Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1940
Page 1 of 258
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 258 of the 1940 volume:
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, 1 v g . I , rs I ,s, . ' ' Y- Y, Y 0 ' v o, , , 1, lv A 41,4 ,.,., A - '. v x . . , 1. , n ,-.1 . , J .. M , J, . - ' Q -.F u,'l 1, .I u A' I L' '-. . 1:1590 y, A 'A I .. -v 5 ' g 19 , ,,.- 1 ,I . . , - 4 v x 9 1 4 ..1' .. , r 4 -H5114 .'.. -. . 1 f . - --l4u- 1'- Y '1 H ,O v q v-uw,-, . n l q I , 5 I I I v r-Q -M - 1' I-l, 5 ' 1 I 1 C V if' ' ' I Q 1 3' ' ! I : v ' 4 ' r , ' v ,?.-.-FP 1 r' r vi 1 4 , -,T 'P fi.. .4 4.l Q , 1 1 P , .f . , V s -I v v ,x A f ,, n 3 I .I ' I f' PQ Kr. 0 rf , . ,nl i . . g. P 'R 1 I, 54 J 1' r l ,n 1 .-lx A . -, 'Z r, e ', 'I -- if-V' I f v, rw' V' ff ,, r ,- . A 17 . Wg g,a.::g,g ' N'f:3Z,?- .Z JWLQ, 40,2 .-,, 1 1 x,..fp:.,Z ' ,. ..--kv,-'i-Rf 4 ' 42 qv-ff K, Ll.,-.1 4 gT Z 51' Jucgu ,744-. 1- in-J 11 L rv , ,1,,L, , 11, , , x Y M , '. z ' . ' if . A, 4 ., .1 z , ' ? :I ? yi- if pug. K Wi, ,I ,.,', N ' 13,1125 J ' 5 ' -- f- 5' V ' ' 'lil' ' ' 'fTjW:'?Z'f3v?21 . V V I L K W m ,Q r 41.-. X 5' V-Aff v ,A - .E-jf, f ' ' -:vi 5 H .. ' X V' 45 ' . 5- 1 f. o 5 ,Q A... 7 I k . ' , -.M im, ' A ,F naw H 1 :'.'JLw , - VM A ,4f:- M 'fic hggfggo gy, . MILTON - ACKERMAN, Editor-in-Chief FRANK A. VERI, E PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF THE HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE DR. WILLIAM ALEXANDER PEARSON llHllllHlIHN HE administration of the affairs of a medical school, and the wise solution of the myriad prob- lems which must every day confront such an ad- ministrator is, in itself, a task calling for rare quali- ties in an individual, and rarer still is the man who can rise above the mundane duties of administration and yet not lose the common touch with those whom it is his duty to guide. Therefore-in recognition of his capable adminis- tration, his masterful teaching, his humane friendli- ness, and above all, for his profound faith in a glorious destiny for Hahnemann and the men of Hahnemann-We, the class of Nineteen Hundred and Forty, dedicate this, our class book to fl lf. KZ!l! ,O Afflllf ef' L cff1.1'J011 Memories of the past may oft be clouded loy the realities of the present. So . . . if . . . ten or fifty years from now . . . a perusal of these pages may recall to mind . . . a youthful ideal discarded . . . a happy hour spent . . . or the face of a friend forgotten . . . the time and the effort consumed in the preparation of this book . . . will not have been in vain. i X ft f67!6l'liZd7Z, Editor-in-Chief. UNIINIS COLLEGE FACULTY SENIORS UNDERCLASSES ERATERNITIES ACTIVITIES VARIA WILLIAM A. PEARSON. M.D., Ph.D.. Sc.D., LL.D. Dean of the College '-V - , ,,,,, V- 5-5w.f.4.'-5412-Zia, Tll THE CLASS UF 1940 ff ff N my long and intimate contact with hundreds of medical students, I am convinced that each student undergoes material change during his formal medical education. It is to be expected that any individual living in the environment of a medical college and directing his thoughts in medical channels for four years would become a definite type. Not only is this a fact, but environment and time are necessary for medical students to realize that the practice of medicine requires extensive professional knowledge before the responsibility of a physician can be assumed properly. Samuel Hahnemann said that it is criminal to neglect any information which may be of value to a future patient. I trust sincerely that each member of the Class of 1940 will keep this admonition in mind and also the many advantages which this training in Homeopathy affords him. The members of the Class of 1940 must accept soon the numerous responsibilities of medical practice and each should be a loyal son of Hahnemann and observe thc highest traditions of his Alma Mater. I am truly grateful for the compliment of having this classbook dedicated to me and wish the fullest measure of success to each member of the Class of 1940. R.- FREDERICK I. vonRAPP. Litt.D.. LL.D Provost and Executive Vice-President lll THE lIlASS lll 1940 if if Man is not put into the world as a music box set wth a fixed number of tunes, but as a violin with infinite possibilities. OU have been given the opportunity at Hahnemann to prepare yourselves to face a complicated and difficult world in which you must function. Entering a profession whose rewards embrace so many of the finer things in life. should be the means of developing in you the highest ideals, the acquisition of which can only bring happiness. Pride in things well done and an appreciative affection and sincere interest in your work on the part of those you have been fortunate enough to assist physically and mentally. await you. May your ambition to reach the highest attainment in your profession be tempered with those lovable traits of kindness. patience. and sympathy. guided by which you will arrive at that enviable state in life known as success. Those who have been responsible for your development in medical knowledge and technique will be keenly aware of your advancement and follow your career with interest. believing that you will measure up to their faith in you. In planning your future do include in it a journey to your Alma Mater at certain intervals and refresh your mind at this fountain of knowledge, by a post-graduate course in the selected subjects you will find so necessary. G0 forth with the determination that you will live up to the ethical standards of your profession, no matter what the economic picture may be. looking forward only to that day when such a career and purpose will bring you self-respect and the great esteem of those who know you. v -4.-Y W .' N I N 1 ' . 1' ES E I ., . . .,, 1 6. 3-v': 7'-714, ul'.ff f -., .f CHRISTIAN REDERICK SAIVIUH HAHNEIVIANN HRISTIAN FREDERICK SAMUEL HAHNEMANN, one of the great figures in medicine, was born in Meissen, Germany, on April 10, 1755. Very early in his schooling he exhibited the brilliance that distinguished him throughout life. His skill as a linguist broadened his knowledge and facilitated his studies at Leipsic. From this school he graduated as a Doctor of Medicine in 1779. His perspicacity early revealed to him the chaotic state of therapy, then prevailing. Complacency in this matter was in- compatible with his disposition and learning. His quest for a solution drove him about Germany practicing Medicine and Psychiatry, experimenting in Chemistry-and in this he had few peers-but always studying, always writing. His work had already disting- uished him as a physician. In 1796 his travail terminated. The principles of homoeopathy were enunciated. He returned to Leipsic to teach Medicine. In the years that followed he elaborated, further applied, and taught his findings. He acquired followers who dis- seminated and modified his teachings yet cleaving to the principles and methods of Hahne- mann. His innovations were not received as manna. Very early the refractoriness of medical men even in his day was apparent. This served only to characterize the spread of his principles with a virile turbulence. With an arduous life behind him rest was vital. This he found for a short time in Paris where he died in 1843. In his bequest to Medicine was a lesson in the urgency for acuity of observation. and a rule of therapy, where for- merly none existed. T. R. COUNIHAN !955E'i?gP!lNEWil k llllllllll BOARD OF Charles A. Allen Addison B. Brown David Burpee l. Warner Butterworth William H. Clayton loseph S. Conwell E. Burke TRUSTEES Thomas Cr. Hawkes Charles E. Kenworthey Philip C. Snow Frederic H. Strawbridqe, lr. Frederic l. von Rapp Victor Wierman, lr. Wilford Honorary President, Charles D. Barney, MA. OFFICERS President ............. ........... Senior Vice President .... lunior Vice President .................. Provost and Executive Vice President. Secretary ........................... Treasurer .... Solicitor .... . . . .loseph S. Conwell . . . . . . .Philip C. Snow . . . .Thomas G. Hawkes Frederic I. von Rapp . . . . . . .Victor Wierman, Ir. . . . .Fidelity - Phila. Trust Co. . . . .Charles E. Kenworthey 5.355 www? Us-, H A . n 'xl ff rr i rr EI ff N , v I 1 ,pr -f ,f UU gif HH HW fi if 59' if H El Q! si Q! 3, ' rf- f HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL 6 l L 1 4 4 1 L: i. E I i 1 r H AHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE :s 'E tv.. . . - ir- HISTURY UF THE 0011161 iggjmgamwmwgwmis W- ji 5 i 1 'vl?nl.:lll'gll EE E Milt H 5 ii S ii 2 5 .'.ll11 1-Mil M 1 ill 1tlt.gati NWT gg? VHMEEEE JAA, A 'itnll tl 14151511 ,,- . llttmptlii llilllvlllll 1 'R'- 1 l f'fff 1 '1 tt.. lf . ' ' 'E'Ll1ttl3A,1tiZ1l:i5,'f.!t' .': '-' HE vast and complex organization that is today-Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital of Philadelphia had its simple beginnings in a phy- sican's office at the corner of lulianna and Vine Streets on a February day in 1848. On that day, Dr. lacob leans, Dr. Walter Williamson, and Dr. Constantine ...-- iw sr 1,....-- Y- Hering met in Dr. leans office, and de- ,- D? ..... , Dini- ,..,,.-,---.-- Y-. . .i, cided to apply to the Pennsylvania Legislature, then in session, for a med- ical school charter. It was the desire of these men to found a homeopathic medical school, where the student who desired a knowledge of the practice of homeopathy, might acquire such a knowledge systematicallyp and not, and had been the custom previously, by serving a haphazard apprenticeship under a practitioner of that art. The charter was granted, and on April 8, 1848, the Homeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania, the college now considered as the old school, was incorporated. And so, the impetus having been initiated by the three founders: the homeopathic physicians of the city set themselves to the task of procuring funds and obtaining a building where classes might be held. A building was leased at 228 Arch Street, a faculty appointed, and on Monday evening, Oc- tober 16, 1848, the opening session of the old college was held. Classes started the next day under the direction of a faculty consisting of: Caleb B. Matthews, MD., Materia Medicap Walter Williamson, M.D., Midwifery and Diseases of Women and Childrenp Francis Sims, M.D., Surgeryp Samuel Freedly, M.D., Botanyp Matthew Semple, M.D., Chemistry: William A. Gardiner, M.D., Anat- omyg Alvan E. Small, M.D., Physiology, and Alvan E. Small, MD., Pathology. The first year found fifteen students paying the S100 course fee, a S10 anatomy fee, and a S515 graduation fee, to attend classes. The year terminated with graduation exercises which were held March 15, 1849 in Music Fund Hall at which six men were graduated. The success of the first session of the old college demonstrated to the founders that more adequate facilities would be necessary if the college was to continue to grow and prosper, and so, during the summer of 1848, HAHNEMANN a search was made for larger quarters. These were found in a struc- HOSPITAL ture located on the North side of Filbert Street between Eleventh and isih supgulsav- -19381 - Qmi iw 'wi-,jd ,,,, L.,-,Sp H,.- Q 1201, 'J ff TTT, 559' J, 1 ,. s Q ' lf P' - 1 T f' -,- . ef we s 1 it itiiiw ir 1 ,- r 3 siw9! 1?,.-fgllin mv is -fs -. -f-ff in ,, .- -,w P --' E11'l T?E'l: T' TTU. 1 i Y.. 1 ' mvmi-,Wifi +.,, QT-XF3 T fE TM 55455 Q is ff W ! A Q .e.. .- l m .E .D Q ' P xi..-m ifiiii . i ti lr lg lilo at QTTQT' -if-if 1.141 l 'Q I mi s. 'lit' ' if . L , J ? g F r . t E E E T' 1 1 ' '. 'Yi'-,' 't l lrf I ' - :gif 1 1 .1 Iwi-' 5' -nfl f rw-- P' Ai? T 4 1 V -Vi ' Y lll?M1,J'l llwui1ul T-left it 1-1' ff laik? if .. is ml i ,f sj il llnfnqllifjliglgd :lv-is Tsx A ..... 1, Amllft- 1-13? ' . fxgfgxl 'r i f f hu ' .rf X so rtt .ii.iii..i1i. ...1 ,. ., . . ii 'T ' f H tf .... mmf Q is ZS , - I Q T ' l L. ' E '?4 , fi-:'xl: L3 fi :Y 1 .f -1 Q ,g,At?. ,Tx I 1 l till - ,iffwii-i .-- . .iA,, , .in i 1 f,klv3'v-,-:tfj,,L3.,. , -l dqf ib iq! I ,ml I I!! misss-.1Qf1ri 'Tii' itll, ' 12th Streets fnow the r-H L FQ -I W E A IMI, site of the Reading ,gilt T N 7-:if L ,L y ,. Terminall, Which had fl' It ' T: L ' E' M 3 . I-L formerly been occu- gg JH my' ' ,1 T im pied by the Pennsyl- lil' till llll itll n vania V C o l l e CJ e of 1'l:'ft 8, i T' T, N 'll :Q Medicine. The open- ,tilt 5 'f4,,.r f'l,'3 A , Ml,4i1 ,i--- pl 'W in l f h Tfllilll 'TT lg 'll'l 'tl'l'lIiilil ill' it ul g ectures o t e :,,.i Mil lil, it ' second session of the l' T I' MFQX' llzlflllg l T., LQ , ,, ,, ' old college was held t ' ,Will A AJ xi mg -I I On the evening of ll ' ll illlll llll I , in --M i. Q 'X -'- T-, ,ara I October nl, l848, in My-A ., I git l E ' lx llll this building. l,gz',?5Q:g, itigejffji' II j- t m m i 'W :- ,Q-v. .f gi ,-g- ,-7'.:.1f3.. li. Ag:-5: .u - -'.-J 'i I l lu '2L4S'J'1 Jr?f'F'?f'f' i ' i W , -22, t Thedoldtcolle-ge con- 5 n e- -1:',1T?i'l lgg w illftxlu-- ' ' ' 7 :ii- -, it 1 X ' ' inue 1 s exis ence 7 -1 - . - .. l',,,--f .i .Q-' - 8-ui' in this location until 'f 1869. These years, however, found the college beset with fi- nancial difficulties which were partially solved by making the school a stock corporation. This move, however, permitted one of the faculty to become the majority stockholder and the distatorial manners he assumed in his control of the school initiated a wid- ening breech between himself and one of the found- ers, Constantine Hering. The break finally came in 1865 with Hering resigning from his lectureship in protest over the abolishment of the chair of pathology by the majority stockholder. Hering determined to start another college be- lieving that the old college was no longer serving its purpose as a school where students might acquire a homeopathic education as part of a Well rounded medical course. He secured the charter of the Washington Medical College, which had been char- .-n Zi S Tir- xx it FY fu gb 'T Huis l ----sew Jjlggl, . In-ll ww Nlglgffiigkni XNX2iiR :-Aff-N,,3TT-ZN'Li1J-- T 'S illiligill X-N yu-X x 'Fr -alll To 1 W is A iv Q felifjfiffpf- 2-rig? ' 'iff , ,a1!tiIli1nfig, itfglfu N T ' if 'A 1 illlitiill fi' xi? f1i 1.'i -li' illl T it f i figgg, ANA E i: giizn J'Uallrll,:Li1 Nil-Ek fs lf ,S l -l'fTi,,l,,l gf '51 fill I . '-45,2-:, N, : , if f filllll' ll ill Q51 fi- he i f 1 1 T. 3 it rg F21 saga be Efg n fi hgi lf Li , Jul it i f Q' if' ft- sir- in I I- 'I Wt iii ll m I ,i' 3 truss ll i X - . -firf A i - -Wi , p -- .-:,..i wi l ,s ig i, .i ii :main lllcsm 5 ll m will li, s 1. ., ' I ' fa 1. N,,-.......---mnmuvlu mliwn wnmg mm mi m 'IE I ' UV' flti T ' ' 'r . HAHN'f:1v1ANN MEDICAL COLLHEIE if ,f Qi E Zig: Q- i s North Broad Street C1886 - 19293 if-Qld ,-A-Pl'-rg-.3 i ':,F,?,, N lar -. 55:1 . .- - i -T-nv'-'::-?-5 ' A .-?4f:-:...-..-,,- -. - if ' THE OLD HOSPITAL tered in Pennsylvania in 1853, and which had ap- parently never held classes. ln Iuly, 1867 he secured a court order changing the name of the originally chartered school to the 1-lahnemann Medi- cal College of Philadel- phia. Thus began what is now considered to be the new college. The second and third floors of a build- ing at 1897 Chestnut Street were rented and the new college began classes on October 13, 1867. The first session ended with a com- mencement at Music Fund Hall on March 4, 1868. For its second and last ses- sion, the new college moved to a building at 18 North 10th Street, and this ses- sion ended with a commencement at the Academy of Music on March 3, 1869. ln the meantime, most of the faculty of the old college, being in sympathy with l-lering, were attempting to work out a plan for the union of the two col- leges. The opportunity to consummate this union was afforded in 1869 when the dominant stockholder of- fered to sell his holdings in the old college. With Dr. Walter VT Williamson acting as the agent for Hering, the deal was trans- 1 acted, and the major portion of the stock of the old college was transferred to Dr. 1-lering. The two colleges were le g ally merged by an act of the Legis- lature on April 2, 1869, and a supplementary act on March 11, 18705 and so the old Homeo pathic Medical College of Penn sylvania passed out of exist ance, and the 1-lahnemann Med- I ical College became the only homeopathic medical college in Philadelphia. The combined college, lo- cated at the old Filbert Street address, grew steadily in size, wealth, and faculty, until final- ly, the increasing numbers of students made it imperative that more adequate facilities be THE OLD SCHOOL l1lA1-INEMANN OF THE FUTURE obtained. So, we tind the subject ot a new college and hospital being dis- cussed in 1880. This ended in the purchase ot ground on the west side ot North Broad Street between Race and Vine Streets. The cornerstone tor the new building was placed on November 6, 1884. Thus, with the session beginning on September 27, 1886, the college moved from the now inadequate Filbert Street quarters into the new North Broad Street buildings. This building con- tinued as the college building until 1928, when it was torn down to make way tor the new hospital, and the college moved into the only hospital building fronting on North 15th Street. The college remained in the old hospital build- ing until 1938, when this building was partially razed to make way tor the con- struction of the new college building. vnww f Yi E f X ix .n 41-At ., 5 31F? 'f U Ml HW ufgzn HE ANATOMY LABORATORY CHEMISTRY LABORATORY L PATHOLOGY LABORATORY RUFUS B. WEAVER K AHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE is the proud pos- sessor of the most renowned specimen of anatomical dissection of its type, known to medicine. This specimen, known as Harriet , is a complete dissection of the human cerebro-spinal nervous system. Harriet was a maid employed by Dr. Weaver. For years she suffered from tuberculosis, and before she died, she requested that her body be used to benefit science. This was a benevolent gesture, for in those days when superstition reigned, doctors and scientists had difficulty in obtaining cadavers for dissection and study. Therefore, when Harriet passed away in 1887, Dr. Weaver proceed- ed, after much deliberation and research, to carry out her wish in a way that was most worthy of her generosity and humanitarianism. He finally produced the specimen which we now possess, a scientific achievement that has rewarded Harriet's kindness by rendering her immortal. Up until the time Dr. Weaver undertook this unusual task, such work had never before been attempted, and the completed specimen, the preparation and mounting of which consumed six months of exacting labor, stands as a masterpiece of perserverance and skill-a tribute to the patience of Dr. Weaver and an everlasting monument to his mastery of woman anatomy. 5X 1. .133 , 41 W v ae if .. C 3:1 , ! 3 g EULUGY UF THE DUCTUR HERE are men and classes of men that stand above the com- mon herd: the soldier, the sailor, the shepherd, not infre- quently, the artist rarely, rarelier still, the clergyman: the phy- sican almost as a rule. He is the flower Csuch as it is? of our civilizationp and when that stage oi man is done With, and only remembered to be mar- veled at in history, he will be thought to have shared as little as any in the virtues oi the race. Generosity he has, such as is possible to those who practice an art, never to those who drive a trade: discretion, tested by a hundred secrets: tact, tried in a thousand embarrassments, and what are more important, Herculean cheerfulness and courage. So it is that he brings aid and cheer into the sickroorn, and often enough, though not so often as he Wishes, brings healing. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. A ,I JOHN EDWIN IAMES. IR., B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S Professor Emeritus ot Obstetrics WAYNE T. KILLIAN, M.D. Professor Emeritus of Anesthesia 2.49 FRANK O. NAGLE, ILM.. M.D. Professor Emeritus of Gphthcrlmoloqy GILBERT I. PALEN, A.B., M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor Emeritus of Otoloqy SAMUEL W. SAPPINGTON, M.D., F .A.C.P. Proiessor and Head of the Department oi Pathology and Bacteriology M.D. Hahnemann Medical College, l897p Fellow American College oi Physicians, Fellow American Medical Association, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Med- ical Society American Institute of Homeopathy, Phladelphia Pathological Society, American Asso- ciation oi lmmunologists, American Society of Clin- ical Pathologists, Society of American Bacteriologists, Pathologist to Hahnemann Hospital, Physician to Hahnemann Hospital. WILLIAM A. PEARSON, Ph.C., Ph D Sc D M D LL D Dean oi the College Professor and l-lead ot the Department oi Chemistry and Physiological Chemistry Ph,C., University oi Michigan, l900y Ph.D., Univers- ity ot Michigan, l902p Sc.D., LaSalle College, l926p MD., Hahnemann Medical College, l9l5g LLD., Hahnemann Medical College, 1935, American Chem- istry Society, American Pharmaceutical Association, American Association ot Clinical Research, Amer- ican Institute ot Homeopathy, Pennsylvania State Homeopathic Medical Society, Research Chemist, Parke-Davis, l9OU-1904, Professor of Chemistry, Fer- his Institute, Big Rapids, Michigan, 1904-1906. LEON T. ASHCRAFT. Ph.B.. I-LM.. M.D., F.A.C.S Professor and Head of the Departrnent of Urology PhB., Dickinson College, 1887, A.M., Dickinson College, l890g M. D., Hahnemann Medical College, l89O, AM., Hahnernann Medical College, 19315 LLD., Hahnemann Medical College, l937y Pi Upsilon Rho, American College of Surgeons, Urologist to Hahne- mann Hospital, Urologist to Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Urologist to Broad Street Hospital. CHARLES SIGMUND RAUE AM MD Professor and Head oi the Department ot Pediatrics University oi Pennsylvania, M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 18955 Philadelphia Pediatric So- ciety, American Institute of Homeopathy, Pennsyl- vania Homeopathic Medical Society, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Physician to Children, Hahnemann Hospital, Consulting Physician to St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital, Con- sulting Physician to Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Head of Department ot Pediatrics St. Lulce's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital. HARRY MARTIN EBERHARD, M.A., M.D., LL.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Gastroenterology Hahnemann Medical College, Philadelphia, Pa., 18985 Post-Graduate work: University of Berlin, Boas Polyklinic, Berlin, Boston Floating Hospital, Boston City Hospital, New York Graduate Medical School. Societies: Pi Upsilon Rho, Germantown Medical Society, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American lnstitute of Homeo- pathy, American Society for the Advancement ot Science, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Medical Club, Philadelphia. Fellow, American Gastroenter- oloical Associationy Fellow, American Medical Association: Associate, Amer- ican College oi Physicians, Gastroenterologist to Broad Street Hospital, Con- sulting Gastroenterologist to Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Consultant Gastroenterology I. Lewis Crozier Hospital, Chester, Physician to Hahnemann Hospital, Shriner's Hospital tor Crippled Children, Philadelphia. g 1 EDWARD A. STEINHILBER, M.D. Professor and Head ot the Department ot Neuroloqy arid Psychiatry M.D., Hahriemann Medical College, l9U9p Phi Alpha Gamma, Associate Professor of Histology arid Embryology, 1914-19255 Neuroloqist to Halmemanri Hospital. 1 1 , GARTH WILKINSON BOERICKE, M.D. Professor and Head ot the Department of Materia Medica and Therapeutics University of California, 19145 M.D., University of Michigan, 19185 Alpha Sigma, Past President Amer- ican lnstitute ot Homeopathy, President Pennsyl- vania Homeopathic Medical Society, Editor Hahne- mannian Monthly, Physician to Hahnemann Hos- pital, Director of Herinq Laboratory. G. HARLAN WELLS, B.S., MD F A C P Professor and Head ot the Department ot Medicine B.S., University of Delaware, l8987 M.D., Hahne- mann Medical College, l9U2p Sc.D., University of Delaware, l934: Pi Upsilon Rho, American College ot Physicians, Former President American lnstitute of Homeopathy, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, Physician-in-Chief to Hahnemann Hospital, Consult- ing Physician to the Woman's Homeopathic Hospital, the Broad Street Hospital, the West lersey Homeo- pathic Hospital, the Crozer Hospital, and the Wil- mington Homeopathic Hospital. EARL B. CRAIG, M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor and Head of the Department ot Gynecology x M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, M.D., lefterson Medical College, 1908, American College of Sur- geons, Member of American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Philadelphia Obstetrical Society, Gyne- cologist to Hahnemann Hospital. THOMAS W. PHILLIPS. M.D. Professor and Head ot the Department Anatomy M.D., I-Iahnemann Medical College, 19165 Univers- ity of Pennsylvania, l923g St. lVlark's, London, l923p Post-Graduate Surgery, Post-Graduate Proctoloqy, Pi Upsilon Rho, American Institute of Homeopathy, American Association tor Advancement of Science, American Medical Association. 1 GUSTAVE A. VAN LENNEP, M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor and Head of the Department MD., Hahnemann Medical College, 18947 Amer- ican Board oi Surgeons, American College oi Sur- geons, Germantown Medical Society, Tri-County Medical Society, Medical Club oi Philadelphia, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Penn- sylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital, Consulting Surgeon, Allentown State Hos- pital, Consulting Surgeon, Pottstown Homeopathic Hospital, Consulting Surgeon, West lersey Homeo- pathic Hospital. oi Surgery REINHARD BEUTNER, Ph.D., M.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Pharmacology Ph.D., M.D., University of Berlin, 19365 lnternational Research Anesthesia Society, American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeuticsg 1911- l9l4, Assistant at Rockefeller lnstitute for Medical Research, l92U-l923 Chief Assistant, Pharmacolog- ical lnstitute, University of Leyden, Holland, H324- l936, Assistant Professor, Professor of Pharmacology, University of Louisville. if t J STANLEY P. REIMANN. M.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Oncology University of Pennsylvania Medical College, Director of the Lankenau Hos- pital Research lnstitute, Chief of the Division of Cancer Control of the Penna. State Department of Health, Associate Professor of Experimental Pathology in the University of Pennsylvania, Director of the American Society for the Control of Cancer, Chairman of the Cancer Commission of the Medical Society of the State of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia College of Physicians, American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science, Philadelphia County Medical Society, American Medical Association, Federation of Biological Societies, American Society for Experimental Pathology, American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists, American Association for Cancer Be- search, Society for Experimental Biology and Medi- cine, Committee on Pathological Anatomy of the National Research Council, Society of the Sigma Xi, American Society of Clinical Pathologists, Deutsche Pathologische Gesellschaft, Member of the Executive Committee of the International Union Against Can- cer, Member Board of Director of Philadelphia Health Council and Tuberculosis Committee, Fellow of American College of Physician. 1 t Z l I I 5 n l IOHN C. SCOTT, I-LB., Ph.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Physioloy AB., University oi Montana, l923, Ph.D., University oi Pennsylvania, l929g American Psychological Society. WARREN C. MERCER. M.D F A C S Professor and Head of the Department of Obstetrics Martin's Academy, West Chester Normal School, M.D., Hahnemann Medical Colleqe, l899, Philadel- phia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute ot Homeopathy, Germantown Medical Society, Clinical Research Society, Pi Upsilon Rho, Obstetrican to Hahnemann Hosptal, President of the Statt ot Broad Street Hospital, Chief Obstetrician to Broad Street Hospital, Head of Department ot Women of St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospitals, Consulting Cbstetrician, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, West Chester, Pa.: Consultant, Homeopathic Hospital and Crozier Hospital ot Chester, Pa.: Consultant, Mercy Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. FREDERICK C. PETERS, M.D. Professor and Head ot the Department ot Ophthalmology M.D., Hahneman Medical College, lQllg Alpha Sigma, Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hospital, ln- structor in Ophthalmological Pathology, Ophthalmol- ogist to Allentown State Hospital, Chief Ophthalmol- ogist to St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hos- pital. ' 1 1 IOSEPH V. F. CLAY. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor and l-lead ot the Department of Oto-laryngology M.D., l-lahneman Medical College, l9U6, Alpha Sigma, American College ot Surgeons, American Board of Oto-laryngology, Fellow ot the American Medical Association, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania State Medical So- ceity, Philadelphia Society for Clinical Research, Ctologist to Hahnemann Hospital. - JmbA'-' 1.11- ha. ,.. . -.-0 T , .Y -ef-Q-5 RALPH BERNSTEIN. M.D.. F.A.C.P. Professor ond Heord ot the Section of Dermatology MD., University of Pennsylvania, 1903: M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19043 F.A. C.P., American College of Physicians, 1920: Fellow American Academy of Dermatology and Syphilology, Pi Upsilon Rho. Society for Investigative Dermatology, Society of Foren- sic Medicine, American Medical Authors As- sociation, County, State, and National Homeo- pathic Medical Societies, Germantown Homeopathic Medical Society, Consuting Der- matologist to Hahnemann Hospital, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Broad Street Hospital, Shriners' Children's Hospital, Crozer Hos- pital. Chester, Pa., Homeopathic Hospital, Wilmington, Del., Homeopathic Hospital, Pottstown. Pa.g Allentown State Hospital, Al- lentown, Pa., West Jersey Homeopathic Hos- pital, Camden. N. J.: Bancroft School, Had- donlield, N. J. IACOB WILLIAM FRANK, M.D. Professor of Roentqenoloqv MD., Hahnemann Medical College, 19053 Radiologic Society of North America, Amer- ican Roentgen Ray Society, Philadelphia Medical Club, Aesculiapian Medical Club, Germantown Medical Club, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society. Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, Medical Society of Eastern Delaware County, Roentgenologist to Hahnemann Hospital, Consulting Roentgen- ologist to St. Luke's and Children's Hospital. IOHN A. BOHNEMAN, P.D. Professor of Pharmacy P.D., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. 19023 Pi Upsilon Rho. FRANK C. BENSON. IR., A.M.. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor of Radiology M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1894: A.M.. Hahnemann Medical College, 1925: F.A.C.S., 19223 Pi Upsilon Rho, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Pennsylvania State Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy. Pan-American Medical Asso- ciation, American College of Surgeons, Radi- ologist, Hahnemann Hospital. IOHN A. BROOKE. M.D.. F.A.C.S. l-leorcl oi the Department ot Orthopedics Professor ot Orthopedic Surgery M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 18963 American College of Surgeons, Philadelphia Homeopathic Society, Pennsylvania Homeo- pathic Society, American Institute of Homeo- pathy, American Medical Association, Amer- ican Academy of Orthopedic Surgery, Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital, Chief of Orthopedic Department at Hahnemann Hospital, Chief of Orthopedic Department at St. Luke's and Children's Homeopathic Hospital, Clhief of Orthopedic Department at Broad Street Hos- pital. Consultant of Orthopedic Department at West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital, Con- sultant of Orthopedic Department at Wil- mington Homeopathic Hospital. WILLIAM M. SYLVIS. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor of Anatomy' M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19073 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, l908g Phi Alpha Gamma, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society. American Institute of Homeo- pathy, Pathological Society of Philadelphia, Associate Professor of Surgery, Associate in Surgical Pathology, Surgeon to Hahne- mann Hospital. THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D. Professor oi Histology and Embryology M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1916g Pi Upsilon Rho, Clinical Professor of Ophthal- mology, Assistant in Ophthalmological Path- ology, Ophthalmologist to Hahnemann Hos- pital. HENRY IRVIN KLOPP, Sc.D., M.D., F.A.C.P. Clinical Professor oi Mental Diseases Palatinate 1Albrightl College. Sc.D., Muhl- cnberg College, 19371 M.D., Hahnemann Med- ical College, 18941 Pi Upsilon Rho, Lehigh Valley Homeopathic Medical Society, Penn- sylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, Amer- ican Institute of Homeopathy, American Psy- chiatric Association, Philadelphia Psychiatric Association, American College of Physicians, Superintendent, Allentown State Hospital. IAMES H. MINES GODFREY, M.D. Professor oi Anesthesia Professor of Anesthesia, M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19043 M.D., Jefferson Med- ical College, 19063 Alpha Sigma, State Homeo- pathic Medical Society, Philadelphia Homeo- pathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy. CHARLES B. HOLLIS, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Professor oi Lorynqoloqy ond Rhinoloqy Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology, M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19123 University of Vienna, Alpha Sigma, Medical Club of Philadelphia, Germantown Medical Society. American Institute of Homeopathy, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medican Society, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, American College of Surgeons, Laryngologist to Hahnemann Hospital, Consultant, Ear, Nose, and Throat, St. Luke's and Children's Hospital, Consultant in Nose and Throat, Al- lentown State Hospital, Consultant in Otol- ogy, Institute for Deaf, Trenton, N. J. i I I I ? k I 1 i l 1 1 1 1 I I r 1 5 u I - 2 I- l 1 I. F. MCCLENDON, B.S. M.S., Ph.D. Research Professor oi Physiology B.S.. University of Texas, 1903- M.S., Uni- versity of Texas. 19041 Ph.D,. University of Pennsylvania, 19061 Phi Rho Sigma. Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Xi. Fellow American Medical Association, Association for the Advancement of Science, Association for the Study of In- ternal Secretions. American Physiology So- ciety. Society of Experimental Biology and Medicine, American Society of Biological Chemists. Physiological Society of Philadel- phia. American Society of Anatomists, Amer- ican Chemical Society. Association of Military Surgeons, Biochemical Society of Great Brit- ain. International Goiter Conference, Inter- national Physiological Congress. Major. Of- ficers Reserve Corps, U. S. Army. IOSEPH SAMUEL HEPBURN, A.B., A.M., B.S. in chem., M.S., Ph.D., M.D. Professor of Chemistry A.B., Central High School of Philadelphia, 19031 A.M., Central High School of Philadel- phia, 19083 B.S., in Chem., University of Penn- sylvania, 1907: M.S., University of Pennsyl- vania, 1907: Ph.D., Columbia University, 19131 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 1934: Ed- ward Longstreet Medal of Merit of Franklin Institute, 19113 Pi Upsilon Rho. American In- stitute of Homeopathy tHonorary Associate Memberi. American Society of Biological Chemists. American Chemical Society. Penn- sylvania Chemical Society, Franklin Institute. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Physiological Society of Philadelphia, Na- tional Gastroenterological Association. In Charge of Basal Metabolism. and Secretary of Staff, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, As- sociate in Gastrointestinal and Metabolic Diseases, Broad Street Hospital. , C..--A. DESIDERIO ROMAN, A.M., M.D., F.A.C.S. Clinicol Professor of Surgery A.M.. National College of Granada, Nicar- agua, 18893 M.D. Hahnemann Medical Col- lege, 1893: American College of Surgeons, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, Philadel- phia County Medical Society, Pennsylvania State Medical Society, American Medical As- sociation. Member of the Pan-American Med- ical Association, Germantown Medical So- ciety, Guest Lecturer, History of Medican, Sureogn-in-Chief to St. Luke's and Child- ren's Hospital, Consulting Surgeon to Wil- mington Homeopathic Hospital. JOSEPH MCELDOWNEY. M.D. Clinicol Professor of Medicine M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1905: Alpha Sigma, American Institute of Homeo- pathy, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Clinical Professor of Physical Dia- gnosis, Physician to Hahnemann Hospital. T i l l BENIAMIN K. FLETCHER, Ph.G.. M.D. Clinical Professor of Pediatrics Ph.G., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy 18883 M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, l895' Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, German- town Homeopathic Medical Society, Philadel- phia Pediatric Society, Physician to Children Hahnemann Hospital. v - v IAMES D. SCHOFIELD. M.D., F.A.C.S. Clinical Professor of Proctoloqy M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 1902: Associate in Post-Graduate School, Univers- ity of Pennsylvania, Fellow American Proc- tologic Society, Proctologist, St. Luke's and Chi1dren's Homeopathic Hospital, Consulting Proctologist, Montgomery Hospital, Norris- town, Pa. . , .fe .-.,- -N. .,,-1.,-g:ff- DONALD R. FERGUSON, A.B., M.D.. F.A.C.P. Clinicol Professor of Medicine A.B., Swarthmore College, 1912, M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19161 Kappa Sigma, Alpha Sigma, American College of Physicians, American Institute of Homeo- pathy, Pennsylvania State Medical Society. Philadelphia County Medical Society, Ger- mantown Medical Society, Captain, Medical Corps, U S. Army, Electrocardiographer, As- sistant Visiting Physician to Hahnemann Hos- pital, Electrocardiographer to Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Cardiologist to Child- ren's and St. Luke's Hospital, Visiting Phy- sician to Broad Street Hospital. E. ROLAND SNADER. B.S., M.D.. F.A.C.P. Clinical Professor of Medicine B.S., Haverford College, 1917, M.D., Hahne- mann Medical College, Diplomate of Amer- ican Board of Internal Medicine, Fellow of the American College of Physicians, Alpha Sigma, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Penn- sylvania State Medical Society, American Medical Association, Germantown Medical Society, Main Line Branch of Montgomery County Medical Society, Philadelphia Heart Association, Society for the Study of Internal Secretions, Philadelphia Metabolic Associa- tion, American Association of the History of Medicine, American Heart Association, Phy- sician to Hahnemann Hospital, Chief Meta- bolic Clinic Hahnemann Hospital, Consulting Physician to Allentown State Hospital, Con- sulting Physician to McKinley Memorial Hos- pital, Trenton, Consulting Physician to J. Lewis Crozer Hospital, Chester, Consulting Physician to Homeopathic Hospital of Ches- ter County, Chester, PAUL C. WITTMAN, M.D. Clinical Professor of Dermatology M.D., Hahnemann Medical College. 1916: American Institute of Homeopathy. County Homeopathic Society. State Homeopathic So- ciety, Dermatologist to Hahnemann Hospital. Dermatologist to Women's Homeopathic Hos- pital. EVERETT A. TYLER, Ph.B., M.D., F.A.C.A. Clinical Professor of Anesthesia Ph.B.. Syracuse University. 1910: M.D.. Hahnemann Medical College. 19137 American Institute of Homeopathy. American Medical Association, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society. Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, International Anesthesia Research Society. International Association of Anes- thetists, American Society of Anesthetists. Diplomate American Board of Anesthesiol- ogy, Alpha Sigma. Anesthetist to Hahne- mann Hospital. Chief. Department of Anes- thesia. St. Luke's and Childrens Homeopathic Hospital. i 4 -,,., 354-5- , L-. ' . ,. 1 . y T l,::'ff' 3-Q'-U lf?-A it ' L I-TiA1:i,: 1: - if-ffl lt W J-S.. l one , . . f lr, ' '31 1' I ...Z . V ' r lil l 1 l HENRY R. RUTH. B.S., M.D. Clinical Professor of Anesthesia M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19233 Alpha Sigma, Phi Sigma Kappa, Ptolemy, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, German- Medical Society, American Medical Associa- town Medical Society, Philadelphia County tion, Association of Anesthetists of U. S. and Canada, Anesthetist Travel Club of America, International Anesthetist Research Society, Eastern Society of Anesthetists fPast Presi- dentl, American Society of Regional Anes- thesia, American Society of Anesthetists, American Society of Anesthetists, Inc. CPast Presidentl, Anesthetist to Hahnemann Hos- pital, Chief of Division of Anesthesia, Phila- delphia General Hospital, Chief Anesthetist to Broad Street Hospital, Anesthetist to St. uke's and Children's Hospital, Vice President of the American Board of Anesthesiology. NEWLIN F. PAXSON. B.S., M.D.. F.A.C.S. Clinical Professor of Obstetrics M.D., Hahnemann Medical College, 19193 Alpha Sigma, Fellow American College of Surgeons, Philadelphia Homeopathic Medical Society, Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical Society, American Institute of Homeopathy, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Penn- sylvania State Medical Society, American Medical Association, Philadelphia Obstetrical Society, Diplomate American Board Obstet- rics and Gynecology. GEORGE P. MILEY, BJ-X.. M.D. Cliniccil Professor ol PhcrrmocoloQY M.D., Northwestern University Medical School, 1932, Philadelphia Medical Society, Pennsylvania Medical Society, Fellow Amer- ican Medical Association, Member American Association for the Advancement of Science. Philadelphia Physiological Society, National Society of Gastro-enterology, Director of New Hahnemann Research Foundation, Chief of Department of Hemo-irradiology, Acting Director of the Cirystollography Laboratory, Hahnemann Hospital. AUBREY B. WEBSTER, A.B., M.D.. F.A.C.S. Clinical Professor oi Surgery A.B., Acadia University, 18985 M.D., Boston University, 19023 Alpha Sigma, American College of Surgeons, Union League, German- town Club, Surgeon to Hahnemann Hospital, Surgeon to St. Luke's and Children's Homeo- pathic Hospital. NIGHT FALLS Night falls . . . To deepen the sorrows of the day. Still hours . . . Darken the Weary souls of rnen. Pity Man . . . Who sleeps deat to tortured cry. Scorn Man . . . Death must never have reward. Nor Pain . . . Its anguishing relentless way. Night falls . . . But Man does not forget Man. Still hours . . . Abound in Peace and loving Mercy. lVIan's humanity to man, One Mighty Barrier Against a vast Unknown. IN MEMORI LEON CLEMMER, M.D., F.A,C.S. Professor and Head of Department of Obstetrics 1888-1940 A M HERBERT P. LEOPOLD, A.M., M.D., F.A.C.S Clinical Professor ot Surgery 1874-1939 WALLACE K. KRATZ Assistant Registrar HERE are times when the impersonal black of a printers ink set down in words, and phrases, and sentences on cold white paper must tall tar short of the duties one would require of them. So it seems that anything that we, or anyone else who knows him, might set down on paper concerning Wally, would be wholly inadequate. To only enumerate the things we will remember him tor: the ever-ready, cheerful smiley a wise crack that brightened up a hum-drum day, a word or two ot consolation when we wallowed in the doldrumsg a word ot reassurance when rumors or actualities had us worried: a kindly word ot counsel when we wrestled with a problemg and a friendly word ot warning when we threatened to overstep any ot the bounds which the exigencies of a medical curricula placed around us, to but enumerates these and all his other deeds which made our days at Hahnemann easier, could never serve to delineate the true character ot the man. So, because there are none among us who do not owe some debt of grati- tude to himg and none among us whose medical school lives have not been enriched by his friendship, we salute-our friend and counsellor- WALLY ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS WILLIAM B. GRIGGS, M.D. Associate Professor of Therapeutics JOHN L. REDMAN, M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics O. F. BARTHMAIER, M.D. Associate Professor of Pathology DEACON STEINMETZ, M.D., F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Surgery WILLIAM M. SYLVIS. M.D., F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Surgery JOSEPH CHANDLER, A.B., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry FRANK J. FROSCH, M.D., F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Gynecology JAMES B. BERT, M.D. Associate Professor of Obstetrics HARRY F. HOFFMAN, M.D. Associate Professor of Mental Diseases JOSEPH R. CRISWELL, M.D. Associate Professor of Otology CARROLL F. HAINES, M.D. Associate Professor of Otology GEORGE LORENZ. JR.. B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Gastro-Enterology CHARLES J. V. FRIES, M.D. Associate Professor of Ophthalmology GEORGE D. GECKLER, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine CHARLES J. WHITE, M.D. Associate Professor of Physical Diagnosis GRANT O. FAVORITE, B.S., M.D.. F.A.C.P. Associate Professor of Pathology J. ANTRIM CRELLIN, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine J. MILLER KENWORTHY, M.D. Associate Professor of Urology N. VOLNEY LUDWICK, B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Radiology JOHN J. MCKENNA, M.D. Associate Professor of Roentgenology ALFRED E. KRICK, M.D. Associate Professor of Roentgenology H. RUSSELL FISHER, B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Pathology LOWELL L. LANE, A.B.. M.D., F.A.C.P. Associate Professor of Medicine JAMES H. GLOSSON, B.S., M.D., D.Sc. 4MedD Associate Prof. of Neurology 8: Psychiatry CLARNCE L. SHOLLENBERGER, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Anatomy ROWLAND RICKETTS, B.S., A.M., M.D.. D.N.B. Associate Professor of Anatomy RUSSELL K. MATTERN, Ph.G., M.D. Associate Professor of Therapeutics ALBERT MUTCH, M.D. Associate Professor of Obstetrics HUNTER C. COOK, B.S.. M.D. Associate Professor of Pathology M. F. ASHLEY-MONTAGU, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy CHARLES WILLIAM SCHAFFER, A.B., B.S.. M.Sc., Ph.C. Associate Professor of Pharmacology LESTER L. BOWER, M.D. Associate Professor of Gastro-Enterology THOMAS L. DOYLE, M.D., M.R.C.S., Eng.. F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Surgery WILLIAM L MARTIN, B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Surgery HENRY L. CROWTHER. M.D., F.A.C.S. Associate Professor of Obstetrics CHARLES L. W. RIEGER, M.D. Associate in Roentgenology JOHN H. READING, JR., M.D. Associate in Pediatrics GEORGE R. NEFF, M.D. Associate in Nervous Diseases WILLIAIVI M. SYLVIS, M.D., F.A.C.S. Associate in Surgical Pathology WM. J. RYAN. M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology MARION W. BENJAMIN. M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology H. FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, A.B., B.S.,M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology R. McCLURE, M.D. CARROLL Associate in Histology and Embryology HARRY S. WEAVER, JR.. M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology CARL C. FISCHER, B.S., A.M., M.D., F.A.A.P.. F.A.C.P. Associate in Pediatrics JOHN S. MILLER. JR., M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology PAUL A. METZGER, M.D. Associate in Neurology and Psychiatry WALTER J. SNYDER, M.D. Associate in Gastro-Enterology JAMES F. TOMPKINS. M.D. Associate in Gastro-Enterology JOSEPH S. HEPBURN, A.B., A.M., B.S. in Chem., M.S., Ph.D.. MD Research Associate in Gastro-Enterology JOHN H. MCCUTCHEON, M.D. Associate in Laryngology and Rhinology RAYMOND McGRATH, M.D. Associate in Larynology and Rhinology RUSSELL D. GEARY, M.D. Associate in Larynology and Rhinology WILLIAM K. KISTLER. M.D., M.Sec. tMed.D Associate in Bronchoscopy RUSSELL S. MAGEE, A.B., B.S., M.D., D.N.B. Associate in Therapeutics H. WASTL, M.D. Research Associate in Anatomy EHRENFRIED PFEIFFER. Ch.E., M.D. Research Associate in Chemistry JOSEPH W. MESSEY, Ph.G., M.D. Associate in Pharmacology RAYMOND E. SEIDEL. M.D. Associate in Pharmacology DESIDERIO A. ROMAN. M.D. Associate in Obstetrics RICHARD R. GATES. A.B., M.D. Associate in Obstetrics HENRY D. LAFFERTY, B.S., M.D. Associate in Obstetrics HARRY P. LANDIS, JR.. M.D. Associate in Histology and Embriology WILLIAM S. SUTHERLAND, M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology ISADORE J. WESSEL, M.D. Associate in Gastro-Enterology T HE FACULTY LECTURERS NATHAN GRIFFITH, LL.B. on Medical Jurisprudence F. BAKER, A.M., M.D. on Non-Pharmacal Therapeutics HORN, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. on Hygiene W. LARER. M.D., F,A.C.S. on Medical Economics Lecturer WILLIAM Lecturer DAVID W. Lecturer RICHARD Lecturer CLARENCE L. SHOLLENBERGER, M.D., F.A.C.S. Lecturer on Surgery WM. G. SCHMIDT, Ph.D. Lecturer on Bio-Physics and Physical Chemistry EDWIN O. GECKLER, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Lecturer on Orthopedic Surgery FRANK E. BRISTOL. M.D. Lecturer on Surgery DUNNE W. KIRBY, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. Lecturer on Medicine MORRIS FITERMAN, M.D. Lecturer on Medicine CHARLES F. KUTTEROFF, Ph.Ci., M.D. Lecturer on Gynecology L. THOMAS SOOY, B.S., M.D. Lecturer on Neurology and Psychiatry THOMAS J. VISCHER, M.D. Lecturer on Medicine MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH, B.S., M.D. Lecturer on Medicine GEORGE D. GECKLER, M.D. Lecturer on Physiology ALBERT V. HALLOWELL, M.D. Lecturer on Laryngology and Rhinology PAUL C. MOOCK, M.D. Lecturer on Obstetrics MICHELE VIGLIONE, B.S., M.D. Lecturer on Medicine CHARLES E. LAWSON, B.S., M.D. Lecturer on Medicine JULES J. KLAIN, B.S., M.D. Lecturer on Physio-Therapy EDWARD W. CAMPBELL, M.D., F.A.C.S. Lecturer on Urology EUGENE F. CARPENTER, JR., M.D. Lecturer on Surgery THEODORE C. GEARY, B.S., M.D. Lecturer on Surgery DONALD T. JONES. M.D. Lecturer on Orthopedic Surgery WILLIAM G. WOSNAC-K, M.D. Lecturer on Obstetrics H. FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, A.B., B.S., Lecturer on Physiology PASQUALE G. DAMIANI, M.D. Lecturer on Urology WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, JR., B.S., M.D., M.D F.A.C.S. Lecturer on Urology DEMONSTRATORS J. CARL CRISWELL, D.D.S. Demonstrator of Dental Surgery ROBERT A. HIBBS, M.D. Demonstrator of Pediatrics HARRY B. MARK, M.D., F.A.A.P. Demonstrator of Pediatrics EDMUND G. HESSERT, B.S., M.D., Demonstrator of Gynecology F.A.C.S. BRUCE V. MacFAYDEN, B.S., M.D., M.Sc. lMed.J Demonstrator of Gynecology SAMUEL ALLEN DINGEE, M.D. Demonstrator of Gastro-Enterology GERALD P. FINCKE, M.D. Demonstrator of Medicine WILLIAM A. WEAVER, JR., M.D. Demonstrator of Laryngology 8: Rhinology HARRY D. EVANS, M.D. Demonstrator of Roentgenology HARRY P. LANDIS, JR., M.D. Demonstrator of Therapeutics PAUL M. KISTLER, M.D. Demonstrator of Pediatrics CHAS. F. LEONARD, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology BERNARD G. WALKER, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology WILLIAM KLINMAN, M.D. Demonstrator of Medicine HERBERT M. SHARKIS, A.B., M.D. Demonstrator of Medicine WARREN H. HOENSTINE, M.D. Demonstrator of Medicine HENRY J. KOHLER, M.D. Demonstrator of Otology WILLIAM M. SNOWDEN, B.S., M.D. Demonstrator of Therapeutics WILLIAM P. GREGG, M.D. Demonstrator of Pediatrics HORST A. AGERTY, M.D. Demonstrator of Pediatrics LEANDER P. TORI, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology HENRY G. BLESSING, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology HORACE L. WEINSTOCK, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology INSTRUCTORS N. FULMER HOFFMAN, M.D. Instructor in Surgery EDWIN HICKS, B.S. Instructor in Chemistry THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D. in Ophthalrnological Pathology Instructor GEORGE J. RILLING, C.S., M.D. in Proctology Instructor ALBERT R. RIHL, JR., M.D. in Obstetrics Instructor HIRAM FRANCIS SNIDER, B.S., M.S. Instructor in Chemistry WILLIAM Y. LEE, M.D. Instructor in Surgery JAMES A. SELIGMAN, M.D. Instructor in Surgery CHARLES C. THOMPSON, M.D. Instructor in Proctology EDWARD P. VAN TINE, A.B., M.D. Instructor in Anesthesia HENRY D. LAFFERTY, B.S., M.D. Instructor in Gynecological Pathology EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D., F.A.C.S. Instructor in Surgical Pathology MAXWELL F. WHITE, M.D. Instructor in Surgery JOHN F. ROWLAND, M.D. Instructor in Anesthesia DAVID D. NORTHROP, M.D. Instructor in Surgery ERNEST L. ROSATO, Ph.G., M.D. Instructor in Proctology EDGAR M. BLEW, M.D. Instructor in Mental Diseascs WALTER E. KEPLER, B.S., M.D. Instructor in Roentgenology FRANCIS M. JAMES, M.D. Instructor in Physiology FREDERICK W. JARVIS, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics FRANK H. MURRAY, M.D. Instructor in Proctology WILLIAM A. BUCK. M.D. Instructor in Surgery RAYMON C. MOYER. M.D. Instructor in Surgery M. FREDERICK ONDOVCHAK, M.D. Instructor in Surgery JOHN J. DOMANSKI, M.D. Instructor in Surgery LEOPOLD S. LIPSITZ. M.D. Instructor in Surgery H. EARLE TWINING, A.B., M.D. Instructor in Dermatology J. RAWLINS GINTHER, A.B., M.D. Instructor in Dermatology J. ARTHUR HORNEFF. M.D. Instructor in Pathology ROBERT J. MCNEILL, JR., M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics ALBERT R. SERAPHIN, M.D. Instructor in Gynecology B. MARVIN HAND. M.D. Instructor in Neurology and Psychiatry CHARLES S. FOX, A.B.. M.D. Instructor in Neurology and Psychiatry WILLIAM J. KUEMMEL, A.B.. M.D. Instructor in Anatomy WILLIAM Y. LEE. M.D. Instructor in Anatomy JACOB H. SIGAFOOS, M.D. Instructor in Anesthesia RUSSELL C. SMITH, M.D. Instructor in Anesthesia HERMAN KLINE, M.D. Instructor in Dermatology JACOB H. LEHMAN, M.D. Instructor in Roentgenology ROBERT M. HUNTER, M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics E. DALLET SHARPLESS, M.D. Instructor in Surgery HERMAN J. LUBOWITZ, M.D. Instructor in Surgery LYLE V. BECK. A.B.. M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Physiology HERBERT S. WARREN, A.M., B.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Anatomy JOHN H. DAVIE. M.D. Instructor in Medicine J. PAUL BURKETT, M.D. Instructor in Medicine C. J. KLEINGUENTHER. M.D. Instructor in Dermatology OSCAR GRIGGS. M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics RUSSELL S. MAGEE, A.B., B.S., M.D., D.N.B. Instructor in Medicine WILLIAM C. THOROUGHGOOD, M.D. Instructor in Surgery ASSISTANTS THEODORE W. BATTAFARANO. Assistant in Physiology PETER J. WARTER, M.D. Assistant in Medicine WILLIAM J. WALKER, M.D. Assistant in Gastro-Entcrology RUSSELL C. SMITH, M.D. Assistant in Ophthalmology E. DALLET SHARPLESS. M.D. Assistant in Histology and Embryology LEON A. FRANKEL. M.D. Assistant in Anatomy OSCAR E. HEIM. M.D. Assistant in Anatomy NUBAR A. KARAKASHIAN, M.D. Assistant in Anatomy GEORGE P. GLENN, M.D. Assistant in Ophthalmology NUBAR A. KARAKASHIAN, M.D. Assistant in Ophthalmology LIVINGSTON CHUNN, M.D. Assistant in Anatomy ARTHUR W. W. WADDINGTON, M.D. Assistant in Gynecology ARTHUR A. HARTLEY, M.D. Assistant in Gynecology WILLIAM S. SILVERMAN. M.D. Assistant in Gastro-Enterology JOHN B. CONWELL, M.D. Assistant in Gastro-Enterology ALFONSO L. PIERRO, M.D. Assistant in Gastro-Enterology W. VERNON HOSTELLEY, M.D. Assistant in Larynogology and Rhinology PAUL M. JAMES, M.D. Assistant in Obstetrics HARRY D. EVANS, JR., M.D. Assistant in Obstetrics FRANCIS M. JAMES, M.D. Assistant in Obstetrics MARTIN PACKMAN, M.D. Assistant in Pediatrics ROMAINE C. HOFFMAN, M.D. Assistant in Medicine EMANUEL ALMES, M.D. Assistant in Therapeutics FRANCIS B. SMYTH, M.D. Assistant in Gynecology PASQUALE J. C. GAMBESCIA, M.D. Assistant in Pediatrics ALFRED SEBASTIAN DAMIANI, M.D. Assistant in Obstetrics WILLIAM ELLIS M.D. Assistant in Urology gal M lu z F 30.1 . 393 MRS. MELLITA TURNER Librarian MISS CLARA C. FISHER. B. A Secretary to the Dean . 1 . 2 X ,, - .. Vfvl V .aj a! .. i ,li 4 fx ,, 1 'l Xxx x I :va fi 9 I u lx my Sit Q i.. T2 ,f .4, -v ., , Sy ,. A+-H Vg.. X .L .lv ,A x...J , '.J X Al .. .W Y' ' r ,, . '-an -1 ..-- de 1 .LL 41, xv, X. -vu. 4, f- -, ,X x Q 'X 'BN 6, 's Q ma' - Y A f L' EI! :E I nf . I. 1 fi OUR PARENTS On this, the first page of the Senior Section, we pause to pay tribute to two grand people. Through long years they have inspired our every effort to strive on. Their sacrifices have been great, indeed, that our names should appear on the pages that follow. Whether it be our fare to achieve distinction or not in our chosen profession, may we strive always to vindicate their pro- found faith in us. And in after years, when we turn the pages of this book, may this serve, always, as a reminder of the two whose devotion has made us physicians- MOTHER AND DAD. M5145 ,.4 -'ff f - s NM xgqiix X .Q w 4 49 . Ja 1 Ahmucwclmr in mrmmkm uvlfii' w'Mzf: .' WA 1' Li-UQICII shvulfl ix' Kbqfl kdm I VI ix, :, l1'Q,., -I X ,, ,fm 4 Natl .NW A6 .AVQ I Aww XUSA WHO ' 11 mrl !iscuIup1u577. lk'altl1?i'.Ul'iuzd-Ball lhc Qodbgj godelvms that .uruuhllgv lO.Yljj' .ulvilzgyl mdqc c-nr 5 . -P - if ' ' Q , -21,11 A X Nlhxs .supukmon-m Y1'f'k0Il lum wl 10 l.nuQl1l'1nc- l1lLN. 'XXL d-qU.11lt dv.1n' toms' .xx n3J'xmwru1s uv slum my SLlhSl.1IlUL' xulh l111n'Tf1-1-llkw has nba-ssnm-s1l'mqu1ru!:tv look upon thc .sumc li 'ounv .us nw Own H'UlhL'ITi5K1lhlChll1l'!'1l thus Am' ish wlcunfl' A- ' ll ll1qy.sl1.1ll i5f':'f1.jf'f S232 V ' ' fi-, GWLEW W rnfcyfr ginznt Qrgzv7',0m7r' mod? yf '1frm1Q1'12o21sl u it 11111 mmf! 4 iflgglfqqf' yr gy, 111 rv llflf owl .fp.'1.gpr4q.g5ig5gy 'fliltwflbfbfdigfdbllilf avzzaq l?l'4.5fI!l'llfdfl07! D Oil' fig . 43 ,A ,fix F-. X ,-- ,.. jx, 7 NI., -H 7X3fL.QJlfQ:.flg 'eng 3,1 3f1.i,g:f'Q'. 1 uk 133, iw zo ggrvu' ozffw's.f1l'm' f?W0z1'-lm' .Qfffllls of 1yfqzirg1,,1e2g'f3..., avwmzfgo tv nl'llf1l1LQ' Q'-f'1mgawrzwzr lrvmzmvf' ' C91 PWlTUT7VEfffW'VNNT3TmVTf Wx . LAY- Af-VJ, 1Q.-.L Q .. K4 ,-gqi4 .' 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UWOLAYC this Oath, U10 to fviilfig,-gy hangin' L M.- W L. o ' 1' .L J ' M , 2 f ' C . . vf - 9 5 5NxL? . ..,' chr- s r I -.hyd 1 I! 'I 1- 1 qt .L K. , 9 P. A sim ,- .' 4 q I ,.-.1 Q Ulgfe 5 ,N AD 'x 4- '55 v .Atl suv: ' -1 f.. 'l' Af 455 3 s'hf fib' ' - 0 - .- - A , av - ,-. -'14 in -4 -l SENIHH UIHSS HHIHH8 by 7 ARMAND F. VERGA President FRANCISCO HUGH J. BURNS LEON M. CARP BERIO-SUAREZ RUSSEL P. STONER Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Student Institute IOI-IN H. ABBOTT Allentown. Penna. Lehigh University v Bachelor of Arts Pi Upsilon Rho, Ptolemy Hahnemann Hospital Philaolelphai, Pa. EDWARD A. ABERANT Wyoming. Penna. Pennsylvania State College Bachelor of Science Newman Club Wyoming Valley Homeopathic Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, Penna. MILTON ACKERMAN New York City. New York University of Pittsburqh Bachelor oi Science Phi Delta Epsilon, Glee Club l, 2, 3, 45 Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic Society: Medic 1, 2, 3, Editor-in Chief 4. Montefiore Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. VINCENT F. AMAR Rockland, New York University of Alabama Bachelor of Arts St. Iohn's Riverside Hospital Yonkers, New York xx X , l K f i r ., D x to M V! 2 I R. IOHN AMATO Newark. New Iersey University of South Carolina Bachelor of Science Lambda Phi Mu tPresidei'1tl 4 St. lames Hospital Newark, New lersey L. ARSUAGA ROURE Miramar, Puerto Rico University of Puerto Rico Newman Club l, 2. Fajardo District Hospital Fajarclo, Puerto Rico f I r Q x Q62 v. GILBERT BEGENAU K - ' J! Peekskill. New York Syracuse University University of Alabama Student Institute 1, 2. East Orange General Hospital I East Orange, New lersey I CHARLES C. BENEDETTI Lynn, Massachusetts Tufts Colleqe Bachelor of Science Lambda Phi Mug Newman Club. Union Hospital of Fall River Fall River, Massachusetts ERNEST I. BENKO Portage, Penncx. Carnegie lnstitute of Technology Medic 4. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. FRANCISCO BERIO-SUAREZ Corozal. Puerto Rico University of Puerto Rico Bachelor of Science Newman Cluby Class Treasurer 4 Captal City Hospitals Santurce, Puerto Rico , K if IOSEPH JOHN Bosscx ' ff Hudson, Penna. University of Scranton Bachelor of Science Pi Upsilon Rho: Newman Club. Wyominq Valley Homeopathic Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, Penna. CHARLES EDGAR BOLINGER Greenville, Penna. Thiel College Bachelor of Science I-lahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. I I f 7 R - Z FRANKLIN A. BONTEMPO Aliquippcr, Penna. Washington and letferson College Bachelor oi Science Phi Alpha Gamrnap Club l9 g Glee Club lg Basketball 4. St. Francis Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. WILLIAM P. BRADLEY, IR. Coraopolis, Penncz. Waynesburg College Bachelor of Science Medic 4. St. loseph's Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. :iii 'Z L S' --gy , , f Q f . Af, CARL F. BUECHLE Irvington, New Iersey Albright College Bachelor ot Science Phi Alpha Cfamrnag Club l9 p Medic 4. East Orange General Hospital East Orange, New lersey HUGH IOSEPH BURNS McKeesport, Penncr. Duquesne University Bachelor ot Science Alpha Sigma: Vanl.ennep Surgical Societyg Club l9 p Class Vice- President 4. Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. ANGEL ROBERTO BUXEDA Santurce. Puerto Rico University oi Puerto Rico Newman Club. Presbyterian Hospital Santurce, Puerto Rico HENRY HUGH CANTON Watervliet, New York Fordham University Bachelor ot Science Phi Alpa Gammay Newman Club: Club l9 y Basketball l, 2, 35 Coach 4. Pitkin Memorial Hospital Neptune, New Iersey LEON M. CARP Philadelphia, Penna. University of Pennsylvania Bachelor of Arts Phi Lambda Kappa: Class Secre- tary 4. Montgomery Hospital Norristown, Penna. RALPH DEAN I. CAVALLI Wilmington. Delaware University ot Delaware Mount St. Mary's Colleqe Bachelor of Science Lambda Phi Mug Newman Club. West lersey Homeopathic Hospital Camden. New Iersey fN X 1 '55 ff Q 4 X9 g t ' lf s. fl -XP J LOUIS ANTHONY CERULLI Rochester, New York Louisiana State University University of Alabama Bachelor of Arts Lambda Phi Mug Newman Club lg Managing Editor, Medic 45 Class Baseball l, 2, 3, 4. St. Mary's Hospital Rochester, New York PETER IOHN CETTA Brooklyn, New York Lonq lsland University Bachelor oi Science Lambda Phi Mu St. Peter's Hospital Brooklyn, New York AUGUST ANTHONY CIOTOLA Hazleton, Penna. University ot Pennsylvania Bachelor ot Arts Lambda Phi Mu. Nesbitt Memorial Hospital Kingston, Penna. WILLIAM RYCROFT CLARKSON Pittsburgh, Penna. Princeton University Phi Alpha Gamma CPresidentD 4 VanLennep Surgical Society: Un dergraduate Society. Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. WILLIAM T. COREY Munhcxll. Penna. University of Pittsburgh Bachelor of Science Medic 4. St. loseph's Hospital Pitsburqli, Penna. IOSEPH TERRAZZINO CORTESE Newark. New Iersey Upsala College Maryville Colleqe Bachelor of Arts Lambda Phi Mu. Memorial Hospital Newark, New Iersey K3- '14-44 THOMAS R. COUNIHAN X Forest Hills. New York , - KA W Six J Fordham University Bachelor oi Science Medic 4. Fifth Avenue and Flower Hospitals New York City, New York I RAYMOND W. CRONLUND Philadelphia. Penna. Gettysburg College ' Bachelor oi Science Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic Societyy VanLenr1ep Surgical So- ciety. I Hahnemann Hospital I Philadelphia, Penria. RICHARD IRWIN DARNELL Easton, Penna. Lafayette College Bachelor of Arts Undergraduate Society, Garth W Boericke Therapeutic Society lPresi dent? 47 Glee Club CDirectorD 4. I-lahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. IOSEPH ANTHONY DE CARO Philadelphia, Penna. St. loseph's College Bachelor of Science Lambda Phi Mug Newman Club l 2, 35 ll Circolo Italiano. St. l..uke's and Children's Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. STEPHEN DERKACH N cmticoke. Penncr. Philadelphia College of Pharmacy University ot Pennsylvania Graduate in Pharmacy Undergraduate Society. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. REUBEN IAMES DIERWECHTER Philadelphia. Penna. Villanova College Bachelor of Science fX K-M 1 x ty 'c 1 I ef, ,I l 1 X, K X - ' 1 Pi Upsilon Rho: VanLennep Surg- ical Societyp Newman Clubp Photo- graphy Editor Medic 4. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. ERNANI V. M. DI MASSA Philadelphia, Penna. University of Pennsylvania Bachelor ot Arts Lambda Phi Mug Il Circolo Italiano: Newman Club. St. Mary's Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. IOSEPH WILSON EHRHART Forty Fort. Penna. Wyoming Seminary Albright College Bachelor of Science Phi Alpha Gamma: Beimann On- cologic Society CPresidentD 45 Glee Club 45 Class Baseball. Nesbitt Memorial Hospital Kingston, Penna. HAROLD ELCANESS New York City, New York College oi the City oi New York Bachelor of Science Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Wilmington, Delaware GEORGE ERWIN ENGELHARD Arlington. New Iersey University of Virginia Bachelor of Science Phi Alpha Gamma. East Orange General Hospital East Orange, New Iersey ROWLAND BURTON ENGLE Philadelphia, Penna. Dickinson College Bachelor ot Science Class Secretary 35 Secretary Stu- dent Council 4. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. KENNETH duBOIS ERVIN Ienkintown. Penna. Princeton University Bachelor ot Arts Phi Alpha Gamma, VanLennep Surgical Societyg Undergraduate Society CPresidentl: Class President lg Blue and Gold Committee 45 Student Council l. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. HAROLD H. EVANS Berwick, Penna. New York University Bucknell University Bachelor of Science H My X ' C L N Y rj- vy' K I - Y Z Undergraduate Society: Club l9 g Glee Club l, 2, 3, 47 Class Treas- urer lj Student Council 3. Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg, Penna. RUSSELL M. EVANS. IR. Pittsburgh, Penna. University of Pittsburgh Phi Alpha Gamma, Undergraduate Societyg Club l9 p Class Secre- tary l. Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. IOSEPH MARTIN FASO Portland, New York Miami University fOhiol Bachelor ot Arts Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic So- ciety: Beirnann Oncoloqic Society, Glee Club l, 2, 3, 45 Class Vice President ly Blue and Gold Corn- mittee 4. Harnot Hospital Erie, Penna. PATTISON FULTON Cincinnati, Ohio University ot Wisconsin Undergraduate Societyy Basket- ball l. Bethesda Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio fi LEON GLASSMAN Philadelphia, Perma. Temple University Bachelor oi Arts Phi Delta Epsilon tPresident7 4. l-lahnernann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. HERBERT K. GOFF Pittsburgh. Penna. University of Pittsburgh - Bachelor of Science Pi Upsilori Pthog VanLennep Surg- I I ical Societyg Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic Societyg Undergrad- uate Societyp Medic 4. I Shadyside Hospital Pittsburqh, Penna. I MAURICE B. GORDON Atlantic City. New Iersey University of Pennsylvania Bachelor of Arts Phi Lambda Kappa CPresidentl 4, VanLennep Surqical Society. Atlantic City Hospital Atlantic City, New lersey EVERARDO GOYANES Brooklyn, New York Colqate University Bachelor of Arts Phi Alpha Gamma, Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic Societyg Van Lennep Surgical Society, Under- graduate Societyg Blue and Gold Committee l, 2, 3, 45 Medic 4. Hahnernann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. LESTER S. GREIDER Dauphin, Penna. f f Xi if Y i x NX 4 . 1 lx xi ' yi V 1 l ig- X Susquehanna University Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg, Penna. CYRIL VOGEL GROSS Philadelphia. Penna. University of Michigan Bachelor of Arts St. Luke's and Childrens Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. WILLIAM LIONEL GRUBER Newark, New Iersey Rutgers University College of Pharmacy Upsala College New York University Columbia University Graduate in Pharmacy Bachelor ot Arts Newark Beth Israel Hospital Newark, New lersey HOWARD L. HAIN Elizabethtown, Penna. Catowba College Franklin and Marshall College Bachelor ot Science Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital Harrisburg, Penna. STEVEN HAMMERMAN R Philadelphia, Penna. Columbia University Bachelor of Science Phi Lambda Kappa. Coney lsland City Hospital Brooklyn, New York GEORGE WOOD HARRISON Ashland, Wisconsin University of Notre Dame Bachelor of Science St. Mary's Hospital Superior, Wisconsin 5 - s. is J HAROLD W. HENDRICKSON Camden. New Iersey University ot Pennsylvania I-lahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. PAUL IAMES HERLEY Coatesville, Penna. Villanova College University of Pennsylvania Newman Clubg Reimann Oncoloqic Societyg Medic 4. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. C. RICHARD HOLLAND Rochester, Minnesota Rochester lunior Colleqe Swedish Hospital Minneapolis, Minnesota I. SCHOFIELD HOPPING Hanover. New Iersey Louisiana State University Alpha Siqrna. Newark City Hospital Newark, New lersey CHARLES W. HOYT Hillsboro, Ohio Ohio Wesleyan University Phi Alpha Gamma: Undergraduate Society: Medic 4. Bethesda Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio FREDERICK WILLIAM HUMMEL West Belmar, New Iersey Princeton University Bachelor of Arts Class President 2. I-Iahnernann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. WW? f ALLEN ROBERT KANNAPEL i 2 Palmerton. Penna. , 1 ff t .ty Pennsylvania State College Bachelor of Science Phi Alpha Gamma: VanLennep Surgical Society. Allentown General Hospital Allentown, Perma. PETER PAUL KARPAWICH I Worcester, Massachusetts I Holy Cross College Bachelor of Philosophy Clinico-Pathologic Society, Class Treasurer l, 2, 3, Student Institute Treasurer 4, Blue and Cfold Com- mittee 4, Basketball 1, 2, 3. Worcester Memorial Hospital Worcester, Massachusetts MARTIN D. KISSEN Philadelphia. Penna. University ot Pennsylvania Bachelor ot Arts Phi Delta Epsilon, Garth W. Boer- icke Therapeutic Societyy Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4, Blue and Gold Corn- rnittee 3, 4: Class Dance Committee 1, 2, 35 Editor Class Newspaper 1, 2. St. Luke's and Children's Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. LAWRENCE IAY KOPF New York City, N. Y. Iohns Hopkins University Bachelor ot Arts Phi Delta Epsilon, Garth W. Boer- icke Therapeutic Societyg Beirnann Oncoloqic Society: Medic 4. Allentown General Hospital Allentown, Penna. 5 ' IACOB KRAUSE VX ' Norristown, Penne. ' PP 1 Temple University Ursinus College Bachelor of Science Phi Lambda Kappa, Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4. Montgomery Hospital I Norristown, Penna. RICHARD E. LANG Passaic. New Iersey Holy Cross College Phi Alpha Gamma, Reimann Cn- I cologic Society, Clinico-Pathologic Society. I St. Mary's Hospital Passaic, New Iersey HUGH IAMES LENAHAN. IR. West Pittston, Penna. Georqetown University Bachelor of Science Phi Alpha Gamma. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. RALPH IOSEPH LENOCI Bridgeport. Connecticut Fordham University Bachelor of Science Bridgeport General Hospital ' Bridgeport, Connecticut f K R, I2 BERNARD FRANCIS LEONARD a X-Q' Burlington. New Iersey Drexel Institute St. loseph's College Bachelor ot Science Newman Club lp Blue and Gold Committee 47 Basketball l, 2. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Wilmington, Delaware CARL A. LEYRER Hamilton. Ohio Miami University COhiol Phi Alpha Gamma, Garth W. Boer- icke Therapeutic Societyy Club IQ , VanLennep Surgical Societyp Class Vice President 25 Glee Club l, 2, 3, Manager 4, Blue and Gold Committee 45 Basketball l, 2, 3, Captain 4. Bethesda Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio BENIAMIN NORMAN LITMAN Philadelphia, Penna. St. loseph's College University of Pennsylvania Bachelor of Science Phi Lambda Kappap Basketball 3 St. Luke's and Childrens Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. IOHN MARTIN LOFTUS Scranton. Penncx. University of Scranton Bachelor of Science Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. IACOB SNYDER LUDWIG s. XX - Q Coatesville, Penncr. Philadelphia College ot Pharmacy and Science Franklin and Marshall College Graduate in Pharmacy VanLennep Surgical Societyg Medic 4. York Hospital York, Penna. ROBERT B. MARIN New Rochelle, New York Lafayette College Columbia University Bachelor of Science Blue and Gold Committee 4. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Wilmington, Delaware GERARD FRANCIS MCDONOUGH Manchester, New Hampshire Georgetown University Bachelor of Science Newman Club l, 2. I-lahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. EUGENE GEORGE MELLIES St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis University Pi Upsilon Rho tPresidentl 45 Ptol erny Societyp Undergraduate So cieyg Medic 4. Christian Hospital St. Louis, Missouri DAVID MELTZER Philadelphia, Penncx. Temple University Bachelor ot Arts Phi Delta Epsilon. St. Luke's and Childrens Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. ANTON LAWRENCE MERKLIN St. Louis. Missouri St. Louis University Pi Upsilon Rho. St. Louis City Hospital St. Louis, Missouri IOHN L. MEYERS Shillington, Penna. Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science Albright College Reimann Oncologic Society: Clin- ico-Pathologic Societyg Medic 4. Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital, Reading, Penna. I OHN IOSEPH MILICI New Haven, Connecticut Fordham Universtiy Loyola College Bachelor of Science Grace Hospital New Haven, Connecticut PAUL T. MILNAMOW Wilkes-Barre, Penna. Villanova Colleqe Bachelor of Science Newman Club 1, 2. Mercy Hospital Wilkes-Barre, Penna. ANTHONY I. MINELLI Elkhart Indiana Lambda Phi Mu. Huron Road Hospital Cleveland, Ohio Z fxl X FRANK DOMINICK MINERVA Brooklyn, New York University ot Alabama Bachelor of Arts Lambda Phi Mu, Newman Club l Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4g Medic 4. Frankford Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. EDWARD W. MULLIGAN Red Bank, New Iersey Gettysburg Colleqe Bachelor of Science Medic 4. St. Peter's General Hospital New Brunswick, New lersey WALLACE WELSH MUNSIE ' Decatur. Illinois Iames Millilcin University Bachelor of Arts Basketball l, 25 Medic 4, Huron Boacl Hospital Cleveland, Ohio ' IAMES V. MURPHY Lockport, New York Manhattan College University of Buffalo Bachelor of Science t Master of Arts Flushinq Hospital Flushing, New York 'L 5 K FRANKLIN K. NELK Hazleton, Penna. University ot Pennsylvania Columbia University Franklin and Marshall Bachelor ot Science Alpha Siqmap Medic, Advertising Manager 4. Pottsville Hospital Pottsville, Penna. SAMUEL OLLER Philadelphia, Penncx. Temple University Bachelor of Arts St. Lulce's and Childrens Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. I. ALBERT F. PARKER Wilmington, Delaware University oi Delaware Newman Club 1, 25 Medic 4. East Oranqe General Hospital East Orange, New Iersey IOSEPH I. PENDOLA Springfield. Massachusetts Brooklyn Colleqe St. Iol'1n's University Bachelor of Science Newman Clubg Medic 4. Mercy Hospital Springfield, Massachusetts DOMINIC IOSEPH PONTARELLI Philadelphia, Penna. Temple University Lambda Phi Mu, ll Circolo Italiano, Class Vice President 3, Hahnemann Institute, Garth W. Boericke Thera- peutic Society, Newman Club. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. LEE PULLEN Freehold, New Iersey Franklin and Marshall Bachelor of Science Phi Alpha Gamma, VanLennep Surgical Society CPresidentD 3, 4. Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital, Reading, Penna. .-...- V , fl 1 .- w F 2 I z' ' . I SAMUEL I. PUMA, IR. 1 QC 1 - Pittston, Penna. Gettysburg College Bachelor of Arts Lambda Phi Mu: Clinico-Pathologic Societyp Blue and Gold Commit- tee 4. Mercy Hospital Wilkes-Barre, Pehria. STANLEY PUPEK. IR. Conshohocken. Penncx. Villanova College Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital, Reading, Perma. KENNETH RAMIREZ-SMITH Aquadilla. Puerto Rico College of Agriculture and Mech- anical Arts University of Puerto Rico Bayamon District Hospital Bayarnon, Puerto Rico IULES A. RIEHS Philadelphia. Penna. LaSalle College Newman Club 1, 2, Blue and Gold 3, 4. St. Mary's Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. CARLOS F. RIVERA-LUGO Rio Piedrcxs. Puerto Rico University of Puerto Rico Bachelor of Science Certificate ot Social Work Newman Club l, 2: Garth W. Boer- icke Therapeutic Society. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Wilmington, Delaware IAMES A. R. ROGERS Paterson. New Iersey Muhlenberg College Bachelor of Science Undergraduate Society, Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic Society: Van Lennep Surgical Society: Meclic. St. Michaels Hospital Newark, New lersey f W ,lf f K X K f - 2 WILLIAM H. ROGERS Spring City, Penna. Muhlenberg College Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Perma. D. O. ROIAS-DAPORTA San German, Puerto Rico University of Puerto Rico VanLer1nep Surgical Society Bayamon District Hospital Bayamon, Puerto Rico ULISES LOPEZ SANABRIA San German. Puerto Rico Polytechnic lnstiute of Puerto Rico Bachelor of Arts Bayamon District Hospital Bayarnon, Puerto Rico DAVID B. SCANLAN Atlantic City, New Jersey Villanova College Bachelor ot Science VanLennep Surgical Society: Medic 4. Atlantic City Hospital Atlantic City, New Iersey NATHAN SCHARF Spring Valley. New York Cornell University Bachelor ot Science Metropolitan Hospital New York City, New York PHILIP ALBERT SCHIFALACQUA Philadelphia. Penna. Temple University Bachelor of Science ll Circolo Italiano CPresidentl 4 Newman Club l, 25 Meclic 4. St. Luke's and Chilclren's Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. 1 ' IOSEPH ALFRED SCIUTO fi , . Q X : f' H Cl K' It ! ski, - X K ff - YY 2 Lawrence, Massachusetts V1 llanova Colleqe ,ish Bachelor of Science ll Circolo Italiano, Newman Cluh l, 25 Orchestra l, 25 Blue and Gold 4. i St. Luke's Hospital New Bedford, Massachusetts FRANK A. SERENA Norwalk, Connecticut Columbia University Medic 4. Providence Homeopathic Hospital Providence, Rhode Island i f L WILLIAM IOSEPH SHAUGHNESSY Worcester. Massachusetts Holy Cross College Bachelor ot Philosophy - Clinico-Patholoqic Society CPresi- dent 45 Blue and Gold 4. Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode I Island, Providence, Rhode Island I , I I - SIDNEY SHORE I Philadelphia, Penna. Temple University Bachelor of Arts Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital, Reading Penna. IOSEPH F. SHOWERS Milton, Penncx. Bucknell University Beimanri Gricoloqic Societyp Blue and Gold 2, 35 Blue and Gold Chairman 47 Club l9 . Hahriemarin Hospital Philadelphia, Perma. IOHN JOSEPH SMERZNAK Concord, North Carolina Maryville College Bachelor of Arts Watts Hospital . Durham, N. C. fY mix X ! PAUL THOMAS SOULIOTIS Worcester, Massachusetts Syracuse University Clinico-Pathologic Societyg Medic 45 Basketball l, 2. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Perma. PETER S. SPAGNUOLO Iackson Heights. Long Island. N. Y. College of the City ot New York Holy Name Hospital Teaneck, New lersey fi FRANK HENRY sri-:GURA ,X f Ncmticoke. Penncr. - J Pennsylvania State College ' I Clinico-Pathologic Society I Wyoming Valley Homeopathic I Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, Penna. I I I RUSSEL PHILLIPS STONER Mount Ioy. Penncx. I I Franklin and Marshall College Elizabethtown College I University ot Virginia I I Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic So- I ' ciety 3, 4: Student Institute 4. I St. loseph's Hospital I I Lancaster, Penna. I I I I IOHN GORDON STRANCE Marietta. Ohio Marietta College Bachelor of Arts Garth W. Boericke Society. Bethesda Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio EUGENE C. STRAUSS Fort Dodge. Iowa University of lowa Bachelor ot Science Saint Luke's Hospital Duluth, Minnesota Therapeutic BENIAMIN FRANKLIN STREETS. IR. Sutersville, Penna. Washington and leiterson Colleqe Bachelor of Arts Phi Alpha Gaminag Medic 4. Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. IOHN SUMERS New York City, New York University of Pennsylvania Bachelor of Arts Phi Lambda Kappa Blue and Gold 4. Lincoln City Hospital New York City, New York IOHN CHALMERS SUTTON. IR. New Brighton. Penna. Washington and Iefterson Bachelor of Science Phi Alpha Gamma, Clu College b l9 Medic 45 Basketball l, 2, 3. Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. CARL FRANCIS TARLOWSKI Trenton. New Iersey Temple University Clinico-Pathologic Society. William McKinley Memor pital, Trenton, New Iersey ial Hos K HAROLD W. TELGE Manchester, New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Bachelor ol Science Homeopathic Hospital of Bhode Island, Providence, Bhode lsland ELMER EVERETT TERRELL Paris, Illinois Franklin College Bachelor of Arts Alpha Sigma tPresidentl 47 Under- graduate Societyp VanLennep Surg- ical Socetyp Club 19 g Blue and Gold 35 President Student Institute 4 Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh, Penna. FRANK P. TOCCI Verona. New Iersey New York University Bachelor of Science Lambda Phi Mug Medic 4. Harlem Hospital New York City, New York THOMAS WALTER TUCKER Dayton. Ohio University of Dayton Ohio State University Bachelor ot Science Pi Upsilon Bhog Undergraduate So cietyy Blue and Gold 4. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. l f Q f x MIGUEL ANGEL VALIENTE ig 2 Corozal, Puerto Rico University of Puerto Rico Garth W. Boericke Therapeutic So- ciety, Medic 4. Wilmington Homeopathic Hospital Wilmington, Delaware ARMAND FRANK VERGA Iersey City, New Iersey I Bucknell University Bachelor oi Science VanLennep Surgical Society: Clin- ico-Pathologic Society, Undergrad- - uate Societyp Reimann Oncologic I Society: Club l9 p Student Institute 3, 4: Class President 3, 4. ' Pitkin Memorial Hospital I Neptune, New lersey I FRANK A. VERI Lancaster, Penncx. Franklin and Marshall College Bachelor of Science Vanl,ennep Surgical Societyg Clin ico'Pathologic Soceityy Medic Busi ness Manager 4. St. loseph's Hospital Lancaster, Penna. CHARLES WILLIAM WEBER Abington, Penncz. Lehigh University Drexel lnstitute Bachelor of Science Chemical Engineer Phi Alpha Gammag Medic 4. Hahnernann Hospital Philadelphia, Perma. F ORNEY D. WINNER Lock Haven, Penna. X -g -Xi K ff N 1.11.8 -I ,X ,, 'K QQ' Dartmouth University Tulane University Pennsylvania State Colleqe Temple University University of Pennsylvania Bachelor ot Arts Master of Science Phi Alpha Gamma. Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. IOSEPH L. WITKOWSKI Shenandoah. Penna. Pennsylvania State Colleqe Hahnernann Hospital Philadelphia, Penna. 1 I R. BRUCE ZERBE Tremont, Penna. Ursinus College Bachelor of Science Alpha Siqmap Reimann Oncoloqic Societyy Blue and Gold 4. Pottsville Hospital Pottsville, Perma. DAVID N. BLOOM Philadelphia, Penna. University of Alabama Bachelor of Arts Master of Science 1913-1938 He has outsoared the shadow of our night: Envy and calumny and hate and pain. And that unrest which men miscall delight. Can touch him not and torture not again. ,K X tal.. X. 11' f -V , 1 xwjf SENICDR REFLECTICDNS Four years. . .of our allotted space. . .have passed. . .Measured by the few tangible values. . .that are the only remains of their passing. . .a receding hair line. . .a new vocabulary. . .a degree of portliness in our demeanor and appearance. . .a Doctor's degree. . .a new way of thinking. . .measured by these remains. . .those four years might have been considered. . .slow. . .and dreary. . .and well rid of. . .and so. . .become unrnourned in their passing. . . But these things. . .are but the ashes. . .not the fuel which made the four years' flame. . .burn so brightly. . .and so swiftly. . .the happenings. . .the high spots . . .the sorrows. . .the joys. . .thees are the intangibles. . .which made the four years. . .swift in their passing. . .these. . .in retrospect. . .are the things. . .which have made the past four years an unforgettable part of our lives. . . September. . .Nineteen Thirty-six. . .and by the grace of. . .acceptance committees. . .grades. . .personality. . .we were finally medical students. . .and this was registration week.. .We wandered... somewhat in awe. . .through corridors. . .ringing with the glad helloes of upper classmen. . .giving voci- ferous demonstration of their joy in finding one another back.. .Eager fresh- men.. .leading not-so-eager fathers. . .with check books in their hands. . .The counsel of upper classmen. . . don't buy those notes . . . that's a snap course . . . watch out for prof in that course . .in one ear. . .and out the other. . .and then. . .The opening exercises. . .and our first. . .of many hours to be spent in the Elkins Amphitheatre. . .and while the Provost welcomed. . .and the Trus- tees cautioned. . .and the Dean warned. . .and Dr. Beutner droned. . .we spent the time studying this first gathering.. .of the men who were to be our class- mates. . .and constant companions. . .for the next four years. . .and wondered . . .whether we looked. . .as they. . .a bit worried. . .slightly awed. . .a little concerned. . .and a touch bewildered. . .and so. . .it was. . . October. . .and nine point zero zero. . .and the beginning of our medical education. . .the tumult and the shouting were over. . .gone and far behind. . . the good luck wishes of friends and relatives. . .there remained for us. . .only a sinking feeling in the pit of the stomach.. .as the chemistry department... in full battle array.. .gave us our first inkling. . .of what we were letting our- selves in for. . .on that first morning. . .and that chem exam the first day... define a normal solution. . .and we weren't even sure what a solution was. . . Well. . .we were on the way. . .and we did lots of peculiar things those first few weeks. . .we rushed madly for front seats in all the lectures. . .took copious notes. . .sang the alma mater . . .first guiltily. . .then loudly. . .and frequently ...bought reams of worthless notes from upper classmen. . .discovered that those balconies afforded an excellent view of the nurses home. . .the babes in the woods . . .were learning fast. . .and so. . .we put a caboose on October. . . and it was. . . November. . .and our first examination.. .and the Histology department almost convinced everyone.. .that these medical school exams weren't as tough as they were cracked up to be. . .and then a week later. . .and the first exam in physiological chem...and we weren't so sure...We moved into anatomy lab...and bought our Gray's Anatomy...it seemed kind of the authorities to give us that hour rest peroid after lunch. . .we came back to earth with a thud however. . .when one of those pleasant strangers. . .always roaming through the lab. . .stopped at our table to give us a quiz one day. . . We held rowdy class meetings.. .while the founders of parliamentary pro- cedure. . .rested uneasy in their tombs. . .and for a Week or so. . .the usual 142 hall chatter of. . . l'll take Temple and six- . . .was supplanted by. . . I'll vote for your man if .... . .We discovered that the seniors didn't have the market cornered on the nurses. . .in the Hahnemann Luncheonette. . .and that a beakerful of boiling colored water.. .was an excellent way of convincing the chem department. . .of one's industriousness. . .while one was out. . .enjoy- ing a morning cup of coffee. . .The air. . .over any group of three or five gath- ered in the hall. . .was thick with pennies. . .and if this form of wooing Lady Luck was too slow.. .there was always the possibility of a crap game. . .in the back of Room B. . .before Histology lecture.. .ln the course of events... came. . .Thanksgiving vacation. . .and four days of welcome relief. . .from proteins. . .and clavicles. . .and adnexogenesis. . .and so. . .rested. . .and with a new lease on life. . .we came back to. . . December. . .and what a December. . .three hectic weeks. . .the town alive with Christmas spirit. . .spirit'?. . .with a Histology exam impending. . .everyone cheerful and happy. . .except us. . .with the approaching grand finale of the physiological chem course. . .the chem exam wasn't bad enough. . .we had to get our introduction to the firehouse lecture room? the same morning.. .all in all. . .a tough day. . .Then the final orals in chem. . .the fidgeting bunch on the bench outside the Dean's office. . .the slowly toh, so slowlyl trickling sands of that ten minute glass. . .the low murmur of voices in the hallway. . .Whad'e ask ya? . . . Wuz'e tough? . . .and the feeling we had of walking on air. .. and kicking the clouds aside. . .as we finished with Dr. Hepburn. . .and emerg- ed from his office. . .with his Merry Christmas and HCIDDY New Year . .. ringing in our ears. . .We clung to tradition and gave a Christmas party for Dr. Snyder. . .and sang Arsphenamine . . .while the good Doctor listened... and Miss Brady blushed. . .and Mike and Carlos rhumbaed. . .and Kissen stripped. . .and then did Miss Brady blush. . .We breezed through the Histology exam the next day. . .with our minds on train schedules. . .and home cooking . . .and Christmas presents. . .stopped long enough. . .on our way to trains. . . to have some of Dr. Snyder's peanuts and pretzels. . .and so. . .the three hectic weeks of December had passed. . .and we were still alive. . .and it was. .. Christmas vacation. . .and a few weeks' respite from alarm clocks. . .and restaurant food. . .lt was nice to be called Doc. . .and hem and haw knowingly . . .when the family asked you. . . what to do about Iohnny's cold . . .or that scratch on Mary's arm . . .and so. . .all too soon. . .we came back. . .to a New Year. . .and. . . Ianuary. . .Nineteen Thirty-Seven. . .and some New Year's Resolutions. . . about the amount of studying we were going to do. . .and how we were going to knock them dead . . .the second semester. . .they were promptly forgotten ...and somehow or other. . .we had a whole new set of class officers. . .cmd we analyzed everything from bananas to H :St H custard pie. . .for Dr. Hepburn ...and we kept the third floor V.F.D. busy putting out ether fires. . .Half-way through the month. . .we suddenly realized that Physical Chem. . .and Medical Terminology. . .and History of Medicine. . .had final examinations attached to them. . .and weren't just pleasant places. . .where the authorities supplied lec- tures to lull us to sleep. . .and so. . .we recalled our New Year's Resolutions. . . from the wastebaskets of our thoughts. . .and buckled down. . .and the day the chem department. . .presented us with our final grades in physiological. . . varied were the feelings. . .the pleasantly surprised A's . . .the expected B's . . .the unexpected C's . . .and the unwanted D's . . .and most of us were over the first big hurdle in our quest for an M.D. . . .and so. . .the first semester died. . .unlamented. . .and it was. . . February. . .and a new semester. . .and we were one-eighth doctors. . .as some of the boys put it. . .There were some exams. . .but they didn't bother us any more. . .There was a class dance. . .where some of the class. . .and most 143 of the class treasury. . .passed out. . .and the bull sessions waxed hot. . .in the old Kjeldahl room. . .while the more industrious ones.. .chased Topfer Units and enzymes. . .for Dr. Pearson. . .and Dr. Hepburn. . .We grew tired of watch- ing surgery clinics. . .in the amphitheatre. . .where we didn't belong. . .and grew more interested. . .in the pool tables.. .in Hering Hall.. .which was out of bounds too. . .We tried our hand. . .with some drastic results. . .at some of Dr. Borneman's. . .triturations. . .and preparations. . .and histology course be- gan to move a mile a minute. . .Neuro-histology. . .orals. . .slide quizzes. . .and the big slide quiz. . .with Zerbe beating Abbott to the draw. . .making the Whole first section. . .sit through ancient movies. . .while a bell. . .clanged every minute. . .across the hall. . .and so. . .came. . . March. . .and our first exam in Clinical Chem.. .and the firehouse again . . .but we were old hands at the game now. . .and its gloomy dankness could no longer faze us. . .March. . .and seventy beakers of urine. . .bubbling merrily over seventy Bunsen burners.. .informed everyone within a radius of a block . . .that Spring. . .had come to Hahnemann. . .Spring. . .and Dr. Chandler lurked in every corner of the third floor. . .and Pop Slocum and lim. . .had their busiest weeks. . .Spring. . .and the penny-matching took on new impetus... and the balcony outside the chem lab. . .creaked and groaned. . .under the weight of most of the assembled Freshman class. . .as the boys' thoughts lightly turned. . .to the nurses. . .across the way.. .and down in the alley below... Spring. . .with Histology over.. .and Anatomy now moving in earnest. . .and it was. . . April. . .and warm sunny afternoons spent.. .plucking at greasy muscles . . .and tracing endless nerves. . .and the electrical tension one felt throughout the entire lab. . .every Friday afternoon. . .just before the Anatomy department descended. . .en masse.. .for our weekly quiz sessions. . .the hot foot sup- planting the goose . . .as the chief class diversion. . .and Dr. Phillips'. . . How's it going, Men . . .and getting hit with everything from a cadaver wrap- ping. . .to a piece of chalk. . .and we partook. . .of Dr. Borneman's hospitality . . .and his beer. . .and his cantharides. . .and. . .lo and behold. . .it Was. . . May. . .and the home stretch. . .and we had our first taste of the Blue and Gold. . .and Hal Kemp made us like it. . .And it got hot. . .too hot to appreciate Anatomy lab. . .so We studied our anatomy in queer places. . .like Shibe Park . . .and the roof of the Parkway Library. . .and over cokes. . .in the Luncheon- ette. . .and as the virulent Spring Fever. . .gnawed at our vitals. . .the member- ship of Cholly Hoyt's T.G.l.S. Society grew by leapsand bounds.. .for eight 144 months had gone by. . .and we were tired of Anatomy. . .and Chemistry. .. and Pharmacy.. .and of each other. . .and so. . .after an interminable period ...May. . .became. .. lune. . .so for a few days. . .anatomy chased chemistry. . .and chemistry chased pharmacy. . .and pharmacy chased neuro-anatomy. . .in our troubled dreams...and there we were...the babes in the woods . . .ot eight short months ago. . .somewhat wiser. . .slightly chastened. . .very weary. . .but no longer bewildered. . .all. . .eager to take a crack. . .at the much malinged. . . Sophomore year. . .and so. . .the summer passed. . .and it was. . . September. . .Nineteen Thirty-Seven. . .and we were beginning. . . so they say. . .the toughest. . .of our four years at Hahnemann. . .and the Freshman year was already. . .only a vague collection of incidents. . .pleasant and un- pleasant. . .somewhere in the distant past. . .and we were a tanned and healthy bunch. . .resembling little. . .the drooping. . .weary group. . .which had parted company in lune. . .So. . .after a few days reminiscing. . .about the re-exams . . .and who was back. . .and who wasn't. . .and the newcomers. . .amongst the blondes. . .and brunettes. . .on Spring Garden. . .and Green Street. . .we moved into. . . October. . .and the opening exercises again. . .and we wondered whether we hal looked as sorrowful. . .the year before. . .as the new crew of Freshmen did. . .And Physiology lab. . .we won't forget those first few periods. . .with our tempers worn raw. . .by the vagaries of rubber bands. . .and elastic springs. . . and writing levers. . .with the street cars rumbling by outside...and the scrawled signature of an instructor. . .on a smoked drum. . .the almost unattainable goal of our labors. . .and trooping downstairs. . .long after five o'clock. . .grimy with smudge and shellac. . .and perhaps some vague nostalgia. . .for those de- parted days of our Freshman year. . .when no laboratory ever went beyond the five o'clock bell. . .And Anatomy. . .with us again. . .and once again. . .the little cubicles. . .on the second floor front. . .resounded with. . . Duke and four . . .and Penn and nine . . .and the blackboards. . .confronted one with the brachial. . .and cervical plexuses. . .in every color of the spectrum. . .and be- tween the dirty jokes. . .the horseplay. . .and the football. . .we managed to squeeze in a little anatomy. . .and just as we were beginning to realize. . .that Bacteriology was no picnic. . .it was. . . November. . .Which passed rather swiftly. . .while we were undergoing the daily struggle for survival in Bac. lab.. .the scourges of mankind. . .weren't very interesting as little blue or pink dots under our lenses. . .and anyway. . . 245 an afternoon spent in the lab. . .would convince anyone that we had some much better scourges in the class.. .and so. . .in the light of flaming cotton plugs. . .neath arching streams of water coming from all sides...on stools thoughtfully dampened before we sat on them. . .and ducking little missiles like test tubes or wadded gauze. . .we enjoyed our Bacteriology lab. . .while the faithful few. . .remained glued to their scopes. . .oblivious to the din above . . .Dr. Sylvis. . .combined some old neuro-anatomy. . .with some new jokes. . . but it was still our favorite siesta hour. . .and of the Navy men could sleep. . . why couldn't we. . .and Dr. Beutner. . .covered everything but the floors. . .of his lecture rooms. . .with showcards containing ze formulae . . .and Peck... bought every pharmacology text in print. . .and so. . .the month ended.. .and with it. . .remember. . . Dear Father: l'm writing this in the Bacteriology Lab- oratory, where we are studying, etc.-- . . .and so. . .with the wisecracks con- cerning that exam ringing in our ears. . .we left. . .for Thanksgiving vacation ...and came back.. .to find the holiday spirit abroad in the town... for it was. . . December. . .with Dr. Scott rambling through the nervous system. . .while we filled countless pages of notes. . .and sent acres of frogs to their Valhalla. . . in the lab.. .And we sang lingle Bells . . .with instrumental accompaniment . . .every day. . .for Dr. Sappington. . .who probably detected a plaintive note . . .in that jolly tune. . .as the pages of the Bacteriology notes dwindled. . .and our concern. . .over coming events. . .mounted. . .Christmas intervened. . .how- ever. . .so after depleting the class treasury to buy gifts for every faculty man in sight. . .we went home. . .and while the grim spectre of the approaching Bac orals. . .hovered somewhere in the background. . .we enjoyed ourselves. . .and hemmed and hawed a bit more pompously. . .when someone asked us what they should do about lohnn's cold . . .and with staph and strep. . .vague annoying figures. . .somewhere in the back of our minds. . .we returned to. . . january. . .Nineteen Thirty-Eight. . .a new year. . .and a dawning realiza- tion of just why the Sophomore year was considered tough. . .the pressure was on. . .and we were lost. . .in a bewildering maze of. . .duodenal relations. . . and life cycles of filiaria. . .and narcosis. . .and nerve synapses. . .and implied contracts. . .and the class was enveloped in an all-pervading gloom. . .which quieted the Bac lab. . .and lessened the production of paper airplanes. . .and even the most valiant. . .put away their capillary pipettes. . .and their rubber bands. . .and thus. . .in a glare of midnight oil. . .lanuary expired. . .and we had. . .all too soon we thought. . . February. . .and the week of semester finals was upon us. . .an explosive four days. . .with the last day finding us in the Bac lab.. .waiting for our orals. . .with Miss McDevitt tolling off our doom in groups of threes. . .while some roamed aimlessly. . .and some matched pennies. . .and some sat staring . . .trying to dissociate arabinose. . .from mannose. . .from hookworms. . .from capsules. . .Well. . .it ended. . .and exam week was over. . .and the semester was over. . .and We. . .were just about over. . .So. . .we celebrated. . .With a class dance. . .and once again. . .the class treasury. . .gave up the gohst. . . and with the celebrating over. . .came the knowledge that things were hap- pening about us...the second semester was gaining momentum...and it began to feel like a medical school. . .with Dr. Bristol. . .teaching some Minor Surgery. . .along with some of the queerer doings of the folks at Allentown. . . and there was even a course called Elementary Medicine.. .and we bought stetchoscopes. . .and carried them. . .three months before we needed them in Physical Diagnosis...and we puzzled a bit...over just what that Psycho- biology course was about. . .and so. . .with the year at last beginning to show some rhyme and reason. .. 146 March. . .was upon us. . .and we walked around. . .percussing doors and walls. . .and we sweated and fumed. . .trying to get cannualas into various places where they didn't belong.. .in dogs and cats. . .and we watched the Schuylkill River turned into drinking water. . .and a few weeks later saw that water. . .returned to the Delaware. . .as sewage. . .and we player switch. . . for Dr. Beutner. . .and Dr. Pearson showed us a dozen new ways of making a guinea pig feel bad. . .and before we knew it. . .another Spring had caught up with us. . .along with. . . April. . .and the urge to linger until the very last minutes of the lunch hour ...in laughing groups.. .on the shady side of Fifteenth Street. . .then regret- fully trail off to class. . .Spring. . .and white shoes. . .and paper airplanes. . . and the lost art of the hot foot revived again. . .Spring. . .and the Path De- partment. . .providing complications. . .so. . .we had another session. . .with Miss McDevitt. . .and the path lab. . .while Dr. Young's attendance. . .dwindled until only the old faithfuls remained. . .and the fourth floor. . .resembled a field station.. .after the Marne. . .as Dr. Buck taught us how to do our patients up in neat packages. . .and we had with us. . . May. . .and Dr. Beutner was still talking about Narcotics . . .and we were practically convinced that. . . failure to x-ray fractures before and after setting . . .was frowned upon in the best medical circles.. .and Dr. Shollenberg was showing signs of running out of cross-sections to talk about. . .while Dr. Scott was showing no signs of running out of systems to talk about. . .and some of the conscientious lads. . .tried to see. . .fibrosis. . .and lymphocytic infiltration . . .for Dr. Sappington's sake. . .while most of us. . .went for a walk. . .or to a ball game. . .instead. . .and somebody completed our joy. . .by lettting Anat- omy into the curricula again.. .and there we were. . .hounded from pillar to post again. . .it felt like january. . .but it was. . . june. . .so we polished off the finals. . .and the year. . .and we were half- way there. . .measured by the faculty standards. . .we had a fair groundwork for our clinical years. . .but we had our own standards. . .we could hold our beer. . .we could hit a dartboard at five yards. . .we knew every nurse in the hospital. . .in fact. . .there wasn't a thing the Seniors could do that we couldn't . . .so. . .the tough Sophomore year was over. . .and they could bring on. . . their clinical years . . .and so. . .we went to camps. . .and some became life- guards. . .and some swung picks and shovels. . .and most of us just loafed. . . until. . . October. . .Nineteen Thirty-Eight. . .and we came back. . .Iuniors. . .the laboratory and didactic work. . .far behind us. . .or so we thought. . .and this was one of the clinical years . . .and we were all set to spend our time... parading around the hospital.. .smiling condenscendingly at poor benighted Freshmen and Sophomores. . .so the class businessmen. . .did a land office business. . .in thermometers. . .and percussion hammers. . .and flashlights. . . Well...the delusion was nice while it lasted. . .but the faculty must have thought the altitude too rare for us. . .because it wasn't long. . .until we were again boiling urine. . .this time for Dr. Sappington. . .the surroundings were different. . .but the odor was the same. . .and Dr. Sylvis. . .dug up the nice black boxes of slides. . .which had plagued us through the first two years. .. and we still weren't sure we saw tumor cells. . .Even the water on our stools. . . had that old familiar feeling. . .when we sat in it. . .and so. . .with the realiza- tion this... c1inical year . . .was but a snare and a delusion.. .we settled down to work. . .and were just beginning to understand the intracicies of the Iunior schedule. . .and feeling good about our ability to find the majority of classes. . .when it was. . . 117 November. . .and we trekked. . .from Hering Hall. . .to the Annex . . .and back to l-lering Hall.. .and back again to the Annex . . .and the drizzle of lecture notes became a storm.. .and the storm became a blizzard. . .and we drowned. . .in a flood of lecture notes. . .that showed no signs of relenting. . . and the long days. . .became a succession of lectures. . .and courses. . .Dr. Mercer. . .pounded Obstetrics into us. . .and Dr. Lafferty. . .tried to drag it out ...we learned about women. . .from Dr. Frosch. . .and what they can do to men. . .from Dr. Kenworthy. . .We stopped long enough to hold a class dance J. .and this time. . .since it wasn't official. . .the class treasury lived through it. . .but it was rather quiet. . .because we wern't used to bright ballroom lights . . .after the gloom of the Annex . . .and our hands weer far more accustomed to the grip of a fountain pen. . .than the waist of a female. . .and Thanksgiving vacation came. . .to briefly dam. . .the rising tide. . .of lecture notes. . .so we all went home. . .and sprinkled our conversations. . .with cryptic remarks as. . . LOA . . .and G-l . . .and OBS and GYN . . .and G-U . . .it didn't do any harm. . .and helped the folks realize we were Iuniors. . .even if we didn't feel that way. . .and so we dragged our long and weary faces. . .back once again to mingle with. . .the cheerful holiday crowds.. .for it was. .. December. . .and a close observer.. .could see the earliest signs of the class' spirit returning...with now and then...a paper airplane...floating gently downward.. .or the thud of a well-aimed paper wad. . .awakening us from our lethargy. . .and darned if the curriculum wasn't right. . .we were seeing patients. . .so it must be a clinical year . . .Dr. Ferguson. . .was hand- ing us a bedside manner.. .with the emphasis on the hands.. .and we had reached the point. . .where we could examine a female chest. . .for Dr. McDeldowney. . .without wanting to hide under the bed. . .and we were going through the stage. . .where every lub. . .and dub. . .sounded like a murmur. . . but in spite of the patients. . .the lecture notes mounted higher. . .and the class ego. . .received another boost. . .when the Seniors departed for Allenown. .. and we were masters of all we surveyed. . .for a week. . .We didn't have much opportunity to enjoy our exalted position.. .however. . .because the first ten week section. . .ended at the same time. . .and we received our first taste. . .of the bane of all Iunior existence.. .exams. . .and there it was Christmas again ...so we all went home. . .and this time. . .when the neighbor asked us... what to do about Iohnny's cold . . .we told them.. .in five or ten thousand well-chosen words. . .and we had an enjoyable time. . .until along about the last quarter of the Rose Bowl game. . .when it occurred to a lot of us. . .that Dr. Sappington. . .and his department. . .were going to request the pleasure of our company. . .at a little session. . .soon after we got back. . .so. . .we came back ...a bit worried. . .to. . . 148 lanuary. . .Nineteen Thirty-Nine. . .and there was a brief lull before the storm. . .and we became a self-appointed body of building inspectors. . .watch- ing closely. . .every detail of construction in the new building. . .to see that nothing went wrong with our pride and ioy. . .when suddenly. . .an explosion ...and someone had put the order for. . .exams B.l.D. and T.l.D. ...on our chart. . .so we told them. . .about. . .hypochromic macrocytic anemias. . .and primary beta radiations. . .and bronchophony. . .and collecting sewers. . .and retroversion. . .and caloric requirements. . .and breast milk. . .and modalities . . .and rest, rubber sheets and a hand dip at the door. . .and so. . .in between a couple of exams. . . February. . .was born. . .and as we dashed through the Hygiene exam. . . the last one of exam week.. .most of us. . .were incapable of any feeling... except one of. . .overwhelming relief. . .But we didn't get a chance to stop bouncing. . .as we resumed the trek. . .and the lecture notes reached moun- tainous proportions. . .Dr. Ashcraft. . .fished up prostate after prostate. . .for our edification. . .and Dr. Schofield matched him. . .with hemorrhoid after hemor- rhoid. . .and Dr. Clemmer. . .introduced us to all the things that could happen to.. . the old girl . . .before, during and after. . .a visit from the stork.. .and in the Annex , . .we got all tangled up in forceps. . .while disputing the slick- ness of Mother Nature . . .with Dr. Mercer. . .and Dr. Kirby. . .was just getting warmed up on. . . REST, both mental and physical . . .and while we waited. . . for Dr. Steinhilber. . .to lecture on one disease. . .with a good prognosis. . .the month died. . .and it was. . . March. . .and we longed a bit. . .for the constant. . .hundred and five degree temperature of the Fire House.. .as the air conditioners. . .in the new lecture rooms. . .blew hot. . .and cold. . .but never temperate. . .and the stacks of lecture notes. . .began to worry us a little. . .when our thoughts drifted to May. . .whence we know. . .would come the reckoning. . .but the stacks grew . . .unheeding. . .as Dr. Leopold. . .traced gut and omentum all over the place . . .and Dr. Boericke. . .mentioned for the nteenth time. . .bloating. . .and acid eructations. . .and foul offensive discharges. . .and it sounded exactly the same ...as all the drugs.. .of all the lectures past.. .and scattered midst the note taking. . .we saw a patient or two. . .three weeks of G-U dispensary. . .without getting above the belt once. . .and Pediatrics ward assignments. . .providing a pleasant opportunity to play with toys.. .and renew our acquaintance. . .with Torn Swift. . .and the Rover Boys. . .and with Dr. Kirby. . .reiterating. . . REST ...we had... April. . .and another Spring. . .and anyone. . .who faced the front. . .in the amphitheatre...while someone in the back had a gown handy...left 149 .- rg, Vs hmiself wide open. . .for anything from a simple bruise. . .to a compound frac- ture of the skull.. .And we were getting organ accompaniment.. .to most of the lectures in Booms A and B. . .and Dr. Sylvis. . .had only to look up and point a finger. . .and they could hear our answering. . . BEST, SUNSHINE AND HYPEBNUTBITIONH. . .at City Hall. . .And some playful soul.. .touched a match to a theormostat. . .and the air conditioners.. .ceased blowing. . .even hot and cold. . .And the class marksmen discovered. . .that BB shot. . .could be aimed more accurately. . .and get a much better reaction. . .than paper wads ...so that after Dr. Frank turned out the lights. . .the center of a tornado... was much safer.. .than Boom A.. .and still.. .the lecture notes mounted.. . and Dr. Kirby. . .was still reiterating. . . BEST . . .as the month. . .gave way to... May. . .and more juniors showed up for the Blue and Gold. . .and Glen Gray. . .than had been turning up for most classes.. .and lots of the boys. . . still didn't know. . .what Dr. Miley. . .or Dr. Geckeler. . .looked like. . .and they posted an exam schedule in the office. . .and we looked at it every ten minutes ...but they were way ahead of us.. .because every time we looked. . .there were two or three more exams. . .on it. . .and we were tired. . .of sitting. . .and writing. . .and lectures. . .and clinics. . .and ourselves. . .and each other. . .and the lecture notes mounted.. .as Dr. Goldsmith sped.. .and Dr. Hollis galloped ...and Dr. Lane pounded.. .and Dr. Carpenter cajoled. . .till we felt. . .as though our heads would burst. . .with the addition of one more medical fact. . . and we looked again. . .and the exam schedule had taken on.. .a second sheet. . .and the lecture noes. . .still mounted. . .until finally. . .they wavered . . .and toppled over upon us. . .and. . .the reckoning had come. . .and some- how. . .about ten days. . .and twenty exams later. . .it was. . . Iune. . .and some more exams. . .was it twenty-five. . .or thirty-five. . .or fifty exams. . .we took. . .We were weary. . .and if we didn't know the answers . . .the guy next to us did. . .and if he didn't. . .then the devil with it. . .because we were tired. . .and we didn't care if the school burnt down. . .or they threw us out. . .or if they gave medicine back to the witch doctors. . .But it was over . . .and even the prospect of glorious Seniorhood. . .failed to stir our pulses. . . and the Iunior year was over. . .and we were tired. . .and blase. . .and. . .we didn't care. . .which was the attitude that clung to us. . .all summer. . .through lunior internships. . .and camp jobs. . .and loafing. . .and was still with us. . . when we returned to. . . . Gctober. . .Nineteen Thirty-Nine. . .and the promised land of the Senior year. . .and the world was our apple.. .And we marveled a bit. . .at the dif- ference. . .that the three tonsillectomies. . .and seven lumbar punctures. . .and ninety-eight intravenouses. . .which most of us had done during junior intern- ships .... had wrought in the appearance of our fellow classmates. . .the boys were beginning to look like Doctors...and the talk... ln my clinical ex- perience-- . . . So l told the Chief-- . . .and thus. . .all the imperceptible changes. . .which had been going on for three years. . .had crystallized. . .over the summer. . .So. . .with eight long months. . .until lune. . .and graduation. . . we commandeered the pool tables. . .and dart board in Hering Hall. . .and the pinball machine in the Luncheonette. . .and the hall in front of the cage for our bull sessions . . .for these were the pursuits of Seniors.. .from time im- memorial. . .and it was only. . . November. . .and we still had seven months of our sentence to serve out. . . but the days were moving fast. . .especially for those who were starting them at noon. . .and Dr. Klopp was broadcasting. . .on the Boom A and B hook-up. . . and we got the zykoses . . .and the Iuniors had the fun. . .and the odds were three to one. . .that any collection of two or more seniors. . .thrown together. . . would be talking about internships. . .And we started working on our second 150 carload. . .of Phenobarb. Cap. gr. ss.. .in the Medical Dispensary. . .and Dr. Boericke. . .was still mentioning. . .belching. . .and sour eructations. . .and foul secretions. . .for every drug in the book. . .and the Medical section. . .blossom- ed out in boutonierres. . .every day. . .while the sixth floor nurses. . .wondered what happened to all those flowers. . .every morning. . .And by this time. . .the Industrial Medicine lecture. . .had become a lonelier place. . .than some of the far reaches of Frankford. . .And so.. .it came to be Thanksgiving. . .and we took some time off.. .to go home and scare the family. . .with our newly acquired professional dignity. . .and chase internships. . .and eventually came back to. . . December. . .and still. . .time on our hands. . .and only three weeks to go. . .till Allentown. . .which we spent writing. . . Patient feels about same, no new complaints . . .on student sheets. . .in the wards. . .and wondering. . . whether we would ever see a case of. . .Typhoid Fever. . .and waiting for hospital elevators. . .and waiting for Miss Whelan. . .to fill out requests. . .and while waiting for all these. . .we took a few exams. . .and so. . .we waited out December. . .and it was. . .Allentown. . .here we come. . .and the ride up. . . with the ingenuity of the Senior class. . .soon overcoming the thoughtfulness of the street car company. . .who had removed bells. . .and nailed down every- thing movable in the cars.. .but had forgotten. . .that someone might venture into a lavatory.. .and so. . .having surmounted obstacles like hot boxes... and broken windows. . .we swarmed into the Americus. . .and the school authorities. . .and the Allentown Police. . .and the hotel management. . .crossed their fingers. . .while we settled down. . .for our week's stay there. . .which was rather quiet. . .considering our reputation for playfulness. . .So we spent a week. . .of mornings. . .and afternoons. . .walking through cheerless wards. . . steeped in the odor of misery. . .and listening to the tales. . .of one who was backed up against a cellar door . . .and one who was railroaded. . .and Dr. Hoffman's. . . Are you happy here . . .through the long afternoons. . .and we sought devious means at night. . .to overcome the depression. . .which the days wrought on us. . .the town had its greatest per capita consumption of beer.. .in its history. . .that week. . .and a portion of the class. . .discovered that they learn their crap shooting well. . .in Puerto Rico. . .and another portion discovered...that the business manager of their yearbook...was the only guy in the class. . .who could fill in an inside straight consistently.. .and the boys with sweethearts. . .sat around the hotel lobby at night. . .while the boys with wives back home. . .made the most of their freedom. . .and The Daugh- ters of lsrael . . .held a highly successful dance. . .and some o fthe boys grew so expert. . .that they could drop a hard roll.. .in a bowl of soup.. .at twenty tContinued on Page 2177 151 i 1 1 I I ' ,.-M-ff' .X 4, . I UNHIHHHSSIS Air, ,.?f '-511 .X-E, I 131 -E.-fb 1-5 NC ADMT AYCE J -A44 JUNIOR CLASS President .... Vice-President . . . Secretary .... Treasurer ...........,..... . . . . Student Institute Representative 154 . Lewis A. Steinhiiber . . . .Vincent A. DeRosa . . . Sidney I. Brody . . . . A. Eaton Roberts Rudolph E. Warnecke 2 ,--5.4,- ' I '1 i ..p- A X JUNIOR CLASS Adams, Lambi N. Althoff, Charles C. Arnold, Carrington G. Auringer, Arthur J. Bailey, Donald M. Ballard, George T. Battaglia, Albert J. Baum, Jerome N. Beery, Emerson B. Bekampis, Eugene H. Bogosian, Armen Bolton, Alexander A. Jr. Bozig, Albert F. Brauer, Charles K. Brill, Francis W. Britsch, William P. Jr. Brody, Sidney I. Buczkowski, Joseph T. Budenz, G. Charles Burdett. James J. Buxeda, Fernando L. Carter, Alfred G. T. Chrzanowski, John A. Cicione, Edward T. Colon-Fontan, Angel B. Concello, Joseph A. Cook, Homer E. Couch, Manfred R. Courtney, John J. Covintree, George E. Cox, Jack E. Dantzig, Henry DeBold, Charles, Jr. Degling, Erwin G. DeLuca, Joseph M. DeRosa, Vincent A. DiGiacobbe, Hugo R. Edmundson, Walter F. Eger, Saul D. Erb, Alfred W. Fas-Fagundo, Nayip Froio, Gregory F. Gebele, William X. Goodman, Herman M. Granatir, William L. Greenspan, Herbert S. Gribbin, James A. Gueovpian, Armen H. Harrop, Joseph K. Hart, J. Robert Heinrich, Ward D. Hernandez-Camara, Wilbert Hladycy, J. Jacob Hofmann, Valentine A. Hultzman, Ellis K. Kelly, Frank J. Keown, Kenneth K. Ketcham, Frederick Krounold, Milton L. Kummer, William M. Lanard, Francis W. Laufenberg, Joseph W Lavoie, Robert J. Leber, Alfred P. Legg, George E. Leman, William W. Lenhart, Amos E. Liberi, Alfred A. Linn, Robert H. Littleton, Thomas R. Lonergan, Francis J. Lovell, Donald R. Maclntyre, Donald E. Makarchek, Sigmund Matzko, Michael J. McGovern, Edward B. McIntyre, William A. Merle, James J. Mikan, Venzel R. Miller, Frank L. Mintz, Solomon S. Morgan, William F. Moyer, Warren F. O'Connor, John J. O'Hara. William A. Okulicz, Stanley J. Palmer, Arnaldo 155 Palmgren, Einar A., Jr. Patterson, Walter Pechan, Bernard W. Pennock, Thomas H. Pinto, Joseph C. Piver, William C. Prout, John W. Redcay. Robert A. Richlan, Alfred R. Roberts, A. Eaton Robinson, Irving W. Roman-Vega, Desiderio A Rosner, Albert Rosnick, Manning J. Rothrock, Willoughby J. Rush, Martin R. Ruta, John P. Sacks, Charles L. Salmon, George G., Jr. Schadel, Lees M., Jr. Schlosser, Woodrow D. Serena. M. John Simon, Edward J. Sivak, Michael V. Steinhilber, Lewis A. Stern, Francis H. Taboroff, Leonard H. Terry, Willard B. G.. Jr. Them, Albert H., Jr. Tucker, Wilson D. Tushim, Joseph N. Vetter, Thomas H. Vogel, Louis, Jr. Walsh, Redmond B. Warnecke, Rudolph E. Warner, Norman M. Weber, John I. Weber, Lennard L. Weightman, Joseph White, Richard K. Woodworth, Jess J.. Jr. Yost, Charles S. Ziegenhorn, Karl H. H. ,WJ ll in P f'-T- -if -f- 4 -i . ,J h Q -Qs. 1 wx -5 x ' rw 'fv...... - , NO ADN' T AWE L........... 1 f , 1.7.3 2 nuq M i ev-, , -. 'I e. SOPHOMORE CLASS President ...... ...... I Olin L. Kelly Vice-President .... .. . Cornelius l. Regan Secretary .... .... B ertrcrm M. Bernstein Trecxsurer .................... .... D ctniel I. McCc1rron Student lnstitute Representative . . . .... Charles O. Tyler 156 SCPHOMORE CLASS Acevedo-DeFillo, Carlos E. Allen, Joseph H. Anastor, Herbert P. Aneses-Arrache, Jose Battafarano, eLonard A. Beirne, Donald P. Bernstein, Bertram M. Billman, Howard G. Black, Daniel E., Jr. Blanchard, William H. Block, Charles Boc, Stanley F. Bogucki, Alfred S. Boros, William K. Boudwin, Norman K. Boyle, Daniel E. Brown, Frank H., Jr. Brownstein, Israel E. Brunhofer, Andrew C., Jr. Bryan, Charles E. Burnett, Joseph W. Campbell, James C. Campbell, William J. Canelis, Michael Conino-Pont, Fernando M. Canter, Donald Cassidy, Joseph A. Ciccarelli, Armanno W. Cirelli, Gerald Morris Corbett, William T. Crane, Nathan Croyle, Ray W. Davilla-Boria, Julio E. DePiero, Nicholas Deshong, Howard C. DiRocco, Vincent P. Duffy, Robert W. Etzl, Michael M. Faller, William W. Faringer, David R., Jr. Febbraro, Anthony A. Fitzgerald, Orville M. Furey, Charles A. Geyer, Samuel V. Gregg, Lester O., Jr. Guarini, Pasquale Gutnick, Morton Hall, John R. Hamborsky, Eugene M. Hare, James Harps, James A. Hauck, Francis A. Hege, John H. Hess, Chester C. Hill, Robert C. Horner, John I. Hughes, David W. Hughes, Lloyd W. Hulick, George S. Jenike, Thomas S. Kelly, John L. Kimble, Leroy R. King, Cedric S. Kobylanski, Joseph M. Kowalqk, Edward A. Kozak, Walter H. Kram, John E. Kraus, Edward I. Krick, Earl S. Krzywicki, Paul L. Kullbom, Kenneth B. Ledden, Lewis J. Leibundguth. Henry Luddecke, Hugh F. Magilner, Louis Manuzak, Hubert F. Marconus, Joseph T. Marino, Daniel J. Matlack, Harold E. Mazor, Jack McCarron, Daniel J. McCormack, George A.. Jr. McMarland, Malcolm D. Melenkevitz, Victor T. Merscher, Walter F. Meile, John G. Mikesic, Michael G. Miller, Walter Moser, Christian E. Mosig, John J. 157 Mudafort, Sarkis M. Nadworny, Adolph J. Norley, Walter N., Jr. Ragan, Joseph M., Jr. Ranallo, John J. Reeves, James A. Regan, Cornelius J. Reilly, Joseph B. Reithmayer, Edward N. Ritter, Charles W. Roasberry, William R. Robinson, James J. Robinson, Joseph Ronan, Robert B. Rosario-Santos, Angel R Rosenberg, Hyman Rosenstein, Herman Ross, John T. Roth, John F. Rugh, P. Wallace Scanlon, James G. Seyler, Raymon Q. Shields, William E. Shinkawa. Shigeo Shiraishi, Toyohiko J. Smith, William T. Starcke, Sewell K. Strenski, John Sudimack, George A. Sverdlik, Samuel S. Swick, Jesse H. Szary, Leo J. Talmage, Walter R. Tanous, John H. Tihansky, Theodore B. Tindall. Herbert L. Touzeau, Arthur T. Tyler, Charles O. Usserow, M. Robert VanMater, John S. Weinstock. Jerome L. Werts, Kenneth G. White, Philip F. Williams, Russell K. Yocum, Paul H. . I W. 1- I-taH..1 SJ no AoM.r.ANc:, list t FRESHMAN CLASS President ..... ....... B ede F. Howard Vice-President .... .... W illiam I. McHugh, Ir. Treasurer . . . .... Ioseph I. Leskin Secretary .........,........... .... M ax H. Goldstein Student Institute Representative .... .... F rank I. Frosch, Ir. 158 FRESHMAN CLASS Allebach, Gustave S. Alvin, John A. Apple, Stanley B. Arsenios, Geore D. Atkins, John H. Balin, Solomon L. Batten, James C. Beckert, Rudolph H. Berman, Richard Bolton, John D. Brady, Francis J. E. Brewer, Wesley D. Brumersky, Harry J. Byrne, William A. Carter, Edward F., Jr Clark, Morris B., Jr. Coane, Morton R. Cohn, Edwin M. Coltman, Arthur B. Congello, Anthony M. Conrad, Donald C. Cooper, William M. Costello, Daniel F. Cullen, Charles J. Cunningham, Howard Danner, Donald M. Davis, James C., Jr. K. DeDominics, Frank A. Delafrange, Kenneth Duck, Walter O. Duffy, John M., Jr. Dunsmore, Rembrand Ezaki, Toshio Fedack, William J. Fischer, Herman Fitzpatrick, John F. Flynn, Paul L. Foster, Hollis J., Jr. Fox, Wesley B. Frosch, Frank J., Jr. Gallagher, Leo B. Gibbons, Robert F. Giddings, Lane Gizinski, Norbert S. Golden, Robert J. Goldstein, Max R. Gorman, John J. Grasley, William C. Grieco, Victor F. Grotzinger, Paul J. G. M. t H. Hamilton, George R. Hammond, Willis E. Hanna, Louis E. Hanysh. Myron C-. Hechler, Robert F. Hely, Charles J. Hereter-Alvarez, Jorge A. Herring, Livious D. Hess, Ivan W. Hess, Paul G. Hetzler, Clyde W. Heydt, Ernest H., Jr. Hoffman, Harry P. Howard, Bede F. Howrie, William C. F., Jr. Hunter, Albert L., Jr. Irwin, Richard M. Iungerich, Alexander Jancisics, Mathew J., Jr Jarrett, Paul B. Kassell, Martin B. Kistler, Kermit K. Klimkevich, Albert J. Knox, Frederick H., Jr. Konecke, Carl J. Kowallek, Paul J., Jr. Krebs, Ernst T. Krieger, Harry L. Kumkumian, Edward S. Lake, George L. Lapihuska, William Lapin, Alfred R. Laudenslager, E. Clifford Leeper, Robert H. Lepore, John Leskin, Joseph J. Lipschutz, Arthur Lynch, Michael F. Maida, Gennaro G. Mancinelli, Mario J. Martinez-Funes, Jose F. Massey, Franklin C. McAvoy, Harry D. McClimans, Frank E. McHugh, William J., Jr. McKee, Wayne O. Meng, Ralph H. Mohnach, Vladimir Morison, James P. 159 Morris, Raymond A. Muchlado, Felix J. Mullarkey, James W. Murphy, Foster E. Murphy, Ian D. Nahas, Elias N. Noel, John A. Norley, Theodore Novak, Edward J. Oyer, Robert S. Paisley, Ellwood S. Petrone, Peter A. Polevoy, Pomeroy E. Policarpo, Nicholas J. A Poulsen, Russell P. Pullen, Harvey T. Rambo, Oscar N., Jr. Records, Sarl J. Rudnick, Herman D. Scarpa, Harry C. Schmick, Jesse E. Scott, William D. Sellers, David E., Jr. Sexton, Richard J. Seybold, Carl S., Jr. Shade, Jacob G. Shepard, Vitol S. Shields, Henry A. Sholler, Nicholas A. Skyer, Joseph R. Sollami, William R. Sollot, Herbert Soss, Thomas L. Staples, Herman D. Stewart, John A. Stoecklein, Herbert G. J. Stovall, Henry P. Teskey, William F. Toth, William VanSaun, William A. Vazquez-Milan, Hiram vonDeilen, Arthur W. Wagener, William L., Jr Wells, Fullerton B. H. Williams, Richard D. Wilson, George W. Witherspoon, Robert G. Wrona, Eugene A. Yost, George F. Zogby, Albert J. ,X ,if FHHHHNHHS .475T7?5 rf?-.71 IAF YT 252 1 , i. 5 ff- g ,, ,LW 2-, 'E S I : .15 1 3. , if 44 ,WY Hrfk.3,X,x 'RJ . ' . f xiii- I llmq' 1 gl X! I ll Q ldll mmm I 0 ft-1' 's lj M 'K' Wg A .A P 'ip 0 l:.s::a'm '4 Q 'lmvl' -I .mg M' it ll In PM mi . HIIIIIU. ay f-+0099 PHI ALPHA GAMMA President .... Vice President Treasurer .... Secretary .... Editor .... GAMMA CHAPTER 162 William R. Clarkson George E. Engelhard . . Alan R. Kannapel . . . Amos E. Lenhert Lewis A. Steinhilber Carl F. Buechle Henry H. Canton William R. Clarkson Joseph W. Ehrhart George E. Engelhard Kenneth D. Ervin Carrington G. Arnold Arthur J. Auringer Donald M. Bailey merson B. Beery George E. Covintree Walter F. Edmundson William H. Blanchard Robert W. Duifey James Hare John H. Atkins Morris B. Clark, Jr. Walter O. Duck Rembrandt H. Dunsmore Wesley B. Fox Frank J. Frosch, Jr. Horst A. Agerty, M.D. O. F. Barthmaier, M.D. Michael J. Bennett, M.D. Paul J. Burkett, M.D. J. Antrim Crellin, M.D. Henry L. Crowther, M.D. John H. Davie, M.D. H. Franklin Flanagan, M.D. Carl C. Fischer, M.D. Frank J. Frosch, M.D. Richard R. Gates, M.D. Russell D. Geary, M.D. Theodore C. Geary, M.D. J. Rawlins Ginther, M.D. Arthur J. Hartley, M.D. Class of 1940 Russell M. Evans Everardo Goyanes Charles W. Hoyt Alan R. Kannapel Richard E. Lang Class oi 1941 Robert J. Hart Kenneth K. Keown Joseph W. Laufenberg Amos E. Lenhert Francis J. Lonergan Class of 1942 David W. Hughes George S. Hulick Thomas S. Jenike Class of 1943 Ernest H. Heydt, Jr. Harry P. Hoffman Frederick H. Knox, Jr. Robert H. Leeper Wayne O. McKee Theodore Norley Ellwood S. Paisley Fraters in Facultate Oscar E. Heim, M.D. Warren S. Hoenstine, M.D. Romaine C. Hoffman, M.D. John E. James, M.D. J. Miller Kenworthy, M.D. Paul M. Kistler, M.D. Warren S. Kistler, M.D. Henry D. Lafferty, M.D. Lowell L. Lane, M.D. Jacob H. Lehman, M.D. Bruce V. MacFayden. M.D. John H. McCutcheon, M.D. William L. Martin, M.D. George H. McKeoWn, M.D. 163 Hugh J. Lenahan Carl A. Lcyrer Lee Pullen Benjamin F. Streets John C. Sutton. Jr. Charles W. Weber Bernard W. Pechan William C. Piver Lewis A. Steinhilber Jess J. Woodworth, Jr. Charles S. Yost Carl H. H. Ziegenhorn Malcolm D. McFarland William R. Roasberry Robert B. Ronan Russell P. Poulsen Carl J. Records William D. Scott Herbert G. J. Stoecklein William Toth Robert G. Witherspoon Harry B. Mark, M.D. Robert J. McNeill, Jr., M.D Albert Mutch, M.D. David Northrop, M.D. Richard F. Northrop, M.D. Desiderio Roman, M.D. S. W. Sappington, M.D. James Seligman, M.D. Alfred R. Seraphin, M.D. E. Dallett Sharpless, M.D. C. L. Shollenberger, M.D. Walter J. Snyder, M.D. E. A. Steinhilber. M.D. William H. Sylvis, M.D. Peter J. Warter, M.D. GEM Q gm? A Z ALPHA SIGMA BETA CHAPTER President ....... .... E lmer Everett Terrell Vice President ..... ............ H Omer Elms Cook Secretary ....... ...... F rcmcis William Lcmcxrd Treasurer ..... ......... R obert Bruce Zerbe 164 Hugh Joseph Burns Francis Walter Brill Alfred Gabriel Thomas Carter Homer Elms Cook Charles DeBold, Jr. Erwin George Degling Frank Halstead Brown, Jr. Orville Moyer Fitzgerald John Leo Kelley, Jr. Edward Adam Kowalyk Walter Harold Kozak William Austin Byrne Edward Fenton Carter, Jr. William Marion Cooper John Anderson Stewart William John Fedak Garth W. Boericke, M.D. Lester Leroy Bower, M.D. William Buck, M.D. E. W. Campbell, M.D., F.A.C.S. Joseph C. F. Clay, M.D. Leon Clemmer, M.D., F.A.C.S. James H. Clossen, 3rd, M.D. Earl B. Craig, M.D., F.A.C.S. Pasquale Damiani, M.D. Thomas F. Doyle, M.D. Harry Evans, Jr., M.D. D. R. Ferguson, M.D., F.A.C.P. Gerald A. Fincke, M.D. H. Russell Fisher, M.D. Charles D. Fox, M.D. Edwin O. Geckeler, M.D. Class of 1940 John Schofield Hopping Franklin Kugler Nelk Class of 1941 Armen Haik Gueovjian Ward Dittmar Heinrich Francis William Lanard Robert Hayes Linn Class of 1942 Henry Leibundguth Hugh Freer Luddecke Edwin Nyce Reithmayer Herbert Lincoln Tindall Class of 1943 Robert Francis Gibbons Robert Joseph Golden William Charles Grasley Livious Duncan Herring Fraters in Facultate George D. Geckeler, M.D. James M. Godfrey, M.D. Carroll F. Haines, M.D. Edmund G. Hessert, M.D. N. Fulmer Hoffman, M.D. C. B. Hollis, M.D., F.A.C.S. Donald T. Jones, M.D. Wayne T. Killian, M.D. Richard W. Larer, M.D. N. Volney Ludwick, M.D. Russell S. Magee, M.D. Russell K. Mattern, M.D. Carroll R. McClure, M.D. Joseph McEldowney, M.D. Raymond Moyer, M. D. Frank O. Nagle, M.D. George R. Neff, M.D. 165 Robert Bruce Zerbe Sigmund John lvlakarchek Stanley John Okuliez Alfred Ralph Richlan Mario John Serena Joseph Nicholas Tushim Charles Orlan Tyler John Stroud VanMater Donald Peter Beirne Francis James Kelley, Jr. Russell Kenneth Williams Frank Eugene McClimans James Peters Morrison Jesse Elias Schmick William Francis Teskey Fullerton Barton Hartley Wells N. F. Paxson, M.D., F.A.C.S. Fred C. Peters. M.D. John H. Reading, M.D. Charles F. Rieger, M.D. Henry S. Ruth, M.D. James D. Schofield, M.D. E. R. Snader, M.D.,F.A.C.P. H. Earl Twining, M.D Everett A. Tyler, M.D. Edward P. VanTine, M.D. Frederick J. von Rapp Thomas I. Visher. M.D. Harry S. Weaver, Jr., M.D. A. B. Webster. M.D., F.A.C.S. William W. Young, M.D. Arthur W. Waddington. M.D. i E ff' ,C I.o.. Y 'E'-' 9 ff!! LL ' .FS K LBMHI5-5 121-12143 T .p,X s S 5 PI UPSILON R President ...... Vice President . . . Secretary ............. Corresponding Secretary Treasurer ............. VERTEBRA QUARTZ-X 166 . . . Eugene G. Mellies Reuben I. Dierwechter . . . . Iacob I. Hladycz Redmond B. I. Walsh . . Thomas W. Tucker H0 John H. Abbott Reuben J. Dierwechter Joseph A. Concello William X. Gebele, Jr. Jacob J. Hladycz Frederick Ketcham Leonard A. Battafarano Daniel E. Boyle Charles A. Furey, Jr. John Robert Leo Hall Toshio Ezaki Dr. John V. Allen Dr. Leon T. Ashcraft Dr. William F. Baker Dr. Frank C. Benson, Jr. Dr. Ralph Bernstein Dr. James B. Bert Dr. Henry G. Blessing Dr. John A. Borneman Dr. Howard S. Busler Dr. Eugene F. Carpenter Dr. Hunter S. Cook Dr. Joseph R. Criswell Dr. Everett H. Dickinson Dr.H. M. Eberhard Dr. Grant O. Favorite Dr. Melville A. Goldsmith Dr. Nathan Griffith Class of 1940 Herbert K. Goff Auton L. Merklin Class of 1941 Alfred A. Liberi Einar A. Palmgren, Jr. Robert A. Rcdcay Desiderio A. V. Roman Class of 1942 Christian E. Moser Cornelius J. Regan Joseph M. Ragan Class of 1943 Kermit K. Kistler Fraters in Fcrcultate Dr. William B. Griggs Dr. Joseph S. Hepburn Dr. Robert A. Hibbs Dr. H. F. Hoffman Dr. J. A. Honeff Dr. Francis M. James Dr.W. E. Kepler Dr. Dunne W. Kirby Dr. Jules J. Klain Dr. Henry I. Klopp Dr. A. E. Krick Dr. Charles F. Kutteroff Dr. Harry P. Landis Dr. Charles E. Lawson Dr. George Lorenz, Jr. Dr. Warren C. Mercer Dr. Paul A. Metzger 167 Eugene G. Mellies Thomas W. Tucker Willoughby J. Rothrock, Woodrow D. Schlosser Edward J. Simon Redmond B. J. Walsh Joseph B. Reilly Toyohiko J. Shiraishi George A. Sudimack Arthur T. Touzeau Pomeroy E. Polevoy Dr.M. F. Ondovchak Dr. Gilbert J. Palen Dr. Thomas W. Phillips Dr.Desiderio Roman Dr. Rowland Ricketts Dr. Albert R. Rihl Dr. George J. Rilling Dr. William G. Schmidt Dr. Thomas M. Snyder Dr. Henry L. Somers Dr.L. Thomas Sooy Dr. Leander P. Tori J Dr. Gustave A. Van Lennep Dr. G. Harlan Wells Dr. Charles J. White Dr. Frank H. Widman Dr. Paul C. Wittman 1 Q9 fix X 1, ' ' ' ' 1. II! .ir i E A X - 1 ry, T' , 1 L9 H E P1-11 DELTA EPSILGN BETA ZETA CHAPTER i 5 5 i Q Q 1 A 5 12 OFFICERS Consul ........ ...... L eon Glassman Senior Senator .. .... Milton Ackerman Vice Consul .... Martin D. Kissen Junior Senator .... Lennard L Weber Scribe ..... ........ S aul D. Eger Historian .,... ...... C harles Block Chancellor .............. Jerome N. Baum Marshal . .. ....... Louis Magilner Class of 1940 Milton Ackerman Leon Glassman Martin D. Kissen Lawrence J. Kopf Class of 1941 Jerame N. Baum Saul D. Eger Charles L. Sacks Lennard L. Weber Class of 1942 Bertram M. Bernstein Clharles Block Donald Canter Morton Gutnick Louis Magilner Jack Mazor Walter Miller Hyman Rosenberg Herman Rosenstein Samuel S. Sverdlick Jerame L. Weinstock Fraters in Facultate Herman J. Lubowitz, M.D. 168 Class of 1943 Richard Berman Morton R. Coane Edwin M. Cohn Arthur B. Coltman Herman Fischer Max R. Goldstein Martin B. Kassell Arthur Lipschutz Herman D. Rudnick Herman D. Stalpes PHI LAMBDA KAPPA 1 5 f . 1 i OFFICERS Superior .... Maurice B. Gordon Scribe ...... ...Leonard H. Taboroff Chancellor ., ........ Leon M. Carp Treasurer .... ..,...... A lbcrt Rosner Class of 1940 Leon M. Ciarp Maurice B. Gordon Sol Hammerman Jacob Krause Benjamin N. Litman John Sumers Class of 1941 Sidney I. Brody Herman M. Goodman William L. Granatir Herbert S. Greenspan Ellis K. Hultzman Milton K. Kroungold Frank L. Miller Solomon S. Mintz Irving W. Robinson Albert Rosner Manning J. Rosnick Francis H. Stern Leonard H. Taboroff Class of 1942 William K. Boros Israel E. Brownstein Nathan Crane Joseph Robinson Class of 1943 Solomon L. Balin Harry L. Krieger Joseph R. Skycr Fraters in Facultate Dr.L. A. Frankel Dr.M. Fiterman Dr.W. Klinman Dr. L. S. Lipsitz Dr. J. W. Messey Dr.H. M. Sharkis Dr.W. S. Silverman Dr.H. L. Weinstock 0 .-45-, -A Q- at 4:5 N 1 AVN lb WQQZ LQQC ll war A . L31 K A V M . JL LAMBDA PHI MU 23' OFFICERS President ....... .... J ohn R. Amato Vice President ..........,. Frank P. Tocci Secretary .,........... Anthony J. Minelli Corresponding Secy.Ernani V. M. DiMassa Treasurer .... August A. Ciotola Chaplain ......,.. ...Joseph T. Cortese Historian ............. Frank D. Minerva Sergeant-at Arms ...... Joseph A. DeCaro Class of 1940 John R. Amato Peter J. Cetta Augustine A. Ciotola Joseph T. Cortese Joseph A. DeCaro Ernani V. M. DiMassa Anthony J. Minelli Frank D. Minerva Dominic J. Pontarelli Frank P. Tocci Class of 1941 Class of 1943 Albert J. Battaglia John A. Alvin Frank A. DeDominicis Victor F. Grieco John Lepore Peter A. Petrone Class of 1942 Mario G. Cirelli Daniel J. Marino John G. Miele Fraters in Facultate John J. Ranallo, Jr. A. DeBiacomo, M.D. 170 We an I IL CIRCCLO ITALIANO I 4 kv' HBS. OFFICERS President ......... Philip A. Schifalacqua Secretary ........... John J. Ranallo, Jr. Vice President .......... Joseph A. Sciuto Treasurer .......,..,. Albert J. Battaglia Class of 1940 Joseph A. DeCaro Ernani V. M. DiMassa Dominic J. Pontarelli Philip A. Schifalacqua Joseph A. Sciuto Class of 1941 Albert J. Battaglia Joseph A. Concello Gregory F. W. Froio Councellor ...,......... Joseph A. DeCaro Class of 1942 Leonard A. Battafarano Armanno W. Ciccarelli Mario G. Cirelli Vincent P. DiRocco Nicholas DePiero Pasquale Guarini Daniel J. Marino John G. Miele John J. Ranallo Class of 1943 Frank A. DeDominicis Nicholas J. A. Policarpo Harry C. Scarpa Fraters in Facultate P. G. Damiani, M.D. L. P. Tori. M.D. P. J. Garnbescia, M.D. H. R. Giordano, M.D. A. L. Pierro, M.D. W x Ill e T gllllhn co ' G, Q' nfl' lf. 1 X s Q iq gysf n..-- , ,'l o oo ,GX NEWMAN CLUB l I Q 1 f ' fe as Q Q OFFICERS President ...... George A. McCormack, Jr. Treasurer ......... Fernando Canino-Pont Vice President ............ Paul L. Flynn Recording Secretary. . .William R. Sollami Class of 1941 Albert F. Bozic Class of 1942 Carlos E. Acevedo-Defillo Jose Aneses-Arrache Leonard A. Battafarano Daniel E. Black. Jr. Alfred S. Bogucki Daniel E. Boyle Andrew C. Brunhofer, Jr. Joseph A. Cassidy Gerald Mario Cirelli Julio E. Davilla-Boria Nicholas DePiero Robert W. Duffy Corresponding Sec'y, .Arrnanno Ciccarelli Anthony A. Febraro Charles A. Furey John R. Hall John L. Kelly John E. Kram Edward I. Kraus Paul L. Krzywicki Hubert F. Manuzak Joseph T. Marconus Daniel J. Marino Daniel J. McCarron John T. Ross James G. Scanlon George A. Sudimack Leo J. Szary Class of 1943 Harry J. Brurnersky William A. Byrne Anthony M. Congello Frank A. DeDominicis George A. McCormack, Jr.John M. Duffy, Jr. Cornelius J. Regan Joseph B. Reilly Charles W. Ritter James J. Robinson Angel R. Rosario-Santos 172 John F. Fitzpatrick Leo B. Gallagher Robert F. Gibbons Norbert S. Gizinski John J. Gorman Charles J. Hely Jorge A. Hereter-Alvarez Mathew J. Jancsics, Jr. Albert J. Klimkevich William Lapihusko Joseph J. Leskin Jose F. Martinez-Funes Harry D. McAvoy William J. McHugh, Jr. Vladimir Mohnach William R. Sollami William F. Teskey Hiram Vazquez-Milan Arthur W. vonDei1en Eugene A. Wrona Albert J. Zogby x 1 i E 3 N 1 4-' s J 4 I o tn f ff' ' 4- Z , S2 S I U . -- , 'C . ' 'L' , 'A ' 1 , pu- .Q 6 mu ll' ,fi- As , ' , ig N W.-if, Student Institute OFFICERS President ....... ............ ...... E l mer E Terrell Vice President .... .... D orninic I Pontarelli Secretary ...... .... P eter Paul Karpawich Treasurer ..... .... R owland B Engle Class Representatives Class oi 1940 Class of 1942 Armand F. Veraa Russel P. Stoner Class of 1941 Lewis A. Steinhilber Rudolph E. Warnecke lohn L. Kelly Charles O. Tyler Class of Bede F. Howard Prank I. Frosch, lr. 176 1943 'll G G1ee Club 35 i PQ I .mm OFFICERS Director ...... .............. .... R i chard 1. Darnell, '40 Accompanist . . . . . . Paul L. Krzywicki, '42 Manager ......... ...... C arl A. Leyrer, '40 Faculty Adviser ........ .... D r. Hunter S. Cook, '27 First Tenor Robert A. Redcay, '41 Donald P. Bierne, '42 loseph A. Cassidy, '42 Hugh F. Luddecke, '42 Robert S. Oyer, '43 Second Tenor loseph M. Faso, '40 Sidney 1. Brody, '41 I. Robert Hart, '41 Manning 1. Rosnick, '41 William K. Boros, '42 loseph Robinson, '42 Arthur B. Coltman, '43 Ernest H. Heydt, lr., '43 First Bass Martin D. Kissen, '40 Frank D. Minerva, '40 Charles S. Yost, '41 lrving W. Robinson, '41 Charles Block, '42 Louis Magilner, '42 lack Mazor, '42 Martin B. Kassell, '43 Second Bass Milton Ackerman, '40 loseph W. Ehrhart, '40 Herbert S. Greenspan, '41 loseph W. Burnett, '42 lames C. Campbell, '42 William C. Grasley, '43 Henry A. Shields, '43 lan D. Murphy, '43 Vladimir Mohnach, '43 Orchestra Conductor . . . Manager .... Violins George W. Laufenberg, '41 William M. Kummer, '41 George E. Covintree, '41 Alfred C. B. Carter, '41 Hugh F. Luddecke, '42 Pomeroy E. Polevoy, '43 Paul I. G. Grotzinger, '43 Frank A. Dellominicis, '4 3 Anthony lvl. Congello, '43 Trumpets Donald B. Lovell, '41 William H. Blanchard, '42 Thomas L. Soss, '43 Trombones Francis W. Brill, '41 Clittord E. Laudenslager, '43 .. . William W. Leman 41 Richard K. White 41 Saxophones Walter F. Edmundson, '41 William I. Campbell, '42 lesse Howard Swick, '42 Clarinets Nathan Crane, '42 lohn R. L. Hall, '42 Lane Giddings, '43 Eugene A. Wrona, '43 William C. Grasley, '43 Russel P. Poulsen, '43 Tuba Allred P. Leber, '41 Piano Paul L. A. Kryzywicki, '42 Drums Alexander A. Bolton, '41 178 Basketball Team J. . . . Henry H Canton Carl A leyrer . . . . Franklin A Bonternpo Coach .... Captain .... Manager . . . Class of 1940 Franklin A. Bontempo Peter Paul Karpawich Henry H. Canton Emerson B. Beery Eugene H. Bekampis Andrew C. Brunhofer Charles E. Bryan Carl A. Leyrer Class oi 1941 Alexander A. Bolton, Ir. Kenneth K. Keown Class of 1942 Michael M. Etzl Henry Leibundguth Hyman Rosenberg Class of 1943 Herman D. Rudnick 179 -.,..... Blue and Gold Ball OFFICERS Chairman ....... ............. . . . loseph F. Showers, lr. Vice Chairman .... .... .... E v erardo Goyanes Secretary ..... .......... B obert H. Linn Treasurer .... ............... . . . Peter Paul Karpawich Class of 1940 Franklin A. Bontempo Carl A. Leyrer loseph A. Sciuto Kenneth duBois Ervin Bobert B. Marin William l. Shauqhnessy Bussel M. Evans Anthony I. Minelli lohn Sumers loseph M. Faso Samuel A. Puma, Ir. Carl F. Tarlowski Martin D. Kissen lules A. Biehs Thomas W. Tucker Bernard F. Leonard Carlos F. Bivera-Lugo Bobert B. Zerbe Class of 1941 Alexander A. Bolton Francis I. Lonerqan William P. Britsch, Ir. Thomas H. Pennock Class of 1942 Donald P. Beirne David W. Hughes George A. Sudimack Class of 1943 Harry D. McAvov lacob G. Shade 180 Boericke Therapeutic Society NOC? FW .ms OFFICERS President . .. ............ .... R ichard l. Darnell Secretary ......... ....... L awrence l. Kopf Faculty Adviser .... . .... Dr. Garth W. Boericke Class of 1940 Lawrence l. Kopi Carl A. Leyrer Dominic l. Pontarelli Carlos F. Rivera-Lugo lames A. R. Rogers Russel P. Stoner lohn G. Strance Miguel A. Valiente-Carreno Milton Ackerman Raymond W. Cronlund Richard l. Darnell loseph M. Faso Herbert K. Golf Everardo Goyanes Martin D. Kissen Class of 1941 Arnaldo Palmer A. Eaton Roberts Albert H. Them, lr. Norman M. Warner Charles S. Yost Nayip Fas-Fagundo l. lacob Hladycz George E. Legg Francis I. Lonergan Stanley l. Okulicz 181 Reimann Cncologic SOC19tY President .......... Vice President ....... Secretary-Treasurer .... Sponsor ............. loseph W. Ehrhart loseph M. Faso George W. Harrison Paul I. 1-lerley Lawrence l. Kopf Amos E. Lenhert Alfred R. Richlan loseph A. Cassidy Thomas S. lenike 1 1 OFFICERS ....losephW.Ehrhart .........EatonA.Roberts Lawrence l. Kopf . . . . Stanley P. Reimann, M.D. Class of 1940 Richard E. Lanq lohn L. Meyers loseph lj. Showers Armand F. Verqa Robert B. Zerbe Class of 1941 Eaton A. Roberts Willoughby l. Rothrock Lewis A. Steinhilber Class of 1942 lohn L. Kelly Daniel I. Marino Christian E. Moser 182 Van Lennep Surgical Society OFFICERS President ...... Vice President ....... . . Secretary-Treasurer .... .... Sponsor ........... Honorary Members Dr. Charles P. Bailey Dr. Theodore C. Geary Members Class of 1940 Herbert K. Goff Bverardo Goyanes Raymond W. Cronlund Maurice B. Gordon Hugh I. Burns William B. Clarkson Beuhen I. Dierwechter Alan B. Kannapel Kenneth duBois Ervin Carl A. Leyrer Class of 1941 Alexander A. Bolton Amos E. Lenhert Fernando L. Buxeda Sigmund I. Makarchek Iames B. Hart Venzel B. Mikan Francis I. Kelly Thomas H. Pennock George E. Legg William C. Piver . . .... Lee Pullen Frank A.Veri .........Iames A. B. Bogers Gustave A.VanLennep,M.D. Dr. Wm. F. Bhienhoif, Ir. Iacob S. Ludwig D. O. Bojas-Daporta David B. Scanlon Elmer E. Terrell Armand F. Verga Alfred B. Bichlan Irving W. Bobinson Desiderio A. Boman-Vega Albert H. Them, Ir. Norman M. Warner 183 so Undergraduate SOC1etY Corresponding Secretary .... Faculty Sponsor ........ William H. Clarkson Stephen Derkach Harold H. Evans Russell M, Evans Pattison Fulton Herbert K. Goff, lr. OFFICERS Kenneth cluBois Ervin . . . . . . . Eugene G Mellles . . . . Dr. William W Young Members Everardo Goyanes Charles W. Hoyt Eugene G. Mellies lames A. R. Rogers Elmer E. Terrel Thomas W. Tucker Armand F. Verga 184 Clinico-Pathologic Society Y.... .....,.i, .., ,, ,, , . , V 'W in n F President . . . Sponsor .... Class oi Peter P. Karpawich Richard E. Lana Iohn L. Meyers Samuel I. Puma Frank 1-1. Stequra Paul T. Souliotis Carl F. Tarlowski Armand F. Verqa Frank A. Veri OFFICERS ....WilliamI.Sl'1auqhnessy H. Russel Fisher, MD. Members 1940 Class oi 1941 Francis W. Brill loseph K. Harrop lames R. Hart Francis I. Kelly, Ir. Robert l. Lavoie Siqmund I. Makarchek William A. Mclntyre William A. O'Hara Alfred R. Richlan Alfred E. Roberts 185 Club Nineteen 'AF Franklin A. Bontempo Carl F. Buechle Hugh I. Burns Henry H. Canton loseph W. Ehrhart Harold H. Evans Members Russel M. Evans Carl A. Leyrer loseph E. Showers Iohn C. Sutton Elmer E. Terrel Armand E. Verqa Alfred H. Richlan 185 Craig Gynecologic Society President ...... .... A mos E. Lenhert Vice President . . . .... Bernard W. Pechan Secretary .... Karl H. Zieqenhorn Sponsor .... Earl B. Craiq, MD. Members Walter F. Edrnunson Alfred W. Erb Amos E. Lenheri Robert H. Linn Bernard W. Pecnan Lewis A. Steinhilber Karl H. Zieqenhorn 187 Cir-culo Hispanoamericano C Q I Class of 1940 Lorenzo Arsuaga Carlos Rivera Lugo Francisco Berio Suarez Dulcidio Rojas Daporta Angel Roberto Buxeda Ulises Lopez Sanabria Everardo Goyanes Miguel A. Valienie Kenneth Ramirez Smith Class of 1941 Fernando L. Buxeda Wilbert Hernandez Camara Angel Benicio Colon Arnaldo Palmer Nazyip Fas Fagundo Desiderio A. Roman Class of 1942 Carlos E. Acevedo Iulio E. Davila lose Aneses-Arrache Angel R. Rosario Santos Fernando Canino Pont Sarkin M. Mudafori Class of 1943 Iorge Hereier lan D. Murphy lose Martinez Hiram Vanzquez 188 . on I - , f s ,,, S - C In reooqninon of fifty years of devoted service to Hahnemann S We pause to salute S DR. FRANK ll. BENSUN, IR MILTON ACKERMAN Editor-inChiei Managing Editor .......... . . . Louis A Cerulli Assistant Managing Editor . . . .... Paul I Herley Assistant Managing Editor . . ....... Herbert K Golf Society Editor ............. . . . Iohn C. Sutton Ir Art Editor .......... .... E verardo Goyanes Humor Editor ........ ....... E rank D Minerva Photography Editor .... .... E euhen I. Dierwechter l-'acuity Editor ...... ....... I ohn L Meyers Underclass Editor ........................... Vincent E Amar General Editorial Staff William P. Bradley, Ir. Richard E. Lang Carl E. Buechle Hugh I. Lenahan William T. Corey Iacob S. Ludwig Thomas R. Counihan Eugene Cf. Mellies Charles W. Hoyt Wallace W. Munsie Lawrence I. Kopf Ioseph I. Pendola David B. Scanlan Albert E. Parker Frank A. Serena Frank P. Tocci Ioseph L. Witkowski Executive Editorial Staff CERULLI GOFF HERLEY SUTTON 'Qi SIHH FRANK A. VERI Business Manager Assistant Business Manager .... ............. P aul T. Souliotis Assistant Business Manager .. .... Miguel A. Valiente-Carreno Advertising Manager ..... ........... F ranklin K. Nelk Circulation Manager .... .... E rnest l. Benko General Business Stcrii Edward R. Aberant Anton L. Merklin Edward W. Mulligan Lee Pullen Phillip A. Sclfiifalacqua Executive Valiente-Carreno Nelk Benjamin F. Streets Frank H. Stegura Gene C. Strauss William H. Rogers Charles W. Weber Business Stcxii Benko Souliotis 3. ,ls J 5. J 5 Q ' Business Staii K Editorial Staff HENRY D. LAFFERTY, M.D. MEDIC FACULTY ADVISERS X CARL C. FISCHER, M.D. RUSSEL H. FISHER. M.D. -1 . 5451 . 3 V E .!PN 103 X., ,zj,.----,,,- xx , 7,-,,n E J!! , nm xr , 'f .,., ,.,.y-. I K MEDIC li' Tl-IE SENKDR CLASS of l-lalmemann Medical College LETS DOWN ITS HAIR WITH THEQMANHC OF l94O W1 He who knows not, and knows that he knows not, Is a Freshman - poor fellow He who knows, and knows not that he knoivs, Is a Sophomore - and he'll probably forget it He who knows, and knows that he knows, Is a Junior - and that's what he thinks He who knows not, and knows not that he knows not Is a enior - and he'd better watch out for the Medical Council. .-JTIJIA . As you, the members of the Class of 1940, embark upon your medical careers, the world lies in chaos about you lbut they haven't seen any- thing yeth. It therefore behooves you, as physicians, to not only concern yourselves with the healing of the poor benighted individuals who pre- sent themselves to you tmostly your wife's relativesl, but also in a larger measure with the healing of the evils which beset the world about you- for both of these I strongly recommend the indicated remedy in the 12X potency. Only the other day, I had lunch with a very excellent gentleman. un- fortunately a graduate of this institution, who bemoaned the fact that the young physicians one meets today see far more beauty in the engraving on a ten dollar bill, than they do in a perfectly executed tenth-normal equivalent. This was, I sorrowfully admitted, a true statement-and just between you and me-a damn good idea. I hastened to assure him, how- ever, that the men of the Class of 1940 were not of a type that would over- ly concern themselves with the beauties of ten dollar bills-especially if anyone had a twenty handy. So, as you go forth, armed with naught but your diploma lonly one to a customerl, to find your niche in life, I would like to leave this mes- sage with you land where you leave it is your own businessl. Fight hard, fight fair, vote Republi-loops, wrong pep talkb, be loyal to your school lyou may want to get your brother in some dayl, and be sooner caught in public without your trousers-than without your handy pocket case and its four hundred and thirty-nine 11930 Census figures? useful remedies. Very hazily yours. WILLIAM A. VON SMITH Dean and Executive Vice-President Men's Acute Building Allentown State Hospital 1940 MEDIC SENIGRS Editor's Note: A Senior section with out pictures is like Strance without Strauss, but this senior section is not going to have any individual pictures because: l. We'd have to talk George Engelhard into paying the sitting fee again. 2. We'd again have to convince Amar, and Cavalli, and Shaughnessy, and a half-dozen others that they really DO look like that. 3. Lastly - look at the results from the pictures that were taken. So, in order to save ourselves all this Woe, We Will resort to a device with which some of you are no doubt familiar, and make it . . . The Last Roll Call ABBOTT-who had better stay away from the post-mortem rooms next year lest some undertaker mistake that lethargy for true rigor rnortis. ABERANT-Snuffy sits in the back at all the lectures to save the profs the trouble of looking over his head. ACKERMAN-who seemed to be having a lot more fun with the year-book secretary, than he was having with the year-book. l AM!-XR-who checked out of chem lab with only the wire gauze left in his locker-he couldn't break that. AMATO-Iohn Was, undoubtedly, Greene Street's most promising rectal specialist. ARSUAGA-lt got so bad with Larry handling the phone, that Dr. Bernstein was afraid to call the dispensary. BEGENAU-whose rat races either ended up with three nurses and three hun- dred students, or vice versa. -Q '1 5.1 198 P BENEDETTI-whose only competitor for pediatrics samples was Minelli, until Sciuto started laying away supplies for coming events. BENKCD- Well, l have a case down at Broad Street Hospital now, Doctor BERIO-SUABEZ-who with one hot pair of dice, broke several morales, to say nothing of a few medical students, at Allentown. BOBECK-somehow or other, he even escaped the eagle eye of Dr. Bernstein. BOLINGEB-a couple of times, we thought they were going to have to call in the engineers to extract Bolly from one of those seats he got tangled up in. BONTEMPO- hand me another dart, and this time I'll hit the board. BRADLEY-he reached the point where he was slicing meat so thin for Pop Dion, that Dr. Sappington sent the tissue room technicians down to watch his technique. BUECHLE-no matter how noisy the class, there Was always a hush right before they hit Beak's name on the roll. BURNS-who spent the first two years developing the art of making fine paper- wads, only to see them replaced by BB shot in the Iunior year. BUXEDA-Alice in Wonderland-the South American way. CANTON-who could do more tricks with a rolled-up surgical gown, than Hubbell could do with a baseball, but couldn't get the Dean to install pari-mutuels. CARP-the only patients in whom he couldn't find endocrinopathies were Dr. Klopp's-but then, we were only in Allentown a week. CAVALLI-a roaring voice, which came to class only to argue with Cerulli. CEBULLI-the gyn patients all wanted to be treated by that fellow who looked like Edward G. Robinson. CETTA-the Kings Kounty Kid was really disappointed when he discovered just where babies did come from during that lunior internship. CIOTOLA-Augie found that the pleasantest way to make ward rounds at Allentown, was to follow the nurses. 1940 199 MEDIC .lvl- CLARKSON--he supplied the cigarettes for four years-and Engelhard sup- plied the habit. COREY-some of those conversations may have made sense to the patients at Woodville, buti CORTESEWH seems that the only reason he ever ventured into the hospital, was to look for Cetta and Ciotola. CQUNIHAN-the guy who even hod Dr. Lafferty bewildered-he'll probably end up by giving the state board examiners a quizz. CHONLUND-an introitus which would take the largest speculum the gyn dis- pensary could supply, was still a little too small to admit one of his fingers. DARNELL-the front row's foremost citizen didn't know what to do with his hands, when the profs said- You needn't take notes on this . DECARO-the patients at Allentown got a break, when the school sent loe up for them to see. DERKACH-Steve was going to get his year-book by the middle of May, if we had to shove it down his throat. DIERWECHTER-a right rectus incision started at the costal margin at one end, and usually ended up with Rube and his candid camera at the other end. DIMASSA-the boys always knew that the lecture hour was approximately one-fourth finished when Ernie came in. EHRHAHT-to whom we are also going to deliver a year-book personally, and not via the throat. ELCANESS-the only thing that pleased Elky in four years was-you guessed it-Elcaness. ENGLEHARD-so George took out a pack of cigarettes-and fifty-three Seniors fainted. ENGLE-we'll never know whether or not he carried Verga across the threshold at Allentown. . ERVIN-they had to keep Cutey out of the Pediatrics Wards for fear that some- one would slap him into a bed. EVANS, H.-whose tenure as social chairman for the Daughters of Israel was short but highly successful. R fa X I X . c' . , x Y Al -, x N , 1? 'Alger QL., 1.-unnonf Fvrfv 114- 6014.114- lfnau to -uduvfaln but fl foo 200 AW' .K f ' I A . f fm gif' EVANS, R.-we thought he was spending so much time in the amphitheatre because he was interested in surgery. FASO-one of the original Y. M. C. A. boys who managed to fenagle through. FULTON-they called Pat T. B.-and they didn't mean Koch-they meant three beers. GLASSMAN-Leo started worrying in Medical Terminology-and was still at it the day they handed us our diplomas. GOFF-who managed to sandwich a medical education in between trips to Pittsburgh. GORDON-Dr. Snyder was going to sue him for plagiarism after he graded that first histology exam. GOYANNES-they were setting their clocks by Ev at the Gladstone, when he passed through the lobby on his way to school, they knew it was noon. GREIDER-Les was two steps ahead of the class when ti came to knowing about the care and feeding of infants. GROSS-after a while, the class got tired of singing We're a bunch of - but nobody could convince Gross of the fact. GBUBER-the standard technique for preparing the operative field in any of the surgical clinics always included getting Bill out of the way. HAIN-the farrn's loss is our Hain. HAMMERMAN-who intended to get his tuitions worth if he had to kill every dispensary patient in the place. HARRISON-swing and sway-the Tavern way-any Friday night. HENDRICKSON-refrected by every optholmologist on the staff, and the dart board still wasn't any easier to hit. HERLEY-one of the front row reflectors that helped to get the light to the back of the room. HOLLAND-the cockroach population of Minnesota is literally trembling in its boots. HOPPING-the poker games at Allentown were a lot tougher than the heart games in Hering Hall. HOYT-the Major didn't expect us to believe those stories, but the least we could do was listen to them. illl 1940 MEDIC HUMMELM-Napoleon had his Waterloo, but all Fritz did was call the roll once in the Sophomore year. KANNAPEL--Al was well in the running in the collegiate clothes competition until McDonough showed up in that green jacket. KABPAWICH-the only nurse he didn't call by first name wos Miss Lysle- and she didn't hang out in the Luncheonette. KISSEN-the boys were quite sure that the editor oi the class newspaper was smoking lochia pads in that pipe ot his. KOPF-who became so expert, that he could play Yankee Doodle on the pin- ball machine in the Luncehonette. KBAUSE-who was always the dispensary chief until examination day rolled around. LANG-a most even-tempered fellow-always griping. LENAHAN-who spent so much time in Orthopedics dispensary in his lunior year that people thought he was one of the fixtures. LENOCI-who Mae'd his way through medical school without selling maga- zine subscriptions. LEONARD- Now the way we play at the tirehouse . LEYBEB-and what will the Blonde Bombshell do now? LITMAN-he's looking for a rotating internship that includes three months for worrying. LOFTUS-inasmuch as this is the last roll call, let's make it an unusual one, and write down for Iohnny-present. LUDWIG-the demon pharmacist who spent tour years with Sumers, Meltzer, and Oller trying to get a word in edgewise. MARIN-the suregon had two assistants but all the anaesthetist had was Marin. MCDONOUGH-we wern't sure whether the Brown Prep students were coming over to see the latest thing that Mac was wearing, or to watch operations. l . H. I . l -,I ' .1 - V 0 A V4 . ,fl .. ,N K A . I., .,-' . Q . 1 J . 2 F r' - .J rg , 1 . 4 r.- . ' a-, . . .,.e. ., 3' Et + 202 iff: 4 jr ' ' MELLIES-Red was a handy man to have on an anatomy table when Dr. Kuemmel dropped around because when those two started talking cameras -the Doc forgot all about quizzing. MELTZER-we might have known that Meltzer and Oller would take an intern- ship togetherMthey've been talking steadily for four years now and there is still so much to be said. MERKLIN-we don't know how he does it!but you could set Tony down in the middle of wildest Siberia, and the betting would be even that he'd have the telephone numbers of a dozen blondes inside of twenty-four hours. MEYERS-we never did believe the rumor that they had to furnish a room at the Americus just like the Alumni office before they could get Iohnny to move in. MILICI-nobody envied him his roommate. Poor lohnl MILNAMOW-We'd like to be around for the fun when he starts to pass out those nuggets on his state board exams. MINELLI-he and Minerva weren't seeing enough of the patients in G-U dis- pensary, so that used to follow them up in that Race Street poolroom. MINERVA-the Alabama flash wit da Brooklyn accent will probably be heck- ling the speaker on graduation day-he hasn't missed anyone yet. MULLIGAN-that smile that Mulligan is wearing these days probably means that or joke someone told him back in the Sophomore year finally did bore its way in there. MUNSIE-the first herald of a warm spring would be Wallie stripped down to his undershirt in the air-conditioned C?l lecture rooms. MURPHY-the man who-always had a little stuff lined up, quit wearing that iron Kelly the day a freshman asked him for his autograph. NELK-the chief reason our advertising manager didn't get to a lot of those lectures was because he didn't know where Room C was. OLLER-We never could figure out how he managed to keep up a running-fire conversation with Meltzer, play Ghost with Glassman, and take lecture notes all at once. 1940 203 :I l Xvgm MEDIC L..l,...i,.....l PARKER-who has enough candid camera evidence on most of the boys to enable him to live the comfortable lite ot a blackmailer tor the rest ot his days. PENDOLAesWhom the boys dubbed4 The pregnant penguin from Brooklyn - but there couldn't be a tundus that would go that high. PONTARELLI-after tour years of sitting between Meltzer and Oller during lectures, the only place Ponty could intern where he would feel at home would be a boiler factory. PULLEN-Lee didn't care Whether he graduated cum laude or not-all he wanted to do was beat Weber just once in a twenty-tive point game. PUMA-Sam still claims that it was the tine print ot those Sophorome bacter- iology notes which spoiled his batting eye. PUPEK-who is bound to become a cardiologist, since he's been fixing tickers for years. RAIVIIREZ-SlVllTl-lewho was one ot Murphys original Gitchy-gitchies . RlEHSeand there Wasn't a better three Whites shooter in the class. RIVERA-LUGOeCarlos was the only lad in the class Who could talk party with the Duchessueand he made the most ot it. 5? K ttggg - 1 D ROGERS, l.-we didn't recognize lim for the first couple of weeks, with that new name, but it all came back the minute we saw him with his hand on a prof's shoulder-buzing in his ear in that old Rogokos manner. ROGERS, W.-he didn't mind dropping down one place on the roll, but he did get a little sore when his brother thought their grades were mixed. ROIAS-DAPORTA-they're going to have to give him a twenty-four sheet bill- board on graduation day because they won't be able to get all that name on one diploma. SANABRIA-somehow it's easier to picture Ulyses sitting by a fireside, decked out in a shawl and lace cap, knitting socks, than it is to picture him amongst all those great big burly med students. SCANLAN-we often wondered whether or not Dave just didn't want to take notes, or whether he never had a fountain-pen or pencil. SCHARF-Pasteur and Koch and all the rest were certainly lucky that the man with the face like the lolly-Boy kite ads wasn't born a couple of centuries sooner-according to Scharf. SCHIFALACOUA-Tsk, tsk, tsk-such an insult to Culbertson. SCIUTO-he took such an awful lot from the sixth floor. SERENA-who was so full of hot air that they wanted to assign a couple of N. Y. A. boys to act as his ground crew. SHAUGHNESSY-and of course nobody ever dreamed that he was Irish until he showed up in that green necktie on St. Patrick's day this year. SHORE-Sid was never quite sure just where that sciatic nerve did go to, but then Dr. Phillips never asked him the odds on the Oshkosh Tech-Mineola Aggies football game, either. SHOWERS-Shadow wanted to know what those guys wanted for four bucks a couple-the Minneapolis Symphony! SMERZNAK-one of de boys dat wuz in de know! SPAGNUOLO-they had to convince Pete that it wasn't a diabolic plot to get him in wrong with the faculty, before they could even get him to play the piano. STONER-if the other two people in Mt. joy are that quiet, the silence must be ominous when Russ goes home for a vacation. STEGURA-We're not quite sure how a barber pole is going to look with M.D. painted on it. STRANGE-Hurrah for the western spaces The home of the wheat and the corn STRAUSS-Vlfhere the Strauss's look only at Strances And the Strances look only with scorn. STREETS-Ben worried that hair-line back at least two inches over the four- year period, but the waist-line didn't keep up the pace. SOULIOTIS-our nomination for the best trick of the decade was Paul's going through four years at Hahnemann before discovering that his last name was one letter shy. SUMERS-it wasn't the mustache that annoyed the boys so much, it was just some of the words he used to strain through it, that got their goat. 1, 1940 MEDIC' ' - SUTTON-any barroorn in town was willing to offer a southpaw dart-shooter a contract, but Big Iohn couldn't see any future in it, so he stuck to Hering l-lall. TARLOWSKI-who brings back to rnind that old adage about- Be true to your teeth or else they'll be false to you . TELGE-the Black Turk had political aspirations tor three years, but the closest he ever got was serving sandwiches to Verga in the Luncheonette. TERRELL-and if Terrel hadn't been elected president ot Student Institute he could have very easily taken that army of Sigs and gone off and started his own medical school. TOCCI-it he hadn't dragged down that internship in Harlem Hospital, his next best bet would have been the chair Cor soap-boxl of forensic medicine in Columbus Circle. TUCKER-and if only Tommy hadn't run out ot toilet tissue, that Allentown streetcar we were on would have won tirst prize in any tloat parade in the country. , ., EF X. ', 'QL , VALIENTE-CARRENA-we were certain that the Revenue Department would get around to making Mike take out a license for that bar in the Gladstone before the year was up. VEHGA-we don't know whether the A. M. A. elects its presidents by popular vote or not, but if they do, we'll give even money that Mr. Moto will be the president in a couple of yearseeither that, or he'll have Hague working for him. VERI-and if the advertisers won't pay for their ads-ewe'll just send Frank out to play poker with them to collect the money, and their shirts as well. WEBER-Old Man Mose is going to get his electrical engineering mixed up with his doctoring some daydand wire some poor patient for sound. WINNER-the only thing his Sophomore election platform lacked was a copy of his date-book-and if he'd thrown that in, his ticket would have walked in. WITKOWSKI-the ten o'clock scholar started coming in at nine because he got tired of eating breakfast so close to lunch. ZERBE-we always envied Bobghe was the only fellow who could come in anywhere during a roll call and still get marked present-but it must have been a terrific struggle to keep from developing an inferiority complex after being last in everything. And so ends the last roll call, which was all in good fun-but if there are any hard feelings-blame it on- Minerva, Munsie, and Ackerman. C-F,--X f 1 X XX .X-L. X X XX N X I fl-J R ' X '31,- 514 I W u I K X it Q Xt QS X it lt t ti' l W l l ill t N XXX KN N Witt f x X I 1 f l Vi it K, vhw ghlfc , a V4 lvl cd-1 sfdltj hall 'Ill-I in 1 Q I... ,'g l 1940 MEDIC Handbook of Dispensary Medicine A compilation of handy little facts and pointers calculated to advise those classes following us, and those twelve seniors who are going to repeat the year 411:00 P. M. rumor 5flf4Ol how best to enjoy the hours between one and three. MEDICAL DISPENSARY-a cozy little madhouse occupying the southeast cor- ner of the first floor wheer junior staff members drop in to get warm, cadge cigarettees from one another, and tell tall tales about the size of the patient who got awayg and where senior students play a game called button-button, who has the B.M.R. request with a red-headed lady who was certain that that pateint Wasn't Irish even if the name on his card was Michael O'Rourke. Our advice for getting along here is: l. Don't spend a half-hour trying to find the clinic card of that good looking blonde you saw on the bench on the way in-she is probably one of Dr. Snowden's allergy patients. 2. Refer all undiagnosable patients to G-l dispensary-but DON'T give them an appointment for the day that you are assigned to that dis- pensary. 3. lt is customary to send Miss Whelan flowers and a box of candy before requesting a chest plate for a patient. lf, after this, she still wants to know what you want the request for-you had better give up and refer the patient to Neurology. 4. Shy away from a folder containing ten or twenty cards-it probably belongs to a diabetic who has been receiving insulin from Dr. Gold- smith ever since the doctor was high enough to reach an arm with a syringe. Such patients will insist on taking up your time with tales of how much better the dispensary was in the old hospital. 5. Don't worry about the pharmacy-they always keep a five-ton supply of phenobarbital in reserve. 6. After getting three different answers from three different staff men concerning the indicated remedy for a case-give the patient Bryonia and you can't go wrong. Gel DISPENSARY-this dispensary is dedicated to the proposition that any patient who doesn't have a rubber tube shoved down his gullet at least once a week is the unhappiest of mortals and probably a nasty Communist to boot. l. ln this dispensary, all the patients get the works , the works con- sisting of the draining of everything from the cavities in the back molars down to the goblet cells just north of the ligament of Trite. This is all performed by means of a rubber tube with a gagging patient on one end and a harried technician on the other. 2. ln interpreting a gall-bladder drainage report, the finding of the fol- lowing should be considered pathologic: Cal goldfish, tbl old hairpins, and fcl cigarette butts. 3. If you can't blame it on the gall-bladder-remember-you can always fall back on Habitus Enteropticus-where the ensiform is more than a stone's throw from the symphisis. 4. The best way to confuse a peptic ulcer pain that comes on three hours after a meal is to have the patient eat his meals three hours later than usual. 208 l Tl-IERAPEUTICS-in which Drs. Boericke, Snowden, and Mattern carry the gospel of Samuel Hahnernann to the darkest regions of the sixth floor, and also to see how well the students assigned to the various cases on the floor have copied the interns' histories and physicians. Things to keep in mind in this section are: l. Always stay as far away from the bedside as possible because- fal This gives you more time to find out from your partner whether or not the case is yours when Dr. Boericke says, Now whose case is this? fbi You can step out and chew the fat with a nurse while the doctors are deciding whether to give the patient Pulsatilla or Iodine. CCP Some of the diseases they get on that service are awfully con- tagious. 2. After the indicated remedy has been suggested by Dr. Boericke, it must be moved and seconded by Drs. Mattern and Snowden before it becomes a statute. 3. You can have a lot of fun with the X-Ray department by giving them the history on one case and the X-ray plates on another case to in- terpret at the Friday afternoon seminars. 4. Some good excuses for uncompleted histories and physicals-the patient was uncooperative, the patient was on the bedpan, the patient was in coma, and last but not least-the intern hadn't done a history and physical yet. 5. When confronted with a patient on whom you knew you were sup- posed to have taken a history two weeks previously, act indignant and blame the intern for failing to assign the case to you, if this doesn'f work-say you were waiting for the symptoms to develop. PEDIATRICS DISPENSARY-this dispensary is split into two divisions-the sick baby division, and the well baby division, the chief difference between the two being that in the sick baby division, they put you in a booth with a single baby-and you only have to watch out for ONE stream at a time. lt is prac- tically impossible to go through three weeks of this dispensary unsullied land we mean unsulliedl-but here are some tips anyway: l. Never attempt to carry a baby to the scales for weighing-you never can tell when those things are loaded. 2. Always try to get the cards of babies who are on the breast-you don't have to worry about figuring out a formula for one of those things. 3. Never give any of those samples to the patients-do you want the babies of the married students in the class to starve! 4. The recommended method for getting a tongue depresser into a baby's mouth is to dislocate its jaw first. 5. Never try to strap an umbilical hernia without four assistants-two to hold the baby-and two to untangle you from the adhesive tape-while one of the staff men is strapping it. NEUROLOGY DISPENSARY-a veritable bee-hive of a dispensary where the students sit around playing a game titled-- Who put the positive spinal Was- serman in Uncle Iake's moustache cup . The only way you can enjoy this dispensary is to break a leg and miss the three weeks-but here are some pointers anyway: 1. The first thing to do when one of the staff walks in the room is to make sure that the neurology book you are studying so intently is not upside down. 1940 209 MEDIC 2. Don't be surprised if Wally Kratz comes in to give a lecture on some- thing nearly every one else gives some sort of lecture in this dispensary. 3. We advise taking the notes on homeopathic drugs used in neurology on colored note paper if it can be obtained. lt makes excellent confetti at Mummer's parades and other gala occasions. 4. Don't waste too much time on the cases assigned to you in the wards-- they will probably be discharged before Friday clinic anyway-YOU HOPE. 5. And if you miss the P.G.H. section on Mondays-you can always claim that you mistook the Stanley Theatre for the psychiatric building. DERMATOLGGY DISPENSARY-the answer to the problem of how you can keep a student entertained and cram a little knowledge into him at the same time, or Ringling Brothers, Bernsteins and Wittmans mammoth show featuring that galloping dermatologist-Dr. Kleinguenther. l. A handy method for telling the day of the week-on Tuesdays the Professor wears a brown suit, Wednesdays a grey one, Thursdays a black one, and Fridays a blue one-on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mon- days-the Professor stays home while these suits are out being cleaned and pressed. 2. To become a doctor-you must know the following: Cal The Professors baldness is PREMATURE fbecause in the old days-they didn't have such conveniences as automobiles, elec- tric lights, and-Bernstein's Hair Tonicl. tbl There is some drug in a 5UOx potency-because you can't destroy matter ibut you can make it damn inconspicuousl. 3. The Professor believes in the use of high potencis in practically all drugs except malt, hops, rye, or corn extracts which he prefers in physiologic doses. 4. Statistics show that of the three hundred and twenty-eight students who have been awarded the rope in the Profesor's fifty years of teach- ing experience-three became Presidents, one won the Kentucky Derby, nine are doing the Indian rope trick in various Carnivals, and the rest are prescribing Dermament for all their skin cases. 5. When stuck for the indicated remedy-remember: you don't go up an alley just to take a short-cut homey Canaries don't crow, and if the bank clerks are using fountain pens-you still have some in your pencil. EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT DISPENSARY-wherein the boys get a gander at a retina, an ear drum, a turbinate, and a tonsilg and thus, having absorbed the essentials of these difficult specialties spend the rest of the time in the second floor students' room recuperating from the strain. To pass the time away-here are a couple of nuggets : l. Never try to argue with your head mirror-if you find the light focused on the eye-treat ity if focused on the nose-get a speculum in there before the light-or the nose-gets away, if focused in the larynx and you catch a glimpse of something red between the two pillars-you have the prime indication for a T. G A. If you can't get the light any- where near the head-better refer the patient to another dispensary. 2. When syringing an ear-you can be certain that you are using too much pressure when the water starts coming out the other ear. 3. If you see sebaceous glands-that is not a retina you are looking at, but the side of the patients nose. 213 4. lt is recommended that the senior students have a working knowledge of the alphabet before attempting to test a patients vision on the charts. 5. W'hen using a laryngeal mirror on a pateint-stop when any of the following happens: Cal the patient deposits his lunch in your lap. tbl the patient becomes cyanotic and stops breathing. CCD you withdraw the mirror and find pieces of vocal cord hanging from it. GYNECOLOGY DISPENSARY-an assorted collection of backaches and leuk- orrheas subsidized by the Vinegar Manufacturers Association where the gals learn that that thick white discharge ain't whipped cream and the students learn that the gals aren't sugar and spice, and everything nice . l. Don't try to get all the fresh looking young white girls for patients- because in three weeks-you can become a confirmed cynic. 2. lf you can't feel a fornice in any direction-you are probably in the bladder. 3. Make sure that the patient sees that it is a speculum you are inserting because some of them will insist that you are trying to shove a sink up there. 4. When, in the course of an examination, a patient complains that she is feeling nervous-get that thumb away from there. 5. Simplified treatment-Cal all patients get vinegar douches, tbl alternate patients get hydrastis or cantharis, Ccl every other patient gets dia- thermy, Cdl every fifth patient gets estrogenic substance, tel at the end of the day-a drawing is held of the patient's clinic numbers and the winner gets a bilateral salpingo-oopherectomy. OBSTETRICS DISPENSARY-a place where thirteen year old primiparas sit around walking with twenty-five year old para twelves while the students finish their cigarettes in the students' room. l. The internal conpugate shall be considered as the distance from the symphis to the point where the patient yells ouch. When you have your entire arm in there and still can't feel the lumbar spine-put down eleven centimeters-and forget about it-because the patient could probably deliver a Mack Truck through there. 2. A marked rise in the systolic pressure means: Cal someone has prob- ably stuffed your stethoscope diaphragm with paper, tbl you've put the blood pressure cuff on your own arm by mistake, or Cc? the student who took the previous reading was in a hurry to get back and retrieve his cigar butt in the students room. 3. We don't care how thirsty you are-that stuff you find lying around in various places in paper cups is NOT lemonade! 4. ln a patient pregnant over six months-the following are absolutely necessary for a vaginal exam: Cal A vagina: Cb? a foetus. The only contra-indication is the presence of Dr. Lafferty. 5. Whe ntaking the internal measurements on a para ten it is best to have one foot anchored to a radiator or some other stationary object. 6. The social service workers have been in this dispensary a long time and are pretty much disillusioned about the stork and such-so don't worry if you can't embarass them. 6 1940 SURGICAL DlSPENSARYithe curriculum provides this dispensary as a place for students to go after they have finished reading the morning paper in surgery clinic, and also Where they may learn to do things Which any Boy Scout could do with much less fuss. l. The duties of a student assisting at a sebaceous cyst removal are: Cai To hold the patient's coat, tbl To move the light around for the staff man, Cc? To keep out of the staff man's way. 2. A bandage or dressing can be considered as correctly applied when you are able to get the patient out of the dispensary before Dr. Buck sees it. 3. Hemostats Which stay closed, and forceps that grip are to be turned over to the dispensary nurse when discovered, as they are not meant for student use. 4. For a small laceration on a finger, bandage the entire arm and put it in a sling-in this Way, you Won't have any trouble With Miss Wehlan when she Wants to know Where the cut is. 5. Students are required to report back to Surgery clinic when the dis- pensary is finished-once upon a time, a student did. MILTON ACKERMAN. x ul ougd MHA a ?a.'Hzn+ 1, N 1 t llll!i, l QQ M 212 WWI ug N 27 Q , LJ Q 51:91 vb K, 5 Q4 W, ' W W 'I M N X ffl 1 N! 14223 -nI whx Gamlf 10 wg y--1851 Km?-rim lab clean 2 PGP, 1940 MEDIC THE RIP VAN WINKLE LETI-IARGIC SGCIETY This society was founded in our Freshman year at Hahnemann by a group of progressive students who realized that in the intensive training to which medical students are subjected, there must be some time alloted to rest fthe hours from nine to tive daily is the time they had in mindl. The only require- ment tor membership in the society is the ability to sleep for one-halt hour on an amphitheatre seat without falling oft. The society holds meetings on the least provocation - in tact all they need is someplace to sit or lie down. HONORARY FACULTY MEMBERS - tor distinguished contributions toward the aims of the society. Dr. Frank Dr. Baker Dr. Horn Society Motto - We Should Have Stood in Bed 214 la Yi: Tl-IE SCDCIETY EGR THE PROTECTION CDE SURPRISED SENIOES A group of seniors banded together for the purpose ot giving the year-book candid boys something to Waste film on. Their aim is to never let the back of their head show in a picture, lest the folks want to know what they've been doing with all that money that they were supposed to be spending on haircuts. The society can be found holding a meeting anytime there is a candid camera Within a radius of three blocks. Society Motto Gee Whiz l'm Getting My Picture Taken and My Hair is a Sight .-.-li.---'-'-+-' 1940 fxxxxx xx 1' , SPECIALISTS Yuri ' JI hx ffl I lf, ,V as ww, f Q fm, 'ri Z' X xx . f 'lk M407 ?g Z '1 3 KWH!! M' 1 H nesfnesm iz 7 .,, IONHLN THERHPY R E Pnocrogocy 1 1 X :. Qxxxx f - ,fl M- 25C'f-N-mf SN 5 fffff E LJ X59 77 Y L ...,9A in ' ' md X xx fa '-.HIM X X-'WL BRHDLEJ3. S-hs1'os.oGy 'gd v, la 'Q u v GOLINGEK- SEDFlr40lv fxws V X X53 M x5 nf f K , 7 L R I 5 X Q-ax X mann - eevm vu-aemrr GQ-1 gg ',-L I 4- . MEDIC 216 SENIOR BEFLECTIONS fContinued from Page l5ll yards. . .and one of the boys. . .developed a taste. . .for the town's cockroaches . . .with beer as a chaser. . .and finally. . .it was our last afternoon. . .and we took an exam.. .and left the gloomy piles of the State Hospital behind us... and the school authorities. . .and the Allentown Police.. .and the hotel man- agement. . .uncrossed their fingers. . .for the week was up. . .and the town was standing.. .and nobody had been jailed. . .and it was. . .Christmas vacation . . .our last as students. . .and this time.. .when they asked us what to do. . . about Iohnny's cold . . .we demanded a blood count. . .and a chest plate. . . and a surgical consultation. . .before we'd venture a word. . .and so. . .with our internship contracts signed. . .and without a care in the world.. .we re- turned to. . . Ianuary. . .Nineteen Forty. . .and still time on our hands. . .and why don't they hurry up and get this thing over with. . .and Dr. Ferguson was lecturing to what appeared to be...a one-tenth section...on Saturday mornings... while the rest of the class was apparently. . . on OBS . . .and they switched ten week sections on us. . .putting all the boys to the trouble. . .of re-arranging their sleeping schedules. . .in the morning. . .so that they wouldn't conflict with roll-calls. . .in their new sections. . .and some of us. . .were beginning to won- der Where Dr. VanLennep was finding all those gall bladders.. .or was that the same patient he was using every week. . .and the sample cabinet in the peliatrics dispensary.. .was supplying the fathers of the class. . .with every- thing for the formulae of their babies.. .but the bottles and nipples. . .and lo and behold. . .We had waited out a whole semester. . .and semester finals were with us.. .but the darts kept plunking in the board.. .and the pool balls kept clicking in Hering Hall. . .and the marathon heart and bridge games kept right on rolling. . .for the boys couldn't. . .and wouldn't be bothered. . .by the pros- pect of a few exams. . .after all these years. . .and even if we didn't know. . . where the cerebrospinal fluid. . .came from. . .or went to. . .they couldn't throw us out now. . .so we took them in stride. . .and settled down to waiting out. . . February. . .and the second semester. . .and we took over the dispensing of Strontium Bromide. . .in Neurology dispensary. . .where the section preced- ing us. . .had left off. . .and we were being measured for caps and gowns. . . and filling out sheets of information. . .required for our diplomas. . .coming events were beginning to cast their shadows. . .and Dr. Ferguson. . .was lectur- ing on Rocky Mountain Fever. . .in a solitude as vast as those mountains... and morning Surgery section. . .was a place where three guys slept. . .eight guys read morning papers. . .two guys studied Dermatology. . .and everybody else. . .watching the operation. . .Were probably Freshmen. . .and they stopped Industrial Medicine. . .and started Tropical Medicine. . .and the number of men on OBS . . .grew to undreamed of proportions.. .and we were a couple of yards of antigens. . .and a couple of miles of amboceptors. . .behind Dr. Sap- pington. . .and giving his department. . .enough laughs to last them all week . . .on those weekly roll quizzes. . .and the only man on the faculty. . .who wasn't sponsoring. . .a senior society. . .appeared to be Mr. Hicks. . .and so. . . it was. . . March.. .and the only band.. .which hadn't been rumored for the Blue and Gold. . .was the Philadelphia Symphony. . .and Dr. VanLennep. . .was still taking out gall-bladders. . .for a mixed audience of. . .Brown Prep students. . . visiting high school science clubs. . .a few seniors with afternoon dates. . .and some strangers who just dropped in to get warm. . .and Dr. Crellin. . .had the boys looking under their beds at night. . .for T.B. bugs. . .and the heart game 1940 217 MEDIC . . .in I-lering Hall. . .showed no signs of slackening. . .and we were still wait- ing for elevators. . .and Miss Whalen. . .And in the meantime. . .we made the acquaintance. . .of Hahnemann's member. . .of that great triumvirate. . .of Homeopaths. . . Einstein, Bernstein and Curie . . .and did our professor vibrate ...and how he did. . .and so. . .we had wiled away. . .the second ten week section. . .and the year was two-thirds over. . .and to celebrate. . .we took some exams.. .giving some of the boys their first opportunity.. .to see. . .Dr. Doyle . . .and Dr. Roman. . .and Dr. Webster. . .and Dr. Craig's office neighbors. . . may have wondered a bit. . .why all those men were visiting him in the morn- ing. . .and we started our last ten week section. . .and weren't quite adjusted to our new sleeping schedule. . .when Easter intervened. . .and we went home . . .to try and convince the family. . .juts why we'd need as big an allowance . . .during our internships. . .as we needed during our student days. . .Return- ing to. . .the tag end of March. . .and the home stretch of a year. . .which found the faculty showing more. . .and the class less concern. . .over the fate of the class of '40, . .and it was. . . April. . .and we knew it was Spring. . .by the increased brilliancy of the sport coats. . .of our Brown Prep companions. . .at the Wednesday afternoon surgical clinics.. .and Dr. Snader was lecturing on the thyroid.. .to a select group on Saturday mornings.. .and Dr. Roman was removing them. . .before an even more select group. . .on Saturday afternoons. . .and the weather grew warmer.. .tripling the fragrant aroma of lochia pads. . .and the flare of an occasional hot foot and the re-appearance of theback row marksmen in Neur- ology clinic. . .reminded us.. .of other springs which had passed.. .but for the most part. . .we clung to Hering Hall. . .and the pinball machine in the Luncheonette. . .and the bull sessions didn't stop. . .while they moved from the frontof the cage. . .to the Fifteenth street steps. . .and sidewalk. . .And finally.. .the gathering wrath of the faculty.. .concerning the. . . who cares attitude. . .of the class of Forty. . .reached its bursting point. . .and there was a class meeting. . .at which no one heckled. . .and no one complained. . .and we sat silent. . .and staring. . .and lost deep in our own troubled thoughts. . .as the class president exploded a bombshell. . .in our midst. . .and for a day. . . the halls rang with conjecture. . .and worried groups. . .buzzed in low tones. . . throughout the corridors of the school. . .and hospital. . .and thus. . .was the Club 2l born. . .and the happy-go-lucky Seniors.. .of but a week before... were all at once. . .worried. . .and hurt. . .and angry. . .and resentful. . .and concerned. . .and lecturers. . .who had become inured. . .to empty spaces. . . were overwhelmed. . .by the hordes of Seniors.. .who hurriedly left. . .their beds. . .and their pool tables. . .and their dart boards. . .and their card games . . .their haste. . .to convince the Medical Council. . .that they weren't possibly the guys they were thinking about. . .But even without the impetus of the Medical Council. . .the l don't care attitude. . .had been undergoing a slow transformation.. .as most of use began to realize. . .that all the old familiar scenes. . .to which we had grown accustomed over a four year period. . .were not to be with us much longer. . .So we went to a Blue and Gold. . .and got a little tight. . .perhaps because it's what we always did at Blue and Gold Balls . . .but more likely because it was our last. . .and we were a little bit saddened . . .by that thought. . .and finally. . . May. . .and it would soon be over. . .and we wanted to finish. . .and then again we didn't. . .and we detected the buds. . .of a beginning alumni spirit. . . as someone proudly discovered. . .an arm rest or seat back. . .on which he had playfully carved his initials back in the dim days of '36. . .or caught someone else. . .looking with fond regret. . .at scenes about to be left behind. . .and the pool games. . .and the dart games.. .and the card games. . .seemed to take on a listlessness. . .imparted by the fact that after four years. . .they too would 218 soon be over.. .and in the meantime. . .the curricula gained momentum. . .as the faculty took their last crack. . .at making M.D.'s out of us. . .and maybe the Medical department. . .and all the other departments. . .weren't kidding. . .in those many warnings which they had passed out throughout the year.. .and the tribulations. . .suffered by the Club 21 , . .rose anew in our minds. . .and we began to worry about the session the Executive Committee was going to have. . .on the evening of May 3l...and the boys were scurrying. . .to get their twelve deliveries under the line. . .and the papers. . .and themes. . .and case histories. . .which should have been written months before. . .and finally . . .weary. . .and tired. . .and happy. . .and sad. . .and apprehensive. . .and un- concerned. . .we came to the end. . .and. . . lune. . .and a busy two weeks' bustle. . .of alumni dinners. . .and gradua- tion rehearsals.. .and invitations to mail. . .and friends to bid good-bye to... and arrangements to make.. .and finally. . .lune 13. . .and the Academy of Music. . .and a long and devious way.. .from the Elkins Amphitheatre.. .of September, 1936. . .and as we repeated. . .after the Dean. . . l swear by Apollo the physician, and Aesculapius . .the last vestiges of our youth. . . seemed to drop from us. . .and. . .the babes in the woods . . .were physicians. MILTON ACKERMAN. 1940 219 MEDIC THINGS WE WOULD LIKE TO SEE Stoner and Meyers in a spirited debate. Dr. Craig on a roller-coaster. Abbott doing the Conga. Harrison licking a lollipop. Burns at a Sunday School picnic. Dr. Bernstein playing checkers with Dr. Boericke. Dr. Hepburn beating up a policeman. Kissen and Hoyt in a telephone booth together. Dr. Beutner roller skating down Broad Street. Counihan as a district attorney. Sanabria as a sex-mad killer. Dr. Sappington leading a swing band. DeCaro and DiMassa playing the leads in Romeo and luliet. Dr. Agerty as the Phantom ot the Opera. Dr. Chandler playing Macbeth. Dr. Ferguson running a medicine show. Aberant, Amato, Cetta, Ciotola, and Cortese impersonating the Dionne quin tuplets. H. H. Evans as Dean of a girls seminary. Weber running a lingerie shop. Dr. Crellin as an automobile salesman. Mike and Carlos as president and vice-president of the Prohibition party FAMOUS LAST WORDS Dr. Beutner's- Vare is Mistur Peck today? Minerva's- Get oft ya knees. Sumer's- Class meeting. Dr. Chandler's- Has Mr. Chiezselski come in Ehrhart's- When do I get my yearbook? Cavalli's- G'wan yer crazy. Counihan's- Well in the article I read, Doctor. Leonard's- Tilt, Dr. Carpenters- Abbott, Aberant, Ackerman, -. Elcaness's- Who threw that? yet? Dr. Steinhilber's- The worst set of examination papers -- Dr. Reimann's- Get them talking over the back fence. Dr. Boericke's- What do you find in their diapers? Dr. Latterty's- Now we'll hear from Dr. Canton. Hoyt's- That reminds me of the time I had down in Ohio Dr. Wells's- And it you don't have a Yater. Dr. Sappington's- We'll answer a few questions now. Mr. Kratz's- Oh yes, the microscope fee too. Hains's- I'd like to see them bust me out. Miss Fishers- Will all the New Iersey boys see me. 220 one night Tl-IE LAST RGUND-UP Marin Cyou know-the Bellevue Marin?-at Allentown Hospital- Honest-you'd think they'd go crazy up here. 1' i' i' 1' Abbott CSleeping Beauty?- Welllll-l always eliminate syphilis, tuberculosis, and cancer first. 1' i' 1' 'k The Evans boys-this is to be repeated in unison- l thought my partner was going to prepare that part of the case, Dr. Wells. 1' 'l' i' 1' Ernie DiMassa-indulges in some subtle repartee with a patient- Did you ever have a sore on your -? 'k 'I lt happened in Pediatrics dispensary- Dr. Redman-demonstrating a case of pyloric stenosis- To prove our diagnosis, we will give the child a bit of water to drink, and we will then observe a peristaltic wave, and in a short time, another peristaltic wave. McDonough tgetting in his ten cents worthl- And where does the first wave go to, Dr. Redman. This one was in Gyn dispensary- . Marin fthe Bellevue Marin of coursel- But Dr. Frosch, there is really no great difference in the pathology between myoma and myomata, is there ? Dr. Frosch Cpaternally and with patience?- My dear boy, the term myo- rnata is plural for the term rnyomaf' 1' i' 'A' Who was the guy who wanted to know what the blood P.O.N. concentration was in uremia. 'I' 'A' i- Dr. Boericke- Define the term anamnesis? Benko- Well Doctor, an means without, and amnesis means vomiting- so l guess it means-without vomiting. 1' i al- Remember the day that the suction apparatus went blooey in G-U dispensary just as Dr. Ashcraft was getting ready to tap a kidney- Dr. Ashcraft- Well-what am I supposed to drain this cavity with? H. H. Evans fsotto voicel- Why not try a soda straw, Doctor. 1940 M 4 -1 X Y E8 Nh' . 'f-9' 'TP F52 . Q, br' . 1 1 9 THE EINAL EXAMINATICN A general intelligence test for the members of the class ot 1940. CEd. Note: Knowing what the general intelligence of the class ot 1940 is-we are including the answers alsol. Name tive ways in which the name Buechle may be pronounced? Answer: Cal Bushelly, tbl Bukel, Ccl Beekle, Cdl Butchly, Cel Bugle. Who invited the Dermatology sec- tion up to watch a skin grafting? Answer: H. H. Evans-perish the thought fellows, perish the thought! Who smacked Elcaness with the wet mop that day in Bac. Lab? Answer: Nobody-it was just a nasty Republican plot to discredit one of the CCNY boys. lf Lenahan had four apples and gave two to Shaughnessy-what would Shaughnessy have? Answer: A surprised expression. What ever happend to Rogokos? Ansker: Maybe he tell into one of those incisions in surgery clinic. What two seniors are that way about each other? Answer: Darnell and Abbott land by thataway we mean like Ger- many and Englandl. Why is Mussolini so happy and contented these days? Answer: Cavalli is on this side of the Atlantic. Ev Goyannes is walking north on Broad Street from City Hall-what time is it? Answer: About eleven A. M. What two men in the class remind you ot the title of a well-known book? Answer: Strauss - Shadow and and Stranse - Substance . 10. ll. 12 13 14 15 16 17. 18. 224 ls the statement- Nobody loves a bald man -true or false? Answer: 'Weber and Kissen are married and they must have taken their hats olt sometime during the couz tship. Select the proper word to complete this statement-Mike and Carlos drink nothing but-Cal Eagle Brand Milk, tbl Grange luice, lc? Dextri- maltose, Cdl Similac? Answer: Either something is lack- ing there, or we have the wrong im- pression about what's being served in bars around town. Name an allergy, and the class member possessing it? Answer: Gross-he's allergic to silence. What does the word Schitalacqua mean? Answer: lt is an old lndian term meaning - 1've-never-seen-such-a- lousy-bridge-hand. lt Scharf had three darts which he threw at the dart board - what would the dart board have? Answer: A blank look. Do you believe in hypnotism? Answer: No-but there must be SOME explanation for Abbott's be- havior. Complete this statement: l'm prac- tically speechless, said tal Cavalli, tbl Schart, Cc? Meltzer, ldl DeCaro? Answer: As they say in the Neur- ology department - some questions are wrong no matter how you ans- wer them. Will Roosevelt be re-elected for a third term? Answer: He will it Verga gives the word. Which would you rather have-a gastric ulcer or Elcaness? Answer: Well--we know some very nice gastric ulcers. HCKNCWLEDGMENTS The process of compiling, editing, and publishing a yearbook is a difficult task, when to this is added the necessity of doing a thorough job with the diffi- cult Senior medical curriculum, the problems of an editor seem at times un- surmountable. Therefore, in acknowledgment of those whose ready help cmd advice aid- ed materially in the completion of this book, we give grateful thanks to:- Mr. Frank Veri, the Business Manager, and those of his staff who contri- buted towards making this book a financial success. Those members of the editorial staff who responded to the frequent calls of the editor for some assistance. Mr. Armand F. Verga for his counsel and cooperation. Dr. Wm. A. Pearson, Dr. Russel H. Fisher, Dr. Carl C. Fischer, and Dr. Henry D. Lafferty for their friendly counsel. Mr. Wallace K. Kratz for the numerous tips he gave usp and Miss Clara C. Fisher for her advice and the mass of stenographic detail of which she relieved us. Miss Betty Rubenstone for the many hours she devoted to stenographic work, copy reading, and the compiling of the dummy. Mr. Frank Boles of the Philadelphia-Weeks Engraving Company of whom we can truthfully say that without the hours he so willingly gave in assist- ance to the editor, the publishing of this yearbook would not have been possible. Mr. Max Merin of Merin-Baliban Photographers for his friendly coopera- tion. Mr. Ed Schlechter of the Schlechter Printing company for his cooperation, advice, and patience. Mr. Twist of National Publishing Company for his aid in the completion of the cover of this publication. To all these, and to all the others not mentioned whose friendly interest in the book, made the task of the editor so much lighter, we say, thanks again. MILTON ACKERMAN Editor-in-Chief 00'0o'00'00'00'00:0 0'0 0'00' 00'00'00'00'00'0 0'00'00'0 0'00' 00'00'00'00'00'00'0 0:00:00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00:00'00'00'00'00'00'00:00:0-0:00200:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:b Un The following pages reveal the financial success of your l94O Medic There is more to a book than its cover, a few pages, pictures, and cold black type. No doubt, you may know that many supporters are necessary for the production of a yearbook that you will cherish forever. The Class of i940 of The l-fahnemann Medical College has been for- tunate in having such numerous friends. We wish to express our sincere thanks to the patrons, to the subscribers to professional cards, and to the adver- tisers for their generous and whole-hearted support which has aided greatly in makingthis publication possible. We owe a debt of gratitude also to the alumni and to the entire student body for their earnest cooperation which they have contributed so willingly. So that you may know specifically the names of our supporters, we invite you read the following pages. FRANK A. VERI, Business Manager. 0'0 0:0 0x0 0:0 0:0 0 0 050 0.0 020 0 0 030 020 .:. 0:0 ': 0 0.0 0 0.0 0? 0 0 050 0'0 .5. 0'0 0:0 0:0 0x0 0x0 .5. 0'0 0 0 0z0 0:0 0:0 0.0 0 0:0 0:0 0.0 0 020 0:0 0.0 020 0:0 0.0 0:0 0:0 020 0:0 0.0 0? 0.0 0:0 0 0.0 0'0 0 '0 02. 0:0 0:0 0.0 02. 0:0 020 QS. 0:0 0 0:0 Q.. 0'0 0:0 Cz. .gf 0:5 0 .0 0'0 050 .gf 0:0 0.0 020 Og. Oz. Q.. 2 '0 00000000000000000000000000000 00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00 00'00'00:00'00'00'00'00'00'0 050 00 00 00.00'00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00,00'00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00.0000 oooooeo ooooooooooooooooooocoooofooooooo aoaoonoeoooo u.M.oo.n.N.oo.oo.o 0 .u.oo.oo.o .oo.oo.o0.oo.oQ.oo.oo.oo.oo,o0.oo.oo.o4.oo.o4.oo.oo.oo.u.oo.o4.oo.oo. o A .4 .oo.oo.oo.oo. o.oo.oo.o4.oo.oo ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS 1939-1940 Presidente-Dr. William L. Martin, '15 First Vice-PresidentMDr. N. Volney Ludwick, '26 Second Vice-President-Dr. Homer Snyder, '13 Third Vice-President-Dr. Everett A. Tyler, '13 Treasurer-Dr. Richard W. Larer, '98 Executive Secretary-Dr. Carl C. Fischer, '28 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Chairman-Dr. William D. Culin, '94 Dr. lames M. Godfrey '04 Dr. Wayne T. Killian '06 Dr. Charles B. Hollis '12 Dr. Newlin F. Paxson '19 Dr. lohn E. lames '02 Dr. loseph W. Post '09 Dr. Francis T. Krusen '14 Dr. E. Roland Snader '21 On December 4, 1884, an association of the graduates of The Homoeopathic Medical College of Philadelphia and The Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital of Philadelphia was first organized with the declared objects of promoting the interests and extending the in- fluence of the Alma Mater, encouraging a high standard of medical education, securing intellectual and social benefits for alumni and per- petuating college memories. On December 22, 1931, the Association was incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Early in 1935 an Alumni Office was established in the College as a center for all alumni activities, under the direction of the Board of Trustees of the Association, through the Executive Secretary. ln addition to the annual Reunion Banquet held the evening of Commencement, the Alumni Office keeps a biographical file of all alumni, maintains a location bureau and serves in general as an active place of contact between the college and the alumni. A 1-lahnemann Alumni News has been created to bring to all of the alumni four times yearly news of the college and of their brother alumni. ln recent years further efforts have been extended looking toward the creation of District Alumni Clubs throughout the country. At the present time permanent organizations exist in Western Pennsylvania, Northeastern Pennsylvania, New Haven, Conn., Cleveland Ohio, and Metropolitan New York and Philadelphia. lt is planned to establish similar groups in other districts this year. oo'oo'n:o oo'oo'oo'u:oo'oo'Qo:o4'oo'oo'o oo'oo:oo'oo'oo'oo:oo: o:oo'vo:oozoc:oo'oo'oo:o4'oo'n'oQ'oo:n'oo'u'u'oo'oo'oo'u'oo'u'oo'oo:oo:oo'oo'u:u'oo:oo:oo ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 00'00'00'00'04'oo'o0'0o'oo'so'0o'u'00'n'o ' Oo.o0.o0000.030o.o0.00.04.o0.oo.0o,oo.n.oo,o0.0 .0 .u.0o.0o.00.oo.0o,n'u. 0 .0' 0 , . . . . O O 0 . . v Patrons Dr. Leon T. Ashcraft Dr. Frank C. Benson, Sr. Dr. Garth W. Boricke Dr. Iohn A. Brooke Dr. I. V. F. Clay Dr. Earl B. Craig Dr. Harry M. Eberhard Dr. Grant O. Favorite Dr. Gerald P. Fincke Dr. Carl C. Fischer Miss Clara C. Fisher Dr. H. Bussell Fisher Dr. Benjamin K. Fletcher Dr. Iacob W. Frank Dr. Charles C. Hollis Dr. I. Arthur Horneff Dr. Henry l. Klopp Mr. Wallace K. Kratz Dr. Henry D. Lafferty Dr. Leopold S. Lipsitz . . . . . . . g..g..-..'..-..g..'..g..g..'..'..g. ,..'..g..'..'..'..'..'..g..g..g..g..g..g..,. . ..,..,..,..,..,. to l9-40 Medic Herman I. Luloowitz I. F. McClendon loseph W. McEldowney Warren C. Mercer George P. Miley Isaiah L. Moyer E. A. Parker William A. Pearson Thomas W. Phillips C. Siqmund Baue Stanley P. Beimann l. L. Both Henry S. Ruth Samuel W. Sappinqton .C. W. Schaffer Iames D. Schofield Thomas M. Snyder Gustave A. VanLennep Frederic l. von Bapp G. Harlan Wells ooooooooooorooo 0.00.00 00.00 oo 00,00 00.04.04 00.00 00.0500 ooooooooooooooooooooooooofonoaaooo aooooooeooooouo 0,00 00.44 oo oo,oo.o500.403o'oo,oo.n.u.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.u,n.oo.o o.u.n,u.u.o00003300.0000 .0a.u.oc,oo.oo.oo.u'n.u.oo.oo.n.oo.oo.o N. ARIANO, IR., D.D.S. Dentistry 207 North Fifteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. RALPH BERNSTEIN, M.D., F.A.C.P. Skin Diseases Exclusively 1816 Pine Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ALFRED S. DAMIANI, M.D. Obstetrics and General Practice 142 East Alleheny Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D., F.A.C.S. General and Neurological Surgery 250 South Eihgteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. JAMES B. BERT, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology 1512 West Oxford Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. THOMAS L. DOYLE, M.D., F.A.C.S. Plastic and General Surgery 230 South Nineteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EDWARD W. CAMPBELL, M.D., HARRY D. EVANS, M.D. F'A'C'S' Roentgenology Urology Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. 1120 North Sixty-third Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EUGENE F. CARPENTER, M.D. Surgery 1433 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CARL C. FISCHER, M.D., F.A.C.P. Pediatrics Germantown Professional Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. IOSEPH CHANDLER, A.B., Ph.D. Blood Analysis 235 North Fifteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. MORRIS F ITERMAN, M.D. 6152 Spruce Street 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. HUNTER S. COOK, M.D. Pathology and Bacteriology Hahnemann Hospital By Appointment PHILADELPHIA, PA. I. ANTRIM CRELLIN. M.D., F.A.C.P. Diseases ot Chest Exclusively 1930 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ooooooooooooaqooooooooooooo sooo . .0o,oo'oo.oo'oo.oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo'o0.00.04 oo n 04.00.00 o RICHARD R. GATES, M.D. General Practice and Obstetrics Drexel and Marvine Avenues DREXEL HILL, PA. THEODORE C. GEARY, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Surgery 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ,ooooo ooooooooooooooooooeoo . oo.u.oo.o o oo oo oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.u.so.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.u.oo.oo.oo u,u ooo sooooooooooooooooo oooooooooo ooo .oo oo oo.n . O . . O 0 Q O .u.oo.oo.oo.n.oo.n.oo'Qo'u.oo,oo.oo,n.oo,oo.oo.oo.n. O ' O .oo.:o.oo.oo.u.oo.n.vo.oo'oo.oo. ' .u.nn.o MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH, M.D. Medicine 400 Cottman St,, Jenkintown, Pa. Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. WILLIAM Y. LEE. M.D. Surgery - Peritoneoscopy Hours by Appointment 10 A. M.-12 Noon 1113 Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. CARROLL F. HAINES, M.D. Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat 1409 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EDMUND G. HESSERT. M.D. Gynecology 417 Cooper Street CAMDEN, N. J. WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, IR.. M.D Urology 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. IULES I. KLAIN, M.D. Physio-Therapy 1516 North Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. GEORGE LORENZ. IR., M.D. Gastro-Enterology 1930 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. RUSSELL S. MAGEE. M.D. Medicine and Surgery 201 White Horse Pike AUDUBON, N. J. WILLIAM L. MARTIN, M.D. General Surgery 1737 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D. 6840 Ogontz Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. HERMAN KLINE, M.D. 2643 Pacific Avenue iCor. California Avenue! ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. HENRY D. LAFFERTY. M.D.. F.A.C.S. Obstetrics and Gynecology 250 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ROBERT I. MCNEIL. M.D. Obstetrics and General Practice 5148 Wayne Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. FRANK H. MURRAY. M.D. Coloproctology Medical Tower Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. LOWELL L. LANE, M.D.. F.A.C.P. Internal Medicine Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. 0.0 0'0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 o'o o'o 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 o'o 0.0 0.0 0, ALBERT MU TCH. M.D. Obstetrics 124 West Logan Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ooooooooouoooooo 4 0.00.0o.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo'oo,ao,Qo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo'o o '64.00.0 0.0 0 00000000000000000coco.-aooneqooooooooooooe 0 . .0 0.00000000'un00n000 00.00000000n.u.00000 O 00.00.n0.s0.0o.00,0o.o 00.00.0033 00.00 u.u.n.0o00 PROFESSIONAL CARDS R. C. OVENS, M.D. 675 Bergen Avenue JERSEY CITY, N, J. NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology 250 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. FREDERICK C. PETERS, M.D. Ophthalmology Physicians' Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. WILLIAM M. SYLVIS. M.D., F.A.C.S. Surgery 1930 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EVERETT A. TYLER, M.D. Anesthesia Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. MICHELE VIGLIONE. M.D. 331 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. IOHN L. REDMAN, M.D. Pediatrics 331 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES W. URSPRUNG, M.D F.A.C.S. General Surgery 415 West James Street LANCASTER, PA. GEORGE I. RILLING, M.D. 5750 Rising Sun Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. HARRY S. WEAVER, IR., M.D. Ophthalmology 1433 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA. PA. WILLIAM G. SCHMIDT Law Applying to Patents in Medicine, l Pharmacy, Chemical Engineering 414 East Allen's Lane PHILADELPHIA, PA. Che. 0883 IACOB H. SIGAFOOS, M.D. Anesthesia 1700 Diamond Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CLARENCE L. SHOLLENBERGER, i M.D., F.A.C.S. Surgery 662 South Highland Avenue MERION, PA. 0 0 0 0 0 0030.0 0 .0 0 00 0'00'0 0'0 0'0 0.0 0'0 0'00'0 0'0 070 G. HARLAN WELLS, M.D. Internal Medicine - Diagnosis Hours: 9 to 12:30 1627 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES I. WHITE, M.D. Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. HORACE L. WEINSTOCK, M.D Urology 1930 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA. PA. f 000000000oo000000000 ' 0 000000000000005000030000000.0o000000.00.00.00. 00000000000000000000000000o-000000000000000000000000000000000 0:00 00 00 00:00:00.00.00.00.00.00.00 00 00 00 00.00.00.00:00 00.00.00:00.00.00.00:00.00.00:00.00:00:00'00:00,00.00:00 00:00.00 00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00,00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00 00.0 . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0 0 0.0 0:0 0:0 f O Q Q .SO .EQ 0:0 0:0 fs: 151 020 0:0 0:0 0:0 0 0 0 0 4. .Q 0:0 0:0 221 ISI :0 0:0 :gf 0:0 0 0 0:0 0:0 0:0 0:0 121 ISI 0:0 0:0 Q Q O O 3 2 O O 0 9 fi. .if , 0 0 0 X X 0 , 0 0 .ff .30 .S 0:0 6, 0:0 0? 0:0 Q Q Q.. .g. 0:0 0:0 0:0 0.0 lg 0x0 .3. .30 050 024 25: rg: 02, 030 0:0 0 O 0:0 030 gz, 0:0 0:0 0 0 0:0 'E' 050 'Z' 0'0 '10 7fne Jfame .2- ,', 0:0 2 3 . , 0 0 0:0 'E' 020 0? 0:0 0:0 0.0 0,0 0:0 0? O O 9 9 0:0 - 050 0:0 0:9 .:, 0:0 0:0 9:0 DRUG PRODUCTS '2' 3, 0:0 ,E, 0:0 0:0 'g' :sf THE STANDARD OF QUALITY AND VALUE ft: Q O ' 0'0 151 0 ,:, 0? Z? Sold by Registered Pharmacists :gf O oi. Who Display This Seal 'ff 0 0 132 9 0 0 15: .g. O 323 1.9 033 0:0 N 'E' ,., 0:0 0:0 9,0 ,0, 0:0 z Ox. ff: . 0:0 ' 0:0 Qz, 0:0 ,:, 0:0 . O Q 251 0:0 Q' U C 'f' 020 I ' 0 0:0 'E' 0 0 :Sf PHILADELPHIA Q. 0:0 'Q' : 0 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '0 '00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00'00:000 0 0:00.00.00'00.00.00:00.00.00.00:00.00.00:00.00'00:00.00.00.00.00.00.00.00,00:00.00:00' 0. O : . . , O , . , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 0 0.0 J 2 Qsoooovooo oooooeaooo ooooooooooooooooooooooeo u.oo.oo4oo.oQ.oo.u,o4.u.oo.oo . .n.n.n.oq,n.uo,oo.oo . . n.u.oo.oo.oo.o4.u.oo.n.n'oo.oo.n.u.e4.n.u.u u.u.o4.u COMPLIMENTS OE THE Hlllllllllll INSIIIHH IINI I N C O R P O R A T E D f5f5f5f5l'Nf5 Our passenger ss BARBARA, which serves a regular schedule between BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA, ancl PUERTO RICO every three vfeelcs, is characterized by its gentle Puerto Rican hospitality. 'We also maintain a treight service to Puerto Rico with weekly sailings from BALTIMORE. 0 BALTIMORE INSULAR LINE OFFICES: PIER 5, PRATT STREET BALTIMORE, MARYLAND 0 oooQooooooooooooooooo0ono oaqooooonooooooooooooooo oo.oo oQ.oo.oo.ooooo4oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo oo.oo.n.uoooo4ooo oooouoou.9o.oooooo.sooooo.oo.uoone-o.oooosoo4oooooou4oo.oo.oo E XPLOITATICDN ofthe EDICAL PROFESSIQN VERYWHERE it is rampant-newsapers, magazines, billboards, radio. Your doctor will tell you that .... Medical science has found that .... The greatest specialists in Timbutoo say that .... And the rest of he story is, of course, Use our pills or our vitamins three times a day, ask your doctor. You are forced to compete with those who offer your patients free advice regard- ing medical treatment. You deliver Mrs. Blank's baby today, and tomorrow she will receive by mail samples of baby foods with complete directions how to use them. Indeed, some physicians representing a commercial organization and knowing that the case is in your hands may address a personal letter to your patient offering his services free. 0 0 0 lt has been said that ten more years of the present trend of interference ini medical practice will do away with the need for private practice of infant feeding and other branches of medicine. 0 0 0 Mead johnson 6 Company have always believed that the feeding and care of babies and growing children is an individual problem that can best be controlled by the individual physician. For over twenty years and in dozens of ethical ways we have given practical effect to this creed. We hold the interest of the medical profession higher than our own, for we too, no doubt, could sell more of our products were we to advertise them directly to the public. So long as medical men tacitly encourage the present trend, so long will serious inroads continue to be made into private medical practice. When more physicians specify MEAD'S Products' when indicated, more babies will be fed by physicians because Mead johnson Cr Company earnestly co-operate with the medical pro- fession along strictly ethical lines and never exploit the medical profession. i'l2i'.1'!1'z'-lliillffs Nas. I, J and 35 l1c.i't1'i-glliiltwsc ll'iIh Exe lx uf ll 'limit linzbryn and yvusf lfnrlllcrly Dc.1't1'i-Illfiltosa ffm' with lvffllllllhll H25 ,llmzcllr l'iuslc1'w! in Oily Meadlf Cod I.i:fc1' 0Q'v A'o Oil 'iA'l.frlZ, l'1'uslvmI,' .llm1d's Slui1dt11'd1':vd Cod I.ii'fr Oil, Fab , r lunzg ,llcfzdfs f.NL'l'C'Llf,' fllcr1d's B1'CIUL'7'.S' Yeast Kjwwdcr and tab- 0, 215 lots! ' zlleudk l'n-zi'dv1'vd Lactic Aria' .llilk Nos. 1 and 2,' IlIcud's 'fffpmcftl' Oily IlIeud's l'z'u.vlcmI in Halibut Liver Oil fliquid and illilk .' Cliscg' .S'ul10e,' CL'llLtlC',' llIead's Halibut Liver mpsulcsj. Its tqtlnospllere of GREAT ES. plus unsurpassed facilities and services for functions of any size and type, make this world- famoushotelthecenteraround which revolves the really important social and com- ll mercial life of Philadelphia. It is where important events happen and outstanding people stay. It offers all the luxuries of modern comfort- at reasonable rates. ' AIR-CONDITIONED RESTAURANTS TR THIRD IN PHILADELPHIA CLAUDE H. BENNETT, livnvral Nlanagvr Sz n C e 1 87 6 WILLIAMS STANDARD INTERNE SUITS First fllwayf in Quality Ana' Service FOLDERS ON REQUEST C. D. Williams 8: Co. Designers and Ilflanufacturers 246 South Sixteenth Street Philadelphia, Pa ansooooooooooooooooooo Queen... o O-osooofouoo.n.u.oo.oo.u.u.u.ov.ov.n 04.0.0.5 . 0 .u.n.u.oo.o .ivyQzuznfuznznfnfuzqnfnznzufnzuznzqfo.fnzoQwz.oznznzufuznznfnfnzf0:04. Sdn.. ,IQ ,o zufuzo'zovzwtoezufvvzwfwfwzwfv 0:00100:00:0'Iv'Ivvzwfwfnfwfwzovfufnzoofoofoozooznfuznzuzooznznzo 0:0 J, ego .x. 0:0 .30 ego 3. 0:0 .f. I , o 0 ff: .1 ts I lme You fwnecl :fr exe ,:, .i. 3 151 rx: BELL 8: HOWELL 0:0 a .'. J. 222 Oib QE. 'x' 0? 3: of X 0:0 0,0 0,0 0? ' gs, .31 151 0? ego 'J ooo 252 151 3. 5. 0:9 gt, 251 151 030 :xo fo .xg .f. 12: MOVIE CAMERA Ox. 0:0 4. 232 :gg o rg: exe 9:9 121 A HELP IN YOUR PROI-'ESSION 131 151 A GREAT HOBBY 121 rf: , . . . rs: 0? Shel1oadmg! No Threadmg of F1lm! -Q- 0.0 0.0 oz. lo 'I' It' t'm d a reall fi e 3 S I 6 you .owne y H the SHELLOADING l6mm. F'1l.mo 121 3, camera, for movles can be more than 3, 0 a rec eat'o . . . th be u d t - -f F 1 n .ey can Se . O The Perfect MOVIE Camera for Everyone- .-1 ,f, advance yourself LD your professlon. 5, 'Q' Your movies, however, can be no bet- 0? ,ff ter than the camera with which you D Zz: make them. QQ. 'x' - - , . . . . 'x' 'g' Wlth 3 F111110 YOUU have H Camera Th1s trxm. pocket-Httmg 16mrn. camera glves you unusual 3: 'z' so rec' th t f ' 1 l ' h . . . . 2 ' p lse a pro esslona resu ts WH versatlllty and almost automat1c ease of operatlon. It shel- 'g' fx- amateur ease are assured . . . so versa- 1 I 3' Og: tile that every movie Opportunity can loads with pre-threaded 16mm. film magazmes. Perm1ts Ig: . . . . . x 3' be captured. You can make films that m1d-reel changes from color to black-and-wh1te. Has buxlt- 3: 12' ' 1 ' ' ' . . . ,, . . . . 'Z Ig' W11 be In demand at medlcal meetings' 1n, damage-proof, pos1t1ve v1e-wtinder whlch el1m1nates Ig: 2' So get a Filmo, precision-made by - . 2 '.' ' . off-center 1ctures even 1f our e e wanders! Has four 3' the makers of Ho1lywood's professwnal p . y y I 'f' :EI equipment, now. Easy terms available. speeds and smgle frame exposure. Uses all spec1a1 lenses. IE: jj ik With one-inch F 2.7 lens . . . 3115. ji: ' : .0. . . . 1 1 .. 5. pilmos are basic came,-as Wllich will To show your mov1es at the1r best, use prec1s1on-bu11t 'gf ,fi keep pace with your progress. Bell 81 Howell Filmo projectors. 1:1 o'o oo 3 2 oo 0 0 0 to . 2 33 The Home of Motlon Plcture Equlpment 3,3 E0 0:0 0:0 . I oxo 6.0 l , - OXO I IBITIS TOWITI al' C DC '5' O Oz' Q :SO 15, 918 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. PA. .si 5. PENNypacker 7320 MAin 7261 .Q 151 151 ozoozuzoozoo'oo:n:oo:n:n:n:ooznzuzoozoozooz 0: a:oo:oo:oo:n,oo.o :ooze oznzuz Q: Q: Q: ozoozoozooooozoozooznz ozuzoozoozoazoozoozoo. .noon 0.00.0ovoiozoozoozoozoozoozoozoozoozooz 0:00200:00:0ozoozoozoozoozooznzuzoozo oooooo ooooooooooooofoooooooooneon-...announce oo,eo,n.oo.oo.oo. Q .0 n.n'oo'oo.oo, o.n.u.oo.n'o4.oo..oo ,u.oo.oo.u.n.oo.n.aa.oa.oo. .o4.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.u.o4.oa.o Nitrous Oxide Oxygen 4 The Ohio Chemical and ' l Manufactured by ' Manufacturing Company National Publishing CQ, Oxygen Tent Rental Service PHILADELPHIA. PA. . Manufacturers of DeLuxe Year Book l 0623-25 Brandywine Street Covers and Loose-Leaf Binders PHILADELPHIA, PA. l Miller. Bain, Bayer 6. Co. ST R E ET WHOLESALE DRY Gooos 81, 1001-1003 FILBERT STREET PROPERT l PHILADELPHIA, PA. i Estfiblislicd IQO0 I ggetgtimi - l Medical Book Department Streets THE REILLY BOOK STORE ' 133 NORTH THIRTEENTH ST. PHILADELPHIA JOHN A. BORNEMAN AND SONS Thirty-eight years' practical experience in manufacturing Homeopathic Remedies. Up-to-date in all matters pharmaceutical. The necessity for ultra purity in strictly Homeopathic remedies is recog- nized and constantly practiced. Manufacturing a full line of Tinctures, Tablet Triturates, Compressed Tablets, Ointments, and Specialties that produce dependable results. Laboratories: Philadelphia Address: Norwood, 248 N. 15th Street Delaware County, Pa.. Philadelphia, Pa. STUDENT OUTFIT ORDERS A SPECIALTY :ooo oooooooooon so--Q. ...foes oooaoooooso ooo any so Q.- oo.oo,oo.oo. .0 o .0 Ou, . 0' . 0 . 'Q 0 o.w.oo'oo.o 0 .u.oo.ao,oo .oo.oo.oo.o4noo oo o moo: I oooooooooooooooooonooooooqpeeaooovooaonvvoooooooooooooo 40.00.0o.oo.oo.ousageo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo oo.oo.oo.oo.oo. 0 .oo.u.u.oo.oo.9 o.oo.u.n.n 5:4044 00.04.031o.oo.oo'o0.04.0a.uo.oo.oo.oo.u.oo,oo.oo.oo.o0.00. FRANK L. LAGAN Gao. H. MCCONNELL fgf 0:0 PHILALILLPHIA SURGICAL INSIRUAALNI CU. - DISTRIBUTORS - O HAMILTON MODERN MEDICAL FURNITURE I ROYAL CHROME WAITING ROOM SUITES O WAPPLER SHORT WAVE DIATHERMY Write us for Location Data and Office Planning Service RIT. 3613-14 BULRICKE A RUNYUN, INC. HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACISTS 116 South Eleventh Street Philadelphia, Pa. FRESH PLANT TINCTURES TINCTURE TABLETS COMBINATION TABLETS SPECIALTIES MEDICINE CASES We solicit initial orders of Physician entering into the practice of mericine. CATALOGUE MAILED ON REQUEST Publishers of BOERICKE'S MATERIA MEDICA Ninth Edition 1717 SANSOM sT. 15: Medical Surgical Supplies .f. PHILADELPHIA HOSPITAL SUPPLY COMPANY IQ: Manufacturers of 0:9 Custom Built Physicians 3. o Wood Furniture :ff 264 SOUTH SIXTEENTH STREET : Phone: PENnypacker 1665 , l o Trusses Surgical Belts O BELLE v1s'rA SANATORIUM ii' 0.0 A o 0.0 Open to the Profession 'f .f. Germantown Avenue and City Line Convalescent and Mild Mental fo 4 Inspection Invited NATIONAL ACADEMIC CAP 6. GOWN COMPANY 821-23 Arch Street Philadelphia, Pa. 0 ALL CAPS AND GOWNS USED AT THIS SCHOOL SUPPLIED BY US. SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT COMPANY 3527-31 LANCASTER AVENUE PHILADELPHIA 0 Microscopes O Laboratory Apparatus 0 Chemicals ' 0 Reagents exe A o onyooooooaoooooooosoov+oooo o oo oo.oo,oo.oo o .0 .oo.oo.oo.oo,oo.oo.oo,u.oo,oo.oo.oo.oo,u.oo.oo.oo'oo.o Q o xo chesmut Hill 1600 145 North Fifteenth Street ooooooooooooooooosoooooooooooooooooeooooooooeoonsooooo oo oo so oo.oo.oo.oo.Qo.oo.oQ.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.u.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.n,u.oo.oo.oo'oo.oo.oo.oo.o4.0o,o.so.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.so.o0.00.0o.oo.oo.oo.so u.oo.oe.u.oo The American lnstitute of Homeopathy . welcomes Hohnemann graduates to fellowship in the nation's oldest national medical society. You will never regret early association with your national society. lt represents your profession nationally, and offers through its monthly lournal and annual meetings invaluable postgraduate opportunities. Special arrangements for the membership of recent graduates have been made by the trustees. A. I. H. application forms for membership may be had at the Dean's office. lOlN UPON GRADUATION ' KERMAN 6: DE VINE PHARMACISTS . LU CHEO ETTE 246 North Fifteenth Street HAHNEMANN Where the Hahnemann Boys Meet When in Town. A Pleasant Place to Rest and Eat S. E. Cor. Eleventh and Spruce Sts. PHILADELPHIA. PA. MR- Und MRS- PAUL Realthful Recreation Agreeable Fellowship STATIONERS and PRINTERS THE ADAMS - LESSACK CO. Acquire and Regularly Practice the GYM -- SWIM - PLAY HABIT in the College Supplies our Specialty Y. M. C. A. No School Item too Hard to Get t A T' 1421 Arch Street Philadelphia, Pa. a ny une Central Club Residence provides facili- ties for Men, Women, Married Couples, at Moderate Prices. PHILADELPHIA, PA. 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'E Our Slogan :ff Quality at Moderate Prices ISI 252 333 PETE'S BARBER HOP 0? 0:0 0 '0 THE STUDENTS SI-IGP Below the College NORTH FIFTEENTH STREET .i. E22 soooooooooooooooooovooooooaoo 0.00.0004.00.04.04.0o,0o.0o.0o.0o.oo.0o.u.0o.0o.0o.0o.0o.oo.00.0o.0o.0o.oo.oo.0o.00. , Surgical Instruments of Quality Ig: Trusses, Elastic Stockings 4' Arch Supports and Rubber Goods 214 North Fifteenth Street Phone RITtenhouse 6635 PHILADELPHIA, PA. Club Breakfasts Platter Luncheons Special Dinner Platters From 20c to 50c WILLIAMS' RESTAURANT 326 North Broad Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ' Quick and Pleasant Service 0 Piping Hot Coffee Delicious Desserts Open 24 Hours Q' z 0.0 0:0 00:0 0'00:0o'0o'00:030o'00'00:00:00:0o:0o:00:00:0o:0o:00'00:00'00'00'0o'0o'00:0o:00:00:00:00:0 o o ure so Q 0 Q 'Q 0:0 Q' 0 Q I 'n'n'n'f o'. J 'N nz. .'n'n:n'u'u'n'N:. Q u - e.. c o o o s o o o 0 o Q o gunna... 'Q' . noone.. BEST WISI-IES FROM THE MANUFACTURERS OF 0 BENZEDRINE INHALER 0 BENZEDRINE SOLUTION 0 PENTNUCLEOTIDE Accepted by the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry of the American Medical Association Smith, Kline 81 French Laboratories Philadelphia Penna. 1 Established 1,841 .2 ifflillll ziCllLtZl'nA7 Ad2'Hll.Ai.4 L. M. SHEAFFER CLOISTERDALE FARM EGGS EPHRATA, PENNA. Fre. 5774 Race 9641 Achenbach 6. Butler. Inc. 1508-10 BRANDYWINE STREET Heat and Cold Insulation Contractors RU-BER-OID WATSON 85522 Magnesia Covering Insulating Material Supplied and In- stalled by us in the new Hahnemann Medical College Building THE CO MENTS O HOOVER - SMITH MPM F COMPANY ELITE DRUG CO., Inc. 726 Chestnut Street , E PHILADELPHIA We lgD23li?e?RTH BROADCEJEEET3438 FRATERNITY JEWELERS SCIENTIFIC 12-EST CONTROL AND Q AA u Y ,Q ,A SANITATION . j 'ig I 1 S V 0 G E L - f Ahalfvefifhinegfhvfvsfaphir l - EXTERMINATING COMPANY 1' 1 , - or PHILADELPHIA KLEINIVGOODMAN 2212 CHESTNUT STREET 1835, 10th Sfmt Phila., P.. 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HARRIS TYRE-Succeeding ENGINEERS - CONTRACTORS 'f' Steel - Ornamental Iron Witherspoon Bldg., Philadelphia Pennypacker 1274 Reg. Prof. Eng. Brown's Cafeterias and Bars 2' Full Line of IMPORTED LIQUORS and WINES HOME COOKED FOOD F. W. HOFFMAN 6. co., Inc. 35-37 SOUTH FOURTH STREET o 0 PHILADELPHIA o .0 o 09 ' C 'A Iv Il AWBRAEUNINGER 5 INC., 0 0 PHILADELPHIA, PA. A'5D1CALAm,SBuyy,DWx GEORGE SUTTON, Secretary N.w. con. new e. wAn.Nu'r srs. PHILADELPHIA WILLIAM A. WEAVER JOHN I' FELDENS HOSPITAL and INSTITUTIONAL CHARLES KIENT-E EQUIPMENT GUILDCRAFT OPTICIANS 6742 LAWNTON AVENUE PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. 27 South Nineteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. , SPRuce 2719 Race 6078 I PIERRE UNIFORMS QUALITY INTERNE SUITS 224-226 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. ig: o 0? o o 3 You Are Entitled to the Best Insist On Pierre's To Be Sure To Get It. 3 , ... o e .0 EVERY GARMENT GUARANTEED TO GIVE COMPLETE SATISFACTION. o ago 0:0 0,0 0:4 oooooooooooo oooooo-soooooofoeqqooooeooooosonooonooaoo oooo.n.oo.oo.oo.oo.oo.u,a4.00.03 0. o.oo.oo.o4.oo.n.u.oo.oo.o0.000000 .u.u.u.oo.oo.o . Q. ,u.u.u,oo.oo.o .n.oo.oo.u.u,u.oo.oo.oo. 0343... oeooooooooooooooooo sooo 0.0o.oo.oo.n.oo.oo.oo.sv.oo.oo.u.u.oo.oa.u.n.oo.o0.00.0-0.00.4434 LEDERLE 6. COMPANY .2 o o 0.0 o 804 Arch St. 85 N. E. Cor. Broad 84 Race -- PHILADELPHIA, PA. 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