Drexel University College of Medicine - Medic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1970
Page 1 of 240
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 240 of the 1970 volume:
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Acknowledgements Epilogue ......... 4 SAMUELHAHNEMANN 1755-1843 Osler's belief that over-treatment with drugs was one of the medical er- rors of the day has often been men- tioned, and it was always one of his favorite axioms that no one individual had done more good to the medical profession than Hahnemann, whose therapeutic methods had demonstrated that the natural tendency of disease was toward recovery, provided that the patient was decently cared for, prop- erly nursed, and not over-dosed. -Sir Harvey Cushing The Hahnemann Grave Montmarte Paris, France What is a student but a lover The Hahnemann Memorial Scott Circle Washington, D.C. -:go-. -- - L -,., .,,,- L ,f--l- -.A.....- Samuel Christian Friedrich Hahnemann was born in Meissen, Saxony on April 10, 1755 and matured in a restless age. Old and established dogmas in science and philosophy were being ques- tioned and this inquiring attitude was an early habit of young Hahnemann. He was educated at Leipsic and graduated in medi- cine with honors at Erlangen in 1779. Even during his studies, he was critical with the prevailing methods of treating the sick which entailed blood letting, violent purging, induced vomiting, and intricate prescriptions. He devel- oped a concept of combatting disease by stimulating natural defenses and carefully selected single remedies by considering the symptoms and physical findings. In this way, Hahnemann forged a sweeping reform in medicine and, for many years, taught as a Professor at Leipsic where he advanced his new medical philosophy. The last years of his life were spent in Paris where he was received with great respect and where his abundant talents were recognized by royalty. He died, full of years and honors, in Paris on July 2, 1843 at the age of 89. He was buried in Montmarte and a monument to his memory was erected by his students and devoted followers. A pioneer, searching for knowledge in the practice of medicine, he directed humanity forward with creative thought and devel- oped a new concept of therapy that has had a lasting effect on medicine. This school honors him by bearing his name. . . courting a fickle mistress who ever eludes his grasp? 5 1 Bill' The student is born, not made. He defies definition, but there are three unmistakable signs by which you may recognize the genuine article . . . if' '3- t W, 5' I iff E-iff st 1 fo ,f . in t . . . an absorbing desire to know the truth, an unswerving steadfastness in its pursuit. and an open, honest heart, free from suspicion, guiie, ano' jealousy. 7 Amid the eternal heritage of sorrow and suffering our work is laid . . . Ri is M gn- ,fi 5 ,, I . Q 'S '-Q. A ,N H . '- V x- A Y 1 X m' . ' ' L '5 ' 0 ' ' , 1. . J san- , . . J . 0 Q ' ' , .' 'l 'e 1. - ' ' all 'A XM , ...li ,Q .Y -S. .. .1- i -+ ' s . . . and this eternal note ot sadness would be insupportable it the daily tragedies were not relieved by the spectacle of the heroism and devotion displayed by the actors. 9 W Nothing will sustain you more potently than the power to recognize in your humdrum routine, as perhaps it may be thought, the true poetry of life . . . :- 2 5 Q 10 Y ii W ni-9 A. I- ll ' e .. ui. . . . The poetry of the commonplace, of the ordinary man, of the plain, toil-worn woman, with their loves ano' their joys, their sorrows and their griefs. 11 DEDICATION '18 Viva ,aan Mes 'fl .f I 4 gn , . , p 'Y Pu- .fx The successful teacher is no longer on a height, pumping knowledge at high pressure into passive receptacles, but he is now a senior student anxious to help his juniors. Best wishes and congratulations on your commencement Your graduation is just a brief pause in your training. Now you go on to your internships which are really a continuation of what you have already learned in medical school, and a chance to apply this knowledge. Rather than spout a lot of rhetoric, as is the fashion on college campuses today, I would like to discuss two ideals which I hold high and which l hope you will tOO-honesty and scholarship. The first, honestyi The physician should be honest with his patients, his associates, and, most important, honest with himself Your honesty should be remarkable for its candor, and if your honesty outshines your diplomacy, so be it. Don't take the easy way out. If your honesty at times appears to be defiance, then so be it. The awareness of human fallibility which we all carry within us makes the man without honesty obnoxious to us. Know your strengths but recognize your weaknesses. Continually re-examine your work and learn from your errors. Those about you who are dishonest deserve your scorn. The other thought that I would like to express concerns schol- arship. As you take up the duties of a physician and apply the techniques which have been given to you, remember that each one of us is still an undergraduate in the school of experience, When a man thinks he has graduated, he becomes a public men- ace, regardless of what you may think or hear. Your education at Hahnemann has been a good one. The method of instruction is constantly undergoing re-evaluation and change. We hope the changes are for the better, only time will reveal if this is so. The basic foundations of a good education are yours, and I hope that you will continue to be students of the art and science of medi- cine. In the final analysis, in your accomplishments will rest the ulti- mate judgment of the greatness of Hahnemann. Thank you very much for the honor you have bestowed upon me, and I wish you fortune and success in your future endeavors. Stanley Spitzer, M.D. , , ' - ee arrskt , X 1 1970 13 1848 GADDO ONESTI, M.D. Associate Pr f ssor of Med PAUL JAY FINK, M.D. Associate Professor of Psychiatry GAUDEAMUS L5auduamus igitur, junzncs dum sumus. Ernst jurundam juuzntutzm, East mulzstam sznzftutzm, Rus hahzhit humus. G. JOHN DiGREGOF!IO, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Pharmacology U Jbaw' 'WW mg4 When a simple, earnest spirit animates a college, . . . 14 MARY JANE SHOWERS, Ph.D. JEAN MacCREIGHT, Ph.D. Professor of Anatomy WILLIAM LIKGFF, M.D., Professor of Medicine . . . there is no appreciable interval between the teacher and the taught . . . P'0'eSSO' of Mmne VINCENT ZARRO, MD., PhD. Assistant Professor of Pharmacology WILBUFR W. OAKS, MD, ANTHONY RENZI, MD, Instructor of Radiology MARSHALL KLAVAN, MD. Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology 15 During the past four years, the personal and scholastic qualities of a few of our mentors have made a lasting impression on us. The Class of Seventy wishes to thank them for their involvement in student affairs and dedicates these pages to them in appreciation of their inspiring example of academic excellence. -va V 1, ' ,!' '0 CHARLES W, SWARTZ, NLD. JOSEPH E. iMBFiici.iA, Mp., osc. RALPH A- SHAW, MD.. PHD, ' Professo ology Associate Professor of Medicine V Of Path Professor of Med'C'ne Q x W6 X kj . . both are in the same class, . . 16 ,gre AMEDEO BONDI, JR Ph D , Professor of Mrcroorology ff H .., in 'u 1' .V 1 W , W. -11 . .Q - - QI W, JEWELL L. OSTERHOLM, MD., Associate Professor of Surgery J f - J' o +fr- 'PP Q . . . the one a little more advanced than the other. Sir William Osler To my Friends and Colleagues of the Class of Seventy: A message of farewell to the graduating class should always be uplifting and filled with ideals worthy of in- spiration. I hope that my reflections will stimulate you towards an important dedication. I would like to be the first to bid you welcome to the Establishment . You may be able to stay on the per- iphery of organizations for another year or so, but ulti- mately circumstances will demand that you accept respon- sibilities and become actors as well as critics. Soon, you will be an integral part of the staff, the society, and most significantly, the profession. Our world and our lives are constantly in turmoil with new advances and with the swift dissemination of know- ledge through the air with the speed of light by radio and television. Pressures are brought to bear on decision makers by concerned individuals who often lack infor- mation and who do not have to share in the making of a judgment nor in the responsibility for the results. I submit to you that what we really lack are those people who can accept duties, who can be adaptive and flexible with their goals. I would call them actors but in reality they are doers, effective participants who can take any sys- tem and by their energy, cooperation, dedication and organizational ability make it work well. Your preparation for the practice of medicine has been a firm foundation upon which you will expand and ASSOCIATE DEAN Hugh D. Bennett, M.D. update your skills. Most of you will return in future times to tell me how you found yourself better prepared then graduates of other medical schools. The story becomes a bit monotonous from repetition, but I never cease to delight in the telling of the discovery by a physician I saw evolve from a first year student. With this preparation you can now assume the more meaningful role of being an actor. By this, I do not mean that you will have to give up any interests, participation, or dedication to causes. Quite the contrary, for I believe that the time has come for all of you to tackle the mas- sive difficulties in our society and to give your individual efforts to make certain that improvements are realized. Make these things work through dedication to your pa- tients, cooperation with your peers, implementation of new ideas, and enforcement of self-discipline. Work with the thought of the priceless aspect of each human being and his untold potentials and how you may preserve and enrich the lives of all people you may encounter. For each of you I wish health, happiness, and as much genuine success as can be won by worth. I have ob- served you mature with the skills of medicine and ac- quire that essential blend of confidence and humility so necessary in a physician. l offer my sincere congratula- tions to you upon the occasion of your graduation and perhaps our paths will cross again. Sincerely Yours, 2,126 f PRESIDENT Charles S. Cameron, M.D. To the Members of the Class of Seventy: For some years, in parting messages to the graduating classes, I have thought it important to emphasize two things. The first was the imperative to recognize the pace of change, particularly the rate at which new facts are being added to the store of knowledge, and the need to accommodate this expanding store through conti- nuing study. The second was the responsibility of the new generation of doctors to consider how they are uniqu- ely qualified to participate personally in bettering the human experience-in treating a sick community as well as a sick man. These things are no less important now than they were, but it does not seem to me in this year 1970 so necessary to restate them here, because the pace of change and the avalanche of discovery have become our daily experiences, and social disjunctions are now widely, although not universally, regarded as the fore- most challenge confronting every segment of leadership and special competence. On the occasion of your graduation, what does seem to me worthy of advice has to do with complacency- that comfortable attitude of mind which is satisfied with things as they are, which eschews involvement in, or even concern for problems not directly affecting its con- tentment and which is relatively unmindful of its capacity for savoring the wonders of its environment-an endow- ment given to a very small proportion of living things. Complacency is a sort of selfishness but I am not us- ing it in that context. I have in mind the kind of unaware- ness which cannot or does not sense tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones . An- other poet put it blithely The world is so full of a num- ber of things, l think we should all be as happy as Kings . Schweitzer called it a reverence of life. A partic- ularly moving account of deliverance from complacency was written by Hans Zinsser after he learned he had leukemia and realized his time was short. He said that from that moment of knowledge of his disease, it seemed as though all his heart felt and his senses perceived were taking on a deep autumnal tone and an increased vividness. He found that instead of being saddened, his sensitiveness to the simplest experi- ences, even for things that in other years he might hardly have noticed, was infinitely enhanced. Every- thing that went on about him or within him struck upon his heart and mind with a new and powerful resonance. Zinsser was an immensely gifted, perceptive and sen- sitive man, and l have many times thought that if so ex- traordinary an individual experiences fresh delight in merely living, only after he realized that it would soon be over, how much more constrained are most of us, less endowed with perceptive faculties, to strive for this en- riching experience consciously, purposefully. My earnest wish for you is that you will be able to shun the thrall of complacency. To have the knowledge and the skill to prevent illness, to make sick people well, and to ease the suffering of those you cannot are precious privileges, but even they do not determine the quality of one's life nor do they assure joie de vive. To each of you I offer my warm congratulations for having elected the highest of callings, for having sub- mitted gracefully to the discipline of these four years of preparation and for having finished with style. My wish for each of you is a long and noncomplacent life, rich in the satisfaction of service and of awareness. Sincerely Yours, dmusi. DEA Joseph R. DiPaIma, M.D. .4-f .A 'XX .Ziff '11 If 11.9. 11:5-E 7 L' ' . . r 1'-.J 4-rw 1 . Q. . 1 J ' A A Q -Tfif' ff :N 'lv ef . 1 if 'W if 6 5' - n Q Education is a life long process . . . Plato Dear Doctor: You are being spawned into the profession of medicine at a time when clear directions are lacking and confusion rules. The era of concen- tration on basic research which has been so pro- ductive seems to be in the process of decelera- tion. Ultra specialization and focus on hospital practice is increasing. The number and quality of private and family practice is decreasing. All are agreed that there is no logical and practical means of distributing and delivering health care to the community. Many feel that the nation is on the verge of a National Health Plan. There is one certainty. Never was the acute short- age of physicians more clearly felt. In this statistic lies your greatest opportunity and challenge. Obvi- ously, in this seller's market you will have more se- lection and a better chance to attain an important position. Will you fall victim to the unparalleled bo- nanza of all types of residency training at almost reasonable stipends? Will you divert your medical training towards industrial and administrative sine- cures? Or, resisting these temptations, will you de- vote your youthful energies to the direct care of patients in family and community practice? My crystal ball offers no clear image. A cummu- lated experience gives confidence of but one truism. You will be more successful and produc- tive than your preceptors and teachers. Indeed. if you were not, we would be disappointed. You will fulfill those potentials with which you are endowed more completely than your predecessors. Cer- tainly, some of you may become moon doctors and some of you will specialize on the pineal gland but most of you will simply practice medi- cine and bring comfort and relief to the sick and the injured. Whatever and wherever your paths may lie, our blessings and sincere good wishes are with you. Sincerely yours. H We 21 1 4 THE EST BLISI-IME T, .29 ABOVE Left: GERALD HEDJUK, M.A. Assistant Dean Center: HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL Right: CHARLES PAXSON, JR. B.S. Administrator Far Right: ROBERT HOLMES, M.D. Director of Medical Affairs BELOW Left: LEROY SCOTT, M.A., Registrar Middle-of-the-Road: LUCY COOKE, B.S. Librarian Right: CARL FISCHER, MD. President of the Alumni Association Extreme Right: HOBART REIMANN, M.D Associate Director of Medical Affairs l 1848 1970 X Q A ' Q'-4 'N w 1' K.- X I 'E 1 ae- ' KE, 4 C gm,--- I We PRE-CLINICAL YEARS The hardest conviction to get into the mind of the beginner is that the education upon which he is enl- gaged is not a college course, not can medical course, but a life course, for which the work of a few years under teachers is but a preparation. Sir William Osler .-Q . 4. 'f..Sg, x QQ . ' E ' 'lv , lg -L +' :.3S:Q1 Q .4 xx, ,ji X xA-5, M- - ' 3 ' sb? 1- ?f'.:eL1nPF-r?k'r+ ll IZ Keep Smiling JOHN VAN DYKE, P 15' tx ft 'Vi et J . m f -gl I - Jfil L. 1- 2 r v Fi t if KATHRYN FUSCALDO, PhD., The drag-On lady. Anatomy was the beginning of our systemic study of the human body and we were informed at the start that we should, above all. acquire an appreciation of it The course quickly engulfed us and filled our thoughts with strange words histology Amenta smooth muscle lslets of Langerhans Van Dyke fas- cia . . . origin . . . insertion . . . lymphat- ics .,. Showers ... pons .,. brainstem pyramidal tract spino-thalamic tract race track. The fascination of Gross Lab faded as the routine of dissection pro- gressed and the formaldehyde per- meated our clothing. Practicals were challenging anomalies the rule rather than the exception and how do you explain missing a struc- ture tagged on your own cadaver? Although much of what we had learned may have escaped us now, the appreciation of our teachers and the aroma of the labs linger on. The investigation of anatomy began our four years of study and introduced us to the realm of Medicine. hD., Alas, poor Alessio, I knew him W 1-U I V MATT JENKINS z.?,yF,s up Q Q1 L ..- PETER AMENTA, Ph.D. The singing histologist uf' Tiff 'fvou dom See iw- BERWIND KAUFMANN, Mn Chromosomes are my bag.' 26 T I v - ' A 'H f- --.QA ..,3,l-hN'.ii. --x it EDITH HURST, Ph.D. JEAN MacCREIGHT, PhD. Sorry, I don't go out with freshmen. A fine teacher and a magnificent person. 'Q-.. y 'x MARY JANE SHOWERS, Ph.D., That brain winked at me! 'I'- -We .Y ig, The spring of our freshman year brought us to biochemistry and led us off on the paths of learning Krebs cycle Cori cycle DNA ... urea ... pyruvic acid glucose ATP. Code numbers were issued so no one would know us, except Dr. DeFrates. The Silver Fox knew us be- fore the course started. Labs passed slowly trace the isotope don't spill any no, you don't need a lead shield. and be sure to come to the lab practical. Don't scream at the students, SCHULTZl We learned to trace the nitrogen in hamburger as long as you don't eat onions with it. The experiments became more exotic in the end and we all took turns showing up so the place wouldn't be totally abandoned and, besides, who else would feed the rabbits? Finally, the boys got together and kicked us upstairs to the Sophomore year. THOMAS DEVLIN, PhD What do you mean, calling Dr. Angstadt a toad? ! viii its like 21 good day at Garden State PE I xl ,V , ,V ' V 5 ' V? V- 'A . 4' if 4 - rg, ,ifwf i. 'f 2. ' ., ..1,,-f v 5 f Siem TER OESPER, PhD., How do you like my hippie glasses? F 'A 1 y -4 .4 pqjqri' ' y' Jvnmt .X ,1 uni, 5' iq' S.:- 4 I 5 H 4 ,. : .. 'Lusk 'W , Q N ? X, 6' x f M2 l,goIJ . lv ' Still ,l. 'M ,u ES, PhD., Heh! Heh! I am the Sulver Fox! uv -1 A AA . U '1r- ' ' 'VJFIPN if ' ' - 41 ' x.-J '4' . , 4:1 1 FRED PAIRENT, PhD. and JOHN BOYD, PhD. t'It's time for Mickey Mouse. HERBERT EICHEL, PhD. Damn! Even I can't understand THAT test question. ,fum V WLT! E f Q-311 J .Q m ' , in ' E E WouId you buy a used car from these men? ff K, 3 ,rf I S ' R J All right, what wise guy put a female nn here? 1, ' 'f5.,Z-0'-' . I' PAUL GEBHARDT, Sorry, we don't stock LSD. ,ea f I 1 - I inf IF' , Q . gl- fit: T 3 lik Science marches on! The spring of our first year also brought us to the realm of physiology, a study we found stimulating . . . at one millisecond intervals. The course was designed to give us a view of the research being recklessly at- tempted by Ether Diamond Jim Hubert and, of course, John C. The class again awarded the A.A. Bechtel Crappy Lecture Award to old A.A. as usual. The labs weren't much better . .. let me spin you in the chair and see if you can make it to the Logan Time to pass the gastric tube, boys boys? Say, where did they go? The real scientist could make a fudged kymograph paper look better than the real thing. Dogs cats frogs mice What! No student nurses? Oh, that's individual research! The inevi- table new vocabulary chronaxie threshold latent period . . . recruitment. . . fatigue . . .lots of fatigue. At the end, everybody showed up for the final and the staff was so happy they passed us almost immediate- ly. WILLIAM MCELROY PhD., Mother and I will grade these, 32 'ln . ' Q 6 M52 gh in ' i - A Gui, f,. hm? nr ,ff-L44 LINDA MORRIS, All the staff are over in the Bit of English. Shove it, Jack! ,f .. GI lv EVANGELOS ANGELAKOS PHD 'Emerson' For the last tnme. ho' No more penis trahsplamsh AARON BECHTEL Wish I knew what I was supposed to do with all the trash. i., i I 1 14 A toad turtle it Y 3 X SQ So that's how you put in a Foley No, I didn't make out your grades yet. Next week, I'Il get pre-eclampsiaf' 34 ns- JOHN SCOTT, Ph.D., Don't you threaten me, you young pup! HUBERT APPERT, PhD, Dapp . . . Dapp , . . uh rryetn Dapo EMERSON REED, PhD. Isn't that right, Emerson? Emerson? Emerson' - ! .1 4 4 -J 35 3 ' x w D' ' u I --.J.-. .. . , 1 F?-fb-rf' .ml V ' :FMF fb. Our journey through microbiology gave us a glance at the cultural aspects of medicine and we soon were fascinated by the manner of presentation more than by the subjects being discussed. The lecturers were friendly, even amusing, and most of it made sense to us. Amedeo proved to be a benevolent despot, ruling the class through his able-bodied henchmen Ham- mell Stelos Weidanz Crowell Landau. Labs were filled with agar and the bizarre names filled even our sleep . . . bacteria . . . antigen . . . candida adenovirus . . . VDRL . . . PPLO . . . gram positive . . . Kol- mer ... OX19 ... Pseudomonas ... rods ... cocci ... Proteus. Al Moat, the true researcher, stole the show with his treatise on arthropod-borne disease transmitted by the deer fly . . . the sand fly . . . the horse fly . . . and, of course, the bar fly. We emerged from the study with a definite educational experience and with a deeper appreciation for penicillin, syphilis, and feminine archi- tecture. r-susan- W i ' BURTON LANDAU, PhD, all viruses are guilty until proven innocent. 36 0-www-www' fu-pw-is 'E li da, --iq--...,., ... - ,,-U JAY HAMMEL, PhD. Hello, Mama? This is your son, Jay. -l ll T 'sf l ' . l Y , lf'- . E , 4 '?K'8 F5 V .-fgifxliyyrv , ., ,' ig: . Wit., ., .Q 'R fx.. 6,',1' ..u..,. Mirror, mirror, on the wall Moat has all the fun and l do all the work, iii' PETER STELOS, Ph.D. . . and malt does more than Milton can to justify God's ways to man The Hahnemann Lunch and Thigh-watcher Society , 2? fy X E ALBERT MOAT, Ph.D. I-lickw, what HicKy'? 4 I. WILLIAM WEIDANZ, PhD. Nobody loves me anymore Our sophomore year was off and galloping with days in pharmacology. The concepts of drug action and therapeutic index were drilled into weary minds along with more esoteric information such as how to mix a Mickey Finn. Suddenly, weird words were on our lips . . . diazepam . . . veratrum . . . sulfisoxazole . . . digitalis ...warfarin . . . guanethidine . . . vinblastine . . . dextro- propaxyphene hydrochloride decamethonium bro- mide . . . dihydroxy manure. The course was intricately arranged, consisting of extensive reading detailed lectures . .. seldom successful experiments .. , and bi- zarre exams with the answers arrived at by faculty vote. In the ultimate analysis, we learned at least three im- ,I portant items from all this. 13 placebo plus the power of suggestion can be amazing. 23 never volunteer for a Calesnick experiment. and 31 always prescribe using generic names so no one will know what you mean. sv 27. if fx ff Q , 4? 3 if i f 'i r l alll' ALEXANDER GERO, PhD. You mean you actually BOUGHT a copy of Drill? 1' VINCENT ZARRO, M.D. PhD. Nobody's here! What are they protesting today'? 1- 'Q 'lb rf'- 1 .vu , , S? Damn, another Ciaccuo expen ment today! Maybe I can get a grant from Michelob 41 ?', .Ag .- 1 f- '-. 3,351 n ,Qi a, . ,t-, pil lf ll Q5 Q fs ff it BENJAMIN CALESNICK, M.D. How many students died during the experiment?' - -- .,..,,,m.y:.. V, ANDREW FERKO Ph.D. There I was in a bar in Trenton last night, and this broad comes Q my ' . '-.- AT.. JOSEPH R. DiPALMA, M.D. Youse guys loin pharmacology or else! PIXIE And then Ciaccio threw his chair at me. G. JOHN DiGFtEGOF!IO, Ph.D. I suggested we hold our seminars at the Bit of English . . . and Zarro agreed! 43 XUCYFX 5' .1 ROBERT DONATO, M.D. Now for a few thousand slides F 5 Z Al 2 The Queen of Sciences, taught by the court jest- ers, fell upon us late in the Sophomore year and . enveloped us in a maze of lectures and labs. The days began with lectures and finished in endless labs where we looked at the pretty pink and blue squashed slides. The timeless maxims of the de- f partment echoed in our sleep l was called to 4 do an autopsy on de high seas I refuse to make a diagnosis on hunks of tissue don't try to understand, answer the question . . . slides cost 85.00 a piece. The court jesters, notably Alex the nasty, had us wondering if being sane and being a pathologist were mutually exclusive situations. At least we had the notes so we could read what was being mumbled . .. kodachromes . .. gross speci- mens . . . seminars. The finale was swift as Big Joe smiled upon us and let most of us become Ju- niors. Looks, like Koiwai fouled up the notes again. 3 .fl My urine gives a positive pregnancy test! f' W, it fax. T, 2 1 I . K tx lax ,. ' V-J 'T 1-x SZ 'x , . - ... WILLIAM KASHATUS, M.D. Wait until the final, then we'II see who laughs last! K ' I f I lg, I C .I 1 , I A r- x - xx Joe, your dad really screwed up the notes this time! , n .1 YS 2.2 V ' I I ' 4 i -, A-ELK og i I - !-,,T--1 N.. QL - s I WT- A 7- . . 'W' 1 We don't expect you to understand our lectures IFIENA KOPROWSKA, M.D. Leader of the Hungarian Smear Campaign. WLTON STERN' Pho. Our own Uncle Miltie Dinner is served. O W 'z ,. , E. KARL KOIWAI, MD. Time to go downstairs and feed Kashatus. 1. , E 'rw ,mf ROBERT LEARDI, M.D. EUGENE BENTLEY, M.D. Don't hand me that non-specific changes crap, Leardi! Imbriglia? Never heard of him. How am I taking Path? Right in the ear! 46 JOHN DOLPHIN, MD. PathoIogyf?, Ah, yes, the Queen of Sciences. if: L OnIy 33 slides for today. ALEXANDER NEDWICH, MD. l'm allergic to medical students. 47 I don't see it inthe book or the notes. .Ln Q A ...4 Just a few slides for the practical. R . 4 l 1 1 I X x l 'i F 0 CLINICAL YEARS Man, with all his mental and bodily anomalies-the ma- chine in order, the machine in disorder, and the task is yours to put it to rights . . . the naked, new-born infant, the artless child, the lad and the lassie just aware of the tree of knowl- edge overhead, the strong man in the pride of life, the woman with the benediction of maternity on her brow, and the aged, peaceful in the contemplation of the past. . . All through the long centuries there has been no variableness or shadow of change in the essential features of the life which is our con- templation and our care. Sir William Gsler .- - X 45. X I ,U .K x V 1 . -I v x - x X NAI S i X X 'S X. s - A 'ts X we gi bi? ,- 48 The beginning of medicine was slow and painful with 12 page history and physicals and endless days in clinic with new patients what type of pain do you have? A . . are you taking the heart pill and the water pill? what color are they? what happens after your brain starts buzzing? We soon knew what a pertinent negative meant but still wondered what a pertinent positive could be, In our eagerness, the elusive art of medicine could not remain away from us for long. Gradu- ally, we acquired the skills and judgment neces- sary to sustain us alone. A mixture of knowledge and confidence came to us and we became ex- perts in tracing lab results, X-rays, and consulta- tions. We even learned how to function in a car- diac arrest: call the CODE 99 and stay out of the way. Finally, we could write orders, manage small problems, and even make our first correct diagno- sis without assistance. HUGH BENNETT, M.D. Every Dean should know how to use a sigmoidoscope. ,,,, yi ,. 9 S T tl K , JOHN DAVIE, MD, Really, son, from a toilet seat? r 9 , A l EUGENE COODLEY, M.D. Harkl What light through yonder window breaks! '4 JosEPH cAMBEsciA, Mp. T' So you tapered steroids and started olive oil? -it 49 LEWIS C. MILLS, M.D., If you want to make a hormone-don't pay her, y .vi Q ALAN KELLERMAN, MD. Who are you calling a visiting fireman? BERNARD SEGAL, M.D. Who is this Holmes character, anyway? JOHN MOYER, M.D. and WILBUR OAKS, M.D., The real power behind the throne. STANLEY SPITZER, M.D. Do you think we should call in the Bear? -i I JO! . IN' A EDWIN POLISH, M.D., Our roving am- DANIEL MASON, M.D., Always collect your fee bassador to Graduate Hospital, with both hands. PAUL SOLNICK, MD. Passing gas for a living can be fun. - .LUJ I I I I LEONARD DREIFUS, M.D., The Wizard. 'Ax J BENHAM KAHN, MD, I think she has an anti-bagel antibody, TED OSLICK, MD. Anything Kauffman can do, I can do better! 51 ROBERT SLIFKIN, MD. and VICTOR IACOCCA, Ph.D. That's right, 41-26-33, and her phone number is . . . ,ns iff 5 , -. PETER SIGMANN, M.D. Oaks still counter-signs my orders. JAMES HUGHES, M.D. Got time for a quickie? nr ESR hr WILBUR W. OAKS, M.D. The things I do for Moyer. 52 idx f: .. 9' DAVID NAIDE, MD. I don't believe in either Digitalis or Diureticsf' -ii I 4' 'in -fy , . I if 1:-Y S -,ef ag . 4 'Wikia xv. 'Wu- 4 Q '11 , A .,, if . S5-v WILLIAM LIKOFF, NLD, LEONARD KRYSTON, MD. A teacher, a scholar, and a friend. Do you really think Fucose exists? 53 MARVIN DEFIEZIN, M.D., Kiss my ass! or 1 1- 7,' I px, I 7 ROBERT JOHNSTON, M.D. A big chest man. DONALD FISHMAN, M.D., Why do ROBERT SELLER, M.D. you think Dreifus and I are brothers? Family practice personified, 7 , W fr. ..,YA,, 1 , 5 i 1 ' i CHARLES SWARTZ, M.D. President of the Digitalis Fan Club JOSEPH URICCHIO, M.D., The Mafia sent him to me when they finished with him. 55 ISADORE BRODSKY, M.D. And, on the seventh day, I rested. xv- 4 GADDO ONESTI, M.D. Maybe we can overthrow Moyer. ,.y5.Fs, , A ,X . fs. ,-, ,NMA y M, yf-, sf e .V t il by f il- it 'l .l fl ii' ,' 1 - ,fl t t - 1,1 if i ' ' --4 .. .. A A. L 's,, . X ' .- ' 414' fx., 'x-,' M11 XJ Lf A Weird hours, sudden deliveries, long clinics, friendly nurses and stimulating seminars were the hallmarks of our rotations on obstetrics and gynecology. The routine of the day consisted of timing contractions . . . fetal heart tones . . . how many centi- meters dilated? have the bags broken? there they go! another glove faster now to the Delivery Room get dressed .. . scrub . . . saddle block . .. position .. . episiot- omy it'll never work fundus fetus APGAR umbilical cord placenta What time is it? l still don't believe it works that way. We always had the joy of filling out the charts even if we didn't deliver the child usually by memory. All things considered, the people were eager to teach the students and made great impressions on everybody. Al- though few of us will be obfgyn specialists, we will always remember most of the staff men, many of the residents, a lot of the patients, and a little obstetrics and gynecology. No Sussman, the baby is in the uleru no the stomach' .'g, -1 E f What are we supposed to do novif? GW? ' ' ' 4, 32 BRUCE MacFAYDEN, M.D. Just be careful how you laugh, mother. WouId you like one of these cute coily things? .W S MARSHALL KLAVAN, MD. What do you mean you do a 'No Hands' pelvic exam? .:' .V -, n LJ 55 F l NEIL SILVERMAN, MD. You take your pills regularly, but they keep falling out? '1 4..e l,Y .-,K GEORGE LEWIS, MD. I get ten placenta the take from the Feinstein Clinic. nf, x . L wail . A it Ye must be born again. BEATRICE TROYAN, MD., The indication for hysterectomy is the presence of a uterus, NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D. , . .X -i ' in JAMES LEE, M.D. Drop it again, Harrison, and you Hunk! ix! M. . Ki F' ,M Ye N DOMINIC PONTARELLI, M.D. Knocked up is hardly the correct medical term. 'rx SEYMOUR STEIN, M.D. Fink sends me all his successful patients. Ready, . . . Aim, . . . Fire! 59 x 'cy f x 3f5 f 4 x ,zur 4 N ,snr - .L M Our introduction to the special land of the little peo- ple consisted of social workers, clinics, public health nurses, comprehensive care, and, of course, lollipops. The schedule of immunizations, well baby examina- tions, and growth charts took up most of our time, but it was certainly enjoyable and well worth the efforts we made. Pediatrics rapidly became a totally new specialty what was enfamil with and without why not try mother's milk? always watch for the waterfall have the mother hold the child in her lap another wet diaper . . . and another ruined tie. You never realize how strong a child is until one of them hits you with your otoscope and have you ever heard breath sounds so clearly on a screaming youngster? Besides, where else in the hospital can you play tag with your patients? We may not remember the intricacies of for- mulae, the way to mix fluid replacement in the new- born, or the myriad of viruses which may cause head colds, but we will not forget the child that ran up to us crying with fear and was comforted by holding our hand. And we both knew that he had found a doctor. MARTIN BAREN, MD., Go West, Young Man. ',iLTQ ti ffld ,llllli A th dl T, Time: 3:30 P.M Place Pediatrics Clinic no er nee e. V ITAA .A i ., ,' X. M- 1 ' ' r' ,vR, 4, NV: ,v 4. . ',,p 7, gf? ,-:U ,Y . I 'I 1 , .tgv ' E , . .ll .3 .. AJ, I. 52 ' . 4 X 1 . rr SYDNEY f,LDiif1xfm!, f '.fi.j, Pie-Ciellrics clinic CEI: lie .Qnf -ddgi 'iff l.,x 0' f' fy' s 'I I K 5 . JOSEPH GARFUNKEL, M.D. Come to Harrisburg, you'Il literally love it 4 ,CX X x W +R' SUMNER ZIEGFIA, M.D. Alive and well somewhere in PGH Get me out of here' 1 X JOHN H. GUNDY, M.D. GIULIO J. BARBERO, M.D. ELEANOR SHAHEEN, M.D Why don't you guys come to clinic? You're just in time for rounds. Gary, what is an F.L.K.? ? DANIEL F. DOWNING, M.D. Smile when you say that, Doctor. GIULIO BARBERO, M.D., IAN GIBBONS, M.D., and ROBERT JOHN- STON, M.D., l'II trade you a secretary for a play therapist. . 1 , i 5 r if li J 'I I N l 41 l - 1.5. ,gulf -. Y- If I GARY MORCHOWER, M.D., An F.L.K, is a funny-looking kid, Eleanor. '945' 5 N , g q Here they come on rounds again! GERALD FENDFNCK, M-DW F And stop calling me Fuzzy! I P X g ti, K ARTHUR LIPSHUTZ, MD. What's the pediatric dose for Aspirin? JEANETTE REME, M.D., Watch out for the waterfall when you examine a pediatrics patient. f- fx . I F-,-!, X ,, . -. . , For six weeks, we explored the world of the conscious, the pre- conscious, and the unconscious as well as the id, ego, and superego. The rules of the game were established very early in our rotation don't make a slip of the tongue . .. don't yawn during the conferences aren't you interested why do you feel this way? how long have you felt this way? . . . don't you like your mother? . . . why do you resent my asking these questions? lt got so wild that asking a person why they were in the hospital wasn't easy to fathom. Keep those keys close to you drives defenses flight-of-ideas approach- avoidance . , . castrating female . . . blocking . . . I'm not crazy! ...or am l'? Be it ever so humble, there is no place like home. 1 . In 'rv I I .j . ---- ltr: 5 fggz MELWYN POSTERNACK, M.D. Welcome to the Land of Psychosis.' OSCAR WEINER, M.D. The voices told me to be a psychiatrist. Blll f ...-.-.v -'-...,. l'i'7' it 11- .. 257' url 'T' ' Ill F I F re 12:1 HERBERT WALKER, M.D. Want to trip out? MITCHELL DAVID, M.D. ,nf Well, I think I'm a Stud. Ciillijfwrilll Child SIWSIIE-r 64 HERBERT ADLER, M.D. Who are you calling a Shrink? X. ' x I F- , I A AJ Zi A . - . Q- x ev EDITH PENNEYS' MD' .The Wonder where Fink and Bennett are? VAN BUREN HAMMETT. MD- 0n'Y Casffafed men me those mls gallow decompensating AGAIN? who want to be. PERCIVAL LEVINSON, MD. PAUL JAY FINK, MD. Who called me a Toad? I got an Oscar for my performance at the Junior Comprehensive Exams' A 1? FRANKLIN WEST, M.D. and ROBERT DGSILVERIO, M.D., I SQFISG the HERMAN BELMONT, M,D. th d fingef Syndrome. Yes, Snyder, even you could be a psychiatrist. 65 The nature of the surgery game is called operating room and lots of it. Ftounds on the floor start at seven in the morning and then, sweet surprise, we put our monkey suits on and stand around and hold retractors for the next six hours while being told that this is truly an educational experience. Most of us never did figure out what was going on in the OR and few of us cared. We got to know everybody by their backs, especially the staff men because that was the only way we saw them. At the end of each case, we were allowed to cut the knots, take the patient off the table onto the cart, and then observe him in the recovery room. Funny, they never moved much in there, but we had to ob- serve them anyway. For amusement, we could specu- late on the philosophy of the department and their intrigu- ing system of recruiting residents. Fortunately, we had only six weeks to survive of this and most of us, upon leaving, swore we never would return. A few did, but there are always masochists in every crowd. r 'iV 66 Q, X Quai, CHARLES WOLFERTH, M.D. Hello, God? This is sonny. IVAN BARONOFSKY, M.D. Th-th-th-that's all, folks! PhD. SIDNEY TOBIAS, M.D. Out damned spot! l-if I' hug A Stwtch In mme Saves mme l :Tix I ,LAP HOWARD ZEIDMAN, M.D. Sorry, The Baron is definitely not in! l -x,kx ,-. ARNOLDO BENDLIN, M.D. One of my patients is a Playmate! DEMETRIUS SARIS, M.D. Ll He's really gone? U 1. '- , ' '51 ii l.--4-1 MITZI Quinto! Drop that knife! 68 ROBERT BOWER, M.D. Winner of the Battle of the Bladder - -w .JJ W, . 'Q tri A. 2 ' A 9 N ga s . X-'Y ,x n ' 'Oo' ,f 1 39 C 1 QE X .. 1' a . -:HAH -.5 .IQ . :Ihr --'7 . u w- if 1 X 1 'Z ,ll 1121 .,.,, . SL WILLIAM BLACK, M.D., First you drill a hole, then ,fer A Z' EDWARD COPPOLA, M.D. Tell me, do you like the gall bladder? ?ss if ? 5 ,Q M.-Y we S F SK . A i ... A 1 ' 5 D 'sy P ' ' If vw .sbt az 1,55 , . ALEXANDER PEARCE, M.D. Shut up, Gallow! ll 70 GUMERSINDO BLANCO, M.D. l thought YOU sutured the valve in place! 1 Tl Va THOMAS GAIN, M.D. Quint0 did WHAT? MORTON PERLMAN, M.D. I! a Al Maybe I can sell newspapers. 'c W fm' - x fy'-Q'h,1, Q PAUL JAMES, JR., M.D. VICTOR AMBRUSO, MD Six more weeks with Moscato? OsterhoIm is no jewel! 71 RADIOLOGY An independent kingdom situated on the third floor of the hospital. the radiology department is easily identified by their barium cocktails and automatic doors. Staff men, when not hiding behind lead shields, are always willing to teach inter- ested students the secrets hidden in marble vertebraes, lead pipes, filling defects, napkin rings, and scotty doggies. The corridors are consistently crowded but somehow, in all the chaos, the studies are completed. The techniques are intrigu- ing and the names inspiring arteriogram brain scan apical lordotic skull films retrograde pyelogram linear accelerator liver scan aortagram PA and lat- eral cardiac prelims inconclusive study suggest re- peat study shadow merchant. JOYCE PAIS, MD. The Kerley B girl '-li 'bmw' i i . i f I J. STAUFFER LEHMAN MILLARD CROLL, M.D. . ,, , h I d ' Damn! I told those clowns to take skull films. of Course I know W at am omg .ff ,V ,JF DFJSLUNAN 30102, , , ,,,...---so L - xx- . ' l . 1 1 '-T-.i'... - l - 'RAv RDI' il?-4 K I l it W ,my ,Q-Q ' W.: :1g,,,,g w DONALD FAUST, M.D. You mean she only came in for a wash and set? RANDOLPH TATEM, M.D. i l DEWEY HARRISON, M.D., As you can plainly see Well, that's the way the old ray goes. LUTHER BRADY, M.D. Brodsky should talk! He uses my statistics. 73 5K 1,K'.-hun' Amd-,Q 9 null' -Q KENNETH SOLL, M.D., This is dedicated to the one I Iove. GEORGE EVANS, MD. Who was that masked man? 7 vi' X NX K 11150 x 1' b3Wl W E ' ' E , ,UAN xx Arizif, Lv F Some say that whereas medicine can legitimately deal with the prolongation of life, it cannot cope with its enrichment. But it the physician is to be a social animal, he must reject this limitation, Otherwise the picture is tragic indeed, for then science is relegated to the role of robotmaker, to the building of brightly polished automata with smoothly functioning gears which permit their owners to stare eternally with vacant eyes at a world they are unable to perceive or enjoy. Louis Lasagna 'VX 4. Va-. i5,5q'v 5 Q. si '?w?ff'f? -f'-341' 'f A.. .g'X v- Q ' I M, get . , Al 3 - 4 v it . - if-f -,' J 3:-,, , .rf --Pt - V it t. f, e k ,vc 1 Swarm 3 Ek X ' - . 2 Tfif-'L5,+ 5 5 ,I , i 'Dug ki? X L if ' h 76 I' ,Y1:A ,.--- ' ' 'iw' ,PF ,... if-' ,, 'JM' 4, 1 -4- ...-. ...,.-.....-'.s.......,.........,,............-.,...,.- . . 1.31, 1 1' in! .. ,filg-:u:'xwsm:n 'A J ' ' -' f ' ' A ' lx! .N,' ,,, 1 n l I ,am Tw.QiI. R I Q tn. .2-ml A tw- -.--- U .'-.,s,..v 'x 'X. fs .31 .3 Q . rw. P lfA 5-2.53. ,gr I-.,Q'.Qo'kz9r:s411iaf-Tn I -,-A:.,.g.1fggi .:-ifAimfax- -...,f' 'NAL-1 if?- 'l 'T' KN Q 'uv' 3-'N . 5 N , A , I, A- A 'I ag ,QL -- . . i x tk 1 E 7 'f'f - 4 . lv xx sg at g e I .f - V , :fi ggi'-4 ii, . .A , 1 ,, .1 1. Q . n 1 R Ak V fa- ' ' gl--I' V A Q ol fy , Z ' Fwy: AA Q I .1 7 . 1 M 'tv 1 ! 5 KVM, I xi, , X ' x :U ' iii, ni 1 ., J r su -..rs A ARNOLD SOSLOW-Business Manager ai ROBERT SHAW-Editor-in-Chief Like every other publication, MEDIC SEVENTY is the creation of a few interested people. The myriad of activities is organized and coordinated by an editor and a business manager on whose shoulders the final responsibility for the book lies. For every word printed, thirty are written and rewritten. For every picture used. twenty are taken. The final pro- duct is MEDIC SEVENTY, a 240 page critical record of our years dis- played in pictures and prose. For those who created the book, the blank paper and the unexposed film that are the beginning of every publica- tion are the challenge of a year. The crises large and small are passed and the ultimate result, the sum total of all the separate tasks, is proudly published by a staff that knew all along that it would be worth the effort. PM Sfmt! Who in season labors best. His labors ended. has the sweetest rest. Sophocles SAMUEL HAHNEMANN-Bllthe Spirit 79 Q5 Perhaps these days of fresh- man orientation are all but for- gotten in the four years we have been here. But it was at that time that 110 anxious and curious individuals began their careers as Doctors of Medi- cine. The course of four years has brought about the mastery of the anxieties and the attain- ment of the dream. More im- portantly, we have learned to manage the difficulties in our training and acquired confi- dence in our judgment. The title Physician is one which is well deserved, t.nI'v 1 21 xflzcfe , 1 ' ' ' , 'af' 1 f' K' i 'f 1 1 I - W , -Q!! 4 '? V Q ,Q H Y ri 1966 FRESHMAN ORIENTATION 1 i 4. Q X ld At ' 1 A ' ' 1 -n ,, ' i - x gf t 4 l '. -- D , 1 I - uxs,li,1- -C'-, 1 - a : ' ' - - . - vo i ' I 4 R' ',, 'T ' s A 'Jr Q -. ' P - ji Qlfillmpx - fit V, 'fiiftf 53 X r. Q 81, ix. gin' 'L' 4 I 4 714 U I' 'i li? At the end of this seemingly timeless period, we might be- lieve that we have at last fin- ished our course. ln reality, it well said that this is beginning of our careers. The three days of Ori- entation were simply the begin- ning of the beginning. would be only the ... J. . .A I THE DISTAFF A thing of beauty is a joy forever: Its Ioveliness lncreasesg it will never pass into nothingnessg but still will keep a bower quiet for us, and a sleep full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing. Keats iff IKE g lx..-, . 5 ,,,,,-f- 4 4-S h ff '!.4n l! fllj, fgil 41113 I 1 Norman getting lunch. CANDID MGME T if '1FJ'f-f ,rm W ,r an 1 .1 4 vm MultipIe Track? Never heard of it. How do I know? It's fifty days late! 84 A 1, ' J- ,, Please don't throw up on the clean floor O G' f -wuz:-hi, ,Z ' I Theater in the Round. , l .fxx Let's put Lucy on the blacklist. I don't believe you've met my wife V j .. ' W E '. I O 5 :L .l ' A -i u iff, , V Q q iii., Fil A .i i ,i lei e It .N 5 -1-f .C ,L-' ya.-, ft. i' Q K .il',Q gi all J. I ' .. v' lf V .V 1,0-' 5 I4 .y - L L-a - ' -V if g..A.3 Y 'ny' 1 . l fp 1 . ' .216 . .- 5 . , 1 .i x-E-Q - 1 .Q -V , nl., fx. - RU'-Ji rl' 15- :fade 'L i 'V L pq , . '--.inn ff Y, .3 4 , ' 3 L, s,'.'-fZg?':.g :. ,'1-nik' :',.2s4?ff. ff -vffigggx 9- gi1l3fJi'- L ' f ' -' .- '- 1.01-A '9'-1, ' I' ' 1' ' A ' E .JQ 'qf '. 7' - Q -6-:I f 5 fwf, - 31 -1 ' '- - I ipaq' QAJL LZ. I 3 -. fu, g et - gli A: QL . L .. . Q , , gs In Y wwggnb Inf- ft I I x- '- '. -.4 I I '- ' '-7l '?7'fi-T ' I-T'-zzqi. ,Vi ' i f-2134, ttf-fffii ,.,. ,. it :Eg-Z! Al: M51- bk.,-ytqpii is-!f?..w.fl'g.,.Q ,- n, - ZW.-AI' 'a-.H ' f. . - ' .L- A A if. J 4 -'T-'Qi'-Q I i 'S . 1 I LQFQM3-E 'Q' .95 1 I - r11:'f.g??fwfa4t s-'n Si, rn .. 'R W I-I-.nie ai ,3 may ', 5, 1.11 JN ',::, , :3iz1f-iY fv'- 'M..QA. Q, -.,?g ,'-?5EfE.qgL5ii1jf,,,, '5g1':, . . -' E ' ' if lp. I , Q -,gc ' ' , - ---.4'rv-v- Q 'V' -Q I I Mighty Casey in action lu pf 41-1' I My last chart and it's only 12:3O. I I I I I, I Wy Q No, I'm serious. The babe comes out the vagina. 86 , I -4 Nurse in native costume. .gaa - ,--q:v-- 1 rip!! You're full of crap, Marv! 45' I I I i Z' Enovid takes the worry out of being close. Your money or your Iife! Well, we killed the experiment. Now what? i vu '+- U x f 'sQ ' Calesnicks Chamber of Horrors I . Ruth, why don't you shut up! - 3 9 1 1 Q ' 3 5 Clin 1 Q l l f rw,-f -N' n I 'xl ,g? i M- ' Don't kiss me, l'lI turn into a prince. . 'Leif -4511, X Well . . . You are what you eat! IN RMATION YSIS l Farewell to Hahnemann Gothic. --A large Foley can-l be THAT large-- I I l 1 i Look, I run this place! If you don't like it, leave! no V .- -Hg .Lt ff I Z-P -1 R gf' . You think YOU have a credibility gap, Dick? '11 ' 15' fx 'f,a+.:.-s 2 , Av. . l I So Ron scored on hei'? KC Since when does Moyer have to countersign Oaks' orders? IK 1 fn. ,if aw 1 7 O --4 J Did Brodsky try to walk on water AGAIN? gg 'Q i S k The Pill is a No-No! F D L A ?.es 0 P VE L Wlogtfi ,Qin 7 SQUARE I it-'fn C ff' , ' B 2,- lug g.,,'15+ i .. -fi - '--wiii - -. x .- - . You can get anything you want . . .' Lfllll l HLNCE SCHEDULE ill! 211133 ,S THURSDAY N .4 .l ., ,.,. , . v FRIDAY s su V NGSPTYN. Qi-1 How's my little brother doing 0 UPI l-Ulm! 'Vlliflllu . uxuwtmlo l ' as 4, rr' 5 4, muon: vt Z 4,1 . , ,..,,. at 71' L' ,4 ' . .1 l ' of ' - 19 ,li ' 7' X, The original Hahnemann Toads. 2-if , . 5kx:.i:f.4 5 Tony Quinto is my brother! 90 -W' ff' ,Q 5 E, ,f , f5?Z4iw'?' Q I' 5 f 4 f 'S .galff N at ,.f .I. , , f f ' P 'ny 4 ' ' .4-'.. ff 's Ot W, 4.5. 4 MQ bl' O. R. PERSONNEL ONLY N PROPER ATTIR - T UNDERCLASSMEN l I Xf'lN:fiNi ' 0 www Yr Yrs Wf Rf Ngr wf - fl ea ---V gi xv y X N 5 iN 5 if l elf sfo e I S. You can all become good students, a few may become great students, and now and again one of you will be found who does easily and well what others cannot do at all, or can do very badly. . . and that is an excellent defini- tion ofa genius. Sir William Osler 93 If you cannot find the Ultimo-branchial body, drop back ten and punt. ' w , if 1 . gf' A A I 1. n fr, ...X J' ,, C J! 2,1 Q fa 1 f 1 2 1 Zi .,,i 54 ,ff 5 :LP Is that what a cervix looks like? Q. fit ii r has-nn' E, .A A' '.aiie:t,L.,....,.1.fi:a,,----' e Z fiif' Urelationships. . . Iymphatics. . . appreciation . . .fascia. . . manure! lr ti' Q- - fr 'G -1. , 'yi' KEN ANSELMI STAN ASKIN STEVE BINNICK JOE BIRNBAUM DON BLOCK ROD BOWERS DAN BOYLE HANK BROCKINGTON ROGER BROTMAN GERRY BROWN BERNIE BRowNsrEnN 5 I BOB BURR MIKE BUSKY JOHN CAMPBELL FRANK CAPOBIANCO f ROY CARHART ' BOB CEC: RICK CHANDLER JIM CHEPKO RON CODARIO STU COOLER ELOR CORTESE BARRY CUTLER LOU D'AMICO - JUDY DANIELS GEORGE DAVIS in TONY DITULLIO RON DONELSON ALEX DOUGLASS CARL DUNCAN LEON DURA NICK DZEBOLO x BRUCE EIDELSON aw. EMANUEL ELEENBEIN RAY ENDRENY JIM ERDAHL CHUCK EVERHART I--4 la- , EXW: fb 1 ,,4 -5 Q 6 ' I I I Hey, who transplanted this heart? The Bearded Prophet of Doom 95 FRESHME SAM FAGER MIKE FEINBERG BERNIE FELDMAN MARK FISHER DAVE FITTINGOFF TONY FUNARO BOB GOODMAN WAYNE GREENE JOE HAGAN STU HAMEROFF GORDON HARPER JUDY HARTNER LISA HAWKINS DAN HENSELL ED HESS DEBBIE HIRTZ JACK HUSE JIM JAGEMAN MARK JEWETT BOB JOHNSTON AL JONES FRED KANTER RICH KAPLAN BILL KAPLAN LEN KRAJEWSKI MARC LANGMAN GLENN LAU ANDY LEVIN GIL LIPSHUTZ DAVE LUSCHINI DAVE MALISH BILL MANNELLA EARL MARMAR JANE MAXWELL BOB MCOUEEN AL MELTZER DAN MIHALYI AL MILLER ERIC MILLINER PAT NAHORMEK JIM NELSON RICH NEWBOLD JOEL PARLIMENT TOM PENDERS PAM PRETE RICH RATNER JOE REICHMAN LARRY RICCI CRAIG ROSS GLENN SCHROYER STU SHIKORA AL SHOLOMSKAS JOHN SIEROCKI JOHN SNODGRASS AL SPANGLER AL SPEES EUNICE STANFIELD JULIE STAUFFER RON STRAUB VIC TACCONELLI ROGER THORNE PAUL TROUP BILL UFFNER GERARD VERNOSE PAUL WAIBEL AL WASSERMAN DAN WATERMAN MEL WATSON ERWIN WEBER ROBER WEINER KEN WEISS KURT WENDELYN ARNIE WIGLE DAVE WOLLNER GOERGE WOOD DAN WRIGHT DAVE ZAJANO MARK ZIBELMAN They can't ask that on a quiz, xx, F A 4 9.1 .,X 4 NI fl - .,..-.M ,,,,,...svw V ' ,wwf X .- l Prince Valiant I tell you, that slide is moving! 6' 'Whb ,., tx-in I X J A nice Bod and not a bad cadaver too, 5... A A I X Q Q 2 Q -.-f Hi, Big BOy! All right, what the hell is THAT? Q Y P ' x L, my Q - ' fi. QT ' A f f -if it I . Q Q H 2 -1 9 A ff A : V '- X x., A2 . ..-f- ' il r ' L .3- 1 ,- 7' And then you tenors sing HaIIeIujah ! 97 J LQ 5 5, 1 H ff t J 'x 2 by 1 9' f-X Hey! Calesnick needs volunteers for a contraceptive study! N-4 ..-. Say, what the hell are we supposed to do? X ', . F i I -1-1 10 -MMM .1 f? 3 f 0 ,Q 'x Another infusion of Scotch and water 5 t N., N. .-t. X' V L Ig 2 - Wonder if I can fudge the experiment? , Q 1 f ifill 3 .wa x -A-H i . ,X V-wlmwia a Q ' ' ' , .. You idiot! You put the IV in the dorsal vein! ' '21 SOPHO CRES George Arom George Andrews Greg Asnis Phyllis Baer Steve Baer Tom Baker Clay Barclay Roy Berkowitz Rich Bishop Roger Bitar Poni Bolinger Mike Bolognese Bill Boucher Rob Bronstein Bob Carpenter Joe Carver Herb Cherry Carl Citron Larry Clinton Lenny Cohn Joe Colandonato Rich Coleman Hank Conroe Wil! COOK Joe Corvasce Ed Comer Anne Cusack Hank Conroe Bruce Demchick Marv Dodek i Al'D,bmsky , A Peter Eisenberg Ken Emkeyun John E-riders Ginny Eftinger 'Ne'ii'.Fagan ' Carl Fischer How Floch Jim Gabroy Al Gaisin John Gastaldo Tom Gindhart Judy Gouldin Barry Green Harry Hirsch Gary Hirschberg Joe Humenik Warren lsreal Bob Joynes Lou Kandl Ted Katz Helen Keith David Kelsen How Kerpen Dave Kistler Neil Klein Bob Lally Carl Levitsky Jerry Lindauer Steve Losben ROD Lutz Mike Mandarino Ester Mascaro Holly Mayerson Mike McGirr Ed McLaughlin John Melbourne Mel Melnick John Mendola Jerry Miley Frank Milgrim Karen Maura Jim Morgan Fred Myers Ed Nardell Tom Nary Matt Naythons Denny Novack Bob Pendrak Al Pusnik Al Radotf Les Reiner Carlos Restivo Rich Reutter Bob Rinaldi Emory Robinson Mike Robinson John Rosenberg Stan Rubin Mike Rudnick Sharon Romm Joel Sands Barry Saul Jay Schamberg David Schrarer Neil Schwartz Chuck Scipione Ellie Seller Harry Senekjian Rob Seto Gene Shippen Bill Sivitz Jim Slovak Dan Smuro John Sommer Bob Speigel Marty Steinfeld Bruce Tapper Bob Teears Chris Thomas Dave Tinkelman Gary Veith Bob Wagner Cliff Ward Frank Weirman Rhoda Weisburg Gene Zenone Fran Zonay Bill Zurhellen not Sf f . uuaunm 'if l 2? 2:5 gi Then Ferko started to hustle my date w L. te :gL..-- ,f Y E5 V U . . 1 , D Screw it! ,,f' . ,f .l.- .Ar .' .-. g - ou. '- . , ,, . 3'e Veg Q-f. 1-25:2 figs' '.v xl. . ff . 5 Haw 'f 'F ffl? . it A, 'S 6 vw -' Another type of score 100 Will the real Guru Whs- Say ah! Q 2 5 1 i . Y ky please stand up? Swan Lake Act 2, scene 3 Ili un. Quick! Call a Code! Who is this DiPaIma character? l Ht 1 Y . L. T, Ve haf vays of making you taIk! ff , .Ll Q .. 91-'W ,-a '-' , ' t a ,if ,,,,',.ziavQiat - -W Q ' ' V' lr , ,i ,2' , ,x , . .- ga A - -. P4 .. f ' - M ' , ' - .ff 'i ' J +,'i,'d 2, fu U- N np- 31' Mfg: Maybe we should have challenged the Nurses. 5- turf' and then Quinto came in with a knife . . ' 5 1 Why is the patient hiding under the bed? 4- X gf L X tr si LEE ABBEY ED ARENSON STEVE BABIC STEVE BARRON OLLIE BATES JOE BECKER JOE BEDNAREK MARK BERGER GEORGETTA BIDWELL BOB BLACK ED BLEEDEN MIKE BLESHMAN HARRY BREMER ERIC BURKETT PAT CAMODY TONY CAMPO HANK CANTON DICK CARLSON PAUL CASS JERRY CHECK CRAIG CHILDS AL CICCIARELLI JANET CONNELL PAT CONVERY PAT COYNE DUANE DAVIS FRANK DeLUCA ALAIN DERASSE A IOR JOHN DEVENNEY MARTY EICHELBERGER BOB ENCK RICK ERVIN RON FEIGIN STEVE FIELD TED FINK HOWIE FRANK IRV FRANKLIN AL GAMBROY RICH GAMBESCIA FRANK GAMZA CAROL GIANNITTI STAN GOLDMAN HERB GOODHEART JIM GOSPER MIKE GOTTHELF BARRY GRAHAM LOWELL GREENWALD GLORIA GRZYBICKI BOB HALE WARD HEINRICH BOB HERSHKOWITZ LEE HERTZ ORIE KALTENBAUGH SHELLY KARASICK GEORGE KIRKPATRICK BILL KNOX CLARK KOPYCINSKI GARY KRAMER PEG KRAYBILL LARRY KRON BOB KUHNS STEVE LAFFEY ED LAMON FORREST LANG HARRY LESSIG BRUCE LEVY LEN LICHTENFELD TOM LISTON JIM MacFADYEN STEVE MACHINTON STEVE MATARAZZO JIM MCCOLE ED MCMAHON CHUCK MEYER RICK MEYER MIKE MILES GERRY MILLER LEE MILLER MAYER MINTZ FRED MURRAY RALPH NAZZARO JOHN O'NEAL BILL POIRIER MARK PRAGER MEL RICHTER MIKE ROCK LARRY ROSSI MIL RUDDELL VANDIM SCHALDENKO JOHN SCHANTZ FRED SCHIFFER JIM SHAMES JAY SICHERMAN RON SNYDER AL SOLTYS CAL STAFFORD JON STEN MEL TONKON BILL TRACHTENBERG JOHN TUMOIA MIKE VERGARE DEAN WASSERMAN JIM WATSON JEFF WEIDIG STEVE WEINBERG RICK WEISMER ARMAND WOHL JACK ZAHNISER Sleeping Beauty, 1971 style. -r f X: f. 1 f X A A ,Il 'I ' ' ll fl X- . Keep those balls moving! I' :f 1. 104 BEFORE En 15. DURING i I, L ll K. AFTER I 5 THE CLASS OF E TY Luv' 4 . v-1,.,.', . ie. v 2,4-4.-0 . ' 'Latif- 'x ,,, -? ' ' ,f,'ii,1f. V.. f' V V ,Q A A Y ' 1 '5lM91'Hft V17 -'a ,- 7'-1. u x. f- Wig 1 f , wf ' -f . ' .' My --1 1 ' ,J 3 . ,'g,..' . ..1, ,:A f , ' A ' Y 5' 5 -rye ,1 'f 'W' :'4.7fZ'355l3'1L'-. - 4:'Jr-'lfnfi ,'- :fir f ,' ,nf w.,,.- ,- 11?-1-+L: .'I.L,E-'H , - 1- A ' : -. - , ' ' ii-. , A , , 1, . , 106 -S' ' 41 I 1 i llll1 1 4.-- flu ,', Sszyilxxfs ami 4 -wlf,sm.,1n:, W, is-vTa'1 rs if 1- Q-'f WH' .v N-1, .nf . ,532 fa' ' all To each one of you the practice of medicine will be very much as you make it- to one a worry, a care, a perpetual annoyance: to an- other, a daily joy and a life of as much happi- ness and usefulness as can well fall to the lot of man. In the student spirit you can best ful- fill the high mission of our noble calling-in his humility, conscious of weakness, while seeking strength, in his confidence, knowing the power, while recognizing the limitations of his art, in his pride in the glorious heri- tage from which the greatest gifts to man have been derlved,' and in his sure and cer- tain hope that the future holds for us far richer blessings than the past. Sir William Osler 107 . .4 . kg? ,419-we 5... Q7 Q54 JAJZZL Gary K. Arthur M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania St. Joseph's College B.S. , W fl ar 15 fig. 64164--' 4 .g , -' seg'-' 39 L T9 .15 V Courtney F. Baker M.D. in Fair Haven, New Jersey Brown University B.S. hum., up f ir- ,gf 3' Dfowffff Z KMAZQ. Donald E. Barilla M.D. Slatington, Pennsylvania St. Joseph's College B.S. 110 in mwfwi Lloyd E. Barron II MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Fairleigh Dickinson University BS life! E -p F-321 ., NS' .17 Til' , ,je.er v -V -' Q-wgwfzf, ffill 1 I i 7 ,. .- vql,-,Jeff - i ' i ,i -. , f , , if 0 f -'. ,. gif. X -A jg . 'yy ' :?Iff. f John A. Baxter lVl.D. Sayre, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College AB. CHM Q.Bf.,is1 x'3iIFV' Allan G. Beck MD. Waterford, New Jersey Muhlenberg College B.S. lilQ9ee2eQ urn, Ninn' 400099 ons. L an al r 1 -mifpifwff 5956214 , J M- f Norman N. Bein M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania St. Joseph's College B.S. I ,,,., nj 'i Herbert M. Bergman Bronx, New York MD Brooklyn College B.S. ' 115 . , gl wh' ,, ' ' N, 'YQ --. 5 ,, ,. V' 1 ':',.-A' X' :V....-' .jan Q J: Q ' ..'f x Im.- 1':,a.' ir f -M. -1- - 9 .,, x 4 mv-' Q' ...- 3:.xTx Daniel F. Bevilacqua NLD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University 116 fir ,,gf,Wf, P. ,gwgfmfsk Frank P. Bonikowski M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania A.B. 117 fvv Mvkwhugwwpl Charles Theodore Bonos III M.D. North Hills, Pennsylvania Ursinus College B.S. 118 llBNN,J 'Nu- George G. Brackin MD. Glenside, Pennsylvania Ursinus College B.S. University of Pennsylvania MS. yd 1 Q 1 'L-.. QM of 4-oi 'iw u sp 3:45:55 4,71 7 y, P is ff ,srraf fb-E S. .V J , tu.. f- N. ., . Phillip S. Brackin IVI D Jenkintown, Pennsylvania Ursinus College B S University of Pennsylvania M S M17 J QQMW 'Q- X 3' Sq,-,N Wi is tl Vincent D. Bradley MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania St. Joseph's College AB. Muff I .A- fx Q-I' 5s. Phillip Kenneth Brownstein M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania B.A. whiff 753 . 'Vg-Fave-19 v-H3921 14 1.4 F 'Y iv Y' Jay Kenneth Brubaker MD. Mount Joy, Pennsylvania Goshen College B.A. 123 MMM, Samuel D. Bruttomesso M.D Torrington, Connecticut Yale University B.A. 124 t V QL f - J! .4 4: I I 1 .QXMQM QOWW, J. Chriss Cancro MD. New Hyde Park, New York State University of New York B.A g, i il, Richard D. Capriotti M.D. Altoona, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh B.S 126 P 27 l -. ' . t fT fT ' ' ,,, -1. ,,, , - . w 1 ,. , :--Kelli? f'f 1 , -1 I-9,.S? E fu ' r'-'if 7 ' .1:.al. U 5,4 ,.' My . l A l 'P ' , b . 7,5156 . . John P. Carey, Jr. MD. Villanova, Pennsylvania St. Joseplfs College BS K i Bohdan Cehelyk MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania A.B . R-. Kerry A. Citrin lVl.D. Portland, Maine Dartmouth College AB. 45 XMQ4., Daniel Cole lVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Johns Hopkins University B.A. ZMZZZ, QV ' w 'V 2 ., i fxiilx,-. 'f 5 4:2 ,Qi 37I H V V 1 1 -l'74'if4 i , f fffvzs P ,f.,i.pQ-, ff:-ii ' 1e:s,gg,,-gi S s , . . i ,L 'Q ' A , '.?'-,NYJ .. .'X., f ': 'Y 2' QM , vhilsg 216422 iii! .'f'.':4:,,' s P f f 15252 b . .JK ' I -5 H21 Wh: JW 14, Gino A. Consigliere M.D. Jackson Heights, New York St. John's University B.S. .f EM!! Frederick Donald Coopey IVl.D. Hazleton, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University B.S 132 Y' - '- in 5 1,2 C209 Joan L. Davis M.D. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania Dickinson College B.S. 133 I' 7i,i1?3 f ef A.. nl 'l' K Dem! Charles Kenneth Detwiler, Jr. M.D. Pittsford, New York Dickinson College B.S. qi my ' 9, P ...Ax W rl X'll',:'.O .fy A., It Ifvh QW .: ix, ' 542, ,, M 'ig 'ffqf -2 'h if J frfgg -' , 5 i i Q xZ32C ,j,Q,j :fe fbi-' H :.ff'3 :,' Q .-if-.gk x l vwf- 5 w .5li' X y sa- fin N, , if 5 . Y Lawrence Dinenberg MD, Margate, New Jersey University of Pennsylvania ?M.-Q :df 1 EL -. ni4....g vo 9 H7 Michael A. Evans NLD. Wy Bronx, New York ' Amherst College A.B. f,F L-I V 'Q' if Gregory John Fulcniero MD. Newry, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh BS. yfzewzgg is-1' Glenn H. Gallow lVI.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania New York University B.A. Qjliwwj' if in-...--'Fl MM? M, Harry A. Glassman M.D. Flydal, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College AB. 139 'w if e 'NN ff Cflfgfwf Kenneth W. Graf MD. Devon, Pennsylvania Notre Dame University B.S. ' Jonathan F. Hahn MD. Scarsdale, New York M Amherst College B.A. 'lv fad W iG.,,,,wQZc Su Carroll Hain MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Dickinson College B.A. 142 Walter L. Harrison MD. Malverne, New York Dartmouth College BA. 1. !z4l,.,,,g,,.., l Victor Emanuel lacovoni IVl.D. Broomall, Pennsylvania West Chester State College B.A. www ZMJ o,,,,, i I f it Joseph E. Imbriglia MD. Wynnewood, Pennsylvania Georgetown University . P xl Ai Q -Q Wulf IU!- R.. 4 , 55 l i l u r Aa Q- h-nw.-.... -nno.-4vs1,..,,, ,M- Thomas A. Javian Jr. lVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College B.S. Tffmfwwqf fviowlf l 'A I 'V Q.. :W fm? Wi Kathleen J. Julg MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Chestnut Hill College BS. Lana Prince Kenig M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania A.B. 4 W-,,.,-4 www Alan Kenneth Ketover MD. Norwich, Connecticut Boston University AB. University of Pennsylvania MS. Ya' JW Jeffrey S. Kezis M.D. Farmingdale, New Jersey Rutgers University B.A. 'M -1. pa , 4-f. .i 111. 7 ifiiei ,.,f,, Q x h 31 ' f I.. ...F 5 f 3 Thomas Soo Kim MD. ,X Y. . , Qi Norristown, Pennsylvania pie. -g Franklin and Marshall College BS. e g- ' , -...Tl ' I E, ' 5- '51 1- f it -rs: g-.f av 4' j j P ' - F L I -'Q 5 'Q I .. . - ' 'q .' ji Q lx X ,Q ' 1' D4 'Cl- 'OO f l ...-.4 wi Jeffry I. Komins lVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Villanova University glgflng Agfomib ff' .1-vi' 7.: Charles Allen Kosove MD, L Philadelphia, Pennsylvania it Y Pennsylvania State University BS. 1.75 X ff e .-'V' yr fgamg 7 S. David Krimins M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania St. John's College B.A. Johns Hopkins University IVl.A. a, Mwef K 1 55 Douglas M. Lanes MD. Hudson, Massachusetts Bowdoin College AB. Alexander Lewis Ill M.D. Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvania Ursinus College B.S. I -4 I 15-v-f 1 56 E.. .4 W , Edward Michael Lipski MD Philadelphia, Pennsylvania La Salle College B.A. 3 Louise Marie Lisi M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University B.A. 6 x 158 wav, Preston R. Lotz MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Urslnus College BS. ipfwqliiw Z. 2. Q 'tw' aff . .-B 96' 1-1 4 'T 9.- , vp',c1,,.'f 1 'lem '.'-.'f, 1 6' John D. Lucey IVl.D. Staten Island New York 'jfTyf1T,g4L-Q Georgetown University A B V f-nu' .fy 4' Theodore Joseph Matulewicz MD Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University BS 'if F I 'firing grin if if N 5 ' Michael Matus IVLD. East Orange, New Jersey Rutgers University B.A. ff zwzwffwe 5 .u-ng lg, I wwvgwgw Mae H. Meltzer MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Swarthmore College AB. C7 if-fwff Robert G. Meltzer M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Dickinson College B.S. i , 911 iff Stephen E. Mitteldorf MD. West Englewood, New Jersey Rutgers University AB. 165 I.j. ' 4' H ' . ' 1 2. Sylvester L. lvlobley M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Cheyney State College B.S. qi.. Anthony F. Moscato MD. Hollis, New York Fordham University B.A. , 17 gl, . . 1- In X 'WF Elf - X 12,-, ' ifzkff-f 'P ' 1: QFQJT'-Af7 X Kenneth L. Mummert MD. York, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University B.S X 'Sur Norman Mutcnnick MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University AB. N01-wxafn IVI MQWMJ4 gf'-39 1' 2 Robert Michael McClellan lVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College B.S. R . l fl f Q2 Ylfl 'W C, in Nancy McEnerney M.D. Bala-Cynwyd, Pennsylvania Villanova University B.S. 171 7Qi1 :JJ , k 'k, X WWA James I. Nlclvlillen M.D. Meadville, Pennsylvania Allegheny College B.S. 172 , . J ' p:?!:, 'Q'-X 9 is f , J 1 WE M' I' N71wmr,w Thomas S. Newmark M.D. New Castle, Pennsylvania University of Michigan AB. 173 'lg-iq vi pk? 1 ,t,s55f.' J ., f if-f' -Z OVQNQQQWG Charles J. Olney M.D. Amsterdam, New York Hamilton College B.A. University of Pennsylvania lVl.S 174 12 1. 5 i '. v ri? , 3 ',.l,J'g .5 ' L. Thomas J. Parente Jr. MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh B.A. It Donald Petroski MD. Bridgeport, New Jersey University of Delaware B.A. 0.M0,Q Q,aiIw1a,Q X... Helmut Jack Pynel MD. Fair Lawn, New Jersey Seton Hall University BA. fixture 614 W Geoffrey P. Fladoff lVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College A.B . .3 -A-,r ,ru 7+ Jerald H. Ratner MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University B.A. 179 lv CP. fig' MMM eh Howard B. Reiser M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University B.A. X XXX - X X ,lx AY? Qs 4 -C1 Pi QQ A L? xy.. Pa, r. ,'. 7 - ,QL 5. 'rg 1 l r 'f - y, WMM XQWLGQ Michael Rhodes MD. Lewistown, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University BS. 1 -L 8 Jife-yd' Stanley E. Richter M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College B.S. 2 2-3- iff f' 2 fr Ty. , 1, Q? A , f xg' 5 5' N . vv, -f' 1 Stephen V. Fiigberg MD. f Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Albright College BS. gf' 4 ' f 'ir '-reg, -1. 'inf-ef-:-Q-'v' 1 Y. yy ,, 2: vw- r. ' n, 1. . , -. , 1,3 . James B. Rondina IVI.D. Plymouth, Pennsylvania Kings College BS. ff Z3 Y Eric Paul Rosen MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University B.A. 3' if-apx.. H .1 Stanley A. Rosenberg MD. Haddonfield, New Jersey Villanova University B.S. in fi my-f-' .ainvefh- F. 1 V gv ?mW5,. I 5' .11 . G -VY , ' 7 fiiywv Elliot M. Rudnitzky MD Linden, New Jersey Yeshiva University B.A. if A22 , Aww Robert G. Sanford II MD. Somerville, New Jersey Lafayette College A.B. 188 if X if Q! I' YJ xx!! if' AJ 1' 1494 Dfw Lyle T. Saylor MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ursinus College l3.S. 189 1 C. Richard Schott M.D. Lebanon, Pennsylvania Lebanon Valley College 190 .L Robert Shaw MD. Goshen, New Jersey Ursinus College B.S. UMM on f ' . Edward Daniel Sivak MD. Erie, Pennsylvania Gannon College B.A. 'Awww F V' Y - .JHYKVL . 6 Y, .Y 9 9 N on 'J w , .L ,. Q, . , ,,.,,.. 'Wav ' 1 -,, , AEA.: u ,, . 1 Y ly ' ,fm . , I , 1, o A 4' 0 'f M M' A 0 A GK 5 1 N and Robert Skversky lVl.D. Melrose Park, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University B A 1 Y 4' I, , vv ' QUE U ,I , , - - ve' .fam 4- . '51 nf ,-QV' Roger M. Smith M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Miami University AB. My Wi Snack ga.-1: i fC? Elliot L. Snyder lVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University BA. li FM, 1 ,:' ,AL 1 . ,-,l 7 ,,,. f-M2 -5 -b-7 ' ,I '. - Ye W ,s 4 f 'V 4 3- A 7. 1 1, 1 w is 1 . 15 Arnold R. Soslow IVl.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania B.S. 196 5, 1 A l Kjkfuo Lawrence Paul Straub MD. Kew Gardens, New York City College of New York B.S. 197 . is VM? Mark N. Sussman lVl.D. '1- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University A.B. 198 .2-'in Michael Swank IVl.D. Frackville, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University 199 A .f.l v -:Z , 1'-. 5. ' lu: 1-. ' 'N . If Q . ,. . k ,Y .tvlh 21' L ' - 'M' .g sf? ' A. ' V .fw ' .fl , f, .f G . X ,A 1 ff' VVS ,A Q.: 4b. -:J 'rl WW!! 'if Y , l i i, T' v Donald B. Symanowicz NLD. Reading, Pennsylvania Albright College B.S. 200 'Nix Frank G. Twardzik MD. Shenandoah, Pennsylvania La Salle College BA. We wil? . . 5 QI I ' -'W' - , 1 -l. .l, l'J U i-,,. YY --.U :. IL: -r -A Yi V ,. .1 x . ' -3 x h K... b- .af 215:32 ,a 1- sf .' Q, 'I .,...,.. ou -. --..-iE,, ,,.. - - 1 , . r I Theodore W. Uroskie MD. Ashland, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh BS. WLQWMMJM Jack Van Campen MD. Ravenna, Ohio Ohio Wesleyan University B.A didn., in B 6 . ,' 5 A . if-1 9 2' Alan Weingrad MD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Brandeis University B.A. 1271 1,4 , f -f -X.-S if Glen N. Wheeler M.D. West Chester, Pennsylvania University of Delaware BS. 205 'hiv' Qaaffaff Alan S. Zakuto M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University B.A. -...L -'f--4 .puff kg-E HMM Lee Seitz Zelley MD. Norristown, Pennsylvania Ursinus College B.S. 207 'V I' X Gilbert L. Zuckerman NLD. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Albright College B.S. 208 TI-IE OATH GF HIPPOCRATES I swear by Apollo the physician, and Aesculapius, and Health, and All-heal, and all the gods and goddesses, that, according to my ability and judgment, I will keep this Oath and this stipulation -to reckon him who taught me this Art equally dear to me as my parents, to share my substances with him, and relieve his neces- sities if required, to look upon his offspring in the same footing as my own brothers, and to teach them this art, if they shall wish to learn it, without fee or stipulation, and that by precept, lecture, and every other mode of instruction, I will impart a knowledge of the Art to my own sons, and those of my teachers, and to disci- ples bound by a stipulation and oath according to the law of med- icine, but to none others. I will follow that system of regimen which, according to my ability and judgment, I consider for the benefit of my patients, and to abstain from whatever is deleteri- ous and mischievous. I will give no deadly medicine to any it asked, nor suggest any such counsel, and in like manner I will not give to a woman a pessary to produce abortion. With purity and with holiness I will pass my life and practice my Art. I will not cut persons laboring under the stone, but will leave this to be done by men who are practitioners of this work. Into whatever houses I enter, I will go into them for the benefit of the sick, and will ab- stain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption, and further, from the seduction of females or males, of freemen or slaves. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice, or not in connection with it, I see or hear, in the life of men, which ought not to be spoken abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such sould be kept secret. While I continue to keep this Oath unviolated, may it be granted to me to enjoy life and the practice of the Art, respected by all men. in all times! But should I trespass and violate this Oath, may the reverse be my lot! 209 61114 112 1 gi I ' ' L ' . f n! , - .,,A f I QE MRS. C. F. ADAMS DR. 84 MRS. ELLSWORTH BAKER MR. 84 MRS. JOHN BARILLA MR. 84 MRS. LLOYD B. BARRON MR. Cgl, MRS. S. BERGMAN MRS. HELEN BONIKOWSKI MR. 84 MRS VINCENT D. BRADLEY MR. 84 MRS JOHN BORIS MR. 84 MRS. BERNARD B. BROWNSTEIN MR. 84 MRS PAUL N. BRUBAKER MR. 84 MRS SAMUEL R. BRUTTOMESSO MR. 84 MRS LOUIS CANCRO MR. 84 MRS JOHN CAPRIOTTI MR. 84 MRS JOHN CAREY MRS. BARBARA CEHELYK MR. 84 MRS. MURRAY CITRIN MR. 84 MRS ABE COLE MR. 84 MRS E. CONSIGLIERE MR. 84 MRS. HAROLD DAVIS MR. 84 MRS. BRUCE M. DONALDSON DR. 84 MRS. SAMUEL DINENBERG MR. 84 MRS. MILES FISHER MR. 84 MRS JOHN P. FULCHERIO MRS. HENRIETTA HERMAN MR. 84 MRS. MAX GALLOW MR. 84 MRS. EDWIN GLASSMAN MR. 84 MRS. ANDREW E. GRAF MR. 84 MRS. VICTOR S. IACOVONNI DR. 84 MRS. JOSEPH IMBRIGLIA MR. 84 MRS. LOUIS JULG MR. 84 MRS. RICHARD K. KEISER BRIG. GENERAL 84 MRS. J. M. KENDERDINE DR. 84 MRS. I. JOEL KENIG MR. 84 MRS MR. 84 MRS. DR. 84 MRS. MR. 84 MRS MR. 84 MRS. MR. 84 MRS DR. 84 MRS. MR. 84 MRS. MR. 84 MRS. MAX L. KETOVER NATHAN KEZIS DAVID KOMINS HERMAN KOSOVE SAMUEL KRIMINS FRANK LEVINE ALFRED LISI SIDNEY MAGDULE MALCOLM MAKLEY KA 32136 210 MR. 84 MRS. THEODORE J . MATULEWICZ DR. 84 MRS. FRANK MATUS MR. 84 MRS. W. R. MCCLELLAN MR. 84 MRS. JOHN MCENERNEY MRS. IDA MITTLEDORF DR. 84 MRS. DAVID MELTZER MRS. MINNIE MOBLEY MRS. CARMELA MOSCATO MR. 84 MRS. JACK MUTCHNICK MRS. JULIUS I. NEWMARK MR. 84 MRS. FREDERICK NORMAN MRS. SIMON PEPPER MRS. NELLIE PETROSKI MR. 84 MRS. H. J. PYHEL DR. 84 MRS. CLIFFORD RATNER MR. 84 MRS. JULIUS REISER DR. 84 MRS. LUTHER V. RHODES MRS. HOWARD RIECK DR. 84 MRS. ISAAC RIGBERG MR. 84 MRS. J. RICCIUTI MR. 84 MRS. MAURICE RICHTER MR. 84 MRS. BENJAMIN RONDINA MR. 84 MRS. LAWRENCE ROSE DR. 84 MRS. HYMAN ROSENBERG MR. 84 MRS. ROBERT RUDNITZKY MR. 84 MRS. SOLOMON SANDLER DR. 84 MRS. M. E. SANFORD MR. 84 MRS CHARLES L. SCHOTT MRS. KATHRYN SHAW DR. 84 MRS. MICHAEL V. SIVAK DR. 84 MRS. NORMAN J . SKVERSKY MR. 84 MRS. GLENWOOD SMITH MR. 84 MRS. HYMAN SNYDER MR. 84 MRS HARRY SOSLOW MR. 84 MRS IRVING SUSSMAN MR. 84 MRS PETER J . SWANK MR. 84 MRS FRANK TWARDZIK MR. 84 MRS. ANDREW G. UROSKIE MR. 84 MRS. SAMUEL ZAKUTO MR. 84 MRS. GEORGE W. ZELLEY MR. 84 MRS. LOUIS ZUCKERMAN WAU W I I I IE - ' JULES ABRAMS, PH.D. GEORGE ADAMS, M.D. EVANGELOS ANGELOKOS, M.D., PH.D. GUILIO J. BARBERO, M.D. MRS. JEAN BARR HERMAN S. BELMONT, M.D. SHELDON BENDER, M.D. HUGH D. BENNETT, M.D. EUGENE BRECHER, M.D. BENJAMIN CALESNICK, M.D. CHARLES S. CAMERON, M.D. ALFRED CATENACCI, M.D. KENNETH CHALAL, M.D. EDWARD I. CIACCIO, PH.D. EUGENE COODLEY, M.D. LUCY COOKE, B.A. EDWARD COPPOLA, M.D. ANDRE CORMAN, M.D. THEODORE DeCONNA, M.D. ROBERT DCSILVERIO, M.D. THOMAS DEVLIN, PH.D. LEONARD S. DREIFUS, M.D. CARL FISHER, M.D. PAUL J. FINK, M.D. RAUL FLEISCHMAJER, M.D. JOSEPH GAMBESCIA, M.D. BENJAMIN GLASPEY, M.D. VICTOR IACOCCA, PH.D. JOHN JAKABLIN, M.D. WILLIAM KASHATUS, M.D. KWAN EUN KIM, M.D. LEON KAUFFMAN, M.D. RODANTHI C. KITRIDOU, M.D. MARSHALL KLAVAN, M.D. EICHI KARL KOIWAI, M.D. IRENA KOPROWSKA, M.D. JAMES H. LEE, M.D. 2 GEORGE LEWIS, JR., M.D. WILLIAM LIKOFF, M.D. BRUCE V. MacFAYDEN, M.D. HENRY MAGUIRE, M.D. LEWIS C. MILLS, M.D. JOHN H. MOYER, III, M.D. DAVID NAIDE, M.D. ALEXANDER NEDWICH, M.D. LESLIE NICHOLAS, M.D. HENRY NICHOLS, M.D. WILBUR W. OAKS, M.D. AXEL K. OLSEN, M.D. GADDO ONESTI, M.D. FREDERICK PARENT, PH.D. NEWLIN F. PAXSON, M.D. MORTON PERLMAN, M.D. ALEXANDER PEARCE, M.D. DOMENIC PONTARELLI, M.D. LOUISE SANDLER, PH.D. DEMETRIUS SARIS, M.D. VICTOR P. SATINSKY, M.D. BERNARD SEGAL, M.D. ELEANOR SHAHEEN, M.D. RALPH SHAW, M.D., PH.D. JOHN G. SHINN, M.D. WELLAND SHORT, M.D. MARY JANE SHOWERS, PH.D. PETER SIGMANN, M.D. NEIL SILVERMAN, M.D. STANLEY SPITZER, M.D. CHARLES SWARTZ, M.D. J. ELLIS TURNER, M.D. SYDNEY WALDMAN, M.D. OSCAR WIENER, M.D. CHARLES C. WOLFRETH, JR., M D VINCENT ZARRO. M.D.. PH.D ST. LUKE'S HOSPITAL, BETHLEHEM PENNA. Qu... 500 Beds SIG:-4 ' f 'fy ,Q X X F,-'az ,, ., - A H -4 ' ,- wif-Vp '- 3.74 gm, ...-gm, M- ,, 4 .. -Rotating Internships with Majors in Medicine and Surgery -Approved Residencies in General Surgery, Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Pathology -Full-Time Chiefs in Medicine, Surgery, and Pathology -Affiliation with Jefferson Medical College FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, WR'TE OR CALL Office of Medical Director St. Luke's Hospital, Bethlehem, Penna. 18015 215-867-3991 212 Q -...,. BEST WISHES TO THE GRADUATES HAHNEMANN BOOK STORE SHIRLEY E. Mol-IN, MANAGER 11056 Wai J, mmm I MEDICAL SPECIALTIES COMPANY 226 NORTH 15TH STREET PHILADELPHIA PA 19102 Sppl dEq p tf Phy H ptl dLb t One of the chief defects in our plan of education in this country is that we give too much attention to developing the memory and too little to developing the mindg we lay too much stress on acquiring knowledge and too little on the wise application of knowledge. I William J. Mayo, ivip. DEPARTMENT OF RADIOLOGY DIAGNOSTIC AND THERAPEUTIC RADIOLOGY 214 CONGRATULATICNS AND BEST wlsl-:Es CROZER-CHESTER MEDICAL CENTER CCNGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES DEPARTMENT OF PATHOLOGY ANATOMIC PATHOLOGY, CLINICAL PATHOLOGY, CYTOLOGY is . . the man of science in searching for the truth must ever be guided by the cold logic of facts, and be animated by scientific imagination . . . William J. Mayo, M.D. CONEMAUGH VALLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL William H. Beute M.D. l James S. Burgbacher M.D. George A. Crawford Charles G. Gegick James F. Mayhew lVI.D. M.D. IVl.D. -iv ,. Oscar L. Mullis Jr. Dennis R. Mychak Leslie J. Schultzel Eugene R. Zehren M.D. M.D. M.D. M.D. jfgrzifrzaizr in Weaitla ., Q ., aefs s ita a, 6333? ca n was j CD and Q of Swarm yglaiiarietfplaia Congratulations to the CLASS OF 1970 and Welcome to your HAHNEMANN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Carl C. Fischer, M.D. '28 Michael P. Brignola, M.D. '45 Board Chairman President Ernie Leiss Executive Secretary 218 4 -4 GRADUATE EDUCATION AT ATLANTIC CITY HOSPITAL 352 Beds Emergency Rooms Staffed by Full-Time Physicians Emphasis on Acute Illness Active Ward Service and Out-Patient Department 15 Internships-Flexible Program Residency Programs in Internal Medicine, General Surgery, Radiology, and Pathology CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES INDUSTRIAL AIR-CCNDITIONING AND REFRIGERATING CCJRPORATION 4640 LARGE STREET PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA 219 METHCDIST HCSPITAL fl thi J J ,......:: irlll .- K I ..... -Cyp' 1 Q vu i x ty v . , . R , l i I X l 2 , iz ' 1 - ,, . .llllll , W 1 . . , -',X,,,,!, t . , , , , ,4 A 3' L -..ly w:!lf'f 2 I . .HA ' AF' 1 . ,, 5 - 1 y 1 L Q , 'A u 1 . A , , V - ' If 'Lf , .ff fW 4 Ziff I, , as-. , V, ,, 1 ,.- , , .3 . I ',, , .fl ,at 54 1,41 if ' ,Q up K 'K 4: , ,f , l' . iff Q C ' . f f 1 ' 'lja' ' ' in . 3 ,air Ar 5 ' :,:, , I . A , . 5. :JA gf i1 131 : 5 ' ,' ' ' , ' . 1. 0 1 , gif, K ,E , 2. W. ', V 5 it-f - . 'v f ' 1 . ll --- , 4 'L let there be education in medicine commensurate with instruc- tion, let the young physician be sound in the fundamentals, so that he may see his problem as it is, and his duty to himself, his patients, and the science of medicine. . A Progressive and Modern Institution Charles H. Mayo, M.D Major Affiliation with Jefferson Medical College and Hospital 250 Beds Extensive Out-Patient Clinic Well-Staffed and Equipped Emergency Room Service Internships-Flexible Programs Rotating with Major Experiences in Medicine, Surgery, Obstetric-Gynecology Residency Training Programs in Surgery and Obstetric-Gynecology For Additional Information, Contact- INTERNSHIP-Director of Medical Education RESIDENCY-Obstetric-Gynecology - Wesley W. Bare, M.D. Surgery - John J. De Tuerk, M.D. 220 WARMEST CONGRATULATIONS DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE Once you start studying medicine, you never get through with it. Charles H. Mayo, IVI.D. . . . lf there is a sixth sense, it is intuition, that instinctive summing up of memories and other evidences collected by the special senses and correlated in man's consciousness. William J. IVlayo, Nl.D. COMPLIMENTS OF NAZARETH HOSPITAL Fully Accredited by the American Hospital Association and American Medical Association. Rotating Internships Available Residencies in Surgery, Internal Medicine, Radiology, and Pathology COMPLIMENTS AND BEST WISHES HAMOT HOSPITAL Erie, Pennsylvania ORGANIZED 1881 I Approved by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals and the Council on Medical Education I and Hospitals for Intern and Resident Training. 221 772 Bed General Hospital, expanding to 900. 'EW Classic and Flexible Rotating Internships with up to eight months in major field: straight Surgical Internship. WWE Residencies in Medicine. Pediatrics, Radiology and Surgery. W? Sound Educational Program in the Setting of a Superior Community Hospital. WY Major Affiliation with I-Iahneniann Medical College. 'Wi Generous Stipend and Fringes. W3 Attractive. Friendly Community Come and Visit Us. THE LARGEST TEACHING CENTER IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA Vital Signs: 440 Beds 40 Bed Psychiatric Unit 40 Bassinets EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS: 16 Internships-Rotating -Elective- RESIDENCIES IN- Surgery-4 Yrs. Family Practice-3 Yrs. Ob-Gyn-3 Yrs. Pathology-4 Yrs. br Qltonna iiaospital ALTOONA IS A PROSPEROUS AND PROGRESSIVE -f COMMUNITY is 'UIQJQLA THE MEDICAL STAFF I .1 :EE I ' 1 INCLUDES PHYSICIANS lx ' CERTIFIED IN ALL X, pf, g D gg SPECIALTIES. FOR INFORMATION WRITE: Philip W. Hoovler, M.D. Director of Medical Education The Altoona Hospital Altoona, Penna. 16603 PHONE: 814-944-0811 HOUSE STAFF SALARIES: Interns-S 9,600 Residents-510,800 to 514,400 Plus Rental Allowances of S150!mo., Insurance Coverage and Maintenance. Full Time Emergency Service COME AND SEE US! Available Added Attractions-Skiing-Blue Knob, Hunting, Fishing, Symphony and Theatre Group Ealmaivi 59. Eoibey 66 Ca., 3926. P.O. BOX 7316 PHILADELPHIA, PA. l9l0l Serving the Medical Profession since 1909 LABORATORY AND MEDICAL SUPPLIES We extend our best wishes for 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 and Baltimore Ave. 465 Penn Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19104 Yeadon, Pa. Phone: BAring 2-6020 Phone: SH 8-8600 Mail and Phone Orders Promptly Filled 223 . . no physician, in so far as he is a physician, considers his own good in whatever he prescribes, but the good of his patient, for the true physician is also a ruler having the human body as a subject, and is not a mere moneymakerf' Plato, The Republic MERCY HQSPITAL 1400 LOCUST STREET PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA A PROGRESSIVE AND MODERN INSTITUTION INTERNSHIPS-Rotating and Straight Medicine RESIDENCIES-Anesthesiology, Surgery, Obstetrics-Gynecology, Medicine, Neurosurgery, Ophthalmology, Urology, Pathology, Radiology, Otolaryngology. CONGRATULATIONS MONMOUTH MEDICAL CENTER The scientist does not study nature because it is useful, he studies it because he delights in it, and he delights in it because it is beautiful. Henri Poincave C1854-19125 Medicine is a collection of uncertain prescriptions, the results of which, taken together, are more fatal than useful to mankind. Water. air, cleanliness are the chief articles in my pharmacopoeia. Napoleon Bonaparte at St. Helena DEPARTMENT CF PHARMACCLOGY 224 OIHIN lBt lISlE.ll..lI.YnNc. 5939311.13535 Nil T113 HIT? ilikilllixllqkllll Church Home and Hospital Baltimore, Maryland A unique opportunity to obtain superior quality training for clinical practice Internships: Rotating, Medical, Surgical Residencies: Medicine, Surgery, Ob-Gyn 2.5 For information, write to: Director of Medical Education Church Home and Hospital As f g Baltimore, Maryland 21231 W NX --,, 5 I X - EIL gg - CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST OF LUCK May the knowledge and skills of the class of 1970 always be used for the betterment of mankind . . . DEPARTMENT OF OBSTETRICS-GYNECOLOGY WARMEST OONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES. The science of life is a superb and dazzlingly lighted hall which may be reached only by passing through a long and ghastly kitchen. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOPHYSICS 225 Patients worry over the beginning of an illness: Doctors worry over its end. CHINESE PROVERB DEPARTMENT OF MICROBIOLOGY In science the credit goes to the man who convinces the world, not to the man to whom the idea first occurs. SIR WILLIAM OSLER, M.D. DEPARTMENT 0F ANATOMY BLBSRT SIFISTSIN MSDICBL CENTER Voluntary, non-profit 1,000-bed community medical center in two divisions- Northern Division, York 81 Tabor Rds., and Samuel H. Daroff Division, 5th and Reed Sts.-major teaching affiliation with Temple University School of Medi- cine. Major activities include patient care, medical education and research. Three basic internships are offered: Straight Medicine, Straight Surgery and Rotating. Residencies are offered in: Anesthesiology, Internal Medicine, Surgery, Orthopedic Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Psychiatry, Pathology, Radiology, Urology, Orthodontics and Endodontics. For further information, write: P. F. Lucchesi, M.D. Executive Vice President and Medical Director Executive Offices Albert Einstein Medical Center York and Tabor Rds. Philadelphia, Pa. 19141 226 THE Carry out the two fundamental surgical requirements: See what you are doing and leave a dry field. CHARLES H. IVIAYO, NLD. WARNIEST CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST OF LUCK DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY The object of all health education is to change the conduct of individu al men, women, and children by teaching them to care for their bodies well, and this instruction should be given throughout the entire period of their educational life. CHARLES H. MAYO, lVl.D. DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS ifzfoaeziirrfirr' if ef S' and theshvw ifibthll When dining out becomes a special occasion . . . The Stratford Garden Famous for hne food, gracious service and expertly-prepared cocktails. Popular prices. Dinner music 6:30 to 8:30 PM. The Hunt Room A quaint English Tavern. Lunch- eon, Dinner and After Theater Snacks. Sunday liquor scrvicc 1 to 10 PM. efhae Brood Street at Walnut ' PE 5-0700 1011 jqrch Street Ehilaolelphia, pa. 1910? NI2lllllf8Cllll'illg Pliarmacists and Pulmlislieis A complete line ol Homeopathic' Prepziratioiis. Specialties Fresh Green Plant Tinctures and Books Boerickes Nlaterizi Media 227 THE W. M. MOYER COMPANY CO-ORDINATED CEILINGS SYSTEMS PARTITION SYSTEMS Harrisburg, Pa. 4200 Chamber Hill Road 717-564-2760 Quakertown, Pa. New Street 215-536-6710 Philadelphia, Pa. 1616 Walnut Street 215-735-8880 THE BARNEY ROTH COMPANY Planned Lighting Maintenence Service X Electrical Engineers and Contractors Brand Name Appliances-Television-Stereo Philadelphia's Largest Electrical 8t Lighting Maintenence Organization 211-213 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 X Telephone: 563-0590 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE SENIORS BIOSCIENCE LABORATORIES Philadelphia Branch 1619 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19103 Phone: PE 5-6900 PROFESSIONAL PLANNING SERVICES, INC. 233 Lancaster Avenue-Ardmore, Pa. 19003 Lampert-Marks Associates Estate Planning-Tax Shelters-Mutual Funds-Life 81 Health Insurance 215fMI 9-7633 228 Wentz Seventy DON'T FORGET TO GIVE YOURSELF A FINANCIAL CHECK-UP FROIVI TIME TO TIME The Green Stuff so vital to Good Sound Financial Health ' won't always flow freely. V . W Store some of it away for a 1007 Market street, Philadelphia, Pa. X' future fesefve- We WI add .4'i Dividends four times a year PHOTOGRAPHERS 8 at the rate of 5fMJ per yr. 5 Savings Certificates earn l 51A'Ma, 53AfX1, 621, and even Wm. Keller Inc. gi more when dividends are left to be compounded. 33 Clarence Avenue, Buffalo, N.Y. PUBLISHER LIBERTY FEDERAL SAVINGS and Loan Association 202 N. Broad 1625 Wadsworth Stenton 8t Duval 128 W. Chelten CONGRATULATIONS TO THE SENIORS Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity 'When ignorance is bliss, Tis folly to be wise. IN MEMORIAM Alfred J. Catenacci, M. D. 1913-1970 No man is an island, entire of itselfg every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the maing if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friends or of thine own were, any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankindg and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee. John Donne 229 udif Senantg It is an obsession. A drive to present in print an obvious self- centered personality. A yearbook reflects the common interests and creativity of all the workers involved but, on the whole, rep- resents the individual talent of the editor and his personality to himself. Nothing is more pleasing to a writer than to read his words in print. Nothing is more satisfying to a photographer than to see his art covering pages in a book. Or for him to compare and com- pete for a visual impression with another photographer on the same page. He looks and judges: Criticism or a rare burst of humility, in a form of a compliment, follows. Medic Seventy is our world, the realm of Hahnemann in our years of study. We began in confusion, earnestly attempting to master the complexities of basic science and physical diagnosis. The stage then changed to the hospital and clinic, where our con- cepts of practical medicine were developed. We have survived to reflect at this time upon our passage through the four years and to wonder what challenges and adventures will cross our paths in the next fifty years. This yearbook presents ourselves in formation, as embryos yearning to be born, as students impatient to implement our knowledge. We, as a class, are similar to the structure of a chem- ical compound, the individual atoms not resembling the assem- bled molecule but having characteristics exclusively their own. It is this conflict of ideas and personalities, this clash of ideals and commitments, that is the essence of the human spirit. A yearbook must display these qualities to be meaningful and to reflect its theme. Medic Seventy is my book. I acknowledge this. R.S. 230 Zlrknumludgzmnznts -The Associate Editor was James Rondina -The Publisher was Wm J Keller Inc. -The typestyle was Helvetica. -The Photographer was Zamsky Studios. -Dr. E. Karl Koiwai, Faculty Advisor to Medic Seventy, gave generously of his time and counsel. -Mr. Robert Davine, the publisher's representative, took a personal as well as professional interest in Medic Seventy. -Mr. Robert Johnston contributed his professional talent to the photography of Medic Seventy. -The photograph Earthrise was provided for Medic Seventy by U.S. Senator Richard Schweiker and NASA. -The photographs of William Likoff, M.D. were provided by Modern Medicine. -Members ofthe Senior Class who worked on the yearbook include Drs. Bein, Brubaker, Cancro, Krimins, Rondina, Schott, and Sivak. -Tender loving care, sympathy, and assistance were provided forthe Medic Seventy staff by Mrs. Richard Schott, Mrs. Rene Soslow, Mr. and Mrs. John Laughlin, and Miss Diane Rubin. Robert Shaw Editor-in-Chief Arnold Soslow Business Manager 231 .fi lim? ,Q , . if f And weaving 1-1 each isa part: R Each connected with the of time: And things nor persons is ever quite W to be duplicated nor replaced: i but each is a new and incommunicably tender life, wounded in every breath, sustaining, for a while, without defense, the enormous assaults of the universe. James Agee ,gm 1 1 MW J-tg, i 3-li ' Wgviso f. .5 , I . ,N 4 J I w 1, 'L .. r v I 1 . L 4 ...ml 1 M431 ,,, A ,XJ , t- ik' . ,I '17-. bw' Q '13 1. es. . ', 'x rj. I 3. ,I . M N. .N 1,4 .Q .,, M, J . M..-3. G? -1:-. .. - 'y' li 'ii' 1 V A-'rf .4 'i' 5, Lv . ,Q w I nf 1 'H' 1 . A ., 1 'I . ..!- X , .- M N ' ,J . 'fl' Al- W ,.'.' 2 , , 4 N 1 , 1 . 'rf P '. 'a ,Q ,N , . ,N 'A V- . -- '- w. . 4 If-., . , . ,-. . '1, .v A . 1,4 ,f,:f,w Lf, v. a K, vt ' Iv v'-1 114.40 W: I, ', n l N. 1 ... , 4 . ,. o 1 A.., .,,,M , . Q V LI . 5-.. - yur. , V '. - , . , -, .11 f :ji A ?Q.,.i:n cw A M '- Q. 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