Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA)

 - Class of 1976

Page 1 of 112

 

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 112 of the 1976 volume:

'TE-14?-1-92-4-'1w.. Q' ' ' 2' -Jgf!1',1..,:.,:z.1. MQ,-55...-1,..,....,fif 1, :M-.:.,, QQ,f,Qv.zz,'-,. . 15..- ...Z-.1-...f Q, f ',f: 1:-.' - -v:L,,-Q ,. QQ- 5 1 :sf .L,, i - -Q N M . 'f Agri ,J..,..,1 ,, 1 .:f,,y'L:qf'- - ' - ifnfn Q, --xx:-1 'NP-...T ' 'WML . -- T-1-.....g, .N . - 1--.-.... .., , -........, 11--- -.-. L--1-V+-.... Q- 1 ar. :., r,- , .1 Y, fa ,nw- -M. , . -Q 5:2 64 ' g -Lax-5-xi-sz MQ i Yearb hool Medical Sc s inia r Clas Eastern Virg f the Charte 1976 Ullllllllll, ll, I Nu osokx PX M E010 0, x X 9 5' Q9 '75 9 SS 72 E33 5: if avi 01, lv 4 X09 III Illg 2.9 Pfmxxx The charter class of the Eastern Virginia Medical School gratefully acknowledges the support of the Retail Merchants Association of Norfolk, Inc., who under wrote the cost of this publication. MICHAEL JOSEPH WALSH April 18, 1942 -- June16, 1976 The sudden and unexpected death at age 34 of Michael J. Walsh, Associate Professor of Pharmacology at Eastern Virginia Medical School, profoundly shocked the community of scholars who have been associated with the development of EVMS in the Tidewater area. ' Mike, as he was known to all his friends, grew up in Baltimore, graduated from the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy in 1965, and received his doctorate in pharmacology from The Ohio State University in 1969. Following postdoctoral training at Baylor College of Medicine, Mike was appointed in 1971 Assistant Professor of Pharmacology at Bowman Gray School of Medicine. ln 1973, he was invited to head a new pharmacology department in the Procter and Gamble Co. but returned to academic life in 1974, shortly after the founding of EVMS. He was attracted to EVMS by the philosophical foundations of the School and the possibilities they afforded to improve the learning of medical pharmacology and therapeutics and to conduct independent research. His previous involvement in the wide variety of curricular approaches, at Maryland, Ohio State, and Bowman Gray, prepared him superbly for the EVMS experienceand he gave of himself without reserve in an effort to improve the curriculum and teaching techniques. Future classes will reap the benefit of Mike's devotion in this area. His expertise in curriculum matters as well as his research acumen was well known beyond the EVMS community and it is a measure of his total dedication to the School that he chose to remain in Norfolk. His area of research, for which he was internationally known, dealt with the release of catecholamines and their altered metabolism in the brain following alcohol administration. ln addition to his positive contributions to the common goal of curriculum improvement, Mike involved. himself on a personal basis with his students. He spent long hours counseling them, often at the expense of time with his family. He is survived by his wife, Estelle, and two sons, Ryan and Andrew. ln two brief years, Michael Walsh established himself beyond question as a major resource of EVMS. He was a respected teacher, a brilliant scholar and scientist, and a gracious companion. He will be missed terribly. We dedicate this book to those individuals responsible for the founding of our medical school and who remain concerned for its continued support. We acknowledge those who envisioned a school in Tidewater over a dozen years ago and who have by their persistence made its realization possible. We appreciate the efforts of the area physicians and health professionals who have volunteered their time and talents to us and to the school and have created an exceptional educational environment. Finally, our gratitude to all the citizens of Eastern Virginia who support our institution and who will continue to benefit in an increasing degree with its presence. The Graduating Class 1976 WHAT DO X OU DO WHEN h gh physician f p pl ? h'gh k p t travel h d d f 1 f d d h p 1 tract enough int d d pl h ff h gh pp rtunities for phy h d ? THE DO-IT-YOURSELF CREATION OF THE EASTERN VIRGINIA MEDICAL SCHOOL THE MEANS TO A BEGINNING' dedicated to those who believed in the HIMPOSSIBLE DREAM The difference that a medical school makes in the quality of health care in a region is staggering, it is most easily seen in the number of available physicians. In 1960 the ratio in eastern Virginia was 86 practitioners to 100,000 population. In the area around Richmond, site of the Medical College of Virginia, it was 183 per l00,000g around Charlottesville, home of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, 281 per 100,000. The impact on the availability and quality of health care is obvious. Eastem Virginia is an area of approximately 6,000 square miles containing about 28 percent of the state's population. Its largest city is Norfolk and as a medical trade area it includes northeastern North Carolina. It did not in 1960, and does not today, have enough physicians to adequately care for its 1.3 million people, but the odds are getting better. Since the Eastern Virginia Medical School was established in 1973, there has been a considerable increase in the number of practitioners, currently 116 per 100,000. In the nine months from November 1974 to August 1975 alone, there was a net gain of 85 physicians in eastern Virginiag 35.570 of the gain for the entire state. In fact, a medical school itself is only the tip of the iceberg in the health care benefits it can bring to a region. Events of the past years have clearly shown that the heretofore separate worlds of patient care and medical education must come together. Rising costs, demands for more health services and the now recognized inter-depen- dence of these worlds make necessary their uniting in a single system. When properly seated, a medical school becomes the core element for better programs of premedical education, graduate medical education Qinternships and residencies in hospitalsl as well as for continuing education of practicing physicians. The interweaving of these programs with the ways of providing medical care to people creates entirely new mechanisms in which health education and health care strengthen and improve each other. On September 24th of this Bicentennial year the Charter Class of the Eastern Virginia Medical School graduated. When the 24 students entered in 1973, they found themselves in a ten year old, four story building that had been used as a domiciliary and teaching facility for a Licensed Practical Nurse program that had been phased out. Senior faculty offices were in hastily partitioned apartments where bathtubs were being used for book and equipment storage. Junior faculty space was anywhere room could be found for desk, chair and filing cabinet. By contrast, the students moved in relative luxury with newly built study carrels, renovated lecture halls and a lounge magnificently appointed through gifts of furniture. As formal classes began, renovation crews were still wiring and painting some laboratories and shelving was being installed in the library. What may appear to be poor planning was really the result of an incredible success story in the establishment of a private school of medicine despite seemingly insurmountable problems in raising S15 million in private contributions, obtaining state and federal support and in gaining accreditation. As a demonstration of faith justified, formal permission to accept students came only three months before classes began. In this age, when medical schools are usually established as part of a state university by legislatures spending tax dollars, the EVMS is unique in that it was created by public subscription. The only known instance in the United States, perhaps the world, where citizens donated the millions needed to bring together teachers, researchers, administra- tors and the equipment needed for a medical school. And, through that Medical School began a series of changes that greatly improved the quality of their health care. The clinical base for a medical school fthe place for bedside training of studentsl had been rapidly developing through the early 1960's. The Norfolk Public Health Department had opened a large new headquarters near the area's biggest hospital. Within a year, a 100 bed childrens hospital and a physicians office building housing 100 practitioners opened in the same area creating, for practical purposes, a medical center. Of the approximately 5,000 hospital beds in eastern Virginia, more than 1,200 were available for teaching through the cooperation of hospitals and physicians. Ultimately, a consortium of community hospitals in seven cities became the operational substitute for the traditional university hospital. Vigorous support from leaders in the business and professional communities and the endorsements of local and state medical societies became a call for a medical school as a means of improving health care services. The State Council of Higher Education studied the possibilities in eastern Virginia and reported that a medical school was not only feasible but desirable since it could be the focal point of a third major medical center for the state, attracting physicians and providing more educational opportunities for Virginia students. However, along with that solid recommendation there was an observation that since Virginia was already supporting two state medical schools with general tax revenues, it was appropriate that the proposed school be constructed and operated with private funds. In other words, It's a great idea, but you'll have to do it yourself. Members of the state legislature from eastern Virginia were quick to respond. Even before the Council's report was formally delivered to the Governor in January 1964, a bill keyed to its findings had been drafted. By the time the legislative session ended, the Assembly had passed and the Governor had signed a bill creating an Authority to create a private school of medicine. The enabling act provided no funds and, perhaps because of this, gave an immense range of powers to the newly created Norfolk Area Medical Center Authority. In six pages the bill empowered the Authority to plan, design, construct, remove, enlarge, equip, maintain and operate medical educational institutions, medical and paramedical facilities, together with related and supporting facilities and to do all things necessary and convenient to any of its purposes. That included the right of eminent domain, the right to charge and collect fees for services and facilities, accept loans, grants or assistanceg and borrow money and issue bonds. The act also empowered any municipality in eastern Virginia to cooperate with the Authority in virtually any way it wished. Health officials, educators and planners CHAIRMEN OF THE MEDICAL AUTHORITY MASON C. ANDREWS, M.D. HARRY H. MANSBACH ROBERT L. PAYNE, JR., M D T964-T970 1970-T974 1974- H Mason C. Andrews, M.D. 'Charles F. Burroughs, Jr 'Marian P. Capps, Ed.D. Roy R. Charles 'Edwin W. Chittum 'Richard F. Clark, M.D. 'Charles N. Cooper Lawrence M. Cox John Franklin, M.D. COMMISSIONERS OF THE MEDICAL AUTHORITY Asterisk indicates current appointment A. B. Gornto, Jr. Roy D. Hudson, Ph.D. 'Sidney S. Kellam 'Arthur A. Kirk, M.D. Harry H. Mansboch Walter A. Page M. Lee Payne R.l. Payne, Jr., M.D. Harry B. Price, Jr. Llewellyn S. Richardson E., Redwood Richardson Toy D. Savage, Jr. C. E. Thurston, Jr. Richard F. Welton, III Richard F. Wood William P. Woodley have called the act one of the most enlightened pieces of health care legislation ever produced. And, judging by what the Authority has accomplished, it may well be. However, to the pragmatic community leaders, business and professional people, who would lead the drive to establish the. school, it was seen primarily as a hunting license - great things were possible, if you could make them happen. When the City Council of Norfolk appointed the seven non-salaried Commissioners to the Medical Authority in 1964 they choose regionally oriented people from other eastern Virginia cities as well as Norfolk. Able, dedicated men with demonstrated success in their professional and business operations, the Commissioners were also members of the establishment in the finest sense of the word. People with long careers of voluntary public service in education, community funds, hospital board memberships, planning councils and other civic groups that aided the professional social service organizations. Administrative costs of the Authority were funded by the City of Norfolk. A part-time director and a secretary were selected, total costs for the first year including equipment and office space were under S35,000. Recognizing that more health service elements had to be in place to establish the credibility of the medical school concept with federal agencies and the national accrediting body, the Authority concentrated first on enlarging the clinical base and attracting' top flight physican! teachers. Because of their own high credibility the Commissioners were able to organize committees of physicians and other interests to advise on the area's most critical health needs, and on ways that meeting those needs could be structured for future use by the medical school. Thousands of hours of planning, research and consultation were voluntarily contributed over the next five years. The Medical Authority acted as broker in arranging multiple sources of local, state and federal funds to establish and staff high-priority health care facilities. The first to flower was the Tidewater Rehabilitation Instituteg con- struction began in 1965. It was the first of four new health service programs the Authority opened in 1967. In June the Rehabilitation Institute began providing a broad range of physical and occupational therapy to the handicapped including the area's first public resource for children with learning disabilities. Five months later, in concert with area hospitals, the Authority opened a Cardiopulmonary Labora- tory and a Cardiovascular Center to provide the first capability for open heart surgery in eastern Virginia. Cancer and heart ailment investigations began later that year when the Research Institute was opened in the area's largest hospital by the Authority. By mid-1969 there were enough health care facilities in the pipe line to provide the needed clinical base. It was time to get to the financing. Health educators and consultants had estimated the long range costs for all elements of the medical school at S60 million, most of it federally financed or self amortizing. The immediate requirement was in privately contributed funds to start the ball rolling. Thirty-five of eastern Virginia's public service minded citizens were named Co-chairmen of the Campaign Committee and charged with raising S15 million in front end money to finance construction and endowment of the medical school. That bargain basement price was predicted on the use of existing hospitals for the bedside training of students, thereby avoiding the enormous expense of building and maintaining a university hospital. It also counted on the practicing physicians of the area contributing teaching time to the school, and on matching federal construction funds on a two-federal for one-local basis, the then prevalent matching pattern. The broad stroke plan was to raise S5 million for construction fproducing S15 million with the federal matchj and S10 million for endowment. Interest on the endowment funds would help meet the expected annual operating loss of S2 million. The balance of the deficit was to be made up through a yearly contribution by the City of Norfolk and a hoped for state subsidy of 34,000 per student per year. Because of the massive sums needed, the fund raisers would concentrate only on prospects capable of gifts of 530,000 or more, payable over 10 years if necessary. Less would be accepted, but the first effort was geared to the big-ticket potential. To make the soliciting of large gifts easier, and to provide protection for the contributors should the campaign fail, the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation was established. This non-private foundation made possible maximum IRS benefits to the donors and provided an entity for holding and managing contributed funds. The broad geographic area represented by its trustees assured a regional approach to the Foundation's mission. Privately, the Campaign Committee solicited its own members, getting commitments that approached S1 million. It was expected that half the S15 million would be raised with difficulty in eastern Virginia, the balance coming with relative ease from major national foundations and corpora- tions. This was the only major miscalculation of the Campaign Committee. The campaign began on January 15, 1970, with the expectation it would be completed within six months - it actually took three years. The national sources, with very few exceptions, were usually courteous and always firm in saying No and the people of eastern Virginia kept digging down to make up for the lack of national support. Public reaction to the fund drive was excellent. From the beginning the business and professional communities supported the school and contributed handsomely. Many clubs and civic groups contributed through self-assessment by the membership without being asked. One persuasive argument was the tremendous economic benefit the school would bring. The attraction of highly paid professionals, the increase in jobs at the medical center, millions of dollars in construction and the attendant tax revenues through the years - it all added up to additional yearly payrolls of more than S20 million and a cash turnover of about S100 million a year when the school and medical center reached maturity. However, by mid-1970 the campaign began to lag. About S4 million had been pledged locally and the first disappointments were coming in from national sources. Announcements of new health care facilities established by the Medical Authority helped recharge campaigners batteries. At the Children's Hospital a Department of Pediatric Neurology was started. A Renal Dialysis Center with six artificial kidney machines was opened in another hospital with the promise that work would soon begin on a kidney transplant program. Up to this point, the nearest transplant facility for patients with serious kidney disease was more than 100 miles away at the medical school in Richmond, and the waiting time for transplants was measured in months and years. Plans for an 80 bed mental health center and psychiatric institute were announced along with the immediate opening of three mental health outreach centers to provide limited care until the institute became operational. The fund raisers kept making the calls, visiting homes and offices, and became thick-skinned about rejections. In October 1970, ten months after the formal start of the campaign to establish the EVMS, the prestigious Carnegie Commission on Higher Education issued its report on Higher Education and the Nation's Health . The Carnegie Report identified the eastern Virginia area as the second largest population center in the United States without a university health science center. In its Report the Carnegie Commission also recognizes that local initiative is desirable, and usually essential, in planning for a new university health science center. In the absence of local initiative, it may be difficult to develop centers in the nine communities we have identified. The Carnegie Report not only validated the need for the establishment of the EVMS and the benefits that would follow, it underscored the essential rightness of the approach, local response to a local need. January 1971, the first anniversary of the fund campaign, found the total at just over S7 million in cash and pledges, virtually all of it from eastern Virginia. National sources were still saying No and that part of the campaign was to be intensified. It was and the results were discouraging. April was a climactic month. The fund drive reached the local goal of 37.5 million, the first meaningful out of town money came in - S200,000 from a foundation, the medical school's Dean was appointed, a site visit was scheduled by the accrediting committee, and it appeared there might be trouble at the State Capitol on the request for a student subsidy. The Governor was preparing his budget for the 1972 - 1974 biennium and had asked for a detailed report on the financial planning for construction and operation of the school. The Medical Authority produced a comprehensive report which included the hoped for subsidy of 54,000 per student per year. A delegation of Authority Commissioners, the Campaign Chairman, State Legislators and the United States Congressmen from the area was to hand-deliver the document. The meeting with the Governor was cancelled abruptly by phone with instructions to mail the report. The signals from the State Capitol were not good. In May the Liaison Committee on Medical Education sent its survey team to eastern Virginia. The Committee is made up of members from the Association of American Medical Colleges and the Council on Medical Education of the American Medical Association. It is the formal THE HONORABLE PORTER HARDY, JR. Chairman, EVMS Campaign Committee accrediting body for United States medical schools. Bulky reports had been prepared by the Dean and the Authority staff, which now numbered eight people. After three days of concentrated study of plans and facilities and of conversa- tions with medical professionals and educators, the site visitors left to deliberate and prepare a report for the full Committee. Meanwhile, the thirty-five Co-chairman of the fund raising campaign had added more volunteers as contributions became harder to get. The small army slogged its way through the summer and fall raising money locally, but getting no significant responses from ,national sources. At the second anniversary of the fund drive, in January 1972, the total of cash and pledges was approaching S9 million and the Governor had not included the state subsidy in his budget. However, in late January the Liaison Committee officially declared the Eastern Virginia Medical School to be a school in development and recommended that it be granted provisional membership in the Association of American Medical Colleges. This is the first in the four step process of accreditation and it put the School formally into business, making it eligible for some federal assistance in development. This recognition also armed the state legislators of eastern Virginia for a battle in the Appropriations Committee. There, they would attempt to put into the budget the state subsidy funds the Governor had refused to include. From the Liaison Committee's report, state funds are absolutely necessary and must be committed before the School can enroll students. With the limitation as presently cast at S1 million, the Commonwealth of Virginia is acquiring a definite bargain in medical education. There was a sharp skirmish with the Governor who ob- jected, he said, not to the 596,000 at issue for the 24 students expected to enter in 1973, but to the concept of state i l t President, EVMS Foundation Chairman, EVMS Foundation Development Committee support for a private school. A delegation of eastern Virginians appeared before the Appropriations Committee and pointed out that many states were contributing much more to private schools of medicine, that Virginia was getting a third medical school with no capital investment by the State and the requested subsidy was far less than the estimated 824,000 per student per year the State was already putting into the two public medical schools in addition to other millions of tax dollars supporting the university hospitals. The Appropriations Committee inserted the subsidy in the budget, the Governor did not veto it, and that building block was in place when the legislature adjourned in March. The Spring of 1972 brought a surge of progress to the campaign, now 28 months old. In May alone, a half million dollars came in through a legacy, a corporate pledge and scattered individual gifts. More faculty was added. No small accomplishment considering that maj or career decisions were being made in joining a medical school that did not yet exist. Through a buy and leaseback arrangement the Medical Authority acquired the building that would eventually be the interim home for the School until construction grants, could be received and a new building put up. By midyear, more solid support had appeared - from citizens for the school, through a pledge of 575,000 from an areawide labor organization, from the government for a program, through a multiyear, multi million dollar staffing grant for the Mental Health Center still under construction. Then the 'pendulum swung. By late summer, there were setbacks. Two grant applications totaling more than S1 million were turned down by HEW. A S900,000 request for renovation funds for the interim school building was rejected because of lack of nonfederal support in short, not enough money had been committeed to prove' the School financially stable. A S240,000 request for startup funds was denied because the entry date for students had not been set. As the summer of '72 slipped into autumn there were some sobering second thoughts. For more than two and a half years the Campaign Committee had been meeting to re- port and exchange prospects every Thursday except Thanks- giving Day and Christmas week. They had secured more than S11 million in cash and pledges. Buildings had been acquired, faculty had been attracted Con contractj, a foundation had long been established to hold and manage funds, the City of Norfolk had agreed to increase its yearly contribution to SS00,000, the State legislature had approved the student subsidy, and hundreds of prospective students had applied for the 24 openings in the Charter Class. But, in four months, January of 1973, the Liaison Committee would review the School's request for permission to accept students, and the Campaign was still more than S3 million short of the needed money. Battleweary from hundreds of solicitation calls, veterans of major triumphs and disappointments, faced with ever smaller prospect lists as calls were made fthe big ticket potentials had long since been exhaustedj, the volunteers could look at the most successful fund raising campaign ever conducted in the Commonwealth of Virginia - and could see it still was not enough. The moment of truth was fast approaching. The big break came in October. A challenge gift of 81.5 million was made by a Richmond, Virginia philan- thropist on the condition it be matched with newly raised funds by December 31st. The campaign Committee had just 67 days to review the lists, make more calls and try to pry still more money out of the area that had already been drained financially. The decision was made to go public . To this point there had been no general, mass appeal for gifts because of the difficulty and expense of returning the smaller contributions should the campaign fail. Now in the eleventh hour, it was a make or break situation and all the stops were pulled. Full page ads were donated in area newspapers with clip-out and mail-in pledge forms. Area radio and television stations responded with public service announcements and programs on the need for broad support to match the conditioned gift. The revitalized campaign gained speed. By mid-Decem- ber more than S1 million in fresh money had been raised. The mass appeal brought 300 responses totaling over 850,000 One of the clip-and-mail pledges came in with two dollars in cash and a promise of eight dollars more within a year. At the last report meeting of 1972, Thursday, December 28th, the terms of the conditioned gift had been met and the campaign total was S15,731,856.52 in cash and pledges. On December 31st a S1 million gift from a national foundation was announced. By the time of a celebration dinner on January 3rd the total had reached 317.6 million and the School's minimum financial base had been established. However, there were still problems. When the Liaison Committee reviewed the school's progress a week later, there were reservations about its ability to be ready for a class that year. In February a survey team visited the school. Their decision was that not enough faculty had been brought aboard in the basic sciences, department chairman and other faculty had to be in place to bring the school to acceptable strength. They urged an intensive recruiting effort and said the status would be reviewed in March. An interim report was sent to the Liaison Committee that month and there was no official position taken on the school. The Committee would meet again in June. During April and May as recruiters continued their efforts cross country, the Medical Authority received as a gift an electron microscope laboratory from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the equipment had become surplus, and the Community Mental Health Center was dedicated and received its first patients. By June 5th, all needed departmental chairman had signed contracts and the Liaison Committee was immediately notified. At the Committee's meeting on June 13th, the medical school was granted permission to accept students. Registration was set for late September and acceptance notices mailed to 24 of the 1200 applicants, twenty of the students from Virginia, the Charter Class of the Eastern Virginia Medical School. As diplomas were awarded to the graduating Charter Class, 148 other students were working their way through the three year curriculum. Sixty-four entered in July and are deep in the study of basic sciences. The second and third year students are getting their clinical experience in community hospitals and physician's offices, the environment in which most will practice, instead of in the traditional university hospital which is fast becoming an expensive anachronism in medical education. By 1978, ninety-six students will be entering the Eastern Virginia Medical School each year. The increase in class size made possible by a new Basic Medical Education Building now under construction. With the Medical School in place, the Authority formed more links in the educational chain that begins with pre-medical training and runs through medical school, residency training and continuing education for practicing physicians. Organized by the Authority, a seven member consortium of colleges and universities is working to coordinate and improve pre-medical education. Area hospitals have affiliated with the Authority in a joint venture as the Eastern Virginia Graduate School of Medicine. This entity handles the recruitment and management of interns and residents on a regional basis. It coordinates the educational programs of the hospitals, and the Medical School's faculty provides a core of basic science and clinical instruction. This strengthens the academic quality of the residencies and improves the patient care provided by the hospitals. Scientific meetings, seminars and workshops are being arranged for the continuing education of physicians, soon to be a requirement for practice. More than a third of eastern Virginia's 1500 practitioners are already sharpening their skills and knowledge through voluntary, non-salaried, teaching assignments and curriculum development at the School. These links of medical education have been forged by the Authority as parent organization of the School, holding legal and management responsibilities. The Authority itself has undergone a major change. Because of the regional nature of its operations, the educational and health care programs have an inescapable impact on the communities of eastern Virginia. It was apparent these communities should have a direct voice in the govemance of the programs. On request of the Commis- sioners, the General Assembly of Virginia amended the Authority's charter to allow direct appointment of Commis- sioners by city councils of the region's municipalities. Along with the voice in governance came the implicit obligation of financial support. The name of the organization has been changed to the Eastern Virginia Medical Authority, the number of Commissioners increased from seven to ten, appointed by six cities, and the yearly financial support from these communities is expected to soon exceed S1 million. This is the first voluntary agreement and joint funding arrangement ever entered into by this group of cities. In itself a pioneering and significant step. There has been strong continuing support for the School and the Authority by the people of eastern Virginia. Since the end of the formal campaign to establish the School in 1973, the EVMS Foundation's Development Committee has continued the fund raising - to make up the lack of federal support and for special programs - to date contributions total more than S20 million. In the area of state funding, the General Assembly has increased its operational support of the Medical School to 85,333 dollars per student per year. This reflects the three year curriculum of the EVMS as opposed to the more traditional four year program. The Assembly also approved S560,000 over two years for support of the Family Practice program, recognizing its parity with similar programs being operated by the two state supported medical schools. However in the largest and in some ways most critical area, funds for the medically indigent, the Assembly has not responded. Because of the over-riding importance of these millions of dollars in general tax revenues channeled into patient care through state medical school hospitals, the Authority and area hospitals will continue efforts to have the eastern Virginia hospital consortium recognized as a surrogate for the university hospital. This would provide a means of returning to eastern Virginia those tax dollars for care of the destitute that are now being disbursed only in the Richmond and Charlottesville areas. Nationally, changes in the patterns of medical education and the providing of health care services are both overdue and inevitable. A cohesion and singleness of purpose must be brought to the fragmented mass of medical resources. The need is for a logical arrangement of contracts, mergers and joint efforts using all medical resources with maximum efficiency for both medical education and patient care. In eastern Virginia the Medical Authority is the framework on which new systems are being fleshed out. Education, persuasion and negotiation involving health professionals, government leaders and health insurers are bringing about changes. Differing views of mission are being reconciled to a single goal - better health care - with all things medical geared to that purpose. In eastern Virginia the impossible dream of thousands of people, the Medical School and the Medical Authority which created it have become the means to the beginning. THE EASTERN VIRGINIA MEDICAL SCHOOL Established by the people of Eastern Virginia to meet a demonstrated need. ROSTER OF CONTRIBUTORS Listed here and on the following pages are the names of organizations and individuals making leadership gifts in the form of contributions and pledges to the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation. The generosity of our area's people enabled the dream of a medical school in eastern Virginia to become a reality in three short years. These gifts and pledges are gratefully acknowledged as are the gifts and subscriptions of hundreds of additional contributors in the one dollar to one thousand dollar range. An asterisk CFD prior to the donor's name indicates an increase in pledge has been received since the original Sponsor, Honor Roll, Merit, Medallion or Citation subscription was made. There are 182 organizations and individuals who have pledged at the leadership, Sponsor, level.The average Sponsor gift is in excess of S62,500, excluding gifts from several foundations ranging from S300,000 to over 81.5 million. By definition, a Sponsor has donated or pledged a minimum of 330,000 to the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation. The roster of EVMS Sponsors will be permanently displayed in the Basic Medical Education Building upon its completion late in 1977. EVMS SPONSOR ORGANIZATIONS Aetna Life 8: Casualty American Bank Stationery Co. 'l'American National Bank Ames 8: Webb, Inc. 'Atlantic Permanent Savings 8: Loan Association Ballard Fish 8: Oyster Company 'Bank of Virginia Barr Construction Company Incorporated Bayberry Psychiatric Hospital 'Beazley Foundation, Inc. Berkley Machine Works 8: Foundry Company Birdsong Storage Co., Inc. 'fBonnie Be-Lo Markets, Inc. 'Majorie S. Charles Foundation 'Chesapeake 8: Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia City of Portsmouth 'Colonial Chevrolet Corporation Colonial Stores, Inc. t Columbian Peanut Company Doughtie's Foods, Inc. Empire Machinery 8: Supply Corporation Farm Fresh Supermarkets 'fFine 8: Salzberg, Inc. First 8: Merchants National Bank First National Bank of Norfolk tFirst Virginia Banks Ford Motor Company Fund Franklin Equipment Company General Electric Company Globe Iron Construction Goodman 8: Company Goodman-Segar-Hogan, Inc. 'Green-Gifford Motor Corp. 'E.T. Gresham Co., Inc. Hall-Hodges Co., Inc. Hilltop Volkswagen, Inc. Hoff-Cadillac-Oldsmobile 'Hofheimer's, Inc. 'Home Federal Savings 8: Loan Association I. B. M. Corporation 'flndustrial Securities 'klntercoastal Steel Corp. I. T. T. Gwaltney, Inc.' International Longshoremen's Association John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. Kabler 8: Riggs Realtors Kitchen Towne Irving, James 8: Richard Kline Kotarides Baking Co., Inc. Landmark Communications, Inc Leggetts Department Store t Life Federal Savings 8: Loan Association Lone Star Industries McGaughy, Marshall 8: McMillan Andrew W. Mellon Foundation 'Merchants 8: Farmers Bank Military Circle, Inc. Miller 8: Rhodes Foundation 'fMutual Federal Savings 8: Loan Association J. A. Myers' Sons 'Noland Company 'Norfolk Foundation 'Norfolk Shipbuilding 8: Drydock Corporation Norfolk 8: Western Railway Co. Norfolk whokisale Floral corp. S. L. Nusbaum 8: Co., Inc. 'Ocean Electric Corp. Old Dominion Paper Company Old Dominion Tobacco Co., Inc. J.C. Penny Co., Inc. Penrod, Jurden 8: Clark 8: Co. Pentecost, Wade 8: McLellon Perry Foundation Philip Morris, Inc. Phillips Oldsmobile, Inc. tPrice's Incorporated Redco Industries of Virginia : Retail Merchants Association Dr. 8: Mrs. Macon C. Andrews John Aragona James A. Bargatze Mr. 8: Mrs. J.D.A. Barr 'Mr. 8: Mrs. Frank Batten Mr. 8: Mrs. W.T. Bird Mary L.B. Birdsong Stanley S. 8: Delia P. Bohannan Jeneil W. Bott Edward L. Breeden, Jr. Edward L. Brickhouse Memory Esther B. 8: Jacob H. Brody 'l'Mr. 8: Mrs. Charles F. Burroughs, Jr. Ralph E. Bush 'Roy R. Charles T. C. Clarke R. S. Collins Mr. 8: Mrs. Clifford A. Cutchins, III Mr. 8: Mrs. M. Dan Dalis Robert W. 8: Frank DeMille Ruby A. Fine Mr. 8: Mrs. Samuel Foreman Rices!Nachmans A. H. Robins Company Paul H. Rose Corporation Rosso 8: Mastracco, Inc. Roughton Pontiac Corp. 'Royster Company L. M. Sandler 8: Sons, Inc. 'l'Sears, Roebuck 8: Company tSicash Builders 'Sir Galahad Corporation Oscar F. Smith Foundation 'Smith 8: Welton, Inc. Smithfield Foods, Inc. Taylor Freezer Sales, Co. 'FTenneco Texaco, Inc. 'l'C.E. Thurston 8: Sons 'Tidewater Construction Corp. EVMS SPONSOR INDIVIDUALS Max H. Goodloe Mr. 8: Mrs. Richard C. Goodman Mr. 8: Mrs. C. Wiley Grandy Howard W. Gwaltney Julius D. Gwaltney Ira B. Hall Lynette Hamlet Hon. 8: Mrs. Porter Hardy, Jr. Mrs. Margarette Hartley Dietrich W. Heyder, M.D. David S. Hirschler 'l'Edward D. Hofheimer Mr. 8: Mrs. Henry Clay Hofheimer, II Paul 8: Miss Rebekah Huber Mr. 8: Mrs. Charles L. Kaufman, Sr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Charles L. Kaufman, Jr. Mr. 8: Mrs. George M. Kaufman 'Arthur A. Kirk, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Herbert Kramer Ernest M. Lendman Mr. 8: Mrs. Sydney Lewis Mr. 8: Mrs. Gerasimos Logaras Joseph W. Luter, III Mr. 8: Mrs. George T. McLean Tidewater Research Foundation, Inc. Union Camp Corporation United Cancer Association United Virginia Bank! Seaboard National 'Vansant 8: Gusler 'Wirginia Chemicals, Inc. 'Wirginia Electric 8: Power Company 'Virginia National Bank Waller 8: Woodhouse Seeman 8: Stanley Waranch Wheat Foundation Wilkins Chevrolet, Inc. Willcox-Savage-Lawrence Dickson-Spindle Williams 8: Tazewell Woodlawn Memorial Gardens, Inc. F. Wayne McLeskey Mr. 8: Mrs. Horace P. McNeal 'Dr. 8: Mrs. Richard M. Magraw Mr. 8: Mrs. Harry H. Mansbach Mr. 8: Mrs. Alvin Margolius, Sr. Dr. 8: Mrs. Alexander Martone 'kMr. 8: Mrs. W.B. Meredith, II Mr. 8: Mrs. William P. Oberndorfer Joseph B. Ottenstein 'Mr. 8: Mrs. George G. Phillips, Jr. George R. Powell Memory Edmund S. 8: Cordellia B. Ruffin Charles E. Russell Mr. 8: Mrs. Lawrence A. Sancilio Dr. George Schenck i'Mr. 8: Mrs. Leon T. Sewell, Jr. Dr. 8: Mrs. Ralph R. Stephens Mr. 8: Mrs. Joseph H. Strelitz Mr. 8: Mrs. Leonard R. Strelitz Mr. 8: Mrs. William R. Taylor Fred C. Trump 'ltMr. 8: Mrs. J. Hoge Tyler, III Mr. 8: Mrs. I. T. Walke Mr. 8: Mrs. William P. Woodley There are 178 Organizations and Individuals listed below. Each has made a gift or pledge of 810,000 or more to the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation. The Honor Roll roster will be permanently displayed in the Basic Medical Education Building upon its completion. ARA Services, Inc. Action Oldsmobile-Cadillac, Inc. Addington-Beaman Lumber Co., Inc. Allied Towing Corp. Altschul's Inc. 'Asphalt Roads 8: Material Co., Inc. 'Baldwin 8: Gregg Bangel, Bangel, Bangel Barr Brothers, Inc. Basic Construction Company 'Birsch Construction Corp. Boulevard Markets Breeden, Howard 8: MacMillan Bruce-Flournoy Motor Corp. i'Burroughs 8: Watson, Inc. Canoles, Mastracco, Martone, Barr 8: Russell Cavalier Ford, Inc. Chapel Hill Builders Charters Development Co. Church of God in Christ 2nd Diocese Citizens Trust Bank Clark-Whitehill Company Cohen-Johnson Associates Craver, Green 8: Company J. W. Creech, Inc. Crockin Levy M.M. Crockin Co., Inc. Daily Press, Inc. Dudley, Morrisette, Cederquist 8: Associates Ear, Nose 8: Throat, Ltd. Evans Products Company 'FFine's Men's Shops, Inc. General Mechanical Corp. Lawrence J. Goldrich Foundation Gordon Paper Co., Inc. Gray Lumber Company Guille Steel Products Company, Inc. EVMS HONOR ROLL ORGANIZATIONS Gulf Oil Corporation Foundation Hamill, Grissom 8: Co. Hasler 8: Company Hassell 8: Folkes Hellenic Woman's Club Henderson 8: Phillips, Inc. Hercules, Inc. Hicks 8: Ingle Co. of Va., Inc. High's Ice Cream Corp. Frederick B. Hill 8: Co. Hoffman Cigar 18: Beverageb Company, Inc. J. Henry Holland Corp. Hollomon-Brown Funeral Home, Inc. Horst Advertising Services, Incorporated Interscapes Investment Corporation of Virginia Johns Brothers, Inc. C. Lloyd Johnson Co., Inc. 'Kimnach Ford, Inc. King Foods Kitchin Equipment Co., Inc. L 8: O Construction Co., Inc. Lake Wright Motor Lodge Lawler-Ballard-Little Advertising Lewis Chevrolet Corp. Eli Lilly 8: Company Harvey Lindsay 8: Sons, Inc. Luke Construction Co., Inc. McPhillips, Lieland 8: Miller 'Mansbach Scholarship Fund : Mason Marking Systems Corp. Meredith Construction Co., Inc- 'J.H. Miles 8: Co., Inc. Moon Engineering, Inc. Morgan, Marietta M. 8: Samuel T., Jr. Memorial Trust Mutual Savings 8: Loan Co., Inc. National Cash Register National Council of Jewish Women Norfolk, Baltimore 8: Carolina Line, Inc. 'Norfolk Coca Cola Bottling Works, Inc. Norfolk Dredging Company Norfolk Motor Company, Inc. Norfolk Tallow Company, Inc. Olsson tE1isJ Memorial Foundation Peat, Marwick, Mitchell 8: Co. Peck Iron 8: Metal Co., Inc. People's Bank of Va. Beach Planter's Peanuts Portsmouth Gas Company Portsmouth Retail Merchants Association Progressive Medical Group, Inc. A. Lee Rawlings 8: Co. T. E. Ritter Corp. Security Storage 8: Van Company of Norfolk Shriver 8: Holland 8: Assoc. Shulman Company Southern Amusement Corp. Southgate Corporation 'Spigel-Carter-Zinkl- Herman, AIA 'kStokes, Incorporated Standard Forms, Inc. 'Stewart Sandwiches, Inc. Straus tAaron 8: Lilliej Foundation 'kTaylor Foundation Terry Corporation of Va. 'George 8: Eleanor Thornton Foundation 'Tidewater Business 8: Professional Women's Club of Norfolk, Va. 8: Vicinity fTodd Electric Company Traylor Optical Co., Inc. Valley Pountry 8: Produce Incorporated Virginia Beverage Co., Inc. Virginia Federal Savings 8: Loan Association Virginia Furniture Company Virginia Pilot Association Jerome E. Adamson, M.D. Norman Berlin Mr. 8: Mrs. Barron Black Alfred L. Blake, Jr. 'R. D. Cooke, Jr. Charles N. Cooper Dudley, Charles 8: Joel Cooper Peter G. Decker, Jr. Baroness Helen R. DeLustrac Charles J. Devine, Sr., M.D. Charles J. Devine, Jr., M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Peter Eustin Robert J. Faulconer, M.D. Donald T. Faulkner, M.D. Mr. L.S. Febre Ernest L. Fentress James D. Finley, II John Franklin, M.D. Robert L. Freeman 'Lee A. Gifford R. Bryan Grinnan, Jr., M.D. XS, Inc. TXA Zero's Mr. Submarine Henry Walke Company 'l'George H. Ware Company Watters 8: Martin, Inc. WAVY-TV EVMS HONOR ROLL INDIVIDUALS Mr. 8: Mrs. P.D. Gwaltney, III W. Wright Harrison Raymond R. Hembree 'Lewis D. Hirschler Mr. 8: Mrs. Richard D. Hofheimer Shirley T. Holland Charles E. Horton, M.D. Mrs. Virginia W. Hudgins Edwin Jacobson 'FMr. 8: Mrs. Lucius J. Kellam Edward D. Levy, M.D. 'Mr. 8: Mrs. Sherwood E. Liles, Jr. Thomas J. Lyons Robert E. McAlpine, M.D. Robert K. Maddock, M.D. Alvin A. Margolius, Jr., M.D. Glenn R. Mitchell Mr. 8: Mrs. James A. Monroe M. Lee Payne Mary H. Payne R. Kenneth Weeks Engineers 'f'Willis Wayside Furniture Co., Incorporated fJohn E. Wool Lumber Co., Inc. Yellow Cab, Inc. ikRobert L. Payne, Jr., M.D. Aubrey H. Perry, Sr. 8: Jr. Kenneth R. Perry Memory of Mr. 8: Mrs. Emily Alfriend 8: Hunter R. Rawlings Robert Rubin, D.M.D.g Sherry Hamilton, Jr., D.D.S.g Warren G. Karesh, D.D.S., Ltd. A. Kenneth Scribner Claude A. Smith, M.D. Marguerite B. Taylor W. Wickham Taylor, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. S. Heth Tyler, Jr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Martin Unger John A. Vann, M.D. Lloyd P. Warrington i Richard F. Welton, III Jock R. Wheeler, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Nicholas G. Wilson, III Mr. 8: Mrs. Wesley Wright, Jr. There are 164 Organizations and Individuals listed on the Merit roster. Each has contributed or pledged 85,000 or more to the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation. A roster of merit contributors will be displayed in the Basic Medical Education Building upon completion. Victor J. Ashe Memorial Concert 'Atlantic Furniture Manufacturing Company, Inc. Best Products Co., Inc. Blackford Associates, Inc. Brown, Arris, 8: Langhorne, Inc. E. Caligari 8: Sons, Inc. Carload Furniture Center 'Chesapeake Savings 8: Loan Assn Coastland Corporation 'Colonna's Shipyard, Inc. 'Don Comer Ford Company Conforma Laboratories EVMS MERIT ORGANIZATIONS eDaylin Management Group Delmarva Auto Supply, Inc. Ed-Mar Construction Edmondson, Ledbetter 8: Ballard Electrical Suppliers, Inc. Equity Mortgage Corporation Famous of Portsmouth, Inc. First Baptist Church CBerkleyJ Joseph S. Floyd Corp. Foote Bros. 8: Co. Frank R. Ford Co., Inc. Ford Pile Foundation, Inc. Fowler Roofing Co., Inc. Fraioli-Blum-Yesselman Assoc. 'Gas1anides, Inc. H 8: M Contracting Co., Inc. Hampton Roads Oil Co., Inc. Health Care Centers of America, Incorporated Hirschler Foundation Hunt Auto Supply Co., Inc. H.B. Hunter Company Jett 8: Company Kee's Business College Kellam, Pickrel 8: Lawler Kempsville Building Materials, Inc Kilian GMC, Inc. Robert E. Lee Chapter H122 A. H. E. P. A. W. F. Magann Corp. Marsh 8: McLennan, Inc. Master Auto Service Corp. Metro Machine Corp. E. G. Middleton, Inc. V. H. Monette 8: Co. Naivette Shoppe, Inc. National Realty Corp. Nesson Sales Co., Inc. New Bell Storage Corp. Norfolk Association of Independent Insurance Agents Norfolk Beverage Co., Inc. Norfolk 8: Carolina Telephone 8: Telegraph Co. Norfolk 8: Carolina Telephone 8: Telegraph Co. of Va. Old Dominion Stevedoring Corp. Oliver, Smith 8: Cooke Parsons, Steffen 8: Moore Paxton Company 4'Samuel R. Ames 'tWilliam J . Ames Richard E. Blanchard, D.D.S. G. D. Brooke H. M. Brown Richard C. Burroughs William F. Calliott Dr. 8: Mrs. John W. Capps Russell H. Carter, M.D. Daniel Cowan, M.D. Crile Crisler, M.D. 'Mr. 8: Mrs. George Crump 'Mrs. Evelyn T. Daughtry Richard J . Davis William S. Debnam, D.D.S. Frank F erebee Barry S. Fine Seaborn J . Flournoy Mrs. Hartwell H. Gary, Jr. Bernard 8: Simcoe Glasser Mrs. W. E. Gray Alexander P. Grice, III Peop1e's Bank of Chesapeake F. Perry 8: Son Lumber Co, Inc. Phillips Mercury-Lincoln, Inc. Psychiatric Associates of Tidewater Arthur Polizos Associates Portsmouth Terminals, Inc. Pruden Foundation Quality Shop Roof Engineering Corp. Royal Silver Manufacturing Co., Incorporated Russell 8: Holmes Corp. S 8: N Freight Lines, Inc. Saunders Provision Co., Inc. Seaboard Paint 8: Supply Co., Incorporated Seawell, McCoy, Winston 8: Dalton Seven-Up Bottling Company of Norfolk, Inc. Smith Corner Motors Snow, Jr. 8: King, Inc. Southern Tile Distributors, Incorporated Standard Iron 8: Steel Co., Inc. EVMS MERIT INDIVIDUALS Harry N. Gustin Herman A. Hall, Jr. Phil S. Hamovit George Harkins, M.D. t Mr. 8: Mrs. Charles Hastings Robert D. Hecht Alan J. Hofheimer 'Mrs. Ethel H. Howren Mrs. Paul S. Huber Fred Jacobson Jack Jacobson W. MacKenzie Jenkins, Sr. Jack 8: Eugene L. Kanter, D.D.S. Stewart Construction Co., Inc. Sunlight Laundry 8: Cleaning Co. William H. Swan 8: Sons, Inc. Talbot 8: Associates, LTD. Taylor-Parker Co., Inc. Teagle 8: Little Printers, Inc. 'FTeledyne-Hastings-Raydist Tidewater Shopping Center, Inc. Tidewater Steel Co., Inc. Tidewater Supply Co., Inc. J . Edwin Treakle Foundation 'l'Virginia Tractor Co., Inc. 'Walker 8: LaBerge Co., Inc. 'ltWeaver Fertilizer Co., Inc. J. E. Weddle 8: Assoc., Inc. Welch Industries, Inc. C. B. White 8: Bros., Inc. M. E. Wilkins, Inc. E.V. Williams Co., Inc. Williams Paving Co. Winn Nursery, Inc. WVEC-TV Wynne Wright Motor Corp. Zayre Foundation, Inc. Frank J. O'Connor, Jr., M.D. Alton W. Overton Mrs. Fanny W. Parker Sydnor Y. Priddy Jerry N. Renesis William Ruffin, M.D. Mrs. 8: Mrs. J.M. Ryan Harry S. Seeley Harvey H. Shiflet, D.D.S. T. Howard Spainhour Milton A. Stein John W. Tatum C. E. Thurston, Jr. Joseph Kantor 'Michael Wagenheim Julian S. Lawrence Mrs. Stanley S. Watts Sheldon J . Leavitt Mrs. J . B. White Sanford Lefcoe, D.D.S. 'Mr. 8: Mrs. Thomas H. Willcox, Jr Marvin W. Lucas J . Rives Worsham, Sr. Shepard W. McKenny Radm. Joseph L., M.D. 8: LeRoy Margoluis Sallie Yon Robert L. Neal, Jr. Arnold Zetlin, M.D. Mrs. William P. Nordlinger There are 121 Organizations and Individuals listed on the Medallion roster. Each has contributed or pledged 52,500 or more to the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation. Allied Mills-Dow Chemical Scott B. 8: Annie P. Appleby, Incorporated Batchelder 8: Collins, Inc. Bil-Dry, Grip-On Corp. Buddy's Supermarket Catron Insurance Agency Chandler 8: Gibson Checkered Flag Motor Car Co. Chesapeake Bay Beverage Co., Inc. Conrad Brothers, Inc. Copeland Motors Demober, Inc. J. C. Driskill, Inc. Edmondson Foundation, Inc. Etheridge-Baylor-Hofheimer, Inc. First Colony Telephone Co. First Federal Savings 8: Loan Assn. of Suffolk J. J. Haines Co., Inc. Hampton Roads Tractor 8: Equipment Co. Haycox Construction Mrs. Sylvan Altschul William C. Andrews, M.D. W. Barton Baldwin Leo S. Baydush Mr. 8: Mrs. Preston Blake, Jr. 'James W. Bolding, Jr. James H. Boyd, M.D. ' Thomas C. Broyles F. G. Burns, Jr., M.D. Mrs. John Merrill Campbell Mrs. Miriam Carter John P. Clarke, M.D. George A. Crump 8: Irving B. Hill William B. Curtis John W. Dickerson, M.D. William A. Dickerson, Jr., M.D. William P. Dickson Gerald Einhorn, D.D.S. Claiborne W. Fitchett, M.D. Jack S. Garrison, M.D. Herbert A. Haneman, Jr. George B. Hardy EVMS MEDALLION ORGANIZATIONS Howard Association of Norfolk W. Taylor Johnson Co., Inc. James M. Johnston Trust Kiwanis Club of Portsmouth, Incorporated Lowenthal F urriers Meekins Pontiac Corp. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, 8: Smith Milady, Inc. Cameron Murden 8: Associates Norfolk Iron Works Norfolk Stationery Co., Inc. Norfolk Truck Center, Inc. Old Dominion Peanut Corp. Ellis Olsson Chesapeake Foundation Outland 8: Gray Peltz Brothers, Inc. Portsmouth Rotary Foundation Prestige Spring Corp. Robbie's Home Centers, Inc. EVMS MEDALLION INDIVIDUALS H. Courtenay Harrison, M.D. Edward H. Harrell, Jr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Joseph H. Hecht Reginald B. Henry, Jr., M.D. Lewis D. Hirschler, Jr. Albert Hofheimer Dr. Clarence A. 8: Mary B. Holland Doyle E. Hull Mrs. Louis Jaffe Mr. 8: Mrs. W. Taylor Johnson, Sr. William T. Johnson, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. William J. Jonak, Jr. John Jay Krueger, M.D. Alter Laibstain, M.D. Robert M. McCombs, Ph. D. John McCraw, M.D. J. R. McKenry J. Frank Malbon David L. Margolius Ralph S. Margolius Bertram S. Nusbaum, Jr. William A. Old Security Insurance Agency, Inc. E. B. Sams Co., Inc. Shaw Paint 8: Wall Paper Co., Incorporated Shenandoah Life Insurance Co. L. Snyder Foundation Spertner Jewelers Standard Office Supply, Inc. Swartz, Bresenoff, yavner 8: Jacobs George Tait 8: Sons, Inc. Valjar, Inc. Victory Sales Corp. Virginia Beach Federal Savings 8: Loan Association Welton, Duke 8: Hawks, Inc. Whitehurst-Blassingham Corp. Herbert E. Wittersheim Foundation Wolcott, Spencer, Rivers, Prof. Corp. Women's Auxiliary to Norfolk County Medical Society William C. Overman Daniel H. Payne Richard B. Payne Mrs. Blanche Z. Polis Mr. 8: Mrs. Richard T. Ray Henry M. Rogers, Jr., M.D. Francis E. Rosato, M.D. W. B. Siviter Lawrence N. Smith B. M. Stanton Harry B. Taylor, Jr., M.D. John H. Vansant, M.D. Lucien Von Schilling William B. Warden, M.D. Bertram L. Warren, Jr., M.D. Forrest P. White, M.D. 'J.A. White, M.D. Jay F. Wilks Richard F. Wood Lewis Zeno John G. Zimmerman There are 361 Organizations and Individuals listed on the Citation roster. Each has contributed or pledged 351,000 or more to the Eastern Virginia Medical School Foundation. Albano Cleaners, Inc. Allegheny Pepsi Bottling Co. American Sheet Metal Corp. Atkinson Dredging Co. George N. Badran 8: Co., Inc. Balaban's Bank Street Baptist Church Bank of Suffolk Bay Disposal Beach Ford, Inc. Beach Medical, Inc. i Beach Travel Service, Inc. Belair Chevrolet Corp. Beneficial Finance Co. of Norfolk, Inc. Berkley Feed Corp. T! A Berkley Realty Brundage, Cohen, Kroskin 8: Associates Burroughs Corporation Burrus, Cootes 8: Burrus Byrd, Dinsmore 8: Evans, LTD. E. Caligari 8: Co., Inc. Capital Concrete Inc. 'l'Carolina Coach Company Carpenter Construction Co., Incorporated L. Chenman, Inc. Commonwealth Masonry, Inc. Cox Funeral Home, Inc. Craig, Abiouness 8: Associates Davis Grain Corporation Doumar, Pincus, Knight 8: Harlan Doyle Brick Company Henry Eagleton Company Eastern Auto Distributors, Incorporated Elliot 8: Company, Inc. Feather 'N' Fin Ferrell Linoleum 8: Tile Co. Fidelity Commercial Company :'fFinch Massenburg Carpet Co. Thomas Adamson Theodore Adler, M.D. James D. Alexander, Jr. E. Ray Altizer, M.D. Herbert R. Ashelle Altschul EVMS CITATION ORGANIZATIONS First Baptist Church Chesapeake First Baptist Church, Norfolk First Calvary Baptist Church Fourth .Baptist Church Frito Co. of Norfolk, Inc. Gemini Builders, Inc. - Dragas Mortgage Hampton Roads Welders Supply, Incorporated Guy, Cromwell, Betz, Smith, Culverhouse 8: Dickerson Angus I. Hines, Inc. Hipage Co., Inc. Hogshire Tent 8: Awning Mfg. Company, Inc. 'fL. J. Hoy, Inc. Jamestown Exposition House Tour 8: Art Show Jerusalem Baptist Church D.D. Jones Transfer 8: Warehouse Junior Women's Club of Norfolk Keeling-Bradshaw, Inc. Kempsville Lions Club Koppers Company, Inc. Legg, Mason 8: Co., Inc. Frederick Livermon Interiors Medical Foundation of the Ports- mouth Academy of Medicine Moody, McMurran 8: Miller Mt. Herman Baptist Church Mt. Zion Baptist Church Mutual Insurance Agency of Norfolk New Central Baptist Church Norfolk Chapter of Chums, , Incorporated Norfolk General Hospital Alumnae Association Norfolk Junior Chamber of Commerce Norfolk Links EVMS CITATION INDIVIDUALS Charles W. Anderson, M.D. Vonoe M. Annas W. Leigh Ansell Victor J. Ashe Stuart Ashman, M.D. Norfolk Savings 8: Loan Corporation Norton 8: Ellis, Inc. Ocean Park Women's Club Pembroke Mall Merchants Association, Inc. Portsmouth Paving Corp. Priest Electronics, Inc. Queen Street Baptist Church Redwood Garden Club Rehoboth Baptist Church S 8: K Sales Sanitary Linen Service Jack Schechter Memorial Fund Schwartz CDavidJ Foundation, Inc Shiloh Baptist Church Shulman's Inc. Sisson 8: Company, Inc. J. L. Smith Corporation Solite Corporation Southland Manufacturing Co., Incorporated Stant 8: Stant 'Jack Stein Memorial Fund Max Steinman Foundation, Inc. Stevens Roofing Corp. Suburban Enterprises, Inc. Suburban Woman's Club Suffolk News Herald, Inc. Taylor Salt 8: Chemical Co., Incorporated Third Baptist Church Thompson-Royal Dodge, Inc. Tidewater Dispose-All, Inc. Tidewater Rent-A-Car, Inc. Ullman 8: Emanuel, Inc. Union Baptist Church Vanguard Construction Co. Van Sumner, Inc. Virginia Squires Basketball Club Walke-Parks Insurance Corp. Ward's Corner Lions Club Wilkins 8: Quayle Joe Assaf Mr. 8: Mrs. John B. Baines J. W. Baker, Jr., M.D. E. A. Barham, M.D. John W. Barnard, M.D. Richard F. Barry, III Gaspare 8: Catherine Battaglia, Jr. James S. Berger, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. William Bernart Lawrence A. Bernert, M.D. John B. Bernhardt Mr. 8: Mrs. Bernard M. Beskin John I. Bowman, D.D.S. John Bowman, M.D. William E. Boyd, M.D. Harvey J. Breit, M.D. C. Herbert Brooks Lyman B. Brooks, Ph.D. Mrs. H. O. Brown Paul L. Brown Lawrence W. Bruff John A. Byrd, M.D. Lcdr. 8: Mrs. Kenneth C. Campbell Robert M. Campbell, M.D. A. Joseph Canada, Jr. James Van Dyck Card Mr. 8: Mrs. Worrall R. Carter, Jr. F.J. Carr, Jr., M.D. George H. Carr, Jr., M.D. R. Cecil Chapman, M.D. Frank B. Clare, M.D. Donald H. Clark James P. Coates John S. Cockey Mrs. Helga E. Comninaki William E. Conklin Walter P. Conrad, Sr. C. C. Cooley, M.D. Francis N. Crenshaw Mrs. Frank W. Crumpler Gordon B. Cutler Henry S. Daniel, IV Guy E. Daugherty Neal P. Davis, D.D.S. Behrooz Dayanim, M.D. Albert 8: Arthur Diamonstein Susan and Alan Donn Ronald I. Dozoretz, M.D. L.C. Drake Donald W. Drew, M.D. Elizabeth S. Duffee 'Earl W. Dunham Col. 8: Mrs. Fenlon A. Durand Oscar E. Edwards, M.D. Robert J. Eigen George F. Elsasser, jr., M.D. V. Alfred Etheridge, Jr. Russell Evett, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Edward S. Ferebee Oscar B. Ferebee, Jr. Lowery D. Finley, Jr. Joseph G. Fiveash, Jr., M.D. Robert F . Foeller .- John Foster, M.D. V David C. Fuller John H. Furr Robert B. Gahagan, M.D., Randolph Garnett, M.D. l H. Singleton Garrett W.Y. Garrett, M.D. William F. Gibbs, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. John L. Gibson, II Anne Cooke Gilliam Fred T. Given, M.D. Stuart D. Glasser William A. Goldback Milton Goldin, M.D. E. E. Goldman, M.D. Robert A. Goodman Robert C. Goodman, Jr. Mrs. John D. Gordan D.R.H. Gourley, M.D. E.M. Gourley George E. Gowen Francis G. Griffin, M.D. Allen Grissom J. W. Halstead, Jr. Garth S. Hancock Gordon F. Harrell, M.D. H. D. Hayes, M.D. ' Samuel W. Hill E. Beaumont Hodge, Jr., M.D. Charles Hofheimer Robert G. Hofheimer 'Thomas L. Hofheimer George G. Hollins, Jr., M.D. John W. Hollowell, M.D. Gerald H. Holman, M.D. Francis H. Holmes, M.D. William B. Hoover, M.D. Bert H. Hornstein C. Randolph Hudgins, Jr. Phillip F. Hudson Benjamin Huger, II Donald E. Huston Hon. Lawrence W. I'Anson Gus. J. James, II W. MacKenzie Jenkins, Jr. I. Curtis Jernigan T.N.P. Johnson, Jr. Gordon W. Jones Joseph A. Jordan, Jr. Mr. 8: Mrs. Douglas M. Joyner Jerry J. Kantor Arthur S. Kaplan, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Leonard Karp Joseph L. Kelly, Jr. E. P. Kiernan, Jr. Archer Emmet King, III M. K. King, M.D. H. Melvin Kunkle, M.D. Leopoldo E. Ladaga, M.D. Philip Lastings, D.D.S. Morris Lazaron, Jr. Bernard Lidman, M.D. Mr. 8: Mrs. Robert B. Lindemann Alvin P. Long, Jr., M.D. Felice E. Lowenberg John F. McCabe, M.D. Michael W. McCabe Robert M. McCombs, Ph.D. Dorris Withers McNeal Thomas T. McPaul Hon. Henry W. MacKenzie, Jr. Hon. 8: Mrs. John A. MacKenzie J. Hugo Madison Capt. 8: Mrs. S.J. Major R. M. Malbon, Jr. John A. Mapp, M.D. Dorothy A. Martin Mr. 8: Mrs. Frederick V. Martin H.D. Martinez, M.D. John Meek, Jr. Donald J. Merchant, Ph.D. H. Clarkson Meredith, Jr., M.D. H. Curtis Merrick, M.D. Bernard H. Miller, M.D. Grayson B. Miller . Maurice M. Miller, M.D. Dr. 8: Mrs. Donald Mingione Richard Mladick, M.D. A. A. D. Moore, M.D. Edward J. Morrison, Ph.D. John W. Musick Edward Myers, D.D.S. Nester F . Natalio, M.D. Richard B. Nicholls, M.D. William K. Norman L. Wayne Norris Mr. 8: Mrs. Clay Q. Nugent, Jr. Charles G. Nusbaum E. Joseph Nusbaum Jehu C. old Levi Old, M.D. R. M. Oliver, Ph.D. Warren Oliver, Jr. Themis V. Pangelos, M.D. Ernest H. Parker Willis G. Partridge, Jr. David R. Patek, Ph.D. Radm. G. Serpell Patrick Roy G. Phelps, Jr. Roy R. Powell, M.D. William T. Prince George N. Psimas, M.D. Dr. 8a Mrs. Joseph J. Quarles Richard C. Reed, M.D. Robert M. Reed Abdon Reina, M.D., LTD. Mildred B. Ricardo Paul W. Robinett, M.D. Mr. 8a Mrs. Walter D. Rosenberg Mr. William F. Rountree, Sr. Mr. William F. Rountree, Jr. Mrs. Ethel K. Royster Milton Salasky, M.D. Stanley L. Samuels James R. Scholten, M.D. David B. 8: Boris Schwetz Robert F. Scott, M.D. R. B. Seal, M.D. Robert Seeherman, M.D. Julian W. Selig, Jr., M.D. John G. Sellers, M.D. Conrad M. Shumadine Mrs. Tore E. Skeppstrom, Jr. Craig Slingluff John F. Small, Jr. B. L. Smith, M.D. Adm. H. Page Smith Julius J. Snyder, M.D. H. Calvin Spain H. Dale Sponaugle, M.D. Robert C. Stackhouse Robert L. Stein Maurice Steingold Edward W. Stephens A. Gordon Stephenson T. Lane Stokes, M.D. Nathan Supak Mr. 8a Mrs. William B. Taliaferro Mr. 8a Mrs. Gervas Taylor, Sr. Helen W. Taylor, M.D. Mr. 8a Mrs. William M. Taylor John S. Thiemeyer, Jr., M.D. Robert H. Thrasher, M.D. Miss Annie Tignor G. B. F. Traylor, M.D. De Witt S. True, M.D. 'kCharles F. Tucker Roger L. Visser, D.D.S. Charles R. Waters, II Charles E. Watkins, Jr. Mr. Sc Mrs. J.A. Weinberg, Jr Mrs. Alice B. Welton David C. Whitehead Memorial Fund M. Richard Whitehill, M.D. Hon. G. William Whitehurst Mrs. King Whitney William B. Wiley, M.D. Rev. David B. Williams J. O. Willie, M.D. J . Martin Willis A. C. Woodruff Roy A. Woods Frederick G. Woodson, M.D. William C. Worthington Mrs. Virginia Bell Wright John Oliver Wynne Gerald N. Zeno The following pledges were received after the Yearbook closing date. By special arrangement with the printer they are listed below: EVMS SPONSOR INDIVIDUALS Mrs. Mary D. Edmondson EVMS CITATION ORGANIZATIONS United States Sales Corp. EVMS CITATION INDIVIDUALS Mr. Sc Mrs. Milton Kramer N. Virginia Southgate Braden Vandeventer, Jr. -- ' J'-' - .- .Le-ff 4 me : iw,-'V 'wiruig :v'7 .'..L'l1I- 2 ,-'-T1'-fT'1.- 1.r,:s-1'4.L-.-- 2. 21 fa ,, T. .v g. 33: . -2 11 V, 11 .f3i':Vg.:'i5.vL-g1g',:APjiV 2 .:,,,5',ji.f,, U.4.-J.'5r4i.-g5::5.3LlL'5fF3!::-:','q.tgf.g E-it-::,,.'.5:f.22 332,33-gi? ,VM v. .. ' - -- ..- - wtf fr' , . Jfmaffiwnf 4 q?'Elp..mrvf1zr1f-:rbwsfs-at H ..-- .tg..rffeff-getfeatruaamfafa'-r:a1.v.2'ff if ...la..s:.f.::Qat N- .,, gse.::.r.' ':-E--. -Q - .ff .,::.4:+3s5-1.1.J--9.-QAM, ,-.:'ae:..,--'f' In , . V I., Half.- Few - 1, , V lm- J .I .L s.. ,A A Yagi,-g,,, V ,..:y. 1.1547 ... . f. ,iw K , 5 .,, ., s..R v - D... 1. ,wi . . 'iii-'fq'. wi -gjl:5lF'4 ' 4,152 'z3EWii'IilfYjEF:.,f!AhtL'F'-A' --- ' gf- , Q up I - -6- -'-1 'f ' F- '1- -- 51'- ' A f A r'tve,2'G- X .4-lf . ur'-if . a waits... .,..,. .f'1riQfr.a. . '1'-Wits.-AzcfaF-rziriexg..-Rff...?' .- ' I ' Y' ' 1...-,J ,- w, -,AM --,-is ,ef gtk' ,..f' 1 ti .W-A . T.-f :ap W ' ft' X ...fe-rfifr-'fvcfit-tif5.41 P . 5.-,.A.V.'.1-15,2 1,-,...- .W i.Q:Qlgg5,gg11gw 1-ag,-fi gym kgs r , f, wi ',-' ,f- ,1-,ieiff TH? fQ2i 'A WJ'?' 4' -' ,, .. wwf,-'fqiiglzli pff3?1fiWFi'l?' . -?.,i.,'w:' 4 .. ,.f n'.- - . A. ,-. I , . -All IJ V. .5 .fr-...,f-G-aff, -1,51-Yau,-If .1 pw ff -SQ, M-3.-,,,,l.1,5l,q,,,:f .,r,,.9,:u -X -5 'E ef A Wig-6'fW!.f!11'l- .Iif ' .'RfEfif'fQ19 W .mr ,QIi', 4 ,l'rJ,,L?g2,x9'-.:J 291,43 gpm, ji -3 5 l. P' .2-gg' ,fi ' l . 1'0'Ax?fwt1 if While 1 113- A' I 'Jfif-'j'nll'g -' . A ,up if ' ,Q-5'5 l Y 1 ggi! .', -,iii js.. f- -an Flys., Jiang? .lflifw ' , , 1:- ra., EJ , P, .-.355 ' ' Sttiilpfofg- Flik .1 A A - ,, ...ag--'..'f':.grf. - - ,L ..-'AU ' ' 7 -gg, r rgwp '- an :-- 'I 'fl -mf . ff - i tif .ia 1,-g. I . Big, ,,,,Vfr.21 E1-f 1b'.- ,4-aZJ.g-pP N- I r . .41-5-'.f..:faf.f--ff. .. ar-2f4:.z' fff-Er' I xi - .t.....,E....a-. I ! X ,V My 4 4 1. L ADMINI TRATION RICHARD M. MAGRAW, M.D. President, Eastern Virginia Medical Authority E A i E 1 E GERALD HOLMAN, M.D. RICHARD C. PETERS Vice-President, Vice-President, Academic Affairs Administration 8. Services DEAN'S LETTER Dear Wendy, John, David, Richard, Frank, Susan, Rick, Tom, Greg, Tom, Jim, Magee, Marcus, Maureen, Dennis, Tom, Scott, Tony, George, Pete, Larry, Mel, and Matt: Your graduation as the Charter Class of the Eastern Virginia Medical School marks a most important milestone for you, the faculty, and this Community. Together the students, faculty, administration, and the Community have shared a three year learning process in the development of this community based school without walls. Your success is the success of E.V.M.S. as our destinies are irrevocably linked. It has been and continues to be an exciting venture in medical education. As you pursue your graduate medical education and, ultimately, establish practice, we will always take a measure of pride in your progress. We believe you will do the same in ours as the Medical School grows and more physicians are educated by methods that are based upon what we developed together. We hope many of you will return to Eastern Vir- ginia, but wherever your ultimate careers take you, we will think of you often. On behalf of the faculty and staff of the Eastern Virginia Medical School and the Eastern Virginia Medical Authority and all those whose freely given time and treasure over the years made this graduation day possible, I thank you for your commitment, involvement, your constructive criticisms, and most of all, your support. Our wish for you is Godspeed and good fortune, in your medical careers and your personal fulfillment. As always, Gerald H. Holman, M.D. Dean Eastern Virginia Medical School QF ROBERT M. MCCOMBS, PhD. JAMES R. SCHOLTEN, M.D. Associate Dean t t- 1 1 1 ' t I it I . ! i - ,t 2 i i i t t 5 BRUCE J. INNES, M.D. Assistant Dean, Continuing Education DOUGLAS M. MONTGOMERY, PhD. Assistant to the Dean .r 5 rt- it i T, V ttirm ' JJ 'LJ Ii'lw.2, i 'J' 'ii CHARLES HORTON, M.D. THOMAS KOLCUM Director of Graduate Education Director of Business Affairs b Assistant Dean Educational Resources JOSEPH L. YON, M.D. Consultant to the Dean THOMAS QUINLAN Assistant Director of Graduate Education 42: ,TI f 7 .: 4 AL ANNE CRAMER Librarian NOT PICTURED: FRANK NELSON, D.D.S. Assistant Dean U.S.P.H.S. Affairs C. COOPER BELL, M.D. Assistant Dean Veterans Administration Affairs CAPTAIN D. C. GOOD, M.D. Assistant Dean Naval Hospital Affairs MARY LU PARKS Registrar ,M Hi' JI ANATOMY I I i l f HERBERT SCHAPIRO Professor 1 I 1 . 1 f H sn f, nv, nd 1 A ' K t g Rf PL - Q fax 54.3 if yi L , 5,3 F.. '49 . .A A 1 X , X I . K I J EDWARD MORRISON Professor and Chnirmon sm. 1453 , 1441 ss. .,, ty. . i 'Y ' : Li. W i 6 .JV M15 MARTHA CLENDENIN U 4, Assistant Professor Q D M -I,-,,.. 5 C2 DOUGLAS McDOUGAL R. MICHAEL OLIVER Assistant Professor Assistant Professor 'TE ' 'gl' gf... E7 V' Q ,li Q 3 fgxigsq ,Q T 6 'jf J ,, A , af' tl QUINCY A. AYSCUE, SR. GEORGE H.M. RECTOR JOHN HESS Associate Professor Associate Professor Assistant Professor and Chairman V s. :R ,... --vsgggagqw X4 m y 'lv:gi,,,,, in '. ., fi Amis-9-,+1q11f 541 -' , - 9511.P?-3Z1i5'5fii1Eifw'Q ' -N t 2 f'i11522!!i121Fiisifi E - , L2iggiIiiigifki,l xf ' E A JOSEPH CARLUCCI FELIX MAROTO Assistant Professor lngtucmr I I 1 I ROBERT MANNING Associate Professor BIOCHEMISTRY KARL SCHELLENBERG Professor and Chairman ' .J'Zb ff A 'W 3 .l S STEVEN HOTI'A Professor DAVID R. PATEK Assistant Professor Ile k Ji -few: iz, H Q45 Pa.: are I 21' -L Z.,-Z,j 'ff4 ' ,AL NORMAN D. HINMAN Assistant Professor MARK J. ROWE Assistant Professor INTERNAL MEDICINE I I I I ROBERT T. MANNING X Professor and Chairman JOHN DEMPSEY JAMES BAKER Professor Professor ,---.v -.La ,l JAMES LEA, JR. JOHN A. CARLSTON TAPAN K. CHAUDHURI VERNON COFER, JR. Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor I E I ,rs l I ings - R 'QW-. ' if R, I ' ' .I . I X 'Il ,Y 1. 'CJ- J, I U. iii., V wx! 1 rI'e i, ' ,I , i. p ,. 1 ' -.4 gi , I I fi 4 . I Q. wiLuAM DICKINSON, JR. OSCAR EowARos ALAN EARTH Associate Professor Associate Professor JOHN DAWSON ASSOCIUIG Professor Associate Professor T DAVID ELDER GEORGE ELSASSER JR Associate Professor Associate Professor DONALD DREW If JAMES E. EFHERIDGE, JR. ssociate Professor of - ' I 'Q JOHN FRANK'-'N Associate Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor 2 ROBERT MADDOCK H. CLARKSON MEREDITH, JR. Associate Professor RAMNATH NAYAK Associate Professor HARRY PARISER Associate Professor ,. ,J 1,-, -U A.A. DDUGLAS MOORE Associate Professor 'T' JAMES D. PRICE Associate Professor 53-eff If Y, , . I Il it WILLIAM TERRY Associate Professor - ' K .ir DANIEL ANDERSON Assistant Professor iff Hitt R, I ' STEPHEN CAPLAN Assistant Professor 1 1 I i E I . ' 'ivl ' . JOHN SETIER SAMUEL SHAPIRO Associate Professor Associate Professor S. W. SEITY Associate Professor ROBERT W. ALFRIEND NUCHAEI- VULPE DUANE W0M30lT Assistant Professor ASSOCICITG PI'0feSSOI' Agggciqfe Profeggqr E 7- , imnfil v , ' T ag tfirmnm mf , I .9 ram: Fm I ! Pi ff. 21 '? 'f Lf: Q if 'V r'l L:4ff Aiki- ' ' ' fx .Tr 1 - A E , it 'f 1 2 'V' ' EDWARD CANTOW HARVEY BREIT ROBERT L. BURGER Assisfanf professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor i V V ,Lu rt, DONALD FAULKNER RICHARD EASTON GUILLERMO ESPEJO Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor 'Lx . .,., ' -0- I V' I - V 6 r.. :A . CHARLES J. GOLDMAN WILLIAM W. GOUGH Assistant Professor Assistant Professor MOHAMMAD A. ISLAM CARL wi HARTMAN ' P I Assistant Professor Assistant Professor PHILLIP M. GREEN Assistant Professor HERMAN LAIBSTAIN Assistant Professor EDWARD L. LILLY ' HUGH B. McCORMICK Assistant Professor Assistant Professor ROBERT MORTON Assistant Professor i I I 'P 'S' I ar v l i JAMES SCUTERO RICHARD SKEPPSTROM VINCENT SPECKHART Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor ff. Y ' I ' J had-'4 gy , Ji ' ML f I J' . I L I f ,WI r , 1 I CHARLES HOFFMAN Assistant Professor ERNEST C. LEVlS'I'ER, JR. Assistant Professor JOHN C. SCHAEFFER Assistant Professor I I I 5 PIERRE TULOU Assistant Professor RANGANATHAN VENKATESAN Assistant Professor ROBERT WILSON Assistant Professor . 'ILL' f I 5 41' . H '.'.V . I-'15 ' 4,1 I .' ' , -'I L' ' gc. 4 I 'Zi-5, Siif' IW 5 I I If L A I REGINALD B. HENRY, JR. ROBERT J. SWAN . s ,I5I'fF'I ' . ' ,V I ' CHARLES ANDERSON DAVID FOREMAN Associate Professor TNORMA S. OLLER MAGPOC- Q' '. f i1 T s'1F'.fj1l2'f 13' . ' f :F '.: i, 1 .-33 g:'.1- il-fl :Lf ARNOLD ZETLIN NOT PICTURED: ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS FRANK BILISOLY R. CECIL CHAPMAN RUSSELL EVETT ROBERT GAHAGAN LAWRENCE HUNSICKER KENNETH HYATT ARTHUR KAPLAN JOHN KOSTINAS DONALD LEVY ALVIN MARGOLIUS JOHN VANDERDECHER ASSISTANT PROFESSORS ANTOINE ARRAGE BERTON ASHMAN FIAMMETTA BARCHIESI JOHN A. BYRD CRAIG CALDWELL CHARLES DONLAN, JR. ASHER FRIEDMAN ANDRE GUAY JAMES HALL, III ROBERT HEIDE PATRICK HENNELLY, JR. EDWIN HODGE JOSEPH HOLLIS YOUNG-SUNG HONG HANNIBAL HOWELL RONALD KLAYTON JAMES KOPP EDWARD LEVY ROBERT MANN REUBEN MCBRAYER, JR. JESS MILLER BHASKAR RAO JAMES REID EDGAR ROSSHEIM RALPH STARKEY MICHAEL TEMKO EUGENE TEMPLE MARY JANE TOMPKINS WALTER WALLINGFORD WILLIAM WATKINS THOMAS WEBB RONALD WYLES TERRY YARBROUGH INSTRUCT ORS STEPHEN BEUTTEL MARIE MANICKAVASAGAR CHARLES MARESH HOWARD STEIER ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTOR JOHN ECHTERNACH LECTURERS BERNARD LIDMAN WILLIAM READ RANKING IN PROGRESS HERBERT BREWER WILLIAM P. EDMONDSON JR CHARLES EGOLF H. COURTENAY HARRISON DOROTHY LEAKE ALFRED MILLER LARRY SHARPE ALFREDO SORIANO M. RICHARD WHITEHILL FAMILY PRACTICE and COMMUNITY MEDICINE ROBERT CASSIDY Professor and Chairman CHRISTOPHER BUTTERY DESMOND HAYES Associate Professor , N f f',- n 'ui Q ,AN A -,J -H XIII! A- R QI ' A Q Lgifg i Li t, Fm, 1- 'IW 1 47 4 .1 'I mx L E I1 L . m A ,A , , , ' . -- A XR RICHARD EASTON HARRY WISE -, .f .- Associate Professor Associate Professor 2,123 i?Iiflg2'f , 'W H414 L T. WINSTON GOULDIN B. A. HUBBARD I a hh fi A-5 7-' I I SAMUEL BARBOO, JR. , N-..., f' ,1 , 5' I :pE:,',+ - 9 I ., ,,,-:.,. eg , 1-. ' . a., j .Z I A , I 1 x . . . X f'i,'fwf5iffg f'fwf5.- -. fu I ' ,S ,f 21 a , S, ' :' -!-' 5 4 J' ' ' I I 1 9 Q I C ' ga. I 1 F,,,. K I , an Iv , 'A' 'F 357 ! I JW . , f 'Y ' w In I7 II ,N I -' II X PI L A . x D. D. CONKWRIGHT , , W. STANLEY JENNINGS LEOPOLD MORENO NOT PICTURED: ROBERT BYRNE EE-Init- f Y V 'A II ,, N I I 1 ' 'V.-- , V If 'I 'I ' , I , ' , I 1. ,I - N I F- QI, A I T , : I P, il I I J N J i AJ Ili f A 51 J IL IIII: ' I 'si Ia? I, 'Z .I .f'j'3Aj1jFg .i I gQ.5g?-:FSC gilgi If-l:..f1 :E CH Rl ARD DEATON EVERETT KING . mm r' ' ' T 1'v. 'l.,II. LI ,QI ,. ,H X -I I, A Qs- , I , my ' 5473 lr! 1 X5 III I ' fi, ,. I I -' gf, 1 'g l' . I I 4 ' ,l 'l J' - ' Tf I 0 W , '. ' -' -1 LI Y,-R ' . 'IN :A - Za. 1 -:FX A-,ijt fa533X, - MMIQ5 .. K J, It I I ff? -, I' .. QNX , ,, '- S mf 4 LAURA MORRIS ,A , Lax , --1 ,- . 1 . :'l-' .Va- W I I v ,, 'I JAMES CARLEO I 1- 5, - - ..w,1.gI I ' I. . w M i I J J L I. , A B I I 4? ,I I if ,L ,,,,,, '-,.ui:.g fi '7' 9' ,eva -, Q A Ai -.3'.- f-ff-L-if w,f,.If I mf- FI 'I' if -fl, -5 , L I Q-gw.lfff,...qIya-gh! I . SAMUEL DELAURA HOWARD KRUGER ,1' vL.-it 5 . .I -P I ,Oh Q3-:: is --I4 A1 I .,f.9yT.n?gI I 1 v .-3 uv? I s ff! 'ai' I 1 FRANK ROWELL I -II, -4--J,,..,-Aw, -f '--V ng .-.. . NY x 1 I isg S, N I ,. ,' I I2--L A, I I. L GEORGE CAVROS HAROLD HORDEN If fm -E WTI, :V kf f' ' -qv. I' It . xf 9, - l!II,:, I :',-I ,,a.f-I . 4 II. I 1fI.,,: fl 1. 11.1.4-,W 7 ' 7 I-, R I F ALTER IAIBSTAIN AUBREY SHELTON WILLIAM BANDY, EDWARD BARHAM, JR., PELIGNY CAMACHO, ALBERTO CASTANEDA, JAMES CHARLTON, ALVIN CICCONE, LEONARD DAVIS, OSCAR DIAZ, GUIDO ESCALANTE, MILTON GOLDIN, JEROME GROSS, CLARENCE HOLLAND, KASEDUL HOQ, WILLIAM JOHNSON, DAVID LEWIS, MICHAEL MORO, JOHN MYERS, JAMES PEES, L. B. PENALOSA, JEROME PERLMAN, HARRY PLUNKEIT, JR., WILLIAM POPE, PERLA SOLINAP, BEN STEINGOLD, RALPH STOKES, WILLIAM WARDEN, PHILLIP WILSON, M. YUNAS. ROBERT MCCOMBS Professor DANIEL SONNENSHINE Professor 'I DONALD MERCHANT Professor and Chairman I 71-,N 41,14 .Z , I V3 I :fkfii -- ,fa ::. V I' sp '- V ' f I I-If' 'ig' wr- JA-, .ui-1 ' S TG T i'i':'2 34- lf . ,::: ,fffffki 1 'Q 159.4 I , I 5' -A-, Y 2 II . .-11.23 ' ,. .rzzrzr 1' 1 ' .5?r .mIE 1? I .'llT.I:':fl5 4' GEORGE L. WRIGHT Professor MICROBIOLOGY I I I I I ALVA JOHNSON Assistant Professor HARRY PARISER Professor I If W' M A , INLLII I .1 I I gli , I , I . . , 7,'.,v.L I J , LJ ,, , KENNETH SOMERS Associate Professor 'v-. fm -Ls, ff' x N N-A :bf I X Q Q J ' X L1 , x 3 LX , OOM 1 4555 81 IMMUNULOGY BEVERLY ANN WEEKS Assistant Professor BURTON MOSS ROBERT HOUSEKNECHT Assistant Professor Instructor HARRY A. SNYDER Instructor I I WILLIAM ANDREWS Professor MASON ANDREWS Professor and Chairman FRED GIVEN, JR. Associate Professor OBSTETRICS JOHN KIGHT WILLETTE LEHEW Associate Professor Associate Professor ,,, HELEN W. TAYLOR JARLATH MACKENNA Associate Professor Assistant Professor 151,.o 52.1, :- , vii A 'E- -A - 5' fffff 'I'-I I ,L V D If II I I , L' WILLIAM BYRD Associate Professor I I I I.. PAUL MOZLEY Associate Professor HERBERT GATES JAMES M. WOLCOTT, JR. WAYNE D. BORING, JR- Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor and GYNECOLOGY ROBERT HOWARD Lecturer g k A , f V, I 21753 t, we I .. x1:Z? ' .3f It 'f- 'I'-f fsiiiff 41' .13 4 593. A -' -1- ,ff 2 :ff ff5,f..g.,L ifkiiii -. msg .W 3- Tffrrw iff- x- '-1,4 'V -5L'f1.f-.-svf lr' .V '1- WILLIAM WINSTON Lecturer , ..-w'fE,f 4. Ii, . :N ,VA A N., ' - J -' f ,J . Q Q L tl ' t,. EL ,, v , . -- , ' - Q ' -I '-H H ' yo- 5 I. h . .7 p f gb Nv ' Q We V r-rf- jigs, JAMES O. WILLIE L. LESLIE WASSERMAN, JR. Assistant Professor Instructor 55 7' NOT PICTURED: ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS RICHARD UPTON ASSISTANT PROFESSOR DONALD MILLER CHARLES NICKERSON WILLIAM REINGOLD CLAUDE SMITH JAMES VIA BERTRAM WARREN, JR INSTRUC'l' ORS PHILLIP PARK ROBERT PUTZE LECTURERS FRANK DENARO FRANCIS GRIFFIN BETTY MERIWETHER DEWITT TRUE FREDERICK WITI Lecturer I ff? JOSEPH MCFADDEN ALBERT LOEW Professor 8. Chairman Associate Professor U' ' ' .Y ' ,P , ILE lf I 1 c ,A 'll BERKLEY L. RISH ALEXANDRE SOLOMON Associate Professor Assistant Professor NOT PICTURED: ABDOU REINA, Assitant Professor DAVID HERZ, Instructor KARL NIELSON, Instructor RICHARD NEAL, JR., Ranking in progress JOHN H. PRESPER Instructor ' 3?-fx X 2 lg ,fa 6 Y IL! in Hull, ffllluhu 1' f 7 I 1,111 FRANK CLARE Associate Professor JERRY 0. PENIX Assistant Professor DANIEL H. WHITE Instuctor 4' ' 5 F 5 ' - - I L 1 S . -- x I - 'Q L5 e fs-fs, 'iam , wwf' 'm g fr, ,, Hlnmqrfnw in ,.,1 WI W, ,hu 'I' I Pant ' I I' ' ' Mt 'Visit 'I .g1fWfff?f ' ' af'-it -'Y ..ff4,z.W ' I2-..1i.+. Nay-V' ' I f,1 I A ,WI Q ,nfuznf - W UW' wU f 54,41 sn! K' f 1, yfff Inv- A ,415-. rw DAVID YOUNG JOHN THIEMEYER, JR. JOEL MASON ROBERT NEFF Associate Professor Associate Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Pf0f6SS0f If W Q NOT PICTUREDJ .-,, . , 75 ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS ' Q ' oERvAs TAYLOR, JR. GERALD WEITZMAN vi ,. JOHN VANN 2 ASSISTANT PROFESSORS INSTRUCTORS ' JAMES COLLIER, JR, FRANCIS BURNS, JR. .J JOHN DOBSON JAMES PHILLIPS ' LOUIS JORDAN CLARKE RUSS ' PAUL RANDELS EARL D. WHITE J 9 I c - - - - ,E II It I Nuff f '.,s my-J f :Iv J, I, - A . it Wikia' 5, , I V, :'lf,E. i !.v ' ,-,. f .' 331 'iw' A A Vx ID G F l .55 ., II ll 4-,I-',,. . 455: ' 't ' I -if X 'K A A IRQ f F ' ' CURTIS SPEAR IRA CANTIN Assistant Professor Instructor ,pic , ROBERT WADDELL HENRY WAIVE STERLING WILLIAMSON Instructor Instructor Assistant Professor OTOLARYNGOLOGY GARY SCHECHTER Associate Professor and Chairman J. PARKER CROSS MOHAMAD A. AFIFY ERNEST A. MURDEN, JR. Associate Professor Instructor Instructor A MILTON SALASKY WILLIAM SMITH, JR. Instructor Instructor ' f ,JE , E -gy.. -Z x NOT PICTURED: INSTRUCTORS WILLIAM CRUTCHFIELD JOHN SELLERS , ASSISTANT PROFESSORS M. G. LALL W. R. STEFFEY CHARLES SALE EUGENE MIHALYKA JOHN STEHLIK DONALD SLY ALVIN MIRMELSTEIN BRENDA RYALS RICHARD ROBINS NORMAN FARRAR, ranking in progress OPHTHALMOLOGY WILLIAM HUMPHREY Associate Professor and Chairman W. WICKHAM TAYLOR Associate Professor MARSHALL REDDING Assistant Professor JOHN DICKERSON Assistant Professor KM NNN M wif SN f in Q4 55 f I ew . W 5.x 'iii'-g - ,U 71-rs.. J Z' V ,y , 9 . 'x:' I -3 . ' 4,-1 sv W' rf P A I wi g, .2 I I NOT PICTURED: ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS WILLIAM NEWBY ASSISTANT PROFESSORS JEREMIAH KLOTZ, JR. IRA LEDERMAN EDWIN PEARLMAN INSTRUCT ORS RICHARD GRIFFEY MICHAEL HINES PHILLIP LEVY RUSSELL MEYER BONNIE RESHEFSKY H. DALE SPONAUGLE WALLER TAYLOR, JR. DAVID WHITELOCK, JR. JAMES C. WRIGHT, ranking in progress EUGENE HEATWOLE Assistant Professor my ffwnl ' Q Qi it J I X 'Lb . riff X . IL' mf' if ,. I-l ' wil X IWW XX It -.. , 'y ,M F if ! iii! 1, ,ii , fer 1 I I tt, L it f .It I., 4 I .J I HARRY B. TAYLOR Assistant Professor ROBERT BAKER Instructor -ff' , 'r '. W I... x . Q1 ' Ig 11.44-. L I ' X 'WNW I' M, u - J ,R W 4.2. iliiiiit igy 1' ff it 'Queer . 5: -I v 'i -tifti Nfl LL ,7 Y ti ' '-1.125 . .fifs sgsi . J. -J-.,.,.I. , ,. ,.M,,.,,-.r,-Wi ,V is ssum-,ffm I RICHARD CARLSON Instructor riff, I1 ' I to ,'As, I 3 A . X,-LVL' I :, , 1, QLf v I ' f IWCIIIII JORGE VALDIVIESO Assistant Professor JOSEPH CAUTHEN, JR A E Instructor I . I I I i PATRICK MOORE Instructor PAUL LAYMAN Instructor .w'l.y, ,-'A X 1 DANIEL COWAN Professor and Chairman J-1 ' '1 '- ' if it 1 . --X Tl' :Lu - r r . -. H I L L 'N 'N . 'M W 111 LSIMJ 'ju J' K' as Q ILL . tl xxffx 154,-Q Aiajgk WI iw 'Wi aEL,.l,:' kX13 ,gjip if M xiii ti WMM JULIAN SCHORR Professor JOHN KRUEGER Assistant Professor PATHOLOGY NICHOLAS D'AMATO Professor ROBERT FAULCONER Professor DOUGLAS CORDRAY Associate Professor 1 ,, ' '. '1 ' it -H, , ii ,tv ' , , Y V V I . . . L iixyf, . 'v3Q'5bw31If5'1' 7'-I'g'f'.'-pri? ,1La',fQ'z'2H.z' L x:,aq.g?gi!.-gm , -5341.- 1.51-2 Q '5kM - 'il V: CT ' I t '.- 4g!E1Si11!f1' 5222 ' A -.:f.1f'f', ' i211'f1l-:QMS 439. X LEOPOLDO LADAGA Assistant Professor SANFORD VERNICK Associate Professor WINSLOW LEE Assistant Professor ALVIN LONG, JR. Assistant Professor ROBERT L. SMITH Assistant Professor R. B. SEAL A. J. WILLIAMS Lecturer Lecturer ff WIYTLIA X f go I qw, ' X 1? Q,-' E! 3: .gs- , J-etc a 1 BPH 9 ..,',ffNlj5- ax.. Im I 'wig 7.0 if I I ' Q7 Re I E T' zI,3j'E psig' . 1 E- ' -4' If T 4 H I It C 2 SHALOM VISHNIAVSKY Assistant Professor NOT PICTURED: PROFESSOR GEORGE CARROLL ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR RICHARD CLARK ASSISTANT PROFESSORS JOHN CATE, IV MICHAEL DUNNE, JR. MICHAEL GOODMAN STANLEY GRABER JOE LOWRY FRED ODERE PAUL PETIT MELVIN SCHWARTZ EDWARD SPERBER HARRY TAYLOR, IV ABRAHAM WAN HARRELL WHITTEN INSTRUCI ORS CHARLES DIGGS JOSEPH HARGIS GERALD KERR DENISE ROSS WILLIAM ROSS HENRY TRAVERS SANDRA WARD LECTURERS AMBLER GOODWIN RALPH STEPHENS CHARLES SPRINGATE, ranking in progress PEDIATRICS QQ, STANILEY F. PORTER GERALD H, HOLMAN Chairman 8. Professor Professor JAMES E. ETHERIDGE, JR. Professor Q ff? X 1' I C fl fag, mgggmg , , THOMAS RUBIO Professor .j f-, -Q,-T-1 -,Q 1 X - I I 5, ' 1 'IIaI1'fI.!f n I V I I 'hifi Jr' R 5 Is, ff: I W I A.A. DOUGLAS MOORE Professor H. WILLIAM FINK WILLIAM MURPHY, JR. MELISSA WARFIELD Professor Professor Professor wif RUFUS B. JENNINGS, JR. Associate Professor ' yoj' .1255- ,7 ,. ,, J! -' A . ' fi' Q xl x I is 1 :f' Ei ' A , X .,Q!i fr I I1 X 0 :P ' 151- 4 - ' E B' -as JOHN RYDEEN Associate Professor ,I i n A ,f 9. ,- . in .gow b .- , A- -. - .ii 1 7:52. 11- 4 I , f , 515. ' ' 9' X. - ' ' fs! ' - Y A ,git- ,t ,ji I ,, V , .T f, gs- I 27f,Z4kfi I A FORREST WHITE Associate Professor NOT PICTURED: fvx ROBERT BIEHL GEORGE HARKINS Associate Professor Associate Professor LENARD LEXIER ALFRED SCHULWOLF Assistant Professor Associate Professor A. L X, . - T vig, ff' -.i' ,if in U Y xr I' A I jf m, A fm A WILLIAM BOYD SIDNEY COREN Assistant Professor Associate Professor, WILLIAM BASON, Assistant Professors, LARRY BERMAN, GEORGE CYPRESS, ALBERT FINCH EARL PETERS, PAUL POPISH, STEPHEN RODGERS. Assistant Professor BURTON MOSS Associate Professor AHMAD SHOAIBI Associate Professor HARRY COX Assistant Professor GEORGE KOEHL, ROBERT MOSBY X J J J . if --L-. is . M . Q i 1 If . Aff HARVEY DAVIS JosEPH FAMILANT FRANK MANcuso Assistant Professor NORMAN T. SCOTT Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor i THELMA MASCARINAS WILLIAM MAY ROBERT V. RACK HENRY M. ROGERS, JR. Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor i H , v ,Q f L is: ' ' f' , ' tg . ,r , , . f . ' g3 i' I I Q T it vuvlANA sKANsl JACKSON w. THoMAs FREDERICK H. wmm ANN R- KARN'T5CHN'G Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Pr0feSSOr Lecture' NOT PICTURED: Instructors, JEAN SHELTON, VALERIE STALLINGS, Lecturers, ALBERT BISESE, N. TURNER GRAY, CAROLYN HUNTLEY, ALAN JEFFRIES, NELSON PAYNE A. J. SAYERS, GEORGE SHEPHERD, JOHN THOMAS. JAMES MORGAN, ranking in progress. LL 'I A:' 'gist er . I - ii'?. Qc ,Iv mfs- .17 I ' A the I ,. ff- v-K pil. '-, KQV V: , It f- qsi- ' lv , A P, v . I I ,T . I .. . :,,.,A. 1 L, ,KI W I , 1 Q 1 40.3 . o ' IIl,, ' ov ,I Q DESMOND GOURLEY Professor and Chairman f UNIY I X . ,T X. ' N. If Vr I M PATRICIA WILLIAMS Assistant Professor V! 1 MARTIN SCHECHTER Associate Professor SX fr ,li MICHAEL WALSH Associate Professor Qs ,M . l-qannilla uuii i A 4 . ,,.s ' un? ng un 1211111 f-',1 ,v 1 2' l A If? K, ui rgm. '- ?a- L A ' 4 fe, 6:73 . ' ' 4 5 ig, ' 1 ? 3 ix F197 M ,M S4 r f 5 Q 1 K G if I. I I V ' ' I 4 Z fn, Y.,- Fk It 4 ' I . - -I -1 - X. ' PHYSIOLOGY l OO '-f -- i 0 mm E 9.9929 0 ' .Lxf Q 6 ooo CO0 Professor and Chairman QB O DAVID D. MICHIE MARGARET C. CONRAD Professor IDDD i O S' -f-' : Zi' N JEFFREY T. BAKER CLARENCE P. CAIN Assistant Professor Assistant Professor -'vw' ,F ,.w ,ff RICHARD C. HOWE PIERRE TULOU Associate Professor Associate Professor i- ii, i JOHN W. LLOYD Ill Assistant Professor X' x- CHARLES HORTON Professor 81 Chairman , b -4 fr CL A 410 JEROME ADAMSON RICHARD MLADICK Professor Professor .pl ul A ,h X1 -ng + xw g J, 9 0 P vu my JOHN B. McCRAW GLENN SHEPARD Assistant Professor Assistant Professor NOT PICTURED: WILLCOX RUFFIN, JR., Associate Professor JAMES H. CARRAWAY, Assistant Professor NORMAN WALL, Assistant Professor CHARLES F. CONVERSE III, Instructor WILLIAM D. MERKEL, Instructor PSYCHIATRY AND BEHAVIDRAL SCIENCE i i PAUL J. FINK Professor and Chairman BEN BURSTEN Professor ff i 5 Y 'HC S i ' .- if L V, 1. . 1 'AXE gQii.,g3Qe, . iki f , '4:,,i ' 1 N ? - is W jfff' 5- ,if 'fi-E L , f 1 , -5:5 w if . I 1 4 -V Q . ,J 'L . , v CHARLES GRAVES Professor GEORGE TOWNSEND LODGE Professor ROBERT M DORN Professor .-. STUART ASHMAN wiLuAM F. BLAIR COORER CLEMENTS Associate Professor Associate Professor A550C'0fe Professor ,aff- RALPH J. COPPOLA Professor JOSEPH WARNER Professor 'Q-'ua ii -' gifs e wc- 'Z' ' , x. '- A . - is RICHARD FLETCHER Associate Professor PAUL GROB Associate Professor KURT T. SCHMIDT Associate Professor , ' I I fm L I,, I J l : ,. I A DAVID ROSIN Assistant Professor L, I I JUDITH S. SCHAPIRO Associate Professor PAUL D. MOZLEY DAVID RATNAVALE I V Associate Professor Associate Professor , -41 I its.- '1' T 92 i i i Q ' ,. WA VINCENT WALLEN Associate Professor JU'-IAN W. SELIGI JR, ROBERT H. THRASHER . V Associate professor Associate Professor ' gf I I M I s 2 ' I 5 I , JI fi FATHY ABDOU Assistant Professor IRA ALBERT Assistant Professor ROBERT E. YOUNG Associate Professor f' if K' YV' ' :RN rv' -TAX X-.Ak s 1 Q 2 GLEN BOHLKE ,. . 'Y Assistant Professor LAWRENCE A. BERNERT, JR. DANIEL D. BROADHEAD Assistant Professor fs r' 'N NIARCOS CHAPUNOFF Assistant Professor JOHN H. FURR Assistant Professor WALTER JEWELL Assistant Professor I' I JOHN G. BUCHANAN FLORENCE CHAPMAN Assistant Professor Assistant Professor - Assistant Professor .r Y , Jw- - '- 1 f I I I I LEONARD E. DOBRIN RONALD DOZOREIZ Aggigtqnt Prgfeggor ASSISTUI11 PI'0fBSS0l' W s JOHN 0. DABNEY A A I 'Y I Assistant Professor ,Q 5 - 'X I s .f-:,. .f- ' vt. ff in ' I -. - ff i s F 3 i9?i SI ':s11 I 'B sf ' ' gfaiikv' -1 ' Raft .4 jfux X -if ,U -' ' . his To J r K-' aa ' 't 'iw 1 f' N safer Q 1 I ' .X jfzvxki !..'s. 'f 9-I an ig j 3, , l ,Q JAMES HOWERTON Assistant Professor ROBERT L. ILARIA Assistant Professor 'QF I ,W Assistant Professor W ' HI I ' 3 '- v a . 73 I , 5 L., ' b - - 4' s . , :,f.r,.,-'I -, ,. ,I ''- l.g'5-:.f,J:,.ffg4 2'v:'lm ,f-1:12.-mm , '-.mat-:QQ--R--:.-eamftliiig, '1 ',mu A17 H. ---1 '1f'gm mu. J mg un um m.,v A243-i5i52'.i:?E55!5!i25SEiEEi::gg555555iimz:::555g5gg::: ' ' 1' I Ill itr't:::r::::::,w::::::::::ggi:,,ggggg:::u'2.mmgg,5gr: 3.4.52:::::::,'35g5::::::::::...m,,,gggqg:I::...,m. If- I FIIIIgg5pni::fiIIi:IIIIngnnisunll mIIIIIlln I Assistant Professor WILLIAM LAMB LENARD LEXIER Assistant Professor Assistant Professor LEAH TROY ROBINSON BASIL ROEBUCK Assistant Professor - Assistant Pl'0f6SS0r ROBERT E. MITCHELL EDWARD V. REYNOLDS Assistant Professor Assistant Professor A 'Y Q ':. Mi '-Q I - '.! 1.mY'2,5- 'ws 4-2-1 If .. 5 ?-rs. I 4 7 wffIf2Z?Sf.lf tt I P i I .,f5iLi.xjY :.1,' -yi 'mf'i.M,.i 5 :1 i jt-' Y, -' Nr- i1'ft::f'1i E' .IS r i 2. ALVIN ROSENFIELD .4,., 1 DONNIE J. SELF Assistant Professor WILLIAM SCARPETN Assistant Professor DONALD V STEVENSON Assistant Professor Assismm Professor JONATHAN G. SOLOMON LEONARD VOLENSKI Assistant Professor Assistant Professor WILLIAM YOUNG Assistant Professor ELEANORA WOLOY Assistant Professor ps J. ,L JOHN BARNARD FRANK J. GRIPKA EARL D. HEARST Instructor Instructor Instructor MAGNUS LAKOVICS Instructor iq' ,I t WI ' I 1- f. -H:-wi' E ynax Ngtv ixv N ... N l' -. I , - ul l- 5 ' LA 1 ll H., -' ,, ,, I, '-: I. .1 , , . 'Y ,V 4gaQgt,,,A, , A t , ., -11 I K . Z' I , I ,J--1 -. -E' fl ' .-I ' -'.' I J F1':' .5 '0Vf'5 5fV- .f,' Rf.. 1' , 'I F ' V -125:96 R54 V , ,J za, ,- , I- ,f, G SH- KY '-QL n ' ' T' -: V' ,ws , 1 -f I I f L., . , .,, ,I---if ij ff 1 PETER B. LAu ,J , I 5 i f is ',NI-ff l Instructor N, , ,..,,. .. , I 1 ll 14. Nm ,..,m,- I I C. PAUL PASCAROSA RANDALL RATLIFF MARY ROSE ROWELL ' Instructor Instructor Assistant Professor I 7 I ff .iz . It , I ings WILLIAM RUSSELL LQ tm Juuo woLBuRG Instructor Instructor ' J. CAROLE SCHERRER EDWARD SCHWAB, JR. Instructor Instructor fl ROBERT L. ZUCKERMAN Q Instructor NORBERT NEWFIELD Instructor Q I 137' ka' UI af- gi f ' ,1 T li. 4 no I its T JOHN STROSNIDER Associate Instructor RON LOVELL NOT PICTURED: PROFESSORS DANIEL DELANEY AUBREY ESCOFFERY DONALD OGDON ANN STEWART JOSEPH WARNER ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS ALESSANDRO BARCIHIESI CLETUS COLE PETER MIKULKA ARTHUR NUDELMAN BURT PHILLIPS ALBERT POWELL, JR. H. KENTON REAVIS KURT SCHMIDT H. JAMES SEARS GLENN SHEAN GEORGE STABLER DUNCAN WALLACE ASSISTANT PROFESSORS JOSEPH ALLEN CARRIE BARNES VERNON BISESE TEODORO BRAGANZA ROBERT CANESTRARI ATTILIO CATANZANO DOUGLAS CHESSEN EVELYN HELLINGER DIETRICH HEYDER TRAFFORD HILL, JR. JAMES HOLMES LOUIS JANDA E. DANIEL KAY, JR. ROBERT KEITER RONALD KLEDZIK FRANKLIN KNILL LEO KORMANN DAVID KRUGER BERYL LANGLEY ELLEN DIXON LATHAM DONN LIPSCOMB EUGENE MALESKI FRANK T. MILLER ANNE MINGIONE JAMES MORREY WILLIAM MULLIGAN WENDELL PILE CHARLES POE RICHARD POOLEY ARNOLD SCHNEIDER ROBERT SCOTT STEPHEN SLATKIN CHARLES SPITAL THOMAS TSAO LEONARD VOLENSKI DONALD WOLFGANG FREDERICK WOODSON INSTRUCT ORS JACOB ASLANIAN ROBERT BRANSFIELD SALLY CANESTRARI DANIEL FISCHER BERNARD FRUEND FRANCES GILBERT MICHAEL GOLEMBA DAVID GORDON FRANK GRIPKA JAMES GRISWOLD ANTHONY HITE DOUGI.AS JOHNSTONE PHILIP JONES MARILOU KOLLAR JOHN MACMAHON DAVID NORMAN JAMES NOURSE WAYNE ORTON RICHARD PAKOLA PETER O. POWELL DAN SANDLIN ROBERT SHEPARD IRA TILLEM LAWRENCE TIMENS ROBERT WITHROW ASSOCIATE INSTRUCT ORS JONATHAN BERNS THOMAS KELLER RADIDLDGY NSR 1 A ,L -xl? , r , . ,, . A T11 A N '1 ff 4, , . W-. 55 N If V I I Lk U 1-:gg if Tiflff W X W' HIL 53 A A .. -1' N.-.4.-.L Top row, U. to r.J: DONALD CHAMBERS, JOHN FOSTER, ARTHUR FRAZIER Bottom row: ROBERT KESLER 0.1 and ALFRED VINSON lr.l N01 Pictured: JACK MAHAN, ANDREW MAYER, HARRY PRESBERG, CARL WISOFF SURGERY FRANCIS ROSATO C. COOPER BELL Professor and Chairman Professor I f 1 gl-an ii CHARLES DAVIS CLAIBORNE FITCHETI' Professor Pl 0fESS0l' JOSEPH MULLEN ROBERT PAYNE, JR. Professor Professor .1 y N 1 'i' Elf 2 - 1: '...'L'L - R-TV: ,Q ,l u r., U ' sv' I X 1 , T 'H JOHN VANSANT JAMES BERGER Professor Associate Professor BRUCE INNES Professor CRILE CRISLER GEORGE HARKINS Associafe Professor Associate Professor Ii NEVILLE JACKSON Associate Professor I WA Q ,.-1. My 9 v. , MTX . 'L' Lgyiu' '. L-JX ffyf.-I : ,lr .AfIl':,f',.fj -I 1. '-I x 'vi GEORGE GRINNAN Assistant Professor JOHN KING Assistant Professor 'il '-' . V Q -' 4. 1, , -WSI 1 .-.sei iz' . 5553, - '. 1' ,v,:g'63..::. , ::.?Q'::'f-.L If A' ' ' ,1. - ggygifzji mg:-5:-gg 9 -.'E, ?'iE2EE2!I'f'E 52:-.'.::-:-: I f ,g::::123m: :ifsxfff-I-5. -1'l' :::: ' 'r' i5f5:.'5'-'s'- 4 . :2iE' ' :,5t: 'f.- .' .525-2 ' . .. :gifts .L 'Z' 15 ' z. Qu, , .' 1- an-3 Effgfi , ,zrrffft 11 -. 1' wil 'ISHS . I1:ii3off:'-ltsf' Ii' H -35:21-Q SE-i SAMUEL MCDANIEL JOCK WHEELER SIDNEY .BELLINGER, JR. Associate Professor Assistant Professor .v. . I I .. ,.,. ml' . -,...x -'LEA' I rs' I I , .. --im' 3.1 - M... . . -. vw ...'- 1' ' .. , . Q5 unjhgmg . .,.. ,-. Lu-.. OSWALD HOFFLER, JR. Assistant Professor ge PAUL KOVALCIK Assistant Professor MAURICE MILLER Assistant Professor Assistant Professor I, . V I -I , , . li git.. ..4,, IW.. ,W-. : 5. hsn., 3,518 . .. y in JOHN W. BAKER, JR. Assistant Professor ,H - ,. . '. 4.-533' 1 fxgzg: I. I4 vp , .5-.-,':-, .J-1 '- e affair ' 14, ...W f- . if ' .QP 'Na+' 9352? , '.,x ROBERT BRICKMAN Assistant Professor - 'f1 A ,1 ' 1 IJ. ' fs! f.5S -.- Fi f '3'fsQl.? . miitfii I I ix I IIIIIIIIIII LEMUEL MAYO Assistant Professor J f ,sv S5 ,Set 5 3 in qu , sotiti 5? I pfgigikirq as ,934 1 izhqpif' 3 2- -f' -ll 5 ww im I A 5 ' fi 1 an 1 1 'f'-'2 'K I -'si' 'jstimlsas . JE ,L-H W.. A f zigqggzgtqi-it :SQ V ?f?f',zi..' ,sg-ff anggri. ' 0 is M- - ' ?5Eiff'L 1 .1 Wg, - ' 'sem pm ' fa. Q, S,a'Qgg,5j Y 2172? O .1. A- 645 O Lan' I 1 L nv Q ' iv. In , I :14', f 1.5113-1 - SWE I ' 2-.Q z.-?v.h1?, ' .tI.' 1:2 'Q '. :A I ,V., ., - A 5'.'i.,?Zr Q' ,,,.... I , ,5 ws, Y: 'Ui-, F' 3 LQ- A-. -9' ..pf'?Zl7 Vg .sfo 5-2 ' ffiffttfa IT' T W' '-7' M W Y I I I I I I I I I, I .5 ,Yf75 51 ROBERT LUDEWIG THOMAS STOKES JOHN TEMPLFTON, JR. CLARENCE TROWER Assistant Professor Assistant Professor ASS-istunt Professor Assistant PI'0f8SSOr I I 'T z I wfq, N . If JOSEPH BARRECA MARVIN P. FRIED ROGER GREGORY HARRY BIGLEY Assistant Professor Instructor Instructor 5 n 7- I I , I- +1 .,rs fi'-r21?a 't 2 'f 921: rsiuf fi it ' MANSUR RAHNEMA BEHROOZ DAYANIN PAUL RoBINE1'r THOMAS SALE Instructor Instructor Instructor NOT PICFURED: ROBERT KNAPP J. M. BRITT, JR. ROBERT MCALPINE HYouN CHAI WILLIAM NEUBAUER GREG DE Los SANTOS ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR DICK PARK CLoYEs HALL LEvI OLD, JR. WILLIAM PAYNE L. FRANK HENRY SPYROS PHILIPPAKIS IRA MILLER wILLIAM WILEY LEE WHITLOCK ASSISTANT PRoEEssoRs CHARLES BAUER THOMAS FLYNN 'NSTRUUORS MARK GREENSPAN wADI ACRA ALAN JAFFE oIsAMoDHA AMARASINGHE THOMAS H0DGE5fr0r1kirl9 BRUNEI JEAN-GILLES PETER BLANCHARIJ ir' Progress UROLOGY I rp I 'N .si ,Y-fy-... I, X gl 40 'ci . A s ,, Ps 1.-. X .. CHARLES DEVINE, JR. PATRICK DEVINE Professor 8. Chairman Professor C X5 --- cf 'ET' E '- - Y V 21 I I I: I if E EUGENE POUTASSE JOSEPH rIvEAsI-I, JR. Pf0f9550f Associate Professor EMILE SAYEGH PAUL F. SCHELLHAMMER Associate Professor Assistant Professor . I iff . I5 rr4 A I-rf wr I fvi .I I I w ifi-V 'gQ :IIfI . , it A JoIIN STECKER, JR. f 1. -Q A - WILLIAM TYNES Il Assistant Professor Assistant Professor JOHN HOLLOWELL WILSON H. COBBS Assistant Professor IHSTFUCTOF NOT PICFURED: Associate Professor, ORAN CHENAULT, Assistant Professors, DAVID GALLO, HARVEY RAWLS, Instructors, FLOYD CSIR, STERLING DECKER, ALAN FLETCHER, GUILLERMO MOSQUERA, FRANK 0'CONNER, JR., DAVID ROSEN, T. REED UNDERHILL. RADIATION ONCDLOGY AND BID PHYSICS ANAS EL-MAHDI Professor and Chairman JAMES SHAEFFER Associate Professor DENTAL MEDICINE JOHN I. BOWMAN, JR. WENDY SUE BARNES HOME: Kansas City, Kansas AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Pediatrics or Obstetrlcs and Gynecology HOBBY: Piano MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Tournler's 'A Doctor's Casebook In the Light of the Bible' FAVORITE QUOTE: lt does little good to repent a symptom, but It may do great harm not to repent a sin. Vlce versa, It does Ilttle good to merely psychoanalyze a sin, and sometimes a great harm to ignore a symptom. Karl Menninger. PROFILE: Devout-. . . tolerant . . . maternal . . . roots in Kansas . . . recent passion for pickles. . . carries more than astethoscope . . . It's what's up front that counts. I BEVERAGE: Grade A pasteurlzed homogenized Vltamin D Milk JOHN DAVID BECHER, JR. HOME: Norfolk, Vlrglnla AGE: 26 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine HOBBIES: Backpacking, blrdwatchlng, reading, biking, running several mlles at terrlilc speed. MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Menton's 'Seven Story Mountain' FAVORITE QUOTE: A medical career should be Interrupted every few years by a 2000 mlle walk along the Appalachian Trail or some such nonsense. PROFILE: Easy going . . . outdoorsman . . . J, B. . . . CurIy . . . reputedly loves nature morethan hls wife. . . Kung Fu enthusiast. BEVERAGE: Beck's beer 'D A ,X 7 DAVID BERNARD DOMAN HOME: Jackson Heights, New York AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine Q HOBBIES: Tennis, photography, numismatics a 4: MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Joyce's 'Portrait of the Artlst as a Young Man' FAVORITE QUOTE: The fundamental purpose of medicine ls to make sick people well, or falling that, to relleve paln and sufferlng. I. S, Cooper, M.D. PROFILE: Energetic . . . renowned . . . self-confident . . . Dove . . . well-tanned nose . . . Bermuda vacation scholarship. Hey, Doctor! . . . DoctorI . . . lefty . . . with the lights on? . . . a RICHARD WARREN EVANS HOME: Chicago, Illinois AGE: 24 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine HOBBIES: Reading journals, gardening MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Tolstoy's 'War and Peace' FAVORITE QUOTE: That's not rIght. PROFILE: Quiet . . . most knowledgeable . . . destined for research . . . . pneumothorax . . . what Iles behind that beard? . . . ought to learn to take National Board exams. BEVERAGE: Water FRANK WHALEY EWALD, JR. HOME: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania AGE: 31 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine HOBBIES: Tennis, fishing, photography MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: EIseIey's 'immense Journey' FAVORITE QUOTE: It Is better to be thought to be ignorant, than to open your mouth and prove It. PFIOFILE: Assertive . . . the authority. . . Ivy League. . . keep those KX nurses in their place . . . a realistic portrayal of a psychiatric patient. BEVERAGE: Slow comfortable screw tSouthern Comfort, Sloe Gln, and Vodkai SUSAN KATHERINE FALK HOME: Danville, Virginia AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Dermatology HOBBIES: Piano, plants, Pete MOST UNMEMORABLE BOOK: Lehninger's 'Biochemistry' PROFILE: Poised. . . charming, , . Ace driving award. . . the Deuce . . . fingernail vasectomles. . . Pete's shadow . . . does red mean stop? BEVERAGE: Skip and Go Naked I I . I RICHARD STEVEN GINSBERG HOME: Reston, Virginia AGE: 24 SPECIALTY: Nephrology HOBBIES: Sleep, obesity, day dreaming MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: LehnInger's 'Biochemistry' FAVORITE QUOTE: What's the use In getting sober if you're just gonna get drunk again. PROFILE: Imaginative . . . unlnhlblted . . . honest. . . kidney man . . . cheesecake connoisseur. . . Ratso . . . Dave Doman . . . fat ls beautiful . . . lt's not how much you have, but how you use it! in 'I BEVERAGE: Natlonal Premium beer nelalggf' , , 1 -. 41 . , 'rs , .ILM i ,ff , Q'-li, ' ,, ' .11-I I,-1, ' THOMAS WAITE HUBBARD HOME: Newport News, Virglnla AGE: 24 SPEClAL1'Y: Pediatrics I HOBBIES: Swimming, skiing, brunettes, fantasies, nude gourmet , cooking FAVORITE QUOTE: We're all bozos on a bus. F. Zappa I PROFILE: Involved. , .dlllgent. . . mildly pervened .. . me Hub . . . f a well preserved Wahoo . . . commltteeman . . . 'Boy? . . . Have you ever seen a BOY with a . . . l . . . typical politician. BEVERAGE: Chivas Regal GREGORY JOHN JAFFERS HOME: Seattle, Washington AGE: 24 SPECIALTY: Carpentry HOBBIES: Sitting in silence, watching people MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: 'One Fish, Two Flsh, Fled Fish, Blue Fish' FAVORITE QUOTE: I was out in the real world once . . . and it was windy. PROFILE: Perceptive. . . concerned . . . artistic . . . Lars . . . tans easily . . . obsessed with blondes . . . I never walked out on a Iecturel liked. . . . size E E ankles. . . Hi, l'm Karen -fly me! BEVERAGE: Scotch 5,-. if E I I , .- 'WIS - ' , A ,J A T J T KEY' .'! l A Eg. 5 at ' JAMES ALEXANDER KELLY HOME: Norfolk, Vlrginia AGE: 29 SPECIALTY: Obstetrics and Gynecology HOBBIES: Skiing, sailing, flying, hunting, reading MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Ruark's 'The Old Man and the Boy' FAVORITE QUOTE: There's no such thing as a free Iunch. Will Rogers PROFILE: Conservative. . . self-assured . . . Jlmbo . . . over the hill? . . . Brooks Brothers and starched shirts . . . pilot stories . . , I've F been around, seen a lot, and in my opinion . . . BEVERAGE: Dewar's, of course 1 - -is-1 -CEI! il I , I 'us- SAMUEL THOMAS JENNINGS HOME: New York City AGE: 24 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine HOBBIES: Coin collecting, antiques MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Mlchener's 'Hawaii' FAVORITE QUOTE: God grant us serenity to accept the thlngs we cannot change, courage to change the things we can, and wisdom to know the difference. PROFILE: Reserved. . .thoughtful . . . congenial . . . antique collector . . . clock-like . . . Wolfman BEVERAGE: Vodka tonic MARGARET WARREN LEIGH HOME: Norfolk, Virginia AGE: 23 SPECIALTY: Pediatrics HOBBIES: Swimming, fishing, painting and wallpaperlng, studying for National Boards MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Amy Vanderbilt's 'Book of Etiquette' FAVORITE QUOTE: Are you related to the hospital? PROFILE: Personable. . . fun lovlng . . . sincere . . . Magee . . southern hospitality . . . Mintduleps . . . Chug-a-lug champion. . . memorable game ball . . .- one of the guys BEVERAGE: Virginia Gentlemen I . MAUREEN DAVIDICA MAYES HOME: Hampton, Virginla AGE: 30 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine HOBBIES: Hiking, jogging, dletlng, tennis MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: 'Notes to Myself' FAVORITE QUOTE: Another year shot to hell. PROFILE: Intellectual . . . determined . . . plays a mean tamborlne . . . enzymatic dog . . . Ms. . . . a women's place ls ln the home! M, l I I MARCUS LEWIS MARTIN HOME: Covington, Virglnla AGE: 28 SPEClAL'l'Y: Internal Medlclne or Emergency Medicine HOBBIES: Music, basketball, football, pool, dancing MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: 'Biography of Mighty Marty' Inot completei FAVORITE QUOTE! Woe Is me PROFILE: Ambitious . . . popular. . . most athletic . . . Mighty Marty . . . Mr. Charisma . . . colorful personality . . . my change Is strange and my money ls funny. BEVERAGE: Chianti 4 Y 1. l I . I 'l lg I DENNIS LEE NAPIER HOME: Newport News, Virginia AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Internal Medlclne HOBBIES: Gourmet dlning, model shlp building, REM sleep MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Harrison's 'Principles of Internal Medicine' FAVORITE QUOTE: Knowledge is the principal thing: therefore get knowledge: And with all thy getting get understandlng. Proverbs 4:7 PROFILE: Meticulous . . . imaginative. . . Lampoon sense of humor. . . . are you sure that isn't a wlg? . . . Once a Gobbler, always a turkey. BEVERAGE: Chateau Mouton-Rothschild, 1955, or five quick screw- drivers - whichever is available l l THOMAS HARRY OLSON HOME: Pierre, South Dakota AGE: 26 SPECIALTY: Family Practice HOBBIES: Cross country skiing, water skllng, backpacking, camping, canoeing, hunting MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Mlchenefs 'Centennlal' FAVORITE QUOTE: What's the sense of knowing something that ls useless? PROFILE: Friendly . , . a trucker . , . Wommy . . . Buffalo Chip Tossing Champion of Mlnnehaha County . . . You can pick your friends and you can pick your nose, but you can't pick your friends nose. BEVERAGE: Budweiser or Sody pop TN. noeem scoff PACE I HOME: Blacksburg, Vlrglnla I AGE: 24 , SPECIALTY: Internal Medlclne I I HOBBIES: Weightlifting, runnlng, camping and backpacking, reading, I philosophy MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: 'Man, Reality, and Existence' '-Jil , I, lilllwl . .L -I FAVORITE QUOTE: I believe in the sun when It is not shlnlng, I if ' believe In love even when I am alone, I believe In God even when he I , ls sIIent. PROFILE: Qulet . . . sincere . . . our only Junlor Mr. America . . . memorable neurological exam . . . one hell of a body image . . . good wrestler at parties ANTHONY SIDNEY SADO HOME: Brooklyn, New York AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine or Epidemiology HOBBY: Running FAVORITE QUOTE: I am getting the hell out of here. PROFILE: industrious. . . aggressive . . . Sid . . . Moose . . .Violin lessons . . . family man . . . destined to wln a demolition derby BEVERAGE: Milk ,ral H T wha GEORGE CONSTANT SAKAKINI HOME: Norfolk, Vlrglnla AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Famlly Practice HOBBIES: Hope, jogging, tropical fish, surfing, weight Ilftlng, fishing, horseback riding MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: 'The Happy Hooker' FAVORITE QUOTE: Sometimes a cigar ls just a cigar. PROFILE: Good-natured . . . compassionate. . . Mr. Punctuallly . . . Kak . . . camel jockey . . . definitely henpecked . . . always on the ball . . . not expert in soft tissue shadows 'R BEVERAGE: skip and Go Naked LESTER WHITLOCK SANDERS, III HOME: Clnclnatti, Ohio AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine or Obstetrics and Gynecology HOBBIES: Tennis, basketball, medlclne, muslc MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Watts' 'Does lt matter?-Essays on Man's Relation to Materlality' FAVORITE QUOTE: Was l surprised? PROFILE: Reflectlve. . . experienced. . . Pete . . . Peter Saunders . . . cool as Ice . . . football coach . . . Crlmson Cruiser . . . bedroom eyes . . . Aprll's Discovery of the Month. BEVERAGE: Jack DanIel's Tennessee Sour Mash ta fine slpplng whiskeyj LARRY CHARLES STRONGOSKI HOME: Vlrglnla Beach, Vlrginia AGE:30 SPECIALTY: Family Practice HOBBIES: Jogging, golf, winemaking, banjo, rafting at the beach, treasure hunting, beer with frlends MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Stoker's 'Dracula' FAVORITE QUOTE: How does that make you feel EVMS Behavioral Science faculty. PROFILE: Conscientious . . . uninhibited . . . Polaski . . . lg and I Fuzz . . . fat roll . . . Kahona Nipple Grease. . . friendly shepherd , . . . twenty-foot tomato trees BEVERAGE: Too many to list I MELVIN WALTER THOMAS HOME: Alexandria, South Dakota AGE: 28 SPECIALTY: Unknown HOBBIES: Jogglng, basketball, pleasure reading MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: Glbran's 'The Prophet' FAVORITE QUOTE: Intellect without feeling, knowledge without love, reason without compasslon, lead to pure negation, to rigldlty, to splrltual death, to mere vaculty- whlle feellng wlthout reason, love wlthout knowledge, compasslon without understand- Ing, lead to confuslon and dissolutIon. PROFILE: Reserved . . . easy-going . . . Mel . . . Stretch . . . cowboy . . . basketball . . . Lavender Ilmosine . . . size 14 canoes MATTHEW MORGAN TIGNOR HOME: Vlrginla Beach, Vlrglnla AGE: 25 SPECIALTY: Internal Medicine HOBBIES: Cars, banjo, carpentry I MOST MEMORABLE BOOK: TwaIn's 'Golng West' FAVORITE QUOTE: lf Rudyard Kipling PROFILE: Personable . . . priestly . . . Matt Trigger . . . the General . . . . class money-minder . . . the Underground Newspaper . . . entrepreneur X BEVERAGE: Fruit juicy Hawallan Punch I U IV 1... 1:7 1 I. CC: HPI: PMH: ADMISSION HISTORY AND PHYSICAL l feel this strange overpowering craving for knowledge and whenever I pass someone on the street, I want to cure them. , This 21 y.o. white male clo light headedness, inappropriate laughter and several episodes of severe sunburn and intoxication in the last two months. He also clo that his head has recently enlarged noticeably lor so his friendlsl sayl. He was in his usual state of tenuous health prior to receiving a message from above . His mother Iwho accompanies him everywherel sts. that about this time he received notice of his acceptance to medical school. ln the previous 4 years he has been a college student during which time he noted the gradual onset of tunnel vision and a peculiar brown discoloration of the nose which worsened near the end of each Semester. In the last six months he noted trismus, an inability to close his lips, and wide swings in his feelings concerning euthanasia, abortion, marijuana, and the war in the Middle East. He c!o photophobia and muscu- lar wasting which have become progressively worse since age 5, coincident with long periods spent in dimly lit rooms. Since he was an embryo he has been irresistably drawn to study chemistry, calculas, and the way man works . At the same time he noted the onset of the stated compulsion to help mankind and states that he coached his mother through his own Lamaze delivery which was complicated by a prolonged period of anoxia lapproximately 2 hoursl. Childhood illnesses: measles x 3, varicella x 2, mumps x 4, Rx hyperkinetic syndrome. Adult illnesses: pts states he isn't finished with childhood illnesses yet. Surgery: 1lrhinoplasty - 1973 2lface lift - 1973 Bldermabrasion - 1973 4ldental caps - 1974. Allergies: 1lsex 2lmusic 3lart FAMILY HISTORY: Great uncle lpaternall - chiropractor, cousin lmaternall - veterinarian SOCIAL HISTORY: none available lthere is none?l ROS: General: I'm awright, really PE: Eyes: tearing lwhen reading letters from medical schooll Ears: complains of wetness behind both Nose: runny, generally large, clo offensive smell with discoloration lsee HPII Mouth: gapes Neck: redness, swelling Throat: clo choking sensation Resp: dyspnea, 2 stair step CV: pt. sts. heart is big and open and has been broken several times lonset usually with first date or when calling for secondl GU: not sure he has any Psych: too numerous to compile Vitals: BP 1801100 Temp poikilothermic P 180 Resp absent General: 20 y. o. pubescent WM sitting on edge of table with stethoscope in nose trying to look at his own eyes through an ophthalmoscope Head: microcephalic I11 cml, pointed at top Eyes: wide, pupils dilated Ears: pointed Nose: out of joint Mouth: drooling, open, protruding tongue Chest: pectus excavatum Heart: no evidence of stated large size, soft Back: pt. will not allow me to stand behind him, not examined Abd: unable to examine, pt. giggling uncontrollably Rectal: unable to penetrate anal sphincter with aid of small nail and ten pound sledge hammer. Genetalia: pubescent, erect, unused, but circumcised , I u Extremities: knees, elbows flexed, arms and legs abducted lfetal positionl, ROM not tested due to rigidity of osture Neurologic: ma?ked ataxia of all movements lfell over while attempting to walk and breathe at the same tlmel IMPRESSION: deferred at this time PLAN: observe And so he entered, walking in the footsteps of Hippocrates, Galen, Osler, Delp and Duck, Marcus Welby . . . but wait! ..... first a few preliminaries 't-. l l I tipping a few with some highbrows, he was impressed, to be sure Do people really do that, Doctor Fink? better get your smiling done now although his new home was roomy, comfort- able, and uncluttered, l He plunged into the basic sciences eager to learn the way of rational medicine, willing to spend long hours alone with the books, and obedient to the wishes of his revered teachers, but . . . other diversions were soon discovered. , kv New and strange methods of academic stimulation were attempted. in spite of such earnest desire exams still aroused anxiety, 161-- and he occasionally got the impression that the faculty didn't care. He came to know that, although the road was long and strewn with He learned the intricacies of the l dynamic process of sexual con- ff' iugation in bacteria. , f . , , it .. , ' ' 'fri V :lf-' -- and came to desire the smooth touch of a fine ultrocentrifuge or autoanalyzer as much as the satisfaction of his baser lusts. Y' obstacles, there were those older, wiser and better paid who would teach him to better shoulder his load and show him the light at the end of the tunnel . . . i ., My There was nothing fuzzy about the faculty or their teaching, ,FSR X.. V --fr, some could even imitate dead liver! And when the faculty had gone home for their well deserved rest, there was someone there to worry and care. It was necessary to spend some of his time away from his studies, and he made the most of those moments when the weight of his books did not rest on his shoulders. Love had a chance to bloom. Though he sometimes got a little cocky, 1 A ..-4 , wi He ioined in rowdy parties with his classmates even a little time for Beethoven he always had a feeling that there was work left to be done. l r:I4i xx .' ,I , ' I ff, 1 sem, ' ' it - - 'Q M ff: 1' F Ti: f-. , ' '- ' 1- H 'ii i-li--irmilil llf. ,. . ,t ., . Y . , .3 gp' i,,',,i. - g t N- ii i,,Jl,..:,. f i s l t 7' i W , .,, 5 .- H , ' I . I , X 1 ' 2 X l iv ,V -.iii ' 4 - r-v I ' it , - 'e, .,lii4,g- V -J.. --I i Q V- .1 it A l 1 it x ' ' i TH X 1 44 L, l X xx .. ' . ' ,yutiyf .Q ' 1 ',,'. i ' 'l'ii.i'i5 i i s 'U 7 ' f ' ll 'npr L 1 i ,H Y IL B , it 1 l A. i , PW' ' i ' l L ' v ii ll i., N ,,. k he He learned to eat, sleep, and take medicine and, although he loved his work and patients, he sometimes had to find an outlet for relief. and mental health. As his rear end knew the end ofthe lecture, so he knew it was time to move on, follow the sun, manifest his destiny . . . And once he even began to doubt his always precarious physical Ali Only a man of great patience and superior knowledge could suffer his blunders. His body and soul were infatuated l with the beautiful seductress Minerva Medicine. He often dreamed wistfully of his hearts desire . . . Frustration grew, but he could find solace in admiring those who had already been out on dates . . . x 14 ' ,,,1.a 7 Il- f 1 A4 l It's not what you say, it's how you say it. J 5 and had their moves down pat lharoomf, poof poofl Through long lonely hours without pay or reward, he stumbled down the deserted hallways in search of fair Minerva. ., V -- .ofa 5 gfllflf' , V., A ,, .. , 15 .. i. He often tripped and fell, but his friends were always near to aid him in his moments of trial Was it worth it? Spending all those years in toil and trouble, without a social life or time for himself? You bet your ass it was, because someday . . :marmmg Convalescent ?Home ' lf and it not, we can always dream W I I I: :WIT DIAGONAL CONJUGATE CLUB , Advisor: Meconium Jones BASKETBALL TEAM Coach: D. McDougal CLUBS I 1 I SOCIETIES ANTIBODY CLUB Advisor: F. Sanger DUCK WATCHING SOCIETY: Members Ir. to LI: N. Sanity, X. Rey, D. Cease, D. Jenneret, N. Emma, X. Zema, E. Sophogus, B. Toff, A. Ness A. Pendex, L. Bow, D. Livery, P. Ness, A. Orta, O. Very, B. Hind, E. Zelay CHEST CLUB Advisor: Melony Bazoom BS S C, E-fY So dig Q SUDS SOCIETY R. Ginsberg T. Hubbard M. Leigh M. Mayes L. Strongoski 01 - W I!.Lrf:f1, H.. . , M., ..2,.:.- - ,..f,..r, ,,. ,V.,.,..f , ifrfnwqi I jwf' TRACK TEAM Coaches: R. Davis and P Fm 'ng j . 'fy ' I I- L v . :-- s?T ' :'.:.11'1.1,.'111.: -f 331.121 , '1'4?-513' I ' 5--.P 52K'7 'Q ' 5 YZ!! if-U1 ff' I f - L i Lf,-.. Xil'f,':.,..'Q:'w.ff1, .,.,,,yy,, . I E7 W- ' 'lffgiflfzk -I--'J1'-''TZQEQLFF'-i7'i f 'Q .' I '-'Nreun iz. FMP Nj 0 'fu nvu-rr. :za-fffq' FOOTBALL TEAM Coaches: E. Schwab and Carl Rogers MVP: M. Leigh in 'hm ALUMNI SOCIETY - . BASEBALL TEAM and COACH Advisor. Anonymous D. Doman What do you give 'ro f everything? r X . . . antibiotics! i i 7 the girl who has A Al ln' . fs...-1 Q 11 .Y 7.3 1:1 . I I l 4 Yi , 'O . 1 1-ff ' 1- if xy n K i ' 12,01 1 1 I Y L 4 , M1 534 . N . 'mn Q' f :Q-fl, 5. ,llggnh A, X . 1 N. .Y 'lrmv lf' J. R! XQ x sf 1' ,La R, ' , I M l u Wg' -n , . ,N 1 'ia , 'P' -2-.......-,, , 1 1 9 iff! I, I 1 ..,, ,. ! 42-err, . Z' A .f I ..p ...ii '-s .... I x . .fr Q Z' PJ L23 1 14:-' ' - 11: fa- Fvflghl , 2 ': Ti uh, 7:rh , r- A1 I 4.3 ' 'N Q 1 .-1 XX -Q ,jf t Hi X 'S x Ln, I n,, ' --Mgr. 1 -V-: ' ' f . -xl' V-.. . V--W .J -U, ,1 M y a, if '-'. '. 3.,?13V -:- -. ,IJ L, 1 , ,HA , I -,,., . an ,. ' ' L 51 vu wr . A 1 ' - V ' :ee 2 1, ,-7 , I u . r -1 1 --' , I L , -3. 'x N , fx -'ri 43 2.1-w. H . f' U- N' -V .fn --.,-r 4 v ff -.- ' 37' N -- F' in n EL , a ..-Q ':, J1- L ' - -'-b f , 51 ., Q1 J, Az 5 1' .- - f ,Now hug N. nf.: '. f u -ff '- r- 4 FF !n -a gm lv 1 --. Ill nf, , ,r 1 f E' ,. .4 19 ,, 4:-A 1 Hin: ff Inn. V, lr:1l:r-u VIH! tl! .1 o ll' , V' vf -i 5 mr.. It -A ,s 11, -9 llllxl 1: il nm I CLASS 0F 1977 Why is this man laughingb? BILL BUCKMAN GEORGE BUSSEY RANDY CHISHOLM P fr, x if f I X XY 13 Q5 ,A F ffuf L ,' S, fl fi' ,'L'?IW:f' vL F V 'W ' QY ,J-X251 in ' ' 1-7?4,9i:f:2' .4 . I , X' T R if 5 Q, ' ' vi .-i2iWlLEi5L f .rl - 'Z 1 lmffyfg 'f R F ' ay - if '53 J f I' Vega Q-el-'A' MQ, lz Hi., QQ -, U. rlf'l J' 1' , LARRY CONELL TRIP CROSKEY BRUCE DILLON ' 1 lf A In st 4 'L 1 I I L ' f' 4- L- v VI 'win W I I I BEN ENG ,,,,,. 4. , I W I .W-I iff I 'fr-' I. ' I If ,4 ' Lil.. ' - I HLIII1 JIM FISH RONNIE FOREHAND JOHNFIT GEORGE PAUL HARTMAN I Q , ff W . .W Q ' ,JV-4,,..:5,1I-gy , I1 I I I 1 X I I Lf.. I I DOUG JONES , - in IA - 1-5 P' AA DONNA FITZGERALD A Y - I lg:-I 13 '11 V. Q' II-- , Y, I.-5.-n-. H ' '..w9,Q:I' I -fufgfv, ' X, L1 2 1.47 , . PHIL GILLESPIE 25 4 1-TSA f M , .4 ,X 5 KEVIN KANTER HERB LADLEY BK DAVID LOWE J, I BONNIE MATIHAEUS NEW'I'Y MILLER rw., , , V, I SAUL NEUMAN CHARLIE NIEBULSKI BECKY MARKUS I DAVID MONTGOMERY I , I MARSHA RAY wif A, FTA i , II. I , L44 INA . , , , BILL RICHARDSON BOB ROWLAND , I I III X, I.. M ,h X. I ff I JEFF SMITH If l ROBIN RODIN i.,:...-.:lv.,.,,,,..,, E iinfw I I I I I5, IfIf IH. I I-:L ' gl: TONY RYALS I I I I I.. L PETE SOMERS 1 E If I I , I II I I TED ROSENKRANTZ jmlw ,tm If mn w fry'-rfr If WQI GORDON SASSER LINDA STAIGER N '- Hg' PAM STROTMEYER f -A. ef- . ff' . A 1. f J -5135 ' Q 'A IN . s'f1i..-- K- , A A 1 ' A A ,JM 4 . E93 ,iq TQQ: df 4 ,. T' 5 gif' 1, mf' ,, , Fl . if . Q '- J -.a. rt LEONARD TOUCHEITE MIKE WARE 4.1. A GORDON wlLHolT I I 354 i LHP . -- ,,r . ' f , iifx fw kg I VK 5 U X 131 A ff llvfw wivggg Lk X , f l L-.1 4 w 1 1 'vw l' ...' I I wif 4.. C 5 I v 4 , p O .' n .v W I 4 1 Q it G A 'Z N 'n -- ,.'-,a .il ' 3f 'fI'Q'. k ,Je ' I WL: V. . , 43.11. :- . ' + , ' f L 1 v .1--511-. 4 'P' ' . 11-L4 f. 'Aww' ' -va - M01 'il E ufrf fl .. -l4S' QQ'ggKf -'inyv'.?1?.f??m,.. -N----P 1 ., ,-f. f2f'JL2'-wi'15.m-fx-.k 5,-'r5-'ff- '. .Q - '1'w:'fg- :..':'1f'+' T,,, ,:, Q ' ' 5 ,M 1.21,-Q ..,-, - , 1 lm W . . w ,. ., w, E . , , Ny lal 1,2,3 lbl 1,3 lcl 2,4 Idl 4 only fel none Q0 4-15401 X 77 5 , an QSWI QQ , NB e EN E K P X7 , s E I W WM M, K DX ' ,fr r KI f Ari JJ Z ' gf K F fx I 1 xx W--fu 1 'H 'mfg SEPTEMBER DECEMBER ' i I NNWRXNYE 'sz YA 1 I 4. A 1 K 1- MP 'VFX , fi- .f ,J X X X Q All i f .i,7 :umuuzun ' 9 JUMH AH! ' - ' 01.3 L 1- Q r xx m , . b IQQLQII f ff , ,S 4111! l fi ' X A Wfyjg ffm xii . :Zami 7 ' x lllmj T 2 x 5 Aft' Q-Vfv Qffxl' , - fvwfv fl ,my . -5 F: 1 4 - ' 1 . fffW'55:.v 1 I Mix sg- I ,V mr' S m i W 4 O se L W7 . 1:5 . G Jim f bw wg 'x w fig ,TQ . 's 'I' h M 'Wy 74 Xw if i PRECEPTORSHIPS WHO 'S Bill Buckman?' I CLASS OF 1978 'QQ .ll V12-1 1 Y N w MACK ANDERSON RICHARD BROWNLEY ff' PEGGY COOPER DONNA CRAIG 1 U FW x f CHARLOTTE ALSPACH AL ALTORELLI I ,, -, A X X Q' , ' 1 , if . W V I' f vf X' ,L LLL, lg,-Tl - ..- . I ' - 44.32 3? ' 2 RANDY COLE COLEENE COOKE ,A-.JJJ '3 'ii-.li'L ' 75 WIP SCJ' ' -L JIM FRANK STEVE FREEDMAN 1: lv ,. LAURA FUNKHOUSER HOLMES GILLETIE I F ,I :M V 71- YI . I ' . mic: 1- , w.- I, - ., . . . . ,.. I i f I If 1 RICHARD DE NISE SHARON DINNEEN 1 f I li-I I BILL FAULKENBERRY BILL FEATHERSTON H ECL ' fII s nous GOLLEHON RANDY GOULD Iulvmf I I '1 . IX NEIL GREGORY KEITH HALL ALVIN HARRIS 'mlm 'B ' CHRISTINE HUGHES , ff' AI .1 Nw IN A ,,. ,,Y,-1, -nwwgv. --ww--1?-i , , asf- - I, I ,- , , I LINDA HORAN JOHN JENNINGS I l ' ' ,LE 3 ..f A- ..V E t , Na My ', I ' .3 g A 1 ' b f ! Q b , ,Jax , fA ' - lk 4 .- fx .1 X E., V ' ' 7 V . ' ' .l,::. X H- V V. X 5 5 N gihgx f!',,w've'1 4 4 . 1-,wmv N .-1' 1 1 - : B , w K is . V . L.-. 1 1 ' 1 ' 11 7 if ' NT in E E N x N 5 1 - A ' . ' 'NQFTCS ' 41' N ' N ff d- r U X h , V4 fi, 9 Q Ang,-Q' L A . 1 fs' ' x f ,. JENNIFER KRUP KIP LARSON LOIS MARCH ALLAN LEVY Matrix ? Q . . .W -. P G c- +' N. ,f ,. - ' -1 .Q E ' A 15' 'x I. xy x N Q ,, ELLIS MAXEY Y. ' E K A . W BEN MASSENBURG ' . at , , V' 4 Qin ,i R Q 'gl N ju: :mf , A.-.- -1. E: gh- -f '9J!-L- f f- L in -A ,' ,,'..t'r3L. . NY 1 , ,A L 1 -L n . I H .. , E P if ,ff ,.. f fl...-M VINCENT MCGRAVEY mmf' J., , ,M w 9 R . 4,1 ,,.1 JANE ROARK ' ,, , ,gl 1 W. n. E? 3 RICK MERCER PAUL PERLIK X .:. JIM POPE 2 Rx W , 1 4 fo .235 EMORY H. ROBINETTE I! P53 Refur- LISA ROSCHKO ix In - 'J MIKE SCHORR 1' y ,, ,,.I-A, X, 5 1 DENNIS SAGER RICK SHEPARD ,vw J, in fy- 'I' jf film- -', I ,fri f ' ff, f - ' ! f ff f f If 1 1 ' If . .f iff 1 ' J ' ' ,f .ff-'I lrdlff' 'riff' .f jg W. 1 I, , , 1 rj' v., ghllb19-!9-- ' ' r .f- ,,, I 1, iff lk MARK STRICKLAND LEE VLIFI' , I . 1.1-uf' wpzr f V 'psf 4, , I I jQ I- I, ' If 1 ,a ,zy I NWI! ' I I PM ' , 5 , , . 1 I 5 Q ' LL-.. .S ,111 JUDI TEPPER PAUL WALKER W law 1 BOB WEBB CRAIG WESSELLS X, . Lx! .Rive , .J , I-a f, fi 1 :W 'w . 1 V in , N 1 5 an X Nik' M VOLUNTEERS SUE WHEELER ANN ADDINGTON Director NOT PICTURED: EDITH DRAKE SALLY MEEKS JOYCE GRAY PAT STECKER , ,. at V. 'A ffiyx Ariz. i Q- ' -L-' 1- 'L In ' QQQTTQEH IL ,a. . 'gfiibb .YI ,J ,V - 1 . - , 'P rlffsai MARGARH UNGER ' AUG HVEASH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Memorium: Class of 1977: Class of 1978: Cartoons: Photography: Other: STAFF Frank Ewald Rick Ginsberg Tom Hubbard Magee Leigh Sherrie Olson Tom Olson Pete Sanders History of EVMS: Vern Jones D.R.H. Gourley and M.D. Schechter Newton Miller Jennifer Jrup Newton Miller R. Chisholm, B. Eng, F. Ewald P Ewald J Fish R Ginsberg S Hornstein,J.Jennings,V.Jones J Kelly R T Manning E Morrison T Olson, P. Sanders, J. Smith, L Strongoski M Tignor J Tepper S. Braswell, D. Corica, R. Evans S Falk C Kitts D Napier G Napier K. Tignor, M. Tignor, G. Sakaklni L Strongoskl The above staff and contributors, not the faculty and staff of the Eastern Virginia Medical School, are solely responsible for content. We apologize for all errors deletions and misrepresentations that might have occurred in this book Lk Llhg N :luv P d h by CP lgi A HH . :- , 341- 4, .17 I' With empathy for those creatures of experiment. THE CLASS OF 1976 ,....-7 h w, 'w' ,- ,avg-7 v:Ur11.'jjg4lg-i' 7 ' ' :'A ,gl-f --1,1-1QQ,f 'f:fI,T1Q ,i'-, L'.ffzf'-32. 1:4 ' N ' I ::i:f123,5-gzigaf- ' ., I . - V - M .-45.1,- I ,Q-, .,-Jv., ,- . , -f 4 -,'15::'Z-ix5er,,,'.,.-1Q- f.:L1 j 5?':- ' Aizgf-'-F!:.'t' , W.-... , , A., -.,, L . , A.- i I Q ,, Li Q..-3,31 H.. PJ 1. I Lb, X1 L, 4 ' x M v J 1 J ga, , . ' FWF-i'-'14 nr F? 315-:L 71.2 ' ' ,.f ff Xw,...k,,,, x.1, . , .- -:,xf.3.FA--1, -,-5,2 , -va.-,Q-A.. L:Q4,.,fL-77.47-at rl, .3 fVUw'Qf -1 ' X 1 NI 'QSFQQE ,, 1:.a-- 7 Ev-+2 3319322 '-1 - -F vvqfS3i , ,jj , 5-J ,,,,, . ...,.....,.. Ki.f,,...f... , -- - -i--A E31 . Ftxzzj, v -+R ?, xx


Suggestions in the Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) collection:

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 78

1976, pg 78

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 102

1976, pg 102

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 33

1976, pg 33

Eastern Virginia Medical School - Yearbook (Norfolk, VA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 77

1976, pg 77


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