Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1966
Page 1 of 220
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 220 of the 1966 volume:
“
ff fi S 4,--Y 1 Q2 . gal LN ' Young man with a future . . . what have you bought with thevyears that went before this day? What summit. gained with the interminable. irreplaceable hours is dear enough to merit the exchange? The square ol' paper in your hand holds no clue . . . no whisper ofthe silken hood will tell you this. Instead. the answer remains where it has always been . . . waiting. quiet as a jewel in the eonvolutions ol' your restless mind . . . or elamorous. now. with a sudden joy- ous alfirmative. This is yours to lind. lor no man loresees the hour he will become a physician. For some students the time was long ago . . . others will know the moment . . . marrow-deep , , , in some distant rendezvous with maturity. When you lind within yourselt' the skill. man-given. and the purpose. God-given. fused into an incomparable in- strument ol' service lor those who need you - and they are countless e- then you will be a physician. Then you will hold that hard and implacable jewel f- thc knowl- edge that fulfillment belongs to him who is needed and can meet that need. Then you will know the coin was worth the minting . . the vicw was worth the climb. Robert A. Ersek George G. Westcrnmn Ifrmk N1. Cin-cm' Editor Editor Busmcxs Mgxnugcr '1ffe'rra ., ii ' 'fvu .. 5: 1 i1,iii5F5 . 'Jfplfi'-il 553.21 'V fi 7 L' Ufin-i'?:'1i f l . ' .:' 5:-Qiigilifii-f I 3,1 ig I . .'., .:. l,'4,' , . I' -I -v- - ', 1. Ly . I Ill. 'V iflwzffTF!5rr - I f ' i A I I 5 f - f . ' I ,Q . I ,, . zft2'ff:,-rjiggji' 7' ' TOE' HLtgh'DL BCDHCU. pB.S., M.D Q,'2i25f'gfi-'fsig-iev'fi. I I r , A Q I 1'5,'f:i'.'?? f ' Associate Dean H I Professor' of Medicine I Dr. Bennett's Message: An Association of Scholars To the members of the graduating class I give my personal greetings and congratulations. You have successfully complet- ed a difficult phase in the long process of education. This is truly a milestone as it represents the termination of your for- mal education, a period during which teachers sought to de- termine your academic needs and to design courses and in- struction to fit these needs. From this point forth you must determine your own needs and prepare accordingly. This is a great responsibility as failure to correctly gage these needs and to carry out the self im- posed tasks derived therefrom can destroy all that you have accomplished. Your preceptors in the Internship and Resi- dency years will aid in this educational transformation but fundamentally and increasingly the task will be yours. I am pleased to welcome you into the great fraternity of phy- sicians and to wish you every success. I have been asked by the editors of your Yearbook to give a brief description of my philosophy of medical education. A portion of this philosophy is included in my greetings to your Class indicating that medical education is a continuing pro- cess, the responsibility for which lies with the individual. The remainder of my philosophy, I believe, can simply be stated by saying that I want to see medical education parallel the development of current scientific post-graduate education. This implies a certain base of required courses to be accom- plished at the speed chosen by the individual, a variable length of medical education, and a maximal degree of free- dom, with proper advice, towards the medical student choosing his own curriculum. This implies a partnership rela- tionship between the teacher and student. In other words,.an association of scholars, rather than a strict student-teacher re- lationship. It acknowledges that there are medical careers and not a medical career. Thus, the training of the individual would progress at variable speeds and in different lines. The graduate physicians would have certain basic knowledge, but the differences in knowledge between one graduate and an- other would be vast. The training attempts to match the vari- ations between students with variations in the educational process. , 1'I.y41- -,f , 1 . 1 I' '-lx. X n , E 'AM 1 1 - .L,lH..! x '. 1, N I ' 1 V1-Q I 9: lv ,A ,hui .I SJ . nl-E l , 1 1 l 1. il. V' Q '11 . L X I V! .x.. 'Q 'i. QF vo ' Zu fin' . x I t . pa 1 -Q K 5 'v 'Fils- ... 41' - -. '..' s K!! X1 . b. +,.q1,.. . . ' . '.,,- L s I K ss: 4 , .xx , 1 Q ' ' , -z r u , 'x' s vi '--51:04 nv' 'uv 1- 1 ,Ax A A . ... . - .-fl.: - 3 - .-',.:A, - 'JXr ' s S v I ...Z . ' Q -.- V . .1 - Q . 7 .f kg g ,, 'fp' rib,- 4 f I. ,:,AV,':'J,.gi: . . I 3 ' Nyr- L., .I -' ', -',,',f'f.fPZ5 , . ',::'f'7,f'kfG?':'-'f . . Q ,E ' i.:-.-451115 , J' f .' :' gv f' -,gp ,1 .' '4 1 ,g f'.v:w. -3 t I I x . gm 4.,I'A.,'l,rJ ill lp- .I .I 1. ,Jin n ' l , 1 'rug L'f,U,. Al ,- .,1'I!1.u ' 1 .f1- u,r'-45 :-:y'?A-- V . AJ.. ll' 'ID 'I Anti!!! ' I4 fag me '41,.l 'u',5iEg'1 . 1 L. .s 3 5.-I. ,W j.-JT 2, 1, , I, X 1l '1L fp, fm - 1 X 1 .'z11 if'1'!' , !.' ,g4f'. ?' ' 1 . I ' ' 1 up,,,2'4'1'A.ff,:'f1a,1 K E 'f,- ' ' ?. 'o'-3'5 ,I X' .1 'g.-4f- fur--ffr-' ,Q 1' 'HM ' 2 . w :Uni-' '.'.-VIS. 1. I n l .4 John J. Spitzer. A.B.. M.D Professor Phvsiolovv . Cu IN ACKNOWLEDGEM ENT To provide thc lincst quality of postgraduate education should he the primary goal ofa medical college. This ide- al is. in reality. quite dillicult to achieve. Good instructors are qi scarce commodity in any discipline, and the teaching of medicine is perhaps unrivaled in the difficulty of the subject matter. Furthermore. the qualified individ- ual is constantly attracted by fascinating and time-con- suming pursuits in research. patient care. and administra- tion. which provide more renown and better remunera- tion. While teaching is considered in the highest regard philosophically. an instructor is usually evaluated by his administrative position. the size of his medical practice. or the extent of his publications. Unfortunately. even the most stimulating and qualilied instructor is of little value to the medical student unless this sophist has considerable time to dedicate to teaching. We would like to acknowledge the immeasurable con- tribution made by many of our teachers. Following a poll of our classmates. the 1966 Medic wishes to extol fifteen doctors for excellence in the art of teaching. These men have encouraged an academic environment like unto an association of scholars. George G. Westerman Sam Gould Jewell L. Ostcrholm. M.D. Senior Instructor. Surgery Joseph R. DiPalma. B.S.. M.D, Professor 8: Chairman. Pharmacology l Joseph S. DeFrates, B.S., Ph.D. Professor, Biological Chemistry Milton Tellem, M.D. Associate Professor, Pathology .av--A -'P i asf' ...ai ffl Pramklm ll,XNcs1.fX.Ii.. M.D. Clinical Associate Professor. lkytliia Amedco Bondi. Jr.. NLS.. Pli.lJ Professor 8: Cligtiriiuiri. Nliurobnology 'sf ig 1.:f ?X'3'., -.L-,,y. ox xx... .- . Henry L. Perlmutter. AB.. MA., Ph.D. Research Assistant Professor. Radiology Jerome Karasie. BS.. M.D. Senior Instructor. Psychiatry 5 Wilbur W. Oaks, A.B.. M.D. Associate Professor. Medicine Martin Baren, A.B., M.D. Assistant Professor, Pediatrics X 1 ,Z 3 Herman S. Belmont. A-XB.. M.D. Professor. Psychiatry Head. Section ol' Child Psychiatry W. Budd Wentz. ABN Nick.. Nil? Research Assistant Prott-swf. Olwstetrics .intl Gvnccoloux . d. QQ CHARLES S. CAMERGN, M.D. President I salute you as physicians with sincere admiration and pride, and I wel- come you to the company of alumni of which you are youngest and yet proba ly the best prepared of any who have Cpreceeded you. Part of this distinction derives from recent strides of me ical discovery and part of it is dividend of the quality of medical education which has been achieved here. I ex ect that you recognize that your educative experi- ence has been of a iiigh order, and I ho e, therefore. that you will hold Hahnemann in grateful and loyal regard, always. Not long ago. the President of Great Britain's General Medical Council. Lord Cohen. stated. quite seriously, that robots will soon diagnose and treat patients, that electrodes would be applied to determine their condi- tion, that a needle in a vein oi one arm would collect blood lor automa- tic analysis, and that all these data will be fed into a computer, analysed. the most likely diagnosis established, and the appropriate treatment automatically administered through a second need e in the other arm.' However, the opportunity for human intervention was not entirely ab- sent from this scheme of medical practice, for the prophet added, The effects will be monitored and the treatment will be adjusted. if neces- sary, Apparently it is doctors who will do the monitoring and the adjusting. I want to suggest to you. as you enter upon your careers as healers, that while Lord Cohen's prediction may seem somewhat overdrawn, the small beginnings of robot medicine are already evident. The increasing- ly technologic character of the practise of medicine seems to be ecli s- ing in some degree personal va ues. I regard this as an understandable and Cperhaps natural sequence, but it is nevertheless regrettable and it is avoi able. One need only to acknowledge the deep, underlying, ever present, and immensely important part which the human spirit has in any illness. Call it mind. psyche, ego or what you will, it seeks solace and encouragement and warming concern: and it seeks these things of the one in w om hope and confidence are placed - the physician. The needs of the spirit, usually mute, are very real components of illness, and thgf will not be met by improved machinery nor even by better drugs. nly another spirit can reach them. So, at the outset of what is certain to be a tremendously exciting rofes- sional life, I ask you to resolve to make full use of every new advance, but not at the expense of your personal commitment to the importance ot' human values in treating sick people. If you succeed in conjoining the science of medicine with the heart of the physician, you will be a complete doctor. I extend to each of you my sincere wish for many years of full life and of deep satisfactions which go with every high calling. . 'A WILLIAM F. KELLOW, M.D. Dean There is a story told about a group of Irish youngsters who believed that there was great adventure to be found in a garden which lay down a road and across a field from their home. Filled with the zeal for discovery. they traveled the road and crossed the field but found the garden surrounded by a high wall. At first disheartened y this obstacle, they thought again ofthe treasure beyond and then tossed their hats over the wall. Daring not to re- turn home without their hats, they put their ingenuity to work and scaled the wall and enjoyed the pleasures ofthe garden evermore. A decade or so ago a group of Philadelphians were faced with the Question of continuing a century-old medical college an its hospital which had suffered severe finan- cial reversals. These men foresaw the medical needs of this nation and the importance of this college and hospi- tal to the entire community. In spite of obstacles which at first seemed overwhelming, they set about planning and working. Now their foresight is evident, for the redevel- opment of Hahnemann is well underway. Your four years at this medical college have been occu- pied larfgely with learning the facts of medical science. ome o today's facts, however, will be undermined by tomorrow's discoveries and others will be superseded by new and more pertinent information. The faculty has em- phasized, therefore, that there is more to higher educa- tion than the acguisition of factual knowledge. Judgment and courage ad ed to knowledge provide the rich earth from whic great men grow. The struggle for further development which you have witnessed during your short period at Hahnemann should have provided an example of dedication and courage for you to emulate. lf Hahnemann has played such a role in the early years of vour lives in addition to assisting your acquisition of medical knowledge. then youaare well pre- pared for the heavy responsibilities ot this profession. On the other hand. if you have not advanced in the maturity of manhood as well as in the knowledge of scholarship during this period. then you have merely ac- quired another degree and you still have a long journey before you become a revered and trusted physician. Centuries ago it was written: Put not your trust in princes. And so as you take vour leave from this college l urge you to give thought to those personal qualities which make a prince a king. Dwell on the seasoning of your personality. Envy discretion and thoughtful judgment for these are the traits which will guide you to a creditable conclusion. After you have finallv determined the right. then have courage. Copy the Irish lads, if you will, and toss your hats over the wall. Use your talents and skills and overcome the. obstacles in your ath. And mav the pleasures of satisfactory achievement Ee yours evermorel I 4 It la rm JJ! r 'Y 5. la. ., ' Al ' ,i ,Qi if if ' ' ,Q .5 is t - ri 5,1 a .':' .1 I. 'S' :Q -iff? ' li ' , ' 1 3 2 - ,,5,.- 2 -- g 7. z .4 71, ' , , , ...,. f i ' 8337? 'Z 4 ' nw if :Q '-.gwfij f ' , lm . vs ,. -- 3, if f I3 I ft Y Q , ,g A rv V .- 1' fn ' A . QS Ee-rl? ' , e EV , 1 l Philutlclphxa City Hall down Broad Street from Hahnemann Hospital. TV! 10 ll ,fx .J 4, s . Q, W1 ' , gi ,wifi I cyl- ...T::....H 4' ' .2 sq 1 ,,,,.,-N M51 I A? 1 5 A K. .Q 2 'f'xfffx .1, fy . . ' ' A -, . ' - A- ' ' s-is aww, . Y. ' , , X -s . . .1 - 4. '-1. , Q r .V -11 x ' 1 ' 1 ,. .,,1gl- ':-,f',,g . :ff-v 1- - A i. .1 1, ' ,V H , Q Q , . if ? 'J A b56'5f'f-v,ahi..2wT.uL Q-rf w.faaL:224i6-if?-f.4iQqvn1l1ii53,Qwi4 ai ?f1wL3:i'f46Ea4.,1um2a-V..fx.v- ufrwzfr-A: ew df- x - - s b , 1 , c . 3 'A 'ni -.Ai 01 .- FOREWORD More than four years ago we. as college students. applied to the medical schools for admission to their class of l966. We were asked a great many questions by the representatives of these institutions. but none was more frequently asked than Why do you vvant to be it physician '. ' It is doubtful that any of us can as yet fully ansvv er this questtong and. indeed. many of us feel that the answer is now more illusive than ever before. Each of us did possess an intense desire to become a doctor of medicine, and we felt fortunate to gain acceptance into the class's four year journey through the labyrinth of medical education. Novi. as we pass through the desired exit from the maze. we feel that our reasons for becoming physicians. whatever they may be. have been based upon sound foundations. because they have met the test of many challenges for several years. We receive the hard and implacable jewel with the feeling that it was worth the climb . And for the rare opportunity to become a doctor of medicine. we shall forever be grateful to Hahnem- ann. Even so. while gazing at the long-awaited view and feeling grateful for the chance to do so, one is annoyed to realize that, invaluable though the jewel may be. the price at times seemed unnecessarily great. Why did we have to run a maze at all'? Why couldn't it have been more like an association of scholars - or at least as dignined and enjoya- ble as postgraduate education in other disciplines? Why was so much time wasted in required. non-enlightening curriculum? The faculty claimed the responsibility for how. when, and where learning should oc- cur and imposed rigid restrictions upon our time. The final respon- sibility for knowing, however. could rest only upon each of us as indi- viduals. So often, it was harder to satisfy the prescribed time-table of leaming than to know the material to be mastered. In fact. mo often the two situations were contiicting or even mutually exclusive. Accepting the responsibility for the education of medical students must be an awesome burden. As a consequence, a seemingly logical means of assuring that students are at least exposed to the vital infor- mation would be to require a strict schedule of attendence to lectures. conferences. laboratories, hospital rounds. night and weekend duty. pa- tient work-ups, and frequent examinations. This should help sig- nificantly to relieve the anxiety of the teacher who assumes the respon- sibility for educating medical students. Unfortunately. education is basi- c.tllt. .1 sell-ltttjittstwl ptttcess '-'-hlcl. . t stovvcd bu others lver'. -tudcrt '. iifcs tlcetls lt' cievtile lit the tell lwfitls tli. hosptt.tl. .ind tttitsl have .tltc-.idx devel-t ll.ll3lls .ts undcrgr.tdu.ites bitch sttitlents . w t ' - enough to segregate their tinic. catch .itci-rttir. s l one sttident lectures .irc not as good .is ft ni the lectures vsere t.ilsen lor .inotlier .1 st.: . more lasting impression than .in iinperstni. te'-,t I tcndanee register increases the lc-.irning gotential til i If one gives an individual the responsibiliti. oi pairs. goal and then tirustrates him by dittating .i tzzxc scl ee: his individual capacity lt' achieve this lotta stu., .md i' poses his personal vvhim .is ac'rttert.1 tor progress 2 as vt: individual quite naturally vievvs stlcll tttlefleteticc' rs- vi nt.-' J t rc. volently intended. as ignoble t'litl'-ird lurner has succirctl-. s' -1.-J ' prevalence of such .in .ittitude thusly' The personal image as a member of the 'noble' pr.-iession. . image so vividly portrayed for Us during our freshman indoctrin.n.t has not developed in us yet. perhaps because '-ve were taught other than nobly. perhaps because vue evperienced too little oi thc art of medicine. or perhaps because our medical studies were not done at an institution with centuries -- long tradition unmarred by conflicting practices and philosophies, Time is on our side. fortunately: and as the many trivial grievances leak out oi our care- fully developed memories. as the good Hahnemann pliysitiaris .ire remembered with gratitude long .ifter the not-so-good .irc forgotten. and as vve learn that vue compare vscll 'sith our Dccrs vvit studied in heavily endowed halls of ivy. our ni-ble inriee '.v1L' .i an due Proportions. Already. we have begun to preferentially recall that which vv.is good and the l966 Medic has chosen to applaud the valuable rather t?z.ir. tt decry the mediocre. ciettffc' fr CNVL f '.ttl' t t ,.. ' 4 'l. I I Summer Street Wm. Penn-Philadelphia City Hall from Nursing School Plan :Nl 'un' I. Nuff ly' 1 5 . vw .,3.5,-,f.guf.f1 -,fA ::'5.gL1ffl,r, , If- . ..I Ll - ' .WL .' .. 'joy f6.fnN,O' U , ,,-40.11-fgff, 1-M519 L . 3 'Ji 255: QQ 1 .1 lf' .,,l'.:,:' 111: I , , 41 fa . f,i - af, 'Y '1 , '1 I I, 1 rn-nom ,-.Wg . f. .u C' . 'Wo' -2, ' -vikfryr .U. 2-:ff!..z. ll I I 4 f. vii, 'XZ 3 V' 44 'VI l .,,, .J . 1-1 'N .. '. ,I' ..,. . ai' is sk! h I ' 'gf' ,fH5i 'f. hjriij'-.. A f' ' A l ' Mig Q ':1jf:::?HfJf. ti-'fJi5, HW! - ' ' if JM. f ' f. -mm fm A, all . 5.5, .. hiya, '-..g,, ,' H. 'my' '1.f'f'.mff .124 f ,,. sf x ,. V, ,:,.,,. '. ,1Iv.,:n:f,f,' . -J gf' rf.-4, 1, , f'..fxI,, .': v'. f'w1'. ,' .' ..,, ., ,L 1 .,l.,:.1,r. , 4.1, 1 .- V 1 , 1, 1 ,v..n1 V ',' - 1 1, ,, 1 r , -'OP-.1 ' ,M '11 ! . E WIA. U ' ' I I:' V. 'S 1. x .1 , 'Y ' , - 1 5 - 3 qQ!,.,l.-1-5 P.: I fi ex h-5.31 fifY7hs:.'- limba. , . .f- .' . 1' i11 lF'.' f '4 'lf -4 .-ti 'rxipfir v-Q . . .-L, . n ' 7' 'f . ' '1x' 'l'r.i.S' 1 XL . ' . .-- H.. - x 'y 1- v ..-r.: 2-Q. :-, X ' . ,W N .-.. I.. ,I A . ,V . aux'-rl. ' I . - -'rw fe' . u ' 'l' ' f j,' 1 Q. '. '. sk ' ' . ,zu - . ' n K years that went before 'EL 5 yhix K 4 . 7' 4 I f Q 1 ... P 1 U Q? I . f 1 . 'J 25 , :ff ' .J ll .1 ' ,P gg e 3 r,lVu,,g Hu-A i fa-W' 43 - Elwx .v w :'v'11 J 'H .' . -' 1' -Wi. 'sz -NV f ' 'rf ., .- - 1 7 ' 'hurl' 'V L: r .,,. . +L? 3-Q . . f ',5f.1su:f5'5',- fl-Q . w I1.:-51 ' v .wr-.,.,E,,il.-.guA. . , 5-I - - +1-I--pl'-WKQS, vs-1.. . x,,,,n,- ,iq . nuff A- -5. N I A 1 7 i 5 . - U ' 5 . ' S 1 'N . Q21 xff'S f fu 41' 4 z::AAmh.,,,4 v gh 4-f , 1,41 - I fl' is x 1 'lwwv f - t v 4a'4'lUlWMW'!'! '- ' 7'1 , o Young main with a future . . ave you bought with the years that went Tbefofgf: this day? w ' . -e .l- Jflg.,::,.. a x a ' - n ' u l ' 1 as ,. , .. ax 'Qi' -' .n ' X 1 'A' b1 ,f' , w 'MJ' T Kp 2 NL, 5' 1 What summit, gained with the interminable, irreplaceable hours, is dear enough to merit the exchange? 4 -will ,z r A Q NX 1' ua. , ,ss 55374 it .4 414' A X , -I X I X. I fi' ,yy Y The square of paper in your hand holds no clue 'G .sz ., f M ,AX 74 Q1 N A' 1 . .WA M :',x 1, 1 ?Z' 32-25 jf. F . J . - ' ?f,pF.:Lj .L 1.11: fir' .Q ' .nl no whisper of the silken hood will tell you this. 'Sui X f If I I IS. 24 Instead, the answer remains where it has always been Ali ' FY' i 'iii' waiting quiet as a jewel in the convolutions of your restless mind . . . or clamorous, now, with a sudden joyous affirmative . . 26 ' X-4' ww.. C 'V I 1 This is yours to find, for no man forsees the hour he will become a physician. 29 4--' 'Hut 1' For some students the time was long ago 31 asm, 15 'ff- if 3' S , 'f F' 'ii' , 'Q :A LJ, 5' ' 'VM M3527 - A - 4, seg 3' . f . xv aff' 1 ,I jg, - ff,-123 ' ' 'iff f- we A m, 1 W -1 . nfl. QS 1-ff, W, 'Ff'sl- , fm, ' A ,. ,wg-,lb 2 ' - 15 'F in others will know the moment marrow deep . . . at some distant rendezvous with maturity. 34 X x XX ---- K K an When you find within yourself the skill, man-given, and the purpose, God-given, fused into an incomparable instrument of service for those who need you . . 36 ,-. . 'Lyn .-2 --fb, -.4 'E ge. up 1 -1 ' 411+-fff-. 5 Q 5, lf' ' 'if-g ' N- . ' 7' ' 4' rJ O .v ' ',. ughgyqj-'-1-. I 3, 5 -nc--, W' 'fr xi 'L We ' 9,2 'A -A Auf., . ' f ' A, .1 sl X ' , 0 N - I' . 1 Nl- Q B ,Q ...J I hu L ' 7. ' 5 ff Q 4 'N 7 l K ' 4 J ' A ' P' . i . lf o D Alf., link-.ji l f., ,. T9 - 0 0 is IP, 2 blk' iffy, 'i '-xy,-If Nx I1 ,' . sv' If 5 sg X, Qffff QW ff!! ,vfil . f , xg ff ,Jlfvna 3 V n V - y 1.5 X .113 . x 5 wil!! I' 'L S4 xg TN - 'I f 6 and they are countless . ff 1' nada, Then you will be a physician. Then you will hold that hard and implacable jewel . . . the knowledge that fulfillment belongs to him who is needed and can meet that need. L90-lf -II L. ., ,s 'Q' if- 1' . 41 Z- 5 'Q A -- 11,4 U 0 u m , If Then you will know the coin was worth the minting the View worth the climb. 42 . , La-.Ar .Ls- r Q? 1 1 1. ' K ,f A1 E x 'is L X S I' f..7'. ' I .1,'.f 1. K o V- , . -. V: ',-N L.-'fx .A'f' 'f '-fi-':.-- . , . --K -14 1.. N 1 ' Vi' . lffhr . , 'I L: 'Q Q ,aw K . , f , fb-' ' T 1 'QIJL' , q- 4 . - . '1 A , f, 4-t,. , psf: W f ' ' 1 'I J V v 1 0 .0 4- v,, H . ll ' , J-' 1 ,A i, 'fn , gg Q f . fi Y Mig' 'fy si K , 11 NY' .5 'Q 'it XJ I ff, ' 1 LX A 8493.1 fa' ' 9 - if I P J ' ,' M , '5. JJQH' Q , P ,,-,nf fx' 41-.Yg 4 . 5 x - 'S 11 3 A I , V u N :H .M 4 4,0 1 . v:-- Alu, . H. ', 4. - I ws ' V' w :f , ,N 2.2214 ll '- f,,,. A ' - Mm:-'i4..f4?.-5 ' A ' ' - - . 4- - -. xp.. . 3 3 .- ,g , -317 I , 1 f,,',. , I ' I Y I 1 Q 4 ri' lf I. 1 -41. fi ' iff' if 59 'Ll Lg' . 'Q 'fi' f .f . rf-f' :Q -sf lf ,.' . ! , 41' 1 s Y' J 1 1 s. H ,' fl! n U rx- 1 gfl 1 , A '1 '..' . .:,'. 5 1 -:J - I ' 4 F. A 'fp .4 ' ' A T4 iff, .-+4 C 4. EL: Q, ' x , 'L-. r I ur' gil, ' PAQ .7 4v' if X 1 'f-A 'I' 'tv' ' . -1 . L 't' A n . I A L, 991 ' Q .1 15 1 Eff. u f, M H. ' 4 M. r a 1 , K, if! Q ' 1' , v 1 ,t',14, 4 I yr 2, ,At ' I riff. , 6 Q 1 , ,'., .F ',-, 'V V l . Q . ..? .,,- , 7491 147-ff Q . ' ' K A X ,Dy .ga-if I Lffgx 1 I Ji , J ge ' r v n 1 v 2- pn 1 P vm A' 1 1 ww. 1 1 .f 'aw' - . ' v - m' A A N 1 ' F 1 , nv A .,.. - T-fo , ,o 'X 5 11, I' ' H 5 X , I ' '4 x--la' , I 1 . 1 ' ,lx A I. 1 X51 I A I A K A L - 1 1 r ' , U I X n ' ., v X V . , n x A 1. l v ' xkx' 1 Q 81? Nd ' . .L Q , I A .a 'A , . - 2.1, . 4 4' 'r..x Nil' I rf EK fr' ww w' .4 I' '.',' A GFg+ v4.,11nf.x.i:: 3..S.:gvh ,.,,!h,,,,.,,5 a 'v 2 , L ' - ' ' 1, . ., A9 ,Ur 5. .1.f' 7:-, . ' 1'AfU5i'F'f , -, . .. - ,, - , ,A A 1 ,gf ' v- A: 11. w .JJi3 -:Q .0 . 9 xvk f ,', l,. i,Q'A ' Y,-I 1 V. ix .- 1 N .f1.4-- .ff 1-'np .r-19-k ' W- , ' '- f, fa,-.q -fy. . -..,.- . 1 , I- , - X .- . 1 4x t'3q,...jv ..: Agni' 'Qi 51' '.Vk,'-lu1i 'v,Q:g:f? q X..-.qi-ng t ' .Inav .,, I f, . 15,15 'L ,.?f 2'f'ffi. ', g4-fy .7 'l PA 'q4'iL, Q42 .A N 1 -w6Qj5'i:AiX3f 31:5 5 W .L .IY 23212 4. -ui. From Cytogenetics In Clinical Medicine by G. Westerman 8: R. Ersek. 4-6 Atypical Mycobacteria Colonies by G. Westemian With retrospectoscope in hand, the senior medical student may evaluate his four years at Hahnemann. He can analyze the clinical, the pre-clinical. and the various departments which have contributed to his medical education. Perhaps there is no one more qualified to criticize or to applaud the curriculum than the enlightened Senior. If this is so, there is no question that the yearbook has a purpose. Here in this section there is intended to be both criticism and applause. The applause is for the medical students who spent their spare time. energies. and, at times, finances to doubt, to investigate, and to discover. Even louder applause is directed to the preceptors of student research. who invested their time and often their grant funds in the unproven student investigator. There is also criticism intended in this section. and it is directed toward any student, teacher, or administrator who would belittle or question the educa- tional value of student research. Deserving special contempt are those who would attempt to further restrict or eliminate free time in the curriculum. because to do so is to restrict or eliminate student research or to make re- search possible only at the cost of truancy from the regular curriculum. The student of medicine needs time to doubt and time to seek answers to the cur- rently unanswerable. In the following pages are abstracts and photographs ot' research projects ot' the senior students. Reading these abstracts impresses one with the wide scope and complexity of student research. This section is dedicated to three preceptors who both in quality and in quan- tity have done the most to further and enrich student research. George G. H esrerman 47 John Malone Howard graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Southern College. Birmingham, Alabama. While a medi- cal student at the Universit of Penns lvania School of Medicine, he was granted tliie Elizabeth Shippen Award for Student Research on The Etiology of Pancreatitis. Af- ter an internship and residency at The Hospital of the Universitty of Pennsylvania he received a clinical Fel- lowship rom the American Cancer Society. In 1951 Dr. Howard entered the United States Army Medical Corps where he organized and directed the U.S. Army's Surgi- cal Research Team in Korea, was awarded the Legion of Merit with citation for this work, and edited four books, largely of research data on the Korean studies. During this time in the Army, Dr. Howard joined the full time faculty at Baylor University College of Medicine, in the Department of Dr. M. E. DeBakey, as an Instructor in Surgery. This appointment was serially elevated to As- sociate Professorship, and he was presented the Teacher of the Year Award by the undergraduate medical stu- dents in 1954. From 1955 to 1957 Dr. Howard was Professor and Chair- man of the Department of Sur ery at Emory University and from 1958 to 1962 he helc? the Chair of Surgery at Hahnemann. He has continued as Professor of Surgery to devote most of his time to teaching, research and surgical care. During his time at Hahnemann, Dr. Howard has lead over 80 medical students into the research laboratory and worked closely with them on various rojects from lymphangiography to electrical supression of, the immune response. i.- John Malone Howard, M.D. Some of the extra-mural positions held by Dr. Howard are: Diplomate, American Board of Surgery, 1950, Diplo- mate, American Board of Thoracic Sur ery, 1955, Chair- man, Committee on Shock, National Research Council, Membership, Committee on Trauma, National Research Council, C airman, Ad Hoc Committee, Evaluation of Ultra Violet Light in Operatinlgl Rooms, National Re- search Council, Chairman, Ad oc Committee, Evalua- tion of Effects of Dextran, National Research Council, Chairman, Ad Hoc Committee, Develo ment of Contin- uing Studies of Civilian Disasters, Nlational Research Council, Chairman, Program Committee, Cardiovascular Surgical Council, American Heart Association, 1962, Chairman, Post Graduate Program, 1962, Pre and Post Operative Care Committee, American College of Sur- geons, Counselor at Large, Society of University Sur- geons, 196l-1964, American Surgical Association, Vice- President, Pan Pacific Surgical Association, American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, American Asso- ciation for Thoracic Surgery fAssociate Membershipjg American Medical Association, Society for Vascular Sur- gery, Surgical Biology Club, International Society of Sur- gery, Intemational Cardiovascular Surgical Society, Col- ege of Physicians of Philadelphia, Editorial Board for the Journal of Trauma. Dr. Howard is a recognized authority on pancreatic dis- ease and is credited with greater than 200 scientific pub- lications. He has been a visiting Professor of Surgery, Vis- iting Surgeon, or Visiting Lecturer all over the world. DR. HOWARD ON STUDENT RESEARCH: Reiner de Graaf, while a medical student in 1664, first described the pancreatic duct, cannulated it, and found the juice to be acid. In 1869 Paul Langerhans, a medical student in the Universit of Berlin, published his thesis in which he first describeci, the structure of the islets of the pancreas, later designated in his honor. Charles Best, a medical student working at the University of Toronto with Banting, first isolated isletin, as t ey called it, from a Ringer solution or suspension of the pancreas of a dog whose pancreatic ducts had been ligated 10 weeks earlier. They injected this material into a dog in diabetic coma following pancreatectomy. The dog rapidly recov- ered and the treatment of diabetes was revolutionized! Such have been the lasting contributions to Medicine by medical students in so limited a field as the pancreas. As valuable as the direct contributions to science have been, the greater contributions of student research have probably come later and indirectly. My first study on the Anatomy of the Pancreatic Ducts was presented as a sophomore to the undergraduate re- search day. The honored speaker of the day commented in his address that the anatomy of the pancreatic ducts might not be a veizy important topic of research but per- haps it might lea the student into a continuing and deeper interest in pancreatic physiology. This is the more important function of student researc . To train the student to question, to seek the answer on an experimental basis, to experience the pitfalls of research, to distinguish between the values of direct over indirect approaches to his answer, to become an authority in a tiny facet of medicine, and to realize on what tenuous grounds uauthorityi' rests: these are the foundations on which the student and Medicine can grow. The student of the past, especially the clinical student, has usually been taught by authorilty The teacher by ill recorded experience and not the stu ent by factual evalu- ation has been the judge of truth. Mr. de Graafs teacher, Sylvius, had taught him that pancreatic 'uice was acid and the student wrote that this was true. lglow can a stu- dent learn medicine when half of what he is taught is probably wrong? He can only learn to be a student of medicine, a continuing, lifetime student, looking beyond authority and salesmanship to a factual answer to his questions. Research is more than a state of mind. It is the combina- tion of the inquiring mind, critical planning, and the ini- tiative required to gain an answer. Research training for the student is unlikely to create imagination or to create initiative but surely it is helpful in channeling creative effort along lproductive, disciplined lines. A more critical physician w'l result and perhaps a productive, creative career emerge. 4': 1' 5Ti'1'ff'3 '. '.i,'4'A.,!!1, '- v , V 1 . . ,N ' 'f5.'a2?f?W?r' -Q23-vrrifb-gf . . W'-giiia .., -ml' - l 4 Qff- - .:- A- ' , .V-YH fPH.H.W' ' 1 .: Hr -akin fcefh. .4 N5 v.4 Q . -N 'v:, ., .- rf' nip'-'I ,- L, '-'51 .-up 1a 1, 92 , ffpi. ' ,1fl:g5SgIt5'!' fgflffflfu 5 Vg'f'i,' -K: : . , . 111 g 1131.-, ' I, , , A ' vx '- . 'TM .11 ' ' 'J:ir.Ef f3 Q 'Fra-f E511 wr 1 - Q2 .1:i':2L MK' ., L ?2'f:13,1-hgis. . -M--w- -. J A -L--. - - ' x :Ha-M- - , L' 1 ,'!2:.f-L,-L ' fix ,' 'f , 6-if ZW!!- 4'.' 'fx - . -1 f -Q42 1'H'31e . I a.' -' 41 ' 4-1 . ' ,fg3.- . x. . ,.f. agp:-.HQ . 21f'.tg'. 1' -' ' - E,-SMU' uf , - f' - 'Q-,Q X . : ,1f.-.!'f:!,fQ:E??' 'Q L : .l'.'I E . . , .-,.- e5J.:.L,.b.,1AL.- A, gr, 12. 4' i '21 ' ' f::,v.-I-1-i1g,ff1': Lqjf 9 1 ,-, ' .,.: A b.-. :. , I ,i .I . .V '.,,yIl:r,-:IPI L '-linux. Ly... ,u X .4 '. X f- Lvl! 55Lii'Q.Ii' .1 ' ' .,. 2'e:fQfr+x'1qf. 'ali . -is .11 'g ', ya . -- f- L1 -..1?v.:-4.:-.. 1 yz' '-f'.,:- r'- '.-. Q' , A,. .H.,.-, 1 -.xv l'f: N. ... -. v'.....t' s 1' 'Agq': i John Hazen Nodine developed an interest in research while an undergraduate student at the University of Flor- ida. After pursuing a curriculum of chemistry and mathe- matics. he graduated Phi Beta Kappa and enrolled in the Medical School of the University of Pennsylvania. Here his interest in physical chemistry precipitated into a re- search fellowship for studies of urea formation employing heavy carbon and heavy nitrogen. Following his intern- ship at the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Nodine received the Schering Fellowship in endocrinology at Philadelphia General Hospital and then the Endocrine Fellowship at Temple University Hospital. These two years of graduate study emphasized bioc emical and bioassay methods of research with the agplication of mathematical and kinetic techniques. Dr. No ine joined the staff of the Philadel- phia General Hogipital, and in 1953 was appointed Assis- tant Chief of Me icine. Simultaneously, he continued his endocrine clinical pharmacology research and expanded his research interests to general clinical pharmacolo y. He also served as Assistant Chief of Medicine at the 'Femple University Hospitakplrior to assuming the position of Head of the Section of 'nical Pharmacology at Hahnemann Medical College in 1959. In this position he has pursued a broad medical pharmacology program with special emphasis in the areas of psychosomatic medicine, isotope drug studies, and drug kinetics. Dr. Nodine has been a spokesman for the use of appropriate statistical methods in the design and analysis of research. He has directed the teaching program in Biometrics for the under graduate medical students as well as the post graduate fellows in clinical pharmacology. Dr. Nodinels interest in psychosomatic medicine resulted in a symposium which was published under the title of Psychosomatic Medicine editors John H. Nodine and John H. Moyer, Lee and Febiger, 1962. The plost gradu- ate course in clinical pharmacology was pub 'shed as a textbook Animal and Clinical Pharmacologic Techniques editors John H. Nodine and Peter E. Siegler, Yearbook Publishers, 1964. He worked with Dr. Eric Dendoff in planning and contributing to the publication of a small monograph entitled, Drugs in Cerebral Palsy, editor Eric Dendoff, 1965. With Dr. Y. Mapp he has published a small mono ra h entitled Psychopharmacology 1963-64. More recengy lie has been applying biochemical phar- macologic principles in the preparation of two additional John Hazen Nodine, M.D. books now in press: Anabolism and Catabolism, editors Georgina Faludi, Morton Fuchs and John H. Nodine, Academic Medical Literature, 1965 and Introduction to Biometrics, John H. Nodine, Academic Medical Liter- ature, 1965. Because of the large amount of calculations required for handling radioisotopic data and kinetic analysis, Dr. No- dine has been active in the development and application of digital comdputer methods for data processing including methods for irect transferal of data from isotope scalers and the automatic processing by the computer. In addi- tion he has employed digital computers for teaching such methods to medical students and in the handling of vari- ous statistical and biometric problems as they occur in the broad field of clinical pharmacology. He has applied computers in data storage and retrieval for teaching of pharmacologic principles for the management of poison control information and drug toxicity. Of major unpor- tance is the application of bioassay principles to human pqharmacologic studies and the calculation of ED50's and D 25,s.along with the therapeutic index of drugs when apphed in the treatment of human disease. Originally ap- pied in the area of tranquilizers additional studies have been developed utilizing the same principles for anti- depressant drugs, stimulants, anticonvulsants, antihista- mines, muscle relaxants, analgesics and diuretics. These scientific Iprinciples of dose response curves, therefore have rep aced the older and less scientific aclinical impression in measurement of human drug response. In addition to his books, Dr. Nodine has published or has in pressl' nearly 100 scientific papers. r. Nodine is a member of the Endocrine Society, the New York Acade- my of Sciences, the American Federation of Clinical Re- search, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, The American Geriatric Society, The American Therapeutic Society, The Academy for Psychosomatic Medicine, The Editorial Board of Psychosomatics, The Editorial Board of Current Thera eutic Research, and is a consultant for the American Medlical Association Council On Drugs. As Head of the Section of Clinical Pharmacol- gy, Deplartment of Medicine, here at Hahnemann, Dr. odine as contributed to the training of several dozen post-graduate fellows, and nearly as many medical stu- dents in summer research fellowships. DR. NGDINE ON STUDENT RESEARCH The primary purpose behind the student research fel- lowship program is to provide selected students with a training ac ground which is different from that able to be provided in the standard curriculum. As a professional person, each medical student will after graduation be called upon to make many decisions involving profession- al judgment. Medical science is a rapidly growing science with new diagnostic and therapeutic met ods constantly under evaluation. Whatever the future of the individual medical student he will be called upon in his lifetime of practice to constantly revise and upxdate his medical nowledge and to evaluate the usefu ess of new diag- nostic and therapeutic methods as these become availab e for the care of his individual patients. For a student fellowship therefore, the ideal is to select a limited problem where a particular question can be posed and in which experimental investigations can be reasona- bly designed, undertaken and completed during the course o the fellowship By participating in the .entire process of planning an carrying out the investigation as well as in t e statistical evaluation of the results obtained, the research fellow obtains a different perspective on the importance of accurate observations and the meaningful- ness of statistical data as applied to practical observations in medicine. While the particular problem may not be world shaking in its applications, it should involve a definite area where the medical student can participate in the basic aspects of the investigation and can contribute in some fashion to our spectrum of knowledge. The methodology applied in that particular area may then give the flavor o the types of methods which are impor- tant in medical research and other areas and place em- phasis on the importance of a skilled observer and of the proper recording and analysis of experimental data. Hopefully from among the students who take research fellowships and who become enthusiastic about research participation, the eventual scientists may be selected, but whether or not the student continues in a research career, it is felt that the articipation in the fellowship program will make him a Better doctor and better able to handle his own professional decisions in the future. v-- . L.' 1'-ww NHL' 2 V-T v-f - I'-it ' if-'N ffI'. A I 7 'V 'f 7.- .- ,,-- , -N .Lx-QQ.: wmv., -, ,Hb Q19-.--', cpu. -A Li x L ' 'a L'-2' n 1 f i Pl. gf 14',.,U '5 l'q1- fe U ' 1 J .I Q X ,cttw mln.,-7. W -xr . Klwp--,II T1 -l U .. N . , HMG 1.74 .I l lxl If ' 'X 7t1:'!!,: .ifl-'A 1, 5- QW, lk- 1 ,fi lmwvl-h -' .. -.5 iw xc! . ' 5 mgii vw Hg Ag .Hfvgzw-+-11 pun -' - 1 F41 . u' . 'x L ,: i 5.1,.fj.'f,-33.1ll ' 'qqiqa ij-1f,'f.fL. !-5-Q34 Q, 1 'V g' D :J M' ,ht -R, nil 4:21, - k,:f,::,:xIiU..: ' .Eyre I-X .,,:-Avyh :tu-31' . . ' f f 4-WW ?f'iv - Q H 1 f ch .PL ' 1 CT ' -1 YZ-J, il' I yQ'7 k 71 1'. ,l '-Tf,1,'.1'f V. Y 5' ' 3 - ---M -ia-IMF. . .4 xi'-i.',?'sQ :wt 1-:.,.: F ,iIXJ2.2 4rx' - x . L. --.. Qlynj, 4. .A y B. p, , 1.l .. qv.--XJ.-'v ' ' P3 'znfxi-7 V , '11 Y- 5 S 'W' L' 29' - HV . ,fxllw ' 1 ' Q .lv ...' 51 'Lx' Nj--Y' Q' ,' A., . :K , .D 5 -gmfsiqqgqf-!,u ,, alle! L a-..rG:.i,x!un.:15.H . E':Ei5'5?-St--154513. 2 ,mn 5 .cgiagq-.--J-ur R 3 y .--V V- -w1fgmp:3g .r --'L L my Q-AQV1-7.23. fa .- RESP, gh' '. f.' fill!! Q . ' 1 'YW' VAN., ' ' 3, ' Q-:gn . 1 -, lik ' 'Tri' L.. 1 ' 'T---'f'4:5S '- I- -xr lgg-hv i 'L .54 X ,Ik-. u 3 I-UA. J... vt , K5-.,-, nr V. 1 ..,3-,.,l- s :3N.--, r-5-:fu-3 . ' 151-,, ,- K Q 0' :xcwet-X: ..- . Q., 4.55 P-17, 'Q :12-'Qi?-1-..,- ' .Q-V323 3 'Jl'x-g-9, .X 5 ' ,v,.,!IV'Nf:v',q ', '-:Q x'.L-11:13-QAg fii3H..E. na -22 3LT:.'Y.Q: I L N ' '.:'.-1'lr,1'.f-2fffi'T.' u 4 L Q .S 7N.1.g.i I - - Q 'VN v ' I ' ..-- r..' .11 -' 1. .1 '. N , . .. .- i . -A . a a r Julius Schultz studied chemistry as an undergraduate at Cornell and the University of Michigan. Under the sniper- vision of Dr. H. B. Lewis. he pursued and complete his doctoral in the Department of Biochemistry of the Medi- cal School of the University of Michigan. Dr. Schultz then received a post doctoral fellowship in the Harrison Department of Surgical Research at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. Prior to coming to Hah- nemann as a Research Associate Professor in 1957, he was Research Biochemist at the Einstein Medical Center, Principal Investigator at the Research Institute of Temple University. and Assistant Professor of Research Biochem- istry at the Fels Institute of Temlple University Medical School. In 1958 he was named irector of the Hahne- mann Institute for Biochemical Studies in Cancer, and in 1962 he was appointed Research Professor of Biochemistry. Dr. Schu1tz's early research at the University of Michigan and the University of Pennsylvania was concerned with the effect of hepatotoxic agents such as selenium and chloroform on protein metabolism. At Einstein Medical Center he studied the role of proteolytic enzymes in the development of tuberculous lesions. During the war, a 3-year effort led to the discovery that urotropin fhexam- ethylenetetraminej was a prophylatic against phosgene poisoning, which is described in his 80 page article in 'Chemical Warfare Medicinef' wherein he illucidated the biochemistry, pharmacology and toxicology of urotropin and its protection against t is lethal gas. Julius Schultz, Ph.D. In the past 15 years, much of his work was centered around the enzyme, Myeloperoxidase, which is found principally in the neutrophile of all animal species of which 20 were examined in his laboratory. Interest in this enzyme arose from an effort to resolve a controversial question as to the nature of the green color and red uorescence of Chloroma, a green tumor known for over 100 years in cases of myelogenous leukemia. The red fluorescence was demonstrated to be due to protoporphyrin which was isolated and crystallized and its identity unequivically established. Likewise, the green color was shown to be due to myeloperoxidase whose crystallization was accomplished for the first time since its discovery. A series of papers resulted from this research carried out at Temple which contributed new knowledge of the chemistry of experimental Chloroma in the rat. Believing that the answer to the pathological was more readily determined by the work on the normal, Dr. Schultz continued his efforts on the structure, function and localization of myeloperoxidase on the neutrophil of normal human blood. Recently the first isolation of the lysozome which is the peroxidase-containing granule was accomplished. Dr. Schultz is also well known for his research with amino acids and serum proteins. He has published over sixty scientific papers and personally supervised over two dozen medical students in research in his Institute of Cancer Research. DR. SCHULTZ ON STUDE T RESEARCH The Importance of a Research Experience to the ' Student in His Medica Education and as a Practicing Physician Learning consists of studying facts, gaining insight, doubting accepted interpretations and as 'ng a question. In research, the question is put to test in the laboratory. The new data are then examined in light of the question. A new interpretation, if any, then requires teaching one's colleagues to convince them of its validity. Then the process of expressing a problem, planning its solution, and exlplaining Cteachingl the results is t e essence of researc experience. COur pglesent civilization has reached its status by this process.J ithout a research experience, or at least being closely associated with it, most medical students only go as far as Learning the so-called facts. Now is the medical student who has had a research experience at the bench better educated and in the long run a better plracticing physician? Having spent close to 30 years wit students during! their pre-medical and medical training, and as a colla orator and consultant to interns, residents and physicians in clinical research and clinical practice, answering that question will be definitely positive and prejudiced. There are two events in particular that stand out in my mind which bear witness to my opinion. As a post- doctorate at the Harrison Department at the University of Pennsylvania, a discussion' with Dr. I. S. Ravdin on the role of basic biochemistry in the diagnosis and treatment of disease led the good doctor to suggest that accompanying him for one year on Grand Rounds might be somewhat enlightening to a so-called know it all young biochemist. The Ravdin Grand Rounds in the pre- World War II days was a truly remarkable experience. Each case was an open forum. Anyone felt free to speak up, or if none did, the Chief called on someone with specialized knowledge. The latter was either doing research at the bench or ad a unique experience. Those with such experience spoke up with confidenceg they knew their subject. Everyone soon learned to have the current literature on the tip of his fingers, for the Chief already knew of the related published or even unpublished work either at Penn or elsewhere. The intellectual drive to know and to understand was tremendous. Those who knew usomethingv either had been or were doing research in the laboratory, not just reviewing past cases. The names of the group making rounds at that time now read like the roster of eminent Professors, Chiefs and leaders in surgery today. Now on the other extreme, I spent a few days with a surgeon who had given up his practice to do research on leukemia because he ad found himself a victim of chronic myelogenous leukemia. He had asked me to help him get starte . Within a year he expressed himself thus: After 4 years of medical school, and many years of residency in surgery and surgical lpractice, to me biochemistry meant only the clirucal la where you sent blood specimens. I had actually never seen a research lab. There is no question in my mind that my whole lrfe would have been different had I ever spent a couple of months doing this kind of work. CHow often I've eard thislj He claimed that the 2 years fbefore his death! were the most intellectually satisfying, enlightening and pleasurable of all 'his previous experiences. It is not unusual that alumni, after visiting the labora- tories at Hahnemann, admit that they were seeing a re- search lab for the first time. They really had no conception of how the knowledge in text books got there. In truth, a physician without a true expinence or close association with the Ndiscovery of new owledge could become a lay physician, and one with a research experience can be a pro essional. In the era ahead, with most. patients becoming increasingly aware of science, the physician will be evaluated more critically. His patients know that in his training, the doctor had contact. with scientists, and expect him to know more about science than. anyone the atient may have occasion to meet. The physician should be knowledgable of research at the bench, not only for his continued intellectual growth and education, but to maintain the great prestige as the erudite, learned man his redecessors have earned for the most honored of profgssions. gun: 1 I 5 .l:.'f , f ',,1j..,, Riif'-, -- 'uyi E133 E L', 'ff ' ' ' ' .1 Nl- . ' -'J lf:-'a km' 'h X' 'W'-Q, ' '51-H--. - ,,,f1,g, 'Nik' .u1v'-1- 'H' -' W V '-'- , ' 1' ..-A 3 ' Lys , ' ' 'inf-. ' W FQ' 1:3 in- 'lffyijzt 'Y 5.5: fszwfnfifi' 1 - :Q U ,,.. ,-3 V.. .4 Q' A I t sys!! Q' . gtygllrv-,:'Y,.fQi-Q4 .kit 1:3 . ,ll .fnxx y. - H ,,x.,.'--Q N.. M- -A FT . 5. uf' -L . 1 4 x5,' 5l5ix 'w Phil --Lili-ffh' 1?-.4 .-,x lqtvvw fg.4'h Jai- ..i,..w. ,Q ,. .x V, H wg 'gh X -- ll .Z-Q - X ' 1'-'nu L It-q , J' . M i-NEA Ntti- . , 1-,::i I.,Lp ' Ni: ' '11l'-- ' 'I - N ' 'Z-EL? ' - '53'a.4. + .q,,?qf.f5W4.fsf115f,55' aff 7 - ,..-m-'..,4, 4 1. . ' ' . Q1 - ,QL w.:,wq3Zr',5i3 5 f','1'3N..:j': 4 - . '1 I -' . E ?f-:vii-'::e'E45 '5fi'511 A h-JJ: . 1 fi - -12:-M 53.27-qigga, F. 1 'xfucfffx' .v'-N35 PM ' ' -.L z 2' ,ff . Q5 ff ' fn'-T-'I-ei+:11aff,'ff . 1:--1- N 'r: 1. ' 1-T! ?5g?::rr:..H1f 'ji :IE T111-.,Jw E N I fi PAUL C. Al'l'A Experintwilal .4 nii'lo1'a'n.ri.s' and Friend Virus Leukemia A project evaluating the effect of Casein induced Amyloidosis on Friend Virus Leukemia in Swiss Mice. This study indicated that the two dis- eases are probably synergistic in 1 lj increasing size and weight ofthe liver and spleen. 121 accelerating reticuloendothelial response, and O5 in- creasing susceptibilitv to neoplastic diseases in these animals. Preceptor: Dr. Milton Tellem. Dept. of Pathology. PAUL C. AITA. BEN F. BALME. ROBERT A. ERSEK, AND MAR- SHALL H. JONES A lloxan Induced Diabetes Mellitus Using Alloxan in effecting selective necrosis ofthe beta cells of the Islets of Langerhans in the Pancreas of a dog, the course ofthe disease was followed with clinical evaluation and serial laboratory studies. The se- quelae observed. including the progression of hvperglycemia, ketoac- B. Bogdanofl' ld N. Berger idosis. and diabetic coma, simulated an acute onset of uncontrolled Di- abetes Mellitus in man. Preceptor: Dr. Joseph S. DeFrates, Dept. of Biological Chemistry. JOHN J. ALIFANO, JR. Urea, Urease, and Induced H 0 I cemia. The effects of hypoglycemic fTolbutamide, Chlorpropamide, and Phenforminb on t e enzyme urease were studied in vitro using colorime- tric techniques and human serum. The investi ation included the null hypothesis that the hypoglycemic agents enterecf into competitive inhibi- tion with the urea-urease congplex. No competition was ap reciated in these studies. Preceptor: Dr. arl Alper, Dept. of BiologicalPChemistry. JOHN J. ALIFANO, JR. Studies of the Canine Cardiovascular System. fSee Kaine, R. LJ ROBERT E. BAUTE The Egects of Pancreatic Enzymes on Absorbable Suture Materials. The e ects, in vitro and in vivo, of pancreatic enzymes on absorbable suture materials were studied. The study evaluated changes in length and tensile strength of the suture materials. Preceptors: Dr. Paul James and Dr. John M. Howard, Dept. of Surgery. EDWARD W. BEAL The Eject of Aldosterone on Norepinephrine Tolerance. This experiment was designed to study the effect of aldosterone on norepinephrine tolerance in normovolemic dogs and in dogs subjected to hemorrhagic shock. CTolerance to norepinephrine can be illustrated in both these conditions.J The initial rate of administration of noreigineph- rine necessary to raise the systolic blood pressure 30-40 mm. g. was found to be six to eight times greater in the dog subjected to hemor- rhagic shock than in the normal dog. In the normal dog aldosterone administered I. V. in a 0.1 mg!Kg dosage had only transitory and nonre- producible effects in reversing norepinephrine tolerance. Alderstone administered similarly to the og subjected to hemorrhagic shock not only had an immediate effect on the blood pressure but it reversed the tolerance to norepinephrine for periods up to two hours. Preceptor: John M. Howard, Dept. of Surgery. EDWARD W. BEAL AND DONALD L. MELLMAN Hgfdroxyethyl Starch as a Plasma Expander. T e experiment was a pilot project to determine the value of hydroxy- ethyl starch CHESJ as a plasma volume expander following acute hemor- rhage in the dog. Lightly anesthetized dogs were emp oyed and the Wiggers shock model was used to reduce t e blood pressure from 150 mm. Hg. to 30mm. Hg. where it was maintained for one hour before reinfusion with either whole blood, clinial dextran, or HES. Results were not statistically significant, but favorable enough to warrent further investigation. Preceptor: John M. Howard, Dept. of Surgery. 54- - NATHAN A. BERGER The Subcellar Distribution In Survivin Rat Heart Slices of Persantin-2. 6'llC And Its Fixation To Isolated Sugcellular Particles. Persantin has been shown to have a selective action, causing a marked increase in coronary blood fiow. Experiments to localize the sight of ac- tion of Persantin. employing tissue slice and subcellular fractionation techniques with manometric. fiuorimetric and radioactive measure- ments, demonstrated the permeation of the myocardium at the cellular level and its concentration in specific intracellular compartments. Preceptor: Dr. Gerald Litwach. Dept. of Biochemistry, PGH. NATHAN A. BERGER Isolation of the Lysozome Particle of Human Leukocvtes. Continuining the work of five previous medical students in the Hah- nemann Institute of Cancer Research, the isolation of the M eloperox- idase granule from human leukocytes was refined. By subcellular frac- tionation, density gradient separation, and spectrophotometric enzyme analysis, the granu e was demonstrated to be the ysozome of the hu- man leukocyte. The morphology of the lysozome was established by electromicroscopy. Preceptor: r. Julius Schultz, Dept. of Biological Chemistry. NATHAN A. BERGER Myeloperoxidase Content of the Human Leukocyte. A microtechnique was developed to quantitate the Myelolperoxidase ac- tivity per polymorphonuclear eukocyte in the peripheral lood. Normal values were esta lished, then variations in the enzyme level were studied under specific metabolic conditions of stress e.g. fastin , hemor- rhage, and hematoloigic disorders. Exogenous administration ofgMyelo - eroxidase was foun to stimulate the maturation and release into the geriphery of polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Preceptor: Dr. Julius chultz, Dept. of Biological Chemistry. BRUCE M. BOGDANOFF Influence of Diuretics on Potassium Transport into Ervthrocytes. In vitro experiments were undertaken to determine the effects of or- ganomercurial and benzothiodiazine diuretics on the migration of serum potassium across the RBC membrane, and to evaluate the kalemic effect Ocf all CXPCl'imCY1f111 diuretic, furosemide fLasix5. It was found that potas- sium was mobilized across the RBC membrane via an active trans ort System and that furosemide effected an excellent diuresis with liittle emonstration of hypokalemia. Preceptor: Dr. Benjamin Calesnick, Dept. of Pharmacology. ROBERT J. BROSELOW The Relationship Between Parathormone and Pancreatic Morphology. A project was undertaken to evaluate the effect of parathormone ad- ministration tipon the structure of the rabbit pancreas. Difiiculty in pathologic an ysis of the pancreatic tissue prevented definitive conclu- sions from being stated. Preceptor: John M. Howard, Dept. of Surgery. Y W1 4 ' -off -.., J Q 0 I J Al A 'J ' ' wwe'- V ' J, 3 6 .1 . 'r' ' I 4 ts I S 1' 1 ,tt , s . . 1 U . it , Q . v x QI? V . t DAVID R. BURNS A New Technique of Trigbfceride Anabtsis. This research was undertaken to devise and develop a convenient X Y N. Werther v 'Q 1 'Q-0 -YN-J .. ' ' ' ' f I' v , 8 Q+fQI,:I'3w'- X-I Qltiiix -- :J , ' :I Q . fifsl .QI itz. , 4 ', i t -.. . 'Ap TF. fu iv A oe- mf ' I I M Igli,-3 'V' I ' t . O . . K . 9 h , ' ...H 'o . Q X .3 -v 'I' Q .Q -' . ' E ' Ae '., 'ph . xt M- P- sg 'Q , and K 'V' g . 4. . I. w- Q 'fq 9' D ' 'fi rf . , - .at-t -. ' Q . 1 gr 'ft div-Qiix l ' - ' ' 'ii-'i 51r' . .- . I ts' . GQ ,t 4- . -N7 Qgt J ' ,, 1 0 U ' . 1.1, Q ' ,- .' Ya ff' U1 P451 fu ' 1 :.g I 0 ' t , .-In K, b ,I Q - ' ' 5' 1 ' '- - 1 i '. Granuloma of Lung by G. Westerman accurate method for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of triglyc- erides. Such a technique is essential before rapid progress can be made in the study of triglyceride metabolism. A recent y available tempera- ture programmed gas chromatograph was employed and severa ex- perimentalfpolyesters were characterized for possible uulitv as substrate materials. t e conclusion of the project. it was possible to separate triglycerides readily on the basis of their carbon number. The problem remained of se aration according to degrees of unsaturation. Precep- tors: Dr. John Sipitzer and Dr. Martin Gold. Dept. of Physiology. DAVID R. BURNS Fatgf Acid Metabolism ofAdipose Tissue Project was a continuation of earlier published work of the preceptor. The obiective was to characterize the qualitative aspects of free fatty 55 acid release by the rat epididymal fat pad in vitro.'Constant temper- ature gas chromatographic analysis was employed to quantitate the vari- ous fatty acids released b the adipose tissue incubated under different conditions both with anal, without erpinephrine stimulation. Significant changes were observed only in the ally acid fraction containing eigh- teen carbon atoms. This fraction was greatl increased at the ap arent expense of other fractions. Preceptor: Dr. Jlohn Spitzer, Dept. ol? Phy- siology. JOSEPH A. DE COLLI Pseudomonas and Granulomatous Mvocardial Lesions. The research project attempted to show that granulomatous myocardial lesions produced in living rabbits by intramyocardial injections of viru- lent pseudomonas organisms contained antigenic remnants of these bac- teria, Fluorescent tagged antibodies against these organisms were ap- lied in vitro to myocardial sections and initial results demonstrated guorescence of the granulomatous lesions. Preceptor: Dr. E. K. Koiwai, Dept, of Pathology. JACK A. DEVOR Living with Disease tSee Westcott. W. IJ ROBERT A. ERSEK CWITH R. R. COBURN, W. J. WILLIAMS, W. S. BLAKEMORE, AND R. E. FORSTERJ. Effect of Eqvthrocvte Destruction on Carbone Monoxide Formation in Man. The endogenous production of carbon monoxide was measured before and after the I. . injection of N-ethylmalemide treated erythrocytes. The RBCs rapidly sequestered in the reticuloendotherial system. The carbon monoxide was found to increase in amount with the alpha car- bon atom of the destroyed Heme ring. being the apparent carbon source. Published: Fed Proc. vol. 21. No. 2, p. 67, March-April 1962. ROBERT A. ERSEK, MARSHALL H. JONES, A. TILAK, AND JOHN M. HOWARD. Studies ofthe Peripheral Lymphatics Following Occlusion of the Femoral Vein in the Dog. Four series of dogs were studied Ely lymphangiographic, venographic, lymplh and venous pressure, physic , and other methods before and af- ter t e femoral vein was occluded at various levels. In two series the pop- liteal lyngph node was removed. Published: Sur ery, vol. 57, No. 2, E. 269, ebruary, 1965. Preceptor: Dr. John Howard, Dept. of urgery. ROBERT A. ERSEK AND GEORGE G. WESTERMAN The Essentials of vtogenetics. This paper reviews and summarizes the clinically applicable aspects of Cytogenetics. To be published: New Physician. ROBERT A. ERSEK Alloxan Induced Diabetes Mellitus fSee Aita. P. CJ ROBERT A. ERSEK C vtogenetics in Clinical Medicine. iSee Westerman, G. GJ ROBERT A. ERSEK Milrov's Disease, a case study A family with nine members is reported, and compared with Milro 's original family. Lymphangiographic. cytogenetic, electrophoretic, dye difusion and other studies were performed. Soon to be published. Dr. John M. Howard, preceptor. ROBERT A. ERSEK Studies in Spleenectomized Mice Receiving Friend Leukemia Virus. Various hematologic parameters are being explored to determine the role of the hypersplenism sometimes seen in mice receiving the Friend, so called, Leu emia virus. Dr. Isadore Brodsky, preceptor. J. DeColli mag . ' ? I- ia! ,iff 4.5 R. Broselow ROBERT A. ERSEK . . . INVENTIONS: A New System for Retention of Large Incisions and Wounds. A New Space Helmet, for long term closed system rebreathing apparatus used in endogenous carbon monoxide and other gas investigations. A New Device to Kee Pediatric Patients in Cribs. A New Device to Allinw Bed-Ridden Children to Draw and Eat While Reclined A New Collecting System for Stool, Urine, and Sputum Samples. A New Atraumatic, Sterile System for Thorocentesis. A New Heat Exchange System to Warm Transfusion Blood and Other Fluids to Bodv Tem erature. RICHARD C. FEPCREIRA Effects of Cigarette Smoke on Newt Lung. Lung tissue in a Sykes-Moore culture chamber was subjected to ciga- rette smoke drawn' through an aupette. All cilia so subjected ceased beating within four minutes. Preceptor: Dr. Peter S. Amenta. Dept. of Anatomy. The experiment was demonstrated at the 78th Session of the American Association of Anatomists in Miami, Florida in April, l965. Published: The Anatomical Record. I5l:3, March. 1901. RICHARD C. FERREIRA Nucleolar Organizer C hromosornes. Studies were conducted to locate nucleolar organizer chromosomes on cultered cells of Treturus viridiscius. Preliminary results demonstrated two chromosomes with characteristic secondary constrictions. Using the ultra-microbeam chromosomes without such constriction were iso ated and in no instance did the nucleus formed by these chromosomes pos- sess a nucleolus. The suspected nucleolar organizer chromosomes have not been observed in advantagous position to allow irradiation and to demonstrate that they are nuc eolar organizers. Preceptor: Dr. Peter S. Amenta, Dept. of Anatomy. Published: The Anatomical Record. l48:2. February. I964. RICHARD C. FERREIRA Nueleolar Mass of Newt Cells in Culture. Using the principles of density and refractive index. it is possible to es- timate the dry mass of a cell or cellular component using the A. O. Bak- er Interference Microscope. Although final analysis was not complete, the mass of the nucleoli is in the range of I0-12 gm. Preceptor: Dr. Peter S. Amenta. Dept. of Anatomy. RICHARD E. FREEMAN AND JOHN R. GLASSBURN Cerebral Collateral Circulation Investigative angiographic determination of the presence or develop- ment of cerebra collateral circulation in the canine following occlusive microsphere injection via the internal carotid artery with or without subsequent injection of acetylcholine. Preliminary results suggested the existence of collaterials. Preceptor: Dr. Henry L. Pearlmutter. Dept. of Radiology. RICHARD E. FREEMAN Determinination 0 Normal MEFR-V3 Values Prior to and Following the Administration o Isuprel via vaporizer. Preceptor: Dr. Leon Cander, Dept. of Medicine. OL. 5 i d JM .....- f si ,.,..-. A-- i li O us' oo. 50' sv' - 5nl ' 1 Cell in late Anaphasc by R. Ferriera JOHN R, GLASSBURN Cerebral Collateral Circulation tSec Freeman. R. El SAM C. GOULD lavmphedenia Caused hi' lsvmplzatie Destruction Massive edema was produced in the hind lee of I2 dogs by destroying the subcutaneous lymphatic network of the leg along with'ligating' the deep lymphatic trunk at the Femoral area. This work supports the con- cept that post-mastectomy edema of the arm is caused by lymphatic de- struction. Preceptors: Dr. John M. Howard and Dr. Danese. Dept. of Surgery. PAUL B. HABERMAN Interrelations between Lipid and CHO Metabolism. The effects of hyperlipemia on CHO metabolism were investigated hy I.V. GTT before and after periods of hyperlipemia. Preceptor: Dr. Donald Beskowitz. JOHN A. HOLLAND Analysis of Cell Fractions of Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Avher lneuhation With Cl' Labelled Alanine. Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells were incubated with labelled Ca ala- nine. The cells were lysed and then broken apart by sonic oscillation. Fractionation of the various cell particles was obtained by differential centrifugation. The resultant fractions were extracted for lipids. S ecific radioactivity was determined for each of these fractions an founciwto be greatest in the whole cells with decreasing values in the supematant. membranes, and RNA fractions. Phosphorus determinations were also made for each of the fractions as a basis for more accurate comparison of specific activity. Preceptor: Dr. Gaby. Dept. of Microbiology. MARSHALL H. JONES Alloxan Induced Diabetes Mellitus tSee Aita. P. C.J MARSHALL H. JONES Studies of the Peripheral Iavmplialies Following Oeelusion ofthe Femoral Vein in the Dog. tSee Ersek, R. AJ ROBERT L. KAINE AND JOHN J. ALIFANO The Canine Cardiovascular S vstem The cardiovascular system of does was studies in C.V.I. Open heart tho- racic surgery was aseptically performed. Small metallic rods ttraumatiz- ersl were anchored in the apex of the heart. so that one end of the rod became situated between the cusp leaflets ofthe mitral or aortic valve. to study the effects of valvular incompetence. At the same time. a radio- opaque dye was injected at the apex into the myocardium. the su- perficial lymphatics visualized and the main collecting lymphatic duct cannulated. Into this lymphatic trunk hypaque was injected in a retro- grade fashion and serially' X-rayed to study the lymphatic channels and ow rates of lymphatic fluid in the normal dog heart and in the heart crippled by induced valvular incompetence. Preceptor: Dr. Henry Pearl- mutter, Dept. of Radiology. PAUL P. KRASNER AND RONALD PENNOCK Studies in the Relationship Between Blood Glueose and I'-OH Steroids. It was attempted to demonstrate whether the normal 24 hour diurnal blood glucose level was at all affected by a similar diurnal variation in I7-OH steroids from the adrenal cortex. and whether this cause and effect could be implicated in the etiology' ot' Diabetes Mellitus. 28 hour glucose and steroid infusions were perlbrmcd on normal and diabetic patients and results evaluated. A relationship was strongly suggested by the data. Preceptors: Dr. Gordon Bcndersky and Dr. Georgana Ifaludi. Dept. of Medicine. ALAN l. LEBOWITZ Studies of Antibodies Against Mouse Sareorna Ir 'll in Raliliitx Preceptor: Dr. Carl Alper. Dept. ot' Biological Chemistry DONALD L. MELLMAN Norepinephrine Refravtoriness and Erztlotovit' Slioek. The project involved the study of norepinephrine refractriness following R. Ersek an endotoxic insult and the value of aldosterone to reverse this refracto- nness. Cats were subjected to an endotoxic insult and inconsistently de- veloped refractoriness to norepinephrine. In only a minimal number of the animals did aldosterone reverse the refractoriness, Preceptor: John M. Howard, Dept. of Surgery. DONALD L. MELLMAN H Vdroxyethgl Starch as a Plasma Expander. fSee Beal, . WJ FRANCIS G. MOORE Lvmphatics of the Peritoneal Cavity. The project was outlining the lymphatics ofthe peritoneal cavity by the intraperitoneal injection of a lipoid contrast material fEthiodoJ which would be absorbed and could be traced radiographically. The project did not yield significant data because of oor absorption of contrast ma- terial. Preceptor: Dr. John M. Howard, lJJept. of Surgery. --Y. .,1-,R-ikt Rw- A-i L.. 1 NN- sa.l at ,.-...- -l.-...... ..- ..'l.. -si A -5. WILLIAM H. PELOQUIN Studies on the Isocitritase System in Streptomyces Griseus. The enzyme isocitritase, the controlling enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle, which catalyzes the reversible cleavage of isocitrate to yield equimolar amounts of glyoxylate and succinate, was studied in Streptomyces gris- eus 3492. The organism was grown in various media and the growth and s ecific activity of isocitritase in the organism could be neit er in- ducedp nor repressed to any significant extent. This suggests that the .ex- istence of isocitritase is of a constitutive nature in this organism. tor: Dr. A. H. Romano, Dept. of Microbiology, University of Cincinnati +A! RONALD PENNOCK AND DAVID C. RILLING Experimental Production of Portal Hyfertension in Dogs. A reverse Eck fistula was employe to create porta hypertension in dogs. The pathologic changes resulting from the induced hypertension were studied. Preceptor: Dr. H. Tanyol, Dept. of Anatomy. RONALD PENNOCK Vascular Changes in Alcoholic Patients. fSee Rilling, D. CJ RONALD PENNOCK Studies in the Relationship Between Blood Glucose and 17-OH Steroids. J Weiner fSee Krasner, P. PJ DAVID C. RILLING AND RONALD PENNOCK Vascular Changes in Alcoholic Patients. One hundred male chronic alcoholic patients were examined for the resence of varicose veins, telangiectasia, and lpalmar erythema and gbrosis. The findincgs were compared with a contro groufp of nonalcoholic patients. The inci ence of positive findings was signi cantly higher in the alcoholic groulp. The question of primary vascular disease in the etiology of alcoho ism was raised. Preceptor: Dr. H. Tanyol, Dept. of Anatomy. DAVID C. RILLING Experimental Production of Portal Hypertension in Dogs. lSee Pennock, R.J FREDERICK H. ROEVER Studies in Renal Transplantation in Dogs. Preceptor: John M. Howard, Dept. of Surgery. RICHARD J. TORPIE D A Thalidomide in Experimental Teratogenesis in Mice. l U Preceptor: Dr. John M. Boyd, Department of Biological Chemistry. RICHARD J. TORPIE The Use of Citation Data in Writing the History of Science. Grajphic computer analysis of the bibleographies of key discoveries lea mg to Nirenberg's DNA-genetic code discovery show many linkages which agree with dependencies listed in a recent istory ofthe subject. The mechanized citation index demonstrates other important but unrec- 58 ognized discoveries and other deplendences not demonstrated in the his- posterior ortal irradiation. simulating .i rad:ati..tt iii,-fate. t i ig tm tory. The methods are useful istoric tools since they identify key mtl events. their chronology. their inter-relationships. and their relative im- i evalttidtion ot' the dogs by renal ltitictiori slttdtcs s.i:.ill .il it year alter irradiation. Preceptor' Dr. I. NK Brady portance. Published: Ivnstitute of Scientific Information of Philadelphia. 964. PAUL T. IURNIZR Deternimatton nf the .'1i'llI'L' Site of filiitagttri I ting .lfiti Ht 'r RICHARD J. TORPIE tSee Warrington. J. TJ ' Stttafi' ofthe Dying Patient and Attitudes Toward Death, An extensive review ofthe literature outlining the mechanisms by which a patient deals with his terminal illness. The attitudes ol' the patient are investigated, and also those of the phavsician, medical student, and nurs- ing staff. The terminally ill child an mental patient receive particular study. Preceptor: Dr. Jerome Karasic. Dept. o Psychiatry. NPR. AND GEORGE G, WESTERMAIN Dt'tt'rmtmttmn of tht' flt ttrt' Slit' of fNlll'tl!L'tIll L img .-It til llttirofi iii horesis. The active fraction was to be determined by aniinal bioassax CLIFFORD J. TURNER Investigation of Radiation Nephritis. The production ol' radiation nephritis in dogs was attempted by bilateral Biological Chemistry. I1 JOHN THILODORI: WARRINGTON. JR. P.-Xl l. 'IRl'N1.XN ll, li' Ulucagon. a polypeptide hy perglycemic factor til' the Pancreas. was sttla- ,lccted to acid hydrolysis and tlie fractions separated by tiiitroelcctro- llilie amino acid sequence of this fmt-tittn would then be determined utilizing the amino acid analyzer. Preceptor: Dr. Julius Schultz. Dept. or '.-Q 55.5 P. Aita D- Mellmafl P. Krasner 8: R. Pennock IT I' N lx. P+ '55 N y V- - - , .1 .IEFI-'ERY RICHARD WEINER Evaluulinn ofa New lnlravenous Cholangiographic Agent. The project was concerned with thc evaluation of a new iodide containing l.V. cholangiographic agent. The cardiovascular and renal hemodynamic effects upon administration of a therapeutic dose were observed. I 131 uptake was also evaluated in some ofthe subjects. No significant toxic effects were noted. Preceptors: Dr. Peter Siegler and Dr. John H. Nodine. Dept. of Medicine. :Y l rr-qv.,,,., -,rv Y l, l-'u-- if , af' 'f IV Il .qi A NORMAN M. WERTHER Evaluation of Peripheral Vasodilator Agents by Plethesmo raphy. Various potential peripheral vasodilator drugs were tested in humans in vivo and their beneficial clinical effects were correlated with changes in the fluid volume of the plethesmolgraph chamber. Preceptors: Dr. A. Corman and Dr. John H. Nodine, ept. of Medicine. WILLIAM I. WESTCOTT AND JACK DEVOR Living With Disease. As part of the Hahnemann television series Living with Disease the 1'- -'F Psychiatry Department contributed a panel discussion ol' Anxiety and Depression. The two summer fellows in psychiatry interviewed l00 people In determine to whom they went w en they were anxious or depressed and in tum interviewed Z0 physicians. ministers. and rabbis to tind out how they advised the anxious and depressed and compile any questions they might themselves have about psychiatry. The results of these interviews were presented to the panel ol' psychiatrists and a list of I0 do's and I0 don'ts in adnsing people who are anxious or depressed was offered to the public. The program was concluded with questions about psychiatry and mental illness directed to the panel of psychiatrists. Preceptor: Dr. Franklin West. Dept. ol' Psychiatry. GEORGE G. WESTERMAN Human In Vivo Kinetics of P6'l1I4t'IlllI1l1.X't' .4t'lll'llV Agttirixt Penicillin fi. Methicillin, and Nafcillin. The effect of penicillinase from Bacillus cereus tbleutrapeny upon the blood level of penicillin G. methicillin. and nafcillin was investigated in nine normal volunteers. The penicillins were administered by intravenous infusion at a constant rate for 4 hr. Penicillinase 1800.000 unitsj was administered intramuscularly after IBO min of penicillin infusion. Blood samples were obtained every I5 min during the 4-hr period. Microbiological assays of blood samples to determine penicillin content were performed by the cylinder plate method, and were based on antimicrobial activity against Sarcina lutea. Kinetic analysis of data was carried out by computer to determine disappearance rate constants and dilution space for each type of penicillin in each patient during the first 2 hr. These values were compared with those in the second 2 hr lafter penicillinase administrationy. Penicillin G rapidly disappeared from the blood after penicillinase injection. and remained absent or the remaining 2 hr of the experiment. Nafcillin and methicillin showed a droip in serum concentration which was less racpid. much less complete. an of shorter duration after penicillinase a ministration. Preceptor: John H. Nodine. Published: Antimicrobial Agents 81 Chemotherapy - 1964. This paper was read by invitation at: The Annual Meetinzg of The American Society for Microbiology in New York in Oct.. 196 . The Annual Meeting of the American Society for Clinical Research in Carmel, California in Jan., 1965. 41 G. Westerman . 1 1 F. Roever GEORGE G. WESTERMAN AND ROBERT A. ERSEK Cvtogenetics in Clinical Medicine. Exhi it displaying the application of Cytogenetics to Clinical Medicine. This exhibit won an award at the l965 Student American Medical Association Convention in Chicago. Preceptor: Dr. B. Kaufman. Dept. of Anatomy. GEORGE G. WESTERMAN Photography' l. Macrophotography for Dr. H. Reiman and Dr. P. Ma. Hahnemann Medical College Dept. of Public Health for paper on the Maturation of Atypical Mycobacterium. 2. Photomicrograpihy for Dr. P. Ma. Hahnemann Medical College Dept. of Pub c ealth for paper on the Colony Characteristics of Atypical Mycobacterium. 3. Photomicrog- raphy for Dr. T. Ducanes, Hahnemann Medical College De t. ofPathology for paper on Histology of Rare Tumors of Endocrine Gliands. GEORGE G. WESTERMAN Chemical Analysis of Human and Do Gastric Secretions. Preceptor: Dr. H. Appert, Dept. of Pghysiology. GEORGE G. WESTERMAN A Re-evaluation ofthe Treatment ofAa'verse Reactions to Penicillin. This paper is an analysis and review of treatment of encillin sensitivity reactions. Original insights gained from research of gie authors' is part of this article. Preceptor: Dr. A. Corman. Dept. of Medicine. GEORGE G. WESTERMAN The Psychiatric Impact Abortion. A extensive review and analysis of the indications for abortion on psychiatric grounds and the impact of an abortion on the patient. receptor: Dr. Jerome Karasic. Dept. of Psychiatry. GEORGE G. WESTERMAN Detennination of the Active Site of Glucagon Using Acid Hvdrolvsis. tSee Warrington. J. TJ GEORGE G. WESTERMAN The Essentials ofC1vtogenetics. tSee Ersek. R. AJ t .,! -alan- 'P Y fu' .rf-W5 . -'uzlff-'f 'lx 1' 'l 'TF' L , ' LZ. J' 37 a'6'1fi' I-'X A !'?,fC-1'I f1ifU,? -L: g!A f,fgJ..',,,f!, 5 'f ' Q 'Q- -'16 IiHrf'.','yli:1 ': '! If '45 ' A 'wg . 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'2' ' ,, 1 .1- iw I V.-.1 -- f .ms sy, ,L27l.!- 1, ' ,I . in , . -Q -X' I :hh h-.: -',- W AIA , , '90 ,'. - Y L O,-A x ' X- Q 1-1911 f J 5 ' . 1 ' , -zwzgi' 'f-,f, -- ' ' lp ..,w 'Y 1 . ' l.z1,.xI.:f.-1 :Lk 1 - ' w '. 1' '.24 ' xr 5 qv wp . 1 . . J., RZ .1 -- 4 . H - ' -j K-JV.-F R.. .-, . . ':'f,xn .AEWW ... g7. ' --.. ii'-,Z N- . ,- .,.'. L.. ,I ,'1j'.f-Q1 ls 1: 1 -. .'-. ., I 1 M, gn!! 22,4 St. Francis College . u M: 'If ,- fr- ,,n ., ff ,.- 3.1, ' I - . , I v'.'f1'q,,'. , , ' lf'-3 , . 1, . . 1.5 'ffl '11 - rf' , ..L. F 5 gs: j lnnfy. .- .,,, Q - 4 4 !J' .. .1 N1 , 1 's M. V Dartmouth College, B My j . .1 bf' l - 1 I -I .. M- '..'1,:Aff1I, ag .N .4 1 .Lf-A lb. ,X TQ-ff 'MA , , 5 idlylSllQQf,gk3':!':2..w,.l . . . I - .1'l-'lhmbr 'l'.l 1'.-f.. .':5 ' l- -fi'il- .9M' 'f 5'-5f:'.':.'f2W-2 'G if-I: A -A , ' , 4 ,4.5l!,.gig-Q Q A f H i.. Slwwylliiqgx 'sp . 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Lil'-us10iZiJL,lll Franklin and Marshall College, B.A. Aesculapian Society, President Student Institute Original Hahnemann City Jug Band Medical Minstrels Intramural Athletics, Chairman . ,wL':.J'5 ,w,.:..I,5' 1 1 .. , 44 , . 7-fi 1 V -' . wff .. 'Q 41.4.--....-n.p..,... - -v M' .-'. --u gp ' ff 'ffi 4,5 , naw- - ' 1g,,g'giz-' ' ' 1 ' f . 1g, -.g .4-.M f,.,:1..,s z-uf' jpg, . ., ' f'f'---'fT1:..'.: ,'f' f f , .::..Jf .Jvlf Y I: V - -.14 ' -' fl 'wha X. ' ' ' ' - , I-f-.-'r . .1f.-1,f7L-45-f,eL.w . e A , V v..-4 'f ' 1 1 ,X I rl I 'v' . If..-IJ, .llhzg 'uh 1.5 .5 , '- .. .'--V, ,UV 2. 4-f 1 vi A , is Williams College, BA Aesculapian Society X w. n N V s wh ..,4' x - - X X 1 ., ...x- X -1. .' - .. .. . . .S Lufb .YT X x X .1 lx.:- , Q n,,U.-...- . 5:2 , 1 1 K' Zffffffglmy W3 Yale University, BA. .. ' .:, ,.,. 5 if::4 1.:1,f52: A ul .. 'Inq' 1, Z.. fn ,J .,l,n::1,.-2 . ,. . ., ,,, ., A vl, 5 : .irnyv-. .'!-,f,1I!.: '-ff' A -,-f.r. MLM. ...., . I. ,, 1. if ' nv. -I f . U '- -. 1-. .. 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The Bairds The Westermans The Greenes 11 ' Q The Warringtons JT'- H , 'bf I -Q nu 'ibn :rsr- The Trybuses The Ruhnnx 155 E T 1 Y The Cummingses The Morrises The Joneses The Malees The Brookses 5-L 156 The Yecieses The FIYHHS The Peloquins The KUHPPS The Stoltzfuses The McE1ieces Eff T- -' J 157 The Freemans The Silsbys The Leaveys The Golds The Bautes The Zwibels The Roevers The Korns X Qs f The Hollises 158 The Torp The Aitas The Zuckers Q. The DeCollis The Sweatmans PCI . if 'i The ' meses 159 The Goulds The Fcrreiras Senior Candids n.'4..4-QV if' ,QI 21 5. -gl 5,6 K. lf? wfvx f ,,. ffl L. xi ,384 pnnlul ks . A. l'vs-., xi K x l Af.. dffegf... L 'D- , , 1 99 ik A ' 2 'i' L J ta 'it' PS 1 5 'ur-, p 0 Z1 EE .ns O x N . if W , 3' i y, if-Q W, fs .u, , 1. -S if Ea 1 9' 1 Q I .J S1 5 Q 4 u x E v 6 Q L A.-, ISM -M., .'7Ei..:-k.r' 'xffI-:5'6Vf-it, , ,f.Ju,.,- JH A , , . ,.- v. 'f ...4 ' J ,! fa.,1f x'-1 :.'..5'r' 1-r-vrv ur rfnqjq .-pu-wwf 1 .. ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA: Since its incelption in l902 at the University of Il- linois by Wil iam W. Root, the Alpha Omega Al- pha Honor Medical Society has elected to its membership those juniors and seniors who have established outstanding scholastic records and pro- fessional attitudes. In addition many Hahnemann alumni and faculty who have demonstrated the above principles in their day to day practice of medicine have been elected. The establishment of the Zeta Chapter at Hahnemann in 1952 was in itself a tribute to Hahnemann, since chapters are established at only those institutions which dem- onstrate the highest standards of medical educa- tion and practice. The annual A.O.A. lecture and banquet was this year, as it has been since the chapter's establishment, the culmi- nation of the year,s activities. This year Dr. Frank Glenn, Chief of Surger? at New York Hospital - Cornell Uni- versity Medica Center, was our distinguished guest speaker. 1966, however, marked an innovation in the ac- tivities ofthe Zeta Chapter. A series of dinners were held with alumni A.O.A. members in non-academic medicine as guest speakers. These dinners fostered wide-ranging discussions which were designed to give the undergradu- ate A.O.A. members an appreciation and understanding of the unique problems and rewards met in the non- academic practice of medicine. In looking to the future, it is hoped that members of A.O.A. will play a more active role in the extensive evaluation and modification of medical education that is currently being undertaken at Hahnemann. Officers: President, John Silsby, Vice-President, Robert Morrisg Secretary, Theodore Kowalyshyng Treasurer, Jo- seph DeCollig Banquet Chairman, Robert Kaine. Seniors: Richard Brooks, Albert Callie, Fred Davis, James Flynn, Sam Gould, William Peloquin, Alfred Sa- dler. Thomas Sweatman, Paul Turner, Jeffrey Wiener. Juniors: Wally Buch. Malcolm Galen, Rollin Hawley, John Wandalowski, Stephen Risen. John Silsby THE AESCHULAPIAN SOCIETY: The AESCHULAPIAN SOCIETY is the oldest society still in existence at Hahnemann. It is basically a social or- ganization which seeks to develop more meaningful inter- class and student-faculty relationships. This society holds regularly scheduled dinner meetings with interesting speakers on a variety of para-medical topics. Members are selected by men already belonging to the society, keeping in mind students who have s own inter- est in school activities as well as having maintained a re- spectful academic record. The organization consists of a out fifty students: this year,s ofiicers have been . . . Bob Hunsicker - President Don Flannigan - Vice Pres. Paul Domson - Sec.-Treasurer Dr. J. Imbriglia - Faculty Advisor Dr. F. Tropea THE CHRISTIAN MEDICAL SOCIETY: The Hahnemann Christian Medical Society is a student chapter of the National Christian Medical Society. The Society is non-denominational and exists as a profes- sional organization of physicians, dentists, and medical and dental students. The purpose of the Society is to en- courage one another in the Christian Faith and to investi- gate the spiritual implications of professional problems. n addition to a program of lectures and discussions, the s , - Hahnemann Chapter maintains a clinic in a downtown Philadelphia rescue mission. Thus, we are a service and a social organization concerning ourselves with both the problems of our profession and those of our patients. Thomas W. Sweatman, III Secretary THE STUDE T INSTITUTE: 6,1 The school year 1965-1966 saw an accelerated program of social. professional and athletic events. The 'eynote of our yearls work was to keep the Hahnemann student in- formed so that he might feel more a part of this school. Perhaps the most significant contribution along these lines was the institution of a monthly news sheet. the Impulse. Its appearance along with the Insert did much to reach our far flung compatriots. This publicity program augmented by an aggressive letter campaign did much for our successful social events which included cocktail and informal parties, picnics. niinstrel and movie nites and our black tie Blue 8: Gold dance. Our guest lecturers were among the m0Sl learned ever to haveg been Eresented to Hahnemann: our sports season now includes asketball 8: football as well as softball. 1966 was the year the Hahnemann student gained a voice in the curriculum committee. This was the year Hahne- mann became a complete honor school. Let us hope this legacy will continue on. The contribution of the Senior class did much to add to the success of our year. Mike O'Brien THE ERPE T SOCIETY: The Serpent Society is the service fraternity to the Col- lege, and is made up of Seniors, Juniors. and So ho- mores. The Society's activities include: providing students to act as guides for tours of Hahnemann, to receive digni- taries visiting our Collefge, and to act as escorts accompa- nying Hahnemann Sta members visiting undergraduate college campuses. I mb! Qlnnllt slight? uftbe During our Sophomore year. under the direction of Bob Ersek, the Serpent Society became an integral art of the College scene. In our Junior year Jerry Melchjiode took over the reins. The Serpent Society. operating at maxi- mum eiiiciency. provided tours and answered questions for almost 90075 of prospective Freshman students. ibahttemann Jltlehiral College does hereby acknowledge the efforts of by g-ranzing full membership with all the 1 privileges and abligazions mherene therein. A5G11lCYIlbCY,IUliuuPh0ld!htUddi!'l07l5d1ld A I work diligently fur the Progress of the Hahnemann. ' 'j Sw-d.. , ww ,A ,-,,,,-W., MM I - Gdunhpnnksp .. L Did. . . ,... ,.... ,,., ,. , ,,,,,,,,,,, Vinasw ,W vm,-q U, H , mug' A . , ,-1 hun . THE UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH SOCIETY On the third Wednesday in March, the Under- graduate Research Society holds its annual Re- search Day. Ten students who have been in- volved in original investigation during the preceding year are selected to present abstracts of their work from the podium to an assem- blage of faculty, guests, and fellow students. Comments and questions are entertained from both individual faculty preceptors and from the floor. Following the conclusion of this section of the program, a guest lecturer of note addresses the assembly. A banquet for the participants concludes the day's events. The Society has sought to promote student in- terest and participation in medical research. It is hoped that such direct involvement will foster an appreciation for the philosophy, technical problems, and individual effort involved in the advancement of medical science. Richard E. Freeman President Hahnemann Undergraduate Research Society Undergraduate Research Day Committee: Mark R. Levine Berwind N. Kaufmann, M.D. Alex W. Ulin, M.D. Amedeo Bondi, Ph.D. Richard Freeman John J. Spitzer, M.D. Leon Cander, M.D. K. E. Fuscaldo, Ph.D. NINETEENTH ANNUAL UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH DAY Wednesday, March l7, l965 sponsored by The Student Institute and the Alumni Association of the HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE Medical Education for National Defense .. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Fat Absorption After Pancreatic Duct Ligation Bertram B. Giulian John M. Howard, M.D. Myocardial Free Fatty Acid Oxidation in Vivo Alan N. Miller John J. Spitzer, M.D. Study of Norepinephrine Refractoriness in Endotoxic Shock and the Value of Aldosterone to Reverse this Refractoriness Donald Mellman John M. Howard, M.D. Dextran Therapy and Regional Flow in Hemorrhagic Shock Ronald D. Emkey Lewis C. Mills, M.D. lnfluence of Diuretics on Potassium Transport into Erythrocytes Bruce Bogdanolt Beniamin Calesnick, M.D. INTERMISSION Solubilities of 'l7-Ketosteroids in Water David Levenberg Gert M. Jacobsohn, Ph.D. Nicotinic Acid Biosynthesis in Clostridium Butyricium Morris Levin Albert G. Moat, Ph.D. STUDENT PRESENTATIONS 2:15 P.M. Human in Vivo Kinetics of Penicillinase Activity Against Penicillin G, Mellcicillin and Nafcillin George Westerman John Nodine, M.D. Hematologic Effects of Iniected Myeloperoxidase Nathan A. Berger Julius Schultz, Ph.D. The Effect of Cigarette Smoke on the Cilia of Cells Cultured from the Lungs of Amphibians Richard C. Ferreira Peter S. Amenta, Ph.D. INTERMISSION LECTURE 5:15 P.M. A look ut the Burn Problem Curtis Price Artz, M.D., Shrine Professor of Surgery University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Texas MEDICAL MINSTREL SHGWI The following is an objective history by a '66 Medical Minstrel: The first annual Medical Minstrel Show was held during our Sophomore year. The Class of '66 rose to the occa- sion and won going away with a skit written by Gerry Melchiode and Bob Broslow. The theme was Clinical Science Time. Award winning performances were ren- dered by Bob Gold as Uncle Donny Nathanson, John Warrington as Nurse Frankenstein, Bernie Staller as the Patient, Bob Ersek as the Dermatologist, 8a Bill Taylor as the Lab Technician. The Class of '66 again answered the clarion call in our Medical Minstrel Night is an annual event. Each class of medical students pre- pares a skit to poke fun at the faculty and staff. The faculty retaliates as best as possible Cconsidering their age, etc.j with their own questionable portrayal of the students. Junior Year when we presented another witty, sophisti- cated, musical skit. Actors who distinguished themselves on the stage that year were A1 Goldman as Lucy the Librarian, Bernie Staller as Leroy Rot the Registrar, and Bob Hunsicker as the tortured and overworked Junior O.B. student. However, due to the undying devotion of members of our class who were required to care for the sick that evening fthus lowering applause capacityj, Mr. Lease, alumni secretary and well known critic of the arts, presented first prize to a less talented but noisier Class of ,67. J. M. 1El 'Ll-.l 6 SPORTS Sports Record of Class of '66 Once upon a time. many years ago, we strode through the doors of Hahnemann as proud fresh- man, finely conditioned young men. a class of young stallions fresh from the spirited contests of collegiate athletics. Alas, two months later and twenty pounds heavier, we plodded through the halls dragging our bone boxes behind us. wheezing and pletho- ric, finding it all but impossible to struggle up the eight dark winding tlights of stairs to Pharmacol- ogy Lab. And so, the fall of the Class of '66 had begun . . . While this article is being written, we still look forward to an Intra-Mural Basketball League and another crack at the Softball Crown. Needless to say, we expect to crush any opposition that dares face us. However, after talking it over with Hard Luck Hunsicker, Disaster Davis, Mistakes Mc- Carthy, and the boys, the Class of '66 and their athletic machine are grudgingly beginning to wonder if Old Cassius might not be right when he sa s, NICE GUYS DON'T WIN BALL Y GAMES . . .! X!:!+ '!!! Robert C. Hunsicker it .. ln our weak and undernourished condition. and with some financial assistance from Dr. lmhri- glia, we banded together and gave birth to a rather modest softball league. The League worked out wellg and despite an unfortunate rec- ord of O wins and 3 losses. we looked forward to the spring of '65 with eager anticipation. As luck would have it, however. we ran into the pitching of H. Hemsley,rthe bat of T. Kowalski. et al. and wound up with another impressive record . . . 0 wins and 4 losses. With this slightly tarnished record of O and 7. we decided that maybe softball just wasn't our sport and cleverly decided to use our Sl Represen- tatives to drum up support for a football league. The plot worked well. Enthusiasm ran high: and. during the summer months of our Junior year. we secretly labored at double reverses. sharp- ening our passing attack. throwing an elbow without being caught by the Referee. all under the hysterical prodding of our beloved Coach. Knute Gould . . . Well, considering our past record. I guess we didn't do so badly. We LOST to the Freshman team by 3 points. and they were undefeated at the time. We LOST to the Sophomores by IO points, and then rallied to LOSE by l point to the Junior Squad who became the eventual League Champions . . . mumble . . . I I I 1 -eff' ' Q - . l THE ORIGINAL HAHNEMANN CITY JUG BAND Lx 'hu The Original I-Iahnemann City .lug Band represents the most recent and one of the most fascinatinv trends in American folk music. Emulating the originafiug bands which gained popularity in the Southeastern United States in the l92O's. the Hahnemann Band performs on a wide variety of authentic musical instruments and achieves a much reater degree of diversity than other currently popu- lar fOk groups which are essentially limited to only a guitar andfor banjo. This group of medical students, tfive extems attending Hahnemann Medical College in Phila- delphia plus the wife of one of the future physiciansl, creates music which is historically novel. but also excep- tionallx' good bw anx current standa rd. Tvt o members ot the Band have pertornied with wmphonx orchestras. one is it Ted Mack winner. and noncis without an cxtcnsixc musi- cal background. In addition. the group prcscnts an uncom- monly tine blend otvocal talent. original musical composi- tions. and the leader ofthe Band is an excellent prox ocatix C comedian. Vkliether you would enjoy truly novel instrumcrt.il mtisic. fine vocal harmony. thought provoking humor. or gust like good folk music: you are invited tovcotue and hear the historic. exciting Original Hahnemann City .lug Band Robert Gold and Gerri Ersek. In February of 1964, here at Hahnemann in the City of Brotherly Love, tive soph- omore medical students plus the wife of one of the future physicians decided to pool their considerable musical abilities and form a folk music group. Tongue in cheek, Gerald Melchiode, the originator of the group, proclaimed that since the finances would necessarily be very limited, the band would be a Jug Band. Jug Bands were popular in the southeastern United States in the 20's and 3055, consist- ing of poor musicians who used homemade instruments including empty jugs to achieve their unique sound. The imaginative students of medicine dubbed them- selves the Original Hahnemann City Jug Bandv and set to work constructing their instruments. The music the sextet created was not simply novelg the music was excep- tionally good by any standard. One readily understands the reason for the extraordinary quality ofthe music when he considers the musical back- ground of the individual musicians: Wash tub bass player, Bruce Bog- danoff. is a Temple University graduate who studied classical piano for over ten years. An exceptionally fine pianist, Bruce was chosen by Eugene Ormandy to appear as a guest soloist with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra. Playing the jaw harp, Robert Ersek took advantage of seven years experience playing the accordian. Bobls wife, Gerri Ersek, who played the jug in the band, played the french horn for eight years including four years of professional experience with the Charleston, West Virginia. Symphony Orchestra. Bob and Gerri are graduates of Morris Harvey College. Bruce Bogdanofl and Bob Hunsicker. BELOW LEFT: Bob Ersek and Gerald Melchiode BELOW: The band at the 2nd Fret. F' N i -au Arranging for the band and playing both guitar and banjo was Bob Gold, a fifteen year veteran of the music business at the age of 24. Bob had previously arranged for the Innkeepers of his alma mater, Ursinus College, and he was a member of a group which in 1963 won the WCAU-Second Fret Folk Contest at the Devon Horse Show. Robert Hunsicker played the kazoo for the band. Bob's previous experience was on trumpet. While a student at Franklin and Marshall College, he was a finalist in the Vil- lanova Jazz Festival in 1962 and was a Ted Mack Amateur Hour winner in 1961. Playing a most unusual wash board and leading the band was Gerald Melchiode, a St. Josephis College graduate. Gerry had nine years ex- perience on the piano, but this was over- shadowed by the fact that he was an excep- tionally fine and well-read comedian whose ever-changing intricate descriptions of the band's forthcoming numbers were no less than hilarious. Finally, added to the unique music was an uncommonly good blend of vocal talent. Each member of the band not only played, but also sang. The non-perform- ing portion of the band consisted of another medical student, George Westerman, a Stan- ford University Graduate, who functioned as business manager, photographer, and histori- an for the' band. The O.H.C.J.B. enjoyed an extremely suc- cessful two year career. The members ofthe band decided that being a medical student was a full time job and the group made their final performance at the Grand Ball of the 1965 Student American Medical Asso- ciation Convention at the Palmer House in Chicago. Medical Students Adept On Musical Instruments The 1950 Cadillac ambulance with the jug painted on its side isn't an advertisement for a home remedy, but it does have medical connections of a sort. It's the official vehicle of the Original Hahnemann City Jug Band. The band was organized last February by six sophomores at Hahnemann, Medical College. It consists of six musicians - five of the students and the wife of one of them-and a manager. Leader on Washboard Gerald Melchiode, of 5017 Fairway road, Drexel Hill, is training: Ersek was an accor- dianistg his wife played French horn with the Charleston, W. Va., Symphony, for four years and is a music teacher at Ed- dystone High Schoolg Gold, at 24, has had 15 years of musi- cal training, did arranging while a student at Ursinus Col- lege and was a member of the winning group in a fog music competition at the 1963 Devon Horse Showg and Hunsicker, a trumpet player, won a Ted Mack Amateur Hour award in 1961 and was a finalist in the Villanova Jazz Festival the fol- lowing year. th 1 d .H I l th wishggaig. e aso P ay' e As for Bogdanoff, he was Rcbert Ersek and his Wife, guest soloist with the Philadel- Gerri, of 204 E. Maryland av., phia Orchestra under Eugene Aldan, play the jaw harp and Ol'l'l'laI'1dy at the age of 12. His jug: Bruce Bogdanoff, 1303 father, Benjamin. who 0Per' Woodbine av., Penn Valley, is HECS the Sunset Pharmacy' in composer and plays the wash- Ridley TOWUSNP. 0bServeS2 tub bassg Robert Gold, of Bri-lee traded 8 34,000 baby northeast Philadelphia, also grand Piano for a 82.50 wash- does some composing and ar- tub- ranging, and plays guitar and Many Appearances banjo, and Robert Hunsicker, The Erseks spotted the am- of Allentown, is on the kazoo. bulance on a used car lot in George Westerrnan, of Cali- New Jersey and acquired it for fomia, is manager, the band's use. In addition to displaying their instrumental talents, the band members all sing. All Studied Music All have also had more?- tensiva musical training than many a jug band player. Mel- chiode had nine years of piano THE 7-BND FRET 1932 SRXHSCVEXK Fl? 1711113 lla LS-79342 -'--f J. 1 'A' ,v,r,'v- , lt! .-:nav L6 wer f'r.g1:.ul lim. 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C-.ssc is 74 ni'-I 1. 40 Qhe Evening Bulletin G PHILADELPHIA, Friday, July l0, 1964 Man About Town, in Med Students Set for Debut . OfJug Band 'W FIVE SOPHOMORE students at the Hahnemann Medical College and the wife of one ox' the future physi- cians decided last February to pool their varied-but considerable-musical talents and form a folk music group. One thing about jug bands, which are now enjoy- ing a comeback, the homemade instruments don't Cost much money. Most medical students don't have much money. So the five sophomores and the one wife became the Original Hahnemann City Jug Band. Formed originally only to play at school functions, the reputation of this jug band has moved beyond college halls, and the student music-makers have had to turn down many in- vitations to perform elsewhere. Their study load having lightened a bit, though, they will finally make their professional bow when they open a two-week engagement at The 2nd Fret next Wednesday evening. They make good sounds-all of them sing as well as play- and, despite the fact that the band is a hobby, all of them are well- trained in music and far from Gerald Melchiode amateurs in the folk music field, where so many ama- teurs abound. The originator, leader and washboard man in the group is Gerald Melchiode, a St. Joseph's College grad- uate, who studied the piano for nine years and also is an enjoyable comedian. Bruce Bogdanoff, the wash tub player, is a Temple University alumnus, who studied classical piano for l0 years and once appeared as guest soloist with the Phila- delphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy. THE MARRIAGE partners in the ensemble are Robert Ersek and his wife, Gerri. The husband, whose instrument in the band is the jaw harp, has been an accordionist for seven years, for his own pleasure. Gerri, who is studying for a PhD. in music when not handling the jug in the band, has played the French horn for eight years. including four years with the Charleston UV. VCU Symphony Orchestra. Both are graduates of Morris Hziiwex' College. Doing the arranging for the band and pliixine l-oth guitar and banjo is Bob Gold. whose alma mater is Ur- sinus College and who has 15 years in the music business. Robert Hunsicker is a trumpeter who plays kazoo in the jub band. A graduate of Franklin and Marshall College, he was a finalist in the Villanova Jazz Festival in 1962 and was a Ted Mack Amateur Hour winner the previous year. There is one non-performing member in the out- fit, George Westerman, who comes from way out West -Stanford University - and is the business manager and photographer. None of the musicians has any idea of shoving aside medical studies to become a full-fledged professional en- tertainer, despite the growing popularity of The Original Hahnemann City Jug Band. As Melchiode says, It's just a hobby with us. But we're having a lot of fun and we get a lot of satisfaction out of it, too. rl: lf 1?a nl Nu -15 1 K N? L CLASS OF 196 The half way point is passed, and now the transi- tion from sore behinds to sore feet - from aca- demic materia medica to the application of the principles we have studied for so long - from the rigid examination schedules that ruled our lives to the dynamic Flux of humanity coursing through our hospital, a transition for which we have waited impatiently and gratefully accept. The memories of the class of 67 can still be fo- cused upon the regular meeting in Class Room B and the events occurring outside this chamber of reckoning. -i YU! 21.8 X Upon entering medical school. we could not foresee the changes that lay ahead. Whether the grand entrance was made with trepidationl anticipation, or merely nonchalance, the effect of the first two weeks was universal: never had we thought so little and memorized so much. The volume of material with which we were confronted was encyclopedic, the ter- minology formidable, and the laboratories interminable. The ability to accept change is the hall- mark of the scientist and as the year pro- gressed, we learned to cope with all the various exigencies inherent in a day at medical school - a day Iilled with dis- section, anaesthetization, and over-all stress - and we approached the sophomore year with appropriate awe and an increase in non-specific resistance. Richard Mallin Hazel Weinberg .l ...N 15 THERE MUST GE A 3.67152 WAY To MAKE A Lwme I 1 1 XX '1- lf 2 f Elf , E 55 E 53 Q S ':, ,-: If 'f ,fiig V Mus ease l .nf Wfsvvtness 15 GQMC: 'N f M c-C-5 N-T O I HHS biota E'-31 'T As usual, the entering class consisted of one hundred odd students. To date, the freshmen have been in the able hands ofthe Departments of Biochemistry and Anatomy. Outstanding in the series of recent lectures has been: I Remember Michaelis and Mentenf' by Dr. Oesperg Trickery, Chicanery, and Examination Theory, by Dr. Schultz, The Power of Positive Ni- trogen Balancef, by Dr. Boyd, Danish Operation or Hormone Supplement, by Dr. Jacobsohng Meta- physical Machinations of Mitochondria? by Dr. Ei- chelg Happy Endings for Incomplete Beta Func- tions, by Dr. Koserg Diabetes is Forever,', by Dr. Milsteing Womb to Tomb, by Dr. Augustineg Mnemonic Plague, by Dr. Van Dyke, The EEG and I, by Dr. Showers, 'Through the Looking Glassf, by Dr. Amentag Kwashiorkor or Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? by Dr. Alperg Ex Nihilo Synthesis of Purines and Pyrimidinesf' by Dr. Alex- anderg and 'tPhantasmagoria of Acid-Base Balancef, by Dr. Defrates. The Class of 1969 was pleased to learn today that two months after its graduation, dor- mitory space, new laboratories, and a recreation cen- ter would be available. Football was popular this year, but most of the class preferred the indoor vari- ety of winter sports. Martin H. Savitz if Goan cfmer CHAQLQE fbllowu I I I 2223 74 f 1 . .ff , . A41-, . 'C' -nl - 7 f ,9, -, 11: 'Q 42 '7f 1, '4 6 I ?'l K P Il Q MHS We DR Y-REBS Mus? be If X THE LOST SU ER XX H -XT I DID ON MY SUMMER VACATION BE- IWEILN JUNIOR AND SENIOR YEAR IN MEDICAL SCHOOL or THE VICAR OF WAKEFIELD by Gerald A. Melchiode Man first wrote about the concept of vacation about sev- en thousand years ago in a book called Genesis. Accord- ing to this tome, man worked by the sweat of his brow for six days of the week and on the seventh day he wiped the sweat off his brow and rested. He could sit around his cave. roll his wheel down a hill, start a fire, scribble dirty pictures on his cave wall, throw a rock at a neighbor, throw a rock at a broncosaur, or just wait to get hit by lightning. The fact is. that one day out of the week he did not have to work. He just took a vacation. Furthermore, as he became more educated, he took a longer vacation. He would whip his beast of burden for fifty-one weeks out of the year, and in the fifty-second week of the year he could sit around his tent, roll his wagon down a hill, boil water in an iron pot, write dirty words on his tent flap, throw a spear at his neighbor, throw a spear at a tiger, orjust wait to get hit by a spear thrown by his neighbor. In other words, he did not have to do anything. He just took a vacation. -,-1-I Through the Industrial Revolution and into the Technical Age, man worked less and less, and took longer and lon- ger vacations. Suddenly his trend came to a grinding halt at Hahnemann Medical College when in 1964 some- one decided that the Class of '66, of which I am inciden- tally a member, should not take the usual three months vacation. Perhaps the College was operating under the old axiom that Idleness is the Devil's workshopg or perhaps in a rare benilicient mood, it decided to give us more for our mon- ey. I am not quite sure what the reason was. but I am sure of one thingg if I had been given a vacation last summer as some of my more unfortunate friends at Jefferson had been given, I might have become involved in a teenage wine gang, some kind of Peace protest, or worse than these obtained a grant or a position as a Junior Intern in some out of state Hospital to help defray the ever increasing tuition cost. Well, you might ask yourself how the College decided to occupy my time. The answer is simple. You either ex- pand an old course or invent a new course. Hahnemann did both in one swell foop. The new course was called an Elective. An Elective was defined as a course you have to take for six weeks. The student was supplied with a list of suggested courses. many of which were the same pursuits of study that were rewarded with S600 grants in the old days. tPhotographs depict a few of the choice Electivesl. Well, I was fortunate enough to spend my summer in an old course: in fact, it is an old specialty that is notoriously slow during the season. At least one half of the confer- ences were cancelled. Why? Obvously it was summer and these conferences were just not held during the summer. The majority of the Staff including the chairman of the department, all being successful men. decided to take a month's vacation. The nights on duty were best of all. Sleeping accommodations were provided for the students in the Black Hole of Calcutta. This is an enlisted men's billet located on the Hospital grounds complete with Viet Cong infiltrators and uncirculated air. This building was condemned for student nurses and therefore considered quite suitable for residents, interns and medical students. 1lH 7 ' isis-qv Flo YF if -vw? I The last month of my service was spent on afliliation. An afiiliation is an outpost on the defense perimeter of Hali- nemann. Here the heat is turned up full blast during the summer and here you are eighth assistant in the OR 7:30 A.M. rounds are conducted with all the enthusi- asm of an old housewife doing her weekend marketing. Looking back though. I found my summer to be a rich and fulfilling experience. and l am secure with the thought that I have had three more months of medical school than my less fortunate contemporaries at Jefferson. Penn. or Harvard. -4' F-'1', Perhaps one might object to a term which designates women or women's work as somehow separate. The word is certainly the product of an earlier era. Today sec- retaries, technicians, nurses, graduate students, nursing students, librarians, tele- phone operators. instructors, physicians, and medical students may be either men or women. However, at this place in time we, the medical students, find ourselves to be men with only a few charming exceptions. Therefore, operating on a strictly instinctual level without any political axe to grind we wish to praise the women among us and around us. They not only beautify our environment but they add a certain charm and delicacy to their work which makes it quite pleasantly distinct from our own labors. May we present three ofthe distaff. G. W. Miss Charlene Hill Senior Student Nursing School .-.dnui iiinwfn fs-g 5 V i fm N, 4 Miss Lois ci1liiiIlL'f 5 Medical Sccrctgiry i x D Section ui' finducrinolugy s 'hi as-4' 5 . ', ..r -6 513' i i 1 i A I Miss Sossama John ' Graduate Sludcnl if Biological Chcmietry if i i il, I if 'if' i xx 2 7 , X I W ,I 1 K X , 21 I Q, 1 uf W -'T' X gf X an ,Q J4 fr . A+ ' .' 4 vu - 'Xxx rf. ' is P-'S ','-. ' ' .mn '-.L '. .ir 366 MEDIC STAFF ' , R. Ersek G. Westerman F. Greene Dr. J. DiPa1ma Editor Editor Business M gr. Advisor L. f 1 Q J A hx. N. Berger S. Gould F. Roever G. Melchiode R. Castellanos Q' B. Torpie l R. Morris CONTRIBUTORS UK' C. Turner R. Hunsicker J. Fine A. Sadler 138 B. Staller R. Knapp ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Thelma Wilson is the author of What Have You Bought? - the free verse chosen for the theme of this volume. Mrs. Wilson is a prominent writer whose interest in medicine and medical education led her to accept in 1961 the position of Assistant Director of Pub- lic Affairs at the University of Oregon Medical School. In addition to her numerous publications in medical journals and fine maga- zines, she is the managing editor of the medical schoolls publication. What's Going On. Her empathy for the medical student and her understanding ofthe illusive meaning ofthe title Physician are ex- emplified in her writing which appears in the early pages ofthe '66 Medic. Zamsky Studios of Philadelphia was the portrait photographer. The candid photography in this volume comes from many sources. Of major importance are the contributions of F. Roever. J. Fine. R. Ersek, and G. Westerman. Division pages by G. Westerman and R. Ersek. Art work by F. Greene. 189 n Memoriam Meyer Feinstein Myer Feinstein was born and lived in Philadelphia. Early he estab- lished his interests in business and banking, and just as early entered the civic, cultural, religious, social and philanthropic streams of the community with all the exuberance and vigor with which he was endowed. His zest was matched by the breadth of his interests. He was a member of innumerable boards and committees in addi- tion to being President of the Myer Feinstein Company, of the Penn Federal Savings and Loan Association. He was also a board member of Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital and his contributions to this institution will long be remembered. So it is that we, at Hah- nemann, along with many others, mourn the loss of our friend and benefactor, Myer Feinstein. 1 1 1 N. Volney Ludwick, M.D. A 1926 graduate of Hahnemann Medical College, he devoted his en- tire life to the school and its hospital. He took his internship and resi- dency training at Hahnemann and was appointed to its faculty in 1928, rising to the rank of Professor of Radiology. He headed the Department of Therapeutic Radiology from 1924 through 1959. es- tablishing one of the first tumor clinics in the nation at Hahnemann in 1942. Dr. Ludwick was granted an honorary Doctor of Science degree by Elisabethian College in 1950. He was a Diplomat ofthe American Board of Radiology, a Fellow ofthe American College ot' Radiology. and held memberships in the Radiologic Society of North America. The Philadelphia Roentgen Society. American Medical Association. Pennsylvania Medical Society and Philadelphia County Medical Society. He was also active in both the Philadelphia and Delaware County Cancer Societies. Thus it is that we at Hahnemann and many others deeply regret the loss of Dr. Ludwick. JQ'AX f,, 4 :AC- 4 QQ all .-Q v is . .-fb fn x.. Z.. All-4.45. SKcQF Foreign Fellows Have Gone to INDIA, TANZANIA, IRAN, GUATEMALA At ho.spita1s and medical outposts abroad, medical students contribute to international understanding and goodwill by helping to provide much-needed medical services to people in developing areas ofthe world. This unusual opportunity to work and study in foreign countries is ojered to students through the Foreign Fellowships Program of Smith Kline CQ French Laboratories. Administered by the Association of American Medical Colleges, the program has enabled 180 students to work and study in more than 40 countries during the past six years. Junior and senior medical students are eligiblegfor Fellowships, which provide on the average 12 weeks, work abroad, to be completed before internship. Interested students should apply through the deans of their schools. Smith Kline di French has published an illustrated 24-page booklet telling the story of SKdZF's Foreign Fellowships Program. For your hee copy of Fellowships in Medicine, write to .' SKAZF Services Department, Smith Kline di French Laboratories, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19101. Smith Kline 8 French Laboratories , 'v '- ,AX ,,'.? r'S -Q, 1 lfqtlfy ff, Ut, ,gy I - .g 5 A I ly, Qu 5 Partners in Health . . . YOUR HOSPITAL YOUR DOCTOR BLUE CROSS and BLUE SHIELD BLUE CROSS of Greater Philadelphia Compliments of THE SAMSON LABORATORIES PHILADELPHIA 3, PA. 1619 SPRUCE STREET Modern Laboratory Service for Modern Medicine MARTIN CENTURY FARMS, INC CDivision of Lehigh Valley Dairyj Country Fresh Milk and Ice Cream General Offices - Lansdale, Pa. For Service Call - CHestnut Hill 2-2160 Evergreen 6-1234 GILBERT 81 RING SPECIALIZED PHOTOGRAPHY MEDICAL ' SCIENTIFIC - INDUSTRIAL 2006 Chancellor St. Phila. 3, Pa. ' L0 4-5633 FRANK T. SMITH APOTHECARY Filling Prescriptions Since 1926 - '!.-' 245 N. Broad St. Philadelphia, Pa. - Copposite the hospitalj L0 3-9809 Hahnemann Ext. 604 BOERICKE 81 TAFEL and BOERICKE 8: RUNYON 1011 ARCH STREET COOK-NEIMAN BUILDERS, INC Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 Manufacturing Pharmacists and Phone I-0 32430 publishers 1518 Summer Street A CQMPLETE LINE OF Philadelphia, Pa. 19102 Homeopathic Preparations, Specialities, FRESH Green Plant Tinctures and Books Bierick's Materia Medica with Repertory - 58.00 Edward P. Dolbey 81 Co., Inc. P.O. Box 7316 Phila., Pa. 19101 Serving the Medical Profession Since 1909 LABORATORY gl MEDICAL SUPPLIES We extend our best wishes tor your every success Let us continue to serve you with Microscopes, Medical Books, Diagnostic Instruments and Laboratory Reagents and Supplies in your practice. RETAIL STORE LABORATORY SUPPLIES 40th 81 Baltimore Ave. 465 Penn Street Phila., Pa. Yeadon, Pa. Phone: BAring 2-6020 Phone: GRanite 6-9300 Mail and Phone orders promptly filled. BEST WISI-IES FROM Hahnemann Book Store Shirley E. Mohn Compliments and Best Wishes from THE MERCER HGSPITAL Trenton, New Jersey Williams, Brown 8: Earle, Inc NI!-LIJICKI, - LKBORKTORX Iioi iifxiriwr ' Microscopes ' Sli-IIISVOIWS ' Diagnoslii- liquipmeiil 0 Bloml Prvssiiiw- Ifquipnwiil llli nical Ifquipment Hematology Forks Tuning Forks Pervussioii Hamm:-rs hf'l'I'Rf lrilli Ihr' fimul - Silva' 1385 WILLIAMS. BROWN 81 EARLE. Inc. 904-Qllfi CHISSTN I 'I' S'I'RI'II'IT PHILADIQLPHI 5. T. PI-IN YSYLYAXIA MEDICAL SPECIALTIES 226 No. Fifteenth St. Philadelphia, 19102 Supplies and equipment for physicians, hospitals, and laboratories. ' I .a-- j'- . g !,f 'Sx,s lf.,-...s SX tg , ' f ,p h ..4 V - A t ' f . f' 15.34 of O ff t P ' '- ' 5-Q, . EGGS FOR DUR DCG . . .in New ALPO SGRAMBLE! i d+fH1-. I . 'g M New ALPo SCRAMBLE is sow, meat, soy, eggs it ' Radiant broiled chunks of meat . . . . 'Y' ,f scrambled fresh eggs . . . nothing else. gk at V- Just these two complete protein foods, X V together in a dog food for the first timel ' f, 'A Ask your veterinarian. W' Then let your dog enjoy SCRAMBLE. I-'rom the packers of ALPO 100'Z, MEAT Dog Foods I1 Psst! Wanna buy a French post card? Jr.-s-.. fa' Q Jack may overdo it when it comes to studying, but he sure can hold his liquor . . . N V' lg ff X, ' AQ ll 1' l'IIT I!TT! '.JAcounrs london AW Town- H: Gin rg-4 Y Would you believe me if I told you that I kissed her on the first date? How about if I told you that I kissed her on the second date? How about if I told you that I just shook hands with her on the fifth date? ay. ah! 201 htm 'v Ah! Wednesday .xttcrnoon otIf X, ETSI 'GDP Tlili - mmf vo '- I 'Y .iw-4 1 1. V? When I count to three. the lady will rise from the table and tioat through the uir.,. ,..,.., H-.........1.....s.L....,. l l 1 l :ly In xuinnniry. the good uir goes in and the bud ztii gon out 9 4 After rolling around the Hoof ol' my lab all day I need a strong detergent with bleach to clean my greasy lab coats. Ladies, that's why I use super-powered Salvo in my automatic washer. WS. 1 l ,. A. ,bot , if? ff' :Il : 35 -I Qs- V' F: V - .,g, 11. gm 1 I --'Q A My motto is a simple one: Fingers, Flies, Feces. Foamites. and Philadelphia. tix Q, I - -' N, For his next ZICI Joel will put a rabbit out of his . . . 9 MKPN .4 BJ P X F W1 . H Would you believe that this woman's whole body was covered with a yellow green puxlular erup- tion? Would you believe half her body? Would you believe her leg? How about just the top ol' her foot? The friendly atmosphere of PGH is conducive to the pursuit of Medical knowledge. PGH ix the latest word in modern facilities. Edward Jenner 4 I7-1948231 5 I i l u There is a Dr. Schuster on the phone . , . he says he wants lo talk to the Phaniom'T? C .irdioiiie:aly. lit pt ririipliit iiix--,irtlf urn i nberx. tain w iit imn-, my inn Niixk lei me gi .wer :he i.i.iiin'fN Iwi one more time Non luxe ,i lw: white liiinnx uahlizl v X ' --xi -., 'qv Ciil A+inl ,Q N Nl-bv- , S l 1 X l I Dr, Dolphin is seen here demonstrating his invention the I'd read my own Pap slides, but I can't get that damn plastic cover off my mi Noseoscope. croscope. nib 'ff' f' Dr. Dolphin's Noseoscope in action. By resting his nose on Q., the eye piece the operator's eyes are free to evaluate the environment. We 1 ilu Q .N . No kiddin' an 80? commission on every lab test'?'? 'M .' ani ilu., ,E W-.:4':-41914. H Dr. Cole: Do you realize that a picture almost identical to this one appeared in last year's Medic? 204 Q' OK. Jerry and Marty will hi -Y l Y fig? L o den1w'dwe'lll'lfidlh. . K dn ry O n em Lixtcn .-Xxil. it my liurc in Ihr Nlolliiur X 1 wllfllll l 9 s i x - ' . l . I Dr. Coppola: Before we go Medic. and last year. Damn il Sonnx. wuirc ciilicr Quin: lv limi' in gr-i :lim light in the flgl1lPONlllUllUflll li.ixu in put .in ini. gpm any further, deline what you mean by picture. Hey Bcn. lislcn io llllN Tl1Cf lmw .1 new lliclor I-'l-1. the .inliBrod- Qky factor lt n1.il-in your blood run cold, 1171!--v 5 44 Compliments of OUR LADY OF LOURDES HOSPITAL Camden, New Jersey Live And Let Live William B. Kohn STANDARD OPTICAL EQUIPMENT COMPANY 233 N. Fifteenth Street Philadelphia 2, Pa. Phone: LO 3-8679 Dedicated to the continued advancement of health through drug research IVICNEIL LABORATORIES, INC. Fort Washington, Pa. pharmaceutical manufacturers SER ICE EDICI E your new credo, your constant challenge Your knowledge. skills. talents-acquired through the past long years ol' dctliuitetl study-are now to he put to the greatest test of all: SERVICE TO IXIHIJICINIC. VVyeth Laboratories is proud to be a partner in your eiuleaivor. providing you with therapeutic agents of proved merit. continually searcliing for new products and techniques to meet the ever-cliaiiging needs of modern practice. offering you the services of thoroughly trained remcsentri- X tives to fulfill the needs of your own practice. Gui' Credo. too. is Service to Medicine. Wyeth Laboratories Philadelphia, Pa. SERVICE TO MED'CINE l WF CONGRATULATIONS to the CLASS OF 1966 and WELCOME to your HAHNEMANN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Dedicated to Serving The College 0 1 ZAIVISKY STUDIOS 1007 MARKET STREET PHILADELPHIA 7, PA PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE NIEDIC 1966 Negatives of Portraits appearing in this Annual are kept on file. Photographs may be ordered. Congratulations to the CLASS OF 1966 from the sisTERs OF MERCY FITZGERALD MERCY HOSPITAL Lansdowne Avenue and Baily Road, Darby, Pa. x XNQ 'C ri THE ADAMS - LESSACK COMPANY STATIONERS College Supplies Our Speciality southeast corner 15th and Race Streets Philadelphia 2, Pa. LOcust 7-1133 LOcust 7 1134 THE ALTOONA HOSPITAL A community voluntary institution founded in 1893, with a bed capacity of 328 beds, and 40 bassinets. The hospital bed capacity is divided into four care categories: categories: Obstetrics 40 beds Medicine 84 Surgery 216 beds Pediatrics 53 beds Intensive Care 19 beds In addition to the facilities, the medical care teams of the hospital are well- supported in their efforts by a modern, well-equipped Laboratory and Blood Bank, X-ray, Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, and Anesthesia Serivice. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM The Professional education program of the Altoona Hospital is under the direc- tion of the Director of Medical Education, Dr. J. M. Stowell. The practical ex- perience is stressed at the Altoona Hospital as it is our philosophy that it is very important to follow and round out the medical education after the academic training of the university medical school. All patients in the hospital are avail- able for teaching purposes. INTERN AND RESIDENT STAFF The Hospital is approved for 12 rotating Internships and offers Residencies in Obstetrics - Gynecology, Surgery, General Practice, and Pathology. Duty sched- ules for Interns require service every third night and every third weekend. The Intern stipend is S500 a month and S300 moving allowance to cover the costs of initial moving expenses to Altoona. In addition, a uniform allowance, room and board, and adequate malpractice insurance coverage along with YMCA membership is also provided. APPLICATION PROCEDURE Appointments are made in accordance with regulations of the National Intern Matching Program. For additional information and application forms write to: Joseph M. Stowell, M.D. Director of Medical Education Altoona Hospital Altoona, Pennsylvania, 16603 ',1 B WEST JERSEY HOSPITAL HOSPITAL STATISTICS Bed Capacity - 418 Admissions - 14,020 Deliveries - 1,915 Operations - 7,477 X-Rays Cdiagnosticj - 25,098 Radioactive isotopes - 218 Pathological tests - 256,139 E.C.G. - 6,977 O.P.D. - 10,211 Q-at Emergency Ward - 15,008 Autopsies - 3771 Average patient stay - 8.8 Significantly, 197: of the general admissions are ward cases, while 447, are ward obstetrics. This obviously offers to the house staff a wide selection of cases for which they would assume responsibility. CONFERENCES I MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Radiology Medicine Journal Club Pathology - Autopsy Visiting Lecturers Basic C3 P.M.J C3 P.M.D Cmonthlyj C8 A.M.J C2 P.M.J Science C9 A.M.J Cardiac Uf0l0gy Closed circuit FM General Staff C4 P-'VU 412530 P-M-J Medical conference CMonthlyJ C12 Noonj Anesthesia Surgery Pediatrics C8 P-M-J C3 P-M-D Orthopedics C1 P-M-J Jointly with the C3 P.M.J Anesthesia Depart- Electrocardiogram ment, Jefferson C4 P.Nl.D Obstetrics - Gynecology Medical College C3230 P.M.J Tumor Clinic C12 Noonj s '1 1- itccnf' F' .Vg ' . 'NI 5 -av- ATLANTIC CITY HOSPITAL 1925 PACIFIC AVENUE ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY New Intern-Resident Building at Atlantic City Hospital. One of the First Motel-Type in U.S.A. :P l l'zrj f .iff I Af' -as 65 A f 'l . H X vp .f ' - 51.1 . .W ff -0 .. 7 ug 140.1 'ff-at-I-1 -. I I . --S ,f' ' I ONE 0F 18 APARTMENTS - COMPLETELY FURNISHED FOR SINGLE OR MARRIED INTERNS AND RESIDENTS. A.M.A. Approved for Internship A.M.A. Approved for Residencies in Medicine, Surgery 81 Pathology 360 Beds C30'Xi of which are Ward- Servicej 43,000 Clinic Visits per year. 18,750 Emergencies per year. New 15 Bed Self Care Unit PATRONS: Henry I. Perlmutter, Ph.D. Thomas K. Rathmell, M.D. Thelma G. Villanueva, M.D. Joseph S. DeFrates, Ph.D. Joseph R. DiPalma, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. H. Wendell Gray Mrs. Lucy Cooke Milton Tellem, M.D. Jack W. Cole, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. Carl A. Rilling Mr. H. Gold Dr. 8: Mrs. Donato D. Mecca Mr. 8: Mrs. Frank M. Greene, Sr. J. Stauffer Lehman, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. George B. Davis O. Ramirez-Muxo, M.D. Harry S. Weaver, Jr., M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. Wm. I. Westcott Otto F. Muller, M.D. Michael P. Brignola, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. William J. Peloquin Don E. Johnson, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Max B. Horman 8: family Daniel J. Marino, M.D. Salem Harris Lumish, M.D. William F. Kellow, M.D. William Likoff, M.D. Mr. Robert E. McCarthy, Sr. David V. Grow, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Meyer Berger Mr. 8: Mrs. Joseph Korn Franklin H. West, M.D. Benedict B. Kimmelman, D.D.S. Mayor 8: Mrs. James J. Flynn, Jr. Joseph E. Imbriglia, M.D. Berwind N. Kaufmann, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Abraham Staller Norman G. Schneeberg, M.D. R. Peachy, M.D. Axel K. Olsen, M.D. Kenneth Chalal, M.D. Gerald Chalal, M.D. B. Calesnick, M.D. Leslie Nicholas, M.D. Herbert Kean, M.D. Jerome Karasic, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Casper Devor Mr. 8: Mrs. Albert Callie, Sr. The Philadelphia Travel Agency Sheldon R. Bender, M.D. Amedeo Bondi, Ph.D. William D. Lewis, M.D. M. John Boyd, Ph.D. Frank Tropea, Jr., M.D. Philip Gerber, M.D. A. E. Pearce, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. Sidney B. Levine Dr. 8: Mrs. J. L. Fine Alex W. Ulin, M.D. Francis E. Barse, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. B. Broselow Sol Perchonock, M.D. The George W. Westerman Family Thomas F. McGarry, M.D. Mrs. Charles Linshaw Dept. of Medicine William M. Lemmon, M.D. Robert V. DeSilverio, M.D. Alfred J. Catenacci, M.D. Charles C. Wolferth, Jr., M.D. Herman S. Belmont, M.D. William A. Reishtein, M.D. Charles K. Fetterhoff, M.D. Van B. O. Hammett, M.D. Mrs. Frank A. Wilbraham 8: Family Raul Fleischmajer, M.D. Edward D. Coppola, M.D. Irena Koprowska, M.D. Domenic J. Pontarelli, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Thomas M. Holland Mr. 8: Mrs. William M. Turner Carl C. Fischer, M.D. Seymour Stein, M.D. Henry Eisner, M.D. W. Budd Wentz, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Henry F. Roever Mr. 8: Mrs. George Werther Bruce V. McFadyen, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. John R. Glassburn, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. C. J. Matthews Mr. 8: Mrs. Albert DeColli Hratch Kasparian, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Morris Zwibel Dr. 8: Mrs. Paul K. Ayars Patricia Ann Germon, M.D. Charles M. Thompson, M.D. Abels Luncheonette Mr. 8: Mrs. Manuel Costellanos Dr. 8: Mrs. Nicholas Mauriello Wilbur W. Oaks, Jr., M.D. Martin Baren, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Joseph M. Ersek Hugh D. Bennett, M.D. Daniel F. Downing, M.D. Hahnemann Alumni Assoc. CONEMAUGH VALLEY MEMORI L HOSPIT 1086 FRANKLIN STREET, X I V al JOHNSTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA I X . - 1 1 !' 'N' ,' ' . .av il' lg., 'I X x lg li u '- lg ' I ll' x '- i A fully accredited short-term general community hospital of 471 beds and 40 bassinets. The hospital is located in an industrial community of over 65,000 and serves as a medical center for a population of some 350,000 persons. Situated 70 miles east of Pittsburgh and 120 miles west of Harrisburg it is in the heart of beautiful mountain and farming country. EDUCA TIONAL PROGRAM A twelve month rotational program beginning July 1 provides diversity of experience. The intern spends two months in pediatrics, two months in obstetrics - gynecology, four months in medicine fincluding psychi- atryj and four months in surgery fincluding duty in the emergency roomli laboratory, anesthesiology and radiology experience is integrated into the total program. CONFERENCES Didactic instruction is provided by regularly scheduled conferences in Clinical Pathology, General Staff, Medicine, Obstetrics - Gynecology. Pediatrics, Radiology and Surgery. In addition, a Graduate Education institute is conducted by prominent men in the field of medicine from University facilities. CLINICAL MA TERIAL Over 16,000 in patient admissions yearly. Inpatient Diagnosis Number of Cases ' Cancer 408 Dental 165 Dermatology 36 Gynecology 776 Medicine 3,828 Neurology 225 Neurosurgery 16 Newbom 1, 195 Obstetrics 1,468 Ophthalmology 272 Orthopedics 360 Otorhinolaryngology 255 Pediatrics 3,033 Psychiatry 525 Surgery 1,746 Tuberculosis I9 fe- qi Traumatic Surgery 785 Urology 843 ' Fiscal Year July 1. 1964 - June 30, 1965 All outpatient services including clinic visits. emergency room. and out- patient diagnostic services number over 68.000 visits per year. Clinics in- cluded are: Arthritis Obstetrical Children's Cardiac Orthopedic Dental Pediatric Diabetic Surgical General Practice Tuberculosis Gynecology Timor Medical Urology Neurological FA CILITIES Included in the monthly stipend are full maintenance and uniforms. Living quarters for single interns are provided at the hospital as well as bachelor apartments. Apartments or homes. with all utilities paid. are provided married house stall' members. APPROVED RESIDENCIES Anesthesiology, Pathology and Surgical Residency appointments are made from the lntem Stafl' at Memorial Hospital and other approved hospitals. RECREA TIONAL ACTIVITIES As a community. Johnstown ofTers opportunities including concerts. trav- el and adventure lectures and films. a summer playhouse. points of his- toric interest. sports activities. and a multiplicity of social and cultural events. Tickets for many of these are available to the house staff. Mem- bership is provided in a beautiful swimming and tennis club with fine facilities for outdoor picnics for the entire family. IN VITA TION Medical students are invited to visit the hospital to discuss internship and residency training programs with the Administrator, the Director of Medical Education. Resident and intem Staff and Active Stall' members, L ,ov fs gif 5 ,I 1 je' 'K Young man with a future . . . what have you bought with the years that went before this day? What summit. gained with the interminable. irreplaceable hours is dear enough to merit the exchange? The square of' paper in your hand holds no clue . . . no whisper of' the silken hood will tell you this. Instead. the answer remains where it has always been . . . waiting. quiet as a jewel in the convolutions of' your restless mind . or clamorous. now. with a sudden joy- ous afiirmative. This is yours to find. for no man foresees the hour he will become a physician. For some students the time was long ago . . . others will know the moment . . . marrow-deep . . . at some distant rendezvous with maturity. When you find within yourself' the skill. man-given. and the purpose. God-given. fused into an incomparable in- strument of' service for those who need you - and they are countless - then you will be a physician. Then you will hold that hard and implacable jewel e the knowl- edge that fulfillment belongs to him who is needed and can meet that need. Then you will know the coin was worth the minting . . the view was worth the climb.
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