Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC)
- Class of 1956
Page 1 of 120
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1956 volume:
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A .. , , 4 . -.,.rfH H...-Vwf,-Qggxs, . I 'Q ' 'Wa f I . . -lf' 4 'Q ,cf x fljwfl u'.' , H - m -4 - .'-' ,J .., I ' ' 'I-'w5.?.. ',f.-ul. K- .12-nf' lql n. ,,-, ., .V'..Q sy. N: 4 .J U.. f... F. :,A:v.!I , 'V . . -fan, AN , 'wgilajh Hiyf N :f'A.,4: 64 f ,,x ,Q 'K , A 51? r' 'Q '11 '-...iw 11 6' . V .4 A ,AA .58 ,-J, - . ,p ,r ...fi V5 . ' , ' -. J ' W ' A B .g ' . .- 1 A 4' Bake Qlesrulapian 1956 Qllumplettng The Z!Etnentp:ftftIJ Zlnnihersarp nf Bake Ublnihersitp Schuul uf jllilehirine Barham, jaurtb Qlarulina jnremnrh As a matter of fact, this book was not intended to be read consecutively or for pleasure, but only when in need of information. In contrast to many . . . books which too often resemble the old-fashioned hoop-skirt in covering the subject Without touching it, this book is like a G-string in touching the subject Without any pretense of covering it, or even more aptly, like a brassiere in only touching the high spots. WILBURT C. DAv1soN, M.A., D.Sc., LL.D., M.D. The Compleat Pediatrician Duke University Press, Durham, N. C., 1949. The title and emblem of this book are used partly with the hope of impressing upon our readers the true medical history. Aesculapius, the Greek god of medicine, is the father of medicine, and his healing staff is the only emblem correctly used to represent our profession. Scientiyic Monthly, 1932, 34:392. 4 Eehirateh tu the Memory uf ELIZABETH GLEN SWETT 1895-1955 NORMAN SHEALY Staff RATCHFORD, BoB BEACH STEVE KARPMAN Edrltor-tru-Chief Art LELIA WINDOM SHIN TANAKA Assistant Editor Photography FRANK LANG DR. TALMAGE L. PEELE Business Manager Faculty Advisor Gordon Benson Nell Bryan Mary Bryson Martha Crenshaw Anne Culton Joan Dorsey GENERAL STAFF Hope Grunt Andy Horne Cathy Koger Eugene Komrad Ed McGough Ed Miller Tess Pollock Noel Schweig Mary Shealy Jeannine Shoemaker Kitty Townsend Lyn Wilbanks Colon Rick Wilson Betty Steiner Qnknnmlehgments To Dr. Syd Osterhout belongs the credit for prodding us into producing this book. We are gratefully indebted to Wendy Weisend for his outstand- ing aid in obtaining faculty photographs. To Mrs. E. A. Stead, Dr. Billie Peete, Dr. R. H. Saxton, Dr. J. P. Hendrix, Mr. Sam A. Agnello, Mrs. Helen Thomas and Miss Judy Vann we extend our thanks for their kind aid and suggestions. We are indebted to Lederle Laboratories for the dedication photograph of Mrs. Swett. For conveying order to the chaotic dummy we handed him and for all around aid, our sincere appreciation is extended to Mr. J. H. Hardison of Edwards gl Broughton Company. Finally, we wish to thank our advertisers who bear the Hnancial burden of our book. Ed. 6 . X... If y v fs - H , W... -5- 2 dw, 'xi -1 E'-E-1' ln 'QYJV' , . ff is-4 ,. It , ,t , - 5112110 ' M? .,,, ' DUKE HOSPITAL, 1928 ZW5' AA.:-xr . fi. sw-n 5 rg -. , 1 ' i X K., . I a , ' PW' . ' - DUKE HOSPITAL, 1956 The sun will never set on a completed Duke 7 pi 1 K, C r 4 I A .,,,,, , ,,. .U- 1, sm. 'Q Cl: ..--. 1 .un- was so- Bella! 4 M lky iff get 1115.2 Ei :li i .nl I F J If We ' Sus 4. Before the ivy began to climb 8 Zfaisturp uf the uke Utlnihersitp Snbunl nf jlillehinine anh uhe Ilauspital The buildings were started on 1 September 1927 and we moved in with a staff of fifty on 21 July 1930. The instruction of students of medicine, nursing, hospital administration, dietetics and technology was started in August of that year. For the first few years we had plenty of space, but for the last twenty, the infiux of patients and students of all categories from this country and abroad has utilized every square inch. The opening of the new wing on 30 June 1940 helped the congestion for a year or so, and it is hoped that the newest wing, which will be ready in 1957, will reduce the crowd- ing in the corridors, examining rooms and classrooms. Some of the innovations for which Duke might take credit are the first course in hospital administration, an outside obstetric service in Char- lotte, an outside pathological service, flat hospital rates, private diagnostic clinics, a course for medical record librarians, the first hospital blood bank, the organization of the 65th General Hospital, compulsory rooming- in in obstetrics. The stafiing of the Atomic Bomb Casualty Cominission at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the furnishing of consultants to the hospital and medical school in Taiwan CFormosaJ have been among the more recent activities of the medical and nursing faculty. All of us take pride in having the largest number of Markle Scholars selected from our graduates and staff of any medical school. Our medical library, through purchases and through the gifts of the Georgia Medical Society and of the Josiah C. Trent, Jr. Medical History Collection, is among the best in the country. The alumni of the schools of medicine, nursing, dietetics and technical courses are now established in every state and several foreign countries. The largest number are in North Carolina, with Florida, New York, Vir- ginia and California following in that order. Now at the end of our twenty-sixth year we grieve for the loss of more than twenty-five per cent of the original staff, including the chairmen of four departments, Dr. Hanes, Dr. Swett, Dr. Perlzweig and Miss Baker, other valuable members of the faculty, and now during the past year, Elizabeth Swett and Carl Rogers. WILBURT C. DAVISON, MA., use., LL.D., MD. I0 l 'i! - '?Ll13f.:..' .i . 'b.I..iE ' ORIGINAL STAFF, 1930 First row, left to right: Dr. Bellows, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Sykes, Miss Baker, Miss Patrick, Miss Laxton, Dr. Swett. Secomi row Dr. Eagle, Dr. Alyea, Dr. Forbus, Miss Batchelder, Miss Floyd, Miss Nelson, Mrs. Lawlor, Miss Muller, Dr. Amoss. Third 'row Mr. Smith, Dr. Perlzweig, Dr. Oates, Miss Robinson, Dr. Hansen, Dr. Johnston. Last two rows: Dr. Gardner, Dr. Ziv, Dr. Jones Mr. Reese, Dr. Magill, Dr. Craven, Mr. Ward, Dr. Davison, Dr. Taylor, Dr. Hart, Dr. Reeves. ' Wfsiil N I -1 fx ORIGINAL STAFF, 1932 I I , ww NW 4,0 ' 0 4 Q ' Aww 41 3 0 ' f n 3 25 s, i'f W ORIGINAL STAFF, 1940 ORIGINAL STAFF, 1950 I 2 un K 'ww Q K I4 in 7 F . kzrfj , fm. E.,-.rf 4 ,Q rafig' f, NK, f s S DEAN WILBURT C. DAVISON 13 5 fi X Qnatump .ml ra ff. mx A' J E Markee J. W. Everett D. C. Hetherington K, L, Duke T, L, Peele R, F, Becker I am writing this short history somewhat under duress, not exactly because I am unwilling to do so, but rather because the time has been limited and I have had to return from Elysium and have therefore had to cease doing what I would rather be doing-which, in short, is nothing but being myself and purring. Lest this introductory sen- tence have little meaning and leave many readers with no thread of association, mayhap I should introduce myself to some and awake the sleeping synapses of others. I am or was, as the case may be, a black cat with a white bib and four white gaiters. I was the Owner and Director of the Department of Anatomy for close to eleven of its twenty-five years of being-a position which I acquired all on my own through sheer force of personality and adaptability to circumstances. I arrived as a young adult by way of the Tower and, being particularly pleasant to the boy who tended me and others of lesser stature than I in the Department, I was allowed the freedom of the Halls and soon I had eased my way into the inner sanctum where quietly and methodicall I took over all regulation of the Depa.rtment. IX: was here I acquired the name Sailor from one of the characters in the Department who thought my silhouette and gait as I traipsed down the Halls on my rounds of inspection, reminded him of a sailor on deck with dark trousers rolled up alsuhe adjusted his walking to the rolling of the s ip. It may seem odd that I shall be able to relate what went on before my regime, during it and after it. Marvelous as it may appear, it is quite simple: I had a friend of my own race who pre- ceded me and from whose diary I gleaned the story before my time. I was also around during the development of E. S. P. and by virtue of some of its inner workings, known only to a few, I was able to dictate this history to an amanuensis in the same spirit as though I had been here in the fur and witnessed events even long after my apparent departure. We began as a Department-and I use we to indicate our unity which from my standpoint of personal historian was remarkable among de- partments-in the Fall of 1930 counting our official instructional members as the Drs. F. H. Swett, D. C. Hetherington, W. Henry Hollinshead, and Roger Baker, with a quota of 50 students selected, as the Dean would have us believe, from a list of 3,000 applicants. This bit of information came through a previous incumbent of my office - Mehitabel, who oddly enough was of the Dean's Household at one time, but because of their frequent dispersions over Europe at rapidly succeeding intervals found herself, for lack of a home, in the Tower from whence she came, as I did, into Anatomy. In passing, we must mention our Erst janitor- the Reverend Earlie Evastius Jones-who be- lieved with sincerity, often enhanced by an openly urged silver offering from the students, that he prayed them through all their examinations. His informal lectures to groups of students fupon their coaxingl, compounded of Biblical texts and anatomical terms, surprised and mystified the students with their moments of aptness and their incongruities. Because the space allotted me in dish sheeah Cfor I am a Southern cat! Anniversary Book is closely edited, I cannot mention all the persons who in the past twenty-five years have passed through the Department in one capacity or an- other. A few came early and stayed late. Others, like Mr. Pim, merely passed by, but each con- tributed in measure to its continued growth and evolution. Of the early arrivals still with us, Dr. Everett put in an appearance in 1932 when Dr. Baker transferred his affections to Pathology. A year before, Talmage Peeleythen a student- began his association with the department first as student instructor and later joined the Depart- ment in 1939. Dr. Duke popped over fresh from graduate Work in Zoology and settled with us in 1937. Dr. K. E. Youngstrom came in late Knot unusuall, 1937, and tarried long enough to finish his M.D. degree before going into the Army. Dr. SWett's sudden death in 1943 terminated his thirteen years as Chairman of the Depart- ment, during which span of administration he had been ably assisted and abetted by his wife. Because of Mrs. Swett's active interest in stu- dents and her past association with student admissions, she was asked by the Administration to continue in a new capacity as Secretary of Admissions and later, in addition, as Advisor to the Students. Short of a year following Dr. Swett's death, Dr. J. E. Markee came from Stanford University to assume Chairmanship of the Department and brought with him Dr. Charles Sawyer. With them came new interests and new outlooks with emphasis on audiovisual education. With the passing of time Dr. Hollinshead accepted in 1947 the opportunity to establish a new Division of Anatomy at the Mayo Foundation in Rochester, Minnesota and Dr. Sawyer withdrew in 1951 to become Professor of Anatomy at U. C. L. A. The youngsters of the staff, so-to-speak, are Dr. Fred Becker 119513, Dr. Jerome Grunt 419535, and Hnally, a scholastic toddler, Dr. Wm. Knisely, who appeared on the scene in 1954. Somewhere in this history, I, myself, departed from my eleven years of management as I inti- mated in the beginning of these jottings. So, rather than be cut-off by the editor, I shall gather up my kit and like Kipling's Cat That Walked by Himself I shall Walk by my wild lone through the wet wild yonder waving my wild tale Cwith apologiesb for all places are alike to me. Done this 17th day of March, 1956 by Me - Sailor My Mark ,rate Eanteriulugp .-'L' 'i 3 5 5 y U W T 'w ' 3' ' new QUW ff.. rear- D. T. Smith N. F. Conant S. P. Martin The first class in Bacteriology began in Jan- uary, 1931. The teachers were Mary A. Postong Royall Calder, who was then an assistant resident in Medicine, and David T. Smith. Dr. Harold Amoss, the iirst Professor of Medicine, gave one lecture on the diseases caused by streptococci. Dr. Donald S. Martin joined the staff in 1932 and remained until he left Duke in 1950 to become the dean of the new medical ,school in Puerto Rico. Dr. Norman F. Conant came in 1935 to help teach the general course, particularly Fungi. Dr. Hilda Pope Willett, our iirst graduate student, has been a regular member of the department since 1948. Dr. Samuel Martin, who was a Markle Scholar primarily in Medicine but secondarily in Bacteri- ology, has been helping with the teaching since 1949 but is leaving this spring to become Pro- fessor of Medicine at the new University of Flor- ida Medical School at Gainesville, Florida. Dr. Suydam Osterhout worked in the department as a Hanes Student Fellow during 1946 and 1947 and returned for a joint appointment in Medicine and Bacteriology. He helped teach the course in 1953, 1954 and 1955. Dr. Joseph Beard is a member of the Bacteriology Department as well as the Surgical Department and has been giving the special lectures on the nature of viruses. Dr. John Overman, a 1950 Duke graduate who has received a Lederle Medical Faculty Award, will join us in July, 1956, for preclinical teaching. He y .iffy -N 'V' , 2 A I ' f-X M Nr' 2 U 1 ' -al if 4 C... H 3 Y -ar' ,V , aff. nf , H. P. Willett S. Osterhout M. A. Poston is to be a permanent member of the staff and will teach the virus diseases and consult on virus cases on the wards. The Department of Bacteriology has carried a dual responsibility for teaching Bacteriology to medical students, nurses and technicians and providing diagnostic bacteriologic and serologic work for the entire hospital and its out patient clinics. The staff has been prolific in research and sev- eral hundred original studies have been published by various members of the department. The fungus diseases in practically every medical text and system of medicine in use in this country have been Written by Donald Martin, Conant or Smith. The Faso-Spirochetal Book by Smith perished after the first edition. The Manual of Clinical Mycology by Conant, Donald Martin, Smith, Baker and Calloway appeared in 1944 and was revised in 1954. The monograph on Fungus Diseases of the Lungs by Smith appeared in 1946 and is due for revision in 1957. Zinsse'r's Textbook of Bacteriology was inherited by the department in 1947. The 9th revision Was made by Smith, Donald Martin, Conant, Beard and Poston in 1948. The 10th edition by Smith, Conant, Beard, Pope, Sharp and Poston appeared in 1952. The 11th edition is scheduled for publi- cation in 1957. DAVID T. SMITH, M.D. Biochemistry L, 'ego 3' 'ie 5. 4' dw- P. Handler M. L. Bernheim G. W. Schwert H. M. Taylor H. Kamin Although the Department of Biochemistry has grown considerably and changed in many ways during these 25 years, it is still recognizable as the handiwork of the late Dr. W. A. Perlzweig. He believed that today's biochemical research is tomorrow's medical practice. This philosophy still pervades the teaching of biochemistry at Duke and the staff has always sought to achieve a balance between the presentation of those facts and concepts which may be immediately trans- lated into clinical application and those which may never do more than satisfy the student's curiosity about the nature of living things. Withal, although the class of '36 would hear much that is strange in the current presentation of biochemistry and find the laboratory experi- ments almost unrecognizable, biochemistry re- mains the most difficult area in the curriculum to most students and this does not seem likely to change! The staff, like all biological systems, remains in a dynamic steady state. Drs. Neurath, Klein, Coolidge, Mason, Putnam, Michel and Mommaerts grace other faculitiesg Dr. S. Perlzweig and Korkes lecture no more. Of the original staff Dr. Taylor and Dr. Bernheim teach this spring as of yore, together with Drs. Schwert, Byrne, Kamin, Lynn and Handler. An expanding research program, the advent of radioisotopes and the necessity for large and expensive research tools forced the department to transfer its research activities, in toto, to the Bell Research Building. Whereas this had the desired effect on research, it seriously diminished the frequency of contact between the biochemis- try staff and both our student and faculty bodies. This is most regrettable, particularly since bio- chemistry appears destined to loom ever larger both in clinical practice and in our understanding of normal and pathological physiology. In con- sequence all who are concerned look forward to a construction program which may heal this wound. PHILIP HANDLER, Ph.D. atbnlugp Bw? QQ'- l ,... W D. Forbus R. D. Baker G. Margolis E. S. Rogers A. G. Smith B. F. Fetter A. B. Morrison The Department of Pathology at Duke probably began at Johns Hopkins when a freshman medi- cal student was introduced to surgical pathology by a senior student, a fraternity brother. The enthusiasm of the senior was communicated to the freshman. This freshman was Wiley D. For- bus. During his first year, he spent much of his free time in this laboratory. The interest in surgical pathology continued but it was greatly broadened by the contact with general pathology under Dr. MacCallum. By the time that Dr. Forbus had completed his medical school train- ing he had developed a profound interest in path- ology. This was recognized by Dr. MacCallum who appointed him then to the house staff. In 1927 Dr. Davison, the only faculty member of the Duke University School of Medicine, re- ceived plans for the medical school building. He asked Dr. Forbus' advice, as a personal friend, regarding the blue-prints of the pathology depart- ment. No commitment was made as to an ap- pointment. In the fall of 1929, after Dr. Forbus returned from Munich, negotiations were entered into regarding the Chairmanship of the depart- ment. At the time of this offer, which eventually culminated in appointment, the medical school faculty consisted of Dean Davison and Dr. Harold Amoss CChairman of the Department of Medi- cineb. The next two appointments were those of Dr. Deryl Hart and Dr. Forbus. The department of pathology, as now known, began work on July 20, 1930, at which time, in addition to Dr. Forbus, there were two residents, Buddy Craven and Max Oates Cboth of whom came from Baltimoreb and a technician, Miss Milner Qlater Mrs. Collinsb, who also came from Baltimore. Mr. Carl Bishop was very shortly after this taken into the department. The next senior staff pathologist appointed was Dr. Roger Baker. The aim of the department from the beginning was to be the training of academic pathologists, particularly for the South. For this reason, the appointments were made in such a Way that individuals who were interested in academic work were selected for the house staff. This interest was encouraged and directed during the residency period and, subsequent to this, these individuals were retained on the senior staff at a low level until such time as an opening else- where developed. As soon as this opening oc- curred, the individual concerned was sent to fill it, and in this way the original aim of the depart- ment was accomplished. Such a program as this meant a great deal of work for the Chairman since, under such a system, the senior staff per- sonnel were constantly changing. That this aim was accomplished is evident by the following list of those persons who have received all or part of their training at Duke or who were associated with its teaching staff for a considerable time. Minister of Education-Oscar Duque, Colombia, South America. Professors Cincluding Chairmen of Depart- ments? - Anderson, W.A.D. CUniversity of Miamibg Baker, Roger D. CAlabama and Dukejg Cuttino, John T. CMed. College of South Caro- linalg Dubin, Isadore N. CWomen's Medical Col- legejg Edwards, Joshua CFloridaDg Erickson, Cyrus C. CTennesseeDg Follis, Richard H. CUni- versity of Utah, Salt Lake Citybg Gill, A. James CSouthwesternDg Margolis, George CDukeD, Net- tleship, Anderson CArkansasDg Rigdon, Raymond H. CTeXasDg Sprunt, Douglas H. CTennesseeDg Stoddard, Leland D. CGeorgiaJ. Associate Professors-Black-Schaffer, Bernard CCincinnatiJg Kipkie, George F. CQueensDg Rogers, E. Staniield CDuke7. Assistant Professors-Benson, Walter R. CKen- tuckyhg Fetter, Bernard F. CDukeDg Hurteau, William W. CTennesseeD. That the influence of pathology at Duke is becoming world wide is seen by the fact that academic pathologists from the following coun- tries have spent one month or more here learn- ing the teaching techniques used: Japan, Taiwan CFormosaD, Philippine Islands, Thailand, Korea, Colombia, South America, and Peru, South America. The department at Duke and the above lists constitute a living monument to a man whose industry, enthusiasm, and foresight are enviable. BERNARD F. FETTER, M.D. ,I lg D! ff 1 .314 ,Den gl I hriiiifi ' ' X'--1:11 X51 I ZA F Dr. Forbus certainly goes ' f 4 i all out for Round-Ups in ef .2 ic -- Mai' 1 r J 'I i Lf: 2- ' ' f '?'1 f ll. 'U cz'- , N 'Na 'tif 0 ii- E. A. Stead J. L. Calloway 5' s, Q ' W. B. Tucker J. V. Warren vvkffifvw ll? E. C. Kunkle S. P. Martin ff :ff e . mt mf rl ,fl ' Lf 4 Q A f Allilehirtne 0. Hansen-Pruss X hmmm, ...Q fy? F. L. Engel mf:Sf ' E. E. Menefee , , - X , ' yi, A ff Z f , H 'af If fi, X ,, f , .fn-W,-. --X fu .f Z, may V, .J 4 ' , ,f Q' 15.2 , , f 01' ,J , ,, 4 f , ' 1 I .1 if . cfm, ., ,X 1 I... I Z 1 i fm if 41. ggi.. , A3 ik Q xr ,A K ,JFK Vg fig ' , if -g QW, .K 'fr - V, '. W. M. Nicholson E. S. Orgain J. M. Rubin J. P. Hendrix J. B. Hickam A. Heyman ? 'Y' Y Q i 2 In .4 1 -. gg, J. D. Myers E. L. Persons R. W. Rundles 1 1, y . .1 1 f f 'NN .. ' Q Q. -4 5 M? ' .,! .',l3 x Z' , Q f J E .ftliv ' . X .Sv ,VVI J . G. P. Kerby T. L. Peele W, P, Deiss, Jr, M. Dick E. H. Estes E. Peschel , , CVI 13,1 mn,-at ' I 'MY 4 5' V. e ' ' .9 VV f N 1 . ... -- - , , , gf A ' . f' , z , 4 .,. ' ' - 1 fg' I ii . V ' 'gf 5 L I 7 Q ,,v' ' mf ' ia . I , ,W Q X it N 4 . ' -1. , ' , A J H. D. McIntosh H. D. Sieker S. Osterhout A- H- Woods M. D. Bogdonoff J. A. Owen H. T. McPherson f x 5 ' ,x if J 'F i' ff Q, A fi f c Y . 84-- j -'tx' , 2 f , , I Hs. jf TE ,f is - In July 1930, Duke Hospital formally opened its doors. The medical department at that time consisted of Dr. Harold L. Amoss, Professor of Medicine, Dr. David T. Smith, Associate Professor of Medicine, Dr. Oscar Hansen, Dr. Christopher Johnson, and Dr. Julian Ruffin, each Assistant Professor of Medicineg Dr. E. L. Persons, our first resident: Drs. Royall Calder, Emil Cekada, assistant residents: and three interns, Drs. Rowland T. Bellows, R. Eloise Smith, and Thomas P. Magill. Although there was no sharp division of assign- ments it was understood that Dr, Amoss would handle infectious diseases, Dr. Smith tuberculosis and diseases of the chest, Dr. Johnson cardiology and nephritis, and Dr. Hansen hematology and allergy, Dr. Ruffin was assigned to direct the Medical Clinic and the course in Physical Diagnosis, and soon became inter- ested in deficiency diseases and diseases of the gastro- intestinal tract. Dr. Frederic M. Hanes was visiting lecturer in Neurology in the first year and served as Acting Professor of Medicine in the Spring of 1932 while Dr. Amoss was serving the Peking Union Medi- cal College in China. In the Fall of 1932, Dr. Amoss resigned and Dr. Hanes agreed to fill the vacancy. From this modest beginning, the department grew by the addition of men with special interests. Dr. Edward S. Orgain came from Dr. Paul White's service at the Massachusetts General Hospital in 1934. In 1935 Dr. William Nicholson was the first alumnus of Duke Uni- versity appointed to the medical faculty. His position on the Metabolism service at Johns Hopkins was filled by Dr. George Thorn until 1942 when Dr. Thorn moved to the Brigham Hospital. In 1936, four years after the first M.D. degree was granted by Duke, a graduate who had taken his entire medical course at Duke was added to the faculty. Since 1949, Dr. Robert W. Graves has been chairman of the Department of Neurology at Albany Medical College. In the following year, Dr. J. Lamar Calla- way, also a medical graduate of Duke, returned from the University of Pennsylvania service of Dr. John H. Stokes to head the division of Dermatology and Syphil- ology. Before 1937 Dr. Hansen supervised the Syphilis Clinic Ca large one in those days!5 and Dr. Persons taught dermatology as well as medicine. In 1938 Dr. James P. Hendrix joined the staff as a clinician trained in pharmacology under Dr. Richards at the University of Pennsylvania. In January 1940, r -waz,-r-f 1 Dr. E. E. Menefee fM.D., Duke, 19365 took charge of chest diseases, as the first member of the faculty to have secured his basic clinical training at Duke Hos- pital-with excursions to Saranac, Dr. Paul White's service in Boston, and a year of residency with Dr. Burns Amberson at Bellevue Hospital. In 1945, Dr. Wayne Rundles returned to his medical school, after five years of training and research under Dr. Cyrus Sturgis at Michigan, to pursue his work on the medical and hematologic aspects of malignant disease. The influence of Dr. Frederic Hanes on the medical school was profound. In undergraduate teaching, his emphasis on careful history taking and on the neuro- logic aspects of physical examination helped graduates to quickly make a reputation for themselves and for Duke. Several of his residents have moved into re- sponsible teaching positions in other schools qHarvard, Ohio State, Bowman Gray, Oregon, Tulane, Medical College of South Carolinal. In 1934, on a visit to the German medical centers he had known as a student, he realized that Germany would soon lose many of its best young medical investigators and personally se- lected Dr. Walter Kempner as an addition to the research group in Medicine. In 1941, Dr. Hanes stimu- lated Dr. Kempner to applying his theoretical knowl- edge of oxygen consumption of living tissue to patients in uremia. It was from this beginning that the rice diet was designed and the rice houses established. On December 24, 1945, Dr. Hanes was taken ill suddenly with a pain in his chest and diagnosed his own condition as a dissecting aneurysm, from which he died three months later. In 1947 Dr. Eugene A. Stead, Jr., became chairman of the department. In 1952, the Veterans Administra- tion Hospital opened and the staff of the Department of Medicine was considerably increased. In 1947, the staff numbered 60 doctors: in 1956, it numbers 130. Many former members of the Duke Medical Staff now hold teaching positions at other hospitals, and three of the staff have become chairmen of departments: Dr. George Harrell, Department of Medicine, Bowman- Gray Medical School, and now, Dean of the University of Florida, Dr. Jack D. Myers, Department of Medi- cine, University of Pittsburghg Dr. Samuel Martin, Department of Medicine, University of Florida. EUGENE A. STEAD, JR., M.D. AND E. L. PERSONS, M.D. fwhstetrics anh Gpnenulngp B. Carter R. N. Creadick E. C. Hamblen W. L. Thomas,,Jr. R. Parker V. H. Turner l wg X gl . ,,,, . ff? QA 'x 1 L' .,. 'ww Tr- no-nv .gy-..x-. A- 'F wr -...,-ff' .wx . ,. N . . f 1 N W. B. Cherny C. von Roebel V eggs X m4,4.x,g.., .3 . w ...M x A ' 7 . 1' A W N I Q' -wav' -3. ,.,,....,.. . .xl I 5. ,J w Q f X 2 f 1' .. 5 Q M v :25iff -5 , ,- gil' f?1 14. I f f , if f f -A A.. ' . f J rf. - . -ix f, Q ' wa, 4, , Q.. I .r f I .0 'EH 'W' , , , ' vf 1 - . ,ff G' X - 1 YJ. X 20 X N:-vi I x I r 1 F17 Y The original staff consisted of Dr. Bay- ard Carter, Dr. Edwin C. Hamblen and Dr. Robert A. Ross. Dr. Walter Lee Thomas then joined the faculty. He was followed by Dr. Robert N. Creadick. Dr. Robert Alter and Dr. Violet Turner were next added to the staff as was Dr. Chauncey Pattee. Dr. Leonard Palumbo and Dr. Roy Parker were the next two faculty members added. Then Dr. Clarence Davis was added to the fac- Wff ulty. He was followed by Dr. Christa von Roebel, Dr. Charles Peete and Dr. Walter L. Cherny. Dr. Ross and Dr. Palumbo left to organ- ize the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of North Carolina. Dr. Pattee left to join the teach- ing faculty of McGill University. Dr. C. D. Davis left to organize the Depart- ment of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Missouri. BAYARD CARTER, M.D. Ru-l .Sheff BI 772111 V ,f71 f'! X 6' f:...e.. f af of - gf? -'l'hf,5'u D. 11- ever 'w'f::f7- 21 Eehiatrins f--L -ig: . g V 6 f Q Q, ,,, ' ..........-4 ., .., e-,G ,Ai I 'A W, M' a t. t xl, -.suv , , sf, .5 K ' 'J if J S Harris W. C. Davison J. M. Arena S. C. Dees A. McBryde W. J. A. DeMarla F. P. Anderson ra?- I an .29 .. fs? 'wif' -,. ,...4Hkr V ,lg .tg 4 -an-if t sm, ' ' . , 45 t 4' i 03 Q ,ZX ,sl X Q 3 i In the beginning, there was the Dean. And the Dean said, Let there be a Department of Pediatrics. Thus began the Duke Medical School and the Depart- ment of Pediatrics. Growth and development of these two newborns were rapidg sometimes orderly, some- times tumultuous, often With growing fxains, occasion- ally with behaviour disturbances, but a ways under the kindly, perceptive, authoritative, yet permissive guid- ance of Dr. Davison, to whom both owe their origins and direction. Assisting at the birth of the Pediatric Department was Miss Sherwood, who has been gently and tenderly caring for it, our patients fand our staffl ever since. Additions to the teaching staff had to be made fairly rapidly because of the increasing demands of students and patients. Dr. London assisted part time during the First two years. At that time, there was but one resident and one intern. Dr. Angus McBryde joined the staff in 1932 and Dr. Jay Arena in 1935. In 1937 Dr. Jerome Harris became the first full time member of the teaching staff. Dr. Susan Dees joined the staff in 1939, Dr. William DeMaria in 1951 and Dr. Doris Howell in 1955. Prior to the war the house staff had to be increased to 6 interns and 4 assistant residents. At the present time, the complement is 18 straight and 4 split pediatric-obstetric interns and residents. Until 1932, the outpatient clinic was open only three afternoons per week and could easily handle the patient load. Daily clinics were necessary by 1933. A morning well baby clinic was added in 1936. By 1949, there were specialty clinics in child guidance, convulsive disorders, allergy, heart disease and kidney disturbances in addition to two well baby clinics and the daily afternoon clinics. On some days, 200 patients are seen-plus countless mothers, grandmothers, aunts and sometimes even fathers. The department has experienced a strange and most baffling growth disturbance-precocious behaviour de- velopment as manifested by patient service, teaching load, research, etc., accompanied by severe retardation in physical developments: in fact, a shrinking dwarf- ism. In 1946, the number of pediatric beds listed in the catalogue decreased from 52 to 40. Further, the fv ., ,f , ,sa ---- ,QFQ 3 5 iii, t 1 I I , , ,, y .1 'N Q ' x Q ' fs N 1 size of the outpatient clinic diminished by the loss of several rooms. Although the etiology of this un- fortunate condition is obscure, it is hoped that therapy with a new outpatient department in the building under construction and the addition of the Jvresent outpatient clinic to the Howland Ward facili es will correct this growth imbalance. There have been several changes in staff. Dr. H. Grant Taylor left to become Dean of the Postgraduate School of Medicine at the University of Texas while Dr. I-I. B. O'Rear became Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pediatrics and Dean of Faculty at the University of Georgia. Dr. Robert Lawson has since become Professor of Pediatrics first at Bowman Gray School of Medicine and recently at the University of Miami School of Medicine. In 1954, Dr. Davison resigned as Chairman of the Department because of the increasing burden of his duties as Dean and the many demands made for his advice and aid by institu- tions all over the world. Dr. Harris was appointed chairman to succeed him. The Department has had three main but interde- pendent goalsg teaching, service to children and re- search. A strong research program has included studies on many phases of pediatrics. By 1952, over two hundred papers, one book and-several chapters in other books had been written by the staff. Service to patients has already been mentioned. Throughout, the primary function of teaching has been to help students understand children and learn how to keep them well. The emphasis has shifted from the care of the acutely ill infant fthe summer diarrheas and the winter respiratory infectionsl to the prevention of disease and the amelioration of chronic illness and disability. Increasing attention is being paid to the child's total development since our ultimate aixn of teaching, research and service is to deliver into adult- hood not only physically healthy specimens but also emotionally mature and stable individuals who can function at optimal inherited capacity and be responsi- ble citizens of the community. JEROME S. HARRIS, M.D. lf Physiology anh Bbarmarulugp 1 . an 54 J ' I a ?l ,, x 'V I 1-v-r'+.,f W 9 - 1 -'Pnl , ...- - l v ' I.' , I l as s Y Y v-f A h' 4 h.: Y , Tl f f v l f is B' - .xr 1 1 '- ,Q . 2- ' F G H811 F. Bernheim G. S. Eadie W. E. DeTurk K. E. Penrod W. E. Hull MCC. Goodall, Jr From the opening of the medical school, medical physiology and pharmacology have been taught by the same staff in a manner thought to be favorable to the integration of these two subjects into the medical curricu- lum. Emphasis has been on the presentation of the fundamental principles of these two sciences. ' Dr. George S. Eadie was the first chairman of the department and he was assisted by Dr. Frederick Bernheim and Dr. Forrest D. Mc- Crea in the original organization. Dr. Mc- Donald Dick joined the staff in 1932. Dr. John Dann served as Professor of Nutrition from 1934 until his death in 1948. During the War years Dr. Percy Dawson taught as a Visiting Professor. Dr. Henry Kohn and Dr. Sidney Ellis were also members of the staff during the early postwar years. Dr. William DeTurk joined the staff in 1949. Dr. F. G. Hall became Chairman of the Department in 1949. Dr. Kenneth Penrod was added to the staff in 1950 and Dr. Wayland E. Hull replaced Dr. McCrea upon the latter's resignation in 1953. Dr. Otto Gauer was in the department from 1953-1955. Dr. McChesney Goodall is now in residence as a Visiting Associate Professor of Physiology and American Heart Fellow. Progress in teaching methods has been made along several lines. There has been a gradual change from the teaching of classical animal experiments to a greater emphasis on experi- ments on normal human subjects. There has also been a change in the content and schedule which favors correlation with biochemistry. Nutrition which was taught in this department before the War has been transferred to bio- chemistry. There is now a greater emphasis given to cardiovascular physiology and endoc- rinology. The department has also expanded its teaching program to instruction of nurses, physical therapists and gradute students. Members of the department have been active in research. Some of the research ields have been enzyme and cellular metabolism, mode of drug action, aviation physiology, oxygen toxicity, body fluid balance, heart sounds, endocrine metabolism, regulation of respira- tion, blood preservation, prenatal and postnatal hemoglobin studies, etc. While the number of students has increased and new members have been added to the staff, the amount of research and teaching space has been drastically reduced because of the increasing needs of the hospital for clinical services. F. G. HALL, Ph.D. Bsprbiatrp anh sprbulngp E, W. Busse B. Dai fi Y G. 2 , f 455, ...M ' 5,4-w VW M , f , J, -5- W4--u A., ,, f fs R. H. Barnes R. B. Suitt A NR L. B. Hohman H. Lowenbach A +4 ,J '9m Q ' .2 , -as f 'i?f:i' 'X sf K gg: X' gb, X , , X wf . ... M J. Goldsmith B. Bressler ,ff ...J Z! I L. D. Cohen J . Parker . ,, X L 'IW 'vm Xe X f S 1 if xxx Q aaa Q ef' C3 - ia-wg .fig 5236? ' Q gf if Q , . 'f fx :Wim nw. 'x J, 3 53' 24 ',,H ,f MA Vg K Q 3' ' Xu - Mi., . 1 - M . XL f 1 W ' I f 4 5:3 ' ' -exe .1 There were fifty-nine faculty members when the School of Medicine opened in 1930. Of these, three were psychiatrists, two, visiting lecturers from other cities, and the third practiced in Durham. The fifty-two first year students obtained sixteen hours instruction in psychobiology. Each of the eighteen third year students received two weeks combined experience in neurology and psychiatry in the Department of Medicine. Medicine's appoint- ment of Doctor Raymond Crispell as an As- sociate Professor in 1933, provided weekly lectures and clinics, instruction in methods of examination, elective work, residency training in psychiatry, and consultation. What is now the Department of Psychiatry was established in 1940. Doctor Robert Carroll had given the Highland Hospital to such a Department. The Rockefeller Foundation fi- nanced the Governor's Commission to study Mental Health in North Carolina, which in 1936, recommended: Duke . . . should become a center for psychiatric training. A . . . service ranking with other major departments and having modern hospital facilities . . . is essen- tial. This Foundation generously aided the Department during its first seven years. Doctor Richard Lyman became the first departmental Chairman in 1940. He imme- diately opened the electroencephalographic laboratory, Kirby Clinic, and Meyer Ward, psychoanalytic participation, and resources for convulsive and other children's problems and for psychosomatic medicine followed. These permitted an expanding undergraduate cur- riculum, and systematic residency training. His catholic teaching policies exposed both undergraduates and residents to represent- atives of every divergent school of thought in psychiatry. During these years a number of important additions to the staff were made. These include Dr. Leslie Hohman, Dr. Hans Lowenbach, Dr. Bingham Dai, Dr. Burke Suitt, Dr. Louis Cohen, Dr. George Silver, Dr. William Wilson, Dr. R. Charman Carroll, Dr. Robert Craig and Dr. Marie Baldwin. All of these psychiatrists and psychologists are currently active in the Department of Psychiatry. In 1951 Dr. Lyman resigned from the Department. Dr. Hans Lowenbach consented to serve as Acting Chairman of the Department until a new permanent Chairman could be appointed. Under Dr. Lowenbach' considerable progress was made, particularly in the area of improv- ing and expanding the facilities for Inpatient care. Dr. Ewald W. Busse, was appointed Pro- fessor and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry on September 1, 1953. The pre- viously established pattern of growth con- tinued with particular emphasis in the areas of Psychosomatic Medicine, Child Guidance and Interdisciplinary Research. Dr. Albert J. Silverman was originally responsible for training in Psychosomatic Medicine but is at the present time on leave of absence with the Air Force as Chief of the Stress and Fatigue Research Unit. Currently, Dr. Bernard Bres- sler is heading this portion of the training program. Dr. John Fowler is Head of the Durham Child Guidance Clinic and Dr. Robert Barnes is Co-ordinator of the Interdisciplinary Research Team. Dr. Joseph Parker is Head of the Department of Psychiatry in the Veterans Hospital which forms an integral part of the Department of Psychiatry. Additions to his staff include Dr. Jack Ritchie and Dr. William P. Wilson. Other new appointments include Dr. Charles Llewellyn, Dr. Oscar Parsons, Dr. Charles Spielberger, Dr. Sanford Cohen and Dr. Finn Magnussen. Mr. Dolph Hess is re- sponsible for Psychiatric Social Work and other social workers holding academic rank are Miss Mildred Long and Miss Evalyn Lynch. The Housestaff of the Department of Psychia- try is now composed of 19 psychiatric trainees and 6 psychological interns. EWALD W. BUssE, M.D. How long have you been having these visions?? N v Q 75- , 3 fs? . ,,....... ,, f Z' f 7' QQ f 5 . 2-' Wiz- lf ,.f.. ,, .Q fa 4 fl fa' . ag' ',7YV f ,, fc ' ' ,nfs-H5 W Fi eV '.1 'av' -Nas- .f'r.0n,. ' '10 K X '1 X ' ' qv ,. .. ...RM , - -1 J-f4.,-pefsv ,. .-fwefi. . 'fa QW , If ,Nw-f If .A my ' -42 f .ff ,v fm., .V 2 'fl W .151 2 Q-- ' Qurgerp VW' wf , ,E ,.-, 6 5: 'A ' Y' ,, ' f- -V -5' ' ' K A 1.3, f- f W- ' U ii 'Y Msg, Llfv: ' X :O , WA- ' .Q ' - I 1 . V E' sf gn, me ff F L mf M2 was 'W - -i'i A . f f Q. A Y ug. .4 wi f 4 . K 5.2 - in--5: Q N I., I f , Y Rx . V .Kil l VH' f X Me. ,. .r Q g. L , Ai x- A -1 A . ' 1 .V--af fffii f, fly Q G- x . S- if 'N if ' . X 2 ,P 4 -2' 3 '-r1 'm-me-z'. f.f - 'E -2. Mil: f 1 A .H - F 3 1 ........1...l... X , . - .. . 12- as , ,qw V giw , ...Q L. A K1 , . ,N re. 5 V f A.--.vang x 4 Y '1' ' ' .PIA ,f ' x. ' Ji ' , . U T451 ' H ' 1 K . ' 1 ff 'Nz'-1 L Q . -I .... , Q 1 55 V I nl- 0 V q 4 5' ,',,...-. ' ,f . z ' ' f f? ., J, ? I , , ,, 'vig My f 401 . 5' , 2 f .s .cf.:'E .fx Vzri '2--' Lx x D. Hart E. P. Alyea W. B. Anderson L. D. Baker J. W. Beard J. E. Dees W. W. Eagle C. E. Gardner K. S. Grimson G. L. Odom C- R- Stephen K- L- Pickrell B. Woodhall R. A. Arnold J. L. Goldner R. C. Martin W. C. Sealy J. H. Semans W. G. Anlyan A. W. Boone I. W. Brown N. G. Georgiade W. W. Shingleton W. P. J. Peete, Jr. R. W. Postlethwait G. M. Carver, Jr. 26 at-. 'Q f. 1 , 5. N V 'e H V When the hospital opened in 1930 we had almost unlimited facilities tbeds, operating rooms, and research spacel, but a very limited senior staff: Drs. Alyea CUrologyD, Shands COrthopaedicsJ, Eagle fOtolaryngology D , Anderson COphthalmologyD, and Hart CGen- eral, Thoracic, Plastic and Neurosurgeryh. The residents for all of Surgery consisted of Drs. Gardner CResidentD, Jones and Baker tAssistant Residentsl, and Ziv tlnternl. Miss Batchelder was operating supervisor, and Miss Muller nurse anesthetist. Dr. Gardner joined the senior staff in 1932, Dr. Jones in 1933,.Dr. Fink in 1934, and Drs. Beard CExperimental Surgeryb and Woodhall CNeurosurgeryD in 1937, the year that Dr. Shands was replaced by Dr. Baker in Ortho- paedics. Dr. Dees CUrology7 came in 1939, Dr. Sharp in Biophysics in 1940, Dr. Arnold COtolaryngologyl in 1941, Dr. Jones was killed in 1941 by a paranoid patient, and Dr. Grim- son CGeneral Surgery! came in July, 1942. The death of Dr. Jones, the mobilization of Base Hospital 65 in July, 1942, the illness of Dr. Beard, the resignation of Dr. Fink, and the entry of Dr. Woodhall into the armed services came near wrecking the surgical service. Only Drs. Alyea, Dees, Eagle, Ander- son, Baker, Grimson and Hart were left on the senior staff. Dr. Odom fNeurosurgeryD and Dr. Lovell CGeneral Surgery? joined the staff in 1943, and Dr. Pickrell fPlasticJ in 1944. All worked hard to carry on the teach- ing load and care of patients, and by the end of the War had built up a large research and rehabilitation fund to be used in rebuilding the department. Dr. Trent CThoracicJ joined the staff in 1945, Dr. Sealy CGeneral, and later Thoracicl in 1946, Drs. Shingleton CGeneral Surgery? and Goldner fOrthopaedicsJ in 1950, Dr. Boone CUrol0gyJ in 1952. Dr. Semans iUro10gyl in 1953, Dr. Georgiade QPlasticD in 1954, and Drs. Anlyan CGeneral Surgeryb, Brown CGeneral Surgery and Blood Bankb and Peete CGeneral Surgery and Assistant to the Deanl in 1955. There have been a number of additional men who have worked for a year or two and have then gone elsewhere, and several who have been on a part-time status. Drs. Collins, Connar, Emlet, and now Postlethwait, in General Surgery, and a number of additional men in the surgical specialties, have held joint appointments at Duke and the affiliated Vet- erans Hospital. Dr. Ruth Martin started the Physicians Anesthesia program in 1945, and Dr. Barreras was our only assistant resident in Anesthesi- ology during the first few years. Dr. C. Ronald Stephen took over the direction of the Anes- thesia Division in 1950 and now has a staff of 5 Physician Anesthetists and 13 assistant resident and resident anesthetists at Duke and the Veterans Hospital, in addition to 7 Nurse Anesthetists and 13 nurses in training for Anesthesia. The resident staff has grown equally as rapidly, until now in Duke Hospital and the Veterans Hospital combined there are in surgery and the surgical specialties 12 resi- dents, 46 assistant residents, and 16 interns. There are over 50 full-time employees in the operating rooms, 28 secretaries, 18 technicians, ll student research assistants, and 31 em- ployees in the Surgical Private Diagnostic Clinic. The unlimited facilities soon became in- adequate. The General Surgery Outpatient Clinic spread into the Orthopaedic and part of the Gynecologic Clinic areas. The Private Diagnostic Clinics were organized in 1931, the private room facilities were soon over- crowded, and in 1939 and 1940 the P. D. C. building was added. The Blood Bank was opened in 1939, the surgical nursery of 18 beds in 1940, the Recovery Room in 1946, the Surgical Instrument Shop in 1949, and the Oxygen Therapy Service under the Anesthesia Division in 1955. The North Carolina Cerebral Palsy Hospital, financed by the state and an outgrowth of the spastic service started by the Orthopaedic Division in 1938, was opened in 1950. The Bell Research Building was built in three stages, starting in 1945 and being completed in 1952. The 500-bed afiliated Veterans Hos- pital was opened in 1952 and is now running almost at capacity. In 1954 the contract was let for the addition to the hospital now under construction. This building, air-conditioned throughout, will house on the lower 3 Hoors all outpatient departments, with the exception of Ophthal- mology, Nose and Throat, Urology, and Oral Surgery, which will expand in the present building, and will provide additional space for the Private Diagnostic Clinics, while ad- ditional oflice space for doctors has been obtained in Baker House. The second and third floors each will have 40 beds for private patients, teaching rooms, and dining facilities, the fourth floor will provide 10 new operating rooms, a doctors' lounge, and a preparation or service area for all operating rooms. The Hfth Hoor will contain 29 beds in an intensive nursing unit and will also have dressing rooms, a nourishment room for the operating rooms, and observation rooms for students and visitors. With these developments there has been a gradual increase in the departmental budget, but more spectacular has been the addition of funds from the earnings of the department and from outside research grants. Without the latter sources of revenue the department as it exists today would not have been possible. DERYL HART, M.D. 51 EF ahinlugp fi ,. 1 , ' .P v V i X , : 3 Vvly, - f If R. J. Reeves G. J. Baylin ..i...... f F11- -1 1 W . . , 'Q ' cum-x.c,f X ..... d FQ - .2 ft . ...... l' X 1, . at c 7 i -1 .M cu, 1 f 4 z mf, ,.1-ua-. 1 Q 42, i V 4 sf 52912 ,,., I.: The x-ray department was opened in May, 1930, with 2 x-ray diagnostic rooms and one x-ray treatment room. None of the equipment was shock proof and an occasional electric shock was received. A small amount of radium was owned by the hos- pital and in 1941 a loan from the U. S. Public Healt.h Service increased the amount so that today the hos- pital has 650 milligrams of radium. The x-ray department made rapid growth at the beginning of World War II and by the end of the war many people and doctors were x-ray minded and physical examinations were considered incomplete without x-ray studies. Chest x-rays were considered an essential in detecting early disease. Barium study of the gastro-intestinal tract is also one of the oldest of x-ray studies. Gall-bladder studies have now been perfected to almost 100 per cent accuracy. With increasing specialization, the x-ray has steadily played an increasing role in aids to diagnosis. The increasing demand for x-ray has necessitated all physicians knowing more and more about the sub- ject. This increase in service required more equipment. 28 fi 3' my The Urology Service was increased to 3 x-ray units. The outpatient clinic x-ray was set up adjacent to the Medical Clinic and 3 complete x-ray rooms were opened. In 1942, with the aid of the State Board of Health, a Photoroentgen Chest Unit was installed and all outpatients receive a stereo chest film. The Resident Staff increased from one at the be- ginning to eight and, with the opening of the Veterans Hospital, the quota was increased to twelve. The x-ray technicians' school was begun in the early years and has continued to grow. A large num- ber of technicians throughout the South received their training here. Student roster shows people from many states entered for training. World War II brought increasing interest in isotopes and the use of atomic energy. The research isotope laboratory was moved to the Bell Research Building and a clinical, diagnostic and radiotherapeutic labora- tory was organized by the department of Radiology. An extensive research program is also underway, collaborating with various clinical services. A bio- physicist was added to the department in 1953. Ros:-:RT J. REEVE5, M.D. il n I 191911,-:aural Ulberapp l if ' W' -e . -, 9 A 'Q HQ ' 4 ' 4 f Q -4 . Q K 1 'U' ' x s 1 . K, A-Y XX A 'Is V 'H X c1.ARK.G. COMP'l'ON,P:. CoRYE:L.1.,.1, EA'1l0N.G. c.pimxmArw,i+.K. liUNI'E.R,l.. .4 ' A -3 t. 10 ,ps , '?X' i , i V A N. L, - .7 ' fl ' ' . . , u-, X , , J 33 4 vu w ' , 1. X ,Qt fe L i - x , r A-+ 11 1 KJOSNESM. GEp1WE11,ER,F, LEWIS'J. MELQy,1g,gjgyJ1E1, IX'IrpORE,li,LD, SEVERANCEJX. ls '-- V ' 'ai A J' ' ' . fu- f at 1- 51 ' 9 ! J' ' 'f , . , f . ' ' r 5- X 11. 1 Kr' , 1 yw X -I x ' ' B A ' S I'ARLING.N- STRUNG,Ii, A STVlE'I'ANA,J. SYKESJ. Vf 'WlAV-f'9- -9, 'wk ftqfl : W . W. , Back row: Wood, M., Brewer, M. F., Lane, R., Litaker, R. M., Smith, J. A., Flanagan, E. M., Shealy, M. E. Front row: Kelly B. L., Horton, G. C., Kaiser, H., Tilghman, H., Peake, C. W. Physical Therapy became available to patients soon after the opening of Duke Hospital. In 1943 due to the increased demand for such treatment and personnel, brought about by the large numbers of war maimed and injured, Duke Hospital and Medical School in co-operation with the Woman's College established an accredited nine months' course in Physical Therapy for properly qualified men and women college graduates. Dr. Lenox D. Baker was asked to serve as Medical Director and Miss Helen Kaiser as Director of Physical Therapy. Since that time 120 students have successfully completed the course. Forty-eight of these have remained to practice in North Carolina. After the first year the length of the course was increased to one year and very soon thereafter to fifteen months. A recent grant from the Office of Voca- tional Rehabilitation will make it possible to double the enrollment. Beginning with 1956, 24 students will be accepted. The educational program has been assisted also by grants from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. The division employs 11 physical therapists, one re- search associate from a foreign country and several graduate student assistants who are working toward an advanced degree in the departments of Anatomy or Physiology and are relating their theses to some phase of Physical Therapy. In addition to its educational program for physical therapists, in-service training programs in Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation are given for nurses, medical students, house staff, administrative intems and record librarians. From tune to time in conjunction with the Department of Psychiatry a six months course in Patient Management has been offered to graduate physical therapists. Patients are referred to the division from all the major services and the majority of minor ones. The greatest numbers come from the departments of Medi- cine and Obs tetrics. These are followed in close suc- cession by Orthopedics Pediatrics, Psychiatry and Neuro-surgery. Since 1944 a group program of exercises or activities has been carried on with the psychiatric patients on Meyer Ward. The most recent expansion of services has been to provide physical therapy in the home to patients who after discharge from the hospital are unable to return for follow up care. This has been made possible through the assignment of a physical therapist to the division through the courtesy of the North Carolina League for Crippled Children and Adults. The Physical Therapy division is well supplied with the customary as well as most recent equipment usually associated with Physical Therapy, including a therapeutic pool. It is interesting to note in this connection, how- ever, that exercises are used five times as frequently as any other procedure. HELEN KAISER, R.P.T. E' es! . Ch 3,2 A . utr: Z3 , r . L.. Oo gr,-4 :TO au Q 'ii or TQ 4. -Ad :lb .1 nb L4 -1 IP A ,J ,. 35' .,' -. 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H IJ-f. rf ru H, II., ,f mum -if., T 'J , .I I' E? -'Ir E I I M WT, 'I , I A if' E A ni iii f f ' ! i A ., W ., .-.M . Y., in, .I rn , ,Y VY. ., ,,,,, ,Y 1 TY? -- -aw' -A-Y -f--+V V 1 v s I I , I ... -. I , Y fi , I fi I I Q 1 - .QQ I I -,590 .19 If I 39 j I -,ah , '-3 V , A, -III Y 'w -+?I 2T.g.F?2 :Q I ., ' km A LA K LI 'mg .. C 'I . SLI 'll . I N I V Ai' 4? aa I ' . P-' -wi If -'C me wruvqh, M , rweus H, Q3 5 mfgsfihas, H: JI' Na1UI.Dv', E I ,uf I Num, Jw L wewsm , a,Jf I DF we N, ,I Q ff -A We ' L .- ..UU ,U U..,.,,-,,, , .,,,...,.,U. UUN , ,U , - 1 U . . ,,--..,..,5- U, U Mum , , Q' A Q - 5, I O O Q I , .2 0 'Ah 39 I I . gg I I I JN 4.4 I I I .. I ,O , I , Q H ' '17 ! i 5 Q N I I I , I I .C IA M , I L-.x,IaQ 54 L , '-' iw. gi f.. H, h. I L I-:xcfffenc 591. RENQIWT, aw PRoL-w3, 72 L ,If 1 woszbsrwv, P, i mes, Ii If I wwf-IQiriI, Pli EIVORD, vo srcrmcwer-, I-.I ,Ham T , S4 :.L v 1 -. U, ,,,,..,A - ,U .,.. ,U , ., A , . ., -W ?W,.,,w,, U--Ma., i I S Y I I-5, I I my I' I , Q , 5 f N , , I I --g I I , I I I I - Jig iff? Ir I F - X. A hi I ' L..i , KM I sffL:aM:.xzw,cc sLo:.w,Jrv1i:LI SYEELE, all STEINER, sf-4 I STERLING, L N MNAKA, 5 WNSEND, :J I TURNER, Jc E VANCE ' ' av , e I .T - ,. u , E , - , I ' - I I I I I I I I I AY- 1? ' 545, 'Q I Nj- -.Ls -.Q I -- I ' I . . 1 - ' I I km A WHANQER, U w T I-rER,mx,JfI wane, FA,Jf wILaANKS,co,.If wmcswsoru, CA , wngsormc mnowwe I NEW STUDENTS OCTOBER I952 DUKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 31 Transfers A. F. I-I rne E L K d W. E. McGough G. W. Paulson N A. Schweig f,9AzN,L -9 me 3, - Q .E an gg . J Aj Sf JS.. s 3 S f . X V mae. I xw M I f, u . . u ti V ' sz fl A . .-'5 . A ' 5 J. A. Grunt E. G. Stuart S Olansky S. Strauss 32 Behicatiun tu a iBrnIific Qllass RONALD EUGENE ALLISON May 30, 1930, Cleveland, Ohio Married today, gone tomorrow Duke University, A.B. German Honorary Society, Nu Sigma Nu Tampa Muncipal Hospital, Tam- pa, Florida-Rotating Plans: Florida? GoRDoN DoNALD BENSON April 13, 1931 Sharon, North Dakota Made it through the year with- out another scar Drake University, University of Minnesota, Phi Chi The New York Hospita1-Medi- cine WILLIAM BLAIR BRYAN , September 27, 1930 Battleboro, N. C. Blair has hair Wake Forest College, B.S. Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Sigma Phi, Beta Beta Beta, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Gamma Sigma Epsilon Charity Hospital, New Orleans, La.-Rotating Plans: General Practice ABEL PAUL CARSWELL, JR. May 24, 1929, Oxford, N. C. The late Dr. Carswell Duke University, A.B. Lambda Chi Alpha, Duke March- ing Band, Duke Concert Band Duke Hospital -- Straight Surgi- cal Plans: Surgery Qfter jfuur Bears l. 573' A.,- c Q15 'Km Calif N50 'fr Q, If' I 3 , ,O .J A gt cf 7 D' ,Dx . 2 K' Nb I! E' Y., I 3 ,' ,. n-'V 3, f Q 'E A hh . ., 'ska 5 .I ,H MN as 1 .,g, J We ' DEWEY LOCKWOOD BARTON December 8, 1928 Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Jersey bear with a Southern ac- cent Bates College, Lewiston, Maine, B.S. Wm. Beaumont Army Hospital, El Paso, Texas-Rotating Plans: General Practice EDWARD BROOKING BRowN October 7, 1928, Scranton, Pennsylvania The only one who got anything out of OB Duke University, A.B. Phi Kappa Buffalo General Hospital, Buf- falo, N. Y.-Rotating Plans: General Practice? DANIEL ERSKINE CARMICHAEL May 26, 1932 Birmingham Alabama A sheep in wolf's clothing Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., A.B. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Chi Grady Memorial Hospital, At- lanta, Ga.-Medicine Plans: Obstetrics-Gynecology LEWIS AUGUsTUs COFFIN, III October 1, 1928, New York, N. Y. . . . And Smiley's Bacillus University of Virginia, Phi Chi St. Louis Children's Hospital- Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics HAROLD DAVIS CRANFORD December 31, 1922 Asheboro, N. C. King of the WBR. How about Yancey? University of North Carolina, A.B. Alpha Tau Omega Duke Hospital-Obstetrics-Gyne- cology Plans: General Practice J ULIAN CLARK CULTON November 2, 1929 Greensboro, N. C. Guy and Dolls Guilford College, B.A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, N. Y.-Surgery Plans: Surgery WILLIAM ALEXANDER DAVIS, JR. November 12, 1926 Raleigh, N. C. A dogis best friend Davidson College, B.S. Charlotte Memorial Hospital- Rotating Plans: General Practice WILLIAM ANDREW DICKINSON, JR. November 18, 1930 Richmond, Va. Hey, Goose, if that's rhinophyma, what's phimosis? Virginia Military Institute, B.A. Phi Chi The New York Hospital-Pedi- atrics Zlfter jfnur ears ,- , in-7' Z , we V f.f..S.4 H A-. ' 6' vi pr?-.-.ze-fi' . ,ai matt: ,Q 5 , 1 Q' . if S 1- ., iv if ifx 26- -'..,,g..a . f Flwsca- W A V ' 1 if , I 4. f' H . 55? iq 4? Y i' A 1. ug, ,Aw ,.., ,.. ,Av h ra A :L I N: 4 fa-w,A YQ NL- 'I ' RVIAIJ flw. -E, f 3' I -i-I, , QE591 K mx t ' il x A - I , . 4 K 'Hr-mm. f 'N S-.W ,J ,, ' M' S 34 l R i w i 4 I MARION CARLYLE CRENSHAW, JR. I April 15, 1931, Lancaster, S. C. King of the BBR Davidson College, B.S. Kappa Alpha Order, Alpha Epsi- lon Delta, Phi Beta Kappa Duke Hospital-Medicine Plans: Obstetrics-Gynecology l I YANCEY GOELET CULTON, JR. December 25, 1927 Greensboro, N. C. How about Cranford, Failing, Grunt, Lang, Suds? Guilford College, B.S. Duke Hospital-Obstetrics-Gyne- cology Future: General Practice ELMER ANDREW DEISS, JR. June 22, 1930, Lexington, Ky. King Deese Princeton, A.B. Salt Lake City General Hospital -Medicine Plans: Internal Medicine? CHARLES LAING DoRsEY April 26, 1930, Denver, Colorado Our own 'Lil Abner Virginia Military Institute, B.A. Duke Hospital-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics LAURIE LESTER Doz1ER, JR. February 1, 1927 Tallahassee, Fla. Quiet and unassuming he takes his place among men-and all with one ball! University of Florida, Gaines- ville, Fla., B.S. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Chi Grady Memorial Hospital, At- lanta, Georgia-Medicine Plans:Medicine, Tallahassee, Fla. ROBERT MAYO FAILING October 20, 1928 Ann Arbor, Michigan I pride myself on being so toler- ant-gas or brats- Western Carolina College, A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Phi Sigma, Mason Los Angeles Co. Gen. Hospital- Rotating . Plans: Anesthesiology or Pedi- atrics, California RICHARD NEIL FREDRICKS March 26, 1932, Brooklyn, N. Y. Good humor man, the physician with banker's hours Duke University, A.B. Plans: Clinical research C to find cure for Cancer D JAMES FRANKLIN GIBSON January 10, 1930, Dawson, Ga. Mary's 'lil lamb Duke University, A.B. . Phi Delta Theta, Varsity D,' football, Chronicle,' Tampa Municipal Hospital-Ro tating Plans: General Practice, Wil- mington, N. C.? Qfter jfnur ears -Ef 3 in fin. 'R M X X , .M 'Nm- ll if in I . .151 J Q . if . l 1.54. W. . -6,525 3 .4 I.-md. N xii' 72214 ,ge ,,, H . ' - -'Ea im- Q .- Nr- .wr . Q -' . Vis ia fig' -1 , , -aes -us, J - N . f , - is L YN x . vi, ,Q B Ylgxfsjw E a.. R. syn-A Ns- - +4- ., Q . .,4: r U JAMES FRANK EASTERLING April 8, 1930, Rocky Mount, N. C. Whitey: Speak softly and carry a big stick University of North Carolina, A.B. Phi Chi St. Albans Naval Hospital, New York, N. Y.-Rotating RICHARD SPARRE FOSTER July 2, 1931, Washington, D. C. Fearless Fosdick Duke University, 1949-1952 Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Chi, Phi Chi Grady Memorial Hospital, At- lanta, Ga.-Medicine JOHN ANDREW GEHWEILER, JR. March 18, 1932, Brooklyn, N. Y. The outdoor john Duke University, 1949-1952 Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Delta Phi, Beta Omega Sigma, Phi Chi Philadelphia Naval Hospital- Rotating Plans : Urology HARVEY LEE GRIFFIN, JR. March 21, 1931, High Point, N. C. Bless the squaws who helped him through University of North Carolina, A.B. Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi chi The Queens Hospital, Honolulu, T. H.-Rotating Plans: Internal Medicine, Ashe, boro, N. C. pp , ,,. li rg.. 5 - , T 1 . 1. -X iz if - - F L JEROME ALVIN GRUNT April 6, 1923, Newark, N. J. The Sigmoid Voice, How About Yancey? Rutgers University, B.S., M.S. University of Kansas, Ph.D. Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma X1, Phi Sigma, Beta Iota Lambda, Sigma Alpha Mu Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Academic Anatomy and Pediatrics WILLIAM LADA HASSLER April 10, 1931, Chicago, Illinois The jirst bone to ossify Duke, 1949-1952 Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Chi University Hospital, Cleveland- ' xr Surgery Plans: Orthopedics ANDREW FERREE HORNE July 2, 1929 Bluefield, West Virginia He blows his own Davidson College, B.S., M.S. Phi Delta Theta, Phi Beta Pi, Sigma Delta Psi Duke-Pediatrics Plans: General Practice PETER HUTCHIN September 2, 1930 Brno, Czechoslovakia Only Czechoslouakian chooch known to man Duke, B.S. Phi Chi Grace-New Haven Community Hospital, New Haven, Conn.- Surgery Plans: Surgery 'Z' JOSEPH HAMMOND HARDISON, JR. April 25, 1932, Raleigh, N. C. The big red cloud Duke, 1950-52 KA, BOS, Phi Chi Medical Fra- ternity Cornell, N. Y. Hospital-Surgery Plans: Urology? ALAN MORTON HOLLETT October 4, 1932, Wilmington, Del. I 'uant to be like Hans! Duke, 1949-1952 Tau Psi Omega, Zeta Beta Tau Delaware Hospital, Wilmington, Del.-Rotating ROBERT MACKAY HOWARD December 29, 1931 Savannah, Ga. Angels rush in where fools fear to tread Duke, A.B. ATO, Phi Eta Sigma Emory University Hospital- Pathology Plans: Pathology, Savannah, Ga. JAMES ROBERT JACKSON September 4, 1931 Fayetteville, N. C. Mis' Jim Halsted, a thorn with- out a rose Wake Forest College KA, Beta Beta Beta, Alpha Delta Epsilon, Gamma Sigma Epsi- lon, Phi Chi Duke-Surgery Plans: General Surgery JOSEPH HOYT JACKSON, JR. October 29, 1929, Shreveport, La. Suds, the preacher? How about Yancey? Centenary College of Louisiana, A.B. Phi Chi, ODK, Kappa Sigma Confederate Memorial Medical Center, Shreveport, La.-Ro- tating Plans: General Practice EUGENE JOSEPH JOSEFIAK March 1, 1926, Buffalo, N. Y. Smiling Gene University of Buffalo, Duke, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Chi Beta Phi, Sigma Xi Buffalo General Hospital, Buf- falo, N. Y.-Rotating ' Plans: Academic-Mycology EDWARD RICHARD KOGER March 29, 1930, Miami, Fla. Beau er!! University of Florida, B.S. Barnes, St. Louis, MO.-Surgery Plans: Surgery FRANK ALEXANDER LANG, JR. May 10, 1931, Phoenix, Arizona The Original: How about Yan- cey? Duke, A.B. Ka a Si ma Theta Chi PD Q , Parkland Hospital, Dallas, Texas -Medicine Plans : ? ? Zlfter jfnur ears l. 'av Lge-f .Qu M s -. A + ,fjeign--ggiff' I gf - ,,, , 5. i X . ig ' , tx' gn, ff Sl--nf QC Nun-41 'Ww- DOUGLAS MARION JOHNSON September 18, 1926 Savannah, Ga. Booney Dust!! Emory University, A.B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Tampa Muncipal Hospital-Ro- tating Plans: General Practice HORACE SMITH KENT March 29, 1930, Louisville, Ky. The yellow rose of Arizona Duke, A.B. Pi Kappa Phi, Theta Chi Salt Lake City General Hospital -Medicine Plans 1 7 ? EUGENE LESLIE KOMRAD July 20, 1928, New York City He came in the back door with those bedroom eyes Long Island University, Boston University, S.B., A.M., Ph.D. Sigma Xi, Phi Chi Mt Sinai Hospital, New York, N. Y.-Surgery Plans: Surgery POPE MATTHEWS LEE October 29, 1930 Asheville, N. C. Honest Pope, louder than words Duke, A.B. Phi Kappa Psi Louisville General Hospital- Medicine Plans: ? '? WILLIAM EDWARD MCGOUGH November 12, 1928 Weehawken, N. J. Dukels own Lord Chesterfield Saint Peter's, New Jersey, B.Sc. Phi Chi Plans: Academic Medicine HARRY JACK METROPOL November 20, 1929 Manning, S. C. Did your mother ever tell you you talk too much?,' Duke, A.B. Nu Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Eta Sigma Albany, N. Y.-Surgery Plans: General Surgery HENRY CURTIS MOSTELLAR, JR. July 10, 1930, Montgomery, Ala. A Bishop's Husband Duke, B.S. Beta Omega Sigma, Sigma Chi Duke-Surgery Plans: Neurosurgery BRUCE NEWELL, JR. March 19, 1927, Roxboro, N. C. Ol' Folksey! Duke, A.B. Kappa Alpha, Phi Chi The Memorial Hospital, Danville, Va.-Rotating VERNON PRESSLEY MANGUM November 2, 1921, Hamlet, N. C. Lover Boy University of North Carolina Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa Watts Hospital, Durham, N. C.- Rotating Plans: General Practice DAVID EDMOND MILLER June 6, 1930, Biscoe, N. C. Easy Ed-Still Waters are run- ning- Duke, A.B. Duke-Straight Medical Plans: Internal Medicine JOHN WILLIAM NEAL September 17, 1926, Monroe, N. C. He went. home five times!!!!!! Four hits and a Miss Wingate Junior College, Wake Forest, University of North Carolina, B.S. Tlaeta Chi, Gamma Sigma Epsi- on Tampa Municipal Hospital-Rm tating Plans: General Practice SIDNEY OLANSKY January 11, 1914 Boston, Massachusetts Skirt Flea New York University, B.S., Metropolitan H o s p i t a 1, New York, 1940-42, A m e r i c a n Board of Dermatology and Syphilology, 1949 Plans: Dermatology GEORGE PAULSON July 27, 1930, Raleigh, N. C. The Congenital Flea Yale University, New Haven, Conn., B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa Bellevue-Medicine Plans: Medicine J AMES HAROLD POLLOCK April 25, 1931, Columbus, Ohio Catch those crazy pastel pants! Duke University, A.B. Sigma Chi, Phi Chi Parkland Hospital, Dallas Texas -Rotating Plans: General Practice GEORGE RUFUS RATGHFORD, JR. October 4, 1931, Gastonia, N. C. Rufe the Goof Duke University, 1949-1952 University Hospital, Cleveland- Medicine Plans: '? ? ROBERT LEROY ROLLINS, JR. February 16, 1932 Farmville, North Carolina Get that spook a sheet! University Of North Carolina, A.B. Phi Beta Kappa Charlotte Memorial Hospital, Charlotte, N. C.-Rotating Plans : Psychiatry Zlfter jour Bears eye.- iv ' X g Q.. if if es 'E'- fs .gy - . F, . L EV 'E I I A 5 'L FW ' I HUGH OLIVER PEARSON, JR. February 16, 1931, Wilson, N. C. How to sleep in one easy lesson Wake Forest College, B.S. Phi Chi Grady Memorial Hospital- Medicine Plans: General Practice EDNA ANNE PRESTON May 14, 1931, Fort Bragg, N. C. She knew what she wanted, but the1'e's many a slip and she missed one . . . WOman's College, University of North Carolina, A.B. Beta Beta Beta, Phi Beta Kappa Duke Hospital-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics? ADHEMAR WILLIAM RENUART August 10, 1931, Miami, Florida My Vines Have Tender Grapes Duke University, B.S. Sigma Chi, Delta Phi Alpha Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics PHILIP LEON ROSEBERRY November 10, 1927 Glen Rock, Pennsylvania The only decent guy in the class Duke University, A.B. Phi Chi Philadelphia General Hospital- Rotating Plans: General Practice JAMES VINCENT Ross, JR. August 22, 1929 Easton, Pennsylvania Go, go, go!!! Duke University, A.B. Phi Delta Theta, Delta Phi Alpha Mercy Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa. -Rotating Plans: General Practice JEROME MILES SCHACHTER October 22, 1928, New York City Fools rush in where angels fear to tread Duke University, A.B. Bellevue Medical Center, Fourth Surgical Division, New York City-Surgery Plans: Surgery JosEPH WALTER SHANDS, JR. November 1, 1930 Jacksonville, Florida Milli-Salmonella Shands Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, A.B. Sigma Psi Duke Hospital-Medicine Plans: Medicine CARROLL CLIFTON SHOEMAKER November 18, 1930 Meridian, Mississippi Shoes has an MG Wake Forest College, B.S. Duke Hospital - Obstetrics- Gynecology Plans: General Practice Qfter jfuur ears ,L .15 A L f X X -m.,v X Ig f .f'f'-512' if , ' I - ' t I ' -,an 45. T' .J ' 4' 'U'-A X TK4i X, ' , I 1 f x was ff, 1 VIRGINIA OA'rEs SANFORD September 15, 1922 Greensboro, North Carolina Lover Girl Woman's College, University of North Carolina, A.B. Gamma Sigma Epsilon Duke Hospital-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics NOEL ASHER SCHWEIG March 22, 1930, New York City People are no damn good Wesleyan University, B.A. Long Island Jewish Hospital- Rotating Plans: Psychiatry CLYDE NoRMAN SHEALY December 4, 1932 Columbia, South Carolina N orrnone the Hormone Duke University, 1949-1952 Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Duke Players Duke Hospital-Medicine Plans: Neurosurgery JAMES MARSHALL SLOAN, III July 8, 1930 Gastonia, North Carolina Slimy-four years of abstinence Davidson College, B.S. Kappa Sigma, D Club, Phi Chi Charity Hospital, New Orleans, La.-Rotating Plans: General Practice RICHARD AUSTIN STEELE May 30, 1926, Asheville, N. C. Slick Dick for President Wake Forest College, B.S. Alpha Sigma Phi Bellevue Medical Center, New York City-Medicine Plans: Internal Medicine, Ashe- ville, N. C. LEHMAN N1-:WELL STERLING May 1, 1928 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Leaping Lehmanf-Sterile? Duke University, A.B. Phi Chi Jacksonville Naval Hospital- Rotating Plans: General Practice in Phila- delphia EDWARD GEORGE STUART 1920, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The student nurses, Clark Gable State Teachers College, West Chester, Pa., B.S., Temple Uni- versity, M.A., University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. fanat- omyl Sigma Xi, Alpha Sigma Xi Chester County Hospital, West Chester, Pa.-Rotating JAMES J oYE TOWNSEND January 8, 1929 Jacksonville, Florida If you, too, have orchitis amoro- sum, try marriage, I did. Duke University, A.B. Kappa Alpha, Phi Chi Charity Hospital, New Orleans, La.-Rotating Plans : General Practice Qfter jour ears C'- fv-l' 1 4, C' X fi? ,. ,,r 5 H - W1 . .. N-3 In . ,qv r ,. fa ' 13 2 X ia if . A 'BN wi X R, A 'Surf f Z -Q 5Q.. 1-ay. -vu VX V' . . ,ff lp f A SHELDON HASKELL STEINER February 5, 1931, New York City Another Southerner? ?? At the line for one and one! New York University, A.B. Beta Lambda Sigma, N.Y,U. Bi- ology Honor Fraternity Duke Hospital-Medicine Plans: Surgery SAUL A. STRAUSS July 7, 1930, New York City S0 round, so firm, so fully packed Duke University, A.B. Zeta Beta Tau, Phi Eta Sigma, Tau Epsilon Omega, Phi Beta Kappa Bronx Municipal-Rotating Plans: Medicine SHIN TANAKA February 12, 1938 Hiroshima, Japan I should lose my apartment if I take a bath with my wife?? Duke University, A.B. Chester County Hospital, West Chester, Pa.-Rotating JOHN CALHOUN TURNER September 9 ,l931 Fair Bluff, North Carolina Glans-parking lot!!! Duke University, 1949-1952 Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Sigma Phi, Phi Chi Confederate Mem. Med. Center, Shreveport, La.-Rotating Plans: General Practice THOMAS DOYLE VANCE September 12, 1931 Crossnore, North Carolina Who watches the night watch- man? Duke University, 1949-1952 Phi Chi, Phi Beta Kappa Vanderbilt-Medicine Plans: General Practice ALAN DUANE WHANGER July 17, 1930, Detroit, Michigan Dr. Whangdang Livingston, I presume? Duke University, A.B. Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Psi St. Luke's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio-Rotating Plans: In service of the Board of Missions of the Methodist Church in a yet unknown area. GEORGE DEWEY WILBANKS, JR. February 24, 1931 Tampa, Florida King Kong Duke University, B.A. Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Omega Sigma, Phi Chi, Cabot Society Pennsylvania Hospital-Rotating Plans: Surgery, Florida G1-Y T Q. luv ,J 2 H V Wm A I I X 1 I A fi-af' Zlfter Jfnur fears , if 1 i 4'-'Yea 5 24 QQ' 1 f N... x ss J i, if sz, , , X322 V w ?- , MX, ,fa f, . ' LE ll ', . f at . 'Y 'W-as 4n ? .,--I K vw .Jai ' ' s. 'Z' ,Q 1 1 . 4- N I gl' GEORGE BRITAIN WALTON, JR. September 2, 1931 Lumberton, North Carolina Rigid midget with a frigid digit University of North Carolina, A.B. Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa Ga. Baptist Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. -Rotating Plans: General Practice HARRY A. WHITAKER, JR. May 5, 1930, Rocky Mount, N. C. Maa namme is Speeeedieee Davidson College, B.S. Sigma Chi, Phi Chi Duke-Mixed CPed.-Ob.D Plans: General Practice CHARLES ALBERT WILKINSON June 4, 1932 Wake Forest, North Carolina So this is what itis like? Wake Forest College, B.S. Sigma Pi, Phi Chi, Phi Beta Kappa Duke Hospital-Surgery Plans: Surgery S 9, I- I 1 x 1 Q 'T ' ii l , at in I ie: -52555525 F-T f .Wig ' I F i . ' it aim' I deux-1 care Kg, IYIQJ Sahel Annes 14,195 1555-15 utah-T,'D1. LURVVOQI-, 1?rgF6rThnT Lgomiotjglflfgaewu 42 OU-YXNE 6:n.TiguT4 VO.-A uoxmk Xe. Sew QV'-'LSAT 'T'N.E. hi :To rss . COLON HAYES WILSON, JR. April 10, 1932 Marshallberg, North Carolina Ricktum, the Splenic Flexure Syndrome Duke University, A.B. Nu Sigma Nu University of Virginia, Char- lottesville, Va.-Medicine Plans: Internal Medicine ROBERT EMERSON WINDOM July 14, 1930, Columbus, Ohio Ace, the class politician Duke University, A.B, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, President Y.M.C.A., O m ic r O n Delta Kappa, Phi Chi Parkland Hospital, Dallas, Texas -Medicine Plans: Internal Medicine M HADLEY RASCH YOUNG November 25, 1929 Duluth, Minnesota To know him was to love him- OTLC9 The Citadel, B.S. Phi Chi St. Mary's Hospital, Duluth, Minn.-Rotating Plans: General Practice or Sur- gefy E-95'.f 66! I 'll bd Than fu Rnce Culfow makes R f ' 5-55 Wkiufogdollhrs For Jiscov'er'Wf' l Thoifwew S NTMTSQ T rwhojw in qv 5 .vp Nl uf' 2 Wi ,f ,, fl Xi, N if . , 7' W . ref Q f , , if J iii ill u ,A - . g , qw? , if ali: , ,, 43 families '?W5 -uf- NA ' ,rlwrrfikf ,S bias. Li fx A XS' if 's I, MJ gf ,Iv 'Qi if' NWA 1- N , laws I EN' - Em I QQ. 'FQ-I f Y.. Q... V, , 4. V3 H Ronald Eugene Allison, Wed: January 11, 1955, Durham, N. C., Anne Weaver Allison, August 23, 1930, Logan, West Virginia, Michael Clinton Allison, November 9, 1955, Durham, N. C. 4' V I F RJvnTisLruuT fvfvfs ollfy I .1 eg. 1 Mix 7' , . A 1 - . n mnw fy 'ff ' ,, CD ! ff llfll1llL'lLlNilllll!'fl'.lf ea 6 Q 9 .' 1 fx Anlne Przgton Askew, Wed: June 17, 1955, Atlanta, Georgia, Stell Blake Askew, June 30, 1929, At anta, eorgia. if - Q is ' vs. 'T-'v3 -. ,ir see 'gf yY,! W Qu if 1 Edward B. Brown, Wed: June 16, 1955, Ringgold, Georgia, Mary Ann Bell Brown, I-loschton, Georgia. William Blair Bryan, Wed: July 3, 1954, Battleboro, N. C., Nell Philips Bryan, December 2, 1930, Battleboro, N. C. .-'V as ,- We ' f ,. W ' 'iw A 1.-I' 1 -..., K ff ff . : ' f I , , . . N I 5 ' --f . Wiz' w , af ,,, , .,:. 3 A.. V F , 1 1 - av. X, -3, N ' CM? v'v'i-'gi' HM-fa. P '22 -4. I -is ev ,, ,QM 5' , sw' , at chi' ,ff?',., i +ff1,,,, - LLM-.f:f,L'1v1' :'.f'..f 'LH-+-Zi , Harold Davis Cranford, Wed: February 11, 1944, Asheboro, N. C.: Gloria Anderson Cranford, July 31, 1923, Brooklyn, N. Y., Harold Vernon Cranford, August 3, 1948, Charlotte, N. C. 44 3, Q1 A, .' w 95423 cu, ,mf mis' 41 ' CRENSHH4-03 in ','f.f rx I 9 M lfx Q 'FQ 4 J wx ' f,Q. qf.fY'zf2 1 ' X' ' j' fax Marion Carlyle Crenshaw, Jr., Wed: June 25, 1953, Martha Beasley Crenshaw, October 22, 1932, Greenwood, S. C., Marion Carlyle Crenshaw, III, July 10, 1955, Durham, N. C. 'aim Q.. ' XM ' ,H K Yancey Goelet Culton, Jr., Wed: June 30, 1951, Sandy Spring, Maryland, Anne Hallowell Stabler Culton, July 1, 1929, Newark, New Jersey, Yancey Goelet Culton, III, August 13, 1955, Durham, N. C. 419 'xx , av x. Q., s r 4: X William Alexander Davis, Jr., Wed: June 16, 1950, Fort Mill, S. C., Mary Rose Bostick Davis, April 30, 1928, Charlotte, N. C., William Seth CChipD Davis, June 5, 1951, Durham, N. C., John Scott Davis, March 19, 1953, Durham, N. C. 1 ' - H X 1 N-,. Wil:- -1 i i? 'i db- reef 5 f37xN sf- M WWW ' '3 -Q - ---W'?f'ffZ ' -15-ykla 'mf if www Elmer Andrew Deiss, Jr., Wed: March 17, 1956, Durham, N. C., Lois Plummer Deiss, December 3, 1934, Brevard, N. C. 45 fl! i xg' S- 11351 4, 4- l 515 .rl ,, s Charles Laing Dorsey, Wed: June 20, 1952, Salem, Virginia, Joan Neal Johnston Dorsey, April 20, 1930, Roanoke, Virginia, Charles Nealson Dorsey, August 31, 1954, Durham, N. C. We , . A . h K ,Q J -af 'H , Q., ,I z-. . C 3 fs ,,,, fi, Yi? fig Laurie Lester Dozier, Jr., Wed: June 11, 1949, Tallahassee, Florida, Sarah Marie Simmons Dozier September 29, 1930, Tallahassee, Florida, Laurie Lester Dozier, III, March 31, 1950, Tallahassee Florida, Sarah Marie Dozier, April 2, 1951, Tallahassee, Florida, John Simmons Dozier, March 10 1954, Tallahassee, Florida. '- -:Ii fi ,Zf,'.f.'J?... ' . , . . it 1 Q 5, .2 V ' if-25,' ' . 3, 1. 5 ii , i 1 Robert Mayo Failing, Wed: June 20, 1955, Toledo, Ohio, Letty Ward LauHer Failing, January 5, 1934, Louisville, Ky., John Andrew Gehweiler, Jr., Wed: June 19, 1955, Glen Ridge, New Jersey, Faith Lassiter Gehweiler, December 25, 1933, New York, N. Y. ,nw- F' . if , fix H , , X James Franklin Gibson, Wed: June 17, 1951, Greenville, N. C., Mary Smith Gibson, January 7, 1930, Greenville, N. C., Martha Brockton Gibson, April 30, 1955, Durham, N. C., Susan Gerhling Gibson, June 20, 1953, Durham, N. C. 46 7 G35-D 14 N A vs U, - ie Q. Ev ww . Q K l ya .' , L as rp - , i 9 rj if Jerome Alvinf Grunt, Wed: July 29, 1950, Kansas City, Missouri, Hope Howieson Grunt, January 30, 1928, New York, N. Y., Rebecca Ruth Grunt, June 19, 1952, Lawrence, Kansas, David William Grunt, May 29, 1953, Prairie Village, Kansas, Jonathan Joseph Grunt, February 9, 1956, Durham, N. C. ' v omg Kzuud-5 575 9 f g g ' 5 V' .1 f 3 ' 6' Andrew Ferree Horne, Wed: December 26, 1952, Northfork, West Virginia, Sue Carroll Horne, July 14, 1931, Northfork, West Virginia. 5 Robert Mackay Howard, Wed: June 26, 1954, Jacksonville, Florida, Margaret Braun Howard, November 19, 1927, Jacksonville, Florida, Mary Teresa Howard, June 25, 1955, Durham, N. C. 15.29 ,, ... 1 f i . , V E l x :X QW Y N Q N PL I - DEL., xg. L Ji.-fYQ : CL X, Y 0 Douglas Marion Johnson, Betty Talkington Johnson, Jackson, Tennessee, Cynthia Johnson, Octo- ber 14, 1955, Durham, N. C. 47 l 2 'W 2 - 3 Eugene Joseph Josefiak, Wed: June 28, 1950, Buffalo, New York, Theodora Kubik Josefiak, Buf- falo, N. Y., John Nicholas Josefiak, II, May 11, 1953, Durham, N. C., Eugene J. Josefiak, Jr., April 23, 1955, Durham, N. C. ws f ,V ! 7 'Kr' ,NW if 7 F -L W sf. W -iff xi it are .. 'Q owewfmwbw dl Edward Richard Koger, Wed: June 27, 1952, Miami, Fla., Catherine Register Koger, March 7, 1930, Jacksonville, Fla., Karen Ann Koger, January 20, 1956, Durham, N. C. Eugene Leslie Komrad, Wed: June 17, 1951, New York, N. Y., Audrey Katz Komrad, March 23, 1930, New York, N. Y., Vernon Mangum, Wed: September 24, 1955, Greensboro, N. C., Virginia Sanford Mangum, September 15, 1922. Greensboro, N. C. 5.5 Harry Jack Metropol, Wed: June 19, 1955, Columbia, S. C., Phyllis Constantinides Metropol, May 21, 1930, Salonika, Greece, Henry Curtis Mostellar, Jr., Wed: June 17, 1955, Monticello, Florida, Mary Bishop Mostellar, December 6, 1930, Monticello, Florida. 48 A M 111.1 John William Neal, Wed: August 23, 1946, Dillon, S. C., Nancy McEachern-Neal, July 4, 19299 John William Neal, July 1, 1947, Washington, D. C., Paul Greyson Neal, April 23, 1950, Raleigh, N. C. 5... ' W Y R212 Ag ' I 'Q-of -ni 3 ,f . Christopher Horace Neal, March 8, 1952, Raleigh, N. C., Kemp Albright Neal, June 16, 1954, Ra- leigh, N. C., Ninneva Nancy Neal, November 15, 1955, Raleigh, N. C. ,Z Sidney Olansky, Wed: October 13, 1945, Washington, D. C., Marian Freehafer Olansky, November 3, 1918, Washington, D. C., Leann Olansky, March 1, 1947, Durham, N. C., Alan Joseph Olansky, January 22, 1949, Washington, D. C. . . 1 X . If-'W Q sig.. S. K David Charles Olansky, October 29, 1950, Atlanta, Ga., Ad Sidney.Olansky, November 28, -1952, Atlanta, Ga., Bruce Newell, Jr., Wed: December 20, 1949, Zephyrhills, Florida, Marilyn Skinner Newell, March 20, 1920, Rochester, N. Y. 49 l ilk George Paulson, Wed: June 26, 1954, Raleigh, N. C., Ruta Bergmonis Paulson, December 10, 1930, Riga, Latvia, Robert L. Rollins, Jr., Wed: June 19, 1955, Farmville, N. C., Janet Stansill Rollins, June 30, 1931, Farmville, N. C. , ,af 1' 6' x I Y4. , . V' ' . . 'F' fl T 3 - aid ' , . ' V -. 1 5 0 : V 'lfN l x .,ji , X a T 0 4 Am h . ,, j . James Harold Pollock, Wed: December 28, 1951, Fort Myers, Florida, Hester Hough Pollock, May 16, 1930, Fort Myers, Florida, James Scott Pollock, January 11, 1956, Durham, N. C. vw pa ,X Vs... 1 ,,, 4' Q my ': J M Nt, L 4 ,A fy. .,,. ve? , QP 43 1' . t I if fi i f -' f r ..-1 L- Adhemar William Renuart, Wed: December 30, 1952, Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, Ruth Kimmel Renuart, January 8, 1932, Front Royal, Va., Sandra Lynn Renuart, October 1, 1953, Durham, N. C., Emilia Leggih Renuart, September 12, 1954, Durham, N. C., Kim Louise Renuart, August 14, 1955, ur am, . C. WWW Car M 4 I Q 'W ' 4 AR 42521 James Vincent Ross, Jr., Wed: August 23, 1952, Durham, N. C., Margaret Goodman Ross, August 24, 1927, Concord, N. C., James Vincent Ross, III, February 4, 1954, Durham, N. C. 50 S . ,X 1 gifs N. Q A .-9 A -fi 73 .. ,.,'v,'y A Sri X 3 Jerome Miles Schachter, Wed: December, 1955, Elizabeth Crain Schachter, December 31, 19331 Durham, N. C., Joseph Walter Shands, Jr., Wed: June 15, 1955, Jacksonville, Florida, Elizabeth Anne Rogers Shands, October 15, 1932, Marianna, Florida. If 4- l 35' ' X K P-.9 F ,Q ...pq 1. 1 nl S f 1 1 W 1 A A L. K Noel Asher Schweig, Wed: June 18, 1950, New York, N. Y., Nannette Hertz Schweig, August 18, 1929, New York, N. Y., Graham Manfred Schweig, August 2, 1953, New York, N. Y., Gwendolen Amelie Schweig, May 4, 1955, Durham, N. C. .1' 'Ns A 437 , f, me F- fy , Q7 . .539 -1 . . 'K 1 3? 1 1. Q , x , . Vg 'A 192,21-e . Q ' 37 1 , .,' Q5fS'E:2! Carroll Clifton Shoemaker, Wed: June 20, 1953, Albemarle, N. C., Jeannine Boysworth Shoe- maker, December 13, 1930, Norwood, N. C.: Sheldon H. Steiner, Wed: November 6, 1955, Durham, N. C., Betty Northey Steiner, September 29, 1931, Burlington, N. C. 1- 13.1 V wr W W 3 Q Edward George Stuart, Wed: June 19, 1943, Tyler, Texas: Avis Densmore Stuart, 1922, Ridley Park, Pennsylvania, David Edward Stuart, January 9, 1945, Fort McClellan, Alabama, John Densmore Stuart, January 9, 1945, Fort McClellan, Alabama. SI AFS 14 - -'bx QI ' -4 , A 'If' ,s 5 Shin Tanaka, Wed: February 6, 1954, Durham, N. C., Taeko Fujita Tanaka, May 19, 1929, Hok- kaido, Japan, James J. Townsend, Wed: June 26, 1954, Tallahassee, Florida, Catherine Brittain Townsend, May 24, 1930, Jacksonville, Florida. ' me 'Wu ...fagw - 1 4. E . ' ' ff QS-4 4' 1 is , 3? ,' X 1,'f'f,.s F ', 3' : Q I! I vw ,. f aa, K .ky x 1 . 'ws ., Mi, fi 'mf ,E R- 3' BV 'wtf ' W1 A I.. . 4 , N, . M , f KM, A , 4 1.53.5 ,3,,, Q? J '6-1 KZ' 'E-:fri f 2+ va. ' KAL. 112. r . . Alan Duane Whanger, Wed: December 26, 1955, Brunswick, Georgia, Mary Whittle Whanger, January 13, 1929, Brunswick, Georgia, George Dewey Wilbanks, Jr., Wed: July 31, 1954, New Orleans, Louisiana, Evelyn Rivers Wilbanks, June 19, 1932, Atlanta, Georgia. Charles Albert Wilkinson, Wed: August 20, 1955, Smithfield, N. C., Ann Woodall Wilkinson, November 9, 1930, Smithfield, N. C., Robert Emerson Windom, Wedz' September 5, 1953, Sara- sota, Florida, Lelia Harmon Windom, January 16, 1931, Sarasota, Florida. 52 'Cs 4 ,L Q r fu a 3 , , . go nn. w -0 ,ay . -a -1 1 n Q ' A ,I dv I v Ut' ' 'W' ' Q, 2: 9 2 W L - -- N- f -. .1 Y ff -' I 1 1. 1 7, .., .' ,. .. 1 , . s 'ff -- 3 - 4 N 5 . A k .li!f'fL!LQ,LQ. ,,.. A. Nff+iEL.NgL.5LQ,l uucorm E- P ax.wig4lLL,L5,JH HAHHel-K,HN,.iRw r -KHen,fu.1 iw 11. aL.1f.HmQ 3lQl' .ff ? fl L , ' ,M , ,. I f L Q V o -ran, 'ag -fl-pn. ag. . ff' 'fa' '15, . :ffl-vs .f 1 H ,, 4 , 4 -4 : ., L L, I X 'at r ' , 1 y - I , 'D ' B- 5 A . lk AL . A km 1 93. BROMBERGJXM BUNN.-1 P CANNON,S J CREuGHTON,J Big- DuLnN,T L EHTESHAM, T ELOERLT D ELLHJGTOfL,Eu?!kq- PUANELALL5 W ..: f .:. K 1 1. 1 ' 4 -Q . , I , . ' S V 8 - . .,, in an .fl . ii , , I ' 1 5 FnsHER,e L ,JR FULTON, Jw esBsoN,To ,JR c1vENs,o M HALE,L S. HALL,J.s ,gn D ?'QS4RLEY,E L HULL, o B if Av HGLLYIPL 3 in F -vw 5 QV I v A t Q K 'X Q 1 .4 9 Q 5: sz, 3 '-Q ' --. -1- . . 2 v' - f 1- ,J I 'Q - -1 , -- V ka ,Fl y -.., . -'S' 'W - - Le 1:1 L Rh N tv Ugg HOwELL,R R HOWSE,R M HURST, L. R JAMES,':1S.,JR JOHNSON,PA KARPMAN,S B KELLER, D H K1RKMAN,S EVA KuTLowsKn,E J 6 ,QSM ,A ,Wh , n ,mn .Ig ,an -. f V 1 I L. , 'Q L, 4 . l .Q . 'X -4- 4 'V ,Q ,, Q . ,Q .gwzfiq L ' ' -,I x AQ, I , , L Q 4 , L L .. .Lg N. Q ,. . ,. L . L ...5 . Kwncxenaocm-:R,E Q xoMRAo,E L. LAcKEv,oA QTEBAUEFLS 5 Lewus,wR , JR L.ONGSTF1ETH,DB McmN1s,Ac,.:R MosEL5f,R G MvR1cK,s E ,JR -fr V' , . , 5 - f '- - 2 961 V' ...+A ,.i'. 'J .1-'Lf -3' .5 A Q ' f I ' tm' N 1 5 lx 'If - ' OMANSKLB L O'MANSKY,S 1 ONEKLL J F PAINTER B E PANTELAKOSLG PATR1cK,P L PEPF'ER,G PERKiNS,H T, JR PlL.l.SBURY,RT,JR A it . Y . in MW -H Z L Mx ,fea ' , V Q ,E I s if 'Rf -3445? an 'E A- 'li . Q R . avg, up ,U -if-K' zz: L f -127 1 ww. L Q.-si mg xx Y Q x . , 45 L Q .. Q' ,I Po'5ToN,R L 5 PowELL,A H , JR PROCTERMJQ ,JR REDMONDJ S ,JR REESE, 0 , JR Raimi-wAv,NA ,JR RQCGCRS,Fi L 1' wf:+1rf-f.,1f-, , Vw szxwf-ERf1,c .gm I -.,- . L ,,,,--lm.. ..,, ---L ,.., ,h.. -.--.w,-.,,, ..-L-.,,.....M..,WH,,,.L.....-,L,- W , f,,4M,M,,,,,,,,,,A, , .1 .L - W V M V 5 MJ f' 7 I , 4 . Q 1 ,Vat q 'AQ 'Nh A :QQ yn- F rang, ,N -Q f i 'nf -4? -- P ,V Q if, -J , 1 i v 1 '22, , TI- '3- 'Z 'T ' -- ' Y? I 'Q . , , W , x ' Q . A I . X 4 L Q gn L 1 up 45 Gr4WENF1E1.3,L,,..f1 .Il4TTERF4ELV?,GH,iH S,f:HLv,1,H sq .IR Q SfLH'JVARTZ,M .3 SEl3GLE,L w1,.iR SHNGLL rorgwu Qww, R L SM !'4,NE ,W 4 ' ' i'1'i-.gm , .3 in . ' , A X N 1 f 'fu 11-Q1 W 2 as 5-On. mg .., ,si '33, .sql -'J' Z ,W ' ' i 4 J Na .5 ! 'rl I 9 M. 'If' Ag J' ,,,, ,rx ': 2- . Q L . 17 3 a l -3 Q w rl ' A Q 4 ' ' B nf vulxf :ff i xm r :S ry lk: E !wrwwr1,U H Ni 1' -,F rx !v:.'44'E v H '-' f i.A'ii!i:i ----H ' - 'f ' f - x aa In '43 . ev 1 f ' . . ' L A -4 f . i lf. 'fi' ! X-L , 4 , Y mu3Ss1.rf11a,n, nAm:I5oN,'r'.ii. 1.uNcz5'I'RE:'1'u,n, mul... r-gsz,c1,u, W rin I. 'HL-If. N. Wi' - lass nf 1957 1 4-1 ,P I X - ,, I -42 ' V na I K Q5 , rv, ! ,S . vu- ' 'T' JI , , xx rl x 39' , - A A if L ' h , , Q 5 AL EN :E is S 4 ' . N 1 . 'fm' J , J S 41 L . ,Jr ALT MAN, R S ANDERSON, E E BARNHARDTA EJJI1 BELL, J H BERRY, R BINGMAN, K R 9OROERS,O O snANOw,R J , 1 'Q Q , rx r 3 . J n 'QQ . A 1 v ,Q ,R I . H, R0 3 r Y Q ' J .4 V S J A--nd ' V s x nn Q i Q f ' M1 I 'X W X 45 A . I BRYANT, WF.-If BYERS, FM .Jr CASSAOY, G E .Il CHAMBERSJ? T CHRISUE, JN ,Jr DIXON, J E DUNN, J T EVANS, J C EVANS, J S i , ' ' 5 .L ,av , qv ,V ' 9 'fe ' YQ S -, 9-Q I .gg ' , - -.J A L J , J L f J S, L A , A ' JS1 'N 1 . , ' ' E f ' 'M 1' I A h xi? ff 'ASQ FORTH, J J GARczA,G C GARCIA-TRlAS,D E GOLOSERG, D GRAHAM, 1' c GRIFFlN,AT,'iI1 ? GROOSKY, L N, GRUNERT, DH sum , T D ' 1 i ! Eff? .vibgif Q , . an ,WJ , ,Q , ,Q my gg. J S- ' J .EV - J ',:,f ig-J -1 J wr 'ex L YS w A V it, , . ,. 9 X A f J HANOY, JR HARRIS, ac HART, E ra NARTsELL,cJ,Jf HEINE, M w HERNANOEZJQR HowELL,TR HOwER1'ON,PT HURLBURT, JC N ' 'ff- W 1 1 nl nfl ll . 'V' .4 ' 'Iqbal-W'i' q l F 7 'Q 9 ' 1 I U 'H' vw 5 9 Nw if 4 ww Q Q X ,jf Q ,,111f A S f I ' K 'N INGALLS, J M JOHNSON, AW JOHNSON, H F J JOHNSON, J A JOHNSTON,ww , JONES,B E V JONES, O R KIRKLANDJA ,J LAUGHLIN, E H J , . 5' N-4. ,V , r 1 S Q K '- 53 57 3 LQ gig V 1 e -N01 -K , ' Z :L U-A , 2, A 5 .414 ,- A .., , ,G 1 Wh! 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I s Remember, boys, when you get upstairs and the going's tough, this is what you wanted . . . spoon-feeding . . . few believed it at first, but after a week of Bio! . . . four girls in the class, each one of the boys . . , Peggy Johnson Rutnowski Johnson Duncan??? . . . One lost the first week . . . Class 'tcharactersw Cmost of the classl quickly recognized . . . 8:30 movies . . . demonstrations: not a quiz, just a teaching ses- sion . . . Lucy's first View of sperm: Jesus, look at 'em go! No wonder they're so dangerous . . . Dr. H's ready wit: Miss Preston, people will think weire having an affair back here . . . After Miss P. knocked books off during micro lecture: Pick him up and prop him back on the stool . . . Spastic Cwhy?D quizzes in the dark . . , Certain class members who each day developed a new disease, low back pain predominant . . . A certain female always worrying about pregnancy . . . Psych lectures . . . Anne singing I Wanta play mammals in the moonlight . . . A certain class member, after one of the usual bull sessions, It's a shame our brains are located in our ........ . . . Dr. Peele asking a patient to remove his shoes Some things are better with your shoes off You know, Doc, sometimes I have to agree with you . . . A certain student, late, period . . . Mock clinic: how risque can you get? . . . It was believed that a certain garrulous student, bored with slides, was making shadow figures on the screen, but he quickly thought up a question to ask . . . this same student spent 70 minutes an- swering one question . . . First slide description: which student wrote 12 pages, front and back? . . . What is a prehensile vagina? . . . Cabin parties and just parties, at least 3fweek . . . P J . . . Med School dance, what a brawl . . . Only one wedding . . . Christmas holidays . . . Finally Neuro begins to straighten out . . . Final exam: hand in your paper and get your grade . . . cadaver hop-the drunkest bunch of bums you ever saw . . . The new regime . . . When the Revolution comes . . . This is what we wanted? . . . Fifty experiments the first week . . . as for Kleiner, I can't think of anything bad enough to say about him . . . When the new book comes out, someone's going to criticize it, once . . . The Wedge appears . . . Physio, a welcome relief . . . Urine bottles: who traded in for a wider mouthed bottle? . .. Why don't you go flying with me said the spider to the Hy . . . Pardon me, Madam . . . Is it true you rolled the stone away on Easter morning?,' . . . After winning a bet from Dr. H., a famous student asks Are we still 57 friends? . . . Kymographs: the bane of a med studentls life . . . The first 24 hour collection: Whitey wins an award for the greatest volume . . . Lucy, with only 400 cc, quipped As you boys can see, I just don't put outi' . . . Dr. H. always wanting to t'bleed someone . . . A certain student trying to get into a locked room, Deese iss Deeck Steeele . . . I never can find anyone to go to bed with me at these parties, so I just leave? . . . L'Never? Well, hardly ever . . . Stomach tubes: Erskine funnelling in ethanol, f'It's quicker that way? . . . Spring holidays, a large favor . . . Those damn diets . . . Flash: Miss P. at a cabin party asked for a few ham- burgers for that poor old dog outside. When she tripped and dropped them, the dog ran up and she yelled HOh, he really is eating them! But how many did you eat? . . . The class couple continue their affair . . . L'Dr. H., don't you like me? My name's D. S., and you never speak to me when we pass . . . Who's going to volunteer to demonstrate the cremasteric reflex? . . . Dr. Dis definition of a coon hunt Just a necking party . . . Those last hectic spring days and then, thank heaven, summer vacation . . . Which class male and female made a beach trip? . . . And who, draped out for a hemorrhoidectomy, was greeted Hi, what're you doing here? . . . Just a few weeks before the New Year . . . Mis- taken identity: Hi, Shorty! My name's Wood- hall, whatls yours? Mud, sir! . . . New wives and new faces . . . Bugs and drugs . . . Unknown slides with much coin tossing . . . A certain student has a new look . . . and brave, he disagreed with Dr. L. I think you're all over- board. And you've come to throw me a life saver? . . . See here, do you really read these or do you just weigh them?'! . . . Days and days on What is Disease . . . Doctor Forbus says it's Reaction to Injury . . . Which students memorized numbers of slides, instead of contents? . . . Smiley's Bacillus . . . Fifth quarter and a new philosophy . . . Don't worry, by next year, even the Pole'll forget . . . After unsuccessfully interrupting a certain instructor, some student asks Are you hard of hearing? . . . Pope Pius, observing a brain, asked Is that a surgical pa- thology case? . . . Dog Surgery: no one flunks, we donit want to put up with you next year . . . Autopsy call: how many students were more pickled than their cases? . . . P. D .... What female student asked H. P. What's the normal size and consistency of the testicle? . . . One of the biggest mistakes we make is assuming that we are normal . . . Daddy Blue Eyes takes a trip . . . Rain, go away . . . A certain wife called her spouse, Hey, Genel' and got an un- expected answer from the Big Euge, 'fHi! . . . . . . It can rain nowf' and then there was a flood . . . Round-ups . . . What bashful female lectured on the The Great Pissing Evil . . . Damn it, if you donlt know how to do it, ask Tanaka: he knows. . . . First encounter with the Hero Hotel . . . Which well-known student thought a huge blood clot was a spleen? . . . A brief rest before hematology . . . Which sawed off little student coined the phrase 'tyou sawed off little German . . . He later tried to confuse someone with chicken blood slides . . . Which student was re- ferred to when a certain technician asked, Who let that child loose in here?,' . . . Which student described the fundus of a patient who had a completely obstructing cataract? . . . Many missed round-ups before the final one when another student asked Dr. F. How did you get where you are?'l . . . Another summer . . . State Boards, externships, clinical clerks, school, and loafing . . . New wives and in the fall new faces . . . Including the one of What makes you such a bastard fame . . . OB with the BBR and WBR . . . Now, Mother, just breathe through your mouth and let your belly move . . . Which student of spook fame looked out the window while the nurse delivered his patient? . . . Tox watch! . . . How many pre- cipitations did our class have? . . . This G.D. bloody hole . . . Cutting days . . . The surgical wedge . . . I.V.'s and general crud . . . And when we finish with him, he'll sound as normal as you or I . . . The biggest mistake is assuming we are normal. . . . Which student had a pt. with a c. c. of A sore on my peter ? . . . Or the other one with Some- thing wrong with my ballsl' . . . If that's rhino- phyma, what's phimosis? . . . Many revolutions with trips to private side . . . Jelly boots . . . Which alert student suggested Why donlt we combine Neurology and Neurosurgery? . . . He was known to pull off his gloves and leave the O. R. at 5 o'clock . . . Which student got apost- card Getting any lately? . . . and from whom? . . . The tooth-dentist . . . Water works, osteo- paths, nerve cutters, EENT, beauticians, Bard- Parker, gas passers . . . When I was a resident at the john . . . Traction is a man's best friend . . . The best pancreas I ever saw, but the patient died . . . Who, when asked How are you? an- swered: Oh! Just Lucky I guess! . . . Oom- pah! . . . Circumcised mass in the Breast . . . Flea Service: nerve fleas, skin fleas, heart fleas, gut fleas, blood fleas, lung fleas, sex and hormone fleas, just plain fleas . . . Dr. E. flushes again: Do you want to know what this patient has? It's myXedema! . . . Not even a little trace of Cush- ing's? . . . No one would object if you did a little work . . . You might as well have stayed home for all you've contributed . . . How much iron is there in a slice of bread? . . . What kind? . . . House staff parties . . . Rice: parched, boiled, puffed, fluffed, raw, etc .... Lupus preps 'til positive . . . Stools times three . . . Peter Rabbits: The most popular specialty in our class . . . Which infamous student checked the charts of his classmates for undone lab work? . . . And who was Sneaky enough to fudge names of patients? . . . The most likely diagnosis in a four year old was reported as Toxemia of Pregnancy by which prompt student? . . . Watch Hans Convulse every Tuesday . . . Research C?D papers . . . Wild Bill . . . Miscellaneous: Apartments and the flats . . . Our mock CPC . . . Moose, Moose on the wall, whois the best pathologist of all? In all the world there is only one of greater fame and Baby Anderson is his name . . . That makes five now . . . Really? Who the aitch cares? . . . A thorn without a rose . . . Him? Oh, he flies like Peter Pan . . . The yearbook: much confusion on names. But who ever heard of a book called Proctoscope ? . . . Internships with the cruel cold world to be faced, at long last . . . Remem- ber, boys, this is what you wanted. C. NORMAN SHEALY 7 4 ,Q Go' A 'fa'rrM'1,, lx V V i i. X u, W if X yvv ' ' .. ga- 6 I v Egg . , , i wr X ,,,, iq...- 1 GZIP- X 6' Qing 'X'-v, . + ,gg-Q, F. if wg-.i Q , Q - M' I Z gm? f I ,1 : A i 9 .v 'U ' 3 v FAMovs LAS f' N045 - R+ X S+ Fx 'S Hin 'fo go 'Hg I'ua.,lfy'!' Eoldaf A ML H5 V -- 4:-.1 0 uh W :J f f ., . 1- ' . Z: ,, ' 4' I. nah... -E Z in - I. NJWM' ANL' 1, X ,, 1 f 'N rj' Rx I .. IQQHQ fx 1, S I Am Xu Zhi? ,val N1 WW ,ig ' A 1 I f ' mf! I A, ' t f0,b.?f'5 airing? gjm-1-L 0 5 irffo Dr-. Qfu.a.w1'15 f.u,-fag,-an 74.- . X'x Eg' -Fri' . V 1 X, - f7A'f'?ia'!! fff2 fff 1 w Hf?fff f.Xa f y X . , llI9yl,.!,,..eQmi '.I..5s ! I ,lf ff.f, .L ' 17LA' m11!lfIf 5 jz55y,i 'j,1Z .L ,-:jj ' A U Ildflltljpllllplll 'W lfifff 4 .fiI'1l? 'fk l 'X l'. ',f.fff!' lf, g f WMf'.' ,ffp. '1 ' 5' f' 4 G-RK lm cxrow me-T' ln oe.Tnr lake 'VN 'J X i E 'x ,f K1 A E . 1 , ll ll ' ,gk i1 g S 5 l -5 -e 2 X 1, ' w 'ULS1 V 17 if 4 X V :f':' f Q I I4' x.. ' , f , 5' I A M Z' Q 4 .g,1. Q X ' ,4 4' 4, uf,-.' ff, ,l' ,Z!,jgf,T,'r,' M X f X95 I l'1 r 1l 7H ' f 7 f ,,l1,1,rf., ' ,,p,.lI,.nxg Z WIA 'll' llmll ' N I N 'Z 1'f ' 1 H'f1fH s1 A V 41 ,Mff4'?'f-5.5,2'Z.1- 5-' 6- lzlu W ' f 1 fi, iffy! Jnulllp Lum ' IH J' f'Wf.fg5':1 lg,n:':'1,,.g:i 'ul! U X I' 'fix Inf! I' ,1,! ! Ji, I' t N ,I Him' , v,, 'f', fl'f,'.Hi!!g! ', I, I ' 4 X f'.,1f l L' Jw! I1 I If Q ll ' ,4g,l',,.. ,I V, 1 Nil Wlllmlqf ,Inf ll! :17W7 :Hin ra, f X 4um.fmc'f'Zi, M 1' 'S' f ' S' 0 0 0 Q H ' A ' J J KZ? ff!!! ,Q lx hw 'L 'V Zia ff ! . , .nf ,, 1 5 S J, ,VP QA. sl ,g Q' 7 .5 . if x x I 1 'Gly , V X162 yy, nr L: 1 ,. 'E FY'-r iv iii , un' 1 ' m l I L spur b-ILSTN 46, L - cv ffouff U07 'xr I 5 X. C' af' 0'-5 Own, TAS- MOYQI H01 if fl! 'H-L Zrl 7f4fS' 7? ISQbnJl4L Q Can 1100 ml UMGU iflllemurial . I ' fvic sf N. -r.. ' a 4 W. ef : 2 ,gan-4-avoir A , DR. W. J. DANN DR. F. M. HANES DR. R. R. JONES Professor of Nutrition Professor of Medicine Assistant Professor -of Surgery, in Died: December 5, 1948 Died: Merch 25, 1946 Charge at Plastic Sargery Died: November 18, 1941 DR. SEYMOUR KORKES DR. W. A. PERLZWEIG CARL ROGERS Associate Professor of Biochemistry Professor of Biochemistry The Assistant Dean Died: December 10, 1955 Died: December 10, 1949 Died: February 11, 1956 -ii if -' tikgf x ' ,, 1 ffr 'W' . ffif 5? .5 ,Z NA- 'frigg- 12 , ziiivxi in LA ' 'jf W If ' '.'li if 1 fi xx. 1 1 1 V. u f MRS. ELIZABETH GLEN SWETT DR. F. H. SWETT DR. J. C. TRENT Secretary to the Committee of Professor of Anatomy Assistant Professor of Surgery, in Admissions Died: February 10, 1943 Charge of Thoracic Sargerg Died: November 6, 1955 Died: December 10, 1948 9 gb- 'ef' M Q-.6 PM NOX UM ,Qi A . J, QQYWQJYCL B. U75 H f'I Vik av- 'Q fu Qt R A 1116 'tM0'Niwj RouvsC1S H R SQYG4' of 7'-9-Q E'c2.Sf-I ayxqfffafuaz, Prof wf SLUCIQHYLS all ? lint npatbuluggiral unference Saturday, October 22, 1955 Case-I. D. Duke No. IZ880 Pathology No. DEAD Admitted-June 8, 1955 Expired-June 15, 1955 Clinical Presentation-Dr. Usa Bedstead Pathological Presentation-Dr. Foxy Probus C. C.: This 108 years old mulatto, married male gigolo from Surelay, Georgia, was admitted to Duke because of Dr. Ornery Wiseguy. P. I.: The patient claimed that he had never been sick a day in his life but on June 8, 1955- he came to Duke to visit Kattie M. One hour after entering the lobby, while still trying to find Osler Ward, some Hyoung whippersnapper of a doctor rushed up to him and pushed him into a wheelchair. Clnquiry has revealed that this was Dr. Ornery Wiseguyj Before the patient knew what was happening, he had been stripped and was lying in a bed surrounded by about two dozen other doctors. The patient isn't certain what was being said but from the chart we learn that Dr. Wiseguy had been reading again. It seems that he had read that in 1802 Nostradamus predicted that there would be a new disease discovered in 1955. Dr. Wiseguy had seen a most peculiar smile on the patient's face and realized the call that had come to him. P. H.: No history of any illness, childhood or otherwise. No symptoms, past or present. Patient a vegetarian for 100 years. F. H.: Negative, legally, patient claimed his father was General Useless Rant and his mother an F. P. C. Cfree person of colorb. M. H.: Married 10 times. Has a total of 98 children. All living and well. Present wife, age 90, living, well, and pregnant. P. E.: On admission-done by Dr. Ida Laidem. T 34.5, P 111: BP ?!300, lying on head and sitting on stool, R 8. The patient was a WN, WD, mulatto man appearing to be no more than 95 years old, cheerful and healthy-looking. Skin: the kind you love to touch. Head: Neg., except for a Hchessy-cat grin which is constantly present. Eyes: Heavenly. Fundi: red. Nodes: certainly. Neck size 17 1f8. Chest: He-man type. Heart: obviously. Abdomen: well-worn. Genitalia: still present and remarkable. Extremities: extreme. Rectum: done. Neurological: yes. A. C. Hgb. 28.1 gm., WBC 1593: Hcrt. 20'Z:g Diff. 72 big purple, 3 small purple, 5 bluish-green, 20 unidentified: Platelets - Haviland, Dresden, Urine-adequate, S. G. 1.800, Protein 3-, Sugar- sweet, Micro.-loaded: Stool-covered with fur, STS - 6 plus, Serum porcelain-Wedgewood, NPN 4, Na 137: K 10: C1595 CO2 148, Chol. 2888, BSP 29'Z1 in 50 min., Prot. timed: thymol turbid and flocculentg L. E. prep. positive: Blood aspara- gus-tipped scale: BVDs-in winter. PSP-4'Z:g BMR-minus 805 Regitine test C50 gm. I.V.D neg.: Blood alcohol-pure corn, aged 90 years. Bromide 999 mgqng Protein-Caseing Guaiac- done, Skin tests all negative. Spinal-tapped, Duke's mixture-mixed, Alkaline phosphatase- Eciidg TT, PP, SS, NC, AB, PhD. DT's, SB, CDC, , etc. RAI-uptakeng PBI--none, Uric Acid-goutyg Tennis, anyone? Ven. pressure 208. Pneumobur- sograms-can't tell. Cultures-of every orifice revealed a peculiar organism never before seen in this lab. Evidently quite contagious. Ten laboratory assistants were immediately admitted to the hospital, laughing hideously. X-Rays-5075 taken. Of the 200 which could be found in the x-ray department, and two in the surgical resident's dressing room, all were completely negative except one reported as un- readable. Course in Hospital In spite of a few slightly abnormal laboratory values, the patient continued to insist that ........................ it, I feel okay. And it is a fact that his relations with the feminine employees indicated that he felt. Several of the patient's family were interviewed and it was seen that they also had the peculiar smile first observed on the patient. Cultures were taken from them also and again revealed the unusual bug men- tioned before. The patient was now placed in isolation and a constant watch set up by his bed. By the 5th day, he had received 10 pints of blood to replace that taken for the laboratory tests. Every doctor, nurse, and student in the hospital saw the patient, except Dr. Bedstead. No one could decide exactly what was wrong with the patient, but all agreed that there must be some- thing there. More laboratory tests were done. The patient continued to hold his own until the 8th day when a consultant from the mail- order house of Chiropractic was called in. This eminent scientist suggested to our Staff that per- haps the patient really wasn't ill. The patient began to laugh loudly and exclaimed that's what I've been trying to tell these ,............... 'sf' He laughed so hard that he went rapidly down- hill by rocking out of the bed and as they tried to help him get up, suddenly, there was no pulse. It was learned later in the day that the patient had not received the 10 pints of blood. The patient in the next bed, who had come in because of an in-grown toe nail, died of drowning from congestive failure. C. N. S. 1 Wx XR I 'Q fig 1 .M '-Q. ' . a Dr.F:x1'7r0 5 Dm Usa 335,24 Rv- ,dl 'sd' 1' H71 N 'W f S, wi 7 -lu-1 isrussinn of . . . CFuneral Marchj Dr. Probus CJim Renuartb-If any of you took time to look it up, you realize that this is the 25th anniversary of these conferences. But I wonder how many of you remember the purpose of these meetings. They are presented as teach- ing programs for the students. Obviously, a few of the cases will tend to have more to present from the clinical point, most will be almost en- tirely anatomical. The case today will have interesting aspects of both sides. Dr. Bedstead will now present his usual brilliant analysis of the case. C Hallelujah Chorusb Dr. Bedstead CBob Moseleyb-I've been at this school for nine years and that's the first kind thing Dr. Probus has ever said to me. Tell me, Dr. Probus, is it true that every morning you get up and say Moose, Moose on the wall, who is the best pathologist of all? And the answer comes In all the world there's only one of greater fame, and Baby Anderson is his name ? The case today is not quite as clear-cut as I've seen. However, I think there are a few points that stand out. You all have protocols so there's no need in my reading over the case. The first point I want to bring out is the admission of this patient to the hospital-and having pointed this out let's leave it as a lesson to the students- donlt force your feeble services upon a patient. The next point is-did this 108 year old man actually father a child? And for the answer to this, all I need to do is call on an expert, Dr. Fengle. Dr. Fengle CGeorge Waltonl-It's quite pos- sible that he did, who else would sleep with a 90 year old woman? If you want to know what's wrong with this patient, I'd say he had his ex- cessive smile because he's still able to carry on his profession. And I'd expect to find a func- tional Leydig-cell tumor. Dr. Bedstead-Now the question of this pa- tientis blood pressure is one that should be answered. For the answer to this: Dr. Kremp. Dr. Kremp KGeorge Paulsonl - Gut rice, naturally! Dr. Bedstead-Don't hedge the question. The patient was a vegetarian and had been on rice diet for 100 years. Dr. Kremp-It vas de first 8 years of life that caused his blood pressure. Dr. Bedstead-Do you think the patient may have had Cushing's disease? Dr. Kremp-Vell, he could have, if you vant to take into consideration the lab tests, but I never do that. His cholesterol vas a bit high. Dr. Bedstead-We've noticed several times. And Dr. Pliers, what was the state of this patient's liver? CPomp and Circumstancel Dr. Pliers CEd Kitlowskij-There's no doubt that this patient had severe hepatic dysfunction. I should not be surprised to learn that he died in hepatic coma. However, as to Whether his liver dysfunction actually hurt him, I should say, as did Adlai Stevenson, He's too old to cry, but it hurts too much to laughli' This is highly com- patible with everything but not diagnostic of anything-nothing you can hang your hat on. Dr. Bedstead-Dr. Prancen-Fuss, What do you think of this patient's blood picture? Dr. Prancen-Fuss tVernon Manguml--The re- ports quoted indicate again just how stupid ou1' students can be. You can't pin them down on the type cells they see anymore than we can pin down Dr. Probus. You can't expect to pin down Dr. Probus when he made a low pass in pathology at the John. This patient seems to have been highly allergic to physicians. Dr. Probus--And you wouldn't have made that high pass if you hadn't been such an apple polisher. Dr. Bedstead-Dr. Starter, what can you con- tribute to this conference? Dr. Starter CJim Sloanl-I'd like to have that man's wife in the clinic. We never get such good grand primips in this god-damned bloody dump. It's about time someone asked me a question at this stupid, bloody conference. Dr. Bedstead-Perhaps the spooks can contrib- ute something useful for a change. Dr. Lowen- brau. Dr. Lowenbrau CPete Hutchinb -Obviously this patient had a somatotype of O-O-3. Dr. Leslie B. Heman was commenting on this before the C. P. C., but I'd rather hear what Dr. Perle has to say about the patient. Dr. Perle CNorm Shealyl-Leslie, I told you, and told you, and told you yesterday all about this case. S - Dr. Bedstead-I think a comment from super- duper pooper snooper Squeaky Grufiin on this patient's G-I tract would be in order. Dr. Gruflin CJerry Grunt!-Not one procto- scopic! Not one! And no one ever thought to do fat absorption studies. What can we write this patient's local physician? History is highly typi- cal of a sarcoid of the small intestine. However, carry on and remember to always push upwards. Dr. Bedstead-Well, I don't know about thatg I'm just a country boy trying to get along. You forget that this cookie had never seen a physician before coming here. Dr. Mane Fuinbles, what is your two cent's worth? Dr. Fumbles CCarroll Shoemakerl-What was the serum rhubarb in this patient? I think there are a lot of possibilities in this patient. With his vegetable diet, he certainly should not be iron deficient. I just reviewed the slides and find that the 20 unidentified cells were immature sperm. Obviously, the students should learn to make better slides. Dr. Bedstead-The slide was done by your hematology resident. In a situation like this, I'd turn to Dr. Faker. Dr. Faker CHarvey Griffinl -Does anyone know whether this man played football? Should have been a 4-letter man. I think he would have been helped by a man's best friend, which, you all know, is traction. Dr. Silver-Fox CBob Windomb-I agree with everything said but I would like to get my voice on this wire-this patient should have been quindigitalized. Dr. Bedstead-Dr. Woodenheadall, what have you got to say for yourself? And put out that god-damn cigarette! Dr. Woodenheadall CLee Sterlingl--It's ob- vious the patient had a brain, but there's a ques- tion of where it was located. This patient did not have any intracranial tumors. His peripheral nerves, also, seem to have been in good shape. I think cystoscopy would have revealed more than burr holes. This patient reminds me of one of Dr. Dandy's cases which is written up in this excellent book-now out of print, but still the best on the subject. How can you expect a lowly surgeon to contribute anything with so many brains around here? Incidentally, did he have an open airway when he died laughing? Dr. Bedstead-Dr. Dill-Pickle, how would you have cut this patient? Cpauseh Another slougher! Carl-CWalking in, he turns on the lights over the Dean's picture, then takes a glass of tomato juice to the Deanj Here's your second breakfast, sir. Dr. Sertoli Lemans CRufus Ratchfordl-I think we can all take a lesson from the sexual adjust- ment of this man. And, believe me, he should not have been separated from his wife for so long. Dr. Bedstead-Now We come to the most im- portant consideration. Dr. Smythe, would you describe the bacillus found in this patient. Dr. Smythe CDon Saundersb-The cultures did not reveal anything unusual. However, I should like to mention the possibility of tuberculosis in this patient, for, if I've said it once, I've said it a thousand times: TB can do anything. Is that right, Mary? Miss Poston CSelf7-I remember this patient very well. They sent up about a half cc. of ma- terial and wanted routine, fungus, TB, gonococcal, anaerobic, and diphtheria cultures and smears and sensitivities, and they filled out only one slip! They put the wrong history number and only the patientls first name. You might remember a little better yourself, Dr. Smythe, if you hadn't been away at that convention learning all those new parrot stories. Dr. Marigold CGene Komradb-I hope no one will mind if I turn off the Dean. I'll probably get turned off myself for this. Dr. Bedstead-As usual, we have with us this morning a visitor from a distant land and I'd like to get his opinion on this case: Dr. Onelong- song. Dr. Onelongsong CShin Tanakah-Ah, sooo. Dr. Bedstead-We are fortunate in having another visitor with us this morning, not a stranger to any of us but a stranger to these friendly Saturday get-togethers. Dave, what do you think of this patient? Dr. Davison-Cobviously too flabbergasted to speakb Dr. Bedstead-In spite of all that's been said this morning, there's a student, not known to the alumni, but whose tongue is eternally napping. Dr. Metropol, say a few thousand words for us, Cpausel For once, heis silent. Is there anyone else here who would like to crown himself with glory? Qpauseb There is no doubt from the facts presented that the cause of death in this patient was entirely iatrogenic. I think we can safely say this patient was sick, however, he did not have sick cells, he had sick doctors. Dr. Oster- hout, you know I don't like excessive lab work. Why was a serum porcelain drawn on this pa- tient? Cpausel Didn't anyone else come today? Dr. Baywindow CDewey Barton!-Not that the X-rays contribute anything, but if I'm going to be invited to this conference, I feel I ought to say something. Saying these X-rays are negative is an understatement, they are the most negative X-rays I've ever seen, except for the one de- scribed as unreadable. Perhaps a little fluid there-no, nothing. You clinicians are always wanting me to diagnose your cases. As a matter of fact, I'd say this is a testicular metastasis to the lung. At any rate, there's a vas deferens between this and normal lung. Dr. Probus-Is there a surgeon here today? They never get here. If there is no surgeon, then is Sterile Deryl here? O yes. Well, do you think you could have helped this patient, Dr. Dart? Dr. Dart CCBill Hasslerh-No, but I think I could have helped his wife. A phallectomy would have been indicated, had he lived. And to keep her from getting complexi, we should have done bilateral, radical mastectomies. Dr. Connie Farmer will agree with me, I'm sure. Dr. Farmer CAndy Dickinsonb -Remember that a doctor should do everything he can to help the natural process of healing and repair of a wound and nothing to hinder this natural process. Obviously, you Wouldn't be helping the patient by your suggested operations. And' remember, don't pour boiling oil on a wound! Dr. Probus-The first thing I'd like to show you is this heart-not one from the present case but one of the most beautiful specimens we've ever seen. To say the patient was hirsuit was an understatement. Now we come to the patient's organs. The heart you see here weighed twenty- five grams, the lungs, one hundred. The liver was a little large, it weighed 550 grams. The testicles seem a bit small, they weighed only 13 kilograms each. Now we have some other interesting slides taken on my most recent trip to Taiwan. Here you see our hospital staff. The woman posing in the nude here was my secretary. And from my many former studies come these slides of Hodgkinis disease-very similar to the lesions produced by Brucella infections. Here is a view of the mitral valve of our patient today-ex- tensive bacterial vegetation, but they're probably insignificant. Everywhere We see in the tissues of this patient the organisms which many thought at first were Smiley's bacillus, but they turn out to be only spermatozoa which permeate every structure. The aorta is not the least bit arterio- sclerotic. In the lungs we find what Dr. er, Dr., Oh, Dr. Baywindow described as vas deferens and it is indeed just that-part of a testicular neoplasm which is quite active. In the brain we find the primary source of this mass which is indeed a Leydig-cell tumor. Dr. Probus--In spite of the fact that we've carefully examined these tissues, as we always do, but especially when we-'re presenting before the clinicians, we could not find any evidence that this widely metastasized testicular ttunor was malignant, or that it or anything else in our pots was responsible for the patient's death. It could be said that the patient died of an ectopic pregnancy of the lungs. Dr. Bedstead-I don't see how you can say you've carefully examined the patient's tissues. How much of them did you section? Dr. Probus-Aah, er, aah, Sonny, we don't measure this in grams. Dr. Bedstead-Then tell us in milligrams, Buster! Dr. Probus-What you need, Dr. Bedstead, is to come to the autopsy room and look at some organs. Dr. Bedstead-And what you need, Dr. Probus, is to come to the wards and see some living patients. C. N. S. 69 EY-Q! K Ying ku -21 ,.-.M Wvf' 90 I' XA, . 'x I . , itz? M Q4 V 1 , OK H6 . MQW WUI5 .Lai y yy. s , ff x XZ K 'f ,',, f A ms f 1,35 ,W fw,wL: M 5:. was x Jf4,,F-f, ,tk wx, Q , x A.. ARM nl 4, , gi N fihf hi W Zia f wx-'fw ' ' www' ' A H Xm f. y , ,, W ff K ,LW WZ f ' f Wm Nw NN E M, in QQ if -1? '75 badlluj M! j F C05-I-,YJ 3 5 'IL Unlik Qz.vxQ!Ic1'C2.'faS Ba S k-effbdtf A69 -cam Dx y,'y1i7L'7 Cfug o R-ur Cfful: -can-X 7,77-2, 5 5aOClOQK-T-QQ X 'thy x Q Quay? 86 7-Lf- x W. Skin-L is a.! Q bw l Q xy' . W ' AN s., Wu fr 1 ff 2 H CM-Mvwowi 1.,.y , .... .,: ,.f ,m f mg fy- 5 .my fi , fi f 1 1152 I ' wait! 4 I , 3 f W ,Z ef f-gg - ' W , iv' .f - 'W-,,.,,,,..1-' YW ,M W 14,-ff Sli, all, M-1 42 f 1 , Laila-'Z-.S 4 ivy WV X: -222 , I ,, ,VI gf' , Q ' 4 ,L 3 'SJR 4' W W .Q ff - of Ez, X. 5 1 is-mf. Mi. -'rw b -V Nwsx ' 1' '- ff, OV' Ll 6 'SON 64:041- fallow , f. Y , 'fr VX 'Y-xx. un be Smilie lectures It was in early Juin or Septembre of 1946 that I, Professor Teophile Smilie of the University of Canada, while examining a routine culture of Grandmere's Porrige, C15 made the discovery which has since rocked the foundations of La Bacteriologie. For there under le oil-immersion lens was an organisme looking back at moi with a shy, gentle smile, and I knew that this was MY bacillus. My very own. Oui! Excitedly I cultured him, transferring hirn from culture medium to culture medium, seeing him grow wan and enfeebled without his porrige CGrandmere's XXXD, until, ma foi, I discovered the ideal mediuni for growth, Ethanol agar. C25 Day after day I studied my bacillus, his habits, development, size, and all else I could glean from him. Sacre beige! Soon I discovered another similar bacillus had arrived on the scene, and shortly many smaller ones were to be seen, and I had solved the problem as to mode of reproduc- tion. Nothing new here, mes amis. And now, I will present what I have discovered obout my bacillus and the disease it causes, which I have modestly called Smilie's Disease. Efin, L'Organismg As depicted, approximately ten virus stools in overall length, and three and one- half virus stools high. C One virus stool is 1!13 of a micronb, with the standard stool, formed and of a rather attractive greenish-color, kept under standard conditions in Paris. The bacillus is, naturellement, bi-sexual, and the sex of an indi- vidual can easily be determined by referring to the illustration, C31 recognizing the type of smile and characteristic tail arrangement. La Maladieg The person unfortunate enough to contract Smilie's disease has the insidious onset of a rather repulsive smile about which only his plus cher ami will tell him. This is soon followed by, in from seven to fourteen days, a generalized rash which consists of discreet FABULES, which are graduated polypustular lesions topped by two hairs with bell-like terminal projections, which produce the very annoying sensation of tinkling all over. C43 There is a variant of this rash which is found in China, wherein the lesion re- sembles a pagoda, and the diagnosis can be made by placing the ear to the skin and hearing the 76 oriental strains within. C57 This rash is fabulous. CThis may not be yet in The Compleat Pedia- trician, ah non, but there is a new edition.D La Reaction to La Injury, The basic mecha- nism in the formation of this most beautiful dis- ease state may be likened unto the insidious intrusion of a sociological nuance into a stable environment. Notwithstanding the alternate eco- logic pressures which react upon the cellular homeostasis of the tissue, the general reaction to invasion by this organism is a reorientation of the latent defensive milieu inherent to the specific tissue thus invaded, that is to say, c'est a dire, the tissue responds in such a way so as to create an atmosphere of relative hostility to the en- croaching organism, thus bringing about in the invader a distinct feeling that it is not wanted, and thus a blush of shame, a tearful cloudy swelling comes forth, and soon, the militant forces of defense surge forward upon the field of battle and bring to bear upon these ursurpers of the flesh that mighty weapon, INFLAMMATION! However, whilst all this is going on in the skin, the wily Smilie's bacillus creeps unseen to the Kreb's cycle, catches a high-energy phosphate bond, and rides around the cycle until everything is exhausted, and thus Smilie's disease takes hold. La Remedieg The only eiiective treatment for this dread disease, which finally goes on to in- volve the central nervous system the most severely, is total immersion of the skin lesions in Canadian Club, by means of the Smilie Bag which enables the wearer to be under treatment and still be very popular at parties. The CNS lesions are cured only by total .extirpation of this system, followed by intensive psychotherapy and occupational rehabilitation. C6 8: '73 The Kreb's Cycle lesion is of minor importance, of course, owing to its minor role in metabolism CBlanchard, La Farge and Rosenblatt, La Krebs Cycle Est Pour Les Oiseau, 16775. C'est tout. Quel Dommage. Merci. Le Professeur. Butner, N. C. 1956 L. A. C., III. if 5 HI Ccmun g wr 'Plllbonu QD ?--Q...-.:. .--f'Z C C2 -1-3 Ft9?uLa Ln CIHNE. PHNLLF. J cf s N '-D KA S CNLTUSIE Pais Fl-Edcla nilalhtzgg X, D Hniktsy IW 5- TTZ.-' X ...r 1 'X fi B 'TTY W3 tml If -29 gV'f5 2.fiS On gonn-2,f'dn'f'L s KM. 1 1 s. is dl! :mg 'W W Aww C 1 K J in-22 TIS- QV? MV lmivfg . Duke, M0-Bl Call new SMP Pink LQ4.-L5 DLI :V-lv-3 ROUYW E W1 gp b I ujlfj Llafful-r U 1 2:57 fr'.'.-Vyf Q: ' 'mb X ' ,. f ,g ., . ? ,, , V ,W . N vws ,.f.g4AfffL ' ' wf :fx ' x A 'x ' f rv- ,, 9 ,- 4 1 B.. x .fi Folly, vm, -5-Mer f 'if ss 9 DY. '6'0JoCk ,sf 7' V, x fin i ! 247 9 '41, . f r J vl 2. f. I K f oss -wk, X A-f if an y Y -5' Vw B! v 1. 5 amy: ' XX 1 Q, f1?gN,?,,:j 5-075 .ZZ QNX H ' -f , .,,, ffm, 4 if J i ,1 Mass kQ.'5eY This is a brief report of each member of the class gleaned from the reunion on June 4, 1966, the 10th anniversary of our graduation from medical school. As it was our first class reunion, being prolonged because of post-graduate train- ing and service obligations, a Truly Tre- mendous Time was had by all. The five days of festivities brought 76 out of the 81 class members back to the hallowed halls of Duke Hospital and School of Medicine. Many changes have been made in recent years among the faculty, and it was amaz- ing how many of our classmates held teaching positions. As I have so much free time at the pres- ent, I was chosen to prepare this 1966 Report on the members of the 1956 grad- uating medical class. There were only 5 who could not attend the meeting, but 2 of these, Dewey Barton and I, saw it over the new View-a-phone installed. As you know, Dewey and I during the national election two years ago were convicted and sentenced to Fed- eral prison for 10 years on the charge Political Individualismn when we cast our ballots against the present political party in power for abolishing State Gov- ernments. Al VVhanger didn't attend the reunion because of pressing medical problems in Central Africa, but he did write that he will be able to attend the 25th reunion. By then he plans to have all the natives immunized against Kwashiokor. The Vagabond Lover, Dick Foster, and his third wife are now living in Mexico. Still receiving mysterious phone calls, Dick left the United States two years ago to escape ever increasing alimony pay- ments and has not returned since. The fifth unable to attend the reunion was Maj or General Abel Paul Carswell, Jr., A.B., M.S., M.D., M.C., F.A.C.S., F.A.C.P., U.S.A. Never ceasing to amaze his class- mates with his ever increasing achieve- ments, his recent appointment as Surgeon General of the U. S. Army kept him from attending. Of the 76 that attended, many were still at Duke. When the Dean retired, he hand picked Ed Miller for the job, and Ed, sur- rounded by lovely secretaries, has con- tinued to keep the wheels of progress moving. No keener observer could have been picked to replace Dr. Stead when he re- tired this past fall than Joe Hardison. Only after Saul Strauss' appointment as Associate in Medicine was Jack Myers' loss to Duke replaced. Pete Hutchins' Hominy Grits treatment of Hypertension has completely replaced Walter Kempner's old method of using the rice diet. Ed Stuart, who has replaced Wayne Bundles as head of hematology, spent most of his time during the reunion show- ing off his new air-conditioned office. The AC unit was given to him personally by Dr. Stead when he retired. With Sid O'Lansky becoming Duke Hospital's Dermatologist, patients on this service are now being weighed in ,stones instead of kilograms. Ed Brown and Bob Rollins, continuing their close association as roommates, just last year took over the new 100 bed wing of the Hospital as Co-Professors of psychi- atric problems in patients with Chorioe- pithelioma. Noel Schweig replaces Dr. Goldsmith in charge of the NEW Kirby Clinic. With the clinics 10 new one-way windows, you can see him perform for no charge at almost any time. Whitey Easterling is just recovering from a hemorrhordectomy-for years this has been a seat of chronic irritation to him. He has filled Dr. Hart's pot as chairman of the Department of Surgery. Julian Culton and Henry Mosteller both are assistants to Dr. Woodall, performing human craniolomies with as much dex- terity as they used to pith frogs in physi- ology. Gene Komrad combining his knowledge of pharmacology with his interest in sur- gery is now one of Duke's leading anesthe- tists, passing gas daily in the OR. Leaving his first love - childhood - Lewis Augustus Coffin, III, has become one of the nation's leading proctologists and professor of the subject at Duke. Working from the bottom up, he is still looking for a second colony of Bacillium Smilie. Speedy Whitaker is the new Professor of Dog Surgery. He's the only person Mrs. Beard felt could do the good job Dr. Beard did before he retired to the poultry farm. Bobby Howard following the path of father and brother specialized in Pa- thology and now is allowed to run the tape recorder for Dr. Forbus in C.P.C. Bill Hassler, still looking for the Right Girl, has been with the Anatomy Depart- ment for the past two years. And Jerry Grunt, though remaining in academic anatomy, practices pediatrics at home with his 8 children. After finishing their military service, Phil Roseberry, Lee Sterling, and George Walton have returned to Duke to operate its special acromegalic clinic. While Buddy Willbanks is Duke's new Professor of Bacteriology Cwith a larger repertoire of risque jokesb, Gene Josefiak has taken over Mycology. Both received high praise at the reunion for their recent isolation of Blastomyces dermatidis from the Skene's glands of pregnant opossoms, thus solving one of mycology's last unan- swered problems. Never losing his interest in Duke and athletics, Jim Gibson will take over the reigns of Lenox Baker this fall. Since Dr. Carter left for Yale, Yancy Culton and such able associates as Carol Shoemaker, Carlyle Crenshaw and Bill Davis have taken over. Between babies, Ann Preston helps also. Ed Koger has stayed strictly with re- search, his new hyperimmune beaver's serum may be the answer to the common cold. Some have taken teaching positions at other institutions: Charlie Wilkinson is newly appointed Professor of Surgery at Bowman Gray. After the reunion's open- ing cocktail party, we all wondered if the Baptist School would have him back. Blair Bryan also is at Bowman Gray as newly appointed Professor of Medicine for Communities With Less Than 500 People. Andy Horne entered an allied field and is now the Dean of West Virginia New School of Veterinary Medicine. George Paulson has returned to Yale as Professor of Medicine. We understand lectures have been done away with, stu- dents do all the laboratory work, the intern staff has been cut in half, and the patient load has been doubled-the stu- dents are just eating it up! When Princeton recently opened its new Medical School, old grads Andy Deiss and Joe Shands returned to head the depart- ments of Medicine and Bacteriology re- spectively. Both plan to take time out to raise a family now that the future looks secure. Other appointments are Sheldon Steiner as the United States Physician to the UN g and Ron Allison as team phyiscian for the Indians and the Cleveland Browns. Quiet and unassuming Jim Jackson just before the reunion was appointed Assist- ant Surgeon at the new 20 bed Carrboro Memorial Hospital. Receiving temporary leave from em- ployment, Shin Tanaka made the long trip from Tokyo where he is Chief In- spector of Geisha Houses in that city. Others traveling long distances to Dur- ham for the reunion were Doug Johnson and John Neal. Following their diligent and conscientious study in Medical School and Internship, both are successful family men and GP's in Las Vegas, Nevada. From Arizona came Horace Kent, by way of Istanbul, Turkey. Horace states the Turks have something better than antibuse for the treatment of alcoholics. The government has given him the OK to try it on a select group of patients at his alcoholic sanatorium in Northern Arizona. From the Antartica came Pope Lee. Still a bachelor, he's been by himself for the past 3 years in that cold wilderness studying the Vitamin P levels in the nuclei of infant penguin erythrocytes. Andy Dickinson managed to attend the reunion between Virginia fishing cruises and his summer race and social schedule in Florida. From Virginia also came 285 lb. state GP of the Year Charlie Dorsey. With- out the check of wife and family, he pro- ceeded to drink every one under the table, take all in poker, and throw 87 straight passes. After this, without sleep and appearing to need none, he left for a VMI reunion. President-elect of the AMA CYoungest in Historyl Dick Steele and Chief CHonorary Navahoj Harvey Lee Griffin left together following the first night din- ner and haven't been seen since. Best guess is that they are still in Raleigh. Ed McGough, in his third year as Medi- cal Consultant to Bing Crosby Enterprises, had a new one for each occasion. It is interesting to note that a great many members of our class have done well in sports. Jim Sloan has replaced Doc Middlecoff as golf's star professional man. Between geriatric referrals from asso- ciates Frank Lang and Bob Windom, Jim Pollock gets in 18 a day on his own per- sonal course. Jerry Schachter still talks a tremendous game of golf. Currently riding atop a string of 34 straight KO's in Middleweight competition is Al Hollett. John Gehweiler, who brought to light all potentialities, is still in the Navy. So is Jim Townsend, as head of a Naval Hos- pital in Florida. Others with new positions include Harry Metropol, who, following internship and service, returned to New York where he is now Chief Inspector for All Greek Restaurantsv in the city. Gordon Benson, following a 2 year internship on Medicine at Duke, 3 years as fellow to Dr. Paul D. White, and 2 years in the service is newly appointed Student Health Director at Bemidji St. Teachers College, Minn. Jim Ross is Company Doctor for his father's business fand all the free beer he can drinkb. Joe Jackson and John Turner are re- ported as being New Orleans' most inter- ested citizens in raising the Health Standards 'of that town's brothels. A few of our class have left medicine. Bruce Newell, after a iiing at general practice found Florida real estate more to his liking. His position so secure with Good Humor, Dick Fredricks has temporarily retired from medicine. He does a great job on his latest singing commercial Take a Tip From Singing Dick, Get Your Ice Cream on a Stick, to the tune of Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star. And speaking of the musical world, Hugh Pearson and Rufus Ratchford have taken banjo and piano along with southern style jazz to New York with great success. Laurie Dozier has retired. The interest from his wife's stocks and bonds is more than enough to care for his family of seven and their 25 room Gulf Coast home. Laurie has his own private gambling casino aboard his wife's 100 foot yacht. Never satisfied at cocktail parties, Tom Vance has just written The Proper Mixed Drink. Erskine Carmichael has also taken to the pen. Everyone had high praise for his new book Adolescent Petting and Its Sequelaef' At the reunion we learned Rick Wilson has again put off his wedding to Pat. The new date will be in June 1967. We were glad to hear that Hadley Young was at least planning to get mar- ried. Norman Shealy is still doing a wonder- ful job as personal physician to the aging Eleanor Roosevelt. Some other bits of family news. After eight, there's finally an Adhemar William Renuart, Jr. Vernon has finally got Ginny out of the oiice into the home, and the Mangums now have three children. The reunion's only mishap occurred to Harold Cranford. He missed it all after the hospital tour. When visiting Osler Ward he perforated and spent the next three weeks in bed with an uneventful post-op recovery. Well, there are the 81 and what they're doing. Until the Next Reunion, I am, ROBERT M. FAILING Federal Prison Alcatraz, Cal. 83 More arkle Scholars than any other school ip 1. x x ,A L 15 iv N... .15 .. N '- 'f ,9 M 14,5 Q 2 in? 4 'I 'C 'S In 4' , . X . 13 wgibg 'fwsbae av f -Pb it We Vu 'F Seated: Dr. Anlyan, Dr. Korkes, Dr. Brown. Standing: Dr. Hull, Dr. Martin, Dr. Schwert, Dr. DeMaria. 'Hx 13 E. fi ew .QE Peterans Zlhministratiun Jfauspital ..... 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VV f 'f V' --Vu-:- J JH .Q '4 - 1 'Scif -5.4 . wj ,4-1.-4' , Q 'V' 2'-L: ,Q - ' A 9' ef V. .X K' - :S X- V 'J X' K ' J IV.V4y: -V12 - VV, xl: 3' Vx 5 .Y-' s- A QV 4 'VVV'.L.r . I Qjgti 7 ix, 352, sa V . . . . . ' .. Qigpptian Jiainzrnglpphins is . 35 Q2 A , 3 Vgqiifi iff Qv fi Q 5 3 QISQQY if '0 GMM' iw, Nfysfifq F535 5 Zigwjzigix af G2 aww 0 gygw gwwblffiywg A GYM Q2'Z?w M' QW . Q14 V MLM .3 5 QM C. is TW 52 Q, Q 5513! is MWWWZXLS? 525543 55123 - ' S'- 3f' --45 M 2 izbiqu K Q MM C194-10'-51 f- IL-'-lk :S Q-2706 www FM wjftggf Mia? 2 yay! 7!W'4f,QgMg 'Vg 0 pg? cf SQZZ4? Wwgfwm 552 iiifff SF? MEM X 2-'KAIJ 5.14 1 W . X Www' XJw2z'f Xfofvwg Sf was eminisrenre The doors of the hospital opened July 21, 1930 and at the end of the day the patient census was 17-Getting lost in a maize of cor- ridors at the hospital and being recognized and rescued by a tall, gigantic gentleman with his shirt sleeves rolled up and tie askew- Classes begin October 2, 1930. In short order our group is well adjusted, occupying quarters with the house staff of 9 on the third and fourth floors-The inability to find the faculty of 42 as listed in the bulletin-The 30 student nurses were less difiicult to find-The Dean of Nurses with petticoat showing, glaring and with one glance showing how insignificant we actually were-The breakfasts by the occupants of the fourth floor and the ingenious uses of the steri- lizer for bringing out the culinary arts-The first case of pellagra with the three D's Cdiar- rhea, dermatitis and dementiab. The many similar cases that followed much to the delight of Drs. Smith and Ruffin-The first patient with pernicious anemia.. A Price-Jones curve -where? why? how? Does anybody know how to do a Price-Jones curve? No help! Finally after several hours the curve is com- pleted and then knew why the disease was called pernicious-Lobar pneumonia-percuss, ausculate, outline the pneumonic area. Checked by the intern who facetiously remarked that the patient should be dead with all that consol- idation. He correctly outlines the areas involved Chaving already seen the x-raysl. Treatment- good nursing care and prayer-these were the years B. S. Cbefore Sulfab-Our first autopsy on October 2, 1930 fthe 18th since the open- ing of the hospitall. A 15-year-old Negro boy with generalized tuberculosis-The intricacies of the 3 glass test in Alyea's urological clinic- The puricity of patients in the Ob and Gyn clinic which was more than compensated by Daddy's stories andfor a trek to the ball game if one were available-Our acquaintance with Courvoisier's law and catarrhal jaundice in Dr. Hart's surgical amphitheater clinic-The stu- dent' attire in flashy bright knickers at the surgical amphitheater clinic and the blast that followed reverberating throughout the hospital -The spick and span appearance and the pomp and formality of the medical rounds- The medical resident with the Harvard shuffie -The dextrocardia that didn't.appear dextro at all in Dr. Davison's pediatric amphitheater clinic-Armistice Day 1930 the patient census had reached 100-The country club days were over-The poker games in the interns' lounge on the third floor. Oscar and Watt were fre- quent contributors - remember? - The abso- lute alcohol easily accessible for many, many months but alas, alack new labels appeared and the days of plenty were over-The phar- macy on the first floor where the present registration offices are located and Mr. Brewer in charge- Bowman's classical uninterrupted presentations of cases in the amphitheater- Heintish and his- Say have you heard this one? -Pulling the perfect smear for Oscar- The detailed medical histories-even then- Dr. Hanes and the reflex arch-Conti Gardner and his painful feet-Alky Jones with his friendly smile always eager to give a helping hand-Dr. Forbus and his extraordinary C.P.C.'s at 5 p.m. in the hot, stuffy autopsy room - pleasant dreams - Texas Bob Reeves, the one-man x-ray department- The first medical school dances fbrawlslb- Watt Eagle, rapid gait and speech-Hart's Now when I was resident at Hopkins -The Dean's ward round at 40 paces-Julian Ruffin and the gastric neurosis-D. T. Smith, pipe, kitchen matches, elongated stethoscope and tuberculosis-Dr. Shand's demonstration of the various gaits-Putting on a Jelly Boot with the temperature around a 100oF.-what a mess! . . . The noted Dr. Thayer's visit and amphitheater clinic where a jittery student ausculated the chest with the ear pieces around his neck, and then described in great detail what he heard . . . The thrill of the loud speaker bellowing Doctor for the first time when interning on Howland as a fourth year student . . . The intravenous orange juice by a surgical intern, no reaction . . . The futility of hiding the ice cream and milk on Howland . . . The griping about the meals in the Union din- ing room . . . Miss Farrar and her mother most gracious and always helpful in the library . . . Dr, Rokitanski - Dr, Rokitanskii' over the loud speakers, indicating an autopsy was in progress . . . Dr. Canfield - Dr, Canfield - indicating that a poker game in the lounge was underway . . . Monday, April 20, 1931, Dr. W. H. Welch and the colorful dedication of the Medical School . . . The A.O.A. charter on April 1, 1931 . . . Depner, the philosopher of the group, his pipe and easy chair . . . Haltonis rocks, snakes and bones . . . Our lone female classmate not the least interested in the other 17 mates-and vice versa . . . The Dean getting us out of difficulties with Uni- versity administration and the law . . . Rube Goldberg apparatus, Hart's tidal drainage . . . The night the nurse on Strudwick gave all the patients 30cc of glycerin instead of min- eral oil-and the inadequacy of the bed pan supply . . . Calloway and Darden, the entire 1931 junior class for the summer surgical quarter and their first assignment-44 patients each . . . The Saturday night sewing parties in the accident room . . . Amoss' determined insistence on proper pronunciation and phrase- ology . . . Joyner's lung abscess . . . A few children transferred to Howland Ward October 21, 1930-and soon it was known as Howl- ingi' Ward . . . Capable Miss Sherwood and her way with children . . . Jean Craven, a hen- medic who was different . . . Wiley attending his first delivery in cap and gown on gradua- tion day . . . Graduation day on June 8, 1932 and au revoir .... JAY M. ARENA, M.D. NOTE: This article was submitted too late to be placed in its proper order but the com- parision with Memories Are Made of This is too good to miss.-ED. O . can 5 f7ssg5fCm+S G M35 miC..q,, I hygn ' W 'Ho JI . w .fi MQ ?w+fyM,QJ?? D Zap, Mf+..,,+ Uv-vx Dr. NGQWM S?aWQA DF. Kao f eva SYXQ-QSEJV5 b ,, ........:..f......... 'wgwfiff .A ,, 'H- ff .9' lllllliiil U 5 ' X 8 I X! N A i X . I W rw' If x fn' tlu.. 4 I i Il: U , I ld! Nl ,H3 xik z AJ 1 Tj. , I A. I 4 , - 1 E W- in Fil f A 4 sq ' D I gf I A I 4' 5 Il f YQ! , rx f - ew' is .J N Q A I' Fi Z 7 ' 'Q ' ' puff 4 ', fs 4 J 1 Si 1' ,V Iuvv-Bs, ' .:. f '-' il ' 51 4 ' ,5 ?'l r 52 A I ,X I fl f : f 1 ll I '53 ha l f . u. ,,.,, , THIS IS LEDERLE . . . A community of more than 4500 men and women-scientists, technicians, and other specialists-working in modern laboratories . . . developing, testing and producing new medicines . . . striving to improve those already in use. Other Lederle research throughout the world furthers this extensive program-a program designed to provide the medical profession with the latest pharmaceutical, biological, and dietary discoveries. More than half a century of service and achievement has made Lederle a world- renowned name. LEDERLE LABORATORIES DIVISION AM51e1L',41v ' EUMPANV Pearl River, New York there is hothihg quite like I OINTM ENT 'rich in , I . o con uvsn on. l ' ' ' DIAPER RIISH to keep . baby's skin clear, We IIERMIIIITIS smooth, supple, free from rash, ' excoriation and chafing , ' 'i ' A IIIIIIIIIIIIIN CHEMICAL COMPANY 0 70 Ship Street, Providence 2, RI Your New Electrocardiograph - - WILL IT HAVE THESE FEATURES? 'ir' I STABILITY when switching rapidly from one Iead to another. PRECISION RECORDING sensitive to rapid changes in potential. CONTINUOUS TIME MARKER independent of chart: assures accuracy of time factor. A SIMPLIFIED LEAD MARKING: automatic for first four leads. All these features are available in the 0 E K - 2 B DIRECT RECORDING ELECTROCARDIOGRAPH We invite you to visit us in BURDICK E K - 2 CHARLOTTE or GREENSBOR0 HCAROLINAS' HOUSE OF SERVICE Winchester Surgical Supply Co. Winchester-Ritch Surgical Co II9 East 7th St. Charlotte, N. C. 42I West Smith St. Greensboro, N. 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Kato We supply rational therapeutic preprarations for Prescription use I. T. REAMER, Pres. Trademark of Better Service pl-' W l Asheville, N. c. I: Q Columbia, s. c Charlotte, N. C. Charleston, S. C Fayetteville, N. C. 5 Florence, S. C l, U9 4' 0 an co LY kJ MEDICAL GAS PRUDUCTS DIVISION OF NATIONAL WELDERS SUPPLY COMPANY, INC. I Upiolnn , medicine . . . designed for health . . . produced with care The Upjohn Company Kalamazoo, Michigan Congratulations to the l956 Duke Doctors We appreciate the patronage you have given us in the past PllTTlSHllLL'S MOTOR 00MPMlY Willys Jeep Sales .sz service l90O W. Markham Avenue PHONE 8-7272 Congratulations To The Class of Doctors Graduating From The Duke University School of Medicine 1956 CARDINAL PRODUCTS Laboratory Chemicals and Equipment P. O. Box 1611 Phone 5111 East Markham Avenue DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Qrtho OBSTETRICAL - GYNECOLOCICAL PHARMACEUTICALS AND BIOLOCICALS FOR THE MEDICAL PROFESSION ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION RARITAN, NEW JERSEY Quick Delivery for Quick Recovery THE PRESCRIPTIUN SHUP S . Gregson at W. Chapel Hill St. Durham, N. C PHONE 4-1201 builders of the world's finest swimmin pools PIIDDGGK ENGINEERING 0F NORTH GIIRDLINA, ING. 3903 East Bessemer Avenue Greensboro, North Carolina PHONE 4-4724 designing ' construction ' maintenance ' equipment When you want to contact a member of Any Duke Medical Class, the Quickest way is to write: Secretary of the Medical Alumni Duke Hospital Durham, N. C. Write Him Regularly l fjmpgyw fDic1monda - fwafcfues - Sifwerware TELEPHONE 9-3020 -i- IISVQ E. CHAPEL HILL STREET DURHAM, NORTH CAROLTNA PEABUDY DRUG COMPANY Wholesale Druggists 305 Pettigrew Street DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA RINALDl'S GRILL SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI WESTERN STEAKS C1 CHOPS SALADS Er SANDWICHES OPPOSITE EAST CAMPUS MAYTAG U. S. ROYAL R. C. A. GILLETTE FRIGIDAIRE PHILCO AUTO-LITE TELEVISION RECAPPING Morgan 6' Roney Streets Phone 6-I85 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA nummm TRQIIENIZEUIISQIIEIQFTURAGE, Inc LONG DISTANCE MOVING Deluxe Service at No Extra Charge Phone 22116 Night 8-8587 - 3-3362 MOVING - GRATING - SHIPPING - STORAGE Q Q Congratulations, Duke Doctors ' aww M7 We Have Appreciated Your Patronage -L Qfedrwjkbnl glarmay f Catering to Medical Men Since 1926 were Quad? 56016 Sai, MHLLER-Bnsmap Co. f-:ilS5'?Tfff5f?f.I? 5'ffYfi55'f1l,1w1-' cmd a?e lllllll 111 1 ,Wx xx xxxx S' SURGICAL SUPPO 'iiiiiifsii MEN'S cLoTl-HNG cf FURNISHINGS CORNER MANGUM, PARRISH AND ORANGE H2 Corcoran St. Durham, N. C PHONE 4-911 - DURHAM, N. C. A MOST PLEASANT AND PHOFITABLE PLACE TO SHOP 15256 f DURHAM'5 SHOPPING CENERI O DURHAM A ter thegame-H suRGlcAl. suPPl.Y Refresh with Coca-Cola Qqyla Row JJ igargm B,g,1h 9Q, o . ... 0 UM 09 s is -4 5: QQ Qi 17 Moumrrc -i-1 IQ' Q , SU' 5 S P 1 2 5 X 3 - 2 ,ST 1, 0 3 COMPANY 21316 W. MAIN STREET DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA QJVCD Supplies for Physicians and Hospitals X-Rays, Short Wave, Galvanic Sinusoidal Machines, Ultra Violet Lamps, Infra-Red Lamps, Sterile Lights, Ampoules, Pharmaceuti- cals, Chrome and Wood Office 8: Waiting Room Furniture, Instru- ments. For Rent Hospital Beds, Wheel Chairs, Short Wave Ma- chines, Infra-Red and Ultra-Violet Lamps. TELEPHONE 2-4361 FOWLER'S FOOD STORE Choice Meats ' Fancy Groceries Frozen Foods Club Boulevard and Roxboro Road PHON ES 6-723, 6-0171 Qhe IDELITY Member Federal De posit Insurance Corporation 0 Member Federal Reserv DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA e System ,AAA , E E ET' A ., mimi lf.,r!i!!E 1 Q r.r.. F - '--- -. ...O 1 if is 'F ' North Durham Office East Durham Om ce Downtown Office West Durham Office Vickers Ave ce Roxboro 8: Maynard D ' r 8: Angier Main 8: Corcoran Ni . Om th 8: Perry V k rs 8: Jackson Compliments of DUKE POWER COMPANY DURHAM BRANCH A Complete Electric Service arid Street Transportation C ner of Mangum and P h St t Phone 2-1151 4021. eomiplefe lvewdpaipaz Smaice You Can Rely on the Barham Morning iiaeralh CMorning-Sundayj and THE DURHAM Sun CEveningj Nm! fem lite mad of Me deal' in 'mafia ies WDNC 4 620 kc.J and WDNC-PM 1105.1 mc.J, the broadcasting services of THE HERALD-SUN PAPERS DURHAM, N. C. CLEANING AND STORING ALL MAKES OF RUGS A' I5!I:bli!:IH9EGo T116 SHOP Compliments of ORIENTAL AND DOMESTIC RUGS AND CARPETS 324 West Geer Street Phone 2-1151 DURHAM, N. C. IO04 West Main Street Plenty of Parking Space at THE LITTLE ACORN RESTAURANT Proprietor AIR CONDITIONED 706 Rigsbee Avenue R. W. ROYCROFT PHONE 2-4567 DURHAM, N. C. BARBECUE, BRUNSWICK STEW 0 FRIED CHICKEN 0 WESTERN STEAKS BANQUET ROOM FOR PRIVATE PARTIES Phone for Reservation The Largest Stock of Medical Books in the State QMQ The Book Exchange Five Points PHONE 2-4662 We Buy, Sell and Exchange ALL KINDS OF BOOKS 75 Congratulations to the Class of 1956 SOUTHERN DRY CLEANERS 6 Ninth St. PHONE 8-ll22 -and- Jack Rabbit Laundry H03 W. Chapel Hill Street PHONE 7-4283 DU KE U N IVE RSITY STORES Hospital, Men's Store, Womezffs College Store OWNED AND OPERATED BY DUKE UNIVERSITY .J OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS 1956 AESCULAPIAN COLONNA STUDIOS, INC 114 Park Row NEW YORK 7 N Y fi fi f 996I IAIOOH .LNHHL I Xu X WOW x In Nil NFS f N N mai ' My Wg ..L. tl, T YQ .. N J K 1 x me XE!-2, sl Dr- Kra.m.qD S cw? M Hof nada On LJQAJQM3 m.qUfS ... Kpko Caluwf Q,l:ou?L 3 Q FORTVV' , ken ' C Bu, . 1 0 ,'A' vt' FR 'A '. . , 'A'A1bVpv, S, L -p it io u 0 F wl- 0 ul D 'S 9 l V 4 1 , . X , 9 I 1 ff , 42-': ik l ,lf Q. . ! W2 ,. 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