H o's lg W H O WWH3 WAS! s '-.S 'X Aa. ' .5 4' ' 'fy WHO 1 1 Y '1' Huvlclfdd .X5'L'C7Z!f. -Y THE CLASS BEFORE CHRISTMAS 'Twas the class hefore Christmas when all through the room The students were merry that now very soon The year would he over and holidays here And good old St. Nicholas would buy them .1 hee:- The boys they were merry, and happy, and high For liquids were flowing, the gin and the rye. The professor he lectured in tone dull and dry On sweet diahetes and why people die. And as he droned on in monotonous vein The hoys were impatient to get on the train. So feet hegan shuffling and papers were rustling And everyone hoping that Fergy was hustling, For vacation was calling and there we were stalling And the prof, he was calling for order again. Soon now the class would he over and done, The treatment was reached, boy, are we having fun! Now professor, he asks for a numher of drugs His patience is ended, he's soon going hugs. Wlieii out of the din a voice raises on high With a drug that's named Thuja, I thought I would die! The prof, he's mistaken so oil: comes his coat, That hold last remark, it sure got his goat. He offers us down, hut we all decline, The class is excused and the moral we find, Is-that drugs are dangerous. M U c K E R s Two hundred seventyfone , 5 4 ff 2 QDOORNOB AT THE :MIKE STRTWN N-U T'5 , LocHTED IN THE BEAUTIFUL , x New srunno nr THE ' EQ S.E CORNER OF THE 63 W? ff., ANPWOMY LABATQRY N x 3 Q0PERn'rmo oN R FREQUENCYX OF ABouT TWO A wear P D06 TQ ra 7-Oo AMI-OPENING CHORLJ5 'E' QCQIYCELLED Na 0 q-03 FAIRLV coaraecr 1-1,45 e ggefvce or DR PHILUPQ :rn-n eve Przese-fr I lik SPL11' SEC- LR1'EkMfA.P1, t ' q'O51' PKCOLQ SOLO-Svwks. v q.07:- THE XNRECN-L gg rue qq Cbuwccmeo By wvmauj- 1401- TALK' 'THE LABOR Svrunvaom- DR Jo.-nvE JA'-aes Jn. fwvrff zresse Jn:-ws 1-:av wormw- ro no V-ll'vH Arsovsn msqokoj. Cl.I5-- PFNHHVCJ HT 40 FOR Puansurze AT lo- ig wmv we SHOULD URoP A Uumoovu on ur - DR PHiu.ivs, 9-l1:- PLACQNQ. 'rl-we Ks- Scum-up-r Bncu FROM gg-KBOROUGH Rgponf, q.2.o:- Torvgmuc, Henna Exam:-sgs - DR. Heveueu. q.:15,- DRM--1 courn or r-MLK Terra - Uv. SHOLLENBURGER- fl,3o-.- Sona, - ul AaN r 6-or Noeooyf Lanmqw, 1321... TWO mmm-s INTERMISSION ANAT0M1j D'55ECT'oN- q.35.:, -rue. DIFFICULTY or s4m.ouNrf 14-HRS- UR- PEHRSCN' .143-I..- ,gL1f,Hv m1-earzuvruuw FOR COMP!-CTE 5fF'f'ON REPWR- q'qo:,, 01FFEReuCe BEYWEEN Mvscm.E tome AND Mvscte TONUS- DR UJCDMHN. q.q51.- Dnnmcf Exvosumes - UR- 'RUNN- '1.l-Ho:.- -rv-ui Foomswurss OF SURGERY' NORTHMP 89' HONHRUPQ Ct-S'0g- ggngu semen TALK - DR. CRELUN- '1.S1:-- can-ues - BHLOW'N LOCOMOUVE WORKS- q.52- ll.4S:- OuT r-'on A SH :'KE 7 Y guerznvfv Uv ,A -N:-'rhljx JOHN HELD Jkjjlja 'CL ' muff' IIERGUSQN. Now, whaI I wanied Io, or rafher, I was abouf Io and yes, here I have an arficle by Dr. S+evens and by Ihe way, and speaking of Digi+aIis I believe +haI Dr. Sfevens and I agree Ihaf we shouId use if in all cases of pneumonia. OI course no+ Iorgelrfing Ihe high caIoric die? of I Ihe Iiguid 'rype. Now, i+'s abouI Ima m?- Iwenfy afier five and I Ihink iI's Ii 'yi besf Io sIop here, and if you genIIe- Q fk men will read up on iunkeI- 'ax if' WELLS. My Iriend Dr. Beckman IoId me -Q S lf! Ihe o'rher day Ihajr he used Digifalis za in all cases of pneumonia and I asked 'IISW him wha'r good iI did and he didn'I Ii know. The old schooI uses 'rhis drug I ' because IhaI's all Ihey have. Bu+ I whaf we're here Ior is Io geI Ihe sick xx man well and DigiIaIis vvon'I do II. CIass be excused. 6 I I k .s X I 0 O Y 92? 6 I ix ilu, , W . I . if XX I' I xii X Q I ' ' : if I I I Il yi ry' '1f'x ci 1 'J if if Lovuc- 2? . ED .ff N 6 HORT F A gOF MEDICINE 1 'liiuu hundred xe11entyfLI1Tee CROSS SECTION The sewer rat carries the plague . . . up the main house drain connected to the water closet . . . Patulous to four fingers . , . in the knee chest position . . . dust will gather unless you have . . . clean teeth as they will fall out and he ref placed hy . . . an S hy IO Xfray plate after a harium meal . . . and gravy, gruel, junket, thick soup, peas . . . and feels hetter . . . hut should he prohihited dur' ing the last trimester . . . although when done to the horse . . . and hoggy tonsils . . . hest treated hy a Bucks Extension . . . also the females . . . until 2 to 4 P. M, do nothing locally . . . as the suhject will prohahly have night sweats . . . and think she is in pieces in hed . . . hut send the nurse . . . for extra systoles . , . and hold hetween thumh and first Finger . . . the 2-Ifhour sample . . . hut if you have pain from hip to hip . . . twentyfsix, twentyr nine, thirtyfone, and twenty and a quarter . . . to twelve the hooks will he collected a hanging outhouse all curtains, davenf and hric a hrac and placing them . . . in the pouch of Douglass . . . and should not he removed for two nionths . , . the woman will not tell you anything is wrong . . . until you and placed . . . in . . . lirst removing ports, radios, pianos are a Senior . . . then take out your useful drug hook . . . and you will Iind these compound pills are dynamite . . . and clean out the resulting cavity and suture . , . self . . . as far as reading this is concerned. OUR IDEA OF .ai PERFECT LECTURE Asleep in hed, with a stenographer tak' ing down a lecture hroadcast hy a mute over a dismantled radio station. ,yi DR. SAPPINGTON BECOMES A LOCAL WIT There was a young man from Bombay Who thought syphilis had all gone away hut now he has Tahes And saher shinned hahies And thinks he is Queen of the May. V II N A 1 U0 - ., If ax IX -I T-I B ACTUALLY OVERHEARD SYN. DISPENSARY How old are you? 'Bout eighteen. Are you married? Yes, suh! Any children? Yes, suh, I'se got a hahy. When was it horn? Tuesday, doctor. What Tuesday? I dunno, doctor. How old is the hahy? Bahy he two years and day. What trouhles you? I'se got misery, doctor. Where is your misery? I don' know, doctor, Iise just got m Ye Gods!-so have I! Two hundred .sereiityffoiw IN isery JUST DRIFTING AND DREAMING Placeswally Krat:'s rendezvous on the first floor. Time-Eleven o'clock any morning. THE DE.sXN-..NLJXV, Waillace, if you'll get me a reservation for Indianapolis on the 2.-I-I P. M. tomorrow, I'll hegin writing my speech now. The Chemical Propaf Uanda Society of Indiana wants me to speak on 'Indol and Skatol as Factors in Human Happiness' I'll compose the tirst paragraph and you can do the rest. Make it hreezy-inject a personal appeal for every man, woman and child. And rcntcmher, the train leaves at 2.44 and not 2.43 or 2.-Ii! W.sxI-L.i's Yes, Doctor-and do you want me to include the ioke ahout what the cream puff said as it floated down the river? DR. VJIDMAN frunning into the sanctum in a state of hypertensionj-- Mr. Kratz, tell me at once if joe Blitsch paid his microscope fee hack in 1902. My stulas are getting hlurred- XVALLY-!'Certainly, Dr. Widmaii, don't you rememher he gave you a five-dollar bill, four ones and the other dollar in dimes? I IlllIIv1nvI'll I IN M 1 I. Ill -. I -22 I' was I ii l . I I I V DR. BIIERICKEYNKYHKZ, get these grade slips out, will you? The first three hundred are for the underclassmen. I'll have the Senior marks outs The phone rings and Wally answers it- -Yes, he died in 1908 and his wife never married again. Finest student we ever had here-a cultured man in every respect. No, the wart was under the right eye, not over the left one. No trouhle at all. Goodfhye MISS I:ISHERs Oh, Mr. Kratz, will you check these lists with me? That's a cute tie you have on. WKLLY-b'S3y', young lady, I think you hadiu THE DIf.iN+l'XrV8llHCC, use the joke as it standsgonly feature a jelly roll instead of the cream puff. SElTZTl-WRllj', have those carholic acid samples for the Seniors come yet? Xxw7.'.LLYTuY6S, and I wish YOLIQCI all take a good healthy gulp right now. Tivo lzimdmd SCL'C71fjy'fI'L'6 ' L 1 m ' l' fl fl C 31 x H L m' -4 2 J HON. NATHAN GRIFFITH-LIKFRIZ, notify the Sophomores that my examination will be held in that -1 lk foul smelling -+ ni of a Room E. And I don't want any 51 - cribbing, either! Why, those--- HH- -T think they can get away with murder! WALLY- Suppose you- MRS. SLOCUM falmost choking with excitementj- Mr, Kratz, two of those Unemf ployed Apple Kings are fighting and cursing downstairs. See if you can make them stop. WALLYHl'My dear Mrs. Slocum, I'm not hired to- DR. MERCER fshoving Mrs. Slocum asidej- Say, Kratz, get me Saji and De La Vara right now! There's a Para Nine down in Gimbel's basement with the head on the perineum, eight inches dilatation and- WALLY fbeginning to get the Hippocratic countenancej- Dr. Mercer, they're in the Library. If you'll just step in there- THE DEAN-l'Wallace, you'd better write me a page or two on 'Cholesterin Crystal Phenomena during 193O.' They want me to make two addresses. Two of my finest friends are on the Program Committee. GEORCJE MEYERfLgMf. Kratz, you look happy this fine morning. Will you please be so kind as to inform me if the College intends to let those Hospital authorities continue to tell me what to do and how to do it? WAI LY- George, I'm too busy right now to-M THE DE.4N-kiW3ll3C6, write a check for my 19274931 City Club dues. I received a reminder this morning which seemed slightly sarcastic to me. And telephone the Rotarians that I won't be down today. Hope they'll try to have a good time, anyway. WESTON- Wally, fix up a notice about Clee Club practice, will you? - WALLY- Listen, Handsome, do your own dirty work. I'm so dizzy now that! DR. SAPPINGTON- Here, Kratz, write for these Laboratory supplies at once-six gross of Agglutinin Activators, four Precipitin Pots, fourteen yards of Ambo' ceptors, a year's subscription to College Humor, and threeei' WALLY- Doctor, don't you have someone in your department who can- THE POSTMAN7nS1g1'1 for these. DR. BERNSTEINHL'Give me the names of all the chesty weisenheimers in the Senior Class. I want to whittle them down a couple of sizes when they come to me. Do that now, Kratzf' DR. WIDMi4N-'BSGE here, Kratz, in April of 1919 jack Druzenwecski gave us a hot check for 51125. Look up your records and see if- . MISS FISHER- Mr, Kratz, my ribbon needs changing. I'm in a big hurry, if you donlt minds' THE DE.AxN-iiC6ftH1I1ly, my good friend, walk right in here. Ivlr. Kratz isn't at all lmsy. He'll be delighted to give you the name, age, favorite flower, weight and address of each member of the Class of '30. Wallace, Dr. Pflight here wants- Wally falls to the floor, frothing at the mouth, tearing his hair and reciting the multiplication table backward. His pupils are dilated and his pains are at five second intervals. THE DE.KN4iiW6ll, this is a surprise. just goes to show how some people like to amuse themselves when they're at leisure. Cet up, Wallace, and quit downing! fHealth BulletinHThe Dean is expected to be out of bed in three weeks. The blow delivered with the chair leg was a sliding one and only a single parietal bone was fracturedj Two lnmdred seventy-six -5 . fr-. ffa E. af' rfg gh. A-C QQ, :.,.,L 1 1 fljxf. if. QJQA . :sul f :XQCQ tl . Qkph ,ff 5 5 nfl grx. . fic? jffi' Q55 xbQ, fffgc. 5.5-,,. T i1 :Fi lift!- '4-f' . 259 .J 3-i. Vicf:i.'l QYL'. vgif. I ' xl V L.q P ,. kit! :Aff I bil fnc 'if Li' ' gl .- xiii 7, v . Wa' M H H R f 1 N 4 L .4 f'. v 1 fi f-W 'F' , A ig! ti. ov: J l ' 1 1-. lf' '- v. lf! l f i.. Vi' 1 1, rig 1 1R 1 lui 511' 1333 If. Wg.: V1.1 I L PA, L F 1 I P t,ii H sag. - iv i f V 1 Q E M J Q. REHEARSING GRAY nee 1 371 BLUEBOOKS .i LEQ oyx ' gyr- xq- A, MEDIC 1 31 HEBEPHRENIA! CATATON IA!! HALLELUJAH!! - ,9WA3.xa, PARANOIA!! 4.-' f 'iv . 51, it . lip , l' . fk n . fad: .:-, ,li ,H t ,3-. w 1. 1' -if , -ef 95 Ai -1- - .1 ff is ,Ni if f. fax 44-2 .R 'I F.. V. fx. , Lui, 1 . V..-1 af Ei? ,. ,, EE Q 12,1 Q., . xl- 5, I-:Q ' rg . ME- - F. qf'.', kg, , , Fw A -A if 1 I-122' 4 ' ' ? ,' ,,. fr, M I 'O' V 1. S4 . egr- 11.- L.. X,2' s'- X- I 1. P41 2 ll XGA. ?L 1 X .. c K - Sf A 'Z .S XJ. .HQ 11. , KM-A ,H-. V Ek. .IL rlf' .f Q .' V- . ,VN k LL'-f 1' ' Q, N I 1 F Lf, 51 V. ry- - A , r -r 1 w A 51' 'ily ug. 1 'fill gf. A .NV an .uf Vs... . .QQ L V - f tin? . Fifi :W , :VAT-. .rg . 711 'J'-2 V 515 . Q11 . I l,:,.f . ' if iff L '- K5 za' mf. Y,4 . I-4 SF. if ,Aa , V, . , 'rJ .3 -ST. fl xl L, N JK Two hundred seventy'eight Q . 1 343' gi-iigfg E F' . :Lg V f..,C , 311'- fd. qv. QQ:-3 f - Fw' 53,15 - :: -T 513151 A 12 .1' V1 V ag- . , , .5 -. . .kb , an 4-. 1: 4 A f I f, E' I , , i 5 ' i.- - f it I I '7 I I A 1 P THE ALLENTOWN TRIP OR A VISIT TO THE NUT HOUSE Cn December the 17, 1930, a group of some ninetyffour nonfintclligent looking embryonic M.D.'s gathered at 69th Street R. R. Station for the purpose of being transported to Allentown, Pa., there to study the social, economic and prohibition questions in Allentown, and incidentally to view the Allentown State Hospital from the exterior and interior. Promptly at 9 A. M. these same men boarded an electric car, and from this point the story really begins. The ride to Allentown was a complete success and no casualties were reported. Much to the surprise of the entire class several of our somberer members tumbled from their high places among the lesser Gods and did us the honor of bending the knee to Bacchus, in humble worship with the larger majority of the group. We suspect that some earlier, intensive training in other localities was partially responsible for their success in staying with us. Our vehicle of transportation experienced some slight difficulty due to poor brakes and trolley poles, but by the grace of numerous guardian angels we finally discovered ourselves in Allentown. Although the mayor of the city had neglected to provide the usual reception bands, the metropolis seemed quite ready to welcome us with open arms. Our caravanserie was the Hotel Allen and at this juncture the writer wishes to say that never has he seen such a ine understanding and forebearing group of innfkeepers as that hostelry provides. Having settled and established ourselves in our quarters, the entire group moved in a body upon the State Hospital. This indeed was worthy as it provided each of us with some idea as to where we might locate the institution on some future occasion. Maiiiac-depressives we all know, how great or how little knowledge of the schizofphrenias and G. Pfs we have acquired is a matter of individual tastes and trolley rides. What a find was Ngoodftime Charlie's. Classes were held regularly and constantly, many were the discussions and problems which were settled. May the classes of the future sit often about one of Charliels round tables and enjoy the cheer that is known there. The Allen Hotel is an unusual place, vases sometimes decorate the third floor hallways and sometimes they decorate the lobby floor. Firehoses are always kept in readiness funreeledj, lights hang often at unusual angles, and all this, of course, only adds to the charm of the place. Telephones jingle often and Allentown is enjoying the stay of our Senior Class. A walk through the halls is an education, the city speaks an odd dialect and the class has mastered itg Sure, Charlie, two of the apple, l'll raise you five, Tell her to get a taxi, No sir, we don't know anything about it, Make it for two, Hello railroad, I thay have you got any good ties, I've los' mine, I'll take vanilla, N331 did it, Oh, hell, everybody's crazyfl Here's the trolley conductor looking for his brake handle. And so we wander through the week on the even for unevenj tenor of our way. Something we learn of mental states, more we learn of life in Allentown. Two hundred seventy-nine On Friday of the week the class moved once again in a body upon the hospital and there each now serious student endeavored to recall and write in one of the famous blue booksf, facts we should have learned! A great thing is the imagination! And so on Friday evening these representatives of Hahnemann gave a last, long, lingering look upon this city of hospitality and moved onward to various destinations there to begin the holiday season. None of us, I am sure, will soon forget our Allentown trip. lt was a class event long to be remembered. May Allentown and the State Hospital prosper. siQLlIT PUSHINN ME. ff ' 6 '-'.: 4 ,-,.,.,.f.4 QL,-1-eretggg -1,-3-1.22:-, -- 1-A nr 251335,-,.. ,,,, , 1 hgh, r xx -, K-,-,,,,,? i'1. .as51i?l35' X A' E fl V A i s qixriii . lY'fX i X 7 X I . 'V' -Z- l fd' fx ' 'fhaonif - I . ' woman fsl Z i y .,-- A: lull ff .f X , Wmugooo TIME au s J or NOTlCE The following paragraph is quoted from a letter received from Mr. Elmer E. l-leimbach, lvlanager of Hotel Allen: lt is a pleasure for me to inform you that this class was all real gentlef men. We had no trouble at all in their conduct while guests at our hotel. A surprising fact was that we gave the best food that we were able to and not one plate was sent to the back kitchen with the usual remark that you get in conducting a hotel, 'I don't eat this, Give me something elsef Never in the history of my hotel experience have l come across such a large number of gentlemen as these ninetyffour men who were perfectly satisfied with what was served them. It is a real joy to receive such a compliment to the Class of 1931. XV. A PEARSON, Dean. Two liundercl eighty Q ' , A x Q ,N 1 Il f gm! 'fx JI?-5. I X xi f 4, ' f --- I, . ii R101 I K, 1 2 R 'fr - la 1 f I I ,fn fx - l K Q:-. Jn-1 ER TRKES H HAND uurg I YA Poor? DUMBELL! -HE-p.E.HE-HE-HU-U-U-UN -ff-77 G-IMME Pfoiavss ! 3 .L- , Ur cf-' . R. , 3 du 1, ny L g -4 .1- -1 71-QRRQE H' TO Scur-uOl' x W9 , k,,.' 'Q LL 1?C x'r YGU 4 5.2 anti gf ' L , , WI 'mx M, HE pqmvnc, F- F- T , D X Cv 9 Q .9 I if .Ll 6 Q1 K ' W ON x A l L ll LOOK RT 'rug 1.13, BOTVOH BOYS ' fam-'-1 ., .- ' - ' .5 ,, F , -rm' --102, ' - 4-f ' 34' - I'. 1 ,y M o,,ox A , Q ,. , 0,:A,.U I 47 nu: pnoovwe SANTA cuws Wy 4, ff - SQUAD OF Tue GTRRPPERSH ,X 4-2 ' NRUQHYY , 9 R J 5101165 .---x , ' SLQ f x 1 m'4' ' D FA' X VFW .LJ JA!! ' FFLKINQURG ' ,V :T'n:uw-i M vliq - , ow 17 .' K -.,...,,5R '-E' x S W M-hi X. a 1' - ' - '- - . X ' - X: x r. I ,is ' . ' ,aw - 2,-,T I r ' ' mu m -+ , 0 X , 1 gum X i- a C-l0Unp.l I . YA,'- c H, 'N I So' I YQ Q41 fi' !,fQi-uf' O -N :f Q - g Q qEf'xiQ55 f as-.4-RQ? gr Bu'ru.:rL 'swf T BLUE ALCOHOL BLUES T THE request of Dr. Sappingf ton the various memhers of the resident staff were assemhled in the autopsy room. George lxlyers heamed a white smile as he llitted hither and thither arranging instruments and passing out El Produetos. Men spoke in nervous whispers and there was a tenseness in the air riyaled only hy the tohaeeo smoke. The ease history was heing read: s-Y white male, age 25 years, oeeupation medieal interne e --W-ff' The yoiee droned on and on. Finally diligent lahor and the ohservf anee of an exaet technique was ref xyarded. Dr. Sappington lifted a gory hand for silenee. As usual he was sueeessful: the whispers eeased and the men erowded forward. Gentlemen, said this learned paf thologist. I am pleased to hring to your attention the pathologieal findings of a new disease whieh has made itself known to us during the last month hy the unusual deaths ot three ol our internesf' STUDENTS NOT RLLOWED To U55 THIS PASSAGE Ar RNY TIME He seemed to hesitate for a moment to let his words take etfeet and then xyiti 1 eoy smile and in mueh the manner of a 'zlaek Horner, he thrust a hand into ti eadaver's ahdomen and hrought forth the newest advanee in medieal pathologx TI-IE LARGE BLUE KIDNEY. fl, ' 'Y ,f ki tw: f .,.i r +.kf I jk fr I T, T X 1 N 7j 5' - J if if L, ii I -Q i re 6-Pl is 5.2 if T- 1 . - l lx ll A '5' Lf? T - - 'T . , - ,- X - 4.1 C l 'Hs Y , ' lil! S ll 'll -i' , ' -Vfv H ' 'V-2:--Sf: u ,- 5 ' - 'N . :sg I N e , Y '-'w 4 9 4 ' 'c . 'f .rl L 3.6, 'ff J.-pf 1 -Cl' Ll ' 1:1 ' lc. ' - i i i Lg, :' 7 lf Z' Tumi lizuidred eiglztyftien G if! ,- 111- . -.4 -N -fJ2'- 'J W V. x V11 no ... .f am I I V f -X I 5 ,u fi: EZ. .L , L, .I Lf' .V -Q. ' .I rw lt if .1 ,QQ M A jf Q fv A 1 X as 'AN R . pb' 490m W .ww '31f?f2 p . . ,.' C N ERSID I , 'THOSE 3AM. CRLL5 you DO z!ENT,:,'- Az? ON9 W 51 yes r-mn wc ovusk DQ. 'X IS Slam so ri-1 oowo Tue Fouow up cARE 'I' 5 ' Fon Hum r-- R X' -B, ., 'ig 6 7 5 o' 3 1,1 f F' L ' ws AN, tf H-ML' 3 K ' Lon SLIPPK sf: 6 L A Q' fu'-5 W I f'?:f3, I df , ' , D V-1 1 W FRESHHRN EYTING FST EARLY cumuu. uvemeuci - ,,, fl, f?NfF 63 xaql QI! I K' gp 't Q 'Q 't +C' E' SEND IN A BENNY kv . BUTLETLJ Y L , I 1 U -X A fx 1x ' 1 J..-pr, ,n . f ' A - I a 4 3, --1 Q rw Q Q46 kr Q N if 1 :bv 1 f :gig 'IL Q 3 g, ,fm Q H M- Q ' ' s T ' f if' E V. V ,NWTMK F ily ', an U 34z.'.11,j I 4 111 . I.,- - 4- . , ,V-,V..-Yvnf, 9 Y.. .,- - . Y -4. ' ., .5 , ,x . , ,bw WE NOMINATE FOR OBLIVION , ,-4 .. f--,,, T 5 . Q ., ,Q ' XJ ,t 'Q-,n 4 , x 5: l 1 I ' ' 'i5 l'f i l ' A. -. , f ff? The hook salesman in the hasement. Slide of a cross section of a hahyfs finger. Outside Ohs. cases over the weekend. Enyearts hrief case. Nine o'clock classes. Dr. Loren:'s moustache. The handle on Dr. NVell's glasses. The scyaloscope. The paper in Ohs. Lah, ki' Van Slyke Tests. One o'clock classes. Nota Bene. J li Dr. Sylvis' glass of water. Ll Red hooks. Preamhles. Saturday classes. . .1 Appendisectomy. N Junior Internes. f Heppes' jokes and rats. Hangingfout houses. Shirinian's fur coat. Boys-Doc-Ivlr. IndolfSkatol. Electric hand driers. One way elevators. Twentyffourfhour samples. White carnations. Ransom's hook. Per se. Practical points. No students allowed. ReticulofEndothelial System. Wash stands without plugs. This article. Two hundred eightyffive 9,4 I U -, Q- 1' .g g Adj 1 N B Y C 1 'Q v N. f ' . g.. b'f5f:f 1 '94 .r X I :rf- 'T fl 'lg ' V fx X V x fx 1 Q X, 7 5 1i 7? .1 N - ', . 9 i. l f. if V J ' ff I 1 v ' , 1 I' 1 J f Qfli, PHOID TY MARY 1 4 DERNSTEINSJX HAIR TONK, -4.-.4 ...- LlMJaunua Julia A TRRDE Mann -lilh J. , ll Y: ff f S N fa is Q N ' ' 1 ' Q . .X - l ' .f 10115 . ,inf ?0,'wff. -r 'QL , 'F'-ff 5 y - 2. ,G ,I - - ,-A.ff14r - 4. ff ,fig x UH TWO OR TOO BAD lVl.Df- How many children have you1 ' Foreign Patient- Tirteen, doctor, lVI,D.-- Any of them twins? F. P.-f'One time tree, two times twos, and six times just one. lVl.D.- XVhy most of the times you had two or threelu F. P.-3'T'sure-shut look at de touf sands of times we 21111-ll got nothings. Dr. Mercerf Fetus at QW months is 93.S'j water and Hifi allauminf' Voice from the Rear-!'That makes over llJO'2 Dr. M.fe I-eer-zih-Well, it's not much overfl Dr. Sappineton Vs7ilson, what do you know ahout the history of antiseptics7 NVilson-!'Onee upon a time-5' Dr. S.-e What is this-sa hedftime story? 4 N .iq Y .aff , 'f fjjw rss Qi 9 l - 1 . l f .15 if I , I it Q f f l 0 , x, o - 0 . A E i- X ' 0 ' 1 K l-' l PEVQOLQGHR Nurse reading an advertisement in A. Nl. A. foimml for jones' Gonorrhea in the Malefl Chl is that a new kind of gonorrhea? Interne: But you can't circumcise this hahy, you don't have permission. Dr. Wziite: Oh, I'll get around that, Driscoll- Do you know what wears out most shoe leather? Sheba- No. Driscolle That's right. Son to father entering burlesque sl'iow+ But, pop, I thought you were a vegetarian. Grandmother goes in to see her great grandchild fjust deliveredj. She looks in erih and raises her glasses. After look' ine some time, scratches her head and says, Well, if my memory serves me right, itis a hoyf' And the heavens thundered And the rain fell in torrents But the faithful twelve were happy Because they were in skin dispensary And were ahout to see-elantern slides. Height of Repertory - Aggravation from a Placeho Qooth. Sixth floor password-Friend or enema Two liunclred C1gl'lf:x S6'L'6'l1 'K - 1 - Y. -lu fl ... K ? A L Q I i Q 1,..- Y- -'A ' f +JL E 9 af ffl? iff We are naturally very conservative and dislike to make statements we Hnd difficult to prove- 5 BUTVVHEN l l Dr. Elliott ceases hitching up his pantsg tl Dr. Widman refuses a tuition checkg Dr. Sappington lets someone else do a blood transfusiong Captain Plummer confesses he might not know anything about something: V, Miss Parsons forgets to wisecrack the operator: f Hon. Nathan Griffith apologizes when a darn slips out: il Dr. Webster praises an interneg Nobody sleeps in the Libraryg Dr, Ashcraft can't expose a kidney at one bold ripg I Tropical Medicine is sung instead of readg P' Dr. Bernsteirfs new book on Skin comes outg An anesthetist admits the death was his faultg Dr. Hen Ruth quits pleading poverty: Roll Call means anythingg Supt. John Smith installs a necking nook on each floor of his hotelg T Dr. john E. James throws that blue necktie awayg j All the ladies who come to OBS Dispensary are married: Dr. Marter fails to find pus in a Senior's tonsils: y Dean Pearson claims punctuality is a viceg Dr. Mercer refuses a chance to go to sleepg g Dr. Eberhard wears a pompadourg The cops find Dr. Hepburn in a love nest: Dr. Clemmer and Floyd Gibbons slow down to four hundred words a minuteg Dr. Bert insists that tobaccofchewing is disgustingg The Book Store is run for accommodation and not profitg Dr. Haines doesn't confide Senior stuff to underclassmeng AND, Dr. Kenworthy gets sore and knocks Dr. Hunsicker over the garden wall with a wellfplaced sock to the button, i why, we'll admit that no medical man gives a hoot whether or not he makes a living- If he can only help suffering humanity and starve while doing it, he'll be happy. i 1 I l fl 'X is 5 , Q S f X M 1 'A . if I NX 2 aff ' Two hundred eighty-nine l is l ra 6 , Jr . l 1 l N-'S 5 5 i g k g . lui - .i a is B OUR VIEW OF SURGERY HAMLET IN UTERO. OR THE ASPIRING FOETUS To flex, or not to flexsthat is the question. Whether 'tis hetter an R. O. P. To let my head extend and present ahrow, Or even a face and make The two convexities of spine a good excuse To give the nurse the chance she needs To prove her diagnostic powers, Or whether in this sea of amniotic fluid To simply do a version on my own, And as L. S. A. dilate the os. But time grows short- I feel the pains of lahor round me press, Increasing in their strength and frequency, The memhranes bulge! Oh, me! My heart is sad, I'm just an L. O. A. Two lnmdred ninety Q fr -, 7 -5-l l Well, today vve'll take up the hilarious group of remedies. It includes, Pumper' nickle, Pithecantropus Erectus, Asphaltum, Miriam Tigrinum, Zweiback and Ivory compositus. Pumpernickle, the deadly window shade. Well, the preamble. Hahnef mann recognized this drug and all the provers, two out of eleven, had sympf tons of Asphaltum. And that sounds paradoxical but the ideer is sound. These duocrests as I like to call them are very similar. And that's right. Well, the active principle of this drug is sourkraut, we have the ineffectual desire to laugh but nothing to laugh about. Now, the key' note, and here's something to hang your hat on, Feels better when playing a C sharp piccolo. This is a good fourth class determinative sympton. Well, the generalities. Aggravation be' tween 2.15 and 4.30 P. M., Rocky Mountain Time. Feeling of fullness after eating a heavy meal. Feels chilly while undressing, and I've seen this work iust like that among the Eskimos. The old school say this don't amount to a hill of beans but the older homeopaths have proved it and its tried and true. Well, FR c,M1c1F'2CX,,vnl?, BELLPD ppl-S, GPPVESISQFVR zs Hfppk 5 VM 981 POOUFWLRUMEK iu-L NWN, .COR cot? In new 9nv0N f vgauf-1 - Ny H ANIME .UI NR f LP LILHVE r-+1 it has been used as a palliative for maligf nancy while crossing the Tropic of Cancer, from East to Wvest. And now for a short special analysis. The mind, well here we have apathy, def sire under the elms and wants to sit down when he is sitting down. The head, nothf ing much here except headache from working in a boiler factory, tic, facial paralysis, protruding nose and a split hair lip. Well, the stomach, gas, oil, water. Def sire for junket. Now just a word about the extremities. Peculiar twitchings noticed while sitting in an electric chair. By Jove, it will work in these cases. And lastly in Senators feet, better on motion. just a word about the sleep. Here it is a left sided remedy. Patient dreams he has fallen out of bed and when he wakes he is. This makes us think of Mat' tressia I-Iairia who dream they have fallen out of bed but have really been pulled out. Sleep always aggravated by an alarm clock. Well, the dose, the 7th X has always proved satisfactory. Well, I guess that's all for today. Two liunclred nmetyfo-ne L1 ' . 'f a '11 5 fp 'L THEY DIDN'T DO RIGHT BY OUR NELL K3 Q L 1 , 5 s Q FEI I v Sf, Tu 0 hundred nmety'-ru 0 , Vg :fat I . MUSINGS OF THE OPERATING TABLE 'LS0me people think I lead a drab, dumb sort of life. Here I stand in the middle of the Surgical Amphitheatre, day and night, waiting to be imposed upon whenever the Scalpel Squad wants to use me. just a hardfworking, longfsulfering operating table with chronic lumbago! But say, I can't kick, even though the hours are long and the pay microscopic. My needs aren't many, for I've settled down to a man's estate after a somewhat hectic youth. Back in the days when my paint was scarcely dry and my metal parts never needed polishing I was quite the blade! I played around with the Diathermy Sisters, the Douche Cans and the Warm Babies from the Xfray Department and scarcely ever caught more than an hour's sleep before a 7 A. M. operation. I've seen 'em come and go-I've had my thrills and I've done my share of good in the way of charity jobs. And what's more, I'm still in the ring and plenty able to take care of three hundred pounds of female flatulence or a wailing infant who doesn't even make an impression on my chest! My Big Moment of the week comes on Wednesday afternoon when Dr. Northrop carves for the Seniors and juniors. Pardon my laughter, folks, but when I think of those birds about ready to graduate who selffconsciously stumble over each other on their way down to the marble seats half surrounding me, I almost do a Trendelenburg, no fooling!! They look wise in their rakish caps and gowns and they hunch forward so as to absorb every slash and suture, yet each guy is so afraid he'll be asked to step up and apply a piece of adhesive or wigglefwaggle a fractured tibia that he breathes a silent supplication every time H. L. glances in his direction! And when the clock says 4:20 they can't get away fast enough for their 'How to Become a Master Plumber' lecture according to Horn! 'Tm perfectly healthy, see, and can snap into a Fowler as smoothly as I did twenty years ago, but honestly some Wednesdays when night comes and the last bundle of unconscious adiposity is lifted off me, I'm too tired to squeak. The orderly puts on a clean sheet and pillow slip and I am left alone to grunt and groan and perhaps reminisce a bit before going back to work. You'd be knocked horizontal if I whispered to you the inside life that I pick up during the day-the sub rosa sallies back and forth which never reach you folks on the benches. To you the operating room is a place of machineflike precision, low tones, faultless technique-to me it is a bubbling stage presenting an endless human interest drama which never pallsf' When Dr. Webster growls under his breath to the interne, 'For Gods Sake, lasso that bleeder and try to show some intelligence-the nurse here can assist better asleep than you can with your eyes open,' I feel the youngsters body tremble and then stiifen against my side and instinct tells me that the good Doctor, his surgical skill and his ancestors are being consigned to a place where the grass is not green, the skies are not blue and a Minot Diet is never served. What burns me up is for the anesthetist to practically lie down on my neck. Dr. Ruth seems to think he is at home in bed whenever he squirts ether at an opera' tion. I'm a good sport and a glutton for punishment, but a strapping gallfbladder victim has enough tonnage without Baby Face Henry sprawling all over the cone and adding a good part of his handsome physique to my burden. However, ever since Hen took a trip to the Mayo's, he's gone Spinal. Gas, ether and chloroform don't receive a tumble from him nowadays. Two hundred ninetyfthree v 18 Shorty Steinmet: is my huddy, though, among the operators. I'Ie's so stumpy that I sag hard in the middle so he can reach up to make his incision without strain' ing his milk-and then most of the time he has to stand on a high chair. But he's a great fellow with a keen sense of humor and a mind stored with upftofthefminute knowledge. Miss Parsons, our very efhcient operation nurse who twists a mean Salome figure and a Fanny Brice line of chatter likes to work with Steiny hecause he humors her when she starts her hoary argument about whether Twelve o'clock is A. lvl. or P. You know, an arresting thought just struck me. If I say much more, I'll lose my license. To dish up the dirt as I have heen doing horders on a violation ol professional ethiesel should have gargled an oral astringent an hour ago. I'm ashamed of myself! But hefore signing off, I'd like to wish the Class of '31 a world of good luck and success and to give them the assurance that when they come hack for their reunion in 1941, either I or one of m ' ho fs will he on dut 5 5 5 Shfh, not a word, hut here's the lowdown! I'm engaged to the hlonde Sterilizer over in the corner there, the hottest little piece of machinery on this reservationlln tx-f iips l,, i YN BSER TREATMENT Little dog walking down the streetd- Cooper- Attacks of what? said the tree to the dog, I-Iave one on Sdppmgums''Attacks cjfI'Mjtl1ing,DLjC, XSS ' A 7 5 33 .5 5 , Sl mi' Said Ill dog tw tht trmx. Nl' tor, just ataxic symptoms. thanks, iust had one on the house. . Roses are red Dr. Plummer: Why all those Junior A l - , , -, , -- Violets are hlue, Internes do is eat and go to classes. 7 W 1- I d? . ,, . NF , 7 t3 3' . Dr. HCHCIISIIIICZ Ive never seen them A Hunk p L L gl, to dasscsf' The hell with you. Two hundred viiwiezyjitviar 4 . I I . I 1 I 19 D fff'Qfi'f?ilC -1 f iq..-1 I I I I .4 I I rl .5 I E 1 X 'I .i 53 i ' 1 v 5 ' 1 i I .3 - 1 'v .4 I-I 1 Ll, L3 .v --L, 1 W1 C-BABBERDEAN Alright! My watch says it twenty seconds after nine o'Clock Pennsylvania Railroad time, they're probably right, I don't know, and maybe they're not. Now Dr. Chandler, he'll pass out some little slips and I want you to write down the answer to this little question. How do you 1 tar a Crucible? j Alright, now you've had two minutes so just put a Caboose on it and pass them in. Now . we have an original and ingenious man in this class. Last week Hill, he, why he drew a 1 Caboose. Alright, tho' I guess there's no harm in that. f Alright, now in this little book it says a factor is a number-now it's not an orange or a 'i bunch of grapes, but it's a number! Now over the page, here it says Dr. Fritz Morris removed -' a 17flb. Calculus book. I don'ti know maybe it only weighed 16 lbs., but I guess he removed it. l Mighty fine fellow this Morris, a scholar and a perfect gentleman. 5' Alright, now how many of you fellows heard of Garcia? Four, well don't worry about if A I that-but here's a young man who carried a message to Garcia. Now he could have Carried ' it to Ardmore or Paris but he carried it to Garcia, per se. Now I want you fellows to look through this little book and maybe you won't come back to College after the holidays. I don't know what you're studying medicine for anyway. You don't make any money fAuthors fj note No. 1.2 ' Alright, now here we tell you to get a 24fhour sample. Now this doesn't mean 23 hours ll or 25' hours but a 24fhour sample. And the patient doesn't have to hire a truck and bring the entire amount in. Now I know of a lady who had aesthetic tcndencies and didn't like urine ' along side of custards and rhubarb pies so she painted pictures of flowers on the bottles. That's I neither here nor there, but get a 24fhour sample. - Alright, now here's a little sample of stool my good friend Dr. Griggs sent me. Now if you'll just pass that around. tl Alright, some of you fellows going to sleep just because you had a dance last night. Why j what are you going to do when you are Seniors? Why they enjoy staying out two and three nights straight on an Obstetrical case and they feel fresh as a rose when they Come to school. fAlLlIl'LOTlS note No. 2.1 But I guess there's no harm in that. Ah, Dr. Chandler. you're a big man, go over in that room and throw a half dozen of those bridge hounds out the window. Alright, now maybe some of you fellows know we have a splendid library down stairs. The Seniors think it's a sleeping room. but I guess therels no harm in that. But you fellows ought to exercise. Now my good friend Prof. Schmidt and myself play squash every day, and that's what some of you should do. KAutl1or's note No. 3.1 Alright, now it's ten and well go in the lab. Now if the Captains will step up to the desk Dr. Hepburn will give them some dog's liver. And why don't you fellows run around the block instead of puffing on a weed. l Author's notes. Author's note No. 1-Packards and PicrccfArrows in thc hospital vnrd must have been in n at a church supper. Author's note No. Z-'They don't come in until two days later. Authors note No. 3-,lack Keese played with the Dean. Hepburn- Now, Hiles, put that fire I I . . I out or Ill call the fire marshal and hell make it hot for you. .W l - 3 ,il - 4 f mf qgf':,j l ' 0-V mi , X I 0 2 jf I , A wfavsmz smzms I asap' CC1f2T'o ' oi t '-1 b lk h h -5 I os erman- s reast mi t e mot er I , ,lf fgzigfiffilzkm- tincture? F -' Q3 ' Hepburn- Now, Schmidt, get out. Two hundred ninetyffiue 1 Fvll-i'1DlC - 31 WE WANT THE WORLD TO BE HAPPY Philadelphia, May 10, 1931. Supt. john Jones, Hannigan's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Our Dear Superintendent:- As members of the Class of '31 of Hannigan's Medical College, we feel conf hdent that you will give the contents of this letter your careful attention. Dr. Stoneheaver, of the Department of Neurology, insists you are the best Hospital Superintendent in these United States-and from this most generous bit we gather that you are ever striving to improve your place of business and will therefore welcome suggestions. Have you ever thought of the social possibilities literally studding Hannigan's Hospital? Do you realize that you have the power and privilege of making it a Haven of Happiness, a Beaconlight of Laughter, Life and Lilting Lays, a Skyscraper Shaft dedicated to Joy and jollity?? Because we love Hannigan's and what she stands for, we are offering the appended zestful thoughts in the interest of those who spend much of their time in your establishment. Of course, some of these plans may bring an annoyed perplexity to several of the more narrowfmindedg that, however, is of small moment when we contemplate the almost unmanageable pleasure the majority will derive from the crystallization of the following items. Do you have sufficient vision to fortell just exactly what they will mean to Hannigan's? We challenge you!!! 1. We suggest that on days when there are at least twenty acute retention cases in the wards, you hide all .of the available catheters and forbid any suprapubic incisions. The popping of bladders will greatly amuse the kiddies on the seventh floor, for they will think it is the Fourth of july. 2. Cn each April First, go into the Obstetrical Ward and pick out any lady who is suffering intense labor pains. Tell her she is not pregnantfit must be something that she ate! Then have her taken to the Delivery Room, give an orderly a pair of forceps and admonish him to prove the old adage Might Makes Right. After the child is buried you can poke your finger at the mother and laughingly tease April Fool-you did have a baby! If she has had the proper background, she will appreciate the humor of the situation and mention the matter to her friends later. And incidentally, the orderly will have received valuable experience and the undertaker a nice fee. Make this an annual event. 3. Run a Valentine Dance in the Big Clinic for the patients of the C. U. and GYN dispensaries. This should prove a gala affair. These folks have been places and done things and doubtless have much in common. In the rehned atmosphere of the dance they may exchange experiences and perhaps telephone numbers. For favors we suggest petite glycerine tampon corsages for the ladies and dainty KY Jelly tubes for the gentlemen. Two hundred ninetysix 6 C? 9 4. Institute a Learn the Gther Fellow's Job Week. Shift the elevator operators to the Pharmacy, let the Social Service workers remove cataracts, set the ofhce force to scrubbing windows and commission Jorge Mayers and his assistants of the Anatomy Depart' ment to diagnose Xfray plates and calculate Diabetic Diets. Eli' ciency may not be up to par during this period but the experiment will excite fun no end. The above is simply a sample week. You can figure out other combinations to please yourself. 5. This one should prove popular. Absolutely ignore the orders on the charts and for a period of three weeks put all the overweight women on a High Caloric Diet and all of the anemic, emaciated women on a Lap Diet. The heavyweights will wonder why they are getting bigger and the skinny ones will be vexed at how much they have in common with a piece of string. As soon as news of this grotesque spectacle spreads, literally hundreds will throng the corridors fighting for a chance to chuckle at the museum your sense of humor has provided. 6. What could be more soothing than Twilight Music each evening? Call this feature The Vespers Hour. Drs. Barnstorm, Perrique, Hollers and Martys, Hannigan's Harmonizing Male Quarf tette may spend five minutes on each floor singing folk songs and old English hunting tunes. After such a tender benediction, the hardestfhearted patient will cry himself to sleep. In a very rough way this outlines what we have in mind. When a program of activity such as this has been in operation a year or more, Hannigan's Hospital will be known throughout the world in song, story, sermon and editorial. We leave the project with you-it is our gift to our Alma Mater! Hopefully, THE CLASS OF '31. Smmnn Etecfnocmaloonnuv 5-v Fnegunfu -4 Hamann: -wi Omen MENTAL Defecnveg LEAD I. Y 8 il ? l ,soon . .x .- ',f.f l , . v - . 'x GG .' 'fu' 5 U X ,Q U Sw ti .U V 7 , ca . IQ VI VRLVULM itll T K 'sun' Aogflt ' Q V msn CARUIAL gag-f FLUTIEP BDHINANT D 0? D 1 auNoLe Aonrac wr- SLM ' 'sizzix ww wr at 1:2539 N w ,1- Nzf, ,1 I ,L gp g f ,-f .. Q V 1 s -004' Dfhuq., M752 I nfs Pas W 1. In Fr, ,MTL RE APncAn. f A nDf1INl5TERED,WlTH EXTRA Q1 if' MH., cwmcnons 'MPULSE lk N-may H f mnenwrs EFFECT 'ltwfw 519015 ms W '4UER ' vw-'S api l 7f'f,.f of,..,n..z nmna-4 CLEFV DEviATl0N 'A'E 'E'l fgg' W. A M 5:55 ru, 95. AA gg OFF LEAD m. W M D CDMA . Gounfsly 0' NAUSEA' V0Ml1'nu-, ' c,LLA,55 ..-4 DEATH Trix:-Zgnuurzst M,g,n.A.S. Duunfrgutmiel. Two hundred ninetyfseuen M mllllllll lllllllllll S Sw hkkkkkkkwxuxxum fl f X 1 lu..1!0 N . Eg Z S 2 i ' X Q X A A Hn. x. . 3 S 16 , ,.,- IQL'4'f'v-' fc' -'HW -Hy' v'V-Nlxbxv ' ----.- ... . ,. A ,V V. '. AV,-fV .-va. . ,JR . L ,M 5 :A --'VV-r - ---..-.. . W W., 'W' J?-,r . 1 JV xv,--I if gn. ,QV t!,.bj:Jv4 VJrh4'L+-:J 0 E4.1.:'j M,11,2-Vufvqn..J-vi--VE',:'.,?:e:h. 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V .+'4El?4?34fF15-'J??'V5PF!?.,Ff-V - V--f.q1TQIk3- 1 .V -V ,- f 'V,f,.-,-V5-gg.-V. V,--3 V. 4-Q f- V4-uv www, .T . ea' ' .V V 1 . . VV - -' . - ' VV ,V V . - .. ., ' -V g 5' -.3 V V ', , V jg M. --'J' .L :,f -w.,,'- J-5 -h. , fi Avxhpu -, .L V h-V.e,f4 ffginffruv .VV WT A J, . ,,,'.,m,:f V-f5'W9'.,vvfllitggghf-z,w.-.5113,cfnggyxhxwy 73.i,.,LP!FMd7 ,,V,, ig,-v 4,5 ,-.i . -Vgsdafiay, ' -V.,V,- V 'J' , - . V- V .1 ' ' 'uf : j ' 4.V-:- 41fV-V,'V.-- V, .:-. V ,. Q. gg, , ' , ..,,.71gV 1--.,-, - .,,, , mevsvmmbyl, ,g ,ml V ' . .V V. V . - 4 '2'? ' 'X'-msfgfi'-V .e .,V,4w.VI.f,7-- - :V ' ' 5 ' ' ' V' YV . 'UQ M V ' ',5:m1:m V.-.:eg.-,i:.1- 'H A- A :N:' ' ' - 'L ,. ,.,. QV., . ' ' - . ntl LEON T. ASHCRAFT, M.D. RALPH BERNSTEIN, M.D. F.A.C.S. F.A.C.P. Urology Skin Diseases Exclusively 2039 Walnui' Sfreef IBI6 Pine Sfreel' Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. KENNETH L. ATHEY, M.D 403 Linden Avenue Camden, N. J. JAMES B. BERT, M.D. Obs+e'rrics and Gynecology I530 Locusf Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM F. BAKER, M.D. 2l3I E. Cumberland Sfreei Philadelphia, Pa. ALOYSIUS J. BLAKELY, M. D 3500 Bleigh Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. O. F. BARTHMAIER. M.D. 2303 Lehigh Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. GARTH W. BOERICKE, M.D lnfernisi' Hahnemann Hospifal Philadelphia, Pa. MARION W. BENJAMIN, M. Ophfhalmology lB38 W. Venango Sireef Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN A. BROOKE, M.D. D' F.A.C.S. Orihopaedic Surgery Frac'rures and Dislocaiions l43I Spruce Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. FRANK C. BENSON. JR., M.D. EDWARD W. CAMPBELL' M.D Urology Hahnemann Hospllal Medical Arfs Building Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Three hundred E. F. CARPENTER, JR., M.D. 664 Church Lane Yeadon, Pa. PASOUALE C-5. DAMIANI, M.D. l60 E. Allegheny Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH CHANDLER, A.B., Ph.D. Personal AHen+ion Given 'ro Chemical Analysis of Blood Kahn Tesi 235 Norfh ISI'h S+ree+ Philadelphia, Pa. - JOSEPH V. F. CLAY, M.D. F.A.C.S. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throal' I806 Pine Sfreel' Philadelphia, Pa. EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D. Surgery Exclusively 702 Cenfral Medical Building I8Ih and Ches+nu+ Sfreels Philadelphia, Pa. THOMAS LAWRENCE DOYLE, M.D Plaslic and General Surgery 269 Soufh I9+h Sfreel' Philadelphia, Pa. LEON CLEMMER, M.D. Obsfefrics and Abdominal Surgery I53O Locusf Sfreel Philadelphia, Pa. H. M. EBERHARD, M.D. GasI'ro-Enlerology N. E. Cor. 20fh and Ches+nu+ S+ree+s Philadelphia, Pa. JAMES H. CLOSSON, 3rd, M.D. General Pracfice Germanfown Professional Building Germanlown, Pa. RICHARD J. COYNE, M.D. Upper Darby, Pa. GRANT O. FAVORITE, M.D. Hahnemann Hospilal Philadelphia, Pa. DONALD R. FERGUSON, M.D. Infernal Medicine and Diagnosis Elecfrocarcliography I737 Chesfnuf SI'ree+ Philadelphia, Pa. Three Iumdred one CARL C. FISCHER, M.D. Pedialrics Germanlown Professional Building Greene and Couller S'l'ree+s Germanlown, Pa. MORRIS FITERMAN. M.D. 6I52 Spruce Sfreel Philadelphia, Pa. JACOB W. FRANK, M.D. I730 Spruce Sfreel' Philadelphia, Pa. CHARLES J. V. FRIES, M.D Eye, Ear, Nose and Throal I737 Cheslnul Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. FRANK J. FROSCH. M.D. Gynecology 2736 Norrh l2+h Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. THEODORE C. GEARY, M.D. Lansdowne, Pa. GEORGE D. GECKELER, M.D 825 Medical Arfs Building Philadelphia, Pa. EDWIN O. G-ECKELER, M.D Orihopaedics l703 Spruce Slreel' Philadelphia, Pa. JAMES M. GODFREY, M.D. Anaeslhesia 2IO5 Walnuf Slreef Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM B. GRIGGS, M.D. l326 Norlh I2'rh Sfreel' Philadelphia, Pa. CARROLL F. HAINES, M.D. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throal I4I9 Spruce Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. ARTHUR HARTLEY, M.D. F.A.C.S. Surgery 34l Soulh l8ll'1 Slreef Philadelphia, Pa. Three hundred two JOHN K. HEDRICKS, M.D. Medicine and Obsfeirics Telford, Pa. D. BUSHROD JAMES, M.D. F.A.C.S. Gynecology Medical Arfs Building Ibfh and Walnuf Sfreeis Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH S. HEPBU RN M.S., PH.D. Biological Ohemisiry Basal Melabolism 235 Norfh I5+h Sireei' Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN EDWIN JAMES, JR., M.D F.A.C.S. Obs're'rrics and Gynecology 250 Souih I8fh Sfreei Philadelphia, Pa. N. FULLER HOFFMAN. M.D. I602 Vine Sfreei Philadelphia, Pa. ALBERT B. KATZ, M.D. 345 E. Wyoming Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. CHARLES B. HOLLIS, M.D. F.A.C.S. Ear, Nose and Throai Exclusively l930 Chesinul' Sireel' Philadelphia, P... F. LAIRD KENNEDY, M.D. 20l Evergreen Avenue Woodlynne, N. J. WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, M.D. WAYNE To KILUANI M.D. F-.A.C.S. . Anaesihesia Urology 450l Spruce Slreef I625 Race S+ree+ Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. ROBERT M. HUNTER, M.D. 560I Norih 3rd S+ree+ Philadelphia, Pa. DUNNE WILSON KIRBY, M.D. Infernal Medicine I822 Norih l7I'h Sireei Philadelphia, Pa. Tlwee hundred three E. PAUL KITCHIN, M.D. Ophlhalmology N. E. Cor. 20+h and Chesfnul S+re Philadelphia, Pa. RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M. D. General Praclice 6922 Ogonfz Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. JULES J. KLAIN, M.D. l420 Norfh l6+h Sheer Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH McELDOWNEY, M.D 48ih Slreef and Balfimore Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. HERBERT P. LEOPOLD, M.D F.A.C.S. General Surgery Medical Arls Building Philadelphia, Pa. WARREN C. MERCER, M.D. F.A.C.S. Gynecology and Obslelrics ms Spruce Slreef Philadelphia, Pa. GEORGE LORENZ, JR., M.D. Gaslro-Enlerology l605 68'rh Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. L. E. MARTER, M.D. F.A.C.S. Nose and Throal l63l Race Slreel Philadelphia, Ph. HARRY P. METZGER, M.D. lnlernal Medicine and General Praclice 4505 E. Thompson Sfreel Philadelphia, Pa. ALBERT MUTCH, M.D. Obslelrics l32 W. Logan Sireel Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM L. MARTIN, M.D. General Surgery 269 Soulh I9'rh Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. FRANK O. NAGLE, M.D. Diseases of lhe Eye N. E. Cor. Chesinuf and 20+h Slreefs Philadelphia, Pa. Three llundred four GEORGE R. NEFF, M.D. I40 E. Gorgas Lane Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN H. READING, JR., M.D Pedialrics 748 S. LaIch's Lane Merion, Pa. HERBERT L. NORTHROP, M.D. FACIS. JOHN L. REDMAN, M.D. Surgery Pediafrics Medical Ads Building 33I Soufh IBIh Sfreef Philadelphia Philadelphia, Pa. GILBERT J. PALEN, M.D. F.A.C.S. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throal I4I9 Spruce Sfreei Philadelphia, Pa. FRED C. PETERS, M.D. Ophlhalmology N. E. Cor. 2O'fh and Cheslnuf S+ree+s Philadelphia, Pa. ROWLAND RICKETTS, M.D. Gas+roen+erology N. E. Cor. 2O'fh and Chesfnul Sireefs Philadelphia, Pa. D. A. ROMAN, M.D. General Pracfice and Obsfelrics I95l N. Broad Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. T. W. PHILLIPS, M.D. Diseases of 'rhe Recium 5I33 Chesfnul' Sireef Philadelphia, Pa. HENRY S. RUTH. M.D. Pracfice Limiled Io Anaeslhesia Spruce Sfreef Medical Building 269 So. l9'l'h Sf. Philadelphia, Pa. R' W' PLUMMER' MD' WILLIAM J. RYAN, M.D. F.A.C.S. O h+h I I Medical DirecI'or P amo ogy Hahnemann Hospifal l225 Spruce Sfreei Philadelphia Pa. Philadelphia' Pa' 'Three hundred five SAMUEL W. SAPPINGTON, M.D. 250 Soulh l8l'h Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. DEACON STEINMETZ, M.D F.A.C.S. General Surgery 23l4 N. Broad Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. C. DUDLEY SAUL. M.D. lnlernal Medicine and Diagnosis l530 Locusl Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D. Surgery I722 Pine Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. JAMES D. SCHOFIELD, M.D. Proclology Medical Arls Building l6'rh and Walnul Sfreels Philadelphia, Pa. THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D Ophlhalmology Medical Arls Building Philadelphia, Pa. C. L. SHOLLENBERGER, M.D. Surgery 4047 Baring s+ree+ Philadelphia, Pe. EVERETT A. TYLER, M.D. Anaeslhesia Exclusively III3 Medical Ar+s Building Philadelphia, Pa. FRED W. SMITH, M.D. F.A.C.S. Eye, Ear, Nose and lhroal I706 Aldine Trusl Building Philadelphia, Pa. G. A. VAN LENNEP, M.D. F.A.C.S. Surgery Pagh Read and Counly Line Wayne, Pa. E. ROLAND SNADER, JR., M.D. F.A.C.P. Infernal Medicine and Diagnosis Medical Arls Building Philadelphia, Pa. CARL V. VISCHER, M.D. F.A.C.P. 5903 Greene Slreel Philadelphia, Pa. Three hundred SIX THOMAS J. VISCHER, M.D. ie lOl, Germanlown Professional Bldg. . W. Cor. Greene and Coulfer S+reefs Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH R. CRISWELL, M.D Ear, Nose and Throa'r Cen+ral Medical Building Philadelphia, Pa. F. VERNON WARE, M.D. General Praclice Millville, N. J. A. B. WEBSTER, M.D. F.A.C.S. Surgery Medical Arfs Building Philadelphia, Pa. G. HARLAN WELLS, M.D. F.A.C.P. Diagnosfician and ln+ernis'I' I627 Spruce S+ree+ Philadelphia, Pa. CHARLES J. WHITE, M.D. 3400 Queen Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. DESIDERIO ROMAN, M.D. F.A.C.S. Surgery 250 Soufh I7'rh Slreef Philadelphia, Pa. NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D. Obsfefrics 250 Soufh I8'rh S'free+ Philadelphia, Pa. FRANK E. BRISTOL, M.D. Surgery III3 Medical Arls Building Philadelphia, Pa. RICHARD R. GATES, M.D Obs+e+rics Drexel Hill, Pa. Three hundred and seven LEANDER P. TORI, M.D. HENRY G. BLESSING, M.D Urology Urology I807 Soufh I5'rh Sfreef 3744 S+. Vincen+ Sfreef Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM l. TOMLINSON, MD. Obs'le'l'rics JOHN P. MAYER, MD. I4I0 Spruce Sfreef Drexel Hill' Pe. Philaclelphia, Pa. The Class of '3I exfends ifs 'rhanlcs 'ro fhose who have con- . +ribu'recl so willingly and so gen- erously. Three hundred ezglzt IIII . II I , ,I - -- 1, '- LI: I -: - ,NJ H1-923' .j:fI'4 -In-3-'..-V'-6 - . w- 0 u-vs' ' -f-.. f ,:fe--11.-fs?-IMS.In-555143. 1-,4 1- - 16-w 'J Q ,C-L-2A':T::f2:2i?3'U -1?-22? f'E-?i:fr.1-gf..-' I 'f41iv5 '- w,V f:l-4'.'.51 -I 1-fftx-I gif' - gg ' -f i'.,,':'.5: 'T'3Q'.s.g,i'f, 'f f,1-Vfigii-qw ' ..'-,'-,afgf -5212,-Y, . ,-'.j'+f I ---t. ' II .. '- Mn: ' '-:III-.II. IgI.'...'IIf-Lfii . ggi.:-4-, .f,.,,: ,. g. 3-, 1' ' 'F V ,- - . .-six ' ,-:IQ Q12 ,,,I ii-' '71 . ' -'T-4. X- -- 5:45 1-if'-I 'gigs Lf I T -IIhHf,. ,fb 4 3, SVI.,-51 I -Link-3 .- 4 ,W Ekwfx' ,I - . gg-A1 V Lff ,.,I ,.5I. I..,JV ,I J--,V-I,M -g-.I.-.I-ZI .- 1 inf. - I 'y-I-. -rfqi' gf' if --I 1 --Z:'-i2a-3,'- I - '5Q'F2-- ,-av i ' .f .Q X ,gg-'.. ,- - -. -- , - - - --.-- :-- ,, .34-, -.-.-.--H r . '.. 1 -Q.-..-I-'i4fv'K:,QL , - , -If I ., .MQQJ .vu V-.-. 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' -. 'gg -' M . , - .. , ' . -Q ' -hu -:-73 ?.: 'V.I 9' I-- , +I 15: ' -2' 7341? 'I ' ' V NV - . . ' . , ' UI .'::.,,1g.T, I-1' I - - 1.114-1 Iii, -g ,.I,I:L. ..a L. 'I' .- . I, f . : : 15 '4 'KL f---jf :'.,.g.i f 'v - - ' ' ' ' .' I 1 I. 4.5.4215-' 0,3-5' 'giiph ff: I, .1 '. is ,-'i'ff .-'-E',.- 1 -.- -l , - .- 3, - ,IQI.,,-:Ji . fl --in - ' .sf 55 -f 4 ' I A H 'LQ kK'M.:' Q. if' .-- E K tif 1 4 'Z' 133: 'al' ' FI ' h -iff -'-' 1' '377 -'31 .V I,.?'f I f 5 I r ' ':'. K. '- ' 1 ' ' 'I I. ' ' . Ig--'Ii ' ' I 'f w 23- '-.I.g.J I 5 I . If J - ' -. Q' NI.. 'Q' .1 -, Q- ' 32 .-4-1' Kgs - L., ., . j- gr I .- 4: ,I F 'I' ' .:I fq:5St .f . 45-ff, -:II ,321 ' -:f-,I ,vip gg, 4 Q- I I 1 .151 :fy V Q-L' QF .g4,g,1? y- 'rl' p I - ' .Y ,fr -I': A vw ,.f- --I' - I- 1 L I -l,.- I. ,Iv I '- ,- --- - V, 4 .--.5 v- .U 2-I 4- I ' .,I', f I'-If LE..' IA .g.,.:-g1'...IY , . I I ,A l ' - I .wg ...Y I.-. I ' . ., .,- ,x- -1 I ,- '. .- 'I .L m 7,,7n- . I- I . .,, .. I-.-:1-.. I II, -,Ig - - 2 -' I, ', -- Qf' A ff Ivey ,--5 ,7 .:. .- - ..::, ... . .'-,. 1. -VI . .- N-'ff' - v- -- '-' - ' F. .If I -- .ig . 1: J , -.y , ,- ' If- -H' -. .,,, '--Q j'2'?-CY ' 2' - f l I 7 -I1'flf-... , f:.,- ::',1.Tf.'E'- 1.-,-if ,.f v.- . , . . , ww - . 2 ' -- a n 1-.gsrzfd- -..f'1 -TN.-s 2:-,'?'.f1-...2. -,L -- ' Wi-f -1'f'.- 1M,p'2,-:?r2.',1'-.1i.-Am I. .L .- 2---. a.,.,. . ' A .I . , I, I N14-fn. ...fxlv-:I JOHN A. BGRNEMAN Homeopathic Pharmacist Over thirtyftwo years' practical experience in manufacturing Homeopathic Remedies. Upftofdate in all matters pharmaceutical. The necessity for ultra purity in strictly Homeopathic remedies is recognized and conf stantly practiced. lvlanufacturing a full line of Tinctures, Tahlet Triturates, Com' pressed Tahlets, Ointments, and Specialties that produce def pendahle results. Student Outjit Orders a Specialty Laboratories: NORWOOD, DEL. CO., PA. ajous's Analytic Cyclopedia of Practical Medicine Charles E. deM. Sajous, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D. Fournier and Firxt Editor Edited by George Morris Piersol, M.D. l'1oles.wr ol Ivletlicine, Graduiite School of Mediclviu, Uvurersitv of Peririwliuiani, Plivueiau to the Pluladelplvia Gewieml, the lvlctliodxtt and Preshvtevnnx I'lt-spirals, Pliiladelplua, eff. And Over 100 Contributors FEATURES lst. Alphahetical Arrangement. ld. Instant reference through a Desk Index of 450 pages. ilklltlfl references. fld. Authoritative Editors and Contrihutors from all parts of the world. -lth. Medicine. Surgery and Specialties covered in a practical manner. ith. Research Work facilitated by plan and Index. 6th. Individual Atypical Clinical Cases. Eight Royal Uctavo Volumes, each containing over Sflll doulwle column pages. Thin paper Format. Illustrated with Text, Photo and Halfftone Engravings and Full'paee Color Plates. Extra Cloth, Sgllllll, net. Separate Desk Index Volume Free. Revised hv Periodical Supplement. F. A. DAVIS COMPANY 1914-16 Cherry Street, Philadelphia CIOLLABORATORS I. M. Andets XV. lVayne Bahcoclc Anthonv Bassler R. l. Behan A. j. Bell P. Bftuilte Blilfld H. Childs Carpenter 'loseph Collins vludson Daland john B. Deaver F. X. Dercum leonard Freeman R. Max Coepp S. S. Creenhaum l. P, Crozer Crifhth Frank C. Hammond Howard F. Hansell Chevalier -lackson Edward Jackson Henry D. ,lump XV. NV. Keen Norman P. Henry Frederick XV. lvlarlow Rudolph Nlatas Alexander McPhedran Robert T. lvlorris M. E. Rehfuss W. Eel-:err Rohertson lay F. Schaml'iei'g: Oscar M. Schloss S. Solis-Cohen And Seventvfseven Associate Edit:-rs other Three hundred ten M IM EOGRAPI-I ING M ULTI GRAPI-I ING FOLDING ENGLOSING MAILING PRINTING Acme Addressing and Multigraphing Co, VV. S. QBFRRENIWER, General M anager N. E. Cor. 12th and Cherry Streets Plttsburgh Branch 3939 BUTLER STREET RITTENHOUSE H497 MEDICINAL OXYGEN COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA, I IIC. 1712 CALLOWHILL STREET PHILADELPHIA OXYGEN TENTS EOR RENT OxygevzANitrous Oxide-Hydrogen Ethylene-Carbon Dioxide-Helizmz MICROSCOPES Laboratory Apparatus Clremicals Surgical Furniture and Instruments Medical Books Edward P. Dolbey and Co. 3621 Woodland Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. 7 S T RE ET LINDER. '6 PROPERT 20 th and Chestnut S t r e e t s Phlladelphla 'ii id Three Inmdred eleven Boericke 86 Runyon Specializing in MANUFACTURERS or High Grade Equipment Homeopathic Mediciwtes for the and Specialties Pliysicicwfs Oflice 116 s. ELEVENTH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. K2 518 SIXTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY' N' Y' National Hospital It will be to your advantage to see us laefore placing your initial orcler. Company Catalogue Mazletl on Application 1502 SPRUCE STREET Publishers of Boerickel Materia Medica PHILADELPHIA, PENNA, 9tl1 Edltlllfi lLlLlPO Amlbu anee Seirviiee TO OR FROM HOSPITAL, SEASHORE OR ANY GIVEN POINT ANY HOUR-DAY OR NIGHT Our service consists of careful, competent trained operators, who will satisfac- torily give you every attention to insure comfort and ease of mind in convey' ing the patient to destination, The equipment is the most complete conceived to date. Every ambulance has an invalid bed of unequaled comfort. warm blankets. fresh linen. electric fans, tlwermos bottles, running water. stationary wash bowl. lieater. Seat for Doctor. Nurse and Friend, emergency kits, etc., CEC. 'Tlie Very Highest Class of Equipment to Be Had in Plnladflplna Service in every city of the United States and direct connection with London Reaches All Departments-Delaware 6100-01-02 MAIN OFFICE-1240 VANKIRK STREET, PHILADELPHIA Three hundred twelve DOCTORS-CONGRA TULA TIONS.' The Philadelphia Hospital Supply Co. 328 SOUTH 17th STREET SPECIALIZES IN Physicians' Oihce Equipment Medical and Surgical Supplies Pay Us a Visite-'You Will Be Agreeably Surprisetl Phone. Pennypacker 3974 The College Store Every Medical Book Published Available Here Phones Bell. Rittenhouse 6625 T' R' Keystone. Race S121 and Physicians' and Hospital S u p plies-S ur gical Students Supplies Instruments of Quality Trusses, Elastic Stockings, P2 Arch Supporters and Ruhher Goods 252 North 16th Street 215-217 North Fifteenth Street Philadelphia, Penna. Philadelphia, Pa. Three hundred thirteen For over thirty-tive years physicians flN 'U!liout the world have endorsed the use of Golf Tennis- Base Ball- Swimming- i TI'aCk-T ififfgiifffiggm Antiphlogistine Ping Pong 10 FQQ1' wherever Inflammation and Congestion I are present. By virtue oi its marked hygroseopie and thcrmogenctie action, it hastcns resolution and relieves the swell' ing and the pain. 113 S. 16th Street XXfTlIc' for Sample to Phila., pa. The Denver Chemical Mfg. Co. 163 Varick Street, New York After all is said and done the final analysis in setting a standard l upon which to judge the necessary fitness of a milk modifier is Quality, Eliicacy and Experience lVlellin's Food ii A Milk Modifier Accepted as a product of high quality Meets the purposes of a milk modifier Sustained hy an experience of more than sixty years Mellilfs Food Company Boston, Mass. Three li undred fourteen THE TEST OF TIME ESTABLISHED 1839 STILL SERVING 1931 BUERICKE St TAFEL Homeopathic Pharmacists rt 7 lfff 4. -.MAN 1876-e -193 l Your Profession Demands the Best Williams' Standard WHITE DUCK IN TERN E SUITS Have won an enviable re ut t' f . p aion or their ' Professional Correctness, Individuality and Excellent Service. Made of Best Brands of Standard Materi- als and Guaranteed Thoroughly PrefShrunlfen ' iq so as to remain True to Size Alter Laundering. L , I Stock Sizes, or Made to Measure 7 .9 Coats, Trousers, Operating Suits and Dissecting Gowns x i i Send for Catalog D Sampfes and Prices C. D. WILLIAMS 86 CO. 246 S. 11th ST. PHILADELPHIA, PA. OUR PQLICT: To Make what YOU want, just as 'You want it. ,,,- Three hundred fifteen Physicians, and surgeons Supplies W. H. Bill', Lentz Colonial Drug Co. 15th AND RACE STREETS The - Halmemcmn Coswmfs Barber Llild Academic Caps and Gowns Of a Superior Excellence ftp On a Rental Basis 'J WAAS 86 SON Costumers to the Nation 1426 RACE STREET 123 South Eleventh Street Philadelphia, Pa. THE MEDICAL PRUEESSIQN CDE PHILADELPHIA ENDORSES SCCOTTQIPIOJWVIEILIL Because It's Fresher by a Dayv Three hundred sixteen oil!-qiv rl UAWBRAEUNINGER 11 INC. A' xC' N.W COR.l6'rr1 8- WALNUT STS. PHILADELPHIA Commercial Photography Copying and Enlarging Lantern Slides BERRY 86 I-IOMER 604 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA The makers of SCIALYTIC the original EUGENE SMITH SHADOWLESS SOLltl'l Stfeet LIGHT Philadelphia installed in 7,000 hospitals all over the World have created and sponsor the SCIALYSCUPE the modern method of OBSERVING SURGICAL INTERVENTIONS . Progressive Medical School or Hospital of larger proportions should be without this apparatus. Cl sclaiisiisrwlc Specialty Three hundred seventeen S1TTINc:s BY APPOINTMENT BELL Ti1LiaPHoNr-PENNiPACKER 61906191 COLLEGE DLPARTMILNT, PFNNYPACMR 8070 H. ZAMSKY 902 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Penna. Portraits of Distinction We have completed successfully over sixtyffiye school and college annuals this year, and are adding new ones to our list. There must he a reason-lt will pay to to investif gate. The photographs in this book are a sample of our product and skill. SPECIAL UPPER for a Short Time Only Three French Gray Portraits, S5000 A Complete Set of Proofs for Your Selection Three li lU1LTT6d eighteen Wie AL I G J 72? --v PHOT -ENGRAVING COMPANY if 1'2.1i18Cl-IERRY STS. PHILADELPHIA K ' X .- v:--: ' ' L ' - 'Q'-1 'N - H'if4f'f4f'21e2f5 Fi! , 1 X , ,Q gf- N' -v, 'qljzwr' ' . Wx A 'J . , , If-9, 11' 1 x : , ,. . 0' W W-K ? ?ffA : , Y? , 9 XxxX3..XNXM N wk XR xx M ,7 , I K9 v W A J if 7' ,, 21, A M 1 - L33 if 255: , g'34,,,f,A ' A 3 in f 118517 ' Ill. -'ff-4 ' ,l, N X ' X' ifigfslig tuffjg,-f' L ' 12 I , x I 1 N JQYBQQEQF5 A ?+fiF . ' , 1 I' g kgq R 7 f ff! 'mf' A J f UW h xx Q1-117: 'n ' H ll is kv ' X fx XXX 1,flllNEWQ:l2,XE NX 1 Ml ,Um ,f ' :D dx 'WM X my 2 lf' 5 , ,,f Qf f FLW 4 7 X ' U V X 55 , ,Q ff ' - Vx if , K , 13. E , E5 , 5-f q lf T5 12 rf- N ,. - 0 P TSLSZXIZEITS' Imkszfra 501156 W f , h0l'0f-'E71ZxgI 0V9I1Sf f7l4'A ICERS OF THE ENGRAVJNGS IN' THIS PUBLICATIONT V H ww' if Xuan Three 11 undred 'r'li7'l6f5671 XA Careful Planning Modern Typography High Grade Paper Quality Printing and Binding Painstalcing Care XV VVVVVVVVYVVVVVVVVVVVYV VV VVVYVVVVVY LUS THE KNOW HOW which comes only from experience, and siudy of every phase of +his 'rype of publicaiion work ar ar sf ak Ik ' 4' ' is whai gives +o a year book 'rhai' some- ihing, which makes ii' differeni and makes ii a cherished possession. Year afier year, for 'Fi'F+een years we have been making annuals for pariicular schools and colleges ' 4' ' ' 'l' ' ' ' and 'rhe service we offer every siaff is 'rhe same ihai has enabled us 'ro 'rurn oui so many ouisianding books. Your year book lasis a life iime,-and ii is prinied only once. So fake no chances. Place ii' in ihe hands of specialisis. 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