Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC)
- Class of 1961
Page 1 of 216
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1961 volume:
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H., . .M , ,f '15 '33 A - 'Ll 'fi by dj-43 4 1 7 :lp '-1 ' 4 if ' I x ' l i, X!,Q.1 i .ff 3 J ir, 1 1' N '5'i.,. ,fy , M ef' , ' N me A L, I . . Q 5 - , 0 fav, ff 11'- ff At the onset appreciate clearly the aims and objects each one of you should have in view-a knowledge of disease and its cure, and a knowledge of yourself. The one . . . will make you a practitioner of medicine: the other . . . may make you a truly good man, four square and without flaw. -WILLIAM OSLFR OPERTY GF EIJSKE uuivensiw msoicixi. CENT ER ARCHIVES lf. My 4,4 auf 4 , ,M , .N , few vf J 1 5 A., W my we Www , .gfunvr '1 'V . 9 J f 'W' 1961 AESCULAPIAN 105 I Negwef f.Q .-', - ,I f +i at 'f 5+i - A- S lilo DUKE UNIVER ITY SCHOQL CDF MEDICINE DURHAM, NoRTH CARoLiNA Volume XXXI Published by the Student Body of the Duke Uniwerwity School of Medicine. Copyright applied for. James J. LaPolla. editor- in-chief: Kenneth Lassiter. associate editor: Robert Yoxiell. managing editor. Editorial Staff Ea'itor-in-c'l1ief As.s'0c'iate Editor lllanaging Editor Layout Editor Orga'1i:ation.s' Editor Circalatiorz Manager Plmtograplly Editor Features Editor Dedication Tlzird Year A.s'.x t Editor SHCOIIKI Year A.s'.s t Editor First Year A.s'.s t Editor Staff A.Y.Yf.S'llllII.S' A d vixor.x' l'1'ufe.s'.x'ior1al Plmtography James J. LaPo1la Kenneth Lassiter Robert Yowell Roy Schmickel Harry Summerlin Stephen Schwartz Robert Corwin Philip Noyes Bernard Levy George Armstrong Harry Banghart Crawford Barnett Larry Thompson Tolhert Wilkinson Ed Powell Ken Starling Boh Young Dr. William Peetc Dean Herring Thad Sparks ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS At this time we of the 1961 Aesculapian Stall' would like to make special mention of these people of groups of people who have helped to make this yearbook possible: I ,mia 4 Dr. W. P. J. Peete Mr. W. E. Seeman Dean B. Woodhall Mrs. Jean Goodwin Miss Fran Thomas Miss Sue Amaan Dr. J. W. Ray. Editor Ohio State Medical School Yearbook 1960 Dr. A. Sorosky, E.ditor University of Miami Medical School Year book, 1960. Mr. Andy Lewis The Senior CTass. 1961 The Faculty The Medical Illustrations Still tespecially Pinky J M rs. Thad Sparks w -- - --- oiqnnigd - nina' 3 ARBOOK STAFF-l.eft to right. Buck row: H. Bang htirtiii, Armxtrong: R. Sehmiekel: Cf B.ii'nett: H Niiniinerlin Noyes. Front row: K. lztwiter: B, Corwin: J. J. l,aPollzt: R, Nowell1N, SChXKL1l'Il, This puhlictition will not reprekent the mme thing to gill perkonk w ilu read it. To the ftieulty it will reprexent .inother ye.ir in the growth .ind prominence of Duke Lhixerxity Nledie.il Center. lhe undereltt-kmen will greet this yettrhook with mixed emotionk. lo it few it will he merelj. something in return lor the payment of xtudent goxernment teek hut to many it will represent the ptiksing ot' tinother ietirk .ietixitiek w hieh putk Q them closer to their dretims. hopek und gogtlx. Certtiinlji thik hook will meun the most to the grtiduuting xeniorx. lt wtix written with them in mind. It wus written with their help, ln our lirxt meeting the yedrhook stall' decided. wholeheartedly. thut thix puh'ie.ition would kt mholnfe the fruitk of four years etliort und thtit it would he eompoxed in the mime kpirit which has guided the entire graduating -:luv tow gird the end ot one phme of their education und the commencement ot .inotheix l tl'l N I do solemnly swear by whatever I hold most sacred, that I will be loyal to the profession of Medicine and just and generous to its members . . That I will lead my life and practice my art in uprightness and honorg that into whatsoever home I shall enter it shall be for the good of the sick and the well to the utmost of my powerg and that Iwill hold myself aloof from wrong and from corruption and from the tempting of others to vice . . . That I will exercise my art solely for the cure of my patients and the preven- tion of diseaseg and will give no drug nor perform any operation for a criminal purpose. and far less suggest such thing . . . That whatsoever I shall see or hear of the lives of men which is not fitting to be spoken abroad I shall keep inviolably secret. . . These things I do promise, and in proportion that I am faithful to this Oath, may happiness and good repute be ever mineg the opposite it shall be fore- SWOTD. --HIP POCRATES. Contents DEDICATION DEAN'S MESSAGE IN MEMORIAM ADMINISTRATION OtIice Staff AESCULPIAN SALUTES Wilbur Davison, M.D. David T. Smith. M.D. Wiley Forbus. M.D. Deryl Hart, M.D. FACULTY THE STUDENT AND THE HOSPITAL ORGANIZATIONS - PARAMEDICALS STUDENT BODY To Be a Doctor Seniors Juniors Sophomores E Freshmen THE SOCIAL STUD YEARBOOK QUEEN AND HER COURT ADVERTISING INTERNSHIP APPOINTMENTS 9 13 15 18 20 22 23 Z4 25 26 29 61 85 1 103 105 109 151 161 171 189 199 201 207 PAXGE if EX my W J 4 LESLIE B. HOHMAN, M.D Dedication TO LESLIE BENJAMIN HOHMAN, lVl.D. 19 61 AESCULAPIAN To know wisdom and instruction: To comprehend the words of understanding: To receive the discipline of wisdom. Justice, and right, and equityg To give prudence to the simple. To the young man knowledge and discretiong - Dedicated And the man of understanding may attain unto wise That the wise man may hear, and increase in learning. counsels. Pnovuuxs I, 2-5 These words of the author of Proverbs summarize the accomplishments of the man to whom we dedi- cate this yearbook. Dr. Hohman has devoted his L ' eshe B. Hohman, M. life to the study and practice of medicine. His ac- complishments have been many. 5522 E Q 'M P . t , ,U wx .Q sa' DR. HOHMAN AS A STUDENT AT HOPKINS DR. HoHM.AxN IN His Duma Ho,:PI1'.x1. OFFICI .KCI- ,Ma v. 'Q.W-if DR. HOHMAN. IN 1946. Pkhshmss A PATILNT WITH STAMMERING TO A GROUP OF STUDENTS Dr. Hohman was graduated from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1917. After a year of internship in Pediatrics. he was appointed a resident in psychiatry at the Henry Phipps Psy- chiatric Clinic at the Hopkins. under Adolph Meyer. His postgraduate training included a year in Vienna working in experimental neurology. His early work was primarily concerned with the psychotic mani- festations of epidemic encephalitis and the histopa- thology and eye signs in postencephaltic Parkinsons syndrome. He continued on at Phipps as a member of the faculty. Dr. Hohman then initiated his lifelong ixc is I0 study of the affective disorders, a field in which he has become a widely recognized authority. Signifi- cant contributions in this field included the recogni- tion of the usual benign course of affective disorders. He also showed that hypochondriasis and anxiety neurosis could be included in the affective disorders. ln addition to Dr. Meyer. two other men greatly inliuenced Dr. Hohman's thinking. They were John B. Watson. the father of behaviorism, and Horsley Gantt. probably the most important investigator in the field of the conditional reflex theory of Pavlov and the head of the Pavlovian Laboratories at Hop- kins. Child psychiatry is another field to which Dr. Hohman contributed significantly, partly based on his contact with these men. In addition to contributions to the medical literature on the formation of life patterns and on behavior disturbances in children, he wrote a popular book on raising chi'dren As rho Twig is Bent. During World War II, he served with the Navy studying and treating combat fatigue and war psy- choses. Following the end of the war he contributed further studies on the rehabilitation of veterans. In 1946 Dr. Hohman joined the Duke faculty as Professor of Psychiatry and Associate Professor of Pediatrics. He has actively taught both the second year course in mental status examination and the clinical quarter in psychiatry. His teaching has been clear and concise. ln a field where it is dillieult to separate fact from fiction, he has constantly striven to be objective. He has been a demanding mentor. never satisfied with half'-truths or gibberish. And he has given an unusually large portion of his time to teaching. While at Duke he has repeated'y demonstrated the value of electro-convulsive therapy in affective disorders. ln conjunction with the neurosurgical staff he has studied the treatment of malignant mental illness with pre-frontal lobotomy. . as READING IN HIS OFFICE TEACHING A CLASS OF JUNIOR lN1EDlCAL STUDENTS PAGE W. - R, ,ax i DEAN WooDHALi. PAYS TRIBUTE TO DR. HOHMAN AT A RECENT DINNEIX IN His HONOR Nationally known as a leader in the field of cerebral palsy, Dr. Hohman has served as president of the American Academy for Cerebral Palsy. He was instrumental in the founding of the North Caro- lina Cerebral Palsy Hospital and has served on the stafT since its conception. The accomplishments of Dr. Hohman are im- pressive. but it is not these alone which make him loved and respected. There are qualities to his manner that are diliicult to characterize. Grace. charm. and interest are part of his person. He is ,i5l2 actively concerned with all those about him. Hardly a day passes that he does not invest of his time in helping a student with a personal problem, or se- curing medical aid for people who cannot afford treatment. or trying to answer queries for informa- tion of which he has special knowledge. His mind abounds with curiosity about all of medicine, and his storehouse of knowledge is phenomenal. To Leslie Benjamin Hohman, M.D.. physician. mentor. and friend, we respectfully dedicate this yearbook. i -Q. 1 f.. f 'Uv ' f'-I , The Deans Nlessage Medicine faces a bright but difficult future. At no time in the history of our profession have we known so much about the basic mechanisms of disease and the effect of such influences upon man as a whole. It may be the happy destiny of this Class to participate in a more sophisticated scrutiny of these causes of ill-health and to trans- fer from their own thinking, and that of their fel- lows, laboratory equities to a level of patient well-being that has never been previously attained. The studious and well-motivated physician can virtually guarantee himself a rewarding life ex- perience in any aspect of laboratory or clinical medicine and in any environment of his choice. This bright future will not be achieved by clannish participation in many of the static pat- terns of our professional life that have character- ized recent years. Nor will the individual phy- sician reach fulfillment in any category of his experience by a churlish insistence upon the con- cept that the physician stands upon a pedestal aloof from the world about him. Herein lies the difficulty and the actual challenge of your future. The modern physician must truly be a citizen of the world, not dismayed by social. political or economic changes, but intellectually aware of such alteration in social thinking and above all, seek- ing to participate in such changes that are valid and good for the health of his patients. Good luck to you all. BARNES WOODH.-XLL P XGE PAGE 14 RALPH ARNOLD, M.D. Q , A If 125454, 5,14 f-,nfiw ' .Z . , my 4 1,1 , W., yy 4 I A 3 .- f? 'fW ' W fffww v 1 ,1 M3 ,Q7 ,1-2,321-.?.4f', ,Www 'al fag' ,JMLZWQVEQV 'lj Qi, if g,gg,y,,- ' ,gg Q - ,, mf ' 4 Av In Menlorialll RALPH ARNOLD. M.D. By GEORGE BAYLIN. M.D. lt is surprisingly dillicult to write a brief sketch of a person who was unaffected, frank and truth- ful, particularly when the writer knows that the protagonist would have deemed any praise as unnecessary. Ralph Arnold, born in Rochester, New York on December 10, 1910 was a physically rugged youngster possessed of an exceptionally alert mind. These attributes enabled him to excel both as a student and athlete in the public schools and at the University of Rochester. Competitive sports in fact arlorded him the opportunity to pursue his education and also helped him to de- velop the fine sense of fair play and cooperation which so clearly dominated his relationships with people. Moreover, his athletic endeavors en- hanced his innate abilities to react decisively and quickly under pressure. Football left him a permanent legacy-a broken nose. Perhaps the missed diagnosis of the nasal fracture conditioned him for his future speciality. Dr. Arnold studied medicine at the University PAGE Lift' ix .vlmrt.' url ix lung: a'.t'pe1'iel1t'e rliflifull. of Buffalo and was elected to the AOA honorary society. During his years of schooling he found it necessary to energetically pursue a strenuous extra-curricular schedule so as to cart a liveli- hood. Thus he was for years an iceman toting lOO lb. cakes of ice to a retinue of regular cus- tomers, and was for a time selling fruit and pro- duce. This type of total experience fathered his humanism and modesty, but also brought him face to face with the stark realities of life. lt is re- markable that he integrated so successfully the many diverse endeavors during his youth, but to know him made it easily understandable. The affiliation with Duke began in 1936 when he accepted a full time interneship on the then infant Student Health service. He brought to the area a vigor and zest which was to win for him the respect and admiration of patient, nurse and staff. Each student was so carefully followed that no true illness was neglected and every non- organic complaint was usually properly handled. Following this year of close association with the student-patient, he put in three years as a house officer in the E.E.N.T. service and was subse- quently certified by the American Board of Otalaryngology and the American Board of Ophthalmology. The war years saw him serve with the Duke unit in England, following which the armed serv- -Al1SC'Ul.APlUS ices dispatched him for duty in Japan. His col- leagues in both theaters of war were high in the praise of his magnificent efforts as a physician, friend and counsellor. He had some tense mo- ments with respect to Army directives and higher brass but was so sincere and dogged in his choice of action that reason usually prevailed. Dr. Arnold returned to Duke in 1946 after a four year stint in the Army. At this time he made a highly significant decision and married Monice. They had four children, one girl and three boys. He played his role of father with eminent success and the Arnold youngsters grew up in an environ- ment of freedom, understanding, discipline, hap- piness and respect. The proudness with which each one called him Daddy bespoke a complete story of the proper child-father relationship. A gifted teacher, Dr. Arnold gave untiringly of himself. Never was he too busy, too lazy, too tired or too important to assist a student, patient, nurse, resident or senior staff colleague. His un- canny ability to unravel a complicated clinical problem made him the ideal consultant and the prompt dispatch with which he made decisions as to modes of treatment placed heavy demands up- on his time. Also, the willingness with which he accepted the responsibility of examining and treat- ing friends, endeared him to the entire hospital family, professional and non-professional. Sonia patiwils, tlmugli C'0Il.S'l'i0llS rlzut rlieir C'0llllfff0lI is perilmzm 1'vr'oi'w' their health simply tlirrmgli their l'UlIft'HflIIl'llI iriili Ihr' g0oclm'.s'.v of 1110 lJlIj'.S'fCflll'l. mon l6 -HIPPOCRATIZS ll lx lllllffl nmrr' IIHIPUVIIIIII In flume' nrlml .turf of putivul fIll.K' ll cli.ic'r1.w Illllll irlmt .wrt nf fli.wu.ic' tl lnllfvllf lmx. Ralph Arnold could be tersely critical and had no hesitancy in expressing disagreement when he deemed such necessary, but never was the criticism or disagreement colored with malevo- lence. Who can forget his inimitable be that as it may, l think that -and fortunately for many a patient he could rarely be veered from his de- cisions. As a surgeon he had few peers and it was a veritable joy to observe him painstakingly manip- ulate the ossicles with an infinitely delicate touch that belied the ruggedness of his large, powerful hands. Throughout each tedious surgical opera- tion he kept his assistants informed as to each step and maneuver in order that they would soon be able to duplicate his performance. Ralph Arnold died on July IO, 1960 in New --HSI I R York where he had registered in a post-graduate course devoted to perfecting new techniques for the treatment of deafness. lt is highly significant that he participated in more post-graduate sessions than any other staff member, for it epitomized his disdain for complacency and self-satisfaction. This attitude coupled with an unassailable in- tegrity brought him to the forefront in his field. Those of us who worked with him are con- stantly reminded of the benefits gained by virtue of this wonderful association. Whoever henceh forth comes to Duke-be he patient. student or doctor-is likewise indebted to him. for the Duke Medical Center is now and forever a better insti- tution because Ralph Arnold was here for some 24 years. 1 We lmve lvrultwz f'0llIl7lC'fC'l.Y with flu' idea llmt rwzzl- ing lvooks una' listcriirig In fl'C'fIH'l'.S' is un llCff'flIlllfl' training for doc'tor.s'. -VVILLIAM VVl,l.CH y P.XGlf C'f1u11c'c' 11111-Y flll'lIl'.Y flu' mind Ilmt is prepared. -PASTEUR PAQ V V X wf .. 76 6 X I DR. BARNES WOODHALL, M.D. Dean, Duke Univer.s'ity School of Medicine maxi I8 ..., ' LANE gfgglhi'hQ1. if P J. E. MARKEE, Ph.D. WlLLIfXNI M. NICHOLSUN. MD. l1?'w 94.1. sf ' Wiz K xi Assistant Dean in Cwflllfgl' of Azln1i.s'siam' .4.S'Sf.S'IlllIf Dean in CHIIIIFKQK' Pn.sI-Gruzlnurv fi-llllflllfllll Admini tration L X-..,,f gf W!LLIAlN1 P. PEETE RICHARD A. Bnmnuvwlm Assistant to the Dean Assisfanl 10 the Dgfm PxGF 19 n :A vw. .N i ' l ' 4 t .rr iii ew fz ' ' ' . V f DE.-RNS' SECRETARIES Left to right. Back row: Fran Thomas: Mary Athearn. Front row: Kathyrn Perryg Helen Thomasg Jean Goodwin. Ufhce of the Dean The medical student is the hub around which the wheel of the Dean's Oliice turns! Stalied with live secretaries. the Dean's Otiice offers a wide variety of services to medical students from the time they register for the first day of school until they stand over the desk saying. Be sure my name is spelled correctly on my diploma! Mrs. Helen Thomas, since March of 1946. has been watching medical students come and go. and with each graduating class has the feeling that this year's crop of young physicians is the best yet. Helen worked with Dr. Davison for I4 years and now is happily continuing her job as Secretary to thc Dean with Dr. Woodhall. Mrs. Jean Goodwin wasn't sure she would ever recover from her assignment of getting out the an- nual medical school bulletin after joining the forces in August. 1958. She made it though. and in addi- tion survived four years as the wife of medical student. E. B. Goodwin. Jr.. who is a member of this year's graduating class. In addition to the medical school bulletin, Jean types transcripts, letters i if ii 20 of recommendation. draft board forms. grade sheets. etc. Mrs. Kathryn Perry came to our otiice from Durham Hosiery in June of l960. She inherited tuition charge sheets, known to the medical students as blue slips. ln addition to this, she shares with Jean the responsibilities of student records. etc. Miss Fran Thomas. after ll years with Eastern Air Lines. joined us as Editor of WHAT GOES ON. a monthly bulletin of all of the medical postgraduate activities in this area. Fran manages to get her bulletin out to 10.000 physicians in North and South Carolina and Virginia. and in addition is always ready to offer a helping hand to any medical student who comes her way. whether it's collecting SGA dues or distributing yearbooks! Mrs. Mary Ashton Athearn-the latest member to join our crew-came in September. 1960. She is secretary to Dr. William Peete, and in addition handles the medical student assignments and room reservations, as well as managing the Hospital Week- ly News Bulletin. ' 3 1 4 V ' a I 8 1' 1 4 ig ' -.,,,-Z, V THE AES C LAPIA SAL TES 1 l There are men and classes of men that stand above the common herd: the soldier, the sailor, and the shepherd not in- frequently, the artist rarely, rarelier still, the clergyman, the phy- sician almost as a rule. He is the flower tsuch as it isj of our civilization, and when that stage of man is done with, and only to be marvelled at in history, he will be thought to have shared as little as any in the defects of the period, and most notably exhibited the virtues of the race. Generosity he has, such as is possible to those who practice an art, nerve to those who desire a tradeg dis- cretion, tested by a hundred secretsg tact, tired in a thousand embarrassmentsg and what are more important, Herocleon cheer- fulness and courage. So that he brings air and cheer into the sick room, and often enough, though not so often as he wishes, brings healing. -ROBERT Louis STEVENSON 'iz I Wang QM., ,A ' W 4, , , f. Wilburt Davison M. D. Of the men this yearbook pays tribute this year. Wilburt Davison was their mentor. Much has been written about him. much more will be written about him in years to come. ln the short space allowed to this salute only a few things can be said. He has been honored by yearbooks in the past and every time a yearbook is published it will in essence be a tribute to him because this medical school has been molded in his image. In 1930 he brought to Duke University its first medical faculty. They were all Johns Hopkins trained. They were young, eager and ambitious. Six years earlier Mr. James B. Duke had signed the indenture authorizing the Schools and Hospital. But establishing a medical curriculum was not an easy task. Dr. Davison and his staff decided to give clinical instruction similar to the programs at St. Bartholomew's and Guy's Hospitals in London and the Massachusetts General and Boston City Hospitals in this country. The staff grew, the patient care became almost fault'ess and medical facilities reached heights unheard of in 1930 under the uncanny wis- J dom and strong leadership of Dr. Davison. Words alone cannot describe how a senior student feels toward the greatness of this man. He relinquished his deanship last year to Dr. Woodhall and shall continue here at Duke as James B. Duke Professor of Pediatrics until retirement. Wilburt Davison was born in Grand Rapids. Michigan in 1892. He received his A.B. from Princeton in l9l3. was a Rhodes Scholar l9l5-17: received a B.A. from Oxford University. England. 1915, B.Sc. l9l6. M.A.. l9l9 and M.D. from Johns Hopkins. l9l7. D.Sc. from Wake Forest University in l932 and LL.D. from the University of North Carolina in 1944. While at Hopkins Dr. Davison worked as head of the Department of Pediatrics and was assistant dean of the Medical School there from l9l9 until he came to Duke to begin the medical school and hospital. Having worked closely with Sir William Osler during his early years. Dr. Davison brought the Oslerian spirit to the Duke University School of Medicine. PNGE David T. Smith, M. D. Dr. Smith, like the other men we are saluting, was a member of the original group of bright, in- dustrious Hopkins' men that Dr. Davison brought to Duke Hospital in 1930. We of the senior class will long cherish his anecdotes which preceded each of his lectures. Each of us has found Dr. Smith to be not only an astute bacteriologist but a teacher of medicine as well. If an interesting problem arose on the wards, be it bacteriological or surgical, Dr. Smith was always happy to consult with the student. Past president of the National Tuberculosis Associa- tion in 1950, and past president of the American Trudeau Society, Dr. Smith has had time to publish well over 100 research articles as well as to co-author a textbook which is considered most outstanding in its field and is used throughout the nation's medical schools. Dr. Smith was born in Anderson County, South Carolina in 1898. He received his A.B. from Furman in 1918 and his M.D. from Johns Hopkins in l922. He married Susan Gower in 1918 and they have one daughter. Dr. Smithis training at PAGE 24 Johns Hopkins well-equipped him to form and head the Department of Microbiology in 1930. He in- terned in pediatrics, was an assistant in pathology and bacteriology and later went to the Research Laboratories of the New York State Hospital for tuberculosis as its bacteriologist, pathologist and di- rector of research. While at Duke Hospital, he has seen his depart- ment grow to be one of the best in the nation if not the world. Articles have been published on brucel- losis, fungus and other infections, immunology, lung abscesses, nutrition, tuberculosis tDr. Smith has been a major contributor in this fieldj, experimental black- tongue as well as many other subjects. Besides his textbooks, he has written monographs on fungus diseases of the lungs, mycology and fusospirochetal diseases and fourteen chapters or sections in other standard text and reference books. Dr. Smith retired as chairman of the Department a year ago but has retained his full professorship and has recently con- ducted an elective course in diseases of the lungs for Junior and Senior medical students. Wiley D. Forbus, M. D. In 1930, bringing with him the spirit of Ludwig in Leipzig, Cohnheim in Breslow and Welch of the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Wiley Forbus came to the then very young, perhaps somewhat impatient Duke Hospital. William H. Welch had been his teacher. almost his very most inner spirit and Dr. Forbus Wanted to bring this spirit to Duke Hospital. There's no question in anyone's mind-he succeeded. He and his department became the core of the hospital. No diagnosis was final until Dr. Forbus, looking at times like a tyrant and at times like the humble man of knowledge that he was. looked at the slides of the surgical specimen. His C.P.C.'s became a teaching instrument for student and house staff alike. Dr. Forbus was born in Zeigleville, Mississippi in 1894. He received his A.B. from Washington and Lee in 1916. His M.D. from Johns Hopkins in 1923. He married Elizabeth Knox Burger in 1926 and they have five children. As assistant pathologist at Johns Hopkins he worked very closely with Dr. Welch and his zeal was rewarded with a full pro- fessorship at Duke University School of Medicine by Dr. Davison because of his dynamic personality. forceful character and compelling leadership. While at Duke he published his two volume text- book which has been a guide as well as an inspira- tion to Duke Medical Students. He has seen his department not only carry a heavy teaching and training program but to provide Duke Hospital and several other institutions with pathologic service and consultations. His department has carried out re- search studies on: blastomycosis. brucellosis. cancer. coccidiomycosis, Hodgkins disease. hypertension. kidney necrosis. nocardiosis and viral disease. The training of Dr, Forbus has been carried on to other medical schools by many of his staff who have be- come full professors and heads of departments. Recently retired from Chairmanship of the depart- ment, Dr. Forbus will spend the remaining years prior to his retirement as full professor helping to institute medical schools in the Far East. PAGE 75 A ' lv' mf- .3 ' S , y .,,A A Deryl Hart, M. D. To be named President-pro-tem of Duke Uni- versity is a great honor and, indeed. it takes great- ness to achieve it. None of us will ever forget the magnitude of Dr. Hart's greatness. When he took office recently as administrative head of the Uni- versity. each of us was proud to have been associated in some way with this man. The impact of his ultra- violet lights on surgery will in years to come surely be considered a hallmark of modern medicine. When the Duke Hospital opened in 1930 there was unlimited facilities but a very limited senior staflz Drs. Alyea tllrologyj, Shands 1Orthopedicsl. Eagle 1Oto1aryngofogyJ, and Anderson 1Ophtamolo- gyl. Dr. Hart. himself. was in charge of General. Thoracic. Plastic and Neurosurgery. The present chairman of the department of Surgery. Dr. Gardner. was Dr. Hart's chief resident. Dr. Hart has seen his department grow into one of the finest in the world. The resident staff has grown rapidly and there are in surgery and the surgical specialties 12 residents. 46 assistant residents and 18 interns. There are cm 26 over 50 full-time employees in the operating rooms, 28 secretaries, 18 technicians, 11 student research assistants and over 30 employees in the Surgical Private Diagnostic Clinic. The objectives of Dr. Hart have been threefo'd: 111 to establish a teach- ing program where learning is by doing C21 to provide the best patient care possible and 131 to encourage research. Deryl Hart was born in Buena Vista. Georgia in 1894. He received his A.B. from Furman Universi- ty in 1916, his M.A. in 1917 and his M.D. from Johns Hopkins in 1921. His training consisted of residencies in surgery and pathology under the great men who dominated The Hopkins at that time. ln 1932 he married Mary Elizabeth Johnson and they have six children. He is a member of A.1VI.A., American Association of Thoracic Surgery, Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Omega Alpha and many, many other organizations. He has contributed numerous articles to journals, especially on the effects of ultraviolet radiation upon bacteria in the operating room. '7 IXCI 1 F A C U L T Y ANATCDMY J. E. MARKEE, Ph.D., CHAIRMAN imma 30 get 1--W ., V,. ,. 12 fhVA-' sf,.:.'...4+sf+ 4 We' 'W A g,,,..- as Q: '- ag. ,L Left to right: L. Perkins: H. Wilkinson: T. Peeleg R. Swearingen: J. E. lvlarkee. Chairman: A. Gabor: D, Hetherington: F. Becker: M. Mosesg S. Agnellog J. Everettg K. Duke. Traditionally. the students Hrst movements in Medicine are in the study of anatomy. and the relevations of the cadaver will guide him throughout his training in medical school. The Anatomy Department has an extensive share in the freshman's progress. training him in gross anatomy. histology. embryoogy and neuroanatomy. The students spend a considerable portion of their time in the labora- tories doing gross dissections and studying microscopic slides. Audiovisual educational techniques are combined with laboratory instruction. The motion pictures. most of which are produced by the Department of Anatomy at Duke, intergrate special areas of study and are extremely valuable for teaching and review. All of the instruction is designed to be as informal and individual as possible. General principles and the functional viewpoint of living anatomy are stressed by the department. Fresh tissues and living cells are available for examination. With the co- operation of the Department of Radiology. the students have the opportunity to study parts of the living body as revealed by the X-ray and tluroscope. The anatomy of the nervous system. a particularly intricate subject. is fully explained with the use of brain dissection and slides, The clinical appication of neuroanatomy is stressed. Histology utilizes demonstration materials. lectures. and study of microscopic materials in the laboratory. Elective ad- vanced courses are offered bv the department. These in- clude experimental neurology. brain modeling. special neuroanatomy. surgical anatomy. and orthopaedic anatomy. mor 3 1 BIOCHEMISTRY PHILIP HANDLER, MD., CHAIRM 'Ami 32 Left to right: S. Wakilg W. Guildg N. Kirshnerg K. McCarty: E. Davidson: W. Byrne, R. Wheatg H. Kamin: T. Rosette, I. Friedo- vichg Philip Handler, Chairman. The increasing importance of biochemistry in the training of the medical student may be attributed to the tremendous progress being made in biochemical research. Medicine is looking more and more to biochemistry for the understanding of disease processes, to diagnostic methods and to a more rational approach to therapy. The biochemistry course in the freshman year introduces the student to the chemistry of the human body. The first phase of the course is devoted to a survey of the chemistry of the materials fundamental to all life, proteins, fats, carbohydrates, and the nature of enzymatic action. This is followed by study of those events in intermediary metabolism common to the life of all mammalian cells. The special metabolism of muscle, kidney, bone, erythro- cytes, liver, connective tissue, and the chemical aspects of digestion. respiration. electrolyte. acid-base and Huid balance are presented with relation to the study of the physiology of these organs. so as to correlate the two disciplines. Instruction is conducted in small groups of students by members of the staff. These small groups are designed to enable the student to discuss with the instructor material from the lectures and laboratories. In the labora- tory the student handles and manipulates those basic sub- stances and functions necessary for life. Instead of regular laboratory exercises the student may pursue original research within the field of biochemistry. In addition to being quite active in original biochemical investigation. the department a'so presents special seminars on the chemistry of proteins and enzymes. intermediary metab- olism, nutrition and the biochemistry of disease. PAGE 33 PHYSIOLGGY AND PI-IARMACQLQGY FRANK GREGORY HALL, PHD., CHAIRMAN PAGE 34 l -ti l i . fi 1 4 is? .S i .,, ii: l ft I , k . I i . , .. l , ' ll I l 3 i v.-.-.-.-.1 ' . 5 3 iii, ',.4l ff, 2 F... ,nf Left to right. Front row: W. Hull: J. Schmidt: M. Dick: F. G. Hall. Chairman: R. Frayscr: J. Kostyog J. Salzano: l-. Bernheim. Back row: W. DeTurk3 H. Langley: E. Crawfordg E. Longg B. Farmer: A. Ottolenghi: B. Mincey. FREDERICK BERNHEIM, PH.D. In the first year the student is introduced to medical physiology. Cieneral principles of human physiology and their app ication to the practice of medicine are stressed. Lectures and conferences are closely intergrated with the studentk work in the laboratories. In the laboratory the student is taught experimental technique. I-le participates in experiments in which he can observe tirst hand physiologic principles. During the course. the student is allowed to follow a small colony of animals with different endocrinologic problems. He is able to observe the natural clinical course of these diseases and their reactions to therapy. Respiratory and cardiovascular physiology. endocrinology and neuro- physiology are closely intergrated with the anatomy and biochemistry courses. The course in pharmacology is taught in the spring of the second year under the direction of Dr. Bernheim. Lectures and laboratory work deal with the mode of action of drugs in terms of biochemical and physio'ogic processes. There are special facilities in the department for research in the fields ot' respiration. high altitude physiology. circulation and cellular metabolism. PAGE 35 MICRQBIULOGY NORMAN F. CONANT, Ph.D., CHAIRMAN PAGE 36 Left to right, Seated: S. Osterhout: M. Postong H. Willettg H. Hardin: A. Eiring. Standing: L. Pine: J. Overman: Norman F. Conant. Chairmang H. Craig: D. T. Smith, S. Gross. Including the division of Virology, mycology. bacteri- ology and parasitology, this department has a major role in preparing the sophomore for his clinical years. Throughout its teaching program. the study of the micro- organisms' physiology, biochemistry and life cycles is cor- related with the pathogenesis and symptomatology of the disease produced in man. In the laboratory, the student is taught all the methods and procedures employed in bacteriologic laboratories. In addition to personal exer- cises in technique, ample materials and demonstrations are available for his use. Most of the lecture time is devoted to the immunologic and epidemiologic aspects of infection. During the study of viruses, the student is instructed in the use of the electron microscope. In- struction is designed to give the student a clear concept of how organisms get into the body, the nature of the toxins produced, the nature of the host immune reaction and the methods of disease prevention by immunization. In addition to its responsibility for teaching microbiology. the department also maintains a diagnostic infectious serv- ice for the Hospital and provides an advanced training program for the Center. Advanced training leading to a M.A. or Ph.D. degree in Microbiology is offered to gradu- ate students of the University. The areas of training available for graduate work coincide with the research interests of the staff and include viro'ogy. immunology. microbial physiology, mycology. and medical bacteriology. During their clinical clerkships on medicine. the medical students may perform the routine and special bactcriologic work of the patients assigned to them. under the direction of the Department of Bacteriology. PAGE 37 PATHGLGGY V ,. ,, 'f 2 ' .Z W-efwwlfayb M561 THOMAS D. KINNEY, MD., CHAIRMAN I xi I W ' P .,.:, . . - .4 it 9742? ' if 2 52 :Q ,W A I g Q Q AX gm , yy M Xyffff Haw sz . , , ju pl is Q E ik A 3' . t ' .',.. : Q-1:-. at i f- H s . t ary Q f t , . 5 y, i Lett to right. First row: J. Scmmer: Thomas D. Kinney. Chairman: D. Hackel: R. Baker: N. Kaufman: J. Klavinsz B. Petter. Second row: J. Elchlepp: R. Breitenecker: A. Smith: E. Chick: A. Ottolenghi: A. Noto: A. Valdes. Third row: D. Grihithz Polt: D. Rubin: S. Huang: R. Stuberl R. Pruitt. Fourth row: L. Griffin: R. Swearingen: R. Reeves: R. Patrick: W. Hendry. The medical student is first introduced to the illnesses which afliict mankind during his sophomore year in the course of general pathology. Teaching is conducted in small groups, each under the guidance of a senior instruc- tor and his assistant. The histologic aspects of the pathologic processes are studied together with the gross anatomic and physiologic alterations of the tissues. thus maintaining a unity of conception of disease. As patho- logic processes and the diseases arising from their elabora- tion are studied by the student groups. reports on the study of groups of cases are made by individual students. The group work and the individual student reports are supplemented by weekly conferences involving the class as a whole and dealing with problems presented by current autopsies. For the first time in his career the medical student is on cal as he participates in rotation in the hospital's post-mortem examinations. Cases studied at post-mortem by the student are presented before the class and staff as a clinical-pathologic conference in which each student on the case plays a particular role. No student in the past thirty years of the Duke University School ot' Medicine will ever forget the drama of Dr. Forhus' weekly round-up in pathology. A clinical-pathologic conference for advanced study is held each week in the hospital by the Pathology Staff. It is open to all interested persons. but is designed especially for the Hospital and Medical School Staff, Research facilities are provided for students who wish to do original work in the field of Pathology. P you- 39 MEDICINE My EUGENE ANSON STEAD, JR., MD., CHAIRMAN PAGE 40 J , .1 'J 1- 'J I 'J A ,- 1 f J E 'J K ,- ,.- z 1 .Ir P E4 U SC 'J Z C 'J I C. ,- C 1- .1 .C L. C L1 C .C u 'J rs Q ... U C U CL .I CII U f LL! C U .IZ C :s I 5 .- f- C f I ul N JZ I .- 3 C L.. U P 2 .4 C : .C C5 A -1 .C U f A w C 1- .1 f C. f- C. J :C E E N 1 I C C E E ..c f C Z ,JU :.4 1'J J- C.. H... .SE Z'-I '24 111, ,... E... L.. H7 ,f:: ,.. -1 7:1 7'1- J.1 :Ci 1. .Ju '-'N f'.J H1 5: :Ll 1,1- -11 5: E.: :Z 'Z g... .cf 'JC ,4'-f- ...,, -4 C u.. .CC 'JC 1... 'S ..u 32 55 L3 .C Z5 :LL C: LLZIZ If ,UE az, pu: .. H5 .CQ .CL 53 T23 , S! 511.1 .Cd EJ U! -L- ,.,C CU 31 CE C13 1 lb.. 'L .Io - .fx LJ? :J -1.1 C :.. ff Zo C ..5 C, U H7 'Z'-L jr- 51,12 Cv 5-.. 32. U gi 5 CL' 1.1 JC. -53 'xfn Vw CC rs: -v-V' -4-: :1 CI.: I-'iff .1 uf- ui -C 4:1 'J-4 sz' :if C.: ..C CC -C .Z- .--'4 Jf LJ Z ,: f E 'J I C 3 7 4, :I 3 jJ Q - ... 'J .L 'J U .J- 'T .1 9 'J C 'Y 2 CJ .4 'J I ..1 Ei C ... .C 'J ... P 1- J 1- .. 2 ..- C ,- .1 f L. 1- .1 I U 2 .1 :L 1- .1 ..1 .. 'S 1- -1 .C D ..- C r' :I U C FJ 2' .1 1- .1 L E 1- .1 f U .4 .1 f .1 4 7' -- C C f ,- 5 E .C ... SZ .M ,. P .1 1 .1 ,. , 'J .Z Q 'J C Z f ,.. f .1 N- 1-1- ..- C 1- .1 I sl C.. ,.. ,.. VU sl 'J .- 4 ? U .4 .L 1- .1 NJ CJ 4 .E P f U L 3 .4 5 ,- ...1 s 5 2 .S L '- .1 NJ U C. u 11 ff: 5 LJ : E z .C U '- -.1 3 E C E .4 urznxcanlcol M VZ ITC W Jo Pcclcrg I DIVISION OF HEMATOLOGY 'W I Q 'f .TM .. f . . AW.. H ' , . Q ' 1? x,,. Left to right. Seated: A. Wooteng F. Gunter: L. Garrissg M. MacArthur: E. Shands. Standing: J. Hobsong F. Garrisong J. Laszlog N. Danielsg Wayne Rundles. Chiefg T. Itoga. DIVISION OF NEUROLOGY Y Z? f . , . xxm Q K f f A ..., 55 555. f 1 .4 mf- x P , Left to right, Seated: T. Peelez J. Pfeifferg E. Charles Kunkle, Chiefg N. David. Standing: L. Kleing Y. Saitog J. Peelerg J. Stiefel. l'MiIf 42 DIVISION OF DERMATOLOGY Left to right, Standing: G. Newtong J. Marascalcog H. Dixong E. Huttog W. Samsg J. Tyndallg J. Temple. Seated: S. Smith: J. L. Callaway, Chief. The student's introduction to the Department of Medi- cine comes in his second year in Clinical Diagnosis. In this course the sophomore receives introductory lectures. case discussions. and instruction in methods of physical examination and history taking. Early in the course, stu- dents begin work at the bedside in the examination of selected patients. The emphasis throughout is placed on instruction individually and in small groups. The inter- pretation and pathologic physiology of abnormal findings are stressed. Instruction in the more specialized methods of examination is provided by coordinating the lectures. case discussions and individual student instruction from the departments of Medicine, Neurology. Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Radiology and Surgery. In addition, the lectures and laboratory sessions in Clinical Microscopy are coordinated by the Hematology Division with the over-all program. As the course continues, special emphasis is p'aced on student correlation of the history, physical findings, and the pathologic physiology in the individual patient problem. Clinical Microscopy com- prises an introduction to medicine designed to equip the student to participate in patient care on the wards and in the clinics. The essentials of hematology are reviewed. Laboratory work includes blood cell counts, the prepara- tion and interpretation of blood films, and the examination of fresh material, such as urine. stools, spinal fluid, sputum, exudates and transudates. Junior and Senior medical students are assigned as clinical clerks to the public medical wards of Duke Hos- pital and The Durham V.A, Hospital and to the medical outpatient clinic. In addition. Senior students are also assigned to the Private Medical Service at Duke Hospital. Here, the medical student learns total patient care. He works close'y with the intern and resident on the ward. He is given increasing responsibility for the patients as- signed to him. During the morning teaching rounds the student presents new patients to the attending physician. Presentations are followed by discussions related to the problems which the patient presents. Bedside teaching is supplemented by daily noon conferences and biweekly residents' rounds. In the Medical Outpatient Clinic the student has the opportunity to treat and follow patients over a period of time. The Department of Medicine is composed of a full complement of senior staff physicians in all divisions. In addition there are twenty-eight fel'ows in medicine. three chief residents. thirty-three assistant residents and twenty- six interns. The student works closely with the senior staff, resident and intern as a unit in which there is free interchange of ideas. P.-XGIT 43 SURGERY CLARENCE E. GARDNER, JR., M.D., CHAIRMAN PAGE 44 b '-443, wif vi '- Im. I , 9 1 1 'ef Q 1 ,. Qw- Eg, t . : 7 ,. : X 4 4 . 3 1 - 41 hs 5 6 4 'fx fd y ' 1, f .,., ,au fl 3?f'f' . ! 7Wt1 V A f , 49 1 1 1 , Q '75 T1,4 1 2 If 4' , Y. .1 I 'J , , 1 1 J J 1- 'J 'J f ,- F , , E 3 P: Z C .1 1 ,. ,. Nl 2 E : T3 cr: U U U 1- 'S ': Q- 1- i x.1 U E T NJ w - A 'I .1 CJ TJ. ,- .ff 3 2 1- .1 ,- .1 C 1 C 4 2 5 : .L 1 1 .1 f ,- .EQ 1- .1 if ,. .2 1 'J 1 'J 'J Z 'J 1 1 I -.1 f 1- .1 -1 .1 E 11 , L1 1 1 J' Z 1 1 '- .1 .1 r- 1. 1 1 NJ Ii f C 1 .C 'J U sd TJ .4 . -J LIT A f C 11. - 1- U F- - 5 : I L! .E LJ x f Z x : Q .- A 4 S 3 ,l, -lf JJ 'J 1 I P 'J 'J I -vi .. 3: f D 3 : 'f E :L f 5: ,- ,- J A :J I' U F' J. U ZJ U A A ,- .1 Z sd f C zz 1.9 U f : : f! -1 1 1 1- .1 ,- .1 ..- i U A . -. U U CJ 7 LZ A U r- C.. 11 .4 Z .C LJ 2 -IJ -L DIVISION OF NEUROSURGERY Left to right. Seated: J. Jackson: B. Nasholdg G. L. Odom. Chief: B. Woodhallg G. Tindall. Standing: R. Viethg H. Cuppg M. Mahaleyg H. Dukesg S. Kim. DIVISION OF ORTHOPAEDICS 321 I Q ie..f? W W I an ,t W 4 . M f . Left to right, First row: F. Bassett: I. Robertsg O. Stewartg W. Jones. Second row: R. Pruittg H. Aidemg R. Swearingeng P. Kyne G. Kingg E. Freedleg A. Sallasg I. Dilworthg J. Bell. Standing: E. Buggg F. Clippingerg L. D. Baker, Chiefg J. Goldnerg R. Coon- radg J. Glasson. Left to right: O. Dabbertg Kapoorg F. Stellingg L. Myerg G. Blincowg D. McCollum. IFXCEIC 46 DIVISION OF OPHTHALMOLOGY .1 f A ,II if f W N tN.f ig MfSJv,W Left to right, Seated: J. Creighton. J. Smithg Banks Anderson. Chief: J. Whelissi A. Hudnell. Standing: B. Anderson. Jr.: A Johnson. D. Richmang C. Mitchellg W. Hunter. O O DIVISION OF TOLARYNG LOGY Left to right. Front row: H. Lefkoffz Watt W. Eagle. Chief. Back row: P. Kenang E. King: A. Mumford: J. Turner. irxmi 47 DIVISION OF PLASTIC SURGERY Left to right, First row: F. Kessefg J. Adamsong Kenneth Pickrell, Chiefg N. Georgiadeg R. Ormandyg G. Matton. Second row A. Eiringg S. Cooleyg J. Heidg W. Huger: M. Maatong E. Pound. Third row: J. Leeg R. Fuquhar. DIVISION OF UROLOGY I.efI First row: I. Semamsg E. P. Alyeu, Chiefg J. Glenng B. A!anisg J. Deesg V. Politano. Second row: H. Parishg M. Mcx gang R. Macaulayg B. I-'loydg J. Richardsong J. Johnson. 1-AGE 48 DIVISION OF ANESTHESIOLOGY 4 W' . Q 1 ,- as .4 t Mimi -. i,,. W' . -Lf e if A in A its X W' Left to right. First row: W. North: P. Knoxg S. Dent: C. R. Stephens. Chiefg K. Hallg V. Vartanian. Second row: J. Gillespiz W. Searsg M. Williamsg J. Mobleyg S. Culpepperg E. Coffman. Third row: C. Hartsellg P. Kemmerly: T. Collawn: M. Edmonds: E. Lozanog J. Throwerg J. Workmang J. Barro. Since Dr. Hart has become President-pro-tempore of the University, Dr. Clarence Gardner is present chairman of the Department of Surgery. The surgical service and surgical specialties of Duke Hospital operate a resident system of training wherein the responsibility for the man- agement of ward patients lies primarily with the resident staff under the supervision of the Senior Staff. One year appointments are available to approximately eighteen in- terns in surgery each year. who then may elect to enter the residency training program. It is the purpose of the resi- dency training program to provide security for the competent individual seeking surgical training and to pro- vide for steady progression after the initiation of the senior assistant residency. In anesthesiology the residency consists of close'y supervised teaching and instruction is supplemented by three seminar sessions per week. During the second year of training a research project is encouraged. Neuro- surgery has a long program of advanced study devised to qualify the resident for his life's work. Work is done in the Neuro-Pathologic laboratory. Organic neurology. neu- roanatomy and Electro-Encephalography. The program is headed by Dr. Guy Odom. While the Ophtha'mology program is shorter than the neurosurgical one, Dr. Banks Anderson has established a program in Ophthalmology which matches it in teaching and research. Dr. Lenox Baker heads Orthopaedics and his program is arranged so that his men work in clinics throughout North Caro- lina as well as at the North Carolina Cerebral Palsy Hos- pital. The program is closely affiliated with the North Carolina Department of Health's Crippled Childrens Program. and with the Vocational Rehabilitation Program of the State. Dr. Baker works closely with Dr. Leonard Goldner who is chief of the division of hand surgery. Dr. Watt Eagle is present head of Otolaryngology. His program is aimed at securing qualification by the American Board of Otolaryngology. Special emphasis is given to diagnostic procedures including Endoscopy. Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery is under the guidance of Dr. Ken- neth L. Pickrell. This program is three years in length and is so devised to meet very rigid standards. Thoracic Surgery is under the direction of Dr. Will C. Sealy. The resident is given an opportunity to carry out major cardiac surgical procedures including those necessitating the use of extra-corporeal circulation. Dr. Edwin Alyea heads the Urology division. Like the other programs at Duke. half of the training period is spent at the V.A. Hospital. The trainees are well qualified for the American Board of Urology. The student need not feel he is left out. The student and the housestaff work hand in hand to care for the sick patient. As a Junior the student spends most of his time learning the principles of general surgery. The Senior. however. rotates through each subspecialty. The De- partment of Radiology also takes an active interest in the surgical student. Principles of radiation are intergrated into both clinical years. The student may attend diversi- fied conferences and is encouraged to undertake a re- search project during his senior year. PAGE 49 UBSTETRICS and GYNECQLQGY FRANCIS BAYARD CA D CHAIRMAN xcl SU Left to right. First row: Y. Cultong R. Williamsong B. West. Second row: S. Massadg L. Haimg G. Wilbanksg C. Crenshawg R. Ellington. Third row: S. Atkinsong C. Jones: J. Gloverg M. Courieg T. Whiteg H. Clarkeg R. Parker. Fourth row: F. B. Carter. Chairman: C. Peeteg E. Hambleng W. Thomasg W. Cuyler. As a sophomore. the medical student receives in- struction in the fundamentals of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Endocrinoogy as part of the integrated course in Clinical Diagnosis. The technique of gynecologic ex- amination is demonstrated and practiced in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinic. In the Junior year the student rotates as a clinical clerk on the OB-GYN wards and Outpatient Clinic. In the clinic he participates in the general gynecology clinics. Endocrine Clinic, abnormal obstetric clinic and Tumor Clinic. In addition he participates in the care of obstetri- cal patients who are being fol'owed by the clinic service. The student consults with a member of the senior staff on each new gynecology or obstetrics patient that he sees in the clinic. He has the opportunity to attend numerous clinic conferences held by the OB-GYN Department and by allied specialty services. On the ward service the student works up and follows obstetrics and gynecology patients. He assists at the surgery of all gynecology pa- tients and participates in the patient's postoperative care. He follows his obstetric patients through their period of labor. assists at their de'ivery and participates in their postpartum care. As the student progresses in skill and ability he is allowed to assume increasing responsibility at deliveries. The student also attends ward rounds each week and presents his patients to members of the senior staff. mor Sl PEDIATRICS JEROME SYLVAN HARRIS, MD., CHAIRMAN IVXILI, 52 , 'dt 909' n 5 ,Zi w nf' E Left to right, Standing: W. Delvlariap M. Spach. Seated: J. Arena: J. Harris. Chairmang Dcesg R. Stempfel. The medical student is first introduced to the Depart- ment of Pediatrics in his first year when he received in- struction in normal growth and development and in patterns of behavior. During the course in Pediatrics in either his Junior or Senior year. the student spends half of his time on the Pediatric Inpatient Service and the other half on the Clinic Service. Students participate in the afternoon general medical pediatric clinics. in the morning subspecialty c'inics and the well baby clinics. seeing both new and return patients. ln the clinic, there are weekly conferences on hematology. metabolism. neu- rology, cardio-renal diseases, allergy. convulsive disorders. behavior problems, endocrinology and well baby care. The student has the opportunity to present patients in these conferences and participate in the discussion of the problems which they present. Consultations are available to the student on all of his patients. both new and return. On the wards, the student assists as a clinical clerk and is assigned patients in rotation. He makes daily rounds on all ward patients each day with the housestallf Pediatric nursing procedures are demonstrated by the nursing super- visor. The different subspecialty groupsgcardiologi. hematology. allergy. endocrinology. dermatology and metabolism-make ward rounds weekly. A joint con- ference with the senior and resident stall' is held twice weekly on topics of pediatric interest. There is a weekly radiology conference at which all interesting cases of the week are presented and discussed with the radiologist. At present the Pediatric Inpatient Service is located on Welch Ward until reconstruction and expansion of Hou- land Ward is completed. The new Howland Ward will have fifty beds and over twelve bassinets. There will be a conference room. student work room. intern on-call room. doctors' otiice and new student laboratory. The hematology laboratory and a pediatric cardiac catheriza- tion laboratory will be part of the new facility. moi 5. PSYCHIATRY 'WN W EWALD W. BUSSE, MD., CHAIRMAN more S4 -pu-0 , 'J-' fi Z Z ,--1 wal Left to right, First row: Obrist: Green: Silver: Lowenbach: Bressler: Rhoads: Busse: Dai: Llewellyn: Hohman: Preiss: Turk: Brown Cohen: Meiller. Second row: Lakin: Hin: Dovenmuehle: Choen: Cobb: Newman: Nichols: Reckless: lrigaray Wong: Sinverman. Bromberg: Meiller: Jeffers: Huse. Third row: Long: MacDonald: Thompson: Altrocchi: Marshall: Carter: Graham: Gingras: Cox: Goldbloomg Feather: Lertora: Heyman. Fourth row: Salmon: McCombs: Tomlinson: Tetrault: Wertz: Dobbs: Barnes: Fleis- chaker. Fifth row: Cox: Jones: Turner: O'Shaughnessy: Spring: Thompson. In the first year instruction by the Department of Psychiatry is devoted to personality development. maturing and aging. and the effect of the environment upon the individual. Small group discussions follow the clinical demonstration of normal children, adults and patients. In the second year the student is given his first opportunity to observe and work with psychiatric patients. It is during this time that interview techniques are developed. The student studies the common mental mechanisms. the topography of the mind and the concept of the uncon- scious. In his third year the student is assigned as a clinical clerk to the In-Patient Service at Duke and the V.A. Hospital and to the Psychosomatic Service of the De- partment. During this time he comes in contact with patients who have a wide range of emotional disorders. The student follows the therapy and management of each of his patients. It is the objective of the Department of Psychiatry to bring to the medical student the basic information which he requires to comprehend his role in the community as a physician. to understand his relationship with patients. to appreciate the impact of disease upon the patient and final- ly to provide him with the knowledge of interviewing techniques and psychotherapeutic skills which can be utilized in the general practice of medicine. In addition to an active psychiatry In-patient and Out-patient service. the department provides the Psychosomatic Medical Service for the Hospital in which the psychiatrist works with the other services in providing care for the patient with a psychosomatic problem. I' xoii 55 RADIGLOGY ROBERT J. REEVES, MD., CHAIRMAN mon 50 Q I it 5 35? 90 K. Q. it L w 4 1, .gif fP i . .Q ...mv L it . . I 7 'W it sg Q2 'W . ' V '21 .2 .' A 4 f ,A f 5 1 ' 5 Left to right, Front row: J. Goree, G. Bayling Robert J. Reeves, Chairman: W. Barry: B. Worde. Second row: E. Shull: A. Sanders: J. Redmond, P. Cappg D. Barton. Third row: B. Klostermyerg C. Smith: J. Reinhardtg J. Proliittg A. Thorne: J. Mylesg K. Wallace. Radiology teaching begins in the first year. X-rays are made of anatomy cadavers and these are studied by students during dissection. Radiologic discussions are presented to section groups. In the second year, student groups get further sectional training. An attempt is made to acquaint the student with the aids of roentgenology in diagnostic problems. In the clinical years the correct use of x-rays in diagnosis is stressed. This year the new Radiation Therapy wing was com- pleted and opened. This is a sixteen room addition to the Department of Radiology and will house the entire radia- tion therapy, cancer teaching and cancer research portion of the department. Two supervoltage rooms are equipped, one with a 3000 curie Cobalt 60 machine, the other with a Cesium 137 unit. The radium unit is complete with housing facilities and working area for 1000 milligrams of radium or C060 equivalent. In addition to examining rooms and viewing rooms there is a lecture hall in which tumor clinics and student conferences are held. A complete radioisotope laboratory facility is available for the diagnostic and therapeutic applications of radioiso- topes. Radio-iodine is used routinely in the evaluation of thyroid function and in the treatment of hyperthyroidism and thyroid carcinoma. Other isotopes are also used clinically. A training program in the physics. radiation protection, routine handling. and application of radioiso- topes in medicine is a part of the Radiology Residents Program. Therapeutic radiology is given each quarter in the Senior year. Tumor clinics run throughout the year. At these sessions the general problem of the treatment of benign, inflammatory and malignant lesions by X-ray and radium is discussed. The student is able to follow his patients from a'l services as they undergo therapy for tumors. PXGE 57 DIVISIQN OF ENDOCRINCLOGY E : , 1 5 3 FRANK L. ENGEL, MD., DIRECTOR tv L7 1' . A V Left to right, Seated: H. Lebovitzg J. Schmidtg E. Whiteg R. Porlwoodg Frank Engel. Director: E. Hambleng R. Stempfel: J. Kostyo: H. McPhersong R. Parker. Second row: H. Clarkeg F. Garciag R. Packmang G. Onghenag W. Blackardg M. Ballg C. Snipesg I. Hanssumg G. Irag S. Osterhoutg L. Zabala. The Division of Endocrinology was organized by Dr. E. C. Hamblen, now Emeritus Director, in 1936 as a division of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. In 1955 it was reorganized as an integrated service with a staff drawn from several clinical and preclinical depart- ments. Dr. Frank Engel now directs the activities of the Division. Its objective is to give comprehensive training in basic and clinical endocrinology and metabolism par- ticularly at the postgraduate level. Although individual senior staff members have their own special clinical and research programs. the division is organized so that clinics. conferences, ward rounds and seminars are participated in as joint ventures by the entire staff. The endocrine laboratory and its services are available to all members of the staff equally. Resident physicians from Medicine. Obstetrics and Gynecology and Pediatrics rotate through the Endocrine Division. At any one time there are usually four residents assigned to the division. Clinical and re- search fellows and trainees are assigned to individual senior staff members. depending on their major interest. but all participate essentially equally in the clinics. teaching rounds. and conferences. The Endocrine Clinic meets three mornings and the Metabolism-Diabetes Clinic one morning each week. All fellows have the opportunity to attend these clinics and in addition the clinical fellows assist in the care of the private patients with endocrine and metabolic disturbances in- cluding diabetes. An endocrine conference is conducted weekly. In addition. each supporting service has special conferences. lectures and seminars of endocrine interest which are available to the statf and students. P xor 59 L L ., , , X ix uzlu - -:-' 1. ' --v- X X J? pi aw., - x 'A' A , ,,,. V , f 3 ,,,A . QQ 3 W ' ' 3' xi an , - I ,,.. will i I - ' v-A , . , M-W www W., ,,,,,4 f ww 'M W ww' V W my - 4 Q ' , , A . ' , D i i- ',.A' -z b 'mv' mv' wp.-.UV Mwfiw? 4'5- ' Qi, 'Ti 1 92+-W Mwv! WW? 4 ,ft 0 H V ,Ark ,Q ,,,. 09' 2 Xml, Z' , ' 1.9, 4 'yn V., , J,i ,9 ' I A , IV ,, 5 ,, 4- ,VAF J I . . '51, sl' . +7 '7?T On thc following paigcs are pruscntcd whut we consider to bc some of thc highlights ol' four yours at Duke University Mcdical Ccntcr. ll is ll pic- torial essay dcdicutcd to . . . THE ST DE AND Tl-IE H0 PITAL THE FIR T YEAR 'l'ake Mr' to Your lmczzler lfxfsl KQ 1 Senior Larry Thompson Instructs Freshmen Medical Students in Anatomy You can work yourself to the bone in tlzix damn coznxven N el' A5 Pwr CG This course is designed to teach you how to treat sick mitachondria xcal-1 64 it 2 Dr. Kamen instructs .students in biochemistry MQW 'if if awww 22 Aerial view of Duke H0sp1'tczl PMQIQ 65 THE SECDND YEAR in Mike Rubiwn and Randy Vanderbeek as budding bac'leri0I0gist.s'. IVXRI 66 Q52 5. ,I . . . . It's all in my book-all you ever need to know Dr. J. C. Sleeper teaches the proper art of uuscultcztion PAGE 67 '-ww., N-X I wouldrft let you operate on my dog xmi 68 We sweat and strain for dear old M.E.N.D 'ky Q- Qu- at W - 4' After the first two years the O.P.C. opens its doors to the student KCI AND THEN THE CLINICAL YEARS ' 6wlB'-MX sz., ii f.. 1' 'mr-'H , 1, ' g, ,v I 1 ,-Q, 4, a rf, r wi? X N ,.. ,..,.. , - 3 , A 3, ,Si V ' ::,4a 2- ,.z ..,x V g , ,ky df v--W www ,. A ' W f A 4, yt M A Mypka- lf kg 4 V. 4, My f V , ' Q :ggi 1 Z , 3 .M . . gf , , 4 w wifi , ffM.M,g. Q A, Q -Xu f S 2 J z iff A s 8 1 W. I , 'N s , ? J - i if fs! - Q . i 'ww 255' ,M ,A I k , .. fvfwf 6 E M. xx ,Aflww - ! ff . f ' gg 1 4VJ Wm, A H35 H. ,X fv-, 'R h , ,,f 'ff W 1i'ivf, , x if Y Zf IV .. if A . I f , ,.,, :- -W -Wrifwww.. Ward rounds on Osler with Dr. Whelan , - 1, , .. ' Mix 7. J 4 . 4 X ,, 2, tj 4 luxcslv, 72 Vinegar and water is a much better douche that Lys0l 5--f Dr. Hans Lowenbaclz confers with an Army P.s'ycl1ic1triAs'r WYE xxx . . ,RN Medical P.D.C'. I z Z' 3 f V ' i Gul 6 Bob Ridcfr and Dudley Price examine a parient in Orthopaedic Clinic iw A fzmrse never smiles gnvnnlv J' Till Lybuss and Hurry Trantlzam in Medical O.P.C 7' 504 i ,flf, V 4 711 . .vi-'Q fs sw .fl f Qi 11,-,can 75 1? fwfr-..., ?aM,12L2-,qw -ixcslc 76 4' Senior students taking their elective in Radiology W' J Q , .N E 5 5, ,., ,, 4 ,, I .4f y. A Er... K W f , , f , ff L 4, ,A 2 5 . ff' , we 4 fn pf , : 4-5 I 'Z fi x' ,7 15 fn fp, it ' ff f l W , A . h ' ,V ,, , X I V A awww Dr. Demaria demonstrates' a pediatric patient Examination of the eye in Dukefv study on aging X f IV-XG! K ff vggmazywyi f ,Q'ymzsa2w ,V , ff M,4..f, '11fm1-w , ,,f,f '1 ual' 78 My You he .vure to tell me if ir hurts I r The student is very vital to the Mea'ic'c1l Center -Old Proverb. Ast YV' x e- N' .A x t 'em - .- X. . H SSP? ' ' ' ' 'X -,Q . ' '. ,.f'f fe e Kham... Dr. Goldner and Friend PXILI 7 PHARMACY , g A'. iA That nice man in the white Coat told me I Could get something for vornicking here 1? Just remember to squeeze that bag 111 'UQ B A 1 f No Johnny, that is not a picture of C1 medical student! AGE 4 aL iq J The Emergency room Does this tickle? PACE!-, 82 Ughz fniiilllialfl f f J D 'A b n- ' 5 . , ,X ' Q: ', 1 f ' f I ,f,,4, 3 V' Lf-f, , z,'- w 1 .WW cf In 1 if gun. pw I-f ' , gum lf .1 if , fa .1 w. ,, The end of the road xcsr 8 1 a ,Q , , . 1 Y .nf ' - ' . I W 1 1 V Q w . 2 f nf.- .4 N 4 1 ,M Q , 4,44 4-- W. ,hi fl, 4 x xy, v Q Q - ', 'X , I I s 4' , X.-QA., 1 , , 6 A 4 . s ,x 4 , , -wg 4 ' . f-1'-aw ' f X A. Y .av , Q 'fy' ,lf Q ' six N wi . 4 T x x . 5 . ' Mi' ' 'KJ H ' Q 2 -X, '- , s A 4,4 7 1 wife? aff, , RL, f ,f , 'M I-'Q wf'f v5' Alf , ,XJ , vy. ,ww .me x . Q. .SN Q , ,Q zfffc' 1, ',-, , ,, mf Jfw., ., mm A, AY 4 ,a , 1 Y ' J , ,.. QQ' ix 's wi' QZZEP f pa .MM 5 'I' J 1 v . Y F 4 ff. 502 A , , 'ini 221. V ,ma ,lf 4 AND P A R A M E D I C A L S Seated: McBryde. A.: LaPolla. J.3 Feagin. J.g Waddell. W.: Warden. W.: Standing: Lanning, J.: Herring. H.g Good- ing. R.: Holmes. L.3 Yowell. R.3 Kramer. R.g Lewis, A. STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION The Medical Student Government Association. to which each member of the student body belongs. functions as the olhcial organization of the students in dealing with the university administration. medical school faculty. hospital administration. and national and state medical groups. lt administers the Honor System and serves as an appellate court for alleged traffic violations by med- ical students. The SGA sponsors three dances yearly for the Duke Medical Center. The SGA is the sponsoring body of The Duke Aesculapianf' lt has had provided and has furnished a Student Lounge and at Christmas added a television set to this haven of relaxation The SGA was organized in l94l. By 1944 a movement was begun to have medical students affiliate with the American Medical Association and in 1957 the Student American Medical Association was incorporated as a part of SGA. Pacers 86 Other accomplishments of SGA include making CPC protocols available before the presentationsg making avail- able in the library information concerning internships, externships and other summer jobs. S.G.A. OFFICERS Pl'6.Yllll'lIf.' John A. Feagin .S'ec'rc'Iu1'y.' William B. Waddell Treus1n'ffr.' Martin A. Hatcher Senior Class P1'CSltll'llf.' James J. LaPolla SC'lIllll' Clriss Represcflilutii'c's.' Robert K. Yowell, Andrew M. Lewis. Jr. Junior' Class Pl'8.S'llI'l'llf.' William S. Warden Junior Class RC'l7l'C'SC'l'llllfll'US.' James Watson, Richard S. Kramer Soplmnzore Class President: Angus M. McBryde, Jr. Soplznmore Class Represe11mtives.' Thomas P. Graham, Jr., Lewis B. Holmes f'll'C'.S'l1Hlllll Class Pl'l'.S'llll.'l1I.' Joseph R. Lanning I-'rzfslinzcin Cluss Represenmtive.s'.' Ronald S. Gooding, Herbert .J. Herring Farmer. Raymond McBryde. Angus Waddell. William Hogan. Leo STUDENT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Organized in 1957 the Student American Medical OH-ici-.las 1960-ol Association is the affiliating organization with the na- tional student organization. The journal of the SAMA is The New Physician . It is issued monthly with ar- ticles of particular interest to students. interns and resi- dents. The Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Co. under- writes a SAMA Life insurance plan available to all mem- bers. Activities of service have increased since its inception. In 1959 a reduced white-coat laundry was begun. and an exam file was made available. A textbook exchange was set up. In the fall of 1960 a Medical Student Di- rectory was printed and distributed. A dinner meeting to which all interns from all the non-teaching hospitals throughout North and South Carolina and all senior medical students from Duke Medical Schoo'. the Medical School of the University of North Carolina and Bowman Gray School of Medi- cine was held at which time an open panel discussion of the available internships. the why and wherefors of the smaller hospital internships and the problems of such hos- pitals in obtaining interns was held. Pra.sidc11r.' James Watson I'1'c'r'-prvsiz1'w1I: Leo B. Hogan. Jr. SL't'I'6'ffll'-V.' Angus M. lNlcBryde. Jr. T1't'llSIlI'f'I'.' Raymond M. Farmer NuIio11uIS.-IAI.-l Pf'v.s'1'zlw11.' William B. Waddell ai fi . ,-' reef PAGE 87 DUKE MEDICAL DAMES The Duke Medical Dames was organized in the early 1940's by Mrs. Charles Sweat as a social or- ganization for the wives of students and interns. Due to the increasing number of married students it is now open only to the wives of students. Since 1957 Mrs. Deryl Hart has been the faculty sponsor. The purposes of the Medical Dames are to pro- vide an opportunity to gain insight into the role of the doctor's wife in community service, to grow intellect- ually along with their husbands, to obtain information SENIOR MEDICAL DA MES about interesting avocations, and to meet and getac- quainted with one another socially. Projects during 1960-61 have included aid to the Mary O. Cowper Nursery School by mending books, dressing dolls, and making puppets. A bake sale was held in the fall providing funds for a Christmas dance. Typing for medical school organizations and a gradua- tion exercise for the Senior Medical Dames were other activities. PAGE 88 Hammond, Peggy Harrington, Becky Kistler, Janet Johnson, Bettie Ann Jervey, Pat Lazenby, Gail Lewis, Gladys Lyon, Dede Mattison, Jean Merlo, Ann Hall, Ellen Feagin, Martha Goodwin, Jean Banton, Bootsic ElRamey, Gayle Poole, Jean Pitkethly, Susan McTammany, Helen McLean, Meade Ray, Peggy PAGE 89 Schwartz, Bobbie Schmickcl, Lota Smith, Jo Wilemon, Lou Thompson, Mary Lou Rider, Wanda MEDICAL DAMES QFFICERS Pre.s'idwzt.' Janet Kistlcr Project Chairman: Mary Frances Price, Shirley Liakos Fir-If Vff'3fI9 f'-Yfflfflf-' Lynn Baxley Publicity Chc1i1'mc1l1.' Susan Pitkethly Sef'f 'd V'f'f l9 f'-5 flf 'V Betty Waddell C lass R6l7l'6'SE'l1l'lJIl'V6'S.' Senior: Dede Lyon, Junior: S6'C'l'0fClI Y.' Frances McMillan Trea.s'urer: Kaye Cline , SAMA Sec'retary.' Betty Farmer Kay Llakos' Jean Nicks, Sophomore: Gray Long, Freshman: MEDICAL DAMES SOCIAL FUNCTIONS imma 90 JUNOIR MEDICAL DAMES Magcndantz, Nancy Taylor, Carolyn Grant, Ann Waddell, Betty Martin, Shirlcy McFadden, Ann Woods, Shirley Nicks, Jean Conna, Mary Lou Baumann, Nancy Ralph, Sissy Baxley, Lynn Gebel, Barbara Croft, Ann Lunas, Jill Sime, Betty FRESHMAN MEDICAL DAMES Slaughter, Betsy Green, Betsy Chase, Anne Hall, Jane Dobson, Anne Liakos, Kay Harris, Janice SOPHOMORE MEDICAL DAMES Kohler, Judy Goldston, Rosa Lee Cline, Kay Young, Anne Carlton, Mimi Lucey, Shirley McBryde, Jane Holmes, Leslie Bolton, Janie Jones, Jan McMillan, Frances Banta, Neil Vanderbeek, Patti Robison, Mahala Graham, Carol Ann Psxor 91 :mms-wi is-gwzsifya v- 5 M' - mb ' 'T , X A 1 - wx 246 -N. f wa f x f . 'M Q . . f Q2 ki M 1 Q f MM ww f X X ba HALL. HAMMOND QxJ!!.!4 Zfg. t K ff JERVEY f 5 r 114 .Q-f,7,m-V W :Q cf A LY QB XS V , WWI' , , , ,ly V QQ . RALPH Our Queen', lby 19 write-in votesj ON Mc 'llx x1x1AxNY Q0 ,Q V . fiqfffv' I , Kg, 5:31, M , 14, K , - r v W F M 'A X W: 1- E MUN 5 ,fn Q 4 ff, gm Lf x 'M K we ' mga Am , wwf, 6 ggi? ,. ,M , ,. V , PLTKETHLY YES ., IQ 4 i. Nh, G 4 f E 4:-47 'K ,O J f . XEZQ QA f ,a ' . ', 1 gfv' :ig Sxunu 3 W KISTLER M is ix ex ff 2 is N-' as I-X . 5 , 2 - fx L ,Qi - s , x Q. 'S 1.1 . I if ,- W, W ,V PITKETHLY ,, THO M PSON' .nv fs., Blumwx Wiliam? Ax an 0' .,. 'nr' Q x A 1 I 1'1 I COX 'Ns X 11.55 is V S we an 'Q-at i h ir af tit gt , 933 Seated: Carlson, Sue: Roebken, Anng Pope. Nancyg Seaton. Carolg Standing: Hogsed, Clydeg Mraz. Bettyg Porter. Joanneg King, Penny: Spring, Faye. SANTA FILOMENA Santa Filomena is the Senior honorary society 3. Show recognized qualities of leadership or of Duke University School of Nursing. Its pur- have made some contribution to the better- pose is to recognize achievement and promote ment of the SCh001OfNuf5ing. leadership' New members are Publicly tapped at Santa Filomena strives to serve its school. Be- the May meeting of the Student Government As- . . cause all proceedings and ceremonies except tap- sociation. They are selected from the rising Senior . A , , . . ping are secret, it may serve the school in ways class, and must fulfill the tollowmg three require- that other organizations cannot. ments: l. Maintain aB 43.03 or better average through- Santa Filomenais Color is White? its Howerf a Oulthc first twg ygarsh white carnationg its pin a small gold Florence 2. Demonstrate superior nursing ability. Nightingale lamp. Mari O4 'fw- pim' Ui f, fx 3. Qi S A as fx.. :QL sf' . :ages vs sw: -im Fgiiuififxfr . l m .yr .1751 ,I . r lf, fs fs KW. I -., . .3 sc I X TZ 9 X X.. Martin. A. Lybass. T. G. Mcl.ain. l.. VV. Flanagan. I.. Behar. V. ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA Alpha Omega Alpha is a national honorary medical society having as its purpose the promotion of high attilinments in scholarship. The fraternity was founded at the University of Illinois in 1902 by William W. Root as a protest against the lack of honesty and scholarly attainment of the stu- dents of that day. The number of chapters has gradually increased until at present there are over fifty-live groups in the leading medical centers in the United States and Canada. The Alpha Chapter of North Carolina was chartered in 1931 under the leadership of Dean W. C. Davison who is now the national president. The official faculty advisor for the Duke Chapter is Dr. E. S. Orgain. Many members of the Senior Staff and the House Stall' at Duke Medical Cen- ter are members of Alpha Omega Alpha. Q YQ E S WSW . STL Dr. li S. Orgain V 1 l'X!il 95 , 3 Q x Q-. K,,4 ,X i Levy, B.g Mattison, J., Mclzaughin. J., Brown, S.g Evans, 1.3 Advisor, Rev. H. C. Wilkinson. CABGT SOCIETY Sensing the need for an understanding of the spiritual as well as the physical aspects of illness, several medical students decided to invite some of their medical elders to speak at periodic lunch- eon meetings on various subjects. These meet- ings proved helpful and interest in them grew, with the result that in the fall of 1952 the Cabot So- ,1,. , , , ' . Q, ' , W 'AEE ., ,A.,, ,. - , , 4 3 - v f' 4 . it 'i is W fr www. Dr. Hohman meets with Cabot Society 1 M ii 96 ciety was organized to extend and stabilize the program. Dr. Richard C. Cabot, for whom the society is named, was Professor of Medicine at Harvard. It was his conviction, and in the conviction of the Society, that the patient should be treated as a total person. The Cabot Society is informal in or- ganization, having no formal member- ship and being administered by a steer- ing committee of interested students. All medical students and related personnel are cordially invited to the Cabot Meet- ings which are in the form of by-weekly dinner-discussions held in the Private emfm HY! tw- Dining Room of the Men's Graduate Center. 51 r I -.P 1! EQ PHI CHI DANCE, FALL 1960 Pl-ll Cl-ll A loosely knit organization, Phi Chi exists at Duke as a social fraternity, the purpose of which is to provide entertainment for the medical stu- dents. Cabin parties and informal dances are held at monthly intervals throughout the year. Fall activities are open to freshmen and in early spring new members are initiated. A Founders Day ban- quet is held in May of each year. Phi Chi is a national medical fraternity founded in 1889 at the University of Vermont Medical School. Delta Upsilon Chapter was char- tered at Duke in 1930. This chapter has the largest membership in the nation at present. - , , A: 1 ' 5 ,M X . . I6 Eiffktxv : 1 7 ?TeH,eefear 'est swigv i X ef' D I ' Q52 .f ,Tjf . 'Y . 5 Morris. Jg Davis. BQ Atkinson. S. I' XGI PAC 12: STAFF STUDENTS Kaiser, H.: Burnett, C.g Abrams, W.: Flanagan. E.g Ussher, CSittingJ Van Camp, M., Salley, L.g Dowling, M.3 Doby, C.g D, Peakeg Federchuck, B.g t2nd. rowl Schmidt, B., Perkins, Mayer, R.: tStandingJ Graves, E., Syms, K.g Lewis, S., L.g Lalinde, L,g Horton, G.: Gibbs, C.: Patton, J., Landrum, Von Armin. C-3 Gfabski. L3 Martin, M.: Haley. D. T.3 Warner, N. PHYSICAL THERAPY The physical therapist upon referral from a physician administers electrical and manual tests to the patient that assist in establishing a diagnosis, prognosis, or determining the patient's physical em- ployment potcntial. The physical therapist instructs the patient and his family in the use of exercises, crutches, wheel chairs, and their adaptation to the home environment. Applications of heat, light, ultra sound, electricity, and Water also are used in the physical therapy management of disease and injury. The fifteen month's program in physical ther- apy at Duke University Medical Center includes . f ' 'lit -- . - I-. X ,f , f if W W' f ? , yy courses in the basic sciences such as human anat- omy and physiology, psychology related to physical handicap, ethics, administration and physical ther- apy procedures. The final three months students gain clinical experience in the physical therapy department of Duke Hospital and afliliating in- stitutions. Applicants for the course must have earned a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college prior to admission, or make arrangements to receive a degree upon completion of the course. Prerequisites include courses in the biological, physical and behavioral sciences. ff A certificate is granted on com- pletion of the fifteen months pro- gram and the graduate is eligible to become a member of the Amer- Physical Therapists at Work I2 98 ican Physical Therapy Association and to take state and national licens- ing and registration examinations. 1 2 4 1 F 1 if 5, ii e'-x Ol l. - V S ' v s fzf fy! if -fail 1 5 ffl Qff, is Q D ,M , r I s is . , :',. QA? .V .Wy . .ff . Lockhart. M.: Winn. A.: Hodge. C.: Cahoon. J.: Watts. J.: Pangle. R.: Rouse. N.: llnd, rowl Arena. M.: Davis. li: Jones. S.: Malone. R.: Thompson. S.: Hobgood. L.: Hay, B.: Fletcher. S. X'RAY TECHNGLQGY The Duke University Medical Center's School of X-Ray Technology offers a two year training program of instruction and practical experience in all divisions of radiology. Students receive in- tensive training in the academic and practical as- pects of radiographic, therapeutic and radio-isotope techniques. Classroom and practical floor work as well as night and emergency Work is required. Candidates of admission must be graduates of approved high schools. Courses in physics, chem- istry, biology, physiology, and anatomy are helpful in preparation for a career in x-ray technology. Upon completion of the course the student is eligible for the national board examination spon- sored by the American Registry of X-ray Tech- nicians. P.xG1i KN 'QW ww 1 -as 1 N fx 5 5 . ga 0 l if f ., A . . t , X . t I .,f ' f We 2- , t fr: , Iwi! -V 544 -, Q4 x lp Q e-I, It F ,wr f giz wk ii Y - :em3wSf'aQ. t fv- Q, ,,.f Y.52fF-,zwywff - - Sitting: Timmons. E.g Harlow. L.g Finnern. J.g Nittka. J.: Standing: Taylor. M.g Lupo. A.: Black, M.g Drozd, L. DIETETIC INTERNSI-HPS wi' Miss E. V. RATLIFF Director of Dietetics Ama IUO Duke Hospital opened in 1930 with a School of Dietetics. In the dietetic internship program at present the student is given special lectures by members of the medical stalf as well as classes in therapeutics and administration. In addition she participates in teaching student nurses and in gaining experience in pediatric work. Candidates for admission must have a bach- elor's degree from an accredited college or uni- versity with a major in foods and nutrition or institutional management. With the satisfactory completion of the intern- ship the student is eligible for membership in the American Dietetic Association. Baker. F.g Bryant, F.g Bracewell, K.g Whitfield. G.: Campbell, M.: Moody, A.: Blasing. L.: Nielson. F. NURSE ANESTHETISTS In the post-graduate course in anesthesia which is given at Duke Medical Center the student ac- quires the training, skill, and experience necessary to practice this important professional specialty. The department is well-equipped for the use of all accepted anesthetic agents and techniques. The management of caudal and spinal techniques is taught. Special attention is directed toward the use and effect of premedicant drugs, pressor drugs and analeptic drugs. Pre- and post-anesthetic pa- tient evaluation, as well as prevention and treat- ment of anesthetic complications receive empha- sis in this training regime. Training is given in anesthesia for: Neurosurgical, Plastic and Tho- racic Procedures. Attention is drawn to divisional organization and management. Student teaching ability is developed through her contact with younger members of the department. With this background, the student is equipped to accept the responsibilities required by the profession. Graduates are eligible for membership in the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists. PAGE 101 g. ...pw HMM Q-x fe'f.1:, ' 1 1-Q42 ., EA N,,,, if, 1 5 2 Q ,f 4 2 'ff 5 ' 3 'if'zf:ff? 2' gf In ,M ,W ' ' f V 12544 l 7 ? ' ,324 4 1' ' ' YQ M. T H E S T U D E N T B CD D f:A.A.Ji1PA1?l -1-in nur: :fx . -4 .- 1 A-1 1 THE ummm I Ama 104 SENIOR CLASS k,, Two SENIORS AT WORK ON THE WA RD MY COURSE on the history of medicine had ended. Facing me were a hundred and twenty- eight young men and women. There were pale faces and swarthy faces. students with dark, blond. or red hair, but throughout the entire group the same restless light shown in their young eyes. as if they had captured a spark from the sun. These freshmen of mine asked me to tell them what it means 'to be a doetorj' and I ended my course with this explanation: Ever since the day you first said those magic words, I want to be a doctor, you have been wrapped in the colorful fabric of the history of med- icine. a fabric woven from the ideals. wisdom. en- deavors. and achievements of our glorious prede- cessors in medicine. You have just embarked on a fascinating voyage leading to the harbor of one of the most dynamic professions. Year after year new windows will keep opening before your eyes. revealing the multifaceted landscape of medical art and science. But medicine today is so complex that no hu- man mind can possibly absorb it all. as was possible a few centuries ago. Only by using the history of medicine as a gigantic frame to contain what you learn is it possible to integrate the numerous fragments of medical theory and practice that will be taught you in your student years. Only through the history of medicine can one appreciate that to be a doctor, in the true sense of the word. is to be not only a wise man but, above all. a good man. To be a doctor is, in other words, to be a whole man, who fulfills his task as a scientist with fReprinted from MD Medical Newsmagazine, vol. IV. No. ll. by permission of the Publisher. IQDI TO BE A DOCTUR BY Flfl.lX Mmulwi-lisfirsiiaf, lVl,D. 'IOR-IN-Cllll I' Ole MID, llll, Ml lJlf'.Xl. Nl NN'SlN'lAl1A7lNl,,' l'ROFl:SSOR AND CHAIRMAN UF llll. lJl'l'AR'l MINT UF llll- HISIURY Ol' MlplJlC'lNl. NI'-.VV YORK MIIJICAL C0l.l,l,Gl', Fl.UWl1R AND l'IFlll .XVl'NUl' llOSPllAl.S Nl1W voiuc, N. Y. professional quality and integrity: as a human being. with a kind heart and high ideals, and as a member of society. with honesty and efliciency. Contemporary medicine is founded on a series of events that resulted from the thoughts and deeds of a few men in the course of history. History is made by men. and the greatest among the makers of history is the physician because of the effects of his ministry on all other human beings. Man is the only creature able to make tools with which to make other tools. and of all the tools made by him words are the most important. The fabric of medicine is woven with words that ex- press the ideas from which they sprang. The original meaning of the three words-physician, medic. doctor-that describe our profession is highly il- luminating. The word physician derives from the Greek plzyxis or nature. denoting that the phy- sician has his roots in an understanding of the nature of things, the word medic comes from nzederi, to heal. and the prefix med means to med- itate or think, so that medic is equivalent to thinker and healer: the word doctor originally meant master, instructor. Thus, semantically. our pro- fession involves learning. knowing, healing. and teaching. In its turn. the word medicine not only means what medical men do lmany of the great figures in medical history. such at Pasteur and Leeuwenhoek. were not physiciansj. but also denotes a social science that uses the methods of the natural sciences to attain four objectives: to promote health. to re- store health. to prevent disease. and to rehabilitate the patient. Every day. more and more. medicine becomes. PAGE 105 above all. the prevention of disease and the pro- motion of health. For only by knowing the healthy man can we cure him when he falls ill. Knowl- edge of the healthy man is obtained by studying our fellow beings. both the healthy and the dis- eased. not only in the morror of classical and mod- ern medical literature but also in current news- papers. You will then learn that poverty is still the main social cause of disease. just as it was in archaic times. The history of medicine epitomizes the history of civilization. The history of man has passed through three great stages: man learned to master nature by yielding to her laws: he learned to live in society by establishing the first communitiesg he acquired consciousness of his human dignity and of his ability to forge his own destiny. which in turn enabled him to acquire greatness. The physician in his threefold capacity, as a pro- fessional, as a member of society, and as a human being. has throughout history helped man in his physical. mental. and social ascent. As a professional man in particular, the physician has always acted as a healer. using magic, faith, impiricism, or ra- tional resources. as a knower, for he knows the secrets of nature and of the human beingg as a preventer. for he can arrest disease by forestalling its inroads before they developg and as an organ- izer. for he can guide society in fighting the his- toricosocial process called disease. To heal, to know, to prevent. to organize-these will be your four future spheres of professional activity. em- braced in the expression to be a doctor. To be a doctor. then, means much more than to dispense pills or to patch up or repair torn flesh and shattered minds. To be a doctor is to be an intermediary between man and God. You have chosen the most fascinating and dy- namic profession there is. a profession with thc highest potential for greatness, since the physicians daily work is wrapped up in the subtle web of his- tory. Your labors are linked with those of your colleagues who preceded you in history and those who are now working all over the world. It is this spiritual unity with our colleagues of all periods and of all countries that has made medicine so IMI lilo universal and eternal. For this reason we musl study and try to imitate the lives of the great doc- tors of history. Their lives, blazing with greatness. teach us that our profession is the only one that still speaks of its duties in this world of today. in which almost everyone else speaks only of his rights. An ideal of service permeates all our activities: service especialy to the patient. as a fellow creature isolated on the island of his suffering. whom only you can restore to the mainland of health. For that purpose you must know thoroughly not only the diseased but also the healthy. Your own contributions to medicine can begin even in the golden years of student life. There is no need to wait for your medical degree to start making medical history. Many physicians while still students made historic contributions to medical science: Vesalius. Stensen. Laennec, Remak, Freud, Best, men who believed in themselves and were dedicated to the profession you have chosen for your own. From now on your professional conduct must adhere to the moral code of medicine that began with the Hippocratic oath. Despite its negative as- pect in prohibiting a number of activities, the Hippo- cratic oath was not a law but a precept self-imposed by physicians who accepted an ideal of devotion and service enjoined by their moral conscience. Five types of ethical duties must guide your life: duties to your teachers. to society. to your colleagues. and to yourselves. You have duties to your teachers. because they. the parents of your mind. are the most important people in your life next to your own parents. I do not mean only your university professors. but any physician from whom you learn anything- his science, arts, ethics. self-denial. or example- that may become a source of inspiration in your professional life. You must honor your masters with devotion and friendship. for friendship is man's noblest sentiment, greater even than love. Your duty to society is to be idealists, not he- donists: as physicians, to accept your professions as a service to mankind, not as a source of profit, as investigators, to seek the knowledge that will benefit your fellow beings: as clinicians. to alleviate pain and heal the sick: as teachers. to share and spread your knowledge and always because you are imbued with an ideal of service and not the ambition for gain. Thus will you maintain the dignity of our profession as a social science applied to the welfare of mankind. Your duty to your patients will be to act toward them as you would wish them to act toward you: with kindness. with courtesy. with honesty. You must learn when and how to withhold the truth from your patients if by not telling them all the facts of the case you can relieve or console them. for you can cure them sometimes, and you can give them relief often. but hope you can give them always. Remember that a laboratory report is not an irrevocable sentence. A hematological determi- nation. a roentgenogram. an electroencephalogram may supply vital information on the organic work- ing of the body. but it is even more vital never to forget that. behind all such reports and data. there is a human being in pain and anguish. to whom you must offer something more than an antibiotic, an injection. or a surgical aid: you must. with vour attitude. your words. and your actions. inspire con- fidence and faith and give understanding and con- solation. To your colleagues you have the obligations of civilized men sharing a great and noble task and fighting for a common cause in a great crusade. prestige it enjoys. Hence. never speak ill of a colleague. since to do so would be the same as speaking evil of medicine and therefore of your own selves. If you have something good to say about a fellow physician. say it everywhereg if you have not, then keep silent. You belong to a team of gal- lant professionals of all races and eras. bound to- gether across the ages and continents by a glorious ideal. Finally. you will have obligations to yourselves. Every man in his youth forms an ideal profile of himself or of what he wants to bc. He envisions. while young. an ideal program of things to do in life. The rest of his life is spent trying to fill in that profile with achievements. Some fail to reach fulfillment. and later it is tragic to see that ideal profile. ol' which they dreamed during their youth. in ruins. with the stumps of things begun but never completed. But in the majority of cases. that ideal silhouette created in youthful days really represents our true selves. You must live to be worthy of that silhouette. Your life. your work. and vou' personality as a physician must be such that your ideal profile of yourself will be filled in with brilliant achievements. Learn to live preceptively. using that key to wis- dom that comes from seeing everything with a total perspective and in view of eternity. Learn through science to correlate things in space. through history. to correlate events in time. and combine all this knowledge esthetically through the beauty of art. You are embarking on a noble career in which there is no room for amateurs or dilettanti. a career in which we must all aspire to be masters of what- ever we undertake. for the mistakes of medical car- penters and prescribers' apprintices can have tragic results. Remember that the important thing in life is to be great. not big. a great man. not a big man. Let your actions be great. but preserve your personal modesty and humility. What counts in a man and in a physician is his greatness. By greatness I mean grandeur in the things we do and simplicity in the way we do them. doing things that influence the lives of many people. but preserving always the greatest personal simplicity. For greatness is sim- plicity. Know how to feel yourself an important part of the deeds of history. Try to find out as soon as you can what your ideal self is. Try to be what you truly are: otherwise you will be nothing. Such was Pindar's theme: Be what thou art. Mans dignity rests in his ability to choose his destiny. You have chosen the best destiny of all. a life of dedicated service and dynamic activity. If you work with faith and without dismay. all your dreams will come true. In your future work you will be in good com- pany. The great physicians of history. the glorious P.-XG F figures of the past. will always be near you. When you perform a dissection, a red-bearded young man with hashing eyes, Andreas Vesalius, will be peering because if two eagles were to fly from any two points of the g'obe. sooner or later they would meet in Delphi. We now know that the two eagles of over your shoulder: when you make a physiological Science and medicine do not Hy only in Space but expenmem' the melancholy' pensive eyes of Wil' also in time, and their wings hover over the illustrious l'f Hz 'llb th' 1 h t h . . mm- . lrvey W' e Wa C mg ypu en you ea? shadows of the investigators, clinicians, educators, medicine, the venerable figure ot William Osler with his Apollonian head will come and sit like a medical ploneers' rebels' and martyrs of the history of med' Goethe beside youl and when you approach the icine. The meeting place of those two eagles lies Sickbed, the Shades of Hippocratess Sydenham, and not in space but in time, in the future, and in the Fleming will gather round to counsel you. The Greeks created the legend that Delphi, site of the famous oracle, was the center of the world, mind and the heart of every one of you who an- swered destiny's call to greatness when you decided to be a doctor? Look to this day! For it is life, the very life of life. In its brief course Lie all the varieties and realities of your existence. The bliss of growth, The glory of action, The splendour of achievement. For yesterday is but a dream And to-morrow is only a vision, But to-day well lived makes yesterday a dream of happiness, And every to-morrow a vision of hope. Look well, therefore, to this day! Such is the salutation to the dawn. Kalidasa IOS L if, I , Q. ff A. 'l'was the night after Christmas that I-'red wed his dear The rest might rhyme But we ean't print it here. Fred worked for the chemistry lab after hours and all hours . . . was a member oi the formidable Agre and Agre tennis team and it looks like they might become a Pedepod team, too. A thoughtful guy and fine eonversationalist, l-red was born in Great Neck. New York and received a BA from Lafayette College. J. M. A L A He doesn't have the hand of a woman. the heart of a lion. or the eye of an eagle but he'll probably turn out to be one of the country's best surgeons. Joe was born in Denver. Colorado and educated at Washington and Lee where he received a B. S. degree, Mickey has spent several months of his senior year on a fellowship in Surgery working in the dog surgery labs of Dr. Anlyan and Dr. Weaver. Joe will long be remembered as a very soft spoken young man who always complained about not having a date but always ending up with the best looking gal in the crowd. Joe plans to set up his surgical practice out in Colorado. Sam the Man. as he is commonly known, made many of us cognizant of the fact that there are rim Carolinas. Sam has been active in school affairs and has had his hands in everything. One of his fondest memories is Subinterning in Ob-Gyn. He was social chairman of Phi Chi also. Sam always had been a ladies' man. He even invited Miss America to his studio tc have her picture taken-and what's more he has the photographs to prove it. The years have mellowed Sam: his way with the women has smoothed outg and so has his scalp. He is married to Betty Ann and plan to live smoothly ever after. Tom enjoys the line things in lil'e. We are told that Tom used to be a Nocturnal Ornithologist with Birds of Paradise his specialty until he spied through his binoculars. a sign in the building across from the MGC which said, We are watching you, too, Tom Bantonf' Tom also remembers being reprimanded for addressing one of Forbus' finest as a Pathological Surgeon. Tom is presently interning in Surgery here at Duke Hospital. He spent three years at Duke before coming to Med School. He is a member of the S.A.M.A. and Phi Chi. On August 24, 1958, he was married to Martha Lynn Fowler. A , F A R Vic's a New Jersey boy who came to Duke thinking about one thing-Lenore. He had earlier received his BA from Washington and Jetlerson. Since Vic's first year here, he has been an atheletic stand-out-known for his ability to pull down high passes-was one of Stead's starters junior year and shown in many all night games. Vic leaves Duke having maintained his amateur standing and feeling that he will always be deeply indebted to Duke-four years, tuition. Vic is a member of A.O.A. He has always maintained a sense of humor in times of duress and actually is, in general, quite casual. W N John hails from Newberry, S. C. and came to Duke Medical School by way of Clemson College where he received the BS. degree. We always wondered why John liked to get V.A. assignments, then we found out that his wife. Tish. worked in a lab over there. Being one of the class 'ggung-ho's John went to school during the summers. took a sleep- less elective in OB-GYN, and started his surgical internship in January. l F. B U Born in Roseboro. N. C. and having received his B.S. at Davidson, this tarheel decided to try his wings at the country club of the south. Freddie is our class's answer to Fred Astaire. and his story is one of real success. From shining on the dance floor, Freddie next was brilliant in a Pathology dissertation on Moon Pies and Royal Cola. He went on to greater fame by chasing the snakes from Nidus. And this modern fable ends as does many a T.V. commercial. after shaving with Gillette Blue Blades, factually he didn't shave but was shaved. and it did nothing for his beard! he married the beautiful girl next door. He and Ann Carr plan to share in the life of a general practitioner in North Carolina. Another one of those Davidson boys. young Doctor Campbell hails from Taylors- ville. N. C. Milt knows how to spin magic with a bottle of champagne, and is second only to liberace in the mastery of the candelabrag but for an entirely different purpose. Such techniques may sound extravagant. but it was a Penny earned-Penny Plunckett, June, 1961. He is quite casual going but pulls in a lion's share of high passes . . . won our Freshman anatomy award for the best grade in anatomy. He plans on entering the field of internal medicine and will spend his lirst year of training in New York. He is an ambassador whom we are proud to send. 5 .Y Marcus Conant returned from England after studying abroad. not to mention beer. fish 'n chips and pub society. However, he still retained that lean hungry look. Meanwhile back in the states, Marc is a bon-vivant in a hot sports car. That is except for the times he spends in the blood bank perplexed by the fact that 9 out of I0 doctors recommend transfusions in the middle of night. He spent three years at Duke before entering medical school and plans one day to be an internist. and practice in the old home town-Gainesville, Florida. V. S . ' ' 1' C Q f!esxa.fQfil 5 li' N ' S ?g,s.,c ,WVVLL Q t ,A X A 5 mt, 5 5 T -is - . is I N N i f f E Simon received his B.S. degree from Duke University and had every intention of settling down to a quiet. academic life as a medical student when. lo and behold, he found him- self in anatomy with a certain redhead from Rochester as his lab partner. and they just never did get the finer points of anatomy. However. they had fun! Simon is quite a scholar, as his record proves. and has done research at Bell Building in endocrinology. He has made extensive studies in the field of glucose metabolism. Simon will be interning in internal medicine next year. The future is undecided. I. PAGE Our photography editor hails from Dover, New Jersey and Wake Forest College, and he'll never let you forget it. Where there are gathered two men speaking in ear shattering volume, among them you will always find young Bob. For it's eat. drink and make merry-and if Mary isn't around there will be many, many more. Bob is planning to go into the plumbing business-l kidney thee not, And. believe it or not. with all his personality lplus intelligencel he just might do a good job. Besides the yearbook Bob's very active in Phi Chi and Hanes House. tHe has refused in Freudian undertone. to comment on his gun collectionl. R. C ma., Ron enjoys playing bridge and when he was first learning to play. he always carried a pack of cards with him. This way he had a game wherever he went. He knew that the way to get something is to have something. Never one to waste time or words. Ron arrived at school freshman year with pictures of his children who looked older than some of our younger classmates. Here's a man of action with a philosophy that works. Could anyone ask for more? Ron began his internship early and right now is undecided between Pediatrics and Medicine for the years to ccme. 15 . ' a f. .w'0.,.,t tn. N J. D E A I, , A t ' A it 2 s Dave hails from Canton, N. C. He has. unquestionably. the subtlest wit in the class- but that probably comes from aging! Dave tore apart two colleges before coming to med- ical school-Pfeiffer and Duke twhere he received an ABB. Thinking over the four years here. Dave believes Senior medicine on the private side was his most rewarding experience- no scut. man. that's why! He started working at Dorothea Dix Hospital in Raleigh in April and will remain there tnprobably as a patient J till he begins his internship in July. When asked to list his marital status and pertinent dates he wrote-- Single . . . had a good date last weekend. Dave plans to enter general practice in North Carolina. If we have another great Hood none of us need fear because we could probably all ht in Jim's shoes and sail to safety. We're not saying his feet are big-but. Jim is another one of those bright young men who got through Duke undergraduate school without a degree. He took a wife Bertha Ann Bagwell on June 19. 1959. While here at Duke. Jim probably will never forget those P.D. sessions with Dr. Stead. and those days in Anatomy when Johnson. Flannagan. Harrington. and Dellinger were our own Four Horsemen. PAGE I 15 H. There will always be an England, at least as long as there is a Henry Dixon. Henry is from Mebane. N. C. and received his AB at Duke University. He then journeyed to England where he took his first two years of medical training at St. Bartholomew's Hospital. He returned to the colonies for his last two years. Dick married Kathryn Fisher in March 1959 and toured England. In November 1960 little Katherine Lea made the family three. If you think Dick had a happy and active four years-then you're right. It won't be lung be'ore an English student may owe the experience of study at Duke University to the thoughtfuiness of Dick who started a movement to have an English-American exchange program which is now being implemented. Next year Dick will intern at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal. He's off again. T. A. One of the best known men in the class. Tom is known for The Pad ta renowned Beat hangout of which Tom was proprietorl and the pad ta seat situated in the front of pathology classl. He is also known for his famous comeback. When asked by a professor what he could do for a poor woman bleeding from the canal he answered- There is nothing else I can do-l've done a 'crit and white count already. Tom was our Freshman Class president. He was born in Farmville. N. C., educated at U.N.C. and married Gayle on March 27, 1957. X l Here is one boy who never missed a dance but never danced. He's our class music man-a Base man on a bass fiddle. But senior year he quit fiddling around. got married and went to dances the regular way. Linsey is a hustler. with a quick smile. His hustling got him through school so that he became the first in our class to receive certification that he had finished his med school work-way back in December. Linsey is a graduate ol' Duke University undergraduate school and a home-town boy from Charlotte. He plans to enter Ophthalmology. A. 'sk F G l N f 3552 if r g '-1 -:Q .q..: ' -sis: .Y ..... M amy-gr John will read this some day while he is a surgeon general of the army. and he has a good startg he is the first West Point graduate ever to serve a tour of duty in medical school. He was elected to the student body's highest Cii'iCCfPf6SiLlCI1f of S.G.A. John spent a Quarter in Ireland delivering babies and brought his own back with him. After a Quarter under the great teacher. he became adept at ambulation on water. spend- ing haDDv davs water skiing behind a boat owned iointlv with Cv Guvnn, He will alwavs re' member the iniiuence of Dr. Davison upon his career. He is the proud papa of a spittin' image -John Jr. He and Martha were married August 22. 1959. PAGE I 17 -AGE I 18 Lath is a man with assurance. unlimited energy and plenty of know-how: three ingredients which will make him the top surgeon which he intends to be. l,ath added to this strong base of essentials a quarter with Dr. Baylin in which he learned how warm hearted a successful lVI.D. can be and more specific items such as who to vote for in the election. In his spare time. Lath tweeters around with the local woofers to out blast the other Baker House Hi-Fi enthusiasts. He is a member of AOA, and an alumnus of Duke. Ar- lington. Virginia. is home. 'Wi If there ever is a man cut out for surgical fame. it is Bill Gay. We remember how he took his lunch hour in the observation room. If ever a surgeon had an inglorious start it was Bill. His first patient suffered from a severe case of Creeping crud and an overdose of Formaldehyde. If the stench was un- bearable tand it wasl in the OR , Bill was all the stronger for it. This lad did some fine operating in other theatres and was rewarded with a beautiful Christmas bride-Frances. Bill was born in Durham and received his BA from V.M.l. He is a member of Phi Chi Believe it or not this stud claims Durham as his hometown. Ernie's one of the shouldered military men from that institution which took the first potshot at the Union about 100 years ago. It is not what you know. but who you know. in this world, and Ernie happened to have a very good friend in the Dean's ofiice. He's married to her. in fact. But he's a very unassuming fellow who has amassed many friends with his quiet manner. Ernie is married to Jean who is one of those diligent young ladies who works in the Dean's office. In the future, we see Ernie as a prominent practitioner in Durham running for city council-if the city lasts that long. O F F We knew Dick was going to do well ever since the beginning ol' med schoolfhe was in the frequent company of a real good looking nurse. tThe ambition of most freshmen med students was to be in the company of a good looking nursel. Dick was presenting a patient with a polyp in his colon only to have the patientk feeble neighbor jump out of his bed energetically to ask Lawsy. how did he get a 'possum in his colin? Dick is a Haverford lad with an A.B. He belongs to Phi Chi and plans to cut up further in the field of surgery. PAGE 119 PAGE l2tl Cy comes to us from the University of Virginia. He has a questioning mind and a quickness of wit which is helpful and almost essential for the existence of a Blood chemistry worker who is likely to be called at 2 A.M. to do an emergency blood cholesterol. Cy is known to be able to quote Shakespeare and speaks in Edwardian accents late in the evening at parties. His sense of humor is a source of enjoyment to his classmates. however one professor states. You all velly funny but I no understand youl jokes. Cy spent many pleasurable hours with a boat he co-owned with John. With his ability he appears to be sailing for a fine career in medicine. C Ei ks s i Warner is a family man las well as a Davidson man.J He is usually seen in the com- pany of Hammond and Jervey believing that three can do the job better than one. Among his fondest memories is the occasion when Chuck leaned against a phenol soaked cadaver and got burned. Warner was co-chairman of the Cabot Society and one of his duties was to arrange for the splendid speakers at the various meetings-among them Dr. Stead, Dr. Baylin, and Dr. Carter. li looks like a career in surgery for this boy, his children will be well scrubbed and no appendixes. 534 HWY? 3 s Q - , 'Q xii '. W as 3 ! ' . we ' 5 as t ,.f . 0 ' ' aff., 1 y- z 1 4 ' 5 f ls. ii P A 3 ' M M o N D f AQ x ig i fv 19' I f General Hammond is renowned for his leadership and successful maneuver at Fort Bragg. He led an entire brigade of medics through one ot' the bloodiest messes ever wit- nessed by any humans with no casualties except for a few cases of severe foot fatigue. He was a Junior Class officer. A graduate of the Citadel, Chuck married Peggy June Zlst. 1958 and they have one child-Sharon. He plans to be a surgeon in Western Carolina. A R P One of the wise old men of the class. Jim. after a tour of Navy duty, finished his pre- medical training at Duke where he was married to Gail. He has consistently demon- strated his ability to keep up with the best. through good class standing and a probing skepticism-both of which will stand him in good stead in his intended future career of general practice. While at Duke. Jim has also taken active interest in research and last year took part in Dr. Wyngaarden's research training program. Among his most prized objects-his daughter. Ruth. I: xixf' . This North Carolinian originally set out to be an engineer and was enrolled at the Cow College but. thank goodness. he saw the light and decided to be a physician. He linishetl his Pre-medical training at Duke with a B.S. in Zoology. While in medical school. Randy cites his 9 week elective with Dr. Baylin as one of his most rewarding experiences. Among his extracurricular activities. are S.A.M.A. and Becky. By the time he reads this. Randy just might be a proud papa. There is never a dull minute since Randy married his dietician wife-he is served pomme dc terre au gratin while the rest of us eat boiled potatoes. ,-0, Mya .ma 1:43 , 3 'I V ,:.. NL: sf l ies Q . V. sms: A B ,. -- ,.., ,. ti 'i Q, 1? f -W .Q 3,34 Q if QAM Y 3. EQ., 4-W S '52 wt Xi ' Q 2 Harry began medical school in a unique way, to say the least. On the very first day of classes in the freshman year, his wife delivered his first-born son. Harry has since been known as the class family man. being the proud father of Sherry. David and Joseph. From Norton, Virginia, he received his BA degree in Biology from Virginia Military Institute. Appropriately enough, Harry's most rewarding experience in medical school was the sound of a new-horn hahy's first cry. z ., y a - 9- f t D Darrel was born in Greenville. C. and received his AB. from the University ol Vir inia. file has been taught many things by his patients including the fact that a patient may be able to answer some very academic questions. When the rounding man put his hand on the precordium of a pretty young thing with congenital heart disease. his question was Do you feel a thrill? The patient shook her head before Darrel could get the answer out. Darrel had the right answer to Pat on June 21. 1958 and now is answering questions for a little tot named Kay. Taylor is one of the Johnsons of Portsmouth. Virginia. He married Bettie Ann on June 19, 1959 but all during that first year in medical school he had only one thing in mind and that was Bettie Ann, tjust ask Lathll. and June 19th came not too soon. Taylor has always managed to look at everything with a sly twinkle in his eye. There's one day he'll just never forget. That was one morning when he met Wayne Moll on Minot with a loud good morning, Wayne and to his surprise got not only a return greeting from Wayne but also a very quiet. Good Morning from Dr. Wayne Rundles standing nearby. Taylor plans to enter the practice of Internal Medicine somewhere in the South. PAGE 123 IKM M. W J O W, W '1 Marshall received his B.S. degree from Duke before coming to the medical school. Marshall will always be remembered for his pleasant. quiet. unassuming manner which all of his patients love. He is married to Margot. and now there are three. During his senior year. he adopted a beautiful eocker spaniel who required a 2 A.M. feeding. Clancey be- comes the first cocker spaniel raised on Simalac with iron. Marshall was senior staff man at the Rebel Rounds which was a very rewarding ex- perience but not in the class with the grateful clinic patient who although indigent held out a silver dollar as a gift to her fine doctor. .a.....,sss L 2 ZZ, Y N J Lyn Jordan, a Duke alumnus. Junior Birdman. is one of the leading aeronautical archi- tects in this section of the country. He put several missiles in orbit. He Hies model air- planes with unbound enthusiasm. There isn't much trouble getting them off the ground: the biggest problem is getting them to come down again-searches have been known to last for weeks for missing planes. When not tracing lost missiles. Lyn is usually seen with Beverly. Three years ago Lyn's feet left the ground and they haven't come down yet. He plans on being the best G.P. in North Carolina fprobably Farmvillel. D. S L E Y After coming back from three years at the University of Amsterdam School of Medicine and glimpsing Duke Medical School for the first time, Dave wondered why he hadn't come here in the hrst place. His undergraduate days were spent at Brooklyn College where he received a B.S. in 1955. He gave graduate school a whirl before deciding upon medicine. Believing that hometown girls are the best. Dave married Elaine M. Gersten in New York on September lst. 1957. ,Since being at Duke. he has had some frustrating moments lhaven't we alll? but he'll never forget when the intern promised to let him deliver his first baby lthe mother being para 15-0-151 and mom went ahead and dropped it while he was scrubbing. Dave plans to be an internist. Hank was first introduced to the class when a professor attempted to demonstrate the normal variations in human body growth. There was no doubt about said variations as Hank stood upright with a Lillipution colleague. Hank always has a ready smile and is as freindly as can be but you can bet socialized medicine will have Hank to deal with when that miserable day arrives. He will always have a fond spot in his heart for all those mothers on Sims-Williams. He is happily married go lgncet. They have one child and are expecting soon. Plans for the future are still un- eci e . J. L A Our esteemed editor and leader came to us from Niles, Ohio. He received his literary background at Duke where he received the BA degree in English. In addition to editing the yearbook, J. J. is also our Senior class president. He has been active in Phi Chi and is a member of the Duke University National Council. He had the amazing ability to ex- tract work from the yearbook staff by giving Lecture No. l0c. They did complain, how- ever, of the 2 A.M. staff meetings. Dr. Bogdonoff will never forget how softhearted J. J. always was to drug salesmen. Future plans: marriage and a rotating internship in Ohio. A good physician should always have a ready answer, but not too quick. For instance- Ken was told as he approached a Colonel's wife with speculum in hand- You look mighty young to be a doctor. Ken reassuringly told the woman. Oh. I'm not a doctor. . . . Some- times you just can't get those abdominal muscles relaxed. Ken will never forget how gratifying it is to receive an expression of appreciation from a patient's family for whom he cared for terminally. Among his activities Knot counting those trips to Florida and Ohiol are Phi Chi and this publication of which he is associate editor. CJ. J. would have been lost without him-he could typel. Future plans include Sharon to whom he recently got engaged. V nf, N B Y Bill comes here from Davidson College something which is not unusual at all. He is tl native of Beckley. West Virginia. Bill was at one time a champion weight lifter at the Graduate Center when that sport was actively pursued. Bill was known as Smootenzhe, Freshman year, because of his way with the women. but times change. Weight lifting and his other pastimes have been re- placed hy the good family life since he met Gail. Now he raises cats and watches T.V. as he is comforted by his beautiful wife. Bill was Sophomore class president and Treasurer of Student Body. B. S. Bernie. from old Baltimore. has a built in father figure with his personality-one of the few who became a father figure without being a father. Bernie's dormitory room was always an intellectual battleground for the discussion of anything from Aristotle to Zionism. Bernie. a graduate of M.I.T.. took upon himself the arduous task of tutoring his under- classmates in biochemistry and. thereby. received their undying gratitude. Dr. Hohman has had a faithful Apostle of synapses and schizos ever since Bernie took his elective with him. One day on tox watch, Bernie reassured the rounding men that the patient was just line and nothing had happened. An inquisitive intern turned down the sheet to find a neonate nestled between the patients legs. Bernie's first move was not to explain that but to head for the lah and sign up his Ob for. l'XGl li IZX Andy, born in Cheriton. Virginia has been a Duke man from way back. having spent his younger years' here too. Andy was the editor of the Aesculapean last year and it was the present editor's job to match his efforts in quality and spirit. He spent a year in research studying about viruses as part of Dr. Overman's research program in Bacteri- ology. He is very active in Phi Chi and a Senior class officer. He is married to Gladys and, as of yet, there are no children to speak of. Andy plans to enter into the field of Pediatrics and will intern at Duke. Til journeyed from Jacksonville, Florida, to Duke University where he earned his B.S. Til is one of those Duke patriots who spent four years at Duke undergraduate school, attended Duke medical school. married a Duke girl, and then interned at Duke. Til was always present at those Phi Chi blasts with his darling Kathy, but found time to distinguish himself academically by election to AOA Junior year and winning the Roche award for the class's top scholar. Til feels that one of his greatest rewards in med school was his association with his classmates-a mutual feeling. -,.,,N , thyme W si- l it at r y M. A . 9' N' O N 7 , ,I ff Q I s gig' ti -.gagf Pede is a native of Huntington. where his father was a pediatrician and that's how Pede got his name. Pede also got his bride in Huntington. West Virginia-she is known as Dede. Pede went on his aba daba honeymoon with more than one usually takes. He took a case of measles-the adult measles have a way of giving you more than just a red speckled face. You can't get a good man down. though. and Pede has a really cute little girl to prove that. Pede did undergraduate work with Davidson, has distinguished himself with some out- standing work for Dr. Wynngaarden in the metabolic etiology of gout and seems destined for a line career in pediatrics. He is starting with an internship in pediatrics at Duke. ,,..,i . 235 A. 'Q M. M8019 R T l N Whoever heard of a medical scholar being called Bubba '.' Well. that's what he's called, and his membership in A.O.A. attests to his academic ability. Bubba. a native of Columbia, South Carolina, came to Duke after spending four years at Davidson College where he received his BS degree cum laude in 1956. His membership in fun loving old Phi Chi demonstrates his ability to mix business and pleasure. Although some of his class- mates choose to ride around in Cadillacs and Thunderbirds. Bubba's humility wouldn't allow him to arise above a motor scooter. We're sure he shall doubtlessly make a tremendous success in the field of medicine. PAGE 129 C. M A Having a dietician for a wife lher name is lngridl has done wonders for Charlie- during his senior year 30 pounds to his frame. Charlie came to Duke from Davidson College where he received his B.S. He served for Uncle Sam and has been following in his father's footsteps in his study of medicine. lt is a moot question though whether he will follow him to the end. Hubie is a Raleigh boy who also went to Cow College, oh excuse me!fNorth Carolina State. Upon coming to Duke he immediately joined forces with Harry Trantham and Marshall Jones. Probably Hubies most rewarding experience at Duke came during his Senior year when he took his elective with a General Practitioner here in North Carolina. It was earaches. backaches. sore throats. headaches Cmostly hisl and catching babies for nine weeks. Hubie decided when he got back here that it takes more know how to be a GP than probably any other field of medicine. He plans to practice around Raleigh. .l NN, Nl A T T l S O N The vital statistics on Joel go something like this: horn in Arcadia. Ploridaz reeeiyed a BA from Davidson and a BD from Princeton Seminary. and in 1956 married lean N-Iorris. Joel ties knots. be they' surgical. umhilical or marital and the last can be attested lil. two members of our class. Joel is going to join Albert Schweitzer next year-and it is rumored that he is taking a waterproof organ. We all are yery proud of Joel and wish him the very loest in his fulfillment of the real meaning of physician. XY, NI. NIC D Hack. a Georgia boy: is a product of three years at Emory University.. The campus still reverberates with a story of daring by' Wild Billfi Hai-ing :Jet a fancy to an attractive newspaper picture. Wiley Williams tittitienrtillj ran out of 515 at the subjects doorsteps. a heart rending story' of a poor lass without gas quickly :went to the lovely damsel's car and she was next seen at the next medical school dance with Bil. No one ever knows quite what will spring from this unassuming friend but he! go: the disposition of Eternal Spring. His current love is pediatrics. Having been an academic success at Duke, Bill came here looking for new fields to conquer. Bill's the champion bridge player in the class, and he has his own bidding convention. He is a quiet man who uses those Lowenback conversational hand gestures. Bill is a very effective man. and from the onset. was tapped as the man to keep up with in academic spheres. He joined with Warshaw in studying how Crisco moves from the can to thc cor. Bill is married to Meade and is a member in good standing of AOA and Phi Chi. J. R. Mc T Bob literally had his eyc on the internal environment of Hanes House way back in '57. In fact. Banton and he had more telescopes set up in MGC than you could count. All kidding aside, Bob was born in Jacksonville, Florida and received an AB from Duke . . .While at Duke he sub-interned for a quarter on Ob-Gyn and he calls this one of the most re- warding experiences of his life, He has also participated in Dr. Wyngaarden's research program. One of his chief interests in serotonin and he has done much student research on the subject. He is married to Helen Demarest and they have a child, Michael Scott. wwf ' rl, . ck :gs -of-wi.-ft. 3 .I O New Yorker by birth but cosmopolitan by nature. Bob received an A.B. from Duke in 1957. Before entering medical school here in the States. he journeyed to far-flung Europe and made medical rounds there for a few years. He is single but the says? still trying-to stay single. that is. Bob's most rewarding moments at Duke Hospital have been in the medical O.P.C. where he managed to learn all there is to know about the physiology ol' peptic ulcer disease. His future plans are destined for the practice of Internal medicine 'somewhere in this world. R. as B. M E R L O Dick Merlo is one of the few Harvard graduates who are not serving on the Presidents cabinet. Dick is from St. Louis. Missouri. and while not to be confused with a southerner in the hush puppy tradition. is a southern gentleman. He is a couch man in the Freudian tradition and spent a profitable summer working at Butner Hospital. Dick is married to Ann and is the proud father of a young heir. Dick expects to go into psychiatry in the future. and he will take with him a refreshing sense of humor. PKG! Mora l34 E. N. M E T Z Earl is one of Columbus' discoveries. Earl comes to Duke from Columbus. Ohio and Capital University where he earned a B.S. Earl brought his wife of two months when he came to Duke: he will take more back with him-Doug. his three year son and Tom. a one year old son. Earl has always been an outstanding class member and has teamed up with his next door neighbor. Vic. in gaining top grades. Earl is a sports fan and a good sport. Next year he plans to return to the home of the national basketball champs and intern at Ohio State in internal medicine. Norman was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1933. He received his B.S. degree from CCNY where he was on the varsity swimming team. He decided to go international and studied basic medical sciences at the University of Lausanne Medical School. In true international spirit. Norman came south to finish his medical training at Duke. During his globe trotting, he played basketball at Lausanne. married Bernice of London, England, and became the proud father of Neal here at Duke. Silk D. C. M F'.,N':'.! U L L E N Don was born in Greenville, South Carolina and received a BS from the Citadel. While here he believes his most shaking experiences was presenting a CPC in the ampitheatre with Paul, Smith and ElRamey during the sophomore year, showing Dr. Stead what any of his students could do. Don feels that his most rewarding experience was probably seeing the mass of pathology on Howland Ward during his weeks there. He was married to Patsy on June 8, 1957. They have one child Patsy Jr. Don plans on entering into the prac- tice of surgery. f , , .....,. . Q ........ A V N 1 . wv wwvipssff-. 4 i b'. 5. QSKY KAWQFX QA -' 2- Air t '- c'f'5Ecf- f -- ' M. W Q W.,4a,a,:.i.Qgd,f,Q.,g,.et ., it '75 5'55'-Wigiffffbi'fCNY'41..sZ4ii4'f - X mfff. v' . X : I' . .. f aws s ' P- ., ,, ilfawfligiviz 3 552's 1. A X X ,stiaze Wt - we 'X We ft at-ff,f.fg,v' fra sf Ivsccf' xx . -' ..1:-,- -- fl Xfiffis f ' . 'ef - i .Q 'f iszefzv-i f W . , .,..-0. Q f . .. - 3. '- gfegsgw Ye -:sq Q , xy. . -V., . f.. ..... . 4. - P ,.. . Y ii. H , .,.,, - 2: -: - .'3'tspg: - .. - . , 3 S X- . gy 3 -- - ... i -Q-'P E' Out of the gold covered hills of California came Phil Noyes-the class's Grand Old Man. Phil joined us after our class had already gotten under way. We soon found out that we were the ones who were just starting. Phil had an A.B. degree and was actively engaged in science research while we were graduating from grammar school. Phil brought with him tales of the West Coast and how things are done on that side of the continent. If Phil is an example. we imagine they must be done pretty well. He intends to become a radiologist. li PAGE 136 :QM Mary Jane has the dubious honor of being one of two females in the class of 1961. She has sustained with courage and dignity everything that must necessarily go with such an honor in a class composed of an unusually large number of practical jokers. She ac- quired her courage. dignity and A.B. degree in English at Agnes Scott and Queens Colleges. She joined the class of '61 after teaching English a few years. She was an immediate success here even before our freshman year. When she came for interviews she passed 11 group of anatomy students in the hall. During her interview a note came sliding under the door. which Dr. Markee read. lt said. We, the undersigned. petition the admissions' committee to select this applicant. lt was signed by the anatomy students. Right now. Ron is probably the best intern at Henry Ford Hospital up in Detroit. He and Carol left here in December after having spent four determined years here. Ron is a native of Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania and received his B.A. degree from Gettysburg College. ln his spare time Ron could be found either doing dog surgery, golfing at the tough Duke course or out shooting his .22. The class is indebted to Carol for arranging the decora- tions for the Senior Class Halloween Party. Ron plans to enter the field of surgery. Saw- lit i -:mi .1 1 tif' . is . i ' , Q V' ' zz, ' . is f 1 1. Q N- . V tw V? 3 - X E R Captain Jesse Peter came to med school after a sparkling career as captain ol' the Duke track team. Soon he took over leadership of the class by guiding classmates through the local theatres. Fame was at peak in cinemaship when he was heard on the radio extolling the virtues of a film on the subject of natural childbirth in a local theatre. He stepped down from throne of King of East when he fell in love with a beauty queen at Hanes. And what does he owe his success? Five packs of Sen-Sen per day. Seriously, Jess is probably best remembered for planning our Freshman class party. He is from Rockville Center. New York. and is an active member of Phi Chi. having been treasurer of that or- ganization in l958. He plans to specialize in lnternal Medicine . Dave is the fastest man in the class. He has two children with the aid of Susan. but that isn't the reason for the conclusion. Dave was the big factor in Duke's taking the ACC cross-country championship. He also easily earned a track letter for two years on the Duke track team, and all of this is more amazing. considering that Dave is from VMI and didn't join Duke's team until he entered medical school. One thing Dave will never forget are those Orthopedic sessions with Dr. Coonrad. PAGE 137 I xml H8 E. T. P O O L E Til was born in Raleigh and educated at North Carolina State College where he re- ceived his BS in Zoology. Looking back over the years he'll never forget roughing it with Hubie Mathews and Harry Trantham. nor will he ever forget that day on rounds when a patient described what was meningitus as the smiling mighty Jesus . Til was married to Jean Evelyn Thompson on August 22. 1957. He plans to enter the field of internal medicine here in North Carolina. Ed is a product of the rigid training of Virginia Military Institute. Introducing Easy Ed is easyfhe's a big man with a big smile. He first achieved fame at Duke as an impersonator-he could put people asleep by such articulate lines as notice these playful bosophilic granules in this polymorphoneuclearneutrophil. Some day Ed will be impersonated. Ed has started off on the academic trail by measur- ing the vital capacity and one minute volume of a myxedematous white cell. His teacher was Dr. Rundles, a man who encouraged Ed and sent him into the world with the image of a fine and feeling teacher. D. R. p R l C, E Dudley received his B.A. degree from Virginia Military Institute. He came to Us from Stanley, Virginia, and we were surprised that mountain boys really don't have one leg shorter than the other. Dudley is another of our Army doctors in reserve. We all got to meet his wife, Pat, when we went down to sell our brachial veins to Dr. McIntosh's cardiac catherization lab. Dudley was almost always available for bridge and just about all of us played with or against him through the years. ai Ritz Ray, commonly known as Shakes by his Duke classmates where he did under- graduate and received a B.A. Ritz is from the rugged western part of North Carolina in Jefferson City. Ritz showed he was destined for great things when he showed in dog surgery that he could absolutely stop all bleeders. The only trouble was that Ritz was the anesthesiologist. Ritz fell in love with a Durham girl now named Peggy. This year Ritz finished school early and interned in Pediatrics giving him the privilege of calling on his classmates to do hematocrits. PPXGF When Bob hit the campus, most everyone thought he was an alumnus. He drove a big Cadillac and sported a rather prominent girth. He married a quite unmarmish school- teacher named Wanda after his Freshman year. Most of us thought he would settle down. but it wasn't long before stories made the rounds. One had to do with an Ob patient who answered one of her doctor's questions with If you don't watch out I will name it after you if you don't quit fiddling around down there Bob Is grateful for learning the art of medicine well as dermatology while spending a quarter with Dr. Callaway. Bob spent his undergraduate years at Duke and plans to do his graduate Pediatric training here too in order to prepare for a life of Pediatrics in North Carolina. Clive used to be a man who kept the path between East and West campus well worn. Now that he's married to the reason for going to East he doesn't move around too much. In fact, he can usually be seen working on Howland Ward where he has been intern- ing since January. In his free time Clive will readily demonstrate his ability as a water wonder skier which is one of his favorite pastimes. Clive is from Palatka, Florida and he started Duke after doing undergraduate work for three years entering the school at a very tender age. R. D. S C. H Nl l C. K E L Roy lived with Fred and Milt at MGC. Westover. and Nidus ltradition, with the mud- diest lake in the worldl. His last year. he took the plunge tinto lake Nidus with the assist of friends at his bachelor partyj and came up with a Lotus Blossom. Traveling the road toward an M.D. and an internship at Duke. Roy enjoyed his short side-trip into chromosome research: the classmate commraderi: and the many profs travel- ing the road who were kind enough to stop and give him a lift. Roy was a Phi Chi ofhcer and a class officer and plans to go into a life of Pediatrics. Smick is from Southbury. Conn. 1' Steve, a surgeon to be fmaybe just like Dadl is a little man who has taken on some very big jobs. While he was an intern for student health. a Duke basketball player came into the office with a sore eye. Steve fthe former day leaguer that he wasl suggested that the patient sit in a chair so that he might examine him better. then when that didn't work the patient got up and Steve stood on the chair. iLife has always been a strugglell But the biggest of his undertakings was that Obstetrics Quarter in Ireland followed by a tour of Europe with Bobbie. Lest we forget-he was our yearbook circulation manager. s .ix Alfa is rl X , Y ,Z A Mg' 1 Many of us have heard the question, What does a Scotsman wear under a kilt? Well, Siggy would be the man to ask since he was the leader of a bagpipe team at the Citadel where he did his undergraduate work. After only a short time of being single. he found that the going at med school was too rough alone, so he brought a bride back with him after his first vacation. Now Jo and Siggy enjoy the easy life while young Chip keeps everything in order. As things look. Siggy will go into OB-GYN after a medical internship at Duke. Siggy is a good big friend with the heartiest laugh of the class. Ken came here via being born in Troy, Alabama and educated at Washington and Lee where he received a BA degree. Ken could usually be seen in the company of Bob Young, Joe Alanis and Jim Crane at the latest Maria Schell movie. ln spite of being a near genius in the field of baby and infant care, Ken is a connoisseur of Frothingham ale and bridge. The two go together very nicely. At present he is a med- ical intern. His future plans will probably be the practice of pediatrics in Alabama. l may Ir ly Harry is a romantic but few really know this. ln fact-now no one is supposed to know this-but Harry loves to read poetry. Next to loving Browning. he is presently romancing a cute little Delivery room nurse named Joyce and they plan on being married in June. Harry's dad is a practicing physician in Laurinburg and some of Harry's most satisfying moments at Duke Hospital have come from seeing his father's referrals. He undergraded it at U.N.C. and just might practice in Chapel Hill. He is a member of the yearbook staff and Phi Chi. He's Corwin's roommate and if that's not a test of patience, nothing is! W E A T Earl is from Mulberry, Florida. He did his undergraduate work at Duke where he received his B.A. in Chemistry. He was one of Phi Chi's faithful members who has arrived at the formula for enjoying life. Earl knows the good life. It was no surprise to find Earl at Cape Cod Hospital last sum- mer serving the Kennedy family. Earl is the man Jackie sought for help-any more in- formation than that is Top Secret. K. f f L. H O P History repeats itself and faster with some than others. Larry Went to undergraduate school at Duke and then to Pennsylvania Med. Yearning to hear the strains of Dixie once more and longing for the warm honeysuckle breezes, Larry came homing back to Duke. But only after bring a Philly bride. He has been a real service to his underclassmen colleagues by serving as an Instructor in anatomy and intern in Student Health, two rewarding jobs. Medical school has been a place for learning and beginning the practice of service to others. He plans on be- coming a surgeon fprobably with Mary Lou as his scrub nursel. We owe quite a few of the photos on these pages to Larry. mi Introducing Jack Sprat-distinguished blood-letter and philosopher from the VA Hos- pital. His fame has spread to Hanes House, East campus, the Single Women Duke Hospital Employees Union. Jack's from the Old Dominion town of Portsmouth and received tactical training plus a B.A. at the Virginia Military Institute. Looking for excitement, Jack packed his scotch and headed to New Orleans for his quarter in OB-GYN. lt was merely coincidental that he was there at Mardi Gras time. Quite an opportunity to gain practical experience and get some line teaching. Leaving broken hearts behind, Jack returned to Duke where he continued training for a career in Internal Medicine in Portsmouth. H. E. T R A N T H A M Harry is from Brevard. North Carolina and has spent his undergraduate years at Duke receiving a B.A. degree there. Harry is a thoughtful man and usually masticates a subject thoroughly before heqreplies to a question. Occasionally a class is adjourned before Harry has replied. But when he gets his answer in, he says something worth listening to. Harry hardly ever makes a wrong move, but a mistake was hurriedly pointed out to him when a distressed 'woman redirected the destination of proctoscope which had ended a little anteriorly. As we look into the future, we see Harry's medical practice in North Carolina flourish because of his quality of concern for others. G. A. T Gordon is our second Harvard man. He has come all of the way from Minnesota in his quest for medical knowledge. There is always something going on when Gordon's around. It's usually in Baker House where there is a bridge game or a bull session going on. When working. Gordon matches blood for the needy. Gordon went to England for almost a full year and spent time touring with Mark. lt is said that Gordon is quite proficient at Rugby. He hasn't let us in on what he is going to do in the future but watch out. small world. mor 145 mor. I-46 V. R T V.V. is the only stud in our class who came into the class already an M.D. Having first received his training in South America, he decided to find out what North American medical schools were like. V.V. is an active member of the department of Anesthesia. and in that capacity. helped teach his classmates all about gas passing. All of us have found him to be a good teacher and sincere friend. We hope that he shall continue to be a success here in the United States. Dave came to us from Rutherfordton, North Carolina. His undergraduate days were spent at Duke where he received a BA. Dave will never forget those 48 hour tox watches on Ob. His most rewarding days at this old Rock Pile have been spent on the Opthamology service under Dr. Banks Anderson. His future plans at this moment appear to be headed toward a career either in Opthamology or General Surgery. Most of us will never forget Dave's caustic little comments about those weird psychiatry conferences that his wife took him to. Dave known throughout the school for his energetic devotion to his tasks. However. he is known throughout the whole campus for his model T Ford which he has reconditioned beautifully. rumble seat and all. Not only is his car pretty but it came in second place in a famous old cars race which he entered. Sel is enthusiastically pursuing the field of pediatrics, and one of his most rewarding experiences was his quarter spent at Boston Childrens Hospital. Sel is a Haverford man who was an engineer for one year before coming to Duke. In his spare time he sails at his home in Atlantic City. New Jersey. , i fix! W B. W Joe says that what he enjoyed most about Med School was his study at the Bell building. He studied Fatty Acids -pure case of sweets for the sweets. Meanwhile fifteen miles out of town is a place named Black Acre . out in the land of stud bulls and farmers' daughters. On a cold winter's night Joe could be found with a fire in the fireplace and-. He is a graduate of the University of Florida where he received a B.S. He is a mem- ber of Phi Chi. PAGE 14 IVXGI5 V18 Rvws? Q. .. ., .W -.N . .mrww-' - it t Bill is another one of those Washington and Lee boys who came up to Duke to set things straight . He was born in Boonesville. Mississippi and received his BS in pre- medicine in l957. While at Duke. he feels he has prohted most from his outpatient clinic experience as well as his sub-internship in Surgery. Bill was here during his Senior year via courtesy of the U. S. Army Senior Program. He married Louise Wallace on August ll. 1959 and they have one child. Kathy Lou. Bill is planning to go into surgery. ts wif' 'X . . , wa Sue is a graduate of Duke University. Her hometown is Suffolk Virginia. Being one of only two women in the class might have taxed most young ladies but Sue has managed to take her place among us as one of our more promising young physicians. Long before coming to medical school she had planned to be a pediatrician. Maybe it was the ma- ternal instinct . Sue says. She plans on practicing in Virginia in the future and will be interning in Montreal in pediatrics in the near future. Sue has some interesting ideas on Socialized medicine as anyone who attended Dr, Morton Bogdonolfs January coctail party well knows. . L. 1 Y O U N C1 . Wi NVQV N ,. ., 5 ' iii . 1 ' 'ii gif bfi ' Q Ln is Bob received his AB from Duke before trudging to the other end of the campus Right from the start the clan of Young, Sterling, Levy and Alanis began to sprout wings. Some of Bob's most interesting moments while in med. school have come from staring at those weird paintings that Ken used to hang, in the room-imagine pink fish in a sea of lavender! His most rewarding moments have been spent on Student Health and in the Pediatric Clinic where he spent his elective. Bob is a North Carolina boy who claims Charlotte as his home. The future might be medicine or pediatrics. HZ L L The official class measurement is the Yowell which is the distance from Bob's ear lobe to the tip of his sideburns. Where there's a party. there are two Yowells-Bobby and his wife. Lucy Yowell. There has never been a colored combo at any party which has not benefited from his rendition ofa song about hot condiments. And. he ain't smooth eeenutff' Bob who spent three years at U.N.C. is a senior class otiicer and member of Phi Chi. Also it was his financial genuis which got this yearbook on its feet way back in September. Bob calls Raleigh his home, but now lives in Durham. JUNIGR CLASS 2 PAGE 150 , ,Z 2 'SP ... 'U 1 6 ' IX 1 J. M. Al,EXANmm Hahn! W. A. BAXLEY fBilIJ w if Q 4 , '.. . . .2 0. E. CARTER CNickd . 'Nik . ,,.., . N fm Q ' , ' W. C. COLSTON fBillJ N. S. CRAVEN fSc-otth .. f., lf, AllMS'l'lElDNH ffiem-:wr Y 3. K. -4 Il. L. B1-:MII.r.1alc lI5ux-M . .5 .f -'5 , X 1,3 Q 3' Q 2 S! ' Q m . .v K C.'1',C'AsK1-:Y qTmnh 1:Sf'M.ji53: 3 :Q .,., . . f'1fN ill: 1 .H.COI,v1N lChuckJ Wm? s ff Q. .Y 1-.V :,:. 5.133 .ff . L. C1101-'T iCal-IJ 2 li if .,. . .,g' x L. A, -6 V+' L .iv div I' J. PI. BAM-fi.ucf'lA CJorge-J .I, A, li.xl'M.xN f.Inl-nl ir .5 , ww ...f ggffv X X . 1 If' . ff 4' ll r W. J. BICKNI-31.1, fBill3 A. B.1'Alc'1'l-:K fAlr 151' u . I E ' f i 1' .I.f'.1'.xL 1'1fIxaN fJoe-J Y.I'l.1 ms1.E fYaukr f x lm an U? Q' J . ..N A.. ., 1' 5. A. 1-'UNNA KT.-dh J. D. CRANE t.Tim1 iwiniliivh 5 'H PQ . R. N. DAVIS fliuby A. W. I1l'm,1-:Y gBudH PAGE 15 I av LI.. b All f J SQAR '. l .x1cM1c1c 1.111-'J 11.31. FARMER CKHN7 X y2TTig? V' Z. ,. D LA H- 11, FRAXK fllonj E. L. Hmm-31. 1SuuggsJ zqggfgfgwg .S ,,.:, 3 5? gggl my 15? N qgmy fp,-N15 A. V, UoNz.x1.l':s 4'1'onyy g Ag I., M. HUl.IA'JXVAY mi..-kr 'P TY'T0NI'1S fI71ll1UY5 PAGE 152 .MI My 119.5 ,sh ixmxrm: IA:-lmlllj R. Iilmxlrzlc fflif-kj V X .ig ' X 3 6 Ah 4 I 4 X fry gp ..,',. - W. N. FORTESCUE fNick7 5 . -gg. V J. II. HII,m:lc'1' fJoelJ ' M . 23? . 1. R. N. LIIQAN1' qBobb J i?S3F, Ii.J.KA1IN llienb P. J. LOGUE fPatJ J. T. FOSTER fTomJ W. R. GILBERT iwaltem-7 M. A. fIATCHER iMartinJ . .ww N. ,. . if ' V 1,355 n f Ij.l7.Kl.I1'EfPal1l, fgggmk ,fu .N :- V32-5 gfqf1,,! ' ' ' ' ' iilgff a' W 1' J. P. LUNAS CPaulJ M 3' 1' Var Q. 7' 4 S 1 n .' -gf ,, , 1 h ,I 1, py1lvl4'M,l,l,N1I,0n, 11.1-.Al,u:l4.x1m.xN'1mlump1 I., 11. Alxlnxn-.x' llnfnm 5I.Il,Nlx1:'llx4l1'v-bv N fv. , WWW r' V .I f Ik. W ,c:!w 'g. wg -V .3 A 2, if K f 45 2 -0 . Q Q . 5. - 1 as . V V E., F ? Keg., ' - V1 ' M' ,. ..ff,.j. as , 1+ -P ' J A A 1 ly , 5 Q 71 . A -'I W. J. MASSHY tlsilly C. Y.Mo1z1:AN 14':1.x'i1n .i, li. Mm.w:.xN riff-xx l...L51UKlCIl1l'.lClhllryllj 1 v if 1 - ' ndvnxt K 1 'gf - ,hx ,. x V- .- Q V ' V F 'Q' V, W. SL - -1 an .b if A 4. - ga A V ' -1 'Q , .1 Q 5' 5. 11, I V, Q , . ' ' . ..,. -' , K ' A , A x P f J- C. MORRIS uhm S,I'I,MoR1:1snN U'f1 'U 'U l . l, .xlvlis tk'm11kb l..f'.NuH1xs Hmm 1 ' 5? .z f ff ' F. 'Vv ' I G ' f AAA'f , 1 , '45 ., Q .,,, 3 it ,J . 1 ,. xg. If V gjvixbiilzl K f , plz: f f X f ' 3 . A A . B. F- QHMAN 43911, 11. u. r.u'Nx-1 LF11 11.43 W. F. I'1:u.'1c mldilld Ii.ll.1'L'I:41cl,l. 1, liubm ..,.. A P - 4 . , A , ,Q .Y A ,. 2 F ' . Q. s . . - . Q, -r! 'ff 1 A 3 f. . 'Q ' Ti W W 3,5 ' 7 F 3 'W af' W viyff . Q, Ntvw-'Iv' , v -3. . ' ai J .adam A 1 J. W. RALPHqJimJ N.R.RATr.1FI-' QB111-rw J, H. RIDIIICK Um-H nw. W, Ruxillllxl' 1 llmxl PAGE 153 PAC F B. S. SA'r'1'l-:IzFII:l.1m IBQIII BI. SCHIFF Ulm-tyd 5 , . Hia I 1- ': f 5 . 7 3 ...M m , A ' . ,, ,. . ff: W-K-QW 1:17 L4 I 5 SQ! R. C. STONE fDickJ D. G. STOXVE film-yly Q ...,' ... V X If A E :V A - A ,V ,,.. 1 L. N.TUIINI-11: 4LewJ H. L. TURNER fLe:m:n-db W .. : ' , i Y ' Q, A V' , , ,Z 1' Ai 4. f . .x ,V . ., W. B. W.umIsl.I. 1BilIJ W. S. WAIIDIIN fBiIly W V . . . . . I 5 iz i f .-., f f n. ' 'l ..M if. 4' , J. .T. VVEISICR Uoelj T. I 54 S. XVILKINSON QT! I N 3 is ,J I7 -I 95 5 2 W. A. SHIL RIN qliillj D. W. SHIP! UHLYHD M K. . W I ,- Y! jx 'f X V, X M ., fx Sl. .155-..v 1- If -- .. . 1 .. ,. - - ' ., -'il , -5 4' ,. '-'- I .,,. - -2.1 '1 5 .,.,. vbizztl 2 Q I- W, K. S'I'lm1'II14:R flienlpb D- R.TAY1.0R 117921117 'X ,,,. V, , V g '21 525. ' ,ff M. I. VIc r0R fMarly7 J, R. VRIIANIAK f.Timb 4, f .. Q... 15. p . .4121 Q V... , ...Z ,nkn 1 3. ,.v. 'EK 13? , , . S. J' XVATSON Lum, VV. S. XVI-IIGMS KW nth-'J I .. ..3,3.q,,.l G. R. WILLIAMS fGailJ C. A. WooDsfWoodyJ . ,, x 41:11 59' . .Y L Q 5' Y 5 f ,A 9? If mf 'f ,2i'3 ' 3 -1 7 , in 1 l w 4 f A - 4 f 4 if , 3 . 'ff x 1 . of , ' f .M,.. . v fy: Now, this won't hurt one bit. ' The junior year arrived. and at last we began to on the wards and in the clinics with real, live patients. addressed as, Doctor . Perhaps the greatest change there were bloods to be drawn and taken to the out rather traumatically. No longer could we cut 9514: one minute to spare. ' feel just a little bit like doctors. We began working At least we no longer looked behind us when we were in our lives was our new sleep pattern. Every morning chemistry lab by 9:15. not 9:16 some of us found that early morning lecture for an extra hour's sack time. Another fact learned early in the clinical quarters was the patients more often than not get sick late at night, not to mention such things as tox watches There was also the matter of lab work or scut Mr. Smith in sophomore hematology when we were and night-time deliveries. work as it is fondly called. Maybe no one listened to urged to become proficient in the art of counting those little white cells. Hemoglobin, hematocrit, WBC. differential. and urinalysis became familiar terms. to say the least. L E preps until positive, stool guiacs daily The hematocrit centrifuge which never worked ....24 hour sputums for AFB. .. .One might forget the names of his patients. but he could recognize their specimens at ten paces. On our quarter on Surgery we never saw the sun. on Halstead had it easy. and vice versa. Those were Rounds at 6:45! Those on McDowell thought those great days in the O R when we were first assistants to A finger in the rectum is better than your foot in your n1ourl1 l'XGlf I5 5 The request sheet said 'routine scut' the second assistant. Sometimes the staff had very little time to spend with the students .... Did any- body read your last five workups? there was much scut work to be done, and some of the fellows on McDowell considered hiring a technician to help out in the lab. Many hours were spent with Willie Teta- nus on McDowell. Dr. Gardner had some helpful hints: Putting a finger in the rectum is better than putting your foot in your mouth. Then there were Dr. Grimson's lectures on gastric surgery .... What am I thinking? Midway through the quarter we moved to the surgical wards at the V A .... No more lab work! ! ! We had much more time to spend in the operating room, and at last we could get close enough to the table to see the incision. Some of us even got to do some sewing. There was Dr. Schauble, the terror of the VA .... Pull harder on that retractor, Dad! We were sometimes amazed at the six week conva- lescense following a simple herniorrhaphy .... Free movies, TV. et al .... The VA Hilton . We learned the scoop on surgery from Dr. Postlethwait and Dr. Dillon, in spite of the distraction of a shapely ward secretary. We wondered if all the veterans in North Carolina had hernias or hemorrhoids. On Obstetrics and Gynecology night and day lost their significance . . . those 4:00 a.m. phone calls for deliveries. We started paying quarterback . There were three types of patients. and some of the students found themselves first up for delivery, ob-not, and gym all at the same time . . . And we saw clinic pa- tients. too. There was much scut work. and many lV's to be started, often in arms without decent veins. Ob-Gyn had a converted closet which was used as a lab, and it never ceased to be crowded. Some of the students were luckyt'?J enough to have fellow classmates as interns on night duty. The lectures, sparked by Dr. Carter's colorful language, were excellent, when we were free to attend. A prac'Iic'e .s'e.s'.s'inr1 for quarter-lmcks But Dr. Markee Said it was like Cl box lttl IS6 If , w 'ff' . ,if gli , a X 4.. You d0l1'I have to be so snzcirl to he Cl doc'Ior Srimzilatilig nwrlzflzg l'UiIIIlf.S' on Osler Dr. Creadick told stories about twins named Cystocoel and Rectocoel. Dr. Carter had some interesting comments. . . The two great American diseases. obesity and loneliness .... : Don't let them make you a what? A damn father figure! There were required reading lists for Dr. Hamblen li.e. Hamblen's articlesl. There were exciting times and sleepy hours spent with patients in labor. Some of the fellows sat for fifty hours plus. Don sat with one for eight hours. only to have her deliver in bed. Hatcher had one to precipitate in the clinic. We will never forget the nights spent on tox watches. A trip through the wards every morning would find the students on Medicine making a last minute review of their charts before rounds. Rounds may be remembered as a sometimes traumatic. but highly instructive association with members of the senior staff. After working late the preceding night. some members of the class have been observed snoozing while standing by the patients bedside. There are vivid memories of those nights spent with diabetics in acidosis . . . serum acetones q 2 h . . . urine sugars and acetones q30 minutes. We did every conceivable blood test on our patients .... BUN. FBS. PSP, BSP. Na. Cl, K. CO, Ca, P, serum asphalt. There were impressive associations with Dr. Stead and his philosophical discussions of medicine . . . You don't have to be smart to be a doctor. i 4' 7---.. -4s,4.4.A. mmf IM The .S'6Cll'C'f1 for knowledge Some of the students on Medicine were assigned to the MOPC for half of the quarter . . . We saw Health Team patients with complex phychosomatic complaints . . . I-lypertensives by the hundreds. Con- sultants always arrived either early or late . . . ten minute lunch breaks at 3:30. We saw return patients and wondered why they had been treated with czrtain drugs . . . Impressions: As before. Dr. Bogdonoff greeted us every morning promptly at 8:00 in morning report . . . Attic Disease?l . . . A certain intern who changed the vocabulary of the Department of Medicine . . . 'tHoncho talk'. We worked in the Emergency Room at night and saw patients who came in because they cou'dn't sleep. On Psychiatry we were promptly introduced to the rule of non-fraternization . , . Never touch the pa- tientli' . . . But, how am I to percuss the chest'?', . . . Hostility t?J f?j Some of us were quickly submerged in way-out psychodynamics and sub-conscious motivations. There was motivation and time available for sharpening up the old golf game. Paladin: Shape up Struts! One patient offered to wipe the floor with one of the students . . . Beware of those seductive patients. Dr. Hohman kept us all fascinated with his experiences and comments . . . The only two individuals who know everything are God and my man- servant, George? Dwzczmivullv oriented student spooks Dr. Hohman, a gracious host ,E Q, IXCI ISR 'Ill Eager .s'c'ier1Ii.s'I.s' ul work How does this darn thing w0rkf ' We were introduced to numerous and varied psychological tests . . . MMPI's and TAT's . . , all those hidden meanings . . . We watched patients take Rorschach tests . . . Look at all those dirty pictures. Some of us looked into the mirror and wondered about all those hidden drives. Psychiatry allowed time for some of us to do night work at Watts Hospital. working up surgical patients . . . time to chalk up some added experience and income. A number of our classmates entered the Research Program with Dr. Wyngaarden for the year to gain experience in the scientific aspects of medicine. The Bell Building Boys were given free reign to investi- gate various problems of interest . . . There were seminars with experienced clinical and laboratory investi- gators and many hours spent in the labs. There were even private oliices for study. There was, in spite of the long hours of Work, still time for social life. Any time of the day or night some of us could be found in the student lounge, discussing the problems of the day. The Student Govern- ment Association gave us a TV set for our spare time entertainment. and everyone laughed at the chain and padlock . . . No one absconded with the TV set, though With the flourish of summer weddings and the exodus from MGC. there were numerous apartments available for parties . . . Med School Dances and cocktail parties. Dr. Hohman entertained the students on Psychiatry. Dr. and Mrs. Stead had all the Juniors to their home for dinner. and we all learned to play skittles. A few of our classmates became travelers. Bill Waddell went to San Francisco to the SAMA Con- vention and was elected National President of SAMA. Kemp andj Jim went to Europe for their quarter on Ob-Gyn and some sight seeing as well. The year moved rapidly, and all of us were looking forward to our Senior year which would be for some of us our last year at Duke. K, 1. .53 en: M, - - v a 1 Y . . ,Q 25 4 si X e f Lunch break in the student lounge irxor 159 THE SOPHQMQRE CLASS --N Pwr I6 ,114 5 lib - 1. Q , . ,vi .,.....: y-W-v W mzg:m: 1 Y gil? 4 A 'if If v 2' .Xv1f:l:s,l'. R. U'h:n-lic-5 Q 2,1 fn., Q.. , ' 2:55, , gg- . 2 A , .LJ X 1 Vg-Xiu' ,.:.4jEE5'5f9. K xr .- -.. . , 1.1.25-..:-'.-..f'..::-,-4:-'+5. 5 fw,--,V A BLACK, C. G. fCraigJ BYRNES, T. H. CTomJ CHANG, NV. H. J. CVVz1llyj BANl,lHAIC'l', II. P. Cllurryb x , , Q7 Q . .. ,1., ,. . BOLTON, J. C. CJohnj , '15 ,fl 4490 W'9V0 N W A W: nf . CARIHON, T. K. fTom5 CHURCH, C. F. 4Linb EDXVARD, E. S. fE1mo7 EMERY, J. B., JR. Uackb inns' W W , , 1 'J ,. . Y , V IJ flluw-J l.I1xXII'Ii X. I.. H:nm-.wb W .,1 V ww .my V -W. ww J, W BOONE, S. C. CSteved Bl:0Uf:H'1'oN..T. O., JR. CJnf'j S.. Q 2821? Q 4 C f f, . ww A if A: . , 5,,.,,. . 7 1 A. C.-Xndyj f 62 ,,gg. '1 2 ' CAR'1'151z. W. .L CBNH 3951 zsftu - .0-ah' Aw' Ia. -.66 CLINE. R. IC. 4130113 Il1'1zu14:T1'. R. H. HMM ENTMAN, M. L. f3IiI1'k5 F.xRr:m.1., J. B, LJim5 l4'm:'1'Nl-IY. S. R. fSirlJ GABON. A. J. CAmlyJ 'iii , ':' 3:Q...xa ' ' ' .QW 1.2 ' ' 2... 45. M' M A Wx Rani sf' K -.5 4 , .gig ' 2 'L . . Q ' 'E2'?.i'if1I .5 4 'fxlfwif HRAHAM, T. P., JR. CTom7 GRANT. G. R. fGeorgeJ . ne., .-gy K: Q21 'N M, ff , 'I 'nf -. - A 31552 -'fjff 4. .,-,...,,...,.. , , , f Q g 1, N? c 41' 5 ' ij, A . 4 , A ,S 5 7 ,J I 442 ff J Z ' ff II.xs1.r:'rT, N. R. CNancyh HAw0RTH,C.C.,JR fy? Ky, . ,vffff ff? ' . is 2 '.-'. .,.' .- ,, ..,,p ,-1 , 4 X I ff ff J Z . 4 f' 3 f 41 1 45' 4 f f 749 I 1 5 f A f , f 1 ,,f- , , .74 s 2 f I 5, fl ,f f ' f HULL. VV. M., H111 Ml-Qs, I.. B. KLQWJ , gig f A, M... .f . Q ff Jn. fBil15 . fCxhEStQ1'j GLASICR, J. S. C-10015 1il7N.f1L'K,H.D, fliavw HUGAN, L. B., JR. 11.903 I'IUTCHINSON,XV.R,, IV qliillb x4,azg:.e.., sp Q .:.'. . IA.. . ' ff 9 4 9 -S .... 1 455:17 My ,wwf .t . L,2:? 4.::f,.- :- '..f?ifl?f f' '. rx' Y M-'v 1. M jzqgg .-.,: . ,. if' lm-14.n.x'm, l'. J. rlmth J.xx11cs, C. M. fCllil1'liPl JONES. J. L. QJP1-1-yy PAGE 162 0 ' -' S r ? 2 3 , X, Q z .Q Q42 . f' GOLDSTQN, W. R. CBiIlD IIARRISQN, R. B. fBrcntJ Ho1.x.AND,W.F., JR. fWarrvn IIYMAN. IE. N. 1131111-y5 I -Av' Q X 'f Q , w 'L , - . A ,' ' .4 Y. , . 9 53255, X 1-i V jf . K AA Q 5 f JONES, K. L. lKenb rg' ,pw- f' ? Q . 1 'figs 421 V+, f-. , jf ' Atvl , 9 ff' n - f 4 Lmwls, E. L. fEdJ LONG, E. M. CGmwH I,1'c'14:Y, Il. T. fllonb M.x1:mI.xn, R. W, fwazdeb MCLAUc:Hr.1N,J.D,. JR. CDrmJ P NIARTIN. CT. R. fChf11'1iC5 Q' 4' 43 ..':::55:. VV 3 4 ' ' R' .,,: ' I Q N 3 K 1 f' f BICQIIIJLAN. W. 0. CBillJ NTAYSON, J. S. Mimi B up X' ,Tqyypjg IK XY, fI'glulp lf,Xl'l', J, I', f.-lflllllj KUIIIJ-llr, l'. U. fPl'f1'J KIUlI'I,Il,.f,lIJ1rl1? , . 'ill fm , f -yfkf-3: , 16 21 . 1 1 2' . M,x1:m'I's, IC, I.. Hilliotl , ,Qi 1 I, 7, 4 5. I 3 I . 2 -' Ir:B1u'm-1, A, M., JR, f.xl'lEllXP Ma 2' - '- It Ve . ' U .. my , 101115. L. XV., JR. fIA1l'l'YJ OLIYA , P. U. 1Phi OINDEXTER. J. S- fJohuJ POLLARD, D. D. 4Dm'ouD PORTER. J. M, qJn11ub IU:mm1xf,a, J, O. Q-Jima PAGE 16 S.xrN'1'-AMAND, N. E, fSmiIey5 PAGE I64 N'I'l'lTGX'lCR, H. Y. H. tHe-m-yi .,- . ' W . xx . I ,R ,Q RUBISUN. M, L. fMikeH RMHNSON. N. J. CNm'nmnJ RUNYAN. T. IC. f'Tmnj , . vfff . Q' .. f., Co' 4 . if ,QS ,, 'VTX' ' S1cwE1.L, F. K.,J1z. QFrankj S1-UMM, S. J. fSteve3 Q ,pqqs . A 6 ' x ,:,.::g:... --.,.,.,q.v .- .X I I V . ' W- ff 2.-. v I H ..,.. . 1:21553 It M I 5 ' 4' 1 . . f.. 2 If - STUMPF, K. J. KKQ11-15 Tnmlz, 0. B. COwenD 'l'lluM.xs, Il. L. flhnyj X'.xxlmlc1:l1:lA:1c, R, B. fRumlyj WA1.s'l'uN. A. IAMJB SAI-'1zI'l', H. F. !Hom-yy N- wg uhm 5. , . 13'-ifrsaff V 5.2, .. . s C SPRODES. E. T. ,III CTOmj 1.xxl.mz, XX . L., JR. CWallerj Ymwxfa. N. W.. .Tl:. CTHIH AT LAST A C.P.C. ks , 1 . g ,- oi sf, I . -4- 1 Q ' if t ., lr 5 4 . Having weathered those dismal days of the first year. the class of '63 returned 76 strong with 3 new students, 8 new wives and 4 new babies, to join the ranks of the upper-classmenf' We were, on September 12, 1960, officially sophomores, wearing for the first time with some pride and some apprehension. the Drf' before our names. Bacteriology and Dr. Smith were an impressive two- N26 CHARLIE some. It was an extremely satisfying experience to be associated with such an inspiring man. Dr. Conant was a down-to-earth guy who took great delight in saying. You haven't passed the course yet. None of us will forget Dr. Pine's art of quiz interpretation or his course in mycological illustration. Drs. Overman and Osterhout provided us with a valuable experience in virology. isn't that right, Syd? Miss Poston. whose harsh manner. matched by her warm heart. will remain dear to many of us. Dr. Kinney and much of his pathology department were new at Duke with us. Before completely turning the department over to its new head. Dr. Forbus trauma- tized us with his Last Round-Up and inspired us with a lecture on the nature of disease. We often wondered if the Cleveland Zoo pathologist. Dr. Hackel. could tell hypertrophy from hyperlasia in the elephant. Dr. Grif- fith aroused many of us when taking a seat on the top row. It was a pleasure to listen to Dr. Fetter's philosophical lectures as well as to hear his word derivations such as idiopathic-from the Greek iflio meaning 'l don't know' and parliic meaning 'a damn thing about it.' Dr. Kin- ney's lectures on neoplasia were very stimulating. His casual attitude in lecture and his correlation between opera and T.B. heped to make learning more enjoyable. A familiar Helllll, nooo and a dissertation on the language of Pericles always confirmed the presence of Dr. Sommer. We'll never forget Dr. Klavins' stormy lectures with One large. two small. three large, etc. Dr. Kaufman will always be remembered for his confirmation of rumors that a pathology test was inevitable. Dr. Lowenbach with his three faces of I-lans changed psychiatry from the first year with Margaret Mead and her Bantu Indians into a dynamic process. He put his maximum into teaching us the minimal activity technique -one week being atliicted with Parkinsonism only to he- come a manic-depressive by the following week. l Read everything and believe nothing. l Physical diagnosis found us in a new world with strange professors. The first few days were the awkward days of the medical students adolescence. For one and PAGE 165 T H H E gb RBC WBC Di one half years we had been kept in isolation in the laboratories of learning. then suddenly we were confronted with a real live patient. Observation. palpation, percussion and auscu'ation were our new accomplishments. The spasticity of our first rectal exam was only exceeded by that of our first pelvic. Day after day Dr. Tyor stressed the significance of the physical finding while Dr. Baylin gave us a course on how to become a radiologist in twenty easy lectures, or was it, how to use your radiologist and still keep him happy? With all this help it wasn't long before we took everything in stride and began to acquire that professional feeling. Hematology gave us what we had all been asking for in a laboratory science-a lab with direct clinical applica- tion. Many hours were spent trying to see those differences in size, shape and color which Dr. Lazlo assured us existed. Blood smears were always fun, if you had a clean cover slip you at least had a chance. Lectures managed to make us aware of what we didn't know or understand and usually gave us much material for further reading. By the end of the course blood lost its idenity and became rbc's, wbc's, hgb and ten mi'lion different types. The year was not without its gayer moments. Parties at Turner's cabin appealed to the animal instincts in us while the more sophisticated of us reveled in those at the Duke Motel. No matter where they were we all managed to enjoy them, even the married couples. It would be quite unfair to omit some of the classics of the year. J.P.'s syphilis. gonorrhea and other child- hood diseases . . . or Nathan's case of chronic smilosis being diagnosed. Each professor had to make us aware that a female was present. Why did someone always have to ask a question, even at l2I3l? By now Nancy should know that a testis is not as she described it. an atrophic kidneyfl' The blue oinment has helped one of us with a case of idiopathic non-pathogenic lice. What would a day be like if it didn't start and end with my boy ? 'Q 1. ,gif W :E . , - . wg I' im .I g . - 1 Sip M W, I , ,,., vi . ,I l . pas. : wait I 2 31 ,I 's I Q ET Ig, v. Q 1, 1 M0 PAGI2 168 L N ow H lf, 'X R fl' 65 DAISY CHAIN Wx ii la.. 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YARN -' '1' fi Xf Af'x ff ' ff-4,-' ' ' V51 WWQ x b - 11 -- -M - f f , - , X. v,, , f , Eg N 'G' ff ' 'NW ' 'fQ,. . ..,. .' , -T ' fx' Ve.mIiu.s'. De Human! Corporis Fabrica. 1543 R. II' AgL1.3X,yNnl':l: fliuyb 15. L, Al.I.I'LX fllvny xv. S. BARB1-:lc Cwuynei l , I . B.xl:N14:'1 l'..1r:, ff'v:m fb J. W. C'A1:R1'TH. JR. fJimJ N. B. CIIACE QBruweJ J. L. DOBSON Uolfnb R. W. DRURY 43010 K. S. GIVEN fKenb D. S. GOLDMAN CDnveJ M. S.Axls'r1-LY 01:1 rx Q I'. .L .Xxlfulcsnx Ilmuvr W. U. HTCLI.. II KWH!! f',4'.B1:1-:Mlm 4f'hrisJ A, J. CQ'1 1'-1N1:1l.ur fAnflyp li. 4:.CRL'M5x1x-3 qliubb f U. B. TWNIN KUNG! li.U.FRu:1m1-11. QBUIH ,114 -jgfag ' ' :L,.1v,-...M ,. ,Wx . W.. wr -,,,g --N.: ai, . 4, ,,...a- 7 19? Q. H. P. Gonmux CHQ1-In R. S.Go0D1XG iRon5 PAGE 171 J. I..1il:r1r1x..T1:. CJimJ l4',l..li1:m'FI: flfrwlm J, BI. II.xlcl:1c1,sux, Ill Hulxvn B.S.II.xlc1c1s.III H36-nb TI. .I. lI1cl:1cINf: Uimb J. W. Hm.s1M.l',1., Jn. Numb ,I. IC, Ii,xl:l1'l4lml-'F Hulnm Y, J, K1-.lmxl-.A fX'icJ .4 1, 424,52 QwZwwvWia'.-?ea? ?. .4,14f,4,, A. , M, 'ffff MU if ' f ,nf - gf ' f , ' . ' f Wiffififiiii 5 'V 1 1 . ,'f2f',f,i5-5524, , 5 1, px, ',2,,Z,5?4,'.5.vQ I 'KZ , I I A Ny an , f ff: ga . QQ , 1 , f - J. IC. I..xNxlNr: Hoop S1.M,LAz.xlcUs fgft'X'C', PAGE 172 3.11.11-HAI' QJUIIIH F. T. IAIANNAH flfrankd I,,S.II,xRlc1sfBmlm J,D.II.a1c1'fI1eryl3 T.. T'1..TAf'4msuN fI.vuJ H. E. IQXNN lHer-M IJ. N. Kvzvs flmveh G. KORNR1-:ICH Cfieorgej K. R. Llcwls Uiayb W. G. LIAKOS fBiIlD IC. I'. l.1x'141l.x' HCM D. W. M.uc'rlN, Jlc. fllnu-J M. A. NASH CMm-vinb S.L,N113KMAN CSteveJ J. B. POWELL fJim3 T. B. PRICE LTomJ . J. Rum-JNSTEIN !CarlJ H, W. Rr.-'1-'N1':1c,J1:. 4rs.xX .1 ui R.sooTm qainu rx SERAFIN Cndny W... . .X,ll.Mvrl l'r'1l.xx1.Xrlr 11.17. NUI5I.l+lfBU1xj .wx sw.,-,,,,f ,ks aw ?4'1fIZ'.f3' ,midff ' . w1iI1Q?f'L.i92Q5K2f'E2 -my vine-wi-14, v 'aye .mi ,V ,-. .V -Mm, 4 yqk-,,,, ,L ,V X .ng M .. ,J 414229. :eww ,, 21 -wi Q.. w , , M .. . amy,-q-. .. 3,gf. ..' A H ig? 2- 3 . 51' , e-gm. . - 4, I -Q. -' '- :ga P 5x fr ff , 5 z A H ...H x--SQSQSQQKWAQ ..E5MQ9.3Q.w2wMWf - f ' ,f Mg,-,Z-,g-,, . ' 1.1.-..j f 'xzwsfizg is ' -2-L???5 xgggmgpff if mf' gs 'N wig? wif 2' Y - ' '- f W. . Y V, N 5- , , .. , , . ,.v.. S- ., C 3 ,Q mum x 25,58 94. vw S.D.R.u'r:xu1,fBoseJ J. II. Rl'1'1,:cm:141. III Lliutl R.I..SHIEl,l1S QRQIIVIU I.. NI. .l:.xxx , .Il:, fl-:..1,,1.. IT. F.1'AL'1,soN fllnub F. L. RUB1-:X fF1-edq ti. l-'.Sc'lul1'1'Z un-nr .v P. T. SHINR1: fPhilJ PAGE 173 ? ILM. 1 N, P. S'rm1's1a, III lPhil7 R. H. Tunkel QBOBJ PAGE I74 C. H. Y1cl:NOX 4Chzu'lvsJ CK Ii. VIRGIN ffilllldi SI,,u'r:HTl-11: Himlnuud I.. Svlxmclr CT.enJ Y. X. WATEITS fYvonm-J W 2W7W1W' ,MW 744, J Q f 6 w, 32 5,1 ,,U4 , 'W 2'Q,W-vbwfw QWMMW- 4 t ' ZZ v ,iAv.M:n59'P - 1' I I EWQWM 9 2 .W .5 'Y Z 'ef V, ,N , . ,a , ., . -572222525553 5252:-bI:'QX:4:k3,g6i' e ' 31.5, wi?-I-645:-.-aj:.g5QN:27:1':9Y:f'-'. 1 ., z f,.:4,. : 13' ?Wmf, Mgwwwww ,, 4Q.,1,'4vsf.:,- ,- yy ..,.Sf:gW-:z,.y.,:, 5 H, Y gfzmg. XM ,R '92, V 4 ,5 , Y J 'K 25' A ff X X2 fi? X57 4 ,vi W., t- L -1 .714 I f 1 f R. H. WINTI-11: fliubj M, IJ. XVULK fMikoJ M. L. STI-1151: Cllikej K. D. STRAUB 4DuveD L. K. To'1'T1-:N fLzu-ryb J, W. TURNER, JR. CJ1m, T. WU SON CTom7 LOOKING BACK The third quarter rolls around, the ANNUAL goes to press, and there is a very short moment in which lo take a look back at the past few months. A transmutation has taken place in the latest aspirants to medical oblivion. the Class of '64, No longer are we mercy prospective inmates ot' the lvory 'lower. We are now genuine medical students, l SUPPOSE. Work has become the middle nam: of most of us. but the school was working to prepare lor us even before we arrived. Our home away from home, M lltl-where we study. eat. are lectured. and sometimes sleep-was completed about 2:00 A.M. the morning of registration. On the first day the room was even equipped with a brand new dean tapparently the sophomores wore out the other one last yearj. There were 76 trombones-er. students. rather-that first day who were informed that 69? of them might not be there four years later. The day after registration there were 75. l.3l5Sf? bit the dust. We were told that he had decided to wait a year. but rumor had it that he took a look at one of the cadavcrs in -H7. decided that alcoholics were not his cup of coffee. and left. Others of our brave group took refuge behind green masks or rubber gloves. aspirants of surgery. I suppose. The low-pressure talk of . . . all the anatomy you need can be learned in two weeks' '.., was rapidly followed by . . . but we will take a bit longer' '... Our lab work was greatly aided by instructors-when one could be found. We even learned what caused hemorrhoids. but the cause of herrhoids is, as yet, obscure and not too well elucidated. Trauma sessions, branded by a minority group as learning experiences. followed with amazing regularity. We learned that there is never only one right answer to each question. Such was rather graphically proved by one examiner when he picked up the right colie tiexure ff y Q f fn, i . . fl i ..... 4 was 1 A bfvzsfrw of Iii MEIN? D61-'Z A if The Ivory Tower and asked someone to describe what was on the inside of the organ. After ten minutes of brilliant histological and anatomical oratory by the student. the examiner gave a much shorter and equally correct alternate answer. Fortunately. most questions were on some part of human anatomy. but we were prepared to identify kangaroo ovaries. Markee Mouse Movie Productions lived up to all expectations and reached even new heights of popularity via vidio. In order not to disturb those who felt the need for rest a new show was introduced: The Silent Joe Show. in lousy black and white. This show was made possible by the discovery of Murphy's Fourth Law: Silent waters run deep. and its corollary: Wells have been known to obey this phenomenon too. The complex equipment used by MMMP Studios followed the trend set by Volkswagon and came out with a model equipped with a brand new type of ash-tray. Demonstrations came a'l too frequently, labs passed too rapidly. and the air of examination surrounded us. Oliicial schedules changed on the bulletin board with ever the slightest of ease. Talk tioated around of a Thanksgiving Day session. Work reached a new high. More than once Willie found the labs open in the morning. most of the time, fortunately. with students still working in them. One instructor. when asked for a question of typical difficulty. replied. Hmmm .... well, describe the universe and give two examples . He wasn't too PXGF 175 'X Clzoosirzg textbooks Sweat shop far wrong, at that. What the students were hoping for were ones similar to one once given to a group of new nurses: Name the womb and give two examples , but this type just didn't seem to come up. Recuperation after the exam was provided by Joe's tea parties at the Gasthaus, BYOT naturally. Another l.3l5Cf2 hit the dust. or rather the concrete floor of the histo lab. before signing out, and we became 74. Came close to 73 when another was hospitalized with pericarditis, but he proved to be too mean to stay in the hospital very long and was soon back amongst us. Not that we were always studying. Planned parties as well as spontaneous gatherings were frequent. even at the Duke Motel. SAMA set the ball rolling with a picnic at the beginning of the year. The SGA had a dance in the fall. Navy game found the past members of Navy and Army at odds with each other, but differences were settled at the two cabin parties that afternoon and evening. Though we were not yet members, Phi Chi generously extended us invitations to their two parties during the fall. The Med Dames had a dance. but fora long time the click of glasses was the only music. It seems as though the band didn't arrive for the longest time, and when it finally did come. the pianist couldn't express himself suliiciently with the piano then there, so another one had to be procured. Pizza parties. ball games with the sophomores, and other forms of tension relievers were often contrived. Histology was likewise an integral part of these past few months. Just how integrated one sometimes wondered. lt was forever a mystery how the areas studied in anatomy one week could precede those studied in histology. and the next week histology could be a week ahead. Internecine warfare broke out here and there over when and where the student spent his time. though it was never very serious. It was just that sometimes we preferred movies to microscope stills. Nevertheless. we stuck by our beloved Uncle through thick and thin slides. even when the growl of bulldozers was added to the rattle of garbage cans. These would only prevent us from hearing. Now and X W Wlzut big hluc' eyes' you have! Crummie came stag i tm. T76 , ' ,xy ri K ,Z g .4 , . 2 I' .M 1' ,,, Mfr' f f ff' esfwaanf .w ' ' awifg. ' ' if +V' , 0 . 1 A me ' . 'iffy ' f. f f tina . fy ,, . -. fiff.,,,. ft, gf... -f. ,, ig. Ha, ,f , fl ,J X 4 , f ,!ilY.?ZM4f,.', ,, ,, W., . 1 ,. ., i ff ' :'f'WA f2w. is. fm, ,fivff .000 I ,Zip fw,:f.,m,f:Ifz' 'Q if f My hear! looks like this? 7 . . . X . . . 9. Hmm-ni. . again, we also couldn't see due to a drooping head projected upon the screen. We enjoyed histo. however. and to show how much. we combined the traditional Uncle Dunc Day with Halloween. Shortly thereafter we were introduced to the possib'e permutations and combinations of acidophiles and chromophiles: not suprisingly few of us could discover many chromophobes. After the first slide demonstration. Uncle Dune used a few choice superlatives to describe our papers. but that's the way the pseudostratified ciliated high columnar epithelia wave their cilia. The final histo note was more pleasant, for it was noted that there would be no histo final. Christmas vacation came none too soon. Just how soon was shown by three of the class running home to get married. It also became rather obvious by then that another member of the class had been married for some time. Psychiatry and Orientation were being given continually in small doses at widely spaced intervals. prob- ably on the theory that one might forget what the last dose was like and wouldn't mind the next one. One dose Well remembered was an intricate and complexly developed theory of animal behavior dictated so that everyone could get it down in detailed copious notes and then followed by . . . l'm not sure what relevance this has to human behavior. One must be careful about trying to relate these studies to humans. The answer to one of the questions on the next final was undoubtedly given in reply to a students question. lt went. I seem to be blocking out on that material right now. Other important points are surely contained in those pearls often thrown out by another member of the department after all notebooks are closed and everyone is just about to leave. In this course Murphy's Fifth Law was made known: If you can't say anything without making it complicated. say nothing at all. Zum Beispielz lt would seem. teleologically speaking. that medical education. per xv, would simply be inadequate without concomitaat avenues of approach through various moda'ities and processes mediated by ostentatiously ver- Adjust the oxygen valve and begin the count down I want one voliiritcw'-yozi. PAGE l f bose circumlocutions. lt's not a cold. it's a cause of auto-immune reactivity to the virus Pompus americcuza, with conjoined nasopharyngeal symbiosis. A few members of the class determined to follow Netter's path after one Orientation session in which Marilyn's picture appeared on the screen as typical work of Med Illustra- tion. We were assured. however. that that was only part of the work done by the artist-doctors upstairs. In the beginning there was a soup. and it was good. . . l' began the gospel. or rather bioGenesis. according to St. Philip. In addition to the gospel. we were given Murphy's first three laws: l. Whatever can go wrong will go wrong . 2. You got to believe what you see . 3. You don't understand nothing. until you know every- thing . But all of these didn't seem to make the cycles quite circular or prevent the lab reactions from getting all mucked up and grinding to screeching halts. We were sure that it was important. but weren't sure what we were studying. At first we were led to believe that we were going to attack medical biochemistry. The statement by one member of the department. my job is to teach biochemistry. not medical biochemistry . how- ever. set us straight. but added to the confusion about which direction. Then we began comparative biochem- istry by discovering that whale and pork insulins are identical and by investigating the Bohr effect for Busy- Cou, Urec'l1is, and the Guslroplzilus larvae. ln any event, we spent long hours in the lab bending over various and sundry apparali. sometimes so long that a wife would come over to see if the husband really was at school. One wife remarked. as 7:00 PM was dis- Lub-Dup, Lub-Dup . . . just like that Will this last forever? appearing. Jim, when you coming home? EVERYTHING is getting cold. Evidently our performance wasn't exactly what THEY wanted. for they declared war upon us. Blistzkrieg B attacked the substrate student with enzymatic warfare. After one lightning. but detai'ed. lecture he declared. This is not pinned down as well as one would like to see it. Too bad no one could pin him down. Another member of the department per- fected giving students the silent treatment to such a degree that he could do it while giving a lab briehng. Though the department denied it. one member of the class went to the hospital after a bout with diamox in the lab. He pulled through. however. and now the class is organizing for a counterattack. using the infernal War- burg machines. After Christmas THE ORGANIZATION took over from anatomy. The receipt of physiology equipment pre- cipitated the usual roommate quarrels over who was going to examine whom first. One never did discover whether the equipment ever caused any domestic quarrels. Turtles. rabbits. dogs, and frogs were other types of patientslill. The Q-10 of a turtle's heart was investigated, though sometimes not quite successfully. That's rather lethargic. even for a turtle. eh Mr. H. . 7 Poetic justice was wreaked via squirting-dog-femoral arteries. and heart sounds were found to go f'lub-dup, lub-dup, vthip. vthip, just like that. And just like that has the transmutation taken place. We have begun that fascinating voyage leading to the harbor of one of the most dynamic professions. Year after year new mental windows will open to us. as we learn about new facets of medicine. Let us hope that each succeeding year will be as rich. varied. and valuable to us as this, our first one, has been. mor 178 . TRADITID UNCLE DU C D Y Duke is young as medical schools go, when compared to the ancients of the North. Never- theless, it has come to have a few rather well established traditions. Perhaps the most memor- able one, to the freshmen. comes during the first traumatic Fall at Duke Medical School. lt is UNCLE DUNC DAY. On this day CHalloween this yeary we gave honor to our mentor of the microscope, Dr. Duncan Hetherington, with a few timely com- ments and a well chosen gift or two in gratitude for what he, by teaching and example, has meant to us this first year at Duke. A Ulzcle Dime and Arrifacts To DR. HETHERlNG'l'ON, ln recognition of your various talents and in gratitude for your delightful wit and outstanding example. Blest be the ties that bind. Su' iiox A twshy PAGE 1 AGE Our tirst weeks at D. M. C. have been filled with an exciting intellectual challenge. Each of us has eagerly left behind the alcohol, the parties, the women of undergraduate life for the cloistered existence of a medical career. Many of our new ideas and much of our dedication has been fos- tered by our inspiring teachers. One of these is our beloved Uncle Dune. Not only does he in- spire us with his own mark, or stain if you wish, on the annals of histology, but he also provides us with a personal example in conduct and dress, an example we are behooved to follow. We wish to honor and thank Dr. Duncan Hetherington today for the tremendous impact he has had upon our lives. We have purchased several gifts which we believe are fitting in several ways. These presents we believe are as subtle as his wit yet they also have life and contrast, con- trast ai vivid as mitochondria stained with Janus green and injected with normal saline solution at monkey blood pressure. In addition we have striven to make these articles intensely personal, causing our class not only to be remembered for its magnificent performance on the first slide demonstration, but also for its deeper personality. These articles are in a broad sense artifacts which are the visible remnants of our freshman class. We hope they shall remain after our vitality has left these walls. SECTION B Crhaj ACIDOPHILE, ARTIFACTS. AND MANY CHROMOPHILES ARRIVAL freshmen .... Eager, bewildered. In line. Out of line, Out of . . . con-text. now nothing, later, perhaps . . . lcfbj WE We few, We happy few, We band of brothers, We passed the biochem. exam. Tm Shakespeare Henry IV, Part II Act III, Scene II. Falstaff Crcnj CGNSOLATION Vacation nears, my boys be brave For on us rests the feet of those Who dared to study, not play the knave Brace now, comrades, to reap our woes With shoulders bared, with back bent through Now we support the half that knew. frcnj PAGE ISI more 182 ODE UN A DREAM OF VACATION O, sing of the days of the pelvis, Sing of those days pudendal. Sing of the sublime mysteries Of Gallaudet transcendental. Whisper the wonders of fa acial planes ln tones of deepsst awe, And don't forget those laryngeal muscles Or those ossieles we all saw, Ah but good friends, be of cheer, And cry not over joys of the past, For with a prayer and some trying There will be no denying That neuro appears yon the lirst of the year. O, sing of non-competitive learning processes, Sing of multiple choices galore, Sing of plexuses mixed with arteries betwixt And ganglia deep in their core. Sing of ten days thoracic and abdominal, Sing of fibers of strength phenomenal, Sing of glutei and gemelli with actions replete So when you sit, you can sit on your seat. Yes, here is my toast in ale To a course one could not fail to enjoyg With a tear in my eye and a deep heavy sigh l think of leaving it for two weeks and l cry, l'll be back, don't leave me anatomy dear. l'll be back year after year after year after year. Cvery, very anonymousl in u real sefixe. I suppose I P 4 A Quiz?-In Lab? Cfmperurive C'lIClC'tll'OI'? Y? gl 1 W ,ry 1 Now up on the Ceiling . . . Donors' Kczricklmjf, Hurt and un zznizlezzrifiefrl .smclerzl :Je ,Q lflix ilu' nc P 'XG ix ck fi If you look closely Sixleen years of sclzool and l'm a Cli.S'l1WCl.S'l16I' PAGE 184 zz! rlml sqlliggle . . . 1 n R ff ,M , , aww 4 P P I V, , , fi Here you have the optireetul nerve Just watch the yummy doll I QW ? 2 f Q 1 , -5'-Xu' M , eve m g , .- 72175 ,Jag M LM' iffy!! W may 51.4511 HND WWTF , You said it! ., ,234 NK X 5 xg 1 ol .,.. , iv 2 ,E 3 - ' He alwayx has his nose in u book x W .lk in Another puppyfx' paw? Lcrrc' hours ,,,..M., ,.,, . . M, ,,,,,,.,..9q-nv-an VW .uw ,-fglfkif A gxdw E. What are you doing hack fI6'l'L', F1'ed.' lI'.s go! In hc' flvrv s'mm'u'f1w'1' PAGE 185 '. wl Sormm for lIC'f'0I'lI'i0H in EKG minor IQIIUXI' f'urc'frz'4' li: l Ama IX6 ., MM ' as 14 mg 1. fe, iffv dark in l,l4'l'C'H Ah, for the good old a'r1y.s'! I , 4 ,pw ,, ,, , . ., 7,7 K, 5,W,v..i.,v . .iv A -MW ,,.:, , f.-v ' - .,.., . W ' 'if A -' IF C ,.-' f!Z1L6W',,'-' fy ' A f Q fjgfiffiggx, AU, ,wfmyfwfw ,f ,,,,f ,ygfqf - mul ..--.. 3 V- ight rnulinr' IHIIVQIIKQUX . , ., fi?f4f95 , -15822 1 . -4., l yme f H 1 ' J 4? A' 1 : J. ..:.4,-A ..:ew..4.v.,:f ,115-5 : , . f ,yi-N , . My W , . W ,1f:a:a:,,4g- A-..gw:.:zvg:::zgwazgf- , f , 1 , 1 1- .. v 4,1 ,ww .A ' f 1' ' w - , 4.5 g.. .1 A4-P .. M.. A -.,..w.v-gn , .Q .-N., 1 warg-2 , ,. 1 1,4-,-A -, 4, - .. ' ,, ' fn ',-15.96, A .Sega - - 1: . ' A , . 'ggff ' 1 . . - f i One more mul I WOI1'I be uble Yes, to see sirzziglzl l'd be unhappy uhoul il, loo .VHIHL - - 3:0011 A quiet evening by the fre P XGF, lvkx, l'u'1'l'l' jllxl I1 WWW E1 gd 4 X ay f 1W ff M A ,H ,M W we Scmzzz Parry Mfll1I15V, Moe mm' .lack Junior Party v7 M 5 pg ff' 0 .,. mmm On the Imac-I1 1,171 Sick 'Afllf WO if 4IIll!0HI-V Can lu' fun Crazy Mf'fl Sclmol 3 K W' x , 5 , Man I0 llze left Sums' of Ihe boys Wake mv H'!l?lI iI'.s' owl' l'XKil WI What part of Georgia are you from, suh? Harvard is tougher than Wc'.S'I Pain! And a bottle of rum Ifl Q r,ej, f X g Ei yy wi' ll? Peach-fuzz What lab alcohol? mari 192 l v 4, Ik v 'xv .1 D.. 0 1' Ar Smooth enough ,,, r, 7 S Tallahu.s'.s'eu La.x'.s'1e I, 2 fad, A fjtex. .,:' She hit my lip Who wet on the chair? Like ll xlmrp knife 'N PAGE 19 Om' lemler c'0n.s'uI1irzg Wish I had a dale' Serzim' picnic Wuiling for II 2-I-lzr. urine .S'p6C'iH1EI1 MI'- SHN? 1'.xmQ I9-1 v iii: V ' - 1 1 9 - They WOIl'l .mciulize me! I Wllflf U ffm vin-...A Charge if gf- gf bf 1 - -5 ., -lj ' 3511155- , A rose is zz rose is a rose D0 fell mor W5 if When do we eat? Do yot.1 think we missed anything? Bicycle Built for Two Soc'iulite.x Happy Roommates ma IE 196 K - fye heard ff Sqllil'I't'lf fl1!7 I if L 01111-D0 it again, Harry! In in if It's the dress you lead PKK EE SGA, DANCE f VVINTER 1961 A Bonzlvefl I flirl no! You forgot your tie, honey! M , Bollonzs-llpf I'ACili IQX THE AESCULAPIAN QUEEN -AND HER COURT PAGE 200 MISS BETSY CRAWFORD Miss MARY ANN ROHRHURST MRS. JUDY KOHLER Miss BETSY WOODHALL Y OFFICIAL Pl-IQTQGRAPHERS n I for the AESCULAPIAN Colonna Studios, Inc. ON LOCATION PHQTQGRAPI-lens With the Compliments Of YOUR WHITE LABORATURIES REPRESENTATIVE Charles D. Andrews Compliments of BORDEIIS PHARMACEUTICAL DIVISION Makers of Bremil-Mull Soy Marcelle Cosmetics Dermatologicals 20 gat? K r o f 5 I'fulfillf1z'4'1z!1'm!, Hfflffltflillf mm' lD1'1zg11n,vl1'1' l,7'0fIlfI1'f.Y 1 mx THE AIICIJILHXI, l'1m1fr-is In Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation, Raritan, New Jersey GOTHIC BOOKSHOP DUKE HOSPITAL STORE UKE Nlvenslrv STORES PCP PRE 8L P0 T-UP in every type of surgery PHEMARIN the physiologic hemostat GUNTRULS BLEEIJING EFFIGIENTLY AND SAFELY The definite value of PREiviARiN iNTRAvENous in clearing the operative field, minimizing blood loss, and preventing postoperative hemorrhage is being consistently reported in patients undergoing ophthalmologic, EENT, Ob.-Gyn., urologic, and oral surgery? The wider range of application for PREiviARiN iNTRAvENous also includes spontaneous hemorrhage Cepistaxis, gastrointestinal bleeding, etc.J as well ' -as bleeding during and after surgery. Over 1,00'O,-GlG0injections have been given to date without a single report of toxieit4y. HPR'EM'ARlN'g iN'rRAvENous Cconjugated estrogens, equiney is supplied in packages containing one Seeule P p'roviding 20 mg., and one 5 cc. vial sterile diluent with 0.51, phenol U.S.P. Clbosage may be administered intramuscularly to small childre'n.J 1. Johnson, J. F.: Paper presented at Symposium on Blood, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, Jan. 18, 1957: cited in M. Science 1:33lM .251957-P .S .E . B' I. 81 M d. 94:92 ar l , roc oc xper io e lJan.l 1957. 2. Published and unpublishe.. case reports, Ayerst Laboratories. 3. Rigg, J. P.: Digest Ophth. 81 Otolaryng. 20.528 lNov.l 1957. 4. Rigual, R.: Ibid., p. 3. 5. Servoss, H. M., and Shapiro, F.: Ibid., p. 10. 6. Menger, H. C.: 1.A.M.A. 159:546 l0ct. 8l 1955. AY E-RST LA B0 RATO Rl ES New York 16, N. Y. - Montreal, Canada 5935 Welch Allyn Electrically Illuminated Diagnostic Instruments -W. A. LIGHTS THE WAY- Otoscopes, Ophthalmoscopes, Retinoscopes, Transilluminators, Headlights, Rechargeable Battery Handles, Laryngoscopes, Proctoscopes, Sigmoidoscopes, Anoscopes, Gesophagoscopes, and many others We are authorized agents for W. A. EXAMINING and TREATMENT ROOM FURNITURE, SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT, INSTRUMENTS, LABORATORY SUPPLIES, ORTHOPAEDIC APPLIANCES and other related items. W. A. Otoscope 81 Ophthalmoscope Serving the Carolinas' since l9l9 in Sandura Case Distributors Of KNOWN BRANDS Of PROVEN QUALITY ltCll7'0!i7llIl.Y Hozzff Qf -S'e1'c'z'n ' WINCHESTER-RITCH SURGICAL CO. WINCHESTER SURGICAL SUPPLY CO. II9 East 7th St., Charlotte, N. C. 421 W. Smith St., Greensboro, N. C. SHERMAN LABORATORIES Detroit, Michigan In the service of medicine since 1907 PROTAMIDERI El.lXCPl'lYl.l.lNk PRESISTINQ Intramuscular injection for I. V. Theophylline blood- Long-acting non-narcotic neuritis and herpes zoster. levels obtained orally. analgesic BACTERIAL VACCINES ' PHARMACEUTICALS PAGE 205 5 gi , . Pi 'mi-13, 1 'E ' - A E I E N Q51 ,L , 5 .,- ' ' f A f 1 ,. ':I - ' Qi -,, 5 ' , 5 1 - . aff - ' A .. ,W 2 f - ' I ' 3 ft ' I 3. is an ll, ! f .,., . LV , A I fm....,.ww' E Q- -I ..,.. ,, 4' ,rf 5,1 X., x ' 4 ' ' v 6, , Z' fc co , We E 1 of f X , 1 W L' 5fV:.,,::. t ripigf .,,. . -f - 3, Q Dedicated to the discovery and development of better medicines for better health-since 7 84 7. Smith Kiine ei French Laboratories 720 years of service to the heaith ,orofessions fxmi 206 INTERNSHIP APPDINTMENTS Agrc. Fred A. Duke Hosp.. Durham Pediatrics Alanis, Joseph M. Colorado Gen.. Denver Surgery Atkinson Samuel M., Jr. Army Med. Serv. Hosps., Rotating Behar, Victor S. Duke Hosp.. Durham Medicine Butler, Freddie C., Jr. Duke Hosp., Durham Medicine Campbell. Milton F. The New York Hospital Medicine Conant. Marcus A. Duke Hosp.. Durham Medicine Corwin, Robert F. Lenox Hill Hosp.. N. Y. Rotating Cox, Ronnie L. Duke Hosp., Durham Pediatrics Deas, David J. Greenvil'e Gen. Hosp. Rotating Dellinger, Clyde J. U. S. Air Force. Lackland Rotating El Ramey, Thomas A. Duke Hosp., Durham Medicine Farris, Robert L. Philadelphia Gen. Hosp. Rotating Feagin. John A., Jr. Army Med. Serv. Hosps., Rotating Brooke Tripler Flanagan, Latham. Jr. Univ. ol' C'alifornia Surgery Clay. William A., Jr. Duke Hosp.. Durham Surgery Cioodwin, Ernest B.. Jr. Moses H. Cone Mem.. N. C. Rotating Ciroff, Diller B.. lll U of Penna. Hospital Rotating Guynn, Cyrus H. Duke Hosp., Durham Medicine Hall,'Warner L., Jr. Barnes Hosp., St. Louis Surgery Hammond. Charfes B. Duke Hosp., Durham Surgery Harp. James R. Univ. of Okla. Hosps. Rotating Harrington, Randall L. Naval Hospitals. Bethesda Rotating Jervey. Edward D., Il Duke Hosp., Durham Surgery Johnson, Walter T. Naval Hospitals. Bethesda Rotating Jones. Edward M. Naval Hospitals Rotating Jordan. Lyndon K. Watts Hosp.. Durham Rotating Kistler. Henry E.. Jr. Army Med. Serv. Hosps., Rotating Womack l.a Polla. .James J. Univ. Hosps.. C leveland Rotating Lassiter, Kenneth R. l.. Army Med. Serv. Hosps. Walter Reed Rotating l.aLenby. Cieorge W.. lll Army Med. Serv, Hosps.. Walter Reed Rotating Lewis. Andrew M.. Jr. Duke Hosp.. Durham Pediatrics Lybass, Tillinghast Ci. Duke Hosp.. Durham Pediatrics Lyon, Cieorge M.. Jr. Duke Hosp.. Durham Pediatrics Martin. Arthur M.. Jr. Duke Hosp., Durham Pathology Massey. Charles C.. Jr. Roanoke Memorial Hosp Rotating Matthews. Hubert l. No. Caro'ina Mem.. N. C Medicine McDonald. William Public Health Service. Boston. Mass. Rotating NlcLain. Lee W.. Jr. Duke Hosp., Durham Pediatrics McTammany. John R. Naval Hospitals. Bethesda Rotating Merlo, Richard B. De Paul Hosp.. Norfolk Rotating Metz. Earl N. Univ. Hosps.. Columbus Medicine Noyes. Philip P. Veterans Adm. Hosp.. L Rotating Peter. Robert H. Duke Hosp., Durham Medicine Pitkethly. David T. Army Med. Serv. Hosps Fitzsimmons Rotating Poole. Ernest T. N Watts Hosp.. Durham. Rotating Price. Dudley R. Army Med. Serv. Hosps.. Walter Reed Rotating Rider. Robert E. Duke Hosp., Durham Pediatrics Rockwell. William J. K. St. Luke's. Cleveland Rotating PAGE 208 H. Schmickel. Roy D. Duke Hosp., Durham Pediatrics Schwartz. Stephen O. U Va.. Charlottesville Surgery Smith. William S.. Jr. Duke Hosp.. Durham Medicine Starling. Kenneth A. Duke Hosp.. Durham Pediatrics Summerlin. Harry H.. Jr. Watts Hosp.. Durham. N. Rotating Sweat. Robert E.. Jr. The New York Hospital Surgery Thompson, Lawrence K. Duke Hosp.. Durham Surgery Trant. John H.. III Duke Hosp., Durham Medicine C. Trantham, Harry E. U. S. Air Force, Lackland Rotating Walton. David S. Childrens Med., Boston Pediatrics Warshaw. Joseph B. Strong Mem.. Rochester Pediatrics Wilemon, William K., Jr. Army Med. Serv. Hosps.. Beaumont Rotating Young, Robert L., Ir. Duke Hosp., Durham Medicine Yowell, Robert K. U Va.. Charlottesville Rotating Powell, Edward Harvard-Teaching Fellowship Boston. Mass. .bw , 1' kr N jx , M , rx W .4- 1 I any L, ta, w v . 4 . 1 Wm. .n., I W V 12- :HM Y 1 ' 9: K Al,,Qg!,A?x N, -. c. ,gf , I . 1 4.11.- fm? , . I rl Iv 'Q' wr .X 'fi .U ,-.3 Ki I 15 '.l I' ,Li . xv ' ,Mff L w I vt. 'WR Q sw . ,a 50 , ,, .... ,., -.,...bvw--f-- ' .-4 ,nu 4:- .Man VL f, ,Z 1 Tl. Q- . ,f . my 1'Q,...'f'13f3' Atta MTNA ,.-- ,,,.,..- .4 ix A 1 '- ...- 14 g V :..-b..1 . .,- , 'f . . , , ,- 1 , ,- X., ,- ,,..... u-J, N, ll ...' .M .Z .. ...LA ,It 4 'L':t,:vr, M' .. .. w...,,....,,,L.,,,f M . ,V .. ,W ,. ,. ,. ..-.V-MHA Lg H :,1,mLJf uf H if.-- . -- W :rr W. A . ,.. ,-,. MQ.. L. .-- ' .MA ff .lid , f, gn. ,. 3 3 3. 11 K fy, 1 sf, 1 mf A ' wir!-ilfit 4' w,,,,3.,f,. H' S Q .0-Y, . ,y .A ,J . .4 . ...ai M.. ,. .---Q-., L fa.. , , , .van ? 1 - Q 4..,,. +-Y ,..., ...,.,..,. u-ti, 'U' i ,.-1 n-v1 ,Q .-L.-4 .l ..A. 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