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

 - Class of 1956

Page 1 of 206

 

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1956 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 11, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 15, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 9, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 13, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 17, 1956 Edition, Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 206 of the 1956 volume:

Q Q I ss Q . W nam... M- , '.'s59lP Qu Ulf. 5 VI. 1:51 ---'Olds . nan ' 1 llillllll ...1 41.1. Uv- lllll :lu fl fffffffllllallflllli 'PII , ,gn 6v. . '.'.lsanQ' ell. - H' .A 9 Illll9l il!lU,. H Q . r I 1'Q.q. ni, Q- ll 'fo 0 ' no ' - .1 i af n . ' ll 'I . l 1 Q lg 5' QI 4 .. ITS OUIET BROKEN BY THE CRY OF SIREN AND MAN . . . ITS PACE OUICKENED BY THE URGENCY OF LIFE AND DEATH ln I gi , Q., lfwig 3 N AND THROUGH THE DOORS COME THOSE IN NEED OF THE HEALERS Through these doors come the halt and the blind with their burden both trivial and serious. Here come the rich and the poor alike seeking aid commensurate to their need. Here come the mature and the old, their bodies marked by the classical emblems of the continual symbiosis with the agents of injuryg here the young, baffled by this, perhaps the first dramatic violation of physical innocence . . . f ff' I 1. I s ! T fm Q' ---- .2 V'tv2 J Here passes a continuing procession of the ills of mang ranging from the obvious gross lesions through the more severe imbalance of the chemi- cal milieu, to the subtle or final psychic disfunction. f x hw 4 . , -as ly as W QW F lb 'I Q' X , f HERE LIFE ENDS-BEGINS-GGES ON 1? .1 I I If fi X t 1' -'T 3 J 1. QI' 1 A .0 1 'v . x X -I ,A x D I , a 5 , 3 .M A W E ,3 I' Ji 5 X if If 'rf' 'iarili' if f X . . . here the first lusty squall of the newborn herald whatever hourg and here too the final brief susurrus of life whispers and fades out, defiant of all our careg but most often, here at the center of our paraphenalia and ritual lies a problem ammenable to our talents, a lesion that can be cured or arrested, a life to be made whole again. And so with all awareness riveted to the problem before us, we bend our purpose to define its limits, inspect its condition, estimate its probable outcome and pausing but A moment, and not much more, to reflect . . . on theories, ephemeral and perenialg to muster reliance on broad generali- zations and proven proceduresg and gathering confidence from years of discipline of mind and training of hand, we fit our studies to our work, basing action . . . 1' u- sv I New 1 ff I x - A 'Q X X I - i s 5 Cn knowledge gained in titeory and practice The iiuman anatom y One hundred and five scholars with idealist dreams of the medical world gath- ered on a September day, 1952, to dedicate themselves for the next four years to a scheduled 5446 hours, 607 credit units. These were to be our statistics from which we were to be fashioned into medical doctors. This then is the story of work, play, humor and interludes which is particular to our class and yet common to all . . . the student. And tire initial introduction to and A lt s 4-OQQA A Raymond Truex, Ph.D., Head, Division of Anatomy. GENTLEMEN . This is a serious Business To Dr. Raymond Truex and his department is dele- gated the job of teaching anatomy, histology and neuro- anatomy. He must make nomenclature and structure part of our thinkingg to fashion a foundation on which a magnitude of seemingly diversified facts will he amassed in order that thc human body be appreciated as a single functioning unit rather than isolated inter- ossei and livcr cords . . . an infinite task. Cadaver, slides, Grant's Atlas, Jamieson, Strong and Elywyn and Bai1ey's his- tology, we remember them well. The path of the lingual nerve with its dirty swerve, that made us erudite. Most of all the dash to the bul- letin board following the paralyzing hushed whisper -MThe marks are up. The 28 day menstrual cycle somehow became 34 days and 'snow we shall con- sider and appreciate epi- theliumf' The lights come on and Blatt lies sleeping. Then there was Neuro which never did come to- gether as predicted, by the end of the course. Finally, our parting words in ana- tomy . . . uremember the Broad Sweeps. ' - so- . ... , - ..-.,..-.. .4-...Q 1 2 .- . .rv -9 -Q- - Q-H --1 ----..L I - - av ff- Ji. 'I-A Ax If Y l '7I L:,, 177' . IW Af' .127 4 . i, You've got a mind like a steal trap! Dr. Myron H. Halpern Assistant Professor of Anatomy Ask any senior his most vivid memory of the Freshman year, he will reply, almost reluctantly Paff -Doctor George Paff, teacher tnever professorj of anatomy. A personality, eccentric. idol, character, call him what you wishg he was a teacher, an educator, a friend. To him and all our instructors in the anatomies we, as all those who have past before us, owe much more than mere gatitude. To their lot feel the task of coaxing, cajoling, threatening and oft times pleading to a group of bewildered, innocent aspiring young men to forego thoughts of brain surgery while learning the meaning of humanity via the dissecting room and microscope. xl A K, . lf. f t Dr. Warren gives out with the nuggets. DIVISION or ANATOMY R. C. Truex, Professor and Head of the Division Professors: A. W. Angulo, S. H. VanDyke, C. Paif Assistant Professors: E. C. Bernstorf, M. H. Halpern, H. l. Sugiura Instructors: F. E. Eksterowicz, E. H. Polley J,' - 1 ,V D7 If 5,1 sg . . m I Hmnn, I've got you by the Sclallc nerve. t W A Professor A. W. Angulo. WHEN FACING Under the enthusiastic guidance of Dr. Boyd and staff, we began to know the complexities of the Kreb cycle, intermediate enzymes, hormonal complex and protein metabolism. Drs. DeFrates, Alper, Oesper, Roth, and Wase made these long hours of study and experiments more than a mere exercise, for what we learned of theories became the facts of health and disease. s r g .4 Drs. C. Alper and P. Oesper L. L Between hands of bridge and a ping-pong match we diligently attempted to extract ATP., etc., from rabbit muscles. Beforehand these same rabbits suffered our man-made hypoglycemic reactions followed by rich glucose IV. Socially you were nothing if seen without the gallon 24 hr. specimen container. QThe kind Promish broke in classroom CJ The fairness of the exams frightened us. Something surely must he wrong! But by the end of our frsehman year we all agreed that biochem was perhaps the most relaxing and enjoyable course as yet. Although we were not masters of fluid balance or protein metabolism the Gamblegrams no longer upset our autonomic systems. v1 ', 4-ylax'a I. Q- U l J - X QT 'W I . 4 , 33 QQ Dr. .lay Roth Dr..Arthur Wase John Boyd, Ph.D., Head of the De- partment of Biochemisry Dr. Joseph DeFrates C H E M I S T R Y DIVISION or BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY M. S. Boyd, Professor and Head of the Division Professors: J. S. DeFrates. J. Chandler Assistant Professors: P. Oesper. J. S. Roth, A. Whse, C. Alper Assistant: P. S. Cebhart Research Associate: H. S. Eichel THE MANY EMERGENCIES WE DEPEND ON KNOWLEDGE GAINED HERE v 7 Y 'N . A V K 5 - 4- Plwsiolowv, the studv of normal vital :roc- . r-. . I esses. To this task Dr. Scott and stall' allotccl a series of Ncxpericm-cs - The muscle twitrll, heart-lunfv a n nartus, and a maze of tulrcs, wire rs l , and glass. For most of us the lessons learned here may someday save a life, for a few it was just tubes., wire and glass. Amid etlier fumes, saline infusions, canulas, syringes and confounded stubborn electrical contacts stands four men in white. Even the animal seems impressed for even to the last he heats, twitches and abidingly defecates for these pioneers. ,.. 15,5 1 .0 V .Wx ' x ,,n, , Q 'X L ,- 15 Now, the minute volume of a frog 1 hun T -he PHYSIOLOGY Dlv1sloN OF PHYSIOLOGY J. C. Scott, Professor and Head of the Division Associate Professor: E. A. Reed Assistant Professor: F. J. Wiercinski Assistants: W. C. Foster, A. A. Bechtel I 'T' .M - rar 1 arf. ff: .. -zz- sv .,.','..l .lho ,,.04fg.Q:S,. s 'O V' f I' X'-v. 9,04 x I I t 'A '64 2 . ' -P 0 . ' 4 ,- 'x :.. .,.' of--. ' '-.. 4- .-v vi 'ar 19?-. 4 n 3, . .,, g t I 5 I5 . ,N fi. , ,ZKJQ .a ,fl .r , t'-5 i7J'9 -' -- ' ' 'L 0 'I H- . s 1' A 1 na K Ffy. ,J 2 ,- D, '31, ,131 f ' ?.c043gq' -.',153.,nf f:z , 'Q 5. - s ,150 .1 - ':,,b2,-, Af',n1 ,,' 5 , .v....,.A,w vf'v.' - - - - - . .. . , 1 . . -. , V. . - q,',a, 7 ',,'4.t,' .'g'1,gJ'g,-7-! , . -4-af- ,' v ..f'4T'f,.':9L- , 1- 4, .rv,,'. ,nil .,'f'-,-2'.'ff+ . 'f'f , ,'o.v,--' 1 ,, .4 ,V w.'v9', ,'. y ' -vb, '..'. .501 '.Q.' ,'v'1 'Q . .glv-.2 :Ye 6 qv' rl-q,,,.o .8-J' -.s 14 S gil! .': Y ,PHVI-r 'tgyyuf 'A' - I if. 1 ' 1 I ' ' ., :nf -' V, , ' , . 1 I . K f- 'sw as s-we-as-f ': fi 1 'W . . A - , -'. . f ' ' ' nfl., 'uf .7 ' f rO'q-v, 9' l, ,-,'n ? 'vi . ' ' - v'.f'n'. ' 2- - 32 - 7 X9 fi-Yr' -K-5735-v' it ' U n r il'f.'9' - ' -2-1 Q -ew - -s-- .'- . ' X 4 l D ' A' , l P . 1' 4, glo- AO. ..,v n - .f'f.,-'r ,N 54- . o V ,:0 .' V ':. 'lj' 'if' rnCl1:f5'g4 s wit- 'tg' Q .5 :IJ .3-',.aA:.5 fix, -.,yUjJ'Lr...',, cahyi. J, 'gf ., K 'Liv Q . K. ...ii JL ,,,qw'x. 1' ' sp 'I-I c4s 'f' '4 ' .1 ' Ji .f t' xc la' Q ,I .. 'W QAZVE J a du.. 71' 0,5 ',. t 5 . 0' 'I 'I' Q l I ,' .' Q 4 ,' .'J 1v 5s4- R ' .fa-31 Tv' -r' ' r .. -ns 'v A . 5 -1 'liar ol 'bf-Vice' , ' ' livin 9' 4' 'fl Arial a U I I . fsirf1ff'iEc - ff ST-1 'v ' f. - Don't you think the breast is a gynecological organ? Can't you see the Psamoma bodies Q - , :Q qt 1 L C' N l Oi. j rr 1: N XX, ' x- ' - I A V4 V . - , U 't lf' ' . -' A1 ,J x 0, I - ' qw ,' Ol. A , 4' ,t 'r r-effg,-an is N I2 When does one learn Medicine is the oft heard cry of the freshman as he despairs of escaping the clutches of his mammalian patients. And, as always, the answer must be: In pathology, my boy, in pathologyf' In this, the queen of the medical sciences, the aroma of death is ever mingled with the sweet perfume of discovery as the dead reveal their secrets unto those who seek to learn. Timedly, we embarked on this great sea of learning, slowly, we became aware of the mysteries of inflammation and won- dered at the unknown forces that drive cells to self-destruction in a furor of malignant growth. The year wore on, a seemingly endless succession of exams, posts and rainbow mosaics under our 'scopes. We glimpsed tantalizing flashes of the clinical years to come, and wished violently that we were already there. Then we wouldn't have to study pathology any more! But, as we left our formal work behind, shook and grateful that it was over, we knew that it was not an ending, but a mere beginning in a study that will be life-long for all of us. It behooves you . . .1 Q h5,,.,,5M.N H F - 482 , 1 ., Q, 7 fg' ' '1 Oh, just like in Anderson. Drs. Koiwai, Maniglia, J. Imbriglia. 5- ,- 4 .f H- Q DIVISION OF PATHOLOCY J. E. Imhriglia, Professor and Acting Head of the Division N C. George Tedeschi, Former Head of the Division - Associate Professor: R. W. Weller Assistant Professors: C. P. Barnett, E. K. Koiwai, R. Maniglia, T. - K. Rathmel, B. M. Wagner Y Associate: H. Pullen Instructors: R. E. Bovard, V. N. Damoclaran At the Food Fair this sells for 89c a pound. i - if -. 1 X ' , 4 ,Y n I ', 1, ' Did you hear the one about . . 'Gin fr' ' is: ,ff an A Q J 3, ALMS: 1 9 'A - , 3 4 BACTERIA . . PROTEAN . . . P RASITIC. ,, . wiv , v. .1 5-A f Amedeo Bondi, Ph.D., Head of the Department of Micro- biology and Miss Nancy Lloyd, Secretary. Do you see any numbers in this blood? BACTERIOLOGY DIVISION OF MICROBIOLOGY A. Bondi, Jr., Professor and Head of the Department Associate Professors: R. C. Bard, B. A. Briody, Jr., W. L. Gaby Assistant Professor: A. C. Moat Research Associates: 'W. A. Cassel, M. A. Medill I4 -. ' l 7r. A You know, Moat, I do believe this is a northern con- taminent. In comparison with the age-old struggle of humankind with his microbial foes, our short semester's fight deems indeed insignificant. But, tight it was, a time of long nights filled with a confusion of strange names and endless genealogies of the aristocarcy of the bacterial gardens. Four hour lectures, the gentle humor of the man from the South, sparkle of surprising Kodachromes among the collegiate the teaching material, all are impressions still vivid to these many years. Growth curves, gas formers and the story struggle against the Brucellae filled our days. exam to lab exam to stool cultures and back again we re- D of one man s From hour bounded down the corridor of learning, soon to take up our syringes and do battle with the tiny invaders, wherever they may be. Drs. A. Bondi, B. A. Briody, W. A. Cassel AND THE PANA CEA PHARMACOLOGY v, M- .A 1-vi r- 'N' B . 4 , , A1 1p X - T,:.::k-N -I . - ,qu-.tvs I I -un. QN.b n 1 ix l i ' rg .ff I had to walk seven flights for this? Did you guys forget anatomy already? ' -A F if ttf? ,f . I' pa 5 H' is I 1 P Y 94 s '- . ' 3 t F I 7 . 1 Q9 I 1.l.g 7'9 What this country needs is a good five-cent antibiotic. ' V Y It IA AAA -xt' 'Z Ad, U: ' . 3 Q 2 1, D-'11, N, I i ' 'I Al Civ. I ' I Q . fi 4 :sys f'S.Ni' ti 'if ui ' l'NPf'-'K tty Dr. Barnes and his keys to happiness. Pharmacology bridges the gap between the pre- clinical and clinical years. Its illustrous staff is headed by Joe wfhe Pipe DiPalma who always started his lec- tures Wid a boiningw interest. At times our cardiac refractory periods were shortened-especially with the quinidine-digitalis lectures and those exams fwowlj. But there to console us were soft spoken Dr. Christenson and Karl Agre, always the friends of the student. The Don Juan of the hormones, Dr. Spirtes, and EEG Barnes held our attention famously-Dr. Barnes with his keys'7 and Dr. Spirtes with his vitality. And as Dr. Gero stressed the SH groups of pentothal even Morphius could not sedate us and we entered the clinical years. DIVISION OF PI-IARMACOLOGY J. R. DiPalma, Professor and Head of the Division Associate Professors: T. C. Barnes, A. Cero, J. W. Messey, R. E. Seidel Assistant Professor: M. A. Spirles Associate: B. Calesnick Instructors: J. A. Christensen, J. C. Munch ff THEN FACE TO FACE WITH . . PATIENTS WE HAVE ENTERED MEDICINE ls balding a neurological problem? 5 Q.: ll- Medicine is more than a body of facts and figuresg it is a discipline of the mind, a fertile Held for the inquisi- tive and original thinker. Here we strove mightily to match wits with men whose minds and senses were sharpened by long experience to keenest perception. We often stumbled and only occasionally made a lucky cerebration that proved satisfactory to our sternly im- patient chiefs. The daily exercises in logic were classics wherein a diagnosis on the basis of a CC of miseries ' was the rule. Thoroughness and attention to detail were repeatedly impressed on us, when in the bustle of a hectic day, we forgot a seemingly minor fact important to the diagnosis and with reddening face realized we had goofed again. Q F 35: lf' ' fs. 'Q I ,. bn , ff' sn. A FZQ' -N- N.- ,ii 51' A 'VA ,L A 1 - l ui Alternating spike and wave pattern at 3 per second. will T..-q ..:w-' V., . Si . K X Q .. . . a hissing, crackling, crunching, groaning murmur??? Antispasmodies, incorporated lj ' K--- C l Franklin Massey, M.D. William Lik0H, M-D- Gentlemen, 200 tissue proven cases-200! 4 1 Now, lu-vp ai Iiglll list. Joseph Gambescia, M.D. - cheaper by the dozenf' DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE C. L. Brown, Professor and Head of the Department Professor: L. L. Lane Clinical Professors: J. A. Crellin, C. D. Geckeler Associate Professors: 0. H. Janton, W. Klinman, Wi. Likolf, H. A. Taggart, M. Viglione, T? J. Vischer Assistant Professors: H. E. Banghart, N. C. Berk, E. B. Brown. J. H. Davie, J. B. Donaldson. H. Goldberg, D. J. Marino. F. C. Massey. F. E. Murphy, M. Packman, Comm. L. J. Pope 4MCj P. .l. Warter Associates: M. P. Brignola, M. Fiterman lon military leavei, L. H. Kirchhofer, C. E. Lawson, D. Mason. H. Rosenberg, J. P. Schaffner ,H. M. Sharkis, Comm. E. M. Wurzel lMCP Instructors: C. Ballard, E. M. Barrist. A. Bender. R. WH Betts. C. Denton, H. C. DeShong lon military leavel, D. A. Donio M. L. Dorfman, S. Green, H. A. Levy. R. H. Linn, J. F. Moran P. O. Paul, N. J. Rocco, N. D. Schall, C. J. V. Selsman, S Simkins, F. C. Stubbs, A. H. Them, Jr., R. Watanabe Assistants: W. F. Basinger. H. L. Drezner, A. L. Errichetti, Jr. lon military leaveb. H. K. Cabroy. G. W. Lilley lon military leavel, H. C. Mason, E. Murray lon military leavet, M. S. Ostrum, E. S. Paisley. B. Rossman, J. F. Uricchio, WC A. Weax'er, Jr., J. L. YVilliams, J. Karasic Teaching Fellow: P. Lisan 7 5 7 I Ld , U, c ' u 1 '...3 G f, -1.-Nm I 'eu . 3 ,I ry 'W ff L , Q, U . m s t 3' '1-31 ' ,' ' .. .LAM H., ,. W. Lf 1,3 . ,Ig .Iwi li' 5 40. 'P QJ3 'Z' H ,yu , ' : .f-. vm 1' ? -rqPw.'.1:Af 4, , we-' V s.. .. fx--1 ' Charles Thompson, M.D., Acting Head of the Division of Medicine. James Donaldson, M.D., Acting Head of Department of Medi- cine. B. Marvin Hand, M.D. -Head of the De- partment of Neurol- ogy. Just take one-third of the hematocrit. I8 WE BECOME FAMILIAR Crooks, cardiacs and conferences made senior medical clinics an interesting and generous afternoonfull. Rotating swiftly through a wide range of sub-specialties, we variously found our- selves immersed in urinalysis at eight, crying the insulin bluesg stalking, gun and camera in hand, down the intestinal canal, or straining stapes with a hi fi stethoscope. Four weeks on affilia- tion gave us welcome respite from the rigors of life in the ex- school house, and a chance to review and reflect on the experiences past and the opportunities of the years to come. We left medicine sadder but wiser, still wondering if anyone could have passed that junior final. , . x- X - - . .QS ' if t A J. Antrim Crellin, George D. Geckler, V. B. O. Hammett, M.D. - Clinical Pro- M.D. -- Clinical Pro- M.D. - Head of the fessor of Medicine. fessor of Medicine. Department .of Psy- chiatry. za The Klutz Kuna. 7 WITH PHRASES . AND PHASES arroll Burgoon. Garth Boericke, M.D., LD., Head of Depart- Head of the Depart- :ent of Dermaiology. ment of Therapeutics. aniel Marino, M.D., Lowell Lane, M.D., ssistant Professor of Clinical Professor of 'edicine. Medicine. N F C 'fl 0. fm 'Xu Stanley Riemann, M.D., Head of the De- partment of Oncology. f.,,r,, TI J., B. , ,F-1 A If in J Drs. Tedeschi, Taggart, Brown, Greene and Ludwig. 1 , , ,- Dr. W. H. Maloney, Head of the Department of Bron- choesophagology and Laryngology. 20 'X rs .X ! y THE FIRST INCISION . Plunging into a new and bewildering environment, we in our junior year, found ourselves in the aseptic citadels of surgery, spreading pathogens far and wide, and making chaos of the sacred rituals so zealously practiced by those Vestal virgins of the O.R. With anthropoid cunning, we mimed our way through the first scrub, wary of straying too far from the resident whose every action was our guide. Soon, in the natural course of things, we were retracting with aplomb and snipping sutures with the best of them, taking care to never, never get in the way. Aside from supplying horse power to the idiot sticks fretractorsj we took multitudes of histories, carefully performed routine lab work under the voluble tyranny of 5th Main's Latin Cassandra, and held lively confer- ences with our deceptively boyish chief resident. The trimester soon fled, leaving us with a heightened respect for the man in the mask and a fresh realization of the awesome task of those who wield the knife. DEPARTMENT or SURGERY W. L. Martin, Professor and Head of the Department Professor: T. L. Doyle Clinical Professor: T. C. Geary Associate Professors: E. F. Carpenter. P. J. Crotzinger, W. Y. Lee. A. E. Pearce. E. D. Sharpless. F. Tropea, Jr., A. W. Ulin Assistant Professors: W. C. Kirkland. W. C. Thoroughgood Associates: A. S. Ayella,, C. J. Rilling, E. L. Rosato, C. L. Sacks, J. W. Smith Instructors: V. J. Cattie. C. E. Thomas Teaching Fellows: R. Bower, T. C. Watson lllln ufl1'l'llo0lll Drs. C. F. Haines, S. Ball, V. Hostelley. R. M4-Crath, H. P. Harkins fHead of the Department of Otorhinologyf and D. Canter. E. Pearce, M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery. DEPARTMENT or OTORHINOLOCY H. P. Harkins. Professor and Head of the Department Clinical Professors: J. R. Criswell, C. F. Haines, R. McGrath Associate Professors: S. Ball, A. V. Hallowell lon military leavel, W. Vernon Hostelley Associate: J. V. F. Clay, Jr. Instructor: D. Canter DEPARTMENT or NEUROSURCERY A. K. Olsen, Professor and Head of the Department Instructor: M. N. Wood DEPARTMENT or OPHTHALMOLOCY H. S. Weaver. Jr., Professor and Head of the Department Assistant Professor: J. K. K. Finley Associates: J. P. Cossa, Jr., H. J. Kohler, F. O. Nagle, Jr. Instructors: K. W. Benjamin, M. Curcio, A. S. Rogers W. C. Thoroughgood, M.D., Assist- ant Professor of Plastic and Re- These physicians started at the bottom and worked their constructwe Surgery' H. S. Weaver, Jr., M.D., Head of way up. . the Department of Ophthalmology. P 'sf . - f Ts f I A X lL.,: I xb 1 rx Q' lint l must B-1'll4'lllllt' Illall rzulirnl for 4 i , .K . v J ug' . I 1 .ll J 1 In - , F1 r- Q '- - ',.-In-mum. IP-1 ,QI -- , r-fr-AJ , BRINGS TO MIND OK, Bob, you take from the duodenum to the large bowel and I'll do the abdominal-perineal. 5' f -1 I 'I : ,W X 'Y f 1 I : M -J .Aff 1 ,mf THIS NlGHT'S EMERGENCIES K 0 1. Ted, how many times have I told you to stay away from the prostate. Paul, are you sure all the seniors were in accident ward this past week? Q Q . 'gs , Head of the Depart K if' ' .rv f 4 ai .f .S 1 Q 'S S4 .l :IW ...4 f I Q e ' I i rl I 0 0 iii- in ' ' i f r i i U i XX E 4 . K.. ' X X Again a new year and surgery became a matter of minor procedures of major import. A week spent in Emergency ward gave us a chance to turn our hand at embroidery and afforded a panoramic View of life in the raw, proving to all that the best of friends wield a mean razor. Clinics were busy, varied with all the little problems that beset the practi- tioner: bandages refused to stay neat, abscesses formed despite the 600,000 units of penicillin, and sore toes stayed sore, hot soaks not withstanding. Unnais paste boot was fashionable footwear and gauze turbans marked those whose Saturday night was more wild than wise. Lipomas vanished and cysts relin- quished themselves to our ready knives, as with waxing knowledge we were allowed to do a little more than observe. Rotation through -the surgical subspecialties gave us, at one time or another, fleeting glimpses of pathology at the ends of the GI tract, an opportunity to exercise a massaging forefinger, and an idea of how to build new faces from old. The eyes had it on opthalomology and the ears on E.N.T. A week at Hamburg taught us that M. tuberculosis is still very much with us and deserving of our profound respect. A month at one or the other of Hahnemann's surgical affiliates rounded out the trimester, while we indulged in an orgy of plagerism preparing scholarly tomes on one obscure subject or another. So we came to the end of our under- graduate training in surgery, some to go on to a career of scalpeling, others to ever more supply the traction. Axel Olsen, M.D. ment of Neurosurgery 'Q ' 'a THORACIC SURGERY 7 XF' I d0n'I dare take the Chance, but - - -! Left heart catheterization by Dr. Goldberg, 9515.5 4'--M DEPARTMENT OF THORACIC SURGERY C. P. Bailey, Professor and Head of the Department Clinical Professor: R. P. Clover Instructors: H. -E. Bolton, W. L. Jamison, H. T. Nichols Research Fellow: K. V. S. Roa Drs. Bolton, Urrichio, Goldberg, Bailey, and Denton 42 0 r x 'X H 4, 'HY' et al. Dramatic, exacting, the skilled talents of Dr. Bailey and his associates have drawn people from all over the world to our gates, each seek- ing a return of the life which disease or capri- cious fate has deprived him. The eighth -floor is the baliwick of these master craftsmen and we., as third year students, were permitted to enter the inner sanctum to watch and sometimes to scrub in as they got to the heart of the matter. All sons of Hahnemann past and future owe a debt of gratitude to these daring pioneers who have brought such universal notice to our alma mater. Vp , 48' Ns No, no, when you get to the skin stop culling. T?1 ,X N x 11.24 DEPARTMENT or ORTHOPEDICS AND FRACTURES E. O. Geckler, Professor and Head of the Department Associate Professpr: D. .l. .lones Instructors: 0. Corn, E. J. Powell Assistant: M. P. Mandarino Teaching Fellows: P. J. Andrews, F. Lima GENITO-URINARY SURGERY Each specialty has its particular aroma, so to speak, and who can forget the eau de urology which pervades fifth main? Sounding the depths of this specialty during the third and fourth years, we quickly learned the litany of hematuria- stone, tumor, T.B.,' Silently resolving eternal purity fat least until the weekendf we observed the time honored remedy for sins long past and uttered a fer- vent plea of thanks for penicillin. lf E. 0. Ceckler, M.D., Professor of Orthopedic Surgery I ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Bodies encased in molluskoid sheaths of plaster or trans-fixed on frames mildly remi- niscent of a medieval torture chamber are all a part of the practice of orthopedics. Cn rounds, the pedagogery was often caustic., always effective and accompanied by the soft scrape of a penknife and a whistled obligatto. To our surprise and pleasure we found that college physics was not a complete waste and patience is often rewarded with a crooked limb made straight and a broken body made whole. DEPARTMENT os URoLocY E. W. Campbell, Professor and Head of the Department Associate Professors: W. C. Hunsicker, H. L. Weinstock Assistant Professors: C. J. Cislason, L. P. Tori Associate: W. Ellis , Teaching Fellows: N. Viek, J. Shaw A fascinating vera montanum, don't you think? Drs. Vick, Weinstock, Campbell, Gislason, and Shaw. Q, P fl- .s,, ' v fd , 'N SPECIAL DELIVERY AND GENERAL . DEPARTMENT OF WOMEN .xxx It's 4:00 A.M. Sunday and the lab work has been com- pleted on Paula Primigravida. The fetascope is placed on the patient's abdomen and a spine tingling A-h-h-h is uttered. Had she delivered? Behind him stood Pen- man M.D. the Temple Flash, bow-tie et al. The following A.M. MacFayden M.D. enters and asks, '4How are you going to make the diagnosis?', The stammering junior replies, Careful history, PE and pelvic examination, appropriate lab tests, x-ray and endocrine studies, biological tests for pregnancy, espe- cially if she's in the child bearing age. Smiling reply, L'Yes, yes, go on. 5:00 P.M. Monday and still no baby. But now in the delivery room, Paxson, M.D., the great fox hunter and president of the bank enters rubbing his lapels, Of what must we be suspicious? Afibrinogenemia, Doctor, afibrinogenemialr' Reishstein, M.D.: LBe prompt at lectures, doctor. I come-two minutes early and if you can't get there by 8:30, don't come. Seitchik, M.D.: I still think small ears are the best. Qeven when they have pedals?j. Hunter, M.D.: Son, here are some seeds to be planted -llj an empty uterus does not bleed 121 no pregnant woman ever bleeds normally 13D good girls bleed, bad girls don't bleed. Pontarelli, M.D.: Take it easy, doctor. Everything s going to be all right. And so it was- N. F. Paxson, Professor of Obstetrics and B. V. MacFadyen, Professor of Gynecology. Oh, doctor, don't crush me!! Drs. Reishstein, Hunter and Penman. Q X V s I i sat -1 DEPARTMENT or OBSTETRICS Newlin F. Paxson, Professor and Head of the Department Cinical Professors: H. L. Crowther, R. M. Hunter, H. D. Laiferty, A. Mutch Associate Professors: H. D. Evans, Jr.. J. N. Seitchik Associates: A. R. Kannapel. W. R. Penman Instructors: F. E. McClimans. W. C. Wbsnack Assistants: L. A. Battafarano. N. C. Baltafarano, R. B. Engle, J. A. Gribbin, C. J. Ingersoll, XV. C. McCain Teaching Fellows: J. A. Krieger. C. A. Sangnlang 'Huw ii r--1 rl I . 1 XR I S .N X Y . .Q ,, 'V a n, ,W ' I it x - - 1 rn 1 ' 1 . ufxNx5Ty cj v , D ll ex ,. . -, Q 1 . 5 Q ff -- - f 1 , ,f' T L-I .7 , bi - ' 417- jx!! .W DEPARTMENT OF GYNECOLOCY ' 3. V. MacFadyen, Professor and Head of the Department 'issociate Professor: D. A. Roman, J. N. Seitchik 'issistant Professors: A. A. Hartley, W. A. Reishtein 4ssociates: R. P. Couldin, D. J. Pontarelli 'nstructors: N. Canuso, L. A. Lasalvia, B. P. Troyan, A. W. W. Wad- lington fissistants: R. L. Hall, W. G. McCain, S. A. Mercer, W. E. Shields Feaching Fellows: J. A. Krieger, C. A. Sangalang 'IQ- ' 'R ig 1 THE CHILD OF THIS NIGHT . . . LIKE THOSE OF YESTERDAY IN Drs. Greenspan, Rosenberg, Downing, Brelian, Fischer, Viek, Gregg, Valerio, and Hubsher. PEDIATRICS Assorted sounds and smells, dampened ties and grim determination are the pediatrician's lotg one which we were privileged to share for a short while during the third and fourth years. Fumbling bachelors gazed with admiration as their more experienced colleagues changed didies, computed formulas and soothed fretful infants with the finesse that comes of paternity. St. Lukes, P.G.H., Fife Hammell, Mt. Sinai, Sayre and Harrisburg supplemented the teaching program with widely varying results. Because, or in spite of these experiences each of us has a better understanding of the young, sick or well. L-was Erwin I ,g.. Weir-ff' if nl A. I I. L ,I And I broke my skis too. I want a man doctor! II, -' rms Nnyb H. A. Agcrty, Clinical Professor of Pediatrics. Wu: bf 4... Dxvlslow or Psnurmcs I. C. Fischer, Professor and Head of the Divi ion flinical Professors: H. A. Agerty, J. R. Noon lssociate Professors: D. F. Downing, W. P Iregg lssistant Professors: J. Bitman. A. Lipschutz lssociales: W. B. Fox, P. J. C. Cacbescia, M. Iraub, H. S. Greenspan, J. L. Weinstock nstrucior: S. H. Lumish issistnnts: M. M. Axler, D. J. Bevilacqua, D. E. lonanno. R. M. Filli, J. A. Hubsher, W. E. Kepler, M. R. Krausz, V. Malisoff, J. J. Maio- iello, P. Rosenberg, J. Rubin, M. A. Whitman 'eaching Fellow: A. N. Moghadam x 6 f , Q 'eff' - ' n Vx ai ,4.- 1 Sleep, that knits up the ravelled sleeve of care, is ably provided by a large staff of anes- thesiology. A series of lectures in the junior year proved their proficiency, and the pop quizzes were as effectual as Nalline in the re- versal of narcosis. A week spent with these medi- cal sandmen permitted us a glimpse of their problems and a chance, perhaps, to take a blood pressure. 5 1 'YS 5 hu-ff ANESTHESIOLOGY Drs. Catenacci and Grove. E. G. Covintree- I'l1 fix this guy. -4-v F DEPARTMENT or ANEsrHss1oLocY H. S. Ruth, Professor and Head of the Depart- ment Associate Professors: A. J. Catenacci, D. D. Grove, K. K. Keown Assistant Professor: E. P. Van Tine Associate: C. E. Covintree Assistants: M. L. Buckley, S. M. Fisher S. M. Fisher- Just a mosquitoe bite. V N igmw' rx J- IM .' 4 ' -.4 . . X-RAY Our formal X-ray training consisted of a series of lectures scattered throughout the first, second and third years. These early morning sessions were gratc- fully received by those members of thc class in need of dim restfulncss. During the clinical years every opportunity was taken to give us practice in the inter- pretation of roentgenograms, and we, like Peter Pan, developed high regard for a shadow. Drs. Hughes and Ludwig. DEPARTMENT or RADIOLOGY J. S. Lehman, Professor and Head of the Department Professor: N. V. Ludwick Clinical Professor: A. E. Krick Associate Professor: R. A. Boyer Assistant Professor: F. S. Winter Associates: S. V. Geyer, D. W. Hughes, L. F. Kienle f Military Leave! If l Nw Iv Q I7 v ,X E s .l. S. Lehman, M.D.-Head Department of Radiology. What young medic, alone in the long watches of a night on Emergency call, can help but reminisce fondly on the many and varied educational experi- ences he has survived, intermitable lectures on bur- eaucracy in all its many splendored forms, bus trips to see City Hall and the Cadillacs down along the Delaware, tales of detecting Salmonella typhosa in the sticky buns, and many, many more. Nostalgic memories of the delightful walking tours of the park- lilce streets of South Philadelphia with the V.N.S., and total recall of some of the more important facts and figures concerning the happy union of demo- cratic government and autocratic medicine must stimulate his cortex to the point of endurance. And these are the park-like streets . . . Instructors: T. E. Sopp, R. M. Sproch Give them last year's exam, only change the answers. 'H ' . 'light -...L - J F ' .ici 3 qv it 0 . I .2 H Q , Q lf 0 ' X Q cl ' ., 14'-. E 'ii PUBLIC HEALTH Philadelphia General Hospital - Obstetrics, Medicine, Surgery and Pediatrics. Veteran's Administration Hospital-Surgery. The Memorial Hospital of Wilmington-Medicine and Surgery. I . VY -. . 'I-il-F915 ll -1:4 i M - ' , jf ' I... 1: :XX -. - , ' ,wr . , Y -1 1 Fluffitiq '1 1, ' .1- :J F M N NJ' I H A I l Y. AZT - '7-' pl A 51531 .....i 'W 1- Q' LJ' ' f ' ., wt W 9 J c is 335 N J-S 4 'Q v M. qi- s5'- 1 T1 .... :r 'A --:f-N:-21: fit . an-r-. , . - tg--. --q U i3l ZI .1. '.1 'el... Q: fgrE1.1Uf'.f::g: f TQQ1., , ....-. ' ..... ' T.Z..I:- ...L Aj Q!-psi . , ' ' llllllm 7 '- -..1f-r--4- ' ' .,.,...,..-. ..... . AFFILIATIGNS During our junior and senior years we ventured from Hamlet to city hospital to gain and give of our knowledge. Neverthe- less we returned after our sojourn far wiser in the practical matters of men, medicine., and medicaments and realized that as seniors we really knew something. To most of us it was enjoy- able to match wits in skirmishes with students from other schools at PGH and Veterans Hospitals. But alas, the poor married seniors who had to trade Sayre for the home-like atmosphere of PGH. g ',n.,,.-.f -f-.- as my ,x.-- -1 J avg' ' , , .. ,I ,I 11 65 't 321 A V 4 'QQ I II.-, -V 1 1 'p lm 3 A H f 'j il J ' - K 'J 't .f . . 1' J' in Fi' li! A aw Q r H I : -i' P 'QQ' 4 . K St. Vincent's Hospital - Pedi atrics. Albert Einstein Medical Center, South- ern Division-Pediatrics, Surgery and Medicine. ' Fife-Hamill Medical Center - St. Agnes Hospital-Gynecology. pediatrics. wa - f 1 ---- f '- 'x -1 5 I . .G- - . -. I a tn 'Y ,-v?7,.,,f -Gil. Norristown State Hospital -Psychiatry. ,P ,..4 - f T' ' If apvapvz V , , g - 4 Uni .- if . li . 2 - 1 . 'ff 'ffl'-r- , H ff Q 1 4'-.W v tn cv., .vxbqsi - 5 Y QV- . ,,, .' ' A- sf.. l tu ' , 4, L . . Aw ' l, ' Q.. , U ll . ,, . I A Children's Heart Hospital - Cardi- ology. u A has 5 , . Harrisburg Hospital-Pediatrics, Medicine, Surgery, Ol: sterics, and Gynecology. , A I ' ' i , Q llllll , , 1 I Hollis ui' Robert Packer Hospital, Guthrie Clinic-Pedi- atrics, Surgery and Medicine. Jewish Home for the Aged - Geria- I trzcs. St. Lukels Hospital-Pediatrics. Hamburg Hospital - Pulmonary Dis' ease. '- Lf 1 gQfill'ffT'-7? - o Y :L .,.htl2 -4 gi W til vt ig, 111 1 -SQ-1-l 'Q' .,,.' .a-x.r.. :1-- - ' 1' N ii , 1 .-A e'f5Aj ' .,u'- 4 fr .lv 1, -lt- va -- fx. ' ' 'Q ' v , 1 ,-4 ' 'Za i, rx -I N J I st I 1 I , :.f :C W- I I I I WE'RE ON CALL . . . AWAITING THE CRISIS YET TO COME . . . AND FEELING THE STILLNESS OF THE BUILDING WE THINK OF THE NOISE OF THE MEN WHO FILL ITS WALKING HOURS Gwen I XX, I S, K ' x . s ,' g 4 pf ,J Q, Adelson, Stephen J. Atomare, Frank J. Arvan, Dean A. Babigian, Dickran N. Baltz, Richard D. Battaglia, Victor F. Beach, Leslie M. Bitter, James E. Blechman, Howard J. Bovard, William J. Braunschweig, R. Brown, Nancy H. Brunner, Edward A. Buckley, Thomas P. Chapis, Nicholas J. Chillrud, John G. Clark, John R. Clopper, Marvin Cook, William L. Cressman, Marvin R. Cusick, Patricia M. Davis, James A. Davis, James K. De Silverio, Robert V. Detar, Reed L. Dold, Frank A. Down, Russell J. Drewes, Richard C. Drosick, John R., Jr. English, Robert S. Ettore, Albert J. Farson, Richard A. Friedman, Marshall D. Geissinger, John B. Gerber, Johannes F. Gildea, James E. Glodek, John F. Goldman, Duane C. Greenberg, Cyrus M. Gunter, Mary J. Gusack, Floyd B. Hobbs, Donald W. Hogan, Joseph M. Imperial, Salvator M. Islamoff, Igor I. James, Paul M., Jr. Joseph, Robert F. Kashatus, William C. Keating, Garrett M. Kirchner, George G. Klein, Sanford S. Kornblum, Joan Kreider, Henry L. Leonard, Lois E. THE FIRST YEAR MEN . . Insecure ' lmpressionable ' Eager . Spouting medical terminology Lesher, Robert C. Lo Presti, Alfred E., Jr. Lovett, William E. Lupas, John A. Lyster, Aexander K. May, Albert N. Mayer, William F., Jr. McKendry, James R., Jr. Meisel, Jerome L. Messey, Edwin W. Miller, Donald E. Misenhimer, Martin D. Moock, Paul C., Jr. Nase, Paul K. Naughton, Robert N. Neuwalder, Herbert F. Ninos, George S. 0'Connor, Joseph J. Pelszynski, Eugene E. Phillips, Steven J. Pironti, Pascal A. Pritchard, Hayden N. Prokop, Joseph R. Reed, Gilbert C. Riesz, Peter B. Rimple, David F. Robb, George W. Roberson, John W. Rosato, Francis E. Ruderman, Joseph E. Saltzman, Marcus B. Sarrett, David L. Savastio, Joseph A. Sesso, Anna Marie A. Sevick, Myron E. Shaver, James A. Sherman, Donald J. Smith, Sally A. Spielvogel, Arthur R. Stern, Robert Stockler, Leonard E. Stone, Charles S., Jr. Stoneback, Raymond D. Sullivan, James F. Susanin, Andre G. Tom, Lloyd C. M. Tullai, John Turner, Norman S. Walk, Donald R. Wallen, Marvin H. Warrender, William F. West, Stanley T. Wilde, Alan H. Wosnack, William G., Jr. Yeager, Harvey P. ,,,..-, rg -J -ugh...-...... fn -, 'T -'. .gp .J.-mmf. t xf' ' - -5 Q1 - Ear- 45-W ' v A' .J Q ma- s f A - . . . . .5 'W -, . Orlgm, lnseruon, blood and ncrvc supply and 4 , 'JW 151 45 .. . ,M if , 1,08 1fi '5,,f' function . . . ad nauseum. .pug - I y nv: ., hr. . -... A N. -W.. V .. ev V- ' 9.-.-. ,w:.ff .- ,-5, . , ' j A-Im' .3 .ff 'O' , 13? Ami .-.s AWED SPECTATORS EYES DIRECTED TCWARD THE PIT . X la 'E 93 I 'F ,, fi R 'QI T -Z7 f o Qs .lvl AND WITH CNE YEAR BEHIND THEM - A NEW AWARENESS IS APPARENT Alexander, Raymond S. Altland, Robert C. Angulo, Armand J. Backer, George B. Beatty, Albert C. Bentley, Eugene A., Jr. Beran, Irvin N. Bickel, Robert C.. Jr. Birkenfeld, Ronald Boccagno, Patrick M. Burns, William P. Campbell. Edward W., Jr. Carnes, Harry M. Carson, William E., Jr. Clearfied, Ronald J. Cole, George L., Jr. Cornog, Chester D. Cossa, John P. Crispell, Earl C., Jr. Dailey, Edward G. Daly, Anthony F., Jr. De Marco, Arnold R. De Michele, Joseph Dimlich, Herman K., Jr. Ditunno. John F., Jr. Downey, Thomas R. Fields, Herbert Finkelstein, Lawrence J. Formichella, Joseph E., Jr. Frederick, Walter W. Gesensway, Daniel B. Goldman, Arnold D. Gollub, Seymour M AA ia.. Good, Milton S. Gordon, Robert S. Govi, Joseph R. Grimes, Gilbert R. Hadley, Stanley, Jr. Hay, Philip H. Helmig, Walter R. Hepler, John E. Hessert, Edmund C., Jr. Jones, Leighton W. Kahl, James B. Kaiser, Gerard D. Karasic, Atida H. Kent, Howard L. Keyser, Herbert H. Knouse, Albert B. Krauss, Audrey R. Lauro, George A. Leamon, Ivan B. Lebeau, John J. Leomporra, Remo B. P. Leonardi, Henry B. Lesovosky, Eugene A. Lewis, Norman G., Jr. Long, Virginia A. Lowell, Howard A. McCombs, Harry L. McDermott, John R. Moore, John H. Neumann, Peter Henry Paleologos, Joseph B. Park, Robert C. Pauerstein, Carl J. Paul, Franklin A. Percelay, Eliot E. Perrotto, Santle L. Polock, John J., Jr. Reichert, Carl E., Jr. Riegel, Charles S. Robbins, Roger C. Rorro, Mary A. Rosenbaum, Leonard Rowan, George P. Russo, Carmelo G. Sabatine, John W. Seidler, Robert C. Sharpe, Richard G. Siegel, William Smith, Theodore N. Stein, Herbert S. Stein, Martin Sterba, Frank J. Stoltzfus, Virgil De Lee Straughton, William J. Streher, Don A. Sudol, John E. Sulkowski, Stanley R. Talbot, Geoffrey A. Thallinger, Merrell E., Jr Thomas, David J. Thompson, Clark E. Weiner, Norman D. Whaley, Joseph S. Wiltsie, John C. Winchell, Harry S. ,4..f- -G-C'5 31-13 . . W , Mil Qvzefkwhv -- ., O f l- f-1 A .f P.-. iq, L- L. x 1,1 1.5. vi. . f I .1-Q. 1. A view from lllc Terrace Room Which is the specimen? L -01 L ..-v' I l. If OF THE VAST STORE OF FACT I 'FJ' 5 T .Eb . vw- TO BE ABSORBED ,,,.- W.-1 L S6 kukl ,S , O THREE YEARS UPHILL Adams, William R. Alameno, Carmen J. Baren, Martin Barnes, Willis C. Beck, Richard L. Berman, Staney L. Bernhard, William N. Borodkin, Robert Brooks, Allan Bruno, Anthony J. Bunn, Norris D., Jr. Bushkoff, Stanley Chai, Chiuling Chinn, Kenneth Coe, John E. Connor, Anna C. Davison., Richard A. De Maio, Frank J. De Marco, Peter T. De Simone, Sylvia Di Giacomo, Oscar P. Dunnigan, William J. Edelstein, Stanley W. Evans, William E., III Fessman, John W., III Friedmann, Karl R. Furnary, James S. Geobert, Herbert W. Gottshall, Samuel C. Grozier, Michael L. Halpern, Eli B. Heimbach, George Z. Hoffman, John E. Ingemi, Basil J. Johnston, John Thomas Ka sprenski, Matthew A. Kauffman, David V. Kennel, Arthur J. Koch, Myron Kownacki, Vincent P. Leagus, Charles J., Jr. Lee, Richard G. Levy, Martin E. Lewis, William D. Light, Caude F. Lomax, Walter, Jr. Lucidi, Edgar A. Lundy, Theodore Maclean, Ruth A. Magnani, Thomas J. Mandell, Robert S. Mann, Irving A. Mann, Joel B. Margolis, Bernard M. Masters, William E. Matunis, Joseph J. Meltsner, Gilbert Miller, William Morrissey, Eugene J. Napoli, Anthony F.. Nese, Anthony J. Newman, Edward J. Nicolai, Karl E. Nuschke, John D. 2 ! Y Y Only 425 more days to go .l . V 3 . - IP! . do A! I ' ' v 1'-T C5 N , , A if X- ., K Y! 'I x I '-u .M - -----1-A-1fwvs....A.dls . 1 1' 5, -my ' ..: 1 KL.. 7 T. ALL THE WAY vll, the um not the lnonv! 0'Riordan, Joseph P. Owen, Lawrence B. Paul, Emily J. Rnub, James A. Rutt, Clarence H., Jr. Salitsky, Sherwood N. Salmon, James H. Sattilaro, Anthony J. Schmitt, Henry J., Jr. Schwartz, David J. Schwartz, Donald S. Segin, Robert S. Seto, Millard S. Shane, Louis L. Sicher, Bruno P. Smith, Warren E. Snyder, Robert L. Stahl, Theodore J. Steiner, James H. Stetzer, Samuel S. Strolis, Justine A. Tolchin, Sidney Trollinger. Robert J. Valecce, Vito A. Vassallo, Charles L. Venerose, Robert S. Weitzman, Gerald Whitney, Theodore R., Jr. Williams. William J. Winski, Leonard A. Withrowv, Curtiss L. Wofson, Robert J. Yeager, James P., Jr. I Yeah, mine's on the lesser curvature too 't 1 3 -. E J , V 1 ' AL A A I t r . f fix 'll-gg' at I 5 ll .-3? - U A ggi' ' J' if 5,11 if g fi j.-Ep . ggi: 1 . l ,pi . if ' -I ', 5 1. 1 ' I' BUT OUR GOAL IS IN SIGHT Ef'fI?'-I 6 If +3 ' iv: ' J la Q ., .. H. 1 50 3 3 .El :T? iii - ' .T .LQSI . PERFORMANCE CQTE5 THAT COUNTS 5 T , .FP-Ti-iv+TT12 T I ,W 5, FH Db V' -. 5'--. ,ff .?- rm1 9 P5 fx-'Q J 1 fx ' K, K Xa K ra ' x .W 1521 ,r - u, K 4 7-. X. . , h5,, 5 'W V Qi P' 51 , I x sf S W -10 if 3 1 x f 5 ' 41' Q 5I THE CLASS OF '56 . , is ,- , , 'G I 'WALYF' nv . , ' ' Y ,L if 'ftlv 'f ., ,, . '- '?31f9 f.'-, .wa!2:1w 7 Harold A. Taggart, formerly assistant Dean, presently acting Dean. Having received his M.D. in 1919 from Hahnemann, he returned to teach in 1921. During those hectic days that are medi- cal education, Doctor Taggart has been our liaison to those seemingly untouchables that are a medical faculty. He has taken our important and trifling problems to his own, and tirelessly tries to blend many personalities into a Hahne- mann family. Yi Pays Tribute to . . . To thc Members of the Class of 1956: Four years ago it was announced that you were a chosen few selected from a group of applicants numbering somewhere bctwccn twclvc and thirteen hundred young student aspirants to a medical career. You headed into medical school because of a variety of motives which might be described as a mixture of interest in human biology, a desire to heal the sick and a special idealism containing quanta of religious fcrvors, Oslerian ideals and a missionary zeal. We, through our associations and close relationships during the succeeding four years, have watched with keen interest and concern your progress from day to day, and month to month, as you meta- morphosed from students of science into student-physicians, in your quest for the solution satisfactory to your zeal and ideals. You have learned, among many things, that the study of medicine is an educational process not only of scientific facts alone, but also of the art of human understanding and a tolerance in your relationships with people as well. As you are now about to graduate, you are ready to embark upon the third great episode in your educational experience, namely that of becoming a physician-student. For you will never lose the student', label throughout your entire professional life if you desire to grow in stature as a healer of the sick. Also, your deep concern for human welfare leads those of us at the medical school to hope that you will manifest a sense of responsibility and interest in the community in which you may settle-in brief, that you become good citizens as well as competent physicians. But, in turn, you have a right to assume that the college which grants you the M.D. degree shall continue to manifest a continuing interest in your educational and social welfare. Hahnemann is your Alma Mater and the root meaning of the Latin Alma is 'ato feed, nourish, sustain or revivef, All of these meanings imply the concept to help, and that is exactly what we hope we may have the privilege of doing for you in years to come. This means to us the opportunity to offer you-information about your contemporaries, aid in planning your further training, help in finding locations to practice and a responsi- bility in providing continuing education through a well-organized and integrated program of post-graduate exercises. In the development of your career, in the maturing of your ambi- tions and desires, Hahnemann, in turn, hopes that you will maintain your interests and loyalties to your fellow classmates and to the Insti- tution which has nurtured you during the apprenticeship period of your professional life. While familiar faces and personalities may change, the college, with its ideals, vision and hopes for a consistent betterment of the functions for which it strives, will not falter in its growth. And you, as the sons and daughters of Hahnemann will help to keep it that way. We salute all of you, and wish for you every success and happiness in life. HAROLD A. TAGGART 1 THE CLASS eff' :gl '56 , s ft U Bruce V. MacFadyen, M.D. 'R Honors . . . For the past four years all of us have come in contact with both the clinical and non- clinical instructors. But in looking hack if we were asked to identify a conscientious, de- voted, and energetic teacher, the class of '56 would reply Bruce Vischer MacFadyen. Our first contact with him was in the orientation lectures of our sophomore year. During the junior year we were impressed with his in- finite patience as he stressed upon us the importance of endometriosis, PID and ovarian tumors. The conferences in the 7th floor class- room and the quizzes at the OR tables cli- maxed our third year Gyn training. For those who stayed in Philadelphia for the senior clinical Gyn affiliation the four '4P's', of a retrodisplacement were again re-emphasized and all were asked for the fifth NP . Dr. MacFadyen himself is a 'graduate of Hahnemann Medical College '28. After an internship at Shadyside Hospital in Pitts- hurgh he returned to Philadelphia and the Graduate School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania from which he received the de- gree of Master of Medical Science in Gyn-Obs. Having served as the first resident in Obs-Gyn at Hahnemann he became a member of the Department of Gynecology in 1932 and then Head of the Department in 1946. And so the class of 1956 proudly dedicates this hook to Dr. Bruce V. MacFadyen whose sincere desire to teach and share his knowl- edge with others will never be forgotten. Doctor Brown ezune to IIilllllt'lllillIll following an tvaieli- ing career whieh has guinetl him zu reputation as an organizer. lezuler. unil tt-in-lu-r of pliysiriuns. llt- iw-4-4-in-il his 13.5. in l9l9 anal NLD. in l92l from the l'niversity of Uklahoniai. For some men this wouhl he sullieient, hut eompelleil to ronstruet lwlter that whirh he eriti-- eizecl. he set out to further his nieilieul l-uiowletlge hy training at llui'vui'4l. SllltSt'tlllt'Illly in I9-I-o an new Dean valine to llilllllvlllilllll. Never sutistiml with SPl'0Iltl hest, he strove vigorously to Cllllfllll' students into iloetorsg to digest infinite niealirul fzu-ts into ai curriculum which li-ft no student grauluute in ignoranee. Doctor Brown left us in June. 1955. llis uhsenec has given us the knowledge that hrillianee alone is not enough: initiative and desire, alone will fail: it is the culmination of all these qualities und in addition courage which we must seek in replacing this man. Charles L. Brown, BS., M.D. 'A 56 'Q TRUSTEES President Watson Malone, HI Vice-Presidents Ellsworth A. Roberts, LL.B., LL.D. Robert G. Dunlop, B.S. Executive Vice-President Madison Brown, B.S., M.D. Secretary Frederic H. Strawbridge, Jr., LL.D. Solicitors Pepper, Bodine, Frick, Scbeetz and Hamilton Treasurer Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company '5- MADISON B. BROWN, M.D. Trustee of the American Hospital Association, member of the Advisory Board of the Hospital Council of Philadelphia, and member of the Board of Directors of the Associated Hospital Service of Philadelphia are but a few interests which Dr. Madison Brown is following pres- ently. Since it would be impossible to list all of his many activities, positions and papers suflice it to say that he is highly qualified to lead us in the complexities of hospital states- manship. Because his activities are so much behind the scenes we are unable, in our daily routine of labs, wards and clinics, to have close contact with Dr. Brown. However, his devotion to his work has been self evident in the continu- ing progress Hahnemann Hospital has made since his arrival. It is most fitting that far removed from the drama of the accident ward there is a capable leader to make possible the realities of a modern hospital. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Charles A. Allen, B.S. in Econ., Harry C. Barnes, Hon. James C. Crumlish, LL.B., Robert G. Dunlop, B.S., Myer Feinstein, Arthur Gal- lagher, Mrs. Theodore G. Geary, William B. Griscom, Jr., John F. E. Hippel, A.B., LL.B., E. Merton Hill, M.D., John LaCerda, Watson Malone, Ill, Samuel F. Niness, B.S., Charles H. Noble, Jr., Joseph W. Post, M.D., Ellsworth A. Roberts, LL.B., LL.D., Howard W. Schotter, Theodore P. Scott, Frederic H. Strawbridge, Jr., LL.D., Carl Vogel. Ex-ojicio: Madison B. Brown, B.S., M.D. Harold A. Taggart, M.D. . I., ' U 4 , rd ' fs . 5' ' . g lhgvjrff if 'N ' 1 . . 'Yiaxhf 5 Q , M' ag 4 , ' A .7-.,4 , +1-N A The Class of '56 pauses, in this time of farewells, to honor the memory of one of its first and finest teachers, Dr. Armand W. Angulo, Professor of Anatomy. So suddenly deprived, the halls of Alma Mater will long echo the soft Latin accents of his voice and be lighted hy the spirit of his gentle humor and keen scholarship. Dedicated to the pursuit of truth, devoted to his boys, he made the transition to medical school smoother for hundreds of new medics. His life and work will remain a vital force among us for years to come, as the many careers he so skillfully launched ripen to full maturity. His monument is the eternal gratitude of his school, his students and his professions, his resting place is in the hearts of those who knew and loved him well. Zin :Memoriam F' .,,, . fw- 11 ' f N -.rr 4, 1 gg .W '5 .JL 1 gf' J. J., . ,.,f. 1, 3: , J : ,fx v ,-M7541 .l :n'3': 'A.vf: ' rf, 1:5 f ,57 'K N xg , xx i Q ! 1 f 5 I I , r' J ' 9 fl of 4 r 'I 4 5 'X 1 ,s -N' ff 2 1 , I 9. ' 4 0' A' 65 1 n 'P X . ' 2 'if' -V 'ff 5, :M ,x.' m ina. V '44 ,I 3 , JC nf, ' g, 5,2 F1 ' 9 .. v M ' 3 Q3 K, J-' u E l x Q? F: E, Q. ,An B-J.. .- , fr tl, .L .. . VN . Q' I f' G V 'L , K 4. J, .sky Sig V 1' ' 4 w i -4 4, 1, 1 1 i .1 I 1 -Q..-. G i 1, I.. Q! E, w ,. K X ll w 1 V 'N yi I '1 , 1 1 a- 4 3 ,v + 3.:.Y -. , ,x . ' ,, J Q ,f pw, 'uf : 'W ,'hL:.:.. - 4.41 PBWQKHN- 1 x . ff.:-' 's mfr 4 '1..m.m ' 5 -5' 4' A v ' Ali Abbas Alley This talkative fellow came to Halmcmann from Dickinson and Gettysburg Colleges with a B.S. degree from the former, earned in three years. During his freshman year in anatomy lah King Farouk ' became fast friends with Dr. Chunn. After becoming treasurer of Phi Beta Pi fraternity, he then attained position of president. He is a member of the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, the interfraternity council, and served junior internships at the Community Hos- pital of Philadelphia and at the Memorial Hospital of Pottstown, Pa. Ali is a native of Berwick, Pa. and is unmarried. Internship: MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA Richmond, Vu. wr- I I - e Joe hails from California, Pa. and attended the University of Pittsburgh. He participated in the undergraduate research program and is a member of the MacFadyen Gyn. Society. Joe served a junior internship at the Lower Bucks County Hospital, and was also a member of the Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity. Members of .loe's group will not forget his ability in hitting the anticubital veins in biochemistry. He and wife, Beverly, were blessed during his senior year with the birth of their daughter, Shauna Elyse. Internship : 5 ALBERT EINSTEIN MEDICAL CENTER, SOUTHERN DIVISION Philadelphia, Pa. A . Joseph Leo Azorsky Walter E. Badenhausen, Jr. -Q, -. fr 'ix 5 -ix? 5s..,,sN- lTQ,T .-iggl Q, Ss 'R N -Q --lj' :---- -4 ,.f.ffff 5 f..f.' 'lf A , ,. ,- . . . v iff 'l ' -- Q 5 i -V 4 41 ,, Q 4 gs 'ku ,. , ' . f bf- Ln- ' -r KS- ', 'C ' . - -N ' M f it .- , ,- ini Qgwgeg Q . . Lu:.fi?' V JE: Walt, a member of Phi Chi fraternity, the '55-'56 Medic Staff and the Mac- Fadyen Gyn. Society, is a graduate of Hamilton College, N. Y. where he majored in English literature and biology. One of the tallest men in the class, Walt will be most remembered for his pleasant manners, conservative dress and his knowledge in fields other than medicine. Having served a junior internship at Staten Island Hospital Walt also found time to visit Europe on two occasions. His plans for the future include his venerable pipe, a trip around the world and a specialty in internal medicine. Internship: LENOX HILL HOSPITAL New York City, N. Y. -f-fm .-,f. .- ' - - -' ' f .'5.',,'L1 'rf-' +1 L ff? P -- f' Leonard Earl Berk A native of Pittsburgh, Len came to Hahnemann via Johns Hopkins University. Although an ardent Pirate and Steeler fan, Lenny was not always on the losing side as those who played basketball with him at the Y can attest. Vlfhile at Hahnemann he served as a laboratory technician and held a junior internship at Coatesville Hospital. Socially Len was a member of Phi Beta Pi fraternity and plans to marry Carol Hawk of the Hahnemann nursing staff in June. Plans for the future are for a general practice in the Pittsburgh area. Internship: WESTERN ASSOCIATION HOSPITAL Pittsburgh, Pa. Frank attvmlvd llurpur Collvgv of Now York aiflvr growing up in XYSIIIIIIIINIFI Pu. which zu'4'or1ling to Frank is whvrv thu- Malin Lim- of Pliilaule-lpliiu in-gina . . . and w . vnils. Frank is ai iiwliilwr of thv Nvwinzin lllulr, lhv N12l1'l'iI1lVl'll hvn Society, the .A1'Sl'llllllliZlll Sovivly, A.0.A., annul the' Phi Chi l l':ih-l'liily. llf- si-rva-fl il junior internship at Stvtson llospitul und. wlxilv not purhuing ilu-sa: uvlivilia-s, hc was alwavs good for an dart game and an Ipit of sulpllc wil. 7 3. V. 1 u N i 1 N 3 Franklin Stanley Bizouiky lnlvrnslxip: ll All NICMANN IIUSPITAI Philadelphia, Pu. Mark is a hometown boy from Philadelphia who attended the University of Pa., and married a hometown girl. In spite of four years of narcolepsy, he managed to get through all of his courses. He participated in surgical research, was a member of the Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity and was also elected to AOA. Although primarily concerned with furthering his medical education, no small amount of time was spent in worrying about that universal disease, progressive alopecia. Internship: UNITED STATES NAVAL HOSPITAL Bethesda, Md. . 55? 51:6 ,if f ,L Cx Mfg . E, , A f?'Q2f',:,., S-wit .' J if Frfffirf- f cfxggi' gf 7 ' fi X gf' f ?3!'f1-TQ' - '1'Q.'i:ff-f, ' ' -- fr,-ru ' . N-NZALLQ' ' H .:w:.g,:.Jt . 5' 1. , , 'X CL . 1 ' 'Q ' . me .. wx.,5,' vf if if Lfgff il.. :- K E . X Mx, if 'R gf nbe, 5 an Mark Avrum Blatt Andrew D. Chigos, Jr. Andy intends to he a G.P. when the Air Force is through with his services. He comes from Wilkes-Barre, Pa. and attended Wesleyan College of West Vir- ginia, where he met his wife, Betty. After working for the Pepsi Cola Company for the past three summers, he is now so strong that he can lick his weight in bottle caps. A dedicated family man and the father of two children, Andy would like nothing more than to set up practice in a small community. Internship: ST. LUKES HOSPITAL Bethlehem, Pa. ..f f 'iy Hr'-' fbi ,W -' T'---.1-pm. Iggy, A ,f 1 Farr '23 f'T:f1 -f2f.g.,f-N 'A , A r- -- -.52..1 -. A , - , V - Q y -with A Leon Harold Dantzig .I 0 Q V Y . I 9 . , . gre, , W, rx- . 'W' fr- ,S ' f 'J rfmff cp ' . ' gi 'L-g,g..gi J' .ist M, Q.. 2. Leon hails from Levittown, Pa. and is a devoted husband to his wife, Cecile. While at Hahnemann he found enough time to join Phi Beta Pi Fraternity and have a daughter, Tara Lynn. Pre-med studies were at Champlain College where he must have been considered an eskimo in good standing having spent four years in this northern outpost. It has been rumored that Leon spent two-thirds of his time commuting but always managed to make class by 8:33 A. M. Internship: ST. AGNES HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pu. '1 'l'0rrililv Tod vonivs from Wilkinslmrg, l'an. :intl took his pre--nu-il ut this liniwvrsity of l,lllSlllll'g1ll. Ili- is at nivlnlwr of thc' l'hi llvtai l'i l mt4'i'iiity in whivh he svrvml us hi:-stm'iain, sm-itil t'll1lll'IllillI, rushing t'lllIll'IlliIll., :intl finally prvsialvnt in his senior yt-ur. At at-lnml ha- was an ina-inhe-r of the- 'Nlau-l aulyn-ii Gyn. Sovivty, the Nl'N'lllilll Cluh, tht- Stutlvnt lnstitutv, :intl pro:-itlviit uf the senior class. Ho hold an lah. intvrnship at thv l,owvr But-ks County lluspitul anal a junior internship ut West Chester M1-muriul Hospital. llc is inurrie-el untl plans to go into gvncral practice or take u surgical rcsiclviivy. lnlvrnship: WEST .IERSEY lIOSl'lTAl Camden, N. J. H , f ' K. N r 4, ,5 A A by -1 -4 L f- n Q a Theodore John DeConna . 4- P in xl' 'Q Wherever there is beer to be had John will not be far away. This hard working AKK is a native Philadelphian whose presence graced the Newman Club, the Aesculapian Club, and the MacFadyen Gyn. Society. John attended LaSalle College and worked as a lab intern at Hahnemann during his junior year at which time he endeared himself to the night nurses on pediatrics with his soft and sugary phrases. John was the only senior able to do a good history and physical, CBC, and still visit Browns in the same half hour. Internship: ST. AGNES HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. C lmicf . :grit V , , g g eiulfztawi V ' 3.1, 3- John Joseph Dennehy in .MQ af' aw -x ,. f Earl Patrzck Derrick it 5lu.... E... Earl attended Juniata Coll fto no fault of his ownl and is a member of the Phi Beta Pi Fraternity, the N Cl ' ' ' ewman ub, the Aesculaplan Society, the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, and numerous other extra-curricular activities. Earl held a junior internship at D . . . . . . octors Hospital during his Junior and senior years but found enough time to entertain and be entertained by the girls in white as well as being a companion to .lohn Dennehy. His fellow group members will remember his ability to manipulate John Scott's kymographs. ege after being raised in Wyonling, Pa. He is single Internship: ST. AGNES HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. A I Garrett Edwin Donnell M1 ,-P' J 'e . n 1 5 by ' il- h A'Hfll MG X Ay, ,V .,, .2 nvvlqqlulv Qv n , M N f. a A 5 E , i ,D K gl! -f H is 5 , its Gary is a member of the Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity, the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, and has worked on the 1955 and 1956 Medic. He calls Cochranton, Pa. home, and attended Bucknell University. Gary is a gay, carefree extrovert who always has a smile for his classmates, and a kiss for their wives. There's a certain characteristic about Gary which enahles him to have an answer for most any question, even the location of his home town. Long range plans are for a wife, home cooked meals and a large family. Internship: H AMOT HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION Erie, Pu. 1 John Anderson Dotterer Jade, the leanest football player from Lafayette College, came to Hahnemann after three years of pre-med. He and his wife, Ruth, were blessed with a daugh- ter at the beginning of his senior year. .lack served as Vice-President of his Sophomore class and intends to go into general practice. On rare f?J occasions in physiology lab he had been heard to remark in awed tones, Oh, gee!!! What's it gonna be?', Although only known to his closest friends, he holds the distinction along with Charlie Wilkins of owning a roaring Twenties auto- mobile, a 1928 Packard. Internship: BRYN MAWR HOSPITAL Bryn Mawr, Pa. X w Pete, whose ready and natural wit and infectious grin has been noted at the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and the Aesculapian Society, has served as repre- sentative of the Student Institute and is a member of the Medic Staff and Phi Chi Fraternity. His home is in Chicago and he attended the University of Illinois where he earned a B.S. and M.S. degree. It w that if Pete has it in his notes, it is important, but who can read it? Future plans include a residency in internal medicine. ill always he remembered Internship: PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL Chicago, Ill. a mum: --'WWW Peter George Economou S vs riff 1 , . 7 . 'S' +4 u - . ,.iWf ,L ' , .. -.','Q-?vQ?f' . . , lihf'-V-.J f .MIQH . . , ext-,ggi George Geoffrey Flamm U if 4 19. . . 3, r . , V A . ,f ' ' is :P ' 1 -xl.-.fs -.P --gf - f ,V . M' -,. V, ' .5 ,N ..i 2 L . L ' . t .H 1 f 5? 'fi fl Y' N , 0-. .J',n l..'. wi- '- ax fv- . l ' 1 1 .1 I ,- George spent more time in the Bacteriology lab than at Herms playing the pinball machine. He married Pat, but the pinball machine got away. George is a member of the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, the Medic staff, and the Phi Beta Pi Fraternity. During his junior year he was a lah intern at Hahnemann and held a junior internship at the Coatesville Hospital during his senior year. He took his pre-med at the University of Delaware and comes from Felton, Delaware. His plans include general practice and a large family. Internship: WESTERN ASSOCIATION HOSPITAL Pittsburgh, Pa. S W if-1.15. .f'f,,.- rf: Q' Y n iw. .Q Qqffialf 'Qbjqg fl' . nf, ' -- - ffm. 5 . 1 F? Q' 'T' ' ' 'za -f'Zr v ' rf f - - - Ng- -ef .4 ! ' - ' - . ia V' WiIllllll,.hn.- Dad is a native Philadelphian who took his pre-med at Penn State, and is married to Joanny F. whose friendly personality won many friends. At Hahne- mann hc has been active in numerous class affairs, is a member of the Mac- Fadyen Gyn. Society, the Aesulapian Society, and a member of the Medic staff. Bill is President of the Phi Chi Fraternity, at which house he could always be found planning a work party. During his senior year he served a junior intern- ship at the Coatesville Hospital. No one will forget Bill for his easy-going atti- tudc, ability to rclax and his philosophy of life. His plans for the future include anesthesiology. Internship: HURON ROAD HOSPITAL Cleveland, Ohio A William Henry Forrest, Jr. ...Li v T X . ,H N A ' ' s. 9 f' John V. Foyt john is l'l1ilndt-lphiu horn and cznnc to llilllllvlllilllll following an ILS. ele-gn-v from Univvrsity of Pvnnsylvuniu. l,ittl4' did hc rculizv, that first duy in I4-1-turn room A., that hv would soon lwvoim- infaunous us the- hypodvriniv ni-nu-sis of thc' biochemistry lah. Following a work of diligvnt hook vrau-king, John could ln' found joining in with Phi Chi w4'4'lu'ml affairs und rvluxing ut tha- ping pong table or looking for at fourth for hridgc. Always to hc rmncinhcrcd are ,lohnis two hamburgers and black coffcc for lunch in llcrnfs. The futurc is not defi- nite for John--the Army-followed possibly by a residency. Internship: ABINCTON MEMORIAL HObl'lTAL Abington, Pa. '13 in ...... 1' South River, N. J. proudly claims as their son Churchill C. Franklin, known to all as Church. Church is a Rutgers grad with whom we struggled through a long courtship which was finally consecrated with Mary Kathryn Dolphin to every- one's delight. A very active Phi Chi, Churchill also participated in the Newman Club and was a member of the Aesculapian Club. Future planning is towards a practice of general medicine, and knowing Church as we do are sure that he will do Hahnemann proud, as an LMD par excellence. N Internship: MISERICORDIA HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. ' f WJWAK, 'F- Churchill C. Franklin it Donald J. Frazer Detroit is his home, University of Michigan his sclioolg wife and Phi Chi his hobby. To all Don is best known for his firm grasp of medical know how and an equally firm determination to seek the truth. Fondly dubbed 'Chard nose, it is his desire to know facts which will aid in his future planning as an internist. A recent addition to the family has blessed the Frazer household. Internship: UNITED STATES NAVAL HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pu. 'F James Kethledge Fugate Despite his famous family of four, Jim has found enough time and energy to make his mark in medical school. ,lim is from Pennsylvania State Universityg while at school was Treasurer of the Sophomore class, joined in the Aesculapian and MacFadyen Gyn. Society and was an active member of the Phi Chi Fra- ternity. His many activities kept this medic from Sykersville, Pa. far too busy to be tired, and his boundless energies will be well directed in future medical ventures and in raising a football team. Internship: HURON ROAD HOSPITAL Cleveland, Ohio ll illll attvlnlvtl Villanova l'nivc'raity mul was horn all W'illiaunr-port, l'ai. While- at llnlinmnunn ho was an nwinlwr of tht- Ne-wmun Cluh uncl Mau-l auly4-n Gyn. Society. 'l'ln-sv arc tht- statistic-s. hut what of tht- num? l'zml wus lllllllhlfltllls., coopvrativv. :intl always svnsitiva' to pt-rsons as wt-ll as the-ir elisvznsa-. 'fogvtlu-r will 1 his wifv, Tvrvsu, Paul plans il future' in gvllvrail przivtivv prohuhly in or nvur his homo town. To us Paul Milligan? will lu' ra-ilivllilwrc-al us tha- guy who slept 26 hours a day, and as the Duncan llinvs of Rave Strm-t. lnlvrnship: WlI,l.lAMSl'0RT ll0Sl'lTAl lvilliamaport, Pal. Paul C. Garell, Jr. 3 if , , S 6 T . Gentleman Jim cuts a striking figure in his whites, as he steps to the side of a patient's bed, and in his best bedside manner cxtrudes a tale of metromenorr- llagia or gumma of the liver. This LMD calls home Bloomfield, N. J. and attended Columbia University prior to entrance to medical school. Between classes, labs, and clinical rounds, Jim could be found relaxing at the Phi Chi house sampling the ravioli that he would smuggle from Jersey on weekends. The future is as yet undecided but .lim will most likely specialize. Internship: MOUNTAINSIDE HOSPITAL Montclair, N. J. ., ' vcwf-' 'Wi ,fu ' A V, .- gg 4 , :i Wi.. 1 s3'.'fs,. V. ,N r ' g -.ff Y-I J.,-J G: James Louis Garofalo .es W4 , . -ml,,.,,,. 1,2 ,I X, ...H .3415 W, !,:,,1,3Lbl.-burwnc ,W for p , . , A 'H 1' ' ' 1- Z 'kwa' ' 'f 'ff 1 uf- ' ,ga-'ew W I ll William ll. Gausman, Jr. 5 X v . 6' w Q A - g As Bill Gausman, a new ,lersey Yankee who invaded the South via Duke University, has been distinguished hy his astute political wisdom, financial wizardry and solid scholarship here at Hahnemann. While presiding as Mein Host at the Cluh 1513, Willie has focused his attention on such diverse suhjects as photog- raphy, women and the prevention of total alopeeia. A loyal Phi Chi, Bill also owes allegiance to the Aeseulapians and the MaeFadyen Gynecology Society. His future hopes include internship, surgery, parenthood and the ownership of Fort Knox. Internship: ORANGE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Orange, N. J. I In P' Ronald G Goldberg f. ff We will remember him best by an unknown jibe which somehow grew to sym- bolize humor and relief of daily menial tasks. Tay Sachs, the cherry red macula, Goldy, all these aliases let us know Ronald G. Goldberg. Ronnie was born, raised and educated in Philadelphia. He received a B.S. degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and while at Hahnemann was an active member in Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity. Ronnie was always ready for a party but equally prepared to meet the demands of a medical education. He is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society. Internship: L05 ANGELES COUNTY HOSPITAL Los Angeles, Calif. 'vs 1 W it 'L fa., From Trenton, N. J. came this bright young medic with the ambition and deter- mination to succeed as a physician. Siggy has a B.S. degree from Franklin and Marshall and at Hahnemann was Vice-President of Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society, Treasurer of Phi Delta Epsilon, editor of the Medic, cartoonist for SAMA paper and member of the Gynecology Society. Despite all modesty, it must be said of Sig that his medical eagerness and determination to learn have impressed his colleagues and teachers. Sig and Carell were the champs of the won-ton and almond cookie set. His future plans are for residency in surgery. Internship : ABINCTON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL . Abington, Pa. Elv- qu. 1 'RW ,X :fx , C, Sigmund R. Greenberg p Philadelphia born and raised, .lack has long dreamed of becoming an LMD. He was educated at Albright College and came to Hahnemann with high hopes of being an all around physician, however, forces unknown to us have guided his desires towards the psychiatric field which may be part of future planning. Always worried about 'Gfatal anaphylactic reaction, he would argue about penicillin prophylaxsis, given any opportunity, especially with Greenberg. J ack was Secretary of Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity, member of the Undergraduate Research Society, elected to Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society and married Reva Moss from Baltimore, Maryland. Internship: PHILADELPHIA GENERAL HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. H so M.-M Jack Greenspan John Patrzck Hagan J r X I QTIL-v-vf Known to all by his official voice, which so often stated the curt necessary few words which led to a correct diagnosis, John came to medical school from Kenyon College where he received the basic background for a further medical education which John took to full advantage. All work and no play makes John a dull boy, so in wedlock John took Jeanne E. Boyd from our Biochemis- try department in his senior year. John was a member of the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and Secretary of SAMA 1952-1953. Future plans include a residency in Ob-Gyn and hunting wild beasts in northern Pennsylvania. Internship: LANKENAU HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. 'x L V if Dwight always despaired at those who joyfully stated, You only get out of it that which you put in. Which usually meant-there is plenty of material but we are too busy to teach it. Yet, it must be said that he gleaned much from little, and harvested, eagerly, medical know-how from all our teachers. From Perth Amboy, Dwight attended Rutgers and married a lawyer friend, Rosalie Cooper. While at Hahnemann he was a member of the Phi Delta Epsilon Fra- ternity and elected to Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society. The future remains open, but secure. Internship: UNITED STATES AIR FORCE WALTER REED HOSPITAL Washington, D. C. Dwight Noel Halpern I X l S sn. Diekis Main Line heritage has lieen the center of much friendly kidding. lint we shall always rememlier him as a quiet., reserved, but genuinely enthusiastic gentleman. Staying close to home, which is Wynnewood, Pa. Dick attended thc lfniversity of Pennsylvania and came to llahncmann with his dcgrcc. Ar Medical School he participated in the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and took an active interest in the Phi Beta Pi Fraternity. Dick is leaving future medical planning openg for an Armed Forces internship may point to now unknown fields. Internship: BRYN MAWR ll0Sl'lTAl, Bryn Mawr, Pa. 1' ., l' ,uv 4 . 2 . v- x' ,,1. ss: .Ami t 4n----'f-- Richard W. Hartman, Jr. X1,,4't4fg ii, iii., 32,9-'Z-' Qui' :1 ' .- - ,- H : W ,it -.L if 'af-'A' fi, 1- - '- 1 Sin.-'y-,145 ff ' f Y ,f M ft Don was known as father of the good group, which was unknowingly so typed by Dr. Murphy during our Junior year. Doris, nurse-wife, and family left no room for wasted time, and Don applied his summers diligently in research in physiology on various problems of respiratory chemistry and physics. Born in Collingswood, N. J. Don attended the University of Pennsylvania before coming to Hahnemann. His other activities were the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, the Research Society, and having children. Don also joined the Phi Chi Fra- ternity and plans a general practice after internship. Internship: HURON ROAD HUSPITAL Cleveland, Ohio - 4. .- -VYY tf,w-wwf. -V-M--.rf 5, ' ,.g 'L - --s vnf .sf -,Nils ,:2z.y,a- f - 6 .wa L -. :1 .fe -1-, -.14 V 4 y an 'fm 1 6' X ,,,,,gfwgy,:3,sy 1 .A If .gl - . 1 ' ir:-J .',wf. , N., 5, an ,-g.g.,,'f - ' G,--Q ggi, 1 .. ' . ffm -if fx 3 Rfk, - lf, -1 js f --1,v-V53-4' .53 Y A':f,f:::-5 M, , L4 ,1- , f r ' 51. -f f ww' b SJW , 2-.,-if ,-f?1',.Ar ,. 'w . ' - an v - ga, 1-.-.V W . I, t. . K .1 K , g , -gg- 39 , - g,g dgff. 'QL 3 . ' , f h - ,-si.giva, A ' T' . Q .' A ,. - f - A fins. re . , ,JV-wal-A 3, i V L, I ,i swift . Y, V sf 'E Donald Harvey Johnson im, In 'J fi' . 1 - Kenneth Roger Johnson 1 sv- 1 'X X Y .... 200 Midland Street, Bridgeport, Conn. is home for this New Englander who came to Hahnemann after receiving a B.A. degree from Dartmouth College. Many are the dull hours that Kenny made bearable for us by his facial plastics, and it was with some emotion, almost sadness, that we left poor bewildered Shirley and Einstein Southern Division. Kenny was a member of MacFadyen Gyn. Society, Vice Order of Phi Beta Pi Fraternity and found time for a junior internship at Pottstown Hospital. The future may be in Ob-Gyn and in general, women, especially ones with high heels. Internship: MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA Richmond, Vu. , was ,f 1. x : 'ar 1-Qs'-df? N' , , . 1 ,. :V 4. f W I George Philip Jones -33.2 As the group is hustled from one clinic to the other, you can always find Phil at the lead. His eagerness and intellectual honesty have gained the respect and admiration of all his classmates. In spite of Phils long absence from formal education during World War II, he had no trouble in cracking the books. A proliferative graduate of Penn State, Phil is the father of four children. Phil's energies and diagnostic acumen will not go unrewarded. We all believe that honest Capt Jones will succeed in the future as he has done so capably in the past. Internship: HARBOR GENERAL HOSPITAL Torrance, Calif. kd-JJ Nc'cr a day gocs hy. 'l'hat's llillis crccd. lfvcry day with llill is chock full of curious cxpcricnccs. In spitc of his antics, hoth voluntary and involuntary, Bill has a captivating pcrsonalily which has won him many fricnds. llill, singlae and a graduate of the Univcrsity of Pcnnsylvania, is a native Philadclphian and a mcmhcr of Phi Lambda Kappa. llc has maintained a line academic rccord and is known best for his vcrsatilitv which at timcs is somewhat hcwil- dering. Plans for thc fixture may include pediatrics. Internship: PHILADELPHIA GENERAL HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. , . -. , ' ii i 1 li 1 gm 5, if . --.A if , K 5 Q Ll' if William Kamerling sa -YL What's the hurry? This is a familiar cry when Don is nearby. A native of Reading, Pa. he is married and a graduate of Franklin and Marshall College. D0n's greatest joys in life are eating and television. His eating ability is undis- putable but it is hard to believe television is his hobby. Regardless of what is said of Don's ping pong ability he has managed to attain a high standing in the senior class and maintain a jovial attitude. Don can alwys be counted upon for correct diagnosis and latest cures. Maybe he has developed a new way of studying. Internship: THOMAS FITZGERALD MERCY HOSPITAL Darby, Pa. S. 5 'itff-W' MB-ff' 'Z I Donald John Kasper Helen Myrna Kass yo..--g: ,. 1-1' , - ..-Af. . ,, , A 'wvx 'Wh- Helen is the proof that doctors can he glamorous. Always a favorite with her classmates, Helen never lets us forget that beauty and brains do mix. Alon with having charm and personality, she has managed to place high in the class and in some phases of our work, has excelled. A graduate of Douglass College QNJCJ, Helen makes her home in Philadelphia. Besides being occupied hy her studies as well as the activities of the various women's medical societies, Helen found time to fill out her social calendar with Jerry Oslinker with whom she will settle and practice. Internship: MONTGOMERY HOSPITAL Norrislown, Pa. 0' D 1... 'iii-E 1 Herbert Kean A aa.. Herb spent his pre-med time at the University of Pennsylvania. During the summers he worked at various jobs ranging from swimming director at adult resorts to medical research. At Hahnemann, Herb has been active in the Phi Lambda Kappa fraternity, holding the offices of Social Director, Vice-President and President. He has also been active in the Gyn. Society, the Psychiatric Forum and had a junior internship at Chestnut Hill Hospital. His spare time has been spent taking care of the television concession in the hospital. The plans for the future are uncertain, but he seems to be leaning toward Psychiatry. Internship: H AHNEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pu. . , 12:3 'Ti' Frank is one of the many men given to our class by St. ,loc-'s. lloweve-r, his mcdieal education was delayed lay the ll. S. Navy and Merrill l'l1arlnaa-eutieul Company. Wliile working for Merrill, Frank met an auliurn haired, Clic-stnut Hill College beauty, who lle married in June, 1955. During luis four yearn at Hallnemann, Frank worked for Merrill, Pfizer and had a junior internship at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Camden. Frank expects to practice in Cam- den and raise a big family. Internship: OUR LADY OF LOURDES HOSPITAL Camden, N. J. Y -s ixiflif A 'J .- ' 5 . as As Q Francis Xavier Keeley Whenever anyone strays from the straight and narrow way, Mark is always there to lend his stabilizing character, amiability and cheerful personality. Mark, who attended Eastern Mennonite College and Wittenberg College, has spent much of his life in Asia and now calls Hagerstown, Md. his home town. His extra-curricular activities included the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and Chris- tian Medical Society as well as being dedicated to his family, his wife, Betty Marie, and daughter, Lois Ellen. Mark was elected Treasurer of the Senior class because, as Promish put it, he was the only one we could trust with our money. Future plans are for missionary work. Internship: HARRISBURG HOSPITAL Harrisburg, Pa. T . ll ellll 1 wmv! 1 A 1 Mark Alan Kniss Rudolph Anthony Komada -4? ' fi , A ff! ' A la. W l They say insomnia creates more study time. If this is true, Rudy should be one of the brightest young physicians to come out of Hahnemann. At any rate, Rudy's sharp diagnostic ability cannot he underestimated, as those who know him can readily attest. A native Philadelphian, Rudy is a graduate of La Salle College. Even though an advocate of McCarthy he was always a favorite with his pals and professors due to his affable personality. In spite of his many self-created ailments fwhatever was studied the week beforel, Munch-Munch has been active in the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, Newman Club and 4'Oldsmobile driving. Internship: HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. Al hails from Scranton, Pa. and is a graduate of the University of Buffalo. I wonder if Al ever found his ophthalmoscope? In the junior year, this was the big question. Everybody knew it was missing and everybody was concerned, except Al. He took the loss as though nothing had happened. This was just an example of the easy-going manner which characterizes him. Unperturbable Al won the respect of many while at Hahnemann. His vital capacity amazed all of us whether it concerned schoolwork or fluid dynamics. Many pleasant thoughts are in store for us when we get together with Al in the future. Internship: HURON ROAD HOSPITAL Cleveland, Ohio Alexander D Korba i u-N Bob, za graduate of New York University, will lw n-lm-iiiln-re-el for hit worlt in the informal quartet. Althonghthis wan- not his gr1'altvst ut-hioveina-nt, il alumln foremost in onr minds. Among other things we ra-im-inln-r tht- vounllc-me trips back home along tht- roaul to N. Y. A week in utlvznu-0 1-vc-ryhotly know Holi was going home to Union City. At lluhna-mann ha' was ai mc-mln-r of l'hi Chi Fraternity, Acsculnpian Club, and thc Mucl u4lycn Cyn. Society. Plans for tlu: future arc for internal medicine. Internship: KINGS COUNTY HOSPITAL Brooklyn, N. Y. ' filth. - Au., Q - Y N -Eff? K'i'f.ix z 4. fr, J Kg? 1 .6 I Q Robert Leslie Kozam ff 4. .fi , Who will ever forget the way George Paff used to refer to our George as a 'ahandsome lug. Far from being untrue, George has not let that hinder him in working toward the goal he pursued. After spending a stretch in the U. S. Army George came to Hahnemann from McKeesport, Pa. and would taunt us about the basketball fortunes of good old McKeesport High and Duquesne. In his freshman year at Hahnemann, George found what he had been looking for all these years. When Lois says 'gyesf' that will give this story fitting climax. Post-graduation plans have not been formulated. Internship : YORK HOSPITAL York, Pa. 2355-9- 115: -' B 1: 1'HkffP5i l QCA ' , Hifi- f by ' X 1. 1 ' , '. , 'Z K? W .5 4sk+..,:1,fA9 A Nev' A 1 f ' .. W 5 'ii - ' ' 'Jia-' ' r A ,I .1 we-Qigd, r ' ' .1 1.EfE-830595 ' f ff 911' it .egg . ,Q -E v Wt W- v,21w,:age 'Wim 'ff 'ply :r H. . I L ' ,M ., .V 5? -- 4,- iaiau?S'Ji3a' '5' - iz 1 fs ,. SHEAR 1-4 -M f , 'MW .QM 'wr' George Kushner, Jr x I Wallace 0man Leeher, Jr. 1: .., 'it f, fjsig , 3353.5 N N Graduating from Upper Darby H. S., Wally decided not to become another Harry James and putting his trumpet aside disappeared for four years into the physics and chemistry labs at Amherst College. It was soon discovered, how- ever, that some joint experimentation was going on with a pretty blonde chem. major at Mt. Holyoke. Shortly after the completion of his sophomore year at Hahnemann, Wally and Curley tithe chem. majorl were married, and are now living in Arden. In addition Wally has been an active member of Phi Chi, the Mac Fadyen Cyn. Society and the Aesculapian.Society. He is planning a resi- dency in Urology after an internship at Fitzgerald-Mercy Hospital. Internship: THOMAS FITZGERALD MERCY HOSPITAL Darby, Pa. .nl? ' Most people are naturally curious but Dave is one of those few people with the drive and perseverance to find out answers. Since coming to Hahnemann from Shamokin and Muhlenberg College, Dave has been actively interested in re- search. This interest resulted in his being elected Student Chairman of the Undergraduate Research Society. However, this has not detracted from his studies. Dave has managed to maintain a high scholastic average in spite of his active interest in problems of research. We all feel that this drive and initiative will further Dave's success. Internship: H AH NEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pal. Q ll David Michael Long, Jr Tony like the other Murkuriuns of lluhneniunn was horn in Johnson City, N. Y. A graduate of llarpur College of the State University of New York, he joint-al Phi Beta Pi Fraternity illlll was aetive in niatny extra-eurrieulur au-tivities as we-ll as holding a junior internship. Lulu sessions were never boring as long as 'l'ony's wit was present. When difficult questions arose 'l'ony eoulal he clepenalecl upon for a logical and intelligent answer. A member of AOA honorary scholastic fraternity, his plans for the future are untlecicleal. Internship: THOMAS FITZGERALD MERCY IIOSPITAL Darby, Pa. Y . Anthony Markarian Daryl hails from Monroe, Pa. and is a graduate of Catawba College. Who will ever forget the catch Daryl made in the softball game at our class picnic in 1954? This was just an indication of spectacular things to expect from Daryl. In our four years of contact with him, we have all learned to respect his judg- ment when making important decisions and diagnoses. Daryl always manages to startle us with rare diagnoses at least a few times a year. Future plans are for general practice. Internship: READING HOSPITAL Reading, Pa. 9' wx: Daryl Hoover Marsteller Ltr a Donald Edward Martin 's xw wh- A graduate of Eastern Mennonite College and a citizen of Hagerstown, Md., Don exemplifies spirit, hard work and success. He started his career as a farm boy and eventually found his way into medicine by a round-about route. At Hahnemann Don was a member of the Christian Medical Society and active in class affairs. Most of us have learned to admire Don for his diligence and effort with which he went about his school chores. Don's plans for the future are for general rural practice and a happy honie life with his wife, Ellen. Internship: LANCASTER GENERAL HOSPITAL Lancaster, Pa. gsaqzzg, 'Q 'V' 4'-.gl .1 3' '-Pg vu ' fjq, Jiievri, Q11 fair Edwin Harvey McKnight .JJ 1 I .f 1 I 4 '--. -A Q. ., Ed McKnight came to Hahnemann via Atlantic City, N. J. and Villanova Col- lege. Throughout the three years of didactic lectures Ed established himself as the leader of the back of the lecture room platoon which hacked up those hardy front rowmen with silent encouragement at all times. Ed confined his social activities at Hahnemann to joining MacFadyen Gyn. Society and marry- ing Catherine McLaverty. Having breezed through Hahnemann, Ed feels that he will probably go into general practice somewhere around Atlantic City. We're sure the smiling Irishman will be a big success. Internship: ATLANTIC CITY HOSPITAL Atlantic City, N. J. 1 li' - Fu:- 1 t H- 7-'v ,f Aaron Medow M fs-All Aaron came to Hahnemann from the University of Pennsylvania. He joined Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity in his freshman year and became the fraternity Secretary in his sophomore year. His junior year was spent in pursuit of Judy Manus, whom he married in ,lune of 1955. Aaron had a junior internship at Stetson Hospital and more recently has done research in Neurosurgery with Axel K. Olsen, M.D. Many of the photographs in this ycar's Medic are the result of Aaron's work. Aaron's future will he either in Neurosurgery or in general practice in Florida. Internship: MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL Miami, Florida .N 5 5 I B I .BM V RNA Stan Mitnick is a dyed-in-the-wool Philadelphian, having been born here, at- tended the University of Pennsylvania, and now Hahnemann. Stan joined Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity in his freshman year where he was one of their most ardent members and was the undergraduate representative and member of the Phi Lamb Board of Trustees. Stan spent one of his summers working on a fellowship grant from the Cardio-Vascular Institute. He married the former Miss Roberta Miller, and his plans include an internship, a service obligation and then a residency. Internship: MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL Miami, Florida -MH!! Ns, if LAA Q fi , E ' .,,,sMfv' 3 31 -ci. , atv. 2 Evfii F' I4 .H I, . V Y A if ,st I QV U . i' t . 5 ul A . -Q 4' 'LTsf.q?-pq,-,K ftesasttsass N' a fi i fevts,,,,,f1 v P 'F ff- s 1 'wi-iff! . ri --1, , . X . f ' 'if ! 5-,A.?.wV Z., M 1, A' ' SU. ' 'f fvniwsmsvf ft Stanley Marvm Mztnack Lots Jane Newman N 9,0 'IO-v 'Win Lois, a native of Salisbury, Pa. came to medical school from the ranks of nurs- ing. She trained at Memorial Hospital, in Cumberland, Md., but then went to Asbury College in Kentucky and so came to Hahnemann. Lois has been very active in the Woman's Medical Society and has been the President of the group. Although a natural for the Newman Club, Lois, instead, is a member of the CMS and is one of its hardest workers. Her short term plans are to marry the once hardy bachelor, George Kushner, and her long term plan is to practice with him in Western Pennsylvania. Internship: YORK HOSPITAL York, Pa. X Len is a Philadelphian who took his pre-med training at Ursinus College before coming to Hahnemann. He joined Phi Lamba Kappa Fraternity and in his senior year he was elected to Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society. Len took an active part in affairs at Hahnemann and was on the Blue and Gold Dance Committee. He had a junior internship at Frankford Hospital and made him- self a happy man the saysl when he married Barbara Slawetsky. Len is pretty definite about his future which will be a general practice in a small town. Internship: ALBERT EINSTEIN MEDICAL CENTER, NORTHERN DIVISION Philadelphia, Pal. k C Leonard N iesenbaum ii 'R f ' I Joe Qhenandoahl claim t f , . ' J 'z o anne, Uilllll' to llahneniann from P4-nn Slate. lm- IS a man of many and diverse talents. lle is the svhool Bridge 1-hampion. whit-h is quite an aeeoniplishnicnt. as well as one of the leading dart entliusiasts. All kidding aside, Joe is quite a seholar and has the unique favulty of having the most authoritative voiee in school. lo- '. ' l'l' Cl - been active in their affairs. Joe is still sure he will do well in any field. 1 14 a ll ii mcniher and has alwavs undecided about his future hut we are Internship: MONTGOMERY HOSPITAL Norrislown, Pu. v- 'i V' I'- O t x l, 5zai:,ki, u X 1 Y X S N X V Q X s X K X U x ,JP W., .lr t fn---1,,,AV s Joseph P. Norris ? .Ld ttf 1' .lerry comes from South Philadelphia and attended Villanova College before coming to Hahnemann. In his freshman year, marked by many losing battles with Dr. Paff, he joined Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity. In this momentous year he also met classmate Helen Kass and was an engaged man a year later. Jerry 'afoundn himself after leaving the preclinical subjects and enjoyed the wards thoroughly. He especially has fond memories of Obstetrics. We are sure that his sartorial elegance, his native ability and Helen will carry him far in the medical profession. Internship : MONTGOMERY HOSPITAL Norristown, Pa. ' I WW, .W Jerry Herman llslmker Richard Charles 0wen, Jr. A. S' -N Nxt Q-.. J' . , i . . 19 Dick Owen is from New Brighton, Pa. and attended Geneva College for his pre-med training. Upon arriving at Hahnemann, Dick joined Phi Beta Pi Fraternity and is one of their more active members. Like all of us, Dick sweated through the first two years of school, but when he hit the Hospital hc was often indistinguishable from the staff men, so calm and collected was he. Dick has often expressed the desire to return to a small town environment and hopes to set up a general practice there. Internship: HARRISBURC HOSPITAL Harrisburg, Pa. John Harvey Paige s-rmanaw H'-'QS John, or J. Harvey as he is called in more formal circles, is from East Pitts- burgh, Pa. and attended the University of Pittsburgh. John is a member of Phi Beta Pi and the Newman Club. In his senior year John, always a good student, became a member of Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society. He has maintained his fluid balance these past four years on equal ionic equivalents of coffee and beer. As for the future John will pursue a specialty and practice it in what he calls smokeless Pittsburgh. Internship: HARRISBURC HOSPITAL Harrisburg, Pa. Charles Edward Pohl Ed, a resident of Lancaster, Pa., went to undergrad st-bool at Franltlin anal Marshall College in that city. lle joined Phi Chi Fraternity and demonstrated what propinquity can do to a man when be married Nora Ann Maguire, an Hahnemann nurse. Ed's father was a Hahnemunn graduate and the cheery inquiry from stall' men, How's dad? brought smiles to Ed and sneers from his classmates. Ed has done research in surgery at Hahncmann and is a junior intern at Fitzgerald-Mercy Hospital, at which place he will probably intern. He will continue his preoccupation with thc aseptic blade and become a surgeon. Internship: THOMAS FITZGERALD MERCY HOSPITAI Darby, Pa. K ' ff' I rl -0----' A' we fs, - x-MESA. yff',,2f:,,zfy3 naw 2,2 git, ,wr 2, L as ,f L+ 'Y' -' ,, 4' K ' Rr' 0 'h1wuS.S- 'SYM-1 -'? v:?i'2+ 5' f' f fu . '15 , N'5f?'f'2g,ffffge,fT2-Qif, 1' -v?i'iw'Q1 ,iqmf -, tg L -4 .fv1m,Q1.,f - f Y if ,f 2 ww, '- ' ' , ,Z 2 'wgvzh ,Qvg5iQ5f15,,5q. ,, Y . 4 ., , Mary, .- -I .0 L - ' . , L 11: SR ' ,sz uf: .- Dave is a Philadelphian who attended the University of Pennsylvania before coming to Hahnemann. He joined Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity in his fresh- man year, a year which also saw him marry Esther. These two lovebirds could be seen at any Biochemistry lab periodg he from the fire escape and she from the clinic lab, exchanging billet doux. Dave has worked at the HY as a swim- ming instructor and now as a junior intern at Montgomery County Hospital where he hopes to intern. Dave is currently making up his mind whether to go into General Practice or Psychiatry. Internship: MONTGOMERY HOSPITAL Norrislown, Pa. WW, Mas' s ,yy David Sheldon Promcsh Russell Basil Puschak 1 Q- . 1 Russ Puschak is probably the only citizen of Coaldale, Pa. not to become ll football player. Russ instead chose education and got a B.S. from Penn State University, a M.S. from Bucknell University and his M.D. from Hahnemann. In his freshman year he became a member of Phi Beta Pi and in his sophomore year joined the MacFadyen Gyn. Society. Russ is our enthusiastic student, so enthusiastic at times, that his friends feared that he might develop some ulcer- ative disease. However, steady prophylactic doses of Bicarb and Banthine carried Russ through. He intends to go into general practice near his home. Internship: ST. LUKE5 HOSPITAL Bethlehem, Pa. V QL' Paul, a native of South Philadelphia., went to the University of Pennsylvania. When arriving at Hahnemann he joined the Phi Chi Fraternity and the Newman Club. Almost as talented musically as medically, he has entertained us many times with his guitar renditions. Paul owns a questioning mind and has stopped even the most able with some of his queries. Most of his spare time is spent in the pursuit of medical knowledge, being a junior intern at Saint Luke's Hospital. Paul is uncertain as to the future but feels that he will be in general practice. Internship: METHODIST EPISCOPAL HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pu. Paul Carmello Quattrone ,lean comes to Hahnemann from Colver, Pa. and Allegheny College. As an honorary lnemher of every fraternity, she has held her own against all and any lreer drinking champions. She was a mcmher of the llnalergraduate lic-search Society for three years, was Treasurer and Vice-President of the llahm-mann Branch of the American Medical WOIIICDQS Association. ,lcan's size cnalrlcs hcr to be one of the very few to inspect and repair episiotomics without handing over or sitting down. As to her future plans she says, General practice, prola- ably, maybe in Europe, maybe in India or China, maybe South America, or maybe even in the U.S.A. Internship: ST. AGNES HOSPITAI Philadelphia, Pa. . A' r ii v .F X F- . I - 9- 1 . Vada Jean Reese uv Myron, a native Philadelphian, attended Temple University before coming to Hahnemann. He joined Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity in his Freshman year. He was selected to Alpha Omega Alpha in his junior year and is now the President of that organization. Currently he is on the Medic staff in charge of the senior write-ups. His greatest accomplishment, to hear him tell it, was overcoming the dystocia he encountered in Obstetrics. He says he labored more than any five patients. Anyway, that's his aversion. Myron is desirous of doing General Practice in suburban Philadelphia and will most likely intern there. Internship : i ALBERT EINSTEIN MEDICAL CENTER, NORTHERN DIVISION Philadelphia, Pa. -.4 i1:5i3ff E' V .4 -:ff ,.,, . I Q? S VLQQQ v 5 ., tb, , 1 4 4 -va 1 'iii I, ll .l Y Q K r -' F 1 I y Y I A li . 4 X' , ,W , l 'l','f . . , v sg: 'l 5.7 , - -A-1'-:S Myron Ellis Resnick John Joseph Reuland Q .lohn lives in one of the nicer suburbs of Philadelphia, namely Collingdale. He attended St. Joseph's College and showed himself to be a joiner at Halinemann, being a member of Phi Beta Pi Fraternity, the Newman Club, and the Aesculapian Society. After graduation is over, John is going to end one of the longest engagements in modern history by marrying Dotty Millbourn. He is a junior intern at Fitzgerald-Mercy Hospital and is going to intern at that institution. Despite a ugreat liking for Obstetrics and Gynecology, John plans a residency in Internal Medicine. Internship: THOMAS FITZGERALD MERCY HOSPITAL Darby, Pu. I .fe fi Y Frederick C. Richardson Fred, following the footsteps of his father, comes to Hahnemann from Torentum, Pa. His undergraduate work was done at Allegheny College. On August 15, 1953 he married Pauline J. Dunham. At Hahnemann he was a member of the Student Institute '53-'54, Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity and the MacFadyen Society. He worked as a junior intern at West Chester Memorial Hospital. After internship, Fred plans to enter general practice. Internship: UNITED STATES NAVAL HOSPITAL Chelsea, Mass. Dcrlc wus horn in Clcn Lynn. lla. llt- caunc to llzilmcnmnn hy waxy uf l'cnn- Sylvania State' l'nivcrsity. Still ai huchclor antl an stalwart hrothcr of l'hi tllii hi-4 school activitics rczul like a rostcr of all uvuilahlc cnnipus urgunizutium: Stutlcnt Instituto Trcsurcr, 52, '53-'S-lg Soplminorc Class Prcnielcnt '53-'Sig Ncwnlun Cluh Vicc-Prcsitlcnt '53-'S-lg mcnihcr Urcutcr lluhncrnunn Dum-4: Connnittccg Vicc-Prcsitlcnt Acsculupiun Cluhg Chairman lVlacl aulycn Gyn. Su- cietyg Assoc. Editor S.A.M.A. Bulletin. Plans for the future arc for general practice. lnlvrnship: HAIINEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pu. may .nv I-J I I ' i 'F ' -- . ,: 17 ' '.,.. 'LM .S-E, Er , ' ' 1 ,A. ,ind f -,'-1, . ,Cal ,-flrijgnl. v- -' ,,'fi,.3l'iiVX'-'N . .N , 'ef J ' Q13 ' X, Tw: fi ' '- A , ' t .ln in Derle Robert Riordan Irv was born in Hillside, N. J. and attended Franklin and Marshall College. He married Frada Diane Grosky on August 28, 1955. At Hahnemann he participated in the Student Institute and the SAMA Bulletin editorial hoard. A fraternity man, Irv holds a Phi Delta Epsilon Key. He is looking forward to a residency in internal medicine and practice in northern Jersey. Internship : NEWARK BETH ISRAEL HOSPITAL Newark, N. J. NC JI. 1' va wi . .4 K' , . . -3 513-6' f ' fa-we s M ,,. ia. fs,-.1:fga 'f' , QW 7 ' I -1' ,',,ZLZZ.l v'3-:-- , .-g Nc,,.,'.I , .AA- ' I -Jil 2 f f 1 . . -iwfwfi ,LL. ..,,i. .L i ,af J' ,:. . , JT, E, ,.,.,g,,.w fY f'. A 5 .1-.nvvr,,,g-' M-ij-A E Aw. -saying, , 1. ' u ' af W, A z A.. .X in X ' ve M, J ,, :iid ff?n,JY,'g 35, ' - 'E '-3 QM :.,,fE-kv! 'H' Qifm- , 3' Y . 'lfiie' ' 'W A is I Riff?- 'f'T 'I 1 f' ' A ' - Qs-5 I -1 , .. - 1. . I 3 E 3... - -as - mf Xu ' J 1' 194' uf 'ff N .4 yt ' ' ' . 1 i Liv ' 11.4 v'-U ' . , Qaida.,-. iygJ' 1 - ,,, s'2 ,.,f ,t ,Ra if .- 'r ' , ' -5 ,j 'ty- I-Avugpv-li . -M' t . --fmwg f l..r..jff- 'M ' fl f-'Af . . .Q . I - - 12 ' J , M22-+if,fF U ' ' 1 ,if r , 1 ., . W' ' .7 i, - 1' sk-f' it -F Ny.: 1 0' pf..-:A :W w. ,tr 'fpfjlilffi Alrggggff -tl ,gy gm-.tf,, A. ' rf Q - it ' , 1 1362 , ' '-DW. 7 Irwin Roseff ,,.--1 Thomas Francis Rozanski 5-.1 J' Tommy, the roue from Plymouth, Pa. went to Bethany College in West Vir- ginia where he obtained a degree as Bachelor of Science. After two years at Hahnemann he married ,loan Lallone of Teaneck, N. J. A familiar face to greet us in the library, Tom also found time to join Phi Beta Pi Fraternity and was active in the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and the Newman Club. After military service, Tom plans to enter general practice. Internship: HACKENSACK HOSPITAL Hackensack, N. J. sf 33,2 'fc 'BULL-: ' Q Q' 9. , I I Kemper Davis Sarrett, Jr ! .. Kemper is the '4Southern Comfortw of the class. Though born in Huntington, W. Va., he traveled east to attend the University of Virginia where he earned a bacl1eIor's degree and a compass. From here he set out northward for Hahnemann where he still qualifies as a bachelor, Phi Chi-type. His school activities have been many: Freshman Class Secretary '52-'53g Editor SAMA Bulletin '53-'545 .Iunior Class President ,54-'55g President SAMAg Greater Hahnemann Dance Committeeg President Aesculapian Club '55-'56. Plans for the future are undecided. Internship: MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA Richmond, Va. Elliott rvnllv llt'Yt'l' lvft lioniv. .-K nallivv of lilnmln-r, l'u. lin' :alta-mln-1l Xlllrigln. Collvgv in Hvauling. Nvllilv all llilllll4'lllilllll lu' wus an nn-mlwr of l'lni Ile-ll.: Epsilon svrving as 'l'1'4-ansiin-I' in '53-'54 annul l,l'l'sill1'Ill '55-'50, llis ollu-r an-livilh x inclumlml thc' Mau'Faulyvn Gyn. Sorie-ly uncl lllv lim-i'-l rulc'i'iiily Coum-il. lillii is still looking for llu' right girl lo sliarv his futurv VVllll'll lIl1'lll1lI'h an I'1'hl1l1'Il1'V in surgery. llc is deeply fond of ilu' tlivulrv, good musiv aunl Caulilluvs. lulvrnship: HARRlFl!URl2 I'0l.YfIl.lNIlI ll0Sl'l'l',-KI, llurrisliurg, Pal. .33 t.l',s.' 'Wi Wu ls' 'ix ' Elliott Abbey Sauertieg Evelyn has the rare distinction of being a native New Yorker. Her pre-medical training was carried out at Los Angeles City College, the University of Cali- fornia from which she received a B.A. in 1950, and the University of Kansas where she earned an R.P.T. in 1951. At Hahnemann Evelyn has been active in the Alpha Epsilon Sorority serving as Secretary-Treasurer '53-'54 and Presi- dent '54 and '56. She is a member of the American Medical Women's Associa- tion and is a substantial contributor to the Psychiatric Forum. She holds mem- berships in the American Registry of Physical Therapists, the American Physi- cal Therapy Association and the American Association of University Women. Internship: NORTHEASTERN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. sq 2? . -hr - '1 Y A -nm ' ' Evelyn Jean Schendler nz, ,,. f H-- :KT John Joseph Schmidt K. X.-14 John was born in Harrisburg, Pa. He attended Wasllington University in St. Louis, Pennsylvania State College, and LaSalle College where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree. He married Norma June McKinney on December 26, 1954. John is a member of the Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity and has been active in: MacFadyen Gyn. Society, Newman Club, Student Undergraduate Research Society and Lederle Undergrad Research Fellowship 1954 and 1955. Plans are to be formulated in the future. Internship: HARRISBURC HOSPITAL Harrisburg, Pu. - -4 lUs 'XS T '..L I ig :ij -5, ,QI ,L' f.f.q: ,. ' -- . -' ., 1. , Pete was born on the Jersey shore at Asbury Park. He took a bachelor's degree at Villanova College, Pa. in 1952g he is still a bachelor. At Hahnemann, Pete pursued medicine and nurses, faring better with the former. An Alpha Kappa Kappa man, he also found time to join the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and the Newman Club and was the lucky recipient of the position of Pfizer Student Representative in 1955. Pete plans to go into general practice after a sojourn in the Army. Internship: MISERICORDIA HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pu. QV . Peter James Semple A native of New Jersey and a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, Paul is another of thc class who will lic remembered for his gentleman-like manner. Well known for his quiet ways and pleasant smile he is a mc-mln-r of Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity and is married. A practice in thc Philadelphia area and perhaps a residency arc his future plans. Internship: ALBERT EINSTEIN MEDICAL CENTER, NORTHERN DIVISION Philadelphia, Pa. , -Q, lv Paul Barry Sher Skeet , hails from Merchantville, N. J. Before coming to Hahnemann he gradu- ated from Pennsylvania Military College. He married ,lean Reimet and has two children, Debbie and Elliott 3rd, Skeet's imperturbable good humor has been an asset to the Phi Beta Pi Fraternity and the Undergraduate Research Society. After Hahnemann he plans to intern at West Jersey Hospital before taking up the family profession of Roentgenology. Internship: WEST JERSEY HOSPITAL Camden, N. J. i fir? ,QSZXS ' Q Elliot Cogswell Shull l 'Qi' V 'Vs . y , 1 --0 V. s 'J if nfw ,' - nfs, tl.. W. 5 'K 4' Ralph Adrian Skowron 0 I , . O V 'Q Ralph claims Collingswood, N. J. his home. He received B.S. in biology at Villanova and studied law for one year at Dickinson College. He married Marie Antoinette Tatem and has two children: Ralph, Jr., age three and a half years, and Marie P., age six months. Ralph is a member of AKK, the Newman Club, MacFadyen Gyn. Society, and a junior intern at West Jersey Hospital. Spare time is spent in such activities as hunting and fishing trips and a 14,000- mile camping trip through western U. S., Canada and Alaska. Future plans in- clude a home and a general practice in South Jersey. 3 , Ed is a native Philadelphian, attended Trinity College and married Joan Kelley. He was President of AKK and spends his spare time as an engineer of his model railroad. fThe result of two summers with the Reading R.R.J Ed added to his clinical acumen through a junior internship at Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park, Pa. His future plans are as yet uncertain but we are sure that Ed's pipe will be an integral part of all future ventures. Internship: H AHNEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Plumstecul South From Lancaster County and Franklin and Marshall College eonu-rs Marv Stull!-r who over four years has lieeonie integrated into the ranks of the 1-lam of '50 after an initial introduetion hy George l'all'. A more friendly and nina-ere fellow would be difficult to find. Although quiet in his own way he was a eorm-icritimis student. Marv joined the Christian Medical Soeiety and during his senior year had a junior internship in Reading. He plans a rural practice. Internship: l.ANCASTEll GENERAL llOSl'lTAl Laneaster, l'a. -il-ll ' '7 A 41 .. 'N - 5, Z5 4! f K Jacob .Marvin Stauffer Sy is an alumnus of the University of Pennsylvania and makes his home in Philadelphia, Pa. Spare time is spent in writing popular music. His best known creation is 6'Guess, Guess, Guessi' which has been published and re- corded. A member of Phi Lambda Kappa and MacFadyen Gyn. Society, his outstanding scholastic ability was witnessed by election to AOA. Sy also was on the staff of the 1956 Medic and served a junior internship at Rolling Hills Hospital. Future plans include a residency in Obs-Gyn and continued writing of popular music. Internship: PHILADELPHIA GENERAL HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. L ,. o 'mn' QE ig? ...ans - Seymour Stein -5' Cornelius Nelson Stover Y' 1 ,. li' N p P I 'x Connie is a graduate of the University of Michigan and calls Parker., Pa. his home town. He is a member of Phi Chi Fraternity, the Aesculapian Society and served as class President during the freshman year. Between studying medicine and the art of loving, Connie found time for a junior internship at Butler Memorial Hospital and Episcopal Hospital. Plans for the future are in surgery. Internship: ABINGTON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Abington, Pa. , . f V-f ,J if I J oe came to Hahnemann from Wilkes College and makes his home in Plymouth, Pa. As a member of Phi Beta Pi Joe served terms as Treasurer and Vice- Archon. He is also a member of MacFadyen Gyn. Society and Aesculapian Society. When not busy fduring summer months baking the finest pizza in Wyoming Valleyj Joe was a junior intern at St. Agnes Hospital and business manager of the Medic. Future plans include a tour of duty with the U. S. Navy to be followed by a career in Urology. Internship: ABINGTON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Abington, Pa. Joseph Jerome Stuccio A X Yi g Y ir,-ff X - A ' A A well-liked melnher of the elass, ,laek hails from Mars fl'ennsylvania, that isl . He reeeived his B.S. at Grove City College in 1952 and his MRS lAli4-e llolnlj in 1950. This pair has two children: Spike, age four and a half years, and Cathy, age three years. Slllllllll'l'H were spent on johs sueh as gas station attend- ant on the Pennsylvania 'liurnpilce and as a teehnieian in the Central l,ahora- tories at Campbell Soup Co. During the senior year ,lack served a junior internship at Nazareth Hospital in Philadelphia. The future will find Jack in general practice where his pearly smile will be a definite asset. Internship: SEWICKLEY VALLEY IIOSPITAI. Sewiekley, Pa. H John F. Swartz, Jr. Lee claims Ridley Park, Pa. as his home town. He is single and is an alumnus of Pennsylvania State University. Summers were spent as a printer for Con- tainer Corporation of America and as a junior intern at Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park. Future plans for Tiger will be directed toward a general prac- tice in which this bespectacled, mild mannered chap will no doubt succeed. Internship: LANCASTER GENERAL HOSPITAL Lancaster, Pa. 1223 . 1- as f, 1 1 f 'Y in Elmer Lee Thompson tp: M .t i aw I 1541-x ',.-vf ' Vnlkwlll' ,1i?,'FY '9:fv Q-in if: - ...Q p I fiifiw' .f W ilt- bfi ' ,gy nf .g m V1 gf 1 .Q . 3. is ' 1 .x . i M ff Ernest Tillman 'I 1.73 -,fn N 1 1 . .. ll, 4 Q 5 Quill lg .1 '- l ':'f . ,. 'wr- -,1 xi I 1.194 ' ' 4 Vwxnr 'Q va 1 -pkiaf. sh' 5 'X m .1117-1 ,Q i'.'t'L' A L I 5 Q71 ,IX I s i .x,'t',1 1 l V ! - 8.5 ' AWWA Jiri S i'? 1. I 'i o . 7 -mg? My Lil'- Q-M . elIf.4 Ernie hails from Philadelphia and attended Temple University. He is married to Dot Conrad and has one daughter, Joanne Dorothy, age two years. During the sophomore year Ernie served as Alumni Secretary to Phi Beta Pi Fraternity. Summers were spent as a brakeman for the Reading Railroad, as a driver for Yellow Cab Co. and as a junior intern at Nazareth Hospital. Ernie has lost more games of Hearts'i than most card players have played. Plans for the future are centered about a general practice in the Philadelphia area. I nternship: NAZARETH HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. .,i A' 1 nity., 411- . f f' . .i2s:?2fi?-if Slug. L ,H 8.4 .spam 1' 4 W . -' H145 1 .1- 40' Francis J. Vassalluzzo 4 K A S , if gggdffgp-V4 r i f Y 1 A 4 3 W a QF 'Q K S JF' 61 Vx. 2 5 ?i' K- A native Philadelphia, Frank took his pre-med studies at Villanova College. He is a member of Phi Beta Pi Fraternity and the Newman Club. Franks outstanding scholastic achievements are demonstrated by his election to AOA after the sophomore year. Summers were spent as a milkman at Beach Haven, N. J. and as a junior intern at Nazareth Hospital in Philadelphia. Future plans include a general practice after a temporary affiliation with the armed services and a permanent afiiliation with Miss Ann Lindenfelzer, R.N. Internship: N AZAR ETH HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. A midwwestern representative in the eluss, Howie huils from Park liidw- lllinois. He reeeived his B.S. at Wheaton College und worked toward u muster's degree at New York University and the University of Illinois. llowie has In-en active as a memher of the Christian Medical Society and Muel udyen Gyn. So- ciety. His future is as yet undecided. Internship: AKRON GENERAL HOSPITAL Akron, Ohio I '9a, Howard T. Wadstrom r-'Q Walt was born and bredi' in Philadelphia and attended the University of Pennsylvania. As of November 16, 1955 Walt became engaged to Jerry Steet of the Hahnemann Nursing School. fThey plan to marry after graduationl. His school activities have included membership in Phi Lambda Kappa Fra- ternity and MacFadyen Gyn. Society. Extra-curricular activities have included a junior internship at Nazareth Hospital. Walt plans a future in Anesthesiology and we hope that his spontaneous wit will remain a part of him. Internship: MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL Cleveland, Ohio Walter Henry Waskow William Frederzck Weaver Freddie the red head is a true Blue Hen from Wilmington, Del. and from the University of Delaware. To date he has been successful in avoiding matrimonial ties. Active as a contributing photographer to the Medic of '53, '54 and '55 and as Photographic Co-Editor in '56, Freddie was also seen at meetings of MacFadyen Gyn. Society. Further services include House Manager, Treasurer and Veep during four years of active membership with Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity and a junior internship at Beebe Hospital in Lewes, Del. Future plans will be directed toward a career in general practice or in Obs-Gyn. Internship : MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Wilmington, Delaware Richard H. Weber 7 'Q f. la '11 4 w Ts? r 4 T Preceding Dick Webers admission to Hahnemann was the confirment of an A.B. degree from Columbia College., Columbia University. Both he and his wife, Shirley, who were married during Christmas holidays of the freshman year, are residents of Allentown, Pa. Known to many are his musical interests and his waggish butions to the SPCA fSociety for the Procurement of Coiffures for Alopecicsj . The past year was spent as a junior intern at Misericordia Hospital, in addition to participation in MacFadyen Gyn. Society and the Newman Club. It is undecided whether Dick's future beckons him to general practice or a specialty. Internship: MISERICORDIA HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. I' . Before illlllllllilllllg in the halls of llahneniann, Jack, a native l'hilaele-Iphian, received his prcnlcdical education at St. ,loscphs College of l'lnilmlt-lplniu. ln addition to ilrhillllllilllllg the particulars of medicine, ,lack was an enthusiastic participant in Phi Beta Pi, Student lnstitutc, Ncwnlan tllulr, Nlat-l ady4'n Gyn. Society, and the Aesculapian Society. l.ct it he l'l'lllt'llllIt'I't'll, too, that when a professors query had defeated all of us, this connoisseur of words repeatedly overwhelmed lroth stall' and student lor at least consumed the conference llllllll with his prolific replies. The future holds a general practice. lnlvrnship: JEFFERSON HOSPITAL Philzidelpliia, Pa. I N --x 5-is ,,,,,...,A -1: ' John Joseph Welsh Louis W. Welsh's acquaintance with Hahnemann was preceded by four years at St. .loseph's College in his native Philadelphia. Lou's medical education was profitably supplemented by his participation in Phi Beta Pi, the Blue and Gold Committee, Newman Club, MacFadyen Gyn. Society, and the Aesculapian Society. While not his singular virtue, assuredly one of his most outstanding for the past four years, was Lou's uncontrollable propensity in posing im- ponderable last-minute conference questions. The future reflects-a general practitioner-a black bag--a house call-a portable E.C.G. Internship : JEFFERSON HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. , V ' .g,,.-all Louzs Ward Welsh Charles N Willems, Jr. 6, M I , 4- Although engineering first attracted Charlie, he drank deeper of the scientific spirit and received a B.S. degree from Moravian College followed with an M.S. from Cornell University prior to his entrance into medical school. Chasfs extra-curricular activities include Student Research, Christian Medical and the MacFadyen Gyn. Societies, Senior Class Secretary, and somewhere in the past, six years as a Stall' Sergeant with the U. S. Army. Among his treasure of possessions are his nurse-wife, Tice, his daughter, Wendy, and his antique skimmer, a 1906 Cadillac. He plans a future of general practice or research. Internship: UNITED STATES NAVAL HOSPITAL Crea! Lakes, lll. ext Hs ,Q-' ',- 1 da. . , t -Hi qaigff- .. M, 4f45'B.iA7' - N' ' , fyvf' A , . AAQA M , ,h v Q, .4 , , . T4 'H ,k.,!.,j,f4w.:1,1,'x: 11, 9,-Qw.g1.,,g,.' -, ff-ws v-,.QQ A if Fiilxs eg R 111 5. ,513 ,- 54' 'bfV 1 James Korah Wilson s 1 .. . i if -1 . iq pg. , 4 I is ll ii ' J . 1 f' ,W it l is ff ,iff we 3 of 's'-2, f if 4' . 1 Q V , , I Q- , f Q1 Re , ye f V .-'P A' A .- ' - l ai, , 1 ,, by 5 ,,,, X 'i1'!7? Jim, whose hometown is Oreland, Pa. is a unique colleague, a physician-engi- neer, having prior to his entrance to medical school received a mechanical engineering degree from Lehigh University. He was elected to AOA and served a junior internship at Doylestown Hospital. Much of the junior year at Hahne- mann was spent at research in the isotope lah where J im became intrigued by a specific organism only to he come permanently attached to same-Dollie Dietrich-on August 27, 1955. The future as with many, presently undecided- possibly internal medicine-probably little Wilsons, in any case, positively success. Internship: H AHNEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. is Sidney, a vivid, pleasing yet unindexahle personality is a pioneer from Shenan- doah, Pa. His undergraduate days were spent on the campus of Bm-km-Il l'ni- vcrsity. Upon entering Hahnemann hwfraternized with l'hi Lamlnla Kappa, became a member of the MacFadyen Gyn. Society and shortly thereafter, won Fran Rae Smigel as a permanent affiliation. Known to many is Sid's medical wisdom that is enhanced hy his superior memory and magnetism for easily forgotten facts and figures, only to he outdone and at times undone hy his mysti- fying handwriting and magnificent wit. A member of AOA, Sid anticipates a general practice. Internship: ST. LUKES HOSPITAL Bethlehem, Pa. ,Q as 'Q'-A 'i'X 'vw Sidney William Winehell U ,. .. ,, , , gf as A1 .. 'f' .'.,,-rw.:-. A A44 1521 12 - 1.-,if .021-'ir -sd im. gr. - 5. , '-ai 'FX' writ, - ' :-.1-A . 4 1 - -. fff api .Q7g?,vYQg-Ail3,E.iQ:5Yi- Aygsris 1 , .-Z. lx -X .Q gr' Z 'ifgfgfflgg 4, figs, ,F 'K ,L gilt -lj ,. fr Q '51-. 1 - Qi ,455 1 si ,453 3 H, .63 .+,-A 'eva 4 j 'Y' TH i'A1gw 3 q',u'-,pkh wgi ,, 51-.1123 K ws-we A s mz.y'.1 ' X ' r nf f f fmt ' i 'u'i'f'lf'W'?' ,ff1-fi' .f :J , ' 91.5, The undergraduate days of John were spent at the University of Pittsburgh. His home town is Johnstown, Pa. Quiet, sincere, yet scholarly and energetic, .lohn bears all the earmarks of a student who is clinically observant and med- ically oriented, as attested by his acceptance to AOA. The Christian Medical Society benefited by his attendance. Summers were spent as a surgical assistant at Windber Hospital, Windber, Pa., in addition to which John was paged as a junior intern at Doctors Hospital of Philadelphia for the past two school terms. A general practice is contemplated post graduation. Internship: HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Pa. N 1 John Luther Wright 0 . Brian Anthony Wummer l ' - , ,. Q 'ffl p 'li Z I. VL mbsf, x. a,,,,. Brian, whose home town is Reading, Pa. arrived at Hahnemann via Villanova University. In addition to Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity and the MacFadyen Gyn. Society, Brian's sons, Karl and Mark, have shared his free time. Before coming to Hahnemann he saw action in Korea with Uncle Sam's Army. Pres- ently a junior intern at St. .loseph's Hospital in Reading, he plans a general practice after graduation. Internship: ST. .l0SEPH'S HOSPITAL Reading, Pa. TIME OUT FOR A SMOKE. . . LITTLE . w O 313 O j T '-Qu, , A, Lu ' up at We .V if 5 Y . VY' 1' f A T ,Qt i ' TIME FOR MORE. . SOCIALIZING BECOMES RARE SPARE TIME A MOST PRECIOUS COMMODITY THE TIES OF FRATERNITY ARE FONDLY RECALLED- SAY, WHATEVER HAPPENED TO JOE 7 1 VT A nu ' ' ?I V 8.40 :ar ' 'Q . N ' IVKVQL , ' 5 I I I Sjfi I v I f , f 1, ' ' ,A ig 1 E is Q If ,T la? 'fb Ak W! Iss li if 7 . . .4 . p r i President ...... .... T . DeConna Vice-President . . , ..... T. Magnani Treasurer ...... .... ....... ...... J . S udol Secretary ......,...................,....... T. Buckley Faculty Advisors ....,.. Drs. P. Grotzinger and E. Polley Alpha Omega Alpha The Zeta Chapter was established at Hahne- mann in 1952. This group sponsors an annual lectureship, a dinner and this year a survey of medical schools in order that a comparison of curricula and suggestions be made to our edu- cators. Membership is based on scholarship and L. to R.: J. Sudol, S. Adelson, H Yeager, T. DeConna, T. Smith, T. Buckley. Members: J. W'elsh, P. Economou, T. DeConna. K. Friedman, T. Johnston T. Magnani, F. Sterba, J. Sudol, T. Smith, T. Buckley, H. Yeager, S. Adel- son. 9 Student institute The functions of the Student Institute are numerable. Its main functions are to formulate a budget for the appropriations of the Student Activities Fund, as a liaison between students and faculty, to formulate student body policies and finally to promote school spirit. OFFICERS President ...... ............... .....,. ll I . Resnick Vice-President ........... .... S . R. Greenberg Secretary .....,. .......,. F . Bizousky Treasurer ....... ............. J . Wilson Faculty Advisor .... ..... J . DiPalma, M.D. personal integrity. Sitting: F. Bizousky, R. Goldberg, S. Greenberg, M. Baren, J. Wilson Stand- ing: R. Mandell, J. Foyt, S. Wincbell, L. Niesenbaum. Members: M. Resnick, S. Greenberg, F. Vassalluzzo, F. Bizousky, J. Wright, R. Goldberg, J. Greenspan, J. Wilson, D. Halpern, J. Foyt, M. Blalt, S. Win- chell, J. Paige, L. Niesenbaum, S. 735, x U9 Stein, A. Markarian, M. Baren, M. Koch, R. Mundell, M. Levy, R. Wolf son. KX Interfraternity Council Undergraduate Research Society H. Kean , H. Schmitt ..a. E. Sauertieg W. Forrest T. DeConna ww Sitting: J. ifuyl, ll. KPLIII, T. lla-ffnririu Standing: J. Schmidt, J. Azoraky. MEMBERS . ,.....,..,.. Phi Lambda Kappa , ,... Alpha Kappa Kappa . , Phi Della Epsilon . ...,.. . Phi Chi PhiBela Pi D. Long '56 ,.....,. Student Chairman Alex Ulin, M.D. ,... Faculty Chairman Members: W. Bernhard '57, K. Fried- man '57, R. Sherman '57, J. Strolis '57, J. Greenspan '56, E. Shull '56, C. W. Wilkins, Jr. '56, V. J. Reese '56, J. Schmidt '56. L. to R.: E. Shull, H. Kean, C. Freed- man, J. Schmidt. . 1 Q v ,olli 2 n g i i i 5. xf 'UW First Row KL. to RJ: A. Karasic, J. Gunter, S. DeSimone, S. Smith, M. Rorro. Second Row: M. Sesso, V. Long, E. Schendler, P. Cusick. Alpha Epsilon Iota f gr, Lf-Y-nf 3 OFFICERS President ....... ..................... E . J. Schendler Vice President .... ....... E . J. Paul Secretary ....... .......... . . ,.... M. A. Rorro Treasurer ........................ S. DeSimone Members: FRESHMEN-P. M. Cusick, M. J. Gunter, J. Kornblum, L. E. Leonard, A. M. Sesso, S. A. Smith. SOPHOMORES-A. H. Karasic. A. R. Krauss, V. A. Long, M. A. Rorro. JUNIORS-A. C. Connor, S. DeSimone, R. A. MacLean, E. J. Paul. SENIORS-H. M. Kass, E. J. Schendler. Alpha Epsilon Iota was founded in 1890 at the University of Michigan. In 1945 a chapter was established at Hahnemann as the Alpha Beta Chapter. The purpose of the organization is to promote good fellowship among women medical students and to maintain a high order of scholarship and professional achievement. Within the past years several new strides have been taken, most important of which are social gatherings with members of the other AEI sororities in this area. It is hoped that this trend toward greater professional fellowship will-con- tinue among the various women medical stu- dents. :. -.r,.,? 7 -. .1 1 'rt .1 B. V. MacFadyen, M.D. First Row: R. Kozan, J. Foyt, D Riordan. J. Azorsky, W. Wnskow Second Row: I. Roseff. A. Alley F. Richardson. T. DeC0nna. T. Rozanski, S. Greenberg, R. Ko mada, H. Kean. J. Furnari, D Johnson. Third Row: S. Wim-hell J. Schmidt. K. Johnson, W. Guus mann, K. Sarrett, F. Bizousky, L Dantzig, D. Hartman, R. Mandell R. Weber, E. Shull. MacFadyen Gynecological Society Women's Medical Society I OFFICERS President ......... .... A . J. Krauss Secretary ,,,, ,,,,, M , A, Rgrm , Vice President .... ...,. V . J. Reese Treasurer .... ..... S . DeSimone W If . First Row: A. Karasic, S. DeSi mone, M. Rorro. Secod Row: J Gunter, V. Long, M. Sesso, T Kornblum, E. Schendler, P. Cus- ick, S. Smith. Members: FRESHMEN - N. H Brown, P. M. Cusick, M. J. Cun- ter, J. Kornblum, L. E. Leonard, A. M. Sesso, S. A. Smith. SOPHO- MORES - A. H. Karasic, A. R Krauss, V. A. Long, M. A. Rorro. JUNIORS-A. C. Connor. S. DeSi- mone, E. J. Paul. J. A. Strolis. SENlORS7H. M. Kass, L. J. Neu- man, V. J. Reese, E. J. Schendler. Newman Club Christian Medical Society First Row KL. to RJ: J. Wright, C. Rutt, M. Good. Second Row: I. Leaman. Members: SENIORS-BI. Kniss, M. Stauffer, J. Wright, H. Wadslrum, D. Martin, L. Newman. JUNIORS -W. Barnes, Secretaryg D. Kauff- man, Treasurer, A. Kennel, R. MacClean, W. Smith, J. Steiner, C. Rutt, President. Sornorsxoass -M. Good, I. Leaman, V. Stoltz- fus, Vice President. FRESHMEN- A. May, N. Turner, H. Kreider. Newman First Row: J. O'Connor, N. Sesso, J. Wagner, J. Dicunno, E. By- throw, P. Cusick, F. Rosato. Se- cond Row: J. McDermit, R. Leomporra, S. Perrotto, R. Ko- mada, P. Pironti, R. Naughton, P. Jones, T. Rozanski, O. DiGia- como, E. Brunner, R. DiSilverio, J. Sullivan, G. Robb, J. Funari. Third Row: G. Keating. T. De- Conna, M. Crozier, J. Cildea, T. Buckley, J. Pollock, J. Kaiser, E. Hessert, F. Altomare, J. Sudol, J. Hogan. Christian Medical Society Psychiatric Forum l,. In K.: N. XX 1-llurr. li. Nl:-Azul la-r, lu. 5.llll'l'l1'lL1, ll. ix:-nn. All'IlllH'l'5f lla-rln-rl Kwan. N. lx.ir- alsiv, N. vvil'ill4'l', ll. Xxillviu-I. lt. 5illlI'I'li1'f.1, lf. 5l'lll'IllH1'I', fflmir- lllllll. Aesculapian Society First Row: W. Caufman, A. Kor- ha, R. Kozam, J. Ruuln. Second Row: W. Mm-Dermotl. P. Econo- mou, C. Friedman, IJ. Riordan. C. Cornog, E. Campbell, C. Backer. J. Sudol. Third Row: J. Kuhl, C. Heimbach, E. Daly, P. Hay, S. Hadley, M. Crozier, P. Reich- Cfl. A few Acsculupians ' ' l6l ffl ,,,1f '4 . 1 X. pl Q-Q if la, 5, if Alpha Kappa '5!b .. Bottom Row KL. to RJ: J. Dennehy. B. Wummer, F. Weaver, H. Schmitt, A. Satillaro, P. Semple, J. Schmidt. Second Row: A. Mays, R. Alexander, D. Hobbs, A. Lyster, R. DeSilverio, M. Thallinger, G. Robb, R. Braunschweig, W. Louett, J. DeMichele, C. Russo. Third Row: C. Greenberg, R. Leomporra, E. Lesousky, E. Pelszynski, H Leonardi, R. Snyder, H. Kent, J. Ditunno, A. DeMarco, A. Angulo, F. Richardson. Kappa OFFICERS President ........................ ..... H . Schmitt Vice-President ............ ...., F . Yveaver Corresponding Secretary ..... .... J . DiTunno Recording Secretary ..... .... A . Sattilaro Treasurer ........... ..... G . Grimes V z Schmidt. Peter J. Semple. Ralph A. Skowron, Edward P. George Z. Heimbach. Anthony J. Sattilaro, Henry J. Schmitt. Donald J. Schwartz. Robert L. Snyder. Theodore J. Stahl. SOPHOBIORES-R1lQ'Hl0Ild S. Alexander. Armand J. Angulo. Arnold R. Delllareo. Joseph Deltlichele. John F. DiTunno, Gilbert R. Grimes, Gerald D. Kaiser. Howard I.. Kent, George A. Lauro. Remo B. P. Leomporra. Henry B. Leonardi. Eugene A. Lesoveliy. Carmelo G. Russo. Merrill E. Thallinger. FRESHMEN-Ralph Braunschweig, Robert DeSivario. Cyrus Greenberg. Donald Hobbs. Jos- eph Hogan. YYilliam Lovett. Al Lyster. Albert May, Gene Pclszynski, George Robb, Frank Rosato. Members: SENIORS-JODII J. Dennehy. Garrett E. Donnell, Rudolph A. Komada. Fred C. Richardson. John J. South, William F. YVeaver. Brian A. Wummer. JLYNIORS- ff ti Qt 93 1 s we. P. 1 B Hg. E v . N .hs 7' Oldest existing medical fraternity in the nation, AKK was founded in 1888 at Dartmouth Medical College. It is one of the largest organizations of its type in the world. Beta Phi chapter was established at Hahnemann in May, 19-1-8 and presently acquired the chapter house on 16th, below Race. The chapter has pursued a steady course to a position of leadership on campus, introduc- ing many innovations to Hahnemann student life. An active social program, scholastic aid with a well rounded library, monthly dinner meetings and an atmosphere of comradarie are the goals that Beta Phi of AKK has constantly strove to provide its members. An active and interested alumni group has given generously of its time and resources to make our venture in fraternal living a successful and stable part of the Hahnemann scene. First Row KL. to RJ: J. Bitter, E. Detrick, K. Johnson, T. DeConna, A. Alley, T. Rosanzki L. Dantzig. Second Row: W. Lomax, N. Lewis, R. Gordon, N. Weiner, C. Keating, L. Berk P. Riesz, J. Lupus, R. English, E. Crispell. Third Row: V. Battaglia, J. Whaley, R. Davison R. Hartman, E. Shull, R. Baltz, L. Beach, J. Cossa, M. Saltzman, O. DiCiacomo, W. Kashadus OFFICERS Archon ........ ,................ T heodore DeConna Vice-Archon .... ..... J oseph Stuccio Secretary ...... ..... W illiam Lewis Treasurer .... John McDermit Editor ..,.. ......... E dgar A. Lucidi Historian ......... ...,.,,......... J ames Bitter Ph. B P. Faculty Advisers Dr. Joseph E. Imbriglia t Dr. Foster E. Murphy I e a I Members: SEN1ons-Ali Alley, Leonard Berk, Leon Dant- zig, Theodore DeConna., Earl Detrick. John Dotterer, George Flamm, Richard Hartmann, Kenneth Johnson, Anthony Markarian, Richard Owen, John Paige, Russel Puschak, John Reuland, Thomas Rozanski, Joseph Stuc- cio, Earnest Tillman, Francis Vassalluzzo. JUNIORS- Carmen Alameno, Stanley Berman, Robert Borodkin, Anthony Bruno, Richard Davison, Oscar DiCiacomo, William Dunngian, Karl Friedmann, James Furnari, Samuel Cottshall, Vincent Kownacki, William Lewis, Walter Lomax, Edgar Lucidi, Karl Nicolai, Robert Segin, Warren Smith, Robert Trollinger, Vito Valecce, Robert Venerose. Theodore Whitney, Leonard Winski. SOPHO- Moass- -John Cossa, Earl Crispell, Thomas Downey, Larry Finklestein, Robert Cordon, Edmund Hessert, Norman Lewis, John McDermit, Joseph Paleoogos, Alan Posta, U Norman Weiner, Joseph Whaley. FRESHMEN-Richard Baltz. Victor Battaglia, Leslie Beach. James Bitter, Nicho- , las Chapis. Richard Drews, Robert English, Williant Q K.'- ' - Kasliatus, Garret Keating, John Lupas, Peter Ricsz, Mar- cus Saltzman, Myron Sevick. CN' .. I . 1 Z 1 I . N 1 X- -srl 7 v. ,. , ou I D 1 ll WNW! t Y Q , ul 1 NEXDQN' l 1 'll ,P x 4 X Phi Beta Pi was established at the medical school of the University of Pittsburgh on March 10, 1891. 1n the past 65 years it has flourished into a fratrenity con- sisting of 36 active chapters, all of which encompass the principals of social and moral unity in a brother- hood for all. The history of our chapter dates back to Oct. 4, 1947, when Beta Kappa succeeded its progenitor, Pi Upsilon Rho. At the present time, our chapter consists of 68 active members and a large faculty membership, with members in practically every department. During the past year many plans, such as the renova- tion of the kitchen, living room and cellar, have been completed. At present, however, our main interest is the establishment of an active alumni membership among members of both Phi Beta Pi and Pi Upsilon Rho and to maintain a well rounded social calendar for our members. fx 3 sl Q, R X1 .f S fe. ' o x e 1' ,-ati, , J 1 'Q 'Q' -nu g T - is 4, , .li A i It .t, 7 1 I' 4 Ai! tl Q Q7 u 1 . ff-'QB First Row KL. to RJ: L. Rosenbaum, E. Newman, M. Levy, H. Kean, A. Goldman, L. Niesen- baum, P. Sher. Second Row: L. Stockler, T. Lundy, D. Gesensway, R. Goldberg, D. Swartz, R. Stern, F. Gusack. Third Row: C. Pauerstein, H. Kaiser, S. Edelstein, W. Waskow, E. Messey, E. Halpern, S. Salitsky. Phi Lambda Kappa OFFICERS President ...,... ..................,... H erbert Kean Vice President ...., ........... J oel Mann Treasurer .,..... ..., A rnold Goldman Secretary ..,... ,... R onald Clearfield Members: SENIORS-Mark Blatt, Ronald Goldberg, William Kamerling, Herbert Kean, Aaron Medow, Stanley Mitnick, Leonard Neisenbaum. Jerry Oslinker, David Promish, Paul Sher. Seymour Stein. Yvalter Yvaskow, Sid- ney Winchell. JUNIORS-lxlllfilll Buren, Richard Beck, Allan Brooks, Stanley Bushkoti, Stanley Edestein, Eli Halpern, Myron Koch. Martin Levy. Theodore Lundy, Robert Mandell. Joel Mann. Irving Mann. Bernard Mar- golis, Gilbert Meltsner, Edward Newman, Sherwood Salit- sky. David Schwartz, Louis Shane, Sidney Tolchin, Gerald Weitzman. Robert Wolfson. SOPHOBIORES-ROH3ld .lay Clearfield. Daniel Gesensway, Arnold Goldman, Seymour Golub, Herbert Kaiser. John Lebeau, Carl Pauerstein, Elliott Percelay. Leonard Rosenbaum. Saul Winchell. FRESHMEN-Floyd Cusack, Robert Stern, Leonard Stock- ler, Edward Messey. Marvin YVallen. A I Phi Lambda Kappa was founded at the University of Pennsylvania in 1902. The Hahnemann Chapter, Alpha Beta, was activated and became a member of the national organization in 1927. The purpose is best expressed in the preamble: 6'Con- ceived in accordance with the ideas of Judaism, dedi- cated and committed to its perpetuation, the purpose of this organization shall be to foster and maintain among medical students and physicians who are socially and professionally compatible, and regardless of race, creed, or color, a spirit of fraternalismg of mutual aid and moral supportg to promote and advance the con- cepts of the medical sciencesg to instill and maintain in our fraters a love for and a loyalty to their Alma Mater and its ideal, and to encourage activities worthy of the highest precepts of human endeavor. 1 , i I' 0 1 . 'Q .' .I 5 1 ix 5' 7 rw. Tv- E s 'Girl qi ,ax 1-' tg ,xx .' ' 'v I l 'I - f A I . vr- - , ' , . 'I Q ,n ' lt, fwvtfs l 1.5 01 : ' 1 -A fp ' 5 5, .f -,7..,a t -I I ,' ,,4,FnIv,s fig, 4 'sl ' 5 , ' . Q v U' ll , K. 1 I-111.7 Y . ' ' ' I x D ' O 'I Y I ' , - 6 Q., ot. sq, -, W, . i ' X gt! S Y 'M ,' if , ' 1732 4 ' 5' r , 4 f V 5 X ,. -' J ' . Q h Xxx N3 1 9? xmas-an -va ' -., E' 1 ,A if ' .-It I. 1 7 ,Q 2.2 OFFICERS Consul ................. Elliot Sauertieg Vice Consul ........... ..... W illiam Siegel Scrlbe ,....... Jack Greenspan Treasurer ...,......... Herb Fields Faculty Adviser .... Leslie Nicholas, M.D. Phi Delta Epsilon Members: FRESHMAN-HHFVCY Yeager, Marv Clopper, Howard Blechman, Dave Sherman, Steve Adelson, Jerry Meisel, Art Spielvogel, Joe Ruderman, Sandy Klein. SoPHoMoREs-Marty Stein, Herb Stein, Bill Siegel, Herb Fields, H. Lowell. SENIORS--JOB Azorsky, Myron Res- nick, Sig R. Greenberg, Irv. Roseif, Dwight Halpern, Jack Greenspan, Elliot Sauertieg. First Row S Greenberg I Roseff H Fields E Sauertieg W Siegel M Resnick M. Stein. Second Row S Adelson A Splelvogel M Clopper H Yeager D Sherman S Melsel J. Ruder- Q 2 2 If . W, he Ya 3. Q s I X -Q I - L 1 :Sv .411-lu a ,,, Q ' -,s---... I Y,-fm? ' , . I ' ', . . Um' of ilu' llilllllllh lurggval Il4lllN1'1'l.lI'l.lll lm-.In-.nl frallvrluln-s, lie-lu le-lu Llmplu-r prmullx -I4m1l- nnmng 49 lllllll'l'QLl'll1llIill1' aunl IH gluaeluxaula- vluln- ni' ilu- I'ln D4-lla: lfpsilun l l'ula-rnily. 'Haig m'g4nnimli1m lwg.m :nl w v . . . . . l.urn4'll llllV1'l'hlly Ill Will lm' ilu- purlm-4-- ul l'1IlIl'il tion. lH'0llN'l'llU01I :xml h01'iill au-Iixily. To this 1-ml wc' haw- slrivml lay lDI'I 4'IlliIl:l an ni-ll l'0llll1l1'1l prograun. Um' awlivilivs lluw- im'llule-el N-we-l'ul huusv pzll'li1's. all wsllirll we' wvra- ple-41-4-QI lu linfl lllilllf IIilllll1'lllilllIliilllS., wie-lllific' lll1'1 ill:1H. histology as-nnillun for ull fl'P5llllliIll., llll'IlllN'I'hllill in many VSIIIIIHIS groups, and our unmnul lu-llln-sllip. This yq-ur Ja-rmnv l'rlnun, M.D. of Mmnoriul Hospital of Nvw York, pn-sf-1111-cl the annual lvvturc on the zlppli4'utim1 of l'L'll'0!ill'l'Ilill 110111 discction in mammzlry carcinoma. K R Xa .45 First Row IL. to RJ: G. Kirschner, D. Johnson, J. Whiltsie, J. Sudol, J. Garofalo, J. Sabatine, L. McCombs, C. Reichert, P. Pironti. Second Row: T. Smith. R. Robbins, F. Paul, B. Parks, A. Korba, J. Raub, K. Sarrett, H. Carnes, W. Causman, B. Kozam, D. Miller, C. Ninos, R. Stonebach, J. 0'Connor, J. McKendry, D. Rimple. Third Row: D. Goldman, J. Salmon, K. Nace, A. Susanin, C. Franklin, W. Warrender, D. Sarrett, J. Sauastio, W. Masters, C. Thompson, B. Wosnack, A. Wilde, D. Pritchard, C. Stone, B. Joseph, S. Imperial, P. James. Phi Chi i President ..... Vice-President Secretary ...,. Treasurer ..,. House Manager Sentinel ..,... Members: SENIORS-W. E. Badenhausen, Jr., F. S. Bizousky, P. Economou, W. H. Forrest, Jr., J. V. Foyt, C. C. Franklin, D. J. Fraser, J. K. Fugate, P. C. Garell, Jr., J. L. Garofalo, W. H. Causman, Jr., D. H. Johnson, D. J. Kasper, A. D. Korba, R. L. Kozam, W. O. Lecher, Jr., J. P. Norris, P. C. Quattrone. D. R. Riordan, K. D. Sarrett, C. N. Stover, C. E. Pohl. JUNIORS-W. N. Bern- hard, N. D. Bunn, Jr., H. W. Goebert, M. L. Crozier, B J. Ingemi, M. A. Kasprenski. C. J. Leagus, Jr., R. G. Lee C. F. Light, T. J. Magnani, YV. E. Masters. J. J. Matunis: A. J. Nese, J. P. O'Riordan, J. A. Raub, J. H. Solomon B. P. Sir-her, J. P. Yeager, Jr. SOPHOMORES-R. C. Alt land, P. Boccango, W. Burns, E. W. Campbell, Jr., H. M Carnes, C. D. Cornog, E. C. Dailey. H. C. Dimlich, Jr. W. R. Helmig, J. E. Hepler, J. B. Kahl. H. L. McCombs F. Moore, Jr., P. H. Neumann, R. C. Park, F. A. Paul J. J. Pollock, Jr., C. E. Reichert. Jr., R. C. Robbins, G Rowan. J. W. Sabatine, R. C. Seidler, T. Smith, J. Sterba J. Sudol, S. Sulkowski, C. Thompson, J. Wfiltsie. FRESH- MEN-A. Ettore. J. Ceissinger. D. Goldman, S. Imperial P. James, R. Joseph, C. Kirchner, J. MacKendry, D Miller, K. Nase. C. Ninos, J. 0'Connor, P. Pironti, H Pritchard, D. Rimple, D. Sarrett. J. Savasito, C. Stone, R Stonehuck, W. Warrender, A. Wilde, W. Wosnack. OFFICERS William H. Forrest, Jr. ,.........James A. Raub ,....,......Jack Sudol .. . . .Jack Wiltsie . . . . . .John Sabatine . . . . .James Solomon . 9 1 in we v 51-'Ki ' filll'-1 K - X! D.: . t v i 9 Te .ri . v in -s- 3 1 Phi Chi fraternity was founded at the Uni- versity of Vermont in 1889. In 1948, Phi Alpha Gamma was incorporated into Phi Chi and since that time it has grown into the largest of the five fraternities at Hahnemann. The fraternity house located at 1624- Summer Street, is the site of many functions of both academic and social nature. Here each brother strives to keep honor and spirit high, and to maintain a desirable scholastic level for the gratification of himself and the honor of Phi Chi. We are grateful to our Alumni Group guided by Robert Goulding, Donald Tschan, E. M. Hill, A. James Fessler, and Peter Warter. These men are forever present with endless advice, words of wisdom and willing support. Phi Chi has active chapters in most of the colleges and universities in the country and has grown to become the largest National Profes- sional Fraternity. '1 Q-v 'v - 1110? l , ' -L f' - wr- 'fy vl S 4 Dr. Hill graduated from Hahnemann in 1931. Following a period of general practice he returned for further training in pathology and medicine. ln 195-1 he became Executive Secretary of the Alunmi Association, and in that capacity we have grown to know him as uMert . Tire- lessly, he devotes his efforts in uniting the Hahnemann family with past, present and future physicians. His office is always open, a place we feel free to air our gripes, hopes and aspira- tions for the future of Hahne- mann. The Phi Chi's are proud to claim him as an active brother. v--oyexv 3.-.9 a.-l. .-I T0 THE WIVES IN OUR LIVES. . . FOR THE HELPING HAND ALWAYS ExTENDED TO us 'N 'H PROVIDED FOR THEY COOPERATED TO 'I PROMOTE OUR STUDIES ,lgvf on 'E' .. -swf i OUR coMFoRT f'w-If Beverly Azorsky Rita Blatt Betty Chigos Alice DeConna Ruth Dotterer Patricia Flamm .loan Forrest Sylvia Foyt Roberta Fraser Mary Franklin Mary Fugate Theresa Garrell Reva Greenspan .lean Hagan Rosalie Halpern Betty Johnson Lillian Jones Jerry Kasper Marie Keeley Betty Kniss Marylin Lecher Ellen Martin INSPIRED AND FIRED OUR AMBITIONS Donna Long Judith Meadow Katharine McKnight Roberta Mitnick Barbara Niesenhaum Nora Pohl Esther Promish Frada Roseif .Ioan Rozanski Poly Richardson Norma Schmidt lg ,I . H g' '3- on .gy az. 0 'x 'I vw I ar G Lynn Sherr Jean Shull Marie Skowron .Ioan South Alice Swartz Dorothy Tillman Frances Winchcll Shirley Weber Myrtice Wilkins Dolly Wilson Helen Wummer .nk 1721? A, ' qw., . 0 rf.. .-.- v ' u ! i , , 1. Y? i if' 566-Az' 'nu . I L fJ'j 1 f .I -Vg 'fin 'guy p gl 1 ' L rv' ., ' rv. Ji X - .- ' K 1 ' - -3- , fe- ' 4 - f'-f A 5: x Q. . in -8 1- ,. NJ! 4' ff N x ff. nn- E . .x? ,' . f ,gtn iqilv -' 1 ' fi.-f S-s. as ' sg- Ln g Nu .., 1, 'I' ' x - ,.......f' 4- Wvf IUG4 sl' v'! ,114 MJ. v I 1 5 I s V' ,h - 5 ?. L '?r.1' ' 5 ' ' .4 P3 , wgfvffzf' . ' '- ,f , 1 - Q 'Y wh 'L'-5 ' 1 , ,F iigf'-A:f?3ff'1Q' , h .. j.v.q.. ' 1 q L3 'I A L 1 MA I1 ' - J? W- , 'wi' 5. h h , 9.1-3'1 ' K -9' ,, r' ,,. Q4 'f' iff ' I I I Lfxqgiiflri . Q i V , iii- nv ' H , ', v' 'Z i 4 ' .4 iifiwv 0 J, iQ,f'fgPmf?3fEe,.fQ ' X 4 X Aiprxtrjwt r l'. I ' 11 X if-I xii Ji' 'xiii - .1 , f , g-.15 . ' W4 sh-,IQ ,gf . Qf. N I' 4 :7'--l .f. r-Qftx x QQ. ,.' 1 .H Y f, Mi., aflfm In-A A 4 f .f ,5Q,vsJ , . 1 , --H 'W ,,, 1. N? - ,in .6 x fi: 9 9' nr ll I -lln'J in F I H A -14 1 w 2 r Q X , 'f L 3- su X xxx IM I I-'Ts Y. , 5 iff.- ,-Q pk ' .X , 7. 0 .. . Q. . -. I K s.. qt' ..- -9 f vs... 7'TNs-v 1 ! ,A N .T - M ' , M if X'- , X 'l'7f rr- .., ' 1 N , N Q4 w . f ., 1 lax. rf L -JK -.pf '11 ........-. .-1 1-D Q-5 9 X Y 1 vi MCRE HANDS THAT MCVED T0 SERVE US . . The Library Staff The Record Room Miss A. C. Britt .wh . 4' H 1 The Front Ofiice Staff aw., .MG QW. - n U iii Dean and Mrs Jones x p Joannie Forreit I U' v '- 7 n ' Sig Greenberg, editor-in-chief, and .loc Stuccio, business manager. .,x grip . a . Ks Foster Murphy. M.D. Faculty Advisor X.- , , -1 J. Greenspan, G. Donnelly and Wm. Forrest. ' , A xg, ' J V 1 1 X l B. Kozan, P. Economou, F. Wleaver, B. Gausman and W. Baden hausen lsittingl. MEDIC STAFF Editor-in-chief ..... ..,,........,.,..,... .,... S i g Greenberg Business Manager, .. ..,..,,,..,....., ,. ......,.... Joe Stuccio A N D T H G S E T H Associate Business Managers . . . Frank Keeley and Elliot Sauertieg Photographic Editors .. .,..... Pete Economou and Fred Weaver Associate Photographic Editors ..,.,. .George Ninos. Bob Kozam, Bill Gausman, John Paige, Aaron Meadow, Red Reichert, Tom Johnson, ,lim Yeager, Joe Ruderman Department Editor . . . . ,.,..,,........ ,... .,,. G a ry Donnell Associate Department Editors . . , . , Jack Greenspan, Sy Stein, John Schmidt, Don Fraser Senior Section Editor . . i .,.,,,, . .,,...,, r , . Myron Resnick Associates , , ...... , . ,George Flamm, Herb Kean, Dick Weber, Ernie Tillman, Walt Badenhausen Faculty Adviser ....,.......,...........,. Foster E. Murphy, M.D. RECORDED ALL 'I a X '. ' n W 5 , LQ yur, vvvvvk' sf ly: v 1 E3gfi'f 'ZQfi V Jn '41 B! 2? I 'iysjzim wa 5, f 2fy,,5bT7.v1Jv.1 - ' f9'OI02 I? 3,3 , ,f '5?'?fif'f1Zfgi E fi 9 WJ Jw fvwixvfzw w,f ,wsf4 17 in r 1,54 4, ' .. . f Wryryztay HIQHN HHHIN 71 mf Maud mari Hurd FHHQ '.'.'.'.fA . . KTVVQ 3111114 had lisa '. .W u 1 ,M 21:2 IQ ' 'J ' 1 5 'Q 0 9 M33 V Ja, 'M L n 1 I 49' I I' 'HIIQNDNR ' 'rf-fi Y u D f W x...f'i JJ I I WE SIGN OUT WITH A SENSE OF SATISFACTION OF THE GOOD ACCOMPLISHED THIS NIGHT ls 1 A LOOK IN THE EYES OF A GRATEFUL PATIENT it - . 01' - T'f Cfw 7 THE PRIDE IN ANSWERING THE CALL FOR DOCTOR ALLEY, A. A.. . .. AzoRsRY, J. L.. .. BADENHAUSEN, W. BERR, L. E. ....,.. BIZOUSKY, F. S.. .. BLATT, M. A. ..... CHIcos, A. D., JR. DANrzIc, L. H.. .. DECONNA, T. J.. .. DENNEHY, J. J.. .. DETRICK, E. P.. .. DONNELI., G. E.. Do'rTERER, J. A.. . . ECONOMOU, P. G.. FLAMM, G. G.. . .. E. .... . FORREST, W. H., JR FOYT, J. V. ...... . FRANKLIN, C. C.. . .. FRASER, D. J. .... . FUGATE, J. K. ..... GARELL, P. C., JR.. .. GAROFALO, J. L.. . . GAUSMAN, W. H.. COI.DBERG, R. G... GREENBERG, S. R... GREENSPAN, J.. . . HAGAN, P. J. .... HALPERN, D. N... CLASS .....239 W. 2nd St., Berwick, Pa .....256 Second St., California, Pa . . .22 Nixon Ave., Staten Island, N. Y . . . . .404-0 Windsor St., Pittsburgh, Pa ... ...Route 113121, Walnutport, Pa . . . . .4710 Locust St., Phila., Pa . . . . . . .1505 Spring St., Phila., Pa .....44 Forest La., Levittown, Pa .....106 N. Mole St., Phila., Pa . . . . .1422 Englewood St., Phila., Pa . . . . .18 Mossic St., Wyoming, Pa .....................Cochranton, Pa Brookside and lven Ave., Wayne, Pa . . . .1438 W. Monroe St., Chicago, Ill . . . . .1606 Summer St., Phila., P D. 2, Felton, Del .... . . . . . .2208 Murray St., Phila., Pa . . .76 Milltown Rd., ..........155N. .....36 E. Main . . . .300 Arch St. ... .36 Waldo Ave. South River, N. J 16th St., Phila., Pa St., Sykesville, Pa , Williamsport, Pa , Bloomfield, N. J 17 Montrose St., South Orange, N. J 4903 Gransback St., Phila., .. . . .1323 E. Barringer St., Phila., . . . . .1964 Godfrey Ave., Phila., Pa . . . . . . . .416 E. Alcott St., Phila., . 0 . El. . Pa. Pa. Pa. HARTMANN, R. W.. .. .. JOHNSON, D. H... . JOHNSON, K. R.. .. JONES, G. P. ..... KAMERLING, W.. . . KASPER, D. J.. . .. KASS, H. M.. . .. KEAN, H. ..... . KEELEY, F. X.. .. KNISS, M. A. .... . Koivmm, R. A.. . .. Komm, A. D.. . .. KozAM, R. L. .... . KUSHNER, G.. JR.. LECIIER, W. O., JR LONG, D. M., JR... MARRARIAN, A.. . .. MAns'rELI.ER, D. H MARTIN, D. E. ...... .. McKNIc:IIr, E. H. ....... . ...44 High St., Perth Amboy, N. J. .. .1233 Grenox Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. .632 Stokes Ave., Collingswood, N. J. ...200 Midland St., Bridgeport, Conn. . . . . . . . .5515 Cherry St., Phila., Pa . . . .7812 Froebel Rd., Laverock, Pa. . . . . . . . . . . .1613 Race St., Phila., Pa. . . . . . .848 Tyson Ave., Phila., Pa. .. . . .1502 Roselyn St., Phila., Pa. ....7110 Louise Rd., Phila. Pa ........R. D. 6, Hagerstown, Md. ....6l1 E. Phil-Enna St., Phila., Pa. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Pleasant Mount, Pa. . . . .. . .529 29th St., Union City, N. J. 331-1 Grover Ave., Mclieesport, Pa. 31 Runnemede Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. . . . . . . .819 Walnut St., Shamokin, Pa. .184 Corliss Ave., Johnson City, N. Y. ........................Monroe, Pa. ..................Maugansvillc, Md. 115 Columbia Pl., Atlantic City, N. J. OF 1956 MEDOWV, A. ...... MITNICK, S. M.. . .. NEWMAN, L. J.. . .. NIESENBAUM, L.. .. NORRIS, J. P.. . . . .. OSLINKER, J. H. .... . OWEN, C. R., JR.. PAIGE, J. H. ....... .. POHL, C. E. .... . PROMISH, D. S. .... PUSHCHAR, R. B.. .. QUATTRONE, P. C.. REESE, V. J. .... . RESNICK, M. E.. .. REULAND, J. J. ...... .. RICHARDSON, F. C. RIORDAN, D. R.. .. ROSEFF, I. ..... '. . . ROZANSKI, T. F. ..... .. SARRETT, K. D., JR. .... . SAUERTIEG, E. A... SCHENDLER, E. J.. . SCHMIDT, J. J.. . .. SEMPLE, P. J.. . .. SHER, P. B.. .. SHULL, E. C. .... . SKOXVROPL, R. A... SOUTH, E. P. .... STAUFFER, J. M.. .. STEIN, S. ....... . STOVER, C. N. .... STUCCIO, J. J. .... . SXVARTZ, J. F. JR.. THOMPSON, E. L... TILLMAN, E. ....... . .455 W. Roosevelt Blvd., Phila., Pa. .... .232 S. 10th st.,Phi1a.,Pa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Box 128, Salisburg, Pa. . . .1830 E. Tulpehocken St., Phila., Pa. . .334 W. Mt. Vernon, Shenandoah, Pa ..........19o0 S. 4th St., Phila., Pa. . . . . .1535 2nd St., New Brighton, Pa ...l08 Beach St., East Pittsburgh, Pa . . .Apt. 1-A, 1706 Race St., Phila., Pa . . . . . . . . . . .151 N. 15th St., Phila., Pa .129 E. Phillips St., Coaldale, Pa ... . . . .2549 S. Jessup St., Phila., Pa . . . . . . . . . . .761 7th St., Colver, Pa . . . . . . .5607 Wyndale Ave., Phila., Pa ..3l4 Lafayette Ave., Collingdale, Pa .... . . . . . .804 Lock St., Tarenton, Pa .. . .329 W. Main St., Glen Lyon, Pa .326 Field Pl., Hillside, N. J . . . . . . . . . . .219 N. 16th St., Phila., Pa .313 W. 12th Ave., Huntington, W. Va . . . . . .1146 Concord Ave., Chester, Pa . . . .417 Third Ave., New York, N. Y . .............. 150 N. 21st St., Phila., Pa 400 Deal Lake Dr., Asbury Park, N. J . . . . .4822 Baltimore Ave., Phila., Pa .....5l7 Cooper St., Camden, N. J ....1513 Summer St., Phila., Pa . . . . . . . . . . .530 N. 12th St., Phila., Pa ...1653 Old Phila. Rd., Lancaster, Pa . . . . . . . . .801 Snyder Ave., Phila., Pa ......................Parker, Pa .....523 WV. Main St., Plymouth, Pa D. 1, Mars, Pa . . . .402 Pomeroy St., Ridley Park, Pa . . . . . .1946 N. 4th St., Phila., Pa VASSALLUZZO, F. J. ................ 6701 N. 4th St., Phila., Pa WADSTROM, H. T. ...... 1600 S. Washington St., Park Ridge, Ill WASKO, W. H. .... ............ 6 17 Mayfair St., Phila., Pa WEAVER, W. F. .... .... l 28 Concord Ave., Wilmington, Del WEBER, R. H.. .. WELSH, J. J. .... . WELSH, L. W. .... . WILRINS, C. N., JR.. . .. WILSON, J. K. .... . WVINCHELL, S. W... Wmcur, J. L. .... . WUMMER, B. A. .... . .....238 S. 13th St., Allentown, Pa . . . . .6249 N. 18th St., Phila., Pa . . . . . . .6249 N. 18th St., Phila., Pa. . . . . .472 Roberts Ave., Glenside, Pa. ....224 Lafayette Ave., Oreland, Pa .107 N. Main St., Shenandoah, Pa ....16l7 Brier Ave., Johnstown, Pa . . . . . .348 Pine St., Reading, Pa ADAMS, W. R. ALAMENO, C. J. BAREN, M... BAItNI:s, W. C. .. Back, R. L. ........ . BERMAN, S. L. .,....., BI-:ItNHAIw, W. N. . . BORODKIN, R. ..,. . Bnooxs, A. ..... BRUNO, A. J. ...., . BUNN, N. D., Jn.. .. BUSHKOFF, S. ..... CHAI, C. ........ CHINN, K. .... Cos, J. E. ..... . CONNOR, A. C. .... DAVISON, R. A. ..... DI-:MAIo, F. J. .,... Dr:MAItco, P. T. .... DI-:SIMONI-:, S. ...... . CLASS . . . . . . . . Box 2, West Chester, Pa. ,. . 19 N. Texas Ave., Camden, N. J. 5913 Warrington Ave., Phila., Pa. .. ...,,. 311 Race St.. W. Pittston, Pa. 6520 Norlltumberland St., Pittsburgh, Pa. . 314 Brinley Ave., Bradley Beach, N. J. ....,79 Minnisink Rd., Short Hills, N. J. . . . . . . . .1836 E. 9th St., Tucson, Ariz. . . . . . . . . .3037 Colona St., Phila., Pa. . . . . .66 Markham Pl., Littlesilver, N. J. . . . . .2034 Eastern Blvd., York, Pa. . . . . . .6227 N. Bouvier St., Phila., Pa. . . . . . . .3900 Karl Rd., Columbus, Ohio . .3636 Nuuanu Ave., Honolulu, T. H. ....2615 Harrison St., Evanston, Ill. . . . . . . .991 Sanger St., Phila., Pa. . . . . . . . . . . .Box 135, Danville, Pa. ....Harding Hwy., Landisville, N. J. ... . . . . . . .104 N. 4th St., Reading, Pa. . . . . .405 Preakness Ave., Paterson, N. J. DIGIAcoMo, 0. P. .... ........ 3 044 W. 23rd St., Phila., Pa. DUNNINGAN, W. J. .......... 831 Morris Ave., Lansing, Mich. EDELSTEIN, S. W. ,........ ..... 2 37 Vine St., Johnstown, Pa. EVANS, W. E., III ................ Pole 172, Harvey's Lake, Pa. FESSMAN, J. ........ 114 Clements Bridge Rd., Runnemede, N. J. FRIEDMANN, K. R. .................. Girard College, Phila., FURNAIIY, J. S. ..... ..... 6 00 Fronheiser St., Johnstown, Pa. Pa. GOI-IBERT, H. W. .... ...... W oodward Rd., Coatesville, Pa. GoTTsI-IAI.I., S. C.. . . ....... 753 Main St., Trappe, Pa. GROZII-:It, M. L. .... ..... 9 Hanover St., Nanticoke, Pa. HALPEIQN, E. B.. .. HAImon, D. B. .... . . . . . . . . . . .1519 Pine St., Phila., Pa. ....87 South Ave., New London, Ohio HI-:IMIxAcH, G. Z. .... ..... 4 38 N. 7th St., Allentown, Pa. HOFFMAN, J. E. ......,........ 1074 Edgehill Rd., Roslyn, Pa. INCEMI, B. J. ........ 630 N. Egg Harbor Rd., Hammonton, N. J. JOHNSTON, J. T. .......... 66 W. Tulpehocken St., Phila. 44, Pa. KASPRENSKI, M. A. . ....253 - 19th Ave., Irvington ll, N. J. KAUFFMAN, D. V. ..... ..,................... C reston, Mon. KI-:NNI:L, A. J. ..... . KocH, M. .......... ....1920 Spring Carden St., Phila., Pa. ....1329 Knorr St., Phila. 11, Pa. KOWNACKI, V. P. ,.... ............... R . D. 1, Library, Pa. LEAGUS, C. J., Jn.. . . . LEE, R. G. ....... . Lsvv, M. E. .... . LEWIS, W. D.. . . LIGHT, C. F. .... . LoMAx, W., Jn.. .. LUCIDI, E. A. ..... LUNIJY, T.. . .. . . . . .298 E. South St., Wilkes-Barre,,Pa. ..........R. D. 1, Orwigsburg, Pa. . .. . . . . . . .. . .313 N. 8th St., Phila., Pa. . . . . .355 E. Market St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. .......................Biglerville, Pa. . . . . . . . . . . .129 N. 53rd St., Phila., Pa. . . . . .522 Roebling Ave., Trenton, N. J. . . . . . .950 N. Marshall St., Phila., Pa. OF 1957 MAtLl.t-LAN, R. A. MAGJNANI, 'l'. J. MANDIII.l., R. S. MANN, 1. A. MANN, J. ll. .... . MAItcoI.Is, B. M.. . MAsTI:ns, W. E.. MATUNIS, J. J.. .. MELTSNEII, C.. .. MILLER, W. ....... MORRlSSE1', E. J.. . NAPOLI, A. F. .... Ness, A. J. ....... NIawMAN, E. J.. .. NICOLAI, K. E.. . . . NUscHIcI2, J. D.. . .. .. Colonial Manor, l'ort Norris, N, J, . . . 306-l Wllllll'flllQ'rlf Ave-., l'ittslpurglI, l'u. Croydon Apts., 49th and Locust St., Phila., l'a. ........ ...... 663-1 N. 18th St., Phila., l'a. 12 N. Thurlow Ave., Margate City, N. J. ............29 W. llcmlork Sl., llazlo-ton, Pa. .. .............. R. D. 6, Warren, Ohio .....562 Washington St., Frackville, Pa. ......7112 Blvd. East, N. Bergen, N. J. ..............R. D. 2, Mcveytown, Pa. .. .... 96 Grandview Blvd., West Lawn, Pa. . . . . . . . . . . . .621 Cherry St., Vineland, N. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . .219 Moosic Rd., Old Forge, Pa. ...128 Medford Ave., Patchogue, L. I., N. Y. F. D. 1, Vero Beach, Fla. ............Austin, Potter Co., Pa. 0,Rl0RDAN, J. P. ..... ..... 5 14 W. Berks St., Phila. 22, Pa. OWEN, L. B. ..... PAUL, E. J. .... RAUI1, J. A. ..... RUTT, C. H., Jn.. . .. SALITSIQY, S. N.. . . . SALMON, J. H... .....132 Walnut St., Audubon, N. J. ... . . . . . . .5835 Chester Ave., Phila., Pa. . . . . .1732 Spring Carden St., Phila., Pa. .. . .549 W. Main St., New Holland, Pa. ....2709 Washington St., Allentown., Pa. D. 5, Waterford, Pa. SATTILARO, A. J. ........ 227 Valentine St., Highland Park, N. J. SCHMITT, H. J., JR.. . . ......... 398 McKean Ave., Donora, Pa. SCHWARTZ, D. J. .... .... 1 5 E. Parkway Ave., Chester, Pa. SCHWARTZ, D. S... SEGIN, R. S.. . .. .. ....... 60 High St., Pine Grove, Pa. .....5020 N. 16th St., Phila., Pa. SETO, M. S-L, ..... .... 1 818 Poki St., Honolulu, T. H. SHANE, L. L.. . . SIcHI-Jn, B. P. ..... S.46th St.,Phila.,Pa. . . . . .McMurray Rd., R. D. 2, Bridgeville, Pa. SMITH, W. E. ...... 2301 W. Diamond St., Apt. 1205, Phila., Pa. SNYDER, R. L. ..... STAHI., T. J. .... STI-:INI:It, J. H.. . .. STI-:TzI-:It, S. S. .... . Srnous, J. A. .... TOLCHIN, S. ...... TItoI.LINcEII, R. J.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .528 14th Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. . . . . .411 Broadway, Bayonne, N. J. 1,Sterling,Ohio . . . . .10 Redman Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. ....314 Florida Ave., Shenandoah Hts., Pa. .. .............. 115 N. 7th St., Easton, Pa. . . . . . . . . .95 - 144th Ave., Madeira Beach, Fla. VALEGGE, V. A. ..... .... 2 500 E. Somerset St., Phila., Pa. VASSALLO, C. L... VENEROSE, R. S. WI-:ITzMAN, G.. . .. WHITNEY, T. R., JR.. . .. WILLIAMS, W. J.. . WINSKI, L. A.. . .. .. ....... 900 Main St., Riverton, N. J. ..... 1753 - 53rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. .........530 S. 45th St., Phila., Pa. .. . . . . . .2441 Jefferson St., Phila., Pa. .... . . . . . .228 E. Main St., Lock Haven, Pa. .2502 Jackson St., Apt. 2-F, Phila., Pa. WITHROW, C. L. .... ........ 1 824 W. Erie Ave., Phila., Pa. WOLFSON, R. J... YEACER, J. P., Jn .. ..... 5850 N. 13th St., Phila., Pa. ...... 857 E. 29th St., Erie, Pa. ALExANDER, R. S. .... . ALTLAND. R. C. ,... ANCULO, A. J.. .. BACKER, G. R.. . .. BEATTY, A. C. ,...... . C L A S S . . . .942 Kaighn Ave., Camden, N. J. F. D. 6, York, Pa. .....418 Beverly Blvd., Upper Darby, Pa. .................Shamokin Dam, Pa. . . . . . . . . . . .7180 Uber St., Phila., Pa. BENTLEY, E. A., JR. .......,., 4 N. Drexel Ave., Havertown, Pa. BERAN, I. N. ...,.,.......... 438 Kaighn Ave., Camden, N. J. BICKEL, R. C., JR. ,..... Skippack Creek Rd., Collegeville, Pa. BIRKENEELD, R. H. H. .......,..,....... Haws La., Phila., Pa. BOCCAGNO, P. M. ........ .,..... 1 745 Rose St., Reading, Pa. . BURNS, W. P. ..,..... CAMPBELL, E. W., JR.. . .. .. ..... 627 Argyle Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. . . . .Ballytore Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. CARNES, H. M. ..................... 2006 Green St., Phila., Pa. CARSON, W. E., JR. ...... R. D. 5, Vineland Pk., Bridgeton, N. J. CLEARFIELD, R. J.. . . . COLE, C. L., JR. .... CORNOG, C. D.. .. COSSA, J. P. ...... . CRISPEL, E. C., JR. ..... DAILEY, E. G. .... . DALY, A. F., JR.. . . . . . . . . . .550 N. Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa. . . . . . .4009 State Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa. . . . .30 Colony Dr., Summit, N. J. . . . . .253 Sullivan St., Exeter, Pa. .........................Noxen, Pa. .....2929 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. . . . .171 Ward St., New Brunswick, N. J. DEMARCO, A. R. .... ..... 2 36 Grant Ave., Highland Park, N. J. DEMICI-IELE, J. .................... 6613 N. Fifth St., Phila., Pa. DIMLICH, J. ........ 2249 Woodmere Dr., Cleveland Hts., Ohio DITUNNO, J. F., JR. ......... 1000 E. Rittenhouse St., Phila., Pa. DOWNEY, T. R.. .. FIELDS, H. ........ FINKELSTEIN, L. J. . . . . . . . .1700 Third St., Beaver, Pa. .....2277 E. Cambria St., Phila., Pa. 74th Ave.,Phila.,Pa. FORMICHELLA, J. E. ........ 706 Raymere Ave., Interlaken, N. J. FREDERICK, W. W. .... GESENWAY, D. O.. GOLDMAN, A. D... GOLLUB, S. ...... GOOD, M. S.. . .. GORDON, R. S.. . .. Govx, J. R. ..... . CRIMES, G. R. .... . HADLEY, HAY, P. HELMIC, S., JR. .... H. ..... . W. R.. .. HEPLER, J. E. ........ . HESSERT, E. C., JR. JONES, L. W. .... . KAHL, J. B..., KAISER, C. D. .... KARASIC, A. H.. .. KENT, Il. L. ..... KEYSER. H. H.. . .. KNOUSE, A. B.. .. 304 Comly Ave., Langhorne Manor, Pa. S. 39th St., Phila. 4, Pa. . . . . . . . .3826 Wyalusing Ave., Phila., Pa. .7809 Parkview Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. .......R.,R. 4, Box 541, Lancaster, Pa. ...........R. D. 2, Jeannette, Pa. .............Box 263, Yukon, Pa. ....316 Morton Ave., Rahway, N. J. . . . . . .279 Cassidy Ave., Lexington, Ky. ...R. D. 2, Abbey Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. ....l78 Summit La., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. . . . . .405 N. Pickering St., Brookville, Pa. . . . . . . . . . .Tresseh Farm, Rancocas, N. J. .1527 N. Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa. ....760 Viewmont Ave., Johnstown, Pa. . . . . . . . . .1820 Napfle Ave., Phila., Pa. . . . . . . . . . . . .1920 S. 5th St., Phila., Pa. ....62l Wagner Rd., Lafayette Hill, Pa. . . . . . . . . . . .6416 Dorcas St., Phila., Pa. . . . . .311 Harrison Ave., Clcnsidc, Pa. CF 1958 KRAUSS, A. R. ..... LAURO, G. A. .... . LEAINIAN, I. B. .... . LEDEAU, J. J. ..... . LEOMPORRA, R. B. P LEONARDI, H. B... LESVOSKY, E. A.. .. LEvvIs, N. G., JR... LONG, V. A. .... . LOWELL, H. A.. . . . MCCOMDS, H. L. ...... R MCDERMIT, J. R... MOORE, J. H. ..... . NEUMANN, P. PALEOLOCOS, J. B.. . . PARK, R. C. ...... . PAUERSTEIN, C. J.. PAUL, F. A. ...... . PERCELAY, E. E.. . . . . . . . .38 Parkview Dr., Millburn, N. J. ..334 Atwells Ave., Providence, R. I. D. 4, Box 372, Lancaster, Pa. . . . . . . .1215 Johnston St., Phila., Pa . . . .1148 E. Rittenhouse St., Phila., Pa ..... ...1003 S. 8th St., Phila., Pa ..8 Arlington Ave., South River, N. J . . . . . . . . . . .1822 S. 58th St., Phila., Pa . . . . . . . .9 Church St., Hampton, N. H . . . .. . . .15 Wilbur Ave., Newark, N. J . D. 2, Fox Chapel Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa .. . . .726 Somerset St., Johnstown, Pa ......421 S. Fairview St., Lock Haven, Pa . . . . . . .332 N. 29th St., Allentown, Pa D. 1, Box 36, Newton, N. J ............2004 Green St., Phila., Pa . . . .329 Brookdale St., Allentown, Pa . . . . . . . .316 Laury St., Bethlehem, Pa 40 Belmount Ave., N. Arlington, N. J PERROTTO, S. L.....1224M Monroe Ave., Asbury Park, N. J POLLOCK, J. J., JR. ............. 229 S. Beech St., Mt. Carmel, Pa REICHERT, C. E., JR. .......... 5347 N. Camac St., Phila. 41, Pa RIEGEL, C. S. ..... . ROBBINS, R. C. .... RORRO, M. A. .... ROSENBAUM, L. ....... ROWAN, G. P. .... . RUSSO, C. G. .... SABATINE, J. W.. . . SEIDLER, R. C. .... . SHARPE, R. C. .... . SIECEL, W. ..... . SMITH, T. N. .... . STEIN, H. S.. . . STEIN, M. ......... STERBA, F. J. ..... . STOLTZFUS, V. D. L. . . .440 Windermere Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa . . . . . . . . . . . .Sunbury St., Danville, Pa . . . . .417 Chestnut Ave., Trenton, N. J . . . . .509 W. 39th St., Wilmington, Del ...2l8-12 131 Ave., Springfield Grdns., L. I . . . . . . . . . . .51 King St., Hartford, Conn .......175 Main St., Roseto, Pa ................Box 169, Austin, Tex .....922 Kenwood Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa O. Box 87, Plumsteadville, Pa .............Box 126, Garland, Pa . . . . .1205 E. Orange St., Lancaster, Pa ...... . .1724 S. Sth St., Phila., Pa ....726 North St., W. Hazleton, Pa .............R.D.1,KinzerS,Pa STRAUGHEN, W. J.. .. ......... 4 Penn St., Penn's Grove, N. J STREHLER, D. A.. . . . . . . . . .11 W. Sellers Ave., Ridley Park, Pa SUDOL, J. E. .............. 18 Locust La., East Rutherford, N. J SULKOWSKI, S. R. ..... ............ 4 43 E. 12th St., Erie, Pa TALBOT, G. A. ........... ....... 3 4 Tulip St., Levittown, Pa THALLINCER, M. E., JR. ................. R. D. 3, Vestal, N. Y THOMAS, D. J. ........ .... 3 33 N. Sumner Ave., Scranton, Pa THOMPSON, C. E.. .................. Cowicha, Wash WEINER, N. D.. . .. WHALEY, J. WILTSIE, J. C. .... . WINCIIELL, H. S... ...........5007 Rorer St., Phila., Pa 476 Tenth Ave., Yuma, Ariz 339 W. Diamond Ave., Hazleton, Pa ....l07 N. Main St., Shenandoah, Pa . e n Am-:l.soN. S. J. Al.1'oM.uu-:, F. J. ARVAN, D. A. BAun:l.xN. D. N. B.u.1'z. R. D. B.aT1'.u:l.i.x. Y. F. BEMZII, L. M. Burn-:R, J. E. Bl.l-:a:nM.sN. H. J. BOYARD. W. J. BRAl'Ns1:lnvl-zu: . R. BRUNNER, E. A. .. Bl'clu.Ev, T. P. . CHAPIS. N. J. . CHILLRUD. J. G. . . CLARK. J. R. . CLOPPER. M. Cook, W. L. ..., . CRESSMAN. M. R.. Cusick. P. M. .... Davis. J. A.. . . DAVIS, J. K. ...... DE Sn.vER1o, R. DETAR, R. L. ..... Dow. F. A. .... XY DowN, R. J. ..... DREwEs, R. C. ,.... DRoslcK, J. R., JR ENGLISH, R. S.. . . ETTORE, A. J. ..... FARSON. R. A... FRIEDMAN, M. D. ..... GEISSINGER, J. B.. GERBER, J. F. .... . CILDEA, J. E. . . . GLODEK, J. F.. .. GOLDMAN, D. C. GREENBERG, C. M. GUNTER, M. J. ... GUsAcK, F. B.. . . Honns, D. W. . .. HOGAN, J. M. . . . IMPERIAL, S. M. . IsLAMorr, I. I. . . . . JAMES, P. M., JR. JOSEPH, R. F. .... . KASHATUS, W. C. . . . KEATING, G. M. . . . KIRCHNER, G. C. KLEIN, S. S. . . . . KORNBLUM, J. . . KREIDER, H. L. . . LEONARD, L. E. . LESHER, R. C. ... CLASS 311 Alle-gli:-ny Av a-.. Kitlanning. l'a 8131 1:t'l'lllillll0Nll Av n-., Phila.. l'a 7 1,t'1l'l1l0ll Sl., Corfu. lil' 4-4' ce . 252 Hampshire St., l.awr.-m-e, Mass 453 Claremont Rel.. Springlie-ld. l'a 401 W. 2nd St., Wilmington. Ih-I 30 l'1lmcr St.. Bridge-ton. N. J 1618 Maine. Quincy, lll 5443 Upland Way. Phila.. Pa 4840 Larcliwood Ave., Phila., l'a 712 E. Montgomery Ave.. N. Wales. Pa . 6414 Girard Ave., Phila.. Pa . 822 Franklin St.. Reading. Pa 22 Glencoe Rd., Upper Darby, Pa . . 722 Plymouth. Schenectady, N. Y .. 11520 E. l83rd. Artesia, Calif 64 Central St.. Peabody. Mass . . 5 Marion St.. Uniontown, Pa . . . . . 1349 Hamilton St., Allentown, Pa 7422 Miller Ave., Upper Darby. Pa .....107 W. Mill St., Nesquehoning. Pa . . . . .1371 Kemmer St., Johnstown, Pa . .... . .. 4701 Ramona Ave.. Phila., Pa . . . .1128 E. Market St.. Danville, Pa .....407 Brooks Ave.. Magnolia. N. J ...55 Dartmouth Rd., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa .11 Monticello Ave., Trenton. N. J ...Box476,Cary,W.Va ....433 Dunlap St.. Pittsburgh. Pa . . . . .1301 Pennington Rd., Phila., Pa . . . .1815 E. Pastorius St., Phila., Pa . . . .742 Madison Ave.. Scranton, Pa .....23 Ross St.. Somerville. N. J .... ... . . Lansdale R.D. 2. Pa .. . .277 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa .,.196 Marcy St.. E. Plymouth, Pa ....3512 St. Lawrence Ave., Reading, Pa . . . . . . . . , , 6048 Ogontz Ave., Phila., Pa . . . . . . .Taylor's Mill Rd., Talladega, Ala ...705 Kensington Ave., Plainfield. N. J. . . . . . . .Pine Ridge Rd., Cochitnate, Mass. Knights Rd. and Chalfonte Dr.. Phila., Pa . . . . . .205 George Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa . . . . .5 Fairfield Rd.. Claymont, Del . . . , . . , . . . .6809 Emlen St., Phila., Pa .. . .18 S. Elmwood Ave., Clenolden. Pa .. . . . . .165 W. Main St., Glen Lyon, Pa . . . .1125 Lakeview Terr., Plainfield, N. J. . . . . .6 Cable Park Rd.. Lancaster, Pa ..,.4043 Baltimore Ave., Phila., Pa . . . .5515 Wissahickon Ave.. Phila., Pa ... . . .Rt. 2, Box 241. Mount Joy, Pa . . . . . . .2018 Upland St., Chester, Pa . . . .264 Bayard Rd.. Upper Darby, Pa CF 1959 l.o ljltl-.hll, A. li.. JR. 1.081-1'Il'. XY. li. l.l ms, J. A. I.xs'rr:n, A. K. Mtv, A. N. Nl nan. XV. l-'.. Jn. Mczliizxmn. J. R.. JI! All-.lSl'.I.. J. l.. . Nlussrzv, li. W. lN1II.l.I-Ill, IJ. li. lN1l!'iI-INIIIMEIK. M. ll. Moocxk. P. C.. JR. NASE. P. K. N.-tUtill'l'I-IN, R. N. NEUWVALIDER, Il. F. . NINOS. C. S. . OJCQINNKJR. J. J. . PELszvNsiu. E. E. . . . PHILLIPS, S. J. . 110 S. N I PRITCHARD, H. N. Puoicor, J. R. .. . REED, C. C. . .. R1Esz, P. B. .... RIMPLE, D. F. .. . Ross, G. W. .... . ROBERSON. J. W. . . . Rosno, F. E. .... . RUDERMAN, J. E. . . .. SALTZMAN. M. B. . . . . SARRETF, D. L. .. SAVASTIO, J. A. . . SEVICK, M. E. .. . . SHAVER, J. A. .,,.... . SHERMAN, D. J., Apt. 4A, 8000 High School Rd., Elkins Park. llRoN1'l. P. A. ....... . 175 Court lid.. Winlluop, Nl.:--. llll l'1. lirlllvvvoull Kun. Ualvlyll, N, - . . I, Ill NX . l.aru-v Sl.. l'lam-. .i. r , - 8ll.x liovsland Av o-.. llllla.. l'.n. 134 l'1. N. Sl., lJI'lllll'1ll'lll. l'a. 120 Orcliard Sl., Jllllllalilhll. l'.n. 568 llope- St., Providence-. ll. l. I3 Rynda Rd., S. Orange. N. J. 101 lf. 3rd St., l'1s:-ington. Pa. 320 llc-vvvtt Rd., W'yncole-, Pa. 213 N. 16th Sl., Allentown. l'a. 618 li. l'llil-Ellcna St., Phila.. l'a. 330 N. Main St.. Soude-rton, l'a. 154 Opal Ave., Ra-dvvood City. Cal. 107 YV. .ith St., Mount Vernon. N. Y. 88-15 Ferne Blvd., Drexel Hill. Pa. . 84 Norman Rd., Newark, N. J. . . . 1638 E. Berks St., Phila., Pa. . . 35 Tuxedo Pkwy.. Newark, N. J. . .Sunset Acres, Bangor, Pa. 73 Main St., Abervale. Pa. . . . . ..... 1421 Arch St., Phila.. Pa. . .256 Washington Ave., Chatham. N. J. . . . . . . . . . .39 Slocum St., Forty Fort, Pa. . 4477 Venicean Rd., Sea Isle City, N. J. . . . .209 Angler Ave., Palm Beach, Fla. . . . . .2542 E. Allegheny Ave.. Phila., Pa. . . . .1463 W. State St., Trenton, N. J. . . . . .1654 Conlyn St., Phila.. Pa. ... . . . . . . . .4927 Cedar Ave., Phila., Pa. . .245 E. Second St., Hummelstown. Pa. . . . 809 Liberty St., McKees Rocks, Pa. .............112 E. Ave., Ridgway, Pa. SMITH, S. A. ......... Mary Waters Ford Rd., Ba1a'Cynwyd, Pa. SPIELVOGEL, A. R. ..... STERN, R. ...... . STOCKLER, L. E. STONE, C. S., JR. ... STONEBACK, R. D. SULLIVAN, J. F. SUSANIN, A. G. .... ToM, L. C. M. .. TULLAI, J. ..... . . . TURNER, N. S. . . . WALK, D. R. . WALLEN, M. H. .... WARRENDER, W. F. . , WEST, S. T. .... . WILDE, A. H. ........ . WOSNACK. W. C., JR. . r I85 XEACER. H. P. ..... . . . . .. 26 Brookside Rd., Maplewood, N. J. . . . . . . . 221 Welsh Terr., Merion. . . . .8006 Cornelius St.. Phila.. . . . .2027 Frankella Ave.. Pgh., Pa. .. . .Washington St.. Red Hill, Pa. . . . . . . . . .1134 Pine St., Ashland, Pa. . . . . .45 Lafayette Ave., Palmerton, Pa. . , . .1570 Bertram St.. Honolulu, Hawaii 4623 State Rd. Apt. 4D, Drexel Hill. Pa. 61 Belmount Ave.. N. Arlington, N. J. .... . .... R.D. Reedsville, Pa. 217 E. Pine Ave., Wildwood, N. J. . .... 815 Evans St., Jeannette. Pa. . . . . . 57 'W. Johnson St., Phila., Pa. . . . .468 Olympic Ave., Havertown, Pa. . . . .. .4707 Baltimore Ave., Phila., Pa. . . . .47 Rosemont Terr., W. Orange, N. J. ortb Carolina Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Pa. Pa. Pa. The HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE and HOSPITAL of PHILADELPHIA is approved by the Council of Medical Education and Hospitals of the American Medical Association and The Association of American Medical Colleges. The curriculum provides comprehensive four-year training in the medical sciences leading to an M.D. degree. Graduate courses in the Basic Medical Sciences are offered to qualified applicants leading to a Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees. Applicants desiring admission to the College are re- quired to have a baccalaureate degree or the equivalent thereof from an accredited College or University. 'A' Catalog and additional information may be obtained from: CHAIRMAN OF ADMISSIONS COMMITTEE 235 North Fifteenth Street Philadelphia 2, Pa. The Next Academic Session Will Begin September, 1956 l86 The Class of 1956 sincerely thanks the follownng sponsors whose generosity and support has helped make th s yearbook possible . . . BAILEY THORACIC CLINIC EDWARD W. CAMPBELL, M.D. ALFRED J. CATENACCI, M.D. DANIEL E. DOWNING, M.D. JOSEPH M. GAMBESCIA, M.D. JOSEPH E. IMBRIGLIA, M.D. S. RICHARD KAPLAN, M.D. LOWELL L. LANE, M.D. J. STAUFFER LEHMAN, M.D. PASCAL E. LUCCHESI, M.D. BRUCE V. MQCEADYEN, M.D. WILLIAM L. MARTIN, M.D. AXEL K. OLSEN, M.D. E. SPENCER PAISLEY, M.D. ALEXANDER E.PEARCE, M.D. DOMENIC J. PONTARELLI, M.D STANLEY P. REIMANN, M.D. GEORGE J. RILLING, M.D. CHARLES M. THOMPSON, M.D FRANK TROPEA, JR., M.D. I87 ALFRED S. AYELLA, JR., M.D. SIMON BALL, M.D. DON E JOHNSON, M.D. MR. AND MRS. R. A. LALLONE PATRONS NICHOLAS C. BATTAFARANO, AARON A. BECHTEL, A.B. NATHANIEL G. BERK, M.D. AMEDEO BONDI, Ph.D. BERNARD A. BRIODY, JR., M.D. LEON M. CARP, M.D. J. ANTRIM CRELLIN, SR., M.D. HOWARD C. DeSHONG, M.D. JOSEPH S. DCPRATES, Ph.D. JOSEPH R. DIPALMA, M.D. JOHN M. DISILVESTRO, JR., M.D. PHILLIP FIEMAN, M.D. EDWIN O. GECKLER, M.D. WILLIAM P. GREGG, M.D. PAUL J. GROTZINGER, M.D. DOROTHY C. GROTZINGER B. MARVIN HAND, M.D. HERBERT P. HARKINS, M.D. DAVID W. HUGHES, M.D. LUCY ANNE LaSALVIA, M.D. HOWARD A. LEVY, M.D. N. VOLNEY LUDWIG, M.D. LESLIE NICHOLAS, M.D. JOHN R. NOON, JR., M.D. NEWLIN F. PAXON, M.D. THOMAS K. RATHMELL, M.D. CHARLES REESE WILLIAM A. REISHTEIN, M.D. MR. AND MRS. ALEXANDER ROZANSKI CHARLES L. SACKS, M.D. SAMUEL SIMKINS, M.D. DAN SMIGEL THEODORE E. SOPP, B.S. in E.E. HAROLD A. TAGGART, M.D. BEATRICE P. TROYAN, M.D. RAYMOND C. TRUEX, M.D. HARRY S. WEAVER, JR., M.D. ABRAHAM WISHNOFF Research, development, and production of medicine serving physicians since 1841 Smith, Kline EJ French Laboratories, Philadelphia I89 hiladelphia 1, Pa. ln its new quarters at Radnor, Pennsylvania. the lvyeth Institute for Medical Researeh offers the most ailvaneed faeilities for pharlnaeeutical investigation. It is here that NY'yeth's men of seienee endlessly explore physies and ehemistry to finil new tools for men 0liIl1C'lllt'lIlC. By these luhors. the Wvyeth Institute gives lill- to the phurniaeeutieal lIlLlllSll'ylS eoneept of serviee. This is why the Wyetli Shiehl is at synihol of plui1'11ia1eet1tieul progress througliont the world. I90 j.fI..., 'f - From . ug I A '1--- ,O A . , - ' . E iff- f'fn5E3:1:i2233,t3ig3 - T H E M E M O R I A L 5 ,. iff I - H O s P I T A L fy' ' . THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Wilmington, Delaware Congratulations to the Class of '56 The Memorial Hospital offers approved rotating internships for licensure in the state of Pennsylvania and approved residences in surgery, internal medicine and pathology. New Building j, Expanded Facilities Modern Equipment 3 00 Beds Total Admissions . . 8,000 Laboratory Exams . 105,000 X-Ray Exams , . 11,700 HOUSE STAFF APARTMENTS Out Patient Cases . 15,000 Emergency Cases . 11,272 For Application Blanks and Further I Information, Contact: f ' eu-, V' . 1, CHAIRMAN OF THE HOUSE STAFF p f i m g , COMMITTEE L If Ei? Wi' 3 - 1 If 83 ' The Memorial Hospital '-T 'V 1 1501 Van Buren Street THE . , D I EUGENE DUPONT CONVALESCENT Wdmlngtoni e aware MEMORIAL HOSPITAL I9I the most widely used he ethical specialty for care ofthe infant's skin 9 l N 1- M E N 1- a 7 the pioneer external o .X 3 JE? , E!!!!..l.i.'!.9.! 0 f aPY 'zz L-N ' 4354 E , : IQ E CFD Gif 5 Decisive studies S A' substantiate over 25 B years of daily clinical use regarding the ability of Desitin Ointment to ...... protect, soothe, , - ,hp it ,-Ag S dry and accelerate healing in . . . ' ' o diaper rash Q exanthema X ,h Q o non-specific dermatoses X AM, Aww o mtertngo fpncixly heat QL ,N,-j f o chafing o Irritation ' ' Q'-f f ldue to urine, excrement, chemicals or friction! Tubes of 1 oz.. 2 oz., 4 oz., and 1 lb. jals write for samples and literature 70 Ship Street 0 providence 2, R. I. For the Conservation of Life . The length and thoroughness of the physician's training enables him to act swiftly and effectively in an emergency. Medical science does not encourage haste . . . either in diag- nosis or in training. That's Why there are no short cuts in the physician's period of preparation. Of us all, he has by far the smallest margin of error. Division 0 f 8 SHARP DOHME MERCK Sc co., INC. I92 KEYSTONE DRYDOCK 86 SHIP REPAIR CO. Dryrloeking - Conversions - Repairs 'A' Delaware Valley, U.S.A. 'A' Hearty Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of '56 A. L. BRENER HERMAN KOSOVE T. A. WINTERS Congratulations to the Graduating Class of 1956 SHADYSIDE HOSPITAL 5230 Centre Avenue PITTSBURGH 32, PA. 'Ir Fully Approved for One-Year Rotating Internship I93 Since 1874 S H O Y E R , S Congratulations and Best R E S T A U R A N T The Gour1net's Rendezvous Wishes from Cited by GOURMET - HOLIDAY 86 ESQUIRE RECOMMENDED BY AAA T H E open Daily and sunday A L L E N T O W N 11:50A.M.t08:30P.M. 412 Arch Street ASSOCIATION MArket 7-8800 i' i' Congmfflations Fully Approved for The Graduating Class Interne and Resident Training of1956 Partners THE HOSPITALS in Health: THE DOCTORS BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD ASSOCIATED HOSPITAL SERVICE OF PHILADELPHIA MEDICAL SERVICE ASSOCIATION OF PENNSYLVANIA ' For Cojfee For Lunch II- lT'S PHOTOGRAPHIC, YOU'LL HNJD IT AT ROSENI-'IiI.lJ ' For Dinner wk 0 For a Snark Supplies and Apparatus H E R M ' S fo Clinical and Medical LUNCHEONETTE Photography 246 North 15th Street t LO 7-9897 LEICA AND EXAKTA SPECIALISTS I' ROSENFELD Meet Your Friends PHOTOGRAPHIC At This SUPPLIES, INC. Hfllmemfmfl 1304 Walnut Street Institution Phone: Klngsley 5 -43 5 9 C O M P L I M E N T S O F HARRISBURG HOSPITAL 'k H A R R I S B U R G PENNSYLVANIA I95 Congratulations to the Class of 1956 from your Imported and Domestic Clothes and Men's Furnishings 'A' HAHNEMANN JESS BUTZ ALUMNI U. of P. Campus 3403 Walnut Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. OUR Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1956 MERIN STUDIOS OF PHOTOGRAPHY 'A' Official Photographers to the 1956 Medic All Portraits Appearing in this Publication have been placed on File in our Studio and can be duplicated at any time. Write or Phone Us for Information WAlnut 3-0146 3-0147 1 010 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia 7, Pa. Where One Sandwich Is a Meal . . . BEN'S DELICATESSEN and SANDWICH SHOP if 218 North 15th Street THE ADAMS-LESSACK COMPANY MEDICAL College Supplies Our Specialty S P E C I A L T I E S Stationers - Printers C O M P A N Y 'A' S.E. Cor. 15th and Race Streets PHILADELPHIA 2, PA. LO 7-1133 LO 7-1135 Serving Habnemann Students and Staff COLONIAL DRUG COMPANY N.E. Cor. 1 Sth and Race Streets Rlttenhouse 6-6832 U Congratulations 215-217 North 15th Street PHILADELPHIA 2, PA. 'A' Supplies and Equipment for Physicians, Hospitals and Laboratories For Over 30 Years NOT MILK . . . 5751 NOT TABLETS fini' and E,-75 ' Best Wishes U S O N A Y X Media: BIO-CHEM. LAB. Inc. 1930 Chestnut Street fSuite 6031 Your next step is the most important one. 3, PA. To attain your goal start with a Savings Phone: Locust 7-3989 Account at ik LIBERTY FEDERAL SAVINGS We have been supplying 202 North Broad Street PURE L I V I N G PHILADELPHIA 2 Uust a few steps from Habnemann Hospitalj A C I D O P H I L U S 3, Complete Selection of Professional and St d t M' , u en wmscopes Congratulations Complete Line of Medical Studnts Equipment to the Standard Prices Hard to Beat uk Class of 195 6 STANDARD OPTICAL ,k EQUIPMENT CO. 2 2 3 North 1 Sth Street PHILADELPHIA 2, PA. ST. AGNES HOSPITAL Best Wishes to Our Friends and Future Patrons Best Wishes T H E S A M S O N LABORATORIES tothe 1 6 1 9 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA 3, PA. Class of 19 5 6 Routine Laboratory Procedures Advanced Laborator Procedures Ilncluding Protein-Bzund Iodinej Mailing Containers Available Congratulations to the l . C ass of 1 9 5 6 Congratulations 'A' From the Producers of from the ARISTOCRAT MILK and HORN 85 HARDART DAIRY PRODUCTS RESTAURANT i' Philadelphia f i' Dairy Products Company 244-48 North Broad Inc' Street 45 00 Parrish Street PHILADELPHIA 39, PA. To Our Neighbors and JAMES V. GAROFAL0 Friends . . . A Great Future Complete I n s u r a n c e THE BROADWOOD Service H O T E L -if i' 36 Waldo Avenue WILLARD I. RICHMAN Managing Director BLOOMFIELD, N. J. gale-P' K I' 'I' 0 f 5 Obstetrical - Gynecological Pharmaceuticals and Biologicals for the Medical Profession if ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION Raritan, New Jersey I99 Congratulations Best Wishes to the Class of 1956 from i' MARGE'S WEST JERSEY HOSPITAL LUNCHEONETTE 1' if Fully Approved for one Year Good Food at Popular Przces Rotating I nternsbip Compliments Of SCHREIBER'S LUNCHEONETTE N.E. Cor. 16th and Race Streets PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Co. of Philadelphia BRANDT N. EARHART ir Suite 1919 3 Penn Center Building PHILADELPHIA 2, PA. Compliments of GORDON DAVIS if College Linen Service P bl h d b William T. C ls 2l S. S Ph P THE DAWN CASTS LONG SHADOWS OVER THE CITY . . . 5 .,, xx HAHNEMANN FACES THE NEW DAY WITH THE CONFIDENCE OF EXPERIENCE OF MANY NIGHTS. vi fn. . l E' sg 3 40 ' 5 1 5 da ,o ' . z i - -,,, G f 4-rl L-4 Q 4.4. -14 , 2 J '!' 5 A ' 4 ' 5 ' V . . P . . 41- 'Q - '. - -- I I gi an-o 0 , K gr iff Y,---1,1-if-,-f .1 . t .. , , - lv 0 'Ig lxxflfg C' . L , ,Q 4. le I V ve .5 Nfl?-'1-'fggffgieggwkxgz s w. 1 - 9 iw X ,C L- 1.1.-'A.g,, Q 'n E


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

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

1953

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


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.