Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1962

Page 1 of 97

 

Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1962 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 97 of the 1962 volume:

NURSES ' LIBRARY HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE ANQ HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING FOR REFERENCE NOT TO BE TAKEN FROM 11 E ROOM (V f « on - W j 96£. 1U£ AG L 1962 SCHOOL OF NUR£fN£ RytetuW As many classes have gone before us, so we too, the Class of 1962 leave Hahnemann to take our places in the field of nursing. Behind us we leave three years of education, experience, and many pleasant associations — some to last us the rest of our lives; others, to remain memories to think back upon in future years. However, in our wake we should like to leave this yearbook, both for us to look at and reflect back to our schooldays and for other classes so that they may share our memories. We sincerely hope you will enjoy this yearbook as much as we enjoyed creating the experiences that make it possible. I iP5KIAIK,MA© r Joseph V. D ' AhJjoflo onui U tfibtw W. Oak D £tc fctMt There have been many people who have influenced us during our three years of nursing education. It is hard to single out any one person who has contributed more than the others, but to two people we owe a particular debt. It is as a small token of our respect and gratitude that we offer the dedication of the Vigil, ' 62 to Dr. Wilbur Oaks and Mr. Joseph D ' Ambola. We hope that we can justify their confidence in us as mature professional nurses. Did you know you were brave, did you know you were strong? Did you know there was one leaning hard? Did you know that I waited and listened and prayed, And was cheered by your simplest word? Did you know that I longed for that smile on your face, For the sound of your voice ringing true? Did you know I grew stronger and better because I had merely touched shoulders with you? — unknown Nuvt$i tC| Jkjuuiiio v To the Class of 1962: The Faculty of the School of Nursing and those in Nursing Sen-ice join with me in extending congratulations and best wishes to you. Your three years of study and clinical experience as a student nurse have come to an end. You have had expert instruction and skilled guidance. You entered our School of Nursing to learn; now you will go forth to serve. Your instructors and all those concerned with your progress are proud of your achievements. v e know that you are happv and elated in reaching your goal — becoming a graduate professional nurse. MRS. EDYTHE GRING KISTLER. R.N.. B.S. Director of the School of Nursinc J 1 1 SEATED: J. Weinstein, M. Greensfelder, M. Strakay, J. Chuback STANDING: P. Balanda, S. Sammon, E. Yoho, M. Smi th SEATED: Y. Morosky, M. Tregunna, R. Graver STANDING: M. Pezzana, P. Maccarone, W. Spangler, C. Haracz Nwi Imq Q uACto 9 mwm ' t J. Lynch, E. McCuen, E. Anderson To the Class of 1962: The three years you are soon to see completed are but an introduction to the role you must now accept in your chosen field of endeavor — in nursing and in life itself. Untold and unrealized heights of professional development and selfgrowth are open to you. Be never satisfied with other than the best — for self, friends, family, and all of human society with whom you come in contact. May success, health and happiness, accompany you in your fu- ture; and may these words of Louis Untermeyer from his poem Prayer serve as an incen- tive and a guide in your achievement. From compromise and things half-done Keep me. with stern and stubborn pride And when, at last, the fight is won God keep me still unsatisfied. ELINOR E. McCUEN, R.N. Acting Director Nursine Service VJmiu t iXoiv It is with sincere pleasure thai 1 extend to each of you congratulations for the completion of your training, to assume the responsibilities that will be entrusted to you by physicians and patients alike. You have within your power the ability to do more than any man maj ever de- clare. Let each experience of your ministrations, which gives you satisfaction, give you also the strength to meet the more perplexing and taxing situations which will be required of vou. In a world of tension and suspicion, you are now in a profession to which people turn with justified confidence in their most extreme hours. Justify this confidence, and you will truly earn the title of Angel of Mercy. CHARLES S. PAXSON, JR. Vice President and Administrator Tw New Wotat fti iut 1. New Nurses ' Residence. 2. New Outpatient Clinic. 3. New College Building. 4. Existing Klahr Building. 5. Clinical Research Institute. 6. Existing Hospital. 7. Operating Pavilion. Piecfe uca p dod, Our life as student nurses began on September 8, 1959, Registration Day, when with excited expectation we — all 27 of us — entered the nurses ' home, 245 North Fifteenth Street. That evening, our initiation began with a party given for us by our big sisters. We each received a tiny cap, symbolic of the real ones we were to receive at the end of six months. We spent a laughter-filled evening and returned tired but happy to our rooms: greasy door knobs, taped spigots, short-sheeted beds, and jumbled drawers! During our week of orientation we had our first good look at Phila- delphia through guided tours by the faculty. Then we settled down to our formal instructions. All week we studied — basic sciences, allied nursing arts, and social sciences. But on Friday at five began the mad dash to catch the bus or train home for the week-end. Our clinical experience began next; and how proud but more than a little scared we were as we invaded the hospital in our probie blues to fill water pitchers, clean utility rooms, straighten casters, and keep the shades even on the wards. Later, we don ' t know who was more anxious — us or the instructors as they supervised us on enemas, colos- tomy irrigations, tracheotomy aspirations, and medications. How happy we were at Christmas for we received two weeks vacation; but how apprehensive that evaluations to our parents were following us in the mail. After six months of classes and clinical instruction, the day finally arrived! Capping! How proudly and thankfully we walked down the aisle to be capped by our big sisters. TO ml s ' If H Ahh, the poor puddy-cat. Do you really think it ' ll happen? ? ? PJujStofogq And right about here — she coughed. Just a little mosquito bite ! Ue i ' s iWicofi That thing looks dangerous ! ml But this makes the fifth time today. Jl QuAqtixtb Real food sure beats I.V. ' s! Pitted Fitness Ever} ' Tuesday morning, ten o ' clock till noon. I ' m NOT Who me? I ' m little red riding hood ! I study every night! You ' ll get your wish, Phyl. 7 •3 I ' ll wow them all ! Rah for the lucky patient ! CappMq I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly, to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug. I will do all in my power to maintain and elevate the standard of my profession, and will hold in confidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my calling. With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work, and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care. UftA A IS, 1960 It was the night before capping and all through the halls . . . In one more hour What do you mean, say cheese ? I ' ll have a cap! We ' ll light the way. Boy, does this cap feel great ! Ptestauow YtoJu That long-awaited day had finally arrived. Remember how proud we were marching down the aisle of Klahr Auditorium to the strains of Pomp and Circumstance in our new white bibs and aprons? The importance of the nights of studying and the days of work was finally realized as our big sisters placed our caps upon our heads and we recited the Florence Night- ingale Pledge. Now we were Freshmen. Along with our whites and caps came new experiences and added respon- sibilities. We spent more time on the floors and were no longer called maid by the patients. Pharmacology was a new course we had to face. All those drugs with their actions and reactions! How would we ever pass? But with the dint of hard work and Mr. D ' Ambola we did. Then there was dietary experience with its principles, preparations, patients and problems. We did fairly well in getting the patients to adopt good food habits, but at 11 PM it was practically impossible to convince ourselves that we didn ' t need a pizza or a chocolate nut sundae. The operating room brought with it a new routine and a new vocabulary. What did he say? When we observed our first operation no one passed out, but we could feel the initial incision with the knife. In the recovery room we became clock watchers. B. P. ' s had to be taken every fifteen minutes and not a day went by without our ears ringing. Magee Rehabilitation Center made us realize the things we had to be thankful for, and how courageous the unfortunate are. We left with newly obtained knowledge and an affectionate name for the rehabilitation center — Magoo. Working weekends, studying even harder, and giving our first hypoder- mics to a real patient were still other accomplishments of this new life of which we were becoming a part. We experienced many joys and disappointments in Freshman Block, but they were important steps to the day when we could place a black band on our caps and be called Juniors. OjpQMtiMQ R 0 w that Ivory look ! Raaov uj R wm Blood pressure — stable. Bt0 tck SC0|3tj Is it in there, doctor? ? ? ■■■■ Well of course it ' s sterile! DtefcfOteW Does the dish count? Two more drops should do it! Uogee R ktbtfofotow f t+ } That chair looks pretty weak to me ! Sorry, this is non-formulary. Hot chocolate, anyone? We ' ll be with you All right, who did it? in a minute. I I Took only 5 trips on 2 elevators! We always wash our teet like this! Of course I set my hair! If you want my opinion A Mer maid How could you ! Erga ! JwdWi YtotAs Our Junior year began happily with the presentation of a half-inch stripe of black velvet. Pediatrics was our first specialty; the war cry being Oh, no! I ' ve got 27 and 29 again! P-L-U-S three isolations! But Peds had its happier days — the days when we played a mother ' s role and comforted a grieving child. It isn ' t every day that a nurse finds her diabetic patient stuffing his peas in the fan in his room or finds some child pouring his bright red cough syrup down a medical student ' s clean white lab coat. With our hearts still on pediatrics, we moved to the D. R., where we witnessed our first delivery with awe. The formula room, nursery, ante and post-partum departments all hold their memories, but clinic stands out quite vividly — No, lady, you didn ' t swallow a watermelon seed seemed to be a familiar response. How many times did you wish you had your Spanish interpretation book along? Don ' t push, lady, the doctor isn ' t here yet! is a difficult exclamation to make in Spanish. Junior class block made a dramatic entrance with this frank fact — five courses awaited. The sentiment of the group was expressed as such, Here I am, working my third week of nights with no weekends off and conferences at 1 PM every Wednesday! The TUR irrigations, gyn exams, cranio- tomies, fractured femurs, and Bailey bottles will always remind us of these days. Our social life was not to be forgotten, although preparing for our bake sales seemed to curtail many of our dates. The traditional senior prom given by the Junior Class was held at the War- wick Hotel in the Mirror Room. Will we ever sell enough tickets? domi- nated every conversation. How many times did we bug people to buy our aprons, stuffed animals, stickers or scrap books? And how many times did they smile and say Not you again! Our greatly anticipated Month Off finally became reality. With it came the realization that many happy experiences awaited us in our senior year. Ot OfWiCS Scratch a little to the left, nurse. J3W . Carry on, nurse! ! ! P kobuc So who ' s afraid of the big bad wolf? Next comes a lullaby ! Neuviotagij Cough, please. Geatt -U t uwttJ How dear ' s clear? i y Inspiring confidence. CojviioJb Catiifife t (iil m Ever ready Angels aren ' t the only ones who can fly! Wish you Scout ' s honor; it ' s only colored HOH! were mine. Well, shut my mouth! It just doesn ' t look like it ' ll work! Baby Touhey Qtodo Vmjv The beginning of our senior year was marked by two events. We received the long-awaited quarter-inch stripes for our caps which designated us as seniors and that same week our Little Sisters were welcomed at the Big and Little Sister Party. Skits depicting the preclinicals arrival and first day on the floor and a welcoming speech from Mrs. Kistler were highlights of the party. Our little sisters were each given a miniature cap, symbolic of the ones thev would receive six months later. We then began the last few specialties of our training before graduation. Senior Class Block taught us about communicable diseases, tuberculosis, venereal diseases, integumentary, and eye and ear conditions. Ward administra- tion and professional adjustments gave us the final principles of our profession and taught us the most ideal and practical aspects of how to properly manage and run a hospital floor. POSCORBE was imbedded in our minds forever! History of nursing included background and development of the nursing pro- fession. EPPI and the daily bus rides, delicious meals, and many conferences gave us both education and experience in the field of psychiatry. Pleasant and co- operative upon approach, no ward problem took the place of BP stable, urine less bloody, tolerating liquids in our daily nurses ' notes. Out-patient department, a new addition to our curriculum, provided an ex- tensive experience in the field of Public Health. It allowed us a chance to fol- low many of our patients after their hospital discharge. Accident ward, perhaps the best liked by almost all of us, trained us to think ahead and act efficiently and quickly in emergency situations. Vague complaints of chest pain for two weeks, stomach pain, and, vomicking became as familiar to us as the burn cases, asthmatics, and stab wounds. Aside from all of our classes, we can ' t forget our senior class activities. Our spaghetti dinner is never to be forgotten as it put us on our feet (financially, at least) and saved us from the ruins of poverty. April brought the end of our bake and apron sales. It seemed as though we were all becoming home-economists at times! Cupid ' s Frolic and the Junior-Senior Prom were our two big dances of the year. They were a lot of fun for all who attended. We each have our own separate memories of both occasions that we ' ll carry with us always. Finally that long-awaited day came — graduation. The event we ' d all been waiting for since three years earlier when we had registered as Hahnemann student nurses had arrived and we received our diplomas and became graduate members of the nursing profession. We are proud to be following in its tradi- tion and dedication to service, and doubly proud to be the class of 1962 of the School of Nursing of the Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital. Ou£-Paftfta£ V OJibntoh And that — is a murmer. But I can ' t see a thing ! ] thPUm . - But I keep getting a cha-cha beat ! l Did you know that a psycho-ceramic is a cracked pot? I was just tell ins Bill about the food. Every Monday night at Kulla ' s. ' J 1 K In your future I see . And then she said . . Smile, Joanie. Feofo tes Activities play an important part in school life and help to develop talents and abilities. Officers are chosen for the clubs, and meetings are held throughout the year with the guidance of a faculty advisor. Their accomplishments are many and diversified. On the following pages, we shall see and remember all the activities which helped so much to round out our school life. Bft$ke£fc ftM ' 7e H ami CkmJkod tS £fel«iM tfj %b Nudes ' CWstatit EMow yp MfiwtHOti C ui) 7U Vdd £tgn £to$ Vlglfc ' 62 Gta$ C N. A P. rioiuM i £ uM Club CWe u6 Couttct ! Chow Ho ! Ho ! Ho ! Were you a good girl? Meet me I get the bedpan next ! at 4. Santa ' s Helper. Ever see an EKG like this, Dr. Oaks? Ck 4 1964 (WUttfeSisfois F %A - ©S ' ?% ft A O tjfyj) FIRST ROW: B. O ' Brian, J. Markuze, P. Lovell, M. Swigart, J. Peters, M. Kane, D. Celmins. F. Fitzgerald, J. Vassallo, B. Tarbutton, P. Kemetz, G. Rauch. SECOND ROW: A. St. Petery, I. Schenck, P. Robinson, M. Pyck, J. Bencivengo, R. Seymour, P. Shale, K. O ' Keefe. B. Baker, M. Balanda, J. Frecon. THIRD ROW: C. Slysz, L. Nihill, B. Henderson, I. Bartish, J. Hackney, C. Peck, C, McLeaf, C. Bray, A. Brent, L. Rogal- ski, G. Scott, E. Porter, P. Dockus. FOURTH ROW: S. Lyons, N. Pierson, C. Wanner, L. Smith, K. Jakelsky, E. Shershen. C. Rogers, B. Deichert. S. Buttle, C. Bumgarner, I. Busch, N. Ludwig. We hope you have bound in this book All the leaves of three years past; But just to be sure, as little sisters will We offer you a leaf, may it not be the last. Eternal friendship is ours to give; It cannot be measured with man-made gauges. Press it carefully, now, between these new pages. When in later years you wish to share Your knowledge of this profession rare. Open this book, now with pages old. And you ' ll find this friendship as good as gold. The Class of ' 64 , - r t FIRST ROW: J. Anthony, J. Brodnick, M. Levy, E. Thompson, S. Centrella, S. ' Zieber, J. Dilworth, L. Mar. SECOND ROW: A. Nagg, C. Zambetti, E. Farrell, L. Johnson, E. Wilson, M. Williard, B. Murray, P. Lavery. ABSENT: L. Baker, G. Deeble, J. Deemer, J. Dill, D. Dubeck, L. Eggee, C Fulchiero, N. Gauer, B. Gochnauer, J. Jones, S. Kane, H. Loner, S. McLean, S. Notestine, P. Parsons, Q. Pettiferde, R. Pologruto, S. Potocki, C. Potts, M. Relitch, J. Schmehl, L. Sellers, P. Shikorsky, L. Schuyler, .M. Sweeney, L. Wiggins. May we extend to the class of 1962 our congratulations. As you venture forth along the pathway of life, may each of you find happiness as well as prosperity. Often we have worked with you, shared your problems, and realized your successes. Now accept our fondest wishes that whatever life holds in store for you may fulfill your desires, up- hold the profession you have chosen, and bring you the satisfaction of success. Best wishes, The Class of ' 63 A rare combination of frolic and fun. MERILYN JOAN ANGERMANN Haddonf ield, New Jersey fJjytl MARGARET l BARTLETl Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Peg i ' A musical mind is full of harmony. 1 ■ H 1 yjfc h PATRICIA ANN BROSCIOUS Northridge. California PoJb ■ H ■■§ The price of wisdom is above rubies. CAROL BVTHWAV TATil RSIMI Pine Hill, W s Jersey By X , m The present is big with the future. i Emotion is the spark that gets action. JOAN ELIZABETH CAMPANELL Hazelton, Pennsylvania CoJnujpij PATRICIA ANN (ATA MM Norristown, Pennsylvania Neatness is the secret of charm. V LUCILLE ANN CHALFANT Upper Darby, Pennsylvania LuAj ' A blush is the color of virtue. CAROL DOLORES COLBY Laurel Springs, New Jersev Cxw ' The purpose firm is equal to the deed. NANCY DIANE DAVIES Pottsville, Pennsylvania N KjC ' The world means something to the capable. NANCY F.Ll-ANOR I ' l.YW Goldsboro, Maryland Good nature is stronger than swords. ' Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. JUDY ANN GREEN Newfoundland, Pennsylvania Jtufe LUCILLE MAE JOHNSON Easton, Pennsylvania Utdly a To be happy in the present and confident in the future. I Four be the things I ' d be better without: love, curiosity, freckles and doubt. JOYCE EVELYN KING Chester, Pennsylvania Secretary, Class of 1962 Joy SANDRA JOVCi: KLING1-R Wiconisco, Pennsylvania Vice-President, (Mass or 1 062 Cmdy ' Hearts were made to give away. ROSEMARY VICTORIA OSTROW ' SKI Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Vu l § Sing away sorrow; cast away care. PHYLLIS JANE SMITH Pottstown, Pennsylvania President, Class t 1962 Pfujfc ' Be silent or let thy words be worth more than silence. |? r CONSTANCE ADELAIDE VERSAGE La. Stockertown, Pennsylvania J Treasurer Class of 1962 .. fl El A good disposition is more valuable than gold. DORA ANN WAGN1 R Harrisbure, Pennsylvania VOHOu Vivacity is the health of the spirit. RITA AURORA B. YOUNG Ashland, Kentucky R%fe ' To be silent would be the death of me. CJIms AdifoOnS MISS MARY SPAKOW ' SKI, R.N. Nursing Service MISS MARY-CHARLES SMITH, R.N., B.S. Nursing Education CotMv Vow magtwje . . . Men cool, calm, and collected? Peg not talking? Pat B dating a fella taller than she? Carol B. not in a hurry to go home? Pattie not waiting for a phone call? Joan whispering? Lucy C on time? Carol C. without the final remark? Nanc D without her aqua-lung? Nancy F not reading the latest book? Jude not getting any mail? Lucy J not watching T.V.? Joy without a cigarette? Sandy sitting on a bench at a B.B. game? Vicki not flirting? Phyl — — Not going to the Y ? Connie not going home on her days off? Dora — with two left feet? Rita ----- eating meat? RjGftifiiiibe t U [ie t . . . Meri lost a recta] thermometer in a patient? Peggy kept her closet locked? Pat B. mistook a Presbyterian minister for Dr. Thompson? Byth waited for us to notice her ring? Pattie spent all afternoon in the laundry looking for her cap which fell down the chute? Joan lost her blanket out a nth St. Window ? Lucy met Mrs. K. at E.P.P.I. while driving to work evenings? Carol C. squeezed 6 of the E.P.P.I. girls into a Sunbeam car? Nanc scrubbed 6 hours in the O. R. only to lose a sponge and have to reopen ? Nancy F. tripped over 3 urinals while trying to impress a policeman on 5th Surgery? Jude brushed her teeth with Noxema ? Lucy J. tried to observe one of her first deliveries without a mask ? Joyce yelled Fire! in the O. R. during a nephrectomy? Sandy plugged and unplugged the bovie 7 times for Dr. G. only to have him trip over it? Vickie backed into a mayo stand while draping a patient? Phyllis ran the hospital elevator and took Dr. Oaks to 11th floor? Connie preped the wrong leg for a cardiac cath ? Dora preped for a hemorrhoidectomy with benzoin instead of Ioprep ? Rita welcomed the medical students with a huge adhesive sign ? PMtU U Keep us, O God, from pettiness; let us be large in thought, in word, in deed. Let us be done with fault-finding, and leave off self-seeking. May we put away all pretense and meet each other face to face — without self-pity and without prejudice. May we never be hasty in judgement and always generous. Let us take time for all things: Make us to grow calm, serene, gentle. Teach us to put into action our better impulses, straightforward and unafraid. Grant that we may realize it is the little things that create differences; that in the big things of life we are at one. And may we strive to touch and to know the great, common human heart of us all, and, O Lord God, let us forget not to be kind. — Mary Stewart Q itovdxA; 6, 1 962 A £ 49 Q FIRST ROW: Merilyn Joan Angermann, Joyce Evelyn King, Sandra Joyce Klinger, Phyllis Jane Smith, Constance Ade- laide Versage, Dora Ann Wagner. SECOND ROW: Carol Bythway Tattersdill, Lucille Ann Chalfant, Patricia Ann Catanese, Patricia Ann Broscious, Nancy Diane Davies, Rita Aurora Borealis Young, Lucille Mae Johnson. THIRD ROW: Rosemary Victoria Ostrowski, Joan Elizabeth Campanell, Margaret Anne Bartlett, Carol Dolores Colby, Judy Ann Green, Nancy Eleanor Flynn. CoRtiSonE . . . probably useful only in the treatment of Addison ' s disease. No knowledgeable person could have pre- dicted more for cortisone. The time was April, 1948. The conclusion by a panel of distinguished clinicians that this medical new-comer, the first of the corticosteroids, would probably be of value only against one rare disease reflected the best in scientific thinking. No one could have foreseen that in the coming decade and a half, the corticos- teroids would be utilized against more than 50 diseases and disorders, and that millions of persons would benefit each year. Merck Co., which pioneered with corti- sone, could trace its interest in the marvelous secretions from the adrenal cortex back to 1933, when it had cooperated in studies at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. World War II gave the studies urgency when it was reported— falsely, as it turned out— that Ger- man aviators were making use of an adrenal extract to fly as high as 40,000 feet without oxygen. The federal government had lost interest by 1944, but Merck continued to push ahead with the adrenal program, cooperating closely in this work with Dr. Edward C. Kendall and his colleagues at the Mayo Clinic. It was Dr. Kendall who had first worked out the for- mulas for the corticosteroids. The first lab- oratory synthesis of cortisone, a mile-stone in medicinal chemistry, was accomplished by a brilliant young Merck scientist, Dr. Lewis H. Sarett, in December. 1944. It was in September, 1948. five months after the clinicians had issued their evalua- tion, that Dr. Philip S. Hench, also of the Mayo Clinic, made medical history with a series of cortisone injections given to a 29- year-old arthritic woman. The patient, who had been bedfast and virtually unable to move, delightedly went shopping after one week of therapy. A new era in medicine had been born. Within the research laboratories of Merck Sharp Dohme. which came into existence through the merger of Merck with Sharp Dohme in 1953, the quest for a better anti- inflammatory agent has never ceased. In these laboratories, scientists probe deeply into the basic nature of inflammatory disease. Chemists synthesize and study a wide variety of corticosteroids; pharmacologists, physiol- ogists and physicians check these and other compounds to see how they measure up in activity and absence of unwanted side effects. Merck Sharp Dohme ' s research and de- velopment in the corticosteroid field is but one of the company ' s many programs of sci- entific investigation. The medical scientists engaged in this work are the trustees of the better medicines of tomorrow, which are now beine; created in their test tubes and minds. 76 Congratulations to the Class of 1962 Congratulations From to the Class of 1962 From YORKSHIP PRESS PHARMACY Printers and Stationers OAKLYN, N. J. THE CLASS OF 1964 Why Not Join Your Wishes Happiness and Success ALUMNAE to Their Big Sisters ASSOCIATION CLASS OF 1962 77 Photography Best Wishes by to the Class of 1962 REMBRANDT STUDIO, INC. DIETARY DEPARTMENT 1726 Chestnut St. Philadelphia 3, Pa. LO 3-6256 Best Wishes Try Our Special Breakfast From ABE ' S LUNCHEONETTE CLASS OF 1963 246 W. 15th St. LO 7-9897 78 Best Wishes to the Class of 1962 From STUDENT COUNCIL Compliments of HOSPITAL CLOTHING UNIFORM CENTER Graduate Uniforms in the Finest Poplin Materials — Also in Dacron, Cotton and Wash-and-Wear Fabrics Competitive Prices 79 Congratulations to the Class of 1962 From THE FACULTY 80 • PATRONS HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL Dr. James A. Davis GIFT SHOP Gifts for All Occasions Dr. R. B. Leomporra It ' s Our Pleasure to Serve You Dr. Solnick Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson HOURS— Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brader Monday to Friday 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Howard Jarolomen Saturday — 12 noon - 6 p.m. Sunday — 12 noon - 6 p.m. Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Versage Mrs. Myrtle Liggett Mascots of the Class of 1962 SPECIAL PATRONS Dr. John Anderson Dr. Donald Berkowitz Dr. Robert Bower Dr. Michael P. Brignola Dr. Leon Cander Dr. John P. Cossa Dr. Millard Croll Dr. John H. Davie Dr. Thaddeus L. Deren Dr. Joseph H. Entine Dr. Nicholas G. Frignito Dr. Pasquale Gambescia Dr. Edwin O. Geckeler Dr. G. John Gislason Dr. Robert L. Green Dr. Paul J. Grotzinger Dr. D. Dwight Grove Dr. Robert M. Hunter Dr. William F. Kellow Dr. Lowell L. Lane Dr. William Likoff Dr. N. Volney Ludwick Dr. Axel K. Olsen 82 Aufogtapta Autog ds TAYLOR PUBLISHING COMPANY The World s Best Yearbooks Are Taylor-made NUP ' LIBRARY Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital SCHOOL OF. NURSING 0£


Suggestions in the Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

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Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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Hahnemann Hospital School of Nursing - Hahnoscope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.