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c is so short; the art so long HIPPOCRATES 777 f Davison Building The Duke AESCULAPIAN Duke University School of Medicine Durham, North Carolina Volume XXXII George F. Armstrong, Jr. Crawford F. Barnett, Jr. editors 1962 1962 Duke Aesculapia Dedicated To BERNARD F. FETTER, M.D. Bernard F. Fetter, M.D. James A. Garfield said that a log with a student on one end and Mar Hop ins, his old teacher, on the other end was his ideal college. The point in it all is that personal contact and direct interest in the individual student by an instructor of lofty character is the main thing in any institution of learning. _p 5 Groner Dr. Bernard F. Fetter, the man to whom this yearbook respectfully is dedicated, is a teacher and friend to all those who have passed through the portals of the Duke School of Medicine since 1951 when he returned to Duke. Throughout his resi- dency and as Instructor and later Associate Profes- sor of Pathology, Dr. Fetter has been dedicated to those ideals upon which this medical school was founded. His first thought has been for the educa- tion of the medical student and the advancement of medical knowledge. four Bernard Fetter was born on January 21, 1921. After graduation from high school, he attended Johns Hopkins University, where he received an A.B. degree in 1941. He came to Duke University School of Medicine that year and received his M.D. degree in 1944. After graduation he was an intern in Surgery at Duke until June 1945, when he left to serve in the Medical Corps of the United States Army. From March 1947 through May 1948 he was a resident in Pathology at the V.A. Hospital in Fort Howard, Maryland. In May of 1948 Dr. Feter was hospitalized for tuberculosis, spending the next nineteen months convalescing from this illness. Certainly his illness had much to do with his later interest in the pa- thology of tuberculosis, ami his students can all testify to his generous, first-hand knowledge of the disease. After his recovery, Dr. Fetter returned to the V.A. Hospital at Fort Howard, Maryland, to complete another year of his residency in Pathology. In January of 1952, Dr. Fetter returned to his alma mater, Duke University, to become Assistant Resident and then Resident in Pathology under Dr. Wiley Forbus. In 1953 he was appointed Associate in Pathology at Duke, and in 1955 was made As- dstant Professor of Pathology. In 1959 Dr. Fetter was appointed Associate Professor of Pathology, the position which he holds at present. In his present capacity he handles a large portion of the surgical pathology cases for the hospital, but above all he teaches medical students and house staff. Dr. Fetter has done research on a number of disease processes ami has published articles on such varied conditions as tuberculous myocarditis, viral hepatitis, and cardiovascular syphilis. He is board certified by the American Board of Pathology and is a member of the American Association of Pathol- ogy and Bacteriology, the American Medical Associ- ation, and the College of American Pathologists. He is married and has four children. Perhaps most Duke medical students first en- countered Dr. Fetter on the Admissions Committee, of which he is a member. Many will remember his immediate moves to make the nervous applicant more at ease by discussing subjects of mutual in- terest. As a second year student, one found him to be ever ready and willing to stop and explain any- thing which might be confusing to the budding pathologist. He has a phenomenal ability to re- member names, and what student was not pleased to feel that someone really knew who he was. In school and outside, Dr. Fetter has become a friend as well as a teacher. And so, to Dr. Bernard F. Fetter pathologist, teacher, and friend, we dedicate the 1962 Duke Aesculapian. L_ With the student five 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 honor; that into whatsoever home I shall enter it shall be for the good of the sic and the well to the utmost of my power; and that I will 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 disease; 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 {eep inviolably secret . . . These things I do promise, and in proportion that I am faithful to this Oath, may happiness and good repute be ever mine; the opposite it shall be fore- sworn. — HIPPOCRATES. SIX Foreword What, after all, is education but a subtle, slowly-effected change, due to the action upon us of the Externals; of the written record of the great minds of all ages, of the beautiful and harmonious surroundings of nature and of the lives, good or ill, of our fellows — these alone educate us, these alone mould the developing minds. sir william osler A publication such as The Aesculapian represents something a little different to each person who reads it. To the undergraduate it signifies the passing of another year, putting him closer to a desired goal. To the senior it marks the end of one phase of his medical education and the beginning of another. To the faculty it records another year in the growth of the Duke University Medical Center. But to everyone it symbolizes another year ' s accretion to his pearl of knowledge. As with one photograph, this single volume attempts to pictorialize something of that dynamic, but ethereal, process of Education of which we have all been a part this past year. STAFF edito George F. Armstrong, |r. Crawford F. Barnett, |r. layout alitor C. Christopher Bremer photograph) alitor Tolbert S. Wilkinson faculty alitor William B. Waddell features alitor William A. Baxley senior alitor Antonio C. Gonzalez junior editor Harry P. Banghart sophomore editor N. Bruce Chase freshman co-editors David R. Maynard Kirkwood T. Shultz nurse editor Barbara J. Dimmick artist Frederick D. McFalls, M.D. editorial staff Midge Anderson John A. Baumann Betsy J. Crawford Carl Eisdorfer, Ph.D. Judy Evans Pat Flatter Battle Haslam David M. Hawkins Margaret Johnson Sue Leyrer Marie Meeker Mrs. Guy (Barbara) Odom, Jr. Donald W. Romhilt H. Leonard Turner. Jr. photography staff Robert C. Noble Ralph L. Shields H. Leonard Turner, )r. business manager Martin A. Hatcher, Jr. advertising assistant Frank T. Hannah advisers Dr. W. P. J. Peete Dean Herbert J. Herring eight COXTEHTS m ■-.. xmm 1 8 __! ■' 91 Yah 4SIF5i 2H1 i forty-six one hundred and twenty-four one hundred and thirty-six one hundred and fifty-eight © ic)57, Parke. Davis Comnan The Temples and Cult of Aesculapit f ten : S j J ADMIHISTRATIOH and FACULTY eleven Barnes Woodhall, M.D. Dean of the School of Medicine During these past twelve months, this graduating class of medical students and 1 have been students to- gether. The President of Duke University will pre- sent their degrees shortly after I have testified publicly that the faculty of the School of Medicine considers them individually qualified for that degree. This ancient and honorable distinction demands a strong sense of the value of continuing education. Both these students and the Dean may be widely separated ge- ographically during coming years but they will be united in this single purpose. Medical education continues to be buffeted by the changing storms of categorical research emphasis, the need for teachers to teach medicine, the search for qualified students, the structuring of multi-curricula pathways ranging from community hospital externships to the clinical investigators program and the need for financial resources to guarantee neither economic nor intellectual segregation for these and other pertinent issues. Enthusiasts rightfully display the advantages of each course of study. The basic issues resolve them- selves into the ability of the Medical School to develop the potential in each student and to insure the quality of each program the student may choose. This grad- uating class has demonstrated mature judgment in career appraisal and the Medical School has sought to both advise and design appropriate channels of con- tinuing study. Neither student nor school appear out ADMINISTRATION Commuter on Health Affairs: Left to right, seated: D. U. Tosteson, J M.irkee L R Clark F G 1 1) T Sn A. M. Jacobansky, J. L. Callaway, N. F. Conant; standing: L. B. Hohman, P. Handler, b ' . Woodhall J S Harris ' C Frenzel, E. A. Stead, Jr., W. P. J. Peete, C. E. Gardner. Jr. ith, H. twelve . J [oseph E. Mark.ee, Ph.D. Assistant Dean in Charge of Admissions of balance although the advantages of flexible emphasis from year to year among these programs is obvious to all concerned. I would repeat what was stated last year with greater vigor, that medicine is so well de- signed and now so much part of the modern world, that the studious and well motivated physician can be William M. Nicholson, M.D. Assistant Dean in Charge of Post Graduate Education guaranteed a rewarding life experience in any aspect of clinical or laboratory medicine and in any environ- ment of his choice. I therefore so run, not as uncertainly; so fight I, not as one that beateth the air. Again I say, good luck to you all. —Barnes Woodhall, M.D. William P. J. Peete, M.D. Assistant to the Dean Richard A. Bindewald, A.B. Assistant to the Dean ihn teen A ■E. Marker, Ph.D. Chairman J Traditionally the entering medical student ' s first in- troduction to medicine is through the study of anatomy. Here he learns facts and principles which he will use throughout his association with medicine. As befits such an important subject, anatomy in its various ram- ifications occupies more than half of the first year stu- dent ' s time. The student works in the laboratory doing gross dissections and studying the microscopic structure of tissues for much of the first three months. Audio- visual aids are used to supplement this work. Among such aids are colored motion pictures demonstrating dissections, closed-circuit television, colored lantern slides, and embrylogic and neurologic motion pictures. Many of these audiovisual aids are produced h ere by the Department and are used in many medical schools other than Duke. With the cooperation of the Depart- ment of Radiology, the student has an opportunity to Department of A7 [ATOMT ' The convolutions of Convolvulus The structure of the . . . pelvis maybe compared with that oj a box. fourteen study parts oi the living body as revealed by the X-ray and fluroscope as well as to begin to understand the advantages and limitations of this equipment. Later in the year, the anatomy of the nervous system is pre- sented with the use of brain dissections and slides. Here the clinical application of neurology is stressed. In all of the instruction, teaching is designed to be as informal and as individual as possible. For the more advanced student and lor review, the Department oi Anatomy offers elective courses. Among these are re- views of general, surgical and orthopaedic anatomy, brain modeling, experimental anatomy, special neuro- anatomy, and a special interdisciplinary seminar in the physiological and anatomical bases of behavior. First row, kit to right: Everett, Hetherington, Markee ( hairn McFalls, Gabor, Peele, Moses, Lacy. Not pictured: Becker, Goree. Duke. Second w: Venetta, Dabbert, Agnelo, fifteen ■T The increasing importance of biochemistry in the training oi the medical student may be attributed to the tremendous progress being made in biochemical re- search. Medicine is looking more and more to bio- chemistry lor the understanding of disease processes, for new diagnostic methods and for a more rational ap- proach 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, and carbohydrates, and to 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, erythrocytes, liver, connective tissue, and the chemical aspects of digestion, respiration, electrolyte, acid-base and fluid balance are presented with relation to the study of the physiology of these organs, so as to correlate the two disciplines. Philip Handler, Ph.D. Chairman Department of BIOCHEMISTRY Now which way does the stoc (co turn? ' Shafo, Rattle, and Roll sixteen First row, left to right: Green, Kamin, Kirshner, Handler (Chairman), Wakil, Rosette, Hill. Second row: Wyngaarden, Guild, Bernheim, Wheat, McCarty. Davidsoi, Tanford. Missing: Lynn, Thiers. 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 lab- oratory the student handles and manipulates those basic- substances and functions necessary for life. Instead of regular laboratory exercises the student, if qualified, may pursue original research within the field of bio- chemistry. In addition to being quite active in the field of biochemical research, the department also presents special seminars on the chemistry of proteins and en- zymes, intermediary metabolism, nutrition and bio- chemistry of disease as well as participating in the new- Research Training Program, wherein the medical stu- dent may get advanced training for research without having to leave school or finishing behind his class. seventeen p Ecgene A. Stead, Jr., M.D. Chairman The Department of Medicine plays a large part in the education oi the medical student throughout the last three years of his training. Beginning in the sec- ond year, the students are introduced to Physical Di- agnosis. In this first course in medicine, the students have their first contact with patients, and they begin to feel like a part of the medical profession. In this course the students learn the methods of physical examination and history taking, which are essential parts of their training. There are lectures covering a wide field of dis- ease processes with emphasis on their signs and symp- toms. The interpretation and pathologic physiology of the abnormal findings are stressed. Students have an opportunity to work-up patients and present them to their fellow classmates. The bedside teaching is done in small groups with much emphasis on individual in- struction. The course also places emphasis on the more specialized methods of examination, and lectures and demonstrations are given by members of other depart- ments such as Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Surgery, and Radiology. Further instruction in the second year is given by the Hematology Division of this department. In Clinical Microscopy the students are taught to do the laboratory procedures which are essential in the management of their patients in later years. The laboratory work in- cludes the preparation and interpretation of blood smears, blood counts, and the examination of materials Department of MEDICINE r OK, th one of you guys that ' s late visits the BIG FLEA ' CBC, Urine, FBS. Bun, PSP, TP with .1 G. Pro tune Thymol floe. Sickle prep .,• I2 , LE prep, til positive eighteen ' r- - = — I ft ' I z °£ X In „ Js . - 00 - — i-T rt - pq bo -a c JS 1 E = ffl be o oo — 5 — - 00 00 u rt u ft 3 c ._ s C3 ■f) o • s — - - „ p 1 O V5 E o U - U r -2 rt v_ ti. n n £ 3 c — U ■- C ft « - o n fel — —s u. o c - 3 u J3 r ,- 1_? ■■_ n „ u — c — fc sc c fe - u, w _ 3 3 V H — H X u U — ' -• n u 3 ' j: C X. — O J3 g s — c as 1 ? hr - Tl O n 5 -. 1 O pq u a: « tn c — ' C — z V U rt Is ■- 1— 4J 1 - , -■r cd OJ ™ — JfJ rt V ' •n 2 - 3 v - H CO X. -a trt -r - ■J u J c 5 - rt Q - X. u - - .-- . o c 3 -a c _l - ' J be m 3 PQ PC C in z — C - s c 3 u - c l- pq - 00 X i U 7 s c w — c u o c - ft — z - 00 J4 t 5 — in — cfl - ifl _ !S X - u, tun teen Division of Dermatology 8 $ ttliir First row: Smith. Callaway (Chief), Hutto. Second row: Sams. Tosteson, Tindall, Miranda. such as urine, stool, and spinal fluid. The procedures learned in this course are of great importance in the junior and senior rotations, where laboratory work is included in the students ' duties. In both the junior and senior years one quarter is spent on one of the medical wards or in the Medical Out-Patient Clinic. Some of the students spend all or Division of Cardiovascular a pari o! one of these rotations on the medical ward; at the Durham V.A. Hospital. On the Medical Service the student learns total patient care. Patients arc worked up completely, and the student is given respon- sibilit) commensurate with his ability and experience. 1 here is emphasis on indiyidu.il instruction by the members ol the house staff, who are always reach ' to lend a helping hand at any time of the day or night. Tin teaching by the senior staff is done at the bedside and in small groups on morning rounds. Bedside teach- ing is supplemented by noon conferences and special lectures and teaching sessions. The students find their rotations on the Medical Service to be extremely im- portant parts of their training, regardless of their future plans possibly in other fields. They are made to realize the importance of caring for the whole patient no matter how limited his basic disorder. Many long hours are spent with sick patients, in the labs, and in the library searching for information which might help in the management of the patient and the understanding of his disease process. It is particularly useful to the student to be encouraged to search the literature for references on the diseases which he is treating. This helps one to realize that the material in books is often out of date and that in order to keep abreast of the latest methods of diagnosis and treatment, he must go to the literature. and Renal Diseases Left to right: Mcintosh, Shelburne, Roberts, Sleeper, Cohen, Estes, Sumner, Floyd, Whale twenty n, Orgain (Chiel ), Ir Division of Chest, Allergy, and Infectious Diseases First row: Hansen-Pruss (Chief), Over- man, Sicker, Osterhout. Second row: Kahn, Bongardt, Norins, Lynch, Gentry. Division of Hematology First row: McFarland, Laszlo, Liebling, Rundles (Chief). Second row: Lane, Combs. Ennis, Morris. Division of J [eurology First row: Pfeiffer, Kunkle (Chief), Villa- ] neuva, Heyman. Second row: Obenour, Cupp, Williams, Peele, Harrison, David. twenty one ' 1 his department, which includes the various aspects ol bacteriology, mycology, parasitology, and virology, has a major role in preparing the second year student for his clinical years. Throughout the teaching pro- gram, the study ol the physiology, biochemistry, and the life cycles of microorganisms is correlated with the pathogenesis and symptomatology of the disease pro- duced in man. In the laboratory, the student is taught all the methods and procedures employed in bacterio- logic laboratories. In addition to personal exercises in technique, ample materials and demonstrations are available for the student ' s use. Most of the lecture time- is devoted to the immunologic and epidemiologic as- pects of infection. Instruction 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. During the study of viruses, the student is instructed in the use of the elec- tron microscope. In the clinical years on medicine, the Norman F. Conant, Ph.D. Chairman iMMm :..- Department of MICROBIOLOGY ' Lovebugs? No Ridding! ' Now this patient didn ' t have BCG twenty two - JLil ■■iv.v . . •■; Hhmhhmmh int nflMMMH V ■■■i ■■■■■■■vm Hi ■naRnsi ■■■■■■■■First row: Pine, Hardin. Willett, Eiring, Smith, D.T. Second row: Osterhout, Conant (Chairman), Overman, Craig, Gross. Not pictured: Beard, Larsh. medical student performs the routine and special bacte- riologic work on the patients assigned to him, under the direction of the members of the staff. In addition to the responsibility of teaching microbiology, the de- partment also maintains a diagnostic infectious service for the hospital and provides an advanced training pro- gram for the center. Training leading to a M.S. or Ph.D. degree in microbiology is offered to the graduate student of the university. The areas of training avail- able for graduate work include virology, immunology, microbial physiology, mycology, and medical bacteriol- ogy- twenty three The Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology is responsible for the portion of the Sophomore course in Physical Diagnosis which deals with diseases of women. The fundamentals of obstetrics, gynecology, and en- docrinology are taught to the students and integrated with the other sections of the course. The techniques of the gynecologic examination are demonstrated to and performed by the students on Physical Diagnosis in the Ob-Gyn Clinic. Close supervision is provided by the house stall and members of the senior staff. The major contact which the student has with the Ob-Gyn Department comes in the junior quarter which is spent on this service. In the nine weeks spent on Ob , as it is known by most of us, the student sees patients in the clinic and on the wards. He is given an opportunity to participate in the examination, diagnosis, and follow-up of gynecologic problems in the clinic, and he works up those patients who are admitted to Francis Bayard Carter, M.D. Chairman Department of OBSTETRICS GYNECOLOGY , vj ... v 0 i And there I was — 30,000 ject up and. . . . I Pseudo? cyesis ' twenty-jour the wards. Here one has a part of the responsibility for the [ire- and post-op care of those patients who require surgery, and the students are encouraged to scrub in on all cases in the operating room. On the obstetrics patients, the students again have the opportunity to see the patients in the clinic and make the original diagnosis of pregnancy. After con- sultation with members of the attending staff, one is responsible for instituting the patients obstetric care. On the wards, students are called as soon as the patients are admitted in labor, and the student who is called spends his entire time with her until after the delivery. Throughout the period of labor, the student sits with the patient, makes frequent checks on the progress of her labor, and makes certain that her condition and that of the fetus are satisfactory. The student then as- sists at the delivery, and after he has had some expe- rience is allowed to do the delivery himself, tinder the watchful eye of the house staff. There are many lectures, case presentations, and conferences which deal with the routine and complex problems encountered in obstetrics and gynecology. There are a number of lectures on the endocrinology of women and the various disturbances of the harmonal system of the female. There is special emphasis on the complications of pregnancy and the carcinomata of the female genitalia. Perhaps one of the most vivid recol- lections of the student who has had Ob-Gyn will be the nights he spent on tox watch. When patients are admitted with toxemia of pregnancy, the students take round-the-clock rotations with the patient and are able to observe the progress of such patients from the bed- side. Thus the student is introduced to as many of the Ob-Gyn problems as can be telescoped into one quarter. First row: Ellington, Wilbanks, Crenshaw, Haim. Second row: Clarke, Massad, Cherny, White, Addison. Third row: Creadick, Carter (Chairman), Peete, Parker, Cuyler. tn ' t nly-fivc The medical student is first introduced to the ill- nesses which afflict mankind during his second year in the course of general pathology. Teaching is conducted by lecture and in laboratory and small conferences under the leadership of the junior and senior staff. The histologic aspects of the pathological processes are studied together with the gross anatomic and phys- iologic alterations of the tissues, thus maintaining a unity of conception of disease. When applicable, the student works in small groups with experimental animals and provides the other mem- bers of his class with live examples of the pathological processes to supplement the study of the other material. For the first time in his career, the medical student is on call, as he participates in rotation in the hos- pital ' s post-mortem examinations. Cases are studied by the students in pairs, with much of the prosection eventually being done by the student under the guid- ance of a resident. The student makes and records his Thomas D. Kinney, M.D. Chairman Department of PATHOLOGY m ' Lesion, Lesion, who ' s got the Lesion Dig that crazy Kimmelstiel Wilsc twenty -sn First row: Fetter, Hackel, Kinney (Chairman), Kaufman, Smith, Klavins. Second row: Valdes, Summer, Porter, Patrick, Wittels, Polt, Elchlepp. Third row: Johnson, Robbins, Chick, Stuber. Klintworth, Vogel. Fourth row: Hen- dry, Martin, Robertson, Poon. Not pictured: Forbus, Grift ' eth, Huang, Kurtz, Rambach. own observations, studies the histological slides, con- sults the literature he thinks pertinent to the case, and finally makes his own diagnosis. He then reviews his work with the resident with whom he did the original prosection. In such a way, the student comes to learn how a pathologist approaches a case as well as learning the various facts and processes. The department in ad- dition takes care of all of the surgical and general pathological problems of the hospital, no small under- taking in a medical center of this size. Research also occupies the senior staff, in an ever increasing amount due to the new techniques available for their use. Two electron microscopes are owned by the department for diagnosis, research, and for student use if he is qualified. twenty-seven One of the most significant events of the year was the opening f the new pediatric wing, Howland Ward. This new fifty bed, twelve bassinet ward is a major step in the progress and growth of our medical school. The Department of Pediatrics is founded on the prin- ciple of teaching, and the new ward is a reflection of this principle. The students ' acquaintance with this de- partment is primarily in the senior year, when one quarter ' s rotation is spent on the pediatric ward and in the Pediatric Clinic. Here the student works directly with the patients under the close supervision of the staff, and he is given a major part of the responsibility for the care of the patients. On the ward the students work up all admissions and plan with the house staff the management of the patients. Frequent ward rounds and conferences with the pediatric sub-speciality groups gives one a excellent opportunity to become familiar with the complex prob- lems of pediatrics. In addition there are many con- ferences dealing with common problems of diagnosis Jekome Sylvan Harris, M.D. Chairman r Department of PEDIATRICS V ' The Micro-Fleas ' Now, Honey, don ' t cough in Joe ' , face . . . just .uiy ah. . . . twenty-eight and treatment. The nursing staff works closely with the students to give them an opportunity to visualize the unique features of pediatric nursing. During his tour in the Pediatric Clinic, the student is shown the importance of out-patient care in treating children. During this time, several nights are spent in the emergency room, where routine and unusual cases arrive in large numbers. In addition to the routine clinics, there are morning and afternoon clinics devoted to the sub-specialties: hematology, metabolic disorders, neurology, cardiology, allergy, convulsive disorders, be- havior disorders, and renal diseases. Well-Baby Clinics are held twice weekly. The students work up new pa- tients and see return patients. They are given the re- sponsibility for the patients ' dispensation after consulta- tion with one of the staff members. One gets a chance to follow the progression and regression of the diseases in his patients during his stay in the clinic. Part of the student ' s time is spent in the Nursery. The problems of premature babies and the lull term newborns are presented vividly. After only a few days on the Nursery, one learns that those little babies are not so fragile as they might seem, and it is not so easy to drop one as we might think. The student even learns to feed the babies, and this bit of experience is inval- uable in the future, especially to those who have wives who like to sleep through their baby ' s three o ' clock feeding. First row: Agre, Murray, Osterhout, Canent, Harris (Chairman), Howell, Spach. Second row: Lanzkowskv, Gentry, McKay, Moseley, Lewis, Stempfel, McBryde, McLain, Spock. Third row: Rider, Engstrom, Warner, Lyon, Ray, Schmickel, Lybass, Cooper. Cox, Starling, Nye, Dees, Buckley, Sidbury, Gitzelmann. Not pictured: Arena, Baker, DeMaria, Freye, Fani Job, lose Job. Lee, Robertson, Weise, White. twenty-nine Iii the first year the student is introduced to medical physiology. Basic principles and fundamental concepts are stressed. Lectures and conferences are closely inte- grated with the student ' s work in the laboratories. In the laboratory the student is taught experimental tech- nique. He participates in experiments in which he can observe first hand physiologic principles. During part of the course, the student follows a small colony of animals with different endocrinological problems. He is able to observe the natural clinical course of these diseases and the reactions to therapy. In this course as in the others of the first year, the instruction is fre- ' Daniel C. Tosteson, M.D. Chairman Department of PHYSIOLOGY PHARMACOLOGY -Lr ¥ ' • 1 ' Man, hs thou Bo jse nongos There ' ll always be an England thirty First row: Horowicz, Moore, Tosteson (Chairman), Hall (Chairman Emeritus), Burch. Second row: Evarts, Caputo, Langley, Ulbricht, DeTurk, Salzano, Mincey. Third row: McManus, Hull, Gerber, Frayser, Ottolenghi, Harris. Not pictured: Bernheim, Kostyo, Long. quently in small groups with emphasis on individual teaching as much as possible. In addition, the depart- ment, newly organized into five divisions, participates in research in the various yet unexplained aspects ol the fundamentals of physiologic processes. The course in pharmacology is taught m the spring of the second year under the direction of Dr. Bernheim. Lectures and laboratory work deal with the mode f action of drugs in terms of the biochemical and phys- iological basis. Properly qualified students are encour- aged to undertake original research under the direction of various members of the staff. ' Frederick Bernheim, Ph.D. Chief of Pharmacology thirty-one Ewald W. Busse, M.D. Chairman The medical student is introduced to the Depart- ment of Psychiatry during the first year at Duke in an elementary course on personality development, matur- ing, aging, and the effect of environment on the in- dividual. Students are given the opportunity to observe children in various stages of growth and development and to see the reactions of abnormal patients m similar situations. In the second year, lectures are given throughout the year on the methods of interviewing patients. The lectures are interspersed with case pres- entations and demonstrations. In the second half of the year, the student has his first opportunity to interview patients on his own. Patients are interviewed and pre- sented to small group conferences, and the methods of interview technique are criticized and evaluated under the close supervision of the stall During the third year of medical school the student spends one quarter ' s rotation of the Psychiatric Service. Some of the students are assigned to the Psychiatric In-Patient Service at Duke Hospital and the others to the Psychiatric Service at the V.A. Hospital. During this quarter the student has a chance to interview, ex- amine, and follow-up patients with a wide range of emotional disorders. Working under the supervision of the house staff and the senior staff, the students in- terview the patients when they are admitted to the Department of PSYCHIATRY The eeper of the eys, and helpers This is the best group we could get since we started requiring National Boards thirty-two ward, perform physical examinations, and then follow the patients throughout their course of therapy and their stay in the hospital. There are lectures and case presentations to acquaint the students with an even wider range of psychiatric problems, in addition students are encouraged to do individual research on problems which are of particular interest to them. The various schools of thought re- garding psychiatric therapy are discussed and explained. During the stay on the service some of the mornings are spent in the Psychiatric Out-Patient Clinic, where patients are interviewed for the first time. Their cases are presented to group conferences and the dispensation is made on the recommendations of the group. In addition to the work on the Psychiatric Service, the students work with the house staff on the Psychoso- matic Service, which acts as a consulting service to the others clinical departments. Patients on the medical, surgical, and Ob-Gyn wards are worked up by the students on the Psychosomatic Service for problems of an emotional nature. Throughout his stay in the De- partment of Psychiatry the medical student has em- phasized to him the role of the physician in the com- munity, the relationship with patients, and the impact oi disease, especially mental illness, on the patient ' s family and community. This knowledge and the in- terview techniques learned are of great importance to the practitioner of medicine, whether he be a small town general practitioner or an academician in a uni- versity center. First row: Dovenmuehle, Green, Silver, Hohman, Rhoads, Busse (Chairman), Lovvenbach, Bressler, Silverman, Cohen, McGough, Harris. Second row: Carter, Gehman, Daston, fordan, Wilson, Newman, Smith, Verwoerdt, Goldbloom, Llewellyn, Gingras, Maddux, Trachtenberg, Hine, Carson, LaBarre, Miller. Third row: Obrist, Graham, Yongue, Taylor, Cox, Lertora, Barnes, Bromberg, Borstelmann, Altrocchi, Nichols, McLauchlin. Fourth row: Irigaray, Fleischaker, Williams, Jones, Turner, Back, Turk, Spradlin, Spoerl, Hughes. Absent from picture: Bar- ringer, Cohen, Eisdorfer, Huse, Jefters, Hein, Preiss, Lakin, Wertz, Shmavonian, Thompson, Fowler, Rippy, Tomlin- son, Golann, Crovitz, Clemmons, Reckless. Beiser, Enzer, Workman, Erwin, Clarkson, Gianturco, Saner, Van Veen, Hay man. thirty-three Robert J. Reeves, M.D. Chairman The Department of Radiology has an important part in the education of the medical student for the entire tour years. Radiologic anatomy is taught in conjunction with gross anatomy, and the students learn to correlate the two facets of anatomy. X-rays are made of the cadavers, and these are presented to the students as a part of their instruction. In the second year the students are taught the basic principles of roentgenologic di- agnosis as well as the fundamentals of physical di- agnosis. In addition, there is instruction in the hazards of radiation and the protective devices used against these. The pathological features of radiation sickness are discussed and shown graphically by the use of ir- radiated laboratory animals. In the clinical years the Department of Radiology plays an important role in teaching and in the manage- ment of patients on all the clinical rotations. There are frequent X-ray conferences each quarter. Even more instructive than the conferences is the readiness of all the members of the senior staff and house staff to dis- cuss the X-ravs with the individual students and to Department oj RADIOLOGY ' Sleepy time ' The quicl consult ' thirty juui Left to right, bottom to top: Goree, Worde, Reeves (Chairman), Baylin. Islev, Barry, McCrae, Cavanaugh, Davis. Wallace, Bean, Brooks, Winkler, Tester, Thorne, Sanders, Capp. point out their application to the patients ' problems. In addition to the regular teaching functions of the department, there are positions available for several of the senior students each quarter to spend their elective time with one of the senior staff in learning the funda- mentals of roentgenographic interpretation. These rota- tions have proven to be extremely valuable to those stu- dents who have chosen to spend their electives in this department. The Radiation Therapy division has been open for a year, and students on their clinical rotations become ac- quainted with the methods of and indications for radia- tion therapy. Lectures and case discussions are held weekly for the students in addition to the weekly Tumor Clinic, in which tumor cases are presented for diagnostic and therapeutic evaluation. A third important division of the Department of Radiology is the Radioisotope Laboratory, which is available for diagnosis and treatment. This laboratory facility is important in the diagnosis and therapy oi thyroid diseases and other diseases in which the radio- isotope techniques are applicable to diagnosis. Much of the research work of the medical school is centered around this laboratory. thirty fire tm Clarence E. Gardner, M.D. Chairman The Department of Surgery has no clireet contact with the medical student until the second half of the sophomore year. In the last half of the second year, the Department of Surgery has charge of a course in M.E.N. D. Surgery. The course is set up as a part of the program of Medical Education for National De- fense, and the fundamentals of emergency treatment and the management of mass casualties are stressed. Emergency surgical procedures such as tracheostomies and debridement are learned in the animal laboratory in Hell Building. The members of the various sub- speciality departments cooperate in the demonstrations of induction of anesthesia, suturing, debridement, and cardiac massage. The Junior student spends one of his two month rotations on the surgical wards. Most of his time is spent learning the basic principles of general surgery, but he is also responsible for working with patients of some of the sub-specialties; namely, neuro-surgical, plastic, thoracic, and orthopedic patients. Teaching rounds and conferences are held frequently to acquaint the students with special problems of surgery, and the house staff is available for individual instruction at all times. Students share part of the responsibility of the patient ' s pre- and post-operative care with the interns and residents on the wards. It is the policy of the de- partment that students scrub on all cases when it is Department of SURGERY So? What ' s the rush ' Zap! You ' re jried thirty-six possible for them to do so, and excellent operating room teaching is promoted. In the Junior year, one halt of the quarter is spent on the public surgical wards at Duke Hospital, and the other half is spent on the sur- gical wards at the V.A. Hospital. In the Senior year the student is given an oppor- tunity to become acquainted with the surgical sub-spe- cialties. The quarter which the Senior spends on Surgery is divided up into five rotations on the various sub-specialties. In addition there are many lectures, con- ferences, and case demonstrations in the other sub- specialities. On his rotation on Orthopedics, the stu- dent works with the senior staff and house staff in the clinic and on the wards. He is also given an oppor- tunity to observe the orthopedic procedures in the op- erating room. The time spent m the Surgical Out- patient Clinic gives the student experience with the management of long term post-operative problems and with the diagnosis and dispensation of out-patient sur- gical problems. During this time nights are spent in the Duke Emergency Room. Another rotation is di- vided between the Ear, Nose and Throat Service and the Ophthalmology Service. The student becomes fa- miliar with the problems and procedures singular to these services, and at the same time he spends his nights on the Emergency Room at Watts Hospital, which handles the majority of minor and sometimes major emergencies for Durham County. Many students regard this as their most valuable experience in the clinical rotations. On anesthesia Seniors learn the fun- damentals of good anesthesia, and by the end of their time on this rotation, most of them feel competent in handling minor cases. The fifth rotation is spent on the Urology Service. The time is spent with clinic and ward patients with urological problems. Special em- phasis is placed on those disease entities which are unique in the practice of urology, but which most all physicians will encounter in practice. First row: Young, Shingleton, Sealy, Hart (President, Dul{e University), Gardner (Chairman). Grimson, Brown, Smith, Peete. Second row: Deaton, Noah, Flemma, Freese, Elliott, Mattison, Turner. Welch. Seabury, Pomeranz, Riggins. Th ird row: Robertson, Brown, Hill, Price. Kurad, Windsor, Schauble, Silver. Lee, Kistler, Weaver, SchifT- man, Cox. thirty-seven Division of Anesthesiology t r Left to nght: First row. North, Hall, Edmonds, Dent. Yartanian. Second row: Coffman, Buckner Mobley Gil- spie, Stephen (Chief), Borders, Lozano, Williams. Division of J [eurosurgery Left to right: First row, Tyndell, Nashold, Odom (Chief), Woodh son. Cupp, Yieth. Lee, Mahaley. Dukes, Jack- thirty-eight Division of Ophthalmology Left to right: First row, Anderson, Jr., Hudnell, Anderson, Sr. (Chief), Smith, Mitchell. Second row: Campbe Hunter, Richman, Kunkle, Levenson, Johnson. Division of Orthopedics 41 Left to right: First row. Bell. Dillworth, Dabbert. McCollum, AiJem, Pruitt. Hill. Second row: Deverell, Sandaen, Bugg, Coonrad, Clippenger, Baker (Chief), Goldner, Kapoor, Glasson, Kyne, Roberts. thirty-nine Division of Thoracic Surgery Left to right: Hatler, Kistler, Young, Sealy (Chief), Weaver, Mullen. Division of Urology Left to right: First row, Moffat, Semans, Alyea (Chief), Dees, Howse. Second row: Hart, Kirkland, Harper, Anderson, Shearin, Jones, Politano. forty Division of Otolaryngology Left to right: First row, Patterson. Eagle (Chief), Hudson. Second row: Mitchell, Hurst, Kenan, King, Mum- ford, Hammond, Shearin. Division of Plastic and Oral Surgery Left to right: First row, Kessel. Georgiade, Pickrell (Chief). Guido Malton. Maria Malum, Quinn, Ormandy. Second row: Hoffman, Hartwell, Huger, Barnes, Sly, Greskovich. Farguhar. Third row: Gwenn, Tsamas, Tilly, Pope, Blalock, Odom. forty-one Frank L. Engel, M.D. Director The Division oi Endocrinology has the distinction of being a division ol several departments. Although not a department per se, it is made up ot members from the Departments of Medicine, Pediatrics, and Obstetrics and Gynecology. The Division of Endocrinology was organized in 1956 as a pan of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology by Dr. E. G. Hamblen, who is now Emeritus Director. In 1955 it was reorganized into an integrated service with its staff drawn from the other departments as mentioned. The students have less contact with the members of this di- vision than the house stalf since the purpose of the division is primarily 1 hat ol post-graduate training. Emphasis is placed on clinical and laboratory research in the Held of endocrinology. Glinics, conferences, ward rounds, and seminars are ar- ranged so that the entire staff may participate, and these conferences are open to the house staff and students. The endocrine laboratory and its services are available to all the members of the staff. Residents from the Departments of Medicine, Pediatrics, and Obstetrics and Gynecology rotate through the Division of Endocrinology. There are also fellows and trainees working with the individual staff members and participating in the clinics, teaching rounds, and conferences. Although the students do not have any formal rotation in this division, the members of the staff and resident staff on this service are always willing to take time to consult and advise on the care of patients with endrocrine problems which may be puzzling the student. The members of the staff all have important teaching functions in their individual depart- ments as well, and here they have the important role of teaching the fundamentals of general endocrinology, pediatric endocrinology, and gyne- cologic endocrinology to the students. Division of ENDOCRINOLOGY First row: Lebovitz, Schmidt, White, Portwood, Engel (Director), Hamblen, Stempfel, Kostyo, McPherson, Parker. Second row: Clarke, Garcia, Packman, Onghena. Blackard, Hall, Snipes, Hanssum, Ira, Osterhout, Zabala. forty-two THE AESCULAPIAH SALUTES A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence stops. henry brooks adams The faculty of Duke Medical School is made up of many men of many different types: teachers, re- searchers, physicians to people, animals, and test- tubes, all involved in the educational process of us, the students. The Aesculapian wishes to pay tribute this year to two men who have been our teachers, who as such will continue to affect our lives, the lives of those we teach, and those who come thereafter. Though they at times may have been hard task- masters, even slave-drivers, it is by their urging, inspiration, and example that they have taught us to be the physicians we hoped to become. forty-three JOSEPH ELDRIDGE MARKEE, Ph.D. Of all the men on the faculty, the prospective or new freshman sees Joseph Markee first. As Chair- man of the Medical Admissions Committee, Dr. Markee guides the selection of each incoming class and upon its arrival begins its instruction. No one in the entire medical school ever forgets the dissec- tion movies prepared by Dr. Markee or his willing- ness to sit down and clarify some more abstruse point of anatomy. Joseph Eldridge Markee was born in Neponset, Illinois, in 1903. He received his B.S. from Knox College in 1924, Phi Beta Kappa, and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1929. He be- gan his teaching career as Instructor of Anatomy and Douglas Smith Fellow at Chicago after getting his degree. Later that year he went west to Stan- ford where he progressed rapidly, becoming Pro- fessor of Anatomy. While at Stanford he visited the East as Research Fellow at the Carnegie Labora- tory of Embryology in 1935-36, and as Visiting Pro- fessor of Anatomy at the University of Tennessee in 1942. In 1943 Duke Medical School lured Dr. Markee permanently to the East. He became Pro- fessor of Anatomy and Chairman of the Depart- ment. In 1953 as recognition of his outstanding ability he was appointed James B. Duke Professor. The student will remember Dr. Markee as a pioneer in the field of audiovisual aids for the teach- ing of anatomy. But as a pioneer, Dr. Markee has entered other fields. Among the 160-plus papers by Dr. Markee are those on the general field of re- production in the primate female, including studies on menstruation, ovulation, and tests for pregnancy (such as the Markee test), those on the nerve con- trol of various biological phenomenon, and those on the fundamental activities of various muscles. So outstanding are his investigations that learned societies outside the field of anatomy have made him an honorary member. He has been nominated an Honorary Fellow of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, the American Association of Orthopedists, Alpha Omega Alpha and the Amer- ican Physiological Society. But throughout his ca- reer Dr. Markee has maintained contact with the student, ever ready to help him and to teach him. Could a more fitting tribute to his teaching be made than by saying that his son and daughter are or soon will be physicians. forty-four EUGENE ANSON STEAD, JR., M.D. A good teacher not only must tell the student of his discipline, he also must show by example what the student is to do. And if the student of Medicine at Duke thinks he works hard, then Dr. Stead works even harder. Frequently at the hospital at seven in the morning and late at night. Dr. Stead is continually conferring with staff and stu- dent or attending a patient. Eugene Anson Stead, Jr. was born, reared, and educated in Atlanta Georgia. He attended Emory University in Atlanta, received his B.S. in 1928, Phi Beta Kappa, and his M.D. in 1932, Alpha Omega Alpha. Determined to get a thorough grounding in Medicine, Dr. Stead interned at Peter Bent Brig- ham Hospital in 1933 and was Assistant in Medi- cine at Harvard Medical School the next year. To further expand his knowledge he took a surgical internship at Peter Bent Brigham. In 1936 he be- came Assistant Resident of Medicine at Cincinnati General Hospital and the next year became its Chief Resident. Returning to Boston, Dr. Stead first became instructor and then Associate in Medi- cine at Harvard. Just ten years after receiving his M.D. degree Emory University Medical School asked Dr. Stead to return as Professor of Medicine and Chairman of the Department. In 1946 he left the student for administration and became Dean of Emory Medical School. But the call of teaching came once more and Duke appointed him Profes- sor of Medicine and Chairman of the Department of Medicine. As an outstanding member of his profession, Dr. Stead has frequently been elevated to positions of responsibility in various learned societies. He has been past secretary of the American Society for Clinical Investigation, past member of the Research Allocation Council of the American Heart Associa- tion, and past member of the Council of the Na- tional Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases, to name a few. Presently he is secretary of the As- sociation of American Physicians, and a member of the Research Committee of the Veterans Admin- istration. Though one ' s influence is felt through such societies, the influence of a teacher is primarily effective through others. What more could be said than to state that eight of Dr. Stead ' s past disciples are now Professors and Chairmen of their own departments. forty-five CLASSES jflg f-A. ■, ... r - . ,.. ( .ompany forty-six Sit-: Vesalius and the Anatomy of Man ■I £L ' .. | forty-seven SENIOR CLASS Seniors at last! It hardly seems like four years since we first gathered in the dim, trash-littered Room M-uo for our introduction to medical school. Yet in those four years untold numbers of events have brought us together and provided us an education in the art of living together, as well as in the art of medicine. We are older now, and perhaps a little wiser. We are 75% marrieds, with most of us members of the Brown Bag Club , and many newly developing parents. We have thought of ourselves as a special class through the years. Physiology, Anatomy, Biochemistry, Bacteriology, and Physical Diagnosis thought we were. We have had our class characters, and we were as good at partying as any class in history. At any party we would all be there, with our Texans and Puerto Ricans shining by voice and deed. There were the wits, the casuals, those who took cuts now and then, the sleepers, the researchers, the virgin surgeons, and the neophyte fleas. All worked together to make the class top flight with with a high character titer. Although we all dread the parting of friends after grad- uation, we can look back on four unforgettable years. Now the shackles of being a student are chafing, and we are ready to intern stat, but all proud to have been members of the Class of ' 62. Class President Rn 11 ri S. Kramer ffcf forty-eight John M. Alexander (John) January 19, 1936 El Paso, Texas Duke University, B.S. Delta Sigma Phi, Sigma Delta Pi Plans: Surgery in the Southwest ft George F. Armstrong, Jr. (George) September 7, 1937 Washington, Georgia University of Georgia, B.S. Kappa Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Men ' s Glee Club, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Phi Sigma Phi Chi, S.G.A., Aesculapian Staff Plans: Pediatrics in Georgia Married: Katherine Burnette Toler, December 17, 1961 Jorge E. Baez-Garcia (Jorge) San Juan, Puerto Rico University of Puerto Rico Plans: Internal Medicine To study the phenomenon of disease without books is to sail an uncharted sea, while to study hooks without patients is not to go to sea at all. — Osier. forty-nine There is no situation or position in the world in which it is more important to say I don ' t know ' , if yon really don ' t, than in the practice of medicine. — Perrin I. Long. John A. Baumann (John) June 14, [936 Milwaukee, Wisconsin Northwestern University Theta Xi, Dolphin Club Plans: General Practice in the Southeast Married: Nancy Springborn, July 12, 1958 Children: Michael, September 11, i960 William A. Baxley (Bill) May 10, 1933 Washington, D. C. Duke University, B.S. in Civil Engineering Phi Beta Kappa Plans: Internal Medicine in an academic center Married: Mary Lynn Williams, July 14, 1956 Children: Christian Andrew, February 18, 1961 David L. BeMillek (Dave) June 12, 1937 Evansville, Indiana Purdue University, B.S. Trent Prize in History of Medicine, 1959 Plans: Ob-Gyn in Washington or Oregon Walk worthy of the vocation in which yon are called, with all humility and mildness, with patience supporting one another in charity. — St. Paul. fifty You have also earned the privilege to share a responsibility which ought to he sacred to you: The amelioration of pain, the lessening of anxiety, the occasional triumphant cure of a disease, and when this fails totally, you can share the responsibility of helping a family experience tragedy with some confort and dignity. —Louis G. Welt— 1161. Alan B. Carter (Al) July 27, 1936 Boulder, Colorado Duke University, A.B. Duke Symphony Orchestra, Madrigal Society, Men ' s Glee Club Plans: Pediatrics Charles E. Carter ( Nick ) September 21, 1936 Mount Airy, North Carolina Davidson College, B.S. Kappa Alpha Plans: Rotating internship, then Radiology in Florida Married: Joan Helen Misiewicz, August 19, 1961 Joseph C. Cauthen, III (Joe) June 22, 1936 Rock Hill, South Carolina The Citadel, B.S. S.A.M.A. Plans: Surgerv in the South To him who dezwtes his life to science, nothing can give more happiness than increasing the number of discoveries, but his cup of joy is full when tin- results of his studies immediately find practical applications. — Pasteur. fifty one An old definition of medicine: The art or science of amusing a sick man with frivolous speculations about his disorder, and of tampering ingeniously, until nature either kills or cures him. Yank I). Coble, Jk. (Yank) June 8, 1937 Duke University, 3 years Alpha Tau Omega, Scholastic Scholarship Student Government Association, President 1961-62 Plans: Internal Medicine Married: Ohlyne Blackard, August 6, i960 b William C. Colton (Ace) Rocky Mount, North Carolina Davidson College, B.S. Plans: Radiology Charles H. Colvin, III (Chuck) Birmingham, Alabama Washington and Lee, B.S. Plans: Internal Medicine or Pediatrics Dr. Baker: Boy, if you ever want to be a bigshot you ' ve got to learn to walk like a bigshot! fifty-two Health Team: Lady, where do yon hurt all over the most? Sherrill A. Conna (Ted) February 16, 1931 Yonkers, New York Wesleyan University, Duke University, A.B. Plans: Child Psyehiatry Married: Mary Lou Kolbe, April 2, 1955 Children: Ted Douglas, October 3, 1959, David Russell, November 19, 1961 James D. Crane (Jim) August 30, 1930 Warren, Pennsylvania Duke University, A.B. Plans: General Practice in the South Nicholas Scott Craven (Scott) Lexington, North Carolina Duke University Plans: Undecided — Mai tip said to Alexander, Doctor, haw many years will you have to go before you finish high school? fifty-three Why is mother ' s milk better? More lactalbumin. Don ' t have to boil the nipple. Cot can ' t get at it. Ready mix free formula. And you can ' t beat that container! Carl L. Croft (Carl) Brunswick, Georgia United States Military Academy, B.S. Plans: Orthopedics Married: Ann Croft Children: Beth and Lynn Robert N. Davis (Bob) February 8, 1936 War, West Virginia Virginia Tech, B.S. Phi Chi, S.A.M.A. Plans: Undecided Alden W. Dudley, Jr. (Bud) May 15, 1937 Staten Island, New York Duke University, A.B. Beta Omega Sigma, Men ' s Glee Club, Chapel Choir, Triple Quartet, Y.M.C.A. Cabinet Plans: Pathology Married: Mary Adams, September 12, 1959 When staff objected to raising administrative interns ' salaries from $300 to $400, the administrator said: But these men are college graduates! And besides, they work one night a week! fifty four ' What you ' re saying, son, is that life is hard. — E. Stead. Joseph Clarence Farmer, Jr. (Joe) October 14, 1937 Henderson, North Carolina Duke University, 3 years Kappa Alpha Plans: Internal Medicine Married: Margery Jean Newton, August 17, 1957 Children: Joseph Clarence, III, April 17, 1959 Raymond Mayfield Farmer (Ray) February 18, 1954 Columbia, South Carolina University of South Carolina, B.S. S.A.M.A. Plans: U.S. Navy Married: Betty S. Davis, April 15, 1954 Children: Davey, April 10, 1956, Gary, October 1, 1957, Keith, October 18, 1958, Chuck, March 28, 1961 William N. Fortescue (Nick) Hendersonville, North Carolina Duke University Married: Ann Any incontinence, ma ' am? (21) y.o.W.F.) only when I go to the wrestling matches and I get so excited! fifty-fit Massey teas fleeted the anatomy model in Suxy ' s group — still has indelible ink on his fanny. John Thomas Foster (Tom) June 4, 1937 Wilkesboro, North Carolina Wakes Forest College, 3 years Plans: Internal Medicine in Wilkesboro, North Carolina Married: Sandra Marshall, August 26, 1961 Donald Harry Frank (Don) Novembebr 10, 1937 Haworth, New Jersey Yale College, B.A. Honors Major, Yale Dramatic Association Plans: Research in cardiac surgery at Johns Hopkins for six months, then surgery Emile L. Gebel (Snuggs) Pittsburg, Pennsylvania Duke University Plans: Ophthalmology Married: Barbara Henry ' s massive grand multip who dropped her breech baby pre- cipitously in the hall only to comment: Never had no baby take this long before! fifty-six There was the woman who told the doctor at Mr. Duke ' s Hos- pital, that whenever her baby didn ' t look right, she gaz ' e him a few drops of turpentine (US. P. of course). Joel Henry Gilbert (Joel) September 30, 1936 West Orange, New Jersey Cornell University, A.R. Beta Sigma Rho, President Phi Chi, S.A.M.A., S.G.A. Plans: Rotating Internsliip Fred L. Ginn (Fred L.) January 20, 1936 Goldsboro, North Carolina University of North Carolina, B.S. Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Pi Mu Epsilon Plans: Pathology Married: Betty Tate, September 5, i960 Antonio Carmelo Gonzalez (Tony) Laris, Puerto Rico Duke University, A.B. Plans: Cardiology Easy Al ' s patient just wouldn ' t hold still for his first opthalmo- scopic exam: I ' m sorry. Doc, but I just can ' t help blinking when your light touches my eye. fifty-seven The morning Rex was to pick up Dr. Tefrault at 7:00 hut came at 9:30, and Dr. T. had walked around the house 1.039 times. Robert Neil Grant (Bob) Greensboro, North Carolina Duke University, 3 years Alpha Tau Omega, Vice-President Junior Class, President Senior Class, President Med. Freshman Class, Vice- President Sophomore and Senior Class, Student Government Association Plans: General and Thoracic Surgery in the Northwest Married: Ann Fry, June 21, i960 Martin A. Hatcher, Jr. (Martin) Hamlet, North Carolina Duke University Alpha Tau Omega Plans: Internal Medicine Married: Sue Suzanne Brown Henry (Suzy) Pittsburg, Pennsylvania Sweetbriar College Plans: Undecided Married: Dr. Pat Henry Who hid the plastic scut list on McDowell? Same guy who was accused quite vocally of hypnotizing a Meyer patient. fifty-eight Watching Urbaniak break the ice on £4 hole and go swimming in his drawers to get the seven-iron he threw in the lake when he flubbed one. . . . Rufus M. Holloway, Jr. (Dick) April 13, 1936 Leesburg, Florida University of Florida, R. S. Alpha Tau Omega Plans: Pediatrics Married: Betsy McRroom, December 17, i960 Danny Rrigman Jones (Danny) June 12, 1936 Raleigh, North Carolina Duke University, A.B. Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Reta Kappa Plans: Ophthalomology in the South Married: Glenda Fowler, September 5, 1959 Kenneth Jay Kahn (Kenny) April 11, 1938 Lakeland, Florida University of Florida, R.A. Phi Eta Sigma, Pi Mu, Pi Sigma Alpha, Phi Kappa Phi, Hillel Foundation Plans: Internal Medicine in central Florida Married: Norma Weitzenkorn, June 21, 1959 There must he something in the HA) out at Poplar . . . why else do we call it Rabbit Hill? fifty-nine Flea-inn it ■' « «.v night ' s edition of the Tasmanian Journal of Omphalology . . . and in the Journal of Clinical Insignificance (J.CJ.J. . . . Paul Don Ki.itk (Paul) March 22, 1938 Miami, Florida University of Miami Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta Plans: Undecided, but on the West Coast Richard S. Kramer (Dick) October 18, 1936 Shaker Heights, Ohio Duke University, B.A. Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Omega Alpha, Student Government Association, Presi- dent Senior Class Plans: Surgery in the West Married: Robin Lyons, August 29, 1959 Children: Lauren, August 4, 1961 Patrick J. Locue (Pat) Royersford, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburg Married: Joyce The patient who came in to get his trach tube changed, eight years later. sixty This fat intern wouldn ' t listen to Herb — his thoracentesis brought out brown stuff — grew pure E.coli, too. John Paul Lunas (Paul) March n, 1956 Cedar Grove, New Jersey Johns Hopkins University, A.B. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Delta Phi Alpha, Rami, Orchestra, Canterbury Club Plans: Thoracic Surgery Married: Frances Jean Jorgensen, September 3, i960 Henry G. Magendantz (Henry) August 20, 1936 Newton, Massachusetts Harvard College, A.B. Hasty Pudding Plans: Medical Internship and then Ob-Gyn; tour of duty with Public Health Service then practice in West or New England Married: Ann Rotch, July 15, i960 SPf - - Eugene D. Maloney (Gene) Gastonia, North Carolina University of North Carolina Plans: Psychiatry Married: Peggy A V.A. prof, the ' most common G.I. malignancy ' is rumored to have two sides to his bed: both wrong. sixty one Heard the fleas worked this guy up for jaundice for two weeks- found out he was a Chinaman. Miles Herbert Martin, Jr. (Herb) Oak Hill, West Virginia Duke University Married: Shirley William Joseph Massey, III (Bill) March 10, 1936 Smithfield, North Carolina Duke University, A.B. Alpha Tau Omega, Glee Club, Hoof and Horn, Phi Chi Plans: Internal Medicine in the South Married: Jeanne Kelly, June 25, i960 Don C. McFadden, Jr. (Don) January 25, 1936 Mount Sterling, Kentucky Duke University, A.B. Plans: General Practice in Kentucky Married: Anne Perkins, June 25, i960 Children: Laurie Jo, April 12, 1961 On the difficulty of getting a nurse to help in S.P.D.C., one surgeon growled Looks like you have to Marcel! your hair and be an S.O.B. to get anything done around here. sixty-two Scut list: fecal asphalt, serum porcelain, LE preps ' til positive, ' crits q2h, tie test, liver Bx, spleen Bx, kidney Bx, spinal cord Bx, C S to BB for OR in AM, and don ' t forget to read . recent journals before rounds. Calvin V. Morgan, Jr. (Calvin) Johnson City, Tennessee Davidson College, B.S. Married: Margie John G. Morgan (Rex) July 22, 1936 Spring Hope, North Carolina Davidson College, B.S. Kappa Sigma Plans: Undecided Lloyd A. Moriber (Lloyd) September 3, 1937 Brooklyn, New York Duke University, A.B. Plans: Orthopedics in the New York area r efy) Local preacher called Dr. Rundtes to ask permission to pray over the cancer victims. Certainly, pray over only half of them, though. nxty-thr After Foster had finished palpating the breasts of the young wom- an who brought in the infant with stomatitis, she said, But doc- tor, I ' m the baby ' s next door neighbor! f s James C. Morris, III (Jim) Anchorage, Kentucky Davidson College, R.S. Plans: Surgery Sedney Emmett Morrison, Jr. (Emmett) Gastonia, North Carolina North Carolina State College Married: Rankin Frank Irvin Nicks, Jr. (Frank) September n, 1935 Colorado Springs, Colorado University of Colorado, B.A. S.A.M.A. Plans: Medical internship, then Ob-Gyn Married: Phyllis Jean Graham, August }o, 1958 One of the boys sutured a patient ' s laceration at Watts when the patient left Duke because she did not want an intern to work on her. sixty-four Remember how the cigarettes filled the waste can in Pathology after the lung cancer lecture? A nd the cholesterol craze? It took weeks to get hack on eggs and weeds. Leslie C. Norins (Les) March 23, 1937 Baltimore, Maryland Johns Hopkins University, A.R. Immunology Society Plans: Immunology and Internal Medicine Benjamin F. Orman (Ben) July -25, 1936 Houston, Texas Rice University, A.B., Class President Plans: Internal Medicine Married: Helen Belton, September 3, 1959 William Foster Price (Bill) October 18, 1936 Fayetteville, North Carolina Davidson College, B.S. Plans: Medical Internship at Alabama Married: Mary Frances Eaneart, August 29, 1959 When you hear s imeone here refer condescendingly to the LMD, remember that he has probably never practiced outside a medical center with its lab tests and consultants, and he has never had to make a diagnosis by candlelight in a shack 20 miles from a tele- phone. — V. Politano. «fc £- sixty-five The Class of ' 62 — Last to learn pathology from pot cases, last to squint in M-110, last to make 6:45 surgery rounds, last to use the old Ob lab. last to know and admire Dr. Forbus. Robert H. Purcell (Boh) Haileyville, Oklahoma Baylor University Plans: Pediatric internship, then medical research Married: Carol James Walker Ralph (Jim) November 16, 1936 Tulsa, Oklahoma Stanford University, A.B. Sigma Chi Nu Sigma Nu Plans: Army internship, then Orthopedics Married: Sissy, July 3, 1958 Children: Betsy, August 24, 1959, Philip, May 25, 1961 Norman B. Ratliff, Jr. (Burr) Lake Worth, Florida Duke University Plans: Internal Medicine The class was also last not to be ranked publicly, last to have Dr. on our name tags, last to run Phi Chi. last to learn psysiology without calculus. sixty-six Dermatology — it ' s dry, wet it. If it ' s wet, dry it. If that doesn ' t work, try steroids. Joseph Henry Riddick, Jr. (Joe) March 22, 1938 Lynchburg, Virginia Duke University, 2 ' 2 years Phi Beta Kappa, Order of Hippocrates, Canterbury Club Plans: General and Neuropathology Married: Marceile Guest Ballcntine, August 26, i960 Donald W. RoniHiLT (Don) Terrace Park, Ohio Duke University, A.B. Tennis Team Plans: Undecided Benton Sapp Satterfield (Ben) November 5, 1936 Raleigh, North Carolina North Carolina State, B.S. Sigma Chi, Phi Chi, Social Chairman, S.A.M.A. Plans: Ob-Gyn in North Carolina suspect this veteran has an advanced case of disuse atrophy of the cortex. sixty-seven ' . finger in the rectum is better than a foot in the mouth. — C. Gardner Martin Schiff, Jk. (Marty) December r, iy S New York City Alfred University, A.R. Honors in Mathematics, Varsity basketball and tennis Plans: Surgery William A. Shearin (Bill) August 20, 1926 Wake Forest College, B.A., Pennsylvania State College of Optometry, O.D. Plans: Ophthalmology Married: Dorothy Blackwell, June 20, 1954 Children: Arthur, April 30, 1956, Lynn, May 14, 1959 Marvin J. Short, II (M. J.) July 28, 1932 San Antonio, Texas Trinity College, B.S., University of Texas, M.A., Illinois Col- lege of Chiropody, D.S.C. Osier Society, Neurology Club, Editor of Syndrome, Med School Yearbook at University of Texas Plans: Psychiatry Married: Frances Marie Kennedy, December 26, 1953 Children: M. J. Ill and Letitia Marie Recent Albums ' Oh how I hate to get up in the morning. ' Big Had John. — Rex Morgan. — Don Frank. sixty-eight Popular Songs Sweet Sue. Guess Who? ' I ' m donna Sit Right Down and Write a Nasty Letter. — Hen Satterfield. Waltzing Matilda. — Les Norins. David William Sime (Dave) Fair Lawn, New Jersey Duke University, A.B. Plans: Surgery Married: Elizabeth Quillian Children: Sherrie Lynn, June , 1961 § 09S Richard C. Stone (Dick) December 4, 1933 Durham, North Carolina Duke University, A.R. John B. Derieu.x Award Alpha Omega Alpha Plans: Internal Medicine, probably in the West Married: Sandra Ferrell, January 1, 1957 Children: Ricky, August 18, 1959, Craig, February 1961 Deryl G. Stowe (Deryl) November 2, 1935 Burlington, North Carolina Duke University, A.B. Plans: General Surgery Married : Sue Stanford, September 5, 1959 More Song Hits Good Old Mountain Dew. — Fred Ginn. ' ' his Ain ' t the Army, Mr. Jones. — Carl Croft. uxty-mnc ' Anesthesia: 90% Boredom and 10% Panic. William Kemp Strother, III (Kemp) Dallas, Texas Southern Methodist University, A.B. Plans: Undecided Dean Ross Taylor (Dean) June 3, 1937 Jackson, Michigan Michigan State University, B.S. Beta Theta Pi, Varsity Swimming Team, Phi Chi Plans: Internal Medicine Married: Carolyn Moore, August 6, i960 Children: Susan Lyn, December 13, 1961 Lewis N. Terry, Jr. (Lew) January 19, 1937 Spartanburg, South Carolina Duke University Sigma Nu Plans: Surgery Married: Bety Schoenly, June 20, 1959 Point of debate: The medical center revolves around the student, and its primary purpose is teaching. seventy ' Have Gumma, Will Travel. — T. Palliilui Harvey Leonard Turner, Jr. (Leonard) March 2, 1937 Thomson, Georgia Emory University, A.R. Delta Tau Delta, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Omega Plans: Medical specialization in the South James R. Urbaniak (Jim) May 15, 1936 Fairmont, West Virginia University of Kentucky, B.S. Phi Beta Kappa, O.D.K., Varsity Football Plans: Orthopedics Married: Judith Kaye FurTner, June 7, 195H Martin I. Victor (Marty) Tuckahoe, New York Massachusetts Institute of Technology Plans: Surgical internship, then ophthalmology ' You Don ' t Have to Be Smart to Practice Medicine. — E. Stead. seventy-one f One thing to learn about little hoy babies, don ' t stand down- wind. William B. Waddell (Bill) Galax, Virginia Wake Forest College National President, Student American Medical Association Plans: General Practice Married: Betty William S. Warden (Bill) February i, 1958 Melbourne, Florida Duke University, 3 years Phi Beta Kappa, Lambda Chi Alpha, M.S.G.A. Phi Chi Anatomy Award, Junior Class President, Student Government Association Plans: General and thoracic surgery Wade Scott Weems (Wade) December 7, 1937 Waynesboro, Virginia Duke University, A.B. Alpha Omega Alpha Plans: Academic practice of surgical sub-specialty, probably urology Married: Ann Wood Davis, July 15, 1961 ' Routine scut is a learning procedure. — H. Silberman. seventy-two Virgin surgeons need no urgin ' ; when in doubt, they cut it out, before the fleas stick needles in it. Joel J. Weiser (Joel) January 14, 19 7 Bronx, New York Adelphi College, A.H. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Who ' s Who, Beta Beta Beta, Captain Varsity Soccer, Flambeau. Plans: Orthopedics in New York Married: Sylvia Kramer, June 25, i960 I Tolbert S. Wilkinson (T.) December 28, 19 7 Wake Forest, North Carolina Wake Forest College, B.S. Phi Beta Kappa, Who ' s Who, Sigma Pi S.A.M.A., Executive Committee, Orientation Chairman Plans: Plastic Surgery at Duke Married: Mary Jean Hunt, August 19, 1961 Gail R. Williams (Gail) January 10, 1938 Clifton Springs, New York University of Rochester, B.A. Plans: Medical internship, the rest undecided Married: Beverly Naulty, September 1955 Children: Andrea Yvonne, age one year Surgeon — Knows nothing, but does a lot. internist — Knows a lot, but does nothing. Psychiatrist — Knows nothing, and does nothing. Pathologist — Knows and does a lot, but it ' s all too late. k x u venty-threc Come now, doctor, you don ' t expect we to believe you only earn S3? ' .50 a month. — Credit Manager. Charles Alexander Woods (Woody) June i, 1937 Greensboro, North Carolina Davidson College, B.S. Gamma Sigma Epsilon, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Theta Pi Interfraternity Council Phi Chi, S.A.MA. Plans: Private practice of pediatrics Married: Shirley Ann Sterne, September 10, i960 ' Let ' s twist again like we did at Watts Street! Crad center closet case. From freshman gate parties and noisy dances at Mike, Ken, and Joel ' s to senior twist parties, we were a crew who worked hard and partied hard. You would never find seventy-six more congenial guys. While we lived in MGC, it was like a big frat house, eyeing the nurses, the late hot- dogs, shouting at the lawyers, and beer at the Rebel. Then bachelor apartments anil marriage lured many away. seventy-four Warden. Where did the little Devil go? THE TEAR OF ACCOMPLISHMENT The afternoon came to an end with only taurine blood- shed and with much sunshine. Four years of very good efforts have made way for future, even more rewarding work. We look hack for pleasant encouragement. We began at a beer party; then, we passed to the cadaver days which were enjoyable. We learned more anatomy than we would ever retain; histologically speaking, we slept through most lectures; once, we were awakened by the sound of an associate professor hitting the floor during an Uncle Dune lecture. The repeating of the same exam questions was a nice anticlimatic innovation for some of us. Biochemistry and psychiatry were soon added. Too many formulas and for some instructors too many dou- ble helixes. Once in physiology Ben Orman speeded to break the vital capacity machine with his own two lungs. What a horrible succession of examinations were those winter days. The departments seemed to be in conspiracy against our gluteal areas; the tests were always, like petechiae, in showers. At the Cirad Center, in one of the more serious rooms, an inquisitorial textbook burning took place shortly after the final examination in biochemistry. After rat-rounds and many final questionings came the spring, and with it came Dr. Peele and the trash-can col- lectors. When June arrived, there were many lights shining in the class, and we went to rest our souls from that first great effort. Shut up, or I ' ll take tin rest off! i 1 Hi . . Ears normal seventy-five Boy, you should have seen this pelvis! The second year was solid and encouraging. There was reason to arrive early to the lectures, especially when Dr. D. T. Smith gave them, but George Armstrong, neverthe- less, was late for all. Ray Farmer broke an amphitheater seat in the middle of Dr. Anlyan ' s lecture. . . . Dr. Forbus was still having round-up in those days, and run-downs to the library to read about measles. ... It was also at this time that Dr. Patrick had his copy of Forbus ' text painted with gold margins and took it to church with him. It was such a joy rewriting our autopsy reports in Japanese. The days that preceded Christmas that year were heavy with many things, but when we came back in Jan- uary, Physical Diagnosis began, and we began to feel in a small way like doctors. It was with deep sympathy that we claimed the rank of being Dr. Forbus ' last class. Pharmacology, Dr. Bernheim, and the disaster rehearsals Think! came in a not too tiring succession, then state boards. The third time around required the most energy. For the first time the weight of the great pyramid of authority was felt on our backs. The pressure of the blue eyes of the Professor glared at us when we had to present in Osier rounds. Ob-Gyn gave us practice in being first, second, and third-up all at the same time. And, they said it could not be done, but the psychiatrists failed a few. Our craving for handwashing of the best kind was satisfied by the surgeons; delightful soap and sunshine on the fourth floor. Finally we are seniors with much clinic and emergency room work. Wishing that January were June, we wait tor the moment of graduation, and within the pattern of these last months, it becomes clear that we are again be- ginning. MOPC: Harrison doesn ' t list ' crocl or ' turkey ' either — what ' ll we do? ' That gas pattern means only one thing- a stud at exam time. ieventy-six Practice session — odd man lost. The record of individual performances of our class- mates has been laudable. . . . Paul Lunas ' unforgettable, Say there man! . . . the thrilling deep-deep tone of Kramer ' s sweet voice . . . the memory ot )oe Farmer ' s questions, or Marty Victor ' s, For completeness sake . . . the warm friendliness ol Hob Grant ... or Bauman play- ing Lunas, on the stage . . . and steadfast Stone, who seemed to preach that learning is more enjoyment than it is pain . . . Don Romhilt has been synonymous with tennis and a few other things of the sport world . . . Baxley comments: She was a good patient, when he was on call for Ob and his wife came for delivery . . . Danny [ones taught a few patients in MOPC to test their urine for sugar by drinking their Clinitest and watching the urine lor color changes . . . Wade Weems had a famous Indian Sperm Collection Episode, unwittingly spread on the floor after hours of labor ... a few Irish fleas can still be seen on fim Morris since his trip to the Emerald Isle for OB-GYN; while there he became requiem-oriented and still remains the most requiem-oriented member of the class . . . Kemp Strother discovered during his visit to Italy that there was one area where Texas is not first in size . . . Yank Coble spent a summer with Dr. Dodge in Cardiology, and came back with the idea of returning there sometime . . . Don McFadden gained the title of biggest of the class of ' 62 . . . Kenny Kahn has not failed to call his sweet wife every afternoon, when she is at home, just to be nice to her . . . T. Wilkinson has taken his elec- tive as photographer lor the yearbook . . . Woody Woods has been appointed the Green Journal ' s editor on Medical Formal and Beachwear . . . Fred Ginn and Bud Dudley had the Pathology Department slightly remodeled before they accepted their internships there . . . Bill Massey has bought his own Warburg to have when the Byrnes come over to visit . . . after years of burning research, Tom Caskey discovered the formula that will make Dr. Wheat ' s voice stronger. D.imn — another space capsule lost. ' Carramba. he beet me! seventy-seven 1 1 mm Isn ' t this Rundles ' new poison made by Blac Flag? Projecting into the future. . . . Al Carter is taking his kettle drum back to Colorado, where he may go into group practice with Beethoven and Mozart . . . Les Norins is gathering material for his book The Kangaroo, to be completed in Australia at Dr. Burnett ' s lab . . . Chuck Colvin has already gathered data for his first contribution to the Green Journal: The Casey Stengel Era . . . Walter Gilbert will drive away from the Duke campus in his own Rolls-Royce . . . Joe Riddick will get his MD and his first child (to be named Joe, regardless of sex) during the same month . . . Purcell will advance more information on his Purcelline , an amino acid . . . Jorge Baez-Garcia may consider starting a practice at Le Moulin de la Ga- lette . . . Rex Morgan plans to reverse psychoanalytic technique and have the patient sit while he lies on the couch . . . Ace Colston and Jack Daniels are planning to ' ' t{ ' ?{ nuw ' You woe right, she is full of it! go into partnership . . . Burr Ratliff will have a symphony dedicated to him, also to be named Eroica . . . Bill Warden plans his future with ideas of sterile technique and champagne, in Florida . . . Bill Waddell aims at the Vatican now; they will have to change the rules . . . Scott Craven wants to be a ship ' s doctor . . . Gail Williams will smile once before he starts his internship . . . Bill Pr ice will get angry once before he goes into practice . . . Joel Gilbert will take a rotating internship, between New York, Florida, and Philadelphia . . . Dave Sime will be official writer of the Medicine section of Sports Illustrated . . . Hatcher may stay at Duke for his internship; he wants to get to know the place a little better . . . Future golden partnerships: Joe Cauthen and Dr. Tommy Jones, Deryl Stowe and Dr. Mort Bogdonoff, John Alexander and Dr. Tom Andreoli. 1 will not do another stool guiaicl It ' s io: o; shouldn ' t we be leaving for your place? ' ' seventy-eight Which triplet has the gastritis? Physical therapy did wonders for this case. Continuing our look into the future, Henry Magendantz will stop chewing tobacco and speak clearly . . . Paul Klite will apply the active-transport-through-the-frogskin-mem- brane theory to modern therapeutics . . . Lew Terry wants an office in Washington, D. C. . . . Frank Nicks is going back to basketball . . . Sid Morrison is buying stock in American Speculum Co . . . Leonard Turner is going to take off his glasses . . . Lloyd Moriber wants to be an Army doctor . . . Jim Urbaniak has plans to join Schweitzer . . . Dean Taylor is going into twin prac- tice . . . Marty Schiff is joining Dr. Kildare . . . Snuggs Gebel is going back to the pond . . . Bob Davis will publish his private memories, I Was a Failure as a Social Chairman . . . Dick Holloway will pose for the cover of Kellogg ' s Cornflakes . . . Jim Ralph plans to be Surgeon General . . . Nick Fortescue will show up for gradua- tion . . . Carl Croft will promote Mrs. Burnett as chief nurse at the West Point Student Health Office . . . Bill Bicknell has accepted a contract with the New Yor ( Daily News Research Department . . . Calvin Morgan will re- vise Dr. Kinsey ' s Report . . . Don Frank is going to keep a diary . . . Gene Maloney is going to be Weather Bureau Psychiatrist, in Miami . . . Ben Satterfield will come back as Dr. Rundles ' fellow . . . Bill Shearin will get to see his wife . . . Ted Conna wants to take anatomy as a side line . . . Dave BeMiller is going to return some of the V.A. ' s white pants before he leaves Durham . . . Herb Martin is spending a season with Billy Graham as soon as he finishes his internship . . . Ray Farmer is planning a larger family . . . Nick Carter and Tom Foster are con- structing a still in western N. C. . . . Pat Logue has ordered a fire extinguisher . . . Jim Crane is coming back to re- place Dr. Persons in Student Health . . . Tony Gonzalez and his long-lost cousin Speedy are planning a partnership at the Walth Disney Studios . . . last and most important, our love and only rose, Susie, will bless this world, not only with health, but also with more children. We will have many more sunny days ' ' Mmm — love that canthandes! Prognosis — Limbo lumbago seventy-nine ' C ici, cha bca!? A rectal a day eeps the fur ey away Life is tough the man said fa Sometimes we have to improvise Listen, interne, tak,e it and- eighty Revenge at Valhalla Alexander the great — worlds to conqueor All right, so J did take your lH y.o. and leave you the para 9-1-8 WSF After orals: Like an IV set — Disposable Xoon grand rounds eighty-ont ' Then one night the picture tube blew out Oral stage ' People are no damn good Say, bow did soapsuds get m her urine? ' ' They won ' t use you for their evil experiments, man eighty-two ■•; ; ' ' Goddam thing just stole my dime } ; ow now why they put me in the funny ward- Mr. ' Touchdown U.S.A. : Same old Osier grind ' And I ' m treating her Cervicitis! eighty-three Firing from the hip? or maybe he ' s cleaning it — ' Morning after siesta — A ' to 5 ' But then, maybe the whole darn thing is just upside down ' Uh, ta e a note, uh , this, uh — dammit, uh, this plm- So, I sez to her husband eighty four Tough extern Santa Claus, Casa Grande version eighty-five I WOULD SUGGEST fuuAN P. Price, M.I). FLORENCE, S. C. Practicing pediatrician I lead oi Department Pediatrics, The McLeod Infirmary, Florence, S. C. Medical Director, S. C. Home for Crippled Children Former Chairman, Board of Trustees American Medical Association Former Chairman, Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals The invitation by the staff of the Aesculapian to write an editorial for publication in this volume was received with appreciation and apprehension — appreciation for the distinct honor, apprehension as to what I could say that would be of value. Should I attempt to be profound, to be philosophical, to present a scientific treatise, to fashion a literary gem ? These and other ideas coursed through my brain and were discarded. Finally I decided to present, in the form of suggestions, some of the observations made and thoughts entertained during the years I have been practicing medicine. You of the grad- uating class will soon be full fledged members of the medical profession, and I welcome you and speak to you as one physician to another. My first suggestion is that you keep on studying. To make such a proposal to you who have spent two decades going to school may seem strange, but you will find things different once you have left the accustomed routine of lectures, clinics, and ward rounds. Up to now you have pursued your studies with a definite goal in view — courses to be com- pleted and examinations to be passed so as to ob- tain that coveted degree, Doctor of Medicine. Furthermore, the subject matter of your study has been in most instances that of someone else ' s choosing. From now on you will be on your own. What you study, when you study, and more impor- tant, whether you study at all, will be your decision. The only force that will drive you on — except for the interlude of state board and possibly specialty board examinations — -will be your desire for knowl- edge. To keep abreast of medicine in the days ahead will necessitate contant study, and the habits which you acquire now— habits of reading books and cur- rent journals, of attending lectures and seminars, of discussions with your colleagues— will be of great value. But I would urge that you carry your study beyond the immediate field of medicine. Study the socio-economic problems which confront your pro- fession and the problems in the health field which concern our citizens. Study the activity of your state and national government. Study and keep on studying if you would be an enlightened physician ami an informed citizen. My second suggestion is that you cultivate a skeptical attitude toward things medical. Nothing in medicine is so constant as change. If you doubt the truth of this statement, read the following words: antibiotic, antihistamine, amphetamine, co- ramine, cortisone, DDT, dicumeral, electroenceph- alography, gamma globulin, hyaline membrane, infectious hepatitis, penicillin, Q fever, Rh factor, rauwolfia, sulfonamide, testosterone, thiamin, vi- remia, television, and hydrogen bomb. These were not even in the dictionary when my colleagues and I studied medicine thirty-five years ago. Progress in medicine is made by those who re- fuse to be satisfied with things as they are. To them, our present knowledge is a broad foundation upon which to keep on building, not a completed structure in which to make a permanent home. They are convinced that much of the medical in- formation existent today will be the medical fiction of tomorrow, and they are ever restless as they probe eighty-six the unknown. While you may not devote your ca- reer to scientific research, I would urge that you cultivate an investigative mind in your medical work ami a skeptical attitude toward what you hear and read. Accept the scientific data and the tools with which we work today as the best avail- able until somebody — perhaps you — looks and finds something better tomorrow. My thin! suggestion is that you develop a spirit of humility. Your brain is teeming with knowledge and your understanding of the science of medicine is extensive. You will soon be known as Doctor , and this will make you somewhat different from other people. You will be recognized as a man of education and ability, and you will be afforded spe- cial privileges which are not given to the man in the street. In the eyes of many you will be a man of distinction. Be careful that you do not become a man of great worth in your own eyes ami that you do not think more highly of yourself than you ought to think. What we know today is based upon the work, the struggles, the dreams, the hopes, and the failures of an innumerable host of our colleagues from the days of antiquity to the present. The contribution of any individual physician — no matter how great it may appear at the moment — is but one more brick in the vast structure which our profession has built. There is no such thing as a self-made man in the field of medicine — he is what he is because he builds upon the work of others. The great man in medicine is not the conceited man. but the humble man who knows ami acknowledges the debt he owes to others. My fourth suggestion is that you broaden the scope of your activities and interests. Medicine is an exacting taskmaster and will, if vou permit, usurp all of your time and energy. It will be easy for you, m the days ahead, to withdraw into a little sphere all your own and to forget that the rest of the world exists. And unless vou take measures to prevent it, you will end up living in a rut which you have dug for yourself — and a rut can become a grave by closing in the ends. It is true that you are a man of medicine, but you are also a member of vour profession, a mem- ber of your community, and a citizen of vour coun- try. As such you have obligations and responsi- bilities, and I would urge that you not take them lightly. As a member of your profession you would do well to join with your confreres in activities of your local, state, and national organizations. Give of your time and energy toward a study of the prob- lems which confront us. The decisions which you ami your colleagues make and the work which you do will play a large part toward shaping the future course of the practice of medicine. 1 nere are many phases of community life which need your encouragement and support and some of them deserve your active participation and leader- ship. Let me suggest three fields in which many physicians are engaged, and urge that you consider them carefully as areas in which you might con- tribute your effort — public education, work with boys and girls, charitable and philanthropic organ- izations. In this day of uncertainty when our country is faced with the menace of Communism and the threat of war, we need citizens who are not only enlightened but willing to work for their country. I would urge that you take your position in the van- guard of these citizens where your training in log- ical thinking, your knowledge of people and their problems, and your capacity for leadership will prove of inestimable value. Join those groups which are striving for better government, support the pro- grams which are fighting crime and corruption, take an active part in local and national politics, and be sure to vote when the opportunity arises. My final suggestion is that you strive to become a good physician. Medicine has contributed much to our people — high standards of education, scien- tific achievements, wonder drugs, operative proce- dures, good hospitals, quality medical care, long life expectancy — but the finest gift has ever been its tradition of service and its willingness to give beyond the call of duty. Over the years the great foes of dedicated service have been love of money and love of self. I would urge that you guard against these deadening en- emies. Every physician is worthy of his hire but he is unworthy who puts financial gain ahead of the welfare of his patient. Many systems of medical conduct and ethics have been evolved, but the basic rule for our daily work must ever be the Golden Rule. There are many great men whom we would do well to admire ami honor, but the one whose example we should follow is the Great Physician who came not to be ministered unto but to min- ister. These are my suggestions, and I offer them to you with my best wishes. It is my hope that they will be of some value to you as you embark upon the most interesting anil challenging of careers. eighty-seven JUXIOR CLASS The art of the practice of medicine is to be learned only by experience; ' tis not an inheritance; it cannot be revealed. Learn to see, learn to hear, learn to feel, learn to smell, and l now that by practice alone can you become an expert. Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the classroom. But when you have seen, rend. And when you can, read the original de- scriptions of the masters who, with crude methods of study, saw so clearly. — Sir William Osler. s W Lewis Holmes, Class President eighty-eight Charles Rausch Ayers ! [arry Pnzer Banghart Henry David Banta Yancey Brintle Beamer William |. Bicknell Craig Grayson Black form Charles Bolton Stephen C. Boone Joseph O. Broughton, lr. Thomas H. Byrnes, Jr. Thomas K. Carlton, |r. lames Anderson Carter William Alvin Carter Wallace Han-Jen Chang Clay Franklin Church Robert Edward Cline Robert Alan I )o le Ray Robert Durrett Elmo Stephen Edwards John Bloom Emery, Jr. ■m if mlkiiihM ■71 iktfh lk eight) aif ity-niitc mfkrfkaikd iV : d -tam • 0™ • fl 1 i Mlk m: j qg E K M I r 7  Mark Lawrence Entman lames B. Farrell Sidney Ray Fortney Andrew John Gabor Joel Stephen Glaser William R. Goldston Thomas Pegram Graham, Jr. George Redd Grant, Jr. Howard David Gunlock I obert Brent Harrison Nancy Rose Haslett Chester C. Haworth, Jr. Edward I ' eter Hoffman Warren F. Holland, Jr. Lewis Ball Holmes William Martin Hull, Jr. William R. Hutchinson, IV Howard Pierre Hyde Barry Noel Hyman Paschal John Imperato ninety Charles Marion James ferry Lee Jones Kenneth Lee J ones Paul W. Jones John Paul Kapp Peter Ogden Kohler Donald James Kroe Edward L. Lewis, [r. Eugene M. Long, II Donald T. Lucey Elliot Lee Marcus Robert Wade Markham Charles R. Martin Angus M. McBryde, Jr. William O. McMillan, Jr. Lawrence W. Moore, Jr. Philip B. Oliva John S. Poindexter, III • Yf f ' ■«• • • iflliil John Hoseph La Rosa Richard Andrew Liguori ah t ill ridii ML I 4 n i dik ktiM ninety-ont Q Dulon Devon Pollard John Marshall Porter James Oscar Redding Stuart Samuel Roberts Norman |. Robinson Michael Lee Robison Thomas Earl Runyan Henry Faison Satrit Nathan E. Saint-Amand Frank K. Sewell, )r. Stephen Jay Shimm Elijah T. Sproles, III Henry Yon Hoft Stoever, III Karl ). Stumpi Owen Hritt Tabor Waller L. Taylor, |r. rt C T: Ra mond L. Thomas Randall B. Yanderbeek Abe Walston, II Noel W. Young, Jr. ninety ttco ninety three It ' s sure nice outside Our Junior Tear The junior year finally made us feel somewhat con- fident to wear those rapidly vanishing Dr. ' s before our names. Of course, stud, scut, or stat might have been more appropriate titles. We were no longer able to sleep late or to electively cut those early classes. The re- sponsibility of patient care now paralleled that of learning. There were bloods to be drawn by 8:30 and heaven help you if it was 8:31. The routine lab work seemed to stem from the horn of plenty. Blood work- ups which required a whole afternoon during the sec- ond year now became a fifteen minute breeze. It was always a mystery as to why a STAT order for an L.E. prep would be written at 2 A.M. In surgery we found our time equally divided be- tween the breast masses and obstructions of Duke and the hernias and hemorrhoids of the V.A. Many of us are sure that Dr. Gardner and Hippocrates were per- Nobody walkj at the V.A. sonal friends. Those of us on McDowell are convinced that under the leadership of Mary Jo they sport the best nursing staff in the hospital. Life at the V.A. was considerably different from that at Duke. The patients could always give an ac- curate history beginning in 1918, when I was gased, or in 1943, when a shell exploded The plastics service was our biggest solicitor even if we were not theirs. Honestly, who wanted to do a complete work- up for a tooth extraction or for a face lift on a 65 year old farmer. Obstetrics and Gynecology became a 24 hr. devo- tional. In medicine we learned that expirations com- monly occur at 3 A.M. and in Ob. we soon discovered that the first inspiration also frequently occurs at that hour. As the year progressed and the interns began to disappear we were faced with more and more neces- f% - t Togetherness Three Patients on Tox Watch ninety-four ■' Why S.T.A.T.? ' sary work. After this quarter any of us could start an IV in a fly ' s vein. There were many hours endlessly spent with patients in labor and on tox watch. Why did that woman de- liver while I was getting a cup of coffee after I spent thirty hours with her? In medicine the word chart became by definition synonymous with patient. Morning ward rounds were usually stimulating and always traumatic. Did you compare that CSF with water and where is that pe- ripheral smear? If you march a iooo patients through the door . . . , became a familiar, if not trite, expression. Those at Duke were convinced that the lab equipment was brought to us from Osier ' s original lab at Hopkins. The Bogdonoff Morning Report, the Health Team and those hypertensives by the hundreds were high prices for an evening of freedom. The multiphasic psychiatry quarter forgot to include in its complex schedule any time for the students to see their patients. An attempt was made in psychosomatic medicine to explain how anxiety, anger and lust can be the basic factor in the development of osteoporosis in 70 year old grandmothers. Dr. Hohman devoted a great deal of time and effort into teaching the diagnostic aspects of psychiatry. The quarter offered us our first freedom from the laboratory. The drawing of blood was the closest we got to the lab. Of course there were endless hours spent in writing histories starting with the first bowel movement. In closing we must not forget that little office which somehow managed to detain the patients until 6 P.M. regardless of how early they arrived. To this office entitled Admissions we outwardly voiced our hostilities. 2000 ec D-W c . . . ninety-five Psychosomatic Conference ' Strain Down ' It ' s Ben Casey Time ninety w.t Morning Reports it ' s outdated m ill uji 111 Ip PI ■11 M r ibkSl, m j CVj7 F h iniit Y seven SOPHOMORE CLASS .... and just like that has the transmutation taken place. We are no longer freshmen. We are sophomores — the wise and the foolish, according to the Greeks, and who has ever known them to be wrong. We have begun the second part of that fascinating voyage leading to the harbor of the medical profession. As we learn about new facts of medicine, new mental windows will open to us. Let us hope that as each of these windows open, we be- come a bit more wise and a bit less foolish. Class officers: Left to right — Steve Lazarus, S.G.A. Representative; Ron Gooding, Class President; Chuc Virgin, S.G.A. Representative. ninety-eight R. H. Alexander (Ray) B. L. Allen, Jr. (Ben) M. S. Amstey (Marv) P. A. Anderson ( Page ) W. W. Baxley (Hill) W. S. Barber (Wayne) C. F. Barnett, Jr. (Crawf) W. H. Bell, II (Will) F. A. Berne (BUI) C. C. Bremer (Chris) I. W. Carruth, Jr. (Jim) N. B. Chase (Bruce) A. J. Cottingham, Jr. (Andy) R. G. Crlmmie (Bob) |. L. Dobson ( lohn) R. W. Dkury (Bob) D. B. Dlbin (Dave) R. O. Friidel (Hob) M. A. Fronstin (Mike) K. S. Given ( Kenna) (-? O «rj I A St  s 4 f a£ dJk ninety-nine D. S. Goldman ( I )ave ) H. P. Goldman (Herb) R. S. GoODING ( Ron ) J. L. Green, (it. ( Jim ) F. L. Grover (Fred) J. H. Hall (John) F. T. Hannah (Frank) |. M. Hahrelson. Ill ()ohn) B. S. H. Harris, III (Ben) L. S. Harris (Bud) J. D. Hart ( Deryl ) H. f. Herring ( |im ) A tl k i L, I j A. L. Hinshaw (Arnie) |. W. HOLSINGER, [r. ( Jim ) L. E. Jacobsox ( Len ) H.E. Kann (Herb) «V i I. R. K ' k kiioi i ( fohn ) V. | . Reran en ( Vic ) I). N. Keys (Dave) G. M. Kornreich (George) one It mid red J. R. Lanning ( |m. ) S. M. Lazurus (Steve) K. R. Lewis ( Kay ) W. G. Liakos (Bill) E. P. Lively ( Ed ) I). W. Martin, Jr. (Dave) A. D. McCutchan (Art) R. McGraw, )r. (Ralph) |. I). McLaughlin. )r. (Don) M. A. Nash (Martin) S. L. Nickman (Steve) R. C. Noble (Boh) D. F. Paulson (Dave) |. B. Powell ( |im) T. B. Price (Tom) S. D. Ravenel ( Bose ) F. L. Ruben (Fred) C. J. Rubenstein (Carl) B. W. RuFFNER, lR. (B.W.) G. F. Schmitz (George) m ik dhhlh £1 J O W - dfciMM i l fl UA 7-S y ■Idktikdtk one hit ml red ami one -JSf dikdtotikJi . W. R. Scott (Bill) D. Serafin (Don) R. L. Shields (Ralph) P. T. Shiner (Phil) D. G. Slaughter (Graham) L. Springer (Len) M. L. Steer (Mike) K. D. Straub (Dave) N. P. Strause, III (Phil) R. H. Taxkel (Bob) L. K. Totten (Larry) ). H. Trlitt ( Harry) dkdkm }. W. Turner, Jr. (Jim) C. R. Vernon (Charles) C. E. Virgin (Chuck) T. Wilson (Tom) R. H. Winter (Bob) M. L. Wolk (Mike) o ;e hundred and two The Tear of the V ise and the Foolish From beginning to end, a year of many things to many people . To us, a year met with a confidence un- known the previous September: a year where new courses were met with an enthusiasm born of the antici- pation of the great progress the year would bring in our education. We were fortunate to be taught by men of great academic stature who helped make our long hours of study into a gratifying labor. The role of Pathology was epitomized by Osier: As is our pathology, so is our practice of medicine. Dr. Kinney and his newly face- lifted department introduced the world of dysplasia, dysorder, and dysfunction; the Microbiologists enticed us with the knowledge of a world populated with causes of the same. Psychiatry identified with Dr. Lowenbach and his environment of coal shuttles, neosems, building blocks for the house of history, and clucks that could not be controlled like empires. His minimal activity technique was often demonstrated — usually to other departments, and erroneously at that — by fellows who slept in class. After a time we could begin to see a bit of integra- tion between departments, and we were soon on our way in this second year with its study of drugs, bugs, and trauma. Pathology offered Hart ' s Law of Mud on the Walls (if you throw enough mud on a wall, some of it is bound to stick), followed by displays of genitalia such as were never seen before, as well as a smorgas- board of CNS genetics and a free handwriting course, courtesy of Dr. Griffith. She thereby provoked the sug- gestion that most of us would be very embarrassed it we talked the same unintelligible way in which we write. She provoked other things which are too obvious to need description here. Dr. Vogel was provoked dur- ing one lecture to assert that he would talk until he was House of the seven subjects Dr. White explains cardiopathology finished, but rumor has it that his four year old son is demanding equal time to discuss oligodendrogliomata. Not to be outdone, the class displayed its research talents with more than just Mongoloid chromosomes spread out in all their glory (as seen with microscopes on this planet). A notable milestone of medical science was the discovery of Strayensus Occulatus, vectored by Larshmaniasis Conantus, and resulting in Fornicatus Multificans, or Gil ' s disease. (This, incidentally, has now spread from the Dope Shop all the way up to Room 310, where the student nurses are now studying the bugs and the lues). Other, more classical syndromes were available for study (gross specimens). Vocahs Diarrhealis had a high morbidity; its victims were, it seems, perpetually inebriated with the exuberance of their own verbosity. Maybe the same bug caused Shdeus Diarrhealis, which prompted betting pools on the (as- tronomical) number of slides shown for certain lec- tures. The rare condition of virusitis featured persevera- tions of I and me . Lastly, the combination of Pro- jectoritis plus turn-off-the-lights-itis, was notable for a compulsion to keep us in the dark — sometimes, in more ways than one. Fortunately, none of these diseases were contagious (we hope) except for Gil ' s disease. Then again, it may really be idiopathic — perhaps related to immoral immunity or to non-diagnostic palpation. Speaking of research, the warning to do nothing more to student nurse than skin-test then came too late for some of the fellows who married them instead. You may recall that this warning came from the same man who admitted that test questions do sometimes Stt down toward the groin. No doubt he will have hundred and three i Shades of biochem What do you see, Dave? ' similiar words of wisdom jnd encouragement for next year ' s class — that is, if a medical student doesn ' t get him first. Having opened the space age with tales of missile toes and naval destroyers, Dr. Conant told us how to specialize on tinea circinata at $10,110 instead of charging $5.00 for ringworm. Someone else opened their mouth only to expose the danger of being bit by a blue gummed Negro and to say that an entire micro- biology course could be learned from one dirty mouth. Do you suppose Leo does it this way, since he disclaims reading the text? It does correlate, also, with his met- aphoric copraphagy. There was much to be seen during the year — it wasn ' t entirely just a listening process, al- though some lecturers seemed to make it that. We saw such things as bloody Fridays, moments of truth, and an owl ' s eye which turned out to be an Aschoff cell. One lecturer showed a slide and said, This is a female tube — from a woman ; another told of . . . an- imal experiments requiring a rabbit testicle — from a male. . . . There were entertaining bits of history, by Dr. Smith, on childhood diseases , feetsies , and the prevalence of iatrogenic conditions. It was said that a macrophage, given its druthers, would treat a tubercle bacillus with Channel No. 5. Dr. Dixon ' s plasma cells had to have an enema while the intoxicated macro- phages became anorexic. Even traffic cops got their chance to be understood — after all, they may be sick! New opinions, concepts, and viewpoints are a part of professional training in any field. And so, we sat in the aorta to get a better view of the CVS; as a vermicide, we selected a worm of choice; and as the louse in Boyd ' s text, we realized that it is man who is the dreaded emissary of disease. Later we walked thru Fungus Land with Dr. Chick to pass in review the mycelial wonders first created by Dr. Conant. Of course the GMS-stained species waved their rhizopodial flags at us. After almost getting lost in Virus Country, Syd came to our rescue with the reminder that we are here to treat sick people (some with Staph, Phage type 7) rather than sick chickens. Attending CPC ' s we were treated to the best in forensic medicine. Some points were demonstrated esoterically — weren ' t they, Dr. Balyin 5 Dr. Smith dis- played his usual keen insight with the advice to think of the best way to treat a disease before the patient be- comes a candidate for a CPC. At this point we wish to assert the educational value of this material-lest anyone cast aspersions — and have included some review questions: (1) True or false: Columbus was a typical govern- ment employee? (2) If the statement is true but the reason is also false and is unrelated to its causative action but is sometimes . llways waiting now its about this big one hundred and jour Try to thin of it this way Seems to be smaller now. considered true because of its inaccuracy, then the as- sociation of the two is a relatively correlative dissocia- tion. (3) Once a streptococcus, always a streptococcus? (4) What is this specimen which was removed from a fraternity brother at Chapel Hill? (5) Why are buzzards not susceptible to botulism? (6) Do explosive pseudopodia have radioactive fallout? (7) Does incubator incubation of an incubatee incubate retrolental fibroplasia ? (8) If a medical student can fix ball games, then why not exams? (q) Are patients really just big test tubes? (m) Who was Pope Innocent VII? (11) Who went to sleep in their first P.D. session with Dr. Stead? We should also review some important diseases, as described in the text of bugs: influenza of ferrets; Weil ' s disease of bandicoots and mongooses; and marsh fever of voles. Disease transmission is also important. Be- sides L. Conantus, here is a story somewhat reminiscent of the Luetic Lues (alias the Syphilitic Satire): Let us here and now — Hear of why and how The bite of the mite — Of the mouse of the house Caused rickettsial disease — In a man, if you please! Furthermore, said the trichinella to the pig, I encyst (and swear by Osgood and Hull) that it is better to be late than have worms in your muscle. As one student said, Oh, to have a gynecophoral canal! May- be this is characteristic of nothing, as Dr. Fetter would say— probably after he illuminated the darkness of ig- norance with the burning story of the Bantu, suggested cooling jackets for fountain pens, or defined lecture and idiopathic. ; says here Sure. I ' ll pose for a picture Sometimes I do have to look, at the hook,. urn hundred ami pre Tetralogy of Fallout? Let your light shine unto all Could be, but I doubt it. 1962 was something old, something new. Path- ology returned from the twilight zone of cardiac dam- age only to enter a no man ' s land of bronchovesicular breathing. Dr. Kinney spotlighted laryngitis with the introduction of the look at me, I ' ve got it method of demonstration. Psychiatry introduced real, living pa- tients (recovery time as long as a string) in competition with Physical Diagnosis, which sometimes hid behind the Zorro mask of xanthelasma and warned of percus- sing the pot, financial rapeing, ballotting the overcoat, intractable physicians, virgin hypertensives, and nasty words like scab . Some of these patients matriculated on Osier while the pathologists — to be frank — some- times confused them with the surgical specimens. Any- way, we still had to get right in there and listen for a protodiastolic gallop, using a stethoscope which made us look like one of those twelve New York doctors (a Kildareish maneuver). Clinical Microscopy got stuck with a Lepage glue version of hemimmunology while Mr. Smith assured us there was nothing overly excit- ing about cleaning coverslips and someone else told us not to panic every time we saw a Hgb of 3 gm%. Con- sidering all the wonderful fact s presented this year, it seems unfortunate that even our brilliant minds can- not retain everything. Much of it will simply perish in situ. Other facts may get squished by an indicted baby Anderson. Lucky for us we could always reserve the right to be wrong — or else just shoot back to Area 17 and hope the rubes won ' t miss us. If the job is really a tough one, chances are it will be relegated to a janitor. After all, there is nothing more frightening than a Sophomore medical student. Most of these things were obscured by the spirit of our local athletic events or were discarded for the pleas- ure of SGA dances, of fire engine rides with Johnny Long, of winter wonder lands of snow, of much-wel- comed vacations, of many informal get-togethers, and, well, just the thousands of memories of another year at our beloved DMC I Wk. 1 9k m i 1 Fraternity Rush «sl a New viewpoints and attitudes are learned at medii al school one hundred and six The Three Musketeers Let ' s twist! A Tale of Two Doctors At approximately 9:23 5 17 PM on the 12th day of Never, two young physicians were progressing along a portion of the highway system (they were intraauto- motively situated) when one, the driver, suddenly be- gan to suspect the presence of some automotive dys- function. Quickly reducing his speed to zero (— 1% standard deviation), he sought to analyze the causative factors by way of a differential diagnosis. He perceived the necessity of a comprehensive visualization of the pathologic process responsible for his dilemma, and upon instituting a complete and methodical examina- tion of the peripheral organ system, he determined the primary lesion to be a focal, though nebulous, involve- ment of the cortical portion of the dextrocaudad pneu- matic pseudopod with secondary loss of the medullary parenchyma. The precise etiology was determined only provisionally; the initial clinical impression was that of a foreign body reaction. Based on the significant elucidations of the most prominent investigators in the field of auto-pneumatics, Casey decided to write an order for total extirpation oi the pathologic organ, bil- lowed by replacement therapy. However, Kildare stead- fastly refused to perform this corrective maneuver (due to a network heterogeneity reaction) and encysted (a regression to a symbolic pre-natal environment) upon consultation with a board-qualified specialist. This iatro- genic adversity was detrimental to the proposed thera- peutic regimen and therefore the specialist w as consulted and was apprized of the physical findings thusfar deter- mined. The consultant, a pneumatic tireologist, con- traindicated replacement and suggested chemotherapy as having greater efficacy. The drug of choice was an ad- mixture of 79% Nitrogen with 20% Oxygen gas at 2.0 atmospheres (STP). The compound was administered intraluminally via the adnexa. Prompt and complete remission of all focalized symptoms followed this course of therapy; nevertheless, specific procedures were outlined for institution should recrudescence occur, al- though the prognostication was favorable. At this time the specialist presented his bill (giving rise to a neuro- financial side reaction) for professional services rend- ered. It was promptly paid in lull by professional courtesy, a competitive enzymic inhibitor. And now, we end our story, happy in the knowledge that ignor- ance is bliss; doctors are neologismic, lexiconographical snobs; ami that Casey will have it immunized next time. Stag party: Sai one hundred ami seven V Rombera --  s ' ive. Pearl ' s of P.D. No one is too sic to be examined. ' Heroic Allegory Department The Vesicle, the Pathogen and the Samovar from Kuibyshev ' s Tales of the Forest for Socialist Youth One day in the fields outside of Nome, Alaska, in the days before the American occupation, there- walked a lonely vesicle who had just been disinherited by his father. He had already gone many miles in the snow and freezing cold, and was ready to collapse on the ground. Just then a great hairy Pathogen appeared! The Pathogen lumbered up to the young vesicle and (though it could not speak) made some commiserating noises. At first the vesicle was scared out of his wits, but soon when he saw it was a friendy Pathogen he took heart and heeded the beast ' s encouraging noises. Fnally, following the waving tail of the huge animal, he moved off into the forest, and soon they came to a big tree with a hole in it, which was the Pathogen ' s lonely home. Inside there was nothing but a stinking pile of leaves in one corner, and a low wooden table with a shining brass samovar on it. The vesicle was overjoyed, and, taking a cup from a hook on the wall, filled it with steaming, fragrant tea from the samovar. Warmed and happy, he was soon ready to continue on his journey, convinced of the basic goodness of nature. As he left the Pathogen ' s sylvan abode it occurred to him that the cup, though only of pottery, might come in handy in his travels, ami (not seeing what use it could be to the Pathogen) he put it in his pocket, patted the beast on the top of its broad head, and went out the door. Thereupon the Pathogen opened its huge mouth, moved its head lazily and swallowed the young vesicle whole, nothing being left but his fur shap a . Moral: Sometimes you can ' t outwit a Pathogen. ■h.u nit ' handled and eight HEW STUDY AID! (in dead stereo) IDENTIFY BACTERIA BY THEIR CALL! (Scientific name: Bogus Bugus) Buy the new Authenic Bacteria Call Record In Horrible Coccophony, IDENTICOCCUS with Descriptive Key Made by Experimental Labs Inc. with Special Electronic Amplifying Equipment 1 ' oucET Tedious Staining Procedures and Sugar Fermentations! HEAR what the Bui Themselves say! (a new aesthetic experience) GUESS THESE CALLS: ' COCCUS! Escherich, Oh a c-coc-coc-coc-coc-coccus! COCCUS! Escherich moo COCCUS! FOR INFORMATION SEE THE STAPH MEMBERS ' Get that silver nitrate ready, or 1 ain ' t gonna come out! ! ¥ one hundred and nine Dr d. t. SMITH BUGS BEWARE! Where the boys are If you were homogenized we ' d have a whole milligram of B . Put me down! i Affect dissociation? 1 j t 1 10IHWI J riux y TV _ i - jr - T - ■j No false alarms here! Pinographs! one hundred and ten The Three Musketeers stride again Uncle Dune has many talents. Oh, all right. one hundred and eleven FRESHMAK CLASS Gentlemen I am happy to welcome you to Duke Medical School. It is now 8:35; at 9:15 I have an operation to per- form. I am going up to do my job — I expect you to do yours. The Dean ' s welcome was a day late, but was the real in- troduction to the Freshman year. Professor Markee ' s movies helped, but the first anatomy lab retains its pre-eminence among many firsts of this ini- tiation year. Class Officers: Left to right. Tee Moorman, Class Presi- dent; Jim Nuc olls, SGA Rep.; Sarah Shilling, SGA Rep. one hundred and twelve M. J. Andriola (Mike) B.B.Baker (Bernie) |. Y. Barbee ( John) W.R. Bender (Bill) E. H. Bossen (Ed) G. A. Butcher (Gene ) S. A. Butcher (Suzanne) T. P. Clancy (Tom) W. M. Dunlap (Billy) C. Eisdorfer ( Carl ) f. L. Emlet (John) R.R.Fagin I Ron) I.. M. Flint, Jr. ( Lew) J. I.. Frank ( Larry ) F. H. Gerber ( Fred) 1 1. K. Gold (Chip) y Wrfr « „ , Aik fkjLikdik ■- ■JSt  T V M M dim F.V.CoviLLE(Fred) — R. C. Crawford ( Boh) J. I). Dirkers ( Jerry) L. T. Donavan (Larry) . ' «jSP f T ik I dtokdik r ;i JtmAlm one hundred and thirteen F. Q. Graybeal, [r. ( Fred ) J. E.Green (Jim) R. I I. Gross (Dick) E. J. Gv : m (Gene) rmf J ) ufhJtA dthM S. C. Hall ( Snowden ) R. E. Harner (Russ) I. B.Haslam (Battle) J. E. Hasson (Jack) D. M. Hawkins (Dave) T. C. Hoyle, III (Buck) R.KATz(Dick) E.D.Kay, Jr. (Dan) R. P. Kruecer (Ron) S. M. Kulvin (Steve) E. S. LeBauer (Gene) C. C. LlNNEMANN, Jr. (Cal) • « a -Ait. r i ' ' i 1 . A. Lucas (Bruce) J. E. Markee, Jr. (Joe) D. R. Maynard ( Dave) R. E.McCarter (Bob) one hundred and fourteen f. D. McCracken (Dean) F. H. McGregor, Jr. ( Frank ) I. S. Minis (Joe) C. T. Moorman, II ( ' T ) A.Nikides (Leah) (. G. Nuckolls ( fim ) ( i. L. Odom ( Guv ) M.M.Oken (Marty) J. G. Powell ( John) A. R.Price (Andy) K. P. Ramming ( Ken) I. P. Reitt ( Pete) C.P.Riley (Chuck) L. A. Rogers (Butch) J. B. Rouse (Jim) E. J. Sanford (Smiles) L. M. Saputo (Len) P. C. Scheidt (Pete) N.R.Scott (Neil) S. K. Shilling ( Sara Kay ) 1 § z -xe I 1k JAJ: L S £l - f s 19 £ l 1 Atkntk r y ■■■hi c? O 1 o;j - hundred and fijlttn % o 4thid kd kdkk J. H. Shore ( Jim ) PC. T. Siiult ' . ( Kirk) W.H. Spencer, III (Bill) W. C. A. Sternberg, Jr. (Chuck) H. L. Stewart (Lee) H. B. Stone (Ben) T. A. Sullivan, Jr. (Tom) J. J. Sulzycki (Jack) J. B. Taylor ( Jack ) K. W. Taylor ( Ken) G. S. Wagner (Galen) C. N. Watson, Jr. ( Chuck) f mi dik J. W. Weeks (Wesley) J.I). Williams (Jack) C. B. Wricht ( Creighton) W. S. Yancy (Sam) J. D. Zaepi-el (Joe) one hundred iind sixteen Anatomy I suppose I should tell you that Anatomy is the course a medical student cuts his teeth on. At the first opportunity we headed for the dis- section labs, fourth floor, Davison Building: was it male or female, black or white, fat or thin, young or old? Then there was the curiosity com- pelling that first touch . . . and the recognition that here, strangely enough, the sex seemed sexless. Oh, well. . . . From the lab . . . Have you found the iliohypopoinogaster on your side? Oh, hell — I slipped and cut the Phrenic! Vive la Pudendal nerves! Pct have another song by the ' Bladders ' . to Mi 10 at the request of Cecil B. DeM(arkee ) : Aided by a grant from the National Foundation. The Gluteus Maximus is demonstrated and then cut and reflected; the Inferior Gluteal nerve is shown and the Inferior Gluteal artery is indicated. Xmi ' let us consider Just who was the subject in Surface Anatomy of the Back ? And don ' t worry about this first demonstration; it ' s really not that bad. Thank you. That will be all for this morning. K W Doctors! one htimlrctl ami seventeen ' Nooo, there are no uncle ' s in Biochemistry. ' You want to see what I got? Histology Histology, for some of the members of ' 65, holds rapidly fading memories of delightful autumn afternoons spent slaving over a hot microscope. After becoming professional observers of such dis- tinguishing features as Peyer ' s patches, Hassel ' s cor- puscles, and Brunner ' s glands, we often found our- selves called upon to identify mysterious choicely stained tid-bits, which were prepared by Uncle Dune et al. Searching questions were enthusias- tically answered by Dr. Hetherington. . . . Noooo . . . you are not looking at adipose tissue . . . you are observing a portion of your vaseline ring. The an- nual Uncle Dune Day was observed in reverence by all those concerned and Uncle Dune was pre- sented with a new decanter of H. H. solution, specific for the staining of the gastric mucosa. Soon thereafter it was made known that there was to be an objective (multiple-guess) type final and again distinguishing features of the tissues were rein- tegrated into our thoughts . . . pinocytosis . . . holocrine . . . Kris Kringle . . . Donder and Rlitzen. Specific stain for the gastric mucosa one hundred and eighteen So don ' t sweat psychiatry ' L « . ;m ' questions? Indeed an amino and analyzer Biochemistry Biochemistry began with an inspiring lecture by Dr. Handler; inspiring because he didn ' t believe the admission committee was infallible. This was the last we were to see of him for nine busy weeks dur- ing which his staff members answered questions such as, How do you work this dilution problem ? , How do you know that is the amino acid sequence of insulin? , Do you have any old tests? , and, How should I decide what is wrong with this pa- tient ' s acid-base balance: take the pH of the plasma or urine? After this introduction to the building blocks of biochemistry, we were prepared to meet the Mas- ter, and this we did, waving gayly as we whirled around the citric acid cycle or screaming in terror as we shot down the direct oxidation pathway. Throughout the course each student found him- self faced with the big question: Should I study in the library or go to lab? I I ' Hmmm The highest paid blackboard eraser in Duke Medical School one hundred and nineteen ' Our problem lies here ' What do you mean ' you don ' t understand? ' Physiology The new year of 1962 began with a joint New Year ' s Resolution by the Class of 1965: pass physi- ology. Our mornings were filled with marvelous adventures as, under a new department head, we explored the private life of the squid, watched mozaics of graphs form before our bewildered eyes, and wandered through the chambers of the heart with a quiet-spoken immigrant. During the after- noons we systematically cut off the heads of hogs and the blood supplies of our arms, inhaled amyl nitrite, stood on our heads to take blood pressures, inhaled amyl nitrite, made abstract sketches on kymographs, and inhaled amyl nitrite. By the end of the course, we had exhausted the supply of dogs, maimed ourselves physically, received delightful lit- tle surprises in our mail boxes as the grades-by-mail system went into effect, and become hooked on amy] nitrite. Medical students Lin- the crabgrass in the lawn of a dc life. Mass Masochism one hundred and twenty Now? Dr. Silverman Now what? Peace of Mind Therapy The biweekly battle against the viscious spiral finds seventy-six maladjusted personalities strug- gling to discover what man has made of man. Having reduced all of man ' s problems to problems of mental hygiene, the NEW PHYSICIANS pro- ceed to solve them as if they were but so many problems of bed wetting or acute thumb sucking. Dr. Heinz ' s 69 Cures constitutes a vehicle of salvation, a last line of defense in the attempt to extinguish the anxiety and disquiet of the solar sys- tem. His aggressive outburst: The only thing we have to fear is FEAR itself, will long be remem- bered. Enlightened by the fruitful examination of the dynamic aspects of toilet training and their effect on surrogate mothers, we now stand ready to tread the Rhode to orgasm. The paradox of pathological grief and danger diarrhea has finally been re- solved . . . the organism marches on. . . . The Freudian view Dr. Heinz 6g cures. one hundred and twenty-one Andriola expresses agression Moorman ' s Medics The Medics After three close defeats, the 1961 Medics came storming back to win their last four games and clinch third place in the intramural B league. It was the running and passing of Sam Yancey and the stingy Medics defense which paved the way for the late season comeback. In fact it was the alert and hard-charging defense which won the last game with a safety late in the second half. The final score ended up 2-0. The defense was led by line-backs Bob Mc- Arthur and Ken Ramming, safety Pete Scheidt who together intercepted more passes than the opposition completed. Dean McCrachen, Dick Gross, Frank McGregor, Galen Wagner and Creighton Wright made up the rest of the defensive unit. The Medics had a bevy of sure-handed receivers in Joe Markee, Jim Nuckolls, Ron Krueger, Jack Taylor and Jim Rouse. Other keys to victory — the blocking of Mike Andriola, Lew Flint, Ed Sanford and Billy The Toe Dunlap ' s terrific punting . . . the coaching of Tee Moorman and Bob Crummie. ;. • , m ■. lie made a late season comebac Yancy in a tion one hundred and twenty-two Medical Dames ' 6$ .. ' . wwww t rf f frYr w . An Aft ff fV f ' fY ? , rr tf ' j i ' ' ff ' ff f jf. f . . y A ' f ff ' ' rrrl ' .i ( . Yr rrjt.l , High Cholesterol? ?  The inquiring minds . . Socialized Medicine? Wonder what the single boys do. . . . Let ' s twist again . . . Happy Sew Year! Population Explosion . Our contributions one hundred and twenty three 1 i 161. Parke, Davis Company one hundred and twenty-four -n :1 I ■Founding of the A.M. A. ORGANIZATIONS one hundred and twenty -lire Editors at ivor The IQ62 Du e AESCULAPIAK The Du e Aesculapian is in an unusual position in the field of medical publications, since few medical schools have an annual. We of Duke feel, however, that there is a place for a yearbook in the scheme of a forward-looking progressive center such as Duke Med- ical Center. The purpose of The Aesculapian is to portray, pictorially and editorially, the events and constitu- tion of the School of Medicine in its thirty-second year. Obviously, this must include much which has become (I THE OUke I 8 fi ;; ' ( purely routine for us. But then, systematic repetition seems to be the key to learning. Newly added this year is a section devoted to the School of Nursing. This was instituted to recognize the close association, both professionally and socially, of the two schools. We find ever impressed on us that the care of the sick must be a team effort. These Hanes Help- ers are constantly an aid to us and an indispensable part of the team. The problems of presenting this annual, as with the I Ik f F.dilors-in-Chiej r one hundred and twenty six production of all annuals, have been both acute and chronic. The co-editors have attacked these problems, with varying success, and have produced this result. Here a concerted effort was necessary and one was re- ceived. Various section editors, writers, photographers, and aids have done their part. Our special guest editor, Dr. Julian Price, oi Florence, South Carolina, has provided a provocative word directed toward the graduating class but having meaning tor all. He gives to tis with the wisdom oi hindsight a profound suggestion for our future. In an attempt to characterize the student we have presented him at study, at research, and at play. These facets somehow merge to produce the young Doctor. Influences of the departments lead some of the young doctors to careers of teaching, some to investigation, and some to the life of a physician. In all, varied is the Section Editors: Baxley, Banghart, Dimmick, Shultz; missing: Chase, Waddell, Gonzalez. Photography Editor T Wilkinson Layout Editor, Chris Bremer; Business Manager, Martin Hatcher. Advertising Manager Frank Hannah background. Cultivators of this variation, the teachers, are the enduring heart of the school. It is we, the stu- dents, who change. In this bo k the individual changes of each class are noted. The Senior who looks at the Freshman presentation, will be able to remember his green vear of initiation. Then the slow process of ma- turation will be appreciated. Changes perceived more readily have taken place. Noticeable throughout the bo k are material improve- ments of the hospital facilities. Renovations and addi- tions are evident from projectors to professors. The modern touch of electron microscopy confuses the stu- dent and confounds the clinicians. Esoteric is the watch- word. In spite of this necessary emphasis on the tech- niques of medicine, there comes somewhere a subtle introduction to the art of medicine. The seventy-kilo test tube of our biochemical training becomes a per- son — a psyche and a soma. The instruction in the art is covert but dynamic; it is absorbed passively but well. This inescapable factor of medical education cannot be depicted per se. It is the unseen thread woven into our linen. So, The 1962 Aesculapian has attempted to signify a transition— of the student and of the school — and to indicate this as it is peculiar to this year. This is done 111 .1 manner which hopefully will increase the meaning of this volume as the young Doctor becomes the mature Medicinae Doctor. one hundred and twenty-seven Members: Class of 1962: Stone, Weems, Kramer, Urbaniak. Alpha Omega Alpha is a national honorary medical society having as its purpose the promotion of the highest ideals of scholastic achievement and professional ethics. The Constitution perhaps bests describes its basic tenets. The spirit of the Society is set forth in its motto and in a modern interpretation of the Hip- pocratic Oath. It is the duty of its members to promote its ideals, to foster the scientific and philosophical fea- tures of the medical profession, to loo beyond self to the welfare of the profession and of the public, to culti- vate social mindedness as well as an individualistic at- titude toward responsibilities, to show respect for col- leagues and especially for elders and teachers, to foster research, and in all ways ennoble the profession of cAlpha Omega cAlpna Jronot Medical Society TO BE WORTHY TO SERVE THE SUFFERING medicine and advance it in public opinion. It is equally a duty to avoid what is unworthy . . . and all practices injurious to the welfare of patients, the public or the profession. The society was founded at the University of Illinois in 1902 by William W. Root, M.D. The number of chapters has gradually increased until at present there are 85 chapters in the leading medical centers in the United States and Canada with some 30,000 members. The Alpha Chapter of North Carolina was chartered in 1931 under the leadership of Dean Wilburt C. Davison, M.D., who is now President of the National Order. Dr. Edward S. Orgain is the official Counsellor for the Duke Chapter. CLASS OF 1 961 Elected us Seniors Victor Samuel Hehar Latham Flanagan, Jr. Tillinghast Goethe Lybass Lee William McLain Arthur Morrison Martin, |r. Milton Flake Campbell Victor Simon Constantine Clyde James Dellinger Charles Bessellieu Hammond Edward Darrell Jervey, II John Robert McTammany Earl Nelson Metz Dr. Edward S. Orgain Faculty Counsellor CLASS OF 1962 Elected as f union Richard Spencer Kramer Richard Cole Stone James Randolph Urbaniak Wade Scott Weems HONORARY 1961 Joseph E. Markee, Ph.D. one hundred and twenty-eight STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION S.G.A. meeting: Gooding, Kramer, Shilling, Nuckolls, Lazarus, Coble, Stoever, McBryde, Holmes, Moorman, Armstrong, Virgin, Grant. The medical Student Government Association, to which each member of the student body belongs, func- tions as the official organization of the student in deal- ing with the University administration, medical school faculty and the hospital administration. It administers the Honor System and serves as an appellate court for alleged traffic violations by medical students. As is often the case in similar groups, the exact youth of this organization has never been recorded. It therefore resembles early literary works and customs which were handed down from group to group by word of mouth. Each year one or more of the sages from the preceding year ' s organization returned to gtiide the new members in the way of the past. In recent years, however accurate minutes bear witness to the groups ' transactions and plans. According to the earliest records remaining, the Student Government As- sociation, dates back to 1941. Since then it has become an ever increasing integral part of Duke Medical School. The SGA sponsors three dances yearly for the mem- bers of the Medical Center as well as for the students. It is the formal sponsoring body for the school annual. The Aesculapian. In the past, it has provided many things which still remain to be enjoyed, among which are the arrangement and furnishing of the student lounge and the television set in this haven of relaxa- tion. In the future it will continue to represent and help the student in such diverse and greatly appreciated ways. S. G. A. OFFICERS President Yank I). Coble Seaetiiry Henry V. A. Stoever, III Treasurer Angus M. McBryde, |r. Senior Class President Richard S. Kramer Senior Class Representatives George F. Armstrong, (r. Robert N. Grant, William S. Warden junior Class President Lewis B. Holmes Junior Class Representatives Thomas P. Graham, ]r. Edward L. Lewis, ]r. Sophomore Class President Ronald S. Gooding Sophomore Class Representatives Stephen M. Lazarus Charles E. Virgin Freshman Class President Claude (Tee) Moorman Freshman Class Representatives James Nuckolls Sara Kay Shilling S.G.A. President Yank Coble one hundred and twenty nine Duke SAM A 1962-1963 Officers. First row, left to right: Nuckolls, Friedel, Stoever, Lazarus. Second row, left to right: Cline, Hart, Markee, Edwards, Virgin. The Duke Chapter of the Student American Med- ical Association (SAMA) was organized in 1957. The local chapter is one of the 76 present in medical schools throughout the country, all of which combine to form a large national organization. The New Physician is the journal of the Association and is issued monthly to medical students, interns, and resident members. On the local level SAMA has greatly expanded dur- ing the five years of its existence. Among its many and various student services are the SAMA Laundry, an an- nual social, the SAMA Medical Student Directory, the Smith Kline and French Award for Medical Writing, the Duke Endowment-SAMA Rotating Internship Pro- gram held during the fall of 1961, the summer extern- ship programs sponsored by the Duke Endowment, and very important, a pilot program for high school medical — . j STUDEXT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION DUKE CHAPTER recruitment which will expand in the 1962-63 school year. Not the least of SAMA ' s contributions is making available an opportunity for any and all Duke students to participate in SAMA affairs. This implies participa- tion not only at the local level but in Regional and Na- tional affairs. At the Regional Meetings and National Convention, SAMA members hear speakers of note in political, general medical, and research fields. In addi- tion, there is a cooperative interchange of ideas among medical schools from all parts of the country, as well as interchange among the new physicians who compose these schools. DUKE SAMA OFFICERS, 1962-1963 President Henry Stoever President-elect Bob Friedel Secretary . . Steve Lazarus Treasurer . . . Jim Nuckolls Senior Class Representatives . Boh Cline, Steve Edwards Junior Class Representatives Chuck Virgin, Deryl Hart Sophomore Class Representatives . foe Markee, Sam Yancy Bill Waddell National President, ig6o-ii)6i Duke SAMA 1961-1962 Officers at planning session. Left to right, Wilkinson; Stoever, Vice-President; Good- ing, Secretary; Fanner; Liakos, Treasurer; Friedel; Mc- Bryde, President and Region 1 Vice-President. one hundred and thirty THE CABOT SOCIETY Steering Committee: Left to right, Crummie, Herring, Barnett, Grover. The Cabot Society is an informal organization of medical students and related personnel who are inter- ested in aspects of medicine other than the pure tech- niques of treatment. The society was named for Dr. Richard C. Cabot, Professor of Medicine at Harvard, whose conviction that the patient should be treated as a total person and that there is more to medicine than just the mere techniques perhaps best embodies the philosophy of the society. The society began sometime prior to 1952. Sensing the need for an understanding of this other side of medicine, several medical students decided to invite some of their medical elders to speak at periodic lunch- eons on various subjects. These meetings proved help- lul and interest in them grew, with the result that in the fall of 1952 the Cabot Society was organized to ex- tend and stabilize the program. Through the years the society has remained in- formal, having no formal membership or dues and be- ing administered by a steering committee of interested students. All medical students and others interested are invited each time to the Cabot meetings which are held fortnightly in the private dining room of the Men ' s Graduate Center. Steering Committee: Wayne Barber, Crawford Barnett, (r., Robert Crummie, Fred Grover, Sue Brown Henry, [im Herring, Don McLaughlin, Tee Moorman, Chuck Virgin. Advisor: Rev. Howard C. Wilkinson. Chaplain to the University. Dean Barnes Wood hall addresses The Cabot Society Members at an after dinner tall{ one hundred and tlnrt out IOTA SOCIETY Members: First row, Reitt, Tankel, Dr. James Sidbury, guest, Norins. Second row: Burnett, Dirkers, Williams, Bicknell, Keranen. Missing: Guazzo, Hoyle, Nuckolls, Virgin. Iota, nee the Duke Medical School Immunological Society, was founded in the spring of 1961 by a group of medical students who had in common an interest in the various new aspects of immunology. Meeting once or twice a month at dinner, the society hears one of its members discuss a topic of current in- terest. Following this, a faculty member invited as a guest commentator gives his own concept of that sub- ject. Among the topics considered this the first year were: lung disease and immunology, theories of antibody for- mation, the current status of the measles vaccine, psychosomatic allergy, historical aspects of vaccination and blood group genetics. Seniors discuss with Dr. Sidbury. Lett to right, Hick acllj Williams. Dr. James Sidbury, Norins. OFFICERS 1961-1962 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Faculty . idvisoi Leslie Norins William Bicknell Charles Virgin James Nuckolls Dr. H. (). Sieker um liiindiid and thn ty tiro DUKE MEDICAL DAMES The Duke Medical Dames was organized in the early 1940 ' s by Mrs. Frank Swett as a social organiza- tion for the wives of students and interns. Due to the increasing number of married students, however, it now functions primarily for the wives of students. Mrs. Swett remained the advisor until her death and was succeeded by Mrs. James Semans. In 1957 Mrs. Deryl Hart became the sponsor. This year Mrs. Angus Mc- Bride assumed the sponsorship. The purposes of the Medical Dames are to provide an opportunity to gain insight into the role of the doc- tor ' s wife in community service, to grow intellectually along with their husbands, to obtain information about interesting avocations, and to meet and get acquainted with one another socially. It has helped new wives be- come adjusted to their new roles and has given them a feeling of belonging to their own group. It also pro- vides a place for the exchange of ideas and thoughts for the solving of mutual problems. This vear many projects have occupied the talents and time of the Med Dames. Among their social gather- ings have been Christmas dance and a Fashion Show MEDICAL DAMPS OFFICFRS President Lynn Baxley First Vice-President Kay Cline Second Vice-President Patti Vanderbeek Secretary Gray Long Treasurer . Leslie Holmes Project Chairman fean Nicks Publicity Chairman Frances McMillan W A— SAM A Chairman Betty Waddell Senior Representative Marv Lou Conna ]umor Representative Mimi Carlton Sophomore Representative Phoebe Gooding Freshman Representative Sue Scheldt Officers: Seated, Vanderbeek, Baxley. Standing. Long, Holmes, Cline. with members modeling clothes from Montaldoes. They have also had Mr. Paul Hardin speak to them on Legal Medicine, and Dr. D. T. Smith on the history of the medical school. Mrs. Tanaka has demonstrated Japanese flower arrangement for them. Their main service project for this year, however, was a bake sale, the proceeds from which went to the Chapel Fund. The year has been a productive one for them, but they look forward to an even more productive one next vear. ( ' ers: First row. McMillan. Scheldt, Nicks. Second row: Carlton. Waddell, Conna. Gooding. one hundred and thirty-three jmJ m T l fiF Ohlyne Coble Betty Sime 1 1 Sue Stowe Mippy Scott Tucker Crawford Barbara Odom Carol Grover Mrs. Angus McBryde (Sponsor) Norma Kahn Carol Taylor Mrs. Tanka (Guest) .  - 3U © « R _f J? Phyllis Pollard Anne Chase Isabel McGraw Anne Young Larice Kapp Nancy Kay Sally Weeks Judy Baker one hundred and thtrty-four Frances Short Shirley Martin Barbara Gebel Joan Carter Kay Armstrong Jean Wilkinson Nancy Baumann Ann McFaiklcn Anne Dobson Connie Durrett Sue Carter Virginia Henshaw Janice Harris Betsy Green Jean Wilson Members in discussion Blurred frenzy of voting J one hundred and thirty-five Features © 1959, Parke, Davis Company one hundred and thirty-six Harvey and The Circulation of Blood one hundred and thirty-seven THE YEAR IN REVIEW through the retrospectroscope The new buildings Important and far-reaching events, changes, and advancements have taken place at Duke Medical Center this year, which seem to reflect locally the rapid growth and progress of medicine the world over in this atomic age. We have all watched with pride the construction of the new buildings in front of the hospi tal and anticipate their completion next fall. Nearly four million dollars is being spent on these additions, part of which is federal funds. Duke has long been in- ternationally known for its work in Gerontology, and the new Institute for the Study of the Aging will be housed in the west half of the new building which extends parallel to the front of the existing hospital. There will be modern facilities for para- medical and medical approaches to the problems of our elderly citizens, and both teaching and research are to be conducted here. The new Diagnostic and Treatment Center will occupy the cast half of the building, and all of us will benefit from the teach- ing, research, anil out-patient care to be conducted here. Most specialties are represented: surgery, in- cluding ENT, thoracic, vascular, and neurosurgery; medicine, including allergy, gastroenterology, and pulmonary disease; pediatrics, including endocri- nology; radiology; and psychiatry. A day hospital is planned for psychiatry, which is an intriguing in- novation in treatment of mental disease. The third unit in the new addition is the Clinical Research Unit, now temporarily located on Welch Ward. one hundred and thirty-eight The new buildings New pathology offices This unit will be located behind the long building in front of the hospital. Teaching and research will be the theme here, and facilities for in-patient care will be included. Surgery, medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry, with their subspecialties, will have space in this unit. These new buildings will not be the last, for when our children are grown and enter Duke Medical School (which won ' t be too far in the future, in some instances!), they may be in an entirely new building, now under discussion. The new pediatrics ward was opened in the sum- mer of 1961, and to those students who had pediat- rics on the old ward, even with its unique character, this was indeed an improvement. The total cost of construction was over half a million dollars, a part of which was federal funds. On entering the new Howland, one is at once taken with the warm, sensitive murals representing the ages of man, as seen through the eyes of a boy. The ward has a large patient capacity, a double nursing station, adequate treatment rooms, interview rooms for talking with parents, provisions for parents to stay The outdoor play space in pediatrics one hundred and thirty -nine One of the electron microscopes in pathology with their children, a large outdoor sunporch open- ing directly from the ward, and — most important to the harried student — a new modern lab. Dr. Thomas Kinney, in his second year as suc- cessor to Dr. Forbus, is continuing an all-inclusive revamping of the Pathology Department. Among the students only the seniors can recall the large autopsy room where the never-to-be forgotten round-ups occurred, the workrooms, the myriad of white pots and black volumes, and the large office with the moose-head on the wall. These have all been replaced by neat, compact offices and labora- tories stocked with the most modern equipment and supplies. New laboratories include those for isotopes, tissue cultures, fluorescent and electron microscopy, nutrition, electrophoresis, research chemistry, histochemistry, experimental neuropath- ology and cytology. The senior staff has been in- creased considerably in number. The course in pa- thology has been changed to further emphasize the pathogenesis of disease with basic experiments. The case method of teaching as previously used is now no longer emphasized. Electives are given in sur- gical, anatomical, and experimental pathology, and students have the opportunity to work in the var- ious sub-specialty labs. . new lab in pathology one hundred and forty One of the new radiation therapy units The new radiation therapy wing is now in full operation, and about fifty-five patients a day are re- ceiving treatment from the new x-ray units. Any- one who inspects this wing will be impressed by the neatness of the surroundings and the size and power of the units. Included are a cobalt 60 Teletherapy unit with a beam equivalent to two to three million electron volts, a cesium 1 7 Teletherapy unit with a beam equivalent to one million electron volts, a 280 kilovolt rotational unit, ami a 100 kilovolt unit. These machines are able to deliver a higher thera- Students in the research training program peutic dosage of radiation with less side-erfect than the more conventional units. We students are constant library users, and another construction project for the year is excava- tion for extension of library space. The old refer- ence-book room and part of the stack-room are to be converted to office space for the increased library personnel. Projects in the planning stage include a new emergency room and a larger Dope Shop. The sale of coffee to sleepy students lias proved a thriving enterprise! Perhaps the most promising innovation from the students ' point of view has been the establishment of a student curriculum committee to meet with the regular staff committee. This provides students a chance to evaluate their courses more critically, dis- cuss their criticism, and then bring a more united force to bear in instituting the desired reforms and changes. A new head of the Department of Physiology arrived in the summer of 1961. He is Dr. Daniel Tosteson, who is from Washington University in St. Louis. Dr. Toste:on has reorganized the depart- ment, added several new faculty members, reworked the curriculum, and made plans for some new build- ing and remodeling projects. one handled and fori) (Jilt Inside the new research laboratories This has been the second year of operation for the Medical Research Training Program, a new concept in medical education which has been estab- lished at Duke by Dr. James Wyngaarden. It is vol- untary ami open to students after their second year, and to graduates. This program is three or four school quarters in duration and designed to instruct the participants in the basic technique of medical research and to give them some actual practice in attacking a problem of their own choice under the guidance of an experienced investigator. The first twelve weeks are spent on such subjects as tissue culture, cytology, enzymology, cellular physiology, genetics, and biophysics. For the remainder of the program the participant engages in his own chosen project, as well as attending regular scientific sem- inars and special lectures. Courses in mathematics, statistics, and electronics are also carried on concur- rently. The facilities are modern and extensive. Each student has his own laboratory work space and desk, plus access to all types of special equipment, includ- ing an electron microscope and tissue culture ap- paratus. The program is quite flexible and can be arranged to suit each individual; those desiring a Ph.D. in addition to an M.D. degree can achieve it through the program by spending addition time in their particular fields. Medical educators through- out the country are aware of our new program in research training, and we are proud of its success. The Saturday morning CPC ' s continue to be stimulating, provocative, and informative. This year the heads of the various departments have given many of the clinical discussions, and the large crowds have attested to the popularity of their pres- entations. One of the more colorful and instructive participants of every CPC is Dr. George Baylin, and the saying Betting against Baylin is like betting against the Yankees continues to hold true. Each year the disaster rehearsal provides a colorful diversion from usual activities for a day. Multiple compound fractures (made from sticks), abdominal viscera in full view, and blood ga- lore reflect the talent of the make-up artists among the students and staff as Duke Hospital goes through a full-dress practice run of a sudden, un- expected disaster. Hysterical relatives and large numbers of student casualties round out the real- ism. The rehearsal acquaints the staff and medical students with the problems of handling large num- bers of survivors of the catastrophe we hope will never come. w if Researchers at wor A happy investigator! one hundred and jorty-tWO Peeking through the window at a CPC. Dr. Bayhn and X-rays at a CPC. One of the most delightful and stimulating events of the year was the Symposium on The Com- monwealth of Children, held at Page Auditorium in early October, 1961. The symposium had two specific purposes, each of singular importance to us as Duke medical students: first, to examine the overall problems of children the world over from the different medical, social, economic, cultural, and educational viewpoints; second, to honor the man who established the Duke Medical School, Dr. Wil- burt C. Davison. To accomplish these ends, twenty distinguished leaders in fields that bear directly on the problems of children met for three days to lec- ture and discuss their views before an audience ranging from medical students and house staff to foreign vistors. Among the lecturers were such cele- brated personalities as Dr. George Boaz, Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Johns Hopkins University; Dr. Brock Chisholm, former Director General of the World Health Organization ; and the Rajkumari Kaur, former Minister of Health of India. Specific problems that were discussed included poverty, A I any laities at the disaster rehearsal one handled and jolty-three The Davison symposium hunger, mental health, overpopulation, moral val- ues, and educational trends. The entire series was put on video tape. Following the three day pro- gram, Dr. Richard H. Shryock, Librarian of the American Philosophical Society, spoke at a convoca- tion for Dr. Davison. This ceremony was strikingly colorful, as the processional included senior faculty representatives from the various university depart- ments in academic robes. The climax to the morn- ing was the surprise announcement by President Hart that the main medical school building would henceforth be officially called the Davison Building. The symposium concluded the next day with a sermon in Duke Chapel by Dean James T. Cleland, entitled Spiritual Aspects of the Commonwealth of Children. To those of us who as medical stu- dents had the honor of having Dr. Davison as our dean, the symposium served as a public display of one hundred and forty-four The convocation recognition of the man we had admired personally ever since he greeted us that first day of medical school — coatless, with tie loosened at his unbuttoned collar. His office door was always open, his manner always cordial, his stories always humorous but meaningful, and his prime concern always the stu- dent of medicine. It is fitting that the outstanding event of the year has been in honor of this man who was Dean of the Duke Medical School for its first thirty-four years. The processional Dr. Davison one hundred and jorty-fii ' t THE MEDICAL STUDENT And His Time At — STUDY, RESEARCH, RECREATION. STUDY Ever since we saw Du e in the distance, we have had to . . . . . . in the library with boo s . or in the lab- ever an upward path — one hundred and forty-six I wish all I had to do all the time was to push a button. We worked in the labs together . . . m v. h P V t } Lub-dub, just like that with our professors . . J A frustrated ham . . . or alone Gentlemen! Pleas Uncle Dune ' s class We even had let lures. hundred and jorty-st vt n Do I have to? We worked on one another ' ve read Gray ' s, too . though not always. Speak to me George, George, GEORGE? ' . . . sometimes . . . WMM-TV studios We thought about the past The aspiring surgeon and about the future one hundred and forty-eight You. WHAT? if we weren ' t lucky enough to make the grade. Now what do we do with it : We did s ut work . ■■m ' How can you read it with all that brown stuff on it? . . . worked on the wards , . . m4 ■■•--. We haven ' t had this much fun since that patient came in with priapism 1 . . were helped by the nurses ' I us! do as 1 say ' one hundred and forty-nine r r ' C ' mon in honey! ' So what, lots of people get sick. . . and did more wor on the wards. It ' s Marilyn Monroe ' s! With equus-of-Milwaukee ' s best We even toasted our professors . . Me! . unbeknownst to them. Frequently our best teachers weren ' t always found in the chromed labs , . . . . but all guided us . with an occasional evening conference to set us straight. one hundred and fifty Some of us too time out for RESEARCH After rush ended, and we received a bid ' Just connect the gigaggle to the twartle! The what: . . . woi began under careful supervision for a while. one hundred and fifty-one J|j|. |l, MIMIII ' • ' ■•■llllll JIM flJIHi iiilllllll! 19 kl l! Ill K I. the gjil lsck.tng good wrumen, die eraoiiooally dmudx-d ([id. the (pd die- io$ ucehcpsthii trend and other mental v «ancv Two uudW of wi .Ticn A lin..jumi in the United Sine, composed largely of prortitutei, vcnfina ihi . porioon K«. mjg _yj«dv of_ Co ntageg I ' loui t oicr y jfjjfcd t pp yrt tf Jihamcw, Mow obusven agree thai the girl who bceonttt provtitute hai !ud prevkut not experience, raosdy unf ' trtunaic, in or out ' A wedkek. The wiually deviate (prl or woman of good socul nd personal tnoutcev it not likely mk for proftitutkin. She t able to command a career usually uo « much higher level than prostitution, cither in or out of mjmjge Phi .;; d of poor tocud and personal resource , plus previous mil or tun ate es cape rience. b the one, wc may j: ..unit, who is mi Vi vulnerable to the drift into prostitution- However, if the drift into pxcstjtution wtt meidy determined by these vubierabilitiev, we ifaouid then expo t to hnd a very mu L h larger proportion of the xx -delinquent prl who get referred lo our juvenile courts and get icnt to our trajnintt H ' hools ;toi delinquent (prU) being reputed as ultimately becoming prouituti-s. Evidently there i$ a lacior in addition ti Then we began wor on our own projects report to our advisers and hoped that the new clinical research building would soon be finished. one hundred and fifty-two Among all this wor , however, we did find time for RECREATION- •• Steady Chuck We hud our parties They didn ' t tell us they were going to do that! ' The answer is still no! . . where we twisted . On your marks, get set. . . . and twisted . . . Look what he ' s doing . . . and ■■? one hundred and fijty-three knew the RTP training would come in handy. Occasionally we gathered . . . Really, it will be fun. . . . for a cocktail . . . ' Remember the time we iced the proctoscope. . . . together. When the spoon disolves, it ' s strong enough. mixed our own . . . First Robins of Spring . . . and even cooked. The evening daze All our clothes match this way. Sometimes we gathered to watch T.V. ... . . . or . . . Wanna trade? ' . . . tal , . . one hundred and fifty-four And Co think, I married her. ; we could get a word in edgewise. We just finished working on Meyer ward. . . . just gathered . . . Tox watch at Watts . . or stayed alone . . The suntanners Othertnnes we . ' Not even my best friend will tell me. . . . all alone. Do vou think we could: Now after a long journey . Careful, you might get burned. We ' ve about come to The End. one hundred and fifty-five I ' Gooding V Goldston TO Hej R r 0J| Slaughter Liakps M-,. A Baxle Crawford Jteranen one hundred and fifty-six is AA[ Martin Baker Croft Weeks Hall , ■Baumann Waddell one hundred and fifty-seven Our Helpmates from the HOUSE OF HAKES r i Student government executive council: Left to right, first row: P. Twigg, Athletic chairman; D. McKay, Cor- responding secretary; C. Kreider, Publications chairman; M. Field, Student-Faculty chairman. Second row: P. Drewry, Honor Council chairman; L. Kurlbaum, Vice Pres- ident; N. Stiejel, President; J. Stephens, Social Standards chairman; A. Pratt, Treasurer. Third row: A. Donnelly, Orientation chairman; S. Norwood, SSNA representative; A. Hix, Recording Secretary: A. Kern, Freshman Class President: E. Havens, Social chairman. The House of Hanes, better known as the Duke University School of Nursing, is composed of approxi- mately two hundred and ninety girls from many dif- ferent states. The school offers a four year program leading to a Registered Nurse ' s license and a degree of Bachelor of Science in Nursing. The first year is spent mainly in liberal arts courses and in an introductory course to the art of nursing. Nursing theory classes keep the sophomores occupied with new terms to learn and one laboratory session a week on the hospital wards to test their wealth of knowledge. The last two years are known as the clinical years with the junior students rotating through medicine, surgery, obstetrics, pediat- rics; and the senior students praying that senior medi- cine and surgery, psychiatry, and the venturesome task of field work in public health will successfully be com- pleted. Pinning, graduation, and a well-earned profes- sional position awaits those who manage to accomplish the goals of this nursing education. The student body is governed by their own Student Government Association which is headed by the Execu- tive Council. This council is composed of the officers of the association and chairmen of all standing commit- tees. The SGA meetings, held once a month, offer topics of interest to be discussed among the students, these ranging from making major changes in the Con- stitution to adopting a standard student uniform for the pregnant members of the senior class. hundred and fifty-eight SANTA FILOMENA SANTA FILOMENA is the Senior honorary society of the Duke University School of Nursing. Its purpose is to recognize achievement and promote leadership within the school. The new members are publically tapped at the May meeting of the Student Government Association. They are selected from the members of the rising Senior class, and must fulfill the following three requirements: maintain a B or better average throughout their first two years, demonstrate superior nursing ability, and show some contribution to the betterment of the School of Nursing. SANTA FILOMENA strives to serve its school and profession. Because all proceedings and ceremonies ex- cept tapping are secret, it may serve in ways that other organizations cannot. SANTA FILOMENA ' S color is white; its flower, a white carnation; its pin, a small gold Florence Nightin- gale lamp. 4 N. Santa Filomena: Left to right. First row: Patricia Flatter; Charlene Hartline; Linda Klose. Second row: Mary Ann Peter; Judith Rollins, Nancy Stiefel. one hundred and fifty nine r «?T ff r Seniors We weren ' t quite sure that this year would ever come. The previous three years had been a long, hard pull, especially the nine week summer quarter of jun- ior year. After resting during the month of August, we returned to take our place at the top of the student-nurse mt± Senior class officers: Left to right: C. Wood, Treasurer; P. Mclllvain, President; M. Meeker, Secre- tary; N. Espenshade, Vice President. hierarchy. There were some welcomed privileges, and we hoped to be able to remain and enjoy the prestige. After losing so many of our classmates, Triumph of the big 40, became the byword. Not much longer, girls. We knew that it could be done! In September we capped our sophomore little sis- ters in the Chapel. Hearing Dean Cleland ' s inspiring talk and seeing the enthusiasm ot our younger co- workers made us realize how fortunate we were for having chosen the nursing profession. Senior rotations started, and some of us were sent to the Public Health Department and thus were exposed tn the wilds of Durham. Everyone became quite at- tached to her quota of families and many interesting- things were learned from the city and county people. We attended clinics, preached D.P.T. ' s, vitamins, and pre-natal care; dressings were changed, enemas given, and measles and chickenpox uncovered. The weather conditions were not the best — the postman has nothing on the public health nurse. The Dean ' s course opened new areas of thought concerning the professional nurse, and in paper after paper we asserted ourselves and attempted to support our statements. Florence Nightingale was a pioneer in the field, true — but did she have two term papers and two finals all on the same day? one hundred and sixty Senior Med.-Surg. brought us the experiences of being team leaders on Long and the Intensive Nursing Units. We saw that there was more to making out . n assignment than we had imagined. Team conferences were valuable, and the I.V. ' s never received such T. L.C. Independent studies were in a class all by themselves, and we couldn ' t have done them without the help of last minute typists and proof-reading roommates! Cabell and Meyer on Psychiatry — how we clutched the magic keys. After four years at Duke we were ready to scream at the mention of IPR, but instead we gritted our teeth and wrote that d interpersonal relation stud. The exams were unbelievable; group therapy was nearly instigated. The year was not all work, however — we attended football and basketball games, decorated the Christmas tree, basked on the sundeck, and looked forward to the farewell banquet by the juniors, burning our blues, and graduation. During the year Boydie, Louise, Nancy, Judy, and Carol were married and others began making plans for the near future. Four members of our class made the Who ' s Who listing. Job applications were mailed; state boards caused tension; and training soon comes to an end, but a new road is ahead. ■t ' ltl ' f ' Bless that ' bag, ' girls! Wnn ' s who members: Left to right: P. Drewry, . Rollins; N. Stiefel; P. Ucllvain. Does it have to be so long? ■me hundred mid sixty-one Juniors ' ' ' Here we are on the wards again after a long sum- mer of service time on various wards. Where have those ten days of vacation gone 5 For the first time our class has divided into the four famed rotations: surgery, medicine, obstetrics, and pediatrics. Each group hoped to discover the enlightening facts that each course was to offer. The medical clinic was viewed somewhat as a three ring circus where every kind of illness from an ingrown toenail to lupus erythematosis could be seen. The medi- fuNiOR class officers: Left to right: S. Matthews, Treasurer; C. Todd, Vice President; B. Pierce, Secre- tary; B. Brod, President, {not pictured). cal ward presented a different picture to the student, being more organized and providing more intensive patient care. During the surgical rotation every student became quite adept at the art of pumping up a sphygmomano- meter, and continuing to say, Wake up, you ' re in the Recovery Room, with enthusiasm that became habit- ual. Things progressed until it was time to don the medical green of the operating room. We began to at- tempt the ritual of passing instruments, any confidence being shattered with each instrument that was handed back along with that piercing glance from the doctor- wrong again! On both the surgical and medical rota- tions, lectures are presented weekly. Evenings before these two hour dissertations are characterized by sheer panic on the part of the am ateur lecturer, the stu- dent nurse. One can easily distinguish the students on pediatrics by the wrinkle of their uniforms and the question- able sploches seen everywhere. Howling ward was a very appropriate name for the new children ' s floor, we concluded. Those were the strange days of writing pa- pers on how to play with children and learning to re- move chocolate fingerprints from your cap. Obstetrics was enlightening in many ways and gen- erally enjoyable for all. Here is where we learned how hard the med. student works and how remarkable it is to see that he can endure following a patient through a tox watch to delivery. This is generally known as the happy service , but some of us are still wondering! one hundred and sixty-two Sophomores ' We were hoisted en masse onto the brink of our nursing career in the traditional capping ceremony at this year ' s beginning. We were all quite sure that this was a Big Moment; yet the realities that were involved in it are only now being revealed to us, and we look eagerly ahead with a good deal of inner excitement and anticipation. Sophomores must be by definition the most skilled at disrupting the mental homeostasis of their instruc- tors! One of us, for example, benignly asked a patient Sophomore class officers: Left to right: P. Pecor, Treasurer; S. Scheiderbauer, Vice President; D. Duhy, President; M. Steen , Secretary. (concerning his urinal), Mr. G., is this your water pitcher or your flower vase ; Another well-meaning mechanical idiot broke a Hi-Lo bed by raising the sink a good foot off its normal location on the wall. We also had the usual incidence of open, spattering bedpan- hoppers, and inadvertent contamination of the clean laundry for an entire ward. On the academic side, we had our first brush with the medical sophisticates in anatomy class— how funny and how we ' ve been warned against all that! Other firsts: Carol Rogers became the first cheerleader to represent Hanes House as the Nursing School is gradually penetrating a little farther into the life of the University student body. We also produced a champion as the queen of the annual Hanes Christmas dance. The sophomore class set a new all-time record for hospital admittances for rare and mysterious diseases, presumably contracted in the Line of Duty! We also made our big academic stand during first semester finals, having imbibed trillions of facts and, we suspect, a bit of folklore about the world of medicine. We now grow tired in the realization of all the work our bodies do — even when they ' re not overtaxed by studying, working, or socializing. As we move in geometric progression through and on to new nursing experiences, all this stress on nursing theory becomes unalterably important to us. And so it should. Thank heavens nursing holds an element of the exciting and unknown for we might be discouraged. Sophomores are a confused, but dedicated bunch who still have the strength to go forward. one hundred and sixty-three Freshman September 6i, at the Annex meant another noisy crew was about to descend upon its ever weakening walls. And so they came — eighty-five screaming co-eds, struggling through the small but adequate portals of the soon-to-be notorious Hanes House Annex. Chaos and appendectomies, combined with unequaled academ- ic prowess have followed this unique group from every frenzied Women ' s Chorus rehearsal to the Sunday afternoon sessions with the Sceptres. Called The Hil- ton bv those who know her best, Hanes Annex has Freshman class officers: Left to right: A. Kern, President; M. Robertson, Vice President; K. Smith, Treasurer; A. Robinson, Secretary, ( not pictured). seen just about every form of feminine Tom-foolery in- vented. The mechanical marvels in this former psychi- atric ward have removed a door from its hinges (com- plete with Columbia decal and two roommates staring in disbelief) — tried to send smoke signals to the Grad- uate Center (Men ' s) via the clothes dryer — and learned how to stop the telephone from ringing after picking up the receiver — i.e. a swing in the air to prevent a ring in the ear. Judi-board has sent Sue and Elaine life membership cards. No one yet has claimed the jar of vaseline which caused some slippery antics one morning, al- though first suspicions were directed right at the grue- some towsome — I.E. and E.C.B. II. B.B. also found a new use for the transparent shower curtain — and Sharon ' s pink wig. Meg was the first to get pinned — followed by several classmates. However, Barb and Joanie were the first to get married. More excitement ensued when Elizabeth was elected W.S.S.B. ' s Girl of the Week and Exie hied the mail by middle names. A rumor about room check sent M. J. and Kris scrambling madly about hiding the forbidden toilet paper and taking pictures off the wall, to say nothing of trying to keep the fish from swimming side- ways. Pearl threatened to take drastic measures when she found Sue ' s headless snake one day. Eleanor wanted to know how much water one used in the care, growth, and nourishment of one ' s artificial flowers. The first snow brought out chains, fuzzy hats and snowmen, better known as Delts — followed by the zany, zooming, hectic, harrowing Rush parties. one hundred and sixty-jour ' No liquor in the dorm, girls Will I ever grow up? ' me hundred and sixty five ' More company? ' ' It was raining ' Cool shower follows hot date ' one hundred and sixty-six THE AESCULAPIAK QUEEH AND HER COURT ilJWi Betsy Crawford 1 ■■sJRf ' s Harriet Livingston, Queen Barbara Dimmick III QUEEN WD II1.R COURT Carol Rogers Sylvia Matthews ie hundred and sixty-seven FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE PLEDGE 1 solemnly pledge myself before God, and in the presence of this assembly, to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischie- vous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug. I will do all in my power to maintain and elevate the standards of my profession and will hold in confidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my profession. With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his wor and devote my self to the welfare of those committed to my care. Dn (e Nursing Pin one hundred and sixty eight one hundred and sixty-nine Acknowledgments The 1962 Aesculapian wishes to express its deepest appreciation to the following for their generous efforts during this y ear: Mr. Elon H. Clark Dr. Philip Handler Dean Herbert |. Herring William W. Johnson. M.D. Dr. Joseph E. Markee Mr. Norman K. Nelson Dr. Talmage L. Peele Dr. William P. J. Peete Mrs. Kathyrn Perry Dr. Julian P. Price Mrs. Gail Thomas Dean Barnes Woodhall Special thanks are due to: Mr. W. E. Seeman of The Seeman Printery Mr. George Bender of Parke, Davis Company For professional photography The Aesculapian thanks: Colona Studios Thad Sparks Thurman (Pinky) Ellis The Department of Medical Art and Illustration of Duke Medical School For the pictures in the series A History of Medicine in Pictures The Aesculapian than k s : Parke, Davis Company, who commissioned the original oil paintings, and by whom they are copyrighted. The project was written and directed by George A. Bender, painted by Robert A. Thorn. one hundred and seventy © i960, Parke. Davis Company Morgagni and Pathologic Anatomy A D V ER TJ $ER S one hundred and seventy-one J$zMik o jiua: nanti flfitflj-yai ' liliii SEEMAN PRINTERY INC. DURHAM-CHAPEL HILL BLVD. T Serving Industry and Education in the Southeast for Over Seventy -five Years one hundred and seventy-two Official Photographers for the AESCULAPIAN Co onna Studios, Inc. ON LOCATION PHOTOGRAPHERS 340 WESTBURY AVE. CARLE PLACE, L. I., N. Y. PHONE: EDGEWOOD 3-5606 one hundred and seventy-thrt Dedicated to the discovery and development of better medicines for better health- si nee 1841. in one hundred and seventy-four when your diagnosis is menopause. consider that current medical opinion favors treatment I know that many physicians feel that the menopause is a physiological process and no therapy for it is indicated. ... I do not belong to this school of thought, though therapy can certainly be overdone. We have to bear in mind, I think, that Hushes are merely one aspect of the menopause; irascibility. , ' .j migrainoid headaches, insomnia, apprehension, moods of depression and nervousness may occur without any hot Hushes at all. Then we mustn ' t forget the sequelae of the menopause, such as senile vaginitis, pruritus vulvae, and osteoporosis. These must be considered part of the menopausal syndrome. ' •Transatlantic Telephone Symposium, The Egecl of Estrogens in the Menopause, Amsterdam New York, 1959. Transcript available on request. in the menopause— there is no substitute for a specific ® the natural oral estrogen that imparts a ' sense of well-being CONJUGATED ESTROGENS (EQUINE) Usual dosage: 1.25 mg. daily. Increase or decrease as required. Cyclic therapy is recommended Id week regimen with 1 week rest period) to avoid continuous stimulation of breast and uterus. AY ERST LABORATORIES 1 a ®l New York 16, N. Y. • Montreal Canada „ one hundred and seventy-five Ortho Pharmaceutical, Biological and Diagnostic Products for the Medical Profession Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation, Raritan, New Jersey there are now 2 new Pe ton Crane OMNI-CLAVES FOR EVERY STERILIZING REQUIREMENT i wmmT if MODEL OCR MODEL OCM P C ' s NEWEST THE ORIGINAL 17 x 14% x 20% 15 x 12% x 16 V (1) Holds up to 3 trays, the largest (1) Holds up to 3 trays, the largest measuring 8% x 1 % X 17% measuring 6 1 i x % x 13 (2) Takes instruments up to 17 (2) Takes instruments up to 13 long, 8 wide long, 6 wide (3) Reaches pressure in 12 minutes (3) Reaches pressure in 10 minutes from cold start; less than 5 from cold start; less than 4 minutes on successive cycles minutes on successive cycles UNIFORM EASE OF OPERATION IS COMMON TO BOTH • The only dual-purpose single-chamber autoclaves with both steam and dry sterilization • Technically alike in all respects • Single-knob action sets pressure and temperature • Proof of postive sterilization — thermometer in the discharge line • Postive locking action door • Condensed steam returned to reservoir for re-use. • Trouble-free and thoroughly field-tested, to keep service and maintenance calls at a minimum • Besr value for the money — the low price will amaze you. Distributers of KNOWN BRANDS of PROVEN QUALITY WINCHESTER CAROLINAS ' HOUSE OF SERVICE Winchester Surgical Supply Company Winchester-Ritch Surgical Company 19 East 7th St. Charlotte, N. C. 421 West Smith St. Greensboro, N. C. one hundred and seventy-six REACO PRODUCTS REABELA EACH TABLET CONTAINS: PHENOBARBITAL 16 mg. HYOSCYAMINE SULFATE 0.1037 mg. ATROPINE SULFATE .0.0194 mg. HYOSCINE HYDROBROMIDE ...0.0065 mg. A. E. P. EACH TABLET CONTAINS: AMINOPHYLLIN 1 % Grs. EPHEDRINE SULFATE .....% Gr. PHENOBARBITAL % Gr. REAVITA EACH CAPSULE CONTAINS: VITAMIN A 5000 U.S. P. Units VITAMIN D 1000 U.S. P. Units THIAMINE HCL ...10.00 mg. RIBOFLAVIN 5.00 mg PYRIDOXINE HCL ...... 1 .00 mg ASCORBIC ACID 75.00 mg CAL. PANTOTHENATE 5.00 mg NIACINAMIDE 20.00 mg ALPHATOCOPHEROL .. 5.00 mg All above stocked by leading wholesalers and retail pharmacies in Southeastern area. REACO PRODUCTS P. 0. Box 2747, West Durham, N. C. I. T. REAMER, Pres. Compliments of WHITE LABORATORIES, INC. Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Kenilworth, N. J. one hundred and seventy-seven SHERMAN LABORATORIES Detroit, Michigan In the service of medicine since 1907 PROTAMIDE ELIXOPHYLLIN PRESISTIN Intramuscular injection for I. V. Theophylline blood- Long-acting non-narcotic neuritis and herpes zoster. levels obtained orally. analgesic BACTERIAL VACCINES • PHARMACEUTICALS GOTHIC BOOKSHOP DUKE HOSPITAL STORE Duke University Stores WOMAN ' S COLLEGE STORE DUKE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE one hundred and seventy-eight INTERNSHIP APPOINTMENTS Alexander, John M. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Armstrong, George F„ (r. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pediatrics Baez-Garcia, Jorge E. University Hospital, Hillman Clinic Birmingham, Alabama Medicine Baumann, John A. University of Texas Hospital, Galveston, Texas Medicine Baxley, William A. Duke Hospital. Durham, N. C. Medicine BeMiller, David L. King County Hospital, Seattle, Wash. Rotating Carter, Alan B. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pediatrics Carter, Charles E. Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. Rotating Cauthen, Joseph C. Ill University of Florida Hospital, Gainesville, Fla. Surgery Coble, Yank D., Jr. The New York Hospital, New York City, N. Y. Medicine Colston, William C. Naval Hospital, Charleston, S. C. Rotating Colvin, Charles H. Ill University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Va. Medicine Conna, Sherrill A. Duke Hospital. Durham, N. C. Pediatrics Crane, James D. Duval Medical Center, Jacksonville, Fla. Rotating Craven, N. Scott Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pediatrics Croft, Carl L. Letterman General Hospital, San Francisco, Cal. Rotating Davis, Robert N. Brooke General Hospital, San Antonio, Texas Rotating Dudley. Alden W. Duke Hospital, Durham. N. C. Pathology Farmer, Joseph D., Jr. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Farmer, Raymond M. Naval Hospital, Jacksonville, Fla. Rotating Fortescue, William N. Public Health Service Hospital, Boston, Mass. Rotating Foster, John T. University of Virginia, Hospital, Charlottesville, Va. Medicine Frank, Donald H. University of California Hospital, San Francisco, Cal. Surgery Gebel, Emile L. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Gilbert, Joel H. fackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Fla. Rotating Ginn, Fred L. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pathology Gonzalez, Antonio C. Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. Medicine one hundred and seventy-nine Grant, Robert N. University of Oregon Hospital. Portland, Oregon Rotating Hatcher, Martin A., Jr. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Henry, Suzanne B. Georgetown Hospital, Washington, D. C. Medicine Holloway, Rufus M. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pediatrics Jones, Danny B. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Kahn, Kenneth ). Duke Hospital. Durham, N. C. Medicine Klite, Paul D. Colorado General Hospital, Denver, Colo. Medicine Kramer, Richard S. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Logue, Patrick J. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Lunas, John P. Health Center Hospitals, Pittsburg, Pa. Mixed Surgery Magendantz, Henry G. Philadelphia, General Hospital. Philadelphia. Pa. Rotating Maloney, Eugene D. St. Mary ' s Hospital, West Palm Beach, Fla. Rotating Martin, Mi les H., Jr. University of Florida Hospital. Gainesville, Fla. Surgery Massey, William |. Ill University Hospital. Hillman Clinic, Birmingham, Ala. Medicine McFadden, Don C, Jr. Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati. Ohio Rotating Morgan, Calvin V.. |r. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery ( January 1963) Morgan, John G. George Washington University Hospital. Washington, D. C. Medicine Moriber, Lloyd A. Yale University Hospital. New Haven, Conn. Surgery Morris, James C. Ill Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, Mo. Surgery Morrison, Sidney E., Jr. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Nicks, Frank I., Jr. University of Oklahoma Hospital, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Mixed Norins, Leslie C. Department of Immunology, Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, Australia Medical Research Orman, Benjamin F. George Washington, University, Washington, D. C. Medicine Price, William F. University of Alabama Medical Center, Birmingham, Ala. Medicine Purcell, Robert H. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pediatrics Ralph, James W. Lettcrman General Hospital, San Francisco, Cal. Rotating Ratliff, Norman B., Jr. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Riddick, Joseph H., Jr. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pathology Romhilt, Donald W. Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio Rotating Satterfield, Benton S. Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Rotating Schiff, Martin, Jr. University of California Hospital, San Francisco, Cal. Surgery Shearin, William A. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Short, Marvin J. Public Health Service Hospital, Boston, Mass. Rotating Sime, David W. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Stone, Richard C. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Stowe, Deryl G. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Strother, William, K. George Washington University Hos- pital, Washington, D. C. Medicine Taylor, Dean R. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Terry, Lewis N. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Turner, H. Leonard, Jr. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Urbaniak, James R. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Victor, Martin I. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Waddell, William B. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Warden, William S. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Weems, Wade S. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Weiser, Joel J. Hospital for Joint Disease, New York City, N. Y. Rotating Wilkinson, Tolbert S. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Surgery Williams, Gail R. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Medicine Woods, Charles A. Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. Pediatrics one hundred and eighty DIRECTORY Senior Class Alexander, John M. Armstrong, George F., Jr. (Kay) Baez-Garcia, Jorge E. Baumann, John A. (Nancy) Baxley, William A. (Lynn) BeMiller, David L. Carter, Alan B. Carter, Charles E. (Joan) Cauthen, Joseph C. Coble, Yank D. (Ohlync) Colston, William C. Colvin, Charles H., Ill Conna, Sherrill A. (Mary Lou) Crane, James D. Craven, Nicholas Scott Croft, Carl L. (Ann) Davis, Robert N. Dudley, Alden W., Jr. (Mary) Farmer, Joseph C, Jr. (Margery) Farmer, Raymond M. (Betty) Fortescue, William N. (Ann) Foster, John T. (Sandra) Frank, Donald H. Gebel, Emile L. (Barbara) Gilbert, Joel H. Gilbert, Walter R., Jr. Ginn, Fred L. (Betty) Gonzalez, Antonio C. Grant, Robert N. (Ann) Hatcher, Martin A., Jr. (Sue) Henry, Mrs. Suzanne Brown Holloway, Rufus M., Jr. (Betty Ruth) Jones, Danny B. (Glenda) Kahn, Kenneth J. (Norma) Kincsley, David I. (Elaine) Klite, Paul D. Kramer, Richard S. (Robin) Logue, Patrick J. (Joyce) Lunas, John P. (Jill) Magendantz, Henry G. (Nancy) Maloney, Eugene D. (Peggy) Martin, Miles Herbert Jr. (Shirley) Massey, William J., 111 (Jean) McFadden, Don C, Jr. (Anne) Me 1 1 1, Robert W. Morgan, Calvin V., Jr. (Margie) Morgan, John G. Moriber, Lloyd A. Morris, James C, III Morrison, Sidney E., Jr. (Rankin) Moskowitz, Norman (Bernice) Nicks, Frank I., Jr. (Jean) 1 68 Jelrer Court, Ridgewood, New Jersey 421 1 Robert Toombs Ave., Washington, Ga. S 4 S Palma Real St., Hyde Pk., Rio Piedras, P. R. 708 N. 51st St., Milwaukee, Wis. 143 Key Blvd., Arlington, Va. 20 E. Sunrise Dr., Evansville 10, Indiana 728 1 6th St., Boulder, Colo. Box 347, Mt. Airy, N. C. 772 Myrtle Drive, Rock Hill, S. C. 5(11 Parkview Dr., Burlington, N. C. 1603 Pinecrest Rd., Rocky Mount, N. C. 4221 Old Leeds Rd., Birmingham, Ala. 472 Hawthorne Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 2 Lansing St., No. Warren, Pa. 19 W. }rd Ave., Lexington, N. C. 2090 Cate St., Brunswick, Ga. Box 488, War, W. Va. 1902V2 Shelton Ave., Durham, N. C. 217 Granite St., Henderson, N. C. 3716 Kaiser Ave., Columbia, S. C. Kanuga Rd., Hendersonville, N. C. 515 S. Corporation St., Wilkesboro, N. C. 26 Whitman St., Haworth, N. J. 811 (keen St., Durham, N. C. 4 Underclifr Ter., West Orange, N. J. 520 Crescent Rd., Griffin, Ga. 4308 Jean St., Durham, N. C. Box 71, Lares, Puerto Rico West Durham Community Center, Durham, N. C. 404 Clay St., Hamlet. N. C. 814 Louise Circle, Durham, N. C. 1309 S. 9th St., Leesburg, Fla. 1312 Williamson Dr., Raleigh. N. C. 1421 N.E. 171st St., North Miami Beach, Fla. 1075 Ocean P ' kway, Brooklyn 35, N. Y. Old Pump Station Rd., Durham, N. C. 402 P. Boundary St., Perrysburg, Ohio 1314 Glendale Ave., Durham, N. C. 221 i-C Elder St., Durham, N. C. S44 Louise Circle, Apt. 36 E., Durham, N. C. co R. M. Gardner, Franklin Ave., Gastonia, N. C. Box 178, Oak Hill, W. Va. Raleigh Road, Sinithfield, N. C. 540 N. Maysville St., Mt. Sterling, Ky. 87 Sydney Ave., Malverne, Long Island, N. . 707 N. Mountain View Circle, Johnson City, Term. Box 508, Spring Hope, N. C. 2260 80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 122 Southampton Rd., RFD 1, Anchorage. Ky. 1006 S. Hillside Lane, Gastonia, N. C. 2214 64th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. [318 E. Pikes Peak Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. one hundred and eighty-one NoRixs, Leslie C. Orman, Benjamin F. (Helen) Payne, James F. Price, William F. (Mary Frances) Purcell, Robert H. (Carol) R u i ' ii | wins W. (Sissy) R vi in 1 , Norman B., Jr. Riddick, Joseph H., Jr. (Marceile) Romiiilt, Donald W. Satterfield, Benton S. Schiff, Martin, Jr. Shearin, William A. (Dorothy) Short, M k in J., II Sime, David W. (Betty) Stone, Richard C. (Sandy) Stowe, Dervl G. (Sue) Strother, William K. Taylor, Dean R. (Carolyn) Terry, Lewis N., Jr. (Betsy) Turner, H. Leonard, Jr. Urbaniak, James R. (Judy) Victor, Martin I. Waddell, William B. (Betty) Warden, William S. Watson, S. James (Sarah) Weems, Wade S. (Anne) Weiser, Joel J. (Sylvia) Wilkinson, Tolbert S. (Jean) Williams, Gail R. (Beverly) Woods, Charles A. (Shirley) 4035 Woodhaven Ave., Baltimore 16, Maryland 2 5 Glenhaven, Houston 25, Texas English, W. Va. 1002 Brooks St., Fayetteville, N. C. (Sox 146, Haileyville, Okla. 3816 S. Victor, Tulsa, Okla. 21 14 Sprunt Ave., Durham, N. C. 744 Sherman Dr., Lynchburg, Va. 619 Floral Ave., Terrace Park, Ohio 407 W. Park Dr., Raleigh, N. C. 325 Riverside Dr., New York 25, N. Y. (1112 iSth St., Buter, N. C. 809 Englewood, Durham, N. C. 2740 Dogwood Rd., Durham, N. C. Rt. 1, Durham, N. C. 2626 Pickett Rd., Durham, N. C. 6001 St. Andrews, Dallas 5, Texas 800 S. Grinnell St., Jackson, Mich. 1402 Holloway St., Durham, N. C. Thomson, Ga. 916 Farms Dr., Fairmont, W. Va. 203 Park Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 120 Newel St., Durham, N. C. 1 136 AIA; Melbourne, Fla. Enoree, S. C. Box 730, Waynesboro, Va. 1687 Sehvyn Ave., Bronx 57, N. Y. 521 S. Main St., Wake Forest, N. C. 11 Hibbard Ave., Clifton Springs, N. Y. 200 W. Avondale Rd., Greensboro, N. C. Junior Class Ayers, Charles R. (Lorna) Banghart, Harry P. Banta, Henry D. (Neil) Beamer, Yancey B. Bicknell, William J. (Jean) Black, Craig G. Bolton, John C (Jane) Boone, Stephen C. (Liz) Broughton, Joseph O., Jr. Byrnes, Thomas H. Jr. (Carlene) Carlton, Thomas K., Jr. (Mimi) Carter, James A. Carter, William A. (Sue) Chang, Wallace H-J. Church, Clay F. (Patti) Cline, Robert E. (Kay) Doyle, Robert A. Driver, Doyle (Mary) Durrett, Ray R. (Connie) Edwards, E. Stephen Emery, John B., Jr. Entman, Mark L. Farrell, James B. 818 Demerius St., Durham, N. C. 5401 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia 44, Pa. 1307-D Leon St., Durham, N. C 240 W. Lebanon St., Mt. Airy, N. C. 35 Mayo Rd., Wellesley, Mass. 2322 Englewood Ave., Durham, N. C. Box 116, St. Paul, Va. 80S Onslow St., Durham, N. C. 2924 Hydrangea Place, Wilmington, N. C. 919 Mt. Vernon Ave., Charlotte, N. C. 901 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N. C. 340 Dixon Dr., N.W., Gainesville, Ga. 3627 Kentucky Ave., Norfolk, Va. (147 W. 207th St., Apt. i-B, New York 34, N. Y Route 3, Hillsboro, N. C. Apt. 24 Alastair Ct., Durham, N. C. 2606 Marathon Lane, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Texaco, Inc., DeLand, Fla. 391 1 Virginia Ave. S.E., Charleston, W. Va. Box 37, Spring Hope, N. C. Pitman-Richwood Rd., Pitman, N. J. 1225 Inwood Ter., Jacksonville 7, Fla. 909 N. Edwards, Carlsbad, N. M. one hundred and eighty-two Fortney, Sidney R. Gabor, Andrew J. (Judy) Glaser, Joel S. Goldston, William R. (Rosalee) Graham, Thomas P., Jr. (Carol Ann) Grant, George R., Jr. Gunlock, Howard D. Harrison, Robert B. Haslett, Nancy R. Haworth, Chester C, Jr. Hoffman, Edward P. Holland, Warren F., Jr. Holmes, Lewis B. (Leslie) Hull, William M., Jr. Hutchinson, William R.. [V Hyman, Barry N. Imperato, Pascal J. James, Alton E., Jr. (Jeanette) James, Charles M. Jones, Jerry L. Jones, Kenneth L. Jones, Paul W. (Jan) Kapp, John P. (Larice) Koiiler, Peter O. (Judy) Kramer, Arnold Kroe, Donald J. (Paddi) LaRosa, John J. Lewis, Edward L., Jr. Licuori, Richard A. Long, Eugene M. (Gray) Lucey, Donald T. (Shirley) Marcus, Elliot L. (Carol) Markham, R. Wade Martin, Charles R. Mayson, James S. (Carolyn) McBryde, Angus M., Jr. (Jane) McMillan, William O. (Frances) Moore, Lawrence W., Jr. Oliya, Philip B. PoiNDEXTER, JoHN S. Pollard, Dulon Devon (Phyllis) Porter, John M. (Ann) Redding, James O. Roberts, S. S. Robinson, Norman J. Robison, Michael L. (Mahala) Roe, Cfiarles R. Runyan, Thomas E. (Carol) Safrit, Henry F. Saint-Amand, Nathan E. Sewell, Frank K. Siiimm, Stephen J. Sproles, E. Thomas Stoever, Henry V. H., Ill Stumpf, Karl J. Tabor, Owen B. Taylor, Waller, L., Jr. Pa. S. Main St., Harlan. Ky. S5S Louise Circle, Durham, N. C. 1609 Flamingo Dr., Orlando, Fla. 906 N. Gregson St., Durham, N. C. 7 Alastair Ct. Apts., Durham, N. C. 1 109 Arsenal Ave., Fayetteville, N. C. 3403 Thornapple St., Chevy Chase, Md. 407 W. Poinsett St., Greer, S. C. 5 1 Si) E. 2nd Ave., Hialeah, Fla. Box 1551, High Point, N. C. 315 Clark Drive, San Mateo, Calif. 102 Southwood Dr., Columbia, S. C. 2306 Elba St., Durham, N. C. 640 E. Mam St., Rock Hill, S. C. Country Club Estates, DeLand, Fla. 5140 S.W. 14th St., Miami, Fla. 225 Old Sleepy Hollow Rd., Pleasantville, N. Y. Robersonville, N. C. Cannon Ave., Albemarle, N. C. 3223 Sussex Rd., Raleigh, N. C. 16 North Va. Ave., Brunswick, Md. 1428 Berkeley Rd., Durham, N. C. 120 Newell St., Durham, N. C. Burruss Dr., Blacksburg, Va. 105-28 65th Ave., Forest Hills 75, N. Y. 24 L. Aileron St., Baltimore 20, Md. 627 Francis St., Pelham Manor, N. Y. 205 South St., Greensboro, Ga. 1516 Sheffeld Lane, Philadelphia , 2S26 Erwin Rd., Durham, N. C. 3007 Oxford Dr., Durham, N. C. 917 Golfview Ave., Tampa, Fla. Rt. 1, Apex, N. C. 1810 Market St., Wilmington, N. C. 6623 Brookshire Dr., Dallas 30, Tex. 2804 Erwin Rd., Durham, N. C. 5010 Kanawha Ave., Charleston, W, Box 122, Blacksburg, Va. 328 Gaston Ave., Garfield, N. J. 625 E. 45th St., Savannah, Ga. Rt. 3, Benson, N. C. 853 Louise Circle, Durham, N. C. 341 E. Salisbury St., Asheboro, N. C. 3231 Rochambeau Ave., New York, N. Y. 307 Beauregard St., Charleston, W. Va. 1005 Buchanan Blvd., Durham, N. C. Western and Thornton Mill Rd.. Sparks, Md 304 Northwood Circle, Durham, N. C. Front St., Beaufort, N. C. 802 College Dr., Gaffney, S. C. 303 N. Sycamore, Mt. Sterling, Ky. 1540 Urbino Ave., Coral Gables, Fla. 173 W. Sevier St., Kingsport, Tenn. 3m 1 Buckingham Rd., Durham, N. C. 127 Pinecrest Rd., Durham. N. C. 1S01 Ruffin St., Durham, N. C. 47th St. Ext., Virginia Beach, Va. one hundred and eighty-three Va. Thomas, Raymond L. (Ann) Vanderbeek, Randall B. (Patti) Walston, Abe V.i NGj Noel W., Jr. (Anne) 3204 Monroe St., Columbia, S. C. 886 Louise Cirele, Apt. 26C, Durham, N. C. Box 115, Walstonburg, N. C. 4424 Ryan St., Durham, N. C. Sophomore Class Alexander, Raymond H. Allen, Ben L., Jr. Amstev, Marvin S. (Freddie) Anderson, Pace A. Barber, Wayne S. (Pat) Barnett, Crawford F., Jr. Baxley, William W. Bell, Willis Harvey 11 Berne, Freeman A. (Billy Jean) Bremer, C. Christopher Carruth, James W., Jr. Chase, N. Bruce (Anne) Cottingham, Andrew J., Jr. (Ch Crummie, Robert G. (Emma) Dobson, John L. (Anne) Drury, Robert W. Dubin, David B. (Sandra) Friedel, Robert O. (Sue) Fronstin, Michael H. Given Kenna S. Goldman, David S. Goldman, Herbert P. Gooding, Ronald S. (Phebe) Green, James L., Jr. (Betsy) Grover, Frederick L. (Carol) Hall, John H. (Jane) Hannah, Frank T. Harrelson, John M. Harris, Benjamin S. H„ III (Ma Harris, Lee S. (Janice) Hart, J. Deryl Herring, Herbert J. Hinshaw, Arned L. Holsinger, James W., Jr. Jacobson, Lenard E. Kann, Herbert E. (Carol Anne) Karickhoff, John R. Keranen, Victor J. (Elaine) Keys, David N. Kornreich, George M. Lanning, Joseph R. Lazarus, Stephen M. Lewis, Mrs. Kay Riffle (Al) Liakos, William G. (K.i ) Lively, Edmund P. Martin, David W., Jr. McCutchan, Arthur D. ar) rtha) 1201 Fairfield Dr., Gastonia, N. C. 416 Forest Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. 805 Louise Circle, Durham, N. C. 3715 Telegraph Ave., Oakland, Calif. 955 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N. C. 2628 Rivers Rd., N.W., Atlanta 5, Ga. 3140 Vista Circle, Macon, Ga. 464 S. 6th St., Indiana, Pa. 3207 Eubanks Circle, Durham, N. C. 1605 Tryon Rd., New Bern, N. C. Box 711, Red Springs, N. C. Lewisburg, W. Va. Courtland Dr., Durham, N. C. 3000 Chapel Hill Rd., Durham, N. C. 825 Louise Circle, Durham, N. C. 317 N. Davis Rd., Palm Springs, Fla. Westover Park Apts., Durham, N. C. 937 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N. C. 122 Hoyt St., Stamford, Conn. 113 Koontz Ave., Clendenin, W. Va. 98-40 64th Ave. (Apt. 5H) Forest Hills 74, N. Y. 405 Oceanpoint Ave., Cedarhurst, N. Y. Box 579, Pampa, Texas 600 S. Wingate St., Wake Forest, N. C. 2323 N. Utah St., Arlington 7, Va. 28 Walker Rd. Fairfax, Va. i66r Johnson Rd., N.E., Atlanta 6, Ga. 1124 Cedrow Ave., High Point, N. C. 1310-G Leon Street, Durham, N. C. Yamaw Dr., Sarasota, Fla. 2324 Duke Univ. Rd., Durham, N. C. 2010 Myrtle Dr., Durham, N. C. 1302 Cleveland Ave., Burlington, N. C. 2306 Wilson St., Durham, N. C. 518 Tisdale Place, Woodbridge, N. J. 3818 Westcliff Rd. So., Fort Worth, Tex. Crescent Dr., Spencer, W. Va. Apt. 6, Markham Ave. and Sedgfield St., Durham, N. C. 208 Brooke Dr., Fredericksburg, Va. Stratford Rd., Harrison, N. Y. 206 Edward St., Kingsport, Tenn. 600 E. 18th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1707 Forest Rd., Durham, N. C. RFD 2, Bayard, Nebraska 119 S. Main St., Reidsville, N. C. 210 Osceda Way, Palm Beach, Fla. 1616 Wiltshire Rd., Salisbury, N. C. one hundred mid eighty-four McGraw, Ralph, Jr. (Isabel) McLaughlin, Joseph P. Nash, Martin A. Nickman, Steven L. Noble, Robert C. Paulson, David G. Powell, James B. Price, Thomas B. Ravenel, Samuel D. Ruben, Frederick L. (Susan) Rubenstein, Carl J. Ruffner, B. Winfred, Jr. Schmitz, George F. (Eileen) Scott, William R. Serai- in, Donald Shields, Ralph Lyle Shiner, Philip T. Slaughter, Donald G. (Betsy) Springer, Leonard Steer, Michael L. Straub, Karl D. (Jeanette) Strause, Nathan P., Ill Tankel, Robert H. Totten, Larry K. Truitt, J. Harry (Mickey) Turner, James W., Jr. Vernon, Charles R. (Marjean) Virgin, Charles E. (Sue) Wilson, Thomas (Jeanne) Winter, Robert H. Wolk, Michael L. 1225 Main St., Follansbee, W. Va. 1012 McCurry Place, Honolulu 18, Hawaii 701 Roslyn Rd., Winston-Salem, N. C. 2 S. Derby Ave., Ventnor, N. J. 2717 Fairview Rd., Raleigh, N. C. 3 Lake Drive Bay Ridge, Annapolis, Md. Haggard Ave., Elon College, N. C. 1019 Jackson Ave., Florence, S. C. 106 Fisher Park Circle, Greensboro, N. C. 225 W. Thomas St., Rocky Mount, N. C. 138 Kearny Ave., Perth Amboy, N. J. 4420 N. [8th St., Arlington 7, Va. 3100 N. Sheridan Rd., Chicago 14, 111. 215 N. New St., Nazareth Pa. 521 South Phelps, Winter Park, Fla. 3107 Center St., Bethlehem, Pa. 310 Oakridge Court, Front Royal, Va. 171(1 Murray St., Durham, N. C. 1203 St. George Ave., Roselle, N. J. c o Pathologv Dept., Fitzsimons Army Hospital, Denver, Colo. =504 Kinglan Rd., Louisville 7, Ky. Country Club Dr., Henderson, N. C. 87 W. Haledon Ave., Haledon, N. Y. Racine, W. Va. 213 Harmony St., New Castle, Delaware Hillcrest Dr., Great Falls, S. C. 601-A Maplewood Ave., Durham, N. C. 3635 St. Gaudens Rd., Miami 33, Fla. 862 Louise Circle, Durham, N. C. Box 35, LeRoy, Ohio 1 471 1 Parkchester Rd., New York 62, N. Y. Freshman Class Andriola, Michael J. Baker, Bernie B. (Judy) Barbee, John Y„ Jr. Bender, William R. Bossen, Edw kd H. Butcher, Gene A. (Suzanne) Butcher, Mrs. Suzanne A. (Gene Clancy, Thomas P. Coville, Frederick V. Crawford, Robert C. (Marion) Dirkers, Jerome D. Donovan, Lawrence T. (Marlene Dunlap, William M. Eisdorfer, Carl Emlet, John L. Fagin, Ronald R. Flint, Lewis M., )r. Frank, James L. Gerber, Frederick H. (Ze) Gold, Herman K. 4430 Cayuga Ave., Bronx 71, N. Y. Tyner, N. C. Scottsville Rd., Bowling Green, Ky. 526 S. Main St., Red Springs, N. C. 1255 Belvedere Ave., Jacksonville 5, Fla. 421) Bobbins Ave., Niles, Ohio 429 Robbins Ave., Niles, Ohio 2832 Ridgewood Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Box 34, Atkinson, N. C. Rt. 2, Box 305-B, Durham, N. C. 5932 Oakland Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. ) 1 221 Freeman Ave., Albemarle, N. C. 605 Lake Boone Trail, Raleigh, N. C. 3424 Hope Valley Rd., Durham, N. C. Apt. ti-C, 200 E. 71st., New York 21, N. Y ,,,5(1 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 12 Normancy Rd., Fort Lee, Va. (131 Willow St., Mount Airy, N. C. 1419 Clarendon St., Durham, N. C. 850 18th St., Newport News, Va. one hundred and eighty-five Graybeal, Fred Q., Jr. C .i;i EN, I Ml s E. ( .Hi iss, Run rd H. GuazzOj Eugene ). (Shelb) ) I 1 Ml, Snow DEN C. I I R F.R. Russell E. ! 1 M l. foHN B. 1 1 SM) , |uii K. Haw kins, David M. Hoyle, Thomas C, III Kvrz. Richard Kay, Earl D., Jr. (Nancy) Krueger, Ronald P. (Lucie) Kulvin, Stephen M. LeBauer, Eugene S. LlNNEMANN, CALVIN C, Jr. I.i i s, Bruce A. (Jeanette) Markee, Joseph E., Jr. M yn rd, David R. McArtor, Robert E. McCracken, Joseph D. McGregor, Frank H., Jr. Mini ' s, Joseph S. Moorman, Claude T„ II (Janie) Nikides, Leah Nuckolls, James G. Odom, Guy L. (Barbara) Oken, Martin M. Powell, John G. Price, Andrew R. Ramming, Kenneth P. Reitt, James P. Riley, Charles P. (Leigh) Rogers, Larry A. (Happy) Rouse, James B. Sanford, Edgar J. Saputo, Leonard M. Scheidt, Peter C. (Susan) Scott, Neil R. (Mippi) Shilling, Sara Kay Shore, James H. Shultz, Kirkwood T. Spencer, William H., Ill (Chotsy) Sternbergh, W. Chas. A., Jr. (Martha) Stewart, Henry L. (Betty) Stone, Harry B. Sullivan. Thomas A., Jr. Sulzycki, James J. Taylor, Jack B. Taylor, Kenneth W. (Carolyn) W vgner, Galen S. Watson, Charles N., Jr. Weeks, John W. (Sally) Williams, Jack D. Wright, Creighton B. Yancy, William S. Zaepfel, J. P. 222 North St., Marion, Va. 2124 L. Vista Cr., Hopeville, Ga. }5 Greenwood St., Andover, N. Y. }45 S. JefTerson St., Orange, N. J. 1 1 1 Linden Dr., Danville, Va. 937 Longwood Ave., Los Angeles 19, Calif. 1951 Brightwaters Blvd., St. Petersburg, Fla. 221 Fairfield Ave., Johnstown, Pa. 2620 SW 4th St., Miami 35, Fla. 3605 Dogwood Dr., Greensboro, N. C. 2557 Steele Rd., Baltimore, Md. 1007 E. River St., Anderson, S. C. 116 Bennett Court, Durham, N. C. 1881 S.W. 36th St., Miami, Fla. 910 Cornwallis Dr., Greensboro, N. C. 591 Parkview Dr., Burlington, N. C. 2729 Brown Ave., Durham, N. C. 1015 Demerius St., Durham, N. C. 341 Bellevue Ct., Los Altos, Calif. 769 E. 5th St., Salem, Ohio 219 N. Brown St., Orlando, Fla. RFD 1 Box 327, Millwood Rd., Mt. Kisco, N. Y. 16 Jamestown Rd., Charleston, S. C. 1348 N.W. 7th St., Miami, Fla. 1050 Cottonwood Rd., Dayton, Ohio 502 W. Stuart Dr., Galax, Va. 2729 Brown Ave., Durham, N. C. : 7 Glen Ellyn Way, Rochester, N. Y. 9103 Columbia Blvd., Silver Spring, Md. 4672 Maiden Dr., Wilmington 3, Del. 3812 Lillie St., Fort Wayne, Ind. c o F. Smolan, 1(140 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn 30, N. Y. 221 Rozzel Rd., Winchester, Va. 343-A Wakefield Dr., Charlotte, N. C. 3007 Fairview Rd., Raleigh, N. C. 5] 1 Harverling St., Bath, N. Y. 1 1 1 Sleepy Hollow Lane, Orinda, Calif. Highland, Md. Rozel, Kansas 1 162 Westridge Dr., Troy, Ohio 240 W. Main St., Danville, Va. 224 Rugby Rd., West Palm Beach, Fla. 221 W. Stewart Ave., Mooresville, N. C. 121 7 Belgrave PL, Charlotte, N. C. Box 33 E. C. C, Greenville, N. C. 2436 Lincoln Ave., S.W., Roanoke, Va. 5167 N. 37th Rd., Arlington, Va. 1 4 W. 39th St., Erie, Pa. 616 Hawcock St., Smithfield, N. C. 1009 Jackson Ave., River Forest, 111. 410 E. Murphy Ave., Connellville, Pa. 421 Wolf ' s Lane, Pelham, N. Y. 3 Sayle Rd., Charleston, S. C. 215 Mercer St., Beckley, W. Va. 1200 S. Courthouse Rd., Arlington, Va. 6154 Wilson Blvd., Arlington 5, Va. 317 Mt. Holly Ave., Mt. Holly, N. J. one hundred and eighty-six
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