Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC)

 - Class of 1960

Page 1 of 88

 

Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1960 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 88 of the 1960 volume:

'ff IN 'rl-as Tn:Acl-lsnous JOURNEY fx THROUGH THE FRONTIERS AND WILDERNESS 5 Q or MEDICAL scHooL, -me STUDENT Mus'r 5 Q 6 E N 5, cor: wma MANY wn.Y, ronMmAm.s, AND Q 'ff Q I 'N f AWE INSPIRING cR:ATun:s, some or 5:11 y , 4 A s H w IN THEIR NATIVE ' V , n :':.:a'1: S 0 N gf 3 , ANY RESEMBLANCE 'ro STAFF ff j Mmsens ls, or counss, INTENTIONAL AND Rsruzcrs THE Plmumcss or A . Q THE CREATOR : 1 E---fd 1 I 4 Av- 1 '- - w E Y fc k y lg IJ -nl lf fxyx I 5 ,E Q gi! S 3 it 'E' ,Aw W1 mf Ms v J' J fi A7 A f A W 3 G' - A A X X - S Q W P' Q : : N 5 I ,Q Q di Z 2....Uf A '14 fff 3253 A X V N2 rj 'T i 1 E:, 'N ' I gm? M35 l ' 'V NA' E' ' N-' N f' 2 , ' WWW' xv . A My 1 Q I' A f fff, f A A v NQSQQEQQW Lf Q 0 Nix arms' 1 I -gif X XT N l I Q 5 Q-ff ,f ' ' ffl! ,Ill 9? PRECYNICHL YEARS 'LQ ' ff' 6 1 .-.4.: g 'S YWQW 333 infix I7 fm Sf :FQ W , - fffffw moo M! ' t E qi u'f p, f ,, ig fm wwf MZ-.Z-1 ha' 'M 5 5 Wy X .., 7 X X 4 V - ZX K f N35 g f? QA , WD 1460 ' lux5uX QL.-jg-' n 1 'fljjJpi' K J ffm. I f ffgfflylllil -.- NN E, eau Wu 5 . Wkffqcx I W5 Y 7...wx 'W ff Q :fs fiza Q H7 xf' U., fx gl., 1 Q xe..':.',',66 1 h Q ' X - 'Q '. I N- , O 6 x 7 'Z B . dt ' Dr. Jay M. Arena Duke Hospital Dear Doctor Arena: May 30, 1950 I should like on behalf of myself and my class to express our appreciation for the recent barbecue supper given for our class and for the superb job you did in discussing the Dean. We cer- tainly share your high regard for him. We are grateful for the contact we have had with you as students and for the many contributions you have made towards furthering the Duke Medical Center and making it a place of which we can always be proud. W Sincerely, Carl H. Weber, Jr. President, Medical Student Government The 1960 AESCULAPIA 45935 '27, N0 A.A'.,, ,I4 I A yy.:-.-44 .Bmw .J E Yu -1- 1. l i XXVWGQQZ25-1- FXR- - A5 J..-, Q43 a '53 ,U f Ft' 'Qs DUKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL GF MEDICINE DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Foreword 'hWhat, after all. is education but a subtle, slowly-effected change, due to the action upon us of the Externalsg of the written record of the great minds of all ages. of the beautiful and harmonious surroundings of nature and of art, and of the lives, good or ill, of our fellows--these alone educate us, these alone mould the developing minds. Within thc bounds of this campus these influences will lead successive generations of youth from matriculation in the college to graduation in the University. the complex, varied influences of Art, of Science, and of Charityg of Art, the highest development of which can only come with that sustaining love for ideals which 'burns bright or dim as each are mirrors of the lire for which all thirstg' of Science, the cold logic of which keeps the mind independent and free from toils of self-deception and half-knowledgeg of Charity, in which we of the medical profession, to walk worthily, must live and move and have our being. -From: THE STUDENT LIFE: The Philosophy of Sir William Osler. Ed. by Richar E. Verney. E. 8: S. Livingston LTD.. London. 1957. p. 56. morg 2 PAGE 3 .. .,.,., . as'-Eff? - N .M , x QS' fb5'JX'. ' R-.ffN?f3i2 '52?Ef543:f:':3-7-.T955-.'3'-ff'4:-!h:Si'-' ,, -- w'1?f1i'Xvfffi'Q-94i'PFfg:2f gg' - ,V x I-5:f':Q',vfF, g?X:+3X1Wf'-Q .QLQEQYQK.-Qllgf,, 2?SfQ',5vNlS1E'Q0f'3.fQ,N:fSPQfE1z . Q 'Q ' QQ, nav-ww . X14 1-,Q lx L A ,A 5 .xx ,qw vs..-ff,-Qw5y,w . .. , 1 ' xvgsfvfvgf 7:1 f- vw it , x x 3 Qgsbww. . X' vhs X1 Q . x x- X X f - - f grgyk- . ,xA1s,iy,Qie ,.-mxzi,g- if V X f ' X M -1- , , X. A . , xy fx Q .4 Xi, any I ,:-if sv is Q ,,.,1- 1 in . , , E f v , if df, Dedication Miss Mary Poston was born in western Maryland and reared and educated in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1922 she made application to the Johns Hopkins Hospital for a position as a secretary and was given a standard intelligence and aptitude test. Her performance exceeded the other candidates by such a great margin that it became the subject of discussion in the hospital dining room. Dr. Harold L. Amoss. then Asso- ciate Professor of Medicine and later the first Professor of Medicine at Duke. decided to hire her as a bacteriologist although she never had had a course in this subject. She was given a special summer course in Bacteriology at Columbia University and her training was continued by Dr. Amoss in the Biological Laboratory at Hopkins. Dr. Amoss and Miss Poston published three papers on Brucellosis before they came to Duke in 1930. Miss Poston has been senior author and co-author of over 30 scientific publications. Most of these have been on some phase of Brucellosis but one was on the relatively rare Listerella meningitis. ln 1937, she received an M.A. degree from Duke University on the basis of her thesis on the Brucellri group of organisms and a four-hour oral examination covering all phases of bacteriology and immunology. There are hundreds of Duke medical graduates who remember with appreciation and affection Miss Mary's efforts to teach them the fundamentals of bacteriology. PAGE 5 X 4 4 a :. Q sq 4 3 ' 2- ,L fri A i 'A 5 . , . V' W .2 W 2 9 2 , 1. 0 4 f W, 5, Q, 4, agen, gg . ef 'A' f.,,, ff farm ' ,, , gf, 1 1:33, , 7,. sf V fy, 4 X ,CC I if .A ,44 ,n 1:5 , f 77,4 4 f ' wwf wig? 9 W ff in 5 0 7' 'W M.: Z The End of an Era The year 1960 marks the end of an era for The Duke Medical Center. On the first of July. for the first time since it was established. Wilburt Cornell Davison will not be Dean. The story of The Duke Medical School and The Duke Hospital during these 33 years is largely his story. In 1927 The Duke Medical School began with the appointment of Dr. Davison as its Dean. This man in his middle thirties was already thc possessor of a remarkable career. Upon receipt of the A.B. degree from Princeton in 1913 he became a Rhodes Scholar residing at Magdalen College, Oxford and received the B.A., B.Sc. and.M.A. degrees between 1915 and 1919. lt was here that he began his medi- cal studies and first became a friend of Sir William Osler. He found time to serve with the American Red Cross in France and Serbia during Mr. Wilsons effort to Make the World Safe for Democracy. and from 1917 to 1919 he was First Lieutenant and subsequently Captain in the Medical Corps of the American Expeditionary Forces. He received the M.D. degree from The Johns Hopkins in 1917. Upon such activity is based his famous statement of interest in medical education because he never obtained one. At The Johns Hopkins between 1919 and 1927 he rose rapidly through Instructor. Associate Pro- fessor to Acting Head of the Department of Pediatrics and Acting Pediatrician in Charge. He was also the Editor of The Bulletin of Johns Hopkins and Assistant Dean. At this point another of the Four Horsemen played a decisive part in the future of W. C. Davison. William H. Welch recom- mended him for the newly created post of ,Dean of The Duke University Medical School. The measure of success of our Dean and his remarkable original staff of boys is the success of a 400 bed hospital and its subsequent growth in North Carolina. Students through the years have often heard the familiar statement: When I was a medical student in Baltimore- as the boys at Duke became known throughout the state and nation. The Dean's well known book The Compleat Pediatrician is his best known hobby and the compila- tion has filled otherwise idle moments on trains. Steamers, planes and at lectures and concerts from ls- tanbul to the Canal Zone. He could indeed be found any place on the globe and in such fashion did the name of Duke become a household word in medical circles. Yet such is this man's pervading pres- ence that he always seemed available to the perplexed student. Duke is unique in many respects but the central core of its uniqueness is the importance of the medical student. Few of us are given a name that will not be forgotten. ln the future. Dr. Davison. we shall say: When I was a medical student in Durham-. PAGE 7 f 44, . , . ,, , W xv- -f Z X lg, ! R , f - sffgqmyw A 5 9 V 454' -..,. 'f 'W wb Q, m xx , W ' 1-50 f ,2 53 J ' ,VV,, -1 xi The e inning of an .Ira The year l960 Ends not only The Duke Medical Center but all of medical education and indeed medical practice in a state of flux. lnto this challenging spotlight steps a man who is well known locally. nationally and internationally. On July the lirst Dr. Barnes Woodhall becomes the second Dean of The Duke University School of Medicine. Dr. Woodhall was born in Rockport. Maine in l905. He received the A.B. degree from Williams College in l926 and. in keeping with our local tradition, received the M.D. from The Johns Hopkins in 1930. He remained at The Hopkins for the next seven years as intern. resident and instructor in Surgery and in the year I937 was appointed Assistant Professor of Surgery at The Duke Hospital. During World War ll, Dr. Woodhall was Chief of Neurosurgery at Walter Reed General Hospital and served as a neurosurgical consultant to the Surgeon General, U. S. Army Medical Corps. For his outstanding work dealing with injuries to major nerve trunks, he was awarded the Legion of Merit in IQ46. Upon returning to Duke he became Professor and chairman of the division of Neurosurgery. His vast interests have extended from local perfusions of chemotherapeutic agents in neoplasm to the use of hypothermia in the surgical correction of large vascular anomalies. He is a Diplomate of the American Board of Neurological Surgery, a member of the Board of Gov- ernors of the American College of Surgeons and in 1944 was President of the American Academy of Neurological Surgeons. He is a member of the International Surgical Society, the Harvey Cushing So- ciety and the Society of Neurological Surgeons. His academic career is marked by membership in Phi Beta Kappa. Alpha Omega Alpha and Sigma Xi. His appointment is received by unanimous vote of the Executive Committee and the Board of Trustees upon the recommendation of a committee composed of Drs. Handler. Markee. Stead. Busse and Harris. Dr. Woodhall's career has been marked with signal success. He is now asked to walk in the foot- steps of one who has overshadowed most. Judging from past events and present status the future of The Duke Medical Center is bright. We can think of no one more capable of picking up the gauntlet and we look forward to a period of unparalleled growth and development. PAGE 9 taff In planning the 1960 edition of the AESCULAPIAN the editorial staff thought it would be very interesting to run a feature article on the major medical contributions that have emanated from Duke since its opening in 1930. At first this did not appear to be a very difficult task, but when the attempt was made to accrue a list of the top twenty-five Duke originals, the task was formi- dable. lt seems that no one person will sit down and judge all his colleagues and then say who is the best The path then chosen was a poll taken among the senior class members to List the five senior staff members who have impressed you the most. From the results of that poll the fol- lowing is written. We might add that Dr. Bayard Carter was among the five chosen, but to avoid a repetition of last year's AESCULAPIAN, in which he was featured, we chose another staff member. ln addition we might add that Dr. Barnes Woodhall was among The Five, but he is being fea- tured elsewhere in this issue as the new Dean. George Baylin was born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1911. He attended schools there and later matriculated at The Johns Hopkins University, receiving his A.B. degree in 1931. Following a year of Zoology graduate study at the Hopkins, he entered the Duke University Medical School, where he spent one year as an anatomy instructor before graduation in 1937 after qualifying for AOA. He took a surgi- cal internship at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore. but after consulting with his advisor and close friend, Doc- tor Swett ofthe Duke Anatomy Department, he decided that radiology was more adapted to his desire for teaching in an academic institution and for close contact with the various medical specialities. To more fully prepare himself for his chosen specialty, he worked for eight months in the Pathology De- partment at Guy's hospital in London. He returned to Duke for radiology residency, completing his training in 1941 and being appointed instructor in Radiology in the same year. In 1947 he became an Associate in Anatomy and by 1950 had attained the position of Professor of Radiology. Doctor Baylin's contributions to medical research have been of a varied nature and reliect his om- niverous interest in all facets of medicine. Working with Doctor Philip Handler. he demonstrated the roentgenographic changes in animals on deficient diets. He was one of the pioneers in the use of iso- topes for studying the function of the pancreas, the liver, and the kidney. He has been a leader in establishing X-ray criteria for mastoid and middle ear disease. He worked closely with Doctor Ruffin in an investigation of the pain mechanisms of peptic ulcer and with Doctor Grimson has helped make original contributions on the effect of vagotomy on gastrointestinal physiology. With the advent of the Duke Medical Center as a leader in the relatively young field of cardiovas- cular surgery. he has clearly and vividly demonstrated the value of the routine P-A chest film as both an index of cardiac status and as a diagnostic aid. ln the sixty-live papers in which he has served as author or co-author, Doctor Baylin has shown an unusual versatility and a multidimensional approach to problems. Indeed, perhaps his greatest value as a teacher is his insistence on considering all aspects of clinical and research problems before render- ing an opinion on the roentgenogram. Walter Kempner was born in Berlin in 1903, was raised there, and attended Schiller College where he received his A.B. degree in 1921. The years 1921 to 1926 were spent in medical school at the Uni- versities of Berlin and Heidelberg, receiving his M.D. degree from the latter, following which he in- terned in medicine at the University Hospital in Heidelberg. During the years 1927 to 1928 and 1933 to 1934 he studied under Dr. Otto Warburg at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur Zellphysiologie in Berlin. The interim years of 1928 to 1933 were spent as Assistant Physician at the Berlin University Hospital. PAGE 10 In I934 Walter Kempner came to the young Duke University Medical School for further research at the invitation of Dr. Frederic M. Hanes. then Professor of Medicine. With his clinical background in internal medicine and his research background under Dr. Warburg in cellular respiration and fermen- tation studies, Dr. Kempner became vitally interested in the dietary relationships to cardiovascular renal disease. After several years of studying the cellular metabolism of normal and diseased kidney cells, he published in 1944 his first report on the successful clinical use of the Rice Diet in the treatment of cardiovascular renal disease for which he is now internationally famous. His results with the Rice Diet have been dramatic and unequivocal. and the success is due in great part to his demands for rigid adherence to the dietary regimen. His dynamic personality has indeed proven the strength of his scientific convictions, In commenting on the success of the Kempner diet. Dr. Eugene Stead stated: His strikes have all been made in areas where the experts said there was no gold. A student is indeed fortunate to have the opportunity to round with Dr. Kempner at one of his Rice Houses in Durham, where adoring patients, almost hypnotized in his presence. decry the sodium molecule as their papilledema steadily recedes. A most pleasant and unique experience for the student in the MOPC is to consult on a patient with Dr. Kempner in his ofiice over coffee and cookies. one of the rare informal contacts a student has with a senior staff member. Doctor Eugene Stead is an enigma to many medical students, for, despite his position as an ae- knowledged leader of medical thought. he does not wax eloquent with glibly quoted clinical aphorisms. choosing rather such phrases as let me think along with you, or let's see how your head works on this, or let's find out why this man's kidneys are sick. This insistence on basic reasoning often proves bewildering and frustrating to the beginning student, who is accustomed to a more smug and sophisti- cated approach to problems. However. it is by way of this basic reasoning and questioning that he is the man and teacher that he is. This brief sketch is concerned more with unearthing the roots and development of Doctor Steads philosophy than with a biographical survey of his life. which we will mention briefly. Eugene Stead was born in Atlanta in 1908. where he remained until he had received his BS and MD degrees from Emory University. Following this he had a rapid ascension into the loftier areas of aca- demic medicine. His background includes: internship in medicine at Peter Bent Brigham t 1932-33l, Re- search Fellow at Harvard H933-343, internship in surgery at Peter Bent Brigham 11934-359. assistant and senior residency in medicine at Cincinnati General Hospital H935-377. assistant in medicine at Har- vard tl937-39J, resident physician at the Thorndike Memorial Laboratory H939-427. associate in medi- cine at Harvard and Peter Bent Brigham H939-422, professor of medicine at Emory University H942- 46J, Dean of Emory University H945-461, and professor of medicine at Duke tl947- 7. Much of his basic philosophy has evolved from the various chiefs under which he received his trainingfi: From Doctor James Paullin, chief at Emory, he learned that the family doctor of the fu- ture was going to be an intelligent interested internistf' From his second chief, Doctor Henry Chris- tian ofthe Peter Bent Brigham, he became aware that just as many people liked to fish or play golf. I liked to work with my head, and that men must be made conscious of their ability to learn for them- selves. Of his I6 months internship under Doctor Eliot Culter, he says. I discovered how hard sur- geons work, and I learned that those long hours in the operating room use up the time which the intern- ist loves to spend talking with his patients and teaching. In commenting on why he took a surgical in- ternship he stated: I had no intention of going into surgery, but I wanted to become familiar with sur- gical problems. I wanted to see sick patients. and an intern has the best opportunity to learn about the disease and its treatment directly from the patient. Doctor Stead credits his fourth chief, Doctor Blankenhorn of Cincinnati with giving him his basic The Journal of Clinical lnvestigntiorz, Vol. XXXII, No. 6, pp. 548-549, June. 1953. PAGE I I interest in clinical observation and of teaching him how to get other people to work. It was from his last chief, Doctor Soma Weiss, that he benefited the most because in Doctor Stead's words The clay was worked better and more ready for the molding. He found that repeated efforts to explain to the undergraduate student the basic mechanisms of health and disease . . . kept before us the extent of our own ignorance .... 1 have never ceased to drink from this well of undergraduate naivete and skepti- cism : that the goal of the medical student was the opportunity for the correlation and consolidation of his knowledge which can only be achieved in the fourth year. and lastly that men with sound clini- cal training who have spent time in learning the ways of sick patients could hold their own in the re- search field. The story of Dr. Ernst Peschel's emergence as a member of the senior staff at Duke Hospital is more adaptable to a movie scenario than to a biographical sketch in a medical school yearbook. His gregarious and affable approach to the student, his modesty and his almost palpable desire to teach camouflage his past and his unique path to his present position. Dr. Peschel was born in 1901 in a small town in the middle section of Germany. ln his early life. he displayed a talent in music, and by his adolescent years he was an accomplished cellist. Through his artistry of the cello he soon became a member of several well known chamber music groups, and it ap- peared that he was destined to be a professional musician. But his interests also extended to medicine, and in 1926 he entered the medical school at the University Hospital in Berlin. During his years as a student and house oliicer in Berlin, he became acquainted with Dr. Walter Kempner, a relationship that was to prove instrumental in his coming to Duke. Upon completing his training in 1933. Dr. Peschel entered private practice as an internist in Ber- lin. But he soon found himself enmeshed in the web of intrigue which developed with the rise of Adolph Hitler and his secret police. Being one of a group of individuals who harbored the Jews and other political refugees from the Gestapo, he soon found himself being interrogated by the police, and on one occasion was questioned with a pistol held to his head. By 1943 his record was so questionable by SS standards that he was banished from Berlin and sent to Bavaria where he could be kept under closer scrutiny. However, with the permission of a disillusioned and sympathetic Nazi otlicial. he was allowed to resume his medical activities, and following the termination of the war, he continued medical practice in Nuremburg, Germany. Although Dr. Peschel enjoyed practice. he still yearned for an academic atmosphere. and when the Duke Medical School in 1947 extended an invitation to join its staff, he accepted. Since his ar- rival his interests have centered in the fields of electrolytes. renal physiology and vascular disease, Dr. Peschel's enthusiasm and elfervescence in these areas and in medical education have been a constant source of inspiration and motivation to all students who have been fortunate enough to come under his tutelage. No biography of Mr, Dr. Peschel would be complete without mention of his gracious and charm- ing wife, Mrs Dr. Peschel, whom he met and married while they were both at the University of Ber- lin. Ruth Lohman Peschel was an instructor and Associate Professor of Medicine there, and was well known for her research in the physiology of inllamation and also in cancer metabolism. Since her arriv- al at Duke with her husband, she has been associated with Dr. Kempner, and together with her hus- band has contributed much on the metabolic alterations associated with the Rice Diet. more I2 EDXVIN P. ALYIiA,D1I,D. I'rul0,fry RALPH A. ARNOLD, M.D. Otoluryngolofry Josxaru W. BEARD, M.D. Surgery BERNARD BRESSLER. M. D. Psychiatry W W. BANKS ANUIQRSON, MD. Ophtlmlmolngy Roman D. BAKER, M.D. Pathology taff I' 4 'Z Q ,I rf . f Q .35 3:1 'lf ' 2. 'g ' , rm: , ,,,,. , , 'J '. lr, . - :V . 1 -:v?Q7'.. ' .-' , - fy., f. .,.114W -, . .. N . ..,'.y1m. Y .mjgrff-1. 'bm' f, f- 1 fs-Q inf, W11.1,1AA1 H. ANIJ.-xx, MD. Slll',Ejl'l'j' XVILLIAM FRANCIS BARRY, JR., MD. Radiology JM' Mmucls Aux-1NA,M.Il l'n-flintrivs 4,51-zolculc JM' BAYLIN, MD Rnd iolngy Ii. FREDERICK BECKER, Ph.D. F1ucn.sx:1c'l4 BIGRNHICIM, Ph.l1. BIURTUN IJ. Bmmxm-'1-'. M, Anatomy Phu1'm:u'ology Merlin-inv ' '-'- zxxff- ' .-Q31 'f' ---- 2 ,-A :bf Q Kiwi'-f.fXQ'fa?x' . . . .,,. . :u.:.,-xsi,'25gs.' '- V ,.,. . . ' '1- ,L-Q ah ,. . , - ---' : 'I ' , .,,. f -- 2 2 , -- -K - YI L -ffif ' ' ' -N:-:-rbe mr. '. - . - . Qgilfkv: : fl.. . , . -.fr ' Ll igj, it IVAN W. Blmwx. .I1:..M.Il, 111w.xl.n W. livssxfz. MJD. Wu,l.1AM W. BYRNE, Ph.U Surgery Psyvlmizntry Ilincln-nuiftry PAGE 13 Mb' wrvQann-M. J, LAMAR f'AI,I,AwAY. M.D. IVJ9l'II12lf0IU2j' ...H . ,Mk .,.., ..,l,, . ' ff .vw-V 1, 1 , , . ., ,.. , ' gf - F 4- 2 I . ge f W M 252 I Q , A45 Q V ' W' A P . 95. Ie gf ,Q 154' I , 1 f Zfflwf .. My . f.-Q,-,sy .-A Qc 0 5 ' f QI MX ff if 6 'ax Q p, X, Q 45 1, Q . 4 S.xxr'm:n I. f'Hlll'IN,11.IV. Ikyclliutry . 3.41, , 4 f 1 Af f ri? X 1 f wi' .IUIIN Ii. DEI-IS, M.D. Vrulogy X jf I 5 '11 4 . 4 'VZ Qi, Iggy, j f, Q , xy '0vfwrif61!0 X I f ' f C' XX l1.III,xAl 14 I'h.l!., I'lIysiolug.:y and PAGE 14 I. DI:'l'IIRIc, M.D. PlI:l1'Im1f'ol4,mgy FImNCIs BIIYARD CART1-JR. MD f,NDSfPfl'il'S and Gynecology . , 1 4' I ,. ggi! ,, Y w 9 Q I 4' w ' 3 ' 97 Nnlm.-xx F. f'0NAN'I', PIID, Mic'1'uhi0logy A, , , fw , - .228 t A :-,:1:.h,'z:.s,, b V Of V 'iq-2,1 . , ' ,fm I WI? ,, ,M ,af,.1:'. , I Slfsxx 04mNs Tlmzs. M.D. P1-4liut1'ics taff .. , at X I ' W ar. . ., 1 ' 1 L,,.b . fy., ,Qzqg 5 IQ ,, ,. iqa' VVALTER BORIS CHERNY, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynec-nlogy limalA:1z'r Nowxcm, FREADIOK, M.l Hhstetrics 211111 Gynecology 1 Q s '. 's Q WIl.I,I.xxI J. A. DEMARIA, M.D. I'ediaf1'ivs ,,,.7Qfs3f - , 19.5 ,Wm X h .JR iii .,ff 1,.5 M4 , 'fi' 5 4 .v 7 5 f f I 43 V Q V , f S 95 rf, Q ' 4 f K 4 a ,, f ' V ' 5 3. U I , Q 1, A , , .S Qs LOUIS D. COHEN, Ph.D Psychiatry lilxfarmxl DAI, Ph.D, Psyvlliatly in ,.,, NE P4 g, ,S Na+ , P, Q Y? i , +2 1 f , , I A 46 I . 43 QM.. SARA J. DI:N'r, M.D. AIIGESYIIBSHIIOHY a MACIIONAIJJ DICK. M.D. MARCUS L. DILLON, M.D. ROBERT H. DOVENMUEHLF, MI-dicine Surgery MD' Psychiatry tall' ,,5y' '- ,. nw? , J--.V 'wzffff f , l, Af.. 'L ' wif,-' v , , - , . 4 1 fl if ff f 0 1 1 7, u rn 1 f I f, 1 4 2, . 1 f Q, f , ff' 'H f ff 0 All f, fi ff f if , R4 71 f lfI11NNlfI'I'll L. Dvluc, T'h.D. Wfx'r'1' W. l'1,u:1.Ic, BLD. lf'1:.xx1c I.. l'1NGl'1lA, MD, FI, II.x1cv1-1vl'Zs'r'r:s, M.I1. Allllliillll' Utolzlryllgology Nlwlivim- Nlvrlivinv- my-uf ,Tony W. EYERE'I'T. Ph.D. Iim:x.x1w F. F1f:'1 l'lc1:, M.D. WILEY D, Fmcmrs, MD. .Imlx A, l'l0NVl.liR, M.Im. Anatomy Pzltllology l'ntluolru.fy l,Nyf'lllEltl'j' ,5gL,,v,,2, , , , ,,,, W V. If -' I . , 1 Q , IA 5 I Jw, ffl' W ,- ' vfsfk i' x ' X 4' X 4 Q Y v 4 lf' A , Q' 4 s 0 IRWIN FRIoox'1ri'lI,P11.D. 1,'1..xl:HNc'1z E. G.xnDx1-112, M.D. NICIllll,.XS 15. Gr10Rr:mDE, BLD. J. I.1cux.x1:1+ mimmxx-,x:, M.Iv. Bioclu-mistry Surgery Plastic Surgery lll'llllIlll'1lll' Surg!-ry 19 n-QQ V r ' , .lv I- - K 'V i ---. :'- l ll . .I .S NAL . 'K .X s - . Q .. , ' 1 . s ' Q J15w1s'rT GOLDSMITH, M.D. KEITH S. G1c1MsoN,M.D. FRANK G. H.x1,l.. Ph.D. l':IPXVIX fV'liOXVHI.I. Hxmrzmtx, Psychiatry Surgery Physiology and Pharmacology M'l4:'l'- BLD' Ubstctrirs and Gynecology PAGE 15 JL '42 .. PHILIP II.xNm,zal:. Ph.Ii. Usaxxz: fl ii. HANSYQN-Plruss, 31.11 Biochemistry Mvflivim-' .IARII-18 l'. II1f:Nm:1X. BLU, :X14'Klif'illlf 1.1-:sl.1r. Ilmlxux, NI lr lky l'hlilTl'Y KDE Hzzwzz I' Ixrnm' Xl Il muh I6 M1 '4 liqinv IJVNAN 12 III4:'l'l1r:lc1N4:'mN. M In Ph lr .XIIZITIHYIX MW Im IS Am, 111 Hmv14,1.u, NLD. l'c-mli:1fl'i4's lb. 1 K ,M sn f Aa ' ,R 3 1 :r,A,w, ,Y f , ? 'F'- f1,i fb 1 49 1 1252? W 1 Af f' -,c v ' Az Nmcxux Kllcsllxmc, l'h.lW. HilN'lll'llliSfl'j' aff 'Y' f...Q.f:x. 3 4' . I ,I . ' . ' A 16 1 W .11:1:oA11A1 S. ITxw'1s, BLD. Pe- fini if's V . , zz-qw Kyiv ' P .f Q vw' QQ . , 1 f as 5 ' ,.'..,., I 1-' .BF 4 yi HQ, . xi ': , W M3351 my iv , , ,f an M ' YT N9. 445 ' N V. x af , Z 7 W X WSW J 4 , , ' 2? y 'E J fs xr V 2' ww ' sf! H N ' ,N , 'V' ' Ji W xx x 1 www I11,1.x ,IIA1:'r. M.D. hllraw-ry QA A' 1s1':1c'r I11f.YM.xN, BLD. I 1:lc1v1c1cIr'li Il. IIINI-3, M. No-Ilrulugy lkychialtry .4 ll X r. f 4 I m,,,,., 'f , , 1 vi ' ..5m1,,-Z. X 1 5? Wu' .xxvw Ia. ll.v,1.. I'h,lP. lll4.Nl:YIxu1lN. l'h.ll. l'l1-xxinfu-fy :xml I'll:urn1:1vnIugy liim'l1el11isf1'y Ii, i'l1.xl:l.l-is Kl'NIxlfI'2, M.ID, f'Il.XIII,l'1NI1l,I'INVl'II,I.YN, Nt'lII'Hl1N-fy l'syr-lxizltry M.l! Nt 'IWW' Xli'l'Hl'R HILL I.oN1mN, MD. Ilfxxs lAlXX'l'lNl4,U'H, BLD I'01li:ltl'iL's VNY4'hiPlt 3' A .,.. H 1.-X-ef A M .,,, Q --xi: Q 1- . ' 27539 2 . hum X 1 N5 v si XSSQ QQQ sg? RYE, X f it Q X4 f. X ly. . 1 A .X X5 .2 . gf . Jzvgggf, Q g-594 This ,mf g Q my , , Aw .Q M llrzxm' IJ, LICINTOSH, M.I1. II.X1:m'T. Mf'l'1Ilf:usoN,1XT.I1. NIPlliCill0 Mvalim-im' H H' 1 1'-1 -A for ,W QW. , Af, Li X XX ll.x.1.xM S. LYNN, ALI! liiuvllvlxlistly 1 Q , ' ' fy 1 X 11.3 9732,-5, I -g. -'If : ., .i 653 ' ' J. 'Aw V X ,X , . ., 4' ,f A E, Q. -, A -X 515 V, Q, 'Q 1 3 ,ff I i Q , xgp w,f':Q,f, S SEQ - Z .wmg 1945-1 f- ,- - X- . f iii, X' i .0 3 1 , X ' QM , ' 9: ,- M, in I nn -... -. ,. HA-ann. V '..:uaulu1 haw Q 4,,,, N www ., m.. ., ,.,, 4 , ,, , 9 MA .41 ,Xxulx M4'lSr:Y1rl11, Nl.Il. l'I'4llJltl'll'N ,WV 5 iff, ' 4 5 , , is 5 'Z ,W a W f ' U 4 f ' - L f! ff '! , 3 , W , X lusxcvll IC. MA1cKl1:11:, l'h.ll. KIl'Il.'XI!lr 51' Mmmlmv 31711, A nutunly ' M.D ELLTAH IC, Ml':N1c1-mm, Ju., HLAINH N.xs1m1.11, MJD. liAxl:xs.xm IX I'1XX'li0liG, BLD' Nt'lll'flSlll'g9l'j' Medicilw F I xIPlli1'illP www X ,sg X: 1 5 f . 2, 5,5 J 1 J K 5 'S P -'X . 'X' . , GUY L. Ononr, M.D., limuum S,Onf:A1N,M.IJ. Juux Neurosurgery Medicine M ivrohiolofy l's-.'m-lxiantrx' ,WMM ,V Q Q gs 5:23, Q ,, . I Q '- 5' 'fi' J::.. ' S. I XX 11,l.1AA1 M, NIf'HOI.SUN, M.lw. BIt'dil'ill1' ,Q-'E E 5' gxnpf' R.0v1f:RM.xN, BLD. Rm' T. Iixluqx-inc. M.IP. Ohstetrivsul1dHynvvulo:y PAGE I7 f T,-xmiADr:E L. PEELE. M.D. .X lliltfbllly I'IENs'rPEsCHE1.,M.D. M0fiiCin0 Ii.u'n1uNn W. INus'1'i.E'l'Hw,x1'r, M.D. SlIl'2'Ol'V Xie nw V w wf . . , , 77 fm L'-v:i ' 5 Q . x. N K N X N 2 X 1 S s Q.x . E K Q .1 rf ' its E-fx , , W f ff' ff! , iq ,f f': 11 , ' - i ' I R. VVAYNE IiUN111.Es, M.D. Me-diciue PAGE 18 wa ,. fx , wtaff 'Sz .r .QS f'IiAlCLl'ISII.Pl4IPI1'PI,M.Iw. Hbstvtrif'su1i4l li yn Pm-nlugy s I ' ., , - .5.,,. ,, 1 - a,,,,,,.5 , ., , ' . 'r-.4 fiiff: ' E. V ,IQ Q f' K. iv , ,. , ,, , ,Qz . MI: -l we 44,1531 7 .f E. .Qs , .,-QW: f ,W , , , - Qi 3621- 'Ef:2.f1 ,, c .Y f WH? f naw 27141. 4 fm -' is .-,aww -www Ms, wiv ., Wi? ' r ff 1!1'5?5?3?51f:,ff?,kQ'f2f5?5Zf5, ' ' KENNETH L. PICK1 Plastic Surg' 1 ,. ., A ,E r f'XRA : swf ?fff25?m ,fw,e,,.Qf,.f fr5zfi3vfp:Q f 5,22-IJ ' 9, Q17 7 J r I 1 f 4 Q 3 -r 5 49 ' ' f,. f ' V f ' P 7 6: ff. 4 1 4 4-X 3 a Q ,fr f , f gf 4 , z , Q Q Q- V- ,.. ,gf .wp-f , r, famvsn r sf X gf? ' Q XVII,-LIAM J. PEICTI-I . M.D. Su rum-y W ,, fv g: Lx - ,Q QM V . --qw, new ,f F? -V L f f Q 4 9 .f 5, Z4 ' 'fy 615 A 9' ix J 7 ,rg 1 , ,, X Q fc iigsli ,ww 1 ' . WJ., ., .9 , I Y by 4 f if 0 'f ? Q I f 4 Q, ge ' f A KW ' V74 f 5 ,, 4 54,949 , ' , Q . J, A V V 9 f if ' , , 2? M- ' , , M. 4 4. . Zn.f. 'f?'6?f: an fx A ' HILL. M.D. ery ,Al , .4 , f, - MQ. 9 , 3 ,- -..::.,2.f..'1.',:f .Q U ly ., M , fe A W Q LEo :P1NE,P11.ID. Mielwobiology I f l 14' Z' I EVE X 0 ' ff 1 W4 y , Q4 f 7 v . iv , I ww 4 wr aww I Q Y YJ if , , f 4,53 5' f cy A ,J ,f f 57. . f X X ,r 45' .4 QL Y? X Q 1 Q 45 aff 6 s 5' 4 i E , ' is ROBERT J. REEYES, M.D. Radiology IIHICIEE RT SALTZMAN Medicine ,M.D. 41' ' M Q I E 43 9 lay. 5 ggi A a X , , 0,19 05,55 S ? . P . 951 Wiz Q f 'S s EE C 4' 4 f V! . 4, JOHN M. R1-Ioixlms, M.D. Psychiatry v E i wyf . I MM... .4 .. A -A WILL C. SEALEY, M.D. Thoracic Surgery lC1.nE1:1' IQ. PERSONS, M.D Mvdivinv YIVTOR A. T'o1,1TANo, M.D Urology JULIAN M. RUFFIN, M.D. Mm-divine IIERBERT O. SIEKER, M.D. Medicine Ntaif ,lnlus Il.S1'1MANS,B1,i3, 31l1.mn:11 Siimzwmm, ILN. W1l.l,i.xM W, SllIN4il,H'l'UN, 31.12 l'1-ology ..,,-'-xr.. t 1 f W X I' X J s P .K x 1 6 K X 1 vii Q ov , X 2' N , , Q N VX1 Giconui-: A. SI1.fYER, 31 Psychiatry .. lou mu R Noxuu R 31 D Nlumixox N'1'0CK'l'ON Sl'A1'I1,1I.i7. 1' ltllolng I'c'4liz1trif's Slll'1,fQ'l'3' Q . K W 'Y 6 6 Els , Q. , 5? 'x X . , 5 QQ, , 5 4 . 1' . 1 , 1 f ' - 4:5-13. +-v.3s1,::-5:gf1i::g.s' 1J,'1v1nT.SMI'1'H, 31.11. Mivrubiulngy Xmsmzw' 11. S31l'I'11, M.1v. I'z1t1mlm:y 3, ..m,..,.. ., 2 QLQAQ, ' L.:-f',,zff. . , 4 1 1 .MW . fs 4 ..:-4 .- ns' , x's.,. , as 2. ' fi. Q. ex .. , uf .1 . , 'a .1 1, :L - 152 , xv. . . 44.-a 'iw fx . fw - ' . ..,.45:. E 1 X 1 lilwaizxiz A. S'ri-zxm, 31.11. - Pediatrics 311-dia'il1c fi llgtw C. RONALD STEPHEN, 31.13. IiAY3V00ll 31. '1'AYI,oR, P11.1J. 3VAI.'l'lCK 1.1512 Tuoxr.-xs, 31.15. Anesthesiology Biochemistry Obstetrics and Gynecology .I 5 , 1 1 a ,jg XlI4l'1lZ'l'.K,5ll.YI111I3IAN, 31 IP. i,N3't'ili1lfl'3' 'A-17 . M I i i . J mr Za, V. V . 1 v 4 3 ,N QM... f 3YI1C'1'3Y,S3l1'I'lI 31.11. Surg:-ry r ,, ,K fm- . A ' ,f'1.w.Q, , . ' .,.-f 'ii :tif . I NQVV P.. 's 4 -q.f?gf4,,,w. x if F' . 335 33 331, - -' ar k : .fax Iiolzbilvl' S1'i:xil'w11,, 31.11. IH-flint rim Sf . vIULE'I'1I.Tl'1iNl'1R, 31.11. fjilS10tl'il'SilIlti Gynecology PAGE 19 'calf 1 . S aw 4 fy If .,.' , .fi ft Xin..-m.x1i','Fx'm:.M.Ib, .lmlx V. Vlulrxrcnc, M.Ir, f'IIRlS'I',X vox Rm-:lsm,. 31.11, III ' - NIL'4li1'iIl1' fU1SfHf!'i1'S5IIlllHyll0I'0I0!jy xlvllllllll PAGE 20 aw. QNX in mm P. XVILI.ET'l', Ph.D Mic'1'ohir1l0g'y ,kmlcs Ti. WYN4:.xAum2N, M.D. W.tJ1,r:NN YoUN1:. J1z,.M.D, M41-clicimg '1'l1m'nCi1' Surgery NWI' l'1f 1'l'Ii11.IP LIQNHX lb. Hxlil-Llc, BLD. NIHN'l'RtlNlCfI.BIUSl11N. I'l1.lF. 01'tlmpf-'lies .XIIHTUIIIX RY I.. lP,lil'1l:Nlllf:lM,I'h.lJ, IC. 1i1's'1'.u'11: Nrawxmxv M.lr. Iliuwlu-l11ist1'y I'xy1'lliz1tl'y I Ic.xxKi'l.II'l'l11xu:l1:1:,MJD, Sl'x'l1.xM fYN'l'lfIIH'IUl l'. l'h,Il,. B f,l'flIU1YL'K1i4' Slll',E1'l'j' BIk'Ilii'iI1l' Ill-:1:w1x f'1lUl'l'Ill,NI,ll. .Manx B. l 1f1c1wr'1-zlc,M.lb. Me-1li1'im' Nl'1ll'Ul02j' Ii,xx'xmNlv'1', llm'1.r:, MM, ,l4rllN Y. S.x1.z,xxn, VILD. Mmlivilw I,llj'NiiDl1l2Qj'lllll1Y,lHll'llll1X 4 l'.HHllI'lS,l'1.'XllIl'1,Pll.IJ.-BLIP. S.,l.W.x1cll.. Pl1.Il. l'l1ysi11lug:y :md l'h:l1'11l:u'olug5y I1im'l11-lllistry XY.xl,'1'l1:1i Iimll-Nlclz. 31.11, .X1:Nm.ln M. W1f11ss1.141z. MJD, Mwlicim- Nli'iliI'iI1k' I .f'lm1f'l' l.UNt6.1l.l?,, I'h.ID, .I.l'1.xn1.l'1Wll1'l'1c.M,l1. l'hysinlngy zlml I'l1:11'1ll:lculu:.fy lW1L'di1'ill0 Kl41NNl1I'l ll S. Mv1'.xl:'1'Y, Ph.ll, ,MMI-is 0. WYNN, M.lJ X liincln-lllis trv A1l'diI'ill0 The History ofthe Class of l96ll It all began in the austere, stern environment of room M-I ltl. How appropriate a place to commence the study of a profession which is characterized by attention to detail, foresight, and cleanliness. The huge black blades of the window fan were beating out their inellectual refrain- squeak, squeak, squeak. A very unusual fan this, for it was able to distribute odors and cigarette smoke evenly throughout the gloom without moving the air pereeptibly, thus preserving the incu- bator-like quality of the place. The young men and women seated in that room four years ago were to become the class of 1960 at the Duke University School of Medicineg namely, us. All in all, it was a sobering moment. The Dean was the first to speak to us. We appeared to be listening intently to what he had to say, actually we were looking intently, for what an eye-full was this man! He greeted us, told us of the wonders that lay ahead, and in general behaved in a deanish manner. He also complimented us and told us what a select group were were. Actually, in many respects this was the first time in our respective lives that we had been recognized as worthy and significant hu- man beings. It was also the last time that such occurred. The next speaker was the head of the department of anatomy, and he made us a little uneasy for he talked less about the glories of the future, and more about the realities of the present. He even suggested that there might be hard times ahead. We shrugged this off as a likely story and turned our heads toward the first year. The Dean had streaked us out on the agar of the Duke Medical Center, and we had but to grow. Anatomy turned out to be basically the negotiation of a peaceful co-existence with four other people, three living and one dead. The relationship with the latter proved to be by far the most intimate, if not very long lasting. We soon found that there is considerably more to dissection than is readily apparent. Take, for example, the matter of the removal of the skin from the cadaver. To the casual observer, this seems simply a matter of stripping ofi' the skin. much as one would peel an avocado. This, however, is not so, for the skin must come oli in just the exact thickness. We were all rendered tense and tremulous by the emphasis placed on the importance of this, and as a result most of the first specimens removed were markedly fenestrated. Feelings of guilt and inadequacy were heavy upon us. However, we soon recovered and adopted less subtle, more de- finitive methods of skinning. This also cut down significantly on annoying details of anatomy which cluttered the dissection. It was at this point that we learned that in the busy life of the physician, it is sometimes necessary to temporarily lay aside detailed, precise, thorough methods and take short cuts. We had been in medical school for 45 minutes. Although gross anatomy occupied most of our time, there were histology and neuroanatomy to be dealt with. lt was in these areas that those of us with liberal educations were way ahead. Per- haps way out would be a better phrase. One of us was so liberal in his orientation that he soon left school to write the great American novel. More power to him, wherever he is. As the depart- ment of anatomy was the first to view our class, it was also the first to take a dim view of our class. We sensed this, because some of us failed anatomy. Fortunately. most of our losses were not per- manent, thanks to the do-it-yourself course given in the summer. After this less than glorious debut, we proceeded on to physiology and biochemistry with more trepidation. ln anatomy, a new fact was uncovered with every stroke of the blade, but in bio- chemistry the facts did not turn up so easily. For example, after hours and hours of laborious chemical procedures, we were able to look an egg in the eye. and know that it does indeed con- tain cholesterol. At the rate of one fact every six hours, it takes a long time to learn an apprecia- ble amount of biochemistry. The records we kept of our physiology labs sounded more like menus than anything else-frog legs, turtle hearts, rabbit chitterlings, rat kidneys. All these yielded their secrets unto us. And soon the first year was over. Looking back over it we said that in anatomy there were too many facts and not enoJgh thinking, in physiology too much thinking and not enough facts, and in biochemistry too much thinking and far too many facts. It was good to look back on the first year, and it got better. There were other things learned that first year. Very early in the year we discovered that the medical student has much smaller calorie and vitamin needs than do interns. residents. nurses. PAGE Zl maids and orderlies. Furthermore, warmed or cooked food is injurious to the stomach of a medi- cal student. For these reasons, medical students are barred from the hospital cafeteria. We found that the natural, healthful diet of the medical student consists mainly of aged ham-and-cheese on rye sandwiches, preferably served at room temperature. These could be had in abundance at the Dope Shop, and were usually consumed in room M-110, the ancestral home of the Duke Medical Student. Also very early we became acquainted with the vast, liquid spectacles referred to as medical school dances. Our class seemed to have an inherent naturalness at these affairs, and we always attended in large, loud numbers. lf the first year had been one of bleakness and feeling-as-though-it-will-never-end, the second year was one of adjustment and relative tranquility. We had finally come to the study of human illness and its causes, and it seemed to us that such study was entirely appropriate in the training of a physician. Human illness turned out to be an animal acting in a certain way, its cause was a wheel, and the universe was the biggest wheel of all. We all laughed at the wheels until we began to think seriously about disease, at which point this concept became very useful and strangely modern. Beyond the wheels were the pots, endless pots, pots on the wall, pots on the table, pots on the Hoor. They contained cases. At first glance these were merely foul smelling, hopelessly tangled wads of viscera, but more careful inspection revealed that they could tell a story as clear as any in medicine. Autopsies were interesting, but they would have been more so had we been able to understand our prosectors. Our questions were usually answered with bows, smiles, nods, and perhaps the phrase, smooth and glistening, or passive congestion. In pathology, as the material from the first year was incorporated into the study of illness, we began to see our profession as a unified whole. For the first time, we could site some concrete reasons for choosing medicine as a career. Bacteriology and Pharmacology both contributed large amounts of valuable information to our growing stores of knowledge, they also contributed considerable amounts of useless informa- tion. The latter was entertaining, so it was really not useless. In addition to teaching us their own fields, which they did nicely, the faculty in these disciplines performed the important function of complementing our knowledge in other areas. Thus physiology became much more meaning- ful because of pharmacology, and pathology more meaningful because of bacteriology. Perhaps the most significant thing of all is that we came into contact with the remarkable faculty members who constitute these departments. What can be said of dog surgery? Almost every Duke student looks back on it with a great deal of pleasure, and those in our class are no exception. Everyone scrubbed for fifteen minutes except the professor, and he scrubbed for three minutes. We wisely attributed this reduced cleans- ing to intrinsic asepsis on his part. There was the surgeon whose patient died under the blade, not a Bard-Parker, but a Gillette blue blade. There was the first assistant whose integrity had al- ways been impeccable who crept down the hall with a dead dog, heading for the refrigerator. There was the giggling anesthetist whose patient expired in the midst of the giggles. Then there was the professor. Why do we love dog surgery? Because of the marked reminiscence value. We sadly regret its passing, for it was a time of fun and the acquisition of more than a little knowledge. Hematology sticks in most of our minds as basically a course in cover slip pulling. It was so encouraging to pull hundreds, until at last a masterpiece is achieved, one in which each red cell is exactly 8 microns away from every other red cell. The best part came when the preparation came back graded D minus , it seemed to make the effort worth while. What kind of cell is that? A myeloblast. How do you know? Why because of the nucleus and the cytoplasm. What about it? The texture, man, the texture. Thanks. And so it went. It might be thought that what is learned in the course in physical diagnosis is how to make a diagnosis from physical examination. This is not true at the Duke Medical School, certainly it is not true when referring to the class of 1960. The knowledge that we acquired from this course was on a more basic, perhaps primitive, level. We mastered such things as how to strike the ples- simeter finger with the percussing finger 2 times out of 3, how to avoid shining the ophthalmoscope PAGE 22 light into one's own eye, and how to avoid fracturing one's metaearpal bones when setting the tuning fork in motion. We also learned history taking at this time. Some of the eompendiums we recorded were indeed tributes to the endurance of modern fountain pens. Here too, we lirst became acquainted with the bright young men, the rising medical stars, the nouveau long coats. These folk talked in a peculiar tongue in which they exchanged ideas by referring to them rather than expressing them. This form of communication has been labeled journal jumping. Many of our class began to speak this language even then, it seemed to them to be the only thing to do. The second year was rounded out with a battery of lectures that was astounding. Preventa- tive medicine, public health, legal medicine, dentistry, MEND, Markle scholars, psychiatry, ob- stetrics, surgery, physiatry-all had their rather lengthy say. Our intake of knowledge was some- what limited because of severe gluteal fatigue. ln addition, there was that fairly non-descript entity, the sophomore elective. lt was so non-descript that it was forgotten entirely by one of our class, and he was forced to divide his time between golf and sleep. The class energy, which had been so well directed in the early part of the second year, had been thoroughly dissipated in at least 39 different directions by that year's end. We were ready for the clinical years. lt would be very diflicult to state how the class of 1960 reacted to serving on obstetrics and gynecology, since individual reactions were so different. One thing that is certain is that we in- deed did serve, another is that the teaching program given by the senior staff was excellent. Most of us managed to deliver at least one baby, and this cannot fail to be a memorable experience, even for one totally unimpressed by this area of the practice of medicine. We still cannot understand how it could be impossible to locate the medical student when the pelvic examination was to be done on his patient, yet when hemoglobin time rolled around, he was snared and spirited to the ward with IBM-like efficiency. Then there was the student who happened to come upon a mother giving birth to her baby in the dark recesses of Prevost, and who at this point found out that stu- dents were not allowed to call for precipitation trays. We are glad that OB 8: GYN is not given in the fourth year, for some astute, more perceptive than average senior might observe that running fourteen consecutive urines was of questionable teaching value and be tempted to point this out. All in all though, the quarter on OB 81 GYN was an entertaining and dramatic one, and perhaps the best part of all was listening to the captain of the OB team, a truly amazing man from any point of view. Our class was undoubtedly exposed to more psychiatric radiation than any other in the history of the Duke Medical School. In addition to absorbing the direct rays emitted from the quarter on psychiatry itself, we were also exposed to a marked increase in background spookery. thrown in while on other clinical services. Whether we admit or not, the effect has been profound, many irreversible cerebral mutations have been induced. Even those of us who consider psychiatry in the same realm as phrenology have been overheard making guttural, non-committal noises and thoughtfully repeating their patients' last sentence. Things such as chronic fatigue, low back pain, headaches, and history of hysterectomy point our diagnostic noses toward the psyche just as surely as dyspnea points it toward the hean. However reluctantly, we have learned our lessons well, we only hope what we have learned is true. Psychiatry is a field of great potential-some might say, all potential-and we are glad that our class will contribute several members to this area of medicine. As doctors, of course. Howland ward is the only place in the hospital that can compare with M-l IO in aptness of thought. It too has a big black fan that goes squeak, squeak, squeak without moving air. But all this is beside the point. We observed an incredible array of disease processes in this ward. any one of which would have been enough to send the average house officer on any other service into orbit permanently. The pediatric house staff is imperturbable, however. Why get excited about systemic nocardiosis when there is a patient in the next bed with hypertensive adrenogenitalism? Perhaps the most impressive thing about pediatrics was the violence with which the young folk get sick. Fever means 42 degrees, epilepsy means status epilepticus, heart trouble means murmurs that are audible across the room, eczema means no normal skin-children seem to be moribund or well, with little in between. Of incidental interest to us was the fact that a half pint of blood PAGE 23 really was not necessary for electrolyte determinations, and that blood would run through less than an 18 guage needle. We could have used this information earlier. In general, pediatrics was a happy quarter, taught by happy people. We all agree that the dominant clinical service at Duke is internal medicine, at least from the point of view of the medical student. Here is where we learned most, were stimulated the most, and were stressed the most. We did not have to look far for the reason for this, for the biggest learner, stimulator, and stressor of all sat at the center of the internal medicine web. Indeed, nothing of importance ever transpires without Him being present, either in body or spirit. We have seen young clinical investigators writhe in guilt before Him, as if lack of medical knowledge in certain areas was their own personal fault. It was reminiscent of 1984. We were amazed at this man and his staff and his department, and we are proud of their very important role in our medical education. Certainly, in the house staff years ahead, we shall have an unmatched storehouse of anecdotes for midnight meal conversation when it comes to talking about former teachers. The department of surgery was less student oriented than medicine, and it was a welcome relief in many ways. lt was nice to be able to do one's lab work and depart, and know that the house staff would not worry about our mental deficiencies. Many of us were impressed with the definitiveness of surgery and the rapid, action-packed course of most surgical disease. Many of us have chosen this area of medicine for these and other reasons. Others of us felt that time spent tying knots was time lost for other, more refiective activities. To each his own. Senior surgery was a sort of hop scotch across the surgical specialties, and these had appeal for some. Particularly beckoning was the thought of knowing everything there is to know about a subject, and this has lured some of 1960's finest into the surgical specialties. As can be gathered from this account and from examining the senior pages of this yearbook, we are a class with many varied interests. Almost all divisions of medicine will receive benefits from the class of 1960. We are especially proud of our several general practitioners who stuck to their ambitions throughout four years of specialist oriented training. By Christmas time of the senior year, all our plans were solidified, with the exception that none of us knew where we were going to intern. Consequently, there was a steady rise in the class epinephrine level until the day of the National Intern Matching Program, or NIMP to those in the know. The memorable day was Monday, March 1.4. There was much talk that morning about in- terning in Creedmoor or not getting matched at all. As it finally turned out, the internships we ob- tained were, without exception, superb. After that day, the symptoms of apathia terminalis be- came severe, irreversible, and beyond therapy. We were on the pleasant down hill slope of Starling's curve, and we decompensated all the way down to graduation. ln conclusion, let us state three firm convictions of the class of 1960. First of all, we are certain that medicine is the greatest profession of all, for our object of study is the most fantastic of creatures, the human being. Others may study mankind, but society allows only the physician the opportunity to take the full and complete look. We are aware of our responsibility to look and look well, not to do so would be to fail our patients, our profession and ourselves. The second conviction is that there has never been a more amiable, pleasant group of people than the class of 1960. Our relationships have been characterized by mutual respect, cooperation, and an amaz- ing paucity of malice. We are basically 78 nice people, and it is perfectly obvious that we do not mind if we say so ourselves. Our final conviction is a straight-forward one, namely, that Duke University School of Medicine is a pretty damn good place to go to medical school. PAGE 24 4 Q : Z Z J X '55 W' px L ML xx .. f ' N XX 3 X f J J' 4 if 3 Qwfqigniff XAQZ A if W fbi? 3 fx llf QC H314 ff A X W gmwlxgj K, ,wg unf' QQBN fjfgs fi f AQ A1 EN, Q60 . Y 5660 ,,,f f I A fig? 4 2 f , I nk ,kj 'fflh YQ N21 7 ffw X fl X cCg7 ,5JKmX5f'f Phicc K P, W 'QT , N Ccccf 39? ' '?y3'Zf-,S-bwr X! 2 x Quayle CJPQQ ' iff? A + Z W 1 ' N45 2 -ff 'ATN V A Q fffrfltlmn . f fp? 1 'X ' l F f Www Qlf ,ffm ck. EW W '- KSYEF-f-'Jul 5-'4' ,.. 1 1 -::- l vf if Hff Y? 'fig f-if A x ff , ,N X - X Q' 7 - Z 35.7 , Q9 -Umxxx-wx? N-Xosval X'- J- 5 ,Fi -ff Z-dl . ' X V- ' fini 3' JB - 19 S jg! fw 'Q O 5 X ,H y . 1. iL QX ww Q2-wg Q, Lg, -'G fg eniors AIJIJISON, WINNIFIlI:.lJ AI.I.1:N May 24, 1934. Toccoa. Georgia M5 ,Q Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Internship: Medical College of Georgia-Medicine Plans: Obstetrics-Gynecology Married: Sally Ann Bender. College Park. Md.. August 28. 1959 in BLOUNT. RORIQRI' Es'rIis, JR. September 17. 1932. Jackson. Miss. Millsaps College 1949-53. B.S. Kappa Sigma. ODK Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine in Mississippi BRICIE, ROIxIaR'r SAMUEL. JR. June 17, 1932. Gastonia. N. C. ww- Duke University 1952-56, A.B. ,f'T',.Z Internship: Hartford Hospital -Rotating Plans: Undecided BRUMLEY. GEOROIE WILLIAM, JR. January 21. 1935. St. Marys Ga. Duke University 1952-56. B.S. Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics in Piedmont. N. C. or Florida Married: Nancy Jean Stanback. Salisbury. N. C.. September 5. 1958 CASSELLS. JOSEPH SAMUEL K November 9, 1934. Chester. Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Phi Chi Internship: Bethesda Naval Hospital-Rotating Plans: General Surgery - BAKI R, l.INNv M,xRsII.xII March ll, 1934. Kannapolis. Nc. A R. Davidson 1952-56, B.S. Alpha 'l'aII Omega. Phi Beta Kappa, ODK. AED Alpha Omega Alpha Internship: Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics Married: Joyce Holshouser. Kannapolis. June 1. 1956 BR.xIJsII,xw, PRI-.sION H.. JR. July 25. 1934. Rocky Mount. N. C. Wake Forest 1952-56. B.S. Kappa Alpha. Beta Beta Beta. Gamma Sigma Epsilon. Al- pha Epsilon Delta Phi Chi Internship: Yale. Grace New Haven Community Hospital -Surgery Plans: General or Thoracic Surgery BRowNsTIiIN, BURTON E. September 27. 1931. Brooklyn. N. Y. Washington Square College. N. Y. U. 1949-52. A.B.. N. Y. U. College of Den- tistry 1953-55. University of Lausanne School of Medi- cine 1955-58 Internship: Beth-E1 Hospi.tal. N. Y.-Rotating Plans: Pediatrics. N. Y. CAMPELL. HENRY SIMON February 1. 1935. Greenville. S. C. Emory Universitv 1953-56 ODK. Phi Beta Kappa. AOA Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Undecided CIIAMBLEE. HUBERT ROYSTER. JR. December 14. 1934. Raleigh. N. C. Davidson 1952-56, B.S. AED, Gamma Sigma Epsilon Internship: University Hospital. Jackson. Miss.-Rotating Plans: North Carolina 'S 52,42 . af. ' Wim V W0 4 4 1' f M fm I I gf 1 . B gi 3 ,bww Q..-J 'N Parr 77 ,Aw-1-,vy3m,ff,.,,...s., . sa.. . . X,'., - H., 4 s. 'Q 'PI'-way, My I A HA... , Wk 1 ZW ,Z www' Q ,A 4. ,,. M PAGE 28 Seniors COLLINS. WILLIAM STUART September 6, 1935. Chase City. Va. Davidson 1952-56. B.S. Internship: University of Virginia-Medicine Plans: Undecided COUSAR, GEORGE RICHARD. JR. January 11, 1934. Lubondai, Belgian Congo Davidson 1952-56. B.S. Internship: Philadelphia General-Rotating Plans: Undecided as to field of Medicine CRYMES. JAMES E. November 18. 1935. Miami. Florida Duke University 1953-56 Phi Kappa Psi Phi Chi Internship: Grady Memorial Hospital-Rotating Plans: Radiology or Medicine in Florida DAVIS, JAMIas KARNES August 30. 1934. Rainelle. W. Va. University of Arizona 1952-53. Duke University 1953-56, A.B. Delta Tau Delta. Phi Beta Kappa Phi Chi Internship: University of Florida-Surgery Plans: Radiology Married: Nancy Lynn Penning- ton. Mount Hope. W. Va.. August 23, 1958 Doizixs. CI-IARLI1s EDWARD May 18. 1934. Charleston. W. Va. Washington gl Lee University. B.S. Phi Kappa Psi. AED Internship: Vanderbilt- Medicine Plans: Medicine Married: Ann Louis Scholderer, Glen Ridge, N. J., June 21, 1958 Zur.: I, Q ' COOPER, WILLIAM C., JR. June 5, 1934. Rocky Mount, N. C. Union College, Schenectady. N. Y. 1952-56. B.S. Sigma Chi, Delta Epsilon, AOA Internship: Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics Married: Janet Deloris Fulcher. Rocky Mount, N. C.. June 21, 1958 CRONCE. PAUL CALVIN December 25, 1931. Frenchtown, N. J. Rutgers University 1950-51, Duke University 1951-54, B.A.. Duke Graduate School CBotanyJ 1954-55. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa, Mu Sigma Phi Chi, AOA Internship: U. S. Public Health Service Hospital. Boston. Mass.-Rotating Plans: Undecided DALTON, FRANKLIN PALMER October 15, 1933. Charlotte, N. C. Duke University 1951-53, Virginia Military Institute 1953-56, A.B. Sigma Chi Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine in Charlotte Married: Jo Ann Baughan, Princess Anne. Md., June 21. 1958 Children: Katrina Marie. February 6, 1959, Durham, N. C. DENBY, JOHN LAMBERT July 24, 1933. Carlinville, Ill. Yale University 1952-56, B.S. Chi Psi Phi Chi Internship: Ohio State Univer- sity-Surgery Plans: Surgery in Mid-West Married: Jane Elizabeth C01- clesser, Erie. Pa.. December 22, 1958 DUVOISIN, PETER MARC February 13, 1934. Clearwater Beach, Fla. Duke University 1953-56 Phi Chi Internship: University of Alabama-Medicine Plans: General Practice in Florida Married: Jane Lawhon, Tim- monsville, S. C., August'29, 1959 DYKI4, PIi'I'I-It CUM MINS February 7, 1934. Washington, D. C. Yale University 1952-56, A.B. Internship: Johns Hopkins Hospital-Medicine Plans: Medicine Married: Perry Jane Huggin. Knoxville. Tenn.. May 7. 1960 EYs'I'I.R. MARY ELAINL March 31, 1935. York, Pa. Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Phi Beta Kappa AOA Internship: N. Y. Hospital- Medicine Plans: Undecided FISCHER, Roaeai WfXLLACE June 9, 1934. Fort Lauderdale. Fla. Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Pi Kappa Phi Phi Chi Internship: Jackson Memorial in Miami-Medicine Plans: Dermatology in South Florida FORT. LYNN. III January 17. 1937. West Palm Beach. Fla. Duke University 1954-56 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: General Surgery Married: Marian Carol Swart- ley, Stroudsburg, Pa.. August. 1959 GLRBER, EDWARD MICHAEL Boston University B.A. M.A.. Harvard School of Dental Medicine Internship: Boston Floating Hospital-Pediatrics l ata 2 ity ' I 'Q . , 'eniors Q 'E 1 1 il'-W 1-- 1 1. ix if V . x 'vi sis? .N sa-5559-s N glass j . .NZ Q 11 H -Y S Fir ':.gs,-51-v',,.i.' ', Q. . ... . .-:es 1 21-3-2 1 ' ti. 5 H ...so 1. .5 - Pls. is 1: Na: 511195291 ' a..fQ35 .:t ' . ' .if-LT V g 1 ... I'iIN. Isnt' November 25. 1933. New A York. N. Y. I 3' , . 'Y New York University. 19-19-54. --ef' B.A. Married: Ellen Bloom Children: Audrey Debra I-IIIJI-.k. Rom-RI Josi-.PII January 1. 1934. Brooklyn. N. Y. New York University 1951-55. A.B.. U. of 1-ribourg. Swit- zerland. I955-57. U. of Lausanne. Switzerland. 1957- 58 Internship: Los Angeles Coun- ty Hospital-Rotating Plans: Surgery in Los Angeles Married: Elinor Joyce Salzberg. Brooklyn. N. Y.. August 28. 1955 Children: Lauren Sue. Feb- ruary 2-1. 1959. Durham. N. C. FoRI1. WILLIfX1N1 WH.-xILLY May 27. 1936. Lynchburg. Va. Duke University 1953-56 Pi Kappa Alpha. BOS Phi Chi Internship: Johns Hopkins- Medicine Plans: Medicine in Virginia G.xIzCI.x-TRI.-ts. EIJUARIJU ARI Uao February 26. 1935. San Juan. Puerto Rico Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Phi Eta Mu Internship: George Washington University Hospital- Medicine Plans: Obstetrics-Gynecology in Puerto Rico GOODL. GIioRoI-. BROWN!-.. JR. October 14. 1935. Hickory, N. C. UNC 1952-56 A.B. Phi Chi Internship: University of Oklahoma Hospital- Medicine Plans: Medicine andpor Neurology in New England or West Coast Married: Judith Greene. States- ville. N. C.. June 17. 1959 W Z as 9, 2.2 ,. E V., -1.4.4.2 .v,,.V . M... . ,I ,, r' ,Q asf e ft sf f '52 G . 1 X? s fe '? ,F ,f jiaf . Q 'sw Y 61 ,M ii.. 'ez 7, , -V4.5 . ' .5 V x .. .. X 1 .fig-E 1, .f E , ' ,'.SfI,, ff' . f' f 'z ... 1 'gf' jf, , az -ff -' 2 - :Z 1- A ., . 4 Jil -'-' A ' Q if - If' Ski. is f t Q- 56' PAGE 29 it A-as 48 .1 ,fl ff . me PAGE 30 Seniors GREEN. ROBERT September 27. 1934. Palm Beach. Fla. Duke University 1952-56, A.B. Tau Epsilon Rho Phi Chi Internship: New York Hospital -Surgery Plans: Orthopedics in Palm Beach. Fla. HUBBARD. WILLIAINI HENRY October ll. 1933. Jacksonville. Fla. University of Florida 1952-56. B.S. Phi Eta Sigma. Phi Kappa Phi. AED. Phi Sigma Internship: University of Ala- bama-Rotating Plans: General Practice in Florida Married: Jo Ann Camilla Lerens. Galena. Ill., Decem- ber 29. 1959 LEIIAUER. EIJMUND JosEPH May 17. 1935. Greensboro. N. C. Duke University 1953-56 BOS Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine-Greensboro I.ODMI:LL, JOHN GARY February 10. 1935. Greensboro, N. C. Stanford University 1952-53. Duke University 1953-56 Delta Tau Delta Phi Chi Internship: Walter Reed Army Hospital-Rotating Plans: Undecided Married: Susan Davis Maxwell. Durham. N. C.. June 15. 1959 MAssIE. FRANCIS STANFORD April 29. 1935. Waynesville. N. C. Duke University 1953-57, A.B. Internship: Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics ,ZH SHIP' ud0 ' K w-qu,-. Y' GRODE. HARVEY ELIOT December 29. 1935. East Rockaway. N. Y. Dartmouth College 1953-56 Phi Beta Kappa. AOA Internship: Duke-Medicine, University of Washington- Rotating Plans: General Practice DYKE, PERRY HUGGIN May 7. 1936. Knoxville, Tenn. University of Tennessee 1952- 56. A.B. Internship: Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Undecided Married: Peter Cummins Dyke, Washington, D. C., May 7. 1960 LEE, JAMES FLETCHER January 14, 1934. Murfreeboro. Tenn. University of Tennessee 1952- 56, A.B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, AED Phi Chi, AOA Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: General Surgery Married: Jane Volz. Ripley. Tenn., August 2. 1957 Children: Mary Jane. Septem- ber 23. 1959. Durham MALONE. Joi-IN HUGH, JR. July 9, 1934. Charlotte, N. C. Davidson 1952-56, A.B. Internship: Hillman Clinic and University Hospital. Alabama -Rotating Plans: Undecided Married: Mitzi Green. Mid- land. N. C., 1957 MAYER. WALTER BREM, JR. March 10, 1935. Charlotte, Princeton 1952-56, A.B. Cottage Club Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine in Charlotte. N. C. Married: Anne Stoughton Powning. Boston, Mass., June 28, 1958 Children: Penelope Walker, January 3, 1960, Charlotte, N. C. MCI.I-.oIJ. ALI-XANIII-It CAN,xmY January 14, 1935. Southern Pines. N. C. Tower Club Princeton 1952-56 Johns Hopkins 1959-60 Phi Chi Pithotomy Club Internship: Cornell-Medicine Plans: Medicine in Southern Pines IYILRINPY. DAVID KNIQIII June 18. 1934. Ramsey. N. J. Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Theta Chi Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine Married: Harriet Ellen Bond. Princess Anne. Md.. June 20. 1959 OPDYKI1. JoHN LINEIIRII. JR. December 10, 1934. Flemington, N. J. Rollins College 1952-56. B.S. Delta Chi. Phi Society. Key Society. Zeta Alpha Epsilon Phi Chi. AOA Internship: Tripler Army Hos- pital. Honolulu-Rotating Plans: General Practice 7 gd., 4 . .ff .. f .435 I lf. 3 ga E 4-3 3:55-- t s X 1 4 1 A w 1. . . A-Q. 2 .2 s:4L:,':.?' tl ' I 1'-'gv' 'R PARKERSON, W,xI,I'I-R Tuck .gf -vI '-f November 21. 1934. Savannah. Ga. Duke University 1953-56. B.S. Internship: Philadelphia General-Rotating Plans: Ophthalmology Married: Ruth Crowell Dowdy. Charlotte. N. C.. December 23. 1958 PEARCE, PHILIP HENDERSON April 10, 1936. Gaffney. S. C. Furman University 1953-56. B.S. AED, Chi Beta Phi. A.C.S. Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: Surgery in northwestern S. C. Married: Virginia Ann Miller. Spartanburg, S. C.. June 22. 1957 i Children: Philip Henderson. September 20. 1959. Durham. N. C. 'eniors Mc'l.I-on, INIICIIAII Et1t.INI March 5, 1935. I-'ort Pierce. Fla. University of Ieloritla 1953-56 Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi lita Sigma. AOD Phi Chi. AOA Internship: DultefMedicine Plans: Medicine in Western North Carolina MI.IuzI1LI.. Romai AI.sIoN. Ja. December 29, 1934. Daytona Beach. Fla. The Citadel 1952-56, B.S. Phi Chi Internship: Grace New Haven- Yale-Surgery Plans: Urology in Daytona Beach. Fla. O'SHAUCiHNIiSSY. P,x'I'RIcK JEROME February 10. 1929. Winona. Minn. Loras College 1946-49. B.S.- Utah State 1949-51. Masters University Iowa 1951-52 Alpha Chi Sigma Internship: Florida-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatric Endocrinology Married: Martha House. Deca- tur. Ga.. in 1955. Gaffney, S. C. Children: Maura Elizabeth. Kevin Thomas P,tI1Ro'I I. L.-xw'RENCI-. HUIII November 9. 1935. Charlotte. N. C. Davidson 1952-56. B.S. Beta Theta Pi. Phi Beta Kappa Phi Chi Internship: Vanderbilt-Surgery Plans: Surgery Married: Edna Joy Bulfaloe. Raleigh. N. C.. December 29. 1959 PILLIOD. J.-xIxIEs PHILLIPS August 9. 19311. Scarsdale. N. Y. Yale University. B.A. Phi Tau Delta Internship: University of Michigan-Rotating Plans: General practice in Pacific N.W. Married: Sarah B. Macfarlane. Charlottesville. Va.. Febru- ary 6, 1954 Children: Sharon P.. August 17. Kittery. Maine. Linda M.. April 11. 1958. Durham. N. C. if 3 9. v Q dim. 1 ' , ,V Z , ' M f f ' ' X s .. 'uf -'f.'. V 1 I V f, c1..afaW0f5 f t, Eng . ' 1-f . hi, ,V .fy 'f , . fin 1. ...Mfg ' --lt . f'..,,,f 6 W I... ig K PAGE 3 1 ,-A W- li :X .ov-R Q qlawibfff' , .2 ,,,. . ,yu M. Www.. n fi ' . f 1 cfff .aqsgjykf 5 Y , M- I ,4' .' SQ. AMW ,QQ fi ,ff . ,-I ft .' 4 2 www? , if tm WHL. , A P44 3 -- W f f, f V 4, l'fiLgz AW. '- , M1 ff '12 pm. gw.w.ffff5g 1234! 'gm ff,ff.jff4,f5g,,,: - fakjfy .mga-fig' , v ,QWU La' - 4- f PAGE 32 Seniors PORRO. ROBERT SIGURD October 29. 1934. Evansville. Ind. University of California 1952 56. A.B.. Tulane Medical School 1956-57 Internship: Johns Hopkins -Pathology Plans: Undecided PRICE. GRADY EDWIN March 25. 1933. Charlotte. N. C. Duke University 1951-55, A.B Alpha Tau Omega. ODK. BOS Order of Red Friars Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: Orthopedics in Char- lotte. N. C.. or Florida Married: Katherine Marie Thompson. Charlotte, N. C. August 6. 1955 Children: Grad Edwin Jr y . .. February 4. 1957. Durham, N. C.. Katherine Marie. August 26. 1959, Durham, N. C. REED, JOHN MARTIN August 16. 1934. Nashville. Tenn. Davidson 1952-55. B.S., Vanderbilt School of Medi- cine 1955-56 Phi Delta Theta. AOA Internship: Massachusetts General Hospital-Surgery Plans: Surgery in teaching center Married: Dawn Irene Ferman. Myrtle Beach. C.. June 2, 1956 Children: John Brian, Novem- ber 26. 1959. Durham. N. C. RINERERO. BERNARD ALLEN October 26. 1934. New Brunswick. N. J. Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Zeta Beta Tau. ODK, Order of Red Friars Phi Chi Internship: Barnes-Surgery Plans: Orthopedics in New Jersey ROCRWLLI.. W. J. KI:NNE'I'H March 18, 1931. Asheville N.C. Washington 84 Lee University. 1948-52. A.B. Botany Internship: Undecided Plans: Psychiatry-South Q 250' 5 Z iilli I A ' ,- ' ' X . V I I ef PRESTON, EDWIN THORNTON, April 24. 1935. Kingsport, Tenn. Duke University 1953-56 Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine Married: Nancy McNeil Sims Kingsport, Tenn., June 27, 1958 Children: Edwin Thornton, III June 5. 1958, Durham. N. C REECE, RICHARD LEE October 2, 1933. Oak Ridge, Tenn. Duke University 1952-56, B.S Phi Chi Internship: Hartford Hospital -Rotating Plans: Pathology in South or Northeast RIGGINS. RICI-IARD STAFFORD May 16, 1935. Lakeworth, Fla. Duke University 1953-56 Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: Undecided Married: Cecelia Kate Mahood, Oak Ridge. Tenn., Decem- ber, 22. 1958 ROBERTSON. LLOYD HARVEY, JR February 1. 1934. Salisbury, N. C. Davidson 1952-56, B.S.. Guilford College Phi Gamma Delta Internship: Duke-Medicine and Surgery Plans: Urology in Salisbury, N. C. Married: Judith Ann Parker, Salisbury, N. C., June 28, 1958 Children: Ann Heath, May 13, 1959, Salisbury, N. C. SADLER, JOI-IN HOLLAND December 10, 1935. Donalds, S. C. Duke University 1953-56 Phi Kappa Sigma Internship: Grady Memorial- Medicine Plans: Medicine in the west Married: Joan Brown, Honea Path, S. C., August 18, 1956 Children: Patricia Lynn, Sep- tember 9, 1957, Durham, N. C., John Murray, 'Febru- ary 16, 1959, Durham, N. C. SANDBLRU, Si-.YMUUR January 31, 1931. Brooklyn. N. Y. Brooklyn College 1948-52, A.B.. Catholic University of Louvian, Belgium 1958. First Doctorate Internship: Hospital of the Good Samaritan-Rotating Plans: Undecided SCHWARZ. Gi1oRoE CARL December 3, 1935. Springfield, N. J. Duke University 1953-56 Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Beta Kappa Internship: University of Florida-Pediatrics Plans: Psychiatry Married: Shirley Jean Schick, Los Angeles, Calif., August 16, 1958 SHALIT. ALLEN February 12. 1933. Newark, N.J. Rutgers University 1951-55. B.S.. University of Amster- dam School of Medicine 1955-58 Alpha Zeta Omega Internship: Philadelphia Gen- eral Hospital-Rotating Plans: Medicine SMITH, EDWARD HARDIN, JR. May 22, 1934. Clover. S. C. Duke University 1952-56, A.B. Phi Beta Kappa Internship: University Hospital, Birmingham, Ala.-Rotating Plans: General Practice TULLY, HARRY THURMAN, JR. January 27, 1936. Louisville. Ky. Washington 81 Lee University 1953-56, Duke University 1959, B.S. Phi Delta Theta. Psi Chi, Phi Epsilon Delta Phi Chi Internship: Henry Ford- Rotating N Plans: Obstetrics-Gynecology Married: Mary Nell Sillmon. Pleasant Garden, N. C.. March 2, 1957 -A Plz: 3432.293 '3 .- Seniors Q ip 1 Q i i 54. - .- .S 5, Q s. I - 4 5.- . zif: T ' 1 we f . .XM -W . ' ,,,. Q' is 3 - f?f5'?f1:. rg , ,f 514196 A e swf' 1, ., 1 f ? ,Rica - Is. W Hsin' WN an aw u wa-u..,.k . -1 ' wg -97 .Z '. , Ja,,..',k , ,- SC'ARPI'I.I.l. I-Imni INIICIIAI 1, July 2-1. 1931. New York. N. Y. Fordham University 1947-51. B.S.. Duke University Ciradu- ate School 1952-53 Internship: N. Y. C.- Pediatrics Plans: Academic Pediatrics Married: Ann Ethel DeVito. New York. N. Y.. July 26. 1952 Children: Michael. June 14. 1953. Durham. N. C.. Mark. October 18. 1954. Montgom- ery. Ala.. Robert. March -1. 1957, Durham. N. C.. Anne. March 6, 1958. Durham. N. C. SLARURY. JAA1Ls CONGDON. JR. November 5. 1934. Silver Spring. Md. Davidson 1952-53. University of Virginia 1953-56. A.B. Beta Theta Pi, Beta Beta Beta. Phi Beta Kappa Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: Surgery SMITH, DONIXLD DLWRY March 31. 1934. Orlando. Fla. Duke University 1952-56. A.B. Phi Beta Kappa Internship: University of Florida-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics in Central Florida STUART, FRANK ALLAN. Ill April 13, 193-1. Tulsa. Okla. Duke University 1952-56 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: Orthopedics in Tulsa. Okla. Married: Susan Kurlbaum. Broadalbin, N. Y.. August. 1957 Children: Frank Allan. IV. May. 1958, Durham. N. C. VAUSI1. DAVID Dwiom January 5. 193-1. Rutherfordton. N. C. Duke University. 1952-56. B.A. Married: Mary Ella Robertson O x ' s I 1 ,.s. i 3 -155516: fx ff! v -vm M--s.. Q fx, .Q 7 - 1 if - . -rr-gr Q tit' snr 3 ir' sf 'A YOUNG. .IAMILS SANFORD if eniors WALKLR. .IOSl:PH EDWARDS April 8. 1929. Shelby. N. C. Duke University 1947-49. U. S. Naval School of Aviation 1950-51. Guilford College 1954-56. Duke University 1959. B.S. Phi. Chi. Sigma Xi Internship: Kaiser Foundation -Rotating Plans: General Practice in Shelby. N. C. Married: Mary Mitchell Mattingly, Washington. D. C.. December 22. 1959 WLDLR, CARL HAROLD July 28. 1933. Gastonia. N. C. Duke University 1951-52. 1954-55 Phi Beta Kappa Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Surgery Plans: Urology Married: Rosemary Ormand. Gastonia. N. C.. 1951 Children: Chic. November 3. 1952. Durham. N. C. WES'ILJN, WILLIAM, III November 6. 1934. Columbia. S.C. University of South Carolina 1952-56. B.S Sigma Alpha Epsilon. ODK Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Pediatrics Plans: Pediatrics in S. C. Married: Elise Dume Verner. Columbia. S. C.. December 29. 1959 .K mon 34 WoR'ioN. STANLLY. lv,xN December 17. 1932. Miami Beach. Fla. Cornell University 1950-54. A.B.. University of Basel Medical School, Switzerland. 1954-58 Internship: Jackson Memorial Hospital. Miami-Medicine Plans: Radiology in Miami Married: Joan Kandel. Miami Beach, December 17. 1955 Children: Marcelle Carol. Feb- ruary 20. 1959, Durham. N. C. 3 RICHARDSON. CHARLLS CLIFTON May 7. 1935. Columbia. S. C. Duke University 1953-56. B.S. Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Biochemical Research WALKER, LAWRENCE CRUMPLER. JR. April 13. 1935. Mount Airy, N. C. UNC 1953-56. A.B. Chi Psi. Morehead Scholar Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Obstetrics-Gynecology in N. C. Married: Lillian Elise Harris, Mount Airy. N. C., Septem- ber l. 1956 WI:SfI'FiXLL, HARRY LAKE. JR. March 2. 1934. Portsmouth, Va. Virginia Military Institute 1952-56. A.B. Phi Chi Internship: Duke-Medicine Plans: Medicine in Southeast Married: Jacqueline Senna, Tuscaloosa. Ala.. August, 1956 Children: Pam. June 5. 1957, Durham. N. C.. Lake III. July 10. 1958. Tuscaloosa, Ala. WKJIDDWIKRD. Suri EGGLESTON July 23. 1935. Suffolk. Va. Duke University 1953-56. A.B. Phi Beta Kappa Internship: Montreal Childrens Hospital-Pediatrics Plans: Undecided March 21. 1931. Washington, D. C. Washington 81 Lee University 1948-51. Duke University 1955-56 Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Chi Internship: D. C. General. Washington, D. C.--Rotating Plans: General Practice in Washington Married: Sara Hawthorne Lewis. Staten Island, N. Y. Children: James Sanford. Jr., April 24. 1958. Durham, N. 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JR. f.7ohnJ PAGE36 Junior .I.M..Xl..xN1s Um-5 9 vx . .X ,df-ie 4 6 'S 9 -as X X' f J. W. l31:owN fJohny ,Q .4 9 f if ai Y . 0- 'I 4 '- X' 75 ? ., Il. I . l'mzW1N fliuhb 6 fn!! V . Zvr 5? f - ' 2 5 .gf.Q.,z 1 . , QE 'Q f , ,A . .. II.DlXoNfl1if-kj f - qw . ', lf fm. , 5 1 . 1 Q 4 I.. I4'1,,xN,xf:AN, JR. fLath7 i S. M. A'l'lilxsuN, JR. 1SamJ T. J. IMNTON. JR. 1TomJ ,Au I . V. Bl l'x.l-zlc, Ju. 1Freddic-I M. F. t',xM1'::1-:LL QMHH w A 9. ' v .. ? 'E ' 5 'Qing 3 . We-.7 X wx , Y ' ' ' ' . M. ,.,. , , . Q 4 Q x 4 Q N, 1 .cf . S .. .. W Y 9- V, .1 .1 . Q QF ZW 2? Q 5 f x 3 .3 vi, I' I Il.l,.1'1rX flionnieb Il.J.Illf1As4I3a1x'vJ , :iv ., ' ,. Qlhl Q Ty A . , , VQQ ,Z im A l X -. , 4 ff T. A. ICI, RAMM' fT0mJ R. l,. l4',x1:1:1s Cllinsyj - s . Q r W. A. GAY, JR. fBillD E. B. GOODWIN, JR. CErnieJ IA- 1 II Ii tilcm-'rg III Illif-kj . .:'.Ii1nJ K i V , ' YA , Q z Q '32 -' I .2 ' X f 21 ., v yi TEZZQ sb A M f S' S? S, . x . ff at w '1' .IUIINSIIN fTnyIm'I Q Q5 x . x 2 2 J, .I. I..xPm.I,.x fJ..I.J '- 41 . , 2 l :EE .4 - v . X ji 15?-3 I ' T. Ii, I,YnAss LTIIIJ G.M.I Junior .1 9 nf :Y 53:1 S -'K ' . ' 1' V. II,1il'vNx HW! QW, ' Yzrm' I Iggy? .... A .gf ' 1 Q-I E25 W-1 c 'm:'l'nN Cllnndy I , q-Av v. : , ,,, 2 R , S 5 II' wi - I - . , I 'wuz I M. .luxrzs fM:n'sImlIJ I I y, . . I. . x A fa f' , R. I,. I,.XSSl'l'ER Ilivni ' A NNI.. X X S Q3 XI I lI.xl.l...Ill.fXX:nrn41I I I HUIW ml, rt huvki IIJWZ' I 'f I AE: , -M: I lg - I I will ., f F I 2 - 'ifav' if yy 'Aiwa , A if 1 ' ff II 1' IIl'wr:x'c'1 l l', .Il:. rllnrnm I Il Ir1l:x'm'. II Ilmr-ro-III , , W . 2 1.-Rv 1' 2 f SQA. 5' 4 wffg as gg 1 , x,xf,l , .A, 1 '. ' 4 . w2 ' XQSQIQZEXZPQ L. lx. .Tmclmx QI VIII II I Ix1s'r1,r:1:. .I1:. qllunkm 'RN '. :Ning III IB' 1:4 W, Luv if :III I3 N. I.+:x'x' IRQ-rvm-I IYON, JK. qlieor-gm .L M. 5I.xR'rIx qBubbay U, I . NI.xssr:x', Jn. uilxurlif-I PAGE 37 Junior , 2 x 6 x N631 if .Q ' . x 8 N E W KQV? I R f FP A M . Q. 'ia ' Ig. L Egfvffif! ' H :f f .1251 II. I. AIA'l 1'lil-LYYS Qllubioj .T.xV.L.1IA'I I'IN1lN Um-J W. M4'Imx.u,n fl-Billy 3 A 413, ,: 3.3. . , .. 2 Q 0. , , . .3 f i , 94, S Q, I J. R. MC TAMMANY fliohy R. B. M 111111.11 Qllivky Ii. N. IIFTZ qliarlb ,,., ,,.: 4 .. 1.: ..,:...,. . N., w Y ' -' Y Q.. 2 , 1 1 . ,, vm M f B , , AM. A 6 S ZW ' ua: , P , 'V X. !: Z lj, I P. P, NUYICS CPl1ilb M. J. NY!-I 4M:11'y .lilllllf R. 141. PAUL fKOIll ' Www , ,. , X 9 W 4 f . . ' .5 04' jf? ..7'f!'s' 4Z vf .!! ,p ,, f f V , A --'W Ir. T. I'l'l'Kzc'l'l1x.Y flluvc-y 141. T. I'4m1.l-: f'I'ilg'hm:1nJ T. E. POXVELI., III QEAJ l , , . kia A ' -I ww. ,Ln y y R. V. R.u', Ju. fltitzy 41 V. Iilmmluvsox fl lnu-lie-5 R. E. RIDER fBob5 PAGE 38 .m u. Xie I.. XV. NICLAIN fBi1lJ D. C. MULL1-:N 1150117 . K y , 9 x K X1 4. ish. if ,, QQ' w e . ,. , .sg . X Y . f' 2 K. H. Pl-:Tmz Messy 5 4 S' IJ, R.P1:Im'lc flludleyy f'.IC.Ro1zERs0N 1f'IiveJ 5 , lk Ib, S4'IINllf'KlCl, fsclmnif-kb Junior -3 ,. J' X H' 1 2 1 . .. X , Fi , A zzuv ' ik X ' Sl'Mx1lf:1cx.lN, JR. Cllurr-yy li. l,. bv xml, Ju. fluarle ,. , , .Q -:x we ' ' a SQ K ' Y -ve -1 V N X ' . ,. x g-yggvgbkx bf wwf - :a 4 . ' :4 , Q. - V X ' ' TR,xN'rHAM qllnrryj li. A, Tlcllfv Hlordieb N if X, 2 A .. f .W.ucsu.xw Um-3 W. K. XVILEMON, JK, qBill7 'Q S, 0, Sf'llNX'.XH'I'Z QSM-vu-1 W. S, SMI ., l Ill ll: fNiff--if-J K X S'1'xl1Iv' fliln . , . p , , f fw ' '- f , 4 1 ,121 f 6? ... 1 f ,! 4 ' , fmga , f if 'wif Q 4 'TZ aw 'l'lmxx1'suN, III QI 'urn-vw I ll 'l'1 x ky X' Y.XR'l'XYl.XN KX N 1 - . . 1, NT. Ill blur .QQ ' ' l ' , - Eli QQ, 4 V I fi ' 243 .. 'urtnnl I3.S,XV.Xl.'I'1lN Hmwb R. L. Yu UNH, JK. ilinhy R. K. YHXVI-QI.l. tliuln PAGE 39 912 l9007r7 g .xxr Q. P YW ! f X .-MS' f:..r.9e 4,q -ix f .1442 - A- M Lzffm' ' f ' .WSW N 334 555 ' ,Q-Q Rr' QQ K - -.. ,,,,.,,,, W 1 ,Zig -5 gi 23165 P , , . f- Skmfisjwi gs g .2 U I N Q X A 4 N ' f .Slow ogg L-7 7.615 B145 67-6, l.', MH. Bab- , b ' ' I - .- N 9 ' 1 we w 25' flu u.N'fu-racuarg ls! Fou. n I sy curl-Joes - ly ophom ores Here we stand. at the end of the second year . . . linally a little time to look hack and brsathe a heart- felt whew! But then it really does not seem so long since that first day in M-l I0 when these close friends of ours were strangers . . . you don't mean you've got a baby Ilzut old! . . . so that's Markeen . . . he doesn't look too bad . . . the faculty picnic at the ball park . . . new namss and faces . . . two Texans. guys from Florida. Michigan. and just a few miles down the road. Then things started moving . . . the first eye-to-eye meeting with the cadaver. a close companion for many hours to come . . . using a scal- pel for the first time . . . working in dead Earnest . . . the conditioned reiiexz off with the lights. on with the movie-sacked out . . . Dr. Knisely discussed voodoo masks with table Z . . . Dr. Duke's mouse uterus . . . cramming for the first demonstration . . . Hetherington Day . . . and this is a small animal peering through a hole and oh you do. do you? No one could say Doctor and make you feel so small either . . . but here it was Thanksgiving. and Presi- dent Grant arranged an extended holiday by devious means. The first biochem lecture and the first quiz . . . the impact of Dr. Handler's off-the-cuff lectures . . . the day the after-lab conference lasted until 7:00 . . . the ice skating party: some of us never knew ice could be so hard . . . and of course the riotous parties at Kenny. Mike. and Joel's . . . Treva-baby. the Blip. and Wheatie-pie . . . it turns out . . . psych lectures: the surgeon and the Moro reiiex . . . how Marty always managed to come up with a question . . . Dr. Eisdorfer. the sociologist. Some of us went to the library and some stayed in lab. often with disastrous results . . . but nothing was as bad as the day we drew blood or the week we carried the big brown bottles with the narrow necks . . . then the long awaited holidays: we even missed our friend and our rat-race life . . . we carried away a unani- mous opinion of Durhamtown . . . returned to greet a biochem test . . . the wild celebration in the dorm after the final. Physiology: Hull or Hall? Howard always had the scoop . . . that frog isn't so big. Now back home . . Orman's vital capacity was tops . . . Sime ran the treadmill . . . Dr. Long. im- peccably British: poor wretch. dermatographia There will always be an Engfandf' and capillaries . . . Rat Rounds: the Great White -- - and the Field Mouse . . . that distinctive odor . . . that little 385: ?!:i: bit me! . . giving a shot when it took two hands to hold the varmit . . . mill! ing time: pulled what tail off? . . . never wear clean shirts. Dr. Gergen: any questions? . . . oral finals: Draw the structure of these hormones. Gilbert. . . . alcohol increases the desire. but diminishes the performance -answer by experience. Neuroanat- omy: Dr. Peele's dry wit . . . Gabor is prof now . . . the garbage men made every lecture. Suddenly death was no longer just another medical term. We were deeply moved and saddened by Mike Rubin's tragic accident. During the summer we were to learn of another tragedy. An accident claimed the life of Jules Raynor. Spring holidays . . . we saw real patients in psych and neuro . . . cabin and lake parties . . . our long coats began to show signs of wear . . . Scoop Bicknell and Scrooge McDuck comic books . . . back to the old familiar cadaver . . . more of that brand of humor peculiar to dissecting rooms. Sum- mer came and we scattered . . . mass exodus from MGC . . . marriages: Stowe. Grant. Orman. Kahn. Hatcher. Jones. Kramer. Dudley. Price. Terry. Bick- nell . . . new members of the Brown Bag Lunch Club. President Waddell sent us info . . . Septem- ber came so soon. Now we were real honest-to-goodness sophomores. Who can ever forget the hrst encounter with a pot case? Washing of hands picked up . . . and it's a lot different from Histology . . . write up 5 autopsies and do a special project. too? . . . the guys who were called at 4:00 A.Nl. The First round-up: four quivering masses . . . if they had known they would PAGF -ll ew 7. ,. I 4 1 9 X .l.M.A1.r1x.1.Nm-11: fJuhnJ lu W. A. ISAXLM' fBillb -f ophomores y , . y A wr 'Q-4:,-ew--N Q A 2 M, , If. .XRx1s'1'1mNr1s Uivorgzvb 301' , ' 9116 J 7 Q 1 ,. e ,gw f Sf z cg' 41, f .-.-we , vi f Iv. I., N1-1M1l,:,1cR flmvep Az. ', Z., .,..,. 1 451, - ., x ' 3 , .' .V 'Zi' XJ' . ' WP ,- ..1. 1 ' av 4 - ' A. I3.1',xlc'l'14:R f.XlJ , if 'W-H 'Z .gy ..,,,.4. -...af 6 A Q .. Y. IJ, f'Olil.l'1 fYankJ x .l. I,l.f'RANlf1 fJimJ PAGE 42 12 IC. t'.xl:'1'14:1: QNi1'kb ' 4 1', W9 l 4?: v ,. . 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A M? k Q X RX X it W .. 41'1W41Ie' .. .. .. y :W , , L ,. 3 w -l-Q . M. A. H'A'l'i'HER Ulartiny X 'fi S X ar Ki X m X , R. M. 1'10I.I.UXV,-XY 1l3iCkl ll. B.Jux1-is rllannyy - - -3., . W if , . S . .. if mx Q, 'f X. 31f.fEgf S? S ,nw . , , - A 13.2. liar fri. P. D. Km'rl-1 QPaulJ f R. S. KRAM1-:R qDick1 J. P. Lrygs fPnulx E -fb? Q 'x WY, .5 ,,av. 1 ,, 467' ,' if 2 ,A ' XX , N. I-'m:'l'1-.m'l'l1. tNiwk fan' , -.FQ I t .I. li.1.I1.m4.n'1' q.Ifwlp . in ZR, ' lk, N. 1i1:.xN'l' tliuln 3' , Lx. i 3.15541 ,gf 555:- lx, J. :KAIIN 1K0ll5 xilis M1-P,x1fm:N 4Donm PAGE 43 f V , Q, , ophomores , no . .. Q.-E-, m v 'SN .x ' 'E ii If 3 'I 3 I I' f y' ,,.. ' L' I . i' V 1 ' 't g-'ff ' '1 .,. I i 5 3 ' 3 If , . jf 1 ' - II. Ii. M.ua1-:xn.xx'rz II'Ien1-yd IC, I1.M.xl,uNEY UIQ-noi BI. II. M.uz'1'IN Qlflerby -.155 K mfg M , 'ff ,, 4. 'Q If A -,A 5 .E f i I 'I fi' I 'N A Q- H WWWYWQ ,.5f ,,,, ' 2359 Q- A., , 1 ' . 'iff :fy , E56 . I , aww 0 my ,f ' , ' 3V,,v5if+: . . ?. , M . . A Q I, -1: .. 4'. V. Mumux If'aIvinb J.H.Mo1u:AN fkexj .-f 2' 'E K , , C ff? C .f 2 V 1 P 4 f f ,, . , Q ff M , , V . y Q3 Af . 0 4 , If 1 flu? 0 . , 9 5, .. . . . M . - - - ' Q5 1 fi gs? , 0 6 Y K! gl? . 2' f 62 IE , , , fb-' 22 swam -, -, If ' :sw - X fgaw f. ,,.-,:f,f-ma 2.4 wwass , ' . f S.IC.Mmuc1suN Hinmwtty F, I. NICKS fFrankb . w 4 ' , .gf A ' K .Q . . - NX. I . I'1:n'lc IISIIII R. II. Pl'1cf'lc1.1. 1120117 M7 , ,., WG, ,,, . , , ,gwg f., 7 Juan. .rf , ,f ,,,,f . ,I A ' 1 I f - , IJ. W. Roxlllllxl' flhmj Ii. S. SA'I I'I'IRFII'IIIlJ CBQIIJ PAGE 44 II. A. Mulrnnzl: CLIuydD f -151' H T A' Wi' A E Q 4 f Q 4 I1.f'.N47lIINS CLQ-S7 K, NW 'W' 'ww , A s. 4 4 41 -if 'fJf.Q.6iSf'Zl N. B. II,x1'1.1Iv1-' QISIIITU wp f I I T525 H M.Sc'H1FF fMnrtyJ . X we . M s. 1 , ,qv Q, , I 'Yi U A Q , , 13 ,D 2 vb fx - -'A .,'2:..f,' ' . C34 M4 ig, XV I .. . Mfxssrzv fBiIIJ fb K .5 'X I -, 'M . ., 5? J. CK BIORIIIS fJim7 .jf . ' 29 .3. 1 1 . S - 1 ,.ff'VS' , Ii. F, ORMAN fBenJ - 'gifsi W J. H.R11m1CK fJoe-J F 4 V? .Wm 'fi- I W.A.SH11:AR1N QBIIIJ 1' ophomore ' I: J v I -0 A 1' ' -ul ' ,ug 1 .r . .-. ,,, , . V 'Q 1 1 H W W. MR? . 5235 . '. 5' W, f ff p ,- V f 1 'C ' Ib, W. Null-I flbuvei R. F. S'l'oNl-2 fllivkb Ib,1i.S'l'uwl11 fllvryll XX. Ix.S'r1:1r'llilN,l: lK1'mpr E . M, X N --vfb f s ' Q . f IT, R. T.-XYI.UR fllvnnj l,. N. 'Flfzulcx' 1I.ou7 ll. I.. 'I'l'nNr11: 11,1-mmm-dp .VILl'l:luNl.xKf.Ti1nl S lf W ' M? N Q 6 x 'Y 9 Q4 v 4 v,: -: A c ' 5. pq N4 V: ., . if 51... I P -1 I' '51 1 f ' -.M if ...... . 1 . , ,ef 3, M. I.VVlf l'01: 01:11-ty? W. B,W,xlmm-31.1. fliilly W. S.WA1:nr1N Uiilly 5. .l, W vrsnx Uimp . - . 4 ' ' . -,Q xx X ' . 3 1 ,,.. ' ,..V - .Q in b g y-.. Ji A . A .. Q QE is 4 iw . 4 will s X' NX XX .,.. V x :Q 14 W.S.W1f:1-:Ms fWnde5 J.J.W1cIsmc 4.1041-13 T. S,W11.K1xsux 1Tp H. Ii. Wll,1.1.u1s uiuilm 5 'fb -' C. A. Woons fwoodyb PAGE 45 ophomores '1 Q51 K J ,, f ' r X ,, 3, ,N 2, 3 if' !' 'I as sf, V ,j as E i aa Q , ' , V , 'Wa Q If 4 ' be called back for a record third time . . . Kasakura. Huang and Poon: no speaki Englis' but learn velly soon and Moose head. Moose head on the wall . . . Dr. Fetter's striking slides of the mammary gland . . . you awake. Farmer? . . . Kenny's open- ing squeak in CPC . . . Dr. Smith's Duke Side Show on the romantic aspects of hermaphroditism . . . autopsies got to be old stuff . . . Come now, Miss Brown. you know the facts of life! . . . smashed in lab sessions . . . Cutie Pie . . . Dr. Patrick at the Med School dance . . . Chauncy's infectious smile . . . Dr. Fetter's you don't mean that now, do you? . . . the man with the plastic face. Dr. Sommer: nonsensel . . . the dead silence before the names for each round-up are called out. Dr. Smith and the tall tales he spun out every morning . . , we learned sterile technique with per- sonal preservation in mind . . . look at those bugs! . . . B. cereus . . . stained, lingers . . . outa my mouth? . . . the line-up for shots, army style . . . Dr. Smith keeping the needle in until we answered a few questions . . . Typhoid Mary . . . BCG gave some of us a Ht . . . Dr. Conant's dry humor . . . Strother protested a too colorful description of Candida in the sputum and broke up the class . . . Dr. Pine's fungus quizzes . . . Dr, Ptosis . . . the parasit practical we all did so well on . . . We returned still shaky from that hectic two week period before Christmas holidays to find a new atmosphere: We wore short coats and HDR. tags . . . we carried black bags full of unfamiliar new equipment . . . hey. maybe we're in medicine after all! . . . PD at the VA . . . Neurology: Here's your patient: go to work. . . . frantically racking our brains for the neuroanatomy of last year . . . Dr. Bay- AA 1 more 46 lin belting our views of patients and MD's . . . some people like to think we're photographers! those titliwlxfkoif reticulocyte counts! ...' learning the art of the ophthalmoscope . . . mental status and the psychiatric interview: we applied the principles and they worked! . . . I want to be of help to you. . . . Dr. l-owenbach's gift of mimicry: we laughed and we learned. Joe and Scott led in most hours sacked out in class . . . the time one of our classmates with his most professional air stepped up to the patient's bedside and promptly stepped in a bedpan . . . not only that. he drenched the rounding prof, too! Dr. Forbus: What book have you been reading. boys? . . . writing up patients . . . just beating the deadline for the pathology special project . . . grinders in the library every night . . . Sime took time off to win races and prepare for the Olympics . . . Parkinson- ism? Just think about a drunk walking into a strong wind polishing cover slips with both hands . . . those 8:30 psych lectures after a big dance . . . when Tony listened to a patient's chest with no results, only to have somebody put the stethoscope plugs in 2 s r zf? -X ,I 5. ' f if W 225.15 ,, A 622' faawlrw. . ,tV,, . Af s 5 f 1 . . his ears for him . . . Joel proved Dr. Forbus was wrong by showing it to him in his book . . . who was it who was looking for fields in a glass eye? . . . true love when a guy's girl does the dirty work for him at an autopsy . . . Waddell wowed us with his automatic projector. Dr. Huang's Chinese jokes . . . Dr. Al Smith's lecture on syphilis . . . Dr. Sommer: Sing! . . . Al and Joe found it doesn't pay to walk in late on a pop round-up day . . . too bad Chinese unable market Ascaris eggs and Chinese Homecoming. not play football-drink Chinese whiskey, eat raw crab and moon cake . . . that long silver tube, the retro- spectoscope . . . flies ate up drying bloodfilms . . . Dr. DeMaria: Everybody in this class is a straight- man! . . . not visual aids, but visual tests . . . this year it's Joe with the inevitable question . . . Pharma- cology begins . . . back to the second floor labs . . . more frog muscles . . . dilated pupilsg we didn't see for a week . . . and we finish up another year, this time looking toward comprehensives and board exams with fear and trembling. 1 t 1 lt reshmen . T fi r . . t . f X -deduvatvd lo the llraelual Plexus- - ,R j W' This is the most intelligent freshman class ever-or I . - ' .- so we were told. It is indeed possible that this opinion X I V V V. . f' ,. ,'V ' has been modified with time . . . in fact very probable. V V ' f f , fl, ' f V, ', Perhaps we are merely an unusual class. The early ' ,fi X ' ' days of the I-'all were marked by new white coats, V V f V J.-' ' izqgir technicolor movies from National Geographic. and a 1' ik WV ' V, '- marked increase in the sale ol' those cigarettes with the X ' V , I rf, V -ff., -V 1, ,, white band on the lilter. The struggle had begun-to V kg V,'i f ' keep awake once the lights were turned off. and to re- ' 1 V' ,N '. V11 ' , sist writing I suppose . . before inscribing your V V ,i f'i' V V coffee clIP with the mo,fniI1g', lecture notes. With the ,rf I k i help of Grady's Atlus of 0lm'1u't' Amllumy. we began ' V' to play a new type ol' Scrabble. using such learned terms K '. V! V 'V as the Sphincter ol' Odi to confront that day when it S 1 W- 7 Vl would be time to demonstrate . . No-o-o, try again! I' W . . . but l like spinach. l don't care what kind of people ' 'Vi l 1 li l ' 'S , N- V , . ,. K, N VV - t ' A 'P Xl ,-'. Wg gPP ' Q! 'P ' i ' ' dir is it , ' Ai V I il V ffjfgffr H QPQ. ' , gi 5 ,rx G PX. i' I s -so ' i P f - if be f A 1 T ' ' l -. - A ' i ' - I , ' 4-if to 'Q in L ' JJ! 'Q 'Pl cf' Y if i L PK ls- ,Q-1- ! Ja- . -ft .5 i P 6 .Qt . . 1 .2 i 5' so s s it P h ,- gf L i f .4 V - , i Kai 1' ,-r 4 CJ KAP . , eat it! . . . Dr. Hetherington, Day. the presentation of -if 'V the HZQE Memorial Stain Award for continued contribu- ' ' I ':-VW tion to the known color spectrum. X. . V V 'N 'I V ! Famous last words after watching a real live baby , '..5i fy V , l perform its thirty-one rehearsed reflex actions . . . Ve , V if , This is going to be treat! The roblem of wire and P f .' V' f ' ' VV V cloth Vmothers. a j.n.d.E. . . coffee. ia. or milk. . . . Yet V VVVVV i,' in spite of our now evidenrshortcomings. new hands --5'-L--mfs' Vf A f i were extended to guide us. The microscopes were put 1 ,gf . may 1 SV away. Stone and Church rested on the shelf. and Lew T ,'- gjf V i Ma x - Holmes began to take his text and begin his campaign s K VV - . . . Get married now. and avoid the RUSH! His 5 V V words have not fallen on deaf ears. Then there was mf ' ,gi -' '. ,VJ 'V Abe's operation. and the rush for ringside seats. . . . V. If 'j.a,7J ' V - f 1 V is Biochem lab presents socio-economic problems. . . . ie . T QVV V T V., X '1. ' V' V Have you ever REALLY watched a Warburg in motion? 1' V' 1 A V- ,lik X 0 l . . . Do we have to lill the whole bottle? . . . Some- 'V -' ' body has to go to the library! . . . three hearts . . . '13 5 ' L ' The Enzyme Express from Bell Building .... Physiology ... :': s P ' Lab: Why Lassie never came home . . . My name is Haj V,V,-51 .7 ' 'fjb Gunloeku . . . Dr. Handler. when is the next Physiology Vg55g5V!.'! i test? . . . Our first patients -and the rounds with ' I Yi J' pl? 11 C.P.C.. freshman-style. All right. you'll have to make V 'IV1l Jei Q X a choice. is it Estradiol or Gonadotropin'? . . . and v f V . ,. t 11 V VVVVVVVV V VV X V ... agffir qq A It I A X V ' ,.-'-:-' when you go to see Howard. tell 'em Groucho sent you . . . Patience. and more patience shown by the learned men who stoop to help . . . signs of progress . . . the year draws near an ending . . . signs of hope . . . Great Expectations. more 47 Fre hmen V 1 1 . Ix..KYr1l:s Cf'lmrlin-H H. I , Ii.xx1.:H.x1c'1' LHan-ryp II ID IS ' 25' ,, 1 ,.,.,. , . A 5 L gm 'f.: I N' Q 5-A .f X: A , ,X .- 245 f , - ' ff X' ' i .sf F. A. 'lilalcxl-I Hiilly V. Ki. B1..xL'K 101-zxigl K ., . -- V' f fade' V, My ? . 7.0.l51:m'v1l'l'uN,,T1:. Um-9 'I', Il. HYllNl'1S.JI!. 1'I'mmny3 A2 J: Qin A, .I . W ' I 52? H V A :I ,4 . ' f I- f Q ij. , ,2 , 4:2 ' ' f' A W ,, V. ff ,, 4 .. 4 , 1-,f r -1 5 f f 5? x , , 4 .:' , ff, W 1 If ff If W X 1'xlc'l'l1:1z flillly W. II. VII.-XNH fW:1llyJ 94V lc, H. lH'mclc'r'1' 113-obj IC. S.I+lnwA1cns Qlfllmoj 'AGE 48 . . ASTA Hluveb Y. B. BIQAMI-:R fYanceyJ 5 V QQ? 7 2 ':. , age ,era AGXUQI-152 5 1. K f 1 it , ,, N., J. C, BOLTON Uullnh S. C-. BOONE fStevej ,ff 'H ,. I. K, l'.xl:1.mx. JR. i'1 om5 J, .L C.x1:'1'r1R fAndyy f'.I1'.1'111'xu'11 4Lin9 R, IC. Cx.1Nlc fBobby7 J. B. lflxrlclcv, JR. fJackJ M. L. ENTMAN Ologiy 1 Freshmen ,. mf 'ii M. EI's'1'1-:IN fhlurtyb .sg - . W. R, GOLDSTON LBiIlJ R. B. HAKIRISON fBx'e-nw .. Y I .Q T X ':-.'- 551- .mp f M . ' n an Q! 17.1 1 am J. Ii. l A1:1:1a.,1. f.IimJ 'ff 4, :,v . T. P. GRAHAM, JR. CTnmmyJ ' .L, Y 5 42' V? J fc 4 , Il X 0' 9A f 1 Z' , , .,.,.,Z2f,- ' 1-gf. 2 .ir X . A ff' 1 N. R. ILxsr.E'r'1' fNuncyJ . W. F. HOLLAND, JR. qwzu-1-env I.. B. Ilumucs ql,ewy B. N. HYMAN CBnrx-yy P. J. IxrPE1cA1'o fPat5 S, li. I .n:x'Nl1.Y 4Si4ln A ARK Bggzi '7' km Big Qxvmw X X if If aw MQ ,QE 4, ff-M' 1, ' V ' . . Q' 35401. . Q 6 25 Fr I 1 f , , 1 , . ,, . .n.xx'1',.Tlc. ffivorgr X gl ,. . :a,.1.,,..,..5.- ,I . ..,. - , . 1 'Q ,Zi , I V 2 .ff F, H,xwm:'l'1l. Jn. CChvst wi 'mf i K 4 . W. AI. II1'1.1., Jn. fBillr ff' . is s .faux ,K 62' 'O 1--s ' .1 1 .l,N,41l..Xxl-.li flu:-ll M II. I.J.1iL'N1.m'Ai rlmwy :IJ I., H. Ilu1.Ax,J1:. fLem ww my .W 9 WM-0 .... r 0,55 f i 2 V- 'i : warm: A 1 375. .,f7' ff: '7' W: ' . V- . , .. . . 5 A-46 . . 6 X- ' Wi.: xx' It IIl'rf'HIsux,IYqliillr . wxkygi. 3. 55 me 'Wie x C.BI.J.XBIl41S qlqluxrliw J, I,,.1uNHa Uerryr PAGE 49 v . ,kk .A+ w Ni. .15 . 1 . Freshmen lx. I., .Inxlos qlivnb J, P. KAN' flohny II. I.. I..-.Nfsla1:,.Ilc. ffiuyj IC. I., Llcwls. .I1:. flidp IC. I 1 254- 'Q BI.xlc4'l's fI'IIIi1 2 , 4 I II.W.M.xkl411.u1 1W:uI4-I , -rx? ,b .ai A,NI.NI1'ISl:x'l111,,Ilc. I Xu uw A14 ll, BIf'I..xl'1:1ll.lx. Jn. qljonj V .. x WN .. xx Qi C A X X . Vx xy XX vb X y x SE: xx X X ,M ' 2 fl 'zf',c' f., f' .Jay gm., , fg f Q, Q, , - ,y .,,. ,f Q I' Ii. 1u,n'.x fPhiIJ J, S. I'mNnxax'l'Iclc, III qJohnJ I'AGIt 50 fsw x? 2 df' an - -' I P.O. KoH1.1-:R flfeteh .kwa f .BW 5 f v A Q D, J. KROE fDonw IC, M. Loses. II ftieneb Ib. T. I.1'm-:Y 1DonJ V. R.M.xlc'1'1N ff'Imrlim-I J. S. XIAYSON 6JimJ '-D C 5 ., -gf - ' ' 5.-53, I X ' fa W. 0, M1'Mll.l,IxN, JR. flkillb I,, W. NIUURI-1, JK. CLnrrxJ NA 1 L ' Il. IJ. I?m.1.ARD fDuIo J. M. PORTER fJohnJ I 0 RICIIIDINIQ 1.111111 N, J, Iiomxsox fNm-nmnm 'r..',. - Q , Y l:u1.11:s, III lTnml I Q: Tlmxus qRayI N I-Z. S1xlxT-Axmxri rN111h11111 Freshmen I 1 1 4 M,II,Rul:Im1N fklikvr 75:1 , , ' H 'ig I Q- .ma A 'MI M .., Al -' 1, ,M x 1 ff f 3 , . Y, H. S1'1113w31c 1IIt'I1I'Yl 11- Ig, TA111,K 11111-,.,,, B. Y.1x11111:m-11-LK fkundyp ' , yt- ' . wc SI Q 135' C.G.Z.xH1,ER QCQHTYI F. K, Sl-IXYIiI.l., .Il:. tl-'runkm ,Xl-:I-1 IX .xl.s1'nx. I I LU11-1 CIR 'IX I RINXAX f'I'111111 1 ,f I 1 g ' - - 1' ' V1 - 2 Q. if 154' ',' fH1f- 1, S. J, SIIIBINI fSI4'Y6'3 Z I W. I,. 'I'AYl.11R, .I1:. HI 1111111-1 4. 1, 252' -me ...Q ,. N. W, Yurxu, JR. 4I.1llw PAGE 51 1. 3 iv fl! 'v f Cv ly! 5 X I - One Pa e for S rnpathetio Consideration The Lotise The louse shares with us the misfortune of being prey to the typhus virus. ll' lice can dread, the nightmare of their lives is the fear of some day inhabiting an infected rat or human being. For the host may survive, but the ill-starred louse that sticks his haustellum through an infected skin, and imbibes the loathsome virus with his nourishment, is doomed beyond succor. ln eight days he sickens, in ten days hc is in e.rtremi.s', on the eleventh or twelfth his tiny body turns red with blood extravasated from his bowel, and he gives up his little ghost. Man is too prone to look upon all nature through egocentric eyes. To the louse, we are the dreaded emissaries of death. He leads a relatively harmless life-the result of centuries of adaptation, then, out of the blue, an epidemic occurs, his host sickens, and the only world he has ever known becomes pestilential and deadlyg and if, as a result of circumstances not under his control, his stricken body is transferred to an- other host whom he, in turn, infects, he does so without guile, from the uncontrollable need for nourishment, with death already in his own entrails. If only for his fellowship with us in suffering, he should command a degree of sympathetic con,ideration. -From: Zinsser, Hans. RATS, LICE AND HISTORY: Being a Study in Biography, which, after Twelve Pre- liminary Chapters Indispensable for the Preparation of tie Lay Reader. Deals with the Life History of TYPHUS FEVER. Little, Brown and Company, Boston. 1934, pp. 168-169. On the first day on Osler my intern gave to me, an order to start an I.V. On the second day on Osler my intern gave to me, two progress notes, and an order to start an I.V. On the third day on Osler my intern gave to me, stools times three, two progress notes, and an or- der to start an I.V. On the fourth day on Osler my intern gave to me, four L.E. preps, stools times three, two progress notes, and an order to start an I.V. On the fifth day on Osler my intern gave to me, live B.S.P.'s, four L.E. preps, stools times three. two progress notes, and an order to start an I.V. On the twelfth day on Osler my intern gave to me, twelve differentials, eleven electrolytes, ten T.B. skin tests, nine consultations, eight presentations, seven P.C. sugars, six urine bottles. five BSP's, four L.E. preps, stools times three, two progress notes, and an order to start an I.V. -The Fungus Five. Mor 53 tudent Government Association Standing 1.-R backrow: B. Orman. B. Waddell. C. Hammond. O. Tabor. A. McBrydeg L-R front row: J. Lebauer. T. E1-Ramey. B. Grant. Seated: B. Cooper. B. Lazenby. C. Weber, G. Price. ln the above picture are the officers of the Medical Student Government Association to which each medical student belongs. The more important functions of this organization include serving as the of- ficial organization of the students in dealings with the University administration, medical school faculty, hospital administration and national and state medical groups: administering the Honor System: and serv- ing as an appeal court for alleged traffic violations by medical students. The SGA also is the sponsoring body of The Duke Aesculapianf' Recently. progress has been made in the realization of two goals long sought by medical students. The Student Lounge which was promised for so long has now become reality. The other progress concerns the use of the hospital cafeteria by students 0:1 duty in the emer- gency room: expansion of these privileges appears forthcoming. The SGA, according to earliest records. dates back to 1941. In 1944 a movement was begun to have medical students afliliate with the AMA, and was realized locally when. in 1957, the SAMA was incorporated as a part on our SGA. Thus we are now in contact with fellow medical students through- out the country. ln 1956 the SGA was instrumental in making CPC protocols available several days prior to the presentation. In 1957 SGA began sending questionnaires to previous graduates concerning their internships and making this information available in the library. In 1958 it was decided to have certiiieates of graduation awarded to the Seniors. In 1959 the reduced-rate white coat laundry and the exam file were begun. It is hoped that the SGA will be able to make significant contributions to student activities and wel- fare in the future as it has in the past. PAGE 54 T NIA l T. Wilkinson B. Waddell H. Wilkinson R. Farmer J. Feagin The Duke SAMA is a committee of the Student Government and includes the membership of forty-seven percent of the study body. SAMA has as its mission the national representation of the medi- cal students and service on the local level. This year SAMA has been active in presenting programs to high school and pre-medical groups on Careers in Medicine. These programs have been quite enthusiastically received and it is hoped that this activity will be widely expanded. The Duke Chapter also served as hosts at the regional SAMA meeting in March which included guests from eight southeastern medical schools and Puerto Rico. SAMA at Duke looks forward to providing an increasing variety of services to the Duke students in coming years. John Feagin Co-chairmen Bill Waddell PAGE 55 Duke Medical Dames KET gg' Wits' ni un Dr. 81 Mrs. Hart OFFICERS President Marie Price First Vice-President , Janet Cooper Second Vice-President Carol Patil Secretary . Lynn Baxley Treasurer Betty Waddell Publicity Chairman Jo Smith Project Chairmen Gayle El-Ramey Nancy Baumann Sponsor: Mrs. Deryl Hart The Duke Medical Dames was organized in the early 1940's by Mrs. Charles Sweat as a social organization for the wives of students and interns. Due to the increasing number of moe 56 Vi? Dr. and Mrs. Price Dr. and Mrs. Cooper married students it is now open only to the wives of students. Mrs. Sweat remained the advisor until her death and was succeeded by Mrs. James Semans. In l957 Mrs. Deryl Hart became the sponsor. The Med Dames have interested themselves in a number of worth-while activities among them being the well-baby clinic provided for students and house staff and the Mary O. Cowper Nursery School. The most recent achievement has been alliliation with the Wom- en's Auxiliary of the Student American Medi- cal Association. Phi Chi -QP' L, N . ,, MM . VY - ' 'V' aj ' ,Q l 12 1 Q f ff: 1 gf . Q ' A 2, ,flu ' F -' 5' 'f ' f' la .1 V -' 1 -uf -1 we A- e V, -gf 3? 15,91 ya . ,ff 1 , .4 A , .. , i I If ,K H A V. Ui any 4.4, fy 74 ,ur 1 reef G ' F ' if eff 5 Hu 1 , V f' ff f-.af u zfmff 1, ' 7 4' ,', ffl M t i 1 ' .f e W fff- f 5 W ? ' if .f M Q V ep, ,4M, Q. 04, '. , ., f. W ef' ff A v s. ,l 21.9, f' H ff' X 441 6 WY 'fl is ' I if f f. I- V y 1.7 f 4 fn, Q 1- gf- 21 ir . -A-V 'P -f ' 1 55:1 ..,. .- .Q '6 ei 4' I f' A ,V ,WM ,' , .. ,gm ,, , 1. . gg ., if v ,-.,. N, , ,, ,H .1 Q gg er W, gi 1 , 4 gf 4 fi 17272 Q Y 'tg j, if YH ,,. Z A 4 Z Y 4 Z ii John Lodmell Jim Morris President Treasurer A loosely-knit conglomeration of week-end fraternity men who gather occasionally with their women under a cabin roof or in a ball- room to celebrate the beginning, middle, or end of a quarter is in essence what Phi Chi means at Duke. At the recent national Phi Chi convention in Dallas, the Duke Chapter was hailed as one of the largest in the country. Answering the many queries of eager, competitive delegates from other medical schools, Brother Strother stated calmly: We don't let competition from Nw.-1.1 Bob Davis Sam Atkinson Secretary Social Chairman other fraternities bother us, we have no real competition. As the questioncrs hurried off to exchange information on new rushing tech- niques and to practice the Secret Handshake, Brother Strother must have felt Real Fraternal Pride in his own little Duke Chapter. At Duke nobody seems to know when Phi Chi was founded, or for what reason it was actually founded. As a matter of fact, nobody even cares. So long as an occasional gathering is forthcoming, Phi Chi exists at Duke. P.-tor 57 . 3, .15,,,,.5 .. 2 QW ,4 , W Q Q , A , hgfft, N Q ?f 2 4,1 3 I 2 5 3 2 2 5 2 X, W 4, 1 f, YL 'h.V, , vmmy fffj ' ,,, ., ,W 7, f 4: . ,,iyf, ', r f ff, ,ff If - ,f if , , fy, , A ' www ' , f X ,,, 4- , , ,fqQf5g,w, ,mf z,,4gc,A,4 7 WJ ,,,,, Y W, 1 ,H ' '24 Q, Wifi' f ff Mag, f f , 9'45i?:f,, 7 Q' .,,,,,11v' I Wi z I 1 V , 'M www f A f Z ,,, fn, 'Maw ff f ffwfff f, 1, , yjf V? :wwf MLM Wy,- 4 1 , f ,f ,WM , 'X .N . . 4-. 1, x .vwimx f JV, ,rv J MJAVQ' ' ' 'alP f xg' w. f .Mb 5,461 4, 'uw r., C2931 ONALLY E X4 Q QTY i Ulm RY TSI' Tm Q WVU X 'WL X 1-lquar-'u Medical Ditties Muscle and Blood Some people say a man is made outa mud, but a med student's made outa muscle and blood. Muscle and blood and skin and bones, thirty potential cells and chromosomes. It began one morning when the sun didn't shine Saw Markee mouses morning, noon and night Never let that cadaver get outa my sight. Cl10l'll.S'.' You learn sixteen years and what do you get Your life half over. no M.D. yet St. Peter w0n't you call me Cause 1'm so tired My first live patient, just expired. Took Biochem and it was drizzling rain ATP is my middle name Use Benedict's solution for liniment Took my little brown bottle where ever I went. Physiology comes and you can cut on a dog. lnject a rabbit or pith a frog. Drug a rat or cut a turtle in half. And writc your name with a kymograph. Chorus Well Pharmacology comes with drugs galore Man they bury you alive and pile on more You learn molecules till you feel mighty ill Then you calm yourself with Serpasil. In old Bacti you feel just great Pour blood agar and streak that plate Find bugs lurking in your stool if you can And take that BCG like a man. Chorus Mori 62 Forbus comes with his regime. Keep those hallways and class rooms clean. Cause if you want to see what a patient's got Just stick your nose in the proper pot. If you see Forbus coming better step aside, Lotta men didn't and lotta men died. One shaft of iron, the other of steel If Fetter don't get you Margolis will. Chorus Now Psychiatry it was quite a show. I want to help you with all we known But to be a psychiatrist ain't such a feat All you need is an accent. a couch and a sheet. Comes venisection and old Joe Beard Now contamination was the thing we feared. But lean over a suture that's tough Boy Dr. Beard roars that's earthworm stuff. Chorus Now in public health we had it made Learned the ten diseases on the hit parade. If it's typhoid what's carrying all the children away It's cause sweet old grandma has come to stay. Now we can inspect and we can palpate To diagnose, percuss, and auscultate, So you poke, you listen, and feel the skin, The instructor comes. Hell! flushed again. Chorus -The Fungus Five The Turkey Song tCirca McDowell 19591 He's a fifty-five Y.O.. WD WN WM. who appears to be in no acute distress. His CC is tummy pain, his Pl relates the same. Our intern still requires C and S to the BB, forthe OR. in the AM Oh he says he's simon pure. that he's never felt the lure, but there seems to be a positive STS. His Babinski raises toes and he's got a saddle nose. Out intern still requires C and S to the BB. for the OR. in the AM I don't mind 'crits qid. or preps to show LE, or even daily urinalysis. But there's one thing I must say. I'm waiting for the day. When I don't have to go take C and S to the BB. for the OR. in the AM D and W KCI, be sure to mix it well. and don't forget the wounds you have to dress. When you think the scut is done, he says as if in fun, Please go and take the C and S to the BB. for the OR. in the AM With my stethoscope in back. of my brand-new Cadillac. l'm stamping out disease along the way. I've struggled hard for years through blood. sweat and tears. At last I've learned how to say. C and S. to the BB. for the OR. in the AM. -J. Pilliod Four Foot Seven Four foot seven. smells to heaven. PARA 13-2-ll Does anybody want my gal. Output fell, began to swell. pre-eclamptic you can tell. Does anybody want my gal. Now her BP is high. looked in her eye. it wasn't nice. Called a flea, said to me. Better start that girl on rice. She has a fit. so here I sit. this tox watching ain't for me Does anybody want my gal. -The Fungus Five PAGE 63 vfioiv. 64 Yellow Rose of Creedmoor There's a yellow rose of Creedmoor That I'm going to see They've got her up on Osler She's jaundiced as can be I'll test her bilirubin, thymol turbidity For Rose is 67. she's been drunk since she was three. She's got Laennec's Cirrhosis For whiskey is her sin Her sclera are quite yellow, she's got icteric skin The Spider angiomata and bruises there to tell She's got a hobnail liver and it isn't working well. When Rose was just a baby, she fed at mother's breast. But mother she got tired and teething did the rest So she took a baby's bottle where cow's milk should have been Instead of using formula, she weaned the kid on gin. And since that first exposure. her thirst has gone quite mad But for the daily bootleg is all the food she's had The vitamins and the minerals have been replaced by drink, And sixty years of liquors have made her liver shrink. She's got Laennec's Cirrhosis for whiskey is her sin Her sclera are quite yellow, she's got icteric skin. The spider angiomata and bruises tell you quick She's pinned to old Nat liquor and her liver cells are sick. It's not Hemolytic anemia, you can't palpate her spleen And it's not yellow fever, no mosquitoes have been seen. Nor serum hepatitis, she hasn't had a shot lt's just Laennec's Cirrhosis and her liver's gone to pot. She's got Laennec's Cirrhosis for whiskey is her sin Her Sclera are bright yellow, she's got icteric skin. Forget about your gall stones. your viruses as well It's just Laennec's Cirrhosis and her liver's shot to hell. -The Fungus Five Editorial ANDY LEWIS Editor DICK REESE Art SAM ATKINSON I Photography JOHN LODMELL Faculty Copy OWEN TABOR Freshman Advisor MARIE PRICE KAY BEAN BARRIE WALLACE taff BOE BLOUNT LINSEY FARRIS Business Managers JOHN REED Senior Copy STUART COLLINS Organizations GEORGE ARMSTRONG BILL BAxLEY Sophomore Advisors DR. W. J. PEETE Faculty Advisor Acknowledgments RAYMOND HOWARD T. M. ELLIS JIM WALLACE PAGE 65 tltefre is iiotliiiig qitite like in DIAPER RASII Ol NTM ENT ' iiieli iii 1 ' DERMATITIS coo uvsn olL gl f . to keep INTERTRIGQ baby's skin clear, ' smooth, Supple, IRRITATIUN free from rash, excoriation and chafing Medical Gas Pr ducts A Division of National Welders Supply Company, Inc. Serving lffllllllg Hospitals of the Carolinas With the Finest in Medical Gases Oxygen-Equipment ciml Supplies Consiiltatioii Service on Liquid and Piping lnstallfitioiis NATIONAL WELDERS SUPPLY CO., INC. CHARLOTTE ASHEVILLE FAYETTEVILLE SALISBURY CHARLESTON FLORENCE COLUMBIA GREENVILLE mon 66 FOR SELF-ADMINISTERED INHALATION ANALGESIA 1 I I' I Q 1 Q l '1 , l .-4' XX fy- X .IT , gm V N HQ . I jf f xi N x , f 54x XX Q 0 ll I rl' Q and the Brand of trichloroethylene U.S.P. CBluel 'lDukef.CUniversi1'ylnhaler No. 3160 Model-M 0 notably safe and ejqective Trilene,', self administered with the Duke University lnhalcr. under proper medical supervision, provides highly effective analgesia with a relatively wide margin of safety. 0 convenient to use The Duke University Inhaler llllodel-Ml is specially designed for econ- omy, facility of handling, and ready control of vapor concentration. 0 special advantages Induction of analgesia is usually smooth and rapid with minimum or no loss of consciousness. Patients treated on an ambulatory basis can usually leave the doctor's office or hospital within 15 to 20 minutes. Inhalation is auto- matically interrupted if unconsciousness occurs. Trilene alone is not recommended for anesthesia nor for the induction of anesthesia. Epine- phrine is contraindicated when Trilene is administered. Trilene is available in 300 cc. containers. Ayerst Laboratories ' New York, N. Y. ' Montreal, Canada Ayerst Laboratories make Trilcne available in the United States by arran cnient with Imperial Chemical Industries Limited. 5718 moe 67 I. A Z, COMPLIMENTS OF THE EIGHT CC's cb 5? W , 4 I f 0 9 77 af I , X fi ,yt ,A X +I. PADI' 68 - 0 ' 6 jwwwwwwvww vw Xwwwvwwwww N X sv www Ig jg fi - E 5552 A 45 ' 35 Ei 25 Q 552 sr E' 0 15 gi 51 K W '41 P- li 'I 2. H 2. ' --rs 'v lf 2 3 'D ' 6 Q '- A Q ' s . - I 3 Q 9, .5 Sf' sa 5 I- Q --Q ., Qi 3 5 3 S 13 1? Q 2 2 f 5' 5- 'D 3 9 35 A I -,,., ::.- I In hlqq gli '-' ,. ff 575 W 1 II I 5' 22 -I w 4 Q 2, - '1 4' 51: 2: ca If -f -K4 K, 5 5 B UQ - -I 'z Z, 2 I A, X, fi-43353. B, 3' ro a Y ffaQ 12W WEE 1a?m 4 Q f - PM .Q .-4'k 'hw . : H- v ?Z iff Q-2V 3523 Q jg v A Q O 52 :r Q fb 'Y Q' ' L22 2 as - M I-1 rg ff 0 2 RS C 'y if G O ,,,1 5 C ,y i, 'gig SUE gg I-u Q P X I 1 ,., ., ,., T jf I: if fs- is I :I fb gf Q CT E E. 8,3 I A 5 Zi E 2 I 7 ' x A LD I 4 5 -' -I - U 0 rn no m 5 ,-E 5 Q CID fEg:rS5 -xanax Q5 y -' 2 9' UQ 39 Q C 3, ., ,-, H- U fy Q 2 E ASQ' Q 3 5..2Z nd 1 r fs U1 C4 I V1 :p 2 O 5 O E I-I Q 'Q A 39 W rn f- 3 H '-o PU Z X 1, 3. 3 I-I Z S -I F. :r L. rn In Q DP Q 5, 3- Q N '-1 O 3' FD '4 Z f- A, H. 3- -1 If 'U rn 'I ' C T4 X 1,23 Q 42YfwH 3 Pwriwg 5 ISU QQZSFQQEES-Z In 5 - C, w Q D fb U1 3, FJ rn I-o Z -4 if If 51' 3 Q 31 r-I Q' VJ I' 'ii C 3 :U ' 53 ' UQ U 79 :F I- H- FU Q. X - 5 E E F11 Z fi V' H 'D cn 5: U7 . cr f-' H '-U f: I-4 3 - ' 71 f- Q 0 Q rn U '-I O' cn 3 ,-I 3 3: 5 zWG5?5 Omvww F1 X 4 ' S! 2 U O O D S W 2 Q PH Cn Z 4 Q' QP h O I-I-I 5 P-1 1 37 H . 0 UQ :I m ua VU UD gf X Q w I: W. QI CD ' Z -I L Q Y . . m I-I :S 27, Q-Q 3 O F4 Z f. o P- F' 4 3 o o- 'cu L I.. m Q G5 0 P-1 :D Q CD y 3 I-I-J . Q 'U 'HQ E' 'D H In of I- Z 2 Q ' '4 I 'IZ D- I I G 1 3 0 - 0 wwoMw o Ob.s'!c'1ric'c1l - C1ylIC'C0fOgfC'llf Plmrz1c'e11Iic'c1l.s' and Bi0logiCc1l.s' FOR THE MEDICAL PROFIZSSION Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation, Raritan, New Jersey Compliments of BDRDENS PHARMACEUTICAL DIVISIO Makers ot Bremil-Mull Soy Mclrcelle Cosmetics Dermatologicals K . KCI PAGE 70 I fri ,f from the beginning. .. almost a half century ago, a guiding purpose of Mead Johnson and Company has been to aid the medical profession in providing better health for infants through improved feeding methods and scientific formula preparations. Our services have now extended to other nutritional products, vitamin and pharmaceutical products. In step with the Mead Johnson research and product development program, has been an uninterrupted program of cooperation with and service to physicians in every field possible. Our Company philosophy- Symbol of Service in Medicine -is a simple declaration of the responsibility of which we are ever-conscious. Physicians can depend on us to be sensitive to their personal and professional demands in our business policies. Mead Johnson Symbol of service in medicine ness QQ i 1 i SHERMAN LABORATORIES Detroit, Michigan In the service of medicine since 1907 PROTAMIDER ELIXOPHYLLINR PERSISTINH lntramuscular injection for l. V. Thcophyllinc blood- Long-acting non-narcotic ncuritis and herpes zostcr. lcvcls obtained orally. analgesic. BACTERIAI. VACCINES ' PHARMACEUTICALS Wfith the Compliments vf YOUR WHITE LABURATORIES REPRESENTATI YE Charles D. Andrews P C I THE INTERNAL CLOCK The ability to judge intervals of time is a basic mental function. ln order to learn how drugs affect this internal clock, SK8tF scientists use a test in which a monkey must hit a lever after an interval of 20 seconds to obtain food. When he is under the influence of certain drugs, time flies and he misses the pay-off period by hitting the lever too late. Other drugs make time drag and he misses the pay-off period by hitting the lever too soon. Because one of the characteristics of many mental disorders is a distortion of the time sense, observing how drugs affect this primary psychological process may reveal valuable in- formation that will help SKSLF scientists in dis- covering effective treatments for mental illness. SMITH KLINE 81 FRENCH LABORATORIES pioneering in pharmaceuticals... for better health QFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS far the 1960 AESCULAPIAN Colonna Studios, Inc. ON LOCATION' PHOTOGRAPHERS Address Directory Addison. Winnifred Allen. '60 Boone, Stephen Cu '63 127 West Franklin Street. Toccoa. Georgia 6231 Del Monte Drive. Houston 27. Texas Agre.- Fred Alan. '61 Bradshaw. Preston Hatcher. Jr.. '60 53 Wooley Lane. Great Neck. N. Y. 1509 West Haven Blvd.. Rocky Mount. N. C. Alanis. Joseph Martin. '61 Brice. Robert Samuel. Jr.. '60 404 E. Nelson Street. Lexington. Va. 296 North Edgemont Ave.. Gastonia. N. C. Alexander. John Maclie. '62 Brown. John Williamson. '61 168 Jeffer Court. Ridgewood. N. J. Route 1. Newberry. S. C. Armstrong. George Foster. Jr.. '62 Brown. Suzanne Linton. '62 P. O. Box 409. Washington. Georgia 1407 Denniston Street. Pittsburgh 17. Pa. Atkinson. Samuel Marvin. Jr.. '61 Brownstein. Burton Erwin. '60 P. O. Box 456. Bennettsville. S. C. 188 East 53rd Street. Brooklyn 3. N. Y. Ayers. Charles Rausch. '63 Broughton. Joseph O.. Jr.. '63 16 Meeting Street. Charleston. S. C. 2924 Hydrangea Place. Wilmington. N. C. Baez-Garcia. Jorge Eloy. '62 Brumley. George. Jr.. '60 Palma Real 72848. Hyde Park. Rio Piedras. P. R. Box 286. St. Marys. Georgia Baker. Linny Marshall. '60 Butler. Freddie Clarence. Jr.. '61 Route 1. Box 567. Kannapolis. N. C. Roseboro. N. C. Banghart. Harry Prizer. '63 Byrnes. Thomas H.. Jr.. '63 5401 Wayne Avenue. Philadelphia 44. Pa. 919 Mt. Vernon Avenue. Charlotte. N. C. Banta. Henry David. '63 Campbell. Milton Flake. '61 100 Elliott Circle. Oak Ridge. Tenn. Box 445. Taylorsville. N. C. Banton. Thomas James. Jr.. '61 Campbell. Henry Simon. '60 Amherst Pike. Madison Heights. Va. 23 Lanneau Drive. Greenville. S. C. Baumann. John Albert. '62 Carlton. Thomas K.. Jr.. '63 1121 N. Waverly Place. Milwaukee 2. Wis. Box 82. Salisbury. N. C. Baxley. William Allison. '62 Carter. Alan Bruce. '62 368 Kenilworth Drive. Akron 13. Ohio 616 McClellan Avenue. Fort Leavenworth, Kan Beamer. Yancey Brintle. '63 Carter. Charles Edwin. '62 240 West Lebanon Street. Mount Airy. N. C. P. O. Box 347. Mt. Airy. N. C. Behar. Victor Samuel. '61 Carter. James Anderson. '63 447 Prospect Street. South Orange. N. J. 131 Dixon Drive. Gainesville. Ga. BeMi1ler. David LaMar. '62 Carter. William Alvin. '63 20 East Sunrise Drive. Evansville. Indiana 3627 Kentucky Avenue. Norfolk. Va. Berne. Freeman Albert. '63 Caskey. Charles Thomas. '62 1307 Haynesworth Road. Columbia. S. C. 1653 Kathwood Drive. Columbia. S. C. Black. Craig Grayson. '63 Cassells. Joseph Samuel. '60 24 W. Euclid Parkway. Asheville. N. C. 126 Oakland Avenue. Chester. S. C. Blount. Robert Estes. Jr.. '60 Cauthen. Joseph Claude. III. '62 3923 Azalea Drive. Jackson. Mississippi Box 47 L. Rock Hill. S. C. Bicknell. William Jackson. '62 Chamblee. Hubert Royster. Jr.. '60 146 Summer Street. Boston 10. Mass. 1127 Harvey Street. Raleigh, N. C. Bolton. John Charles. '63 Chang. Wallace Han-Jen. '63 Box 116. St. Paul. Va. 210 Oak Tree Avenue. South Plainfield. N. J. mms 74 Church. Clay Franklin. '63 Dobbs. Charles Edward. '60 40 Hayes Road. Chapel Hill. N. C. 203 28th Street. Charleston. VV, Va. Cline. Robert Edward, '63 Dudley. Alden Woodbury. Jr., '62 Box 545. Southern Pines. N. C. 75 Margaretta Court. Staten Island. N. Y, Coble. Yank David. Jr.. '62 Durrett. Ray Robert. '63 561 Parkview Drive. Burlington. N. C. 3911 Virginia Ave.. SE.. Charleston 4. W. Va. Collins. William Stuart. '60 Duvoisin. Peter Marc. '60 139 Walker Street. Chase City. Va. 21 Somerset Street. Clearwater Beach. Fla. Colston. William Carroll. '62 Dyke. Perry Huggin. '60 1603 Pinecrest Road. Rocky Mount. N. C. 611 Kesterson Road. Knoxville. Tenn. Colvin. Charles Henry. Ill. '62 Dyke. Peter Cummins. '60 4221 Oled Leeds Road. Birmingham 9. Ala. 6101 16th St.. N.W.. Washington. D. C. Conant. Marcus A.. '61 Edwards. Elmo Stephen. '63 404 NE Tenth Avenue. Gainesville. Fla. Box 37. Spring Hope. N. C. Conna. Sherrill Alexander. '62 Ein. Isaac. '60 472 Hawthorne Avenue. Yonkers 5. N. Y. 530 F Ground Street. New York 2. N. Y. Constantine. Victor Simon. '61 El-Ramey. Thomas Anthony. '61 We Public Statistics. Shah Avenue. Teheran. Iran Farmville. N. C. Cooper. William Cornelius. Jr.. '60 Emery. John Bloom. Jr.. '63 1512 Bedford Road. Rocky Mount. N. C. 354 Lake Avenue. Pitman. N. J. Corwin. Robert Francis. '61 Entman. Mark Lawrence. '63 5 Richards Avenue. Dover. N. J. 1225 Inwood Terrace. Jacksonville. Fla. Cousar. George Richard. Jr.. '60 Epstein. Martin. '63 2119 Malvern Road. Charlotte. N. C. 240 Griswold Drive. West Hartford 7. Conn. Cox. Ronnie Lewis. '61 Erismen. Fred Raymond. '62 301 Perry Road. Greenville. S. C. Box 432. Longview. Texas Crane. James Dewar. '61 Eyster. Mary Elaine. '60 2 Lansing Street. North Warren. Pa. 136 Rathton Road. York. Pa. Craven. Nicholas Scott. '62 Farmer. Joseph Clarence. Jr.. '62 19 West Third Avenue. Lexington. N. C. 217 Granite Street. Henderson. N. C. Croft. Carl Louis. '62 Farmer. Raymond Mayfield. '62 Box 1187, Albany. Georgia 3716 Kaiser Avenue. Columbia. S. C. Cronce. Paul Calvin. '60 Farrell. James B.. '63 36 Kingwood Avenue. Frenchtown. N. J. 909 N. Edwards. Carlsbad. N. M. Crymes, James Elbert, '60 Farris. Robert Linsy. '61 6050 South W. 35th St.. Miami. Florida 626 Moravian Lane. Charlotte. N. C. Dalton. Franklin Palmer. '60 Feagin. John Autrey. Jr.. '61 P. O. Box 31. Charlotte. N. C. 701 Elizabeth Road. San Antonio. Texas Davis. James Karnes. '60 Feder. Robert Joseph. '60 Box 267. Rainelle. W. Va. 65 Lenox Road. Brooklyn. N. Y. Davis. Robert Nicholas. '62 Fisher. Robert Wallace. '60 Box 488. War. W. Va. 140 N.W. 36th Street. Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. Deas. David John. '61 Flanagan. Lathan. Jr.. '61 9 Hampton Street. Canton. N. C. 6 915 S. Washington Street. Alexandria. Va. Dellinger. Clyde James. '61 Fore. William Whately. '60 4218 Blackwood Avenue. Charlotte. N. C. Hilltop Link Road. Lynchburg. Va. Denby. John Lambert. '60 Fort. Lynn. III. '60 324 E. Main Street. Carlinville. Ill. 3400 Gastview Avenue. West Palm Beach. Fla. PAGE 75 Fortescue. William Nicholal. Jr.. '62 Hall. Warner Leander. Jr.. '61 Box 16. Hendersonville. N. C. 727 Queens Road. Charlotte. N. C. Fortney. Sidney Ray. '63 Hammond. Charles Bessellieu, '61 Box 112. Harlan. Ky. 1510 S. Milledge Avenue. Athens. Ga. Frank. Donald Harry. '62 Harp. James Robert. '61 326 Whitman Street. Haworth. N. J. 1115 Cline Street. Pikeville. Ky. Garcia. Edgardo Arturo. '60 Harrington. Randall Leon. '61 Box 518, Hato Rey. Puerto Rico 309 N. Lee Street. Ayden. N. C. Gay. William Arthur. Jr.. '61 Harrison. Robert Brent. '63 1 13 W. Trinity Avenue. Durham. N. C. 407 West Poinsett Street. Greer. S. C. Gebel. Emile Louis. '62 Haslett. Nancy Rose. '63 980 Lakemont Drive. Pittsburgh 16. Pa. 5180 East Second Avenue. Hialeah. Fla. Gerber. Edward Michael. '60 Hatcher. Martin Armstead. Jr.. '62 145 Ormand Street. Mattapan 26, Mass. 404 Clay Street. Hamlet. N. C. Gilbert. Joel Henry. '62 Haworth. Chester C.. Jr.. '63 -1 Underclitl Terrace. West Orange. N. J. P. O. Box 1551. High Point. N. C. Gilbert. Walter Randolph. Jr.. '62 Hogan. Leo Booth. Jr., '63 P. O. Box 188. Grillin. Ga. 7 Westover Circle. Wilmington 6. Dela. Ginn. Fred LeGray. '62 Holland. Warren F.. Jr., '63 712 Pou Street. Goldsboro. N. C. 102 Southwood Drive, Columbia. S. C. Glaser. Joel Stephen. '63 Holloway. Rufus Madison. Jr.. '62 1609 Flamingo Drive. Orlando. Fla. 1309 South 9th Street. Leesburg. Fla. Goldston. William R.. '63 Holmes. Lewis Ball. '63 Rt. 1. Wake Forest. N. C. 142 N. Main Street. McKenzie. Tenn. Gonzales. Antonio Carmelo. '62 Hubbard. William Henry. '60 Box 71. Lares. Puerto Rico Goode. George Browne. Jr.. '60 921 Avenue 4. N.W.. Hickory. N. C. 1003 Inwood Terrace. Jacksonville 7. Fla. Hull. William Martin. Jr.. '63 640 E. Main Street, Rock Hill. S. C. G00LlWln- Ernest Bflyd- JV- '61 Huneycutt. Harry Carr. Jr.. '61 606 Belvin Avenue. Durham. N. C. Graham. Thomas Pegram. Jr.. '63 815 Lamar Avenue. Charlotte, N. C. Grant. George Reed. Jr.. '62 1 109 Arsenal Avenue. Fayetteville. N. C. Grant. Robert Neil. '63 301 Villanova Road, Oak Ridge. Tenn. Hutchinson. William R.. IV. '63 Country Club Estates, Deland. Florida Hyman. Barry Noel. '63 3140 S.W. 14th Street. Miami. Florida 225 Old Sleepy Hollow Rd.. Pleasantville. N. Y 1814 Madison Avenue. Greensboro. N. C. lmljeratof Pascal John- '63 Green. Robert. '60 240 Tangier Avenue. Palm Beach. Fla. James. Charles Marion. '63 Greenlee. Lorance Lisle. '61 762 8th Street. Boulder, Colo. Grode. Harvey Eliot. '60 124 South First Street. Albemarle. N. C. Jervey. Edward Darrell. 11. '61 101 Church Street. Greenville. S. C. 1 10 E. Rockaway Rd.. Hewlett. N. Y. Johnson. Walter Taylor. '61 Groll. Diller Baer. Ill. '61 3726 Harrison Street N.W. Washington 15. D. C. 110 N. Fort Lane. Portsmouth. Va. Jolls. Kenneth Robert. '62 P. O. Box 6368. Raleigh, N. C. Gunlock. Howard David. '63 Jones. Danny Brigman. '62 4332 East-West Highway. Bethesda 14. Md. 1312 Williamson Drive. Raleigh. N. C. Guynn, Cyrus Harding. '61 Jones. Edward Marshall. '61 100 Gallberry Road. Portsmouth. Va. mari 76 Ashton, S. C. Jones. Jerry Lee. '63 Lyhass. 'lillinghast Cioethe. '61 3223 Sussex Road. Raleigh. N. C. 1409 Windsor Place. Jacksonville. lfla. Jones. Kenneth Lee. '63 Lyon. George Marshall. Jr., '61 I6 North Virginia Avenue. Brunswick. Md. 1540 Spring Valley Dr.. Huntington. Wa. Va. .lordan. Lyndon Kirkman. '61 McBryde. Angus M.. .lr.. '63 Box 206. Mount Olive. N. C. 410 Forest Hills Blvd.. Durham. N. t . Kahn. Kenneth Jay. '62 McDonald. William. '61 1715 Hyde Park Street. Sarasota. Fla. Box. 254. Pelham. Cia. Kapp. John Paul. '63 Mcl.ain. Lee William. Jr.. '61 406 North Main Street. Galax. Va. 4192 Roberts Pt. Cir.. Sarasota. lila. Kistler. Henry Evans. Jr.. '61 McLaughlin. Joseph D.. Jr.. '63 706 Louise Circle. Durham. N. C. 1012 McCurry Place. Honolulu 18. Hawaii Klite. Paul Don. '62 McLeod. Alexander Canaday. '60 3401 S.W. 9th Terrace. Miami 35. Fla. Box 775. Southern Pines. N. C. Kohler. Peter Ogden. '63 I McLeod. Michael Eugene. '60 Box 502. Blacksburg. Va. 716 South 7th Street. Ft. Pierce. Fla. Kramer. Richard Spencer. '62 McMillan. William O.. Jr.. '63 Box 796. Cleveland 22. Ohio 5010 Kanawha Avenue. Charleston. W. Va. Kroe. Donald James. '63 MeTammany. John Robert. '61 24 Left Aileron Street. Baltimore 20. Md. Box 134. Orange Park. Fla. Langer. Guy L.. Jr.. '63 Magendantz. Henry Gunther. '62 686 Beverly Drive. Sarasota. Fla. 47 Vaughn Avenue. Newton Highlands 61. Mass. LaPolla. James Joseph. '61 Malone. John Hugh, Jr.. '60 Niles. Ohio 4810 Addison Drive. Charlotte. N. C. Lassiter. Kenneth Robert Lee. '61 Marcus. Elliott Lee. '63 3715 Decatur Street. Richmond. Va. 917 Golfview Avenue. Tampa. Fla. Lazenby. Feorge William. Ill. '61 Miifkhilm- ROIVCFY Wilde- '63 104 Foster Avenue. Beckley. W. Va. Route IW- APEX- N- C- Lebnner, Edmund Jggephg '60 Martin. Arthur Morrison. .lr.. '61 Cgfnwglllig Drive. Ch-Qgngbgl-0. C. 4l-Ollz KIIIUOLIFUC. COlLlVT1l7lll. C. Lggn ,lnmeg Fletcher, '60 Martin. Charles R. '63 933 East Main Street. Murfreesboro. Tenn. P. O. BOX 175. Wilaiington. N. C. Lei-ro, Margaret Anne. '62 Martin. Miles Herbert. Jr.. '62 834 Manhattan Avenue. Dayton 6. Ohio BOX 178. Oklli Hill. W4 V21. Levy, Bernard Saul. '61 Massey. Charles Caswell. Ir.. '61 6001 Park Heights Avenue. Baltimore 15. Md. 1318 C21f'lf0n AVYWUC- Charlotte. N. C. Lewis, Andrew Morris, jr., '61 Massey. VVilliam Joseph. Ill. '62 Cheriton, Va, Raleigh Road. Smithlield. N. C. Lewis. Edward L., Jr., '63 Massie. Francis Sanford. '60 Greensboro. Ga. Box 374. Waynesville. N. C. l-odme1l..1ohn G.. '60 Matthews. Hubert Irvin. '61 Walter Reed Hozpilal. Washington 12. D. C. Route I. Cary. N. C. Long. Eugene M.. ll. '63 Mattison. Joel William Lewis. '61 1049 W. Front Street. Burlington. N. C. Box 69. Arcadia. Fla. Lucey. Doaalgl T.. '63 Mayer. Walter Brem. Jr.. '60 125 Rosalyn Avenue. Daytona Beach. Fla. 2828 St. Andrews Lane. Charlotte. N. C. Lunas. John Paul. '62 Mayson. James S.. '63 25 Westland Road. Cedar Grove. N. J. 6623 Brookshire Dr.. Dallas 30. Texas moe 77 Meriney. David Knight. '60 59 Nottingham Rd.. Ramsey. N. J. Merlo. Richard Bartlett. '61 2001 Virginia Avenue. Augusta. Ga. Merrell. Robert Alston. Jr.. '60 3322 S. Halifax Drive. Daytona Beach. Fla. Metz. Earl Nelson. '61 772 Pleasant Ridge. Columbus. Ohio Moore. Lawrence W.. Jr.. '63 Burkeville. Va. Morgan. Calvin Vere. Jr.. '62 707 N. Mtn. View Circle. Johnson City. Tenn. Morgan. John Garland. '62 Box A. Spring Hope. N. C. Moriber. Lloyd Alan. '62 2260 80th Street. Brooklyn. N. Y. Morris. James Culvin. III. '62 Box 122. RFD 1. Anchorage. Kentucky Morrison. Sidney Emmett. Jr. '62 1006 S. Hillside Lane. Gastonia. N. C. Mullen. Donald Collins. '61 15 N. Earle Street. Greenville. S. C. Nicks. Frank Irvin. Jr.. '62 1318 East Pikes Peak. Colorado Springs. Colo. Norine. Leslie Carl. '62 4035 Woodhaven Avenue. Baltimore 16. Md. Nye. Mary Jane Love. '61 862 Louise Circle. Durham. N. C. Oliva. Philip B.. '63 328 Gaston Avenue. Garfield. N. J. Opdyke. John I.inford. Jr.. '60 R.D. ffl. Flemington. N. J. Orman. Benjamin Franklin. '62 2335 Glenhaven. Houston 25. Texas O'Shaughnessy. Patrick Jerome. '60 176 Coventry Road. Decatur. Ga. Parkerson. Walter Tuck. '60 15 East 48th Street. Savannah. Ga. Parrott. Lawrence Huitt. '60 3501 Sharon Road. Charlotte. N. C. Paul. Ronald Ernest. '61 10 Crestmont Drive. Pittsburgh 20. Pa. Payne. James Franklin. '61 English. W. Va. Pearce. Philip Henderson. '60 515 Pinckney Court. Spartanburg. S. C. Peter. Robert Hatton. '61 134 Roven Road. Roswell Center. N. Y. Mori 78 Pilliod. James Phillips, '60 89 Greenacres Avenue. Scarsdale. N. Y. Pitkethly. David Thomas. '61 202 Wayne Avenue. Silver Spring. Md. Poindexter. John S.. III. '63 625 East 45th Street. Savannah. Ga. Pollard. Dulon Devon. '63 Route 1. Benson. N. C. Poole. Ernest Tilghman. '61 407 Chamberlain Street. Raleigh. N. C. Poro. Robert Sigurd. '60 909 South Villa Drive. Evansville. Ind. Porter. John Marshall. '63 256 Sunset Drive. Concord. N. C. Powell. Thomas Edward. III. '61 Box 306. Elon College. N. C. Preston. Edwin Thornton, '60 152 C Linville Street. Kingsport. Tenn. Price. Dudley Randolph. '61 Stanley. Va. Price. Grady Edwin. '60 2106 Sarah Marks Ave.. Charlotte. N. C. Price. William Foster. '62 1002 Brook Street. Fayetteville. N. C. Ratlifl. Norman Burbridge. Jr.. '62 110 19th Avenue North. Lake Worth, Fla Ray. Ritz Clyde. Jr.. '61 West Jefferson. N. C. Reece. Richard Lee. '60 154 Kentucky Avenue. Oak Ridge. Tenn. Reed. John Martin. '60 265 Woodmont Circle. Nashville. Tenn. Redding. James Oscar. '63 341 East Salisbury St.. Asheboro. N. C. Richardson. Charles Clifton. '60 1117 Gladden St.. Columbia. S. C. Rider. Robert Edward. '61 2006 Walker Avenue. Greensboro. N. C. Riddick. Joseph Henry. '62 744 Sherman Drive. Lynchburg. Va. Riggins. Richard Stafford. '60 2417 North Federal Hwy.. Lakeworth. Fla Rineberg. Bernard Allen. '60 137 Livingston Ave.. New Brunswick, N. J Roberson. Clive Ervin. '61 801 Vermont Street. Palatka. Fla. Robertson. Lloyd Harvey, '60 Box 519. Salisbury. N. C. Robinson. Norman J.. '63 2663 Conner Drive. Charleston. W. Va. Robison. Michael Lee. '63 Box 282. Anniston, Ala. Rockwell. William James Kenneth. '60 142 Hillside Street. Asheville. N. C. Romhilt. Donald Wade. '62 619 Floral Avenue. Terrace Park. Ohio Runyan. Thomas Earl. '63 5222 Elliot Avenue S.. Minneapolis 17. Minn. Sadler. John Holland. '60 80 Butler Street S.E.. Atlanta. Ga. Safrit. Henry Faison. '63 Box 388. Beaufort. N. C. Saint-Amand. Nathan E.. '63 P. O. Box 345. Gaffney. S. C. Sandberg. Seymour. '60 East 96th Street. Brooklyn 12. N. Y. Satterfield. Benton Sapp. '62 407 West Park Drive. Raleigh. N. C. Seabury. James Congdon. '60 8309 16th Street. Silver Spring. Md. Sewell. Frank K.. Jr.. '63 303 North Sycamore Street. Mt. Sterling. Ky. Scarpelli. Emile Michael. '60 723 East 226 Street. New York 66. N. Y. Schiff. Martin. Jr.. '62 325 Riverside Drive. New York 25. N. Y. Schmickel. Roy David. '61 Training School. Southbury. Conn. Schwartz. Stephen Oscar. '61 660 North Street. White Plains. N. Y. Schwarz. George Carl. '60 848 Mountain Avenue. Springfield. N. J. Shalit. Allen. '60 25 Hobson St.. Newark 12. N. J. Shearin. William Arthur. '62 RFD 9562. Whitakers. N. C. Shimm, Stephen Jay. '63 1540 Urbino Avenue. Coral Gables. Fla. Sime. David William. '62 0-100 Whitehall Street. Fair Lawn. N. J. Smith, Donald Dewey. '60 115 Kennison Drive. Orlando. Fla. Smith. Edward Hardin Smith. Jr.. '60 Clover, S. C. Smith. William Siegfried. Jr.. '61 234 Dalton Street. Madison. N. C. Sproles. Elijah 1.. lll, '63 173 West Sevier Street. Kingsport. 'lcnn. Starling. Kenneth Allen. '61 Box 414. Troy. Ala. Stuart. Frank Allan. 111. '60 2135 E. 47th. Tulsa. Okla. Stone. Richard Cole. '62 308 Monticello Avenue. Durham. N. C. Stowe. Deryl Grant. '62 Route 334. Burlington. N. C. Strother. William Kemp. 111. '62 6001 St. Andrews Drive. Dallas 5. Texas Summerlin. Harry Holler. Jr.. '61 P. O. Box 506. Laurinburg. N. C. Sweat. Robert Earle. Jr.. '61 410 NE First Avenue. Mulberry. Florida Tabor. Owen Britt. '63 601 Chesnutt Avenue. Tifton. Georgia Taylor. Dean Ross. '62 800 South Grinnell St.. Jackson. Mich. Taylor. Waller L.. Jr.. '63 Va. Beach Hospital. Va. Beach. Va. Terry. Lewis Newman. Jr.. '62 410 Forest Avenue. Spartanburg. S. C. Thomas. Raymond L.. '63 3204 Monroe Street. Columbia. S. C. Trant. John Hill. III. '61 421 Waverly Blvd.. Portsmouth. Va. Trantham. Harry England. '61 Green Acres. Brevard. N. C. Tripp. Gordon Anderson. '61 1375 N. Cleveland Ave.. St. Paul 8. Minn. Tully. Harry Thurman. Jr.. '60 1702 Tartan Way. Louisville 5. Ky. Truman. Margie Rebecca. '61 103 Hill Street. Christiansburg. Va. Turner. Harvey Leonard. Jr.. '62 Thomson. Ga. Uprichard. Eleanore Elizabeth. '61 32 Alexander Avenue. Yonkers. N. Y. Urbaniak. James Randolph. '62 916 Farms Drive. Fairmont. W. Ya. Vanderbeek. Randall B.. '63 656 State Street. Holland. Mich. Vause. David Dwight. '60 109 Ridgecrest Avenue. Rutherfordton. N. C. Victor. Martin Ira. '61 203 Park Avenue. Tuckahoe 7. N. Y. PAGE 79 Weston, William. III, '60 1314 Adger Road. Columbia, S. C. Waddell, William Bryan. '62 Waddell Hospital. Galax. Va. Wilemon, William Kelly. Jr.. '61 Box 131, Booneville, Miss. Walker. Joseph Edwards. '60 Rt. 5543. Shelby. N. C. Walker. Lawrence Crunipler. Jr.. '60 L, Wilkinson. Tolbert Sie er. '62 131 Orchard Street. Mt. Airy, N. C. Williams. Gail Roger. '62 Clifton Springs. N. Y. Walston. Abe. ll. '63 Box 115. Waltonburg. N. C. Woods. Charles Alevarider. '62 .l. 200 West Avondale Rd., Greensboro. N. Walton. David Sellers. '61 309 S. 21 Street. Brigantine. N. Woodward, Sue Eggleston, '60 , Box 105, Suffolk, Va. Warden. William Steele. '62 1136 AIA. Melbourne. Fla. Warshaw. Joseph Bennett, '61 Worton. Stanley lvan, '60 . 422 SW 25 Road. Miami. Fla. Weber. Carl Harold, Jr.. '60 Young. James Sanford. '60 1 121 Edgemont Avenue. Gastonia. N. C. 3825 Garrison St. N.W.. Washington, D. C. Weems. Wade Scott, '62 Young. Noel W.. Jr.. '63 - Box 680. Waynesboro. Va. 115 W. Seeman Street, Durham, N. C. Weiser. Joel lames, '62 Young, Robert Lassiter. Jr., '61 1687 Selwyn Avenue. Bronx 57, N. Y. Box 2006, Morristown, Tenn. Welch. Bruce Lynn. '62 Yowell. Robert Kluttz. '61 691 Sherwood Road N.E.. Atlanta, Ga. Box 6195. Raleigh, N. C. Westfall, Harry Lake, Jr.. '60 Zahler. Charles Gary, '63 304 Melvin Drive. Portsmouth, Va. 4739 Circle Dr., Columbia. S. C. s t . xx 7 I. 9' N I-Am-' 80 521 South Main Shot. Wafe Forest, N. C. C. P 4 995 N. Venetian Drive. Miami Beach 30, Fla. J I W .,,.1,. ,.-. av u M17 30. 1950 y . ef, D lr. Carl H. Weber President, Student Goverment Deer Oerlz , lo one een adequetely describe the Deen, end if I captured e little of his greatness, it is only beoeuse I have been priiileged or being espeeed to me these many years. for which I sm everiesttngly grateful. I en not so sure that I deserve the high regard expressed in Nur com- pliesntery letter, but I ea indeed thankful end proud of hearing received it. This wee e thvlllhtful end appreciated gesture on your pert end the ' , Student Government and I shall elvsys treasure it. '1 ly warmest personal regards and best wishes to you and your colleagues ' fd on this happy occasion. Sincerely, Jey M. Arena, H.D. I 9 n f-U' il Jlmrv Qi x D xW X 0 1y x i f 6 if Xfi1,.?9,Z Q , 1 1 ,Q .T S IS fl MW f Y! fb If f 2 X f K ' ,QV 5 , fkjffxsy 7.5 gm? N XJ' fgigl ' A-'WM ' 1 fl 6' x W vig' ? 6, N---' XQEXI 'Y g '- QQ Rig! Q 3- ff s T' wg N . N 13. -'Y - h , I W '51- TN Z Os Z 9 '1 -J ' 2 - az 0 '31 if 1 f P fy F bs ?H I I ,' 'X 2 2.2 gp Z rigs ful H CYNICHL YEAR5 .15 ul fd rv ,.- , f ,fn H ffafgnidfi iq Z J fx Q 2 Z? H, ' ,Q 'I r .7 M , K 4 fff,Q: 5dE W I f Q ' , flfx Kei 5 27 S 6 I 7 ' FIN 'SH 3 I A WW 'x s Q V M ' mf KN Qtr. , , T 0zff3ff?229 , i ff Wikia? gf P- 6ffQyl,,4 5 0 1 A Q Q-.-J ' Q W ix Ky 2 V f aqf: 1 , 1 ti-1118? I 1-vb MN 5 f f QU M -, . Q ' 5053


Suggestions in the Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) collection:

Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

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Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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