Duke University School of Medicine - Aesculapian Yearbook (Durham, NC)
- Class of 1963
Page 1 of 140
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1963 volume:
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t Dulce University Medical C His orical Collect I ll .WJ-Wm Vi -9- -A y ,I Q -Vx H, , 5 , . x , .4 . ,n -5+ , X f f 1 ,M I 'Q R. N. I f X 1 .ur X X ,Syl ' X ' -'M :n,'.s ,I tflfflllg if I' o f Q-9023442 ,gy J H '99 lv u-I ff Nl 9 7 X f E all WVWVWQ 45 I 'O' 4 i e S A Ab 1' - H . I Q I Ax ll, A 'R , x,f Pr my I 1 si I B 1 'F es' W - i lf 4 X ' 45 W B, l - 5 V ' r-1 'V X21 Q ea Q r . f 5 iii ef dfffal GLW Nineteen hundred sixtyftlwee Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina Foreword Medicine, the only profession that labours incessantly to destroy the reason for its own existence. Address at dinner for General W. C. Gorgas, March 23, 1914 The Class of 1965 has attempted to present in these pages a mosaic of the life at our medical center, as seen through the eye of the student. We hope that this small book will serve as a pleasant reminder to those who have already experienced these years, as Well as a glimpse of what is yet to come for the underclassmen. O.B.T. two 1 I szveaf' by Apollo the pfzysiciafz tfzrfc 1 Mm G i 5 fn- wwx ,mxw-+wm -www ..W.w-,N was-wwqmwww. www www-awme, 4-+-www-ww www, mmmum-mm 'WUKGRCHQQQ ,mmm 'wh-.N W.ZNf?f,ff- Xlllllllwdf Qmqgqg wdvma-mp.-u .,,......,.,,, I will prescribe for Zfzc good of 772 y paticfzis, ami 72C'l'C'l' do lzarm to mzyozz five 5 1 In every place where I come I will enter only for the good of my palicfzts 550677 ' S , 1, s ,f ...if , , All ffm! may come lo my lqnoafledge aflzielz ought not to be spread abroad, I will lqeep secret and will l2C'Z 1'i' reveal . . . eight DMI ISTRATIQN and F AC ULTY v Q K g Q 1 is P ' 'im 5,-Nag 2- Q, 13,4 '. , Q- .- Q My fy .Lg w 1 w, X ' g pm S V ,E ,bl - .. .. - we cf -2 N , 'M Mikie' bxm- - - - .54 S 1 Q, 'SM A.: m fg ,V M3 QQ? by .X E-.Q-s, :K- A Q: ,QF nine DR. FRANCIS I3. n'.xRv CIARTER Professsor of Obstetrics and Gynecology lC'l1 DEDICATIO The dedication of this yearbook to Dr. Francis Bayard Carter is not made on his interest in teaching. Nor on his facility as a surgeon and physician. Nor on his generosity. And not even on his relationship with his patients fwhich dt-:Fines the word rapportj. The dedication is not made on the basis of any one of these, but rather on the combination of them all. It is tribute to a person who has managed to be a doctor, a teacher and a human being and to achieve excellence in each aspect. It is said of Dr. Carter that he once Went to address an alumni group and when he had Finished, no one was sure what it was he taught: history, medicine or philosophy. The demands of medicine are rigorousg to be something more than a competent doctor requires determination. It is good to know that among the practitioners of medicine there are still some who can be called learned men, some Whose vision has a measure of breadth, as well as of depth. Such is the basis of this dedication. eiezfefz Wliere experimentation is so in vogue the following section should be no novelty, for it is simply an effort to provide a more personal glimpse of medical educators than yearhoolts usually allow. There are no traditional group pic- tures: the art and skill of teaching are, after all, not achieved en nzasxe. Hope- fully, what has been learned here is in large measure associated for each student with several men, whom he has found to emhody those qualities which set aside a teacher. The succeeding pages carry the photographs and essays of a few such men, only a few and not all. In trihute, then, to the role of teachers and teaching is this section meant, and even more: as an expression of concern that respect for the transmission of knowledge and those who teach not he lost in a frantic race for an ephemeral Reputation. twelve OFFICE OF THE PRESIDE Three problems connected with medical education have long interested me-the control, the quality, and the cost, both to the school and to the individual. ll' given ample support with a broad base, each school, re- sponsible to the public which supports it, will be assured of control of its educational program and will be able to solve its problems in the way best suited to local con- ditions. The opportunity thus provided the schools to compete for excellence is the best guarantee of pro- gressive improvement in quality. Support for medical education now comes from tuition, endowment income, gifts from many sources, government grants and, in case of state and municipal schools, tayes. The percentage differential in cost between a good and an excellent medical school may not be great. Theree fore members of the medical profession have an unique opportunity, hy financial support well within their re- sources, to improve their own school, and thus obtain refiected prestige and professional standing. Further- more, hy repaying after graduation no more than costs of their own medical education over and above tuition, they can contribute to its excellence, assure its freedom, reduce the costs to students and increase their own enthusiasm and responsibility for their profession. Their contributions can be made at a time when their earnings are highest and costs after taxes are least. Thus, the medical profession can undertake the best possible pro- gram of public relations by manifesting its interest in better medical care and by assuring a continuing and ample supply of well trained physicians. This program of educational giving, to me, seems the best possible defense against government control of medical educa- tion and government controlled socialized medicine, both of which could lead readily to mediocrity in medi- cal training, scientific discovery, and patient care. Students who now attend Duke University can be- come soon a part of such a program already in opera- tion, having been initiated by the clinical stafif in iovgi with the organization of the Private Diagnostic Clinics. Already the staff, through the clinics, has contributed much to the development of a superior medical school. Originated during the depression with the objective of coordinating studies on patients who presented difiieul- ties in diagnosis and permitting all necessary studies within the patient's ability to pay, these clinics have been expanded to include all private patients coming to the Hospital. Operated voluntarily on a cooperative basis , W' ' M 4-,V 1, 711 - n, ci f' Amy. bfi . lt 5 i :yy , O . 2 I mf. , .ff Mw4 i DR. HART by all members of the clinical departments, with pooling of resources, they have been used to build a better Medical Center. They have supported a variety of activities including expansion of the clinical teaching staff, research, development of new fields of activity. acquisition of needed equipment, and construction of buildings for teaching, research, and patient care. Additional funds supplied by you after graduation. for fellowships, scholarships, student loans, professorf ships, or preferably for unspecified purposes. will be used to aid medical students and graduate students of the future and to build for superiority at Duke on the solid foundation of an already existing school ol' excel, lence. Generous financial effort on your part will be of great value to you as well as to the L'niversity. Your continued close relationship and partnership with your Alma Mater will produce a sense of pride in being an integral part of future developments and will result in greater enthusiasm for your profession. .Xt the same time you will benefit from improved public relations and from greater prestige reflected by the high standing ol' the school of which you are a product, and to whose excellence you will have contributed. IDERYL H.xR'r, BLD. I're51'fz'e12t of the U111'zfe1'51'Iy Professor of Surgery thirteen OFFICE OF THE DEA Within a brief period of time, this graduating class of the Medical School will receive their degrees of Doctor of Medicine from the President of Duke Univer- sity. The event, of course, represents one of the classical milestones in the educational process where not only does the student enter the company of scholars but, be he a medical student, he receives the further accolade that allows him to take care of the physical and mental ills of his fellowmen. This does not represent a dichot- omy of purpose but a dual recognition of the science and the art of the practice of medicine. Not only knowledge then but judgment is also concerned in a continuing committment to a Hnal purpose. The President-elect of Duke University, Dr. Douglas Maitland Knight, made this statement at the recent Founders Day occasion: A second quality of the great professional schools of a university is their transcendence over the daily practice of any of the callings they serve. 'We sometimes forget, I think, that there would be no real value in a medical or law school which did nothing but teach the good practice of the momentg there is no quicker way to stifle a profession than to perpetuate its routines without criticism or imaginative reappraisal. One major element of the vital service that a profes- sional school performs is criticismg it exists in a constant state of tension, questioning and being questioned by the vocation to which it belongsf' These words are equally applicable to medicine, and to the continuing student and practitioner of this ancient profession. ln half a lifetime, the physician of today has lived through two major revolutions, the ages of the antibiotic and the atom, and now faces at least a third revolution, one marked hy increasing social responsibilities. Dr. Knight has made somewhat the same point and his remarks may be quoted, without removing these parts too much out of context. He says: From the twelfth to the twentieth century, the professional schools have tif you will allow me the paradoxj become less central to the University but more important. They are, for instance, to be parts of the whole and must seek new common points of interest in a mutual relationship. From this exploration of intellectual pursuits must come answers to two of the major demands upon the bright dreams of university life. The first of these, the proper dehnition and interpretation of the place of science in our lives, and the second, the search for the small, bright needle of insight in the vast, Protean mass of .. ,Al .' , if ' ws -Aft at :ggi-,5. iv., . Y 1 xril, . J 5 b y sm r ,Am 2 . 1' -f 1 A ' 4 525, .. jg v 5 f 1 ff 5,1255 , iii? ' . .,,. A ?...... I if ,131 Q rw F' W Dia. XVOODHALL scientific and technological achievement. The continuing and professional student of medicine must not leave these endeavors to the rather esoteric and sometimes unrealistic battlefield of the University. He should, of course, re- turn to the University, in a broad sense, for his intel- lectual growth. Armed with these tools, the student must commit himself to judgment and action in a world that is deeply hopeful of good health, that seeks political goals to this end, that is poorly informed concerning our basic lack of understanding of many disease processes, that is bewildered by the few facts and countless fancies of Hcategoryu medicine, that is, cancer, old age-name what you wish, and finally it really hopes that it may not be mortal. To this social responsibility, complex as it is, the new Doctor of Medicine must be dedicated in a very knowl- edgeable and liberal way. History has been kind to American medicine in many ways. We have most of the facts at hand and the earlier experience of sister nations, England, Canada, and the north countries of the continent. We need only to par- ticipate in our future decisions, most of which must be made outside of the University, and these decisions must be faced with intelligence, clarity and independence. Be- fore his tragic death at an early age in an automobile accident outside of Paris, Albert Camus presented medi- cine with a simple motto: Where lucidity reigns, he wrote, a scale of values becomes unnecessary. BARNES WOODHALL, M.D. Dean of the School of Medicine Assistant Provost of the University Professor of Neurosurgery fourteen ATOM Y Technical competence is the lirst requisite and schol- arly distinction is the first ohligation of the department. The second requisite of the department is the capacity for the dissemination of knowledge that reaches the young men and women aspiring to a career in medical service. The third requisite is the creation of the type of intellectual environment which is maximally condu- cive for learning. Our ohiective in the teaching ol anatomy is to give the student maximal assistance in his acquisition ol knowledge. The kind of knowledge he needs to acquire involves the memorization of many anatomical details as well as understanding the suhiect matter of anatomy and its relation to all of his other learning experiences as a medical student and to his career in medicine. The prohlem involved in the teaching of anatomy concerns supplying the students a large quanity of diverse resource material. This resource material includes ca- pahle teachers plus recorded material such as hooks, drawings, models and specimens. For practical reasons, these resource materials and the numher of teachers are limited, and thus, some compromises are made. It he' comes necessary to introduce some large-group teaching: namely, lectures, motion pictures, and television pre- sentations. I Dix. TALMADGE L. PEELE Wpi '9'. DR. lhfliililsllzii As a part of their total study ol' the suhiect matter in anatomy, the students are made aware of the fact that this teaching is going on in an environment which in- cludes continuing research. Ample opportunities are given the students to participate in this research. Iosaifu M.-xitkma, Pii.D. Cflizzirlmzzz of the D6'pt1I'fl?26lZf fumes B. Duke I'r0fe5.v0r at isi isf, J '- ' ,. .. .1 MN Ms ' x 1.3 fin Q. . . atassiy - x , , - pw mi . si .- f xlkgsiikge. gig? It Q ' W w -ss TNCNTQ' .X ' , . at H .s X .s we ,zzsw . ,sw-5.' - s V- .- my wa . ,1-.:: :,..,.c. V ,-2 :.,.-.ce s -sm.-..bvs,. X , S Q 1 -X t DR. DL'NC,kN C. Hiariilaiuxcrox fifteen BIQCHEMISTRY Since the word biochemistry was coined, less than sixty years ago, the curricula of American medical schools have included biochemistry, physiological chemistry, medical chemistry, or pathological chemistry. The object, in so mistreating medical students, initially, was to impart a few technical skills which had immediate application in medical practice. Graduates of those cur- ricula found these skills useful and rarely questioned the point to biochemistry. The original impetus to biochemical research came from the problems of clinical medicine and biochemistry, as a discipline, grew up in medical schools. Much more recent has been the growth of biochemistry in its own right, i.e., an attempt to understand living systems in terms of the properties, organization and reactions of the chemicals of which they are composed. Meanwhile, the body of biochemical knowledge has approximately doubled each ten years and this growth continues at the same logarithmic pace. There is, therefore, about one hundred times as much to know about biochemistry as there was for medical students to consider at the opening of this century. To be sure, the language of biochemistry is no longer conhned to material presented to medical students during a few formal weeks in the first year of the curriculum. Histology and cytology must use this language, the phenomena with which physiologists, pharmacologists, pathologists, and microbiologists are concerned find ex- planation in biochemical terms-or fail to find explana- tion. The 2oo,ooo determinations performed annually by our Clinical Chemistry Laboratory are but a small token of the extent of clinical preoccupation with physio- logical chemistry. Nevertheless, it will be recognized that each year, our students are asked to consider a yet smaller fraction of that which is known about the human body in chemical terms. Thus, there are posed two allied questions. Which aspects of biochemistry should be presented to the neo- phyte medical student? And with which aspects of biochemistry should the faculty of biochemistry concern itself in our research laboratories? Our philosophy in this regard is based on several factors: ij Not only is our clinical faculty alert to the clinical applications of biochemistry, many are quite qu courant with recent developments in fundamental biochemistry. Hence, they teach and practice transfer medicine, medicine which is firmly based on sophisticated application of the basic medical sciences. 25 Whereas biochemical thinking becomes ever more important to medical practice, it is no longer essential that medical students struggle with biochemical laboratory skills which are best left to the combined competence of both the iron maidens and F U 4'Nvvqq, i . . ..,,, DR. HANDLER the charming young ladies who operate them in the clinical chemistry laboratory. gl Many of our clinical faculty engage in research which is addressed to deeper biochemical understanding of clinical problems. In so doing, they have accepted the challenges which pre- viously had been the concern of the practicing bio- chemist. .Q Medicine, as a profession which should rest upon an ever expanding base, must look to the not very distant future. For my part, I find intolerable a vision of the year 2,ooo, when the American population will have doubled, if this must also mean twice as many hos- pital beds, rest homes, sanitaria, nurses, doctors, etc., etc. It is imperative that we learn to deal more successfully with the dread diseases before the population explosion overwhelms us. And we can only hope to do so if, almost tomorrow, we acquire a much more profound understanding of human biology. Hence, it is a considered judgment that medical stu- dents are entitled to an opportunity to understand life in the most fundamental terms and that this will form the basis of medical practice tomorrow. Anatomy must be brought to its ultimate-the architecture of the macro- molecules of which we are made. And physiology must be understood as a cooperative behavior of these mole- cules. If this be done adequately, then, for example, will the physiologists be in position to discuss contraction, the immunologists to consider antibodies, the pharma- cologists to worry with cholinergic drugs, and the pathol- ogists to address themselves to neoplastic processes, all with intelligence and understanding which are impos- sible at this time. Achievement of this goal will require that students be offered the most rigorous treatment of biochemistry possible, and that they be prepared, in advance, to do so. It does not, however, require that all students be forced to repeat in the laboratory the evidence for bio- sixteen chemical concepts. Such experience, in the future, may well he limited to students who voluntarily so request. By the same token, in their research lahoratories, the hiochemical faculty should-and dowaddress themselves to questions which have no immediate application in medicine, hut the answers to which must. ol necessity, form the hasis for medical practice tomorrow: I-low do enzymes work? Wlizit is an antihody? llow do genes work? What factors make for the harmonious, integrated flow of metaholism which characterizes the normal cell? I-low is the potential energy of foodstufls transduced into the accomplishment of mechanical, elec- trical, osmotic, or chemical work? How are the various kinds of macromolecules made? Wlizit are the specihc functions of diverse suhcellular organelles and how are these constructed? What is the molecular basis for cellular dillerentiationF ls there a molecular liasis lor memory? These are the grand questions. The health ol the American people tomorrow will depend upon our success in linding the answers. lt is these questions which underlie the research programs ol' the faculty ol the Department ol' liiochemistry and it is the current state ol' the answers to these questions which properly constitutes the hasis for the course in hiochemistry which we oller to our students. Hopefully. we shall soon he ahle also to provide, to those students so desiring, a much more intensive experience in hiochemistry as part of their medical education. PHILIP I-I.xxn1,ER, PIID. Cfmirzmzn of lfze Dcfprzrtnzcnt lunzes B. Duke l'r0fes,v0r vu . Du. HENRY li,-XMIN DR. NIARY Biiitrsniaim Dia. WILLIQXKI LYNN .fC'l!C l1fC'C'71 PH 'YSIOLGGT Ss? X' as X 1 v 55 s iz its M96 ,935 sv W t dz MW V as 1, X 4 K bt :vac .vr-, . -2+ QR v's-Ac-,-M Z.,5-L,t.:,s.:Q.,1,g-,.,.tam.f-, The Department of Physiology and Pharmacology consists of a Division of Physiology and a Division of Pharmacology. Each Division seeks to provide a focus for the growth and dissemination of ideas in their re- spective disciplines within Duke University. ln order to provide for growth of new ideas in Physiology and Pharmacology, the Department is engaged in a vigorous program of research in certain aspects of these fields. In order to provide for the dissemination and communi- cation of these new ideas, the Department conducts an educational program for medical students, graduate stu- dents, post-doctoral students, and nurses. Since both of these departmental responsibilities, research and teaching, require a large and varied faculty, the Department is in the process of a substantial expansion. This expansion will be completed upon construction of a new medical sciences building which will form the first component of the new medical campus at Duke. In recognition of the fact that a few investigators working on the same problem seem to progress more effectively and happily than either a single scientist working alone or a large group, both Divisions of the Department are organized into a loose confederation of relatively autonomous laboratories. Each Laboratory is headed by a mature scientist capable of conducting a vigorous research program. Within the Division of Physiology the following Laboratories are in being: the Laboratory of Cellular Neurophysiology CChief, Asso- ciate Professor W. Moorej, Laboratory of Muscle Physiology CChief, Associate Professor P. Horowiczj, Laboratory of Molecular Physiology fChief, Associate Dix. TCJSTESCJN Professor Hluml, Laboratory of Cellular Endo- crinology fChief, Associate Professor I. Kostyoj, Labora- tory of Cardiopulmonary Physiology CChief, Associate Professor W. E. Hullj, and the Laboratory of Cellular Transport Processes CChief, Professor D. C. Tostesonj. The Division of Pharmacology presently contains one Laboratory of Biochemical Pharmacology, headed by Professor F. Bernheim. Laboratories of Circulatory, Cardiac, and Oncological Pharmacology are presently in process of formation. When the Department is at full strength in the new building, there will be nine or ten laboratories in the Division of Physiology and six labora- tories in the Division of Pharmacology. Since it is obviously impossible to represent the entire fields of Physiology and Pharmacology within any one department, the selection of the areas covered by the Laboratories mentioned above involves decisions regard- ing the most promising frontiers in the two disciplines. . ,- ,.,, , ' ff lin. Ficiinuiuczk liuiuviiiaim Du. WAYLAND HULL DR. E. Citorr LONG eiglz teen Research in the Department can be viewed as directed toward two such frontiers. First, the goal of much of the work is to increase our understanding of the molecu- lar basis of fundamental physiological processes, such as muscular contraction, nerve conduction, active trans- port, and cell division. The second frontier involves the analysis of complex integrated physiological functions such as the mechanics of respiration, the activity of the hrain, etc., with the use of modern analogue and digital computer techniques. In providing for the communication of ideas in Physi- ology and Pharmacology, the Department recognizes a primary responsibility to provide the hest possihle in- struction to First and second year medical students. In addition, it offers a vigorous educational program for graduate students who are candidates for the l'h.D. degree in Physiology or Pharmacology. The graduate program involves a general course in Physiology and Pharmacology taught from the literature, as well as courses in selected advanced aspects ol' lvoth disciplines. The advanced courses are also open to third and fourth year medical students as well as postdoctoral students. In collahoration with the Department of Electrical Engi- neering, the Department of Physiology and Pharma- cology offers a training program in Biomedical Engi- neering. The Department is also active in promoting the development of more vigorous teaching in the areas of clinical physiology and clinical pharmacology. D.-txiiit. Tos'rEsoN, M.D. ChLlliI'771L1IZ of the Deprzrtnzwzt nineteen PATHOLOGT Pathology has been defined as the science which deals with the causes, mechanisms of development and effects of disease. It is the bridge between basic medical science and clinical practice, and the study of Pathology pro- vides the student with his fsirst experiences in his life long study-disease. At a medical school such as Duke much of the departmental effort is devoted to the teach- ing of Pathology to medical students. In addition, because of the large amount of surgical and autopsy material available at Duke, it is possible to maintain a very active graduate training program. Young physi- cians who choose to specialize in Pathology or who wish to receive further grounding in the basic fundaments of disease before entering a clinical speciality spend from one to four years in the department as a member of the house staff. At this stage the training is pre- dominantly by the apprentice approach with close asso- ciation between the resident and senior members of the department. Usually after a period of four years of such training, the resident is eligible for certification by the American Board of Pathology. During this period of training the residents in pathology gain teaching experience so that the majority of those who complete this training continue to hold an academic position in pathology either at Duke or some other medical school. Those residents who go into a clinical specialty after a shorter period of graduate training in Pathology have the security of a fuller and more precise knowledge of disease. Harvey Cushing once wrote that apprentice- ship in the pathological laboratories always has been and always will be the only way to reach the very top either for the surgeon or physicianf' and William Osler claimed that successful knowledge of the infinite variations of disease can only be obtained by a prolonged study of morbid anatomy. ' 'Q' ff .- ' f H'-'Ea,721, . -- ., v 1 V f f.. I 'g - if- 2' cy , - 'QQ , 'Q 0 ' 9 X5 f yfff f, f 5 ff j f 7 ' , V 1 1 I I JSM? .. 1 fyffff f f f rg,-72 1 , 4 fl? QV? , ji. f 'f V A f-f ,WW gf I Jia. I3 ian N A ian I7iz'i 1'iaiz DR. K I N N Ii Y The Practitioner of Pathology specializes in the prac- tice of laboratory medicine for the purpose of providing physicians and surgeons with the scientific information they must have in order to treat their patients most efficiently and successfully. The hospital pathologist is responsible for the identification of the disease process in the surgical specimen removed at operation and for the Final diagnosis at the autopsy table. In many hospitals he also may supervise the laboratories of clinical chemis- try, hematology, and bacteriology as well as the blood bank. The pathologist works in close cooperation with the patient's physician in arriving at a diagnosis and Dia. DONALD B. HACKEL twenty assisting with the patient's treatment hy furnishing laboratory tests which aid in determining eilectiveness of the patient's therapy. No specialist is called upon for consultation hy others as frequently as is the hospital pathologist. All universities have as one of their chief responsi- bilities the development, dissemination, and application of new knowledge in the various fields of learning. For this reason, the Department of Pathology at Duke Uni- versity maintains an extensive research program. Every ellort is made to provide opportunities lor students and residents to participate in hasic research programs and to develop their own skills and interests in the field. This gives the imaginative young doctor a chance to explore unknown areas of medicine. Research oilt-rs a maior challenge to the physician who desires the eiccitel ment of discovery for experimental medicine is one ol the truly genuine adventures. Ti-iosms D. KINNHY, M.D. Clltlllfllltlfl of the Depizrtnzcnl llUElIl'y-OIIC' MICRGBIOLOGT Infectious diseases are responsible for a high per- centage of the ills which plague mankind. This per- centage has 110i diminished appreciably in spite of the availability and use of specific chemotherapeutic agents. Rather, the widespread indiscriminate use of such agents has created resistant organisms which maintain, if not increase, the infection rate as well as complicate the treat- ment and management of an infected individual. Also, the use of therapeutic or maintenance doses of steroidal compounds in the treatment of chronic debilitating dis- eases predisposes, in many instances, to concurrent in- fections by a variety of organisms probably by inter- fering with the host's immune mechanisms. Since the patient with a straightforward, uncompli- cated infectious disease can be treated effectively at home or in a small community hospital, the majority of the patients seen in a medical center such as our are referred because of such complications as those mentioned above. Therefore, the Department of Microbiology assumes its share of the responsibility for the training of medical students, house officers, postdoctoral fellows and nurses in the diagnosis, treatment and management of infec- tious diseases, while its staff also acts as a consultant to the medical center for those patients presenting extraor- dinary infectious disease problems. Because such pa- tients inevitably stimulate research from which informa- tion of practical value might result, the department maintains facilities wherein such studies may be under- taken and, indeed, every encouragement is given to utilize these facilities for clinical research. ln a university setting such as ours, however, the Department of Microbiology has an additional obliga- tiong namely, to make its several disciplines available to the total community. It accomplishes this purpose Du. Davin T. SMITH fume.: B. Duke Professor f if DR. CONANT by its affiliation with the Graduate School of the Uni- versity. This affiliation is not only desirable but neces- sary for the fullest use of its many disciplines essential to the development and growth of the life sciences. During the past two decades microbiology has as- sumed a unique position among the life sciences by virtue of its great span of living organisms which it makes available to its companion sciences as tools,' to be used for the study of the basic concepts of life. These studies have contributed not only to a more definitive knowledge of life processes via biochemistry but also they have allowed the study of the continuity of life itself to be carried to the molecular level via genetics. In this same setting microbiology must borrow tools provided by its companion life sciences for its own de- velopment and growth. Thus the cycle is completed and a department within a university finds its proper relationship with the total community. NORL'IAN F. CoNANT, PHD. Cfzairmun of the Department lames B. Duke Professor DR. SUYDAM OSTERHOUT fll'fl1f'V-lll'0 PSTCHIATRT Over the past four score years significant contribu- tions to the theory and practice of psychiatry have been made by such diverse figures as Pavlov, Freud, Meyer, Kraepelin, Bleuler and others. The challenge facing the psychiatrists of today is to fuse the outstanding lessons which each of these psychiatrists has produced. Prior to the turn of the century, the psychiatrist was primarily a custodian of the deranged individual. The treatment procedures were extremely limited and time was perhaps the great healer where mental illness was concerned. It was at this time that Kraepelin, Bleuler and Meyer began to pay increasing attention to the classification of mental illness and from then on there was a great increase in that body of knowledge called descriptive psychiatry. In the early part of the twentieth century the contri- butions that Freud made in the psychoanalytic under- standing of mental disorder was considerable. His con- tribution was limited by the controversy that was aroused and the schism which arose between Freud's followers and the rest of the medical profession. At about the same time in Russia, Ivan Pavlov was publishing his studies involving the conditioned reflex and was pro- viding a theoretical framework for the understanding of overt patterned behavior and changes in the various biological systems of the body. In the 1930's and especially since World War II there have been important achievements with the incorpora- tion of the somatic therapies in the treatment of various psychiatric disorders. These have been insulin shock therapy, and the convulsive therapies introduced by Bini, Gerletti, and Meduna. In the past decade, psychophar- macologic treatments have assumed particular impor- tance and have led to the increased discharge of many DR. Bussia chronically ill institutionalized mental patients and have given the psychiatrist increased opportunities to treat many more patients on an out-patient basis. Qne of the misfortunes of psychiatry has been that these various groupings of theories within psychiatry tended to isolate themselves. It is now becoming ap- parent that the concepts of Freud and Pavlov and others have many common links that are described using dif- ferent phrases and in different theoretical frameworks. The challenge now becomes the integration and amal- gamation of these theories leading to a fuller scientific understanding of the total normal and abnormal be- havior patterns with its basis in organic, psychological, psychodynamics. and psychosocial framework. The newcomer to the speciality of psychiatry today. feels the growing enthusiasm of participating in investi- gative undertakings utilizing skills and opportunities for the understanding of behavior coupled with neuro- amy DR. FREDERICK HINE DR. HANS LowENBAcH DR. LESLIE B. PIOHIXIAN lzvefziy-three chemical, neurophysiologic, psychopharmacologic and psychophysiologic alterations within the individual. The links are to be made not only with the biological sciences, but are to be coupled with increasing examination of the social, anthropological and forensic disciplines of the present day. As well as sex differences, biological and behavioral, the examination of this broad spectrum will devote a special attention to the population extremesg ol the aged and the very young. The need is to attract the students of medicine who are interested not only in promoting their clinical skills but also who possess curiosity, open mindedness, the capacity for critical thinking and an interest in human nature and behavior. Such men, possessing a clinical competency and basic research skills may and should have the opportunity to forge ahead in the next decade along this exciting path of progress. EDWALD W. Russia, M.D. Cfmirrmzn of the Depurtnzent twwily-fozzr We have been requested to write a short summary of the Department of Radiology since its inception and the scope of activities over the years, current activities and forecast for the future. Since some of tis were here before Duke Hospital was fully completed or equipped, we are able to give a general picture of progress over the years. By the time this issue comes olf the press the Department of Radiology will be given the green light to enlarge and for once to develop into a well equipped, up to date department. In IQSU the department was organized for Diagnostic Radiology with a minimum of Radiation Therapy. ln the earlier years diagnostic diseasesg such as, tubercu- losis, syphilis, empyema, pneumonia, and lung abscesses were very common. Little was known about the various heart diseases as well as many of the other problems in modern day medicine. Lung cancer was practically unheard of. Very little research was done in the various fields which we are undertaking today. This was chieHy due to the almost complete absence of available funds. In the present day Radiology Department there is a complete change as compared with the earlier years. The Diagnostic Division has been reorganized with sub- specialities, such as, Pediatric, Cardiovascular, and Neu- roradiology. We are now able to visualize the entire vascular and venous system, including the coronary cir- culation. With increase in research funds there has been a tremendous upswing in cardiac radiology. The best results are being achieved where there is a team effort of Radiologists and Cardiologists. Radiation Therapy has also done a complete revolu- tionary turn in the last few years. Since World War II Cobalt has become available and there are more and larger X-ray machines, the cancer problem is being Dit. Rhigvss attacked more vigorously and with these aids a certain percentage of increase in cures is being obtained. We still admit that surgery and radiation therapy are not the solution to the cancer problem. Where cases are gotten early with better diagnostic facilities and operated or treated early, the percentage of cures has increased considerably. The clinical use of Isotopes went through a rapid revolutionary period following war number two. Cer- tain clinical studies using isotopes are now more or less routine. The use of isotopes in the study of small bowel disease and kidney diseases were originally developed at Duke and now are both listed as standard procedures. Extensive research is under way using many and various types of isotopes. Insomuch as Radiology is closely allied with all spe- cialities of medical practice, there is an overall effort to teach Radiology both throughout the academic years as well as on the clinical level. Starting with the Roentgen Anatomy of cadavers in the first year and carrying the studies on through the clinical years into the graduate level, we Find the student makes a better clinician. The more closely he allies himself with radiological consultants the better the medical care to the patient. Roiauiti' I. Riaiayiis. M.D. C!IiIlil'l71LlI1 of the Deptirtniwif 1 ii ii ' six-at 5 ' t ....,. -. , , f , ,,,.. ., .,,., , 5 DR. IOHN A. Goituiz DR. Guoitoia BAYLIN twerzty-five PEDIATRIC The primary ohiective of the Department of ledi- atrics and of Pediatrics in general is to assist children to J develop into adults who can function at optimal capacity as responsible citizens. This ohiective may he achieved directly hy attention to an individual child or may he approached indirectly hy training personnel for the various tasks and hy the discovery of new knowledge through research. Throughout the history of the De- partment of Pediatrics, these three goals have guided its growth: Service to children, teaching, and research. ln the early years, the care of the sick child was paramount since there was a scarcity of Pediatricians and Duke Hospital was, for a very large area, the only referral center which had special skills and equipment. Teach- ing was wholly patient-centered in general clinics and wards. Later, and when personnel and space hecame availahle, attention was given to the organization of specialty clinics, research, and suh-specialty training pro- grams. In fairly rapid succession, specialized clinics were formed in the areas of child guidance, convulsive dis- orders, allergy, heart disease, renal disturhances, pediatric neurology, pediatric hematology, etc. Additions to the staff, which has heen increased rapidly to meet needs, have hrought new vigor to the Department and its training programs. An active research program has strengthened and complimented the teaching program. At the same time the physical facilities of the Depart- ment were increased and modernized. In 1957 the new out-patient clinic was opened, in 1958 the research facili- ties of the Department of Pediatrics in the Bell Building were much increased. Finally, in 1961, Howland Ward was completely renovated and expanded into an ultra modern, completely air-conditioned ward for 55 children. Throughout these changes, however, the primary - ws sr. 459 , f-rf' Q A gqgwziivsf- v rf' as iw s 4 , DR. HARR1s function of the Department of Pediatrics toward our medical students has heen to help them to understand children, to learn how to keep them well, and to treat them in illness. It is our intent that the undergraduate medical students acquire an appreciation of the child in his family setting-gaining an understanding of child- hood disease states, normal growth and development, the child's interpersonal relationships, and the preven- tion of disease. We hope that some of the medical students will he stimulated hy their experiences in the course and enter Pediatrics as a specialty. ln this way they may appreciate the deep personal satisfaction that may he gained through work with children. IEROLIE S. HARRIS, M.D. Clzairmzzn of the Depmtrrient QW V M g gk 'h, 7 ' 3 -- . 1 'fff ., ' yu., . .X X 3 s . . , s 1 Q . HEY Q ' Q 3 4 S. 4, 5 S .5 . ...:s:,'S' Qu, 4 save. 1 . N. ' Tk 0 Q 5.2: . DR. MAIJISIJN S12Ac:11 DR. ANot's lVlCBRYDE DR. WILLIAM DEMARIA tuferzty-six QBSTETRICS GT ECOLOG The literature of Medical liducation is just so volumi- nous, and just so confused, as is the literature of any field of intellectual pursuit. All branches of medicine are intellectual pursuits. Obstetrics, Gynecology and Gynecologic Endocrinology do have many intellectual facets. It is problematical that any one is ever taught anyk thing. The individual learns to learn. Our feeling is that any stimulus given to the student Cscholarj in medicine to insure his interest in continua- tion education is of the utmost importance. The stimu- lus should express itself as exposure to the processes of thinking and reasoning. A teaching community should have a high content of imagination and intellect. It is obvious, therefore, that imagination and intellect should be expected to be manifest in both the teaching scholars in the student scholars. The mental efforts of scholars of any type, are best served if they are viewed closely under a system of intel- ligent criticism. A certain amount of knowledge can be acquired and part of it can be retained. A wise old educator of the eighteen hundreds once wrote, The shadow of lost knowledge at least protects you from many illusions. In any intellectual efforts, habits are formed. Among these habits are the habit of attention, the habit of exf pression, the habit of suhmitting to censure and refuta- tion, the habit of assent or dissent, the habits of accuracy. of discrimination of mental courage and of self knowl- edge. Of all these habits we would stress self-knowledge. Armed with self'knowledge the scholars will readily acquire the medical conscience so necessary for intelli' gent, humane and adequate care of patients. Wav , . . Dia. c,.XRTl'.R Bacon, a man of varied accomplishments and repu- tations, expressed very well the things which should be avoided in the acquisition of medical knowledge. I-le wrote, For first the zinforzmzfzion of the sense itself, some- times failing sometimes false: obxerzfiztzbfz careless. irregu- lar and led by chance, ffcltflill-Oil vain and fed on rumor: p1'i1c't1'c'c' slavishly bent upon its work, C'.1'tf7C'I'IiNI6'l1Z blind. stupid and prematurely broken off: lastly, mzzzmzl fllif- tory trivial and poor, all these have contributed to supply the understanding with very bad material for y'7!2IifU.fOf7!l'1' and the .fc'ic'z1cc's. Fit.-xxcis l3.xY.x1uJ k:AR'I'ER, MTD. Cvflcllifllltlll of the DL'pi1rtn1e11t DR. E. C. I-IAMBLEN DR. R. N. CTREADICK DR. Rox' T. I'uu4Ex fll'C'lI fy-.i'f'I'C'l1 S URGERT Surgery is not a single science, but the application of many to the management of disease, injury or deformity whose course can be altered to the patient's advantage by an operation or some other mechanical procedure. Manual dexterity and meticulous attention to the details of operative technique, though important, are subordi- nate to a precise understanding of the pathology of the living with all of its anatomic, physiologic, chemical, biologic and humanistic implications. A surgeon must be able to recognize disease processes in all stages of their development and in all of their atypical manifestations. He must know which of these might be benefitted by an operation and when the proper time for surgery may have arrived. He must know how best to prepare his patient to undergo the ordeal of sur- gery and which technical procedure is best adapted to the needs of the patient. He must conduct the operation with gentleness and dispatch with strict attention to the principles of wound healing and the physiology of the structures he repairs. And after the operation, he must understand how to care for the deranged biologic proc- esses to insure safe convalescence. In the case of emergencies, he must be able to accept responsibility, make decisions and carry out an active course of treatment, often unassisted, alone and in the small hours of the night when undue meditation, inde- cision, or procrastination might lead to loss of life. He, then, has the advantage of verifying his diagnosis imme- diately on the operating table. Rarely in surgery does one have to wait long, one way or another, to learn whether his judgment was correct or fallacious. And any surgeon with a conscience who is not humble under these circumstances is a poor surgeon indeed. Specialization has narrowed the held of activity of Du. CiARDNER many surgeons who now limit themselves to a specific area or group of organs. Yet no one needs broader training, closer orientation to the entire Held of medicine, or understanding of the workings of the body as a whole more than the specialistg for the fundamental laws of all the biologic sciences operate in his field with the same inflexible regularity as in any other, and disease processes, injuries or an assassins bullets know no specialty barrier in the area they cover. The present day surgeon can no longer be looked .. LY 9 an W- 4 X Du. Gm' L. Onom DR. WILLIAINI ANLYAN DR. LEONARD GoLDNER lulenty-eight upon only its at crztltsmztn. Nur can lic lic xt miistt-r ol' c'l1'r11Acuf ,f11rgw if. llt- intist lic gi inzin til tmnimissifiii, iiirlg the newcr HClilSUl.I'CSL'Lll'ClllCCllllltll.lCXVlllQl1 ligivc sliiltctl nit-nt :intl clccisicin, its uiiiipctciil gi Iiliysitiqiii ginrl liiisit emphasis from tlic tirglain systcni to tlic tirggtn, to tlic scientist its 1iny,1incl in View til' tlit- lmzginlfitis ii.ittirtA til single cell gtncl cvcn to atoms ttntl tlicir twliitgils. Tliritiggli tlic lJI'UL'CllLlI'L'S lm cmplfiys, lit' IUUSI li.ivt- it liuttur liIlUXKl he cannot lic at mulcctilair lmiultigist, at nuclcgti' or electronic ctlgc ol the structure qincl liunutitin til' tlic lifitly tlitin in physicist or at lviomtttlicmQiticitin, lic .vfmzrltl zfmfcwttzml titlit-r tltictfirs. una' c'11c'o1m1gc' fflflii' i1z'I1'z'1't1'c',v inn! fn' izfrfc' Z0 l'L'l'0gIII'ZL' Cliutiti-gxrzia li. Cixiuixi-it, lit., lVI.lJ. um! apply promptly tfzwir m12tr1'b11t1'o11x to lfllwrilmry will Clflzlllflllclli of Zflc' Uc'fmrfn1c'nI Az., ' K 4 s fi A 1 ,. f 14 Z :iff k i , l,,,i W ,. Nm- DR. BANKS ANDE1tsoN Dia. IOHN IJEES Dia. Iiilxxnrn Picixituii lzuefzty-zzfzzc MEDICI The Department of Medicine traditionally has the responsibility of preparing the student for a lifetime of learning as he gives care to patients who ask him for help. The first step is to begin to think and act like a doctor. Two courses in the second year, Introduction to Clinical Practice and Clinical Microscopy, prepare the student so that he can take an active role in patient care. ln the third and fourth years, the student assigned to Medicine acts in the role of a physician. His desire to give good care is the motive which drives him to excellence. He learns to properly identify the problems of the patient. Having identified the problems, he marshalls the information which he can bring to bear on them by his pzlSt training, he recognizes the gaps in his knowledge as he attempts to focus the information learned from the basic sciences onto the specific clinical problem. Using the patient as his means of integration, he re-reads his anatomy, physiology, microbiology, phar- macology and biochemistry. In this clinical setting he has the opportunity to speak many Words which he has previously only read, he discusses the problem with his fellow students, interns, resident and senior staff, he gains familiarity with ideas and concepts by actively manipulating them. The student crystallizes out his idea of the best diag- nostic and therapeutic approach to this particular patient. He identifies the reasons for each of these decisions. He has real curiosity to see if his evaluation of the situation is correct or if he will have to admit that certain data which he interpreted as rock-like support for his house of cards have turned out to be shifting sand. He learns that the course of biology is uninfluenced by strong state- ITICIIIS, by the rank of the faculty member, or by the number of supporting references not quite applicable to the points in question. W 1 DR. STEAD Under guidance from his fellow students and from faculty of all ranks, he slowly appreciates the difficulties of learning in this system of multiple variables operating on only partially defined substrates. Part of a doctor's learning is only experiential. He knows from living with his patients that certain things are possible, but he does not know the underlying sequence of events. In other instances, his learning is more precise because he understands and can control some of the important variables. He must learn both the liabilities and virtues of attempting to use logic in clinical practice. The goal of the Department of Medicine is for the Dia. Wii.i.1Aixi Nici-ioLsoN Du. HAIRVEY ESTES DR- EDWARD S- ORGAIN student to have as many learning experiences as possible in which he plays an active role. We hope that he will enjoy these learning experiences so much that he will continue them as long as he sees patients. We are not interested in covering the entire field of medicine. ll' one of our graduates meets a new problem, correctly identifies it and has pleasure in solving it. we are satis' lied. We are not concerned that a new area of knowl- edge is being explored without our guidance. In caring for our patients with ill-defined genetic and acquired differences and with many variables of un' known strength at play, many erroneous conclusions are drawn. The student has to learn to examine statements both oral and written with care and to ask for all authori- ties the source of data which underly their conclusions. One way for the student to learn the dirhculties in drawing accurate conclusions about biological systems is to give him the opportunity to establish some fact on the basis of his own work. We call this research and find it a very elfective method of teaching. The intel- lectual discipline involved better prepares him for the . role ol' a lifetime learner. The health held is a broad one. .Xnyone with init Ili gencc enough to gain entrance to the Medical Sthool tan lind an area where he can he happy and produttive. We are interested in producing manpower lor the entire held. We are not interested in molding our students into any single career in the health lield. The faculty accepts the fact that our intake is heterogeneous and that our output will be heterogeneous. Our role is Io identiliy the area where the individual will he most productive and happy, and to help him reach this goal. XVe will continue to produce general practitioners, specialists, administrators, research workers, biologists, government workers and various combinations. There is no special honor attached to any of these roles. Our primary interest is that our graduates are productive. and receive emotional and intellectual satisfaction from their work. Etwaaxa A. Srtasn, Iii.. MD. Clztzirmtzn of the Depurtnzenl Florence 1VIcA!1'szw- Professor of M 6111.51.12 6 f. . f4f,,,w,, 1 4, , .0971 M, ,,, Af f' ,Z.f21Qff ' A sts., X - 5,324-Q .- 0 M ,, .. ,gf f ss. ,, , sw A 'f Kiwi .-: f Q DR. LAMAR CTALLAXVAY DR. HERBERT O. Siiikigit ,fi i - . ws 1 4-3 a if 1 YK? if s 1. A is fi f V 4 t As, Q a 4 J 1 3? sf s Y A 4 vp, .vm ,ff I I AY Dia. It'Lt.xN M. Rcriftx xii. . .. ,. .s .s DR. E. E. MENEFEE, IR. DR. R. WAYNE RL'NDLEs Dia. E. Ctuitces KVNKLE thirty-one Professors Alyea, E. P. Amos, D. B. Anderson, W. B. Anlyan, W. G. Arena, I. M. Baker, L. D. Baker, R. D. Baylin, G. Beard, W. Bernheim, F. Bogdonolf, M.D. Bressler, B. Brown, I. W., Ir. Busse, E. W. Callaway, L. Carter, F. B. Cavanaugh, G. S. T. Clark, E. H. Conant, N. F. Creadick, R. N. Dai, B. Dees, E. Dees, S. C. Eagle, W. W. Estes, E. H. Everett, I. W. Farrar, I. Forhus, W. D. Frenzel, C. H. Gardner, C. E., Ir. Georgiade, N. G. Goldner, L. Grimson, K. S. Hackel, D. B. Hall, F. G. Handler, P. Hansen-Pruss, O. C. Harris, Hart, D. Hetherington, D. C. Heyman, Alhert Kaufman, N. Kernpner, W. Kerhy, G. P. Kinney, T. D. Kunkle, E. C. Larsh, I. E., Ir. Lowenliach, H. HE F ACULTY J A 550611116 I rofessorf Barry, W. F. Becker, R. F. Bernheim, M. L. Blum, Borstelman, L. Bufkin, H. Cavanaugh, P. I Cohen, S. I. Cuyler, W. K. Day, E. D. DeMaria, W. A. Dent, S. DeTurk, W. E. Dillon, M. L. Doyle, O. W. Duke, K. L. Engel, F. L. Evarts, E. V. Fetter, B. I. Fowler, A. Garmezy, N. Gehman, I. H. Gregg, R. A. Gross, S. R. Guild, W. R. Hamhlen, E. C. Harris, H. Hendrix, P. Hill, R. L. Horowicz, P. Howell, D. A. Hull, W. E. Kaiser, H. L. Kamin, H. Kilburn, K. H. Klavins, V. Kostyo, L. Lynn, W. S., Ir. McCarty, K. S. McPherson, H. T. Maddox, G. L. Moore, W. Moses, M. Ohrist, W. D. Overman, I. R. Parker, R. T. Peele, T. L. Peschel, E. 19621963 A 551 stu zz I Profesyors Altrocchi, I. C. Anderson, W. B., Ir. C. Beaudreau, G. S. Bonar, R. A. Byrne, W. L. Cahoon, B., Ir. Carson, R. C. Chen, R. Cherny, W. B. Chick, E. W. Clippinger, F. W. Clower, V. L. Davidson, E. A. Dick, M. Dovenniuehle, R. H. Eisdorfer, C. Elchepp, G. Ferguson, G. B. Fridovich, I. Friedherg, S. Goree, A. Green, R. L., Ir. w Greene, R. C Hall, K. D. Hardesty, K. C. Hine, F. R. Hudson, W. R. Kirshner, N. Kurtz, S. M. LaBarre, M. Lakin, M. Laszlo, LeMay, I. C. Lesage, A. M. London, A. H. Llewellyn, C. E., Ir. Long, E. C. Long, M. McCollum, D. E. McCrea, A. L. McLachlan, M. H. McManus, T. I. Meltzer, M. L. Metzgar, R. S. Narahashi, T. Nashold, B. S., Ir. Nichols, C. R., Ir. North, W. C. tllirty-two Axsociates Beard, D. W. Bressler, Rubin Bugg, E. I., Ir. Cavener, L. Coonrad, R. W. David, N. I. Easley, E. B. Flanagan, I. F. Floyd, W. L. Glasson, Iohn Hollister, W. F. Huse, M. M. Iones, T. T. Kouns, C. McPherson, S. D. Newhorg, B. C. Osterhout, S. Portwood, R. M. Renuart, A. VV. Sapp, B. B. Schiehel, H. M. Schupper, N. Snider, R. E. Stocker, F. W. Styron, C. W. Thompson, L. W Vartanian, V. N. Verwoerdt, A. Von Roebel, C. Z Watson, G. A., Ir Whalen, R. E. Profcsxonv McBrycle, A. M. McIntosh, H. D. McKinney, I. C. Markee, I. E. Menefee, E. E., Ir. Nicholson, W. M. Odom, G. L. Orgain, E. S. Persons, E. L. Pickrell, K. L. A A'A'UC'1-Lift' I ' ro I cxxo rx Peschel, E. Pfeiller, B., Ir. Quinn, G. W. Ratlillf, li. V. Ross, N. P. Schmidt-Nielsen, B. M. K. Seman, H. Sidhury, B., Ir. Silver, G. A. Silverman, A. Postlethwait, R. W. Smith, A, G, Reeves, R. I. Rhoads, M. Ruilin, I. M. Rundles, R. W. Sealy, W. C. Shingleton, W. W. Sieker, H. O. Smith, D. T. Smith, G., Ir. Stead, E. A., Ir. Stephen, C. R. Tanforcl, C. Thomas, W. L., I Tosteson, D. C. Tyor, M. P. Vogel, F. S. Woodhall, B. Wyngaarden, I. B F. Stempfel, R. S.. Ir. Thiers, R. E. Waliil, S. Willett, H. P. Wilson, W. P. Worcle, B. T. Young, W. G., Ir. .-1.v.v1'.v!t111! Profz' UI Urniancly, R. li. Ustrolunlt, D. Ci. Otlolcnghi, A. Owen, Ll. li. Peetc, C. ll., Ir. Peetc, W. P. Pine, L. Pircher, F. Remmell, C. L. Robinson, R. R. Russell, B. li. Saltzman, H. A. Salzano, V. Sanders, A. P. Shmavonian, B. M Smith, D. S., III Smith, R. E. Smith, W. W. Sommer, I. R. W Spach, M. S. Stotsky, B. A. Stickel, D. L. Swanson, L. E. Tate, Dorothy Taylor, W. E. C. Tinclall, G. Titus, B. R. Turner, V. H. Warshauer, A. D Wheat, R. W. Wittels, B. Wynn, I. O. tlzirty-three Fowr Teams in Medical School f m -1 .pfff mug 532 Xml' Kam The ulpfnz um! onzcigfz . . . ,ws X' XX V' , H 5 United we stood . . . DI.L'I.lZCtf, we !c'LII'l2L'lZ7 tlzirty-j5z'e The birlfz of a Vexalzzzs . . . As written in SZ. Gray . . . The 41z1'n21'xtz1re of legend and repeated innovation . . The z'nstrzznzc'nZ of vision . . . Ami 5PC'C1fll0il'0f2 zhirty-six I The Dope-Shop -z'z5 z4f1'zz'esp1'eaz1' injqzzence is fell f!Zl'Ollgf10Zlf Zfze lzofpftfzl. ., .1 QMWW Z ai.:ff'f S1 hu-vw IK M,..,m.W,.N,w,,..NmW.3 W D.. X 23. lfzirly-seven fd' 5 ,,,..mD., 4 I J 15,1 91 '-zmfb , fy' I, A..-4 A ' 'c 'iffff 1 . , The student at zvorlq . . . ,- ,DME -.Hi A B., 'M' ,.g. ay, .Y xv ,Wx F- ,. The sch olar at play , A , X f, ff f thirly-c'igl1t Determining the fnifhed product . . . ,mf W 4+- ,N l . 'fm ., Watcfz that hand . . . Wfzizt do you 11'0 in this lub? No, Dr. Smith, I n'0n't see the rerf-bugs. 22? Pete, yozfre not listening . . . Virzrs Lab thirty-nine Mffffg the 'mage' Don? tfzosc' lights worlq, yet? Wl2e1'e'5' my rigaretlc' fz0l11'erfJ The F1'V65I'tf6 Chat forty Jr I Y m f? Y ,T 5 MSW ,ff z' ff Well, l'l'5 about tlzis long. There'f cz C6 l'l!I..l' in lm,-gf Our fzomimztiozz for Iunzes B. Dzzlqe profcxsor The Z-z-z-z's Club Q ii Hcfs been Ll buff boy. A whole :JZ 2 , f ' f ' 4 ' , A A -4.f,.3f::gf:'1, 1, , ,, , J' - V .AQ Transfer stzzzfent e ' 5 I SQL , gamish of zfitaminff 011019 If you nick mc, I 'IZ vomit! All right, once is enough! forty-two The Gym Gr6en.v Q4 . ,,.. 1 . ,..,.., . - , 1? , , 2 ig L xx xaxfyahv gi, ,, New in x f' The Amf0z1ni1'5 The Dual -Paris f0I'fy-fl1I't'C' M. B. L. R-1'-1'-1'-r1'p f if q'f -mix-, For cl little guy, his as m cum ax h dl. if I z1'on't need any lzelp-not really How can I be of lzelp to yon? Mardi Gras, anyone? Well, 10001617 WC There? a big bunny in here! Voulez-v0w - - - ? W 4. 'Fa Q fig . - ' 5' Q, , ,,w,f,,, I r ' ga From nfisdonz and znsigfzt w Q if E: V .,. ': ' 5 1 v N '7, H xy: x comes instruction . . . forty-ffzfe 5 mf .9 , XNZMXK and knowledge S f X X4 2 fa 0 -R, ,. x M 914427 ' ' ,f 1 17 'f Q ff, zo' f Q-ff I f - M5192 . X' f ww 'W fi W ' 0 f X, 'f 4' 5 4? Q ,M 4 A 0 3 1 mf 4' , ' 1 if, 1 Z Qld , 2 .A if ,U , MLM W bf The plfcpurcltion of the earnest . . . I 3, ' forty-.fix www MQQQQV an Q 5 'E N: 'Q Q N X 'QE .Q 'X 'E St N Nv- -S. . N -. N 'Ya Ns S St Q N. R. 'z A- bu .X N1 N. .. N. 'N . R' 'I YY Q XA N W . ...wmv 'N . , I k , N fl 4 r 4 , 3- gf'::5,,Z, V: rg A ' ':' , x ,ism 3' QQ ff,-4 -, gg, 14, .145 - .f+A i3g,,.: , H11 ,v. 1 , . -x A . 1 - ,A .A, X ,. 1 . ,mg uxl XM! , 1 V ' Qiim ,J For the birth of a nation p,,f n 4 gf f Z5 7 ,fy , 4 PG f , Www ' The Iozfc' of the zz'znnp. -ffi An enzpfzasix 'U Put into practice' on fzznzfuzrzentals . . 5? ...f jg ., b ' ,vkxw v 4 X ' A fam- f .. A fi X fx 'W .i g - ' QVKQX gffim ., 5 , 3 b ,,,.,.,. E X M ls xi ' fx 1 Z X b 5 - -X R3 X. fix? . ,muah ' X X V 'x New . fix? . 1 xg wfw , V , a 5 F J' -fb' Wm, forty-seven 4- ' , , cifwl- : Y ,ff 1 7 iv fff nv , J, A 45 - ,inf n ze f , 1f.., ' M 'fn ' fig , g3gyf,ez,1 , , ' m W n n ' , .,:, nw , 'f vu, . 4 ' , ' ' 2: 'f '4fVnW5h7iZ,V,',, 177 f ' y , In my c0n.rz'derc'd opinion forty-eight A 2 1 1 V- s f gf ag 7 G S .x . . . iff pzzlmomzry 51672051-5 41 ,af I Q If I S 1 fi 4 -41 .4'9'W I I 'N f-fm 5 Iflffmt do V011 fflfllff, POIIIZ .1 ., . . Al. ,: .. ' Our fmt lad of Ped: -:z,f1:5-'a-:iss -v WY: X214 X 'I 5' 5, I' , ' f :P V 4 by X 15 .gf 1 M 3 y . Well, in my opizzion . . . forty-nine a 2 i '13, A aJ6hlyc'1l' an 11' Lnzxiozzf relzzrn . . . Aga 1-In curly urrimzl . . af 'Wx , ,, ., , V4 M99 'if if ,,5 , l ,F MAH. E 3 151' fy A happy resolution. EMER WNCY S URGERT SMOKI G Ii? K ffty-one Bc'fzz'mf tlzczvc zfoozpv . . 'flu' 1ffu1'M of Zfzc' .flll'gc'OI?. ,!V, . ' , F5840 , f ff 'Til 'izf The preparation of num . . ,I-1' ,' wif? W ,zu , Wqg of material and machine fifty-two . ., ' tlm,,,,i5, Q i' '.'Q: v,:- 1 A , --......,,,N xvxr I H N JW' , ff 1 W f 1 xpgfl Q' H.:-IMI ,. 1 . lk Q all 5 full-5 - a 1 1 fi ,S Ag x I 'K 9 for the zffzity of effort. in 3 H' A , W, 1 ffl V, f X 17 1' ly-th rec' 'W was 5 A 'H ' fm ,.,,..,.,,,....,....-MN,,.wv-'-w1':v'r '7'f 1 !' f -ff ,w .r Q ' ' G . f' x :A 1 N eq, M,-N , . , ,.v f I K , ,, V , 2 : I . . f? 221 ,f , ., fm f I 2 f : Z3 1 3 Q - . , rc 'X ' gf Q, T11 6 labors of I'C'C'UUC'l X' n f b- f . Y IL cvrlenzf tfzrozfgfz the niglzt .LL- Www n-0 zzfzdel' the eye of Halsted. ffly-four 'avr 'Nm 'sf 1,3 f- 4 -Pl ' 4 vp f 'L 4- Q 2 L , r '22 F' I J 's Your cya are tfzf 6lX'C'S of a zffomdn in I0zf6. ' Dzlzgn osix zz'eferrezf nffy-nw Tel! me zfortor .p .1 lu., N rfg Ari -17' f , I 2- ,EFA ' sw. Q 3 E f 1 The jellyboot the ortfzopezfie surgeon . If we , fgwwwg A 4 , QW . , yy, iii ' The zvorlzz' 0 0 X b . , ,?:5Q,:iL 1 , 1- -1.07 Zzw :fy ' f 'fm-vw-Mme WSW: ffnf, .1 .KW , -A,-4, . ff, , fifty-.fix X N W, 'Q Q W P9 Q qi . ,ggw . Y Q . ay HAl0l'l?l'l2g Rcfporf' Ivegim' the Jay . . . Dr. Mcnefee consults . . igyywsh '-N-w...,, Qu, j7fly-eight D ZX u 1 spc'c'Z1'o12, p61'c11551'o12, pL1fpL1t1'0n .... the Inzizk' uz.zz2az::'w'5 'uf . ' fifiy-nine T-s. '... ,P 1 P -we ,,, V vv- V . . . Allfcvf by accefyory clinical ana' laboratory fina'z'ng5 . .. sixty I M3 1 I .-6-L..'l ,-P , The Search for LZI75ll'6'I'.s' in 1'6c01'1f6z1' f',x'pc'1'1'e1zcc . and in the zz'1'5z1'0m of 6xpc'1't cozmsel . . . 1' 4031-'Z Zz EWS sixty-one .., K 5,1231 :F L M' s2j F! f ,-'PZ' Q if L Ml Dzlzgzzoszk and tlzenzpvzzsis . . . the omniprc'5c'nt I.V. .h ,W-.. 3 n xiii, Y '9 5 181,251 .4 ' f 2 , , X 'GL 9. is x A Q. gf-my gif? if my A Fm mf 3? 'I L. 3 MY, ' sixty-two 'ii gm I X I!! 'Q LEL1i'HIbHg' from the past for the fllfllll? . . F' 2 '-ii ,g I ESQ, X hu KW 1 3 q 'N' Q K .'.' - ' QxX,, Palmislry in the IJ.D.C.,-li7cI.fZ, present, fzrlzzrc sixty-tlzree The Research Training Program, directed by Dr. VVyngaarden, provides an opportunity for a limited number of medical students and post doctoral fellows to become acquainted with the current ideas and techniques of cellular biology. The RTP faculty consists of six members repre- senting the department of anatomy, biochemis- try, medicine, and microbiology, with three additional instructors teaching calculus, statis- tics, and electronics. The program lasts nine months beginning in September of the junior year. By going to school in the summer and absorbing his elective in the program, the medical student is able to graduate with his class. Arrangements may be made to drop either senior medicine or surgery as the Final quarter of the program. The curriculum is divided into two phases. From September to December there are or- ganized lectures and laboratory exercises by the staff members. Throughout the year special lecture series are given on bacterial genetics, calculus, electronics, and statistics. During the period from December through Iune the stu- dents present a weekly seminar series and get practical experience by working in research laboratories exploring in their Fields of interest. THE RESEARCH TRAINING PROGRAM ffwwx z , DR. MOORE NM DR. W1'NGAARDEN DR. MOSES f M, X Q 'Sim ,Q X X X 1 A- I, V 'S ' wf..',.E,,f-E - MR- . Vg.-W... , i x 1 wk x , - 1,5 1 . , -A lil f' 1 - 'V R 'SSR X R PAB N , . 5 'R fix X x-y,fX N xx' , Y Sk 5 if K' ' 359' 2 V xx X 4, M X M S , A v 1 J.: r X K, X , :XY-R . .1 1 V ., X. H. JW.. -- , ,. N 4, Q , A 4. fd? eifszyf' GQ X wg ' ,, Y 9 N x 4 R 4 vw x if R051 gag Q ' 4 V' Q? Na f e Qi? X X v 4 X v A O 0 Rf, uv? X oi M fs Y R i DR. GUILD 1 .,,..,. ,,A,,, ,., .,R , . . , DR. ELLIOT ar DR. GROSS , , ,, 3 Q v ' ---X 1 'wi:3?f'i1R12'fg2-EQ . ' .I. :f f S ,,,- .bm ig i ww- Ee3v , 5' A 'Q -uf 1 A ' Qi R. -1 . . 5 . X XV., QA R in -' Q? 1 Ng. DR. WAKIL .R ' .J . . . .--11 Rm .' N 'tar A . -5-vii 1 V DR. THOMPSON DR. AICC.-XRTY sixty-five if M. ,--- PAULSON 'W' ,,, 'f 4 Af If f V4 M4 13214 .Q . U z j 1 ' . Vx , A 35 Y X 1 , ,r SAIXI5 STICKEL RAT ,M 1 f 1 ' X ze We R as as cd Uwe MM, f..-f' Y f IQNES HAR NICKMAN G1TzEL1x1,xNN .af ,ww .QS-1. -I , Q 'V ,.-. ' wh :Y , A X , . WJ! rw ' J Y ff? e9 , v ff' 3' A J aa. , MOSES STICKEL Y .,, W.,-mm -,-: , , '-,f -X ,- , . . ff- . ., K I :q,, ,,:,A. ll, rii E 3 . ..,.... 2 g ag? i ,Z K I xi 'W A ffm 3- , ' W'- , pw 2 ' nl Tl x I A 8 W HENRH' 6' Winn, WAK11. LAszLo WITTLES MARTIN sixty-six - u DO Y a LJ 5. DUN.. A.A .,,- I W .42 KEN IONILS QE A, ,- 'J T N va , , '59 FRIEDEL NX 'i 'N if :Ja A xiii 5 mmm ,a L-. Scovr ? 1 A Q' ' - A -9 . '- W r:11f'I , ' '94!'g ,,' ',:'oo f X Q 1 N RUFFNER NOBLE sixty-sc' urn M20 ORGANIZATIGNS SAMA DAVISUN SUNIMISH 5 EX'l'liliN l'll0liliAM 1ll'l'I1XV FVCJTY I 3 ..mfff1f.:fzM' ' 711322 'UOCQUUWQOQQQH wgwx Q- - X QQ N Q Al 523 A. , , Q, ,, , , YKAXN, 5 iii Kg, -www ff , . , ,, VC Nw, ,W 597 V V 5i ,?,:1 fu f I' ' 1 4 ,I 4 1 n nu ' ' 4 v 4 A. .- , I 1 4 is , H ' B 3 K If q U 12' if S 'W Y f X ie S I if L if as y i n? Z' 3 f f 5,1 g , ,ff T gf! f Jv. ' l CABUT SUCIIZTY I'll!l.U!-ZUPIIY 01' mznmfxm-: M U 1' Flilkll 6 PM ' 1 mf ,mwm . ilifx XRD A EIU'-2 S ,hai SGA malrsczlxmmx, xxu uw or , . if 1z x:v-:rr xxx rrwx DARLL UH. an T1 if 21 , . Q I . Y. .. LH Q1 1' ANQXYIUKNS sixty-eight ESATURDAY MAY1 fs 3 .mcxc 'mu IIUTICL SRM!-1- 1IIiMAl. ln,H.,, Q aa. aa ,Q Mfr ai 3 ,S- M212 Sealed L. to R. Nash, Virgin, Zirkle, Lazarus, Kulvin, Weber, Moorman, Markee, Crummie. Standing L. to R. Stoever, Graham, Cline, Hull, and Holmes. STUDE GOVER ME T ASSOCIATIO The Student Government Association is composed of the elected representatives of the student body. This year, as in the past, SGA has been involved in many aspects of the curricular and extra-curricular activities of the students. Also, the SGA functions as the Honor Council for the medical school and Court of Appeals for violations of the traffic code. Some of this year's activities were carried over from past years, but several new projects have been added. The student curriculum committee has been working closely with its counterpart in the faculty evaluating the current and proposed systems of medical education. This year SGA has appropriated money for two Davison Scholarships to be used for travel and study abroad. Started last year in honor of retired Dean Wilbtirt C. Davison, this scholarship has already become a much sought after award. This year interested members of the senior class were assigned as advisors to the new freshman class. This program is to be an adjunct to the existing 'faculty advisory body. Knowing full well that all work and no play . . . etcf, three successful dances were held during the past year which were well attended by students and house staff. SGA OFFICERS P7't'51't2l672f.' Robert Cline Sccrcvary: Stephen Lazarus T1'6rzsu1'w'.' Herb Kann SEMA Reprc'rentr1t1'L'f.' Henry Stoever Fourth Year Class P1'c'51'dc'nt: William Hull R6ll7l'C'5B7ZN!fl.L'65.' Louis Holmes, Iohn Kapp, Thomas Graham Third Year Class PI'C'.f1il2lEI1f.' Charles Virgin Reprc'.venZrzt1'Lfc: Robert Crummie Second Year Class Pl'6.fl.dE71l'.' Ioseph Markee Reprc'5c'ntat1'zfc'.v.' Claude Moorman, Stephen Kulvin Ffzztz Year Clrzry PI'E.flid671I.' Louis Zirkle Rep1'e.fer1tatz'z'e5: Iames Nash, Iaroy NVeber sixty-nine Qqmrrg Q Seated L. to R. Markee, Lazarus, Greene, Yancey, Edwards, Friedel. STUDE T AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO Now representing 7524, of the medical student body, the Duke Chapter of the Student American Medical Association is a service organization interested in a wide spectrum of activities. SAMA is the only national, and since this past summer the only international organiza- tion which represents the opinions and desires of the future physicians of America. Though only a relatively new organization SAMA has earned a reputation for its interest in medical re- cruitment in conjunction with the admissions committee, the summer externship program hnanced by the Duke Endowment, a medical students directory, a listing of research opportunities for the student and many other projects. Recently SAMA has joined the International Federation of Student Medical Associationsg this union promises to provide increased opportunities for study outside the United States. The Duke chapter has been one of the leading chapters in the national association for many years. A past president and current vice-presi- dent came from Duke. SAMA OFFICERS P1'c's1'dc'nl,' Robert Friedel Vice President: Samuel Yancy Secrc'zary.' Stephen Lazarus Trea5urc'r: james Nuckolls SGA R6P7'65BHldZl.UE.' Henry Stoever Fourth Year Class Reprc.cenzaz1'zfe.' Stephen Edwards Third Year Class Repre5c'nZat1'ue5.' Deryl Hart, Ir., Charles Virgin Second Year Clay: R6PI'656HZHZI.U65.' Ioseph Markee, Kirk- wood Shultz First Year Clay.-' Repre.fentaz1'z1e5.' Iames Alexander, Iohn Green seventy mf , J 33 lik! fi f 59 Mm Seated L. to R. Virgin, Barnett, Moorman, and Hyatt. Steering Committee THE CABOT SOCIETY The Cabot Society is an informal organization of medical students and related personnel who are interested in aspects of medicine other than the pure techniques of treatment. The society was named for Dr. Richard C. Cabot, Professor of Medicine at Harvard, whose con- viction that the patient should be treated as a total per- son 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 luncheons on various subjects. These meetings proved helpful and interest in them grew, with the result that in the fall of IQ52 the Cabot Society was organized to extend and stabilize the program. Through the years the society has remained informal, having no formal membership or dues and being admin- istered by a steering committee of interested students. All medical students and others interested are invited to the Cabot meetings which are held fortnightly in the private dining room of the Men's Graduate Center. Steering Committee: Chuck Virgin, Crawford Barnett, Fred Grover, Tee Moorman Advisor: Rev. Robert Hyatt seventy-one Q, Q 3, Z ,, 'rife-if Xa. Wu... is if ff nh 'fin ii ..-X Q83 1- - - 1- f I . ' tm- x 0 . .:.,. . 1 .I - t. . 22: 4 -ii.: a, f - X - wa-ag my I A Ms S 5 , ,f . sim 'S Z -Q4 .6 v ' ww 4 ' Q f, it 9 ,- 2' , l f . - ,,. 4.-.. .s .af .. 01 - H X ,N I - , 5, -s.. Seated L. to L. Graham, Entman, Porter. Standing. Dr. 9 K . ,- Kg'1 s 5 ,. eff? i - Y' . Q ' V , I .R i s , 0, Q .ax s , Q , v X , t , ,Mista ke X Q 10 A -'QW its .sv s -i Q t. .7-f:.-wsaggf. ' wr-1-swZ1,::.:c:ag:Q.f:.a,..:afaazf.a: '- G3EQS?'?? ??iE'g:?? ..,, A 9 Orgain. allplza Umega allpha Alpha Omega Alpha is a national honorary medical society having as its purpose the promotion of the high- est ideals of scholastic achievement and professional ethics. The Constitution perhaps best describes its basic tenets. The spirit of the Society is set forth in its motto ana' in a inoilern interpretation of the Hippocratic Oath. It is the duty of its inenzbers to promote its iileals, to foster the scientific and philosophical features of the medical profession, to loolq beyona' self to the welfare of the profession anil of the public, to cultivate social ininilezlness as well as an ina'iu1'ilzuzlistic attituzle towara' responsibilities, to show respect for colleagues anil espe- cially for elzlers anil teachers, to foster research, ana' in all ways enable the profession of ineflicine anil acluance it in public opinion. It is equally a duty to auoia' what is unworthy . . . ana' 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. Davi- son, M.D. Dr. Edward S. Orgain is the oflicial Coun- sellor for the Duke Chapter. CLASS OF 1963 Mark L. Entman Iohn P. Kapp Thomas P. Graham, Ir. Iohn M. Porter Sl?l!C'71ly-IZUO T733 75237-JYIJTLQT up-i 11wrlNw :'3 ...W 5 .f Seated L. to R. Harner, Hoyle, Dirkers, Keranen, Dr. Amos, Guazzo, Nuckolls, Bicknell, Iones. IOTA SGCIETT Iota, the Duke University Medical School Immuno- logic Society was founded in the Spring of 1961 by a group of medical students who shared a common in- terest in the various new fields of immunology. Meeting once or twice a month at dinner, the Society MEMBERS hears one member discuss a topic of current interest Bob Fisher which he has prepared for the group. Following the ' Russ Harner presentation a faculty member invited, as a guest com- Ken Iones mentator, gives his concept of the topic. Iohn Hall Gene Guazzo Crawford Barnette Bob Tankel Research and various studies are carried out in labo- ratories made available to Society members for work in their own Held of interest. seventy-three Topics which were presented this year included Aspects of Immunogenetics, Properties of the Plasma Cell, Immunologic Aspects of Transplantation OF IOTA Pete Reitt Iim Nuckolls Vic Keranen Buck Hoyle Ierry Dirkers Bill Bicknell Chuck Virgin .af l Q CJFFICERSZ Front Row L. Z0 R. Grover, Taylor, Virgin. Driver. Back Row L. to R. Scheidt, Vernon, Porter, Holmes, McGraw. Cottingham. DUKE MEDICAL DAMES Organized in the early forties by Mrs. Frank Swett, Duke Medical Dames is an organization whose mem- bers are wives of medical students. Other sponsors have been Mrs. Iames Semans, Mrs. Deryl Hart, and Mrs. Angus Mcliryde, who presently holds this position. Each month the Dames meet at the home of one of the medi- cal school's faculty members to conduct a business meet- ing. hear a guest speaker and enjoy a social get-together. Each class also holds a separate monthly meeting. Objectives of the Duke Medical Dames are to pro- vide an opportunity to gain insight into the role of the doctors 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 offers an opportunity to meet other student wives and to be a member of a group which has much in common. The fashion show in the Spring and the Christmas Dance have become annual social events and a bake sale was held in February to raise money for their project, Edgemont Community Center. Speakers this year in- cluded Dr. William DeMaria, Dr. Allan Sindler, Mrs. Betty Hodges and Dr. and Mrs. Otis Skinner. seventy-four ff' 2 I fi in 5 xy 1 V Ki a , , N.,.,, , I :EW SENIOR MEDICAL DAMES Front Row L. to R. Mimi Carlton. Rosalee Coldston, Sonja Rohinson, Carolyn Hoffman. Shirley Lucey. Serozzd Row L. to R. Ann Thomas, Frances McMillan, Connie Durrett, Ann Porter, Patti Vanderbeek. Phyllis Pollard, Carol Ann Graham, Mary Driver, Ann Young. Standing L. to R. Kay Cline, Iane MeBryde. -I . 4 V, ' ,Q ill 6 fi X. 021 -...as-v4, wands IU IOR MEDICAL DAMES Stzlndirzg L. to R. Anne Chase, Harriet Keys, Ieanne Wilson. 56111607 L. to R. Char Cottingham, Mariean Vernon Isabel McGraw, Virginia Hinshaw, Elaine Keranen. Annie Roe. seventy-five 1-1 SOPHOM ORE MEDICAL DAMES Standing L. to R. Sally Weeks, Ieanette Lucas, Sue Scheidt, Mary Lily Nuckolls. Seated L. to R. Carolyn Taylor Suzanne Butcher, Betsy Green, Mary Andriola, Ianie Moorman, Iudy Baker, Ioan Venetta. Seated Front-Right Tucker Crawford, Ze Gerber. 'blwfoiny J' Sf 9' 4 law 1' ' ,s'- fx -5 r y f i, ff. , . fi QW cf ' 'S ig! ' '4 +17 4 A W YM N f. M117 ., 3, ,L ,zz tk A6 if f 4 .. y ,pix FRESHMA MEDICAL DAME Standing L. to R. Ioanne Wasserman, Ioy Dick, Elinor Grant, Marjorie Currie. Seated L. to R. Bobbie Redding Iilinor Clark, Louise Berry. .veuenty-six AESCULAPIAN EDITORIAL STAFF Editor L1'tcn1ry Editor Faculty Editor Organz'zLzt1'0n Editor Arr Effimr Clays Elfl'f0l'A' Business Managers Sales M amz gel' Ph ozograplzy Pr0fe.v.v1'0naI Plzozogrrzplzy S ecretary Henry Szifrit Owen Tabor lim Herring Bob Cline Tom Runyan Gray Long Bruce Chase Kirk Shultz Dave Hawkins Berta McNeil Gene Long Buck Hoyle Chester Haworth Kirk Shultz Al Lewis Bruce Chase Bob Noble Richard McKee Carol Kitch SC'U6'7Zly-560671 CLASSES seventy-eight PRESIDENT A. ., H 'YEAR CLASS The years 1959-1965 have been ours. Each graduating class sees medical school in terms of its own achievements and short- comings, and We certainly are no different. We have experienced and prohted from associations vvith men who are dedicated to the teaching of medicine and its ideals. A new maturity fostered by an ever-increasing responsibility has propelled each of us as individuals into manhood. Our years have been Hlled with fun, as they should be. We have begun meaningful and rewarding friendships, and the four years have seen a number of our class begin their family life. In these years the foundations for our lives have been carefully WILLIAM MARTIN HULL, IR. Rock Hill, South Carolina D2iViLlSOH College placed. We hope that our gratitude may be best expressed by our Mgdzlgline fl,llf1llIT1CHI. Duke Hospital CHARLES BAUSCH AYERS HARRY PRIZER BANGHART C fztzrlestozz, South Carolina Pfziltzdelplzia, Pezzfzsylzfazzzkz Princeton University Wesleyan University Pediatrics Rotating Duke Hospital San Francisco Hospital I seventy-111'11e vw ' 29 . H T21 A ,.. - , H I - X 1 if B 51 - , 2 ' , Qi ai? iii' .5.:.::f si I 2 -R 25212 . - , .A -55.52 ,. vc Q '. ,, ,QW Y f ' ' 9 efgv 1 -,t fx! ? HENRY DAVID BANTA Oalq Ridge, Temzessec' Duke University Mfdiflillf King County Hospital CRAIG GRAYSON BLACK Aslzezfillc, N ortlz C izroliiztz Wake Forest College Rotating Roanoke Memorial Hospital s A 2 1 Q X 1, A X A X? N S M X 7 x v Y 5 X f Nei! YANCY BRINTLE BEAMER Mt. Airy, North Carolina Guilford College Surgery North Carolina Baptist Hospital IOHN CHARLES BOLTON Saint Paul, Virgiizicz University of Virginia Pediatrics McGill University Hospital ,.,.:f .9 A ye' 'Ri I in :ffii ia 4.-fg 9 f , ,'w..-. '-- ., '- . L ,. X Y 'Wi ff, in 1 we W, , , fw: :iii a' , A 'f A-. 1 eighty MQW' ' ' WILLIAM IACKSON BICKNELL Boston, Massachusetts Iohns Hopkins University Rotating University of Oregon Hospital IOSEPH OT1s BROUGHTON, IR. Wilmington, North Carolina Duke University Medicine Duke Hospital , Q X XS- ,V S THOMAS HENDERSON BYRNES, IR. Clzurlotte, N ortlz C urolifzu Princeton University Medirifze Emory University WILLIAM ALVIN CARTER N orfol k, V1'r1'gi1z1'u Duke University Metlirizzc' Duke Hospital THOMAS KERN CARLTON, IR. Salisbury, N ortlz C urolifzu Wake Forest College Rotating U. S. Air Force CHARLES THOMAS CASKEY Columbia, South Carolina University of South Carolina Medicine Duke Hospital ciglzty-one 553, if IAMES ANDERSON CARTER Guizzcsuille, Georgia Duke University Surgery Medical College of Virginia WALLACE HAN-IEN CHANO Neuf York City, Neuf York Duke University Surgery Duke Hospital fl Nfvs x X4 Q-sm ...An . , R , Q, , v 3 Q 'I ' . ' -A N 1 in 'df C vw .I Ei.-ag V' As, I A 029 '-, .. M- .,,.., ,..., tg. CLAY FRANKLIN CHURCH Dzirfzam, North Carofiiza University of North Carolina Mixed Watts Hospital DOYLE DRIVER De Land, Florida University of Georgia Medicine Duke Hospital Qynwawm-u. -5 ROBERT EDWARD CLINE Soatlzern Pines, N orzlz Carolina Duke University Surgery New York Hospital RAY ROBERT DURRETT C fzarlestoiz, West Virginia Duke University Medicine Duke Hospital i W eigh ly-lzuo ff ar ROBERT ALAN DOYLE For! Lauderdale, Florida Michigan State and Yale U Rotalifzg Lenox Hill Hospital niversities ELMO STEPHEN EDWARDS Spring H ope, N orzflz Carolina Davidson College Pediatrics Grady Memorial Hospital tw' , an K ' 'Q S it .f ,-'.., 1, A rf IOHN BLOOM EMERY, IR. Piiman, N ew jersey Maryville College Medieine University of Utah Hospital SIDNEY RAY FORTNEY Harlan, Kenzzielqy University of Kentucky Medicine Duke Hospital 'N I 'Q 4 f !!n 'fp ff 4 An-1 ' gwff 1 fp cf, ff , Q ll MARK LAVVRENCE ENTMAN JAMES BRECKENRIDGE FARRELL lHfk50IZZfIll6, Florida Carlsbad, New Mexieo University of Florida Rice University M ed iei ne M ed ieine Iohns Hopkins Hospital University of Utah Hospit il ANDREW IOHN GABOR WALTER RANDOLPH GILBERT, IR Washington, D. C. Grijin, Georgia George Washington University Emory University Surgery Medicine Duke Hospital Iohns Hopkins Hospit 1l Ari R . y ' V rs, 5 ' , Vp ,,.- 1 f ' - Y ' eigli ty-three -. . , ,Q ..,. - X... ' .Ez,.f? e -V+ R, Q M Q E Mgmt? R A f 4 - X .. .W -f t A . t 4 IOEL STEPHEN GLASER Orlando, Florida Duke University Medicine George Washington University Hospital GEORGE REDD GRANT, IR. Fayetteville, North Carolina Duke University Medicine Emory University Hospital . Aim ,i.. , lf ,tw , W 1 W 4 V35 X . AAI. Xiang If N as .1 ' ,- , waxy, ' 4 5 ,,.--v A-R dx, F 5: P Z 'PU O co rn sv 'l Q O :- U U7 f-I O Z 'sf l 9 si W 6 Walqe F orest, North C aroliiza Wake Forest College Mixed George Geisinger Hospital HOWARD DAVID GUNLOCK Chevy Chase, Maryland University of Maryland Mvwmgm. i THOMAS PEGRAM GRAHAM, IR Charlotte, North C aroliiia Duke University Pediatrics Boston Children's Medical ROBERT BRENT HARR1soN Greer, South Carolina Duke University Surgery Rotating George Washington University St. Anthony Hospital Hospital X X ,.,, A G, , 'i3i ,fff i ' -'E , gi . . Y eigh ty-four FMU: Ks., A , X X. NANCY' RosE HASLETI' CHESTER CARL HAWORT'H, IR. EDWARD PETER HOEEMAN Hjzzleczlz, Florida High Point, N orflz C arolizzcz San Mateo, C lI!l.fOl'lZl'tI University of Miami Guilford College Stanford University M edifi 126 M edicizze Rotatifzg George Washington University Duke Hospital Huntington Memorial Hospital Hospital WARREN FREDERICK HOLLAND C ol umbia, South Carolimz University of South Carolina Medicine Grady Memorial Hospital LEVVIS BALL HOLMES McKe11 zie , TC'll llC',S'5C'C' Princeton University PC'lZlftZl'l'l'C5 Massachusetts General Hospital ' efgh ty-fue WILLIAINI RILEY Ht:TeHINs De Lmzd, F!0l'l'!l'd University of the South Rofatzizzg Norfolk General Hospital R A Y I R L L, HD' I N ON wad, K 3 HQ BARRY NOEL HYMAN Mnzrni, Florida University of Miami Medicine Grady Memorial Hospital CHARLES MARIIJN IAMES f1!bC'l71CH'!C', North Cnrolimz Davidson College Mixed Medical College of Virginia ,.,. . U .oy Q 3 3 PASCAL IOHN IMPERATO Plenrmztznlle, New York The Iohns Hopkins University Medicine Syracuse Medical Center IERRY LEE IONES Raleigh, N orth C 6lI'O!lilZ6l University of North Carolina Rotating Philadelphia General Hospital V -1.7 lm M nigh ly-.ff.r 1 if ALTON EVERETTE IAMES, IR. Rohcrsozzznlle, N orth Carolina University of North Carolina Medzdrze University of Florida Hospital PAUL WESI,EY' IONES Porlhnzd, Oregon Lewis and Clark College Rotating Emmanuel Hospital H f ' fl 1-erik ! IOHN PAUL KAPP Galax, Vlifglllllitl Duke University Surgery Medical College of Virginia EDWARD LLOYD LEWIS, Grc'e11sl2oro, Georgia Davidson College Rotating University of Virginia IR. Hospital X saw' ' 1-..,. Q W' ,J 'Y ,, J If fl!! PETER OGDEN KOHLER DONALD IAMES KRDE Blaclqsbttrg, Virgizzla Baltimore, Maryland University of Virginia University of North Carolina M6dl'Cl'llC Patlzology Duke Hospital Duke Hospital RICHARD ANDREW L1c:UoR1 OU6I'bl'00k Hills, Pfllllfyllfflllltl University of Pennsylvania Rotating Methodist Hospital EUGENE MDNRDE Lows, Il BZll'l1illgl0lZ, N ortlz Carolina Davidson College Medirizze University of Alabama Hospital -2' , ---e , , tw ii un-D Wan, ii i il i , xg eighty-,vez'fz1 , 5, Z Mriaf axnnnmrvme' R Q t 'ffb lt Q t DONALD TRUESDELL LUCEY EMANUELE Uno MANNARINO Daytona Beach, Florida Rome, Italy University of Florida University of Rome Mixed Surgery University of Virginia Hospital Duke Hospital ROBERT WADE MARKHAM CHARLES RICHARDSON MARTIN Apex, N ortlz Carolina Wilmington, N ortlz Carolina University of North Carolina Duke University M ed ieine Rotating Indiana University Hospital University of Alabama Hospital , I ,X ,',,, Q Z? ii 45 Z ,ff 7 i f W I 1 eiglzty-eiglit ELLIOT LEE MARCUS Tam pa, Florida Duke University Meclieine University of Alabama Hospital ANGUS MURDOCH MCBRYDE, IR. Darlzam, N ortlz Carolina Davidson College Surgery University of Pennsylvania Hospital mm-A K 4 .... , . 2 f It I I WILLIANI OXPVEN MCMILLAN, IR. Clmrlestolz, West Virginia Duke University Mixed University of Virginia Hospital IOHN SAMUEL POINDEXTER, III Siwazzzzah, Georgia Davidson College Medieizze Eugene Talmadge Hospital it W' gawk ,Q , - nga 'fr V , fi 1 ' ' V ffmp ,Q 9 S fi LAWRENCE WHITE MOORE, IR. Blizelqsbzirg, Virgizziei Virginia Polyteclinical Institute Rolaiifzg University of Colorado Hospital DULON DEVON POLLARD B6lI5OlZ, North Cilrolimi University of North Carolina Medicine Watts Hospital Q ,X PHILIP BAIRD OLIVA Garfield, New lersey Duke University Medicine Georgetown University Hospital IOHN MARSHALL PoRTER C oizeord , N orzlz CLIl'0Il'l2tI Duke University Surgery Duke Hospital its I ' im ' Qu-.... Af- 9,,,5M 4-1 -A XX it I eigh ly-nine IAMES OSCAR REDDINO NORMAN IEFFREY ROBINSON Aslzeboro, North Carolina Charleston, West Virginia Duke University University of West Virginia Rotating Rotating Cincinnati General Hospital U. S. Army HENRY FAISON SAFRIT NATHAN EUGENE SAINT'-AMAND Beaufort, North Carolina Gajney, South Ca1'ol1'1zn Duke University Duke University M ed ict n 6 Pc'dz'nt1'1'c5 Georgetown University Hospital University of California Hospital THOMAS EARL RUNYAN M in neapolis, M innesota United States Military Academy Surgery Walter Reed Hospital FRANK KASH SEWELL, IR. Mt. Stcvltzzg, Kentztflqy Vanderbilt University Rotating Charity Hospital ninety ? Q R- My ,. t .pusy e ..A ,..1. .. , STEPHEN IAY SHIMM Coral Gables, Florida Duke University Mediciize Grady Memorial Hospital KARL IOHN STUMPF Diirlzam, North Caroliiza Duke University QQ ilkv' -OIUHUQ' il' xi, E. THOMAS SPROLES, II Kingsport, T611 izessee Duke University Rotating Queens Hospital OWEN BRITT TABOR Tiftoiz, Georgia Wesleyan University , ,ir - Rotatiiz g Rotating Blodgett Memorial Hospital University of Pennsylvania Hospital v-:i: R- Q . :, 5 , px A x l I 1' ninety-our 4 f iytganw- V-.Q gf, Qrmw v ',M ty! ' l .Y 4' 1 1 Q xr z ,L -'ft '11 HENRH' VON How SToEvER, III Ditrlzam, N ortlz Caroliiza Princeton University Surgery Medical College of Virginia WALLER LITTLEPAGE TAYLOR, IR Virgiizia Beach. Virginia Davidson College Medicine Medical College of Virginia ' 'iii JK ,gum l f l KS' RAYMOND LENOID THOMAS Columbia, South Carolina University of South Carolina Mc'a'icz'nc' Medical College of South Carolina ABE WALSTON, ll Walstolzhurg, N orlh Carolina University of North Carolina Resemfch Duke Hospital RANDALL B. VANDERBEEK Charlcslozz, West Virginia Duke University Rowling King County Hospital NOEL WILLIAM YOUNG, IR. Durham, N orzh Carolina Duke University M edicinc' Duke Hospital ll 4. 111'r1cty-two l v 4 l 1 SG if ig i X I 'k i ,i JAI f ' 5 A is st ,Wi 1 N.. The class of 1963 is the last of many to feel the guiding hand of Dean Davison. lt is also the first of many to share the privi- lege of the scholarships in his name. To his list of glowing accolades, the class of IQ63 adds its modest and affectionate admiration for The Dean, philosopher, teacher, physician, friend. ninety-three THIRD 'YEAR CLASS CHARLES VIRGIN R. H. Alexander B. L. Allen, Ir. M. S. Amstey P. A. Anderson I. Arluk W. S. Barber C. F. Barnett, Ir. W. W. Baxley ninety-four fw- sag 6, S if . ff Q.. .J '55 X W A.. .1 M gg? , X ' .Y -..gg Mm .. , . - a s Wi? x- .ag X 54 N A 93 :NAVY .X .. I, . V.. , f.. Z:33..fN:A. Z.5' ' .... ---- -.-. .W -.1 ' f f f 5? N 'A ? ' .: ' we. .. .W ,.g. l .. -. xf , f:-Q W ' ..-W. . vu- - , 00' gif. .. a J ff' .5 Q. 9 V 5 65 f iazssj : ' -fix:-.. X agsffyg f z5 QQ. . Q 5 Pr ' .. A ' 'fffll .. : sb -Z . 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P 43, Q , AME A .Q . f , .gn f f, f ff Q QQ J 'YY gif cz ,, f es Z v 1 5 , , , ' A 'E 4 92 f lf' X f Z' A if Q f Q C A f ,, M . fi iv' KV x VQ x 1 N xx? -6 xo., 3 e 4- 3 .. . ,, Q A 41 .www vi? wwf .r7,5,'?igs. .-A f . . 11 llnffu-f1.11P W. H. licll, II F. A. licrnc S. G. 15 fmcmlm c C. C. Iircmcr I. W. Curruth, N. B. Chase A. Gottinghzl I. L. Dobson R. W. Drury D. B. Dubin R. O. Fricdcl M. A. Fronslin K. S. Given H. P. Goldman R. S. Gooding R. Gorenberg I. L. Green, Ir. F. L. Grover I. H. Hall F. T. Hannah I. M. Harrelson, III B. H. Harris, III L. S. Harris I. D. Hart M. H. Hecht H. I. Herring, Ir. A. L. Hinshaw I. W. Holsinger, Ir H. P. Hyde L. E. Iacobson C. A. Iohnsou H. E. Kzmn I. R. Karickhoff V. I. Keraneu D. N. Keys G. M. Kornreich I. R. Lanuiug A. M. Larimer I. I. LaRosa S. M. Lazarus C 4 fin. + :'.., ' 4 fins., .s..653GW12 .new A :.: 5.9! 1--4 ni11c'ty-six ,Ana w we ,www 71 Inez y-fe uen K. R. Lewis XV. Ci. Liukos D. VV. Martin, Ir. R. S. Miiilie-ws I. S.Mz1yson A. D. MCc3L1lCl1Lll1 R. McGraw, Ir. I. D. MeLuugbin M. A. Nash S. L. Nickmun R. C. Noble D. P. Pauls c111 I. B. Powell T. B. Price S. D. Rzivenel S. S. Roberts M. L. Robison C. R. Roe F. L. Ruben C. I. Rubenstein ll. W. RuFfner, Ir G. F. Schmitz W. R. Scott D. SCI'Lll:lll R. L. Shields P. T. Shiner D. G. Slaughter L. Springer M. L. Steer K. D. Struuh N. P. Struuse, III R. H. Tunkel r L. lx. Totten I. VV. Turner, Ir. C. R. Vernon , - Q.. IL. Virgin T. Wilson R. I-I. Winter M. L. Wolli 11il1ezy-eight SECO D 'YEAR CLASS PRESIDENT -if . L - w a 1. ' M. Andriola B. B. Baker I. Y. Barbee W. R. Bender E. H. Bosseu G. A. Butcher S. A. Butcher T. P.. Clancy 3. IOSEPH MARKER C i 11 in et y 12 ine Nw it X i 6 K Q X Q' gr Agp. I '-X' f..' 3,5 3., freak 1 Y if 6 vw. 49 A l t. 4953, .,, .4::,: VZAZ . 1 HVAVE .. 2 f' - - '- N.-'4-1' , .- 'v . f :k?.'.'.fI:' r 1 - A..W fiZ'fI .' 1,5 A ,, W5.. 48014, yigggggg I f 'R 1' ii I f' f W f W! 1 FS W4 one l1und1'c'a' F. V. Coville R. C. Crawford I. D. Dirkers L. T. Donavan W. M. Dunlap C. Eisdorfer I. L. Emlet R. R. Fagan L. M. Flint, Ir. I. L. Frank F. H. Gerber H. K. Gold F. Q. Graybeal, I. E. Green R. H. Gross E. Cvuuzzo S. C. Hall R. E. Haruer I. B. Haslam I. E. Hasson I D. M. Hawkins T. C. Hoyle III R. Katz E. D. Kay, Ir. R. P. Krueger S. M. Kulvin E. S. Le-:Bauer C. C. Liunemann B. A. Lucas I. E. Markee, Ir. D. R. Maynard R. E. McCanter I. D. McCracken F. H. McGregor, I. S. Minus C. T. Moorman, G. L. Odom A. I-I. O'Quinn I. G. Nuckolls M. M. Oken 3 Ir II 3 - --1 -. ,QQ ' 12 I ' 4 0 4 W I, , vw . mn I. ,z If Ir p X' 3 X in ffuii mu 20,2 -K WW ' VJ! 4' ,A s' f I by fa, f' 91 A 71 fig W 'B 4-s'1 DNP llflnrlrnzl 'Qi H. .f : Y . --. L fl: ,...--K k.,gA M ! X ' ' . lf z lm -- ,. Y 5: .. ' .2 -W a . VV,,- 1.,: ' . A .,, ., f 5 ' .- N . 7 .4 , V X My .V ff f Q I Aff P. .. ,,,. KX ,..,4M,f f W.. .x,, I . 013 ff' f 1 A , ' 'gezvw ' W3 2 ji Q' 5 Sv lm. - , 1 .of ,ff 4 .f ' Q . .f M A 9 W.. 2 ' , ...J ' Q Y E., if 4 ggy, 'f.6 43 62- .31 Fl iifb Sli' lv: 4 J 494 ,.f2.:'::. fi-' Ee. .-X514 B , , IL 4 . .,. X :-Q-4. ,fm :- -,b ' ' A NV VA A 6 . . I 'M 5. f' Q? Wim , xy x + QQ gf' f 'Q ,M . f o- f V fam , Q A' ff' . . f fr I Q .,.., 1, 495 W I ' hy . an I '46 AG one hundred qnd two I. G. Powell A. R. Price K. P. Ramming I. P. Reitt C. P. Riley L. A. Rogers I. B. Rouse E. I. Sanford L. M. Saputo P. C. Scheidt N. R. Scott S. K. Shilling I. H. Shore K. T. Schultz W. H. Spencer, W. C. A. Stcrnbergh Ir H. L. Stewart H. B. Stone T. A. Sullivan, Ir I. I. Sulzycki I. B. Taylor K. W. Taylor G. S. Wagner I. W. Weeks J. D. Williams c. B. Wright W. S. Yuncy I. D. Zuepfel M. Andriola L. A. Cancellaro A. G. Cavallaro R. Crummie A. I. DiCroce D. S. Goldman E. P. Lively G. S. Scott B. Stewart B. Venetta x . fl. ,, C 9 1 Z l ,. if , 1 , X. 1 Af o 3' l I . X r ...,,.. 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W 6 , I I , ' -zffiolmzfl gi' rv 1 4 4 , 4 , 457 f-f ' 49 ff Wy 0' FIRST TEAR CLASS P SI EN LEW ZIRKLE ,WW 3 ' 1 f .1 2' M415 ' me ' ff. J' 2 if Z f AAX2 . X one l1u11drcd and four C. S. Adler I. A. Alexander B. T. Allen, Ir. D. W. Allen I. K. Allen R. E. Appen R. M.. Ballentine, Ir R. C. Bechtel, Ir. P. E. Berry W. R. Bland E. C. Borden I. W. Bradford J ' E. W. Brian, R. G. Brown P. G. Burk I. L. Clark E. B. Cooper, I I. N. Crook C. Culver D. P. Currie W. E. Davis W. B. Dick W. S. Dillingham W. H. Duke B. Ferris R. B. Fisher R. F. Ford W. W. Fox .ff tp A 1 if in ' ,af if , 2 I. one hzmrlrcrd and jim' JO D. G. Graham I. A. Grant, Ir. I. E. Greene T. M. Grehl I. A. Halikas E. B. Hammett G. M. Hayter C. B. Herron D. C. Hitch C. B. Hopkins T. M. Hudson I. R. Iohnson G. L. Kline S. E. Kohler A. M. Lewis L. A. Lohrbauer I. G. McCL1lly D. McGregor E. R. McNeill M. MCD. Martin ' .- 2 f f , X 'UQ 'Q M, ,, . .aw . 13- M 0116 hundred and six ,I I JM.. 'Xi lv l tjif w i I f X xy . I fx ff one lzzzzzdlwd 1171117 .vezfcvz R. iVIilL1llUllL' lf. H. MfJIIiSS,i I. L. Nash C. Niemeyer C. li. Norton, Ir W. H. Obenour R. T. Osteen S. M. P11inter,Ir E. A. Palmer V. A. Perriello, Ir W. C. Pierson. Ir W. D. Price M. S. Redding I. M. Rich J. D. Robertson M. P. Rozegir I. E. Sgiltz. Ir. I. P. Shuck. Ir. C. T. Smith D. H. Smith ' ...Q S- 1 3.. Q ,., ,. ,, gf ,rg if s K9 , V V 'D A ff r , fer? 6 tw 15 bf Wk? fi' t 1 fu V ' 4 5, , 4 i 'gi f 7592! y, one hzmzfmrz' and sigh! I. A. Snead I. Taylor R. H. Threlkel L. L. Wasserman, I. Weber, Ir. C. A. Wellington I. M. Witherspoon 4-uv -4. M, s . ls.. .. '. ,, nn. .... A ,nl 1 I zu susan. W... 5353 Vt, , 150115 . ' AY mv' X lg ,tu-f 1 nu. V 1 mr is? 1 Q .Q .,, 'V M. - wk' ' ,W M ,. s . , if , x as-av M.-if ummm sf MM MM. N .-a-.we X Q. Us A.. , swmmys nw ' awww 'ZW' H ... M ww A bk ,, W 'www 'WA QKY6' . max '31 sew, . 'bm . . xx.-YQ: Nm' Nw -T if wa . , ,X , -X. ., f x ' X Mwwq ,Q-A W' -uma M, W -My P M Q mae M M W X qw ww ,X my as-Qmfnx Rem' was hw, NNN w wma-wx Xxwg ,, W +3388 7 'M-nl J we M.. k A E 2 Q if , - , , M, -, Mx.. 'E . 'W 'Q ua...4 su fl x -.4-. ann . , ,. 'a -. 4 4.07. V- . a 'H 1 'Q 1. ,. t. .,,, ., ,.. 11 Z, I. A U4 52 nu 4 .- 4 Tl16VDLIUI.50lZ Builzfing one hZl71!17I'C'l11 and nine' -x .K ff' A Duke H ofpilal Uurluznz Vc'tcran,c X1 rf 771 in iftrclti on H ospitul 1 A f I f X ' f f f i , A, .A , ,, 4 , l,,33ggfggQzMg3gg3?9w . ,ff 'I' X, M YA X ,vw TWHIH firkfiggiiy :MM new ww H illii geliik 15356 zgnnss HF? FY , I . , ' -7 ? N, f g 55 Bell Bllljliillg Q 3-',,,x Ty i. ,,, 3 1 - 9 FQ iq 'rl gygg, -2, '. ' 4 f ' - 'C , A liz, for 4 ' ey , Bukw' H ousc' If-92 ' one hundred and elcvczz it-N , The m'wc'st LIZIIIIJUIUOIZ -- The GC'l'I'dlI'l.C5 and Trcuztmerzzf Center one hzmdrcd and Zzuclzfc Ayers, Charles B. Banghart, Harry P. Banta, Henry D. Beamer, Yancy B. Bicknell, William I. Black Graig G. Bolton, Iohn C. Broughton, Ioseph O., Byrnes, Thomas H., Ir. Carlton, Thomas K., Carter, Iames A. Carter, William A. Caskey, C. Thomas Chang, Wallace H. I. Church, Clay F. Cline, Robert E. Doyle, Robert A. Driver, Doyle, Ir. Durrett, Ray R. Edwards, E. Stephen Emery, Iohn B., Ir. Entman, Mark L. Farrell, James B. Fortney, Sidney R. Gabor, Andrew I. Gilbert, Walter R., Ir. Glasser, Ioel S. Goldston, William R. Graham, Thomas P., Grant, George R., Ir. Gunlock, Howard D. Harrison, Robert B. Haslett, Nancy R. Haworth, Chester C., Hoiirman, Edward P. Ir. Ir. Ir. Holland Warren F., lr. Holmes, Lewis B. Hull, William M., Ir. Hutchinson, William R., IV Hyman, Barry N. lmperato, Pascal Iames, A. Everette, Ir. James, Charles M. Iones, Ierry L. Iones, Kenneth L. jones, Paul W. Kapp, john Paul Kohler, Peter O. Kramer, Arnold LaRosa, Iohn DIRECTORY Senior Glass one hundred 16 Meeting St., Charleston, S.C. 5401 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 1307 D Leon St., Durham, N.C. 240 W. Lebanon St., Mt. Airy, N.C. 35 Mayo Rd., Wellesley, Mass. 20062 Englewood Ave., Durham, N.C. Box 116, St. Paul, Va. 2924 Hydrangea Place, Wilmington, N.C 919 Mt. Vernon Ave., Charlotte, N.C. Box 82, Salisbury, N.C. 340 Dixon Dr., N.W., Gainesville, Ga. 3627 Kentucky Ave., Norfolk, Va. 1653 Kathwood Dr., Columbia, S.C. 647 W. 207th St., New York 34, N.Y. Box 729, Mt. Hope, W.Va. Box 545, Southern Pines, N.C. 2606 Marathon Lane, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla 2802 Erwin Road, Durham, N.C. 2QO2w Carver St. Ext., Durham, N.C. Box 37, Spring Hope, N.C. Pitman-Richmond Rd., Pitman, N.I. 1225 Inwood Terrace, Iacksonville 7, Fla. Rt. 1, Box 521, Carlsbad, N.M. 941 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N.C. 858 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 520 Crescent Rd., Griffin, Ga. 1609 Flamingo Dr., Orlando, Fla. Rt. 1, Wake Forest, N.C. 815 Lamar Ave., Charlotte, N.C. 1109 Arsenal Ave., Fayetteville, N.C. 3403 Thornapple St., Chevy Chase, Md. 407 W. Poinsett St., Greer, S.C. 518 E. 21'lCl Ave., Hialeah, Fla. P.O. Box 1551, High Point, N.C. X48 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 102 Southwood Dr., Columbia, S.C. 2306 Elba St., Durham, N.C. 640 E. Main St., Rock Hill, S.C. 230 E. New York Ave., DeLand, Fla. 3140 S.W. 14th St., Miami, Fla. 225 Gld Sleepy Hollow Rd., Pleasantville NY Robersonville, N.C. 628 Cannon Ave., Albemarle, N.C. 3223 Sussex Rd., Raleigh, N.C. 16 North Va. Ave., Brunswick, Md. 142 Berkeley St., Durham, N.C. 120 Newell St., Durham, N.C. Box 502, Blacksburg, Va. 105-28 65th Ave., Forest Hills 75, N.Y. 2404 Vessons Ave., Apt 5, Durham, N.C. and fourlccrz Lewis, Edward L., Ir. Liguori, Richard A. Long, Eugene M., ll Lucey, Donald T. McBryde, Angus M., lr. McMillan, William O., lr Mannarino, Emanuelc U. Marcus, Elliot L. Markham, R. Wade Martin, Charles R. Moore, Lawrence W., Ir. Oliva, Philip is. Poindexter, Iohn S., IH Pollard, Dulon D. Porter, john M. Redding, James O. Robinson, Norman I. Runyan, Thomas E. Safrit, Henry F. Saint-Amand, Nathan E. Sewell, Frank K., Ir. Shimm, Stephen Sproles, E. Thomas, II Stoever, Henry V. H., Ill Stumpf, Karl Tabor, Owen B. Taylor, Waller L., Ir. Thomas, Raymond L. Vanderbeek, Randall B. VValston, Abe, II Young, Noel W., lr. Alexander, Raymond H. Allen, Benjamin L., Ir. Amstey, Marvin S. Anderson, Page A. Barber, Wayne S. Barnett, Crawford F. Baxley, William W. Bell, Willis H., II Berne, Freeman A. Bremer, C. Christopher Carruth, Iames W., Ir. Chase, Norman B. Cottingham, Andrew I., Dobson, Iohn L. Drury, Robert W. Dubin, David B. Friedel, Robert O. Fronstin, Michael H. Given, Kenna S. Goldman, David S. 2o5 South St., Greensboro, Ga. 1516 Slit-tiield Lane, Philadelphia 51, Pa. 2826 Erwin Rd., Durham, N.C. 125 Rosalyn Ave., Daytona Beach, Fla. .ISIC lirwin Rd., Durham, N.C. 5o1o Kanawha Ave., Charleston, W.Va. H511 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 917 Golfview Ave., Tampa, Fla. Rt. 1, Apex, N.C. IXIO Market St., Wilmington, N.C. Box 112, Blacksburg, Va. 528 Gaston Ave., Garfield, NJ. 6254 liast Jjlll St., Savannah, Ga. Rt. 5, Benson, N.C. N55 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 541 li. Salisbury St., Asbeboro, N.C. 2oo4 Fairview Rd., Durham, N.C. 51,04 Northwood Circle, Durham, N.C. Beaufort, N.C. S112 College Drive, Gallney. S.C. 5o5 N. Sycamore, Mt. Sterling, Ky. 154o Urbino Ave., Coral Gables, Fla. 175 W. Sevier St., Kingsport, Tenn. k?,OlI Buckingham Rd., Durham, N.C. 127 Pinecrest Rd., Durham, N. C. GOI Chestnut Ave., Tifton, Ga. 414 25th St., Virginia Beach, Va. 1426 Berkeley St., Durham, N.C. S114 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. Box 115, Walstonburg, N.C. 4424 Ryan St., Durham, N.C. uriiofr Class om' hzmdrc' 1201 Fairheld Dr., Gastonia, N.C. 416 Forest Ave., Spartanburg, S.C. 8115 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 5715 Telegraph Ave., Oakland, Calif. o55 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N.C. 2628 Rivers Road, N.W., Atlanta 5, Ga. 514o Vista Circle, Macon, Ga. 46.4 S. 6th St., Indiana, Penna. 52117 Eubanks Circle, Durham, N.C. 18115 Tryon Rd., New Bern, N.C. 225 E. 5rd Ave., Red Springs, N.C. Rt. 2, Lewisburg, W.Va. 3512 Courtland Dr., Durham, N.C. 1155 N. Harrison St., Arlington, Va. 317 N. Davis Rd., Palm Springs, Fla. Westover Park Apt. D-5, Durham, N.C. Q57 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N.C. 1406 Duke University Rd., Durham, Ni II3 Koontz Ave., Clendenin, WV.Va. 98411 64th Ave., Forest Hills, 74 N.Y. 11 ana' flew: Gooding, Ronald S. Gorenberg, Richard Green, Iames L., Ir. Grover, Frederick L. Hall, Iohn H. Hannah, Frank T. Harrelson, john M., Ill Harris, Benjamin S. H., Ill Harris, Lee S. Hart, I. Deryl Hecht, Manfred H. Herring, Herbert I., Ir. Hinshaw, Arned L. Holsinger, Iames W., Ir. Hyde, Howard P. Jacobson, Leonard E. Johnson, Charles A. Kllllll, Herbert E. Karickhoil, Iohn R. Keranen, Victor Keys, David N. Kornreich, George M. Kroe, Donald Lanning, Ioseph R. Larimer, Alan M. Lazarus, Stephen M. Lewis, Kay R. Liakos, William G. Lively, Edmund P. McCutchan, Arthur D. McGraw, Ralph, Ir. McLaughlin, Ioseph D., Ir. Martin, Davis W., Ir. Mathews, Robert S. Mayson, Iames S. Nash, Martin A. Nickman, Steven L. Noble, Robert C. Paulson, David F. Powell, Iames B. Price, Thomas B. Pruitt, Harry Ravenel, Samuel D. Roberts, Stuart Robinson, Michael L. Roe, Charles R. Rubenstein, Carl Ruffner, B. Winfred, Ir. Schmitz, George F. Scott, William R. Serahn, Donald Shields, Ralph L. Shiner, Philip T. Slaughter, Donald G. Box 579, Pampa, Tex. 4553 Alton Rd., Miami Beach, Fla. 600 S. Wingate St., Wake Forest, N.C. 2323 N. Utah St., Arlington 7, Va. 304 Byrd Dr., Fairfax, Va. 1661 Iohnson Rd., N.E. Atlanta 6, Ga. 1124 Cedrow Ave., High Point, N.C. 1310 G Leon St., Durham, N.C. Yamaw Dr., Sarasota, Fla. 2324 Duke University Rd., Durham, N.C. 142 Laurel Hill Terrace, 5-I, N.Y. 40, N.Y 2010 Myrtle Drive, Durham, N.C. 1302 Cleveland Ave., Burlington, N.C. 2306 Wilson St., Durham, N.C. 517 Grand Ave., Pierre, S.D. 518 Tisdale Place, Woodbridge, NJ. 960 N. Center St., Hickory, N.C. 3818 Westclifl Rd., S., Ft. Worth, Tex. Crescent Dr., Spencer, W.Va. 823A Burch Ave., Durham, N.C. 208 Brooke Dr., Fredericksburg, Va. Stratford Rd., Harrison, N.Y. 24-L-Aileron St., Baltimore, Md. 660 Carolina Springs Rd., N. Augusta, SL 526 W. College St., Granville, Ohio 600 F.. 18th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 1707 Forest Rd., Durham, N.C. Bayard, Neb. 119 S. Main St., Reidsville, N.C. Box 1247, Salisbury, N.C. 1223 Main St., Follansbee, W.Va. Box 360, Mystic, Conn. 210 Osceola Way, Palm Beach, Fla. Edonton Highway, Hertford, N.C. 6623 Brookshire Dr., Dallas 30, Tex.- 7OI Roslyn Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C. 2 S. Berby Ave., Ventnor, NJ. 2717 Fairview Rd., Raleigh, N.C. 3 Lake Dr., Bay Ridge, Annapolis, Md. Box 306, Elon College, N.C. 1019 Iackson Ave., Florence, S.C. 213 Harmony St., New Castle, Del. 106 Fisher Park Circle, Greensboro, N.C. 3231 Rochambeau Ave., Bronx, N.Y. IO8 Davidson Ave., Durham, N.C. 703 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 138 Kearny Ave., Perth Amboy, NJ. Q47 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N. C. 3100 N. Sheridan Rd., Chicago 14, Ill. 215 W. New, Nazareth, Pa. 521 S. Pheeps, Winter Park, Fla. 3107 Center St., Bethlehem, Pa. 310 Oakridge Court, Front Royal, Va. 200 Paddington Rd., Baltimore, Md. one hundred and sixteen Springer, Leonard Steer, Michael L. Straub, Karl D. Strause, Nathan P., III Tankel, Robert Totten, Larry K. Turner, Iames W., Ir. Vernon, Charles R. Virgin, Charles E. Wilson, Thomas Winter, Robert H. Wolk, Michael L. Andriola, Mary T. R. Andriola, Michael I. Baker, Bernie B. Barbee, Iohn U., Ir. Bender, William R. Bossen, Edward H. Butcher, Gene A. Butcher, Suzanne A. Cancellaro, Louis A. Clancy, Thomas P. Coville, Frederick V. Crawford, Robert C. Crummie, Robert C. Daniel, Eubert I. Dirkers, Ierry D. Donovan, Lawrence T Dunlap, William M. Eisdorfer, Carl Emlet, Iohn L. Fagin, Ronald R. Flint, Lewis M., Ir. Frank, Iames L. Gerber, Frederic H. Gold, Herman K. Goldman, David S. Graybeal, Frederick Q., Ii. Green, Iames E. Gross, Richard H. Guazzo, Eugene I. Hall, Snowden C. Harner, Russell E. Haslam, Iohn B. Hasson, Iohn E. Hawkins, David M. Hoyle, Thomas C., III Katz, Richard I. Kay, Earl D., Ir. Krueger, Ronald P. Kulvin, Stephen M. 12115 St. George Ave., Roselle, N.I. liitzsimons Army Hospital, Denver, 5o4 Kinglan Rd., Louisville 7, Ky. Box 1119, Henderson, N.C. 87 W. Haledon Ave., Haledon, N.I. Racine, W.Va. Hillcrest Dr., Great Falls, S.C. Colo fl!!!-A Maplewood Ave., Durham, N.C. 3635 St. Gaudens Rd., Miami 33, Fla. 862 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. Box 35, LeRoy, Ohio 147o Parkchester Rd., New York 62, N.Y. Sophomore Class one hundred 8119 Englewood Ave., Durham, N.C. X119 Englewood Ave., Durham, N.C. Tyner, N.C. Scottsville Rd., Bowling Green, Ky. 526 S. Main, Red Springs, N.C. 1255 Belevedere Ave., Iacksonville, Fla. 429 Robbins Ave., Niles, Ohio 42Q Robbins Ave., Niles, Ohio 401 W. Madison Ave., Dumont, N.I. 2832 Ridgewood Ave., Cincinnati, Ohi Box 34, Atkinson, N.C. Rt. 2, Box 3o5B, Durham, N.C. 3ooo Chapel Hill Rd., Durham, N.C. 5o6 Buchanan Blvd., Durham, N.C. O 5932 Oakland Ave., S., Minneapolis 17, Minn 215 Purefoy Rd., Chapel Hill, N.C. 6o5 Lake Boone Trail, Raleigh, N.C. 3423 Hope Valley Rd., Durham, N.C. Apt. 11-C, 2oo E. 6ISI St., N.Y. 21, N.Y. 1o56 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. I2 Normandy Rd., Ft. Lee, Va. 631 Willow St., Mt. Airy, N.C. 5708 Kingswood Rd., Bethesda. Md. 856 18th St., Newport News, Va. 98-40 64th Ave., Forest Hills 74, NX. 222 North St., Marion, Va. 2124 LaVista Cr., Hopeville, Ga. 35 Greenwood St., Andover, N.Y. 545 S. Iefferson St., Orange, N.I. III Linden Dr., Danville, Va. 937 Longwood Ave., Los Angeles 19, Calif 1951 Grightwaters Blvd., St. Petersburg, F11 221 Fairfield Ave., Iohnstown, Pa. 2620 S.W. 4th St., Miami 35, Fla. Granville Rd., Durham, N.C. 2557 Steele Rd., Baltimore, Md. 1007 E. River St., Anderson, S.C. 224 Old Short Hills Rd., Short Hills. 1881 S.W. 36 Court, Miami, Fla. and seventeen N1 LeBauer, Eugene S. Lively, Edmund P. Linneman, Calvin C., Lucas, Bruce A. McArt11r, R11bert E. McCracken, Ioseph D McGregor, Frank H.. Markee, I11seph E.. Ir lVILlyl1llI'Cl, David R. Minus, Ioseph S. Mllllfllillll, Claude T. Nikides, Leah Nuckolls. Iames G. Odom, Guy L. Oken, Martin M. O'Quinn, Aglaia H. Powell, I11hn G. Price, Andrew R. Ramming, Kenneth P. Reitt, Iames P. Riley, Charles P. Rogers, Larry A. R11use, Iames B. SLll1f0I'Cl, Edgar I. Saput11, Leonard M. Scheidt, Peter C. Scott, George S. Scott, Neil R. Shilling, Sara K. Sh11re, Iames H. Shultz, Kirkwood T. Spencer, William H.. Sternbergh, VV. Charles A., Ir. Stewart, Betty G. Stewart, Henry L. Stone, Harry B.. Ill Sullivan, Thomas A. Sulzycki, Iames I. Taylor, Iack B. Taylor, Iane C. Tayl11r, Kenneth VV. Venctta, Benjamin D. Wagner, Galen S. Watson, Charles I Weeks, I11hn W. Williams, Iack D. Wright, Creighton B. Yancy, Williams S. Zaepfel, Ioseph D. Adler, Charles S. 1XlL'X2lI1ClCI', Iamcs A. 9111 Cornwallis Dr., Greensboro, N.C. 119 South Main St., Reidsville, N.C. 591 Parkview Dr., Burlington, N.C. 12119 Washington St., Durham, N.C. 769 E. 5th St., Salem, Ohio 219 N. Brown St., Orlando, Fla. 23113 Pratt Ave., Apt. 7, Durham, N.C. 11115 Demerius St., Durham, N.C. 341 Bellevue Ct., Los Altos, Calif. 16 Iamestown Rd., Charleston, S.C. 1348 N.W. 7th St., Miami, Fla. 111511 Cottonwood Rd., Dayton, Ohio 5112 W. Stuart Dr., Galax, Va. 121 Whitfield Rd., Durham, N.C. 37 Glen Ellyn Way, R11chester, N.Y. 111511 Cottonwood Rd., Dayton, Ohio 91113 16th St., Silver Spring, Md. 4672 Malden Dr., Wilmingt11n, Del. 3812 Lillie St., F11rt Wayne, Ind. 224 W. Trinity Ave., Durham, N.C. 221 Roszel Rd., Winchester, Va. 511119 Rembert Dr., Raleigh, N.C. 311117 Fairview Rd., Raleigh, N.C. STI Haverling St., Bath, N.Y. III Sleepy Hollow Lane, Orinda, Calif Highland, Md. 311112 Wllllfill Way, Augusta, Ga. Rozel, Kan. 1162 Westridge Dr., Troy, Ohi11 2411 W. Main, Danville. Va. 224 Rugby Rd., West Palm Beach, Fla. 221 W. Stewart Ave., Mooresville, N.C. 1217 Belgrave Pl., Charlotte, N.C. Box 98, Pavo, Ga. H117 E. Ninth St., Greenville, N.C. Lambeth Circle, Durham, N.C. 5163 N. 37th Rd., Arlington, Va. 134 W. 39th St., Erie, Pa. 616 Hancock St., SmithHeld, N.C. 3311 N. Church St.. Tupelo, Miss. 935 111119 ILICKSOII Ave., River Forest, Ill. 21122 Pershing Rd., Durham, N.C. 4111 E. Murphy Ave., Connellsville, Pa. 421 Wolf's Lane, Pelham, N.Y. 3 Sayle Rd., Charleston 44, S.C. 215 Mercer, Beckley, W.Va. 9 M11rse Drive, Maplewood, N.I. 6154 Wils11n Blvd., Arlington 5, Va. 317 Mt. Holly Ave., Mt. Holly, N.I. F ifeshmcm Glass 226-49 Kingsbury Ave., Flushing 64, N 12111 Fairfield Dr., Gastonia, N.C. one l1W1d1'611 and eighteen Allen, Barna T. Allen, Davis VV. Allen, Iames K. Appen, Rickard E. Ballentine, Rudolph M., Ir. Bechtel, Ridhard C., Ir. Berry, Peter E. Bland, Wiley R. Borden, Ernest C. Bradford, Iohn W. Brian, Earl W., Ir. Brown, Robert G. Burk, Peter G. Carr, William A. Clark, Ioe L. Cooper, Edwin B., Ir. Crook, Iohn N. Culver, Charles M. Currie, D. Patrick Davis, Walter E. Dick, William B. Dillingham, William S. Duke, William H. Ferris, Barry Fisher, Robert B. Ford, Raymond F. Fox, William W. Graham, Doyle G. Grant, Andrew, Ir. Greene, Iohn E. Grehl, Todd M. Halikas, Iames A. Hammett, Elliott B. Hayter, George M. Herron, Charles B. Hitch, David C. Hopkins, Christie B. Hudson, Terry M. Iohnson, Iames R. Kline, George L. Kohler, Stewart E. Lewis, Alvin Lohrbauer, Leif A. McCully, Iames G. McGregor, Douglas H McNeill, E. Roberta Maki, Dennis G. Martin, Mitz M. Mignone, Robert I. Morriss, Frank H., Ir. Nash, Iames L. Niemeyer, Charles I. Norton, Charles B., Ir. Nucifora, Thomas L. 4012 Hamilton St.. Leaksville, N.C. 919 Lambeth Circle, Durham, N. C. S.C. Industrial School, Florence, S.C. fi2o1 Bresslyn Rd., Nashville. Tenn. Ballentin, S.C. 210 Hillendale Dr., Doylestown, Pa. 2887 Howell Mill Rd., N.VV.. Atlanta 5, Cla Edward, N.C. Box 552, University St., Fayetteville. Ark. 48oo Kanawha Ave.. Charleston, VVA 2111 White Oak Rd., Raleigh. N.C. SQUU Gosnold Ave., Norfolk, Va. 10541 Abbott Ave.. So., Minneapolis, Minn. 1715 Queens Rd., Charlotte. N.C. 17o9 Forest Rd., Durham, N.C. 43118 39th St., N., Arlington 7, Va. 401 S. Railroad Ave., Opelika. Ala. 2417 Shenandoah Ave., Durham, N.C. 2513 Inverness Rd., Charlotte. N.C. 35 Summit Dr., Easley, S.C. 16115 Sedgefield St., Durham. N.C. 318 Elm St., Lancaster, S.C. Rt. 3, Box I95, Wetumpka, Ala. I5 Ofakim Lane, Haifa, Israel 498 Hawthorne St., N.E.. Salem. Ore. 42 Dellwood Ave., Chatham. N.I. 515 Duke St., Durham. N.C. P.O. Box 565, Knox City. Tex. 532 Hart St., Tallahassee. Fla. 2918 Woodside Dr., Tallahassee, Fla. 412 S.W. 7th Ave.. Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. 1153 Both St., Brooklyn 28, N.Y. 121 Andrews Rd., Durham, N.C. 436 Monrovia Ave.. Long Beach 14. Calif. 229 West End Ave., McKenzie. Tenn. Q18 Cowper Dr.. Raleigh, N.C. 309 Southwood Dr., Columbia 5, S.C. 5412 Staunton Ave., S.E., Charleston. XVY. 627 S. Yorktown, Tulsa. Okla. Box 35, Robbins. Tenn. 112 Burruss Dr., Blacksburg, Ya. 1707 Forest Rd., Durham, N.C. 1721 Estelle Dr., Clearwater. Fla. 1556 Parrish Pl.. Iacksonville, Fla. 1411 Green St.. Durham. N.C. 1056 Elm Ave., Columbia. S.C. 528 VV. Dayton, Madison XYis. Halifax Va. 1477 Ridge Rd., North Haven. Conn. 2931 Avenue Birmingham S, Ala. 2327 Englewood Ave., Durham. N.C. 9327 Ocala St., Silver Springs. Fla. 4524 County Club Rd.. Jacksonville, Fla. I7 Winfield Dr., Stratford. Conn. one hundred and nineteen Obenour, William H., Ir Osteen, Robert T. Painter, Simon M., Ir. Palmer. Earl A. Perriello, Vito A., Ir. Pierson, William C., Ir. Price, William D. Redding, Marshall S. Reilly, Maura D. Rich, Iohn M. Robertson, Iames D. Rozear, Marvin P. Saltz, Iames E., Ir. 1201 W. Nokomis Circle, Knoxville 19, Tenn. 610 Anderson Ave., Savannah, Ga. 52 Orchard Rd., Staunton, Va. 557 Warren Ave., Washington C.H., Ohio 1228 Myers Ave., Dunbar, W.Va. 815 Lake Boone Trail, Raleigh, N.C. 5215 Elmsmere Ave., Bethesda 14, Md. 810 Dutch Court, Greensboro, N.C. Overlook Rd., Morristown, NJ. 1064 Lawton, Park Hills, Covington, Ky. 103 Yanthin Way, Weirton, W.Va. 2812 Lydia St., Iacksonville 5, Fla. 1001 28th Ave., N., St. Petersburg, Fla. Scarborough, Walter A., Ir. 223 W. Third St., Wendell, N.C. Shock, Iohn P., Ir. Smith, Craig T. Smith, David H. Snead, Ioseph A. Threlkel, Robert H. Wasserman, Louis L., Ir. Weber, Iaroy, Ir. Wellington, Catherine A. Wilson, Robert A. Witherspoon, Iohn M. Zirkle, Lewis G., Ir. Main St., Webster Springs, W.Va. 550 Riverview Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. 4407 Beechwood Rd., University Pk., Hyattsville, Md 1107 McLees Rd., Anderson, S.C. 2022 Lexington Ave., Owensboro, Ky. 877 Louise Circle, Durham, N.C. 5520 Clinton, Beaumont, Tex. Apartado 45270, Panama City, R.P. Rt. 5, Mayfield Highway, Paducah, Ky. Rt. 1, Box 155D, Brookeville, Md. 801 Kentwood Dr., Blacksburg, Va. one hundred and twenty ff 7 , 'G ' -,,,., 4i'2T?T. r 1 ul., at QA' rw as 1 .g f 0 V ' ' N Q Q -wqnx ,y ,Q N cy-31,41 1 ,,,,,,,L-,Lv . J. ,. ..... ..... . . A H G, ,.... -, , , , ,., f,, Q1 e ' ' t ' - 11- if' -- - 'gaenifg 3' L '-22' rl: qi . 2 num 7317137 nJ5oR7U?IA?.1D J, - A .fifnuai 1-L . t 1 , jg fp QQ, ' ,Y - ,fi-71. I 'rf I 2,1 rl' -- ffzlfixggg f '33, jll fu., -,, 'tg 'cw' - .fiiszh f-.-'lffffj 'SVI I 1'3 ,:5 Ezifjzfrfif3f:,igLl3:L5j:i7f5:F:5Efl? ' - I - ' 'fl' 'V 'ITL' 'I':. :NNE I-'f i.j.'i'- TT- 'L I K . Y. , w,,,,w ww NX SEEMAN PRINTERY INC DURHAM-CHAPEL HILL BLVD. V Serving Industry und Education in the Southeast for Over Seventy-Jive Years Thi is a cap ule... ' ' ' and it looks deceptively simple. Certainly not as complex as an x-ray machine, a fully equipped operating room, or a modern pharmaceutical analysis laboratory. But appear- ances can be deceiving. Into this capsule went countless hours of research, the clinical investi- gation of thousands of patients by scores of physicians and-finally-painstaking manufactur- ing controls. And-with the help of this capsule- physicians are able to provide more effective care for their patients. Smith Kline 8t French Laboratories is dedicated to the discovery and manufacture of these seemingly simple medicines . . . prescription drugs which have revolutionized the physician's treatment of his patients. SMITH KLINE 81 FRENCH LABORATORIES when you prescribe estrogens in the rnenopause... consider that current medical opinion avors natural estrogens HI think most of us have agreed here that we would use natural estrogens rather than synthetie ,QW - estrogens because of the likelihood of producing toxic effects with the synthetic compounds.'7:l: We don't use stilbestrol because it causes nausea in a certain number of people, we 'st ti' Ni , . . . . 1 I don t use ethinyl estradiol very often because of headaches and nausea in occasional V . . . U t f people and we prefer conjugated estrogens in its smallest amounts. . . 4' ,A ,,,.:.. A. '-f 'Transatlantic Telephone Symposium, The Effect of Estrogens in the Menopause, 'A ' ' AmsterdamfNew York, 1959. Transcript available on request. ,'-'fa-Zgiwftmww nllzv ,,4V, I , f, ZR Published, J.M.A. Alabama 29.448 cxnyp 1960. stiff 2 r i .. Q 4' fr 6 1 E i: I . - Q J . 'TR ' , eases tewaf U is'-x I XNN il .f '- . ' -'?i'Q.f J ' l, f' 'Jfl' ' f . I. f M ff ' ' lt x W l -f' 'XXV V 'f EM - ' ii Ai Vf Rx , if . X its ff, Ai, , I. if I 515' f 5 4 If 4 A V I N N. N. X' fi f l-. :iii X X X 1 :ll ' 1 -.Xi Xxx ff! i tl t -Qfig ' .fi V W. . X X: I K'- in the menopause-there is no substitute for a specific K Wx H ee ' 99 W the natural oral estrogen that imparts a sense of well-being CONJUGATED ESTROGENSQEQUINEJ Usual dosage: 1.25 mg. daily. Increase or decrease 'fxkk , as required. Cyclim' therapy is recommended 43 , . . . A K .. i . week regimen with lweek rest period, to avoid QMNGY AIERSY LABORATORULS .Nut lorls 16, 3.1. .llUllfI'1lll.l.IllllldIl l continuous stimulation of breast and uterus. I E I 1 . , X f Cy 1 'efwqii 1' feat Kufialzed io the Cfasa of 1963 0rtho Pharmaceutical Corporation, Raritan, New Jersey there are now two new Pelton 8. Crane OMNI-CLAVESQ FOR EVREY STERILIZING REQUIREMENT MODEL OCR PlC'S NEWEST 17 x l4fVg x 2OiV, iii Holds up to 3 trays, the largest MODEL OCM THE ORIGINAL l5 x l2'fQ x l61A KID Holds up to 3 trays, the largest I S'a : measuring 81A x ling x IVA measuring 61A x 74 x I3 I , ,,,. 1 s .11f,Q ., , Iilll 4 f 127 Takes instruments up to l7 C29 Takes instruments up to l3 fl , fV. - '- i fyl ffs ' long, 8 wide long, 6 wide if ' 1 :rs- H ' i3D Reaches pressure in I2 minutes C35 Reaches pressure in IO minutes wif, ' 1-. X' 2 from cold start, less than 5 from cold start, less than 4 5 X ' minutes on successive cycles minutes on successive cycles if ..- A A uNiEoRM EASE or OPERATION is coMMoN 'ro Bo'rH Q' 'Afr 0 'W E o The only dual-purpose single-chamber autoclaves with both 4 V E i steam and dry sterilization o Technically alike in all respects reign ff . I . . 5 P r, oSingle-knob action sets pressure and temperature0Proof ' , ' .Ling of positive steriIization-thermometer in the discharge line 5 I I l 0 Positive locking action door 0 Condensed steam returned to 'ai ,QL-f:- '-, 'g reservoir for re-use. o Trouble-free and thoroughly field-tested, H to keep service and maintenance calls at a minimum 0 Best Model OCM value for the money-the low price will amaze you. Distributors of KNOWN BRANDS of PROVEN QUALITY WIN HESTER CAROLINAS' HOUSE OF SERVICE Winchester Surgical Supply Company Winchester-Ritch Surgical Company II9 East 7th St. Charlotte, N. C. 42l West Smith St. Greensboro, N. C. SHERMAN LABORATORIES Detroit, Michigan In the service of medicine since 1907 PROTAMIDEW ELIXOPHYLLIN PERSlSTIN l Inrrrmunscular injection fo I. V. 'llheopluyllinc lmlooal- l.ong-acting non-narcotic neurltls :mal herpes zost levels olutalncd orally. zmalgc-sic BACTERIAL VACCINES ' PHARMACEUTICALS GOTHIC BOOKSHOP DUKE HOSPITAL STORE UKE NIVERSITY Stones RE CO PROD TS REABELA A. E. P. REAVITA EACH TABLET CONTAINS: EACH TABLET CONTAINS: EACH CAPSULE CONTAINS PHENOBARBITAL ...,..,...,.,. I6 mg AMINOPHYLLIN ...C,...,,.. I 10 cars, VITAMIN A ,..... 5000 U.S.P. unafs HYOSCYANIINE EPHEDRINE SULEATE ..,C.,.,.. 14 Cf. VITAMIN D ,,C,., I000 LI.s.P. Units SULFATE -.--,'--,'---- 0-1037 me PHENOBARBITAL .,,,,,,,I4.,,, IQ Cf, THIAMINE HCL ........,. I 0.00 mg ATROPINE SULFATE ..0.0I94 mg RIBQFLAVIN ,-------.------- 5.90 mg HYOSCINE PYRIDOXINE HCL .,,,.,,, 1.00 mg HYDROBROMIDE .... 0.0065 m9 ASCORBIC ACID .......... 75.00 CAL. PANTOTHENATE 5.00 NIACINAMIDE ..,....,..... 20.00 ALPHATOCOPHEROL .. 5.00 All above stocked by leading wholesalers and retail pharmacies in Southeastern area REACO PRODUCTS P. 0. Box 2747, West Durham, N. C. mQ m9 mg m9 I. T. REAMER, Pres MEN'S GRADUATE CENTER ' Cafeteria ' Coffee Lounge uKE NIVERSITY INING HALLS WEST CAMPUS DINING HALLS 0 Blue and White Room 0 University Room 0 Oak Room H AM EEISAN Giucs trcatmcnt rooms modern, custom look. Snmrlly-stylczl contemporary clcsign crcaics a pleasant, mosphcrc for both doctor and patient. more rclaxing at- LAR Work-and-storage centers tailored for your treatment rooms American Modular is not just a new cabinet -it is an entirely new ideal A complete selec- tion of work-and-storage centers, arranged and positioned exactly where you need them for more productive, less futiguing ofHce hours. American Modular centers Bt old or new, large or small areas-cost less-can be installed easily. AMERICAN CABINETS Hunuuuon mnnuncrunmc comPANY . rwo nlvsns -was Compliments of WHITE LABQRATORIES, INC. Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Kenilworth, N. J. QUALITY if - H Wm 4 4 Tareytcm CIGARETTES S , .... IQ kr? 2 U' 4 ' 'P M W DU f um SUE Hn' Hit Parade C I UA I? E T TES ' mam LUCKY smlxs ITS TOASTEU' CIGARETTES GX JN Products QF M . if re CX QA.r.c0 IS OUR MIDDLE NANIEH I heavy and highway construction I concrete paving asphalt paving quarries l dredging l engineering I railroads l foreign construction l l l V N ELLO L. TEER cowl PANY l I durham, north carolina l ftyjourth year l I l l XVOlfc RBKC4 Wolfe Medical Microscopes and Accessories Microscope Repair Service CAROLINA BIOLOGICAL SUPPLY COMPANY Burlington, North Cllffbllllll l sn, , 'gush K l og' 'ls 45-v. - 15. s QQ .--. -v-' 4-,.a- yn-gf .ag-'L' B.,-4 ' 1 11. . :L 1 !'1f. A X w I Yvll Kg 1 AUTOGRA 5 , Q .- X ' A r' A 1, 'x X., 1 1 I COA- J A t, -4 . Lwfil - .' d. IL 2 ' EQ ' Riel-1' Rf Jiflf ' ,, Q '- -' l'.,f5'ffl w 7.11 ff!! 'wfffwff 1-'fv 'f-5? ' .Q 19 , x ,,..f-,, ,J ,Y , 2 .fc K , v 1 X I K , fxi .Ju I . w ,-. . .1 1' -1 - -5 if 4,. Q qv 1 l f g. , . w V- K I .' X , 1 ' f r,,, , f 1 7 ,, , fl! vt'.,1-fgxkiy 'N ,Q-1 .rj M if ' .MV ,IN ,, . 1 1 y .. ,!.:.:,.. .i,l..,,,4 -5155 . 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