Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1941
Page 1 of 266
Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 266 of the 1941 volume:
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ng: f K ,. 4 . B - H ? , 1- , J S O b -A 0. 1 Q ., I 5 n 6- 'I . 1100- 1, . 5 I I K V . .1 1 ' .. n , , 4 . , 1 . . I , .4 - ,-Q -Nt ' ...., 'il L44 'iii 7i'la4hg.g, Q ,-,IJ-- ' 'I 1 v if 9 -f. ' O n f - 4 1 10 QA., E PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR gCLASS OF HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE Warren Pecban, Editor-in-chief William M. Kummer, Bus. Mg A. Engle Lenhart, Adv. Mgr. jack Hladyrz. Bw. .1 lgr ilk-A-P f Two great careers of service to mankind can hardly be conceived than those of the pedaqoque 'sk and the physician. Unfortunately they each de- mand a delicate blend of the finest in mind, body and spirit the human race can produce. Rarely in- deed does any man achieve true greatness in either, and rarer still in both. To such a man, Dr. Newlin Fell Paxson, the l-lahnemann class of l94l humbly dedicates this book. 'Y 'WWW- N u 1 4!.E:i.blE.3in.'n4.-Ll.,+,A.,--- .,,,, ..,, .4 lil XWQDLE3 ln 1937 some one hundred and fifty men assembled at l-lahnemann. Each one represent- ed considerable variance in aptitude, culture and belief. ln one aim alone was there accord: the study of medicine. However, in this too there existed a variable stimulus - be it family, prestige, security, or scientific interest. From the very beginning these differences provided a fertile field wherein were planted subtle seeds of conflict. Since then a few grew wildly into hatred, others died from lack of care, and many were gently nurtured into under- standing. Consequently, impressions have been developed, perhaps complimentary or degrad- ing, deserving or unfounded, which will soon be forgotten or always remembered. This publication is the historical document of the Class of 1941 and, as such, must present the facts as accurately as memory allows. Conse- quently our purpose is not to delete the bad for the good, but to Weave a pattern of actuality. Read it to remmbery Discard it to forget. B. WARREN PECHAN, Editor. CGD WTEWU' SENIORS o UNDERCLASSES O FRATERNITIES I , ACTIVITIES I FEATURES W 4 IJ QS Q-Pj 55 'I' . 'u sv- s :H- f. F., L N 1 qi'.-,v.,w'.w15cy-pv-s4.+,1s5r,g51ylg'fyn'1Q'95g ,fu Pl H - 1848 '1 P1 W' A2 r'- il. Fk 7' X .3 ' L IH z,. . T1 E. If ,,., tif Q ,. .. .r 'ibdvr .j, - -,-- fgg. lp lsfg N. I' ' X f 1 A gf' x, 'M .. Q, I.. ax ' ,421 Cf . ,--f'. 'Nj--TH :. , 'dxf- Sj s i -. A Q '13 Q +' --61+ If 17 N5 , 95' J eel- ' 22,211 ' I f ' Ii l. u D 1 . I' . Yc...gf 'ixffa A za -,H-, .. ...--V ,,,,-3: i..t'-!i2--- 'i ,. agp' Q , 'mr . '- - ,q A -.f- ,fl- ,- ' - ' .V - -- 4- -s 'Q--Q gf 4. --J' 7-j '.:. ,.' ,,,,, J - 1888 523- OUR ALMA MATER . . Her past moulds our ideals . . . Her present trains our minds . . . Her future stimulates our aspirations nil HIT HW If Il 'I gif HH HIT THE HOSPITAL at sniff.. 1 11. x X f L' AA G , Q X X f f f! ffjv 'Qs AMPITHEATEB -1'-1 9- QQ., 'Xl ' 9 J ? f I ! n S I 11 33? 6 1 1 2 I uanw 1 gl..-1 .-. - - ' A ' lllll l . Q N f' I Y H E I WN w ., H --Q44-QC'4 I H IOSEPH S. CONWELL. LL.B., LL.D. President Board of Trustees CHARLES A. ALLEN. B.S. in Econ, THOMAS G. HAWKES. AM.. LL.B., l,I..1.b ADDISON R. BROWN PHILIP C. SNOW, MA. DAVID BURPEE FREDERIC H. STRAWBRIDGE. JR. J. WARNER BUTTERWORTH FREDERIC J. von RAPP. Litl.D,. LLD WILLIAM H. CLAYTON VICTOR WIERMAN. JR. JOSEPH S. CONWELL, LL.B., LL.D. E. BURKE WILFORD, BS. in Honorary President CHARLES D. BARNEY, MA. Vice-Presidents PHILIP Ci. SNOW, A.M. THOMAS G. HAWKES. AIXII.. LL.B., LLD Provost and Executive Vice-President FREDERIC J. von RAPP, Litt.D., LL.D. Secretary VICTOR WIERMAN. JR. Solicitors PEPPER, BODINE. STOKES and SCHOCH Treasurer FIDELITY-PHILADELPHIA TRUST COMPANYY ef- xal WILLIAM A. PEARSON, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D. Decxn of the College f70 me CAM, of XQJI This college year has been a very difficult one. The uncertainty of military service has been a severe handicap both to faculty members and students. Many things in this world cannot be influenced materially by a single individual and the best philosophy of life under present conditions is to work each day as if it were the last real opportunity for gaining knowledge and try to Worry about what the future may bring. Sons of Hahnemannn have done their full duty in every emergency and this tradition will certainly be observed by the Class of 19441. 9...- FREDERIC I. von RAPP Provost and Executive Vice-President The rung of a ladder was never meant to rest upon, but only to hold a man's foot long enough to enable him to put the other somewhat higher . Your four years of intense preparation for the profession of medicine are being brought to a close with the knowledge that your steady growth in the medical sciences has been recognized fully. Having been trained in an atmosphere most conducive to success, and absorbing much that is necessary for a satisfactory development, you go forth now to make your contribution to the welfare of humanity, with the superior training in science that this institution gives, and with the firm grasp of its spirit. Since education is wholly a matter of personal effort and a continuous process, may you arrive at that degree of ability that the conscientious practice of medicine demands. R. W. PLUMMER, M.D. Medical Director To the Class of l94l: Hahnernann Medical College qeoqraphically is one block away from the hospital, but the Medical Director has been closer to the medical students ot this class than the situation indi- cates. l-le conscientiously believes that all of you will find a proper sphere in the practice ot your profession. 23 WAYNE T. KILLIAN. B.E., M.D.. F.A..C.A. Professor Emeritus of Anesthesia IOHN EDWIN IAMES. TR.. B.S., M.D.. F.A.C.S. Professor Emeritus oi Obstetrics FRANK O. NAGLE, A.M., M.D. Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology GILBERT I. PALEN. A.B., M.D., F.A.C.S Professor Emeritus oi Otology THOMAS W. PHILLIPS. M.D Professor cmd Head Department of Anatomy WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Professor oi Anatomy THOMAS M. SNYDER., M.D. Professor of Histology and Embryology Associate Professors C. L. SHOLLENBERGER, JR., M.D., F.A.C.S. ROWLAND RICKETTS, B.S., A.M., M.D., D.N.B. M. F. ASHLEY-MONTAGU, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associates HARRY P. LANDIS, JR., M.D. H. WASTL, M.D. Instructors WILLIAM J. KUEMMEL, A.B., M.D. HERBERT S. WARREN, A.M., B.S., Ph.D. WILLIAM Y. LEE, M.D. Assistants LIVINGSTON CHUNN, M.D. LEON A. FRANKEL, M.D. OSCAR E. HEIM, M.D. NUBAR A. KARAKASHIAN, M.D. PHILIP D. LI VOLSI, M.D. ALEXANDER E. PEARCE, M.D. SAMUEL S. ROMAGOSA, M.D. THOMAS F. PUGH, M.D. LEWIS KIRCHOFER, M.D. WILLIAM A. PEARSON, Ph.D., Sc.D., M.D., LL.D. Dean of the College I O ,X- EILEZ TR3.'? HIRAM FRANCIS SNIDER B.S., M.S. Instructor in Chemistry whose stature as a line teacher and gentleman will linger long in the memories of those whom he helped become physicians. EHRENFRIED PFEIFFER, Ch.E., M.D. Research Associate in Chemistry NATHAN GRIFFITH, LL.B. Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence WILLIAM G. SCHMIDT. Ph.D. Lecturer on Bio-physics and Physical Chemistry IOSEPI-I S. HEPBURN, ILB., I-LM., B.S. in Chem.. M.S., Ph.D. M.D Professor of Chemistry IOSEPH CHANDLER. I-LB.. Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry HARRY MARTIN EBERHARD. MJ-L. M.D., LL.D., F.A.C.P. Professor cmd Head Deparimeni of Gastroenterology Associate Professors GEORGE LORENZ, JR., M.D. 0 ROWLAND RICKETTS, M.D. LESTER L. BOWER, M.D. Associates O WARREN J. SNYDER, M.D. JAMES F. TOMPKINS, M.D. JOSEPH s. HEPBURN, M.D. , 1. J. WESSEL, M.D. 1. GRATCH, M.D. WILLIAM s. SILVERMAN, M.D. JOHN B. CONWELL, M.D. ' ALFONSO L. PIERRO, M.D. Assistants WILLIAM ELLIS, M.D. WILLIAM J. WALKER, MD. WILLIS C. GERHART, M.D. EA. 'LFLIR 0 JBINITELQQD QDCGI I 30 STANLEY P. REIMANN. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor and Head Department of Oncology N. VOLNEY LUDWICK, M.D., Associate Professor of Oncology H. RUSSELL FISHER, M.D., Associate Professor of Oncology ,,.,,..-. , V . SLS 2? I .Lk :A . -gg on , ..'- w 'WI .z'??'f. .5-.I , - EARL B. CRAIG. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor and Head Department of Gynecology NJ Ei LGB FRANK I FROSCH M.D F A C S of Gynecology Associate Professor CHARLES F. KUTTEROFF, M.D Lecturer on Gynecology EDMOND C. HESSERT, M.D. Demonstrator of Gynecology BRUCE V. MacFADYEN. M.D. Demonstrator of Gynecology ALFRED R. SERAPHIN, M.D. Instructor in Gynecology ARTHUR W. W. WADDINGTON M.D. Assistant in Gynecology ARTHUR A. HARTLEY, M.D. Assistant in Gynecology FRANCIS B. SMYTH. M.D. Assistant in Gynecology G. HARLAN WELLS. B.S., M.D.. Sc.D.. F.A.C.P Professor and Head Depariment of Medicine DONALD R. FERGUSON, M.D., F.A.C.P. Clinical Professor of Medicine GEDRGE D. GECKELER. M,D. Associate Professor of Medicine CHARLES J. WHITE. MD. Associate Professor of Physical Diagnosis J. ANTRIM CRELLIN, MD. Associate Professor of Medicine LOWELL L. LANE. M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH. MD. Associate Professor of Medicine H. EARL TWINING, M.D. Associate Professor of Dermatology RICHARD W. LARER. M. D. Lecturer on Medical Economics DUNNE W. KIRBY. MD. Lecturer on Medicine MORRIS FITERMAN, MD, Lecturer on Medicine THOMAS J. VISCHER. M.D. Lecturer on Medicine MICHELE VIGLIONE. MD. Lecturer on Medicine E. ROLAND SNADER. IR.. M.D.. F.A.C.P. Clinical Professor oi Medicine IOSEPH MCELDOWNEY. M.D. Clinical Professor oi Medicine CHARLES E. LAWSON, M.D. Lecturer on Medicine WILLIAM KLINMAN, M.D. Lecturer on Medicine WARREN S. HOENSTINE, M.D Lecturer on Medicine HERBERT M. SHARKIS. M.D Lecturer on Medicine GERALD P. FINCKE, M.D. Lecturer on Medicine RALPH BERNSTEIN. M.D., F.A.C.P. Professor of Dermatology RUSSELL S. MAGEE. M.D. Lecturer on Medicine PETER J. WARTER, M.D. Lecturer on Medicine JOHN H. DAVIE, M.D. Demonstrator of Medicine J. RAWLINS GINTHER, M.D. Instructor in Dermatology HERMAN KLINE, M.D. Instructor in Dermatology J. PAUL BURKETT, M.D. Instructor in Medicine C. J. KLEINGUENTHER, M,D. Instructor in Dermatology ROMAINE C. HOFFMAN, M.D. Assistant in Medicine ANDREW DOERING. M.D. Assistant in Medicine THOMAS F. PUGH. M.D. I 2- , , Assistant in Medicine if M K 3- WADE BASSINGER, M.D. Assistant in Medicine 8 9 Mu -- new ,I PAUL C. WITTMAN. M.D. Clinical Professor of Dermatology 37 EDWARD A. STEINHILBER, M.D. Professor and Head Department of Neurology cmd Psychiatry HENRY I. KLOPP. M.D., F .A.C.P. Professor of Psychiatry JAMES HARWOOD CLOSSON,M.D. Associate Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry GEORGE R. NEFF, M.D. Associate in Neurology and Psychiatry PAUL A. METZGER, M.D. Associate in Neurology and Psychiatry L. THOMAS SOOY, M.D. Lecturer on Neurology and Psychiatry EDGAR M. BLEW, M.D. Instructor in Psychiatry B. MARVIN HAND, M.D. Instructor in Neurology and Psychiatry CHARLES S. FOX, M.D. Instructor in Neurology and Psychiatry HORACE I-I. HUNSICKER. M.D. Assistant in Neurology and Psychiatry WARREN C. MERCER, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Professor and Head Department of Obstetrics STEER NEWLIN F. PAXSON M.D., F.A.C.S Clinical Professor oi Obstetrics Associate Professors JAMES B. BERT, M.D. ALBERT MUTCH, M.D. HENRY L. CROWTHER, M.D. Associates DESIDERIO A. ROMAN, M.D. RICHARD R. GATES, M.D. HENRY D. LAFFERTY, M.D. Lecturers PAUL C. MOOCK, M.D. WILLIAM G. WOSNACK, M.D. Instructors ROBERT J. MCNEILL. M.D. ROBERT M. HUNTER. M.D. OSCAR GRIGGS, M.D. Assistants PAUL M. JAMES, M.D. HARRY D. EVANS. M.D. FRANCIS M. JAMES, M.D. ALFRED S. DAMIANI, M.D. FREDERIC C. PETERS, M.D. Professor and Head e Department of Opthalmology V v 0 L? LQJZALLLMJCID -v THOMAS M. SNYDER, M.D. Clinical Professor oi Opthalmoloqy HARRY S. WEAVER, JR., M.D. Associate Professor of Ophthalmology MARION W. BENJAMIN, M.D. Associate ix: Ophthalmdogy WILLIAM J. RYAN. M.D. Associa'c in Ophthalmology H. FRANKLIN FLANAGAN, M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology JOHN S. MILLER, M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology WILLIAM S. SUTHERLAND, M.D. Associate in Ophthalmology RUSSELL C. SMITH, M D. Assistant in Ophthalmology GEORGE P. GLENN, M.D. Assistant in Ophthalmology NUBAR A. KARAKASHIAN, M.D. Assistant in Ophthalmology IOSEPH V LAY. M.D.. F.A.C.S. Professor and Head Department of Otolaryngology Q V QDTCQLZAALQYBQIGCQLQDGNY CHARLES B. HOLLIS, M.D.. I-'.A.C.S. Professor of Larynqology and Rhinology Associate Professors JOSEPH R. CRISWELL, M.D. CARROLL F. HAINES. M.D. Associates JOHN H. MCCUTCHEON, M.D. RAYMOND MCGRATH, M.D. RUSSELL D. GEARY. M.D. A. V. HALLOWELL, M.D. Lecturers WILLIAM A. WEAVER. JR.. M.D. HENRY J. KOHLER. M.D. Demonstrators W. VERNON HOSTELLEY, M.D. HERBERT P. HARKINS, M.D. Assistants BURTON A. HALL. M.D. ROBERT M RAPP, MD. GEORGE N. A. WESCOAT, M.D. L. E. MARTER, M.D. Clinical Professor of Laryngology cmd Rhinology SAMUEL W. SAPPINGTON M.D.. F.A.C.S. Professor and Head Department ot Pathology TIEHCIDIL O. F. BARTHMAIER, M.D. Associate Professor of Pathology GRANT o. FAVORITE. M.D. WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D. Associate in Surgical Pathology J. ARTHUR HORNEFF, M.D. Associate in Pathology DAVID W. HORN, Ph.D. Lecturer on Hygiene FRED S. PETERS, M.D. Instructor in Ophthalmological Pathology T. M. SNYDER, M.D. Instructor in Ophthalmological Pathology HENRY D. LAFFERTY. M.D. Instructor in Gynecological Pathology EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D. Instructor in Surgical Pathology H. RUSSELL FISHER. MD Associate Professor of Pathology Associate Professor f of Pathology ' 'Q M523 -Q HUNTER S. COOK. M.D. ' Associate Professor of Pathology 47 ?EDD A CHARLES SIGMUND RAUE A.M.. M.D. Professor and Head Department of Pediatrics ERI! B. K. FLETCHER PhG MD Clinical Professor of Pedxcrtrlcs J. H. READING. JR.. M.D. Associate in Pediatrics CARL C. FISCHER. M.D. Associate in Pediatrics ROBERT A. HIBBS. M.D. Lecturer on Pediatrics WILLIAM P. GREGG, M.D. Lecturer on Pediatrics HORST A. AGERTY, M.D. Lecturer on Pediatrics HARRY B. MARK, M.D. Demonstrator of Pediatrics PAUL M. KISTLER, M.D. Demonstrator of Pediatrics FREDERICK W. JARVIS. M.D Instructor in Pediatrics P. J. C. GAMBESCIA, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics MARTIN PACKMAN, M.D. Assistant in Pediatrics JOHN R. NOON. JR., M.D. Assistant in Pediatrics I. L. REDMAN MD Associate Professor oi Pedmtncs REINHARD BEUTNER, Ph.D.. M.D. Professor and Head D pcxrtment of Pharmacology D A RMA DEED 0 J JOHN A. BORNEMAN, Ph.G., P.D. Professor of Phcmnacy JOSEPH W. MESSEY. Ph.G.. M,D Associzitc in Pharmacology RAYMOND E. SEIDEL, M.D. Associzitc in Pharmacology JAMES C. MUNCH. BS.. MS.. Ph.D. Lecturcr in Pharmacology WALTER C. DIETRICH, BS. Assistant in Plizirmacology HARRY J. PRATT. BS. Assistant in l lini'i1iuc':wiogy AARON B. SLOANE. HS. Assistant in Plmurmzicology GEORGE P. MILEY, M.D. Clinical Professor of Pharmacology 1' NBTIAQ' -'za .-'Fr 4:?w,'- L , '43 ,N -Q th 1- N' IOHN C. SCOTT. I-LB.. Ph.D. Professor and Head Department of Physiology I. F. MCCLENDON. M.S., Ph.D. Research Professor oi Physiology JOSEPH S. HEPBURN. AB., A.M.. B.S. in Chem., M.S., Ph.D.. M.D. Professor of Chemistry GEORGE D. GECKELER. M.D. Lecturer on Physiology H. F. FLANAGAN. B.S.. M.D. Lecturer on Physiology THOMAS J. VISCHER, M.D. Instructor in Physiology FRANCIS M. JAMES. M.D. Instructor in Physiology LYLE V. BECK, M.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Physiology THEO. W. BATTAFARANO. M.D. Assistant in Physiology GUSTAVE A. VAN LENNEP. M.D., F.A.C.S.. F.A.B.S. Professor and Head Department of Surgery if-3 R ir? DESIDERIO ROMAN. M.D., F.A.C.S.. F.I.C.S. Clinical Professor of Surgery Associate Professors DEACON STEINMETZ, M.D. WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D. THOMAS L. DOYLE, M.D WILLIAM L. MARTIN, M.D. EVERETT H. DICKINSON, M.D. Lecturers C. L. SHOLLENBERGER, JR., M.D. EDWIN O. GECKELER, M.D. FRANK E. BRISTOL, M.D. EUGENE F. CARPENTER, M.D. THEODORE C. GEARY, M.D. DONALD T. JONES, M.D. CHARLES D. BAILEY, M.D. Instructors N. FULMER HOFFMAN, M.D. GEORGE J. RILLING. M.D. WILLIAM Y. LEE. M.D. JAMES A. SELIGMAN, M.D. CHARLES C. THOMPSON, M.D. AUBREY B. WEBSTER. M.D., F.A.C.S. Clinical Professor of Surgery IAMES M. GODFREY. M.D. Professor of Anesthesia EVERETT A. TYLER, M.D. HENRY S. RUTH, M.D. Clinical Professor of Anesthesia Clinical Professor of Anesthesia 78' e' I O 56 IOHN A. BROOKE. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor of Orthopedic Surge1'Y Instructors EDWARD P. VAN TINE, M.D. MAXWELL P. WHITE, M.D. JOHN F. ROWLAND, M.D. DAVID D. NORTHROP, M.D. ERNEST L. ROSATO. M.D. FRANK H. MURRAY, M.D. W. A. BUCK, M.D. R. C. MOYER, M.D. M. F. ONDOVCHAK, M.D. JOHN J. DOMANSKI, M.D. LEOPOLD S. LIPSITZ, M.D. JACOB H. SIGAFOOS, M.D. RUSSELL C. SMITH, M.D. HERMAN J. LUBOWITZ, M.D. E. DALLET SHARPLESS, M.D. WM. C. THOROUGHGOOD, M.D. ALEXANDER E. PEARCE, M.D. IAMES D. SCHOFIELD. M.D., F.A.C.S. Clinical Professor of Proctology 4754? GARTH WILKINSON BOERICKE. M.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Materia Medica ' and Therapeutics 'LFLHI LH 'X WEUTH' 58 bt N. VOLNEY LUDWICK. M.D. IACOB W. FRANK. M.D. Professor of Radiology Professor oi Roentgenoloqy Associate Professors VVILLIAM B. GRIGGS, M.D. JOHN J. 'McKENNA. M.D. A. E. KRICK, M.D. RUSSELL K. MATTERN, M.D. RUSSELL S. MAGEE, M.D. JULES J. KLAIN, M.D. CHARLES L. W. RIEGER, M.D. Associate in Rochtgcnology WILLIAM F. BAKER, M.D. Lecturer on Non-Pharmacal Therapeutics WILLIAM M. SNOWDEN, M.D. Lecturer on Therapeutics HARRY D. EVANS. M.D. Demonstrator of Roentgc-nology a W. E. KEPLER. M.D. Instructor in Roentgenology JACOB H. LEHMAN, M.D. Instructor in Roentgehology EMANUEL ALMES, M.D. Assistant in Therapeutics 59 QD LEON T. ASHCRAFT, A.M.. M.D., F.A.C.S. Professor and Head Department of Urology EDWARD C. CAMPBELL, M.D. Lecturer on Urology WM. C. HUNSICKER, JR., M.D. Lecturer on Urology CHARLES F. LEONARD, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology BERNARD G, WALKER, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology LEANDER P. TORI, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology HENRY G. BLESSING, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology HORACE L. VJEINSTOCK, M.D Demonstrator of Urology WILLIAM ELLIS, M.D. Demonstrator of Urology Q-f X I. MILLER KENWORTHY, M.D. Associate Professor of Urology FRANK C. BENSON, IR.. M.D., Sc.D., F.A.C.S Professor of Radiology 62 A pioneer was removed from Hahnemann through the death of Dr. Frank C. Benson, Ir., on February 18, 1941. A tru1y great name was thus added to that 1ist of departed teachers who had devoted their 1ives to Hahnemann. He was a pioneer. He was one of the first men to use Radium in the United Statesy he was the Head of the first Department of Radium Therapy in a genera1 hospita1 and in addition for many years he gave the first comp1ete course in the use of Radium in a medica1 co11ege. He was a scientist. This was evidenced by his many contributions to radio1ogica1 investigations. A1ways the gent1e and understanding c1inician, every patient right1y p1aced their a1oso1ute confidence and faith in his judgment. He was a great teacher. His boys , as he always spoke of his c1ass each year, soon 1earned that his office and 1ihrary were a1Ways open to them. It was here that many hundreds of hours were spent in friendty conferences, hours which Wi11 never be for- gotten by them. For thirteen years it was my p1easure and good fortune to work with him. Through dai1y contact a very deep understanding deve1oped between us. 1 join in mourning with every one at Hahnemann over his passing. N. VQLNEY LUDWICK, AB., MD., his associate. MEM EEUU P., 4 sv Z' QF? WALLACE K. KRATZ Assistant Registrar The Class at 1941 would show a reprehensible lack of grati- tude it it failed to thank formally Mr, Kratz for the unceasiriq, uh- seltish aid which in countless Ways it was and is his habit to extend to every I-Iahnemann student. We pause to salute - Wally ! MISS CLARA C. FISHER Secretary to the Dean JRR wh'-K MRS. MELLITA TURNER Librarian 65 F l m fl I li 1 1 r sus x. . j,rp.'p.ry1, 1- . - '1 - ir V' -'?.f!v..4 1 T, 1. ,Q 4 . ,gm I,- .3 Lf f yu-4.5 - -T.-g , J .- ,W .5. s.1 . A4 It .b 'ff . .r...q mn, f . . 5 - .1 x - 1 1 1, w. 5 HL V... . ,Wil 1 :Vi , 1 'I . .1 4-2'.. '-7:l: ,. r. n . -1,- 1- . lx? r ,N ' 4 , Q . . I r ? v 1-A wif 1 . X' 3 1 ' ilil6'illiL mvlo 'lui he of gt.- Ap-,- 5 -MQ' UL9 ' pmyayrnqrtcmmym :gill 1? vrlvmfr af Wlzwwfzw 2 '. 5 71 . ', Q-, 6- .n , ' W1 ff: vs':-' N f 1 55+wf 4QE1ff-X' Uv X ' jthns supulauon-m redux lum who lJllQhl mc- dug uIu.11l3.'dcvu'kimc .us 33,-p.xn'nnpw rv sham ng' suhwm xx nh hnnfldiwc hns nd -1-mln 's :Qu funuktv lovk upon .alma Iifoung .usngy uwn llUd'K'fSZXl0fl1lCh lhcm this Arr 11 thu xhnll wlcarn it, ..,- -.,.ifT e .- -.1 f-:' f N, V, J - , '- 1 f,'S-A. ' q 5,4 LHTN 1 . '- -- N 'Crm l 1.11, 2 ZLL A L W 1 ,, - Cvlrur by pnfa-pr Qmr Qqzn .mir mai Nnf QlfIJl7AZlfIl0!. 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'W WEPNSS SALE TNLTJ 'XST' 'Qlg Inu ngr mr 'vrgyons lamniga zmdar ilk, starr .-611' tlfgfldll' to br din' mmm , 60 afrjgmhinvfgns W-rmgqrm hrqvmqjzvgi bags I mm' ly!! 9 :hm Ibm 1fl1'llY,6Z6lllNly' Ill' .fuk if Qlll7QUJTdQlflUM nnyzmnr art Efvrwafnf ' ' Q '13P1,11 ,3l ,jim qi: vc nnbnigfjinaiiiv grand? nffizmrn Xifsfirwt I ts. . llmrrzwu, ummm: zz1Il'gJ 1ogaf 1h n n,1rliz'Zv ay!!! nor Iv Dr .wth 11' am Enix-h shvukl h.- ntllllt' to kwp this Outh lUNI0l.lIl'd, bL'l1l1. qlxgs Lo., ti pmcnce . cn ln all um! rhw Cath. theArr byallm udf-'- 'QNV . ,'j, -' v -4 -nv.w5Xhj Q1Sf3Qr!!o M ' ' 'n and .!-.4cuIaIp1l4s'XI'kalth?f.Xll'hgZu!l bg wdclcsia that iKl'0lllmQ lojrgy.lbll19'5. IULIQC c-nt 1 -15, ! 'v '. I 6 I . v X 'sv . 'v' , l - n --'Z-. 1 ' J' 137 '.. rf p - . N .X LEWIS AUSTIN STEINHILBER N H QQ., President, Class of 1941 ONWARD! We have finished another semester in the course of our in- dividual lives. Upon this a great deal of what is to be will find its foundation. The habits to which we are well conditioned will mould and shape much of our destiny. But, aside from thisl in- tangible director lies a chaotic social landsscape throuqh which it is our lot to move. To move fairly and honestly, to acquire the minimum of faults in transit should be the aim of each of us. We must abolish petty jealousies, hypocracies, and rank ambition, and rely upon Wholehearted sincerity and persistence in the pur- suit oi our tried convictions. l wish you all success commensurate with your humanitarian- ism and individual abilities. Your true worth will ever be reflected in the glances of your colleagues. L'lVl,4 c . Sfcl1zALMur 69 S93 E' ERS WOODROW D. SCHLOSSER Vice-President SIDNEY I. BRODY Secretary A. EATON ROBERTS Treasurer WILLIAM A. O'l'lORA Student Institute Representative , LitllEilE'lLEt C' THQ QWQU The real beginning was when we were first impressed by our family doctor and decided that it would be nice to be like him. Every- one told us how hard was the work and how long and tedious the training. But we laughed and said we could take it and so here we were in September 1937 determined to be doctors. We began with chemistry and it almost looked as if we would end with it. For hours and hours and hours the dean masticated-from tenth normal equivalent in September through saliva in November to mineral water in May-the words rolled on in ever-ending stream. Amydo acid, urinometer, aromatic urine, adipocere, my friend Dr. Blah, had lunch with, melba pacific gavity, friend of Hahnemann, Caboose. The oratory flowed and we snuggled deeper into our seats. Then came HS-DDY-meek and mild but brimming with gems of chemical enlightenment. But alas the class was in no mood for ions and molecules-rather it was paper airplanes, pennies, and spitballs. Suddenly a blitz descended-Captain Chandler had arrived and the situation was saved. Prefacing each lecture with a half-hour apology for lack of time he proceeded in orthodox Prussian style to bark his own pet conception of organic chemistry at our brow-beaten platoon. The little ragged band strove to keep up with him but the doughty captain stayed well ahead of them. Over the top he went victorious-organic chemistry in three weeks-and Chandler won the Croix de Guere tParlez vousl. Slowly the terrible day approached-the day of the first chem. exam. How many rugs were worn down by nervous students memor- izing those hundred compounds. Cram, cram, consult old exams, pick out the sure questions. At last it was here. A short pre-battle pep talk Ctwenty minutesl by Chandler Cgentlemen empty your bladders and fill your pens? and then for four hours we spewed what we had so unwil- lingly consigned to memory. lt was over-the first bitter pill. That night the men of '41 solemnly drank themselves into forgetfulness. On September 29, 1886 in Hamburg, Germany, a girl failed to menstruate -Dr. Thomas Snyder, slow, amiable, motherly, drawled out his perfectly prepared lectures on Histology. Here was the first homey touch at H-- little personals, favorites, stooges, Thanksgiving and Xmas parties. Tommy knew everyone by name and all had the uncomfortable feeling that he was looking right at them during lecture. And those exams-day is to night as squamous epithelium is to 1. You always went into shock when filling out the blanks of a word because of a sudden fear that it wasn't going to fit. But Tommy to make it easy always gleaned the most important part of the course for us before exams- One just knows the kidney and the tracts of the cord are to be learned . Thus the number of facts to be memorized for each exam were never more than 2U0,000. 71 Sometime in our mad dash We paused to organize our student government. After the usual horse-trading and peanut politics, we elected Lewis Steinhilber president. We ran a nice respectable dance at the Ben Franklin and performed a few other functions that every well mannered class is supposed to do-giving Xmas gifts to our beloved profs, etc. The one man to whom the class as a man responded was T. Phillips. His lectures were the nearest thing to medicine we got. Men, the clavicle -thus he started our course and to the finish kept our interest centered on the dynamics of anatomy. The deltoid abducts- a-b-ab-abducts the arm. Where does it come from, where does it go, how does it get there, what does it do when it gets there, and associated pathology? These are the phrases for which we always shall remem- ber htm. But Tommy Phillips transcended his role as teacher. He became to us the embodiment of the physician, kindly, reserved, friend- ly, competent, sympathetic. So we met our faculty. We soon learned their capabilities, failings, idiosyncracies and we proceeded to try to humor them into letting up on examsethose hellish swords that hung constantly over our heads. lt was of no avail. Life became either a postmortem of an exam or a pre-exam headache. By the grace of cramming, worrying and some studying we finally approached Christmas. Now we were introduced to the supreme in nerve wrackers-the oral exam. After weeks of grinding and listening to the hair-raising stories of upperclassmen, we stole meekly into the Dean's office-no longer young robust men but hypertensive tachy- cardiac, incontinent, dvspneic, choreic old psychotics. We mumble a few answers and shuffle down the line to Chandler, then Heppy, then Hiram Snyder, and then out. We blink as if emerging from a dark cave into daylight-free at last. Home we go for a few weeks and the family gathers round. What do you think Mrs. lanes really has? Here, is my pulse normal? What's good for a cold? Oh those damned medical questions-why doesn't someone ask what a tenth normal equivalent is. The New Year started beautifully with Hepburn's own course- Food Chemistry, also known as Freshman Surgery. Lab work con- sisted of setting up an ether extractor and leaving it boil merrily for about a week while the student hied himself to the amphitheatre, there to be thrilled, chilled and horrified by exploits that kept the seniors safely at third stage, third plane. much to the FRESHMEN'S disgust. ln spite of these deviations food chem turned out to be the most prac- tical and stimulating course of the year. We also met Sylvis, the Simon Legree of anatomy. Knowledge just dripped from his every pore but unfortunately it didn't drip on us. Savagely he lashed us with artery, nerves, veins-to no avail. Every- 72 one took the cue from the Spanish boys and indulged in one o'clock Siesta during Sylvis' lectures. An amiable man was lohn Borneman. Twice a week we saw his mouth move and occasionally caught a syllable. The lab was fascin- ating-pills, elixirs, cataplasms-just like mudpies. These pleasant frolics were suddenly and dramatically halted by the acute onset of blood chemistry. Der Fuehrer Chandler immediately appointed his leftenants, corporals, and secret Gestapo men. We clicked our heels when the ex-capt. walked by. He haunted us at 8:30 A. M. and went completely berserk when we forsook his own little Folin-Wus to observe some woo-woo's in the nurse's home across from the fire escape. About this time the new edition of P and H arrived- much to Chandler's glee-now he could make us not only memorize the Chloride shift but also the typographical errors. Blood chem finally bled itself out and the rest of chem was clear sailing. Now we turned our energy toward dissection. it was a ioy to dig your hands into a greasy cadaver after the clean sterile glassware of chem. But our joy was a little dampened on Fridays by a few quizzers who thought that anatomy consisted of finding obscure questions out of antiquated books to harass the worried freshman. The year ended as everything else in medical school ends with a blaze of exams. A few never reached lune and others graduated . The rest of us heaved a sigh of relief and went home to mother-she still loved us. The summer flitted and we found ourselves back at school knowing nothing of medicine but full of great expectations of getting the real thing at last. Picking our way carefully through the rubble of the wrecked old building, the hole where the new building was going to be and the bedlam of the fire house and Hering Hall, we managed to get our usual stint of lectures. Occasionally someone would blunder into one of the cells of the old iailhouse but it felt just like home to most of us after being introduced to physiology lab. There was the supreme test of the medical student. For six hours a week we were exposed to a routine that would try the patience of lonah, the skill of Pasteur, the humor of Mark Twain. We spent months in the futile task of teaching frogs and their gastrocnemei the intricacies of physiology. No doubt the particular amphibians that were chosen for us were of the lowest order for they just wouldn't obey the simplest biochemical laws -even if it was discovered by Claude Bernard himself. No matter how we reasoned and coaxed them they still contracted their own merry unorthodox way until driven to desperation we turned on our partners and accused them in the most impolite profanity at our disposal of bewitching those damned obscene creatures and l'll see you in hell before I do another experiment with a obscenity, obscenity, obscenity dumb son of a bungler like you. This went on for a few months, much to the glee of Drs. Scott, Flanagan, and Beck, until some bright boy discovered that the finger was a most excellent instrument for making a lever behave as the physiologists expected a frog to behave. From then on kymographic tracings were pie. But by that time we were doing some really interesting experiments on dogs and cats and the method fell into disuse. The sophomore year introduced us to Dr. S. W. Sappington- familiarly known as Sam ibut never in his presencel. He was so austere that when the lab wanted a frozen section they merely had him look at the tissue. He looked at us three hours a week. But for some reason 73 . L.,--f . ' -J.-L f he struck a responsive chord in the class and we listened intently- almost avidly-to his description of bacteria. We even tried to see some of them in lab but they usually turned out to be artifacts. The course seemed harmless enough until the time for the orals was upon us. Then came the realization that here was a prodigous mass of factsemostly unrelated-that we were expected to know, COLD. After a brief panic we settled down to the task of finding enough unused, healthy neurons to absorb all this abracadabra. Some- how Cwhy recall the agonyl we did it and on examination day as the names were slowly tolled off, we stumbled tthose of us who weren't paralyzed with fear and still had control of our sphinctersl into the august presence of soulless Sam and Co. A few brief questions and then out- it wasn't as bad as l had expected but I wouldn't do it again for a million . All work and no play? Ah that's where Herr Prof. Beuntner came in. Pharmacology a la Baron Munchausen. Twice a week we relaxed by sitting back and trying to figure out just what the good professor meant by experimental enemas and one grain by mouse et zetera. The lab also provided us with opportunities for puzzling out just what the result of that experiment would have been had we actually per- formed it. Then too, we had Natey Griffith who with weasley wiles inspired us with a great distrust for lawyers. His idea of medical prac- tice was to have the physician carry around a sheaf of legal waivers of responsibility which the patient had to sign before the doctor would even listen to his heart. ln one skill however Natey excelled-that was the delicate art of picking his nose, examining the result, and dis- posing of it with grace. Through all this Wild Bill Sylvis kept hammering neuro-anatomy at us with the steadiness and force of a pile driver and we responded consistently by going to sleep in the protecting darkness of the lecture room. Everyone looked forward to the second half of the sophomore year. The catalog listed such enticing courses-pharmacodynamics, physical diagnosis, medicine, minor surgery, psychobiology, prescription writing -the real thing at last. We each spent weeks deciding which type of stethescope to buy. Then we took it home and nonchalantly let it peek out of our pockets so that the folks would notice it. A few base in- dividuals went so far as to take it along on dates to impress the girl friend. But physical diagnosis turned out to be printed notes, plus Wizard White , he of the evil eye, plus thumping each other on the chest and playing Indian with blue and red crayons. Pharmacodynamics was W. W. Little jesus Young's idea under- stood only by I. I. W. of just how drugs acted. Ole Doc Bristol entertained us for a few weeks with hair-raising stories of his pen-knife experiences in minor surgery. We then all felt competent to remove splinters tif they protruded one-half inchl. ,,, t W4 74 In bandaging we practiced how to neatly apply fancy draperies to our neighbors-later we were to learn that any old bandage will hold if it is covered by enough adhesive tape. Dr. Closson talked about the personality and things and we turned about and applied his principles to our personality, ideas, and slips of speech. Prescription writing brought us the bombastic Messey- l'lere's the patient-wadaya gona do, what ya goin to write? Sappington never lost a minute in pathology. A few of his lectures stood out as master- pieces. His description of pneumonia and tuberculosis in particular gave us a genuine thrill and the class gave him a standing ovation at the end of the course. Beutner stumbled onward, tangling himself in a maze of sex hormones, buul testis, belladawna, and zixazix. Physiology lectures almost kept us awake toward the end and we actually looked forward to the labs. This term saw us ensconced in the new building. We opened with great fanfare. Dr. Alvarez of the Mayos spoke in Klahr Auditorium fstudents not invitedl. We all felt proud of the new lecture halls-light and shiney like swimming pools, and air conditioned. Everything was lovely until spring, when we discovered that air conditioning meant hot air conditioning. In addition there was the organ which bellowed forth whenever Sappington wanted to put across a really fine point. The year ended with a mess of exams written and oral. Once again we went home to disappoint our parents with our lack of medical knowledge. O We started the junior year with an unparalleled burst of enthus- iasm. This time they HAD to give us clinical medicine. No more pro- crastination, no more frog theories, from now on we were clinicians at the bedside. Eagerly we dashed for front row seats in the clinic. We were not disappointed-at least not at the start. At our first medical clinic Dr. Wells presented a case of pernicious anemia, a perfect case, eitology, course, physiology, and cure, all known. We were thrilled. Even Ferguson had to put out the S. R. O. sign and Boericke, ruddy and imperturbable on one heel, kept us spellbound by his eloquent theoriza- tions. A highlight of the junior year was the G. U. clinic-also known as life in the raw. Here as nowhere else was the serio-comic plight of the dispensary patient illustrated. Periodically he comes to the dispensary, gets his irrigation, closes his eyes in ecstasy as some student gouges his protstate, and finally ends with a stricture for which he must be sounded. Through all this time he cheerfully tolerates the gaping students who fumble with the seat of his pathology as they learn the proper grip. Occasionally he gets a student who massages artistically. That lucky finger man gets a grateful, Thanks doc, you really hit the spot . The student soon loses his original blushing shyness and after five weeks can be heard questioning a patient with the typical G-U reserve- do you know the floozy that handed you that clap? The patient eventually reaches Dr. Ashcraft's surgical clinic where he acts as the prop for the greatest showman at I-lahnemann. l make a small incision thus , says the doctor as he sweeps his knife around two feet of the patient's flank and steps back to talk while his assistants grapple with the bleeders. Nonchalance, sang-froid, that was Ashy as he ripped out prostates, punched out trans-urethrals, and sneaked out kidneys, fplmls' turn In l'uy1u IQAYI 75 as- -, CHARLES CLAIR ALTHOFF LAMBI NICHOLAS ADAMS 105 Millbury Street Worcester. Massachusetts Clark University, AB, Worcester Hospital, Worcester, Mass 322 East Walnut Street Hanover. Pennsylvama Duke University Pi Upsioln Rho Fraternity Huron Road Hospital, East Cleveland, Ohio W , CARRINGTON GINDRAT ARNOLD. IR. Oakland. New Iersey Columbia University, Phi Alpha Gam- ma Fraternity, Medic. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. wh an ARTHUR IAY AURINGER 520 Spruce Avenue Upper Darby. Pennsylvania Temple University, AB. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio ALBERT IOHN BATTAGLIA 736 South Sixth Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Circolo Italiano, Lambda Phi Mu Fraternity West lersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden, New lersey. l 78 GEORGE THOMAS BALLARD 126 Cedar Boulevard Mount. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, Penna. Bucknell University, B.S. Basketball Team Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa IEROME NATHANIEL BAUM 1201 North Eleventh Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University ot Pennsylvania, AB. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity: Medic Iewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. 5' ffl, EUGENE HUBERT BEKAMPIS 502 Chapel Avenue Merchantville. New Iersey Temple University, AB. West Iersey Homeopathic Hospital Camden, N. I. ARMEN BOGOSIAN 337 Mer1d1a:n Street East Boston, Massachusetts Harvard College, AB. Luke's Hosptal, New Bedford, Mass. ALEXANDER ANDERSON BOLTON. TR. 193 North Eleventh Street Newark. New Iersey Bucknell University, B.S. Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity, Van Len nop Surqical Society: Reimann Oncol ogy Society, Underqraduate Society Blue and Gold Ball Committee, Basket ball Team Mountainside Hospital, Montclair, N.I Q--2 1 ALBERT FRANCIS PAUL BOZIC 2932 Arlington Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania University ot Pittsburgh, B.S. Newman Club Saint Ioseph's Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa 5..- A .V sf. .,, 55 ti I . FRANCIS WALTER BRILL 528 Main Street Simpson. Pennsylvania Saint Bonaventure College, B.S. Orchestra: Alpha Siqrna Fraternity, Fisher Clinico Pathological Society, Newman Club Scranton State Hospital, Scranton, Pa. CHARLES KENNETH BRAUER 441 West Bringhurst Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania lohns Hopkins University, AB. Hahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia WILLIAM PHILIP BRITSCH. IR. 1622 Pine Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University ot Pennsylvania, AB. Orchestrag Blue and Gold Ball Com- mittee, Medic, Boericke Therapeutic Society: Undergraduate Society Hahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Q , 1 I ' ' g SIDNEY IRVING BRODY 1003 West Sixty-sixth Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternityg Glee aes Clubg Student Forurng Class Secretary Frankford Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. 3? .linux-A V01 GEORGE CHARLES BUDENZ 1103 Harrison Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvanicx Temple University, B.S. United States Navy, Philadelphia, Pa. IOSEPH THOMAS BUCKEY 134 Center Street Nanticoke, Pennsylvanm Pennsylvania State College B S Wilmington Memorial Hospital Wilmington, Del. 45 1 IAMES IOSEPH BURNETT 2 Ayres Street Binghamton, New York University of Scranton Boericke Therapeutic Society Binghamton City Hospital, Binghamton, New York ggs HUGH IOSEPH BURNS 3011 Grover Avenue McKeesporl. Pennsylvania Duquesne University, B.S. Alpha Sigma Fraternity, Van Lennep Surgical Society Shadyside Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. ALFRED G. THOMAS CARTER, IR. 739 Wheeler Avenue Scranton, Pennsylvania University of Scranton, B.S. Alpha Siqma Fraternity Scranton State Hospital, Scranton, Pa. FERNANDO LUIS BUXEDA 220 Ponce de Leon Avenue Santurce, Puerto Rico Temple University Van Lennep Surgical Society Bayarnon District Hospital, Bayarnon Puerto Rico EDWARD THOMAS CICIONE 1739 South Twentieth Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Saint Ioseph's College, B.S. West Iersey Homeopathic Hospital Camden, N. I. JOSEPH ANTHONY CONCELLO 825 West Third Street Chester, Pennsylvanla ANGEL BENICIO COLON-FONTAN Morovis, Puerto Rico University of Alabama Newman Club Bayamon District Hospital, Bayamon Puerto Rico '7 H1 Ursmus College, B.S. P1 Upsilon Rho Fratermtyp Circolo Italiano I-Iahriemanri Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. HOMER ELMS COOK 406 East Normal Street Kirksville. Missouri Missouri University Alpha Sigma Fratemityg Underaraduat Society Pottsville Hospital, Pottsville, Pa. tw 55 MANFRED RICHARD COUCH 648 Ohio Avenue Midlanzl, Pennsylvania Grove City Colle-qe, B.S. I GEORGE EDWARD COVINTREE 15 Lincoln Avenue IOHN HENRY IOSEPH COURTNEY 236 Eclgemont Avenue Ardmore. Pennsylvania LaSalle College, A.B. l-lahnamarm Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa Collingswood. New Iersey Temple University, AB. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraterriityp Boericke Therapeutic Society, Orchestra The Deaconess Hospital, Cmcmatti, O. 1' 1 5 bil IACK EDWARD COX I6 Cambridge Road Westmont, New Iersey Temple University, B.S. West Iersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden, N. I. HENRY DANTZIG 31 Eldridge Avenue Trenton. New Iersey Lafayette College William McKinley Memorial Hospital, Trenton, N. I. , l'3'Vo' ' P J ill Ki 1 ERWIN GEORGE DEGLING CHARLES DE BOLD. IR. 52 Washington Avenue Hillsdale. New Iersey Columbia Colleqe, AB. Alpha Siqrna Fraternity Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck 7609 Ogontz Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State College, AB. Alpha Siqrna Fraternity Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. IOSEPH MARIO DE LUCA 129 Mill Road Maple Shade. New Iersey University of Pennsylvania, AB. West lersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden, N. I. f'3'M 'sv qpmauv VINCENT ALFONSO DE ROSA 639 Broadway Long Branch, New Iersey Tufts College, B.S. Oncoloqical Society, Vice President United States Navy, Brooklyn, N. Y. . ,. ..'w i rv, ,, , , r 5 ,, 3 1 gf E5 Ef 2 F , . g. 5, WALTER FLETCHER EDMUNDSON. IR. 5317 Fifth Avenue Plttsburgh, Pennsylvamcz University of North Carolina Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Boericke Therapeutic Society, Craig Gynecolog- 1cal Society HUGO RUDOLPH DI GIACOBBE 142 Forest Street Gallitzin. Pennsylvania Saint Francis College, B.S. Altoona General Hospital, Altoona, Pa r V 1' ' ' I A Shadys1de Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. SAUL DAVID EGER 815 Twenty-fourth Street Ambridge, Pennsylvania College of the City of New York, BS. Phil Delta Epsilon Fraternity Montefiore Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. 5: null 'ti 'Q--1 ALFRED WILLIAM ERB 'Maw 919 West North Street Piqua, Ohio Qhio State University Medicg Craig Gynecoloqical Society Hahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .Mft , , .1 , NAYIP FAS-FAGUNDO Cabo, Roio. Puerto Rico University ot Puerto Rico, B.S. Newman Club, Boericke Therapeutic Society Capital City Hospital, Santurce, Puerto Rico GREGORY FRANCIS WILLIAM FROIO 1211 South Eighth Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania LaSalle College, AB. Hahnemanri Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM XAVIER GEBELE, IR. 310 Main Street Lakewood, New Iersey Villanova College, BS. Pi Upsilon Fraternity Pitkin Memorial Hospital, Neptune, N. I. mi , H 'IT sw '- ' -.is lsr' 3 I 1 Lil YW .0 .v F 5 f'. ff! , . a 3 'I 'S 'F WILLIAM LOUIS GRANATIR 1701 South Ringgold Street Philaedlphicz, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity Mount Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. IAMES ALOYSIUS GRIBBIN HERBERT SCHUHE GREENSPAN 5806 North Fifteenth Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity, Glee Club Mount Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 62 Laurel Avenue Trenton, New Iersey Mount St. Marys College William McKinley Memorial Hospital, Trenton, N. I. ARMEN HAIK GEVIAN 241 South Sixtieth Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania College of the City of New York, B.S. Alpha Sigma Fraternity East Orange General Hospital, East Orange, N. I. L 'z5,. -. yj , 1, , V . IOSEPH KESTER HARROP 56 Youngs Avenue West Warwick, Rhode Island Holy Cross College, B.S. Newman Club, Fisher Clinico-Pathology Society Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode Island, Providence, Rhode Island. it-QP WARD DITTMAR I-IEINRICH IAMES ROBERT HART 1220 Regent Avenue Cincinncztti. Ohio Ohio Wesleyan University, A.B. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternityp Glee Clubg Van Lennep Surqical Society, Clinico-Pathological Society: Under- graduate Society Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio .Y..T..., 903 Brookline Boulevard Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania University oi Pittsburqh Alpha Sigma Fraternity Shadyside Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. WILBERT HERNANDEZ-CAMARA Calle 23, Numero 201 Merida, Yucatan, Mexico lnstitute Literario de Yucatan, B.S. Wyominq Valley Homeopathic Hos- pital, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. l IACOB I OHN HLADYCZ 171 Broad Street Perth Amboy, New Iersey University ot Richmond Pi Upsilon Rho Fraternity- Newman Club, Boericke Therapeutic Society, Undergraduate Society, Medic St. Michaels Hospital, Newark, N. I. ELLIS KOGAN HULTZMAN 270 South Fifty-second Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Saint loseph's College Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternityg Blue and Gold Ball Committee Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. VALENTINE ADOLPH HOFMANN 454 South Dallas Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh, B.S. Undergraduate Society Shadyside Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. FRANCIS IAMES KELLY, IR. 30 Church Street Concord, New Hampshire Holy Cross College, Ph.B. Fisher Clinico-Pathological Society, Van Lenriep Surgical Society Hahriemarm Hospital, Worcester, Mass. R K- Q 1 KENNETH K. KEOWN 1602 West Lexington Street Independence, Missouri Graceland College, AA. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Van Lermep Surgical Society, Blue and Gold Ball Committee, Medicg Basketball Team Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio MILTON LEONARD KROUNGOLD FREDERICK KETCHAM Fishkill, New York Duke University, AB. Student lnstituteg Blue and Gold Ball Commtiteep Pi Epsilon Rho Fraternity Presbyterian Hospital-Olmstead Mem- orial, Los Angeles, Calif. ., I ,iq 2150 North Front Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Medic, Iunior Dance Committee, Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity Mount Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. 4.3 WILLIAM MARTIN KUMMER 587 North Plum Street Lancaster, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College, B.S. Orchestrag Freshman Dance Committee, Medic United States Navy, Philadelphia, Pa. QC, FRANCIS WILLIAM LANARD 2754 Cheltenham Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Alpha Sigma Fraternityg Undergraduate Society, Van Lennep Surgical Societyg Blue and Gold Ball Committeeg Medic U. S. Army Letterman General Hospital, San Francisco, Calif. ..in.. Eng, ROBERT IOSEPH LAVOIE 170 Dana Avenue Worcester, Massachusetts Holy Cross College, B.S Fisher Clinico-Pathological Society IGSEPH WILLIAM LAUFENBERG 525 Fifteenth Street Union City, New Iersey Saint Peter's College, B.S. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity McKinley Memorial Hospital, Trenton New lersey e Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode Island, Providence, R. l. ,elk Wt' ALFRED PORTER LEBER 121 McKindey Avenue Lansdowne, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Orchestra: Medic Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. N X ' to damn... 'in- GEORGE EDWARD LEGG in-tie 135 Boyle Avenue Paterson New Iersey Muhlenberg College B S Boericke Therapeutic Society- Van Len nep Surqical Society, Underqraduate Society Barnert Memorial Hospital, Paterson, New Iersey. AMOS ENGLE LENHERT 565 East Market Street Marietta. Pennsylvania Temple University Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Craig Cynecological Society, Heimann Oncol- ogy Society, Van Lennep Surgical So- ciety, Medicg Sophomore Dance Com- mittee Huron Hoad Hospital, Cleveland, Chio WILLIAM WALTER LEMAN 4915 Cedar Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ursinus College, BS. Orchestra - Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa ALFRED ANTHONY LIBERI 1826 Dickinson Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, A.B. Pi Upsilon Rho Fraternity, Medic Union Hospital, Fall River, Mass. I ROBERT HAYES LINN Grateriord, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. Alpha Sigma Fraternity, Craig Gyne- coloqical Society, Medic, Blue and Gold Ball Committee Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. aQ '9 FRANCIS IAMES LONERGAN Homer. New York Syracuse University, A.B. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Boericke Therapeutic Society: Undergraduate Society, Blue and Gold Ball Committee Couse-lrvinq Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y. THOMAS RAYMOND LITTLETON 261 Rhodes Street Providence, Rhode Island Providence College, BS. Homeopathic Hospital, Providence, Rl 'lf DONALD ROCT LOVELL 413 North First Street Bellwood, Pennsylvania Gettysburg College, AB. Orchestra General Hospital, Altoona, Pa. DONALD EDWARD MAC INTYRE 13 Artwill Street M11ton, Massachusetts Tufts College, B.S. 6 'K 1-lomeopathlc Hospltal of Rhode Island 5 Providence, R. 1. 111 , .I Uv.. . t ?.- utb -R. sb' - Sqn F.4--1--...,......-..V.---...l--.-..., l it 'V 13' -ian.. MICHAEL I OHN MATZKO SIGMUND IOHN MAKARCHEK 558 Groom Street Perth Amboy, New Iersey Ohio University, AB. Alpha Sigma Fraternity, Fisher Path- ological Society, Van Lennep Surgical Society, Undergraduate Society St. Michaels Hospital, Newark, N. I. 1145 Second Avenue Berwxck, PGHHSYIVGHIQ Umverslty ot P1ttsburgh l-lahhemann Hospltal, Ph1ladelph1a, vp, EDWARD BARRETT MCGOVERN 554 Washington Avenue Carnegie. Pennsylvania Saint Vincent College, B.S. Shadyside Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. r 4 WILLIAM ANTHONY MCINTYRE 132 Whitford Avenue Providence. Rhode Island Providence College, B.S. Fisher Pathological Society, Blue and Gold Ball Committee Homeopathic Hospital of Rhode Island, Providence, R. l. 1 gash: fj VENZEL ROBERT MIKAN 147 West Margaret Street Detroit. Michigan DesMoines College of Osteopathy, DO. Van Lennep Surgical Society, Hermann IAMES IOSEPH MERLE 127 -11-15 Avenue College Point, L. I., New York Saint lohn's University, B.S. Newman Club, Flushing Hospital and Dispensary Flushing, L. l., New York Oncological Society Memorial Hospital, Wrlmington, Del. FRANK LEROY MILLER Collegeville, Pennsylvania Ursinus College, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa Society Montgomery Hospital, N orristown, SOLOMON SAMUEL MINTZ 913 North Franklin Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity: Blue an Gold Ball Committee Frankford Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM FISHER MORGAN 6 East High Street Elizabeihtown. Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College, B.S. Medic Harrisburg Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa WARREN FRANKLIN MOYER 16 Miiihn Street Pine Grove. Pennsylvania Lebanon Valley College Pottsville Hospital, Pottsvllle, Pa. IOHN IOSEPH O'CONNOR 1106 West Third Street Wilmington, Delaware University of Delaware, AB. Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity Memorial Hospital, Wilmington, Del. -i. ,W , ...v ..... l My wu- WILLIAM ALOYSIUS O'H.1-VLBA 1 510 Third Avenue Scranton, Pennsylvania Lafayette College, B.S. Student lnstitute, Fisher Clinico-Path ological Society Scranton State Hospital, Scranton, Pa. ARNALDO PALMER-LOPEZ San Gennan, Puerto Rico West Virginia University Boericke Therapeutic Society Capital City Hospital, Santurce, Puerto Rico STANLEY IOHN OKULICZ 1510 Mount Ephraim Avenue Camden. New Iersey University ot Pennsylvania, AB. West lersey Homeopathic Hospital Camden, N. l. -J EINAR ALEXANDER PALMGREN. IR. 2001 Selwyn Avenue Charlotte, North Carolina Duke Universtiy, AB. Pi Upsilon Rho Fraternity Pottsville Hospital, Pottsville, Pa. as 4 WALTER PATTERSON 131 Stratford Avenue Aldan, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, AB. 1-lahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa THOMAS HENRY PENNOCK BERNARD WARREN PECHAN 127 East Forty-third Street Brooklyn, New York Cornell University, A.B. Phi Alpl'1a Gamma Fraternity, Craig Gynecological Society, Medic, Fresh- man Dance Committeeg Blue and Gold Ball Committee Metropolitan Hospital, New York City. 508 West Ninth Street Wilmington, Delaware University of Delaware, A.B. Basketball Team, Student lnstituteg Van Lennep Surgical Society, Reimann Oncological Society, Craig Gynecolog ical Society Memorial Hospital, Wilmington, Del. IOSEPH CHARLES PINTO 1309 South Clarion Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Saint loseph's College, B.S. West lersey Homeopathic Hospital, Camden, N. I. Q 34 WILLIAM CRAWFORD PIVER. IR. 134 Fem Avenue Collingswood. New Iersey University of Virginia Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Van Len nep Surgical Society Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio ROBERT ALLEN REDCAY 333 West Main Street Ephrata, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College, BS. Glee Club, Phi Upsilon Rho Fraternity Hahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN WILLIAM PROUT 406 Napoleon Street Iohnstown, Pennsylvania Allegheny College, AB. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity Pottsville Hospital, Pottsville, Pa ALFRED RALPH RICHLAN 173 Third Street Newark, New Iersey Bucknell University, B.S. Alpha Sigma Fraternity, Undergraduate Society, Reirnann Oncological Society, Fisher Clinico-Pathological Society St. Michaels Hospital, Newark, N. I. E694 'Z' ALFRED EATON ROBERTS , 123 Portland, New York Cornell University Class Treasurer, Hermann Oncological Society, Boericke Therapeutic Society, Fisher Clinico-Pathological Society, Un- dergraduate Society Shadyside Hospltal, Pittsburgh, Pa. W DESIDERIO ANTONIO ROMAN-VEGA Iinotepe. Nicaragua, Central America Columbia University, AB. Pi Upsilon Rho Fraternity, Van Lennep Surgical Society, Vice Consul ot Nica- raugua to Philadelphia Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. IRVING WILLIAM ROBINSON Lakewood. New Iersey College of the City of New York, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity: Glee Club, VanLennep Surgical Society, Medic Morrisania Hospital, Bronx, N. Y. ALBERT ROSNER 1204 Haddon Avenue Camden, New Iersey Temple University, AB Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity St. Luke's and Childrens Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. M? 'if e T4 x .. L- MANNING IACK ROSNICK n b I: .. I 600 Flfteenth Street Miami Beach, Florida University ot Pennsylvania, AB. Phi Lambda Fraternity, Glee Club St. Vincent's Hospital, laclcsonville, Fla 1 MARTIN ROBERT RUSH WILLOUGHBY IOHN ROTHROCK, IR 2 Holmecrest Road Ienkintown, Philadelphia Lafayette College, B.S. Pi Upsilon Rho Fraternity, Riemann Oncoloqical Society Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 42 Battin Road Fair Haven. New Iersey Georgetown University, BS. Gauveneur Hospital, New York City CHARLES LOUIS SACKS 347 East Roosevelt Boulevard Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Saint losephs College, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. GEORGE GILBERT SALMON. IR 96 Sagamore Road Maplewood, New Iersey 54 27 Duke University, AB. LEES MALCOLM SCHADEL. TB. 4336 Pechin Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Gettysburg College, AB. Hahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa WOODROW DOSTER SCHLOSSER 248 Church Avenue Ephrata. Pennsylvania Elizabethtown College, B.S. P1 Epsilon Rho Fraternity, Semor Class Vice-President Polyclinic Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa. l 128 MARIO IOHN SERENA 29 North Main Street South Norwalk, Connecticut Syracuse University, AB. Alpha Siqrna Fraternity Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio EDWARD IOHN SIMON 182 West Main Street Goshen, New York Fordham Universtiy, B.S. P1 Upsilon Rho Fraternity, Boericke Therapeutic Societyp Student Institute St. loseph s Hospital, Yonkers, N. Y. 5 LEWIS AUSTIN STEINHILBER 671 Preston Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State Colleqe, AB. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternityp Class President, Student Institute, Craig Gyne- coloqical Society, Reimann Oncoloqical Society Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio MICHAEL VALERIAN SIVAK 242 Third Street West Aliquippa, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh, B.S. St. Vincent's Hospital, Erie, Pa. FRANCIS HENRY STERN 2421 South Fifth Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, JMB. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity, Blue and Gold Ball Committee Mount Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. LEONARD HERBERT TABOROFF 4742 North Eighth Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity, Fresh- man Dance Committeey Blue and Gold Ball Committee Metropolitan Hospital, New York City WILLARD BIDDLE GILMAN TERRY. IR. 5027 Spruce Street NICHOLAS PHILIP TERESI 335 Ellicott Street Bcxtcxvia. New York Hobart College, AB. Mount Morris Hospital, Mount Morris New York Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State College, BS. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. ALBERT HARRISON THEM. IR. 6824 Torresdale Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State College Medic: Boericke Therapeutic Society Van Lennep Surgical Societyp Under graduate Society Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. WILSON DOUGLAS TUCKER 325 West College Street Canonsburg. Pennsylvania Washington and leiferson College Undergraduate Society United States Navy, Boston, Mass LOUIS VOGEL. IH. 1204 East Thirty-third Street Baltimore, Maryland lohns Hopkins University, Pl'1.G., B.S. St. Ioseplffs Hospital, Baltimore, Md. IOSEPH NICHOLAS TUSHIM 608 Second Avenue Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania Saint Bonaventure Colleqe, B.S. Alpha Sigma Fraternity, Newman Club Reimann Oncoloqical Society, Medic Altoona General Hospital, Altoona, Pa Q, REDMOND B. I. WALSH 2380 Ryer Avenue Bronx, New York Fordham University Pi Upsilon Rho Fraternity Walter Reed Hospital, Washington IOHN IGNATIUS WEBER NORMAN MAX WARNER Reeders, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College, B.S. Boericke Therapeutic Societyp Van Len- nep Surgical Society I-lahhemami Hospital Philadelphia, Pa 3516 Englewood Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Villanova College, B.S. Montgomery Hospital, Norristown, Pa. LENNARD LESTER WEBER 5618 Woodbine Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylavnia University of Pennsylvania, AB. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Mount Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH WEIGHTMAN 2002 Elizabeth Avenue Laureldale. Pennsylvania Bucknell University, AB. Medic Heading Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital Reading Pa IESS IUDSON WOODWORTH. IR. RICHARD KERR WHITE 149 Abbotsford Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania A.B. Orcehstrag Medic Hahnernann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa Andover. Ohio Western Reserve University, AB. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ghio CHARLES SYLVESTER YOST 344 Market Street Bloomsburq, Pennsylvania Lafayette College, BS. Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Freshman Dance Committee, Glee Club: Boericke Therapeutic Society Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio Isa: T KARL-HENRY HARDY ZIEGENHORN 313 Hamilton Road Merion, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College, BS. Freshman Vice-President, Medic Staff, Phi Alpha Gamma Fraternity, Craig Cfynecological Society, Undergraduate Society Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia Pa 9 MTEFQI E3 0 YSW ADAMS-Who after four years of being just on the roll can be heard mumbling here and when accosted blurts out why you itch you . ALTHOFP-Because he has been chef to the three of Green Street, knows how to make a good piece of lean meat sizzle, and expresses his ap- proval by Boy, isn't that some thing . ARNOLD-Believes in the use of tinctures and prefaces all remarks with a twitch and Well this damn .... AUBINGER-One of the Pea Street boys who has developed a method of drawling out W-e-l-l- . BAILEY-Athlete's Knee or Charcot's Ioint? Will set you straight From my clinical experience . BALLARD-The wife has him so flustered he answers, or something like that, you know . BATT!-XGLIA-Are you in his club-socyebone. BAUM-The clinition who wants to know What's the s-t-o-r-y ? You have looked fatigued since Easter, Ierry! BERRY-Clf Hahnemann only needed a cheer leaderl. Wants you to know: Well out in Ohio . BEKAMPIS-An athlete should know better but he insists, It's twelve ounces for a nickel . BOGOSIAN-From his Harvard schooling, he insisted in neurology clinic that it was multiple skillerosis'. ' BOLTON-Who reminds us of our days on the campus, tells us, Now when I was operating with 1- . , BOZIC-Can always be found inquiring Where are we supposed to be now? BRAUER-Wants to know ls she nice? BRILL-Cfteporting to the hospital after supposedly having had a delivery to find a call saying the mother was about to deliverl. lt must have been the wrong sex and the stork took it back to exchange it . BRITSCH-Can always back up his statements by quoting, Little Iesus says it . BRODY-He bought a medical dictionary his freshman year and wants to know it. Doctor, is that according to the monophylitic theory? BUCZKOWSKI-Will finally agree with you but first expresses himself with, Oh yeh! Well? BUDENZ-You can recognize it is he standing in the doorway with that girl by his remark, Well I don't know about that . BURNETT-Will come into any argument and have you understand, That's good for the birds . BURNS-After watching the little ball roll around Eah, eah, tilt, tilt . 140 BUXEDA-Always on his toes, wants to know, What are we supposed to do for that course? CARTER-Stops his trumpet playing to warn: Watch my eyes now . CHRZANOWSKI-Leaves the nurses long enough to come to an exam and exclaim Cheese and rice, I don't know a thing . CICIGNE-Sits in the front of the class but wants you to confirm When these reports are due . COLON-FONTAN-Has enough Spanish blood to serve a siesta but arouses to inquire, Who lectures now? CONCELLO-Interrupts one of his stories to Leman to tell you, Down at the arena last night . COOK-CRushing over to tell Hazel before he goes to Pop'sl Only 47 more days . COUCH-CEmphaticallyl If you put that in I won't buy the book . COURTNEY-Practices what he preaches: lust sit and listen, you'll learn . COVINTREE-Preoccupied with a girl? What was that? What did you say? COX-The Hahnemann Nurses Gigalo adds, They have that over at West Iersey too . DANTZIG-Quizzical to the end asks, Who took roll yesterday? DE BOLD-Explains: Well Connie had yesterday off . DEG-LING-Learning by practical experience. Doesn't care, but, Can you get me any samples out of pediatrics? DE LUCA-CA practical manl. Explains: Two fingers are better than one . DE ROSA-Knows he is tired because it is apparent. Lingers to ask, Are you going to hang around for the next hour? DI GIACOBBE-Acknowledges his approval by He should be put in jail for that . EDMUNDSON-Served CI junior internship at Municipal Hospital decrying: They don't have enough information to make that diagnosis . EGER-Looks around for his assistant, and then, Have you considered a fat embolism? ERB-The less said the better. Clffd Note:-Erb must have written this onell FAS-FAGUNDC-Insisted that the patient in Bernstein's clinic was a soldier because The professor asked him about his colonel . FROIO-Still thinks we have classes in the fire house and attends classes shouting, Smoke it out . GEBELE-Returned from Luetic clinic with: I asked her about potency and she answered 'yeh' GRANATIR-Stimulated anew by a week at Allentown, believes, This case of appendicitis can be explained from a psychogenic standpoint . GREENSPAN-Was overheard after class: I know six other fellows who were about to get up and leave if I hadn't . 141 GRIBBIN-Carrying his hat and coat to four o'clock classes with the remark, Well my train leaves at five sharp . GUEOVIIAN-Has not yet reconciled himself to seeing Dr. Conwell, and so, B-rr, B-rr, pardon but its my sinuses . HARROP-With offices at 17th and Mount Vernon to care for the neighborhood, asks, Did you hear about Bob last night? HART-Who believes in the chastity of womanhood, Of course not, she's a nice kid . HEINRICI-I-While in Gyn: Why resort to a colporrhaphy? Why not try alum first? - HERNANDEZ-tTrying to explainl Tinea nigra found in colored women as contrasted to tinea alba found in white women . I-ILADYCZ- I've only been late once . tEd. Note:-Iokei. HOFMANN-Who wanted the nurses to see Dr. I-Iunsicker's handy-work quips. Lets go out for some actinic rays . I-IULTZMAN-Reported to be taking a course at night at Women's Medical. Wants to know, What's her telephone number? KELLY-The big apple man. Oh doctor, may I see you a minute? KEOWN-The Indian rope man is always ready to tell you, Boy, was I feeling good last night . ' KETCHAM-Who has already joined the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, I don't know her name but I met her in here last week . KBOUNGOLD-tAfter medical dispensaryi: My heart started to pound so that my fingers pulsated and I couldn't locate the apical beat . KUMMER-Now serving his ten weeks section on the Medic. We should have a special page in for him . LANARD-The front office boy. Well, wait till I get you in the army as my assistant . LAUFENBERG-fOver a tall cool one at McGillin'sD: I believe what they said about not playing around in your own back yard . LAVOIE-tTaking advantage of the smoking room between twelve and onelz We should be able to arrange something like that for ourselves at Rhode Island next year . LEBER-The photographer who takes the pictures for Miss Erwin when she visits surgery clinic. Awakens the boys in class with, That was the last slide doctor . LEGG-A symbol of his theory: Now lets not rush into things. LEMAN-With his private art collection, wants to know, Do you know any new jokes? LENHERT-Who brings his stenographer to Saturday morning class. I'1l be damned if I'll get it for you wholesale . LIBERI-Whose hobby is enticing young ladies from their mother's apron strings: I fixed it up for this Wednesday night . 142 LINN-Who thinks all of the band bookmakers are liars: always ends with, Well I'll have one with you . LITTLETON-I-las had the last row reserved for four years and leaves an exam with, Boy was that a stinker . LONERGAN-Answers roll for himself! 'Ftemorsefully remembers when, Lafferty sure caught me flat footed . LOVELL-We've seen him in class but who is he? l learned about that at Altoona last summer . MacINTYRE-Bill amuses himself with: Dad thinks Abe is registrar because he endorses all my checks . MAKARCHEK-l-las beaten a path to every smoker's door with: And now do you have a match? MATZKO-Who rivals the cops with his prowl car. MCGOVERN-An advocate of Bernstein's hair tonic. Asks Are you going to be in the groove tonight? MCINTYRE--Wants his date imported, and, What's the matter girlie, life isn't that bad . MERLE-Who had bought an interest in a paper company by the end of his freshman year. Greets you with, Hiya doc . MIKAN-Who wore himself out writing in Dr. Steinhilber's mid-year exam grumbles, Well that bumed me up . MILLER-Where did he get his ten-day old ovum? Will help you out with, l know that, thai's easy . MINTZ-Keeps his friends busy with, What's he askin? MORGAN-Has lost interest in eating at Pop's but can be heard phoning, Livingston 3664 . MOYER-Has stocked his room with samples from the convention. CTCONNOR-tAfter a Friday morning class with Dr. Laffertyl: We get along like two lrishmen . O'l-IARA-'W ho gets his soao wholesale in South Philly. Known in the hospital as cutie . Asks Where are the boys playing tonight? CKULICZ-tAfter his trip through Georgia with Fas.l Fas wanted to know what was wrong with her speech that she couldn't speak English and she asked the same about him . PALMER-Wants to know, 'V'Do those squirrels Dr. Ferguson talks about eat nuts? . PALMGREN-Asked Major Greene, Do nurses go with us on ambulance calls? PATTERSON-We thought he was interested in his work until we heard: Has my honey called, Miss Fisher? PECHAN-That look, wondering if he can make ends meet this and the Medic'sl. Answers, Why should I smile? - !PIeasc turn to Page' eg!! 143 ANN w bb N 'P N 'J 5 QQ Ka 1? 3.7-.:1 r :T--L i JJ..- .1-'Z-1 ,fx - 19' 7 f .'.?,q7' K g'-.7?' - I .-r n.iL.if.ln,1::, ' . Q ,f-Q -i 5 'E -fby . XQL '-K-Tatu '----.L xx Q1 .X X1 '- XQ- x QQ - x Q1 C X. '-X it C x Q1 F xxxffw- gr.. I xg, 4. 131 ' ii U 1 7 lr Y lr Y HY 727' -7.7- 3'f 1' 1 f 1 lyff 1 lf i l : Q i - i l : - -gr 1 9 ...Q E ........ 'Q 1 1' ' ' ' L- Q 1 U '- .' f'.. .,.., L.4..,-u. , QUUNII Acevedo-Deiillo, Carlos Efraim Allen, Joseph Hardy Anastor, Herbert Peter Aneses-Arrache, Jose Battafarano, Leonard Anthony Beirne, Donald Peter Bernstein, Bertram Maxwell Billman, Howard George Black, Daniel Eugene, Jr. Blanchard, William Hartwell Block, Charles Boc, Stanley Frank Bogucki, Alfred Stanley Boros, William Kloner Boudwin, Norman Kenneth Boyle, Daniel Edward Brown, Frank Halstead, Jr. Brownstein, Israel Edward Brunhofer, Andrew Charles, Jr. Bryan, Charles Edward Burnett, Joseph William Campbell, William James Campbell, James Covode Canelis, Michael Canino-Pont, Fernando Miguel Canter, Donald Cassidy, Joseph Anthony Ciccareli, Armanno William Cirelli, Mario Gerald Corbett, William Tihamer Crane, Nathan Croyle, Ray William Davila-Boria, Julio Elias DeMatteis, Albert DePierro, Nicholas Deshong, Howard Cooper DiRocco, Vincent Paschal Duffy, Robert William Etzl, Michael Matthew Faller, William Ward Faringer, David Reiner, Jr. Febbraro, Anthony Alexander Fitzgerald, Orville Moyer Furey, Charles Aloysius, Jr. 'S A LRQDHQLL Geyer, Samuel Vere Goodman, Marco Herman Gregg, Lester Osborn, Jr. Guarini, Pasquale Gutnick, Morton Hall, John Robert Leo Hare, James Harps, James Alexander Hauck, Francis Aloysius William Hess, Chester Clemens Hill, Robert Clayton Horner, John Ira, Jr. Hughes, David Wheatley Hughes, Lloyd Wayland Jenike, Thomas Stroup Kelly, John Leo, Jr. Kimble, Leroy Robert King, Cedric Sirbridge Kowalyk, Edward Adam Kozak, Walter Harold Kraus, Edward Ignatius Krick, Earl Shaffer Krzywicki, Paul Lucyan Anthony Kullbom, Kenneth Byron Ledden, Lewis Johnson Leibundguth, Henry Luddecke, Hugh Freer Magilner, Louis Manuzak, Herman Hubert Francis Marconis, Joseph Thomas Marino, Daniel Joseph Mazor, Jack McCarron, Daniel Joseph Charles McCormack, George Augustine, Jr. McFarlond, Malcolm Danforth Melenkevitz, Victor Theodore, Jr. Mercher, Walter Frederick Mikesic, Michael George Miller, Walter Moser, Christian Elwood Mosig, John Janovsky Mudafort, Sarkis Miguel Nadworny, Adolph Joseph 147 Norley, Walter Nelson, Jr. Ragan. Joseph Michael, Jr. Ranallo, John Joseph. Jr. Reeves, James Anthony Regan, Cornelius Joseph Reilly, Joseph Bernard Rcithmayer, Edwin Nyce Ritter, Charles William Roasberry, William Richard Robinson, James Joseph, Jr. Robinson, Joseph Ronan, Robert Blair Rosario-Santos, Angel Rafael Rosenberg, Hyman Ross, John Tnomas. Jr. Roth, John Franklin Rugh, Philo Wallace Ruta, John Peter Scanlon, James Gerard Seyler, Raymond Kuearns Shields, William Erwin Shinkawa, Shigeo Shiraishi, Toyohiko Joe Smith, William Thomas Starcke, Sewell Kenneth Strenski, John Sudimack, George Allan Sverdlik, Samuel Simon Swick, Jesse Howard. II Szary, Leo Joseph Talmage, Walter Raymond Tanous, John Harrington Edward Tihansky, Theodore Basil Tindall, Herbert Lincoln. Jr. Aouzeau, Arthur Thomas Tyler, Charles Orlan Usserow, Maurice Robert Van Mater, John Stroud Vetter, Thomas Henry Weinstock, Jerome Leonard Werts, Kenneth George White, Philip Fletcher Williams, Russell Kenneth Yocum, Paul Hilliard ':2'L-.M-Q-sh ......, .M - P4-v ' ,I '79 - 1 Nu! CLASS CFFICERS President ....... ..... I ohn I-l. E. Tanous Vice-President .... .......... I ahn Leo Kelly, lr. Secretary .... Bertram Maxwell Bernstein Treasurer ........ ...... D aniel l. C. McCarran Student Council . . . . . . . . . . Cornelius lasepli Regan 148 JUNIOR'S JOURNEY October 1938 marked the birth of the class of '42 of The Hahnemann Medical College. At that time, 155 enthusiastic young men were ready to embark into the field of medicine. At the present time, 134 remain, strong, no less enthusiastic and still clamoring for entrance into the field of medicine. The class of '42 was the last class to officially inhabit memorable Hering Hall and the Fire House. Not only were our highly concentrated afternoon siestas rudely interrupted by the rollicking trolley cars behind Hering Hall, but we also learned, to our dismay, that Fire House was really what the name implied. At mid-year we had the honor of being the first class to officially boil water in the new Chem lab, under the able direction of Captain C''lust-a-minute-gentlemen''D Chandler. Not only did we officially open the new Chem lab, but unofficially we splat- tered the ceiling of the new Pasteur room with parts of the Kjeldahl apparatus. Further dedication of the new building was furnished by Dr. Von Happ's buffet dinner for the entire school. Doctors Hepburn and Beutner with the assistance of a magician furnished the entertain- ment, and even today they have not returned from the fields of mysticism. Politically speaking, our class was represented in its first year by Messrs. Kelly, Marino, Bernstein, McCarron, and Regan--and were gifts high that year! The following year, Tyler replaced Marino as student representative--P. S. Gifts decreased in price. ln our third year, Kelly, due to the pressure of business Cmedicinel, retired in favor of Tanous, our present president, while Regan replaced Tyler as student represen- tative-P. S. S. Gifts still dropped in price twe sent Christmas cards this yearl. Leaving the realm of caboose , nine point zero, zero , and presto-chango , We entered upon the delightful sciences of the little dears who scratch their anus and reinfect themselves and the scintil- lating salesman of scientific sleepy viz, i. e., e. g., Whispering Sam the Path Man, and Squeaking Six-Hair Iohn C. the Physio Man. KP. S. it must be the catching--We also had Whispering Sam's Favorite assistantl. Back in our sophomore year, the Legal Eagle tPick-a-Winner Griffithl taught us it was naughty to abuse the practice of medicine, and ultra, ultra conservative Messey of Esquire Fame conclusively proved to us that there were: l ounce bottles, 2 ounce bottles, 3 ounce bottles .... Today, we have passed from the field of Taking it by Mouse CBeutnerl and Aborigine tlvlontaguel, to the more pleasant task of recog- nizing a-cute belly CGearyl, put 'em to bed with a good nurse tKirbyl, pain tsunshine Mileyl, you can't tell a woman Without one tCraigD, sentimental in the moonlight tBoerickel, how to avoid frigid- ity CTorch of Life Kutteroffl, Petty-of-the-nose Hollis, Belchy tBowersl and his I-labitus Enteropticusf' to they're never drunk tSteinhilberl, l've been sawing wood in this business for forty years. Ain't nature a slick article tMercerl, and l never flunk 'em tClayl. So We end the days of our third year, With the dummies of the OBS lab. Captain-ain't it Drafty ? 150 S P DMU E A Allebach, Gustave Sasse Apple, Stanley Benson Atkins, John Herman Balin, Solomon Lipman Batten, James Crumrine Beckert, Rudolph Herman Berman, Richard Bolton, John Dewey Brady, Francis Joseph Eugene Brumersky, Harry John Byrne, William Austin Carter, Edward Fenton, Jr. Clark, Morris Bates, Jr. Coane, Morton Raymon Cohn, Edwin Morton Coltman, Arthur Bernard Conrad, Donald Cameron Cooper, William Marion Cullen, Charles Joshua DeDominicis, Frank Anthony Delafrange, Kenneth Manuel Duck, Walter Otis Duffy, John Michael, Jr. Dunsmore, Rembrandt Harvey Ezaki, Toshio Fedack, William John Fischer, Herman Fitzpatrick, John Francis Flynn, Paul Lawrence Foster, Hollis Joseph, Jr. Fox, Wesley Brodbeck Frosch, Frank Joseph, Jr. Gallagher, Leo Belles Gibbons, Robert Francis Giddings, Lane Gizinski, Norbert Stephen Golden, Robert Joseph Goldstein, Max Richard Gorman, John Joseph Grasley, William Charles Grieco, Victor Francis Grotzinger, Paul John George Hamilton, George Richard Hammond, Willis Eugene Hanna, Louis Elias Hanysh, Myron Clarence Hechler, Robert Frederick Hege, John Henry Hely, Charles James, Jr. Hereter-Alvarez, Jorge Antonio Hess, Ivan Wilmer Hess, Paul Good Heydt, Ernest Herbert, Jr. Hill, Robert John Hoffman, Harry Pitts Howard, Bede Francis Howrie, William C. F. Jr. Hulick, George Stem Hunter, Albert Lewis, Jr. Irwin, Richard Maris Iungerich, Alexander Jarrett, Paul Benjamin Kassell, Martin Buddy Kistler, Kermit Kenton Klimkevich, Albert John Knox, Frederick Henry, Jr. Konecke, Carl John Kwalleck, Paul John, Jr. Kram, John Edward Krebs, Ernst Theodor, Jr. Krieger, Harry Louis Kumkumian, Edward Simon Lake, George Lewis Lapihusko, William Lapin, Alfred Raymond Laudenslager, Elmer Clifford Leeper, Robert Howitt Lepore, John Leskin, Joseph John Lipschutz, Arthur Lynch, Michael Francis Maida, Gennaro Giacco Mancinelli, Mario Joseph Martinez-Funes, Jose Francisco Massey, Franklin Carl McAvoy, Harry Drew McClimons, Frank Eugene McHugh, William James, Jr. McKee, Wayne Oliver Meng, Ralph Harvey 151 Ss IRQDU J-, Mohnach, Vladimir Morris, Raymond Albert Muchlado, Felix John Mullarkey, James Wood Murphy, Foster Edward Murphy, lan Douglas Nahas, Elias Naser Norley, Theoodre Novak, Edward John Oyer, Robert Samuel Paisley, Ellwood Spencer Petrone, Peter Anthony Polevoy, Pomeroy Edward Policarpo, Nicholas J. A. Poulsen, Russell Peter Pullen, Harvey Test Rambo, Oscar Naylor, Jr. Records, Carl James Rudnick, Herman Dowshen Scarpa, Harry Charles Schmick, Jesse Elias Scott, William Doughty Sexton, Richard Jarrett Shade, Jacob Gamble Shepard, Vitol Samuel Shields, Henry Andrew Sholler, Nicholas Andrew Skyer, Joseph Robert Sollami, William Richard Soss, Thomas Leonard Staples, Herman David Stewart, John Anderson Stoecklein, Herbert G. J. Toth, William Van Saun, William Arthur Vanquez-Milan, Hiram Vanquez-Velez, Anibal von Deilen, Arthur Wilhelm Wagener, William Ludwig, Jr. Wells, Fullerton Barton Hartley Williams, Richard David Wilson, George William Wrona, Eugene Adam Yost, George Francis Zogby, Albert James 'sm i v cal 'XJ CLASS CFFICERS President ...... . . . Arthur W. Von Deilen Vice President . . . ....... William Cooper Secretory .... .... F rotnk C. McClirnons Treasurer ...... .... I oseph W. Leskin Student Council .... Frank I. Frosch, lr. 152 SOPHOMORE STORY In October 1939 the, Class oi 1943 entered The 1-lahnemann Medical College just after the new building, including the Klahr Auditorium, had been pressed into service. The physical improvement to Hahne- mann was termed the cause tor putted chests and decreased W1 waist- lines on the part of 1-lahnemann Medical College graduates and that inded was a fair statement of the attitude occasioned by the addition to Building and Grounds . One hundred and fifty-one splendid young men Cso said the Hahnemann Alumni Newsl were enrolled in this class. Among this number were four sons of 1-lahnernann graduates, two grandsons, three brothers, one nephew, and six counsins-that about completing the tamily tree . Represented by the entire class were sixteen states, Puerto Rico, and Honduras, while the matriculants had attended over one hundred premedical schools. Academically, the Class of 1943 fared at Hahnemann as well as any other, its ten percent superiority task anyonel at the commence- ment of the school year being balanced by an unmentionable slump at midyears. The usual fun and humor, intermingled with hard work in anatomy, histology, and chemistry, leave-ned the bread oi routine scholastic labors. Came spring 1940 and with it, Page Winchell , who writes, Spring id cub bringing runny noses and budding romances. Same author also advised, ''1-lepaticocholecystostcholecystenterostomy'' is a forty- letter word you should remember from medical terminology. March nineteenth saw an innovation, sponsored by the Class of 1943, which established a precedent later followed by school organiza- tions and in February 1941 by the Student Council. lt was the organiza- L tion of a Forum to which outstanding medical speakers were invited to offer their opinions on scientific subjects in the field of medicine. Capably opening the series was Dr. Garth W. Boericke who addressed the crowd of one hundred and six on Homeopathy . The following month Dr. Desiderio Roman expounded on Trends in Modern Medi- cine . Special lectures, both during the school day and extra-curricularly, comprised a remarkably large part of the class' activities. By courtesy of the Histology Department, many unusually fine lectures were pre- sented including those of Dr. Michael Gratch of the University of Bologna on Medical Education in Italy , Dr. Boland Brown of the University of Edinburgh on Medical Education in the British lsles p and Dr. Henry Lafferty of The Hahnemann Medical Colleg on Ob- stetrics . Not to be outdone by this brilliant array of speakers, the Anatomy Department arranged a similar splendid group, beginning on March twenty-first with the appearance of Dr. Sall of the University of Penn- sylvania on The Circulation of the Brain , and Dr. Thomas W. Phillips of The Hahnemann Medical College on Anatomy and Pathology of the Rectum . Socially, the Class of '43 made its debut at the Freshman Dance, held at the Rittenhouse Hotel in the Christmas month of l939. CLet's not discuss the financial angle herel. As Sophomores, the same class- now numbering one hundred and thirty-four men-jitterbugged at the Hotel Essex, 'tween Turkey Day and Bac.-T exam. day prior to Christ- mas 1940. Besuming the perchant for lectures Chow long will it lastl, the Class President meted out nuggets in a special lecture on, The Teeth . An illustrated lecture, featuring original motion pictures on inguinal and Femoral Hernia was presented by Dr. Clarence L. Shollenberger. As Sophomores, the Class of 19453 has been too busy to cast their ballots for Best Dressed Man , etc., but, perhaps, we'll let you in on that in '43. 154 LHE RHMZA fi ASS LRQCDLLFQ Attarian, James Leon Back, Joseph Michael, Jr. Ballas, William Anthony Barclay, Clayton Carson Bax, Alphonso Leo Baylor, Louis Peter Beckert, William Charles Berger, Norman Shea Blomain, Emile William, Jr. Boettger, Alfred Oscar Boyer, Edward Harry Breme, Julius Charles Brown, Patrick Neely Calvanese, Nicholas Albert Carney, Paul Luther Carras, Peter Demosthenes Chemycz, Joseph Robert Chepko, Julius Chitwood, John Noah Corenzwit, Raymond Corn, Oscar Cressman, Paul Gerhardt, Jr. Curtis, Harrison Everett D'Amico, Albert Anthony Darby, Walter Snyder de Cruz, Julio Medina De Santis, Peter Louis Dosovitz, Oscar Dratman, Michell Louis Dunlap, Stephen Edgar, Jr. Edwards, Walter Roy Erhard, Robert Francis Fodor, Andrew Eugene Forthman, William Hill Fuhrmann, John Barclay Gabroy, Harry Kenneth Gammel, Walter Arthur Gan, Walter Stanley Gelinas, Edmund Joseph Gerard, Frank Hight Gerber, Harris Seymour Gouldin, Robert Parker Graham, Ralph Eugene Haberman, William Burns Hale, Thomas King Hall, Robert Louis Hamilton, Frederick Garfield, Jr. Hamilton Frederick G., Jr. Hitchner, Lewis Clinton, Jr. Hokholt, Carl Alfred Hughes, James Joseph, Jr. Jablonski, Lawrence Francis, Jr. Jablonski, Lawrence F., Jr. Jack, Roy Custer Jette, Roger Gilbert Juler, Edward Thomas Junk, Ivan DeKalb Jurewicz, Stanley Thomas Kato, Masa Masao Kearney, Martin James Kerst, John Cornell Kirila, Andrew William Kirkpatrick, Daniel Wilkins Konopka, Alexander John Korey, Joseph John Krause, Robert William Kueker, William George, Jr. Lagerquist, Albert Lloyd Landay, James Paul Laubach, George Brotzman Leadbetter, Mark Renton Leam, John Alfred Lieberman, Alexander, Jr. Lipcius, Frank Lorentz, Gerald Talmage Lyons, James Chalmers, Jr. Maguire, James Joseph Martin, Charles George Martin, Richard James Marton, Victor William Mayer, Donald Franklin McAfoos, Louis Garheld, Jr. Mclntyre, Donald Kenneth McKane, Andrew, III McLaughlin, John Joseph Minnick, Edward Michael Robert Minnick, Edward M. R. Mohr, Frederick James Molina-Rivera, Antonio Eduardo Molina-Rivera, Antonio E. Monheit, Richard Stanton Montalvo-Carroll, Andres Morrill, Lewis V., Jr. Mozola, Emil William Munchak, John, Jr. Neely, William Joseph Nettles, Thomas Earl Null, Robert Harry Oakey, Richard Stanton, Jr. O'Brien, William Thomas, Jr. Ostrowski, Joseph Peter Paret, Frank Lewis 155 Petkus, John Anthony Pfromm, John Phillips, Paul Richard Pomroy, Henry Swyers Powell, Jack Melvin Preis, Francis Joseph Edward Rendin, Larry James Rigby, Charles Edward, Jr. Rothrock, David Roswell, Jr. Rubin, Justin Sataloff, Joseph Schaffner, John Peter, Jr. Schroth, Thomas Anthony Shepard, Morse Arno Shields, George Henry Simoson, Leo Herbert Smith, George Kent Snyder, William Gerald Snyder, James Ayers Sonis, Meyer Stein, John William Stewart, William Wayne Stoner, Edward William Sullivan, Claude Clarence, Jr. Sussman, Irvin Szczepaniak, John Paul Szmal, Chester John Theodore Szmal, Chester J. T. Talone, Ernest Thomas Teater, Joseph Boland Teskey, William Francis Thel, Albert John Thomas Thomasson, Raymond Franklin Thomasson, Raymond F. Toth, Alexander Gabirel, Jr. Turner, Arden Stanley Ursin, John Uzmann, Francis Joseph, Jr. Walichuck, John Gregory Wasley, Malcolm Tucker Watson, Joseph Hicks Weiss, Jerome Weitzel, Roland Earl Whitaker, Jack Lonsdale White, Albert Evans Witherspoon, Robert George Woelfel, Gerard Anthony Wolf, Alfred Henry Wright, Eugene Neal Yoshikawa, Toyoo Zaino, Edward Constantine CLASS OFFICERS President ...... ....... Vice-President . . . . . Secretary .... Treasurer ..... Student Council Larry larnes Rendin Alexander Iohn Konopka . . . . loseph Michael Back, lr. Nicholas Albert Calvanese Clayton Carson Barclay F RESHMAN F EELIN GS The Class of '44 with Larry Hendin for its Presidentg Alexander Konopka, Vice-President, Nicholas Calcanese, Treasurerg loseph Back, Secretaryg Clayton Barclay, Student Council Repreesntative, has distinguished itself in l-lahnemann from the time it was welcomed into the school on the eevning of September 30, 1940, through the successful running of a freshman dance, up to the time of cramming for final examinations. The results of the first three-week examination in chemistry immediately branded this the best class ever , by showing up all previous freshman classes in having an all-time high of 59 per cent of the students passing. They even had one fellow who was so overjoyed at being admitted to medical school that he registered a week early and then never showed up tor class. Parkin is his name. Not all was milk and honey for the class. They got into trouble once when someone lit a match during a guest lecture by Dr. Russell Fisher, after he had expressly asked for no smoking while the room was darkened. The wrath of the Histology Department descended upon the Class of '44 like a bolt from above. However, the class got on the ball and had the affair cleared up. A real grand dance was organized, supported, and run by this Class of '44. loe Freshman and his gal stepped lightly to the lilting strains of lohnny Creighton's Orchestra at the Stephen Girard Hotel. All due credit to Francis Uzmann and Oscar Corn, co-chairmen. Of course, it ended in a free-for-all brawl, but at that stage who, besides the manager of the hotel, gave a hoot? Much fun and horseplay was indulged in throughout the year. Many a time did Room A reverberate to the shrill cries of, Pass McAfoos up. Pass Rendin down . Loud were the shrieks of those poor unfortunates who had unwittingly fallen asleep during a lecture. For inavriably were they startled out of their slumber by a burning sensation on the sole of their foot caused fl'Irrm' turn fr l'uifi' Jil' f wsw. M by Ns F.. ,Q -Pit i 4 1 I 7 1 fl so X 5: - -.,. ,. , 1- -' ,., v .JL .,..,,., - f . , ... ,N .,,.,.! J,s., . , 1 . 1 5 ' ' 4 ,-ff52L'F: : 2f1 7 -' f ' 1 - -rw:w-f'f .fTf'l i '1 4. ,-L, ., . , , Y f 1 , v .,' 1 pf-.-e':'-Sqn ' ' , , . ,f. . 1 .. rr ,...l,...4...1,- if . 3 R. E. WARNECKE Student Institute President 'ill SALUTES THE GREEKS A Hahnemann man is a friendly man. He is the man one likes to have around. Good fellowship is what he promotes, for this may be observed by turn- ing the next few pages and noting the various Fra- ternities in which this spirit prevails. ij. CYXILLFIICCAL' 161 EJEHH ZEAEIEDIE-H President ....... Vice-President Treasurer .... Secretary . . . . 162 GAMMA CHAPTER . . . A. Engle Lenhert . . . B. Warren Pechan . .. Karl H. H. Zieqenhorn, . . . David W. Hughes, Carrington G. Arnold, Ir. Arthur I. Auringer Emerson B. Beery George E. Covintree Walter F. Edmundson, Iames Robert Hart William H. Blanchard Ray W. Croyle Robert W. Duffy Iohn H. Atkins Iohn D. Bolton Morris B. Clark, Ir. W. Otis Duck ll Rembrandt H. Dunsmore Wesley B. Fox Frank I. Frosch, Ir. George R. Hamilton Andrew E. Fodor Frank H. Gerard Robert P. Gouldin Daniel W. Kirkpatrick Albert L. Lagerquist Donald F. Mayer Class of 1941 Kenneth K. Keown Ioseph W. Laufenberg A. Engle Lenhert Francis I. Lonergan B. Warren Pechan Class of 1942 Iames Hare David W. Hughes Thomas S. Ienike Malcolm D. McFarland Class of 1943 Ernest H. Heydt, Ir. Robert I. Hill Harry P. Hoffman George S. Hulick Frederick H. Knox, Ir. Robert H. Leeper Wayne O. McKee Ralph H. Meng Class of 1944 Louis G. McAfoos, Ir. Donald K. Mclntyre Lewis V. Morrill, Ir. Iohn Pfromm Henry S. Pomroy Leo H. Simoson 163 William C. Piver, Ir. Iohn W. Prout Lewis A. Steinhilber Iess I. Woodworth, Ir. Charles S. Yost Karl H. H. Ziegenhorn 'Walter N. Norley, Ir. William R. Roasberry Robert B. Ronan Theodore Norley Ellwood S. Paisley Russell P. Poulson Carl I. Records William D. Scott Herbert G. I. Stoecklein William Toth George W. Wilson Gerald W. Snyder Iames A. Snyder Iohn W. Stein Malcolm T. Wasley Albetr E. White Robert G. Witherspoon ill? H1 ' Q . i s BETA CHAPTER President ...... Ioseph Nicholas Tushim Vice-President . . . . . . Charles Orlan Tyler Treasurer ...... ....... R obert Hayes Linn Secretary .... . . . Frank Halstead Brovsm, Ir. 4 if 164 I M.D. Francis Walter Brill Hugh Joseph Burns Alfred Gabriel Thomas Carter Homer Elmer Cook Charles DeBold, Jr. Frank Halstead Brown, Jr. Orville Moyer Fitzgerald John Leo Kelly, Jr. Edward Adam Kowalyk William Edward William William Austin Byrne Fenton Carter, Jr. Marion Cooper John Fedack Robert Francis Gibbons Louis Peter Baylor Walter Snyder Darby Stephen Edgar Dunlap, Jr. Robert Francis Erhard Lawrence Francis J ablonski Garth W. Boericke , Class of 1941 Erwin George Degling Armen Haik Gueovjian Ward Dittmar Heinrich Francis William Lanard Robert Hayes Linn Sigmund John Makarchek Class of 1942 Walter Harold Kozak Henry Leibundguth Hugh Freer Luddicke Edwin Nyce Reithmayer Class oi 1943 Robert Joseph Golden William Charles Grasley Albert John Klimkevich Frank Eugene McClimans William James McHugh, Jr. Robert Samuel Oyer Class of 1944 Ivan DeKolb Junk James Joseph Maguire Edward M. R. Minnick Richard Stanton Oakey, Jr. Joseph Peter Ostrowski Larry James Rendin Fraters in Facultate Stanley John Okulicz Alfred Ralph Richlan Mario John Serena Joseph Nicholas Tushim Rudolph Emil Warnecke Herbert Lincoln Tindall Charles Orlan Tyler John Stroud Van Mater Russell Kenneth Williams Jesse Elias Schmick William Richard Sollami John Anderson Stewart Arthur Wilhelm von Deilen Fullerton B. H. Wells John Peter Schaffner, Jr. Tmomas Anthony Schroth Claude Clarence Sullivan. Jr William Francis Tesky Eugene Neal Wright Richard W. Larer, 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., F.A.C.S. James H. Clossen, III, M.D. Earl B. Craig, M.D., F.A.C.S., F.l.C.S. Henry L. Crowther, M.D., F.A.C.S. Pasquale Damiani, M.D. T. F. Doyle, M.D., M.R.C.S., F.A.C.S. Harry Evans, Jr., M.D. D. R. Ferguson, M.D.,F.A.C.P. Gerald A. Fincke, M.D. ll. Russell Fisher, M.D. John J. K. Findlay, M.D. Charles D. Fox, M.D. Edwin O. Geckler, M.D.,F.A.C.S. George D. Geckler, M.D. James M. Godfrey, M.D. Carroll F. Haines, M.D. Martin Francis Hayes, M.D. Edmund G. Hessert, M.D., F.A.C.S. N. Fulmer Hoffman, M.D. C. B. Hollis, M.D.,F.A.C.S. Donald T. Jones, M.D. Wayne T. Killian, M.D. 165 N. Volney Ludwick, M.D. Russell S. Magee, M.D., D.N.B. 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. 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.,F.A.C'.A. James D. Schofield, M.D., F.A.C.S. E. R. Snader, M.D.,F.A.C.P. H. Earl Twining, M.D. Everett A. Tyler, M.D.,F.A.C.A. Edward P. Van Tine, M.D. Frederick J. von Rapp 'lhomas 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. xx 'f lla Q ? 1' President .... Vice-President Secretary .... Treasurer . . . Chaplain . . . I 'K it lk 166 I 4 SHE-LUN E313 . . . ................... Iacob I. Hladycz, '41 . . . . . . . . Willouqhby I. Rothrock, '41 . . . . George A. Sudirnack, '42 . . . . William X. Gebele, Ir., '41 . . . . . .' . Edward I. Simon, '41 Ioseph A. Concello William X. Gebele Iacob I. Hladycz Frederick Ketchum Leonard A. Battafarano Stanley F. Boc Daniel E. Boyle Armanno W. Ciccarelli Charles A. Furey Toshio Ezaki Kermit K. Kistler loseph M. Back Iohn B. Furhmann Roy C. lack ' Alfred O. Boettger Robert L. Hall Carl A. Hokholt Class of 1941 Alfred A. Liberi Einar A. Palmgren Robert A. Redcav Desiderio A. Roman-Vega Class of 1942 Pasquale Guarini Iohn R. Hall Christian E. Moser loseph lvl. Ragan Cornelius I. Regan loseph B. Reilly Class of 1943 Elias N. Nahas Pomeroy E. Polevoy Class oi 1944 Iohn C. Kerst William G. Kueker Pledges Roger G. Iette Iohn Munchak 167 Willoughby I. Rothrock Woodrow D. Schlosser Edward I. Simon Redmond B. Walsh Angel R. Rosario-Santos Toyohiko I. Shiraishi George A. Sudimack Iohn H. Tanous Arthur T. Touzeau Nicholas I. Policarpo Hiram Vazquez-Milan George B. Laubach Ernest T. Talone lohn G. Walichuck Paul R. Phillips lohn Ursin Alexander G. Toth ,N Cu., ., -XX 0 K.-fi liskfl' C -in 'fad-25 fx A- A' ---e I9 lgsfpf' .4 . 9 , , ' .43 L x if V 1 Tall 4 A l ' . .17 H' JL 1. ' Q , S . ., 5' Sidney I. Brody William L. Granitir Herbert S. Greenspan Ellis K. Hultzman William K. Boros Israel E. Brownstein Solomon L. Balin Oscar Dosovitz Superior . Chancellor Treasurer . . . Scribe . . . Class of 1941 Milton L. Kroungold Frank L. Miller Solomon S. Mintz Irving W. Robinson Class of 1942 Nathan Crane Class of 1943 Harry L. Krieger Class of 1944 Harris S. Gerber Robert H. Null Albert Rosner Manning J. Rosnick Francis H. Stem Leonard H. Taboroff Marco H. Goodman Joseph Robinson Joseph R. Skyer Joseph Sataloff l l i l V ALPHA BETA CHAPTER .. Leonard H. Taboroff, Irving W. Robinson, . . . . . . Albert Rosner . . . Ioseph Robinson, , Jerome Baum Bertram Bernstein Charles Block Donald Cantor Richard Berman Morton Coane Edwin Cohn Norman Berger Raymond Corenzwit Oscar Corn 4 X . 21 fi 111111 H1 ' Class Saul D. Eger Class Morton Gutnick Louis Magilner Jack Mazor Class Arthur Coltman Herman Fischer Class Mitchell Dratman James Landay in 4 of 1941 Charles Sacks of 1942 Walter Miller Herman Rosenberg Herman Rosenstein of 1943 Max Goldstein Martin Kassell of 1944 Justin Rubin Morse Shepard Alexander Lieberman Meyer Sonis E9 1 UDEJLEFA 1? GDN !1 Lennard Weber Samuel Sverdlik Jerome Weinstock Arthur Lipshutz Herman Rudnick Herman Staples Irvin Sussman Jerome Weiss President ....... . . . Saul D. Eqer, '41 Vice-President ...... Charles Sacks, '41 Secretary' ..... Herman Rosenstein, '42 Treasurer .... Samuel Sverdlik, '42 Senator . . . . Lennarcl Weber, '41 Historian .. .. Herman Staples, '43 Marshall . . .... Edwin Cohn, '43 r ' gn' 1 ,w V ,, ff Class of 1941 Albert I. Battaqlia Class of 1942 Daniel I Marino lohn I. Ranallo, lr. Mario G Cirelli A M Nicholas G. Depiero Vincent P. DiHocco Class of 1943 Frank A DeDorninicis Victor P. Grieco lohn Lepore Mario l. Mancinelli Peter A. Petrone Class of 1944 Alphonso L. Bax Albert N. Calvanese Edward C Zcuno M E HH IM Grand Master Master ....... Secretary .... Treasurer .... Historian .... 170 . . Albert Iohn Battaqlia . .... Daniel loseph Marino Iohn Ioseph Ranallo, Ir. . . . Mario Gerald Cirelli . . . Peter Anthony Petrone I L-7-fi S 'pk-' 'T Y RV-i inn...- Wi.. l Something few of us realize exists is the beautiful Hahnemann Memorial in Washington, D. C. lt is an artistic structure of which all of us may Well be proud. In l892, Dr. I. H. McClelland of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, conceived the idea of perpetuating in marble the high ideals Hahnemann had upheld during his life. With this thought in mind, a campaign was started in which over 2500 people par- ticipated. The culmination of this glorious vision now stands in Scott Circle at Massachusetts and Rhode Island Avenue near Sixteenth Street. The monument follows the Greek style and is a true ellipse in plan. It is approached in front by four steps leading to a platform upon the minor axis. The central portion before Which is placed a sitting statute of Hahnemann is composed of four columns carrying an entablature. The statute itself is an excel- lent likeness in bronze and rests on a beautifully grained granite base. The dedication of this edifice took place on Iune 21, 1900 in the presence o fthe President of the United States, William McKinley, as Well as many other notables of Congress and the leading professional men of the country with the United States Marine Band furnishing the music. Ever since its unveiling this memorial has held a place of distinction in the realm of sculpturing as Well as lending a source of inspiration to all who dedicate their lives, as did Hahnemann, to the healing of the sick and the advancement of the science of medicine. !Z0Ae.z A. im., '41 171 ! A E n xx 35 I In IST lt lmns lvmt :amd that ct true index to tlts- t xltlwm mt t1 mrm is the way he uttlltrr-14 lun lc-mum hours. To thmr credit, tlu- mort 'vt llcuhnnnznnrm have tradition- ftltv 'tw-.fcltctcti thmr sp-urn tnmo to pur- :stmm turthm lcnowledmw ol their chosen llffltl 'llm tfxtt- Dr Flulus B. Weaver serves -tr. tm trrlrlmnhln oxumpln ot such et- trwttu :md Hf1I!'16?lH ts u splendtd tllus- tvztrt vt Ot thu trmt they bam. 'llttltxy':a students continue this ttne t.':txt,-:ulzxr prolsasstonul clubs cxboundtng tt :ttttt-wrt thmuoh than work in the extra t..1t llf,tlt.'tvttJt1!LD. Er.. SIDNEY I. BRODY INTRCDUCING D D D7 TI-IE FCRUM Sponsoring a series of open meetings throughout the school year, the newly-organized I-IAI-INEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE FORUM hopes to stimulate an interest arnong the student-body in extra-curricular medical activities. Prominent speakers from other spheres of medical learning are invited periodically to address the students on a technical or non-technical medical subject of their choosing. The Medic ot l94l is proud to be the first yearbook to carry within its covers news ot this new and Worthwhile organization which in its debut year was piloted capably by: SIDNEY I. BRODY, '4l FRANK I. EROSCH, Ir., '43 FRANKLIN C. MASSEY, '43 175 t JLLL Class of 1941 Coach, Emerson Beery Captain, Alexander Bolton Eugene Bekampis Class of 1943 Stanley Apple Herman Rudnick Class of 1942 Andrew Brunhofer Charles Bryant Michael Etzl Henry Leibundguth Hyman Rosenberg Class of 1944 Joseph Cheymcz Lewis Hitchner The l94l Basketball Team was crowned Champions ot the Phlla delphia Central Y. M. C. A. Leaque. The lefterson Medical School Was met and defeated in the playoff encounter. 176 IB El: Chairman .......... ..... . Assistant Chairman . . Treasurer ......... U LED Roberi H. Linn, '41 . . Alexander A. Bolton, '41 . . Einar A. Palmqren, Ir., '41 Secretary .. .. . Walter N. Norley, Ir., '42 Orchestra Committee Patron and Patroness Decorations Committee William W. Leman, '41 Committee Frederick Ketcham. '41 Co-Chairman Homer E. Cook' '41 Chairman Kenneth Keown, '41 Co-Chairman Francis H. Stern, '41 C0'Cha1fman Jesse J. Woodworth, Jr.. '41 John D. Bolton, '43 Herbert L. Tindall, Jr.. '42 C-o-Chairman George A. Sudimackv '42 Edward I. Kraus, '42 Ellis K. Hultzman, '41 Richard S' Oakeyv JI.. -44 John H. Atkins, '43 Charles De-Bold, Jr., '41 Erwin G. Degling, '41 Advertising Committee Robert H. Null, '44 Francis J. Lonergan, '41 Co-Chairman M. John Serena, '41 Co-Chairman Francis W. Lanard, '41 Solomon S. Mintz, '41 Program and Favor Committee William P. Britsch, Jr., '41 Chairman Robert A. Redcay. '41 William A. McIntyre, '41 David W. Hughes, '42 177 n n I nAp BUER President . . . Secretory .. Advisor .. William P. Britsch, Jr. James J. Burnett George E. Covintree Walter F. Edmundson, II James C. Campbell Fernando M. Canino-Pont William W. Faller OFFICERS Class of 1941 Nayip Fas-Fagundo Jacob J. Hladycz Francis J. Lonergan Stanley J. Okulicz Arnaldo Palmer Class of 1942 Orville M. Fitzgerald Kenneth B. Kullbom Adolph J. Nadworny HJIESL 'THERE PE Till, George E. Legg, '41 Charles S. Yost, '41 Dr. Garth W. Boericke A. Eaton Roberts Edward J. Simon Albert H. Them, Jr Norman M. Warner Cornelius J. Regan John F. Roth Sewell K. Starcke l78 li. QGJESCLUIL EEIHSEMYVQUD Presidente Fernando Luis Buxeda Secretario Vice-Presidente Angel B. Colon Fontan Carlos Aceveclo Defillo Tesorero Wilbert Hernandez Camara Vocales Fernando Canino Pont Fernando L. Buxeda Angel B. Colon Fontan Jose Aneses Arrache Julio Davila Boria Jose Martinez Fumes Andres Montalvo Carroll 179 Julio Davila Boria Hiram Vasquez Milan Seniors Wilbert Hernandez Camara Nayip Fas Fagundo Juniors Fernando Canino Pont Carlos Acevedo Defillo Sophomores Hiram Vasquez Milan Freshmen Antonio E. Molina Andres Montalvo Carroll Desiderio A. Roman Vega Sarkis Miguel Mudafort Angel R. Rosario Santos Anibal Vasquez Velez Jules M. DeCruz 1+ if on D is urea e E no oo V OFFICERS Sponsors . . . . . Dr. Edr1 B. Crdiq, Dr. Edmund G. Hessert President .... ................ A . Enqle Lenheri, '41 Vice-President .... ..... B . Wdrren Pechan, '41 Secretory-Treasurer . . Class of 1941 Walter F. Edmundson, Alfred W. Erb fi. Engie Lenhcrt Robert H. Linn B. Warren Pechan Thomas H. Pennock Lewis A. Steinhilber Karl H. H. Ziegenhorn Kdr1 1-1. 1-1. Zieqenhdrn, '41 Class of 1942 Frank H. Brown, Jr. Joseph W. Burnett Robert W. Duffy James Hare David W. Hughes Thomas S. Jenike Raymond Q. Seyler Charles O. Tyler 180 '56- FLIS if LINLICQCIDQGDZA i S OFFICERS Co-Chairman . . . Class of 1941 Francis Brill Joseph Harrop Robert Hart Frank Kelly Robert Lavoie Sigmund Makarchek William McIntyre Alfred Richlan William O'Hora A. Eaton Roberts 181 .. Alfred Richlcrn 41 Class of 1942 John Kelly Edward Krause Henry Leibendguth Joseph McCormick Walter Norley John Roth George Sudimack Charles Tyler John VanMater Russell Williams YK EE Conductor . . . Manager ..... Accompanist . . . Librarian ..... Hunter S. Cook, M.D. Donald Bierne, '42 Harry K. Gabroy, '44 William Boros, '42 Arthur B. Coltman, '43 Julius Chepko, '44 L. James Attarian, '44 Charles Block, '42 Herbert S. Greenspan, '41 Roy C. Jack, '44 Gustave A. Allebach, '43 Israel Brownstein, '42 Joseph Burnett, '42 'UB . Sidney I. Brody, '41 .. Herbert S. Greenspan, '41 . . . . . Paul L. Krzywicki, '42 IarnesC.Campbe1l, '42 Faculty Sponsors William M. Sylvis, M.D. First Tenors Ernest H. Heydt, Jr., '43 Hugh Luddecker, '42 Second Tenors J. Robert Hart, '41 William Forthman, '44 S. Jurewicz, '44 Joseph Leskin, '43 Baritones Martin Kassell, '43 Jack Mazor, '42 William J. Neely, '44 Robert Null, '44 Hyman Rosenberg, '42 Basses James C. Campbell, '42 Paul L. Carney, '44 John B. Fuhrmann, '44 Rowland Rickets, M.D. Robert Oyer, '43 Manning Rosnick. '41 John Petkus, '44 Joseph Robinson, '42 Morse A. Shepard, '44 Leo Simoson. '44 Meyer Sonis, '44 John H. Tanous, '42 Charles S. Yost, '41 Vladimir Mohnach, '43 Ian D. Murphy, '43 Pomeroy E. Polevoy, '4 182 LUXWEHJL lLf. LANE Mn LIDITLQJL 3 Sponsor .... . . . Lowell I... Lone, M.D. Co Choirrnon . . .... Kenneth G. Werts, '42 Co Choirmczn . . . . Molcolm D. Mclgorlond, '42 Leonard A. Battafarano Donald P. Beirne Bertram M. Bernstein William H. Blanchard Frank H. Brown, Jr. Andrew C. Brunhofer, Jr. Charles E. Bryan Armanno W. Ciccarelli Vincent P. DiRocco Michael M. Etzl Daniel J. Marino Walter N. Norley, Jr. John J. Ranallo, Jr. Cornelius J. Regan Hyman Rosenberg Samuel S. Sverdlik Jesse H. Swick, II John H. E. Tanous 183 1 'i W T53 Ztlltxl C 3 President ...... . . Daniel loseph Charles McCarron, '42 Vice-President .......,... ........ W illiam Richard Sollami, '43 Corresponding Secretary. . . .. .lohn Thomas Ross, lr., '42 Recording Secretary .... .... I ohn Michael Duffy, Ir., '43 Treasurer ......... .... D aniel Eugene Black, Ir., '42 Chaplain ....... Faculty Advisor . . . Class of 1942 Albert Francis Paul Bozic Class of 1941 Carlos Efraim Acevedo-Defillo Jose Aneses-Arrache Leonard Anthony Battafarano Donald Peter Beirne Daniel Eugene Black, Jr. Stanley Frank Boc Alfred Stanley Bogucki Daniel Edward Boyle . . . . . . . . .Rev. Edward I. Reilly ....Dr. Mario Gerald Cirelli Nicholas DePierro Vincent Paschal DiRocco Robert William Duffy Michael Matthew Etzl William Ward Faller Anthony Alexander Febbraro Charles Aloysius Furey, J Pasquale Guarini John Robert Leo Hall Francis A. W. Hauck John Leo Kelly, Jr. Edward gnatius Kraus Andrew Charles Brunhofer,Jr.Paul L. A. Krzywicki Fernando Miguel Cfanino-Pont Herman H. F. Manuzak Joseph Anthony Cassidy Armanno William Ciccarelli Joseph Thomas Marconis Thomas Snyder Daniel J, C. McCarron George A, McCormack, Jr. Victor T. Melenkevitz, Jr. Sarkis Miguel Mudafort Joseph Michael Ragan, Jr John Joseph Ranallo, Jr . Cornelius Joseph Regan Joseph Bernard Reily James Joseph Robinson, J I'. Angel Rafael Rosario-Santos John Thomas Ross, Jr. James Gerard Scanlan John Strenski George Allan Sudimack Leo Joseph Szary John H. E. Tanous Daniel Joseph Marino 184 Violins A. DeDominics, '43 J. G. Grotzinger, '43 G. Walichuck, '44 E. Polevoy, '43 F. Luddecke, '42 E. Covintree, '41 M. Kummer, '41 W. Laufenberg, '41 A. Schroth, '44 G. T. Carter, '41 E. Boyle, '42 Piano L. A. Krzywicki, '41 U .Ri J 1531234 1312513 Conductor W. W. Leman, '41 Manager R. K. White, '41 Clarinets J. R. L. Hall, '42 R. H. Dunsmore, '43 L. Giddings, '43 Saxophones W. J. Campbell, '42 W. F. Edmundson, II, '41 J. H. Swick, II, '42 E. W. Blomaiu, Jr., '44 Trombones E. C. Laudenslager. '43 Trumpets Lovell, '41 White, '41 Blanchard. '42 Shields. '42 Battery Pullen. '43 Tuba Leber, '41 French Horn Bremo. '44 185 'BT' in 3.3 31111311 M A All All O M Q31 ' CUDHQO G W L3 A OFFICERS Sponsor . .. ............. Dr. Stanley P. Reirnomn President ...... A, Horton Roberts, '41 Vice-Presiolent .... .. lohn L. Kelly, lr., '41 Secretory-Treasurer . . . . A. Engle Lenhert, '41 Class of 1941 Alexander A. Bolton, Jr. Vincent A. DeRosa A. Engle Lenhert Joseph A. Cassidy Thomas S. Jenike William M. Cooper John M. Duffy, Jr. Venzel R. Mikan Thomas H. Pennock Alfred R. Richlan A. Eaton Roberts Class of 1942 John L. Kelly, Jr. Class of 1943 Max R. Goldstein Willoughby J. Rothrock Lewis A. Steinhilber Joseph N. Tushim Daniel J. Marino Christian E. Moser Harry P. Hoiman Raymond A. Morris 3 I Q E TUBE UNC E President ..... Vice-President Secretory ..... Treasurer . . . L. A. Steinhilber E, J. Simon Class J. H. Tanous C. J. Regan OFFICERS Rudolph E. Wornecke Class of 1941 R. E. Warnecke T. H. Pennock of 1942 Class of 1944 C. C. Barclay L. J. Rendin Edward I. Simon Thomas H. Pennock Emerson B. Beeiv W. A. O'HO1'8 E. A. Beery Class of 1943 F. J. Frosch, Jr. A. W. VonDeilen 187 ri: J- Sf warming or 3-gg fo A gebywnrgg TR Ql7FlCEl:iS President . .. .. . Alexander A. Bolton, lr., '41 Secretory . . . . . William P. Britsch, lr., '41 Sponsor .. ...... Dr. W. W. Young Alexander A. Bolton, Jr. William P. Britsch, Jr. J. Robert Hart Jacob J. Hladycz Class of 1941 Francis W. Lanard George E. Legg Francis J. Lonergan Sigmund J. Makarchek Alfred R. Richlan A. Eaton Roberts Albert H. Them, Jr. Wilson D. Tucker Karl H. H. Ziegenhorn 188 ENN 1? L3 Fc1cu1ty Advisor . . . President ....... Vice-President ..... Secretory-Treasurer . . . A. A. Bolton, Jr. F. L. Buxeda A. B. Colon-Fontan J. R. Hart F. J. Kelly K. K. Keown F. W. Lanard R. W. Duffy J. L. Kelly, Jr. K. B. Kullbom G A S. OFFICERS Dr. H N ZA! Gustave A. Von Lennep . . . . . V. Revert Miken. '41 Class of 1941 E. Legg . E. Lenhert J. , Makarchek V. R. Mikan T. H. Pennock W. C. Piver Class of 1942 G. A. McCormack, A C J. . J. Nadworny . W. Ritter Robinson .. George E. Leqq, '41 1. Robert Hart, '41 A. R. Richlan I. W. Robinson D. A. Roman-Vega M. J. Serena A. H. Them, Jr. N. M. Warner J. J. Woodworth, Jr Jr. G. A. Sudimack S. S. Sverdlik H. H. Manuzak 189 -amz.. YV' if-' buf B. WARREN PECHAN V.- M 1 ' A. ENGLE LENHERT EDITORIAL BOARD B. W. PECHAN Editor-in-Chief W. M. KUMMER Managing Editor M. L. KROUNGOLD Copy Editor W. P. BRITSCH Art Editor A. L. LENHERT Advertising Manager J. J. HLADYCZ Business Manager A. P. LEBER Photographic Editor ED Assistant Editors I. W. ROBINSON W. W. LEMAN A. A. LIBERI H. E. COOK K. K. KEOWN MILTON L. KROUNGOLD 'X' WILLIAM M. KUMMIER IACK I . HLADYCZ Faculty Advisors H. RUSSEL FISHER CARL C. FISHER. M.D. HENRY D. LAFFERTY Staff C. G. ARNOLD J. N. BAUM A. J, BATTAGLIA A. H. THEM F. W. LANARD R. H. LINN W. F. MORGAN J. H. HARE. '42 L. L. WEBER J. WEIGHTMAN K. H. ZIEGENHORN A. W. ERB J. T. BUCKEY J. WEISS. '42 W. F. EDMUNDSON J. I. WEBER ' H. P. HOFFMAN, '43 . 1 I Y I - , , QP Sip sb ' '. . 1 A , V. , , . A ' - 4 4 V.-:, A.,'5g4' 'inf G ' 'H' '.fx xt'-Us In -' , 1 -M I.. -, . . ,'In'v? 'AZ C' : v:, If ,.-f f bf . ' ' . -.1-1... . lb ,, . , .. .Q N n -.N , I .,d:'?:3:-A VI MAA 'vdlwl .I u. A 1 ...A :S1 J sv ' A . I , , .1 kv- J J- .'5,L':'gi,- .' v ,-ul .I I I . 1 I' ,- A. ' . .' , v ' -' rf ' .. A ' ' ..5' .fy +,g:,?l:'. ' ii E22-f' ' f 5 d3.?:'i ?. e, 4-' 'Q , 1 Q' 'hgyrf ' .F n-Jr ...A ' . PW vga, ,. tg. f Hx,-J Liz?-I ' A Q: , J 'Q -uf.. I A ,' - 3 , ', C F- . 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N ROBERT HAYES LINN Committee Chairman Blue and Gold Ball Since its inception, when professors in stovepipes and cut- aways carried their gold-headed canes to hear The l-lahnemann Orchestra and Glee Club give their first concert, the Blue and Gold Ball and Concert has developed into the outstanding social event of the year. No longer do We bow formally as we pass by the receiving chaperons. Gone with the gilded gas jet is the stiff two-step, the formal Waltz, the raucous polka. Contrasted to its early prede- cessor the 1941 ball was as great an advance as the sound film over the stereoptican. Gay balloons of light gave one intimate glimpses of five hundred enthralled couples and made diamond sprays in the tropical fountain about which they glided. A goodly proportion of all the classes, faculty and alumni shared alike in the even- ing's enjoyment. They were transformed magically into a terpsichorean kaleidoscope by the versatile melodies of Larry Clinton and his band. On the following pages appears a permanent record for contrasting reference when We of l94l attend our golden anni- versary Blue and Gold Ball and Concert Cas We all hope to dol. 7 Leader! ,fllayeii 7571111 195 'Jrr-rt ft r I n I I ' l 1 : t -r. ' , ' uh 4' 45-i ' 1, ' -fr 1 - .1 U . K X . I X Q- ' Y f f I ' I ' 'xx Q if , 28 QA 45 I 1. ', A . I Lgq 1 n' ,lv ,g. -4 ,f A A X , , A. W 1' x :If ,, Q 1 Q . 125 :5 Q, l , i,5? ?ff ff! S 'f y 0 'ijffffm' ff. 'xv 5-qiffff A if , 9 V ff' 1 ' -. .M -, e',12fg,:1 - an, f W' Y W 'ffff :gl 1 V1-iq' 'T Z.,ZZ3L1- -1 ,Q - f' 3523? A ' fu 'A 1.5 Zi gff g1'i!fan-f ' - 4 f Q, KL Qi af- PM ? . , , D 5 ,U .ff Q,51.fI:g! ,-. . -.Q ' - QQQ . .. A f .4 rf - ,f I nf' ' ' ' ' I 1 , I V, iw i la .4 T i Q pd 'S ' Ln! ilk ,ii xi 1 s f ' r 1, .-ry -.:. - kr, N .Q wwf '- l X' 1- F .A WAS! -. J-31 X , 61 i K., . . l kk ' 1 'al ,.:,.:.J My 11'-S ., . N I 1' I Y 1 x 5. .I v, , la, B' Wax n V' a' in ,S V .. if A . fl , . Lv ,Ju 0 yf 'ixffi' Q '1w12A'XS H- , g 5- 1 X.-, ,iff x f , , , . , . 1 fi w iw. - XR if ' A 4. if 5 -fax 1-Fyff., f ' ' ' - 1 ,nv ui ' ' I P , 'Qin Hy ,lk ,, . :glfu - l .nil .- x lc ' D I X -i vi A A , A 6 x ani' ing? 'ig N 'E b.Q'!- ' ' 4 1 ' X. -L A , s Y ' N , . -5 ,4-'L 3f'?fE'j 'i?l5vf ' Jig' A ' i f U I 4 I x .595 EfX 11 'f K Y, , x1.e:if: ,,4 -HF'-'-ffsfii if it x A 'Q-, - A X V ,A 4 I, ' L .. f 'I i 8 r Sm. Q - -.-f-. :W 9' 1 ' ,Jr D1 I p if . V' . 1 1 5 -I f f l , A' F A ,5- , ,V , . -fe- Q Kyiv? f. an, LREFILE I THU A KC011r1'11z1v11' frunz Pimf 751 Our other surgical clinic was orthopedics where Dr. Brooke-the man of a thousand limps-tackled every job with the same machine-like thoroughness. Orthopedic dispensary too was very worth-while. Geckler, the robot, and jones, the mad genius-how he would og to town o nthe differential diagnosis of low back pain and completely analyze each case for us. The first great disappointment was physical diagnosis. Whereas we all expected bedside medicine, what we got was bedside jostling. Fifteen mean and an instructor all spent an hour jockeying for position about a patient. When you finally got your stethoscope on the apex what you heard was a cacaphony of thumping, mumbling, tinkling, and scratching caused by the diligent percussion of the patient's back by one student, palpation of his abdomen by another, the collision of stethscope chest pieces as everyone went for that murmur and the terminal gasps of the patient Cor Dr. Hoffman's chronic disseminating wheezel. If you dared to listen to more than three heart cycles the boys in the rear began heckling or Wizard White would assume a par- ticularly sneering look- Oh, a wise guy, trying to learn, eh . Philadelphia is graced by many relics. Two at least are cracked-the liberty bell and Dr. William F. Cart of medicinel Baker. Perhaps quacked is a more appropriate word to describe this illustrious pedagogue. Tall, gaunt, and distinguished Clike a sorkl he chewed away at his tongue and amazed us by his startling revelations about non-pharmacal therapy-also known as non- theracal pharmacy or non-compos mentis Baker-phartics. The true insanity of it all was not apparent untili one night someone thought of reading over his notes. Impossible! Incredible! The art of homeotherapeutics is best shown by the action of phosphoric acid on the motor end point in diabetes Hal Hal those bastard chemists can't fool me. You take damned fig-that's an easy was to remember the reaction of degeneration-just leave out the amn and the ig and spell it backwards and there you are. Any questions? I always said don't be afraid, l've taken out plenty of brain tumors right in the kitchen. And as for autopsies, it's obvious that every paying patient should have one. It will always remain one of the major mysteries of H just how Baker got there and how he stayed there and what he meant. To raise the morale they gave us Smiley Miley. He drawled out a series of lectures on clinical pharmacology but we didn't hold it against him. Oc- casionally he would get hipped on blood irradiations and draw a lot of tem- perature curves that looked like tobaggan slides. But on the whole he was an amiable guy and we got along. Our junior year also gave us the original horse and buggy doctor-Pop Mercer. The course was obs but it was really philosophy-not obstruse syl- logistic abstractions of fundamental truths but good old horse sense. Dr. IVIercer's thesis was Nature is a pretty slick article . Indeed not only was it his thesis, but it was the substance of his philosophy and his teaching of obs. For two hours a week he iterated and reiterated that universal truth until the class finally caught on and then they stopped coming. The good doctor finally held an intimate talk to ten or twenty diehards who insisted on attending even after the hour was moved to eight A. M.-a very mournful time of day to hold class. The Obs department had another treat in store for us-Henry D. Lafferty- Hank Cas he is familiarly called by the alleged persons who like himl began 198 his course on operative obs with his usually officiousness and pomposity. Nothing untoward occurred for a few months as the good Henry paced up and down with his own peculiar neanderthal waddle and jerked his bull neck at us but the situation became more and more charged when Hank started to hiss at latecomers. Finally he locked the door at the beginning of the hour and took roll. Unfortunately the punctilious professor happened to arrive late the very next week and found the door locked, the lights out, and the class merrily singing We're a bunch of so and so's . Hank, it is reported, turned pink, red, blue, lavender, and finally deep purple twhich color has never left himl. His B. P. hit SOO and he indignantly refused to enter the classroom after the door was opened. An official apology dispatched to the offended one was accepted. The junior year is cursed by an unparalelled number of lectures. lt got so that we took notes in automaton fashion and dazedly stumbled from one lecture to the next. Great stacks of notes piled up on our desks and callouses piled upon our posteriors. ln pediatrics, Redman rushed through disease after disease without even a pause for concalescence between attacks. Steinhilber proceeded at a slightly less reckless pace in neurology. Both courses were well covered but it was not until the senior year that we even fouund all of our notes. One day Dr. Klopp was introduced and we were told that he would give us our psychiatry lectures. We never saw him again because he was simul- taneously talking to the senios in another room and we heard him through a loudspeaker. The good doctor spoke English of the variety that could be understood most clearly by the Lancastrians in our midst. The loudspeaker also helped clarify things for us. Being left alone in a room listening to a strange voice intone long mysterious words was a novelty which kept the class spellbound for about eight minutes. After that our morale rapidly regressed and deteriorated. At first we just didn't listen, then we began to talk, then sing, then shout, then started dart fights, then thorwing books, then paper airplanes, then burning paper airplanes. Finally, supreme bedlam broke forth when a nice warm bon fire was started in the middle of the floor. And Klopp droned on. After such labors we rested in the nice, warm, dark, uterine-like atmosphere of Dr. Frank's roentgenology demonstrations. The good professor's soothing voice and his pleasant way of repeating opaque material were like M. S. Outside of a few hotfoots, X-Ray proved very relaxing. fl'lt't1.vv fzzrlt fu f't1t,'t' Jog! 199 U. '. Ni it-0 AE' 2 201 !C'm1l1'l11rt'1lffnm lhtffg fool One perennial who popped up was Wild Bill Sylvis who tore into surgical pathology once a week. He repeated the same stories we had heard in the two previous years plus a new C?l one about the femoral artery pulsating like this - - -. Dr. Kirby ground out an hour a week in medicine. After eight or nine weeks on typhoid fever in which were emphasized the method of decorating a food tray, the use of packets, how to be popular, and six easy ways to success, he went on to flu and then pneumonia. Dr. Goldsmith also attempted to describe diseases and succeeded in being a little more practicable but it meant little to us without clinical application. Saturday was a lovely day except for Horn's Happy Hygiene Hour. Horn, the little, dynamic, bald, indignant discloser of poison-plots Ctry to imagine him in bed with Hedy l.amar?l astounded us with tales of skew curves, Broad Street pumps, lmhoff tanks, and his piece de resist- ance-Schmutzedecke. Good old Schrnutzedecke-how Horny liked to roll that word off his tongue. How it mystified us. But now we know its the lowest deck on a battleship! A really vital lecture followed Horn's. That was Dr. Lane's course in medical diagonsis. No one stayed away from that except the week- enders who never showed up on Saturdays. Midyears almost overwhelmed us-over twenty exams in a week. They are less easily forgotten than the substance of their courses. The second half brought a few new courses and a new attitude. The latter consisted in getting up in the morning and instead of saying what classes do l attend today, one said what class do l cut today. What movies are playing intown, what time can my girl friend meet me, etc. We had all looked forward to operative surgery, practical work which the catalog described as personal practice upon the cadaver not only of the general operations as amputations, etc., but also upon the cavities . A cadaver was religiously wheeled into each lecture and seemed admirable as a support for the tired surgeons who leaned on it. One actually had the temerity to remove the cloth from the stolid cadaver but one glance at the subject convinced the cautious surgeon that he was a very poor operative risk, so the lucky cadaver escaped without even an incision. We know the course was doomed as soon as Carpenter walked in. Gene had distinguished himself before us in the sophomore year by confusing direct and indirect hernia. When corrected by the class he became adamant and redoubled his vehemence- l know my hernias, I've done hundreds of them . This year he evidently tried to ease the bitter memory by being dramatic, but for all his spastic antics and paroxysmal oratory he remained for us the perfect chirurgical clown. Dr. Martin impressed us by his sincerity and clarity in the few lectures he gave. Dr. Bailey, the boy wonder-surgeon of H, also added a few gems about chest work. But the course, as all theoretical work does, petered out and ended with a few cheap movies of operations dis- played by Dr. Kimmel, the interdepartmental stooge. Dr. Clemmer began lecturing in pathological Obs. We had hardly made his acquaintance and had just about accustomed ourselves to his presto after Mercer's andante when he suddenly died-prematurely -only a day after he had delivered a talk to us in apparently good health. The next week his hour was taken by Dr. Paxson who thrilled 202 4-- luv WW .fn l -a.ilY.1:'m Yv. 1. T Tn, T-3 -1 . 1 f --1 '- -4. , . - .- 'Y M - .1 fi .L 1 4 ,Y 73. , V X -.'.-..'N ---- -- ' ' ng, -VV -3. Q- xg WH 1 4.3 3 Ky., - M - - S - -- fmq, W 4 K , , f H X f EJ -. r , w N ,Hx 'U I! ' ff-5 1 4 'fi 5 I X I -. , P-, rv ',.N L:-...Jw ' 1-4. w f 7,1 ,W -, f--4, W1 1' us by actually getting excited about his material. We all resolved to attend Obs from then on. Our best clinical experience was obtained in the pediatric wards- plenty of material, instruction, and time to spend at the bedside. We picked up more medicine there than on the crowded ninth floor. And so the year dragged to a close. Most of our teachers dis- covered that they would not cover all their courses so we had five to six o'clock lectures. Craig tgentlemen, leucorrheal read Bland to us till seven one night. The thirty or so exams to close the junior year soon engulfed us. We pushed our way through that ordeal and emerged sane enough to seek junior internships where we could get near a patient for a few minutes and far from a lecturer. -k if 'k Q September l94U brought the class together for the final lap. A new spirit was evident. Most of the men had held junior internships and the experience of bearing the responsibility of treating sick people had had a maturing influence. We had passed from students and were well on the road to being physicians. Everyone was full of tales of rare diseases wonderful chiefs, mir- aculous cures, tall stories of operating appendices and hernias. You had but to mention a condition or a treatment and the next man could go you one better in my experiences last summer . We convened at Allentown for a week of psychiatry. Having looked forward to this as a week of carousing, we had the wind taken out of our sails by rumors of expulsions for misbehavoir. As a result no bottles were thrown out of windows, no cops undressed and given tub sedation, and no singing above high C. All drinking was strictly limited to l quart Cper hourl. Dr. Hoffman presented the star performers in his institution land very capablyl and met our own whacks. The contest was declared a draw and we returned to Philadelphia under the delusion that we were sane and free men. lt was hard to regress from the white-clad dignity of being internes to the lowly station of harassed medical students. Again lectures on Typhoid and Diabetes--everything sounded vaguely familiar. Wells thumped away at heart disease interspersing his homely Pumpkin- Center philosophy. Sappington reached his zenith with his series on Immunology-we had evidently been thoroughly desensitized for our knowledge titer never rose above it. Boericke, bland and ruddy as ever, swayed to the rhythm of his own intoxicating rhetoric and waxed more and more enthusiastic about Belladonnar, Cimicifugar, etcetera. Van Lennep, impressive and dignified, supplied us with good clinical surgery lectures about the ileum and herniers . Steinhilber's clinic was sociable and the constant controversy kept our interest alive. Fergy on Saturday now found himself lecturing to a select group Cprobably those who had missed those lectures last yearl. Reimann gave excellent lectures and still better clinics, correlating biology, medicine, pathology, surgery, and preventive medicine in one hour. Wednesday surgical clinic was well cut. Those who attended were good examples of narcosis except when Carpenter's shenanigans roused them. Eberhard pleaded with us not to give up hope in G. I. There was always another treatment that might help. 204 Obstetrics section was a revelation after lVlercer's mumblings. Highlight of the course was Paxson's Wednesday clinics. A natural teacher earnest, competent, dramatic, he made the utmost use of clinical material. Indeed his presentations were models of what teaching in medical school should be. He made us see into the uterus. The other men in the department were helpful from End Man Hunter to Baby Woznak tthese two displaced so much air that when they entered the delivery room the patient became dyspneic from anoxemiai. Even Hank Lafferty Creferred to elsewhere? was civil, except on exam day. We all looked forward to our week on O. B. S. Many of us went on out- side patient calls with out ever having seen a delivery. By putting on a brave front and deftly catching the baby we fooled the Philadelphia citizenry into believing that their accouchers were real doctors. By the end of the week the students had more self-confidence than obstetricians and always addressed each other as Pare or Dafoe, Delsee or Deljee. They coridescended to watch an L. O. P. but anything less complicated than a breech positively bored them. Wading through surgery tmentioned only to be condemned? made us all appreciate O. B. S. For ten weeks we heard nothing and saw less. Uur minds atrophied at about the same rate as our posteriors hypertrophied. Sitting on the hard benches in the tropical amphitheatre we vainly tried to see into an abdomen from 50 feet away through two surgeons, a scrub nurse, and a spotlight. Most of the surgeons hardly bothered to tell us what was going on, or if they tried to explain, their masks proved certain to absorb the sounds. A typical dissertation sounded thus: We always in the hum hum hum for primary hyper- thyroidism but whmm wmm inspite of hommbrm. On the other hand, the Mayos have nommmm emmmm shtemlmmm with good results. Some of us got worried about being in the dark all the time, but Sylvis put one complaining idealist at ease by saying. Well you have an imagination haven't you? Aha, so we were supposed to IMAGINE the operations. Since that could be done just as effectively at home, fl'1i'f1.w lzrrn tif llttglt' :gui 205 'ii' 'NI 1 - 4 W 'Eiffel 57' 206 Q Q M 'D QDf Lt'QtMEDf1ifi WW PEDIATRICS DISPENSAHY: The place that causes the boys to spend the few dimes they had saved up for beers on having their suits cleaned .... The tricky little devils always get you sooner or later in spite of all precautions .... Some clever student, having had his tie sprinkled once before, thought he had solved the problem by placing a tent over the little plug and started to carry him over to the scales .... Imagine his embarrassment when the bedimpled little dumpling decorated his suit by heeding nature's call .... Upon learning once that the little cusses are double barrelled, students let the nurses do the conveying when necessary .... Rumor has it that some seniors would tip the scales several pounds heavier if they were weighed after leaving the dis- pensary .... Poor guys-they gotta feed the kids somehow and those samples do help a little .... This is one place where a medical student's wife-to-be could get an idea of the size family she was going to have by noting the amount of coochie-cooing her spouse-to-be indulged in .... lf you see a student become very much annoyed over some brat's continued bawling and use the hand-over-mouth method to quiet him when his mother isn't looking-you can bet your life he's going to be a bachelor .... ln the same way you can pick out the benedicts in the class by the expertness and perfection of their coochie- cooing which they acquired when walking the floors at night with their own. DERMATOLOGY DISPENSARY: Everyone gets a chance sooner or later to be entertained by the inimitable Ole Professor himself in the best burlesque manner .... Always nattily attired, this beau brummel of yester-year still re- mains the cock of the walk, the king of his domain, the lion of his den .... Possessed with a mind that grows more and more agile with advancing years, his trigger-like quips make him the master of the situation in any verbal exchange .... He'll threaten to make you learn his notes from cover to cover, give you hell if he catches you reading them, and accuse you of trying to impress him .... When he hands you the rope, he's not inviting you to end your life-just tie the bull outside .... If you receive the shovel, it doesn't mean you've been made an honorary member of the Laborer's Union or honored as a champion of labor's rights. On the contrary-the professor just wants to keep his floors clean .... lf you get the cannon-don't worry-you haven't been drafted. It's only meant to shoot a hole in your skull to ventilate a stagnant brain .... If vou want to be considered a wise guy-just spill the answer when the Ole Professor tries to make you the butt end of a joke that the seniors warned you about when you were a freshman .... And though your knowledge of dermatology be only skin deep, remember-Ouote-Belladonnar, Nux Vomicar, and Cirnicufugar-Unquote .... They'll see you through any emerg- ency and, incidentally, the course .... And at the end of fifteen easy lessons Cminus the half dozen or so called off on account of rain or snowl, your mind now chuck full of dermatological knowledge, the Ole Professor conducts his final Information Please session .... Slowly, he raises his right hand before him, solemnly mutters the words Nux Vomicar Vobiscum and-lo and behold- you all become doctors of medicine-for just knowing these three remedies makes you a finished product and just as good as graduated .... Finally, remember that all that glitters is not gold-in dermatology it may be syphilis .... And in the same way-don't take any wooden nickels-or use Berstein's Hair Tonic-If you're one of those conceited guys that can boast having hair on your head .... That's the professor's pet hate-a guy with hair on his pate .... So if you should belong in the latter group and the professor hands you a bottle of his hair tonic to clear up that dandruff he sees on your 207 X scalp.-watch out .... Take it in a friendly way but give it to the first nurse you see .... lt's a wonderful depilatory lotion and tell her to use it as such for she might misconstrue your intent and take it to the lab for a urinalysis .... Then you're liable to wind up in a hospital bed before you can explain .... lf the nurse should refuse to take the stuff, take it home .... The damned stuff has numerous and varied uses .... Witness the friend with a depleted stock of liquors and pressed hard for funds who had some unwelcome quests drop in on him .... What did de do? l-le fed them the Ole Professor's Hair Tonic .... Set them up for it by telling them about his European trip and the delightful drink he learned to concoct in Paris . . . which he would now let them taste. . . . This was his formula-try it yourself sometime: It Bernstein's l-lair Lotion drachms iss Lemon juice drachms ii Ginger Ale q. s. ad. ounces iv Sig: serve with ice in tall glass p. r. n. Yes sir, top it off with a cherry and a straw and serve very cold. Delicious- refershing-economical .... And wow! . . . What a kick! . . . We did learn something! GYNECOLOGY DISPENSARYZ One soon learns that the few pretty girls sitting on the bench outside aren't always Gyn patients .... Chances are they're only waiting to have their eyes examined in the Eye Dispensary across the way .... Don't be disappointed though, because the prettier they are, the more disillusioned you'll be .... Leave your modesty at the doorway .... One of our comrades embarrassed a pretty eighteen year old white gal by blushing when she nonchalantly related her numerous sexual affairs and decried her inability to become pregnant .... She was single .... He was shocked .... That thick, creamy, yellow discharge she had wasn't an overabundance of milk and honey-just Cupid's catarrh .... lt didn't smell like rose water either-remem- ber? . . . ln doing a vaginal-if the patient begins to pant and squirm-check and see where your thum is .... Remember you're a doctor .... This is also where you learn that vinegar and Karo have other uses besides giving flavor to foods .... And we can readily understand why the manufacturers who dis- pense these products don't advertise these added uses too. OBSTETRICS DISPENSARY: Ziegfield, speaking of his showplace, once said, The most beautiful girls in the world pass through these portals. . . . The Obs dispensary can rightfully claim some of the world's dumbest women pass through its portals .... A young colorel gal, six months pregnant, was asked if she felt life .... Yas suh , she replied, ah always feels good. . . . Another woman, given a paper cup and a bottle to collect a specimen of urine, gave us the following example of how it should not be done: Flush toilet, urinate, use paper cup to scoop up urine from bowl and pour into bottle .... The dumb- ness isn't confined to the patients either .... Witness the student who almost examined a nine-year old girl for pregnancy only to have one of his friends who had been attracted to the scene point out that the chart was stamped Dermatology, thus saving said student from much embarrasement .... The little girl and her mother inadvertently sat on the wrong bench .... Added is the unsuspecting mother who insists her unmarried little daughter can't be pregnant because she's sure she wouldn't think of doing such a thing .... All the symp- toms and signs and even Friedman's little rabbit couldn't convince her .... When poppa stork finally arrived, another soul was converted to the theory of parthenogenesis .... On the other hand, pity those poor souls who are happily infanticipating only to pass wind and explode their dream bubble .... It hap- pens .... Remember the saying, An apple a day keeps the doctor away ? Evidently, the guy who coined it never heard how Adam and Eve were double- 208 crossed .... Today, the Orthogynol and Latex people are trying to devise new slogans to fit their new ideas. On the whole though, it is a happy clinic .... The patients pleasantly look forward to the coming blessed event and the students look forward to sneaking back to the students' room for a smoke and a part in the bull session .... Yes sir, back there is where the boys become so adept in the art of blowing smoke rings and, confidentially, their mouths .... The din of hot gab is interrupted only by the stopping of the elevator when the boys quit momentarily to see who gets off Cafter all they do want to graduatel only to start up again as soon as the elevator doors are closed .... Every so often, there is an impatient buzz summoning one or more students to the dispensary .... Through the haze of smoke they are seen to rise slowly, shuffle off towards the door and disap- pear .... But, they aren't gone for long .... They take a hasty blood pressure and pulse, weigh the patient, and hurriedly sneak back to engage in more enlightening discussions such as the question of the realtive morality of the big city girl compared to her sister from the sticks. MEDICAL DISPENSARY: where two students and a patient try to squeeze into an examining booth the size of the toilet compartments in the college basement .... Once this feat is accomplished an attempt is made to deliver an arm so that the blood pressure and pulse can be taken .... Frequently this is accomplished without a fracture whereupon the patient is allowed to recite his story which usually means telling you that he feels the same. You advise him to continue the treatment so that he'll still be around for the juniors to treat next year and then take a look at the last of those ten cards in his folder to see what he has been taking and fill out a prescription blank. This piece of therapeutic ingenuity now accomplished, both you and your partner set out to tack down a staff doctor to sign the prescription .... This usually entails poking your head in all the curtains down the line until you locate a doctor or some undraped maiden slaps you on the nose. If your quest is realized, Wait your turn .... Other students are apt to use the none too gentle but effective elbow-in-the-ribs method of notifying you that they've had the doctor cornered long before you ever conceived the idea. Half an hour later, if you survive the compression and the prods in the ribs, you may be able to stumble over to the social worker's desk to arrange anther appointment for your patient .... lf there is a mob around you can bet the cute little red head is on the job and the wolves have gathered around to chew the fat. After this monumentous task is completed it is customary to seek a haven of rest in the little room around the corner where Dr. l conducts his allergy tests and other students with the same ideas you have gather round to recuper- ate from the wear and tear of a strenuous afternoon. To those less fortunate individuals who have had new cards necessitating other than routine lab work we wish to extend our heartfelt sympathy. After going through the gruelling routine outlined above they invariably had to endure the tantalizing criticism of Miss Whalen who inevitably only condes- cended to their wishes after delivering a long-winded, ear-bending lecture on practical medicine. NEUROLOGY: This is the place Where the students get a mild attack of hysteria as every Friday approaches over fear of being selected to present their case before the class in the amphitheatre .... A guy who plays the averages and figures he has a 7 to l chance of not being called and presumes to loaf on the job usually looks more like a neurological case than the patient to be presented when lady luck gives him the go-by and Pop Steinhilber gives him the nod. 209 The dispensary is pretty calm though for the greater part of the week. When not pretending to be reading, the boys spend much time fooling with the numerous gadgets in Dr. Steinhilber's instrument cabinet, taking their flash lights apart to see why they don't work, testing their hand grips, swiping each other's percussion hammers, teasing the patients, and being just plain nuis- ances. Occasionally, a pair of students are asked to see a new patient .... The usual proceedure is to outline a brief history which consists of interrogating the patient in a manner understandable to both the patient and your partner .... The following questions are usually asked by the class' most brilliant student : C. O. W'hat's da rub pardner? F. H. Mom and Pop cuckoo too? Any looney brudders and sisters? P. P. H. Did da measles git ya? . . . Ever git socked on da konk? . . . Den what makes you so slap haopy? . . . Ever been bitten by da love bug? Take any needles for it? Okay dat's enough. tThen turning aside to partnerl Okay, now lets give him da woiks. 'Vlfhereupon partner brings in a formidable array of gadgets and goes to work on the patient's knees with a percussion hammer, at the same time asking the patient to put his tongue out and blinding him by flashing the light in his eyes while his partner takes the blood pressure and attempts to elicit the abdominal and cremasteric reflexes. This now being completed a diagnosis must be made .... Two heads get together and if they survive the impact the following conclusions may be drawn: l. If the patient appears to have ants in his pants, chances are he has some form of chorea. 2. lf his knees point north when his toes point south and he Walks like he's got his pants full, we'd call it Tabes. 3. lf he stalks like a Frankenstein, won't even crack a smile over a good joke, and continues trembling even after you put the instruments away, call it Parkinsons 4. lf he tells you he's got plenty of dough and intends to send you a check for your work, send him to P. G. H. with the rest of the paretics. 5. And if he doesn't fit into any of the above groups, call him a neuras- thenic, and dollars to doughnuts there won't be anybody around who can prove you're wrong. EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT DISPENSARY: Here one soon learns: 1. That those who've had previous experience peeping through keyholes take easy to the use of a head mirror. 2. That to practice how to use a laryngeal mirror on your partner is the quickest way to find out what he had for lunch. 3. That the meanest guys around are those who remove a nasal speculum from their partner's nose and come away with four or five Vibrissae. 4. That your partner who always sees everything that you can't has a damn good imagination when he tells you your superior turb is hypertrophied. 5. That the way to convert baby Fords into grown-up Cadillacs is to use some of Dr. Haines' sweetheart remedies. 6. That the primary requisite in testing the visual acuity of a patient is to be able to see the chart yourself. 7. That focusing the light of the ophthalmoscope on a patient's macula is almost as hard as hitting the cork on a dart board using your left hand to throw the dart at a distance of 25 feet. 8. That your partner will not be grateful for having his throat cauterized with a laryngeal mirror and will be even less pleasant if he sees a part of his uvula dangling from the end of your mirror when you withdraw it in haste. 9. That one can take in an afternoon show or play hearts in the fire- house without even being missed. 210 The Medic Presents: - - THE CZFSTTYQECQG EJZAAMMYCQLFJZQAM MEIUDLICZALB CGQDLLLEGE CAny resemblance noted in the following paqes to persons, livinq or dead, is purely coincidental - but those accidents will happenj Rl lulfuagtlul ILCDLNS REQUIREMENTS EOR ADMISSION l. For admission the minimum requirements are a standard four-year collegiate course, at least two years of post-graduate work, Doctor of Philosophy Degree, Phi Beta Kappa, and Sigma Xi. Students are accepted from most all preparatory schools in the country, but special preference is given to Abdominal Prep and Perineal Prep and those students receiving major honors in music, home economics, and sculpturing. The Handy I-Iam Medical College conforms with the educa- tional standards of the East African Ubangi Medical Association in its admission requirements and also with the requirements of the Pennsylvania Department of Public Deception. The details of the admission requirements are as follows: CD Attainment of at least the third year in a nationally ac- credited reform school. C29 Satisfactory completion of a minimum of cultural instruc- tion KQO semester hours' of world which shall include the following courses: Musical Appreciation, The Application of Geometrical Notions to Cerebral Localization for which may be substituted a course in the Notions of the Internal Theory of Surface. Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Cpreparatory for G. U. Surgeryl, alternate course of Neo and Bismuth. REQUIREMENTS POR PROMGTIGN 1. As many rigid examinations and tests as possible will be given on the same day to prevent the accumulation of too rnuch knowledge of any one subject. A seine-ster hour IS stun that it you than t hz t t get vrfeilit t I lidn't spend in class. 212 2. Specific requirements are: C13 Torticollis. C21 Divergent squint. C33 Fortyftwenty vision With ability to read neighbors paper at forty paces. C49 Acute ability to hear the whispered voice. C55 Adequate and prolonged rectal anesthesia. 3. Grades for subjects are arrived at in the following manner: Cal in the cork, Cbl in the triple twenty, Ccl in the double twenty, Cdl in the single twenty: Cel dart off the board. REQUIREMENTS EOR GRADUATION 1. The candidate for graduation must be at least twenty-one months of age, and of proven immoral character. He must have been subjected to the study of medicine for four separate years, in which he must have attended three opening exercises and one Week in Allentown and have received the rope from the Professor. The Candidate must also have used Liposal, Dermamint, Eberhard 32, the deglutable electrode and blood irradiation, must have visited Harriet: and have seen the inside of the Klahr Auditorium. 2. A candidate for a degree must be sober at Commence- ment, unless he was out with the Dean the previous night, and have been previously recommended by the Board of Trustees for castration. -REQUIREMENTS IN coUHsE 1. Every student is urged to purchase a microscope to de- velop his biceps through his four years of college. For those who are unable to do so a daily game of pingpong is suggested. 2. Each third and fourth year student is required to equip himself with blood. 3. Each third and fourth year student is required to provide himself with a cystoscope, X-ray apparatus, diaphragm, audio- cardiette, and a tongue depressor. W! 213 4. Ever fourth year student is required to equip himself with ear, nose, and throat. Those recommended by the Department of Otolarynology may be procured at slight extra charge. CONDUCT THE WORD OF A PROFESSOR IS NEVER TO BE QUES- TIONED. STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE l. All students matriculating for the first time are given a rigid and complete ten-minute medical survey. This includes a complete physical examination. 2. In conditions requiring bed rest, the student is furnished a bed and two sterile nurses B. I. D. without charge. HEALTH OFFICER 3. The medical director is he who is not available from 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 and eats lunch beteween I2 and 2. LOCATION The property, situated on North Broad Street-the main north- and-south drag of Philadelphia-is within a few minutes' walk of the London Ale House, Veterans Club, Brady's and other profes- sional centers accepted by the American Bar Association. The Hammy Ham Medical College and Hospital is thus located in the very entrails of Philadelphia, a city of established sobriety and buggerly love. THE COLLEGE The college is housed in four buildings. The old and dark main building contains on the first floor the Dean's and Registrar's and Secretaries cages and the new laboratory of microbiology and fecal cultures. The second floor contains Harriet and Dr. Tummy Cider's etchings. The third, equipped for freshman sink tests. And the fourth, still more equipment for senior sink tests. All reputedly connected by a spacious, luxuriant elevator. The new college building was erected, finally, in 1938. Its first two floors accommodate three large, well ventilated tcold in the winter and hot in the summerl lecture rooms and the Klahr Auditorium which has a seating capacity available to the Boy Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, Ladies Aid, Kiwannis Club, International Rotarians, and all other organizations not connected in any way with the study of medicine or the student body. The third floor is devoted to cultures-Petroff's, Loefler's Blood Agar and others- and in this respect is fair to medium. The fifth floor is sublet- to cadavers. The sixth floor is dedicated to the newer finger tech- niques in kymographing. The seventh floor has been turned into a large, spacious football field. So that, of course, leaves no room for Medic Staff offices. At present, the Walter E. Hering Hall contains-ah well, that is now out of bounds. In the rear of Hering Hall is an edifice, the fire house, con- taining a gymnasium, dart board, Department of Obstetrics, and Dr. Vasttail's Wasteful Work Shop. 214 The College library may be divided into two departments. One, containing about fifteen hundred Homeopathic volumes, is especially of hysterical interest. The other is composed oi the Index Medicus, Yellow Iournal and The Case Reports of the Massachusetts General Hospital. The Handy Ham athletic field is located on the property ot the college at 20th and Callowhill Streets and the Parkway and is especially suited for broad jumping. SOCIETIES Members, needless to say, will be chosen, as in all other Handy Ham Societies, on MERIT ALONE. l. Society to Provide Cadillacs for those who Ride Around in Fords-C. Haines, President. 2. Society to Provide Parachutes to all Graduates-C. Haines, President. 3. Society to Calculate the Chances of Cheladonium in the Sixth. -G. W. Boericke, President. 4. Society for Useless Interrogation-A. Carter and W. Terry, Co- Presidents. 5. Society to Monopolize Front-row Seats lexcepting for examina- tionsl.-I. Merle President. 6. Society of object lessons for insomniacs-W. D. Heinrich, President. For Co-vice Presidents-consult senior class roll. CPlease note illustrations on these pagesl. 215 THE ZA To most of you a Dean is he Who rules a school majestically, Who signs decrees officially And argues superficially, He talks with men both great and small Of sundry things we can't recall, Who shakes his head with dignity And mentions biochemistry, Whose looks are envoys, bearing fright Who is never wrong or ever right. But now the Dean that heads our school Is stark exception to this rule. Now we intend no disrespect The author's very circumspect, Knowing well that if he tried To satirize our Dean, our pride, The sword of Damocles would slip Perhaps before this one last sip. In short, my honest friends, I mean 'Tis hard to satirize a Dean. 'Tis hard I say, and more, As l have often thought before. Because a Dean fscholastic elfl Will always satirize himself. A ' L-Will A ZATHCM lt is advisable for prospective students to have a personal interview with the Dean. He will be happy to show interested parties the panorama of Medical College life. CThe Dean has been interviewing a new student in his private officel. Dean: Confidentially -- lAt this point thirteen N. Y. A. boys rush through the office carrying stacks of papers. Miss Fizzer is heard shrieking after them and Mr. Katz is knocked down in a futile attempt to pass on the right. He picks himself up and follows.l Dean: l think you should take a little Walk through the building with me to see our new facilities. Applicant: Cbrightlyi. O. K. Chum, anything you say goes with me. lThey proceed to leave the office and start down the hall towards Room C. The mob collecting stamps at the office grill pushes them around a trifle, but the Dean defiantly bellies a way through. As they are about to enter Room C the applicant stubs his toe on a huge barrel resting on the landing? Applicant: Ouch, you son of a Cgulpl gun. What's that anyhow? Dean: That's part of an illustrated lecture on diabetes given by Sauerball Fakir to the afternoon class. He passes out samples of an old homeopathic specific, phosphoric acid. lThey enter Room C and look at the blackboard. It is decorated with a large drawing labeled M. S. Walsh. l Dean: Hump, l don't know just what course is being taught in here. Well, son, how do you like our air conditioning? Applicant: So that's what blew off my hat lpicking up his hatl. I'll bet that's handy in Warm weather. Dean: We never use it then. They built a wonderful heating system that operates only in April and May so we substitute it for the air conditioning. CThe two leave the room and go to the library. As they are about to enter a cloud of smoke chokes the Dean.l Dean: l'll have to speak to the librarian about this. Smoking is not allowed in here. Applicant: 'What did you say. I can't hear you above the din. CThey look about the library. Every chair is occupied and students are also sitting on the tables. Three seniors are asleep in the corner on the floor. One of them, Pinky Salmon, is snoring loudly. ln the opposite corner there is a stack of books stciking up oddly in the air.l Applicant: Now, what do you suppose that could be? Dean: Buddy, you've got me. I'll lift a few books off the top and see if we can explain the mystery. lThe Dean lifts off several books and Squirrel pokes his head through the hole.l Squirrel: Put those books right back and beat it. I'm busy lookin' at all da pitchers. CSuddenly a freshman rushes in the door holding an open P. and H. in front of him. He attempts to edge up on the arm of a chair next to the window. However, there just isn't room for six men on one chair and the added pressure pushed the opposite man right through the windowj 217 Dean: I.et's get out of here fast. The last time that happened the guy that fell out tried to clip 'em for a free bottle of nux and china to get his appetite back. Applicant: tsighingl. Gee, I hate to leave a nice comfortable room like this. tOn approaching Room A a sudden loud commotion is heard. Several students rush in from the forbidden hallway of the hospital lab section. Once safe back in the college they stop to turn and jeer at the white coated gentle- man who has been chasing them.l Samuel: All right you four plus imbeciles, you made it this time but you won't the next. tHe opens a closet and takes out a large box from which he unpacks a machine gun.l Sammy: I'll have Artie Shurnuff on guard here from now on. You won't know him from Hitler when he crouches behind this gun. Dean: Cslightly embarrasedl. Don't pay any attention to them. Let's take a look in Room A. tThey enter Room A and the applicant looks at the blackboardl Applicant: What's the Three H. Club stand for? Dean: That must be Scorn's HCIDPY Hygiene I-Iour. I guess he lectures here today on the Skew Curve. Applicant: Skew, you say? This is a good looking room except for those charred marks on the floor. Dean: Oh those, they occurred during Flippity Flopps famous broadcasts a couple of years ago. It was a pleasant siesta hour until an incendiary bomb air raid one afternoon. Then, the boys got such hot feet they couldn't sleep. Everything turned out allright though. Flopp's still got president Steinpoop up in a tub. t'I'he two start upstairs to enter Boom B. They open the door and are knocked down by an onrush of students anxious to escape from the stale air.l Dean: Hey, you bums, stop jumping on my belly. Applicant: Get dak foob oub ob my moub. CThey pick themselves up, shake off the dust, and enter Boom B.l Applicant: tspitting out his front teethl. Golly that guy had big feet. Diehardt Bunter: Vell chentlemen, come in and get your enema by mouse. Applicant: What the hell l-? Diehardt: I haf to hurry. Parke Dafis is waiting for another tank car of Dermament tAdv.l tThey start out of the room together and emerge in the hallway just in time to run into Vasttail. Vasttail sticks her tongue out and gives Bunter the raspberries.l Diehard: Bah, rabble, thief, dumlcoph! tshakes his fist menancinglyl Dean: We'd better beat it before we get knocked down again. CThey dodge a student sliding down the bannister and go up the stairs.l Applicant: I recognize that fellow. That was Wild Bill Terry. CAs they emerge on the second floor they hear a loud slow deep voice.l Tummy Cider: The hell with it, where's Miss Bradycardia? the comes out of his office and sees the Dean.l Hello Dean, who ya got there? Dean: Doctor, I want you to meet a prospective student. Cider: Swell, I can tell him the new joke I just heard. 218 Dean: tvery embarrasedl. No ttsk, tskl we've got to hurry Cgulpl. tThey duck into the tissue room in time to hear Fuss Fizzer talking to Hunta Spook.l Fuss: Wait until these histology students see the new colored chalk l've got. There are seven beautiful pastel shades that you can hardly tell apart. Hunta Spook: Great, you ought to really confuse them on the nerve tracts. A couple of guys knew them last year but you'll get them all this time. Dean: Hello, you quacks. Fuss: Beat it, the Dean. tthey scurry out of the rooml. Dean: What's new Miss McDivot? McDivot: Cabsentlyl Take slide box number 20. Applicant: Gee Dean, are you a senior? McDivot: Clooking upl. Sorry, didn't recognize you. CAn interne comes rushing in with some autopsy specimensl lnterne: Here's a nice piece of liver for you. tHe attempts to drop-kick the liver to Miss McDivot but the kick goes wild and the liver hits the applicant on the head.l Applicant: You must have played on the Penn team. I never did like liver. Let's get out of here. tThey leave the tissue room and go into the pathology lab.l Applicant: It sounds like the Miami air races are going on in here. Dean: tturning off several suction faucets and throwing the match sticks awayl. There, that should stop the noise for a while. CCurses and screams fill the air together with the loud sound of running feet. Two mice round the corner of the pathology lab followed by one rabbit, one cat, and one emaciated poodle dog. They are just a few yards ahead of Dr. Vasttail, Count Hearthfire, Oddson Favorite, Scotty, Walter, and Slappy himself.l Vasttail: That's my cat. Scotty: How ya mochin oot Dean? Walter: Nice doggie, wait a minute. Oddson Favorite: If Zinsser ever hears of his favorite mice getting loose there'll be hell to pay. The Count: tturning up the collar of his coatl. G'wan, scram outa this firetrap with those mangy animals. Slappy: Come back here Count. I've got a couple tickets to the Troc and we'll be late if you don't cut out the foolin'. CThe Dean tactfully leads the student into the next lab and tries to interest him in the projecting apparatus but desists when an obscene slide falls out of the proiector.l Dean: I wish they wouldn't hold those smokers in here. Speaking of smoke, we can go up on the chemistry floor and see plenty of that. CThey ascend to the third floor and look around the chemistry lab. Shank Dancing is seated in the corner of the room reading a newspaper.l Dean: Hey son, what are you doing there? Shank: 'Er tindignantlyl. Working on N. Y. A. of course. Get out and stop bothering me or I'll tell Miss Fizzer. Dean: Sorry tthey leave hurriedly and go down the halll. Capt. Chandalier: trounding the cornerl. Rowdies, ruffians, bums. This school has the least discipline of any place in the world. Hello Dean. Who 219 I do you have there, another thug who wants to attend medical school during his parole? Dean: Easy doc, remember your high blood pressure. Happy Heppy: Ccoming down the halll. What's the problem gentlemen? I can solve anything at all. Prof. Sticks: tchasing after Hap Hepl. Bring that book back. You're two minutes and thirty-four seconds overtime. Applicant: Where's that door lead to, down the hall? Dean: That goes over to the amphitheater. We can go over and see if anything is going on. tThey open the door and cross over amidst the loud squeals of the guinea pigs. Going into the narrow hall they meet Diehardt's secretary. The applicant starts making passes at her but is pulled off by the Dean. They continue along and enter the amphitheater, The O. B. S. senior section is scattered about in various comfortable positions. Dr. Haxem is seated on a stool next to a table on which a patient is set up for a forceps delivery. Dr. Nurseher is seated by with half closed eyes and is slowly nodding off to sleep.l Nurseher: Cmumblingl. Nature is a pretty slick article. Haxern: trapping savagely on the patient's abdomen with the forcepl. Gentlemen, this patient will only deliver with the application of forceps. Nurseher: tstill mumblingl. Keep your mouth shut and saw wood. Haxem: The baby cannot get through without the aid of forceps. tThere is a loud sound like a bursting baloon. The bag of water ruptures and is followed by the precipitant delivery of the child. The placenta snaps out because of the tension and the patient lies relaxed with widely gaping perineum. Dr. Nurseher nods off completely and starts to fall in the direction of the patient. His head disappears within and he is rapidly sucked in after it. He rotates three times to the right, eight times to the left, then spins again to the right as he unwinds. Finally, his hip becomes impacted in the hollow of the mother's sacrum and his protruding feet kick vigorously in mid air.l Haxem: tthoughtfullyl. Guess l had better call in the O. B. S. staff for consultation. tHe tells the nurse to get the other men in, then takes out his stethoscope and listens carefully to the patient's bellyl. Oh yes, put the baby on the esculator and send him up to pediatrics. Heavens: trushing inl. Tsk, tsk, tsk. What did you hear? Haxem: He says nature is even slicker than he thought. Squirt: Crushing inl. Ouick, take off his shoes and we'll do a Caesar. Smothers: Let's do a double version. Black Hank: tsauntering inl. That, gentlemen, is all wrong. The first im- portant thing is a microscopic study of a biopsy. Haxem: l'll stick to my forceps. They're scheduled for today and I've got to use them on somebody. CThey put their heads together and argue for fifteen minutes, then burst apart and put on gowns. Meanwhile Nurseher's kicking becomes a little weaker.l Haxem: tlistening to the abdomen with his scopel. Nurseher says the hell with nature, he wants to get out. Squirt: All right, we'll proceed as we decided. I do the Caesar and Smothers does the double version. We race for it and, if Smothers wins, Haxem can use his forceps on the aftercoming head. tTilly the Tyler comes, arguing with Dr. Goof.l 220 Tilly: I think spinal is the only thing for this woman. Goof: O. K., you give her spinal and I'll stick to my cyclo. Doc Sniff: Cfollowing them inl. You better let me give one hundred c.c.'s of sodium pentathol just to be sure. CThe three anesthetists all start to work on the patient at once. They make quite a commotion and attract a crowd of passing doctors who stop to observe? Slay: lsitting down and looking in the patient's earl. This all happened because the patient has an otitis media. It must be another result of drinking milk after the age of twelve. tHe takes out a knife and punctures the drum.l Care of Pains: Ccoming inl. Fine. Let me finish it off for you with the twelve tissue remedies. Boy, they're sweethearts. tHe takes out a dozen bottles filled with small pills each labeled One M. He removes a pill from each and taking careful aim from a measured yard he throws pill after pill. Each pill explodes with a sharp bang as it bounces off the auricle and strikees the floor.l Hurrah, ferrum phos. went in. There's the old parachute that'll bring this gal around safely. Cturning to the gathering rnobl. Fellows those twelve tissue remedies will buy you a new Cadillac. lHe leaves to drive home in his last year's Ford.l Oholly Holly Ptosis: Celbowing his way to the frontl. Get that mask off her face a minute so I can look at her tonsils. ll-Ie looks down her throatl Wow, I can get them out under local in two minutes. lust watch me go. tHe starts in with gusto.l There is quite a noise as a group of new arrivals skip up arm in arm. Earl B. Egg, Slosh, Cutitoff, Mesert, Wad A. Gum, and F. Artley lin chorus.l We're not going to help you. lThey skip gaily away giggling all the while.l Spryman: lstanding up on a chair in order to seel. I've seen plenty of tumors but never one like that before. Let's get Pie Farr to diagnose it by crystallization. CThe obstetricians start to argue among themselves. Finally, they reach a decision.l Squirt: O. K. boys, we've all agreed. We'll do a destructive operation. CNurseher immediately begins kicking his feet again. The mother's abdomen bulges as he arches his back and slips his feet in all the way.l Smothers: Now isn't that a dirty trick and just when we were going to have some fun. Heavens: lust for that let's quit. We can turn him over to the surgeons. lThe vulva emits a moan. The surgeons are called in and the obstetrical group leaves in disgust? Ius' One Letup: lwalking over and gently palpatingl. With a little gentle technique this can all be straightened out. Bull Silkvest: ibursting through the crowd like a bull chasing a red flaql. Let me at her. tHe pulls out a hatchet and starts hacking on her abdomen.l You're right, Ius', a little gentle technique will fix things. tHe reaches in the other pocket and pulls out a pickax which he wields vigorously with both hands.l Sharpendher: CComing up.l Scram out of here, punk. I'm the guy that Ius' assists. tHe picks up a basin of water and throws it over his head.l Hell, there wasn't enough water in there. I can make more of a mess than this. Dick and Son, Inc.: It won't bother you fellows if I do a craniotomy, will it? tHe starts to work with a trephine.l Smartun: What are we waiting for? Let's explore. 221 Slashcraft: CStrolling up with a knife held behind him, he eases over to the patient, looks up at the students and whips the knife around in a clean arc.l Good morning, gentlemen. First, we make a small incision as only an artist or genius can. Bleary: Gawd, he opened her from stem to stern. tNurseher sticks his head up through the incision, sees Slashcraft and ducks back in again.l Slashey: Clocking around proudly.l My assistants will carry on the routine part of the operation. CI-Ie walks away mumbling: Bougee, goulee, ulcer, Vienna.l tNurseher straightens up in the right lateral gutter and looks around the room curiously.7 Hound-sicker: toffering his handl. Let me help you out pop. Nurseher: O. K., but take it easy. I've got my toe caught in Rathke's pocket. CHound-Sicker fails to dislodge Nurseher so Big Bill I-lellis comes over, yanks Nurseher out ond stands him on the floor.l Nurseher: Thanks, now give me back my shoes. One Dime: Ccoing inl. This looks swell. Let me give her some nitrous oxide. We can see if she's got a sense of humor. Tilly: Wait until I take her pulse tone minute laterl. Goodness, there isn't any. Call Dr. Slain in and see if he can find out what's wrong. Slain: tpassing byl. Did you mention my name? Tilly: Yeh. Come over here and see what's wrong. You're the guy in the medical department who owns a stethoscope, ain't cha? Slain: I have one but I missed the last two payments and the finance company is threatening to take it away. tHe takes out the scope and listens to the heart.D Say, this woman isn't dead, is she? Chorus: No! Impossible! Slain: Guess she must have tainted. C'mere Lillywhite. Can you Wake this lady up. Lillywhite: Sure. CI-Ie pulls out a long pheasant tailfeather and carefully tickles the patient's sphincter ani.l Gee, nothing happens. G'mere Forgoosin. Thuya Forgoosin: What's wrong here. CI-Ie towers over the others and shakes a long finger at them threateninglyj Makem Downey: Stop the fooling and lend me that pie plate you use for a stethescope. Forgoosin: tgiving Downey the scopel. That's not important. We need a better history. C'mere Prof. and Head Swells. Makem Downey: You're all crazy. This dame is as dead as a doornail. Head Swells: tlooking at patient casuallyj She needs digitalis. Give her ten grains, two grams, one half cc or make up your own dose. That's what I do. Kildair DeGardens and Paling Palin': We, residents, are the ones to decide the verdict. tThey examine the patient and pronounce her dead.l tThe doctors all split up into happy little groups and start telling jokes.l Student: tgetting up from his prone positionl. I thought I heard a joke. tHe nudges the student next to him.l Wake up chum. The clinic must be over, the patient's dead. Other student: Nuts. Nothing ever happens in here. CThey wake up the other boys and the whole group strolls out.l 222 Prof. Gawge: l'll take this body over to the autopsy room and we'll soon discover what caused the death. Dr. Tummy Fill Ups: Ccoming in.l You will not. l want what's left for dissection. Take her up to the fourth floor. Dean: fto the applicantl. There won't be anyhting more in here. Shall we go over and see the anatomy department? Applicant: Might as well go see it. l've smelled it ever since I came in this damned building. CThey leave the big clinic and walk back into the college. On the third floor they pass Room C where C. Lineman is lecturing. They linger outside the open door and listen.P Liney: lf you don't get the patient's history, you're losing money. l'm tellink you, once l had a patient once myself. CDean shakes his head in tired fashion and they start up to the fourth floor.l Applicant: Smells closer. CThey go into one of the dissecting rooms and view a body. Fill Ups comes in followed by the anatomy staffl Fill Ups: Where do you come from, where do you go to, what do you do when you get there, and who let you bums in? Dean: Dr. that's no way to talk. Fill Ups: Well that better not be another navy man you have with you. Applicant: Not me. I wouldn't stoop to anything like that. Fill Ups: Good enough, chum. Look around and help yourself to any parts you like. Why don't you take home a nice ear or finger to the wife and kiddies? Applicant: Clooking at a bodyi. This looks empty. Where are the guts? Fill Ups: The fellows have the intestines down in the alley skipping rope. Dean: I can't stand the odor here. Come on up and look the physiology department over. Gottin Himmel: lf you'd like to see a closeup of Sally Rand before you leave, stop down to my office. Rollin' Spigots: Bah, don't listen to him. I-le's so dumb he only has three cranial nerves instead of twelve. Sir Hashey: lolly well right, Dr. Rollin' Spigots. Saltedburger: Too bad you can't stay and help us hunt for the cross sectional dissections we have under glass. CThey ascend the stairs toward the sound of the barking dogs.l Applicant: Don't tell me you've got Dr. Huer working in this lab. Dean: No, that's his first cousin, Dr. Sott. O. Heck: tto the Deofnl. Whatcha got? Dean: lusta new student. Relax. Frank Pannygun: Do you have permission to come up here? Dean: Aw, dry up, flat foot. Sott: Hey fellows, l've got a swell demonstration set up. It's a balloon that blows up in a glass jar like a lung. Dean: Don't show that. lt might give the wrong impression. We've seen enough. fThey head toward the elevator and the Dean pushes the button. After waiting ten minutes with the In use sign flashing, the elevator stops. The 223 door opens and Pinkey hobbles out on his cane. Fifteen healthy looking specimens sneak out after him.l Dean: What's the idea of using the elevator? Pinkey: Those boys came along to help me open the door. Dean: Excellent idea. I thought for a minute they were bumming a ride. iThe Dean and the applicant ride to the first floor and leave the elevator to walk down the hall.l Dean: I almost forgot. We've got a new auditorium here somewhere that you should see. In fact, I'd like to see it myself. tThere is a sound of machine gun fire at the end of the hall? Slappy: tcackling loudlyl. I-Iah. Try to walk through here eh? That gives us two more bodies for autopsy class. Dean: Look, Von Slapp Qot by. Maybe he'lI open the new auditorium and let us look around. Von Slapp: Ceyeing the Dean as he walks upl. What are you staring at, monkey face? Dean: We'd like to get in to see the new--. Von Slapp: No, you don't. Cl-le bolts down the hall and out the front door. The Dean dashes after him and is followed by the applicant? Von Slapp: trunning down on Fifteenth streetl. I should have known better than to come into that damned college. Dean: Chollering after Von Slappl. Stop Slappy. Give us that key. U-Xs the trio runs madly along. Everhard who is crossing Race at Fifteenth, seeing them coming.l Everhard: Rats. I better duck before Slappy sees me. The last time he caught me I had to give him a ten thousand dollar raise. tHappy Harry ducks quickly into Club London and bumps into a small individual perched on the bar rail. The impact knocks the short one's derby off into his beer.l Burns Time: Cturning to Happy Harryl. You acquired son of a -. Harry: Sorry baldy, I mean Bernie. I'll buy you another beer and we can shoot a game of darts together. Burns Time: No thank you sir. I'm going to run along now and peddle my papers. tBurns Time ducks out the side door and Happy Harry leaves by the front door. Abe looks down the street after them and sees the Dean and the ap- plicant disappearing in the distance after Von Slapp.l Abe: O. K. boys. Its safe to come out now. CThe Chester Flash, the Maestro, the Mac twins and cousin Mac, sneak sheepishly out of the men's room and continue their game of darts.l 224 ,ff FM '- I if K- soft A Kgs Y 1' X ei, . li 'Iva N 'Of course, I believe iff l x i f-X b-rr--Q 'I can't impress A too strongly . . As William Byrd often said . . . . . and I can safely Call this my clinic ' . . . can you see That would get you a six. ll Well, now, I told loslin Never marry . . . ' ' ' universal congenital astheniaf' They sneaked up on the ovum . . . . . . and snatched the nucleus Gentlemen . . . the Levator Ani . . . fa in Homeopathy, but . . But, qaddamit, they will die.' ,. all 1 ilfll all TUESDAY AT THREE IN ROOM B The raucous riot ensembles en masse For Tuesday's Materia Medica class. ln search of Knowledge? Not at all,- ln awesome dread of the roll call. The sleepers grab the last few rows And settle down to sweet repose. Those few who hope to glean a pearl Sit way down front with limmy Merle. The rest sit in the classroom's middle- Prepare themselves to work or diddle. They are the happiest by far,- Their conscience is their guiding star. Garth enters-whoops, whistles, cheers From von Rapp's life take several years, As he listens, shudders, sweats and gripes At the thought of fractured organ pipes. Garth smiles-he beams at such display. And as his body starts to sway, His ruddy face glows purple red- The wine of youth goes to his head. Garth waits-the shouting tumult dies With intermittent Roll call criesy A final plea from seat thirty For a joke- And make it dirty! Garth turns and writes in letters chalk The drugs on which he is to talk: Arnica, Apis, Capsicum, And groans swell forth to fill the room The students feel the dose is great, Crib notes are irksome to create. But Hahnemann's homeopathic star Speaks up, Our first is Amicarf' The drug is toxic, and is used On patients who are badly bruised. The old school rubs it on the hide, We shake it up and give inside. The head is hot, the rest is fine, The stomach presses on the spine. This differs from Nux, the 'Poison Nut', Where the spine presses on the gut. The mental state is strangely odd: They wake, reply, and start to nod Immediately after answering true. Save for the truth, they might be you. Garth chuckles at his little jest, The classroom stirs with some unrest. The front row students smile with poise, Others laugh loud to make some noise. The sleepers rouse a moment after And sense they are the source of laughter. Hearing a Shhhh, they feel secure And settle back to sleep for sure. Garth starts- I had a patient . . Cheers, Not laughter, till the ears Cf the almost sleeping men, Who waken, not to sleep again. Well, this patient was so aged That her casket had been gauged. Her mental picture clearly stated That this drug was indicated' ' l gave drop doses of the tincture Which relaxed her anal sphincter, Cleared her head, allayed her fears. She carried on for ten more years. The seconds into minutes pass. And everybody in the class Feels the lecture is over at last. Consult a watch - it's twenty past! Garth carries on, his thoughts unfurled. Brave banners flaunt a skeptic world! Apis is next. Well,-let's see, This happens to be the Honey Bee. The class considers it quite funny- A drug made from a bee named l-loney . The fact is, Garth goes on to say, The allopath claims its his today. We've used it well for years on end. The Bee's a homeopathic friend Of father, son, rnother, daughter, Who find it hard to pass their water. ln the P. M. they're the worst: They hate heat and have no thirst. Their skin will often puff and swell, And when they wake they feel like hell.' They're better from the open air, And coldness frees their mind from care The action's better on the right, Constriction makes their tissues tight. The mind is stuporous and weak, The brain feels tired, the outlook bleak. Eye signs predominate in some . . find so on, ad simillimum. Someone mutters low, 'W'hat bunk! Pechan's four boat has been sunk. ferry ends the article On Sulfaheparprontisil . Suddenly the bell rings out: Garth stops short and turns about. Gathering up his notes and things, Toward the classroom door he swings. Fitful clappings reach his ears, As down the steps he disappears. The students rise and slowly follow: The last one's foosteps echo hollow. The classroom's empty. No, now wait- A shadowy figure rises late. Straight and tall, yet dirn and wang lt's Samuel Christian Hahnemann. These words are heard from the creator As he ascends the ventilatory So this is called my therapy, SO this is Homeopathy! , , Z5 Q l ,A H . H . ,wx k jf He shoots it fast, an awful pile, I' 1 13 l f ll- Je' xi , , N Sqgggg ' c SA .gt ,rf ax ' A 1-Xxx X X X X t Q 3 , ,C 5' l eb g f ii The gentleman we know so well, The gentleman we'd like to tell, That's Black Hank. The guy who's ever in our way, Who haunts the night and haunts the day, My God, I wish he'd go away, That's Black Hank. To take his chips and go to hell, 'l AWK BEWARE GHOST, Q His face is stolicl, not a smile, 'il His speech sarcastic all the while 1555? ff' Thats Black Hank. infill' -.f. He meets us there in O. B. S., And gives us stuff just oft the press, That wipes out joy and leaves distress, That's Black Hank. 228 r R 0 oR'l0,lD f' 'iff un new Z l .Affjfx in 3:5 To him the student is a fool ' - He haunts us like a horrible Ghoul, Thats Black Hank. 5 'fi .7 A lazy dumb dispensary tool, Ll 1 ? in if 2 W 'K J , E li A l' 7 ln class he gives us all we'll take, 0 He shouts out loud, keeps us awake, :assi-13,2- iv:-X We fear him like a rattlesnake, ij-' iff' rims Black Hank. ,ji 2- L :,gZli:c 'T Z Q'4? 1 D1 No mercy to the student low, 8 1 1l IP He gives to him the deadly blow, H --- Z Then kicks hi mout and lets him go, 2 N Thais Black Hank. ls there no way that we can win, From him we take it on the chin, We're always out , he's always in , That's Black Hank. With purple face he stands and rages. 'fguzgyi We haven't learned sufficient pages, ,, X - The ,tigers are not all in cages, :Q X35-'fn Thats Black Hank. ff 1 Rn, x -if x -. A-'f'-f Q v.. .Z-,LA r51'2'q ' n 1-.-r , Q59 s --sl! . ,M ar' fj , fl H 1 CD Af :Ee cs A manly fellow, not a mouse, He doesn't drink, He's not a souse. ' Our sympathy is for his spouse, 7' 1 I That's Black Hank. Q QH But this, of course, is humor light, And maybe we're a little tight, YEH' His bark always outdoes his bite, ' That's Black Hank. 229 REFLECTIONS If mflzlzzrvd fI'l7lll l'm1p 30,12 in bed, as in the stuffy amphitheatre, why come to school at all. We, therefore inaugurated an intensive in absentio course in visionary surgery until the temperamental professors started stimulat- ing the box-office reecipts by means of a few roll calls. Henceforth, we attended and continued to grumble and play battleship much to the disgust of visiting freshmen. Sylvis retained all of his old-time bombast. He slashed and yelled and raved but never admitted that a student could give a correct answer. W'hat artery is that? he would scream at some helpless interne grappling with the spurting deep epigastric artery, cut while making a right rectus incision parallel to Poupart's Ligament. Where were you when I lectured on Angiology in your freshman year? We then realized that Sylvis had been conscientiously hammering at us for for four years without making even a dent. Martin gave us high-class demonstrations when he could get away from the Navy. He had gained our respect in the junior year and after seeing him operate, all agreed that he could work on us. Webster's clinic was invisible as well as inaudible. G. U. was well conducted and made spicy by Ashcraft's gentlemen of the old-school flavor. Doyle effectively obstructed any possible glimpse of his two- inch operating fields. Roman would have stimulated us but for the unfortunate time of his clinic-not even Lister could stir a medical student on Saturday afternoon. We finished surgery without regrets- undoubtedly the most trying ten weeks in medical school. ln medicine section, we all agreed we were going to sink our teeth into the practice of medicine. Many indeed accomplished just that but not without overcoming certain handicaps. One was Ferguson. His lectures were really medical travellogues. Fergy had evidently visited every clinic in the U. S. A. and Canady and was on speaking terms with every eminent physician from Onion City to Pumpkin Center. He lent a willing and large ear to any ideas they had and then spewed all these clinical nuggets Cbetween numerous eh's , ah's , I mean's and meaningless arm motionsl back at us. It was all very confusing. He began with a few lectures on how to make out bills, keep a ledger, and pay the rent, and ended with Diabetes, Rheumatic Fever, and Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis. But Fergy's pet was Alcoholism. There was a subject upon which he would dilate with great relish. He made us especially aware of the patient's feelings and would wax positively lyrical when describing visual hallucinations. One in particular fascin- ated him-the Brooklyn Boys, Rollo, Pollo, and john fFerguson's Triadl. They were short and stocky and wore high red hats with gold tassels and long green pants with red shoes whose toes were curled up. Rollo hit you on the head, Pollo tripped you, and john pushed you-and no doubt ten medical students thumped you to complete your misery. Snader also presented cases, mainly of Diabetes, Rheumatic Fever, and Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis. His advice on the administration of insulin is a classic of evasiveness- you got to get the feel of it . Dr. Lane favored us a few times with business-like case presentations. 230 Dr. Wells did most of the teaching and his cases were mainlym- guess what-Diabetes, Rheumatic Fever, and Subacute Bacterial Endo- carditis. He seemed to address himself to the lower half of the class and tried to simplify everything he taught. The rest of the time we took histories and physicals and taught the internes the significance of CO2 combining powers and Fishbergs. We Were counting the days to graduation and freedom when an- other threat to liberty arose-the draft. After carefully choosing intern- ships We were threatened with not being able to serve them. This put a damper on the joy of finishing medical school but nevertheless com- mencement in prospect like Independence Daygindependence from having lectures, stuffy operating theatres, mumbling surgeons, frustrated students. We had gained a medical education but at some cost to our imaginations and self expression. 231 Introducing Our Boys fC0nfia111r'cl from Page 14Pl PENNOCK-Never has had the experience of being passed up in class. Shepishly accuses: Walsh did it . PINTO-Who took Adam's money at Allentown and paid him back with a loaded cigar, comes in with, Who has a paper for me to read this hour? PIVER-A confederate among Yankees asks, ls it Miss or Mrs? PHOUT-tAwakening suddenly in classl: One quart of Old Drum please . HEDCAY-We would like to use him in an argument with Lovell. Complains: lt's the walk from 2601 Parkway, not the homework, that wears me out . HICHLAN-The Ward Healer of the l-lahnemann district tells you, We even had a dart board in the basement . ROBERTS-tDoes Dr. Reinmann have a daughter?l So l'm elected treasurer and then they vote not to pay dues this year . ROBINSON-You can find him in the library treading or sleeping?l. Says: Dr. Wells can find as many things to be done as there are men in the front row . ROMAN-VEGA-You know he is Spanish by the bull he throws. Laments: There isn't a decent night club in Philadelphia . ROSNER-Happy from ear to ear, helps you out with, That's easy, l'll explain it to you . ROSNICK-Answered Dr. Wells with, But Doctor they only found a few T. B. bacillae . ROTHHOCK-tlf there is something on the board, he is in classl. Begins class with, Lock the door . RUSH-His weekend ends no Tuesday. Thinks: Maybe we can make a deal . SACKS-Wants padded shoulders in his intern uniforms and greets you with, All right men, what's up? SALMON-Went so far as to give up his art in order to sleep and says, The patients never seem to need any attention until l get out there at night . SCHADEL-Worried over the prospects of being drafted, thinks, They will probably put us on latrine duty . SCHLOSSEH-The retiring type Cregardless of who is lecturingl. SERENA- Well you might as well get out the gas pipe . SIMON-Won't take an exam until he knows what odds they will give him. States: l'll fix them, l'll buy a row boat and join the Syrian Navy . SIVAK-Dapper Dan of Aliquippa, speaking around a big cigar, asks, How am l doing Ma . STEINHILBER-Who has learned early the value of having a technician around, inquires, Anyone going to be down at the Vets tonight? 232 STERN-CouIdn't answer Dr. Bernstein's question because, Mayo's haven't reported on sebacious glands . TABROFF-A revised edition of the lournal of the A. M. A., comes back with, That's not according to what I read . TERESI-Answers to the name of Murphy. TERRY-Walks into class as if he is making a curtain call , stalls off a ques- tion with, Well, let mo see now . THEM-CWhy pay 68 cents to see loe E. Brown when we can see Them for nothing'?l Answers you at the I-lahnemann Luncheonette with, Its your turn . TUCKER-Can be heard saying as he rolls down the ball: I think I'll fit in the navy alright . TUSHIM-Punxsutawney's finest and the heap big boss of Alpha Sigs. VOGEI.-Prepuce Pete with a kind word for everyone, They should have kept the dogs and drowned you . WALSH-Ask the fellows where he lives about his rocking chair recreation, always mumbles as he passes autopsy, May the Lord rest his soul . WARNECKE-Soft-spoken, quiet, rarely heard from. WARNER-Who has taken Broad Street Hospital under his wing, thinks, This is important stuff, better get it . WEBER, I.- Stinky to you, expresses his authority by Come on men, ten minutes are up . WEBER, L.-Whose presence prompts us to remark, Little man, what now? Always expresses his approval by That's the way they do it out at Penn . WEIGHTMANN-Ioe, what are you hiding under that hat? Bids you farewell with, I have to hurry home to the little woman . WHITE-Whose tongue is calloused from licking postage stamps, will stop you in front of the alumni office with, I've got to get this mail out first . WOODWORTH-A member of the fire house gang, wonders, Do you suppose legs run all the way up to her hips? YOST- Well . . . I don't know . . frequently heard around the Gladstone. ZIEGENHORN-Winner of the Blue Ribbon for Ribbing. Karl is one of the time proven non-resident Gladstonites. 233 FRESHMAN FEELINGS fCl?lIffIlIlq'lf flfllfl fulfil' i571 by that demon firebrand the Hot Foot. Those in the know couldn't understand what the victims were kicking about. This outstanding class also boasts of the only student who could call professors pet names to their face, and still pass the courses they were teach- ing. One of these he blandly called Curley , while another he still blissfully addresses as Captain , Now we are almost sophomores, but even after some of us have been dropped out of school we will still get a laugh out of the incident which occurred during an early Osteology lecture. Dr. Warren was operating the projector while Dr. Ricketts did the lecturing. At one point, Dr. Ricketts finished what he had to say about the particular slide on the screen and asked for the next slide. Not perceiving any visible action, he politely asked twice more for cr change of slide. Then giving up he continued his discourse without the aid of illustrations, While the class snickered and Dr. Warren sat unperturbed, arms folded, chin on chest, fast asleep. 234 xfXfNlNlXfN!X!xl NfNfN!X!N!N!X!N 6 fVN!NfN!X!XfNfVXfX!N!X AAA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS 1940 - 1941 President-Thomas L. Doyle, '18 First Vice-President-Dr. N. Volney Ludwick, '26 Second Vice-President-Everett A. Tyler, '13 Third Vice-President-William L. Martin, '15 Treasurer-Richard W. Larer, '98 Executive Secretary-Carl C. Fischer, '28 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Chairman-Dr. William D. Culin, '94 Iames M. Godfrey, '04 Newlin F. Paxson, '19 Charles B. Hollis, '12 Ioseph W. Post, '09 Iohn E. Iames, lr., '02 E. Roland Snader, lr., '21 Wayne T. Killian, '06 Edward W. Campbell, '24 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 pro- moting the interests and extending the influence of the Alma Mater, encour- aging a high standard of medical education, securing intellectual and social benefits for alumni and perpetuating 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. In addition to the annual Reunion Banquet held the evening of Com- mencement, the Alumni Office keeps a biographical file of all alumni, main- tains a location bureau and serves in general as an active place of contact between the college and the alumni. A Hahnemann Alumni News has been created to bring to all of the alumni four times yearly news of the college and of their brother alumni. In 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 Penn- sylvania, New Haven, Conn., Cleveland, Ohio, and Metropolitan New York and Philadelphia. lt is planned to establish similar groups in other districts t is year. During the present national emergency, The Alumni Association is doing all in its power to procure alumni to take the places of those called into military service. It is also compiling a history of the part our alumni are playing in the service. 2 235 Patrons to 1941 Medic Dr. Leon A. Ashcratt Dr. O. F. Barthmaier Dr. Garth W. Boericke Dr. Iohn A. Brooke Dr. Ioseph Chandler Dr. Ioseph V. F. Clay, Sr. Dr. Hunter S. Cook 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. Russell Fisher Dr. Iacob W. Frank Dr. Iarnes M. Godfrey Dr. William B. Griggs Dr. Charles B. Hollis Dr. I. Arthur Horneif Dr. Iohn E. Iames, lr. Dr. Henry I. Klopp Wallace K. Kratz Henry D. Laiterty Leopold S. Lipshitz N. Volney Ludwick Ioseph W. McEldowney Warren C. Mercer George P. Miley Newlin F. Paxson William A. Pearson Thomas W. Phillips Stanley P. Reimann Henry S. Ruth Samuel W. Sappington Iames D. Schofield E. Roland Snader Thomas M. Snyder Gustave A. Van Lennep Dr. Frederick I. von Rapp Aubrey B. Webster G. Harlan Wells I. I. Wessel 6QfX6A 6fx PROPESSICDNAL CARDS HORST ALBERT AGERTY. M.D. I. ANTRIM CRELLIN. Pediatrics 6 Old Lancaster Road MERION, PA. N. ARIANO, IR., D.D.S. Dentistry 207 North Fifteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES P. BAILEY, M.D. Thoracic Surgery Exclusively 1700 Sansom Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 214 W. 14th St., Wilmington, Del. RALPH BERNSTEIN, M.D.. F.A.C.P. Skin Diseases Exclusively 1816 Pine Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. M.D., F.A.C.P. Diseases oi the Chest Exclusively 1930 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. IOSEPH R. CRISWELL, M.D. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Medical Tower Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. ALFRED S. DAMIANI, M.D. General Practice and Obstetrics 142 East Allegheny Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. THOMAS L. DOYLE. M.D., F.A.C.S. Plastic and General Surgery 230 South Nineteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. IAMES B. BERT, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology 1402 West Tioga Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. HARRY D. EVANS. M.D. Roeritgenology 1120 North Sixty-third Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EDWARD W. CAMPBELL, M.D., F.A.C.S. Urology Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. CARL C. FISCI-EER. M.D.. F.A.C.P. Pediatrics Germantown Professional Building PHILADELPHIA. PA. EUGENE F. CARPENTER. M.D.. F.A.C.S. Surgery PHILADELPHIA, PA. SAAAAAAN 1433 Spruce Street vv NAr MORRIS FITERMAN, M.D. 6152 Spruce Street 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. 237 A4 Medical Tower Building ININIXIXXX AO PROFESSIONAL CARDS CHARLES I. V. FRIES, IR.. M.D. Ophthalmology Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. ARTHUR A. HARTLEY, M.D 2374 Seventy-eighth Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. RICHARD R. GATES, M.D. General Practice and Obstetrics Drexel and Marvine Roads DREXEL HILL, PA. EDMUND G. HESSERT, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Gynecology 417 Cooper Street CAMDEN, N, J. THEODORE C. GEARY. B.S.. M.D., F.A.C.S. Surgery 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EDWIN O. GECKELER, M.D., F.A.C.S. Orthopedics 269 South Nineteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. N. FULMER HOFFMAN, M.D. Surgery 1602 Vine Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. WILLIAM C. HUNSICKER, M.D., F.A.C.S. Urology 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. I. RAWLINS GINTHER, M.D. 825 West Marshall Street NORRISTOWN, PA. MELVILLE A. GOLDSMITH, M.D. Medicine and Cardiology 400 Cottman Street, Jenkintown, Pa. Medical Arts Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa ROBERT M. HUNTER. M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology 1504 Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. DONALD T. IONES, M.D. Orthopedic Surgeon , PHILADELPHIA, PA. DUNNE W. KIRBY, M.D., F.A.C.P. Internal Medicine 205 Hardt Building Broad Street and Columbia Avenue l PHILADELPHIA, PA. CARROLL F. HAINES. M.D. Otology 1419 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. VWN!VV 238 PRGFESSIONAL CARDS WILLIAM Y. LEE. M.D. Surgery - Peritoneosco, ,f Hours by Appointment 10 A.M. - 12 M. 1113 Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. I. STAUFFER LEHMAN, M.D. Radiology 250 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. IULES I. KLAIN. M.D. Physio-Therapy 1516 North Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. HERMAN KLINE. M.D. 2643 Pacific Avenue ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. BRUCE V. MacFADYEN. M.D.. F.A.C.S. Gynecology 135 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ROBERT I. MCNEILL. IR., M.D. General Practice and Obstetrics 5148 Wayne Avenue WAYNE, PA. RUSSELL S. MAGEE, M.D. Medicine and Surgery 201 W'hite Horse Pike AUDUBON, N. J. ALFRED E. KRICK, M.D. Roentgenology S. E. Cor. 12th St. and 66th Ave. PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES F. KUTTEROFF. M.D. Gynecology 1632 Harrison Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. HENRY D. LAFFERTY. M.D., F.A.C.S. Obstetrics and Gynecology 250 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. WILLIAM L. MARTIN M.D.. F.A.C.S. General Surgery 1737 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. RUSSELL K. MATTERN. M.D. 6840 Ogontz Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. WXr LOWELL L. LANE, M.D.. F.A.C.P Internal Medicine Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES E. LAWSON, M.D. Allergic Diseases 2 Windsor Circle SPRINGFIELD, PA. 239 f VX6fVXfV' J9NA!VV PROFESSIONAL CARDS PAUL C. MOOCK, M.D. General Practice and Obstetrics 7141 Chew Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. IOHN L. REDMAN. M.D. Pediatrics 331 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ISAIAH L. MOYER, M.D. Medicine and Surgery Sixth and Chestnut Streets COLUMBIA, PA. DESIDERIO A. ROMAN, M.D. General Practice and Obstetrics 1951 North Broad Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ALBERT MUTCH, M.D. Obstetrics 124 West Logan Street PHILADELPHIA,. PA. WALTER N. NORLEY. M.D. 1400 North Fifty-fourth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. DAVID D. NORTHROP, M.D. Surgery Bennett Hall, Lindley and Carnac Sts. PHILADELPHIA, PA. G. ATLEE SAYRES, M.D. General Medicine 18 South Duke Street LANCASTER, PA. WM. G. SCHMIDT, Ph.D.. LL.B. Law Applying to Patents in Medicine Pharmacy, Chemical Engineering 643 Land Title Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. JAMES A. SELIGMAN, M.D. Surgery Hahnemami Hospital PHILADELPHIA, PA. NEWLIN F. PAXSON. M.D., F.A.C.S. Obstetrics and Gynecology 250 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. E. DALLETT SHARPLESS, M.D. General Practice 159 Ashby Road UPPER DARBY, PA. FREDERICK C. PETERS, M.D. Ophthalmology Physicians' Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. CLARENCE L. SHOLLENBERGER. M.D., F.A.C.S. Surgery 255 South Seventeenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. 240 'V PROFESSIONAL CARDS IACOB H. SIGAFOOS, M.D. Anesthesia 1700 Diamond Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EDWARD P. VAN TINE, M.D. Anesthesia 1706 Girard Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. I. HUNTER SMITH. II. M.D. Fractures and General Practice 1240 Devereaux Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. MICHELE VIGLIONE, M.D. 341 South Eighteenth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. RUSSELL C. SMITH, M.D. Anaesthesia Hahnemann Hospital ARTHUR W. W. WADDINGTON, M.D. 1215 West Lehigh Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. WILLIAM M. SYLVIS, M.D.. F.A.C.S. Surgery 1930 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES E. WEAVER. M.D. General Practice and Gbstetrics MANHEHW, PA. H. EARL TWINING. M.D. Dermatology Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. HORACE L. WEINSTOCK, M.D. Urology 1930 Crestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. EVERETT A. TYLER. M.D., F.A.C.A. Anesthesia Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. G. HARLAN WELLS, M.D., F.A.C.P. Internal Medicine - Diagnosis Hours: 9:00 to 12:30 1627 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CHARLES W. URSPRUNG, M.D., F.A.C.S. General Surgery 415 West James Street LANCASTER, PA. CHARLES I. WHITE. M.D. Medical Arts Building PHILADELPHIA, PA. 241 AAAAAAINA The Home of DRUCO-OPTUS DRUG PRODUCTS THE STANDARD OF QUALITY AND VALUE O Sold by Registered Pha cists Who Display This S y QQ PHILADELPHIA WHOLESALE DRUG CO. PHILADELPHIA ' Cil'f'l'tIf.' .lIt'ud'x l'U'Iudi'l't'd Lalvtii' .-laid .lffllc Xwx. I and JJ X!X f 'XXX ExPLolTATloN .5 if EDICAL PROFESSION VERYWHERE it is rampant- newspapers, magazines, billboards, window displays, etc., radio. Your doctor will tell you that . . . Medical science has found that . . The greatest specialists in 'limbuctoo say that . . 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When more physicians specify MEAD S Products, when indicated, more babies will be fed by physicians because Mead johnson 5 Company earnestly cooperate with the medical profession along strictly ethical lines and never exploit the medical profession. t 120.111 inllizlfusv .Yu.v, 1, 3 and ,lj I?v.rt1'z'-.llizllnsv 'willi lf.'l'fl'iH'f,Y nf ll'l1mt lfzzzlwryn mid l'm1.vl,' 1lIvi1a .v Ilt'i'fl-Ilzljllll' in f7l'.l'fl'lA.lfiI1fU5c'.' .llfilffhf Olrum l'v1'ffmifwjvlzzrali fliquid mmf ,LQEPING 7-6, n1ff.v1ilvsf.' .llmdk l'1'i1.vli'mI,' .lIm1f1 x l'z'iu'!v1'nI in Hiililml l.l.f'i'1' QS GVAA, FA, Oil lliillrid and ri1fv.v1i!v.v2,' .lluiidlr C-Nd Ll'I'i'l' Oi! rvitlz l'in.vi'i'4fl.' ur Q O C, E .llvfzdhr Ilizlilvul l'.if'4'l' 0115 .llm1d'.v .S'fi1l1di1l'f11':i'd Cliff l.1'I'i'1' Oil ? 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Come in or write to . . . Williams, Brown 8: Earle, Inc. Scientific Instruments and Supplies 918 Chestnut Street Philadelphia FA llgffl Mg!! ram! fzfzy.. thls IS the gatherlnb place of lll0Q6 who do the nnportanl tlun 5 Ill bum nebs soclal and publlc lull It may be a lmenneee lllt6llIl a small dmner a reat banquet an exclusive party or a number of ear h at the came hour the Bellevue embracee l.llCIll all ln the irc mendou capacity of its fam lllllCQ each Wllll an llllelll ent servue that leaves nollunff to be desired CLAUDE H BENNETT General Manager Sfaafzp Z fbafune PHARMACEUTICALS MULFORD BIOLOGICALS JOHN A. BORNEMAN AND SONS 040- p Thirty-nine years' practical experience in manufacturing Homeopathic Remedies. Up-to-date in all matters pharmaceutical. The necessity for ultra purity in strictly Homeopathic remedies is recognized 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 The American lnstitute of Homeopathy . welcomes Hahnemann graduates to fellowship in the nation's oldest national medical society. You will never regret early association with your national society. lt rep- resents your profession nationally, and offers through its monthly lournal and annual meetings invaluable post-graduate 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. IOIN UPON GRADUATION f x0A.fV'X fNfNA!xfxfNfNfNfxfxf7 f VXfNfXAAA BEST WISI-IES FROM TI-IE MANUFACTURER OE ' BENZEDRINE INHALER ' BENZEDRINE SOLUTION ' PENTNUCLEOTIDE Accepted by the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry ot the American Medical Association Smith, Kline 81 French Laboratories Philadelphia, Penna. M 0 Established 1841 J anuZgacIiuz:L11y Z Apizmficasfs S i n c e 1 87 6 WILLIAMS STANDARD INTERNE SUITS First Always in Quality Ana' Service FOLDERS ON REQUEST C. D. WILLIAMS 8: CO. Designers and Manufacturers 246 South Eleventh Street Philadelphia. Pa. XfN9!XlXfN!N!N!XfXf VV Compliments of THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY PETROLEUM PRODUCTS FRANK G. STEWART COMPANY BUILDING CONSTRUCTION 1520 LOCUST STREET PHILADELPHIA BOERICKE 81 RUNYON KINCORPORATEDJ HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACISTS 116 South Eleventh Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. FRESH PLANT TINCTURES TINCTURE TABLETS COMBINATION TABLETS SPECIALTIES MEDICINE CASES We solicit initial orders of Physicians entering into the practice of medicme CATALOGUE MAILED ON REQUEST Publishers of BOERICKE'S MATERIA MEDICA Ninth Edition LORRAINE HOTEL 0 Special Rates to STUDENTS AND NURSES LARGE AIRY ROOMS SINGLE OR SUITES OF Two, Three cmd Four Rooms D1rect1on' METROPOLITAN HOTEL CORPORATION 0 GLADSTONE HOTEL FRANK L. LAGAN GEO. H. MCCONNELL PHILADELPHIA SURGICAL INSIRUIIALNI CII. - DISTRIBUTORS - 0 HAMILTON MODERN MEDICAL FURNITURE 0 ROYAL CHROME WAITING ROOM SUITES 0 WAPPLER SHORT WAVE DIATHERMY Write us for Location Data and Office Planning Service RIT. 3613-14 1717 SANSOM STREET KERIVIAN 81 DE VINE Pl-IARIVLACISTS Where the Hahnemann Boys M t When in Town S E. Cor. Eleventh and Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. BRUCK'S NURSES OUTFITTING CO., Inc asv FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY, N. Y H A H N E M A N N LUNCHEONETIE 246 NORTH FIFTEENTH STREET A Pleasant Place to Rest and Eat MR. and MRS. PAUL SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT COMPANY 3527 -31 LANCASTER AVENUE PHILADELPHIA 0 Microscopes 0 Laboratory Apparatus 0 Chemicals 0 Reagents STATIONERS - PRINTERS THE ADAMS-LESSACK COMPANY Colleqe Supplies Our Specialty No School Item Too Hard To Get at Any Time 145 North Fifteenth St t PHILADELPHIA PA L 1133 R 1335 L, M. SHEAFFER CLOISTERDALE FARM EGGS EPHRATA. PENNA. THE... HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE BO0K STORE EVERY MEDICAL BOOK PUBLISHED IS AVAILABLE HERE NITROUS OXIDE OXYGEN THE OHIO CHEMICAL AND MANUFACTURING COMPANY O Oxygen Tent Rental Service 3623-25 Brandywine Street PHILADELPHIA. PA. NATIONAL ACADEMIC CAP 6. GOWN COMPANY 821-823 Arch Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. ALL CAPS AND GOWNS USED AT THIS SCHOOL SUPPLIED BY US. COVERSFOILNIDMBINDING 1941f1'fIED1C Pssigfgirziifufgsztzi 212153255 Manu ac ured by NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. 239-245 South American Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. Ma f t f DeLuxe Yearbook C d L L f B d g D Trusses Elastlc Stocklngs A h S pports and R bber Goods o 214 North Fifteenth Street Ph ne: RITtenhouse 6635 PHILADELPHIA, PA. PETE'S BARBER SHOP THE STUDENTS SHOP Below the College NORTH FIFTEENTH STREET Dl0N'S LUNCHEONETTE 215 NORTH FIFTEENTH STREET Our Slogan Quality ot Moderate Prices VV v VVNAAf BOERICKE 81 TAFEL lj HOMEOPATHIC PHABMACISTS AND PUBLISHERS Laboratories at Philadelphia El BRANQHES AT NEW YORK CHICAGO PITTSBURGH CINCINNATI Bus'ne s Establislied in 1833 O er 1 C cntur-v 0 f 5x4?I Z'1.t' RITfenI'1ouse 6225 - 6226 HANS W. CHRISTOPH. Inc. Manufacturers of Surgical and Orthopedic Appliances ARTIFICIAL LIMBS 1927-33 DELANCEY STREET PHILADELPHIA. PA. WM. W DUGAN 81 SONS DAIRY PRODUCTS PHILADELPHIA, PA. ar-iff' ' GOODWQS KLEIN fi -,TOT SIS AMSTERDAM BROTHERS SURGICAL APPLIANCES 274 SOUTH TWENTIETH STREET PHILADELPHIA . 7 V H AWBRAEUNINGER-I INC. ' Emi-W ' N.W COR,I6vn B WALNUY STS. PHILADELPHIA COMPLIMENTS OF DEWEY'S MALTED MILK STORES NEAREST STORE 206 N. BROAD ST PHILADELPHIA 774 Race 9641 , ESTABLISHED 1900 F1-Q, 5 THE REILLY BO0K TORE MEDICAL BOOK DEPARTMENT 133 NORTH THIRTEENTH STREET PHILADELPHIA Student Repre sentativwHarry P. Hoffman AMERICUS HOTEL ALLENTOWN. PENNA. 326 ROOMS WITH BATH FROM 52.50 Fire Proof - Perfect Ventilation Cafeteria Service in Coffee Shop At Popular Prices Banquet Ball Room - 800 Capacity MILLER, BAIN, BEYER G CO. 1001-1003 Filbert Street LPHIA - PENNSYLVANIA PHILADE WHOLESALE DRY GOODS Bed Linen, Table Linen, Towels, Blankets, Sheetings, Etc. RENE A. HODEL, Representative WILLIAM S. REILLY GUILD OPTICIAN RITtenhouse 5357 28 SOUTH TWENTIETH STREET Branch Office: N. W. Cor.l Tulpehocken and L' kiln Pike. One Square West of Ime 7300 Ogontz Avenue, Philadelphia WAVerly 6854 Hours: 7 to 9 P. M. tific Pest Control and Sanitation VOGEL - RITT, Inc. EXTERMINATING COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Scien ENBACH 6. BUTLER Inc. ACH , 1508-10 BRANDYWINE STREET Heat and Cold Insulation Contractors RU-BER-OID WATSON 857, Magnesia Covering Insulating Material Supplied and Installed By us in the New Hahnemann Medical College Building COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIE D latter Luncheons Club Brehtiqfasts P l Dinner Platters - 20c to 50c Specia WILLIAMS' RESTAURANT 326 N. BROAD ST. PHILADELPHIA Quick and Pleasant Service Piping Hot Coffee Delicious Desserts - Open 24 Hours - K. HODART ROATCH THE BO0KMAN LEDERLE 6. COMPANY J. Harris Tyre - Succeding ENGINEERS - CONTRACTORS Steel - Ornamental Iron Witherspoon Bldg., Philadelphia P of. En 2212 CHESTNUT STREET Locust 1828 Race 1812 Pennypacker 1274 Reg' I' g IOHN 1- FELDENS WILLIAM A. WEAVER CHARLES KIFNI-E HOSPITAL and INSTITUTIONAL GUILDCRAFT oPTIc1ANs EQUIPMENT 27jf5'fl2g1ff,jj'fL fKee' 742 LAwToN AVENUE PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. Race 6078 SPRuce 2719 !NlN!N!Nl PIERRE UNIFORMS QUALITY INTERNE SUITS ARMY AND NAVAL OFFICERS UNIFORMS 224-226 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA PA You Are Entitled to the Best Insist On Pierre's To Be Sure To Get It. EVERY GARMENT GUARANTEED TO GIVE COMPLETE SATISFACTION Established 18 I0 SEHHEHHHT T2 fet, ,D,,1z1,12, A154 U.. ,- 4'I7lrf1m?3ll,1 11 mm 5, Cprinters ofthe H1041 5Wea'ic 540 HAMILTON STREET ALLENTOWN, PA. MERIN-BALIBAN 1010 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. ir Cfficial Photographers for the H1941 Medic SPECIALISTS TO SCHOOLS- COLLEGES - UNIVERSITIES - CLUBS SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS AAAIVXAAIVNI o F' 1 557,55 Moo! ,Run . . Many years -1 9lg:g',1.,'Qf 4: ,' t , , 5- ' 'gr I IS A CREDIT TO THE STAFF fu Zu s OU R S P L I Z E E R V I C E . . .:,, '1': ' A X if 2 A -' Indlvld gp oqgii w ia hfg J 0 . . ,lll '44 iii. 47'- 1'1 lIl ,.QQ1,4A GSQIQA 55: ii 'Q g f V ' A Organl ,ia at j' A E'f 'Tf,,3'QQ5 as N Quality A A Past fecof a ' ' OPHIHHCC Largest '- Ai- A produc- ' 'v', Q ff A ' R '--'X : 'gf . rf-5 In 4.5 I ' M' 1'SffY'Tw ,I af PHILADELPHIA-WEEKS ENGRAVING COMPANY golucalfonal Qabarlmenf 29 NORTH SIXTH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. 9 . 0 . A IS.-.. ...':., n 1 K I N I 1 I 8-.ind U --4'4 ,u Q nr, .... a r 4. 1 v w I. -.- ,f.Q4- fy- , 'O 'Fxnl 4 - Q i v . O09.t 'IFQ 9 , 8 .-44 -4,- . I, '55 xai ' ,Q A '7'u-. ,,,. fo-. ,4 W' ia-A. f'. 'ylqrj 'A 'A' Wu, , Jw. , q 1 l'.k V tl 0- V .r' x va. vs I 1 . . I' u l ' N . . . f sa' ' Q !' . R sl' L Jr li' .Q-, i '-r . . w ., ' 4 Zyl lj Ll i . Y .' 'bl-'fx .' . 'grfv 1 W' ' I , K ' ' If .7 '45 .' 'T -U fl. 't fs .1 1 - 4 ' x I 1 'Q ll A Y . 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