Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1950

Page 1 of 234

 

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 11, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 15, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 9, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 13, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 17, 1950 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 234 of the 1950 volume:

VY v 'A 4 V . . - X ci 4 . ' 5 S , , I .4 X . I. . 1 I A-3 N : M.. uh' 1 - X'- 'fiw ' , ,.- ,. Xu N .4.+, . NX' XZ -:XXX 7 tX ' aff? R-, ..u--if-. V . vw... X ,XP . 5 .fif v I 'C V7 -l ' ' w-m-f f- . 4 A x ' ' .1 i - ', Z L My if l ' '15, . , ,-- n v 6 f. ,ff- Q nhl u' .. L I . X ,X X .. fx' ' fl v ' IW . . .14 r I 6 -J qv., , .' X HNF 1 ,X n X 'K . !! 1 ., 4 ll ,vt .N-, . ,. .1 a ' X, X: .A 4 1- . - 'I . nb' , I. 1. 'N Ji ' I N '-Z ,. 'V .-' - 9 ' 1 I' lr .Xu . H . 7 1 ' ' X-,.I'1,',Xg ' . c,- 1' ' X ' ., P I -. ' .F .H L 0 -. V , r A X' , -W 4 f V hi 'B ' ' 1 ' .ull ' A 1 af' I A. . . I F. . . I ' n n 1 - ' . p X XX X X l . , '. nv I n AIA: .414 4P'KL n tj 'nfl 1. ,A . I 11.4 r ' A I ' .. I I In ' A 257. 'ki ll A u .,- L W. I. , '-n. ' N 'a uw 1 K BX :X Ez, x y N? . X533 .lx 'nv' ' . -nv,-1. 1-i Q - ,':, . ' . 'wi-'N'-f , H 8239. Q31 ,, ' 4- 55' ' s xx. , ,ll . R.. K .- -V3-1 A.: N liivf'-. .KYB f . RN'-in x 's vt. :2. ' k.i'?QXx53 -gif ' Yi .f, .x lxg ,. k -,A - . 1- ',,. . ' X ,Z dw , 1 - gg, ., ks ,Lx 'CA 1 in ,'. s -YM. --. . x . G-'-1 .,N. Mg.-h ' x xx. -nn.. -. -Nr -1, . -1 4., H in: f Fil 5 1' JR VX .. .Cf-:. if: i N ff- ' xl., 3 N' V. L. -A '. rx, ' 1. . .. if Lt' ' ' 4. Hg f .,,...v K. 4. 4 IJ 'L-,..,,.--:gig ' ,Jw ft- 5115 ' Y .. 1','3'u1R'lf'VQ',' ' ,xg . ' -N '-:lan . . a J' Y .hg- T . X , ' 5-5:5 N I . ' . r-,f fi 1 , T- A J' x . , I V i . S' I' V! ', , - Q-.. 5.9, -. ffl f , -, '-Jgjfilrffli-wifrvi-1.-' 1' - - . '15, jf2fiQ,-,,':'- ,if-' -V :--T 'jd' -.lwkl-1335 -.-I ' -'-A ' 1 A . wk, ,,, x.Q,..L ,. , ,W I - -. N iq., .. hx. . M .K - -1 5, f v - X -. ,. ' rv- -1 '- afar-153' Q' ,3,gs .J '.' 4 Xls wx . , , , 'g3f.'1,g-,vp , -, ? x. ...s .V - ' 5 '4':1-iff-Yzgfb-S'if'i +75 .A wk 2.3 WR3.. .axe . -.x..: ..x. -,5.,.. W-az, t'l 4' 'X 's5'J' NQt? N' ' , . , . 1-l-QA. m N.-xv .K lg y if 1 .- x . . x 4 V i ,Tx rx 10 ,---':Q?u:f - .1 ' -.X :M-.Q- .'4,-'kjc' ' w .xg ' .'-jfx, f-. 'Ny . Vw 'xv-gs.-'w v s-'QNXY -.1 4-4. Q f3f.vQ ' . ' J.-I ff- 11, . '--- -- r-.XIQM ' X X . .- ,,A:.m,, 5-. - 1, A . -K J' -41 -Y :ff A dx. -:-:S ,G wb gig... K . ,K2.il ' f '?i:7i5fS?' 4 - aw . .E 5 .9xqTQ,'S45 , , ' Q QQ,-:Q-v ' ' Q A, W 'wagqi fig 57 'TW' . vw Q ' , 'f H, W' r . 1 Q Q w I Q1 W. 'A I . . . I 5 ' 4 Xu ' Q vi' 5 , I Q L . Frly , wh, Q'I1 ' A . 'r v v . ' Q A N n K x J ' Q X r.-f - ' PQ. Lx , M nk : 4.ps - 1 'L . V+- v o , a ' f v f . 1 o --1 1 , -1. 0 I ' - 0 K V' . A 0 1 1 .' ' ' .Q I f v. . 'V v A , ,Ju 5 I. . 1 1 I I - 'nf 'K I 1 4 . . a .. A -a w n HV: '-N A 9 w Iv V w , Ml' Q 's , . n x k fv- J I o ' I . s'-.C .. ,G , .rf u-.4 1 v W ' ' 5' A J W' 9 s '.- 4'u Nt ' rv I , :wal ,' 0.40 X , ' ' v In 1 1 o , D, . .. . ', , ,.,,,, . ' ' I -I v- .v- 'J I .dn An...mmm. .i?m.4..4:.:.N.- ..,. ' ' M A 'A ' . XXXXXyxx 'Sgig v 2 Fl 5 ,lj wi sx,yxxXXXXyyxu -' -5 uma - is 9 'XRT4 N iQQ9g'THE 0, o,' ,, xx af E EXMEDICAL comics w 'P 8: HOSPITAL VJ o '45 1 -' ' ' uKXxxxxsK 's sxxxxxx ,. g9 , 'Y : QS' - Q 5 S' N 4: 0 E 2 -99 'D Q 0 I 'o,'3'5,l, 'Q J 'uh' Il ss Nuxxxxxi' THE EDI l90 CHARLES I.. BROWN, M.D. Painting by Cameron Burnside Presented by the Alumni Association of the Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital, 1950. Dedicated to DEAN CHARLE L.BROWN We entered Hahnemann together. We experienced many changes together. Our associations have been pleasant and fruit- ful through a trying period. The class of 1950 is proud to honor a great clinician and respected teacher. Born April 27, 1899, Metropolis, Illinois. B.S. in Medicine, University of Olclahonia, 1919. M.D., University of Oklahoma, 1921. Teaching Positions Instructor in Pathology, Harvard University Medical School, 1925. Teaching Fellow in Medicine, Harvard University Medical School, 1925-1927. Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, 1928-1929. Associate Professor of Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, 1929-1935. Professor of Medicine and Head of the Department of Medicine, Temple University Medical School, 1935-1946. Dean, Hahnemann Medical College, 1946 -. Professor of Medicine and Head of Division of Medicine, Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital, 1948 -. Hospital Positions House Officer in Medicine, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass., 1922-1923. Resident Pathologist, ChiIdren's Hospital, Boston, Mass., 1923-1924. Resident Pathologist, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass., 1924-1925. Resident Physician lin Internal Medicinej, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, 1926-1927. Junior Associate in Medicine, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, 1928-1929. Physician in the Department of Medicine, University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich. 1928-1935. Chief of the Department of Medicine, Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., 1935-1946. Chief of Division of Medicine, Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia ,Pa., 1940-1946. Chief of Medical Service, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., 1948-. Membership in Professional Societies Fellow, American College of Physicians American Society of Clinical Investigation Central Society for Clinical Research American Association for the Advancement of Science American Medical Association American Gastro-Enterological Association American Therapeutic Society Massachusetts State Medical Society, Non-resident member. Medical Society of the State of Pennsylvania Fellow, College of Physicians of Philadelphia Physiological Society of Philadelphia Laennec Society of Philadelphia Philadelphia County Medical Society lformer President and member of Board of Directorsj Sydenham Medical Coterie Philadelphia Heart Association Cmember of Board of Governorsj American Society for Study of Arteriosclerosis Revision Committee of the U. S. Pharmacopeia XI, XII, and XIII. Chairman of the U. S. Pharmacopeia Advisory Board. Diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine, Certificate Number 93. The precursor of the Hahnemann Medical College was the North American Academy of the Homeopathic Healing Art, which was found- ed at Allentown, Pa., on April 10, 1835. lt con- ferred the degree of Doctor of Homeopathia fHomeopathic Medicinel, Surgery and Mid- wifery, and was in existence as late as 1844. On April 8 of that year the Homeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania was organized. A new charter, using the new name, was granted in 1865. In 1870, this college and the Washington Medical College of Philadelphia were consoli- dated as the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia, as a corporation possessing all the powers, immunities, rights and privileges of a university. The prime movers in the procuring of the original charter in 1848 were Constantine Hering, Jacob Jeanes and Walter Williamson. The Hahnemann Medical College held its first ,fl . C va iv, Q- .1 1 5 is E -rt - A A .,, .. 1 Y --. -4 ' v . V, 'N ,- . . ' Sy -N V NX ff! i K . . - 'lt l 5 llflltvynnug u' Q -as -4 - :- ' ' 1 n. sf - iiffffs it . H ss' ---2, 1- fir K... . L flf'7- 'fxf , ,,T'X-N f '-. is 7' n l 'T lrff 1 ' - --.c l fm T 9' r 1. ' 9. tl ' f j-'Hg ff. 'N -' - -.. l A -T 'w 5 + l T' T 'tyre F 's ' IH l 'f l 4 ' y .. . .,. ,Q A, - 2 - y . -N 1, ' .,.. . -. , . l 1,4 g-,,,,.,,.,,.,nli session C1867-18681 at 1307 Chestnut Street, its second session C1868-18691 at 16 and 18 North Tenth Street. After the consolidation, instruction was giv- en in the building on Filbert Street until 1886, in the old college building on North Broad Street fthe site of the present Hahnemann Hospitall from 1886 to 1927, and in temporary quarters at 216 North Broad Street from June 1927 to December 1928. ln January 1929, the present college building was occupied. The first unit of a new college building was erected in 1938, containing Klahr Auditorium, lecture rooms, and laboratories. The course of medical instruction originally was ungraded and covered two academic years. ln 1869 a three-year course was made optional, in 1886 it was made obligatory. A four-year graded course was first offered in 1890, becom- ing obligatory four years later. By 1914 the admission requisites were increased to include one year of college work, including didactic and laboratory work in chemistry, physics, and biol- ogy. This was further increased to two years of collegiate work in 1917. ln recent years, most of the matriculates have completed three or more years of collegiate work before beginning the study of medicine. The degree of Bachelor of Science and higher degrees were first conferred at the commencement of 1921. Women were first admitted as students during the academic year 1941-1942. ln 1945 the corporation acquired the Northwest School on Race Street, completely renovated it, and converted it into a Clinic Building. This was dedicated on May 24, 1945 with an address by Hon. Edward Martin, Gov- ernor of Pennsylvania. At present, Hahnemann is undergoing Q program of expansion and modernization with an entirely new College and Hospital as the ultimate goal. urn' lr I if I 'E 1 v M Q EH .p-I-X I A3 fu .1 1 i. 4 An era ends. The four years that have elapsed since that warm September day in 1946 when we undertook the study of Medicine are drawing to a close. The time has passed quickly for some and has been almost interminable for others. And with the end of this period the work- aday life of the hectic days at Hahnemann and the events that gave us food for thought and topics for talk will become part of a fading yesterday. With this in mind, the Staff has endeavored to present a picture of the period, not complete by any means but perhaps more in the nature of a shadowgraph. We have attempted to provide a background wherein the details could be more readily sketched by the reader in the years to come. Thus, we begin the Life and Times of the Mid-Century Class. It was the first post-war year of the second World War when we entered Hahnemann. For four long and bloody years, Americans had fought all over the world in hitherto unknown places, now indelibly fixed in our memories- Bizerte, Anzio, Bastogne, Guadalcanal, Leyte, Okinawa. F.D.R., elected to the Presidency for the fourth time, did not survive to witness victory over the Axis powers. Victory, however, had produced no per- manent solution to international perplexities. The atom bomb had ushered in a period of general uneasiness. Through the North Atlantic Pact and the Marshall Plan we sought to support the weakened Western countries against further aggression. Even while the world was congratulating it- self on the birth of the United Nations Organiza- tion fa Freshman in 1946, toob, the Cold War began. This organization played an im- portant part in the rebirth of such nations as Indonesia and Israel, but it could not halt the train of events which led to civil war in Greece and China, the Berlin Blockade, the race for atomic supremacy. ln the U.S. the communistnproblem con- tinued to make headlines - the loyalty investi- gations, the trial of the eleven communist leaders with Judge Medina presiding, the controversial Alger Hiss-Whittaker Chambers affair. Price controls were repealed, but shortages continued. The cost-of-living index rose pre- cipitously, and - cause or effect - was accom- panied by a nation-wide wave of strikes and walkouts. More shortages followed: first oil, then coal, then steel. Trains were forced to curtail their services. New York City attempted to con- serve electricity by a brownout, and, threat- ened with a serious depletion in water supply, underwent annoying shaveless Thursdays. Gradually, the buyers' market returned. A new car could be bought at list price, and if a man could buy a house it was still his castle, if only measured by cost. The era of the five-cent cup of coffee seemed on the wane. ln the field of Federal Government, econ- omy was still a dream. A growing tendency toward the welfare state was viewed with alarm, pointed to with pride. President Truman was returned to office after a spectacular defeat of New York's Governor Dewey. He continued in his efforts to unify the Armed Services amid loud squabbling between Navy and Air Force. Congressional investigation of lobbyists and 5- percenters, deep-freezers and Presidential Aide Major General Harry Vaughn, provided radio comic Jack Benny with a few new iokes. Socialized medicine got its share of head- lines, praised and criticized with equal heat in England, legislated out of existence in Australia and New Zealand, it had not made much head- way in this country. The American Medical Association taxed members S25 for its public relations campaign, using the famous painting of The Doctor in its attempt to keep politics out of this picture. g 4, i- IQ.. ,, T 3 QQ, 'und sr . Q1 5. .. Tsai lf . Q.- t U of ai TN . .W 'li 1-,gf u gn Y :iii ...si il .if iff C A it .fqiifn J! 3 , .. fi .ff c . A C., Q..-L ...Qi ,s . K I 1 4 N-rc L Y ,c rf- 53, ,r M 'G . . 15-.Zia -Ps ' J is ,,. -4.-3. ' s. SQ., l . if ln the field of Medicine, more antibiotics were being discovered, and VD, man's ancient enemy since before the Caesars, fell back against their onslaught. Bacitracin, Aureomycin, Streptomycin, Neomycin, and Chloramphenicol were introduced in rapid succession. A.C.T.H. and Cortisone were the new wonder drugs, guaranteed in the lay press to cure everything, but the serious problems of supply and cost still remained to be solved. Hahnemann got its share of the headlines with the development of Arti- sane. B-l2 was the newly discovered anti-anemia factor of liver. The physician who did not read Time Magazine was apt to feel left far behind in the rapid advance of medical science. Under the impetus of Russian use of the atom bomb to blast highways, research in the A-bomb and H-bomb went ahead with ever- increasing fury. At the same time, bigger and faster iet-planes were shuttling back and forth across the supersonic barrier. Radar waves had been sent to the moon and back. Sporadic re- ports of flying saucers made the news-hoax, hallucination or super military secret? Daily flights to Europe ceased to be a topic of con- versation, and rocket interplanefary travel was being considered as a probability. In fact, conversation itself almost became a lost art with the advent of television. While operations televised in color became novel at- tractions at medical meetings, comedian Milton Berle found the ordinary black-and-white variety a highly effective medium to a nation- wide audience. On Broadway, a man's importance could be iudged by the number of tickets he could get for South Pacific, and tenor Ezio Pinza gave new hope to the romantic middle-aged male. ln Brooklyn, the Mambo and Rhumba had pushed the Lindy Hop out of the limelight, while in Philadelphia the old-fashioned square dance was the latest fad. Canasta was the new rage. In women's fashions, the new look was ushered in. The plunging hemline was accom- panied by the plunging neckline. Was this a factor in the upsurge of romance that flourished during this period? Nelson Rockefeller and his Cinderella Bobo, Clark Gable and Lady Ashley, the Veep and Mrs. Hadley, Princess Elizabeth and Philip, Rita and Aly, and Ingrid under the inspired direction of Rossellini, served momentarily to divert our attention from the humdrum existence of operating rooms, clinics and National Boards. Even Philadelphia did not escape the post- war upheaval. The wave of labor turmoil was brought close to home when the ten-day transit strike turned Broad Street into a stream of oddly assorted busses, trucks and Model-T's, with pas- sengers overflowing onto running boards and roofs. Street car fares were increased from 755 cents to lO cents to l3'z cents, despite vigorous opposition by the city administration. Discrep- ancies in city tax funds involving hundreds of thousands of dollars were discovered, but tax collector W. Frank Marshall couldn't be re- moved from office. However, the incident produced the biggest upset in Republican Phila- delphia's political history, when Democrat Rich- ardson Dilworth was elected City Treasurer and three of his party colleagues took office. By and large, however, Philadelphia con- tinued its usual humdrum existence. The blue laws still drove people to Camden on Saturday nights, the local water supply continued to be undrinkable, the Chinese Wall remained even more indestructible than its namesake, the local bookies and numbers men continued to col- lect their slips of paper at corner candy stores, and the City's garbage continued to be collected by horse and wagon. This was the state of affairs while we at- tended classes, raised our families, nursed our ulcers, aged rapidly, and somehow muddled through the four years. 4 dw or S . Y I X, BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS President Senior Vice President Junior Vice President Executive Vice President Secretary Treasurer Solicitor Mr. Charles A. Allen Mr. Walter H. Annenberg Mr. Addison R. Brown Mr. Robert G. Dunlop Dr. H. M. Eberhard Mr. William Goldman Dr. C. Harold Kistler Dr. Raymond S. Leopold Hon. L. Stauffer Oliver Mr. William W. Rhoads Mr. Ellsworth A. Roberts Mr. Howard W. Schotter Mr. Theodore P. Scott Mr. William P. Snow Mr. Frederick H. Strawbri Mr. L. Staulter Oliver Mr. E. A. Roberts Mr. William P. Snow Dr. Raymond S. Leopold Mr. F. H. Strawbriclge, Jr. Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company Pepper, Bodine, Stokes 8. Hamilton dge, Jr. .-6 4' 'S if of Rh J- f liiJ it- g r F If S I i r H-,,.,i-i- COLLEGE COUNCIL Armand W. Angulo, Ph.D Reinhard Beutner, M.D. Amedeo Bondi, Jr., Ph.D. M. John Boyd, Ph.D. Charles L. Brown, M.D. Edward W. Campbell, M.D Joseph Chandler, Ph.D. Carl C. Fischer, M.D. Theodore C. Geary, M.D. John E. Gregory, M.D. Lowell L. Lane, M.D. William L. Marlin, M.D. Newlin F. Paxson, M.D. Charles E. Price, M.D. John C. Scott, Ph.D. Raymond C. Truex, Ph.D. f I1 A? ' ff-W lin' Km- ta ... - Y - r Fl , , ...,.. . v . 1 . I 'v 1 I, 'Tf'1'fg 1 . .1-Q ' if J Q haf I , '-- T.. I 1- ' sl 'N Q ' I -sg ' w- 1 '. f F- lg, , '- . , x.v , -.r -1. ' E1ig,L?V!J' M ww, ' ff'A WW' A ' pg- f- 1 - , -QF . ...,., A 7 - - ' T -- f-:A Q I-1 -15 . -.Q ' 4- - Z 5 --ff ,Wi H , 'HF 'I n 1 ln?-'f' I j- I ' 1,5 .-, - . . - ' .-'-' In- , , 4 'L '-I 'v . 4 ' ' ' - ' ' ' '-' -'35,l.uaf1B?f-1.f 4 . -' .:- M .A-N' ' f 4 5' 4' .V -. so-f' -L , -4 'J :Vu 19- H135 ff V156 ' ' . ' T. ..-..- M , , -'fha' .'. --5 L X59 fe' 1' : :fl . we 1- ', A wc,?gf 1-,'-'fw- f .Jm- --Is- -' 1 'H wws,f4f,a4'.f-' Libgzg .g' ,-ff, .-.-i,,':.?- 'fy,,3,,, . W '3 -- 9 , -'--Lia:-r'.,x, if - '- ',, 4, - Lil t . 1 i ' ' - x lm- 'iff 4 '. 3' QQ- N.-I' H1 ' ,ig '- - - ,Q 'lf'-I' - 1 aj, P. Ag-W ' 7 57- YW FA- - 4-X .. a .grgwifiigi E ' ' I. . ., . .WA ,- ' A 'tif I R Y , 3 ' W '-:A nl? In Y , xh ,, , V K, ,j V ' . A . J - 'QLWZLI .' LQ Lf, ' '- '1 Ev' -' .' Q' an -1 V' ,,E,v:'-' -.,1-ri.. , --. U 1 , 4 v .2-29 L f -M - V .--. A .V if'-.4 .i ,w f 5 T ...1, I N N , I x Q - 43 V - V li if - .--?iL s7 - .- 1 ..E'1,..E9-vt' L - 'fs' 'wg' HV - A-H 'i . ., at ---ir----:-1-:..s-T-. -WAN J- . 1. Q nil l- AJ I 4- -, - ,, v Y - 1 . X AL ., ,X Q- ' :- -- , .lager ,- , H- 145. 1 - ' , ' A 5 5 2 f-f--, 5' Q- ' -9- -f Y E 'Y 12 ff' W Hia: J, K.: N 1 QF-' ' W V ITU Q Ill 57? lzgfvwffm' - Wflllnnnnnwz nQ1 n!vl1lI1! Pf?-UMW !!. M 'H' gdmvnlvnlum nlnnnnnnnfmf ' miMllIlIIH1lHT llll'lIlll!ll!Iifl: mnunsmmur nmlviuggmlw nung,n 'H1 Uni I ll U Ill. 4 MF I- Hymn. .J A I l.Ilnlli1ig I ll 'I 'Wil 'ark ', TW, 'MIL ' 7 '-r,' 11 ufh'w-. A - 5 HFQTMI: u' S nl ll!ll!!llH!II, mllll pl Ili' qu llf' 1 III' ll!! ff? 'll i ul' ill lnnnrm IIIIIUT IIUUD lH 2 'lugs limi All!! fig I WI in gm Y 'r Inn nu mg' .Qt hx. Wllh PliECLlNlCAI YEAH I .Y 1 I ff . -3 A 5,1 if 1 xx A K 'v . Q - 2. .11 vt- 1 'ltr' yi fi' Z' 'L ' p u 'N A Qs.. 2 71. Q I If .. 4 fn - . , 'E f 1 174 r -' 1 l K1 X r E ' .iff -x f : 3. X . 1 X 1523 A' ' f 1 ,UI , ..P'U'r , f f ' ,,, 6 . . ' ' .4 s.,. .-,f'f4f, dy - A V , ' . , ,' ' ,':'.'.' 4 ,jifilf 1 XX. , ,, gi-'f I . V v ul.-9,51 ,fxlif X X 4, 4.A,,'Z2',jf,A In .!'..', 1i55.fg ' 'M' 'I lftflf . IV ' fl iwhliigl 41 fn f , ,,,Lf2iQ ' ' , '-','fjf A ' ff M! ff :ggym A ,5,f,,f.,,.' , X - '4--'f H 1 .' J - ' 1 'ff 5 ' ' f 'f 'If 1 '.7.'l ' ' f ',f ' ff f, 4, ,5f',', H. -'JF' 4' ' ' Y f .. 13941 -f ,fy ,f Y I M., -'-J Ll,' 11447 , , - On Friday, September 27, 1946, at 9 A.M., one hundred and five eager neophytes gath- ered in Room C of the college to meet for the first time the big wheels which were to make their heads go around for the next few years. Dr. Charles L. Brown, our new dean, welcomed us to Hahnemann, greeting us with - We're starting out together and you're my baby! He introduced spokesmen of the various freshman departments: Dr. Thomas W. Phillips, Anatomy, Dr. Thomas M. Snyder, Histology and Embryol- ogy, Drs. William G. Schmidt and Joseph Chandler, Chemistry, and Dr. John C. Scott, Physiology. One by one, they cautioned us of the need to work hard in fulfillment of their rig- orous course specifications lest we fall by the wayside: Anatomy was tough, chemistry was insurmountable, and physiology would sep- arate the men from the boys. Only Dr. Snyder had a kind word. Laconically, he told us to go home while we still had the chance. The meeting moved on rapidly. Expensive textbooks were listed as required, the more reasonably priced ones were labeled as sug- gested reading. War veterans filled out govern- ment forms in triplicate and quadruplicate. Registration cards were signed. Bills for tuition were distributed. During this swift current of activity we turned from side to side in appraisal of our new classmates. The eager expressions were gone, replaced by troubled countenances- looks of anxiety and apprehension. So this is med school! I didn't think it would be this tough! Gee! l'll never make it . . . ! The sweet taste we had experienced since our acceptance was gone and the struggle was about to begin. Work . . . study . . . long hours. Who would be the men and who the boys? These thoughts spun around our heads as we shuffled out of the room. And on the following Monday, at precisely eight o'clock, we began our struggle. 'll M92 Raymond C. Truex, Ph.D. Professor and Head, Division of Anatomy Armand W. Angulo, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy George H. Fatt, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy Herbert 5. Warren, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy Eleanor Hugins Yeakel, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Anatomy Francis E. Eksterawicz, NLD. .Instructor in Anatomy William A. Kase, M.D. Instructor in Anatomy Philip D. I.i Volsi, NLD. Instructor in Anatomy Harold E. Martin, M.D. Instructor in Anatomy Francis H. Stern, NLD. Instructor in Anatomy Anatomy, like Gaul, the Andrews sisters, and poison ivy, was divided into three parts: Histology and Embryology, Neuroanatomy, and Gross Anatomy. These so subdivided our first year that at least one part harassed us at all times. Part one was taught by the late Doctor Tom Snyder. For the first fourteen weeks of our medical careers we learned a bit of Histol- ogy and listened to a vast amount of homespun medical philosophy. It would be futile to at- tempt a satisfactory physical description of Doc- tor Tom with his fresh cut boutonniere, his unique appearance, and his debonair manner- isms. His lectures were most unorthodox and were addressed to medical students, not girls, a point endowing him with special license to tell spicy and ribald stories now and then. The ll 'ni f -. 5:54- isyms I f 'N' LMA 'N ,fan f .4-, ' o fr cw 3-S:S'i fa -, lk s 1 1 A Mi GQ, . -, . --:fr T' mm 3' -f 551 '- 1' 5- 1, ,-- W? K, . 1 ff f-3.1 1. ' 1- f 'il ' ' . 1 . ' ' ' -Q ,,,, , .e U . 4 -i :-' ' ' -,z-qxyit x X t ssl I 1 'll X J ! I X - vo V N YM If . ,F-rr ' fi K . , . ,k ' I v X lifki' rv' rw an 'If ,I - , L ' ' Ml 1 . 'Q 'i ff .V - -lbissjgeg , pf. 5. 5:3.L5,-im .Y : .f,,4 ,-' iff N f W' VX W 1 .fs , , ,. Vg, - X ,X x '. Q Q . . ' . Q. 1 ' 4 bizarre apparatus which Doctor Tom used to il- lustrate embryological development is legend. Who does not remember the enema bag, rub- ber tubing, and window curtain with which he described the rotation of the gut! 'Fit'll teach ya sumthin', Dearie, l'll stan' on m'head, he would toss off. Dr. Snyder was assisted by Drs. Angulo, Warren, and Kirchhofer whom, we must admit, we sometimes gave a hard time in their at- tempts to keep us busy in the laboratory. When not dashing to Dr. Snyder's office for his rub- ber stamp of approval on our drawings, we were taking time out to attend Freshman sur- gery in the operating room galleries or to educate ourselves in the science of bridge in the lounge. Dr. Snyder's examinations were, euphe- mistically, new type. Undoubtedly they must have been at one time, but for many years Hahnemann's fraternities had frantically stashed away thousands of true-false, till-ins, and multiple choice questions from previous ex- aminations. To get an A in Histology one had to have not only a phenomenal memory but also membership in the right fraternity. The famous neurohistology examinations taught us that S.O.B. also stood for same, opposite, both. The passing away of Dr. Snyder in 1948 marked the end of an epoch at Hahnemann. His cheese parties For Freshmen Only held each Christmas, his oral exams with the wide selection of exotic cigarettes, the two hand counters - one for correct answers, one for in- correct answers - his famous exposition on one of the lesser-known uses of a sink, his recollec- tions of Dr.'Rufus B. Weaver -'all these will long be remembered. Neuroanatomy counted toward only one- enth of the final grade in Anatomy. Neverthe- ess it was well presented by Dr. Ricketts in a series of thirty-six lectures. Primarily a gastroen- terologist, Dr. Ricketts was well versed in the study of the nervous system. More important to us than this was the preciseness and concise- ness of his presentation. Our course in Neuro- anatomy was perhaps the best organized series of lectures we have received at Hahnemann, muh IU i3 .Z Qi and the class was disappointed in being de- prived of Dr. Ricketts' tutelage in the clinical years. Any stranger around Hahnemann can eas- ily locate the tile-walled dissection labs, where the Freshman still spends most of his time, sim- ply by following his nose up the four flights of wobbly steps! For us it was customary to take the verboten elevator in the basement in groups of six or more, the theory being that there was safety in numbers should we be greeted by Mr. Jones when we reached the fourth floor. ln re- cent years the department has undergone ex- tensive change in personnel, but when we were Freshmen, Dr. Thomas Phillips was in charge of Anatomy. His mild and pleasant attitude, his Morning, Men! , and his theory that anatomy must be learned by repetition, repetition, repe- tition are still famous around the school. There was little lecture work in Gross Anat- omy. With the exception of an occasional orientation talk or movie, our time was spent with our silent teachers, the cadavers, two of us working on the lowers and two on the uppers. The work was either a pleasant occu- pation or a tedious chore, depending on the practical exams devised by the various labora- tory instructors. These practicals were often designed to have a morale-shattering effect, and each laboratory instructor apparently had his own psychological pattern for breaking down the student. Dr. Montague would floor the examinee by rolling a set of wrist bones on N fl ...f I I r LOOK - N0 HANDS! i Q N 1 . miiiss sssc, ,.,. I2 .gf- Q fx S '71 Q' 'T 1 , a table top with the command, Pick 'em up and name 'em! Dr. Stern would try every re- mote question in Phillips' Notes, ultimately stumping even the bright boys with What's the pH of the vagina? Dr. Angulo made strong men quake with, Thees is the sural nerve?! Then what is thees? And Dr. Warren popped up with simple, straight-forward questions like, What passes medially and inferiorly to the superiolateral aspect of Chassaignac's tubercle, and why is this important? And those who had Dr. Chunn's oral will remember his Pick a card -any card at all! Dr. Chunn was also famous for his 150-question nuggets for a five-question exam. And so it went. We toiled over the cadav- ers, We teased out nerves. We traced muscles from origin to insertion. We looked for anom- alies and then ran to have Dr. Warren photo- graph them. We sought lymphatics-alas! in vain. We drew sketches on the blackboards. We memorized everything. We used Gray's Anatomy, then Morris, then Grant, then Cun- ningham, then the Catechisms, then Dr. Phillips' Notes-each time looking for a better and eas- ier-to-understand anatomy textbook. Thus we learned our anatomy by repetition. And when the course was over, detailed anatomy was quickly forgotten. The big things, how- ever, such as salasap, the lingual nerve took a swerve, and the famous mnemonic about Sally for the branches of the external carotid artery will remain with us permanently. N-x 1 , 2' n.,,,..-ff -s.f x 4, W 5 -4- A . f as ,I f-. ,W l my ty .W t , .s i'iiisi-it-iw ii 1'llXl4lI'HIlIlNIl1t M. John Boyd, Ph.D. Professor and Head of the Division of Biological Chemistry Joseph Chandler, Ph.D. Professor of Biological Chemistry Joseph S. Hepburn, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Joseph S. DeFrates, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Biological Chemistry Carl Alper, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biological Chemistry William R. Brown, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biological Chemistry George A. Nitshe, Jr., M.D. Associate in Biological Chemistry Joseph N. Seitchik, M.D. Associate in Biological Chemistry Armand J. Courchoine, B.S. Instructor in Biological Chemistry Phyllis Yount Wood, M.S. Research Assistant in Biological Chemistry The Class of 'l95O should be very well versed in Chemistry, since it was taught in a highly unique manner. The words of Dr. Phillips, our esteemed Anatomy professor, Repetition, repe- tition, repetition! would perhaps apply some- what more appropriately to Chemistry. First of all, we took the regular Chemistry course. Secondly, we took Dr. Schmidt's course on our own time and expense in order to pass the first course. Thirdly, we bought copies ot Kleiner a year later in preparation for the National Board examinations. +-..,,. gs ,fl sr i . 1 if ff .lags .N Uam Y Smit X Xl' 45 ,.. J The Chemistry course-the first one, that is- was under the direction of Dr. W. A. Pearson, Ph.C., Ph.D., Phar.D., M.D., Sc.D., LL.D., and Dr. Joseph S. Hepburn, A.B., A.M., B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Chem.D., M.D., with the able assistance of Dr. J. P. Chandler, Ph.D. The textbook we used during this phase of Chemistry was the fab- ulous P. and H. The course extended over a period of thirty-two weeks, presumably cover- ing the fields of lipins for ly-pins or lip-pids l, carbohydrates, proteins, enzymes, hormones, tissues, and analytical and clinical procedures. Besides these subiects, we learned other interest- ing facts, such as: Dr. Chandler was a Captain in World War I, Dr. Pearson had a friend whose urinary bladder capacity was greater than that of anyone on record, the urine of a student nurse who had been given knockout drops would yield a positive aldose test, and anyone dipping a pipette into a reagent stock bottle was worse than John L. Lewis. All this led merely to a swivel chair knowledge because the chief engineer incessantly put a caboose on things. Nevertheless, Chemistry was fun. It was satisfying to spike Dr. Pearson's urine-unknown stock bottle with uranium nitrate solution. Also, one felt that he had made a valuable contribu- tion when he added his own feces to those of the rest of the class. Chemistrylectures were unparalleled byany other lectures in our four years at Hahnemann. Attendance was, of necessity, virtually 'I00 per cent and punctual, lest Dr. Chandler note your vacant seat number at precisely nine point zero zero o'clock. For Dr. Hepburn's stimulating lec- tures on carbohydrates and food chemistryg the chances of finding vacant seats were even slim- mer, since those available were occupied by students' wives and girl friends. These guests came frequently to witness Dr. Hepburn's im- pressive antics, and it was for them especially that he often outdid himself. if s J ,.,,...-our 9 O I Qvulrhf- Al 1 Xlyhfjxvll' 1 1 f A Q 'V -1 W Q.-f... - f 'it ,- A. l X Q' xs.. s N ff Who can erase from his memory the famous Chemistry examinations? Do you remember: Question l lworth T0 pointsl: al Classify the proteins, giving several examples of each. CNOT one, NOT two, NOT three, but SEVERAL! You guess how many . . . I bl Give the common name, chemical name, structural formula, and auto li- cence number of the discoverer, of any 20 amino acids, listing SEVERAL proteins containing each one. Points will be de- ducted if only a FEW are listed. cl Discuss the contributions of Dorothy Wrinch fgood old Dorothylj to protein chemistry. Before each exam, the rules for examina- tion were ominously read by Dr. Chandler. We had three hours-not one moment more-to an- swer ten enormous questions. Anyone handing in less than four legibly written and grammatically perfect quiz books was practically assured of a failing grade. lt was a writing marathon, and it was foolhardy to enter the examination without several Knot one, two, or threell freshly filled fountain pens. At the same time it was foolhardy to attempt to leave the auditorium in a hurry once the examination was completed. We had to run the gamut of a statistical analysis by Dr. Chandler, who recorded for each examinee the order and time of departure, the number of books written, the number of pages in each book, and the order and number of questions answered. There were also unknows to do in the labo- ratory, where one drop of reagent past the end point in a procedure such as the Folin-Wu- modified-by-Chandler technique lunpublishedl would throw the result off by as much as 0.000412 per cent, no less! Also, there were write-ups on experiments to be submitted, the grades for which depended primarily on whether one owned cardboard folders, brass fasteners, a typewriter, a Speedball pen, and an assort- ment of colored inks. With training such as this, is our prowess in Chemistry to be questioned? X x ,.-LA fd? 4-- 1- '- , ,,, np t 3... ' l F! John C. Scott, Ph.D. Professor and Head of the Division ol Physiology Emerson A. Reed, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physiology Floyd J. Wiercinski, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physiology George D. Geckeler, M.D. Lecturer in Physiology Brion A. Cookson, M.B., Ch.B. Instructor in Physiology Aaron Bechtel, B.S. Research Assistant William C. Foster, Ph.B., M.S. Research Associate Physiology has been the nemesis of many a student at Hahnemann. It has been said that the scholastic status of a freshman in his class invariably parallels his grade in Dr. Scott's course. The course itself consisted of three one- hour lectures per week, two three-hour labora- tory periods, and all the extra study time we could steal from our other subiects. In order to save time in taking notes, we were required to purchase a physiology bible, a 150-page set of lecture notes compiled by Dr. Scott. ln a very short time we discovered that this voluminous mass of condensed physiology represented only the bare essentials to be mastered in order to appease Dr. Scott, and that the real bible was McLeod's Physiology with perhaps a gob or two of Best and Taylor! mxlllt X .cap ' A ffl Physiology lectures are not easy to forget. Those were the days when we had to get up at an outlandish hour for an eight o'clock lecture. We sat in closely crowded uncomfortable chairs in the dingy, stuffy, overheated fourth- floor lecture room. Dr. Scott entered at 8:00. At 8:01, the public address system was turned on and Dr. Scott alternately fondled and tapped his small lapel microphone. In another minute the tapping could be heard distinctly through the loudspeakers as a beckoning last call to wake up to the drowsy students. By 8:03 the lecture was begun. By 8:10 the last of the class-with the possible exception of Gabriel Rubin - shuffled into the room. In a slow, omi- nous manner and in a somewhat low and un- varied tone of voice, Dr. Scott muttered his bits of scientific wisdom-including many exam nuggets which invariably went unrecognized. Happily, the course was a thorough one. The muscular system, nervous system, and spe- cial senses were studied in detail. Perhaps be- cause of Dr. Scott's special interest in the sub- iects, stress was also laid on the psychological aspects of physiology and on the physiology of respiration. In the laboratory every minute was uti- lized, and many extra hours were often re- quired to complete an experiment satisfactorily. We pithed frogs. We stimulated muscles and nerves. We smoked kymograph papers and then proceeded to transfer the soot to our part- ners' clean laboratory coats. We strove to be meticulous and, as a result, many a student who looked with affection upon his lab partner at the onset of an experiment, finished it con- vinced that his partner was actually his worst enemy- a dragon, an ogre who massages his buttocks on the most beautiful kymograph records with malice aforethought. Gradually we progressed from frog muscle and heart preparations to turtle hearts and, ultimately, to anesthetized cats and dogs. On the larger mammals we worked in teams of four, consisting of the surgeon, assistant sur- geon, anesthetist, and data-taker. Here the budding surgeon was in his glory! Cutting at last! The real glory, however, must go to the data-taker, for it was his responsibility and his steady, unerring finger that often kept the writ- ing point at the right place, at the right time on the smoked drum! f 5' es When it was not feasible to perform ex- periments in small groups, demonstrations were held. Dr. Scott demonstrated current methods of gas analysis. Dr. Beck illustrated the spirom- eter. Dr. McClendon emphasized the impor- tance of iodine in physiology. And Dr. Barnes demonstrated his own techniques of super- electro-encephalography with fanatic empha- sis on acetylcholine, a substance which is ap- parently ffgood for what ails you. Dr. Scott used to say about examinations that when some of the boys did poorly it was the students' fault, but when most of the boys failed, the blame was on the examiner. Conse- quently, his monthly exams were closest to what we could call fair. His exams were difficult to nugget and even with the curving of the grades there were seven studying for re-exams over the summer. The monthly quizzes were tough, but nothing at all like the mid-year and final exams. The first part consisted of questions requiring short answers, to be completed in sixty minutes and to be argued over for sixty days. Part two consisted of two separate exams and lasted three hours with a ten-minute break in between. This ordeal, plus the use of benza- drine fEd. Note: Chicago name Amphetaminel, resulted in several mishaps, one student find- ing herself fast asleep with a blank paper at the end of three hours. By the end of the year, however, we real- ized that the browbeating process we had undergone had not been in vain. We had learned some physiology. l L,' f ft it iff E ,f-L , f 4 - L-, X il Q3 If-2' ,Qs , as Qi UZ Ti ' 1. , Ptlgofy , 'llfffyl FOR .- ! it fLvL 'W i 4, s..-f.---- 1 1 ' f gif' 593 'KU' 1-4-9 k IQ ,,. x To .2 Y l in F 'def John E. Gregory, M.D. Professor and Head of the Division of Pathology Edward C. H. Schmidt, M.D. Associate Professor of Pathology Franklin K. Fite, M.D. Assistant Professor of Pathology Gregory F. W. Froio, M.D. Assistant Professor of Pathology Harvey Pullen, M.D. lnstructor in Clinical Pathology Thomas K. Rathmell, M.D. lnstructor in Clinical Pathology E. Karl Koiwai, M.D. Teaching Fellow in Pathology Pathology, along with Bacteriology and Pharmacology, formed the Big Three of our Sophomore year. The beginning of our study of Pathology coincided with the retirement of Dr. Samuel Sappington as head of the department and the appointment of a young man from Johns Hopkins in his place. Having listened with horror and awe to the stories of the upperclass- men about Sam's phenomenal knowledge of what pathologists know about Pathology and what students do not know about Pathology, we looked forward with relief and even with a smat- tering of self-confidence to the arrival of Dr. John E. Gregory. Nobody could be as tough as Sam . . . we thought. The course itself consisted of a series of lectures, presented by the staff and the residents, and covering the fields of general pathology, pathology of the special organs, and clinical pathology. Along with this there were laboratory periods, during which the class studied and made sketches of microscopic slides, examined gross specimens, and discussed the various ramifica- tions of pathologic physiology. Slide quizzes were given at regular intervals and it invariably proved embarrassing to miss not only the path- ology but also the identification of the tissue from which the section was taken. Clinical pathology was taught by Dr.Arthur Horneff. lt was in this phase that every fourth student was exposed to a gastric analysis, at- tempting to swallow a stomach tube once, and once only. It was in this phase that every odd- numbered man injected his partner with phenol- sulfonphthalein, and every even-numbered man urinated into a graduate. Anxiety was the rule, one student worrying about getting the needle into the vein within the first dozen plunges, and the other praying silently that his renal ex- cretion would be normal. The required textbook was Moore's Path- ology, which we found as hard to read as Boyd was easy. Although the text did not appeal greatly to the student, it found favor in the eyes of the students' wives, to whom Dr. Moore, un- doubtedly with economic foresight had gal- lantly dedicated the book. We had been told that this book would become more valuable to us in the future, and indeed it has, for the heavy tome has been directly responsible for keeping flat at least half the photographs in this year- book. T' ' A 1 Q-....... ' v Q7 'f't l, N X: -4 Es, . , fag, 4 fp , A ' . WL ii ,! x L Most of our Pathology grade depended on how well we made out in the oral examinations. These were truly historic events. On the days when orals were given, crowds gathered around the pathology office to collect nuggets from the poor perspiring wretches who had already undergone the ordeal. Students were called upon in alphabetic or reverse alphabetic order and alternated among the various staff men each month. Dressing for the occasion was character- istic. The brave men wore sport clothes, the piteous wore old clothes, the resigned wore 'dirty lab coats, and the women wore sweaters. Anxiously you sat in the anteroom waiting for your name to be called. In a moment you were in an office alone with Dr. Kassab and his in- scrutable smile, with Dr. Froio and his Philadel- phia sinuses, or with Dr. Gregory-in which case you were really alone. Some orals took thirty .mf , seconds and some fifteen minutes, during which time you suddenly learned that you were a stutterer. The outcome was invariably the same. A faraway voice was heard saying, That's all. Send the next man in, and you were in the hall again feeling lost, helpless, alone, with no one to turn to but the throngs of excited people mill- ing around yelling insanely, What did he ask you! What did he ask you! Alas, there was no alternative but to go home and read more'pathology-or else. This, apparently was part of the department's strat- egy, for the students who were most frightened ultimately got the best grades. With a few exceptions, we all got through. On that fateful morning when we received our grades in the mail, it was with sheer pleasure that we went down to a hearty breakfast ioy- fully anticipating a grapefruit the size of a tumor, instead of vice versa. .1 F., ,nr . N- 1 ' '. f4L N ,fy 3 , , sd 'Z 13355 T' 'T 7 155543 of , '65 ' ' 'II 1 . -4' aio! ,-. -af -,nu 5-4 1 .L 1 .. Amedeo Bondi, Jr., Ph.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Bacteriology William L. Gaby, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Bacteriology Leland Brown, P.D. Instructor in Bacteriology Bennett Sallman, Ph.D. Instructor in Bacteriology Harry C. Scarpa, M.D. Assistant in Bacteriology The class looked forward with a mixture of anticipation and fear to Bacteriology, given for the first time by a new addition to the Hahne- mann faculty, Dr. Amedeo Bondi. The course was divided into two separate phases, one dealing with the medical aspects of Bacteriol- ogy, Immunology, and Mycology, the other with Parasitology. To instruct us completely in these subiects, Dr. Bondi presented a series of lucid lectures, including several by distinguished ul-1 'ix U . ' 4 'Y j' X guest lecturers CDrs. Kolmer, Spaulding, Harris and Clancyi. These were combined with a group of practical laboratory exercises. Here we learned-or were supposed to learn- about such varied subiects as Vi antigens, epi- demic parotitis Cmumps, to the now better in- formed members of the classj, psittacosis, NIH .4l ff? 4'1ll5g1,g,g-'..,, ' 'Us Y, i '. 1 ,Z kgbunv' swabs, schizogony among the malarial para- sites, and the, fortunately, non-inhibitory effects of brucellosis on the procreative faculties. Ably assisting in the laboratories were the two Drs. Brown, Leland and Elizabeth, and the ever- helpful technicians, Miss Boyd, Clair and Rita. A series of maddening bi-weekly quizzes, in addition to unknowns and practical labor- atory exams, measured our progress in the course. Following each of these, cries of an- guish and heated debate with the staff ensued. Then came the grades, cleverly concealed by a code number known only to the individual stu- dent fwho invariably forgot itj, to his labora- tory partner Cwho invariably remembered itj, and to those members of the class with superior memories and remarkable talents for solving cryptograms and codes. ln order to gain more time for studying, members of the class devised new methods of mass production, specializa- tion, and division of labor in the laboratory. However, we always suspected that these meth- ods were subtly countered by those unsched- uled end-of-the-day conferences, belatedly called by Dr. Bondi via the omnipresent loud- speaker system. Nevertheless, at year's end, we had learned not only the subiect matter of Bacteriology but also the spirit of intelligent, friendly faculty-student relationship as exem- plified by Dr. Bondi and his staff. X Reinhard Beutner, M.D., Ph.D. - ', 1 Professor and Head of Division of Pharmacology , W N T. Cunlille Barnes, Sc.D. Associate Professor of Pharmaco'ogy Joseph W. Messey, M.D. .4 L Associate Professor of Pharmacology 4 Raymond E. Seidel, M.D. Associate Professor of Pharmacology Beniamin Calesnick, M.D. Associate in Pharmacology Harry J. Pratt, Sc.D. Associate in Pharmacology James C. Munch, Ph.D. Lecturer in Pharmacology .lens A. Christensen, M.D. Instructor in Pharmacology The field of Pharmacology, with its count- less concoctions and therapeutic advances tum- 2 bling one upon another in rapid succession, re- quires a man with an encyclopedic mind and a -. 6 , 5 love for compilation of facts. For many years, j Hahnemann has had such a man. Dr. Reinhard f Beutner, ever the students' friend, has labored g i 5 untiringly to present his boys with the most 3,2 I , f up-to-date knowledge of drugs. Twice weekly we would convene in Room C with our equipment: a good pencil and one I ll, K Nq -1' fgffs? , ' :EPO HOUDTI., 7l ' f , f T ff X X X ? 1' X 'R ' 1 fi NS ,Ri pf A-.,.--1'l ' X 7'-T- fx, 9'- of the two massive tomes of mimeographed material known to all as Beutner's Notes. With deft hands, we underlined like mad as the good doctor recited in a loud voice the high- lights, synonyms and Chicago names of vari- ous drugs. The atmosphere created by this rapid underlining marathon was frequently made merry by such expletives as Dummkopf! and Gott in Himmel! when some student's indis- cretion, scholastic or otherwise, aroused the good-natured doctor to a display of exaspera- tion, more often feigned than real. It is known as Neostuff, Trishmutzamine or Methylshmethel! The Chicago name is Verevas- tes! lt is N. N. R. but not U. S. P. because it was developed by the Br-r-r-r-itishers. CHiss!j So it duss not wur-r-rk in America! What, what, what, whatl? Shed-up! Get-oudt! Procaine is fast, tetracaine is super-fast, but dere is nutting as fast as super-duper Nuper- caine. But it is no-o-o good! Why? Quick, tell me somebody! Youll Invariably he would single out someone in the first two rows. After a climb of six flights to the laboratory, we studied the effects of many of the drugs on various experimental animals, including the ever expendable medical students. Electroencephal- ograms and blood pressures were taken on men inhaling amyl nitrite and women smoking fat, stinking cigars. Again, we encountered Dr. Barnes who, apparently liking our class, moved J Qs from Physiology to Pharmacology, carrying with him the inescapable acetyl-you-know-what and innumerable charts and figures. Of course, with him came Miss Marie Amoroso. It was almost standard procedure for members of the class to copy all laboratory data and answers from one or two of the previous years' laboratory manuals. It is fearful to contemplate what might have happened had the original source book been in error. Dr. Calesnick, Dr. Pratt and Dr. Christen- sen, astute disciples of Dr. Beutner, also assisted in laboratory instructions, each one contributing to a particular phase of our study. Dr. Pratt, in an effort to stimulate our creative thinking, once guaranteed o fortune for the man who devel- oped an oral insulin preparation. So for we haven't had time to do anything about it. The Department of Pharmacology, however unorthodox its methods, achieved its purpose. Pre-exam tension was minimal-comparatively, that is. Examinations were scheduled for our convenience, often being postponed so as not to conflict with those of other departments. As a matter of record, we made our best grades in Pharmacology in the National Board Examina- tions, one of us even capturing the highest grade in the country. Dr. Beutner and his boys presented a Pharmacology course which was more than adequate, up-to-date, and-yes-even pleasant. J V fi ff- sf ti. 3 s ,, . K ',Cx 5 W 'e li Y ' lf V, 1 f. . L V v ,U X lt I Vx i if '21 r . ll 'iw' illll i if .' f . li 26 . fi 7 Q 1 ,ii . J lm V R y .JHI5 is f'Qlah'veliy -froarfi Sfu 'X 'irq - 7 'ef ElementarY M P eScri Although the value of a minor subject varied from one-half to two semester credits, we were exposed to so many of them that they accounted for a good portion of our time. Many of these little courses we found interesting, but some, unfortunately, were merely obstacles to be overcome. During our Freshman year, one hour a week was spent with Dr. Garth W. Boericke, a clinician of the old school, who read to us on the fundamentals of Homeopathy. In the second semester, this hour was supplanted by Dr. Nich- olas G. Frignito's introduction to Psychobiology. lt was here that we were required to submit weekly psychobiological auto-analyses, which Dr. Frignito accepted with subdued eagerness, possibly in the hope of finding a psychopathic personality in our midst. Pfi . , Roenfgenology . on rfflflhg d Ando Neurol choblolog APP e Ps Yrs? Pedlg. Ch-, edicine Y '- .gs Materia M' ffl tementortl ohne Ph S if ba E 5gr9ed 1'oxicolo9Y ysifdl Dm qc ghqs V . l enereal Disease Medlcal Jur'5P Uden In our Sophomore year we were exposed to a veritable horde of minor subjects, seven- teen to be exact. Dr. Everett H. Dickinson deliv- ered an interesting series of talks on the history and basis of surgery. Dr. Theodore C. Geary presented the essentials of good surgical physi- cal diagnosis of the acute abdomen as he puffed away on countless cigarettes under the No Smoking sign. On Fridays and Saturdays vari- ous men devoted their time to the teaching of both applied anatomy and minor surgery. This latter course was especially appealing to those Sophomores anticipating summer iobs as camp doctors. ln a series of well-presented talks illus- trated with slides of x-ray films, Dr. J. Stautfer Lehman covered the fundamentals of Roentgen- ology. Dr. Michele Viglione, in a succession of weekly lectures throughout the whole year, showed us how anatomy, physiology, chemistry, and the other basic sciences could be applied to the problems of clinical medicine. Associated with Pharmacology were three other courses which we were taking concomi- tantly. Dr. RaymondC Roving-Eyes l Seidel gave us voluminous notes on the toxicology of drugs. Dr. William G. Schmidt outlined for us the essen- tials of Pharmacy, pharmaceutical standards, and classes of drug preparations. Dr. Joseph W. Messey gave us practical instruction in the lost art of prescription writing with many asides on the found art of earning a dollar. One of the most interesting personalities we have ever met was Nathaniel Griffith, Esquire, a Philadelphia lawyer and a very good friend of Dr. Pearson, who was responsible for our edu- cation in medical jurisprudence. His course con- sisted primarily of discussion of the Acts of Penn- sylvania, how to save a lawyer's fee by writing your own will, and how a certain famous late President ruined the country. Dr. Henry Lafferty presented elementaay Obstetrics in the form of lectures which, although actually good, were at the time a bit over our heads. Luckily, we were not responsfble for the lecture material per se in the final examination. Instead, we had to commit to memory the defini- tions of an endless list of obstetrical terms, which we promptly forgot afterthe examEnation. Black Hank really had us scared. From the time he entered the classroom to the time he left, the room was as silent as a tomb. While he spoke, his eyes seemed to be fixed on everyone at once in his never-ending quest for an inattentive stu- dent to drag over the coals. Many of us were so engrossed in our struggle to look interested and wide awake that we didn't hear a word he said! As a sequel to our Freshman study of Home- opathy, Dr. Russell K. Mattern elucidated Home- opathic Materia Medica through a lapel micro- phone snugly tucked away under his lower lip. Memories of some of our classmates return to us along with those of the course, since many of our colleagues were compared with the homeo- pathic nosodes for purposes of memorization. The teaching of Neurology and Psychiatry was in the hands of Drs. Edward A. Steinhilber, B. Marvin Hand, and Charles S. Fox. Dr. Fox, known also as Squire, Foxy, or the Jedge, made himself notorious forever through his dic- tation of definitions of psychiatric terms in alpha- betical order. We had accumulated 431 terms and definitions and were starting the R's when the lectures were stopped because of a change in curriculum. Eight lectures in Venereal Disease were presented by Drs. Leander P. Tori and H. Earle Twining, the former assuming that we could take shorthand and the latter taking for granted that all Sophomores were accomplished dermatol- ogists. Our introduction to Pediatrics was given by Drs. Carl C. Fischer and John R. Noon, covering normal child growth and development, history taking, physical diagnosis, and normal infant feeding. Dr. Fischer impressed us with his straight- forward manner, Dr. Bad Boy Noon impressed us in many other ways. Physical Diagnosis was presented by Dr. Melville Goldsmith and his staFf. This was our biggest minor subiect, consisting of practice sessions, discourses and demonstrations. During these sessions we inspected, palpated, percussed, auscultated,and drew colored lines on the bodies of our classmates. Needless to say, the men and women were segregated, thereby providing our first encounter with current trends toward spe- cialization.Associated courses were Dr. Smiley Klinman's talks on Case Taking and Dr. De Shong's lectures on Special Symptoms and Signs. si i L3 ,.r ' VA zl' r - 'Q x .0 3 , ' I Thus, we plodded through our first two years with the little courses crammed into the crevices of the maior preclinical studies, the little courses hampering our concentration on 'H . :J the bug one: d f b f P h I a 7. ? .Yes, t ese were war s e ore at o ogy, :N -Q .11 177 Physiology, and Anatomy. But with the end of 6' O X i ' -0 our preliminary medical studies and the onset ' of our clinical work, we were to find the situa- P ,fit , O tion entirely reversed. 'l X-Z l x X .3 Rn: X 61 ,4-il f Till lllll:L:liNN Vllll I1 Il 'f-'f us ll mx ,gfhflgtnnruld l N , N nm., X m '- A pox on those teachers ,N I-TVX -Ki Who plunge all the bleachers MXN ln darkness by pulling the switch, ' SNK And frustrate the scribblings li an 1? fl f'n 3 6 ' x ' - - I-rch., if 5 , I A fl 53 1 t W4 f Of medical siblings 1 A H I . l RIS ' Who write down each wherefore X ll ' 1 l 1 A-f.'..'f:Q,, I mh1,..., and which. ' r a. m . N-Lyn! A , F run! ,in rox!-WF' ?,n Wym ,,nrlN' 1rnN ',,,..-I W 'B' i I, --r . Hu,1't ,mx ,mm rum . ,-f nn lu 1 i m,,,,:-lx ,, mmm Awl' ' , A- , - ' K wwf' h 1.U,,n. 0-hm: .man r k l. . X W, 1 1 ummsmfn 'V :uh , Wn,,,i t YY V , .41 f ' Q w 2 il ut U X 1.,,,l.,,l,'1, 1 N. fl, if THE CLINICAL YEARS is X .L f v X -awk ww ,C I 'Mm M DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE Charles L. Brown, M.D., F.A.C.P. Professor and Head, Division of Medicine and Deparfmenf of Medicine Lowell L. Lane, A.B., M.D., F.A.C.P. Professor of Clinical Medicine J. Antrim Crellirl, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. Clinical Professor of Medicine George D. Geckeler, M.D. Clinical Professor of Medicine 0. Henry Janfon, M.D. Associafe Professor of Medicine William Klinman, M.D. Associafe Professor of Medicine William Likolf, A.B., M.D. Associafe Professor of Medicine Michele Viglione, B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine Harold A. Taggart, M.D. Associafe Professor of Medicine Thomas J. Vischer, M.D. Associafe Professor of Medicine Nathaniel G. Berk, M.D. Assisfanf Professor of Medicine Albert M. Lupton, A.B., M.D. Assisfonf Professor of Medicine John H. Davie, M.D. Associafe in Medicine Morris Fiterman, A.B., M.D. Associafe in Medicine Warren H. Hoenstine, M.D. Associafe in Medicine Charles E. Lawson, B.S., M.D. Associofe in Medicine 5' 4 N fe. E' 1 1'-5 i 'ff . gf ', 1 7- in ' Q' 5, -X ,N V4 ' i 5 l Z,,,,. f L,,.!f - ' :f1.Q ' ,N, P . -5,11 -.3 - V- P sf' - 1 : ? nc s- -. X X L ' '- H, . . Q . . 1 ,f-1 L',.,,,m'1 U 'I , fe George A. Nitshe, Jr., A.B., M.D. Associate in Medicine Herbert M. Sharkis, A.B., M.D. Associate in Medicine Peter J. Warter, B.S., M.D. Associate in Medicine Theodore W. Battatarano, M.D. Lecturer in Medicine Dominic A. Donio, B.S., M.D. Lecturer in Medicine Nicholas G. Frignito, A.B., M.D. Lecturer in Medicine A. Joseph Hughes, M.D. Lecturer in Medicine Captain Julian Love, M.C., USN Lecturer in Medicine fTropical Diseasesl Joseph W. Post, M.D. Lecturer in Medicine, Medical Economics, Medical Ethics and Medical Public Relations Thomas F. Pugh, M.D. lecturer in Medicine George T. Ballard, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Harry E. Banghart, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Elizabeth B. Brown, A.B., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine leon M. Carp, B.A., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Howard C. DeShong, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Carl R. Fischer, Jr., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Donald R. Fitch, A.B., M.D. lnstructor of Medicine Director of Educational Program Foster E. Murphy, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Robert H. Linn, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Malcolm D. McFarland, B.S., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Daniel Joseph Marino, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine John F. Moran, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Martin Packman, Ph.G., B.S., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Franklin C. Massey, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Michael Peters, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Captain Clifford B. Powell, M.C., USN lnstructor in Medicine John P. SchaHner, B.S., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Nina D. Schall, A.B., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Raymond Q. Seyler, M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Frederick G. Stubbs, B.S., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine Albert E. Them, Jr., M.D. lnstructor in Medicine - UV' X 's C 'nur K J we W 9... o :Qc 0 NOS 1 '2'.,r ' J U C ,i J, --.-.-117 Q' 539. . .C ' 209: 5 .4 .04 ht' d 'C 1 I ., ,o 'A v S. ' 1 ,ww - ?' -s 'f' 3 5,5 4 m - 4 Q, ' I It it fl: 5 Q ,H 1 2 !?,- ,VN .1 'if' Q. .,.. T 'Q isa' wwf J. fi - .. f RR 1--g, DEPARTMENT OF DERMATOLOGY AND SYPHILOLOGY H. Earle Twining, A.B., M.D. Professor and Head of Department Paul C. Wittman, M.D. Professor of Clinical Dermatology and Syphilology Carroll F. Burgoon, Jr., M.D. Associate Professor C. J. Kleinguenther, B.S., M.D. Associate Herman Kline, M.D. Associate James Arnao, M.D. Instructor Livingston Chunn, M.D. Assistant in Dermatology and Syphilology DEPARTMENT OF GASTRO-ENTEROLOGY Charles Middleton Thompson, M.D. Professor and Head of Department George Lorenz, Jr., B.S., M.D. Clinical Professor Lester L. Bower, A.B., M.D. Clinical Professor Alfonso L. Pierro, A.B., M.D. Assistant Professor William S. Silverman, M.D. Assistant Professor Arden S. Turner, A.B., M.D. Assistant Professor Joseph S. Hepburn, Ph.D. Research Associate and Secretary Francesco D'Imperio, A.B., M.D. Instructor William J. Walker, B.S., M.D. Instructor DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY Edward A. Steinhilber, M.D. Professor and Head of Department Van B. Osler Hammett, A.B., M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Nicholas G. Frignito, A.B., M.D. Associate Professor in Neurology and Psychiatry Charles S. Fox, A.B., M.D. Assistant Professor in Neurology and Psychiatry B. Marvin Hand, M.D. Assistant Professor in Neurology and Psychiatry Paul A. Metzger, M.D. Assistant Professor in Neurology and Psychiatry George R. Netf, M.D. Assistant Professor in Neurology and Psychiatry L. Thomas Sooy, B.S., M.D. Lecturer in Neurology and Psychiatry Stephen J. Deichelmann, M.D. instructor in Neurology and Psychiatry Frank J. Robertson, M.D. lnstructor in Neurology and Psychiatry DEPARTMENT OF ONCOLOGY Stanley P. Reimann, A.B., M.D., Sc.D., F.A.C.P. Professor and Head of Department J. Staulfer Lehman, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.R. Associate Professor N. Velney Ludwick, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.R. Associate Professor David W. Hughes, M.D. instructor DEPARTMENT OF RADIOLOGY J. Stautfer Lehman, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.R. Professor and Head of Department N. Volney Ludwick, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.R. Professor of Radiology Harry D. Evans, Sr., M.D. Clinical Professor of Roentgenology Alfred E. Krick, B.S., M.D. Clinical Professor of Roentgenology Randall A. Boyer, M.D. Assistant Professor of Radiology Firmin T. Kepler, B.S., M.D. Instructor in Roentgenology Samuel V. Geyer, B.S., M.D. Assistant in Roentgenology and Radiology David Hughes, M.D. Assistant in Roentgenology and Radiology W. S. Serri, M.D. Assistant in Roentgenology James I.. Weatherwax, A.B., M.A. Assistant in Roentgenology DEPARTMENT OF THERAPEUTICS Garth W. laericke, M.D. Professor and Head of Department Jules J. Klain, B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Physiotherapy Russell K. Maltern, Ph.G., M.D. Associate Professor of Therapeutics Emanuel M. Almes, A.B., M.D. lnstructor in Therapeutics I.. M. Diemer, Jr., A.B., M.D. Instructor in Therapeutics Martin B. Kassell, B.S., M.D. Instructor in Therapeutics Nina D. Sehall, A.B., M.D. Instructor in Medicine and Therapeutics F. T. Kepler, B.S., M.D. instructor in Therapeutics J. George Sommer, A.B., M.D. Assistant in Medicine lResearch Therapeuticsl Alfans J. Muller, M.D. Assistant in Physiotherapy n .Y-7 5 A 1 . 3 I 'Rini' 'QUE' IQ. x T' The wards and clinics of Hahnemann Hos- pital and the affiliated hospitals formed the backgroundfor our Junior and Senior year as- sociations with the Department of Medicine. But briefly introduced to the subject of medicine in a didactic manner in the Sophomore lecture hall, we were very much on our own as we entered the Junior year. On the medical wards we were to assume the bearing, mien, and responsibili- ties of a physician. Sometimes after a particu- larly stormy morning of rounds it was difficult to look and act the physician, but the responsibili- ties, especially during a Saturday or Sunday evening, were soon learned only too well. New at the most fundamental aspects of medicine, we often found ourselves being pushed, sometimes even pursued, through the wards in an effort to acquaint us with the intricacies of Addison's dis- ease and carcinoma of the head of the pan- creas. Eventually we came to accept the chores of compiling detailed histories, physicals, sum- maries, blood work, urinalyses, as part of the new look in medical teaching. lnfiuencing this acceptance were Dr. Janton and Dr. Lupton, mentors of the men's and women's wards respec- tively. Aiding them and guiding the policy of the Department of Medicine was Dr. Brown, who will long be remembered for such provoking s s-'D-f' 4 2-1' .5 '- 'A Y' . - . I .. I .gin ' ' 'Lt if fs 3 'K o 1 1 .4 Lt llfqsf questions as the causes of gray hair and the concentration of potassium iodide in a satu- rated solution. Cecil and Yater and White were the source-books of our information, with addi- tions and corrections supplied by the patients in the wards and brought to our attention by the staff and by the residents, Dr. Bertino - late of California and often threatening to return, Dr. Gambescia, and Dr. Mason. In our Junior year, in addition to purely clinical work, we attended a series of lectures in Medicine. Dr. Geckeler and his staff, Drs. Lane, Davie, and Likoff, lectured on cardiovascular disease. Dr. Crellin, in a truly memorable and well dramatized group of eight lectures, indoc- trinated us in diseases of the chest. Explained by Dr. Eberhard and Dr. Turner were differences in human habitus, diets, gall bladder drainages, gastric analyses and feces analyses, and their application in the diagnosis and treatment of peptic ulcer, gastric malignancy, gall bladder disease, and colitis. The department of Gastro- enterology also provided us with a completely unexpected series of questions in the mid-year examination. Dr. Nitshe lectured on hematologic disorders, Captain Love on tropical medicine, Dr. Burgoon on dermatology, and Dr. Battafa- rano and his staff on diabetes and endocrinol- ogy. 1' ' ll n if , l r The C.P.C.'s on Wednesdays with Dr. Gregory and the tumor clinics on Tuesdays with Dr. Ludwick rounded out this part of our study of medicine at Hahnemann and taught us to await more and more eagerly the histologic diag- noses as supplied by Dr. Lehman from his per- usal of the x-ray films. Our affiliations at Mt. Sinai Hospital lwith Dr. Mintz as director, and Yetta Samovar as hostess and keeperi and at Philadelphia Gen- all against tuberculosis, the missed diagnoses of lung cancer, the awful surgeons, and the failure of the average American to eat a substantial breakfast. Gastroenterology clinic kept us busy with gall-bladder drainages galore, with only the announcement that Dr. Thompson had been named Professor of Gastroenterology to inspire us. Dr. Geckeler continued to deny the presence of murmurs heard so clearly by the student, and taught at least one in each section that auricular eral l'la5Pllal with Dr- Tl amP5a f Dr- Ballard, fibrillation is not an indication for digitalis. Drs. and Dr- Ellzabelll Brown, Pfavlaea aPPa lUn'l'a5 Steinhilber, Hand, and Frignito directed our ac- for more study and decidedly more relaxation. fivities in Neurology Clinic, where we aaain Wlih DV- Fitch in Charge' a Hnew ana Pla' tried to gather some knowledge in a field in Qfesslvau P a9 am al Clinical lnsifudlan and which we were all in arrears. At clinic's end, we practice was inaugurated in our Senior year.The were apr to suspect anyone who Ilcome from a aUl'Palle 'i departments became auf training, good family of being a constitutional psycho- battle and proving grounds. Here we were to li- - f ' 1 pat ic in error. get ourlast formal training in Medicine as under- A new wrinkle in the clinic scene was ll-ie 9 aaUaie5- DVS- Twlnlna and BUl'9aa ' allemPl' diagnostic clinic with Dr. Fitch and a panel of ed to tevch vt leasl a recognizable Pfam-'ncla' physicians to guide us. Here we spent long after- tion of the names of the dermatologic conditions. noons raking l-,islories and doing pliysiools on In Hematology clinic we were briefed on the paiiems presenrina pathology of yaryina de- leukemias and osteosclerosis, many of us also arees from the Common Cold to aaromeaaly. pily learning how to make capsules of cobalt chlo- the poor Unforfunafe lady who slapped in one ride for one of Dr. Nitshe's favorite patients. Dr. afiernoon Hiosi To get my lolood pressure iolrenffl Balialafana fried to l'elP U5 aPPlY au' feeding Dr Fitch directed medical education in general and lecture knowledge to the interpretation of in fhe Senior year, integrating our studies with blood sugar findings and glucose tolerance tests a series of Grand Conferences eaoln Saturday fo and ultimately to the treatment of the diabetic which soon men as Drs. Lukensl Aeaerier, patient. Dr. Crellin again waxed thespian Herman, and many others Contributed. Mi-:ul WSW .f s CINE Case Report Q dwg ggi Q i ,X .NLC foo Q I .0 Qu ET A , is eo .5 ef fs rg afalgl i is .fe or sf' if fi -,OO sv ' OO Yi O 6 Q ' ' We r X A 2? N ' fi U . ' 7 - ' l 'l I 23 .f l-Z3 f i -xo ' 4 wax? ff 1 1 cfs-I 1 lf Q ' V ii - il l X jx V Z. i l W 'Q 3 . Dykes! O ' o xzf M ' ,, l x I - 4 ' 1 1 .QNX if W Affiliated services played an important role in our medical training, one-third of our time being spent at one of three associated hospitals. Of these, each had its own desirable qualities. At Mount Sinai Hospital, the teaching program was well organized under the directorship of Dr. Sol Mintz, the students having ample time and clinic patients for practical application of the practice of medicine and its sub-specialties. At Harrisburg and Wilmington Memorial Hospi- tals, the teaching program was somewhat diff- erent, emphasis being placed on the study of in-patients and requiring night and week-end duty. Nevertheless, these institutions appealed strongly to unmarried students, since sleeping facilities and good food were provided. The pretty nurses were also an attraction. Those who were assigned to Harrisburg Hospital were for- tunate in being able to make ward rounds with many noteworthy physicians whom they might not otherwise have met in the course of their training. Dr. Childerhose's inspired teaching will long be remembered by those students fortunate enough to have had the opportunity to be near him. At Wilmington Memorial, Dr. Hooker's round tables on microscopic pathology were noteworthy, not only for their educational value but also for the game he promulgated, descrip- tively called flip for a coke. This hospital was ,f' Z believed to hold a slight margin over Harrisburg because of the presence of a television set and well-stocked refrigerator in the house officers' quarters. Probably the most fascinating affiliation was Hamburg Sanatorium, where we spent one week in groups of two. This was without doubt our closest encounter with individualized instruc- tion. Here we saw many patients with tubercu- losis and other lung disease. We observed many fluoroscopies and bronchoscopies, and literally hundreds of x-ray films. We were shown the latest therapeutic techniques in the treatment of tuberculosis, and we were given the opportunity to evaluate their efficacy. By the end of the week, we had met the whole staff individually, each of whom covered some particular phase of chest disease. Dr. Archibald R. Judd, director of the institution, personally saw to it that we were well briefed in this all-important phase of med- icine. On Saturday morning we finished our week by assisting him and his surgical staff in the performance of lobectomies, pneumonec- tomies, or thoracoplasties. In general, the twelve weeks on Medicine were well spent. Just as the Junior year was planned to teach us the fundamentals, the Senior year was efficaciously geared to the presentation of the more practical aspects of the art of Medicine. ' hi V! I 1 .00 Q47 9 91:5 . i E S is , fs f - 2 .. Xxx, t ail G LQ ff' 1: -K - i f S ff! W K 7,! l I Q -47 rpm -M gg: W , xz,.N,.X ' fs- or f ...Ah xxx., L, M, v 5 . 1 f Jsai wr . 7 , -4 ' 451' I f' Q.. O X i f X CONSTANTINE -Xxx counrrzsv or rx-ua 'fb HERING FUND QQ 'W i .db -- Ah 51 H F I 'i ,Y Vw N Q5 1 1 GIVING PNEUMO :sf slmpu: Arran You DONE IT 1000 TIMES gf 1 J, J 1- , ef J. ! , an 1 i ,+A 5 S F x 5 P 1 1 x x , , . v gs 3 3,7 Q' Y' . ....-ul s -QE, s. - I , 4 , Mg!! '33 1 11 Q :M A :v iii ' - Q l . 'lim 4 .5 ,1,, ,, ,f . 1 x 'ilk' In ' ' xx xi, f . 'X 1 Q . 5 :l I .QT 'ii , .. b A ' ' y -QC? i U , , ff mv, vb-A ' 15525-au , 1 - I VZ, A W HQ! I 1 1 - D'L 4 ...,--' ' - ' , .1 ' I . A i s' .1 i. ,ffl Mi ...A 2 4. in ,,fa,,e 4'x x l l,.p-mg, lx 5-. -A SALE 1 x .- E I 'fr' p.f'1 I . I I., 5 gf lr .fi I, A' 4 I if n. r'f3 U 0 oQ A . 7 F-gi , 932 2 -' '.-r Lx' A- u , W , A- ., , .Ai A- Q . 1' , P I - fi' . . '- f Tm- grf,:f f ' ,, .1 'W ' , gh-. 1' B A Y:- lI.I'nZ. I f. - vw Q , -1 I ' l K 'I ig, Wi., . tbl- H 2' ' .. X K 'rpg lu 7 M 3, ii' ,ff 5-Q,,f's4. 'g,f1,:J4. . SJW' . . -, . K-. . ,. ' . I-' , ,,. .furxr ' fy... .f 1: ' -'rqwx . K ..,,'o V ,nail 4 ., . rg :I , ' 1 K ., .. 4'2z5.M . 144- ' . . .-- ,. --...,..-. . .41 4900 E? . A+. E ,l ,.I:!. ,V1 ... ,Q 1 -..QQ 1, 2.42.5 f a QL, Mybf N -PQ 1, - of X 1 L: M, i 'il-.- -Q7 sn' lf' xxx XX Xi ,iw eff i C I ' A , f' ft. 1 I I 1 I y 'ff . I N X . ffx' V. ,r ff' , ' Q X A . - ' f lx X '13 f 1,1 DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY William L. Martin, M.D. Professor and Head of the Division of Surgery Thomas L. Doyle, M.D. Professor of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Theodore C. Geary, M.D. Clinical Professor of Surgery Eugene F. Carpenter, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery Charles P. Bailey, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery Axel K. Olson, M.D. Associate Professor of Neurosurgery William Y. lee, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery Alexander E. Pearce, M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery David D. Northrop, M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Alexander W. Ulin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery William G. Kirkland, M.D. Associate in Surgery George J. Rilling, M.D. Associate in Proctology E. Dallett Sharpless, M.D. Associate in Surgery Frank Tropea, Jr., M.D. Associate in Surgery Joseph Kassab, M.D. Lecturer in Surgery Frank H. Murray, M.D. Lecturer in Proctology Ernest L. Rosato, M.D. lnrlnrar in Prnrfology J. Winslow Smith, M.D. Lecturer in Surgery Robert P. Glover, M.D. Instructor in Thoracic Surgery Paul J. Grotzinger, M.D. Instructor in Surgery Thomas J. 0'Neill, M.D. Instructor in Thoracic Surgery George E. Thomas, M.D. instructor in Proctology William C. Thoroughgood, M.D Instructor in Surgery 4-1- DEPARTMENT OF ORTHOPEDICS AND FRACTURES Edwin O. Geckeler, M.D. Professor and Head of Department Donald T. Jones, M.D. Assistant Professor J. Hunter Smith, ll, M.D. Lecturer in Fractures Maxwell F. White, M.D. Lecturer in Fractures Richard K. White, M.D. lnsfrucfor in Orthopedic Surgery Kenneth R. Weston, M.D Assistant in Orthopedics and Fractures DEPARTMENT OF CTO LARYNGOLOGY Charles B. Hollis, M.D. Professor and Head of Deparfment Joseph R. Criswell, M.D. Clinical Professor of Oto Laryngology Carroll F. Haines, M.D. Clinical Professor of Oto Laryngology Albert V. Hallowell, M.D. Associate Professor of Laryngology and Rhmology John H. NlcCutcheon, M.D Associate Professor of Laryngology and Rhmology Raymond McGrath, M.D. Associate Professor of Laryngology and Rhmology W Herbert P. I-larkins, M.D. Associate in Laryngology and Rhmology ..--P W. Vernon Hostelley, M.D Lecturer in Laryngology and Rhmology Joseph V. F. Clay, Jr., M.D lnstructor in Ofo-Laryngology E If V L4 1 r Q 'i - 3 i Q. 1 Us r J C' Y' H ua DEPARTMENT OF OPHTHALMOLOGY Harry S. Weaver, Jr., M.D. Professor and Head of Deparfmenf William S. Sulherland, M.D. Clinical Professor Henry J. Kohler, M.D. Associafe John Cossa, M.D. Associafe John K. K. Finley, M.D. Associafe --Fa ' John B. Conwell, M.D. K lnslrucfor Kenneth W. Beniamin, M.D. Assisfanf Michael Curcio, M.D. Assisfanl li W Carroll R. McClure, M.D. Asslsfanl DEPARTMENT or unoLoGY fy , 4 Edward W. Campbell, M.D. Professor and Head of the Deparfmenf William C. Hunsicker, M.D. Associale Professor of Urology Horace' L. Weinstock, M.D. Associale Professor of Urology Leander P. Tori, M.D. Associale in Urology William Ellis, M.D. Demonsfrafor of Urology Gerhard J. Gislasen, M.D. Demonslrafor of Urology QWW . l l 5 ul: ' 'f'-. ll ff. A5982 - 1 W, jf . Surgery has always been one of the more popular services among the students of Hohne- mann. Apparently everybody wants to cut. The junior clinical clerkship, under the direction of Dr. Alex Ulin, attempted to provide us with a thorough background in pathologic physiology and a good understanding of the proper approach, evaluation, and management of the surgical patient. The service consisted of a twelve-week period -three weeks each de- voted to general, special, and private surgery, and surgery at the Mount Sinai Hospital. There were also twelve weekly round table discussions and we were required to attend semi-weekly morning lectures throughout the entire school year. The thrill of scrubbing for an operation and being permitted to cut ligatures was short-lived. Holding on to the ends of retractors for long hours took much of the glamor out of surgery as we had envisioned it. The late hours spent in the hospital working up new admissions disillusioned us even further. Q Special surgery consisted of Orthopedics and Urology. Orthopedics, under the mentor- ship of Drs. Edwin O. Geckeler and Donald T. l You just don't know your anatomyl J Jones and Maxwell F. l Tell me all about bone re- pair! J White, introduced us to the essentials of fractures and bone disease. In Urology, Dr. Campbell and his stat? presented the fundamen- tals of diseases of the genito-urinary system. Dr. Campbell's outline condensation of the cream of the subiect was especially note- worthy. We shall never forget his tumor, T.B. and stone. Three weeks were spent at Mount Sinai, giving us a chance to catch up with our sleep and our games of hearts, and, incidentally, to learn howthings are done in another hospital. Here the conferences, discussions, CPC's and case reviews added considerably to our surgical experiences. 'fyffi-' ,APE ' ibn- -191 ' . 5 1 n A 5 V Q 4 Y' , I' x It -ing-.1 ' ff- .ff xg .i--I -.es Q l 'W' vi fn: 31 --f-ex fa-A -if' -.1 Q ' Q 1 x I - I fa 4 t, fag 1 2 AY.. r i 2 :JI gp-.avnr nfs., ankmd to . . f,.........-,-s--1--1 i 1, X N In our Senior year, the program was di- rected by Dr. Paul Grotzinger, whose congenial relations with us, despite his position, popular- ized him among the students as a gentleman and a scholar. Almost all of our time was spent in Hahnemann's clinics. Here we saw the type of surgical patient we would be likely to meet in practice. ln surgical clinic, we learned to per- form minor surgical procedures and to dress wounds. With Doc Zaydon's assistance and Miss Fine's, Doctor, do you have a patient? to prod us on, we did our utmost to work both thor- oughly andllrapidly. In G.U. Clinic, Drs. Ellis and Gislason stressed office urology. We learned that the tray of glasses near the sink was not for thirsty people. With the help of the residents, Drs. Marconis and Troyen, we learned to pass the urethral sound without a sound. fEd. note: Cornli Dr. Tori directed our review of venereal diseases in this clinic at the same breakneck speed which characterized him in our Sopho- more year. The Race and Vine aborigines fur- nished copious clinical material for this phase. Q' L. 'V l '1M '3PM ' L if N 'LA it -M V lx I 'A-MTu PM ni- .. U c, K+ ii - l l 'i In the Orthopedics Clinic, we questioned and examined patients to the inharmonious ac- companiment of the electric plaster-cast cutter. We found Dr. Eddie Geckeler's informal chats on every-day orthopedics very helpful. Dr. Jones continued to berate us for our meager knowledge of anatomy.. Four weeks were devoted to the other spe- cialties, namely, Plastic Surgery, Proctology, Chest Surgery, Otolaryngology, Eye, Anes- thesia, and accident ward. This phase of surgery was known as the four weeks in the salt mines. The work never let up. Besides our regular clinic work, we were to read 400-odd pages in Boies' Otolaryngology, 500 pages in May's Diseases of the Eye, 75 pages in Cole and Elman for chest clinic, 150-odd pages in Bacon for proctology, and 75 pages in Christopher for plastic surgery. Also, we were to review our anesthesiology notes, to be on call for anesthesia from 8:00. A.M. to 11:00 P.M. for a full week, to work in the accident ward from 5 to 12 for one week, and to write a comprehensive research paper on some surgical topic. The rest of the time was our own. .NS l aa-a.,s. ...,, A 'wp-XYS nn' Flclaf HISTORY , fi f 4 E.N.T. clinic was held each afternoon and was preceded by an oral quiz, during which Drs. Hollowell and Clay took special pains to catch the slackers who had failed to peruse the textbook the night before. Dr. McGrath stressed the ay-cute diseases. The rest of the clinic time was spent burying ourselves in the throats of the patients and having our diagnoses con- firmed by the staff men. When nobody was looking, these men slipped us some nuggets in special therapy. f This isn't in the book but the way I would do it. . . J Dr. Weaver's eye clinic gave us contact with a subject heretofore sadly neglected. After years of having thrown at us such terms as pinguecula, coloboma, synchysis and phlycten- ular, we were finally learning not only how to pronounce them but also what they meant. Dr. Finley introduced us to some of the ivory tower work being done in research ophthalmology. Dr. Cossa stressed eye diseases which could be diagnosed and treated in general practice. Dr. Weaver, in his weekly sessions, straightened us out in our thinking along ocular paths in gen- eral. The course in ophthalmology, although much too vast didactically for thorough absorp- tion, did give us an awareness of the eye as an important organ. The four weeks spent in affiliated hospitals were probably the most enioyable. As in Medi- cine, the type of experience varied with the in- stitution. At Harrisburg Hospital, the fracture clinic with Drs. Stauffer and Berkheimer always had ample teaching material. Unforgettable here was the towering Dr. Kunkel, whose two- hour discussions of various surgical topics were Y masterpieces of erudition. To Dr. Clarence E. Moore we are deeply grateful for the time and effort he devoted during operations, rounds and conferences to student teaching. At Wilmington Memorial Hospital, the pro- gram was similar, the students gleaming gems as they followed Drs. Spackman, Mino and Murphy in the operating room and on the floors. Noteworthy at this hospital were the lengthy operations performed, whether they were head- and-neck dissections or herniorrhaphies. At Mount Sinai Hospital, virtually all of the work was done in the Out-Patient Departments. Here we had a field day removing foreign bodies, excising sebaceous cysts and moles, suturing wounds, and evaluating new hospital admissions. lt was during one of these surgical procedures under local anesthesia that the pa- tient became cold and clammy and developed a shallow pulse when a student whispered aloud to his operating buddy, Jeez! Are your hands shaking! Urology conferences were held weekly with the benevolent Heidelberger, Dr. Muschat, and his assistants. CPC's were run with the student participating actively. Dr. Edeiken and his excellent collection of films made the X-ray conferences most instructive. Only in the surgical conferences did we take a passive part, listening with awe as the various staff men criti- cized each other, both constructively and de- structively, in accordance with an apparently well-established tradition of Mount Sinai. Thus did we run the gamut of the Surgery Department. By the end of the twelve weeks we were convinced that we had had it. The final section exam verified this fact. .f Y V-:il-Y., Q, ' 14, --I . '5 ln-ec. F' '3 ? K Yfr i Ai x x an-1+ 'T N lx. ,, ,, X s 4 N. F ,. ,, W mr S if v 21 X S J 4 QR, 5. in I V! 7 s ss 1 if 4 F 1 ,' I f.-.. 1 ig ff! ' u P X o Y X 5 w 3' in X l R ix lm ..! ll f A? .x I gl 1 . Lfegu wk 1 xp K. NO NO O OTH CH RLIE in 'Q' L.. 1 iiii ll, Q f a. ' ug A C fa 7 I ,F of x DEPARTMENTS OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Newlin F. Paxson, M.D. Professor and Head of the Division of Women and Department of Obstetrics Bruce V. MacFadyen, M.D. Professor and Head of the Department of Gynecology Henry I.. Crowther, M.D. Clinical Professor of Obstetrics Henry D. Laflerty, M.D. Clinical Professor of Obstetrics Albert Mutch, M.D. Clinical Professor of Obstetrics Harry D. Evans, Jr., M.D. Associate Professor of Obstetrics Robert M. Hunter, M.D. Associate Professor of Obstetrics Desiderio A. Roman, M.D. Associate Professor of Gynecology Joseph N. Seitchik, M.D. Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology Raymond W. Cronlund, M.D. Associate in Obstetrics and Gynecology Lees M. Schadel, Jr., M.D. Associate in Obstetrics Arthur H. Hartley, M.D. Lecturer in Gynecology Paul C. Moock, M.D. Lecturer in Obstetrics 2 ff, WA Arthur W. Wacldington, M.D. Lecturer in Gynecology William G. Wosnack, M.D. Lecturer in Obstetrics Robert P. Gouldin, M.D. Demonstrator in Gynecology George H. Benzon, 3d, M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics Nicholas Canuso, M.D. lnstructor in Gynecology Allen R. Kannapel, M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics Daniel J. McCarron, M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics Dominick J. Pontarelli, M.D. Instructor in Gynecology William A. Reishtein, M.D. Instructor in Gynecology Beatrice P. Troyan, M.D. Instructor in Gynecology Y rt it came to Obstetrics and Gyne- i were like bridegrooms, for probably iaior branch of Medicine was as vague 1ds at its onset as was this facet, the vomen. Toward the conclusion of our -ar, iust as we were beginning to be- we had a fair grasp of the concepts of an entirely new vocabularly and view- oded upon us, version and extraction, application, internal-external rotation, K , - Q , p ij if YF- ! i 4? li ,SLE ' I pelvic diaphragm versus pelvic floor, Schmitz II versus Broder's lll, retroflexion versus retrover- sion, and so on. At that time we sat in terror and listened to, And the next definition is . . . Woe to the latecomer, Black Hank's favorite ob- iect of scorn! Also, during that fearful Sopho- more year,we hustled to class early on Saturday morning to hear Dr. MacFadyen dictate his con- cepts of the normal female. I I g,y, 4...--.. ll- 1' it 1 i ak J' I5 I L . fi it l-lii i I I ft 8 ll . .,, 4 vt. ii By the beginning of the clinical years, the dust and debris were settling, and as each sec- tion took its turn on the obs-gyn floor, the muddle of female physiology and pathology seemed to clear almost to the point of making sense. But Obstetrics in the Junior year was ac- tually one full month of hard work - four weeks on continuous call without regard for hours or health. The thrill of watching new life born made us feel more like physicians than did any of our other experiences. We learned, we yawned, we beefed - and our happiness knew no bounds after a quick delivery and the sub- sequent opportunity to sleep. Gynecology iunior clinical clerkship was spent almost entirely in the O. R., where we scrubbed for Baldy-Webster's, Fothergills, sacro- uterine plications, myomectomies, and hyster- ectomies. , .Wild .X 2 MJ l -'I V- Q ,.....1P , ' . In the last year at Hahnemann, Obstetrics consisted of three weeks at an affiliated hospital where practical obstetrics was performed by the student. Those at West Jersey learned how to manipulate an internal podalic version, those at Belmont practiced the art of urinalysis, and those at St. Vincent's spent a good part of their time dodging long-frocked nurses. Gynecology students travelled throughout the city each morning to clinics at Jewish Hospital, St. Agnes, and Women's, where many discovered for the first time that things are sometimes done dif- ferently elsewhere. The afternoons were spent in Hahnemann's O.P. D. treating P.I.D. Doubtless, the most laudable feature of the Department of Women was the amount of mate- rial we learned about the normal and abnormal female in the short time allotted. Few of us may become specialists in this field, but none of us will have left medical school without firm ground-f ing and excellent clinical background in Ob- stetrics and Gynecology. HSI, i' 5 s. 1 3 if 'IK , r, Iii 1 'ITF ff if-we g '1 it 5--C ef ,W Kr 'U lv K I l l no -q 3- , - s INF NT FORMULA ROOM Y-., ,,. ' .I 'A A ' A g ,Q mx ll V g 1. V., , -H it . W, . '1 . ' so . 7 Z 2 .1 I' -' , I fffff 'Lf' Carl C. Fischer, M.D. , Professor and Head, Division of Pediatrics Horst A. Agerty, M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics William P. Gregg, M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics John R. Noon, Jr., M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics Daniel F. Downing, M.D. Assistant Professor in Pediatrics Joseph Bitman, M.D. Demonstrator in Pediatrics Pasquale J. C. Gambescia, M.D. Demonstrator in Pediatrics Harry B. Mark, M.D. Demonstrator in Pediatrics Albert A. Carp, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Wesley B. Fox, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Milton Graub, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Frederick W. Jarvis, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Salem H. Lumish, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Joseph L. Witkowski, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Karl H. Ziegenhorn, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics fit f s-Q 4 .' 1 Our formal study of Pediatrics began to- ward the end of our Sophomore year with a lec- ture course by Drs. Fischer and Noon. Dr. Fischer, with the help of lantern slides, gave us eighteen years of Growth and Development in six hours. Dr. Noon spent a portion of his allotted time dis- cussing the differences between human and cow milk. Although he could only skim the surface, we found that it all boiled down to the difference in the containers. He also showed us the proper way of holding a baby while taking a bottle - the baby, that is. During our Junior year, one lecture a week was given by Drs. Fischer, Noon, and Downing, and guests from other departments. Dr. Noon, who gave most of the lectures in an inimitable style with numerous inimitable fthank God!! jokes, also prepared our final examination. Needless to say, the exam was rather bizarre and gave virtually no indication of the student's knowledge of the subiect matter. The clinical clerkship consisted of six weeks at Hahnemann, Mt. Sinai, and St. Luke's, During this period, daily conferences were held with Drs. Agerty, Gambescia, Downing, and Redman. Tuesdays were highlighted by Dr. Fischer's Grand Rounds. This meant his firing questions at the student assigned to the case with machine- gun rapidity as well as machine-gun deadliness. Clinical clerks frequently offered prayers for their patients' speedy recovery and discharge before the following Tuesday. Dr. Downing read our histories, making comments as only he could do. A favorite of his was, Why in hell didn't you ask the mother for the baby's formula! Or, Pupils react to light and on accommodation, dammit! Dr. Downing and Dr. Agerty also conducted daily rounds which were very informative. For each patient assigned to us we were required to do a C.B.C. and urinalysis regard- ,Q 57' less of whether or not the work had been done previously. Some of us will confess, under duress, that the parallelism between their blood and urine values and those gotten by the hospital laboratory was not entirely coincidental. We saw many cases of rare congenital heart disease, infrequently seen tumors, and strange blood dyscrasias, but we did not see too many of the more common childhood diseases onthe wards at Hahnemann. The Senior year gave us opportunities for out-patient experience. Three weeks were spent at Fife-Hamill Health Center CBabies Hospitalj. The remaining three weeks were divided among Hahnemann, Philadelphia General, St. Luke's, and Municipal Hospitals. Preceding our excursions to the various out- lying hospitals were conferences at Hohnemann from 8:30 to 9:30 A.M. with Drs. Gregg and Whitman. Dr. Gregg's discussions, although not practical from the National Board point of view, did give us many nuggets for the successful practice of pediatric medicine. Once a week, Dr.Whitman lectured to us on infectious diseases. 'x 'i s 395 The Class of 1950, the 103rd Class of Hahnemann, arrived in September 1946, only a few days after the induction of the new Dean, in reality, then, this class and the Dean were Freshmen in Hahnemann together, and it is as- sured these four years together will remain a most cherished period in the lives of those who have lived them. The vicissitudes of life and many otheryfactors are responsible for the regrettable loss of a large number of this class, thirty-three who started this long iourney will not be with us in the glorious finish. For those who could not continue we have the fondest of memories and wish they might have shared with us the ioys and satisfactions of this Senior year. For many of those who stayed, these have seemed hard and difficult years, yet the memories of educational pains -to an extent, like labor pains - will not remain vivid, but, with the passage of the years, will be remembered only as accomplishment to- ward a fuller and happier life. In retrospect these times will seem by comparison to have been easy and less demanding than the active life of service to humanity ahead. The strength of character and the seasoning arising from these formative years will have enabled you to carry on the responsibility of a professional life in an admirable way, and in a manner which will engender the pride of your Alma Mater. ln the words of a great educator many years ago, soon it will be your privilege to take a stand in the professional arena and to contend for the honors of public confidence, and we know you will not forget that you have left friends here, who will watch with solicitude your career in Iife. You have done your iob well and in noble fashion under difficult circumstances, and you have the deep sense of satisfaction that you have shared the responsibility, the work and actual accomplishment of all of the fine things that have happened to Hahnemann in this most important period in her history. In extending my sincere congratulations to the class of 1950, I take pleasure in declaring my high esteem and regard for each of you and wish for you a happy, successful and prosperous life. Charles l. Brown, M.D., Dean . 11 T4 V047-V Q -QF- , 1 EQLQWQ .h harm -ww . ' 5 a-- ,- V r,-Q22 lx ' 5 ff ' 1 Y - H E GA H '-1 A I K h :Z 9 K J K'-Ajax - L ,A 'WHL 1 f - - , 1-4-rffw 'f- 953,11 5 1 A . ' .m 5 ' ., . . J 0 Q x ' '- 5 , XQ' KYSQXXO 5 ' XX :md x 4 'Q' hh Ku LA lh sb gf2'dkh'S4f5 M J Qtr ' c en, ' ' ' 'mg R - A -li' . A'scuXapxu5'M va x mo my abxhtffiju ' UHF A Qu me mhxg X E , i ly . J f hj' W 71 .NXTTXQN 0 D ,X K M t 0 in .hs x N in Q 9' T X QL . ' 'U B Yhxs stipxhuon wreckon m J' A 1 f cqna dcarmmc asm pax-emi o sham ny ' I XmiQrr'hc'vc hx. YXCCYSQURSW!!fK1LXlXX'dXY w H n uvmbw1hCrS'xtoKeachxhrm me r x ' '. . X .x V .b 'K NQ 'X 1 .rv Xmv fp' ' f' A ' 'hfit'-. 1 f ' A f-1 'ff .- - f. -- J fs' . 'x an 'X X N hai .focouhlg Q hge t x fwfuyhrx-V . Q -.. In 6,3 fi f ' whouu 1 xml , X u XD' ' sy 1 ' ' 3 Suhsmwf' Y' ' ' 1 S , ' 'hkhupuv l L W A L 'R 5 . fy Xx x N P0131 teacbprfh ASSA:'f'f- A '-HQ 'Q A A 1 ILAJNW, A N X x . DW-L1 X,Q.'Hh,Q-, fwm :L-rs ,lzwl gffou 'iff .-ysrcmvcfrgqznren ' ng U M ni llf7l'lgjQ f'-fjizclyvmfrzt I vwrsrclkir' J ' h , Ns?-HLXNXT L, ' N X YXW' '5 M- 5 x IIS :1rLfL4'f'10115'U X71-UQIJ78 vous. I :MN .qwc 7.15 9515. 55 to -any .mf x y z75Kt'I'l nw' .fyqgfzsf any .WQ5 ff' I rl wzfl nvfbqwz 10 a woman a frgiag Kg prwrufc g ,gxip . A 4. , NZ.. X wh g1QQtf...1gY. eg 1 , U 2 Q U hw W 2 h A h swf!-hf1,' 1 K 4.LXEjLT1 xmyxxgy, ,113 h 3:5 ff, ' f mwns ftIfZ7!'!,l undn'tf6,.sfov1e,fur H111 p-aw 14:5 Iv uc 'ff ' SN-j Q are xgmrii Vngzis pf N515 gvfk, lnfctulufimj fwzwg lhifm qs' fb! Eryfft? sqf tfk' .mf Q' um zzlimzznfxvm x 1' . A Efforqplzqf ' 5 'F f ornmlef qj'femgen Lf'5ML'a.f 1 f'-', my. jvfpfiiffiqryxf S.. ? :th lyfgarlngrt , I - 471.4 J ,-' f ro vc 5-vvxm -if' 3T '15 :li I ,R Yflfif, 1 fi dx' 254 ' 152-:ff ww 1 gi, W .1 N h xxnvkohtcd 'R' Xl A Q , xhepractice X' ' ' Y g- men in ah tinyrS'. 32' V ' vxmohte this Oath ,hflydfif-fj'6.f 1 T- -'Q Not . 1 'hr . Joseph Dinsmore Alter Rawalpindi, West Punjab, Pakistan . . . Westminster College, Boston University .. . MEDIC Staff . . .Junior Internship, Philadelphia State Hospital, Philadelphia., Pa .... Internship, Huntington Memorial Hospital, Pasadena, Calif .... General Practice. . V Ov A 4 7 ' X O u ik, x. , . f 1'1bN 'hy' A . s. t .. 4145- . x s H., , . - -I Ray Edward Andrews Mapleton Depot, Pa .... The Citadel, Juniata College, B.S .... MEDIC StaFf . . . Junior Internship, Harrisburg Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa .... Internship, York Hospital, York, Pa .... General Practice or Surgery. A Louis Harry Averbach 6228 Christian Street, Philadelphia 43, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B. . . . President, Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Literary Editor, MEDIC . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . Internship, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. Milton Avol 'I986 Washington Avenue, Bronx 57, N. Y .... City College of New York, B.S. . . . Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Editor-in-Chief, MEDIC . . . lnterfraternity Council . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . President, MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . Psychiatric Forum . . . Internship, Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, Los Angeles, Calif. . . . General Practice, Neurosurgery. X. 1 Y .gg I' ,,, 'vw , ' .. Theodore George Balbus 4305 Byrd Street, Flushing, Long Island, N. Y. . . Phi Lambda Kappa . . . William Osler Society . Internship, Danville State Hospital, Danville, Pa. . . Hospital, New York, N. Y .... Internal Medicine. . Columbia College, A.B .... Art Editor, MEDIC . . . Junior . Internship, Queens General ,,,,, 'Fax A Mary Gizelle Baran 'l3'I Broad Street, Beaver Meadows, Pa .... Pennsylvania State College, B.S. . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Choral Society . . . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Junior Internship, State Hospital, Haileton, Pa .... Internship, Sacred Heart Hospital, Allentown, Pa .... General Practice. Q4 S L, K 4 I 5 1 'E' . 1 sk 'G ,f W 1 .1 sg, 123 f' 4 ws, N 4 I lm' '1 'r I f -v N UQ A ' , .... r,-.A 4 T 1, . ,-gy-V ' -' 1. ' ,- li,Xlft.Q,l U ' .' f , .1 in 7 5 L j. -' V ',,'f'32tw,uv32 ,, T59 Q ll.g'f,,r.,fw. Qt A . , If lui will N Ll ,, . x lf' V 'ij 5,7 1 ' ti -M if . 2.4 A. ,A - . , - ,,,.l I sv' .- , -.-1-gi, ' G 'tag . lr' - ,fff-fa r , , -. ' - 1.-tl'f'lz'-.ln -- ' .ff'4'? 5 ': ' , , V 5'-1 . '-' A it-. , 1. f, , A f.':,,ff -, '- ,qv , N rx. , 1 , ' fi W Q. , ., t . V - reefs, w if-1 Q r- Q, f- - - - ' ,.--r - .1-.f.-4,1 b, -A fu. - - I fs ' fl V , :A 111 . , - 2, Xl 'M 1 -2,- ,. f 4, I 7 ,., . ,, ,, s. V '.5',1:.Y . , A . .- A .Raw y N -' A. Q I I 7 .3 ' . ': :JV -, 1 ' .,, . ,iglgf 'f F' ' , wo. . 1 , - f - 1' . 'K ,A -' 'S '. f .' 14 A , F. 9.4 .. - .' ' 1, ' ' 4 rl ,, A ' fn' . A ' --f ,, ,- :qc , 1' 1 ' Y A ' ' , -2.7. .eg , Y 'tt' . N, f -a I, .al .. A ' .Airman f., Harold David Batt 1595 Boulevard, New Haven, Conn .... University of Connecticut, B.S .... Senior Senator, Phi Delta Epsilon . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Assistant Editor, MEDIC . . . Internship, Hospital of St. Raphael, New Haven, Conn .... General Practice. . 3 V , bm 'Z-rv Albert Bender 2344 South Sixth Street, Philadel hia 48 P p , a .... Temple University, A.B.p University of Pennsylvania, M.S .... President, Phi Lambda Kappa . . . William Osler Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . MEDIC Staff . . . Internship, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practicei Q, 'iv Victor David Bergelson 1307 E. Barringer Street, Philadelphia, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B . . . Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Treasurer, Senior Class . . . MEDIC Stal? . . . Internship Mt. Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Radiology. Q f Q , jr tc- v ff'-Us img. '- bf 1 it iff Q' Herbert Braunstein 1979 Walton Avenue, Bronx 53, N. Y .... College of the City of New York, B.S. . . . Phi Lambda Kappa . . .Reimann Oncological Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . President, Honor Society . . . Internship, Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, N. Y .... Pathology. f 1 George Louis Cohn 292 East 30th Street, Paterson 4, N. J .... Dartmouth College, A.B .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . President, Redman Pediatric Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Internship, Brooklyn Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y .... Internal Medicine. P sv- ' Reardon Stewart Cotton, Jr. 1330 Argus Road, Camden, N. J .... Pennsylvania State College, B.S., University of Pennsylvania, B.A .... Aesculapean Society . . . Internship, Huron Road Hospital, East Cleveland, Ohio . . . General Practice. az X, John Joseph Coughlin 327 South Oak St., Mt. Carmel, Pa .... Ursinus College, B.S .... Lane Medical Society . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Newman Club . . . Internship, Harrisburg Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa .... General Practice. S 5 Q A Ns. Robert Grant Delph 906 West Willetton St., Phoenix, Ariz .... University of Redlands, University of Arizona . . . Phi Chi . . . Lane Medical Society. . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Internship, Tucson Medical Center, Tucson, Ariz .... General Practice. Win Reynolds Lewellyn Emerson II24 North Second St., Ames, Iowa . . . Iowa State College, B.S .... Phi Beta Pi . . . Vice President, Student Institute . . . President, Lane Medical Society . . . MEDIC Staff . . . Junior Internship, Fort Eustis Station Hospital, Fort Eustis, Va. . . . Internship, Atlantic City Hospital, Atlantic City, N. J. . . . General Practice. all-' Anthony Joseph Errichetti, Jr. 2733 East Ann St., Philadelphia 34, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B. . . . Phi Beta Pi . . . President, Student Institute . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Aesculapean Society . . . lnterfraternity Council . . . Co-Chairman, Blue ond Gold . . . Newman Club . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. Q T' '- YX Q Q -any' in Charles Fineberg Kenwyn Apartments, Philadelphia, Pa .... Wake Forrest College, B.S .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . President, Senior Class and Sophomore Class . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . Student Institute . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Internship, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Surgery. ' Arthur Frankel 459 West l23rd St., New York 27, N. Y .... City College of New York, B.S. Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society Internship, Brooklyn Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y .... General Practice. Q, ml Ei Morton Friedman 'I630 N. Franklin St., Philadelphia 22, Pa .... New York University . . . Scribe Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . Honor Society . . MEDIC Staff . . . Junior Internship, Philadelphia State Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa . . . Internship, Marine Hospital, U.S.P.H.S., Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. . . Internal Medicine. Q B. Shannon Gallaher 7938 Provident Road, Philadelphia 19, Pa .... Temple University, A.B .... Georgia Baptist School of Nursing, R.N .... University of Georgia . . . President, Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . William Osler Society . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Vice President, Honor Society . . . MEDIC Staff . . . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Interfraternity Council . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Newman Club . . . Junior Internship, Dutor Hospital, Ambler, Pa .... Internship, University of Georgia Hospital, Augusta, Ga .... Cardiology. 15.4K Amelia Norma Gallo 2124 South 17th Street, Philadelphia 45, Pa .... Rosemont College, B.A .... Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Women's Medical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Newman Club . . . Junior Internships, Crozer Hospital, Chester, Pa., Phoenixville Hospital, Phoenixville, Pa .... Internship, St. Luke's Hospital, Newburgh, N. Y. . . . General Practice. X lu. ff 'K :Gif JC' C-l Q21 gl Allen Glaskin 5438 Wyndale Ave., Philadelphia 31, Pa .... Pennsylvania State College, B.A . . . Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Internship, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. . . General Practice. F Stanley Goldfine 7095 Forrest Ave., Philadelphia 38, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B. Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Business Manager, MEDIC . . . William Osler Society Lane Medical Society . . . Internship, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. General Practice. N K 4? Louis Goren 227 South 45th Street, Philadelphia, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Internship, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. Jerry Allen Gray 128 Mitchel Avenue, Long Beach, N.Y .... University of Michigan, B.A. . Lambda Kappa . . . Internship, Mt. Zion Hospital, San Francisco, Calif General Practice. Roger Morris Grayson 138-10 228th St., Laurelton 13, N. Y. Arkansas, New York University, A.B. . . peutic Society . . . Junior Internships, N. Y., Crozer Hospital, Chester, Pa. N. Y .... General Practice. . . . City College of New York, University of . Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Boericke Thera- Creedmore State Hospital, Queens Village, . Internship, Fordham Hospital, New York, 'I sf ' ,, Julius Jay Hafitz 7'l Lamberton St., Trenton, N.J .... Yale University, B.A .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . Lane Medical Societ . . . R d y e man Pediatric Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Internship, St. Francis Hospital, Trenton, N. J .... General Practice. u? 59 Thomas Allen Hensel 221 Market St., Williamstown, Pa .... Lebanon Valley College . . . Alpha Sigma . . . Lane Medical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Internship, Harrisburg General Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa .... General Practice. ,L .mmm Murray Horowitz 1234 Perkiomen Ave., Reading, Pa .... New York University, B.A .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Junior Internship, St. Joseph's Hospital, Reading, Pa .... Internship, Harrisburg General Hospital, Harrisbu-rg, Pa .... Psychiatry. va cc s X V , o 1 if Staniey Joseph M. Jallo, Jr. 536 North Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa .... Pennsylvania State College . . . Phi Beta Pi . . . Managing Editor, MEDIC . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society. ..MacFadyen Gynecological Society. . . Undergradu- ate Research Society . . . Student Institute . . . Newman Club . . . Honor Society . . . Junior Internship, Physicians and Surgeons Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. . . . Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. FUR' Vera Dombeck Kahn 417 Brightwater Ct., Brooklyn, N. Y .... Tulane University, New York University, B.A .... Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Internship, Mt. Sinai Hospital, Chicago, lll. . . . General Practice. ,flu Q Mollie Klapper 4503 Maplewood Ave., Los Angeles, Calif .... Wayne University, B.S., Colum- bia University . . .Alpha Epsilon Iota . . .William Osler Society . . . Redman Pedi- atric Society . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Secretary, Psychiatric Forum . . Internship, Hospital of the Good Samaritan, Los Angeles, Calif .... Psychiatry , 0 5 5 is S 5 Q Q y I I Morton Monroe Klein 48 Catalpa Ave., Perth Amboy, N.J .... Temple University, A.B .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Junior Internship, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internship, Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N.J .... Surgery. Albert Seymour Kramer 531 Dumont Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y .... New York University . . . Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Choral Society . . . Assistant Editor, MEDIC . . . Junior Internship, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internship, New York Polyclinic Hospital, New York, N. Y. . . . General Practice. 'el Jean Mary Kweder 125 North Gilbert Street, Shenandoah, Pa Pennsylvania State Colle e B S . . . . g , . .7 Bucknell University, M.S .... Al h E 'l ' ' p a ps: on Iota . . . Vice-President, Redman Ped- iatric'Society . . . Secretary, MacFadyen Gynecological Society Choral Societ . . . y . . . Newman Club . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Junior Internship Danville State Hospital, Danville, Pa .... Internship, Scranton State Hospital, Scranton, Pa. . . . General Practice. .94 X., Robert Joseph Lovin . A 2561 Bellford St., Philadelphia 47, Pa .... LaSalle College, B.A .... Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Newman Club . . . Internship, Misericordia Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. Robert Leclis 2562 N. Corlies St., Philadelphia, Pa .... Rutgers University, Temple University . . . Internship, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. 1- S WN xi r Jeannette C. Mason 5220 Gainor Road, Philadelphia, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A,B. . . Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Women's Medical Society . . . William Osler Society . . Secretary-Treasurer, Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . MEDIC Staff . . . Internship Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. li' Virginia McCandIess 195 Fox Chapel Road, Pittsburgh 15, Pa .... Wayne University, B.S .... Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Secretary, Student Institute . . . Secretary-Treasurer, Redman Pediatric Society . . . President, Women's Medical Society . . . MacFadyen Gyne- cological Society . . . Christian Medical Society . . . Internship, Harper Hospital, Detroit, Mich .... Pediatrics. --r X Thomas Patrick McFarland 5262 Oakland St., Philadelphia 24, Pa .... Villanova College, B.S .... President, Phi Beta Pi. . . Aesculapean Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Reimann Onco- logical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . Newman Club . . .lnterfraternity Council . . . Junior Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. . . . Surgery. N ,vi X 'W-'N V we' V ,fs Leslie Laurence Miller k U ' rsit . . . Lane Medical Society 'I9 Melwax St., Belleville, N. J .... New Yor mve y . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . . . . General Practice. Internship, Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N. J. I S 'Y' x Q Percy Lawrence William Miller 13 Hennesy Pl., Irvington, N.J .... Franklin and Marshall, South Dakota State, University of Wisconsin . . . Phi Beta Pi . . . Secretary, Lane Medical Society . . . Assistant Circulation Manager, MEDIC . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Internship, Pitkin Memorial Hospital, Neptune, N. J .... General Practice. xg, , , ,Qs RQ' . ,V , ff-, -L, .xv D ..,,,.. , ' Arnold Millstein 1013 Lenox Road, Brooklyn 12, N.Y .... New York University, A.B .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Junior Internship, Brooklyn Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, N.Y . . . Internship, Bronx Hospital, Bronx, N.Y .... Dermatology. Elaine F. Needell 2277 East Cambria Street, Philadelphia 34, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B .... Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Chairman, William Osler Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Women's Medical Society . . . MEDIC Staff . . . Secretary, Senior Class . . . Psychiatric Forum . . . Honor Society . . . Internship, Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N.J .... Internal Medicine. gg.: I X 2 c it if Mervin Harvey Needell 50 Western Ave., Morristown, N. J .... Rutgers University . . . Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Circulation Manager, MEDIC . . . Psychiatric Forum . . . President, Paxon Obstetrical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Vice President, Phillips Anatomical Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Secretary-Treasurer, Interfraternity Council . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . Junior Internship, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Phila- delphia, Pa .... Internship, Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N.J .... Urology. 1 4 1.6 ,v '. 1 . Sl 1. ,A I rig i a' 1 QA 3 95:51 . -, J Raymond Michael Albert Negretti Williams, Ariz .... Arizona State College, San Diego State College, B.A .... Reimann Oncological Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Junior Internships, Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.p Pottstown Memorial Hospital, Pottstown, Pa .... Internship, Deaconess Hospital, Spokane, Wash .... General Practice. LO 4'-1 Q1 Phyllis Ostrum 2600 N. 31st St., Philadelphia 32 Pa Temple Universit BA I , .... y, . .... Apha Epsilon Iota . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . M . . acFadyen Gynecologncal Society . . . Undergraduate Research So ' t cney . . . Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. ldv IJ' do H40 FH ld gd DHI' 5111, 4 1,1 'apr' P D 1,'l N :af , 5 5 X 1 I S-V5 Y 6 v' I 1' v V I pd Robert Emmett Price, Jr. 54 Winslow Road, Newark, Del .... University of Delaware . . . Secretary, Phi Beta Pi. . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Aescula- pean Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Newman Club . . . Junior Internship, Newton-Wellesley Hospital, Boston, Mass .... Internship, Mary Fletcher Hospital, Burlington, Vt .... Radiology. 0 rj , ,. A. . fo 0 A 0 gig' Sidney Rosenbaum 185 East 206 St., Bronx, N. Y .... New York University, B.A .... Internship, Bronx Hospital, Bronx, N. Y .... Pediatrics. 4 . '4' . 325 2 2 . F 1 fzazilfv- .. . P if gg' , . -Y' ' . -'Q i1Ei'iiEiE::: ' j 5..1.jL'3 ' 3i1fit..'4ixi:.:H .:.:3'3:v1- 1. -:V V:-.-1 -L-1. , . . .- . ., . ,. , . ...H ,Q X'.j. ...... -,I - . '--1-5122-giilzeia 1 1 -, Q51 1i-p1:,.1:':r.-:-.,- f A - .pg- , .fq:,h, :1 uejj ,.. t-tgqtq'-.ng ' ,t ' , :iiL.l ',lQ, .,: . if ffi'. Q . .Tl-it'.:2:'. V31 it ,Q 'Q - , '9 -4 . 'Q ' .- 'i f. , Wav for fr . 1 t r i 5,11 FE?-1 'f-iafmi.. ' i '- ' A K 'lH ' - li'?x:rt':'- ' , .l ' '4E'?i:A 2'zw.n.1a2f,f c 'J ri :A ::L1::z1f.l:':3. ', - 'r ' ' :pig :fini af-arf '- EE 111E!Q'+.i. 'zo ' ni Q21-'Q-11 ,. fa: a'e?ss.'. K' ul, 'yn :.iia.,. .. fl,-I. I 122, A . 'ii L ' if , , L, . 'N Leonard Rosenfeld . . . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . 44,- N. ul . . Phi Lambda Kappa 68 Treacy Ave., Newark, N. J .... Rutgers University, B.S. . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Internship, Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N.J .... General Practice. ' ,f Gabriel Kevi Rubin 368 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn 25, N.Y .... New York University, B.A .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Aesculapean Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Choral Society . . . Junior Internship, Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, N.Y .... Internship, Lincoln Hospital, Bronx, N.Y .... Pediatric Surgery. 'Vx Lester Sablosky 'llll West Oak St., Norristown, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Advertising Manager, MEDIC . . . Lane Medical Society . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Co-Chairman, Blue and Gold . . . Treasurer, Student Institute . . . Internship, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internal Medicine. Sydney Q 1 'iff' 1 - Salas 'ILIJI If. 'N , ..g i - - .'iZ7 2E 'Z'W' .f'I'L'i'1 25,735 I Q .. - - , . - .1 M' --' -'E E, - -.L ' -fz .- ...tg LZ' ...WE ri.'Z'l22 DIE'- ' ........ 1- -.....-'--...- ': ' :...: ,- ..... ,...,- :a-' -- - ' TE..--... '.1Il-.l- 3.J-:- WL... - .f- -- IZ r: '4 .- ,IKUJZID-I- J.-'E - . - :J . - QL L' -...' Z.. ..'-E... Z 'Z 2. S'Z -Ev E' 'lil I..' , ,HIJDEEZJ7 12 '1 Q .-- ,.-pn-vw-. . -' -.4 ' J B- S. Demetrius Saris 2329 South i8th St., Philadelphia 45, Pa .... Ohio State University, B.A. . . . Phi Beta Pi . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . President, Undergraduate Research Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Aescula- pean Society . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Vice President, Senior Class . . . Junior Internship, Community Hospital, Phila- delphia, Pa .... Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Surgery. Q V ,rr C 2 Naycla Emanuelli Saris Box 25, Faiardo, Puerto Rico . . . Barnard College, Chestnut Hill College, B.S. . . . Treasurer, Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . William Osler Society . . . McClendon Bio- chemical Society. . . President, El Circulo Hispano . . . Newman Club . . . Paxson Olostetrical Society . . .Women's Medical Society . . .Junior Internship, Community ' Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... . . . Internal Medicine. I 10 David Joseph Schnall 2221 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B.p Temple University, M.A., New York University . . . Phi Lambda Kappa . . . Lane Medical Society . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Junior Internship, Women's Homeopatic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internship, Mt. Sinai Hos- pital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. V Tai TK, ,of 5' igli Irwin Schoen 1327 46th St., Brooklyn, N. Y .... College of the City of New York, B.S. . . . Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Aesculapean Society . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . William Osler Society . . . Vice President, Reimann Oncologicol Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . Junior Internship, Danville State Hospital, Danville, Pa .... Internship, Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, Los Angeles, Calif .... Pathology. ,ag fl.. 'Y 5 '- Q so 5 - , , J if s Z. J' ' f .4 X' . . Y X -: ' xx- ! N s Qi S .4 V1 , -': ,fx W. , Q . S , A X 1 . LX . x Q X X Daniel Gilbert Schonfelcl 865 Walton Ave., Bronx, N.Y .... New York University, B.S .... Psychiatric F . . orum . . . Junior Internships, Doctor's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., Sacred Heart Hospital, Norristown, Pa .... Inte h' H' h ' Psychiatry. rns ip, Ig land Hospital, Rochester, N.Y .... , ti ' , 3 A i Q ,l :f,,.' s 4- 1 17. 6' ii: 5155-' 1 John Harold Sewak 629 Second St., Donora, Pa .... Pennsylvania State College, University of Pitts burghp Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cornell University, B.S. . . Phi Beta Pi . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Junior Internships, Doctor's Hospital Philadelphia, Pa., Sacred Heart Hospital, Norristown. Pa .... Internship, Hahne mann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. .- . . Surgery. Arthur Wexler Silver 6216 Carpenter St., Philadelphia, Pa .... Temple University, A.B .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Secretary, William Osler Society . . . Secretary, Undergraduate Re- search Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Internship, Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Surgery. up r I 9 0 'Eiga I' . Toby Edwin Silverstein 6127 Frontenac St., Philadelphia, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, A.B., M.A. . . . Vice President, Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . President, lnterfraternity Council . . . Student Institute . . . Internship, Marine Hospital, U.S.P.H.S., Baltimore, Md .... Pathology. M Q If . ' A V K. , y .lf x 'l' ' .' 1 -55,-ff, Y, ' 1 ' . ,' 1 'f . s ,-ff ff ., X Fil ii I uf . NN fi ' XXL' X Louis Myram Soletsky 124 West 79th St., New York, N.Y .... New York University, A.B .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . William Osler Society . . . President, Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society. . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Photography Editor, MEDIC . . . Junior Internships, Rockaway Beach Hospital, Rockaway Beach, N.Y., Women's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., Sacred Heart Hospital, Norristown, Pa .... Internship, Jewish Memorial Hospital, New York, N.Y .... General Practice. Z , 1 I 1, QA Raymond Lawrence Stone 370 Schley St., Newark, N.J .... Temple University, B.A .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Treasurer, William Osler Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Psychiatric Forum . . . Junior Internship, Doctor's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internship, Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N. J .... General Practice. Robert Ward Summers 'I962 Merryhill Drive, Columbus, Ohio . . . Ohio State University, B.A., B.S., William McKinley School of Law, LL.B .... Corresponding Secretary, Alpha Kappa Kappa . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . lnterfraternity Council . . . Phillips Anatomical Society . . . Honor Society . . . Junior Internship, Philadelphia State Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. . . . Internship, Marine Hospital, U.S.P.H.S., Cleveland, Ohio . . . Gynecology. I QI X f 'tx Jeanette Marie Troup 2237 Ilth Street, S. W., Akron, Ohio . . . Wheaton College, A.B .... Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . Treasurer, MacFadyen Gynecolo- gical Society . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Hahnemann Choral Society . . . President, Christian Medical Society . . . Junior Internship, Peoples Hospital, Akron, Ohio . . . Internship, Peoples Hospital, Akron, Ohio . . . General Practice. -M 1 5 William Bernard Tuttle 517 Kelly Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa .... Pennsylvania State College, University of Pittsburgh, B.S .... Phi Alpha Gamma . . . President, Reimann Oncologicol Society . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Assistant Editor, MEDIC . . .Junior Internships, Crozer Hospital, Chester, Pa., Shadyside Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa .... Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internal Medicine. 'W ff'-1 Wav' Lina Gilda Vardaro 707 West Huntingdon St., Philadelphia, Pa .... Temple University, Ursinus Col- lege . . . Alpha Epsilon Iota . . . Newman Club.. . Hollis Otolaryngological Society . . . Choral Society . . . Women's Medical Society . . . Undergraduate Research Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . MEDIC Staff . . . Junior Internships, Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., Community Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internship, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... General Practice. K -mf' John Gregory Walichuck Crum Lynne, Pa .... University of Pennsylvania, Ursinus College, B.S .... Phi Beta Pi . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Internship, Chester Hospital, Chester, Pa. . . . General Practice. 5' Harold Bruce Warren 607 Ashland Ave., Santa Monica, Calif. . . . City College of New York, University of Pennsylvania, B.S .... Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Reimann Oncological Society . . . Junior Internship, Women's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. . . . Internship, Los Angeles County Harbor General Hospital, Torrance, Calif .... General Practice. HUB , 9:9 Q A ' -1- Charles Shirley Williams 827 East 34th St., Baltimore, Md .... University of Baltimore, University of Maryland, LL.B .... Reimann Cncological Society . . . Boericke Therapeutic Society . . . Internship, Garfield Memorial Hospital, Washington, D. C. . . . General Practice. 93. X A. Stark Wolkoff 5040 City Line Ave., Philadelphia, Pa .... University of Scrantong University of Pennsylvania: St. Joseph's College, B.S .... Sergeant-at-Arms, Phi Delta Epsilon . . . Lane Medical Society . . . Paxson Obstetrical Society . . . McClendon Biochemical Society . . . Reimann Cncological Society . . . Internship, Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa .... Internal Medicine. T Robert Ernest Yanowitch 48 Thorndale Terrace, Rochester, N. Y .... University of Rochester, B.A .... Phi Lambda Kappa . . . MacFadyen Gynecological Society . . . Director, Choral Society . . . Redman Pediatric Society . . .' Junior Internships, Brigham Hall Hospital, Canandaigua, N. Y., Highland Hospital, Rochester, N. Y .... Internship, Highland Hospital, Rochester, N. Y .... General Practice. pp OFFICERS or ri-is simon cuxss President Charles Fineberg Vice President Anthony Errichetti, Jr. Treasurer Victor D. Bergelson Secretary Elaine F. Needell Student Institute Representative Stanley J. Jallo, Jr. VITAL STATISTICS This yearbook would be incomplete with- out a statement of certain vital statistics of the Senior class. Of the 105 students who began the grind in 1946, 72 are left at graduation. Of these 72, there are 60 males and 12 females. The average age is 28, with a low of 23 and a high of 38. Forty-one of us saw service in World War II. There are 40 married students, 13 of whom were married while at Hahnemann. Of these 13, two couples come directly from the class and one student found his bride in the class ahead of ours. We are apparently a very fruitful group. There are 25 children of the graduating class, fas of the moment MEDIC is going to pressi. Two of our married ladies had to take time out of their iunior clerkships to be delivered and one has had to postpone her internship because of pregnancy. As far as pre-medical education is con- cerned, all 72 had good preparation. Only 10 have no college degree. Among the remaining 62, there are 63 Bachelor degrees, 4 Master N ,f degrees, 2 LL.B.'s, and one R.N. Of the hobbies of the class, the leading five in the order of their popularity are sports, music, photography, card playing, and girls. The interest in sports is undoubtedly greatly re- sponsible for the success of Hahnemann's bas- ketball team, which is made up for the most part of Seniors. As far as music is concerned, in addition to the music appreciators, we have quite a few talented and trained vocalists and instrumentalists in our group. Besides these hobbies, the class finds diver- sion in philately, gun collecting, hunting, fishing dancing, chess, painting, camping, mineralogy, astronomy, interior decorating, languages, ama- teur theater, carpentry, writing, pipe collecting gardening, meteorology, and card playing. One member spends a great deal of his free time as a volunteer fireman. One female student succinctly states that, outside of medicine, her hobby is babies, Several students did not specify any particular avocation. These individ- uals, oddly enough, were all married and with 2 or more children, a point of information which leaves little to the imagination. I I I-, XA .Q 'SQ 4 ruff UA w sx ' '- - is fr hit, .27 J-B A x f 5 M , i 4:5-'lx .- Q' LEE? ,-X jg, .312-54 21.7 ' .,',:- A I Y . .,. , - ' ,. :L-,J .. Hg: 1. Ti. -A Q -I1'44L'Q f9 :V '. I I A4 I, 1 F fs J 47' 'I .L N..i' if I 1 S15 x ' 151 f Q 4 H 4 , . -.1 A Q H I 4 .Ge 1 u X ,, .zur u-vi. L' n a l . f I .NAP ,fi , i I ,N 5--, A - T. 4, A- X 'f it' A ri - .ggi 1:1 I4 fb R as xg tw-if X - I 1 ,as f I . f1 xv 1 vLl'1- 'W - lisa .-up i. f x. ,Inna fa. .1 'YN 4 vi -.u ?'NfY . . . .1-ff Qigiig Qfijwhi . .- 'P' 'Qi x a ' 'vs I' f 9 , :ti U X 1' x x V X N-,Wm I X ff n ,. Q A X N In .,. ' vi' 4 -T K' ' K If- ..IJS,37' .' ' at. . 1 I' I 4' , .,f - ', fei.rf'? n U 5A1'wmJ' am... .1 ,ix-- Lf Jul. '. 1. in' rf' aa ' . ...fbnfg-5 iv- . A 'us ,- ...' '.. ll ll Manana Oh, Dr. Beutner told me that I should read my notes each night, But instead I went out with a fat-and-forty fright. So when I got to school, there was such hell to pay, The girl with me last night was in the clinic yesterday. Manana, manana, manana l'll be there with her too. Manana, manana, manona l'll see her in G. U. Now, one experiment we did was for dear Dr. Pratt. He tried to see what happened when we digitalized a cat. The cats all died in unison, results were lousy, too, But, Pratty, Di-gi-tal-us exactly what to do? -Manana, manana, he's a picture of congeniality. Manana, manana, the men in white are coming after me. If poison you decide to take, Seidel's the man to see Because he is a specialist in toxicology. And if one day you should awake and find yourself in hell, You can bet your death he used 3X instead of BAL. Nystagmus, nystagmus, where did you get those lovely rolling eyes? Nystagmus, nystagmus, they're focusing on 87 guys. Now, Dr. Messey gave a talk on how to take exams, With special pearls of wisdom for the guy who crams and crams, Just take your National State Boards, and try to see it thru, And if by chance you do not pass, his piles will bleed for you. Manana, manana, Dr. Messey really is an ace. Manana, manana, you'll find that his heart is in the right place. When Dr. Beutner lectures we just stare and gape like fools While on the board he sketches bare and neked molecules. He tells how epinephrine makes the arteries get tighter. You vunt to ask a qvestion? Silence, sheddup, und zo veiter! Chicago, Chicago, oh this will have to be the last refrain. Chicago, Chicago, we railroad boys will have to catch a train! Student's Wife The man that I married, if I recall, Was tall, dark, and handsome, and that ain't all. The guy to whom I said Yes Was thoughtful and witty and beamed happiness. He went back to college to get his A.B., While dreaming of winning an M.D. degree, We were praying for news saying That for Med School the government'lI be paying. His acceptance came straight, and we couldn't wait until fall And now he's a sophomore, this man of mine, He looks like a victim of Frankenstein, His hair he's lost by the score, He is underweight, nervous, and studies 'till 4. Now, I don't mind working until l'm half dead To make enough money so that we'll be fed. But, professor, here's my request for Maybe one night a month off for amour. Though a doctor's his aim, still l'll love him the same, man of mine. The Flowers that Bloom in the Spring The dishes that lie in the sink, tra-lo, Had better be thrown in the trash, When Snyder gets thru with his drink, tra-la, He'll make for that wonderful sink, tra-la, They're gonna be hit by the splash. They're gonna be hit by the splash. So take his advice, my dear friend, and don't worry, Some day maybe you'Il have to go in a hurry, Tra-Ia-la-la-la-Ia, Tra-Ia-Ia-la-Ia-Ia. There's nothing like raising a stink. Tra-la-la-Ia-la-Ia, Tra-la-Ia-la-Ia-Io. While filling the sink with the drink. Obstetrics I am the very model of a modern obstetrician, I cannot make a living as a practicing physician, I look for abnormalities in every girl's condition And keep my little notes about the fetus's position. l talk about trimesters and toxemias of pregnancy And diagram the ways of having babies- both plain and fancy, I vehemently state l stand opposed to all abortion But don't you dare to question me on where I made my fortune. I laugh at all my patients when they beg me for some chloroform And diagnose each gain in weight as proof of hydatidiform, l only fear that future sons, will reproduce by fission. I am the very model of a modern obstetrician. Three Little Profs from SchooI Three little profs from school are we, Pert as a prof could ever be, Filled to the brim with chemistry, Three little profs from school. Three little profs who, all unwary, Came from a ladies' seminary, loaded with genius tutelary, Three little profs from school. Three little profs from school. One little prof in a swivel chair, Second little prof takes attendence there, Third little prof who is not all there, Three little profs from school. Three little profs who, all unwary, Came from a ladies' seminary, loaded with genius tutelary, Three little profs from school. Three little profs from school. fifn ef' e 0 Q I 91 xii ,1 Q, . WFS, -, ' . , '3 .ns H . ' rs.: , if ad!! - ' x 5 .. iq' - 2-fr. e it nil.. 'ct t:flf'17t' 4' idk. 6' K .. hw- 'HF 'fit' als' - o 'S -4. -,-'L Ib 9.5, if .,'4 rs. , , c vs.. is-' 0 1 I fi -. tiff Ir ' u -M -.xi 1 r1ij.,32 A 4, ,va Q J, 1 'M r r, .-Q' fl CH' . 034'-.' . - 4 'Q 1 X ., , 'A I' 4 uk, Q L L 4 L., i. i i 3, . it Jr ' 1 1 .. ' r', ink., ' -f, sz V, , L J I fl 'XQHQYQK' fax,-4 'J ,eh , 1- . ,H I- Q . ' f 3, ' -X Qi- -. lf' - aid' w - In-.19 ' ' -. -iii F-., XV., .. ep .sf',,rif ' .h ' J' E , .'- '-ty' ' . 1 af' W- ,g 4,ff.. ,Q Av Q.-. I , ' 1 , '- ji, . U ' f fi? -wa, 33,4 'jsxdly Jjfsxl- '1 'I:,. Q. ' . 'lf' , ,, V, ,T K . ,if - V 9 I ' i 'A 1 1 il. l 1 fe ' In ', I yr. I ,, F 'gb' x H . AI? . ' 44-If . , ' .fi -' ' rw fs ,, - H. l . ',, ,. .f , , X- . R ' t- Doing What Comes Naturally Folks may be dumb where I come from, They don't go in for learnin'p Still they're happier than me Knowing no pathology. In every hole, I see a mole, A carcinoma fatal, l've every ill from A to Z From studying pathology. It l'm not right at my peakness, I'm the saddest guy you'Il see. 'Cause don't you know that weakness ls the first sign of T.B. Malaise has come, my feet are numb, My sputum's red and rusty, l'Il show every symptom you can see In the textbooks of pathology. l've multiple lesions and fibrous adhesions, Nephritis, nephrosis, actinomycosis, I have typhus and flu, yaws and leprosy too, And that whoop that you hear isn't one of good cheer What's more - My Wassermann's plus, my urine shows pus, l've got athlete's feet, I faint with the heat, My disk is choked, my polys provoked, l've a felon or two plus tropical spruep I was born, by gum, with a diverticulum Now, l've swallowed some lead- God, l'm better off dead! I think that medical college is wonderful, but gee What good is all that knowledge, I won't live to be 23. So, here is me, Dr. Gregory, A typical sophomore student, l've got every disease in the indexed key Of the textbooks of pathology. A Policeman's lot !Cadaver Sings! Oh the odor in anatomy is hardly very sweet But it wouldn't be this way were l alive ll alivel After two years in a vat, thru Philly cold and Hlthy heat lt's no wonder that I smell like Channel 5. IChannel 51. Oh dissecting may be tough and don't I know it, Learning bones and nerves and vessels ain't no fu But when you get so disgusted then I show it, A cadaver's lot is not a happy one. Ah, when there's anatomic duties to' be done, to be done A cadaver's life is not a happy one, happy one. Feudin' and Fightin ' Readin' and writin' and more reaclin', Can't even take time out for feedin', l0,000 more pages to read, and then thru we'll be With Beutner's outlined Pharmacology. Sulfa is quite helpful, When we get a bad strep. infection. When the girl gets gonorrhea, We somehow think that she-'ll want to see yo. Lab work is certainly excitin', For three hours we sit up there awritin'. They've thrown out all previous drugs and all thot's left, you see Is o course in Penicillinologyll Too Fat PoIka I don't want it, you can have it, it's too hard for me, It's too hard for me, much too hard for me. When it gets this irritating, you iust let me be, let me be, let me be, it's too hard for me. I get dizzy, I get frightened, When it comes to being thus enlightened. Oh, my dear you've got to take it, that is the decree, That is the decree, that's what it says you see, Even if at first you hate it, you will soon agree, Soon agree, soon will see, what fun it all can be. Don't you find it a thrill? No, no, no, no, no. Is it perfectly nil? Go, go, go, go, go. Won't you please change your mind? But dear, l'm so refined! Could you possibly, change your mind for me No. no, no. So, I don't want it, you can keep it, lt's too hard for me, It's too tough for me, much too hard for me. When it gets this aggravating, you iust let me be. It's too hard. What's too hard? Why, Pathology!! :psf - 1 ki xx I ' . ,Tr-,, 3 , l l f. 'Q gff,-.g,s:7f + 4' ' -,r Q ...Afr- L 4 ' 2 ' I .-,A I , D L ,i '7 'Q Wx New .155 a,4fr...4f, - ' ssl' ' - . .1 0 5 ' -76.1--. of -4 1' nal. 'v. -A' , . , . Q, 'f F' . . IQ. I wut. 4 A, ' W iv we A it . ffl ' l i , 'Q . ' .. '7-':. I ' ' 1921 ,- I .1 -at . Bw- x ' , 'lx Izv I -1-a ,, f I I - n 1 Y E Y 43 I Bxv , ,f 1, A I I , . - A.- Yvs...Hs- Y . , 1 U' wx, gga. ' gif' , , ,. Q. , . .I I Q . I , Q I I ' I II I ' - if I f '- I ff-A , 4 I fr- 3 I I.s-1-Q,,4,5..Lw1' I Q I WT eww' Y, ,,. . V ' . u - . . 1 1 I 5- I w Xm- L ,.. I... I -,-. .,,.f ,T -4 I I is I -I ,Half II' , 'wmbx 'ke' Q 3 ' CS '42 , 1 .tr I I II I' I I 'in :III JKT, I CQ X ff I3II?f2f IR X , III mf 'u I SMOKE7' lg ' 'N 9 O 5540 4 9 ,AI , 1 1 -Q i rf' A f. QB, ,. J' 4 , . , ,Alba-N4 'M' HAHNEMANN 4-nd O. 1 li , ftf ' O -dm' G' 'flu N 5? ,fr Z 5 R Q f 4 F F if , 5 Q 4 x ,,.,..--.1 fi 4 I-I Y I I Xl 5 i In I-uw--iuuv--I L-..-.. TT 'n W '99 fi 'lm' x .se 5 .-Cn, ,' a A- +1 if -1 Ewa if 71.35 ,W wr, l Vim r-fir? us. fm! 1 , . Qi ' , 'wa' 4 . , 11521 1 - 1 N H W x ' 'f'l Ax 0 '4 5 X . . N 5' 755 ' if ! 'Lf' nl' .l , Q4-.Q fa . . ... :3:::i1f'ieLumfe 1 A . fl AXE? !'5 Q? f'1l- -'v-'.,,. 1 T7 X -A AQ A 1 . ki wr ,pgs-. D l K I 'Qi' -. 'Q A fziis iw V' 'Q Q W E Y ff who i A gi QL MED STUD N E PATIENT. 5 ff' K, Q n rf, . - X9 J: 9 If Xk I o J V 15. ,bi A G' Q 5 N' fi' I - f ' , 2 'w i Q f i . JJ? ythik i .Ji E - Nw , 91 N I K I fl ,J 2 i W DW 9 i 3 V, ,, ,, f' i fl! 's -- W i ,Q I, ' A' Y ig -ny 5 Mmm, X 5 4, R JL J . I emorile ' ' ' . N This chart you wil m 1 xv i I F A PAXSO ' , of LAFFERTY - And the next definition is . . .' MU7-CH 81794, XMQ e n fmhec :ands Wfggemenf of ' Yelf ll. 'ive bo 0 pro, ke f. by, 2 op-Sed - c 0 -. O' 0 docfcfngrofulofrm: 7. W is s r, e me SEITCHIK - Doesn't know his Ascheim from his X - Zondek! ' . back h boss turns his 1 e A5 so Ofvr A, HUNTER honed e ,- 315 sec fCs ,OU I7 She g 0 l 00173, H70 fhokes ob MQCFADYEN Three P s and on O! x - ' ' on as P J ,,, sr , . A , ' ' x'f 7' 95 Lg e U 1 f ' ' ' - f ' ,V - Y' ' Y ' o O6-Yfeih-I. . 7171,-,Q ,. 1, f ,H 1 THE U DERGHAD ATE f 1 ,f Xgigfviqyx FQ-'Ni XJ i ,La CQ H Lil - . ' T' 'A Yx rfl . 1? xi! li fly! . ,gg ' N 'c,,f'si.. . .-'T ,. J ii S 'I 4 Q1 X fi row ,Mi Q ii fm. oe-'V , cv '-lf' 5 I l 1 JUNIOR CLASS Ernest Eugene Alvin, Jr. Frank Wilmer Baker, Jr. Marvin Harold Balistocky William Anthony Bansbach Katherine Margaret Haupt Batory Bert Ira Beverly, Jr. Marvin Lester Bobb William Thomas Bonner lrwin Homer Breslow Thomas Edward Bressi, Jr. Christopher William Canino Jean Marie Ceccoli Robert Walter Cleveland Peter Louis DeSantis Mary Dochios Leonard Sylvan Dreifus John Dalton Erickson Joseph Irwin Esposito Rafael Osvaldo Fernandez-Ceide Martin Nelson Frank John Gilbert Fraser Alvin Arthur Freehafer John William Gallagher Jack Clinton Gilbert 91 if Pete Got? Stanley Edwin Goren Joseph Hamburg Lewis Boyer Harned Robert Courtland Harner James Lee Harrison Dale Jay Hawk Jerome Asher Hubsher Emigdio lnigo-Agostini Jahn Andrew Jakabcin La Verne Joseph Junker John Kleiner Donald Otto Kopp Raymond Krain James Bard Landis Henry Earl Langenfelder Jack Byron Lee Seymour Lerner Philip Lisan Daniel Carl Maras Peter Joseph Miraldo Edward Murray Lola Mae Patlove Richard lee Peters Nicholas Joseph Pisacano William Richard Ricklefs QI' Fw Robert Roth Roberts Nathan Lester Samuels Russell Elwood Schatz Lorna Eutzy Schmittel Jacob Behr Shapiro Leonard Harold Shapiro Jay Randolph Sharpsteen, Jr. lawrence Zane Shultzaberger Mary Pauline Siracusa Jack Smoger Eugene Matthew Sneff James Piatt Sommerfeld .lose Antonio Sosa-Fantauzzi Selig Simon Strassman Abraham Judah Strauss George Miller Thoma Ira Allen Wasserberg Otto Ray Weber Oscar Roy Weiner Joshua Leon Weisbrod Charles Henry ytloodcock, lll Lester Wortsman William Thomas Wright Richard Masatoshi Yamauchi Charles look Yoder Albert Richard Zavatsky The Junior year brought back a cocky og- gregate of students from summer vacations all over the country. With the exception of the few in our class who started the new year the way they finished the old one e by taking National Board examinations - we were r'aring to go. Our cockiness soon turned to a feeling of inadequacy as we began our encounters with real, live patients on the floors. The innocent question, Now, in your own words, just how do you feel sick? , was answered either with a tempest of grievances which was uncondensable into an abbreviated chief complaint, or with a shrug, a sigh, and a glance toward heaven. Slowly we came to realize that history-taking was 0 real art and that no question is to be considered insignificant, regardless of the pa- tient's ailment and regardless of the activities in the vicinity. Thus, it was not uncommon to walk into a medical ward to find an emergency crew performing phlebotomies,administering oxygen, hypodermics, and infusions to an acutely ill pa- tient, nurses running frantically to and fro- while at the next bed a clinical clerk, cool and undaunted, asked his patient, How much coffee do you drink? , and How long have you been separated from your wife? In our Junior year, we met many new fac- ulty members, outstanding among whom were Drs. Olsen, Hammett, Lucchesi, and Thompson. Dr. Olsen's unlimited patience, skill, and cool- ness were impressive. Dr. Hammett astounded us with his shrewd insight into the maze of com- plex symptomatology often seen in the psycho- somatic illnesses encountered in the medical f Qi - OFFICERS OF JUNIOR CLASS President Joy R. Sharpsteen, Jr. Vice President James L. Harrison Treasurer Katherine M. H. Batory Secretary Jean M. Ceccoli Student Institute Representative William T. Wright ,, 1- fl? A W ' '3'- 'Fw . , W 4 Ti 1 . g 1 ' , is T - 4 1' ' ' 4 1 qw? ' A 4' . zcxwa 'if W Ia. I , . Qa- K- wards. The program in Public Health, as present- ed by Dr. Lucchesi, cmd the visits to patients' homes gave many of us more than a smattering of information about the squalor in which many of this city's individuals live. Dr. Thompson's G. I. rounds proved to be one of the most educa- tional features of our entire year. The weekly C.P.C.'s were also noteworthy. Each week the question was whether the clinician reviewing the case would shine in glory or whether the pathologist would have another field day. How Dr. Lane, with a minimum of diagnostic evidence, pulled a diagnosis of dis- secting aneurysm out of the thin air to the chag- rin of the Pathology Department, still mystifies us. '--'ff'Hg:2',.' X 39 N 'X if cyl' I is . F 4 l A good deal of our time was spent in the laboratories, doing urinalyses, complete blood counts, and more specialized tests. Thanks to the laboratory technicians, Ruth and Gloria, we managed to produce quite accurate data. These girls furnished a veritable refresher course in chemistry and clinical pathology and at the same time kept our spirits high with their en- couraging smiles and pretty faces. Looking back, we find that the year was filled with valuable experiences. The problems ahead are not entirely predictable, but we feel that the knowledge and practice we have re- ceived thus far will enable us to cope with and overcome the terrors of the Senior year. -x fv- 'X Quiwhanw is rsvp: V 3 ' 1, num' I fl' zilf- A 1 ff Mr I Wy- , I P x 7 f. IA 8 ' A fl 4 , 6' Q X, mlig,-4 gif Y e---Pk..-.fu 3' - n'...,,.- X -mv-H' 9' :YH f' F 1 C I :Fulfi- ,Z We if wx X M I Xif SOPHOMORE CLASS Jose Antonio Arbona Francis LeBaron Archer Albert Raymond Baker Anthony Joseph Bamonte Anthony Eugene Biancardi Ruth Arlene Billig Robert Junior Blough John George Brownlee Garrett Ralph Byma Donald Franklin Cameron Robert Uriah Cassel Erma Josephine Casselberry Mark George Cohen Charles Peter De Feo, Jr. Leonard Doloff William Howard Donlan Jerome S. Druckman Edward William Ehrlich Ralph Peterson Erdly Herbert Arlington Faust John Apfel Fisher Robert Alfred Fisher Thomas Joseph Flynn Louis D. Fouche Henry John Fox Arthur Friedman Marvin Friedmann cfgmjf' . YT' L if 5 7 os. Q Y . -A X na,.'. 3- Q of i 'Q' :of FZ r 'V x 1 , , 112' ' or , 1 - y f -A - ' f ' fX . R ff l I 'PI f ' fi 1 mf? X 4 Morton Fuchs Terrance Daniel Furness Edward Joseph Gluck Morris Jack Goldman Howard Vernon Greenman Helen Sliviak Griffen Daniel Joseph Gross George Hafitz Elmer George Homme Samuel Allen Hartman, Il Thomas Wayne Hunter Jack lger William Bracken Jewell Robert Yuzo Katase Ruth Virginia KaulTman Clarence Smith Kemp Earl William Kendrick Raymond Albert Klinger Bernard Leon Klionsky Irvin Jack Leven Julius Lister Melvin Murray Marcus Milton Galbraith Marion Joseph Paul Matwieiczyk Robert Bruce McKinstry Kenneth Kramer Milgram Rufus Wilder Miller William George Minster Phyllis Jean Moffett Edwin Morris gc Mk Y '5- Fred Malcolm Myers Edward Peter Nork James Clyde Oberholtz Phyllis Wechter Paul Henry Harwood Pendleton, Joseph Nicholas Pustai Rawdon Evans Rambo, Jr. Hubert Lawrence Rosomotf Jerry Jack Rotwein Justin Alexander Rubin Armand Lee Ruderman Alfred Francis Shinkus Marion Skezas Joseph William Slap Jerome Bernard Smith Frederick Davis Snyder, Jr. Normand Norris Solomon Donald Elwood Stuetz Alfred Philip Sunseri Gordon Lowrey Tobias Edwin Marvin Todd, Jr. Pascal Joseph Viola Leon J. Weiner Frank Edward Williams Alan William Winshel Eugene Myron Wysochansky Rudy Zakos Richard William Ziegler Lamar Thomas Zimmerman W :--- OFFICERS OF SOPHOMORE CLASS p,,,id,,,f Rufus W. Miller Vic, pmsgdeny Edwin M. Todd, Jr. ffggsufef John A- Fishel' Secretary Phyllis J. Moffett Student Institute Representative Garrett R. Bymo ln June of 1949 we emerged from our en- gagement with the Freshman year - a dazed, beaten and bedraggled crew.The final encoun- ter with Physiology was particularly rugged. We packed our bags, squared our shoulders and headed for home to Wynnefield and Brooklyn, to Michigan and Connecticut, to Olney, the Bronx, and Alabama. Home to work in the store, to paint the house, to be councillors and waiters, to be carpenter's helpers and to wait, wait, wait for our grades. Each morning for many weeks a hundred mail boxes were opened and feverishly search- ed, to no avail. Then one day on her way home, Miss Harding paused at the toot of the stone steps of Hahnemann to drop a hundred sealed FICE i ' m t R N - uns vt , -.REM ' ' .PAFF envelopes into the mail. ln a day or two these letters were received and violently ripped open, and through bleary eyes we read, Bill for breakage. No grades released until paid. But now we were back - most of us, at any rate - fat, sunburnt, and somewhat recuper- ated. We were ourselves again, only a year older - some of us several years older, depend- ing on how one measures the aging process. Ah! but we were a cocky, confident crew, ready and eager to take on the Sophomore year. Hed we not withstood the dynamic Truex and the inscru- table Scott? Who do we get this year? Gregory? A tough cookie? Bring him on! We eat patholo- gists alive! 3 Intl U Annum 1 u if tea , rr so so :gyp- Q A-,...a-D-V Into the ring of Pathology stepped the tal- ented, softspoken Dr. John, seconded by the pensive, pipesucking Koiwai, the gaunt Froio, and Dr. Fite who came from Boston. This group of autopsy specialists made a quick job of us. Dazed and wide-eyed, we were soon clutching the ropes. Afew more rounds of vicious rumors, a bungled slide quiz, a mangled oral exam, and we were back in our old neurotic, spastic state. Bacteriology was the most organized phe- nomenon we came across since Dr. Chandler's lecture on the classification of the amino acids The sterling crew of examination devisors was headed by the able Dr. Bondi, the cerebral Dr. Sallman, and Dr. Gaby who did not come from Boston. The Pharmacology Department we found superintended bya man of distinction in his field, Dr. R. Beutner, who provided us with many laughs and many more notes. Rumor had it that he had once been a frustrated writer of encyclopedias, but this slander was traced to a disgruntled fellow who had spent three weeks looking for an index to the Pharmacology Handbook. Our laboratory exploits in Pharmacology were led by Drs. Calesnick. Christensen, and Pratt. Here we studied the effects of drugs on rabbits, cats, dogs, rats, mice, guinea pigs, and medical students. This review would be incomplete without mention of Dr. Messey and his lectures on Pre- scription Writing. In addition to learning about chartas and pills, we received the lowdown on earning the first installment on a T955 iet- propelled town-and-country auto, as well as other practical aspects of Medicine. Most of us found the second year at least as difficult and even more time-consuming than the first. We came to realize that this was the bridge between our academic background and the real study of Medicine. The theme of the en- tire scholastic year was one of increased student participation. We, ourselves, gavei lectures in Pathologyand demonstrations in Pharmacology. We inaugurated the new system whereby each of us was required to assist at five autopsies. Many of us spent the odd hours of evenings, week-ends, and holidays down in the green room, where we correlated book learning with actual cases. The year is not yet over at the moment of this writing. There is still Clinical Pathology and more Pharmacology to cover. Also-woe of woes -the spectre of National Board Examinations looms ahead. However, the clinical half of our medical training is. just around the next corner and we are looking forward to the oppor- tunity to apply what we have learned thus far. TN X. 39 1- if 1-v. , X i 1 . I ,J :1:.g........,.. '13 T m'l rw 3 ws! - 'Q' x jrtmq X H lf' 'Y 'nw'-'Q lit: mi' 'ifffsfff r 'e' + ' . 1' AU J W Q xy' V + iv 'J' Hr 1. yr L,-K UZ? 1 . f. Y FRESHMAN CLASS Monica Irene Aleniewski Margaret Anne Friel Dominic Angelo Pagliaro Cyril Arvanitis George Parnell Glenn, Jr. William Bernard Pincus Landis Barish Joseph Edward Grady Pedro Paul Polakolt, Jr. Gordon Bendersky Robert Ernest Graybill Melvin Samuel Robinson Frank Arvid Berg Robert Edward Griffen William Joseph Roy Marvin Leonard Bierenbaum Leonard Haimes Daniel Calvin Schadt Maurice William Black Daniel Hamaty Robert Lawrence Scheer Howard David Borodkin Robert Harand Joseph Herman Schley Frank Irving Burno, Jr. Melvin David Hoffman Martin Jack Schwartz Frank Burstein Robert Jay Jaffe William Earl Schwartz S. Thomas Carter Vincent Joseph Jerant Mildred Elizabeth Sheesley Louis Harold Castor Bernard Kaplan Charles Isaac Siegel Anthony Chroniak Jerome Karasic Stephen Slachta Slaton Frederick Blaine Clemens Sherman Allan Karpen Bernadine Ruth Spangler Bernard Cohen David Francis Kelleher James Francis Squadrito Jacob Harold Cohen Mary Ellen Kennedy Michael John Stamatakos Roscoe Louis Curry Hugh Thomas Knight John Howard Staulfer Phillip David Roman John Kownacki Mary Priscilla Sterling H. James Day Beniamin Michael Kraynick Elwood Wakefield Stitzel, Jr Vincent Camillo Desiderio William David Lamberton Walter Floyd Stull, Jr. Robert Ellsworth Dixon Michael James lemonedes Tetsuro Tanabe Henry Joseph Dobies Michael Joseph Maffel Gisela Gloria Ungurian Hugh Coble Dodd Donald Vernon Malick John Robert Vance John Malcolm Dunn Joseph Louis Marcarelli Richard Ray Van Nuffelen David John Evancie Edward Nathaniel Melnicoff Joseph Philip Viglione Charles Bufliington Fager Dominic Menta Paul Joseph Vollmer Hector Anibal Feliciano-Rodriguez Diodor Vincent Minuti Lewis Weiss John Anthony Ferrence Joseph A. Mitchell Bradford Carson White Albert James Fessler Thelbert Roy Moyer Mark Henry Wholey Curtis Jesse Fisher Louis Charles Murray Stephen Newton Weiner Daniel S. Fleisher Paul Wolfgang Neidhardt John Rqmun Wigniewski Frank Andrew Franco Lidia Dolores Nieves-Prestamo Jggeph Albin Witkowski August Frank Frattali Charles Evans Noyes, Jr. Jqgk Wolqnsky OFFICERS OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS President Cyril Steven Arvanitis Vice President -l050Ph P' Vlgllonc ffeawfef Pedro Paul PolakofT,.lr. Secretary Giscla G. Ungurian Student Institu tc Rvplvsvntutivo Bradford C. White Ninety-seven men and eight women make up the Freshman class, forty undergraduate schools, twenty states, and many cities, are rep- resented. Each of us came to Hahnemann with an ethereal image of professionalism burning in his brain, and each is expecting a realization of this figure as its edges come into sharper focus and its form becomes less obscured by a roseate mist. The working side of our new life was intro- duced with remarkable un-college-like swiftness, and the cry When I was in college we never had to . . . was soon drowned out in the whir- ring of the cerebral wheels and the incessant dripping of sweat. A perhaps more cogent source of alarm was the Sophomore class, each member of which had his own scoop, angle, theory, or panacea for the academic ills, real and imagined, to which all Freshmen are heir. Upperclassmen's committees for the Aid of the Stricken Fledgelings were organized, disbanded, and reorganized, giving vociferous aid end- lessly. MEDIC exploitation, the wiles of live nursing women, the opiate quality of Rube's were all experienced and noted. ln spite of these manifestations of the new lite, the class plodded along through the first year. Academically, most Freshmen were neither paragons of erudition nor entirely devoid of brilliance in the scholastic gloom. The class had ,N '39 ' V Y mm N its quota of sages and of flunks, and the middle road was crowded with the remainder. Despite the wise admonitions of the Sophomores, each class member formed his own opinion of the members of the faculty. One disease which as- sumed pandemic proportions as the semester advanced was Paffitis, a highly communicable and yet strangely delightful malady with a unique and characteristic symptomatology. This disease was promulgated through the theories of Dr. George Paff of the Anatomy Department and it was not until January and the surge of Neuroanatomy that the inflammaiton began to recede. During this interval, the vocabularies of the Frosh underwent slight renovation as a result of an extreme Latin influence, for Dr. Angulo's tissueses and lenseses were different from anything we had ever encountered before. The second semester brought an abrupt change in both pedagogy and study procedures. Yet it was a period of highly effective teaching, and while the modus operandi was different, the end results were the acquisition of highly applic- able knowledge. And along with the physiologi- cal and chemical inculcations, each was made to feel compassionate fraternalism with Rana pipiens, the ubiquitous leopard frog. Although the travail did leave its mark, the end result was a feeling of satisfaction, relief, and pride in a iob done successfully. 5,1 -If lj. L 'A Qvxfza A,-, .kia-f I Q 9 J ,r 1 . ' 1 1 , X,.!' 'A ' x , X 1 'BB wl Yi If W l 1 31 'E L . 5. .5 sh' Q Qi -mx ffm 5, S-Mx, 6 I, , I . , 1 ' F' 1? 1 fi ' A ' w if :f 'fS,N gtk M ' JW! 0 ,f 'f ' ' - R x N X QQ, A o AY4 ' 55 fy! X, f - LQ Q 7 I ,. -' ' . , ,X . 4,2 ACTIVITIE ' A f f if gf Q Kiel 2 m xi 3' Q I L ,. ,,. 0 s X L' R ff A N 'Q V ,QM 'X -K X- A' 4' Q- ? 5 I 2 ' Wh - f 1 Q ' ' F ,Q F-ffif' ,,.. ff 0 ' .. 1 1 1 -rl-u.,..w1 . ,, ,, .. 1, I JL-f '-XJ. f-Reef ' I e-F I . -I ' ' ' I I, Y' A? -.A Y- I .. pl I I Q --.xhw s. ' 5 H ' fi 7. ' -- --.-- ' M- , - i.. V I ,M Lu wr- - '--4-. i 1 . I I '--+ 'Q I C in I Q Ji I I I I , 4 8-.J ' ,I .,, . I ii ,. r ' sf N., Nl Q ff-,,., I fr- -14.. 1 , A xxx I, LQ. -145' L4 IIEESI ,1-40' STUDENT INSTITUTE Fira! Row: J. Shorpsteen, R. Emerson, V. McCandIess, A. Errichetti, I.. Sablosky. Second Row: B. Whife, S. Jallo, S. Arvuniiis. Not in Picture: C. Fineberg, W. Wright, R. Miller, G. Byma, T. Silverstein. il STUDENT INSTITUTE The Student Institute of Hahnemann Medical College acts as liaison agent between the stu- dent body and faculty. Dr. Charles L. Brown and other members of the College Council have given us their whole-hearted cooperation in our efforts to place Hahnemann Medical College in the fore of democratic medical education. The Student Institute has many important functions which include regulating student elec- tions, arranging schedules of undergraduate society meetings, maintaining and supporting the student lounge and basketball team, appoint- ing the Chairman of the annual Blue and Gold Ball and the Editor-in-Chief of the Medic, and representing Hahnemann at student government meetings. The meetings are run informally. Repre- sentation of each of the classes not only gives the undergrduates a voice in student affairs but also ensures their being informed of the activi- ties of the college. Officers: President, Anthony J. Errichetti, Jr. Vice President, Reynolds Emerson Secretary, Virginia McCandless Treasurer, Lester Sablosky Senior Class: President, Charles Fineberg Representative, Stanley Jallo, Jr. Junior Class: President, Jay Sharpsteen, Jr. Representative, William Wright Sophomore Class: President, Rufus Miller Representative, Garrett Byma Freshman Class: President, Cyril S. Arvanitis Representative, Bradford C. White lnterfraternity Council: President, Toby E. Silverstein Faculty Advisor Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Literary Editor Photography Editor Art Editor Carl C. Fischer, M.D. Milton Avol Stanley J. Jallo, Jr. Louis H. Averbach Louis M. Soletsky Theodore G. Balbus A Milton Avol, Editor-in-Chief Business Staff Business Manager Stanley Goldfine Advertising Manager Lester Sablosky Circulation Manager Mervin H. Needell Assistant Editors Albert Kramer William B. Tuttle Harold D. Batt P. Lawrence W. Miller Joseph D. Alter Ray Andrews Cyril Steve Arvanitis Marvin Balistocky Albert Bender Victor D. Bergelson Mark Cohen Reynolds L. Emerson Morton Friedman Beatrice E. Gallaher Elaine F. Needell Jerry J. Rotwein S. Demetrius Saris Toby E. Silverstein Joseph W. Slap Lena G. Vardaro Stanley J. Jallo, Jr., Managing Editor louis H. Averbach, Literary Editor fe-4' 4o.ff':e'. lg 5 Theodore G, Balbus, Art Editor Albert Kramer, Assistant Editor Louis M. Soletslry, Photography Editor Harold D. Batt, Assistant Editor One of mon's characteristics is his exag- geration of his own importance by attempting to preserve his experiences in a permanent form, in the delusion that future generations would be interested in them. Thus, we bury Time Cap- sules, construct monuments and write our auto- biographies. The MEDIC is not the product of any delu- sions concerning the importance of our years at Hahnemann to anyone but ourselvse, it is rather an attempt to provide a package of many pleas- ant memories for the distant future, and only time will determine our degree of success. It is hoped that the descriptions of partic- ular incidents in the various classrooms and clinics will not be taken as a personal affront by anyone concerned. It is merely an attempt to recall some of the situations that have lent spice and flavor to our daily existence. Producing the yearbook was not an easy task. The situation was made much more difficult by the unavoidable realization that we still had to attend Medical School. Accident ward, sur- gical papers, obstetrics, home visits, National Board examinations, and the month-long exiles to Wilmington and Harrisburg were among the many obstacles to be overcome. There were a conscientious few who, never- theless, spent many endless nights in bringing this book to fruition and to these I cannot suffi- ciently express my gratitude. A difficult task was made much more pleas- ant by the kind cooperation we received from the front office, Miss Harding and Miss Britt, Miss Mary Maratea, Dr. Carl C. Fischer, our adviser, Mr. Sunny of the Photographic Labor- atary, Mr. Arthur Murat, our publisher's repre- sentative, Mr. Arthur Jameson, who illustrated our divider pages, Mr. Meyer Balbus who assist- ed in the art work, the M. D. magazine which supplied us with the cartoon strips by John Meyer, Abbot Laboratories which supplied the litho- graph by Grant Wood, and the Sarony Studios. These and the many others who have given their time and energy have made possible any success that this yearbook may enjoy. The Editor Stanley Goldfine, Business Manager 4 t X Q l X vw ' X A? L Lester Sablosky, Advertising Manager 7' 'Y' Lb- N li A lil Mervin H. Needell, Circulation Manager l- s '-I, ?A 'i Ei R ' ' - 7 jx -'fwr .-je? A Uj, S X 2 f my 1 1 W ' is-vm ,,. X, ,X xg, M f Z3 z,,ff.+fPf 'Ex lf! Qf N-'K X mv 1 fi2?1'WfHIII i X Q Q MJ 2 XR? 3 53? f 'giqtgx af - Z 2 I NX ' ? ' X X , f 1 , ' -Tfl1Y'Tfl'1'-T'-'T-'T'-v Axgl-Q! ,NSA QW , ha A E. MEDIC x ' 5 ' P ' Iiifixkx 1 my fx 'I EQ YS -2 X ' I !' N Liu! f ,lard :X Q' ,I Q' .4 ' .- ' , t .f',. 4 Qi. N Q 3 X 'il ,Qu t .Xu V farm N,f BLUE AND GOLD COMMITTEE This year the Blue and Gold, Hahnemann's Senior Prom, was held on May 20, 1950 at the Bala Golf Club. Headed by Anthony J. Errichetti, Jr. and Lester Sablosky, the commit- tees established a new precedent by making a Spring Formal out of what was in former years a winter dance. Two hundred couples danced gayly to the music of Kenmore's Caravan, strolled along beautifully landscaped walks, and drank at a very well-equipped and well-stocked bar. The evening was further enlivened by an hour of entertainment by extremely talented members of our own student body. Something special this year was the souvenir scatter pin which was given to each ot the ladies. N4 9:1 X ...!f .. .a . 2 ' Q ev- . '1 -'-N -N.x .. W - ' H QTLTW--ssl 2 .H ,gf - V-,Y - gr Q , 1 --Q-Q ' . 5 W I V -1-ig , I ' 4 ze. l ' 5 MN- ' .Q . J fy .n 4 5 V 1 ,W ., 1. 1. A pfffl ,QW 'N ' y Q V 'im I -2 flfgiipg fee' f'-3 1 . U , V M , , G., , ., . gv, .. .eg fr C t X f r A - X Q f i 3 f A. X I 3 1' X I I if ui s- . ic., f F' '. 1.6- ' A1 T ' ft .li J -- 'Y -' ' s . . 1 -Q..s. f f 1 i 1 t . K., ix i t 1-' I ff' X A KAX Z ff f T as Us ' Nz fnifl kv First Row: M. Klein, T. Hensel, A. Kramer, H. Braunstein, J. Halitz. Second Row: T. Silverstein, R. Stone, S. Jallo, H. Batt, L. Sablosky. Not in Picture: A. Bender, R. Grayson, R. Price, C. Williams, D. Kopp, J. Sharpsteen. BOERICKE THERAPEUTIC SOCIETY The Boericke Therapeutic Society is an or- ganization of Junior and Senior medical stu- dents under the mentorship of Dr. Garth Boericke, devoted to the propagation and fur- therance of an active interest among clinical medical students in the field of therapeutics. Further than that, it is a group of men as much interested in fellowship and 'fraternity among medical men as in the purely practical aspects of medicine. In line with this concept, our policy consists of informal, leisurely dinner meetings at frequent intervals with guest speak- ers.There are no officers other than the Business Manager. Our favorite speaker, of course, is Dr. Boericke, whose practical nuggets and personal geniality have aided and will serve to aid many a harassed Hahnemann undergradu- ate or alumnus. In short, one might almost state that if there is one dominating bond which makes ours a cohesive group, it is a universal respect and admiration for our mentor. Hahnemann students of many future generations will do well to be exposed frequently to his salutory influence. Sponsor, Dr. Garth Boericke Business Manager, Julius J. Hafitz D , , . 9'- llfl I I I I I I 5. .. -Y , . I fi' mt, First Row: V. Kauffman, E. Homme, J. Troup, M. Marion, V. McCandless, M. Sheesley. Second Row: W. Currens, J. Stauffer, T. Moyer. Not in Picture: O. Weber, R. Blough, R. Cassel, C. Freeman, J. Pfietfer. CHRISTIAN MEDICAL SOCIETY The Christian Medical Society was begun at Hahnemann in 1941 by Drs. George Nitshe and J. Winslow Smith. In 1945 it was affiliated with the national organization, becoming Chap- ter Number Fourteen. By now, well over one- half of the medical schools in the United States have chapters of C.M.S. Meetings are held every Wednesday, with from ten to thirty in attendance. Stott men, res- idents, graduate and student nurses, as well as medical students, gather to hear various physi- cians and ministers give Bible study lessons and deliver messages which are informative, inspi- rational, and of blessing and help. Hahnemann's Christian Medical Society cooperates with the chapters ot the four other medical schools in the city for city-wide meet- ings. This year there were six such meetings. ln early October, a city-wide C.M.S. outing was held at Belle Vista Park. The Woman's Medical College chapter was hostess in November, when Dr. Esther Shoemaker, a missionary doctor for more than two decades, spoke on Medical Mis- sions in India. In December, with Hahnemann as host, Lawrence W. Manross presented The Virgin Birth - Fact or Fallacy? At the annual city-wide banquet in February, Dr. Thomas Durant, professor of medicine at Temple, ad- dressed the gathering on the subject, Spiritual Aspects of Medical Practice. Meetings in March and April were held at University of Pennsyl- vania and Temple University, respectively. Faculty Sponsors: Dr. J. Winslow Smith Dr. George Nitshe President, Jeanette M. Troup Vice President, Milton Marion S' X 1 ' .Ji ' , 'S I, A 4:1 1 BNA , I . fs U A' mf' 'Nr 4-Q 1 . i ' 433K V -'L ' xr 'Y' 'GU' B Y' N., ,,,.....-4 , - I , J. Sosa-Fantauzzi, N. Suris, L. Nieves-Prestamo, R. Fernandez-Ceide. Not in Picture: E. Inigo-Agostini, J. Arbona, H. Feliciano-Rodriguez. El Circulo Hispano El Circulo Hispano was organized in an effort to promote social relationships and to as- sist new students of Spanish descent in over- coming the ditticulties that previous members encountered upon their arrival in the United States. At present, all of its seven members are from Puerto Rico. Our sponsor, Dr. William Y. Lee, has de- servedly obtained the undying admiration and gratitude of the group for his limitless interest and efforts in its behalf. We hope that those who follow us will con- tinue to strive and maintain the spirit and ideals of the organization, thereby aiding the Latin- American students at Hahnemann. Sponsor, Dr. William Y. Lee President, Nayda Emanuelli Saris Secretary-Treasurer, Rafael O. Fernandez-Ceide 2 lv is 12+ . 'l X fi, 6 ,F , 1, , f. - ri I - ,W , , I I. EM-'41 x X X . K' A I 1 E -. 'Ji' I' h X ky X ' l .lx v : ' l 3. 1 X gif.. if i i I Q, T i ,Lk , 's-,il 'mtg ml., A l I A 0 X J- l I L 1' ' 'N Y'r'N..,' Xl? D' -r in' x ' -1' Xa' S Xif i X. EX I-wr I- 'NF- dx First Row: A. Errichetti, S. Salus, D. Saris, T. McFarland. Second Row: L. Miller, R. Delph, R. Emerson, P. Miller, D. Schnall, Third Row: J. Coughlin, J. Wolichuck, M. Klein, L. Sublosky, S. Jallo, W. Tuttle, A. Kramer, R. Price. Not in Picture: C. Fineberg, S. Goldtine, J. Hatitz, T. Hensel, R. Negretti, J. Sewalc, A. Silber, S. Wolkotf. LANE MEDICAL SOCIETY Founded in December, 1940, the Lowell L. Lane Medical Society has held monthly dinner meetings during each school year, with subiects of general and special interest being discussed by authorities in their fields. Of very recent inter- est was the discussion by Dr. John Cossa on the relation of ophthalmology to general medicine and its value to the busy practitioner. Membership in the Lane Society is limited to the Senior Class, and only those men who have evinced particular interest in the medical specialties are chosen for membership. Under the guidance and inspiration of Dr. Lane, this Society has come to be regarded by its members Sponsor, Dr. Lowell L. Lane as among their most valuable experiences in President, Reynolds L. Emerson medical school. Secretary, Percy L. W. Miller ifiiifil H pq Q . 'i A i+X:?-it' 1 S ' ' Q-s iw.. YM i -- V YVA' 'A'--+ 75 N t E - l xf-N ,X ' x N First Row: M. Siracusa, E. Needell, .l. Ceccoli, l.. Schmittel. Second Row: M. Needell, V. McCandless, M. Avol, P. Ostrum, L. Sablosky. Third Row: A. Silver, P. Miller, J. Sharpsteen, L. Soletsky, L. Shultzaberger, D. Schnall. X . Ph ?'N QS if 'tri Not in Picture: M. Baran, S. Jallo, I.. Vardaro, R. Yanowitch, M. Balistocky, W. Bansbach, K. Batory. MACFADYEN GYNECOLOGICAL SOCIETY The MacFadyen Gynecological Society was founded originally in 1940 by Dr. Earl B. Craig for the purpose of furthering the interests of students particularly interested in gynecology. Meetings are held monthly, many of them being at Dr.. MacFadyen's home, at which time the group hears prominent men in the field, views motion pictures on gynecological subjects, and discusses problems of current interest. At present the Society is planning an annual lectureship to which a nationally-known man in the field of gynecology will be invited. We have been tortu- nate in having had such men as Dr. S. Leon Israel, of Mount Sinai Hospital, Dr. Craig Muckle of Sponsor, Dr. Bruce MacFadyen the Pennsylvania Hospital and Dr. Herbert Mar- President, Milton Avol bach of the Jewish Hospital among our guest Secretary, Jean M. Kweder speakers during the past year. Treasurer, Jeanette M. Troup N gg 1 1 reef: 4 1. l fi- -QA -' -jj: lil! ze ei r .D ' t l L 'I '. X 'rl - 1- W il ' i' fx u My I. i i it I X- r-- T N L- l l 5 I . I A yy J I 4 x , . ng ' 4 I Q wg . NU 'Y , .fs 19' T7 lk rx..4 First Row: M. Baran, M. Aleniewski. Second Row: N. Saris, T. McFarland, M. Woley, A. Gallo, A. Sunseri. Third Row: D. Kelleher, R. Kownacki, D. Evansie, H. Dobies, D. Pagliaro. Not in Picture: J. Coughlin, A. Errichetti, B. Gallaher, S. Jallo, J. Kweder, R. Lovin, R. Price, I.. Vardaro, E. Alvin, W. Bansbach, K. Batory, T. Bressi, C. Canino, J. Ceccoli, P. De Santis, R. Fernandez-Ceide, J. Fraser, A. lnigio, J. Jakabcin, D. Maras, P. Miraldo, M. Siracusa, J. Sosa-Fantauui, A. Zavatslty, J Arbona, F. Archer, A. Bamonte, A. Biancardi, C. De Feo, W. Donlon, T. Flynn, l.. Fouche, H. Fox, T. Furness, H. Griffin, J. Matwieiczyk, W. Minster, E. Nork, V. Plunkett, J. Pustai, A. Shinkus, P. Viola, E. Wysochansky, U. Desiderio, H. Feliciano, J. Ferrence, F. Franco, M. Friel, G. Glenn, J. Grady, R. Harand, V. Jerant, M. Kennedy, B. Kraynick, M. Maffei, J. Marcarelli, D. Menta, D. Menuti, l Murray, L. Nieves-Prestamo, G. Squadrito, J. Viglione, P. Vollmer, J. Wisnewslci, J. Witlcowski. NEWMAN CLUB The Newman Club, named after Cardinal Newman, a renowned scholar and convert churchman of the last century, is an organization for Catholic students of secular colleges and universities. The purpose of this organization is to deepen and enrich the spiritual and temporal lives of its members through a balanced pro- gram of religious, intellectual, and social activi- ties. At present there exist over six hundred Catholic Clubs throughout the world. At Hahne- mann, spiritual guidance and assistance is di- rected by our Chaplain, Reverend James Edward York. Activities throughout the past year have included Communion Breakfasts, lectures, debates, dances, and parties. . .wp vi In Y X I 03 '493 I5 Y -, wk H :K 4- X1 , s --.xo -'S X. .- , P , bot o 4 'o -X R . Er 2 'l mir 4' First Row: V. Kohn, M. Klapper, .l. Mason, A. Gallo. iv'-I . Je .fit Ei :ff ffl st i A f . i , If i 0- , -i3 I T 'ff s bn-iff i T A Nuff ff' V iv JS' P ' x . 1 X xf . 7 . 3 Q Second Row: D. Saris, R. Stone, E. Needell, A. Silver, N. Saris. Third Row: I. Schoen, G. Cohn, T. Balbus, T. Hensel, L. Soletsky, J. Hafitz, M. Needell, A. Bender. Not in Picture: C. Fineberg, B. Gallaher, S. Goldfine. WILLIAM OSLER SOCIETY The William Osler Society is composed of a small group of Senior students who are sin- cerely interested in internal medicine and its sub-specialties. Meetings are held once a month, at which time prominent men in the field of med- icine present talks on topics of interest to the medical student. The limitedsmembership of the Society lends itself to informal and intensive open discussion of the subiect under view. William Osler has said, From my point of view there is only one intellectual infection of any permanent value to the medical student- the scientific spirit, outlook and attitude of mind. It is this spirit which is being fostered by the Society. Through our meetings and discussions with men engaged not only in clinical medicine but also in basic subjects, we feel that we are pursuing Dr. Osler's fickle mistress, the truths of medicine. Sponsors: Dr. O. Henry Janton Dr. Albert M. Lupton Chairman, Elaine F. Needell Secretary, Arthur W. Silver Treasurer, Raymond I.. Stone 0 g 'D s Z' 3 if ' xi '1 J ' 04'-'A 4 X, . 4 X - J I r . i, p, First Row: A. Errichetti, A. Silver. Second Row: V. Kahn, E. Needell, M. Needell, J. Mason, D. Schnall, l. Vardaro. Third Row: M. Siracusa, J. Coughlin, M. Klein, S. Jallo, A. Kramer, D. Saris, N. Saris. Not in Picture: C. Fineberg, B. Gallaher, R. Lavin, l. L. Miller, S. Wolkoff. PAXSON OBSTETRICAL SOCIETY The Paxson Obstetrical Society, one of Hahnemann's mostactive groups, was organized under the guidance of Dr. D. J. Pontarelli and sponsored by the boss himself. Dr. Newlin F. Paxson. Members of the group, selected for int- erest in obstetrics, meet informally at least once monthly for the purpose of discussing problems and recent concepts in the subject and hearing student papers. This year, the initial meeting was held at Dr. Paxson's home, with Dr. Thaddeus B. Montgomery, the eminent obstetrician, as guest speaker. At the final meeting, certificates and keys were awarded to the Senior members of the Society. Sponsor, Dr. Newlin F. Paxson President, Mervin H. Needell Secretary-Treasurer, Jeannette C. Mason 5' tl ' . ... ' I 1 ., i H I' 11 T' 'T I x -I ... x X 1 . P ' XF? wi rl- K l r ' 1 t ,f-T is I gy k'x N ,. , :': A .,X ,f X nfs V: ,N karl, N N? E First Row: R. Delph, J. I-Iafitz, L. Soletsky, M. Needell, A. Silver. Second Row: L. Sablosky, R. Stone. Not in Picture: A. Bender, G. Cohn, C. Fineberg, G. Rubin, M. Frank, I. Wasserberg. PHILLIPS ANATOMICAL SOCIETY In 1943 a group of students headed by J. Sataloff and interested in the encouragement of a better understanding of Anatomy and its relation to clinical medicine formed the Phillips Anatomical Society. Under the inspiring leader- shp of Dr. Phillips, the Society steadily increased its membership. Students of all classes are eli- gible tor membership on an unlimited basis merely by showing sufficient interest to attend meetings. Meetings are short and strictly informal. Various members in rotation present discussions on various aspects of Anatomy of personal in- terest, usually illustrating their talks with lantern slides. A short general discussion period follows each presentation. Since the departure of Dr. Phillips last year, the Society has been without a faculty sponsor, and the search for a suitable replacement is now in progress. A., ssl' D. Schnall, I. Schoen, R. Summers, M. Babb, President, Louis M. Soletsky Vice President, Mervin H. Needell Secretary-Treasurer, Edward Murray rj: .,i ' 1 -R , ,, 4, ,PTF , rg , I , . ,. A f eg ' ' r X P :EE Y 'I N H n-4 i K5 N L l K' I i A 2 N. f' nv' E ,C I - I 3 i J' A w - A , X- , 1 r l 4 . r J I first Row: M. Siracusa, I.. Shapiro, M. Needell, M. Balistoclxy, M. Avol, l. Schmittel. Second Row: L. Weiner, J. Kurasic, J. Rotwein, A Ruderman, B. Cohen, E. Ehrlich, J. Slap, J. Smith. Not in Picture: E. Needell, D. Schonfeld, R. Stone, J. Ceccoli, J. Jalxobcin, S. Lerner, P. lisan, M. Friedman, M. Fuchs, A. Winshel, P. Polakotf. PSYCHIATRIC FORUM The first meeting of the newly-formed Psychiatric Forum was held in January of this year and was attended by twenty four students, representing each of the four classes, who were interested in the furtherance of interest in Psy- chiatry at Hahnemann. The Society's program is to include clinical conferences, using good teaching cases as they arise on the medical floors, and to be presented by the students them- selves. There are no membership requirements other than a real interest in the field of Psychi- atry and a desire to take active part in the Society's functions. Sponsor, Dr. Van B. Osler Hammett President, Marvin H. Balistocky Secretary, Mollie Klapper Q '7 .X 5 X we 1 , .-1 -., 1 l -- i FQ g y, t . is 3:2 . HIS - f-fr fs r ef . , ,. v .mf .' ' - QQ .. ' ' 'i r ' i' 1 1 t F Fe 1 if H K . M ,ffl ' lx WS. , l ,xx I XX . -4 . , is S e lie-X 8 X tvs! .. is ,f ' First Row: C. Batory, M. Klapper, L. Patlove, M. Dochios, J. Ceccoli, L. Schmittel. I Second Row: S. Salus, P. Ostrum, G. Cohn, V. McCandless, L. Soletsky, D. Schnall. Third Row: T. Bressi, E. Needell, M. Needell, l. Shultzaberger, L. Rosenfeld, L. Sablosky, J. Halitz, M. Avol, P. Miller, M. Siracusa, T. McFarland. Not in Picture: M. Baran, M. Klein, G. Rubin, J. Troup, L. Vardaro, M. Balistocky, W. Bansbach, R. Cleveland J. Hubsher, L. Junker, D. Kopp, D. Maras, J. Sharpsteen, S. Strassman, I. Wasserberg. I REDMAN PEDIATRIC SOCIETY The Redman Pediatric Society was founded in the latter part of 1941 as an outcome of a spontaneous and original idea of a group of Junior students under the leadership of Dr. Franklin Massey. In 1942 a constitution was drawn up and the first formal meeting was held March 31. The Society is made up of Juniors and Sen- iors, members being chosen at the beginning of each school year on the basis of scholarship and interest in pediatrics. Monthly dinner meetings are held, at which time guest speakers are in- vited to address the Society. These speakers have done much to stimulate the interest of the members in Pediatrics. Dr. Redman, our advisor, willingly gives the members valuable information gleaned from his many years of experience. His spontaneous SPOHSOV1 Dr- JOIW1 l-- Redmfln impromptu after-speaker speeches are note- President, George L. Cohn worthy, and his general whole-hearted interest Vice President, Jean Kweder in the students is greatly appreciated. Secretary-Treasurer, Virginia McCandless Irv I I Y First Row: T. McFarland, I. Schoen, W. Tuttle, P. Miller, D. Saris. s. ' ' 1 QC? S, . X L' Q?-' Second Row: H. Warren, J. Coughlin, R. Price, S. Jallo, H. Braunstein, J. Hafitz. Not in Picture: T. Hensel, R. Negretti, R. Summers, C. Williams, S. Wolkotf, R. Peters, J. Sommerfeld, I. Wasserberg, W. Wright. REIMANN ONCOLOGICAL SOCIETY The Reimann Oncological Society of Hahnemann Medical College was founded in 1940, and named in honor of its sponsor, Dr. Stanley P. Reimann, Professor of Oncology at Hahnemann and Scientific Director of the Insti- tute for Cancer Research at Fox Chase. The purpose of the organization is to help develop interest and understanding in the theory, diagnosis, and treatment of neoplastic disease. The Society has a dinner meeting each month, at which time some outstanding investi- gator or clinician speaks on a particular aspect of cancer. Following this, it is customary for Dr. Reimann to lead a discussion in which members present questions, comments, and ideas before the group. For the past two years it has been the practice to alternate theory night with clinical night, so that the students may be stim- ulated to think in terms of the new and unproved concepts and still maintain contact with the reality of present treatment. Along with the men at the Institute for Cancer Research, the mem- bers of the Reimann Society believe that re- search is the key to cancer control. Sponsor, Dr. Stanley P. Reimann President, William B. Tuttle Vice President, Irwin Schoen Secretory-Treasurer, James I.. Harrison wi Y 'tic wg- 3 l r so - A Q N j M - 1 .,, R' r---r-Q L4 ir l eg -X , 2 ' X ff- -' ask, Rfb F X t, -gg Q ..,. I ..... ,mfx no .-. ' if '35 Bs I' . l . B iz 'brisk .5 F ff X ' A. v .-.- ' f M, X -f . , .W . x xx ...L . 1 x ll :J yr Q: N l 1 l '. :Q 1 fi FI - ' IA il- r I X s it X gm it -Q ' 1 fl'-x WM First Row: H. Braunstein, T. Silverstein, A. Silber, D. Schnall, L. Sablosky. Second Row: L. Averbach, M. Needell, S. Jallo, M. Avol. Not in Picture: D. Saris, I. Schoen, L. Vardaro, P. Ostrum, P. Lisan, .l. Sharpsteen. UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH SOCIETY The Undergraduate Research Society, un- der the sponsorship of Dr. Alex Ulin and now in its fourth year, serves to further the need of the profession for well trained investigators. Stu- dents of good scholastic standing are given an opportunity to work with experienced men on original research proiects. Each student investi- gator then prepares a paper concerning his work and has the privilege of presenting it to the School on Students Day each Spring. A prom- inent medical investigator is usually present at this time as guest lecturer. The training and experience received by the Society's members will be an asset in the future when projects of their own are under- taken. In addition, their contributions to the progress of medicine give them a feeling of ac- tive participation in the advancement of med- icine. Several members of the Society have already had articles published in reputable iournals of the various specialties. At present, work is progressing in the fields of pathology, chest and abdominal surgery, neurosurgery, orthopedic surgery, endocrinology, gynecology, biochemistry, and cardiac and respiratory phy- siology. Patron, Dr. Alexander Ulin President, S. Demetrius Saris Secretary, Arthur W. Silver .l 1 . Q-- 1. 5 gin First Row: E. Casselberry, M. Klapper, M. Kennedy, K. Batory, l. Patlove, M. Sltezax. Second Row: E. Needell, P. Ostrum, M. Dochios, V. McCandless, R. Kauffman, N. Saris. Third Row: P. Paul, R. Billig, M. Sheesley, M. Sterling, M. Siracusa, J. Mason, J. Ceccoli, V. Kahn, I.. Vardaro, P. Moffet, B. Spangler, H. Griffen, L. Schmittel. Not in Picture: M. Baran, B. Gallaher, A. Gallo, J. Kweder, J. Troup, M. Aleniewslci, M. Friel, l.. Nieves- Prestamo, M. Rubin, G. Ungurian. WOMEN'S MEDICAL SOCIETY The Women's Medical Society has now be- come an integral part of the medical life at Hahnemann. The group consists of all female members ofthe student body. It has as its main purposes the promotion of friendship and co- operation among the women students, and the guidance of the younger members along their course to a medical career. New members are welcomed each year at a luncheon with the Freshmen girls as guests of honor. Throughout the year, scientific meetings and lectures are held. The Women's Medical Society is open,with- out restriction, to all women students at Hahne- mann Medical College. President, Virginia McCandless Vice President, Mary Dochios Secretary, Virginia Kautiman Treasurer, Phyllis Moffett C. C' 5 I 3 1 .- f : 'n ' J cya ' x First Row: M. Friedman, B. Gallaher, H. Braunstein, J. Weisbrod. I. 1 Second Row: Dr. C. L. Brown, Dr. .I. Gregory, Dr. A. Ulin, P. Lisan. Not in Picture: S. Jallo, R. Summers, E. Needell, J. Hamburg. HONOR SOCIETY The Honor Society was founded this year by both faculty and undergraduates. Its aims are the improvement of medical educational standards both locally and generally, promo- tion of interest in scientific and philosophical aspects of medicine, fostering of research, and cultivation of social-mindedness among its mem- bers. We plan to sponsor an annual guest lec- tureship by a man prominent in the fields of medicine, education, or research. Election to the Honor Society is decided by its members and a faculty committee on the basis of scholarship, character, and accomplishment. At present we are applicants for charter membership in Alpha Omega Alpha, the na- tional medical honor society. f 4 . a 1 if V . A President, Herbert Braunstein Vice President, B. Shannon Gallaher Secretary-Treasurer, Philip Lisan Faculty Members: Dr. John E. Gregory, Counselor Dr. Alexander Ulin Dr. Charles L .Brown Dr. William L. Martin Dr. Carl C. Fischer Dr. Newlin F. Paxson Dr. Henry S. Ruth Dr. Stauffer Lehman Dr. Edward W. Campbell x 1+ '-H-L 1 ,N 's' A I A, A ' X X 1 ' I X X . r X rf 1- 1 X X 2 1 1 A , :F I. ' ' i i 'I , .1 1 .Jil . 1, I I fig Lf xx f 'X lv' - v-C First Row: P. Ostrum, T. McFarland, T. Silverstein, M. Needell, E. Needell. Second Row: D. Saris, l. Shapiro, .I. Gallagher, J. Sharpsteen, A. Bender. l I fm ,I , fx! n V i . 4'l ,' y . X . . rs IWW x ,f K X IT g Q. r .X N X ff! X Q fix fs. 1, 1,1 f-. x Xa, .. 5 N N .Q 'Y '? A . .- - t Not in Picture: B. Gallaher, R. Summers, P. Viola, A. Errichetti, J. Fisher, 5. Strassman. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL The lntertraternity Council, composed of elected representatives of the various medical fraternities at Hahnemann, convenes bimonthly for the purpose of discussing affairs and events of mutual fraternity interest. The Council acts as a central control of local chapter activities, offers academic assistance to students, and ar- ranges an annual dance. This year the dance was held at the Essex Hotel in March and was attended by a large and pleased crowd of Hahnemann fraternity men and their guests. Ofticers of the Council are appointed annually on a rotating basis. President, Toby E. Silverstein, Phi Delta Epsilon Secretary-Treasurer, Mervin H. Needell, Phi Lambda Kappa ' i i E v MY. --I ,X .-we xVff5 First Row: l. Vardaro, E. Needell, L. Patlove, B. Gallaher, K. Batory, N. Saris, J. Ceccoli. Second Row: M. Skezas, J. Castleberry, J. Troup, V. Kahn, P. Moffet, A. Gallo, V. McCandless, M. Klapper. Not in Picture: J. Mason, P. Ostrum. ALPHA EPSILON IOTA Alpha Epsilon Iota was founded in 1890 at the University of Michigan. The Alpha Beta Chapter was established at Hahnemann in 1945. The purpose of the Fraternity is to promote good fellowship among the women students, to main- tain a high order of scholarship and professional achievement, and to foster a spirit of moral and social helpfulness. It has been the custom of the Fraternity to hold dinners and meetings at various times throughout the school year. Each Fall, a few weeks before the opening of school, a dinner is given in honor of all the Freshman girls to wel- come them to Hahnemann and to provide them with an opportunity to become acquainted with the Sophomore, Junior, and Senior girls. Occa- sionally, a faculty member is invited to speak on a topic of medicine or on one of general ap- proach to a medical career. Alpha Epsilon Iota is a relatively new or- ganization at Hahnemann. Efforts and plans are now under way to broaden the scope of its acti- vities. President, B. Shannon Gailaher Vice President, Katherine Batory Recording Secretary, Jean M. Ceccoli Corresponding Secretary, Lola Mae Patlove Treasurer, Nayda E. Saris Custodian, Phyllis Moffett Faculty Members: Dr. Elizabeth Brown Dr. Eleanor H. Yeakel A 1rrllgini'llr e4 ,Q First Row: J. Sommerfeld, R. Summers, F. Boker, Dr. G. Boericke, P. Viola, J. Gilbert, W. Bonner. Second Row: W. Minster, R. Roberts, H. Knight, M. Malfei, V. Desiderio, E. Stitzel, T. Carter, C. Kemp, B. White. Third Row: J. Squadrito, R. McKinstry, D. Kelleher, J. Marcarelli, D. Pagliaro, J. Day, D. Minuti, G. Glenn, W. Donlan. Not in Picture: D. Maras. ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Well established in previousyears asAlpha Sigma, Hahnemann's chapter has felt the need for affiliating with a larger medical brotherhood. Consequently, on May 15, 19481, Chapter Beta Phi was instituted as an affiliate group of the international fraternity Alpha Kappa Kappa. Our Fraternity was founded at Dartmouth Medi- cal College in 1888 and has steadily grown to include today 45 chapters and over 18,700 members. Meetings of Beta Phi are held at regular intervals throughout the school year, faculty and graduate members being invited. The chapter is currently furthering plans for a chapter house. In October, a very enioyable party was held in honor of the Freshmen at the Princeton-Dart- mouth house. At present we are making every effort to stimulate and maintain closer union among graduate and undergraduate fraters and con- tinued support of the Fraternity's objectives. President, Frank W. Baker, Jr. Vice President, Pascal J. Viola Corresponding Secretary, Robert W. Summers Recording Secretary, James P. Sommerfeld Treasurer, Jack C. Gilbert Marshall, Daniel C. Maras Warden, Robert R. Roberts Chaplain, William G. Minster Chapter Primarius, Dr. Garth W. Boericke Faculty Advisor, Dr. Garth W. Boericke Faculty Members: Dr. Edward W. Campbell Dr. Harry D. Evans, Sr. Dr. John Finley Dr. Carroll Haines Dr. Charles B. Hollis Dr. Fredericke Jarvis Dr. George R. Neff Dr. James D. Schofield Dr. Howard E. Twining Dr. Thomas J. Vischer Dr. Arthur W. Waddington Dr. William J. Walker Dr. Harry S. Weaver, Jr. it llj. N r I 1 ' 1 W' Z Q , :fic g.gp1it1i,i.,.ti, 5 T 3 1 a . T- , , 3 EE QQ i 'gi 1' T 5 i , .fi ' .F 'Nw-.ki i gfzf. ffl. W Y I ' ,I h 6 yagiqfq . lj ' K4 W-4, in Q X I Uh N , - 11 Lib.. First Row: S. Jallo, J. Walichuck, P. Miller, T. MacFarlancl, A. Errichetti, D. Saris, R. Price. Second Row: E. Alvin, G. Thoma, J. Harrison, L. Horned, A. Shinkus, R. Peters, J. Erickson, H. Fox, A. Sunseri Third Row: D. Kopp, T. Furness, R. Harner, P. Goff. Not in Picture: R. Emerson, J. Sewark, W. Bansbach, J. Esposito, R. Fernandez-Ceide, A. Freehoffer, L. Junker, N. Posocano, J. Sosa-Funtauzzi, A. Zavatsky, E. Nork, F. Clemens, H. Dobies, R. Kownacki, B. Kroynick, L. Murray, W. Stull, R. Van Nuffelen, J. Viglione, J. Witkowski. PHI BETA PI The Phi Beta Pi Fraternity dates back to March 10, 1891 when it was founded at the Uni- versity ot Pittsburgh. Since that time it has ma- tured into a national fraternity with 43 chapters in approved medical colleges throughout the country. As we look back over the past year's events, the highlight was in December when we held our Initiation and Alumni Night. This affair was cli- maxed at the Pen and Pencil Club where we wel- comed into our group nine new and active members. At this time, Dr. Gregory Froio was appointed our Preclinical Advisor, and Dr. Dominick J. Pontarelli, our Clinical Advisor. Pleasure and business were mixed by par- ticipation in monthly dinner meetings. In this manner, each member became better acquaint- ed with his brother members. It was decided to hold elections for the coming year in April so that the incoming officers could better understand their duties after a long- er period of contact with the present officers. Archon, Thomas P. McFarland, Vice Archon, Richard Peters Secretary, Robert Price Treasurer, James Harrison Editor, Henry Fox Historian, Terence Furness Faculty Members: Dr. Charles L. Brown Dr. Frank T. Tropea Dr. Gregory Froio Dr. H. Dondi Dr. D. J. Pontarelli J First Row: J. Matwieieczyk, J. lee, F. Snyder, J. Gallagher, H. langenfelder, J. Jakobcin, T. Hunter. Second Row: A. Biancardi, L. Schultzaberger, S. Hartman, R. Erdly, R. Miller, R. Fisher, T. Flynn, G. Tobias, R. Baker. Third Row: W. Jewell, R. Rambo, B. Beverly, D. Stutz, G. Byma, C. Yoder, E. Todd, J.. Fisher, H. Faust. Not in Picture: R. Cleveland, J. Landis, P. Miraldo, R. Schatz, J. Sharpsteen, E. Sneff, D. Weber, C. Woodcoclx, M. Marion. PHI CHI Phi Chi Fraternity was founded at the Uni- versity of Vermont in 1889. Our chapter, former- ly Phi Alpha Gamma, is one of the oldest at Hahnemann, merging with the large Phi Chi group in February 1948. During the past year our activities have included many enjoyable functions. Outstanding among these have been the informal dinner-dance for the fraters and their guests, and the Annual Founders' Day Banquet. Of great import at present is the comple- tion of plans for the acquisition of the chapter house in time for the classes' returning in 1950. Once this need is fulfilled, Phi Chi will be more successful than ever in its activities at Hahne- mann. Presiding Senior, John W. Gallagher Presiding Junior, Thomas W. Hunter Judge Advocate, John A. Jakobcin Secretary, Fred D. Snyder Treasurer, Henry E. Langenfelder Chapter Editor, Gordon L. Tobias Faculty Advisor, Dr. Dallett Sharpless Faculty Members: Dr. William L. Martin Dr. Theodore C. Geary Dr. Edward A. Steinhilber Dr. Carl C. Fischer Dr. Henry Lafferty Dr. J. Stauffer Lehman Dr. Bruce V. MacFadyen Dr. Daniel F. Downing Dr. Horst A. Agerty Dr. Otto H. Janton Dr. Albert M. Lupton Dr. Allen R. Kannapel Dr. David W. Hughes 'I nf 11 ill Vi' I I If is I A I V I 1 I I g I I I I ' I ' - .Bl gtg-sl I J' 5' X X i 'at 'ul ,ir I I i I W.. I I-X - , at i M ll' X , R X T. 'X I I I , .. f if I I A fmt I t s U x ,. :X If , v f ' I . x I I E f' ' rf I ' ' . I 4 ' C 1 vi Y, rg 1 I -dfi R . Q-., I x - --I I tix J' I4 3 1 1 :III 4 I ' , X '57 7' L 114, y ,. 4 !f 4ii 'ik -ff at .4- Q' 1 X I I xzls-a3s f' L1 x X 7 -ff First Row: L. Sablosky, S. Salus, C. Fineberg, J. Rotwein, M. Klein, J. Hamburg, J. Hubsher. Second Row: A. Silver, S. Goldtine, H, Batt, L. Averbach, T. Silverstein, A. Glaskin, R. Stone, R. Krain. Third Row: S. Lerner, M Robinson, J. Rubin, J. Leven, J. Lister, L. Shapiro, J. Druclcman, M. Avol, P. lisan, J. Hafitz. Fourth Row: M. Lemonedes, B. Klionsky, J. Wolansky, E. Ehrlich, P. Davis, H. Borodkin, R. Scheer, C. Fisher, F. Burstein, M. Hoffman, S. Weiner. Not in Picture: I. Maskin, I. Schoen, H. Warren, S. Wolkoff, I. Breslow, J. Kleiner, P. Lisan, J. Smoger, A. Strauss, A. Bamonte, L. Doloff, M. Fuchs, E. Gluck, M. Goldman, D. Gross, G. Hafitz, K. Milgram E. Morris, A. Ruderman, J. Slap, J. Smith, A. Winshel, B. Cohen, R. Jaffe, J. Karasic, E. Melnicoff J. Schley, C. Siegel. PHI DELTA EPSILON Phi Delta Epsilon, founded in 1904 at Cornell University Schooi of Medicine, has grown until today it has fifty-nine chapters throughout the United States and Canada. It looks with pride upon its achievements towards augment- ing the spirit of fraternalism among men in the profession of medicine. Beta Zeta Chapter has been in existence at Hahnemann for over twenty years. Through- out the school year, its members are active in r I both scholastic and social events. Scientific din- ner meetings are held at frequent intervals and prominent physicians are invited to speak on subiects of current interest. Parties and dances are held at our newly renovated fraternity house as frequently as examination schedules permit. During the past year Beta Zeta sponsored a dance at Houston Hall for the four undergrad- uate chapters in Philadelphia. In February we were in charge of the gala Annual Five Chapter TP : ' , Formal at the Penn Sheraton Hotel, held for Phi Delts in the whole Philadelphia area. The high- light of the year, however, was the presentation of Dr. Hans Selye as speaker at the Fourth An- nual Lectureship held in Klahr Auditorium. Beta Zeta has been extremely fortunate in having a truly fine group spirit, not only among its undergraduates but also among its alumni. Without this, the Fraternity's efforts and achieve- ments for itself, the medical school, and the pro- fession in general would not have been so fruit- ful. President, Louis H. Averbach Vice President, Toby Silverstein Senior Senator, Harold D. Batt Junior Senator, Leonard Shapiro Treasurer, Bernard Klionsky Secretary, Edward Ehrlich Historian, Anthony J. Bamonte Sergeant-At-Arms, Stark Wolkoff Graduate Advisors: Dr. Edwin Cohn Dr. A. Herbert Marbach Faculty Members: Dr. Benjamin Calesnick Dr. Donald Cantor Dr. Albert A. Carp Dr. Oscar Corn Dr. Alfred Conston Dr. William Likoff Dr. Herman Rudnick Dr. Charles Sacks Dr. Joseph B. Sarner Dr. Victor P. Satinsky Dr. C. J. Stamm Dr. H. D. Sivitz QI-. 1 U' .gx f fuses x g, F91 .nf- 5 . I 2 t 1 :i t i a V it . M,- i l 1 I c Q i 7 s i i ,I li l i J .1 i i P I . E 7 so Vi 'zfvisv' i f , 5 j 'i 1 i ii .i ii ff: First Row: H. Braunstein, M. Needell, A. Frankel, A. Bender, M. Friedman, G. Cohn, J. Gray. Second Row: T. Balbus, G. Rubin, A. Kramer, S. Strassman, J. Karasic, B. Kaplan, L. Weiss, D. Fleisher, J. Cohen. Third Row: A. Millstein, S. Goren, G. Bendersky, L. Weiner, P. Polakoff, D. Schnall. Not in Picture: V. Bergelson, L. Goren, R. Grayson, M. Horowitz, S. Rosenbaum, L. Rosenfeld, L. Soletsky, R. Yanowitch, M. Balistocky, L. Dreifus, M. Frank, N. Samuels, J. Shapiro, I. Wasserberg, O. Weiner, J. Weisbrod, M. Cohen, A. Friedman, M. Friedman, J. Iger, M. Marcus, H. Rosomoff, N. Solomon, L. Barish, M. Bierenbaum, M. Black, P. Brodsky, L. Castor, L. Haimes, S. Karpen, B. Pincus, M. Schwartz. PHI LAMBDA KAPPA The Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity was founded at the University of Pennsylvania in 1906. Alpha Beta Chapter was organized at Hahnemann in 1927, and since its inception here has worked in the interest of the school. The high standards of scholarship maintained by the members are a reflection of the ideals and the program of the Fraternity. Scientific meetings have been a long estab- lished institution, and this year they have been supplemented by clinico-pathological confer- ences with members of all classes participating and contributing. The Annual Phi,Lambda Kappa Lectureship hos brought to Hahnemann, for the benefit of all, such outstanding men as Drs. Harry Gold, Lester Dragstedt, and Owen G. Wangensteen. In the future, other leaders in the various fields of medicine will be guests of Hahnemann under our auspices. 1 J To lighten the busy academic life of the medical student, dances and parties have been strategically spaced throughout the year. At the beginning of the academic year, a party was held at the Hedgerow Theatre, and our fraters, scattered during the summer, were reunited. Today, as medicine stands on the threshold of what can be an era of unequalled scope and advance, we, the members of Phi Lambda Kappa, dedicate ourselves to the preservation of the ideals of American medicine. President, Albert Bender Vice President, Stanley Edwin Goren Scribe, Morton Friedman Treasurer, Joshua Leon Weisbrod Secretary, Hubert Lawrence Rosomofif Faculty Advisor, Dr. Horace L. Weinstock Faculty Members: Dr. William Klinman Dr. Joseph Messey Dr. William Reichstein Dr. William S. Silverman Dr. Francis H. Stern Dr. Alexander W. Ulin -cu-qynki. I 111,- 4 qn4Qv-- -1 iv Q., 4-' r-., 'X 7 I l I I 5 i Y I , I A ADMONITIONS to the Student of Medicine Whoever takes up medicine should seriously consider the following points: firstly, that he must one day render to the Supreme Judge an account of the lives of those sick men who have been in- trusted to his care. Secondly, that such skill and science as, by the blessing of Almighty Cod, he has attained, are to be specially directed towards the honour of his Maker, and the welfare of his fellow-crew tures, since it is a base thing for the great gifts of Heaven to become the servants of avarice or ambition. Thirdly, he must remember that it is no mean or ignoble animal that he deals with. Lastly, he must remember that he himself hath no exemption from the common lot, but that he is bound by the same laws of mor- tality, and liable to the same ailments and afflictions with his fellows. For these and like reasons let him strive to render aid to the dis- tressed with the greater care, with the kindlier spirit, and with the stronger fellow-feeling. THOMAS SYDENHAM, 1624-1689 V 1 1 l l A new generation in Medicine has been successfully nurtured through the neonatal period. The labor has been long and stormy. How this baby will grow and develop will depend upon many as yet unforeseeable influences. The future is open to speculation, but one thing is certain - growing-up will be a trying experience, as it is for all youngsters. The life ahead will not be easyp let us pray that it will not be too difficult. Let us hope that the days of the years to come will be filled with happiness for us and for all mankind. SPONSORS OF THE 1950 MEDIC Horst Albert Agerty, M.D. 1111 North 63rd Street Philadelphia 31, Pa. Pediatrics Charles P. Bailey, M.D. Robert P. Glover, M.D. Thomas J. 0'Neill, M.D. Thoracic Surgery Nathaniel G. Berk, M.D. 1920 N. 7th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Internal Medicine Joseph Bitman, M.D. 7748 Cedarbrook Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. Pediatrics Garth W. Boericke, M.D. 257 South 16th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Internal Medicine Amedeo Bondi, Jr., B.S., M.S., Ph.D. 235 North 15th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Bacteriology M. John Boyd, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. 315 Bowman Avenue Merion, Pa. Biochemistry Dr. and Mrs. Beniamin Calesnick Edward W. Campbell, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S., F.I.C.S. Gerhard J. Gislason, A.B., B.S., M.D. Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. Urology Eugene F. Carpenter, Jr., M.D., F.A.C.S. 257 South 16th Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery Joseph Chandler, A.B., Ph.D. 235 North 15th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Biochemistry Wesley B. Fox, A.B., M.D. 19 W. Strattord Avenue Lansdowne, Pa. Pediatrics Nicholas G. Frignito, A.B., M.D. 255 South 17th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Neurology and Psychiatry Theodore C. Geary, M.D. General Surgery Edwin O. Geckeler, M.D., F.A.C.S. 269 South 19th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Orthopedic Surgery Samuel V. Geyer, B.S., M.D. 1228 Delancey Place Philadelphia, Pa. Roentgenology and Radiology Melville A. Goldsmith, B.S., M.D. Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. Internal Medicine leib J. Golub, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S. 338 S. 21st Street Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology William Gregg, B.S., M.D. 1 Lexington Avenue Havertown, Pa. Pediatrics John E. Gregory, A.B., M.S., M.D. 235 North 15th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Pathology F.I.C.S Herbert P. Harkins, M.D., M.Sc.lMed.J F.A.C.S. 1930 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. Otorhinolaryngology and Bronchoscopy Robert M. Hunter, M.D., F.A.C.S. 250 South 18th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology O. Henry Janton, M.D. 235 North 15th Street Philadelphia 2, Pa. lnternal Medicine Joseph Kassab, B.S., M.D. 269 South 19th Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery Kenneth K. Keown, M.D. 619 Yale Road Clifton Heights, Pa. Anesthesiology William G. Kirkland, M.S., M.D. 220 North 15th Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery Herman Kline, M.D. 2643 Pacific Avenue Atlantic City, N. J. Dermatology Henry D. Lafferty, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S. 37 South 20th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology Lowell L. Lane, A.B., M.D., F.A.C.P. Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. lnternal Medicine William Y. Lee, M.D. 1930 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery J. Stauffer Lehman, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.R 230 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. Roentgenology and Radiology Pascal F. Lucchesi, M.D. Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Public Health and Preventive Medicine N. Volney Ludwick, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.R David Hughes, B.S., M.D. 230 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology Bruce V. MacFadyen, B.S., M.D., M.Sc. F.A.C.S., F.I.C.S. 6341 Ridge Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology William L. Martin, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S. 230 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery Franklin C. Massey, M.D. Medical Arts Building Philadelphia, Pa. lnternal Medicine Frank H. Murray, M.D., F.A.C.S., F.A.P.S., F.l.C.S. 255 South 17th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Proctology Alexander E. Pearce, A.B., M.D. 230 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery Domenic J. Pontarelli, M.D. 5662 Miriam Road Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology John L. Redman, M.D. 331 South 18th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Pediatrics Stanley P. Reimann, A.B., M.D., Sc.D., F.A.C.P. Lankenau Hospital Research Institute Philadelphia, Pa. Oncology William A. Reishtein, A.B., M.D., F.I.C.S. 225 South 17th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology Henry S. Ruth, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.A. 225 Cheswold Lane Haverford, Pa. Anesthesiology E. Dallett Sharpless, M.D. 159 Ashby Road Upper Darby, Pa. General Surgery David Soletsky, B.S., M.D. 124 West 79th Street New York 24, N. Y. General Practice William C. Thoroughgood, M.D. 750 Bonsall Avenue Sharon Hill, Pa. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Frank Tropea, Jr., M.D., F.A.C,S. H. Earle Twining, A.B., M.D. 2026 Delancey Street Philadelphia, Pa. Dermatology and Syphilology Alexander W. Ulin, A.B., M.D. 230 North Broad Street Philadelphia, Pa. General Surgery Arthur W. Waddington, A.B., M.D. 1215 W. Lehigh Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. Obstetrics and Gynecology William J. Walker, M.D. 2014 Delancey Place Philadelphia, Pa. Gastroenterology Harry S. Weaver, Jr., A.B., M.D. 37 South 20th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Ophthalmology Horace L. Weinstock, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S 329 South 18th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Urology Eleanor H. Yeakel, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Department of Anatomy Hahnemann Medical College PATRONS OF THE 'I950 MEDIC Reinhard Beutner, M.D., Ph.D. J. Antrim Crellin, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. Daniel F. Downing, M.D. Thomas L. Doyle, M.D., M.R.C.S., Eng., F.A.C.S. Harry D. Evans, Sr., M.D. Carl Fischer, B.S., A.M., M.D., F.A.A.P., F.A.C.P. Donald R. Fitch, A.B., M.D. Gregory F. W. Froio, A.B., M.D. George D. Geckeler, M.D. Robert Gouldin, A.B., M.D. D. Dwight Grove, B.S., M.D., D.N.B., F.A.C.A., F.l.F.A B. Marvin Hand, M.D. lucy Anne LaSalvia, M.D. George Wood Lilley, B.S., M.D. J. Winslow Smith, M.D. Beatrice P. Troyan, M.D. Raymond C. Truex, A.B., M.S., Ph.D. Edward P. Van Tine, A.B., M.D. Mr. 8. Mrs. Bruno Vardaro Kenneth R. Weston, B.S., M.D. OUR CAMPUS ADVERTISING SECTION T' I I I I I I I I . I I II I I I I, I, I I .L The Hahnemann Medical College mm' Hospital of Philadelphia is opproved by the Council on Medical Educotion ond I-lospitols ot The Arnericon lvledicol Association, ond by the Association ot American Medical Colleges, ond teoches oll tundomentol bronches of scientific medicine os tought by other approved universities and medical colleges. Prospective medical students desiring to enter The I-lohnernonn Medical College should opply tor rnotriculotion obout one yeor in odvonce They ore expected to have o degree trom sorne pre-medical school or university, or the eguivolent thereof. An odclitionol opportunity ottered by l-lohnemonn is the teoching ct Homeopothy in conjunction with Phorrnocology, lvloterio Medica ond Therapeutics os tought in the regulor course ot instruction ot other medical colleges. SEND EOR CATALOC-it ADDRESS Tl-IE DEAN 235 North Fifteenth Street Philadelphia, Pa. The next freshman session will begin SEPTEMBER H, 1950 The llurtu 1' A llllI'lI'iIlill ul' il Fmnmis lirlurmn lluvlui' and at llvisniil lfhiltl It was during the reign of Queen Victoria that a simple forester's cottage near Balmoral Castle, North Scotland, became the setting for a human drama that will live forever in this painting, The Doctor. 0 A favorite servant ofthe Queen lived in this cottage with her husband and their only child. Upon hearing that the child was seriously ill, the Queen wired to London for her personal physician, Sir Iames Clark. Sir Iames came by special train and remained in constant attendance upon the child until the crisis was past. The child recovered. 0 In 1891, Queen Victoria commanded Sir Luke lfildes to immor- talize the scene on canvas in commemoration of the faithful devotion of the physician. 0 The Sculpticolor rendition is dedicated by Vvlyeth to the friend of all mankind, The Family Doctor. The Doctor!-After Sir Luke liiltles. R. A.-Alosepli Tomanelt 1 u ll M I, I i . i l I 1 I l i I. Nlmltvrn Mmmwl Ehivnve The pictured child recovered despite the inadequacies of her humble home-a tribute to her doctorls genius and to the progress of medical science. Important advances have since been made in the struggle to conquer human illsg greater developments are yet to come. The physician of today has at his command more extensive scientific knowledge, greater clinical skill, miraculous new drugs and perfected instruments. I-le is ably seconded by pharmacists, technicians and nurses whose education and training are much more thorough than in the past. The medical, pharmaceutical and nursing professions have joined forces to provide for the sick and injured of every community, a service unparalleled in history. The Family Doctor The service of the general practitioner is characterized today by the same virtues as those that have ennobled his profession throughout the ages. In the words of the great anatomist and physiologist, re- nowned poet and writer of prose, OliverWendell Holmes, the family doctor is the flower of our civilizationg and when that stage of man is done with, and only remembered to be marvelled at in history, he will be thought to have shared as little as any in the defects of the period, and most notably exhibited the virtues of the race. Generosity he has, such as is possible to those who practice an art, never to those who drive a trade, discretion, tested by a hundred secrets, taCt, tried in a thousand embarrassmentsg and what are more important, Herculean cheerfulness and courage. So it is that he brings air and cheer into the sickroom, and often enough, though not so often as he wishes, brings healingf, 'Z I ff l N ll ll li PUIIATEII'lHlLAI1ELl'HIA5,P.-X. 3 l'lmi'limt't-ulit'uls, Nutritionals and lliologiculs ,ii Eff W56e5 fo Qjrafcafilzg CAM Zum fha ywecbcaf ga!! of flw mozznf gnai ,yodlaifaf THE MEMIIHIAL HIJSPITAL WILMINGTON, DELAWARE My 'lflbkea fo the Class nf 1 9 5 U uma M jig Qui?-0. ,N 1949 STATISTICS SHOW SCOPE OF OUR WORK Patients admitted .,,,.,, .t.....,... 1 0,116 Number of births ...,,.A4 ....A.. 1 ,419 Major operations .,,..... ....A.. 1 ,477 ai' QQ' Minor operations ...,.....,, ....... 3 ,097 Clinical laboratory examinations .s,............,..,... 43,529 J-L X-Ray examinations .,,..,..,,........ 11,537 Supervised autopsies as obtainable Founded in 1866, Shadyside is a fully approved 340-bed voluntary hospital doing all types of general work, including neuro-psychiatry. It offers interns a carefully planned program . . . well-rounded services . . . superior living quarters . . . and preference in staff appointment, in a great progressive community. SHADYSIDE HOSPITAL ' Pittsburgh, Pa Best Wishes to Graduating Class of 1950 from Medical and Surgical Staff of the HARRISBURG HOSPITAL Harrisburg, Pa. 1011-.! 'I' bill, 63-If JOHN W. GEARY PI1y5rm1r1', lrt1rfJwrr1I IIvgr1tr1I Stlgtgwlrw Pluirmci vn1Im1Iu 'Sump UI Ii' It: mul Trims' 214 North 15th Street Philadelphia 2, P0 J. BEIIBER C0., INC. Distributors jon Hamilton Equipment in Yvoocl or Steel Beck-Lee Electrocarcliograph Ritter E.N.T. Equipment Mattern X-Ray Equipment McKesson Basal Metabolors Acmetherm Physiotherapy Ready to equip you from a needle to an X-ray 1109 Walnut St. 838 Broadway Philadelphia 7, Pa. New York 3, N. Y. MEDICAL SPECIALTIES COMPANY ZI5-217 NJ. ISTIW Street Philadelphia, Pa. Supplies and Equipment for Physicians, Hospitals and Laboratories Serving the physician since 1841 Srnith, Kline dc French Laboratories are not interested in offering any product unless it constitutes a definite contribution to medicine-a distinct therapeutic or pharmaceutical advance. Smith, Kline Sz French Laboratories 1530 Spring Carden Street, Philadelphia 1, Pa. iw '1X5'Yz3c7i'5WNF T 'M.r- - f' 'M'-:W Qsiff xX.LQ:3ivii-ff,:fQS,xsjf: s - gg so so fl ' as t . we - SAR we f , . c:'1glf':, H-A-br 1, fm , F if-51 We eff: - K' a',?E'?1ls-Vt - ff.-'wi - : -1- W- we eq we ,.ss,x,:se arzxw.-,f x me S K NNMXQR t DQR MN 1 sqxgxs-fi-v:xgA,.kf il. 5 5 mb N. X .,...v............... -,... .... ...-a..,w,,,. ,aww is '- M ,P ,:.r, f' 1 aa , g or fsee Q 'Q N yXNxa ua .NX X' 1 X Nwrxhx .wi NX -xgiqg, 3 F . 5 M S QQ . -w t QXSN Axes sexi- XNNXQNQXQQQX, , Q- X Q: Xxx .F , gk 3 X-,X-X Veg- X:s.?.i1X X- Xsqgffgixiweeg s Q2 N pest jissrx segieeff f Q 3 r I Sd ' M X NS! W i 1 M i2 1 2 , iirisrii .F gm - .,t. L ..t. - fe,.e,f ,..... Q .l.. f .lui ,... E i' 4 Y Q I m IO-I -. if mi, L limi. ll fxirimi.-11 1 PHILADELPHIA SURGICAL INSTRUMENT CO. -- Dixlrilmfors Y o HAMII ION MODIRN MIIWICAI IURIJIILIRI Q RONAI. CHROME, WfXlllN-3 ROOM Hlllllt Q WAPVLFR SIIORI NVAXI DIAIHFRMN WHIP Lis fir Iiullmw Dfllml wwf Offifmi Plclnrwinq 'rrxiiv 1717 Sonsom Street vx DIIESSED BEEF Clllllllillly, In SPECIAL SERVHIIS TU llU'l'lil.S, l'IIlLAllEl,I'IlIA, PA. O MEATS OF QUALITY FEDERAL INSPECTION C GRAYS FERRY AVENUE 8: 36TH ST. CLUBS AND INSTITUTIUNS HUMPHREYS HOMEOPATHIC MEDICINES Family Medifines Since 185'-I ECONOMICAL TIME-TESTED PLEASANT TO TAKE -ASK FOR THEM BY NUMBER- 1 Simple FEVERS and INFLAMMATIONS TEETHING, WAKEFULNESS of . , INFANTS , Simple DIARRHEA .. ,, ,...A., .. M393 N499 7 COUGI-IS due to COLDS .I , I Simple NEURALGIA ..,. Simple HEADACHE .... I I I N877 N979 H1099 DYSPEPSIA ,,,,..,. ,.,. I ,,.,. . . IRREGULAR or DELAYED MENSES . LEUCORRHEA .I ., II.,.,.,. ..,I, I SPASMODIC CROUP . . Simple SKIN ERUPTIONS RHEUMATIC PAINS ,... I .. PILES or I-IEMORRHOIDS . Simple INFLAMED EYELIDS I , . ., N1 133 Q!1273 H1333 H1439 H1531 H1777 M1877 19 SIMPLE NASAL CATARRH 21 ASTHMATIC PAROXYSMS . 26 Simple NAUSEA, VOMITING 27 Simple DISORDERS of the URINARY TRACT . 28 Simple NERVOUS CONDITIONS . . FEVER BLISTERS, COLD SORES, NURSING SORE MOUTH , Simple DISORDERS of the BLADDER BEDWETTING of CHILDREN . PAINFUL MENSTRUATION . DISCOMFORTS during MENOPAUSE Snmple THROAT IRRITATIONS , 40 INSOMNIA , . , H7797 H2977 H3093 U3 1!! 113299 l!34!9 Symptoms of COMMON COLDS Humphreys OINTMENT Simple Piles, minor burns, cuts Golden Douche Powder Q12 individual packettesl PRICES: 35c, 75c, 31.15 at Drug Stores SAMPLES to the PROFESSION Upon Request HUMPHREYS MEDICINE COMPANY INCORPORATED 273 Lafayette Street New York 12 ibeaignerd ana! 7Wanu!aclurer5 of Amerisds Einest interns Suits and Hospital Clothing E24-EEE S. Hth STREET PHILADELPHIA, Pi-X. b I E d AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF HOMEOPATHY XVf'lI,i'Il' L'-. ll 'liiwm :mi qw ltlillfl In lall xx-lip Iii Iliv Ixllli ii' I ll ' Il! ' .T I Yvii will nun-r iixlrvt Carly IL ',-,,', 'alll-ri xxzlll xwlrr Ninth . il I ti. ll ii, I L' 'f i ritrfvimllx, tziiil .fin is IIITSIIIIII it-. ri' 'rvlily ,lwiwii .l .rl cttw: iii :rig i' .I-I li I ' 5' .' OZIIIOIIIIIIIUCS SVC. 'al arr.:i',1r'i110rils, lor Ixlprixlvuiiiliip ul rCIi'IIl clvrilil xl- In ixv Im ii riiiiilr- li, Ilw lriimr' I ', A I, II. application forms lorlXlcr1ilwisl1:p iii ly lil li :il at Iliv It lllllb oltiiie Joi rt upon Q' .xi lil Itiom INSTITUTE EXECUTIVE OFFICE, l6Ol CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA 3, PA. A REMINDER PUBLICKER PRODUCES THE WORLD'S FINEST ETHYL ALCOHOL PUBLICKER INDUSTRIES INC. I429 Walnut Street Philadelphia 2, Pa. LELAN D BROWN LABORATORIES Suite 508 I930 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Serology - Bacteriology Hematology e Chemistry NATIONAL ACADEMIC CAP a Gowu co. STATIONERS - PRINTERS TH E ADAMS-LESSACK COMPANY College Supplies Our Specialty No School Item Too Hard to Get at Any Time Southeast Cor. I5tI'1 8- Race Sta. LO 7.1133 PHILADELPHIA, PA. LO 7-1135 vicron v ci.Ao co CERTIFIED SPeCl 'l'l 9 in Binding 0' Manufacturers of LIBRARY BINDFRY Median Journals Food 59,-vice Equipment Layavu ryzyrmf HAVE YOUR NOTES BOUND AT F I , I ' ,107 SAVIDGE G KRIMMEL Ch, ful 'me of , , L Establishccl i925 ma, Glassware, Silverware and Kitchen Utensils L I G Ag I 111-119-121 s. mn sneer Pham., Pa. 9, B 45 232'234 N' 'SH' SI' Ph Pa' 1 ' MMI-0 CONGRATULATIONS TO CLASS OF 1950 THE HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE BOOK SHOP For Complete Eye Care Consult Your Eye Physician . . . Then See Your Guild Optician MAWSON G KIENLE EXCLUSIVELY OPTICAL 00 -o O -5' 'oflcxb 1926 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa. o?T'C'Afv ll AW BRAEU NINGER -f INC. MEDICAL Am-5 gulkwlxe N.W. COR. 161:-1 8- WALNUT STS. PHILADELPHIA BROTHERSTON BOERICKE cf TAFEL SURGICAL COMPANY Homoeopathic Pharmaceutists G Publishers Laboratories and Homoeopathic Pharmacy at 2214 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. Surgical Instruments of Stainless Steel -2- Chrome Plated Quality and Distinction Hospital Equipment Physicians' Supplies STANDARD REAGENTS CO. Physicians' Laboratory l0ll Arch Street, Philadelphia 7, Pa. Branches and Homoeopathic Pharmacies at New York -:- Pittsburgh -:- Chicago Business Established in i835 OVER A CENTURY OF SERVlCE SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT COMPANY 3527-31 Lancaster Ave. Philadelphia and t . MICROSCOPES Medical Students' Supplies . LABORATORY APPARATUS . CHEMICALS I-:AGENTS zza N. l5th sf. Philadelphia 2, Pa. ' R Courtesy of LIVEZEY lNCORPORATEll 149 N. 10th St. PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. BONSCHUR 5' HOLMES OPTICIANS l900 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. CUNGRA TULA TIUNS to the Members of the C-raduating Class of 1950 ness as., acumen -nr .-.f 212 S. DARIEN ST. PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. A COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP AT YOUR SERVICE 24 HOUR SERVICE We have a complete staff on duty 24 hours a day. Please feel free to call us at any hour. OLIVER H. BAIR CO. Director of Funerals 1820 CHESTNUT STREET RI 6-1581 MARY A. BAIR, President REAGENTS sf STANDARDS For the Clinical Laboratory . HARTMAN - LEDDON COMPANY 5821 Market Sl., Philadelphia 39, Pa. G ? UER If so Do Not Fail to Visit FARMACIA EMANUELLI Fajardo, Puerto Rico or FARMACIA REXACH Santurce, Puerto Rico 10? BEST WISHES to the Graduating Class GLOBE SALES CO. 431 Walnut St. PHILADELPHIA 6, PA. MILLER, BAIN, BEYER 81 CO. Bed Linens - Muslims - Blankets Spreads - Gauze, etc. 1025 ARCII ST. PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. SELBY L. TURNER New England Mutual Life Insurance Co. Specializing in Doctors only Malpractice, Automobile, etc. 150 Broadway New York 7, N. Y. BEekman 3-6620 IRV'S MENS SHOP For a Complete Line of Men's W'earing Attire Two Blocks South of College 103 N. 15th ST. PHILADELPHIA, PA. E -1' Known for a generation as a medium . for dispensing drugs, such as sulfa, for relief from pregnancy and motion Z5 nauseas, in presurgi-cal preparation, for relief of heat effects and as a palat- able drinking water in cases of reduced 3 3 alkali reserve. In all pharmacies. I I I I 5 lx ,1-IEA J i f NOT A LAXATIVE KALAK WATER CO. OF NEW YORK, INC. 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, N. Y. Compliments of CHATHAM PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. Newark, N. J. Manufacturers of HKOAGAMINR and WULTRACAINU OINTMENT Est. 1905 LO 7-0133 KATHRYN TOWSLEY ANN TOWSLEY ROOT CUSTOM MADE ORTHOPAEDIC Post Operative Abdominal Sacrial Supports and Braces Physician's Prescriptions Filled Promptly 405 MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING Walnut at Sixteenth St. PHILADELPHIA 2, PA. Business Furniture Co. 909 Wlalnut St. Philadelphia 7, Pa. Compliments of TELENATIONAL CORPORATION LEWIS 81 MULLIGAN Reproductions Blueprints, Photostats, Drawing Materials, Commercial Photography, etc. 24-I N. 15th St. Rlttenhouse 6-5488 Rittenhouse 6-9930 WARWICK PRESS Specializing in Printing for the Medical Profession 236 No. 15th St. Philadelphia 2, Pa. HAHNEMANN'S BOOKBINDER OTTO MINTZLAFF 1722 Ludlow St. Philadelphia, Pa. Journals Bound - Gold Stamping Howard 8-5521 EDWARD A. MARLEY, Jr. Dump Truck Service ASHES, CINDERS and RUBBISH 2l0l S. PHILIP ST. PHILADELPHIA 48, PA. BOLGER-PARKER COMPANY Hauling and Rigging Contractors HARRY SHILLINGSBIVRG 502 Winfield Ave. UPPER DARBY. PA. T52 N. Markoe Street BOulevard 3295 PHILADELPHIA 39, PA. ALUMNI ASSOQII.-t'I'l0N UI THE IIAIINEMANN MICIDIIIAI. tI0l.l.l'Itil'I ANU IIOSl'l'l'Al. OF l'llll,AlDl'1l.l'lllA. INC. June, WSU To the Members of the Class of 1950 go the hest wishes of their more than three thousand hrother alumni scattered throughout the world. llahneniann Alumni have risen to the forefront of inedieal endea- vor in lnany separate eoniniunities and in all the various fields of medicine and are pleased to weleoine to their fold you, their new- est brother and sister aluinni. For rnore than sixty-five years your Alumni Association has been organized to serve the hest interests of all of our alumni and of our Alina Mater. As the second half of the twentieth century begins, your Alumni Association finds itself more actively engaged than ever in these aims and offers to you a central organization for common endeavor and a perpetual bond to your College. s Carl C. Fischer, lVl.D., '28 Executive Secretary JOHN A. BORNEMAN AND Homeopathic Pharmacists SONS Forty years' practical experience in manufacturing Homeopathic Remedies. Up-to-date in all matters pharmaceutical, The necessity for ultra purity in strictly Homeopathic stantly practiced. Manufacturing a full line of Tinctures, Tablet Triturates, Compressed Tablets, Oint- ments, and Specialties that produce dependable results. Laboratories Ph Norwood 248 remedies is recognized and con- iladelphia Address North 15th Street Delaware County, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. STUDENT OUTFIT ORDERS A SPECIALTY HELLER'S Colonial Dining Room 3729 Spruce St. Ba.2.4057 Daily and Sunday Dinners . . . Private Facilities for Fraternity Dinners and all Social Events Compliments of THE POKER CLUB C, A, DIMON 81 Mrs. Benj. Gallo Servmg Physicians lor over Sixty Years with Best wishes to 1950 Class with , thought in mind: 1430 Race Street Philadelphia, Da. It is great to be great Drugs Slmdnes But greater to be human. 66RURE'S HAHNEMANN LUNCHERNETTE 24-6 North Fifteenth Street A Pleasant Place to Rest and Eat Mr. and Mrs. R. MARCUS BROWN 'S CAFE N.E. COR. BROAD 8z RACE STS Also 804 ARCH ST TILLES RESTAURANT 1528 Chestnut St. 0 Shore Dinners o Sandwiches 0 Steaks R16-1690 BAIN'S CAFETERIA STYLE RESTAURANT Delicious Fresh Food at any hour of the Day or Night Chestnut St Since 1874 SHOYER'S FAMOUS OLD RESTAURANT 4-12 Arch Street MITCHELL 0rrin's RESTAURANT Good Food is Good Health Fountain Service 125 No 15th Str et PHILADELPHIA PA Compliments of JAKE'S DELICATESSEN AND SANDWICH SHOP One Sandwich is a Meal 218 N 15th Sl J XASNO GREETINGS from the HORN 81 HARDART RESTAURANT 244-48 N. BROAD STREET - mia iii I llll Al'I'l XIvNlJlfl YIHII B I L L L E N T Z 161 North Fifteenth Street Philadelphia 2, Pa, PARK HOTEL 1617-1619 SUMMER ST. Philadelphia, Pa. Cl VAN, CO.NlF'OlQil'AlYl lf l1OC'MS FROM A FRIEND A GREAT 'ox lf Thou Wouldst Live Long, Live Well . . . E jfanlfn Enjoy Dining and Entertaining in the GARDEN TERRACE Philadelphiak most beautiful dining room featuring a FLOOR SHOW at 7:30 and 11:30 P. M. THE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CHESTNUT STREET AT NINTH JOSEPH E. MEARS, Vice President and General Manager Your Headquarters laffzfaff an Wrmkfled Bennett E. Tousley Vice-Pres. QQ Cen. Illuuuger THE 166- WWW! BROAD 8: WALNUT STREETS PHILADELPHIA New in face . . . 01:1 in grace Compliments of COLONIAL DRUG co. DUPLICATING N.E. C013 15Ill SI Race SIS. LABORATORY MANUALS ' DIET SHEETS Ri 6-6832 TEXT BOOKS Compliments of LEONARD L. GORRELL, Cen. Manager SHERATON HOTEL PHILADELPHIA, PA. PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS PERSONALIZED GREETING CARDS PARKER PENS Reasonable Prices C O N N E I. I. Y ORGANIZATION, INC. 304-06 N. Broad St. N.E. Branch: 4731 Oxford Ave. Fresh and Frosted Fruits and Vegetables WAlnut 2-5600 READING TERMINAL PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. L. G. BALFOUR Co. E I A 1601 Chestnut St. 1 I ' I Philadelphia 3, Pa. QR iff'- Official Jeweler to the Student Coun- cil and most Hahnemann Student . ' 1 II4 t Societies. Manufacturer ofthe Official . ' . A I PHARMACEUTICALS h I-Iahnemann Medlcal College I 'T A BIQENEFTGICALS Class Rings -.R - - 55 . . Makers of DriEd Biol!! Plasma xx develop- I A Professlonal Must for the I, Imeni of Sharp R Doimxe Research as wcilk Graduating Senioi-99 K S,-,lfg Drugs, Vaccines and Aaxlitoxins. I BALDWIN S. BROWN SP 4-7078 can era in cienfihc .gmifrumenfd LABORATORY EQUIPMENT s. SUPPLIES QUALITY OPTICAL EQUIPMENT S,NCE MOTION PICTURE CAMERAS s. PROJECTORS PI-IOTOGRAPHIC MATERIALS 1395 ENGINEERING 8. DRAFTING SUPPLIES BLUEPRINTS 8. PHOTOSTATS WILLIAMS, BROWN 81 EARLE, INC. 918 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. Produced by ARTHUR MURAT AND ASSOCIATES 985 Waring Ave., New York 67, N.Y Designed by HENRY E. SALLOCH 470 Fourth Ave., New York 16, N.Y T l 4 I i I I x l P l i 4


Suggestions in the Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953


Searching for more yearbooks in Pennsylvania?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Pennsylvania yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.