Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1952

Page 1 of 145

 

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 145 of the 1952 volume:

fygiiifafr ww? f' W' WWJMQ fwnif 5 ,My wg My ' fri fi ,.- : gm: .,.., N., f -- , N Af- .Qapszww-. - HARVARD MEDICAL SUHAHIL BOS'l'0N MASSACHUSETTS ' The Public Garden Oscar Tugo Circle The Old Howard Athenaeum His? sci p ,. U, .QM Qizfiasia . 6922 Tennis at Vanderbilt Hall 25 Shattuck Street ANS Commonwealth 8: Berkeley FUREWIIIID As the testosterone titer rises in passing through puberty so in the spring of the third year vague stirrings, probably in the vicinity of the ligament of Treitz, motivate a group of individuals to publish a record of their class-a record whieh through the years may all memories of the 'Lllood Years? Such has assist the neurons to ree been our intent. a small measure of sueeess we leave to the judgment of the class. The task has not been Whether we have achieved i . . easy, but it has always been fun. Our slim volume has eu- joyed its share of tribulations and crises and l'k ' ' 1 e the priee of eggs has sulfercd from the in- H' t. ' . . . a ionary spiral. Although in its fi nal form it falls somewhat short of our original aspira tions we put it to bed hoping that it may be accepted as our expression of warm thanks for the privilege of b ' Class of 1952. , eing members of the We wish to acknowledge our appreciation to Mr. C. 14' Waid and the i . P. personnel of Waicl Studio for their invaluable and always cheer- ful assistauee, to Mr. John C. Ursprung, Jr., of Campus Publisliiug who rescued this year- book from the fringe of limbo, and to Mr. and Mrs. John Sl 'll' ' u ito who loudly and patiently allowed us to disrupt their household. li. l'. l1'. won 'run S'r.uu-- STAFF I EDITOR ................ ASSISTANT EDITOR ..... BUSINESS MANAGER .... TREASURER ............. STAFF 1' 'N A I G- ............ ....ROBERT P. FORNSMELL . . . . .J. THOMAS 'DOWLING ....JAMES W. MURPHY ....JOHN A. MALCOLM PIIOTOGRAPIIIC EDITOR ...................... ROBERT T. POTTER ASSISTANT PIIOTOGRAPIIIC EDITOR ........ JOHN SInLL1'1'O, JR. FACULTY ................ CLASSES ...... SOCIETIES .... ANALEPTICS. . . W. IIANCOCK ....JAMES S. BEIZNSTEIN . .... KENDRICK P. IAANCIG ....WILLIAM S. CURRAN STANLEY P. RIOLER GEORGE S. BASOOM PHOTOGRAPHERS ............ IIENRY DEF. WEIZSTEII, J. I4IREDICRICK NEHER, ARTHR G. SHIP, ROBERT S. LICHTENSTEIN, ALF'lClCD W. SENFT, WILLIAM B. IIADLEY, '53, MILTON H. ALPER, '54, W1LL1AM J. ADELSON, '55 ART ................ WARREN G. GUNTHEROTII, ALBERT D. ANDERSON, MERRILL J. KING, JR. ADVERTISING ..... .......... . LEO SAMELSON, FRANK A. COSTANZO, ARMAND A. L-EEEMINE, CHESTER M. PIERCE, CESAR E. ROSA-PEREZ, UOROTIIY TWITCIIICLL, DONALD P. MACDONALD CQINTENTS ENVIRONS ..... DEDICATION . . FACULTY ..... CLASSES 1952 Medical .. 1952 Dental . . . Undergraduate . . . SOCIETIES ......... ANALEPTICS ......... ADVERTISEMENTS . . . CONTENTS . 4 . 8 -J 1- . 50 ... 70 7-J 84 96 ... 133 A E. 2 i 3 4 2 2 S 2 2 s 2 n i i f f- 'H+ -ff' fw- cf ww- ff.: igiuf:2bf,...,L.f:-.LL.zfZ '4.,.p,J,.1.A..Zz. fLii1.'2'-JIT.. , , 'f 'S.f15 '1ii5. 'cf W 'if '. W -, '. P: -A if -. f ' A DEDICATIO TRACY BURR MALLORY 1896-1951 This Class of 1952 is the last to know Tracy Mallory ,as their teacher in the second year course in Pathology. Like other classes they remember him as a wise and friendly guide through the chromatic mazes of Pathology and they understand how great was the loss to all of us when this devoted, brave and useful life came to an end on November 11, 1951. Now they have chosen to dedicate this volume to him, the greatest honor to his memory it is theirs to bestow. Tracy Mallory was himself. a student-and a very able one-in the Class of 1921 at the Harvard Medical School. It is doubtful that he experienced much difficulty with the course in Pathology, a subject that for many students is seen as through a glass darkly. Indeed, he had already learned a great deal from a famous father, Dr. Frank B. Mallory, then Pathologist- in-Chief at the Boston City Hospital. Moreover, he seemed never to forget what he had once learned of any subject, so that he was graduated as Doctor of Medicine, magna, cwm laude. After six months spent working in his fatherls labora- tory he began an eighteen-month internship on the medical service of Dr. Henry Christian at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Then for two years he was Instructor in Bacteriology at a time when Hans Zinsser was the Professor. A wanderjahr, ' studying Pathology in Austria and Germany, completed his formal training and in 1926 he became Instructor in Pathology at Harvard Medical School and Chief of the Pathology Department of the Massachusetts General Hospital. There the years rolled by pro- ductively in the old laboratory with its creaking stairs. Then came World War II. He enlisted, took it as well as far younger men under- going the rigorous exertions of the indoctrina- tion training, and later served his country as Chief Consultant in Pathology for the Mediter- ranean Theater. There it was that he carried out his now classic studies on epidemic hepatitis and lower nephron nephrosis, sometimes work- ing in forward station hospitals during the cold Clampness of the winter of northern Italy. With the end of the war in Europe he returned to his duties at Harvard and in 1948 was appointed Professor of Pathology at the Massachusetts General Hospital. With Tracy Mallory, teaching was almost as natural and instinctive as breathing. However, the process was carried out more with the mind Photograph on Page 8 courtesy of Bachrach than with the larynx. His lectures were not so much expositions for the unquestioned beneht of students as they were a sharing of a rich experience for what he hoped it might be worth to them. Judgment of values was not absolute in his mind. Indeed the quixotic had its use, perhaps as a reminder of the uncertainties of probability applied to the particular. There was, for example, the anecdote of the bloated and chronically bibulous capitalist who tardily died in the fulness of years and whose autopsy showed a liver as smooth as a baby's. Doctor Mallory wanted the student to see for himself and to think for himself. After the lecture he would roam about the laboratory pointing out with infinite patience the particular features of microscopic fields, This type of teaching was the more extended privilege of the small groups of students taking his fourth year elective course at the hospital. In these sessions he called on his vast store of pertinent knowledge, while seated at the microscope or while pacing the floor with head bent in concentration and with eyes partly closed against the rising smoke of his cigarette. Students in clinical medicine at the Massachusetts .General Hospital learned much by attending the famous clinicopatholog- ical conferences at which he presided. Here he shared fairly with the clinicians the task, suc- cessful or not, of analyzing in retrospect the strategy of the victorious disease. Here, too, it became clear why practitioners as well as pathol- ogists sought his advice, for to him microscopic pathology, though important, was but one means to an understanding of disease. Tracy Mallory was gentle in manner but iirm in purpose. He displayed throughout his life independence of spirit and an equable judg- ment of men and of events. With level courage he faced and largely overcame the physical handicap of the hemiplegia that marred the last two years of his life. Chief among qualities that must have inspired the dedication of this book was his capacity for unostentatious friendship. He was also my friend. I knew him as classmate in Harvard College and Medical School and I, too, learned much from him. And so in this perennial lexicon of youth, dedicated to him by the Class of 1952, let me record the pride in him and the deep sense of loss at his passing that we all share. William B. Castle A a E E 4 Q 1 5 4 5 Q E 5 ? 5 2 E i : a e Q 5 5 4 -,N -v..',.,. f A ,M ff 42 A -, .my 1-M ' ,gk .fn , hh' Y,gQgg,f,,,?y!? 2 9 'fxwffhrz fi: .pw ,Ei if-C: M' ' :'We51ff.' 'K f3'? iw -'2??2Eff: 1. FRE Yff 3-L35 f61216515QL7,4.aLfRi'Qz,f.fMi?W'2Iy?Em'ifk-1.ffe.i:AQ?Z' W Gb? f- 'hfZ2-?W?i-,LiI' While words of learned length :md thundering sound Amazed the gathered rustics 1'1lIlQ0l-l around And still they gazed and still the wonder grew That one small head f-ould 1-nrry all he knew. - -Oliver Goldsmith James Bryant Conant, A.B., Ph.D., L1.D., S.D Chong, L.H.D., D.C.L., D.Sc. ihonj, Dr. ihonj Litt.D. President of Harvard University DMI ISTRATIO Miss Dorpthy Murphy L. Tillnfnan McDaniel, M.D. Myles P. Baker, M.D. Physlclan to Students Physician to Students Secretary Qresigned June, 19497 George Packer Berry, M.D., L1.D., S.D. Qhon.J Reginald Fitz, M. D., S.D., L1.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine Assistant Dean Professor of Bacteriology Lecturer on the History of Medicine The house of Administration Miss Anna Holt Librarian Miss Murphy and Co-workers Hersey Professor of Anatomy Anatomy . if ,QS L' U 'I 3: f ' sam Marcus Singer, Ph.D HQIBHDW- Pealle, Ph-D Edward W. Dempsey, Ph.D. Assoclate 111 AI13Jt0mY Associate Professor of Associate Professor Anatomy fresignedj y of A112-t01T1Y : : X f , ' T. ' fwizxlr. ?'Sis'15f:lQ.-232'2h-'fx A 3 Anatom George B' Wislocki' MD' Edward A. Edwards, M.D. Don W. Fawcett, M.D. Clinical Associate in Associate in Anatomy 40,1-g-:iffy-'-f'g-vs:','ef':' '-xgf'Y'5'4:Y? 'VC4'n5V5'!'Q f1'fvKi+f'!Eifi9i'VW Q-.X ,V - 2, V -I 3 .M fx , ,.,.f.. sq, Q v.,, , X xp . , . se. . ' N- Wig , r 41,4 .1-1 'f7'k?,.2f,-aan H :il yfif-v f 7: 11 7, Tl 525' A ,:+21i4ii'1Xi:: . .ws -fi - f 1:15:21 ' , sf -iff ffsgwgmf 1:4111-as f,4f.a,4'2, .M ,,,. .. . , vs-..,24.H -mv .. .V 1, - - ' George E. Erikson, Ph.D Assistant Professor of General Education and Biology A. Baird Hastings, Ph.D., S.D. Qhon.J Hamilton Kuhn Professor of Biological Chemistry Eric G. Ball, Ph.D., Edwin J, Cohn, Ph'D- Harry C. Trimble, Ph.D. Christian B. Anfinsen, Ph.D S.D. fhon.D Higgins University Assistant Professor of Assistant Professor of Professor of Biological Professor Biological Chemistry Biological Chemistry Chemistry Claude A. Villee, Jr., Ph.D. Frederick J. Stare, M.D., Assistant Professor of Ph.D. Biological Chemistry Professor of Nutrition Biochemistry Y N j , F 5252 .EM 0 0 , Nl 'I ' H Q J V V V J F. Lee Roakey, Ph.D. Ralph W. McKee, Ph.D. if Associate in Biological Assistant Professor of Chemistry Biological Chemistry E - Eugene M. Landis, M.D., Ph.D., S.M. Chon.J George Higginson Professor of Physiology if V WASTE ON LY ' H ,.J..Jx.. Physiology Webster, Shapiro, and Pauling collect data. A. Clifford Barger, M.D. Ralph H. Kellogg, M.D. Associate in Physiology Instructor in Physiology John R. Pappenheimer Paul O. Chatfield, M.D. Ph.D. Associate in Physiology Assistant Professor of Physiology Bacteriology John F. Enders, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Bacteriology and Immunology Albert H. Coons, MTD. F. Sargent Cheever, M.D. J' Howarfi Mueller' Ph'D' Suas Arnold Houghton As- Silas Arnold Hoghton As- Charles Wileier Professor of sistant Professor of Bac- sistant Professor of Baci- Bactenology and teriolvgy and Immunology teriology and Immunology Immunology Cresignedj Robert A. MacCready, M.D. John H. Hanks, Ph.D. Associate in Bacteriology Lecturer on Bacteriology and Immunology and Immunology William A. Hinton, M.D. Clinical Professor of Bac- teriology and Immunology, Emeritus Monroe D. Eaton, M.D. Associate Professor of Bac- teriology and Immunology 'Q Eaton and Feder at the water bath i . ,. r l Q Arthur T. Hertig, M.D. Professor of Pathology at the Boston Lying-in Hospital and the Free Hospital for Women Lefemine reviews the literature on lobotomy Pathology 01'Vi119 T- Bailey, M.D. Samuel P. Hicks, M.D. Assistant Professor of Associate in Pathology, Pa- PMUOIOSY thologist in Chief at the Peter Bent Brigham Seeing Boston with Dr. Vickery Hospital S. Burt Wolbach, M.D. Shattuck Professor of Path- ologic Anatomy, Emeritus Tracy B. Mallory, M.D. Professor of Pathology at the Massachusetts General Hospital 1Died November 19513 l F Benjamin Castleman, M,D. Assistant Professor of Pa- thology at the Massachu- Shields Warren, M.D. Sidney Farber, M.D. Professor of Pathology at Professor of Pathology at the New England Deaconess the Children's Hospital Hospital gs Qfyw,-fzf' '. v. -- .,., :IQ 'V-zsiziflib' -4' ., ,,,, .-. Q,Q,,f-p- ' ta l A, 4 William A. Meissner, M.D. Associate in Pathology at the New England Deacon- , ,, ,f., f , 4556. . 'V 1 th , -f ,gf.,:r-s,gf,-7.-,clemet . ::+ '-7, ,I -. 'MJI.QuQ'fi-f- 1:52 f'ev.:': 1 Q F' 4 f In ' . :X 2 , f if gf? 5 .4 ff? . 4 11 'b f Z, 285 , 1 9 ,Wifi JMX ., f 9 fi 2211! ' f f jf, 5 ,Zig gg Q as 5 in 53 'ff ,Za , 5,55 1 Q 45 1341 as i f 'sf N! X Pkwy f P2 3'ff4f7 A , 5 X in Q x---.W , . r . ' V r 'Y 2' vo' 5 5 f 5 3' ' 5' , TJ A 5 35 if fi ' 5.aQwu,f.a of or 4? ,L f 21 4 Z5 I 1 2 .. e : r Monroe J. Schlesinger, M.D. Assistant Professor of Pa- thology at the Beth Israel setts General Hospital ess Hospital Hospital TNAK NAI TANK ll umm. GJ. '15 Y, - ' B k . --Y A- 'Xe Yvurvzh Y H-xi., if ' P4 I9 Otto Krayer, M.D. Professor of Pharmacology Pharmacology Edward A- Carr, MD- Avram Goldstein, M.D. Instructor in Pharmacology' Asggciate in pharmacology Dudley and Rothblatt needle their opponents Henry K. Beecher, M.D. Henry Isaiah Dorr Profes- sor of Research in Anaes- thesia Inspecting the prisoners Douglas S. Riggs, M.D. Associate in Pharmacology David D. Rutstein, M.D. Professor of Preventive Medicine Richard Ford, M.D. Joseph C. Walker, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Associate in Legal Medicine Legal Medicine Ach du liebe Parasitology Preventive Medicine Legal Medicine Wesselhoeft whoops Donald L. Augustine Quentin M. Geiman, Ph.D. S.D., S.D. fhon.J Associate Professor of Professor of Tropical Public Tropical Public Health Health Clement A. Smith, M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics William L. Caton, Jr., M.D. Assistant in Obstetrics Winter Production: B. L. I. We're open twenty-four hours a day, lady. What would you like to know about sex? Boston L in - n Hospital -iv ,, 1 I Q. id! I 19 o Pauling and Bertles unimpre Duncan E. Reid, M.D. William Lambert Richardson P L .'V, - - ' -'-i ,ml -VV,,-, ,, . I If , M , Akk.kV, K , - ., V, has . , 1 sf' xi. A- -A f -. F fa , 'fTi LP Thomas R. Goethals, M.D. H. Bristol Nelson, M.D. Bert B. Hershenson, M.D. Clinical Professor of Instructor in Obstetrics Associate in Anaesthesia Obstetrics Professor of Obstetrics Francis Rouillard, M.D. Instructor in Obstetrics -, William B. Castle, M.D. Professor of Medicine O.P.D. City Hospital Embryocardia, Guaiac positive session 24 ,X .4-non' ,.,.,,...mww-v I 9' Henry Jackson, Jr., M.D. Assistant Professor of Medicine oston City ospital Maxwell Finland, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine Derek E. Denny-Brown, M.D., D.Phi1. James Jackson Putnam Professor of Neurology ,. . ,e . Y -- , -'-' - -: ..,. .. , . .wfz 4: 'ff' 1.fiE?s-2-L., . X f1- l'+2':g'y1ff:55sWz is .9 . - '-2: 2522 ?:,1-Q:f2f::Q:-wI- ' 'Y .. ,. . , f5If-55,33 wfya4fr1gga.132ZYf:'. . A ,J-mage ,I:, A '- ,fu - - V fvg , giey zs V- -cg .- 2. , - aye :,11,efq-f,,,, ., 5:1 'f 1,..4:-a-:if .. , , 1 f . .f . 1 , . . V Z1 ,. .wr ' -in ' - - I f' ' ri . '-'5'.',:?5E::'-- V-.. ii .fe Z.. 1 P-i -: .ffI'?i:?tg,:'w4 -J f '- jf M 'izffpffx ,S p-Pi: ' A 44- if--.1E5:, . '65 .?.'Q:'f '47f'F.,i'f il' K ' 4 V ' - '7. , 2. ..:2,u:..::.1. '. ft ' ,. K - .. - 'Z'i:LL3f.QZli:-,'i,'-il-, . e h 125: tif? gf. V- ,, ' v ' j M., I V' f l .- .ve12:51,f2 '-9-if-5ED.:27 .' v5':?'f -fff-5'TN- Y'I1'fE.'5' ' V' - :Wifi -:': v S','f EQ',,' is .alas u 51:51. 5. is ' 'f ':-:-- .: :z-,sw-Q - ,.,:3s,, ' Www A ' n.-2. '. 'ff'I?f7. ' 3625! H. ' , ff ,,f Gi'-.IS'Z',,' 5231: :: Vi ,E 7.,. '- F92 2 ,3 li, .Eff 'Jia .J ' ' . . Laurence B. Ellis, M.D. Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine Charles S. Davidson, M.D. Richard P. Stetson, M-D Clinical Associate in Medicine Associate Professor of Medicine l J - l ,A l P Richard A. Bloomiield, M.D. A, Price Heusner Gordon A. Saunders, M.D Instructor in Medicine Instructor in Neurology Instructor in Medicine fn -. - ck g f ' t .. :'lwMw ow., Paul M. Howard, M.D. ,A , Instructor in Psychiatry W Franklin Wood MD - , - - Mark D. Altschule, M.D Instructor in Psychiatry Assistant Professor of Medicine McLean Hospital Admmistration Building Ground Privileges M 'Q iw- 5 Q ii ' ff ? 1 Q F' Q nw' f 7757 ,a i WN, 4 3 Y7. 'ff 'ZX A 4 , g gf Childrelfs James L. Gamble, M.D. Professor of Pediatrics Emeritus Bronson Crothers, M.D. Clinical Professor of Pediatrics Charles A. Janeway, M.D. Thomas Morgan Rotch Professor of Pediatrics V Louis K. Diamond, M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics my x f 5 ki f . W 1 Y 3 X I QVQ J 51,53 2, wvw , iz. .., , ,M .is mv sf: It 3 gs ! ,X if , , gg SEQ f. X s as .9 Q fi x! 'gg 1 I , 1 ,sf Q5 4' 4 ff if iff 'Af-'ff' '41 13.11, is rr- ' William Berenberg, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics 1-:mac-' if -Nfl Q- v . , H fww f' 'H v m 4 111. Jigs-snawf , 1 - 1-Q '1 an wee .9 ,M ' , 'A' , Q Diaper Changers Medical Center Robert E. Gross, M.D. William E. Ladd Professor of Child Surgery William T. Green, M.D- Thomas H. Lanman, M.D Clinical Pl'0feSSOr of Clinical Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery Surgery l r l i Edward B. D. Neuhauser, Franc D. Ingraham, M.D Gamble Gamblegramming M,D, Associate Professor of Assistant Professor of Surgery Radiology X, 4.-: N 211. -g ,, x we x 3 N ?3 fiQ sim, 3590 X X 2 QA V W1111a.m G Lennox, MD Fred H Allen, .Tr MD Assocxate Professor of Instructor 1n Pedmtncs Harold C Stuart MD Da,v1d S Gnce, MD Assocxate Pr0feSSOr of Instructor 1n Orthopa,ed1c Ch11d Health Surgery X, mx, .-U--.ummm Carpenters and construction job R- 03111103 Eleyf M-D- John W. G. Tuthill, M.D. Assistant Clinical Professor Ingtrllctor in Pediatrics of Pediatrics Alexander S. Nadas, M.D. Win. McL. Wallace, M.D Instructor in Pediatrics Assistant Professor of Pediatrics 5 1 I' , f' 1 Q. gif-'- s P ! 1 K , I 1. ' Llp 4 5' wi:-L- . I '- , 5, f' ' F P Alfred L. Potter, M.D. Chief of Service Lyin -In Hospital Monument to Maternity Sunnyside Up K 2 ' I Free Ilospltal For Women .e X ,ff 'ir ,231 'Nmm. . C os George VanS. Smith, M.D. W. H. Baker Professor of G-ynaecology Arthur T. Hertig, M.D. Professor of Pathology at the Boston Lying-in Hos- pital and at the Free Hos- pital for Women John Rock, M.D. Clinical Professor of Gynaecology Paul A. Youngs, M.D. Instructor in Gynaecology A 5, Q 12 2 . if 4 If I , ...NT Beth Israel Hospital Qs Uhr 1,--mx -- 4... - T 5 H ,f I W Q M' H Q P, 'Hr Y o 2 Herrman L. Blumgart, M.D Jacob Fine, M.D. Professor of Surgery Professor of Medicine :TN-1:5 if Bemamin Alexander, M.D. l X Assistant Professor of Medicine A. Stone Freedberg, M.D. Assistant Professor of Medicine X fi yn X ' M , W ' J' ws, .Wy ..., is YK A eg , ,f ' 5 A ' ff? Q 4 Z W ' I ra 5 Q7 'AA'-' fs e .4 jx 'W :Q 2 4' , X wfnw f ig, W1 e . A sfigil ,-2,2 k .gifs I 1 vs lv 42,23 M, , N , Neff' face sim ' K f Mg? is , A f Q ,f 4' , 1 3 1 ffl ,lv ' Af? L igfs 3,165 1' G H1 A zf25Vf,w' 2 '23 f 4 X 0 1 ,, if si- Q . Q 1 . 2 gw 4,1 0 A f of , 1 ' ,sf 'E ' U 1 w Q H 1 g 4 52 'S P f PS 4 ygg. X A W' I 6' ,Q J of, bf , ff 'WG-4 3 ff I , 9, , :Cf wifi li 2' gy fzff ' N 7 19 Y. .. 'Wi ,LA M y ,4h,:w.f5-.W V Vg? V I 9 6 e 1 1 f 4 1 , . , v f M Q is X vb 4 P E 9 x I A w A f Arthur J. Linenthal, M.D. Instructor in Medicine . .mem . s. -1: 15 1 ies, Harry A. Derow, M.D. Clinical Associate in A Medicine Arnold M. Seligznan, M.D. A Assistant Professor of sm A Q - A X A ., : 5 . Wy. v ., ' Surgery A Joseph E. F. Riseman, M.D. Clinical Associate in X- Medicine 5 N' A' if ' '7bfVf7!E2Ig?f,f:-HWS? L-E5 771 'EYZQVV .x .jxfb V. ,f 'VA j?5'Qf5'S.-5 , , ,,f,,,.,. . ,fe ., fm. ,nafxfih smwzr W : ,. 1 c ,..,.:12, -' cfiLs: s: 1, 1-we y I W ,, z 11' . f, 1 ,,.,,, .,.l,, . ,.,. , .V:,,,, , .. s.,.,V, f1'2c?Lff'ff:z73. T595 - 72919. 1414 ' Wi- -fkzvf 'vzfir-:ff '- QT -A J X 5' f f 5 is' Q 2 0, v ' 1.94, X 64 X ul N 6, X A7 Ni vc' , 1 . , . , ,- -' ':, - V' - ,greg Samuel L. Gargill, M.D. Benjamin M. Banks, M.D. Lguis zegzeu, M,D, Assistant Clinical Clinical Associate in Clinical Associate in Professor of Medicine Medicine Medicine E Z. 0 -L. i 35 Massachusetts General Hospital James H. Means, M.D. Joseph C. Aub, M.D. Walter Bauer, M.D. Fuller Albright, MD- Jackson Professor of Professor of Research Jackson Professor of ASSOCUWB PI'0feSS01' of Clinical Medicine Emeritus Medicine Clinical Medicine Medicine Entrance to the Ivory Tower The Old Mrmssnclxusctts Find the patient .. Chester M. Jones, Dcgm Clark, M.D. Edward F. Bland, M.D. Earl MacA. Chapman, M.D M.D., S.D. Director Clinical Associate in Clinical Associate in Clinical Professor of Medicine Medicine Medicine 37 P J Perry J. Culver, M.D. Associate in Medicine Marion W. Ropes, M.D. Assistant Professor of Medicine Raymond B. Adams, M.D. Professor of Neurology Stanley Cobb, M.D. Bullard Professor of Neuropathology Victim Charles S. Kubik, M.D. Associate Clinical Professor of Neurology Erich Lindemann, M.D. Lecturer on Mental Health from I'ilene's basement HMS IVs working up case presentations Ghester N. Frazier, M.D. Allan M. Butler, M.D. Nathan B. Talbot, M.D. Edwin B. Dunphy, M.D. Edward Wigglesworth Professor of Pediatrics Assistant Professor of Henry Willard Williams Professor of Dermatology Pediatrics Professor of Ophthalmology A l i I Edward Hamlin, Jr., M.D. Lenny A. Schell, M.D. Moses H. Lurie, M.D. 1-Hllfcfm L- Robbins, M-D Associate in Surgery Walter Augustus Lecompte Assistant Clinical Professor Asslstant lafofessof of Professor of Otology of Otology Rad1010gY Professor of Laryngology Edward D. Churchill, M.D. John Don't stick that pencil in our ureters A, , Richard H. Sweet, M.D. Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery William H. Sweet, M. Assistant Professor of Surgery Homans Professor of Slrgery .W,v?255ef'0ffff 2+3if -pf gj i 'gl L5 .rrisrw-X1.'?e' Y gg-5fm,d,yf,,qU2zM.R .. f fX.-N,-,gr45.f-- we ' A fl f V- A ' 'Lti3'5 'F1E4Qr2g Qi. 'K f. -. F633 vbwe:m,.,y.'f.4,w,,-,QMV,-.f A . , se-wi2'fw ,dw M f ' ' Wit? 1-f'-571' ' 'r W ,. ,l, ....,.l., , , - ., , :size 8, S . , ,.- .x.,.,, ,, A 1. 1 yfrn. ,rf 1 ,- . ' 5 - IPX ' , 1 V ww fe , of W1 ,sf .14 f Q. N5 -- p2f ?2?- - , R 4524 53 Oliver Cope, M.D. L , l cland S McKittrick MD -731 . , , , mes C. White, M.D. Associate Professor of 01' ' 40 1111031 Professor of Associate Professor of Surgery S urgery Surgery D -- 1 f'.vf-.,wm.y1,ff- ,. - we f ff lv -l . Wffg. ee, f I ,K A grzfffw- WgZfK4,3Q,, 2Jj:,gf'9 ff ,ef ff, Mgffw gf Y .- ., ,,..,,N,,,, ,,,y.,,, , ,fm 'W . ff 5--fefex.2iapwvgy2 .2 , Q?-MW: f Xa, JL Wgpfxfpv 131322, 5, ,Q,,4s,..7ef.,s.. Wk, 22 ziseffaffgww ref ' '- ff ,fL- : 14. : H .f sunny-' 1 f - 23 ,v,, ,V M .A . V, .-g'g ' f 55571 f. isa' -:JL v Q32--g , Q: . , f-QW ' I 5 , ,. ,,Xl sf The Four Monkeys of Surgery Gynecologist and Captain of the Head Joe V. Meigs, M,D. Fletcher H. Colby, M.D. Robert R. Linton, M.D. Clinical Professor of Assistant Clinical Professor Assistant Clinical Professor Gynecology of Genito-urinary Surgery of Surgery Joseph S. Barr, M.D. J. Grordan Scannell, M.D. C12-llde E. Welch, M.D. John B. and Buckminster Instructor in Surgery Clinical ASSOCi2.te 111 Brown Clinical Professor of Surgery Orthopaedic Surgery Peter Bent Brigham Hospital George W. Thorn, M.D. Francis D. Moore, M.D. C. Sidney Burwell, Hersey Professor of the Mosely Professor of M.D., LL.D. Theory and Practice Surgery Research Professor of of Physic Medicine Merrill C. Sosman, M.D. Samuel A. Levine, M.D. Professor of Radiology Clinical Professor of Medicine J. Hartwell Harrison, M.D. Lewis Dexter, M.D. Clinical Professor of Assistant Professor of Genito-urinary Surgery Medicine Tutor in Medicine Finger Fracture and Appendectomy-Auricular that is- A-aff 11. ,- ,,., .59 X sam.-,Q-i,,,,Lv, fy sa 4- 149.1 I . . . IM:mg-2,i,,.'w-L,.Qg1, 1 - gf o..:m-f,,.- QW- .4 V, : ,-,IY,.f.,..:fb.w': ' C I 5 7 , I of ff 5 2 ,.vp,gg.4,:f1b L, 'A'f,3,4, H 552,154 ni 'Y ff xw,1,f .1 11 :- A yr f ...,X 4 1? wr Af? ro ff 19 My ?vwg9f2' ggi' mpg, . 1 1 W 0 f ' s 4 f Q , ,B V f fi Q 1 ' R f f is f ' . i if f f 9 , of 9 4 'K' rs f if 2, Z f W' N fgflff , , r 1 9435, ,I ,Ziff N fk nw 1 Q , ,f f f W A ,, , si , W f 1 5: yy X 2 41,-ifyffiiffgvv ff-1551'efwrffns--X-lrsfff Sggif W! X - -I f 11-ey? if 7 Qfff:w5X1faTWW:-Y,.V . if-f' ' ' W 5 ,mmi V f 1 ' '- fm ?' ' Xxx 1 W5 f A i 'Y J. Engleburt Dunphy, M.D. Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery Dwight Harken, M.D. Assistant Clinical Professor of Surgery Thomas B. Quigley, M.D. Clinical Associate in Surgery William S. Derrick, M.D. Instructor in Anesthesia A 1 MQ Harold D. Levine, M.D. Clinical Associate in Medicine WW' Carl W Walter MD Assistant Clinical Professor of Surgery Donald D. Matson, M.D. Associate in Surgery Francis C. Newton, M.D. Clinical Professnr of Surgery 5 X5 1 W f'+':m1faz,L:.v H2 ai . L Ak . ,, M 3553 'QM A A 'H'- :L x A -1 AxM,g:'?': x., 'C vawafiikf . Q, Q: YC, - - . 5 ,-5.19 f Boston syohopathic Hospital Two anal and one oral characters So x P339 X '42 or '19 VER Harry C. Solomon, M.D. Henry M. Fox, M.D. Professor of Psychiatry Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital Gaylord P. Coon, M.D. Clinical Associate in Psychiatry Obessive-compulsives Herbert J. DeShon, M.D. Ives Hendrick, MJD- Instructor in Psychiatry Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Henry Wermer, M.D. Grete L. Bibring, M.D. Instructor in Psychiatry Associate in Psychiatry 47 School of Dental Medicine James M. Dunning, D.D.S., M.P.H. Associate Dean and Dean of the School of Dental Medicine Myron J. Van Leeuwen, Arthur M. Maloney, D.M.D. Roy 0. Greep, Ph.D. D.D.S, Associate Professor of Professor of Dental Science Assistant Professor of Clinical Dentistry Clinical Dentistry Director of Clinic Rothblatt, Ship and cooperative patient G. Earl Thompson, D.M.D. Assistant Clinical Professor of Dentistry David Weisberger, D.M.D., M.D. Associate Professor of Den- tal Medicine and Chief of the Dental Department at the Massachusetts General Hospital Reidar F. Sognnaes, L.D.S., Ph.D. Herman DeWi1de, M.D., D.M.D. Associate Professor of Associate in Clinical Dental Medicine Dentistry f 5 NLM, Charles M. Waldo, D.D.S. Associate Professor of Orthodontics Paul L. Munson, Ph.D. Paul K. Losch, D.D.S. Assistant Professor of Associate Professor of Dental Science Pediatric Dentistry at the Children ' s Hospital James I-I. Shaw, Ph.D. Joseph P. Jazowski, D.M.D. Assistant Professor of Clinical ASS0Ci24te in Dental Medicine Dentistry Q1 3 'I x 2 5 is 5 Q 1 2? 5 3 9 5 S Z 4 3 V F iv S 2 5 ,Q r fk L. Q 5 H 9 5 E Wee, sleekit, vow 'riu, tim 'rous beastie, Oh, what a panic's in thy breasticl -Robert Burns WILLIAM OAKLEY AIKMAN 15 Hurd St., Cazenovia, N. Y .... Born Feb. '12, 1924, Syracuse, N, Y .... Univ. of Florida, llarvard Col- lege . . . Aesculapian Club, Lancet, Stork Club . . . Future plans: Surgery. ALBERT DOUGLAS ANDERSON 1005 St. Nicholas Ave., N. Y. C .... Born Jan. ll, 1928, New York City . . . Columbia . . . Married Rozi Wiener, April 22, 1949 . . . Aesculapiad . . . Future plans: Ob-Gyn in New York. JAMES GORDON ANDERSEN Brush, Colorado . . . Uni. of Colorado . . . Argo . . . Future plans: Surgery in the West. HAROLD LEWIS ATKINS 35 Essex St., Belleville, N. .T .... Born Sept. 2-1, 1926, Newark, N. J' .... Yale, B.S. '48 . . . Lancet . . . Future plans: Medicine or Radiology in the East. JOHN HAIG AYVAZIAN 147-3-i llawtliorne Ave., Flushing, N. Y .... Born Dec. 17, 1921, New York City . . . Dartmouth, A.B. '49, Dartmouth Medical School . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Argo . . . Future plans: Medicine. RICHARD EDWARD BARTMAN 50 Webster St., Hartford, Conn .... Born May 5, 1925, Hartford, Conn .... Wesleyan, A.B. '48 . . . Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Medicine in Connecticut. GEORGE SPARHAWK BASCOM 423 Denison Ave., Manhattan, Kansas . . . Born Oct. 26, 1927, Richmond, Va .... Kansas State, B.S. '48 . . . Married Jane Halbower, Aug. 26, 1950 . . . Acsculapian Club, Boylston Medical Society . . . Nu Sigma Nu, Aesculapiad . . . Future plans: General Practice in Manhattan, Kansas. 2 ROBERT BENJAMIN BERG -i0 East 88 St., New York City . . . Born Oct. 4, 1928, New York City . . . Dartmouth, A.B. '49, Dart- mouth Medical School . . . Future plans: Medicine. JAMES LAWRENCE BERK 16B Mayflower Hotel, Akron, Ohio . . . Born March 28, 1926, Akron, Ohio . . . Harvard College, A.B. '47 . . . Lancet . . . Future plans: Surgery. n EUGENE A. BERNSTEIN 324 South Orlando Ave., Los Angeles, California . . . Born April 18, 1919, Brooklyn, N. Y ,... Harvard College . . . Future plans: General Practice or Pediatrics in California. JAMES STUART BERNSTEHQ' 47 Plaza St., Brooklyn, N. Y .... Bor11 July 1, 1928, Brooklyn, N. Y .... Harvard College, A.B. '49 . . . Aesculapiad, Boylston Medical Society, Lancet . . Future plans: Medicine. JOHN FRANCIS BERTLES cfo Winans, Harmon St., Lexington, S. C .... Born June 8, 1925, Spokane, Wash .... Yale '45 . . . Married Jeannette Winans, Dec. 21, 1948 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Prosector . . . Future plans: Medicine in New England. WILLIAM STEVEN BRANAMAN, Jr. Florence, Arizona . . . Born May 28, 1922, Florence, Arizona . . . Univ. of Arizona, BIS. '43 . . . Future plans: General Practice. FREDERICK RONALD BROWN, Jr. 6 Wal'1'611 St., Wi11cl1este1', Mass .... Born Aug. 7, 1923, Montreal, Canada . . . Bowdoin, McGill . . . Married Judy Roxburgh, Jan. 19, 1946 . . . Children: Frederick Ronald III, 1950 . . . Aesculapian Club, Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: General Practice. OWEN LESTER BROWN Russell Springs, Ky .... Born Oct. 2, 1924, Russell Springs, Ky .... Univ. of Kentucky, B.S. Argo . . . Future plans: Medicine in Kentucky. , PATRICIA COUGHLIN BRYAN 10 16 St. N.E., Atlanta, Ga .... Born March 18 1927, Athens, Ga .... Trinity College, A.B. '48 . . . Future plans: General Practice. 53 ' l WILLIAM RODERICK BUCHANAN, Jr. 187 Lincoln Ave., Athol, Mass .... Born June 20, 1927, Athol, Mass .... Yale, B.A. '48 ...A A lpha Omega Alpha, Lancet . . . Future plans: Pediatrics. RICHARD LUNDY BUTLER R42 Pine Lake, Eldora, Iowa . . . Born March 2, 1924, Des Moines, Iowa . . . Coe College, Williams College, B.A., Harvard School of Dental Medicine, D.M.D. '50 . . . Married Mildred Elwood, Aug. 22, 1947 . . . Children: Brian Russell, 1949 . . . Aescula- pian Club, Boylston Medical Society, Lancet, Stork, HMS Basketball Team . . . Future plans: Research. WESLEY G-RIMES BYERLY 211 Highland Ave., Lenoir, N. C .... Born July 28, 1926, Statesville, N. C .... Univ. of North Carolina, A.B. '48, Univ. of North Carolina. Medical School. LAWRENCE SUMNER CARLTON, Jr. 322 Brookline St., Cambridge, Mass .... Born Aug. 10, 1924, Hartford, Conn .... Harvard College, A.B. '46 . . . Married Margaret C. Boody, Sept. 7, 1947 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Prosector . . . Future plans: General Practice in New England. CARL HENRY CATHER, Jr. Morgantown, YN. Va .... Born Sept. 16, 1928, Mor- gantown, W, Va .... West Virginia Univ., AB. '48, B,S. '50, West Virginia Univ. Medical School . . . Future plans: General Practice in VVest Virginia. REGINA RACHEL CHANOWICZ lk Halsingegatain, Stockholm, Sweden . . . Born Jan. 9, 1925, Suwatki, Poland . . . Lodz Medical School, Simmons College. HAROLD CHIAT 1850 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y .... Born May 4, 1928, New York City . . . Columbia, B.A. '48 . . . Future plans: Medicine in New York City. ALFRED GRIGG CI-IURCHWELL Savannah, Tenn .... Born June 23, 1926, Corinth, Miss .... Vanderbilt University, U11iv. of Tennessee Medical School . . . Alpha Kappa Kappa, Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Medicine in the South. 54 DAVID KAY CLAWSON 12 Parkway Rd., Brookline, Mass .... Born Aug. 8, 1927, Salt Lake City, Utah . . . Univ. of Utah . . . Future plans: Surgery in Salt Lake City. BEVERLY WOODFIN COBBS, Jr. 3202 Bankheacl Ave., Montgomery, Ala .... Born April 12, 1927, Montgomery, Ala .... Vanderbilt University, B.A. '49, Vanderbilt Medical Sehool . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boyston Medical Society . . Future plans: Medicine in the South. WILLIAM DAVIS COCHRAN 268 Lexington St., Watertown, Mass .... Born March 1, 1923, St. Paul, Minn .... Harvard College, AB. '48 . . . Married Marybelle Herman, Sept. 7, 1946 . . . Children: David, 1948, Susan, 1951 . . . Aesculapian Club, Nu Sigina Nu . . . Future plans: General Practice. MARSHALL DONALD COLEMAN 52 Prospect St., Utica, N. Y .... Born Dec. 27, 1925, Utica, N. Y .... Harvard College, A.B. '48 . . . Married Beverly Ruth Sitrin, June 28, 1949 . . . Children: Charles Theodore, 1951 . . . Future Dlans: Psychiatry in Boston. HERSCHEL DOUGLAS COLLINS 8 North Main St., Caribou, Maine . . . Born Jan. 19, 1928, Caribou, Maine . . . Univ. of Maine . . . Married Helen R. Fraser, June 29, 1950 . . . Children: Herschel Douglas Jr., 1951 . . . Future plans: Gen- eral Practice in Maine. FREDERICK EVERETT CONKIIING, III 1728 S.W., 14 Terrace, Miami, Florida . . . Born Nov. 28, 1927, Atlanta, Ga ....' U11iv. of Florida . . . B.S. '47 . . . Lancet . . . Future plans: Medi- cine in Florida. I JOHN DAVIDSON CONSTABLE 23 Craigie St., Cambridge, Mass .... Born June 21, 1927, England . . . Harvard College, A.B. '47 . . . Alpha Omega. Alpha, Prosector, Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Surgery. . FRANK ANTHONY COSTANZO 2093, Waterbury Road, Lakewood, Ohio . . . Born .Tune 28, 1925, Ohio . . . Yale, B.S. '48 . . . Aeseula- piad . . . Future plans: General Practice or Pediatrics. 55 RIAL WHEELER CUMMINGS Plains, Montana . . . Born Nov. 16, 1923, Montana . . . Montana State Univ .... Aesculapian Club, Nu Sigma Nu, Stork, HMS Basketball Team . . . Future plans: Medicine in the Far VVest. WILLIAM SHELDON CURRAN 2 Montague Terrace, Brooklyn, N. Y .... Born March 19, 1926, Fenchow, Shansi, China . . . Har- vard College, A.B. '48 . . . Lancet, Aeseulapiad, Boyls- ton Medical Society . . . Future plans: Medicine. RICHARD REED CURTIN' Wlebstei' Springs, W. Va .... Born April 1, 1923, Philadelphia, Pa .... Swarthmore . . . Married Dorothy Dana, June 14, 1947 . . . Children: Dana, 1948, and Dick, 1949 . . . Future plans: Surgery. SAMUEL KIRBY DAY, Jr. Inverness, Miss .... Born June 2, 1928, Inverness Miss .... Univ. of Mississippi, B.S., Univ. of Mississippi School of Medicine . . . Future plans: General Practice in Mississippi. JAMES FREDERIC DONOVAN 121 Main St., Houlton, Maine . . . Born Aug. 24, 1923, Houlton, Maine . . . Univ. of Maine, '48 . . . Nu Sigma Nu, Class President, I and II . . . Future plans: Surgery i11 the East. JAMES THOMAS DOWLING 51 Park Drive, Boston, Mass .... Born May 11, 1926, Seattle, VVash .... Univ. of Idaho, Univ. of Wasliiiigtoii, B.S .... Married Constance Jean Lee- inan, June 30, 1951 . . . Aeseulapiad, Boylston Med- ical Society, Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Sur- gery or Medicine in Seattle, Wash. GARTH RICHARD DREWRY 994 Suinner Ave., Springfield, Mass .... Born Aug. 8, 1928, Kingsville, Texas . . . Yale, B.S. '48 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society, Phi Beta Pi. HUGH ROBERT DUDLEY, Jr. . 2021 Donald Ave., Huntington, W. Va .... Born Feb. 7, 1924, Pochahontas, Va .... Harvard College . . . Married Patricia McBrien, June 5, 1949 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society, Phi Beta Pi CPresidentD, Class Vice President I, Class Treas- urer IV . . . Future plans: Pathology in W. Va. 56 ROBERT EFRON 88411 Elmhurst Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y .... Born Dec. 22, 1927, New York City . . . Columlgia, B.A. '48 . . Married Mary Louise Snider, June 12, 1948 . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Medicine or Psychiatry in the East. RICHARD PUTNAM EMERSON 45 West Road, Short Hills, N. J .... Born March 30, 1921, Buffalo, N. Y .... Dartmouth, Harvard College, A.B. '43 . . . Married Doris Jean Macintosh, June 19, 1948 . . . Future plans: Psychiatry in Miami, Florida. JAMES JOSEPH FEBNBY Blue Island, Ill .... Born Aug. 28, 1918, Chicago, 1.11. . . . Dartmouth, '49, Dartmouth Medical School . . . Married Barbara F. Mallett, Dec. 15, 1945. Children: Richard, 1948, Jonathan, 1949 . . . Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Medicine. MERRILL IRVING FELDMAN 58 Colborne Road, Brighton, Mass .... Born Feb. 1, 1925, Boston, Mass .... Univ. of New Harnpshirc, Harvard College, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, D.M.D. '50 . . . Aesculapian Club, Lancet, Stork . . . Future plans: Surgery. ROBERT PEARCE FORNSHELL 629 E. Main St., Kent, Ohio . . . Born July 3, 1925, Cleveland, Ohio . . . Harvard College, A.13. '48 . . . Nu Sigma Nu, Aesculapiad, Qliditorj ..., Future plans: Surgery in the Midwest or Northwest. STANLEY GIANNELLI, Jr. 798 Ocean Ave., VVest Haven, Conn .... Born Sept. 15, 1928, New Haven, Conn .... Yale B.S. '48 . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Surgery. GERALD STANFORD GORDON 2606 Union St., St. Joseph, Mo .... Born Oct. 10, 1924, St. Joseph, Mo .... Univ. of Chicago, B.Sci. '48, Univ. of Missouri Medical School . . . Married Lillian Rosen, Nov. 6, 1945. Children: Marcia, 1946,'Steven, 1950 . . . Future plans: Surgery in the Midwest. ROY RICHARD GRINKER, Jr. 4940 S. East End Ave., Chicago, Ill .... Born April 25, 1927, Chicago, Ill .... De Paul Univ., Univ. of Chicago, Ph.B. '47 . . . Nu Sigma Nu. 57 BUEL KING GROW, Jr. Rt. 4, Raleigh, N. C .... Born Dec. 4, 1927, Beckley, WV. Va .... Univ. of North Carolina, B.S. '49, Univ. of North Carolina Medical School . . . Future plans: Medicine in North Carolina. HENRY ULMANN GRUNEBAUM 11 Brayton Road, Scarsdale, N. Y .... Born June 5, 1925, New York City . . . Harvard College . . . Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Medicine. WARREN GADEN GUNTHEROTH Wfilburton, Okla .... Born July 27, 1927, Hominy, Okla .... Harvard College . . . Aesculapiad, Phi Beta Pi, QVice Presidentj . . . Future plans: Medicine in Boston area. ERNEST WILLIAM HANCOCK 3028 Puritan Ave., Lincoln, Neb .... Born April 6, 1927, Lincoln, Neb .... Univ. of Nebraska, B.A. '48 . . . Aesculapiad, Aesculapian Club, Boylston Medical Society, Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Medicine VVest of the Mississippi. RUTH CALLADINE HAYNES 250 Hoy Ave., Woodstock, Ill .... Born May 13, 1923, Woodstock, lll .... Kahler School of Nursing, Rochester, Minn., Univ. of Chicago, Ph.B. '46, B.S. '48 . . . Married Walter M. Haynes, Jr., Dec. 27, 1950. WILLIAM HARDY I-IENDREN III 1232 West 58 St., Kansas City, Mo .... Born Feb. 7, 1926, New Orleans, La .... Dartmouth, '48, Dart- mouth Medical School . . . Married Eleanor McKenna, Feb. 7, 1947. Children: Sandra McLeod, Douglas Hardy . . . Aesculapian Club . . . Future plans: Surgery in Kansas City. I-IORTON CORWIN HINSHAW, Jr. 2851 Fillmore St., San Francisco, Calif .... Born July 8, 1927, Oakland, Calif .... Carleton College, Univ. of Minnesota . . . Argo. KENT I-IAESSLER HOBART 841 N. Green St., Champaign, Ill .... Born' July 2, 1928, Decatur, Ill ....' U niv. of Illinois, A.B. '48 . . Future plans: Medicine in the Midwest. 58 MOLLIE HUBON KOTHE 230 Classon Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y .... Born 1928, Stamford, Conn .... Wellesley, B.A. '-LS . . . Future plans: Researeh. CHARLES EDWARD HUGGINS 5326 S. University Ave., Chicago, Ill .... Born May 7, 1929, Chicago, lll .... Univ. of Chicago, Ph.B. '-17 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medieal So- eiety, Nu Sigma Nu, Proseetor . . . Future plans: Sur 'erv in New fEn0'land. 1 29 JOEL BROADUS I-IUNEYCUTT Rt. l, Albemarle, N. C .... Born Sept. 22, 192-l, North Carolina . . . Univ. of North Carolina, A.B., Univ. of North Carolina School of Medicine . . . . . , ., Future plans: General Practice in lX. L.. BENJAMIN BROWN JACKSON J asper, Ala .... Born Dev. ll, l?l2fS, Centreville, Ala. . . . Univ. of Alabama, ,-LSI, Univ. of Alabama Medi- cal Colle 'e . . . Future plans: Surwerv in Birininwharn, . H . O Ala. THOMAS WILLIAM JOHNSON 309 E. 25 Ave., Spokane, Wash .... Born May 30, l9l9, Spokane, VVash .... 'Univ. of Washington, B.S. '49 Married Ruby Kanyer, Dee. 23, l950 . . . Argo . . . Future plans: Practice in the Nortlnvest. WILLIAM STAFFORD .IOYNER Kernersville, N. C .... Born Jan. l5, l925, Kerners- ville, N. C .... Davidson, B.S. '48, Univ. of North Carolina School of Medicine . . . Married Jane Lin- ville, June ll, 1948 . . . Future plans: General Prae- tiee in North Carolina. MAURICE JOHN JURKIEWICZ 47 Atkinson St., Bellows Falls, 'Vt .... Born Sept. 2-l, l923, Claremont, N. H .... Univ. of Maryland, Univ. of Maryland Dental School, D.D.S. '46 . . . Aeseula- pian Club, Lancet CPresidentj, Stork, Proseetor . . . Future plans: Surgery. MELVIN' H. KAPLAN l75 Hancock St., Cambridge, Mass .... Born Dee 23, l920, Malden, Mass .... Harvard College, A.B '42, Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences '48, Yale Medical School . . . Boylston Medical So eiety, CVice Presidentj, Laneet . . . Future plans Research in Internal Medicine in Boston. 59 1 SAMUEL LAWRENCE KATZ 60 Oak St., Manchester, N. Il ,... Born May 29, 1927, Manchester, N. H .... Dartmouth, A.B. '49, Dartmouth Medical School-. . . Married Betsy Jane Cohan, June 26, 1950 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha . . . Future plans: Medicine in the West. RICHARD BITERE KEARSLEY P.O. Box 17, White Horse Beach, Mass .... Born Oct. 16, 1924, Brighton, Mass .... Dartmouth, A.B. '49, Dartmouth Medical School . . . Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: General Practice in a rural 2lI'02l. LAUREL EUGENE KEITH RR. 1563, Cassopolis, Mich .... Born Dec. 19, 1920, Cassopolis, Mich .... Univ. of Michigan . . . Married Elizabeth Brown, June, 1951 . . Lancet . . . Future plans: Pediatrics. PETER KELEMEN 414 Beacon St., Boston, Mass .... Born Budapest, Hungary . . . Univ, of Budapest, Univ. of Vienna, M.I.T., Harvard College . . . Future Plans: Surgery. EDWARD THOMAS KELLEY, Jr. Four Mile Point Road, Coxsackie, N. Y .... Born May 1, 1925, New York City . . . Yale, Dartmouth, A.B. '48, Dartmouth Medical School . . . Argo . . . Future plans: General Practice in Seattle, Wash. STANLEY WEBBER KENT Box 386, Bueno Vista, Colo .... Born Oct. 20, 1924, Lincoln, Neh .... Univ. of Colorado . . . Future plans: Oh-Gyn. MERRILL JENKS KING, Jr. 38 Cypress Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass .... Born Jan. 28, 1925, Willoughby, Ohio . . . Rensselaer P. I., St. Lawrence Univ., Hamilton, B.A. '46, Oslo 'Univ. . . . Aesculapiad, Argo . . . Future plans: Surgery or Ophthalmology in New England or Northwest. JOHN ALVIN KIRKLAND Y 805 Raleigh Road, Wilson, N. C .... Born Sept. 7, 1927, Wilsoii, N. C. . . . Univ. of North Carolina, B.S. 148, Univ. of North Carolina Medical School . . . Future plans: Pediatrics in N. C. 60 GERALD D'ARCY KLEE 6623 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y .... Born Jan. 29, 1927, Brooklyn, N.Y .... Princeton, McGill . . . Married Elizabeth Grace, June 5, 1950. Children: Brian D'Arcy, 1951 . . . Phi Beta. Pi. WILLIAM LUDWIG KRAUS 87-37 118 St., Richmond Hill, N. Y .... Born Aug. 12, 1922, Augsburg, Germany . . . St. Stephan, Munich Univ., Harvard College . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Aesculapian Club, Boylston Medical Society, Lancet, QVice P1'CS1dG11tD, Stork, Prosector . . . Future plans: Medicine in the West. SUSANNE EHRENTHEIL LAMDIN 121 Park Drive, Boston, Mass .... Born Sept. 15, 1926, Vienna, Austria . . . Radcliife, A.B. '48 . . . Married Ezra Lamdin . . . Future plans: Pediatrics in New England. KENDRICK PAIGE LANCE 125 W. Milton Ave., Rahway, N. J .... Born Jan. 10, 1928, Railway, N. J' .... Princeton, AB. '48 . . . Aesculapiad, Nu Sigma Nu CPresidentj . . . Future plans: Medicine in the East. ARMAND AN GELO LEFEMINE Windsor Locks, Conn .... Born Sept. 14, 1926, Windsor Locks, Conn .... Boston College, Holy Cross, '48 . . . Aesculapiad, Nu Sigma. Nu . . . Future plans: Surgery. f LAURENCE BRICKENSTEIN LEINBACH 426 S, Main St., Wiiistoii Salem, N. C .... Born Feb. 22, 1926, Winston Salem, N. C .... Univ. of North Carolina, AB. '48, Univ. of North Carolina Medical School . . . Married Kathryn L. McNair, .Tune 18, 1949 . . . Future plans: Medicine in VVinston Salem. CRAIG BILLINGS LEMAN 17 Hawthorn Road, Brookline, Mass .... Born March 12, 1923, Chicago, Ill .... Northwestern Univ., Univ. of Chicago, A,B. '46 . . . Married Nancy Farwell, June 26, 1948. Children: Christopher Kent, 1951 . . . Boylston Medical Society, Class Secretary-Treasurer I, Class Vice President III. ROBERT SIMEON LICHTENSTEIN 1928, Chicago, Ill .... Univ. of Chicago, Ph.B. '4 . . . Aesculapiad. 6I 1400 N. Kedzie Ave., Chicago, Ill .... Born Aug. 21, 7 JOHN ELLIS LINDLEY Macon, Miss .... Born April 23, 1926, Macon, Missf . . . Univ. of Alabama, Miss. State College, B.S. '50, Univ. of Mississippi Medical School . . . Married Martha Joy Robertson, Feb. 14, 1947 . . . Future plans: Surgery in Mississippi. JOHN GEORGE LOESCH 29 Stoneleigh Park, Westfield, N. J .... Born Dec. 25, 1925, Rochester, N. Y .... Princeton, A.B. '47 . . . Married Katharine Page Taylor, Aug. 28, 1948 . . Future plans: Psychiatry. JOHN WICKWIRE LOOP 425 VV. Lincoln Ave., Belvidere, Ill .... Born July 23, 1924, Boone County, Ill .... DePauw Univ., Univ. of Wyoming, B.S. '48 . . . Aesculapian Club, Lancet, Stork . . . Future plans: Surgery in the 1rVest. MORTIMER LORBER S45 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y .... Born Aug. 30, 1926, New York City . . . New York Univ.. B.S. 745, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, D.M.D. 150 . . . Undergraduate Assembly . . . Future plans: Medicine and Stoinatology in New York. ALFRED JOHN LUESSENHOP Lime Kiln Farm, R.F.D. Bloomsbury, N. J .... Born Feb. 6, 1926, Chicago, Ill .... Yale, B.S. '49 . . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Surgery in the East. BRADFORD WELLINGTON LUNDBORG 175 Alta Vista Drive, Atherton, Calif .... Born July 11, 1927, San Francisco, Calif .... Stanford, B.A. '48 . . . Nu Sig-ina Nu QVice Presidentj, Class Secretary- Treasurer Il . . . Future plans: Medicine in California. DONALD PAUL MACDONALD 36 Andover Court, Carnhridge, Mass .... Born April 12, 1921, Cambridge, Mass .... Harvard College . . . Married Hazel Anguish, Feb. 5, 1944. Children: Bonnie, 1945, Brian, 1950 . . . Lancet . . . Aesculapiad . . . Future plans: Public Health. JOHN ALFRED MALCOLM 50 Masterton Road, Bronxville, N. Y .... Born Oct. 24, 1924, South Shields, England . . . Harvard Col- lege, A.B. '46 . . . Aesculapian Club, Aesculapiad, Lancet, Stork, Class Secretary-Treasurer III, Class Vice President IV . . . Future plans: Surgery in the East. 62 DAN ANDERSON MARTIN 1821 St. Mary's St., Raleigh, N. C .... Born April 5, 1926, Benson, N. C .... Univ. of North Carolina, BS. '49, Univ. of North Carolina Medical School . . . Married Gladys Chambers, Sept. 3, 1949 . . . Future plans: General Practice in India or North Carolina. JOHN JOSEPH MARTIN 6 Crandall St., Adams, Mass .... Born Nov. 1, 1923, Holyoke, Mass .... Vlfashington Univ., Univ. of Massachusetts, B.S. '48 . . . Lancet . . . Future plans: General Practice in Adams, Mass. ' RALPH G. MIERKLEY 1924 S. 16 East, Salt Lake City, 'Utah . . . Born Aug. 18, 1927, Vernal, Utah . . . Univ. of Utah . . . Mar- ried Dorothy Gleason, April 22, 194-S . Future plans: General Practice in California.. KATHLEEN MERO 299 West 12 St., New York, N, Y .... Born Aug. 17, 1927, Berlin, Germany . . . Barnard, B.A. ELS . . . 1 Alpha Omega Alpha . . . Future plans: Clinical Re- search in Medicine or Pediatrics in New York or Boston. DAVID PAUL MICHENER 19 Danville St., VVeSt Roxbury, Mass .... Born 1923, Truro, Iowa . . . Pacific, Antioch, AB. '48 . . . Mar- ried Jean Martin, 1944. Children: Thomas, 1917 . . . Future plans: Psychiatry in New Zealand. RICHARD NORVAL MOERSCH Plummer Lane, Rochester, Minn .... Born Feb. 28, 1926, Rochester, Minn .... Univ. of Minnesota, Dart- mouth, A.B. '48 . . . Aesculapian Club, Nu Sigma Nu, Stork, HMS Basketball Team . . . Future plans: Medicine in the Midwest. SAMUEL LOUIS MOGUL 1116 Piedmont Ave., Atlanta, Ga .... Born .... .., Atlanta, Ga .... Emory Univ., Harvard College, A.B. '48 . . . Future plans: Medicine. WILLIAM LOCKE MOORE B-2 Cannon Ct. Apt., North Elm St., Greensboro, N. C .... Born Dec. 18, 1926, Greensboro, N. C .... Univ. of North Carolina, B.S. '49, Univ. of North Carolina Medical School . . . Alpha Kappa Kappa . . . Future plans: General Practice in N. C. 63 WILLIAM LIONEL MORGAN, Jr. 1817 Keeaurnoku St., Honolulu, Hawaii . . . Born Nov. 18, 1927, Honolulu . . . Yale, B.A. '48 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society, Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Medicine. JAMES WILLIAM MURPHY 69 Mill St., Rhinebeck, N. Y. . . . Born Nov. 12, 1925, Brooklyn, N. Y .... Harvard College . . . Aescula- piacl, Argo . . . Future plans: Clinical Research in Endocrinology in New York City. JOSEPH HENRY MYERS 17011 Ridgeton Drive, Cleveland, Ohio . . . Born Aug. 20, 1927, Streetsboro, Ohio . . . Stevens I. T., Hiram College, B.A. '48 . . . Future plans: General Practice in the Midwest. FREDERICK JAMES NEI-IER 1740 Highland Parkway, St. Paul, Minn ..,. Born Feb. 27, 1925, St. Paul, Minn .... College of Puget Sound, Harvard College . . . Aesculapiad, Aesculapian Club, Laneet . . . Future plans: Surgery in Minn. BERNARD PERRY OTTENBERG- 813 66 Ave., Phila., Pa .... Born Nov, 14, 1924, Phila., Pa .... Harvard College, A.B. '48 . . . Boylston Medical Society, Lancet . . Future plans: Medicine. ALPHONSE JOHN PALUBINSKAS 146 Smith St., Boston, Mass .... Oberlin, B. A. '43 . . . Married Helen Hart, June 14, 1948 . . . Future plans: Radiology on the West Coast. LINUS CARL PAULING, Jr. 132 Glen Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass .... Born March 10, 1925, Pasedena, Calif .... Pomona, Univ. of Cali- iornia . . . Married Sept. 20, 1947. Children: Linus, 1949, Peter 1950 . . . Future plans: Psychiatry on the West Coast. CHESTER MIDDLEBROOK PIERCE S6 Prospect Ave., Glen Cove, N. Y .... Born March 4, 1927, Glen Cove, N. Y .... Harvard Collere, A.B. '48 . . . Married Jocelyn Blanchet, June 15, 1,949 . . . Aeseulapiad, Boylston Medical Society, Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Pediatrics. b4 JAMES ALLEN PITTMAN, Jr. 1138 Overbrook Drive, Orlando, Florida . . . Born March 12, 1927, Orlando, Florida . . . Davidson, B.S. '48 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medic-al Society, Nu Sigma Nu. ROBERT TILLINGHAST POTTER 1170 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y .... Born July 10, 1924, New York City . . . Harvard College, A.B. '46 . . . Aeseulapiad, Boylston Medical Society CSeerel taryj, Lancet, Class President IV, HMS Soguash Team . . . Future plans: Surgery in the Northeast. WILLIAM SELIG RACHLIN 9 Camp St., New Britain, Conn .... Born May 13, 1929, Hartford, Conn .... Princeton, B.A. '48 . . . Future plans: Practice in New Britain, Conn. A JOHN FRANKLIN' RADEBAUGH, Jr. 1234 Westminster St., Springfield, Mass .... Born Jan. 10, 1925, Springfield, Mass .... Bates, B.S. '48 . . . Married Dorothy Paine, June 7, 1947. Children: George Lewis, 1950 . . . Future plans: General Prac- tice in Maine. HOWARD RASMUSSEN 2115 Penna. Ave. N. W., Washington, D. C .... Virginia. P. I., Gettysburg, B.A. '48 . . . Married Jane Spence, June 10, 1950 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society, Nu Sigma Nu . . . Future plans: Medicine in the Southwest. JOHN FRANCIS REICI-IARD 9439 97 St., Ozone Park, N. Y .... Born Dee. 10, 1925, New York City . . . Haverford, Princeton, Harvard College . . . Boylston Medical Society, Ianeet . . . Future plans: Medicine in the East. STANLEY PAUL RIGLER 1576 Vincent St., St. Paul, Minn .... Born .luly 1, 1927, Minneapolis, Minn .... Univ. of Minnesota, B.A. '48 .... A eseulapiad . . . Future plans: Surgery. JOSEPH ANTHONY RINALDO, Jr. 119 Peterboro St., Boston, Mass .... Born Oct. 6, 1925, Revere, Mass .... Harvard College, BS. '48 . . . Married Rosemarie A. Mordelia . . . Future plans: Pediatrics on the East Coast. 65 CESAR EMILIO ROSA-PEREZ Urb-Cabrera, Calle Balboa 61, Rio Pieflras, Puerto Rico . . . Born Sept. 27, 1929, Huinaeao, Puerto Rico . . . 'Univ. of Puerto Rico, B.S .... Phi Beta Pi . . . Future plans: Medicine in San Juan, Puerto Rieo. HAROLD I-IODG-E ROYALTEY, Jr. Tuseon, Ariz .... Born April 30, 1924, Okla .... Univ. of Arizona, B.A. '48 . . . Married Alice Adams, Dec. 19, 1945. Children: Harold H. HI, 1947, Stew- art, 1950 . . . Aeseulapian Club . . . Future plans: General Practice in the VVest. JACK HERBERT RUBINSTEIN 1950 Andrews Ave., New York, N. Y .... Born Aug. 4, 1925, New York City . . . Coluinbia, B.A. '47 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Soeiety . . Future plans: Pediatrics. KENNETH JOHN RYAN 164 Park St., Savanna, Ill .... Born Aug. 26, 1926, New York City . . . Northwestern Univ .... Married Marion E. Kinney, June 8, 1948 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society . . . Future plans: Research. ARTHUR JOHN SALISBURY -L10 N. Ash St., North Platte, Neb .... Born June 13, 1924, N01-th Platte, Neb .... Yale, Bee. '43 . . . Alpha Omega. Alpha, Lancet . . . Future plans: Pedif atries in New England. LEO SAMELSON 2940 VV. VVabansia. Ave., Chicago, Ill .... Born April 7, 1927, Milwaukee, Wis .... Univ. of Chicago, Pl1.B. '48 . . . Married June Nadeau, Dee.. 28, 1951 . . . Aeseulapiad . . . Future plans: Medicine in New England. STANTON SEGAL 1259 Empire Ave., Camden N. J .... Princeton, A.B. 748 . . . Alpha Omega. Alpha, Boylston Medieal So- ciety, Phi Beta Pi . . . Future plans: Medicine. ALFRED WALTER SENFT Billings, Montana . . . Born, Oct. 20, Windsor, Colo. . . . VVarthurg, Univ. of Zurich, Univ. of California, B.A. '48 . . . Married Deborah Cates, Aug. 7, 19-18 . . . Aeseulapiad, Boylston Medical Society, Prosector . . . Future plans: General Practice and Research in New Guinea. 66 PAUL BAMBERGER SHAPIRO 293 Beacon St., Boston, Mass .... Born May 15, 1927, Paterson, N. J .... Williams, B.A. '48 . . . Married Barbara S. llyinan, June 27, 1948 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha . . . Future plans: Surgery in N. J. JOHN SHILLITO, Jr. 761 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill, Mass .... Born Aug. 9, 1922, Cincinnati, Ohio . . . Harvard College, A.B. 145 . . . Aesculapiad, Boylston Medical Society, Nu Sigma Nu, Class Vice President H, Class Presi- dent HI . . . Future plans: Surgery or General Practice on the East Coast. WILLIAM FREDERICK SMITH, Jr. 1887 Hillside Road, E. Cleveland, Ohio . . . Born Nov. 5, 1927, Cleveland, Ohio . . . NVestern Reserve, B.S. '48 . . . Future Plans: Medicine. VAN N ERWIN SPRUIELL 2508 1 Ave., Leeds, Ala. , . . Born 1927 . . . Univ. of Alabama., B.S. '48, Medical College of Alabama, VAUG-HN RAYMOND STURTEVANT Livermore Falls, Maine . . . Univ. of Maine, B.A. '47 . . . Married Velva Morrison, June 4, 19-lli . . . Future plans: Medicine in New England. BEN-ZION TABER 102 Moore St., Providenue, R. 1 .... Born March 17, 1927, Providence, R. I .... Brown, A.B. '48 . . Future plans: Surgery in the Southwest. PETER TEEL C Polson, Montana . . . Born July 16, 1927,Boston, Mass .... Montana State Univ., American Univ. of Beirut . . . Lancet. JOHN BARRY THOMAS 69 Park Drive, Boston, Mass .... Born May 18, 1927, New Haven, Conn .... Yale, B.S. '48 . . . Married Ann Owens, June 30, 1951 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha . . . Future plans: Medicine. 67 NEIL FREDERICK THORLAKSON 5143 Latimer Place, Seattle, VVash .... Born July 18, 1926, Grafton, North Dakota . . . Univ. of Wash- ington, B.S. '49 . . . Married Patricia Fitzsixnmons, July 8, 1950 . . . Nu Sigma Nu, Prosector, HMS Basketball Team . . . Future plans: Ophthalmology in Seattle. ' JOHN JACOB TURNER 1862 Selma Ave., Youngstown, Ohio . . . Born Nov. 17, 1925, Youngstown, Ohio . . . Dartmouth, A.B. '49, Dartmouth Medical School . . . Aeseulapian Club, Lancet, Stork . . . Future plans: Surgery in Ohio. DOROTHY TWITCHELL 325 E. Main St., Owatonna, Minn .... Cornell Col- lege, Univ. of California, A.B. '48 . . . Aesculapiad, Boylston Medical Society, Proseetor. JAMES LEO VANDERVEEN Box 345, Wilcox, Ariz .... Born Jan. 14, 1927, Ravenna, Ohio . . . Vanderbilt Univ .... Married to Eileen Butler . . . Argo QPresidentj . . . Future plans: Anaesthesia in the South or on the West Coast. YANG WANG Peking, China .. . . Born May 13, 1923 . . . Yenching Univ., Pekingg Fu-Jen Univ., Pekin, St. John's Univ., Shanghai, National Medical College of Shangf hai, Chungking, M.B. '48 . . . Alpha Omega Alpha, Boylston Medical Society. LEE CLIFFORD WATKINS, Jr. U.S. Marine Hospital, Savannah, Ga .... Born Sept. ll, 1927, New Orleans, La .... Univ. of New Hamp- shire, Harvard College, S.B. '48 . . . Alpha Kappa Kappa . . . Future plans: Medicine. HENRY deFOREST WEBSTER Bedford Hills, N. Y .... Born April 22, 1927, New York City . . . Amherst, B.A. '48 . . . Aesculapiad, Nu Sigma. Nu . . . Future plans: Surgery in Boston or New York, HEWITT BROWNELL WHEELER 4428 Lealand Lane, Nashville, Tenn .... Born July 21, 1928, Louisville, Ky .... Vanderbilt Univ .... Boylston Medical Society, Undergraduate Assembly . . . Future pla11s: Surgery. 68 W'illiamsburg, Ky .... Born Aug 1, 1925, Willizuns- burg, Ky .... Univ. of Kentuvky, 12-.S. '47 . . . Mar- ried Katherine Pope, Dee. 27, 1949 . . . Future plans: Medicine in the South. 68 Perkins St., Jzllnuiea. Plains, Mass .... Born March 20, l925, Rochester, N. Y .... Bonaventure, Boston College . . . Future plans: Medicine. 655 Hillside Terrace, Pasedena, Calif. . ., . Born July 17, 1924, Los Angeles, Calif .... Harvard College, A.B. '48. 216 N. Lafayette St., Mobile, Ala .... Born June G, 1927, Mobile, Ala .... Univ. of Alabama, B.S., Louisi- ana. State Univ. School of Medicine . . . Married Norma. Janice Thames, July 16, 1949 . . . Future plans: Pediatrics in Mobile. 1 l l l ARTHUR CLINTON WHITE JOSEPH ANTHONY WILBER LEWIS GRANT WILSON HOLLIS JAY WISEMAN PERMANENT CLASS OFFICERS CLASS OF 1952 President. . . . . .WILLTAM D. COCIIRAN Vice-Presiclent .... . . .WILLIAM L. MORGAN, JR. Secretary. .. .... JAMES A. PITTMAN, Ju. Treasizwer .... . . .VV. HARDY HENDREN, 31m 1923, Newark, N. J .... Univ. of Miclxigan, B.S. '43 . . . Married lilainc Brodsky, Aug. 21, 1949 . . . llarvarrl Society of Dental Medicine . . . Future plans: Dental Practice. Monroe, N. C. North Carolina .Iuly 28, 1945 HERBERT BERMAN HARRY LEE HINSON IGS!! Walker Ave., Union, N, .I .... Born Feb. 16, 2014 Greenway Ave., N. C .... Born March 5 1919 Wake Forest, B S '42, Univ of Married Norma Kathryn Plttard Children: Kaye Ellen, 1947 Harvard Society of Dental Medicine Future plans: Dental Medicine in the Southeast JAMES EDWARD BOYETT BERNARD JACOBS Box 38, Rt. it-1, Mcrshon, Ga .... Born Jan. 16, 614 Seeley Road, Syracuse, N Y Born June 29 1923, Pierce County, Ga .... Univ. of Tennessee, B.A. 1925, Syracuse, N. Y. . . Syracuse Univ Future '48 . . . Married Agnes Evelyn Davis, April 6, 1945 plans: Dental Practice in 'Upper New York State . . . Harvard Society of Dental Medicine . . . Future plans: Dental l'raetif'e in Georgia. HARVARD DENTAL SCIIO0L . . CLASS 0F 1952 N3 4 -44 A 'U 41 'W K lan A -4 - Impacted molar N-We CLARENCE KENNETH LASHER LEOPOLD PAUL LUSTIG 127 WaShlH,Qt0n St., Bl'ighl5011, Mass .... Born May 37 Symphony Road, Bogton . , , Born Deg, 8, 1923, 13, 1921, Rhinebeck, N. Y .... Boston Univ., Union, Drohobycz, Poland . . . Univ. of Erlangen, Germany, B.S .... Married Faye Metcalf, March 1, 1947. Dr. Med. Dent. '49 . . . Married Helga Lieberg, Sept. Children: Robert, Suzanne . . . Harvard Society of 3, 1950 . . :Harvard Society of Dental Medicine . . . Dental Medicine . . . Future plans: Dental Practice Future plans: Dental Surgery in Boston. in Eastern Mass. ROBERT CARLING LINCOLN ERNEST STANFORD PINCUS Bayonne, N. J .... Born April 5, 1927, Bayonne, 31 East Hudson St., Long Beach, N. Y .... Born N. J ,... Columbia, A.B. '49 . . . Married June 13, April 29, 1928, New York City . . . Union, B.S. '48 1949. Children: Robert . . . Aesculapian Club, Lancet, . . . President HSDM III, Harvard Society of Den- Stork, HMS Basketball Team, tal Medicine . . . Future plans: Dental Medicine on Long Island. JULIAN MAURICE ROTHBLATT EMILE CHARLES A. SAMAHA 1908 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass .... Born Nov. 21, 40 Main St., Plymouth, N. H .... Born Feb. 19, 1926, Boston, Mass .... Harvard College, A.B. '48 1921, Plymouth, N. H .... American Univ. of Beirut, . . . Future plans: Orthodontics in Boston vicinity. B.S. '42, Univ. of New Hampshire . . . Married Eliza- beth E. Bassett, June 3, 1944. Children: Honda Eliza' ' beth, 1947, Peter Emile A., 1950 . . . Aesculapian Club, Nu Sigma Nu, Stork, Harvard Society of Dental Medicine . . . Future plans: Dental Practice in N. Il. JAMES PATRICK RYAN ARTHUR GEORGE SHIP 230 S. Third Stl, Mechanicville, N. Y .... Born Sept. 2725 Clanin Ave., Bronx, N. Y .... Born Feb. 2, 10, 1923, Mechanicville, N. Y .... Hobart, '48 . . . 1928, New York City . . . New York Univ? A.B. '47, 71 Future plans: Dental Practice in Albany, N. Y. M.A. ol . . . Aesculapiad . . .Future plans: Research. 1 ix W 5 i S P 3 f- .,,, 1.-- - - - f 2 2 4 J A is 1+ 7 f 5 2 Z gl -A Z 5 . . A .-.mv-mn,-.1 - 5 mul - -- , sf Hadley establishes rapport CLASS 0F 9 But is that ileum tenderized, A1'15h11I'? HMS '53 has switched to lab alcohol N V In this situation they'11 probably use an adductor defense. Is Id customarily measured in inches? Good technique in venipuncture is a surgical art which brings much benefit to the physician and only moderate discomfort to the patient. Ham's Syllabus page 34 ff--1-:fwfw :-:vp'AvrmQwimfmr-wevwe-my-1,' 4 , iss. fs .P x 5 Z 2 E f , 2 2 P? 3 5 e F4 5 ? Z A L? Z Z f Q fi Q ? 4 2. V 2 z I Z ge E 4 4 3 3 , 2 5 5 2 z 3 5 3 2 3 5 3 3 3 Z 5 X ? 2 2 4 4 1 e , Z Z 2 2 E 5 -wwff'-M 'V Wm xff-f'1 ' ' L L-www-w:1.--1fv-1::v::1:-:w-21121:zzfwafrrw'N--v-'-m-f-fffa-f:wf1'-rfie+m-m- wwf: 1142:fieafeneafeerefwf-ff:rawfi-1-,L-wwayww-:Jwz:+2m:4:mzwwwva-.4awnm wnwmyMmuwumw:.w1mv,mxeww,sawwwwwww1mwpwmuw.w:z9wxwwyAwxmywmf' Making ends meet in histology 1 Down in front! ceived.' ' . . . the smile was gone from Baue's face, His teeth were clenched with hate.. . . The trea.surer's report was cheerfully re- F N I E l n l il 0F 95 Rigid digit Risus sardonicus Feelthy pictures? And this is their customary turpitudef' fg 43 'f - ' - z' :JQ M1 TV-Y,V-Eggywigf,-5viV,jE:,,. ,' f 3, , Qian::,:1,,.,.1,.,,?5u1.,,:x1. . :eww-i' f v ,Q . sf,-:,::Q ,-iw:-V , , . -4 we2:4f.x-e.,q:i:::Pierre abzafff- 7211214123 1 ' A:.p:-1:1-:': '- 4. '32 , ' ' If ff?-f I '1 I 1 s Y 1 1 w w Y-'Y--f f vff-, M--ff--MN-H-A fffff M Wm-MlmHAan-Mwf.ML.zMw,AM.1.W.,,wM2- My4y..w,f,-K'wp-.,:.Lwf4.,,w 1,1-f:fm.., f.',,.1,,Q41-,,.m.-.Wm -If-gw, ,f:f.f-Hmm, ,,1r.,- ..,,, - 1-gm m,,.ynQfzz.-mm-1. X: if .Wg ,,v,-rf,-J ,x,N:,, -- . 4 -. 7 . ,I 2 5 6 fi fl V. f-kf ., , yn,-1 ..-- cw. -My 4 . ,,,. .-f. f:--a',,w- V 1-W, .f:mL-ww-iw..ww rffwfi aw. -V V-W.-4f,:':.1::. i.-14-nf:-few ,Af,f1f.1f,-'1-M1-weqwf-Wynn.fy-1-W-Dwi..1-H:p4f,:1 f,',. ,4.N4-1-vw2.14-,.:.1-Q-.W 1--f,,-W.. f-mf , -f:.- - -f w,f: - , f - f. ,., ff Un. ' ww 1- Q x 5 ,- wx - A x X I afi- 5, 'Q iiik Q X X R 1. ,, 1- -ev '11 -5:27 firwsff .,. up QJHIQ:-E' .Rm ' w Q , 5 5- , ' f , L X, .R K A A if .535 My . ,Q , X a H ,WS gt W . Would you repeat that question, Doctor? 'As I live and breathe, the induseum iseum. ' ' Becker and Mr. Yeaton compare skulls while Stiles No, I wasn't going to take it home. fondles a bone. pi:am1,4mn 1 why iw: .V m'w.ow.,, fi - , 1 1 1 1 I I i H E 5 . , . I , I ,. fm, ..-, .,,.. , , ,f,.,,,, .,,, , ,.,,., ..,. -,,.1 ,1,,. ., ,,,.,, , ,,,.,,,,. fa ,,,,, W ,,7., .J i , , V i Fiddle, we know, is diddle And diddle, we take it, is dee. -Algernon Swinburne Front Row QL. to RJ: L. Carlton, K. Ryan, J. Ru benstein, K. Mero W Mor an C' Drewi .I rtl , . g , 1. 'y, .Be es, S. Segal, C. Huggiiis. Second Row QL. to RJ : R. Dud- ley, .l. Thomas, B. Cobb, W. Buchanan, R. Efron, H Alpha Umega Alpha Alpha Omega Alpha is a national honor- ary medical society. It was founded at the University of Illinois in 1902 by William W. Root, with the purpose of promoting higher scholarship. The Harvard Chapter was or- ganized in 1906 by Dr. Walter B. Cannon and Dr. Frank B. Mallory, and they acted as faculty advisers. Approximately 25 new members are elected each year. Of this number about six are chosen from the third year class and the Rasmussen, W. Kraus, A. Salisbury, J, Pittman, Y Wang, S. Katz. Not Pictured: J. Ayvazian, P Shapiro, .T. Constable. remainder from the fourth year class. Selec- tion is generally on the basis of scholarship alone, although expectations of future medical contribution is also considered. Throughout the year faculty members are invited to lecture to the society. Dinner meetings are held at frequent intervals after which speakers from the Boston area discuss with the chapter members diverse medical subjects. A permanent lectureship fund was estab- lished this year by members and alumni. In attempting to fulfil the purposes for which the society Wasffounded, these lectures are to be given by nationally famous physicians and scientists who will discuss before the entire student body the work which they have been undertaking. Such lectures have been success- ful in the past. Joseph B. Aub, MD. and C. Sidney Bur- vvell, M.D. are the present faculty advisers. Ia sn bum um, X, - N .ML in 4 2 ff' ,of , , ,fav 2 '1 I my cf? . gg I mt vi ,f'effw1g' -r ifffliw Y EFLTLJQ ,, -V53 K 1 , f 'W , 'Z 5 -vsaff if .,: +A 'X 'Q' ' W I , 2,5 .M f ' al A 'Q , .avfxffgigywg ' - w',. , .ww .f x M15 Q-My ,Vg W 'S Vanderbilt llall Committee Front Row CL. to RJ: Stuart Q. Flerlage, Charlotte Grantz, James Forrester, Charles Ulrichs, Robert Potter. Second Row QL. to RJ: Dr. George Packer In the Winter of 1945 Dr. C. Sidney Burwell, then Dean of the Medical School, looked at Vanderbilt Hall, which houses the greater portion of the student population, and recognized certain deficiencies. Recreational, social, and cultural opportunities within this ine community arrangement Were not being fully utilized. Dr. Burwell believed that some degree of organization was indicated, and caused a committee of student and faculty to be formed. From this beginning the House Com- mittee of Vanderbilt Hall evolved. Its pur- pose is to improve the life of the student at Harvard Medical School, discipline is not a concern. For six years this group, more popu- larly known as the Vanderbilt Hall Com- mittee, has undertaken a variety of projects in order to further the enjoyment of student activities. Berry, Dr. Charles Davidson, Dr. A. Clifford Barger, Dr. Reginald Fitz. Not Pictured: Geoffrey Coley, David Eaton, William Haddon. , , ,Q , . I ,.,. - ,V ,emwuat fwfw-1waffma:,wnaqnmun -M-QwnwMiwewmmev .. - 1 -i ' f- ' I 1 ! i V ' . . , :i':' 3-T10 .111 , . Q , 5.5 , gfifi .1, ' 5: - ' ,,f, 1.-,233 sf A w 4 ' fw.z:- i : 1 , .-V . '-ri -4- H - S Q LQ 5 3555.9 F .Wx 1 E -- 3,55 I Qs -E ' 'Wing .2 X pax 2 . Vrq.v-n al' X Ni15 Q?F25EEHVIx:E5 V QV EV , ' '- 2 'Sig' -' f . 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Sf, X, .V - V, N V 2, .Q -Vw: 1 - A Vs ys4W,wsz f 'Q' ' -ws, war: v' is 2' W ww VP ? ,.ff , , Q, , Q' A 4 54,55 X x N1 n ,:, X -' A -2+ V' -,111-fain-, ,' --,,. .fic- V , f Wi V '- - ' ' ,V ' , .f . ff ' '- .V , 2'5'lf'R xl x f 19 - B 2 . I f Vue M ' v 5, X ff. .. , ' - V. .0 , ,yy pe 1, ,M ,, 13511. vA,a1,4V: .. .+q'v'2imx'3'3Am,5V J 5.31425 'nf 'J 'N' 1 ' 14 ,Wy-If ' '--' ,Zi A' -f 1 , , . . . Ana, V ' J xxx A 4 ' ' ' 'N 'W ' K 'V Vv '1'm fN -,.f.w ' ' -.hw iw wa V . xx .VM The Lancet Club in its ups and more recent downs reflects subtle changes in the population of Harvard Medical School. An ill-defined attraction lures into its ranks the more romantic element-the troubadors who must sing in the night, and the Quixotes who battle invisible foes with hollow tin missiles. This has resulted in a rich heritage of little- knovvn songs of love and adventure preserved in the Lancet Club Archives, and many sleep- less nights for the inhabitants of Vanderbilt Hall. Within the club the members dedicate themselves to principles and clean living. An excess of the latter in l950 led to victory in two athletic contests over the Nu Sigma Nu. This has since been corrected. Basically the Laneets arc not athletes. They are gentlemen. Front Row QL. to RJ: Loop, Lincoln, Neher, Bane, Jurkiewiez, Coulson, Holm, Feldman, Kraus, Turner, Malcolm. Second Row QL. to RJ: Crisp, Atkins, Trie- ger, Roth, Coley, Kaplan, Horton, Berk, Berstein, Ivins. Third Row QL. to R-.j: Nobles, Feder, Collins, Wood, Potter, Hansen, Chesnut. Mascot: Rand. Not Lancet Club Pic'1'1tw'fl: Aikman, llnelmiian, Butler, Carter, Clallin, Conkling, Crowe, Curtin, Dolan, liarle, Farrell, Frazier, Greenberg, llaley, llughes, C., llughes, R., Hutchinson, Keith, Lena, Maellonalcl, Manniek, Mar- tin, Mullally, Nagle, Ncsbct, O'Malley, Rashin, Reese, Robison, Sharp, Toomey, Weiner. Wieganfl. The name of the Argo Fraternity, for obscure reasons known only to antiquity and John Parker, comes from that band of Gre- cian eager beavers who sought the golden tlcece. 'l'hat their mission has been finally accomplished is attested by the famed Argo Museum of Ancient Objets fl,AI't, including one of the oldest golden fieeces in Boston, and the celebrated Argo mace, recovered from an ancient Grecian ether dome. Wlien not absorbing culture from the New England Journal, the members of Argo delight in watching televised prizeiights, read- ing science fiction, and toasting their tradi- tional scarlet and black banner in the friendly atmosphere of their padded club room. After a year as president, Ed Kelley still thinks that Argo is the best club in Vander- bilt Hall. Members of more backward organi- zations who wish to sample the good life are always welcome in 446. Argo Front Row CL. to RJ: I1CdCl'l'Tl1ll1, De Kornfeld, Sci- gal, Schiebler, Vauderveon, Kelley, llinshaw, Burn- stine, Novak, Deikman, Gold. Second Row CL. to RJ: Kane, Warren, llolyokc, King, L., Rickclibacli, Nor- ton, Garrett, Uafligali, Galnlzda, Draper, Ayvazian I -.mils Cherrick. Third Row CL. to RJ: Breer, Katz, Browns berger, Rolett, Haddon, Clnbb, Pruett, Greene, An derson, K., Landau, Flanagan. Not Pictured: Ander son, J., Barnett, Boyd, Brown, O., Garceau, Gelfand Hoskins, Johnson, King. M.. Murnhv. .T T.nviv-elm lf'1'4mL limi' fli. to RJ: Slcinmor, Uolonibo, Segal llrm-wry, BIIIIUF, lvlnlnrot, Alpcr, Stolc-r, llulluy, Kinn thoroth, Martin. Snconrl Row Cli. to RJ: Milkrnnn Hnidi, Ring, l.o1t, While, l.ovinv, Htnrolnin, l.nssitur Arons, llinllvy. Tllirfl Ilnw Cli, to NJ: lsr-nlmcrg, Wnlla or, llinnisl.on, llornslzoin, Ynliin, Allon, linszlo, Hon ring, linrkor. Nul 1'irfllL1'r'rl.' liond, Horst, lliiiinorv, Y , l'lis4-ninnn, l'lrwin, I'il'Jll'l'Jl, Kintor, Klvo, Klininn, , Krnnt, l1l'V,V, Morgmi, lfoszi-l'm-rox, Rotlilu-rg', Sivnlnr. hi Beta i Alpha Xi, tho loved Q-lnlptor of Phi lic-tn Pi, national invclieal fraternity, was originally vstablislied on IIzn'vnrrl vznnpus in 1913, and was reorgrunized after World Weir ll. l'r'vsoiit membership numbers about 50. The group participates in auetiviiivs tlmt touch upon most spheres of nn-dival school life. The club room in Vanderbilt Hall sol-vos as al source of beer and ceonversnT.ion on quiet evenings. Parties, quiet and otherwise, help the members to find diversion on wc-elcz-mls. Two of the members find it possible to livo in the club room. More orguliizz-il VPIITIITUN of the frater- nity include ei series of bi-monthly dinner meetings. Medical mon and others find them- selves talking' to the members on anything- nlthougli in l95l the tliemc- A Speceinlistfs Day S00lll0Li pervasive. A Spring' Dum-0 :ind Pl Phi Hole spon- sorod pnbliv l04'i.lll't' rounded out The forinul :wtivitios for the your. Front Row CL. to RJ: Aikman, Innocence, Guilt, Stork Butlei Svcoml Row fl t RJ: Jurkiewicz, Turner, Samaha, Loop, MOCISfll Kr-ius, leldman Not Pictured Cummings, Lincoln, Malcolm. Stork Club The Summer of 1904 was hot as summers are Wont to be, and when even faithful multi- paras succumbed to the general torpor, stu- dent obstetricians Chapin, Green, Ripley and Silvester conceived the Stork Club and de- livered it through the bunghole of a beer barrel. Over the years its activities, albeit at times legendary, have always remained nn- obtrusive and tempered by Moderation in All Things Including Moderation Itself. Nine fourth-year men, unable to divine the purpose of the club, hand down this task each year to an equal number of successors. 'i'M A 'Mn ,, ?,. , 1,,, , X . 7, . ., ,.,, gl' fi f 1 .. yr f fx 5' me ,fy e ,, : ' , 1 M .,5:,,a, ,, :V -' mW .z'1fWQ74'WMffe 4'Kif.::'f 1 ,.5f' ,s+Q1: 1 ' . 2? 1? V 232 . 5 2 2 if f ,, , .,... ., . ,L ,,., 4,,,, ,, ,.., A ,.L, ,. k . .,., Q, , A , , ,, , , 1 , , 1, 5? ,x f Q f -'-:iv Q v 6. -ww' ' - ' - -32.1. '5.f,:,w-.1 ,- riff? f- , .. 2 , , f V .. . V VK 7 . L if , W -' v .1 Q 24, W f Q :q .Lf M1111 A 1- ,,.,1 ,, Iii, ' .4 , Vg p, ! ,H . . . 5 .f.,J,: w V. , '.g,,1.'..1 ,gr-, aw-.1-I fav , f ,E L f H ' - . 'M 7 X C - - 742: -f , . ' 5 , ,f -'1 VWMQ-gy? , ,x H 7,1 ,KM ft p. - 1.11. 1 ra -awry, I .., :4!'12:21:-2 ' ' x 'L . ff 4 'f W-L. -f f 1' ., if-4. ' ' 4 . , ., , , V., , , , ,, ,wr - - ,.,,. :Sw mf,.q,f f ., 4 , . 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I' .J og , Q w 1: K nfl . ww. f f ., . , A4.w,fv .fMm.,AMw.w, mv i' 1 N ,, i Wg, .,.. ,ff nfl 4 Ale, man, a1e's the Stuff to drink For fellows whom it hurts to think: Look into a pewter pot To see the world as the World's not. -A. E. Housman A TURN OF THE SCREIV OR SCREWED AT EVERY TURN In the somnolent September of 1948, the class was assembled, variously full of resolve and eager ambition. The first event was a clinic with Dr. Burwell in the Brigham amphitheater, later to be the scene of many clinics surrounded with less grandeur and mystery. Although a few of us were beyond our depth at the finish, it was a grand sweep- ing impression of medicine on that Saturday morning. During the next four years we never felt again quite the power and finish displayed by Dr. Burwell. . . . ln saying this word of welcome, it would be easy to give a philosophical lec- ,., .I it W from 9 T7 xy VHXQ, xigg ture about medicine, and it is always a strong temptation to do so . . . instead of talking to you ubout medicine, I propose to show you a concrete sample of some of the problems that arise in medicine. The patient was then introduced. t'As I present this patient to you I should like to have you pay particular attention to work- ing out three conclusions on your own parts. The first is an understanding of the nature and mechanism of this patient's disability. The second is the translation of that under- standing of the nature of his disability into some sort of idea as to how we can make him better, or prevent him from growing worse. The third is the formulation of all these technical problems in adequate relation to his total environment, his family, his job, his hopes, and fears,-trying to see the techni- calities against a background of his own par- ticular situation. The patient was a 48 year old man with constrictive pericarditis, subsequent to a vague febrile illness six years previously. He showed feeble action of the heart, ascites, edema, and hepatomegaly. The venous pres- sure was 300 mm, and the chest film showed calcification in the pericardium. NI-Iere is a man who is ill, who is dis- abled, whose life has been altered, whose family has been put in difficulty because he has a simple mechanical obstruction to the entry of blood into the heart. That is what is the matter with him. That is a clear and comprehensible problem . . . Now what can be done about it? 'H . . The first question that we ask before we say to Mr. A, 'We think you ought to be operated on' is this: is the disability severe enough? . . . Second, what is the probable course of this disease in this patient? . . . Third, we must consider the risk of the surgi- cal procedure that we contemplate . . . Fourth, we must consider what possibility of success is offered by surgery . . . There is still, however, a fifth question. In spite of the fact that he is disabled, is he able even with his disability to maintain his family in reasonable comfort, and if we ree- ommend the operation are we exposing his family to a serious situation in case the oper- ation is not ai success . . . We have to say to him, 'What is your philosophy of life? Are you satisfied to live your present limited life or would you rather take a risk, which is not a very large risk, on the chance that you are going to be better?' His own philosophy may be the decisive factor . . . On the basis of all the facts, on the basis of the diagnosis and the severity of the disability, I advise him to undergo this operation . . . Dr. Burwell concluded, '4Well, now you have met the first concrete problem in your professional field. I will try Csometime in the futurej to see that you get a report on the future of this interesting patient . . .You will find that medicine has an essential personal aspect as well as an essential technical aspect and that these cannot be disentangled . . . You will find it is hard work, you may find it discouraging, but I am sure you will never find it dull and I wish you all good fortune. Follow up: This patient was subsequently operated on, and had considerable improvement. September passed, but somnolence per- sisted. We were at grips with anatomy, grap- pling against frustration with a fierce fury. Many a fond idea had its last fiowering in those first weeks, fond ideas of brilliant ca- reers in science and of blazing new paths in medical research. Rooms in Vanderbilt Hall, by nature bare and austere, were inhabited by equally austere young scientists. A hard pallet, a box of books and bones, a microscope, and a rude desk with a naked goose neck lamp on top and a fresh P B K medal within the center drawer-this was the scene in those early weeks. The first afternoon of dissection dealt the opening blow to the individual and collective ego-ideals. Stumbling, blind, futile fumbling for elusive spinal nerves in the back, ending in fatigue, failure, and discouragement. Suc- ceeding days a11d weeks continued the process, until the first hour exam sent P B K keys into deep hiding like jackrabbits before a grassfire. There were brief moments of academic glory, though. Jurkiewicz isolated the nerve of the carotid sinus. Rasmussen demonstrated the Circle of Willis. Moersch demonstrated his own superficial volar arch in an imaginary parachute jump in the dissecting room, drawing his palm neatly over the scalpel blade with a deft pull of the ripcord. Neher and Brown feigned amazement when others demonstrated a .45 slug in the pericardium. Bertles missed with the bucket Vanderbilt Courtyard wl11-11 11111 1-1111111 w11s 1-v111'111111-11. Wilson W11111. S1101'1i.Y 111111111' 11. light 11111 1111 11111 s11o11I11111' 11y 111'. 14'11v1'1'1111's f1'11111111y 1111g1fl'1'. A1111111111y 111-111111111 11, 1111111.1'1' 111' Q1'1'1',11lQf by 141111111 1111w. 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T110 Oral Gratification 'Vx 11s11111 p1'111111iz 1111111111111 1111111 sw11y 111 Vil11116l'- 111111 111111. '1'1l1' 1111111111 quiz was 1111 1111ti1:1111111x, 11s 11111111 11111.11's 1:111'1-f1111y p1'ep11r1111 speci1111y, was 1:1111spi1'111111s1y 1l11SC1lt from the 11st of 11111-st11111s. .'1'1111se were 1,1111 first of 11 series of 1e11111111s 111' 111111111111 111111w1e11,f13e born, and carc- 1'1r11y 11111-1111-1111, 111 1111111111 unseen 011 any ex- 11111i1111111111 p11p1'1'. 1 ' 411 1 V115 1111 Q1 . Meeting of Minds Formal Hat Dance -N Noon Hour The Straight Dope ln the process ot coming of age, we were initiated into the dim departed past. The buildings seemed old, as though Oliver Wen- dell Ilolmes daily donned his lab eoat there. The huge gilt portraits on every wall ap- peared to be 19th century stuff , and seemed to include enough Warrens, Cheevers, and Minots to represent many generations. The Lecturer on the History of Medicine gathered the class together one afternoon, in among the dusty pillars of the library. The most heavily gilt, somberly painted, and least often looked at pictures hung there. The lee- turer moved along smoothly and drylyiin the early stages. As he touehed upon the first l'ruit.s of New England medicine, uncontrolled laughter burst from the listening ranks and the matter of history was dropped. Dr. Burwell's clinic was followed by others. The second found us with a new criti- Noah's Ark Death on the Highway cal spirit. The liady with No Tumor was t.he butt ot' the speaker's wit, wisdom, and win- ning way. Thelwhole procedure was the butt of our own dour disapproval. We learned to take clinics in stride, or not to take them at all, a help in later years. These Saturday mornings in the shadow of greatness were designed to keep our heads above water, surveying the field of medicine with perspective. What they did do was to provide us with a weekly decision-to sleep or to get up? lt was one ot the few decisions we made then. Qualities ol' independence, critical analysis, and perseverance developed by these Saturday morning decisions later be- eanie highly developed in the clinical years. Many of us showed from the start a quickness and sureness of judgment which was remark- able. Stick ' em up! Other qualities of independence, critical judgment, and perseverance were tested in the first months. There was the problem of the necktie. The heterogeneous collection of personalities constituting the class of 1952 was only slowly broken to the dress of the Harvard man. More than one small group signed and sealed a contract of protest-no neckties for everyday. Loop even carried the fight to the enemy by appearing in the front row of the Brigham amphitheater resplendent in dungarees and VV sweater of yellow and gold. A critical point of policy arose. When it became necessary to pass near the Dean's Now, Nurse . . office, was it safer to wear a tie and avoid persecution, or go without a tie and thereby avoid providing that handy means of being strangled for au unrelated offense? That ter- ritory was soon surrendered, but the no man's land of the dining hall remained. Bold deeds of valor were done there. Sharp appeared several times in his pyjama shirt, whether by foresight or oversight we couldn't be sure. Huggins appeared in an eclectic combination of Bermuda knee length pants and Nova Scotia turtle neck sweater. There were only a few stares on these occasions. On the clothes issue, as on a few others, we finally gave way. Seersucker jackets ap- peared the first spring and swept the field the second year. White shoes began to appear the second year, like menacing white caps on a windy bay, and swept the field in the third year. Bowties divided and conquered. Small groups held out long' past the general collapse. When Donovan succumbed midway iu the fourth year he was the last survivor. Dur- ing our tenure, the shoestring tie made its entryg the pink shirt had its rise, peak, de- cline, and fall. We found ourselves in physiology before we knew it. We knew it when we had been there a while, though . . . 'tExereise 26. Physi- ology and Biochemistry of Respiration and Acid-Base Regulation-the subject breathes normally a fewtimesg at the end of a normal expiration or a normal inspiration, he puts the mouthpiece into his mouth, quickly does Now I'11 tell ya, what I'm gonna do . . . a forced expiration Cduration not over 1 see- ondj and closes the mouthpiece with the tongue. He then breathes around the tongue until the sample has been eolleeted . . . A blow heard round the quadrangle was struck on March 7, 1949, as this trap for alveolar air was laid. Even as a stray bear trap will elose around the hunter, alveolar air trapping carries a hazard. Exercise 26 was Dr. Pap- penheimer's home ground, we all felt. The famous equations were down, the lines were drawn. The Haldane machines were ranged around the room like so many menacing judge advocates, calling upon us all to produce the goods. Our front line was held by the robust team of Neher, Brown, Cochran, Berk and Ginitheroth, led by Neher. The opening skir- mish was a demonstration by Dr. Pappen- heimer oi' the technique of alveolar air samp- ling. lt was found impossible to do a foreed expiration in not over one second, close the mouthpiece with the tongue, and explain the procedure to the group at the same time. Neher, being at hand, was therefore stationed with a Kelly clamp to aet for the oeeluding tongue. The victory was won in not over one seeoud. A wheezing pop-eyed plethorie Pap- penheiiner, a deft thrust and snap of the and the lst year eats it Terrible Twelve Keen Kents Kelly on his unsuspecting lip, a wild flailing of arms, and a slow trickle of blood from the wound. Nobody said much of anything. The Haldane machines seemed a little less impos- ing after that. The Haldane machines took their toll, however. A suckover on the Haldane was a humility shared by most of us, but some more than others. Cummings led the troops into action on the second Haldane morning, primed by: Cab a careful exposition by the cautious, bandaged Dr. Pappenheimer of the thirteen steps in readying the machine for analysis and the ten steps in doing the analy- sis, Cbb doleful tales of the previous day's casualties in action, In this particular game, Cummings was beaten before he started. He walked up to the machine, muttering, I can't do it . . . I can't work the God damned thing! . . . sat, and looked at it for a few minutes with painfully increasing anxiety. Finally he reached out, turned a convenient stopcock, and watched the contents suck over. This was quickly repaired by the ready crews, still efficient and unruffled at that early hour in the morning. A half hour later Cummings again stormed the embattled heights, giving the nearest stopcock a cautious and trembling half turn, and again watching a rhythmic machinery like motion of fluid from the right chamber into the wrong chamber. No ordinary contestant, he listened pa- tiently to the ensuing torrent of explanation, recrimination, and suggestion . . . Perhaps you'd better go home and read over the in- structions. ' ' I read the God damned thinglw roared Cummings, storming from the lab, not to re- turn to the Haldane front. . . . life in Vanderbilt Hall, milieu of the Harvard student . . . composed of squash and basketball, cheap literature, the Saturday night dinner promenade, sprawling parties, courtyard clamor, marathons of study, debate, and card playing. Vanderbilt I-Iall'was the social center of the medical school, lying in- termediate bctween the nurse 's home and the Boston Lying-In Hospital. 5 o 'clock shadow Rach rules f flihan Cochran conquers 1, QW? Xl av ' ilqllw 'lf-'Q Q29 iff-V7 L Thorlakson suffers wana., The Vanderbilt Hall basketball court was put to much heavier use than the medical school library. In terms of accomplishment per hour, the court was undoubtedly the busi- est spot in the whole medical school, or indeed, in the whole of the Fens. High and unquench- able spirit made up for a generally rough style of play. The players trotted on the court rubbing their palms and announcing the forthcoming release of a hard day's frus- trated aggression. During our first year, bursts of aggression led to one set of frac- tured ribs, one lacerated semilunar cartilage, two sets of subluxated fractured tarsal ,pha- langes, several sets. of pulverized spectacles, and countless ruffled tempers. Of all the Currents of Thought in American Literature, many escaped Van- derbilt Hall. But of all the currents of thought covered by the twenty-five cent paper pocketbook, none escaped the Hall. Reading habits were largely determined by the oifer- ings of Joe Sparr's bookshelf. At Hrst, War- ren's Handbook of Anatomy offered some competition, but the battle between the hand and the pocket went to the latter by default when anatomy became history. In the clinical years, oppressed by Frannie Moore 's momen- tous announcement of the reading year, and the rising prominence of the thirty-ive and fifty cent pocketbook, we gradually left pocket fiction for the Medical Journal. Li- braries lay fallow and something went out of Lie in the Hall. Joe Sparr's bookshelf con- tinues probably, for preclinical readers. Biochemistry laboratory was a mathe- matical impossibility. That is to say, it didn 't seem possible to do all the work laid out in the book. Few of us put it to the test. To many of us, it didn't seem very reasonable to do any appreciable amount of it. All of us did analyses of unknown sam- ples, however. These somehow appeared mys- teriously at any time, labelled with a number and nothing else. Giannelli was not surprised, therefore, and only mildly disturbed, on ar- riving one afternoon, to find on his desk a ' L Dowling doodles NGVGI' 1100 old small inound of crumbly white powder on a round lilter paper, labelled x67. Carbo- hydrate unknown, he was told. Due tomorrow. He boiled, fried, sizzled, dissolved, and precipitated that t'x67 for several hours, finding no clue to- its identity. That looks like mine, someone said. 'tBetter nitrate it. The obstinate x67 was thereupon boiled in fuming nitric acid for several hours in a des- perate barrage of nitrate groups at the mys- terious powder. The mixture underwent a kaleidoscope of colors in the process, somehow changing hue every time Giannelli's back was turned. In the end nothing was left but a delicate pinkish colored solution with a strong odor of fuming nitric acid. X67 was gone. In fact it had never really existed, being a hoax planted by congenial colleagues. Gian- nelli later came to expect that sort of thing. As the second term faded away, the bio- chemistry laboratory was gradually deserted in favor of the afternoon ballgame, alter- nately in Fenway Park and Fitz Stadium. In the end the warm sun and a month of lazy convalescence closed over the year, smoothing out its rough spots. The second year flowed along on schedule. Things came faster and faster, though. At first there was the pleasant novelty of two afternoons and an occasional morning off, and the only fly in the ointment was the game of describing pathology slides, a form of mar- ginal speculation more risky than grain futures. The advent of Parasitology limited the free mornings. It also imposed a heavy lin- guistic burden at a time when the inflow of words was reaching its eventual peak of four or five lectures daily. Parasitology made its exit just before Christmas, joining with Pa- thology in a hammer-blow barrage of exams. January brought pneumococcus typing. February brought physical diagnosis, and the beginning of the daily caravans to the hospi- tals. We had come of age and entered the clinical phase. Painter Come now, Reg' ' , vw vi if 6 5 s 9' 2 . f J . 0 , . Q fu fi sf f 3 ,W .... gl,-2' When was the last time . . . '? Fantas Y 'ga . 3 , , W,- A., ., 5- KZ:- S 1:1 5 Rican-non nes-r noon -Y -- --Q- Q-:L mme in x VIEKI' 'I BQIWUES.. ffl 'N , f - 'i 70. 'M f oKlua si URL I Ni Y HERE'-il .4 Fl' asfwo ' u TONITE r-1 UNCLE JAMES ' W' - me li .. L31 M IDEAL. nu f fx oaormass' , 5 i 4-rum.. 1' STATS HOUSE' 51- A NTUDENT'H GUIDE TO BOSTON HOSPITALS In the eastern part of Massachusetts, near the junction of the Charles and Mystic Rivers, are located thirteen hospitals, known collectively as the teaching hospitals of the Harvard Medical School. Around these hos- pitals has grown up a thriving community, affectionately called Boston. The natives of this community, often referred to as Bos- tonians, are a complex cultural and social admixture, reflecting the personality of the hospital near which they dwell. Thus, on Beacon Hill, built originally to shield the Massachusetts General Hospital from the gales blowing off the ocean, is found a close- knit, somewhat snobbish, but always impec- cably correct group of inhabitants, while in the South End, but a stone 's throw from the Boston City Hospital, resides an odoriferous, somewhat disorganized, and highly cirrhotic segment of the population. Perhaps the best example is afforded by the Boston Lying-In Hospital, which stands across the street from the most active source of new babies in town. The city and its people are completely de- pendent upon the hospitals for their liveli- hood, and their lives are oriented exclusively in this direction. The transportation system was constructed to provide easy access to the hospitals for everyone, the tuberculosis rate is the highest in the country, so as to provide adequate teaching material, and the city gov- ernment has as its principal aim the furnish- ing of sufieient personnel to staff the City Hospital. lt would thus seem wise for each student and potential intern to acquaint himself with some of the salient features of the major institutions. Boston City 110.5-pzftrzl-WliateX'ei' else may be said of this place, it is certainly large. However, armed with compass, map and thirty days' supply of food and water it is generally possible to inalce one's way through the subterranean corridors and arrive at his destination. lqet us begin our tour at the Harrison Street entrance. Being careful not to slip on the spittle which covers the stairs, one enters an impressive, marble-Hoored lobby. Portraits Striking at Angell of James Curley, his sons, daughters, sons-in- law, cousins, and uncles, gaze mournfully from the walls where they once hung in pride. Just to the left is a lively little chapel-an air of stark .realism pervades the hospital. If one walks straight ahead he runs into the arms of a cop. So it 's best to go to the left and down a long hall which is the main artery of the building. Just off this hallway is a more-or-less private rest room, marked, Re- served for doctors, medical students, orderlies, personnel, nurses, maids, kitchen help, pa- tients, and visitors. All others keep out! l A brief twenty minute walk brings one to the Accident Ward. This is easily identifded by the slightly tense but efficient atmosphere. Patients are tensely but efficiently sewing up each other's lacerations and passing Miller- Abbott tubes. Every so often a white-clad in- tern is wheeled down the hall on a litter. The Harvard Medical Student is impressed by the complete absence of zephiran, a substance he formerly deemed essential to any surgical procedure. Every so often sirens shriek, bells clang, and another ambulance rolls up and belches forth a load of bleeding passengers. Invariably one of these unhappy folk, a for- mer patient, clutching his torn abdomen with both hands, screams, Oh no! l. ,Not the Cityli' and rushes olf down the street toward City Point. His old record's probably' been lost anyway. After wiping the blood of of our feet We may proceed with the tour. There are two Ways of getting to the Mallory Institute of Pathology-one is to attempt to cross the street, artfully dodging speeding ambulances, police cars, and taxi-cabs, the other is to use the tunnel, which involves the risk of ending up in the South Boston sewerage system. In either event, with a certain amount of luck, one finds oneself in the autopsy room. There are usually a dozen or so posts going on at the same time. Great cranes, suspended from the ceiling, swoop down and haul off the large fatty livers, too big to be handled by human hands. Back in the corridor again we follow the signs to the Thorndyke. Suddenly, a model A Ford convertible, with an imposing bald head sticking out of the top, careens past. Incidentally, when asked for directions, as . ,. ..,. f wmve-afmxuamave 4n ese1.ine.w, .fs ,. -V V Start the second unit of blood So me and Rock . . you surely will be, the best lllllllg to do is to suddenly develop a limp and reply, Where is the X-ray department? Boston Lying-In Hiospfiml-Patients are divided into two main groups-those who are p1'eg'nzmt, and those who were pregnant. The inenmhers of the former group will shortly re- ceive :L dose of seopolamine-a Wonderful drug which transports its users to unheard of levels 'of ecstasy, causing them to ery out in W Little Iodine Tail end of the evening ff D6 U Sc.oPos.AMNE ,again - A sassy 3. Q 5- Ernsc-nvs ' AMNESIC SED Xp, X 1 Q ,I 7 5 70: H 7'o B H .X 4466 'CS X-x f s- fcs ' L , nw . ZZ - 758 ' , x Q , v 5 M519 -9' H.K,,,y sheer joy-and be trundled off to a tiled closet known as the delivery room. Here all patients lose their identity, being referred to only as mother The cry of bear down, mother l echoes through the halls, awakening the third year student, the fourth year stu- dent, and the house officer, all of whom rush into the room. Since there are only two scrub basins, one of the students-usually the fourth year man-grabs a leg, and the race with time commences. Just as the intern brushes his sterile hands against the light, forcing him to return to the sink, the nurse reaches down, says, 'twhat on earth is this? and holds up a blue object which the intern identi- iies as a baby. The student, who is now gowned, and the intern, bobble the thing around for a while, each trying to apply the unholy contraption which is used to tie the cord. Finally, a faint cry is heard. This ap- pears to bc coming from the student holding the leg, who has gotten tangled up in his mask and is gradually suffocating. Every- thing is eventually straightened out, and after the placenta is delivered the intern grabs a knife and makes the episiotomy. By this time the anesthetist has gotten all the valves on the machine open, and is delivering great quanti- ties of oxygen to the mother and ether to the baby. Nobody dies at the Boston Lying-In, and consequently the pathologists, of which there are many, feel a little unnecessary. They are relegated to examining placentae, of which there also are many. After the pathologists are through with them, they are shipped down to the kitchen and examined by all at lunch, the next day. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital-Every medical school should have a Brigham, for this is truly the well-spring of all knowledge. It is often stated that the people at the Brig- ham feel that they have made the only lasting contributions to medical science. This is defi- nitely not true-any one of them will tell you that Halstead and Osler also had a few good ideas. The Brigham is an airy place-lots of windows, lots of sunshine, and lots of time Wasted trying to get from A Main to F Main. A new emergency ward has just been con- structed, and everyone is eagerly awaiting an emergency that will bring in the first patient. The focal point of activity at the Brig- ham, during the hours when the coffee shop is closed, is the X-ray department. A ceremonial dance is held each morning over the nrey grave of a couple of discarded stethoscopes. Then everyone settles down to think up new ambiguities to be said about the day 's films. These usually commence with, 'tThere is a possible suggestion of an ill-defined density which may be the patient's neck-tie . . .H The general attitude of optimism is well demon- strated by the fact that everyone wears rose- colored glasses. Several elective courses are offered at the Brigham: A Bard-Parkerization Just what we've always needed Dog Surgery-Slanted primarily for the future veterinarian, this course has practical value for all dog owners. All sorts of thera- peutic procedures that most dogs will require at one time or another are done-rib resec- tions, splenectomies, etc. The first few sessions are a little fright- ening, perhaps, but you 'll have no trouble if you remember that the word dog refers to the student. Initially, everyone splits up into groups. First one man ties up his part- ner in knots, then his partner paints him with lamp black, and then they have a race to see who can get out the mess he's in first. Finally, you choose up sides, stand at op- posite ends of the room, and throw wet gloves at each other. If you tire of this there is always a demonstration going on in which students are autoclaved for varying lengths of time in an effort to see which ones disinte- grate fastest. After these fundamentals are well in hand, you start operating. You should gen- erally allow at least a couple of hours for get- ting the snarling beast, who somebody has forgotten to give his pre-operative Kibble, out of the cage and onto the table. Then, after everyone has gotten the urine and feces out of his hair, you are ready to go. The anesthe- tist scrubs, puts on his gloves, and begins trying to get the top off of the ether can. By the time he has gotten his hand disentangled from the dog's teeth, the surgeon is back from his brieiing session in the next room, having learned nothing save that the incision should be made at the spot directly under the light. Stork torque I 5? , Fitz therapy Release of aggression Shaving the animal is quite a problem, best solved by bringing an electric razor. 'l'his is all apt to be a little confusing at first, but the situation is saved. by the pres- ence of the kindly gentlemen who run the course. Bustling from table to table, goosing this one, shoving that one's face into the in- eision, full of words of eheer, mostly said under their breath and out of one side of their month, these wizards of the knife have all sorts of little tricks for making operative techniques mueh simpler. By the time 'they have finished with one one is eonvineed that he will be an ophthalmologist. Artificial kidney course-The principal defect in this course is that they forget to tell the student where the artificial kidney is being kept these days. So you usually spend a month wandering between li' Main and the men 's room looking for it. The best thing to do is to give up right away, and settle down in the coffee shop. Here you'll at least get a good diuresis. Free Ilospiltal for 'Womefnf-The butt of many lewd jokes, this hospital deals primarily in lewd butts. The student is immediately impressed with the singular devotion of the members of the stall: to teaehing-nothing is spared to aequaint the struggling young fin- gerer with the mysteries of the diseases of women. On oeeasion one is even permitted to do a pelvie examination. !llassm'llclseHs Ue'ne1'r1.t Ilnspflal -.'l'here are a number of' eonferenees held eaeh week at the fleneral, whieh are an absolute must: U.l'.U.-'l'his is the high point of the Any number can play Anaplasia 9 1 L? 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Roughly half the people' who start out from the White Building actually reach the pathology amphitheater-the remainder being variously maimed and torn by the diabolical guillotine which serves as a doorf Prior to this session the room is scrupu- lously cleaned. All old cadavers are shoved underneath the seats, and the path residents run around spraying everything with Air- Wick. The fellow sitting in the front row, pale and trembling, shuffling through his notes, is the discussor. He is a little concerned because he just re-read the protocol and dis- covered a new fact which makes his carefully worked out diagnosis absurd. Those people dancing around, laughing, and rubbing their hands with glee are the pathologists, who are about to get revenge for the indignities they have suiered at the hands of the clinicians all week. No one is expected to do outstandingly well at these knife-throwing aiairs, but bear- ing a couple of points in mind may help some- what: CID Always consider the patient's age. Pyloric stenosis rarely manifests itself after the age of fifty, and thus one can rule it out or in with fair accuracy. C25 Know the dis- cussor. If he 's a dermatologist, it's a fair bet that the problem has something to do with the skin. Q35 If you miss, be of good cheer. Often they get the slides mixed up, and your diagnosis may be the correct one. Thyroid clinic-The place Where this is held is a little hard to find, but if you follow anyone with bulging eyes, you'll get there eventually. Gradually, the members of the Thyroid Group begin trickling in, each carrying a can of iodized salt, from which he occasionally takes a pinch. You will see two types of patients: those who race' into the room, shake hands with everyone, and pace back and forth during the presentation, and those who pad in yawning, complain a bit about the cold, slump into a chair, and promptly fall asleep. Those with sharp clini- cal acumen are able to classify the first group as toxic, and the second as Hmyxedemae tous. The more scientific of the group, how- ever, insist on being appraised of PBI's, RAI's, BMR'S,, etc., and then spend the rest of the morning complaining about how quix- otic all these tests are. All in all it's good fun, and you'll undoubtedly get to feel a gland, even if it 's only your own. Surgical grand rounds-Take the ele- vator to White 3A, or, if you 're in a hurry, use the stairs. Walking down the hall to the amphitheater you will encounter a row of beds containing patients, waiting to be wheeled in and presented. It is considered evidence of a good attitude toward the pa- tient if you grasp each hand warmly, and oier a word of encouragement as you stride past. Wheii you enter the amphitheater, al- ways glance casually at the call-board to see if your name is thereon. If itis not, as it won't be, don't look disappointed-heave a sigh of relief and take a seat near the rear. . . . eating grins The most important part of these rounds is getting to the amphitheater and Ending a seat. Thereafter things become pretty dull. Since everything which has been done has been done well, the visits are relegated to nodding, smiling at each other, and occasion- ally leaping up to pat a house officer on the back. The Childrcfnk Hospital-Little kiddies from the entire civilized world, and even a few from as far west as Albany, flock to this fabled institution. They come with palates cleft, psyche 's dereft, and bodies heft, to be greeted by specialists deft. A typical saga runs something like this: little Johnnie, a red-blooded eight year old from Springfield, is a perfectly normal, happy chap, except for one thing-he hasn't said a word since birth. For eight years his parents have wondered a little about this, but figured he probably just didn't have much to say. They consulted a couple of LMD's, one of whom prescribed some vitamin pills, the other suggesting watchful waiting. The par- ents watched and waited, and Johnnie watched and waited, until six A.M. one morn- ing, when the suspense got to be too great. They commandeered a local ambulance and headed for Boston, the Children 's Hospital, and the answer. Careening down Longwood Avenue a couple of hours later, siren scream- But where are the fields of Forel? .9 f vewzlm- -i vmewam ' Cerumen lumen Roy Boy ing, they managed to pick off a couple of third year students heading for the B. I., and rudely awaken all the fourth year students in Vanderbilt Hall. A scant hour later, J ohnnie, Mr. Johnnie, and Mrs. Johnnie are sitting in the OPD, waiting for the specialist to arrive. Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie are carrying on a stimulating conversation with the parents of a bearded three year old adrenogenital-Johnnie isn't saying much, as usual. Suddenly the door bursts open, a hush settles on the assembled throng, and a white coat, pockets bulging with ophthalmoscopes, hammers, and tongue blades, struts into the room. Somewhere within this garment lurks Blutz, a small, frightened third-year student, trying vainly to recall the caloric requirements of a six month old sheep. He waves commandingly, and the Johnnies follow him to the examining room. There isa brief moment of embarrassed tension while Blutz attempts to disentangle his stethoscope from the door knob, but he carries this off very well, electing to leave the damned thing hanging there. Forty-five minutes later, Blutz has the essential facts of the pregnancy and delivery well in hand, and is beginning to embark on eating habits. The parents are shuiiiing their feet a bit, awfully anxious to get started on the speech problem, but aware that this fellow must know what 's important and what isn't. By one o'elock, Blutz is thinking about pro- phyllaxis, and Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie are thinking about lunch. Johnnie isn't saying much, but seems to be getting quite a kick out of dismembering Blutz's ophthalmoseope. By two o'clock the visit has gone home, the maid is mopping the tioor of the examining room, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie are both snoozing quietly, and Blutz is trying to remember what he's forgotten to ask. Suddenly, the silence is broken by an insistent squeak, HFor Christ's sake, let's get the hell outa here! Blutz smiles wanly, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie clap their hands delightedly, Johnnie stomps out of the-room, and another satisfied fam- ily gratefully takes leave of the Children 's Hospital. S. P. R. DOSS High voltage spikes A QUARTET OF FOUR DOCTORS CWitl1 apologies to Ogden Nashj THE INTERNIST I'm a disappointed figure in these Aescula- pian states, An excellent demonstration of hereditary traits. As the children of policemen have the tlattest kind of feet, As the daughter of the Hreman is accustomed to the heat, My position near t.he bottom of medicine I owe To the qualities my predecessors bequeathed me long ago. My father was a gentleman, and what is even more A physician of distinction and what an awful bore. IIe studied and he cogitated, he examined all with care, But refused to soil his hands or descend to cutting hair. And I inherit Wisdom, but cutting is what counts, And as no one pays for wisdom, my deficit it mounts. All the money of my patients, to the surgeon it does roll, Wliilst to me is left a pittance, just a bit above the dole. TIIE SURGEON I'm a plutocratic figure, 'mongst these ple- beian docs. Just a dandy demonstration of the value of hard knocks. As the children of the baker make the most delicious breads, As the sons of Casanova till the most exclusive beds, As the Barrymores, the Roosevelts and others I could name Inherited the talents that perpetuate their fame, lVIy position at the apex of medicine I owe To the qualities my predecessors bequeathed me long ago. My father was a barber and a hairdresser to boot, He used to bleed his patients just as a substitute. . For when physicians gentle their hands re- fused to soil, They called upon the barber and boldly he ' did toil. So the barber and the bleeder are the ones I have to thank, That I am now the only doe with money in the bank. THE GENERAL PRACTTITIONER I'm the most pathetic member of the medical family, I'm the backbone of the profession, but I never get a fee. l am busy, I ani wakeful, I am always on the go And for all the work I have to do there's nothing left to show. If VVillie has the croup at night, l'm called to give reliel', But if he breaks his arm by day, a specialist they'll seek. My father was a doctor of the horse and buggy days Whose miraculous aceoniplishments we all are wont to praise. But times have changed, the public wants no family physish, They demand to have a specialist for every bad condish. I've studied and I've worked to build a prac- tice of some note To have these robbers steal it all has simply got my goat. At last I've learned my lesson, and I'm on the proper track I'm a self-named general specialist, and I'll get my practice back! THE RADIOIJOGIST In a modest laboratory in a famous German town, My father made the studies that earned him great renown. Now some inspect and some percuss and others auscultate, But since this great discovery I just view an x-ray plate. My methods are so simple they're expressed in just one phrase: To diagnose or treat a case you need only use x-rays. It's true I work with shadows and am often in the dark, But seeing through my eolleague's brain is really quite a lark. I'm the only scientist midst these vaporing does, They talk of art in medicine, but tl1at's all tommy-rot. And when it comes to charging fees I use the tluoroscope, A good look at his pocket-book, and when Ilm through heis broke. I'm a debit to society, but a credit to my dad, The most expensive specialist a patient ever had. S. P. R. THE PRESENT IL-LNESS IS NON-CONTRIBUTGRY J. Newton Peasley shrugged into his white coat with the HMS emblazoned proudly on the left shoulder, a symbol understood by about half the patients, generally those of a naive temperament, to mean House Medical Surgeon and by the other half, a frostier, meaner group, to signify exactly what it did. The one group treated a student with a cer- tain puzzled deferenee, whereas the latter spared no pains to make evident their vast contempt. One of our principal's previous workups had been of this latter sort. The original re- lationship between them, one of bare toler- ance, had considerably deteriorated since the day when Newt ascribed the patient's epi- gastric pain to carcinoma and confidently predicted a precipitate gastrectomy, only to be followed by a house officer whose diagnosis was alcoholic gastritis. These consoling words served to bring the trembling soul down from his precarious perch on a bedstead but also served to harden his heart against the apple- cheeked student whose recent visit had been so terrifying. Good morning, Mr. Cannon, Newt Famous pair chortled good naturedly. I guess we'll have to put that operation off a while after all. Well, hit a few, miss a few. Mr. Cannon nailed him with a cold and steady glare. After a moment, without shifting his eyes, he deliberately gathered the saliva in his month and spat precisely midway between Newt's white clad feet. And ai pleasant good morning' to yon, sir, Newt said win- niugly as he stepped on ont ol' rznigre. Fnrtlier into the ward he encountered ai patient who he quickly deduced must be ai Send ME m, Coach Come in, '52 new one. Fan-tors whieh led to that deeision inelnded the long' red nnderweair in which the patient was elaid and ai certain air ot inde- pendenee whieh eontrzisted strongly with the attitudes taken hy other white elzldw:n'dnn1tes whose pride had been lmtiered into insignifi- eance by days of being' ignored, jnhlmed, pushed zn'ound, alternately eneonrng'ed to g'nrrnlonsness and shut np. This was ai new patient, :ind was all his. Newton draped his stethoseope :ilront his neek, innssed his lniir ei trifle, and eonsnlted ai mirror to determine how best. his physiogr- noiny eonld he altered to zidd, sziy ai deezide. This aeeoinplished, he strode wezirily to the pz1tient's bedside, looked :lt hiin ont of eyes which he hoped were hooded and smiled as mneh as was eoinpzitible with the wrinkles he was attempting to preserve. The old inzni-returned his smile and in- quired, UXVll2ll71S,l'll0 matter, Sonny? Been eating DCl'Sl1llIl'10llS?H Newton abandoned his wrinkles but strove to, fetain some command of the sitna- tion. What is our name sir and how old are you? y 7 5 77 . l WI, N Li,?,,W,,,w.. V ,L easzvss..-uw.-fs. 'sifir.,'-?t:.fi Nsf'-'I.-.' P' . ' fi X 33:43 W , sw---.. ,, . , gif., :I-z-s-.Eg'ev:L'5'?b.'W . ' 135: 6 - ,,g f is airs .gf fe -a - 'S f if ..,,,,,. ., ' 5' , li 1 3, wrwfz- .ffzw-1-.::,v:4.f::vs,a:e-'-QNLZ' 'Q W . 5,5 , Chimney Pot I 4 iw W' fl !l!l! . .. , . Peter Perkins, it is, and I have sixty- eight year behind me, Sonny, full of more hell than I can remember. What's our nam boy? Y ei 77 ' Peasley, sir. Dr. J. N. Peasleyf' I get it, he said, drooping an eyelid. A medical student, huh. The booming voice reverberated through the ward like the bellow of a Bull of Basham. Well, that's fine. I don it know how the hell else you'll learn. Newton felt as if a rug had been pulled out from under him. He sensed the eyes of the less penetrating patients who had ac- cepted his story turn in dumb accusation upon him, and in the silence that followed he heard the angry snap of saliva hitting the floor near the bed he had previously visited. Now, then, about your illness. Why did you come to the hospital? 'AI got this lump in my throat-had it fer years. I been scaring doctors with it since I don't know when. It don't give me any trouble but I been hounded so long about it I figgered it ought to come out. These two fellers here, he said, indi- cating a man on either side, had goiters out a day ago and they say it 's fine so I guess Iill go through with it. t'That's certainly a wise course, sir. It 's entirely without danger and since you may have cancer in there -there was the sound of a man spitting contemptuonsly on the iioor -'Lyou should have it out. t'Now, sir, I'd like to have a look at you to see if things are in order. Hliook ahead, boy, he said, throwing his head back to expose the mass. Take off your underwear, sir, please. ' At this the grizzled head bobbed down in sur- prise. HTake off the underwear? Bedamned to you. This don't come off from fall to spring. I got blood vessels running in part of itf, Newton decided to make the best of it and auseulted the heart and lungs through a wall of constant rustling. HNow, sir, you have a drop seat? he inquired. The old man drew back and studied Newton's expression carefully. Seeing that he appeared perfectly serious he elected to answer him. Hell, yes, I have a drop seat. Got to' have one-use it nearly every day. Say, don 't they teach yon things like that in medical school. Never heard of a man going all win- ter-hell, yes, I get a drop seat! Nei1's Joint Very well then, sir, drop it and bend over ! commanded Newt. You serious, boy? the elderly gentle- man inquired. Yes sir, Newton said. This is essen- tial to finding out what's wrong with you. The old man shook his head and then stooped over. Newton pulled on a glove and turned back to him. The plethoric stubbled old face, framed by his scarlet covered shanks, looked back up at him. Say, friend, inquired the ancient in a guarded tone, 'tain't that a hell of a long ways to go to feel my goiter? Newton was saved the embarrassment oi' answering as the patient to the left of him began to wheeze and quickly became cyanotic, dyspneic, apneic and moribund. Newton raced for the corridor where he found an in- tern and reported the situation. The intern was instantly galvanized into action. lIe sprang for thc files, whipped out a dischrgc paper and screamed 'tllis nanie, his name! Newton supplied it and then anxiously inquired, Hilo we need oxygen, sir, blood, digitalis, sir? HNo, no, no, the distraught intern shouted. Open the laundry ehute!'l There- upon he plunged toward the ward and re- turned with the patient in his arms. lle east him into the ehute with an expert twist oi' the shoulders and then leaned weakly against the wall, gasping for breath. Thank God, he breathed as the patient rattled into the distance, We saved the old man 's series. We saved it. Newton walked slowly back to his pa- tient and found him drawing a sheet over the purplish face of the patient to the right of his bed. Same dainn thingfl the old inan an- swered cryptieally. Then he reached back and thoughtfully buttoned his lavender drop seat into place. You know, boy, I ain't got any more brains than a hickory stump, but l be- lieve I'd just as leave be sicker'n hell than cured like these boys was. Goodbye and good luck! Dr. J. N. Peasley, HMS IV, gathered to- gether his stethoscope, ophthalmoseope, tun- ing fork, reflex hammer, and rectal glove, dropped them i11to his pocket and returned to the uncomplicated company of his urines. An air of excitement pervaded the halls and Newton paused as he trotted down the corridor beariugturines of various descrip- Q . , Dinner at one X Q Q :Q n- Fixx: .- 1 tai-ae? . , it The Plerces tio11s. He paused and keened the air, his nos- trils Haring. Suddenly he knew the reason for l1is uneasinessg the halls were deserted Eilltl no voice came from the Wards save the groans of neglected patients. Yet in the distance there sounded the buzz of excited voices. A vast thrill possessed him. An inter- esting' case! he called, and with a bugle-like neigh plunged for the elevator. As he raced to the emergency ward he encountered a long line of individuals who represented every fneet ol' hospital life, They growled in anger ns he began to force his Way past Thom in the direetion of the eniergreney rooms. Ile had taken no more than a dozen Thorlaksons Playful Katz's Mrs ' Coleman and Loesch steps when 21 earpenter earryiiig his saw reached 21 lcnobliy hand out, grrablied him by the shoulder and said, Get in line, NVOil'U all in a liurryf' 1l.ilVlllg' been lured to independent thongrlit and ai disdaintul attitude toward anfliority during the stininlating' days of mediezil sehool he eyed the fellow an instant and nnimhled, 'LYes, sir,', wherewith he took his place :lt the end ol' the line behind il, newshoy. 'Pliongli n trifie offended alt this disre- Johnson trio 2:48 The Wisemans, Ayvazians YS? ' k '-.. Nz .The Thomases tc i t 1, 1 The Senfts 'W X and wife Berman family spect he remained silent and was soon com' forted by the fact that an attendant bearing an armload of whole blood was similarly forced to take his place at the rear. Eventually the serpentine queue carried him to the door of the sick room. At the head of the bed stood a group of men engaged in a heated discussion, flourishing slide rules in emphasis of one point or another. Near them a nurse with a pair of towel clips artfully applied to the patientis tongue smiled in pride over the specimen who lay distended and writhing upon the bed. With the least twitch of her wrist she could throw the pa- tient into trembling opisthotonous. She dem- onstrated this device tirelessly and distrib- uted reprints, ink still damp suggesting that the nerve bundle responsible for spasticity lay at the apex of the tongue. The carpenter ahead in the line ap- proached the patient and jabbed him with a horny thumb, noting a concomitant bulge of the eye balls. Then he slapped the abdomen with his saw, listening with rapture to the harmony of tympanitic abdomen, high pitched peristalsis and the quavering tones of the saw. Tiring of this he passed on, nodding to himself and saying- A very interesting case. Lustigs T' li A ' Unidentified transients at Woods Hole A point of difference arose in the physi- cal examination of this patient and the white clad cabal at the patient's head wheeled on him and in turn sank their arms to the elbows in an attempt to verify if possible Ulipping of the anterior aspect of the third lumbar vertebra. The p'atient's groans became weaker, his struggles less active. As Newton approached the bedside he seized the man's clammy hand and smiled comfortingly at him. The patient groaned in response, whereat the nurse moved her wrist and subdued him. As Newton in his attempt to do a quick physical passed a hand over his abdomen he felt a mighty pressure within and then noted a gleaming object in the bed which proved to be a sigmoidoscope the other end oi' which extended an indeterminate distance in the direction of the patient 's pharynx. Sir, he murmured after a moment's deliberation. Sir, he said, tugging at the skirt of a house officers coat. The house of- ficer in the process of rebutting a claim that serum cadmium dropped 20? in advanced small bowel obstruction, shook off his hand. No,'7 he cried, I have no patience with those who on the basis of a study like that would replace cadmium when they ignore Best and liinkletter, who showed the danger of beryllium depletion. Alia, returned a colleague, but Best and liinkletter didn 't show that. Ile paused a moment to heighten the suspense and then with deliberate crushing words intoned, If you read that paper carefully this antag- onist shrank against the wallj you would have seen that they proved just the opposite. Beryllium cannot be assayed as they did with the Goran-Watteau transphoretic metahexo- meter without the inversional factor of Gor- gon as shown by the paper by Hanks and Spindle. The patient 's groans became weaker. An ancient janitor next in line entered the room. He gazed at the apparition on the bed. Then he gave it an experimental jab with his mop handle. Pleased with the faint grunt he elicited he cackled and tried it again. There came an explosive pop, the scream of gas escaping under high pressure, and then silence as a feculent miasm pervaded the room. The patient was still, his abdomen scaphoid, a sigmoidoscope tip gleaming through his eventrated umbilicus. Newton took advantage of the stillness to say- Sir, I think he has a sigmoidoscope in situ. The clinicians gazed at one another with arched eyebrows. 'One of them stooped over and deliberately extracted the formidable length of the shiny instrument. He dropped it in a sink. They looked at each other again, took a deep breath, shrugged, and then to- gether exclaimed, A very interesting case. With that they left the room. Returning from the EW Newt joined a group finishing ward rounds. They entered a conference room where the 'tchieff' taking his position at the head of the table, gazed in awful dignity at residents, interns, students and visitors from foreign lands. When every- one was seated and coffee had been passed around, by way of calling the group to order he spoke a deelamatory Weill And as si- lence settled in the room inquired after the weekly report. The chief resident blandly read the sta- tistics, passing rapidly over the mortality figures. The chief's eyebrows knit rather heavily at the end of the list. Then he said, Now, then, let 's go through the mortalitiesf' The resident picked up the sheet before him, cleared his throat, looked challengingly around the room and commenced. First, we have Giano Searlato, a fifty- eight year old Italian born male. Before tell- ing his story, I'd like to say that he spoke very poor English, because it has a bearing on the course we followed with him. He entered the EW in no distress. Naturally this worried us, so we went over him very carefully. By history we could elicit nothing except that he kept holding one finger in the air and restlessly motioning toward the men's room. We restrained him and eventually he did develop some lower abdom- 411' I I 111 funn-v n on win inal distress and began to ery out 'tPissato, pissato to every inquiry. By this time we had I.V.'s in to maintain electrolyte bal- ance- he paused while the listeners turned to smile complacently at one another and nod. When we did a repeat physical we dis- covered a midline lower abdominal mass ex- tending to the umhilicus. 'We diagnosed an omental cyst and operat.ed. He had a diverticulum that apparently involved the entire bladder. So we excised it including all hilt a walnut sized patch which we used to reconstruct the organ. Despite our etforts his urinary output remained at zero and he died on the fourth post-opt day. The chief shifted in his chair. 'LWhat were the exact circumstances of his demise? Hlle sat bolt upright in hed at the end, screamed tl'issato, hastardos, pissatoll, flung himself hack on his pillow and died. That's an interesting story. the visit said. Ile paused, looked at the desk and then in an earnest tone, remarked, You know, l don't know of anything in surgery harder than making a surgical diagnosis on patients without complaints or physical findings. Well, as 1 listened to that story, it seems pretty clear to me that what beat us here was his irreversible kidney disease. You gavehim a chance-his only chance. And he wasnit en-a+ 'I+ rnnu-I' 'hn gt 'N'it!l.t m m iwfx f--f -f f - , , 'M.y.g.if,MMf fam-mx PBIIG Yff f 2 L Wfzf f 4.52 ' Gynccologist Otoiogist Throat Specialist Roalizing that tho nnimagxinative major- ity of The class of 1952 will go on to internal medicine, surgery or general practice, wo rospootfiilly turn our attention to other fields of modical endeavorg and hazard a few prog- nostic giiossos as to what an ingoiliolls minor- ity will be doing' in the year 1962. w L U W 'i E Q P E. W1 fi 1. I H in i. i i i i E Psychiatrist Research Man Pediatrician g ',f , NES' V - 3, ., f '+A QS , , if 5gs.?4?'?iQ 'IQ If .1 A f ,V fl 4 1, .Q ., -, 3, ., LW U . A , 6 . Q, ,A I - X H14 SQ, f A 4 f fn- fs-1-M 'g-3 xl 5? . W2 - ri' '1E.,m,Qk -M xv - an 'Q -- -+ .. - ,- Q: .. - www . t . .Zh V:-'Q V539 ' -f iz, 1 in ' JN, .. ,, . , ,. , ,. .,.. v.. . , , sigh. A, , ,W . , ,,.,,,A. wwf fy M -A . K :r.1-,- W t af, i, 5 1, 1' ' - , .,vw- A - .g , -x.1.W -,f- -3- Mm., iff? fl '22-'if ml iz I 1 if . ' , ' ' ., ' s 'f '? , , - ' , ' ' Q gg -l--' V - , , , ' . ' 49 -, . . . ..,. k , ' . . '4 -ay x'1 '-,V GUARDED man enough to take advantage of it. For cause of death put down, 'Patient's disease'. A swart foreigner who had been follow- ing the conversation with a wrinkled brow and look of bewilderment interrupted, But, senor, if he only had to . . . His sentence was cut short as an alert nurse poured scald- ing coffee down his back. He staggered from the room beneath the scowls of the entire group. There was a silence as the group col- lectively studied the far corners of the room. Then there came a clearing of throats and as one their lifted their cups of coffee to their lips. The resident went on, The second case represents a very common problem in diag- nosis. This twenty year old male entered with a classical story for appendicitis. He was ex- amined by a house officer who alleged that he had RLQ pain and tenderness. Subsequent to his examination, drapes were applied in order to protect the field from chance con- tamination. Here the problem arose, in the course of getting him settled his bed was turned-at least so we reconstruct it-and what had been his RLQ now became his LUQ. Our house officers quite rightly immediately rejected the impossible diagnosis of appeiidi- citis and brilliantly substituted a provisional diagnosis of pancreatitis in the apancreatitic phase. We decided to sit on him. Accord- ingly we spent four hour shifts crouched on his abdomen. At one time we had three house officers dancing the Billroth ceremonial around his bed, had a Halstead-Mayo amulet about his neck and a potent charm containing the dust of Ambrose Pare's healing finger slung across his lower or, as it developed, across his upper abdomen. Even these meas- ures failed to work, doubtless because the amulet was around his ankles and the charm out of place. The chief shot a quick, shrewd glance at the resident. VVas he hydrated? f'Yes, sir, the house officers replied in chorus, the first thing we did was to restore his fluid balance. Good, lads, good, the chief replied and wagging his head in amazement tallied oif on his fingers, 'LYou had a Billroth cere- monial going, you had hydrated him, you had applied a Halstead-Mayo amulet about his neck- MAbout his ankles, sir, a house officer interrupted. The chief waved his hand deprecatingly. lt doesn't matter where it 's applied just as long as it is over hone and blood vessels and is moderately tight. Was it moderately tight Yes, sir, replied the resident. Parenthetically the chief remarked, We even applied it to the wrist in one ease of double leg amputation and it seemed to work beautifully. ' ' Whispers of amazement went up about the room and a medical student quickly cap- tured the information in a voluminous note- book labelled Pearls. The resident continued. Finally we decided to explore him. A 25 cm. transverse upper-no lower-abdominal incision was made and We discovered what appeared to be situs inversus with multiple developmental anomalies. The bladder was found in the upper-no lower abdomen-and the liver in the lower-rather upper. Most remarkable was the fact that the aorta was bifid in the upper-no lower-abdomen and single below -above that is. Remarkable, the chief murmured. Muscular relaxation was rather poor, possibly because the ether cone was applied to the patient's feet. We visualized things as best we could and began the enormous task of rearranging his viscera. Despite continued poor relaxation we-accomplished this. We undraped the patient and then realized a rather serious error had been made. Of course we had to make a decision about this case. Should we reconstruct his abdomen, should we do a plastic to his external limbs to correspond to his viscera, or should we simply train him to walk on his hands? And what course did you agree to fol- low? the chief inquired. We had not yet made a decision when the patient suddenly expired. 'fReally. And the cause? The resident hesitated an instant, then replied with peculiar threatening emphasis, As we expected his pancreas was found to be entirely consistent with apancreatitic pan- creatitis. As an incidental finding which probably also contributed to his death path- ology reported-ahem-a ruptured gangren- ous appendix. Splendid, the sage old chief exclaimed. f'That's a fine job of diagnosis. You did your best. ln this hospital at least., acute apancreatitic pancreatitis carries off 100 per cent of its victims. You need not feel bad about that. Turning to the secretary he proclaimed, Cause of death, patient's disease.'7 Ile smiled benignly about the room and then spoke a declamatory, Well. Forty coffee cups were drained in unison and forty saucers carefully set down. 1 guess that's all.': G. S. B. GREETINGS, FRIENDS! and Farewell Twas the eve 'fore commencement, and in Vanderbilt The silence lay heavy, the laughter was stilt, When suddenly over the P.A. was heard A voice, sometimes soothing, but often more lurid, A rasping, a gasping, an occasional wheezc Offering greetings to seven-score new M,D.'s. I'll miss you, God bless you, you bastards and bitches But I'll not forget you, l've still got your pitches To all of you Greetings! Iluzzahs! and the like May the flood of disease de danimed by your dike. To Aikman and Bartman and Bernstein, Eugene A year full of satisfaction supreme. Lots kind wishes to Katz and his missus For Cochran and Webster, a sea full of fishes. A hatful of huzzahs to Grinker, young Roy, And a bushel of rattles for Basconi's new boy. We haven't got a single bitch Against Maurice Q. Jurkiewicz. For Woody and Whitey, a, loving good nighty, For Merril a barrel of rare Aphrodite. Let's light the burner for Rachlin and Turner, For Donovan, Dowling, and Segal the learner. A raid on the brewery for Wilson and Drewery, The glasses we'll pour for William Moore. A copy of the Index Medicus For Reichard, Loop, and Junior Linus. Our voices raise in shouts of glee For Conkling, Johnson, and D'Arcy Klee The Andersons, James and Albert D. , And Huneycutt, Kent, and John Lindley. Come, 'tis time to start t.he dance, And leading off is Kendrick liance. A fox we'll trot with Twitcllcll, Dot And minuct thru stately lanes With Molly Hubon and Ruth C. Haynes. A tango with Mero Is worth about zero, But better than tryin' To Lindy with Bryan. So instead let ls waltz with Sue and Regina, And try to preserve our fading, patina. The best of everything, we pray For Coleman, Malcolm, Ryan and Day For both the Browns, Owen and Fred, For Lorber and Mogul, Curran and Red. A lusty chorus of My Gal Sal, For Potter, Kirkland, and our friend Pal. The Hinsons Is my pubis crushing your elbow? PM W Room with a view Then once again, let's sing it afrcsh For Byerly, Merkley, and John G. Loesch. As long as we're singing, let's have a verse For Branaman, Bertles, and Richard Moersch. To Thomas, Morgan, and others from Yale Best wishes from us beyond the pale. The power to deal with a ehalazion We wish for Joyner, Smith, and Ayvazian. For nephrosis of the lower nephron We 'll trust to Atkins, Senft, and Efron. Bernstein, Grow, and Peter Teel We'll ask to treat our varicocoele. If stones within the bladder lurk We'll cry for Butler, Pierce, and Berk. And if our pneumonia should be lobart We 'll put in a call for Kent H. Hobart. To cure a prostate which is tuggin, There's certainly no one like Charlie Huggin. For Pittman, the Martins, Taber and Leman, We wish many nights of delectable dreamin. Oceans of cheer and the money to buy it For Radebaugh, Spruiell, and Harold Chiat. Collins, Lefemine, Watkins and Neher We're sure will do well, with the help of a prayer. The courage and strength of old General Kitchener We wish for Feeney, Shapiro, and Michener. For Murphy and Myers, and Ottenberg, Perry, Costanzo, Lundberg, and Carlton, Larry For Curtin and Kaplan and Al Luessenhop We bequeath a postion right next to the top. We advise not consortin with Dudley or Horton, A session with Rosa may be very cosa, But not quite as ramblesome as one with Leo Samelsome. Emerson, Feldman, Wilber, and Rial Pushmg back the frontlers Power failure in a. sigmoidoscope We number with those who will make a pial. Treatment, we're certain, will be no steal From Fornshell, Gianelli, Hancock, and Neil. Nor from Lichtenstein, Shillito, L-einbach and Wong, Will patient's get by with just singing a song. A vial of pitocin ' For Kearsley and Clawson For Constable, Churchwell, Berg and Ras- mossen. To Grunebaum, Rinaldo, Kelley and Cather We wish all the honors that four men can gather. To Guntheroth, Royaltey, Jackson and Mac, The cheer that abounds in a glass of dry sack. A suckling pig stuffed with applesauce, For Hendren, Keith, and Willie Kraus. A tasty shrimp, a tender prawn For Buchanan, Salisbury and Vaughn. Begone, dull care, from Rubenstein, For Keleman, repeat that line, Say it once more for good old Van, For Wheeler the dealer and Hollis Wiseman. We won't forget the dentists this trip, Neither Lincoln nor Lasher, Rothblatt nor Ship. We wish tons of amalgam For Lustig and Ryan. To Berman and Boyette, Hinson and Stan, A great deal more than just catch as catch can. For Emil and Bernie, we'd do a good turnie, For all who want them a set of new plates, For all who need them, the most loving of mates. The silence lay heavy, the laughter was stilt, They've gone, to move into castles they've built. But next year a new team will enter the Hall To take up the battle and carry the ball. S. P. R. fwwmzw, 1,-wwvfmwvg fy. .y ww A-1 wa Mm www AM4 x FEENEY'S FUNERAL PARLUR 13 DHEWRY LANE Open 24 Hours a Day When Your Diagnosis Fails Recommended hy Feeney, Drewry and Day WAID STUDIO 18 Newbury Street BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 52925 School and College Photographers Completely equipped to render the highest quality craftsmanship and an expedited service on both personal portraiture and photography tor college annuals. if Photographers to the Class of 1952 Patrons May Obtain Duplicates at Any Time I33 CROWLEY 8: GARDNER CU. Medical- Surgical and Hospital Supplies 1258 Boylston Street lNear Fenway Parkl KEnmore 6-5847. 5848. 5849. 5850 Boston 15. Mass lPar1r in Hy's Texaco Station! Compliments ol SELF SERVICE LAUNDRY 123 Iersey Street--OH Park Drive Francis Conway. 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Hospital Equipment-Physicians' Supplies 'p 1 M p . A 533 Commonwealth Avenue BOSTON, MASS. At Kenmore Square ri- , - A- A---W--finfwffvfsvwWLMW--,fffmyw-swwws f- A M., , , MM W rf ,QW .envy .3 .QIV ? 2 4, 1 . X ,A .5 ,. .. sc mom,mp..tm2:fi:fRl-ff,,gr1f.ogy.,imfen..g+,wrx,-isin4 5 9, . V5 y AZI ppppbr w,m.i..W,..,.-.c,,.i,., .,,,, , Av,A,, ., . . . ' Telephones: I KEnmore 6-1945-1946-1947-1948 ' Q , : ., . A me f-gr, 1-1 : . 5 ..: , Vimm. f fi ' :1ts,-'a fuf.,-uf. I -X if 2 ,Qi Q-:Qxj:.q3fA:v .-..:1,: .... my ' 5Q4f.i'I.. .,, , v- , V' f,,,.,47zW51?. b in . 'fM' 1'. f.nT ' 5- -:':2g1,,-45242-3,:-' .,., , ,. ,.,, ,,,, . ., If ,1f::'.:i-Ei' ' ' ' W.. , Special Terms to Physicians ,, ,.,. ,, , ,,, ,,,,. ,. Starting in Practice WE HAVE ICE CUBES Let Us Keep You in Good Spirits BRIGHAM LIOUOR 732 Huntington Avenue At Brigham Circle CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS, CHAMPAGNES Try Us for Quality, Service and PRICE Why Walk? Let's Talk! WE HAVE ICE CUBES I LO 6-8300 INTERNS' UNIFORMS We believe you Will find our service satis- factory because of the following reasons: l. Accessibility. We are Within one mile of the Medical School. 2. Our materials are the best. 3. Our prices are as low as is consist- ent with quality. ln the past We have supplied 75 per cent of the Harvard graduates with their uni- forms. FEDERAL NATIONAL LINEN SERVICE COMPANY 1310 COLUMBUS AVENUE at Roxbury Crossing Tel. Hlghlands 5-7330 I37 K i -T ,.,. T 1 755, Natural bristles Durufized for longer life. 9 ds ' Bristles reinforced by special process to assure flexible stiffnessf, resist matting for longer periods . . .outlast ordinary brushes up to 3 times. 5 Slruighi'-line design to meet professional St ff preference. Straight-trimmed bristle tufts, straight shank, straight handle . . . for simpler, more efficient manipulation. Py-co-hp for interdental stimulation. gf Flexible, resilient rubber construction . . . ready for your patient's use according to your instructions, to reach interproximal spaces inaccessible to the toothbrush. Pycope, ll1C. ' Jersey City 2, New Jersey jj Me06z,,..1af:,.Deagn, y co g,W,a,.,a-,M RECOMMENDED BY MORE DENTISTS THAN ANY OTHER TOOTHBRUSH I38 T 1 TT T T T 1 T T T T Tl Tv TTT X T TTT ll T l V. 3 T T l I TE T lT TT . T TT T ll Ml T TTT TT T Tl T E T l l T I MAIN STORE 851-859 Boylston Street Belween Fairfield and Gloucester Sis. BOSTON O Telephone KEnmore 6-7100 E. F. MAI-IADY CUMPANY Serving A11 New England 'K HOSPITAL AND PHYSICIANS' SUPPLIES SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS MEDICAL AND NURSING BOOKS 'K 41st Annive1'scrry 1911 - 1952 STUDENTS' SUPPLY BRANCH 655 Huntington Avenue BOSTON Telephone KEnmore 6-7107 I39 It's the MOST MODERN , the MOST EFFICIENT It's S. S. White FREE OFFICE PLANNING EASY PAYMENT TERMS Master Unit ' Airdent 9 Motor Chair co. PHILADELPHIA 5, PA. Compliments ot MACALASTER BICKNELL COMPANY Laboratory Supplies and Equipment - Home Oftice: 243 Broadway CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Branches: 181 Henry Street NEW HAVEN, CONN. Box 5. Eastwood Branch SYRACUSE, N. Y. North and Depot Streets MILLVILLE, N. I. For Dry Cleaning ot Distinction CARLETON CLEANSERS, Inc. 55 Carleton Street CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Serving Vanderbilz Hall TR 6-2830 IIM'S RESTAURANT on Huntington Avenue Opposite The Peter Bent Brigham Hospital Tel. LO 6-1742 Tel. CIrcIe 7-8332 MCGRAIL BROS. The LINWOOD GRILL 69-71 KILMARNOCK STREET : IN THE FENWAY Ales - Wines - Liquors Booths and Bar Service We Cater to Banquets and Parties Breakfast - Luncheon - Dinner MEDICAL BOOKS ALL PUBLISHERS - - - DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK - FREE DELIVERY -- BROWN 8z CUNNOLLY, Inc. 911 Boylston Street BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS COpleY 7-1511 Tune-Up and Carburetor Service Tires and Batteries GENE BROWN'S SERVICE STATION Compliments Across from the Toddle House 541 Huntington Avenue, Boston 15, Mass. Tel. GArrison 7-9774 of CIRCLE BARBER SHOP Opp. the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital 3 Experienced Barbers 4 on Saturdays Kentucky Beverage Company THE LONGWOOD UNIFORM SHOP O1-ters a Complete Line of 255 Brookline Avenue I T ' N ERNES UNIFORMS Comer Pilgrim Road Individual Fitting BEacon 2-3255 Open Evenings 421 Brookline Avenue Opp. Good Food I l4l Longwood Tailors and Cleaners EXPERT ALTERATIONS and REPAIRING COMPLETE LAUNDRY SERVICE Rapid Cleaning and Laundry Service 164A Longwood Avenue BOSTON Call LOngwood 6-5900 HARVARD WINE 6. LIQUOR CO. Wholesale and Retail 288 Harvard Street, Brookline LO 6-3180 At Coolidge Corner LO 6-0312 Myron Norman BRIGHAM CIRCLE FLORIST Flowers For All Occasions Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere 4 Francis Street at Brigham Circle LOngwood 6-9339 Compliments of Surgeons' and Physicians' Supply Co. BOSTON, MASS. Headquarters for Tennis Racquets Squash Racquets Restringing a Specialty E. F. Mahady, Agents TENNIS :S SQUASH SHOP 67A Mt. Auburn Street CAMBRIDGE, MASS. DANKER df DONOHUE, Inc. Service for All Makes ol Cars PACKARD SALES and SERVICE AS 7-5225 462 Brookline Avenue THE COLLEGE BARBER SHOP 650 Huntington Avenue Near Longwood Avenue Frank Ortolano, Treasurer TR 6-5417 SKIS BEacon 2-4942 Established 1914 I CHINESE PROVERB g I One picture is Worth more than ten thou- ' W t lla Q ,, , E tg sand Words. . . . It true, then Columbia Dentotorms speak Volumes. E 1,. ,V 5 Write for Your Copy of ml' MQW Q CATALOG NO. 33 f WEN I , ly from LVM ,,,,,,,,,,,,r, r,,,,,,,,.,A M M ,,,,A,444 The House of A Thousand Mode1s COLUMBIA DENTOFORIVI CORPORATION Also Headquarters for Brown Precision Attachments 131 East 23rd Street - - - New York 10 Aikman, W. O .... Andersen, J. G 4... Anderson, A. D ..., Alkins, H. L .,.., Ayvazian, J. H .... Barrman, R. E .,.. Bascom, G. S. . .. Berg, R. B ,,.. Berk, J. L ...,.. Bernslein, F. A ..,. Bernsfein, J. S ..... Ber+Ies, J. F. .. .. Branaman, W. S., Jr Brown, F. R., Jr... Brown, O. L ...., Bryan, Pa+ricia C... Buchanan, W. R., Jr... suiier, R. L ....... syeriy, w. e., Jr. .. cari+0n, L. s., Jr.. cane, c. H., Jr.. chanowicz, R. R. Chiai, H ......,. Churchwell, A. G. .. Clawson, D. K. .. Cobbs, B. W., Jr... Cochran, W. D... . Coleman, M. D ..,. Collins, H. D ...... Conkling, F. E., 3d ..., Conslable, J. D .... Coslanzo, F. A .... Cummings, R. W ..... .. Curran, W. S. . .. Curiin, R. R... Day, S. K., Jr. .. Donovan, J. F... . Dowling, J. T .... INTERNSI-IIPS-CLASS OF I952 ..............Barnes, Sl. Louis Surgical ....U. oi Minnesola, Minneapolis Surgical . . . . .Bellevue IIII Div.l, N. Y. Surgical ....Grace-New Haven Comrnunily Medical .....BeIIevue llll Div.l, N. Y. Medical l-lospilals oi Cleveland Medical ,Grace-New Haven Communily Surgery-Mixed ...........Belh Israel. Boslon Medical . . . . .Johns Hopkins, Ballimore Surgical .,..Be'lh Israel, Bosion Medical ....Ml. Sinai, N. Y. Rolaling ... .. .... Preshylerian, N. Y. Medical ..San Francisco, U. of Calif. Service Ro+a+ing ...Alameda Counly Hospilals, Calil. Rol'a+ing ...Philadelphia General Ro'ra+ing ...,........FeIlowship ........US Naval I-lospilals Rolaiing ....Peler Benl Brigham, Boslon Surgical . . . .Bellevue ll Div.l, N. Y. Surgical ......Har+iord Rofaling ...Cincinnali General Ro'l'al'ing .Boslon Cily IIIII Medical . . . . .Bellevue III Div.l, N. Y. Medical .......U. of Minnesola, Minneapolis Medical Slaniord U. Hospilals, San Francisco Surgical ......Massachusells General, Boslon Medical ..ChiIdren's Medical Cenler, Boslon Pediafrics ....Massachuse'rls Memorial, Bosion Medical ...Massachuseils General, Boslon Medical .......Johns Hopkins, Ballimore Medical IPriv. Wds.l ....Massachusells General, Bosion Surgical .. . ............... USPH Service Rol'a+ing .Slaniord U. Hospilals, San Francisco Surgical .. ...... U. Hospilals oi Cleveland ' Medical ...Massachuselis General, Boslon Surgical ................Barnes, Sl. Louis Surgical ....Massachusel+s Memorial, Boslon Surgical .. . . .Bosion Cily Medical Drewry, G. R .... . Dudley, H. R., Jr... Efron, R ........ Emerson, R. P ..... Feeney, J. J. . .. Feldman, M. I .... Fornshell, R. P .... Gi anno Ili, S., Jr. .. Gordon, G. S .... . Grinker, R. R., Jr. . .. Grow, B. K., Jr ..... Grunebaum, H. U. e..n+i1em+i., w. e. . Hancock, E. Haynes, Ru+h c .... Hendren, w. H., 3d .....Massachusc-lls General, Boslon Medical .... .Massachuselis General, Bcslon Medical ...Peler Benl Brigham, Boslon Medical ......,.......Belh Israel, Boslon Medical-Special .....Massachuse'rls Memorial, Bosron Medical ..San Francisco. U. oi Calif. Service Roialing ...Feler Benl Brigham, Boslon Surgical ........Sl. Vincenl's, N. Y. Surgical ...........Barnes,Sl,Louis Medical ry I-Illchcock Memorial, Hanover, N. I-I. Roialing ......BoslonCily Medical .... ... Belh Israel, Boslon Medical ....Pe'rer Beril Brigham, Bosion Medical .....,...............Boslon Cilv Medical ...Childrerfs Medical Cenrer, Boslon i Pediairics ......Massachusells General, Boslon Surgical Hinshaw, H. C., Jr.. .Slaniord U. I-lospirals, San Francisco Medical Hobarl, K. H ..... .....,........ U . oi Chicago Clinics Rofaling Huggins, C. E ..... .... M assachuselrs General, Boslon Surgical Huneycuii, J. B .... ...... J eliierson Davis, Houslon Rola+ing Jackson, B. B ..... ,..... M assachusells General, Boslon Surgical Johnson, T. W, . .. .Slaniord U. Hospilals, San Francisco Surgical Joyner, W. S .... .... U .oi Norlh Carolina, Chapel Hill Mixed Jurkiewicz, M. J .... . ....... Barnes, Sl. Louis Surgical Kaplan, M. H .... ........ B oslon Cily Medical Kal'z, S. L ..... ............ ........ B e Th Israel, Boslon Medical Kearsley, R. B ...... Marv I-Iiichcock Memorial, Hanover, N.H. Roialing Keilh, L. E .... .,.......... ........ , .... U S Air Force Rolaling Kelemen, P .... ..... .... H e nrv Ford, Delroii Ro'I'a+ing Kelley, E. T., Jr... .... ChiIdren's Medical Cenler, Bosron Pedia+rics Kenr, S. W... ..................... N.E. Cenler, Boslon Surgical King, M. J., Jr. ..... Mary Hilchcock Memorial, Hanover, N. H. Rolaling Kirkland, J. A .... Med. College oi Virginia l-Iospilals, Richmond Rolaling Klee, G. D ..............,.................... USPH Service Rolaling Koihe, Mollie Hubon. .,.. Bellevue Illl Div.l, N.Y. Medical Kraus, W. L ....... . .......,....... Rooseveli, N.Y. Medical-Mixed Lamdin, Susanne E. .. ..... Massachuselis General, Bosron Pedialrics Lance, K. P. ..... .... P eler Benl Brigham, Boslon Medical


Suggestions in the Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) collection:

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Harvard School of Medicine - Aesculapiad Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971


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